The evening world. Newspaper, July 29, 1913, Page 3

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Zumino Kept Son Locked in ¥ Room: and Daughter Tied to Cot. SISTER THEIR GUARD. Fruit Deaier, Reputed Worth $30,000, Wouldn't Pay for Care Outside, Ps we WME the arrest and arraignment te- © of John Zumino, a weakhy fruit dealer, and his daughter, Mary, tweaty- Core Years old, the secret of the House | @@-Byetery at No. 1 Madison street, Bedthon, was reveaied in all tts detatl. Wether and daughter were’ held by Re- e@Oer MoGovern in $600 ball each for the Grand Jury on charges of atrocious cru- ety, eavault and battery upon Zumino’s two, imbecile children, annie, twenty- five years old, and Frank, twenty-two years ald. @ince October the Zumino residence Reap been an object of superstitious dread te the entire neighborhood. Terrible @torles of ghosts were circulated about (ie dismal building, the window shades ef which were drawn night and day and into which no one except Zumino and his elder daughter were permitted te enter. Vor months Mrs. Suean Keiser, who Qtves méxt door, hed heard the screams ef @ woman and the moans of a man @arough the partition between the bulld- ings. Three weeks ago, as ehe was pase- ing the house, @ shade was lifted eud- denly on the upper floor, and a girl's @aee, with matted hair and haggard eyes appear:1. The apparittion raised her bands, which wore bound by ropes, and cried aloud for aid. ‘Help me, I am being murdered—t can't get out,” the creature at the window shouted, according to M : Kelser's tastimony. ; Tt was though Mrs. Keiser's report that the police became interested in the House of Mystery. Detectives Barrone, Cornelli and Brown waited yesterday in front of the house u@tit Mary Zumino came home, She refused to let them in, but they raided the / place und on the second floor found the causes of all the mystery, sIn one room was Annie Zumino, J stripped to a single tattered garment, her wriats tled to her knees end her ankles bound. She had been in thie enforced posture for many hours. Her hair had been cut short and she was emaciated to a pitiful degree. Her wild, lustreless e: and incoherent ravings attested her mental condition. In the next room Frank Zumino was feund in almost as bad ao state. He was clad in the rags of an old sult. His hair had grown below his shoulders and was matted into a sn beard j that fell almost to LQ: waist. His finger } alla were two inches long. With his hans tled behind his back and his ankles bound so as to give only a few inelies play to his feet, he was shuffling up and down his room, snarling like caged beast. The two of them we: rushed to the hospital other daughter were arres: Neither of the prisoners would make eny clear statement in their defense. ecerding to the detectives, Investig toy showed that the father had tried to have the children committed to an in- stitution a year ago, but had brovght them back home when he found he had | to gay something toward their mainte- a nance, } Zumino keeps a fruit etand at Church and Worth streets, Manhattan, and is Teputed to be worth $30,000, * } CARMODY TAKES A BRIDE ', WT EARLY DAY WEDDING ‘Attorney-General and Miss Agnes E. Flinn Married in Albany Church at 7 A. M. ALBANY, July 29.—Attorney-Gen- eral Thomas Carmody and Miss Agnes E. Flinn were married at i. M. to day in Joseph's Church by Right Rev, Mer. James P. ‘Connor. The wed- quiet affair, t Mr. and Mr left after the ceremony & Fourth Lake in the Adirondacks, « Mise Fifan was financial clerk inthe Attorney-Genoral's office uptil yester- day, when resigned. Attorney-General Carmody hae been dower for about a year, He has n up ‘his residence in Penn Yan, it id, and will make his new home in thi city. Selecta FALLS FROM WINDOW; DEAD. | Chgt@ Drops Th Storless Anoth sr Sfmilar Accident Probably Fatal, While “rs. Joseph Creighton of No. 2G @impson street was nursing he fowremonths-old infant, hee boy, Ar ohie, aged three, climbed from his bed | to an ining window sill early to- | fe pushed out the screen and | to the sidewalk, three floors be- The little boy was instantly the third floor of a house at No. Park avenue, where the family of Japob. roy lives, Jacoh Jr. eleven! i, played at an ppen window nls Dalance and fgll, A grape rin the back yard broke the fi child was hurrigl to Fordhi suffering from a fractured ‘@n@ internal injuries. He may ie omens meaheente Chances for Lightbourne Middle- Registration Ends With) CLAR 403 Lusty Youngsters to Be Judged for Prizes ee —Examinations Begin| SCHOOL. Monday—News of ad sTe& Other Contests. Prats ave. Registration in the Better Babies’ Con- test conducted by The Evening World and the Babies’ Welfare Association in cunjunotion with the Playground Asso- clation of Public School No. 1M, Brook- lyn, closed yesterday afternoon and to- day & recapitulation of: the list shows that 408 babies are entered for the money Drizes, certificates and ribbons that will ‘The closing houre of the contest were featured by a stream of eager mothers that equalled if it did not exceed that of Previous days, but more particularly were they notable because of the regie- tration of the first incubator baby yet entered in any of the city wide series of contents. He is the small son of Mrs, F. Weber of No. 2 Seventh street, Brooklyn, and he created something of a Sensation when his mother told those at the registration station that he is an incubator product. The little fellow ‘s now one year old. He has spent six months in an incubator and seems the very picture of baby health. EXAMINATION TO LAST AT UEAST A WEEK. Examination of the babies entered in thia contest will begin at 10 o'clock Monday morning. August 4, and al- though nineteen physicians have volun- teered to examine the babies in com- Parison with the scientific standard that determines prise winners, it is Iikely that the examination will last most of the week. Moth who have entered infants will be notified when to appear to have thelr babies judged. Next in interest to Brooklyn's incu- bator baby, among the scores of kiddies entered at the various registration cen: trea in the greater city wae one entered in the Chelse: No. 78 Ninth@venue. This was a “Caes- arian” baby, one brought into life through the rare operation by which Jullus Caesar was given to the world. The youngster \9 now sixteen mon olf and Mrs. Blakely, in charge of t Board of Health mili station, where the baby was entered, decared it to be one Of the Iikellest looking infants that has been brought to her for registration in the contest. Yesterday was next to the last day of registration at the three stations estab- lashed in tn@' contest conducted in con- Junction with the Chelsea neighborhood, and right up to the hour of closing entries continued to pour in. Singly and in sets of twins the babies were brought to the stations by mothers and otca- sionally fond fathers or big sisters, and the registration officia re kept on the jump at all three stations. DIET KITCHEN KEEPS ITS LEAD IN MANHATTAN, As on the previous days during the week of Diet Kite street, led with o last di of fifty-four, making that total nearly 300. Thirty babies, Including two Pairs of twins, were entered at No. 78 Ninth avenue, making the total for that station 216, The registration at the Hud- son Guild Station, No. 6 West Twen- prizes, ty-geventh street, was also heavy. At/| limit, same all three stations there were pi for registration iy babies under the imit of three months and ,others whose parents lived out of the district, whose entries had to be rejected. Announcement was made to-day of a serles of lectures that will be inaugu- rated by Dr. Arthur A. McLean of the Board of Health at the Little Mothers’ Aid Association, No, 238 The “Breast Feeding, sive, from avente to Forty-fi Will be delivered at 4 o'clock to-morrow afternoon. It has been especially arranged for mothers prizes. who have entered*babies in ‘The Evening World and Babies’ Welfare Association contest, conducted in conjunction with Mothers’ Aid Association. The of this sertes will be nd 13 at the same hour Fifteen more babies were entered in the “Little Mothers’ " contest yesterday, making the total for the contest, which has been in progress just two weeks, 275, — BRIDE'S SACRIFICE MAY BE IN VAIN Ninth of Sehool No. them, ton’s Recovery Said to Be Almost Nil. The condition of Lightbourne Mid- dieton, who is lyin the point of death from hemorrh in St. Luke's Hospital, though six different pers all members of his family, have given blood for transfer into his system, was reported to-day to be almost hopeless, His bride, with whom he was making a honeymoon trip when he became Il, has not lost her faith in his recovery; she has already given nearly a pint and a half of blood to ald him and je eagerly begging his pnysicians, Dra,! Frisyell and Lideman, to allow her to give hg much more, thone who were rivals with for the rtunity to help Mr. Middleton were his father, A. W. Middleton. Treasurer of the Bristol Con- struction and Smelting Company; his guld ras he 6—Dress possible, directly, eapecially 8—Whil alone, I WHEE Hudson Riv taking care of the bal Wesley ©. Cow, Principal of the Play Grounds Association of Public weather and tentperature. clothing loose and let it hang from the shoulders. @—See that your child !s in the fresh alr gnd sunshine as much Don't, however, allow th strong midday sun to beat on him at every trifie. Keep him 1-4 oie KATHERINE. KING AT MILK DEPOT 78. ST AVENLB 7 ws. How, When and Where-to Enter Your Baby For the Big Prize Contests Now Under Way CONTEST AT LITTLE MOTHERS’ AID ASSOCIATION, No, 23% Second for children between three months and five years; living in district eventh to Twenty-eighth street™and Fifth avenue to East River. July 14, to Wednesday, noon except Saturdays and Sundays, from 2 to 4. begin Monday, Aug. 18 For thie contest The Evening World offers #100 in CONTEST AT THE PLAYGROUND OF PUBLIC SCHOOL NO. 1%, Fourth avenue and Fourteenth street, Brooklyn. inations begin Monday, Aug. 4, at 10 A. M. and will continue for one week. For this contest The Evening World offers $60 if money prises, CONTEST OF THE CHELSBA NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION—Age Contest boundaries—From Fourteenth to Forty-second street, Fifth avenue and the Hudson River. from Fourtegnth to Twenty-third street, Fifth avenue to Hudson River; head- quarters at Milk Station, No, 78 Ninth avenue, from July 21 to July 2, inclu- above. 2to4dP. M. District north of Twenty-thtrd and south of Thirty-fourth atreet, Fifth Headquarters for registration, the Hudson Guild, No, 436 Weat Twenty-seventh street, July 21 to July 29, inclusive, 2 to 4 P.M. District between Thirty-fourth and Forty-second streets, Fifth avenue and Registration headquarters, the Diet Kitchen, No, 437 Wert reet, from July 21 to July 2, inclusive, 3 to 4 P. M. For each of these three contests The Evening World offers $50 in money Hudson River. Contest at Greenwich House, No. 2% Jones street, will open first week in August, date to be announced’ later. Contest boundaries from North River and Fourteenth street east to Fifth avenue, to Washington Square to Broad- way, to Canal street, to North River. Age limit, same as above. For this contest The Evening World offers $0 in money prizes, Aug. 13, e Judging of the Registration closed July 2%. Exam- Registration centres—District @ series of articles on written by 184, Brooklyn. 1—Feed your baby regularly. Have definite hours for feeding and observe 2—Feed your baby the proper kind and amount of food. Get a diet your baby early. Watch the temperature of the water and don’t bathe after feeding. »| 4-If your baby solls his clothes change them at once. He should al- ways be kept dry and clean. your child according to the Have the 7—See that he gets plenty of sleep, sleep in the open alr. your baby {s young let it will soon learn not to cry baolutely free from usin, Misa Helen Quigley and his brother, Malcolin, a mining man of| ™osauitoes, files and other py h Utah, “Mrs. A. %. Middleton aiid to-| 10-Do not sive him tea, coffes, day that despite the young wife's op-| drugs or patent mediciens of any timism, she herself had almost lost| kind, the belief that her non could bs saved. |NINE DON'TS FOR LITTLE Gay oy feeding him ‘consucauy with MOTHERS nly di ounstan! 4 pe of Chamoage | Fu wen owing, chake or dounse How to Care For the Baby; Ten General Health Hints your baby violently to quiet or pacity aim. 2. Don't give your charge any pat- ent medicine, drug, medicine or Uquor to soothe, quiet or pacify him, % Don't frighten your baby or jw others to strike or frighten him, 4. Don't allow files to be about the baby or anything he eats or puts near his mouth. 5, Don't feed or cuddle your baby whenever he cries. Leave him alone He will goon get over it. 6 Don't let your baby sleep or play in a hot room without ventilation. 7, Don't feed him ice cream, candy, cold drinks, tea or coffees. 8 Don't dreas your child too warm: ly or w the clothing to be tight. ® Don't take your baby to the the- atre, the “movies” or other places of amusement, This will irritete him and make him cross and peevish <> ——_—— THE HAGUE, Netherlands, July 2.— The death occurred to-day of Tobias Michael Carel Asser, a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration and of the Dutch Counell of State at the a: of seventy-five, He was awarded the Nobel prise for peace in isii, in con j junction with Alfred Fried of Vienna. -| not go to Chicago to try and bring back He was «@ profound etudent of tnt national law and a prolific writer on the gubject. ® THE BVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1918 The Evening World’s and Babies’ Welfare Association’s Great City-Wide Series of Better Babies’ \First Incubator Baby Enters Race as Second Brooklyn School Contest Closes Contests PATRICK TOBIN QmMo's: ar HUDSON $eewe Agever WINS HIS BATTLE WITH WILD WAVES IEW YOR BAY Lyman. W. Fawcett Makes a Strong Swim for Life in Rough Seas. | While hundreds of awe-struck yachte- | men, huddled on the veranda of the | Bensonhurst Yacht Club, gamed sea- |ward during the terrific thunder storm which broke over the bay yesterday afternoon Lyman W. Fawcett, step- son of D. G. Whitlock, fought death iN the high waves half a mile from shore. Those on the veranda could see him at intervalé as he struggled on the crest of a high wa’ nd lost him as the suction carried him under. It Was useless to launch a boat and im- potent life savery on the beach ran up and down, shouting helplessly, while young Fawcett, abandon! is efforts to reach his father’s boat, the Ariel, swam for the shore. It took him twenty minutes in all the tury of the elements before a climbing wave tossed him on the @ands, exhausted and about to be carried back by the receding waters, as helping hands caught him, dragging iim up on the beach, Fawoett, who is a manager in the ‘nsurance firm of Jones & Whitlock, left business yesterday noon to visit on the 7%6-foot cruising power boat Ariel, owned by Mr. Whitlock. With younger brother and his seven-year- old alater he went swimming from the motor tender Queen, which lay astern of the Ariel. The storm descended rapidly and Fawcett had just helped his sivter to the ladder of the Ariel when a emash- ing guat of wind elewed the boat out of reach and the next instant the etorm swept over him. The Ariel was lifted from her moorings and began to drag away from him. Another anchor thrown over fatled to held the big boat, which slid along and was held only when @ third anchor caught. The young man’s parents threw over a life pre- server and cut adrift the tender Queen, hoping he might catch hold. The Queen swamped in the seas before it drifted near him, Fawcett, swimming half submerged, wave up the etrugsie|” for the boat, now fifty yards away, and elected to try for the shore, “The hail cut into me end I was half ‘Dlinded," said Fawcett to-day describ- ing his escape, “All the smashing came from behind and soon I found myself iifted high and flung down in the trough where the undertow kept me submerged fifteen seconds on every drop, The Ariel was out of reach and it hope, the tender veagh where I dug my fingers into the nands and held on until life savers pulled me clear, It wae ome exper- tence.” Yacht “Jouephii eo Race at Chat. Addison G, Hanan, one of the best .| racing skippera in Eastern waters, will the Manhasset Bay Chalienge Cup. However, he intends to ship his new Josephine. There still 1s some mystery regarding her ekipper. Some say it ia going to be Butler Whiting of the Larch- moat Yount Cieb. convenient one flung me high on the | én LANES MOTHERS ANARCHY OF DRESS “They're Off the Job,” Says Monsignor O'Hare, “and So Girls Become Lax.” MANY KNOW NO BETTER Powder and Paint, Immodest Dress and Barbarous Dances Call for Reform. Hae mother gone off the job entirely these daye? « her abdication of author ity amd responelbitity for her children the cause of the extravagant dressing and the astounding make-up seen on the young girl of the perlod? Is che te blame for th skirt and the Rigist of @ prevalence of the elit turkey trot? Rev, Monmgnor P. F. Greenpoint, Brookiya, whe has undertaken @ crusade for simpler modes and better morals, te decidedly of the opinion that mother fe the real cul- prit. He has so informed the mothers in hie congregation of St. Anthony's hurah and hes called upon them to aesiet him in his efforts to euppress paint and powder, immodest dressing and turkey trote, Who can doubt that mothers are off the job when they allow ther young daughters to paint their faces amd to wear the sort of clothes we have seen everywhere in the last two or three ecasonst” Monsignor O'Hare inquired yesterday. ‘To say mothers can't con- trol their daughters ts even worse. It's an acknowledgment of disgraceful fall- ure that no grown woman should ve obliged to make. “We are living to-day in a pan- @emontam of powder, a riet of rouge, © moral anarohy of dress. ' ‘When will women learn that the only ‘alde to beauty’ are absolute clean- ness, proper food, proper exercise, ebundant sleep, fresh air and an un- selfish character? nother matter on which they are gone starig mad ts the modern, barbar- ous dan MODERN BANC BARBAROUS, WOMEN TO BLAME. + The O'Hare “The new dances are but an indication | g, that the suspicion of immortality does Not trouble some people. And eo you will find girle who, there is every reason to think, are good girls, yet have be- come infected with the egey-going epirit of the world about them, and will par- ticipate in dances that ought to make them blush fer ehame. It ia beside the question for them to say that ¢! do not mean any harm, that it is all done {n the spirit of tun, and eo on. “With many people and in many circles these laxities are common, ordi- nary sins, and the girl who will brasenly Permit such liberties may protest that he Is beautifully innocent, but she need not complain if the ordinary spectator refuses to distinguish between her end ‘But do you think women are to blame for these conditions of modern life?’ | ¢; was asked of Monsignor O'Hare. “I do indeed,” he replied. “Few girls or women have it brought home to them that they largely re- sponsible for the stand of moral cleanliness about them. If they let themselves go in the way of passion- stirring clothes, they help just that much to lower moral ndards. not easy to impress this upon young. ; SHE INVITES INSULT FROM THE UNDIGCIPLINED. “It ten't playing fair to emphasise sex as the low neck, short eves, thin walst, or extremely tight skirt does, in & mixed crowd. The girl who does it need not feel ind! and outraged If ome undisciplined male slope over. She has invited the insult, responsibilty. “It ls unfortunate that the women of to-day are not more careful about them- impressions they g on society by their loudness in dress, their love for cosmetica and in- Guigence in questionable dances. These are not the qualities that go to make good Christian homes and attract God- fearing men. To indulge in the worldll- and the quality that etrengthens trust, constancy and fidelity in the true hue- band. “STOP THIEF!” The words “STOP THIEF!” caught your eye, didn't they? That's why you're reading this. And the story whose title is “STOP THIEF!” will catch your interest with the very first sentence and will hold tt In mental handcuffs to the last crapter's a, “STOP THIEF!” is the greatest laugh- story of the summer. It is, novelized from the successful play of the same| , title, and it Is one unbroken succession of laughs snd thrills, with @ triple-love interest running through it. “STOP THIEF:” will begin In .The Evening World to-morrow, July 30. Write down the date, For to-morrow 1s the day on which you are going to begin to read the funniest, most excit- tag romance of the me. ~—— FOR RIOT OF ROUGE, Blue Underwear a Cooler For the Torrid Dog Days. WASHINGTON, July 29—The head of the Public Healte Depart- ment has given out instructions on “How to Keep Cool, Happy and Healthy in Summer.” What to Eat—Plenty of fruits; fresh vegetables; as little meat &8 possible; potatoes and other @archy foods tn.moderate quan- titles, « What to Drink—Soft, non-aleo- holie, cooling drinks; buttermitx and sweet milk (the certified kind); alooholic drinks in great- est moderation, What to Wear—White outer clothes; blue underwear; soft col- lars; straw hate; good, old, easy shoes, MRS. HALLERAN'S SILK DRESSES FIGURE IN SUN Her Husband Says She Admits She Used Circus Funds to Pay for Them. By way of anewering th Ittons for ‘Separation and divorce of Sarah G. Hal- leran against Aloysius G. Halleran, Robert Price Bell of counsel for the husbend to-day served on William Ras- quin, Mre. Halleran’s attorney, a series of admissions of the truth of eome of her charges which 4i4 not please either Mra, Halleran or her brother-in-law, Qorough President Connolly of Quesns, oF any of their friends. ~ After denying generally her charges of Dis habitual intoxication and of mis- conduct with perscns not named, at times not named, at places not named, Mr. Halleran admits: That he did at various times enter- tain at his home men friends, to-wit: J. F, Rog- ers, one time; Joseph Cleary, three times; Thomas O'Brien, ore time, and Maurice D. Connolly, twenty- ivan (whom he is suing for 000) and Borough President Con- nolly were not there at nd that he counselled his them. Many times, he agsinst ears, Mr. Connolly wae taken to his home at the suggestion of the, plainti® wite and wae undressed and put to bed by against the protest of the defendant, ® ‘om that it was entirely pro- per as eal Connolly's sister-in-law to perform such oft-ae for him. Wate thermore he admits that the furniture and curtaing and rugs of his home were damaged and destroyed by said Connolly je in @ drunken condition, Mr. Halleran admits that he occasion- ay reproved, denounced and upbraided hin wife, as, for instance, when she pur- chased two silk dresses just after fe close of the Flushing society clrous of 111, He sweare that he asked her how she paid for the dresses. She confessed she took advantagé of the turmoll an@ confuajon of the last afternoon of the circus’ to get into her possession @ large part of the receipts of the Irish village, of which she hed charge, and had used the same to buy the ailk Grosses. . Mr, Halleran, who is now iving with bis brother Lawrence, has also sued James H. Connell, for slander and ts suing Borough President Connelly for 960,000 for alienating Mre, Halleran's affec- tions, HUSBAND AWAY, WIFE FOUND DEAD ON FLOOR Neighbors Worrled By Her Seclu- sion Tell Policeman Who Climbs In and Finds Body. Men employed at ® garage next door to No. 600 Coney Island avenue, Brook lyn, the h of Mr. and Mre. Oakley T. Lee, knew Mr. Lee had gone to visit @ eon in Connecticut last week and that Mra, Lee wae at home alone. They also knew she had not been seen for sev- treld something has happened to her,” they told Policeman Maloney of the Parteville station when he passed the garage early today. Maloney said he would investigate, Repeated ringing of the cottage door- bell brought no response, so Maloney went to the rear and climbed in @ win- dow. He found Mrs. Lee lying, ,tully Greased, on the parlor floor. Dr, Coltsh of the Kings County Hospital, called by Maloney, said the woman had been dead about four days and that, a superficial mination indicated, death had been caused by apoplexy. Mra. Lee was fifty years old and had already suffered one apoplectio stroke, ——— TO INSPECT ALL FACTORIES. Sulser Will Be Asked for Special Saft to Cover Hatire State, BINGHAMTON, N. Y., July 29.—Dep- uty Fire Marshal George 8, Roesch an- nounced to~tay that his chief would re- quest Gov. Bulser to instruct the State Civil Service Commission to designate ity special inspectors from Btate vil Gervice Het for @ period of thirty days to visit every factory in the State and report conditions at once, Ordere will be issued by th eState Fire Marshal regulating conditions com- plained of from Gloversville, where women employees are compelled ot 4: ecend the fre escape during the fire drills in the presence ef men etending at Detectives Believe Guilty One — . | HORSE INJURES BOY HERO, ° Will Seek Mrs, Watson, Hop-. ing to Stop Prosecution, HONEYMOON JUST ENDS. Young Philadelphia Ma‘ ie Who Was Assailed in Letters * Is Secluded at Home. ase me ees . ? i (Goyecial to The Bvening World.) > PHILADELPHIA, July 9.—Wits the, return of Mra, Frank A. Wetson, Get bride who received scurrilous “Beteem: Pen" letters, to th. home of her mothen, Mrs, Bila V. Fatrohild, No. 26 West Seymour etreet, Germantown, ¢o-@an, the Federal euthorities instituted © aye tem of geptonage in the hope of trage Ding the writer of the letters. Wate® will be key: on the house, and ne ene Will be allowed to see Mrs, Watson. - Tt tm thought that some one 7 senting the “poisoned pen" writer oe make another effort te “square” a cane by an appeal to the young Mrs. Fairchild opened the frout of the house only a few inches ps sire when a reportér called. She was tm | definite as to Mrs. Watson, but tually admitted her daughter bad sqs” turned from her honeymoon trip, ix “Postal Inspector Cortelyou has pei * 4 me thoroughly in the case,” ng” said, “and he has told me some ag” tounding things. But he hae instructed * me to admit no one to the house am to talk to no one.” | ga” Mrs. Fairchild admitted that a suar@ had been thrown about her daugh the bride. a 7 Mrs. Watson's Husband te Frank A" | Wateon, formerly an Temple University. They were mar? ried June 26, and on that day letters? were sent to friends of the bride do" Rouncing her. ROSE WAS DRENCHED =< BUT NEVER WILTED: “eb Miss McCarthy Sat at Her Switch» ® Detuge in: Districts)" Dereon yh ine alit ekirt. "Tae District-Attorney was He was down in court. act wet Bleven-Toar-0ld Lad Tries to Otto. Runaway and Je Ran Over “Patay” Amendaler, eleven years of No. @1 Wythe avenue, Wil had often read in the papers of somebody became a hero by ® runaway horse, so when hi coming through the avenue early (day to @ citisen called an ambulance dep bo; “iOr, Cohen took “Patsy” to the Wil femeburg Hospital suffering trem cor at No. 47 Wythe avenue, fright at an auto horn while the

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