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I T CELL 1 6 YEARS, SHE Jennie Hall Had Seen Only Mother and Sister Since She Was Fifteen. CONFINED BY PARENT. Found Emaciated and Wearing Flimsy Clothing With Child's Bonnet. SAUATOOA SPniN'OS, N. T.. May 2 After having spent sixteen of her hlrty-one years In a dark, cell-like room, as the prisoner of her own mother, Jennie Hall of Hallston H .xperlonclng freedom to-day. Hho was removed from her place of soli uiry confinement yesterday by Wil liam Hennrssy, superintendent of the ''aratoga Springs Humane Society. He was tho first person, aside from her mother and sister, the wretched woman had seen since she was fifteen years old. ' The Hall familv. consisting of Jen. mo, her mother and her sister, lived in a small hut about a mile and a half west of Hound Lake. Jennie's cell was made of wire netting sus pended from the celling, In a corner of one of the rooms. The windows were barred with filahs. nnlv thin rav nf llivht nntn.- tng. For sixteen years she lived In tnis small space with never a glance at the world outnide. . tit:u iiiu uiuu.uio uiuccr cnierca tho cell she shrank from him In fright, never having seen a man In sixteen years. She was dressed In a child's bonnet and flimsy clothes, and was emaciated. Neighbors were sur prised to learn of the existence ot the third member of tho family. Proceedings have been started be fore Judgo McKelvy In Saratoga County Court to have the mentality of the entire family examined. The case was brought to the atten tion of Mr. Hennessy by a neighbor, who Is tho only1 perron who recalls having seen Miss Hall In sixteen years. Neighbors, ho found, had shunned the house, and no one re- KEP N DARK HOI SHRINKS FROM MAN members having seen the windows I pitched his tent nt the Hotel Commo and doors In tho vicinity of tho cell . dore, in the Pershing Square reserva room open. Mr. Hcnncssy said lie found the woman pacing a room eight feet long which adjoins the cell room, this room also being barred from tho out side world. Mr. Herinessy said that upon enter ing tho cell room tho woman ap peared astonished and frightened. Apparently she has cherished her child's bonnet since her Incarceration. She showed the mentality of a child. She also appeared to bo weak and In need of nourishment. An Investigation by Mr. Hcnncssy disclosed that Miss Hall was ad Judged insane about twenty years ago and after being confined to tho Utica Stato Hospital for a time was ent home. From that time she has Dot appeared publicly. Tho Hull home, of dilapidated ap pearance Is on a thirty-acre farm In Halls tun, about fifty yards from a road, overhung with heavy branches of the surrounding trees. FUND FOR PLANT DISEASES. i llri..l.l,n llntanlr (inrilrn Rpp.irt Mum, ftSU.IMm Wnllnlile Jan. I-. . Th- lentil annual rvport of the Ilrook ,n Hut tide Oarden shows, considering s-t iilmnj ilui' to the war, raplil ilcvcl oj.tii' nt tri. t of puhllc land about i't: n T'i nf af'ti, hating an assessed rsluutlon of two and a half million lol a.rs. but lying Idle, has been oimvcrt fd Into one nf tho moat beautiful and aiir otivu pl.ivrs In the city. The elj- i m iri ana secondary education of ,',,.iU In the grammar and high schools, of th. lty U being enriclird. i T,. KenUra, attendance at the .3ar,ea ' , In. .ased during the past ten years "r. in .i!-r.it 10,000 to oer 300,000, and '. ml. mlanee at lectures and clasies .r in J 00 to ovor 53,000. During 19J0 u-r 1-'.'J00 penny packets of seeds v.-r. distributed, to bo planted by chli- flu dlfftor points out that during fti piim unci- the notanic liir.ioa , ., ivtablieticd the entire oppropila-1 1" san Ide a horse and llsh .ind v i ;hT-in ltuilcot for its mi'n. hunt, although he doesn't have to. 1,1 1ax "u,"Bt , for ,"";" ! The Government supports all Its In i.i, ,n,.- nave amounted to only $1 .or,()ma The oM man ls lno .Mi-diclne . , -,,.imi of the Tax Hudcet Tha M(n of the wiickfeot. and his mrm p. r lniiubitunt has been leas than 0ry harks back to the good old ,n-iiu for tho entlru ten yean. I davs when the prairies were wild. ' i. r. have been nearly J300.000 of prl- n'e fi.mls used, s,.. lul ii i ntlon .i i 'ni bei uni ut rent ..r :.ii uili in be ev. ,1 mr Investlrfutlons of plant dls DAD'S TIP BRINGS ARREST. I iill.rr nlil t" ild rollei' Aflcr kn IJwulril llfli'i'llii'i i . . p) . u'keefe, t"eaty-tWO, who H- I ' rilluv after a ihase on htatim i b Itlisens lei b Iete,-tlve- aiit Jului Lowis, was arrested to- at hU liome, No. I: i . Port Itlehmond, S Itlehmond I. O'Keefo inken Inl'i custody Friday by UwU tin nl.ireli'JUHe of the Connolldutiul Works iVnipnnj at aranltevllln oionen Into oy several young nun sfi Fii i.-n mar tliu polleo station he broko riom the doiix tlve, ran throush ,. ti-wn and ignoring the shots (in d i... air by ih diteetlve and tho ',..iii nf the crowd In pursuit, leniwl . , mltiimiiv and Ohio train bound v.-w Jorsej. Anile seaivh j bi'lng made In tno rrmiiinl In Niw JiTfey, he dropped off Otf trail and returned home. His father j.rnod of ths escapalo and Informod Classic-Faced Immortalized Balks at a ri d.-lj. nh..P UFMV ROC A CT Chief dOE. HEAVY BREAST. Chiof MANY WHITE UOB.GF.Ci Squ-aw HEAVY BREAST. W.ef WAHX TAIL FEATHERS 00 Z ears Old at Least ) MARY T . " l ' I I V 1 f .ltl-T-r-'-itr- irtr ouno Trni ic. i,Lr, SatLaw TWO G-UNS WHITF cE.r?c9!e'-.T,wo gums WHITE CALF (Indian Chief) World Siaff Photographer) Red Man, With a Home in Breezy Glacier Park, Shud ders a Protesting "Ugh" as the Wind Sweeps Over Commodore Roof, Where His Picturesque Tent Had Been Pitched. The buffalo nickel has come Into lta own. Chief Two Ouns White Calf, whom profile adorns the "head" side ot the celebrated "Jitney," Is in town, and with a number of other ladles and gentlemen of the Hlackfeet tribe has tion. The Indians arrived and were escorted to the roof of the Commodore, where tho Chiefs tepee had already been set up by Manager Hoy Hubbcll, who read Ucadle's Dime Novels In his youth and has an eye to the picturesque. The red men grinned at the familiar etretch of canvas and Chief Two Guns hopped up on the parapet, .whloh reminded him of one of the precipices in Glacier National Park, and there posed for his picture. Two scouts from The Kvenlng World wcro sent out In the afternoon to trail the Indians aiyl, taking tho underground passage to the Commo dore, made the Hlackfeet camp before nightfall. They found the. red Chief of the White Calf ordering food for his party from Leony, the great White Chef. "I.Ike It up here?" asked Kugene D. Miller. Keeper of the Wampum of the Commodore and other caravan saries. Wampum means well, ask Phil Donohue, Treasurer of the Tam many tribe. The Chief of the Hlackfeet didn't ,lk() Ulu nlry surroundings of the , ., ,,. th..n ...nvlin.1v else !ld. "Ugh!" he responded, which means in Indlanese, "Nothing doing." Bea dle's Indians always grunted "Ugh." With the Chief are his wife and daughter, Susie and Mary Two Guns White Calf. The Hlackfeet don't call their ladies squaws any more, al though the term Is not consloered an Improper one. The Chiefs Christian name is John, and his familiars call him Jack. Then there Is Owen '-vy Hreat. who w,Ul hm ar(1 hls wlfCi Kosl0 nn(, tnP)r jd. joc Heavy Hre.ist. Tho n.st of the party comprise Manv Tail Feathers, ninetv-two years old: Many White Horses and lliinnlng ftalvblt COMING EASY NOW FOR MANY TAIL FEATHERS, AGED 92. Many Tall Feathers has a faci as full of wrinkles as a walnut. Hut he I and the forests nnd rivers prov'ded rood for trio rcil man. es, ne re is made of i Mt mcmberiHl the old stage coach with vaTuMe on i ""'.. '" lerprviri n) "i'i Great White Fathers. The President of the United Stales is the Great White Father to the 'u dlnns, but the old Medicine Man couldn't remember the names of any of them. Me hadn't even heirl-of President Harding, but for the mat ter of that he had never In ard of his fellow tribesman, Charley Murpny, I'lnef One Hig Gun of Tanmi.nj. Asked what lie called the stage coach, he responded "mail wagon." "Has he evor seen an nutomobilo?" the interpreter was asked to iruire. $100 To the Family Born Semi nrinies, photographs if possible, with complete informa tion of dates of birth, occupation or business of father. Send all replies to Family Editor, Evening World, Two Guns White Calf, on the American Nickel, ; Tepee on N. Chief TWO THIS INDIANS PROFILE IS The 'BUFFALO NICliEL" "Ugh! Skunk wagon," was tho ready reply of Many Tail Feathjrs. The party was shot down one of tho elevators and the red mon turned almost pale and clung to their stom achs. Tho women grinned and t!wn the men did too, rather foolishly. "Ugh! Heap sick!" grinned Many White Horses. When tho party was grouped In a room below the camera scout wanted ! to take a flashlight of tho Huffilo nickel profile of Chief Two Guns Whito Calf, and the Chief 'calily stood, or rather sat fur it. The pho tographer set up his tripod, took his focus and then bang! And another redskin bit tho dust. To bo more exact John Two Guns Whito Calf hit the ceiling. He jumpi d from his chair and took two turns ip and down the floor and laugh?d "ke a kid. He's a handsome chap and his smile is that of a great big. g.-od- natured white man. The entire party laughed with him and at him, while Owen Heavy Hrrnst explained that the Chief had been "flash-llgatrd" before, but had Just naturally forgi t- ten ail about the bang. i "Thank you," he said, In perfect ' English, when the newspapei man i handed him a cigarette. The entire I party has learned that expression. ONE STEP, TWO-STEP, FOX TROT? NO; SUN AND POW-WOW. Presenting, now, Running Uabhit and Many White Hordes. Girls, chouse your partners for a sun dance, for the I twi. voiinn- Chieftain, .ire the hiirh- t steppers of the Glac.er National Park Heseivatlon. Hoth are tall and well put up, and Running Habbit Is said to be a TorpMclioiean revelation in the sun, grass and pow-wow dances. We have tho wore, of Owen Heavy Hrrnst for the statement. But alas, girls, alas! There a a Mrs. Running Rabbit back home on the reservation. Little Joe Heavy Hreast and Prin cess Mary Two Guns White Calf had burled their heads in the back page ot Tho Kvening World, and little Joe thought that the funny page was the funniest thing he had ever seen, Princess Mary ls the real Indian Princess of Indian lore, the kind we used to read about In the old Indian t-tory books, only she is a very modern maid. She uses rouge.; yrs. Mary does, and ulie uses It after the manner of her forbears when they smeared on war paint and sharpened up the tomahawk and the scalping knife for tho warpath. Hut Mary is pretty and gentle, with eyes like sunshine on the wild grape, and a perfect Cupid's how of u mouth Her voice Is like the rippling of the brook or the breeze 'n the pines on ,i lazy summer day. This Is her first visit to New York; the first tltnr, in fact, that she has been away from Largest Living in New York City on Saturday . 5" Sfcgra. . ..P' V' '1. ,T SONETS. X WVVl Y. Skyscraper GUNS WHITF CALF POSED OUST AS IT WAS for COMPARE PROFILES? the Montana reservation. "Have you a sweetheart, Mary?" "Me! Why I am only fifteen. Na, Indeed. Yes, I have my own pony and 1 miss him, and I fish and hunt, although there's nothing mch left to hunt now. We don't have to hunt now, you know, for the Government takes care of us. Oh, yes, I can swim, but don't care to at thLs tlmo of the year. Do l dance? Oh, sure." CAN JAZZ AND ONE-STEP; YOU SHOULD SEE HER SHIMMY. "Sun dance, grass danco like Run ning Habbit over there?" Princess Mary Two Guns Whito Calf laughed right In her Inter viewer's face. "Tho Idea!" she cried merrily. "1 danco all the modern dances. Of course I can Jazz, and one-step and two-3tep, tho fox trol and the chicken trot and you ought to seo mi shimmy! And how I do love to waltz." "Do you favor the short skirts tho girls aro wearing?" "Yes, I think some of them aro very pretty. I mean the girls look pretty In them, and after all It's the girl," and she glanced roguishly at The Kvenlng World man and then 1 looKed uown at her own pretty moc- casincu reel, nor moccasins wiro nindc of glass heads fastened to a so'i of hor.sehlde and with buckskin strips across tho uppers. "I made them myself." sho said, "and I nvde the lieadi d legg ngs. My . . "u" 1 uu tnlnk 11 wondr-rful? ' . ... , nntnr-nt-n O bUTJ nUHl IK MUOIUtWIO Ilorne Itnnn wny Willi Onr, An other Fill 111", Tlilnl Mint. Mounted Patrolman Moorehouse of the Kingsbrldge Station was thrown from his horse "Itei d" when the ani mal slued at a passing automobile and ran away at Sputen Dnyvil Parkwiy nnd 231st Streut. Moorehouso clung to the bridle and wn-s draggid two block. At Foidham IIoaplt.il it wius belleed bin skull wa.s fractured. He Uvea ut No. 2270 Washington Avenue. ProlMtlonnrv Patrolman O.'ane, No. 24.1 Haft 2lif.tli Street, on duty at .i school crossing ,it 18Sth Stn et nnd Webster Avenue, l.nd a sudden fainting .ip II and frll. Injuring and purluips tinc turing his skull. He ius taken to Fnrd linm Hospital. Patrolman Michael Cowley was accidentally shot In tho leg when his ruvolvor fell from tho holster. HOMESICK LAD IS CAUGHT. Kfirapril frnni a Hume lo Work lack In Mirk Mother. A homesick boy, found shivering In tho rain outside the ferry house at Staten Island to-day proved to bo Michael Suwllewskl, 10 years old, who tfccaped from tho Homo of the Immacu late, Conception at Hlolunond Valley, Staten Island, and trudged and "hitch ed" rides on trains for H miles, to get homo to No. 123 Fox Street, Bronx, whero his mother In 111. Me made a da.-h for liberty when he hen id the l ollee Iloutinant at St. (Imrge , iiilns 1 up the home. lie Has .I'oppi-I at i e door. Ho whs sent hmk t i the ho no to which his father had had ti'm com mitted for care during thi mothers ill ness. Hut the boy wanted to ge.t back to Ma mottotr. f S Bernard Schutz, Reported to Be Worth $18,000,000, Sued for Separation. Justice McAvoy to-day denied the motion of Holon C. Bchutz, who claims to bo tho wlfo of Hernhnrd Shutz, reputed to bo worth J18.000.000, for alimony of fS.000 a month and Jx.000 counsel fee. pending her action for separation. Justlco McAvoy held It j was advisable to allow tho status of xne panics 10 rcsi unm uic case wua tried In tho plaintiff's latest complaint eho alleged that sho and tho defend ant had a common law marrlngo In 1S0S, "as though performed by a rabbi." For nineteen years, sho al leges, tho couplo lived In this city and the defendant lavished presents upon her. Rho says she received many relatives of the defendant and fchutz always introduced hor as his wlfo, ' On Julv 9. 1017. while they were living In West 8lst Street, the plain till nays, Schutz abandoned her. Sho says Shutz, acting with others al lowed her to bo dispossessed from tho apartment and later caused tier to be physically forced from tho Hotel Commodore on a "trumped up and false chargo" resulting In tho plaln- Hll and her mother Ellen Card, being committed to tho. psycopathlc ward in Hellevuo Hospital, whero they woro kept, sho says, many weeks before being discharged. Tho plaintiff says Shutz Is tho con trolling stockholuer In tho Baglo Itc flnlng & Smelting Company with an office at No. 233 Broadway and that ho Is interested In other largo flnan rial enterprises. Since ho abandoned her, sho a&serui, Shultz has given her but Z0. She says she is living on borrowed money. Schutz declared that tho plaintiff on April 28, 1917. started her tlrst ac tion for a separation. It was dis missed the following October. A sec ond action was started July 31, 1919, and It was withdrawn, he said. Jus tice Pendleton in January, 1920. he says, dismissed the complaint after 7J-I .n V ,. Vnn Vh , n-rminil th.it tho nlaintiff and thn dn- fendant were not married. SchuU I declares the plaintiff In four years i...J w ,, ti,n. h 1 tiff was always known to him, as ' well as to others, prior to June, 1917, as ucien v am. no luriner saiu no viva iivi.i in... ...ii ... nw. m FATHER'S EVIDENCE WINS HER DIVORCE Maiden Lane Jewe'ler on Raid Which Disclosed Leon W. Hop kins in Strange Flat. Supreme Court Justice Piatt, at Whito Plains, to-day granted an Inter locutory decree of divorce to Mrs. Frcilerlca C3. Hopkins, well known In Yonkers society, from her husband, Ix?on W. Hopkins, a New York pub lisher, publisher. One of tho principal witnesses for tho plaintiff was her father, Mr. Cham! crlaln. a Maiden Utne Jeweller, who testified ho accompanied several Investigators on a raid on an apart ment In West Forty-eighth Street, Manhattan, where they said they found Mr. Hopkins In company with a young woman, Mr. Chamberlain said his son-in-law was In his pijamas and the young woman was In tho bath room which was separated from the beilroom by a thin curtain. Mr. Hopkins was In court and ad mitted he had no defense. H said that ho resided In ISth Street, had no law yer and did not deslro to put in nny answer He further stated that ho was trlng to revive a inagar.lno which had been In financial straits and that his income now was only $:i,0u0 a year. Mrs Hopkins was roprosuntud b Iviv.yer John F. lirennun. Auto llrltrr Cleared of Simiilrlon of Winn im's Murder. Michael D. Sellito was cleared to day of all suspicion of a guilty Knowledge of I ) plans lending up lo the liullder nf Mrs 'eleste OasNene in South ilrnnge early Satuidiy )lr. a"-;"!"' wnh Killed by a stab wound in the thi'int b me ol tour iiei, who held up th' nut'im'.blle. In whleh Si'lluo wns ,i , nm her DEMAND Al If A MONTH BUT COURT SAYS NO psm Assorted Chocolates l . mjjffl One dollar the pound .8 h) & Nfac and Bold cxdasKtly ly LVilted Retail Cindy Stores ) H Ty NOBODY'S MOVING THIS MOVING DAY Rent Laws and Fear of Higher Rents in Fall Uring Gloom to Van Owners. This moving day Is the dullest In New York's history, accordjng to Charles Morris, President of the Greater New York Van Owners' As sociation. "Tho rent laws," said Mr. Morris, "are kcoplng people In the apartments they now occupy. Thoso who havo summer homes and usually givo up their town places during tho hot months arc renewing tholr leases be cause they fear higher rents when they go apartment hunting In the fall. As a result there is practically no moving this season." nT y. loses fight to prevent sewer Supreme Court Denies Appli cation of State for Injunc tion Against Jersey' Plan. WASHINGTON, May 2. Tho Bu promo Court denied to-day tho appli cation of New York State for on in junction to restrain tho iStnto of Now Jersey and tho Passaic Valley Sew erago Commissioners from construct ing a sower to emplty Into New York Hay. Tho great problem of sewerage dts- posal on New York Hay would he better settled by co-operation betweei tho neighbor states than by any case at last tho court hold. The opinion rendered "without pre Judlco" to another suit. Instituted If tho sewer causes conditions danger ous to the health of citizens' of New York, stressed tho lniortnnco of changes inado In the plan for the sewer by New Jersey after tho Inter vention of tho Government In the case. To theso was added, the Court said, a stipulation that no conditions would arise to which the War V)c lament could raise objection. This was "a valid contract." 'the 'opinion said, and If carried out made ' tI)e r1U(!8l for injunction untcnabl . The sower would bo twenty-six miles long nnd would empty npproxi niatcly 100,000,000 gallons of refuse K(rw York Hnl.iK)r amiy, much of whloh Is now turned Into tho Pas sale Illvcr. It would drain f03 square mllos of the Passaic Valley In which aro located thirty-seven municipal ities and townships. New York olllclals contended tho fewer would cause tho pollution of the upper bay. Injuring the health and property of Now York tvtfidenta. These contentions were denied by the New Jersey authorities who charged that In Instituting tho proceedings tho .Vow York officials came Into covrt "with unclean hands" liccauso ihat city's method of sewerage "Is the worst poai1le, o far us Its effect on the hatlior waters Is concerned." The case luui been ibitterly fought In tho Supremo Court! where It was In Ht. tutcd In 190S. Charles KvanB Hughes, now Secretary of State, and George W. Wlokersham, former At torney General of the United States in President Taft's Calblnet, appeared as opposing counsel In the case. The point In the bay where It was priosed to fix the terminus of Jer sey sewer Is not far from f'oney Isiand, Sea Gate and other fo.lth shore Imng Island and Staten Island recreation ix-aches. PLANT ON TRIAL AGAIN. Former .A'niNitu Offlrlnl AcrtiNi'il nf llt'cel, luir S(iliu Properly. The second trill of Cirmaii Plant 'omierly Nassau County Iletctive, on a charge of rrlmlnnlrv revolving stolen eoods began to-day before Justice On p sey In Supreme Court at MHeola, I.. I At the first trill. In January, the Jur; I'l'iT'ived. Hlnre lhat time, two aut mobllcs said to figure in the chaixjev igalnst Plant have been found and are new In possession of the County authur Itles. .Matthew O'Neill, now In Sing King, mil William II ffinan, umler Inilletnierit nn the .iinc i hnrge as llant, are e pis-tHl t" be the chief Altnessis agalns' the iletertlve DUMPING IN HARBOR ROOKIE POLICEMAN NOTONDUTYASHE Simon, Who Says He Was Attacked, to Be Placed on Trial for Murder. District Attorney Harry Uewls of Hrooklyn announced to-day that In vestigation by Assistant District At torney Selvnggl nnd several detec tives establishes that tho killing of Charles Hanson, a bartender In Joseph Zaenglc's B.iloon at No. 362 ttumncr Avenue, Hrooklyn, Saturday night, by Mark Himon, a probation- ary policeman, was nn unjustlflablo murder. Tho District Attorney will ask tho Grand Jury to Indict Simon to-morrow. nI.A lnifi.allf.nHnn ,41 MftArWi (hilt . i Himon was noi on general i oi.-i;iiiii enforcement duty. With two other probationary officers, named Valcn tlno Shlck and Christopher I-owe, Simon visited a number of Hrooklyn saloons Saturday afternoon and eve ning. They were not looking for violations. Tho threo rookie cops met Gcorgo Cross and John Lynch in a Broadway saloon Saturday evening. Simon suggested that tho party go to Zacn glo's place, whero ho could get whis key. Tho three probationary cops and Cross nnd Lynch piled Into a. tnxlcab driven by ono Joe Mundy and rodu out to tho Sumner Avenue sa loon. Hanson refused to sell the party any whiskey, saying ho had none In tho place. Zaongle, tho proprietor, who is very deaf, was not at tho saloon when tho party entered. He rcachod tha plnco about 11.15 o'clock. Four men had Just entered an nutomobilo stand ing nt tho curb. Ah ho walked Into the saloon he Hnnson and Simon standing nbout six fect apart. They wcro In an argument. Suddenly Simon drew a revolver and fired a shot Into Ilanson'iH abdomen. Tho oartender fell dead. 'aenglo was tho only witness to the Hhootlng. Simon claims that Hanson kicked him twice, once In the ' abdomen and once In the face. Two i doctois after a careful examination jcsiertiay reinirieu ihuv uuiu ..vm. ...... .. .. . of Simon's body. , Shlck, the probationary policeman who was arrested with Himon hy I'a- troltnan John J. Quald of the Gates Avenuo Station, who heard the snot, will be discharged, lie lias suown that ho was not In the saloon at the time of the shooting. POLICEMAN'S WIFE SUES FOR DIVORCE liases Action on Evidence Acquired Dunn,' Co-respondent's Marital Suits. Mir. Mary A. c.Shorp-'0r, No. 214 Holland Avenue. Horkuwi. lleach, to day brought suit In the Supreme Court for a divorce from Georgo J Schoep pler, a traffic policeman, and named Mrs. Kdna Jackson, No. 1111 Univer sity Avenue us co-respondent. The suit Is bused on ovldenco ob tained In thp domestic troubles of Mrs Jackson and her former husliand, itrnry It. Jiiekmin, an advertising man. Mrs. Jackson sued a iiHiool teacher. Miss Agnes R Knnls, for $50,000 for llenatlon of Jackron's affections. Miss ICiinlH won the case, but Mrs. Jackson Mierwaru oiuaineu a uivorce anil ner ijsb-ind married the school teacher. It was In a raid on Mrs. Jarkaon's npartiiicnt, Oct. 31. 1319. thai. It Is i -ha m oil. Si hix-iipler was found thero at ' ne o'clock In the morning Mrs. J ir-k-son denied Improper relations with M hocppler. She sold sho had cilhsl him In for mHlee after her huntian.l hail Jinmiieii ner apartment uoor. KILLED BARTENDER Men's Underwear for the Summer v, IT is nn opportune time to purchase your supply of Underwear for Summer. Our Assortments are complete in styles and sizes and our Prices have been revised to meet present market values. Lisle Thread Balbriggan Merino and Cotton Gauze in Shirts, Drawers and Union Suits by the Kst Foreign and Domestic makers. Athletic Underwear Madras Plain, Striped, Check and Plaid Mercerized Materials Jap Silk and Crepe de Chine. Department for Men 33d Street Entrance Fifth Sao. Trad Uart MAYOR WILL GIVE VI BATH PARTY, JUST Seeks 525,000 to Fit Up Portable Showers in Streets of the City. After moving that $35,000 b ap propriated for portahlo shower baths for New' York City's klddlm -who cannot Uik n dally dip In tho ocean, (Mayor llylan to-day Invited tho members of tho Hoard of Estimate to Join him some night In a shower- tath party. "Just one person In this great city of C, 000, 000 souls has thus far ob jected' to children bathing in tho streets." said iMayor Hylnn. "Tho .... objector happens to be a distin guished clergyman. He claimed some nienVbcrs of his congregation wore shocked at the .scantiness of attire worn by some children who have been given Improvised baths tn tho past through tho klndheartcdncss of hosemen In fire houses. I told tho distinguished clergyman to request his scandalized (lock to pull down their shades." itorotigh President Ricigclmann of Hrooklyn will aid Mnyor Hylan In or ganizing a nhowcr bath party. Instead of appearing In tho con ventional seaside two-piece bathing suits It ls understood tho bathers will wear lown shoes, shirts and trousers. This will set tho style for grown folks In congested districts who dcKlrc sharing the portablo shower baths with children, nor uiigh President lUegclmnnn says par ents might be Induced to accompany their children to tho portable shower baths. However, should the conges tion become too great because of presoncc of grown folks, they wKl have to keep away. Tho baths w ill consist of arches of piping spanning a street and sup plied by a lire hydrant. The spray will be In the centre of the arch and will cover an area In which thirty kids may crowd. Mmr. .Sinxlniiitfl III from Orlp. i vim .:iiimiv:i- Lno neire.M. m m - I'"111 10 nnr home in Tort Chcutcr with ' an attack of grip. She Is not suffering J from pneumonia, as reported, 1 - lieAll-CeylonTea "Picked clean, packed clean, shipped clean in an air-tijjht lead foil package." L KE THE K DD ES Avenue, 34th & 33d Sts. t I r h i J 1