The evening world. Newspaper, October 22, 1901, Page 3

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eres Rivals Will Be United | —Bride-Elect’s Moth- | Commodore, Con- | firms the News. widow of the New Rochelle Mrs, Edward J. Kelly, Tate Commodere of th Yacht Club, told a reporter for The Evening World to-dny that It was true that her daughter, Helen Margaret, is “to marry Frank Jay Gould, the young est son of the financier, Jay Gould. “This ts the firat public announce- ment of the engagement,” said Kelly, “and [am glad to give the pleasant news publicity through ‘The Evening World, “The young fulks haye known each other nearly all of their lves. Two or three years ago they met after a separa- ton of a short time, during which \ had been at achool, and, well, the usual thing happencd. They f4ll in love and ngw they are to be married, “They have not been engaged long, but the engagement {x not a surprise. Ttefore my husband died in July we had talked of the probable result of the ap- Parent attachment of young folks and he looked with compli marriage of his daughter to the son bis father’s old ant They 1 ay eney Roulst, ch at Lawealt united afier such long and itter lawsuits, but those troubles are all past and the young folks know Mttle | \ about them and care Lexy. ’ “When will the wedding occur? Well, Mi nothing has been decided. They may \ walt for the full pertod of mourning for \ Mr. Kelly, or they may be married tn the spring. That {!s unsettled. The f+ young folks are too busy now making Jove to worry about the date of their \ wedding.” Miss Kelly ts a beautiful young wo- mun; She will be eighteen years old next January. At present she Is a guest of Mre. Edwin Gould at Ardsley. Frank ula ts also stopping there, though he usually comes to town each day for a few hours, Mlas Kelly will not return her home for several days. The bride-to-be was educated in a con- 1t. She was christened Helen Mar- ruerite, but when she became older she rred the name of Margaret and » t {a the name by which she Is now known, Millions to Be Joined. Young Gould wilt’be twenty-four years nt tot age Dee. 5 next, When-he became of he Inherited a fortune of from $10.- *) to $12,000,000 from his father. This lune hae been tremendously Increased turing the past three years, and he is now th close to $20,000.00 and en- jova an Income of from $12,000 to $20,000 "Miss Kelly is a grandday Kelly, the well-known From her father, who d will, she will Inherit: clo: to $1 she Is just 5 snteen years of age xtremely. pretty sister. 7 fort / grandfather was ould in his: fnanelal nd railroad oper: and thelr clashes often result weults, Many of these suite, Involving | s sums, have not yet been settled, bu posed to Ja. have descended ta the heirs of the two me: f ‘The uniting of the families through the marriage of young id Miss Welly nd re, aims will doubtless end the Htgation sult In the compromising of the and the withdrawal of the suits, Father's Sudden gent ward J. Kelly, the father of the girl who Ix to become the * bride, died suddei War at that thine Commodore of the New Roche Club and was preparing to Admiral Schle when he sudde came 1! from gastric hemorrha, died within a few hours. His summer home was fille with guests at the time of lily death, and, he was in good bealth until fatally: stricken. He was only thirty-nine years and Was a member of many He left three brothers, Eugene, Thomas aot Rovert. When hin widew ma¢ application for letters of administratto: on his estate she sald that his fortune woul amount to $144,000 In personal property and $100,000 In real estate. These figuren were merely tentative and the neral Impreksion was that Mr. Kelly \ was worth at least $2,000,000 and perhaps much more. Her Mother’s Romance. th here Was a romance in the marriage Mr. Kelly to the woman who will ome the mother-in-law of Frank ald. He was married in‘ 1882, but e marriage was kept a xecret until 1891, and then made puble through the ajnouncement of the death of a son, All of Mr. Kelly's friends had supposed he was a bachelor, ° When the news of his marriage be- came public Mr. Kelly explained that the affair had been kept secret because of religious differences between him and his wife. He was a Catnolle and she was 4 Protestant, Hecause of this difference the mar- riage was opposed by Mr, Kelly's father, but previous to his death he became reconciled to the union and very fond of his handsome daughter-in-law. Mr, Kelly refused to divulge the name of his wife, and her identity has never been made pubilc, though she Is sald to be a member of an old New York - family. Young Gould's Love, Frank Gould has been paying devoted attention to Mixes Kelly for several months. She has never seen formally Introduced Into soctety, but she has Deen present at many entertainments given at the Kelly summer home near New Rochelle, and Is well known to » many prominent New York people, espe- clally to those interested in yachting. Het father owned the steam yacht Barracouta, on which many. distin- guished! quests were entertained, home in New DAY EVE WOMEN HELP BURGI’S WIFE FIGHT HIS DIVORCE SUIT. THE WORLD: FRANK JAY GOULD WILL WED THE Se ee MISS HELEN KELLY. | er, Widow _of thet: +] tes nthe | ften laugaed over the idea | uld and Kelly families being | 79 Fifth avenu ndition duriig th ite ina Sadlrectart s kind in th Rtallroad and | do Amertean Yo sixth of the the income ts jer his direction, Jould has two hobbies, dogs and He the scum ughter-in-law Wherever exhibited, wintry or in F ad business man. contains numerous ys ohis sister Helen ALLIED TO SMASH TOBACCO TRUST! --—___—__ — ®8'$75,000,000 British and $10,000,000 Ameri- can Company to ES Banded Together. HE GIVES UP 00,000 LOOT. O'Connell, Music Music Hall Man,| Returns Part of Armit- age’s Stealings. of a committe Hoof Known Pifty-third. xtre lends color to recent reports that a genger, held high revel on his stealings, Ibs. 7 commonly known antes to give had $3.20) of the money O'Connell sin trast whieh fave enjoyed 0 DEAD ‘and O Contes ite was taken to| » Imperial Tobacco Company repre- ADIRONDACK’ Econ RUNG ASHORE, MOT FLOATS ANOTHER BODY FOUND THIS AFTERNOON IN ERIE BASIN, thett armita him to go on ath Tine ritance and wow ou proceeded to go row spent. Sy ¢ ey O'Connell turned over to As a reason for his de- elf up. that begun with Ar about Armitage’s but finally de- a aabure Acne Fast Aground on Coast of Jamaica counted for of Snount’ taleen by two women with the Armitage of all his %. avethe latter told when ar- + party. did. mot rob Few Days Old, Kistrate Crane in the urt thix aftern tes Distrlet-Atto: ralgned before | r Itack River was found by Willi Maloney EARTHQUAKE AT ST. THOMAS Sharpest Shock in Tenes in higher court,” Apparently been ST. THOMAS, D. W, earthquake stock Yeura wan felt here to-day, ‘eons it was Ko badly dasornpaaga that aioe ketch him on the big road!"~Atlantg it wis tmpoasible to tell Che cause of inquiry 5 Jeger had byardedl a Crain for New York, Pe edt SST Wel Ts Peete ee ae NG, OCTOBER 22, 1901, —s Trial of belmonica| Chef's Case Began) To-Day, with Many |: Female Friends of Defendant on Hand to Testify for Her. Burgi a chef at Deimonico's, sa divorcee frem Marie Burgi wo| tae, | whom he was married on Aug. 10. Justi Dugro vn 1 Part 1 a jury are tryt Supreme towtay "chef says t + bilasful honeymoon, spe t that ali then they ning but quarrel. Things went from bad to wor: ne might ». 11, 1900, whe usband says went home t Ww Twenty-seventh to find that his wife Nad tert, ul other proper- str taking his cloth Later, anys the oo aint drawn by House, Grossman & Vorhaus, he found inatalled in a fat with another man. Through her lawyer, N. J. O'Connell, the wife dentet all charges and ap- peared in court to-day at the head of a solid phalanx of female friends who are o testify In her behalf, A Letter from Mrs. furl. A letter sail toh Mrs Mure t ton, which en written by nen. used thing Teads in part [than y not awful to think that Tomar-/ilke if y wax, and tol had consum Tam alljwhat 1d 1 othe worst man th think 1 lovet you se ert I never w fat prhank {and you ion nay itt me, have a oolevele. norning Io get up ut Whatlwi oo welock and have a good time all] te took oan i to around the town. ft was 23) o'clock} this s holy mins erwart l gol Albert lidermunle, a Swiss Nd T never felt so happy. imaker, waa called as tie firs dean keen your mociey. Tecan sup: 1 eanen Sn wauire i ne! id how Ne and Brugi gained 3 DIDN'T MEAN TO AIT SOM Old Anderson Says He Fired -| Intending Unly to Scare Him. Peter Anderse the Long Island City is now on trial in act for killing this year, took the defense. was sixty years len, but had liv try for twenty-two yea wie son had time and «him and beaten him, swore that two years ago he had been knocked down by hia son and beaten | nearly Insensible, | He suid that once. seven yeara ago, the boy siet at him, He narrowly ex- | lo being killed, the bullet grazing J hilx alde. | ig down to the prewent case, Any derson told how the son and daughter had gone to North Beach, While they he went upstairs and got a r which he intended to use to © his son, Ae soon as the son got back he began to quarrel! with his father. ‘The sister told him to “shut up." as her father had a revolver, The boy, according te his father, replied that “I don't care, Vi fix the old man.” Atulerson declared that when he drew revolver and fired he did not mean son, All he wanted to do frighten him and protect him- oo maker Queens County won May 2 testified th no were gon reve was elf, At the concluslon of Anderson's teati= your was taken. uring the afternoon further wit= Nexsex Were examined, . Henry Montfort, counsel for defense, will try to prove the shooting was both cldental and self-defenalve, “ABE” GRUBER TELLS HOW HE ROSE TO | The indefatigable Little! Republican Leader of, the Twenty-first Says: | “| Would Rather Talk| to 500 Teamsters Than to 5,000 Busi- ness Men” and He Gives His Reasons. “LE would rather talk to $00 teamsters 549) business men"? * Gruber accentuated exch word with a characteristic motion of hin fore- finger as he told an Evening World re- wrter to-day something about ix man- muking speeches, « Jingles made him famous as orator, He wa Personal in his rhymes and he sandwiched them in Lt such opportune moments that he has me known from one end of the elty » the other and many calls are ma Thin fron out of town and from oth wen Abe,” as hia friends int nty-tlest cal) him. haw hoa Te publican leader in that district for some time, Alth aoa stat, Hean he isa persistent ghee Platt machine He Nas throw the Senator, but ts might and main for the « ho Low, and t n teket. Give Him Work not talk tw Mr. Gruber, “1 ¢ gauntlet to} with alt hin etl, “men on the | amen, Iwi take an ways do tha with the bustness men. You it is Just ke thin The business man to the meet- fhe with als mb y made up, Me | % has arranged everything to Mia own) satisfaction and all Lean say will noe onvitice hin te iny way kink un less that happens ty t he hi thought out for hime “Hat with the workingmin i ix ait | mpression, but 1 co ty terented In What L tan andy tng. And when ethan t talk righ vet wax om Phere ix some sativfaection in talking my v peopl there isa chance of Ing votes, ‘That ix the kind Ink Thad veterday at th rn 1 MM talk all day to men like that ie THE ABS. WASHINGTON, Oct, Hay left’ Washington MW war will from ¥ ——--- BOY RUN DOWN BY CAR. ou Mint unt Atttletod Ot ped from a sata ietey i rere} Cont ay tvrenti, int WtOW) ay wh PULL AT Wi the trytnin whe eda leper oy Dr, Cantretl, of 3 than fed the t ent ylor, of E mule ii WAS and diligent formation that Tihs | Years. uid not be elicited. the: tn t whenever 1) Started. He te willing Co Tearn aumetbiig. @oThat wos when Phat ins bot plarguments. [vee ato ind Quiseg.) satel Into that he dx in Blatt turned down Black fleht and Plat Phen spr PULLED FORA FALSE ALARM. | OR MOYNIRAN. Die | THREE KNOCKOUTS FOR STORY ABOUT POLICEMAN EGBERT. Mi ede seablthd (hac they tad seen t tbruy: yg FAME THROUGH CAMPAIGN JINGLES. a), np subjected to, Then his face ' up he d: Cat Much of It out. “Hut 1 have cut a good deal of my ry out this campaign. Tam talking i more serious vein. 1 ke, howeve begin a speech in a light way #0 as tH t the attention of a crowd. Then un hold them all the way qhrowan, Now, the only things in light vali tam running this year are. the ze of Richard’ ssuge of Richard. Every Knows how fi ve Krow, runs 1k your Irlah tacer: a Rnglish terrors, aliah races nd the second swinga Into line ike a a you as fat my purse wane, elty while you pay the ta ne of "Rich Rich- of them run this When 1 Jeave the city it bs only because I cas't [take it on the ante, The city may go to the doge, That ts why d bur the highest-pricel ones Thowe > through the dle areca by meting on t the Tammany hi “L suppose | have made 10 speeches in ny life and I find that « little poetry helps out a good deat fy district? Oh, thot {9 so easy that it Tidiculous, It wf! eive 6,000 plurals ‘ity for Seth Low i C earot ONVICT KEEPS VOW OF REVENGE LEAVES SING SING AND BEATS WOMAN SAVAGELY. ter being y two and a half years In § fyon for burglary, he swore on’) Mrs. Mary witness against five-year-old ty the door Mf ip to the aiel's tt savagely tnd chok nsibility. A pasweraby el creams, belt off her dssalfant doher fron farther hang, foday: MeEanery: was arr omen Latupion, of ¢ ation: atten

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