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TIERNANS EXPLAIN MOTIVE IN STRANGE PATERNITY ACTION (Continued from First Page.) Drovght about a public hearing which bas stirred the country. Phblicity, Prof. Tiernan betieves, is the mighty weapon through which morals are to be kept at a high standard. Through the medium of Publicity, this university teacher and author of legal text books believ betrayer of a woman may be exp from a community and the minds of People raised to such a pinnacle that of a debasing union shall not suffer. “1 do not repress self in this ease,” he said, “but unfortunate child, Even if I have to carry this battle to the point of community ac- tion, I shall see that justice is done I shall invoke the influence of friends with a view of expelling the invader of the home from the community. He fs not only a standing challenge but 2 menace to the community. He must be exposed thoroughly that the wronged woman may be comforted and the child acknowledged."* It fs from Mrs Tiernan, however, that one learns of the trials that have beset her, and in these trials she says there is a lesson for young mar- ried couples. “Sometimes,” she explained to-day, “although young husbands love their wives devotedly they are likely to / give to thelr work a more appayent devotion than they concede to their helpmeets. Or perhaps they have in- terests that require attention to the exclusion of the young wife. Nat~- uraily, a young wife feels pique when this is the case, and unless she 1 more than ordinarily strong of wil) she will seek amusement elsewhere.” Mrs. Tiernan called attention to those young wives who feel they ure undergoing a period of semi-imprison- ment in a home where they meet only the same people day after day, where they go through the same old routine of baking, cooking, making beds and polishing furniture, and feel they ure entitled to a litte relaxation. Their husbanils, not being socially inclined, or because they have their clubs and their men friends down town, as well as the ever present change in thoir occupations, fall to realize the danger in which their wives are placed when they meet young men who seem to take a‘more than ordinary interest in them. “Women,” said Mrs. Tiernan, ‘‘will naturally seek the company of men who interest them more than their husbands do, and who can give them the amusements thelr husbands can- mot or will not give. “Perhaps they love their hasbands fas devotedly as ever, but perhaps they do not realize it until some sort of calamity brings the realization home to them.” In this case, supporting the theories advanced by the Tiernans, is the well- grounded fact that at no time has an effort been made to force Harry Poulin to pay over a large sum of: money. ‘The only financial demand has been for the provision of a small fund to meet expenses incurred at the birth of the child, and this, it is stated, is done only for technical reasons. Another argument in support of their position is the continuance of their marital relations, During the days of the hearing, Prof. Tiernan has been as devoted to his wife as a bride- groom. She, in turn, has shown her love for him by rising from her, chair inside the bar to attack the lawyer who inferred that her husband was himself a violator of the moral code. “There is every probability that the past will be forgotten,” said Prof. ‘Tiernan, “and that we will begin life anew with our interest in our chil- dren and home."’ ‘The baby in the case, he infers, will remain as one of the family and will be educated and raised as will the other two children. LINER IN BAD GALE __ ESCAPES ICEBERGS ® IN TITAN'S LANE (Continued from First Page.) Superstructure doors fastened to keep, Passengers safely within. A wireless message from the Red Star steamship Zeeland, bound for Antwerp, gave Capt. Brevet word of the icebergs off the Banks, so a Sharp lookout was kept, but none was picked up. Among the Lafayette’s 423 passen- gers were Mr. and Mrs, W. Bourke Cockran. He declared nene of the ‘Yoyagers had any idea until hours later that the vessel had passed through a hurricane. “We rolled about a good deal,” he said, ‘‘and we were kept off the decks, but had no knowledge of so severe a storm as Capt. Brevet and his officers @eviired it to have been. Mr. Cochran had two audiences with the Pope while attending the Bucha- ristic Congress in Rome. He said he had nothing to say about politics but that he was going to attend the con- Yention at Syracuse. Judge Martin T. Manton went to th» plier to meet Mr, Cockran. Wireless report that the Cunarde: Aquitania, due here on Friday, had fun into a heavy storm, piling great ‘Waves on her decks, occasioned no apprehension to-day at the offices of the line. No message had been re- ceived from her that indicated she ‘Was encountering unusual weuther, There are 1,876 passengers on the Aquitania, among them Sir Reginald McKenns, former British Chancellor ef the Exchequer; Sir Claude Hill and Oliver Iselin. MOTHER ACCUSED OF HITTING TEACHER to Jook into the matter of Mrs, Mille's hospital bills, which had been as sumed temporarily by the emergency THE EVENING WORLD, suying he was going to the chureh Japne ince of Vaviowa, He w je to remember the occ: ccording to their neighbor Millie Opie, Mrs, Millx had de he thouzht more of Mr. Hall WEDNE way connected with the case and that mystery fout of the front door of ‘his home wid fund of the church Parent Says Son Told Iler an Instructor Struck Him. }now proved taise by the Reeds, tha [Whole i ea : a ete our Oo the wrt of t t she | say. Wiektide- her son add he hed Ween he ne : phd mehr aunivels Inquiries to determine what dispos! | rack of his houre jon was made by the Rev. Dr. Ed struck by Mise Margarete Coffrin, a teacher in Public School No, 112, 16th Avenue and Tist Street, in the Lefferts Park section of Brooklyn, the trolley line. ¢ heen found {n the Ha last Thursday, Mra. Rose Andriolo, of church which app Prosecutors Stricker and Beekmar No. 1414 15th Avenue, went to tho) Peuring on the have not been able to find out ju school house and, it is alleged, struck |” t resources in bank the ministe the teacher, Mrs, Andriolo was ar d apart f his wife's incom raigned before Magistrate Reynolds hich they understand he handled fc to-day and paroled until Oct. 3, for her in large purt. They do know thi | examjnation for disorderly conduct his mother-in-law's will a yea Complainants in the ‘ revelved $10,000 in easily ne Isaac Bieberfee of No. 5 OW e le » is understood t | 164th Street, Manhattan, Principal 0 1 f leposit vault, , ana Miss Comin ‘ fe a * were drawn oi ho Street, in th Letert ard v indicate to the au y wife left home| rhor “ y are on the right rk section i told the Magistrate that M He admitted ef that the rector driole entered M has w yir r were contemplat ‘oom and, on being ejected, 1 4 re-Jit to Japan imme she struck Miss Coffrin, n but said herfd © of the sisters of Mr r a a shabby an) Mil « told them. Mrs Andriolo declared her son Jo- an 0 « covered with an old Hall had $10,000 and other yh, eight, came home w ye shoulder ver 000 and othe Pe aaa at ee rf and he didn't regard her a on his person when he was shot cut and u limp on his head received, | ® he told her, when @ teacher had] "dressed up struck him. His mother asserted she did not strike Miss Coffrin TEN THOUSAND PRAY house making ebureh until ft was too hen I went in and read paper for a while At 11 o'clock murderous frenzy by the FOR RAIN AND GET IT nt over to the church to open the} knowledge that the Rev. Mr, Hal et to air it; no, it wasn't anfand Mis, Mills might disappear at unusual time for that. 1 got back |« sums of money CHICAGO, Sept. 27.—Ten thoulsan'| jome at 11.15 o'clock und af n and their firs Christian Chinese troops and thou Jing with Mrs. Kelly stairs and of killing had sands of other Chine: Vitelling her Mrs. Hall was out T lay |lef realization ¢ Honan Province in a monster open-air] gown to re prayer meeting for rain, according to] “1 fet! representatives of the Methodist Epte-fo'etock. 1 copal Church working in Chin: thinking perha there to med spells, when in the dark turned home ting out the ki hours after the meeting closed a rain fell, the missions report SLAIN RECTOR SEEN ot finding her, 1 went to bed, hen light “1 assumed Mrs. Mills had go » when they met their de- out driving with the Halls and th | car had broken down, 1 still t sa survey of the slain rec the same thing next morning tor's finances, Mr, Stricker and Mr tended to my work in the ord | Beekman will diser o-day, apply Sterling School, went over to the]ing for permission to take up tl chureh and then saw Mrs. Hall. body of Mrs. Mills for an adequat: ON NIGHT (fF MURDEF “T don't know why I asked Mra. J“ttopsy, which had not been per Hall if she thought there had been an| formed w she was buried, elopement. 1 had thought Mrs, Milis] 1 seeking information regarding a. a wus with Mrs, Hall and she wasn't—| Mr. Hal $10,000 Inheritance tt (Continued from First Page.) that was all,’ prosecutors questioned Henry Stevens Mr. Mills suid he knew of his wife's brother of Mrs. Hall, who appeared visit to the office of Dr sald they had made thorough {n-|the dental surgeon, Aur. quiries on George Street, have Insist ed that nobody saw Mr, Hall after he Jing taken her. He said Mrs. Mills,Janswer: “I have no knowledge tha called to his wife as he was going ‘with his knowledge, had accompanied| my nd withdrew any securitic. Mr. Hall to w York to see the last! from the bank.” IN IS ~hA TS i Pane N FIFTH AVENUE, at y oe the very crown of Mur- " aN N ray Hill, stands a shop El whose day-to-day exist- ence is woven into the pleasant side of the life of New York. Like the sundial in the garden of the Guelphs at Sandringham it is perfectly content to say: “Let others tell of storms and showers I'll only count your sunny hours.” This Shop is Ovington's—“The Gift Shop of Fifth Avenue.” And scarcely a person enters its doors OR OU RT AR ON ON On this was based the assumption made his way by Redmond Street tc Mr. Stricker said no papers hae |} home or in the “T remained on the steps of flower boxes for urk,"* he Husbrouck, 29, and was very grateful to the minister for hav- little finger thom of her husband ward Wheeler Hall of his money and ecurities occupid the prosecutors of Middlesex and Somerset Counties to tay ) it is not inconsistent with the plot of the murders as go far recon tructed that the money should be those most strongly under ; they were stirred to action the the said » that the small fortun must not be left with th d bodies of their victims t chance prowlers whic n their bodies, nee of the money woul support to * contention that ng was the work of robbere mailers who had met with put- them voluntart At their request he befor ternoon lay af-| visited his sister and came back with the ‘without having in mind some joy- ous errand. That errand may be the purchase of a wedding gift to some bride of the season. A man may come in to select the lamp that will lend its cosy glow upon his home. Two young girls may enter to dis- cuss fifty gifts for their mother's birthday and they may be followed by a young married couple whose purpose is to select their first good dinner service, Gifts for birthdays, gifts for wed- dings, gifts for anniversaries, prizes for parties, favors for dances, and things like good china and good lamps which lend their gracious touch as OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of Fifth cAvenue”’ FIFTH AVENUE AT 39TH STREET Hills Rendered November Ist, SDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1922, He added that Mrs, Hall felt con-|she did not belleve a discussion of fident that the securities were in no|this phase of it would help solve the Best & Co. Fifth Ave. at 35th St —N.Y. Enablished 1879 THURSDAY rn I EI (Charge Poretinses Made Last Three Days of Meptember Will Appear 00 SPECIAL SALE of ‘Brown “fox Scarfs Silky, long-haired pelts of excep- tional quality, in new shades of brown. These are scarfs of a grade that usually sells for 55 00. Speci- ally priced for Thursday. 39.00 Natural Mink Scarfs - - Two-skin Mink Scarfs - - Stone Marten Scarfs - - Baum Marten Scarfs - - Platinum Fox Scarfs - - Third Floor 25.00 45.00 35.00 45.00 85.00 And gifts from all the world are gathered here the Lares and Penates of a home. For seventy-five years it has been so. For seventy-five years Oving- ton’s have been searching for and finding good gifts. For seventy-five years they have served New York in these matters that call for so much discrimination and good taste. To-day they seek out and examine the wares of the world; to-day there are more good gifts at Ovington’s than there have ever been before; and to-day the old, old principles of good taste and good value appear in combination as they did in 1846, , pT Ei eS’ EY A i 4 Jranklin Simon a Co. A Store of Individual Shops FIFTH AVENUE, 37th and 38th STS, A Fashion Newalty! SLENDERIZING SELVAGE BACK SILK STOCKINGS For -Madame and Mademoiselle An Established Fashion Success, But Made Full Fashioned For The First Time 2 50 T last fashion succeeds in conferring upon full fashioned hosiery that deft tapering touch that is at once the admiration and the envy ofall 2. 2... Pure Threaa Silk with lisle top and sale; In Vionnet Brown, Paris Brown, (Cafe au Rose, Cocoa, African Brown, Beige, Taupe, Gray Black or White Franklin Simon g Co, A Store of Individual Shops FIFTH AVENUE, 37th and 38th STS. For the Funwr Miss STRAP PUMPS AND OXFORDS 4) Which Sumplify Older Sister’s Fashionable Footwear so that it 1s Suitable for the iq Juntor Miss. 729 Sizes 2% to 74—widths AA to D Ages 10 to 16 years The Shoe Shop has settled the delicate question of how to give the Junior Miss the fashion she is old enough to demand in her footwear and yet keep within the limits of good taste. . . . , Tan or Black Russa G@alfshin ; Brown Elkskin; Black Patent Leather Junior Misses’ Suoe Snov— ard Floor It Makes Little Difference What You Need— A World “Want” Ad. Will Go and Find It