The evening world. Newspaper, February 20, 1909, Page 3

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il ANE PRATE” $50,000 VERDICT IS SISTANED Court Upholds Jury’s Award to Wife of Get-Rich- Quick Goslin. BLAMES THE AFFINITY. Former Stenographer and Con- victed Swindler Now in Paris Together. @upreme Court Justice Brady, in a Gecision rendered to-day, refuses to ret aside the verdict of a jury for $50,000 in favor of Mrs. Una A. Gosiin in her sult against Annie Magher, the wom- an she designated as a “love pirate,” who was formerly stenographer of her husband, Alfred A. Goslin, of get-rich- quick fame, for alienation of his af- fections. “Where, for alleged family reasons or dislike of the wife, the husband's rela- tives or others are charged by his wife with allenating his affections from her," says Justice Brady, “it 1s palpably reasonable that activity on the part of the alienator must be shown as well as pre-existing affec- tion toward the wife on the part of the husband, because it {s only from such overt acts that Mability on the Gefendant's part can arise. No Doubt of Liability. “But when, as in the case at bar, the @efendant 18 a woman who personally knew the wife and was consclous of the Jove and affection which the husband then held for the wife, of the luxury and richness of thelr home and the hap- piness of their family circle, and with this knowletge and against the re- Monstrance and protest of the wife, made to her personally, accepts the husband's improper favors, accompanied by valuable gifts and long and frequent perlods of his soctety and companton- ship, how can it be said that such rela- tlon was not of itself an enticement and allurement on her part sufficiently active to make her Hable? If the de- fendant is liable as a matter of law and t, and I think she is, there Is sufficient evidence to warrant the amount of the verdict.” At the outset of his decision Justice Brady recites the many phases of the case leading up to the verdict rendered at the close of the trial several weeks ugo, As to the motion to set aside the verdict, the Court says: “It {s well settled, and the Court charged the jury, that a wife cannot re- cover damages against another woman merely because such woman had Inti- mate relations with her husband, but that a married woman may recover damages from another woman for entle- ing away her husband and depriving her of his comfort, ald, protection and @upport; that it is ne however, for the wife in s on to show Wome active interference on the part of the other woman; that mere passive acceptance of a marrled man’s Improper intimacy {s not enough.” Together in Paris. Justice Brady cites a case, which he describes as “the strongest case to which I have been referred in which the language of the opinion {® sought to be construed as upholding and de- { fending the doctrine of free love as a bar to the rights of a wife.’ He add ) “But I do not e o from the 1 opinion in that wife must ‘ thow before she can recover that the | intervening damsel had been put to la- | borious effort to attract the husband { and win his love, and for the purpose | of alienating his affections from his wife.” Goslin and Miss Magher are now said to be in Paris. He 18 a fugitive from justice, under sentence of conviction for dling, having fied this country while n-appeal story develops the fact that Go: after a long career of extremely iin, successful swindling operations, wound ft up by swindlt equity in thelp V sion and {ts id by Invest! his wife out of her t End avenue man- 1,00 woth of furniture, $30,9%, which she saya she entrusted to him In two Herkimer street (Hrooklyn) properttes, registering the deeds in the name of his’ alleged affinity, Annie Magher, Mrs, Gosiln, as the first step in her sult for alienation, filed a notice of the sult against these two pieces of property, thus tying the knot, and these are reachable by the Bherif's process in settlement of the $50,000 Judgment affirmed to-day by Jus- tice Brady. AQ FEET OF SAUSAG. UT D'S HEAL Booty’s Owner Identifies His Wurst, So the Poor Dach- shund Gets None, Max Cohen, seventeen years old, of No. 8 Allen street, and Samuel Fish- man, another youth, of the samé ad- Gress, were arraigned in the Essex Market Court to-day charged with stealing twenty-eight feet of slim bo- Jogna and oleven and a half feet of wiernerwurst from the delicatessen store of Samuel Bernstein at No, 11 Pike Street. Young Cohen dented the charge pre- ferred by Bernstein and swore that he bought the sausage. "I bought it for my Ittle do iny Yak.” sald the boy. * ‘ak is my little dachshund, “He must have a terrible appetite, Yim- Yimminy | NESESTED WES HRM TEL TMGEDY OFA Author of Book Declares It) a Picture of Many Women’s Lives, WATCHES SIREN’S WILES. | Fascination of Affinity Is Re-| corded In Minute | Details, | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Come all ye neg- ed wives and ead the story of your tribulations as told by Mabel Herbert Urner in a brand new book just issued, called The Journal of a eglected Wife." There ts hardly wife In the world who has not tancted herself neglected at time or another, so this intimate journal of a woman of forty-five who sees her | husband's affections diverted by a younger siren is sure of a large and sympathetic audience, I have read the book, and have just | one suggestion to make about it. This {concerns the title, which I think might | read more properly, “Why Men Leave one Home; or, a Little Journey Into Neuras- thenia.”” But this the reader can judge | better for herself. The dlary opens thus; | “April 1th "Is he with her again to-night? Since 19 o'clock I have been watching at the Mbrary window, I try to sit quietly in my room and read or sew, but in a few moments I find myself back at the win- dow, gazing down the street. hoping breathlessly that each coming figure | will be he, And then always my heart | sinks sickeningly when the street lamp | at the corner shows it to be some pass- | ing stranger. And yet how little dit- ference it makes whether he comes how or an hour Inter! I feel that he 's with her-that he has been with her jall evening. It always brings that | sickening weight in my chest, and a trembling weakness Ike that of fright.” | Two weeks later there Is this entry: | | “April 27. | | “Oh! Horace!” “My worst fears are verified, Oh, Horace! Horace! how can you degrade | me 80? How can you come home reek- ing with another woman's perfume? | What have I ever done that I must |bear such humiliation? And I must bear it tn silence=I must pretend to be blind, Once he knows that 1 know I would have to leave him. “It was almost dawn this morning when, after a sleepless night, 1 went Into the bathroom for some bromide. The door that led into his room was partly open. I could see that he was asleep, his face turned from me, one { arm thrown over his head, His coat hung on a chair near by. The desire to touch it, to breathe In the faint fragrance of cigars that I knew tt would hold, to comfort my poor starved soul with at least this semblance of nearness to him, made me stoop over, Mft the coat from the chair and bury my face against It. And then! Oh, the sickening knowledge that came to me then! From the arm and shoulder of the coat came a faint perfume, elusive, subtle, and yet unmistakably a per- fume. # ¢ ¢ “Ho had held her in his arms! On the shoulder where her head had rested was the odor most perceptible, It w true, then, “April 28. “Sometimes I feel that I would have suffered less if he had died.” | Such Purple Paragraphs. Mrs, Kennedy, the neglected wife, has been married fifteen years, but on May 3k the spring, or something, got Into her Llcod, and she Indited such purple para- graphs concerning her husband as to make the heroine of ‘Three Weeks” | seem @ Sunday-school teacher by con- trast. A little later on she accuses her huaband of being unfaithful to her, and tells him he must give up that woman or she will leave him, never to return, She carries out her threat, and hires a room in Brooklyn, whlch some people may think Ja not giving separation a falr trial, At any rate, returns home on her husband's terns, and continues | to live there In a state of beautiful hys- terla till the husband returns from a+ | mysterious absence, and says in a volce | that was almost cold, "She dled yester- day at the hospital, The child died with her.” | Then they live happily ever after- ward. I saw the author of “The Journal of | Neglected Wite at the Hotel Gre- worlan after I had read the book, | | The Probie. of Neglect, | She ts a little woman, still young, with {a winning manner that suggests that her fraj{l shoulders have telt to an unusually cruel degree the lash of life. She isa divorcee, “I wanted to portray,” she sald, “the problem of the neglected wife, where the Wife ts not a shrew, the husband not a villain and the other woman not an ad- yenturess. My work {8 photographic merely, I take no sides, or, rather, I see both aides, Before writing the story of the wife, I Wrote that of the other | woman, calling it ‘The Obsession.’ But 1 was not satisfied with It, so it has not been published. “My book," Mrs. Urner continued, “‘il- lustrates the tragedy of age woman, Why should we de for a Woman Who Wrote the “Journal of Ta THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1909, MAN IN a Neglected Wife” as True Picture Vr SEK MURDER MYSTERY ENGLEWOOD oe Fascination for Another's Wife marry,” Manno had a wife and five children in aly Further inqulries made by Digilio re- xpayers’ Union Asks for Trick Disclosed by Desertion| ,, of $4 es . alaints A oe Cainupatnan, Complaints of Any Misuse | 1,850 in Tobacco On | cated that ‘Manno frequently left the of Public Money | a \\ harf. jeter Silk and Ribbon Mills, in Astoria, where he was employed, for two and ——_ |three days at a time. . During these Announcement was made to-day by. One thousand pounds of tobacco held | Periods he did not xo to his boarding the Executive Committee of the Tax- | Stoves liore Is the subject | POU At No. 104 Trowbridge street, or payers’ Protective Union, whieh hold a k to the homes of any of his relatives meeting last night at the t the customs author'-/and friends in this borough. His of Union in the Commer ) was selzal a few days) brother, Guldino, who clinched the Bullding, Broadway and ago on the Hamburg-American line pler| identification of the murdered man's stre tw ed, complaint of abuse of offical power or dody at the ilewood Morgue, has In- formed the police that he heard of a mysterious woman who had tnfatuated his kinsman and that he had taken him et, that a Complaint © nty-flve members had b Pledged to Investigate Hoboken, Tt was hampers t had ers,” 1 stean: in five een left on the pler as "sleep: en discharged from the Amertk f ery hr hij misuse of p i ed tot? task about 4s. Sleeper to the attention of the U Tear oF moti Disregarded Warning. will receive most car laimed for some days after the docking} Guldino Manno had urged his brother citizens ere request: aeaveaenlt jto forget ghis woman and eave his Any Instance of official oppression, ex- hampers ware consigned toa man, Money £0 as to bring his wife and tortion or neglect which comes to thelr | who had ANG ajchildren from Italy, The murdered notice passenger and who Is evidently Inno-|™an's cousin, Frank P, Manno, a No complaint, {t was said, will be| cent so far as smuggling ned, | Wealthy !mporter, of Guldone & Marino, deemed trivial and the names of those No, 42 Broadway, had also heard of this T » whieh Is beimg worked by making complaints will not be used in| woul s explained as fol, love affair and expressed the opinion any investigation made or action taken lows are placed in the name! to-day that he could help the police by th Union, fa passenger of the steamship who! !n finding out who the woman ta, e Protective Unto: Se P ae eer Fellow OFRANIREA TO PehE tee the nied nows nothing about the fact. If.every-| Fellow workmen and friends of Frank taxpayers in. tt y one of the Manno say they belleve he was warned he u perions sisusid the name t? cease his attentione to the woman will vanras funilecathe and that threats were made against his name t M eneak the | goods, life, He carrled on a Marge correspond- publ invthing x before then the ence with persona whose Identity he kanco or Smuggler cannot very well be traced curetully concealed, He provided & ape- Pai, seailurea | found OF He tobacco Is HS Per) cat letter box for himself in his board- ficials tntrusted with spe! 7 —_—>—_ | ing place, and three letters were found Sould result in enormous annual SUFFRAGETTES MOCK POLICE! there yesterday, which were setzed by Id result In a di the police. Two of these letters were | mailed after the murder, one on the afternoon the body was found, The most perplexing feature of the mystery {s that no one can be found who saw Bfanno after Feb, 3, fifteen days before his body was dlecovered and nine days before the time fixed for the murder. On Feb, 3 Manno drew an advance of $8 at the silk mill. Then he dropped out of sight, Four Companions Seen Shooting. Lieut. Digillo belleves Manno went to Je muntolpal| Use Patro! Wagon Advertising New e@ wally wed now for the| ke off thelr Rosh on Parliament, LONDON, Fab. 20.—The Suffragettes have adopted a novel method for adver- | ng the demonstration they are planning for Feb, 24. Throughout the day a sombre-looking vehicle supposed | to represent a police van, in which was a man in a polleemgn's unttorm, w driven along the main streets,” ‘The nm was decorated with the Buffra- gette colors and escorted by a number lo. of women carrying banners announ- n/cing that a deputation would assemble the home of the woman and remained It is simply a| Feb. 24 and proceed to the House of} y. tke administra-;Commons in an effort to see Premier * Asquith. New (York to sha awalke to tt ma h ir disposal on extends | He owned a little farm In New Jersey, or, at least, spoke ‘Latest Paris Fad—Having Pho:o of owning one. On Lincoln's Birthday, he was seen with four companions in an Englewood Hotel, They conversed about real estate bangains, “Of these facts we are sur aid Digilio to-d ‘and we are also sure [that Manno’s four companions were | ween shooting Into the patch of wood where his body wae found. It ts easy to imagine what happened. He was Taken Under the Guillotine lured to that lonely spot, surrounded by men he believed to be friends, and shot down from all eldes. His body was almost cut to pleces by bullets, | and he never had @ chance to defend himself. | “That was no murder for robbery. It was a@ carefully plotted scheme to as- sassinate for revenge, and once we learn who f# the woman in the case, | we will solve the mystery, or | CARMEN SYLVA BEGINS | ANTI-CORSET CRUSADE, | BUCHAREST, Roumania, Feb, %.— Carmen Sylva, Queen of Roumanta, has just initiated a crusade against corsets by | land girls throughout Europe, appealing | to them to boycott them on the ground that they disfgure the natural beayty | and injure the health, The manifesto is being witely circu. lated In a dozen different languages. It y asks mothers to teach their children Those gay, volatile, optimistic Paris- the death penalty by the guillotine in| to @¥hor corsets, ——— |fans have a new fad. It is to be pho- | France was responsible for the photo- tographed with the head of the photo- !graphic fad, Alert. promoters, setaing| FARMING FOR CHILDREN. fe our. | Rrapheestinder the sharp knife of a guil- upon the extensive comment growing = that bologna dog of yours,” sald Magia. Selves on this point? A woman touches | jot!ne. from the rfots attending executions {n ‘ {rate Breen: “but. if this complainang |the zenith of hor beauty at twenty-threa, Ot oes tha Bullletine (4 not A pont [ececteds alatHeiat let er eace batted tpen | cares souene Bermupon ane) Mise AP can identify the sausage that is offered| Every morning atter reaching that age vaat H y eal Peden! ‘ mour, of Chicago, who Ilves at Hunting- here as Exhibit A I will have to hold! she should say to herself, ‘I am one guillotine any more than the automobiles the idea of using the uillotine as a ‘on, L. L, hae all the children of ter vil- you, too, | older; 1 have one mota/wrinkle; Tam 80 airships in the Coney Island Photo- photograph gallery “pror ' lage planning to turn gardeners in the Ber ele eae rae Onna ame Cried | eee ebook offers:no solution for the | Kraph gallertes are real automobiies and | Paris, always on the lookaut for the! spring window, These fellows come @ and problem {t present I suggested, |alrships. But the effect ts quite realis- | grotesque and the abr fell for the| Mra. Ferguson, who {# extremely fond ‘Swish!’ it makes a disappearance.” “Ie there a solution?” shrugged the | tic. The papler mache guillotine is fixed CAEN ITH LAY Gane have ¢ chiidren, ie distributing | ed. as freely get's counsel, but, the Court overruled| “And your terial rogid ‘ou mind | the neat willow box for the decapitated makes up to resemble Simona, the off-| gardin| © contest. tn which all the chil- jueation 1@ two prisoners we: ea: where you obtained it?” if thi t - | o 7 . y th ren nv! fo enter. Mre. rey: ma Band the (wo prlecnsrs wore | saying where. yom. quia ee body In exact Imitation of the actual In- | clal executioner, and stands by the aide) Uren, Are invlied te ental dre, Berges foot of saweage was valued| Urner answered, “but I know that it 1a| strument of death of the guillotine in the attitude of| fower and vegetable gardens and. fe- etn at ah true to tifa ‘The recent revival of the infliotion of sorineing the mechaniem, sults therefrom: uing @ manifesto to the women | M’GUIRE BOY, WHO IS MADE HAPPY BY (IGE (} Ml | SCHOOLBOY'S GIFT, | | was al its highest and the h war Y - SPOILS WALKING the air, and the wall made ¢ the wind kept Mrs, Reily’s Daily Supply Falls severe! Wash Carr! ect at High In 100 Tide, | The heavy southwesterly gate that @) j had been blowing all night drove good © @ | sized waves over the Battery sea wall * t S o'clock this morning when the tlde * 7 erable distance, he waves with the s spectacle, and j; is watched {t for ¢ more than a qu membered an engagement he had around the carner. Never Saw His Peril. So, swinging a dinky little cane and twirling his ttle waxed musta: sauntered to the laundry of EB. at No, 89 Eighth avenue, He wished to instruct) Grobet concerning — the starching of his pleated shirts, Just above the entrance to Grobet's laundry Hves Mrs, Hannah Reily, Mrs. | Relly weighs not quite 3 pounds, and ts considered by her neighbors as one of |~ the jolliest women In the world. She‘is | very fond of milk, and so are her chil dren. They absorb about a gallon or so of pure lacteal per diem, The supply had arrived about the time " F t the beautiful lawyer started for Grobet's | $3, mati bov of fourteen. Inclosed 18{ 0, Mrs, Relly turned It Into a large | , which my father has given me to vend to 3 Will you pl pay. the White pitcher, a substantial eleven-pound he, so Mrs, McGuire can get home to) pitcher, and set the pitcher out on the you, #0 he can wear Jt to school?| blowing. A shutter of Mrs. Relly's win- hanking you for iding to thig for! dow wi oping back and forth in| me, ag the address of Mrs, McGuire was | (ON Was Walloping back and : Lad of Fourteen Also Sends Son Clothing Fit to Stop Classmates’ Gibes. A hoy who Ilves In Portchester, and Whose heart ts In the right place, sent the following letter to The Evening World by messenger to-day: i ttor E ning World “Dear Sir: In this night's Evening World [ read the sad case of Mrs, Me Gulre, Who was sent to Jatl because she was unable to pay the fine Imposed upon her for not sending her boy to school, not mentioned tn your article and [| he reaton of that pitcher. Across the 1 could nee CE ty dt myself, 1 gm) way Mounted Policeman Hughes gat on yours try, LEWIS J. GLUICK.” |ite ohare z 3 | Bra; Ellen’ McGuire, ut her home hia charger, alertly scanning the thor oughfare | | Hughes's eve happened to fall on Vig- | giano and the milk pitcher at about the | @ money and cloth o.{ same time, He blinked and blinked turned eer to ner Weis, Meat, Were | again at the lawyer's coffee-colored suit, | ite BOC! and then noticed that the window shut- his new sult he grinned from ear to ‘ammered his ¢ ter was walloping that milk pitcher eur, stammered 118 thanks and at once | (ert Hercuty. ; | ° Perrine happleat Ittle shaver on) Pion more those short punches,”” sald Hughes to himself, that pitcher goes over.” | SHE'S “MRS. VANITY FAIR,” And Then the Deluge. | The words had scarcely passed his lips | |Mra, Gouyernenr Mo Cleara| when bang! over went the pitcher, No, the pitcher did not strike the street, Mystery of Fifth Avenue Shop, [gentle reader, nor was that gallon of }milk wasted upon the unfeeling pave- Who is "Mra, Vanity Fair?” had often |ment, Mr, Joseph Vigglano got It all been asked by persons who saw the |The milk left the pitcher while that ves- thriving Ilttle toy shop under that name [sel Was In downward flight, It was a pur 615 West Forty-elghth street, to-day ine formed an Evening World reporter that her fine had been pald PLAYER-PIAN This famous Piano equipped with the most marvellous self- playing attachment yet devised. Absolutely unequalled. Inspection invitea, Write for catalogue «xd full description. Easy verms if desired. Liberal allowance for old pianos. KRANICH & BACH body “and | rin white cascade, which brake upon at No, 458 Fifth avenue, since it ap- | * 2. | hat beautiful French hat | 237 East 23d Street) peared during the holid the summit of ¢ | NEW YO! ‘ork's most prominent scclety. w t sult, admitted to-day that the enterprise trea fown the pulchritudinons dandy's neck: into hia ears, eyes and mustache, The Pitcher followed the milk swiftly enough, landing squarely on the roof of the [French hat and driving {t neatly over Viggiano’s head. become such a ayecess she {8 willin |to confess to being "Mrs, Vanity Fair® “T always had a desire to do som thing of this sort,” sald Mrs. Mori “and felt that T could make a suc THE BEST WAYTOSAVEIS | “THE SAFE WAY TO SAVE” of tty hut T have really succeeded Detter nee aon y) He Cy ayy TAnBAges Write or call for our booklet ‘ The CNanuinaxpenter hut chin peaks," said Polleeran le Paster Start ey Hughes afterward, “but tho Jreash Safe Way to Save,” which gives full that came out of that hat lst fit particulars regarding our new $10 a month savings plen based on New. York City gusranteed mortgages, This, together with sample contract book, will be sent fr'¢ 'o any address Firat-Class Book of Reference, Wilmington (N. C.) Star, The New York World Almanac and | Encyclopaedia for 1909 {8 just from the press, It {8 what Its name im- | plles—an encyclopaedia as well as an ped some, not being able to get the hat up and off, but when he got up to Mrs ‘Reily's landing he sald enough to her to, spoll her good nature “When I got over there he was com ing down stalrs, neatly balanced on his Ir repeat. Of course he was lanslicap- ihe ss and the rim of that hat, and I re- almanac, It Be real first-class book rai to say that Mra, Relly was. send. |UPO® receipf of coupon below. of reference and {8 worthy of a place Ing remarks and odds and ends of| Mf Interested, Mail this Coupon to on the desk of every business and |{t- | household gear down after him. [|_ straightened the thing out as best [ [facts and statistics on almost every |°Cul" 3, exniaining he, poeiden tebe | conceivable subject, 176 Broadway, New York Please send ‘'The Safe Way to Save,'* “ advertised in The Evening World (N) to } erary man. Its 880 pages contain MAME. sseseeseres Address seeeenes 475 Remsen St., Bklyn, | Capital & Surplug | $80 Fulton St., Jamaica! $12,000,000 Sayings of Great Men the cream WASHINGTON, “T Cannot Tell a Lie.”’ They are either do figures He. facts that the wis | Noother FLOUR If you have any wants to be filled be one of the 7,000 advertisers in has the Quality | to-morrow’s Sunday World. v1) . : } ror ing H = by Gives Clue in Slaying | on Viggiano and Ruins His ces e f foal ee k e Candy by of Frank Manno, Brilliant Raiment. >. eters bony ? wants , eens x GAVE HER DIAMONDS. LIKEWISE HIS TEMPER. 2 Fellow-Workmen Declare Vic: | Combination of Freakish Wind 4 | tim Had Been Warned to | and Flapping Shutter Start | fy, ; | Cease Attentions, the Torrent, im | ee . | MY FAVORITES ‘ | ' That his infatuation, for a marrted | Jonoph Viggiano ix the Rerry Wall, The Best Chocolates 1 woman for whom he had bought dla. | Reau Brummel, Beau Nash, Petrontus, in the World is monds was In some way at the bottom and all the other dudes you could im- In the most Artistic } of the murder plot that resulted In the agine, of the West Side Court Bar As Boxes ever made. a assassination of Frank Manno, the soctation, Ie not only sets the fash it | handsome silk weaver, whose body was fons for hin fellow barristers, but ]]The Boxes contain only’ found tn a clump of timber near the leads them by about sixty-four sar Chocolates with Nut Englewood Country Club on Thursday 135 a Kneten ; Centers of such Purity, aftarncontillantheathaonovadvanced | by: esterday he was fairly radiant tna | sae Digilto, of Petrosino's dei i | {pea-green sult with a delleate pink bY Quality, Flavor and ‘\ . Bilto, roano'a detective [square In tt, a lavender necktie and tan, ff Deliclousness as can 3 staf, who has been assigned to ald the shoes with black uppers and pearl but- only be produced by 7 — = New Jersey police In their tnvestiga- } tons. Rut -day he was there with 1 tions | the real creme de la creme plece de OMABPL HERIER URNERo 8 told exclustvely In The Evening | resistance—a coffee-colored sult. with U . ee aan ————— ees —_— — ~ —— | World yesterday, a letter found in the} deep-blue braiding and a delicate ertm: 1 | | murdered man's clotiing showed that} son stripe eriss-crossing the bias seven NAM i iit MV rl fa) he had an account with the American jways from the seam, ‘The coat was | Wateh and Diamond Company, of No. 3 eut swallowtail, the trousers semt-dl- Large dize | , | | u ) rv Malden lane From this clue Digitlo rectoire, and the waisteoat princess. “MY See ” ! has gathered evidence that convinces |In addition to this he wore a_ tall ad d , y | him that tho eternal triangle was in- |French hat of the famous Rows: more than a pou iif PROB i CHIP PASS NGERS volved In the shooting to death of the -- —— | pattern, a lapis Iazull necktte, pale 5 $1.00 : | big weaver. | low shoes and submarine green spats. ie { i {| Bought Diamonds for “Fiancee.” ‘SCHOOLROY PAYS There really wasn't much doing In the “ Mee rneuees ” Manno went to the Jeweller's two courtroom when Vigglano arrived, but \ A ] months ago and purchased a pair of that little stopped. ‘Three San Juan Hill gore than a half pound i j diamond earrings on the Instalment ! ’ | dudes, who sut In the back of the tri- 30 cents y t 1 plan, When asked what he intended to Dunal, fainted from sheer envy and there Small atze A lo with them he reptied: “I am going I, might have been more casualties hadn't cr ° He ——— | ‘ ct to give them to a woman I expect to the superb young lawyer suddenly re- MYIFAVORITES an | —_—_>—_ }

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