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THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 5, 19012 DEPEW’S OWN LOVE STORY: HE IS TO WED MISS PALMER. OOOC00OCOG0000000000 DOO OOD OOOO Cupid's Latest Distin-|& | » guished Victim Tells The Evening World of His Romance that Be- gan Eight Years Ago —He Is as Happyas a Bridegroom of 20— Enthusiastic in His Description and Praise of His Bride- to-Be. (ssevererersys United States Senator Chauncey M. Depew, whose engagement to Miss Mary Palmer, the young daughter of the late Henry Palmer and granddaughter of John Palmer, founder of the Merchants’ Bank, of this city, has Just been an- nounced, tells in his own words the sim- ple story of his later-day romance; of his eight yoars of constant wootng: of is love for his Glbsonesque charmer; of his courtship and final success in wine ning one of the most tiful and awe. complished of yorrg wo! his bet The Senator, who h. nied rumor after rumor of engagements to various ladies of fasaion and fortune during the Yast few yenrs, at last admits his com- plete surrender to Cupid. He Is a guest of H. McK. Twombly at Florham Park, near Morristown, N. J., and will not re- | © turn to the city until Monday Depew's Love Story. He was «itting this morning on a great white bearskin before an open fire in the Twombly drawing-room when an ‘Evening World reportd: interviewed him. He sald he did not look romantt Romantte or not, he did look roty and smiling and confident and happy. “The Evening World wants me to cell my own love story.” he sald, “and thet fs hardly fair. But 1 am so glad th days to be tn the world, that I su) he began, “people have THE SGHLE LETTERS, Correspondence with Com-! mander Hodgson Put In as Evidence. Fr Hodgson. y navigas wruidyoe Schley’s Mrgeh Ure ive, eon fore the Schley The Sehtey Letters. Lemly and) Mr Inquiry for after which Mr. May of questions Intended Schley side of the conduct of lyn during not only the batt! of the entire Santiago campaisn. POSTPONED Labor Unions of Fall River | Recall the Order to Go Out. me oy reture recommen o work Me he action of the § which votes this a thin question, We fee ih Mr. Hann inquiries were deve partly to developing m: concerning the bombard) Spanish whip Cristobal Coton The entire corres Commander Hogs Schley was There ts much Interest in yee eplnode concerning Sampson and there in stl d he will be a with with Admiral Sch: say for what da calted, . Lemly said: “if th 1 was yi Jay requested by the i Ant to produce the original of the letter from Admiral 3. Commodore Schley, date the question being ax at the end of the hether tt should be jantiago.” will remain An Erasure. “1 have the appears ‘Sant will wed Uh stated yest ie as . at the reanert of Schley’s 06) “in which. ald, “you will hhad me engaged at tntervals of six Benths for eleht years, “They have marricd me off to wide and orphans allke, and they have even kpown all the detalls of the atch and who made it. Now that | am really en- gaged and really to be marrict they can't belleve It. They can't believe tt has happened wittout their knowing an the processes.” An Elght-Year Romance. ‘Then he stopped to ask a fex quer jons. *E don't see,” he raid, “anything 0 remarkable in my being In love. I don't see why I stould erend my Ife with a rallway share in one hand and an afte: dinner cigar In the other. ®) ! He said this with a perplexed face SOS MNAGADMATIONSGMNECG OFS) PROVO EPLGE-EE- DEEL EDHEEO? oe “’ SQ ooo 3 DEPEW’S DESCRIPTION OF HIS FIRST KISS. “Why, worlds couldn't buy memory of my first kiss, on the river at Peekskill, in SENATOR DEPEW'’S IDEAL OF A PUBLIC MAN’S WIFE. Before going abroad ast June, Senator Depew, in denying the rumor of his engagement, made the following reply when asked what qualifications COUNT SOOCORCSCCr” he deemed necessary in a wife penal 1 remember i | “In my case, belng a public man, my wife would have to be SNS a 3 handso Then she would have to be attractive, for she Roainst oy otneKe faci ene ah Daughter of Ex-Vice- would have to represent me nt the head of my table. 1 would of her tou her lu President Morton Re- her rogulsh eyes befor Pity, pity the poor e1 has never enjoyed Uke that! “When ! was a BIG 1499S ESEO POD OD want her also to be a woman who could win the men 1 could not reach. Such a woman was Mra. Logan. She did much to make Johu A, Logan. “BHealdes this, 1 should Hke my wife to be fo ing gown and slippers and to apend her evenings at home, As to her age, the can be anywhere from twenty-five to seventy- asto ange. Youth is not always the ceives $30,000 Year- ly as Her Marriage Portidn—A Brilliant Wedding. CEDOOCE: of her dress IC SOOO & Phis night my little t Was with LONDON, Melon Oct di Have | big round pter of Lavi P, of the United erigord, pOELIUNDED DOEDDE ed Mr. Depew, thoughtfully. A Fine Mastcinn. you ever seer moon shining on t Peekskill on ad you have you ki and a laugh for a fintet, and then he told his own love story aulte simply. “I have been engaged seven weeks, said Senator Depew. “Let me see. Mid- dle of August, middle of Septem seven weeks. I met Miss Palmer at Ve~ nt Boson Duke of ‘Talley rd, wax celebrated to-day a to be theart in for a bo hin» ight. “TL remember h crman that mo Engl all four French, as knows ftalla display decorate wT pulled ont avinhly g : ve be: c z . Oh, ‘ nee 2 3 r chief accomplishment fs her mus chlevou: Fs ith palms and ., the : itil bie unen sa stoone: w h ebryra Doi geven weeks ago, ss acre or @ho is ’onal of the heat amatear/must- See ertisonel area Raven Bepplée teoned with wht! ur. na mus Just elght years ago last August ith clans in Europe, Bhe does not write And Neliever had Wale'alrl a and red ro! nd the side chapels © B , . joseph H. Choate, the United State apendn every summer. When did 1 frst In Very Beautiful.” sweetheart who likes him Just ratte so Geaisivell Choate: and; Lord see her?) At a friend's ut dinner.| “I she clecer In conversation? Uttle bit and loves to be In th Pauncefote, the Britleh Ambassador to moontight with him ts the most @ the United States, and Lady Pauncefote “Yes, she is! and she tells a story he smiled, “that U Btrange, isn't It Should be so mixed up with dinner |@dirably, but she ls very beautiful. She blessed of mankind » core among the fret guesta to arrive. caelea that Leven met ray future wife |!2" xald Mr. Depew, with simplicity Well, we talked, After a w ‘They, were conducted to seats facing and dignity, “everything that a wo- we let the boat drift, I rather the altar, at one. We met there several succes. | sive summers, and © never went abroad without secing her and ner aunt. think, Maybe her pretty drew me nearer to her. M eyes man should be. Mr. Choate immediately ci The wedding has not been fixed. Tha al engagemcat waa announced formally in her loose curls touched my Lord Puuncefote, A Gibson Woman. Paris by Mre, Henry Palmer, hits Maybe we were ‘The Duchess of Marlborough was al- eghe was living in Paris, and she ts /{ancee’s mother, Shehas no plans for nothings. Maybe I most the last to enter the church, She coming to this quntry, and the mar- hand. wore a biue costume Urinmed with sabl It Isa mistake to say in Paris now. Her aunt Is she is in this country. the Waldorf, but she Is to- This t he el “Then tt happened. touch that docs ¢ Duchess of Tal on a magnificent mauve costume. riaRe will probably take place in Paris, “But.” ald Mr. Depew, “we haven't BODIOIOVISASAOSGSS « IMISS HELEN wedding of Cathollc Church, Chelsea, with conait- ed the and cordially shook hands with pers and the and it was) agre should again, de Capt. Ler the papers tr sion bearing upon th and Mr. Rayner repl he (Adtniral Se 4, Admiral more Hodgson Recalled. der Albon C, to Fontinur Lieut.-Comm mony of He was, yy Capt, Lemly about orrespond e with Admiral §: erning what the Judx ° denominated a newspaper “colloa The witnees took exception to the ure of the word “colloquy and Capt. Lamiy plied that this Was (he witness's own fzation. G ayo) evevere) er 9) 1 . rand-Perigord had topping at stopping Miedo, ‘Misa Falmer has not |0t a# far as that yet, at present. 1 Q thrill, A yours fellow i United States and French Bay an rea ceantry for fourteen years, jae no time to think of snybody's)@ more ft than he ed 1 represented. | The See ene in Paria and again this| Weeding, | I have time only to an-/@ a storm, and the girl coulin't ed to summer on Lake Geneva, and just be- | met telegrams and telephones, asking No B—This was written ba Hust, ‘Third Secretary, of the broth. States Embassy here and the bride, ond J. 1. C. ud mbaswy, an 3 | others, me jf It te true, but Iam glad to say summer. fore I sailed for home she*promised to| 1°" 2, wife. ‘be my Misa Palmer is a beautiful young woman, greatly resembling her mot! + | familles, Of the three beautiful He he most valuable possession, importing It beers one et the three Hermann | mann sisters, one married a Mr. P: mon ne trom the other tide, and not | Msters, of New Orleans, famous all over |of Virginia, and another became th an official nor a press representative | untry for thelr beauly uot more) wite of Hall McAllister, detected it about me. ana generation ago, She was edu-| California tawyer, and t CECCOCOOSSOCCoCEHoOS: pune ari Powitn Ae mre: th te flow roof the fee lebrited set you about atlas Palmer?” he re- (eated abroad and ts Qighly uccomplisie!. aq Ward McAllister, ‘The third was disagr isn peated. "Well, 1 wan trying to think |A® 4 mustclan, It Is sald, sho has eared | Ming Palmer's mo:her. : Fr aome New York society woman whom | the praise of many Euvopean masters One of her father's sisters wax the pleture hats and hei of somecmbler. T can't, however. Tut| Her father died In Europe, leaving a mother of Hermann and Charles sat Sa Ore ie erigord_attendod:t e Grisnoy, awalted ahe is very much Ilke the Gibson woman | widow and two daughters. Tho family | riche and Mre, Willlam Jay. Another Very tall, erect and with a graceful | continued to realde there, although mak: | was married to Herman Ie Roy, of a| th bride at the alta In th f the Bishop of Ei hac lage: ing frequent visits to this country. prominent New York family, a . | prominent New York family, and a third | :naun, ; K mn oho ip dark: her hair is quite dark,| Through her aunts Mise Palmer {| became the wife of Henry May, a rela- La A sth af Moste of the gu re afterward | best man. the late eieenat 1 . : ; sof the guecats were afterward | D ‘ ne wat with a decided streak of gray,” add- | connected with several noted American | tive of Mra, William C. Whitney, : vd weit an exhiriation Oy users atareception acid at the house | Gert. Galle Galurtets See <= on —— — ity of t 4 marr, ne. Ue. : ne ant Sras Boats brotn . i, witor FOR $1 | y then retired to the nty| The halle and. dining-ro of Mrw. of Ney WIDOW SUES $100,000.; WHOLE TOW! i t ogister, «cri | cusely decorated with to Forks Mins Ace end: Miss Mery Mor WN IN FLAMES. CUBAN M’KINLEY WREATHS. : SE ae tee ensing (mar wer oned_ with amilax. An jesmalds, The kowne fi rmed at the head of the ide and her sisters were rom “Lohengrin. 1 Memorials from Santiago, The register was signed by Mr. Me for President's Widow the Ward Line steame> Ss mn Business Houses 11 2 Timpson, Tex. HOUSTON, Tex. Oct. E—Fire which! o roke out at 11.2) o'clock last nigh: at} w, : a Mintpeont dTexew aeslvovediaiciontn tae | tee ee ene. atime eat entire business section of the city, en-|, canes 9} Per eeiereeerrar tig + 0-1 funeral wreaths from Santiago, At ® Orcock this morning only ¢our-| signed to Mrs. William McKinley. iment teen business houses were left standing, | Among the passengers was Capt, A, | Falkland, Henry and the fire was not yet under control, | 1. Fuller, of the Second Cavalry, 1'.'8.t ited. States ———— vith a squad of his igen, an guard | daughter, Mr. Ronaid oa i ve mttarypriaoners Wonsigned. (0 the Ualied, State Si ay atta jovernor's Islan ‘: *, vi a iJ 8T. PETERSBURG, Oct. §—It Is re- ported here that 1%! dicate with a capital of ten. millon ren biesy to operate after the Oras of next JOaR ey cea Action Against Central Road for Dr. D: ‘A sult has been filed in the Supreme Court at White Plains by the widow of | Dr. Alfred 8, Dana, to recover $100,000 damages from the New York Central allroad for the loss of her husband. ‘Dr. Dana wan killed by a train at Bronxville. His coachman while try- ing to get out of the way of one train got in front of another. Tho carriage fas demoliahed and Dr. Dana was in stantly. killed, The coachman wai badly, injured. Success Invariably follows In the track of the Sunday World Weats. oftrey, the ; Baron s wife, Count Loutx d Duchess’ of 7 and, Mr. fs and. oth Perbeord, rhe and ‘Mrs, con: | bestdes those H iN" sininter. Mrs. De Bille Duchess o! WHERE THE MILLIONS MEET—| Witla Walort Astor and Mts The Want Pages of the Sunday | Gri: x 5 i Tinreou A Mra. i World every Sunday, Manches Astor rand 1 "daughters, by Me 3 French » Seilie-e and 5 D: De Bille and Miss Miss Harcourt, the the sea Payncetote couple star 000. of ex Mor: i n Morton an i ent anit er Levi P. t ntly In at Ne were particu yom being Morten « " Je, the t wealth af $30,000 wedding portion. Comte "de Gajlifet, f the detatia | Admiral) 1, produced another copy MORTON WEDS BOSON DE PERIGORD MISS HELEN MORTOF. SHE IS NOW COMTESSE DE P a for on early an This | Washing to as her who acted ay’ cotton underwear, must be unan: question, and we ty very two weeks, In con vreferre: ne day they etn til hetore recall the the artvane Hoard of Aro fat noon and is renee with the leaders fs except the suianers had alk wut Monday for an per cent. in wages. 7 Mog the order may mean a tlement. —————_— TENDERLOIN HIS RUIN? Ernest Roeber. 1s complainant inthe to-day agains: Edward B Tall, twent ast ‘Thirt two years ¢ a third street, an agent for the State Car- bonating Company, of No, 217 East \rhirsy-fourth street. Rei} J» charged with having p: meney from the Btatle Cirtonat jE machines In been rion. nz man. It ts sald, of late a trequenter of the Te He was found in one of the resorts there Magne oy two detectives of the East Tairtyelfth street station. \ Magistrate Mott held him in $1,000 ball for trial. DOCOOU ox Priore Sy ROTTS. RIGORD. uauenatly rich. UNKNOWN MAN DROWNED. <) nody Found in Harlem River Near| with ridge. ef an unknown Harlem Miver near Wash- Bridge this morning. He ars old, five fect i In height, weighing about The body min was a pout forty-five y HI STRIKE USE SOME COMMON SENSE iN SICKNESS. Take the Only Remedy That Is Guaranteed — to Effect Great Work of Pa If ever a person needs to exercise the God-given quailty of common sense, it Is when he begins to be sick. One can afford to be stupid or akish, or careless and frivo- ious when well. The vor, {f he has his he erves are in good order, his mus- les sound and his stomach normal, vho cannot correct his mistakes. But the moment one falls sick-~| when, as sure as fnte, disease, with} ts mild beginnings, if not promp checked, ts bound to develop serious {IIness—there {s no longer| to experiment or blunder. e experience of the world has hown that {n every case of sickness esulting from impaired nerves and impure blood Paine'’s <elery com- pound does immediate and effective good! For the Inst ten years the thousands of authentic reperts of In- dividual cases have multiplied, until it can be absolutely sald that In no one case does this great remedy ever fail to benefit, and, If taken promptly, to cure! And yet during that time a hun- dred worthless nostrums under pat-| ented catchy names have been folst-) ed upon the public, and some of} them for a brief period have had arge sales. But every one of ¢ having been tried, has been found sadly wanting, and after thelr un- scrupulous proprietors have made all the money they could in defrauding the well and seriously harming the sick, these quack medicines rnd their catchy, sllly names has disappeared from view. There is a concoction be- ing sold in this State to-day, where’ {ts speculative advertising was begun a year later than in other States, a year or two ago, which has gone the, way of Its predecessors so rapidly that In every section of the country 06 NOT BE FOOLED BY QUACKS! They Are Dropping by the Way While the pound Goes Steadily on. a Cure! ine’s Celery Com- have been sending this greatest of all prepared remedies to the four quar) — ters of the earth in larger and larger | shipments, relieving and curing: the + sick, restoring the weak and de pressed to health and strength, mak- .< ing it possible for many and many © a person to live who could find.no relief in well-Intended prescriptions | or antiquated and worthless sarea- parillas and nervines. In these years that have seen 50 many quacks come and go, one s0- called medicine was put up by mo more experlenced a hand than @ pusking Philadelphia real-estate dealer; another has been and is now run in part by a group of sharp newspaper men; another which origi- naied as a pleasant thir= for colds has added not to its virtues, but to {ts schemes of advertising, until It has become In the minds of its pro- fectors a cure for all the ailments: under the sun—and such Instances might be multiplied. Don't touch: ~ them! 3 % A! these have had or a° having: their , While the demand ‘for America’s greatest family remedy—@ — real remedy for real {lis—an effec- tive tonic and honest invigoratsr.— has not suffered from the attempted |” substitution of other preparations. Ai Paine's celery compound is a medi- ~ | cine that cures the sick, and no high- class druggist ever attempts to induce a customer to take anything in its stead, ; Paine’s celery compound has gone on steadily gaining in fame these | years because those who have tried — it have gratefully sung its praises, and in every community In the coun= __ try have by word of mouth spread its fame. According to the well-known ethics of reputable physicians, this scription was at the very where {t was first exploited the sales have dropped off as rapidly as they egan, and the obscure company be hind It finds !t no longer possible, ven by the most sensational meth- ods, to create any demand whatever for It. Unlike all these and other such preparations, Paine's celery com- pound has stood the test of time and experience. It is not 1 patent medi- cine; {t Is the discovery of one of the grentest physicians the world has had, probably the most successful practitioner in this country. whose reputation was already est>blished as fA specialist in nervous diseases, and who wns and Is the foremost author- Sty in the world on the diseases of the blood and nerves, Prof. FE. Phelps. M.D., Li. D. As distin- guiehed In his way as his kinsman, that other great Vermohter of the family of Phelps, who, as our recent Minister to the Court of St. James, so ably earned the title of diplomat and statesman. In these last ten fetors of Pain MR. AND MRS. S years the pro- celery compound in Babylon and Mr. ration of Mr who were married two years ountry home of the bride's father, in North Babylon, L. 1. le pug dling society, 12 which both Mr. and Mrs. Pel! have always been extremely popue lar, | Pel] was Miss Inabet Audrey sow daughter of Mr ors. Fred: R. Towns has returned to her fathe Ion, ‘Phe peautiful residence on reat Great Neck will bi 0- orrow, and Mr make hls home for a time w Pell, at Port nd Great Neck Evening World Peli home yants confirmed the story of tt aration, M>. Pell had gone to > His butler sald: “Mrs. Pell left here weveral weeks ago. 1 believe she Is with relatives at Sew Girt. “We close the house to-morrow. No. Mr, Pell wii not retarn here, but will go to his brother's In Port Washington. Of course, 1 do ndt know what trouble ‘they had or the reason for thelr separa- Th Osgood Vel! ago in the tton. The servants nave all been discharged. who js one of the Brees w York, al estate operators In > relatives in Great Neither of the young people nor their intimate friends will give any explana Han of thelr separation, It ts said, how Mrs, Pell’s father approves leaving her husband, That nt will reach (he court her course in the estrangeme: ‘s genied. ‘the announcement ot the engagement of Mr. Pell ana Miss Townsend In 16% \| pounds, with brown mustache and eyes. He wore a black sack coat and trou- xers, black and white striped shirt and nd the wed- On Oct. 14 SAID TO HAVE SEPARATED. | Young Society Matron Is at Her Father's Home Neck, I. 1. reely presented to physicians in - good standing, and the formula te gladly given them to-day. For that reason Paine’s celery compound has never been included among patent medicines. Coming from so high a source, and so search: _ ingly tried and recommended, phys!- clans have long employed it as uns — healtatingly as they have used thelt official preparations. It drives the poison germs of deep> seated disease from the blood. It brings buoyancy of spirit fn place of lassitude and despondency, It allows the overtaxed system ta start fairly on the road to health. It procures the sleep so necessary to brain and nerve centres. It strengthens. Invigorates. Gives new tone to the system. Makes the blood healthy. I food for the nerves. | It makes people well! | |, Thousands have been denefted, thousands have been cured by Paine’s celery compound, whea everything else has failed. . OSGOOD PELL Pell is at Great Neck. Roosevelt P i jexander Vat sselaer Ro Warner Haltazzi, Lawrence B. man and R. M. Littlejohn, who attended him at the wedding, ‘ ‘At the wedding tae bride wore a Sowa — of ivory-colorea Satin, en UFaiBy With (runing, Ute Vel, and care | Fled a oouquet of wie roses. "To insure Ae in accordance with the” ton. vaguthing. Olds 7) something dorrowed, * Tne “something oid") 7 DUI IACE, M fhaay Be |r thitig new" Was her costumes |) fe “sumetung Dorrowed" Was a bund= “gomething blue” wad ise, nec in diamot & wen at the waist and. — in its fowas, o 9 t was predicted for hex 7 nds who were in the secrets Dut tae omen seems to have fail Mrs. Pelj's maid of honor was bridegroom's sisier, Miss Gertrude Pe i her bridesinaids were the Misses. Emily Trowbridge and Mabel C. Post. 3, “Osgood Weil ty very popular 4m r aa social clrciea 1g and is noted for lien ,0Ve 4 the vurai kercmet, & bewUtitt horses. has frequentiy interfered. puoiic in del alf of iil-used animals, January. cased the arrest Park avenue for drivi cubman 1 unfit for service, Horae that i Mr. Pell was on his way to a din | pare: vening dress, Dut he broke Big: engagement, mounted the box a: 3 the animal a 0 i zi Just foue. ypars betore pias Sung Pell. was dined the" Ing (Long Island) Police Court f puting Nathantel G. Ingraham graham was married and lived his famity in New York, He “Di nt In ‘socloty, and at & Long Isiand Ingraham 1s criticised Pell. remark u % a young wornan’s hand too om eit went to Ingrabam's Boia man an apology, Amr Toketract nnd Pel keaaeked i In the pollve court pl ain