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a ae s Beven years before that, while O. H. P. he Seponacious and both ber limbs were} months on Blackwell's Island by Magia- Map. ronan. trate Plammer on March 31 on a,charge eae One of ‘them was amputated, When}0f vagrancy, Magistrate Flammer was ny #he returned:to her home she says she|then sitting !h the Yorkyite Court, To- he’ “Miacovered ‘that her husband was infatu-|day, while sitting in the Harlem Court, OM RENE, REY , Taner ‘Ss AME mL NTS Constables Serve a Writ on the Earl of Yarmouth Just Before He Goes to the Altar with He? William K.'s yp Beaet ul Coun- try Seat, “Idle Hour,” Near Oakdale. L. l, Badly ~ Damaged, by Third Fire. (Special to The Evening World.) PITTSBURG, Pa,, April 2%.—In the lobby of the Hotel Schenley, at which he has been stopping, a King's bench Writ was served to-day on the Earl ot Yarmouth, who was weddel to Miss Alice Cornelia Thaw this afternoon, Constables W. J. Morris and Cornelius Barry were busy trying to get service on Yarmouth nearly all morning and it looked as though he had eluded them when he suddenly appeared in the lobby of the hotel. He was not surprised when the paper was read to him. The writ was issued by the King’s Bench, London, at the instance of the Revistonary gnd General Securities Com- Dany, who, “in the statement of claim atached to the paper, aver that the “TAL TREES SWEPT AWAY. Rustio Nooks Where the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough _ Passed Their Honeymoon Are “Burned, Stables Too. “Idle Hour," the country estate of William K. Vanderblit, sr., near Oak- Gale, L. I., the retreat of the, Duke and Duchess of Marlborough after their i sem thE Leven CHARMING BRIDE-RLECT OF ie OF YARMOUTH money,~ three hundred and seventeen Pounds, five shillings and twopence, is due ag principal and interest on a mort- Gage negotiated on Sept. 8, 1902. The paper is signed by Hardinge Stanley, Earl of aHisbury, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britaln. The writ allows the Earl just forty days to make @ defense. He accepted service without protest, A little Jater he was on his way to Calvary Baptist Church, where his marriage with Mies Thaw was cele- brated at 1 o'clock. The ceremony was performed by the Rey. Dr. E. W. Mc- Ewen. The church was decorated Invish- ly with spring flowers, as was Lynd- w home. A matter of comment is the demand being made upon Miss Isabel May, of Washington, as an attendant at high social weddings. She was @ bridesmaid at the Vander- Dilt-Netleon, and Miss Thaw; too, called her as one of her maids. ‘The rquis and Marchioness of Hertford, parents of the Barl of Yar- mouth, and his sister, Lady Seymour, and brother, Lord Seymour, were up early to-day taking a drive through the city before dressing for the ceremony. They remained as guests of Mrs. Thaw after the Earl end his bride had started on their journey. In a@ wedding gown which was of white satin and Duchesse lace with a ‘tulle bridal veil Miss Thaw made an uncommonly beautiful bride. The skirt was clinging and had a long court train, while the bodice was al- most entirely of Duchesse lace. Notwithstanding the limited space of time left for the wedding preparations, ‘the trousseau prepared for the bride was large. ‘Simplicity was the kéy- note and-white tre dominant color. The presents received by the bride: form an astonishing collection lng from painting: glass, ries, books, engravings, Jewels and rare furniture to silver, ornamented and useful, the! ‘Inevitable allotment of brides, The bronzes are superb. ‘The bridal party entire consisted of Mrs. George’ Lauder. Cernegie, matron of honor: Lady Jane.Seymour, Miss Isa. bel May, of Washington; Miss Elinor Wilson, of Wilmington, Del.; Miss Mar- tha Ferguson; Miss'‘Mary Thaw Thomp- son and Miss Nancy Carnegie, of Pitts- burg, bridesmaids, ‘and the ere, J. . Thaw and J. ‘Denniston Lyon, of Pittsburg; H. C. Norman, second sc tary of the Snglish Embassy; ©: Della Gherardesca, of the Italian Mm- bassy: H. Persch, of Philadelphia, and R. Haven Tebb, of England, Lord Ed- ward Seymour was his bother’s best man, and the bride was given away by her brother, Henry Kendalt ‘Thaw. The decorations of the church were in Easter Mites and white Persian lilacs in the main body. supplemented «by palms and potted plants, 1i nd ferns, and a liberal festooning of smilax the plilars and arche: wedding, and where Willie K. Vander- bilt, Jr., and his bride spent their honey- ‘moon, Was damaged by fire early to- day, several of the stables containing carriages and automobiles and farm im- plements and cottages of the employees being destroyed. The most serious and probably in reparable damage was to the fine plece ,Of woods gouth of the mansion, It was in these woods, where there are rustic settees and fascinating summer re- “¢reats, that Consu daughter of Will- iam K. Vanderbilt, led her Duke to the Ulet Places which the critics sald were bullt on purpose for honeymooning. — It was here, too, that Wille K., jr., took his bride, Miss Virginia Fair, four years ago, and it was believed that William K., sr., would now bring his bride, who until Saturday was Mrs. Lewis M. Rutherfurd, to the same re. treat, Destroyed in 1890. “Tdle Hour” hag been undergoing al- terations and improvements in anticipa- thon of the coming of the new bride, and it was perhaps on this account that the fire to-day was discovered as soon as it was. The old mansion and its surrounding buildings were entirely destroyed by fire the night of April 11, 1899, and Will- jam K. Vanderbilt, jr. and his bride, who were spending their honeymoon there, fled to save their lives. The bride lost her trousseau, Belmont was a guest at one of the house parties given by Mrs, Vanderbilt, ‘who is now Mrs. Belmont, “Idle Hour’ ‘aught fire irom a huge grate, and all the guests, who nad retired, fled to the lawns In thelr nightgowns and pajama When the bride and bridegroom were routed by the fire four years ago, which Tesulted in the total destruction’ of the Via pis oe mierbilt de- Blared that ¥1 e had na man on the ere ae that she belleved the dre wag at gnce erected new “dle Hour” and 1 sald one ‘hee se handsoment ‘and zmost ‘oes and estates in ex- cates 9,000,000, and inite ra me persons are larly emp! ly a few, Servants have been, em- ployed in the mansion itself, the ‘great ~ faaiority being in tie estate ‘surrounding it; in the stabi hops and wer house building: The men in'the fields near the lake saw smoke eafy to-day apparently coming from the roof of the “Idle Hour mansion, ‘The alarm was quickly. aud all hands started for the ®cene. On the way the private fire-en- gine ‘and fire-fighting apparatus, with which the place was equipped after the disastrous fire of f given for the ra But it was found that the fire tn the dense woods just the other side Of the house. In one part of these woo Are several cottages for employees, some stables and a new stone and brick house in which are stored 4 num- ber of automobiles. Fire in the Woods, All of these burned and fire spread “through the woods, “1'nis section of the 8 was named “idlewild” by the “Buches. of Marlborough. It was’ hers {hat Jong after her marriage, she con- e and the Duke found taelr eatast happiness, it was e aeitent: fi wild spot whicn man had invaded to make more comfortable. ‘This {s ow was about was an altar embankment of lilt FAINTED ON THE WITNESS STAND. Wife of Plaintiff, Who Arose from Sickbed, Collapsed While Under- going Cross-Examination, ® waste and only nature may restore ‘After two hours of hard fighting tho flames were conquered, For a time the wind threatened to olow the fire over to the mansion, and the south side of it soaked. In case ‘the ire all preparations Were made, to save the moet rants Property. At the last tire many’ v fr @ paintings and much plate and art ‘orks were destroyed, @ superintendent of the place was le to pluce an estimate on the dam age done by the fire to-day, He ala tt would largely depend on’ the damage to the auiomobiles and the cottages, Jd. not be determined until an in made, fire to wlio He Vanderbuile, ene’ with his his country home at rousey, pear Pats. Tt was understood that M anderbilt’ and, his, pride would ‘soo come over to “Idle Hour, Excitement was caused at the hearing to-day before Justice Jay at Mineola, L. 1., In the case of Henry Warncke, 4 Brooklyn’ lawyer, wao 1s accused of grand larceny by Dr. A. D. Rosenthal, when Mrs. Pauline Rosenthal, wife ot the complainant, fainted while under- going a cross-examination, Mrs, Rosenthal suffers from +heart trouble, and whe had arisen from a sick bed to appear at the hearing. The .ex- cltement proved too much for her, and she collapsed. @he wes soon revived and the case then went over! until Wednesday morning, when it will be HUSBAND DIED FROM GRIEF. Aged Mr. Bogart Had Been His Wife’s Faithful and Constant - Attendant During Long Years of Her Illness, * The body of Fenwick A. Bogart, of Tottenville, 6, I, will be laid on Wednesday beside the wife for whom he died of a bréken heart after return- Ing from her funeral yesterday, Be- fore the vell of sorrow had been Mfted from the little‘ cottage came the second bieow to Whe chiliiren, plunging the daughters into grief that Is pitiful. A life spent in devotion to his wife, who had for yeang been an invalld, tells Bogart's story. " They were married thirty years ago in Brooklyn, and until twelve: years ago: ya made, thelr home there, |i During the fast years in Brooklyn Mrs. Bogart became an invalid. Her husband décided that she would be hap- pier in the country and bought the cot- tage in which they both died. There he waited upon her as though she were a child, \ Early and late he was at her alde, Yeady to wheel her chai# and in a thou- sand ways show that his love for her was enduring. For hours they at to- gether, sometimes reading, sometimes chetting of the deys that had passed. Told She Could Not Live, It was not untila week ago thut there was a serious change in Mrs, Bogart's ccndition. On Tuesday the physician teld him that his wife had but e short time to live. He remained at home and watched ith anxious care, hoping against hope that her dife would still spared. When she died on Thursday afternoon he shut himself away from all callers cnd gave himself up to his deep grief, The Rey. Walter Kinsey, 6f St, Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church, of which both had been members for he funeral sermon and the! was borne to Bethel Cemetery. The old man stood with bowed head over the grave after all had gone away, His eee Jed him away and into a car- Th had been hours since he had spoken and his volce was so choked with sobs that he could not talk to. his son on the lonely ride back to the cot- tage, As he stepped to the sidewalk he spoke for the first time, complaining that his neck pained hi: Had Fallen Unconscious, His sons and daughters left bim alone in the sitting rooig and were almost immediately attracted by groans, Run- ning downstalrs they found that he had fallen unconscious to the floor, helped to a sofa, where, bolstered Up’ with pillows, he regained ‘conscious, ness for a brief minute, He peak to his eldest daughter, ae fell back into the pillows, ead. but He ae A physlolan had veen sent for, but ho came too late to. be of service. examination prove! that a large blood Yeunel ah the of the brain had wurst. The physician sald he had died pea grief. taken up again at Woodmere, Dr, Rosenthal testified to paving pele to ‘Warneke two checks, one for the other for $8, for property to ewiion the defendant agreed to furnish a clear title, The witness sald that en a went to file the conveyan the County Cle office he ‘ound, veal lar papers for the same already been fied by a Charlott Goke, Mrs. Rosenthal testified in cor. roboration of her husband, ' APPEALED IN VERSE, cena eae Man Sentenced as Va, it Sends Rhyming Petition to Judge, John Donnelly was sentenced to six LOST LOVE AND HER LEFTLEG AT ONCE Woman Sues Her Husband for Di- _ vorce and She Is in Turn Made Defcndant. - In @ suit tor divorce filed by Mrs, August Pfenninger, she says she lost der husband's love and her left leg at the same time. Mrs, Pfenninger lives st Paterson, N. J, In 1898 while return- ing from @ dance she fell in the street Gted with their housekeeper, He and the woman disappearéd shortly after iets has fled a crogs vill, in charges hs a wite with impr r Cont te we woman Fi © pest wine oe fag eae’ ania Salltse auameny. he received a letter from Donnelly ask. ing that he be discharged, saying that |e wae intoxicated at the time of, his commitment, was not a Vagabond and wished to support his id th AA aie oomelusian’ofetne letter were the Ba Js mercy. tn fark ray of Meht ut eyes eer sa Phere re mercy in the God ‘abovi » ‘phere. emery. ‘in’ sah ctetping thi 2 id if i Bit began ne ta Lawyers Sit and Acwne, mer to diss a | oe duct, —————— TO INQUIRE INTO C. F, SPANG’S SANITY, Young Pittsburg Mah Who Made a Disturbance at Hevue Sent | Back by Magistrate. Charles F. Spang, who created a dis- turbance in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, was removed from Belevue Hospital ¢o- day and arrainged in the Tombs Court. When Spang was arrested two revoi- vers and @ morphine hypodermic syringe were found in his pockets. He named as his nearest friend John Bissell, a wealthy merchant of Pittsburg, His re lations ure said to be wealthy. Spang went 0 the Waldorf-Astoria ten days ago and caused considerable excite- y his actions in the corridor, He was ejorted from the hotel @nd then went to Herald Square, PRtroiman Kie.y, of the West Thirteih sireet sia- ifon, ‘sald he found young Spang dishing tWo revolvers and threatening to kil every one in sight, Bpang was arrested and sent to the hospital. where Ne complaint was diagnosed aa’ “mor: vhinism. In the Tombs Court Mr! Bissell’ told peaistrare Ng's parents a troubien ithe the a pran> Ma mp Ant a ‘sono years, tried at Ten of the latter are a he had bi patalyale Wiuhln ‘AND HER ENNOBLED YOUNG HUSBAND-TO-BE. DR. BIRD SAYS HE'S QUITE POOR =r Cae ene Has $2 Worth of Jewelry and Surgical Instruments Worth $50, Perhaps, He Declares in Supplementary Proceedings. Dr. Arthur 8. Bird, whose wife, Kate R. P. Bird, If suing him for a separation, was up in supplementary proceedings fin the City Court to-day to enable Jacob Marks, counsel for Karl Her- kert, @ tailor, wino obtained a judgment against the doctor for clothing, to find out If the judgment could be collected. The doctor, who has achieved distinc- tion as a surgeon, was asked by Mr. Marks |f he had a bank account. "I had one with the Fifth Avenue National Bank up to two years ago when I closed the account,’’ replied tne doctor, ‘There. wes two or there dollars there when I closed the uc- count, I have no bank account now,” “Have you a horse and carriage?” ‘No, sir.” “What Jewelry do you own?” “None of any value. I have a pair of shirt studs and a palr of cuff bottons worth in all wbout $2 I have a gun metal watcn that I bought three or four years ago for $5." “What surgical instruments ‘do you own?” "I have some knives and sounds, All my inatruments would not bring more than $0 at a sale,” “You have a large practice?" No. I have a moderate practice, can't Say how many patients I have.” “You ‘keep a ledger, or book of ac- counts? , my business {s all cash. I do a surgical and office bus'nes: “One stroke of your knife yields you enough to pay this judgment?" “Tt ought to, but it Is not my good fortune to get enough out of a atroke of a knife to pay this judgment,” ‘ou are eldently no Wizard?’ “Bvidently not.” “You have an extensive library? “No, my Mbrary, if sold, would not bring more than The doctor testified that he owned any stock and that owned the household furniture, ELEVEN KILLED IN TRAIN WRECK, Twenty-Five Other Workmen Were Injured In Missouri Pacific never his wife Collision, BUFFAIA, Kan., April 27.—A north- bound Missourl Pacific stock train crashed into the rear end of a work train just north of this town and eleven men were killed and twenty-five injured, seriously and four probably fatally hurt. he cause of the wreck 1s given mifeading the orders. . g MILK DEALERS ARE WARNED BY COURT. Justice Holbrook in Impolsng Fines Promises Severe Punishment for Future Adulteration, Justice Holbrook in the Court.of Spe. clal Sessions td-day made the announce- mont that hereafter persons convicted of adulterating milk would be severely punished, “The summer season ts at hand,’ Justice Holbrook said, “and the poor children of the east side who are the principal sufferers through wilful vio- lation of the law will be protected,” COPYRIGHT, 18%, BY H. hg peeor _) | PROVIDENOE, Ro CIRL RAN AWAY FROM DRUDGERY Little Mabel Frances Sprague Told Ghildren’s Court that Father and Stepmother Made Her Work Too Hard. o ss Mabel Frances Sprague, the little girl who was found begging in the street Saturday night and taken to the East Wifty-first street station by a sympa. thetic policeman, told her story to Jus- tice Olmsted to-day in the Children's Court. Her father, C. E, Sprague, and her ma@&her, Mrs. Jenny’ Miller, con- tradicted none of her statements, al- though neither agreed with the infer- ences she drew. Mabel said she was twelve years old, She had not been to school since 1 June. She works every day in a bak- ing powder factory in Hoboken for 4 cents a day and in the evening she does housework for one of her mother's neighbors afhder an arrangement made by her mother, Her father and mother were divorced. Both have remarried. The White Plains court which granted the decree to Sprague allowed the mother to see the girl at her pieasure. Until last July Mabel lived with her father. Then she went to Hoboken to visit her mother, and Sprague said he could not persuade her to return, The child told Justice Olmsted that her stepmother did not like her, Mabel sald ahe left the Hoboken house be- cause her moter told her “to get out and to stay out.” Mrs. Miller said she sent. her out for bread and the girl did not come back. She admitted that the child worked in a factory, but sald she keot her at school until the prin- cipal of the school discharged her. She could not find time to go to school to inquire about it. The work Mabel does in tae evening, Mrs. Miller said, is to learn to operate a sewing machine. Justice -Nmsted sent her to the Chil- dren's Society until Thursday. He wishos to keep her in this State, where children of twelve years are not per- mitted to do factory work, If Sprague demands the care of her and shows tnat he can keep her, she will be given to him, Neither parent made any demon- stration of affection in court. She wept bitterly as she talked to the Justice, but Fecoverod her serenity ten minues atter she was taken to the matron uj {nthe court buliding, and evidenty ene Joyed the candy’ provided for her by @ good-natured court officer. Sprague lives at No. 161 William street and works for @ concern in the ‘Times bullding. GAS LEAK EMPTIED HIS RESTAURANT. So Max Weiss Sues the Mutual Com- pany, and Other Suite Will Follow if He Wins, The Mutual Gas Company will be called upon to defend the funniest dam- age suit yet, In Justice Finn's District Court, this week, with eigat others to follow, 1f Moses Strasman's client is successful in this one brought as a test, The complainant {s Max Weiss, proprietor of a restaurant at No, 411 Broadway, and the sult grows out of alleged bungling In the removal of a Mutual service pipe from under the Noor of the restaurant on April 20, Welss says he was taking gas from another company, and the Mutual sent a man to remove an old pipe, It was 0 old and rotten that the man twisted it in two with his wrench. It happened just at the mid-dey lumcacon rufh hour and the place was full of customers. The place was filled with gas fumes in a twinkling. The workman was nearly asphyxiated before he could plug up the HUSBAND WHO DID NOT KNOW He Had His Sick Wife Sent to Prison Because She Could Not Control a Mania to End Her Own Life. This {8 a story ot a sick wife and a husband who didn't know. Mra, Frederick Arnold, of No, 638 East One Hund¥ed and Sixty-first street, passing through that critical period of a woman's .ife when every day she has to fight to overcome an impulse to destroy her life, was taken ta a police court by her husband, who asked that she be confined in @ ceil, because she had attempted muicide. The doctér who was called to the} prison to examine Mrs, Arnold at on¢e made a \proper diagnosie and sent her to the hospital attached to the Tom Bhe wan forty-three years old. In a temporary fit cf depression last Wednesday she attempted to end her ife by Inhaling gas. Made Charge tn Court. While the wife was lying in the Lebanon Hospital in the Bronx slowly recovering from ter partial asphyxia- tion the husband went before Magis- trate Hogan, in the Morrisania Court, and when asked if he desired to press the charge of attempted suicide against his wife satd: “Your Honor, I do. I do not think she is in a fit mental condition to our three chiidren. Time and late rhe has sald that she cannot stand the momentary fits of gloom that come over her, and I think if she were sent it would be the best thing for he woman made no sign of protest. there was any expression it was one of pity. Even when she was led away from her weeping children, a prisoner under $100 ball, she made no sign, though her lps trembled and tears welled In her eyes, She was taken In the patrol wagon to the Tombs Hos- pital. Up to about a year ago Mr, and Mrs. Arnold and thelr three children, Carrie, eighteen; Alma, eight, and Ethel, four, were, with the exception of the few domestic clouds that will settle over ery household, a happy family, Then the woman began to act in a manner that the husband was at a total loss to account for. Her, usual cheerfulness gave way tc fits of un- ht dealers who admitted thelr gullt| leak, customers could not keep their were fined mums ranging from $15 to $%| seats and fled, leaving their dinners each. They were Mrs, Bertha Lastig,| half eaten. The elght, walters lingered of No, 117 Norfolk treet; Pietro Der-| over thelr work a@ litte longer and notl, No) & Stanton street; Morris Tal-| begun to faint, so that it was necessary kosa, No. 43 Kast Third street; Jacob|to summon an ambulance from the Greenwall, No, 325 Rivington Hudson Street Hospital to revive them, Michael Graff, No. 10) Norfolk street;|and the restaurant was perfumed with ae, asine Newman, MM Goerck for days, while ‘most of the food Jn atreet; 1. Raster, No a8" mast ONinth | £2" p street. aid George Niemollar Ney stock was tainted and had to be thrown Hast Eleventh street, ao baie: cP ed all of this—for loss of trade, loss foodstuffs and permanent loss of Golelde in SlanqhtarrHense, customers—Wels# demands $200 dam- SOUDH KENT, Conn, April 2.—Seth! ago, All of bis help lost that day and Munroe, a well-to-do butcher, gxt¥/ some of them were 100 sick to retum to yeara old, committed sulcide in his! work for several days, two of them slaughterhouse to-day by cutting hist to have the doctor, and it throat: He ls eupposed to have been| \ out Mr. Strasman’ is in. spondent on account of recent mis for uve. His wite died w ehort time ago mae l uttered 4 shock of tow weeks, ih s | ae i od to bring sults in their behalf ue Ming about for lost wai aotiors otis’ and other things. a Finn @ Jury mat ide. controllable despondency. The smile faded from her iips and deep Mnes gathered in her face that gave her a haggard appearanc She complained of flashing lights before her eyes. Impalae Was Overpowering. Every now and then, as ‘she would look out of the widow, she would seize the arms of her chelr, as if to restrain herseif from the uncontrollable impulse to_ jump down upom the pavement below. ‘he husband Re spears, at a loss to fathom these v: and often his wife harstuy This ‘only seemed to add to her depression, Both norant of the crisis in the woman's life, or undoubtedly the man would have shown more aepyet ‘ ets ed physician of, , thie aity. who, in miling cases of ie would caution the husbasd to inven on the wife during this critical period an possible love and affection, often said: b, idiots called men! Get jown on your day of your lives and Lig et tray Aematy God thar you ‘were po! About a wrecks Ca 70 the. ufferings ot \Mrs. Arnold seemed to take an alarming turn, and the father told his children to watch her closely. In he outbursts she declared that, stand it no longer. Some scanien to poe ber she Ge (be) and she expressed a willingness to abandon famtly and all in order to avold it for- ever. Room Filled with Gas. Farly ac nepey morni tt fe Amela was ‘akened by a peoullar faintness, and en he got out of bed dincgvered Gin Ree ail aig iad here terin; ‘oom he fo! he “ite stretched out on the poten with a rubber tube in her mouth at- tached to @ gas Jet. Another fet was also turned on. Tearing the tube from Ve maplit and throwite up the win- dows, he summored assistance, two. younger guildren were partly hyxlated ant woman Gangerous condition, wan ine bari were taken to the Lebanon Hoppa ay never thought of what overpowertn| have rompted wife to the action she Raa taken, but Lemeavaly, upon recovery had her hi 40 court @ pressed the ners ba of ‘empsaa Buick ue against her. ‘strate Hogs discovers the eee condition ‘aici Atsire the woman may be sent to Blackwel Island for six months or a year. MAN DYING FROM MYSTERIOUS SHOT, First Said He Was Hurt In Quarrel at His Home, Then Told Another Story, A Weehawken detective in searching for some me who could identify Artaur Johnson, of No, 31 West Bixty-firat street, to-day found William Fields, of No. 337 West Fifty-ninth street. Tt. detective came here to get some one at ffeh house where Johnson ts suppoued live. Johnson is in the. North Hudson County Hompital dying from a bullet wound in the brain. When taken there on Gaturday he sald firet he had been shot in a quarrel at als home polloe of the Weat Sixt this not to be true. wald he wes shot at @ A was found tn, the mation at Wee- bawken. Fields went with the detective to Weehawken to try to identify John- on, MORE TIME FOR LOU BETTS. 2 pepe were 18°) od, Tr ees [CAME OVER THE SEA FOR BRIDE. Friday from Liverpool, Wed- ded To-Day to Mrs. MacLaren Post-Brown. the Strain, and lien. Dose of Poison. nF tet ae ‘The self-sacrifice that led Mra. Browne, of East Orange, N, J., to. up for a week with her sick taking no rest, has cost her life. strain was too much for her and her to disappear from home for oan Brought back there gut ae 4 continued unbalanced, eee’ watched committed sytcide by Polson. Mrs. Browne belonged to ong best families of the Oranges: prominent in society, Her i who {is in business here in New has been suffering for weeks typhoid pneumonia. About ten days ago, as the ia ic the’ disease approached, Insisted on hersele taking of She would not leave the n to professional nurses who had been ployed, one for day and one ‘ors work, She sat up with her husband night, giving him the closest care, 4 her nursing Was in part the fact that he was the attack. The turn for came last Wednesday, and the was too great for Mra. " wandered away from home tl ing, and although assiduous se made for her. the Sealy, © any tracé of her b or night. A romance of two continents, which Cupld bad to make a complete tour of fhe world, reached a clim&x to- day In the marriage of Mra, MacLaren Post Brown, member of the well-known Philadelpyla family, and Angus Mac- fee, of Liverpool. The father of Mrs. Brown, who pre- fers to be know by her maiden mime of MacLaren Post, was until his death teller of the Vanderbilt Bank, in Ta- coma, Washington. There, when a very young girl, the daughter met Capt, Brown, @ wealthy t merchant of English birth, and was married to him within @ month after the meeting. Capt. Brown took his young wife to Hong- kong, where his business interests were centred. The American bride was not happy tn her new eurroundin, She soon had to complain of her husband's treatment. Tt was while wavering hetween a desire to returg to America and fear of tga consequences of such a step that she met Angus Macfee, a wealthy merchant of Livenpool, who was touring the world in his private yacht. It was a case of love at first alght. Bighteen months ago Mrs. Brown re- turned to America and in a Western Stato secured a divorce from her hus- band. Macfee' finished his trip around the world and returned to England; but upon receiving word from his promised bride that she was in New York with her mother he sailed ‘from Liverpool ang Lombagy Friday on the meni was ver a ronieed . bie Archdeacon in "Fonuson., of -itienmond oor Boren h, ie yretong ident of the Post The bride and bridegroom will go on J wedding tour through Norway and Bweden on Mr. Mactee's yacht. They will reside in Liverpool. SHOT AT HIS DESK low neuralgia loth ones A tow drops” ‘of It wot Le were eat morrow proba! till very uicide. reba not been er agar tre Bookkeeper Attacked In Office and Twice Wounded by Man Who Refused to Explain Action, BOSTON, April ‘27.—S8tiliman Bishop, @ bookkeeper for the Edison ht" ‘Com: peny, was shot in the office 6f the com- peny this forenoon by a ouar , Who Broadway Car, Is the pla iD to Bishop and ogni discharging & Police Court, -~ prem Lyevol’| Otto Peterson, thirty-two ich hit Bishop, Nakita testa tim. ai tly. professional strong man, a big crowd in Broadway at stranger and held him Terry polices srrved and he was arrested He” yesterday, fused to expiain Na action his teeth to a Broadway. car oat tpe man Fe cus | it a. few feet, was fined %: ine. Pool in Jefferson Marke! ‘Bishop is about twenty-eight yeare|on a charge of disorderly \rried and lives in Dore! i Shree renee of ity againet this man, tion. a bas aetests | Gare oe loess ee SHOWING OFF COS HIM FIVE. DOL Strong Man Peterson, Whe: Peterson. ‘Conscientiously, I can’t a0} Corr atd Thirtieth street station, who HIDDEN os isa ‘poe man, Known Only as “the Swede,” He| OY 12 pounds, and i Chg ct waistcoat, bet had ‘Ago. gone, Lt ed he ihe fast Of Wie cle oe After a search of five months the body|strong, His business, le pias ind he is iograteer. at th Gember, was found. in the woods vat | Atuietle Cis tn Brooklyn. 4 Croton Dam to-day and Justice of the « i rie ve on the theory that the man was mur- FLASH/OF LIGHT, x dered. man.. By his’ fellow workmen he was| Coffee is so often called “the Big Bwede.” the work it does in the Saturday night tn December in com-| teres! pany with two other men, Afterw: Bays) Gwede's'’ clothing, When questioned| fee until I was an edult. J the man sald the clothing belonge® to|jong after I Tr Dey after day search for “the Big| stupid feel! These 8) Swede’ was kept up, but without re-/| worse until I was ill, . Two lttle girls playtng in the woods! of the trouble. came upon the body, partly covered “I could not only in underwear, for some Tae children ran to where men were! visit to see if FOUND MAN'S BODY do not think he is crazy." Disappeared Five Months helene, Fe, af a Swede, who disappeared last De-| ture, a at Peace Barton has begun an investigation ‘The Colfee Facts Came | No one knows the name of the dead| . The Big Swede” was last seen one! that illustrations of this ki one of these men had on ‘‘the I commenced him. fave headaches ang a sult, until to-day, fuspicion thet ‘coffee ‘was the = with an old coat. The body was clothed/and gfter working, at the br ridge, ie Bow. ery, and Homer Adams Tientitied the | me good, I soon cargee, and at the end Word was sent to Justice Barton and perfectly well again. the local i notified. PATROLMAN COX COX PUT OFF FORCE, Diemissed for Failing to Get Evi- dence, but Shoenick and Darcy Are Acquitted, Police Commissioner Greene dismissed Patrolman Patrick Cox, of the West Thirtieth street station, from the force to-di Cox was tried last week on charge of neglect of duty in falling to get evidence against the house of Laura Mauret, {in West T@irty-third street, which was raided a year ago. George Shoenick apd Patrick Darcy, detective sergeants, accused of failure to get evidence against the same house, Were acquitted ¢or lack df evideo need fod shat Cowmissioner Greene anno’ iu patrolmen, who have been with my f abe better. e of any ki stout the sam and asked She Ste told me ‘Postam,’ lutely could not belleve, joyed it o much and it me bo partectly,, ie ba T had hed an was a fiat-tasting, ioatpid < was only used by peo not drink the ola thio “My friend sald ghe bad been it for two years, drank the bt arog ton her eick half the time. dawned on me like a, Sash of that the old-fashioned cause of my trouble and that leaving fs Cs and ae Te duty in the different preoin! : ill gent out on beats and their pikces taken fy the detective sergeants reinstated by the courts a few weeks ago. LAWYER’S CHECK BOGUS, His Trial for Keeping » Gam' House Again Postponed. . When the case of Lau Hetts, indicted March 9% for maintaining a gamblin| house, was cailed before Judge Cowing {ny Past 11, of General Bemsions to-day, Lawyer James W. Ridgway asked that his (rial be postponed on the grounds that the physteal condition of Mrs, Betts was auch that if ber husband wag put Intel te inght Jeopardige hor Wt well as that of her unborn, ph Rivgway, In support of is finfnoned to court Dr. Wait who corroborated the lawy: ues cry Axslitadt Diatrict-Aitorney Xi rdced the’ marion on the ae Journ to the ordinary a ‘Let me make it; sald it must be directions and must be foted in Special Seastons of P uu It on Bakeshop Woman. Frank H, Breen, a lawyer, of No, 43 East One Hundred and Tenth atreet,/1§ or 20 minutes after the whs convicted in the Court of Special| ging, and if we can om), Bedsions to-day on the charge of pass-/as she does you will be ing a bogus check for $IT upon Mre.|at It’ Elizabeth Rils, whg keeps a bakery at Well, F ‘ond avénue. Breen was re- that time to. this ha iranded fo the Tombs until Friday for| £0 @'ahioned enltee ¥ ek Postun wi Breen | and used a ae Bille gaia, Bia, bad ne rrtnen he | ts ae my headaches aah heck, her to cash e check drawn on