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BULLETS AVENGE — A. GHNATOWN QUEEN -———————_— FE SUEY BETRNS Informer Who Caused Orient: | al Beauty’s Deportation | Pays With His Life. | SHOT DOWN IN PELL ST., Vengeance of Hip Sings Comes Quickly, on Eve of Ter- } tified Victim's Flight. ‘Ah Voug, the Almond Blossom of No. | U Pell street, where she queenea it in ® lack and gold lacquered oudotr, | Kemows to-day that Lee Suey, who, In a} Mt Of Jealousy, told the white devils of | her little court, has pald the penalty | therefor. le paid it last night in the | shape of five bullets in the left side from the muzzle of a vig blue service revolver—a "Chinese Gat” they call It at Zabeth strcet station Vengeonee was quick in descending on, Loe Suey's close-cropped sleek head. | Yesterds afternoon Ah Fong was, gentence. to deportation before United Sta yumissioner Shields. rier in the day lee Suey had sold out his laundry on Seventh avenue, in Brook- lyn, He knew the climate hereabouts had ceased to be healthful for him, for Ab Fong's protecter, Lee Kook Len, Was treasurer of the Iip Sings and it behouved him to flee. me malign Abirit tagk Lee to last night, maybe the spirit was rice wine; they sinelied it on him after he died; at any rate, {( was on the steps of the Hittle basement restaurant at No, 1 Peil street that the long arm of the Hip Sings reached hin. AH FONG IS AVENGED AS LEE SUEY DIES. From tie shadows across qthe street Wllded a fat, ofly-looking Chinaman. He stepped to the sido of the informer and shoved something that glittered in among the loose folds of Lee's blouse. ‘Mere were three of four quick sing-song equeals from Lee and then came five shots, Before the last flasn was out the service revolver Patrolinaa W: was acro street in three jumps. He grabbed” ihe tat, oily Chinaman ed Just as Lee's body rolled down the steps shed through the filmsy doors in mong the plg-tailed customers of the restaurant. * As Walsh's arm closed on his quarry a@ crowd rushed out of the restaurant. In a flash the gun that had wiped out Lee's life was being handed from one to another But Walsh, with one arm on his prisoner, jumped: in among the gibbering crowd and grabbed the weapon from the man that had it. At the station house prisoner sald he was Lou Yee @ laundryman, of No. 11 Pell He worked as stewami on yacht, he said, and also tt's famous America, is pretty well scattered and by the time ‘ation with his pris- w ‘Chinatown with police nowada: Walsh was at the ener they had garnered in ten uncon- eerned witnesses. None of them would admit anything. They had heard the w@hooting, seen the body roll into the Lou Yee Huen was more communica- tive, He told of his service on yachts ené admitted he had come but recently from Los Angeles. He was locked up etill amiling, as if he were serving @rinks on the shaded quarterdeck of yacht. ‘The first peculiar thing the polic theed about their prisoner was thi though he eaid he was a Hip Sing, either Wing Tok nor Ong Fong, the “reltet corps” of the Hips, appeared at the station house. Then somebody re- membered that th of Ah Fong had come up in the afternoon before the United States Commissioner, With ‘Ab Fong was arraigned her protector, Jee Kok Len. His fate has not yet been decided; but as a yellow slaver it may go hard with him, ‘Then, by dint of patient delving In the dark places of Chinatown, !t developed th a Pi dlood. were play deck of cards was called for and it ile shuffled the bet. nd the other players stayed for the by which time each man had After the “draw” the ‘dra $60 in the pot. two strangers threw their the four kept raising one another until there was close to $1,000 in the pot. straight, Curley thr of aces and Hastings three aces and @ A Plea (4 38 wor MARR and NED (F PLATO AND €' “THEIR WAY "DICKERING, GUARRELSOME, IRRITABLE FOOL" Goprright, 1913, by Th ress Vublisulog Co, (The New York World), EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, me eee mee ee eee o- o. What Is the Ideal Age to Marry? ° ixth Article of a Series. for the Bridegroom of 20 | By a Youth Who Is Engaged to Wed \,. ce caso wines “YOUNG MEN WHO MARRY Do NOT APPRECIATE A ood woman’ WRITES “A REPENTANT 4USBAND < “TETUS HAD | SIKAGESIN ONE DECK AT HIGH BETTING GAME | ON LINER MINNEAPOLIS Players Were Western Catilo- men, but No Blood Was Shed After Show Down, | } | On the Atlantic transport liner Minne- for blood’ vith some pl Four of the With 1 on Monday resta hat 8 all was Harbone's deal serene 806: Hes vee cards, passed them for LOU YEE HUEN GIVES HIS HI8-} g.ai:. ToRY. the game, but just before was played the limit bad oft. McDermott opened the This was raised by he discard and apolix, which arrived to-day from South- ampton, was played a game of poke: and which in other day ers, might have drawn passengers, wealthy cattlemen, were James R. Hast- ings and Jesse Harbone of But! Francis McDermott of Austin, Charles B, Curley of Kansas ¢ two other passengers the four all Mont.; Tex. and Mo. night. A new the cut and ‘There had veen a dollar limit on this hand been taken pot with a $2 the cattlemen nds Into cattlemen Harbone laid down three queens and pair, McDermott air of jacks, Six aces on the table! The four men looke “T’'ve seen the time | had an ace high » tens and a pair intently at the four hands and then at one another, Then some one laughed. Montana’ sald would have that the ivory;faced gunman had occu- | Mr, Hastings, “when pied the same room at No. 11 Pell street | been some shooting over a showdown aince his arrival in Chinatown that An | like that.” Fong and Lee Kook Len had furnished “ean gilb and smiling, Lou Yee Huen Geclare! he “no saveed" anything about @ither Ah Fong or Lee Kook Len. But an investigation by an Evening Warld reporter dirclosed to-day that Lee Suey, who was ab ut twenty-eight years old, had been a frequent and favored visitor to Ah Fong's bower, and that ‘when she was arrested with Lee Kook ‘Len on Doc 2% last he was generally gredited with being the informer, After that event, Lee Suey appeared no more in Chinatown. He kept close to his laundry in Brooklyn till a few @ays a when the tlp got out by Chinatown wireless that it was going te go hard with Ah Fong. Then he sold the laundry, The bargain wan consummated yesterday, Then came the big silence for Lee, and another] y) Yopic of conversation in cellars and behind grated doors in dark, #!l-smell- ing passages. AW FONG GOES BACK TO CHINA WELL AVENGED. Ah Fong's history {s the history of hundreds of other Ah Fongs in San Francisco, Portland, Seattle and Vic torla, She was brought to San Fran- elaco by Lee Kook Len in 19%, They <MWed there till the earthquake, Then they moved to Los Angeles, from which town hatis Lou Yeo Huen. h A th db: Dermott. the pot, romance has be sabec" the House of Detention. “Texas had a fairly good reputation for uch things, too," In the manufacture of ces had been slpped ‘The players were ot long after, the er protector. Now, the last chapter Lou Yee Hi aaistant 10. ake With Huen were held witnesses, me, it 1s Whether the aight Incidentally, the Hip y the Gould nor returned Mr. White Devils and took away the Almond Blossom and ‘The 1a the in leck two instead of other cands for there were only fifty-two cards in it ports” and divided came in Lee Suey's n written and soon Ah Fong will be going back to China, know. ing she has been avenged. n Was arraigned before District-Attorney ridge this afternoon and the Toffls for further examination on For all questions Brecken- remanded to he had a of his shiny bowling-ball head, th ten “no went to In the mean likely that when Lou Yee {s arranged on the date set, he will be confronted by Ah Fong and Lee Hook Len. move him or not 4 Chinatown precedent says it will not. of them will nains to be seen, Sings showed their interest tn Lou Yee Huen to-day by sending up Charles V District-Attorney's represent the society, to handle his case. | Neither Mr. Gould, Office said to Lou Yee had y to do. ‘A few months ago, they came here|any talking y ena ati Ab Fong's name be- —_— 4 A 1 ECZEMA CURED IN 10 TO 30 Days, Came known to tho silent yellow men Paris Co., 2624 Pine Street. st. from Brooklyn to Jersey City, Lee ie. ry , izees. Mt. ¢ Byey caine more often than the other mt MARS che i fisconer, ‘Then, one day, he came no more and to cure af Oe a Tak the Fee ota ie Stn oA oeute rae) =. be Ping “It Is Absurd to Set Down a Given Age as Ideal to Marry—Some of Us Are Childish at 35, “To My Mind, a Young Man Is Adequate to Wed When He Learns to Discriminate and Choose His Wife With as Much Caution as He Would When a Boston pedagogue announced the other day that, scientifi- cally considered, the man of twenty-five constitutes the perfect husband he took occasiom to add that the youth of twenty is far too young to be taken away from his mother. Today @ young man of the proscribed age springs vigorously to the defense of NIXOLA GREELEY: SMITH. these cannot be applied to me since I can provide, my age being the only obstacle.” HOW ABOUT THE AGE OF THE Without wishing to oppose obstacles tu the triumph of to this very youn, ike him that ev be old enough t “brides-to-be” ma: wive: that @ girl choose: Ddecause she has had neither time nor opportunity to co: one else, and @ girl young enough to marry @ boy of twenty is generally far inexperienced mind, however grave and re too senior choice the object may be. It may be paradoxical to state ‘that the later a longer it is likely to last, but it 1s my opinion that the modern husband or wife is found more frequently by a tion thau by a sudden flash of Hardly any man likes to feel wa ( ever — Others Matured Before 20,” Writes “G. N.” His Ties,”’ Says “Charles E.”’ BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. the twenty-year-old that the young man ceded, good fortune to be fireside, work and “Unless you print marriage, “I Will be guardians of my IRL? they want, then love I must point out man and to others en though they may 0 be husbands thew y be too young to be is when wil selection of a wife tion ties and socks. Eptetetus advised marry, and Plato was shim for life simply declared that any married by the age of 7 ith an b npare him with 8¥ 156 punished and fined, public uses. to know her own rend a her tmmatur the citlzens t own subwaye, of bachelors within The views of follow: marriage starts the process of elimina- Permit me ao De You DRINK? SMOKE? Swear? now MUCH DO You Mawe !’ to provide for a girl is surely old enough to marry her. who remain at home under the pro- tection of their parents undoubtedly need guidance at twenty,” he con- jut those who have had the dent and matured before the boy who remains at home and are fit to as sume the obligations of matrimony.” twenty-year-old adv your arguments in the paper by the they can shop and get exactly what ‘World reader is right in saying ‘that the time for a man to marry with which he chooses his man to advocate a bachelor man who was not devoted to Juno's temple or the money to be raised by @ tax on all the wilful and persistent ts demesnes, ening World readers DEFENSE OF THE TWENTY BY ONE OF THEM. to contribute a word ETC: WES OLD ENOUBN TO MARI WE ts ABLE TO STAND EXAMINATION QUESTIONS OF WER PARENT'S GN. wife for granted—that is, I figured she'd always be there like th tionary tubs, whether I acted decent or not. Lots of times I'd go off on my ear about @ Uttle thing whioh Wasn't worth thinking about twice, and I'd manage to make @ cyclone out of what should have been only ® passing breeze. I had been mar- ried eight years before I suddenly realized what @ bickerine, quarrel- some, irritable fool I was. I never realized that I had any better wife than some of the other fellows; in- stead, I always imagined their wives Were different from mine, and easier to get al’ § with. I kind of pitied myself instead of my wife for hav- ing got married. It seemed that there was always something to scrap about In our home. I know now it was myself, but I always used to think It was my wife's fault; If she only understood me better, or som thing else like that. I was a spoiled child, used to having my own Way and never seeing any good reason why any one should buck up against me and expect to get theirs. Of course, when I got ma: ried I thought my wife should do as the rest of my family did—let me do anything I wanted for the #ake of keeping me in good humor, and then, fool that I was, I thought she liked everybody else better than me, where now I see she simply had to have somebody else pleasant around her, if I couldn't be. And then one day I came to my senses. A new being came to our home—a beautiful baby girl The idea had never thrilled me very much, until my wife had gone to the valley of husband, urging who is adequate “The boys swept from the become indepen- thi adds the ocate of early confronted with bride-to-be, and ‘The Bvening zercise in the the same cau- the shadow of death, und when T all persons to} realized she might never come back perhaps the first! 1 woke up with a start. I had never tax. He| known how dear she was to me, and 1 told her so, She calmed me with thirty-five should] @ “It's only the excltement of the |, the money to be} moment; you'll get over it, and applied to] thing# probably be the same as they Here is an idea that might] always were.” She didn't belleve be applied to the subway situation, Let} tn me. Why should she? Since of New York build their] t there Is a boy who bears my 1 I—well, I wouldn't recog- f. It took me eigi up. A REPENTANT, CHOOSE A WIFE AS YOU WOULD YOUR NECKTIES. Dear Madam: There in no ftandard age for maria) It should vary as individuals vary with the moral naine, a nize my old years to grow BOY OF revelation, One Evening World | of nse In favor of the much ase ripening of the mi Most men pre- reader suggests to-day that the i sailed young man of twenty, Tam jtute themselves into wedlock ideal age for s man to marry is | ne of the victims, No, not heart result of capricious physleal when h2 Las learned to choose a | Mehr. If you liste: only to tho ‘They are like young ducks, wife with the same caution which parents’ side of the story, well, running into the pond, but governs his sslectiou of ties or then you will know only that which surprising ducking looke socks. {| has been long settled. are eagerly back to dry land. To my find what they want, whut they start) *@me atnong us who b tune | inind a young man is adequate to find what we want, what wo start! ~OF rather good fortune-have been | wed when he learns to discriminate to seek eariy in the morning orimotuy swept from the firesi worited, avd choose his helpmate with ad hopefully, But toward evening} become ndependent ani matured much caution as he would bis friends, when the shadow, fall and ist before brother at home, who fie suits, hie hetw and tes. All @ of the subway jain oppressos they are} has heen sheltered from the tem= | not adapted to be mothers and apt to grab any kind of kesnity | Peat of experience. ils experience te fathers and raine families, When the article rather than return home emoty very lmited—though he would not a age woman attaing the age of handed and with the consciousness of | @dinit tt~and he still neods the guide | twenty-five | think she can well rely a wasted day, The ribbon may uot{| ance of hie pareuts, upon her judgment, Do not wed ou match exactly, the lace may be a But please make an exception of «de the sphere of your age, id Httle too narrow or tuo wide, the gloves us wao by real experience have ma- | and understandings, Youth and old not the right sige, but bargains bee ed a’ twenty and foel gale mens | age in marriage are as fer apart cause of too much andling. And ly and physically to #houlder ¢ the Valley and the mountain p wo it happens often th the cholee of | respe ities of a home, 1 When you meet the man you love, a husband, If a woman is the m u will do this T will be cont who has a good and noble heart, @ rying son. (and the marrying kind the -uardians of my wife-to vain of strong arms, and who is Up- doesn't mean all the women woo are] with your arguments tn the paper, { rghit and ober, willing to love, chet married by any means) @he starts out] and these cannot be applied to me, | ) and protect you, don't hesita’ bright and early with a neat little} wince | can provide, my age being | Marry him, Make him happy and sample of whut she wants—sie calls ly obstacle, It Is absurd to | tise @ family, 18 the highest aim in it an fdeal-—aid she rejects this man} @et down a given age as ideal one | # person's lif CHARLES ® | because he Is not tail enough and that! a! wh omarry, Some o:usare | man because of his religion and an-| child urty-five, others ma- |GIRL OF 17 SHOOTS HERSELF. other because he has a beard or in, tured i twenty, When a man fui, and then along in the panicky| 1 able tv pass the examination | Nervous Invalid Saye Her Parents thirties sho realizes that the dusk is} questions of the parents of tue Had Not Treated Her Well, falling and the day will have been| girl, then [i is the ideal time to r 2 without result unless she gvabs wome| marry, and sor verore ayn | NJ ie a mils man or other in @ hurry and makes ' yeare old, shot hersel him do, And so she grabs him, Ang| VERY YOUNG MEN DO NOT AP. ® precergus conition there you have her, more or ess PRECIATE GOOD WOMAN, ‘ough her and safely married by a proc ne deinen! nicpy enh pa lodged somewhere in the spinal co mn, anelanian anak onale ps a aa a long deen under the care Men may be more scientific and # that they have not iearned to ap wed ed e7eteutatic in buying thelr socks preclate @ «ood woman, | used tu had not and poetics. 3 den) Bnew. af Be elie of those fellows wno tev o ADMITS ALLIANCE _WITHIBANK ROBBER Stand Friendship for Sher- wood, Norwalk Defaulter. | HIM IN PRISON. Story Brought Out on Cross- Examination By Husband Lawyer in Separation Suit. VISITS Amazing admiasiona of her friendship for Oliver T, Sherwood, the defauiting cashier of a Norwalk (Conn.) savings bank, who was arrested tn Canada and is now serving a term in prison, were made to-day on the witness stand before Justice Newburger in the Supreme Court when Mra, Elizabeth Stivers Sterry wae cross-examined in her uit for separa tion from her millionaire husband, James W. Sterry, member of the whole- sale drug firm of Weaver & Sterry. Mrs. Sterry, tall, handsome and of middie wearing @ sealskin coat and an immense pleture hat with purple and red gladioli, calmly revealed her ac- quaintance with the bank wrecker who stole several hundred thousand dollars. Bhe admitted she had been Sherwood’ “manager” at several mijlinery esta- lishments the embezzier had conducted in Manhattan and that she had visited to Be Tri y admitted that und izabeth A. Sargeant” ashe instituted sult against Paul @. with arson tn t are Henry ©. One Hundred and Nineteenth str regeg eed hibits acsuee acing George Grutz of No, 62 Kast One I ‘That part to whiten that the merchant had beaten her ehite| dre! and Second street, and Kalman] his wife objects concerns her divorce she was employed as a model in the | N@WMArK of No. 630 West One Hundred from Win a 8. Curlett of Wilming- merchant’a establishment, ‘The nuit | 2M4 Fifty-second street erat, then aif, Gutlett, opaeeed im never came to trial and wae diacon-| These men, together with Robert J. | ote er Oe a a har tinued, although Mrs, Sterry identified | Rubin, another adjuster, now under in eee ea bond to keep. the her algnaturé to the eworn complaint, | dictment, are to be tried on the Char€? | denew for a your which was produced in court by Hya- lanning incendiary fires, employing |” juret telly of an automobile ride in cinthe Ringrose, her husband's lawyer. ianics” to net the flres and acting after which Mes, Hluret charged Mra. Sterry was formerly the wife of | an the agents of tie insured in the wiih Mivting with ev Alfred J. Rennie, a Chicago merchant. | jection of bowun from whom she was divorced. She is the daughter of Gen. A. J. Stivers of| jlo” Of the Dist: T a civil war veteran, She was| Defore asking ¢ any more arson Freeman and to-day by Rob He entered plea married to Sterry on April 23, 1911, In Chicago. George Edward terry jr, who shot and killed his father in the latter's downtown drug store and then commit- ted suicide, was Mr. Bterry's brothe: Mra. Sterry Hved with the yo merchant until Sept. 1, 191, when then | Meck the tndietmont. which permis a iM harry bey ka parted, Mra. Sterry then began an aac-|*0" ar Judge itusnlaky con: | Potters when he awoke tn Roches tion for a separation, charging Sterry | tinued ¢ mA! four weeks later. with drunkenness and cruelty. and § Gruts, xed on their ar- Ne n telegraphed to his wite, (whe PARTED FROM FIR6T HUSBAND] Mianment to plead ty previous indict-| sie thin, glad. to have. him safe TWO MONTHS APTER MARRIAGE, | Nenin, and they were sont to the! eat dna gays she then promised to Mrs. Sterry sald she wan born in} TM! | be a kind, sweet, tender spouse Texas, and was married to Mr. Rennie| , Maurice Gottlieb p ab not guiity | 8 thetle last Dh, dpapite in New York in 1894. Two montha| fF Newmark, who is under a previous | 1" & Pathetle last paragraph, ter they parted, and Rennie want to| indictment charging hin with submit. | (ts | phraseology, Hurst says he | Chicago, where a divorce was obtained, | ting fa proofs of a tire joss. Ball | sought pe and quiet riding In el | Mrs, Sterry claiming that whe was| Wa fixed at $10,000 in iis case, and, ax) Yated trains, aud once, on a ramble, never eerved in the action, She has af "© could not furnish it he was locked | seeking. fe he found child, sixteen years old, as a result of | UP In the Tombs, publle Mbrary, he made 3 her union with Rennte, — -__ a custom to iitude in the eve. Wish Alb SOW AERC HbaK Hike Sour |ning in this library, where he could soond had divorced you!” the law real without thought of Impending eon- yer asked, | Atct aoe Fry tal rt months later—two ” yoars, [ think—when eome friends told ww me of te - Skillful bicading of n explaining her troubles with Br ee ee wet) NIGHT ON DISABLED © <totcestand purest fei who allowed Sterry to walks} e that enab! er husband to ootain I+ | | quor. A quarrel resulted and during (ie | names she wrote on a piece of » | H and handed to the court, She sald vist e slapped Sterry’s face until he got _—.— | nad apolonixed TURKISH BLEND Med, turning te Justice | Wireless Brings Concord toaid| HUA Fea eat CIGARETTES taman of that har-| Of Sister Ship, Helple: ver the quarrel ihe rh . | Mra. Serr) (m recelving With Broken Shaft. has won the good-will of mony. | this whole country. : TROLLEY RAMS WAGON. he steamer Concord of the ¢ | Distinctively Individual’. AND TWO MEN ARE HURT Mae areved here to-day with the pas: | . gers of the Steamer He which pile caseraagacal wnt for Provid Kt. Lewis Le forty-one years oid. Beverly was a | No. a4 Fifty-eighth street, South Brook: i Island sound liya, was driving his milk wagon south he ank shaft broke. on Fifth avenue at Thirty-third street ond nok stata | Brooklyn, early to-day when a trotey| opie new wax quiet and the transfer |car rammed the vehicle from behind and| tne pannengers was wafels | Wrecked it, Beverly was towed to Whi Levell was thrown to the street the passengers brought to this city jdohn J. Clinton, thiriy-elaut, of No, The Concord docked shor by Forty-eighth street, + th Brooklyn, a} noon, and those of t passe me whe passenger On the car, was painfully cut} had wished to go ta thy ity by ra’ land brutsed, Hoth were attended by were provided with # nina dations | \eurgeon from the Norw Hospital, | and leit for their destination, A tow Jand Levell was taken there. concluded to abandon their trip, and The motorman wald the street was ao| Mess returned to their homes after @ | dark he didn't see the wagon until too night on the disub ed Beverl ¥ aieaa ve avail HIRURa F ‘apt. Cob» of th Concord it i} was learned pe at — about 0 niga ven ORE EXPERT ON STAND. hin ship was on the way’ from’ Provie — es dence to New York, heard the i of jo of Minnesoia Ranges in §: from their sister ship, the Bev The location being given, it was Againet & a simple matter for Capt. Cobb to At the continuation to-day of the] send his ship to that of Capt. Gray, Government's suit to ak up the} and within a short time the two were ni! States Steel Corporation for | towetier | Violating the Sherman Anti-Trust taw,| , The bassenxere uboard ihe Beverley Yood, | P. HL Melaon, an ore expert, gave tes] eee ee ane ae nee ae Act. Merial No. 4110: | umony which bore our the co to whip. To-day wrecking boate were |,_/S the only remedy for women, r - of the Government that the Steet ( nent to whe Heveriey, and she wil be| l8S Of age. Harmless, natural. Taken poration leased (re PU) ore lands in| towed to this city and docked and re-| internally. Compounded of the rarest Minnesota to Keep thelr competito continental herbs and roots, Effects im- from acquirins them. mediate and lasting relief, Will invi Mr, Nelson testified at length con- ate, soothe and allay nervous irri cerning the value of the different ore| ty Grand Jury bodies In the Hill range. The Steel a, f ui Di tig CURE AND REJUVENATE, |Corporation cancelled thelr lease on ES wigit saerion “of” dines | Get our booklet; it is free. the land Just before the Government oo to tivuatode! aloe | Four weeks’ treatment for $1 h it it. i lavas de prvaoinl Uh ibe nesta 5 | Poudre Blanche Chemiéal Co., TON pom amt nips teat, | 1947 Broadway, New York City. David Rachlin of No. i Flushing net wale vacuity YOR San AT avenue, Brooklyn, a diuxgiat, and hie) Port ra GARE ABSOLUTEL 51 ve. brother, Michael J, Racalin, a dentet| Pe ae aE M4 me tes correnee ep of No, 48 Tompkins avenue, woo were! have evem ome of these . Pale e: ¥y . 1488 Oe, Indicted taat week by the King's Coun. glUmiiede Fistiering se, naiged A. Le. Tufte, 171 i. Kinhales Ave. etre " v the illegal ve!ling of, ertnge 15) ounces of cocaine, pleaded gutity to | uamegs, | Dlaale tie tndletment to-day before County e Rew tor Judge Niemann and were held for seis We tre tence nest Friday. Freeman of No. enta, and asked for perminaty ALLEGED ARSON TRUST. MEMBERS ARRAIGNED, PLEAD NOT GUILTY Accused Insurance Adjusters ied Before More Indictments Are Found. - Mr. and Mra, Hurst are at present 5 nowledge > Sc vet, his Aight to Canada, but denied that] MAnce adjusters who are accunel Of | iongy ‘to him, and he is ving at No. she went with him. . having been the moving spirits in the) 771 Putnam avenue, which house bi FORCED TO ADMIT BRINGING] Harlem and Bronx Arson Trust wore ut for her as a’ wedding gift @v : ‘* ouday | YOArs ag SUIT AGAINST EMPLOYER. arraigned before Judge Roraleky to-da Hurst, « rding to his wife's aff to plead to Indictments charging them re second «des wh ee losaes, It Is the tnten ? " freshment, Mrs, at, gays hubby, Sethie aa to ANd any | einphasiaed her displeasure by infiteting upon Win the Iinprint of her small but * Gruta were represented | heavy hard, so that When be Went out ert Elder of Brooklyn. | y nothing until d ax of not guilty for both to Wi SUDDEN DEATH! 86 Went -Attorney to try tiem Gere Gn, ‘641 Wessels Bldg, Rattowell, te, Aha i SOT AER NIE ’ | MILLIONAIRE’S WIFE | RICH MAN'S WIFE. “Wigan | FOR CONVICTED BANKER. ; VNCOSIIS FOR (NEES HEAVERS: She Hit Him in Brooklyn and He Woke Up in Roches- ter, Hurst Declaies. SPANKED FIRST HUBBY. His Spouse Is a White Hope With a Great “Wallop,” According to Defendant. Although Mrs. Clara Huret and her husband, Charles Hurst, whom ¢he is suing In the Brooklyn Supreme Court for a separation, alleging desertion, are thelr marital voyage, experts say whould assure them perfect happiness, each accuses the other of cruelty and says they have been ahip- wrecked long ai Mrs. Hurst is forty-two years oid and her husband ts sixty-eight. Hugst, declares his wife, is a very wealthy man, at and $1,000 coun: fees, ing her husband's allegations concern- ing her marital diMculties with one of her former husbands struck out ef his answer. Justice Kapper, before whem the cane was heard, reserved decision on both motions. vit, {9 president of the Hurat Bleetre- | type Company and the organizer of the | million dollar Hansou Money and Se- ne face he enc as inns at white t y pauned for re. n ring that tine, he all A smoke goodness that tone up the exhausted nerve pee’ Dre M2 oh Be BR x Poh ame ©