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\ SWSHSQND ‘Socéer AN AWA WIT ¢ HS SOW >- Mrs. Wahlig Gives More Dacuils in Her Suit tor ret ' Separation. ALIMONY APP L MAD Wahliy Objects, Declaring Wife Now Has Most of His Property. Frank A ®tay from pay his wi Wahitg's for the ordér directing him to Rose $20 a week alfmony application a wit for separation came up before Jus- tiee Bischotf in Supreme Court, Special Term, By consent of counse| Argument was adjourned until Tuesday her complaint Mrs. Wal i ‘oun her counsel, Louls Steckler, of to-day. No, Nl Broadway, makes most serious allegations, Among them she accuses her husband of eloping with a woman, with whom iad previously main: tained etricious relations; that gon, Charles F. Wahlig, married sane woman and lived wi © for s months, when she cast him off and ri turned to n father; and that t couple are n Husband Denies It All e declares that Wahlig has squan- dered large sums of money on this + woman Her husband, in a reply Had to Sell the Houses. “Your deponent thereupon refused to | Nve with the defendant and left him, at which time he, In order to avoid pub- Ueity, transferred and settled upon tlis deponent four three-story frame hou at Beach avenue and Dawson street, which had been mortgaged for $20,000, ned a gen She says that she waa compelled to Bell the houses to meet expenses, Then, She alleges, that up to July 15, 1:05, her husband lived with one Minnie Blernkopt, occupying apartments tn the Bronx. But, she says, that on that date he came buck to her and begyed he to forgive him. They became ¢lled and she devoted practically all her funds to fitting up a new hone lusband promising to have notiing fur ther ‘y do with the Sternkopt woman, ‘Said defendant,” says Mrs. Wah- Ne, Nig. ey Kireet house for his belongings, and Sternkopf woman there and then Ban, as more fully appears by hexed aiitavit of Charles to work rself the good gr of the said (| Wahl, and on out Aug. W, 1905, she, a Woman of -five vears, and he, a boy of nine- teen, were married and lived together for about six months in the Two Hun- dred and Seventh street home, Back to the Father, re then sent his son, Charles FP. Wah- Two Hundred and Seventh d the be- “In the early part of Fel ry she ( rnikopf woman) went to the business address of the defendant at ». 185 Boston avenue on sé Ve asions, a8 the defendant then informed me, and some time in turned under the influ picked her belongings, gay March ‘eof Pres or, ie Charles F. Wahlig his clothes sand, told. Wim ake Was golng back to his father," Mrs, Wahliz sets forth that from that time on her husband came home Intoxicated, admitted that he had re- sumed relations with the Sternkopt woman and "frequently stated that any girl who was born without tnherit ing enough money to take care of here golf ought to be strangled at birth." Chaslas F. Wahlig. the son, denoses that he was married to Minnte stern- konf and "that in February, 1905, sh fold this deponent that she was going beck to the defendant, Prank A. (val Ms, as she was sick and tired of him t during the month preceding such Information she oame home drunk on Variona occasions and admittec - fidelities to this deponent."’ neta Wahlig Says Wife Shot Him. In his answer Wahi sons are self-supportin street oar conductor and the other g electrician. Ho denies the charge ‘we infidelity with the servant girl and says that he was rooming with lilx son, who boansed with Minnie rnkopt; but de- olares that he nes i Ig says both hi 1, one being a er sustalned m - fous relations with the Women ie declares that his wife shot him n the back and the finger and that he re- turned to her only at the earnest i tation of his son, who, he save he tos | been informed, married Minnie Sterne 1 kopf because’ “she has considerante and he expected to ger sane Joseph Schwarte makes a denosttion to the effect that he owns thirty-three shares of the Frank A. Wahlig Com- any, and that Mr, Wahilg owns thirt hree, the concern being $10,000, but that of late t done little building business apitaltzed at ern hag and that Mr. Wahllg has not had any. Income from the company for the last year, | —_——_— | Kills Himself as Father Did. Jacob Axford who oad worked on the Rutherford estate at Allamuchy, N. J, for many years, uanged himself there yesterday, The cause is unknown, Several years ago the dead man’s father killed hime welf in the same manner at Wiretown, Axford leaves a widow and eight chile ee fifty-five und her counsel a $100 fee pending her| file in the County Clerk's office, dentes the allegations and says that his wife te in pr ession of most of the property whi at one time possessed. Ac- cording to the papers, he 1s a member : of the Frank A. Wahilg Company, hav- ing offices at ‘Third avenue and Forty. ninth street, and also a wealthy ¢ bullder, operating in the q ore Robinson, of No. $9 Nassau te 1S atte 9f reoord for Walie Mg. Justice Greepbaum awardel Mra, | o Wahilix alimony on Jun wai © Was then give i rs as v 4 Washington avenue, the ¢q sronx Mrs. Wa : y e married to f the Rey « “harles FP Wahlig and G We Wah- | twentyet twenty years old, 2'° pectively. She says that in August “ x the kitchen of her | t na Park East, she found misbehaving with a servant girl who had been in thelr em- Dloy for five years, known to her as Wanda, Continuing. she says years old,| Joseph Medill Patterson Pain Spe anlaesat aA, See a Scarlet Picture of “the | Great White Way” in His Book, “A Little Brother of the Rich,” Just Out. “NOTHING IS GIVEN FOR NOTHING” DHE Men Are Crooks and Gluttons, and, to Gratify Their De- praved Tastes, Forced to Wear Tights on the Stage tor $18 a Week. Girls Are Joseph Medill Patterson has taken hie pen In New York soeiety and the stage. benefit those who have never | heard of Joseph Medill Patterson i | may be etated that he is a young man | poseessed of high id and a million | He loves hie Ideals and hates his money. book about For nd and written the of collars, Not that he made the money himself Bome of it he inherited from iis grand father, Joseph Medill, who founded and made a great and profitable newspapar, the Chicago Tribune. More he got from his father, R. W. Patterson, now editur of the Tribune. Young Mr Patterson married money, too. His wife fs a daughter of Harlow W. Higgin- botham, one of the rloheat men in Cai- % & pronounced Socialist, young Mr, Patterson must needs write a book, night buying “sea food, chesse, coffer Every Socialist 2a book at some @nd champagne’ for soubret He Ume or other, whether he can write Kives a picture of Broadway at 2 not; but, fortunately for the public, lock in the morning that is certainly few of them are on velvet, like young * revelation. Listen! px enh, CAD, Sipat aiae ean J drivers and milkmen, to rson, his book published ‘Women Drunkards and Men Crooks. In book, the originality of wi an be guessed from the title, “A Little her of the Ri Mr. Patterson s New York society women and to have pay recital: 8 they Broadway t soft summer breeze entered their tobace co-laden lungs and their steadied hearts beat a grateful ‘thank you.’ eamir wa 1 z from scores Soubrettes on the same plane. All his My women are drunkards and all his men street, lights srooks and worse. His hero ts a) JoW/ed, paun e- sooial parasite of a common type | tonsured, bed: ing to Mr F&F an every | EY @ woman Is untrue to her |! i white-clad ge vows, animated solely by a| Women, waited drive up and for vulgar display and jearry them away, Bacchanals beyond | money and careless of dancing, n s by which her destres may |Money! Ever Money Is the Power, gratified. His pictures of stage. Phe fire burned in Paul's veins ag and morals lead the reader Inevitably {he heard the rustling of women's to the conclusion that he got his facta ;dresses. the click-clack of eels on m close perus cW the works of Ike huge lace pavement, as he saw tl the Balzac of the Police hats nodding above the smiles of scar- leted lips. ‘So many sald he, Mr. Patterson tells his readers that ‘what are they like tha young milionatres of society Just wi they look,’ answered frequent Broadway restaurants at Carl; ‘it's a case of y else —— —— === could such a raving ; z beauty as this brown-haired one we are passing wet out of the disgusting old Falstaf jane is with?” ‘Money again. Money was the ultl- mate, controlling, overshadowing, re- sistless power, It gave to its possessor [dominion over men and over women ‘Paul would get money, He would work “UPON WESTERNER his fingers bare his eyes that he could get money qui th & girl as beaut-tul as the {haired girl they had just passed might }hold to his arm us @e walked down a J | Broadway at Sek in the morning {eNSummer overcoats’ Is. Ohana New York In explanation it may be said that Mr. Patter has spent fost of his heetle life in Chicago. The climate out there is hun at the middle s —_—. on ball bearings and mercury gi np and down the tube Iie an elevator in office bullding. "1 fore {t is c to wei Unusual Number of Visitors really necessary ty wear A ‘times the heavier the Attracted to Ohioan’s " Nothing Is Given for Nothing Headquarters. When it comes to describing the stage Mr, Patterson ike Upton os Sinclatr tn a slau. | ‘The unusually large crowds that dally Jeall upon L. ‘fT, Cooper are such as to say, “ni }arouse much comment in the vicinity | Here A anes) ples phorus. girl of the Riker Drug Store, 6tt ay, and |Pivlosophy as set for Mr. Patter id st, New York, where Cooper has ‘Well, it’s you and other men that established his headquarters for the|make etrls wear tights. ¢ purpose of giving oublic demonstrations | Wear ‘em for the fun of it, of the Cooper medicines. Among OIG UE a Hee a iN t many warm advocates of Couper and |g, Pe Tn i his remedies is Mra rise Sylvester, {of Jamaica, L. L, who say "I suffered for three vears | stomach trouble, which was primarily by catarrii, As time went on | my condition became worse. my appetite was poor. Frequently there chorus—you | was a gnawing sensation in the pit of mush for sh Nl aed my stomach, which I attributed to| ing your wives hardw |hunger, but was afraid to eat much, | .4 Painful thing about this book of | lyir, Patterson's Im that It will give 50 | |fearing the pain and suffering that Was | jiany suffragettes, club women and act all day and « aay {to yell at night, she's so nervous, and from | you offer the same eirl SIS a week to hy hts and dance caused | Wear thts and dai Jchorus, We women've & you men want us to, to live, anyhow-— AS a rule and {t seems you lke us better In the a three leg: pay tin 18 as for sell- jsure to follow. I had Indigestion, esses an opportunity to tell what! which caused my food to ferment, and :hey think about the author, ey produced an acoumulation of gas that | was very discomforting. NO LAW TO HOLD HIM. | "Sometimes I would sit down to a | meal, feeling that I could eat with a |reiumn, out iy appeiite would leave me Diatrict-Attorney's Office Asks for beiore | had taken 4 half-dozen mouin- of ey Dine e, tuis, Mv bowels were badiy consti. Casieyia) DievarEe: pated and gave me o great deal of| jynable to fird any law trouble, 1 was very nervous, and je | Unable to he ee sometimes as though I would go to. tainl to the case, pieces, I was very weak, and the leas: pistriet-Attorney Murphy, in the West jexertion woud tite me out Court, to-day asked for the di “1 tried a number of different kinds | Side Court, ay asked e dis jot medicine, which failed to vive me ¢ charge of William M. Carley mere |Mef. When [ read in the papers about | oiant from Omaha Neb. who was ar- this man Cooper and hs medicines 1 | was persuaded to call upon him. and as @ result of my visit began taking his for abanden- charge pend= rested a few ment. There Ats ago is another |New Discovery preparation, “‘tnee fraying against Carley. that of falling to bottle actually made me fell worse, and | support his child, and on this complaing |T was ereatiy disappointed. but as Thad | he is under $1,500 ba.l for tria often heard It sald that medicine some-| The arrest Was made on the come {times had thin effect, T continued to! piaint of Cavley’s wife, Elizabeth, she |take the treatment. While taking the! aliaged that he deserted her In 1908 | second bottle I began to get relief, The| and eloped with a schuol teacher, gong ain and soreness in mv stomac re ane Bevae tear Pensed, my appetite Improved, ang. 1 |t, Omaha. There, si te felt a little stroneer, talned a iarge store, Carley, accordiy g wAfter taking several bottles of the|to the evidence given, has each week |New Discovery I was feeling splendid. | ben sending monev to her |Toould scarcely realize that I want game woman, Several months na Jelapsed since T stopped taking the me —— oe JEROME NOT INTERESTED. [Cing, and there haa been no return of my ‘former trouble, My bowels are tn ee splendid condition. “My food digests | NaUUBS TRVEURER hd Atti Joertectly I eat anvthing I like, “and |e Wilt Not v d he |feel strong and well. Tam recommend MiaW Bankedblar Hearlec: Ine Coover's New Discovery to all iy Attor Je ne declared ror his assistants meet the vub- | ' at che Miker Stora. 6th av. nid; | day that he had not retained a His medicines can be obtained | burg lawyer to repres m in the v of the Rier Stores, and are| Thaw bankruptey proceedinss had old by all other drugeists. “They are| he any intention of doing so manufactured at Davton, Ohio. hy the | “fam notin the lene ed th Cooper Medicine Compan: ™ Chaner te president. of which IL. | the proceedings,” sald Mg, Jerome. SIRS PATTERSON. BURGLARS & THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1908. ty Women and Chorus Girls Alike QJOSEPH Merpint Pat TERSON; “TRANS CRASH ON TRIAD AVENUE ‘L IN Tht BRON —— 'Crowded Cars Splintered in Rea Rush Hour, d Collision During SKIPPER WATT _Are Drunkards, Says. Millionaire Socialist CLITS SEA ‘gtd SMS TOOTH HAS PAH FTIRA STA Frederick Ernst, 81 Years Old, {by Par and Dies in Torture. COnD PaSSAat — Grizzled Seaman Brings Bi in Four Hours Under Best WINDS SLOWED HER Lusitania Attacke. alysis Ime, HIS CRIE NOT H RD, With Whom He in Harlem Discov. Capt. Pritchard, of the Crip- ine Dau pled Mauretania, to Suc- ceed the Commodore. NEW RECORDS Big Stands an iat FOR LUSITANIA. sae aed ag irie t 4 Workis record figires of the Weg van Ont Cunard bine ribboner's log. : i Mme for voyage of 2,790 knots . i? 4 days 15 hours M ‘ M 1 \P Best previous run, W i nd : 4 days 18 hours 40 minutes re f 2 Best day's run on present ship, j 5 A Knots ¢ at » a 26.05 Knots i knots Average hourly speed... Best hourly speed Left Daunt's Rock, Sunday, 1.9 A, M Arrived abeam Sandy Hook Light- snip w P. M., yesterday Commodore J, B. Watt, of the Cunard and skipper of cocked his mighty steamship and rec fleet, the Lusttant ord! smasher to-day, beaming with jc over his latest sensational achlevemen by which he has reduced transatlanti travel to the magnificently brief matt: ny of four days and fifteen hours—thr |hours and forty minutes better thu " the Lusitania’s previous best. Hie It Was a glorious run for the grizzled | Was gent | | 00 {( ] IN |NO FLAGMAN ON GUARD (ana weather-worn veteran, doubly | i a i retcutly ] tae |pleasing to him, as he has tendered his) exiremlues ina [resignation to the Cunard Company | Mm j hat Lishie + = + drag atfected 1. He found retleg y Panic Follows Smash-Up as ana wit soon settle down to wind ou: ar Aiea eas j his allotted time in the quiet repose | Urinkman reasoned out what happened, Passengers Are Heaped jor a tittle British seaport town ie AATEC Aen Harte ; : Commodore Watt 18 sixty-six years | nit HAWiGRearNe ketal neoT + Upon the Floor, Jold, three years above the age {mit | the vss aoc Raut noiagh hea : fe bay fixed by the Cunard Company's rules, a rus STEN AU A) GU AS eat) awvene FF it A ‘ \\ » and with almost a half century ¢ Lawyer’s Fainily Away When A rear-end collision between two| honorable service to his credit, | CK CORN I \ vated ils feebl Thieves Clean Out Lex+ {trains of the Third avenue clevated Delayed at Glesnetow | ! EES ea aan t aa MO ELSI nya: Before the Lusitania cleared Daunt’s| ight on the hem ington Avenue House. Toad on the dangerous curye at ome ook at 11.10 last Sunday morning Capt. | S Repeating, water ° Hundred and Forty-four t and Watt's resignation was on its way to : tube wouldannl ts Third avenue, at rush hour this morn-|the big chiefs In the Cunard Company's) Loot Two Apartments — in yy the old man thorough and patna- | ing, threw the me fants . London office, The world-beating tur- Ms 8 It was a most thorough amd paina- | jng w the men and women passen Seo atetaten bee ine betters (ik towne Wibenza faulty jantil the la taking gang of burglars that went) gers who crowded the trains into a) the °seu never smoother and the weather N He tind aM rough the ve of ex-Assistant Dis- panic, and it is remarkaole that no one never so promising. Capt. Watt had Once Lived. chin was torribly, 8 uaneinale Attorney John EF, MeIntyre at No, was hurt hoped to flash by the rock early in the esas Catia Gate tat vis ment 13 Lexington avenue The point where the morning and make a memorable | fe MUD Wen ty aGVCOUIEBLIER TENS BIER curred ts within one hundred feet of achievement by bringing the Lusitania | prom the big apartment houae at No, | avenue: Low ¢ ed by his s Since t t of June the house has | ing scene of the collision of three weeks past Quarantine and into her dock yea- Ane ait Fifth avenue tallor been closed as Mr. Melntyre's family ago, when scores of passengers were terday afternoon. But there was an ™ West One Hundred and Eig Three years 1 he ending er at Wood- | injured and a guard was killed annoying delay at Queenstown of three ond street, where "Jac t stroke of Da me before ye When a loaded southbound train’ hours, That was all that prevented yurslar, ved in re : ted the place h 1 out of the ¢ Hundred and the four-day run from dock to dock, | gave himself up, the police of the West everything was al Charles Me- ninth street station to-day at Monday noon Skipper Watt hung up : : eae Intyre, oldes he former prose: o'clock, it Was brought to a halt mid-| another record of 0 natutleal mnfies, | Qne Hundred and Pitty-second Stent cutor, ded to stay over in town for Way between One Hundred and Forty-| many leagues better than any other Sean I ned to-day tha burgiara the night, and late yesterday he went ninth street and the statlon at One! Steamship In the world has ever done, had invaded the top floor d@ ure to the house Intending to open and alr Hundred and Porty-third street, No Head winds caused a slight falling off night and cleaned out two apartinents bedtoo foe hiv use, (GkragbNy CLE oReORell Ain the) for the second full day's run, but the) Mey are the apartments of Freeman a Tega teat ee leek round COaint | ieures (6 miles) makes It manifest | Hloortgood, ., arence W. Hahn, tie uilding literally turned upside) A few minutes later, and while the! !2%t Lusitania did not craw! professor of blolog allie High Se} down. Drawers were pried open, £ forward train was still standing, the Head Winds Slowed Her. oeiC eine teense oiua ferris aren <p j Rhee waa meVern Ite ed to the One Hun-) ‘The Wednesday run was 623 miles and okey Peed alii eeere { sacked. Nearly all street station and on Thursday with still brisker head ie een vere Skillen! operators, , + j fae oe ay ie Fi + fueling |#ot Under Way promptly After a few) winds to buck the best she could do in fercueUNR eee area Mpped with burg: The Last Bi hate | two valuable oil paintings, a lot of sil-| Passengers had been taken aboard twenty-four hours was 610 knots, Be. | !ar LIE Ss a tad valet * | of eye trouble are only possible ] verware and some articles of vertu, had | Brakes On Too Late. CUD ill) SEMIN? EE OGY fy Ba Gates aT TS oat ANE MD Vinee | fe Seen naerledt (Ld file AUVs 5 “ ha when the Cunurder flashed by the Sandy | alarms, tor, vofory Jlinmyin their way peat old saying, “Proc : ie 2 SOUPS Ob rope, Waders.) he of the second train did | took Ligit, she reeled off 246 knots. the flats, they short-clrewited ait AL OW) Saying, — 1 roerastinas Rouze (Ops ANd a DESU Ope | nobyreduse the) spect oeaiatraln Unt sees ino veniiea pun dllelexprssaveritne| (har alectrlo! when ion, the foes ther ienicony iene thien cof time,” is cul how the tifeyos hadjen-jie) was seen thet ‘@ collision) was) In-|\ v0 ss seeei averaged O60 kicte, etill| did not leave arttele of value in doubly true of neglecting your & bas HWE AEs ae a SU ee err eae another new record, and, according to| either apartment, and it 18 belleved the @VeS. Particularly so when it mock the train was so quickly reduced that|/Ot® Passenger, “A confounded sight| loot Is worth several thousands of dol-| costs you nothing to consult agers felusine Au the Annis. imurtcy standing passengers were almost thrown | Netter than they do on the Erle,” ‘Tho! tars. 7M PHYSICIANS who are skilled per HOAtolehie AREO CHAN ROL TES Gr Eeania in buslienle hed oeras all told, 2781) Detectives who visited the plundered ~~ QCULISTS and learn the true pean an Oo eet iM’ Then came a territe shack as the) ules an tp FOO Gort cee cee | aametmente to-day, sald) that, although! conditions of your evesight. fut Annis, AS nedily as he could ‘ell, rear train smashed Into the stalled train CO#! for each mile, §4,0% worth for the! in Sing Sing at present, Jack Gormley : : § miolth shut Would 100: Gheaa, Window panes few Into bits ang) SO7SEE, | But {hla snormous expence| was probably at the bottom of the robe Harris Glasses 1 treet station, and)} the front and Teer, platforms of the Rast covered Inv the subvention she Hilen cee +e sone 8 aie if you need them, $1 and more. meshed! to #Elk from the Britlsh Government, On every| iments might be invaded i ; SueinenieorenmiaiPandirianacytor Heine casa her furnaces ate up 1,100] In tho same neighborhood many rob- hast } ward ie 2 rled to ¢ ae tons of coal, eg and e robberie: have ry ry all in their power to prevent the spread Capt. Watt expects that his Veslenas| feo burglars made a strenuous effort B& EAST 23D ST....Near Fourth Ave, of panic. jton will be acospted early tn October, | to get In » Roman Catholk Chure)) 64 WEST 125TH ST..Near HA But the passengers were uncontrutie| by which time the Mauretania will have E at One Hundred and 442 COLUMBUS AVE...8ist & 824 Sta 1 nto dry dock for the win seventh street and Broadway, 76 NASSAU STREET...Near John St. able, and men banged open the gates! gone in ¥ or the winter. Lusi. f }; BROOKLYN, 489 Fulton St,, Op, A. & land leaped to the footpath, followed tamia’s steter has been practically a a look of one great ’ y \by many women. eripple summer, and it will take the In vain the panel | = . | _Womerf Dare Third Rall Perll, entire winter to put her in condition | wae hammered off me anede Panel THE ARGUMENT THAT WON without assistance, others were alded to &M, WHI, It ts said, succeed John B robanlytrlenlaned the narrow boardwalk, The cry “Look | Watt @# commander of the Lusitania |crackamen were proba Pal gntene Misha out for the third rail!” terrified many of &nd commodore offthe Cunard fleet, = | T at Aaa Lest Homer Ba IE| the women, ‘I'm getting pretty well along now,” een Gn Hiandiealana Bighty-eignth | AH ECORI ‘Tivo hospltals—the Hudson street and roner Harburger's office to- dulging in the cold-blooded practice—Ww (dentally is against the law—of transferring a dying pa- tlent to cfty titut! In order to keep their own mortality records at as low a figure as possible The jury was holding an inquest the case of John Bond, of N ayenue, N. J, @ penniless while seeking employment, tn man. fall tage who, down an elevator shaft at the plant of signal flag to eam Heating Company, | ln. the New York No. 1799 Washington street, on July 16 and broke his back, Although he lin- gered for less than three days the poor fellow was moved three tmos—from the Hudson Street Hospital, where he had been taken originally, to Bellevue and from Bellevue to the Metropotitan charity place on Ward's Island, where ne dled July 19 The Jury also condemned Heat- ing Company for fai properly with railings. Cot Dissrlet-At S office 1 that action would taken punish the offending hospital atteodants One Hy jstation, a lin both trains mak ng Then began the long walk back to the idred an F ty-ninth of several hundred from 1p the procession. street ‘he passengers made their way to the street and every transfers we cident Wrecking the scene of the on w a vent kel Was req to x dow the road and, the rush hour, annoyance 100 dispatched te fully an hour passed before a train could clear the spot There is a Pay d y down grade at the was stationed with @ warn the oncoming r GRACE VAN STUDDIFORD’S i HUSBAND BADLY HURT, ST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug had been unconse when found. y message ev a Al from hat fs in a a over ong-dis. he Shares dent of Van teal ved ye en and it te ed. He an hour said Capt. Watt to-day, “and [ UJ 1 ly GF GORY sae, Wha awakened BY b holes IN Gis want t ak down in the ha Ulan utah is in the harness. 1 rooms of his third floor apart- want to take some of my good health he nto retirement, But, of course. I leay n front all this to my supriors. They couldn't rhe burgla ned and fled down fire escape, et @ better man than Pritohant to wue- ceed me.” au M’PHERSON 1S RESCUED ONCE MORE FROM RIVER. iving behind articles worth $300 that | had packed up. ae JERSEY CITY TO BE NOISELESS, Following the example of Police Com- Chieg of Manhatta! Jersey missioner Bin) Monahan, of Pelice started a crusade purpose.” suid. ( make Jersey City a nolseless city,” Jumped in the Same Place After Having a Good Time Last Night. William H. McPherson, owenty-six, of -third street, v the North, River from the wulkhead at the foot of Twenty-fourth otreet again to-day and was hauled out. He did the same thing at the same place three mentis ago and was hauled HUNTING or FISHING take along When asked if she would marry, " the en said; “I'd rather own a pony "Oh, no! out. He was taken to-day to the same b yospital (the New York) by the same = And drive about instead. surgeon (Dr. Monroe), and similarly as But when her lover promised, last time was transferred to Bellevue, Through World Want Ads., to ge FOOD a prisoner A Horse ind ( bargain, At the home of the young man, where 7 Rod aivengiin hd gRAta tan Of course she said she'd wed, Dupe ewan. rescued, today by “There's a Reason” | MARRIED AND LIVED HAPPILY EVER | Roentyetzin ores SOY Week | arrERWaKD. j 4 ae