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Rog | Ss acpi ene [MATE PURERRAN DS wife. Hé claime he not only has. pro- vided his family with the necensities of STRIKERS’ PARADE. Mf@ but with every luxury af hig com- mand as well. His daughters accom- Diishipents as @ erumician and ‘as proof of this are cited in his ani " SAYS HE OFFERED HER DIVORCE LAWYER'S CARD. If the story related by bis wife in her ‘Dill for separate maintenance is true, Frederick W. Turner, a ¢oreman in the employ of the National Bisoult Com- pany, fe ever courteous and willing to be helpful. “Here's « lawyer's card. Now run along Ite a good Ittle girl ané ask his YOUNG GIRL TO LEAD. {TARE BILL TO CARRY SILK STRKERS’ HIKE. | CATTLE, WHEAT, MEATS, TOMMOIINSOUARE} FLOUR ON FEE UST Hannah Silverman, Fifteen, to| Senator Simmons, After Talk Head March of Thousand | With Wilson, Says Fight Will From Paterson, N. J. Be Made on That Line. HOUMER OF TAK jGAERTHER, ANGRY DVER TARE AND | SMASHED PANO, SWRNEY PREDICTED} WE DECLARES U ms = Wilson Interferes | Wealthy Retired Brewer Is Ac | “Business” May Have to | cused in Suit of Meanness a. Avralt Action Till Fall, at Home. s'yryi” is What Farmer fs tioned t0 WASHINGTON, June §.—Chal : ae ; j : PDA Seuss" roreer, the oe At ine bead of Lone striking | cimmons of the bacdte Yisaned ‘Con 3 WS. IN THE HOUSE.|CALLED EGGS A LUXURY ily Bt 60 Gk date GAENtly 4N60E Toten e dent Wilson. to-d band how she aight get a divorce-in fact, ahe never contemplated one, she says, and that hig advice aroused her auspicions, Through her attorney, John J. Mar- nol of Hoboken, Mra. Turner is asking the road to Manhattan for the Pageant in Madison Square Garden will be Han- nah Silverman, the youngest leader such @ body has had, and one of the most remarkable characters produced ttees ‘Will Be Set to|Turner, National Biscuit Man, Work Now on Measures Urged Wife to Sue Him, eration by the Democratic cau- cus next week cattle, wheat, meate and flour very probably will be on the free Mat. by the fourteen weeks’ struggle de » for Regular Session. Her Petition Says, Co a eee orcas cane eetere|BRAVE BLUECOAT RISKS tween 96,000 etrtters and. 200 mili|_,™t had been reported that the ub; va aE ly Wevessen in Jersey LIFE TO STOP RUNAWAY. | ownere. sere ir nics gered eidrong is not given. Fifteen years olf, Hannah Silverman hae been arrested three times for her. activities along the picket line and was sentenced to aixty daya in jail by Re- corder Carroll when it was understood she was acting es leader to several hunéred girl pickets. Mer energy has placed her at the head of 1,000 women all older than herself. Least Gunday she made a speech in Haledon, declaring that she was un- G@aunted by her arreste and sentences, from which“whe has appealed, 6he would continue to be active along the picket line in doflance of the police, ahe said. “Big BIN” Haywood, chief of the L W. W., says ohe is “the greatest lit- tle I, W. W. leader the American peo- ple ever’ 3 The 1,000 etrikera expect to reach Manhattan by noon Saturd: inal duty on''meats and flour in order to equalize them with. the free listing of cattle and wheat, but Mr. Simmons de- clared after his talk with the President that he expected both the raw material and the finished produ to be free listed. He declined to say whether the change had been made at the tmatance of the President oréenators. Ho aald that I would be consid- ered by the Senate caucus all next week And be reported out of committee the fol- lowing week. Immediately after his conference with the President, Chairman Simmons hur- ried to ¢l ‘apitol, where the gub-com- mittee considering the agricultural schedule was wattt “I am going into the meeting to move to put cattle and wheat on the free Met." sald Mr. Simmons. “I don't know what the committee will do ‘about f."* The committee then went into session dehind closed doors, Later it was learned that it was the President who had decided upon the free-litaing of raw materials as well as finshed products as the best means of equalization, It was aaid that while the eub-committee’s recommendations that the @inished products be made dutiable and the raw materials free, was re- versed at the White House, it was only ‘after many Genators had expressed through Chairman @tmmone thelr ac- quiescence. The decision was left to the President. @% | Mra, Wilhelmina Gaertner, wife of Crark,| Robert Gaertner, @ wealthy retired brewer, of No, 664 Jefferson place, Union Hill, N. J, made application to- @ay before Vice-Chancellor Vivian M. Lewis in Jersey City, for separate maintenagce Assemblyman Charles M ‘Rgan representa Mrs, Gaertner and former Amemblyman J, Emil Wal- echeid the husband. ‘The petition wtates that wp to the time he lost $9,000 by a bank faflure in Toledo, O., several years ago, Gaert- ner was a good father and a kina and generous husband. After the Dank fail- ure ¢he family, Mr, end Mire, Gaertner and Florence T., the twenty-one-year- 04 daughter, came to Union Hill. The ‘ Children on Way to School First Placed Safely, Then Schaefer Grabs the Animal. A horse attached to a light wagon belonging to O’Neill Natt!, a contractor ‘at No, 103 Meeker a e, Brooklyn, dotted just as Louis Natti, the contrac tor’s aon, was mounting the wagon, as hundreds of chidifen were swarming to) Public School No. 61 at Meeker aven:e! and Humboldt street. Natt! was thrown to the street and the frightened horse the groups of + where Tt te further cited in the papers pre- pared by the petitioner's lawyer that when Mre. Turger demanded Ld husband why love #0 suddenly Grown cold he replied: “Can't you see that I am sick and tired of you? If you were observing you'd know that. ‘When a man no longer cares for a woman, why should he be compelied to live with herr re, Turner goes on to tefl In her petition that she caused her husband to be followed, and that she learred that he made Hamilton Park, @ quiet, a questered place in lower Jersey City, his meeting place with @ yours woman Prominent in church and social circles fm Ninth etreet. She says she con- fronted her husband with the evidence) @he had obtained and that he teplied: “Yee, I am mosting the young woman Gtreet atation stood guard. Alded by teachers Schaefer succeeded in driving the youngsters from the path of the approaching runaway and then eet himself to tap for the horse's reins, ‘The impact knocked the policeman's ¢eet from under him and he was dragged @ full block, the horse's hoofs hammer- ing and lacerating his legs at every jump. Schaefer pluckily hela on until he had brought the horse to a atop. Then Schacter fainted. Dr. McKenna came from St. Catherine's Hospital and patch- 4 Schaefer up. He was taken hoi who witnessed Schaefer's ened & ol lar reciting his forward it to Head- will begin to rehearse the resenting scenes of the strike ached- wled for presentation in the evening, promt al JAIL FOR POLICE ACCUSER. Edward F. Whalen of No. 791 Union street, Brooklyn; who wa Policeman until he resigned when charges of four Gayw absence without leave were brought against him, complained before jught @008 A LUXURY FIT ONLY FOR FOOLISH RICH, Baga he regarded as a luxury, fit for ‘Mrs. Turner te quite certain that her husband wants to get rid of her and marry the girl from Ninth street. But she doesn't propose that anything ‘ike that shail happen. Anyhow, she ‘doeen’t believe in absolute divorces, so just asks for separate maintenance —_—_—>——__ Another Burepean-Ameriean Bank Dividend. @upt. Van Tuy! of the State Bank- ing Department announced to-day that third dividend of 6 per cent. is to! - be paid immediately to creditors of the Buropean-American Wank of New York City, making a total ef 76 per cent. paid to date t if i $ ; Hf HT} i ? f | of what he called the brutality of lcemen Hastings and Burgoyne, who arrested him last night at Seventh nue and One Hundred and Twenty- : z Hi i E quarters, : t i i Lj fr | | : I i g i j i i g i i i ——__—_ a E J i Robert T. Seagraves have issued 1, invitations for thé wedding of their niece, Miss Mari e Noble Ga: John Warren Da: ‘on the evening of June 14 at the First Presbyterian Church of Salem. Mr, Davis is State Senator from Salem County. He was leader of the New Jereey Senate atthe first and thy emtra eeanton. - 4 Lie Whitestone, L. I, and Bradpon of Greenville, Tenn., will be 4 i rf i f wertioning tl Whalen i g 2 WORKS BOTH WAYS. (Prom the Atchison Globe.) Possibly, as the saw eays, faint heart e won fatr lady, But, on the other ; tt may have kept @-man from qvttiog away. “ proached and threaten AInjure busive language and re- . Burgoyne. arrested stance of Hastings was him to the station. Mg G copal Church in G: Lieut. Overton is attached to the United States Cavalry and is stationed at Fort Myer, Va. He served in the Spanish- ‘American war with the Twenty-second | Regiment of New Yorok Volunteers. ! | i fe E Necessary to « ) Magistrate Marsh sent Whalen to the ‘warkhouse—without the alternative’ of fine—for ten days. eat Clearance Sale GUARANTEED LONDON PLUMES _’ Beginning to-morrow, Wednesday, June. 4th Prices less than ever be“‘ore. 5B FEE i ae Pe { i I iit rede if ei! 3 4 E i i: 58 Fg i Hf Li see f id | ; i pices 8 lr if i F i E fee 2gas i 3 £57 6 H £ | H & I | 1 i iif i i j i ial fit Representative ot tli ae i i rE zig Fite t : if i [ i i li ° i if | i if a! ‘i come of which bet a full years. to the veal tree— we apeda the sseret millinere and known only to an rn, Frenne Spe are in the latest two which OSTRICH FANTASIES AND TURE BANDS 380 cpg i nh Novelties, in ten different Wyles, regular prices range fem Ontrich Novelties, rem " iat price ‘trom $3.78 to $10.00... | 78 Ostrich Single Plys (all colors) $1.00 to §2 Sale Price, 69 conte Outrich Bands (at inches tong) Femur prise, S078 jo! rey ir ice, 5 PRENCH PLUMES ; bss areas ‘eg jf al tonal tu ith t m8 1» best quality, value $10.75 to $15.00... Sale Price$7.08 900 London Willow Plam a al new solocionn ceo bien 17 in. long, regular pric 200 London Willow Plumea(in all new colorings,also black: 20 to 24 in, long, regular price, $6.08. ae jee, . 100 London Willow Plumes (in all colorings, aleo black) Bs io 30 ta, Teg price, $10.75 t0$12.78 Sele Prien, $4.98 aleo blac! 50 London Willow Plumes (in all colorings, tar price, $24.08 extra | @ laches loag, ; $24. 50 Ocstrigh Boas (28 Inches lo: lar $6.95 to $8.95, ah ng race ba.98 00 0588 LONDON FEATHER CO. Lenpest Qvtvich Pius Mahere te the World ate * MILLIONAIRE DROPS DEAD | years old, one of the wealthiest and | Most prominent men of Queens Cou | dngppped dead to-day of heart troubl his home, No. 49 Broad Joseph Cassidy in the ness. He was tong active in Demo- cratic politics, Ie was County Clerk when it was a fee office, before con- aolidation of Greater New York. He is Teputed t6 have made during his admin- {stration more than a million dollars. He wae President of the First’National Bank of Jamaica. early, tite Mr. Was an ductionéer, going to a! the county, selling off farma and, anne: o, q and | @ ‘valuabié | J stock, when he entered politics, AT HIS HOME IN FLUSHING. David L. Van Nostrand, sixty-two Flushin: ed wit! 1 estate busi- The deceased was in that position was his one bobby in lute life, Van Nostrand leaves a widow end 4 —Mre. erett Woodruff. One ~ ters he wit County Judge Harrison , Arather is Mre, Jed Conklin, living at Riverhead. He leaves three brothera-- William, Charles and Albert. to Constipation = th ad er to WZ daddaddaadddadadddddddadadidaiiasaiddder SSS SS Ourselves in the Line of Men’s Oxfords We Have De- aE veloped to Sell at $3-“. ——< << Twenty-seven styles, each one a@ marvel at the price. Your choice of leathers, as follows: Gun Metal Calf, Tan Ruasia Calf, Patent Leather. Cammexer . SSist means Standard ¥ Merif ” 6th Ave at 20th St We Have Simply Outdonée SSS NNN LL, hha Witibit titi bitte 47end49 Roses ‘and Brides Blossom in June “4.7nd49 Yo $7, * ae, 4st: wn. New Building S 47and 49 WEST \4-™ STREET WORTH SIDE OF STREET — near 6™ AVE. Young Housekeepers’ Established Sal e In This Thirty Years Vicinity Littie’s label on any piece of furniture has always been and alwaye will be a guarantee of quality. Littie’e June sale meane big money saving to young home makere. Moreover it means LITTLE’S LOW= EST CASH PRICES and easy payments on all furni= ture bought during thie June Sale. Our purpose le to Introduce our furniture Into the new homes—to, win the tr and the confidence of the young © housekeepers, knowing that thelr satisfaction. will . bring them baok to Little's for the extra furniture they will need ae their homes grow. Apartments Completely Furnished---Prices . P Depending on Harber of Rooms--- $89.00 to *200.00 ish mfortable homes at these prices. ond Or eee style up into the thousands. ’ Little’s Solid Cedar Wardrobe Couches, $15.50 complete wardrobe in Itself ; FRETS at Sree your clothes from the ravages of moth, The superiority of Little’s box couches over others lies in the fact that they are solid cedar—not merely cedar lined. : They have tufted seats: apholstered Rese 4: with six dozen steel springs, covered SDR . $34.00 Golden $2 in your choice of colors in denim and other striped goods. Size 27x73 Oak Buffet Height $4 in., width 48 in,; Preneh inches. Can be opened without mov- ing fromp wall. plate mir- ror, 10x40 $19-5° Extension Table 06 LEE Ale oak, silver Quartered | drawer; two oak; 42-inch] drawers for top, heavy 8-. ee) inch pedestal base, carved legs, patent har dwood extension; fitted with table lock; an] claw feet; exceptional value at tlils low price. aew design \I Farnitare, Carpets, Regs, Linoleams, Little Standard Qualities on Easy Terms at Cash Frices During June, . H. LITTLE & CO... & 49" 14th St. "wise sss. linen, two roomy ¢los- | ets; French leg nd hand-carved