The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1903, Page 3

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PERSECUTIONS FOLLOW BRIDE { Rev. Carroll Burok’s Wife Is Still Annoyed, and Her Mother, Mrs. Edith Willis, Accuses a Wealthy Brooklynite. t. | 4, MAY TAKE MATTER TO COURT Accused Man Protests His Innocence and Threatens a Counter-Sult, and His Wife Speaks in His De- fense. An attack of nervous prostration, drought on by fear and worry, prevent. 4 Mra, Edith Willis, of No, 36 Park plac), Brooklyn, from consulting ner | lawyer to-day conce-ning action to pe taken against the wealthy married | man who has threatened her daugiter, | f now the wife of Rev. Carroil surck, i of Manha tan, Kan E. T. Burck, chief electrician of tne Hotel Martin, and brother of the min- later, said to-day that unless tue elderly admirer of his sister-in-law ceases nis Dersecution he will become an involun- tary target. Although Mrs. Burck after her secret marriage a few days ago went at once to Kangas with her husband, her family and the family of the young minister fear that the noyances of the } lyn maztigd man will follow the bridal couple to their home Anonymous Letiers One Weapon. Anonymous letters have ova plentifully heretofore, and a contin used nace of this method of annoyance is 1. An anonymous letter delivered yes- terday to the Willis family shows that the Brooklyn admirer of the minister's wife conducted a systematic campaign jn search of information. Records of the doings of the young minister ever sinct his departure from his home in Brooklyn, even down to the salary he has earned In various places in Kansas, indicate that a private detective or a lawyer was engaged to make an In tigation in that State. The elderly and wealthy broker who is accused by both families refuses to make any statement. He says he has consulted his lawyers and that if the ‘Willis or Burck families make any pub- le charges against him by name ke will Institute action for criminal libel, He has a loyal supporter In his wife, who said to-day: Hia Wife Def: “My husband always considered Mr. Willis, his dearest friend, After Mr. Willis died, nine years ago, his widow and his daughter often came to my husband for advice, He spent much time and thought In working for their welfare, but he had no more interest in the daughter than in the mothér. His Interest was inspired solely by friend- ship. “I am absolutely sure there !s nothing fn the charges made against him. He hud no reason for seeking to thwart the marriage of Miss Willis to the young clergyman. No doubt, if he had seen her in the company of an undesirable person, the would have made an objection, just as he would in the case of any young girl of our aczuaintanc “[ have ransacked reason for the talk t of this marriage, and so has my | band. I do not for one moment adm that there Is any foundation for It." a SCHLANSKY NOT GUILTY. Three Blocks Away from Seene of Robbery When Arrested. Dr. Harry P. Schlansky, of No. 1 Madison street, states that his brother who ds tin, y brain to find a at has grows out with theft, was guiltless of compllzity | ih the afralr. ‘My brother was not with the other | men, and w harged in € st the wishes of is parents, sere y went to Coney Island. hharles on Fr! Spatreturne after midnight, not Garing to go home for fear ‘of punish- ment, he sat ina halway at No. 11 Monroe street, three blocks from where the disturbance occurred. While there he was arrested on suspicion. YOU WANT HELP? WORLD WANTS WILL PROCURE IT. RATS 9 14 Paid Help Wants in this morning’s World. BUI 349 Paid Help Wants in the thirteen other N. Y. papers combined: AGENTS . HOUSEWORK BAKERS c IRONERS g JANITRE BLACKSMITHS 8 JANITRESSES 4 BONNAZ JEWDLLERS itt BOOKBINDERS .. KITOHZNWORK ... 18 BOOKKEEPERS . LAUNDRESSBS 3 noys LUNCHMEN 3 “eas REV, CARROLL BURCK AND HIS BRIDE WHO IS PERSECUTED, SUES FOR HER WAGES AS SPY Ethel Kenney Says She Ob- | tained the Evidence on Which Col. Alonzo S. Gear Is Suing His Wife for Divorce. Ethel Hall Kenney, who says she Is a detective, has brought sult against Col. Alonzo 8. Gear for $120 for “professional services A In the suit, which will be heard to-day, Miss Kenney says she was brought from her home in Brewster, N. ¥., by Cot, Gear, who Is superintendent of Twenty-sixth street yards of the Water Department, to spy on his wife, and that she secured for him the evidence on which he is now suing for divorce. Mrs, Gear lives at No. 1070 Secend ave- nue, She Is known in the ‘theatrical profession as a real Indian princess, un- der the name of Susiana. Mrs, Gear, It is sald, will not contest the sult of he husband except to interpose a plea for alimony. Miss Kenney {s being supported in her sult by Manuel Fernandez, a Spaniard of who is well hom siderable wealth, nected here and in Spain, and Charlies Schlansky, was arrested|met while spying on Mrs. Gear. early Saturday morning in connection} Goar won his title in the civil war, he with three other young men charged | haying had q regiment in Gen. Grants final command. EAST SIDE PLEAD FOR SEWARD PARK. People Kept from Enjoyment of It in Order to Complete Bath-Houses, The people of the east side are greatly disappointed bezanse Seward Park, lo- cated In the heart of the congested di trict, has not yet been thrown open to them. Every fair night men, women and children swarm over the sidewalks outside the park and clamor for ad- mission to its benches, and the police have their hands full preventing them trom taking forcible possession, ‘A petition was In circulation yester- day among the residents of the district, It recelyed the ready signatures of hun dreds of persons, and in the course of a few days will be presented to the Mayor and Commissioner Willcox by a committee of citizens, The petition urges the Mayor and the Commissioner to give immediate relief by throwing open the park, and declares that though it has been ready for use over a month there is no prospect of It being used for several months to come, The reason for this, as stated, ts that Commissioner Willcox has decided to walt until the completion of the bathe houses at the south end of the park, WIRES 9] so that the entire ground can be for- CANVASSERE 13; mally dedicated and properly turned GARPENTERS . 4 5| over to the peuple. CASHIERS 2 4|. Because of the present strike in the OHAMDERMAIDS .. 22 . trades there scems to be no ppl + of completing the building un- COLLECTORS 4 operators 15] ul jate In the fall, at the earliest. Only COMPOSITORS 7 OSTAICA FBATHER | half a story je up; no work has been| 200K8 1 Wanvs dione on it fo “over a monti, and there SO ‘ is no prospec that any will he done OROCHETERS 3 PAINTERS . 3| for some time to com CUTTERS . 6 PHOTOGRAPHERS, 4 Aah Peete os eG TaNO® DENTISTS 2 porTERS 13 Enco: ars, by a ice reat lesa : banesccoei and ed (From the ‘nd Plain Dealer.) ppsiaNens Sp ehearss mike +15] Stories of Bishop Williams, of Con- ibe S SKIRT HANDS..... 4] necticut, continue to crop out. One just DISHWASHERS ... 21 sTABLEMEN . 4] told relates to his first’ sermon In “the DRESSMAKERS ... 9 STENOGRAPHERS., 3 parish to which he was called Just after he was ordained. He was rather nervous DRIVURS + 6 TAILORS .......-.. 9/ when he began io preach, but as he pro- pRvG (1 UMBRELLA HANDS 4|gressed he noticed an old man In the BURY. RUNYMRS.. 4 UREFUL MEN....., 6) front Pew who seemed fatensely Inter- ested in the sermon, enever the BMP, AGENCIPS... 12 VARNISHERS ..... 2] preacher made a point the old gentleman BNOINEDRS ....... 6 + 2] nodded vigorously in approval. This .was! BNORAVERG 3 at] very encouraging to the not overconft- lent parson, and after the ser ° un naar 4 + 81/inquired who the man w. old : M4 Bs | man in, she from pew? queried a vestry: i —)} "Oh, he one of! e har: n= ‘ mates ot the lasane jum a@ro' the vert corner.” wn oO the | jan expatriated Americ: WW AUTO SMASH ON HONEYMOON Marshall 0. Roberts, Expatri- ated American and His Bride, Are Better After Severe | Injury. | PARTS, “June 3.—Lieutenant Marshal ©. Roberts, of the Scots Guards and formerly of New York, and his bride, who was Miss Irene Helen Murray, daughter of Sir George Murray, are re- [covering slowly to-day from an accl- dent,which hurled them from their auto- |mobile yesterday on the road from Paris to Fontainebleau It was at first believed that the ac- cident would result fatally to the beau- tiful ySung bride, but later examina- jtlon to-day shows she did not sustain jinternal injuries and that she will ultl- mately ‘They were married a week ago to-day in the Guards Chapel, London. She is the daughter of the Secretary of the | British Post-Office, Lieut. Roberts His father was Marshall O. Roberts, of New York, recover. who died in 1880 and left an estate valued at $8,000,000. His widow was left an income of $350,000 a year and the son $12,000 a year.s In 1892 the widow became the wife Col. Ralph Vivian, of the British Army, Previous to that time rumor had her engaged to many men of prom- Inence, among them being the late Preal- Jent Arthur and the Earl of Arran. Since then Mrs, Vivian and her son have lived in England. The son swore allegiance to the British crown three years ago and entered the army. A little over a year ago he received his commission as leutenant in the Firet Battalion of the Scots Giwrds. One of the magnificent presents given to young Roberts's bride Is the famous string of pearls which belonged to the late Lady Henry Gordon-Lennox and which was purchased by Mra, Vivian for her daughter-in-law at a cost of $118,000. This necklace is composed of about 300 perfectly matched pearls. GIRL STEALING RIDE FALLS UNDER WHEELS. She Is En Route to Harlem When She Drops from Wagon and Is Badly Injured, A pecullar accident befel Blizabeth Castino, nineteen years old, of No. 02 West Twenty-ninth street, at Sixty- olghth street and Central Park West, to-day, Miss Caetino was riding to Harlem on the tall of an express wagon, when the driver suddenly pulled his horses to one wide to get out of the way of a street car, ‘The girl lost her balance and fell to the pavement. Another wagon wi close behind the express wagon, and tho driver was unable to stop his horses jn time to ayold running over the prostrate girl. eighth street, ran to her a: tance, the two wagons continuing thelr way up ‘the thoroughfare. Policeman Wey- lan, of the West Sixty-eighth street station, called an ambulance from Roosevelt Hospital and Dr. Bull the injured woman there, According to the physician she received internal Injuries. The police were mystified to know what tne eit! was doine on the trek. but came to the conclusion that sne wee ri $3. ‘lom, like small boys J, W. Kaylor, of No. 127 West Ninety~ took | i ici lM al : THE. WORLD: TUESDAY £VENING, JUNE 30, 1900. WOMAN SURGEON OW AMBULANCE. !Dr. Emily Dunning Earns the Distinction of Being the First | of Her Sex to Hurry to the! Rescue of the Injured. | i | KNOCKS OUT OPPOSITION. Her First Case Merely a Transfer, but the Courageous Woman yumps Into the Ambulance and Goes About It “Like a Man.” Dr. as Emily Dunning began her duties @ regsuiar ambulance surgeon at verneur Hospital to-day. the first woman ever appointed to the position Her initial trip was taken last night, but as she had only transfer cases she does not consider her work begun, It was with no little satistaction that the young woman awung lightly: into | her seat and ordered the driver to go | ahead, .-r she had won tue right over | |many c-atacles and by fighting the op- | [position of almost every man tn the} | hosoital Old scores are quickly forgotten however, and doctors Joined with nurses: in cheering the plucky woman, as she appeared in her new uniform, which consists of a short black skirt, a white shirt waist. a black’ jacket with a red cross on the arm, and the regulation cap pinned jauntlly on her head It was expected that Dr, Dunning | would not begin her duties until to- day, and {t occasioned some surprise when she was ordered out at 9 o'clock last night to take Mrs. Sarah Margoller and her baby from Gouverneur to Bellevue, Her Instructions were to get Baron Konter at Beth Israel Hospital on the way. No Frills Abont Her, Dunning ts a woman of striking appearance, hut there were no frills in her actions. She went about her work with a businesslike alr, but she could not suppress a smile and a femiaine flut- ter of her handkerchief as she drove away to the Justy cheers of her asso- clates in the hospital, At Beth Israel the clerk as dum- founded and thought she was playing a Joke on him. When he came to he dl- rected that the patient be carried to the ambulance for her, but she resolutely took ony end of the stretcher and car- ried it out of the door and to the am- bulance, Again at Bellevue, where she has a host of friends, she was given an ot tion, The strain of so much attention was beginning to tell on her, and she gnve he friends a nod and a smile and hur- ried back. Many persons in the etreet looked and wondered at the pretty face on the surgeon's seat, as the convey- ance dashed back through the streets, the driver making much unnecessary noise In honor of the occasion. Miss Dunning received her degree of M. D. from Cornell a year agp, but three years before that she had been grad- uated with honor from the scientific de- partment. Not only did she lead the women of her class, but there were few of the young physicians who were her equal. It was her ambition to get a hospital appointment and her stubborn determination won out, Fought for the Place. In competitive examination she won the right to the position a year ago, but a protest was at once tiled by the members of the staffs of Bellevu Gouverneur, Fordham, Metropolitan and City hospitals. They pointed out that she would eventually be a house physi- clan and the junior surgeons would be under her orders, ‘The men saw visions of stern rule and they objected. ‘The case was taken up by the Com- missioners of Charities and was finally decided against her. But she was not dismayed. She went resolutely to work tu ov ome all objections, and although {t took several months she won out. On the first of the year she began her duties as an interne, but all the time she had been looking forward to the time when her six mohths of probation would be at an end and she could take her seat in the ambulance, She wanted to show her brothers that a woman could perform all the duties uf a man in the position, “I how 1 shall have to go aut on all kinds of calls,” she said to-day, “butet am anxious for the real work ‘to com- Mence, Last night I just hag’ transfer cases, and that 16 not a test of my abil- ity. I am well and strong, and I know I gan do Just as hard work’'as the men. t took a long time for me to win my position, and now Iam going to fight hold it and do credit to dt just as hard T did to get it. I love the wor! id he things that most women would’shun are not at all unpleasant to me. “Tt makes me a little nervous now for eve one in the street to atare ao at me, but I suppose T will get over that in a few days. Then, too, there will be un- pleasantness at’ times from the mere fact that Iam a woman. J am going to succeed, though.” WRONG KEYHOLE FOR “TEDDY” PEIPER, Stage Manager Tried It In an Alien| Dr. | ing out dirt to be eradicated. BEHOLD! THE FIRST WOMAN TO SERVE AS AMLULANCE SURGEON. i (uu, ROMANCE SLIPPED BABY SMOTHERED UP ON EEL ET UNDER A PILLOW Helen Kiepe, 19, Says Fishing Clothing Thrown Over the Little for the Slimy Creatures Was, One in Bed by Mistake and the Only Amusement Her Hus-, Before Family Knew It the band, 45, Permitted Her. Child Was Dead. | The Cgroner was called upon to-day Madtstrnte Connorton, in the Mong Investigate the death of ten-months- Island City Court, failed to bring about . z i} Nettie Silver, daught ol . an off-hand reconetilation to-day be-| Sire, Sardon Silver, Ot No: i68 tadak one tween Mrs. Helen Kiepe, nineteen) Hundred and Fifth atreet, who was years old, and Louis Ktepe, forty-fve| smothered last night. mrs old, | As far as could be learned from the The young wife, who \s very pretty | members of the family, the baby, after and was formerly a member of the | being rocked to sleep by Its mother, was Runaway Girl company, appeared as) snugly tucked away in a large bed. It complainant, charging that her husband | was so completely wrapped up, says has forcibly ejected her from their | Sylvia Silver, the fifteen-year-old sister, home at No. 114 Camelia street, Long | that she did not know the child was in Island City. Her ejection, she declared, the bed when she says she threw a pil- low and a coverlet over it. Neither did Fannie Silver, thirteen years old, notice the struggles of the In- was mate doubly ful ing accompanied by a shor hold china and kitchenw. through be- er of house- re. F “And as for amuseme said the | fant as it sttangled under the welght young woman, with flery tn nation, of the pillow and coverlet when she Ince we were married he has taken | threw herself on the bed, . me out In a rowboat twice to fish for When Dr. LB, Rubins, of No, 1708 eels. Ugh" and the fair complainant | Lexin; m avenue, was called in the shuddered with true dramatic fervor. baby was dead. When he inquired of ty adv the family how it happened he could get only Incoberent explanations, Dr. ¥ bins sald the child had been smoth to death. ‘Therefore Me notified the tee. u had’ better kiss and make up," | ed Magistrate Connorton. yes, Helen, you had better come | home with me,” urged Mr. Klepe, “and maybe I won't object if you go to the | theatre," i" ev—er! returned the girl-wife, ~ stamping her foot. “No more row VAN I INE S te and eol fishing excursions for me.” ell, I will give you a week to think | | over," said the Court || Broadway and rSth St. ther, irried from the count-room, never even mplainant, accompanied by ber who had been a silent spectator, | Announce a Special Sale ning her head in response to the re- ted sntres Hes of seh husband rit of iepe is wealthy and prominent in a . the German societies in the city. Oriental Goods marked at ridiculously low prices, Tea & Bouillon Cup & Saucers, Unique shapes, pretty designs, former prices 1,00, 1.25 and 1,50 each, marked now at SOC. each. GIRL, CANDLE NPHTHA,POUF When the Fire Engines Came the Elevator Man Had Taken All the Tenants Safely to the Street. Lunch &Shopping Bags, new styles, were 1.00 & 1.25 each, marked now at 25c. & 35c. each. Jap Cloth Screens, Hand painted, floral A combination of servant girl, naph- tha and lighted candle started a fire in the five-story apartment-house at No. 12 Madison avenue to-day at an hour when most of the tenants were In bed. Following the arrival of the engines there was an entertaining display of pajamas and like apparel. ‘The first floor of the building ts occu: pied by Dr. Rosenwaaser. It was in hi apartment that the servant gir) 0 can of naphtha and a rag {0 0} and a lighted candle in theYot When the Door and Fell Off the Stoop. "Teddy" Peiper, ;the stage manager and theatrical agent, whose difficulties | with his wife have brought him much} notoriety, was taken to the J. Hood | Wright Hospital to-day, unconscious | and suffering from numerous bruiscs. | He is one of those unfortunate mor- | tals who lives in one of a long row of | similar houses, and at 4 o'clock in the/ morning it 1s difficult to count them, so! as to ascertain in whion particular one! he lives, Peiper believed he was trying the key \n bis own door at No, 21 West One | Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, when, In fact, the house was the resi- | dence of Albert Hanscom, at No. 2 ‘The lock would not respond to hia at-| tempts, and in struggling with it he lost | his balance and fell from the stoop to the areaway below. Policeman Kearns found him there ang sent ‘iim to the, hospital. The doctors sald he had re covered consciousness and was not bad-| i 4 explosion came to pass everything In the room caught fire but the servant girl. She ran out In the hall sounding the alarm. Louis Botthein, the elevator man, decoration, 4 fold, 5 ft. high, at 2.50 former price 3.25. stuck to his until every oue * two score occupants of the builaing had | —- = escaped. The fire was confined to 1 ae : Rosenwasser's apartment Turkish Rugs, After the wife of the doctor had t he reached the street she bethou 200at4.& 5,0°each self of a smail at called M by Dooley. Thie cat was not in evidence eta Rae = on the street. Mrs. Rosenwasser went Special sale of Into the burning rooms and rescued Cushions, Kimonos, Cotton & Jute Rugs, Bamboo Furniture, Silks, Etc, A.A.Vantine& Co. Mister Dooley. — To Break a Deadlock, (From the New York Weekly.) ‘Trayeller—Deadlock in your Legislature, eh? Native—Yes. why dont you bri could.’ State He it? ‘ails si One of the Many Thousand Homes =} Where Pe-ru-na Is the Family Medicine, Many Women Have Catarrh and Do Not Know It, EN Pe-ru-na Cures Catarrh Where- ever Located, Mrs. F. Dosaulmiers, 241 Dor- chester street, Montreal, Canada, writes ‘*Peruna is of untold bless- ing to women, Peruna builds up the entire system and makes you well, I havethe Sreatest taith in it, for I have never yet found it to tail either my family or my- selfintime of sickness. I have known it to cure cases of chronic catarrhand stom- ach troubles of long stand- ing. We do not need adoc- toras long as we have Pe- runa.'’ — Mrs. F, Desaul- miers, Everything she ate she, would throw even water. The last doctor we had ex: mined her and sald she bad cancer of tomach, and said he could do her no good’ oxcept to give her something to relieve the pain, and that he would not advise us. to have an operation performed. This from one whom I have always had confidence In, you cannot imagine my feal= it wan the ings and thoughts. i to quit ‘ ry Peruna, and from the ‘Segise wo decided hing it helped her, ‘She is how able ait Sth "housework. “She. ia” gatatog flesh, and T think will soom be back to weight. “To make a long story short, we lite to Peruna, for 1 am satiated, Dad it phe would now be ip not tried gray If you do not derive prompt and factory results from the use of Peruna at once to Dr. Hartman, giving « full mont of your case, and he will be to give you hie vaiuablé advice gre Address Dr. Hartman, President Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. ne trerenenemtneneneneneet For the most acute cases of dyspepsia and the most chronic and stubborn cases of catarrh of the stomach Peruna is an un- failing cure. Mr. E. BE. Gaston, of Milton, Towa, in a recent letter to Dr. Hartman, say “My wife has been sick’ with stomach trouble for almost three years. “During that time we doctored with three of the best doctors in this part of the coun- try, but they did ber no good. She fell off in flesh from 134 pounds to 80 pounds, a Was unable to do anything; tn fact, w confined to her bed a good part of tho time. der “BETTER THAN EVER.” from the clover-scented Mohawk meadows—a modem. hen used undiluted in coffee, tea or chocolate, the Fresh dail; triumph, Gweet Clover Brame j Condensed is far better than raw cream because it is so made that it unites more readily with these liquids and gives them a smoother, more agreeable flavor to the palate. Sold by All Grocers. Beautiful Gifts Free to all uss of Sweet Clover Brand. end f Book of Premiums. Mohawk Condensed Milk Co. 89 Hudson St.,New York. —__> A THE Soap That Cures ~ BEAUTIFY YOUR COMPLEXION _ Not by using cosmetics, lotions, creams, &c., which are so injurious to the skin, and which, for a while, apparently refresh the face, but eventually cause wrinkles and shrivel the surface ot the skin, creating the appearance of prema- ture age. Try MEDICURA SOAP, which will make your skin white and soft as 2 baby's, preserve it in a healthy and fresh condition and insure it against all contagious diseases, MEDICURA SOAP is not an ordinary soap. It is prepared under the formula of one of the greatest authorities in Europe on Dermatology, and the medicinal ingredients which it possesses make it the best Medicated and Al septic Soap in the world. At All Druggists’ at 25c, Per Cake. MEDICURA SOAP CO., 36 east 224 st., N.Y." Free Samples on Application at TULHAU'S Drug Store, ifs BROADWAY, Germ Infected Air. Malaria is not confined exclusively to the swamps and marshy regions of the country, but wherever there is bad air this insidious foe to health is found, Poisonous va) and gases from sewers, and the musty air of damp ci lars are laden with the germs of this miserable disease, which are breathed into the Inngs and taken up by the blood and transmitted to every part of the body. Then you-begin to feel out of sorts without ever suspecting the cause. No energy or appetite, dull headaches, sleepy and tired and completely fagged out from the slightest exertion, are some of the deplorable effects of this enfeebling malady. As the | disease progresses and the blood becomes more deeply poi- soned, boils and abscesses and dark or yellow spots appear upon the skin, When the poison is left to ferment and the microbes and germs to multiply in the blood, Liver and as Kidney troubles and other serious complications often arise. As Milecia begins and develops in the blood, the treatment to be effective must begin | there too. S. S. S. destroys the germs and poleons and purifies and strengthens the polluted blood, and under its tonic effect the debilitated constites | tion rapidly recuperates and the system ie soon clan | of all signs of this depressing disease. | S. S. S, is a guaranteed purely vegetable rem mild, pleasant, end | harmless, Write us if you want medical advice or any special. info | about your case, This will cost you nothing. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, ‘WORLD VACATION BUREAU NOW 0 1381 BRGADWAY, near 38TH STREET, New ee! ) (: si ay eat

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