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T LEFT NBARE HOME BYURNTUREFR Instatment House Takes Every thing After Young Woman With Infant Had Paid $125, ae COURT HELPS HER OUT.| 95 > Money Is Recovered by Suit, After Summer Tragedy Ends Her Domestic Bliss, * , ‘Taawlita thet for once the law was on the side of justice and meroy, Jus- tioes Lehman, Page and Seabury, con- tttuting the Term of the Supreme Court, rescued Mrs. Clarentine Headley, a widow with a seven-month- oi baby, from @ pitiable plight. A week after the father of the baby, John Headley, an underpaid cl was drowned last July, the firm of furniture dealers from whom the Headleys had bought enough furniture on instalment barely to fit up a tiny home, had de- eoended upon the widow's refuge. When the furniture van departed all that was left to the bereaved young wife was a broken-hearted memory. Four bare walls and @ cold, drafty floor, without #0 much as @ rug, were the shelter of the mother with a baby just past his two months’ birthday. Alfred C. Cowan, an attorney, heard of the young wilow's predicament, and le- wal proceedings, against the furniture dealers followed, with the result that to-day the Appellate Term ordered the furniture men to pay Mrs. Headley $124 and five cents costs. LIVED HAPPILY ON $15 WEEK TILL TRAGEDY. $660; Wey Ais thee When Jim Headley decided Clarentine}| Yo"" "OS Simmons, the prettlest girl in Yorkville, | Wh¥, only that at 3 o'clock this morn- was born to thrift sufficient to make | ing three hundred and eighty—yes, the re a sum as $15 @ week | number is exact—very, very gay merry- ™ uvery Wife of Steel Magnate Be- fore Embarking on La Provence for Gay Paris Is Soul of Giddy Night Given by Friends. After Turkey Trotting Has Held the Floor, Mrs. Corey Exclaims Amid| ‘ii Applause, “There Is No| Seurevuur' Land Like America, No| °""© City Like New York.” “Bravo! Bravo! Bravo! “But I said at 10 to-day’ “Bravo! Bravo! Bravo" “But—10—Parie: tl URL COREY WAS THE | BEST Danci ON THE PLOOR Fo found ‘and pay the butcher's and| Makers shouted the “Bravos” as Ma- ' Hrocer they journeyed to the| belle Gll—beg pardon—Mrs. William El- 5 City Hall. With a dollar for the Hcense| its Corey danced. and another dollar for the alderman who them man and wife—both dollars — earvefully pruned from Joh envelope of the week before—they started on New Jersey Lads Quit Playin ‘ i thatt home vulidings Stated above, y YI8| Folks Withdraws His Measure Two litte rooms and @ bath were| And now? Mrs, Corey te at seamom) (-~, Hi nd T: an old flat building on the| La Provence, ve iggwaymen a ry After Hearing Car Owners’ { Marlem. ‘The bare necessl-| But {t all began to happen at 9 o'clock ! ig ture were procured on 4 t night. If yetf dropped into Sher- the Real Thing. ‘3 Benjamin and August | y's at that hoyr you were met with Criticism. almus, furniture dealers. Clarentine | «Mrs, Corey's patty?” ‘ sas a born housekeeper. It was the 0 - continual wonder and a delight of the| And If, through possession baby yy Stne village of Westwood, Nig te all K young husband to ree how far | Vitatlon, ha thaced ee ae worked up to-day over the Stever high-| The Folks automobile speed erdinance, 1 make §& a week go toward | Very soon yea 4 way robbery case. Edward Rell on which the Mayor gave « hearing to- : y, son of b ig } poard fnstalmients on the) IT pelos aa ici fara J. H. Roy, a former frecholder, a boy| day, in to be withdraws from his desk sample 4 ches; by the Aldermen to enable the making prompltu roe{!2 knee breechon; Ferdinand Folcette, Then the baby was born, ‘There waa! Tt wat alt under ie Uvcompaniat|tWenty vears old, son of the next door| of changes suggested by the Mayor as TAigs tate Welle foe Chere ee Pat) recital given by Mre, Grace Anderson, |nelghbore of Arthur J. Stever, and Will-| the result of the hearing. The Mayor ‘ings ran well, for Clarentin ty | rect > i ; ttretched her frugality @ point further | assisted by Mr. Andre Fouquieres and|!am Clark, nineteen years oki, who has! @XPlained that he did Bot desire te Yee nd stopped putting the half-dollar a| Mise Sara Geragh, but been known to the village for years ie heb direrey Caine ay rveglletperd ES; eek into te savings bank. So well had | downstairs. was right, it rather ergatic, were arrested and are| U0 8 Dut ne Be tieed tee ve te tak they met he burdens of wedded life that | Corey's part paroled In the cuatody of thei pedro belts a dcgrtaggaien ied a week-end in July they took @ holi-| “9 pe sure, the recital occurred. Mrs,|'. ds F parents. | the document back to the Aldermen. y Mt the beach, Nothing Was t00 €00d| anderson uemonatrated she art of ace | Accoding to Constable Thomas Dawson, | Considerable opposition to the ordi- for the Tittle wife, thought Jonny 80 ne eee esr tinnle Parence-Ber- | they made a full confession of thelr! nance was expressed at the hearing, oe . gar Tepe olga wey, bs ry, soprano, and Mr. Clarence Seward, | crime last night In the presence of the Willam W. Miller, Chariman of the seated joyously in the atero, | baritone, sang, Stever famity and young Folcete's, Law Committee of the Automobile Club Pe i eniow played ‘Is Extas Panta: ¢ America and cther members of the COURT HITS FURNIT! Miss Ollinae Enlow playe pa PLE FOR THEIR ane PaO nthe violin, Mrs. Beulah Thompson) arthur J. Stever, jr, who is an] Clb, spoke against many sections of Vhe holiday t 7 te hap. Jones read “The Princess of the MOFN=| gronirdet, has an office near the siation| !N* Proposed measure. hie te an any taka, Feit guendtd mee’ | ine and Mins Sara Geragh 10 a serie ee ot tiie home ie next door| Their Keneral opinion was that the en work-| 6 interpretative dances indicated that limiting of speed in city thoroughfares 1g long hours to win promotion. The; to that of his parents, half a mile from anand heat and exertion of rowing |'@in Wad dropping, that lightning was were tuo much for him. An attack of Mashing over Brooklyn Bridge and that, | the station, Momlay night, as he was! i: would be criminal, one speaker sald es eruigo acized him when he pulled well (no matter what the weather man had to} walking home through the dark, after! to operate an automobile at twe mil L it from the He tumbled over-| say abous it, thore was constderaole | closing his office, he was confronted by| an hour In lower Broadway during the ¥ board ee aw ae Bs baie ond thundey in the atmosphere. four boys on the Yates bridge, rush hours, although the proposed law y y Sol e& to the shore Mrs.) phere was then an entertaining*inter- | 66 of tham pok “i ; Pi teva } ne of thom poked @ revolver into his] Prescribed a rate of fifteen miles an ‘She told the furniture people of her| Matin. after which ar ahh eas and: sai hour in city streets, | Cra ponisiony and: they She sale, peuins Auer teeth and pictures the] "GIVe us ail vou have and keep quiet,*| MF. Miller opposed the section of the ited to let her keep @ bed, a rocking /4 ene ! A pai ordinance compelling an auto to come * re coc 3 e onl, M tever thought a joke was being hag i CORY and Sure, Bat ‘the inst y where the cocktail is @ name only a Mey Here uiaos! le giBoamelnInVae Meteae: eee \ v, and ove afternoon the furniture! ‘the above was « “color conference.” | “He won't laugh so much in a inin Hircheripe ee ae Pemmengerg: © von drew up to the door, carrying away’ | y., Pond x tie only con-| ip. ; y rere Low lust sticks of the wrecked [Sr de Touuuieres vette at ua myer oye re him: dition were demanded, home. © who ¢ sed hi ‘TH archite@ looked back and saw 4| congestion would follow, ‘The Callan Attorney Cowan learned, the widow | THE TURIHY TROT AND TANG? boy creeping up with a tong piece of]. law, he added, covers this situation by | already pa r r r WERE \. lead pipe. He at once put up his hands| requiring that vehicles slow « . vhow for the hard wrung instalments |datces—tuikey trot and Wane. | One of the younger boys (he thought| Section of the proposed ordinance re- she had paid of theulls i i Also Mr Pe sntea unt | Was Bdward Reilly, taoagh thie fa quiring that automobiles not exceed a Mr, Cowan offered his services and] But no “raves were sounded until ss speed of ten miles an hour in pasat " be * y ee of all were cov J with black masks Passing bronane sult in the” mun Me im ears Mra. Covey, sliding wil oxauls . gree wank deh his j *| xehool houses he declared to be too fore Justice Davies. where the Surv] oT ny gancinis floor, compelied them. AL broad in its application, unjust to the Headiey's favor without leaving the y foy me," she exclatmed Joyfully | telned: only , naaffeur and discriminatory as well court room, The furniture people ap-| When the “oravos” were loudest, “say } “On your way,” sald one of the rou-) iy applying to public schools, as against led to the Appellate Term of the} for me that there is no jand like Amer-| bers, after they were satisfied he nad private and parochial sehoo unjust Supreme Court ond to-day that court} joa, yo city like New ‘York If ve nothing left, “And keep quiet about! pecau chauffeur cannet determine confirmed the verde es to-day a 10, fhe i because my healt) tois or we will kill you,” when approaching a scho! house with- . demands \{ and—iny yolce Mr, Stever shouted back an angry r out drawing his attention from the ac- © SWEARS SHE WED PORTMAN | riere were a great may PreUy Tort, ‘There were three shols and thive| tual work of directing Wie car and too WHEN HE WAS GREENBERG, |#'"* tt. Corey's atts 1 | dulleta whistled over his head. broad because It states the hours “he ‘Among tose invited were My, and ee < ofdiogk"’ = Mre. Benjamin Guinness, Mz, and Mrs] Constable Aaron Furse was at once] tween end o' Mon when cilldren 7 k i y Charge} %™. ee a 4 Mrs, | called to the Btever home by telepionc, | 2 t2 OF leave school houses. Pollce- Woman Makes Bigamy AEC) Wintiam Astor Caanler, Mr. and Mra onl ie 4 by telog Nan ure‘alwisa new alationes a? anhea) Against Real Estate Man Who [James B. Hustle, Mr and Mra, Bredenok) Bie wot eager nyo das iin CONMADION Sas, ageing the time the enile rey 9 M Ki Cottenet, 2 awson, and at 2 o'clock this mor Sought fo Marry Miss Norden, |¥;poalscs ti Panay clips, | Dann, hd at & vnck eh wore) dri ar orang frm ° Pee , ™ he male ‘ More trouble came to-day for Isanc| yirx, Wililam E y . Nordica, | arrested. : ere cil | Portman, who tu alleged to have Nad] stmme, Gadski, Miss Bella Alten, Miss | Sten mesing and bawling, the three cone| eat yoke Of the Hability: of owners os! N two wives already when he prepared) iii, De Wolfe, sliae Marbury, Misa , Sinumering and vay ling, the thre Atemplatel under te proposed new P last month to take to himself a third] anne Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. Ormond . ae fee Nar ROXR* AS) OFGINANGSM: “TE WOE ‘De UAIUs Lo: ime , ve td ray | oe Speyes | Parties to the plot. They said they had] prison an owner for a violation when! } in the person of eighteen-year-ol ¥1G. Smith, Mr. and Mrs, James Spey ¢ n Slacted, em 4 nee »iber cave in the woods and had) his chauffeur might be altogether Norden, whose wealthy papa objected. | airs, Hichard Irvin, Mra, Edward N 4 & ” * 4 . own tired of merely reading about) blame The owner might discharge the ‘The Kings County Grand Jury returned) prejtung and Miss Bre.tung. LAs ene era eu nts an indictment charging Portman, in- pioBestlas acta OE Nood-ourding adventures and telling | offending ‘chauffeur and hire another Y uestionable financial storles about them whi might make a similar mistake. ee paired ater 2 a PASSENGERS UNHURT. | From the time the boys were puted! "We must remember In tls eanuection ietre. Rachel Greenberg testified be- out of bed until nearly dayiight, they| added My. Miller, “iat there are many | fore the Grand Jury that Portman mar-|Fabre tine Hears M swt on the edkex of their chairs Women Who oWn and operate autor | fo . c (les, and ‘ould not be pleasan' \ ‘org her in 1898, when he waa plain Mr. Uasmer Wan Nal Serinns: Mttle by Httle shametacediy adni'ted | Viles, ani Hi would not be pleasant 0 § Greenberg. She applied for a separa-| | f thelr banding togethe* for a sucesssion! contemplate their going to prison Treen berg. No passengers were injured when an! o¢ highway robberies, of waich M \ private owner raised th int that { tion, she thought, but the ection really | uptake boiler exploded on the Fabre sever was to ue the fest victim, Al wutomobites were re Iie came % was for a divorce, and was successful. 171 steamship Madonna tn the Mediter- “ih te ’ ; ; : oe OA Fate rel aMatenroe ant | bane ° the time, the Folcete boy's parents, in|to a dea! stop beiind stalled atrent )5 In see earned that the inter. |faneam according to a cablegram r6-|ieary themselves, wore begging iim to|cars all the automoblien woull be ‘ had been made | celved to-day by James W. Elwell and) ion the whole truth, holding back no-/uriven to Fifth or other avenues whore Company, local agents for the line, The Mt My & . . Mr. Stever had not seen ‘im | there were no ‘nal, Thus Portman's marriage to | e, from the agents at Marsoilies, | ‘Ming: Mr. Stevor he Bint unde apihat fan tha Le Vine in 1908 was big- and had not suspected him; under au ‘ srr ee Vine—the only “Mra, | aid all the passengers were safe and | ioning, the youngster gave up the name soul’ result ous, Miss Le Vin only“) colder “not 0 p ther a ET RU aly 4 anor thas the & dent was “not of @ serious) Je William Tompkins, a we'lsto-do track — Another own oy m nature. r Wh conn fon with the rub. * 000 obtained from her relatives! "mis contradicts a wireless despaten | Arm! fe rannes the robs | tamobiles to see Portman went into the real ex-| This vontradios @ wireless dowpetoh| very iad not ‘nen suaperted by anys 4 y ¥ or ary 0 ” , b ody, He ha yet deen arrested ‘ tate boss 8 nd fitted out his Fifth Fayal and cabled here. ‘This report said my i asin » avenu four t wan the result of| five persons lost their lives in the a Portman’s ome detective work on the part of the] dent ste ye one Norden, who in looking up his| ‘The Madonna left New York Jan, 8). AmEENGTC wan he dean Fecord learned of several deals war-| with passengers and freight, for Algiers | !'* Uxecutive an p A criminal action, Portman war tion DIN carrying an appropriation of Hg and Marsellie tn to custody as he drove up to a y $20,099 to continue the Commer rae t ahen, ante & home in Riverside Drive A til June 99 was passed hy 1? halt Ing Mina Norden Red Crors fe Cough Drers, “Annte' ty bi trenphantly bea Jay and now goer bar ener sae oper sae semanas oo {fp ns Seer pith emetic Hes an was of th elgat Pay Ain noathaed ate ner be a found enement at No trent congestion hoy la " DESTITUTE WIDOW |rs. Corey’s Dancing Wins Wild Bravos At Merry Send-Off Party at Sherry’s ———_— BOLD BOY ‘BANDITS |AUTO ORDINANCE ROB MAN AND FIRE} 10 BE REVISED AT should be made @ matter of judament. leumiic announcement that a HE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, ,2918. ee he POLICE WOMAN'S HURRICANE STRUCK PISTOL ROUTS GANG BIGLINER, CRUSHING AND SAVES GIRL BOATS TU KINDLING Mrs. Hatfield, Probation Offi, Worst cer, Drives Back Hostile Band of Foreigners. Storm in Skipper’s! Memory Hit Kaiser Wilhelm | il., Two Days Late. | CARS IN YONKERS RUN TO-DAY: STRIKE TOBE ARBITRATED Men Go Back to Work After Whitridge Agrees to Con- sider Demands. ‘The otreet car strike which, since Jan. | 1, has made pedestrians and travellers by railroad of Yonkers residents, ended to- day at approximately its starting point, with both sides agreeing to operate the tled-up lines while arbitrating their dif. ferences. Following the example of President ‘Whitridge, who agreed last night to the Proposition submitted by the Public Ser- vice Commission of the Second District, the strikers voted to go back to work, and when they left the hall it was to ‘hurry home to luncheon, put on their uniforms and prepare to assemble ready for duty in Getty Square. Ghortly before 2 o'clock the strikers began to @o into the carbarns. Tey were in uniform and were ready for ‘work. .Betore entering the barns the men Cormed in a group and were photo- Graphed. The streets tn the immediate vicinity were crowded with citizens. Manager Guthertand made an address to the men in the barns while the great throng outaide, numbering probably 5,000 Persons, watted patiently for the cars to start. The frat car left the barns at 2.85 o'clock amid a great cheering and wav. ing of hats, It was a Nepera Park line rand was the very one on which the trouble started. It was manned by John Smith and Frank Shannon, the two men who refused to break in Sam- uel Markiewtcx as a motorman because he wae @ non-resident, and who in that way started the strike. As the first car went out the vill of Hastings was notified by telophone and a rocket was sent up there to make ay was coming. By 3 o'olock the cars on all lines will (be In full operation No loss than elght business houses have een forced into bankrupte: @ result of the car atrike, and resident» of Yonkers employed in New York have eon put to great inconvenience and ex- pense, Until the matter has been arbitrated the status of the men will be as before. Tf such a con-| Mr, Markowitz apparently*has been lost he said, great} in the shu! * with 1 protestes agaiyst 1 tlen of the ordniar driven corners Al a speed of ten nended Unat the rate per mittin around miles an be « baby, at night tian Kus street hour it to BLIGHTED ROMANCE BLOOMS AGAN FOR GR ROM BOLIVIA Jncle Sam Lets Miss Victor Leave Ellis Island With Her Beaming Fiance. Mra, Marie Hatfield, probation officer a the Manhattan Avenue in Williamsburg, found herself Two days jate, the North bial liner Katser Wilheiny 1, ateamed | into the bay this afternoon with her up: | nt early today in the most acute moment per works in a tangle and her pasaen- of peril of all her oMctal career when, gers pale and wobbly on thelr feet with « levelled revolver, she forced &@ There wore 460 in the cabins and 617 in Group of threatening foreigners, ho had lovked her in @ tenement room at) the steerage, and every soul of them! had looked into the wrath and menage | ‘rescued from the clutches of the des- | perate men who had held her prisoner) pretty Mttle Fanny Martino, who was being forced Into a marriage againet) | No. 26 North Fifth street, Willlame-|of a storm such as has seldom been! | Bure, to fall back, and she made her nm at sea by people who have lived | | escape. | to tell of it. The doughty little court oMeer alto! case GO Cuppers, who on lity return to Europe will retire from the nea after forty-five years of experience, felt free to say that he had never seen such storm as that through which he had her heart and will. M Yesterday Fanny appeared petore| brought the big ship. Charles M. Magistrate Dodd in the Manhattan | Schwab, steel millionaire and globe Avenue Court and told him that her | (etter, sald that in crossing the ocean 112 times he had never been through nything which even suggested that the wind could blow so hard and the waves run so hign and with such angry Dower. LIFEBOATS TORN LOOSE AND SMASHED TO KINDLING. The trouble began last Tuesday when A southwest gale rolled up long, sullen rollers which put mont of the Passen- gers below and made them feel like ataying away from thetr meals. Friday the waves began breaking and pawing at the lifeboats and before night many of them had beon wrenched out from their loosened lashings and threshed to kindling wood. Capt. Cuppers sent six sailors out to try to save some of the boats, A great wave caught them and awept them down the 4 Hoe thought they had gone father, Emilio, wae trying to force her to marry a man three times her Gio loved a youth who was only twenty- | two, Fanny declared, and had tried to get a license from the marriage bure to marry him, but had failed. Her father, learning of her effort, had threatened to kill her, the ollve-skinned little person etammered tn foar, He hal beaten her and had sworn that if abe | 41d not marry the ian of hin choice she | would never live to be the wife of an- other, she said. ‘ ‘The Magistrate {ssued € summons, and since Mrs, Hatfeld had interested her- self in tho girl's case he gave It to the! probation oMficer to serve. ‘anny told Mra, Hatfield that her father always, went to work about 7 o'clock and It) would be necessary to be at the house on North Fifth street before that hour It % she would serve the summons. overboard, but as the ship heaved alde- FINOS HERSELF LOCKED IN A’ wa: itpping down the far side of the ROOM. | wave, he saw them rolling Ike logs in So this morning before 7 o'clock Mrs.| the back wash, The rail had saved Hatheld met Fanny outside the house| them. Twenty other men scurried out and went with her to a dingy room on | and dr 4 them in, They were sense- the second floor. It was evident that | less, nome of them, and all of them were some inkling of the girl's strategy had | bruised and cut. There was no further escaped to her father's ears, for when | effort to put men on deck, the daughter, with the strange woman | The twist of the hurricane—Capt. Cup- by her side, appeared at the door of hor | Pers thinks he must have been in thy father’s room Martino jumped into a| centre of the storm which made its bedroom and escaped to the street by |mark on 0 many ships in milocean last way of the fire-escape. ‘week—turned the force of the storm But Mrs, Hatfield could not follow | around to the west northwest. The ship him. Hardly had she entered the room | twisted and dived and skittered like a when she heard a key turn In the douc| seal at play in a tank, On Saturday behind ‘and found herself # pris-| only five of the +0 cabin pasnengers ap- oner. Seven or eight men and women| peared in the dining saloons. And the stood between herself and the, aingio| veteran sailor, Charles M. Schwab, by avenuo of encape; one of thon was the| his own rueful admission was not among aged suitor whose bid for Fanny's hand | them, had started the trouble. HURRICANE BREAKS WIND. Mrs, Hatfield is a little woman, but MEASURING INSTRUMENT. her nerve |s of @ proportion that many ‘The captain's estimate of the helght of big men envy. Waen sie Spun heraalt he. wares. wean that ltd tha overt cocts confronted vy several scowling men and| fee,” “the spray am they siriick the ship froway women who chattered at her In) was thrown a hundred feet in the air fan allen language and made signa to! lng fell on the decks tn continuous her that she would not be allowed to pounding masses, heavy as the take Fanny away she acted quickly. broken volume of water at the feet of a DRIVES MENACING CROWD BACK | high wind-biown Waterfall. ‘The bar- ometer fell until it could fall no further | and ceased recording. The wind mewsus- ing machine broke down registering 100 miles an hour; it blew harder afier that, Capt. Cuppers estimates that it reached 14 miles an hour repeatedly, AT PISTOL POINT. She had carried in the loose sleeve of her coat—in a pocket prepared for just auch emergencies—a small but wicked Joking revolver. With # single move- | ment of her right hand the nervy little anit hr ge tge' nlp Ere veniea' were probation officer whipped the weapon | yived slightly. It had been reduced at from ite hiding place and levelled it at the knot of menacing people before her. ‘Tell them, Fanny," she ordered in « quiet, level tone, “that you and I are going away from here and the first person that interferes will et a bullet through the heart. ‘Tell them that I can shoot—and will without an tn- stant’s hesitation.”* the height of the storm to steerage eadway, so that on Baturday she m but 183 ‘miles an hour. But she inside Sandy Hook before the majority of her passengers crawled ouc of their stateroom STEAMSHIP. WRECKED WITH 129 PASSENGERS Fanny, trembling so that she could hardly whisper, translated Mrs. Hat- field's message, The words proved | strong emphasis to the snub-nosed re-! volver barrel which was bearing with-| out @ tremor on the breast of the fore most man in the gang. Kverybody | fade) away from the door and Fanny unlocked 4t. | ow, Fanny, you go downstairs first | ——— ond follow, the low tome | Visio meninoette oan mite FANNY | steamer Veronese with 139 passengers on AND “HOW WILL WED! card, went ashore to-day off Letnoes, THE MAN SHE LOVES. pnywlipped out of the door and the probation officer, her always | covering the cowering, black, scowling men in the room, backed slowly out of door, She closed tt behind her with bang and went step by step down- her face always turned toward the door that had shut her off from mminent trouble, When Fanny and the probation oMcer —_— reached the street both flew to the Man- hattan Avenue Court. ‘There Martino, | APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. who had b picked up by a@ poilce- van, Was arraigned later and held for |New Report Made on John A, | further examination. the outport of Oporto, A, high sea was running late this afternoon and the ves- vel could not be reached by boats, Efforts were being made to rescue the passengers and by meane of lif lines thrawn from the shore. Veronese, which Is owned in by the Lamport and Holt Line, Was on the voyage trom Glasgow, Scotland, to Brasil and thence to New York. KF revolver | jen ja | stair The liverpool h Properties. When pretty Marte Vietor aud her When Magistrate Dold heard the | gleaming, golden hair 1 aming, [story and had received nny's assur. | Deputy State Comptroler Wallace 8. nee that She was four months over! ¥ transmitted the following ep- big Mr. Helknap were last neem, this) en years of ake he sent Mra, Hat-| p ates under the inheritance afternoon, It fookedl very much as }feld with her and her Wain to (he | ts o-day to the transfer tax of the apparently unnbling ro over) Sarriage License Buread to ingure flee of the Surrogate's Court which #e x |Fanoy's getting the treasured right to! John A, Singer, died Sept. 4, 2911. Re |day, was still in working wed, Panny wills wed to-day port of Appraiser Garvin, reappralmiths Marie came here to wed Roms 1 Be x thin eatute, shows & gros estate a young mining engin vine p : ourting to $285,619; net value $28,073 n Wort Kind avenue. She arrived ves: | there wasn't the slightest reason in the yal was taken from the former terda steamer of tie United Bruit! he of New York. | a opraisal reappraisal we or- Compa ne, and Was met at t she was finishing the | gereq by & “ohalan. pley by her flance, ‘Then an tnmigras trney from La Paw, ” ame alone and wanted | Gem's countr Rue to know whet brought Mise tor to} stood on tie deck of the Immigration the United States, | Departmes 's fe oat, in the midat of Your tecth are the She told him and then he wanted to ens, Whose dirtiness and 1k = G ‘ 1 ~ Hah au 1Ne he. wane wo PICKet-Guards wif Mr Belknap was going to mat et be ew! her ile It wae an enoe gowoed thgure and the of your health raseing 4 rt eugince vurnshed gold He vesita and said he wasn't sure his al Care for them by using the Genuine ancl condiGion wax such he could tee Hattery sea.! Gosse Qa plunge at once so mat ting, Ne hed Teoth-pick Marie, weeping. s taken balis be tea Vieto: , and. Mr Relkuap 1 had a very Kk to the ca of Quality portant finesse ecomagement atl " and comes fi Trouble starts best " reat woke and ittied northward Caste 4 ow h than ni ter could rar Beth the bomen Hart ad Me ma * @ vr 1 aught of Vie bret dralere everywhere Fifteen Conte Hay a The ona . 1 Belcan ceetainly ated) Lateootie Toath-pied Gengey, tre Tort fn Mae I that t Bt nat tend, o a NOTABLE CROWD SES OLE MA WED LORD VITOR Presence of Nobleman’s Fam- ily Indicates They Will Intro- @ duce Actress to Society, LONDON, Jan, 16.—With one of the most elaborate weddings of the Lon- don season, Miss Olive May, an Ame: foan actress this afternoon was married to Lord Victor Paget, brother and hetr- presumptive of the Marquis of Angle- fey, at Atl Saints Churoh, faddington. Hundreds of notable women and inen of England were present, including the Warquia of Angtwey, the Marchioness, Lady Paget and other highly connected relatives, demonstrating the truth’ of the sfat-ment that the bridegroom's family had accepted the musical com- edy star unconditionally and would in- troduce her Into society. As @ wedding gift the Marquis of Anglesey settled $5,000 a year each on Lord Paget and the bride, Olive May flashed on the orbit of ths London Johnnies seven years ago, The Galety Theatre, famous for its produc- tion of beauties, eclipmed iteelf w this new beauty appeared. Bhe became th and old stagers vied with empty-headed chappies in the pursuit of her amiles, She had suitors by the ncore, and ft was sald that sh could have of London nobility, Lord Victor Paget was then & youth of alxteen. Lond Paget war scar teens when he figured a in one of London's most sensations! divorce cases, A iittie more than a y ago he focussed his attentions on tne Galety's peerless dancer, she being known at that time as the “Girl Wits the Chippendale Legs.” Lord Paget took his place jn the line at the stax. door, but was oon among those pear the top. ALBANY, Jan. 16.—Auto drivers ean not be Hoensed until they age twenty- one years old ts the provision made by @ bill introduced by Assemblyman Far- | rel of Brooklyn to-day, WALKED FLOOR DAY AND NIGHT WITH ECZEMA Worst Condition, Pimples Body. Could Not Wear Any Clothes. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Certainly Cured. oo | tn V on 4 148 Mt. Ana's Ave., Rroaz, N. Y. bed ecsoma tn Whea 1 got a i & if i itl §,: ft] ! i & § z " ii: s 2 aS i i s i 7 tH i ti i i aif bie Hi i f'2 z& vs tf 7 rf fi = Fifi jt | 12, single of Cusloure when ail i { i H | E ! | Ke £2 H ft 5EE dealers mailed free, with postcard “Cuticura, er Tenderfaced Geap Shaving Atick, $ F [ F i i i A doom for wumenkiad suff FEMALE WEAKNBSSE! Poudre Blanche (Rejevenine), Guaranteed under Pure t, Berial No, 41.1) & harmless, naturel, "inte: irrit erve centres: