The evening world. Newspaper, October 17, 1911, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RUZZIE ON RACK IN $50,000 SUIT SHS BLAME Cross - Examination Begins | After His Attorney Reads Hundreds of Love Notes. Famous SAYS HE Was TEMPTED,| Woman |Anarchist Says: Admits He Was Ashamed to Go in Back Door, but In- sists He Was Invited. to Awaken After reading nearly two hundred let- ters and postal cards from Helen Wood- ruf Smith, the Stamford heiress who Auzzlelamb Gardner Griswold ts suing in the Supreme Court for $0,000 damage: for breach of promise, Attorney Jacob Gordon to-day turned the placid Ruzale er to Attorney Edmund L. Mooney for cross examination, Not one of the com- has only his own word as the matronly heiress eve his wife, Attorney Mooney: started in on Ruzzle | vidence that | r promixed to be and fed, we re! Then men would “De you mean time, when Mri to say that at that Cummings was living ‘with her husband, and the Commodore ‘way still there, you went there to do ohores?” asked Mr. Mooney. “E do,” said Ruzzie. "1 used to run errands for her, do anything she wanted me to. When I went there on busin 1 used to go openly, whether the modore or Mr. Cummings saw me or | not, but in the evenings I used to slip 4m the back door, and she would meet “If only 200 or 300 women, not that—were strong enough to declare | would be felt around the world.” On the east skie the world's most famous woman Anarchist 1s among her But next Sunday evening om= | own peop! to which the residents of Fifth avenue may have ready access. As she has told the women of the poor to strike against motherhood, she will talk to the of the rich of their duty as DOOR AS A GUILTY MAN. Then admit by using the back door on those occasions that you went there as a guilty man," asked Mooney. Ruzzielam) hesitated and then lowered you women INTELLECTUAL FAD AMONG RICH. were guilty? A. @ second thme I met “Woman's Day as a Human Incubator Has Fassed, and All the Roosevelts Cannot Bring It Back. “Marriage and Love Have Nothing in Common; They Areas Far Apart as the Poles,” munications read before the jury and! motherhood. They should say to the men: ‘Until Justice Brown made any mention of a you make it possible for us to rear heaithy and Prospective marriage and so far Ruzzie happy beings, instead of human vermin, born dark, til-ventilated rooms, and insufficiently clothed ‘use to bring children into the world. by working upon his poor lacerated earnest and eventually industrial slavery would nerves in a real mean way. He went nd.” right after Ruazie's testimony about) \ , a diaving left iis position at the Corn ‘e Emma Goldman, anarchist and writer, made this Exchange Bank in 196 at the then Mrs. ~ declaration to an audience of east side women Sunday Cumming’s request, to go to Stamford | NIXOTA afternoon. el is te eyes and do odd clerical) GREELEY» SMITH “The poor,’ she told them, “bear children, not for for her, ‘ | themselves, but for the privileged classes. The poor mother rears her child | to maturity, only to give it to the factory or the army. Till conditions of | labor are bettered, let the rich woman have all the children. | they got proper homes for thelr children, the moral effect of their action ‘y more than anything else ¢o me, and we would go and spoon in her | she will carry her message Into ie man, Every, woman shoud be able: to bin or some place where no one could “enemy's country,” for she uy | Dave @ child because she wants It, not wee us." ranged to give a lecture on “Maternity” | because some manufacturer needs it. ADMITS HE USED THE BACK | at 43 Kast Twenty-second street, | Every birth should be the expreasion of | human his eyes. A blush mantied his cheeks | “strike breakers’ 1f they want to madn- | 4p paoK, for the first time since the trial began. | tain industry on its present and to them] It had been years since I saw Emma “i do," he sald, | profitable basis. Goldman, but when I met her yesterday Q@ When you first feel that youl ANARCHY AN he asked Ruzz “that a prove that Miss Sinit faacscu bold ane bi pocr women to be to have chitdren “The Poor Bear Children Not for Them- selves but for the Privileged Classes. “The Poor Woman Rears Her Child to Maturity, Only to Give It to the Factory or the Army. “Till Conditions Are Bettered Let the Rich Women Have All the Children. “A Strike of Women Against Marriage and Motherhood as They Exist To-Day Would Do More Than Anything Else the Men. - BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH., “The women of the poor should strike against in attack the economic problem in the bulk of women—I don’t expect that they would not be mothers till will have to be changed. A strike of women against inarriage and mother- hood they exist to-day would do & conscious, deliberate purpose on the part of the mother. Woman's day as a incubator has passed, and all the Roosevelts ani other similar men, with their course and indecent preach- ing against ‘race suicide,’ cannot bring in the offices of Mother Earth, the Anar- ohist monthly, as at our firet meeting Strike of Women Against Marriag-. Novel Idea of Anarchist Emma Goldman) GIRLS WARDROBE + FORTHO WEEKS wom. the very stupid will deny. One bas but to glance over (he statisties of divore to realize how bitter a fatture macrt: really Is. Nor will the stereotyped ‘BOV TELLS GAYNOR Philistine argument that the laxity ivorce laws and the growln eRe of women account for the fac hat first, every twelfth marriage ends in Alvorce; second, that since 1870 divorces ’ have increased from twenty-eight to seventy-three for every hundred thou- sand population; third, ¢ the statutory ground for div creaaed 270.8 per cent.; fourt! sertion increaved 369.8 per cent, “From infancy, almost, the average girl is told that marriage fw her ultlmate goal; therefore her training and educa- tion must be directed toward that end. Like the mute beast fattened for laughter, she is prepared for that. Yet, strange to say, she Is allowed to know much lees about her function as wite and mother than the ordinary artisan ot his Cade, | James Going of No. “WOMEN DEMAND FEWER AND) Nfth street, a boy In knickerbocke! BETTER CHILDREN.” | went to Mayor Gaynor to-day and de. “he {s, and has been, the blind tool| “ated that Patrolman No. 8642 had of the "racks GUE Will not be eo! clubbed him. The boy's right arm was very long now. in a sling and he limped painfully. “Woman no longer wants to be | “My motner sent mo out Iast night to @ party to the production of @ = buy a loaf of bread,” Going told the race of sickly, feeble, decrepit, | Mayor. “I was just passing from my since 1 e has tne that de- HIT RIM WITH CLUB James Going’s Right Arm Is in Splints and He Says It Is Broken. Fast Ninety- her. 1 thought of her as bodying that @ And you told her so? A, Yes, I} And rich women will listen to Emma | famous line of Dryden’ he seized on @xid T knew ! wasn't doing right, but! Goldman, for Anarcny has.become an|® flambeau with zeat to destroy"—zeal she persisted in inviting me to see hers| intellectual fad in New York within the | &P4 Power as well, for no one can talk And I was so deeply In love with her| past tow y 1 made this discovery | Wt this viue eyed, mild seeming that 1 couldn't resis: aate 4 when a charming okt | “QMS of forty without realising that @. So the woman tempted you and| ome time ago when ian she has both intelilgence and charin. you fell, A. 1 fell in love with her,|/#4¥) worth a million or go, Invited me |“MARRIAGE AND LOVE HAVE vale dehianty to go with her to one of Miss Goldman's NOTHING IN COMMON, In the course of his cross-examina-| lectures “This strike you advocate 1s not Uon regarding the letters Attorney! “It's In a hall on the east side, of | against marriage but only against Mooney commented on the humorous | course," she sald, “but we'l go In the] motherhood under present conditions?” and facetious tone In which so many of | motor. You have no {dea how interest-| “My lecture does not discuss mar- then were written, ‘ing tt all is.” rage at all,” Miss Goldman answered, ALL SURE ENOUGH LOVE MAK-| “I am not an advocate of what the re of course my views on that aub- 1 newsp, call race suicide,” Miss | Ject are well known, ne oN RUZZIELAMB'S PART. Coinan told me yesterday. “I want| “Em my opinion marriage and love “Won't you admit a nothing in common; they are wretched human beings, who have | home when I raw a yi , 2 group of boys play- basiacsad hogy tap a Ror moral | ing on the block between Second and pola eae: eels bed Third avenues. Just as I passed the ig ® she | boys they began to run, and then I saw desires fewer and better dren, Feared im love and through: tres, | # pollceman was chasing them. I aid not run, choice, “The policeman grabbed me by the “And the time will come when the regulation of the birth rate wii! be con-| neck, and then, as he held me, he struck me twice with his club, The first blow sidered as right and sanitary as any was across the right arm, breaking {t other provision of pubite and private hygiene." he weal we: "| be touched upon in these many hun- favors already done follow o1 large number of these letters’ for themselves, not for factories and far apart as the poles; are, in Pei ity re bys wise walking | Then he hit me on the leg with the club are light ans! playfill with no real serl-| armies, And to make that possibie| fact, antagonistic to each other. REMEDAL UNIDN OF Wivda te dria ton | One| Mtl fo the Eidowass, He went oun purpose back of them? conditions of living, conditions of wages | “That marriage {s a failure none but! better homes and happier childrem, | ays but E got his number, It te No. “It may have been just foolishness ~ a: sg ie : Soe, her part," ho replied, ‘bi . 2 ‘ - . ii 0 alled an ambulance from an ttea, fe ceeoual a th it WAS Ruzzie repliad, “that Mr, Cammings had {dreds of postals and sweetly worded|me several tines on the train. Bhe|the Preabeterian Hospital and the doc- A , a ie bur de is with me, Droken into her desk and taken 150 of pote Bag A Leth] bear ry of te spoke of our approaching marriage and| tor fixed up my arm, putting it in twas, ch! Why, havent you my letters, She sald he call r to) Matron’s uation for the agreeably re Ww Ned 4 y bees talline thin Sure ee ment Xet|my letters. She anid he called her to | Ms vrabie lad. appolntments tor clan | sai WS Were KoIng to be so happy t0-l spiinte, I then went home. ‘The people ferent x “ag his office and told her he would sue} gestine meetings are followed next week | Rothe! who saw the pollceman beating me Eas ne hapensitey ih a be one her for divorce, naming me. as cO-|»y invitations to the Cummings home, | WHEN IT’S HARD TO KISS YOUR]! warned him to stop and cried ‘Shame’ mers Ol) the. levemeking? A 2 ns respondent, unless she went west and) where Mr. Cummings seems to have SWEETHEART. at him, About an hour later he came meant to give such an impression. (got orce herself, He gave her/made Ruzzielamb a welcome quest. Re-| 4 noth, up to my home and saw my parents. loved har and made love to her as much | that the boy's sake and|Quests for favors to be done in New| ..\e0ther note referred to the re.| IP UO iy tee Oo complain about Be she dil to me. ahi look1t York City: and messages of tl ceipt of a sMg from Ruazie and he|He as was asked about tt him, and said he would settle every- “She refers,” he sald, “to a song 1|thing all right, and that he was sorry had just sent her entitled ‘It's Hard to|tor what he had done. He sald he Kiss Your Aweetheart When the Last| would get into trouble if hie attack on Miss Means Good; In 1910, when Ruzzie fell i with appendicitis he received numeroun notes of commisseration, of which the me got out.” Going does not appear to be the sev- enteen years he claims. He is slight of build and does not seem to be more than 8 Bit SAS Ae Pau akent ied ter it) Attorney Mooney was astounded, and | in quick succession, always appended by Miss Smith bowed her head and low- |a few tender words of longing or well Ject of marriage? A. Yes did. great her veil. It was the first intimation | wishing, and almost always signed with Q. ‘Then you knew you were being that Ruzzle had figured seriously enough |the abbreviated Brunehilde, written Proposed to? A. Yes, in her Ife to have been connected with | “Bruhid.” Q. Pid you accept? A, 1 a4, 1 told Mrs. Cummtng’s divorce case, Griswold | 18 187 Mra, Cummings went to South Nér L had been waiting for her and/ecemed sorry to have made public this} Dakota. exiling heraelt for six doletul 3 < months trom the remarkably acquies- tat 1 would marry her gladly. new secret in the woman's Ife. cent ex-Mayor of Stamford. During Q. And you loved her devotedly down And 80," Attorney Mooney thundered, | those six long months Ruszie's letter to the time of the break In your friend- “your presence h in court Is the re-| box was kept well stocked with affec- ehip? A. Yow sult of a guilty assoclation with the Honate masaages, Jp many, of whieh a Q. You were always ready and willing defendant?” “yd oy Add fy inva tl thy ae to marry her? A. Yes Rivanie was excused from answering. | [OMe Dy FM ig iy iil @. And are ready to marry her to-day MORE LETTERS TORUZZIELAMB| «4. r id what @ reunion {t will be, my if whe would have yout A. Tam READ BY LAWYER. leven" Is the tenor of the closing line: @. Do vou remember having given a ry Sen RRaER MERGE " of many of these missives from the hay 5 H 910? ou MD. QECU Pies seal he In 1908, after ty (id Jaco Gordon through the reading of them all dapper | WANTED SATISFACTION AND Walle the readiig, plece by .plece, of] ttle Ruzzielamb site in qu com- GOT IT, HE DECLARES. the voluminous correspondence between | placence on the witness stand while nee r sire the matronly Brunehilde and her youth-{ the most intimate details of his long ‘4 . 4 € s bee jove story are publicly aire in the ey s.did «you On: shat 0 FC out Sicgiried has been in the main al! it bitely aired ines droning matter of fact tones of his at- © process Attorney Gordon fr PERIOD OF NINE YEARS, Ruzzle toi an appointment witn alvore i uxate wuld he had been “mixed | arom tne tat day of their meeting eon at the Waldorf and «Worl these always sentimental and often} ene ene m we e, you bet.” When as MAYS CUMMINGS GAVE HER jussionate epi exiead than aia’ walt CHOICE OF SUITS. broken Mine down through t nt the matinee of ¢ low could you have been mixed up) Years that Rugatelamb says he ih 1S Cees Ja a divoree suit brought by Mrs, Cums voted @xclusivery to lis well preserved ‘ NY Baath Ate tae Aon aiannie | SHARIA sappened after the theatre? | # ft nme TOF DAF Every sort of event or ctroumstance 1 st Homer Cummings?” asked! iat might arise to affect the meetings play and sur own ect affairs of this sirangely mated coup ra, 1 Rungie. “Sie held following is an excellent sample fourteen yeara of age, Dear Poor Little Honey-Child | The Mayor has ordered an tnvestiga- Ruazielamb: Was he sick with a | tio! great big pain in his wee, wee The resonds:ahow thet Policeman No tummy? Cheer up. If the doctors O63 Ip Denia J, Rodgers He was ap- behave all will soon be well | The reading of these little missives set even the austere Justice to knawing| at his moustache to preserve the proper! degree of judicial sternness in his ex- pointed June %, 10, He ts no tghty-elghth —— Moving Figares for Him, the Houston I staned THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1911 MAGISTRATEFIXES THREE TO TESTIFY that same plethora to t spite of which always a raving beauty, peared tn the W clad in borrowed finery, Locked Out of Hotel Miss Dale Had Nothing but an Even- ing Dress. pole eng ‘tneates, upon | at Appeared on the calendar we have arging that three witnesses, UPON! been met with requests for adjourt SHE ROOMED IN A TAXI. | whom ne depended mainly to prove| ment. ‘The complaining wit j that Henry Atbert Uirtol was Justifted /come on to New York from th on te. teas at Kreat inconvenience and expen dand Decid ait Gas Heats ealcatee a Phidort bitch the case is adjourned again, Lam £ Ss an ecideéd | {mous negro educator and head of thelafratd the People will have great di Lawyers Conferredang Tuskegee Institute, mistaking him for|culty tn getting It» witnesses here e ; again.” i Woman | “peeper” had inystertousiy dieap-| awe on What the Young peared, James 1 Moore, Ulrich’ aw: | npn eng ih - am ciiatly Nase | yer, demandea time to-day of the| Liewt. Quinn was on his vacation: Actually Needed. Juatives of the Court of Special See-| Chief Justice Zeller announced that ——e sions to learn what had become Tee meted coleied ehubiten” iin | The noted ator, Its @ pretty awful thing be pos-| them, misadventure seven months ago agoused sednd ote rivihora ot elsines and neve je missing witnesses are Mr. and| great int throughout the com he last Jewelled | Mra, F buckled pump distrained | rter and gol | Lew, Dr. Lyman Abbot, Hamilton 4 at 1 proprietor who ckings and garters, but added, with| Vright Mable, Willlam J. Schelffelin, by @ ruthless hotel prop 1 h, that ft ‘ , . v reds 210M slah, that tt would certainly be! he Abraham Ja Robegt Shaw Min ad fasee to heed your clatin that hundreds! hotter than her present. plicht. | Sun coe mane Shay a ai of dollars’ worth of your raiment have) 1 will at least have something that| Criminal Court Hullding an hour bef bi heen damaged by leaking pipes, and {ftw me," she sald, wistfully the tine. scheduled \ tof) It w he demands paym $113 for board and lodg- | should a mere trifle of | the manager « 4 be held to aecount| Were he Femained waiting to be called. ‘ jor having lived up : “s ae Frauen wan the dolorous plight of Mio | (he Soke teen ier Mites beeen’ oc Senator Penrose Better, 4 Dorothy Vieginia Dale, step-daueiter of | yiuti for damases Will begin. She ale] The coll from which United States % a showgirl and jeges ¢ Della Fox, sometime t Skle Court to-day which bulged | Pin and agged here and there in moet dis. |¢ tressing fashion for one possessel of Andalusian symmetry and grace. Miss Dale stil wroe the same white silk stockings that she had on late Sat- urday night, when she came home from @ ball and found the door of her sulte locked against her, Yesterday she had appeared tn court in the same evening gown in which she had been turned out into an unkind world, to reve about tn whe found a friend to taxteabs until take her tn, The evening gown, how- ever, had been replaced by a black sult that bagged across the hips and flared at the hobble. Even the black pumpe were too large and flapped audibly ae the handsome Misa Dale walked. The purple Léberty Betl toque wae fairly becoming, but (a long sigh and a tear glistening on the eyelids) it wasn't in the name class with the seventeen hats locked up in her wardrobe at the King Fawant Hotel. MI88 DALE HAS FAILED TO PAY FOR HER ROOMS. While Miss Dale appeared a com | plainant against Manager Charles G. Hollingsworth of the hotel, he seemed to have most of the law in the case on his alde. Miss Dale hadn't paid up and she made vexing remarks about a ault \tor damages. Abraham Weltfish, coun- sel for Mr. Hollingsworth, couldn't see where she had any rights, except in a slow-moving clvil: sult. "But I must have clothes,” walled Miss Dale, “I can't go round this way. For two days I had to shelter myself in taxicabs because I had absolutely noth- ing but my evening gown, And there are thousands of dollars’ worth of my things hold out dor a measly board bill of $113." “Why, everything ahe's got wouldn't bring $100," retorted Mr, Hollingaworth The nasty way in which thin was sald nent Magistrate O'Connor up in the atv, “T will not belleve that.’ said the Court. “Why, that evening gown the young Iady wore yesterday must have been worth $200." paid $180 for it and can produce the bill,” cried Miss Dale. Magistrate O'Connor was palpably pleased by the closenens of his gu He called upon M. H. Dalberg, Miss Dale's counsel, and Attorney Weltfish to confer on nome agreement by which the show girl could be fitted out temporarily. ‘She muat be provided with cloties,” said the Court, “for at least two weeks, 1f this case ta going into a cfvil sult. LAWYERS DECIDED TOLET GIRL HAVE A CHANGE. ‘The lawyers entered into a brisk arg ment, now and then ralsing thelr voicos to w bellgerent pitch, but finally aet- ting down to a whlapered conferenve which ended in the following schedule of clother for Mien Dale: Two kimonos. Five pairs of assorted etockings. Six unton suite, Three paira of garters, Four assorted ha Three pairs of shoes. Three mult One evening dr When Magiatrate O'Connor had roru- tintzed the List he ventured the opinion pression. “Miss Smith laughed aload,| ‘He ts crazy about figures.” that the allotment ought to hold Miss and the balliff rapped heavily for silence,| “He ought te a college professor." | Tale for at least two weeks. The young | his own face hroadly. agrin | “He'd rather have a front @eat at ajiady herself thought that the lawyers Attorney Gordon offered a batch of musical comedy,’ had skimped in the matter of shoes, photographs, some of Miss Smit) alone, others of her and Ruzale together. On = a number of vem are nder but guarded tnseriptions in Miss Smith's handwriting. Serge Dresses. Preparing for Suicide. A aes CLEVELAND. 0., Oct, 17--Ceorge Velvet Suits. . . . Hermie. five, @ well to do F ‘ estate man of Bu a sure Serge Suits fieheviure an Cleveland, toda. a ynd Killed hts alta Sih Ac ane alti Haralip Maas cnle Double Faced Reversible Coats one arm, After tow lle he held At bay @ crowd of inure than 4 pers ons while he took off ata hoe, turned 24-24 rY-FOUR’ v fone while he took aff sia, shoe, turned) 22.2429 THIRTY-POURTH BTREET, To-Morrow (Wednesday) Women’s and Young Women’s t t g 2 y “What did your relatives and friends assert vat 1 Was trying to blackma’ torney. 4 | que breaks the monotony by haltin; y aft your bre: ith Miss Smith Ripe oa Rat rus the perusal of the letters and postals|REVEALS FEATURES DEAR TO in isin" asked Rumie’s lawser | Q, And you got satisfaction? A. T ald. | oy enough to set Ruasielamb golng on RUZZIELAMB IN COURT. They sald Twas a foot to have wasted | Thon what ave you here for2” sald some piquant relation ot his nine-year), During the early reading of the letters | nine yeara on her and then let he " Mooner. savagely Pe Gee Teen ent to-day Misa Smith sat shrouded me over and get away with tt, te | Gordow'a obfection was overruled and nF WEE Ret on double thickness of velling, but ewered, | DR ee ee Ge) cal the 6 leations from Russ | threw back thie outer Urown vell,, When | "What's the first part of that anaws dhe satisfaction ie accured in publish. | 20's well seasoned affinity read so far! it beca nt that tne letter read. asked Attorney Mooney 1 skit A iar far was meri. Have been the affectionate and cleverly | ing we sntinue Indefinitely she re-iful manoetvering he Kot ita Will Place on Sale toat of protweting his name from slane Worded messages of a well read, acs! moved the Vel! alao and revealed peat that firs: phrase thre Ger and to disprove the claim that he complished and romantle woman to time the features that Huge | the Intenae amuse Me aeving 16 blackmail ike @mith one of whom she Is very fond, Inj Ae N AnalaUS to Baze Upon} “Have you sufte: angits “You sty you loved this woman,” fact, the defense apparently ntends to Goran ¢ CANE eee oe ANA nottan in reas roared lawyer Moones, “and yet soa Make no denial of the fact that the| written in irish “ror” same Gurdon ‘ A Large Assortment stabbed her in the back by making pubs Mature matron of Stamford, even while! reason the atto didnot key Ripe AYE: mi fared) cael \ dio these love letters from her to you?" | still with her husband, Homer nee cimselt, but ap- | runzte iP | “Obsect,"" yelled Gordon, but the Jury | Cummings —twice Mayor of that Hite | pealed to At mpones, op anne fe | had heard the question and Mooney | Conneeticut clty—used the United) Miotnes atoones did co, ‘ultug ata fie | ened satissied, States mails with astonishing j Attorney: atoones did so, waking « great USED TOE SHOOTING SELF | During the cross-examination Ruzele- | lessneas In the pureult of an I ton Gardon came t | AFTER MURDERING WIFE.) Velvet Dresses lam) declared himself to have been the relationship with the tender Ruaate: | stron n ¢ i J | e ng! . j leet 4 get him a any day i % canse of Mra Cumming’s divorce, | In Jem ores oven al mii, lrw Piette !One-Armed Ohio Man Held Crowd! Messaline Dresses » a question about the time aaa ab tha #) t de! P , _ Cummings went West to get her One of the notes of the year 1008 made) at Bay While He Took Off Shoe, sl . $28.00 25.00 19.50 38.00 25.00 20.00 | AGAINST HEAD OF _ TUSKEGEE VANISH So Tria ed Booker T. W. Is Postponed Till Nov. 6. wien #he ap-| complished $500 da | Ave gown En Andrew Alex of Gunmetal! Calf and Black Kid, high cut square tops, firm welted soles and full round toes, Party Shoes and Slippers for boys and girls in unusual | the ground floor apartment, across the hall from Ulrich, March, 19 of this |year, when Ulrich found Washington peering at the names under the bells in the corridor, and led a crowd In @ chase along Central Park West to Sixty-fourth street, where Washing+ ton was knocked down, beaten and kicked. ‘The other witness is Lieut. Quinn of aixty-eighth street station, who refused to entertain the charge of peeping when he learned whom | Ulrich was accusin | y . | Assistant District-Attorney James By | of Man Who Assault | saath protested against the adjoufne . ment asked for by Lawyer Moor shington ‘This is the second time this trial has been postponed ac tne request of the defense,” he ut “The prosecu- tion has aiways ve ready, eager in lfact, to try this ¢ but each time it — se, rank who occupied jAnd rallied to his support President Ti H. Revetce, : = | Andrew Carnegie, Jacob H. Schift, Seth for the trial, He # then arr District-Attorney's office, to t be set bt th hat leaking pipes in a closet Senator Boles Penroe of Pennsylvania ake to her thirty-| has been suffering for a days was tweive wn palra of ex, | much better to-day, He ts at the Wal n li twelve unton sults and! dorf-Astoria FE under the care of and assorted lingerte. (Dr, Adame of the hotel, 2? LGidding &Eo, FOR WOMEN MISSES and JUNIORS OFFER UNUSUAL VALUES— Tailor-made Suits, $45 & $65 i Of winter-weight diagonal serge, braid-trimmed; custone | workmanship throughout. { Sutts for Small Women and Misses in tailor-made and i Norfolk models, of cloth and corduroy— $35 & $55 ; Fashionable Utility Coats,4 35645 1 For motoring, traveling and similar wear; of im, 4 double-faced materials in new colorings; reversible plaid 4 backs. For Small Women and Misses— at $25 4 Crepe Satin Afternoon Dresses, $50 4 Trimmed with lace and veiled chiffon. VALUE, $75. ; For Small Women and M sses—Ot crepe de chine, crepe meteor, chiffon velveteen and French serge, various styles— $19.50, $28, $35 & $39 Dancing Frocks and Party Dre:ses for Small ; Women and Misses—in evening shades— $35 & $48 Evening Gowns at $45, $55 G $65 Of crepe de chine and chiffon, richly trimmed with laces : and bugles. VALUES $65 to $95. Afternoon andEveningW raps, Coats Women's and Misses’ styles, in the delicate new pastel shades and combinations, richly lined— ai $45 & $48 Smart New Blouses, $13.50 & 415 Of batiste, chiffon and silk-marquisette. Fifth Avenue at 46th Street ander Girls’ Button Shoes Children’ Sizes 8% to 10% Misses’ Sizes 11 to 2 Large Girls’ Sizes 2! $2.25 $2.65 $3.00 to6. variety at moderate prices. XTH AVENUE AT NINETEENTH STREET. W, 110) UPHOLSTERY CO. St. Te!, 2565 Chelsea, Covina g 55) ; Chas. | World “Warts” Work a Monday Morning Wonders,

Other pages from this issue: