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4ak BViwine WORLD, WEDNESDAY, ‘EVENING WORLD TEN-SECOND Mary Garden, Prima Donna and Manager, Who Loves ‘a Fight and Is Ready to Fight for Opera Success seanmeanan = on om CL! rit) re r CY CITT Terri rie errr yer ri ri “Men make the real trouble in “Muratore says I'm a ‘floating opera organization, They are x0 frog.’ Not I. L sink or go to the small, so petty, so supersensi- top, but_never float.” tive. They need educating.” “Floating, frog? What a cu- rious simil@ Frogs are not pretty eee and make a damn noise when they sing.” “Will Muratore sing for me af- ter this season? I don’t know. Lord help me from bossing a JANUANW:S NEWS MOVIES Bell AEE! = @ roo Cat ae Lt TTT Lr Cir ry Tt rer ir ry 7 ee ee See ee ee ee ee “Mr. Polacco is a great con- ductor. I have no trouble with him. _I have no trouble with nybody.” “1 shall be delighted to have © Miss Farrar next year li she year if she wants to startle us in Zaza, She can_even have Thais,” “I will not sing here eveh in “We have had a glorious sear PUL BA SAS et So} concert after this year, only pass son in Chicage, House jammed ow save through between steamship and every night. The outlook could. vtsloiaa Chicago train,” not he better.” 7 eam ale HE DESERTS BRIDE = tn DN HER HONEYMOON Aviator Who Fell 1,600 Feet in War Strays to Rochester | —wWife Here, Broke. | Mrs, Edward Sheppard, a bride of | two weeks, is penniless and alone at the Pennsylvania Hotel, awaiting the arrival by telegraph of money to take hier to Rochester, where her husband is reported to be an amnesia patient in the General Hospital. He disap- peared Monday and it was not until MRS. EDWARD C. SHEPPARD, lust night that Mrs. Sheppard learned where he was. This morking she used the last of her money t,) send the following tel- egram to thé Superintendent of the "gre naaane roe AQW ELWELL FIRED detain my husband until arrival.’’ ) But she was not able to start im- i“ ” (mediately because the money, prom- ed by her sister, Mrs. H. L. Mann M Richmond, Va, had not yet} reached her. They were married Jan. 9 ot Bleh- mond and came North on their Sculptor Startled — Friends ‘oneymoon, stopping at Washington, Where Shepperd hoped to csttect, Dozen Years Ago by Story $1,800 due him as back pay for ser- 6 E. ” sey vices as an aviator in France. He _ of Family Strife. contracted tonsilitis In the capital, ooo however, and decided not to wait to! phe sider see the paymaster. He and his bride me on to New York On Monday he started to go bach Darien, Conn., h to Washington alone, telling his bi lie would return Tuesday night at the atest. That same night he wa found in Roches’ wandering about of brain hemorrhage. in a dazed condition. He seemed to In 1910, when he was living in think he was still in New York, for Weehawken Ine asked his way ‘‘to the Pennaylva-. friends by publishing in the news. nia Hotel where my wife is waiting | papers an affidavit saying in part ior me."* TI, Francis Edwin Elwell, do this When he was in France, about two} day disown forever Molina M. El- kveeks before the armistice, he fell well and her two sons, Oleott ©, 1,400 feet, his wife says, and his leg Elwell ond Stanley Bruce Elwell, land three ribs were broken. who deliberately deserted me on the second day of July, 1908. ENANTS WIN SUIT Th a supplemental statement two re- porters, Elwell sald he had been FROM KLASKO CORP. | “nazsed" by his wie for the twenty n years of their married life. i f Col, Franei Edwin Elwell, famous sculptor, at vegalled the story fa of his stormy domestic trouble ent Boosting Concern Is One vid, “fifteen minutes after the mar- A ‘ten Named at Lockwood ge ceremony, and it has contin an nost without interruption—until she Inguiry. ‘ feseanait ‘The rent controversy between rhe| His wife Immediately came to New sko Finance Corporation of whicn| ¥0"K and started @ suit for separa- Joseph Shenk, whom the Lockwood | jyrisdiction the ¢ t said the peti fommittes hearings brought out was] tion otherwise would} teen ne of tea landlords whose cx were] 2 on its merits, aadi Jowring ‘the Municipal Courts, is | fact that a nis a Beni Jent and twelve tenants a’ give him the right to fire 0 Rive Drive, was dismi: -dgy before Justice Davis in the : nth Municipal Court because of | couple were divore tion efforts having failea, the d, and in 1912 Ki- The mthimum of increases was 10; Strength after an injury received in r cent., accordits to affidavits filed |@ fall from a seaffolding in his studio, F tenants. One instance called gor |and she had helped him greatly with 150, when the former rental was| his work. It was her hand that laid R100, Another demanded $225, formes | the first of clay for Blwel!’ 5 $150, This controversy has |celebrated statue of Lincoln since Oct. 1, with | He said she had given him new Counsel for the |AMbition in his work riage Was ‘ma seen in the courts many adjournments. plaintiff, in affidavit filed recently | when the was ready for trl, brought our ion with operty in 19) hicome of 860, in heaven.’ juity of $74,000 in the |Art, but was ouste had received a gross | With J 19.96 from it jof certain w — nich it IGA DRY (GoOps MAN iro] NineHlcd to ine by-laws, only to | lwith Mr. Morgan's instant retor MEET HER : “1 am the by-laws The annual nyention of the Na petaia en Obi _ jonw) Retail Dry ods Association reported that to the by-laws, only to meet ae lin w b, 8 and will con- MAN OF LARC hia beginning mue for three ors of the association handle prac-| of the firm of William Farrell & Sons, colly 60 per cent. of the merchan-| Ine. coal dealers at No, 6 Chureh sold annually to the American] Street, who sald he believed the de ity by department, dry yods, | fendent. eneral movchandise stores and ap alty Shops, amounting tu $7,000 H00,000. The need of reducing the ost of distribution will be the first seman and collector en by the ¢ $15,000, i njamin of N lo Mor 182 Second Str hard HB, Webber of Detroit. Bonjerain pleaded not guilty, dozen years ago, when he almost lied | ‘well startled his | “Our first quarrel took place,’ he! tion. In dismissing it for lack of WIVES CHUMS, BUT DIDN'T KNOW | THEY SHARED SAME HUSBAND, WHO KEI KEPT SECRET BY SYSTEM | | Thirsty Laird Camps Beside Seagoing Bar Time Will It Open?” e Days Here; “Pty Never Come Again.” “What time was the first inquiry made by Fran- Laird’ of Inverness, Carmine penne Had Plan!| by Which He Kept Them Apart Three Year: SWITCHED EACH MONTH |Both Maries Thought He Was With Old Folks When He Was With Other. Evidence taken before Magistrac? | Renaud in Centre Street Police Court} ;, \tu-day established that by close ad-| «,., herence to a system Carmine Scapett | was uble to live with tivo wives—or » brunette and the other a blond the bar would closed until for almost three years without de tection. Not until last night did either learn the truth, though they wer chums when he met them. | In 1918 Seapetto and Maric Ha-- monde, of No. 02 West 135th Street 2 brunette of Italian parentage Maurie Burbon, of No. 441 East 27d apd Street, a blonde of Russian parentage were employed in a Brooklyn shoe factory, On Feb. & of that year prtto took Marie Harmonde to Bogota, N. d., and ric Harmonde is the daughter of a well to do dealer in malt and hop: and things ted her apetto rried hev On April 6, 1918, Seapette took | Marie Burbon to the Municipal Build ing and married her. Marie's people re not well to do and Scapetto set up Keeping with her at No hous | Lexington Avenue after the second marriage irafted and went into 1 about a year, first wife a) Short!: Scapetto the army. H During that time, h sery | part of his pay The second wife, not to an allow- | in the shoe | factory and supported herself \ataun On his discharge from the army, | knowing she was entitle ance, went back 10 wo! stem. He rents had apetty established his told wife No. 1 that his r come from Italy and he would be compelled to spenc some time with them He sug that he would be able to fulfil nis filial) obligations by keeping the old folks company at nights in alternate | months, He told the same story to wife No. Neither of the wives, apparently, ever betrayed any desire to the old folks. Here was Scapetto ailure of counsel for plaintiff to ap-| well married Annie Marion Benjamin. | y, pear She had nursed him back to} nd declared this | |his Lexington Avenue twell was once a curator of seulp- | that the Kinsko Corpora. |ture in the Metropolitan Museum of after a quarre) nas to the placing It was a lively filt, 1 had withheld et was to-day held by Mogistrate Cor- ject to be discussed following the! yigan In Essex Market Court in bail pening address of the President, cf $3,000 for examination Feb. 1, tem clory, where he obtained a jot lov the he would go, if tw ihe first month, to her in West Street, reaching there ibout 6 o'clock. He would have din ner there and sometimes take the vife to the movies. Promptly at 11 o'clock he would depart, ostensibly to join his parents At midnight he would appear at home 5 Lexington Avenve tae n © Un ist and § wor 1 there The next tmopth he would revers! the operation. He would appear at me at 6 o'clock, have dinner there, sometimes take No. 2 wife to the movies and leave at 11 o'clock, ostensibly to join his parents, At midnight he wouid appear at No, 502 West h Stre spend the night there w Wife Ne 1, ave yreakfast there and t work from there Wife No. 1 being well to do, sei dom asked Scapetto for money. Her Witt be held in the Hotel Pennaylya.| COA COMPANY ACCUSES SALES-| people understood he had to support |his parents, He gave wife No, 1 $20 ays. The 2,000 mem-| On complaint of ‘Thomas F, Farrei|a week out of his $50 wages Sverything went smoothly until late Jast night, when wife No. 1 was informed by a vindictive relative of apetio of the condnet of her hus and. This happened to he wife No ‘gs month, A detective found hit and arrested him at No. 125 Lexing » ship was outside | the three-mile limit, he put in an au for u double hot Seotei and pre-empted a seat in the smoking | room right alongside steward who had the bar e Laird, who is sixty-nine yes arrived here his secretary, He brought ¢ Niagara Falls and while t the Falls the his room in the Commodore Hotel ani | Bee | | TEMPERATURE DROPS | | {Cold WI Continue To-Might, but never come he: and T travel, West Indies wher | this morning, a ettired in kilts a He wore the kilts while ¢ y below zero and he ert with his bagpipes on the de ic while the passen ying aboard © Laird had worn his ! | i degrees above zero. | youldn't have felt the nd they were old] HELD WITHOUT BAIL of; Attempt to Be one of five men who held ying his work at the Brooklyn | information f & gang whi six chein grocery store Kagerd in a re eet | HE MEANT WELL ENOUGH BUT HIS ‘FIRE’ FIZZ). smoke Was From Tar Furr 4 Blase in waiting for | Girl Checker Admita ‘Theft, Poller | the Cunard froadway noticed black smoke shooting pas dow, Being an earnest mediately informed the Fire | » which sent an exting is 2 o'clock this morning. Scapetto in stenographers their lunch, 54° BELOW ZERO REPORTED TO-DAY IN ADIRONDACKS Wolf Pond Gives Lowest Record— Railroads Have Trouble Keeping Engines Running. SARANAC LAKE, Jan. 25. _A cold wave with tempera- tures as low as 12 and 54 degrees belew zero was reported in the Northern Adirondacks to-day. Highways and streets are nearly deserted and railroads have trouble keeping engines running, Wolf Point reported the 64 below mark. POTSDAM, N. Y., Jan 25 Thermometers in this place reg- istered 21 degréés below zero 't E At Hollywood, St. Law- rence County, the mercury fell to 39 below at daybreak. UTICA, N. ¥., Jan, 25.—In this city the mercury was from 14 to 20° degrees below zero, accord ing to exposure. The barometer in this olty was the highest re- corded in several years, standing | ut 80.27 this forenoon, Clear Lake Junction reported 40 de- grees below and ‘Pupper Lake 32 degrees below TO 8 ABOVE; GOES UP It'll Be Warmer To-Morrow. The cold, which got Into every one's bones this morning, got into the thermometer and dro’ lown té 8 degrees the mercury above zero at,7 v'clock, After that it receded a bit, wd ree at a time, until at 1 o'clock the temperature stood at 12, where it had been for three hours, For those who may derive comfort from the statement, let it be sald that a year ago to-day the thermometer stood at | The forecast ts for continue cold | to-night with a rising temperature to-morrow. A change for the warmer | is in progress in the Middle States ind is coming eastward. No snow is jexpected for at least forly-eigh hours. aes |130 ARE ICEBOUND FOR BUTLER ROBBERY | oN BOAT NEAR MACKINAW Bandit Said Gang Operating in ie To-Day to) Rescue Passengers in Stratis. SAULT STE. MARIB, Mich., Jan. 2 The Straits of Muckinac are icebound sault Ste, Marie and the surrounding ted from | ritory virtually esi of the te Dututh h Shore and Attantic hief Wawalam and St. Mari k in the tee since yesterday, 4 prospects of being able to mo The St, Marle, out of St. Ignace, | ‘de only three miles yesterday ani 4 en unable to move bi of Wawatam, with 120 posrenge urd, is tied up about a mile out ef | kinaw Cily. Reports wer | this morning that # dray |i Ignace would attemp nt trait h passengers and ——>— | LOVED PRETTY THINGS SO SHE TOOK $300 COAT some tine il Felt, Court. fas Mose Wasonor, a pr nineteen girl of No. “i, Rrooklyn, was held in $1,090 bail | Magistrate Gelsmar in Brides I"laza vurt to-day on a charge of grand creeny $n connection with the theft of $400 Hudson seal fur coat. The complainant, Miss ‘Annetta Beokor, cen, a friend of Miss Wage that the coat disappeared at i t's dance party at which Miss | took charge of t Charles Mera to the police, Mim agenor di she took the ocoa auae sie ed pretty things and w coulin't buy them, UTAH DIVORCEE IS NOW WIFE NO. 4 OF WILLARD MACK | Sheltered in Boston Home From His Influence, She | |Say She W: on love fuses further co-operation in his “ex- periment” as a, love mate at the North { Carver farm. Underwood & tinderwoa.) | Wife Miss Conrad might think of re- Actor-Playwright’s Latest 20 Years His Junior—Married Salt Lake City Beatrice Stone, known to her! has 1 friends whom Willard lake fourth wrig Mack married in ological Marjorie Rambeau « erick | world. Over League, unde |CLEARED OF CHARGE HE “PINCHED” GIRL to live with Ga¥land, I do nat think Conduct Charge Magistrate Oberwager ‘ton Heights | charge of Msorderly conduct pref ss caused the arrest of | Also he discharg: was made by Probation Offic ferous woman, lieve the pinching story The report of the I aceording to the cou he had had Brun 124th Street shown, on her she had vaused the "her and that he |wish to accomplish as much as po: Probation Office out of work been learned sh: arated fronaher husband. GARLAND LOSES ‘SOUL MATE’; "= pirnavney MISS CONRAD, SAFELY AWAY, ::*:" eet) SCORNS “LOVE PRILOSOR RY: Resumes Art Studies. | FRIENDS ST, AND BY HER. | = ssersd = a i —= —— = — b=] e wl y Ste waned atey U.S INGTTTUTEB: der the Fascination of ‘ His Personality. 4 ae First Time in History That:a BOSTON, Jan, 25.—Charlee Gar- *, 5 land, who declined a milien-dollar| Bishop Has Officiated fof: inheritance and afterward accopted . His Successor There,” t, is to-day without either « wife or 4 “love mate.” His problem of what to do about Miss Lilllan Conrad has been solved by Miss Conrad herself, who now repudiates his philosophy and marital relations, and re- The Rev. Caleb Rochford: Stetson” was formally instituted as the eleventh: rector of Trinity Parish to-day. , Th. Oeremony was conducted by Mry, +: Bishop ef the diocese, the Rt. Rev! Dr, William T, Manning. Aasstating.. were the two suffragans of New York, |». the Rt Revs. Arthur 8. Lioyd)am4i Herbert Shipman. ied If Garland should be freed from his turning to him, but at present she te ari Isa atudent of the School of Applied Art| Previous to the ritual of the fait”, b tution office the ancient ceremony. of, «1. rere, of which Miss Mary Irving Ha-} (0 00 ' sted Is director, atta wrincedl Wooo pet sse The Tide-Over League of Boston a of the parish, with the restor:") noved Miss Conrad from the in-| ‘lect, met in the body of the ctitiity fluence of Garland’s erotic philosophy | #24 proceeded to the great door. Quy 308 and placed her in a private family to} ing to the extreme cold the cerethbAy” live, ing bi ar has who came here seek-| was conducted wholly within the’ eai to return to the farm without ping her ce. The new rector was met by thi Miss Husted, director of the school,| Watdens and vestrymen and the sev. -|4aid to-day that Miss Conrad has] eral’sextons of Trinity Church propersii |made a clean breast of her re-| and the various chapels and schpols. jarland and 1s now lead- The mg a “pure and upright life." “'Thie penior ‘warsen, Hermans 2 js a cane where 1 feel that the past | cammann, Presented the keys df thf ee ere er taht” tien | ChUrclg to the new rector and in tut Husted the sextons of the chapels and schools. “All effort mould be. centred on| U4 & like office, Mr. Steteon mm, moulding for the future. The Tide whose auspic this schoo] is run, will stand by Miss Conrad providiyg she does not return lations with todians and the arty retired to’'the robing rooms, where the procédsidi”™* was formed for the ritual of insti? tution. here Is any danger of her doing that.| After the regular ritual of the “fr " “Wo have asian ating Conrad from| stitution of a priest Into the charge’ 6f* her boarding house and placed her in]® Parish, ending with holy Godrs 1 cultured Boston family. This fam-|!nunion, Bishop Manning delivered’+ ly is interested In the school. [ know (hat Miss Conrad {s now living a pure| fect that In the 260 years of its éX¥ Ife. Lam also suro sho never erred|!stenco, to-day was tho first time that before she met ¢ nd, She comes|‘s former rector of Trinity had inst} yf a good Philadelphia family and was aia Jed stray under the fas-|the Institution of hin successor. - ion of the man's personality. After the benediction the new rect. T feel that there is nothing for the|#@vanced to the steps of the choir and league to do but to stand behind this |!ecelved the welcome and godspeed ‘ 4 girl. If we turned her out now I do| hs people not know what would become of her. ——s—— \ithough Miss Conrad ts twenty-| FAMILY IN WESTWOOD Miss Husted said that sho is not fully teveloped as most giria of ter| 1S STRANGELY MISSING, The directors, however, charac- — — “4 terized he sa serious student show-) Ne ‘ marked ability in her work. Misa Conrad was tearful during her talk va | Westwood, N. J. has a mystéry | which ts puzzling Chief of Police Bird. °+ nade serious statements concerning | the disappearance of Henry 4.) me but 1 would rather not comment te, his wife and eighteen-mggt hy: n thom.” she sia. Id child, Darche Is an electricians: AMHERST, Mass, Jan, 25--Miss| with a shop on Washington Avenues) son, after a day of constant! He has three living rooms baci pt terruption of her studies by report-| ie shop, On Jan. & he drove away, ers, remained serene and undisturbed | with his wife and child. ‘The’ store. toetli Her attitude toward the/ with tts few articles for sale and the ublicity attaching to Charles Gar-| living rooms were left as though the snd, Misa Lillian Conrad and herself| intention was to return, Daroha } as that of @ woman who has found| not returned, ea, mund | MCGn the day he left he visited. Wh nd vital interest in life's) Oi Wright at Union, N. J. Swi with the reporter. I veallze that Mr. Garland has ms and who ts not worrted or hia wife and child he left there o ily interested In any uproar |e ee we ian. 9 to. Telunpetecsae t muy be raised, When question-|\esiwood. That was the last sees { to-day concerning Miss Conrad,! o¢ thom, according he infor sie sald tion of the police Mr. Garland, Miss Conrad and |, So far as known Darche wi all very good friends, We like|in Mnancial difficulties. A doll cach other and ag we are all inter-| change was left behind F ov vo * o cht we | three or four women's dresses andi-ssd ested in the same lines of thought we | three oF four, women's dreseee amd! ible by aiding one another, By ow ei association tn physical and ntal have no set rule; we are just golem. © hone to grow to me e's to live the best lives we can, meeti ems in the best way human ich day's problems as we go. Peer amr possible ! in time others may as to whether they had/ I hope they will, as Mr, Garlasid jake lany definite Ideas similar to those of’ one of the finest men I have even ine® the founders of the Oneida Community known and I! as beautifully as sae ut Kenwood, N, ¥., she said, ‘No, we thinks,”* AO} 20s, HOt no bangs e > sn09@ Stetson’s immediate predecessor, mow" '"“r wean Kae turned the keys to their several cus- “*” pote joln us cand « VIA EMEC, a |