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WChild) Restored After Father “maria, ware held in 5,000 ball for «| THE NY BOY POINTS OUT KIDNAPPERS COURT OOM “Four-Year-Old Salvatore Ran-| dazzo Identifies the Cata- tinichias and Contesi. BAIL IS FIXED AT $5,000. | 4, Paid $350 and Gaye Up i Half His Shop. Wwancesca Catarinichin and his wife, Werther hearing when arraigned to-day Sefore Magistrate Droege in the Essex ‘Market Court. They are charged with Manapping four-year-old Salvatore Randazzo, of No. % First avenue, on Oct % last and holding him for ran-| @omn twenty-one days. Isadoro Contest, atleged to have concocted the kidnap- ping plot, was held in a similar sum on 8 charge of extortion. ‘The boy was found by the police on} Rov. 2% and returned to his father, | Joseph Randazzo, But the day before the boy was picked up at the corner! ef Macdaugal and King streets, his father had patd $350 to Contes! and also given the alleged blackmaller a half interest tn his barber shop. Identifies Kidnappers, The chubby-taced little victim of the Wanapping appeared ir court to day and {dentified the Catarinichias as pappers, He also identified Contest as @ man who had often come to No. 17 Ludlow strest and No, 21 Thompson etreet, the two places tn which he was held until the ransom w paid. ‘The father of the bay had been so terrified by threats to drown his bor that he had not reported the kidnap- V¥e3- ping to the police. On the day after Uttle Salvatore disappeared the barber got a letter demanéing $1,000. If the money was not paid, the letter stated, the boy would be thrown into tho East River. The letter declared that if the barber informed the police enti | would ve slain | Randazzo was badly frightened and Mes. when Contes! called on him he willing- CATER ~ “ple SDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1908. EVENING WORLD, TUE ‘Slain Politician, Accused Widow and Sister, on Trial, and Erb Home SITER PLEAD IN MRS. FRB AND HER 4rs. Grannis and the Sunrise Club ——_»— Purity Crusader and Members Have Lively Tilt Over Vi ous Phases of the Woman Question at Cafe Boulevard Dinner. VIEWS OF ROOSEVELT AND DR. ABBOTT HIT. CROWDED COURT ——————— Mrs. Beisel Weeps as She An- swers Not Guilty to Charge of Murdering Capt. Erb. MEDIA, Pa, Dec. 29.--Mrs. M. Flor ence Erb and her sister, Mrs. Catherine Betsel, were placed on trial in the Dela~ ware Count: Their Ideas as to Woman's Place Called Primitive—Di- vorce Defended and Mar Tiage Called Disease. gy Court here to-day, charged whh the murder of Mrs |Capt. J. Clayton Erb, at nis country home, Red Gabies, near Village Green, jon the night of Oct. 6. Capt. Erb, who | waa secretary to Israel W. Durham, the Republican leader of Philadelphia, and | ajso a well-known National Guardsman, | was shot during a quarrel in which Mrs, Erb and Mrs, Beisel participated. Mrs. Beisel is charged with having (fred the shot that killed the captain, | but both she and Mra Mrb havo been lerb's husband, Members of the Sunrise Club who have long boasted that nothing could shock them were willing to admit to- day that Mrs. Elizabeth B. Grannis vants heard the crashing of glass ana! the Sunrisers came right back at her five revolver shots until almost anything the doughty, Mrs. Erb, who sent for assistance | outspoken little woman might have after the shooting, sald her sister had . \ said wow v i d shot Capt. Erb, who was found lying He Wowk) gen) sa) axa out of e. dead in the hail near his bedroom with three bullets in his body, Mrs. Belsel admitted firing the shota, but declared Ik was a pretty fervid sort of eventniz, even for Sunrisers, for Channing Pollock she did #0 in self-defense. Was there, and it is reported was so Since the she Mra, Beisel has FTW with Mrs, Grannis's ability to deen th Jail, but Airs Korb has been out 287 he enemy he is going to dramatize on bail, having sec her reteaso on | MF. eee : habeas corpus. Mrs. Erb was well |" Oeussing “Minrriage and Divorce known to patrons of horse Bes Grass Hosaited sbeiauayict cone where she rode and was recogniz inning by opining that the i Dewees) recounts majority of her hearers did not believe a clever horsewoman. Mra. Betsel’s : marriage necessary at all, She credited husband is a trainman on the Philadel | tory ei seats at all Ge credina phia and Reading Railroad Mother Greets Prisoners, The court-room was crowded long be- ‘orm might differ from her own ideas. | Praises Infidelity Law. fore the principals in the trial had ar-| Mrs. Grannis thought the subjugatioa | rived, many prominent tical }of woman was at the bottom of the life in Delaware County a niladel- | divorce evil. She assumed that mar- phia being present. Among the early riage was the evangelical command. But when she declared that Christjanity was the foundation for the best things In our civilization there was almost as arrivals were Mrs. Mary Gibson, mother of the defendants, who came from her home in Philadelphia with Harry Belael, Clash Over the Divorce Question ly entered into negotiations to recover a _,{} the husband of Mrs. Beisel. They ex- the boy. He could not tf ise $1,000, but 1 pressed every confidence that the trial | managed to scrape up st, which Con: | So Would result in the freedom of the two ‘ten! ok women. Gave Up Half His Shop. GABLES * When Mrs. Erb came in with her Sutil Gontesliireiurned /againland. de: | i Home of \eteter, Mrs. Betsel, the iged mother en- manded more. The kidnappers he was | | le Ped ies, ZB ered the inclosure reserved for counsel negotiating for, he said, were not satis- land affectionately kissed her daughters. fled with the $30. Finally tt was agreed | that the barber should sign over to Con- tesl a half interest In his shop. He did so and Contesi entered Into posseseion | Mrs. Erb sobbed, while Mrs. Belsel was apparently unmoved. ‘The list of seveaty-five talesmen from which the jury is being selected 1s com- 4 of farmers, laborers, mechanics, much excitement as when the hose | bursts at a three-alarm fire. Then she dwelt on the claim that |there was no man or woman who has attained great achievements unmarried but would have dono greater things had he or she been mated. Calling attention to the almilarity of the sexes in aspirations and abilities, of his half the day before the boy was | found by the polic Although Randazzo had remained, fearfully silent, neighbors had informed the police of ¢he kindapping. Detectives urrao and Custino worked on the ca 9. | —.—_— ‘and when the boy was picked up he was t turned over to the detectives, They took the boy home and drew from Ran- | dazzo what had happened, They could | tigectthe actual kamaypere,” “0° Schmittberger Sends for Min- pirommth varioun faa lo streets until utes and Says Things Are “Getting Serious.” @ pointed out the Catarinichia woman. She was followed to her home and, with her husband, was arrested. Four other children were found in the Ludiow | street flat, but they turned out to be! Mrs. Catarinichia’s children, and not Kidnapped youngsters, as was at first | suspected, je Randazzo, howeve: had spent part of his days of captivit at No. 231 Thompson, street, which ts now being investigated. ‘Ail three prisoners denied the charge ef kidnapping. Ss The Brooklyn policernen whore testt- | mony for Patrolman James J. Mannix, convicted of assault, was characterized by Judge Dike in the Brooklyn County Court as perjury, are the subjects of a 4 investigation whic! Inspector SATURDAY A HOLIDAY T00. eergeee an ae nee started, At a meeting to-day of the Board of Managers of the New York Produce Ex- @hange it was decided to close the Ex- change from 130 on Thursday until Monday morning. ‘This will give the members of the ex- change an unbroken holiday over the New Year's holldays The Inspector sent for the minutes of the testimony, and as soon as they are transcribed a dato will be set for the trial. The men who gave the evi- dence are all attached to the Amity strect station in Brooklyn, Mannix was | a policeman of that precinct, and the ‘After the close of the market on|charge on which he was sent to Sing Mirsday afternoon the usual New| Sing for not less than three nor more eae: enter . il be given on! than four and a half years, was for Bre n0oT Ore a ee tine Inter nent | brutally beating John Kennelly, a ape- téon of the city, at the conclusion of cial watchman, on March 6, at the foot which several ‘thousand baskets con- of Pacific street. Kennelly, who \s a much smaller and weaker man, re- mained in the hospital for two months. Commissionc: Bingham said to-day | that he had ordered an investigation of | the testimony given by the policemen. | In summing up at the trial, Assistant District-Attorney Ray said the test!- mony of the four policemen who ap- peared in behalf of Mannix was ‘rank perjury,” and that the policemen were ai taining New Year's dinners will be dia- tributed to worthy families. Help Wanted To-Day ! | We advertised for in The Morning ,.. Werld's Want Directory, a TUBSDAY, DBC, 20, 1908, Housework Troners ‘When a County Judge denounces policemen from the bench as perjurers, things are getting serious,” Inspector Schmittberger said to-day, ‘and the matter will be thoroughly looked into. This thing of police banding together \to save a brother oMcer at any price js @ relic of times that are past, and has no place in the present way of con- ducting the Department.” Doorman Curran, of the Amity street station, was the policeman whose tes- timony was most severely attacked by Judge Dike. The others who testified were Jerry Murphy, John P, McCormick and Smith, RecnShauenen elton They all swore that Kennelly was 12 Polishers drunk and disorderly, that Mannix wag Porters sober, and that the policeman didn't strike the watchman, Prommen o..~ asespaa. eagepaapl ‘Kooters . Kootrs 2 THE SECRET OF SUCCESS. Shipping Clerks A philosopher has said, “Devote 9 Sign Paioters per cent, of your energy in finding out Skiet Hands WHAT to do and HOW to do it, and Sleeve Hands . the remaining 5 per cent. of energy Solicitors ++ will generally accomplish your objeot."’ Maa > m If you attempt aimlessly to locate pe 4) the position, worker, nome, investment, emerges bargain, &o., you seek, your search eteemcen eee will no doubt be tiresome if not fruit- leas, If you will resolve to inake a datly study of World Want sdvertisements uring 1900—@ fascinating task, ax you will nd—it will require but & small ‘Tingwitha ., ‘Typewriters (F.) Walters .... Wattrennes Miscellaneous . seeeceeceeecesseeecss 1p07@| per cent. of energy to go atraight to the ‘ Ftunity i. The World printed to-day 1,079 Rie World “prints, more, want-fls moath = ew Help. Ads., 604 more than all the| jear” ther a x combined. a4 ebhey New York papers combined, Facey " \ SEX OF INFANTS DETERMINED BY GHANE ALINE Prof. Wilscn Declares That the Schenck Theory Is a Fallacy. nis BALTIMORE, Dec. 29.—That the de- termination of sex chance was the declaration of Prof. E. B, Wilson before the section of zoology at the opening session of the American Association for the Advancement of Science yesterday. Although he did not specifically mention the Schenck theory of control by diet, which was tried hy the Czar and Czarina before the pe!r the throne of Russia was born, Prof. Wilson safd this theory is entirely er- roneous, Prot. Wilson occupies the chair of zoology at Columbfa University, and ts considered one of the foremost investi- ors in that science, ‘Former inquiries,” said he, ‘as to the manner in which sex ts inherited have been on the supposition that sex is de- termined by the effect of external con- litions, such as nutrition, ‘The drift of more recent evidence has been against this view, and goes to show that sex is automatically determined by the inter- nal mechanism of germ cells, If this be correct, it appears impossible to modify or control the sex by artifical means, Sex appears to be a phenomenon of heredity which conforms to the laws of heredity in general. I¢ 18 supposed by many biologists to be a particular kind of mendehan—Mendel's law. “Research has proved that \§» mech- anical busts of sex 1s #0 adjusted ag to produce an equal number of males and females in the long run, this fact apply- ing to the race as a whole and not to single families alone, There are, ho ever, variations from this equal ratio, Some of these modifications have re- cently been completely explained by minute study, but many are still quite unexplained." LUCIUS E, LADD DEAD. Lucius B. Ladd, for several years en- gaged in newspaper work in (his city, died at che Swedish Hospital, Brooklyn, to-day, Mr, Ladd was born in Spring- field, Mass., and did his frat newspaper work on the Union of that city, Later he was similarly engaged at Helyoke and in Boston. Im the latter city he was for a Ume with the Boston Journ and became Boston correspondent of the Publishers’ Press. Subsequently he entered the New York office of this organtzatio several years ago to take work with che Associated Yate fs a matter of| leaving it | GIRL JNLED TEN ~ DAYS FGR THEFT OF HANDKERGHEF |Rearrested After Alleged Stolen Jewels Are Found in Hallway. After spending ten days tn a@ cell, falsely changed with the theft of $1,500 worth of jewels from the room of Mrs. Stella Tringle the Colonial Hotel, Columbus avenue and Elghty-firet street, Loulse Groake, who was em- ployed there as a chambermaid, was ar- ralgned in the West Side Court to-day, but not discharged ‘The grand larceny change against hor as dismissed, but Magistrate Cornell held the girl on a charge of stealing soiled handkerchtef from Mrs.| Tringle's room, The handkerchief was not worth twenty cents, but no opportunity was | given to the prisoner of explaining how |{t happened to be In her room when de- tectives broke {n to search for the Jewels, Wanted Girl to Sign Release. The Jewess were picked up in a hand- kerchief that was lying outside of Mrs, Tringle's door by @ scrubwoman, Catherine McNally, who had held them for a reward for five days after the chambermaid had been locked up. The prisoner sald she had never seen the jJewels—two diamond brooches, The most remarkable feature of the proceedings before Magistrate Cornell to- day was the atiempt of a lawyer for Mrs.Tringle to Induce the prisoner to sign release of any rights to sue for fal arrest before being arraigned, Her counsel would not permit her to «ign a release, whereupon the charge was made that she stole the sotled handkerchiet the three detectives, Breoker, Kehn and McGowan, ad found in her room. Chambermaid Brings Sult. ‘The girl's lawyer asked Magistrat Cornell to grant a hearing on the petty larceny charge, but the request was re- fused and the case set down for trial in Bpecta! Sessions, As Mrs. Tringle left the court-coom she was served with papers in a sult for | $10,000 damages for false arrest. The suit has been begun in the Supreme Court on behalf of the chambermaid. The de- | tectives were served with summonses in a similar sult. ‘The vorubwoman who had found the Jewels and held them was also ar relgned before Magistrate Cornell and tn plained the presence of the handker- | chief in her room in that ehe had pleked \it up, thinking it was her own. Ie wae an ordinary, uninitialied handkerehiet. However, ho opportunity was allowed \by Magistrate Cornell for the explana- | ton. AN g TO 14 DAS, 2a as @ischarged. Miss Groake privately @x-| several bankers and pollt!- clans, | At 11 o'clock with Judges Isaac John- Jeon and Willlam B. Broomall on th bench District-Attorney Macdade ad- \dressed the Court, declaring everything in readiness for the trial. "The defendants are jointly, and sepa~ ratel-- charged with murder,” he eald, “and go to trial on the same ill of In- dletment.” she said if woman should be placed on an equal footing with men most of the evils that now harass the nation would vanish, She took an avowed delight in the New York law which makes infldelity in wedlock a misdemeanor, and which she EG Gee deal to do with having |placed In the statute books. She sald inate ratkehangiiue taint the defendants |it had done much to reduce the number “Yelontously, wilfully and with malwe | of divorces, and went on to analyze the Jeforethought. killed Capt, Ere utity or | divorce laws of a number of Btates, | now guste? je asked In solemn tones. | Then she sailed into the arguments of “Not guilty,” replied Mrs, Erb In a |the Anti-Suffragists, including President joudananner er Roosevelt, and said Dr, Lyman Abbott pan rarolee aS ee nee Enowter | was n the level with the most un- enlightened priest in regard to the sub- almost {naudibly, ‘Not guilty, The selection of the jury was then |\igction of women to men.” Not as Mothers Only. tsp to ra.an P, M. nine jurors had been | |why should she be endowed with equal intelligence with men?” she asked. ar: never heard any one commending men from a public platform because they were competent to be father ‘The mare, she said, performs the same service as the horse in addition to ma- ternal duties, so why not apply the same principle to humans? She scored Dr. Parkhurst because tn his coinage of the word “Andromantao,” referring to the aspiring woman, he fiippantly avked how it would have seemed if the Virgin Mary had left the infant Jesus in the clumsy care of Joseph while she skipped out to vote, The women were coming out of the churches, said Mrs. Grannis, because the Church has not kept pace with the advance of woman. “They are not all coming to the Sun- rh Club, though,’ she added grimly, Sunrise arose unanimously to “sahs’ back, and made her advanced ideas look puny for a time. Disease and Cure. From the point of view of James GOULD SUIT SLEUTH FIGHTS FOR FREEDOM Mousley, Indicted for Suborna- tion of Perjury, Gets Writ of Habeas Corpus. Harry 8. Mousley, the private de- tective who was acct by Mabel D. | MacCauslan with offering money to her \to manufacture a story that she had geen Frank Gould tn the apartments of Beasle Do Voe, an actress, in March, was brought before Justice MacLean in the Supreme Court to-day on # writ of habeas corpus. | The writ was obtained by Cardoza f& Nathan, who contended that he was fl- Getained and improperly tn- legnlly fie was indicted it Aujust for |Morton Jr. evangelical teaching was fSubornation of perjury in the Gould di-|the whole cause of the trouble. It yorce cane, Apaistant District-Attorneys Johnaton and Mapes were on hand to oppose th writ, which was obtained when David Miller, bondsman for Mousley, surr ert ime wc aieral Sessions fi ourt of General Ses z fhe. Sawyer D.W. Blumentha court in the interest of Mrs. Who was accused by Miss Mac an, But the matter was adjourned until Thursday. MARRIED IN POLICE COURT. Couple From Washington State Are Wedded tn Long Island City, John ©. Donnelly, a retired business |man of Tacoma, Wash., and Charlot: Milhan, of Seattle, Wash., were marries to-day in the Long Island City Police Court by Magistrate Smith, Donnelly wore a great fur coat, and his bride was preached the doctrine of the destruc- tion of vitally, individuality and all kinds of suffering, Mrs. Grannis, he said, was the only evangelical believer who had ever come to talk to them, and he allowed her credit for her cour- age, “but for one Mrs. Grannis there are ten thousand Cardinal Gibbonses in the Churoh,” he said. He contended that there were us many Ideals of marriage as there were individuals, Raymond St. James Perrin defined |the difference Between them by saying clad in babies. Mrs. Donnelly told Cleric Zimmerman that she was a divorces, heaving arated from her husband on | April 19, is, in Washington County, Wash The witnesses of the marriage Were borrowed from the court—Probas | onary OM Mary M. Fish and Com- | plaint Clerk P. BE. MoGuire. a | SUGAR DUTY UPHELD, | A FFORDS a pleasure that is quite Judge Somerville, of the United States unknown with any other | Hoard of General Appraisers, to-day de- beverage. Old-fashioned heartiness clded suger cases againat Arbuckle Bros, and EVANS’ ALE go together, The \e ‘Tradin oO ny, West | America ae SORARY Ss" Ideal Food Beverage. Makes brawn | suger Henning Coumpany Franklin Bur ar Refining Company, G. Amainck and sinew d otiiers, all of whom protest . : saseasiuen parents of duty according to para) ON DRAUGHT AND IN BOTTLES. | raph 0 of the arid ec Restausanda, Gawd, Kuea Oyeier Hosen, chosen and it was expected It would be | Instead of dynamiting the derelict ons. Use the real Pin Sra completed petore court adjourned for| “1¢ woman were meant only to Fe}, sooner Warner. Moore, which was|| strength, us it Is the most ‘ralueble day. [plenish the earth, and if she were tn- Tht iimed, waterlogged, off the Vir-|| ieemteatod compound of ‘Norway {tended only of use for this one service, Pe ieee eresinareiictl @ Extract, and ie rich’ te TH | | Jointly and ueparately indicted on a 84Ve them quite a jolt at the club's [charge of murder dinner at the Cafe Boule tast| | Accused Her Sister. night. Mrs. Erb, it Is alleged, qui lied with The her husband and summoned to her| 22¢ Promoter of social purity ad-| home from a nearby hostelry Mrs, | mitted right at the start that she Beisel, although Capt. Erb had served * notice on his sister-in-law not to come| 8@d been told that such company to the house. When Mrs. Beisel en-| Was no place for her. Then she tered “Red Gables there was : wrangle and shortly thereafter ser-| W2ded right In to the onslaught, and DIVORCE SUIT LONG DELAYED. Actor Galinher’s Action Heard Afters Four and a Half Years of Waiting. Edward J. Maroney, of No. 71 Nassau Ciizabeth, Grannis street, as referee, to-day began hearings es oe jin a divorce case which was commenced that Mrs. Grannis believed divorce the | four and a half years ago, and in which Se vineed."” | ‘It was Paul who told the women to} so home and keep silent—to shut up. |that in r denies the chargé and e in which she say seven months, It was Paul who told the men and|“fter, thelr mariage, Gall ae eanenz widows and girls that if there were no many flirtations. other way to keep out of mischiet to | get married, Read it in your Paul, Mrs. | 0 Grannis!” cried Henr d riage is the expedient, the convenience. In the old days it became an economic | necessity that one man should r al llarge family and train them up to fight his enemles.”” Frank. ar: | How to Overcome Incip- ient Lung Troubles. Law a Dead Letter. 1 Open-air life in the great pine for- to date,” said Channing Pollock, |] #8 has proved ono of the most suc- Gi have not heard an argument againat || cessful ways of curing contumption. fverce that would hold water. I ad- Y ft mit I am a matrimonial alleniat or | ae bak lit ireiaer eaters | agnostic. I have read Felix Adier and || Chared with the chemtcal elements James Bryce on the subject, and || of the pine, which have a wonderful neither is worthy the attention of an | intelligent man. Adler bases his ob- jection to divorce on the premise that | |‘no one has a right to be happy. ‘The | ursult of happlnoss 1s the first law and healing effect on the membranes. Remarkable results, bowever, beve been obtained in incipient stages of lung trouble by open-air living at instinct of nature. If I have a bad \Xooth I have it pulled, If Y havea || ome and the use of the simple home- bad husband or wite I’get rid of him || made remedy described below. This her. jor remedy !s a food thing to\keep in the home ready for use, for it {s, of course, much simpler to treat a cough or cold when It first appears than to let it de- velop into serious lung or throat trou- ble. Here Is the recip Granulated Sugar Syrup. Pinex . Put the 2 “If we are to consider the greatest | good to the greatest number, according | to statistics it {8 the divorced who will resently be demanding our care, There js nothing that oan make woman's sub- | jugation to man so great as a in- | ent divorce law. And as far as the fiw making infidelity » misdemeanor is. concerned, it was a dead letter on the | statute books the day after it was put 13% on, 2% on. oz. of Pinex (fifty cents’ there. You can't legislate against im- worth) in @ pint bottle and fill up morailty. It will take a greater thing || with the Syrup, made as follows: than a Taw to make infidelity unpopu-|| Take @ pint of Granulated Sugar, add lar.” || 34 cup of water, stir and let boil just 9 | “Mrs. B. Murray Frye ridiculed the law, || moment. Keep'the mixture well corked | which’ would bring heavier disgrace upon a wife through the imprisonment of her husband and another woman. and it will never spoil. Take a t spoonful every oue, two or thi as required. segue Obstinate, deep-seated coughs yield oO quickly to this aimplo remedy, usual fh 24 hours. It Is also. splendid for SAVED THE DERELICTS. || Whooping cough, hoarseness and bron- chial troubles and similar aiimet ‘Two Schooners Abandoned Off Coast || The taste Is very pleasant. eA Being Towed by U.$.Dynamiters, In making this remedy do not the Dest results by using any of tee weaker pine oil or pine tar ginia coast, destroyer Seneca took her in tow and 1s now steaming with her to Norfolk, according to a wireless despatch from | the revenue cutter Mohawk to-day. ‘The same despatch stated that the revenue cutter Onondaga, also bound | for Norfolk, has in tow ‘the schooner W. J. Lermond, previously reported as | the W. J, Laramer - a DIES AT AGE OF 108. BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Dec. 29.--Deb- orah B, Silliman, 108 years old, died yes- | , near this plac ull the ustural elements of the pine, ur druggist does not have ft in can easily order i rats ly order some for you, ful pint of this unequalled rem- edy costs ouly about 54 ceats, aad will | last @ whole family a long time, 3 WEST 38TH STREET NNOUNCE a Clear- ance Sale, regardless of cost, of all trimmed Mil- linery and Blouses, 5.00, 7-50 and 1()-00 | Mend rnL dnd nds RIKER SELLS DRUGS | Drugs that are Pure. Drugs that are Dependable. Drugs that are Fresh. 67c Combination Shoe Built on a special mouel, with an! upper two sizes narrower about (the heel, waist and instep thar the usual pattern. Cooper's New Discov- ery, reduced to.... Made in Calf with double soles; in Kid, with double soles, kid lined, and Cork Filling be- tween soles; also in Patent Leather Button or Lace, CASH OW CABULE, Price $5.00 a pair, WASY PAYMENTS Agent «ill call If ‘eaired AM, WATCH & NO 60, SOLD NOWHERE ELSB, JAMES S. COWARD, 268-274 Greenwich St., N (NeAM WARREN STREET, Conk, HELP WANTEL | Wire Bie SNe See disease and marriage the cure and|he was appointed referee by Justice Morton took it just the other way. He | Dowling last May. i condemned her for evangelical narrow- | Charles B. Gallaher, a vaudeville ac ness nnd him for “toying with a phil-|tor, sues his wife, Estelle, and namea” | osophy of which he was not fully con-|Byron Huntington as co-respondent, aie i ' | | 5 ? 4 | ee | oe | ram! | ‘