The evening world. Newspaper, February 28, 1916, Page 3

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TELS OF KLUNG TOAVENGE WRONG Arrest of Innocent Man Brings Confession and Clears Up Mystery. VICTIM. HOTEL MAN Unwritten Law Will Not Save Her From Prosecution, Says Texas Prosecutor. | FORT WORTH, Tox., Feb. 28.—Im- Plicated by Miss Lols Gulon, one of her closest friends, fifteen-year-old Mrs. Charles Harrison has confessed to the murder of W ‘wealthy hotel owner, whose - body, riddied with bullets, was found near here two months ago Mrs. Harrison says she killed Warren deliberately and after long thought because he had wronged her. Both Mrs. Harrison and her bus- band, who is wealthy and a nephew of the wife of Senator Culberson, ‘Were arresied and afterward released en $2,600 ball, Mrs. Harrison says her husband was a witness of the Killing, Dut that she alone did the shooting. A few days ago G, B. Wige! oafe waiter, was arrested, charged with the crime. Miss Guion, who had | been a confidante of Mrs. Harrison, became so wrought up at the thought @p innocent man might suffer that @he sought the police and told her story. She also asserted that Mrs, terling Richardson, wife of the pas- tor of the Weatherford Mothodiat Church, was a witness of the affair, but Mrs, Kichardeon declares she was @ut of town that night. Mrs. Harrison, taen Miss Katherine Vance, says she had told Harrison of her former relations with Warren and consulted him about what should pe ie. She and Harrison were mar- Flod two days after Warren was killed. In her confession Mrs, tells this story: “I was introduced to Warren In vember. 1914, und a few days later met him downtown. He walked @round with me, carrying my parasol, and when I left him I negli fake it. He carried the parasol to his hotel. Whon I went there to get it he locked the daor of his room and overpowered me by force and threats, “On tho night of Dec. 22 Charles Harrison and I went out for a drive. ‘We stopped downtown, and Charlie Wont to get his shoes shined. Then Warren came along. I thought it would be a good time to kil him, so I asked him to get into the car and take a ride. When Charlle came back ZT introduced them, and we went out on the Benbrook road. “After a while I pretended there hing the matter with one We all got out, and I @natched a pistol that Charlie carried in the car. Warren looked at the tires, and when he came around in front I turned and began {> tire. Ho threw up his arms and stumbled backward. I continued to shvot un- til the pistol was empty. I fired elght times. Charlie and I then got into the car and came back to town, “Many times I had thought I would be justified in killing this man. I told Charlie about it, but he wouldn't take me seriously. He didn't think I had the uerve to do It. We were en- gaged at the time, I thought about it then, but never formed any plan to kill Warren until I saw him puss- ing that night.” Warren, it is thought, was begging for his life when killed, His body Harrison | DRINK A GLASS | | OF REALHOTWATER | BEFORE BREAKFAST. ca Says we will both look and tee! | clean, sweet and fresh | G@ and avoid Iliness, | phd | Banitary science has of late made rapid strides with results that are of untold blessing to humanity, The lat- east application of its untiring research the recommendation that it is as necessary to attend to internal sanita- | — tation of the drainage system of the hu-} man body as it is tot house. Those of us who are accustomed to feel dull a drains of the heavy when we arise, tuffy from a cold, sty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel ns fresh as a daisy ng the sluices of the system ing and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonous stag- nant matter. Every one, whether ailing, sick or} well, should, each morning before} breakfast, drink a glass of real hot} water with « teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver and bowels the previous | day's indigestible waste, sour bile and i thus i poisonous — toxins; cleansing, | aweetening and purifying the entire| mentary canal before putting more | food into the stowae The action of | hot wat ap cmply vigorating. ferment id limestone phosphate on| omach is wonderfully in-| out all the sour waste and acidity | wnd giv uw splendid ap breakfust. While you are your breakfast the phosp! water is quietly extracting a large volume | in of water from the blood and getting dy for a ther hing of all the | le organs, The millicus ¢ ered: with cons stomach tr uthers who | ‘ disorders and sickly complexions a urged to gi after pound of tim atone phosphate from the drug store 'This will cost very little, but is suffi. clent to make any one a pronounced erank on the subject of internal sani- tetion.—Advt, | ‘ We whe are pation rheumatic ious an stiff bloc allow skins, L. Warren, a} 2 ERT ee epee rn ete ae I NT ET TL A THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 15-YEAROL PRIDE Silk Stocking Formula to End Divorce 1911 U.S. PROSECUTOR Will Not Do; Can’t Stand the Acid Test, \SDEFENDED BY Thrills From Female A When a Man Reaches Forty He Has Had All the ttractiveness—What He Wants in Marriage Is Intelligent Friendship. By Nixola Greeley-Smith, Georgie Burns Lacour, lecturing scribed silk stockings for wives as at South Bend, Ind., last week, pre- a “cure for the divorce evil.” “A union suit, @ well fitted corset, a brassiere and gil stockings are the only essentials of said. T hate to thi silk stockings the But here in New us do, do we not? 7 to silk stockings. eerray-waire, venturous female street of South Bend with no more on. a well gowned woman,” the lecturer ink what would happen to the ad- who should faro down the main As for the advice—for South Bend—ts excellent. York—is it necessary? Nearly all of Still it is pleasant to have the formula for pre- serving @ husband's love changed from baby ribbon How many times we have read that the first and only essential to making the most vari- able of human emotions imperishable is the running of fresh baby ribbon through Mngerto. This has always puzzled me. Because, after all, how can one maintain a monopoly based on baby ribbon with baby ribbon only ® cent a yard and consequently at the command of every woman. This same objection applies to the silk stocking prescription with half portion silk stockings at 39 cents @ pair. If only these voluble givers of ad-@——__—_____. vice to wives could realize that mar- rlage has other functions than its primary purposes; that baby ribbon and silk stockings are excellent as far as they go, but that alone or to- gether they have never kept any man's affection, and never will. It ts true that many womea need to be taught the alphabet of personal attractivenese—that nearly all_of us know it during the period of court- ship and that far too many of us for- get all about it after marriage. What a man THINKS he marries and what he GETS ts surpassed only by the difference between what @ was found under a tree in a kneeling position. The “unwritten law" Mrs, Harr as stated shall Spoont “Wil the Harrison's will not save 1 from prosecution, ‘This this afternoon by Mar- , County Attorney. that Warren—if Mrs, confession is true—was liable to a death sentence for his al- leged attack upon her, affect her prosecution for murder?” was asked, lost assuredly not," he declared. » has confessed that she mui dered Warren and that Harrison w: with her at the time. Tho case against both of them will proceed as rapidly as possible,” 7 The Grand Jury haa begun an in- vestigation of the confession made by the girl bride, > —— CRIPPLED BOY ENDS HOPELESS EXISTENCE: “I! Cannot Be a Burden to You Longer,” Writes Lad to Father, Then Kills Self. Belleving he was a burden on his father, Robert Dougal, nineteen| years old, who had been a hopeless | better to marry than to burn | ance. woman dreams and what she sees op- posite her at breakfast five years after, But think a minute. The beauty specialists get all their money from women. Suppose Pauline Fur- long were to confine her ministrations to making fat men thin or thin men well proportioned. She would starve to death. Only men in love care about their waist lines, Husbands are privi- leged characters, What though their waists thicken, thelr hair thins and thoy shave every other day, they are nevertheless stern censors of woman- hood, é And Venue herself would be fortu- nate !f she could pass a board of middle-aged married men without withering criticism Actually, all the baby ribbons and silk stockings in the world won't do more than postpone the death of ro- mance, once romance has started to die. Love may be kept alive a num- her of days or months by oxygen Inducing artifictal respiration or roll. ing Cupid on a barrel may revive him for a while, but the only way to pre serve the permanent interest of man or woman, in marriage or out of it, T! {3 to be an intelligent, sympathetic companion—to permit love to grow up, to develop—and not seek to keep It forever in the glamorous region of youthful romance, where it will choke to death, Marrlage is not romantic can keep it so, St Nothing Paul said it is and 80 preseribed for the human race most infallible formula of fire Insur- Almost any man be lovers—tor a while anyhow But how few men and women can be friends! The best marriage is a flar- and woman cripple since he was twelve, com- mitted suicide to-day by tnhaling gos his furnished room at No. 107 Fourth Avenue, Otto Hester, owner of the house, found his body, Near it was this note: “Dear Pop: I can be a burden to! you ho It is for the best, I cannot stand this existence, Forget that | was ever orry to cause you this great trouble. Will the father, lives in W and works in’ Mun- hattan. He kept the boy in ? York so as to be near him during the daytime, MRS, SAGE GIVES TO SEAMEN, Contribat Mra toward the of the § ors’ Home at No, wi tween sea and the society has d and its work. Dr, George Sidney Webster, secretary of the so- olety, 19 carrying on @ campaign to stimulate Interest in the seamen. The home on West Street has sleep- ing accommodations for more than twe hundred men, but recently men have been turned away several ¢! }as many oth ing friendship, a steady, stable asso- elation of @ man and a woman tn mutual interest, sympathy and es teem, The trouble with many ma riuges to-day i4 that women have no interests outside that more and more women are re Ing that gO trade" is neither so pleasant nor so profitab! f their home und rr as a occupations now open to them, Perhaps the most serious Incompat!- bility which can exist between hus- | bands and wives is that which grows out of the fact that one partner to the marriage keeps allve and the other dies intellectually. Mon, be- cause of the great advantage they njoy if earning thelr lv erally than women They deserve no eredit for | And tn his tf Are BEN rt mentally speaking, more have t be. n &® man m man=the Ww Serif, @ Company's sales of Beet in New dere “ity for the weok ending Baturday, ‘ob. 26, 4d an follows: a” 211,46 cente per pound.—Advi, the} Pomeati | | to be to keep her job, If a man as- soclates during the day with women who re and think, and who never- theless can and do buy just as much {baby ribbon, just as many silk stockings as his wife buys, be can- not help contrasting them with her, and he 1s sorry that she regards the fact that Mrs, Jones is giving a bridge party next week as more important and Interesting than the battle for Verdun, Not all professional women are in- telligent. Not every wife permits small personal interests to obscure her vision of world events, ‘The point fs that wives have more lelsure than thelr husbands, more leisure than business women, to exercise thelr minds, And many of them won't do It, If two advertisen ts were to be printed side by side, “How to Darelon the Bust’ and “How to Develab tho Mind,” is there any doubt which ad- prtiser would be swamped with an- ‘4 from women? And yet de ment of the mind is really more {mportant, mora necessary. For marriage {8 not for a| day or for a year, or'for five years—It it were the baby ribbon and stik stocking cynics would be right, It 1s for ever, and when a man reaches forty he ‘has had all the thrills he ts likely to get from superficial female attractiveness, What ne wants in marriage 18 intelligent friendship. And that is what the woman of forty secka in marringe, too. Very often the marriage of a boy of twenty-two and a girl of eighteen is perfect so long as they maintain the same dlf- Disaster comes only twenty-two gets to that girl of etghteen | elghteen mentally and emo, y, but grows fat and eettied sive, Sometimes, of course, the woman who grows up, the who les in) immaturity peless cases, and no stockings or obesity | reatments will do them any good Sass PREPAREDNESS BOOMERS RAP FORD'S CAMPAIGN ypaganda De- ipatriotic and to Treason, Manufacturer's P clared to Be lt Close Approa |} Coples of a resolution nounces Henry Ford's campaign not only un-American, and unpatriot but a close approach to treason we: which de- as to-day sent to each member of t Conference Committee on National Preparedness w so notive that the resolutions would be offered for adop- tion at the of the com mitt Cont Committes on Na treason, tic attempts of Henry Ford to prevent the put from putting itself in a condition to resist aggres- ion or invas “It is heurtiess; for if war should and us the result of Mp. Ford's ald be epared or only 1 would pi f honest {then eoul me the tt I r s should p {wa in forme isa'a band, the loss t her richly valued trunk, dward 1. enemy Nally, as President of the White | in Kats ‘Transfer Company, muat pay her $378. The judeine at ix one ot he Righ- est ever obtained for a trunl oNally Pil ured in @ fp if Psi nine the int that aa Miss Yolo was Peer ae. Teen aitads Bleed Tha | ing he Was unable to find her Frat apulication gives reli, GOe,—fart, ‘although he searched high and low, ment of thé Westchester County "Grand Jury charging him with per- ju Justice Tompkins to-day directed that an extra panel of tilesmen | drawn for the trial, Mr, Osborne appeared in court this morning with| hin lawyers, ge Gordon Battle, | Huntington W, Merchant and M. J, ‘Tierney “We want a quick trial," said Mr, Battle, “on these char which are absolutely faise.” "We have been ready all along to to trial,” District Attorney Weeks WILL CASE “CONFESSION” FORCED, SAYS DECKER Court Rules Out Alleged Admis- sions Haslett's Nurse Says Were Made Under Third Degree, ix-Senator Frank J. Gardner and George Decker, a nurse, on trial be- fore County Judge Mitchell May in Brooklyn charged with conspiracy to defraud Samuel KE, Haslett, an aged invalid, by persuading him to sign a certain will, gave the prosecution a setback to-day, Assistant District At- torney Allen sought to place before the jury an alleged confession made by Decker on Feb. 17, 1912, to Chiot Magistrate Otto Kempner, who has ince died. Clark Jordan, counsel and Decker, confession be ground that it duress. Judge and called De Decker testified that when arrested, mplaint of John B. Lord, a he was taken before Magis- Kempner and subjected to @ lengthy third degree. He was refused a lawyer, he said, and answered all questions unwillingly and tn terror, Judge May held that under these circumstances the evidence could not| be used. Mr. Allen was given permis- sion to call Mr, Lord, Detectives Rod- dy and Daly, who arrested Decker, and other witnesses to dispute Deck: "3 story. for Gardner moved that the alleged stricken out on the was obtained under May sent the jury out ———~>-___- TRIAL OF OSBORNE SET FOR MARCH 13 BY COURT Justice Tompkins to Preside at} Request of Both Sides—150 | Talesmen Ordered Drawn, | (Special to The Eventing Work) WHITE PLAINS, N, Y., Feb, 28.— Thomas Mott Osborne, former War- den of Sing Sing Prison, will go to trial before Justice Arthur §, Tomp- kins in Part IL. of the Supreme Court here on March 13, under the tndict- go b ch 18 was set for the lem tnsisted that Justice Tompkins preside. Mr. Weeks was brought into court on 5) 1! order which Mr, Ow b ured from Justice Matt for the cutor to show cause why he & not try Mr, Os- | borne on before March 18. Mn for Tennk. | - He ted to notify Mina| Alta ¥ t in donna contralto, ly with § FORMER JURORS Men Who Indicted Buchanan Testify for Marshali Congressional Inquiry. at DE? Say Attack on Attorney Did Not Cause Represent tive’s Indictment. A special Congressional investt- gating committee began to-day an inquiry into the acts of H. Snowden Marshall, United States District At- torney for New York, on complaint of! Representative Frank Buchanan of Iilinots, President of Labor's Na- | tlonal Peace Council and one of the indicted group that tnoludes David Tamar, the “Wolf of Wall Street;” Franz von Rintelin, German spy, now in the Tower of London; Henry B. Martin, head of the mysterious Anti- Trust League, and various other persons, ‘Three members of the House Judl- clary Committee, Carlin of Virginia, Gard of Ohio, and Nolaon of Wisoon- ain, began thetr sessions this morning In the Federal Building, With them was Mr. Buchanan, on whose demand for the impeachment of District At- torney Marshall the inquiry started, and present also was David Slade, trying to link up with great interna- Osborne case, in which efforts of Mr. Marshall. subpoenaed as witnesses and quea- tioned by the Congressional investi- In particular, 'Y HE SWAYED THEM. ! tonal affairs the once famous Oliver tho Slade brothers were indicted through the All members of the United States Grand Jury of September, 1915, were gators about the proceedings that led to the indictment of the labor leaders, the committee sought to find just how much Influence over WO FRED SHOT THATKLLED BAF Police Finally Get Raina, Who Was Named in Confession of Conspirators. ‘The man named as the second gun- man who took part in the actual mur- | der of Barnet Baft was arrested to- day at One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, near Third Avenue, He ts Thomas Raina, a driver. At the time of the murder he lived at No, 227 East One Hundred and Seventh Street, over the saloon of Ippolito Greod, where the murder waa planned and where the gunmen were paid by Greoo, Giuseppe Arichisilo, the other gun- man who fired one of the shots that killed Baff, named Raina in his con- fension several days ago, as did Frank Ferrara, the chauffeur of the death car, That part of the confession was not made public, but Raina appar- | ently learned that he had been named | and he disappeared from his home. His wite and five children were shad- owed and it was learned that thie morning he was to met his wife, Detectives Di Martini, Banano and Caso followed the woman when she left her flat and when @ stopped on One Hundred and Sixteenth Street near Third Avenue they hid in a nearby doorway. A few minutes later Raina came along and he was talking to his wife when the detec- tives selzed him. He was taken to Police Headquarters where he denied knowing anything of the murder al- though he admitted that he was well acquainted with all the gunmen plotters, ———— DROP OF SEALING WAX CAUSES DEATH OF GIRL Slight Burn on Forefinger, Disre- garded, at First, Results in Blood Poisoning. A rop of hot sealing wax which fell upon the left forefinger of Miss | bottom of any violation of law. the Grand Jury District Attorney Marshall exerted, and whether the in- dictments were found at his request or by the Jurors themselves, This Grand Jury wat for nearly four months investigating the labor propa- ganda, Representative Buchanan, on the floor of the House, made an at- ck upon District Attorney Marshall bs 15 jast, demanding his impeach - ment. Buchanan had not then been Indicted, but ten days later the Grand Jury returned a true bill including his naine. ‘The Congressional investigators asked the jurors whether this attack of Buchanan's har any influence on thelr action and whether Mr, Marshall spoke to them about it and urged the inclusion of the Congressman in the list of those indicted. All the wit- nesses examned during the morning session emphatically denied the alle- gation, A. J, Dale, foreman of the Grand Jury, defended the District Attorney, saying: “It struck me an strange he did not mention Buchanan's attack. thought it was very creditable that he remained silent and never fell out of his judicial capactty, My impression was that he was not influenced in any way by tho attack,” Foreman Dale maintained dictment against Buchanan, others, was base r ubmitted, not swaye for % M tr the as in- well pel Joel D. Barber of fifth Street, another juror, denied any suggestion or Influence from the Dis- trict Attorney, “Did you vote for the indictments * asked hep F of the be We voted on @ Hat including the name of Buchanan,” replied the wit- ness. as the lst #ubmitted to the Attorney? A. Yeu, it was, Q. Were any names left off the list? A. If they were not indicated they were not on the Ist, Q. Did you get the impresnton the District Atte was pressing for Mr, Buchanan's indictment? A. No, xcopt he was making very ernest and ry thorough orts to get at the] m sa tre The investization will continue sev- eral days. J, J. HILL SEES PROBLEM IN FINANGE AFTER WAR Interest Rates in European Bond Issues to Compete With Need for Capital Here. James J. Hill, t of the veteran ery in railroad finance, made vations to-day: | Commercial ory 1s 4 drug on the | market, while investment money ts} high. “After the war the attractive inter- est rates on Eurovean Government bond issues will compete with the need for industrial capital here. “Without a market for surplus products, what will the Amertcan| farmer and manufacturer do? | “Some of our statesmen seem to think that business can aucceed only | in smal) unite, “Tho West has had heavy snowfall, | put snow Is the poor man's fertiltzer, @PESCIAL NOTICES. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK | Cheap wubetizutes vort YOU anme ari | Mabel Elliott of No. Stroet, death to-day at Seney Hospital, The burn at first was disregarded, except Joseph, and her alster, Miss C. Elliott, who worka In an office at No. Manhattan Turn Away Hundreds of Patients the institution 30 cent. 000 provided thi raised the sum to $ make the fifty month," result from many simple cases that 682 Monroe Brooklyn, resulted tn ber ra temporary dressing applied at the moment of the accident, but the flesh failed to heal, the hand and then the arm began to swell and, ac- cording to Dr. Tong, Coroner's phy- sician, polsoning, death resulted from blood Miss Ejliott lived with her father, E. Liberty Stre Manhattan, On Feb, 11 Miss Mabel came over trom Brooklyn dropped in had some packages to mall and Miss to do some shopping and her sister, The sister abel helped seal them. The burn om the drop of blazing wax which fell on her finger was not looked upon as serious, physician called in and sent the young woman to the hospital. Last Tuesday the family Dr. T. M, Acker, was ee EYE AND EAR HOSPITAL IN NEED OF $290,000 Institution Forced to for Lack of Room. Lack of adequate facilities has com- lied the Manhattan Bye, Far and Throat Hospital to turn away hun- dreds of patients every month, includ- ing cases of throat cancer and ma tolditis, quired immediate operations. Many of these patients re- Dr, Arthur B, Duel and Dr, Walter Chappell, surgeons and directors the hospital, are urging contribu- a fund of $290,000, which will used to increase the capacity of An anony- rus donor has offered to give § reat is raised by r subscriptions have 000, It is nece ry, therefore, to raise $116,000 to large gift available, © have been forced to refuse tment to between two hundred and and three hundred cases each aid Dr, Duel to-day, “Per- ss and other affilctions 1, and oth y were treated in H service sole and heel, wear thro ordinary rubbers give. and styles to cover the stormy The Hub-Marks ie your value HUB-MAR ERE Is a well-fitting stylish rubber with a hea h until you have had more service than This rubber looks well, fits well, and wears well. Hub-Mark Rubber Footwear is made in a wide variety ef kinds a and girle in town vr country. The World's Standard Rubber Footwear TAKEN AS GUNMAN (GERMANY HST ZEPELNS SANK 3 BRITISH MARSHES Five War Factories Also De- clared to Have Been De- stroyed in Last Raid. BERLIN (by wireless to Sayville), Feb, 28.—On the occasion of the last Zeppelin raid over England, two Gew- ernment factories and two ammunition factories at Birmingham and one am- munition factory near Bradford were destroyed by bombs the Overseas News Agency saya. The nows agency statement, which supplements the account given out yesterday of the damage done by the airship attack on England om the night of Jan. 81-Feb. 1, follows: “At Birmingham two Government factories and two ammunition fae- tories were destroyed. One brewery was damaged at Eoocleshill. Near Bradford one ammunition factory and three spinning mills were wrecked. A& Partington one bomb destroyed tweme ty-two houses, ‘On the Humber « battery wae silenced, the cannon and searchlights being destroyed. At Grimsby and im the vicinity of Hull considerable dag age was done, as was also the case at Shetteid, “The crulser Caroline and the de- stroyors Eden and Nith were sunk, The Caroline sank in six minutes, thirty-one members of the crew bethg killed, fifty-eight wounded and forty- | seven drowned.” A Berlin despatch on Feb. 10 said | that the three warships mentioned jee been sunk during the Zeppelin raid. This was denied by the British Government, which stated that netther the Caroline nor any other British warship, nor any merchant ship was struck by a bomb, cmccemnatpenicmenine ft. John's Mos Charity Rachre. St. John's Hospital, Long Island City, announces its annual euchre, bridge and dance for the benofit of the sick poor, under the auspices of the Ald Society, of which Dr. James F, Power is Preal- dent. It will take place at the Waldorf- Astoria on Friday evening, Maroh 8. Francis J, Hogan t# President of the Kuchre Committee; P. J. Giascott, ‘Treasurer, and H. J. Heldents, general manager, Miss Anna Butler ts in charge of the Prize Committee. SCALP TROUBLES ENDANGER HAIR Eruptions and Dandruft Should Be Cleared Awav with Posiam. Scalp disorders in the form of acal- ing skin, profuse dandruff and intense- ly discomforting itching eruptions are Lajete skin diseases, and Poslam should be used to clear them a quickly, just as it should on for eczemas on an; rt re It heals, W petegg leaves the iP sweet and clea: is an aid to health of skin ani daily one month for toilet and bat A shampoo with Poslam Soap well die plays its qualities of goodness, For samples, send 4c stampe to Emer- ney Laborat: We New York C' —Adve. with its froth of cream, amber hue, sparkling | brilliancy and mellow flavor is Just the Thing for You Now. aot trom any peed dealers Poslam Soap, contaming ey Neither sole nor heel wi wea men, women, mark, Look for it en the sole, RUBBERS PEE wes see | \

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