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HER BROKEN HEART SHE VALUED AT S10 IN HER SUIT Jilted Girl Placed It Last on Her List of Items in Bill for $751. ASKS $100 FOR SUPPER. Jury Awards Her All She Asks, Including $5 a Day During the Courtship, i OHICAGO, July 18—When Adam akwis refused to marry her after all Dreparations had been made for the wedding, Miss Konda Gowacka pre- sented this bill to him: fy ad on, ot soating ot 08. One. marriage 1 ‘The wedding dinner had been ordered, the prospective bride had purchased the (license, the banns had been read in church for two Sundays and a deposit ‘Bad been made on the ti 4 jury in Judge Robinson's court to- Gay put an oMctal O. K, to the bill by giving the young woman a verdict for 871.50 for breach of promise. ails Gowacka might have had a larger verdAct—she sued for $1,000—but after showing the money and t e had spent preparing to be Mrs, Zakwl), she placed her own valuation upon her broken heart. “I guess that $10 more will be enon she raid to the Judge in an answer to @ Question from her attorney. Then the $10 was added to the amounts she had epecified and the verdict wgs allowed, Zakwij courted «the young woman inety-two. days. He admitted that. One erétting he proposed in the usual Polish manner—Iin the presence of witnesses. A Gay before the wedding was to take! place he changed h!s mind. ‘You are thirty years old and T am twenty-seven," he sald. “That 1s too young for me. I can't get married. “But you promised and everything Is * protested the woman. Mer was obdurate. Then she filed the suit which came to trial to-da “Tow long did he court you?" asked B ‘Ninety-two days before he replied Miss Gowacka, “That ought to be worth $5 a day,” sumgested the lawyer. “What else did the courtship cost you “I spent $175 for wedding clothes,” “What else? “Well, I bought the license and paid for it. That was $1.50. And the wedding supper. That was $100." “Bue you didn't have to have the supper without a wedding, did you?” asked Judge Robertson. “Well, it was ordered and we had to pay for it, so we a te it,” replied Miss Gowacka, Judge, we had lots of rdered, and ducks cost a lo! r, Oh, it was a fine suppe ——> NINE IN FAMILY DROWNED SEEKING FATHER IN STORM ‘Wall of Water Rushes on Them From Ravine and Sweeps All Away to Death. JACOB'S CREEK, Pa., July 18.—It was learned to-day that nine persons had been drowned in Barren Run, on the farm of John Raymond, near here during last night. The dead are Mri John Raymond, Michael lMovinsky, brother of Mrs, Raymond; Mrs. Ro- vinsky, mother of Mrs. Raymond, and six children of Mr, and Mrs, John Ray- mond, During a heavy storm which swept through this section Raymond went from his house to the barn, located in a ravine near Barren Run. He did not return, and after waiting two hours tie wife, her children and the other yrs of the family became fright+ and went in search of him. Aw they reached the ravine a wall of water swept down and cariicd them away. Raymond was safe in the barn aud cxcaped. The body of the brother was recovered this morning, and search is Leing made for the others. — Matty ployed by the road, was run over by @ loc Bleventh avenue and Thirty-th to-day and his right leg was #9 badly crushed that {t had to be amputated In the Now York Hospital. The surgeons thought that the man would recover, acaeneeiemmeea Watchman Ac 7 Girl, Accused by a weak-minded girl of @ serious offense, David Harrison, a night | watchman at the mill of the MeN Wife of Congressman Wins Fight n Sale of Jefferson's Old Home Ww: LITTLETON. WASHINGTON, July 18.—As its spon- the New York Representative, sat im the gallery late yesterday, the Senate adopted the Martine resolution creating &@ Congressional Commission to deter- mine the wisdom and to ascertain the cost of purchasing Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson. Senator Williams went up tm theyseiteryy and chatted with Mrs. Littleton as the resolution passed, sor, Mrs. Martin W. Littleton, wife of] pleasantly. Other Senators looked up and nodded Senator Martine and others later went upstalrs, and the successful advocate of reserving the home of Jef- ferson for the American people held quite a reception. The preamble and all features smack. ing of the controversial were eliminated ‘esolution, which now goes to It is regarded as certain that it will be adopted there wighpyt delay. LOVES HER COOKING WILL SUE BECAUSE Suitor Captivated by Woman's Skill With German Dishes, Now Rival Cuts Him Out. PHILADELPHIA, July 18.—Excellence as a cook has placed Mrs. Barbara Jacoby, a pretty German widow, of No. 1862 Bucknell street, in a position where she faces a $5,(00 neseoh of promise sult. The appeal she m sitive gastronomic reenter of Adolph Schnitzer of No, 174 Sepviva street was so great that he refuses to take her no” for an answer—and he intends to invoke the courte inst her, he says. No wonder Schnitzer {s aggrieved. Mrs. Jacoby 1s a cook such as any man might covet for a wife. In her culinary vocab are such dishes as noodle soup, Kelemfte brust, sauer- kraut, kartofel salad and apple strudel, isi which would make the mouth, o! delight. Besides, she is a model housewife; she can clean, wash and fron and, added to her accomplishments, she is comely. So, taking {t all in all, it ts no Wonder that Schnitzer, a young me- chanic, sputters vengeance against his rival, Wiliiam Diehl, a widower, with two small children, and threatens to bring the breach of promise suit against the peerless cook and the per- fect housewife. Mrs, Jacoby has completely turned egainst the machin She said last evening that she may never marry again, but that {f she dogs she tw per- fectly certain ghe wif not choose Schnitzer for her second husband. The machinist declares that his heart has not suffered so much as his pride and that his chtef diss p; from tinking of the sauerkraut and that apple strude!, also that it fills him with Pehagrin to remember how many eve- nings he wasted in BALL LURES TWO BOYS” UNDER WHEELS OF AUTO. ng the widow, Chasing It Into the Street, Are Run Down and Seriously Injured by the Machine, shard Brows, ix years old, of No, wenty-first street, and Jos ears old, of No. street, were fternoon, wh of an automod! painfully injured this they ran fro: owned bj rge nger of No. 7 Ninth and dri William Kinley of No, 552 West One Hundred | and Twenty-fifth street. The boys had been playing ball on the ais wali at Fighth avenue and streot, and when tue ball aan ne the street, both started after it, They did not see the auto coming and al- though the driver tried to #wing out, they ran directly in front of it and were struck, Patrolman Weinberger of the West Seventeenth Street Station, who was | standing on the corner, carried the |two boys into a nearby drug store in Harlin Manufacturing Company, at Pal erson, N, J., was locked up to-day ani the police are searching for two oth men whom Harrison ts sald to nave fi involved in a confession, and then called Dr. Goulding from New York Hospital. Richard was suf- |fering from a@ deep cut on his fore- head, and Joseph was cut about the face and arms, After boing attended Ithey were taken home, SHE REFUSES TO WED. to the highly sen-; f any German water with anticipatory, They | | JUMPS FROM BRIDGE, LEAVING COAT IN HAND OF WOULD-BE RESCUER Young Man Is Hauled Out of East River, but Will Probably Die. Just as the early morning crowds ing Queensborough Bridge to- y a young man clambered over the railing of the first observatory balcony and plunged into the west channel of the East River. Pedestrians yelled and shouted. One passerby leaped from the crowd and grabbed at the poised figure. He caught The man shook himself free jarment and went over, his hat falling at the feet of his would-be res- cuer. The steamer Thomas lL. Mulry hap- pened to be passing, and Capt. Patrick Beehan saw the man jump. Easing the boat around .Cavt, Beehan threw a rope to the figure soon as It re- appeared, and gave hasty orders to The man tn the water, had changed his mind about death, for he grasped the rope lower a boat howeve! steamer docked and the ‘When jumper was turned over to Policeman the Schroeder, he described himself as George Smith, twenty-four, single, no address, and out of work, and said he thought jumping from the bridge wan an easy way to end things. ‘Smith was sent first to the Reception Hospital and afterward to Bellevue, he was placed in the prison He sustained severe internal and probably ‘will die. He had ‘our cents In his pockets. seo ai | SUFFRAGETTE SHAKES UP | HOME SECRETARY M’KENNA. ment comes | Grabs British Official at Cofner- stone Laying and Holds on to Him Until Dragged Away. WPORT, Wales, July 18.—Leaping from be’ 1 wus laying atone old of was Patriel lived at 5 sey Clty, fell from the top of a freight car in the Central Ratlroad yards at Communipaw, Jerse . this morning and was run’ over and killed, SUMNER COMPLAINTS THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1912, ROOSEVELT HOPES TO WIN NEW YORK; ALSO LLNS —eeee Cheerful Reports About the Campaign Are Given Out at Oyster Bay. This, the Colonel Announces, | Will Be “a Contract With the People.” OYSTER BAY, July 18.—The platform of the be Roosevelt said today, Just as a bust- ness man signs a contract for the fulfil!- ment of certain obligations, he ex- Plained, the new party would sign a contract to undertake certain well de- fined measures. Col. Roonevelt has given his approval to the name of National Progressive for the party by using it repeatedly, and {t {s assumed that this is to be the title which will be adopted at the christening in Chicago next month. As the prospective nominee of the party, who has alrondy accepted the nomination tentatively, Col. Roosevelt 1s drafting a platform embodying his fdean. He Indicated that he would use hts influence to avold the twin perils of ultra-radicaiiam and vaguely con- cealed conservatism, and that he hoped the platform would be both practical and genuinely progressive, In his opinion, metther the Republican nor Democratic platforms offer definite promise of @olution of what he con- siders the great problem before the na- ton—the adoption of measures to ob- tain a fairer distribution of prosperity. PLATFORM TO BE PRESENTED AT OPENING SESSION, The ox-Prenident's personal platform Ppoy by Wa resented to the Chi- ri inv Y Aug. 5, He hopes to arrange a meeting of the delegates for that night to make a speech which will be his “confession of faith.” In it Col. Roosevelt will seek first to inter- pret the spirit in which the work of the new party: should be undertaken and will then proceed to a detailed recital of the steps which he believes should be adopted. “Do you think that Kansas, Iowa and Michigan are safely for you and that it will be unnecessary for you to go there?" he was asked, “I don't know anything about {t,"" replied. ‘I'm not @ prophet. possible for me to go anyway A published report from Washington that Senator Dixon, the Colonel's cam- paign manager, was at heart opposed to the formation of a new party and would seize the first opportunity to take ‘@ back seat In the campaign amused the Colonel greatly. He said the Senator is hard at work with the organization of the party in Georgia. CHEERING REPORT 18 BROUGHT FROM ILLINOIS. Ralph C. Otis and Day MoBirney, Roosevelt workers from Chicago, came to Oyster Bay to-day to report that Illinois te in ‘great shape," and that In their opinion he would carry the State. They were puzzled at the attitude cf Gov. Deneen, they sald, but belleved he would soon come out for the ex-Presl- dent and the new party programm “Yes, I think we'H take I!Hnots,” said Roosevelt, “I believe we are strong- er there than at the time of the Preal- dential primary, when we won every he Tt 1s tm- Congressional district except two. ho said, prospects were During had been In the Hast, constantly growing better. the primary campaign he able to make little headway in arous- Ing the people of New York State, but now he believed they were angered at the course of affains at the Chicago Convention and were turning to the new party. He sald it looked as though they ‘would win Brooklyn by three to nd that there wore excellent pros- pects of carrying New York State, finds es TALK OF DIXON BREAKING AWAY FROM ROOSEVELT. (By United Pros WASHINGTON, July 16.—There was goxsip among Senators to-day over a report, ator Dixon of Montana, Roosevelt's campaign would not follow the jonel in the new party movement. Dixon 1s said to be strong as ever in his devotion to progressive principles, but he belleves ft best to establish these principles through a fight directed to the over- throw of standpat control of the Re- publican party. manager of r nomination, was stated, between Roosevelt and, Dixon over the Colonel's trip to Chi- | Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cholera Morbus y relieve of these comusint Tan Calf and White Can 4tos. Infants’ Tan Calf or White Canvas Button Shoes. At Sixth Avenue Store Only Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street i WRITING A PLATFORM} {ald of the Marine Transport Workers’ given credence hero, that Sen: | There was a lack of agreement, It Alexander's Shoe Sale | Shoes For Small Children Seamen and Firemen to Carry On Fight. A philanthropist has come to the Federation and furnished funds which will allow the striking seamen and firemen to carry on their fight without hardship and suffering. When this ald came, it was an- nounced by Secretary Woolman of the [federation to-day, there was dire need for it. The funds of the firemen's union were exhausted and there was very Httle left in the treasury of the) seamen's union, Now, it ts said, they have enough to tide them over for a year. Who the philanthropist was could not be learned, In the next few days the federation to feed the strikers, They have been drawing 45 cents a day for food. Commission men who dea! in pertsh- able fruit shipped here from Southern and Western markets say that the strike of the freight handlers on the railroad and steamship wharves so far Ws not had a serious affect upon the trade, and that whatever handicap has been imposed by the diMcuity of mov- Ing the freight off the ships and trains has not been disadvantageous to them, The firm of Philipps & Lyons of No. i Washington street declared to an Evening World reporter to-day that the extra expense entailed by the commis- sion men's having to go to Jersey City to get their fruit shipments from the South has deen borne by the shipper and has not affected the price of fruit George W. Judd, a frult commission merchant of No, 278 Washington street, declared that the dimeulty in re- ceiving fruit shipments because of the stigce of the freight handlers has ben- efited rather than hindered trade, for It has prevented an over supply in the market. The Old Dominion tine Is the only line ot steamers at present carrying frint by the strike have not carried perishable cargoes since the onlon crop was moved strike began, ode Or SENATE VOTES $33,000,000 $6,000,000 for Mississippi Im- provements, Adopted. about $33,000,000, including $6,000,000 finally passed by the Senate when the conference report adopted. ___ Champion at Ice € TELL CITY, Ind., July 18.- Fenn, twenty-one, and wishing fee cream eating record, With mercury hugging 92 degrees in the shade Fenn downed twenty-four ice cream “sundaes” at a local confection- ery shop in eighteen minutes, the cago, the pilgrimage having been made contrary to Dixon's judgment. When {t became apparent in Chicago that the Mean leader was not affected, but he was unable to approve of the new party plan. Information as it comes to the Sen- ate Im that Roosevelt induced Dixon to remain in charge of the movement until the progressive convention is held, Aug. 5, In Chicago. Polish the Bath Tub with earline Removes All Stains Manufactured only by JAMES PYLE & SONS, New York sizes Sale price - vas Shoe: 95c Sale price 75c Equally attractive values in every department Fifth Avenue above Forty-lifth St. will open @ restaurant on West street | and there has been no trouble on Ite wharves, Other steamship lines affected and that was several weeks before the FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS. Conference Report, Which Included WASHINGTON, July 18.—The rivers and harbors appropriation bill carrying for Mississippi River improvement, was to-day, was Christian 250 pounds, to-day claims to hold a world's | She Cried—“You Bet We Are,” He Answered. | Tn four detectives f simultaneous rads a dozen Headquarters swooped | ® down on four compantes of loan sharks to-day, aelaing papers and other evt-| once and arresting those In charge. | The warrants for the’ raid were ineued | [by Magistrate MeQuade tn the Centre) Street rt through Assistant District- Attorney Brooks. The whole command of detectives under Acting Captain McKinney 4+ | vided and went to work, on signal, Jahortly before noon, Under Detective | Markey th men entered No, 208 where the office of Archi- | Broadway, bald Chesterkirk has been doing bust- ness with policemen and firemen, to the dissatiaf: on of the borrowers, A very pretty, seventeen-year-old = mias, who sald she was May Quinn of New- ark, cried out as the police entered From another room the legs of Chea- terkirk were seen going over a partt- tion, A detective outside showed him it was useless to try to encape, Papers valuable to the prosecution were obtained, Miss Quinn started to telephone to Nan Bauman, another girl in a loan shark age » but in a mo- ment she dropped the phone as if It were redhot. The voice of Miss Bau- man on the wire had been replaced by tones gruff and jubilant The police had taken the recetver from Nao'a hand in the oMfce of Burt Bros, No. 100 Fifth avenue, Just as Miss Quinn whts- pered: “The cops are raiding! Look out’ “You bet they are, So long, Ite one,” wan the reply she got from the cop on the other end. Then she was arrested. From Burt Brox. the books #howing transactions and signatures were taken to the District Attorney's office, At the office of Stewart & Cort, No, 12 East Forty-necond street, Louis Totans re- fused to open the safe, whose door he slammed on the entrance of Detee- tive Trojan, When the detective shoul- dered the small safe and was going out the door with {t Totans agreed to open “ha fourth raid war made at Brodie’s, which has been ralded several times. Rooka and papers were taken and Jacob Brodie wan arrested. The prisoners will be arraigned be- fore Magistrate McQuade, Complaints to the District Attorney's office from men in the employ of the city, who had been charged usurious rates and for payment, brought about 5 | Offer to The present Presidential campaign promises to be the most exciting since 1860, The issues are greater and more complicated than they have been at any other time in the last half-century. In view of this fact we are making a special offer of the Thrice-a-Week World, four months for 20 cents, The Thrice-a-Week World 1s prac: tically a dally and will give you all the political quickly, accurately and impartially, ‘Thus for 20 cents you can cover the entire campaign, an offer that cannot be equalled by any other newspaper. This offer will be open until day, nd you cannot 1 make the ription through agente, Alt offe ition Colonel would bolt, Dixon was dis-| must be sent direct to the Thri posed to sever the political relations| Week World, Pulltser Building, Ne' that existed between them. His high | Yorke 7 estimation of Roosevelt an a Repub- Pretty lies, nine times clear, beautiful a tube a little of oughly. This hap A. glowing use, five cent tubes, When you insist upon Dag, & Ramsdell’s—you are get i. explained his fight by saying that he The Charm of a complexion comes from within, from keeping the skin clean and healthful—not from temporary sub- stitutes. Do this to-day. warm water) and squeeze on it from DAGGETT & RAMSDELL’S PERFECT COLD CREAM “The Kind That Keeps" Go over your face and neck thor- and dirt is brought out—you couldn’t be cleaner. oil in it makes the skin soft, smooth and without wrinkles. health- ful, clear face always goes with its daily Fifty and twenty- the best cold cream in the store. (MONEY FOR STRIKE WARNING AFRIEND ‘PRIEST GUILTY, , ODMESAS GIFT OF OF RAID, GIRL FINDS SAYS COURT; SEND ii LAPS ACOPONTH ONTHEWIRE, HN TOA GELL Sentenced To-Morrow. Accosting Girl Refused Bail; | i The Rey, John t, pastor of Patrick Devan a church at Jackson, Nob, who was accused of accosting twelve-year-old Catherine Cavanaugl of No, % Tenin avenue on the street and offering her candy to accompany him, was found gullty of disorderly | conduct by Magistrate Butt In the Weat! Side Police Court to-day. The clermy-| Man Was remanded to prison without ball. He wil! be sentenced to-morrow afternoon. | The priest, who Kave the name of Jo'n Bergen when he was arrested and wi sald at fist that he was from Chicago, told the Magistrate that he followed t child to point her out to a policeman “for her own good." The little «irl complained to persons on the street, The priest ran and was followed by a crowd, Ho took retugo in a Tenth avenue drug store, froin | hich he was re d by Polices rnelius Browne, arrested him, carried $790 and that he feared he would be robbed, Magistrate Butts expressed regret at having to find the priest guilty and recited the testimony against him th announcing his dectsion, This, he said, was to show that he could not, In view) Jof the evidence, decide the case other- | wine. The priest, who did not reveal his real name until yesterday, appeared 4n court the last two days in a clerical col- lar and a suit of clerical cut. He has been out on a cash bond of $00, which Ihe put up himself. 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