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Mrs. Woerbury: Wants $150,000 ‘Damages for Libel, Was Maligned by a Scriptural Quotation *—Once Mrs. Friend and Helper. (Speciat to The F: y 8 —Tae mys fits constituency—in a word, @tory, the whole story, markable movement— a dadadadadudadadetadaddadrdutedddideddtaedcdatddddddd hat will begin in ta’ which Joseph: ‘geeks to obtain S: from Mary Baker ¢ Mrs, Woodbury wis f the moat inti: “time it ts probable tha wwitnesses will tertify LThe most remarks Bult to perieons Fout:ne cf the © was not men’ Cat a quotation from chapter of the Revelitions was for her. Her counsel « (gan show thi SALLCALAESESED RES AE AEELESADEAORE EE RREREROSSADESENE UMSOSOESECEOR ETEK peceesee yess eeees, FYIFIFIITISIIGS similar passages w RSUeess ee lesee see ee el ele e rer seeees ssvesesceeeseseee. Gaseeraseanseasenase: SABREAR MEAN Aa HAERRAO seneenees uthed In astonishment be- “whe ind rhe had replied 1 for Iwan heard in my prayerr Uadmire your pluck,” for a trace of yulie wure that m very well,” she answered, parents and ner to submit Her sublime faith and during the doctor asked te her neighbors, {for the law, then she sald; aa well £4 srw Healt mbat for all the bedding In the house ‘to. the Here is the quotation upon which the j< “Mbel is based: Libel Lay tn This. . nor Hut t with | Inspector eeariet colored beat full of names 0 “blasphemy, having seven heads and And the woman was rayed in purple and scariot color decked with xold ‘and pearls, hav: her hand full filthiness of upon her head was a name yypose you in waat you deem jour ~~ DAMOND THIEF “BLEW SAFE OPEN |$11,000 min precsnt (Court Writ Demands ed by Vigilance of Night Watchman. Mother of Ha of the Earth. Arunken with t: tyre of Jems, Mrs. Woodbury tx a woman of high} intelligence and houndiess energy | home on Commonwealth of the best ordered and most the city. She has a daughte: mts and Abom blood of the gona, one of whom Is at Harv: Bo deeply did she take the a of Mrs. Ed¢y to heart, so deep think she was damaged by It that soon after the declarations in the sult filed she caused them to be published tn. @ Gally newspaper. Hragon stool before the before 4 o'clock this morning Sight Warchiman John Quinn, street merchantr ight in the rear ¢ Leon Friedman, at his mhe was! fined for contem: thie as her justiticatio: “Becaune for flv h eormapiained of, by friends and foes alike, ~ @hat I dared nor © against Mra. Eddy In "On the death /mysel? defenseles: peal'to the Massachuse (tend its arm, t Sand defend my husband's hon or Mare Peering e door he anwa man in| years Quinn quickly summonet the etation-house Returning he naw the man ving to get through the rear window the alleyway nen the annual four Wy was read in whic | ym the seventeenth chap: | it ds asserted | band I found I determined to ap- court to ex- celgnature. Only a steaal docum Pevtatn thelr reapect. Ehad no idea that by #0 doing T was) ta) 1, eommitting any the ntempt of a Sf hand satchel, Mt Jon the satchel was found good-nlzed dia- ¥ ehusetis court to wt Christian Science will Mass of Evidence, en in her hom: Lypapersin the sult were filed In Octo-| HABA pe bee. 189. Bince tha: time counsel on| eth sides have been collecting a mans) P& evidence. Interest in the x an advertine- pynverted by Frederick W. matt W for Mra. Woodbury, who offern| 1 See ) for information fable. him to discover the whereabouts | 0 Septimus J. Hanna, Shristian Science Journal and # Of the mother church, whom, body aays, he wishes to summon for. the plaintift, # ult brought by ity contain nearly at length: into Chr: tian a8 Rec! ‘Christian Sclentists vs and a quantity of valuable net gave his name as Henry was a atone- | undir the jaw of oven years old, Fittieth | State mun: Ha had a key tn Justice O° James | cision, a Christin Scten> New York City his pocket for a room tn the St. Hotel, of No. 9 Ramapo avenue. ofleors. visited GERMANS OU OUT OF OF PEKING. contents of n tray of riage ren. ver had been taker je Take Charge, May 28,—A despatch to the Cologne Gazette, under date of May 2}, enya the withdrawal of the German ma- rines to Talng-Tan has begun and that she Serman quarter ott Reking has been ir e ¥ , through experimentally, for a fortnighes ee burglar secured an entrance to y entering a vacant buildin, his way throug! burglar alarm next door and cuttin, there falled to operate, THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, MAY Q8, 190) [PROFESSOR HERRON WEDS MISS RAND BY NEW AUU MINS IT WILL REVEAL SECRETS [WANTED HEIRS _OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE. OLLAPADSAALAAS EAL EADHEOAAAODASEDOR DPRLODLOA ODL ADOBSS FORS40,000,000 John Tyson, Intestate, | Leaves that Amount n Australia. (Apel ty The Evening World) of the Inte Jonn Tyson, of Austr: awners of property to the amount 50.00,00, are auy country, Their w! known fs ough tadsiphia Inwyer On Saturday morning last an ad) cerning the heirs be forwarded to John estate John Tyson waa a shrewd Scotchman who emigrated to Australia when the gold fever broke out in the ‘se. He Dourht a large tract of Iand and es- tablished a ranch. His natural indus- try, combined with an element of good luck, enabled him to Increase his pos- seerions each year until his wealth w re than $42,000,000 He never visited his native land and never wrote, living a secluded Ife | About a year ago he died Intestate. {He was unmarried and had no relatives lv Austraia, An Investigation the authorities at his home In Seot- and revealed tne existence of three heirs who came to America rever&l years ago. Where they are now is a mystery. but every one of the trio will he richer by $13.00,000 by catablishing {dentity before Mr. Dickey. $$$ with a Va Enoch Arde ROCHESTER, N. Cummings, veteran of the Civil War, returned hers after many years to find hin vife again married. He demands that she return to him ?GIRL BRAVED PEST WITH HER PRAYERS Anna Ray, Heroine and Christian Scientist, Nurses Parents with Small-Pox for Weeks. The oid brick house at No. 316 East One Hundred and Fifteth street has long been tenanted by John Ray, his wife and four grown sons and daugh- tera. ‘The fatber ty sixty-nine years old, a clerk in a Broadway store, and his wife i about of his age. The two sons, George and John, are Broadway notol clerks, Anna, the hero- ine, fea teacher In Public 8 nol No, 138, and Laura. elghteen years old, is a atu- dent at the Normal College. elgit noticed Giat the family m one of th Ing to thelr occupaty men seemed to be attend- The butcher and grocer made dally calle and ieft provisions in the arevway, which were taken Indoors after they. had Kone, ‘The secret came out Saturday night when # ponse of health inepectors, wart ed by an anonymous letter sent by Reighbors, forced thelr way Into the house and found the olf folks Just get- ting over the emall-pox. For seven weeks In the house, with ¢ as nurses and no mes Dr. Monthan ingutred for other mem bere of the family and learned tha George had yed away from home ani was still a ty John and Anna al attendance. man_ to cinate Geo! fortn with. When t hat Laure bh heen etop- ping with friends at Cherry HI Se, Ke, he notitied the health authorities there by telephone, Departmen: wagons carted sterilizing plant at the foot of East Bix- teenth street. fected and fumigated with has ordered 9 ryntine oon the houre, and has arranged for a guard of two men, day and night, to enforce It. CHILD CLAIMED Girl Held by Order in Jersey. ton, the nine: tt to produce Lilian in court, court free of the previous taint on her. as] “She and Dr, Ludden separated as soon as the Court of Appeals declared the Oklahoma divorce Mra. Winston ob- tained from her husband invalid,” sald the attorney. The mother now seeks to g3In control her ehtld.” outside of that court's Jurisdicdon, Mr. t oduce the child. ——————_ "had stere| CHILD BOILED TO DEATH. Ira The nolid slic er at Play. Carluccla w: ink water while at play. PHILADELPHIA, May 2%.—The heirs 4 to te in thie reabouts |g un- diigently by a tirement in one of the morning news- papers requested that Informatton con- Dickey, Jr. of No. M4 Land Title Built. ing, who has been directed to nettle the May 2.—John tained a straiige secigston and that ey; had been alone work In the hotel, He nent a Then, the entire house ~ BY TWO STATES Walker Winston is between two fires. It te all over Mttle Lillian Walker Wins. ear-old child) who has bien a tone of contention in the courts of Ne wYork and New Jersey for five Winston appeared to-day before Jus- O'Gorman, in the Supreme Court, ona writ of habeas corpus directing him wene Sweency, for Mrs, Winaton- but the burglar saw him|Tudden, said that his client came into a daeh for the front, threw nthe door and dashed out Ju: patrol wagon arrived on the scene, ty | UMicer Martin, one of the The attorney for Winston sald that tt would be imposible to produce the child, athe child is In the juriadiecton of the ty two dozen solid | Court of Chancery of New Jersey, and the father {n under bond not to take her ceney interrupted to say that few York a person in jurisdiction of the courts of this jorman reserved hls de- ‘Two-Year-Old Infant Fell Into a om the case, the had been smashed. MKettteleg,w the goods was about] Two-year-old Francisia Carluccia ecatded to death to-day at the hom eof her parents, No. 6 Oak atreat. ‘The child fell into a kee. of boll- Although the Rev. Prof. George b. Herron and Mias Carrie Rand believe they are legally married, the Rev. Wil - fam T. Brown, pastor of Plymouta Church, Rochester, who performed the pecullar ceremony last Saturday ni Im apt te find almself in serious tro} if anything terrestrial (s regarded as trouble by the Rocheater follower of the Herron teachings, Mr, Brown Is very earnest (= hie faith In Prof, Herron, and pretends to be glad he oMeinted at the “ceremony,” but It Is openty predicted that the good Con- gregationallsta of Rochester will rebuke him, even If they do not ark him to re- nquish their spiritual guldance for tome one less pronounced tn his ideas of what constitutes marriage rites Much tndignation has been expressed that a Congregational clergyman should lend himself to so unusual a ceremo and from Rochester comes the new: that some action in the matter will cer- | tainly be taken. The ceremony uniting Mr. Herron, formerly Professor of Applied Christian- ity at Towa College, Grinnell, getter known throughout the word as the advocate of the latest cult: which ne calls “Tho New Social Apostolate.” was performed Saturday night. Mise Rand, said to be one of the wealthies: young women of Iowa, and who was mentioned in connection with the dl- voree recently secured by the firs: Mrs. Herron from the professor, was the de. Recently the professor and Stina Rand were registered at the Hotel Em- pire, this city, Mrs. Rand also being 4 guest at the hotel. Odd “Ceremony.” The ceremony—if such it may be called—was performed in the Schuyler apartment-house, No. 61 Weat Forty- Afth atreet. To be exact, according to the bridegroom, no ceremony wan per- formed, but rather the determination of Miss Rand and himself to live together as man and wife was “announced.” After the gueats had been welcomed Prof. Herron arone and bowing nald those present had been Invited to hear the “announcement” of hin wedding. “Wo intend to llve together as man ninimieininininit Cacia ss * setae since cae was Announced Their De- termination to Live Together as Man and Wife -Well-Known People Witnessed ihe Ceremony. oe oneness of we that reflects and mani- fests and reproduces somewhat he declared solemnly. At this Mins kered professor, said in a firm vole atend to live together as man swathes an! animates the univet oneness no more begins to-day It has no bexianing and can have of such onene: —the laying her mother's aide, and the groom sald} is the discovery the very soul of the There Is ro yesterday ¢ fn the married harmony of announcing, pronouncing, our marriage will now be performed by again bowing, no to-morrow rre ts only an eternal above its narrow and seems to merge tn the All- ani All-loving. he said, and} then considered | ¢ pastor of the Plymouth Church, of Rochester, etm Fuller Harmony, “In asserting the tim! the bound ess authority uf lov. es freetom and “Such an address," sald Prof. Herron| answers of chureh service. an improve- and antietsate a emancipation. hey have now s from the rest nounce a fuller. with that divine Ife which {s emergent in the unfolding aspirations of the world than could have been theirs as separate f the world. ricner harmony ‘annot but feel, ax all of us must y. the impotence of words fittingly or announce that which this occasion means. the Ume and the place for the muse of a . the speech of a god; the office of st or magistrate were an Intrusion Ketter than the fact of watch we are here might be anno sweet strains “We are not here to establish a reta- tionship which otherwise would not have fn t he a to inaugurate ¢ mmate a marriage, No word of ours or any one’s can add to or take from the truth and solemnity of tne sublime fact of a reciprocal love uniting soul to soul nin the presence of which ail human enactments seem profane and the supreme sacrament of human experience. are not here to perforin a sacra- but to receive one, to honor our- xelves and enrich all that ts best In us haring somewhat tn the truth and beatitude of thexe dear friends. nd are thus united | cof Feetprocal love; | together by the bon: nt and. truth, | ced to the world In the Brown had finished each of the, quests ‘made a few remarks, no one two minutes. Probation of that neither the profesor nor his bride being that of Mrs. gave her son-in-law a thirty-acre farm near Metuchen, N Nod. in the lrtle irunity waere the couple work thle summer, 1 more prominer ty: in the public months than whom jhe married ‘ divorce¥rom him two months aj ing cruel and Inhuman treat further state that his re! popular applause. of the most Oneness of Two are here to-day to announce to DEATH IN WAKE OF THIS NAME. The Third Carl Schultz to Die in Seven Years. The name of Carl, in the family of the late Carl H. Schultz, the mineral! water manufacturer, seems fraught with fatality. The death of Qarl H. Schultz yeatentay at No. 170 West Fifty-ninth’ atreet removes the thin! person bearing that Chrietian name tn the same family within the last seven years Mr. Schultz died from an illness prought about by an operation formed last August, He was twent yearn old. Fae frat death in the trio was that of Carl Schultz, on Jan. 15, 184. Cart was the eldest son of the manufacturer, a graduate of Yale, and about a year before hi« death he had taken almost vomplote charge of hia father's business, On the morning of Jan. 15, 1894, young Carl was injured in the acckient at Hackensack in the coldixion on the Lackawanna road in which thirteen Pernons were killed. Surgeons amputated both lege, but the young man dled shout twenty-four hours after the acckient without having recovered consciousness. Carl's death waa a heavy blow to his father. He aged vielbly from that time oa, dying several yeara later. His body was laid alongeide of his son in Falr- mount Cemetary, near Chatham, N. J. The Schultz famtly were proud of the name of Carl and wanted It er; H It wae decided that Herman, th xt gon, should take it in addition to hin own. Hence, for the last two mm oor he has been known as Carl !'ferman Schultz, Ho wae also a Yale man, having been graduated from that university in 1597, After travelling for some time he be- came treasurer of the mineral water concern. He decided also to become the company’s chemist and a year amo en y the collar and dragged him to the PLUNGED FROM ROOF OF HOUSE. Conductor's Assailant Takes a Terrible good and plenty. ‘The point referred {the point of the Jaw, for an Instant later Sheridan was gropin wan evidently blindly for sup- calling to the walt, dashed after Sutton. Smith saw the ra Then Sutton came alarmed, to the roof of No but the helme ve the hatchway. leap which will pre ‘ost him his which Is ex- pe Ce descent, he will probaly never again atrike a Third Avenue Railroad’ conductor as he did this morning. Third Avenue conductors are mild, but when affronted they are apt to do One of them, Lawrence Bheri. , Was annoyed at Sutton while leaving his car, dealt him a vigorous blow that would end the but In thin he was mistaken, calling upon the motor- man to hold the car, started up Third avenue In rapid pursuit of the fleeting . and that gentleman, . dashed Into the doorway of tenemént-house, 1054, and upstairs, Sheridan at his hele. the Foot Sutton took one saw the avenging face of the coniuctor at his shoulder, and, with a cry of despair, made one mad leap to the: one-story exteni adjoining building. If Martin Sutton lives, tremely doubtful, Ax | for Sheridan, the four-story glance around, ‘There he was picked up Inter, groaning, but unconscious, and taken to the Presbyterian Hospital. Tho no broken bone: serioun cuntusions, but they are of the opinion that- Sutton's Internal injuries are such he will never again ride on a Third avenue ca Button ts twent liven at No, 158 East Sixt: He met many friends last night in the vicinity of Twenty-third Third avenue, surgeone found The World Almanac is the most striking book of facts Some facts are: dry facts, devoid of interest to the masses. The facts given in ithe little volume represent the substance of everything of universal interest clearkr and tersely stated, and all phases of public opinion on ime portant matters are reflected in its pages. The 1901 vol- ume contains an index of twenty-four columns, agate type, directing the reader to every topic contained in its pages. four years old, and yet issued. and when he boarded Sheridan's car, o'clock ths morning, he was !n & too Jovial mood for the pleasure of his fel- Sheridan remonstrated with him, but committed no overt act upon the body of Sutton until three ladies, who had been at Terrace Garden, tered the Johne’ Hopkins Univeraity to take the vourse In chemistry. \va be there he wan attacked by Which has Just resulted fatall —— Week north or south or east or west, ~ boarded the car at Fifty-elghth etreet. x When Sutton began telling these ladies the llne83) now beautiful they were and how warm- esthetic nalure, Subjects. ly they appealed to hi aad even went so parse to offer. tc ‘ al caress them, elthér one at a't! (@ Sunday World want ad.’s the besB' or three ima bunch, Sheridan’ took — em 10,000 EXILED QUEEN TO VISIT PARIS Former Monarch of the Hovas, Ranavalonalll., Leaves Algiers. May 28.—Queen Ranava- isear has started for » first visit the French vermitted her to make This ts th overnment nas avalona ILf of Madagas- ench Resi- , 1897, and March year, she and her fam- the Island of Re- Marca, 189, she was Queen B was brought own village. the niece of the relgning Queen suvatona TL, who died in 183, When untedied she succeeded to the throue h were fought bitterly by ared war In dramatic the French Protec- was established in 188 ene was aken to Paris, then sent into 1 Isle Reunton, thence trans- ; She wears gowns ews tobacco and goes ——$ Ladies’ Neckwear Dep't 250 Dozen Summer Stocks, (washable) 25c. & 48c. each, Dimity, Lawn, Batiste and Piqué. 5 Batiste and Piqué Collars, Se anmmeal with lace and em- broidery, 48c., 55¢. & 75¢. 125 Persian Scarfs, 50c. each, value $1.00. Lovd & Taylor, Broadway & 20th St Sale of Parasols. All silk taffeta; black and white, and white and black woven stripes and dots; plain ons with) colors with embroidered dots, as to merit] Mise Rand was one jand plain colors in club coaching with cases, $2.50 cach, value $3.00 to $4.00. Lord & Taylor, Broadway & 20th St COMMENCING TO-DAY, Tuesday, May 28th, A ean ple eu PURE Prom dto' every day until rther not my permanent food exposition. Calland tre tt, L. J. CALLANAN, 11 & 43 Vesey treet. The World Almanac and Encyclopedia. A Library un Itself.