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| ccs pO TINE ST oe See, SCUSED WIFE SKS USTCE NO 10 SON DECREE Mrs. Don Adele Williams De- | , @lares She Never Saw Ref- eree, Asks Open Trial, | RAID STORY IS DENIED. Doctor-Co-respondent Ex-| plains That Woman Was Pa- tient in His Sanitarium ‘When Mrs. Dona Adele Williams, wife @ John D. Williams, general press Fepresentative for Charles Frohman, read in The World to-day the news that & referee in a divorce action against her was about to present his findings fm favor of the decree to Justice Ford im the Supreme Coyrt to-day, she was @ very much surprised and indignant young woman. After a brief but heated talk over the telephone with the lawyer she had re- tained to defend the action, Mrs, Will- fams addressed the following telegram 4% Justice Ford: “This morning’s World says you will confirm referee's recommenda- tions against me in Williams ‘vs. Williams, T appeal for delay, as I never asked for a referee, never wanted one, had no hearing, neyer aw referee. Proceeding moat Ir- regular. I ask for a trial in open court. DONA ADELE WILLIAMS. ATTORNEY SAYS SHE NEG- LECTED TO APPEAR. Further than saying that this teie- gram contained all the statement she cared to make public until she had consulted with a new lawyer, Mra, Williams declined to discuss the mat- ter further to-day. William Klein, who was her attorney until to-day, is general attorney for the Shubert theatrical Interests, It was sald on bis behalf that he had notified Mrs Williams to appear before the rofereo and that she had not appeared, end that therefore no defense could be made for her. Her friends ssy that she was i at the time and id not know the nature of the proceedings. curs, Williams fe a aister-tn-law of Pau) Armstrong, the playwright, and she was visiting her sister at the Arm- strong estate near Annapolis when she yecame engaged to marry Mr. Williams, The testimony taken before Referee Roger Foster, which has been filed with the County Clerk, with the report fa- voring the granting of the decree, named Dr. William E. Young of No. 59 ‘West Sixty-ffth street as co-respon- Gent, and told of a raid made there on the night of July 6, 1910, by William Chitvers, counsel to Williams; Wilitams imeelf, Joseph Williams, his brothe: ‘William J. Delaney, a law clerk; Ed- ward J. Techimbke, Edgar 1. Flanders | aictum that it 1s not proper for a sec- and Bennett C. Carter, a private detec: | ong person to place a pen in the use- tive BEOLARES HER HIS SANITA- RIUM PATIENT. ‘Dr. Young #ai4 to an Evening World reporter to-day at his office: “I bave known Mrs. Williams as « pa- tleat, my books show, since July, 1909. I wae called by her first to the St. Paul Hotel, of which I am house physician, and found her suffering keenly from nervousness. She had at that time separated from her husband and in & contition bomMering on nervous col- lapse. She has been in my professional charge at trregiiar intervals ever since. “Tt te true that she has, at times when she felt could not control her nerves, had recourse to the reassurance which my presence as a physician ga her. She was at my sanitarium when her husband and confederates forced entrance. Incidentally, they made hasty exit while I was securing possession of @ revolver, under the impression that they were marauders, Mrs, Williams was in one of my rooms at the time. ‘The allegations connecting my name with hers in anything but @ profes. sional capacity are absurd.” “Moreover, I may say that I was never served with any notice of the action, as I am told that a co-respond- ent in the action should have been, and er asked to appear before the I ad have a lawyer obtain from Mr. Klein a copy of the summons an@ complaint which had been served on Mra, Wiliams.” One of the storming party, according to the testimony before Referee Foster, had & key to the hall door of the house, On effecting an entrance he rang the doc- tors bell and got the physician to open *he door of his flat, John D, williams testified that he von thirty years old, and his wife twenty-six, He said he marrted the de- fendant on Jan, 2%, 1907, and that he had not lived with his wife for about three THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1911. Young Metropolitan Opera Singer Who Had Trouble With Officials THROWS OUT WILL SIGNED BY HAND ANOTHER GUIDED) AFTER BIG RAID Surrogate Fowler Says There Is No Proof That Aid Was Requested. In refusing to admit to probate thi second will of Miss Anne L. Surrogate Fowler to-day laid down thi less hand of a paralyzed testator and guide her in writing her name or mak tator, Miss Mooney‘s first will was of thi date of May 19, 1910. posed of her property to Catholi charities, The second will, which hi Just been rejected by the Surrogat was dated November 17, 1910. ficiary. ‘The second will was executed whil She had suffered @ stroke of paralysi and was unable to use her hands, Th mark above her written name. It years William J, Delany, the law clerk, told the story of the raid. ‘The gentlemen who were with me ran into ® bedroom, and we saw Mrs Wiiams, who had app’ ly been in bed. She had on a night robe, and Dr. Young a He asked what we wanted and Mr. Chilvers asked if Mrs. Wiliams was there. Dr. Young made some answer and tried to close the door in our faces, but we forced our way in.” “HELLO, JOE!" WAS HER GREET- ING TO BROTHER-IN-LAW, ben we got into Dr. Y *s apart: | ment,” Carter, the detective, testified, “Mr, Chilvers said we wanted Mrs. Don Adele Williams, and’ Dr, Young sald nero was no Mrs, Williams there. I went Into the bedroom. Mr. Chilvers Mt the gas. Mrs, Williams was in bed. Jumped and ran into a drobe or closet Just opposite the bed. One of the gentlemen with me lit a match and held up her face while he looked at her, ‘She raised up her pead and said, as har ast remember, ¢ ilo! Joe!’ ‘Helio! \ Mooney, ing her mark unless a request for such Assistance has been mude by the tes- By this she dis- In it Mrs, Shaughnessey was named af sole bene- Mise Mooney was on her dying bed. testimony offered showed that the law- yer who drew up the will placed a pen in the useless left hand of the testator and guided her hand while she made a The surrogate also doubts the legality ROOSEVELT'S PET SLEEPS IN GELL Port Warden Braun, as “Com- mon Gambler,” Unable to Get Bail in Station, o| Marcus Braun, one of the Port War- dens of New York, bosom friend of o | Col. Theodore Roosevelt and for many years a special investigator in the Im- migration Bureau of the Department of Commerce and Labor and the Treas. sex Market Court to-day with eleven others, The charge against the dozen pris- e But she stayed abroad only 0 o ec that they were common) veexs, Her patrons had neglected |" Braun and ten of his fellows were|t#ke account of one thing—love. | It was, therefore, with considerable | discharged, A man giving the name of Thomas Raynor of No, 1719 Madi- son avenue was held. * Braun and the others were captured at 12.90 o'clock this morning In a raid on the Waldorf Club at No, 24 Ei Fourteenth street. Sergt, Ray and seven S| policemen engineered the raid and |Teer and devote herself to wifely duties, sacrific om iy var. © | chopped through two tcebox doors. Pa-|the young singer married Mr. Rabinoft and Boston critics praised 1 - Ca ; i : wae trolman Victor Meyer of Inspector |in New Jersey in March, 1910, and went) highly the voice of the young russels Rugs,10.97 E I h A ° E el d Hayes's ataft was with the raiders and |to California, season when she appeared in nglish or American Ename le picked out Braun and Rayner as tho | conductors of the place, They were Moyer swore he looked through a win- il in which the testator point RE A et ek oe on the ground floor, saw Rayner out the be n| inning @ roulette wheel and saw | dicated. He furt the | eae, 5 he! raun watking around in @ supervisory | Soe eee dittetent door, Braun, he sald, had chips tn his| : hand | ; Braun sald nothing during the co | Mx. Chilv don wen Mn’ Witans'e | Drees tele petting Selon Oe or brother. She Was clad in @ nightgown , a eee ee | j beat ne WAR ag Lo i irt-room after his discharge an Even. | and her clothes were on a chair at the] ing world reporter sald to him: ond if | "Mr. Hraun, your identity 1s known, | Jos Hoo Raat ahs lvoe cette eee concur eee K teatied that “AM | have to say,” was the reply, “ta | | bro eatrical manager, Uv ' that as a newspaper man of twenty ni Patterson since 1903, | {' ae ie mie ar aid the raiders got into De, Young's! 7 /2ht to go anywhere 1 please in the wr & wrestling bout | 1/5! PE One | You: we red py nd animal's eye } rt) ne when ed his tall he pursult of my 1s » leading spirit of mn an circles, — Col. 1 him as one of 1 citizens of New York. A ago, When Col, Koosevelt was a bis y, in Ka of n the et, and the do } talked about oe eas Braun used to be a news rn > he ken Man Drops De: tor of her," testifed Aug. 16.—John Birnie of Mrs, 1 ard her singing 400 Hudson Boulevard, Hoboken, N, and playing the was jppeas 40 be oh ~1 plano, Mra. Williams | J., le Woman and did not vm eam baO Belvidere Hotel. @ florist attending an exposition opening here last night, dropped dead tn OPERA SINGER Prima Donna Expects to Dup-' pute had Anson Evening World reporter t Rahinoff swung herself 4 the edge of the mahogany centre table one- | nearly and levery |orphan children. |“1 AM, OH! SO PATRIOTIC!” THE | sougnt himself to become Ard Righ, or French parentage, patriotic! make my Berlin I had all my costumes and street clothes made in New York, Not one stitch did I have made abroad. I came back with those selfsame things, noth- and they seized my trunks They told ing else, and wanted me to pay duty. me I should have registered my ward- robe before didn't some one tell me so before? But it makes no difference. receipts showing just what I bought in this country and to-day they allowed ~ WINS OUT OVER CUSTOMS MEN All Marie Le Salle Re | Clothes Made in America, She | | Says, Surrendered to Her. | PROUD OF HER VICTORY | cte Hare Her Success in Chicago and Boston. Scratch a prima donna and find holy terror is a new version of an old| sprung—so that, according to the strict saying lkely to be in vogue among| ules of precedence, should Mr. French Collector since their attempt yesterday the Rabinoff, Loeb's high pr trunks of Mme. a coloratura soprano sing: acquired by the Metropolitan Opera! of the Geraghtys from the accumu- Who {s also a dressmak Cole contin- | that for themselves, but the child has to rely on Company. Tt was with ovident reifef| lated scorn of Newport and Tuxedo and Wed to reside in his apartment at No. | the mother’s watchfulness, 2, that the custome officers at, the ap. (backs up his contentions with excerpts 28 West One Hundred and Fifteenth | Genuine Castoria always boars the signaturo of 2 Adank Wilieta. Atbteh tel bade farewett|ffom chronicles and missals and | street | tot to the petite but O'Hart's famous "Pedigree: the Cole blamed Miss Thomas for the sepe remove the box to grant an day, tily launched {nto an entirely Jed discussion that embraced topic from customs officers PRIMA DONNA EXCLAIMS. “Is it not too absurd," she began. IT am an American-born citizen, and I’ am oh! Before sailing last May most important debut fling for Europe. me to have my trunks. of my clothes. “But what made me #0 very angry, they sald I should have to pay $20 to a broker to arrange for the admission |¢@ven more recent than the cleventh | I care nothing for the money, but I will not be cheated. told them I would pay $1,000 to a lawyer to fight my case before I would give one cent to a broker. That settled It. They do not know how to oppose a these good Americans. My trunks will be here most any minute no} Mme. Rabinoff 1s the young woman who was sent abroad to study about -|ury Department, was arraicned in Es-|two years ago by a number of aociety in musical geniuses, woman, people She came voice had been highly pralged by critics. a tew| DREADFULLY ILL AND DESPER- interested from Chicago, where hi astonishment as well as chagrin that! her society admirers saw her return to America and rush into the arms of her! old sweetheart from Chi t |{noft, a young impresario. her intention to abandon @ muslcal ca- ATELY IN LOVE. ine, {charged in the Fifth street station with| ., ” a lopportunity to appear in “Rigo all widths; choice of tile, floral or also brought out that the beneficiary |) ooo ona maintaining @ gambling | 4 %ot cee, one explained, | 'T was piping. ‘Then she fell {il $14. All-Woo! Sinith's $10.00 Heavy 9-| nietrical patterns; sold elsewhere at 39¢; fand the lawyer, who was named as ox- |{CePiné And Walntaining & KAmDINE | qreadfully 111 abroad and desperately in |’ Ruropenn trip Instead is Bugs Mraanelal for thie Ghia onle. aacara ward Cc ecutor, were pointed out by the defend: | oa rgaa with th 5 }tove. It seemed that no greater hap-| While abroad Mme. Rabinoff sang b Lights RANALE YA cys tsi ttaee e ant and designated by @ monosylladic | MATed With being common gamblers. | oinogs could be in store for me than|only once in opera, but at Herlin she Woven in Size #6 hown in a Wild’s 65¢ and 75¢ Cork Vinoleum “you.” GAVE, HIS OCCUPATION AB RE-/\tg marry the man I loved. My voice, | won instant success, She will make her oral de, colorings; auttable for ary at 371oc In refsulng tc admit the will the sur- PORTER. ‘my; talent, my ambition all were as New York debut at the Metro rom the room tn’ the house; this XXX quaitty Glou Wild'n fi rogate says: In spite of his terrific “pull” on the! nothing compared with that one big *#y in the coming turers ina Fug Je guaran: *makeyy all’ porte adat S yarda $0 doubt one who 4s unable to sign jeast side Hraun was unable to got bail desire. } Sparse ll nd a $10.00 in y her naine may call upon another for |and spent the night In a cell, Fe w “But as T began to recover my health | \iy Rabinoff is the director of the 9.97 pt eh ar 37ie aid even to the extent of holding her | hooked in the station house blotter in California last summer my husband | Russian dancers, Paviowa and Mord- to-morrow at on pene ale price, said : hand and guiding it, but in some way | “Morri No. Fast | begged me to reconsider my determina- pee ry) bya pn Bs Poy pe $9.00 Roll of 40 Yards of ba tr Daparias Ssaanter Ruee nnd ’ the act of subscription must be the act | sixty-elghth he address {y| tion pot to 1¢ my operatic caree al enterprises, Linen Warp si ixG tect. | i 2-Yard Wide Inlaid Lincleum at 69¢ of the intending testator and not of| chat of Marcus Braun, So aT ines warp, in nes | You can't purchase this XN3 y another, I can seo no evidence of @| In Basex Market Court, after hearing Poe e erty aualgnan red Aue Weta: fae an ane wey cit request for ald on the part of Mis#|ine testimony of Folman Mayer, green oF red under ana ii Mooney and none Js pretended. It 18 not | sragisirate Frescht ed complaints coloring 2.00; spectal $1 xtend her aot than the act of another. That much as Meyer was unable to pick | is not enough, The proofs therefore 9M Vout wny but Rarner as men he had| on this point are insufficient to entitle the | oe vl nting all were o | * i - paper to probate.” |gomn. marnbiien, ail neck emaryee wth Another Great Sale Day Remarkably Reduced Prices in Have you They ar successful social life. S|His Family Comes in a Line Edward Cole Invades Harlem) 1," pl Ha ea eeey | snyder told an, Evening World report: . ‘ 5 ' , ‘ che Cole fred ag wut the |e at and cughter From Niall of the Nine Home and Empties Revolver | {Uiite‘went wht ate’ cate threw ners fave em! « New Thought tas } . 1 ‘if on her husband to #: he daugh |lsion. Co became inary wt Hostages. at Two Women. iar onl Gols Hoeee us teviines oe ek |e ni Nell the daugnter scubinaabataatie Hie fired twice at hia wife, one bullet |to nec p ie Mh the right hand. that the w were engage Here i# balm, in the shape ot a ped police of the One 1 eA and!) While Mrs, lo Wan strugs' with ine ab my the. hele gre for the wor A pride of the aris aty fit treet station are # , u }tocratle Amos Tuck Frenches of Ne Edward Cole, sixty-two years | 2 EA A LNT LT port and New York, who: laughter who tried te his wife and atep- last week ran away and married da Miss Anna Thomas. Cole i i | aber seek eran tne Mes Awe Trove Ce “The Kind You Have Always Bought, | Herbert O'Mara Molineux, a digger In- not se 1y wound them, ‘Then he HIS is the caution applied to the public announcement of Castoria that |to ancient lore and lineage, presents dashed out of thelr apartment on the has been manufectured under the supervision of Chas, II, Fletcher for | proof of the descent of the bridegroom fifth floor of the house at No, 45 We over 30 years—the genuine Castoria, Wo respecifuliy coll the attention from royalty iteeif—yea, from the very One Hundred and ath ates, to of fathere and mothers when purchasing Castoria to ee that the | : yea, ARUN. vi ’ his sigaature in black, When the wrapper is removed the sano ture ap- ee ee eo ey aetany| Cole a8 il be 2-3. on both sides of tho bottle in fed, Pardnts who hove tised Castoria for ajwhich the reigning family of Britain get vay al been Mar: their little ones in the past years need no warning against c re rene wre Oo hee Trepeitad imitations, but our present duty is to call tho attention of the younger gener ectionists to selze | he entitied to walk in advance of all Marle La Salle! present. voluble opera singer! and allowed her to of operatic wardrobe over which dis- raged since her arrival yes- terday on the Kronprinzessin Cecile. Pausing long enough in the pleasant task of superintending the fitting out | of her handsome new apartment at the interview to an Mme. ; upon in | Boru—was considerable of a warrior. ; Why I have all the 0, Max Rab-|y shall be able to build a lot of summer Declaring your business methods ? Are you making use of Western Union Day and Night Letters? THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY and loudly He sat down and muinbled to himeelt + © the win - i appeared te be angry about #0: Seip. Pairelmen Callaban, thing, Winally Re afore aa) asked for|stanty MMackett wud Horner of dhe K if “as Mrs. Cole informed him | We @ Hundred and Twei tth | | com and Cole started s 5 harried to the house. | ’ | for ng he well h ed the shouts. Stil cluteh> IC f wife could in un ou of the | ‘ had thrown ope e ight of houlee . | whi joie upout harteway “Ez v © removed to the Hariem Hosp! ines. in ths ation to the great danger of introducing into their families epu: ; At is to be regretted that there aro people who are now engage’ sly | nefarious business of putting up and selling all sorts of substitutes, or i to | ghould more properly be termed counterfeits, for medicinal preparati Tiring of this, Mrs. | only for adults, but worse yet, for children’s medicines, It therefore devolves live with her daughter, | on the mother to ecrutinizd closely what she gives hor child, Adults can do jor any of his Vanderbilt connections In- | herself g dressmakihg. ¢ vite Mr. Geraghty to dinner, he would insisted that she as with inve: s which never pro be money) makers. Cole went to je has| st him financ | hn Mr. Molineux {s strong in his defense standard book on the subject. °S|TRACES THE SURNAME FROM THE ANCIENT IRISH FORM. He traces the evolution of the surname of the young man who won Julla Estelle French under the noses of scores of the Seager and gil youth of Newport, from MacOrcachta, the historic Irish | form, to MacOiraghty, Garrity, Garrett, to MacGeraghty and finally to Geraghty. ! Could even the Frenches ask more? The antiquarian finds that Mr, Geraghty ts a descendant of Brian, the to brother of Niall of the Nine Hostages, one of the most powerful and famous warriors {n ancient Irish history, who our Furniture Re-Upholsteved apholster ‘a fire. suite wills ie velar SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY PROMPTLY REFUNDED OTHENBEAG co WEST I4 STREET ¢ overking of the isle. Brian himself—he must not be confounded with the more of|famous Brian Borotmhe, or Brian of so|the Cow Tribute, known in {ts Bnglish to|form in poetry and romance as Brian is I desired, goods / chased now will be held for Scptemb: ber delicery. Probably young Mr. Geraghty has some of the romantic qualities of this Breat ancestor. It is related that King Brian caught a ehance sight of Gorm- laith, called the most beautiful woman in the world, and who was the sister of his foe, the King of Leinster. His 1$12.95 3-Piece Bed Outfit, 6.99 $4.00 Like cut; steel bed, extended foot rail; fff al. steel reinforced spring; good International Bed Spring 2.50 heart was inflamed with love, and, ac- ear Just like cut; an ab- cording to the custom of the time, he mattress; “or this sale, solutely nolgclors and | bric set out to take the lady by force, He | Will never sag; has a marched inst her brother, deft i row of helical springs at him at the Glen o' Gap, in Wicklow, | and soon after married the beautiful | Gormiaith. i h end. for ten Gu Massive 2-inch cvutinuous inch fillers, panel posts, 4+ ‘The Geraghtys' splendor, however, !s | Meche Or satin fine 12 98 ch: all sizes. +++. e century, when King Brian rule. Mr. | 1| O'Hara Molineux says they were lords | of @ great territory in. Connaught antl | 1654, when they were dispossessed by | Cromwell, and he finds a record of the death in the eighteenth century of Manus MacOiraghty, the last of the line to use the name in that form, al- though {n the present Gaelic revival the | Sw Extension ‘Tables (like cut) Solid oak, massive claw fert, 7 98 iar; rem. $12.95 7.00 C & otton 3.99 Wool Mattresses | pound cotton and W young people are reverting to the old Ticking: $1.00" form. f | Now won't the Frenches be good and NA ere ly 5 7 mattresses, best satin fine send Httle Mrs. Geraghty's mater atin fin her in her honeymoon Springfield, Mass. clothes to gers cottage in to| My society friends and my old teacher | in Chicago implored me not to give up my ambition, ‘What Is the bringing up of one or two nice children compared with the pleasure you can give the world with your voice” they argued, “T was won over, Perhaps some day 5-Piece Verona Velour Parlor Suite (like cut) $29.75 was the original price of this suite. Mahogany polished frames; extra large pieces; covered in best Verona velour at. 19-75 homes for little orphan children and visit them often to make up for my Jand "The Barber of Seville. ropolltan directors sent represent |tovhear her sing and she was off No. 1 Floor Oilcloth, 24c 2 woven ino , of nol yarne; s n | a and Lwo-tone sulta- | or or dining 1 actual " iin th leat i e In Summer Dresses A manufacturer’s surplus modernized Upholsteries ~ of $2, $3 and $4 dresses at 69c i On Sa'e of 82, $3 and $4 dresses at €3¢1 | 49¢ Window Shades, thu:ts, 19c of other dainty, models in 00_sample_ window shades co sale to morrow- sheer lawns, dimities, linger- Tinted Shades, 49¢. ies, etc. Pretty striped effects aN F Moire Holland rae een koe ha » 49, Oil Opcque Shades (some ghtly im 0 with Persian bordereau yoke and skirt; lace yoke, neatly piped; another with lace in- certion down front, etc. Sizes for Misses and Ladies. No Mail Orders. Special, at e a part of business and BOO OPAL DOW SHAD CLOTH—One 1,000) yardas a 2% oe eurta 18e, price yard Japanese Bamboo Portieres 89c repul pretty Remnants of Armure Tapestry regularly 50c. yard, at