The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1918, Page 3

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IRAE A tO RAR A AEA MS SC RA : ps iss Se a) “AMERICAN COUNTESS WILL REGAIN PROPERTY SCREAMS IN HAMEL | TAKEN OVER BY PALMER HOME DESCRIBED IN BIKA G'S TRL Defense Claims State Witness Bears Out Theory That Man Was Murderer, * BROOKLYN LIEUTENANT WHO WAS SLAIN FIGHTING IN THE ARGONNE FOREST 7 NEW AUTO BLAMED FOR DIVORCE SUIT ‘| AGAINST HATTER, 86 J Samuel H. Rundle Charged | With “Intolerable Cruelty” by His Bride, Aged 25. | SHE ALSO ASKS $500,000. | Miss Agnes Kelly took the stand to-day in the trial of Elizabeth Bak- sa, who is charged with the murder of Mrs. Helen Hamel, and «sid that _ Troubles Said to Have Started When Wife Bought Machine on Feb, 13 she saw the girl hanging Soon After Wedding. out an apron on the clothesline in| | Mrs, Hamel's yard in the rear of | A large, glittering automobile pur- A be Wak ak wires | on BN lM ce The Miata hes ‘This was on the day preceding the Brown Rundie of New York, ogul discovery of Mra. Hamol's body ly-| HiROT.G. > SCHENCK twenty-five, on the day she married Samuel H, Rundle ing on a couch in her kitchen jn the basement. It has by already tos- —————_ ‘WAR WORK THEFT CHARGED eighty-six years tifled that an apron belonging to} oid, multifaiuionaire retired hat Si(ey' Sakon (hu douse’ hangin OF 10 THREE MEN AND GIRL manufacturer of Danbury, Conn., the line. The theory of the proso-| probably figures a9 one of the reas cution is that the girl in her strux | (a sons fpr the suit which Mrs, Rundle gle with the murdered woman be-| Accused of Emptying Boxes in has filed in Bridgeport in which she smeared her apron with blood, Which They Collected Money ‘ washed it out afterward and hung 5 over gelelhen ha tee trtAlaad A |it on the line to dry. in the Bronx. 000 damages for “intolerable cruelty.” ” Miss Kelly keeps house for her! Three men and @ girl, who have been Mrs, Rundle has attached all her husband's extensive real estate and | personal property interests in Con- | Though Loyal to Allies, It Was) brother Edward at No. 605 West 28d | Street, next door to where the ‘mur-| der occurred, Her brother keeps a cigar store on the ground floor. ‘The | collecting money in the Bronx in the name of the Unifed War Work Fund | were arrested to-day on charges of grand larceny. They are alleged to Copyriaht, Underwood & Underwood.) “hie pet ates have emptied the boxes in which they nectiout and, in the absqnee of con- Seized Because She Was brother testified that he heard @ wom-| collected the money and to heve spent trary evidence, it is assumed by Mr. Prisoner of Germans. an scream in Mrs. Hamel’s home, but|large amounts nightly in cabarets, The Rundle and his counsel, Judge J. Moss | WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.—Property | that he did‘not think it worth while|prisoners are Ruth Greenfield, seven- | ‘ No. 49 Ei sth Stroet; het Ives of Danbury, that she still has | 9¢ Countess Gladys McMillan Cornet | Investigate. He fixed the hour at Wes cise oma Weak ee nl ihe abtomobile. about 1.20 P. M., nearly half an hour |>F (Boge thal vbad of Brussels, formerly of Detroit and East 18th Street, and Solomon Gerber, Mra, Rundie’s complaint states that after his sister said that she saw the|\5° usc) gir Avenue, | Washington, which was recently taken by Alien ty the acts of intolerable cruelty which damaged her to the extent of half @ girl in the yard. Detectives say they traced the four) Samuel 8. Koenig, chief counsel for | Pro Custodian | d by Gerber at No. 431 over ENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1918.” LIEUT. SCHENCK KILLED WITH THE {OST BATTALION’ Col. Whittlesey, Writing Moth- er, Says Brooklyn Man Was to Be Promoted. Lieut, Gordon L. Behenck, No, 113 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, was killed while the famous “Lost Bat- talion” of the 808th Infantry was holding off the Germans in the Ar- gonne Forest on Oct. 7, The story of his death was told by Lieut. Col, Whitt! commander of the bat- talion, who recently returned to this country, in,a letter to Mrs, Charles N. Schenck, mother of the Lieutenant, She would permit the publication of only one paragraph of the letter which said: “He was to have been made a Cap- tain, gonne Forest his have gone throug Lieut, Schenck and Lieut. Arthur MoKeogh, who carried an appeal for rescue froin Col. Whittlesey through the German lines to the regimental commander, were chums. ‘They at- tended the Plattsburg Training Camp together in 1917, Lieut, Schenck was graduated from Yale in 1913. A memorial service for Tieut. Schenck will be held next Sunday in the Clinton Congregational Church, Clinton and Lafayette Streets, Brook- lyn. Capt. Francis J. Scare, 136th Ma- chine Gun, 27th Division, recovering from wounds recetved in Flanders, promotion would nillion dollars were committed at| Palmer because of her residence in| the defense, said after Kelly testified: of the sort" mued Ie |e @ eon of Local Weather Forecaster |" poaciey and Miss Elvidge various times between Oct. 16, the! territory occupied by armed forces of| “It was Miss Baksa's screams thot War Work management | James H. Scarr, He was @ noted! reauently were seen together and day of the marriage, and Nov. 16, the the eau, will b 2 ro t \|were heard while she was battling other girls have been questioned | football player at Rutgers College. their many friends suspected that the date of her departure from her bus-| the enemy, will be returned when the! with the murde in the hallway of | by tho Diste ¥ Attorn 's aaaistantr. His brother, Lieut. James B. Scart, friendship would develop into a ro- 01 eg her tec 0 enemy | wt atte " rhe. 4 Gerber and Bui 4 na - a band’s home in Danbury. Countess loseg her technical enemy|the basement after having discovered Woke tia ucllerine. oF ientas in the | as Killed at Chatean-Thierry. | mance. But it ween n until th vie It appears that there was a dis-| character with the evacuation of Bel-/him tn the act of committing the Ainerican, Army, “Greenfield wore no| Capt. Herbert P. Lace of Company tory all that the Lieutenant gaine | 5 charges o chev= courage to propose, He was ac- agreement between the.couple on Oct.| gium. In making this announcement murder.” fons Indicating foreign service, “The |C, 806th Machine Gun Battalion, 77th bash daa eet sit Perit 17, within twenty-fougg hours after| to-day Mr. Palmer sald the selaure| Dr. Otto H. Sclrultze, medical as- | military status of the men will also be| Division, was wounded in action CrPted and Munday nighe the mat the wedding, but it #as patehed up,| constituted no reflection upon Coun-| sistant to District Attorney Swann, |!"vestigated wtih Sept. 9, according to word recetved FC Ra ttow. and Mrs, Hundio lived in apparent] tess Cornet or her husband, who are testified that Mrs. Hamel's death ¥a8 lwpe BOOTH GOES TO FRANCE| DY his father, Francie H. Luce.) Lieut, Tadglay was a newspaper re- amity and content with her aged) loyal to the Allied cause. jdue to strangulation by means of a ' prominent Republican politician of porter in Montreal when war was de- } _ yponse thereafter until the aforesaid commeminenstalioesatesaa jtowel tightly tied about her neck. | wire o¢ salvation Army Hena| Woodhaven Avenue, Woodhaven, It elared. He enlisted as a private in the | automobile unexpectedly appeared at P. S | Dr, Schultze described in detail the failed for Service by Y. M,C. A. [is the second time Capt. Luce has Ist Meld Artillery organtzwtion and two die mansion. Or 6. SUBMITS PLANS lappearance of the body and of the been named in the casualty Iists, |months later went across with the “first ag aaa, Sage rape he firet walked SE Mrs, Ballington Booth, wife of Gen. He 28.000." He wax caught In the original | Mr. Rundle and his wife were seen 0 HASTEN SUBWAY WORK Premises when he first visited Mrs. |p iuington Booth, President of the Vol-|baving been gassed last summer. He oi ita when the Germans surprised frequently together on the streets and Hamel's home on the afternoon of | unteers of America, has sailed for France | wag struck by a piece of shrapnel om 1, Canadians with the rine weapon of in publ ) places in Danbury. Wheo ee | Feb, 14, He testified among other |in the service of ‘the Y, M. C. A. tolthe hand and wrote his father the German trighttuiness, tdeut. Badele , ed S Oo 0 A on ie i. they passed down the main street busi-|Prongced Agreements Include [me|tMnss that the left forearm showed | spend the winter with the American Ex-| surgeons expected to heal the wound Was Weauraed, passed cand anecknas te ae is wucpsaded, for Ate) Tesndis Posed Agreements Include Im-| +1. impression of teeth. He also gald|peditionary Forces. She tin re-| iiortly. He received his commission |the «ame. st Hie was invaded home has been for more than half a century} Portant Connecting B.R.T. Links | someone had hed the blood from | sponse to a cable from the “x's” Hinter- |. 11.0 ‘nest training camp at Platts. |and assigned to duty bere with the Hrit- ej sepa Monat : i F f tainment Committee in Paris. neck wo a Meee ne a ff Danbury’s institutions. in Manhattan and Brooklyn, their hands and burg. A brother, Robert, ts a > one o} ury’ . al Elizabeth Harris, sales-|_ MF#. Booth for more than thirty years giao pila leg ‘Seundy Oly We tide Blaskeo: course there were rumors that he Public Service Co: ssion trans-|_ gigeres swiped “|has been an active welfare worker and|ant in the a’ a 4 . 1 Pycaun ‘Run Je and his spark: ait ike t vps sire egy ia, | Woman in a Sixth Avenue shop, testi-l hay rent comfort to thousands of} Sergt. Wilbur W. Colyer, twenty Walk Lp xiner, Shelia enerable Rundle and his spark- ed to jourd of ate to-day, | fy car a ¢ ‘anc . . ervey City Committee on Fourth | ting heipmect were not nearly so|With a request for approval, four pro- | Ming Hakew between 500 and 6, ME {me In prisons, She plana to apeak at| yearn old, won of Mr. and Mrs. W. | tavecty Tow) tb-diie nnipoaeoed he Ciak amiable toward cach other in.the big| Posed agreements with the D 1 Con-}on Feb, 13, the day Mrs, Hamel was|the various “‘Y" bats at American | Colyer, No. 2020 Helen Avenue, South | Ut i Ce gone the people of Rupille mansion as they were in pub- | traetin ympany und visions | killed. She said Miss Baksa camps. Ozone Park, was killed in action Oct, |//°"" isk eaaeeies to Tut’ ei re always rumoralo! the Lockwood Law, designed to! shabbily dressed, wearing a white| “I am not going to talk to them as alo.” re was a member of Company | 7” OY Gad chantainulis Eanes Were ee roa nOM | Masten the completion of the subway | iiddy blouse, biack ‘Tam o'Shanter | crowd of men in khaki," sho suid before| 4" give Engineers, having enlisted | 1 er eeracean about an 86-year-old bridegroom and] contracts held t on. Company At, Worn coat and runover shoes. |her departuge, “I am going to see each | in the Regular Army May 9% 1917, He Liperty Loan no Judge | a year-old br And as the day#!the company has been unable to fini selected a black dress for $6.98 }one in my audience aa an individual, | way promoted to a sergeancy for pound that he has asked. the wore on and the Rundles continued| the work because of increased cost of | 404 & blue coat for $7.98, and T am going to look et him with his! capturing a machine gun from the Reserve Bank for an explanation ati 1 ear together Danbury was be-|material and labor 4 eat ‘tha Mrs. Harris said that when Miss | mother's eyes.” enemy. A sister, Mabel, is @ pro-apvioky in regard io the matter, He Lb pba geplaed ; : [Ere ee One 1BUOE ARG: Hes sORS ISRO) Ra kee Wit to) Obs her dre —_ “a1 high diver and’ announoed hat Jersey City Went Y coming almost ready to accept the| sums of money A ehaty ineten dike fessional high diver and annaugiay [Wb with its all a I y ‘ ou | notices hat lookec ew uld qui ie stage u situation permanent. Then arose| The Degnon contracts cover four im=| Lorate possibly two and WHORISKEY NOW WATERS. tne eth her mother now that her| 3 ; | portant connec 3. RT. subway! incnes diameter, on srererneteey or has been killed. ' the incident of the automobile portant r 1 yl incnes in diameter, or A | prother has heen From what Judge lve told an|!inks, two in Manhattan and two. in said Miss Baksa appeared an-|Nebody Would Belleve Name Was} 00) Daniel L. Pritchett, who SAMA rena yts Danbury | Brooklyn. When let the contracts ag- | noyed When, she noted that this mark nelic, He Telln Court, served on the Mexican border with Miverting World reporter in Danbury | rm ta $6,472,000, Under the original | had been seen, His name was Gaelic, but nobody|fhe Seventh Regiment and went to ans (O-day it woubh appear that Mr |Contracis there remains $1,962,000 worth | During the noon recess Thomas C.lwould believe it, Edward Sarstietd| Franco with the same outtit when it ‘Rundle had ber approached by his | COMES Ure fer MeDonsid, one of the attorneys for) Whoriskey told Judge Dike in the| became the with tn sniry, waa Killed wie on the mibject of buying an au-| The Degnon Company, according to| would adinit that Blizabeth had |COUMty Court in Brooklyn. eects trom bis chum, Private George J \omodile and had failed to register! the agreement, is to complete the work | wa the fact of the murdered|, “It means ‘Cold Water,’ your honor,” |e Oee ove. Ge No, 208 West 138th the slightest degree of enthusiusm on a cost basis, but tf s over the | woman: with ooton batting, Tuis he said. “I'd like to have it changed| Hekemeyir Ot To nded in the same over the proposition. Mr. Rundle had | $1,162,000 ix not to exceed $960,01 nl/in reply to the prosecution's efforts |to ‘Water: battle. Pritchett, who was thirty- never acquired an automobile for his obligation against the city, » com-| to demonstrate that such work Whoriskey declared his grandfather] one years old and a salesman, was al tian tee ted to take a|bany abandons old claims against the] Woman's task and not that of a|was born in Ireland. His brother got|jnarried a your before he went to pen oem When pee A 3 the| city aggregating $2,000,000 man. Aaa : _ {RIX mame changed, he stated, and Is nice, Ls widow lives at No. 564 notor excursion he telephoned to the | é we $2 ‘When Miss Baska got home at|now ‘William Parnell Water = oo Tiasa Street. New York, New Haven & Hartford ae noon, id her attorney, “she saw jokey asserted that his name provent.|_ Private Morgan. J, O*Brien, a mem. Mal man bending over Mrs. Hamel Hy | ber of Company G, . Nevertheless Mrs, Rundle bought FO GRAA HEAT OHRE oho heal oo He| His sister found it difficult to get] Was Killed im Meet Dettived by. his im automobile and it wasn't a Ford, It FOR SCANDINAVIAN PORTS Jtold her that M Hamel h¥) hurt | lodgings last summer because of her] mother from the we, Denertaent. 10 sumed that a man who has herself and that he was trying to} nar She has written to Washingtot ae be eamemasd thes & ere help her. The girl then got a bowl] Judge Dike granted the request. | verify his death, as she has received \ ARcuMULALeg "® fortune “emimated At) es ; | ot water and dipped the cotton ial four letters from hi 2 all dated after sifection for his money and some Away in One Day With became suspicious and asked hint 1r|_. The Will of the tate Gen. Horatio C Ph, St No. 653 Bast 158th street peehes be should. Deve emet ng Full Cabins. * he Bad done this, King, Civil War v n, lawyer and] 1) wis at first supposed that Private @ say about how it should be spen:. ull Cabin “he man to! her that if she didn't | prominent Brooklynite, who died at his|Geprien was the son of former Judge It Was gathered from Judge lves#] With the galling of two big steamships | keep still he would do the same thing |home, No. 46 Willow Street, on Nov. | Morgan J. O'Brien, who has two sons emarks and from remarks dropped |for Norway and Sweden to-day shipping |to fer. He grabbed her and threw filed to-day in the Surro; 's Court |in the mervis 2, bat ues us Lt gh , . . ng Oo etur r into the wash closet, where the Brooklyn, disposes of an estate of | it was found thi ivate us \y Mr. Rundle that there was a de-|men saw the beginning of a return to} i z w n Brooklyn, dispe it was Bree Ue acinar Tees id fhe of harmony in the house- | normal peace tram 1 Some oy ers The coma attacked her, | s650, His widow, Mrs, Esther H. King, nok Sanne ted with ¢ Sho That hold a s i American 1 vied from fs ; Sha foun i : —_——>— 1O&th Machine Gun Battalion wa On the morning of Nov. 16 Mrs. t She fought him through . one a the morni d Jwith 103 pa r | the en and all along the hall to PRISONER. Killed in action on Mept. 80 near fh Rundle boarded the car and departed) \rasoy samuel Shella the Tent Gee eee te f ERS. spot where his brother George of the rom her husband's home and Dan-land baby. ‘The Major is on his way| spattered the walls. It was her| .WA HINOTON, Nov. 21a list of | aosth Machine Gua Hattalion had nen vury. dle said to-day t © his new post as militar ache 0 ms that Kelly heard ia story | Officers and enlisted men from New] severely wounded two mo AgO. he CADEOE BBE MOUS aah pba: eel a tell POT} Deine »rison camps announced to-da . y or marines, hut | i - |fectly into that told by the girl pris 1 join the navy, army er aor Shan, & I Pebre eho Agel ale PE boa a orp lay fen ation Balas eure ei ouri| by the War Department as follows: | 10> Ntetted ‘as under weight until s Bie when be heard trom, her abroad on # Government mission, ie alo atter the noon Tecens she was cry AT KARLSRUHE. last April, when he was accepted In in apparel m rectly in the way of bein ELE (ceitie (ie Iniphiuiat Gaal Waoiue | fstared tonite tasttaas eaate mledtananiin iM “aad tived “with another, brother papers t one me . 4 a RAS SOP ‘)) She declared th she had en insull- jo man David, Se \e ie SS i be aced” a ar Pee han a beseanouta uninterrupted — sery to the United! ca py the keepers in tt Tbs, wha | Ht Chemeupiioe We sue iglith “Ave,, Ne hn J. Murphy, at » 2431 Cam eee. : " le | Stat hroughout the wa: tol ag f | Yom City pbrelling Avenue, the Bronx. Judge Ives said that Mr. Rundle|St throug t nd o take off the clothes sh 9 n : ie will pM every a Mrs. Rundie| The United Stat was wearing as they had belonged to CAMP LIMBURG. The mother of Private Jam \ nay bring. The rs served on|Line saiied from He another girl who had @ loathsome | AMBRA, (Hachino, 88 Gemlor S¢,, Prov Dousheriy: ge 7 1 ee on nal , ~, He try, belleves the War Departmer 8 Rundle com him to make] sengers. It is her Jiscase a, Sperone A ie aes | r rt ' ais to the assertions of his wife in| gust, 1017 the attorneys for the girl quieted| MOny neal . York) made a mistake in reporting his deat the Superior Court, Bridgeport, on|° SoS SLE her and the case proceeded after she [HUW Daniel J. Wontar, N.Y. | | in battle on Oct, 16, tor ane has re , the first Tuesday in December, Th ‘ : had again asserted her innocense and| yan ene t ceived a letter tf ne bo: sd nature of the acts of intolerable cru-| GRAND JUROR FINED $25, | demanded to know why they did not CAMP HAMMELBURG, Bee ay nS eae Meena oe elty to which Mrs. Rundle in her suit punish the murdereg and set her free.| Lewis, Alert, 91 Hamilton Place, New York | Mother, Th ona ‘T ¢ she Was subjected are not \ A a Oy lives at’ No. 465 Third Avenu specified. pasker Suse » RENWETT. Harry, Ponghtewmie, No ¥ Private Daniel Buckley, Company | eMrs. Rundle was Gladys Austin] | Sewherry In FIRST DAMAGE UITS FILED KRIEGSGEFANGENEN HOSPITAL, |. 165th Infantry, who is reported Rrown of No. 619 West 127th Street, Because he p un ALEXANDRIN STR., BERLIN | killed in action on Oct. 15, was a pas where #hé lived with her mother,| active part in th os i LN Pe i Union iiall St Jencice, |MenEEF on the Titanic when that vesse) Anson pwn, who {# said to have | berry 1 Jury, of w jee Be * CAMP RASTATY. the same Hfebout with Mrs. John made a fortune in*Washington, Mrs.| was a memb Jam - . JATHE, Ommrien ©. Alle N.Y. Jacob Astor. He leaven ‘& sister, M Rundle could not be found at the| stock and bond broker - : ae KEK ER, (lamnee C Sandy Hook, Come Cathe M. Buckley, No. 187) We West 127th Street address to-day, | jek yng, bond brok Thomas J. Walsh Asks $35,000 as | CAMP UNKNOWN. 1th Btreet. She reccived a telegram . " Guce Exchange, was fin , from Washington announcing thy Bs 2 nat eines ORD, John Havel, N.Y <r AN FOR STRIKE jby Ju Aus N Result_of Death of Seventeen. |cnawrgun. 5 Manian Foie. {death, but she is not sure@that her | Federal District ( Year-Old Dauchte Hg EXUDAHAN. Ourneleus nay aow St | brother was the man meant, for #h WAITERS PL Dee I" Garney. at 1 him fea gh u-Old Daughter, Marie, CATIREN, Patrick J, 425 Onrot 8, Brooktn, | Stys there were two men by the name jury for twenty faye without first mage sults growing out of | HUNT. Her mid! 82. Krovkivn, [of Daniel Buckley in the ‘same com permission, i d R wre Nov. 1, in which | KAT 1S Onesie oR pany. She has written to Washington wl ‘ f | ea , for verification, lel EO es were le ero filed eo | York ¢ The Commitive of Five of the HUM ITALIANS CHE ney lives hide ‘ a bei: he ae pert te Fi M6 King 8, Beonityn, ‘After having been in action for . 1 on toed f SR NOT Nh aaron! Dy | MIR nn Vt if, Bat [21 St Brooklyn. forty-five consecutive days, Private jetermining “" ctlo UA hureh Avenue, Brooklyn, who | MATPEWS, Jah P., 0 Baltic 8t,, Brook! monia on Oct. 16, He was a member of the 15,000 hotel and restaurant w y rer Ty eks to recover $3,000 for the death of | ,!°), +4 i of Company A, 308th Infantry, she rere tin War, f Marie, ageds seventeen, | “tennis, 2: 100 Amthny Aw. New) sailed from here on April 6. ‘ 1 ROME, Noy, 21.—The entire chaint filed two sults against the New |SCHIRMCLY, Trcodore D., 74 New Jormy Ave, | mother Ii at No. 391 East 10th i wing the fede and cheered to-day when Pr Consolidated Rallroads and the H.. 17 a Street, He was twenty-five years Otic Wa mier Orlando, he midst of his vi w York* Muuicipal Railways Com: old seni Baal ory apoven, paid tribute to America's |RAny Jointly. ‘aaking wn for 1 ay 3 io Donald Russell and Prive hy part in the war. Ambassador Page and ing woman, f eervicgs of | ye i " Walter Brown, both of Ce y New York Secretary Jay ackne 1 the ovation, | Walsh wah employed’ by the JABPER. Moris M8 Faxt Vath St. New York, | 114th Infantry, have been k " strike, ® Orlonda emphacteed portance. of n Union Telegrash Company, in| REPORTED IN GOOD HEALTH— action. Russell's father ix m r wet vay a ® , ‘ te med the » r hand Mark's CAMP UNKNOWN of the Armour & Co, plant at Wack wertlue. wLcgy Atalay Army, }Avenued: MLAAWRAded. Juldl, ddavony my A ». Bruwn also lived there, aC dilate It he had come out of the Ar- | JUNE ELVIDGE WEDS CANADIAN LIEUTENANT AFTER WAR ROMANCE YONE ELVIDGE Pretty Movie Actress Was Married Secretly Last Tuesday and Is Now on Honeymoon, How the Victory Rall gave courage to a hero of the Somine who won the Military Crows but fa: cred when it came to popping the qu: ‘ion to one of the most beautiful \mertea’s movie actresses was revenle to-day by the announcement that Lieut. Francis Charles Chamberlain Badgley and Misy June Elvidge were married Tuesday and are now on their way to Ottawa. RICH NEW YORK BROKER LOSES HS SUIT FR ORCE Case of Edward L. Carey in Wife’s Favor. Special to ‘The Bening WHITE PLAINS, Nov. ing @ trial which lasted eight days, a jury in the Supreme Court, pre- sided over by Judge Joseph Morsch- auser, to-day handed up a soaled ver- dict fn favor of Mrs, Adelaide H. Carey in the divorce action brought against her by Fdwani 1. wedithy New York broker. Mr. Carey sued his wife for an a solute divorce and named Louis ( Perry, a United States sailor, Tl snes In behalf of Mr. wee Wort) 21.—Follow- Carey, a} | claims was submitted by three New York detectives who testified to have followed Mra Carey with the sailor to Central Park, where they asserted they saw Mrs, Carey kissing the aail- or and also smoking cigarettes, The statement of the detectives that the couple kissed for seven hours with five minute intervals of rest, was classified by Mrs, Carey as a “wicked untruth,” Mra. Carey and the man named, on the witness stand, denied all the charges, Humphrey J, Lynch, coun- sel for Mra, Carey, showed an alibi in behalf of Mrs. Carey to the effect that on Sept. 1 and 2 Jast, whengit was alleged by the detectives that the sailor was with Mra Carey at her home in Harlem after leaving Cen- tral Park, was untrue, ax the satior Produced records to show that he stayed at the Y. M. C. A. on those nights, Mrs. Carey was formerly prominent in the Gedney Farm fon of White Plains, where she lived with her hus- band until she says he drove her out of the house, She now bas a suit pending against her husband for a separation, charging him with cruel- ty, which Will be tried next week Henry R. Barrett, in behalf of Mr. rey, moved to set aside the verdict as contrary to the evidence, Justice Morschauser reserved deciaion. One of the jurors said that it only took them one hour and fifteen minutes to reach @ verdict in favor of Mra, Carey. Mrs. Carey is the daughter of a prominent Virginian who was a Lieutenant Commander in the United States Navy. She is interested in the Community War Service work and frequently entertained sailors from the Burke Foundation, where they are convalescing, on trips through the country for the benefit of their health, a Vire on Submarine Chaser, Fire of unknown origin broke out in the ine room of the United States submarine Chaser No. 71 while it was lying at the foot of Bay 43d Street, vesend Bay, to-day 0 flames To acquaint every New York man who a rior type of clothes with the work of shops—to acquaint you with such clothes and thus win yOu as a permanent customer of this new Men's purpose of this special and extraordinary offer. ' : The fabrics are of fine all wool, carefully selected; the models of exclusive custom design; the tailoring of the fine standard for which Best & Co. have long been known Whipcord Army Officer. Ready-for-service or to order, 37.50 rapidly ‘and threatened (he oil The fireboat William J. Gaynor yed & stream on the burning patrol trol. 28.50 is the sole aking. Ready-for- Men's Shop-—Fifth Floor Entrance, 1 West 35th Street White Plains Jury Decides |} at and soon had the fire ander con- | Men’s High Quality | All Wool Winter Suits & Overcoats Specially Priced poteclates a supe- At 28.50 these suits and overcoats are offered to you at less than today’s wholesale level—for even at their former price they represented values far below their prevailing market worth, The overcoats include staple Blue, Brown and Oxford shades, Heather and Scotch effects; the suits, handsome velours, heavy cheviots and other reliable all-wool weaves. Bear in mind—this is a get-acquainted offering, and as such, necessa- rily limited to a few days only. ’ Uniforms Whipcord Army Officers’ Uniforms ervice or to order, 40.00 Best & Co. — at THREE THROWN FROM When the car operated by Motorman George A#- pol of No. 339 Third Avenue, Brookly i, Jumped the track at 16th Street thhy morning {t catapulted three men, living in Brooklyn, from the frorit oe form to the pavement. Michael Bm twenty-six years old, of No. 98+ bia Street, had his skull trad. and Was in’ dino. Street, also wore hurt The Injured men were taken to the Holy Family Hospital, where it was sald that Baldino will probably You can’t feel “fit” if your shoes don’t fit. Try Hurley Shoes. ‘The difference in foot comfort is apparent at the first HURLEY A/C iba Made over a special last this C forepart, B instep and A heel. These measurements are not obtainable in the ordinary last. Grips the foot firmly, cannot slip at the heel. Corset fitting at instep. Absolute comfort in forepart. Shoes which slip at the heel and do not fit at the instep usually cause ingrowing nails and en- larged joints. Alurley Sh: es in all the newest models—-All leathers, including the rich Cordovan shades. URLEY SHOES Bitrt Reseaees WNT peeetesy 183 ’ 39-41 Cortlandt Se Factory—Rockiand, Mass. FOOD must still Heater 307 FIFTHAVESVENY st & Co.'s own 32.50— CAR. fe y Jomps Track, tie Itamilton Avenue trofley ”

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