The evening world. Newspaper, April 25, 1903, Page 3

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ry Ae "VANDERBILT WEDS ~ WKS ANNA RUTHEREURD. S tereniony yoann te, in St. Mark's, London, Under Special License, Win- freld Hoyt Acting as Best Man and Henry White Giving Bride Away. .~ LONDON, ‘April 25.—William Kissam Vanderbilt and Mrs. fAnna Rutherfurd were married to-day, a few minutes before noon, “at St. Mark’s Church, in North ‘Audley, street. The officiating ielergyman was the Rev, R. H. Hadden. ‘The party, consisting of Mr. Vanderbilt and Mrs. Rutherfurd, (Henry, White, Winfield Holt, of New York, and the Duke and - Duchess of Marlborough were driven to St. Mark’s from ‘No. 6 | Whitehall Gardens, the residence of the Secretary of the Ameri- “ean Embassy. Alighting at the chancel entrance, the party separated, Mr. White and Mrs. Rutherfurd entering the church arm in arm, with the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, Mr. Vanderbilt and Winfleld Hoyt, his best man, \ went through the rectory and met the others at the chancel rail. The Werger and the officiating clergyman were the only other petsons present. Mrs. Rutherfurd looked charming in a simple travelling dress of gray cloth. She wore no jewels. The Duchess of Marlborough wore a sylish morning gown and a picture hat. The gentlemen wore the customary frock roats. : MESSRS. WHITE AND HOYT WITNESSES. Mr. White, who gave the bride away, and Mr. Hoyt signed the regis- fer as witnesses. Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt did not drive back to Mr.- White's residence. ‘After receiving congratulations ,in St. Mark’s rectory they started at once ‘for the country. Their destination is not known even to their intimates, ‘but it is known they will remain in the country for some time before going to any city. The Duchess of Marlborough kissed her father and her new stepmother tely before their departure. . Mr. Vanderbilt's wedding to-day was not altogether a surprise to the ‘American colonies in Paris and London. Though no one knew: the exact date of the wedding, the unexpected departure of Mrs. Rutherfurd and the Duchess of Marlborough from Paris last evening gave color to the rumor that the wedding might take place to-day. A surprise was expected from Mr. Vanderbilt, but he carried it off in an entirely unexpected manner. The newspaper men, though somewhat ehagrined, are willing to give him credit for his shrewdness, ' LICENSE FROM BISHOP OF LONDON. - » Mr. Vanderbilt personally took charge of every detail of his wedding. Whree weeks ago he established a residence in London and last Rees fixy he personally applied for and obtained a license from the “Ipemndon while the newspaper men were keeping close watch on ee fea of Canterbury's palace. The Bishop of London's jurisdiction applies to the diocese of Londen onjy, while that of the Archbishop of Canterbury applies to the whol | Mrs, and Miss White are still staying at Mrs. Rutherfurd’s fiat in Paris. Jt is sald that the license deposited at St. Mark’s rectory sets forth aft tho details of the Vanderbilt divorce and the previous marriages of both parties. It is understood that the couple are not going to America for some time. A telegram from Dover says Mr. and Mr. Vanderbilt crossed the Chan- gmel this afternoon on a boat bound for Calais, CLERGYMAN’S CHILD WAS DEAD. .There-was a pathetic incident in odnnection with the wedding. Almost tmmeiiately afier the puptials the Rev. Mr. Hadden officiated at the funeral ice offone of his own young, children. ¢ The bride was the recipient of many handsome presents from Mr, Van- @erbilt and others. It appears that Chancellor Tristram, of the Bishop of London's con- ‘@istory court, held a special court Wednesday and took the personal test{- y of Mr. Vanderbilt, whose counsel also submitted documentary proofs “ef the divorce proceedings at New York and of the fact that the prohibition ‘against his remarriage hag been removed by the Supreme Court at New fork. The license was subsequently granted, oor Mr. Vanderbilt was enabled to preserve secrecy regarding the license ~ fim consequence of an order issued by Chancellor Tristram after the scan- dale arising from the rows raised in various churches by Father Black during the campaign against the remarriage of divorced persons, An ‘order then went out that Ilcenses of divorced persons could not be en- on the public register until after their marriage, so as to avoid a , Mr, Vanderbilt's license, therefore, has not yet ‘become public ty, and will not be registered until the Bishop of London's Regis- | , fs formally notified that the wedding has taken place. paar 296d cane R. AND MRS. VANDERBILT EXPECTED HERE SOON, }: a Mr. Vanderbilt's social intimates in this city do nof place credence ‘We the cabled announcement that he will not bring his bride to America time, There are indications that the new Mrs. Vanderbilt will , late in the spring and remain for the international yacht races, ‘Whether Mr. and Mrs, Vanderbilt will go abroad for the winter is un- n. Mr, Vanderbilt's town residence at Fifty-second street and Fifth ue, which has been darkened since his departure for Europe early in , Is undergoing @ thorough overhauling. There is like activity at Hour, his country residence on Long Island. Further evidence of Mr, bilt’s early return is the fact that his private car has been brought the repair shops of the New York Central. The woodwork is being torn and will be entirely replaced, Extensive repairs are also going on at lity Farm, the country nesidence of the new Mrs, Vanderbilt. ATIVES KEPT IN THE DARK, © Relativen of Mra, Vandorbilt admitted to-day that they hud been kept| Worse 6 mt mi the dark as to the real date of the ceremony until yesterday, when Win- Stephen Sands, her sons, who arrived here two weeks. ago to their studies at Harvard, were notified by thelr mother that her re would take place to-day. 4 ty finds the marriage a fruitful theme of gossip. The return of % randerbilt to this city with « bride to preside over his household will We an all-round adjustment of social circles. It is hardly likely to end difficulties. \ |, K. Vanderbilt has never joined in the soclal boycott of young Cor- ‘Vanderdit by his brother's family, On the othershand, it will be cult for his former wife, now Mra. O. H, P, Belmont, and hen wad sessiospate in social events where Mr. and Mrs, Vanderbilt (Hy Anot oe of faa, is the likely effect of the marriage on ‘Mr, Rberiey | children, None of them is ip @ condition to ite K., Jr,, is married to Miss Virginia Fair, the jn her own right, A APOE: SA PERI ER. YI Ne ) WILLIAM KISSAM VANDERBILT AND MRS. ANNA RUTHERFURD, WHO WERE MARRIED IN ST. MARK’S CHURCH IN LONDON TO-DAY. CIRL BRAVELY NABS BURGLAR. Seizes We pcoe by Collar and Holds on, Despite Blows, While He Drags Her Down a Flight of Stairs. MEN CAME TO HER RESCUE, Bertha Roberts appeared in the police BERTHA ROBERTS, WHO HELD BURGLAR. court to-day against two men charged. with burglary and modestly tola the Magistrate of her encounter with one of the men. ‘The crowd listened eagerly when others told of the heroic way in which she had clung to the man’s collar until help came. The young woman's motheb owns. a restaurant at No, 645 Sixth avenue and the family lives in the apartment above, ‘The house was robbe@ several weeks ago and Mrs. Roberts strung wires so that a bell in the restaurant would ring when the upstairs door was opened. During the rush hour at noon yeater- day the bell rang and Miss Roberts dropped her tray and dashed upstairs, Seeing the roevbers run into the rear room she followed, with George Baker, @ walter, close at her heels, As #he ran toward one of the thieves he struck her, but ehe setzed him by the collar and held on, He dragged her into the hail, and after trying In vain to throw her over the balustrade, he ran down the stulrs, Miss Roberts still slung " his collar, screaming as he her dowa the stairs creams had attracted a crowd avers J men held the man until the “ val ‘of a polloeman Roberts fainted when the strain of hen excitini experiment wan over, Dut s! Ww back at her work in the resi » the walter, had just ae a He and’ the “ouier cline! ed and rol sled whout, but the stairway Baker th man to pe, ae ates Mer Chart walter ry ire atrest, o way tho’ men deecribed tiebelvon “at the staulon house oberts ix i little bac! Boul talkie of her bray vening World reporter a He was nol very sironK Cor a ‘pure fi T yelled (as loud as ik ‘could for el, but up. there Inv the, hall ne one could heat me, Just as 1 thought he Would succeed in getting away from mo another walter came around from the ‘4nd got him Onn ned toleat In our’res: gare and in that i he, learned at"no one was in the fat at the “hoon our, And t “had fn payin Is _nane, To make it if he was at prew ma my ‘brother. The idea Ce WIFE KILLED HERSELF, Mra. © ef Hidgefield, N. Was Jealous, Neighbors Say, Qirs, Frederick Poole, fitty-four years old, of Ridgefield Park, N. J., come mitted suicide by first turning on the as in her bedroom and then taking carboflc acid, She was dead when found by her husband to-day. a ie is several years his wife's junior. John Ham hin another's fet marriage, told Coroner Curr Nackensack, that he thought he the reason for the suicide, But relused to ay ‘hbors say : Mra, Poole was | sia ‘of her hi ST, THOMAS, Danish West Indies, 0 Mer The Traian cruiser ‘Giovanni tf “Vans soentved ‘here soviey, from ‘ea th ¥ his foot and pintoned him there | PRINCESS LOUISE TO LOSE HER BABY. King of Saxony Orders Child Taken from Her, to Be Brought Up at Court. LINDAU, Lake Constance, The accouchement of taut mer Crowh Princess of Saxony, is ex= pected within two weeks, and there has already arrived here ay oficial of the ‘] Saxon court with « phywician and nurses to be in readiness for the But instoad of the rejoicing wich usually proceeds and follows such o: casions, whether it be in the ble homes of peasants or the palaces of kings, there will be misery and’ shame on the day of travail for the now dis Inherited woman who threw away her crown, and her honor. It Jy stated that Lae mother, deserted by all her royal relatives and friends is to be robi of her child as soon ax it is safe t it from her, A royal of the Baxon King has beeh Ixsued xd inatry ting the physician attending to Lake the child from the mother t her wise, has become partially 4 Mio his daymbier, Dit he hus fod Haat At be Rent not to ha five at Sple ott plan, MRS. GALLAUDET’S _ ILLNESS FATAL. Widow of Famous Instructor of De: Mutes Dies at Her Home in | This City. | Mrs, Elizabeth Budd Gallaudet, of famous world over as an Y of mutes and a charity wor! at her Nou 1 eighth seventy-nino widow the | deaf She had been il for two ‘months, immediate cause of death was heart disease. who was a deaf mute. married Dr. " he 4 SE ntet Bern Budd. a famous of that time. urvived iby five = ‘The daughters ‘te: haw, of Staten x itichard M. Sherman, wite “Dr. Sherman, of St. Agnes's is Henbere Btaniey “eietthe Rey, ‘Herbert Stanley Smith! tsvilie, No Jy aod two un: hters, and Dr. Bern Te ae in one of New York's minent aurKecss. \ services will be held in’ st, 's Chapel. Central Park West Phe Interment wil be at fad one Hor M saat ron ay, Hiartford. |STRAIN UNBALANCED ’ HER. MISSING WOMAN |W RETURNS HOME Worn Out by Her Devotion to Her Sick Husband, Mrs, Brown, of Orange, Tempor- arily Wandered Away. . Suffering Now from Nervous Col- lapse, the Penalty of Her Long Vigil, but Will Soon Get Well Again. (Spec (0 The Evening World.) ORANGE, N. J., April %.—Mrs, Will- {am 8, Brown, the wealthy East Orange woman who wandered away from her home at Np, 65 Hawthorne avenue, East Orange, without telling her fam- fly and for whom a general alarm was sent out, returned to her home of her own accord unharmed, but with her mind temporarily unbalanced, She is now confined to her bed, and trained nurses and physiclans are in jattendance upon her. Mrs. Brown's husband contracted typhold pneumonia About a week ago and has been seriously MM ever since. Though trained nurses were engaged to minister to him, Mrs. Brown was treJesa in her devotion anid never lett his bedeid@ The strain was too much for her, as she {# over fifty years of age, and her mind gave way. On ‘Thursjay night she dressed herself fully for the street and, taking her pocketbook, left the house. Her absence Was soon discovered whom she might oe apt to go to, she had not visited any of thém, and when night came and no trace of her n discovered the police were ha: notified. rang house. Late ‘last night the doorbell and Mrs, She complained of being Ill and said] day 3 that she was ,uffering from the same] her to a fascinating ‘stranger, ‘A trained nurse} William H. Gros and ae seemed di this morning said that this was not so] impressed by the latel majady as her husband. and that Mrs, Brown was suffering from a anental disturbance, In, Brown walked dato the | Jersey, City, on temporary | all and threw her over. damages for a broken nej $00 more. Helen Potter Says Gross Was a Trifler After All, and She” Wants $50,000 for His Broken Promise to Wed Her. |ACCOUNT SETTLED, HE SAYS. They Met on a Ferryboat, Journeyed to Philadelphia Together, and He — Very Goon Fell a Victim to Her ® Charme. Velen Potter says. William H. Grom Woved her and won her, that loved him not wisely but too well; that when he was tired of her he repudiated his solemn promise to make her Gls wife She demands $50,000 rte ‘Mr. Gross's answer 8 that although © he did live with her a long time at’ Various Yirst-class hotels here and where and maintained her sumptuously’ In a eummer cottage in the Berkshires, he owes ‘her nothing. He declares taat = he spent a lot of money on her and ©) Rave her many gifts of jewelry andy! other personal property, “portable an@s¢ 0 tlable,”” But, says Mr. Gross, they? fs came to tha parting of the ways F Oct, and “in 1uil wees ¢ saristaction’ of all her claima him from the creation of the Until that date,” he gave her the: house and Jot No: 128 Sout Hollywood attest, Philadelphia; fourteen shares of {Beir stock of the Melrose Land and Ime plovemment Company ane! sa aa besides paying her debts, amounting He asks that her ult be and Stephen 3. missed, S. gn argue ihe point before a. austicerd of e Court on Wuesday. 4 Supre Was Sniltng to Jerney City. | The complaint of Helen Potter mye that she was a young widow ‘when she & womiin friend were oat for) a Pennsylyania ferry, rom Cortlandt street one auti in ali ne Her companion intreay He soon discove: and. for Philadelphia, fade himself sola bye is very ill, however, and worn out] Uon in a drawing-room car, Ter vigil by ra had pyentually, one to the house 'No, 77 Sussex av , East Orange, and from there had c come directly home. | MISS DE PEYSTER BECOMES MRS. KIP. HELLO, FATHER: WE'RE MARRIED. Surprising News of His Daugh-" ter’s Romance Came to Law- yer Morris Patterson Ferris by ’Phone from Niagara Falls. FELL IN-LOVE AT A WEDDING. “Hello! Is that you, father?” I wanted to let} == He sails meray Sienc MISS DE PEYSTER WEDS GARRET KIP. this ts Mary. s the dearest thing that ever lived. V1 tell you about him in a latter.” Morris Patterson Ferris, a 9 nown lawyer of Dobbs Ferry, almost fel] out of his chair when his daughter gave] The Marriage Ceremony Takes Place this mesknge to aim over a telephone! gt Tiyoli-on-Hudson, and Many wire. Only a few days ‘before he had put her on @ train bound Buffalo, Guests Witness It. where she was to act as @rlc fd at the wedding of Frank Sidway, of Buffa- lo, and Miss Roberts, of Denver. ‘There the young woman met Jogeph B, Roberts, brother of the bride, No sooner had they looked at each other than they loved, After that it was only a matter of KetUng an opportunity Tivoll-on-Hudson ,was the scene of a brillant wedding to-day, when society turned out in force to witness the mar- 4 Both of (he young persons belong to famous New York families, and havéd ED OF GRIEF, CED 101 YEARS ss: Mrs. Margaret Vidal Cope's Sis- ter Expired at Ninety-nine a Year Ago, and. Elder: Never} * Recovered from the Shock. The funeral of Mrs. Margaret Vidal Cope, who died yesterday at tne age of ‘one hundred and one years at her home in Mount Vernon, will be attended by the greates: assemblage of aged persons oldest inhabitants can remember her only as a grown woman, Mrs, Cope died yesterday after griev- ing for a year over the death of her spinster sister, Maria Vidal, who died at the age of ninety-nine years, For forty years Mrs. Cope and her sister had lived alone, and the elder woman soon began to fail when left alone, The old aomestead in summer is al- most hidden from the street by the great trees and vines and rose bushes. The aged sisters seldom. went beyond the gate, but were ever glad to receive callers into their quaint home, Only lastssummer Mra. Comp worked among. the roses in her garden. She took special delight in caring for the flowers herself. She left a fortune of been sweethearts since childhood. Miss De Peyster is the daughter of Col. and Jghnstone L. De 'Peyster, and a of the celebrated Gen. Watts De Bhe {5 accounted one of, the pretuest and most popular young member | Women in the exclusive set with which le} She associat ‘ i Mr, Kip, whose mother married John or} Blake Baker, gaye his bacheler dinner at Delmonico’s a week ago. Tho wed- ding took place ir the country house of the Lride's parents. —_— DTOBE ASLEUTH | Confided Ner - Amb! n Cope per and Now She In in Bellevuc. Annie Morris, who gaye her as No, 18% Park avenue, ted to Bellevue Hospital amped as to Mer sanity by Magistrat Breen the Essex Market Pal Court to-day. fa being id with Wn She approached Policeman Hogan, of shir, “ the Eldridge Street Station, in Hous ton’ street lay and asked him TWO MEN AT WAR trative. Bie then. bewal\fto, ming ail | FOR A GIRL’S HAND. to visit a parson, Tails opportunity came immediately after the marring: of Mr. Sidway end Mis Roberts, Rob- erts and Mies Ferris boarded a train, weht to Niagara Falls and were wedded there by the Rev. Dr, Roy ris is a welleyknow ‘se “amart 1 she started for Buffalo she had never met Roberts, although she knew his sister, Roberts at the weaging. As the . . SHE WANTE eh be to him rcarriage, It had a teh be ny their friends that they handsome looking couple, but fore tongues of Huffalo chance to begin talkin twe in way fous father long to And our that Mr, Toberts was a model nan Wi wealthy and oopular in. sock ih Denver, ‘T9: he expre light asked the policeman to aa to whether she w at un actress or a de BABY BOY DESERTED. Placed tn By They Have a Fist Fight Over Her and Then One Wounds the Other With Pistol, Wan of One Hundred and t and Morris avenue, and John Te 1, of No. 400 Bist One Hundred and Seventy-seventh street are in Jove with the same girl, and as fa resuit of tals condition of affairs they have quuarrelled frequently, When they met to-day at One Hun- ‘Thirty-sixth street and Seuth- yard, Pacifica pulled a revolver Michael Pacli Fifty-seoond str months soy placed in a basket miepa at No, 41), De Kalb avenue, arly fo-day’ It was Vunningham, of No, son place, Who was on his way fe was walking slowly and. sound of a baby crying h ind th aed in a Ww City: Nursery. was mn the Brook. found iio Emer, hop hearing nd deserted ————— - a ming @ Military Sh ‘§ TON, Apel Seoretary ound w ) @f the Lincoln | | Wiliam Wilson, seven years old, | | $100,000, which will be inherited by nieces and nepaews, Her father was Francis Vidal, a Span- fard who took par: the Napoleonic wars. She ts the last of four sisters, each of whom Mved more than ninety years. For thirty-five years she was a member of Trinity Episcopal Church, TWO ARE RESCUED FROM DROWNING, Boy and a Tugboat Man Have Nar- row Escapes Off Staten Island, Two persons drowning, were” rescued Stapleton and rat West Brighton, 8, 1, to-day. was ng on the stringplece of the dock from one at the pla. ej} at the foot of Prospect gtreet, Stapleton, when he fell overboard the second time @ young man, plunged in after him and He had sunk when Stanley Devere, After diving twice brought him to the surface and both were pulled up safely on the dock boy soon revived. Luke Lease A tugboat hand, was trying to board his boat at William at the foot of Broad- West Brighton, when he tripped \ hanger and fell into water, ARNO AWim a way his orles i e dock of ix overcoat the policeman jumped Into the water and with considera difficulty landed Lessenden on the dack It took some time to revi the half drowned man, TROLLEY INJURED TWO MEN. « Carriage in Which They Were Riding, Two persons were injured tm a col liwion between a troll Root will attond the militdy athletic tournament at Madison Square Garden, ‘ow York, Monday and will return to Washington in time i accome, he t) Cabinns and diplomatic bac a eas exerci vos at St. 19ule op i ha a tart ) was arrested and held by Magistrato Hogan in the Morrisania Po: ioe Court hy $1,000 bail on a charge *puo wo yen, hig hand to-band or heat» “ iat Th fi Arrochar, 3, 1, Dena received She told her family that] time of her sister, Miss afiite A. Pierson, of ER ap love. ever known in Westchester County. The| dying | | and they enjoyed his hy all kinds of food, no hes they had reached’ the’ Brotherly Love, she say: = a e told hi a was marble man with i hi ory mat Lee, Mass, He asked | chaperon to rap in al for a few cae au shortly at Herwat t wea i i pretenae a ‘ale vowes ui ove, declaring that” Bah for. r her to say wi continting 4or Rises — con- Ming Little widow! rf 1897, found “them It was wh Gross had bh plain disadvantage, she alleges; sotnced Tin one of, News kare ly shionable apartment ‘h ten Ne poken the solemn n Ald So it went on, she Gross, ne itt made the promise wi Hoe will yleld $50,000 to ‘her thro’ ney, Miele Potter to marr; Car mas, 1897. Metcppole refused mi that morning. "ot nee brother, F. 8. Gri imploring him not to marry. Hrother Mleadea with Him. “Before you cast yourself in into ciated stop and pected brother; “think of our i bed when she ‘asked, *W. "What become of Bil nd is even now ou ma, ne your 4d “ihe aay ar er it tht produced in copy attest Gross and Stephen 8. Marshall, as once her proof of the promise to her and the reason for his se. is cent th now living sat jeiphia. house “@ nd he is in Lee, lace A PHOENIX, A strong, healthy, hungry trea boy will eat pretty nearly anything that he can get his teeth into, He is very apt in this way to lay foundation for future ill health, ticularly if he-takes up a occupation in later life. A prominent young man of a cil of Colorado, who was born on a in Hastern Illinois, says: through my youth I had an mally developed appetite, which I was: allowed to gratify freely, During winter months especially I great quantities of sorghum ses, pancakes <nd biscuits, “When at the age of nineteen I lett the farm aud entered the schoolroom ios as a teacher I had become a con-) | firmed suffering dyspeptic, conse ‘ laxatives were necessary, and only, the Ww simplest foods would digest. at al For several years I carried no other dinner to school but oat meal and crackers, “Life dragged wearily along in this manner, Six years ago I married and went to college, and two years were spent there, but all the time my mental work was seriously hindered by headaches and drowsiness caused by my indigestion. Leaving coll 1 taught school again a year, in midst of which I suffered an attack of brain fever Three years ago I came to Colorado and took charge of the grammar department of the schools here wats Fopeuary, 1901, when my poorly nour! body. could no id the strain | upon it and I completely collapsed ir) both body and mind. For two weeks I lay at the point of death, uncon: Jie scious most of the time, Then Gray ‘1 Nuts was fed to me as @ steady 4 and the change began. It seemed. a * iracle. t out the tale short, T am principal of our school system at twenty-nine years of age, and doing double the amouat of work I ers sa bales apd am” better health than at any time Il can remember. I eat and)

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