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- Q104847533-2a17ea38-4d26-cf3c-d229-51d46afdcb4b rank NormalRank @default.
- Q104847533-2a17ea38-4d26-cf3c-d229-51d46afdcb4b type BestRank @default.
- Q104847533-2a17ea38-4d26-cf3c-d229-51d46afdcb4b type Statement @default.
- Q104847533-2a17ea38-4d26-cf3c-d229-51d46afdcb4b P7081 "The highly novel situation of a husband being a co-respondent in a divorce suit he has brought against his wife falls to the lot of Charles L. Schoenfeld, a member of the Hoboken Quartette Club. ... Mrs. Schoenfeld indignantly denies any misconduct with the two men named and declares that the "unknown man" was her husband himself. It appeared that after a quarrel the Schoenfelds separated, the husband wrote to meet his wife, in which letters he made appointments at a flat at No. 225 Hudson street, Hoboken. Mrs. Schoenfeld swears that her husband told her to have the lights turned low at the stated times he would call and requested her to tell nobody about her visits. She swears that her husband would sneak into the flat and remain the night there. This he did several times and on each occasion and would talk so loudly that the neighbors might hear there was a man in the flat. He, she insists, was the "unknown co-respondent." Schoenfeld was a widower with three children when on June 4, 1896, he married his present wife and they disagreed because of the step-children. ..." @default.