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NOW ASKS FOR INAL DEGR = Notice Given to Court Tha Request for Signing of / | Order Will Be Made. | NEW CHANGE IN CASE, Recent Ieports Were That Family Would Abandon All Legal Action. | The matrimontal of | Maloney, daughter of Martin Maloney. the Standard O!! milllonaire, are in the} courts again. A motion will be made tc-mgrrow be- fore Justice the Supreme Court, to have an order entered con- firming the report of Daniel F, Co- halan, who took testimony as refereo, and recommended that the marriage of | Miss Maloney to Herbert Arthur Os-| porn, a young broker, at Mamaroneck | two vears ago, be annulled. Three| months after the omer !s signed an| interlocutory decree will be eranted. | Two weeks ago to-day Justice Bischoff ‘was to have 8) order confirming the referee's report. Hut an attor representing Martin Maloney appear 4 $n court and moved that the matter be “adjourned indefinitely by consent.” troubles Helen Gerard, in ey Thought Case Was Ended. The adjournment was entered, and it tf Helen the case was supposed that Maloney against Herbert h torn was disposed of finally, of the Maloney sald tha Roman Catholic C through dignitaries to who! high the case had been | urch, referred, had refused to sanction the annulment, holding e marriage was legal. It was stated that the evidence showed that Miss Maloney and young Osborn, befor Justice of at Mamar- ade a Cath- the Peace who 1 oneck, had sought to p cao priest to perform ceremony Osborn is a Catholic, In the eyes of the Church this consti dan act showing deliberation. Originally, when the annulment pro- ceedings were instruted, it Was the fmt ton of Miss Mal when freed from Osborn, to mar Samuel Bb. Clarkson, eloped to Europe by way When a Yawyer op- er posed the signing ing the refere Reports were cirouluted from Phila- Aolphia to the effect that Miss Maloney and Osborn would be married again by 4 Catholic priest, It was an- nounced that Miss Maloney would enter a convent and remain until the pub- Melty attesding the affair had blown| over before entering upon her career as, Mrs, Osborn, Young Osborn appeared to be some-| what bewlldered over the turn the af-| fair had taken. affirm | or deny a report that he and Miss Ma- loney had been {In conference three or four times about their matrimonial on- tanglement. The move of the Maloney family to have the Supreme Court make the an- miment final means one of two things, It means that the Roman Catholic Church dignitaries have revised their opinion about the Osborn-Maloney mar- rage, and will consent to calling it no ceremony, or it means that Miss Ma- Jony has finally decided to marry Clark. bon. over He refused to ———. —_———- | CHILD FALLS FROM AERIAL PLAYGROUND, ——>— One of Infant Group Who Made Fire-Escape Romping Place Is Near Death. Three-year-old Fthel Quinlan is dying in Roosevelt Hospital! to-day as the result of a fall from her favorite playground on the fireesoape of Mrs. Joseph Mahoney's apartment, on the third floor of No. 18 West End ave- nue. Hthel's home, at No, 18 West Bnd avenue, has no fireescape win- dows and Bthel and her brother, Jimmie, used to go over to Mrs, Mas honey's to play as often as the Ma- honey children inviied them. Tho young Mahoneys met Ethel tn ed her up | er ae- them ielr front of their hcuse and invi to play. Ethel and her b copted, and Mrs. Mahoney allowe to go on the coveted fire-e promise to be careful hour Ethel felt cold and Mrs. Mahoney wrapped her in a blanket, but allowed | her to remain on the fire-escape lye ing. Mrs. Mahoney had returned to b duties only a few minutes when sh startled by a scream from the cho pape on t Sthel! She's fallen" cried James & the distracted woman, ag sie rushed ry to the rooms. \ Mrs. Mahoney looked down from @ window 1 saw the crowd that was) closing in about the child lying on the aldewalk, then she fainted, Dr. Herr who answered an ambulance call, said Ethel’s skull had been fractured and tat she had only a bare chance to live, | Fiminle Quinlan broke the news to his mother, who became hystertoal ———— MURPHY SUCCEEDS HAMILTON. | ‘The Bullding Code Revision Commis- gion membership of Thomas L. Hamil- ton, made vacant by his death, has been! filled by the Uullding Committee of the | Board of Aldermen, which has vamed Charles M Murphy, a builder, of No 6, Bast Forty-second street, THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1908. MISS MALONEY ~ |“An Adamless Eden” Is How One Woman ‘WOMAN'S DEATH Describes the Dressmakers’ Meeting BRONX WOMAN COVERS FROM ONG ILLNESS —~— Complication of Troubles. Overcome After Seven | Years of Suffering. | “For seven years T hardly knew what. it was to have a well day until I be! gan taking Cooper's New Discovery,’ says Mrs. Mary Murphy, of No, 3@/ Willis avenue, New York, In a revent | statement, "I had stomaoh trouble of a very serous catarvhal nature, and In | addition suffered from kidney and liver | trouble. My food did not digest prop- erly, and my stomach hurt me terribly after eating. My back ached almost constantly, and | was also subject to frequent attacks of biliousness, | “I became so weakened and run down | that I could not perform work of any | kind, The least effort exhausted me. [| took medicine of yarlous kinds and was under the care of a number of physicians at different times, but aside | from helping me a ttle at the time |TemArk Ike that at an audience with. | ™ out 0 much as the flicker of an eledash, | desperate fight in the cellar of No, 1s} Avenue A, stirred the Tombs prison | nothing gave me permanent relief, | “Hearing so much in fayor of the| Cooper remedies, 1 was anxious to give them a trial, I rsuld not go myself, but sent for a .reatment of the New Discovery and began taking it. Its effect was different from that of any medicine IT had ever used before. I seemed to gain strength almost im- mediately, It was not long until my appetite was greatly improved, my stomach felt more comfortable and I did not experience the distress after eating to which I had been accustomed. “Alter a while my kidney and liver trouble subsided, the backache disap- | peared and my sleep was not broken into a@ before, I have not had a bil- lous attack since 1 began taking the Cooper medicine, 1 finished the trea ment six weeks ago, and my heaitn continues to Improve. I have no pain of any kind and feel perfectly well, “Having suffered so long, I am in- deed grateful to Mr. Cooper for the! his medicine, and cake pleasure in recs ommending Coo New Discovery to | “my one, whe Is suffering from stoniach | uble, te demonstration medies at ot the Cooper | he Riker Drug Store, Sixth (nue and Twenty-third’ street, con- | ues to attract wide attention, and | yer or his assistants are in’ con- | it attendance upon the numerous | ers that daily throng his head- | rters The Cooper preparationg aro vile at all the Riker stofes and can ‘btalned from any druggist. ** an air Rectal TAFT CATCHING UP WITH HIS CORRESPONDENCE, CINCINNATI, O., Sept, 10—Mr, Taft to-day made further strides towards wetting up to date with his corraspond- ence and office work. Bosides this, he Is to be in toi by long tistance tele- phone with te and ‘county i within a convenient radius of his home city and plans are thus being discussed for the pilgrimage here of delegations. No political cot f. were held | speculation to me from which I was S9IsTeaRLUYT ~— “Never Squeeze Your Waist” | Is Miss White's Advice to Her Sis-2rs. | | HOW TO LOOK THIN. Directoire Gown tory Is Explained in an Interview, By Ethel Patterson. Perhaps {twill be known whether it was the shrinking fear of some blushful disclosure, or a prohibl tive feeling of unworthiness, that made ot the Dressmakers’ Protective Asso- | clation meetings an Adamless Eden. Or was It q subtle result, this yolun- tary absence of the mate sex? deniably voluntary It was. They were Invited—certainly they were—to all BUT never | For un- Real His.) 5 EXCHANGE Or THOVGH'T ARTER THETRERFORMANCE of her skirt, to learn the lining thereof, Finally I secured a few moments alone with her jn a dressing room adjoining the stage. Poor, dear Hlizabeth! She sat well forward in her chair and feml- tine Intuition told me that "things pinched her.” But she never “let on,’ not for a moment, She just glowed and talked, and moved her arma from the elbows down. The Directoire Gown An inquiry from me as to the Direc- tolre gown slashed up the side elicited almost horrified amazement at my ignorance, “Why, they haven't got them in Part Mi White answered me. They ne did have ‘em, Somebody over there just started them for an advertisement. Of course they were worn years ago, “Madame Recamler or Camille or somebody Ike that Wore ‘em: But they had to have two soldiers walking be- hind them with drawn swords all the time, too. If any man stared at them they’ Just cut off his head.” That did sound a trifle radical anarehistic even for these times, so 1 guessed We wouldn't “wear | 'em” either, It didnt take Miss White long to ider my next question. “To be a successful dressmaker,” she replied, without hesitation, "you mu: love of your art inside you, here.” To my Infinite confusion she tenderly patted that area usually supposed to contain the human stomach, ‘If you are going to raise and stay there y ave got to work for the love of It, and not for the money,” ex- pounded Elizabeth. "Of course you have t to eat, and I've got to eat, out ust the same, you've got to think more of vour art than you do of your pocket book," the corset lectures. Could it be that for strictly perverse reasons, these would have been the only exhibitions they might have attended? Freely, gen- erously they were bidden to enter, but throughout the long, warm Wednesday afternoon only two samples from the countless thousands of mascuiln manity put in a shame-faced ap hue |ance, one pale and weary youth, who Wish-bone stunt—and she seemed to have something to do with taking In the tickets at the door, and one unhappy reporter, whose dull gaze only brightened when {t rested on the slim lines of some promenading model. But we did not miss the men—we women, We wera far too Interested to even note thelr absence, Interested in the gowns, Interested in the hats, in-| terested in the countless Paris foibles But above and beyond all else—held spell-bound by the flow of eloquence that gushed in an unpunctuated stream from the lips of the High Priest A truly marvellous woman, this Miss Elizabeth A. C. White! “For, says Miss White, “1 never squeeze my waist. I have never done It. 1 push the flesh up from the front, over my shoulders, where {t falls easily into place on my back, You don't notice it there,” Fine and Breezy, Now I call that really fine—breegy!} By this thme the mob had sueccess- fuly stormed the fort and were sur- r ing her once more, and there were many firm hands to pluck me from her side and send me staggering bick st the wall. I Jeft regretfully T liked Elizabet IT liked her tr umphant nerve. She displayed courage of her con e alvaated a ain brand of corsets and—she wore ‘em, She told us certain styles wore the thing and-she hed ‘em on. She preached the gospel of the sh r had “done SS TOMBS PRISON TIN PANIC BY Five Men Required to Put One Shrieking Inmate in a Strait-Jacket. I liked it. Only the really great, I tel! you, can stand up and shoot a radical! I want to say Elizabeth did It, and 1/ admire her for it. For the way inal said tt and the easy gesture she made! that Implied how simply and painlessly | this stunt, that to the uninitiated seemed to require a shylock, could be! performed, Elizabeths neext Iinguistic bomb was to the effect that:— “You've got to spoil something to make something right!” She delivered this unequtyocally, Bhe knew It. Despite old sayings, such as “Two wrongs cannot make a right” and other bread-and-butter sentiments upon which we are fed !n our childhood, the High Priestess of the Dressmakers was Sure that “you've got to spoll some- thine to make something rieht.” This opened up unexplored avenues of recalled by Miss White's tones, raised in pained anger and surprise. “Someone,” she almost wept, "“some- one has been cutting the buttons from the model gowns! I cannot believe that After half an) benefit I have derived from the uge of | !t Was one of you.” Her voice trailed off into the “I-am-more-hurt-tlan-an- gry” cadences with which we are al more or less famillar, “It must have been"—a dramatic pause—''some man!" Every one breathed aga®, Woman- hood was exonerated. I glanced at the pale youth, He seemed to be lost In an endeavor to pull his shoes up through |t I glanced at the re- 18 insane. his trouser legs. porter gentleman, but even endurance Nicolo Maochia, who nearly killed Ta- so Petulta with an tce pick in a from roof to cellar early to-day. Luck- ail the prisoners were securely locked behind bars, Macchia has been developing a re gious frenzy, and for some time has been under observation. He occupied cel! No, 185 on the second tler, ‘About 2 o'clock, when aii the prisoners wore asleep, they were suddenly startled by wild cries, Keepers found Macchia tearing his bedclothes and shouting at the top of his voice, Warden Flynn was summoned and five men entered Macchia’s cell. With the strength of a madman he fought the guards back and forth and it required fifteen minutes to get him in a straitjacket. He was then carrled to the isolation ward, Barely had Macchia been disposed of when William Wild, the nineteen- year-old boy who shot his sweetheart, succumbed to the excitement and began to scream and beat his head against the burs. Wild was recently released from the hospital, where two bullets were re- moved from his head. The surgeons were unable to find a d bullet Judge Crain appointed a ¢ mmission to inquire into hls sanity, and he is await- ing an order to Matteawan, he commission having reported that he to be sent By the time Wild was subdued the has a limit, and the shaft of tle stigma} hundreds of prisoners in the Tombs had not added anything apparently to} were on edge and many on the verge his misery “To the artist line ts everything,” continued Miss White, in pursuit of still] trate Wal another ides. ‘Line {is the thing, not trimming. the Bon Marohe everything ‘s line this vear, We don't pay enough ayention to cut and line over here, I you, and that's why,” triumphantly, “the French look ‘chic-er’ than we do.’ As soon as the lecture was over the Audience mobbed the stage to prod th fair Elisabeth's hips to gound her cor- set limitations, and with the friendly band of sisterhood te tum up the hea In the Maison Blanc a@nd| warden sald it was impossible of nervous prostration. Warden Flynn to-day asked Magis- to send Macehta to Belle: ne order was signed. The 0 keep him In the Tombs and preserve disci- pline vue, add t —_—.>———- SENATOR ANKENY LOSES SEATTLE, Wash., Sept. 10.—Incom- plete returns from the Republican State primary election indicate that Senator Levy Ankeny has been defeated for re- nomination by Representa: Wesley L, Jonee 1600 to 3000 votes, have the) T THO Ns BEAUTIFUL GR APS OFF CLIFF INTO DEEP LE as Young Woman Who Is Saved at Montclair May Be Miss Jennie Fores, ‘Mrs, Jean Reid Ward, Who Foiled Burglars After Her Rare Jewels a | | BY SHOT REVEALS STRANGE CONTRACT Physician Agreed to Pay $250 Monthly for Mrs, Zeller’s Silence. (Special to ‘The Evening World.) MONTCLAIR, N. J., Sept. 10—A woman, who refuses to give any tion regarding herself, but who Miss Jennie Fores ed, is at Moune |HER HUSBAND iS HELD Failed to Report Alleged Sui- cide Until 13 Hor is thought to be from papers she poss taingide Hos here, Mystery sure rounds her identity, She tried to come mit suicide last night by le from a steep embankment into Verona Lake there are many circum- stances that point to suictde In the case of the death of Mrs. Although e girl was foiled by Pet ans and ¢ e was ut Zeller by | a bullet wound, In | | 102 West One Hundred and Third street | the delay of her husband, | Rose ean her home at No. he water when 1 placed her on the bank, He called for help and David Slayback took the young woman in his automo- Sinnir yesterday, Albert, to report the shooting and other | to th ience of Dr, Arnie | mysterious circumstances have caused | Bush. The siclan revived her after uW Geaik his arrest. Another arrest, say, 18 likely to occur to-day, Miss Lena | Gieger, of No, 217 Bast Sixty-second street, sister of the daad woman, Is de- tained as a witness. the police | refuses to answer sas if ina trance. It , he had been brooding ir, 4 nelieved that yver a love a When the police were called into the! When Sinnirud and his companion age at 1 o'clock this morning, thirteen | dragged her from the water they found hours after the time fixed as that of| 1 black pocketbook In her nd. It cone the shooting, the husband, who made | tained $00, a return ticket from Bere the report, was arrested. Seven hours) nardsyille Atlantle City and a crume before he had telegraphed to hie alster- | pled slip of paper, upon which was in-law thet his wife was dead. written in lead pencil the following The most mysterious feature of the message “The bearer 1s Miss Jennie Fores, who ig on her way to Bernardsville to see her brother, Charles Fores, a coachman at Mr, Tyng’s.” lease was the discovery that Dr. Jacob Heckman, of No, 166 East Hightloth | street, who formerly employed the dead woman as housekeeper, was paying to her and her husband $2,000 In $260 Instal- | = Tami a Se + | ‘This furnished the only clue as to the ments. He began paying this money ! identity of the young woman, labout the time he was married, last | et December, and dispensed with Mrs, | WOMAN SPEEDER FINED $50. housekeeper. He | Pleading guilty to a charge of speed- Zeller'a services as uuto at thirty miles an hour, declared to-day that he pald the money Jing h to save his professional reputation, Miss Helene Schuyler, of Plainfield, | Until last December, Mrs. Zeller was was fined $50 and costs by Justice employed as @ servant with the duties | Housell, at Brunswick, N. J, It was the first time a wo- n arrested in New Jersey the speed laws. Miss caught in a Raritan ‘f housekeeper, In the home of Dr. Heckinan. Bhe left his employ about the time the physiclan was married, and at the same time an agreement was entered In between the doctor and the Zellers, Theodore Baumelater, an at- ing was IN 26 FAMILIES AND SAVES GEMS torney, of No, 35 Nassau street, of- Freer ree ficlated in arranging the terms of the) qyoe ne ae Re ith agreement. Stairways Optn, but Excited’ House Invaders Run When) ‘Asked about his part in It to-day, Dr. Paes 4 : iscover ohter af CEC ATE Tenants Rush to Root Discovered by Daughter of Mall Orders Filled. i [eee Had ra Pay, Says Physician ee Peete ey i Telephone Orders Filled t ae re La et hia and Fire-Escapes. American Aniassador, cue ~ oa «Broken Coffee band both worked for ne a veers! There was s fire this morning In a GUILDFORD and, Sept, 10.—A! i jago 1 performed an operation a aed six-story tenement at No. 17 B treet daring a was made last nisht 69) Made up mainly of the broken i |Zellor. Tt was simply @ genecolorleal | wit, euch suspicions features that tie [teal a number of valuable Jewels De-'and smaller beans of Our } [oases y Leaks Reset deh Fre wehay eel Fires Murshal'e omc has begun\aniinayloneina te ALE TOAn RE ae higher priced cotfees | Extra ployment, Since then, IT am ashamed to | vestigation Miss Jean Reld, daughter of Whitelaw | gq value always, Present i say, I have had to pay her money to} ime house is one of a POWatande avec! lel Aenean SAT «Jot is particularly tine, protect my professional reuptation. I] ing etween the 1 ; Pondonit ana eanoEale nent st. | | simlpy had to do it to protect my name. | avenue, Polleeman Pers Seon James's Palace rt Ginny URES LY ee eat a et eles H “If I had been a butcher, grocer or his Baa ea eee ee Re a aya tae nol ‘ 2 ip i i baker I would have put her and her | yior ne aay 9 ana ee ented iTEA Black, Green or Mixed, 4 0) husband behind the bars for ten years. | oie oe a front window on the rst thoor wa ji Regular Price 50c.; at) #UC But with a man of my profession it was ! v0 ie ik ors a a Knowing the excitable na- ingle Pounds Dollvered with Coffea different. The least breath of scandal |i. Ge aha residents of tin Rs p pon | ACCOUNTS INVITED, i |againet me would mean ruin, so Lem | pe ion beg, : re aes r % ltered into that agreement, That is au | /cfdon began rapping for help as h nearer Vii ‘ I can say about It now." ran to turn in/an alarm, Sh mr 1 ind rt a8 | 0. i | By the time he reached the bullding|, 0° S¢mmons trent A bos 233239 the tenants, all Ttallans and Greeks forced Her jewe © foun a yt had taken fright, Although the stair-| al! ready to be taken away Wa WASHINGTON ST. i ways were still open, the smoke In| Piece missing was a Bold purse YALICG |e park pLeierclay St, Established 1840 i the halls had frightened them so | at $500, [Fae ——= that twenty-six familles, with their In-| The burglars — app: escaped | ve evitable boarders, lad neariy all fled) through a window, No clue to them PRICE to the roof or else had draped them-) hus been found yy Ss oe. LE Windowphanie ——-—- -— FOR PELLAGRA. | | TW RO MEN 10 selves in living festoons on the fire | cms escapes, front and hack, where they| clung, nearly. helpless. from fright, LOOK OUT screaming to be rescued. Ferdon and the other policemen whol|yoqu Muy Get It by Eating Muaty had answered his rapping devoted ‘5 “ | themselves frst to quelling the panic | or Fermented Corn. | ett itn aon i] RO ol ; ; 9 give added Interest to and Sate tacape palconfee and herde! CHARLOTTE, N.C. apt: An ave) nes BieE deine) {ng them down the stairs to the strect, topsy on the body of John J, Neat re- | & comanctin A | Then they went after the tire, sals that death was due to neliagra, | RaUYS. DATLAPRE TEL IURE | ao ear tt was inside a locked and barreg Yetl* a acetyl \lt the reeular prica | folfeMom “Hat. ‘The flames from a) a, disease caused by eating musty oF Thursday, Frida ‘ Tat &() | bingl ttress bad > Woods fermente ! Tardy Passenger, Weight 250, (oi"foiaze. ‘The flat ts occupied grits, It ix the | Patan d Sal ae | harily by Antonlo Vitale, his wite and Drought to the . : and Saturday. Reaches La Provence Af- | fost calliten, “None of “ie Vitules Pe hat aided in thel chen : ‘ mn of the fret that the a | ter Bitter Trials. ear company has its tracks who mont)is along the Bowery. engine companies material for his | from the west had a pot Be trouble malady. i vane | negotiating t sage of the ripped. fare q La Provence was about to sail this! negotiate | eon inenee nian | morning, and the gangplank had been! was almost ilitched IOWA DEADLOCK CONTINUES. | # FEST ES JES MOINES, Spt. 10.—The deadioe raised, when & %4-pound Frenchman! 3 LIGHTS IN A MONOPLANE. over ine eluction of a United sate \ | raced down the pier, swinging @ port-| paris, Sept. 10—M. Bleriot made gepator continued to-day. In one bal | manteau in either hand, Stevedores and three flights in his ‘monoplane at Issy jot taken the vote Was; Cummins, i {| ‘shoremen sprang from his th to yesterday, He did not. meet with an Porter, Dem, 4; scattering, 43. There zs re ‘| | lan him a clear way, and mart not accident, and covered 4, 2) and 300 was no break In the ranks of the stand 196. 14th St, New York, 386 Brovdway, Bkiyn, |been for @ portly old sailor he would ¥8"d- patiers: iz | have run off into the river. | | He and the sailor fell together, picked | themselves up swiftly and swore at each \! other in four languages, Then the fat 1! Frenchman waved a first-cabin ticket | | at Purser Henkel on the raised gang- i] plank and asked for a hand. \| Henkel and a steward leaned down to give him @ hand, but his weight was too much for them and they came down on top of him. ‘Then three husky ‘long ] shoremen made 4 lying tower, whict the fat man sealed arter falling twice. | When he had finally attained the gang ay) ai { Diank he had a brulse on his none, a celts ay | scratch on each cheek, had lost ‘hix f Panama bat in the rt¥er, broken he | \ J e,.c00. 2 Rae) i collar, sworn cop tously to ‘the Immense SSE ie ‘9 ‘pa a delight of assembled frenchmen on the ‘ Ot as ‘ ‘ c i SRISI Chatto pas nets every Opportunity” Ey he strutted UE IY oi k ea d br ys id: f d safely eored Hen t is aie ama. to,make.good bread: of ‘longshoremen: , f PS) RT rs ls Ta Provence got off with a alight list ee yy 5 iy) i to nort, the fat F an having been / i ‘“ va nort “room. hg Co i tet i = = , : i i i WANT TO KNOW if coffee is harmful? Stop 10 days and use OSTUM here’s a Reason’ WASHBURN-CROSBYS. > ~~ oot yl GOLD MEDALF