f THE MORNING OREOOXIAX. MONDAY, MARCH 25. 1918. - w . I ase-es..sasi " "T I WIFE OF PRINCE TO RETURN TO STAGE California Girl Says Life in Oriental Home Is Unbear able to American. BEAUTIFUL WIFE OF FAMOUS MILLIONAIRE FLUNG ER. WHO IS SUINO FOR DIVORCE. former Star of "The F'atal AYcd ding" and "The ClimherV Will n-ptrt Turkish Court Life In Vaudeville Miov. FOOTLIGHTS' CALL HEARD jj : t t t NEW TOrtK. March 24. (Special.) rrltiresa Ila.'Mn, who ui Olita Hum- phrey. star of Th Kul Wed dinar." The Climbers," and other ho before she married Prince Ibrahim lluun. cousin of the present Khedive f Egypt. In London last April, haa decided that It la more fun to be an American actress than an Egyptian Prtnceea. and that If she gts the kind ef a vaudeville art she wants she will net bo back to Prince Ibrahim. On advice of Lillian P-ussoll and other friends, the Princess advertised for a sketch which would give her the chance, she believes, to show her fsm tllarlty with Oriental court life, She expressed hr need as follows: "A sketch for a !0-nilnute act In vaudeville desired. Oriental storr treating with the marriage of an American lady to an Oriental Prince. Address Princess Hassan. Hector's Ho tel." "An I groin fr to return to Prince Ibra him?" asked the Princess In answer to question. "Well. I am here, am I not? I am Informed through Turkish diplo matic circles that I will receive no In come from the Prince while I am In this country. But that will not move me. The life 1 led was Impossible. No American girl could endure It. I was the victim of their ages-old treatment of women, Such treatment waa In tolerable. The Princess was born in California and went on the staff there when she waa IS years old. Her first husband was Kdvln Mordaunt, who waa leading mn In "The Fatal Wedding." She ilvcrced him. GUESTS MURDER HOST Italian Shot I tract After lie Serves Hrfrohmcnl. t.S ANilKLKf. Marcn It. (Special.) The most baffling murtl'r mystery whl-h the police have had to deal with In months raujied a general alarm to r sent ut over the city at o'clock tMa aftrmn for tlie arrest of two mn wh shot In the back and killed J..-f.h Sldano. 40 East Kitty-third street, ax he was offering them the hpia1tEy of hta home. Mrs. Soldtno la a ficure of (real lmpori4rr in the es of the police, as II le through her conflicting stories t t the truth !a expected to coma to light. She atubborr.iy sticks to tha desertion that the killing; was done by two stranatrs. who demanded money from her husband or blackmail, and with whom ho had had fierce quarrel earlier In the day. The police have established, how ever, that htit one man railed on the Soldanos this morn!nc Andrea rasa no. brother of Mrs. Soldano. Confronted with this fart, the latter admitted that her brother had called and that she waa the causa of a fight In which Pa aano was thrown oat of the house by Soldano. armed with a bat. The. two men who came In the afternoon, she says, were total etrancers, and none jf the neighbors remrmbera ever having een them before. Soldano welcomed them, however, and had Just offered ihem wtne. when on shot htm In the back, killing Mm Instantly. Moth fled. he dragnet ha since landed five sus pects In the Tombs, but none haa been Identified ur to this hour. SWIMMER RIDES TURTLE Montcr Conquered by Man 'Whom It Attack. TALM BKACII. Fla.. March :t. (Spe cial. I Con'iuerlna a monster sea turtle, that attacked him when he was bath ln here today. John Jordan, of Buf falo. N". T.. twice succeeded In setting on the monsters back, and on the sec ond attempt suceeoded In riding htm to shore, where help came and a noose waa put over its head. It Is the first lime a turtle ever has attacked a man In these waters. Jordan e a brother-in-law of William J. Conners. tie New York politician, whom lie was visiting here. Mr. Jordan entered the water alone n front of the Conners residence and was swimming J')0 feet from shore when the turtle mse under him. strik ing at him with Ita head. To save hlm lf Mr. Jordan Jun ped on lt bark. The turtle swam for deep water and love, unhealing Its rider. Conilnc te the surface. It again struck at him viclotislv. 1'naMe to swim awar. Jordan cam climbed to the turtle's back and nMns his feet a a rudder and holding to the nippers, he ateered It toward shore. Meantime. Miss Alice Conners. seeing his plicht from the ahore. summoned two Japanese servants, who rushed out with a clothe line, forming a noose, which thy cot over the turtle's head sfter a struacle in which bot'i were hltten. The t'irtle measured five ard a balf feet In diameter. SEATTLE PARTY MISSING Auto Kxrurston of Three Into Me lt Nut Heard I'roni Again. SAN rIEiO. Cal.. .Mar. h it. iSpe- 1.4I. Paul Hopkins, ased S yrars. a retired business man of Seattle, left here in an automobile for Yuma Feb ruary 2 4. accompanied by his Invalid son. Edward Hopkins, and Charles Kd liiundjion. of San Incgo. Search was started last Thursday, but ofrlcers here and In Imperial Valley have not been !! to hnd trace of the missing men or their machine. It is believed they ventured Into Mexico, were mistaken for spies, and have either been killed or are being ti-ld pns.-nrs. Vouns; lfpktn and Kdr.iundx 011 have mlnlnc Interests nar t Keario. in the Stale of Sorioro. ' ' - ' ? . I ;C?s . . X "i . X V V '3k -MR. K. R. THOMAs. EFFORT IS WASTED Carnegie Foundation Criti cises Needless Schools, LAWYERS TOO NUMEROUS Report Trace Plsrejpecl for Judl rlary to Multiplication With out Training Half Mil lion In Pensions Paid. NEW TORK. March Zt. "L'nneces- ary educational Institutions continue to "contribute to the deterioration 01 educational sUnaards." In the Judg ment of the Camele Foundation lor the Advancement of Teaching, the sixth annual report of which was made pub lic today- These Institutions, tne re port says, are developed for personal, local and denominational reasons and result In the withdrawal of support from necessary and worthy Institutions. Students, says the report, who should turn towsrd Industrial training are de flected elsewhere throuah advertise ments, scholarships, and other stipends. to tha waste of their anilities ana 01 public funds. It continues: -The Increase In the number and site of post-craduate schools SO per cent In the last decade and ten-fold In the last ae years has been much greater than the natural need. Poor and pre tentious araduate schools, conducted nh the funds of undergraduate col leges and attended chiefly by subsi dised student, often merely Impair the appreciation of good undergraduate teaching and hamper real rwi-". throneh the multiplication of mechan ical seminars, dissertations, and the like. The rare and expense 01 a aooa araduate school can be borne only by a few large universities. ttffort Oftea implicated. "Professional education, also. Is ham pered bv an enormous Bupllcatlun of facilities, resulting In great financial waste, and often In a competition In low entrance requirements and poor instruction. Rome states have four, five, seven and nine schools of en ginrerina each: New York City alone has six. and Pennsylvania has IS. five of these having fewer than 40 students each. Fortunately, the engineering so cieties and the Foundation are now co operating to bring about an elimination through Insistence upon proper stan dards. "In legal education there is an Im provement In Instruction and an In creasing emphasis on better standards by authoritative bodies like the Amerl. can Bar Association, but poor schools still turn out three times as many law yrrs aa the country needs, and one half of our states have no adequate ed ucational requirement for admission to the bar. The miscarriage of Justice, the law's delajs. the cost of litigation, public disregard of law. and disrespect for the Judiciary, all proceed In no small dearee from this multiplication of til-trained lawyers. The bar is pe culiarly responsible, since It alone of all professions practically fixes ita own requirements for admission to practice." Th- report notes that unworthy me.il.-al schools passed out of existence in the previous year. Peaaloaera Maw amber 37S. The report covers the year ended September 30 last. The endowment amounted at that time to III.IIJ.OOO. comprising Mr. Carnegle'a original gift of tl.000.00 In 1905. an accumulation from Income of 11.1:3.004. and $1,000. 0'0 received in lll as the first Install ment of Mr. CarneKle's additional gift of V0.n00 In 10H. Of the Income of 150.00 for the year 11-111. J.-.:. 000 waa expended in re tiring allowances and pensions. $3. 000 in general administration, and $16.. 00 In educational publication. Fifteen recipients of allowances died during the year. Including Professors Bowdltch. of Harvard. Carson of Cornell. Harrison of Y'lrglnla. and March of Lafayette. Russia of Welts I Kagan and Vasllia l.lchatoff. held by the Government, at Tacoma. charged with being anarchists, were adopted at a mass meeting of Socialists at Preamland Pavilion to day. Prior to the well-attendaU meet ing the Socialists paradcti the down town streets with only one flag, the red banner of Socialism, displayed at the head of the column. Kagan and LlchatofT, who, their de fenders say. are Russian Socialists and not anarchists, escaped from the quick silver mines In Siberia and made their way to Tacoma. where they were ar rested and ordered deported. The Gov ernment rontenda that one of the men entered American territory on a false passport and that both of them bor rowed the money necessary to gain ad mittance. The Socialists assert that the charges against the men were trumped up at the Instigation of the Russian government so they would be sent back to Siberia to serve the sen tences Imposed for political activity. The resolutiona demanding their re lease will be aent to Representative Berger. who haa already exerted him self In their behalf. A collection of $100 was taken at the meeting to pro vide a defense fund for the refugees. ilCTOB TAKES OWN LIFE CHAItLKS STERLING PIES OX STEAMER CAMPAXIA. Deceased Waa on W'my to Appear In Vaudeville With famous Iog Actor 'Patsy. XKff YORK. March 24. (Special.) Charles Sterling, an aged English ac tor, traveling with his Irish terrier. Patsy, killed himself aboard the steam ship Campania, of the Cunard line, which arrived hero today. He waa burled at sea Saturday. Sterling was coming here to appear In vaudeville with his dog. From the moment he went on board the steam ship at Liverpool it was observed that he waa melancholy. He became more and more depressed as the vessel ap proached the American Coast and was finally put Into a hospital, where he was treated by the surgeon on board. The nurse In attendance left Ster ling alone for a moment on Saturday and when he returned found the patient hanging by the neck from an overhead tron beam. He had torn a bed sheet Into a strip, tied it about his neck and was dead when the nurse returned to the hospital. Patsy, the dog actor, who waa left an "orphsn" by the suicide of his mas ter, is nut an American rltlsen, but a British subject and cannot be taken In charge by the Ignited States Immi-K-ratlon authorities. He wss left on board the Campania and will be taken back to Liverpool and turned over to the British authorities, there. JEALOUSY KILLS BEAR POLAR CZAR OF NEW YORK ZOO DIES IX PREXZIED RAGE. flarttare Cmm Re f'sired. Mv mr-hnl'! treatment will cure, r'ipture. 1 'onsultat,n fre. H. i '. I.'ne Iruni. ;i's Vainluii St.. l'ciUaud. Oi. DEPORTATION IS FOUGHT SorialiM Prolot AgaltKt Sending Anarrlii-1- Hack to Russia. SK..TTLF March H. Resolutions protesting agiiust the dcportatluo te Sight or Hated Sliver King Making Love to Shaggy Spouse Is Too .Much for Old Rex. XRW TORK. March 84. (Special.) Rex. once the biggest, proudest and meanest Polar hear in the Bronx roo. Is dead from a Jealous rage Into which he threw himself In the belief that he had been supplanted In the affections of Mrs, Rex by Silver. King, another prominent Polar bear. Rex had two wife murders to his credit and it waa to save the life of the third Mrs. Rex that the bear was removed from Rex' cage and placed In a separate one. adjoining that of Silver King. After that Rex never was himself. At once violent hatred sprang up be tween Silver King and Rex. They roared and quarrelled over the head of Mrs, Rex. who lurched about her own rage, apparently delighted that slio was the cause of auch dissension. Rex beat at the bars of his cage all Monday, gradually hla intense anger reduced him to weakness. He lay down and refused to answer the roaring challenges from his rival. In a few hours Rex groaned, keeled over on his back and lay still. Mrs. Hex Is now free to become Mrs. Silver Klngj Get your dog entered before Saturday. MRS. THOMAS' SUIT AROUSES INTEREST Broadway Knows ex-Boy Banker and "Teddy" Ger rard, Co-Respondent. UNHAPPY WIFE IS BEAUTY Former Multi-Millionaire's Money Strewn Career In Wall Street Is Still Talked Of Cred itors Garnishee Income. NEW YORK. March SI. (Special.) No divorce action In recent years has attracted more attention than the suit Mrs. E. R. Thomas has brought against her husband, the ex-multl-mlllloualre boy banker, plunger, turfman and auto speed enthusiast. . Not that It win unexpected, for the couple have not been living together for aome time, but the case pertains to Broadway, as well as Fifth avenue and Newport, and consequently commands a general interest, for Mrs. Thomas lias named as co-respondent Theodora Ge rard, famed on the "great white way" as a fascinating musical comedy act ress, and Mrs. Thomas and her husband are of society. Mrs. Thomas is living at Carlton House, 22 East Forty-seventh street, and Mr. Thomas is In Paris. He has made the French capital his home since the estrangement with his wife. It Is not known yet whether he will contest Mrs. Thomas' suit. Mrs. Thomas Noted Beauty. The couple were married In 1901. Mm. Thomas was Miss Linda Lee, daughter of a Louisville gas magnate, and one of the Blue Grass state s fa mous beauties. She is stately, with a beautiful pink and white complexion and a wealth of golden hair. Edward Russell Thomas is the son of the late General Sam A. Thomas, who accumulated an Immense fortune In Southern railroads. When his son married. Colonel Thomas presented the bride with a diamond necklace valued at $60,000. while her husband's gift was a pretty trifle worth $40,000. There was nothing of the piker" in K R. Thomas until reverses overtook him and compelled the speed-lover to hit a high pace to keep ahead of his creditors. e Deal Too Big. Through the influence of his father, young Thomas became president of the Seventh National Bank. No deal was too big for the boy bank president to tackle. He had unlimited credit. His checks were good anywhere. In those golden years, from his wedding day until the financial upheaval of 107, F. H Thomas w as a thoroughbred sport. It Is said that lie staked $2,000,000 on one cotton deal alone. He traveled around with "Joe" Letter. F. Augustus Helnze and a lot of other redhot sports (the name on every piece), and Wall street and Broadway took notice when he passed by. When E. R. wanted a bit of reFt he flopped on a $10,000 bed in apartments at the Sr. Regis costing $45,000 a year. He Insisted on having the air he breathed and such water as he drank sterilised. His bathroom was equipped with hot and cold tooth brushes and a bathtubola with all the latest and most popular records. Money Surely Flevr. Wee. how the money did fly when Thomas gave a dinner to a few friends at Delmonlco's: What he spent on lit tle automobile favors for his guests would have paid for the ordinary man's family touring car and kept it in gaso line for six months. Thomas was a motormanlac. If there was one. Special autoa were constructed to satisfy his craving for swift travel. The beginning of the end came when Thomas was injured In an auto acci dent at Long Branch in 1908. His leg waa broken and lie has been a cripple ever since. The doctors ordered am putation, but Thomas would have hone of It. Under the physicians' orders. Thomas and Mrs. Thomas dawdled along the Nile In a houseboat for sev eral months. After that they drifted spart and the panic put a dent in the boy banker. He found himself ehunted off boards of di rectors he had graced, and his cred itors put up an unholy howl for money. What they wanted was $.1,000,000. and Thomas admitted he was unable to obllce with the cash. The Sheriff sought him out and attached what he could here and there. laeome la fSfl,0O0. General Thomas had noted the speedy methods of his son. and In his will pro vided his son with $ISO.OOO a year only, giving the estate of $10,000,000 to the widow. The widow came to her son's rescue with $200,000 and his wife mort gaged her home for $33,000, but these sums were nothing. The creditors wanted to take all the rounx man's Income except $10,000 a year, but he protested volubly, setting forth that $10,000 a year wouldn't pay for cigarettes and cab hire. His life Insurance cost him $15,000 a year, he said, and he was obliged to pay $15. 000 a year to a relative. Last January Thomas confessed Judgment for $1,134. 487. and the court signed an order garnisheeing his income. Thomas" debts are now being paid at the rate of $1, 000 a year, under the direction of the court and Thomas" trustees. Theodora Gerard, the "other woman" In the case, was famed aa the exponent of the Vampire dance in Paris and New York, hut she Is not working at It Just now. Mrs. Thomas alleges In her com plaint that the dancer has been gal lavanting around Europe with her hus band. , Broadway K anna Teddy.' In private life Miss Gerard is the wife of Joseph Raymond. She Is known to her Intimates on Broadway as "Teddy." Quite besides her attractive ness, her alleged resemblance to Evelyn N'esblt Thaw, and her delineation of the Vampire dance. Miss Gerard has earned the calcium of publicity for her self by various stunts. As a sprightly English Journal would eay. the follow ing amusing story is told of Miss Gerard: When she was dancing at the Olympic, in Paris, she resented the tare a Russian Duke, or Alderman, or Homebody like that, bestowed upon her In Maxim's, so she busted a. glass of wine In his face. She did it In a "nice. J quiet" way. to be sure, but the Russian was all cut up aouui 11. Again, friends of Miss Gerard tell the following amusing stor1 Shortly after she came to New York she caused the arrest of George Bronson Howard. j the playwright, charging him with waving a piniui at npr 1 1 u anc in jected his alleged attentions. Subse quently she dropped the action against Howard and threatened a fellow play rcrlbbler. Wilson Mixner. with action in court to recover $50,000 which she alleged he had coerced from her. Like her other charge against "Author Author," nothing came of her threat against Mlzner. She never brought the action. Besides Miss Gerard. Mrs. Thomas al leges that her husband has been indis creet with "divers other" women, but she confesses her inability to name them all. She craves an absolute divorce. MATRONS ARE BARRED BANK TYPISTS CAXXOT HAVE HCSBANTJS AXD JOBS, TOO. Only Maidens and Spinsters Can Click Tjpewriters and Adding Machines After April 1. CHICAGO. March 24. (Special.) Women employes of the Continental & Commercial Bank, one of the largest in Chicago, cannot expect to have hus bands and Jobs, too, after April 1. Mar ried women will be barred, says Vice President Schroeder, for these rea- ! sons: Business and matrimony do not go together. A bank is a business institution, not a school for matrimony. Love affairs in bunks should be thoroughly and timely discouraged. Married women should be at home, not at a typewriter or adding machine.. and should not nrroirate the rlchts of j single women who have to earn their own living. "There is a rule in our bank that when a woman employe gets married she automatically resigns, added Mr. 'Schroeder. "In February two of our girls were married. They were per mitted to retain their Jobs until April, at their ovn request. All the others were discharged when the rule went Into effect. "After April 1 the hank will have no married women on its payroll. Wc are opposed to the hiring of v.omen at all. but it Is necessitated by a condition." TWO AVIATORS ARE KILLED Russian Lieutenant anil , Engineer Hurled to Sudden Jcatli. SEBASTOPOL. Russia, March 24. A double aeroplane fatality occurred hern today. Sub-Lieutenant Albokrinoff and his assistant, an engineer, were making a flight in a biplane at the flying ground attached to the military avlatlon school, when the aeroplane was overturned by a sudden gust ot wind and hurled to the ground. The two aviators were instantly killed and the aeroplane was destroyed. Lebanon Bank Becomes National. LEBANON. Or.. March 24. (Special.) The Lebanon State Bank haa received a dispatch from the Controller of Cur rency at Washington authorizing it to begin doing business as a National bank, to be known as the Lebanon Na tional Bark. Application was made by the stockholders at their annual meet- wi n iv j "-v w . W la-samww ' -Msr JL rerchandke. of erit Only. . ANNOUNCEMENT Mrs. L. C. Redding, expert corsetiere and demon strator of MO DART CORSETS, the Improved Front Laced, has arrived, and H'ill spend this week in our Corset Department explaining and demonstrating the merits of these wonderful shaping corsets to oar customers. Wc take this opportunity of notifying you that we shall be glad to make a telephone appointment with you for a filling, and have Mrs. Redding set aside a spe cial time for you. Slip mm iuch an appointment docs not carry with it any obligation to purchase, but wc feel that you will want to see and Ipiow more about these wonderful figure building corsets, that arc worn by the best-drcssed women of today. G TH? MOUL.D Of fTASf-fOM' v : . ' Ing In January to convert the bank inte with $33,000 capital and J2000 surplus, a National banking association and to The bank is but little inore than two Increase the capital stock from $25,000 years old and has assets above $200,000. to $3i.000u. Tills was also granted, and the bank starts out as a National bank Irg Sho-rr office 521 Abln?ton "Rli'g. (raid Adv.) A 5 1 "- v N & if rfe-;,.rV V .AW'f i 1 mTi yjjfflifrfnrint'-" REPRESENTATIVE A. W. LAFFERTY KEEPING UPSTRENGTH Just as much smooth, creamy Oxo mulslon as he can pour Into a table spoon, three times a day. is.therlght fleeh-bullder for the hard-working and hard-worrying man, who feels that he Is, In the bodily semse, going down hill. No defined disease as yet but a gen eral lessening of power. You know what the feeling Is. End It and the faulty nutrition that causes it, with Oxomulslon. 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