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= FOR AUTORILNG — Court it Uphoksi Con- cial : viction of Son of Prominent New Jersey Judge. Opie + ee “MONE APPEAL IS LEFT. *_Machine Used by Youth Was Gift From Priest—Father “\j, Opposed the Intimacy. ‘Twenty-one-year-ol4 Daniel A. Dugan fon of Judge Dugan of the jwOrange District Court, N. J., who ran © Gown in bis automobile and killed frerteen-year-old Leo Francis McDer- “yp-tmett tm Orange oh Christmas day, 1911, * mah corve bis sentence of not less than ro) years nor more than ¢en at hard 4 unless an appeal to dhe Court of peas F . rH. * pel "iy z3y jas J. i Wether McDonald contributed $1,000 , dowerd young Dugan's defense to the dharse ot manslaughter after the tetal aeeldent, declaring that he felt @ ‘menaure of responsibility because he mad presented the car to the young but after the trial Judge Dugan that he had doubts of the his eon’s intimacy with the PI i a geeyezo} rit i if Qu een ” Vietoria of Spain Now He MUST SERVE na PRIS TERM Proud Mother of Three Sons CLD. THOUGH | BY COURT ORDER T0 DEOLARED BOY UN: q = HAPPY AT HOME. is #on once more under ie a reeptrol Judge Dugan appeated his cane eo Supreme Court in Trenton. It fe believed now that he will carry it to the highest court, in his effort to save » Bla gon from a long torm ef imprisons ment. . Touns Dugan pleaded not guilty to ‘the co! of manslaughter, contend- ims ea he had been trying to avoid . @ gisl when bis car struck the boy, was given to show that Du- gan was imozioated at the time. * Young McDermott was dragged for q@mny feet, his clothing holding to the and when he was shaken off tried to escape by speeding. His car skidded and overturned, throw- rr — ing him end his companions out, but they Jumped to their feet and ran and were captured only after e Aight with @heir pursuers, ——————_— POLICEMAN {1S ACQUITTED ON CHARGE OF ASSAULT. Former Member of Becker's Strong Arm Squad Held Not Gullty. “Joseph B. Shephard, who was one of former Lieut. Becker's strong-arm equad, was tried and acquitted in the Court of Special Gessions, Manhattan, Qo-fay on the charge of Looser ad Alexander Jacobus of No. 119 W. Hundred and Thirty-firet street nighg of May 1. Shephard was tried and ismissed from the Police Department on the eame charge two weeks ago. When Becker's squad wae disbanded after Becker's conviction for the mur- @er of Herman Rosenthal, Shephard was assigned to the Lenox Avenue sta- tion, He was on patrol the night of ‘May 1 and was conversing with a woman when Jacobus “clocked” him, Shephard arrested Jacobus and on the ‘way to the station house, Jacobus al- ‘feges, clubbed him, Several witnesses teatified that Jacobus was the aggressor and that Shephard acted in self-defense, but did not use @ club, Shephard will sue for reinstatement on the force, —_———_ TO TEACH SEX HYGIENE. HICAGO, June %.—inwtruction in latters of sex for high school pupils ‘waa authorized yesterday by the Board ef Education, and Ella Flagg Young, @uperintendent of schools, and a number of physicians well versed in the prob- ma of hymene and physiology will be pecured for a lecture course, The superintendent st that the ele- mentary schools need such instruction, ut did not believe that the time is due that phase of the question should pun we Geom her past. She found work, SHE HD HER PAST Fisher Fails to Secure Annul- ment of Marriage With Im- ° migrant Girl. Vor more than a year wavara T. Fisher has been trying through annul- Ment proceedings to rid himself of the little blue eyed Hungarian immi- @rant gitl whom he married two years ago, and to-day Justice Greenbaum in Gpecial Term, Part IL, of the Su- preme Court decided he would not un- tle the knot, During the trial the past of the frightened looking slip of a Gefendant was bared to the last do- tail, But the Justice decided that be- cause her husband had condoned what had bappened by remaining with his wife after he learned the truth he was not justified in aeeking relief now. Mrs, Fisher was a little peasant girl in @ emall Hungarian town a few years ago. Few of the village girls were pret- tler than she and ehe was thi ot of much attention, This led ip misfortune, Driven trom home she came to this country with her babe in her arms, Al here the girl resolved to r She @eved what she could from her slender earnings and finally had enough to establish herself in a small laundry. Then Fisher came into her life. When he asked for her hand she gave it to him—and Med, She was not a widow, she sald; the child was an- other's, One night in her home in Hungary a highborn woman came and gave the babe into her keeping, saying @he Would often come to vislt him. She aid, and when the child was a little older she demanded he be given back to her, The new mother had come to Jove the infant and refusing to give him up came to America. Figher believed the story and mar- Nage econ followed. Then came the truth. People in Elisabeth's far-off homé learned of the marriage and saw to It that her husband knew her atory. Angrily, he taxed her with It, and finally she confessed. She was for- given, apparently, for the testimony showed that for some time the couple had jived together happily, The hus- band assumed charge of the laundry, according to the teatimony, and when he needed money his wife gave him $2,000 from her earnings, Shortly after he decided to rid himself of the girl During the trial Just; Greenbaum did much q ioning, He satistied him- eolf tha: jeher had schemed to cast off his wife and was not entitied to an an- nulment. And the little Hungarian «irl smiled upon him gratefully ag she start- ed back to her pS ‘Kansas City Journal.) “tt to 8 Be ive forty acres and a mule." farming mes ste call no forty equare feet ang STOP WOOING GIRL Ardent Bachelor Wouldn't Take Miss Scher’s “No” Till She Swore to It. Mina Leah Scher, @ plano teacher of Rast One Hundred and Sixth No, 26 street, who is eighteen years of and very pretty, applied to Magistrate Bar- low in Harlem Court to-day to rid her of the attentions of Samuel Green- baum, a wealthy and handsome bache- lor of No. 352 West One Hundred and Greenbaum ex: plained to the court that he had not believed that Mies Scher’s affection for Fifteenth street, Mr. him had faded, but now that ehe had repu him under oath and in a public place he would never annoy hei again. NE MANET W LONE CRILOREN Suspended Sentence for Wom- an Who Is Convicted of Owning a Revolver. BREAD THIEF GETS OFK ‘ ’ Prisoner Who Attempted to: Steal Satin Is Sent to Reformatory. , a as ‘Twenty-eix prisoners were arraigned yesterday in the Courts of General and Bpectal Sessions for sentence. The die- position of each cage was as fellows: BY JUDGE CRAIN. hur Beale, @ negro, seventeen, of No. 87 West Thirty-fourth street, br soo At» of Resaulting a girl; fret Reformatory. “taal Goldstein, nineteen, of No. 1637 Bt. Mark’s avenue; pleaded guilty attempted theft of two pieces of satin from No. 110 Greene street; frat offense; Elmira Reformatory. BY JUDGE GWANN. Charles Gavacese, thirty-one, of No. 60 West Thirty-fifth street, and Thomas Hayes, twenty-eight, of No. O01 West Fortieth street, convicted of unlawtully entering building No, 200 Weet Forty- fifth street; second effenders; peniten- tary, ene year each, Arohie Craig, negro, tweaty, of No. @ West One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street; pleaded guilty carrying « re- volver; firat offense; penitentiary. three months, Frank Wallack, twenty-two, of No. 1! ‘Washington street; pleaded guity es- saulting William Shalack of No. 9% Wagner street, Jersey City, for purpese of rohbery; first offense; Bimira Re- formatory. James F. Burns, twenty-five, of No. 113 West One Hundred and Forty-sighth street, and James McKenna, twenty- two, of No, 663 West Fiftty-second street; both pleaded guilty attempted theft of horse and carriage from Frederick Law- tence of No. 2153 Cilnton avenve, Bronx, at Twenty-cighth street and Sixth ave- nue; Buras, second offense, State prison, one year and seven months to two yeare; MoKenna, first offense; Himira Reformatory. BY JUDGE FOSTER. William Lynch, forty-four, of Ne, 14 Grand street; pleaded guilty burglary at No. 6 ,Grandé etreet; third offense: penitentiary one year. Bimer B. Vail, twenty, of No. 82 Weat One Hundred and Forty-second street; pleaded guilty pron at No. M3 Geventh avenue; second offense; @ate prison four years. William Chapman, seventeen, of No. 1 West One Hundred and Fitty<iret street; pleaded guilty theft of type- writer and sostal cards from No, 304 Bighth avenue; Gret offense; City Re- formatory. Ernest Israel, seventeen, of No, 1218 Prospect avenue, Bronz; pleaded guilty theft of #1 worth of jewelry from No. 2 West One Hundred and Twelfth street; firet offense; City Reformatory. Harry Jones, negro, twenty-five, of No. 41 West One Hundred and Thirty- eighth street and Baward Lightbourne, negro, of No. # Weat One Hundred and ‘Thirty-iret street; both pleaded guilty theft of clothing from No. # Mast One Hundred and Thirty-third street; Grat offenders; each City Reformatory. John Kope, twenty-two, of No. 9 Went One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street; pleaded guilty theft of camera from passenger in Hudson Terminal station; firet offense; City Reformatory. Michael Zirpola, eighteen, of No. 250 Mott street; pleaded guilty carrying o blackjack; Gret offense; $10 fine. BY JUSTICES COLLING, HERRMAN AND MoINERNEY, ANOS NED $25) SUR ALT ‘ONY REPORT OF SING SG ELS Governor Expected to Clean Out Managentent of Prison as Result. ALBANY, June %.—"l certainly will Ret om the findings of the Westchester Grand Jury in the Sing Sing investiga- tion,” sald Gov. Sulzer to-day, ‘The Governor would not say what he Intended to do, but @ general cleaning out ef the prison management |e ex- pected. The Governor sald frankly that he had read the report in the nows- papers and was deeply interested tn Although Sing Sing prison has ready been denounced as “unfit for the housing of beaste by the Westchester County Grand Jury, which is tnvest’- wating that Inatitution, the investigation is not yet Gnished. The shocked Grand Jurors expect to go more thoroughly into conditions at the penitentiary. They suggest the abandonment of Sing Bing and the erection, without delay, of @ new penitentiary on a fertile tract from five hundred to thousand @cres, urging action at the present ape- olal session of the Legislature, WOOLWORTH’S TENANTS SECRET BRIDE SIX MAY CHOOSE WATER WAGONS New Deughter Telle Mme. Restrictions as to Brand of Chaser Removed by the Managers of the Bullding. Hereafter tenants of the Woolworth Building who want to buy bottled epring water or distilled water may patronise whom they please and have the water delivered by the elevator of the bullding. This right of the tenant's has been the subject of bitter contro- versy since the thirty-eight story sky- scraper wes opened. At first it was the contention of the managers of the duilding that only oue brand of water could be carried up on the elevators. Those who wished to buy any other rand were asked to realise that the delivery man would have to carry it up from one to thirty-eight floors on his straining back. Several persons eager to sell Legg not beetle A the went to the Supreme Court for an injunction. But to-day, on the agreement of the buliding managers GIRL OF 16 THROWS and Fadeaway in Her Repertory. -Distance Girl Pitcher Who Relies on Her “Violin Arm”’ WILL TRY ROSENHEIMER LEAGUE BASEBALL OVER | FOR RUNNING AWAY FOUR-STORY BUILDING) AFTER FATAL COLLISION Elsa Umla Also Has Spitball| Freed Once, Millionaire Manu-| cussck. facturer Must Face Another Jury on New Charge. "TRE STS Occuparfis of shio Apartments Turn Out to Firemen Work. * \ ‘The eighteen tamities tn the & seven-story fashionable house at No 2 Weet atreet, were driven to the 0nd street carly today by © fire in Dasement. The clatter of the arouned the exclusive brought ont y spectators 7 At No. 1 Weat Ninety-feurth, @) story apartment house sereme Cemral Park, every wae filled with tenants whe fee the firemen work, ¢ started tn the lockers Hanna jr., college athlete and 2» man of thie city, Whereupon 2m Torrian! gasped a little and veld was surprised and pleased, ti daughter might have let her tn | secret. . ‘Mre, Hanna explained to her that secrecy had been due to her tion to elaborate Tha couple were married & the Church of the Ascension by —»———' & Ne. Frank Hartley Dead, Dr. Frank Hartley, who éled home, No, 61 West Forty-ninth to allow any reaponajble concern to de- liver water to any tenant, all proceed- swore, withdrawn. eo managers of the who are incorporated under the name of the mous chiefly for his discovery | method of curing neuralgia by n'a gangiion at the base of the @ He was professor of surgery in tf lese of Physiolans ai hed written books After three years’ delay, Edward T. Rosenhelmer, @ millionaire manufactur- er, wilt have to face a jury on @ feleny charge for violating the Callan | Auto- y Mobile law in connection with the death, | siandard, For eighteen years in August, 191, of Grace Hough. Resen- Ld f meme peerage ye cer hetmer appeared vefore Judge Foster in General Bessione to-day accompanted | fl" tos; lal He was fttyeeln y by hie attorney, former Asstetant Dis- trlet-Attorney Jamon W. Osborne, and Dleaded not gullty to an indictment al- Bay, tig league scouts, ment time you're jtooking for new timber take @ run over to Brookiyn at No, 373 Ful- ton letrest, ing the doorbell end ask for Misa Risa Mathilde Umia. Tf ehe's not out playing baseball with ome champton neighborhood nine, a wiry mies who ie within five inches of with jet black eyes diaok, sizteen years No doubt and prevent complications which might tye? an excuse for beggare and thieves r the building. BOY STRANGELY VANISHES. Miss Scher's lawyer, Harvey Cohn, wanted Mr. Greenbaum put under bonds to keep the peace, but Magistrate Bar- low eaid he thought !t was not neces- sary. “Miss Scher," he sald, “oan come to me at any time, no matter where I am ting, and If she complains that this young man 1s displeasing her by writing letters, speaking to her on the stree. or him to an {sland retreat where the cool- ing breezes of the East River will calm his ardor.” Mr. Greenbaum nodded his agreement with the terms, But he did not take his eyes from Mise Scher's back as she James Brooks, days, tiary one year. Oenitentiary one year. ‘Thirty-elghth street; one year. no address; guilty unlawful entry of building No. 2227 Fifth avenue; City Prison thirty Herbert Hopicns, of No, pleaded tried and ‘Witam Bhuttieboon, of No. 41 West ‘Thirty-ffth etrest; tried and convicted conveying drug into’ prisoner in Tombs; James Kanneen, of No, 10 West One Hundred and Ninth atreet; convicted as disorderly person ; peniten- ML West Pleaded = guilty theft of efx pairs of eocks from Sixth avenue department store; penitentiary Started for Sunday “ seheot, bet We Reached There. A special alarm was sent out last night for fifteen-year-old Arthur Maine Glemann of No. 46 East One Hundred and Twenty-elghth street, who has been missing from his home since June &.|" ‘That day the boy, who was born the day the Maine sank, started for Bunday gohool at the Harlem Baptist Church, on One Hundred and Twenty-third street, near Third avenue, He never reached bie Gunday eohool class, Arthur, who is 6 member of the Boy Bcoutsa of America and employed an & Gintrict messenger boy at No, 16 Beaver street, has been of steady habits, ac- cording to his mother, Mrs. Glemaan sald that ono of her little sons, Francis, was serlously tl! because of his brother's disappearance. The youngster refuses to eat and centinually osles for Arthur. fesse loa CHASE HOSPITAL PATIENT. Nersee anG@ Decters Pursue Moo Devitt tor ral Blocks. Shortly after Michael MoDevitt had been taken to the Kestern District Hou- pital this morning from No. G4 Wythe avenue, Wiliiamsburg, where he was found breaking a window and preparing to Jump out, he dashed from hls ect to the street clad only in @ sleeping gar ment. He was suffering ¢rom Ballucine- tions, Several Goctors and aurees ease. Policeman Royel joined the chase at Gecond street, At Broadway MoDevitt tried to olimb an “L" pillar and Police Men Broden and Caim pulled him down. He broke away and ran into a tenement house at Bedford avenue and Fourta Mreet. Th he was overpowered by ahe will invite you into the parlor and talk Gasebel to you, but you'll find it Pretty hard work to learn the moat wonderful thing about her, which te ‘thie: Yeeterday af the commencement exer- cises at At.’ Joseph's seminary in Hart- ford, Conn., this young lady threw a lation ‘big league baseball weighing fe and m quarter ounces over a four- ote brick building known as the Chapel on the Seminary campus, a dis tance closely estimated to be 210 feat. Had not a student passing on the other side of the building narrowly escaped foeing hit by the ball, Wisa’s throwing ability probably never would have be- come generally known, though she has been proving it since was fourteen years old, Any first-class pitcher will tell you that it would be hard enough for him to toss @ ball that height over # bull ing. And it happens that St. Joseph's chapel is eizty feet wide across the toot, wo thet the young lady had to pitch the ball eway up over the bulld- ing t make It lear the roof en the other side. And when you have talked to your heart's content with Bisa, you'll prob- ably go back to the captain of you bis ne the the tell your captain to give the Nove tes too cream thnes @ Gay and deans twice, re ico Umila hee begn playths o fiddle hours @ day for four years, and attributes her remarkable pitching power to the vibration of her viol To this wing-strengthening exercise she added a diet of ive cream and beans. Mise Umie threw @ ball 90 feet to-| @ay ‘to demonstrate to an Evening, World man what she oan do. The dem-| Giving his name and address to the police, dismisved the indictment. Whitman appealed and the Court of | Appeals on June 17 reversed Judge ball pending the devision of ot Appeals, to renew his boi {Whitman to move the trial of Rosen- helmer ap quickly as possible. It may follow the trisl jeter J, Duffy before Justice Heabury in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court n and oth may | 9°08 for the eame crime hat held pending the decision in the my enhelmer case. loging thet he hed falled to stop, give name and render what assistaice could when the automobile he was Griving killed the young woman on Pel- ham road, the Brons. Rosenheimor wan acquitted charge of manslaughter after the ac- elde’ thereupon caused his indfotment on on a District - Attorney Whitman lesser oharge, with the result that Judge Grain, gn the contention of Mr, Osborne and the Callan law eonatitutiona! inasmu: was un- it forced a fondant to testify againat himself in Mr. intention of District Police Sergeant t week. Prosecutions in this counties against other ft ADVANCE SALE Weather Conditions BRUISES that hive A make trouble if neglected oo by Se a Soothes tired Banhanee boa body odore. popes pal = At all Drerzicte nd only April 16 thi to him, to call early, calli telling him there w kiss waiting for him, \the mother not day at the CALGARY, Alberta, June %.— mony of persona active in the promotion of the prize fight which resulted in the death of Luther McCarty in the Burns {Arena here May 2% was continued to- trial of Arthur charged with manslaughter, Bix witnesses testified for the crown, ‘al medical experts will appear in behalf of the defense in an effort to ow that McCarty was not killed by @ jlow to the am, as contended by the Droseoution. ‘ flounced out of the court chatting with her lawyer. just to think,” said the young man, @ wrote m: He produced a postal card addressed On it was a message asking him him “dearest” and @ big hug and a He went out with Lawyer Sandler, regarding it soulfully, | | Mr, Sandler explained to the court that Mr. Greenbaum thoughtAhe breaking of his engagement to marry Miss Scher | wan due to interference by her mother jand that his insistence on talking to the girl on the street was due to his desire to get an understanding with her when ound. | —_—_—— | PELKY CALLS EXPERTS. Prise Fighter wit Tey to show "eat!- Pelkey, Lena Adame, of No. 94 Hast Seventy- fourth etreet; tried and convicted hav- ing revolver tn her posseasion; eentence spended. Abraham Rauch, of No, 1 Cannon |atreet; tried and convicted theft of (30 from Pauline Wetssman, of No, 37 Montgomery street; sentepce suspended, James Cahill, of No, 317 West One Hundred and Twenty-sixth treet; Dieaded guilty theft of two bottles of | milk and two loaves of bread from No. 266 West One Hundred and Twenty- ninth street; sentence suspended. Samuel Hornik of No, 1470 Fifth ave- pleaded guilty of obtaining employ- t under a false name; sentence sue pended. Joseph Finger of No. 2% Avenue A pleaded guilty of admitting children un- picture show; gned $26. Nicholas Luna of No. % Oak street pleaded guilty theft of watch from accompanied by guardians to moving| ®' several pol! in. He was sent to Kings ‘County Hospital. PROTESTS SUBWAY DELAY. Fight Agat Time fer Starting Work tn Brookiya. The application of the Public ervice Commission for an extension of two years for the comme..ement ef the subway of Pineapple and Cranberry streets, Brooklyn, was heard to-day jn 4 ‘I'l wager you can't throw this ball tho Appellate Division of the Bupreme| over the hedge two hundred fect a Court, Manhatten, I pitched tt that far easily, ‘and then onstration took place on Alabama ave-| nv>, Brooklyn, in front of her home, and her brother cial caught the ball, Compelled Us to Make These Big Reductions 2469 Suits, form- erly sold at $15 and $18; seeeees (now) Attorney Josiah J. White protegted| they dared me to throw it over the } *, against @ further extension, sang I didi nia I could do it. 67 Suits, form- that two extensions of two years each had been already granted. He de- erly sold at and that the Putte Bary | For $20 & $22.50; The matter was taken Mader advisement, . (now) Constipation MIRACI A. (From he Enquirer.) Antonio Pagano of No, 213 Broadway; CLEVELAND, 0,, June 20.7The Fed- eral Grand Jury here to-day indicted Gutsepp! Pomare, the Youngstown, O., Italian, arrested recently charged with sending a letter to President Wilson demanding 95,000, He pleaded not guilty end, wae Belt under 96,000 bond for trial a. Jee June 3% Olpeianets Once on # time in olden daye an ase degan to speak. The world remounded with his praise, Kings marvelled at the freak. To honor him the great men a flocked to hear in herds. "A e peaple cried, “a donkey using words. But things have changed, and now- adays wild ames roam the earth, In every clime their voices raise: they talk right efter tirth. And if, perchance, a EX- LAX The Delicious Lazative X-LAX gst seat ree remotes it fe found t herd : TA miracle” the people. cr. “Tha Hei die donkey bole tte tongue.” ‘ihe’