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BIGAMY CHARGES CAUSE ARREST OF ~ RICH NEW YORKER Pa Ke” aw Robert F. Martin's Wife Says’ crow He Eloped With Nurse and Married Her in Delaware. W. D. Kolle Second, Only 3,771 Votes Behind in a Total of 325,000 Cast. I GON MONDAY. Then Key of Popular Resort Will Be Thrown Into the Sea as a Symbol. FINAL VOTE FOR KING OF THE CONEY MARDI GRAS CARNIVAL. OFFICIAL NOMINEES, Moe H. Baron, Moe Baron | DIVORCED, HE DE RES| Second Wife Saye He Showed Her Deeree, First Denies att Pa t %.—On a eharee « male by his wife-or form: 1 t F. Ma a rich New York bu ee man, who fs a mem: ‘Olnb 3 ae Wer of the brick vcturing firm of T 3.3, Mewes, Glencoe A. A. Robert C. Martin & PPh Ty. @, smith, Algongnin Club avenue, a ‘ nicht. | ALB, Yacenda, Panama A. 0, His wife, wt 5 vl the | @ Frank Orotssant, a. A. A. mot is |] James Hf. Curtin, Thea. a. A. @ pathet John ©. Biake, Whalen Bros. faverat : I. Be pe: || James J. Spelman, J. J. Bp enme ' f ot . oe @Weatment to the W nt | tarium. There she became attached to one of the nurses, Mise Mathe J. Zahn, || John gd, Hickey, Soc. O14 ®. ¥, @ handsome womar vit thirty-five | Conrad stubenbord, ©. 1... Years old, who fs a douehter of Mr, | 3tgh Hessel, German Citt- and Mrs. ink J. Zahn of Allentown. fens’ League tetas So pleased was Mre. Martin with Miss oh Hasseln, Zabn that when sty left Wernersvile || quarter m2, Gorham, she took her along to her home in New Gama Phi Pra . Work as nurse f mother to her oh herself and a second | The i this wae that Martin ALL HAIL KING BARON AND and the handsome nurse fell in love, she | QUBBN NETTIB! @nseris, and the first t Mrs. Martin] It required the careful counting of knew her ndand the nurse had | 325,000 batiots by a corps of young men left. She says Mortin tried to get ®/and young women to determine the ex- New Y and failed act result of the contest between Will- fam D. Kolle, of Prospect Hall, South | Brooklyn, and Moo H. Baron, of Brond- way and Belvidere street, Wittams- burg, in the election of a King to reign over the gayety and revelry of the ninth annual Mardi Gras Carnival of SAYS THEY ELOPED AND WERE WED IN DELAWARE, Her tnvestigat resulted jn the Aiscovery, tt Is 1, that Martin and Miss Za and were marrted in Wire on or about June %, 110. 1 ng this discovery THE EVENING WORLD, SATORDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1911." THE ROYAL FROAT. BANKER ASSERTS HE DIDN'T PART Mowers and Song. The celebration be- mington ard ‘had a warrant inqued by [Aine on Monday evening and continues @ustice Thomas F, Lewis, By through the week at Coney Island, the Advice she got the w t there great popular playground of the metro. caure tint was the piace where the al-|Poltan district which Hea in @ radius of fifty miles east. west, north and south of the City Hall, The contest between these two popu- lar men, with seventeen candidatea, was #0 close that the ballots had to be counted down to the last one before the result was ascertained, and then urriage took pla She then came to Allentown to hay warrant 4. Local offcera the accused and upon his being n into custody he was remanded to ex the charge of bigamy, declaring he secured a pona fide divorce| sr, Huron was found 10 be elected by and that his mo with Miss Zahn|q meagre 3,171 votes. Mr. Baron. polled is valid. He says he has nothing to fear | 169,948 votes and Mr. Kolle 159,177. On and announced intention of not fight | the last day of the contest each of these ing extradition to Delaware Asin) Wife, |two leaders received four thousand less on the handy declares that tf her \ than a clean 100,000 votes, John J. Cur- husband did get a divorce she know ran, the genial Coney Island host and Yorkville politician, came third under the wire, with Anton Dahibender, the glant candidate of the Farmers’ Club, nothin ‘age Martin king their nis buainena attaita from the | 10% at his heels, firm's office in New York and coming} BARON'S WIFE TO SHARE THE to Allentown often twice a week, THRONE WITH HIM. ao The King’s Royal Throne Fioat, which Robert C. Martin, when told of Nis} wilt lead the nightly flluminated pageant gon's arrest at Allentown, sald to @n/ down Su avenue, is an artietic thing, Evening Worl’ reporter and no royal Mard! Gras float éver be- “I knew that my was paying at-| fore carried ao beautiful a Queen as tention t Zan, vat when he was] Queen Nettie, who will sit beside her in New York two days ago he sald] tege lord an@ husband om the throne nothing to me about having married | next week. her, He was culled back to Allentown] Among those who will entertain the by a telegram w 1 now believe tof royal pair as part of thetr pageant will have been a trap, be J. G, Ballance, of No. 68 West One “My son brought divorce proceed | Hundred and Twenty-aixth street, and ings against his first wife about a year|his pretty daughter, Miss Edna’ Bal- ago on the ground of abandonment, and| lance, seventeen years old, together Iam under the impression that’ she {with Mrs, Ballance. The three Ballanoos gigned certaly ers in which sio{ will represent a whole “First American agreed not ntest the sult. I was |iamily,” av an Osage Indian Chief, his Jao under the ir n that he had | sauaw ‘and their maiden daughter. seoured his dive Chief Ballance's costume will be of Judging by the developments, hin sult fatled.” opera velvet, with 46,000 glass beads tn Mr. Martin’ #aid.that hin son was tn Chief designs, and weighing twen- business with him, and until he went pounds. ‘There will be 188 to Allentown had lived at the famtly in MMs b whieh will home at Maplewood, N. J be aflver mount ro are 10 ——————— | feathers in the war pole and 100 shells hion the belt, at which dangle twelve His war drum, bow and arrow, tomahawk and other paraphernalia are in exact reproduction of the fashions in Osage « and the great chief five strings of wam- Ballance sa, “Actions Speak Louder Than Words’’ John Jones or Bill Smith may ome to you and say: “Advertise in The World Before you follow their advice take the precaution to ask them pectally for the Mardi Gras, go materialé for It from the Osage | Reservation, Oklahoma. MOW MRS. BALLANCE AND HER DAUGHTER WILL DRESS. Mrs, Ballance’s costume ts of yellow buckskin, with Indian symbolto designs for trimming, and she will have thirty> six pounds of beads, and fifteen strings of wampum, while Miss Edna, who w r lust year in @ costume rs on a Sunday World reproducing & copy of tho |FPanny Section of the paper, wil ha a costume of heavy velvet with hand- ted Indian sympols and hoads from the North Dakota Reserva- ton, If you kept on asking and made notes of the answers you received WHERE THEY ADVERTISE. you would eventually learn that there were printed: 4,138 The Ballances have made a close i} cet dy of Indtans and thetr customs World Ads. Yesterday will dance several Indian dan bp fore thelr Royal Highnesses, includ 2,421 More than the Herald; ing the sun dance and the marriage | quarrel KING TO BE CROWNED AT 30,442 STEEPLECHASE PARK. ‘The complete returna from the eleo- World Ads. Last Week— ton, which resulted in the triumph of 7 Willlamsburg clubman, are given with this story, The ing will be ; an .| . George C, Tilyou at 7 o'clock Monday ' More than the Herald; nd. the frat act of King | f aron Will be to place the diadem upon 134 After this President Jackman will pre- g World Ads. Last Month— | ‘ent’ the key of Coney Isiand to the| 4 King, who will hurl {t Into the sea, 4 subjects are tree to frolic as they will, More than the Herald, with decorum and propriety, for the rest of his relgn $o much as to WHERE the Rist pageant, Will tart 96. soon GREAT MAJORITY OF JOHN arting point, Ocean Boulevard and | SMITHS AND BILL JONESES AD- tune avenue, that Is, at ¥ o'clock, : VERTISE he route of the iuminated pagecnt ts 1] Surt to T ty-second WILL"YOU ADVERTISE TO-MOR- , | become and will pass down W? Surf in {ts entirety together RO with 1 feature for the children a np J THR in the form of @ pony section starting LET IT BE IN THE | ta ociocw tn the atternoon, “STRONG ARM SQUAD” WILL BE IN FULL DUTY, A feature of Mani! Gras weekgwill be \ SUNDAY WORLD |Strong Arm Squad." At) of after it has been trampled under foc | Any one caught selling mixed colors will! Ibe arrested, ELOPING COUPLE Son-in-Law Told His Wife to Go Back Home, He Charges. Hariey Peyton Wilson, a bankes who t® being sued for $0,000 by his son-in-law, B. Gerson Oppenhelm $r., for alleged alfenation of the affections of Mrs, Alico Atherton Wilson Op- penheim, filed his answer to tho com-| Platnt in the County Clerk's office yea- terday. Oppenheim charges that his wife was Induced to leave him through the tn- fluence of her father. ‘This Wilson do- nies. According to Wilson, Oppen- heim borrowed money from his bride and later told her he could not sup- port her; that she should return to her parents, Mrs. Oppenheim did so and Wilson says he has supported his daughter since. At the time of his marriage Oppen- heim was in the Iaw office of his father, B. Gerson Oppenleim. He and Miss Wilson eloped just a year ago, when he was twenty. She wes aix- teen. ‘The elopement caused a dlsagree- ment in the home of Wilson, Mrs. Wilson first brought an action tn the Supreme Court to annul a separation agreement entered into last November, alleging #he intended to sue for an ab: lute divorce, At that time Mra, Wil- son sald she had been induced to sign the agreement through misrepresenta- tions on the part of her husband, who alleged he could not forgive her for ap- proving their daughter's marriage. Wilson then said his wife admitted she knew all about the elopement plans. Mrs, Wilson denied this, but admitted she did not think the mar- riage should be annulle She re- ceived #00 a month un the separa. tion agreement. Her husband, she says, has $2,000,000, and she wants $3,600 a month ple Es MILLION FOR NEW YORKER. But Rernhetme: with 85,00 PORT GTRSO! ney Bernheimer of New York ts practioally the entire estate of brother, Jacob Bernheimer of this pla who died June 2 while on a visit to At. lantio City, N. J. ‘The estate ts valued at more than one million dollars. Marcus Bernhelmer of St. Louls, an- other brother, receives only $5,000, the will stating that because of a family ‘al years ago, when Marcus sided with the children of the late Mrs, Clara Lowenstein of Mobile, Ala, the Brother, Cut Of » WIL Contest Win, Sept. 9.—To sid- lett his Misi |testator desired in this way to admin- ister a rebuke, One dollar each Is left to the Lowenstein heirs, Mrs. Carrie Bcherff of St. Louls, a sister, is remem- us Bernhetmer arrived here to- | day to contest the will the first annual convention of “Tae the seventy- tly success- on will be nd during five members of that eminc ful rowdy-handltng organiza on police duty at Coney Isl he festiv 8B, Jackman and Charles Schiffman, of the Mardi » conferred with Com missioner Waldo to-day and it was ar. ranged to detail two hundred patrolmen and fifty mounted men to handle the | crowds. Commissioner Waldo has forbidden the “fuzzy-dog,” a partioularly ating adaptation o fthe tlokl slap- atlek, the du: nd other instruments of torture, The sale of confett! will be restricted to one color by each vendor ‘This will prevent, It 1s belleved, ¢ seraping up and resale of tons of co! ored paper, laden with dirt and gern th THRONG sper | ‘Moe Baron Wins Close Contest for King Of Coney Island's EON a ALLAN CE, UNCLE SEEKS MEN Mardi Gras Carnival, WHO DROVE HIS NEPHEW TO DEATH Florence Burns’s “Badger Vic- tim” Left Note Saying He Was Hounded. FRIEND IS ABSOLVED. |Mysterious Stranger in Case Man the Lawyer Tried to Befriend. Piiney 8. Rigan, @ Yawver at No, 176 Broadway, knows the mysterious mafi| Charles W. Hurlburt, the lawyer whose | body was found in the Hudson River off Iona Island, near Haverstraw, last | month, and whose death hia uncle! thinks was caused by Hurlburt'e con- nection with sending Florence Burne Wildrick to prison for “badgering” him, However, Mr. Riggs doclines to reveal the {dentity of this man. “1 don't belt he said to an Eve- ning World reporter yesterday, “that this man knows anything about Hulr burt's death. It ts true he had been with Hurlburt quite frequently the past summer. This man had once been prominent in certain circles In this elt | He had gone through a lot of money and was down and out when he mot Hurlburt, who was trying to put the fellow on his feet and was succeedin| Now, In view of the publicity attend- ing the ‘mysterious, disreputable for- elgner’ who was with Hurlburt it would not ve fair to this man to tell his name, He 18 not @ foreigner and it is true he went to Hurlburt's room the night Hurl- burt disappeared. Tf he could clear up any of the mystery surrounding Hurl- burt's death I, would gladly give. his| name, but he can't and as he has a| chance to regain his lost position I} think I will withhold his name,” | Mr. Riggs says the last time that he saw Hurlburt was last winter, but he also knows that Hurlburt was worried | over his connection with Florence Burns. Hurlburt's uncle, F. Wayland Foster, of Gloversville, was in this city several | To-day's stock market at the outset was demoralized. A ceaseless flow of Nquidation at the opening broke the entire market from 1 to 4% points be- low the closing range of yesterday. Low levels to-day represent the bottom range that stock market pr! the current wave of liquidation, nadian Pacific headed the losses with an extreme drop of 4% points. Reading, Lehigh Valley, Steel, Chesapeake & Ohio and the Harrimans followed with average declines of 2 points. The afore- said shares sold at the lowest prices reached this year. Two pacific reasons advance for the olapse to-day, One was the keen dis- appointment manifested throughout the country over the crop report rendered by the Government yesterday, A loss In wheat during August dissipated ex- pectations of improvement, entertained by a large part of the financial com- munity, Another cause for the Nqutda- tion tn stocls the demonstration in foreign countries over the high cost of foodstuffs. A feeble recovery was in progress to- ward the end of the first hour, A break of 6 potnts in Canadian Pa- ifle was the frature of the reaction, of this share were made for Berlin and London, Selling pressure appeared to run its course after many of the leaders had been forced down to new low le’ A fa of resiliency was dis- play last half hour when con- siderable d short covering di veloped. A fractional recovery wad in nearly all of the standard se- curitie adian Pacific ' finished with @ net loss of 5M points, The Closing Prices. Today's highest stele, and of net. chang tiday'e tinal figures 1 last. prices of pared with: yee lowe Last, | Amal. Copper Amer, Arn. Amn Aniacond At, 1 Atianile Bat Brook. Cont Oanads | Ches, en ool Del ek Irland Rock Isiqnd Routh Talon | {nia it & v8 Vian ¢ Ving. Cal Walaa Wabash Wost. F, West) Ua | PAdvanee, eae ———_—— SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS | yours, days this week investigating the cir- | cumstances surrounding the death of Hurlburt. A mysterious note dis-| covered under a rock near the spot where Hurlburt’s clothing was found | has added to the complexity of the casa ‘The note was: “Notwithstanding your unwarranted persecution, I wish you long life, health, contentment, happiness and the great- est of success, Good-by once for ail. ‘Trusting that you are satisfled by di- rectly bringing about my death, I am Charles W. Hurltburt.”” Mr, Rigas says he cannot understand this note and also says he cannot ar- rive at a definite opinion regarding how Hurlburt met his death. “Unies he had been hounded as the ‘note fi cates thero was no reason for ‘im to commit suicide,” he added. “If (Twas hounded then there may be something in the murder theory.” Hurlvurt’s uncle says the note puts fa different light on the matter and he is going to investigate and ascertain possible who were hounding his nephew, a LEAVES FARM OF DEATH FOR HER HONEYMOON. Bride's Home Noted for the Mys- terious Fatalities That Oc- curred There. BARRE, Ma: Sept. ‘Mrs. Myra A, Bemis, recently in public view by reason of mysterious deaths that have occurred on her farm here, is off on her second honeymoon with a bridegroom who is making his fourth voyage on the sea of matrimony. The present husband ts Will- fam A. Bushnell, Postmaster of Floral city, F The marriage ceremony was performed at Mrs, Bemis's farm home Wadneaday afternoon, Last month an autopsy was held on the body of Frank Ceeley, who had died at the Bemis farmhouse of poison, Mra, Bemis said Ceeley had taken stryohnine, and that she was with him when he airjan Hammond, another farm hand, |dted on the farm Nov, 2, 1906, a few ays after Mrs, Bemis had withdrawn from a Ware savings bank $1,000 of the fan's money on an order signed by him, Mrs, Bomis was arrested on a charge of the murder of Hammond, but no bil) | was found. In 1897 Mra. Bemti aman. Tried for this offense she piead- ef self-defense and was acquitted, petal EBL Wt WEDDING THRICE FIXED BROKEN OFF AT ALTAR, {Young Newark Couple Tift After | Ten Years’ Love and Leave Priest Waiting. It transpired in Newark, N. J., yee terday that the marriage engagement of Frank J. Hill of oO. 197 Plane | street and Miss Rose Welsh of No, 79 West Kinney street was broken off practically at the alter after a court- hip of more than ten years, and two | previous wedding fixtures, | The couple were to have been ma ried by the Rev, Fugene P. Carroll in St. Bridget’s Catholle Church Aug. 28 But a quarrel occurred, and the priest waited In vain, The marriage was first set for last | fall, but Mr. Hill was taken fl and a later date was chosen. ‘Then some \Otner @iMiculty arose, and the third date fixed on was that of last month, When this was arranged, Miss Welsh gave up her position with Riker Brothers, jewellers, No, 42 Court street, She was out of the city yes- terday and her mother refused to talk. Mr. Hill is well known @ basket. ball player and is employed by the city. PANDOM.SHOT.S AT BIG GAME. AND SMALL BY W.P.MeLOUGHLIN. the kinks that have tied up the Boxing Commission #0 early in its care or next October, sive CLEAN BOXING to the people of the Btate of New York. the new law, revel in the tory of one game man‘s superiority over another. the fastest and most acientific bouts ever held in any ring, and the public again expressed its pleasure, The Sinith-Flynn bout in another rin under the new rules—-was also on the le although not he fight lover's point of view. bury thelr petty differences and give the law a chance to get the fair trial Gov. Dix wishes tt to have? All of thie can be done when e succ takes up the duties of chairman, Let the technical points as to detatle in leases be adjustea when the game who lived all summer as the guest of finds itself running on an even keel. JOR R—Someth purpose of ‘eacttiny a fan “What is the difference between a local and an express on the B. R. T.?” sked a man on a Brighton Beach ex- The B. R. T. runs an “express’’ ser- vice from Kings+ Highway to Fulton Ferry every morning. If you leave Sheepshead and change at Kings High way to an “express” you accomplish Just one thi rifice your se i Oe Dress train to-day. When the “express” geaches Myrtl “Oh, that's ea: 14 the wise man|/avenue and you want to get across the from Sheepshead Bay. bridge you get out of the “express” and “Well, what's the answer? “A local stops at all stations and an express stops between station: If Brighton, Sheepshead Bay and Kings Highway folk were not so @x- asperated every morning over the non- take the local, which is always at the heels of the * Of course, if you are not a seasoned traveller you don’t Know that the B. R. T. has played @ joke on you. It ts a fact, however, that the local you board is the same gne you left at speed of the “joke” expresses they| Kings Highway to take the expre: would be able to appreciate Mr. Web-| But what do people who live on that ster’s definition of the word. ne expect, anyhow? — Bi GRADY, who left Westport, Ireland, forty years ago, took a trip! across recently. All his ola chums had died or emigrated long before and Billy was much depressed. So he went to London to get a flash at the coronation, Billy hit ‘er up in Mooney’s, on the Strand, one day during the festivities and when he was bumped into and jostled by the great crowds he became peeved. “Oh, damn the coronation and the Kin, a bum skate.” A horror-stricken bobby grabbed Billy and led him away. He was arratgned in Bow street and the pompous “beak” who presided roasted Billy good and "said he with great enthusiasm. “He! I THnk HE'S A Bum-sKAre ! plenty, winding up by fining him thirty shillings and cont: then gravely said to the Magistrat in this country?” “Not at all, my man,” sald the Magistrate. “Anybody can think whatever he Billy paid up and ‘Your Honor, te it a crime if a man thinks uk “Well, I still think the King 1s a bum akate,” said Billy, as he left court headed for the first boat for Brooklyn. are called a day's run, that ts from noon N HIS EFFORT to show his sy™-|to noon, on an easterly voyage. The pathy for the toiling masses Com-|meriner also knows there's a. place missioner Stover of the Park De+| wher it ceases and west begins. This is @ parallel arbitrarily fixed, the Pacific, where to-day becomes -to-mor- row oF yesterday, according to which way you're going, so you have to give up your earned time when you hit about Guam and ite little black sultan. Try it going the other way, Sam, and get twenty-five hours out of each day's run, CONSTANT READER, Belleville, J.—-Richard Croker served two as City Chamberlain of New York. The alary then was $25,000 a yea: SSEMBLYMAN “Paradise Jimmy” Oliver was seated in the City Hall reception room, He was there nearly an hour ‘Hello, Jimmy, what are you doing ‘round these diggins?" asked a friend. “In the language of the late ‘Tim’ Campbell,” anawered the Assemblyman, “I am here ‘to see His “His Nibs" {8 a mighty hard man to see when he takes @ notion that way. partment fired three taborers for drink- ing beer with their lunch yesterday. I the tirat I knew there were any 1abo1 ers in the park these days, It sure hasn't looked It, But with the three gone, Will there be Jess than nothing left? And incidentally, {# it part of the Stover uplift to let the keepers who feed Miss Murphy, the productive hip- popotamus, torture her in order to mako a lot of ignorant, brutal-minded people laugh and become more brutal- teed. The way the feeders of the big animal stand off at @ distance of three feet and hurl apples, turnips and other hard feed at the tender roof of her mouth 1 @ crying shame. The beast's eyes show her pain; but she must eat, and {f {t amuses the crowd to make the process painful to her, apparently that is the thing to do. The ledy's state of health entitles her to more constdera- ton just now anyway, Wurra Wurra: In a pool on the number of runs made by a three team combination A scores highest mark. B and C tle for second place. D comes next. How should the money go BALL FAN. ‘The second and third money should be spit between B and C, Fourth prize should go to D. A writes me @ long argument tending to prove that the contest between the B. R. T, and the Interpor- ough for the city’s money to build sub- ways was a frameup and thet the In- torborough will at the proper time run away with the whole bi of tricks, Maybe. But from the absolute lack of intelligent mantpulation shown by the Interborough throughout the negotia- tions I am convinced that there is not enough in that outfit to out. manoeuvre any set of financiers now operating in this violnity, WURRA WURRA: I have read your brilliant answers to the many vexing questions which perturb the community, and my amazement as well aa admiration to find you possessed of such great eru- continues from the north side of the Harlem Rtver to Fordham station near One Hundred and Eighty-eighth atreet, ‘The answer in last week's “Wurra Wur- ra” column was based on information supplied by a Bronx resident, Ot course You can't expect much from a Bronxite. Few of them know how to find their own streets up there. ‘They keep the stationary cops busy dt- recting them home o’ night ANGELO~Tommy Burns was born of French-Canadian parents in Canada, His right name is MAN signing himself ‘Infalitble” H. G. LAPRADE, Fort Slocum, N. ¥.— Knockout Brown, or Valentine Braun, was born at First avenue and Fifteenth street, this city. {HP following communication has arrived in town: ‘Meno, Mev., Sept. 4. “We've got three rings and fifty clowns here on the spot where you aw an 014 one-ring show on July 4, 1910, WELLS ZAWEs, with eayieae ‘Bros.’ Circus.” Alas! Wells, !t wae a one-ring old dition, Now, there {# m Mittle question |Show sure enough. You've got It beaten which has greatly vexed me. Realiz- [fifty ways, You have fifty clowns, you Ing your great ability and your cour- |8ay. There was only one clown tn that show of july 4, 1910. WURRA WURRA A, B and C are playing a three- handed game of pok A betes C on higher spade bet or {ts it a misdeal? and C look at their hands, but A teous response to all questions, I trust this appeal will not be mia- construed. My question t# as follows: You have undoubtedly heard that in sailing round the world (our mun- dane ephere from East to West, one day. or becomes one day | ehows highest spade before looking Jounger. Bo it follows if man | at. the alxth card. Does A win sails round 85 times he 1s one year | higher spade bet. or ts tt a misdoal? younger, C claims that tt !s a misdeal on the I am twenty-nix years of Now, | grounds that @ix cards were dealt. if I repsated the 865 times’ experl- | Who ts right? A CONSTANT READER. Tt {9 a misdeal. All bets are off, W/o ft comes to real results the Geadiy toadstool with tts record of @ score of victims seems to ment twenty-six times, my Would be zero (0). Now, if I repeat- ed the 985 times’ experiment twenty- eix times more, how old would I be? If you answer this question I shall never trouble you again, With sincere thanks. Yours, re- |have it on the Black Hand bomb as an spectfully, SAM, GREENBERG, effective means of playing havoc among Yorkville. our Italian citizens, Why not keep spinning around, Sam, beating the aun to it, and live forever? ‘That Job of doing the whirl 985 times in & lifetime is come stunt—but then you'd be living on the catch-up time all the time, ¢0 you wouldn't be using any time at all, the way you figure it, BL. Aa every mariner who ever kept a tg| He has. Stamps are not legal tender mows, twenty-three hours by the olock for carfare or anything else. WURRA WURRA: ‘Will you kindly let me know if a conductor has the right to order you off a car in case you offer to pay him in stamps instead of currency? T tee am 4 LOT OF LOOSE TALK being bandied around in connection with Tt 4s unfortunate that the first snarl should be based on a technicality as to whether the building in which @ bout is held is to be torn down next February The main thing which the new Boxing law was framed to accomplish was to ‘The Knockout Brown-Matt Wells bout, the first Important engagement under | was a real classy scrap. It pleased the thousands who paid to see H it. It eatisfed the millions who did nat have a chance to be Present and who ‘The second meeting under the law—the Jeanette-Langford affair—was one of Wourdn’t it be a good idea if the two Commissioners now on the Jod would jor to Mr. Sullivan TERDNCE FARLEY—Park avenue ‘WUBRBA, WUPRDA! pie pine! WHAT? VICE-PRESIDENT | -SONOKERROTEL | Young Sherman Denies It, but Magistrate Says Somebody Phoned at 2 A. M. Young Thomas M. Sherman, the Wiees President's son, who, when not coasting about the metropolis in a racing car, $8 President of the Utica Ice Company wasped sighs of reilef when he legg Magistarte’ Krotel's court to-day where he was arraigned after arrest, charged with violating the motor lawa, Tee Vice-President’s son was in court ahead of the Magistrate. Here's what B® heard: “People, arise,” shouted Jay Finn, the clerk. s Honor, the Magistrate!” “Bang! Bang! Prisoner to the dary sounded the Court's gavel and volce harsh discord, Young Sherman, escorts |ed by.Lawyer H. R. Anderson of No. William street, ventured from thetp places alongside seven vagrants an@ three pickpockets: “Bang, bang, bang, BANG!" rder in court.” from a voice nese |the Court. | “Bang! What's the charge, oMoer@ Bang, BANG!" again came from the em» Plosive gavel flanking fhe Court's tm man Silver’ >auer told his story It was convincing. “Bang, BANG! So- ana the Court surveyed the prisoner and hi counsel with cold, trate ayes, to know, young man, if you or your counsel (bang) are the persons who called me up at 2 o'clock this morning (bang) to tell me that the Vice-Preste dent's son had been arrested (BAN@W | Denials were whispered by Mr. Anders jon on behalf of his client ‘I'd like to have you understang (bang) that I don’t care if the Vioee President or the President himself (ba was arrested 1 am not to be disturbs in my sleep after a hard day's wort (bang) on this bench, sirs! (BANG,) “I want you to understand (bang) tha {f T could find out who tt was who called me from my sleep (bang) that I would have them punished,” “Ta Ul (Bang.) risoner reprimandedg (Bang.) “Next case.” (Bang, bang, bang!) “Good Logd,” murmured Mr. Shermat as ho left the front door, He told lawyer that he was lea#ing for Utica once. a Gaby Deslys Sail, for New Yorks CHERBOURG, Sept. 9.—With over fifty big, and little trunks containing eighty stage gowns, fifty hate, fortye eight cloaks and all kinds of what-nots, Gaby Deslys, ex-King Manuel's ene chantress, sailed for New York to-da} on La Lorraine, She was accompaniel by a sleuth, whose sole duties are to guard the fortune in jewels showered upon the dancer by young Manuel at che cost of his throne. The Europea: stage favorite will appear in most of the large American cities, a About Motherhood ‘The experience of Motherhood is trying one to most women and mar! distinctly an epoch in their lives. Nof — one woman ina ht , dred is prepared understands how properly care forht self. Of course’ ly every woman no' adays has medica time of child-birth, but many approsc! ix the experience wit an organism unfitted for the trial o! strength, and when the strain is ove! her syst @ shock fro! item has received which it is hard to recover. Follow. ing right upon this comes the nervor strain of caring for the child, and Gistinct change in the mother results, ‘There is not! ing more charming thi eshappy and healthy mother of ch | dren, and indeed child-birth under righ conditions need be no hazard tohealt! orbeauty. The unexplainable thi ‘that, with all the evidence of shatt nerves and broken health resulting from an unprepared condition, wo! will persist in going blindly to the trial It isn't as though the experier came upon them unawares. They ample time in which to prepare, sty for the mort rt, trust fo cha: e nalty. | iy many Lemes once childless thera now children because of the fou t Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetab! Compound makes women normah healthy, and strong,’ Any woman who* would® lik special advice in regard to thi | Boasten: es covdiall F tavited "| wi ‘Be inkham al Blass, Her letter will be held strict confidence. READERS OF THE WORLD vaca-