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ME aceessenamamaconnanmniemnane etre ree ELSES BRYAN VST 0 GAYNOR St. James's Villagers Want ‘An- | Other Barber to Succeed Mayor’s in That Office. There are thousands of marriages hanging together to-day under the Aimsiest of excuses—any but the real one, which is that the wife cannot earn her living. A divorce which simply opens wide a: door to license brings a curse in its wake. ‘Socialiem might solve the now hideous problem of modern marriage, but it is not here yet. Thinking is almost obsolete among the educated. Girle nowadays may be respected who earn their living cleanly instead of marrying to gain a livelihood. \ DOGS FIGHT OVER IT. ON THE SINCLAIR CASE Demmcratic Leader, Mayor's! Guest for Three Days, to | Make Three Speeches. (Spectel from a World Staff Comepondent.) T. TAMES, L. 1, Sept. 2—With Mayor Gaynor entertaining William Jennings Bryan here to-day, to-morrow and Labor Day and the Impending de- thronement of barber Rudolph Wetsse aa the “Catchpole of St. James," Mayor Gaynor's neighbors are in a ferment. In fact the villagers find nothing e' to tals of. BY LILLIAN BELL. If I had any hope of being correctly quoted or even partially under! stood, {t would meet a long-felt want ot my Inner nature to express myself fluently upon the subject of innocent marri laws pathetically abused | without the slightest interference from the police, and of cruelty to divorcees. & addication of tehpote* occasions most of the gossip, been a character here for When Mayor Gaynor dubbed e “Catchpole” of St. James, there was a rush for the village library ‘atchpole was found to de- @ collector of taxes, one keeps order, Mayor Gaynor had! Wolsse But if T should say all I feel, ¥ would surely be attacked by all those who collect marriage fees, all those who have rent thelr marriags vows as carelessly fe they had previously married, and I should nffVe the pain of being classed by my own ttterances with a set of persons whose !mmorattty Rides under mere legality. Yet, when a prominent aivorce case comen before the public, with unusual features, or rather when two persons are frank and honest in gtving to the public their reasons for separating, persona may question their taste, but thelr reasons are not sufficiently unusual ever to cause comment. Only frankness upon so persona! an issue is unusual and, to the conservative, it is somewhat disconcerting, Yet, what will you? Divorces grow commoner, are more easily procured and cause more real hap- piness than the marriages they sundered. Then why not allow them? Why a fuss about them? stupid as it is trite to aay when two people hate each other or have simply grown indifferent, that to live together as husband and wife is im. moral, because no deep-thinking person would ever deny. such a self-evident fact Yet there are thousands of just such marti hanging together to-day under the filmsiest of excuses, such as consideration for the children, thelr standing in soclety, &c.—any excuse except the real one, which {s that the wife cannot earn her living, and therefore prefers to remain as she 1s, because her mother and | father were criminally negligent and ignorant in failing to provide her with a| profession by which she could go forth with clean morals and a stout heart and earn bread for herself and her children. ‘The wife of a prominent author now being sued for absolute divorce proposes| to marry another man, whom she prefers to her own husband, and who was| quoted in the newspapers as declaring himself in favor “of the state most men mean when they speak of freo love." who @iven his indorsement of W ing him as the Chiet St. James, as» barber. TIME TO MAKE A CHANGE, PROM- INENT MEN 8AID, Smith, Sam" Go Jim and even the incorrigible Frank who was sent to Riverhead Jail by Catchpole Welsse the alleged) stealing of turkeys and chickens, agreed] with the Mayor that Welese is a val-| uable cit'zen, but ther “reckoned as} how it was time to have a change in the high o.uce of Catchpole.”” When the Mayor eaid that Welsse would make a fine police commissioner for New York City feeling became more pronounced than ever that Catchpole Weisse shotld step down and out. While the Mayor was awaiting the ar. rival of Mr. Bryan to-day he sald that he favored the retention of Weisse in office {f for no other reason than that order cellen “Mel Ahearn, DeMott, he had apprehended Frank De Mott. Lat me state that I regard such an utterance by man or woman with horror. | Besides, Welsse knew how to shave| Nothing could be more disastrous, not to the state, nor to society, nor to possible | ekilfully | children, but to the moral nature of the participants themselves. Those men and) “But how about Barber Emil Rile?| women would be the chief sufferers in that they had not feared to sin against a| Me has been among us nigh on to! purity whieh is their real inheritance. i] twenty years and wante the Job, Mr. A divorce which simply opens wide a door to license brings a curse in itn Mayor,” protested “Mel Smith, and wake. Such a divorce is not {mmoral in Iteelf, but the state of mind which: t moment Barber Riis's toxhound | induced ft ts immoral and iniquitous to a deg But no one need get tn the least nd Catohpole Welsse's ter-| excited over the spectacte, for the punishment trailing in its wake travels #0 aged in battle on much faster than the spurious happine uch a divorce and remartiage was va Twn | supposed to purchane, that even the shortest life 1s long cnough to witness the ane ake the Mayor ne | combet and ultimate defeat of what was a lle from the beginning. ell, let the dogs settle it, < Mel smich and din Anearn as) MAY HAVE REASONS UNKNOWN TO PUBLIC. bine raneg was fought, Ding) yet, to get back to fundamentals, the newspapers comment with surprise on the fact that the husband and wife in this most recent spectacle are quite friendly in arranging terms by which they voluntarily enter tne deck for a re- shuffitng, WEITSE GOING INTO CHICKEN FARMING, HE SAYS, What does the public at large know of the secret reasons this ‘ouple or any other nad for growing tired of each other? Why shouldn't who, instead of travelling hand in hand, hi diverged constantly suddenly find themselves so far apart that they are speaking unknown and dwelling tn foreign lands, albeit they meet each other every day— why shouidn rate? Is there anything really wicked in breaking a civil bond when e becom ivil? Can anybody who reads the newspapers velleve that Ged r tn wedlock these unhappy wretches, who snatch t any excuse, who even to colluston to escape the bond whicb a ane stoop ice being | loving Heavenly F y is supposed to Inflct? RL Marriage !s a man-made convention for the prevention of worse evils. Steven- ee Mt | non says: "Marriage Is friendshtp recognized by the police.” And he further de- | them papers? clares that most marriages are mado with as Ittle real teeing ae ences when you see your especial peach or nectarine in a basket of fruit appro- priated by some one else and you are forced to content yourself with an infertor| article. Itt s trte—and If it lacks In than radicalism—then can you wonder to some? What {s marriage for, anyway? I+ it bullt on anything but selfishness? And {f so, Ig it surprising that it falls? The wonder to me is that so many hold, With the frankness which now obtains in good soclety divorces seldom surprise ‘Tho marvel of it is that there are not more of them. T get ont but for uth, It Is on the side of conservatism rather , at the hideous mockery marriage means Ub talk ecelve $20) a lecture. om National me. te the guest of the Mayor for ‘The foundation of every lasting affection is respect. No love, no liking, no pare ae u rmed taat they aoiy regard even ean hold unless lying deep down in the rock bottom there is) ot AIS AVATAR some secret respect for a trait or moral or honor which appeals to our own Widow, deallsin. Ste Eonara al iv of Moncelair| You haven't a friend, scarcely a continued acquaintance, of whom this is not A crgagement of hee sis, true, Often a host of frritations and dislikes are overlooked for the sake of fae y of Ileutenant-Com- some one half-hidden virtue which holds your affection. e Russell, U. & N., to Bur what of a merriage where evil secretly indulged in has disintegrated a { ! Carter Berkeley, U. 8.| once fine chara into an unrecognizable mass {n which there is not one re- Cops Mra, Russell has made’ geeming trait? I know of marriages of this kind where the wife has grown and ene In Montelatr since het wid0W-) —oniinues co grow along mental, idealistic, nodie lines, while her husband scorns hood five ears ago. i her ambitions and saps the foundation of her respect by a deliberate descent into a lower stratum of materialism each day that he lives. ONE IDEAI MARRIAGE CAUSED OTHERS I know another couple, the husband one of the noblest characters I ever met, whose wife both drinks and gambles .to excess. Yet in its early stages theirs was one of those ideal marriages you read about, dream about and shed tears over a Where ? wil you find the help or posi- when you meet, Several couples have got married before they could afford to tion you need? and are now in debt just because in its earller years this marriage was so {deal that they rushed off and tried to duplicate its su 2.632 World “Help Wanted” The wife could be cured, of course, and they still might be happy. But she ads. last Sunday—1,416 more doesn't want to! She frankly says that to her taste life consists of being ‘‘a good fellow,” and any existence which does not admit of harmless itttle sprees in which both men and women eat and drink overmuch would, bore her to extinction I think she even dreads death for fear, inadvertently, she might find herself in heaven, where she would be forced to make new acquaintances and they of class she had all her Ife shunned on earth! Frankly a hopeless materialist, she has wrecked the life of a man who speak several languages, loves Nature, reverences his God and whose nobility je su that life with her is a dally and hourly crime If such a wife wanted a divorce, could you blame him if he were friendly with the co-respondent? Indeed, their friends are only afratd he wil not appear than Sunday He Or the Apertment You Prefer? 1,866 World “To Let" ads. last Sunday—488 more than Sun- day Herald. Or the B ene Bargain? 478 World “Business Oppor- until after the husband has been reduced to a state where he cannot enjoy his tunity” ads. last Sunday—83 well-earned liverty. Yet at the close of the marriage ceremony of these two tne “4 S Herald. priest solemnly said, “Whom God hath joined together let not man put asunder.” more than Sunday : and during the first few years their marriage w catarrelaaida “one ot those few which are really made in heaven. Sootalism might solve the now hideous problem of modern marriage, but {t |s © yet, while another remedy {s at hand, and that is that people are really Thinking is almost obsolete among the educated. Jt {8 only indulged in by those who have no time for luxurtes, but there is where ft counts the most, The h and cultured may marry as thoughtlessly of rea! issues as they like. There are those in world, however, to whom metaphy is not a dead letter. it is becoming a living issue, and the death-kneli of the hopeless materialist has begun to toil, You may be obliged, some of you at least, to listen carefully in order to hear ite clear tones, but if you have ears to hear you may distinguish its voice amid the bad Marriages do not take place with woman within ten years of the age their | mothers married, nor do nearly ag many women marry. There are many women | who diatike the idea of marriage, who do not wish te marry, who never ought ¢o | narey. Time wae when such women felt obliged to marry just to fee! successtul Or a Fall Vacation Place? pe 227 World “Resort” ads. last Sunday—182 more than Sun- day Herald. not beginning to think. These facts may help you to decide (to your advantage) which newspaper to read and fo which newspaper to adver- thee To-Morrow—Sunday ns ARRAN AAS ASSES PETRY AR NT BREW. AA ann siatenisn S_BVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, ‘SEP CATCHPOLE FIGHT |Marriage, Divorce, Alfinity---Their Problems And Solutions Discussed by Lilian Bell ‘@ am: eo one exper!-| struction Company, wi of opera and wilt probably pay | WMO uit te og poe) hatin i t daughter by attaches Tes “ i ue ulla Kuttner Earle, was American, and | causing irreveren| | fami next week for certain river front | the first Mra. Kurlo wan French, There |iawyare and even Magistrate Naumer nd witch tt purposes to fill tn with | was also @ Chicago woman, Gertrude | himself. earth excavated from the tunnel, E clown inatinot in the dog TEMBER 2, 1011, COLLIE PUP PLAYS CLOWN AS WOMEN | DISPUTEIN COURT | Bench, Upsets Clerk’s Dignity and Ink. ANSWERS TWO NAMES.) , But Knows His Mother and Real Ownership Is Readily Established and Admitted. | This was a sure enough dos day in Manhattan Avenue Court, Rrookty Mrs, Filzabeth Comba of No, 6% Met- ropotitan avente had summoned Mra May Stephens of Leonard and North econd streét, on the ground that Mrs Stephens had refured to vive up Spotty, A three-quarters grown collie pup be- longing to Mrs. Combs. Mrs. Combs, with an extremely be {coming hat and a lacy gown, entered the court with Babe, mother of the pup, ona leash, She went forward to the! ,rail of the court and sat down. Babe sented herself sedately beside the chair of her mistre: Then came Mrs. Stephens, likewise \becomingly attired, with Spotty on string. The pup was hardly across the threshold when Brbe .snatched the| leash from the fingers of Mre. Combs, jand, with an affectionate half growl, half whine, Jumped to her eon, rolled | him over on the floor and, yelping with j delight, nosed and pawed him. ‘The Court might almost take jud!- cial comntaance,” anid Magistrate N v half under his breath, “that Babe Knows who {® the proper owner of that pup. THE GREAT TEST WORKS BOTH | ways. | {Phe dogs were separated. Magletrate | Naumer told Mra, Stephens to take the pup to the back of the court. “Now Mra, Combs,” he said, “you call the pup. And Mrs. Stephens, you let him go if he wants to go to her." Mra. Combs stood up and called ‘e Spotty, come here.” The dog bounded up the alsle, sprang at her breast, knocking her all in a heap back in her chair, and tried to| climb into her lap and liek’ her face. | “Now you call him,” sald the Magie- trate to Mra, Stephens. “Here, Roy, here,” crie@ Mra. Bte- phens. The pup Combs, turned | Pansy jae EARLE'S NEW WIFE. ~ AN ARTIST LIKE MUCH WED HUBBY |Hero of “Soul Mate” Fad | wisely at Mra. Stephens, who has had, $300,000 FOR BASE Writes That He’s Blissfully | nim for three weeks, Then with | yolp, he scurried down the aisle again | | i ii Hl and knocked Mrs. Stephens back against ON WHICH 10 BEGIN | Happy With His Bride. | the wall, putting her hair down ana| sadly disarranging her hat. | Ferdinand Pinney Karle, the artiat|,,, Well Madam,” eald the Magtatrate, | who started the “soul-mate” fad, weites | NOW about thin? Will you sive up the | | rite’ | dog to Mrs. Combs?” | | Bradley Construction Co. Also |¢aushter of an architect at Woking. |’! a# to Mra. Comba'a.” cs ula ham, England, an artist, and it was a LEFT TO HIMSELF, PUP ROMPS |case of love at first sight. ‘They mar- ON BENCH. A tangible Iden of tho immensity of India, and will return to Katie's coun: | court oMcers was ordered to open tne ask ne [e} try home at Monroe, N. ¥., by way of| gate in the rail !f the pup showed a the task anead of the Bradley Con. {% home a 796 | Kale. ne rails the uae ey the deak beside the Judge, and stood up) a elte to be used as a base | one,” he wrote. She ts thoroughly Eng-| and looked the court room over with| i Her imm every appearance of judictal wisdom, | BARL \Zao7 climbed down from Mrs. and cocked his head from Italy that he and his third wife are Ml bilss! y still bilssfully honeymooning, and for) 420 Wi Ml wought the dog from & the first time reveals her identity and jman who told me he was @ regular sends photographs of her. j a Bhe was Dorothea Mlbert stewart, | ‘etler. Me anewers to my call Just ae | to Pay $200,000 for Place to | 2 |ried in June and have been in Holland, — Pie Court was stumped for a moment nea cait . Germany and Switzerland. Heretofore ‘Then he had Mrs. Combs and Rabe Dump cavation Dirt. she had been known to his friends only come inside the rail, while he told M jas “Di The Warles intend to go | Stephens to let the pup run loose to # jfrom Naples, where they are now, to | what he would do of his own chotoe. A h has the con-| ‘The pictures of the third Mrs, Earle! ‘The young colii# took the rail at a tracts for the bulk of the work on the seem to bear out the rapturous descrip- bound and landed on his mother’s neck, Lexington avenue subway, may be gath-| tion Earle sent back at the time of the | barking wildly. Then he made for the cas ls vatated chee | wedding, udge, who successfully fended him off. epee She has laughing brown eyes, @ soft| Next thing the pup put his fore feet on ist paid $200,000 for the | English complexion, and is Just twenty- nen this cor- has r | Buell Dunn, who had been tempered by The property for which $300,000 has|@ residenc been paid constitutes the B. T. Babbitt! was anothe: lvery seemed to be waked by the Inugh. He whirled across the room and | ry on | ep: in Paris, who Earle thought ffinity tn the period be- estate, in Long Island City, near the| tween the casting off of the second Mrs. |top of the desk of Clerk Thom p Queensboro Bridge, and fronts 400 feet| Eatle and the annexation of the latest | pard, a man of dignity befitting hte! on East er. Iter back 50) feet to | BUt Earle discovered that the American wars and office. An ink bottle went Vernon aven ieee ‘onta doy | French combination would not suit over on the complaints and commit- feet. In the centre of it ts the old _— oo ts spread out ther: bans clathaced oid | ¥ Hapvit: homestead, whic was cormeriy’ FAKE HEALTH OFFICER Tas ne potice the resifence of the naire s a hould ever, ever say, even manufacturer, but which has been oceu- CAUGHT BY REAL ONES. winen hin neat donk in invaded by & hys- ed only by @ caretaker for twenty erical collie pup. 7 } Eye je DESCRIPTION FITS AND OWNER: ompany intends to erect machine | Man Had Badge and Even Made | DES MeHIP 18 FIXED ai f * 1 “ > 5s Whe ehops'on this property snd will use tt | Prisoners of Peddlers Who here catia (crabtadi thant! aaa Sala O68 Saree Be a ae Balked (min uneasy submission with hand, quantities of supplies which will be : n while she fished out of her long strapped aa in’ wUDWay COSTS A pier | Special OMcers Rinniigton and White While Me Mine enn of the lost will be constructed and the company |of the Health Department ¢ Samuel scotty, which had been written out by | Will operate its own line of ferryboats | Schwartz of No, 1441 Park avenue be- yo abner It fitted the pup exactly, transporting materia! acroas the |fore Magistrate Appleton in Harlem| arg «rs. Stephens acknowledged that r to the foot of Kast Sixty-seoond | Court to-day charging with 1m- spotty had pr ly once belonged to rect, Manhattan, |Dergonating a heali oficer inapector Mra, Combs calle: other property constitute .|for purposes of blackmat “AN right.” she aatd, “Twill give col of 200 Ae oenea hott are HT ‘The officers va py tz yes nim up. How much fa he worth?” by Se yaa terday quarreling with fish ped- “One hundred dollara,” answered Mrs A. Burden.» These are situated near the! dierg at Park avenue and One Hundred Combe aweetly, “and I don’t want to Bobbitt property and are underneath and Eleventh etree! It roll him even for that” the Queensboro Bridge ‘This land {eof the peddlers + r Do 1 get paid for boarding him submerged, but may be ren-|fish into a asked Mrs. Stephens, dered extremely va ble if filled tn. i make the o I should think the pleasure of ha « ha the Ww + property under|ton and White ex had such a beautiful dog in your house Queensboro Bridge {t wouta| found them pe was pay enough,” aatd Mrs. Combs He Bo p Gresner | Schwartz's ahtr My dear, you are right,” exclaimed ‘ a close {1 > Mrs and with the two dogs has called a conference of city ome! aerrnienk amis th of court the dest of at which the auestion of permitting the) The ofcers fr f Bradley ( op on the they had iea hank the Lord," sald Myr. Py 4 bridge for dumping purpoges will be to as the tip of Spotty's tall divaor ved Aleonsmed. a week nr behind the edge of the door ee fifth v y ——————— ; PROOR. | Ly t AUTO RUNS DOWN BOY. 4 Harvard p wonen are ey 4 rule fs Chanflear H Dininetess t West si fron rs * ¢| Magis Apples f Harry J. Lawson of N nem would e? Vail fo a) Seslons et, Yonkers, chauffeur 1 J, Kale Phd on tenbach of 1 Alt avenue, Yonkers, in thelr own eyes, Publio sentiment demanded the wedding march among dowa'a Ave-year-old boy playing in Caucasians just as inhumanly as tt demanded the suttee in India enth avenue near Fiftieth street Now a higher civilization {# abolishing both custome as equally heathenish, “Aly to-day Girls nowadays may be respected who earn tholr ving cleanly, Inatead of marry. TH BOY, Whowe name the police could not learn, Waa badly soratched about ing to gain a livelihood. Ag I said before, we are beginning to think, and therein lies the remedy to the epectacie of the shameless divorces which take place and the even more snametu Gtvoress whieh never take place at all. the face and hia right arm was He waa taken to Flower Hoap! conscious, Lawson was held dlameless by the police, roken. | split PNOCHLEDEAGIN CATEHES HORS FES ATROLETTE ured in “Gambling” Scan- dal, Plays Trump Card Romps on the i aca Vroom Roscoe, Who Fig- * | | | RAIDS LOCAL CARNIVAL. Makes Complaint = Against Those Who Played Wheel at Hose Company's Fair. J. Vroom rh who gained fame as the pinochle deacon of the North Hack- ensack Reformed Church, but who since the great pinochle seandal which the church wide open has moved to the adjoining town of Emerson, con- tinues to constitute himself a thorn tn the flesh of North Hackensack Ex-Deaoon Koacoe ix getting back at the faction that prosecuted him tn the chureh for the heinous sin of pinochle at five cents a point by raiding the roulette wheel at the Riverside Hose Company's carnival as a gambling in- stitution. The wheel is run by a body of pillars of the North Hackensack Re- formed Church, from which the time Deacon iRosove resigned after he had turned the church over on its beam ends by proving to @ court of parsons that there ts nothing In the Scriptures i dirs aut pinuebie ur aay vier form of gambling. ones | HE INVOKES THE LAW OF JER- SEY AGAINST ROULETTE. ‘Taking a contrary attitude now, he Is invoking the laws of the State of New Jersey to shut down the Riverside Hose Company's roulette wheel as a gambling inetitution, The case is now in the hands of the Public Prosecutor ana Juatice of the Peace Johnson, and the villagers of North Hackensack are ut- tering a mighty wall of woe at the cruel methods of former Deacon Roscoe in putting a crimp in their beloved wheel, It has long been @ custom at the | Riverside Hose Company's carnival to raise funds by meana of a roulette wheel, You buy your chances, or num- bers, on the wheel for ten cents each, and if the little ivory ball finds its way into the number you have purchased you are awarded.a jar of jam or @ dish of pickles, or mayhap a home: baked North Hackensack ple. Some- (imes you get @ lemon, which t# the oc- casion of great mirth. All this Was considered a hai way of fling the coffers of the North Hackensack Riverside Hose Company by the same ilars and prope of the North Hackensa. Reformed Church who nought to rope and brand Mr. Ros- coe as a gambler because he partial- pated in a pinochle game for gain. Ex- Deacon Demarest of the same church wan also involved in this scandal, in “] will not,” said Mrs, Stephens in-| which his celebrated wig played no} small part, Demarest end Roscoe fell put after the pinochle game, and Dem- rest said things about Roscoe that cost im a verdict of #ix cents in a slander sult. After this sult Roscoe sald things about Demarest’s wig, but there were no further suite. HOPED TO FIND HIS FOE TRYING 418 LUCK. “AM the action he took In that mat- ter,” said Mr, Roscoe to-day, “was to dincard his wig. He was at the carnival last night without {t, and we wanted to get him among the other gamblers who were spilling their dimes on the wheel with a lavish hand, He must have been tipped off, for he retired to @ grove of trees \ 1@ moon shone brightly on his bald head. Silas H. Moore, President of the Riv. erside Hose Company; Walter KB man, 3 and William a@ membe: named in th. gambling complaint filed by the ex-pinoohle dea. con with Justice of the Peace Johnson. “I am going to take this case up into the highest courts, J. Vroom Roscoe to- to show those people down tn Nort Hackensack that If pinochie ty gambling #0 ie roulette—and then some. Are they sore? Does a liorsefly bite? They are not only sore about this prosecution of mine, but they are galled to the marroy that the Emerson Field n fam official scorer, bea two games of base- If any of my former that J. all this summ® fellow merry Vroom Roscoe {s a dead one and can't nurse a little venletta of bis own they have got another three-speed think com- ing. The carnival roulette wheel was silent to-day pending the outcome of storm Htigation cena ELSIE SIGEL MYSTERY NOT BEHIND RAID, Capture of Sailor by Immigration Agents Not Connected Wi Murder Investigation A report that re arrest of " A wailor, had caused a revival o ' interest in the mystery of Elsie Sigel's Jeath, two years aKo, was ‘ ared loss United States Lr Spector of Chinese Immigrat B, Wiley. Gow ts held by t tnt) fugitive fleat of the Sta 4 Ol ¢ tles as being unlawful He is paid to be a Asiatic Gow was arrested W and his ors after a Hudeo I n, The xa rv ign, autho: 1 s rep at ihe * Kise Sigel was men a ss dur xamination Mr. Wiley a Aa Tt Seemed to Him, From the Onicago Recont-Herald. Do you believe dealing tn futures ts gambling?” “Tt always seemed more Mise sut- cide whenever I've deme it” V denied [GIRL FINDS MAN DYING FROM FALL OFF A FENCE. ‘Workman Di covered in Stoneyatd Victim of a Strange vo. 2080 Second ave~ was found dying early to-day in the 1 Milier at No. 338 Fourth street. The f a fractured sia! at ard of Dav Hundred and one yard was locked up and the polloe be- Neve that Gleason, who formerly rked there, tried to ellmb over the nee during and fell, Frieda Friedland, a girl employed in a factory next door. saw Gleason inside j the high fen: © looked out of | | the window med ang the | | alarm reac n Sullivan of the F and Fourth | street station, He called the engineer, | George Scott, who opened the dvor. A messenger woe sent to St, Lucia’s Ohureh for a priest, who administered extreme unetion. on died before ; of the tion Hospital ar+ r A WACKSLIDER, From the Tuledo News-Rae ' Bunday 1 Tesever-Is your pa ® Christian by? Little Hobby—-No'm, not to-day, Sete Kot the toothache | Rheingold label | theirs Cue ey is pleased. hen they taste Rhein- gold’s flavor their sense of taste is a hundred-fold more pleased. | PALE RIPE RHEINCOLD beer costs $1 for 24 bot- tles in Greater New York. Brewed by S. 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