The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1901, Page 5

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WDHOQOOOSODOOHOOQOOONADAGAS DCOOUDOO0OO OL xe BOG 1, Ph He took me from did not wish to marry hii After living with him two day: ZT fled in horror. marriage annuiled, be. Then I will be marry Robert Van whom I love. free By GEORGE HAAS. We Jing’ asylum ago, my wife and mie. cated her. M; and Mamie ( but we called her nursed her tenderly. her. I promised my wife on death-bed that I would obey her wishes and marry Mamie, Mamie wis willing. By CAROLINE MAMIE HAAS. | Hadelphia to New York and urged imar-| riage upon me. He tried te kill me. He ¥ unkind to} the man I love. He is old enough to be my father, and 1! T want the! nd it will to Blunt, took the girl from a found:| nineteen years} We Rrew fond of her and we eda- wite lay dying, | hername is Carrie, Mamie) The girl my ratu was so gcod I learned to love her She told ever, was not made a Seon DOCQDOGDOGDOOSQOODOOGOOSNS: | | i OOS and that If I persiated in j would kill me. He sald that he had a revolver and had de- termined to shoot me unless 1 con- | sented to marry him. Prisoner in ao Room, | 1 was then locked in a room and not permitted to leave tt, My friend, how- er, and. she ft would me so and set the day in Sep-|*"" a iiespe to Van Blunt for renee BS . pms, telling him that [owas In trouble tember. This is the truth. Tl ang asking him to hurry to my anaiate did not threaten her, ere He arrived in New York the next These are the contradictory stories of | morning. but was met at door of the love life of an old 1 aarm-| Mrs. Drexler’s houae by her son and ing young girl The | Mr. Haas, who assaulted and brutally sister of the man is i Fein beat him when he asked to sea me the girl Into marryin It be A little ater I taken Ina ce kan in an excursion from Philad to New York beginning, and what Caroline Momie Haas has jared | 5 to be the nightmare of her life. Tt is a tule of the dying e old man's affections—th December's ardor for May. ‘The chiil of} age was warmed by the presence of a| new hope, the awakening of an affection | which he supposed to be dead. In an application for the annulment of her marriage to George Haas, fifty-five years old, q wealthy retired contractor of Philadelphia, Caroline Mamte Haas tells the Prosecutor of Pleas of Camden, J. a curtous tale. Caroline Is young and admired. Caroline has lived with George Hans} and his wife, who died two months ago, since she was three years of age. Her treatment hus been everything a girl could wish for. She went to school and} studied. Her houre for play were equal to any girl In the nelghborhood. 8h Was well dressed und the centre of th famlly's love. anese things she admits. Her Ife up to the first day of July was all that could be asked. When the Trouble Began. Mrs. Haas died, und. then Caroline ¥ her trouble began. She was brought to New York i of Mri Seven das, with death unless sh ef Mr. Haas. Caroline claims that to protect herself she married her foster- | father. Before that, however, she went for her lover, Robert’ Van Blunt, who was sent away from the house. On these grounds the application ‘s made, and Is oppoesd by the Drexler and Haas familles with a’ rtrenuousness that makes {t obv: that Caroline's uppearance in court Ww! be no Sunday-schoo! picnic. By Caroline Haas. Mr. Haas had accepted an Invitation to visit his sister, Mrs. Drexler, In New York, and on July 4 he took me and Beasie Brown, who lived with the family for several years. When, whortly after the first greet- ings wore over, I was alone with my. aunt, she sald to me: "i hear that you are to be married, Mamie.’ “Yes, auntie, Iam to be married on the 16th,” I repiled, “and 1 am very. happy, for I love him ever and ever #0 much." I believed, of course, t she referred to my approaching marriage with Mr. Van Blunt, “I thought you were to be married at| the {to a church Seventy fore going to the church ted his threats, and to marry him or m: outery he would shoo: Haas ree rant Mr. a that i aieen test [he had in his pocket. Fearing would Kill me [ went {through t mony, and was then taken back to my aunt's home. brought me to Philadelpht: following morning I au ping from his house. xt day h and on th led in es By Artie Drexler. j, May I be paralyzed and die by inches if this Is not che truth, Caroline Haas oo SOOO OOOO spot with a revelver which he said THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY wv NING, JULY CAME 5,000 MILES FOR RIGHT TO WED Widow Travelled from Roumania to Have Tie| That Bound Her to Brother-i in-Law Severed. WED FOSTER-FATHER, NOW ASKS RELEASE. Coercion, an Suit for Annulment. There were no threats used. 5 wfensty Cr ad wax no revolver employed. 1/4 OISON. USA. tell you just bow ft came about |X tf Rie 4 PSR CHIT tote EID A 3S ROUGH ON" Mary Neuere jee relief of a sprained Ankle, @ My uncle was chiliteas, One day he|® Roacnes ned or Bruise endon, Ligament or Muscle). ® Sty ° y R + ; ny Contusion, Sprain, Bruise or Mashy Ald to his wife, “Let ua have n child | sACOn uslones pra 4 » brighten our home.” They sent to] ® zs aes « foundling asylum and the protector | Any Honest Physician « brought two kirle, One of them was!@ will admit he can't cure a bunion, unless he uses and sassy. The other put her 2 MR. AND MRS. EMANUEL LACS ; Rough on Bunions. Any druggist will ‘ell you no around auntio’s neck und sald |S : remedy heretofore devised will cure a bunt i DOOGOOOGEODGOOOOS (ole (oloKeelerelere@ielersrererer a on. “Take me I'll be good to you," | SPOODDEWSOOOOOL Loe ole{e lorerore(ere1erererey ‘G naa ‘ Tyen Uncle George decided to take her! Untying from the socklers feet of her) There was an iudditionnl exona ¢ By tant ough 00 Bunions Is the Onl Cure Cabins Mamie Haas, She grew nap in| rother-in-law allken slippers Intricate: | worts an finally the woman knelt down, | . 30. ly fastened with small satin rit wnt ass! Wound Ube satin ribtens esvie ind for a sprain, bruise, mash or black eye it Is~ e@acanasnoeoans Golda’ Lacarc a ibieaulitaldlyourig | Gn the’ mans tset tel rabbl lultersd!tie WEN? AB Ge irprisingly effective. and for aching, sore, tired, Roumantan widow, this morning ac- | Sords Is N 6 tender it beats the world. complished the purpose of her five- s ot a Poison. ase. a druggists’, or by mail for i uousanit rail Journey G a her alee dy taken Buys and Insects do tict necessarily eat it, but it is i. S, WELLS, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J, US country when she heard Rabb! Moott, t 7 7; Mes (nbacsardansetwlenaanbnncientdewieh Offensive and Destructive to Insect Life. law, proclaimed her marital freedom nates Hues and + by external irritation and gave her the right to wed whom- Guaranteed to o work quickly und effectively [ieceXergabezchocsen, Is Cheapest and Most Economical Ther ceremony giaehtons GiCe over sense because highly concentrated and promptly effective been recognized in thin country. Tt in ring to the t » mite jt with an a Uae ns Wt ts made necessary when a strict bellever | faith in her country in the faith finds herself a whtow with. |. There ate many tnetanceas ith tarsnld THIS 1S QUITE ANOTINEH PREPARATION out issue, The brother, if auch there| the women tov remain} in, of the deceased husband Ix jen her | single Hay the the love of my uncie kind to her. nd aunt. Then they crie m, and Aunt Mary died, bert Van Blunt, my He called on Carfle and Mary's bos | Then R eared, Uncle George know it, Carrie prom Ised to marry in September, and first week in July Uncle George asked Carrie and Heaste Brown, who board to xo for a lit They agreed. [to our house. uly 4 Van Blun: | doand asked far Carrie, She did [not want to xee him. “Give him. this »jting and say Ido not want to see dim,” she vald. We toid him_to go away. 1 her deception. v ‘an Blunt and he came. Uncle Only Sorry. uncle was only sorry. ¢ married. on she She seemed hap; uy ran away and E he ry time George Slate turne around dislocates his shoulder. |up suddenly from a chair the ead of the Aumerus slips out of ite socket and ‘m hangs as limp as the tail of a the jay he sat in hin room, at No. 948 Lexington avenue, and told his troubles swathed fn) band: . Yesterday he dislocated It for the forty-third ume. The setting of hie shoulder ts so pain- ful that he an an. ach time the operation Ix performed and In this way has broken the ether record. He has taken more ether, {t ls sald, than any other man in the wor! “It is rather hard luck," said he to The Evening World reporter, “that ery time a fellow moves he has to be Infd up in dry-dock, Why, only last Sunday I was sitting In a restaurant with a snung lady when I felt some- thing give away. I knew it was my shoulder again, “Thad to be taken home, where Dr, HAD. DISLOCATED HIS SHOULDER 43 TIMES. ——_—___++. |Peculiar Affliction of George Slate, Who Has Angina Pectoris and Bad Luck. Riordan set my shoulder. 1 felt well If he Jumps] enough to go to the office yesterduy—1 am an advertising agent—and had just rettled down to work at my desk when away went my shoulder. “The doctors say I have angina pec- —that Is, strangulation of the heart. When I have one of these attacks of to the heart my body twitches and that islocates. my shoulder every time, 1 am twenty-mix years old and been troubled in was a Ittle boy, “When | wax going to school I played baseball, and when thua engaged one day I dislocated my shoulder, 1 took off the bandage too soon and snappea one of the ligaments, Since then it has been continually getting out of place. “I have ta be extremely careful. 1 cannot run or hurry, I dare not go In swimming, or dance, or sing, or take any violent exercise. Even when I walk 1am obliged to be cautious, The least sudden move throws out my shoulder. But despite all my care I have thes attacks of the heart, and they alway; result in a dislocation of my shoulder. this way ever since I here in New York right away, plied. I soon learned that she thought I waa to marry my foster-father, and told her that, althougn he had spoken of such a thing, it could never be, that U would never consent to It. As I war speaking Mr. Haan came inw the room and angrily told me that she re- BROTHERS ACCUSED. Londons Held for A it Growing Out of Labor Dimcultics. Samuel, Willlam and Abraham Lon- don, painters, of No. 168 Fourth street, Jersey City, were held for the Grand Jury in the First Criminal Court to-day for an alleged assault on Harris Ruskin, who has a painting business at No, 217 Newark avenue. The trouble arose over labor union dimculties, Rus- Kin left the unton and employed non- union men, He alles that when he remonstrated with the brothers for try- Ing to get his men to leave work they wet upon him and beat him severely. Conflicting Sicries of Old Man's Love and aj; Young Lover's Defeat in This Child-Wife’s has falxifed in everything that she has They She had everything Whed. Carrie waa kind to auntie. oved When ‘Aunt Mary got sick Carrie nursed her. It was on her deathbed Aunt Mary called them both to her bed: side, VT, nild, George. Marry your ‘property to her. on Aunt| “Did vou demand that this man make cousin, s she got to iike him., She never the pleasure = ACTRESS. LED was happy when they came Then it was that Uncle George dtacov- She telegraphed for “Core ae *Pantadel mi tage Fi iT} zy i pila take’ your her ‘arrie cried and aid for him not i U throw her out in thesireet wnere| Caught Olive E. Day ha‘ took Her ta nia nome. "Uneie’ George After Her Di took he home.” Cneie George . jrelented, and) Carle said she would chy P: marry him at once. Ba we ntl w t to the iscopal Gaureh, where Unele Groree and Cousin! ouve g, Day ,who used to be an ace The totiowlng Uncle George in mourning for her. He ix about itty, years oh) and she ts twenty-three. | the City Court to-day a My" uncle loved her unselfishly. “This 1s | judgment obtained agalnat her by Riese | the truth ao pete me God: Brothers, grocers, at Seventh avenue 1 have protector In the eyes of the Jewtsh Inw, and she must elther marry him or s cure from him a release which would entitle her to marry with all the rites of her bellef. In countries where this practice still holds the ceremony ta performed with marked solemnity in’ the synagogue, and the family and friends of direc: partien regard It as an occasion for feasting. The Princtpals. The principals to the ceremony per- formed in this city to-day were Mrs Golda Lace, the widow, and her brother- {n-law, Samuel With ten wit- nesses, required the orthodox law, Mra, Lace met brother-in-law at the nome Moott, No. 109 by her of Rabbi B. Norfolk street. The home of the rabbl had been pre pared for the ceremony. The witnesses were provided with chairs arranged in a circle in the centre of which wan a long board. Rabbi Moott wax dressed In his ceremontal robes and his bulky figure looked very imposing. When the brother-in-law appeared he was told to bare his feet. Then the rabbi directed him to put on a pair of allken slippers, the atrings of which the rabbi himself wound about the leg and necured. Lacs was next told to stretch himself at full length on the board while his handsome sister-in-law was bidden to stand at his head. Werds of the Ceremony. -| Then in Hebrew the rabbi asked, turning to the woman: you his wife?” 1 did," was the reply. "And what was his answer?" -| “He refused.” t THE ROUGH ON’S} x rt Never Fail. | toe PLETE. BEWARE of any “Rough On” 1K On” not bearing the name One @ S. WELLS, Jersey City, N. J. PER’ pect All others are Nasr eiatS STU OUS: at) AuLays ALLIRRITATION AT ONCE, Reouces EIARGEhRa of THE aves f FASE CURE. 35¢ 5 DRucaIsts Sent ‘CY Mate. ES.WELLS, Chemist, mud have and pale wceording he marry It Hn oher privilege to Yoher mind the next minut take him she marrle tee orm, that have. b re and refuse t yugh te a Beauty, F IB not vi She has all a Rovmantis SN xraduated with Mucharest Y SOLD ALL AROUND THE WORLD. Does Not Evaporate. Cures without making the leet sore. Relieves palm and soreness the Instant applied. butoat any to Samuel 1 conn Bir Was enKiied It i Tal Poisonous. Has No Offensive Odor. Corn remedies may come e and go, but “Rough on TAS And thoueh st-onge ‘ yerietrating, persists ry tirin, wink out of ai pial ce aah iad thera beri nied Corns" goes on forever, and In spite of unheard-of. : and agreeabl@ te persons, Wil not sail nor injure clothing. competition it remains the standard, the old and JEN MIMESF CHEAPER: ii ever reliable, never-failing cure for hard or soft OO Mites Alone, sectiver prove a corns. 7 Airs Lacs then a aed. yt ! out worry ear (fren Rouen one Cornel could not be the standard o this country. Alone she set out from y eps ORQUitOcs, licks, the world without unusual merit. 15. at druggists’, Mue cllinsite 4. trom persons, or these atid Tee frou hy boxes, - ggists’, tneneeital Wiatecunteciier at Droggists'. Ny malt ase Houmh o clears out Rats E. S. WELLS, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. tng the trip tn, and Mice, Vie So WALLS. Jersey ¢ 1 ” rN. arrived here Sun SS ee for the frat time Lacs met ls sie in-law, law's maritial rel Mrs. ‘ss smiled pler."" A MERRY CHASE in supplementary Haecall in ofa wan examined Justice the result tress, proceedings before and Forty-elghth street Mrs, Day owes the plaintiffs 8111.04, Jultua A. elaohn, the attorney who examined Mrs. Day, told of a merry chase he and another process server had before they finally served Mrs. Day Int Saturday. ‘The chase le from the Rosamore Ho- tel, where the defendant lives, to the Brighton Beach race track, thence into the ocean and finally to the Ocean Ho- tel at Brighton Beach, Mr, Day was finally served while she was getting out of her bathing costume. “Of course, ‘we could not serve her while she was in the water,” sald Mr Getzelsohn. “We saw her, however, and wulted until she had finished her bath. She skipped out of the ocean and ran tu the hotel to drers. “When we went beck to the hotel we were threatened with urrat, We finally got up to Mra, Day's room, She was ising after her cip. We knocked on door, and when she opened tt 1 ber the order for her ‘o appear in the City Court and be examined."* Mrs, Day In the wife of Charles E. a well-known downtown cafe pro- Mra. Day, although paid to be f considerable means, ap- urt to-day without a «ingle iryon her person. Bhe wan ased, however, and Is plump and pretty. Iu answer to qnestions put by Mr. Get- wlaohn Mrs, Day said that she had no the hand pos peared In Dlece of Je stylishly d ABLAZE WITH CEMS AND TIPSY "DENTAL PARLORS, SuBBEARTnG| to Be That of| ete Woman's Skull. 54 West 23d St., New Yorlc, McKelver, Missing | Fractured—N. ¥.Man ay & 4i6 Fuiton St Brooklyn. from Coney. Severely Bruised. (Second door west of Abraham & Straus'a} i POSITIV! 1D AND FILLED, MAIN BY OUR NEW BOTANICAL tY APPLIED TO THE GUMS? ‘59 P JERVIS uni) Lal Milford NY n dy Mott 31.—Miases ing we nh Mek s wh Island ra in ee Ey Police Save ‘Mrs. Anne Ie) wing’ tre pie poe B. . sult t guests of Perfect Fit Guaranteed. ennett’ from Be- nay. of No. 1 King runaway tan ep a K last evens ing Robbed. Full Crowns, Gold Fillings.” Sitver Fillings air The g of Wagon struck the ra hurty: | bride er othe creck, throwing th T MRS, “BENNETT'S” DIAMONDS, Aneel TAB IBATNINTRTC HORE Rtee OUR CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK teen cre es lothing s skull wag fractured, | mic bensty!at a voull cemeltnnbed Sollinive din nok tped with bruises Hours SA. MM. tao P.M i | Sunday and’ Holtdayn 9't6 4 | and Swediah spokes: IN ATTENDANC MUNYON POINTS a room of the : A utiful and accomplished woman Monday anurn- The W H pireared before Magistrate Crane in e Way to Health, Happiness Harlem Court to-day In an unfortunate matouys| M e Lae forsee predicament. She was daintily dressed a man wi and Prosperity. 8 = {| T\Tl-o)” FoR. her humiltating position Sho _ EVERYBODY sald her name was Mrs ne Tens |" Clothing, Cloaks, Jewelry, hett,"" of No. 122 West One Hundred! and | Twenty-second street that she was thirty years old Mrs, “Bennett” corner of Eighth avenue dred and Twenty-tth » ing followed by th was arres sk One Meive Saturds while be Nelous bundance of 1 po attra Heeman, Bhe se Was Prrentyneth ar IRVINE SUCCEEDS REDFIELD. countabl University, " SA, ONO YY. duly ae University waist, a black =k rank lr ha Ina irst of ¢ formed Sergt. Eurtind that sre wite of a rich nufac Malgeas Pittsbarg; BUCH Sse aummer at and gives tw meat fp veatorday ti ¢ ne Bh RY to the whole body. It on Bret fell in with friends and dine F nm and maker lite living.” DIAMOND 4 and vet _unwisely | it you are is, Mt you can't sleeps you Won't relish your fot 1f Yo If you are dizey spepaia 4 permanently peraonal property of value or no bank account. ave you any interest In the prem- faen at “No, 213) We Forty-elghth cot?” wan asked, have not—not now. I did have a lease of the premises, but gave my hus- pand a bill of sale for all the furniture in the house and assigned the lease to him In October, 1899. “How ruck did you receive from Mr. Day for 4 Mhato thousand dollars.” What did you do with the money?” T paid bills with part of it. Then I lot $1,000 on the Faces. Have you any jewelry?” No, I have none—not even a watch, As to'diamonds, I never wear them. res at wae taken until Aug. Quickly and Permanently REMEMBER, [have been treating rapture for over Ie teny | thou ! care | The above is not a mere statement, but it Is a fact. | money and time on trusses, If you du you will wear one to your grave, | truss’ will cur Rupture. Every trustewearer will bear me out int Jement. It the Doctor who has permanently curcd over 40,000 of | most severe forms of Rupture, and who can cure you, | as soft as on’ Wit CURED WALTHAM WATCHES, DIAMONDS, Sweskls le delivered on frst ATCH CO.. 271 Droadway, ly best nd DIVORCE Ge race Me with iy Shs tis the MUNVONS DOCTORS a have ana would I ome In a ne, and the chances are we can re- nu to health; if we cannot, we will | The examination and advice | inink doctor, phyate store tell you 40. ara free. MUNYON’S, B’way & 26th St. thousands of references and testimonials upon application, No Truss, No Pain, NoCutting. Send Rookiet on Rupture free. CHEMIC-ELECTRO INSTITUTE, caarans sed ere usrati, er Hoar! Seiad GS. ov B'id'g, 489 Sth Ave. N.Y. Sundays, 1 to4 P.M.

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