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Tale of Two Wives Told in Court by Mrs. Andrews No. 1 Original Spouse of Broad Street Broker Describes Entry of Second One in Her Suit for a Divorce Mrs. Maud Augusta Andrews took, the witness stand yesterday in her di? vorce suit against Herbert Thornton Andrews at Jersey City before Advi? sory Master in Chancery John M. En right in the Chancery Court, 75 Mont? gomery Street. Andrews it is alleged, married Miss Esther M. Tatnall in Greenwich, Conn., on January 26 last, and took her to live with him in the apartment occu? pied by Mrs. Maud Augusta Andrews at 2,850 Hudson Boulevard, Jersey City. \ He is the principal member of the brokerage $rru of II. T. Andrews _ Co., 20 Broad Street, Manhattan. An exposure of the situation was made last April, following which Andrews 4pid Esther Tatnall left the apartment. ^frs. Andrews told of her marriage L. Andrews in Portland, Me., June 17, ^r!2, by the Rev. James F. Albion, whe said she and Andrews lived to Sjjfor nine years, foyr at their honte, 1 Stuyvesant Avenue, and five at the Vudson Bouievard address. Mrs. An ?vews said there were two children, .Tohn Andrews, eight years old, and Harley, six. She charged her husband w*ith misconduct, naming Esther Tat? nall, on April 12 last, in the Hudson Boulevard apartment. The woman testified that Esther Tat? nall was brought to the apartment twice by Andrews before it was an? nounced that she was to live there. Mrs. Andrews said she had tried to in? duce her husband to take Miss Tat? nall away, but without aail. He told her he had married the young woman in Greenwich. Conn. '.'After that," said Mrs. Andrews, "my husband showed me no affection. He would not let me kiss him or sit on the couch beside him." Corroborative testimony was given by Helen Fraser, colored, employed as maid. Dr. D. J. Donohue, five years physician to the Andrews family, Julius Lloyd, janitor of the apartment building, and Mrs. Lloyd were wit? nesses. Lloyd said he ordered Andrews to take Mrs. Andrews No. 2 away or he would notify the authorities. Andrews was not present in court nor was he represented by counsel. Girl98 Charge Brings Old Bigamy Sentence to Light Accuses Salesman of Assault on Eve of Their Marriage; Brooklyn Woman Also Held Two alleged bigamists were ar? raigned in this city yesterday. James K. Mclntyre, thirty-six years old, a salesman, of the Hotel De France, 142 West Forty-ninth Street, was arraigned in West Side court on complaint of Miss Ellen Roberson, twenty-six years old, also a guest in the hotel, who charged him with as? sault. The young woman told Magistrate Tobias that Mclntye had promised to marry her and that the wedding was set for last Monday. Later, she said, they agreed to postpone it until next Monday. When Mclntyre was arraigned the police submitted records showing that he had been convicted of bigamy and that on December 7, 1915, he was con? victed of petty larceny under the name of Charles Earle and was sentenced to ninety days. He was returned from Blackwell's Island, the records show, to stand t.ia? on a charge of bigamy, for which he was sentenced to serve from two years and two months to four years and four months. The other alleged bigamist is Mrs. Gertrude Downs O'Rourke, twenty one years old, of 432 Eighteenth Street, Brooklyn. She was held in $1,000 bail ir. the Fifth Avenue court on a charge of bigamy preferred by her first hus? band, William Downs, of 74 Fourteenth Street. Downs said she left him last January and shortly afterward was married to William O'Rourke, a motor man. Voluntary Pay Cut of 10 P. C For Rock Island Officials A voluntary reduction of 10 per cent in salaries of executive officers of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Rail? way waa announced here yesterday. James E. Coleraan, president of the load, said the officers had recommended the reduction and that the board of directors had approved it. Redactions in the pay of oupervisory officers to "meet the changed con? ditions" were ordered by the board. <rTht Good Maxwell In view of its new and greater goodness, and its daily savings, there is literally no question that the good Maxwell offers the most in the way of down? right dollars-and-cents value MAXWELL DISTRIBUTING CORPORATION 1808 BROADWAY, Corner 50th Street TELEPHONE CIRCLE 5550 Bronx Branch: 178th STREET AND GRAND CONCOURSE Telephone Tremont 4914 OPEN EVENINGS Pastor Lets Wife Weep on Neck, Then Bids Her Keep on Eloping MONTICELLO. N. Y? July 21.?Mrs. ; Emily Duroa nnd Early Van Nooy, the ! elopers who didn't elope, but just went 'away together, came back to-day to seek ! the pardon of Mrs. Duron's husband, the ! Row ClA?k Durea, loader of the "Holy i Rollers. The preacher hadn't ordered any fatted calf prepared, and it .was the cooleat of welcomes that he ex? tended to his returned wife. Thanks to the fact that he had sold his house and furniture soon after she departed with another woman's hus? band, Mr. Durea was able to refuse to take her back without, violating the pacifistie doctrines of his sect. As soon as she had finished weeping on his shoulder and begging him t? take her back for the sake of their children Mr. Durea wiped the moisture from his iapel and-^aid: . "I'm sorry, I do not doubt that you are repentant, but I have sold my house I and furnishings. I have no place to ! keep you and no money." "You don't moan that you refuse to take me back!" cried Mrs. Durea aghast, "I haven't a friend left in the world, j I went to my mother's house in Brook lyn, and she refused to tako mo in. Sho said I had"? disgraced here. 1 haven't a friend .left in the world. Won't you please tako me back?" "You have him," suggested Mr. Durea with a wave of his hand toward Van Nooy, whom he had ignored previously. "Yen, I guc.sfi I still have him," said Mrs. Durea uncertainly. "I suppose he is tho only one who will stand by me." She climbed back into tho automobile with Van Nooy and her twolve-yeaV-old daughter, Gladys, who has accompanied the couple on their travels. Durea ad? vanced to the automobile, patted his wife's shoulder, kis?ed his daughter and waved goodby. To-night they drove into Rutherford, N. J., where their landlord ejected them a few days ago because of tho notoriety their escapade brought upon his house? hold. Mrs. Durea collected some clothes ?he had left behind in her haste to get. back to her husband. Van Nooy got some tools he had left at his place of employment, and they drove away without saying where they intended to elope to this time. Van Nooy made no attempt to see Ids wife while they were in Monticello. She has started divorce proceedings. Mrs. Hemming to Demand Share of, Husband's Estate Action to Establish Status as Widow, Says Attorney; Suffolk Sheriff Pushes In? quiry in Broker's Slaying Although the will of Henry G, Hem? ming left all his possessions to his son, John G. Hemming, Mrs. Helen Henderson Hemming, widow of the murdered broker, will demand a share in the estate, according to her attorney, Norman W. Kerngood, of this city. When the will was filed for probate last Tuesday it was reported that Mrs. Hemming would not make a contest, but the statement in the petition refer? ring to her as "the alleged widow" is said to have caused her to desire to establish her legal status in court. Mr. Kerngood declared that Mrs. Hemming's marriage to the broker was legal, inasmuch as it tool; place more than five years after the disappearance of her second husband, Richard V. Thorne. Sheriff John F. Kelly, of Suffolk County, yesterday went ahead with his independent investigation into the murder of Hemming, who was shot and killed by Frank Eberhardt, caretaker of Mrs. Hemming's home on Duck Island, near Northport, L. I. Sheriff Kelly said he desired to question Mrs. Hemming on points raised in the stat ments he received Wednesday from young Hemming, the latter's wife and Joseph Schmidt, chauffeur of the auto? mobile in which the Hemmings went to Duck Island on the night of the shooting. Principal of the conflicting state? ments which Sheriff Kelly said he wished to clear up were those of Mrs. Hemming and her daughter Helen. Mrs. Hemming, he said, testified at the inquest that she had not telephoned to Eberhardt, instructing him not to per? mit her husband to enter the house, whereas, the Sheriff declared* the daughter testified Eberhardt had re? ceived a telephone message from her mother. Sheriff Kelly also called attention to the testimony of the chauffeur, Which was at variance, he said, with Mrs. Hemming's statement that she had at? tempted to raise her husband and shield him after the first shot was fired. "I am also interested in ascertaining where the gun used by Eberhardt came from," said Sheriff Kelly. "It was a brand-new weapon and had never been used before 'Eberhardt fired at Hemming." Records of the County Clerk's office revealed yesterday that judgment for $540.20 was entered in the Fifth Dis? trict Municipal Court on May 15 last in favor of Henry G. Hemming and against Mrs. Helen Henderson. Ac? cording to the attorney who handled the suit for the broker the amount represented loans made by Hemming to Mrs. Henderson prior to their mar? riage, which took place May 31. a I ~ Asks $5,000,000 Share Of Trade Stamp Gains Shelley Hutch in son Continues Drawn-Out Litigation by Be? ginning a New Action TRENTON, N. J., July 21.--Shel!y B. Hutchinson, of Ypsilanti, Mich., to-day renewed in the United States District Court here part of his litigation of three years with stockholders of the Sper?y & Hutchinson Company, trading stamp concern. The late Thomas A. Sperry and Hutchinson were partners. Hutchin? son alleged, originally that Sperry de? frauded him of part of his shares, and that these, with shares bought by Wil? liam M. Sperry, brother of Thomas, gave the latter control of the concern. In his present bill of complaint Hutch? inson alleges that he is entitled to $5,000,000 because of profits obtained by the brothers from dividends which should have been declared, but which were secretly and irregularly paid in addition to regular dividends. Thomas A. Sperry died in September, 1913, and his will was proven in a New Jersey court. Hutchinson's bill of complaint al? leges further that the books of the concern were irregularly kept and that there was a secret trustee's fund for the purpose of keeping the true earn? ings of the company hidden from all but those on the inside. Hutchinson carried his prior suit to the United States Supreme Court and was defeated. He asserts in his pres? ent bill that there was no previous ad? judication to prevent the success of the present suit. The bill recites that Hutchinson is about to file suit in the Federal Court for a partnership accounting. His at? torneys are William M. Atkinson, of Hoboken and Elizabeth, and Barnes & Chievers & Halstead, of New York. ?' -' Two Girls Marry to End Charges of Vagrancy Then Court Says It *Wasn'1 Necessary, for He Would Have Freed Them, Anyhow Annie Schulman, of 167 Norfolk Street, and Freda Simon, of 15 Easi 109th Street, *who were charged wit! vagrancy because they were found in f bungalow at Coney Island with two mer at 2 a. m., July 4, informed Magistrate Dodd in the Adams Street police court Brooklyn, yesterday that each ha? marired one of the men. Magistrate Dodd congratulated th? couples, and then remarked as h? scanned a memorandum left by hi predecessor, Magistrate Walsh, wh? heard the case in the first instance "The marriages were not necessary fo the discharge of you young women, how ever, as I see by this memorandum tha Magistrate Walsh already had decide to release you." Annie is married to Max Skulnick, o 225 Eldridge Street, and Freda, to Sid nev Seltzer, of 623 Sixth Street. Wife Accuses Butterfly Girl In Divorce Suit (Continued (rom pus? ont) ! enr?o La Barre, including oostly gifts, I clothing, spending money, uuto rides, ' trips and amusements. Besides maintaining-"Butterfly" and | her mother at the Hotel Woodward, i Mrs. Shaw declaren, her husband paid | the expenses for the upkeep of a homo ?for them at 45 Mison Streat, Sommer ville, Muss. Mrs. Shaw says that the ?only employment Miss La Bnrre has | | bad since'she ha? known the defendant | was a short engagement at the Ziegfeld | Follies. She includes the following ! letter to her husband, with her sup-' porting affidavit, in addition to a list I of weekly bills alleged to have been paid by Mr. Shaw: "My darling sweetheart: It seems '. that at these times when my greatest trials and tribulations come you ase never near me to comfort, cheer, or help me. Just to think to have a sweetheart and to be engaged to b$ I married and at a time like this nofcl to even be able to reach him by tele- j phone or wire. Mamma nnd I just re? ceived word that Aunt Jessie is to un? dergo a serious operation on Tuesday morning, it's just a sort of ehunce and we want to he near her while we can ! give her every encouragement, it would be so sweet of you if you would write her some sort of cheery note and ! mamma will call at the house and bring it to her at (he hospital. She has grown so fond of you and always writes so sweetly of you for she, too, feels confidence in you and says she is sure how happy we will be. Please <!o this, dearest. Much love, dearest, from your loving ljttle sweetheart, Modrienne Butterfly. You won't be able to reach me, but I'll wire or 'phone you," Perjury Charge Made Mr. Shaw is charged with deliberate perjury by his wife by alleging that she ever condoned or forgave the mis? conduct she charges. Mrs. Shaw also submits a copy of a certificate issued April 3, 1901, stating that her decree nisi, won against William M. Jordan j in Middlesex County, Mass., is "to be- j come absolute after the expiration of six months from the entry thereof unless the court has for sufficient cause othlyWif?e ordered." Mrs. Shaw says that she is destitute and that she has not a dollar in the world, and declares that she has not received any money from her husband since March 10, 1921, and she has been forced to move from her apartment at 25.r)$Ve3t 108th Street. Mr. Shaw, she states, has refused to ! permit her to occupy "The Farm" in | North Salem, Westchester County, i which they occupied for four years when not living in town. She has debts amounting to $8,000 and is in need of medical care, which, she says, she cannot obtain because of her financial cpndition. Mr. Shaw, according to the affidavit, occupies an expensive apart? ment at 2 West Sixty-seventh Street. Mary Harrigan, a chambermaid at the Woodward, also made an affidavit which accompanied that of Mrs. Shaw's. She submitted another affidavit, w"hich was filed yesterday, in which -she says that the firtt affidavit wag so drawn as to cast reflections upon Philip M. Shaw ! and Madrienne La Barre. Her affi? davit yesterday declares that Mr. Shaw was a frequent caller at the apartment of Madrienne La Barre and her mother in the hotel, but at no time were Mr. Shaw and Miss La Barre alone. She admits that she heard Mr. Shaw call Miss La Barre "sweetheart," but says that Mrs. La Barre also called . her "sweetheart," which seemed to be a pet T.;ime. Miss Harrigan says she saw the d?fendent kiss Miss La Barre, but that he also k.f-sed her mother. Robert A. Fowler, an assistant p??r ter in the hotel, in an affidavit accom? panying Mrs. Shaw's papers, says that j Used and Rebuilt Automobiles For Sale by New Gar Dealers DRASTIC REDUCTIONS in Reconditioned and Newly Painted Stutz Used Cars Wm. Parkinson Motor Sales Co., Inc., Distributors for Th? Famous Stutz Cars. Used Car Dept. 1062 Broadway. Phone Circle 8374. LIBERTY AND PREMIER Rebuilt, Repainted, Guaranteed at New Liberty Touring-, royal blue.$1,250 Liberty Sport-Rolls Royce, blue.1,200 Liberty Touring, royal blue. 850 Premier ??crian, wire wheel?. 3,500 Premier 4 Pass., dark blue. 1,750 A. ?G. KAUFMAN MOTOR CAR CORP. 1778 Broadway. Open Kvenine?. Circle 569S. "^?yE continually receive in part payment for new auto? mobiles, used cars which we over? haul, rebuild, repaint and guar? antee in every respect. These used cars are offered you at prices that assure you good, substantial value. F. ?W. WRIGHT, Inc. 225 W. 57th St. Tel. Circle 43+0 Bltlyn.: 1432 Bedford Ave. Prospect 0037. ?DNTJSCAL BARGAINS IN DODGE BROTHERS RECONDlTlONKll AND RKPAINTED USED CARS Stratton Bliss Company Dodge Brothers, Dealer? 109 W. 64 th St. Columbus 7100 Kighth Floor National and Scripps Booth Naliena! Suburban cvorhanled and repainted $1900 National Taurin? overhauled trid repainted 850 National Cabriolet overhauled; pa'nt taod I SAO Scripps Booth Touring overhauled and rapalnted 1025 Scripps Booth Touring overhauled and repainted 800 Scripps Booth Coupe overhauled and repainted 1200 POERTNER MOTOR CAR CO., Inc. 1759 Broadway Re-built Cara 1918, t cyl., sedan, 6-pass.$750 1920, 6 cyl., r>-paas.$800 1920, 8 cyl., 7-pa.'?.$1,150 1920, ? cyl., 4-pa.us. coupe.$1,230 Pacemaker. 1920, 8 cyl., 4-pass.$1,280 OLDSMOBII.K CO. Olf N. Y. Cutting Larson Co., Inc. Used Car l'-evartment 221 West 58th St. Tel. Col. 9080. For good Valu?es in U.sed and Rebuilt Cars watch this column Monday Wednesday-Friday. $200 CASH BUYS Our used car sales policy enables you to select your choice from our $150,000 stock of used cars, paying 20% down and the balance in 16 equal monthly installments. Deferred payments carry straight 6% interest. No arbitrary, so-called brok? erage or financing charges. $1,000 Car?$200 Cash 1,500 Car? 300 Cash 2,000 Car? 400 Cash Used cars accepted as initial payment on higher priced cars. Complete assortment of open and closed body models, including approximately 50 different makes. Lexingtons specially recommended because they carry our new car service and Guarantee. LEXINGTON MOTOR CO. of N. Y. NEW YORK BROOKLYN B'way, Cor. 61st. Bedford Ave., Cor. Eastern P'way on one occasion Ha, saw Simw in Mi I liliirt sleeve." with his shoe?* off and the girl in a kimono. At Mr. Shaw's office yesterday his brother met newspaper men, but de? clared that the plaintiff in the dlyorco action was out of towjj, and could not ue n hi'iu'u j-___-,-,? Collie Takes His Master's Side in Family Quarrel ?,_?...?. ?..-.???._?. Policeman, Called by Janitor's Wife, Has to Fight for Life und I? Severely Bitten Alexander Ottohoeff. janitor or 22 ? East Fifty-third Street, owns a collie Which resents any interference in the domestic affairs of his master, an i when Mrs. Ottohoeff entered the base? ment with Patrolman Joseph A. Tonip kins last night, after a quarrel with her husband) the collio leaped at the patrolman. The attack was so sudden that Tomp kins hud no time to fell the dog with his nightstick. He fended off the first rush, which aimed at his throat, and thereafter the strvtgglq with the dog was at such close ?varters that, his nightstick was useless He did not draw his revolver for (our that he might shoot Ottohoeff or his wife. Severn! times the patrolman Hurled the lunging dog to the floor, but euch time* the animal was on its feet and upon him before he could raise his nightstick. Finally the collie inflicted a Cashing bite on the patrolman's right thigh, and as it retired, snarling, to re? new the attack Ottohoeff seized it and snapped a leash in its collar, Tompkins was taken to Flower Hos? pital, where his wound was cauterized, and then reported sick at the East Fifty-first Street poiice station and was ordered home. The Department of Health was notified and will examine the dog. The quarrel between the Ottohoeffs was forgotten in the excite menc and was not renewed. ?. Held on Arson Charge Restaurant Owners Accused of Burning Church Building Ignatz Yoskowitz, alias Jack Wend, of 316 Eist Ninety-second Street, Man? hattan, nnd Harry Gross, 903 Freeman Street, the Bronx, were arraigned yes? terday in the Long-Tsland City Police Court charged with argon. The com? plainant was Assistant Fire Marshal Abraham Flamm. They were charged with complicity in the firing of the old church building at Hunter's Point, which was burned to the ground last Tuesday morning. The accused men pleaded not guilty and were held in $10,000 bail for examination. Yoskowitz and Gross owned a res? taurant in the old frame building, the basement having been leased to them. The main floor was occupied by a mo? tion picture theater. Fire was dis? covered in the building after midnight. The arrests followed three days' in? vestigation by Fire Marshal Brophy. ? ? ?-' Dies of 3-Year Grief for Son Body of Slain Newark Soldier to Lie Beside Mother's A mother's grief, rekindled after three years by the knowledge that the body of her son Francis, who died fighting overseas, was to arrive home soon, caused the death yesterday of Mrs. Margaret Larken, sixty-four years old, of Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange, N. J. The soldier's bodV will be received in time for a dounle funeral Monday. Mrs. Larken was found dead by her daughter, Mrs. Margaret Flynn, with whom she made her home. Francis Larken, who served in Com? pany G, 312th Infantry, 78th Division, was killed in action on the St. Mihiel front on September 2, 1918. The loss of her son was a bitter blow to Mrs. Larken. but it was thought that if the body were brought home the sorrow would be somewhat alleviated. "No Blood on My Haiid?9"Mrs. Brooks Tells Horton Jury Broker's Wife Denies Saying 4She Would Get the Guy That Killed the Kid'; Let? ter to Laredch Introduced Mrs. Lucille B, Brooks, wife of a ! Chicago in nil ranee broker, was rc ! called yesterday as a witness in the : trial of Nicholas Laresch, who is in- j dieted Cot the murder of Police Lieu- ' I tenant Floyd Horton. Sha won quca- ? ' tioned before Judge Thomas C. 'i'. Cain ana a jury for more than two houn;. Th? only other witness examined yes? terday wag John Cavanaugh, superin? tendent ?if ar. ?parturient house at 540 West M?d Street, where Mrs. Brooks I lived and in front of which tho shootai,; I took place. During her cross-examination by | Bernard J. .Sandier, counsel for the ! defense, Mrs- Brooks Was asked to look ' at her hands to seo if tho blood of I Joseph Laresch, who was killed in u I pistol duel with Lieutenant Horton, was i not still on them. She calmly answered j that it was no*K Mrs. Brooks was asked ! to show the members of the jury the j scar on her upper arm which was left by a bullet wound received the night of the shooting. She walked in front of the jury box displaying the scar ? and talking to the jurors. Judge Grain i told her to show her arm and not to ? converse with them. A letter sent to Nicholas Laresch, in the Tombs, by Mrs. Brooks was intro? duced in evidence. The letter told him I to "pray to God" and that "He will ' help you." She also wrote that she felt ! sorry for Mr. B., but felt that he would j be with her to the end, as he knew her to be good at heart. Mrs. Brooks said she did not recal! going to the homo of Lareach's sister ?in Washington Street and declaring while waying a revolver that she "would get the guy that killed the kid." She said that such a thin?; never took place. She also denied saying that she would kill herself and end it all. Mrs. Brooks testified that she did not know who furnished the bail for John Cavanaugh, who was held as a material witness. Cavanaugh was with | the Laresch brothers on December 16, j before the shooting of Horton. Cavanaugh denied any knowledge of a previous attempt to beat up Tyler Hairston, the colored elevator opera? tor, who Mrs. Brooks said had at? tempted to assault her. Cavanaugh said that he had served a term in the penitentiary for carrying a club. The case will be resumed on Monday. -a? Anti-Ku-Klux Klah Bill Recommended in Texas Wave of Tar and Feather Par? ties Spurs Legislators to Ask Governor to Act AUSTIN, Tex., July 21.?A resolution requesting that a bill to prescribe pen-* alties for persons "disguising them? selves and violating the laws of the state by inflicting punishment, upon persons against whom no legal com? plaint had been filed" be submitted to the Texas Legislature, was presented to Governor Neff to-day by Representative Patman. It bore the signatures of forty-nine state representatives. The bill, Mr. Patman said, was aimed at the Ku-Klux Klan. Mr. Patman said he also showed the Governor what was purported to be an application blank for membership in the "invisible empire, Knights of the Ku-Klux Klan." Beyond remarking that the requirements of the applica? tion "were more stringent" than he had thought, the Governor was non Prince Albert is sold in toppy red bags, tidy red tins, handsome pound and half pound tin hu? midors and in the pound crystal glass humidor with sponge moistener top that keeps the to? bacco in such perfect condition. Buy a pipe Get the joy We print it right here that if you don't know the "feel" and the friendship of a joy'us jimmy pipe?GO GET ONE! And?get some Prince Albert and bang a howdy-do on the big smoke-gong! For, Prince Albert's quality ?flavor?coolness?fragrance ?is in a class of its own ! You never tasted such tobacco! Why?figure out what it alone means to your tongue Copyright 1921 by Jt. J- Reynolds Tobacco Co. Wiastoa-Saleait N. C P. A. s due you! and temper when we tell you that Prince Albert can't bite, can't parch! Our exclusive patented process fixes that! Prince Albert is a revelation in a makin's cigarette! My, but how that delightful flavor makes a dent! And, how it does answer that hankering! Prince Albert rolls easy and jtays put because it is crimp cut. And, say?oh, go on and get the papers or a pipe! Do it right now ! the national joy smoke committal, according to Representative ! Patmnii. ; The petition to Governor Neff was i.rii'.'inatcd as a result of activities of | ]>': ked bands, which during the past few month? have flogged or tarred and | feathered near';/ a score of persons in i the state. Overnight reports added other vic? tims to the alr'M'iy- long lint, At : Lufiin late ye? tard ay Sherwood Vinson ; whs ' treated to a coat of tar and feather?, less than twenty-four hours after Ben Wiley h;tH received similar ! treatment there. Belated reports from i Bay City ?aid W. I. Hoopingaraer, former bank cashier, -.vis tarred and feathered Saturday nfghl and forced to io'ivi' the town. J. G. Saxe Corr-ects Ar?cfe Which Named Him as Caimee) John Godfrey Saxe yesterday w rected a statement appearing in <r?* Tribune one day last week saying that in the recent aldermanic apport'onn,?". case he had appeared *?s counsel f6" the Republican par.;.. As a matter ? fact the appearances were the Attora General, ?ho Corporation Counsel aB' Leonard J. Obrrmeyer for the Renti, Lean party and Senator Saxe t.J George W. Oh-any for the Democrat party. -* CE?COCnOOOCODOOOOI3OOOOOOCiOO0OOOOQOerOeOeOOOOOOCHHH| BENJAMIN FRANKLIN says : "He who multiplies Riches multiplied Cafes. " Many Travelers Forget Their Securities While you are away, if bonds are called or stockholders' privileges announced, considerable loss may result to you. We undertake, for a small fee, to keep you informed, to, cut and remit coupons, and see to the safe-keeping of securities entrusted to us. THE BANK OF AMERICA ESTABLISHED 1812 Manhattan and Brooklyn ?KMHsoafiHaaooasoQecHaaeacr^^ The Toughest Varnish You Ever Trod Upon MAR-NOT FLOOR VARNISH is both tough and beautiful. It stands an unbe? lievable amount of punishment without showing wear. And you needn't worry about radiators or rain through the win? dow. Mar-Not doesn't mar from water. Also it beautifies hardwood grain with a finish that looks deep and rich with light effects. A?k your Shejwin-Williams dealer for Mar-Not. tfuy from yuur nearest dealer. Watch oar lists for his address. NEW YORK, 116 West 32nd St., phone Chaise? 350? BROOKLYN, 102 Flatbnsb Ave., phon? Sterling 1756 BRONX, 359 East 149th S?:., phare Me?rose ?011 WHOLESALE DEPT., 116 West 32 St, ? WAREHOUSE, 52 Thomf*on St. ?Tu i ma un ~n ~riPr"i'ii'i"ii i in 11 m? Tiimn??mi n_!!<>??????? "iii_aiMW?Ti<L^?ii^?J?SiB_B?