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Show iionoric TROUBLE Smlil to IlnTf llrrii Itrousht Aboat by n t'nlllrr.ln.LMW. isnw Vonif, Nov. 17. Miss Minnie Palmer Is iu lij sterlcs at the Aberdeen House. John H. Rogers, her husband, Is tonight Wrap el u, snugly inbedclothliigut the Westminster West-minster House, anathematUIng all things that be and ate to come That patty little suite of rooms in the big Grammercy Aiartmeut House, where Minnie aud John have lived for month like faUev turtle doves lu cotton batting nests, is deserted, the lights are ut out, the ateam heat U turned off aud all this Is because ot a niutlier-ln-lart These two merry-makers-, who have K-en regarded fcr ehthl loug and eventful years as emblems auo epltoruis ot domestic 1)1 u, have seirated. Perhaps the levcrauce has not come to lal' but the fact remains re-mains that Miss Palmer ha flown to the protecting anus of her mother and U la lotterks, has employed l-oth n lawyer and a i'hjElcIan, mid Mr. liogers is saying bad things n'jjut Mr?. Sterns, bis mother-in-law. The whole sad tale came about lu this way. When Miss Palmer married mar-ried DrI Rogers, away lac in 1S52, and, as h said last night, uiadehtru the happltst man who ever saw tin light, the Informed him, according to Mr. Rogers, that her father wn-dea'J. wn-dea'J. One day, alout two weeks ago. Mr. Rogers said tonight, w hllo he was about town, he happened to be introtluctd to a kill, good-looking man, wlio-jo name was given it, liim as Palmer. "Ah, yes." si! 1 Rogersattho lr-troductioii. lr-troductioii. "my wife's name is Palmer, Pal-mer, you kuow, Minnie Palmer." Then with a Jocularity liedldu'i feel a moment Inter, he added, "nt rt-liilou, I suppose.'' "Uni'ou-erveu the getilleman, "I lelieve 1ih is ray daughter." |