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WAY EAR FELL OF AS HE NADE LOVE It Cost Wealthy Jap an Heiress Bride, Who Was Shocked to Discover His Auricular Ap- pendage.a Counterfeit, MAN WHO MADE IT SUED'FOR $25 AND WON. | Declared He Constructed Ear _ Strictly According to Meas- urements and It Wasn’t His Fault if It Didn’t Fit. Because his artificint ear fitted him Poorly and fell off when he was pross- “Ing his suit with a woman who 46 sald to be an American holress, a wealthy Japanese lost the heiress, returned the ear to the man from whom he had or- dered it alnd declined payment, where- upon the man who took the measure- ments refused payment to the man who made the oar, and the latter in- stituted sult for $25 for his services in moulding the ear to conform with the model that was furnished. All these statements and more came out yesterday before Justice Herman Joseph, in the Seventh District Munte- ipal Court, In the trial of a suit by Dr. Alffed Beck, of East Twenty-first street, against William M. Elsen, a manufacturer of truss¢s and bandages, Dr. Beck sued for $25, for services per- formed in making the ear on the order of Mr. Elsen, Made of Wax and Bubber. The ear, which was introduced in evi- dence, is made of wax and rubber, and. Is a very close imitation of the human auricular appendage. Dr. Beck said that he had received an order from Mr. Elsen for a left ear for a Japanese man. ‘The order was ac- companied by a plaster ast of the left side of | customer's head, on which there wi. but the stump of an ear, There also was a wax cast of the man's right ear, to serve as a model for the car. The physician said he made the ear and affixed to it a spring, which was to fasten it to the stump of the ew. The phystcian sald he had asked that the customer call on him to have the ear fitted, but that the man never called, and it was not the maker's fault that the ear did not fit Further- nore, saff Dr, Beck, he had suggested tat, if the spring did not hold, the siump of the customer's missing ear should be pierced and the artificial or: gan fasténed on in that manner. Be- cause the customer returned the ear und refused to pay for It, the doctor sad, Was no reason why payment Shouia hoc be made to the mixer tor <his services, as he had complied with the order in eyery respect. : Kar Spoiled Romance. In'hes deronse, Lawyer Isaac #raten- thal, who appeared lor Elsen, reiated A lite of tae shattered romance, the trageay of which hinged on the artili- Gial ear, ‘wealthy, Japanese, worth many million yen, had lost his lett ear in @ duel in bis native land. Over there, he Suid, it made no difference, Nay, it etch ataed to a man's prominence,’ in- dicating that he was a person of un- common valor. The absence of the ear became a sore afflictipn, however, when the Japanesé came to the United States And fell in love with a beautiful Ameri. can woman, At the first meeting managed’ to conceal the defect, but as thelr acquaintance became better he fhuna it dimoult longer to the fact that he had but one ear. ly he went to Mr. Hisen, saying he was. will- {ng to pay, $000 for a perfect artificial ear. This Mr, Blsen agreed to furnis! for $7, and the ear was. made by Dr. Beck for Eisen, who delivered it to the Japanes : Loked Uke a Good Ha: y, pleased with the ear, the n savanese mowing the bright. new ing it beats fot appear to her to. be Aifferent, from other, Japanese, ears. to vement In court enone, 1 animated diss ‘be- tween the lovers on the question of the ween Japan and Russia, ‘when Tie" .Piltual car suddenly fei trom ite ince fi ‘and. the heiress. horrified, fled rom, room, since which time it is sald wig the love affair has not con- tinued. The Japanese returned the ear to Mr. Eisen, declining to pay for it, sen in turn refusing payment to oe ei “My client” said Lawyer Frauenthal “has grounds for a counter suit against pr ifeck. He has lost. a customer and the customer has lost a wife, and Mr. Elsen really is entitled to the soo fee he lost joped that Elsen “had tl Meares tee erie ee ‘Justice Joseph rendered judgment of $25 and costs for Dr. Beck, BUREAU FOR STREET TRAFFIC MeAdeo Will BHstablish Separate One tn Police Department. Police Commissioner McAdoo said to- fay that he will establish a, separate vureau in his department to look after street trafic. Mr, McAdoo sald the Chamber of Com- merce suggested that he appoint a special deputy to look after this tm- POrLaDe branch of his office. He thinks, owever, that he can get better work from a police captain or inspector, and will select an officer of such rank to: take chi of the bureau. The bureau @lso will look after automobile traffic, Five Fire. Victims Burted, Mra, Fannte Frey, the sole member of her family to escape death in the fire at Columbla Hall, Mount Vernon, is dying in the Mount Vernon ° City Hospital. Ever since she was taken from tHe ruins she has been in a coma, Mr, Frey, his three children and servant, ‘Bertha Salzer, who were burned to death, were buried side by side in the Jewish cemetery at Yonkers, —_— = INE THOUSAND PRIZES FOR THE ANSWERS. Haw long docs an eyelash live? What animal has eyes on the endg of ‘Av iereria red and : eye 18 red and green snow scen? iasngt Stare in the ‘Giton haa’ over 5,000 What insect ts said to plant, cultivate ang. arvest grain? nswers easy (to find, Only slight effort mae ay win a prize, D. See offer in the great WANT AD. Tr RY with next SUNDAY'S apes ie his hair fer down On the Sing his hair far down on cone or ae pead, but proudly. brushe o PE8DSIDF-DS9OOT SS ES SS SS Ss SS SSS SS SSS Te $4OO009OSD 0£-54660000002046 ILLUSTRATES HIS IDEA OF ‘AMERICAN FEMALE QOCDDEEEEEEEDIOOOSEIC OE ‘seavry CHILDREN DIED OF . POSE ESOTHS HE DPOTOOLOSHOD WDPEDHADLGHEIHHNT OSH HORH HOH ALS nl ; Wy We anaemic European woman and. the robust american type’ - oe OYE EVENING, APRIT. 8, 1904. ead “SPOTTED FEVER" Poisoned Candy, Coroner’s Phy- >|. Sician Says, Did Not Cause 900056 | the Death. of Frederick and ¢| Willie Haugh. NOTHING UNUSUAL ABOUT CASE, SAYS DR. HIGGINS. Father of the Victims, However, Still Clings to Poisoned Candy Theory, and Autopsy May Be Held. | Trederick Haugh, an older brother of Willie Haugh, of No, 187 East One Hun- dred and Nineteenth street, who died $ on Wednesday of what was believed to > be ptomaine polsoning, following the $ cating of colored candy, died at his home to-day. The doctors say that © | Fred's death was due to “spotted ‘» | fever." @ disenso that has become more $ | or less prevalent in Harlem. Dr. FE, T. Higwins, Coroner's physt- jelan, satd to-day that the death of Wil- le was in no way caused by the candy he had eaten. After'a diagnosis of the jease he came to the conclusion that “spotted tever™’ was responsible in the S }Arst caso and also in that of the older Blorotner Frederick. © | Five of the Haugh children ate of the ®|candy which was supposed to have [Killed Willie, Only two of them were @| made ill, The father of the dead chil- © | dren, however, still belleves chat tho © | death of both was due to some. other © | cause. The symptoms that marked the ending of Frederiek were the came as in Willle's case. a Coroner's Physician O'Hanlon after Q igetting a report from Dr. Lauck,_ of © \No. 17 Bast Ono Hundred und ‘Six- [teenth street, said thar Willie's death @ | was due to, spinal meningitis. which ts $% ‘the technical tetm for what pusarly & sermed “spottéd fever.” Dr. Lauck was > Vealled In after Willle was taken with B convulsions and his report was so full 3 {of the history of the case that the Cor- % joner's physician was satisfied to allow |the death to go without an autopsy. The father of the boys paid a visit }:o Capt. McNally, of the East One 3B | Hundred and Twenty-sixth street #ta- % | tion, to-day asking for an investigation. @ | Me said that when his first boy dled he @ | was told not to bury the body until an & | autopsy had been made by the Corpner. ® | For the last two days, as ho clalms, ©} he has been trying to reach the par- @ | cular, Coroner who has charge of the | case, but without success. ‘Ine father | sull holds to the candy. theory. ©| The doctors in Harlem that ® | “spotted fever” has become so alarming: © | iy prevalent in Harlem that it has as- \ sumed the proportions of an epidemic, \ “Spotted fever ts caused,” sald Dr, Higgins, “by a germ known as the ‘dip- | lozoccus Int ullaris,’ and the presence 3 Of the disease in indicated by chills, ac- | companied by convulsions, general pains e throughout the body, severe headache, , projectile vomiting and rigidity of the neck, accémpanied by unconsciousness.’ An autopsy may be performed on the body of the child to determine to:a cer= tainty the catise of death, LAW OVER A MAN Mrs. Mary A. Brighton, Seventy Years Old, Wants $10,000 Damages for Alleged Aliena- tion of Husband’s Affections. ‘The celebrated case of Brightson vs. Caihiil, wherein Mrs. Mary A. Bright- son, aged seventy years, demands of Mra. Mary Jane Cahill, aged seventy, $10,000 damages for the alienation of ‘the affections of her husband, John Brightson, also aged seventy, and ‘blind beside, which has been on and in Brooklyn since 18%, ts at last des- tined to heve & twaring, Any one who thinks that the heart- wounds of Mrs. Brightson have been cured by aixteen years of the alleged alfenation {s very much mimaken. Those wounds ache as much as they ever did and Mrs. Brightson avers that nothing short of $0,000 worth of balm will remove the sting, Some of the Known Facts, The known facts in the now cele- brated case of —rightson vs. Cahill are these: That John Brightson was a pilot on the Greenpoint ferry until 188%, that he had a wife, Mary, and that the inti. mate friend of both was the widow Cahill, who kept a boarding-house at No. 76 Huron’ street; that owing to an his ferry-boat into another ferry-poat one day and shortly afterward lost his Job; that he gave up his home and went to board at Mrs, Cahill's house, while his wife went to live with a nepnew, and that this arran-sment was ac- ceded to by Mrs. - rightson at tne time. The further facts alleged by Mrs. Brightson are that the widow Cahill did "debauch her husband and by jhe Uberal bestowal of money and gifts on him" prevent his returning to’ his law- ful wife. For all of which and some other things Mrs, Brightson demands damages. Suit Sixteen Years Old. Mrs. Brightson began this action in 1888, and it dragged its weary way through the courts until 1900, when it was dropped. In 190%, fresh life was injected In the case and it was calen- dared again. Since then it has bobbed up spasmodically, but hag never come to a hearing, and in the mean time all the parties to it have reached the ripe age of seventy, and jt Is said that Brightson {8 ‘totally blind. However, it is alleged by Mrs. Brightson, that he is still living with ‘Mrs.’ Canili at No. 183 Cylyer street, Brooklyn, Mrs, “Brightson’s lawycrs have been wishing the matter so vigorously” 01 fate that to-day ex-Congressman. Ma ner appeared for Mrs. Calill and asked permission to put in an amendment to the answer made to the action in advisement and will give a decision to- morrow, Mr. Mnagner's amendment (a to be that the Statute of Limitations applies ins the case. Mrs. Brightson! Railroad, says that the conditions she complains William’ H. Truesdale, but still con- Unues to: act ay. a, board of managers of f still exist, and so doesn't fear Statute outlawing her case, ‘be AGED WOMAN AT =.American Women Superb, Says This French Artist, — BY FIRE HORROR Alphonse Maria Mucha Enthusiastic Over. Young Lawyer, Friend of Priest Their Beauty, Which Is Far Superior to the Parisian Type. been said and written of of American women by But Alphonse Maria Mucha, greatest of Frenen poster artists and noted, also as an iilustrator and sculptor, who Is on'a visit in New York, {s more enthusiastic than any of them. Mucha Is a devotee of the large ath- letic type of beauty, and he declares that in this bilef sofourn in the United States he has discovered models of a off the calendars of the Supreme Court) perfection he had despaired of nding “that this country ts surcharged with magnetism, electricity and energy. New as it Js it sums all the energies of the Old World, Every foreigner who comes to America possesses a fixed object in You know it requires a great deal of energy to leave one's country and | girls to death in the parish house of one's family and go to a strange, new|St. Patrick's Church, Long Island City, world with other customs and none of] Francis T. MeGibbons, a prominent Europe gives Amer-| Manhattan lawyer, Close friend of the visiting foreigners. the old traditions. {ca her most energetic citizen: this energy goes to the upbullding ot the country they huye adupied. and all In his studfo in the Sherwood to-day when an Evening World reporter asked him for his opinion of the American woman enthusiasm danced’ in his eyes and effervesced in his emphatic tures as he replied: “She is the most superb creatyre under the sun, Infinitely superior to the most beautiful®women of Europe. The type of Parisian beauty Twhich all our artists fad their idents Here the women are vigorous—at once svelte and Ure. dimiru- Taike of Onr Artintic Development. Questioned about the artistic develop- ment of the city, Mucha answered? One must not expect too much of a| 1 go through the whole tragedy again ue Wag re and ogain. Each time I seem to think of its in- lis a’ false one. pew country whose energy m iret the development dustrial und commercial Interests rhia| that some oye can save them. But {t young yet to have de-| always ends the sante way—all are lost There are] in the most horrible death.” Hard to Find French Models, “In France I have been obliged to seek my models among country women —peasants who pass the greater part of affiction of the eyes Brightson bumped® thelr lives in the open alr. The Parisian woman, cloistered between four walls, Her smile, her walk, her every movement Here the women are large, country is too veloped) an art Painters here, and very good ones, tov. But they are not American painters. Young and Unmarried. They | Mr. MeGibbons, who was thirt Hudy abroad and are formed there, #o| old and a member of the law firm of tha best efforts aro in reality only | 35 A ‘ ‘ copies, At the present tte of develop, | Hmstein d& Townsend, was unmarrl ment, however, the real Amerjcan paint-| and lived with hin widowed father, a tty years, | younger brother and two sisters. study abroad er will be produced within and then he will create for himsel?. will have originallty, “The second géneration will open-air sports have made them the most beautiful ornament of thelr coun- type as distinctly American as there 1s a Parisian, Slav or aSaxon type, * “Consider, tor instance, a child born in Cologne or Mayence, of German par- Fents, and compare it with the second child of the same parents born in the There will be such » difference as to make one doubt that they are even of the same race, “It scems to me,” continue SAMUEL SLOAN CELEBRATES |Sixtleth Anniversary To.May of | Wife Says He Disappeared from | PHtl shot was heard by ills, sisters: Home Last sunday. ” Mra, Mary Meehan, of No. 510 West | te bed clothes and bis ninth sireet, reported last night ne poice of the West Forty-sev- enth street, station forty, years old, Fortleth street, between Seventh ‘and ne Mighth avenues, had been missing since | "Ved. Coroner Rouff was r He will be Amer- Thero’ is a country is too young yet, tobe waited his renaissance will produce |deals of a grandiose. severity, ture will be simple, lung built of, the temple of ws, fantnatic have dikappeared, an Ourarchiteo- ter that he continual! wi hancaniten: | After ofScnll the xrar non Ani Ornate effects, United States. its greatest ornament, SEEKS MISSING HUSBAND. ‘At breakfast. time to-day garet Elmendorf, April 8, 18H, will celebrate informally the sixtieth anplversury of thelr wed- ding to-day at thelr cown house, No. dghth street. husband | himself In the forchea employed as ae elghty-seven Justice Garretson took the matter under, @60. Up until some five years ago he continued to act as @resident of the Lackawanna and Western Then he retired in favor of | Muight’ 140 pout: *k laced shoes, ‘of the.| derby ha hips, socks end gray und MADE A SUICIDE Who with Two Girls Lost Life in Parish House Blaze, Blows Out His Brains. Unable longer to endure the mental horror of the fire which a few woeks ago burned a priest and two servant dead priest and earnest worker for the affcoted® myself,. I cannot preach a cries and screams of those unfortunates who lost their lives in the fire, “I am continyally haunted by these shrieks of untold pain. “I seo the flames years He)” He had been called from his bed to the early morning fire in the parish house, and had heard the death his: friend, Father Herman J. F the priest who was lost in the flames spoke of the horror, and bis friends remarked that he had been perceptibly o ted by the ‘ypr- | scene, lecorated | Ho organized a benefit, which 1s to be ture willl given in a few days to rebuild the vie vast. | barish house, and last night he was simplo will cl e benefit TANT He ett nat fe Rowe welling ticket for th erican Muffled Pistol Shot Heard. He retired at his usual hour and + | seemed in rather good spirits compared to what he had exhibited since the fire, 9 had not report of aw nis sisters, muffle Appeared and pistol shot was heard by found McG!bbins covered entirely by ad cnve.oped k the covers nm had The revoive was lying under the covers, Dr. George Forbes waa called, but he id’ MeGibbons had died before he w titted, Dr, A thore was no doubt that in the pillows, Puiling ba the father found that his Ot in Forbes «: She said he went to his stable and | McGibbons had killed himself, was seen there by employees, but dis- appeared shortly Father Hannigan's statement that the Waa}tragedy in the parish house stil pay day at the stable, but the foreman | haunted his own mind wee,a, surprise lid not show up. Mra, Meehan describes her husband | served that’ the in helght; | citable than befor hair, amoor i] known that the fi black to his parishioners. It had been ob- tor was more: ex: ut Was not as- tant priest and two servant girls lost ir lives was continually reourring to dated - shot and killed himeelt]| ing more beautiful than] at his home No, 738 Vernon avenue, Mexclaimed sucha] at Ns home a ew York produces the ‘ef-] Long Island City, fect of a huge block of crystallized en-| When the death of the lawyer was Entering it you samire ie wpn-| made known to the Rey. Father Han- Thene nolsen from the street, from, the| mean, pastor of St Patrick's, he said erpetual building and blasting, from| ve been «reat the trains, the whirring machinery re- FiO ee REBEL CDRS ILA IPA joice and transport on, It seems to me that I have Just|sermon in the church, or say a mass awakened from a long droam and that} there, without being disturbed by the lived since { arrived In recognized her froni knowing of i dancers on the stage. He ap ry of | fonso to-day received a t |tempr on his lfe was absolutely un- ~ gfound - JUDGE HITS AT SERVANT GIRLS “They Have Just Three Ideas,” Says Magistrate Crane from the Bench, and Then He.Pro- ceeds to Enumerate Them. DO LITTLE WORK, WANT BIG PAY AND MAKE TROUBLE. “Why,” He Added, “I Had a Ser- vant Girl Who Kicked Be- cause the Bathroom Wasn't Large Enough.” Magistrate Crane, after Nstening to-! day to a bitter contention over a trunk which Lizzte Miller, a domentic, claimed was withheld from her by Mandel Krane, of No..1% East One Hundred and Twentieth street, went into an Divlian Cray: analysis of the servant problem and entertained his hearers for many min- utes by telling some of his experiences. Mr. Krane, who Isa merchant, was in court on a summons which Miss Miller had caused to be issued. Sho sald that-he would not give her the trunk which she took to the house when she was employed by Mr. Krane's wife. Mr, Krane said that the trunk was in storage and that the girl might have {t f she took the trouble to get It, “We all have had the same kind of trouble,” said the Magt girls have just “Firet—To do as little work as! Yoarg, “Third—To get an possible. “Why, I had a servant girl kick to me because the bathroom wasn't large|courts at Dedham, charging desertion, | 28 Sit who IMes in Mrs. Thompson's enough. She said she wanted to bathe twice a day and that the discomfort she would suffer by using our bath- room could not be compensated for by] ‘The Angel of Clay. She was for- | ‘he boarding house, where he was pop- anything she would receive. “My wife keeps her kitchen as clean asa pin, When one girl applied for @ position asid saw thet floor she said: Do you expect me to scrub the kitchen as clean as that? I'll bend my knees for no woman.’ Then she walked out Uke a peacock. We all have our troubles, Mr. Krane, you may go." DIDN'T KNOW IT WAS MRS, CLEVELAND Hospital Nurse Introduced to Her by Patient, but Fails to Recognize Wife of the For- mer President. Mrs, Grover Cleveland visited the Sloane Maternity -Hospital today, and one of the head nurses is still lamen ing her failure to appreciate an oppor- tunity which she had hoped for all her life. When Mrs. Cleveland was sitting by the bedstde of her friend the inyalid tn- troduced her to the nurse; who noticed A modestly dressed woman, but busied herself about her work and paid no fur- ther attention. An hour or so later a number of nurses were talking if™the nurses’ room. “Oh, wouldn't you love to have met her? “Meet who?" asked the nurse of Mrs, Cleveland's friend, Grover Cleveland.” asked the nurse, ve wanted to see her ali my life. you did meet her,"’ returned a nurses. fur patient introdured her to you not_an hour ago.” Mra, Cleveland's visits to the hospital always were quiet, and the unpreten-| manner of the former first lady e land presented all but ing on her friend. ‘The nurse Is Inmenting her failure to | improve the long-desired opportunity of talking to Mrs. Cleveland. ——_——_- ROONEY, JR. TO TAKE A WIFE Young Pat Will Lead Marion Bent to the Altar, BOSTON, April &—Lt was announced to-day that Pat Rooney, the footed comedian, the son of old Pat Rooney, is to marry Marion Bent, of the Mather Goose Comp: Pat the vounger is one of th formerly in vaudeville and hi the boards was usually mari bills In heavy head! His fath known to the present and the Jast ge erations as the par excellence Irish comedian. rr DR. CONRAD SENTENCED. Dr. Edward E. Conrad, who was ¢ victed in General Sessions of attompt- ing to perform a criminal operation at hie private sanitarium on Wost Forty seventh street, was to-day sentenced by Recorder Goff to serve an indeterminat term of not more than two years and not less than one In State Prison Dr. Conrad was arrested in a rald ey red through the District-Attorney's office, Detectives of the © M Society and the Distr he was con NOT ATTACKED, SAYS ALFONSO, GERONA, Spain, April §—King Al- President Diaz, of Mexico, Ing him on h from an attempt on his tife at jona. The King re- plied, assuring ‘osident that ti report that the explosioan was an a{- ate. “In my eapertence I uve discov- much tron. uch money —eeeeeeee sy r e “ : and Children’s : = pers ik e ehue ‘| Substantial, Convicted Af Performing Opera- morning for nix et : j Stylish Real eg acre fake WOLF BITES SIX AT MINSK, | WILLIAM GRAY, WHO DIED; AT PARTY. AS HE SAID HE WOULD | heart’s Home and Standing in : Middle of Room Gave Notice of Impending Death. “('M DONE FOR: THIS ENDS ALL,” HE CALMLY SAID: A Moment Later He -Fellin@ ~ Heap, and When Physician’ Arrived Was Lifeless : from Heart Disease. wee In the presence of his sweetheart an a large number of friends who hat gathored for a little dance, Wiliam Gray, a young collector, of No. 128 West Nineteenth street, dropped dead last night. MR j ‘the horror of his sudden’ death in the ~ midst of merrymaking was ine byt) le A TRIDG the fact that less than a tainutel Patong he collapsed he calmly announced’ that 7 the end was coming, and then» stood Stoleally In the middle of the floor, sur- rounded by friends who thought fe wag Sees 1 Joking, and coolly awatted the end which came with such awful sudden« ness. Bing Wife of Ne r Gray was twenty-six years olf, and { New York Sculptor and) rer we ntnned soca in the Ning Writer Alleges Husband Has | tcenth street house trom a’ Mrs. Len= 7 ahan, He worked as a collector for = Seen Little of Her for Ten|number of book publishing concerns; but only worked a few days a week, bee cause of ill-health. He was a sufferer from heart discase, and also had a touch of consumption. « BOSTON, Mass., April &§—Mrs. Au- Hecame Engaged to Marry, gusta Partridge, wife of William Ord- Be h : 1 way Partridge, the New York sculptor | 50M® months ago Gray fell In love and writer, who ued for divorce in the| “ith Maggie Sheehan, a young works, was granted her decree to-da: boarding house, at No. 20 Weat Tenth Tt Is alleged that Mra, Partridge is | Street: He became engaged to her, and the heroine of Mr. Partridge's novel, | ®fter that spent much of his thne at merly Miss Augusta Skinner, She {s|Ulr He became a part of the sgclal much older than Mr. Partridge and was | life of the house, and when it was de- married to him in 1887, when he was | cided by the buagders several days ago twemty-three. A child, George Sidney, | to give a little party and dance last was born to the Partridges in 1889. night Gray was ono of the first invited, Mrs. Partridge alleges that her hus-| He went to the party about 8 o'clock band has seen almost nothing of her|and danced with Milas Sheehan and in the past ten vears and that his | other young women, -Ho seemed to be home Is now in New York. The hus-|in good spirits and laughed and joked band put In no defense. as tmich a6 ahy of the others, cieeaae party to break up at midnight | ———a sharp, so at 11 o'clock the dancers stopped to get some refreshment. Gray | ate heartily and afterwara danced some —» more, About 11.90 o'clock he feft the room for a moment, saying he had a pain im a his side. A few minutes later Sh . turned and, walking tirmly te the die of the parlor flopr, ‘sald: "m done for; tts ends al Application Made on Behalf of Calmiy Pred Déath. i Everybody turned to look at the Morse to Set Aside Decree wondering what he meant, Méss Annutling Banker’s Marriage | nan asked him what was the ; and Mrs. Thompson advised him to sif to Mrs, Dodge. ~ dowa,” Gray, without showing the slightest emotion, said again: + “This ends all.” 3S eae ‘The last step was taken to-day to re-| A fow seconds later, with the eyes of | store all the partles to the Dodge-Morse| everybody on him, he turned very pale, — recent divorce, marriage and annulment | pur his right hand up to his heart, ang proccedings to the exact condition in| then fell in a heap on the floor.’ | which they were four months ago when | sternation selzed all, but Miss Shéehan > Charles F, Dodge came up from Geo?g!a| had the presence of mind to summon @ 0 and sued to annul his wife's divorce de- | physician. ‘ When the doctor arrived he ¥ which has stood for six years. said that deato had been almost.in- | Attorney Moses Weinman moved be- See aeY, speedily, ip Nike fore Justice Davis In behalf of Charles | poay was removed rea ee te W. Morse that the degree annulling his | establishment. It wilk be turned over to his aunt, Mrs, Welsh, of No. 186 Dodge be ret| {i chth avenue. How Gray knew that © and the marriago reinstated. heewas going to die te ® e 0 the doctor could ont explain, Bat y John T. Little said he did not wish | the doctor could om rae ig to offer any certal opposition to the applica- | MAS. (igen an announce f tion, believing it to be In the best in-| {t was-all over he never made @ move terests of their client, Mrs, Dodge-| until death took, him, ay See SEAMLESS WEDDING RINGS dan aM it slenéd by Edgar “Direct From the Manufacturer age to Clemen ‘ursman, ex-Justice of the t, and counsel to Mrs. all these proceedings. sald, strinped of legal st 11 hough I have no specific au- ority for Mrs. Mor ppear for her in this proceeding is my opinion Here evteie interests. of Sra Atoree * that this application shall be est which, on endeavoring ci 188 1) For more than fé rs wo have puution for the manulostare Davis took the papers, reserv- | § Se toe, are cea We | ston WILL REDUCE CHURCH DEBT. Church of St. Francis of Assial to H tatertainment, f sm etsee ¢ the| .,, Engraving Free of b women of the! a1: rings are guarantegd a4 of Assi: mafactaring an: nrg _ idea | Mlastrated Cate!ogue oF 138 Pages Mall 4 Tuslg the) PSARP! Ly LEWKOWITZ, (3 te importer whe men ney to re-|Manutactt nd iamonus | wecks to. ralse money to re-| Ma NTH AY., Comer 17th St, New York, debt on the church Downtown Store, 290 Grand” at. nesday evening, April 20, th an all-star ya 1 (By Associated Press.) MINSK, Ru April &—A wolf en-| his town to-day and attacked . Killed, | CLOTHING on the Most Liberal Credit Plag of All, Cash Prices Oniy— Plain fi CREDIT nee Can feel Effect In strength all day on AVOID ALT, PUBLICUTY, iy a the CREDIT STORES, © oF EVENINGS, GRAPE-NUTS} || national outiitiing C0, 166 West 23d St. N, Y. y AND CREAM. Oo Won West 125th St