The evening world. Newspaper, October 18, 1916, Page 3

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CRE RETR E Se re reer rm tre a _THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER. NOTEON LUSITANIA No Man Need Support ‘OFFICERS OF OSTH Vivid Pen Picture ofOne | NOT YET ACCEPTED. Mother-in-Law, Is Ruling NOTFORCEDQUTBY OFthe Most Melodramatic BYULS, SNSPOLK OFTRis Unmarried Judge sys (RDERS New York Murder Trials | The Judge is Mortimer C. O'Brien. His address | Acting seudary of of State De- '8 White Plains. He say , nies German Memorandum ; It’s a mistake for a man nto live ‘Is About to Be Published. | The in the same house with her. | — Her value increases directly with| SEES POLITICAL MOVE. Mother- the square of her distance. Only a Smile of Contertpt From Rofrano as He Heard Witness From the Death House Unfold the Story That, the Prosecutor Believes, Links the Former City Official Inseparably With the | Murder of His Rival--Gentle Manner of the | Assassin in Mcrked Contrast to His Tale of Crim anticline Conley Had to Retire for Phy-| sical Reason—Lynch Asked | to Be Relieved. Jeremiah A, O'Leary, who hae | Joined hands with those sterling Irish When she tries to be an umpire \, thoate, Elihu Won't Be Drawn Into Dis-| in- J patriots, Joseph H, Choate, miiba cussion of Case at This she gets what the umpire gets. Stiinta te eves ar the eset By Lindsay Denison. A On the wall just back of the wit-;told how he was driven to murder The trouble is she wants to be of Charies tvans Hughes, told a small (20 10" BAil TUR backs Ot tie wie aurulnat lls will. Against hie wil, he [audience in Cooper Union Jast night explained sweetly, because he wanted that President Wilson was respon-| the Supreme Court are pictured the) to use a knife or a bludgeon, and his nible for the ousting of Col. Louls Three Fates of the Greeke—Clotho, | Pfinelpals He dia ROL ike spelen By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. D. Conley and other officers Of B® wi sat up above on a celestial bank | he states again and again on the wit- No man need support his mother-in-law, Sixty-ninth Regiment and that the ness stand, because it waa sure to settlement of the Lusitania sinking, marble bench, accord: | jake a noise and d a “The value rotherdin« pases ¢ 80 ; President is back of a movement to | nu a o and draw a crowd, has not been accepted by the t nited | The value of a wother-in-law increases directly as the square of her destroy the Irish character of the 0s to the inspiration of the artiat, and lg elodramatically he leape ‘ Up trom States, Acting Secretary of State Polk alatance. Bixty-ninth Regiment, reel. { off from a distaff the thread of | «the revolver fur. formally announced to-day. " ac ; nished by the District Attorney I Tho mother-in-law ought to be a Wilsonian NeW” Hercival E Nagle, a veteran of the life of Everyman; Lachests, the! hand, showed how. te "pushed. on Polk made this announcement be- the 'Bixty-ninth, la activel) Interested cause Of published reports that the tral—and never is. . lackadaisical lady who indicated the | through the g¢orn pocket and lining “The mother-in-law who tries to be an umpire gets jn the National Guard and holds rank *P@0 ef that thread which he might inside MPMhiae ck ae ieee memorandum had be epted and what the umpire gets. of Lieutenant Cotonel on the reserve @2J0¥, and Atropos, whb, with keen |into Galmarl, His eyes faltly blased would be used as a final “The young wife who lives with her mother and jit, He was on the staff of Gen. Sears, clipped the thread and made! nt the Jury after he had made the tes settlement. These ed that her husband 4s between the devil and the deep aca.” Dyer at Camp Whitman last June as| the verdlet effective, eeete, he Wha. the litte tcer manne Germany reiterated her contention These are some of the things that Judge Mortimer Lteutenant Colonel in the Quarter-| Merete picture, dimmed and) Chidiike gestures, which the always Nag LEN ard AD ace hit JB file ea . O'Brlen thinks about mothersdntaw. In the White master's Corps, Lieut. Col, Nagle) PmOiNs ly ears of grime from out Hath Brissied interpreter, was justifiable, but admitted the loss! . bial ideas en, made the following statement to The| of the dust of White and Centre behind him, repented, with MEsAGSGHCER lived Wee UETRACHAbD Plains City Court the other day Judge O'Brien listened Reon Streeta drifting into the Criminal ven when he transiat- ang expressed regret and promised __ ghey sympathetically to the story of Albert Jenny, who was Evening World to-day; ale urts Building, wat to-day a aoft-| sang inte sonora he encerword Weuslal Pepatation caaaaTAME: arraigned on a charge of nonsupport and desertion, | “I have no desire to enter IMO ©) faced, cupid.mouthed, —rutnd-eyed, | puck wy iEruved’ Die for ar tee “The note has not been accepted," | He defended himself by explaining that he was compelled to leave home Ahad ttl faba Ae friendly. terms | DADY- -volced young man who calmly | Prudence aaid Polk, “and it will not be made! because bia wife's mother lived with him and he would not support her, | Whom T have bln on Frietlll AAtE Public. Stories that it Has been a A wife must live with her husband to be supported by him,” ruled ‘for a number cepted und would be published were fudg. Time, He Declares. Law: | ,. The last omeeceencmcemmivenaseme an . WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. German memorandum to this Govern- ment, proposing certain terms for the of clouds or a / © “he gave mo hell for | ce tie rhe course of the trial has not} LALSHOR look like m shown how Carnivale and Fennimore © union op This was Gactano Montem » reproved me for my lm- {told of making Fates Lachesis and | ¥(in® fresh.” him asa private and officer of the © O'Brien, “A man only marries the daughter and not the mother-in- . 0.|pipked Monfemagno as the proper Sixty-ninth Regiment. J am actuated no, | Diy printed for partisan pu law. It 1s not necessary for him to support the latter.” lonty by an Irishman's love of fair] ian thread of the span of the lita) man to co Re tre anaaet for we . opi ent is not going to be i | . +, | 0! lehael Gaima pler, Io < oavie State Department is not guing to belie 19 ~ BACHELOR JUDGE, — = | play when I state that Mr. O'Leary's 0% Milehael Gaimari, gambler, yall Waetnes er not Rohrens and drawn isto a Stcuaon at this thm THAT MAY EXPLAIN IT. |charge that the Wilton Adminiatra-| Partisan and poiitietan, wax br ullty of putting them to work on It, t was plainly stated at the De Vu O'Brien's iinexampled temer- | oFeeee-ee * hing to do with the re- |? Montemagno with the request that| artin Littleton, ment that officials considered 1 ys tion had anything Ihe cut it off short with a finc ney, says that if inted for in (go ways. For one thing, he is only twen- ty-elght, and looks so much younger that I watched him consulting with 4 client for ten minutes, and had no ' he was the Judge until he told lanation is that moval of Col. Conley ts unfounded. “LT was stationed at Camp Whitman and have personal knowledge of the causes leading to tho removal of @f- ‘fcers there and of the retirement of other officers in Texas. Col, Conley jand Lieut. Col. Phelan were dropped Jon the report of a board of surgeons for physical disability. I am sure Conley will agree with me when I say that the President and the Ad- ministration had absolutely nothing } |to do with it, Major Lynch, who ac! publication of the story political move to partment in the condu ! eign affairs, In addit ® ptated the Depart eign infue take advai the truth to-day It will be shown that si , Carnivale and Fennim who bated blac kamith especially for the purpose | the whole Gaimart clan, chose him as and boiled in garlic for twenty-four! Mike Gaimari's murderer because he hours—a treatment which seemed to| bd a tbe record of committing other ones (°° murders for hire undetected, So far it the almplo Italian-American mind to has only been. shown that Montes insure certain nd horrth death fo) magno became acquainted wi his the man wounded with the weapon, | Convicted associates in’ the Gaimarl Rocco Carnivale and Frank Fenni- | (eurder about @ year before ho killed at ‘ 6 te pear here is no r to doubt more were the two, Mon they had on to think of him. who first pro Montemgano has all the nervous, pinks of Gulint none-rubbing, Jerky, moody churacter- tos of the dope fend. One rea The t nf Hd y sald th given by Joe La 8 serving & sen- day a mburrass the De- of its for- was also teen-inch knife, ma re age of the tion in bringing up the time. Although no definitely would be s hb is a bachelor He said, rather dublously, that his future liced by any remarks on the subject of the mother official might be pr when ttled, indications were the ld not be concluded un- lection, nla case MANO HAYS, ysed to him the snip. i's thread of existe: ir greaé and good friend tl after the The Lusit than tingly “But you can't get ! | you are,” 1 assured him, it did when Seer a5 16 Sixty-ninth in| Michael Rofrano, who’ was then a: tence for another “under-the-bridge” | nounced more than six months ago| “Wasn't your revolutionafy ruling |as Colonel of ie) oie ith 18 srapty Camitatustoner ot Bivael Ciuanc| ganehee for He delay wt arriane | that the Berlin set 1 M4) read in open or furtive at | Texas in the interim betwee ling under the Mitchel Administration | the, thread allowed to Galmart by | “substantially satisfactor The usands of breakfast t 8 this » |Conley'’s retirement and the appolnt- at sf estratlen) Lachests, was the fact that Carnivale came the Sussex tragedy, and thi ine? You really believe, do you iment of Capt. Haskell of the United | 40d also a statesman pledged to con- | was too full of oplum to exact action | Lusitania settlement was held up un- a 5 ere alry to be colonel of the/@¥er Tammany Hall for the Inde.) from Montemagno, also a drug vie- that the mother-in-law i# to ny unhappy marriage » | States ¢ » United States assure twelt that Geman p : yan be | regiment while it is in the United that German pledges would be kept pendence League movement, wanted | tit: ame for m Facing Mont magno these two days ASBURY PARK, N. J. Oct. 18%—|c, 1 that the son-in-law Is a misers | ¢ [States service resigned in Texas be- Galmari “out of the way," which Is] hay beea Rofrano, the! Following a conference with Presi- | Oe) et is Cause the climate and the arduous|Just as pleasant a way of raving | prisoner at the, bar, Tho traditan | bls Secret 1 . + se "C) im” 0% elo ast side is that a it Wilkos Secretary “1 do believe those things, because + lGuties required in active field duty | "Croak him” nut his thread of the a t Rofrano three | vbr cations” published repo: that the lot my experie on the bench,” d United States had accepted a set-|eiared Judge O'Brien, “When I went tlement of the Lusitania ease. based linty the White Plaina City Court L Pec tee Getnan eontention, wat ened ® domestic relations court, were too muth of a strain on a mun/|#pan of life, of his years, “{ was born in Ireland. I se! rs with the Sixty-ninth ¢ iff, to “turn down” Dan Riordan So Montimagno, now under sen-|and send Rofrano to Congress; that nce to dio by et city In the death | Foley laughed at Rofrano, who tried nalr at Sing Sing Prison, 19 in tho! t@ take the Han vote” of the dis-| Juoce MORTIMER : C O'BRIEN $ 7 stifled jmany y et from Foley and wan folled b: q 4 AtinGk was Jstioeg, has woekly sessions, Ive! - — —————| am wrapped up In its charact witness stand giving testimony Gatmarh “4 TF Whent Continues Senantional Advance | potohed ether a lot of marriages for years, butts into the gi ,e traditions, No one would resent more | against Rofrano, charged with having t is the plan of the prosecution to CHICAGO, Oct. 18-—Wheat hepa nerat aay miciand Fea han gle that thie ent nee AMO tronyly thangl any attuck on the nired him, through Carnivale and) PTOv® that this political enmity led ts | J tinued ita nenautional advan shia ded a Cada bate npc bide ie wien he pavert traditions and character of the Sixty-| eo iimore and two othet retainers (20 murder, at Rofrano's behest, of i Shortly after the opening rrehance to discover the commonest Nene eaieeete > ninth. Mr. O'Leary must know that| Fennimore anc imari. Wheat was up f cents over tast {| causes of domestic unhappine he: de Col. Haskell will not remain ynel | named Brondini, to de murder plier ano, with amit of bald spot at 3 Close, while May was up 1 3-4. World Meh) alWaod a. Inlatala: ThE aw achean tise f the Sixtysninth when tl ment) Now and then when Mentemagno [he back of his head, with a kes +. | Manaaeen EFAS His ep! man to live-in the: same. hous her all her lif urns to New York and Is mustered | testifies he looks very wild and vi- now ar Abate smile of intellige * with his wife's mother. The er husband out of the United States Army. He) vioiy aw for instance when he tells trial for tres as ho sita at 18:39) trouble with her is that she wants she becomes suspicious of return to the r Pogh titi: bid " eeccwcecceccccns, | frouble with for ia that she wants (jon ReneS ae Biaty-ninth will elect ity own How he at last shot Galmarl down, | murderer than, de A STOP CATARRH! OPEN {has done a wonderful thing for :mother fills her daughter up olone! ; ; For ten days he had been brought ata banguet - TRILS AND HEAD { her son-in-law by giving him [things stie's heard or i any sive personal knowle ane from his home in Brooklyn to erin Hummers her daughter, and that he ought the poor man com Mt {that Col, Haskell ix a competent and | treet he ‘ past NOS EA {| to repay her by giving in to inaWer ft Jot of charges experienced officer who entertains no| Mars Madiaon Street home in sel and ble broth | Says Cream A\ ‘Kpplied i in Nostrils ¢, continually and letting her run | from his wife—thanks to his mother- Pace prejudices, pee: Once he had been put through y fy totiten oe s band 4 4 the house. A man won't stand | in-liw | —_—_ s rehearsil of the killing he was to . Ag Bod RUCOGRSIOR -Colds at Onc stand low pa ie ravee rare ae 4 | ol 1) for that’and he ought not to |." “But she doean't alwa Hankel A Wedilog ts Set for) go, Fifteen times after that Carnt- dom oft ne eyea of the witness | Se SL h | at. 1 3 el 4, ie eareeterseanss: a pa eMothorsticlaw lanherone| stnees at role, ALBANY, N, ¥,, Oct, 18—The mar lv ale and mnimore Gwho have ale Rote ano made me Alt beside him, your nostrils a gerd and your! eirthest off. If sle's so far away that} is the ke: rlage of Mixs Regina Farrell, daughter dy becun to serve xentences for Mid Montemagn ribing a meet head is stuffed and you can't breathe ‘ y ‘ P | ing of the conspirators at the Mat of ‘ts -otulle y , he her only the home she ma Mra. John Henry Farrell of this share in the murder) and the tha firendint or t freely because of a cold or caturrh, just tte f ; ndini« to urge him to greater Mek a email boitle of Hix's: Ceoam Belt Lb p ammoot mands she onitdteneipleves,cceka | City, and. Dh Henry 8 Hassell. 8 8-1 aronditil thers brought him haste Inthe murder, “He poured “ Py o « Cream Buln ow heir lunches, is a conjurer with ive banian of Yokohama pan, i i: e adrink of e and ade Willian N. Has. | aeroas the Brooklyn Bridge, he says, Nv i and made All day ye Mr. Little in a gentle volce, and with a wink at any drug stor me drink.” this fragrant, antis postrile a é the monthly bills, She takes on | wud brother of Col herself so many of the dull nece | kell, pt the Sixty-ninth Megt-|on his murder project, essary taske that wear Gut the | ment. N Ho wil Lake. plac y nerves, if not the lov: observed Rofrany to on, in a whisper and with “He even says 1 bought bliin rT mother-ine mar: | St. Vincent de Paul Chureh on Oct Matton) Lion Ubabe: bwatne (a aring! ‘ alin druscide| ped. lovers. The husband "ng {James «Farrell, son-in-law of the | ANY 2 9 Tat ena) oothing and healing t vn matters! the wife have a beautiful freedam |iate Anthony N, Brady, will give the | up to @ trifling misdeed with paing- A‘ Ta Balle, confexsed m on MUCOUS membrane ~etant rel | mAh! how good it feels, Your nos; WHERE “BUTTING-IN" MOTHER. trils are open, your head is clear, no} IN-LAW MAKES TROUBLE, more hawking, snuffli.g, blowing: no) “You see, a young woman never more headache, dryness or struggling finde < ut when her husband is telling and you get f Bie Jim Minott, n Rofrane fra sneered angrily as testifying against BIER Tomorrow, Thursday oD Yo sel First Fall Sale ated Coats $30 Materials $30 Models 520 e An immense semblage — of Hi mannish, roomy styles, some of them handsomely fur- trimmed, in wool velours of splendid quality, and in the \ a y time of companionship they could not | bride in marriage, and the It enjoy if a mother-in-law did not | A. Farrell, 8. J. brother of t live with them.” will celebrate the nuptial onal situa. | Clayton IK. Haskell, broth en that sive | bridegroom, will be the bi udge O'Brien pronounced oracu. | Miss Theresa Farrell will frankness in ord delib r to avoid te guilt, he! Joseph | taking bride, Dy | punishment for breath. Ely's Crear: Balm is just | Mor the truth and when he isn’t until| |ter'a maid of honor what sufferers from head colds and ca-| yi), Ue martial long white | Kk have a passion for |= tarrh need. t's a delight. ee o's left alone, Rut if) answ yWaierat te hee | . a = ner mother, who has had a husband with t Goran, MBN Toten a lithe shuld" £ — —_——_ jo to mh if he thought tt along with @ mother-in win Now England the youns who marries has a thrifty hobit of! taking his wife home to the paternal acres and the maternal roof,” [ said "Don't you think that a woman 4s | entitled to a home of her own?" | “Oh, that's different,” Judge O'Brien (\ Jassured me, “It's much ev woman to live wit mother than for him to live her That's the Chinese plan | do you justify it? bq |THE SECRET OF | EXPECTS TO BE BOSS.” “Oh, because a man expects to be boss in his own home, but a woman is resigned to more or less dependence. he explained often a man | must support his mother and he can't keep up two households, If | marry | shall take my wife to | TRY THIS NEW CAPTIVATING SANDWICH | $$ 1 low! Of lettuce, “Sunbeam Olive. Zest w | farmer two thin slices of buttered bread (or with “saltine™ or “eh crackers) and you have a sandwich astonishin good and unlike anything you have ever tasted SUNBEA “OLIVE ZEST" with her | | | { RUTTRRED BREAD } ASTONISHINGLY GOOD § delightful combination of luscious olives, sweet pimento pepper | my Parents’ home. gh sure \ a(t (elighttul combination of tuscious oliy t pimento peppers AMY Barents Home, ea bi various. rough sur anil pidueatisniees.. Mor. ing sandwiches it is better than meat, more do most of the work. And there may face, light weight ty and more economical, For after-theatre lunch or when ¢ k. And there ma : re unexpectedly drops in-IT'S GR i SE TT Lane ee Pv eea at LMT) woolens Get a bottle from your grocer to-day and try it | earning $10 a week married a git! he'd Authentic copies My A Nichols & Co. k courted for ten years and took hee from leadmg de ustin, Nichols > Inc. —New Yor! {home to live with his mother, The signers-—filled from their tremendous collars to their ! » the ‘The Largest Importing, Manufacturing, Wholesale | Grocery Concern in’ the World Sole Manufacturers. latter's allowance was cut d wife felt she didn’t bave « the man told me that if he choose between his mother wife he'd take his mother, 1 sald ‘As a man L honor you, but the law Says You must support your wife.’ “A woman's love 8 more unselfish \ than a man's, and therefore she ean No Charge for Alterations endure his mother while hers drives “There's just one way for a man to met along with his mother-in-law that's to get away from her!” wr the eat adalal ls Carpenter Beaten and Robbed. , Auguat Warpule, a carpenter, Neu |625 East One Hundred and thireye him wild,” the Judge summed up. fourth Street, was attended at the Willis Avenue Fridge this morning (or % N ineteen West 34th Street graceful skirts with that smartness which is not available in lower priced coats. May be worn in company with 875 coats, with credit to the wearer, Fashion Shop & porsible fracture of the sk et upon by two men on and then thrown to the He wee ree tals moved “e the Harlem How ago jusked Tom Foley, then | B Slayer Enacting Gaimari Murder ; Study of Rofrano Watching Him Hontem. illustrates he he killed Gaimari ba him, La Salle ts fat, olly, selt- peogs } Al and John, Rofrano would not have dent and a bit o} | been on trial to-day. The two were Rofrano smile for ‘indicted for the murder of one Cars more pityingly con . “There | dellt, half an hour after Mike Gaimart is 4 man who stands at the door of was’ stabbed In 1913, following bis the death chambe Rofrano seems first quarrel with Rofrano, One Baldo, to may. “Why would he not say | the principal witness against them, drove him to commit the crime, If It! was convicted of over-enger perjury will cause the District Attorney to in| and they went free, When Mike wae tercede for him? Why should he not killed the District Attorney sent for say he was tortured mentally until) tp in a burry, he did murder against his will? Poor here are two ways for you to get boy!" leven with your brother's murderers,” Back in the audience are other! he said, “Shoot them and go to the human elements of the great hum chair for it or help me c melodrama which 1 get credit as good cit Imari Brothers took th out, There sit tog ter") and Al the murdere of natural! Gaimarl, tofrano's weary faced, pretty and his wearler, wrinkled r. From time to time there ppears over against these the tal stately Celtic beauty, Mike Gaimari's Every morning, until hee xobbing 1 control, ‘Tommy said to a man who was Introduce Montemagno's wife—legally ‘his wid- him at the door of the court ow-—sit’ and sobs near the door until while Montemagno was in the midst ghe is led out for disturbing the pro- Of his atory of siauchtering Mike, Nis | ceodings. brother, ut L really could not stay| Out. in the hall little circ les, closd- in there any longer and listen to that |iy watched by policemen in uniform, —that-that" and after the third) whisper and curse in grating tones trial he spat in disgust os he re-/ and growl and look askance at e strained hieself from the « ep | other. thete which sumeested th descriptive of bia brother's glib as saxein But had ft not b BONWIT TELLER &,CO. recy Si of Copuas PIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET by the Al in inserutable, with «a from th graft and gunp you will excuse nat the hesis of The Vogue of the WOOL JERSEY _ FROCK for “Jeunes Filles’ Individualized Types of Youthful Charm Parisian Chic and Esprit in Misses’ Wool Jersey Frocks 25.00 29.50 45.00 to 79.50 Modes distinctively for Misses of 14 to 18—frocks that have the cachet of the leading Paris coutourieres to the * “jeune fille.” Featured are the fashionable svelte silhouettes in Chemise, Moyen Age, Basque, Redingote and Belted types. New and original treatments are applied to these wool jersey frocks in the form of fur beading, worsted crewel embroidery, stitchery, Indian banding, metallic embroidery. Colors: Navy blue, brown, green, burgundy, taupe, beige, gold and rose. Misses’ Suits Fashions 25.00 to 350.00 The personality of the “jeune fille” of 14 to 18 years finds its exact complement in a Bonwit Teller & Co. tailleur. The youth and charm, the verve and esprit of the younger set are admirably expressed in these suit fashions for misses. Misses’ Tailleurs Simple, 25.00 to 75.00. Misses’ Velour de Laine Suits, 27.50 to 110.00. Misses’ Peau de Peche Suits, 85.00 to 250.00. Costumes of velveteen, velvet paradis and Callot satin, 59.50 to 350.00. Featured are suits of marked simplicity for school and college wear, three-piece suits after Lanvin and Jenny, with yery simple stra; shoulder frocks and buttonless belted coats; Redingote suits wit fur stole collars, wine color satin suits with deep collars and cuffs of Kolinsky, long cassock coat suits, velvet suits with Chinchilla fur and the deep, intricately soutache embroidered Callot girdle. Many other types with ingenious and interesting arrangements of the fur collars and cuffs and other style details, 4 | ] |

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