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fife Long Refused to ? Believe, for the Sake of Her Baby, But When Convinced She “Took Prompt Action. Willlam Parkins's only comment as lene: turnkey In the Newark Jail closed ‘the cell door, leaving him a prisoner, was: ‘Well, she got next at Inst.” je" Is his wife, who after years of Godt and distrust had found him out and acted with a spirit that staggered him, : He had said many times to his friend: when cautioned that his wife must in| the ond learn of his misdoing: “Oh, no; Ida would never believe It.” | Wil Parkins ts thirty years old, gal- Jant asa beau of the Middle Ares, with} & smooth ruddy face and big that laughed or glowed wit gerous fire as their owner will born lover. He won women with @ ylance and held them with hts smile. ‘He was smooth with his talk and looked 80 honest. He ‘was all this Jen and dejected. His eyes lack fire and he alts and plans how he may} “square it" with the woman—his wif Ida. To-day he ts sul- He Loved Too Many. Parkins loved too many women when { he should have loved but one. That i | his erime. In New Jersey the law regards the ample set by men of this stamp asd. of gerous to the moral welfare le. POW Parkins engaged hi marry no less than fo! WORLD WANTS ARE READ BY OVER ONE MILLION PERSONS DAILY Paid Help Wants in This Morn- ing’s WORLD. BUT Paid Help Wants in the 1 6 Thirteen Other New York Pavers Combined. ‘AENTS AMPRENTICHS ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. BAKERS « : BARTENDERS - 1 BBADERS ce 4 BLACKSMITHS BOOKBINDERS BOOKKEEPERS bors : BUSHELMEN BUTCHERS . BUFFERS : GANDY-MAKERS GANVASSERS .- ‘CARPENTERS CURPET-LAYELS QAHRTAGE ANDS AUASH GIRLS : TORS TRESS LACQUERE MACHINISTS 8 KWEAR 5] NURSES OPERATORS ACK EIU | PAIN POLISHERS 26] PorTEns ful ye sempre tee THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 8, 1901. PARKINS’S MANY LOVES AT LAST LAND HIM IN JAIL. DovenPorl: TOO COCO Without telling them that ssary for him to frst re, One of these, a girl pretty and form, by accident found Mrs. and then began the husband’ foocdooD) st would be ure Was those big blue eyes of his that won ines said this, young. Indy yesterday to” Will's mother, “and Would inary him tomorrow lf he would get a divorce.” Th is Teda HII, twenty-three years oll. vho {x stopping, with friends At No tt Teh etrret Newark hen ‘Trouble Came. Ida Varkinn. he 2 beautl: ig Wo Fight eye now whiten useful- | ed. a (Matrunte 1 him un ne might kept | hi Jestroyed tts Th rit hou But one Jay she came upon ter! he Had droy lai rocientceTiceee 1 from )ite pocket. Thwas aatve nnd reproeched him NO STRIKE / SNS BORDEN He Believes Fall River Cotton Manufacturers Will Grant Wage Increase. TRADE IS PROSPEROUS. Association Dodging the Real Issue, Inviting Contest in Textile Indus- try Between Labor and Capital. DEOGODODOIOLOISGTOGOD Mr._C. D. Borden id to-day that he did not expect the 20,000 cotton operatives in the Fall River Mills to #trike for an increase of 5 per cent. in wages. “He brtives that when the two weeks extension of the order to strike expires, the manufacturers will yleid and: will grant the Incrase demanded. Speaking of the members of the Man- ufacturera Association, Mr. Borden eaid “Unfortunately, this matter has re- solved itself into @ situation where the manufacturera in Fall River seem (o TRUANT BOY HUSBAND “THE MAN WHO DARES. OPOHSO3 Dede ered o4 feel that they are opposing ono man’ SPOCECECEOSESESOCOSTSOSOS | operationn and methods," sata he. "I seem to do thnt man, and a big mistake | « Recreant Husband te being made. for tt Is conditions, not methods, that confront them. Remarked: “Well, Market Flourishing. She Got Next, at|_“S% reeks aso print cloth wan aclitng at 23-8 cents a yard. A cut of M4 per cent. In avages was threatened. The operators sald they would strike, and wages were not cut. Now prices are 2) Ber cent. higher than then, there Is a strong demand, with three cents strong as the price, a threatened cotton crop faflure and cotton Itself higher, and ff the manufacturers o grant a five peF cent. Increase Oct. 21 they will do so out of stubbornness in the face Last,"” When Prison Doors Locked Upon Him. for some trifling, neglect and was signed Minetta Prices” She sald nothing, but not long after a messenger called at thelr home, No. % th ‘hirteenth with a. tele- street, Sram’ from a Nettle Davenport. Nettie| Of every argument against them. It vidently lived in Dover, thirty miles] will be inconsistent. But for my babe, Mrs. Parkins satd,| “Tey sald the other day: “Tt te all very well for Horden to offer three cents for spot print cloth, because he knows there {s none to be bad. Well, then, I went Into the market and offered threo cents for futures as far ahead aa four months, and they refused to make con- tracts with me, Does that look it} there would be a drop In the price? The He Iaane. “They are subordinating the real issue <-trade conditions of supply and demand —to a contest between capital and labor ona paltry & and she suffered on. There Were 01 The names of oul whom her husband respondence came to her notice. ‘ihe truth dawned on her slowly, husl he had roto trust) was worse than a Morman elder. His entire fe wax a matrimonial cobweb and his Victims seemed to be man: She wan sitting with her babe a few days ago when a young woman wae shown In, Ts Wili Parkins a married man?” she i ; Loam his wit ting Parking at a ng amitten by his manner, We'were to have been im: ea ed per cent. would nt ner of the mills, whe sald two women exchanged enfidenoe, I laters were jroduved, ond attet iq \t ail over they ate ‘dinner to- prs elt granted wh in Ade Re Tt would have been warm for Parkins. he come home. the day following, accompanted by | arking vislted the Second ce Court and got a sum-| husband answered th per, but had nothing to say. “Seemed to be running a sort of mat- rlmonial bureau and wan the only man. commented Judge Schalk. bust.” fr. Borden is not a member of the Fall’ River Association, He runa his! mills on. the co-operative He ralsed the waxes of his 3.00 operatives 5 per cont. and defeated the attempt | of the manufacturers to reduce wages 15 per cent. ' Frederick vu, Darcey Runs Away from Girl Wife, but Writes He Is Earning $10 a Week in Theatrical Company. Pretty Nellle Darcey vonla avenue, Jersey City, fourteen old and a deserted bride. has rece letter from hy t husband, Fred erick J. Darcey, If a boy of eigh- teen years, Youn: y has joined a theatrical “The Man ning $10 a week. FREDERICK J DARCEY. Reece aac hen et e ving wit Jer- Ise- and, after scekine work in vatn ele ded to Dn ‘Thursday Kissed his girl wife ko. he was golng to i Promising to” write his luck re consta ughed i n getting mar- the youth could idea of the ried, but the two ehtld ardor t $|SOLID BRASS—all sizes Le Boutillier Brothers + 'Metal Bedsteads. at WHOLESALE PRICES. 416.50 value $21.00 | 23.00 30.00 } 39.00 value 50.09 | WHITE ENAMELLED BRASS TRIMMED All sises—from 2.50 1 15.00 Le Boutillier Brothers West Twenty-third Street. ROCKEFELLER’S BRIDE , DESCRIBES WEDDING GOWN. ———+—_— Quite Simple and with No Orange Blossoms, but the Wedding Itself Will Be Elaborate. value 30.00 value 38.00 B Bedding. MADE UNDER OUR SUPERVISION. carled American Hair Mattress, size | 47, ° 7. 5 f0: Noi Best Black | $ carles American | Hair Mattress, size L 2. YP 5 25-16. Best Short Fair Mattress, size 40-16. Best Short \ Fair Mattress, sise ¢ Also, special offerings in Oriental and Carpet Rugs, 25-6. Best Black | = 3 feet - -J 4 feet 6 inches - - al L $ 3 feet - J 4. 65 4 feet 6 inches - -) Lace Curtains, &c. (Spectal (o The Frening Worlé.) second floor, 19x@ fret, is thrown ™ PROVIDENCE, R. 1, Oct. $—It witl]one room. Here the ceremony Is to be be a mauve and white wedding, that of| performed, 190 yards from the Aldrich Miss Abble Green Aldrich to John D. | hdme. Sockefeller, which will be solemnized| ‘The great room has deen bullt with to-morrow at noon at Warwick Neck, | white and the floor covered with white Hage of the aon of the richest man in {with roper of smilax, and curtains of he world Isthat nelther family rays the [amilax fall over the windows, Upon ceremony Is going to be very simple. each panel between the windows will ‘The. wedding will not be elmple. It|be suspended a great basket of mauve will be elaborate In every det: ‘There | orchids, Mauve and green are the only not an arrangement of flowers, tab! colors to be used. gowns, excepting, Indeed, the bride's, Wedding Under a Shell. Sat EA Led apply the word) on the north alde of the ballroom fs @ mpie. Areplace and before this the ceremony ; morning Mize Aldrich stood tt F will be performed. The fireplace has eo ee ee eee Fon quar {een banked with green and above the the hante of Senator Aldriehie sony juty | mantle Is ralsed a great sea shell woven aoe Ee ee eae stern ond [Of Fast Indlan grasses. This will over- eta z e ‘Ii nang the wedding party. From the country! every: day. sreen Is piepeceds ae eee % Rene Abas ‘The Uride and her bridesmatds wi Miss Aldrich wore a tan broadcioty | ee eee ne ee en went stalrcare, not be cusled, and Nellie congensed to | oF Arrival there. Hnce elope. suminer he went with Main ei is, but On May 1 th married In Jersey {Py mained away a few day City by Just rydon. Roth said ‘This tim e +k clupsed, they we of e Pred declaring he ax; and the bj ame distracted. She twenty-one rs old and that Nellie {asked the police p her, and ef w After thelr marriage | £orts were belns to locate him in Mrs Hrennan, wore | Shen the letter came tt was dated ni ed wi a eee) A red promis. nand lived with her tn her: Jer: | toy send iihid) wh me money and to City heme The ourit to write every day, xo Mrs. Darevy Is more hopeful. his position recently WIFE ACCUSES MIDGET HUSBAND TELLS THE COURT EDWIN STEAR HAD DESERTED HER. Unable to Stand the Afinence of RSon Week nein Clerk, jonment ar, a doll T shorter than told he erted her fused to had and had she ago weeks Aminutive three of a 238 1 an ears a Sand. Kast New York Baptist’ Church, ' r love wis so ent that their parents deemed it best to allow them to wed Mdward was orking at the tline st domestic responslbilittes dr him ty seek employment. He got a Job « a clerk in an otfice In this borough at % 4 Week, and he was the proudest Husband in Brooklyn. ‘The youngsters ved happily in a cot- tuxe and Edwin took all his) money home every Saturday night. When he ured successive ralees in salary uatil » reached $§ a week a short time ago appeared that his cup of happiness nould be full The ttle wife says that the posses- 38, SEAMSTRESSES | | sun 14 SHORMAKERS 15] SKIRT IAN: AA SOLictTors 15| STENOGKAPIENE.. 6) TAILORESses .. 3) TAILORS ‘TINS MITH RUNWERS 4)TUCKENS . VABNISHERS ., 37] WAIST MIANDS eB ateci : i son of so tnuch money made her hus- band “chesty.” He neglected nis home. Finally, she asserts, he failed to come home at all. twin, in a blase way, Ured of married Ife. He wits of actions sumMctent to cause al- most any husband to leave home, bist she denied Ms allegations with taming cheeks, In splte of her pleading and the advice of the Magistrate, Edwin refused to Klys and make up, ‘The case was adjourned to give him tle to think It over, sald he was accused ly —— CHILD HURT BY TRUCK. Bauer Four-Year-Old Sophie Run Down, Sophie Bauer, four years old, of No, a9 Sixteenth street, was run over by a truck tn front of No. 422 East 'Sixteenth street thts morning, She re- colved Internal injuries, and was taken to Bellevue. Hospital. ‘The driver, Thomas Lohres, of No. 6 East Slx- In the station-house Gtovann! wept. cused Fuchs of selling goods Policeman Henry went back to Averze C and observed Fuchs selling a green hat garnished with yellow flow- Such a busines It was Sunday In Avenue C. In front of the millinery store of Solomon Fuchs, t No. 1m ovannt Plocco was selling t 16 banan’, ers. He arrested Fuc! jet from my doorway out!” shouted! In the atation-house Fuchs worked Solomon Fuchs, "You are the way in.” himself to the vestibule of apoplexy. ovannt Plocco uttered burning words in his dative tongue and Fuchs called pen Polleeman Henry, of the Union Market station, to arrest him, There cams to his ald with bail Isaac Steter, whose butter and cae store is & few door from the millinery shop. Steler has a “pull.” He accused the BLUECOAT ARRESTED STEIER, HE WITH THE “P LES NO ULL.” TRANSFERRED POLice ST? “ati wav paca MORE. HE’ it eletel Jeleininintvinteinietnbleleicinieletebebeiieleinietieiet Jown ball, By this time It was noon, or there ‘mixht have been more arrests, To Magistrate Flammer, in sex Market Court, this tale was told. He discharged Glovann! Plocco, Mined Fuchs $5 and discharged Isaac Steler. Policeman Henry left the court with a smile on his. face. When he to the atation-house he found that he ha been transferred to Hamilton Fish Park. He has not amiled since, but ‘Avenue C ts all amiles, policeman of perrecuting Fuchs. Having made two arrests within an hour the policeman lusted for more ac- tion. He strolled to Avenue C and massed tho butter and egg store. He} saw Isaac Steler selling a woman four | eBEs. | “You are my prisoner!” shouted the| polleeman, dashing into the butter and exa store. “I'll make !t hot for you." So tt came that Isaac Steler had to send out and get somebody to go on his was speaking, dut she avolfed him and | continued: | “He got me to drink some whiskey and I fell asleep. When I awoke he was gone and so was all my Jewelry. This conalated of several rings, a dia- mond sunburst and a ¢old watch.” Mra, Eustis admitted later that she | had known Sullivan eome time. He de nied the theft and was held in default of $2,000 bat! for examination Thursday afternoon. —————_ TOOK STEPMOTHER’S CASH. Temptation Too strong for Lit! Sweatshop Worker, From 4 cents a day in a sweatshop to #0 tn w lump and freedom to spend tt Isa long step for a fourteen-year-old Girl, Bortha Haffmer, of Pitkin ave~ hue, East New York, made tt a few days ago. On coming from her toll In the sweatshop ehe found her stepmothers hoard, amounting to the sum mentioned above, She left home forthwith, taking the %0, She bought two Dicycles, a new dress, many ribbons and candy galore, She went to the theatro twice a day and qrag contemplating a trip to the borough of Manhattan, which she had heard of but never seen when the po: lee took her in, Bertha was arrigned in the Gates Ave- The prisoner, who was Joseph Sulll-) Aue Court this morning. An adourn- van, a atereotyper, living at No, 233 Enst| ment was taken until Oct. 21, when One Hundred and Twelfth atreet, tried! send bard to get Mra. Hustis’s eye while sho HOW SHE LOST HER DIAMONDS. DRANK WITH “SMOOTH” MAN, SAYS MARY EUSTIS. Worth $1,800 She folemnaly De- Mary Bustts, @ stout brunette of thirty, who gave her realdence as No. 24 West One Hundred and Twenty-necond street, told Magistrate Olmsted in the Centre Street Court to-day how she lost $1,800 worth of diamond Jewelry. “Tala young man, Your Honor," se sald, pointing to the very much fright- ened prisoner, “met me on the street, and by his amooth speech Induced me to go with him into the rear room of a saloon at Forty-sixth street and Third ayenue.’ The doctor summoned by Mrs, Du Bois naid Goetz had choked to death ina (it of apoplexy. =~ SENATOR GRADY ILL. Sala to Be Suff:ring from Return of Old Malady. Senator Thomas F. Grady has been ‘n retirement for a week, and is sald to be again suffering from the malady which disabled him last spring. A few intl- mate fricnda only are aware of his whereabouts, and these say that he will be about his usual haunty perhaps to- da; ‘They Insist that there is nothing in his condition to cause any great uneesi- ness, Tho Senator was taken fll during \the last acssion of the Legislature and removed to a sanitarlum, where he was under the constant care of physicians for nervous disorder. DEATH STOPS HIS OUTING. RICH. RETIRED HOTEL MAN VICTIM OF APOPLEXY. Ready tor a Daugh- Audrew J. Goets, Stroll, Expires as Hi “The weather ts beautiful, Helen, and I'm going out for a stroll,” gala Andrew |for nervous disorder, | J. Goetz, a wealthy retired hotel-keeper, | currence of the attack might be fatal, to-day to his daughter, Mys. Du Bots, in| but he did not take the warning as ‘ seriously as hla friends did. He sate- thelr apartments at No, 66 Manhattan | seriously ax hla. friends did, Ho gage, avenue. Weeks, but wire himeclf fata the ex. Mrs, Du Bols left him for a few min- ti ineiient vtorthe epenine.er the trouble returned, utes, When she returned to ask her father if he was ready for his zo CARNEGIE GIVES TO IRELAND. eho found him tying across the his room dead: 5 Library Fand of 925,000 at Dis- Goetz, who was only fifty-two years posal of Watertora. old, and had made his home in this clty! ponwpon, Oct, &.—The benefactions of wfter making a fortune in tho hotel| Andrew Carnegie are reaching Ireland. Dusiness in Albany, had been @ sufferer He hee offered the city of Waterford ‘from apoplexy for some time, 26,00 with which to bulld @ free library. skirt and coat, with white revern edged | SMUT We Trt oe ana him best man with Persian trimmings. She had on &) wit join tiem before the fireplace, have blue and white shirt waist, and her blue Ing entered from the marquee erected Axcot tle wan fastened by a pin set with |) ine rear of the tea house. HaltyarGesen) diemonda. Iu the marquee the wedding breakfast She herself opened the door to the will served at small tables. This carly guests who came down this mom] tent, which is of white canvas, will be ing, and while she talked, two men} cacden of American Beauty roses. standing on the veranda kept in sight | Wagon loade of the flowera came down every new comer until the welcome) so jay aint added to the burdens of the from Miss Atdrich proved them all In-| eyoreasmen, who have been nearly ACM swamped with arriving presenta for two Detectives on Watch, weeks. ‘The two were detectives and belonged | The bride will be attended by her two to a squad of nix, detailed to watch the | sisters, the Mites Lacy and Elsie Ald- house and to accompany Senator Ald-|tich, and both witl be gowned In white embroidered muslin silk. ‘Mr. Rockefoller's best man will be Everett Colby, aon of the late Gardner Colby. Louiston A. Hazard and Stuart Willams and Richard Aldrich will be ushers at the ceremony, At the reception which follows the ushers will be Mosnrs. Hazard, Green, “Won't you please my,” sald Miss Aldrich to an Evening World reporter, “that I haven't any tara, All thet about a tlara from Mra. Rockefeller ta not true, She has given mo some very heantiful things, but nobody has given me a tlara or te Ikely to, besides," she " , “they don't become me.’ Morau and Dr. De Wolf, all of Provi- ‘ly fa to seo my gown," ehe| dence, Though only the two families and a few intimate friends will witness the ceremony, more than 600 guests have been bidden to the reception, and they will be royally received and entertained, Gueata to Come by, Water. Warwick Neck is fourteen miles from Providence and most of the guests will be taken to the Aldrich home in boats, Sonator Aldrich’s yacht Wild Duck bas been reserved to bring down the Rocke> feller party, but steamboats are char tered for the other guests and will ram all day. In addition forty-five of the suburban electric ¢ars have been chartered and will be placed at the disposaliot Ane wedding guests all day to-morrow, The fact that most of the guests are ex- pected to arrive by water is shown by the fact that the driveway to the Ald- rich home, which was being repaired, has not been pushed to completion and said, “until to-morrow, but I will tell you what it Is. It isn perfectly plain white satin cut princesse and with a very little rare point lace on the body." “L aliall wear no jewels at all and no flowers, and T carry no orange blossoms. ‘The veil t* Just of tulle.” Miss Aldrich Is an extremely pretty xirl and very few of her published pic- tures do her justice, She was erpectaNy so when, at 10 y‘'clock, the dogeart drew up at the door, bringing John D. Rockefeller, jr. who had come out modestly on the street car from Providence. ‘Tho grounds of the Aldrich house have been made more beautiful for the cere- mony. For five weeks workmen have been upon the entate getting the walks and private pler in shape. Workmon’s Gift to Bride. Miss Aldrich has personally overseen nearly everything and her popularity with the workmen was proved when, yesterday, they filed up to the house bringing @ statue of a boy with » sword done in stlver bronze and presented it to the bride. 'Thp greatest effort hes been expenfied on the tea house. This ts to be a ball- room, but it was erected expecially for | ficiating clergyman to-morrow will be the wedding, It is dullt of gray stone,| the Rev. James G. Vose, of the enefle two etories in height, and the entire| cent Congregational Church, Providence, PEACEMAKER WAS. STABBED. ALLES MAY DIE FOR, INTER- FERING IN A FIGHT. each side, Mr. and Mre. John D. Rockefeller, who are at their town house to-day, will reach Providence to-morrow, where their gon has engaged every available sult of rooms at. the Narragansett Ho- tel for them and their guests. The of- the point of death in the Fordbam oFisvital. Alles, who ts eighteen years olf, was on tis way home when he was attracte@ by half a doven Italians who were Aght« ing among themselves. He recognize@ several of them and, fearing for thelz safety, he tried to persuade them to ga home. They would not tolerate his ine terference and stabbed nim in the left side. His cries for help bri Roundee man Sweeney, of the sforrisent ie st to the scene and the fighting Ital! took to their heels. Alles was y an ambulance to the Fordham where it wes sald he Had Tried to Pacity a Let of Tal-| Barly this morning fans Whe Were Quarrelling =| the Bt Cert . the Italtans who fad beea tn th Among Themselves. and they were brought before tal for identification. eoreecr= could not identity any of them they While acting as peacemaker in a crowa| 6 of quarreliihg Italians at One Hundred and Witty-figth etreet and Courtlandt avenue, tate last night, George Alles, a) hackman, residing at No. 63 Bast One ‘Hunéred and Witty-third street, | was jeoriousty etabled and is airy as to Chi Sanity. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Oot. 72g the Albemarle County Court to-day RuMn lolph filed applicatic tying et ; $ $7.45 and the notable thing about the mar-|crash. The celling, also white, ia traced = 4@ has a plain pine temporary railing om « r Brtaaevr re 29st wowmeiprwaerdavd