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"FORMER BEAUTY ARS, ATHOHT NIWA WRECK’ SEEKS BORCE Her Husband’s Suit Against Her} ‘Mrs. Anna Clegg Taylor, Sister of Venezuelan Minister Bow- en's Wife, Is Sent to the Mag- dalens’ Home. WAS A HOPELESS DRUNKARD. (Once a Reigning Southern Belle, She + Married Two Wealthy Men, Ob- taining a Divorce from One, While the Other Secured One from Her. On the day that Mrs. Herbert Rowen, wife of the brilliant young diplomat 1 whose skill tn handling the Venezuelan 4, episode has brought him international fame, was being honored py the ladies ef the Cabinet circle her unfortunate sister, Mrs. Anna Clegg Taylor, was sen- tenced in the Harlem Court to six months in the Magdalens’ Home. The woman {s an habitual drunkard, and ‘her commitment was at the intercession Of @ relative, who wished to keep her from a life in the streets, Mrs, Taylor, despite her dissipation, retains traces of her former striking beauty and her well-bred air has not @ltogether deserted her. She begzed pite- ously not to be sent away to the cor- Feotive institution, and in her hysteria betrayed her relationship to Carolyn Bowen, the diplomat's wife. ‘Mrs. Taylor is severa) years Mrs. Bowen's senior. They were belles in Galveston, Tex., both of remarkable ty and of the highest social stand- ing in the South. Ufter a visit to the New. Orleans Mard! Gras, where her striking beauty made a sensation even ff’ that city of beautiful women, Miss Anna Clegg married a wealthy cattle owner named Wood. + First Marriage Uncongental. They were not congenial, and after Tittle while Mrs. Wood secured &tvorce. She then married Thomas Taylor, a cotton magnate, of Galveston, whose family 1s one of the most prom|- ment and wealthy in the South. Two gong were born to them, the elder now ‘being a student at a military academy &t Cornwall-on-the-Hudson. Mr. and Mrs. Taylor came to New York on a visit and stopped at the Hotel Imperial. So fascinating did Mrs, Taylor find life in the metropolis that fhe persuaded Mr. Taylor to make his tome here, and he established a branch of his cotton business in this city, Mrs. Taylor’a two brothers came here to assist him. Tt was at the Hotel Imperial that the fascination for drink took hold on Mrs, Taylor. ‘At one time she made an ex- Ribition of herself in the dining-room that would have resulted in her exclu- sion from the house but tor the kindly feeling of the management for her hus- Wand. ' .Her’ sprees became so frequent that her husband was forced to take her from the hotel, and later he had to leave her. After establishing her with friends in @ private boarding-house he returned, heart-broken, to Marlin, Tex. After his departure Mrs, Taylor went from bed to worse. Her habits resulted fm frequent evictions and much pub- Melty. Seco: Husband Gets Divorce, | ‘Finally Mr, Taylor secured a divorce, ‘which his wife ald not oppose. An allowance was made her voluntarily, ‘ut it hes been withdrawn recently on account of Mrs, Taylor's many public After a recent stay at Blackwell's Taland, where an official who had dis- oovered her {dentity made a hopeless effort to reform her, Mrs, Taylor re- turned to Manhattan, She had no money 4 * and nothing to pawn. In despair she Appealed to former friends, and they ey gheltered her while notice was sent to her aunt, Miss Sarah Mix, of East Orange, N.J. That lady ordered her ar- fest and told Magistrate Pool of her habitual drunkenness and requested that -phe be committed to an institution, Mrs. Bowen, who was Miss Carolyn Clegg, was married to the Venezuelan @ year ago, The wedding pre- cipitated a social war in Caracas, where the doreign set refused to recog: Bowen because of her unV8ny: marriage in the Consulate, Mr. Bowen's first wife was Miss Augusta #loyd Vingut, of New York, ‘Their wedding in 189% was a fashionable @ffair, Archbishop Corrigan officiating and Miss Coudert, who is now Mri firement at No, 615 Madison avenue. Mr. Bowen has never been popular With hus, fellow-diplomats tn surprised when he 6 Misses Bowen, an Sls Glege Joined the him. “President Mrs hare 4 jal al prosudice ‘agninel arr Bowes and DUSE SAILS FOR HOME. ole, Which } Fell, ‘The French itne meamship La Bavole ‘sta to-day with 220 passengers in the in and @ full steerage, the list being \ She longest tor some months for this Among the notedles aboard was Duss, who was quite overwhelmed ney floral gifts, The actress did not | 9 ‘herself on deck as the ship moved “Commander Wentworth Chetwynd, of tie Huglish Navy, and his bride wore starting op their honev- Having Failed, She Asks New Jersey Courts for a Decree on the Grounds of Desertion. HE INTERPOSES AN APPEAL. Both Were Prominent In Hackensack Socloty and He Is Teller in the Park National Bank, of This City. Vice-Chancellor Emery gave a hear- ing In Chancery Chambers to-day in Jersey City in the sult for divores brought by Mra. Grace Rathgate, of (Hackensack, agalnat James Bathgate, assistant teller in the Park National Bank, of New York. Mr, and Mrs. Bathgate, who were prominent socially in Hackensack, sep- arated two years ago, and Mr. Rath- gate brought sult for divorce on stat- utory grounds. The decision was in favor of the wife, who subsequently sued for a divorce on the ground of desertion. At the hearing to-day Mra. Bathzate testified as to the removal of furt from her home In Hackensack, and eral others witnesses gave testimony to show that the furniture had been taken away by Mr. Bathgate or by his orders. The answer of the defendant to ils wife's sult contains two letters allezed to have been written by him to Mrs. Bathgate, in which he proposes that they re-entantiah thelr home for the sake, ot thelr six-year-old daughter Paull Hathgnte denies the charge of desertion: He saya that he has appealed from the decision tn nis sult for divorce. that the case is still pending, and that unt!l it is finally decided a charge ot desertion can- not be properly brought against a HELD UP THREE FINGERS; WON $100 But Hamilton’s Skill at Gam- bling Game Will Cost Him Jail Experience. Oliver Humilton, a clerk Itving at the Waverly Hotel, Eighth avenue and Twenty-elghth street, was on trial be- fore Recorder Goff in General Sessions to-day, charged with grand larceny. William McConnell, butler of the Putnam Tfouse, accused Hamiltor of holding him up and stesling: #100 from him. “What about it?’ Recorder Goff asked Hamilton, “It was this way,’ was Hamilton's reply: “The complainant, he comes up to me and says, ‘Ie there a pool-room around here I told him I was run- ning a hand-book, and there Saree a) horses running. I held up three and told him if he guessed the abies is he won. I covered the three fingers with my other hand, and although he tried to pick out the middle finger failed, He then bet me $100 he ooul He tried and falled again and I got his $100,"* “How much capita] dx you haveT’ Asalstant District-Attorney Townsend asked Hemtiton. “Oh, I waa rich,” replied Hamilton, “I bad fifteen cents. The jury convicted Hamilton of grand larceny in the first degree and he -will be sentenced to-morrow. NEW STREET SIGNS DOWN. Removed by Lamp Company With. out Consulting City OMictals.. Borough Presi@ent Cantor to-day re- celved word that the new street signs recently placed on the lampposts along Lexington avenue had been removed by order of a gas lamp company whose mantles are used on the lights on that thoroughfare. Mr, Cantor wee notified . | thet the | ‘ad sent word to Sie shee, pave a tate Y ‘that the letter wi tho signe. ‘Preal explanagion from the gas lamp oncern. Cantor will ask an PRIEST VICTIM OF DUTY. Dies of Smalipex Oaught While Vietting Siok. PITTSBURG, Jan, %.—Rev, Father a Thomas ¥. Martin, assistant rector of St. James's Catholic Church, West Bnd, died to-day of smallpox, contracted by mbere of his oon tion dea pirituel consoistion, n° ive a Martin, was thirty-thnee yee years ola ‘and came here fr ridgeport, Conn. ————__- ‘ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, Sun rise. 7.18|8un wets, 6.05/Moon risee., 3.25 ‘THE TIDES. High Woes, tH if 4 ARRIVED. A OUTGOING BTEAMBHIPS, SAILD TO-DAY, im Sevole, Havre. Cleafuegos. Santiage. Mustits thereon. ud, Galveaion. Heperniee, Yuewlan, — Jamentéwn,, Nortoli, INCOMING BR SERAMERTES. 0-DAY, i rat bs Betocs, Genes, Ant ee “e ee ught removing | Pain MRS. FRANCIS JAMES OAKES, J. \ \ } \ ia id ahah if \ Ree A Fey THE WORLD: | 1 es ate SA lh Young man, fearing that his sweetheart would be snapped up by titled European, followed Francis James Oakes, jr, son of Francis James Oakes, a millionaire mer- chant of No. 68 Stone street, was mar- ried last night to Miss May Prather, daughter of Mrs. Emma Prather, at the bride’s home, the Hotel San Remo. ‘The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Percy Grant, rector of the Fifth Avenue Ppiscopal Church. Benjamin V. Prather, brother of the bride, gave her HE LOVED T00 HARD FOR DAINTY BRIDE: Wife of Six Weeks Says When She Resented Bear-Hugs Husband Beat Her. David Flam, who is employed ae « special officer at the Thalia Theatre, was a prisoner in the Hasex Market ‘Court to-day on @ charge of assault. His wife, Irene 8. Flam, of No. 398 Grand sireet, said that prior to her merriage ahe was employed ae a type waiter, Six weeks ago they were mar- ried. The husband said that his wife @ave him cause for jealousy and re- minded him daily that she manied be- neath her station. “What?” she would exclaim, ‘I mare fied to do housework? What a ridiou- lous idea! I won't be your an, I want to be an actress,” The wife says her husband makes love like a ear. At One time she said he playCully squeezed her band so that her rings ‘out dhe a on her fingers, He also di Ha knuckles Into ber nd made her how! with ane, I resented his rough love maki: sald, “he struck ‘re. (<5, en waid that she went to Capt ion, of the Eldridge street sta on, for tection, and Cay fon sent with her Detectives Bro Syroene: wo ‘and to help her to Hemore set ture the ho athe detectives then’ accompanied her got @ Warrant for the hus wes to court Magistrate Deuel Sret to. sald he Kill his wi Flam trial in dofauit of $500 "bat Dail, te HIT BY BROADWAY CAR. Pedvetrian Iu Bowl: Pushed Thirty Feet on Track: August Sauer, thirty-four years old, of No, 47 Central avenue, Brooklyn, was knocked down by @ northbou Broa4way car at Cortlandt strest this a@fernoon and badly hurt. Sauer wes Grossing the etrest end werdine bin way in and out of numerous trucks, when the car bowled him ait. and “pushed pis along the tracks a distance of thirty Policeman Daly, of the Bmasway squad, stationed at this corner, carr, ed the semi-conscious man to she pidewalk, ana an ambulance we who was moned, sald be Been Injured cSraety oe wes ay bruleed inte SOUFRIERE AGAIN ACTIVE, Great Voloano Gives a Beautiful Spectacle, KINGSTON, Island of &. Vincent, Jan, %—A brisk eruption of the Bou- friere volcano, on this Island, oocurred at noon to day, ; into the clear eky shot up a twirling, ncandercent cloud. she steal Pat dition that thus Pp her all over the Continent. en and the maid of honor Miss Elizabeth Prather. The ceremony took place in the ball- room of the hotel under a canopy of pink roses, The whole room was de orated with palma and pink roses. After the reception there was a bridal banquet. The bride and bridegroom left on @ night train for the South. They will FORTUNE FALLS TO AN INEBRIATE Woman Was in Jail When the Executors Went Looking for Her. (postal to The Wrening World.) 'PATORSON, N, J,, Jan, 22.—Margaret Finlay, who for years was a well-known police court charaoter here, will come io for a third of the estate of her hus- band, the late William Finlay, estimated to be worth $100,000, Finlay married Margaret in 1873 and, elleving she was dead, he married again, The second wife died and Fine lay murried a third time, This Mra. Finlay also died several years ago, leav- ing only Margaret Finlay, of Paterson, and several children to claim his for- tune, amassed by Finlay as a stock- holder and weneral superintendent of the Manhattan Boach Kallway Com- pany. Washburn & Bickle, a law firm of Brooklyn, to whom had been entailed the settlement of the estate, were & long time looking for the first Mrs, Hine lay, who was known to be alive. When found sho was serving a ninety days’ sentence for drunkenness. WOMAN IN RUINS, HER THROAT CUT. Probable Murder, Arson and Suicide in a Small South Jer- sey Village. (Special to The Brening World.) BRIDGETON, N. J., Jan. burnjng of the house of Frank a colored man, at Springtown, 4 village near here, last night revealed, an the officials believe, a murder and suicide, Phe house was eiitirely dest jn the ruins the body of Mrs, Nic! was found burned to @ crisp, In an- other part of the ruins lay the body of Nichols, with the throat cut from ear to ea The theory of the police is that Nich- ols and his wife quarrelied and that the man murdered his wife, set fi the house and then committed suicide, ‘The body of the woman ta in such con- it 49 impossible to tell Eerie or Not she was iu victim of away. The best man was John L, Gold- a InN spend thelr honeymoon in the West In- dies, The bridegroom ts thirty-one years old and in business with his father, who lives at the Hotel Majestic with his two ughters, He met Miss Prather when she was a student at Welles! fo smitten with her that her all over Burope last summer, thus | preven dns, the possibility of some titled relgner getting her. ANOTHER MILLIGN FOR CHORUS GIRL, Why Certainly, and in Addition a | Million for Each of Her Sisters. Tf a much involved land sult which 1s to be brought in the Supreme Court, according to Lawyer Albert M. Schott, of No. 60 William street, is successful, Marie Btriker, a young chorus girl, playing in ‘The Chaperon," at the Em pire Theatre, Pittsburg, and her two sisters will come tnto more thar, $1,000,000 each. Marie Striker and her two elsters, Mabel and Edith, who Hve in Cleveland, O., are nieces of Henry Striker, who died twenty years ago. He left a will in which he devised all his property to his nieces, This property, according to {the lawyer, includes what was once | known as Striker Lane, a strip of land running dlagonally northward from Eighth to Twelfth avenue, between Fitveth and *Piféy-third streets, Thie property, according to the law- yer, has been {n the Striker family since | the Revolution, but by a tangle of wills and conveyances became much involved its ue, Lawyer Schott says that mure that his present sult will the right of the three young girls to the property. They have not sued undor their uncle's will before, be- cause they were not of age, COUNTY CAVAN MEN DANCE, Thirty-seventh Apnual Take Pla One of the greatest reunions of Irish- men during the winter season in New York is scheduled for Monday evening next at the Lexington Avenue Opera- | House, under the auspices of the County | Cavan Asi lao | It will mark t thirty-seventh nual ball of the 9 OTRRRSFAR TD HURT IN SNOWPLOW WRECK, | Spirson was happy. {her from the cloak factor T RSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 22, ids. » (NEE PRATHER) BRIDE OF MILLIONAIRE’S PERSISTENT SON. BEAUTY A PREY TO OPIUM HABIT Florence Spirson, Once Prettiest Cloak Model on Broadway, | Sent to Blackwell's Island] After Five Attempts at Suiciae) HUSBAND HAD TO SCARE HER. aces) i Wealthy Man She Married Took. Thelr Child from Her When She! Became a Wreck and a Frequent: er of Chinatown Dives. | Florence Spiraon, until a ehort time Ago known Ag the prettiest cloak motel on Broadway, was sent to Blackwell's Island to-day after having tried to kilt | herself five times in three week, | Opium smoking caused the downfall of | this young woman. Uniti the friend of | her ohfidhood, Mamie Sullivan, married | a Chinaman in Pell street and initiated | her Into the anroking of opfim Florence ‘As a cloak model she met and won a prosperous business man and he took and gaye} her a home. They havea little boy, now! a year and a half old. but the husband cast her off a year ago, and aince then she has been with her mother. who lives | at No. 2423 Eighth avenue, when she! was not sleeping on a rough couch in a Chinatown onium den. In a little more than @ year she has| forfeited her home, her husband and ohild and has sunk so low that even to her dulled appreciation death was preferable. Opiura Was Necensary, She became such a victim to oplum that If she was a few hours without It she grew weak and fainted. At these thes she was picked up and sent to either a police station or a hospital. The first time, three weeks ago, in Bellevue Hospital, she tried to strangle horself to death with a bedsheet and waa prevented by a nurse, who discov- ered ber when her face was black and OX Taw dase Inter oh few days luter ehe was ret! the ‘hospital "under" mmilac velreum: stances, and then she tried to Kill her- police tion. When taken to Bellevue the next ete 1G concealed a qi mor- this she took at one dose, ing the doctors to let her die. Tried Hard to Die, Btill pretty, she won the sympathy of | ¥7) the attendanis, and she was not held as cy & prisoner for court until the last time yesterday. She was overcome rf Hata avenue car. She had just. lett the oplum den in Pell street and while on a car she fainted and a policeman took her to Bellevue, While walting in the reception room to be assi to a ward the young woman took @ long an steel pin from her hat and dug ai artery in her wrist. She had caused the dood to run when the attendants seized her. To-day she was sent to Yorkville Court, a physical wreck. The Judge thought she would be better off in the prison hospital on Blackwell's Island and there he com- mitted her for three months. HUSBAND AND WIFE BURIED TOGETHER, Willet Coles Ward Died Sunday and Mrs. Ward, who Nursed Him, Succumbed Two Days Later. Wilet Coles Ward, once a well-known importer of foreign fruits, who died on Sunday at his home, No. 818 West Nine- ty-first street, and his wife, Eleabeth Fowler Warner Ward, were buried to- day side by side in Trinity churchyard, Mrs, Ward died on Tuesday of pneu- monin after nurging her husband during an attack of the same disease, Bhe had no knowledge of her husband's death when she succumbed. Both Mr, and Mrs, Ward came from old New York familfes, and a large number of thetr friends were present during the pervices in Trinity Church, Rey. Joseph W. Hill, one of the curat of Trinity, read the service. ‘The burial was in the F, Warner and Mott vault in the south churchyard in charge of William C. xton of Trinity. MYSTERY IN FIND OF COAT AND HAT, Articles Left on Staten Island Boat, and Police Not Sure) Owner Committed Suicide. OMcials of the Staten Isalnd Ferry Company asked the police to-day to find the owner of @ coat and hat which were left on the ferryboat Middletown last night while on her 10.2 o'clock trip from {Special Lo The Brening World.) RANGBLEY, Me, Jan, 2—A snow! train, consisting of thi ongine: al snowplouw end flange ¢ ih Philips and Rangeley Rallroad, was| wrecked two miles south of Dead River station during the night. | ‘The conductor, engineer and fireman were fearfully pill | SPAIN TO SEND | WARSHIPS. Events in Moroceo May Canse Action, MADRID, Jan. &-—Marine Minister eked the authorities of Cadis, to the “inqut an a P aaicatatatts New York The coat was of expensive gray beaver, | wut the owner appears to have been in hard juck, as there were ¢wo pawn- tickets in @ wallet found in one of the pockets. The name on the tickets wae A. Glooke. The arttoles pawned were 4 watch and @ chain, The hat, a biark derby, had the inftinie “A, G" in tho crown, The police have not made up thetr minds whether the owner forgot the ar- licles or iumiped ovaries ‘overboard UNIONS AND STA STATE GUARD. |BELIEVE HE CAN'T STOP 1HS CHILD CU BOY'S WHISTLE. Night and Day Young David Dunn Trills the Tunes that Are Popular Throughout the City. IS INSANE. Lad Only Stops Whistling Long Enough to Sing “Nancy Brown,” “All Going Out and Nothing Com- ing In” and Other Such Airs, The decorum of the Children's Court was disturbed to-day by whistling and singing, which was found to come from a small boy standing In line with the other youthful prisoners. No one was able to make him keep quiet and for some time every one present was treated to @ vocal and whistling ren- dering of popular airs. Justice Wyatt, becoming annoyed at the notse, took up the case of the boy before the other cases in order to get rid of him. William C. MeGirr, of No.! £10 Ninth avenue, sald he was the boy's brother-in-law and he had brought him to court to have him committed to the insane pavilion at Bellevue Hospital. Ssye the Boy Is Insane. The boy's name is David Dunn, four- teen yearw old, of No. 5:0 West Forty- fourth street, where he lives with his mother. McGirr said the boy persisted in coming to his house every day after school and annoying the family by hip continuous whistling and singing. He also maid that he had noticed the boy |! looking in a vicious manner at his four small children and he was afraid that! the boy might become violent and harm | them, McGirr sald the boy had been whistling almost continuously for a week, Even in his sleep young Dunn, according to his mother, would sing songs and very often in the middle of the night would arise and disturb her slumber by “The Good Old Summertime.” Whistled the Ontldren Awake, Last night MoGirr took the boy to the ‘West Forty-seventh Street Station d him placed in a cell. He was Stterwand taken to the Children's So- lt ata he kept the other children a it. © Wyatt committed the bez: $0 the hosp! While he waited to be taken away by pylcemen Raye Be Brown" a Nh “Going « atk and snd ‘Nothing, Com Com. ieee All Going n the boy arrived at the hospital he tnawered all the questions put to him by the attendant as to his nem age,ate., by shrill nestles’, The q tioning had to be abandoned finally” and Fou Dunn was taken to the Insane avilion, As is the panel & custom, the boy was undressed and preparations were made to HY oe him ES vain, rae) Cat broke and ran around the ward, fa tiainy “behind the other pa- tients or their and apparently en- soyive fe'confusion he was causing. Hie istle was still as active am ever, ante Wing his in ne ati ag the “Mick that ‘Threw the CLARA MORRIS VERY ILL. Passed o Bad Night and Is Now in a Critical Condit (Goectal to The Byening Worl YONKERS, N, Y., Jan. 22.—Ci. 1 More ris, the actress, who Is in a critical con- ition at her beautiful home, “The Pines,” on Riverdale avenue, was better this morning, having passed a bad night. Her devoted husband, F. Harriott, whose entire time is passed at her bed- side, said this morning that she wes ak Hdsment for $1,020.67 hee been deckeled in te ‘Waite Plains Count: (Clerk's office in favor of Willtam Will- jamson, of New York, against Mre. Har- riott. ‘An execution against the property of the actress at Riverdale, near Yon! been placed in the hands of, Deputy Sherite Pailip Kuss. and it is underat property wi it be Cay at auction on stay in the proceed! a ined. FOOD va. DRUGS. A Drug Man's Wisdom that Counts. It's a shrewd man who, while in the drug business, learns that although drugs are all right in their place, the use of proper food will make medi- cine unnecessary in the majority of cases. “Travelling through various towns, writes a drug salesman from Lancas- ter, Pa,, “drinking different waters to ; which I was not accustomed, eating strangely prepared meals at irregular hours, 1 contracted dyspepsia, accom- panied by nervousness, loss of sleep land consequently loss of energy. I often had the ‘blues,’ that indeser{b- ably tough feeling which makes one look on the dark side of every pleture, and see the shadows of life rather than the substance, imagine the thousand calamities that were never in existence, and so render life almost unbearable. Many thousands of men under the circumstances would have resorted to stimulation from drugs or liquor, “I happened to read an article on my own and determined to give the food a trial, It agreed with me from the start and the miserable distress that usually came after eating did not manifest itself when I ate Grape- Nuts, I asked for this food at every hotel at which I stopped and made it the principal part of the meal. My stomach soon got so that I could eat any kind of rich food in connection with Grape-Nuts without it distress- ing me, My dyspepsia and nervous- ness disappeared and life looked bright and happy once more, I am now well, healthy, happy and able to work 16 hours out of the 24 and can sleep like a healthy child the other 8 hours, “My family soon tires of mushy but we never tire of Grape- The children thrive on it and pan it. You may publish this if you think it will SROOLTNER, others to try Graperdiule instead of xe. mecieine stiralat quest of the State military esinat on At: they are mem: ry . re of Neonal Guard, + adi Pale rituous: rematlon t e system for @ time, but iBOY SOBS WHEN HE HEARS [7 WASH Jury Finds that ceva O1 Pietro Squazza Killed Three Year-Old Ambrose ai with a Brick. eae Justice Newburger le Made Angry by the Verdict and Rebukes Amp sistant-District-Attorney Rand fed Talking to Jurors. Pietro Squazza, the eleven- voar-o boy, of No. 656 West Thirty-sixth who has been on trial for manslaught In the first degree before Justice burger for the killing of three Ambrose Keri~an, was convicted Mansiaughtestwhe second degres afternoon, ‘The maximufh penaity ts fifteen Sentence wns deferred until An investigation of the cage ‘will made in the mean time, The jury returned to the courte} after being out about a hour half, and announced thelr mullty, ‘The boy aid not at first ize what it meant, but when he wept pitifully, and his shrill, cries were heard all over Wes room. Judge that Assistant — District who prosecuted the case, i room to talk to the jury, Newburger saw him, The jut ly called him and rebuked him jury. He said: Newburger showed e¥ Lec yon ie any one else.”? Mr. Rand ent eimball, of the Prison sociation, said he would prey tigation of the case and see merited a recommendation that For one week we will pl on sale to dispose of q 600 pairs of Wome Walking Boots, small sts and narrow widths —4 A, B, sizes from 2 to 6- IO™ min, former prices $4.00 & $5, These Boots are not of t newest styles, but the and the quality of the She give an exceptional chance t the purchaser. West 25ra Street WORLD WA Used by the Majority. Paid Help Wants in 45 Other N, Y. Combined. 475 |Grape-Nuts about a case similar to| 2078 ti} it pal It or eta Name Ee .