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Carrant Out For Andrews As Bigamist <C*Mlnu?d frtm ftr*t ft*) When they reached there, however, ; clerk told them Mr. Laszaroo was ?< busy ha had postponed the interviev until 9:30 o'clock this morning. Meanwhile, Eugene J. Donohue, o 149 Broadway, whose retention a counsel by Mrs. Andrews No. 1 las Tuesday caused the love tangle to b< made public, had let it be known tha his client had determined, after a con ference, to accept the broker's proffr that he would provide for her and thci two sons. She was actuated mainly, i is understood, by the desire that fund should not be lacking to keep special ists in attendance upon little cripple Harley, who, it is thought, has chance of regaining the full use of hi legs. Does Not Expect Legal Action Mr. Donohue said he believed tha this undertaking on the part of An <hews would reconcile the boys' mothe to letting the other woman have hii and that he was convinced she voul institute neither divorce proceeding nor a prosecution for alleged bigamj "Mrs. Andrews'? instructions to mo, the lawyer said, "are that I shall ? nothing that might impair her hus land's ability to provide for th rijildren." Mr. Donohue seemed to think th rrineipals to the triangle would finall rdjust things sometime to-day. Pierre P. Garvcn, Prosecutor of th fleas of Hudson County,, N. .T., s?i >csterday that if the second marriag of Andrews had taken place in Cor necticut it was out of the jurisdictio of the New Jersey authorities so fa as prosecution on a bigamy charge \vs concerned. Mr. Garven intimated that Andrew and Mrs. Andrews No. 2 might be foun io have violated some other law in In ing as man and wife in Jersey City. "I will prosecute them if they ha\ done so," he said. Plan Change in the Law Special Digpateh to The Tribunr HARTFORD. Conn., April 14.?Sei ate leaders said here to-day that Coi necticut's present bigamy law will I changed as a result of disclosures : the case of Herbert Thornton Andrew the New York stock broker. The phraseology of the present la will be altered so as to permit proseci tions for deliberate bigamy, it wi said. Few legislators here seeme aware to-day that under the presei wide-open law there can be no proseci tion for bigamous marriages unless tl persons live together as man and wi: within the boundaries of the state. Action on the bigamy law is expect* in a few weeks, according to Sena' leaders. Mother Is Grief-Stricken PITTSBURGH. April 14.?Mrs. Chris tine Tatnal!. mother of Esther Mari Andrews, the second living wife c Herbert Thornton Andrews, the Ne1 York broker, was grief-stricken to-da; She wept as she discussed the case i her home in Brighton Road. She declared that she would s'an by her daughter and said that "he home is here with me just as soon ? she wants it." "I can't believe." she said, "that m daughter knew Mr. Andrews had bee married. "It is all too terrible t think about. He was such a nice me and seemed so devoted to my daughte ft is the greatest shock of my life. expect my daughter and her husbat here .Saturday or Sunday and I am su: this will all be cleared up." Mrs. Tatnall said that when she m Andrews she understood he had nevi been married before.' Since their ma riage, she said, they had visited hi frequently. 'Forgot to Get Divorce^ Says Alleged Bigami Reich, 68 Year? Old, Blam Memory for Dual Marriag Wives Join in Prosecutu It is the firm conviction of Rose Reich, as he sits in his cWl and thir about his marital affairs, that t wrmen are more than a match in w for one man, especially if the man 1 made the mistake of being married both at the same time. ttos-coe, who sixty-eight and hobbles with a ca blames his memory more than wives for his present predicament. He honestly meant to get a divo from wife No. 1, he says, until he ha paralytic stroke and hie memory w to the dogs. Then the trifling mai of being legally free of one wife fore he took another slipped his m altogether. In fact, if it had not b that the two wives got toget through some stray letters he mi still be living in peace and comf first with the one at Easton, Pa., then with the other at 672 Ster Place, Brooklyn. His immediate r dence, however, is the Raymond St jail, Brooklyn, where he is held in 600 bail for the grand jury, followh hearing before Magistrate James Short in the Gates Avenue Court : terday morning. The two wives presented a lo\ ^ front in court?to each other, but ? to Roscoe. They ?re big and stn W Wife No. 1 was Miss Ella Schir " until Reich married her at Tamai J'a.. in 1878. She is the mother of four children. Wife No. 2 was ? Augusta Hublin, who worked in plant where Reich was a bookke? until he married her in 1918. Tl was a third wife, according to the ???ii ? ?.? i im. , , ? . . . . - . . mmml Why Guaranteed Mortgages? Bad investments of the funds of widows and orphans have formed a theme of many a novel and drama. It w^ regarded as only natural that a trustee would make a certain number of mistakes in his investments and a certain portion of trust funds would be lost. T< 'ay this is all changed. There is not the slightest excuse in the world for any trustee, widow or orphan losing one cent of trust funds. If the testator has directed their invest? ment in some particular security, or the trustee has put them in fluctuating securities, in the hope that they would go up in price, there maybe a loss, but not if the funds are put into the Guaranteed Mortgages sold by n?. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. 1 76 Broadway, New York City 175 Reinsert Street, Brooklyn fendant'e testimony?a Miss Carrie Mathers, of Baltimore, but this mar? riage, which took place in 1!M2, was later annulled. Mrs. Augusta Reich claimed that, her husband would take trips for three and four days at a time and that on one of thoso occasions she wrote a letter to him at Tama qua which fell into the hand of Mrs. Ella Reich. This started a lively correspondence, which ended in the laying of a trap for tbe shuffling footsteps of grandpapa 'Reich. Wife ? No, 1 came to town to conspire with i wife Xo. 2. On Wednesday night wife ! Xo. 2 took the old man to the movies. ' On the w*ay home a detective and wifo ! Xo. 1 sidled up behind the pair and i the whole party turned toward the i police station. Ever since the wives ! have ' been together at 672 Sterling 1 Place, comparing notes and giving each : other their private views on their hus i band in common. Husband Asked a Girl To Wed, Wife Charges - Mrs. Rose Manheimer in her affi i davit in the Supreme Court. Brooklyn, yesterday declared that Miss Ruth Braunstein, of 1804 Eighty-sixth Street. Brooklyn, and a "new automo? bile" had contributed to her domestic unhappiness. Mrs. Manheimer lives at n Marion Street, Brooklyn. She described her husband as "foreman of the mailing department of Collier's Weekly," When they went to the country last summer her husband, she said, used the name of Guggenheimer. wen the friendship of Miss Braunstein and proposed to her. representing himself to be a single man. He came home one night pale and excited, she said. Manheimer then stated, according to his wife's affidavit, that Tie nad been keeping company with the girl, that her parents had heard he was married, and that he then asked Mrs. Man? heimer to tell them he was not mar? ried. She agreed to do as requested. She later went to the Braunstein home, she said, and told Miss Braun stein's father that Manheimer was married. Her husband later asked for a di? vorce, fehe said, offering to assist her in getting a decree. She refused and he left her, according to her affidavit. Manheimer, in his answer, admits that he was friendly with the Braunstein girl, but said that his interest in her could not be considered more than "friendship." -? Kills Self in Home on Drive Man Leaves Warning Against Matches, and Turns On Gas William Bainbridge, forty-five years old, formerly associated with the sta? tionery firm of Henry Bainbridge & Co., 21? Washington Street, barricaded himself yesterday in the basement of his home, at 82," Riverside Drive, and turned on the gas. His body was found some time later by his wife. A note was found directing that no matches be used in a search for him. It is believed he feared an explosion might result. The police said that Bainbridge in? haled gas through a tube clenched be? tween his teeth. The basement door was barricaded with a shovel. The police were unable to learn the motive for his act. He retired from the stationery firm in June, 1920. Be j sides his wife, he is survived by two ' children. His death was investigated I by the police of the West 152d Street i station. GLOVESl 8, 12, 16-Button Mousquetaire French Kid, Su?de & Mocha For Women The World's Greatest Leather Stores 404 JFiftfa At.?New York?253 Broadway liomou? !45 Tremont Str??i London?88 ltegent Street . Ututo? Throughout the World V-i-,- > Charged With Cave-Man Tactics to Get Girl, 16 Man Accused of Threatening Child's Parents and Carrying Her Off to Own Home Julian Ross, of Eastmoadow, L. I., three miles cast of Hempstoad, was locked up yesterday in Nassau County jail in Mine?la charged with abduction. He is accused of stealing sixteon year-old Mary Savia from the home of her parents, a few hundred yards from his own, on April 1 and keeping her a prisoner in his home. The girl's father, Francisco, and 'her mother are said to have watched Ross take away their daughter, but to have been overawed by his threats to kill them if they in? terfered. They said nothing of the incident and Mary's attempts to communicate with the authorities were futile. Nevertheless, tho. alleged abduction be? came a subject of neighborhood gossip and came to tho attention of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Chil? dren, with the result that Preston B. Chapman, its county representative, rescued Mary and arrested Ross. Marine Unions Threaten Strike Over 20 P. C. Cut Delegates to Reply To-day to Terms Offered May 1, When Agreements Expire A shipping strike threatens to break May 1. On that dat? the working agree? ments in the industry expires. Boat Dwners have announced t h<?ir intention Df making wage reductions of from 20 to '?0 per cent. Leaders of marine worker's' unions asserted yesterday that the only terms on which they would ?emain at work were those of the agree? ment now in effect. Delegates of the Marine Engineers' Benevolent Association had an all-day session yesterday at the Hotel Marl borough, and will give their reply to? day to the terms offered by the. Amer? ican Steamship Owners' Association. Thomas B. Healey, chairman of the Atlantic and Gulf conference! of the engineers' union, said that the unions ivould accept no reductions whatever nul that if the owners put their pro aosed scale into effect they would be 'calling a strike themselves." sub-committee Finishes Wool Tariff Schedule; Silk Next From The Tribune's Washing ton Bureau WASHINGTON, April 14.?The sub :ommittee of the House Committee on Ways and Means dealing with the wool schedule of ths permanent tariff bill) iias practically completed its work, and j A'ill begin next week the consideration : of the silk schedule. It is understood that carpet wools tvere the last to be agreed upon, the j rates to be four cents a pound for creasy No. ;3, eight cents a pound for j washed and twelve cents for scoured. It was said that these rates might be shaded one cent more in view of the fact that so much of this wool is im? ported from abroad, and there seems to be no one particularly interested in these provisions. iron Clad Rules I For The Dairy Farm, II llj before we accept a farmersif If milk.he must put into practise SI llj a Code of Regulations II I These demand healthy cows, II ?'sanitary utensilsJight.airy, SI Il dean barns, and many other II I?provisions which make possibleII lithe production of high ?Sradell IE milk. This ?spart of Borderisfl IE Grade A Milk Service. ff / BORDENS M FarmVroducis Cojnc. ff Cortlandtr961> mm Mm) Mid M II Uli I MIIIMI ? IIBII?Mllfcll !? ? !?I I I I Pfa,^l^P3Tf^??/fJ Boy Drunk Night Of Kotkov Murder; Guiltless, He Says Peter Nnnziata, 17, Tes? tifies He Joined Others to "Trim Up Some Fel? lows" and Became 111 Seventeen-year-old Peter Nunziata, of 14 Havcmoyor Street, Brooklyn, who is charged with participating in the hold-up and murder of Professor Wil? fred Kotkov at Woodhaven the night of February 23, testified yesterday in hia ? own defertso in the County Court at : Long Island City before Judge Hum ' phrey. He told of his actions on the night of the murder. He said that he called at i the poolroom of an uncle in Woodhaven and there met Joseph Alfano, twenty two years old, of .12 Havemoyer Street, ; Brooklyn. Later, he declared, a man named Verona entered and invited them to go out with him and "trim up some fellows." They went. In another poolroom, Nunziata testified, they met a man j named Cassc?sa, and the four boarded ! an elevated train. While on the train j Nunziata becamo drunk. It. was the ! first whisky ho had ever taken, he Baid. Later, according to his testimony, i they got off at a station, the name of which he did not know, and he remained in the waiting room with Alfano, ho ? said. The other two men disappeared. Nunziata said that when they started to leave they were stopped at the bot? tom of the station stairs by a police ? man, who arrested them. At the police station, he said, they wore forced to sign papera after being beaten with a rubber hose. Nunziata concluded his testimony with the statement that he was indicted without a hearing. 'Six character witnesses testified for him. Mrs. Angelina Peluso, of 14 Have myor Street, Brooklyn, told of seeing Verona, on the evening of February 23, bending a stick or some dark ob? ject similar to the bar with which the police said that Professor Kotkov was killed. She could not Identify the bar in court. The murder victim was professor of philosophy at tho Jewish Theological Seminary. 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Made with Domino Syrup, it has in it the de? licious flavor of sweet sugar cane. ?omino Syrup is a welcome spread for bread and biscuits. You never grow tired of its appetizing taste. And Domino Syrup is good for you?a real body-building food. There's a big, happy family which makes Domino Syrup ?a family numbering over ten thousand members. They are constantly working to keep the good name Domino the highest standard of quality. American Sugar Refining Company "Sweeten it with Domino y t Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown, Golden Syrup. Next Sunday's New $0tl( S?r??mne Full of G< ?!?!? Stuff You will enjoy next Sunday's New York Tribune. It will be full of the *ind of reading you like. A great staff of sporting writers will cover the athletic activities of the budding season fully, authoritatively and en? tertainingly. The news will be presented as it should be?short, full of "meat," but without the "side lights" which so often grow monotonous and tiresome. The special features have been very carefully chosen Bright, entertaining and informative. Order your copy of the Sunday New York Tribune right now. Pieces-of- eight and Other Pirate Loot Found Lying Loose by Fishermen Surprised to learn that old Spanish gold, buried treasures of the bold buccaneers of the Spanish Main are to be found in the beds of the rivers and creeks on the islands in the Caribbean Sea? So was the man who recently found some "pieces-of-eight" while fishing for bait Read about it in Sunday's New York Tribune. Will Crawford's illustration alone is worth the price of the paper?and the story is as good. That Country Home of Yours You "city fellers" who , dream about the time when you can get out of a "flat," ''apartment" or "suite," as you choose to term your "home," and get out into a suburb where you have a chance to become something more than a iuere "strap? hanger"?feast your eyes upon this home. Next Sunday's New York Tribune will tell you all about it; give you floor plans, cost 'n everything. It will probably make you dissatisfied with the way you live now? but it will give you a good "hunch" as to how you can live. We Ask You How's Your Business? A firsthand survey of business conditions in the principal cities of the United States, based on data sup? plied by the Chambers of Commerce and banks, will be an important feature in the Financial Section of next Sunday's Neto York Tribune. A Complete Story The Eclipse Handicap A thrilling racetrack story by Frank Condon. The Opening of the Coney Island Cycle Path The "ask Dad he knows" class of folks will remember this important event, which took place twenty-six years ago. The oldtimer was a youngster then, and was there on his Columbia or Rambler or Cleveland or Steams or Phoenix or some "'wheel." The illustrations ? photographs taken at the time, are funny; the story is good. The Big Stick In Japan Perhaps you didn't know that baser ball is rapidly superseding wrestling as the national sport of Japan, and that the big stick swats the pill oftener than the shoulders hit the mat. A well written, well illustrated story in next Sunday's New York Tribune will give you some inter? esting information on this subject. 'Confessions of a Dime Novelist An inventor of blood and thunder literature tells us how and where the heroes of our boyhood "hap? pened." They were real enough to ua when we were kids?and some of us are still kids enough to be interested in some hitherto unwritten history of those brave "deteckatif s" and double dyed "villuns." The Pastry Invasion Of New York City French and Danish pastry has ap? parently captured New York. Per? haps the shops selling these goodies cater to the erstwhile patron of the free lunch of "the good old days." Anyway, there is a good story, wel. told, in next Sunday's New York Tribune. Overlooked by All Press Agents The real Daddy of the movies has never been press-agented before. Here is a story about the man who invented the machine that gets your money?two bits at a time. You will be surprised and en? lightened by reading this story? illustrated. Army and Navy Bombing Tests An illustrated article, giving full details of the plans for the army and navy bombing tests, which are to be held in June. These tests are to determine whether or not the airplanes can conquer the dreadnought. A feature of the Editorial Section of the Sunday New York Tribune. Order Your Sunday New York Tribune Now