The evening world. Newspaper, October 26, 1916, Page 3

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Defense Asserts. WEAPONS With Conspirators, Michael A. Rofrano, accused of Michael Gaimart, opened who was to be tho “clincher” ‘State, with being a conspirator, whose Gaimari was killed, and finally “sitting in a restaurant” he saw frano‘cross Park Row to the Municl- pal Butiding and the others turn each toward the scene gf the killing Under crossexamigution by Mr} swith which Mra, Rofrano Littleton, . by “the u ft opened ani Congune with yous Nes) Veetiheds grams and: dosgriptians, Mira to| (Roy ea vy _ iter name had filled in by Rofrano’s brother, way he had been sitting in theeark| James J ‘ e+e & Row front of Chitd’s tunch room on ————— | Ru Nicate ( — } the nortty side of Du ny BENEFACTOR OF BLIND DEAD. y Nixola Greeley-Smith. the diagrams, which » by —~r—— Five little children sit solemnly it hb prosecution, Bir. Litste vod Willinm B. Watt Worked Unceas-| County Court House in Newark, N. J ‘the witness must have ac hed ingly for the Sightle | Before them {s a huge b! f ng around tw T blind are reading with thelr® 3 ; : } the feat o: Sround tWo Corners | hy core to-day of the death of William which the Prosecutor of Es: it rt es decribed the situation ac-/ p11 Watt, the inventor of the New to prove that thelr mother, Margaret Claire Beutinger, ourately. York system of point writing, Mr. k 5 * > Next Mr. Brothers c 1 a number) wait died yesterday at hie home, No of July 11 sf telephone girls to verify the state-| 1s W " nid He . ; Menta of witnesses regarding mes- ave ite to The map bores the children lages between Carnivale in Brooklyn ine the Mind. {9 ’ For more witnesses testified ye n fifty years ud bee r he tuorat find Rofrano at the Municipal Hutld rity at ATG Pere Pre Dal| gt Lhe ayed ro naticaret ing and the Home & " ah the Blind, to shots and on running to Room A found the de y ich he " he profita| ¢ loor and Club tn Manbatefin. Seetnaciaman his virenaiing: > q hi floor and The calls for which the girls iden- ——— . - b tified slips we: ali in Jan leeman by Car, : * eyes follo t 1915, when other witnesses sa erman Walter Mantey | Bites asses sim Aivale, In their. presence, «ailet Policeman James 8. Browr called to verify the pres man Cahill at Carn) ROFRANO WITNESS IS MIXED IN STORY OF MURDER PARLEY a Mira Must Wave Seen Around ,” Two Corners, Counsel for IDENTIFIED, Phone Girls Tell of Former City Official’s Alleged Talks , Martin W. Littleton, counset for # Gaetano Montemagno to murder to-day’s Proceedings tn the trial of Rofrano watisfed ho had nullitted the effect of the testimony of Lug! Mira, the pick- Pocket’ and auto-nccessory expert for the Mira is the one man, not charged and the other conspirators under the sBrooklyn Bridge half an hour before! @ frahio and seetnéd ‘to Halk to hia. “That’s the BayerCross” the east ede in December, 1915. Ca- hill f9 1. a hospital and his testimony that he then saw the revolver after- wards used on Gaimari will be read to the jury, Policeman Patrick Leon- ard identified the knife with which M.ke Gaimarl was stabbed in 1913. rgeant William Carron and other licemen testified regarding the ar- rest of various conspirators. + Edwatd Carpel, who defended Fen- nimore on a charge of carrying a re valver, was not allowed to tell the nage of the friend of Fennimore who | employed the lawyer, He ald Ro-| met him Jn the Criminal Courts Thulding nnd anids “tol Fennimore | | Judge We P. not to worry Marbn I shall intercede 5Or | I him to stand pat and keep | o will get a very light won- | | . Q. Didn't you tell Rofrano Fenni- | more wanted to get out of jail and! impatient and threatening to up with everything hoe knew?” No, not open up=I anid he was} ready to raise hell Carpel said Rofrano came to him! last fal and said: "I hear you've en before the Grand Jury, swearing to a lot Sof lex-swearing my_ life] away, A sk you to do Is this tell p truth. + Mr™ Litueton objected to Justice Weoks asking questions of the wit- noss tending to show the lawyer had not overheard all the conferences be tween Fennimore and Rofrano, “L object to the questions asked by the Court,” sald Mr, Littleton. “They aro mere repetition. I object to his action in placing emphasis on this in- cident, Your Honor cannot escape | from the disclosure of your evident hostility to this defendant.” Justice Weeks said he thought Mr. Littleton wrong, but would not press the matter. James B. Joyce, clerk in the Chat- | ham and Phoenin Bank produced rec- orda . e f hir- i that the bank had paid a check for $2,900 Nov, 18. 1915; the jcheck was dated Sept. 14, the day before Rofrano disappeared for eight juriadietion of the after his indictment, And was this check for $2,900 the | that R months from the courts Q ‘ was room, E,” to the jury ment, | demonstrated like a The children are M 7; Marte, y. 8. white, slep! of Mra, Jennie Herron of Jar a uceful pe Beuting It is the mark of the Sua aera! unadul- | Prosecutor Wilbur A one genuine, terated Aspirin. Ask for Bayer‘Tablets ~ ASpirin into the t band, A modern princ woman ts on trial and frescoed County—the princ not a w have been laughed being tested a Mra, Beutinger after he had forced the early mornin she occupied w and M and every tablet! bears | ©: of 24 and Bottles of 100 J. S. Pat Office) duster ot salicy able Bayer manutacture, 0 “The Bayer Cross—Your Guarantee of Purity’’ Pocket Uoxes of 12, Botth aret a phy realized that her little children against her husband the st , wandered te then gradually blurred Into sleep, * ee |More Than the Fate of Accused Widow Should Be Settled by Jury in the Mariticide Trial in Robt H Mecarken led their father, Cristof, in the early mornings hours ev of Rofrano'’s bank account dence can be taken legally tn veritica- tia of confessions made by tho howea the inmitry inthe} the Newark Court, ry th an in April 5, 1915, within concerned in tho crime. Ho sword| (ter Giamarl's murder and he saw Rofrano meet Montemagno) Theory of a Fatal Fear Is Advanced in Defense of ~ Wife and Mother Who Shot Down Her Hus- band and Says She Was ckboard with a map on it—a murder tnap on proposition ir rraret, aged 9 stof, 4, and in courtroom ¢ ple yolver from which bis as t of whether man is the owner of her own We He won't bother me any more’ thelr ong wand with which the Prosecutor ated Room A and Hall B and “Mr. Beutinger's bed- ) their ttle mouselike mother for a mo- a Mrs, | 1 of an y it is her hand n entrance in er neh Wo little girls ' bim tion avatled You've Jried the rest now try THE BEST Austin Nicholsecal™ Drstributors, we¥ YOM Austin, Nichols € (’s ‘MAYONNAISE SALAD DRESSING Fresh eggs, pure oil, full strength spices, filtered viney tifically ended from these perfect parts to pro duc It euriches everything on which it is used, 10c and 25e sizes Order from Your Grover. INSIST on the Austin, Nichols & Co., Inc., New York ing, Manuf ng Wholesale Grocery ¢ Sole Manufacturers a per we The Largest Impo: tu | WOMAN'S LIFE NOT THE ONLY) THING IN THE BALANCE, | body. A few hundred years ago, | fand.s C when women were bartered like! ,/and see that every package VEeaue eur eaten entoigiit ani arms | . “tan EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1916. “Is a Woman Owner of Her Own Soul?”’ Issue in Mrs. Beutinger’s Fight for Life |QNTOLEDERLES tire Bewinger's Sister and the Seutinger chiidren. f that day they were awakened by pistol Beutinger. blunt, heavy, rosy flesb, pa: asleep, rms of bis makes the litt fn school on a bench tn the Essex in ft, Beutinger before x County has undertaken | fover, beta} Mrs, Beutin, jess than an exceedingly. When erday that between 5 and 6 in white gloves. tr mother sitting on the and @ stole 0 slender throat of her tigh ‘The tension was quite evident that murder, was of no Interest to them. nd story Mre in Caldwe the Her housekeeper, Mrs. Graaf, testified | d | pied nd, she says, threatened her life if she continued to ist him, We know that the Beutingers had quarrelled dies, except for one moment when he | Heutinger had divorced her husba eau to re-marry him a few months later, so that her sterday veping in thelr father’s bed when, lad in adressing gown and night robe, | be atole upon their mother tn the gray lawn, said, after Beutinger had Cummings’ and discovere: lying on the for yoara,and that Mrs. of his ervelty and abuse only sitting upon “children would not grow like little heathens,” she has sald, Houtynger returned to ber home N. J., from @ hospital in k in July. 6 shot her husband 0 first we n July 11. that Beutinger had occu- kwoom FP, away from hia wife, y 6; that before that time occupied the same bad ym with twin beds, ana | Bronx Office Beytinger girls were was ar two Magistrate ¢ Twice, the lithe woman has|tral curlosit ne ordered him out, When he/Court to-day ed a d me and threatened |nam t him. A few nv 150K pnts the b per, roused by the|¢inct, arratgne came in and heard bor ex-|4 hostler of Ne u, “Me won't bother me any|seventh Strect, of MeDonald hai ame and terror of that hour|face was brui and no lightens his face. Jerron, whose vivid, robust vome great red It may looked ‘8 and as the gardener, ened by shots, downstairs to Mr. Beutinger's room, found the Ped dishevelled but empty, had passed from room F into room A and the window and Mrs. mains to be determined, POLICEMAN STRIPPED OF SHIELD IN COURT "roi One can trace the father's brutal features In that rticularly when Billy is bright baby glance Lilly sleeps in the mother's sister,’ Mrs. beauty le court room look as if ractua were in bloom be that little Mrs. lke a troploal the years of violence and abuse began. wer took an active part in the selection of a jury, twelve kind, middle-aged men, Who Were chosen in hour yesterday, After the trial began sho sat quietly, ber little bands in her lap, ¢ She wore a pair of spotless now Her sheph laid o DI suit hung on the figure of a little girl. Her small round hat, @ black sailor, was draped with 4@ ve of black la of white fox wound her t, softening the tension little jaws. increased when Eugene Graaf testified that she had told him she satd to Beutlnger, "I'll finish y and her husband had answered do it then.” a 0 Otherwise me as his John that he had been awak~- had dresse gone was tl 1d the body of Beutinger floor between the bed Reutinger the bed sobbing while her eldest child, nine-year-old Mar- bent over trying to comfort dispute as t euulnger case, tion of Justification re rt Declared Drunk After He Had Accused Man of As- sault—Prisoner Freed Yorrigan manifested na y in Yorkville Polico when @ policeman 4 Patrick Dgly, whose lust poat of duty was in tfe Bronx Park pre MeDonald, | 1 Thomas East Twenty- on @ charge of assault black eyes, hin f two sed and there was a lot | 1 » wavered between desperate] of blood on his coat and shirt and a mother'y ire to} Daly was unmarked but was othr rutect the Innocence of swep-| wise decorated to such an extent that | ing children, 4s sti upon bor| Magistrate Corrigan Instructed Lieut face ‘ ner of the court squad to send OLFENDANT A FRAGILE FIGURE|for 4 police surgeon, ‘Tho suriteon IN THE COURT ROOM, uid Daly was tntoxteated, Heforr It is a Uny face all even for a] Daly knew what had happened he jy Weighing jess than 140 pounds,| had been stripped of his shield ei) suspended from duty to await trial on charges which wero preferred witht an hour, McDonald, who was set f the very pretty features « Jed upon it like the long prayers d upon a dime. house is arched and high, the hurrow, Uw mouth a mere rn A muy nave looked like tl ronebud when the burly by the Maxgist veloped that rate, sald Daly had rested and clubbed him beewuse be St eu, | refused to allow him to sleep tn hi stable, m her) Inquiry by Magistrate ( run de a Lieut. Gr juty in the Bast Thirty rk eye Station when Daly brought Mel is fi quich charge of assault against M « and allowed Duly to go to the tory and «9 t Irish lady a luring (he address H. McCarter, to Al unpression in's face | Predertek ® to At than to wait arly ¢ f violence are rovult of fear, and even great ea Wave explained their valur by simply they wore APHAID yubt that Mrs, Beu- tinehamn, Sw Jand lived’ thar 4 traid when a at her in with his fg ly ar-old baby anows| he. lives, and ‘remarkable Mkeness to. father before » bed oe HUNTS PAPA HE NEVER SAW. Parent Hin Wedding The child w j Bergendorf{! and v 1 peparated, und he waa taken t jon, by his foate twelve years 1 la going to ot Westport, he wants to the wedding, MODERN DANCES SURE CURE FOR DYSPEPSIA, | Bell, an officer of the Lederle Labor | torten | con | Department instgts that all milk sold tn SURGEONS ARE TMD peers ote Health Talks and Some Rare} Operations Interest Clin- ic al Congress PHILADELPHIA, Oct, 2 -Dance and cure dyspepsia, Such 9 the lat- ne enunclated A. I ext doct by @lolans, 2 of Fort & session one of the Smith, Ark., of the Ctinteal Consress aaserting of Surgeons In this city that the modern dances have had a remarkable effect in eliminating indigest Dr. Foltz, or, questioned the moral effect of thy dances, but Dr Truman W_ Brophy bia doubts aside, coming out boldly and n that dancing was healthy giving his opin thoth moral and Unusual and remarkable operations wed at twenty-three clin. the wi jos » porfor in hospitals nent of Hlops for paralysis sof Dr rab: for the main bite and guinea pis r ralysis of the legs. By the implants nerves Inte the mus Webster Fox removed a ” In ed a hollow drew the 1 ball and n top. Th that the musols were nove the substituted eyeball and eye in all directions to. corre spond with , , A hol an ineh vl a half across out by Dr J.C) DaCosta wl of a young girl who rasight and the use of her thus relieving the presaur jt uluth ould be restore aatd, te belle another op “YACHT TERN WREGKED; | THREE ABOARD LOST lc iptain and Two Men of Forty-Foot R Sloop Met Death Off | Cape Cod was wr ! lay ¢ ape ‘i the f Capt, Henry |whom he had hired to help fim bring }the ve ! to Hempstead Har ! Indand coast, The f ht, Willlam & Silk ‘Th i ‘ : ‘ atte Lawley of i ripete W ‘ NM ' ndoneil Americar Me Bilkworth JEROME IS GETTING HIS. Me Niovtts doy fatty re of “heal Man Hin Way. 1 1 Twas Vy w 1 ~~ SHACKLETON IS AT PANAMA. In Welt Save Mis x a tr ' 114 Impa a. 5 ably the Au carvied away by w « Jousel going £0 Australia or to wait here yor a sieamebip whiod will sall New, 10, | pasteurtzation puta the milk situation |under control of the big distributors, | 8 himeet? suspicious.“*There was laugh- ter at this sally. Mr. Horton edmétted that he had ralsed the price oferade B milk from 9 to 10 cemta, and grade A from 11 (vo 12 conta. “That,” he said, “was after wé hi: raised the price we paid to the trust.” Q. What trust? A. Why, the Dairymen’s League and Dillon, we tha Figen 4 contract with them? A gentioman’s agreement. REVIVES 3 $26,000 | NIDE AT MILK PROBE Lewis’ Quan” Seeking to Show Monopoly in Pas- teurization Barred. ‘The Attorney General's investigation into the alleged combination tn re- straint of tyade among the big New York milk companies continued on {ts baffled way to-day. Loton Horton, Promdent of the Sheffield Farme-Siqw- won-Decker Company, one of the bla- gest distributors, was on the witne stand. Every time Deputy Attorney Gen- erat Merton B, Lewis asked @ question | that seemed Pp ‘nt toward an illegal combination among the milk dis tributors {t was swept away by an ob- jection. Mr. Horton testified some days ago that he had lent $16,000 to George D. RS Horton admitted that the Bor- den Company set the price to be paid to the farmers for milk. “and,” he added, “when the Shef- Neld Farms esta the price to the con. sumer the rest of ‘em jump on to our band wagon.” Mr. Lewis asked whether anyone gold milk containing lees than % per cent. of butter fat. “If any man,” Horton exclaimed. “should try to #ell milk below 3 per cent, butter fat his license would be taken away from him by the State.” GIRLY-GIRLS’ DRESSES MAKE WOMAN WRATHFUL Waists Too Low, Skirts Too High, Too Much War Paint, Says Mothers’ Congress Delegate. DENVER, Col, Oct. 26—If the “ehtcken” chorus In some gitly-girly show were transferred from the stage into some school room and seated be- fore m few books and teachers, the effect would be not unlike that of the modern class of high school girls, tn the opinion of Mra, B. E, Nichols, a delogate to the State Mothers’ Con- gress now in convention here. Mrs, Nichals regrets that skirts now worn so short that “curbstone de “ag the rubbernecks are called arly always can tell when the girls have holes tn their stockings. “Tigh school girls these days wear their watsts too Yow and thelr skirts Jtoo high,” sald Mrs, Nichols, “They ko to school dressed lke nymphs in ireek dance and they paint and powder like Comanches oh the war They Ernest Lederle, head of that rn, later becume Health Commis- r of New York City, The Health New York muat+be pasteurized. | Mr. Horton's company and the other big concerns are the only ones that ve pasteurizing plants, which cost « lot of money win, conténding Department rule that the lsu eh requiring who alon@ can afford t6 own pas teurizing plants, was questioning Mr. Horton about the loan to Hell, Taw- y Alger objected, saying thin was! gotng too far afteld “Mr. Horton was a momber of the Sanitary Milk Ausootation which mado a crusade for pasteuriz- ing all milk used in New York,” Dealers’ re-| path onder over algebra to Me. Lewis asteurization| the rustle of silk and aiutin dresses, milk keep longer and thus| "Why? ‘To attract the attention of distributors to widen the which they draw thetr the boys, [ suppose. A good many of them spend more time thinking @ the boya than on all thelr lessons ¢ombined. They are boy-crazy, and mos to flirting, they've got rage #uffragette backed off the enables ‘a tela froi supply.” “Hut.” protested Referes Dykman, ‘if that regulation has been settled by an authority from which you oan't wppeal" “Lam not prepared to agree to that," sald Mr, Lewis, “If 1 ean show that shortly after that loan was made Lederle became head of the Health Department and established the pasteurization rule, tt seems to me well worth following up. We have known of improper influences brought w the av boards. BANISHED HIS DESIRE FOR TOBACCO A Kansas Man Tells of a Simple to bear on officials which have re-| Home Lig That Broke Him sulted in the granting of fran- of Using Tobacco. chises”—— am not going to tnvestigate| Mr, Jobn Miller, living at Waverly stourtzation unless Iam so directed Kanans, after using tobacco 0 years, Refe ti anished his desire for tobacco with a simple re which he mixed at the Court,” Dyk ruled man . home. a ® recent statement Mr, Mil- Lowia asked as to the location of| jer said: “L could not stop tobacco milk depots in various parts of the] of my re accord, so used the follow dairy reion that supplies New York ling sfinple recipe almost two years Ho was trying to prove by inference} age und have not touched | toba an inaveemens among see bie acs, eee 3 on. of water add 20 grains ; i isa’ whereby they 4 muriate of ammonia, a small box of puting companies whereby ¥ 4°) Varlex Compound, and 10 grains of hot compete with one another in buy-| pepsin. ‘Take a teaspoonful — three ing mile Ie doesn't have to prove @ com bination in this investigation,” ruled the referee, smiling “He wanta w see if he can find enough to makes Attorney Algor objected tines a day. As it bax no color or smell it can be given secretly in tea, coffee, milk or in food. Any drug, can fill this recipe at very little and it certs for tobacco vat aly will bitsh all desire No Connection With Any Other Establishment in the World WORTH 43 & 45 West 34th Street tities Women’s & Misses’ Coats ew winter models with wide sweep, belted, fitted and loose effects. Suitable for all occasions At Unusually Attractive Prices Women’s & Misses’ Coats Broadcloth, Duvetyn, Velour, Silk Lined, Interlined, Some Fur Trimmed, For Street and Motor Wear, Very Special Women’s & Misses’ Coats Bolivia, Velour de Laine, Chilfon Broadcloth, Velvet, | Duve tyn, lig Suede Velour, } Ki ‘ar Trimmed, 38, 50 ) Lined with | Pussy Willow and | Other Fancy Silks, Very Speciat Women’s & Misses’ Coats | Cashmere Velour, Silk Velour, Suede Velour, | Evening Frock velvet, of Silver Cloth, Bolivia, * $30.00 Elaborately 60. 00 Fur Trimmed, For Daytime and Evening Wear, Very Special oe RAR a LTRS

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