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Show I tlve of Geneva and has lived abroa ' most of her life. 0a j She said that she had not sn nor I husband elnco 1903, nor had he SoQ the chlldrcu since that time. ! "1 am practically penniless," Pho t raid, "and my children are in I'ariB ' alone and without funds, living on ttio 1 kindness of friends. In a few days l I shall be without a sou. and 1 have roa- ! eon to believe that my husbanl ca-Joys ca-Joys a fortune or more than hair a million dollars. He never acquaint mo with the particulars ot his fortune, for-tune, but I can estimate It by the tact that he spent on mo and bhnsr-lf dQr. j ing our married life an Income ol bv 1 tween $20,000 and $25.000, annually.- i MRS. DENSMORE GRANTED DIVORCE WITH ALIMONY New York. March 11. Arter a brlet hearing, a decrco In favor of Mrs. Alice V. Densmore In her action for a separation rrom her husband. Darsa James Densmore, son or James Dons-more, Dons-more, Inventor or a typewriter by that name, wa3 signed yesterday by Supreme Court Justice Gk-grlch. Tho suit was uncontested and the court Indicated that he would allow the plaintiff alimony at tho rate of $5,000 a year. Mr. Densmore is tald to bo at present in Oklahoma. He has a substantial interest In the Densmore and Remington Typewriter companies and in other manufacturing concerns. Mrs. Densmore testified that &he and her husband were married In Geneva, I Switzerland, In 1891. They have two daughters. Mrs. Densmore Is a ca- |