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BREAKS OUT ANEW: 1 BFAD, 2 WOUNDED Panic on Second Avenue as Bullets Fly in Battle of Des- « perate Gangsters. GIRL SEES SHOOTING. Woman Thought Cause of Gun Fight 7lees as First Shot Rings Out. ‘The police, to-day, solved the mystery of the gun fight at 6 o'clock last even- ing on Second avenue, between One Hundred and Fourteenth and One Hun. dred and Fifteenth streets, in which o' man was killed and two others wounds Paul Cass@ta, aged twenty-two, ot No. 47 East One Hundred and Sixteenth street, shot through the temple, died two hours later in the Harlem Hos- pital. Dominick Landi of No. 382 Cast One Hundred and Eleventh street, twenty-three years of age, is in the hospital with @ bullet in his neck and in an adjoining ward ts Enrico Exposito, twenty 7ears old, living at No. 313 Hast One Hundred and Twelfth etreet, with a Ddullet in his thigh. The police say the shooting is the con- finuation of a feud which began six months ago, when Land! was shot in a Quarrel over a girl. Landi was wounded in the abdomen and another man also Was hit. Neither man would say who shot him, Landi told the police he knew who had spun the bullet his way and fter he got out in the approved man- ner of the gangsters, Exposito was walking Ii @ girl, who disappeared as soon as hos- tillties opened. The couple had reached the middle of the block on Second a nue between One Hundred and Four- teenth and One Hunde! and Fifteenth it night with : ol, of Baldwin street, Fairview, and streets when the young woman called | ® ton Hacovere that it Js the most | rropation officer of the Yorkvilis weure, {Gere Zile, twenty-five, of No, S12 her eacort’s attention to Land! and |Positive thing he has ever encountered itIful. story of her eee ott’ | smith street, Union Hill, N. J. Seldom Comte, who were on the opposite | uot men and women under the blind. |© PU MOY OF a et yen tree iw | nas euch an odd eituation Seen brought side of the street. Exposito arew his |! !mpulse of love take mates of whose |New York for three days, both with o lon be fun and crossed to the men, Accsrding |2°tons even before marriage they cis-| strangers and with one she supposed | about as the engagement of both the to reports, Exposito ‘ired first, his tar- it being Landi. He missed Landi but struck Cassetta in the temple. PANIC IN STREET AS REVOLVER DUEL 18 WAGED. Landi returned the fire and Exposito's next shot caught him in the right side of the neck. Pandemonium reigned on the street, which was crowded with mon, women and children, Windows were thrown open, cars were stopped and people crowded under the seats. Women screamed and men got behind posts and pillars of the elevated. Policeman Charles Kuhlman loom: in sight about this time and rushed ini. the fight, Landi ran down the street and took refuge in a hallway. Exposito followed and Landi potted him as he came up, wounding him in the thigh. Exposito, with Kunlman at his hee took a flying shot at Landi and tled down the «street, Kuhlman grabbed Landi by the collar and dragged him along the thorougnfare in pursuit of Exposito, The latter ran inte # door- way and up a flight of stairs. Kuhlman handcuffed Landi bannisters and hurried after the shooter. to him in fright gone higher uw, kept on. As soon appeared above t fourth floor a bullet to the up the stairs Women whispered that Exposito had and the policeman Kuhiman's cap landing on the from Exposito's | gun whistled over his head. Kuhl- man blazed back, and the fugitive | made for the roof. He took another shot at the policeman, which was re turned by Kuhiman, Then he threw his empty gun at Kuhlman, striking him on the head and staggering him. ‘Then the policeman cracked Exposito over the heag and shoulders with his night stick until the young brigand cried enough, POLICEMAN HAS RECORD FOR BRAVERY ANL NERVE. Kuhiman lost no time in dragging him down the stairs, ‘Then he hand- cuffed him to Landi and ched the two men ack to where Cassetta was, lying on the sidewalk in a dying con dition, Kuhiman sent for an ambu- lance and also put in a call for the reserves, Not @ policeman had ap- peared to ald him. The three wounded men were taken to the Harlem Hos- pital, where a few hours later Cas- setta died. Policeman Kuhlman has a record for nd nerve, About fifteen a young man named son of a wealthy glazier, woman of her money and diamonds, and Kuhlman was one of the force detailed to find the thief, He found and cornered him. - berg took three shots at Kuhlman, one bullet going through his cap and two more through his coat. Kuhlman closed in up... the rober and choked him into submission, after taking his gun away, Greenberg is now doing for his crime. Kuhiman honorable mention for the Greenberg affair, a ARGUMENT STARTS FIGHT. Yi of Favorlie Pugtlints, Harry Ferkats of No, 169 Allen street, and William Milkowitz, who prefers to ng Men Were Discussing Merits | the marriage ceremony he sees the radiant beginning of matrimony and he sees its shipwrecks, the men and women who carry their domestic aiMculties to the courts. He !s, in fact, the Alpha and Omega, the begin- ning and the end of marriage and a great many letters in between. According to Magistrate Freschi, big rows from petty causes grow quite like the tall oaks from the little acorn “Most married unhappiness has to start in little things,” he told me “The most frequent cause of the misery that ends in @ivorce is moral incompatibility. ‘The average wife, arguing from the Gifference of the courtship days, seeks to assert a moral control over t man starts approve. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. IKOK gd GREELEYS! youterday. her husband, “I don't mean in grave matters, where there can be but one standard of cun- duct, but in countless little negligible things, such as the number of cigara he smokes, that he would settle scores with him |friends to his right to SURPRISE. dea that his wife's he other, take the edge and git and to forswear makeup. knew before marria, form until long afterward. bitterness: ‘I might 1 married him who don't stop to think tement they directly transfe blame to thelr own shoulders. “It may sound tn that with lowing Ver! call himself “Billy Smith ¢ Pug,” both employed as leather cutters at No. % Greenwich street, got into a violent argument to-lay over the re- spective pugilistic merits of Knockout Brown and Tommy Murphy. “Billy Smith. the Pug’ wound up the argument by leaping upon Ferkaus and slashing his face and arms with @ Knife, The wounded man rushed out into the street and yelled for help Milkowitz was arrested by Patrolman Hewitt of the Greenwich et station and locked up on a charge of assault, ambula} Verkaus was treated @urgeon and went hom r ming for it. invite h game of pinochle in his home; to offer them a glass of beer, &c. AVERAGE YOUNG MAN GETS A “On the other hand the average young his domestic life with the | al companton- ship will be of a negative quality and Then, when the glamour be- kins to dwindle each starts in to reform) ‘The church worker who has married the sport wants him to ip smok- ing. The sobez, stay-at-home man ‘who has lured the society butterfly Bach of the other's faults, but neither thought of re- Many a@ disappointed wife exclaims in have known It ts the favored aculation of many embittered wives, in this the oral to advise that or divorces her hus not college-bred one out of ten or tweive Is divorced, widowers who re- marry clmost invariably wet an | a example of marital felicity; that NO VACATION, KILLS SELF. Depression, sserts Judge Why is an unhappy marriage? | What are the causes which under- | He and produce a dissolution of | partnership in the greatest business | of life? John J. Freschi, City Magistrate, has undertaken to solve this special conundrum of the times in an article in a current magazine which bears the interesting title “It Takes Two to Make a Divores It seems to me that a Magistrate has every opportunity for accumu- lating wisdom on the subject of do- mestic unhappiness and the reason: | Since he can and does perform BENT ON DROWNING, SHE ASKED THE WAY TOLAKE I PARK “Theye’s Nothing Else if 1 Don’t Want to Be Bad,” Says Girl From Georgia. ENGAGES CHUMS 10 SAME KANSAS GIRL Both Found Name of Topeka Miss at Breakfast and Both Wrote. Good sports as well as good friends are Theodore Sidore, twenty-four years A seventeen-year-old girl from Spll- was a friend, who took advantage of her innocence and ignorance of the city. The girl was arrested last night on her way to the lake in Central Park by Policeman Grace, who had been called youths to the same girl in Ka When each discovered the other's secret they decided to go to the girl, make her choose between them and let the loser , THURSDAY, FEUD OVER A GIRL |Check Rein Bad for Happy Mates, {ARMY OF MOURNERS Good for Divorce, A Most Domestic Unhappiness Due to Efforts to Force Reform After Marriage of Petty Faults Which Are Condoned in the Days of Court- ship, Freschi Declares. of republics, including the United States, AUGUST 29, 1912. FOLLOWS BOD OF BOTH TO GA All Classes March in London Streets and Monarchs Have Envoys at Funeral. LONDON, Aug. 9.—The body of the te Gen. William Booth wae laid tw- day beside that of Catherine Booth, his wife, in Abney Park Cemetery, amid aigns of deep respect trom men and women of all classes. Representatives of reigning monarchs and of presidents Joined around the grave with many thousands from the masses whom the founder of the Salvation Army had tread to uplift. Delegates of legisiative bodies, ctvic corporations, the army, the navy, busl- feas men of all branches, workmen who had sacrificed their day's wages, women and children of whom the General w & true friend marched shoulder to ehoul- der in the great procession which fol- lowed the body of the General to its last simple resting place. ‘The funeral procession formed on Vic- toria Embankment at 11.3 A, M, On the march of five miles to the cemetery It passed Salvation Army Headquarters in Queen Victoria street, where the waiting hearse joined the lin Draping the coffin was the Salvation Army's blood-and-fire flag and on it lay Gen. Booth's uniform cap and his Bible, LORD MAYOR OF LONDON 8TOOD AT SALUTE. Directly preceding the hearse marched Commissioner Adelaide Cox carrying the banner which Gen. Booth planted on Mount Calvary when tn the Holy Land, Following her was Gen, Bramwell Booth, the General's son and the army's new commander, and the other mem- bers of the dead evangelist's family, on foot. At the head of the line, unt- formed Salvationésts carried the atan- dards of the many nations in whioh the army in represented, Detachments of English soldiers and satlors Joined the procession as tt pro- ceeded toward the cemetery, All busl- ness houses on the line of march were closed and mort of hem were heavily draped in black. The Lord Mayor of London, tn his robes and chain of office, stood at salute in front of his offictal residence, the Mansion House, as the mourners passed ‘The services at the graveside began with the singing of the hymn, “o, act as best man at the wedding. Sidore and Zile were much together, and not long ago each noticed that the by Nathan Letren of No. 169 East Sixty- first street. She approached him on Fifth avenue, near the Plaza, and tim- into the matrimonial net begins to | ‘(ly asked him to tell her how to find|°ther was acting in an absent-minded, Preach, to urge her to wear her the lake. unnatural manner. hair plain, to dress in dark colors “Why do you want to go to the lake; “What's the matter with you?" asked at this time of night?” he asked, ile. why,” she replied in a} be lovesick.” “I know what I want| “Well, if I am," retorted Sidore, ‘I | don't think I have anything on you, In Letren, fact, you have been going around like “Well, yes," the girl answered. | a sick pig fer so long it's changed your “There ts nothing else, if I don't want) face." to be bad in this town.” . . . She started away from him crying.| “Think so? Well, I'm thinking of tak Letren followed her until he met the) !@ & trip West pretty soon, and I think policeman and had her arrested. | 1t will do me good. Intend to start as Miss McQuade heard a little of her! goon as I can get off.” “You look as though you might you intend to commit suicide?” Men ani women suiould condone what oe sete acts ay West?" exclaimed his friend. “Well they fee! to be wrong—what probably | home until work could be found for| that’s strange. I am thinking of going 's wrong. Stil 's the only course) her, On the way to the home the| out there myself, We might go out to- eae ei ever mak oH uly , eyed elrl told her troubles to Miss McQuade. | gether.” is the course followed in almot My jiome isin Spiilmore, Georgia e every happy home. she sald, “My father was a half-breed| OION'T WANT COMPANY ON HIS ‘i recall but few cases of marital |Indian and my mother a Mexican. They TRIP. dissension between highly educated hus- | both died when I was six years old and) «on, pedged the other, “I don't think banus and wives, or even where one of |! have earned my living tending babie oh Ms ee es ah ° the pair was mentally superior, ‘he |@"d working out ever since. I had) You would ae uh pee Oe ) is that real intelligence ts | *4 ed #45 so that I could come to New tion I'm taking. eta AE Als York. Fe thought there was plenty of ‘Must be a girl in it, you rascal. Come, No. jong ago the alumnae assocta: |" O\vyun y ame mow chance. | | isn't it something like that? mith College complled st about the streets lost. Two young men| 4!l@ admitted in confidence that tt was in <his connection are highly spoke to me and asked if they could|® sith t was computed that only|help me find my way. 1 told them 1| “I found her name on an egg," he con- bred woman out of fifty- | 1 to find a cheap boarding house| paged. and get something to eat right away. They sald they would take me I| restaurant, where I could “Got her picture and she’ | beaut’, Lives in ‘Topeka, Kan.” to al eat and tatk | “Quit your kiddin’,” aimost shoutsd would bo the last to admit that the|!t over with them, Walle T was eating | Bidore. “Who's been telling my affairs only {gent women are products of |they advised me to drink something. | to you? I didn’t think any one knew the “higher education"; and yet the|7hey sald 1 was tired und needed It. | about it facts seem to demonstrate that educa | TheY eee Tee hole let and) “zie insisted he was serious, Sidore Hon and tntelilgence are potent barriers} vo tia nein me take my. things. to. the | became excited. - to dive boarding house. I don't know what| “Why,” he yelled, “the same thing “Widows or happened after that unt! T woke up in| hapsesned to me, Topeka address on an om in a hotel with all my money | eggshell. Wrote to the girl, got her ‘The people in the hotel said they | picture, popped the question and she's gone, Givorcees rarely reach the divorce | din't know anything about the young| gccepted me!" courts @ second time, There are hat T couldn't stay there. = | «game here, old top. If you ain't two reasons: experience has tanght 1 around until T got into the | sosning let's have a look at her picture, sitting there looking at tie them to select mates whose code Tete Miller, @ young man {it can’t te iny girl though, for she of orals nearly approximates their | piilmore three years aqo,| already accepted me." thelr own; besides, they have and spoke to me. We talked Sidore showed his picture and his learned that human nature 1s in- and he said he no girl| friend nearly collapsed. It was the same curauly weak, and do not attempt fonds in New York and was lonely | girl, The name on It was the same and to draw the reins too tight. 1808 aeker me if 1 joni mart Lim, | the address was similar, - at was Tuesday afternoon, We went| \” 4 (fo slagisirate Fresehty 4] tq house where there was a minister; EACH ONE COPIED ADDRESS the good ship Matrimony = — ‘land he married us, and then Pete took AND WROTE TO THE GIRL. me to the place where he sald he 1 od, certain to make a successful but he had nat moved his things in yet,| They talked It owar quietly, Several morat of his dis ‘When Pete left. yesterday morning | months ago Zile Was eating breakfast » the ship!’ Mort he told me to mect him at the entrance | When he noticed a pencilled addresa on among infan der |of the park at 10 o'clock last night, I\ one of his eggs. He copied It, kept ‘so If pou can coddle Cupid through | waited ntl! the clock struck 1 and then| matter to himself and wrote they str, t period of stress he 1s almost sure|T knew he was like everybody| A few days tater Sidore was eating at to be a guest at your silver wedding, | €i8e and had fooled me and T made up| the same place and came across an egg u my mind to drown myself. But T\ with @ simiiar add He did just couldn't find the what his friend had done, | Each began a courtatlp by math ice JOHN WANAMAKER ach GAINS exchanged pictures with tha girl ‘and AFTER RECENT ILLNESS, | ceived ver photograph tm risurn, Hac coepted by the girl, Each was getting Herman J. Kuster, fe ~ reat Fast Recovering From Effects of dad {4s after his bride when the manager for a Fulton street tallot 3 ing Tri “hic: above discovery was made, And last, at his home, No, 23 Linwood place, vention—Now at Seashore. | he can get the girl If he goes to Topeka. Orange, J. PHILADELPHIA, Aug, 29.-—-Senea- So they are still the best of friends Mr. Kuster had not taken a vacation | tional stories regarding the {iIness of| and are arranging to make the trip to~ in elght years. Until a days ago | John Wanamaker wore denied to-day by | gether and let her take her pick, ‘Their he expected to have a long vacation] ® member of his family, It was ad- | only fear {a that there may have been is year, When he told bis wife that mitte that following his return home! more egés with har name on them and wm UOhs ‘ i | {rom the Republican National Conven-| that they w:ll encounter opposition when was impossible for y to wet AWAY) ton at Chicago, where he served as a| they get t from work thi y she said, he delegate, Mr, Wanamaker became Ul) as o_o seemed much depressed, His melan-|q@ result of the excitement and eX-|pottceman’a Prise Watch Stolen echoly increased until he would hardly | haustion of his trip. From Station, 0 to his wife or Miss Margaret] To-day, it was stated he is very much < bis a ss Irained nurse who boardy with| Improved. He ts resting at the sea-| Patrolman Gus Stegerwald of the 2 shore cottage of his son, Rodinan Wana-| Clymer street station, Brooklyn, 1s to- shea . |, | maker, at Chelsea, a suburb of Atlantic |day mourning the loss of a $150 wat When the women Were preparing’ | civ” and it is expected that he soon which he left in hfs locker and mi! breakfast to-day they ard a shot in} will be restored to health and able to to-day. The watch was elven to n his bedroom and ran upstairs to tf 14 | attend to his bus s. Mr. Wana-' for his prowess with ¢ bat whil ‘ him dead in bed with @ revolver on! inaker was not operated on as had been member of t! policen ae tue pillow beside him, rumpred. ship baseball team, Death, Where Is Thy Sting? 0, Grave, Where Is Thy Vivtory?” by a chorus of thousands of vote Lieut, Coldamon, from America, thon offered @ prayer and Mrs. Booth-Helber: sang @ special hymn, “O, Boundi Salvation.” Bramwell, Catherine and Eva Booth and several others spoke. As the coffin was being lowered into “Hello, Mike!” (Special to The Evening World.) NEWPORT, R. 1, Aug. 2%—Rumors | the grave the throng sang “O, Servant ) ‘ *, ot God, Well Don fare more persistent than ever to-day Perfect Cold Cream does it. Bramwell Booth recited the commit-| of the engagement of Miss Bleanora ment: Sears of Boston and Harold Vanderbilt. “As it has pleased Almighty God Mike!" to promote our beloved General, William Booth, from his place and po- “Hello, young Mr, Vanderbilt when they biit replied, with « «rin. earth to earth, as he is ashes and du in the sure and certain hope of se him again on the morning of resurra> tion, FIFTY MOVED TO REPENTANCE AT BOOTH’S BIER. Although the auditorlum at Olympta is the largest in London it was inai quate to hold a Uthe of the thousans who flocked to the memortal service held there for Gen. Booth last night. The streets for blocks in all directions was jacked with people who arrived long fore the doors were opened and walted patiently outside until the services was over. Within the climax was reached when Commissioner Adelaide Cov offered the touching prayer, “O God, we do not want to disappoint you: help us to save the world,” during which Bramwell Br ch, who has hitherto borne up bravely, oroke down and fell sobbing to his Knees beside his father's coffin, About fifty responded to the call for amused at this exchange of lei but neither was the rassed token complete understanding. They stood and raughed at acquaintances for @ while and took to ball playing. half an hour they played Miss Dorothy Bigelow and Prince Jr. sorts of athletics, iw one of the her friends say if there with a batting average about .400, The summer contingent here audience fainted from emotion. Uon was a Kiggle or a sinile, Extra Special Egg Sale EGGS 12 25° MP eee i eo 10 2a STAMPS FREE Wah fusca SALMON, 10¢ 1 Can Alaska xerereo HERRING «:. 5° treat Atlantic & Pacific: Great 400 Stores in the U.S. These prices for the Metropolitan District only “*Mike’’ and “Miss Sports,’’ Who Are Said to Be Engaged to Wed BETROHAL PECTED SON BY NEMPOR Says She; “Howdy, Miss Sports,” His Reply When They Meet. | was the greeting the | athletic young society beauty extended sition in the Salvation Army to the | pened to meet at the Casino yesterday. mansion prepared for him above, we| “Howdy, Miss Sports!” young Vander- now commit his body to the grave, Tho friends of the couple were greatly antrl least bit embar- and shook hands with a vigor and good fellowship that seemed to be- other's jokes and comments on passing Frederick Miss Sears, who excels tn all women ball players in the country, and | were a big league in the Four Hundred she would be one of the bright and shining stars, | somewhere | would | |not be surprised to receive formal MISS ELEANORA ————S Sears MOTHER AND SON HIRED APARTMENT FOR SUE, POLICE THINK Aged Woman Found Asphyxi- ated and Man Dies Before Reaching Hospital. to-day on the ground floor apartment No, 180 Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, Gas was detected coming from the apartment and the open by neigh The woman lay on & bed while bealde her on the floor was the man, The first theory was that dure ing the night the son had discovered the gas and tried to rescue his mother, but had*been o door was broken vm come, Gas was escap- | hap- | and dust. each then with best of using it daily. uns cent tubes, When you insist are cream in the store. no extra charg SUPERB SCENERY An aged woman and a man, sincelyor—just the found to be her son, were killed by £88] nege of °fl out ing from a new range in the kitchen | Minus the frills, this is how D. & R. oil works its way into the pores and brings out every single speck of dirt It won't allow the skin’s natural oil to dry up —that’s what | ordinary soap-and-water does. It makes iN the skin soft and _ pli premature lines and wrinkles. 6\) DAGGETT & RAMSDELL’S | PERFECT COLD CREAM “The Kind That Keeps” Try it once. After that a clear, at- tractive complexion is only a matter Used by clear- skinned, beautiful women every- where; and by a growing penitents, Including aix of the most! nouncement of her engagement to y army of self - respecting fashionably dressed women in the auill- Vanderbilt at any time, and the general as: ul : anon, Bhaln DromTons Hironeh the Jone |neliet ty (hat it will not be deferred gentlemen. aisles Was : har that 4 ° ch longer. They have been reported “Hallelusa and the singing of the ™ fl th f . Je ” engaged many times during tho pas’ Mfty 2 ait aa eres Or snd a few men in the year or more, but thelr only eamfrma. Fifty and twenty-five upon Dagyett & Ramsdell’s, you tting the best cold Announcement The Erie Railroad Company will . removeits Ticket and Freight Office at 1159 Broadway to the New Office at 1286 Broadway, Hotel McAlpin, on Saturday, August 31st, 1912. Tickets, baggage checks, Pullman reservations and informa: tion delivered to your home or office by special messenger— Telephone Greeley 4700, Daily through trains to Buffalo, Cleveland, Cincinnati and Chicago and other points West. ‘The woman 1s about seventy years ¢ The police say this Jet wae turned on, but those who entered at the the bodies were found say it was partly turned one, as if & tempt had been made te shut i When found, the man, who is forty-five years old, five feet eight & half inches in height, and about 18 pounds, was. still allve, died on the way to St. John’s H 4 gray haired and of light co A receipt signed for the gaa yesterday when tite two moved apartment, bears the name Julia don. In the man's clothing was & telephone address which, when muntcated with, brought the tion that a Woman name answering the description of the woman, had worked as a servant Mrs. Mary Dean. Further through the house brought the of Mary Dean as Keene, N. H. of the neighbors knew the man, but | afternoon {t was learned that he William Reardon and had worked. track-man for the B. R. T. The believe mother and son tired the for the expr purpose of commit sutcide. Distine tivelt mdiyvidiadl Tron meters] talbasse ty a leaf pened > 8 for FATIMA CIGARETTES. ** Distinctioaly Indwidual” The fine wble — prevents EVERY Comvort