The evening world. Newspaper, December 9, 1913, Page 3

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SAILING ON JOY RIDE Mrs. Gray, in Bermuda, Thought Hubby Was Pining for Her Return Here. THEN FELL INTO TRAP. Broker’s Wife Got Back in Tifne to Catch Him at Landing of Ship. How John Royd Gray of the firm Fuller & Gray, No. 71 Broadway, pr pared in advance a half dosen tender letters to his wife in Bermuda to be mailed from New York City while h skipped to London and Paris on a Joy trip was revealed in the Supreme Court to-day before Justice Page when Mra. Justine S. Gray's suit for divorce was brought to tri Gray's original action for divorce, a leging indiscretidne on the part of his wie during ler trip to Bermuda la spring, was dropped and her counter- action set before the jury. frat Witness was EMfingham Sutton, the young nrother of Mrs, Gray and formerly em- yed In Gray's office in a confidential capacity, : Sutton told of the letters Gray pre- pared when Mrs, Gray was in Bermuda sn@ of his instructions to open any ers she mikht send her husband and to mail one’ of the prepared letters in anawer, “Mr. Gray did not want my sister to kno his trip to Europe, and took this means of making her think he was in New York,” explained Sutton, WIFE ARRIVED AHEAD OF HUS. BAND'S SHIP, The banker's scheme fell through at the last moment because Mrs. y d New York a few hours ahead of his shin and his deception wax dis- vovered, ‘This led to the quarrel that @sulted in their separation ine itntion of the two divor Mrs, Gray in modish hat and mi nificent fur coat, was put on the stand tor a moment before the trial of her suit began to reply to the charges brought in her husband's @uit, She de- nied the allegations in full and tn the absence of the plaintiff and through lack evidence his sult wae din- inissed, Attorney Krwin Beale, for Mrs. Gray, drew from young Button the story of the admissions Gray is alleged to have made to him the day after his return from Kurope, .Actording to Sutton, his brother-in-law told of his aa@soctation with an actress on the steamer going over and of affaira he had with women in London and Paris. Counsel for Gray, John HM, Curtin put ung Sutton through a gruelling eros examination, attempting to show that he had lived of bounty of his wealthy’ brother-in-law. —>—- SEEK PHILADELPHIAN MISSING NEARLY A WEEK William Vf. Boyd, a wealthy buainess man of Philadelphia, living at 3 West Lehigh avenue in that city, has been missing since lust Thursday morning. The police of thia city have been asked to try and locate him, The Philadelphia police think he is in New York. A woman member of tie mi ing man's family dreamed that she saw him in a New York hospital, his head swathed in bandages, and badly injured, In her dream she learne: tiat he had been waylaid, blackjacked and robbed. Jacob Rosen, a lawyer of No, f2 Wall street, has received a letter from Henry Hartman of No, 194 Ridge street, Philadelphia, atating thet Mr. Boyd left home at 7.80 o'clockk on inet | ‘Thureday morning, since which time nothing has been heard of him. Mr. Boyd had a large sum of money wih him. He wore a diamond ring of one and one-quarter carate, a gold Masonic charm and a Masonic button. He carried @ gold open face watch and a gold chain. Hts description as se- cured by the police ts as follow: Age, thirty-five; height five feet ten; weight, 199 pounds; smooth face, dark eyes and hair, partly bald. He wore « dark blue sult, @ gray waistcoat, brown overcoat and @ green Alpine hat, EATING MEAT REGUL KIBNEYS, THE Flush your Kidneys occa- sionally’ with a table- spoonful of Salts to avoid danger. 1. Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe headache, rheu- matic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disor’ You ply must keep your kidneys r and clean, and the moment you an ache or pain in the kidne fegion, get about four ounces of ded \ F ,| ‘To Know as Many Ways | The American Husband Is | a Beast of Burden and |}. His Wife Is the Burden, Writes M. Emile D champs, Treating of the Subject of Divorce. He Says Hubby Has No Right to Peep at His Wife’s Bank Book, but She Has a Perfect Right | to Pick His Pockets. of Cooking Potatoes as| of Dressing Her Hair an' Infallible Method of Keeping a Husband.” | Who is to blame for our “nervous eed ae Lal Find the woman, M. Emile Deschamps advises, in “Les | Femmes d'Oncle Sam" (Uncle Bam's Women). In America she is the “atronger are” Really, M. Den , champs's varied tributes to our pow lers are most flattering, whatever his intentions, One is compelled to won) der just what may have deen his, own experiences with Uncle Sam's Women, At least, we allowed him to} escape in safely, and are paid by the most naively amusing and impoasi-| ble comments we have read in many a long dey. Translaied By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. CHAPTER V. America's “Nervous 3 7." What are the causes of the insta- bility of marriage in the United States? The duality of family life is , perhaps the prin- cipal one. In the United Stat marriage is not a union, it fs anas- sociation, in which the woman has the largest share of the benefits, two children, for two generations back Nave peen or are divorced, Is divorce & hereditary malady, following the laws of consumption? The American woman im the firat to deplore the fate of the conjugal bond in her country. But if she deplores it, she knows very well how to profit by {t, with the connivance of the Judges. The courts ere inflexible toward the faults of the husband, but show an ex- traordinary indulgence toward those of the wife, especially if she is young, pretty and impertinent. Has not a Magistrate lad down the principle that @ husband has no right to turn en in- discreet eye toward his wife's bank book, while she has a perfect right to pick her husband's pocke' One of the most discussed questions “how to keep @ husband.” To know Wag NARSNACL AES artist many different ways of cocking beef has shown the! ang potatoes as of dressing one's hair way in which American men and |g considered an infailible method. Jol- women go through Iife together. The! lying the American business man when he comes home at night {s also recom- husband, bent over a cane, painfully etd an auccmmial ik fe wish nicer climbs a hill, the sweat dripping | nities of this nature that the brains of from his forehead, which is con-' feminine sociologists are exercised, {1 tracted by fatigue and effort. On his a question of such supreme importance. For what she receives the American ask, comtortebly, settled th eu arm uty gives nothing at all to a hus- chair with a parasol and a box of tans, accustomed to an atmosphere of candy, his wife attentively reads a| perpetual homage, an idol, a goddess, book entitled “The Careers of|at whose feet, all her ite, sien ave ‘ it rostrated themselves, she hasn e Women’ And she says, as she turns) rat dea of antuming an active role tn leas ‘i ‘Could you not hurry a the comedy of marriage. Sho dvesn't dream that as a wife she has some duties to perform toward her husband She has received only @evotion; man has appeared to her merely as @ sort of slave created and put into the work! to serve her, to satisfy her needs and capricem, to adore her on his knees Rut, beautiful Americans, you are severa} thousand years behind your century, if you believe that woman 1s made only to pass through the world radiaung beauty, The queens to-day have to be women before everything, and have to possess the womanly qu ities, of which beauty, however impor- tant it may be, Is only one among others, Lacking eharm, fection, mod- esty, reserve, ignorant of all idea of sacrifice, eager always for the adila- ton of strangers, are you astonished at not being able, however beautiful, to keep your husbands? It !# the con- trary which would be astonishing. ‘The complications which result from Aivorces and remarriages are as inde- cipherable as hieroglyphics, as impen- etrable as virgin fore: They talk of genealogical trees. What genealogtat could arrange the Jungle which certain groups of American families present? I remember to have read an account of a reception at Newport at which di- vorces to the firaty second and third power elbowed each other peaceful offering and accepting polite courte with all the ea woud friends. the page, Uttle, Henry Rich or poor, the American husband gives to his wife or spends on his daughters everything that he can. He ips deeply into his purse for their ben- but it [son the condition that they shall no} K him questions or give him advice. The wife, howe: . is ag indif- ferent to her husband's affairs as she was to those of her father, her broth- ers or her lance, before her marriage, Provided that she knows he is making money it is suMctent, She is so im- hued with her own importance and her freedom that she is uninterested in the rost of the civilized world, except in what may give h emotion or satisfy her taste and vanity. The American wife seeks, whenever possible, to arrogate the right of im- posing hor whima on her lord and slave, In this Republic, where the citizens tetk so much of their independence, their iberty, thelr equality, a husband finds no liberty in his own home, He must gubmit to his wife's fancies, if she wishes it, “While #he need pay no attention to him, if such !s her pleas- ure, The ‘stronger sex" {x the Amert- can woman and the “weaker sex" her |husband, Under these conditions, how |can one be astonished at the large pro- portion of divorces one finds in the ; United States? DIVORCE RUNS THROUGH WHOLE FAMILI val} BROOKLYN STYLE OF DIVORCE 18 INTERESTING, That Brooklyn Judge who sentenced husband and wife to two years of divorce has perhaps indicated a solu- tion to the problem. After having ad- monished the husband, hw There are numerous families of which ail the members, father, mother ani AR GLOGS THE "It imight spoil your s, well as your children’s, if I wer gnounce a final divorcy decree for uch trivial reasons, but Vil give you al divorce for two years and permit th ‘accused to see Lis children during that ume." That Judge may have remembered, at the moment of passing sentence, t! number of imarriages Woich are aga’ contracted between persons aiready divoreed, and may therefore have out thread tn the conjugal bouds instead em to no! of mlasoing them throug, Tt also neutralizes the acid, One case among 4 in the urine eo it no longer irritates, of tho “nervour tmatrin thus ending bladder disorders, "| vatie in the Untied Sia Salts from any good drug store here, take a tableapoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys will then act fine. This 1 in made from the acid of per d lemon {sice, combined with ia, and is harmless to flush clogged ieand, ny typleai that pre , Ie thar of « Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; | young woman, Mrs. Coffin-Coffin-Wa ker. makes a delightful effervescent lithia-|Comn-Layman-Love, ‘The daughter of water drink which everybody should tak Chicago milliona're, she married Cof- now and then to keep their kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious complications, while very young a coachman, M in, her father being oppowm! to her A well-known local druggist says he| marriage. Ten years later she di- sells lots of Jad Salts to folks whobelieve | voroed him for incomputivility of teme in overcoming kidney trouble while it is | Per, to,remarry him i: three years, ealy trouble, 24 (0 @ivorce him once more the fol o THE AMERICAN HUSBAND, 15 A COMMON Carrier, * lowing year, accusing him of ungovern- able temper, Then whe eloped with Mr. Walker, a hotel employee, after having given him $10,000 and paid for « trip to Europ She remained with him only a year, se- curing a divorce for cruelty and jea ousy, SIX weeks later she married Mr. Coffin again, with whom she lived four hours, Yes, four hours Mra. Coffin— third edition—appeared anew in the di- Voree court, charging drunkenness, and avked to’ be freed from her new bonds, Then she married Mr. Layma other hotel em ee. When the new husband departed without leaving any address, she was divorced and married Mr. Love, whom she left two years later, divorcing him for cruelty. It was sald that she was going to marry Mr. Cofn again, whose name seamed to attract her. ; BUT COFFIN TAKES NO MORE CHANCES. maid he, when interviewed, am not a candidate for re-election.” The reasons for divorce are of every varlety, “Cruelty comes at the head of the list, but an American woman charges “cruelty and inhuman treat- ment" on the part of her husband if} ho wishes to smoke a pipe in the house, | A woman has been known to ask & divorce because her husband was tov fond of snakes, another because her husband never smiled. A woman in Denver, Col, was married to @ man who was too good, Shy sought @ di-| vor “Whatever I asi. she told the Court, “he gives me without argument or question, There is no pleasure in life'’ Another asked @ divorce because her husband didn't know whether he Was one or not, having been married In 4 state of intoxication, It's a gay coun- try, the United States | Love, for an American woman, a means to an end or a satisfaction of | the senses. Cold and indifferent, ehe does not know how to keap « man who has avked for her heart while offering | bis own, JOHNNY KIGBANE SUED BY HIS STEPMOTHER She Charges Champion Fighter In-| fluenced Blind Father Against Her and Asks $25,000. CLEVE! champi LAND, Dec. 9.—Featherweight 2 pugilist Johnny Kilbane of | thia city, who Is Aghting a $5,040 allen ation sult brought by his stepmother, Mrs, ridxet Kilbane, was himself the it of her bounty years ago, she | red to-day in pleading her sult | '$ ro rales Ie cax Stitt, Sener, teaanche nd, Geto, There we fk, a Red El rl x Tuc CAN PEK AIS POCKETS GUT 4€ CAN NOT LOOK AT HER Rawk, en), TO KEEP A HUSBAND SHE MUST MNO | mOw D COOK. PoTATORS AS MANY'wart | AS SHE DOES HER. MAA UP | ASME 1 BRown FRENCH) | ! | To THE BEAUTPUL wie a MUSOU APPEARS AS & SLAVE } A WOMAN GETSA Divonce| | BECAUSE HER HUSBAND || SmMOwes 'N THE MOVIE STAY FOR WIDOW HOLDING NEWSSTAND UNTIL NEXT HEARING Her Successor Favored by Al-| derman Also a Widow With | Large Family. The cane of Mra. Augustus Conroy, a widow, whore license for a newsstand | at the northeast corner of Church and Cortlandt streets Alderman Donnelly of | the First District would not renew on} the ground that she mublete the atand,| was heard to-day by the Loca! Improv: ment Board in the City Hall, Borough President MeAneny sitting as Chairman. Pending an opinion from Asalatant Cor- poration Counnel Crowell, to he handed to the hoard at tte meeting two weeks her Mra. Conroy will retain posses. sion of the stand to the exclusion of Mra. Mary Hiton of No. 28 Washington street, also a widow, who got the It after Mra. Conroy w refused it, Rey, Lewis RK. Streeter the John! Hireet Methodist Churoi qaid he had an| Intarview with Alderman Donnetly, w! referred him to Daniel &. Finn, of the Alstrict, who In turn referred him, to Donnelly. though the @ole question here is whether or not Mra. Conroy sublet the mand,” aaid the clergyman, might go into the woman's character and integrity. In fact I could prove THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1913. ~~ LEFTLOVINGNOTES [American Girls as We Do Not Know Them FOR WIFE BEFORE| As Seen by a Frenchman Who HOW TORIDPARTY ‘SAYS Thinks He Does OF MURPHY'SRULE WIFETODRINKING;,£1L0QSIN TEXAS, GOMES UP T0-NiGHT | | Democratic Club Will Dis- | cuss the Question. | ENLIST FI SDER'S AID.) Governor-Elect of New Jersey Will Explain Primary Laws ! | i { at Meeting Saturday Night. Whothe rf Charles Po Murphy ae the hocnatic party manager jn the wtty and State, should Be eliminate! the soothing medirn of Gov. Glynn's direct primariea or by a bold, direct attack on Dis leadership through diatrict fight, the ois which the twenty-one Gov ernore the Democratic Club will take sp teenight r wil tmsue a call for a mpecial ineeting Saturday elect FF jer of New Jer explain the Woodrow Wilson primaries now in effect arom / While the governors feel that the Democratic Club hould direct) the party'’# reformation, only a few voices ate atrong enough to say how to “get at’) Murphy An examination today of the personnel of the club's gover hore made ft quite plain that the ‘Chief has enough friends among them to vote down an anaaull directed at him tndividually, One of the gover- nore maid the word “Murphy” in the club fe an exceedingly delicate matter and not to be mentioned out loud. “m not going to talk polit many Utall or Murphy—for a time, Onlet Justice Edwant O'Dwyer to Jud O'Dwyer Ia the new preaident of the club and recently made a RA ” ey whieh | will type of the river, Ta tional attack on Murphy's methods in poll 1 can't decide law cases and talk politics, All we Intend to do to- it in to call @ meeting for Satur GOVERNORS WHO WILL ATTEND MEETING TO-NIGHT. The Governors who will attend are: rles 8, enhelmer, John fi NaMlocher, Justice Thomas F, Donnelly, Jonn W. Keller, Theodore W. Myers, Willlam F. McCombs, William Jasper, Roger Foster, John P. Leo, Thomas F. Smith, John 1 mpbell, John M. Richie, ohn J. uintan, ohn Fox, Thomas Feltner, Stephen Farrelly, J. Lewis Lyon and John L. Dunlop. Richard Croker sr, and jr. are alao Governors. Ho are easie Tl. Grant and Senator WiK- fan H. Clark, “1 would not be mirpriaed if we took up the condition of party affaira to- Mght,” sedd Thoman L. Feltner. “T be- Heve that is che thing to do mo that the Party may regain the confidence which it has loat and no that those who have left us may be Induced to return. And I think that the Democratic Club has a solemn duty to begin the work at once.” Theodore W. Myera anid: "1 would prefer to awit until the etub defines itn purposes Uefore expressing my views upon the party's reorgantention. But he party imuat and aball be reorganized in thin city and state.” John P. Leo declared that « inan should be selectel to rune af- fairn of the Democratic organisation at & nalary of not lems than $10,000 4 year Several of the Governon« ridiculed a report that the old Croker influences in the club are at work to unhorse Murphy and the Croker power back on Tammany's throne. Young Croker is a Governor, but he has shown teremt in politics will on what plan MeComin suggeata, aa he be looke! upon ax reftecting the plan of party reorganization —-- \intnewn n ment of Juetioce today decided not intervene at the present time in sult by Elsie De Wolfe, Chicane actrens, to tewt the valldity of the Federal In- come Tax (From the Newark News.) Helen's hour of piano practice seemed tre long, and ele began to play her to you, gentlemen, that she ts @ saint one of the bev women I have ever, known.” It developed that Mra, Conroy opened) Johnny Kilbane, In his answer to the : ian, whieh Ce Ride Gah the Oharie withont @ Heonse after te) yar the fighter tutluenced his. father |t ER BIDR) ON Mapes. | against the pliint!, contended that |‘ Hixon thet she had Mrs Kilbane did not provide for her |# tentative 6 from Ha aed Minima, who Ik bind ani helps [Hert MeAneny. At leant, Ne Joss, and that he was obliKed to do so, paliliao s m Rave Hin a hone, | cphere waa no tentative licen euch Hitbane | said ate. Moan “The charter almpl in ae ae fo that he saya that when a matter tw in dlapute Kitvane contended to-tay in court, | MT& Conroy's appeal acte an a tan.) have taken boarders for nevera) | Maxon Gaynor established a precedent | NaWonle Wavat aate np 1 the s cow favored by Al: | untacd) But Weare Ago. nelly, bas alx children, four support Johnny himaelit.' wo boys, whose ages range Hal from twenty yearn to neven years. The sorking M Conroy | B Thonas, aged nix wie a da eke | eon, and Hesse, thirteen. Mra. Conroy }for second-hand bricks, haw receiney |/2 8 S¥ede. Her Nuwhand in dead humerous bricks Uy parcel post from St.) 4 gsm wOw . , ONSCIENGE. Paul, Omaha, Minneapolis and other | Frome 0a Atlante Conley ie, “Bettor than 1€ thrown at me. | «1; Knows why you wakes be sal tarda tie ant stares at de Dark, ‘ wiver over yo! head,’ her Wr oY liane, ‘an’ you know widout me Thughter's cook n’ of you, Ite om account er de 19 yOu kicked 179 de cor Meekton mawnin, wan you wus Wecta an eave fer de das. You didnt inthe te x it tar m Ite han's by rn yOu Wuz RWine er bed, an it rig up. an’ stumbied 'roun’ de room ) de dark, © it ati mw lne in h you seen yo’ own soul! Dat's how 8 come an’ Why—git ‘roun’ it ef you kin:’ , ‘ales hastily and impatientiv “Not no fast there,” called her mother; hut are vou trying to dg? “im brrrying up omy hour,"* Helen. maid WE ARE STI Fancy Packed . | delloves he hasn't the slightont suapt- | $0,900, but owing to the Acker, Merrall & Condit EST. Company 1820 Finest Creamery June Butter 36c ». Selected STORAGE EGGS - AT 33c DOZ. Guaranteed Sound and Sweet Sealed Ey 8 e UNMEN GOT THOUSANDS MAROONED MANY ON OSETIPS Starvation and GAVE THEM JEWELS ; cing !Twenty-One Governors of the| Importer Admits He Drank Death by Exposure; Rescuers Too Much Also, but Wants Try to Reach Them. - { Separation. ties lu STON, Tex, Dec. %—Rescue rews in the Hrogzoe River flood digs SHE CHARGES CRUELTY, trict revoutiet tnete eftorta to-day to each the thousands of marooned per- sons menaced by starvation or death Says Husband Reminded Herj)y exposure Light motorionts ears ried food to flood vietima perched on When Angry of Her Early | refs or imprisoned in cotton win bullde " while larger craft made thelr way eee h the bottoms carrying 1. fugees Indiscretion. centration campe, m | The crest of the flood, nearing the . Gulf, appeared to«lay to be in Fort A rung of Nw York's @unmen are pend County Hamed in an annulment suit fled in) The eatimated death list of 16% the Supreme Court to-day for upsetting | Which included life lowe in all die triets affected by the flood, was mot the home of Frank Hugh, President of | increased to-day an importing house at No. 6 Front ee WOMAN TELLS OF GRAFT. atre who ta trying to eet ide his marriage to Alfreda Carballo Hugh, « bic Wite of wi per Closcted With District-Attorney, . woman greatly his Junior and a member of the prominent Penn family of New| Jerney. Astimant Distetet-Attorney Frederick Hugh saya that bis wife and he were|4. Groshi, who te investigating the al- happy until ahe met a gang of gunmen | leged wiretapping scandal in the Petia who congregated at One Hundred and| Department, was closeted all this afters Fifty-Afth street and Highth avenue.|200n with a young woman whose iene From that tine on, he alleges. ahe be-| tity was kept secret. fan to drink heavily and permitted the| It was eaid that the young woman wee gangsters to take Jewelry which he had wife of @ former member of the wiretappers’ gang now tn jail, ana he! ja in @ position with her husband given hor. Mra Itugh, in reply, says that ane Never heard of New York gunmen uti! fhe read accounts of th trtal Then tn davit she has filed she confessey to having posed for several years as the | Wife of Victor Ca bailo of Camden, je to protect har son's name. The « Emilio, i» now attending a private school at Highiand Falls, and hie mother | “> lice foree and the wiretappers. No one tn the Matrict-attorneye would admit it, it wae sald that h woman had furnished some i tion of the confession made , Pe yee and George MoCres, meme, of the clon that hia parentage in being ques-|domeatio life tloned in court. As a matter of fact, | toward drinking the non has allied himeelf with hia atep- |éreda, my wi father to the extent of having written fo: ® pathetlc letter to his mother aking Hl hee not to drink, ‘This letter follows: | pe, 0iaa, Says that meni ‘cheska, bus; “Dear Mother: Hope you received my | Mrs, Hugh a the bey did this af the letter ali right. Papa was up here to see | request of ugh, who wae érinking tom ma Wednesday, io told me he had tn| heavily to hold @ gen. mtnd not to go home any more decause| “Prior to Christmas last yi you have been drinking again. Now 1|##s away from me for weake hought you took the pledge, but it|time and remained out afl aight dosen't evem to do you any good at all. |epent tle, theme with If you don't take the pledge before °. Chriatmas I don't want to come hom on. for I had enough the leat time. Because cane: ‘otoue ot when I come home I want to have some | graphs from Hugh’ wit, Deace. I don’t blame papa for what he| Supreme Court Justice Ford, does, 1f he breaks up or not. for if you| the affidavit, awarded the are not willing to stop drinking he has | week alimony pending trial a right to do anything he wants. Love and kisses. BMLLZ0." WIPE SAY® SHE TOLD HUGH OF SARLY LIFE. “When I was asked by. Mr. Hugh to marry him,” Mre, Hugh relates, “I told him that I Intended to marry Victor Carballo, but my family was opposed to Spaniards, and as Carballo wae s Span- lard, 1 could not disobey their wishes When f was fifteen years old I met Ca hallo, and committed an indisoretion, and to ant i; rte | } i i Re ge 28 hoy off to Hightand my mother, who wai me to educate him 1 married Mr. Hugh, and he knew ail the time of the mistake I had made In my girlhood, and when he be 1 to me and [sald 1 would leave him he threatened to bare my youthful error, knowing that 1 would auffer any torment rather t@an have my son know ruth about his parentage oon after our marriage I found that husband's favorite diversion wae to go asleep with = razor under hin pil- with which he threatened he would jeut off my hal: Ihe told my folks when he married me that he wana widower. As a matter fact he wax still manried to hia fret | wit, ahough he watd Ge had nent ber {to an amylum and that mhe had died in ‘alla Academy, and then rion, helped m | the inatitution. An @ matter of fact he Kot a divorce secretly from his fret ‘wife four years acter ie married me, and toe feet Mra, Hugh ie now nme on | Kaw Riwhty-fourth street between F ‘Dated and Lexington evenies. With het are two & non | wed twenty- nl a daughter, aged twenty-eight.” Wurthermore my hue hand's real name te Francia J. Hug but when he came to this country he added the HUGH ADMITS DRINKING TOO MUCH HIMSEL! vary that when he married the ime he was worth more than Hig nd ae to the Grand Central Station For 50 Cents Telephone 7400 Columbus, LIONEL’ ov TOYS | LL SELLING Cartons

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