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G § ys — ANS BY RUSSIANS FROM THE BALI TOROUNANIAN UNE \ J lent Artillery Actions Many Points Are Reported by Petrograd. at! GRAND DUKE SWE » Russian Vanguard Is Now Only » 35 Miles From Trebizond "SON, ; on the Black Sea. 4” PMTROGRAD, Feb, 23, Russian e#anguans are within a fow miles of _Rigeh, thirty-five miles east of ‘Tre- Dizond, and the capture of 'Treb\yond iinelf is now but a few days distant, cording to Tiflis despatches to-day. Armenian refugees, flee! from the {Christian quarter at Trebizond, side tho walle, have arri Russian lines Turks have been emptying the city ail its valuat the fall Lrzerum, evidently planning no se rious resi \ < “We are continuing the pursuit of} the remnants of Furksh ar said an official statement from War Office to-day. ed within the ted that the ty of They rep » stores since the the | ® Announcement of fresh successes in the Caucasus, which siaatic demonstrations of the Duma, was fo cd by the of ficial statement to-day that the Slavs haye won skirmishes with the Austro- “Germans on nearly every sector of the front from the Baltic to Roumania ‘Along the Higa and Dvina f German aviators dropped bombs, the official statement tillery actions occurred Dvina and also on the J tor and around Ortex, ne brought enthu- at the opening * Miukst. — | “Northwest of Lake Sventen ot | our regiments made a successful { reconnois: annihilating the oe- cupants of a German treneli, 150 men and two officers. Our fois repulsed pI WF counter attack by enenv reserves and returned to their own .!nes, tak- | ing many prisoners. In the Smorgeen| district we penetrated entan- | glements, bayonetting of the] ra trench occupants and forcing o i to flee, ACKER MERRALLECONDIT ~ est. (QMPANY '820 Elm City Bacon 2lc.b. | ,Boneless Breakfast Small Strips About 2 tbs. Each, | f 4 t t it Olives | | bottle 9) oz. | BY Sunkist Navel |} ‘ancy Large Queens | Oranges | | | 5 | Large Size 126 to Case | | 34e.:Doz. Case $3.25 4 Case $1.70 Sweet’ Juicy Tender BELL-ANS Absolutely,, Removes. Indigestion. One package | proves it, 25cat all druggists, | Indigestion feck Headache, Bilouss | 7 wit G PILLS lost or found Jo Yertised in ‘The W | Msted at The World's Bolo i tion Bureau. itzer Bul Are Row; W northwest core Mt. and Uroadwe. Harlem Office, th Sty and World's Office, Washing- Brooklyn, for GO days the printing of the ° advertisement, Park ner World's Went | remarkable story of this'case I think it | wise I might have to censor the young THE EVENING WORLD, Jekyll-Hyde a Psychological Piker; WhRUNKBODAY, FEBRUARY so, 116, FINGERPRINTS LINK Here’s a Girl With Five Personalities) HANEL 0 KILLING | President of “Clinic for Sick Souls” Reports Strange Case of Girl Possessed of Multiple Characters Restored to Normal Condition and to a Single Identity, Her Real Self. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. ‘The most astonishing case of multiple personality in the annals of ab- normal psychology was made known to me-yesterday by the Reverend Dr. Walter Franklin Prince, who has just taken charge of the Healing Chapel, a clinte for sick souls, established in cunnection with the Chureh of St. Mark’s-In-the-Bouwerte, of which Dr. Wiil- fam Norman Guthrie is the pastor. Tn this church, No. 234 East venth Streot, between the hours of 2 and 3 every day, Dr. Prince will give expert advice to the spiritually ailing. He has been for years a student of psychology and from the pastorate in Mittsburgh, which he gave up to.come toSt. Mark’s, he brought with him an astounding story of a girl, now twenty-six years old, who possessed when he undertook her treatment nearly four years ago, five separate and distinct personalities. Before proceeding to Dr. Prince’s best, in the interest of clarity, to | Print a cast of characters of the five giris and women who, taken altogether, composed the young woman, then twenty-two years old, whom Dr. Prince calls Doris Fischer. Cast of Characters bamaine : f the most accomplished. — She could COMPOSING DORIS FINCHER. | embroider beautifully. Mrs. Prince Margaret. (This personality neveT| has in her possession a piano scart erew beyond the mentality of a girl of ten yeurs,) Sleeping Margaret, eldest and wisest of all the personalities. (A philoso- pher whose advice in the conduct of the cuse and upon the treatment of the other personalities was Invalu- sble, Dr, Prince ways.) Sick Doris. This personality came when Real Doris was seventeen and resulted from shock at seeing a sheet drawn over the features of her dead mother, Sick Doris had no sense of humor, no perception of the abstract, (Under Dr. Prince's treatment Sick Doris died, gradu- ally growing younger and younger in mind. Before her decease she} ONLY ONE DORIS SURVIVES, became a psychical infant and) AND SHE IS THE REAL ONE, talked baby talk.) “An Maer Ned Real Doris sur- i sole iving person- asked. fiber tea te aurviving person: | yee ee ees carvives norman woman of twenty Sleeping Real Doris. been adopted inte SCIENTISTS SURE FIVE PERBON-4 who at this m | worked by Stck Doria which 18 a mas- terplece. Yet not even the primary personality, Real Doris, had ever been taught to do a stitch of the work. Real Doris, however, could embroider fairly well; Margaret, the ten-year-old Personality, no better than a normal child of that age. Mra Prince has a table cover worked by these three per- sonalitts—tho child Margaret, Real Dorts and Sick Dorts, the phenomenal embrolderer, which shows the three different grades of work. “The primary personality was. of course Real Doris,” Dr. Prince con- tinned. “Margaret and Sleeping Margaret camo at the age of three when the baby Real Doris was dropped to the floor and received a great shock. Sick Doris came upon her mother's death @ happy, who has and in a West ALITIES EXISTED. ern esr 2 voted” (only . oris| once, let’ us hope, although, really, ‘These five personalities of Doris! shouia not a quintuple porsunality have Fischer ha cians and men of sclence. Dr. Prince told me, and are conceded by them tu} have existed. “No trained psychologist doubts multiple personality to-day, anyhow,” yaid the clergyman, “Dr, Boris Sidis of Harvard and Dr. Morton Prince of Hoston have studied and reported on ci t 1 only thirt similar cases, but in all aly thirty | Mtn chia cases of multiple personality are) terosted—her™ embroidery. fer. tne known, and of these only six bave| stance. If you withhold from person= been adequately studied. Prof. W.j ality the things it wants—the things K. Walker, M. D., of the University | !t /s interested in—personality die: Pe Aas rh Fiache And when personal of Pittsburgh has seen Doris Fischer | with yuptie polic: Yared at least twenty times, for periods ex-| about that? If a personality tending sometimes to two hours, Dr.| bave what yee sey it ti order to _| vive, must it die what it want Walker met all the personalities ex-) 1" consistent. with public morality? | copt Sleeping Real Doris, who came!Tiere are late at night, Dr, Walker's certificate r thei of the facts in this strange case and). "t are of ita cure are embodied by me in) Smilingly, been studied by bhysl-| five votes? IT say yes, if she is for Woodrow Wilson). “Real Doris takes a reat interest in poultry. She 1s quite Intelligent, but not literary.” | “How did the other four personal-| ities die?” I asked Dr. Prince. “They were extinguished by treat. ment I gave daily for @ period of three and a half years. In the case of Bick Doris, who, 1 have told you, became @ Prattling infant before she died, treat- ment consisting in withholding from confilets “What | must Ir dangerous possibilities in ou know,” the clergyman replied! but in such cases that is pure cus: I don't want to talk the book which I have written about! fyout human eussedness just now. It | Doris Fischer, now in the hands of «| would lead us too fa m Do Fischer. * Doris changed pe’ | sometimes,” he gontinued, many ‘as fifty-one times « day. ‘That was the maximum; the minimum was two nalities publisher, In a few weeks an ab- stract of the case will appear in a scientific journal, Meantime I am giv- | which sho was in-' REV Ww. F- PRINCE + OF MRS, HEILNER Her Butler, Long Sought for Flatbush Murder, Makes De- | Four clear fingerprints on the-beer bottle which the murderer of Mra. Julia Mellner used to t her to death are those of Joseph Manel, wir under arrest in Baltimore, wher he was arrested after a country-wid soarch, according to experts at Police Headquartars. Manel was the butler | in Mra, Heltner's home at No, 217 Albemarle Road, Brooklyn, apd he was seen to leave the house five min- utes before the woman's body ‘was| found, on April 23, 1916, ‘The finger- | prints and other evidence, the police say, completely disprove Hanel's stat®ment that he was robbing the Heliner home with a confederate when the confederate murdered Mrs. Heliner, Upon his arrest in Baltimore tHanet ediately admitted hin ideutity md told the story of the pal who liad killed Mrs. Heilner, He gave the po-| lice the name of the supposed contod. | erate and an address in Pittsburgh, | And the New York police wero not! | fled this mornoing that the naino of| the man was fictitious | the address de. “riled by not exist in Pittsburgh. even as tof the name he us When Hanel is brought to this city | late this afternoon he alone will be charged with the murder of Mrs, Hell her, Lieut. Funston, the fingerprint oxpert at Police Headquarters, suys that the evidence of tho fingerprints jon the beer bottle will be énough to convict him. and Manet that | 1ues| There is not | JAPANESE CRUISERS AND MANY AIRSHIPS | Washington Hears, companion, who suid she saw Mant haa Jeaving the louse alone five minutes WASHINGTON, Feb. 2%--Rrand] before she found the body. Whitlock for Secretary of War to! Stxty thousund circulars with a Jetwcceed Lindley M, Garrivon, ‘This! picture and description ‘of Hanel aa ' report was in iation to-day.| were sent broadcast through the Fleets’ Are Sent to Protect] With tho White House atient, Cou-| country immediately after the mur Shipping From Attacks ed great interest in the] der. It was known that Hanet had! {s § Fron friends in Baltimore and detectives by U-Raiders. rho gonalp way shat Co sgfouso tas went there several times, Yesterday -_- Belgium regarding tho Cabinet | {*ernvon Max Schmidt, who Lae LONDON, Feb, 23.--The Admiralty |vacaney. Tt was said President Wil-| known Hanel in New York, saw him jor. [SOR favored Whitlock for several] in a moving ploturo theatre, He fol- to-day would not comment ow Gor ; His) diplomatic | record, | lowed him to the street and pointed man reports, transmitted throug’ “ frat peal i him out to two polleemen. ‘They at Copenhagen, that a Japanose flect, in his favor, first did not believe Schmidt and did accompuniod by a lurge number of | ‘The appointment would be consid-| not want to interte . sditer. Cred in the nature of a reward for| Schmidt then caught hol ane a mireratt, has arrived In the Mediter- Whitock's service In. Belgium. Wis | grat ng aeccaaane aloe Han ranean to co-vperate with the all influence upon Congress regarding the] tine away : an Feary BOSs The Times, in publishing the Ger- preparedness programme, tt was alao| 2S #Way. Hanel fought back and report, which is said to have come from Italian recalled the fact that it was rumored more than u month ago t Japanese war- would leave for the Mediter- wnese shipping jerman submarines, that time that three sources, ships nean to protect Ja against Austr It was stated , r =|ohanges. As the personalities ap-! , : oe the ing to you the A BC of this extra-|ohanges, As onalitles @P-: armored cruisers—the ‘Tokiwa, th ordinary story--the first time I have) Proached extinction the changes BOW Cijtoge and tne Kusugi—all siall ever told it for publication. “By the way. when the personality] vessels, would be sent to the Mediter-" The reuders of The Evening World| called Maryarct was dying she be-'ravean, ‘Tho Tokiwa and Chitose ar e blind. So when the personality of Margaret was not the girl she in- habited was blind, and unless her eyes were shaded from light they streamed constantly. Changes of personality w accompanied by alternations pulse, The pulse Margaret the child dominant, Sick Doris’s much slower than that of Meal Dorts, | Whenever the girl felt a new person~ bouncing out her are meeting therefore (thelr first ap- pearance on any stage) the flve per- sonalities of Dorls Fischer, These personalities varied greatly in men- tal powers, but luckily for us they were all highly moral beings. Other- pulse was) ludy, maybe cut out one of Doris's personalities altogether, which would be embarrassing, to say the least themselves that they can dispense with | st glasses if they will get the fol scription filled at on drug & two Department to: ing ores | mun + iguinst the proceed- Fotonarfilt | ings brought in the Federal Courts at ud | Norfolk to return the captured Brits liner Appam to her owners In @ note presented by Count |Hernstorff, the German Ambas it'ls contended that many pre: jay by the C a buthe the eve, ‘and yon are Hk: results right eutaract, vie wind | as Well as the terms of the Pru Ame i Treatys provide that ration Ciec Onn wee Tht Leu i.gal action can ile against the Ap- tow bs wiht mee bie pan, held by «a German crew ws a might | prize of war, nor against Lieut. Berg, a mes sad | her commander, It also ig contended vee ls The lato ecome (that inasmuch ax Lieut, Berg has thene ‘victims lassen ure only like erut pm they munt | extraterritorial rights, Nie against him. The note suggests that wi ase comes up in court, Ma the State Department inform Court of the terms of the treaty. no legal action n the: that rong maxuetio ription bere giv the yon j ny of the Russd-Japanese War AGES geht SLIM PICKINGS. Total annual foes in th lice and Justive Courts of N rson, Kansas, were 25 cents, | vete jayity, boncing coat shee ores woul’ DREAMLAND PIER WILL “Tgero 1s no Jekyll-Hydo about this to have me hold her wrists | It was | en! .| possible to talk with the personality | COST $10 800 MORE story,” Dr. Prince replied to my anx-| Co yargaret while she was sound ’ fous inquiries on this point. = “The | gsioop, and tn that condition yhe could | five personalities had separate and/read words which were not spoken, | , 3 ed for Five Years— distinct wills and physical and aes-| but merely, formed by the lips.” | Heat seas! i r Fi ati ite. haw kit ae. tro je os ely al hese riers Musi Pay for Privi- thetic tastes. They had different ex- ||, Yui. telleve abauiutely a think nglers Musi Pay t i pressions and volves. There was #! tho girl ed any of her jersonali- lege of Fishing There. certain finpishness in the ten-year-old ; ’ Seer girl Margaret, and she believed certain KNOW Prince answered.{ Dock Commissioner R. A. @. Smith 4 hi a cannot be counter-| nutified the Sink und Comm things—for instance, that babies were |roitud. It would. bo difficult to MaKe! “io taedey Cho i caus of te found on ri banks and brought to! the eves stream to order, Many phy- ‘ ; families in doctor's satchels, which, of | siclans have studied this case and do| crease in the price ailding mi course, the real Dorls knew not to be | Hot doubt it, “Only the ignorant doubt terial the cost of the new Dreamland PS pig | 5 onality, anyhow. He toney Island will be $65,800 true. Tho wisest personality, Sleeping | MUtple personality, any hu Pier at Coney Island will be $65,80 : san advil ata Soe Hinstead of $55,000, the nial exti- Maragaret know and advised the other A LARGE LOAI cee ear hesorarucie Fit girls, but for twenty years they knew a Lon Anatase, convioios as aH Ha " |nothing of her. An interesting fact : oe he pler ig to be built by the ¢ is that while Sleepins Margaret was; 3 @ Worthless loafer, is frec on and leased ty a company of Coney the most intelligent, Sick Doris wag, five years’ probation Islanders, who ed to pay a rental | ————>_-— Jwhich in ten years will pay for the jtion, five y ss inore will be given IN THE APPAM CASE) tve'iesseis'in' niet fas. | M Mitche wanted to know Ambassador Calls on} from the old pier are to be taken leare of, ommissioner Stith said ‘Tho statement is made that thousande| State Department to Stop the are oO weur evyerlassen who do not really need | ate Department Pp te [he unlenstood there was provision for them, If you are one of these unfortunates, Litigation, jthem, Lockers wi » Installed for then these glasses may be ruining your) Rid gale bea thelr use, but it Is understood the eves Instead of helping ther. ‘Thousands | WASHINGTON, Heb, 23.—Lormal| anglers will have to pay for the priv who wear these “windows may prove for} representations were made to the|! of fishing fi privately nted city owned pl The World's Greatest External Remedy. | \Coughe and Colds | ‘on obest aod i devween shoulder blades) | Wenk Chests, | Any Local fain, The marks of the Mme bloodstains on impressed bottle corre. TALK OF WHITLOCK sponded exactly with prints or| FOR WAR SECRETARY Hanet's fingers taken when he was H arrested for a minor offe ® some F are timo before in Philadelp r Minister to Belgium Favored by} Fitted athe dence is supported by the statement Wilson for Several Reasons, | of Miss Helen Buck, Miss Hellner’s conceded, would be considerable, bo- cause of his actual experience in the one. Democratic leaders Whitlock would the police then interfered and took the fwo men to @ police station, where Hanel admitted he was tho man wanted for. murder, “My name is Joseph 1, Hanel, and 1 am known also as Joseph Harwick and Joseph B, Pettus,” his story ran, the police repeated it, “Until April 28, 1915, | was employed as a butler in the home of Mrs, Sulla Hell- also declared bring political, as well as personal strength to the Wil- m Cabinet, t son of his record 4 Mayor of Toledo, ©. along mod- sociological lines, rich ei itaa FOG CLOGGED TRAFFIC ner in Brooklyn. Before accepting ON RIVERS A that position I had been living in « ND BAY |iciicine house in New York known pes [as the Seamen's Mission, Much of the Shipping Hereabouts! “There 1 met ——" (the police | p A Pasviies would not make public the name of Was att a Standstill Because Of | the alleged accomplice), “who told me Thick Mist in Morning, | he had obtuined @ position as a butler The sun falled to burn through the | !2 the home of Mrs, Heilner, but was | not going to accept it. “Here are imy nd ia the | clothes; you take the job,’ he tald mo. water approaches to the! 1 did so, and afterward we planned city and Its Manking rivers werc|the robbery of the house. a naka! : | “We met several times during the cloaked In impenetrable mist, Most! \ My of ny parviog there, pel we of tho foghorns and whistles which | ways discussed the plans for the rob { sought to blare a way through |bory. Finally tt was decided that on murk in the early hours ceased |the next day the matd was off, | was »ward Noon, a8 shipping, save for! to call my pal and he was to come out boats, clung to the shores to!to see me. We were then to rob the dangers place, ly after noon dis- |" "On April 2: migt and was a day off, and for trate again ar sky in the morning. carly tog of this morning, forenoon th the sun the 1915, the maid took | left about 9 o'clock | When she had gone, way * for a short time, for 1 phoned my pal, and he hurried to ut 1 o'clock fog came up again the house, I opened tho door and tet Quarantine the steamships him in, Then [ told him to hide in| Stephen from Para and the Algon- the pantr ile 1 went upstairs on quin from the West Indies and seven | the pretense making beds, but freighters were held fast to their really to rob the house, invorings until the blanket lifted. We separated on the pavement in ALFRED A. KOHN Announces a SPECIAL “ Roa! CONCLUDING S A LE Ladies’ Smart Shoes To avoid carrying them over, 1,180 pairs of LADIES’ SHOES; various styles and leathers; mostly blacks; © few with gray uppers; not extremely high cut tops; quality absolutely the finest obtain- able; the kind we sell regularly from @6.00 to $18.00 « pair; are offered at this QUICK. ACTION PRICE, 365 i ALFRED A. KOHN Creator of Smart Shoe Fashions FIFTH AVENUE AT 42D ST, ection BROOKLYN WOMAN KILLED] sami that T planned the AND SUSPECT ARRESTED |ioining't do with ine murdge IN BALTIMORE ASSLAYER| Woman. ‘The first I knew of it was my pal told me, Detective Dowd, who went to Batti. more for Hanel, telephoned to Pollee Headquarters ‘this morning that Hanel had agreed to watve extradi- tion, and as soon as he could him before a Justice there he start for New York with him. He said Hanel was already contrad! some of his previous statements, it seemed likely he would be soon ready to make a full confession. ~~ HAVE ROSY CHEEKS AND FEEL FRESH AS A DAISY—TRY THIS: glase of hot water Phosphate before breakfast | out poisons | —— | { healthy bloom in your fac your skin get clearer and clearer, to wake up with. out a headache, backache, coated tongue or « nasty breath, in fact to feel your best, day in and day ont, just try inside-bathing every morning for one week. : Before breakfast each day, jass of real hot water with a teaspoon- ful of limestone phosphate in it as ® harmless means of washing from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, ur bile and toxins; thus cleansing, tening and purifying the entire ptary canal before putting more nto the stomach, The action of hot water and limestone phosphate: an empty stomach is wonderfully in- vigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases and acidity and ives one » splendid appetite for ° jas A quarter pound of limestone phos- phate will cost very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate that just a soap and hot wal cleanses, sweetens ond freshens the skin, so hot water and limestone phos- phate act on the blood and internal o1 who are subject to co: stipal us attacks, acid stomach, rheumatic twinges, also those whose is sallow and complexion pallid, ssured that one week of inside- MRS. JULIA HEILNER drink a | aw JOS) HANEL are bathing will have them both looki: and feeling better here my pal told 1 coine downstairs i When he told me} ided to leave this, we de He not tell me dots murder, but the next day L in the papers, We went to New York and from there to Philadelphia, “The following we pawned the|! Jewelry in that chy, Lean't Fomember | the name tu tthe pawn shop. I To-Morrow, Thursday, February 24th Paris News in: These Spring Suits Fashion's ) Newest Products This new showing for Thursday is an advance collection of models from the mas- ters of style—richly tailored costumes of the newest materials, showing the limit of what can be accom- pikes at the price— earing no extra charge because of their authentic newness. Showing the new period influences—coats with the new peplum and postilion coats. The correct light shades of gabardines and twills and Spring weight suede velours in the latest French checks. An advance guard, composed of the best suit styles the new season has brought forth, at a price typical of the new fashion shop. No Charge for Alterations At the New Fashion Shop Nineteen West 34th Street QOOOOOO “The Tattler” Always Has a Rattling Good Article About Doings in Social and Club Circles in the Editorial Section of The Sunday World! ©OOOOOe ome CC®