The evening world. Newspaper, March 8, 1912, Page 5

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LIT ETT RT NL REE FT ET ET NT ‘HS WELOVED “ONY HS MONEY, SAYSMILONARE “) Mrs. Ducas Quickly Tired of Him, Declares Manufacturer . | | in Answer to Suit. “GOOD FOR NOTHING.” Admits He May Have Called Her That in Presence of Their Son. the making of @ fortune Play compared with a man's un- derstanding of women was virtually ad- mittes by Benjamin P. Ducas, head of the Ducas Chemical Manufacturing Company, in an ewer flied tn the Su- preme Court to-day to the sult for aep- aration brought by his comely young wife, Mrs, Rachel N. Ducas. Ducas has quaitfied as an expert on the wiles of women. Moreo: after nearly twelve years of married life ho says he has succeeded in convincing his wife that he I “an excellent father, but « bum husband.” Ducas was thirty-seven vears old and Me wife was only twenty when they married, after a roman Mulhausen, 1900, courtship, at Alsace-Lorraine, Aug. 16, Imost immediately after our mar- riage,” sald the wealthy chemical manufacturer, “my wife manifested a lack of love for me. Her only reason for marrying me sec:ned to vo because believed I wax wealthy and she could satisfy her luxurious desire MAY HAVE CALLED HER A “@OOD FOR NOTHING.” Admitting that she was “an attractive young woman of some refinement and culture” when he married her, Ducas de- clared he soon afterwards learned that sho was imperious and extravagant. He added that he may have told her in the presence of their son, Robert, now tem years old, that she was “lazy,” ‘good-for-nothing,” and @ “fool.” Since 1908 the warring couple have been Uving apart under @ eoparation agree- ment, by the terms of which Ducas agreed to give his wife $5,000 a year for her eupport. Mrs. Ducas complained to the Court that she could not possibly live on #0 amall a sum, When ehe married Ducas, she sald, ehe was led to Delleve he would support her in the gmanner to which she had been accu: tomed as the daughter of a prospero an4 aristocrat French merchant. Ducas declared that, instead of being an aristocrat, Mrs, Ducas's father w: dealer in junk, and that his estate wi worth only about $60,000 when he died in 189, He added, by way of attempting to whow that his wife was not accus- tomed to all the luxuries she had said, that the living expenses of her father and family did not exceed $1,200 @ year. “The defendant further dent if the answer filed in the Supreme Court, that the plaintiff is well educated in Engit#h, or that she is an accomplished musician, an expert needlewoman, or a ahorough housekeeper.” ‘Ducas also complained that his wife ‘went abroad every year and contracted debts for furs and jewelry without his knowledge. On one of these visits, in 1906, he said, she met one Philip Hecht, @ business partner in Paris of her brother. A friendship eprang up im- mediately, which resulted in Hech coming to America a few months lat While Hecht was here, according to Ducas, much gossip was excited among the guests of the Hotel Netherlands, where the Ducases lived, because of ‘Mre. Duocas's conduct with Hecht. Ducas said he pleaded with his wife to cease her attentions to the French- man, but ehe declared she didn't care what others said and would do ay | pleased. He asserted further that Mre, Ducas treatea him with the utmost dis: remect, indifferent and contempt, and finally became #0 exasjerating that they were compelled to part. Once, when he waz suddenly selzel with fllness in the bathroom, Ducas sald he called to his wife to come to him, but she simply replied that she would rather see him dic than to trouble her- self to leave a comfortable chair in which she was seated. DENIES HE HAS INCOME OF $150,000 A YEAR, Concluding, Ducas declared his wite cafied him a fool, an idiot and a drunk. ard, and refused to occupy the same room with him wien they lived at the Hotel Nethorlands. He sald that in- etead of having : year, as she rep; hig tncome is only pais sae STRIKERS AGAIN CLASH WITH LAWRENCE POLICE. Five in “Endless Chain” of Pic Put in Cells After Small Riot Near Mills. LAWRENC! Mass., March ets 8.-Five arrests of strike pickets were made dur- | ing the early hours to-day and there were clashes between the police and strikers at the Ariingion Mills and on the edge of the Common. Abou: s%0 strikers participated in the ‘endlles chain't pleketins, parsing and repassing the mill districts and urging the work- era to Join thely ranks, A crowd of at the Arlington Mills was dis the police reserves and to of the ere were arrested. oe bie sane Merde Hig HAS George C. Boldt and the hotel for $500,000, President Wood at the conf at | ARRESTED FOR SENDING A TEL. the American Woollen Mills offices in EGRAM TO M’KINLEY. Boston yesterday, In explanation, Wil Beiyin's ifext appearance in police fam Yates, as spokesman, sald _ court was in May, 1901, when he was “Yesterday's offer was similar to that arrested in Buffalo, at the Iroquols Ho- made a week ago and really means only oh "tor trying to. send a telegram. to an dnerea aq of from wee ms George B, Cortelyou warning him ‘that ° weekly on an average Presidunt Ste y's train would be vena ctually thinks his offer means a President M train would be tht nt. advance to the unskilled | Wrecked by dynamite at Paso del Norte, j f ‘exa, ‘and will furnish uy the figures this to us we Will gladly con offer." 1. {Was stoppli | GOES TOISLAND - AFTER HGH LIFE ~—ATTHE WALDORF i —-——— | Ex-Railroad President Arrested for Begging a Meal on Thirty-fourth Street. From railroad president to ‘“pan- handler” and from a Waltort-Astoria Guest to a workhouse prisoner, has been | the career of Col, Wiillam Wayne Be: vin, former head of the San Francia: and Eastern Rallroad, of one of the first families of Virginia, former member of the Lotos Club, for a brief time a millionaire, and once well known along Broadway. Col, Belvin wes sent to the Work-| house this morning to serve out a fine of $5 which he could not pay after being convicted in the Yorkville Court ‘last Might of vagrancy and begging. The) one-time railway president and Wall street plunger was arrested yesterday | by @ detective from whom he solictted| alms at Broaiway and Thirty-fourth street. But fifty-five years old now, the for- mer Broadway “spender,” unkempt, | ragged, dirty and a. physical wreck, tried while before the Magistrate to as-| @ the ol! dignity which he bore so in his prosperous days but he fatied, and {t would have taken a most discriminating eye to find in the human derelict facing the Judge any traces of the Virginia gentleman or the man of | affairs. INHERITED $600,000 WHEN NINE- TEEN VEARS OLD. \ Belvin, at nineteen, inhertted $000,000) when his father died. He had grad-| uated fvom the Virginia Military Ingti- tute. He took up tobacco farming, but after a year of this he went to Seattle ere real estate cpectlations tn a 20 netted iim more than $100,000, Villard, the financier, saw’ the possibilities In young Belvin and intro- duced him into Wall street, where he soon became known as @ plunger and Increased his roll to a million, Losing $45,0% in the Northern Pacific y paid and Relvin wae released. It was discovered about this time that while he was a railroad president Bel- vin's income was less than $2,590 @ year, end it was sald that he had borrowed | money from friends to keep up his dues in the Lotos Club, In 18% Belvin, tt was clalmed, threat. d the life of David H. Moffat, elaim- 5 the latter owed him $490,000, Moffat sat the Waldorf at the time, and this lead to Belvin's ejectment. Beivin immediately entered sult against is . THE SBVENING WORLD, Beautiful French Actress Whom It Is Reported J. H. Hyde Will Wed ¥RIVAY, OY BITTENBY DOG [CROOKS CONFESS MAKUH THREE WEEKS AGO, Three Other Persons Attacked at Same Mme Undergoing Pasteur Trealment. detectives and a bacteriologicrl exam- {nation showed that tt had rabies. . t & N\A We GABRIELLEROBINNE. SOMEHKE MEAT AND CARA EAT BUTTHS PAR Buicher Gets $414.39 for Meat Against Schwenher and Bride. AYDETO MARRY PARISN BEAUTY Wi'lian F. Schwenker jr, whose ro: mantic courtship and subsequent elope ment with and marriage to Miss M Murray, @ pretty show girl, caused somewhat of a stir on Broadway about three years ago, Is in trouble with his butoher, Young Mr. Sctwenker, whose father “3 a? + 3, was a millionaire dealer in brewers’ Son of Equitable’s Founder Has} euppites und. lived ina fashionable . house n Riverside Drive until his Been Very Attentive to Mile. |deatn a short time ago, 1s alleged to owe August F. Frimm of No, 6 Am- sterdam avenue $114.39 for meat fur- nished him and his handsome young actress wife when they lived et No. 267 West Eighty-sixth street. Robinne, Actress. From Paris comes a report that James Hagen Hyde, formerly Vice-President of ieee ee tor ee by the Equitable Lite Assurance Society, 8] gonwenker and his actress bride, In to wed the beautiful Mile. Robinne of| fact mavahuar ihenvaliventad the Comedie Francaise. M. Percy Peixotta, the European rep- resentative of the Equitable, who yes- terday sailed from New York for Havre practically cut his son off, and young Mr, Schwenker found thmself finan- clally embrassed. But that did not deter him and Miss in La Savole, sald that he had heard| Murray from entinf meat. ‘They, or- the rumor relative to the engagement] dered lavish portions of porterhouse of the couple, admitting that he had] steak and al other delicacles Grimm's the affair discussed in Paris, | market afforded. <‘irlmm'x daughter, he added, “I know nothing def} wno nad keep the books for the Grimm nitely about it, Mr, Hyde hag not cOM- | arker gays the bl fided in me.” My *é 4 M, Peixotta is a close friend of Mr, | Mt. Schwenker covers Hog of only but had ne authority from the} @bout two months. Miss Grimm satd president to make any an-|the bil! was often presented to M ment so far as heart affairs were | Schwenker, put le could not be per- concerned, suaded to ipay it n tt wasta ken In New York tt has been rumored) ois father, who walt hn tired that Mile, Robinne has of late been re-| or, ren PIPE TT hI Osivrine marked attention: from Hyde. se aia ae So Grimm brought sult In the Munfelpai Court and got a judgment on Dee, M4, 1910, The judgment obtained in the Muntct- pal Court was returned unsatisfed and Grimm got 4 from Justice Hea- rick in the Supreme Court to-day di- pod ta EL ANE) MUSICAL AT WALDORF TO AID NEW HOSPITAL. ‘The Woman’ ‘liary Board of the New York Polyclinte Hospital will hold e the Sheriff to levy on @ trust crash, Pelvin mot with @ series of busi-|4 mi-careme benefit card party at the : eae tee ore Mr. Schwenker by his ness reverses which swallowed tor- | Waldorf-Astoria on Thursday afternoon, |) Mr. Sehwenker gets an incom ture, His last venture was to open a| March 1, at 2 o'clock, of $000 u year from this fund | banking business in Lo! When he] At the ex gerry Of the’ mame. th imm is now of getting his |fatled in this he came back to be met| members and their friends will be enter- | 701... by a divorce action instituted by hia| med with vocal selections by Mr, Ra- a | wite, named at tie co-respondent | Ward V. Parley and Mr, Dodiin, 36las] Want Civil Service Indina } Florence Traub give a plano solo, apec a4 woman sald to have bee h e ak an ua ave een the wife] oi) thrown, the kindness of Mr ie SHINGTON S.-The Board n at ‘ ‘ranko Goldman, a violinist, Will] o¢ Indian Commissioners, which has just ollowing this Belvin went to the Tickets, including tea, are | concluded its forty-third annual eine orf-Astoria to live, and ar- . and may tained from the | bore, adopied w reso saking Pre | A for not paying his bill of $140.) chairman of the Entertainment Commit. | here: saopied peeeey madyy | s rent to prison, but the bill was| tee, Mrs. A. R, Hotinaon, No. 159 West | dent Taft to place all Inspectors in the | Indian service under Civil Service rules 4 Forty-ninth street. The proceeds will be devoted to the new Polyclintc Hos- Inspectors now are appointed pita! in West feth street, which is| by the President, and the Commission- now being completed, and which will be|ers hold that such a system leads to opened, with an ambulance and emer-| the injection of partisan politics into gency service, during April the administration of Indian y after he had thre: the life of Dis Edwant Mec charged from t on, the erst- wlile railroad manipulator appeared tn Buaivn, Puiiadelphia and Chicago police courts for threatening sulte against various prominent brokers, James A Patten, the wheat king, was one of thc men Belvin tried to sue for money he claimed was due him, In December of last year the former clubman reappeared in New York and persuaded Magistrate O'Connor to send ri and T want to spend the I can at least smell ‘ghts of New and he Wa Dear Old Grandmas who have used tea for many years and know, especially enjoy WhiteRose CEYLON TEA him to the workhouse for a month, havi no money where nd see the bright ned Belvin Forty Cups for 10c, Sometime later Belvin was committed \* Bellevue for examination inte his ean- e he dvopped trom aight and nothing more was heard of | | ED Wate Dove Seles, Gay tie. 0 Bout forty-five years old, born inGermany b: TWO RL TbT A HOLBIG ML $560 worth of clothing and Jewelry from] and about ty take bis frat matrimonial } TAKEN T'! H . his employer, One prior conviction. | step. " 2 8 =. A spotted white mongrel got out ot | Sentence auspended Wien te deed nad vean ait the naxpy | QOUWers andOcians — = the home of Mrs, Ellen Welsh at No.| Ernest E, Bern twenty-two year] ee Py awa apema aii os a nto ie auto and ere he A * 82 New Chambers street to-day and at-|otd, pleaded guilty Feb. 2 to forgery | ort to Mensonhurst. to lunch. at Ato tee 28rd Bt., near Foxrte Aten ‘ tacked eight-year-old Stephen Colomoo|ot oheck for $12. Sentenced to Btmtral y n'a bandborie baimAiow re Ba Week eee Be nner vem, of No, 81 Oliver street who was run-|Reformatory. Sentence revoked and al-|d . ata 442 Columns A te itt Lenox Ave. ning on ‘his way to school, loweg t@ go free on a su ed sen-| Wedding Ls © ed 60 be qu! oN jum! td Me stand he Be The dog had been tied in a dedroom |tence yesterday Cee ee eee tein IReneaT we eee % for a week, had chowed through the| Maurice McGrath, twenty-one years] Promirent Players has been Invited, {t) 1999 Broadway, mear Willo’by, rope that held him. es eae a old, pleaded gullty to attempted grand 4 pe ENE RAS | 199 Fulton 5t., opp. A. & running after the dog when it left the |jarceny iFeb. 13. Sentenced to Elmira mann a Becakers. ee, house and Jumped for the Colombo |Reformatory. Sentence revoked and al-] SALYERAVILLE, Ky., March 9—| 697 Broad 8t, near Hahne's, Newark, boy. The savage antmal sank Its teeth |lowed to go free on a suspended sen-| Overpowering the Jailer, Perry Burton | = deep in the calf of the child's leg. Ir-|tence yesterday. Stole worth of] ocd Charles Darbey, charged with the ; ving Flynn, fourteen years old of No.|goods while shipping clerk in a drug| murder of 8 P. Simra, escaped from 88 Church street, rushed to the ttle |house. jail here yesterday, but were later fellow's rescue, whereupon the dog BY JUDGE SWANN. rounded up and captured by a company turned on thim and sank ft fangs in his arm. Mrs, Welsh managed to get the dog aw but was herself slightly bitten. The boys ami the dog were taken to the Oak street station. A physician cauterized the boy's wounds. The dog aped in the station house and at- ‘acked Doorman Wolf. The mongrel | was at confined tn a cell and will | be sent to the Board of Health for ob- servation. The boys were sent to the Willard Parker Hospital. ‘The dog belongs to Joseph Welsh, the |General Sessions today, Carter was crippled son of Mrs. W Tittle Joe} convicted of knocking Mra. Dill regoued the dog from a gang of boys in| schwartze onacious in front of the street, and they were inseparable companions for months unttl two weeks ago when the boy was sent to the At- lantic Highlagde for hts health. The dog has whined and moped ever since, and then got so ugly he had to be tied up. i —_——>—__ NEW JACK THE GIANT KILLER. ‘Tiny Hoboken At Savage Mr. ey Wallops s Alfred E. Savage, a Jersey City baker of huge size, didn’t like the way At- torney Mark M. ‘Townsend, counsel for the Public Gervice Railway Company, examined him in @ damage suit in Ho- boken District Court to-day. The law- yer is a wiry little chap, and when Savage met him In the corridor of the court after the trial and called him a lot of unpleasant names, Townsend sprang “DES OF RBIS} in the er!minal courts yesterday who pleaded guilty to various erimes| yo. pleaded gullty to attempted robb: the second dexre at Becond avenue Twenty-ninth street and stole prior convictions. years and elght months. and Mre, J. W. Conkitn are wondering they will forgive is not known, teen, same age, plan the parents ob, 8, 19132. 'MISS FRIGANZA, FAIR AND 40, | GETS READY TO BE A MRS. | Beauleous Trixie Trots to Brooklyn | With Manager and Signs Pre- | liminary Contract. AND ARE SET FREE a ny Trixie Priganga js going to marry ’ im Charley Goettler, her manager with Sentences Revoked in Two “Tho Sweetest Giri in Paria” Both par- tes ared in the marrta nee * Cases, One on a Second | Mreru tn Brooktyn, to-day, and signed articles and the event t# reheduled for 7 ” the ehureh ve and Way Offender. yn, Sunday — es” ' s om. Self confessed crooks fared very well of five poped down deputy marvelous Kowns. er nly one was sent to prison, He was an We L. { “Don't ask me to sit down," she Nine-year-old Edward Iabtlis of No, 182 old timer, who had served four prior! py, It's too tleht. Just lean into Weer Fitty-second etrest, Bayonne, x, | erme of imprisonment that desk and co one of thowe ai eae We ee ten, [p Ehe_ Misposition of the Ave Was AS/finny heart forectorure Roticcs and show J, died to-day at his home of rabdtes. | pottows Ags WA beat ptt sor He was one of four persons Mitten on! BY JUSTICE SEABURY,” SU) aiies irivanza tudnled aver with Rood Feb, 19 ast by @ mad dog, The others PREME COURT. hawmer ag and heb. euipuenlion’ are Stanley Hughes, eight years old, Of! ayia Jones, fortyeone years old.| thousht out the answers for the va No. 83 West Forty-third street; Thomas] pleaded gullty to forgery tn the third] blank + When tt waa all over Flannery, proprietor of the Mansion | degr No prior o fetion, W 4) Trixie had tre a odin black House, at No. 91 Broadway, and M,|tleket agent for the New Jersey Central} white that y No, 781 Broadway, Bayonne, | Raliroad Company tn this city, Was) old and bas ed ence bie magyar babes ot awl in his account *alsified his | befo Also that her anme or The dog, a vis, black mongrel, at : . over defaleation, Sentence| Was Della allahan, but that ehe had ‘ c tacked thom at Thisty-sixth street and | Ithe court's decree in 1908 that the etal vere suspended. 2@ OC q i w at je stage Broadway, and all four were badly bit- name #he had used for so many pleas ten. Their wounds were cauterized and| BY JUDGE MULQUEE: GEN. ava might be hers tn real sooth, they -ecommenced taking the Pasteur ERAL SESSIONS. ler depe ere Was born tn treatment. The dog was killed bys two twenty-three years| | ‘and proud of It," she added Edwant M. Kane, old, pleaded guilty to grand larceny in On June 15, he stole ly Goettler went on record ay being ver M he second dexree. of State militia, The millth Charles Thor pson, forty-six years old. y in Held up a citizen Kl One hundred and bo ir State prison for alx ja fired on the 1 BY JUDGE CRAIN. Willlam C. Carter, @ negro with @ bad record, was given a sentence of not less than twenty or more than twenty-five years in Sing Sing by Judge Crain tn West On, Hundred and Forty-third street Ja and stealing her meshbag containing It was his second conviction for theft, and tn 1910 ¢ was arrested In connection with the home at No. READS 10 USE. jaie Repeat di Baler os Bheg hes but HAVE YOU TRIED IT? sornee oe BR . Makes Hot and Cold Meats Tasty. A Fine Fiah Sauce by Ad tossen YOUNG ELOPERS WED, WAIT TO BE FORGIVEN. N. Y., NEWBURGH, March 8.—Mr. ning whether they will aee thelr Heatrice, to-day, Whether Last night they received a telegram saying, “We are married and BEATRICE, r Beatrice, Howard Word Marvin, the ed to get married, and ‘ected on acount of their this me daughter, who ts elgh- and youth, Miss Beatrice was sent to Salls- e into the air and skde-swiped the giant @lbury, Md, Yesterday young Marvin pre- stinging wallop on the left eye. tented a note from his father to the e With a roar, the big baker rushed at the tiny attorney, but he dodged skil- fully and a dozen court attendants dragged the savage Savage away. Aw all this occurred outside the courtroom door {t didn't amount to contempt of court. pe See When you don’t advertise nobody will know that you are doing busl- ness, and it won't be long before you will not know it yourself. ALL OU go right on supplying (Prom M, ¥. Globe, Ma: rc FIREMEN'S HARD FT rh in subduing the t out the tenth floor r They. would “1 in checkin und ' th that period hw » has come to be aimply @ trade , intended to gull the innocent | | | | giving them the gentlne articl Bo there were protably only few hundred bax» of the real articl in America, and muc in smoke to-day en the fire start | marriage license clerk at Salisbury, and after he and Miss Conklin were married sald, Make that the fashi our set." DESTROYED IN FIRE We fear from yesterday’s newspaper reports of our loss by fire at our manuf: turing plant that the public may be led to believe that we can not flames even i they not fought the fire with the standpipe conneo:ions on the ninti floor of an adjacent buliding An interesting feature of the fi was that America’s supply of rea Mocha and Java « at least th part of it, went ‘up in smoke coffes house atid grocery store in the country adver tixes Mocha and Java, there ar but a handful concerns In thi that really hav her. ‘The into paying a r price for cheap Brazilian be or some oth: inferior kind, There are a few old epicures w know the taste ani will ha ° Ing else, and big pure food house like Leggett's, to the y 1 of it went up ITT f tecana “aptoopart of the kitchens d¢ | Premier Vanilla | was affected, T andy and f Premicr Fruit Jame 26e | Premier Whi serve sections were not damaged Premier Currant Jelly 26c | Premier Black Pepper nbs, cause of the fre was un} Premict Saxe Honey 10e, 26e | Premier Maine Corn | Riser! eine dal nak Premier Stulfed Olives t0e, 83e | Prenicr Uncoated Rice. * ninth and th floors “and $ Premier Olive ( Bbc, 45c, 85¢ | Premicr Brown R nee Me | basement of the Leswett Company's $ Premice Hard Wheat Macaroni 16¢ | Premier Perri- Walla Mlb, 80e ace wern fooled Premier Oat Pla ie | Premier Peanut Butter .10e, 16e they set out for @Collars® have— exclusively —the LINOCORD BUTTONHOLES , they're easier to button— they don’t tear out. Geo, P, Ide & Co., Makers “M,: rotuntly vad this “we can't afford a trip « Well, then," with decision, announced Mrs. Leeder, I stay at home and n this season in Troy, N, Ve R COFFEE NOT i n The fact is we iost only that part of our stock of green coffee which was in the coffee-roasting plant when the fre occurred, and we will not be subjected to any shortage, for the reason that we have a large stock in our warehouses, DO YOU KNOW THESE PURE FOODS? 9_Vinagar. the ceeper you dive late our service the more reasons you will find for awarding us your eyeglass patronage. ‘ In each one of the eight stores comprising the Harris chain, you will receive comre teous altention and expert sere tice. You can buy your glasses of us for less money than you could obtain them elsewhere, because we manufacture the complete eyeglass in our four factories. Every pair of Harris Glasses is sold with a bind- | ing pasrentes of absolute = ™ ii tion or your ‘oa beck. Harris Slasees cost $2.00 or more. Opiical Stouse of | | Hot Water Bottle HAMMouss Same Heating Pad = Conte 1 cont for 10 hours te operate, Never grows cold. oft, pilable, conform 02 Murray St, New Yorks City TheTel-Electric Piano Piayer Attachable to Any Grand , or Upright Piane, | Price, $350 - Conveniont Terme. The Tel-Electrie Ce., 199 Fuh Avenue, Corser 31st Street U-WALLA TEA,

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