The evening world. Newspaper, March 4, 1895, Page 1

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5 ) Elaborate Toilets of the Bride and Her [laids--sPresents of Priceless Value. \ «a= 9 in Sunday’s World. EMPLOYERS ad- vertised for Help Watch World Wants. NIGHT EDITION ANNAGOULDAGOUNTESS yr. Wedded at 12.43 to Boniface de Castellane, of the French Nobility SHE WAS NOTICEABLY NERVOUS. The marriage of Mi Gaughter of the late Jay Gould, of this city, to Count Paul Ernest Boniface de Castellane, took place at 12.43 to-day, Rev. Archbishop Corrigan officiating. at the residence of her brother, Mr. George J. Gould, Sixty-seventh street and Fifth avenue. This long looked- forward to event took place under the most favorable conditions, the threaten- ing weather having abated, and clear skies shone auspiciously upon the newly married couple. The wedding procession started from | the second floor at 12.20 o'clock. It was| 12.26 when the couple knelt before the Archbishop, and the closing words of seats. It wa: the service were spoken seventeen min- | utes later, at 12.43. Archbishop Corrigan, just before pro- nouncing the couple man and wife, de- livered a short address to the young couple on the solemnity of the occasion and the sacrament of matrimony The Archbishop spoke in a low tone, and hlr remarks were scarcely audible | to the assembled guests. was also playing at the time, Misa Annna Gould was very nervous during the proceedings, and was very |clothed in full canonicals, who entered, pale as she turned to receive the con-| walking slowly and impressively, like a | man who Is about to attempt a very gratulations showered upon her. Her replies to the Archbishop's ques- tions were tremulous and almost inaudi- | front room by the door leading from the while the Count’s words could be | hall, ble, heard throughout the great room, The Archbishop was assisted by his|the East Indta zoom, turned and faced and Father | the guests, Secretary, Father Connelly Newey, who acte] as master of cere-| monisa. The Archbishop wore the full| robes of his office an} carried a crozier, | the symbol of his office. purple robe he wore the chasuble, and on | 8reat organ in the rear of his head the mitre, and over the chasu- | ble the customary short purple cape. Fathers Connelly and Newey were sim- ply ‘essed in biack cassocks and white surplices. When the Archoishop took his position on the platform ne said: Repeat he Marri Forma! “Paul Ernest, wilt thou take Anna here present for your lawful wife?" The Count answered, “I will.” Then turning to the bride the Arch- Dishop said: “Anna, wilt thou take Paul Ernest here present to be thy lawful husband?" The bride answered, “I will.” Then the bridegroom repeated after the Archbisho) “I, Paul Ernest, take thee, Anna, to be my lawfvl wife, to have and to hold frem this day forward for better, for Anna Gould. | worse, for richer or for poorer, in sick- | repeated after him. The best man then | wife: “By the authority committed in |me I pronounce you man and wife.” | When the elder De Castellanes and Mrs, The music | ¢ ’ervowering sweetness. Over his long | ¥hen the orchestra, accompanted by the | |musie fron Lohengrin, which was | Played at the especial request of the bride, ness, in health, till death do us part. Then turning to the bride, the Arch- bishop said the xame words, which she handed the ring to the bridegroom, which the bridegroom placed on the bride's finger, and sald while holding the ring on her finger: “With this ring I thee Plight unto thee my troth.” The Archbishop then said the few words which made the couple man and wed and I The Song Sign It lacked only a few minutes of noon Gould entered the room and took th then that Frau Bucher, | the diva, standing on the lower -atepes, in the halt, brote out in hér first song, “Elsa's Dream,” from Lohengrin, Her voice rang loud and clear through the great hall and penetrated every nook and cranny of the big house, To the guests the music seemed laden with the fragrance of the flowers which sur- rounded then, and which by this time had begun to fill the room with an The conch the cue ling verse of the song was for Archbishop Corrigan, sertous undertaking. He entered the and taking his stand under the silk priedieu, which had been erected in he Wedding March, He had scarcely reached his station | the hail, | sounded the first notes of the bridal | And then the Count de Castellane, | who, with his blond-mustached and pink-cheeked brother, the Count Jean, | had been waiting behind the closed doors of the reception-room on the op- | posite side of the hall, came out, and followed in the footsteps of the priest until he stood almost beside him. The cheeks of the Count were glowing like a schoolgiri's, but the flush was not an intermittent one. His hair had been curled until not a ringlet was out of and he stood up very straight his brother as he waited for his bride, his perfect-fitting frock coat set- ting his trim figure off to advantage. The first note of the music was also The Floral Bower in the Drawing-Room, Under Which the Marriage Ceremony Was Performed. waa up in Mrs. Gould boudoir, directly | Books Open to All.” | THE END OF _ Existence ‘The monotony which has prevailed at | the Stock Exchange for month past, was relieved for a brief period about noon to-day, when the brokers practically sus- pended operations to give vent to their feclings of delight that the Fifty-third Congress had adjourned sine die. Precisely at noon the Exchange re- with a series of yells, Inter with screaming, hooting and it seem as if sounded mingled whistling, which pandemonium were let loose. For » few minutes before, the brokers gave Lp business to watch the clock, Jand when the hour Indicated that Con- Kreme was o:t of one long, loud yell It was given first by a coterie of the and then the old- made ANDLORDS and Ten- ants find The World equally useful. Houses for Tenants fo Watch Imes: It finds Tenants and r Houses. tt allt World Wants. PRICE ONE CENT, NIGHT EDITION CONGRESS, or Fifty-Third Passed Out of at Noon To-Day. PROCEEDINGS IN LAST HOURS. ' Wild Scene on the Stock Exchange | When Adjournment Was Announced. (Bpectal to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, March 4—After @ tt multuous and somewhat disorderly life the Fifty-third Congress, like a reformea rake, died decently and in order, It adjourned promptly at 12 o'clock te day, the clock not being turned pacity as has been the custom, for half or three-quarters of an hour, and bot® Houses ended their session simultane happened. The drea@ session with reorgamt- of |zation at both ends of the Capitol served an extra to smooth out differences and secure concessions which forty-eight hours ago seemed irreconcilable. Save the case of sugar bounty, the House comes out of conferet.ces with credit and the greatest ; gains. ‘fhe Senate surrendered igne' mintously on the Hawallan cable, the Blaine site, the Mahone site, Souther war claims, Bouthern Pacific Rallros@ claims, Nashville Exposition and @ dozen other items which represented points of difference. The House in turn accepted the amended Naval bill as {t came from the Senate, making reductions aggregating millions of dollars, without even sending It to conference. ‘The last appropriation bill, the De, ficiency, was on its way to the Prest- dent before 10 o'clock this morning, and the Houre had time to indulge in @ little cheerful and instructive fAnancial debate, in which Jerry Simpson, of Kan- as, jingling a silver quarter against @ button in his pecket, gave points te the Rothschilds on the money question, The air was murky in the House dew spite a recess from 3.30 until 8 o'clock, and the House smelled like @ 10-cent lodging-house in the Bowery. Wilson, of West Virginia, leaned on hig ‘lesk, calmly satisfied that he stepped with credit from House to Cabinet. By his side sat McMillin, father of the ine come tax. Hendrix, of Brooklyn, alert but heavys eyed, watched for points across the aisle, Sayers, of Texas, the economical Chairman of the Appropriation Commits tee, red-faced and gray of head, looked Ured and disconsolate that his Congress should also be a billion-dollar Come gress. Everett, of Massachusetts, ree } element, they separated and stepped back, until cial capacity of walter and detretive,|three hearty cheers for the NES Tap catching the apirit of the occa- over the front hall. [there were two on elther side. The had transformed the sult of rooms tn | heiress, Jaton, Ignored thelr dignity and expressed 3 bridesmaids also stepped back, Helen one long dining-room, dotted with th Immediately afterwards the children halt Thanks vociferously, if not fer- Procession of Maida and Ushers. | Gould to the left and Miss Came nto little tables, con peed eating a luncheon of #and- the! uF . Down the garlanded, beflowered stair-| the right. This brought the bride to J wiches, nd ice cream which the fe g Kfast, o | 1 D1 the youn, case they came, under the canopy of the altar, face to face with the priest ie Wen eine Bree newly we Countess had provided. 14 ph Uae EGAN A ald fresh green vines and Easter lillies. | and within arm's length almost of the Tht breakfast was furnished on the) i men are 4, and they at 0: along the path marked out for them by | pink-cheeked Count same lavish and extravagant scale as Uys ‘Train to teving menced testing thele lungs. roses and ribbons on elther side and bY |” The bridal mu Land the diva, |e flowers had been, and during th At Fo'eloek the newly made Countess moment they would cheer; then smilax-covered ropes overhead, Into the | stationed on the lo ten as before, cuing half hour the guests discussed | jert her friends in the parlor and went | some would throw parting shots of con- music room, between growing and bIO¥- | flied the house wiih the mates of Gon, We ment and listened to the very elt to her room to don # travelling d tempt at Washington's retiring states- coming rose trees as tall as the little | je UAtIN LANE Gaara Whe eh. musical program which had phe unt and Countess lett the men, while others, whose volces were bride herself, and so on up the aisle to! foot was almost theatrical, and aa the Meh atranged for the occasion. The I native 420 o'clock. George not in good working order, tried where the Archbishop was standing With | jotog rolled out full ant strane, Mr, Success of the music, which was, IN Gould, Pri Irago and Jean de Cas- | whistling, and finally when every one his hands clasped in front of him. Gauldatepped BACK and strong: MY reality, the brilliant feature of the Wed- {ellane throw rice upon the couple When was tired, they commenced tearing A soft, warm light filtered into the |ing three sepe forwark, took bie piace Unk Was due to the efforts and genus they were seated in the carriage leaves from thelr 3x4 Inch memoran- room through the queer Ortental ‘cur- |." the stde of the little woman, pe, Of Mr Albert: Morris Bagby, an intl) phe horses were decorated with white dum pads and throwing them In the alr. tains of brass and crystals, mellowWing | ine Archbishop. ‘The top ee er ven mate friend of the Goulds, who, at) oq etter. it was Edward Talcott who started the Ivory white satin dress of the bride) Game just above his square. should tieley reauaste Had devoted considerable | ple were driven to the Grand | chis diversion and the Idea spread lke and making the costly lace bridal veil! ang ne looked down at her once as t Se ede ved White | conch Siations ears: they: were: smells) gootagion! In every pant Of the for which covered her wealth of hair look cach of tne guests received le Count Zichy, two valets and the ds were sacrificed by the dozen, and stood there. 4 pa almost Aimy | She handed her beautif at table silver heart-shaped boxes eon- fiteas's mala the white paper thrown Into the alr n ed jer be ‘ul bouquet of nieces 0: fe weililtia. cake. ae \ s ‘The ushers were first, with the Prince | sie of the valley, which are her fq... Himlos pieces f the wedding ak Th Count purchased tehets for Tr | would flutter back like artificial snow- Jean del Drago and Brockholst Cutting iit Royce ie hee aie att than boxes are half an ineh in thickness AO ington and they took the 405 train. | flakes on a stage. leading, followed by Howard Gould and |iii¢ nervousy clasped her hands jlned with gold. On the outsite of the fore in this country lina thera| ‘qt just like Congress snowed us Charles Raoul Duva:, The came the rh cover {8 @ count's coronet—the — one | heen such a lavish profuelon of flowers antl | nd, some one yelled out, and then bridesmaids, Helen uid, with Kitty| The Ceremony Verformed which has been in the De Caste‘l letell of arrangement as characterize | ty, as some more cheering and a Beatrice Richardson and Ade-| | When the song had finished the Arch. (family for ten generations worked 40 | thie wedding, which unites one of the | penetition of thank Montgomery, gowned rather oddly.|bleaop began realing the solemn matri- gov, beneath which are the letters G— | -ciest families In America to one of “non ail the memorandum pads with- it seemed to those present, in white/monial service. At the proper time,,de C. Satin boxes hold the silver) the highest io France The leading JeW- |i ight had been sacrificed the brokers | broadcloth, trimmed with sable, and|the Count Jean de Casteliane stepped souvenirs, and on the boxes are the! oiry shops had been put to the test to discovered that they were covered with wearing Gainsborough hats of black | forward with the ring, and handed it to De Castellane coat-of-arms with theold| furnish gifts for the bride and. bride- |paper, and while brushing off thelr hats mousseline de eole shirred with ostrich | his brother, who, in turn, bending low | French motto, |greom; the leading modt worked ‘they threw them In the alr. tips on the left side and a cluster of; over the outstretched hand of his brid The ushers and bridesmaids received | night and day to pr what “there was more cheering from the} three tips underneath, at the base of | slipped It upon her finger. pins with the initials G. and C. in dia-| has been termed a“tomporary trousseau,” wey aiited — galleries, but — strangers | which were pink rosebuds. Bach bride) nes es they wore peonaunsed man | monds interlaced and the florists were pur to their couan't come within half a dozen oc: d ied reat bouquet of white | and wite by the priest, organ and orches Sawande: id cenough “pinasorie! 10. ol alae Rae ee ae : tra, instruments of wood and strings The Rrenkfant Menu. eae Aesere einioh, (ne caoulde {URVeR OE MIAREIR Wie, Boley et and pink orchids. | tra, a . Il the prodigal orders which the Goulds (ony the brokers on the floor. ‘Th suet dhe Milas, and brass, witn almost a crash, burst | Following is the menu of the WetdiN& paced with them. Se noe canidy however and Alte: ppronch o| |forth with the glorious Mendelssohn | breakfast: In fact, tne country, as far south as Or ee es received a vociferous ‘Then came the bride herself, leaning | wedding March. ee meio caressingly on the arm of her brother, | phe tinued on farewell. George Gould. She looked very small by comparison and particularly dainty in her magnificent wedding dress, with its | great train nine feet long, which was carried by her nephews, Jay and King- don Gould. the signal for the bridal party, which ‘As the ushers reached the Archbishop Vee GIFT SATIN BOX FOR WEDDING CAKE. THE ESTERHAZY DIAMOND. (Que of the De Casteliane-Gould wedding gifts) THREE OF THE WEDDING PRESENTS Se THE GIFT pe oF Heven couro, jie THE GIFT op MR + EOWIN Goo -DE-LIS PIN AND TWO BRACE- PRESENTED To Mith ANNA GOULD BY HER FIANCE. SILVER BOX FOR WEDDING CAKE, WHICH 18 INCLOSED IN SATIN BOX. MONOGRAM BROOCHES VOR THE BRIDES- MAIDA, THE USHERS SCARF-PINS AND THE CORONET GIVEN THE BRIDE BY {THE COUNT DE CASTELLANE. |the ushers and bridesmaids and | bridesmatds. congratulations then vouple received first from the Archbishop, from family, and finally from the guests During the little reception, Sherry, who had twenty men and twenty tables in the dining-room in the rear, opened the door and the men began to carry tables into the front rooms to prepare for the wedding breakfai ‘The table at which the Count and his newly made Countess were to sit was already in the dining-room, decorated and with covers for the ushers and Within a very few min score of alert men, half of is sald, were acting in the the it utes whom, APAIILLS pr Cold with 4 bottle, HELP! HELP! HELP! D”, you watch The ‘World's * Help Wanted” columns on Sunday? If you want work and failed to do 80 you made a mistake, There were 968 advertisements printed asking for * Help.” really called for more than that number of workers. Now and then an employer calls for a whole tory full of people in The World's Wants. Often, too, the employer contents himself with scanning the » Situations Wanted.” 10 cents to ask for a situation in They The World, and 20 words can be employed. Watch World Wants—and use | them. It costs but | the | Le Mara, 1896 fin asenue. The bride's tabie, at which were seat ed the bridal party of ten, was in the form of a fleur de lis, richly covered | with ream-cole satin, hung with cream satin valence with gold applique. The open ¢ between the bul anit | petals was filled with mauye orehi¢ edged with Parleyance fern, and b neath and shining through the mass of | flowers were sinall electri lights of one-candle power exch ‘On the centre of (he large part of the fleur de lx, or the spear head, Was a heart of white orchids, edged with fern and pierced gilt arrow ted with a buttenly tb of delicate cream-ou! d ribbon, and caugat in the ribbon | was @ spray of orchids; through all | shone tiny elvetric lights, The bar across, |the fleur de iis was also of orchide 1 tires from public life with no regrets. (Contiued on Sixth Ps temps «la Messene. la Lvonnaive la Vinaigrette, d'Abricots en Orchids with reflecting lights. Service used at this table was of gold ‘The other guests were served at eigh teen smaller round tables, eight at @ table, and 1 table had a siiver bowl fied with mauve orchide in the centre. | gach waiter wore a white rosette in his button-hole and waite gloves he Feast for Poor Children, | At exactly 1 to-day, when tt was Jed that Anna Gould had me the Countess Casteilane, #0 hun- gry children of Industrial Schoo. No. 6 united in giving Ars the matter with saving 40 centa on ry dullar by buying tor's Preserip. | Root Supplies. ail ¢ very RIK KK, Ol ave: , COR 22d att t quality, al SRA Ask for Germ Fold L) wil provers — BvaNerT's Flavoring Hatracts took the high: est awards at Chicazo, LN “\ For racing, porting mews sce room for you here! | UNCLE SAM (to the Tramp Congress)=--Move on, there; move on! Na

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