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on RL WAS ANGRY TH FATHER WHE SHE DISAPPEARED Louise Swan Had Threatened to Leave Home Next Time She Had Quarrel. HER MOTHER IS WORSE. Missing Daughter Had Con- sulted Many Working Girls About Their Ways of Life. Refore Loulse Swan dropped out of sight Monday after withdrawing de- posits in the Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn amounting to some $50, she had fully Investigated varlous working girls’ homer and retreats, studied different vocations for young girls and express») A determination to “leave home the next Ume sho had a quarrel with her father.” This information was brought to WI!l- fam R. Swan at No. 11 West Thirtteth street to-day by detectives who invest!- td some of fifty or more names of js found in a small leather indexed Kk. Some were in the missing girl's hand writiog and there also in- closed a typewritten ilst. The names Were those of working giris who live in the neighborhood of Fifth avenue and fhirtiethh street and whom Miss Swan visited during the time she was supposed to be attending evening churen servicer ‘The girl's Afth day away from home has further diminished her mother's ebhances of living, Mrs, Swan t# under the care of three physicians and delirt- ously eries for her absent daughter. Upiates are administered constantly, No word of Louise has reached the parents, Relatives have been wired to as far west #m Chisago, but none ha rd of the you! Not one of the score of cr 1 boy friends from Eras- mus Ligh School have heard of Miss Swan, ELOPEMENT THEORY GETS A SETBACK. Young Thomas William Coreoran, a Bankers’ Trust Company clerk, with whom Miss Swan was at Manhattan Heach Sunday night, called on her fatner to-cay and told bow the young women sp ‘an heard s : of William Pari, a Lov 1 Ratiroad evil en- ginger s won her admira- tion, Covoran, who was a wolboy awoetheart of the girl, thougst she might Pave eloped. ‘aril, |owever, was loeated over the wire and sald he had not seen Miss Swan {n several weeks, From tliss Maud § a telephone operator the Hote! Seville, It was learned thitt Miss Swan frequently vis- ed Miss Anne Randolph, a clerk in tel. Misa Rando!ph is now on her vacation. ss Spink says the gir frequently issed the differeat wa a yo uke an inde- pendent 1 s Wwo'l A mis a clerk ina avent ylives at a girls how Miss had asked he tlons about Ler wages, hours of work, her treatment by her employers, and living. Mins Wooting 4s ald sie would find a place jarreiled y her agaty Other young women of the working class, whose nawes Miss Swan erviewed with similar “ecollec Vons of the missing git MUARREL WITH FATHER LASTED TILL MONDAY. Tt is known xirl's quarrel with her nicd over from Sund, en , home from fatier’s command, until ened Kirsed her mother affectionately, re- marking that she had been good to her, but said no word of farewell to the futher. The Delieve the girl put on an ol€ gowr to give weight to hex appli or for © working posi- Hon. “If Loulse ts working and Itving alone In some cheap room she could not have heard of her mother's condi. tion or sie would have returned,” de- clared her father to-day, ‘I'm afratd she ts detained, for I can't belleve my, danghter would leave her mother in such a pitiable pl t. Either thet or remorse over running away has seized her, and maybe-—well, {f she did any- | thing to herself we would know by now, wouldnt we?" The po say Miss Swan will turn up as soon as her money runs out. They believe she does not credit her father's report of Mrs. Swan's fIlness, and for this resson will not reveal her hiding place. “The girl haa almply gone to work,” ald a detective to-day. "She was tired f being told to come home early, and jet out for herself, ike hundreds of other girls ave done, Maybe she'll come back in a few days and, maybe not, It depends on her nerve and her ability to make goo¢, I think this gtr! wil! return home.” ‘The police are still working on the case, but not enthustastically, —— GLAD HE SHOT TWO, July %—'T killed I got her grand- JACKSON, Miss., my wife; and I bellev mother; I did a « job and I am willing to die for it,” sald Emmet Yeagley, twenty-two years old, who shot and Killed his sixteen-year-old wife of four months and probably fa- tally wounded her grandmother, Mre. Nell Pierce, fitty-six years old, at their home here yesterday, Yeagley sur- rendered to a passer-by and was taken to the police station, Yeagiey says he hi letters from friends declaring his wife unfaithful, He on the point of delivering them to her yesterday when he says the two women declared they were going to kill him, “Then I pulled my gyp q fe tty sescription a Good One, but Prescribed Dose of a Year| Spent Apart Is Too Drastic for Cases That Are Not Hopeless. Briet Absence May Cure a Petty Quarrel, but Affection Would be Strong Indeed to Survive Twelve Months’ Cold Storage. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Trial separation is the very latest thing tn mart- tal fashions. The new mode was introduced by Judge Frederick E. Crane of Brooklyn yesterday when he granted Mrs. Mingle MecNell Dodson s temporary decree to be in effect one year. “Possibly during that Hme,” said the learned Court, ‘the wife may have etetone of good qualities in her husband that she Ras heretofore overlooked, and by granting @ drlef separation the dest results may de served. And then he added these words of wisdom about NIXOTA. parente-tn-law: GREELEY® SMITH “It 1a only @ chance suggestion, but tf the elder Jolks would let the young couples settle their cton troubles and quarrel out their own differences without adding their wellintentioned but mis- directed advice, thinge might calm doton in the househotd,” COULDN'T SEE PAY : WA GOOD TNE where angels might weep, but would O'Connell’s Offer to Count refrain from giving advic: Undoubtedly the principle of Judge Him in the Merry Party for the Fare Didn’t Go, | Crane's decision 1s a very good one, | #0 a very old one, as old as “Absence makes the heart grow fonder’ and/ other classics. The idea that marri persons require a vacation from other formed the subject of “What the Doctor Ordered,” one of next season's plays PRESCRIPTION 18 GOOD, BUT DOSE TOO STRONG. ‘A judge ts a sort of marital surgeon, A setter of broken hearts if not of broken noses; a physician who t# only called tn when Cupid feets the death rattle in his throat. | 1 believe in Jud | Crane's prescription for the unhapplly married, if It be taken In homoeopathic doses. But separation for a year by no} With @ countenance indicating all the means @ homoeopathic do! It ts quite} evidences of a merry, busy evening, | possible that absence for a fortnight or even a month might open a woman's eyes to her husband's good qualities or make a man his wife's attractions in a rosier light. But elther is apt— Indeed, almost certain—to do far more forgetting than remembering, when the separation {s prolonged for a whole year. Thomas McMasters, the chauffeur, When a married couple separate, even | #a!d O'Connell boarded his cab at Third for what seems to others a trivial| @venue and Fourteenth street last night, ‘ause, the breach !s far too serious to/ With @ friend, and ordered a trip to be heaied by @ few wellemeaning plati-| Chinatown. The trip gathered momen. tudes. For one thing, the terrible force’ tum at Chatham Square and went ali of self-love, which prevents either from the way to Coney Island. Th it admitting to being In the wrong, grows tarried, according to MeMasters, th stronger as the ties of custom and affec-| various places and sometimes two and James J. O'Connell of No. $1 Prince atreet, by profession, to quote his awn description, “broker, specularor and friend of ‘Big Tim’ Sullivan,” explained to Magtstrate Barlow, in Yorkville Court to-day, why he refused to pay a taxi- cab fare of $22.50 last night. tlon Jessen. | three times in the same plac The sh husband or wife who The friend was lost, but O'Connell leaves ne in a fit of pique will go found more. After a while they wearled and he tool the taxie against a lam and Third av ané generally to without the tntervention of nging a sult fer separa- natter of a day or a them to Brooklyn, still in MeMasters delivered him ost at Fourteentn street nue and turned a spot. pack light on the taxi e reedin , n who perstets tn | go za, taxt clock reeding fi ssion of centuries) "Nix," sald Mr. O'Connell. re not very Iltely | T've bought you $22.50 worth of drinks. You've had just as good a time as chan a | gives | of us. Take $157" 7] Separation is an admission | |," “Muzzle not the ox that treadeth out | ; ich no man or woman| fhe corn. sal Medasters, sto: When elther does mako| gio, e he green Nehte owe pulsively, { tar too| "Thus came they to the Fast Twenty- ferious a matter for outside sdviee 19 | second street station, where Mr. O'Con-| ertatned for the night on a istered with varnish. in getting him-| nnell was fined Magistrate Barlow refused to make O'Wonnell display the badge which MOTHERS-IN-LAW IN GENERAL. ARE PEACEMAKERS, Judze Crane's {4ea that parents- in-law ara very much to blame MeMasters #aid gilttered under ht does not apply very often. There | NN Ly ameal bot apply very indicating that he was a clty oficial aro more mothern-in-law who Keep | told to sue. for his! ther than who young people tog O'Con paid his fine from tne) tend to separate ‘hem, outer layers of a large green bale of The b 19 "Kees home to mamma" | currency, and sald “Pooh—pooh!" to the after the first tiff 1s very apt to be sent| chauffeur as he went out to freedom. Kk with some practical advice which — | may mako more tolerant wife. 1/GHORUS GIRL MUST COME | that this ts always a de-) We remember Tennyson's | TO PRESS ASSAULT CASE. piciure of Amy grown old—| Sener ted to her petty part mes urtle If Burnett Girl Fails to Appear {horde of xIma preaching down a ~ a daughter's heart." | Charge Agaicat Schubert 1 ie. | ‘The roparation of f!l-mated couples ts! desirable and when tt 1s pre-| 1¢ Mary Taylor Burnett, the former Winter Garden chorus girl, fails to vented, as it often ts, by considerations of the greater cost of Hberty, both the, come into the Court of Special Bessionn | | | | husband and wife are cheapenes. The next Wednesday from her present abode, | Judge who ns a divorce or @ sepa-| Atlantic City, to proseoute Manager | ration to two persons who wien tt 18| Jacob J, Shubert, whoso arrest she | tke a surgeon who refuses to operate, | Caused on March 9) laat, her case of ri ie social surgery—nothing | #4ult againat him will be thrown out hy | for. worce In social F iniee Justice Russel, ore. . ty| Lawyer Max D. Steuer, who repre- A brief absence may cure & DetY) sents Mr, Shubert, appeared in court quarrel, but as men women | to-day to move for the dismassal of the older they realize the ty of petty! charge and set forth, in addition to his quarre’a and do thelr best to avold contention that the gire bore no signs them, After all, the law of the survival | of injuries, and could produce ne wit- ¢ the fittest applies in matrimony as! Nesses to the alleged assault, that she \ every:hing else, and even judges had removed herself from the juriedic- oan do nothing to change It. {tion of the court and was unwilling to | eens ave affections (return to it. ‘The motion was opposed The husband or wife wh fect be aOUlGh “was Obnoped | survive © yous Judicial separation LRT ee siorney | must » y sluggish of feeling or of + Who assured the Court t brain, Remaining apart #0 long, th vould “do his level beat” to b cannot love each o:her very much, if) fair client back to prasa her o) at all, And a man mus very trust-| Ws on this pron that the care wes ing, and a woman ver) soph aticated, | PM over until July to take theiv wedding certitcata out of —_——— : the judictal icebox after auch # loos) FOR WEST SIDE Y, M. C, A, | and voluntary separation bly a wort of cold storage affec- 850,000 to Be Pos: nt in Remodelling tion might survive such an ordeal, I Ground Floor of Building. suppose when Cupld ts jost dead, rolling him on a barrel may induce Fifty thousand dollars will be spent artificial respiration for a little while, by the West Side Young Men's Chriv- |} But why distur his iaet howts with Jation on West Fifty-seventt j such an ordeal? 1 the ground floor of | METZ FOR CHARITY BOARD. pny . in vor, When West Side have one of the largest and gest | Governor Names Ex-Comptrolter— ed ¥. M,C. A, lobbies ink the Other Appotatmente, The plan is to make a lobby 80 by ALBANY, July #1.—Gov, Dix sent the following nominations to the Senate last 40 feet, to thr The club idea will be adhered aghout in the furnishing, and night for confirmation: thore will be an abundance of large, | Oommissioner of the State Board of TOOMY chairs and lounges i" | Chartties, Second Judicial District—Her- | 18 the basement there will be in- ! ‘A. Mets, Brooklyn, vice Augustus | #tflled @ hot room, steam room and ne fre 7 thes drying room. all of plate glass. Ma; signed. For the bu: department, on the Trustee State 8c and Sailors’ pifty-sixth atrect side of the bullding, New York, tiere be another big lobby 72 by THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 9#t, 1911." Trial Separation for Matrimonial Tangles Is Latest Device, Offered by Brooklyn Judge New Photograph of Louise Swan; Disappearance Is Still a Mystery aa. LOUISE SWAN, WOMAN IS LATEST |RUNAWAY GIRL CHOLERA VICTIM | 1S WEDDED AND TEN NOW DEAD! PAPAIS ANGRY Another Passenger From the! Mildred and Her Moltke Succumbs at Swin- | Walking Home While Mr. Rudd Seeks Indictment. burne Island. | Another death from cholera, the Mildred, i | 4 tbreak in the vicinity y tho sixteen-year-old daughter of Goorgs Rudd, a wealthy retired real port, was reported today, but | 01 Gm es ro were no new cases, The vietim | “Ate “ester of No, 1979 Morris avenue, Was Francesca Arcardia, % years 21d, | ‘"® Bronx. has been caught once more. one of tie Moltke's parsengers, She | Since she ran away Tuesday ehe has succumbed on Swinburne Island. eyes married, Her husband is Vincent byl Hina tq { Mlcarl (who prefers to be called Daly), Until tho cholera epidemic in Italy {41g Chauteur. Mr ida went te ae suppressed, every Ttallan immigrant | Distrtet-Attorney to-day and eated no will be subject to an individual bactor- | hove Micar! indicted for abducting « fological examination {n every port of the United States, by order of Surgeon, General Wyman tn Washington, The Principe di Piemonte, from Genoa and Naples, with 118 cabin and| 916 steerage passengers and a crew of 128, te held at quarentine, but no suse Piclous cases have been found, Two more vessels from Italian porte a@irl under age, Mildred ané her husband were caught at Stamford. They were walking back from Now Haven to New York to ank the forgiveness of Pa Rudd, which, by all tho signs, they will not met. Mildred han got on hiv temper, whtch {a none of the best. There ts a longelegged re- tar tn the Brot ! co trl are due at Quarantine to-day, and whon | nets A td Nien they are held the feeding and care Of| had the run of his life for three blocks the several thousands of detained pas-/ tie aye tha: if he were Micarl te sengers will become & serious question. | yout he watking in ime nett he There was no hearing yesterday in|)” na ta 'mom any diveation the laquiry. into Dr. Doty's manager | 20%, S88 mention except toward New ment of Quarantine affair el os Gov, Dix, in Albany, yesterday told young bride told Detective Ber- Charlos N, Bulger, the Spectal Commis. | Kent Hofferan, who arrested her and sioner, that in future the Doty inquiry | 20" Dusband, that she and Micart firet must not interfero with the proper per-| Went to Portohester after she eluded formance of their dutios by the em-| er brother at @ party at a friend's ployees at Quarantine, | house Monday night, There she pawned ‘This order was the result, tt ts under- "er @tamond ring for §15 and bought stood, of complaints that Lawyer Dush- ‘lekets for New Haven, kind, by subpoenaing many Quarantine) Getting @ license was easy, but no ofMctals, had hendicapped Dr, Doty and! his ataff, EE MRS. MALCOLM DOESN’T KNOW HER SON’S BRIDE. Hasn't Heard From Boy and Is Not Concerned Over Marrlage, "YT never heard apoak English very well and who was |Persuaded to perform the ceremony, They then went to South Norwalk, There their money gave out, and they started thetr hike to New York, They were trying to pawn Mildred’e fine ponges coat at @tamford when they were arrested. Micari {# @ chauffeur for a netghbdor of the Rudd family, George Rudd $r. of Ro om 1 am told! took a fancy to him and took him married ® " gatd Mos | home, The chauffeur's personality ald Geor 1, Malco Sout 1, not please Mr. Rudd, and when he be. 1 t .'pan to show ardent atter to Mtl and what 1 dred ihe wae told to keap out of the H th 7 sled Pretty soon after that the newspapers was were full of Mildred’s hair rating tale I have not heard from my « of being Kida. a ‘tall, dark Se THRIeAl an expect to heay Htallan looking chauffeur," who took 4 her to Brooklyn and threw her in @ from ham dungeon, from whioh escaped next a Malcolm {s tha widow of George tt rd runaway, I, Malcolm, the broker w oma took the story suicide last Octolx & off the | serionsty Fall River bout Her son ee tn Jullan is twent He YALE MAN DIVORCED, yerried y Ay “ fa Je t Jus > W B to i th a ( Wite of Prof. Shepard at er home as £ ster Charged Crueity, oo RENO, Judge Moran tord 850,000 OMAN POLE ef alvatea 1s POUGHKEEPSIE, Ju Ruth ¥ dard trom W uel W. Bowne of New ¥ ‘i 1 New Haven day gave $0,000 to this ol axeed eruelt berouloais hospital inn at ma t husband, the hospitat to entific School a» Samuel W. Bowne } 1 tof he pital” clty Is now fatter 440,000 tuberculosis , 1 Bowne's gift hl amt TWO RICH WOMEN Head of Novelty Compan Found Dead in Atlantic City, Bullet in Heart. |She Had Charged Rich Mrs. Holme With Having Stolen His Love. Twe women, than $1,000,000, 6 engaged in spent money like water and floated hi friende on champagne. The dramatis personae: Mrs, Lizsie H. Holme, who, as Miss Liszte Hastings, was in 1802 a @lender, beautiful brunette, with « hhalf-interest in the $2,200,000 estate left her by her father, C. C, Hast- ings. Mrs. Saran 8. D. Dunn, widow of the suicide and widow jn turn by race of law of a San Franciaco ad- vertising man, and then of “Dixie” Rosenbaum of San Franolaco, who left her $200,000 from which she made $1,000,000. A suicide chapter told of her second widowhood. James T. Dunn, twelve years ago © well known boulevandier of Now York, later tho keeper of a theat- tical hotel at New Haven, then manager of Mrs. Rosenbaum's hotel, next her husband, and then secre- tary and friend of Mrs. Holme. Dr. Fraser C. Fuller, popular mem- falling from his horse in camp with the fashionable troop, who clandes- tinely married the young heir: of his nuptial da the City Court of New York, aecretary to former May now a resident of Parts. QREAT DRAMATIC NOVEL, Few dramatists or novelists of the |mode have more material stored away lone than {# afforded |in their imagt FOUCHTOVER DUN, WO TOK HLF AT WAR WITH HIS WIFE each possessing more battle over the affections of James T. Dunn, the news of whose suicide at Atlantic City came to-day as @ most interesting topic for the veteran gos- stpers of the White Way. In the tan- gled story of human interest that led up to his suicide there is a complex | earten of chapters containing young | lofe, mature love, one previous suicide | boardwalk at Atlantic City. A lively | end the dashing career of @ man who ber of Troop B, who was killed by | twenty years ago, sought @ divorce four months after his marriage, lost Ine suit and was killed within « year Leicester Holme, former Judge of later Hugh J. Grant, separated from his wife and | WOMAN ACCUSED OF STEALING LOVE OF JAMES T. DUNN y halr-puilling match ensued. ‘The two were finally parted, and Dunn and Mra, Holme disappeared from Atlantio City. Dunn nex: came Into the public ey | when his wife filed her $260,000 allena- j tion sult. This action was to be called |for trial when Mra. Holme secured portponement that she might obtain the | testimony of witnesses In San Fran- viave. On May 10 last, not long after post- | Dunn had his wife arrested In the Mint | Arcade Bullding in Philadetphia, where he had a novelty concern. He told the Magistrate that she came to his office and threatened to shoot him. Mra, Dunn satd #he called upon the advice of a New York lawyer to see her husband about proper support for herself and denied threatening Dunn, She said he had squandered her fortune of $500,000 since her marriage to him. This Dunn denied, declaring pi wife never had $500,000, Mrs, Dunn wi | discharged at the hearing. BEST MAN AT WEDDING BECAME SECOND HUSBAND. Mrs. Holme, defendant in Mra. Dunn's suit, was well known in New York about twenty years ago. When she was sixteen years old she was secretly mar- tied to Dr. Fraser C. Fuller, first ser- |weant of Troop A. Letcester Holme, at that time secretary to Mayor Hugh | J. Grant, had been appointed her guard- |tan, and he acted as best man at the | secret marriage Not long after the wedding Dr. Fuller | Husband |ALt THE MATERIAL FOR A sued his wife for divorce, naming Holme as corespondent and making sensa- tlonal charges, Holme meanwhile had ‘ome a Judge of the City Court. Dr. Fuller failed to prove bis charges and iy Ponement of the hearing in the sult, | LEFT $3,500 GEMS ~ INHER AUTO AND THEF OT THEM Mrs. McMurtry Hid Fact Sev- eral Days Because Husband Dreads Notoriety. $1,000 REWARD OFFERED Theft Committed on Fifth Avenue With Crowd Passing and Chauffeur in Car. No trace had been found to-day by the police of the thief or of the $3,600 Worth of jewels stolen from the axto- motile of Mrs, George Gibson MoMur- try, No. §12 Fifth avenue, while she wan absent for ten mintues on Monday morning. Mrs. MoMurtry is the wife of the for- mer president of the American Sheet Steel Company, who came from North- western Pennsylvanta, hes had a rapid riso tn Wall atreet and le said to be one of the 600 men in New York worth more than a million whose names are rarely seen tn print. ‘Tho stolen Jewels, consisting of a dta- | mond and pearl necklace with pendant, diamond crescent brooch, email dlamond heart pin, and $% in bills, were in @ black bag. While the police fiz their vale at 88.50, Mra MoMuetey conatd- ered them priceless because they were heirlooms. The loss of the jewels only became | public after a reward of $1,000 for their recovery was offered. According to Mrs, McMurtry’s chauf- | feur there were many persone passing | the machine at the time of the rob- bery. ‘Mrs. McMurtry had Just returned from & yachting cruise, and stopped on her | way home to obtain a curio which she | had admired in the window of a sbi mn West Seventieth street, The hunt for the Jewels te being con- ducted by George Gibson McMurtry $r., member of the brokerage firm of Ben- Jamin, Fergueon & McMurtry, No. 49 ‘Wall street, who is responsible for the offer of a $1,000 reward, but declared to-day that he was simply acting for “George Gideon,” named in the adver- tisement. At the MoMurtry home to-day the servants were cautioned not to talk, while the son at his Wall street of- fice declared that Gideon had left implicit instructions thet these should be no publicity,” addin “Mr. Gibson would rather lose the Jewels than get in the limelight.” FOR A BATTERY PARK “GYM.” Mesx Meeting To-Night to Farther by this combination of people and of "9 was dismissed. the Prosect. incidents, all focused and brought to A few days after the dismissal of the , a common atory by the fatal popping of te Dr. Fuller met Holme on a “ong Citizens in the late “Battery Dat ja revolver in the Atlantic City Hotel, I#and Clty ferryboat and the two Finn's district will assemble to-night tn | According to despatches from Atlantic “ame to blows. Holme, according to the Huron Club, Hudson and Spring |City, Dunn went there yesterday morn- TePOFt, got the worst of the argmuent, streets, to organize an effort to induce tng from Philadelphia and registered at a few weeks Dr. lor was the city authorities to locate an athiet- a well known hotel. He was not acen t8rown from’a horse while at Stat fleld and ovtdoor gymnasium at Bat- again all day and last night the man- (ai0p with Troop A and sustained a tery Park, ager nent a chambermaid to his room. )! é. from which blood polson| This \dea was one of the most cher- and he was found dead, He had chor ceveioped and caused his death, Al ished of the deceased Tammany leader's tmaelf through the heart with @ “s- ut ward Holme and s for the betterment of his district. widow were married The speakers will be Alderman Will- volver, which lay by his side » Holme had become an ex- tam Dr Chairman; Congressman Mrs. Dunn ts represented In New Yor commissioner and was regarded as) Daniel J. Riordan; Richard J. Malloy, by her ettornes, L. E. ‘Warren, she ia of the most prominent young poll-|Dantel E. Finn, Senator James D, Me- nald to be in Hurope and her cago (leans In the olty. Not tong after hiv Clelland, William J. A. Caffrey, Thomas against Mrs. Holme ts due to be called 2 ' Pgeon taal P. Caughlan and John J. Ryan. i anwhe oxcise commiasion- eee piney ae und went to take up his home In Paris | home at the Ansonia when | : Mfo of the couple aia but he t¥ not tn the city, She was a pos tant Joni, and Mra, Holme left her [San Francisco at the last report, husband, returning to this country, Her Dunn had achieved much notoriety next move was to sue Holme to ree Py hates nece tin ie seeks Co 1 bonda she had put in He went to New Haven and was pro- « for im, the income of prietor of the Hotel Metror ater go- Ww! a to Bim.” Holme. Sear Ing to San Francisco not long after the th una. Gey Pe nee There he m Rosenbaum, widow of “Dixte" Roser baum, a weulthy San Francivoan, Mr nbaum had divorced her first hi band, an advertising man named Roi thauake. | | mitted # $200,000, which rumor aa! creased to $1,000,000 by ments. Dunn and Mrs, Rosenbaum were mai she had careful invé priest would marry them, and they | ried in Los Angeles in 1907 and Dunn wandered about until they found the|pecame manager of the Bt. Brancta 9. Rochelle, father-tn-law of Brodie L. rector of a German ohureh, who did not! jiore! in San Francisco, whieh his wife Duke, multt-miliionaire tobacco manu hed and fitted handsomely, HOLME GOT FORTUN had furn MRB. t Mra, Harah ers, and married Kosenbaum, who com- (de, leaving her a fortune of Dunn. al career and re- signed his offices to accompany his wife to Para at her behest and that he was entitled to an Ho won the ault Mra, Holme then went to San Fran- ciaco to live and it was there she met She t# supposed to be in San y-| Franciaco now getting testimony to t-| fight Mra, Dunn's alfenatton sult, <M N. Conv’ RALEIGH, Dake c, July facturer, has been convicted of Mquor welling and operating a “blind tiger’ Rochelle was convicted In April and income during hie life. | Fatablished Over 60 N. S. BRANN 231 Eighth Ave. (Det, B1et and 924 sts.) RETIRING FROM BUSINESS | doa agi Wied aol haces Regardless of Cost! | OPEN EVENINGS i 5 GRAND RAPID Manufacturer FROM FATHER, sentenced to #ix monthe tn jail, but Not tong afterward he met Mra, {00% ®n_appeal Low Prices Holme, one of two heirs to the estate of — | Easy Terms | more than $2,000,000 left by her father, 9 WE PAY FREIGHT ic. Hastings, who died more than r 61.00 WEEKLY twenty years ago in New York, Mra e On ¢ ele Favkans lolme " part from her [Bere a are, Dunn laters PERFEOT | 01.Beweetty, 8100 Mra. H and Dunn became | $2.95 on $150 friondly. $3.00 on $200 r en be of the ‘125ch St, Station New ‘ fot é and > York Central &. BR. wifo alieged that Aira. H ad spent not only cleanses, esand and New York, New icy Dor wa Mba Hone Deautifies the teeth without ine RB one block away. disa ved from Ban f sco at th ‘ 4 OPEN SATURDAY dueserentag fan Me jury, butimpartspurityand fre- an sarURD thine they Toft tometer for the grance to the breath, removing lowed them, t! h od f tob. A te he later Dunn met Mstantly the odor o acco, her husband and Mrs. ne on th 3 Cc ‘ White Prose CEYLON TEA One Quality Only, the Best Dandy for Iced Tea 362FIFTHAV, New York City. Near 34th Street. est selection of Viet: aut the ‘test stu ka Greater FISHER RNITURECO £.125°*Sr "MADISON AV J.& J.Colman, Ltd LONDON D.S.F.Mustard Relish HIGH CLASS GET F YOUR GROCER