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“WS DEVELOPED IN ~~ TANIMANY HALL a Leader Thomas F, Foley Has *’ Declared War on Senator James J. Frawley, ? TREACHERY IS CHARGED Foley Says Frawley Must Be + Ousted from Leadership and State Senate. ¥ % 2 A hew feud has developed in Tam- many Hall, Thomas F. Foley, leader, of the Second District and successor to the late “Big Tim” Sullivan as the Power of the lower ast side, has de- clared War on James J, Frawley, - leader “of the Twonty-wixth District in Sthe upper east aide, State Kenatot | stand Chairman of the Finance Com- ““initteo of that body, controlling all Btate appropriations. Speaking to The Evening World to-day, and care. | * fully choosing his words, ex-Sheriff Foley said: ‘ a*Senator Frawley must get out not Only. from tho district leadorabip but also from the State Sen 1 intend to do all I can to defeat him. The #8 no place in the organisation fot a man who fs ungrateful and treacher- “us to his friends.” “FRAWLEY WARNED OF THE COMING ATTACK. fh order that there may be no @Ouht about his intention, the big Jender of the lower east side has @erved notice on the Senator of what 4# coming and, further, has informed “tho Chief," Charles F. Murphy, of his Meclaration of war. Senator Frawley is at present in Europe on a vacation ~ trip, but the warning of what awaits his return was given before he sailed. This feud has been smoldering for some time, but has just burat into flame on account of the appointment “Mest week of Michael A. Rofrano to “he first deputy in the Street Cleaning “Department under the reform ad- mistration., Rofrano was once the «protege and lieutenant of Foley in the ,)Mecond District, but now is bis sworn ~m@nemy. “© Phe charge is made by Foley that Frawley formed an alliance with Ro- ye o in business relating to con- « ) particularly fp connection with ~ warbago disposal and snow removal. He charges also that Frawley e help to the Rofrano-Driscoll forces in ._ their persistent warfare to overthrow ‘Foley in the Second District and to destroy the Tammany organization im that part of the city. The old guard considera this treason. DOUBLE FIGHT ON FRAWLEY IN SEPTEMBER PRIMARIES. At the September primaries there will be a “ouble fight on Frawley. ‘The first will be to deprive him of! the organization leadership in the Twonty-Sixth Assembly District, | which includes a long, narrow stretch | of the upper east side between Nine- ty-fifth and One Hundred and Twen- streets. Frawley has been ; ler there for thirteen years, hav- won out in a hard fought battle inst John Ryan. Foley helped im do it and lent help tn later (aghe to sustain bis supremacy. > e@ Twentieth Senate District, “which Frawley has represented for ten years, includes his own Assembly District and the adjoining ones, | John J. Diets and Nicholas J. The big fight will be ol Reneinrial nomination, » Fote: vowed to-put Frawle: Nout of public life and figures vant) the fall from a dominating posi- tien in the Senate and chairmanship ite gost important committee ‘greater tumbio than loss of an A sembly district leadership. So he In this Cigar Tampa’s workmanship equals Havana’s— the tobacco in both alike. The Universal size, 10 cts. each. * Box of 50, $5.00. TAMMANY LEADER AND SENATOR HE HAS DECLARED AGAINST. intends to try to strip Frawley of his yellow jacket as well as the peacock feather. No feud of this magnitude has oc- curred in ‘Tammany for many years Foley's power in the lower east side is phenomenal and he ts fighting for Tammany all the time tn tbis field,| where the abifting of racial popula- tions has made it the most exposed part of the line of battle. Frawley has been & prominent figure in the State political game and allied him- self in business to the Cohalans in city contracta and bonding compa- nies. —_—_——_ REALTY MEN ARRESTED, CHARGED WITH FRAUDS Realty and Commereial Co. said to Have Padded Assets and Stock Is Termed Worthless, Joseph H. Rudiger, president and Solomon M, Schatzkin, treasurer of the Realty and Commercial Co,, No. 80 Church atreet, and Otto H. Albane- sius, a stock salesman, were arrested this afternoon on bench warrants ls- sued by Supreme Court Justice Gie- gerich, charging fraud, They were held in $1,000 bail each. In a statement issued at the end of 1913, the company claimed to have net assets of more than $774,000. On the strength of this statement it ab- sorbed the Phoenix Realty Co. of New Jersey. Stephen D. Eyre, former secretary of the Phoenix Realty Co, and P, Edward Wisch charge now that the stock is practically worthless, that unearned dividends were paid out of capital and that the company Issued photographs of properties named as its own and It never owned the prop- erties. ——— ed | Sealded to Death in Train Wreck. TOLEDO, O., July 7.—When the loco- motive of a Toledo, Ann Arbor and senger train jumped the ed into 4 ditch near Weat Rion Breitner, ‘ot to-day, fireman, also of Pete neverely scalded. Forty pas enkers were shaken up and brulsed, none of them seriously. RAGE TO VATERLAND’ Frantic Husband Fails in Des- perate Attempt to Board Biggest Ship. RUSHED FROM CHICAGO. | | |Delayed Sailing Enables Southern Planter to Get His Daughter Aboard. The Vaterland of the Hamburg- Amertean line wan half an hour late in sailing to-day. She was delayed by unexpectediy heavy Iate mails and by the reluctance of those who hed come aboard to say good-by to friends among her 3,000 passengera to leave the ebip when the bugle @ounded, The delay enabled a wrath- ful parent, George R. Goodwin, a cot- ton planter of Holly Springs, Miss, to get aboard with bis sevent: | year-old daughter, Mrs. Francis K. | Evans, of whore young husband Mr, Goodwin energetically disapproves. | Before the gan, ‘* was hauled ashore young Mr. Evans, who ts bim- self a cotton planter in the Delta country, made # dash down the He wai opped by watchmen demanded to see bis ticket or @ pass. Having neither, he firat argued and then tried to get past by main forc but fo vain. An officer of the Ii was at last able to understand what was the trouble and directed that he be allowed to go down the plier. But the big Vaterland was well out in the stream and be was not even able to see his bride's face at the rail, Mr. Evans frantically begged for permission to take after the ship with a tug, but he could not persuade the pler captain of his responsibility. He had only a small sum in bis pock- ots. “Hattle Goodwin and I bave been sweethearts for years,” the discon- solate bridegroom told sympathisers who gathered about him as the Vaterland faded into the mists of the lower bay. “The old man does not lke me. Never did like me. He ordered me to keep away from his plantation and took a filer at me with a shotgun one time, “Bo Hattie and I went to Memphis July 4 and were married by a justice of the peace, We got as far as Chi- cago before the old man caught us. While I was out he went to the hotel where we were staying and mai Hattle eo with him. W he found out I knew they were here in New York he made arrangements in a hurry to take ber abroad on the Vaterland, and because the boat was late in eailing had just time to get aboard. But the ship was not late enough for me. “The old man can't get Hattie’s love away from me. I'm going to start some sort of legal action against him for taking my wife. And they will have to come back some time and I know Hattie will come to me fe soon as she can get away from her father.” Among the distinguished names on the Vaterland’s passenger list were those of Count von Bernstorff, the German bassador; William F. R. Hitt and bie wife, who was Miss Katharine Elkins; Marie Rappold and her husband, Rudolph Berger; Mr. and Mrs. John B. Stancbhfield, Frank B. Kellogg, the trust-buster, and his wife, and Mr, and Mrs. James Speyer. > RUNAWAY HORSE TURNS IN BROADWAY FIRE ALARM aera Crashes Into Post of Box, Brings Out Engines and Gcatters Crowd, The horse attached to a restaurant supply wagon left by its driver, Abra- ham Harrison, No, 667 Weat Forty- sixth street, standing at Fifty-necond street and Seventh avenue to-day with @ feed bag on its head, took fright at an automobile and bolted. As Policemap Hermann of the West Forty-seventh street station tried to catch It at Fiftleth street, it dodged into a fire alarm post and tore it down, sending in an alarm and breaking the gas connection supply- ing the Lxht on the post Seventh avenue was crowded and pedestrians* automobiles and other vehicles had to hustle to get out of the way of the horse, which ran on the sidewalk part of the way, Finally Policeman Egan caught it in Long Acre Square and was dragged twenty yards before he brought the animal to @ halt. Meantime several fire companies had responded to the alarm, and a crew from the ges spony was sum moned to repair the leak, which filled the street with gas and threatened @D explosion Harrison was summon wagon w v weight on its neck, but the mal shook this off when it fret peel to run, TO RECLAIM BRIDE Wt and Distric BROESROOM LOSES A WOMAN KILLED MRS, BAILEY, FOLLOW a CUE THE BVENING WORLD, ‘wumspar, 5 SULT 7, 1914. ar oe HEN WTS NOW SENS et (Continued from Second Page.) Freeport this afternoon that Burns detectives had found the place where the revolver with which Mra, Bailey was killed waa bought. Sheriff Pet- Attorney Smith were away at Freeport all day with the Burns men and the informant, who wald he “aquenied” because he didn't get money that was promised him and had other grievances besides. The man’s statement has been put in the form of an affidavit. ‘This story got out in Freeport this afternoon and created almost as much excitement ae the original crime. It im now believed that Coroner Norton will order an arreat at the conclusion of the inquest to-morrow afternoon. SHOT MEANT TO SCARE, NOT KILL, BAY® CARMAN, Dr, Carman made a remarkable statement to an Evening World re- porter to-day in which he forecast an errest and complained that the authorities are trying to fasten the crime on his wife. He also advanced the theory that the person who fired the fatal shot was bent merely on frightening Mra. Bailey and himself— a theory, by the way, that has been held by many Investigators ever since the tragedy occurred. In preparation for submission of the case to the Grand Jury Min- eola on Thureday, Sheriff Pettit and District-Attorney Smith took a sur- veyor t othe Carman home this after- noon. He surveyed the grounds and bulld- ing, took measurements of the office and the house with particular refe ence to front and rear staircases and was Instructed to draw a map by which the Grand Jury may be in- formed of all the surroundings of the tragedy without the necessity of visit- ing the scene. William J. Burns, who was em- Ployed as an investigator yesterday, is bending all his energies in a search for two women who were in Dr. Cai man's waiting room at the time of the shooting. These women ran from the soon as they heard Mrs. exclaim: “Oh, doctor, I am There were five women in Dr. Carman’s waiting room last Tues- day evening. He first attended Miss Hazel Combes and she departed with her friend Anna Kahn, who had ac- companied her to the doctors house. Then he called Mrs. Bailey into his private office, ONE WOMAN STOUT; THE OTHER SMALL, WEARING GLASSES, The two women left in the waiting room with George Golder and Archie Post have been vaguely described by the men. One w.5 @ stout woman, the other small and wearing eye- Glasses, District-Attorney Smith and Shei iff Pettit have suspected that Dr. Carman and his wife know who these women are, But they have been un- able to get any trace of them, Burns regurds their discovery as a matter of the greatest importance, It was not dificult to get Dr. Car- man to talk to-day. He appeared to be anxious to unburden himself to somebody. Throughout the interview his face wore his characteriatic smile. The smile was forced at times, but It (es part of his expression—an attribute of the hail-fellow-well-met demeanor that had made him popular tn Free- bort and Nassau Coun-y generally. “Yow know,” said Dr. Carman to the reporter, “that I have done every- thing tn my power to ald the District. Attorney. You have been here all the time, and you know I have gone out of my way to help hir:. Ih given him a@ lat of my patients, I bave pointed out every person I had the @lightest reason to suspect had grudge against me—and thoy were very few. I have done all [ can and 1 am about to quit. It is my inten- tion to eay nothing from now on ex- cept ag I am questioned on the wit- neas stand or by the autnoritien. DR. CARMAN FORECASTS AN AR- REST VERY 8 “There will be an arrest in this case pretty soon. I know that. I know that tremendous public press- ure is being brought to bear on the authorities and I wouldn't be sur- prised to see them arrest almost any- body. “I know they suspect Mrs. Car- man ef having committed this murder and have tried their best to put it on her, They would have arrested her seve 19 ago if they had had the ae on hy They tried their best, but they failed because she ls an innocent ‘woman, “I have heard @ lot of talk about me being unpopular with men of this community because I have performed iMlega! operations and that an illegal operation performed by me may be back of this murder, On that point I want to say as solemnly and em- phatically as I can that I never per- formed an illegal operation in my fe, “Why, if I had been consulted by Mre. Balley about causing the prema- ture birth of a child do you suppose 1 would have let medicine that I gave her get into the hands of the District-Attorney? I had plenty of time to change it. I wasn't born yes- terday. I don't know ff they bave enalyged the medicine, but they will find it to be just what I alanine | pills. As to the autopsy on the body ot Police Seek a Man of a Certain Mrs. Bailey there were two contrasting and disinterested findings, Mr. Runcie Trade Who Is the Owner of an Airedale Dog. tells mi found traces that Indicated | to him approaching motherhood, but he found no sign of instrumentation. The bbysiolans agreed with Dr. Runcie that) there had been no attempt at an oper-| special trom Ht Corremondeant of The ation, but they went further and said | Krening World.) there would have been no occasion for) SCHENECTADY, N. Y., July 7Z—In such a thing because they did not) an attempt to throw light on the Mo- think ‘@ were any signs of pres- | hawy ancy. INSISTS THAT THE FIRING WAS, seeking to-day a butcher who owns an NOT A “PLANT.” Alredale dog, This line of inveatiga- “There 1s a disposition in somecir- | tion follows discovery of Airedale haira clea In Freeport to doubt the story | on the handkerchief which was knotted you told of having been fired at in about the head of the victim and of your automobile last Sunday nigh! "| pote of tallow on some of her cloth- the doctor was informed. jing. ses pala SA bgptla a seats A wan arrested in Hamilton County jo way it was ae ‘ | June 22 on a charge of “beating” a Weill, I didn't fire the revolver and I board bill is expected to know some- didn't hire anybody to fire it, andthe River murder mystery, police are attack was not a@ ‘plant.’ I intend to testify on that point before the Cor- oner at the inquest when it te re- sumed to-morrow. “But I can't concteve who could have any desire to kill me, The only cause for a grudge I can think of was a fight @ doctor made on me when I was a member of the Board of Health. That wouldn't occasion an attempt on my life.” (The matter referred to by Dr. Carman was a churge made by Dr. Evans, an elderly physican, that Dr. Carman was not report- ing all bis diphtheria and ecarlet fever cases. Asa result Dr. Car- man severed his connection with the Board of Health.) The reporter questioned Dr. Car- man about his impressions as to the cause prompting the person who fired the shot through bis office window last Tuesday night. He sald on Wed- nesday that be thought the assassin meant to kill him. Since then he has revised his idea to conform with that of many who have been follow- ing the case. NOW SAYS THERE WAS NO IN- TENTION TO KILL. “I have come to the conclusion,” sald Dr. Carman, “that the person who fired the shot was bent upon scaring Mrs, Bailey and me. It was & shot Intended to frighten, not to kin “Who could possibly have such an interest in you and Mra. Balle: te fire o sh Ight- en you,” the reporter ed. “Your wife, for instance?” “Oh, no," replied the doctor; “my wife didn't do it. My wife had no reason to want to frighten me or Mrs. Bailey—a woman she it, fi jo the murder my wife and ! had been having a seo a id honeymoon. e took out that dicto- graph ehe became a happier woman,” the doctor sald. “She put it in be- cause she suspected she would hear something to confirm her suspicions. Bhe heard nothing that a wife should not hear and the relief from her jeal- ousy transformed her, The only trouble we ever had was over the nurse, as testified to by my wife on the witness stand, and that was only & fifteen-minute row. “Now, nobody wanted to kill me and I don't think anybody wanted to kill poor Mra, Bailey. Of course, if any- body had wanted to kill her they would be more likely to do it in my office than outside, where they would be seen on the lawn, But it maxes It hard on me. A minute more and ahe would have been out of my house, Private detectiv and constables are guarding th to-day. They have orders to permit no member of the household to leave the premises without permision, Dr, Carman let it be known to- day that Willlam J. Burns, the pri- vate detective, was ordered out of the Carman house last night for trying to intimidate Mra, Carman, This was after Burns and his assistants had executed @ sensational and spectacu- lar ecene of the murder in the doc- tor’s office, Burns was talking to Dr. Carman, Mrs. Carman and Lawyer Levy, Suddenly he approached Mrs. Carman in a menacing way, pointed his finger at her and said: “Madam, we have come here to find the murders “Here, none of those bulldozing methods,” cried Dr. Carman. “Leave me house at once.” Mr, Levy, the lawyer, intervened. There was an apology from Burns and he was permitted to remain tn the house on condition that he did not attempt to question Mrs. Carman, The heart weakness which at- tacked Mra. Platt Conklin, Mra. Car- man’s mother, ag @ result of the strain she has undergone since the tragedy, became serious last nigot and the authorities have been 1a- her death, ORONER STILL ACTIVE IN HUNT FOR EVIDENCE, Coroner Norton, after his wordy jencounter with Sheriff Pettit yeater- day, was not inclined to-day to give up any of the activities which, he be- lieves, his office entail on him. He said that be would continue the in- quest at 10 o'clock to-morrow, whether oF not the Sheriff or Prose- cutor approved of bis course, “The verdiot, he -dded, “will formed that there is grave danger of t thing about the murder, so the police were informed to-day by Hamilton County authorities. They say he an- swers the description of the unidenti- fied man who hired a boat from Claude H. Henton about the time it is thought the murder was committed This man has been eearched for far and wide. The police were requested to nend detectives to Hamilton County to question the prisoner. Several women have visited Police Headquarters, asserting that they can throw some Ii ‘They have been given a respectful hearing, have been cross-examined and turned away. They have had really nothing to tell which might have had any bearing upon the case. urday, Detectives interviewed dentists in the cit eEey and to-day to learn it possible which, if any, of them had filled the teeth of the murdered girl. Little progress was made in this direc- tion. The dentists who saw the teeth declared that the fillings were several years old. Many sto: have been visited with the object of finding where the clothing of the victim was bought. All of this has been of no avail, The police are beginning to believe that the clothing bought here, Bon Schenectady’ cliizers who are followin with the gre it interest th vanced the theory that the murdered girl was the victim of white slat T's police are looking into t! theory. People here declare that t white slave industry flourishes to an alarming extent in this city, thi of detention being conducted id brutal Italian: many girla ha brought here from other cit! and villages and forced into a@ life of sha. be decisive and will fix the charge ef shooting Mre. Bailey on one reson. | am glad Mr. Smith has piece the detec'ives into the He has the right te employ them If the county will pay for them.” —_\_o—— CONFIRMS STORY OF A WOMAN’S THREAT TO KILL DR. CARMAN. PHILADELPHIA, July 7.—John Howe of this city, who was reported Howe was cruising had threatened to day and confirmed the story told by Dr. Carman to detectives. Howe, who Is in business here, said that summer before last he Invited a Freeport man and his wife to an outing on Great South Bay, L. I, in his motorboat. He would not give thelr names. “and ran acros David Kennedy and Dr, Carman. I knew them both. The moment we spied them the worran \n our party screamed and ran back to the boat. Her husband re- mained where he was, surprised and nonplussed by his wife's action. I ran to the boat after her. I found her on a seat In hysterics, She was scream: ing ‘That. man ruined, my husband and ruined me I am going to kill him if it takes a lifetime.’ She picked > a paperknife shaped like a dagger and started to leave the boat. I caught hold of her and kept her back and asked whom she meant. ‘Dr, Carmau,' she said.” Howe said the woman refused to explain her actions and demanded to be taken back home at once. When her husband came aboard the party returned to Freeport “Neither one of them spoke of the jincident again,” said Howe, “I did | not try to find out the reason for it land never gave ‘t another thought until this murder occurred. I thought over it a lot since and decided it was my duty to tell of it, although I hated to do #0. Howe eaid he telephoned Kennedy of the incident and the latter recalled it and said he would notify the police. Howe also sald that he had a tele phone measage from Freeport to-day that detectives had gone to the wom an's house but did not find her a’ home, THE C1 (rom the Manel e and Japane: Chins be exceasively polite, teay ie vextonded to’ the husitess calling. ts Nain-hao, Journal of. note. h the editor of ’® contribution: able brother of the euncand the moon, your slave bows at your fe f earth before you, 1 janion to apeak and to leav ted ‘manuscript passed | before out eye, and ‘we. were ravishied it With fear and trembling I te- turn‘it. Ye ventured to publish 1t the preaident- would order me to take this Jewel aa a model and never depart from iP Or Nave the audacit thing inferior to it, But my long ex: perlence of letters bes taught me that Buch pearls can be produced once, and 0 08, ORE in ton, (eeurene yer 80 1 just return it. Li} you m your feet,’ the your «aves, to publish any- Not a clue has turned up since the| finding of the bead and arm on Sat.) jsaid that Mri not | They | Railroad's lack of apeed h been | subject of Jost for many y to have telephoned David Kennedy | of Freeport that a woman with whom | kill Dr, Carman, was found here to- | CHAUFFEUR'S WIFE DROPS HER DIVORCE in Court Chauffeur’s Suit Against Wife Begins. crowd of spectators, who had Miss Eleanor A. McGill, milion dollar estate left father, John A. McGill, the Jersey City banker, was named as co-re- spondent. chauffeur. against the heiress, Mra .Mayer got @ verdict for $6,5°0 in that case and her lawyer, John A. Bentley of Jer- testimoney not admitted in the allena- tion suit. the dismissal Chancellor He called the lawyers on b ence dismissed t!.o wi Then the suit of Ma wife for divorce was called for trial sult. feur, t | his Dickow of Jersey City. and Dickow }. them kis “You are sure Mayer was and sounded Ii | replied. ————> 'SORREL MARE OUTRUNS LOCOMOTIVE AT A MILE Now Erie’s Patrons Know That An- cient Speed Jest Is No Joke. SAIC, N. J., July 7.2" ‘@ one,” Erle been ths but | i beat an Erle train in a rile straighta;vay to-day, and at that the animal had to run over the tles and might have improved her time with/ good footing. Haff delivers the parce! post ana | was carrying a package to a house in Gregory avenue when the mare took | fright and dasbed for the Erie tracks. She crashed through the lower ga’ in front of a train so close mare was not burt and aded sown the tracks alongside the locomotive. ma atation @ mile away several lengt! in the lead and running strong. T! a nim: later and says he's thinking of putting her on the track no: THE NEW nt your waist made?" atyle. 1 want it to look ut to drop off me, but of “How do yi “in this anit it were course It m NAMING MISS GILL After This Surprise Is Sprung ‘To the disappointment of @ large ath~ ered early in the Court of Chancery in Jersey City to-day, Mra. Anna M. Mayer withdrew her suit for divorce inst Walter M. Mayer in which heir to the by her Mayer was Miss McGill's The crowd expected to hear Miss McGill defend herseif against the ac- cusations as she had been compelled to do at the trial of Mra Mayer's $60,000 alienation of affection sult sey City, expected to introduce new When Attorney Bentley requested in open court Vice- into bis chambers and after a confer- against his Leo Mayer, brother vf the chauf- titled that he bad called upon er-in-law one evening and found her in the company of Otto The witness Mayer did not seem very glad to see him, as both she ew that he had seen it was a kiss?" ed. “Yes, poultively—it looked like one the witness a fact that Henry Haff's sorrel | Mr MUTINOUS MEXICANS THREATEN VERA CRUZ Quickly Sends Word of Danger to Gen. Funston. WASHINGTON, July 17—Brig. Gen. Funston, In a despat h to a War Department to-day, reports of a mutiny among Gem, Huerta’s forces before the Americas outposts at Vera Cruz, Gen. Funston reported the Mexicaa commander had informed him of the uprising and of the threat of the mutineers to attack the American lines. If an attack should be made, in view of the Mexican commander's 4 action in notffying Gen. Funston, i” would not be regarded as “an af tack under orders,” E We consider it an act of gre courtesy and fairness on the part of . the Mexican commander to notify us of this mutiny,” said Secretary of War Garrison Gen, Funston also informed the War Department that Marine Private Heinrich ‘Thobe, who recently mys- teriously disappeared, was within the Mexican lines and unharmed, but gave no details, contin CUP YACHT RACE OFF ON ACCOUNT OF STORM Vanitie, Resolute and Defiance Will Contest To-Morrow in First of Series Off Newport. NEWPORT, RR. L, July 7.—Stormy weather caused a postponement to- day of the first of the Newport races of the America yachts Resolute, Van- Itie and Defiance. Tho raco will be sailed to-morrow under the auspices of the Eastern Yacht Club, which bas cancelled the scheduled club run to Block Island, Iistead, the club w crulse from here to New London ‘Thursday —— COTTRELL DIVORCE HELD UP. Court 0 ‘ial of Cele- brated “Musical Coach" Ca The verdict of a jury rendered last week in the celebrated Brooklyn “must- cal couch” case was reversed to-day by Justice Jaycox in the Kings County when he directed that a the action brought by Phoebe C. Cottrell againat her husband, Royal L. Cottrell, teacher of the gradu: ating class in Public School No, 11 and principal of the night achool in Public School No. 45. The jury found in favor of the husband and refused a divorce to Mrs. Cottrell. s Juycox held fiat the weight ofthe evidence was against the verdict, iy 8 cO-Fei lent a Package isreed 16 uires no quires ese ial for Tuesday PEANUT CRACKERS—A dainty little confection, having @ jacket of rich n Molasses Candy and 10c « @ centre of tasty Peanut Batter. POUND BOX tou fruit nd vored, a Ratt ROTAT STH an toe" i Cicore | ama. a FoLTON Be, BROOKLYN 44,80 BM, Daily. World “Help Wanted” Ads. Last ‘Month— 19,332 Aue the SIX OTHER 2 ecified weight Includes the container in ec « ENNY A BOUND Pi DY EVERYBODY Knows Loft Sweets Are Built Upon Absolute Purity—§ is selected with the most extreme care strictly eur h set standard of Qualit DY from the day of ite rth A really fine ea ep established reputation re- forr DY requires no apolog' napecin! for Wednesday RNY AND CO! ATS STRAWBE: RY nd 187 MARKET OF, ‘Clases Va ¥ rari gor eee my NEW YORK WORLD Commander of Huera’s Pompey. na