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© 500 DIVORCE CASES IN NEW YORK WITHIN A YE y IT. E. POWERS, GENE CARR AND FERD LONG FURNISH A FEW COMIC SIDELIGHTS om } MANY INTERESTING ON SOME OF THE CAUSES OF DOMESTIC UNHAPPINESS IN THE GREATER CITY. — ; CISESINTHECOURTS|T =~ ; a wry HE Gor 3) & A A DIVORCE Number of Suits Which Reach Judges in New York County Is Not Startling and Only One-fifth of the Defendants Put in an Appearance. il -—~ Some Odd Complaints Made by These i = 2 Tired of Married Life—A Few of the Be “eazea ‘ Sensational Kind — Family Secrets] jj THE uONcoveiarion, MMAR 7 Exposed in Testimony. YEAR’S DIVORCE SHOWING IN THE COURTS IN NEW YORK COUNTY. Number of divorce cases reaching courts .. Separation cases EEE SEC Cases not defended Cases classed as sensational...... ‘*A ge of consent’? annulment cases. Average time in minutes required to try case. Considering the teeming population, the feverish Ife and the conglom- eration of temperaments crowded Intolthe boroughs of Mamhattan and the Bronx, the divorce record of this section of Greater New York {s greatly to the credit of domestic happiness in the metropolis of the United States. In i 7 i the year just closed two or three less than 500 cases of matrimontal infe- ‘ “city have reached the Supreme Court of New York County, and many of these were based upon acts committed outside of New York City and before ‘he contesting persons became residents of this community. About 20 per cent. of the cases brought were defended. Most of the suits ‘@e brought by husbands or wives who are unable to get personal service upon their recalcitrant partners, or who, {f service ig obtained, find that the others appear to be as willing to quit as to remain in matrimonial bonds. The undefended cases are set tor Wednesday in Special Term, Part IL., be- fore the justice who happens to be sitting there, and in order that there may be no collusion the triais are public. It takes an average of ten min- utes to dispose of a case of this character, SEPARATION CASES ARE FEW. Few separation cases are brought in Manhattan, The Deople who want ‘tbo get away from each other want to get away for good in 90 per cent. of the instances on record. Nearly every separation case is brought by a wom- i an, bometimes because she 1s unable to get the evidence necessary to secure| il an absolute divorce, byt generally because she wants to keep her husband i from marrying a “certain party" who would figure as co-respondent it the| _ ||| suit were tried on the statutory ground. In proportion to their numbers the theatrical people furnish the heay- fest percentage of the cases that may be described as Sensational. Probably this is because they live in the I!melight and do not regard the smudge of @ divorce court with the horror that surrounds it in the estimation of per- sons not bearing such intimate relations with the public. SENSATIONAL SUITS NOT EXPLOITED, It is to the credit of Now Y¥ that what are known as sensational tvorce suits take up very little space in the public prints when it 1s consid- ered that there are gathered on Manhattan Island probably the largest num- der of pergons who might naturally drift into marital disputes that can be found in any other community in the United States. ‘ Infidelity {s the burden or 450 out of the 500 complaints filed. The mother-in-law figures very seldom in the testimony. Study of the cases shows that divorce in New York City ts almost invariably caused by the Ausband or wife succumbing to the supposed or real Superior attractions ot Be, a home destroyer. Aa antecalan, ls , the fashionable Piise apartment-house, Marital Troubles of fnto the night, and was rewarded py | N20 West One Hundred and Ble } MIS “PE "HAD HE WAS CARELESS pe , ABOUT Some THINGS ABUSICAL BVEHINGS ' | * INCOMPAT= NOCTURNA IBILITY OF MELODIES i hand,” and Justice Barrett out the knot, is a sult brought by Cora siryker Ol-|appoar tm the trial of the divorce case|‘“The Baron's Love Story" company, !that his wife was asbamed’ to that made her Knott ‘cott, the first wife of Chauncey Ol-| before a jury. : Blanche Walsh, the coid and cov. /with him because he Is only five Mrs. Bertha McCallum was @ rosy- cott. for $16.375, the balance of a loan] ‘Toby Cjaude, the “little Dresden china | less, gave a surprise to pretty much | two. while sye towers above htm. otr a Her Hasband,| secur: Street, that. when Jam Act ¥ Hesban ining, If not a reconciltation, at least {slike tinporier: came hom cheeked inatron n| by her to him before they were divorced | soubrette,”” han cued big William. P. | everybody in May by revealing chat sne | “She made’ ths discovery: rieht after Nothing seemed to be lacking, ap-|* truce between them for the sake of |@ Boston trip and Tus she turned her big, pleading blue eyes | five years ago, Sho was a ghorus girl|-Cariton, ix feat four, and already the | had been a wife seven years through our marriage that we looked ridiculous the, In “Pepita."” which was produced by'| gossips say she is going to be tr ted |her ecuring a divorce from together, and I have seen her hi litte William L. Rich, jr, and Helen | the Christe apartment Mrs, Christie an-| Up He Justice ‘Truax and “totd parently, to make the married life happy | Slagden Rich: tee swered his warning through the call] truth” jn the suit of ner mother, Lena | !'red Solomon, Lillian Russell's to J F. McShane, & wealth, Hipknian, of the cast of wedding ring while walking wit! ef Wiillam L. Rich, of the jewelry firm| Mich mansion, “"¢ 8! Went back to the| tube “open the mecond focr, flat; tr.) Weiss, £0 ainul her marriage of three | husband, Ite ‘has another w morean, whoso first wife, Florence lob. | Brown in. which Marle Cahill she was so ashathed to have lam ich, 0 y a fi Wrisley is coming down the flre-eseape,| Weeks to Percy MoCallum, who was| Richird Lambert, the young, Ing! ngon, divorced him and married award | appearing at the Bijou. know I was her husban said t P ef Black, Starr & Irost, His wife was|©M@arged Husband with and tell him Tam sending his hes | @Vidently still the Prince Charm! of | uctor who made a hit in character pai Crozier, of Phila phia, also divorced. | Justine S, Bennett, one of the beau- |round little man. He said that he ‘ 4 down on the dumb- T. gave a di-' her hea The law says auch a in “Fad and Folly” and “Tommy Kot Frederick who del tles in “The Benuty and the Benasr' |French, while his wife was 4 . the mother of his two little boys. S| Administering Mental Tortare,| Vorce to Christle from iis talland beau-, "age ts tio marriage. at Mrs. Osborn's, says in his papers) many old and in the |aeked for a divorce fro‘a Willlinm. 8. /he had to fight the Fra: was a statuesque beauty, and attra Uful wife, who wan Miss 1M h Bur-| Annie Marie Durr, of Rbliadetphia, | that he and pretty, Murgaret Lave leading roles in “Martha,” “I ‘Trovto: Rennett, to whom she was married in jover again every time there was @: 0 seventeen years Chester N. Duryea, son of Gen, Hiram | dick, an Albany. belle, he Ralyeay dhe “statch King and a |— ‘The granting of a decroe of divorce tO ‘holde an the stare eom-| Mrs. Mario A. Hoppe trom Oscar Hoppe| tna tuagengral i# Preatdent, | shortly after Mrs, Tlbridge Ge cf . 3 Nina Lurre Smith, a Mterary |Jr., was freed fro! r husba ‘Corsair’ in 1883, He wooed and won | ve a Boston family of, dis followed by the matriage of her. They had a beautiful mansion at ‘med ty have everything as | and Mrs. Hoppe in New No. 21 East Seventy-fourth str He | eg nit Story. cooks, They were rich| Becauso Jesse W. Pow Peyund the dreams of avarice, young | pretty sister-in-law, M! bad lavished Jewels upon her until she/ ang full ut life. thes ed in| wife of his -voungor possessed $50,000 worth of baubles, and| 1. When the young wife sued tert | pecume. too) fond. er they were still living under the roof of |"Paration she charged her husband | these sons of the vei eo marriage, faptivated by the glib: tongue lttle dressmaker, him while he sat in the orchestr, ahe, as Annie Summerville, led the Ama- gons on the stago in the spectacular id the like, 1a suing Leoniel, the wife | 1900 {family gathering: As for the Diack Gog ror front ieduaintance on the trip | old. flirted on the Elalto the evening vf | he tonk in 186, for a divorce und an a¢-|Came from Japan to Get Divorce, |M. Julllerat disdained to be jealous m iAverpool, Willlam Curtis | March 2, and were married three hours counting of their partnership profits 1 | wire An, Hu u the “‘dorg” because he had fleas. eeenelds nd of the Duke of Con-!inter. Three days sutiated him of con-| the walters’ su plies business, He fa | -,Airs Alberta Hi came all the way lcouple were leading members of rein tad lesseo of Ditton Park. near | nubial bliss, and he wants an annul-| sixty-nine and she is thirty-three. Merous Siri, et, dent of the Hitt (Epiphany Baptist Church. Hoe Je in the 7 oF ent en eee ey | iment, for he says Margaret decelved!” Daisy ‘Thompson got_an order for 326 | M arate Me ctine eto! he Hil |ary-goods trade. wipe wet ghey | him as to her standing in soctety. She] a week alimony from Willam Fi. Sloane DA With Cena et ney chereng | ate R. P. Bird, asking for-e 1S. WW. He wis attested next day ae |feturns his fire, indignantly declaring | in her suit for a divorce. They are both | youne women “Hoarding-house |8fation from the famous surge Dts @ chend swindler and sent to fail. She | that he ts the gay deceiver; that he de-| variety actors. | where “he lived beet tonia |Arthur Bird, to whom she wis ‘mare returned tearfully to New York, and, {ted her, néver save her in their three| Fivo woeks after pretty Mignon Hardt, | Room, ne lived. and | Mrs. | Antonia jicy'tn is harges that he choked her When she had gained @ residence got a’ (y8 of married life but $1), and besides| the barinaid at the Bear Inn in “Sweet | 1p! Dusband, “Thertore woes and knoc! her dow thelr summer ra esse decree of annulment from Justice Bis- | 8! says she has discovered that he left | Kitty Bellairs,” was wedded to “mill- | Wearthy een a ‘Mad sued for a [home, at Sayville, L. L: struck her : With administering mental torture with | Powers, a former Park Commissioner, | drove ; with Chamberlyn's|jonaire” William Ernest Hardt, he be- | Yivatey aii, dealer, hed sued for ® icra that his fst broke the cartilage of Yhe mansion when the public first“heard | conspicuous inventivenes have lost thelr wives In the divorod|'0%. matette Jones asked for an annul- when he came to|came a fugitive from justice in. the frleodly SAY at pele Wa A of nose and treated her so cruelly that all was not happiness there through |, 8h® sald he made love to other wom-| court during ration of the coldon ; ment of her marriage because the man | America three years ago, and Margaret] midst of his trial for ewindiing another | 4hondly WAH the Rt. Rov. Agathodorus |gie had to ieave thelr elegant Nowuer a the filing by Mrs, Rich of a complaint | fap, frends and her friends, before | nated after the celebration of the olden | hg Married te celled hinsalt wok, | demands an annulment ou her one ace woman who wrote love letters to him |mandrate of the trees Church ie Acer. |NO- 169 West Forty-elghth. street, ie bye iS ee) jher: draged her out of bed in the mid-| Wedding of ex-Commiasioner, J’awers | Tlie Wa inated tf celled timate gard | count, annulment carries no all-| Now she is suing for @ divorce. fon, nia rien, in the |60 to a boarding-hovse. He denies all, ‘m a sult for a separation, and asking} dle of the night, in . Western hotel; | and his wife at their home tn Mount Oi’ company knew. bim as ‘Hamil- | mony’ hit, probably he will not op-| | The divorce wngle of Mine. Lilian | steerage, to feht th mut ond. won. Rose H. Byrnes alleges that Martin, for allmony, attaching to her motion | tore er, flghtrobe an pushed her into | Morris Park West, when Jesse and Min: |ton.«whlle a denerted. wits fn Minne | pose her. Nordica, and Herr Zoltan Doem ree raltarnae Magaca yea: | ReF, husband, wet out tg apank her. with % * vay; m: nle made love ES t 5 “Mra, 4 y 20 ve ber trom: the pavers, laid before the court by A. H.| housework and the washing for a dome | followed erween the brothers. The sil- | Se called herself "Mra, Frank Har. ‘Aare, Aimonmine, forraeriz. of the] Wales be qhareee. thar she sxces te vittpaten i, is charged by his|No. ta Hast Thirtesecond at in / Hummel, a letter written to her by Mr. peal while camping in the Adiron- | very-haired ff ie and mother eats Will C. Turner's ease, arp bs, ee epties opens oat ray nar. eueea een by Hh tne Us. NL his $60,000 00. suits, pace nee ee rene ner te Sent ale eee aa ie a ne. ies m dacks; refused to take her pict joys were gad witnesses on y, having told him tha a F i yanohing In the back, twiet rtin, Fé that Rose left him ares ererUy, waters Consrenlatng Bnd | oes Se eine ones OEE ee ane | Rarro’e sult, which ended. ina aecree | (035 Having, told hina fas iy, | How in Toxae with Sadie Martinot’s | te fltiig the nowspapers Just now. wrist and taking his meals with his|oause he would uot get his father a ‘ came back to America, Cellottating her and himself on his pros-|others at the camp. and in answer to | and was followed hy & sult by Joaso's| i dmarred Tumere thelr di: | company, and from whom she had been}, soo) rewrence Tried it housekeeper to epite her, besides give her the house; that she had perity and saying he had saved $150,000) questions put_ by ‘ tte, who was a Mies Carrie McCuteh-| until some time | Separated two years, discovered that he not 5 proper cloth- food money In Six weeks and woul Ih fitoen years without haviog. ctintea ATCO! Grose-Wxnraisntion FASE Of, ye | Mite ho ae 8 Mies Carte cree, in| Yoree Wes Tnartingt to. Tumer in ‘ine, | had been married to Belle Melville since Siz or Seven Timon | ing, "ine donor denies Wall and says |have the house or $400) cash Troms LS years Lf sele admitted calling hin wife “Idiot,” |her favor, his sister-in-law Minnte be-| Turner applied to Justice MacLean for | 1883, and never released from that mar- Mrs, Maynard's declaration to father, who gave them rent, fuel her or himself in a luxurious life as @/*skunk,"" "&— fool,” and several other | ing the co-respondent. qn annulment, But hoe did not get it, Belle Melville being how in Staten} when Myrtle Canady Lawrence, | 4% ght free. gulde to the court in fixing the amount| “net names" from ‘once to twenty-five , A Bigamy, | Justice Mackoun ruxing ‘that the proof | Island. She asked for and got an an- PAN) EET Oa teen lt ¥ “My wife is larger than 1. and tf tt of allmony she should have. times when ankry.. Mrs. Duryea wot] Sent to Sing Sing for Bigamy. the alleged situation’ was incomplete, | na , secured | mother to sve aa her guardian for an worse Of Ite. salt, Leon. Washul The popular notion that the people of) Norma Whalley, an act her deerec and the custody of her twos en-|@n annulment of’ her mi 1d ov. with alimony greater than | Eiizabeth Sarah Park and Carolina], 0% we to J.| annulment of her marriage Ijonel|uate and highly cultured in music’ In her complaint Mrs, Rich declared: ar go View their matrimant owner of about ail the “Uncle Tom" 4 AAR Por the nv Na" | parks were plaintif{s the same day) t! hy ike| Sherrie Matthews, of the variety team | Lawronos, the fainous stage manager, | were unfounded, and if he had known {ot about ail tie Uncle pea "i bays besa ihe most faithful of wives, h ary of the average bank cashier. | Fete the same man, Robert Alexander thelr professlonat enpagerente” mike| of Matthews & Holger on the. grouad | Hetil hat ase wa tle Sixth, OF | If “he would never have married her. PROS ieee anata e fondest of mothers, I have borne Minister an Co-respondent. Park, who by using the first of Tis! nng'a tasis in some of the years di-| that he had decolved her as to his phy-| seventh wife and that all were liv-| Ife asks for a separation on t und | Taree et cruelly. in nen muita tor years what another woman would| Commorore Archle Watt and his wife,| Christian names with one and the sec-| vores cane sical health. Spm, Cho fascinating idonel, however. /tbat his| witele atieaae toward itl separation. He declared that ei gem . ‘ave complained against long since.”| Adele. scemed to lack for nothing thas | ond with the other, adding an ‘‘s" to 7 declared he couldn't remember more |has been that of an enemy, her the “privileges’’ with his show: i FS “i , makes life worth living until Mra. Watt | D138 surname, got them both for wives.| Jack Mason's Manifold Troubles. No Quiet Home Iife for~@ifm, | than three Mrs. Lawrences, and as to|to that, his mother-in-law has abused/ 204 tr: fhe has amassed a.“ ; * ‘Then she specifies a long series of petty | sued him for a separation, charging | But. he came jhome drunk one day] “Jack” Mason, the one-time idol of the v hs SBS OS Mo Le DmeGns Matton with Ure | teen eee ea tere of money") through the sale of: song t annoyances, no one of which amounted| that he sometime: f to Carolina and when she w rt } 5 | Mabel Florence Vroom, who was| while he was on good terms with the|ter have acted $0, books, candy, red lemonade and. other i 8 4 acht American. which war thebs mitne | felatives to complain “abo” discovered | Boston matinee girls, ia being aued ror] . Mabel, Rlovence, Vroom. who was! while be was on guod terms with, th obliged to close his office to his wife. | Hooks, candy, red lemonade ang, other te much, but which in series and in ag- that Hizabeth Sarah had « prior claim|& separation by dainty Katherine Grey before she married Oliver Evans Vroom,{ He said ho was “splifiloated” at He snys his wife, prior to thelr mar-| manded $100. weekly. alimony pending - per home, brought. dissotute “ie ‘ i gregate had made her life unbearable. | Mi tne ment re yee fest upon him. Then both women Joined) While ho Js yet paying $25 weellly ale, a°Wall street broker, in 1901, asking for| Wurtsburger party 10k rathekeller, | : aken a trip to Zanzibar! the trial of the sult. but Justice Levens © Bie\easd Gis fad fornidden her daugh-| CCosT Ine eee Cette he fsoue and after sending him to sing| mony to Marion Manola. who divorced) & Wotation ‘gia ges ‘that while, and a bright press agent hed him | e DF. Adeep, Who introduced | {he trial of the sult. but Justice \eeele ter by her first husband to receive onli. | With" caunter suit. 5 the rector| Sing for bigamy Elizabeth applied for ‘ in ‘ fer thelr marriage, she wanted to set | marry. tho litte violin! c wifc, and that she was| chances of success at the erial of Maw alt rediieslarsalt at ticea soda | Ce ner chureh in Harlem and a nopulas| @ divor i AG Fae) oh liaeia piec Clayton Kennedy could not! tle down In @ quiet home, he wanted to] was ‘sousod tll his, hak sither sti a wife or wus a divorced | potion seem to be extramely slim. The “ ie dry-goods NAS CO-respondents, There wag| dent and hyr chi witness, nd Car “side partner’ Annie Rooney} keep ue the atte r-the-theat suppers Not ha ding — the ta n | woman, and she defrainded and deceived | cause of in is her with the de e stores, and the like. He answered, 1 of mud sling NK ON both sides ie sued or an a ppecnuse becaure he had a wite, Emily Curtly| fas old ang was seldom home i fore ‘Thomas Me a him by noc telling bim, He wants an | fendant (Washburn) ; re wns silence aud thet ft parks was already married to Elizabeth | Decaur bp nd) early morning concelved av the widow, Helen 8 : or fraud denying all this, saying she lad had ed that the sults in New York| aud. Eliaabeth lelped her prove. her| iepncdy. of the Curtis OnMienty nocuit! aisiike for hee mother, and onoe showed | tee daughters ir 196), 8h annulment for tral lie Threw Batnlake $80 weekly allowance, outside of her| County had been dropped and a divorces exedibat ail the big. stores, outetly obtained i n country district he | Nar » Auronson, asking for a sep- F eons and then | ttre. Watt, in which neither. clereemes | aration. from Moses, Aaronson reed her fora year and! a pistol to her and said he bought it to] tis other’men, making eight huss He Was Short and Chabby, Mothei Bea. Then one, morning ‘he read| shoot her mother. He once threatened | altogether, sie Was awarded ¢ and Mother Out of She Tall and Willowss! going Bell vou Pusch, asking tor @ to whom | finite ‘ine to strike her with a bottle and abused | * wked for, he demanded an absolute divorce, nam-| ner clubmuin was Named. and these ren | she had been married only ve monthe, taying that a baby had boon born hn the] her shamefully before. ouior people, aid Prat tretnd ieee her in i8TL and that ane ‘ separation from August George Willigin ing ® young college graduate as co-re-| made strenuous efforts to wet the case | saya that he courted her in Paterson, | (uit hettro the aigne berore, and | has failed to auppore her, though “roll | (at he had lett Up for dead when she| To the fact that he is short and | 0lsTAvon fiiin Ouest one aha wae indent, The case was tried bef reopened and tried here so as to mive| N. J., and as soon as he found out thet] that [Emily was its mother. He hustled | ing in money,” while «he has none, | 2 fa the first of three Husbands and|ehubby and his wite tall and wil- | matried in 1900, charged that when the © ‘ore! them a chance to prove their innocence inthe bank proposed| and gota divorce on account of that | Vr deries the sort Impeachment and | MATIN Tht daw avon as shu discovered | 1OW¥, Albert 1, Judllerat ascribes all | Py TiCl ss? Deo ch he threw. the little. Justice Scott and a jury, and it came! Tn spite of the momt_carefil wroenas that she go Into part-| baby and Emily's affidavit about his des to his mother-in-law, who, | left the “homas was not dewd. ‘There | his domestic woes witeh culminated in | Qh0% OS Se bed and tossed her after out that Mrs, Rich had divorced her flown to keep it a neeret. It leaked out wn him and nis mother in] sortior id then he and Annie Rooney ‘encourages my wife to drink ep ae Ber Tonnes ee moe Sane enete ihe wife, May Juillerat, raateaepreth ile ie whereupon there, was war all tle ; st Mav that Edvth Newcomb Ward, #® S00n as Ley were mar- de . 4 es \ iy eq | bridle, au a the line, and she im wi s sy Sst husband, an actor, who was al the daughter of FH. Victor temmnt ‘he had_got the $1.00) she says "Booth, @ niece of Edwin Booth,| "Tho statuesque Pauline Tail was mar-| {hres years separation, but i lasted) Prat Aa‘ituman conduct toward her, Ee, Nees ian hung ce’ ¢bp. well diane grinning User at the trial, pad wecured w divcree trom *T “he changed.” She says he abused her, d her Gushand, Byron Douglass, | ried first to Edmund White. ‘They were | Priv three weeks. with fie satya He) She apecified that her, Uctle lord and lug used the portieres for a toga and” After a trial of several days, the jur: shiw p phee known as “the | told her she could go to the poor house, | of Maxine Blllott's “Her Own Way’ d, and she married her manager, | (O¢Ked her out sie ban master would com Ic, shiel absolved Mr. Rich trom tho charges o¢ | GQMeRE, King, of Paris. Co" whom sire | ; rompany, fof a separation, ‘Thay were| George Be MeLelint, in lke and how | Sil . : - [into ‘bed and then moan and mutter In- | "40! 1 .or Alice Bernard, @ Salva: © charges of | war married by the Rev. Dr. John Wes. |Court Untied the Knot fiureied in 188-end separated’ in 1s02 suing hin fore dlvoroe, James td McCoy," Norman Selby in pri-| coherently, or throw himself on the | gon Army lassie, says tn “hee tor cruelty and acquitted Mrs. Rich of Ly et i fn R80, That Made Mer Knott,| He suod her, clalming cruelty and de-| K vorrence is the referee. . wate lite; wan dlvarced Umice. by. Tum floor and wenithe Sp Maal floats ec mare Separation from Leon Bernarey a wrong-doing, But there were their two 4 he ‘epresented in one 3 mott) certion, He was ordered to pay #2) Iorida Kingsley, suing Wright Hunt-{| Woodruff iby, and tw remarried | his head agains pote: le jesman, at pret Innocent ilttle children, and the quarrel | fe the Rov. Ralph He utes: Fe] David H. Knott, son of » hote keeper| week! alimony pending. the frail ‘ot | ineionYorunteres: eave Lilie Keune | nen But ‘fot the last divorce, and| haa “to spend. the night is songs and absinthe to her aou! saving: © ‘ Episcopal. Chur: id | y f No. 3% Washington Sy are South,| the sult. It waa never tried. Tt was| supplanted her i her husband's affec- | now he has just taken a brand no: e} bumps wor 3 Wes continued over them, until Justice | ipiscopal, Church, and in her uit for| of No. 34 Washingt Here or iy | abandoned last yeur and now the @ ‘and took her place in his “Stolen |4n the person of Miss Indfanola Arnold He was Jealous of his bie brother }brought home & statuesque ox . George C. Barrett undericok the role of | 2)8lute divorco Mrs, Adelaide ™. Ralds| Was unable to low or where or by | wbandoned. Me Hitchcock gota divoree}and of @ helghbor's black dog, and | Louise Verdiere, from ‘Tripaot’s Wreng ‘ r role of win asserts that he took another wits| whom the knot was tied that made hin, | actr playing Anita to his| Freda Bourn Hitchcock eo} and o ¢ Suing it [uate He replies that. ¢he Sneahennadl Peacemaker, Ho invited husband and|by common-jow marriage in H6%A in thal just under clelteen, the husband Icott’a Ment Wife Wants ace Thy In “private iife im| from Raymond Hitchcock, “The Yun. | once made & hoowe Of rope, swung It joafe, He replies household alentd wife to his house one ovening, and Person o} ther Rebecca Greenwvod,| Jane Ward, at omploxee a u cy from Chaancey,| iiiiman, Seajenty’s 0 ‘ H tt and threatened to hang him-|her religious zeal, spon g of Providence, thirty-aix a. He” was clear, ler Moncy aunceys| wifg of Will Rising. Sho denies the y pgomPury, teciired | through it the ‘cireatae there he taboredwith them, until late “‘phe:stusy Of colored. elauator-bar.at . dowpavassthet abe"inartied, : rom Bdwin Ws, Lloyd, of{ #elk bogner fem | Ha enenee ae &