Who Hands Some WarmGoods to him as to theMarried State.FOND OF HIGHBALLSHe Says and More Fond of Chasing About Other Menand He Wants Freedom.Denver. Col., Juno 17.- Mrs. Madeline E. Hell, a bride of less than two months and the daughter of a wealthy resident of I«os Angeles, Cal., told her husband, G1en R. Bell, whom she is suing for separate maintenance in the District Court, that if ever a child were born to her and the child be a girl, she would either kill her or bring her up as a vampire to lure men to their ruin and destruction, according|o a statement contained in the answer filed by Bell to his wife's suit.Bell’s answer bristles with unusual charges. Less than a month after their marriage at Salt Lake City, 1'tah, Bell asserts, he discovered he made a Jiistake in marrying the plaintiff. She ronfessed to him, he asserts, that she Tmd married him solely for the purpose rf getting Into the ranks of married Women, because as a married woman fhe would have a good time and be able to run around and not be criticised.Touchtng upon the subject of “running around,” Bell alleges that his Wife told him that she was very fond of highballs and had often gone out with men He mentions two specific Instances.’ one In Portland, Ore., and the other at Houston, Tex., where his wife, according to her own confessions to him. has been guilty of gross indiscretions.Regarding his brief life with Mrs.Bell, Bell alleges that he fitted up a comfortable apartment in this city, but five days were sufficient, he says, to convince him that he and his wife wuold never get along together. Mrs. Bell, he alleges, proved to he verv adept in the use of “cuss words’* and In addition developed the habit of imaking confessions regarding herpast, !At the expiration of five days of thissort of thing. Bell says, he proposed that she return to her home in l^o« Angeles She assented, the answer states, and he purchased a railroad ticket and accompanied her to the train.Going into the question of non-support raised by Mrs. Bell in her suit, Bell avers that his wife knew that as an employe of one of the Denver hotels he was making barely enough money to defray his own expenses She told him prior to the marriagethat she had an independent incomeof 1200 a month, and that he wouldbe able to assist him in defraying their household expenses.