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Mrs. Dorlon-Lowe De- elares She Will Scrub ; Before She Will Go; , Back to the Old Life, + Because of the Treat- ment Singers Receive iimininiel SSR ‘Mrs. Martha Dorton-Lowe, who will make her first appearance in vaudeville ‘March. 11, is to ‘have the largest salary ever paid to a singer on the: variety through with church-singing | . she said yesterday, as we talked together in her cosy apartment {f in Brooklyn. Mrs. Lowe had Just come Pf tn from a visit to the photographer and Yooked very happy and moet attractive fn a tailor-made gown of gray broad- cloth and a blue silk walst which Jus méiched her eyes. “I bave stayed in a church cholr as tong as Ican and retain one particle of welf-respect. If you are unfamillar with \ the methods of the! usual church music \ committee my statement In this connec (aon will mean nothing to you. But you know anything about this matter you will understand that the members of achurch choir are treated exactly ax £ £ Pheri eleleinini-i-i-fe! O nie MRS. MARTHA DORLON-LOWE. ett niciiciciieei eerie rr THE WORLD: * FROM CHURCH CHOIR SHE | - GOES INTO VAUDEVILLE. MRS. NATION NOT TO SMASH HERE. She Tells of Her Plans in a Letter to The Evening World. Carrie in New In reply to a telegram from The Evening World, Mr: Nation has sent a letter saying that she will not ‘smash York. She says: TOPEKA, Kan., Feb. 23, 1901. Kind Friend—In reply to your inquiry will say that 1 am at present un- der arrest in this city, and as my trial will not take place until April or later you will realize that | am not in position to make any plans or state- ment as to my future course. I have never had any intention of smashing saloons in States where they are licensed and therefore entitled to legal pro- tection. Yours for the cause. Mrs. CARRIE NATION, SAYS BRIDE IS HELD BY HER PARENTS. Young Lawyer Fighting for Possession of His Wife—Gets Habeas Corpus Writ. Toule McGlynn, a young lawyer, of pgold chain, and his dark No176 Broadway, hae secured a habeas |tache curls at the ends, Tle le. frank though they were of the least import-]1 get so fir as teat. And here my 7] object to atic! y ev ance in the Sunday services, and, tn fact, | Wuberstiion comes in again, | Ail Through | wittetmat hori nck atu thougt ang [corpus for the production of his bride sete T de mento eee: Si hole wide ward, Now, persons | {iyi tttes penne have bewn pares I thiuk many, actresses make a great {in the Supreme Court before Justice tails about’ my ditere sce oat? de> e vaust say 1 have been treated [thie song. of and hackneyed avit in (youre, |) UNE | Much of itz don't | Gaynor lng Brookiys: ie tae Road Faery wat geben members of "hia fam: atta [ae vou dread the test appearany claren that his wife in held a prisoner bs way that It T well, but Iam resigning just in time “LE odreut nothing but the make-up,” ex one as being the| py her father, Edward Moore, Prealdent have brought habeas corpus pricectiige escape the disagreeabier, 1 am not 0-| ene wala. OneLMUStL rOURe man who succeeds, Bhe in| Oy per Cather: ats f0 Ket ty wite, who ts held by her fathe ing to be discharged. 1 am going of my vr i My mother waa | cnt + letermined and fuit of that [of the New York and New Jersey Trans: [er,a¢ nis home," y her fath- 2 3 es sthodist, and Twas broughe up| clustve quality ich we, call for the] portation Company ‘ing omit also ‘own free will. From the Ume T wa think power: aeicrimes, Ofcourse, 4 better word, “magnetiam,: | Mra, McG! vamlly declares that | FTOWINE out of thin affair” Hees, multe twelve years old my ambition was to ater hat nOnAenOE it b o will bh i Lack pA Ao do xen know Cpa ny the ways n att nonwe when i he at distinct boon. to her husband. | law?” pw Mr. Moe my father-li T realized to rouging for the stage lm | oe! audiences. RS Aa OT Crete a Leg nA Muddenly asked Lawyer McGlynn, 3 They deny that she is a prisoner or| "No? Weil, then Til toll yous meee ging in Dr. Storrs’s church. that ambition a year previous to the afraid E shail make rather a mew JANE GORDON, @eath of Dr. Storrs, whom T loved and reverenced with all my heart. But af- ter his death I discovered that the new fusic Committee was going to treat the rs of our choir jum: exactly as most music committees treat the choirs fn the various churches. C0 up my mind to wive wy okut maging at the expiration of y contract and to serab, If necessary, before I would ever mber of a charch cholr again, 1 was notified last week that a change wan to be mace and that my serv! would not be required after May 1. 1 fhaly already announced my inention of going Into vaudevile. When I tell you fhow the oldest member of our cholr has been treated by the church committer perhaps you will underetand me better. This man has been singing the Church of the Pilgrims for eight years Hekfe,an artist through and throug’ I personally know that the people mired his work sincerely. Indeed, th couldn't help It. He is simply: e-auperh Binger, Well, tha Music Commtttes « olded to dischars> Alm, and sor three weeks before they ml aim he was to ye they had his #accertor engaged Waan't that a contemptible thing to d Tama church member myself. 1 shall always love to attend church. But sing in in a church choir, I never will.” Ro you think you will ke vaude- viet? I asked. Mndee3, T do. T love to sing, and to give dramatic expression to song, when | possible. 1 should have gone Into « pny: have very pronounced Ideas ah everything. I have always matntaln that no woman shout go into grand opera after phe Is elghtcen. “put let me tell you why [am going on the stage. Iam to have the largest sulary ever pald a vauteville singer. “Now, the money, ax money, duesn’t in- terest me. But as a means to eendir my son Sydney through college ant helping a dear old xunt of mine, who arly seventy years old and who ts about to lore her home, the salary: I'm to. get !s an tmportan: factor. All m Ne-life haa been one etruggle to help m yelf and othere. I want to do some good in the world. J love to extend a helping hand to those who are rtrugeling nave struggicd. As a girl {had every wie gratified. My father, Sydney Dor. - aaEe) Sletieieiei-hiciei-ieieiet eee <P Ip It Is not easy to dismiss a popu ‘of. New York, was a rich man, as [Singer from a church cholr. This has “© every one knows. But T was only ten ‘been discovered in the case of Miss years old when he died. Later [ made | Charlotte Muconda, whose services as an Unfortunate marriage. And now I /leading soprano have been dispensed consistory: and pastor of the First Reformed Church, of Seventh ave- hue, Brooklyn, ‘The reverance of rela- tlons takes place May 1. The Itey, Dr. Farrar saya Miss Ma- conda leaves because her concert and other outaide engagements interfered with her work for the church, Miss Maconda’s friends, on the other to think of and to| with by the have my two boy work for. “Tam going Into vaudeville In the vers pimeof my Ife, fam In perfect health tnd epirits and voice, I am taking tho cery best of me ints the new life, and I mean to succeed. [ will succeed, nd 11 fist was brought down on a large ® nipno with a whack. ly youngest hoy ts In the navy. He hand, assert that she was too popular ; owihe first petty officer of his crade. My |for her own good. She Inspired the Mdeat boy fan fine musician and a great [Jealousy of ac: element in the church, they say, 1 that proved her student. Oh, fe would go through co!- exe If he had to work his way. But ]undolng. They date her troubies from the result would be a phynical wreck. CHURCH FACTIONS WAR OVER SINGER One Side Says Pastor Bows to Dic- tates of Influential Parishioners. Solelninlelelninieinininininlelnleleinininininininieloiinininieiininr : CHARLOTTE MACONDA,. (PRR RRR Rr e ebb eie icici in irielcieteisisieleieieisieteteteteteh the tne she complained of being In- suited. Sunday after Sunday by two young women and thetr escorts. They belonged to prominent familles con- el with the church, and their of- nse consisted of mimicking Miss Ma conda while she was singing. Extrava- Rant ,grimaces while the singer was taking a high note was the particular thing objected to. ‘The astonishing charge is made that when Miss Maconda's complaint was ade to Dr. Farrar he dinmiesed it by saylng that It would be better to ane tagonize the soprano than to discipline or rebuke the Influential families to which the grimacers belonged. y Both sides agree that Miss Maconda is « young woman of rare talent and unusual graces of person and mind, Heljs.a nervous lad. He shan't wo alg'way through college while he hax ir with a voice to sing. 1 told my " » rercy Williams, that I'd like to my check at the end of the first © weeki to our Church Committee. He @ughed and sald he hadn't the allghtest dbjection.”” “What style of songs are you intend- ing to use?” I asked i 2 My frat wong will be ‘Rose Marie.’ SUM tel you why. T must always have ‘something which will take me out of mywelf and away frum the audience. Um awfully peculiar. Now Rose Marte p name of a faithful and devoted has clung to me ever since tor days in the faraway past, more than my mald now—she Is Shattered in Health, He Is on the Way to Mexico. pt Then in thiv song the sea al to. So while I am singing| It is thought that the days of young andigetting my bearingr, as it were, | George M. Pullman are numbered, E hall be thinking of that devoted girl ‘ndinf'my bonny boy at sea. (iS'My_ second selection wil! be Bartlett's 1 Dream.’ Tam not a spirituatiet, Not ‘ital But 1 believe somewhere our ‘Melings are known to those who loved y and who have gone to the great by and Mrs. Lowe seated elf at the grand plano and mang that it-exquisite of songs In a deep and Ming contralto, Her volce is rich From lower D to high B fiat ly @ marvellous range. I spoke bers! of my fami pback have ad | Shenoaeeheeiee x i thie song Is a little Its He Is now on his way to Mexico for the benefit of his shattered health, but 0 nerioun in his condition that it ta doubtful If he ever recovers. ‘Pullman, ft Is-sald, ts suffering from locomotor ataxin and a general break- down of health, Bince his most recent excapade—hin adventures with the Bowers family—he lved at the Victoria Hotel, in thin city, but so 111 did he become that his mother, from whom he had been estranged, sent him to Callfornia, ‘This was about a month ago, Reports from that State are that his health was im no way benefitted, and now. he has atarted for Mexicas ing song, set to a dell in met gives one opportunities for aboropeiate gestures. One must ert will Ge! old ‘Klarney’ bf | (. M. PULLMAN SURPRISE PARTY MAY SOON OIE. PROVED FATAL Leo Morgenstein Was Among the Surprised and His Heart Failed. ‘The excitement of a sod) evening at his club and the pleanure of a aurprise party in which his wife was one of the leaders, proved the death of Leo C. Mor- genmein, of No, 10 Myrtle avenue, Brookly i Ata o'clock thix morning Mr. Morgen- stein, with hia wife, nang a parting song at the roomm of the Doctors’ Bowling Club, at Ritting’s Hall, In Floyd aire and an hour later he was dead. The bowling club of which he was a member had a match game last night. About 11 o'clock they were aurpri by thelr wives and sweetheart who en- tered the hall in masquerade costume, The ladies render a musical pro- ramme and it wi 3 o'clock whe: ir. and. Mra, ein reached home. Immediately thereafter Mr. Morgen- ateln was airicken with heart disease and dled before medical aid reached him, He wana jet and Hved with has wife and two children near his store, at No 104 Myrtle avenue. man who knows {¢ all. law than the Supreme Court judwea” Had Money Kaough. “It ars ie true that I married hie daughter didn’t have It im not true ¢ upon a ‘y enough to take her. railroad Weeate, Journey. 1 had the Palm i (ickets and rooms engaged. at cama each, Florida, and her. father well enough, And Bald that whe was not Aald £0. Welle Twn einen Ane OctOr sent at first, bu INE to co! sont at frat, but Anally did on my wite Uved at No. 111 Py at my ereins! Pee ct iy, fiutiier-In-law home and wi dered me a He kno under any restraint amt vay that she will have nothing to do with the man who married her under the pretense that he was a young man of mean| Mr. Moore is wealthy. He lives in a handsome brown-astone house at No. 111 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn. In this house McGlynn alleges hin wife has been locked up for weeks and he has not been allowed to see her or to communicate with her. It was after he had made varioun efforts to reach her that the yyung lawyer applled to Justice Gaynor and secured the writ of habeas, corpus. Mr. Moore ts i1] at present and cannot be seen. This statement was made at the Moore home by a young woman, eald to be Mra, McGlynn’ slater: ‘lt In untrue that Mary in a prisoner mone: pect Park hen one night Tretg rent ri re mee feeR dette at r aml threatened to ‘blow my head off. an he put it. Now, T want. ee iy head so f left. Since then [ have ‘FRten to my wife, but have not ree celved an annwer, en, we were happy together. her wister Margaret didn't like me's hen here. She was out with her sister this/ the one ry . of aMetnoohe She married Mes Meaiynn on | moneys "nO "AYS | didn't have’ any Jan. 1. They have never lived together, | “There will be no divorce. My sulta fot even for an hour, McGlynn left the | are against my father-incinw. Ike late fehae ‘Immediately after the ceremony | wealthy man. Tle lives Ina'$0,00 howe and she han not seen him since. and If he wants to fight, why, I'll giv “He married her under false pre- wn ° tenses. He lives with his mother at ats Lewentiis ny Stamford, Conn., and he pretended to be well-to-do, After the ceremony it came out that Mr. McGlynn had no money at all, He did not even have enough to pay for the wedding tour. He had no Tickets for the trip. When he tried to borrow money. from Mr. Moore his wife decided to ve him up, and he was Ulrected to the door. him all he wants. brat foGiynn also sald that he wou have eecuted a writ of, habeas: corpun hefore, only he had been deterred by the death of a relative at Stamford, Conn., where he formerly iIved. Eawaget nt Asbury Park. He first met his wife (formerly Mary Moore) in September, 189. He courted “Bhe has been living here willingly | jer c 4 over since and doen not want 10 Ko tO| with ged Toem buns hen he went fer ‘husband. She has no desire to se¢| fany with one ot her x! n com hin aguin. We may make a full state- ment later, but Just now we prefer to let Mr. McGlynn do the talking. I do not know much about the young man,” Mr, MoGlynn’s Story, That certain circles of Brooklyn 40: slety: will be Intereated when the differ ences between young Lawyer McGlynn and his father-in-law are brought out In court seemm certain from what Mr. Mc- Glynn told an Evening Worid reporter | to be married Chure) a fashionable event. sisters—Margnret, The bride’ and Hertha ests attended ¢ home of the the wedding banquet at U bride's parents. Sluce the wedding none of the friends to-day. of young Mra, MeGiynn rememb 3 se SMeGiynn, who ls a tall, handsome| Ing) acon her nutaie of her, fathera young man of thirty years, speaks| house. They thought she muat have with a low, well-modulated ¢. He} gone to live at Stamford with her hus- band. EXARMY OFFICER KILLS HIMSELF. John Hunt Jumps from a Fifth-Story Window to His Death. wearn eye-glasses from which dangle a READ SAO POER TOOK TWO LIVES Children Heard Father Count Three Before Killing His Wife. Jonn Hunt, forty-one yeara old, who sald he was an ex-leutenant of the United States army, killed himeeif early to-day by Jumping through the airshaft BAVANNAH, Feb, %—Insanity te given as the cause of the murder of Mra, Alken by her husband, Dr. Willlam formerly connected F. Alken, with the Health Department of New |of No. 106 West One Hundred and First York City. After he had shot his wife | street from the fifth floor, He fell on his head. Hunt ved with the family of Alvert Karl on the top Moor. To the Karls and to every one In the Relghtorhood he wis a great deal of « mystery. Ile gave Ittle information about his family: bevond saying that his father end mother were both dead, and that he had a er living somewhere in the clty. His father and mother, he said on one eccasion, had both died tae sane. Dr, Aiken blew out his own brains and died bealde her body. The doctor, who was an eye and ear specialist, lived In a fanhionable part of, thn city. His eleven-year-old son Conrad rushed Into the police station neer the Alken home early yenterday ard said that his father had killed his mother. Mra. Alken sas found on her bel with a bullet hole in her temple and her husband lay on the floor with 1 bullet through his temple, Three children, terror atricken, were} That he had been in the army there in the adjoining room. was little doubt, He showed the utmost The children heard a quarrel. Then} famtUarity with the service, but never they heard their father count three] would tell what regiment he had served and fire. Again he counted three and | in. fired on the third count. Ite never worked and always had ‘The following {sa poem found on Dr.| money. fe drew a good pension, he sald, having been retired for disability. Hunt wan fond of exercise and usually took a long walk each day. For sevei days the had complained of feeling t yesterday tol returned in wita the family. He retired about 9.3) o'clock to his room in the centro of the flat. Hunt bed backed upon the alrehaft window. the upper. part of the window just clear- Ing the bedstead. AtG A. M. Mrs. Karl was aroused by a f breaking glass. Jer husband nto Hunt's room. It was empty, upper part of the win Aiken's table: ISOLATION. When my naked sou! shall Primal darkness softly ste Closer, closer all about, Blotting all the Mgnt of living out, Like a garment soft and waria, Grateful to my shrinking form, Promise of the welcome steep Free of dreams and oh! #0 long and derp; 1M, Tis walk as usual time to take supper When the mother angel Rest Geatly folde me to her breast, Mow far off and din will be crash rushed but the AML these Joys and pains ‘twii open. Hunt had climbed on t Naked thea my woul shall f jumped into the alrshaft. He atruck and smashed a window In 1 Primal arkneg softly Cleser, closer all about, Dlotting all light of Hving out, This was the third attempt of the doctor to take his life and the second time he tried to kill his wife. Mrs. Alken was Miss Anna Kempton the flat be;ow on the way down. Hunt, it is sald, was born In Utica, — DUG UP SKULLS IN BOWERY. Workmen Believed to CUBAN BRIDE RETURNS TO JEALOUS HUSBAND. Mrs. Emile Cassi Oddly Disappears from Her Home, but Yields to Cassi’s.Entreaties to Return to Him. Couple Met When Cassi Was First Violin, and After Many Adven- tures He Won the Lovely Cuban. There wan tremendous excitement in the flat house No. 24 West Ninety-ninth street from 6 o'clock yesterday after- noon until 9 o'clock to-day. Emile Cassl, a firet violin of Paris, a soldier of the Foreign Legion of France, a rxnchman of Arizona, a Rough Rider of the Spanish war, a policeman of Ha- vana and goodness knows what not else, had loat hla wife. MRS. EMILE CASSI Leqeee-one-e-e-o-on0nt-a-t-0n0ntnt-t-t-o-0nontntntuo-o-tntnt-o-t-¢-0n0nt-tntntutnomononontnentneel out for Cocola, and Sig. Caast w2s|convalescence. And when the signor, im driven back to the little nest on Ninet: his impasaioned Italian tones, asked her. ninth street, where he found a group | to be his, the senorita whispered’ back. of Cuban patriots, all of whom had|a timid, but ineffably tender “yes.” ser section tin little more, and the: Me Killed | Misi Men. js. Canal wept a little more, 1 retired. ‘The Cuban patriots grizely dis- Hate nn stenee rwent ¢ cussed the altuation for an hour or police. ‘The ane patos e more and then they, too, retired. tiaawite pil abn sath) mer Shortly before 9 A. M. to-day there) coe inony was sree . ‘The came a soft peal on the Casst bell. 80f | trurpday, performel on @ though it was, It aroused the slgnor ah Rushing into the hall he beheld a arent, | 0", Oe ihe tiacet negn eee, Oe ale rude man, with a heavy black sa toxteated Cuban peck! ae tache, who said he bore a note for! shoot the Senora Fernandes y Cespedes. eaermet erate ak, orang “Give it to m« erled the slgnor.| eurned the revolver on the It Cuban, snatching It from the hand of the as-| noice and stot at him. te iecienaatie@ tontahed man, uatanatihe edhe: at weed It was from Cocola. cahents area’ Lage aislows’ ‘The algnor, according to the neighbors wore: Cuban wa who were gathered on every landing, le tore his hair for several minutes ut- Rr eer nae veivon: cnereee with, tered wild cries in the Latin tongue, and! stanch and true. She coos = — then dashed into his apartments, emerE:| prison next day and wae = ing therefrom a few minutes later aC-! the brave signor by an wedded EP. Rut suddenly the excitement ceased, for whe who had fled had returned; she who was lost was found. She, the wife, Cocola, after apending the night with friends, concluded she loved the firat violin, and at 1 o'clock this afternoon he brought her back to the bijou flat which had been the scene of so much anguieh. She Is young, beautiful and spirited. Bhe {s a descendant of Cuban revolu- tlonary herocs, and she marrie1 Cassi under very romantic circumstances. Said He Was Jealo Rut she ran away from home yester- day afternoon, telling her white-halred mother, the Senora Fernandez y Ces- pedes, that she could no longer stand | companied by the Senora Fernandes ¥| x7 the inordinate jealousy of Bla. Casst, | Geapedes. ‘They had not returned at 2 soos Caan iipeiont Sets Perform the and that she, Cocola Fernandes y Cee | orclock thin afternoon, but as the sfgnor| a natty the algnor had Milled - pedes Cassi, had determined to move. handed his mother-in-law into a cab A Honeymoon in Jail. ‘Then she left the house. This was at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon. An hour Iam on the track of Cocola!* For elght months the signor stayed fm later Sig. Cassi returned. He 1s em-/ And the Janitor, to whom the remark | Jall. but it was a honeymoon, for’ Ce- cola waa allowed by the authorities to, was addressed, offered him congratula- live with her Pxmile in a emall room ployed by a secret service bureau of scree kind. His mother-in-law told him tearfully that Coleola had gone. He off the warten's office There wept. He raved. He threw things A Marriage of Romance. cooked and ate their tamales and draait around. Tenants of the flat below be-) 3 their “Vermouth Americano.” Finally 1 came alarmed when the plaster began aris ra on a cour tenipiene mar-| the mignor was eet at Mberty, whelly ‘ i: i Cassi | Tage of Ste. 0 the beautiful Co-| exonerated. and they came to Nt to fall, To thetr anxlous inquiries Case | oe oe which sent the Sunday news-| Yorks. bad! explained: his 2inotion tersely: “Cocola has gone,” he sald, and they understood, for they knew that he loved her devotedly and often noisily. Cocola, it should be sedd, !s Americas. born, but has aa rich blood as ever came from the Pearl of the Antilles, Her father was the founder of the city of papers into paroxyams of delight a year 0. Cocola was beautiful, and the enor was bra’ Cokola had nursed the wounded and had softened the dy- 10 was somewhat Maen eat Casali calted eeemand [17k moments of the atricken on the| Munzanilla; her cousin was the famous j eee battlefields of Cuba. Gen, Demetrio Castillo, and her unele, drove to the homes of every one whom era ems malo wisp 5 : ident of Cuba,” he theught might be sheltering Cocola.| |The signor, while leailing the Rough | 5\vator Claneros, President of Cuba. o Ridera up the far-famed hill of San Juan, his bugle sounding in the ears of Col. Roosevelt in clarion tones, fell wounded by a Mauser bullet. It wan Cocola who bound up the s{ burat Into the sergeant’s office. wound, and tt was she who fed him| Was denied nll information. ethan he shouted. beef tea and stroked his fevered bFOW| the algnor shouted down the ntl with gentle touch during the days of his! tube, Thereupon a general alarm WIFE DIED AS © SATIN WINDOW LROMMEDIEU HUSBAND SLEPT TO END HIS LIFE. KILLS HIMSELF. Mrs. Jungwirth Com-|Gruesome Spectacle ||n {11 Health He Com- mitted Suicide After | Seen by Passers on mits Suicide at His a Quarrel with Him. the Bowery. Home. Monte Carlo. When the smnor and Cocola had agata nettled down to happy married. Rte they refused themselves to all callers, Even Detective Walsh, who had spent 6 ‘OCOsm, sleepiess. night searching for t's nobody's business but our own,’ Allin vain. Cocola wae not to be found. Could not Find Coco! ‘At (o'clock this morning the cab halt- ed in front of Police Headquarters. Bt Seated Ina chair, that had been pull over to a window #o that Its occupant could see and be seen from the street velow, Albert Bernstein fired a bullet jrough his heart to-day. aati were! The act was done in hix room at the} ie was tairty years old, and was fore Ocetdental Hotel, Bowery and Broome] jr. member of the firm of Theo- GREAT NECK, L. 1. health ix supposed to have been the motive for the suicide of Theodore I’ lommedieu, who shot himself at bie After a quarrel with her husband and In deapalr because of thelr poor circumstances, Mra, Annie Jungwirth, twenty-two years old, drank carbolle acid to-day. She died at Bellevue Hos- pital at 6 o'clock, She lived with her hin husband, Charles Jungwirth, at home, No, %& Seventh street. He han) stil, dore & James I,'Hommediey, of Long locked himself in his room and will not Bernstein was a showman, and for! iyiang Cty. Two years ago he retired yeurs part had taken out anatomt-| oo acount of ill-health. nee any one. 4 i heen married four|cal exhibitions over the country flr] por several weeks, the relatives say The couple had see sel uhawirth wana handsome|clteul!, During the winter months Nel ayeogore had been suffering from Be Birk with large dark eyes, masses of|conductel resorts on the Bowery. He ho seemed to be greatly die aver black hair and ane Mgure. °° was a married man, his wife and three | Courage, Ina ft of slespondency be Fee ieee rcueatones= tne. See re eee ert rans | etioben numa emai neerag esl, He wa bore say. but at none was he a/ie oily Dotierforinooksranis tel arene uASininent bulider of New ide at Bowery hot He wene to the Oc. week ago. His health w was preparing to take tue road. Hernstein was seen about the hotel as late ay midnight. Some time later hoe went to his roo careful preparations for tressed 1H fis be: v his arm fashioned hote mm the lights and the folly ery. was oharacteristic of York, KILLED BY A YELLOW BRICK. It Been Ned Richard K. Wey Would Not Have to vay $10,00> It wan a yellow brick that killed the husband of Marguerlta Koch, Because the brick was yellow Instead of red, she was uwarded $10,000 damuges yesterday: tn a sult brought in the Supreme Court ental Hotel « + poor, but he show’ out on Mrs, Jungwirth went out last night and did not return until 3 o'clock this mornin, Her husband was waiting for her and reproached her for being out until such an hour, A quarrel ensued. After Jung had expressed his feelings he went leaving his wife in the kitchen, even rem: her coat. to the kitchen and drank the acid, A few minutes later Jungwirth was aroused by his wife's groans, He found her in agony In the kitchen, Heside her the ot he man that on the floor was the empty bottl Is cloth: vhe: Ju rth called for help and the Berea fae GH Makossa ant against Richard K. Fox, as owner of woman was sent to Bellevue, where she| the hand that steadied the muzzle of the |the Pollce Gazette Bullding in Franklin died. weapon held a towel to stanch the flow | Square. he brick which killed Koch was a} Jeged to have fallen from the Fox bull ing, while repairs were being made. eral witnesnes swore that the brick ws Hits garments were nelthor of blood. the shot, seared nor stained 5 —————__—_ Potters Of covered Old Cemetery. PHILADELPHIA, Feb, .—Major] 0 Ei writmcanea swore that the brick, w ‘Ten human skull nd. some on| Lynford Lardner fell down tha atoop jed by a Fall from B red and the defense insisted tha @ were Ainearatea ae eet nowery of his home to-day and died jater with| MIDDLETOWN, N. ¥., Feb, LOE eat Aor eat erica pe tes, ‘white| menZwere! excavating ‘there: & fractured skull, Ho waa about sixty-[am B. Miller, a prominent resident of Bittkw that. killed Kooh, % Te Je belleved that they uncovered the] Ming “Ansimant Ge ardner was! Wallkill, foll out of bed to-day and sus], Mut the Jury: dechted_ that Koch meg. aite of an oldtime sametery. mow gene-| Unites a nt Paymaster in thet iained injuries from which he died. He] his, tquth, [rom Ritson otha ‘gued tom rally Lorgotter 4 war from 6, 162 until Dec, 24, 1644,’ was elghty-three years old.