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CTBRIEN DIVORC | SETFOR MONDAY Counter Suits Between the Ex- , Sheriff and His Wife in Which \ Startling Revelations, Politi- cal and Otherwise, Promise. ESTRANGED FOR YEARS. Wife Declares O'Brien Was to Have ] ) \ Been Made Head of Police Under \, Strong, but That She Defeated Deal. {nm the sown which, presumably, ehe Bought with the $2,609 ehe compelled he ueband, ex-Sheriff James O'Brien, 1) through an order of Justice Greenbaum, t to furnish for that purpose, Mrs. Abbie ) Ella O'Brien will come by order of Jua- \f ce Scott to the Supreme Court on Mon i @ay to fight his suit for absolute di worce. She bas a counter suit, too, and sh tional revela- ene Tam- ponents at will for yoars him to have at least on fat office in every irty years. fmhich promise some sen tions about the methods which | abled her husband to “hold up many or its and enable: ™Jimobrienite™ In BAministration for The O'Brien, smooth-shaven, fquare- 4 Sawed, was jaunty In his invariable box oat and low-crowned “plug hat," Ex- Bheriff O'Brien names Paul Smith and George Powers as co-respondents at va- rious times and places and several other Men. She retorts t he has been at fault with their former cook, Mary Car- rick, aud other women at Saratoga, and that he has recently been living at No 4 We: One Hur dl and Twenty: fourth street with Mary Russell, where hhe is known among her friends as her, guardian, and that ho has been friendly awith no less than six women living in West Forty-third street, Estranged for Years, ' In the preliminary proceedings it de- \ eloped that Mrs. O'Brien sued her hus- band for a reparation on the ground of ‘eruel treatment two years ago, but | never left the fine brown stone mansion, ‘No. 11 West Eighty-sixth street, which he bought for $85,000 in 1899, fillng the ‘deed in the namo of their four child- ren, When, in view of this situation, ‘and the husband's showing through A. 1H, Hummel that he had not only pro- vided this clegant establishment, but had been silent during years of estrange- ment from the wife who Hved with him and their four children, no speech passing between them, and had pro- vided her with a liberal allowance and pald her bills besides, her application Bas made allegations in her aMidavita) WIFE OF EX-SHERIFF O'BRIEN, WHO IS SUING HIM AND BEING SUED. THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 6, 1903. CELEBRATED KSS AGAIN I COURT Mrs. Dewint’s Second Suit for Divorce to Repeat How He Kissed a Woman’s Neck Be- fore Others. SECOND TRIAL OF THE CASE. The Wife Goes West This Time and Aska for the Custody of Her Two Daughters and a Suitable Main- tenance, SIOUX FALLS, B.Dak., March 6,—Fall- ing to secure a divorce in the New York courts, Mrs. Millie B. Dewint, a former reatdent of that State, who took up her Tesidence In Sioux Falls seven or eight months ago, haa commenced a sult in this State, by which she aska that she be granted an absolute divorce from John P. H. Dewint, a New York attor- ney, whose offlce Is at No. 4 Wall street. The defendant has a handsome home at Hempstead. 1. 1. The Ming of this suit is the culmina- ton of a similar suit instituted by Mra. Dewint in 1901, before Judge Marean, of the Supreme Court of Brooklyn. Judge Marean dismissed the suit, ‘BOGUS LETTER IN WABASH ACTION Trainmen Say a Traitor to Their Organization Wrote the Let- ter on Which the Strike In- junction Was Granted. HOPE TO WIN THEIR FIGHT. George Gould Expected In St. Louis Next Week, and Labor Leaders Look Ahead to His Arrival—No Further Definite Action Taken, ST. LOUIS, March 6.—Attorney for the Wabash firemen and tratnmen spent the day carefully considering the Ul of particulars filed by the railroad com- pany in its application for the injune- tion recently granted. When the appt cation for diseolution of the order will be made is not yet definitely flnown. ‘The xeneral situation is unuchanged The attorneys and union leaders have declined to say wnat the basis of thelr pleadings will be, but it Is stated that one of the grounds to te urged in asking for a dissolution of the Injunction will be the denial of the authorization of a letter sent to the Wabash employees at the time the vote was ordered purporting to come from a leader of the conference committee and making threats against FEDERAL JUDGE WHO GRANTED INJUNCTION AGAINST STRIKE. ‘The feature of the trial will be teat!- mony to the effect that Dewint was seen the company. Both Mr. Morrissey and Mr. Lee say JUDGE ELMER B.ADAMS. Deserted Wife of Military Teacher Tells How Bigamou Husband Ill-Treated and Nege lected Her. SECOND WIFE PROSTRATED, She Is Young and Rich, and Shox of Learning Her Position Wi Serious — He Disappears fj ee, Their Home, Be Orange Military Institute, discloses the fact that once before he startled the® | community !n which he lived by leaw ing mysteriously. Mrs, Emily Hill, of Stockton Fi near Warrington, claims to be hie and says that her three children are! Her mother sald to-day that twelve s ) years ago Prof. Hill disappeared: ‘ he and her daughter had been m for four or five years. No trace found of him for a long time, and It was learned that he had gone to United States. After two years he returned, (iat he had prospered abroad and been head master of the Maryland cal Academy at aston and to kiss one of the co-respondents on the neck, Judge Marean deciding that as this was done in the presence of others it was simply an imprudence and did not indicate gullt on the part of the defen- dant. Including | = od in one ble that Mrs. O'Brian shouki be un- strung with her habits, and when Mr. Turk said he had had no opportunity to prepare his defense, because he did not dare go to the O'Brien house, Hummel laughed derisively and Justice Scott asked: they had no knowledge of the letter until {t was ueed by the Wabash of- ficials in their plea for an injunction. r. Morrisey and Mr. Lee intimate that they know the author of the letter to de a member of their order who Is a traitor to the brotherhood and who wrote it to make grounds for an in- Junction by the company. ieee Cd GA trainmen are look- ar the visit of Geol Gould, the head of the Gould lines, ine eluding the Wabash, to st. Louis. Mr. Gould waa notfled by telegraph of the situation here on Monday, when the ile n was elivered te ga d' to President ir. Gould and his tramec mana; C. Bird, aro now in Chicago. and hace announced that they avill be in @t Louis Sunday and Monday on thelr in: spection tour of the Ines. The leaders here are of the opinion that Mr, Gould is coming this way o & special errand to inquire into the sit uation between the Wabash and its am. ployees. PIRS:TAMES OBRIEN* MAYOR INVITED 10 j allowed. Later, her suit for separation! supplied on her _ orders, Was dismissed, ‘Then came Mr. O'Brien’a eighteen gallons of whiskey it for absol " vi] + x en a artery orce, which she Met Way to Have een Head of Police. Brie Mrs, O'Brien declares that she de- When Mra, O'Brien applied for ali-|Mim; O'Brien declares that she. de. mony through Robert L. Turk, she al-| be Police Commissioner by Mayor Strong leged that her husband was a heavy|!n 1897, and that Richard Croker made operator in Wall street, with | yaaa A aie Onc aae account of $100,000 at his broker’ h an income of $30,000 a year; that his| secured lc time and money were sent on dintor| fon ae promiss" mae iP lute women and in gambling; that he| Shepard was elect F 2 Was a frequenter of the racetracks and|Q'Hricn should be appointed head of the 5 @ patron of Dick Canfeld's in Sara-|" O'Sirien: never drinks, never smokes toga, and a high player with men of and saya he was never in Canfleld's. He Wealth and fashion; that he had pri- Was a widower when he married Miss gla. Cook, atoga, vate apartments at the Holland House| ajay 91 48a” lie is statyefive nowy site {3 at $100 a month, with servants and more than forty years old. Mr. Turk Ie Afraid. are not afraid, are you?’ sir,” sald Turk. ‘There are four detectives ‘quartered in the ‘house and a policeman. The wife is virtually a prisoner In her own house and has been for two yeats, and when I go there I am threatened’ with arrest.” Justice Scott said the case had dragged too long and Mrs. O'Brien must be ready to go on with the trial on Mon- day or have a better excuse than the one offered to-day, ‘You sd Board Meeting. ah Bs, of Wil Mayor Low review the soi Erin when they parade on March 17 was waited upon He'is sixty-five now; she Is He Patrick's Day parade, Mayor Low was in attendance at th meeting of the Board of Bstimate an Apportionment when the committe called. would not give her even fiv crate « r © cents for e replied that because of her ex- travagance he had directed the ateward of the Hoffman House to do the ‘market- ing for his house; that his wife had been for years a’ victim of ‘drinking bits. Mr. Hummel showed that enor- mous bills had been sent to him which pls wife had contracted for lauors, and he had been called upon to pay for 274 Sherif? and Congressman. He ran for Mayor in 1873, but was defeated by Havemeyer. When the case was called to-day Mr. Turk declared that two of the caildren, Ella and Alice, eleven and four years old, were very fll with pneumonia and that their mother was quite unnerved trom watching over them. The two sons, James, jr., and Sanford O'Brien, twenty and seventeen, are at business college. charge: ‘There are elghteen charges and coun- ter-charges enumerated in the question for the jury to answer, the politician making seven counts againet his wife Deputy Water Commissioner Van Iderstine recommended yesterday that Meter Inspectors Lawrence N. wiinn, William H. Fahey, Martin J. Vereen ard David Klers be dismissed. Quinn In ac- and naming Jack Roche, George Pow- | cused of making inaccurate repurts and ors, Paul Smith and divers others, the |frequenting salvons. Fahey is charged| coi ruturned word that it was wane sary Ma: charges running from 1898 on, and Mrs. | with neglect of duty, Vreen wita O'Brien making eleven charges, one of | doing his work properly, them being a blanket charge covering | making false reports of carfare: or, for alimony and counsel fees was not topes Wg an Mn wr HN worth of liquors, cigarettes and cigars] Mr. Hummel’ said it was not remarka-| May, 1898, to May, 1899. men have had a hearing. e chairman of the committee in. FOUR MILLION CURES This Unparalleled record has been made by t true medicine for all mankind Thousands upon thousands of letters have been received have been cured of B and Lungs, and from ol by the use of Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey as their only medicine. tors and used in 2,000 hospitals. U. S Has 3,536 Centcnarians Almost Every One of Them Owes His or Her Ripe Old Age to DUFFY’S PURE MALT WHISKEY, the Elixir of Life The census now being completed shows that in the United States, with a population of 76,000,000, there are 1,289 men and 2,247 women of one hundred years of age or more, The leading nations of Europe have but half as many with nearly twice the population. LENGTH OF LIFE INCREASING Quite a large number of these old people were recently interviewed and asked as to what they especially at- tributed their great age. In nearly every case the answer was hard work, freedom from worry, careful living, fresh air and Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey, taken regularly according to directions. Duffy’s is an absolutely pure, health-giv- ing, life-preserving tonic stimulant, prescribed by all leading physicians and used in prominent hospitals everywhere, How to Live to Be 100 $04 YEARS OLD, Strong, Healthy and full of Vigor, Thanks to Dulfy’s Pure Malt Whiskey, As well as 40 Years ago Gentlemen: The benefit 1 derive from Duffy's Pure Malt Whis- key is marvellous. 1 owe my great age, vigorous constitution and remarkable freedom from disease to its daily use for many years. Though 104 years of age, | feel as young and hearty as lorty years ago, My appetite is good and I still do all the chores, I cannot say too much in favor of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, It is a blessing to the old and sick. The Lord will surely bless the discoverer of such a great medicine and prolonger of life. RALPH BULLOCK, Brooklyn, N. Y. Grip 1s an Infectious direase which attacks weak and strong alike, especially if the blood ts Involving the mucous tho grip down to and Including the lungs. Serious com- | contains plications are Hable to develop in tho course of the disease, as grip settles in the weakest part of the system, sometimes the kidnoys, the brain, tomach or the heart, revulting often in heart » but the most dreaded of all Is when {t tn the lungs Consumption |s sure to fol- And certain death if prompt action is not taken and Duffy's Pure Melt Whiskey sdmin- Intered, has had and was kip; bu Malt Whi years ago and still able to do a good day's work. 1 attribute my health, vigor and great age to the constant use of a little Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey dally for Lid years. It has kept me free from disease and prolonged my life 25 years, Duffy's is the greatest medicine in the world, a godsend to old people, and I will never be without it.” WM, R. LAUCKS, 9% years old on August 7. 1902 An Example of Vigorous Old Age Gentlemen: 1 have been using your Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey for a considerable length of time, 1 find it an excellent in- ‘Tho fatalities resulting from this disease within the past few yours have suMciently aroused doc torn to the imporance of giving the disease the closest Investigation, Dntty's Pure Malt Whiskey ts the only abso- lute cure for grip, influenza, astuma, bronchitis eatarrh, consumption and all diseases of the throat and lungs; it prevents complications and bad after-effeota that qriy so often leaves in th Sire nd pi » Wo much tm) vigorator and tonic. 1 am 96 years old—hale and hearty. A Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey not y | Ine quite hopeful BELL SHAUL, 402 YEARS OF AGE, Mrs, Elizabeth Hunt, Hale and Hearty | (riend, when he called on me, was surprised to find | was th the “ stimulates the blood, alds Charlotte h., Nov, 8, 1902 Mrs. Hunt, who lives at 407 Adelphi street, Brooklyn, says: “My | back yard chopping wood. 1 am taking it right along in table- action of the heart, | GRIP CUREO AT SEVENTY youthfulness and vigor are due to the use of Duffy's Pure Malt | spoonful doses, night and morning. It agrees with me perfectly,| ‘The voluntary testimony recelved from thou- Gantlenoent 1. take pleasune tadeéormning son Whiskey, my only medicine.” Mrs, Hunt said: “I belleve my long | My Stomach tolerates it, 1 have no nausea, heartburn or any bad] sands of our grateful patients Is proof positive j thet I have been cured of a severe attack of grip life and vigorous constitution are due to the use of Duffy’s Pure | after effect, and | rest well. My birthday was last Thursday and | that Dufty's Pure Malt Whiskey ts the grostost | 1°) OOS ty Pure Malt Whiskey, My Malt Whiskey, which I know has helped me wonderfully. If ever | fecelved congratulations from all my townspeople. 1 hope all| kuown remedy for tho grip and all diseases of | OOS. Meg ELIZA H. REAM, 1 take cold or contract a cough, I use Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, | your old people are doing as well as | tncerely youre, | Sie Ares: and lungs, and all wasting. diseases) 1 Cherry St., Reading, Pa., Dec. 11, 1908. and my cough is quickly cured. I have a good appetite and sleep | WILLIAM R. LAUCKS, Friedensburg, Pa, Aug. 14, 1902, ite ppeakers aod a numbor of tho leaiug Lous 5 es PP P be § & CURED THREE GRIP VICTINS better than I have for several years, 1 am possessed of all my peranes women pr Pures § Malt Whis- 1 MRS. ANNIE RENTZ, & years old Feels as Well To-day as 20 Years ago Gentlemen: 1 am 84 years old, and have been using your Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey for a number of years, | feel as well to-day as 1 did twenty years ago. | must give your excel- lent Whiskey the credit. My appetite is grand, and | rest so well, Gentiem pulled th key for the great good it has saving live “DUFFY'S” THR ONLY CURB Dr, Willard H. Morse, the eminent practitioner and world-renowned therapeutiet, after careful faculties and use no other medicine but Duffy's Pure Malt omplished ta Whiskey, 1 shall continue to use it as long as I live. It is, i think, the greatest blessing in the world for the old, as well as the young. MARRIED AT 104. Townsend Miller, of oes who bas just celebrated if of Jpnaiens J ‘bis 104th birthday and married his third wile, says be ts as vigorous stroog as when tweaty- 1 do not wear glasses; my eyesight is very clear, 1 am now busy fait Whiss. ubaiitutea, which are cen the live youtrof eye, thanks 16 Daly's Pass Miah Wishes making a number of gui. A fo, tay te there are very lev | tively Rarmmsle Demand 'D ully’a” eed be pure wrote: “Th Ean bow ste can. ‘Sincerely yours, MRS. ANI RENTZ, 953 N. sith St, Read~ healthy wi en “yeh teapalty sotaeeaian ing, Pa, Sept: 41, 1903, Ri ik! SEE IRISH PARADE, Committee Calls on Him To- Day, but Fails to See His Honor, Who Was Busy at a He| a committee of the Ps Order of Hibernians to-day, who lackeys; dressed in the latest fashion politics, when only nineteen SEE Anclent fe and rode in expensive carriages, but | [Ot OK and has been ¢ politica! power | Eighteen Charges and Counter-| Four Di ain Recommended, |Tetested the Mayor to review the Bt He sent sword that he would re-| celve the committee later, but the mem-| ss-| study of grij Pure Malt Whitkey 1 the only absolute cure row off the grip germs ges from the nostrils | after-effects, Gentlemen: due to tell you thet the use of your whiskey has prevented me from having the dread disease, (ne grip, this winter, Everybody else on my etreet Thealth t much be | Truly yours, After being given up by several of our best physictans, nounced & case skey. Malt Whiskey and milk. formed Pri Mayor Low—providing invitation—wouldt be rece! mittee at the Vanderbilt trick's Day the reviewin; accepted stand, determination. SMITH AFTER MOSQUITOES. Anka for $10,000 with Which to Fight Them. to The Evening World.) ot TRENTON, B, Smith, of No’ tony | Bru to be used in exterminattny He presented mosqu ft captured under the ice. The Norwegian steamer Fos, | lett Philadelphia yesterday | came into port to-day fly e| Smith tn g her to her cour ‘fn a elmilar acct Cape May, but -| and’ went to Philadelphia. te Secretary Reynolds that he ved by a com- Hotel on. St, and thence escorted to Mayor Low has not yet announced his Legislature of New Jersey . J, March .—Prof. J. inewick, mppea' fore the Legislative Committes on Appropriations and asked for $10,000 the committes with a bottle ef life mosquitoes which he had STEAMER UNSHIPS RUDDER. which for Santiago 6 signals in dlcating that she was not under control, She was alded by the tug Somers N) ‘The Fos had unshipped her rud an dthe tug steamed behind kee; | ' an on et 8 the They left an invitation for yi round on Hereford Bar near Beye BES ATR ad ws subsequently floated cipal of the Trinity School In New Yi He brought about a reconciliation’ his wife and returned to structing her to follow him with children. Bi. Mrs. Hill remained in the United States only a fow years, her health hes | ing poor. Sho rturned to her mot home with her children, her promising, she says, to send her for thelr support. For a long time they corresponded, five years ago the letters from Al uddenly ceased, and Mrs. Hil has eard from him since that time, advertised In American papers for but for some reason the a em: were unnoticed. Mrs, Mery Annie Savage Hill, | beautiful daughter of K. B. Elliot} Norfolk, Va., lies at her home in Orange, N, J, suffering the most mental angulsh Fesult of an e3 which caused the filght of her Prof, Hill, He left East Orange a promising his bride of three that he would explain a letter. England which stated that he wife and family there.” Mrs. Hill's blind faith in the man. bas apparently deserted her thetic. When seen yesterday fused ‘to belteve t rEes husband. = 23 Fears are entertained for Mrs. reason. 2 oa the red he only Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey — from grateful men and women who. yspepsia, Nervousness, Consumption, Grip, Colds and all diseases of the Thra E eople whose lives have been prolonged to and beyond the century m Mal + It is prescribed by over 7,000 doc Grip, Colds, Consumption Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey Cures Grip, Colds, Catarrh, Consumpion, [alaria, Bron: chitis, Asthma and All Diseases of the Throat and Lungs, in all its stages, says: | "Dutty's d enables it an nd prevents ba because It in chemically pure and great medicinal properti PREVENTED GRIP Burlington, Vt., Dec, 21, 1902. 1 consider it no more than your 3 it builds up the sy ft, I am not over and above healthy. afraid I might be takon down with t! tT took @ moderate amount of Duffy's skey each day and never enjoyed better n lite, My wife has also derived efit trom its use, A. A. YOUNG, Mer. Young's Information Agency, CONSUMPTION CURED having throat and lung trouble, ncurable consump: sister started the use of your Pure ..alt She has taken three bottles, and I so proved in strength that we are all feel My family had ‘La Grips of them (hrough with Duffy's Pure Fe OF direct, $1.00 @ bot recuguied by the Gi ‘This te WILLIAM H. YATES, Rochester, Mich, Nov, 3, 1902, Pure Matt Whiskey market for profit only, you getit, it is the ualiti¢s, Look for the trade- Ks ccywrever tasks oriabolch yhen y f be the genuine, CAUTION. noe Wihtn 700 09k fer pails of this preparation, tight eg edn I QUICKLY CURED # Dear Sirs: I picked up one of your cirotiar® @m @ table about a month ago and read it through,” After reading I went out and bought a bottle your whiskey, which helped me right away, am now on my fourth bottle, using it called {ncurable consumption, and I feel like &” new man, I think that if 1 hed known of your! whitkey when I was at home in Chicago I have never come out here for my health. ED, SCHUBARTH, 1008 Market St., Denver, Oct. 18, 190 / NO FUSEL OIL ‘The genuine ts sold by druggists and It ts the only Marantee. and treatment of diseases and cont monials went free to any reader who will write. of Rochester, N. ¥, Duty Malt ee cap =