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SEART BROKEN GIRL (SAYS SO HERSELF) WHO WANTS $25,000. SLIDES INTO SUIT -] « FORBROKEN HEART Pretty Miss Harnett Only Used His Name to Get Cheap Board at Newport. | _- SENT KISSES TO BERT. Despite It All, She Says She Surely Did Love Her Tango Soul Mate. ——————— Glaries Gpanass is @ com- mi @er@ant whe doe the tangs, ‘Dut Re’ bemenss @e My he first ac- @ired a\Rnowlelge of the dance Mice “Well, he was o nice man, was Mr, @itek," coplied the witness. /SCHOLASTIC RODENTS _ SWARM OVER SCHOOL Cry of ‘Rats!’ Disturbs Students, ‘and Head of School Appeals to Board. It James Mackay, Superintendent of Public School No, 4 in Jersey City, could get in:touch with the Pied Piper of he would give him g job right away quick at charming the rats out of fered reed in whieh there are more ‘Win there are ‘Every- thing has been tried to get Tid of them, ;| Sut apparently they for although Hugh 5 of the building, has @ Fat has come to dine and die. Study hours in the school are being in Qhe neture-study course. It's @ pity too, for never bave mature students had @ detter chance to study ratology at fret hind. Bqueakings, scamperings and° gnawings disturb the achool ell day tong and’ at night Fagen has to ‘brash rate out of bie way to get to the heater. * Age last resort Supt. Mackay, whose lunoh has been made off with eeveral times dy epiourean rate, wroté to-day to Fred Ede, Gecretary of the Jeraey City Board of Education. He put in a plaintive plea for @ professor of poison, planning ® pernicious plot against the hundred | pests, ELEVEN. DEATHS TOLL OF TWO TRAGEDIES Parents Kill Children and Them- selves in Different Parts of Germany. BERLIN, Jan. 9.—Two crimes of vio- lence involving the deaths of eleven per- sons were committed to-day in Soldau, of Bast Prussia,and Hamburg, At Boldau an enG@re family, consiming of @ mam and his wife with thelr five ehildren, were found in thelr house with their throats cut and the gas turned on. A dog with its head almost severed was lying beside them. Pecuniary difculties ‘are supposed,to have driven the parents fo kill the children and then commit suicide. At Hamburg a city policeman cut the of his three daughters Ana then after @ family quarrel, M’CARTY ESTATE MUST PAY $59,973 DEBT Judge Decides Senator Transferred ° Property to Escape Payment, Justice Manning In Brooklyn, decided to-day that tho late Senator John MoCarty, who died in 1905, transferred his vast propert! hia sister, Sara, who died tn 19 the purpose and 4 paymenta of deb! i fi inst in troubling you. wake up with backache and duit misery in the kidney region vrall; pare you Dare Sess eating hte much meat, says a wellkknown author. ity, Meat forms uri orks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they becom: of paralysed and loggy. When y kidneys get slugaiah ‘and clog you must telieve them, like you, relieve your howels; removing all the Gody's urinous waste, you have backache, sick head- eche, dissy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is ooated, and when the weather in you have rheumatic twinges. The urine be cloudy, full iment channels often nore, wi scalds and you are to seck relief two ur times the nig! Either cogsult » good, reliable ph; cian at once or get from sour harmaci: ebout four ounces of Jad Salt ¢ Supreme Court, ir, Sherwood ts the assignee of a Judement amounting to $30,918, of which he became possessed by purchase 9 ‘The evidence given in the wed, In the Judgment of Justice that Mr, Sherwood believed McCarty to be possessed of an fortune and expectec clafm would be settled in full. But when Senator McCarty died his totalled up only about $2,300, ice Manning eald in bis decision McClean, the defendant in the wuit, being conversant inner details of Senator business, knew that the | © Jaleo to neutralize acl pe longer irritates, th oe BE eri ending bladder property possemmed by Sara McCarty did mot be- Balts ia. 0 lit f tf Bi Wihdarmote? tink.” ae ay long to her, but to ber brother, ‘ourt Girects that MeClean pay the Sherwoad judgment. ter CHAUFFEUR PAID ASA “LABORER” *ONSTATE ROAD Inspector Merritt Finally Agrees to Testify Without Immunity —Officials Are Present. CONTRACTS PADDED. ‘Were Let, Too, Without the Forinality of Bidding THE BVENING WORLD, * Girls Required by Law, 1 ‘Witiam G. Merritt, Inspector in the! State Highways Department from 1991 | to 1912, who refused to testify at th highway graft inqeiry before Chief Mag- tstrate QfaAdoo unless he could do ao! without waiving tmmunity, changed ale) ind this afternoon and told how con- tracts had Geen let for road building in tely on his return he should ask for @ special to trwvestigate the graft re- Merritt. Apparently Merritt otar witness. Mr. Whitman, at the conclusion of his examination suggested to Chief Magis trate McAdoo that « transcript of the testimony be eupplied ¢o Mr. Cunning- to Juriediction. ANY WORK, ‘Mr. Whitman fret showed to Merritt, & note addressed to bim on June 16, 12, fram George Sherwopd, Guperin- tendent of Repairs in the Highway De- partment, notifying Merritt to put George Schiiting of Kingston on the Dayrotl at (6 a day as ‘a lamorer with Q. Did ne furnish a team? A. He aid not. Q. What was het He was a chauf- feur who owned his own car in King- ston dnd’ dne@ to rent & out. Occa- @onally he drove me to my job. @ Do you know what these are? (producing other papers). A. Yes, They are estimates I made of the com of constructing @ number of roads in Ul- atér County. Q. At whose request did you make them? A. Mr, Sherwood. Q. What was your position then? A, T was an inspector. The first one 1 made was for two miles of road, and T estimated 1,575 cubto yards of concrete foundation would be needed, at @ a Q. Did you regard that as @ generous, utaide estimate? A. I did, Q@ Was that comract subsequently Yet? A. Yes, to Jacob Sontag. Q. Without public bidding? A. Yes, Altogether Mr. Whitman had papers relating to eighteen euch oontracte, all of whioh Merritt said had beeh let without public Didding, but he closed his questioning after thie Great one, EX-WHITMAN AIDE SUSPENDS SENTENCE Judge Nott, Who Had Opposed Policy, Lets First Man Be- fore Him Go Free, Judge Chariea A. Nott of the Court of General Seasions, elected last Nevem- ber, tmposed his firat sentences to-day. Much to the surprise of all, owing to his defined opposition to suspended sen- tences while Assistant District-Attorney, Judge Nott wae very lenient. “Because of the fact that you pleaded qgullty, told the truth and threw your- selves upgn the mercy of the Court, I will deal lightly with you. I consider any man who pleads guilty is entitied to some mercy,” He suspended sentenov. Frank Seaman, alias William Smith, of Cleveland, O., who insulted » girl in the subway in the early morning of Deo, 8, and then tried to shoot Robert G, Hill of No, 18 Claremon: given a Yours and six montns 1) than three years and six months in Sing Sing, Ho pleaded guilty of ying a revolver without @ Heense, the maximum enalty for which is seven years’ im- Jon onard and Joseph Brown, ex- convicts, who blew apen @ wafe in the United Cigar Store on Second avenue, opposite the Queensborough Bridge Placa were given sentences ‘h. of three sutetde News was received here to-day that & man registering as J. H. Warner had Killed himself in a Steubenville, 0, hotel, loaving a wealed letter for Mra. Darwin 8. Hudson of No, 167 Franilin street, Aatoria, L. Mrs, Hudson, wife of an official of the Astoria Ieat, Light & Power Company, said J. H. Warner was her cousin, but she ber Neved be wan in © iia, and knew hothing of the su She said War- ner was wealthy and iad no permanent residence, 1 eat EXPOSURE BRINGS MANY COLDS, Cwe them with Father Jobs's Medicine, ~ Adri, TIGHT FITTING SUITS FOR MEN THIS FALL, < As 191 Who Report Former Admirers Attempted HINMAN IS NAMED AS FLOOR LEADER IS TAILORS’ DECREE} BY SPEAKER SWEET Coats to Have Kimono Sleeves, | Republican Heads Will Form No Padding—Horse Blanket Mudel for Overcoats, for the 1914 Man. ‘The male person of the fall of 1914 te Going to be & queer epectadie, so far as) Bie external appearances are concerned. Uf be leaves his overcoat at home it @ay mot be so bad. He will look some- thing Uke a gentleman jookey in moura- ing. But tf he ventures out in one of those 1914 model overcoats, wurra-wurra! He will look like # combination of the comic opera bandit and a futurist painting of @ scene in Venice, It is the work of the National Asso- elation of Clothing Designers, in conven- tion at Baltimore, The creations they have decreed ¢or his indvor wear are all Fight in some respects, The euitings are quite good, in fact, aB they are not to be slit or hobbled, and will not be X-ray fm texture. They will de “in low key,” as the tailor expresses it. Sort of silhouette style, No padding and very tight-fitting. Fine for the man of Apollo distinction, But the thin-legged chap will have to stand for the overcoat in self-defense, ‘To adequately appreciate one of the new coats you have to see it. Plaids and rough cloths will be used. If you want the colors to make @ noise like a race riot, it will be perfectly proper. Shrieking hues will be de rigueur. Large kimono sleeves will be the mode— bat wing effect, the designers call it If the wearer chooses, he may don his overcoat like @ horse bianket. There will be strap ioops in front through which he may thrust his arms when he widhes to drape it over his shoulders Uke @ cloak. It ts @0 designed that, apparently, {t can be got into from any side, or may be displayed ag if Jt had been wished on. The designers are opposed to the use of “blunderbuas,” however, in describing the sleeves, — THREE DEAD IN WRECK, TWENTY-SEVEN INJURED President Munson of Georgia Southern and Florida Among Hurt on Own Railroad, MACON, Ga,, Jan. 9.—John B, Mun- son, President and General Manager of the Georgia Southern and Florida Rail- road, had @ narrow escape trom 4 early to-day in @ wreck near Cor Ga, In which two persons were killed outright and thirty were injured, Mr. Munson's oficial car was on the ing the president out of his bed and badly bruising him, Detalles of the wreck are meagre on account of broken wires, The names of the dead and in- Jured have not yet been ascertained at the office of the Georgia Southem and Florida here. Autience of Actors An audience of actos estimated at three thou Manhattan Opera At ® special prof let.” and actresses crowded the by Forbes Robertaon and watched with much appla ngii#h actor pore tray “tho Dane. Maude Adam nore, Mra. Fiske, Char! “rohman—in fact, everybody who ls anybody in the theatrical world wes there, Committee to Give Advice as to Procedure. ON RAY ROLLS, GUT NEVER O10/ Points About Proper Attire| atmany, Jan. .—speaker Sweet of the Assembly to-day announced the ap- pointment of Harold J. Hinman of Albany as floor leader for the coming seasion. r said his intention was to tering committee,” co: posed of the various Republican leader: of the Assembly, to advise him in the conduct of the business of the Housé. This plan wes one Sweet had in- sisted on. “Do you consider your election as Speaker a victory for the anti-organi- sathon forces?’ Sweet was asked. “I consider that the people wanted o Speaker not bound by pledges to follow any one or any set of men,” he said. Spe Sweet sald he considered him- jself @ loyal Republican organisation man in 90 far-as “the Republicans support my efforte toward the public good,” Asked if it was hie desire “to oppose Btate Chairman Barnes," Sweet replied: “It je my desire to strengthen the arty, not to tear # down.” GAVE HER HAT FEATHERS TO COLLECTORS OF DUTY Mrs. Blackner Declared All, With a Clear Conscience, but Still She Didn’t Get By, ‘Mrs. H, M. Blackner, accompanied by her husband, a Denver banker, went through the customs with @ free con- acience to-day on her arrival from Eu- about the inckient afterward, “on other trips I have been in a fever of doubt about the things I ought to declare, but this time, for once, I waa | thought, undutiable.”* But the Custom House officials didn't think so, As Mra Binokner chatted with them, and ae they explored Mre, Blackner's hat boxes, they viewed suspi- clously two straight, tall black feath- ere which stuck skywarde from the small, chic velvet hat Mra, Blackner was wearing, When Mrs, Blackner was questioned about these she laughed, and said they were bought in America were very inexpensive, But the officials were not eatiaf “They are what to called I betieve a ‘fantasy’, sald Mre. Blackner. “They also call them ‘Numandy feathers'—I n't know how to epell it—but they came from Chicago, and cost about three or four dollare.” Gti the custom house men were doubtful. So Mra. Blackner with an abrupt motion tore the feathers from her hat and presented them to the of- 3. ‘e will return them," eaid the oM- cer in charge. “No matter,” aid Mra, Blackner. “Remember they only cost three dol- lara, and T can get @ome more.” train and turned completely over, throw: | * LUNOMEON DINNER--SUPPER SULDEN “MUSTARD Makes H. Cold Meats Tasty’ aire ate and Fish Bauce ing vinegar. AS Delicatessen 084 Urevery mores, 8! Mrs. Wagner Refused to Eat WIFE WHO WAS SLAPPED BY HUSBAND BECAUSE SHE REFUSED ICE CREAM TER LOVE GEN GOLD OVER OSH OF IE REAM It; Husband, She Says, Slapped Her, . FROST GOES TO COURT. Fifty Congealed Dollars a Week as Alimony Makes Wagner Shiver. It beats the Gia Harry how trifling things In married life grow inte matri- monial mountains, This is not alto- gether original, but it aptly appiles to the case of Mina Ray Wagner, a diminutive wife, who got * a week alimopy from Justice Seabury to-day. A Gish of ice cream which Mrs, Wagner Fefused to accept from the brother of Albert Ferdinand Wagner, mountainous woes referred STOVER HEARD FROM AGAIN. jlerer From Park Department ‘Terns Up in Baltimore. Charles B. Stover, New: York's wan- dering. Park Commissioner, whose con- Unued absenae led to hia replacement, has been heard from again. Last time— it was Dec, I-che was agen in New Or- leans. Now he has written to Louls F. La Roche, his immediate successor, from Baltimore and apparently is homeward bound, Mr. Stover didn't eay anything about returning, however, but told his friend that he was having a good time and asked to have some things sent to him from his roome in the University Settie- ment House, “He'll be back all right," sald Mr. La Roghe, “but it'll be when he gets good and ready. —_—_—_—_—_—_———— differences of the couple began to grow, Mra Wagner found much in her husband's cunduct to de- Plore. She has eet out these heart Punctured recollections in @ complaint for @ separation. Thus far Mr. Wagner t had the courtesy, temerity or whi you want to call it, Mrs. ‘Wagner says, to make anewer. He is the President of the Wagner, Speciaity Company of No. 19% Broadway and No. 16 West Sixty-third street, with an ingome Mra, Wagner fixes at $15,000 aii not oppose Mrs, Wag- applicatién for alimony for $150 & week and $76 counsel fee, which the Court cut to $50 a week. Mra, Wagner fret recalled her honey- moon at Saratoga in July, 1977, where she eays Wagnergatruck her without Provocation. She and her husband then came to live in Central Park West, where she says his crueities continued. The incident of the ice cream oc- curred on July 4 last year. Because she didn’t eat the del.cacy she says Wagner struck her on the left cheek, leaving ® swollen and disfigured coun- tenance, But what most distressed the young wife was Wagner's attentiveness, she says, to his stenographer, whose name does not mention. Ince about July, 191%," she asserts, “when be aband: me with only the pittance pf $0 a Week, he hae keaft lavishing diamonds, jewelry, maneya, as, well as hie attentions and society, upon his stenographer, and has expressed his intention of marrying her so soon as he is free from ma” Further on im the complaint, drawn by Schacht & Gottesman, her attorneys, Mra. Wagner tells how she came home one night in the summer of 1916, after visiting relatives, and was refused ad- mission to her home. She said that Wagner locked her out and she was forced to find shelter with relatives. Although Wagner's manner has been ualformly cruel, she declares that he had allowed her between $40 ang $50 a week spending mone; When the Wagners first parted com- pany, the husband announced in the newepapers that he would not be respon- sible for her debts. The $10 a week, ane says, has enabled her to merely axist, $3 going each week for a hall room and the remaining 8 being hardly enough to live upon, she said. The Utmost Perfection has been attained by Melba, the sweet .st of sopranos, just as have attained perrection in Piano makin “The 8weeteat Toned Piane in the Wor! Both cl iy pron, Heh ls, y. Newari ‘Extabliched 1867 Francis Connor Player Pianos ‘Wagner friends after their sep- aration, she atates, that their differonces were du a@ cl in temperamonts He said his wife was unwilling to It in the hotse he had provided. and als referred to expensive gowns and dresses ehehad accustomed herself to buy. ‘The Wagners were married in Juric, 1907 Francis Connor, Mfr. Wareroom, 14 E. 42nd St. HEN you bring your best girl a box of LOFT CANDY you are paying the highest possible tribute to her own taste, because LOFTS is the kind she always buys for herself; you are therefore’ interpreting her taste and paying her judgment a very high compliment. 7 ‘ other sa x many Specials for Friday and Saturday a pigs oN enka Tee te fale’ stnces te reuteable vartoes Ee Bae aah Suggestions for Friday and Saturday “Eat ARE the FoUND Box Fark Row, Cortianlt, 128th Gt. 284 @t, and Hrooklyn Mtores open every eves ning uatll 10 o'clock. All eur stores even Haturdey evenings until 11 o'clock, Special for Saturday, Jan.10 VAN CREAMED ALMONDS—Hig. eweet French Alwonds— of thelr speciee—are cover Sugar Cream, V lover the ort Saints. OLATE COVERED PEANUT STERS—A mew consignment of choice Feanute from ti Sunay Bosth adds charm to thie popular delloacy: Singietss and covered with i YW % ee eae CON. rare anort= 29c MILK CHOCOLATE COVERED FRESH = PINEAPPLE— fruit used im the preperation tne Si moat favorable growing sediusns in the tropics; bond tions. rich in thelr matu Mi tre smothered hy ¥ (a jure Ee He wren “You ere going te $8.00 or $10.00. ‘Rogers Pet Compang hase re diced some 8,000 csercoate to thres sale prices. “Every kind of overcoat tncluded. “Every size.” r $15 for coats that were ~ jméstly $20 to $25. | $20 for coats that wese $25 to 880. : $25 for coats that were mostly $80 to $85. . $30 and $40 for 8,500 other coats that were $85 to $50. ROGERS PEET COMPANY, Three Broadway Stores at at 43th St. = 34th St. Ehulich Sons lads caste nea bi The Fitting of Glasses by Eye specialists! Ehrlich glasses are fitted by those specially trained to do the work—and to do it better than it was ever done before. Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Pi.ysicians at Warren St. Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to $12 184 Broadway at Joba St. Formegy Sixth Av., 23 15th St.! 101 Naseo, Ann St, 30 7 West dis—H.Y For yearsYuban was reserved for © the personal use of members of* the Arbuckle firm. Now at your grocer’s. FOR SORE THROAT TONSILITIS ‘THOMPSON'S TONSILITIS : GARGLE Gives quick reitcf. Two otzes, At al! druggists’ of by gail 0) 15¢ Letters 4B §, received, wll stand Oy “yous Newark meditay. Other help ta et | LOST, FOUND AND REWARD: | Lost 140th to Mi old from Why tug and pull, your purse to fill, Since World Want ads. with right good will > Will plough and sow and reap for you While driving is alk you need do? If you seek employment, a worker, some real estate, a business alost article, a house, room or Advertise in Nexts, Sunday’s World?’ Then your ad. wiil get a circu! New York City greater than the Herald, Sun and ADDED TOGETHER. BEAD TUB THRILLING ADV! ot Professor lenger, Lord di py Mr, journailet