The evening world. Newspaper, May 9, 1922, Page 11

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; - SHIP HELD TOWED; {IN JAIL FOR LIFE ALMOST SEPARATED} UNLESS ALIMONY FROM BRIDE HERE| BAIL IS REDUCED Glacel, Held in Raymond Street Prison, Tells Court This, Asking Release. Edward Gilacel, an automobile dealer of Stanwood, N. J., has in- formed Justice Faber in Supreme Court, Brooklyn, that unless his bail is reduced very materially from the $14,552 in which he {s held for the sat- istaction of alimony, he may look for- ward to spending the rest of his days in the Raymond Street Jail. Glacel has been in jail since April 8, Whe& he entered the State to at- tend the funeral of a sister in Brook: lyn. According to the first of three wives, Mra. Irene Glacel, he owes her back alimony at the rate of $15 a week, with interest, @ total of $14,552. As a non-resident, his bail was fixed at the amount of the judgment and he has been in jail since then in de- aes rs = xrrttre 4533s ‘Passport of Wife of Bridgeport . Man Was: Made Out In Her Maiden Name. are tees \ For a while to-day, following the /Parrival of the Oscar II. of the Scan- Minavien-American Line, it looked as jthough Carl Bernhard of Bridgeport, Conn., and his bride, who was Miss ‘Alva Gidiund of Christiana, would be feparated. Mrs. Bernhard had a pass- Port made out in her maiden name. After hearing the story the immigra- tion authorities withdrew their obje tions to the technical violation and bride was allowed to land with her OF.@ nusrana, The young man went abroad several Weeks ago and his intention was to bring Miss Gidlund back to this coun- try and be married here. She obtained her passport. With friends saying Boodby, some one informed him that] rayit of bail. if he came over here and had not been] Justice Faber to-day signed an or- married he would not be allowed to|der requiring Mra. Glacel to show bring his bride in with him and would] cause to-morrow why her former hus- be subjected to delay. band should ‘not be discharged from ‘Then it was decided to get married ond Street Jail or his ball re- at once. Capt. Axel J. Smith, a fine} duced to a point at which it will be old skipper with a heart, said he] possible for him to obtain his liberty. would hold the ship while they hunted] fm his petition for release Glacel up a clergyman and were married.| says that his confinement has cost The captain was getting a bit impa-| hin his job and that if he doesn’t tient when after holding the ship un} get out pretty soon he will lose a hour the wedding party wus sighted] little real estate through Inability to hurrying for the ‘ship. complete payments. He says that he The couple went at once to Bridge ld be unable to furnish bail in where Mr. Hernard ts in bust-| $2,500. Mrs. Glacel was granted a divorce from Glacel in 1908 and allowed $15 a week alimony. Glacel moved out of the State shortly after and has since married twice, his second wife also divoreing him. Mrs, Esther Ruepke Connors, wife of an official of the American Express Company, whose home is in Boston, ‘was another passenger. Mrs. Connor Says she is the original Yellowstone Park Baby, having been born there a Uttle more than twenty ye.rs ago] NAMING YOUNG BLONDE, frmy, wos stint ihe park, she] WIFE GRANTED DIVORCE et her husband while travelling —— abroad, Mrs. Minnie Sherman of New Ro- Rudy Anderson, a wireworker chelle Gets Decree, fhose home is in Poughkeepsie, and who has been in the Latvian Army as a physical instructor, aiso was a passenger. TENANTS’ LEAGUES TO BE FEDERATED Supreme Court Justice Tompkins at White Pieins to-day granted’a divorce to Mrs: Minnie Shermahy, well, known in social cireles of New Rochelle, from Joseph Sherman of Manhattan. The couple were married on May 29, 1917, n. x ‘ Aid several other testified to visiting an apart- dast 187th Street on Feb. 4 and finding Sherman with a young blonde McLellan Raid he gained ad- Certificate of Incorporation Issued for 25 Units Num- * bering 30,000 Members. A certificate of incorporation for the Federation of Tenants’ Associa- tions of Greater New York was ap- c proved to-day by Supreme Court} Stern Brothers ‘announced to-day that Justice Wasservogel. Among the| Mr. Louls Stern, president of the de- purposes of the organization is the] >@tment store coporation was resting easily and that the physiclans were very strengthening of bonds among various] Wii pleased with bis condition. Mr. tenants’ associations and the linking| : underwent a major abdominal of all tenants’ associations in the|oPeration at Mount Sinal Hospital yes- terd ming. He has been fil a Federation for the promotion of their| week. Lo was’ taken to the Hospital individual and federated interests. night. “Mr. Stern fs seventy Robert Ferrari of No. 19 East 122a| 8" old and lives at No, 1000 Park Street, one of the incorporators, said the federation now comprises twenty- five associations of tenants of 30,000 members. Within twelve months, he says, the new organization plans to have a much larger membership and then will proceed to Albany seeking new rent legislation. At present, Mr Ferrari says, a court and jury can decide that a rent is reasonable but cannot rule that It is unreasonable and direct a decrease, This is one of the phases of the situation that the Federation aims to change. Among the tincorporaters, besides Mr. Ferrari, are Harry Allen Ely aad Augusta Ely, Joseph T. Mclnerny and Perry W. Simpson. SHIZE AMMUNITION, ARRKST THREE, UN FRICLAND. BELFAST, May 9.—In a raid at New- town Hamilton, South Armagh, special three men, seized 30 revolvers and a of ammunition, Sherman introduced the woman as his wife. MR. LOUIS STERN DOING WELL AFTER OPERATION, y conspicuous than asol- itaire! Nothing is so dainty in color or so delicate in material that Carbona Cleaning Fiuid will not clean, Parisian in concept on and alive with style the “‘Bab,"’ in patent leather, finds popularity either on the street or in the ballroom, Signet Women’s Shops Ath Bt, at No. 6 Bast S6th St, at 1845 Bway sind St, at 187 West 186th B8t., at 118 Weet 160th St., at Third Ave. Brooklyn: 667 Fulton HEADQUARTERS FOR EDUCATOR SHOES Charge. The indictment against Philip Kohler, charging him with letters through the mati, wag quashed to-day by Federal Judge Chatfield in Brookiyn, on motion of “ames P, Koh- lor, father of the defendant, who ls a Brookiyn attorney, of No. 04 Living- ston Street, The father was secretary to the Jate Mayor Gaynor, It te alleged that the younger Kohler sont the letters to his sweetheart, Mies Alice Jennings, with whom he had quar- reled, Miss Jennings is an actrese and ia now in Europe, The motion to quash the indlotment was not opposed to-day by United Btates District Attorney Ralph C, Greene, who was in court, Son sending obscene Store Hours 9 to 5:30 Belgian Period Actuelle A tall period cabinet of exquisite workman- ship and imposing beauty, At a price that n no statement of com- pareve to emphasize its extraordinary low- ness $159. Belgian Period Actuelle An art cabinet of rich and effective design, of the very finest cr manship..... ecnevase $139 Pathe Upright Phonograph One of the biggest-selling of the Pathe models in the sale so far. New shipment here «+ +e eee een 5 THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1922, DROPS OBSCENE LETTER CASE AGAINST KOHLER Judge Chatfield Frees Brooklyn Attorney of Actrem dramatic delights of Tom's Cabin can boast of such + IN THE REALM OF MUSIC ||": ws | Strolling Russian Opera Sing- ers Start a Season of Native Works. By Frank H. Warren. At some distant date a second chronicling Krehbiel may, in ‘Still More Chapters of Ope: on the evening of May 8, 199%, the rst complete Russian opera com. Dany appeared in New York, a musio surfelted city for whose delectation many operatic organizations had lived and died. And, putting aside the ra- dio for the narrative, the future eve- Curiosity, piqued by this courageous stand, prompted tlie city's music folk t emble in large numbers at the Amsterdam Theatre to hear these foreign minstrels sing, In their own language, an opera that, though as old as 1856, had never been given “Rowsenl ke,” Mermaid, ts its name—in story fret cousin to “The Loreley’* by Alexander Dargomijet: the older schoo! of Russian writers. These tales of water aprites in love with a Morta) and living om the bettow of « stream olose to the olf mill are only Interest invariably ning reader will find {* difficult to believe that a company of singers, ballet and musicians, collected from the opera houses of Petrograd, Mos- cow, Odessa and Kieff, had been forced In 1918 by political upheaval at home to thread thelr way enst through Siberian dangers, to tempt fate in Singapore, Shanghal, Hong- kong, Manila, Calcutta, Bombay and Yokahama, spending a whole year on the 1 of Java, sailing finally for America and working thelr way across the great continent, eventually, after four years of wandering, to find themselves in the city that ts» the hoped-for goal of ail the world's great tenors, sopranos and baritonos. No home-grown band of peripatetio thespians in ite perennial effort to regale « famished community with in America, * tell how, mildly exelting, although (a evident. lags after an act or ‘two. womijaky has cleverly fitted ile music te the post Poushkin’s poem, and the opera ta dramatio and light in. turn, | ful. old fashioned samenses Matin interest was osntred on how “Uhole The class, which the or The ittention. But Dar- GIMBEL BROTHERS a ——[—>—————————————————————————— 82ND STREET -- BROADWAY — 83RD STREET — NEW YORK CITY See. RECEIVERS’ PHONOGRAPHS I, the Prices of 1921 Bought from the Receivers—Every Available Phonograph— Including A Special Group of Rarely Beautiful Period Models at Unheard-Of Prices Reorganization plans of the Pathe Freres Company are under way. Gimbel Brothers of New York, Philadelphia and Milwaukee have bought from the receivers every avail- able phonograph. The liquidation of these stocks will be the turning point—and Pathe prices must go up considerably, with the Pathe reorganization. This final receivers’ sale includes new shipments of models that we have been advertising—and at unheard-of prices, beautiful Belgian Period styles and Chinese lacquer cabinets never on sale before. ONE WHOLE YEAR TO PAY Many of the Phonographs in the sale could not be made for these prices today. Cabinets created by artists and crafts- men of the highest rank, at the of Pathe’s prosperity. The sketches but suggest their beauty. Particularly hard to illustrate are the Chinese lacquer so favored to-day. Come see them! Pathe Quality : Pathe Tone Always among the highest priced ‘or quality of make —and clear sweetness of tone, And in the Actuelle, perhaps the highest achievement in one reproduc- ton. The phonograph or the true music lover. Gimbel Brothers, Music Salons, New York Gentlemen: Please send me at once, and entirely without obligation on part, full information about Pathe Phonograph, Moddl No. ..+ pred in your sale ..... m Ni No.3 Sale Price 1921 me $17.50 $55 . No.7 Sale Price 1921 Pie $30.00 $110 ° No. 10 Sale Price 1921 $49.00 Price $150 No. 12 Sale Price 1921 = $59.00 e No.H_ Sale Price ce $95.00 Price $225 Continuing the Sale of BABY GRAND PIANOS A make nationally known—and nationally famed for quality build. A size to fit wher- ever an upright piano will fit. And the lowest price, within our memory, on a Baby Grand Piano. 935 4 Feet 10 Inches Long Fitting New York’s smuller a fitting New York’s less ambitious purses, And giving every music lover, regardless of means, the way to the finest of musio-— @ quality baby grand. mte— THREE YEARS TO PAY GIMBELS MUSIC SALON—Eighth Floor. it would be done by native artists. Russian company, Must not be compared with the Metro- politan, Rather ts It in the San Carta! The entertainm: of courne, it provided Belgian Period Actuelle * A stately cabinet that is simple in line, classic in Chinese Lacquer Pathe cot the” Chinese eraere ars The ime fousness was, first of all, interesting. The com- pany evidently knew the opera back- ward and there was no prompter In such scones as the wedding, In setting and grouping} looked like an enlarged bit from the Chauve Souris up the street, Prince's room and the peasant merry~ making by the mill, natural touches and a native simplicity gripped the, The kingdom of the sirens. at the bottom of the stream was, on the other hand, much lke doxene of other attempts, As for the voloes and singing, they sound harsh to tastes attuned to the gently flowing Italtan measures, but are not dintante- The artiste were vigorous and) spontaneous, considering their years OF Sar RGN: OS, Prey te ONE: Cia the just suggest sketch ~- one $139 § ‘Upright Pathe Phonograph Si alned dignified and ri is this Pathe m ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE Sprinkle one or two =33

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