The evening world. Newspaper, September 15, 1911, Page 3

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j Lb 4% PARENT DEFENDS SON. 7 WiRS. SUYDAM PUT OUTBY HUSBAND, | YOUNG NOBLE SAYS Filing of Divorce Suit by Mil- } Hionaire Followed by Eject- ment, He Writes, » Declares Boy Did Right in Eloping and That Home Is Open to Him. 5 That Mrs. Walter Lispenard Suydam %. party of the first part in the sensa- tional Suydam-Noble elopement, had) Seen thrown out of her millionaire hus- fand's Blue Point, L. 1, villa on Sept. 5, three days after papers in an action for @ivorce had been served on her, was the statement made to-day in a letter writ- ten to his father by young Frederick No- ble. ‘This jeter was taken to the plumbing thop of the elder Noble (Harry M.) on Nostrand avenue, Brooklyn, to-day by Wallace Noble, a young brother of Fred. J Wallace had spent the evening with his brother in the little flat that the plumb- @r’s son and the young soclety matron have been occupying in the Regina apart- ments, No, 82 West Twelfth street, since the elopement. Frad Noble's letter reads: Dear Father:—I want you to know that there is nothing to worry about. I have not disappeared nor have I been hypnotized, This thing has been com- ing for a long time. You know Mrs. Suydam had been practically thrown out of her home, bag and baggage, 1s you know divorce papers were filed on the 24, I will be married to Mrg. Buy- if the divorce is secured. Don't You worry about me. Wallace will keep you informed and I will report to you through Wallace the progress in the Progress 1 nthe matter. “Your loving son, “FRED. OEFENDS SON'S ELOPMENT WITH MRS. SUYDAM. ‘When the elder Noble displayed the @bove letter to an Evening World re- Porter this afternoon, he said that there was not a grain of truth in the report that he had turned against his son/| Fred and threatened to never recognize bim again as his son. + ‘Phat 1s - much a le,” he sald, “as gome of reports that have been @pread about Mrs. Suydam. I do not Blame my son for what he has done. He honestly loves the gtrl and the girl Joves him. I would probably do just What he t! doing in this case and I regard him just as highly as I do any of my other children. “Mra. Suydam's life down there in Blue Point was made a horror to her. She was almost as lonely as !f ma- rooned on a desert isle. That husband of hers lef’ her alone the greater part of the time. While he {s worth millfons, he engaged in the t je of fisherman, @ sport, but for profit. He would go off with his nets for tnree or four Qays at a dime. He woul. takes his catches to ma. .et and sell them just Ike any other fisherman. “During these fishing excursions of his his young wife was left to he: own @evices in the big, isolated villa that Overlooks the bay. He was not Inter- erted in any of her friends and would have nothing to do with them. When tits own friends called on him he would send his wife to live in the servants Dodge. She ep-: most of her time there by hereelf. DECLARES ELOPING WIFE A/ FINE WOMAN. “Now, I have known this girl for | years and I regard her as one of the very finest specimens of womankind. She has been the one sinned Against and driven to distraction, I do not blame her. I do not blame my son, He ie welcome to come home whenever he pleases, Both my Brooklyn home and my cottage at Blue Point will always be open to him.” ‘The Brooklyn phimber spoke vehe- mently. He said that after Wallace had brought him Fred's letter to-day he had written Fred a letter in which he ad- vised him to separate from Mrs. Suy~ dam until after divorce proceedings ha@ been concluded, “When that ts all settled, I told him,” said Mr. Noble, “that he could resume hts courtship and get married, I in- tend to back him up to the limit Frederick Noble made a public state- ment last night in which he denied the existence of the elopement or that he was living with Mrs, Suydam. Immedi- ately after making this stat the set out by devious ways to return to the Uttle flat in which he and the runaway wife have been living since Sept SUYDAM’S AGENTS FINALLY LOCATE COUPLE. The agents of the Suydams did not sucoged in locating the runaway wife until yesterday, though the members of the Noble family have been aware of the elopers’ wh pouts for several days. in going back tc night young the apartment last ran into two men, with whom he had a heated argument and to whom he persisted in denying his fdentity. When h up to the a nference ence 1a its flat he fe lawyer in ¢ This co night, but stubbornly up. They again with 1 resentative: The young White of Weshing ragansott, i Aay night this was Lispenard M Noble, the iT Noble, fat his Brooklyn home, Both the Whites ané @uydams have exerted every pos me « ers and @ ydam nto the $ stil anoth confer | 1 th A to giv el ed, ore law ot and ore reps to-day , John Jay bp, ¢ an Pte am ant Valter | of | | Would be essential to me tn a husband.” je Makes the Best Imagine One So Busy Thinking of His Own Looks He Has No Time to Think of Your Com- fort! Exclaims Actres Who Will Wed Count. But He Must Be Fastid- ious. No Nice Woman Could Care for a Man Who Was Not Perfectly Groomed, She Declares. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. Kitty Gordon says Count Morria| Fries is not home- ly. Lots of other people say he is. But, then, justice compels one to ad-! mit Count Fries te not going to marry the other people and he ts going to marry Kitty Gor- don. Things like that sometimes al- ter one's point of view. Besides, the Count has a very nice castle in Austria; Miss Gordon showed me a picture of it on a postal card. Not, however, that this {s not, strictly speaking, a “kind hearts are more than coronets” affair ‘I am not marrying Count Fries for his looks, nor his title, nor his money,’ said Miss Gordon, She paused, then plunged: “I would not care how homely he was,” she breathed vallantly. “I love him!” It was beautiful to hear he: “But a homely husband? 1 depre- cated. ‘A homely husband ts the best husband,” she a swered, “Imagine @ husband so busy t!inking of his own looks he would have no time to think of your comfort, Besides, what woman wants to find herself married to ® man that every other woman :s trying .o get y from her? When a sensibis woman mar- ries vhe marries for comfort and rest. “Personally, I have not the slightest desire to spend the remainder of my days running around after a handsome man.” "Yet it sounds Ike an interesting enough occupation,” I murmured. “I fear you like excitement,” reproved Miss Gordon, “For myeelf, 1 prefer things quleter. WILL HAVE HER OWN WAY AS HERETOFORE. And !f this be true, undoubtedly Miss! Gordon will have her own way in the| matter. When, indeed, has she not had | her own way in every matter, her every wish gratified? To be beautiful, to be An actress, to be a’ star, to have red| hatr, to have a pair of sapphire and dla- mond earrings as big butter bal to have married into one of the best tam- {ites in England, to divorce subsequently that member ofsone of the best fami- es known as the Honorable Henry Beresford, to have a real count at one's feet, to have one's picture in the news- Papers, and—crowning achievement of them all—to be able actually to live at Rector's, not to dine there once a week on Saturday nights, but to LIVE there —could the heart of woman ask for more? Yet Miss Kitty Gordon is evi- dently minded to take all the gifts Fate may have in store for her and then suggest a few others just to be on the safe side. “People may call homely,” or not thef Count Fries she explained, “but homely he has all the qualities that “And these qualities are?” I prompted. “Oh, In the first place a man to make the right sort of a husband has to be manly," replied Miss Gordon, “Then | he has to be honest. I mean, tell the truth and be straightforward, “Of course he has to be very fastidious personally, Mo really nice woman could .ver care for » man who \as not perfectly groomed, “The Count Fries ts one of the best groomed men I have ever met. Then, as far as I am concerned, the man I loved would have to be a good sports- man, He would have to love the open. You may be sure there {s nothing very wrong with a man who rides well and shoots well and loves to get out into the woods and flelds."* “You, purself, love the open coun. try?" I hazarded, and tried to picture| Miss Gordon's gorgeously embroidered negligee exchanged for a gingham frock | and her white arms reflected in a wood- land pool rather than the polished brass of her bed, against which she leaned, SHE LOVES THE COUNT’S CASTLE IN AUSTRIA, “Well, I love the Count's castle in Austria,” quallfled Miss Gordon, “and sible pressure to break up the scandal and soparate the eloping couple, MRS. SUYDAM DOES COOKING FOR THE COUPLE. Mrs. Suydam, who had a dozen ser- vants to walt on her tn her husband's Blue Point villa, has done all the cook- ing in the Httle flat. Fred Noble has done the marketing along Sixth avenue, but in going from and coming back to the West Twelfth street apart house he has invariably made a long detour, walking hurriedly and looking | ck now d then as if he expected pursu He is a tall, good-looking youth, with fatr air nd blue eyes an a frank, engaging smile. In denying nen. yesterday he spoke nee of outspoken his denial followed of an interview with his nh the parent sald that 3 son and the runaway wife were liv- ing together {nj orfect contentment and happiness, and that it loaked as if they were golng ‘$0 atiok it out” ial that 1s really very open country, I like it well enough to be happy in the thought of making tt my future home. Of course that will not be for some time, however. Not until I retire from the stage. I have promised to retire when I marry the Count. But that will not be for a long while under any cir- cumstances, “You see I have not actually obtained my divorce from Mr. Beresford as yet, although I do not anticipate any real trouble in that direction. Of course I shall manage to get it, though he ts kind of—Oh, well you know—rather wanting me back and that sort of thing, But I am determined to get my divor and marry Count Fries. “Whether he is homely or not? amended, “Whether he {ts homely or not,” main- tained Miss Gonion, “though, I protest, I think tt is too dreadful to speak of him as though he were a fright. Why, he does not look homely to me at ail. Iam pure I do not see why people call him homely. See {f you think he is.”* She crossed the room to her bureau and held a framed picture toward me. “Well, you seo it Is this way,” I be- gan, regarding the photograph of Count es. 1 ‘ow, don’t you say you think he 1s homely," pleaded Miss Gordon. “But you said you wanted husband," I reminded her. ‘ou said homely men made the best husbands. You waid you would never spend your days running around after a handsome | if I did say so," admitted Miss Gorton. “Yet, this picture of the Count does not look homely to me," I protested. “You perfect dear!” cooed Miss Gor- don, Then triumphantly, But I do not care elfher way—homely or am going to marry Count Fries!" Which all goes to show that if you happen to have red hair and sapphire earrings you can have your own way out almost ¢ :ything BANKRUPT, ENDS . LIFE, FEARING 10 FAGE CREDITORS Samuel Goldenberg, Glazier, Hangs Himself in Store After Failure Is Announce Unable to face the humiliation of bankruptcy, Samuel Goldenberg, a wholesale glazier, commitied sulclde to- day by hanging himself to the top rung of @ ladder in bis store at No, 93 Fifth street, ‘Tne body was found by Mrs, joldenberg, who, alarmed at finding the store door locked after er husband's pecullar actions, when he arose early to go downstairs, called the Janitor, Robin Schoffel, to break in the door. At the sight of the body swinging from the ladder Mrs, Goldenberg swooned and is now in a dangerous state of pros- tration. Goldenberg, who was thirty years old had been in business for himself two years all profits and slow collec tions finally Involved him to the extent of $1,600. Yesterday his assignment to his creditors was announced and a tlement on a 20 per cent cussed, basis was Goldenberg told his wife jast night that he could never face his friends again, She urged him to cheer up and take @other start for t vy of t three Ittle girls, but he was dis solate. In hanging himself G erg used too long a rope to keep his feet from touching the floor, was he to die that he and slowly strangled — Jersey Firm Asks 838,000, WASHINGTON, Sept, 16.—The Inter- state Comme: mmission Was asked but dete drew up 80 mined {8 knee le yesterday to force the Lackawanna and | Eastern railroads to rein burse B. oll & Co. of Perth Amboy, N, J., $38,080 for overcharges in freight rates on tron ore, nine other > E, H. Dutler New ( t of Danger, the Buffalo Evening News |s recovering | om an attack of pneumonia and is W Out of danger, dsome, I | Kitty Gordon Says a Homely Man TAILORS’ STRIKE Kind of Husband): NEAR END; WALS GORDON ROOSTER, PINNED INWOMAN'S SKIRT, BETRAYS THEE Protest Against Cramped Quarters Causes Arrest in Poultry Store. Leo Cohen, who keeps a chicken shop on upper Prospect averiue, East New York, set his son Jake to watch the store to-day to find out why the Fri: day evening books always showed a shortage of chickens for the cash taken in. The store {s always crowded with women on Friday, for the people of the neighborhood nearly always have chicken Friday night. “Pop, there's a woman making some funny business back there where the young roosters are,” said Jake later, pointing to Mrs. Yetta Horowitz of No. 228 Newport avenue. © woman saw them looking at her and started leave. She woddled clumsily, but Cohen stopped her at the | door. | “What are you doing around here?* he shouted at her suspiciously. “You come in, stay half an hour, say noth- ngs to nobody and go out.” “I don't see anything I want to buy,” | to she muttered, “I am looking for a nice young rooster. “Come here.” Cohen led her to @ rooster crate and pushed a fowl under jher nose, "What Is the matter with \enate” “How much?” asked Mra. Horwitz, She thrust the ts he demand i took the in her arma, ick! Tuck! Tuck-a-tuck, tuck," re- marked the rooster to nobody in par- u “Puck! ‘Tuck! ‘Tuck-a-tuck, tuck,’ spoke up another chicken from the gen- eral direction of Mra, Horowitz's kn “Thieves! Murder! Hellup’ shouted Mr. Cohen, } nan Walsh ran in and took Mrs, Horowitz to court. ‘There was searched had she THR EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SHFykmont 1d, 191d, WOMAN JOYRIDER OF WOMEN WIN Employers, Badgered by Rich Customers, Seek to, Set- tle With Workers. ARBITRATION IS LIKELY. Conference This Afternoon May Agree on Terms for Resuming Work. * ‘There ts a chance that the Indies’ tatl- oring and dressinaking strike which has ' tortured the nerves of thousands of | worden who have been planning and or- dering their fall suite and gowns may be nettled before to-morrow morning | There is a conference being held this afternoon at the Victoria Hotel in jwhich Col, M. J. Regan and J, J. Bealin ‘represent the state labor bureau; Meyer London, John A, Dyche, Solomon Ros- man, I. Kraus and H. Pismanoff the workers and Richard J. Hickson, A. E. Harrison, James Blaine, Horace Wein- garten, J. Frank and Walter H. Bar- tholomew, the Merchants’ Society, the employers’ organization. The belief 18 general that the dispute will be submitted to arifitration and that pending the verdict, the strikers will return to work. Employers by the score have visited the Merchants’ So- clety Headquarters at No. 366 Fifth ‘nue and given their written consent to | arbitration. It was noticeable that the proprietors of big and fashionable shops in the Fifth avenue district were by far the most emphatic in declaring for arbitra- tion or any other course of settlement which would relleve them from the terror which the appeals, demands and scoldings of their rich women patrons have inspired, MANY FIRMS SEEK PEACE, STRIKERS SAY. A representative of the Merchants’ Society sald to-day that the employing tailors and dressmakers were perfectly willing to meet the wor half way, to raise the g the trade and to add tly Incheased cost of manufacture to the price of the finished costumes, ‘The smaller manu- turers say that this is a scheme to ze them out of business. Thomas Krattina, chairman of the strikers’ settlement committee, declares he had received many applications for a settlement, some of them from large firms. It is clared that about 200 of the strikers went back to Work to-day at advantageous terms, Agents of both the State and national governments have offered thetr services fn arbitration, One proposition already before both sides ts from John J. Bealln of the State Board of Arbitration, who has asked each to name what It considers fair terms and sett ent, Charlies H. Winslow, an Investigator of the Depart- ment of Commerce and Labor, attended the meeting of the employers yesterday afternoon, ‘To-day 1s the cmuctal day of the strike said R. J. Hickson, president of the Merchant Tailors, “We made a promise to our employees as a body and ave-| KILLED ONRETURN FROM MARDI GRAS Mrs. Josephine Noble Crushed to Death Under Wheel of Auto. COMPANION IS HURT.| Thomas F. Swain’s Wife Is Waiting for Him When She Learns of Accident. An acetdent interrupting a Joy ride tn Brooklyn early to-day caused the death of Mra. Josephine Noble of Glenhead, L. 1, and the possibly fatal injury of | Thomas F. Swain, a master plumber of No. 67% Leonard street, Brooklyn, whose wife was found sitting at a window waiting for him when word of the accl- dent was conveyed to her at daylight. Another who figured in the affair, Will- jam Kreth, a chauffeur of No. 47 Bast Third street, o ped without @ scratch. Tho car was running swiftly through Bedford avenue when, at Sullivan atreet, Kreth miscalculated a sharp curve. On of the rear wheels struck the curb and the tire was torn off. | MAN AND WOMAN THROWN UN- DER RIMLESS WHE ‘The shock threw the car clear across the street and the rim of the wheel which had sustained the first damage was ripped off. Mrs, Noble and Swain were thrown from the car and run over, Tho ends of the spokes of the rimlens wheel punctured the body of Mrs. Noble, killing her instantly, Swain sustained internal tnjurte: Policemen sent for an ambulance to the Swedish Hospital. Dr, ‘Treux, who responded, sent the body of Mra, Noble to the Morgue. He hurried Swain to the hospital tn an ambulance. It was some timo before any connect- ed, story of the accident could be gath- |ered. Swain was unconscious, and | Kreth truthfully insisted that he had never met Swain or the woman until @ short time before he ran his car into the curb. When Swain was brought around he at first refused to talk, but when told that he might die he reveuled the identity of his companion. He met Mrs, Noble, he sald, about two month ago at Glenhead at Karatsony!'s Hotel, where she was stop- ping for the summer, She told him she was divorced and her husband lived ‘SHOW GIRL BRIDE SAYSHILLONARE REAM IS BEATE Young Eloper Never Parted From Miss Pendleton, Her Sister Declares. SECLUDED 1 A FLAT. Son of Financier Only Away Two Days Since Secret Marriage. Miss Marie Pendleton, the pretty ttt- tle sister of Eleanor Pendleton, the show girl who eloped with and married Louls Marshall Ream, son of Norman BK. Ream, multi-miltionatre and tnt. mate of J. Merpont Morgan, declared to-day to an Evening World reporter that youns Mr. and Mra, Ream have not been separated by the bridegroom's stern father, as reported, but are to-~ gether and ere as happy as a pair of turtle doves. Misa Pendleton and her younger ala- ter are in the chorus of “The Quaker Girl.” @ new musical comedy which ts being rehearsed at the Hudson Theatre. It ts their first stage experience. They live with their raether at No. 41 Wee One Hundred and Forty-sixth street. “Of couorse, Louls Ream {a with my sister,” said Miss Pendleton, “and all this talk about his father keeping him away 1s nonsense, How could his father keep him away? Louis ts twenty-four years old and knows his own mind, He and my alster married ach other because they are in love, and they aren't going to be separted on account of money or anything else, “He has been there all the time, that is, excepting a day or two, since they came back from thetr honeymoon tri and he is certainly going to stay. M: winter caught cold while they wore away and has bronchitis, and that is the only reason they haven't left the in the West. On occasions he met her | after the first encounter. Last night, he he was in Reisen- woeber's at Coney Island when Mrs. Noble, Mra, Stuart, Mra. Stuart's moth- er, and Mrs. Stuart's chauffour entered. They had ridden down to Coney Island from Sea CUf in Mrs. Stuart’ Mrs. Noble introduced Mrs. Stuart and her mother. ASKED CHAUFFEUR OF EMPTY CAR TO GIVE THEM RIDE. The party roamed about the Island, Swain said, until midnight, when all went In Mra. Stuart's car to Autenreith's road house on the Parkway. There, he sald, the party separated. Mrs, Stuart and her mother went uptown to the Bedford Rest in Bedford avenue In! tr own car. Mrs. Noble and Swain re- mained behind, After an hour or a0, Kreth, whom he had never seen be- fore, happened along, driving a car and alone. Swain asked Kreth to take him and Mra, Noble up to the Bedford Rest and they were on thelr way when the aceldent occurred. Mrs. Stuart ts well known along the north shore of Long Island. She wae the housekeeper for Stephen Mott Wright of Sea Cliff, who died tn Sep- tember, 19, leaving an estate va ued at over $1,000,000, Half the estate was| left to three cousins and the other halt to Mrs, Stuart the housekeeper, Swain sald, ‘The cousins contested the will, The case dragged through the courts u tl January, 1910, when Mrs. Stuart was awarded $158,200, She met Mrs, Noble during this summer at Glenhead, and they frequently rode together in Mra, Stuart's automobile, Kroth 18 twenty years old, For a weok them had secreted two fine rooster promise to us, We are ready to keep | fv Be our promise and will keep It, and 1|!ro0klyn, His employer gave him per: Before Magistrate Fitch Mrs, Horo- trek that the ualon wall 46 te mission last night to use his automobile Witz set up @ counter claim againat | rt ites the trouble wilh Denes, | to take @ party of young women friends Cohen that he had sold her a sick |1M that caso the trouble will be over and | riying rooster, Kemarking that ho was a good | ‘he strikers Tea eae Swain lives tn a fine three-story frame judge of poultry, Magistrate Fitch dj-| 80! Rosman, organtaer of the strikers'| iouge in L rd street, and has rected that th ster be set on the | ron, Mua tna ule Agrooments already | \yrgo plumbing establishment on Haat desk before Te eWeek inc iKers’ demands | rnirty-third street, near Lexington ave “He's not sick,” sald he "Ho te lee ting of the working weentee| nue. Manhattan. Mra, Swain said she very fine bird.” |four hours, clean and light shops and | neW hething of Mrs, Noble and had The rooster flapped his \tags and let] the abolition of plece work never heard her hustand mention her. out a crow of pride. Another step toward a settlement! Allen Vose Guidert of Sea Clift, L. 1, “Take him away,” sald the Court.|came as a result of a conference late called at the Brooklyn Morgue at noon Then Mrs, Horowitz was held in $#0| last night between Myer London, at- and assumed responsibility for the care Bail tok Geaeniba con torney for the strikers, Mr, Dyche and of the remains of Mrs. Noble, He said pinceidesti ES at Mr, Bealin, ‘They drew up a plan| he was a friend of the family. > whereby strikers favoring arbitration| Mra Noble, according to Guidert, had DIX DELAYED BY WRECK; |and employers willing to enter into {:| two children, a about eighteen can proceed without watting for those | years old, whose home t# in Boston, ONE MAN KILLED, TWO HURT. | who oppose arbitration and & daughter who lives tn Colorado is > The son Was advised of his mother's j > Seant Interest tn New Subway, | deat! this morning and will be in New Governor on Way to Conference at] Where is that great public interesy in| York this evening, Mra, Noble's body + a, Thue : subways? Not one person was removed from the Brook) Spring Lake Delayed Five Yesterday at the hearing eet "ty “the| Morgue to Merritt's undertaking a Hours in Train Block Public Service Commission on the in Highth avenue, Manhattan, there to a : changes to be made in the plan for the await the arrangements for the fune>| ALBANY, Gept, 15 v. Dix, en route TT exington avenue subway, ral to be made by her son. from Syracuse to Spring Lake, N. J, | to attend the conferenec of Governors, = = =< was delayed 6 hours this ..orne by a wreck on t Cen- \trat Railroad on the V street jviaduct dn this cf nvernor’s [train was behind the wreck and did not Double Strength Saves 50%. lget away until 890 A. M Frank Hitchcock of Syracuse, fireman an express t ot with a freight train, ngine ind sustained ho} wers of Syra- and Bark B. express of neti Albans t —_—— Bank tn Newark. its first Postal Savings Newark ge! bank to-day, White Ftose CEYLON TEA Perhaj skin illustrated, or pe: man-tailored mo a strict del One Mode! Like Picture; Actual, $22.50 Value, Alterations FREE to y at at ay at Dey Street LER see \t SA Bye te add pny Fall Costum To-morrow, Saturday Exclusive high grade Fall gostumes interpreted in the richest and smartest Autumn fabrics, including Serges, Mixtures, Broadcloths, Cheviots One look will convince you of more than a page of talk about them. a richly trimmed model will please you with handsome silk frog fastening and French panel, perhaps the stunning model All coats beautifully satin lined, tailoring superb, and colors the season's best. 15 SALE AT ALL THREE STORE« ( Bell 14 & 16 West Idtn Street ~New York 460 & 462 Fulton Street— Brooklyn 645-651 Broad Street —Newark, N. J. the money can buy more. Derbies and Soft Hats, $3 and $4 Broadway at Houston Street, Broadway st Boa ano apartment at No. 3% West Fifty-secénd street. 3 ‘Mr, Ream doesn't want to make any statement, and that's why he and my sister have said he wasn't there when reporters asked for him, No, I don't think he's been back to the bank—but I'm not sure.” Pendleton said she would try and de her sister to explain the pe cullar situation, bu Mra, Ream decided to keep her silence, although she esnt out a large batch of engraved wedding announcements to her friends to-day. “I won't say 1 word about our plane or anything,” said the bride. “In &® week maybe we may make a statement that will clear up ail this misunder- standing—although I don't see where it's anybody's business but our own—but the Reams have told me not to talk and I Won't. It is nonsense to say that I have hired a lawyer~I don't need one.” The coupis were married in Hobokem on Sept, 1, two months after their firet meeting at the Cafe Des Beaux Arts in Huntingdon, L. 1, and on Sept. € the bridegroom went to his father's country home at Thompson, Conm, @ break the new ‘The next day, in an Interview, Nar- man B. Ream expressed his emohatio disapproval of the match and sald that it his “poor boy wanted to remain with this woman he would have to take te consequences. Mr. Ream said his son would remain at Thompson, and after that the young man seemed to have disappeared from New York. He had gone away from his post as assistant cashier of the New York Trust Company on a vacation when he was married, and he has not returned alnce, Neither his father mor his lawyer, Willlam W. Miller, sett make a statement regarding the affair, LITTLE KITTEN’S DEATH UPSET ALL BROOKLYN. ‘The strange death of a kitten tn Fale ton street, Brooklyn, to-day Involved calls wpon the following public servants, Policeman George Brennan. Ambulance Surgeon Rovbine 6 Brooklyn H ital. A patrol wae The Board of Health. To say nothing of Kate Monohan, pmanty-senan OIA, nO Mo © Signet, Joxtord street, who owned the kitten, She was carrying It along Fulton atreet wrapped in a cloth when the kitten, struggling for release, bit her on the thumb, Screaming and squeezing thd kitten with all her might she rvshea linto a drug store. A crowd gathered and Polleeman George Brennan investigated. Finding the woman hysterical he summoned Dr. Robbina, who cauterized the silght wound. ‘Then Brennan unwrapped the kitten and found It dead. He telephoned the Board of Health for instructions. The Board of Health ordered him to take the carcass of the kitten to the Adams street police station and for this ‘® patron wagon was utilized. Batert- ologtsts will examine what ts left of the feline for traces of rabl es tly Get it in YOUR Fall Hat and you will buy style and quality No hat fullest. dings on Ruta Se, ¢

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