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THE WORLD: 5A’ OAKES SUES WIFE FOR HOUSEHOLD PROPERTY. Ce st at iinet itt et G eee Peet flatts felt ittet 5 os tO Ss tt Ai-ft- hit ticiic-eieitieeinicbitiricieeieiat New Turn in Marital Differences of Pair Aired in Court—Hus- band Says $15,000 of Personal Property| Is His. wife, Adilene Estelle Sullivan Oakes whom he Is suing for divorce, was to-day, Mrs, Oakes Raving secured the to sea her boy, little Paul Oakes, twice a week, and beaten Qvaband tn his effort to get her alimony 0f 125 a week stopped py Justice O'Gor- | | she refuses to | Property belonging to him and that she | deposited tt with the Lincoln Bafe De- Another turn in the marital row be- | tween Francis J, Oakes and his thir! | ent | another containing “one chinchilla vest, liven | one ermine vest and lot of chinchilla, her | ermine, mink and sable pl her a $44,000 houre and a M0-acre farm, | ta now confronted by a sult brought by ber husband to compel ner to sr 415,00) worth of personal property which | she sent to a storage warehouse whon | they broke up housekeeping at the| Majestle, ! Evarts, Van Cott & Erskine, counsel | for Oakes. say tn the complaint tnat return $15,000 worth of posit Company fn her own name. A schedule the property claimed consists of 170 ttems, among them being “a partitioned pox containing fur plec | talla and trimmings and a seal muff. 3; a bundie vo crutches, a bundle of flags. two shovels, a grand plano, three plano legs, Solel Helolnininieieinininininieieintelafefelé : ebbiietnt i : : foint tet ‘1-1: latmteletnfnled (ie! fetbieribietisichiesin ern beetle enibivicisiee ist man, on the ground that he had wiven! Wife Insists Goods Are Hers — Property in Dispute Includes Chinchilla Muff, Toy Wagon, Siove Lid, Piano Stool and Dish Pan. &@ piano pedal and a stool: three parte of A stove, one dishpan, two stone crocks. one clothes wringer, one sleeve board one flour patl, one hal barrel, one bundl dri In poles, one ther duster, towel horse, one toy wagon.” ummel, for Mra. Onke: nerved her anawer to-dey. In it she says the property {s all hers. ROOF FALLS; TENANTS FLEE Work on Jersey City Exca- vation Puts Many Lives in Danger, WILLIAMS SAVESMOTHER Is Himself Pinioned Under Debris While Carrying His Par- ent Down Stairs. Undermined by excavations for a new pullding, the four-story tenement at No. 433 Jackson avenue, Jersey City, almoat collapsed to-tay, Immense breaks ap- pearcd In the walls during the morning and fnally part of the roof caved In. Word was sent to the police station that the house was falling and a platoon of police hurried to the place. Teallzing the danger, the police or- dered the tenants out of the house im- mediately. Work had to be stopped In the excava- tion as the laborers’ lives were in dan- ger. Inspectors from the Buililng De- partment sald the house would prob- ably Quve to be torn down, The ten- ants became excited when the police refused them permission to get. their goods and had to be driven away to prevent them forcing their way In. One man waw injured in getting out of the house. He was John Willams, who lived on the top floor, While carry- ing his aged mother out, part of the roof caved in. He was pinioned under the debris and had his leg broken. Hie mother was unhurt. He crawled out finally on his hands and knees, and the police rescued the mother. In all thirty persons lived in the house and are homeless, The building {s owned by Moritz Kornblum. It ts valued at $25,000, ols HAS APPENDICITIS AGAIN. Alderman Lang, of Paterson, N, J. jufferer for Second Tim Alderman Joseph 8. Lang, of Pater- gon, N. J., who ts suffering from ap- pendicitis, will be removed from his home, No, 05 East Twenty-sixth street, to the General Hospital to-day. Drs. Newton and Smith held a consultation last night, and decided that the only hope for the patient was to have an op- eration performed. This {8 the second attack of appen- icitis from which Mr. Lang has suf- fered. He was taken down with the present attack cn Wednesday. Previous to that'he had been suffering In- tensely from rheumatism, of which he’ has long heen a victim. The opera- “tion {8 to be performed by Drs, New- fon and Smith. GIRL SLAPPED A BOLD ‘ In Court This Morning ogized, but Was Put Under $1,000 Bonds. J. M. Rosseau, who sald that he was tical engineer and gave his ad- No. 66 Madison avenue, was arralgned in the Harlem Police Court to-day charged with disorderly conduct and assault, Miss Bertha Streit, of No. 18 East One Hundred and Eleventh street, accused the young man of accosting her on the street, and sald that when she caught the tall of hia dress suit to prevent his boarding a crosstown car after she had called for the police he turned and struck her in the mouth with his clenched fist, cutting her Il Mina Streit and Miss Alice Horner were walking along One Hundred and Twenty-fi{th street, testificd Mins Streit, and were near Madison avenue, when MASHER.” Young Rousseau Apol- Roaseau stopped them and, with his hat In his hand, claimed acquaintance and asked them to go to a drug store for a glass ot soda water, He peruisted in his attentions, standing In front of the girls with his hat in his hand. Miss Streit struck his hat, knocking it from his grasp, He picked it up and ran to a car which had stopped at the Somer. Miss Streit followed and caught him by the coat, calling for th police. | When Jerked from the car, ane aI he aa rougi iy handled by Veral mea re attrac cileemene mS to the spot by the ouaseau explained to Magistrate Mayo he chad been dining. tos nett ea logiex to the young wo held tn $1,000 ball good behavior for six months furnished the bond. oF: os IKITCHENER UNLUCKY IN LOVE AS IN WAR. Lady Helen Stewart, to Whom He Proposed Before Goingto South Africa, It ls Rumored Is Engaged to Lord Stavordale. LONDON, Oct. 12.--A_ private letter from South Africa reports that Lord Kitchener {s greatly pained by the rumor of the engagement of Lady Helen Stew- art to Lord Stavordale, It is another rase of the soldier and the girl he lef: behind, To soctety it is an open secret that Lord Kitchener proposed to Lady Helen ust previous to his last return to South Africa. The young lady was in doubt, but asured the hero of Khartoum that she would consider the matter after the termination of the war. With this) Indefinite promise Lora Kitchener returned to the front assured of winning the hand and heart of one of the most beautiful of English women. That Lady Helen regarded Kitchener with favor ts undisputed, but the romance connected with his name hae paled as a of his recent achievements, and in common with the rest of the English people the youns woman has conceived a lower estimate of the hero than she had a year ago. Lora result BRITISH HANG BOER LEADER. COMMANDANT LOTTER DIES BY KITCHENER’S DECREE, ter Recent Proclamation, Vays Penalty. MIDDELBURG, Cape Colony, Oct. 12. —Commandant Lotter, the Cape rebel whose commando, consisting almost wholly of rebels, wan captured south of Potersburg in September, and whe was sentenced to death, wus executed yester- day morning. Two young farmers who had twice Joined the Bores have been hanged at Vryburg. The death sentences of a number of other condemned men have deen commuted to penal servitude, Lotter had been tried and found gulity on eight counts, Including sedition, the murder of unarmed scouts, the murder of troopers in action, the blowing up of raflroads ond the cowhlding of British subjects and Europeans, Lotter pleaded that he was a gubject of the Oran ‘teproved. ise Free State, but this was POPE LEO SEES CHAPELLE. Recent Apostolic Delegate to Phil- Jppines in Home. ROME, Uct. 12.—rhe Pope to-day re- ceived In audience Archbishop Chapel) who was apostolic delegate to the West Indies and more recently apostolic dele- wate to the Philippines, RDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 12, 1901. DWVORCED IN -FIVEMINUTES Record Broken in the Suit of}; Beautiful Singer Against “ Carrousel King.” ACTRESS WAS NAMED. Kehr's Diamonds and Miss Marie Fay'’s Formed One Blaze in Court-Room, Record time for a divorce ease in Brooklyn has been made by Juaticny Dickey in the Supreme Court. | In five miautes Mrs. Clara Kehr stated | her case yeatorday against her husband, Philip, recelved an award of $230 counsel) feen and $15 per week allmony, secured | a decree of absolute divorce and the cus- | tody of her child. had the decree filed | and was on her way to her home tn Al- bany. Mrs, Kehi who {s tall, blonde, ex- ceedingly handsome and beautifully gowned, !s the soprano in an Albany Protestant Episcopal Church choir, She sang for several years with the Sostontans, but will not tell under what name. She married Kehr, who {s known as the “Carrousel King,” he having the practic monopoly of all those Instru- ments of torture at the nearby parks and seaside resorts, on July 18, 1896, and they lived together three years, They have one child, Anna, aged four years. Mrs. Kehr charged that her husband deserted her in 1899 and found an aM@nity in Philadelphia. This amunity. Miss Marle Fay, an actress, last with the “Midnight Bell company. was found, according tu the testimony of the detectives hired by the injured wife, living with Mr. Kehr tn a hand- soma brown-stoné house on Jefferson avenue. Brooklyn. A procesn server told the judge with much feeling how Kehr had set two large dogs on him when he served the papers tn the on him and Miss Fay, ‘Miss Fay was in court sitting po close to Mr. Kehr that the sparkle from the diamonds with which they were both adorned formed one blage of light. She was not called and Kehr, when asked {f he had anything to cay, re- sponded dramatically: “Nothing. sir; nothing. Let Justice take its cours And justice did. UNCONSCIOUS IN STREET. Policeman Findy Unknown Man tn Dangerous Plight. Lying on the sidewalk at Thirty-aixtn OOROCOCOCD t street and Sixth avence, Patrolman Squires, of the West Thirtieth street station, found a man unconscious at 3.45 o'clock this mornii He appeared to be respectable and his clothing was of good auality. ‘The man was hurried to the hospital, and early to-day was still unconsctou but the doctora neemed to think he! would recover. He In about fitty years | of age, 5 fect § Inches In heleht, wit: gray hair and mustache, He wore a/ gray sult, black stockings and laced hoes. “AGE NO DIFFERENCE,” SAYS SENATOR DEPEW'S FIANCEE. | PA OC! MOTOSODOETS!ETDOOVCOOCHOQOIOOOOITGG Miss May Palmer Says, n Her Paris Home, that She Is to Marry| Because She Loves and that Intellect Always Young. PARIS, Oct, 12—"I am going to marry Senator Depew because I love him. What difference does disparity of vege make when the Intellect {s alwaya 6 young? Such was the frank declaration of Miss May Palmer, the charming flancee of Benator Chauncey M. Depew, In ro- sponse to the questiona of a newspaper correspondent whom she received In her Is) MISS. (FY PRLMER. DQOTDODEDIEGHIDOSGSFOTOATOSOEOSDS: POSTSTOOSOOEOW ] apartment on the fourth floor of a fash: fonable flat building In the Rue Galilee ‘The Paris home of the Senator's flancee and her mother ts delightfully altuated, commanding a panoramic view which the Arc de Triomphe on the one side and the Place dea Etats Unis vn the other, isn Palmer fs tall, with a typical American girl's carriage, free, graceful | and queenly. Her hatr ts dark brown, with darker shadows; the head that It covers 1s shapely, and gracefully polsed on a slender, supple neck. Her dark eyes are limpid, with occasions, tlash mmer of Jet In them, gether her face ts frank, and expressiv in speaking, both in French and Eng: lish, “Mins Palmer shows careful tram- Ing'and wide culture. In thought, form and pronunciation her speech in that of A highly cultdret woman. Bho showed undlegi her ed enthusiasm in apeaking of her betrothed and declaring that hers! wan to be a marriage for love. “Any wi ciared, a charmin, empn STRENUOUS i AEMATIADA OIG po oonOoDo oman would be proud of such intellectual man,” she de- tically, ‘T have heard Senator Depew spegk in dloquence and. br titanes she ‘ton- with other roud of his te has rela- occasion: am tives of his own living here, though, #9 T cannot be sald to have been the role caune of his frequent have been the reciplent of thou- sands of congratulations. Gereral Gowdy called to congratulate nig, 0 years and “Don't by marry! wu tit Roane we shall fixed fur' | pression, Isits to Paris. When Consul- ¢ known Mr. Depew many ke you [ love him.” ‘ou think [ am doing bette: fig a distinguished, thorough- going American than by tying spyself led forelgner? Both Senator Depew and, myself are very patriotic. n have lived yeni eart ts tn York, where we will reside. Ta yet decided am to where he married. nor in the” date ther than cares ‘thin coming winter, va CECIL RHODES SERIOUSLY ILL. Empire Maker Fights Death Alone in a London. Hotel—He Has LONDON, Oct. 12.—-Cecll Rhodes, whose part In politics and emplre-making | vividly recalled by the Schnadhorst let- tera, 1s living almost absolutely alone at a quiet hotel, on a diet and with the attentions of a man who is serious- ly dM. There ts no doupt that he te suf: | fering from heart dicense and is no! longer the robust man of former years; yet he never mineed a day this week at the oMce of the British Chartered South African Company, burying himself in details and con- ducting long, tedlous meetings with- out complaint or mention of his Ml- health, Yet, after these, In the quiet of hin hotel, he seems to have become al- most a wreck, “like a man liable to ko off at any moment," as one of his few visitors sald, on coming out from his room, Usually Mr, Rhodes t« supremely indifferent to public sentiment. pre- ferring rather to ride roughshod over critictam: but in the matter of the Schnadhorst letters he haa exhibited the keenest desire to head off adverse Heart Disease. comment. His cfforts, met with slight success. MORE TROUBLE FOR RHODES. CAPE TOWN, Oct. 12.—Sensattonal de- velopments are expected from a case which was heard in the Supreme Court to-day, In which Thomas Louw obtained Judgment in £110 against Princes: Radgtwill, The money was advanced on a promissory note for £2.00) drawn purporting to have deen indorsed by Cec ‘The latter's lawyer made an aMdavit to the effect that he had written to Mr. however, have Rhodes on the suoject and that Mr. Rhodes repudiated the orsement and all knowledge of the affalr, ‘The court allowed the case as against Mr. Rhodes to stand over until 1, pel ing the arrival of Mr. Rhodes’s am- davits. Princess Radziwill, who was present in court, has been a frequent visitor to South Africa, and the case has wroused AIL the greater interes: because 0 Princess han apparently always bee on the most friendly terme with Mr. Rhodes and the circles of which ne was the leader. BOER COMMANDER SCHEEP ER TAKEN Gen. French Captures Leader Who Has Been Active in Cape Colony. LONDON, Oct. 12.—Lord Kitchener reports to the War Office (rom Pretoria, that Gen, French's Commandant under to-day’s date, columns have captured Scheever, Lord Kitchener does not state whether Scheeper's commando, which haa been so active In Cape Colony, was captured or not, The British have been In pur- ult for a colple of weeks. Scheeper himself was so ill that he wag obliged to travel in a bugey. Early teat July Scheeper’s command entered the ungarrisoned village of Murraysburg, in the centre of Colony and burned the public and reshlences. A week later Col. Scobell’s column cap- tured Scheeper’x laager 3 mdeboo, Southern Cape Colony, and got thirty- one prisoners, some ammunition and ator Sehi 4 at that thme, and Gen. French's forces have been tracking him ever since. The news of Scheeper's capture is re- celved with much bbe alt A as tt is expected to check the operations of the Boors in Cape Colony, Scheeper was we Guiding spirit in the campaign. be the morning Evans. D.D., pi Church, Forty> =i Anthony Hf. Seeking for subject of iter. tor, tn the |eecond street, 1 ot fve the second The Miraclee of Frriceson Mushnett Walk with Got." Lagat,” being sermona on Mr award has entered upon hts Trot Sturgies ot the he Prot I Timothy, vice Paul's Chapel, Oct in ‘commemoration of te one thousandth avn ry of the death of Alfred the (reat There, wilt be a. banquet at Del F Monday evening, 281 Inet, at rt tq Woottord and Capt, Long Island will lace Taption ou for three otlet Eplacopa: vine merviee In AU the Fitth Avenue Pr ner of Fifty-Mfth etreet. cher to morrow MIN be President 1 of Princeton Unt fev, He $ Postic preach at Mariners Tompie, Oliver sireet. to morrow morning. anit the evening Mh Juteon, DoT Juden Memart WIL ‘oecupy “the Vto‘tatet, wilt og Craik Morris, curate of St mi Church, lrooklyn, nme dean of the cathedral at Mr. Morris fa President of the t ure and, and haa many friend ad diocese, jormerly rector of the Prot ers will elect a lay superintendent to do the work bei Episcups! Chereh, Jam celebrated the fifth anniversary thet Rey, MLO, Ladd nue Maptiat ( Hiro’ ly, F # pairioue tee « William MeKiniey.”” Eplacopal Chureh will ed and thirty-a/th annl- speak on John St colebr mireting oP teading 1 York Stethode oe teadinta hela in: the, church, ungar. ike, ete ploes of the Twentieth Century Commision. Dr. EOF. Upham will give his texture on "Our Ob: Hgations to Our Methodiat Fathers.” Glstes FRoedé, head of the @rsined Christian’ The Poeabyterien Union wilh bold ite Aret club's rooms lyn, on the | Dares, on | Rew den City The! Weodnlde th rand Trait Maen. wlll e will a £ CHURCH NOTES. ot the ork, for ting of the Church Club of Inland ijl be beld In the 2, Fulton and Clinton streets, evening of the 28th st. Rev. J. IL of Porta Rico, will deliver the James A. Francis, paster of the Second ue aptiat Church. baw deetin Aa ro maveral years pa Church, Queens Borough, 1 and preaching labore: expianenen and Tubolaal, t of the enterpriee, Mr. Le been Mr. Prancie'e essieust year, will enter another feld, opal Curates’ Rev. Dr. John Mumpstone, pastor of Kmanu Daptinc Chureh, Brooklyn, ‘who prevent from returning to the city al bia usual month's ¥ by Mra, Humpstone’s 1 ail oceupy AL seventh RP. Dr. Johaste portant sery obeerved as anpual Suni Sunday zy diton recelved. Muntoh, Germany. fe Prote: Communion toa, T withatan: deca tributions. vice in it raised by Ds D, seria celved w Mireians respond by ae tt speaking people of those wili| Cone made a viait to India with Ike’ purpote » a69 ie yea “Me came, Back recent fog was Dela Di v. Le Rev. Dr. and others relura. Johnater bis pulpit ta-morraw th Avenue Bap a a recelved teen this moat tt fay schoo rally will take place, the forty-frst anniversary took m Drationsot ite Atty Hey. ieaiorial emblems, a beaser fora stant Episcopat Church of the Holy das seadily refused to abandon itv wentieth treet and Nixth avenue, ling the removal uptown within «of che inh are interested’ tn { It "ly perforaloe ‘a muchcaeed vieintty ecomber on of the Hey. deorge ¥. Paate from, the pastorate af th “church of Yonkers, has i i ‘The Tioard of Porelga church 8 tn core The endowment must i representative to countries pastor of the De Wit Rivington street, was a e Auburn Seminary party that went e by bia pariabioners. Sresides over by ev, J. iarcrolt “.8ho filled the pulpit tn dr, and aAdrensen FP. SehauMer, 1 Bt capresiing Rladness at the past $0 OFTEN KILLS. 2) Thousands Worn and Sick in Body and Mind. |New Strength and Life in One Real Remedy. Ablest of All Physicians Freely Give Advice, It is truer to-day than ever before t one man is no better than an- er unless he does more than an- other, When, re medical re thy the most learned ew jn London, the organ of the great English college of physi= cians and surgeons, it was proved by exhaustive statistics that, despite the drain upon nerves and blood incident to the modern, strenuous life—despite the fact that diseases of the nervous system appear earlier and oftener « ainong working people than former- nevertheless, within the past five or six years the average life of Amer- icans was materially longer than it was a decade ago—-the editors of the review pronounced it as their firm opinion that this undoubtedly result- ed in no small degree from the dis- covery a few years ago by an eml- nent American physician of a »post- tive cure for diseases of the nerrons system, which had promptly been put within the reach of the public in | Mn. F. G, CROWELL, t country, and was riore and more generallly as @ family, remedy. One of the physicians, member then and now of the royal staff, in forwarding a copy of the article to the proprietors of Paine’s celery compound, inclosed a long and some- what technical letter, in which he sali “We are thoroughly convinced that no remedy yet known affords so cer- tain relief from that class of dis crders which modern conditions: of working and living now breed as your Paine's celery compound,"" Certainly one remedy is no better: than another unless it accomplishes more than another, And Paine's celery compound {s pre-eminently the best remedy known to medicine for the cure of aflments that result from impaired nerves and consequent !mpure blood. The rheue miattism, neuralgia, sleeplessness, in- digestion, lack of strength that a bottle of Paine'’s celery compound s0 rapidly dispels are but temporary conditions if the rellef that this rem- edy affords ts properly given. Mr. F. G. Crowell, a regent of the State University of Kansas, example of the strenuous life of to- aay, a college graduate with a later master’s degree from Columbia, who resigned from the prosecuting-attor- neyship of Atchison County after four years to engage in the grain bnsiness with the famous Greenleat- Baker Grain Company, {s one of the thousands of such young men who owe a debt of gratitude to Paine’s eclery compound, and to use his own direct words, “found it all that ft ts represented to be.” When everything else has fafled, Paine’s celery compound makes the sick well. It needs but a single trial to convince! at Motel Saroy. screen the tommorrow eveatag. fomatning toplea are. ted Mindeances ‘Avenue Daptist Chureh, Lexe y ue Ilgodred. and Bleveath, St cgmonele Dy. Di. pastor, with sine Heayenty CHINESE BUYING ARMS. Chinese Viceroy Says Reformers Are Purchasers. “ CANTON, China, Oct, 12—The Viceroy of Canton has received an intimation from the Chinese Minister in London ta the effect that large quantities of dyna mite, arms and ammunition have been} shipped to China, presumably for the) use of the reformers, e Savant Celebrates Hit Elghtleth Birthday. BERLIN, Oct. 12—Prominent men: science from al! parts of the world'al sembled here to-day to foin in theieeles bration of the cightleth birthday of) Virchow, hs ‘The newspapers devote: columng eulogy, re’ his remarkable Vitality?) ang Eminent