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MARRIES ACAN This Time Beautiful \ Single Life, Becomes Wife of James R. Hatmaker. WAS PRIVATE SECRETARY ' TO CORNELIUS VANDERBILT. Wedding in Paris Recalls a Fa- \ mous Romance and Divorce— \ The Present Nuptiats Are the Result of Love Afone. ‘Whe wedding of James R. Hatmaker, Bor many years private secretary to the Yate Comettus Vanderbilt, to Mrs. Nellie Bends De la Mar, news of which was abled from Paris, has caused untold @esalp in the upper circles of society ‘ere, where both principals are well smown, ‘Mrs. De la Mar has for several years been the acknowledged beauty of the ‘American colony in Paris, and rumors of her to men of title, ‘wealth and social prominence have been ‘Qumerous since her divorce from aged ‘Capt. De Ia Mar. Her life has been full of romance and {ta inoldenta would furnish the matertal ‘Cor a lengthy soclety novel, and like the ‘vomances of fiction a happy chapter ‘weems to mark the end of her career as Mrs. De ia Mar. Founded on Love Alone. ‘Her marriage with Mr. Hatmaker is Delisved to be the culmination of an attachment that is founded on love alone, for he isnot known to be ‘wealthy, that is, as wealth is reckoned fn these days of mult!-milifonaires, He ‘vas, as said, for years the secretary of Cornelius Vanderbilt, and is supposed & be one of the best posted men in theh world on railroad matters. He ‘was left $10,000 in his former employer's will. For the last four years he has resided in London. Mrs, De la Mar was originally Nellie Virginia Sands. With her mother, the widow of a well-to-do druggist, she was summering at Narragansett Pierin 1892, when she met Capt. De lar Mar. She ‘was eighteen—little more than a child and he was fifty. Capt. De la Mar had been the favored football of fortune. Born in Holland of ® French father and a Dutch mother, be had early taken to the sea. He drift- fe@ to Chicage and then to the West, ‘where he located a mine which he final- ty acquired ¢ull control of and which is estimated to have made him a fortune ‘of $25,000,000, Promises of Luxury. He was-captivated by the beauty of Wellle Sands and won her heart, it is sald, by the promises of wealth and lux- ury he made ber, They were marriet May, 1993, Both desired social position, and the Captain purchased a magnificent home ‘on Madison avenue. Soclety was cold, however, and they moved to Paris. Here Mrs. De la Mar's beauty swept the field, ®nd abroad she was 1iken up and made ™ pet of by the most exclusive circles of the French capital, Capt. De la Mar was intensely Jealous, and when he was recalled from the Orient, where they were spending the ‘winter, on business, he chanced upon_a Dacket of fetters in this wife's desk, He Secured possession of thelr child, and then sued for and secured « decree of divorce. That was in 1898 He made a settlement on his wife and arranged to Drovide handsomely for her whethor Thy, married again or not, ‘ince then Mrs, De Ia Mar's engage- ment to yarfous men prominent in so- been rumored sure Mi Wroved a complete s sessed of wonderfu' SON'S TALK MAY REVEAL MURDER Els Chance Remark at Mother’s Funeral May Develop the Fact that She Shot Her Husband to Death. rr, The chance/remark of her ten-year- old son during the funeral services over ‘the body of Mra. John Englebrecht, at Paterson, N J., led to an investigation which seems to indicate that the woman had’ killed her husband and that re- morse had driven her to commit sul- cide, John Engiebrecht was found 4) in bed with a bullet hole in his head tive sveeks ago, It was given out that he had committed suicide, Mrs. Engie- brecht was found dead on his grave in Laurel Grove Cemetery, Monday, She tid swallowed carvolic ‘acid. d gon, remarked during’ the funeral services over Mother's body that she had often threat- ened to kill his father, An investigation Was made and it was iearned that the wonlan had Informed ‘ afler the death of her husband that a! id “committed @ deed of which no one new and which no one, ever would ‘iknow. id she wanted to die. hbor the boy told this father’s death: sleoring with pa ‘aad was ewakened by a shot. I ran to call ma and she was out at the front door ring- fg the, dell to wako the nelghdors. When she came back she sald. ‘Well, J guessI will Lave to face it, anyway. ‘Then she went to look at pa and then went Into her owa room and fell in a I ran out to call the neighbors, told me. She got better after that, but she has deen funny ever sinco and’ Aunt Maggle has mado me with ma all the time because afzald ma would commit mucide, mi ‘muiela rato fea Nellie Sands, After Five Years of ‘RABBI ESCAPES FROM HOSPITAL Rev. William A. Sparger, Can- tor of Temple Emanu-El, Mys- teriously Disappears from In- Stitution in Philadelphia. Poke? THE .BEAUTIFUL, NELLIE SANDS, WHO IS NOW MRS. J. Ri HATMAKER. WIFE PROSTRATED AND FEARS FOR HiS SAFETY. Patient Was Convalesoing, After Having Attempted Suicide by Cutting His Throat and Taking Poison---Eludes Detectives. The Rev. Wildam A. Spancer, of No. 73 Rest Nineticth street, cantor of Tem- ple Bmanu-El, has escaped from the Jefferson Hospital, Philadelphia, where he was convalescing after outting his throat and talking poison in an attempt to kill himself, and the news has pros- trated his wife. The Philadelphia Hospital authorities called up Mrs. Sparger on the long- distance telephone early to-day and asked her {f her husband had returned home. She sald he had not, and the MAN AND GIRL. [TRIED TO KICK OF SHOT BY GANG) POLICEMAN'S HAT \Young Ruffians, Accompanied] Handsomely Dressed Young by Women, Were Celebrating] Woman, with Two Compan- the Election When They Got) ions, Arrested for Creating Into Row with Militiamen. Disturbance at Rector’s. her of the escape. Dr. Sparger disappeared from his home city some time ago while suffer- od of intense melancholle, er was found in Wash- ington. The Rabbis’ Association of America sent two Pinkerton men to Washington for him, and at Philadelphia they sto} off for a rest. While Tp dinner fn the Hotel Walton, Dr, Sparger excused himself to go to his room and in a few minutes he was found in a@ tollet room where he had swallowed a quantity of poison and had cut his thrgat. Bludes Detectives. He was sent to the Jefferson Hos- pital, where ho has improved so rapidly that his friends were notified a few days ago that he could be moved. With- out consulting the family, the Rabbis’ Association again employed detectives to bring Dr. Sparger to hix home. "The two detectives called at the hos- pital in Phtladelphia early yesterday morning, but they were informed that as Dr. Sparger was not a prisoner the hospital authorities’ could not turn the patient over to any one, but must re- lease, him to leave hospital of his own free will. Therefore, the detectives stationed themselves outside of the building end waited for Dr. Sparger, to appear. At noon Dr. Sparger was discharged in the hospital office and that was the last seen of him. He did not leave by ‘the two front doors, and # is believed that he went out through the basement door and down through an alley. News Prostrates Wife. ‘The detectives became tired of waiting about 8 o'clock in the afternoon, and when they inquired in the office they were told that Dr. Sparger had been gone three hours, During the last week Dr, Sparger had returned to ‘that melancholy condition in which he was when he attempted to kill himself, For that reason’ grave fears are felt for hie safety. When an Evening World reporter called at the Gparger home to-day Miss Helen Sparger sald that her mother had been prostrated by the news of her husband's disappearance, and could not be. seen. ‘Th notorious Bedford gang in Brook- lyn, that came into prominence at the time when Florence Burns was arrested aboused with shooting Walter Brooks, is again in evidence because of a shooting affair on Election night. William Bryce Cawley, of No. 1211 Dean etrest, was shot in the arm and e young woman who was in the company of the gang was badly wounded in ‘the exchange of bullets, Mr. Cawley, who is a son of 8. J. Cawley, a millionaire manufacturer of umbreljas, was on his way home from the theatre when he happened: to run Into the gang. There was shooting go- ing on and he was hit by a stray bullét. He saw one of the women sink to the ground and attempted to go to her ald, but was hustled away by three mem- bers of the gang. Residents of an apartment-house in the neighborhood ot the row also saw the woman shot. Nothing {s'known of her identity. Were Celebrating the Election. Members of the Bedford gang were celebrating the result of the election. ‘There were eight in the party and they had with them seven young women. The celebration was being held in a saloon in Bedford avenue, near Han- cock street. Everybody in the party became in- toxieated agd so much noise was made that the proprietor of the saloon forced them to leave. They stood at Hancock street and Bedford avenue singing ribald songs and acting generally in a disgraceful manner until the whole neighborhood was aroused. There were no policemen in dight. Fiye members of the Twenty-third Regiment, on the way to their homes from the armory and wearing their dress untforms, passed the gang and were in- sulted. They proceeded to put up a fist fight, when the Bedford gang members drew revolvers and began to shoot. Many Shots Fired. Persons who saw the encounter say “My name is Emma Dive. I'm seventy- five years old and I live at No, % Bowery,” was the astonishing reply a beautifully gowned young woman, who looked. about eighteen, made to the ser- geant in charge at the West Forty- seventh street station. The young woman, in company with another, who gave her name as Harriet ‘Whitehead, forty-five years old, and a man, who said he was Richard Hughes, Was arrested for creating a disturbance in Rector's, The trio drove up to the Broadway entrance of the restaurant in a cab, All three had evidently been looking on the wine that bubbles, and the efforts of the big watchman at the door to keep them out proved futile. “Stand aside, villain, and let me pass!" commanded one of the women, in a mock melodramatic tone. “Back to the woods, Willie!" said the younger woman, and then with a laugh the three brushed by the doorman and entered the cafe. They were hilarious and didn't care who knew it. Other patrons of the place objected’ to their pretence and some: left, ‘The: head waiter issued of- ders that the three were not to.be served and they finally left the restaurant by the Forty-fourth street entrance. “The place ts on the fritz anyway," eae the younger of the women-as they le: When they reached the sidewalk they began to get nolsy ‘and attracted the attention of Policeman Judge. He or- dered them to keep quiet and move on. For a reply one of the women attempt- ed to kick Judge's helmet off. He finally arrested them and took them to] the West Forty-seventh street station. man refused to his ad 3 but Srterea SSE.aT whign had in hid pocket, as cash bi ‘The Sergeant re- fused to accept it and the three spent the night in cells. the three Ischar; . that trom twenty to thirty sh i morning. aso one appeated “We sent no one after him,” said fired, Plate glass windows in the drug inst. them. Miss Sparger, “but it ts Itkely that the Rabbis’ Association did. We belleve ‘that father is n@w trying to walk to New York. He was without money and had nothing on which he could realize anything, “He probably knew that the detectiver were waiting for him, and he did not wish to appear as though returning in the custody of any one. We hope that the will appear during the day.” POINTS TO YOU. How Coffee Sets It; Grip and Is Never ‘Suspected. It {s surprising how many people never suspect that coffee is causing all their trouble until they are finally knocked out or some disease caused by coffee has become chronic and almost incurable, Clie Even in chronic cases the chances are a shift from coffee to Postum Food Coffee will build the sick one up and jn time effect a cure. Sometimes this happens with sur- prising promptness. A lady of Syra- cuse, Neb., says “Last spring a year ago my doctor told me I would have to stop drinking coffee. I had heart trouble so bad that the least excitement would cause me. to choke up 80 I could scarcely get my breath, and [ was so nervous I could not bear to have the children move around the house. “Doctor told my husband to get Postum for me, but before he did so we moved to the country and I fell back on milk and water, but even such exertién as climbing a flight of stairs caused my heart to hurt me so T would feel sick and faint. “This continued all summer until ;|in the fall we again moved to Syra- cuge, There I got some Postum and began to feel 20 much better after (ing one package that I continued its use altogether, and I am now bet- ‘kage.|ter in health than I have ever.been ed | before ant sian Gai Tam atronker one arm around t! and fleshier than I ever was and have thle other ‘hand te held to the oeidle [not had the headache but three times The collision. inevitable In the crowded since I began to use Postum a year (iid not come for three blocks Iago The change certainly seems wonderful, for I have had no return of the heart trouble at all, and never get tized telling what Postum has done for me.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look in cach package for a copy of the famous little book, “The Road to Wellvitle,” is tore of H. Bothwell, at Huncock and Bedford avenues, were broken and bul- lets pierced the windows and window casings of an apartment-house half @ vietiwiey was selsed by membe e Sawley, sel sand rust free bloc! Rs d not Bay ang and rushed for t Hrection of his home. He di about hig injury until «wo became un- anything hours later, when the pain bearable and he was compelled to asi his father to call a surgeon, The bullet was removed from bis arm at daylight, What bocame of the. young woma who was shot is not known. ‘The last seen of her she was being haif led, half carried down Bedford avenue, No po- liceman appeared after the shooting, 00 report of it was made to the station- house and no effort appoars to have been made by the police to find the young rufflans who bombarded the nelghborhood, PHILIP ALLEN ES IN STREET Well Known Clubman, Stricken with Heart Disease, Drops Dead on. Lexington. Avenue While on His Way Home. DOMINICK TS A WONT-LET.0' BOY Plucky Italian Lad of Thirteen Hangs to His Runaway Horse and Is Dragged a Distance of Three Blocks. rs of t} ks in tl Dominick Galgano is ane of those Won't-le-fo boys. He hung to a runa- way horse for three blocks to-day until he was knocked off by a collision with @ passing waeon and had his chest ¢aved In*and his Jaw broken. Then he refused to go 4o the’hospital and wanted to walk to his home. He is thirteen years old. Pominick f9 the eldest of @ix children of Gactano Galgano, Up to three weeks Ago he attenfed.the North Moore Gtreet Publis School. His parents live at No. 181 Spring strees, and it has been hard for the family to get along. Domintdk aw tills and left school of his own. ac- con. He found work in a stable in Chariton street owned by James Wien- man, a truckman, of.No. 4 East High- toonth etreet. The elder Galguno did not know his son was working until he got home with his salary for the firet The boy showed so much determina- tion to work and earn that coupenter,Torday Datainiok was went ut with a ihe Links he Club members to-day were shocked to hear of the sudden death of . Philip Allen, secretary of the Central Union Gas Company, in the Bronx, and a large stockholler “in the Consolidated Gas Company, He dropped dead from heart disease last night while on his way to bis apartments, in ‘the old Jockey Club building, enth street and Madi fell at the corner of Twent; {street and Loxington avenue dead before those who saw him could ivach’ his side. Allen waa born England and was never married, He had no relatives in this country, “He was a m ‘of thi Union, Knickerbocker «and Tuxedo jeluds. | [5100 for Those Who Read The Girl in Black. pride bed Chapter in Next ‘ day's Evening World 0} a n aven was fall in runaway followed, his fleeing steed, leaped his 4 ‘As ‘he struggled to hus feet he called Sut to the gathering crowd to pold his “C11 be back to work {n pidourt a weok, he told an re ‘ond report 1 bandages ence fterngum le. ane thle aft man on tho other end of the wire told |T, EVENING, NOVEMBER. 6, 1903. NATURE'S GREATEST CURE FOR MEN AND WOMEN. Swamp-Root Is the Most Perfect Healer and Natural Aid to the Kidneys, Liver and Bladder Ever Discovered, —they tell us in silence that our kidneys need doctoring. If neglected now, the disease advances until the face looks pale or sallow, puffy or dark circles un- der the eyes, feet swell, and sometimes the heart acts badly. There is comfort in knowing that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, fulfils every wish in quickly relieving such troubles, It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, and over- comes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to get up many times during the night to urinate. SWAMP-ROOT A BLESSING 10 WOREK. | My kidneys and bindder gave me greay trouble for over two months and I suffered SWAMP-ROOT SAVED AY LIFE, reaived Ir, a yet out 1 promptiy the sample bottle of Finey, remeds, Swamp: loot jad an awful pain in my back, over the ery, but ot did not get up until ‘mornin three bottles of Swamp-Root, 8. APKER, farsh Hill, Pa, There comes a time to. both men and women when ‘sickness and poor health bring anxiety and trouble hard to bear; disappointment seems to follow cvery effort of physicians in our behalf, and remedies we try have little or no effect. In many such cases serious mistakes are made in doctoring, and not knowing what the disease is or what makes us| or my druge sick. Kind nature warns us by certain tae) taking tt symptoms which are unmistakable evi-| can now dence of danger, such as too frequent | fi: desire to urinate, scanty supply, scalding untold misery. 1 became weak, emacuted and Very inves ruh dt 1 had great aitricuity in retaluing my urine, and wax obsdKed to pase water very often nix: had used Swamp-Root Perlenced rele A long, loose, roomy warm coat, chock-ful of styl Fashion’s choice for Winter 1903-1904, Immense p chases enable us to sell these $20 to $50 Coats atic. .srsaeewselenereeeunn :|279 Broadway, 47 Cortlandt St., Mis HWS HITT New F MONS eS Belt Coat Wea oJ $15 to $2: Get the Habit. Bee ZB 21 and 219 Sixth At 125th St. and irritation, pain or dull ache in the back To Prove What SWAMP-ROOT, the Great Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy Will do for YOU, Every Reader of theNewYork Evening World May Have a Sample Bottle FREE by Mail. SPECIAL NOTICE —If you are sick or “feel badly,” send at once to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., who will gladly send you by mail, immediately, without cost to you, a sample bottle of Swamp-Root, and a book telling all about it and containing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and women cured. _ In writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sire to say that you read this generous offer in the New York Evening World. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can pur- chase the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles at the drug stores everywhere. Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr, Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. Voge Brovhors A2* Stx.Cor: BS Ave. Sale of Boys’ Winter Overcoats, Special sale of 300 warm Oxford. gray Overcoats for boys, ages 6 to The style is shown in cut alongside—long and loose, with slash pockets and velvet collars. The splendid $5 overcoat special sale for Friday and Saturday, at $3.95 Also 200 warm blue Over- coats for boys, ages 3 to 8, Style shown in cut. Double breasted. velvet collar, military buttons, belt back. These $5 overcoats on special sale for Friday and Saturday, at $3.95 Store Open Late Saturday Night. INCENT says LOTHES can't be bought as mere merchandise, They carry with them a certain Individuality— a certain Air that makes them a part of the wearer. Successful men are well dressed not simply because they can afford them, but because they give the Clothes question a good bit of Personal Thought and Attention. Any man who feels that Clothes are worth think- ing about couldn’t spend ten minutes more profitably than in a chat with me. English Walking Suits, Stein-Bloch’s, $25. Broidway—22d Street. Sixth Avenue—12th Street. SUITS FOR YOUNG MEN. Boys have their own notions about Clothes which we try to adopt in our Suits for them. We think we have hit them off in our Fall and Winter styles: $8 to $18. Short trousers, worth $1.25, at 50 cents. OPEN SATURDAY TILL 10 P. M, owning: King -§- COOPER SQUARE WEST (Opposite Cooper Union). BRQOKLIN—Fucon Gr, a7 DeKave Ava, lies Sales are conducted. Ladies especially are delighted with it, Fi the Gillies Coffees at special reductions from prices known to be our ¢ regular ones and known to be exceedin; store. op nerve force; no uncertainty or worry. guarantee that what you get will be right. roasted—almost hot=straight from a bigger than you ever stw—unless you saw ours. pure, honest, high-grade Coffee, which we believe is not equalled at anything like its regular price (called No. 2 to distinguish it from our extra fine Mountain Mara- value at Sale price... Established 1840, Tel. 3471 Cortlandt, 708-710 Broad: 1967 Broadway, 421 Fulton Street, 404 Fifth Avenue, Gillies Coffee Sale ij Everybody welcomes the system under which the Git gly low. That is a very : very substantial advantage. oe Then—the EASE of the system. No rushing off to: No crowding and jostling. No carfare; no tax on time; no. y i At home by your side you simply write us a postal—or telephone if you prefer. That's all—the Coffee will come to you. You will I it. Our Sixty-three Years of importing none Tight coffees. a You will get it rich, fre battery of Roasting Machines Send’the postal; get the coffee; try it, and . ca then—well, money back i you'll take. tt. Maracaibo No. 2. |Old Government Jav EEGULAR PRICE, 15c. A REGULAR PRICE, 26c. This b introduced by.us two generations ago, still maintains and increases jo pe its hold upon. the people... It is a mighty long time since we have had a special sale of It. Sale price Best Mocha and REGULAR PRICE, name indicates, this is a BEST Java with the best grown. At its regular pi 32c., it has won 2 host of Sale price for three Grocer’s Java. REGULAR PRICE, 20c. Consum- ers as well as dealers have grown to friends; for these three days know it, like it and insist 18° you may buy it at.......... upon it. For many years it Three Days Only—SATURDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, has been counted extra good Send the Postal—That’s All, its regular price. WE SELL 5 LBS. COFFEE—or 1 |b. Tea and 5 Ibs. Coffee—and deliver Manhattan, Brooklyn and Bronx up to 180th St, SEND POSTAL ox te x 10 Ibs. Coffee or 5 Ibs, Tea-—or 1 Ib. Tea und 10 Ibs. Coifee—delivered, free of exe press charges, within 25 miles of Manhattan—25 Ibs. delivered within 100 miles. - -, Gillies Coffee Company ~ 288, 295, 287 & 289 Washington St, tt & Buclay § (W.>L. DOUGLAS) 1$3.50 SHOE "3" W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have, b; their excellent style, easy-fitting ani superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sales of any $3.50 shoe in the world, Just as good as those that ff haye been costing you from $5.00 to $7.00 —tho pny al ecenee is the price, ff fy ©6.Lf I could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass,, the largest in the world under one roof making men's fine shoes, and show you the intinite care with which every pais of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why WW. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best ig Shoes produced anywhere in the world. FRC Af [could show you the difference betiveen the shoes made in my factor and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe in the market to-day. ‘Phis Is the reason W. L. Dougins makes and sells more men's Goodyear Welt (hand sowed process) $3.50 shoes than any other manufactarer in the world, be pald $25,000 Reward ein Sa,tors thustistmete i That Douglas uses CoronaColt proves there is value in Douglas $3.50 shoes, Corona is the highest grade patent A leather made, BROOKLYN: Jersey City: 9. Thornton, 18 Newark Ave, | 2203 y, cori Guten Ave} me Pearl, 4