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OMEN LEADERS MRS. GOULD'S BODY INBIRTH CONTROL 10 BE BROUGHT 10 RALLY ARE FREED CITY 10- MORROW: a Fa Bectieraia M nger | |p From Gevtsien Court and Miss Winsor for Town | Lakewood to Town Hote Hall Disturbance. | Will Be by Motor. ul ASKS CAUSE OF RA!D, FUNERAL Magistrate Corrigan Seeks to! Services Probably Learn on What Authority Meeting Was Halted. Will Be Held in St. Bartholomew’s al Church. Charges of disorderly conduct made against Mrs, Miss Mary Winsor because of their efforts to hold a meeting for the dis- | cussion of birth control at the Tom private course of the Gould estate at Hall last night? were dismissed Lakewood, N. J., Magistrate Corrigan in the West side| this Court to-day. Policemen Green and| Margaret anger terday while playing golf with her husband «nd a house guest on the will be brought to to-morrow morning by and taken to the Gould resi- moto: 1 3. formeriy Miss Marjorie Mrs. Drexel arrived from iia and the other daughters and sons from this city. A cablegram held responsible for It The Mggistrate made an effort to have Acting Inspector Donahue pres- ent to explain on what nority he closed the meeting, but was unable, T4S sent to the other child, Lady De- to reach him. with At the | Ces ef London, formerly Miss Helen Mice of Chief Inspe t was! Vivian Gould said that Insp haa | Only Mr. d, the guest and a ‘obably 1 a letter com. | Caddie were present at Mrs. Gould's 45 received at Head. death, which was due to heart disease en days ago, end was and came without warning at 12.30 n “for investigation and ,©clck yesterday afternoon. Shp had been in excellent health and had been ing for some time. The three had gone out for a round of golf hefore luncheon. Mrs, Gould, \/ appropriate act ‘The American Control, of wiich 1g Was to have veen ence on Bisih |! night's mect- the closing se fon, was the tivet of its kind ever | 2O#ting her siatieth year and normaily aid. tn. thia’ ‘Among the|YefY active, did not exert herself i RORIAARE to have been | t#® Rame, letting her husband driv in the Town Hall during the trouble | fr het Mr. Gould drove from th were Mrs. Charles ‘Tiffany, Mr. ana} ffl tee and turned to his wife just us Svs, Chudbournc, Mra, Lamont, Brot [she fell without a sound or a gesture Tiving iaher) Siva. Sonn: She was carried by her husband and Charles G. Taylor, Atrs. the gue: a@ easino nea on ty Delafield, Dr. Lathrop Stoddard, Mre,| @°W4 place and lafd upon a cot in the gymnasium. While Mr. Gow Learned Hand, wife of the Judge of : 5 the United States District Couct;| to Tevive her with remedies a: han Mrs. Ruth W. Porter, Herbert Croly, | {B® Ruest teleplioned to the house tur William J. Fielding, Miss Mary Shaw, | Medical wsistance. Mrs. Henry ard, Miss Lillian D. Wek, Miss Clara WW. Carter, Dr. Mary R. Bigelow and Mrs. Robert D. Gregory. * Miss Anne Seerétary of the wood was the first of two physicians er to the urgent cal) am Bishop. Dr. Irwin Hance reached the place a tow minutes Wennedy, Executives Birth Control Con- . ference, said Mar, Joseph P, Dineen, | } hime at Secu bal .} Secretary to Archbishop Hayes, told BARU ae eet her before the meeting that “in the . ~ titel ay Suturday to with Le cpinion of Archbishop Hayes and all to speak it became evident {the police did not mean to permit the Pected, however, that younger mem- Pisciting (o he held was | bers of the family would arrive to dir accompanied by Miss Winsor, Kit-| With her and Mr. Gould. { tle Marion, an English Suffra- gus ailtis Veh ae ee. mist; Harold Cox, former mem-/ sey, Japanese gardens, given to ber of the British Parliameat,| str, Gould by ‘her husband five who came to this country to| address the conference, and Mrs. O8-| 4 marble fountain of high artistic den L, Reid, wife of the owner of the| meri: are among its beautiful fe | New York Tribune. Outside the doors | tures, several hundred persons fought to| ‘Tho goif links is only one of many evidences of the love of athletics in the Gould family. Two polo fields, however, the two patrolmen stepped| several tennis courts, a swimming ferward and, stretching .out their} pool and the great casino, which arms, tried to hide her from the view| contains a pool, gymnasium and in- of the audience. iene danced iy door tennis courts, are part of the the platform trying to avold them,| aintetic equi; i and tried to speak. Under orders of | Sthietie equipment of the 600-acre Capt. Donahue she was arrested. | Property. The crowd began singing “ The spot where Mrs, Gould died oa,” and with sarcasm. The police| cannot be seen from the house, which retreated with Mrs. Sanger toward a| ig gurrounded by pine groves, but 19 side door. Then Miss Winsor nly @ few hundred yards fi th to the edge of the platform and only ed yards from the to speak. ‘T've been to jail once,” she| casino, said, and the police seized her. In this setting Mrs. Gould gave When the parade reached the station | entertainments for sailors and sol- house, West 47th Street became hiocked with a mass of shouting,| ‘ers during the war iging humanity stretching to Eighth | work as Chairman of the Women's Avenue. The reserves from he hail,| Division of the Mayor's Committee vhich, they a aoe coe ee nee |on National Defense. There also “irned and tried to clear th ect, Sine : Pirnee ee not eviccossfil until the pris: | any lavgsh entertainments were oners were driven off in the patrol| iven when the sons and daughters ‘agon to Night Court. ‘Then the] of the family were still unmarried, Mrs. Gould spent much time ani awd, still singing, booing and jeer- money in charitable work, and wa 4 ‘Ne the police, fell into line and rohed behind {t up Broadway, known also for her entertainments, her gowns and her jewels. ‘the prisoners were paroled by Magistrate McQuade in Night Court) Daughter of the late Charles G Kingdon, of Brooklyn, Mrs, Gould was in the custody of thetr counsel, 0! \datein, lagistrat - foes Coe r eicting |@ social favorite and noted for her beauty in her girlhood in that city. jade explained he had jurisdiction } es of men prisoners. EES PL Brom childhood | Faith Kingdon showed a strong inclination and great AUTO WITH STUDENTS talent for the drama, Sho appeared PLUNGES INTO RIVER |!2 P¥!vate theatricais’ in Brooklyn as little girl and won local fame re- a sulting in her engagement to play the Driver Killed and Three State Rooters Injured. years ago as a birthday present, and gain admittance. As Mra. Sanger started to speak, Penn part of Marianne in “The Two Or- Phans” with Mrs. Marie LEWISTOWN, Pa. Nov. 14.—Onc| Eugene Tompkins of the Boston ‘The- was killed and three injured wien an|&tré, happened to see Miss Kingdon's | Automobile containing elxht students of work and instantly put her under con- | Pennsylvania State College, returning| Company.) ouring from the Navy game at Philadelphia Saturday, plunged over an embankment into the Kishocoquillas Creek, near Augustin Daly invited her to join his distinguished group of actors early in 1884, and Miss Kingdon first ap- Miss Amelia Schuler, McConnelisburg, n student Penn State, suffered ‘a fracture of the left arm Her success in New York was as- sured after her appearance as Ma jorie Gwynne in “Love on Crutches’ and mino. bruises. under th da age t, pro. 1 J, ied Merz, Philadelphia, student. | quoed the Daly management, pr received bruiser, ard Stewart Taylor, | duced 885, it wa _ Harrisburg, student lacerations and | ‘ended by so much of the Jealousies ‘minor bruises of professional life among the st Acceccording, to reports, the machine of th plunged through the guard rail over an \era eight-foot embankment pany water, in 1685. stage that Miss King months later left the Dul r She was married to Mr Gould Into foyr iset vt| here, ‘Thomas Gray, sixty, a chauffeur of Btate College,’ was instantly killed, } i t WEDNESDAY. | The body of Mrs. George J. Gould, | and Who fell dead from heart disease yes- | Davis of Acting Inspector Donahue's| dence, N». 857 Fifth Avenue. The staff based the charge on the state-| Start from Georgian Court will be ment that the actions of Mrs. Sanger | made about 11 o'clock and Miss Winsor caused the aisles of | It is expected that the funeral se the Rudiiotium to be blocked in violas | !ces will bs held in St. Bartholomew's tlon of tay | Chureh, of which Mrs. Gould was a Magis Corrigan learned from | Member, op Wednesday them that the meeting had already | Six of Mra. Gould’s sevén children, been ordered adjourned and that In-| 9? Whom she was most proud, arrived apector Dowahu the audi-|&t Georgian Court last night. They 4666 to: Beton held Were Miss Glorta Gould, Mrs, Carrol that the crowded a sles were the nec-; Wainwrizat, who was Miss Edith/ essary resul lice order to Gould; ‘ecrge Jay Gould jr., Kingdon Ko Out, and the women could not be Gould, Jay Gould and Mrs. Anthony Dr. George W. Lawrence of Lake-! pass | i i myself this meeting is against the | i | public morals and should be stopped.” | Although np sly had guests ‘The moment Mrs. Sanger ar: or the) en © week, there at the t {was no party yesterday, 11 was ex- 8 part of her| Wilkins. | . tonday, peared under his management as| Mysia in the farce “A Wooden| Spoon.” THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 'Mr.and Mrs. George Gouldon Lawn MILK DELIVERIES Of Georgian hore ie} | 4 | KA | GEO Gouin Ar Court, Lakewood INGREASE AS MORE STRIKERS RETURN Injunction Extended Two | Days, After Which It May Be Made Permanent. Janction restraining the striking milk | wagon drivers from interfering in any |way with those who are now distrib. | utlng milk was extended to-day to re- |main in force until Wednesday when arguments will be offered to make It permanent Meanwhile the companies have an- nouneed that distribution is now |about 80 per cent. of normal, addi- | Uonal strikers have returned to work, nd more house to house deliveries jare being made. It is the beginning lof the third week of the strike, and while the strike leaders still talk | bravely, the big companies believe | that the beginning of the end has ar- | rived. | Arguments for making the injunc- tion permanent were to have been heard this morning, but George Al- ger, of counsel for the plaintiffs, osked for the two-day extension, ga. ing that on Wednesday he would pre- sent additional affidavits concerning Megal acts by strikers. In granting the adjournment Jus- tice Kapper said that if this was the case he had been reading about in the newspapers he would “not need much argument.” John B. Johnston, |of counsel for the defense, sald he had not invoked the aid of the courts but added: “Now that embrace it—the first opportunity t» present our side of the case. There we are in it we shall DEL AND HERBERT BANDITS HOLD U IN CIGAR STORE Flee With $315 After Gage and Binding Employees of United Co. | The cle ie United Cigar ‘Third Avenue were Lound, gaggod and then and porier of Store at 79th Stree: and led together and thus fastened s curely to a cl hack room o' | the store at $ o'clo« morning ty two ban li ted the ea ved entered the 8 package of cig {lon the counter. O'Rrien said ne did not have any bill. At this Mth of tt out revolve the aimed give you a need. Stick up your into the back room, and don't you dare to make a sound!” Once the trio was in the back room one of the bandits hunted about the place and found a length of strong twine. With this he bound O'1 securely, the other keeping the man covered with a pistol O'Brien was gagged with a chief. w handkey le the binding was going on | Abraham Lewis, porter of Jentered. As he did not see jabout he went into the back "Come right in," said one of the lbandits. “You're quite welcome ‘Then, menaced with the pist the store O'Brien ‘oom. porter was similarly bound ar gagged. When this had been com- pleted, Lewis and O'Brien were tied together and then half lifted to a chair and made fast to it. Two customers came into the store just as the binding had been com pleted, and the tailer of tha highwa |men went in ait on the \ |ways glad to see early morning | two bought cigarettes and went out. Then the robber opened tt cash register and’ took from jt $315 | Before leaving the store the thiove {paid one last visit to their prisoners n the bandit, evi new oyercos and put it on with ot thanks (0 {tsb 1 Jown ( tw you the monished, “The ows keep still, do igoners were ad e are oth outside and if you make an out you'll get what's coming to you The banging of the front door was for a quick 1 pi | seives. the firmly ter t e them bonds had been too astened. ‘The ed serear minutes on | room ‘and released the prisoners, 8 CLERK AND PORTER. will be interesting news. Five thousand copies of the injunc- : ; sin W Babes in Wilds | ,,i'-.rowand copies ot the infune Pe ployers, who have posted them in of Brooklyn Had ° fh aate_alfiiera gathers op tant may plead ignorance of the Wandered Far "°° GEinienta (oneGne cs Wesaaat ‘sweeping injunctions in the history : a {of labor disputes. A clause which Ones Toddled 10 Miles From) ce onibite Gapying’ tel interested East Side Home—Cop to mean that strikers must not even Rescue. ele Information as to the travelling hedules of the milk wagons. At 2 o'clock this morning a police-| On Staten isiand it was said that Wien rofl ie) tenders et tion, | the strike 8 practically over. Brooklyn, encountered Tolka Maes-|TWenty-nine striking drivers of the tro, four and a h Anna Donahue old, strolling towards him under ajcompany had already recruited, street light. They were hand in| Drought the number of wagons in hand had a well nibbled operation up to thirty-seven. Forty- dour n ier freehand five is normal. The other important Wh you doing out this time| Staten Island company, the Meadow- of night" asked the policeman | brook, is said to be giving 100 per cent. walk.” suid service, with all {ts old employees on Anna ght | the job th In the central and upper parts of w Manhattan the house to house “ped- djing” system, under which the drivers ring doorbells and sell directly to housewives, was extended, and there was also an increase of new accounts for regular house to house deliveries. The wagons started at 7 o'clock, which 1s earlier than on the t teart consid ct! preceding days of the strike To- i 1 here u ile) morrow they are to start at 6 o'clock. 1 to the poli¢ and| In the Bronx the Sheffield Com- Clinton pany increased its doorbell service o the your and the Borden Company sent out ein a € wagons for street corner sales. | The Be suet companies have overcome one of greatest obstacles that the strl s could put in their way, This MARYLAND AWAY was the fact that the strikers kept ON SPEED TRIALS (1,02 Rute books showing who the gular customers are and bow much ch owes, But the companies have sued new route books to their new drivers based on the Septembr route books. The lists In these books, of are not quite accurate, but e near enough to accuracy to meet the emergency, so that the pres- ent drivers are equipped with the ad- dresses of practically all the old cus- tomers. Motion Pictures of Battleship Taken for Showing Before Arm Conferencee. ROCKLAND, Me. Nov, W.—The super-dreadnought and, one of he battleships wh escape the | Se irctary proposed of mament | Conference imitation, went into the Rockland|breaks in the ranks of the strikers al course to-day for speed and| had been reported to him and that sMcial standardization testa,|th2,companies ure taking back “only official standardization test }such men as are acceptable to them." n pictures of the big battleship| Reports from Northern New Jersey d that the strike seemed to be ing up there. Twenty-seven drivers, minus the! union got their jobs back in New- Nathans of the Milk Board said additiona at top speed, about twenty-one knot were taken for exhibition before Armament Conference in Wast Borde buttons, sda irk; twenty returned to work in nd's armament of 16-/ Hackensack, and twenty-fc in neh guns » tested aleng Elisabeth, ‘Seventy Borden wagons New I ‘ ACA RUA eon e sent out for house-to-house de-| ui "liveries In Newark. land to Bo n Wednesd, About 100 alleged violations of mili: e big opelling motors lations will be progecuted by tle from those o 1 Department to-morrow in the Municipa) Term Court. Two sum cd @ imonsea were issued to-day against Shetfeld Company for 2 of milk too long after pas - 13 INDICTED POLICEMEN WILL BE TRIED SOON. Proseeator & mith rly Dispo- of the Canes, one fire- | AT len | WHERE SHE s2ND. ST., John Fitzpatrick, "© The Supreme Court's temporary In-| years old and| Borden company returned to work five and a half years| and these, added to the number the] 1 TO-NIGHT AT 11 WILL DANCE 14, 1921, RUSH COURT ROOM FOR LANDRU TRIAL Before | i} Fate of sixth “Vict “Victim” by “Bluebeard.” , VERSAILLDS. Nov. 14 (Associated | Press),—The week of the Landru trial opened with popular in- terest evidently unabated in the testi. second of the alleged “Bluebeard bais." Hundreds of persons waiting in line at an early hour out- of Gam- of Mme. Collomb, the sixth of Lan- dru’s alleged cleven Mme. Collomb was for a long time a rest- dent of Guatem victims. accused replied jn a high-pitched voice. “That is a private m which justice is not concerned.” Anked to explain an entey of 500 francs in his famous notebook jinder | the date of Mme. Colomb's disappear- | ance, Landru said this sum was the product of the sale of a travelling canteen he had kept behind the American Army for a few weeks. PARIS, Nov. 14.—That the women | spectators at the Landra trial are | becoming his stanch adherent! while the men are “ant!-Llucbeard is the concerted view of the Parisian | special writers, After the first week, ‘ which one-third of the murder charges against him have been dealt with, Landru is as etrongly in- trenched as ever in bis system of Ge- tense, Ho has not changed it in tho three years aince his arrest “You say I have murdered th people—prove It,” is the position he | has taken throughout, “I am fust a furniture dealer whu purchased their effects. As to where they are to-day, will not tell you. You shat not come behind the wal! of my private statements In reference to women who | Court—Women Charmad to-day. [making every effort to get men of the Japplication for retin mony which is to determine the fate/acted o were) BOY PLAYING INDIAN prisoner regarding the disappearance | pital not expected to live. ) The fat: la, when the dife or lead me to make ungallant | DRY ENFORCEMENT | FORCES IN BROOKLYN, “Honest Dan,” Retiring From Police After 32 Years’ Service, Selected for New Job, Costigal UNDREDS IN LINE “oev'enroncesenr’ FARRAR-TELLEGEN ACTIONS ORDERED TRIED IN NEW YORK !Change of Venue From White Plains Court Was Requested by Opera Singer. “Honest Dan" pues for Police, Captains latter thirty-two years tn the clty's ser vice, a to be made chief of Prohibition Brooklyn, tt was said who has ap- retirement as enforcement ta ‘The Prohibition authorities have been MMgheat Integrity and ability to take up tthe work of enforcement, id are under- stood to have taken Costigan's record @ guarantee of What might be ex- pected of him. It ts likely the appoint: ment will be announced next w 1s nent lias not been . but it meeta all requires ments of the law it cannot be delayed, —_—_—_—_—_ Supreme Court Justice Morsehau- er in White Plains to-day granted a motion made by counsel for Mrs, Lou Tellegen (Geraldine Farrar) to have the separation suit brought against her tried in New York County. | Whe change of venue was sought on the grounds that neither plaintiff! nor defendant Jive in Westchester side the Court House, and when the| SHOOTS EAS ERURBER County, Attorney for Mr. Tellegen doors were opened the court room - consented. : WAS speedily jammed taAtkts Probably Mortal Weene | sty, ellewen's action and: that of Last week the direct examination While Children Are Alone. ‘s. Tellegen for divorce, it was said was completed in the cases Of TOUT! ys wrence Wysockie, eigtitecn months one of the attorneys, will be con- of the women ahd the son of one of) a4) was shot by hia brother. Orville, dated and tried tn New York them, whom Landru is accused of}soven yeata old, in their home anty murdering. To-day Judge Gilbert re- Dean Street, Brooklyn, yeaterday.| Cunscl for Tellegen disclaimed to- sumed direct examination of the] The infant ts in the Hoi: Family Hos- any intent to Keep the suit a se- | He said the actor would wel- br daisy Leo Wyaockie,| (ome & trinl thrown open to ‘the an employe of the Hotel Pennsylvania, was at work and the mother ira in thely private dwelling shooting occurred. ‘The legen's suit now will probably ba consolidated with the divorcee action his wifs brought aganst hia was up Landru displayed considerate tem-|caidren were in the parlor when the ere per in answering the court's qu er found « .£2-calitve rifle Ina closet. |. A. Whalen Head of United Cigar tlons when asked, as in the case of| Orville pointed the rift at nis infant | Stores Company ‘ 1 t brother and said, “Comy on, let's play Edward Wise to-day resigned a h revious alleged victims, EKG ANG Pig Be Gat Indian." There was a shot and a| President of the United Cigar. Store what had become of Mme. Coll scream. Mrs. Wyerockis found her| Company. “He will be succeeded by ‘hat is none of your business,” Guingest child tying on the floor, a holo} A. Whalen, Chairman of the. Board: Young 5 jet in hia abdomen who wil hold both ofices THE OLD HOLLAND HOUSE 'HERE’S magic in the name. What visions it brings of The Avenue when 30th Street was Uptown! The Old Holland House. There’s music in the name. The old-timer fairly intones it— closing his eyes the while to picture Eulalia of Spain--now stepping daintily through its hospitable portals—-now dining in state in its time-mellowed banquet room. The Old Holland House. Where “Joe” did me the honor to bestow favors upon me." Landru’s system {s to admit wit gractful “parfaitement” everything that can be proved, but not a singie thing else. He knows the intricacies | of the case so thoroughly that so far | he has avoided all pitf. He takes | his time anawering questions, adjust- his spectacles and staring at the Judge or jury. Me answers ‘questions with ep!- grams such as: “When a man iy fifty, one love-affalr, sutisfies him,” “All women look alike at 7 o'clock in the morning,” or “A woman feuis nothing more than the pity of hor! neighbors," or “Ail women are born actresses, writing the own parts in life.” If the spectate Jauch he emarks he turns angrily aod cass | them to order, sayin his We @ we | rious affair, if not tor you, tor me! Landru has gained immensely if the confidence of his address as a result | of the six days’ ordeal, Not only th Judge, but the jury and proseguting | counse! now treat him ino @ mist deferential tone, which he recipro- ca les, bxag: ted politeness char acterizes the scssions. | So fai, not the slightest lifting of the veil’ has been accomplished by the prosecution, althoug the pre sumption of the accused man’s guilt 18 as strong as ever. | oars Woman Writer Gets 82 dict for Acciden| Miss Julia Harpman of No. 244 Weat 56th Street, a special writer, to-day re-| ceived a verdict of $25,000 froin a jury fore Justice Platzek against the Eighth Avenue Railroad Company for 100 Ver= eceived on Feb, last when | car collided with a taxicab in| which she was riding at 46th Street end | Kighth Avenue, Misa Harpian sued | for $100,000 | j oe - | Arrested on Charge Larceny. Eugene Guintini twen dson Avenue, Jday by Detec 1 Valkenburgh on complaint of David Tabin, « « No. 8 West 18th Stre with «rand larcen to have proc represe buyer for the pany of Philade' 0 MRS. IRENE CASTLE s ANNOUNCES HER PERSONAL REAPPEARANCE THE Sanne alle KNICKERBOCKER GRILL NIGHTLY AT SUPPER AT BROADWAY PHONE BRYANT 184) = —— eee ‘what to buy and sell in Wall Street. exchanged tips on what to eat for tips on Where a famous Western lawyer, after the formation of a great steel company, handed “Tom” and the boys a tip of three hundred dollars. The Old Holland House. It has not passed. But rather has it kept pace with the march of commercial Progress. It is still an eating place de luxe, upholding old traditions of food goodness—old traditions of environ- ment. Only now it isa part of the CHILDS system, with its modern innovations in food and service. The New Holland House. There’s new magic in the name—the magic of the house of CHILDS. “Joe's” tips on what to eat are no longer needed. Instead, a perfect galaxy of choice comestibles is spread before . the eye. One makes his own selection—the appetite is the guide. Then, too, there’s an atmosphere about this new house of CHILDS—a subtle, pervasive atmosphere of refinement—which makes it as superior to the average eating place as The Avenue is to the average street. In the making of New York’s history, CHILDS has long played an important part. Thirty years ago the first house of CHILDS was opened. Today there are more than forty in Greater New York, and up- wards of a hundred throughout the continent. CHILDS de Luxe in the Old Holland House is the fourth on Fifth Avenue. And here old and new New Yorkers find what they seek-—-excellent food— the old hospitality—-the refined atmosphere-—the pleasant memories—brightened by the vivid spirit of today. A cup of matchless coffee—as mellow as Old Holland House memories; and rising from i¢ ‘1 fragrant steam, the spirit of friendship—hospitality, yon a», \ Serh _ en