The evening world. Newspaper, January 31, 1903, Page 5

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“ AR le, WAY O00 PERSONS SUED FOR DIVORCE IN NEW YORK CITY IN ONE SHORT YEAR, Of Course, There Is Only One Statutory Ground for Absolute Separation, but There Are a Thousand and Qne Odd “Contributory Causes.” Drunkenness and Brutality on the Part of the Husband and Neglect of Home on the Part of the Wife Are Chief Reasons. 4 Five hundred sujts for absolute divorce were brought in New York County during the past year. A review at random to discover the chief cause of marital unhappiness ehows a weird and astonishing artay of accusations and counter-nccusations, many of them widely removed from the single cause for which absolute divorce can be granted in this State. Drunkenness and brutality on the part of the husbané are the underly- nig causes of most of the divorces g@&inted to women. Extrayagance, 1!) temper and neglect of home on the part of the wife bring most of the hus- bands to the employment of priyate detectives and final appeal to the court. Religious differences seldom figure, save when husband and wife disagreé unalterably concerning the education of a child. Behind nearly every case is a record of family squabbles and quarrels due to that comprehensive household bugaboo, “incompaibility of temper.” WIFE WHO FINDS GARTER. Accusations against drunken wives are growing more common than they were a few years ago. The wife who finds a garter in the pocket of her husband bobs up oc- easionally. Stepchildren, cold feet and a tendency on the part of the hus- band to keep all the money he makes are complained of frequently. A woman last year accused her husband of making her go to a mas- querade ball while she was suffering witb measles. Another woman ac- cused her husband of coming to bed from a cold bath without drying himself. A husband accused his wife of gambling away his money, and another said that his wife was a “cold proposition. HAIR DYED “IMPROPER RED.” One man swore that the spouse of his bosom had dyed her hair “an improper red.” A wife complained that her husband had insisted on order- ing a coffin for her. Another complained that her husband made her live in a flat, while another could not live with the man whose name she had taken because he “spoke only one language.” A perusal of the brief history of the divorce cases presented below will bring to mind the underlying causes of the grind of the divorce mill in the City of New York—the real, irritating influences that drive husbands and wives to the statutory offense. All things seemed to have combined to make the marriage of William North- rup Cowles to Miss Marie Isabella Zane, the beautiful California belle, a brilliant he feared her, Lastof all, he said, she had taken up with the hired man in the $4.00) mansion he had provi for her. She replted that the “mansion was a dilapidated houge on the edge of no- where out of Newark, and that her hus- and a happy marriage. The ceremony hand had surrounded her there with as celebrated at the home of the spies. He lost the sult and moved over tase. uncle, Dr, Edward 1, Keyes,| te Tersey. where he ts sulng again. { Fifth avenue and Seventy-fourth street, | ena the happy couple set up thelr own} establishment in a fashionable quarter with much eclat. But in a short elght weeks, ere the bridal roses had fatr! ‘she nad t rynnotized her, But wien Jost thelr fragrance, love died and the, Htlay had hynnotized her. But when brid went In tears tn her wedding Court “thad’ she detested him and ied ratively king,’ to the di-| Erlau madiy, he e her up and the eam et tateacior liberation $5,000, returned to New York and sued 2 2 divorce. The, case was surrounded with the} protestion of secre ‘The husband put! He Dodged the Clock. in a defense, which enadled Justice , Six months afte. marrige Helen V. Blanchard to “send it to a referer (alieged, Het ats ness Me geet tie which means that nobody would ever|ormotu' chock, hhear of the scandal unless one of the parties became a tattle. All that the public was allowed to know was that on No Hypnotinm Here. When Manager Adolph Philipp, of the Germania, overtook his wife, known to the stage’ as Ada Blanch, Actor Frang ‘lau and the $8,000 worth of Jewelry and she had carried away, he thought Riding a Bike Every Day. ‘n the famous Christie case, echors of i ed out,’ James JI the report of the referee and his recom-| te charged his Bendation an absolute divorce w “one of the beautifni z co) ¢ ft Albany," with riding Brinted to pretty Marle Zane Cowles! (°°), ae ahitanttane By uae ariel Be@ind the main charge, which alone couldentitle her to her liberty, haps what Charles Dickens assigned as the cate of his own domesiie infelleity “Incompatibility of temperament," dis- Covered, elas, too late, and after the fateful works of the minister of God— “I pronuonce you man and wife.” It was just one of last summer's romance- tragedies. For (Wine and Women." John Daniell, the veteran dry-goods Millionaire, disinherited hig favorite grandson, Willlam Sohier Daniel!, and his young and beautiful wife divorced him after long, patient, loving efforts to persuade him from his ways, At the trial a former employer testified that joocktalls occasionally’ in a Harlem cage, ’ -1 and responding to signals made ras per | Wells H. Wrisley, the co-respondent, by waving a lighted’ match from. Moraine. side Park to her in her fashtonable | apartment opposite. “Made a Man of Hin Mns. Ida Isabel Chiida laid as much stress upon the proposition that she had “made a man of Elleworth Childs, put him on his business feet, and proved an ingrate." as she did on the main chargé and only charge upon which she could hope to secure her dl- Yorce—his attentions to dainty littio Miss Dora Medeline, who had taken ¢ hier In one of her husband's he promoted her to if Ina Larne Smith Duryea, weoking a yous Danlell had forfeited his situa-| separate existence fr ater Be tion and a $10,000 salary for “wine and| milionaire aturch eal Beoerea thee women,” he nd, made her go oto a taney ‘bail Denerved a Good spanuing, | "Hen she had the ‘measies, oaliea her names, told her to go to a warmer cll- The daughter of Chancellor Runyon,| Mate, tore her night robe into. shreds. formerly Minister to Germany, anked pulling “her “out of ‘bed in their hotel i fe ‘morning. pus! foy a divorce from Harry Carl Haxkine fh pes faanee. er ipso ecause he told her he was her “bosa’’ the hall. and told her to get out as he and she was his chattel, and said what locked the door; made love openly to she deserved was a good spanking, He other women in their camp. and one night tumbled off @ ladder by which he asked for absolute divorce on alleged ects of hers at the Embassy in Ger- was climbing. for a Joke, to the widow of a raom where two of the ladies slept many, She named Vivian Blackburz, 4@n actress. During sult they lived in There was no charge of infidelity. She Was the Crew. Almira C. Lawton, artist, asked to be separate apartments at the Waldorf-| freed from Frank 'H. Lawton, music NRG teacher, b ‘among other’ thini Willlarh Faversham, the ‘matinee a {dol,”” was divorced by his wife, and| boat, so as not to soll his musical hand abortly after married Julie Opp. He was foe erate pourrtlous comm: ta on her Girected to pay alimony of $3,200 a year | 1) iis Cary wm answer wee. that she made him wash dishes and tend babi to his.divorced wife, while she about to teosophist Threw Umbrella Overboard. meetings. Deacon William M. Abbott, of the Sear on Her Lett Legt First Reformed Presbyterian Church,| the o: foolish young man to Was sved by Katherine, his wife, who| bet Was a scar charged that he assaulted her on a| op tt leg just ferry-boat and threw her umbrella over- ve Hgured in her iiua- band’s sult fer divorce later o The Coldest Feet Ever, “My husband bad the coldest feet I board; reviled and insulted her; called her @ witch and said she ought to be shot, and, besides went with a strange Woman to Washington. ever felt and insleted on placing them Hie replied with a string of charges |{%,the iniddie of my back.” says Mos. and weld he threw her umbrella over-| nights” ‘Thentthe left and sony iby the board prcnnee 6he. Skies him in the ribs | solute divorce. with and ‘ashington companion 1 was iseent tence widow for whom | ering oat sy = a a U ul de sought @ pension. After six months i f., Caarles thie mn ‘ot legal quarreling the deacon and his|iRe is enull by} he had| ‘ THE WORLD: DETECTIVE BYRNES, WHO PLAYED POEOETIOSSIOSO OS © See OOS CEHTSO BURGDAR AT W. K. VANDERBILT’ S. POHH DOG BOR e Page eooe ae a the fire-escapes at the rear of the flats Butcher Louis Voight asked for an ab- solute divorce. She Made Him Play Poker. Broker Charles Valentine's answer to hia Wife's charge that he visied ¢ other woman was that his wife play and if he went home she made ould not afford to loze d they had agreed not to interfere with each other's affairs. t $40 for Soda, Claude Thompson charged his wife with spending his last §(0 for soda water. Favored the Servant Girl, Mrs. Joseph W. Stinson says her hus- band, with an income of $17,000, was desperately enamored with the servant girl, bought flowers and vonbona for her, went in bathing at Asbury Park with her and when she discharged her declared the “charm of the household is gone."* Named Himself as Co-respondent. According to the affidavit of Mrs. Charles L. Schoenfeld her husband named himself as co-respondent In suing her for divorce. She sald they had separated, but he often called by ‘ap- pointmen(, turned the lights down and then talked in a loud volce so the neighbors could hear and know there was a man in the fiat. Then he sued, naming “an unknown man" as co- respondent. Coffin All Ready. Mrs. Julius Stein sought freedom be- cause among other things her husband had a@ nice coffin madesfor her. “Painless Poems.” The wife of Dentist Schot: laid hetore the Court what she called “painless poems," indited by her husband to an- other, as her best evidence of his in- constancy. poker Not m Gooa tter, Adjourning from a rathskeller with thelr friends, Lionel Lawren eata Winfield, the violinist, ried at 3 o'clock jn the moratn; montas after she sued for a div alleging that be managed a stage better than he did a flat. 20-Cent Dessert Too Much. Isabelle Shattuck sued because her and flew {nto a rage over her ex- travagance in ordering 20-cent dessert ata restaurant. With Invisible Ink. Iman> Roth's suspicions were aroused by strange blank sheets of paper in his “a possession, He brought some to. court, Soaked them tn water before the jury and thus brought out sweet notes written by Mrs. Rot to an artist, tell- ing her love for him. How's This for a Mix-Upt ved of ‘one ot Ernest Carl Reichert was ré fwo wives during the year, ay them got f another busband, be sides, No. 2 got an annulment becaus No. 1 was still living, and he got a annulment of his marriage to No, 1b cause she had a husband already, she anruled her firrt earriage on same ground. Hoped for 28 Years, Benjamin Loder kept his decree e off the record twen for a regonctilatios ago because it was neces» clear title to property he w ly | | selling. Wined for Park Love. Katherine Luttick sought divorce be cause her husband, a plano soloist, gut fined $5 in a police court for huggin and Kissing a pretty governess in park, and because the governors, on learning that he could not marry ‘hor, took a dose of poison on her doorstep and nearly died. | | ones Hie Kidney, Sued by his wife, who charged cruelty, Morris Pilatsky ' aald he loved "the daughter, but though he was only #ix- teen years old, her mother married {him, and now, when he has lost his (right kidney and several of his ribs. she shows no sympathy, but sues him | for Alyore | Married on # Train, | John Glimore alleged in hin sult th Mabel, jvict on a train bound for Sing Sing Ground Glawe in Oatmeal, Answering Lulu: Dreyfus's sult for separation on the ground of cruelty, Henry Dreyfus declared that she put ground glass in his oatmeal the nixnt before Christmas ax @ preliminary to loping with another man, and addy adidly that if he had not got on such a compl at night he would | probably is fe. He had he: encort sent u helr five for sbandonin thanked his it for destroying bi appetite for that ground-glass break- fast and sued for divorce. ‘ Pretty Bird im a Ca, ides maintaining pretty Florence ‘Alfred Patt tora at his B Perry in @ Harlem fat, Cranston, who had a nice mansion Colonia, ‘had given notes to wife for $100 each. She could not her husbal but after Vorce on account of the pretty sten- ographer she sued and recovered on, the note Beefeteak Breakfast Did it, Virginia Waters, of the Gis} in the Bind, Pllpes. i ear tel aia sar where: h fale to weet his wife. had married a con-| for stealing and bis wito | children, | Barracks,” got her divorce from Ro- land Barrett’ by proving her allegation that he was “broiling beefsteak break- ‘asts In Madeline Baker's flat while the latter took her beauty naps." Salengiri’n Falxe Teeth, Yhen Felix Blatt. the art dealer, brought sult for absolute divorce. Fan- nie denied his charges and declared that all their troubles grew out of his filrta- thon with one of his salesgirlx, and that When some one told him she had sa Miss Klein had false teeth he came home in a rage, gave her a sound thrashing and forbade her, under un- named penalties, ever to comment upon the young lady's appearance again. Garter with a Gotden Clasp, Because Mra. George P. Baldwin ghanced to spy a black silken. thin hanging out of his pocket as he 1 asleep on the couch last Washington's Birthday, and pulling !t all the way out, found it to be a garter with a golden she sought divorcee, “Done By a Belfast Irishman!” Suing for an annulment of her mar- riage on the ground of his previous mar- riage to a wife still living, Mrs. Jullette Letts Chilton-Tuttle- Wright-Ha' irke efaculated: ‘So think of f with all my experience, and ‘after divorcing three previous husbands, wai lett to be done by a Belfast Irishmi Gus Clarke must have hypnotized m Nad Hatr-Dye Habit. Herry Bronner's answer to his wife's sult for limited divorce was that ehe Spent iarge sums on expensive chemicals with which she dved her hair an im- Broper red, and made him sleep on a couch. “Dead Men’s Pinches,” “Dave Braham's danghter, suing John Farley for a limited Civoree, said he had made “dead men's pinches” all over her body. The Coldest Ever, Emory W. Fenn charged that’ his wife was ‘‘the coldest proposition” that ex- ists in the form of a human belng, in his suit for absolute divorce. | “A Flat—Never!? ‘The troubles of Mr. and Mrs. Georze c, Koch began #hortly after marriage jhe she said “I love him, but a fat? Never Carried Away Her ‘Teeth, Mrs. Imma Larkin charged that ‘Thomas, her husband, carried away her ae teeth and wouldn't give ‘them so that she became sick and ner Jealous of Detective. Detective Phil Sweet satd he hac sign because of his wife's jealous she sued him, PROTECTORY FOR THE "BOY EDITOR,” {Young Murphy Is Committed to the Institution for Passing Two Checks, re- when Richard E. Murphy, the thirteen-year- |0ld "boy editor’ from Bt, Joseph, M who was found guilty in the Childre: Court of passing worhless check Sent to the Catholic Protestory to-day by Justice Wyatt: Attorney Chart F, Howe askod the Justice to send the boy home. The lad, ihe sald, was thoroughly penitent, and | was anxious to so home onl 'ead a | proper life. “But here is a letter from the toy father,” sald the Justice, “wich & that Richard has left a :vail of worthless checks wherever he nas tone, and that his misdeeds were done eysemstically and deliberately.” | ‘The letter had been received by Father Ducey, who has taken an tnter- est In the boy and who sat bealde the Justice when sentence was passed The “boy editor’ thanked his attor- ney for what he had done for him and said he would obey the rules of the institution to whic he had been sent. | His eyes were full of tears, but he did not forget to be courteous. “I dread the disgrace of being went away,” he eaid, “and will conduct my self properly at the Protectory. 1 ean never be anythlax but a gentleman,” After he had been sentencel Father Ducey went up to the Society :00ms and had a long talk with the Loy — SMALL-POX ON LORRAINE. Detained tor # 1! which arrived today from Havre, was detajned at Quaran- Une, owlng to a.case of amgiixpox among the steerage passengers. One hundred aocupied re tl ATURDAY EVE | Convalescence. ft sighnest beoke TO THE SOUTH Long Iliness, Starts for South Carolina to Complete His! OCCUPY BELMONT COTTAGE. No Member of His Family Calls to Wish him Godspeed and No Sight. seers Had Gathered to Witness His Depar ure. Cornelius Vanderbilt, now thoroughly convalescent from his recent severe at- tack of typhold fever, left New York | this afternoon for Garnet. 8. C., where he will rest and regain strength and flesh among the dry, piney woods, He was accompanied by Mrs, Vanderbilt, Dr, Brown and a trained nurse, Mr, Vanderbilt is so far recovered |that he must spend considerable of his {Ime out of doors, but the changeable climate of this city will not allow of It, At Garnet, which Is in the extreme southern part of South Caolina, close to the Savannah River and just far enough from the sea to escape the damp winds and fogs, Mr. August Belmont has a splendid cottage. This cottage has been placed at Mr. Vanderbilt's dis- posal, and he will remain there until he feels strong enough to begin his yachting trip to the Mediterragean. The Vanderbilt mansion, at ‘Thirty- fifth street and Park avenue, was in @ bustle of preparation all morning. Be- {ween forty and fifty trunks were taken to the residence of R. 'T. Wilson, Mr. Vanderbilt's father-in-law, at Su Mifth avenue, The two Vanderbilt children, Grace and Cornelius, will re- main with their grandparents while Mr, and Mrs. Vanderbilt are in the South, The silverware and other valuables were taken to Tiffany's for storage. Mr. Vanderbilt with his wife. his doc- ttor and attendant left the house at 1240 o'clock, The young miilfonatre wes muMed to the eyes. He appeared to be quite weet and jeanekd heavily on the arm of Dr, Brown. In order that there might be on excitement the time of Mr. Vanderbilt's departure was kept secret and there were no sightseers to annoy “him, The carriage containing Mr. Vander- bilt and his party went directly to West Forty-second street’and by ferry to Weehawken. © There Mr. Vanderbilt boarded his private car, which was run down to Jersey City and attached ta the Florida: special of the Atlant! Coast Line. Dr. Austin Filnt, Jr, who ttended Mr, Vanderbilt through his {ll- esa, want with him to Jersey City, but. Will not go, South pare ees nt for, a lerbitt iS 4) ly recovered from typhoid fever said Dr, Flint be- fore the departure’ of the train, “In a few ,month# he will be as well and strong as ever, I think he will pick up rapidly in the dry climate of = net and In leas than a month he should be In condition to start on his yaahting rip. Mrs, Oden Gooiet and Miss May Goe- let also accompanied Mr. Vanderbilt to Jersey City. They remained in the pri- vate car until the train was ready to start No member of the Vanderbilt Realy. calied te! Ce (2 say Road: y to young Corge though there | Was a steady strealtor riendgeto wish him good luck and a quick recovery. JOSHED POLICE: NOW WA ELL \Fresh Young Man Posed as Commissioner Greene’s Sec- retary Over Phone and Kept the Department Busy. THE “TIP” SYSTEM WORKED. | | | Here ts a practical demonstration of | |the “underground” or ‘wireless’ tip- ping-off system, which has proven of such great benefit to the Police Depart- ment In years past, About 2 o'clock this morning a man called up Police Head- quartets by telephone and sald: “This is Greene's secretar: me with the officer in charge." He was connected with Sergt. Sullivan and asked: ‘Any communication for the Commis: | sioner “No, there is nothing.” “How Is the city? Anything going! Connect PRICY FU ARUN 8 G, JANUARY 31, 1903. VANDERBILT OFF | Young Cornelius, Weak from Justice won in weekly reports, and, as a check GYEARIUD BOY SHOOTS UNCLE. Poured a Load of Buckshot Into His Relative’s Breast in a Fit of Rage for Re- venge. NO DIVORCE FOR HER EARLY ERROR MacLean Refuses to Grant a Decree to Henry M. Moore for a Transgression of His Wife Before Marriage. GUARDS HER CONSCIENCE.|yicTiM IS LIKELY TO DIE. ag) aaa (Special to The Evening Worl RED BANK, N. J., Jan. 31,—Because Robert Retaway, of Red Hill, near this piace, refused to allow his nine-year- old nephew, Yewls Hargett, jr, to go out to play yesterday afternoon the boy emptied a load of buckshot into Retaway's shoulder, ‘the shot was fired in a fit of childish rage from a double-barreled gun, and Retaway may dle of his wounds, Retaway liver with his sister, Mre. Tewis Hargett, sr., and was left in charge of the houses yesterday, with instructions not to permtt Lewis to leave the hou: Mrs, Hargett had been gone but a short time, when the boy Ins! ‘1 wpon “The key to a woman's con- selence should ever remain sacred to her possession, and no man, not even her husband, can invoke the aid of the courts to wrest it from her and uncover some error of her early life and then base upon that moment of human frailty an action for di- vorce,’’ Buch is the substance of a far-reaching fecision handed down to-day by Justice MacLean in the Supreme Court. If, sald the Justice, a woman should wilfully decelve her husband as to her moral character, carrying her deceit to|#0Ing outdoors to pla the extent of withholding from him any|h/® request with a demand upon his Knowledge of a life that had been|UN<le to open the door. steeped in sin, then the law provides| T2/s Retaway refused to do, and placed that he is entitled to x separation, as| te key in his pocket. Young Hargett she has not been an honest party to/few Into a violent rage, and, run: the marriage contract. But when a wo-| UP Stairs, got his father’s brees) load! man might have had one weak moment |fio\-Run. into which he sipped two ‘ loaded shells which she fully atoned by after conduct} Coming Ipto the room with the gun, and repentence, that is her tnviolable se- | he maited the weapon at his uncle, and Tn @ sult for divorce brought vy | yc OBC fiat door: If you don't I'll ehoot Henry M. Moore azainst his wife, Lola,| Retaway had no idea that the tad the husband charged that before their) vow shoot. ate besan to laugh. Rals- wife 5 ing the wea.on, argett aime e marriage his wife had been guilty off heavy gun es stavilly as tie atrenges error, The sult was tried before ex-} world permit, and pulled the tri Judge Lachman, as referee, and the ane at charas utared Reena s et side and venetrat lings. He fel young wife was made ta answer ques-| ith 9 groan, and Hargett, throwing the Hons put by her husband's lawyers lay-|gun on the floor, ran from the house to ing bare a secret that cast the one Te hie mother had gone and told her shadow on her early Hfe. The referee} ¥i4t he had don gaat ystci ved many of the sho; Teported that the husband was entitled] tein esa ede ee tie ant to a divorce ‘upon the ground of this] lost so much blood while he lay waitin, confessio for help to arrive that he 1s Ina critica condition, Justice MacLean not only rejected] Young Hargett does not realize the the recommendation of the referee, nut} awful consequences of his act. No legal declares in a few short sentences that| ®itlon will be taken against him untess the asumption that the statute could FALSE OLN emt with ethics, but with the civil aw Dr. Porsch Sent to Sing Sing as well, He says. “BSonve space for repentence and ref- for Fraud in Importation of » Chemicals. ormation ‘must be allowed to humanity. Incontinence before marriage js not in itself a ground for setting aside the marital contract. Herein, however, after accusations as to the defendant's past life hed been let In upon hearsay, and whe had testified respecting the facts in Issue, she was suffered to be catachised about what concerned her own conscience, posstbly the comfort of others, but what in no judicial Inquiry showa, ‘be made the piaygrouhd of cpri- vy. “It ts the duty of the courts to be zealous to thwart any effor: parties to sunder the marria tract save for the reasons which the statute prescribes.” DOCTORS: MAKE FALSE REPORTS Charge on Which Four Physi- cians of the Vaccinating Corps Are Dismissed by the Board of Health. Highteen months in Sing Sing ts the punishment meted out to Dr. Otto Karr Porsch, President of the Porsch Chemi- cal Company, of this city, by Judge ‘Thomas in the Oriental Branch of the United States Circuit Court to-day, he having pleaded guilty a few days ago to an indictment charging him with ving defrauded the Government through erroneous invotces in the im- portation of the chemicals, Joseph E. Porsch, the son of Dr. Porsch, who also pleaded gullty, was permitted to go on a suspended sentence. ‘The young man turned on his heel, and to the surprise of those prerent, left the court-room without a single word, not even bidding his father, who was taken to the Ludlow Street Jail, pend- ing his departure to Sing Bing good-by. United States District-Attorney Bald- win informed the Court that Porsch 4s a fugitive from Sprague, where he is wanted by the authorities for fraudu- jent practices in bankruptcy proceed- ngs. Poisch's eounscl informed Judge Thomas that Dr, Porsch was a graduate of a number of Europe's leading unl- versities and had been decorated by both the Emperor of Austria and the King chemival researches. Mr. Baldwin told Judge Thomas that Dr. Porsch had never been decorated by any king or emperor, nelther had he been graduated from’ a university of Curope or elsewhere. His right name was Heinricn Novack. rink Habit Permanently Cured WITHOUT THE PATIENT'S KNOWLEDGE MAY BE PROSECUTED, TOO. Commissioner Lederle, of the Depart- ment of Health, to-day dismissed four physicians: employed as yaccinators In the department for making false re- ports of thelr work. These vaccinators upon them, Inspectors are sent im many cases to see whether the reports are correct, The board charges that Dr, Peter Sohaefller, of No, 433 Fast Righty-, seventh street, had reported that he had vaccinated sixty-five persons in a given week, but the department could not find more than thirty of these people, and of] «womsINB!? is « preparation based on well- the thirty only ten had been vaccinated.|kaowa medical principles aad prepared by Dr. W. K. Jacobs. of No, 99 Fifteenth | ¢hemiats of many years stan Bate street, Brooklyn, reported that he had | water, milk, tea or coffee without the patien! No; everything very quiet," the Ser- geant replied. | Weil, the Commissioner and myself ng down to the ‘enderloin’ and ok around to see If everything | Will call you up In half en} al osed that time there was considerable | police activity. in the "Tenderloin, ‘The sergeant ou duty at the West Thirtteth | street station buttoned up his coat and | ut his cap on straight, expecting nn | mportant visit. A policeman. could seen in every block and they were walk. | ing with heads erect, chésts out and) snowed indi¢ations of great alertness. | Then the ¢upposed secretary again, as he wald he would, a if | he wes telling Bergt, Sullivan D d while that he and the Commissioner were in the Ten. derloin.and that everything was nice and clean and that the Commissioner wished to compliment the men for thelr work, |the telephone operators were telling the | men in the information bureau at Head quarters that the secretary” was talk. ing from & beer yeraen at One Hun-| dred and Fifty-Aftth street and Eighth avenue. So he couldn't be the Commissioner's secretary, and was lying, That made the police mad and they sent @ man to arrest the Joker, He waid he Robert J. Martin, a| real evtate dealer, \t Columbus avenue and One Hundredth street, and lived at No, 87 Wi One Hundred aad Third wr He vegged not to be locked twp. but there was no merey for such ai aldrmist, and he was held jn a cell at the Wi One Hundred and Fifty-sec- ond street wtation until taken to the Court & y it he to exzuse yell Cr (nat he sim- Sie Riad ey * JOne Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, | ai accompanying | Belgium as a reward for his} Wite of Proprietor of the E ing News Dies After Hours’ Iliness When At Trenton. STUDENT SON WAS | (Special to The Evening World.) NEWARK, N. J, Jan. Me ceived a great shock this mornin it was announced that Mrs. Wallai Scudder, wife of the proprietor of Newark Evening News, had. denly in Trenton during the nig Mrs. Scudder went to Trenton ef the week to be with her son, a at Princeton University, Her boy lost three fhngers of his” hand while fooling with a shot Monday, last. 6 astalll Be Accordiny 1o eo det ceive this city, Ata’ Scudder. was. palem denly ill last’ night and dled hours. * The body will be bi der residence In Washing! ay. a Her death was hastened by excitement. IN GOOD CONDI- TION The subject of this Peter Regan, is one of the | fround athletes in New was the champion baske of the Massachusetts played shortstop with the: Portland baseball team of England League, He says; “When an athlete is in tn is necessary to follow set and exercise, and above temperate and avoid s drugs, In no other w powers of endurance be {1 the vital force be retah the supreme physical demand is made, “I have used Father cine for a complicated and lung trouble with wonder cess. Your medicine is tonic and body builder, 1 be in every home.” Athletes in’ training use # John's Medicine frecly as a) Tonic, because it is a b q and gives vital force to the that prevents colds, pn on! consumption, diseases to” athletes gre exposed physical strain, fad , The patent medicines, wi opiam, morphine, and other J ous drugs, are shunned by ath and should be by all people, De they only paralyze the” J weaken the system. Fat! Medicine is all pure nourish not a patent modicine, and fi poisonous drugs. EURALG CAN BE Cl Sloan’ Linimen TIME TRIED 25 : a an Bookiet mailed free on reques! is charged with having put in a false | PPR ee Tei dorsed by W. C. 7. report of his work \n the Bronx Yow publle, men, clergymen, phvaictans: members ef ine Yo MC! AS at A The worst report arding to the [line tM CN Mee enident at Be Pe, emnlt Department, was that of Dr. James J. | Fireproof Coustruction Co. Washington, D.C. Grady, of No. #7 Washington avenue, | 370s Sari Wooderhil’ power of your ie A report a c far _alcohalt envy vou the great the Bronx. He made a report of which |remedy for alratoliom. I envy yeu the gn 100 per cent. of the \ ations are al- | vzportunities you have, | $1 PER BOX—6 BOXES FOR | Bent in-pisin sealed package. all ch palsy ORUNE, CO. leged to be faise, many of the addresses fn given velng vacant lots, 1 is charged. Ax * Pope Building, \vashin ‘oon as the facts in these cases were |ton D. ‘may be purchased trom Riker have, and 28d 196 and 205 ascertained the men were dismissed. By | fth sve Wat: Megeman's, 196 ms Section 16 of the Charter the offense meet ane naan th ave, is a mis! nor and the offenders may | 4th BB ase. be pro Martne’ B. Altman & €o, will hold a sale of DRESS SILKS (Rear of Rotunda), commencing MONDAY, February 2d, Elghteenth Street, Nineteenth Sireet and Sixth Avewie. wook, The Board claims that It wat |men ‘habit, ‘but « disease, reauiring more than » twelve | Mill-power ‘to cur tively guarantee found on examination that only twelve | hl Py wit pe pone mirig' could be checkel as having actually |i malic atimilante la poy farm, ans refund the mome} should It fal) to do been vaccinated a But it oever falls! Tt tones up the diseased Dr, Max A, Weohsler, of No. 66: ‘@8( | stomach and gives a hearty appetite and good on, Steady nerves toon follow its uae. | | AT THE VERY HUB OF THE 361 | for commere ters; will be altered to suit tenant. VALUE PROVED §3 FAIR CITY—Olive street, near 8 way, St. Louis, Mo,; the “Park Row! t. Louis--For lease, for a term of yea 25 feet front, by 114 feet depth, a building with basement, corner of @ toid alley; light on three’ sides; equipy with double boilers, Corliss engine, eter light piant and elevatoy ially adaphe financial or rail ror URCANTILE TRUST MERC. E wt Loss THERE IS NOE

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