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| b¥er the police in their mad rush forward. They sur- ‘and. reached forward to feel the texture of the bride's gown. was started with aden THE VANDERBILTS. in loud women's voices. Her husband was called Lagann _ Overpowered. ‘At last, when’ the cérriage started, the women gave way and / made for the carriage that would contain the next guests at the wedding. _ Bisappointed because they had not seen the wedding hundreds, even ‘thousands, of women maiie for tho Goelet home in Fifth avenue. They sur- tounded it, and the same police reserves who had been beaten back at the thurch went to the house to keep order. GUESTS UNABLE TO GET IN. class of women whe mobbed the wedding couple were not a low ‘class, according to the police. They represented women in all walks of life. ivgea of persons who really had invitations to the wedding were unable ik through the lines of women in the strects and get into the church. $ «oe presented their cards of admission to the police and a policeman be assigned to take them to the church door. The person would be by great crowds, and when the church door was opened the crowds press forward and overpower the policeman. In this way many persons gre unknown to the Goelets or the bridegroom got admitted and i invited gueste out of their seats. While the big mob waited outside the actual ceremony of the Duke's ‘YWnarriege to Miss Goelet was performed inside the church. It was a very _gimple one. ZIKE 4N ENGLISH CHAPEL. dal tones to the size'of an Euglish “chapel by the banking of ferns and .4. complete hedge was formed about the inclosure where the fa- sat, Using the dark sreen of, this hadge a8 a background, a fon cf chrysunthemums and Illes’ were arranged in clusters. Above were festoons and garlands of bréhids, roses and hanging baskets of | primroses. The ceremony began with the processional led by the vested choir of | {180 voices singing “‘O Petfect Love.” Following the choir came the brides- da, They were Lady Isabel Innes-Ker, the Duke's sister; Miss Therese Mies Marion’ Haven, Miss Alice Babcock, Miss Beatrice Mills, Miss ‘Thayer, Miss Martha Johnson and Miss Pauline Whittier. ‘CHANGE FOR USHERS. ie Goelet decidec that the sight of the ushers walking down the aisle “gab by two! would have a grucsome suggestion, and’ #0, after the guests ¥ | were seated, *“s ushers sat down in the nave of the church, taking no part _ (fife procession. * Ne The ushers were Harold Baring, Harold Brassey, Robert Walton Goelet, Woodward, Rogers Winthrop and Heary W. Bull. Aitoagh Goelet entered the church on the arm of her brother, ta the altar, where the ceremony was performed by the rector. ‘Throughout the service the anthem, “Sweet Is Thy Voice,” was sung, ‘voce: ‘The recessional hymn was “To Thee, O Father.” As the bridal left the ‘church’ Mendelssohn's wedding march was performed on the Hutchings organ. % Five hundred guests attended the reception in the Goelet mansion in + hein the ceremony, The flower of Néw York society and many persons from abroad were among these Suests. ae teers Rae MAY GOELET AND DUKE WED {) ‘ FOR'LOVE AND NOT. FORTUNE. ~ When Mits May'Goelet was wedded to the Duke of Roxburghe this linia it could be safd ‘for her that’ slic 4s the first great American (Melresd Whose marriage to a foreign nobleman of exalted title carries no " ‘Pikwestion of sordid barter and sdle. “Phere has been no haggling over the marrlage settlements, no hoards of ‘agi creditors listening greedily for the ringing of the marriage bells, ana a and mortgaged cstates waiting for Amercan gold to return to their former gplendor about the Goelet-Roxburghe marriage, let becomes the Duchess of Roxburghe she becomes the wife of a ina ‘whose estates are among the finest in all England and who what it was to have a fearful creditor. DIFFERS FROM MARLBOROUGH WEDDING. ‘eh; How different was the marriage of Consuelo Vanderbilt to the Duke of great but impoverished house of Marlborough his marriage to the daugh- = X. Vanderbilt was much a matter of business, A few days the ceremony ha went to the office of his fiance's father in the Grand a Station. _ Mr, Vanderbilt. waited for the young man with his lawyera, A mar- fettlement was drawn up by which upon the marriage of Miss Con- ‘Vanderbilt $10,000,000 was awarded to the Marlborough estates. With sum the great name of Marlborough was to be rehabilitated ‘to its “former, splendor, the mortgages. were to be lifted from the castles and Manors and the hosts of clamoring creditors were to be satisfied, .» The Duke of Marlborough came to America to win a fortun: the winning of a bride was but another term, It was purely , for which matter of @aughter would not now he the Duchess of Marlborough. CASTELLANE GOT A FORTUNE, In. that seme year another heiress to American willions was wed to a Watinguished French noblemen when Miss Anna Gould became the bride of whe Count Bon! de Castellane, If there had been anything sordid about _ the Marlborough marriage the preliminaries to the engagement and mar- Plage were at least conducted with delicacy. ‘The Castellano marriage was so patently the result of the frantic efforts ‘ofa fortune-hunter that even society could not be reconeiled to it, and few ed members of the New ‘York 400 attended the ceremony at the of, George Gould on March 4, 1895. me (Count Boni came tto America, to use a popular expression, rapped, ? “Mike engagement was announced, the world ppeculated on the Settlement. It soon learned that there was hot dispute between | ‘brothers of the Count's bride-tolbe and the titled Frenchman, He} 45,000,000 spot cash, He argued flercely for it, but when the con- moter Anatly signed he got only $9,000,000 of his bride's| Anterebt of the marriages of American heiresses to noble for- | ia t OF the Young Duke of Manchester to Miss Helen Zimmer-| 6 Cintinnati millioniare, “This marriage took place the Parieh Church at Marylebone in England. The Me us purely a love match, Papa Zimmermann said ae the ceremony “was no sooner performed than the pire was called upon to setile his son-in-law's debts, P which the American dollar overshadowed ro- i Matgaret Thaw became the Countess of Yar- was, he, doora ot Newport and Fifth fortiine, but met with BO success. was forced to seek the stage as a oe a oo bain! Bi Gf he trhts and vrtbnatoom before they. were doubly 'so and called out in anger when the police pushed them back @ quick jerk did the crowd ‘currigg® was fell back tat enough then to keep from being crushed and then they followed, running behind and calling out ng the Duke's carriage came the carriage of the Cornelius Van- g. ‘The crowd recogni#ed it at ofce and pressed forward. Mrs. Van- and the crowd seemed as thick about it es it had @bout the car- 7 a epee ‘The police fought the women back in vain, They were of the small number of guests invited the nave of the church | Whed | Gene Rhoades, in the same church on Noy. 6, 189. To the young Duke of |¥8* found In a vacant lot playing with be perand 4 abroad tobe penniless. | § | FIFIPINOS “AGAINST “TARIFF. Robert jlate William Thaw, millionaire iron manufacturer of Pittsburg. afd proceeded to the chancel steps, where they were met by the|Thaw’s fortune was $8,000,000. Before the ceremony was performed the ‘cont a the betrothal service was read by the Rey. Dr. Stires. When |marriage seltiement was drawn up and signed, Under it the Harl of Yar- endéd the Duke and his bride and the best man, Capt. Reginald Ward,/}mouth got about $1,000,000, After the instrument was duly attested and signed he wedding bells rdng out heir SMALL BOY WAS A COUNTERFEITER Aas Three Sleuths Capture Lad Who! Had Made Nine Nickels from Pewter and Passed Three on a Verdant Storekeeper. In answer to a score of urgent men- sages from Westbrookville, a little tawa up in Sullyan County, which:stated that @ band of counterfeiters was at work there, Chief Flynn, of the United States Secret Service, yesterday sent three of his mon up t Argivd there, t aleuths legrned that the village storekeeper, had been “flooded with coins’ that were counterfeits. Rhoades showed them some load nickels, so poorly made as to look more like ‘‘slugw’’ than money, He sak! that he got them from Hddle Dren- nan. Then began a hunt for Wddte. He @ lot’of boys. To the agents he told of making the lead ‘nickels and passing them on ‘Gene Rhoades “Just tor a Joke."" Hddile said that he first took a good nickel, heated it white hot and then placed it between two smooth pleces of board. With molten metal from old pew~ ter pots he filled in the mould left in the ee SS board by the hot mickel and made nina coins. Eddie Drennan was arraigned to-day before United States Commissioner Shields tn the Federal Bullding. He satd he ts fifteen years old and did chores business, and had Mr. Vanderbilt balked at the marriage settlement his|*"4 040 Jobs for a living, Lawyer Marx offered to defend the lad and he was turned over to the custody ot the Chile dren's Soclety, until his’ examination, which Was wet down for Nov. 21 “They atrested the wrong man,” sata Commissioner Shields, after examining the lead. nickels in ‘evidence, ‘There ought to be a law makin, a crime for any man to accept any! thins lke that for real money.” PORT CHESTER ROAD WINS. road Commissioners’ Act in Granting Rights Fully Sustained. ALBANY, Nov, 10.—The Court of Ap- poals sustained the State Ratiroad Com- mission in its granting the certificate of Public convenience under section 59 of the railroad law to the New York und Port Chester Railroad Compan The joase is brought; Wetscheste road Comn: The Port proceeding the New in certiorari York city and against the Rail sion heater road thus wing in all courte. t= Appeal for Anoll- fen on Products, w dnhinetton| G ton of Di WABHINGTC the’ cablegrams ved to-day at the Buradu cof Inaular Aftotea te m the Filipino Chamber of Comm “Arinipino Oharpder of Commerce, in Moultural” ARs site ‘ana addressed to the Secretary of |" tie tne ‘on Philippine yao" irs “ietlipiio Chaser of Comineree, 4 fame of 14,000, tobaceo. workmen ogee ool ilen:s of Dingley tariff on. "philip: }2 So ae DUKE AND DUCHESS OF ROXBURGHE, WHO WERE. MOBBED BY WOMEN AFTER THEIR WEDDING TO-DAY. Thirty-nine: Feet Under the New House, of Rudolph M. Haan. ‘The deepest cellar in New York wil be under the new house of Rudolph M. Haan, That is due to the decision of ®upreme Court Justice Clarke to-day. ‘The house will be five stories high and only twenty-three feet front, but the excavation for the cellar Is thirty-nine feet deep and it took a decision of Jus- tice Clarke to convince Henry 8. Red- mond and others, who sold the lot to Col. Join Jacob iAstor, that the Colonel's echetne of making a basement, mez- zanine floor and sub-basement under the new house was not in violation of a covenant in the deed forbidding him to extend the St. Regis Hotel at Fifty-ffth street and Bvfth avenue over the little twenty-three foot plot for the next ft- teen years. Mr. Hedmond charges that Col. Astor Plainly Intends to extend the St. Regis over this Jot at the ond of the fifteen years and he asked for an injunction to stop him from digging a cellar thirty- nine feet deen. But Justice Clarke declares the Colo- nel may dig throush to China, if he likes, “I find no restriction in the covenant, in the common law, in equity or in good morals as to the depth of the cellar for one, family private dwelling said Justice Clarke. ‘He may five or fifty feet, provided that 10 down during the time limitation he erects and aint ‘only a dwelling house for one ‘Arc! t Goodline Livingston tells in ay nmdavit sit gpout | the house he janned with eee: teary collar, and vale he oh ‘Astor. ‘a building for Rudolp' x ‘i of 10 Bast Fifty-fitth “rngunction: denied. street. Miss happy chime, "DOC NAYLOR" HELD IN $2,000 BAIL Coroner’s. Jury Deolares. that Thomas Linehan Killed Ed- ward H. Carpenter at the, Rossmore in Self-Defense, whi Sut yea O's Tomas . Linevan, known as Doc] the: Naglor,” who killed. E@yard Carpenter, the professtonal gamblar, at the Ross more on Oot, 29, was hold to-day fn’ $2,000 bail to awalt the action of the Grand Jury. by the Coroner was somewhat of a sur- prise, the verdict belng that Carpenter Was killed tn self-defense. Detective Sergeant Dailey, Detective McCue, of the Nineteenth ‘Police Pro-| cinet; ‘Kdward J, White and Joseph! Baird were the witnesses called. White and Balrd testifed that they had heard the men quarrelling, and when they went Into the room where Carpenter lay dead they saw a Knife lying at his side. The attorneys for [Anehan directed all} their efforts to show that the killing was done in self-defense. They adduced @ great deal of evidence to show’ that| j; Carpnter was quarreisome at the Ume and the killing was unavoldable, eat Ree witha JAPANESE WANT ACTION. Delay in Settling with Russia De- clared Detrimental to P. es TOKIO, Japan, Nov. 10.—Premier Katsura to-day received a dep the antl-Russian League. He impressed the delegates with the necessity for complete unity and solidarity among the people in the face of the existing situation, which, he declared, was moat. critteal ‘There is a strong inclination in weil- informed circles to doubt the pacific forecasts fesued in Europe, ‘It Is be- Heved here that peace will only be made possible by Russia's complete accept- ance of Japan's claims regarding Man- churia, The Japanese oGvernment finds it Increasingly diffcult to restrain popu- lar sentiment. At an important dinner this evening at the Imperial Hotel, at which aout 330 persons were present, representing all sections, a resolution was alopted’ aiid the greatest enthuat-|, asm, declaring that the continued delay was deteimental to the national int ests and to peace in the Far East and urging the Government to take prompt and decisive action, — FOUGHT ON “L” TRACKS. Ryan Told Bridge Policeman Fifty Men Were After Him. When Joseph Ryan, six-footer and | yaa, Do wan Al the tha aw Iw toh phe she Bun Gov Hel thirteen months in the country, ‘to-day | Colu i Started to walk over the Brooklyn : ees on the elevated tracks from the eyond the plat ere are Hees mene d the Slant. to Pollcem lor and’: McKean, who ran out on ti bridge, hey want to assassinate mu._ "11 want’ protection,” Ryan was taken to the arralanol for sdigor cerly fondue we Protested that he had not been d at Padi ferréd to accept ‘het { remay tion hn to. bi hee ee was ana in (MRS, O'BRIEN FED Robert L. ‘Yes sir; “You say during the summer of 1899 at Saratoga. ‘Do’ ‘The result. of the Inquest held | snapped t the tte maid. “No, I don't, fifteen, O'Brien's two little, dat part (33 the O°! rs, a, been wri the O'Bri ried O'Brien The trial Bandy Hi: ‘ernor' H STH, SANS MAD Mary McCarrick Testifies in ex- Sheriff's Divorce Suit to the Alleged Attentions of Wite to the Musician. Mary McCarrick, for eleven years 9 maid in the house of ex-Sheriff O'Brien and one of the co-respomfents named by Mrs. O'Brien in het counter sult for di- vorce, continued her tegtimony to-day before Justice Leventritt In the trial in ich the husband names’ Paul H, th, a harpist, and two other co- respondents. The, witness declared that Mrs. O'Brien always had a sweetheart during the| I ré of her services teginning in 1889 Turk, attorney for Mi rien, got Mary to declare that e y servant who had sided with Mrs. O'Brien In the last trial had lied, “All lida but yourself, Mary?" asked cross-examiner, every son and daughter ot |F said Miss McCarrick, there. were many! callers m, you recall Prof. Bimberg?’ Mn Turk you consider him anybody?" don't you? He only called when he nted a drink—that fellow. Miss McCarrick sald her. mistress fea beet Isick or crazy. “Did Mrs, O'Brien feed Mr. Sulth from @ bottle or with @ spoon?’ was The thoroughly angry maid sal O'Brien held tea and milk to Sulth, who wes Blass to Sulth's lps. Says She Found Letter. ving Kusges, the cok's daughter in O'Brie) Boogen hold, and util as it she had stopped. visti the upper y Hen house, ., because P, written ty Satanilis Paul lH. then in "at tee former tel ie ter, rey tas: genie te, fe Totter eaid: hoped to save a. litte va id ante ite ‘et will know one another in reents only. ‘The aly, thing 18 ove. me you only here! Comé soon sweetheart down with yout aweet the O'Brien cook for of mie Kugel, fol- bou' werd ith. Ghe a rerees pode owen sith stort M Ing at the his homie, aad en wan paenttea t +t wy money, and that loved on ra go on to-morrow. SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC -FOR TO-DAY. rlaes. 6,40[Sun sets. 4.48|Moon rises 10.18 THE TIDES, Gat et er’ ma," ex. | punt en | Sora: Castle's RIALTO'S OWNER SUED BY A GIRL 000 Damages from Joseph Figallo for Alleged Breach of Promise of Marriage. Loulse Felugo, of No, 16 Downing street, gays in @ complaint filed by Bu- gene L. Parodi, his attorney, that Jos- eph Figallo. proprietor of the Rialto res- taurant, No,.1366 Broadway, trified with her: affections. She demgnds $35,000 damages for breach of promise of mar- riage, which is just the price he ex- ae he et for the Rialto as @ pre- nths'. vacation in Tey with a eiel ne iked Better, acs ing to her affidavit, aflidavit, presented by Hugene 4 patente Sus ge Amend sized tite order of surest u h Deputy Sher. iff Walgering took ‘he foe faithtes gue in this afiernoen. id _when. with her she ac eb. Fe was Red for the happy event. Bat igallo didn't appear, ——— 8T. LOUIS'S NEW POSTMASTER. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—Frank W; Taan to-day was nominated to be vost- master at St. Louis. He is a brother of Surgeon-General Wyman, of the Uh Health and Marine Hospital Ser- vice. -DFEPEST CELLAR ($5 000000 BRIDGE. IN THIS CITY) CONTRACT IS LET it Will Reach to a. Depth of| While Application for aft Injuno- Miss Louise Felugo Wants $25,- awa Figailo deposited |. 92,000 camh ball kr ang Felugo says she was only nine- PAW PAW | THE. NEW CURE TO PRO- LONG LIFE FREE DISTRIBUTION, NOW GOING ON FROM OFFICES OF THE NEW YORK AMERICAN AND’ JOURNAL 37th Street and Broadway. 237 West 125th.Street, | Fulton and Washington Sts., B’klyn. 20,000 Bottles tion Is Being Argued, Pium Is Awarded to the Pennsylvania Steel Company. A five-million dollar contract for the steel structure of the new Blackwell's Island bridge’ was awarded today by Bridge Commissioner Lindenthal to the Fenneylvunia Steel Company. The contract was awarded while an application for an injunction restraining the Commissioner from letting the con- tract was belng argued before Justice Clarke in the Supreme Court. When the proceedings were adjourned until the latter part of this week for arcument, Corporation Counsel Rives notified Commissioner Lindenthat that he could go ahead and award ¢he contract. On the strength of the opinion of the Cor- poration Coane” oe Commas [TOBE GIVEN AWAY IN ar BARS the ewan: NEW YORK ‘The Pennsylvania Steel Company, was notified of the pending action and in- formed that in the event of an adverse decision by the courts it would have to Ce out the case, being the lowest bid- pana entitled to the contract. e Court very plainly intimated to- days onld bie, Rives "that the parties applying for the injimetion had made no case and that it would probably de- inst the applicants. At any ‘ contract, although awarded, has ‘not been sig nor have the de- tails been fully determined upon.” The contract, therefore, like the court pro- ceedings, are in statu “[ have no doubt that the Court will refuse to grant the application, It was for these reasons I intervened with the opinion, advising, the Commissioner to make the awa. The applicant for the in unctte be- fore Justice Clarke: was n= born a taxpayer in Flushing, fie’ else Tepresenta, the Committee, of a ey ie eens: rough who oppose as newly planned by Commissioner Lin- denthal'and the Board, of Experts ap- pointed by him. Sanborn was represtnted by Law- ver ‘Hc a ‘M. Ingraham and Gen. George “Justice Clarke was curfous to know why the = ae a ae was delayed until this late but Inge: at sured bh Mr. was a slonist aad ea a Tammanyite ‘and that there was no politics in it. Mellen. Assistant iSompore posed ‘the ¢ BP cation, almady DYSPEPSIA. SLEEPLESSNESS AND NER- q VOUSNESS POSITIVE- LY CURED "| Nerve Waste Stopped MAKES OLD FOLKS FEEL YOUNG AND WEAK FOLKS STRONG, tion He contract, en als t3 hes ly to Justice Clark the contract ral of Ci app’ troller and Jui teen Charice took the matter under ad- visement. ed, — howev Ho _ intten: ‘thought Sanborn had wat jong and that the contract would stan Both sides will submit brief: HOTTENTOTS WANT TO FIGHT Rebel Force Marching to Cape Town Border Will Be Stopped, KENHARDT, Cape Colony, Nov. 10. —Hottentot rebels numbering’ about 1,500 men are approaching the border. Police haye been despatched to the scene, the yolunteers have been called out and severe fighting is expected, teh from Bérlin last night an- ‘that the German Consul at Cape: Town had: telegraphed that’ the Bondelswarts tribesmen, fener Fevantly TO THE PUBLIC resenting PAW PAW, & $ pene atotnde h, heart and nerve tonic, that I ‘have added to the science of mediciné a force that is as revel tionary as was vaccination, im portant to mankind as the oe of antiseptics and as bent paar iD preservation of human life an ness as anything that man’s ingen’ or proyidential wisdom has ever de vised, THE PRACTICAL DRUGGIST AND REVIEW OF REVIDWS says: Ping juice, of the Paw Paw is cious than pepsin in disso! oe men, The fruit olr juice nore ‘0 the same. effect as a goad and is most. effective in cages of dy: pepsia and habitual constipation.” Having combined wonderful natural remedy with other medica- ony and je .Cape police, print. pla In WOMAN DIES, ON, STEAMSHIP. The steamship. Columivia “arrived in port to-day from Glasfow atter stormy passage of seven days. day Gi iy Ann Barly, years cabin died waddenty * of heart ‘Ainoas On ‘Tuesday during a heavy sea Otto Wis- selisleet Ste Geta te berets se a a NES at Pecelyed a fracture of the right fe had an encounter with Ea @ Three million of Bimon and Michs respectfully St. Agnes's Churel., at 20 o'clock. Interment in Holy Cross | 45t ery. Help Wanted—Female. TR jadies” s! ocr | ‘waists; W. & W. V. H. elec: tric car machin. oa enced hands onl Jas. Mc- |W, Cutehgon, 14 W. Boa. \ Léist, Found and Rewards, | Lista’ bor bf satay ape 5; were eaten last winter. three thousand tons of the very heart and life;of the dest oats our great country could produce. @ To every boy or girl who will write and ask for it, we will mail a copy of the Kinderbeast book telling all about the most interesting prize contest for boys and girls that ever happened. ments, I Pees eacndt epee Apu! am vin, the world the grea’ stom- ach B tood, heart and nerve. tonic ei to mankind. I know that Paw Paw will make ‘worn-out stomachs almost as good aa new; will make good, rich blood and build up the nervous system; willfo away with boththe necessity and de» sire for beer, whiskey, wine and other injurious stimulants. packages of H-O That is, aK A body that ts overworked, -a sys | tem that is run down, requires @ stimulant. Alcoholic y PAW Lind but let you fall. PAW PAW AND HOLDS YOU. T want every weak and debilitated peraon to give yay area Paw a trial. T want every this remedy and then orbits iy cota public the results. I want every cl , when feels exhausted, to take Paw Paw then tell his friends what he thinks it. I want every mcther to introduce Paw Paw into her home, It will prove a ready Sethe in curing and wa: off many diseases. I want every tired woman, Attor & hard day’s work or an afternoon's shopping, to take a tablespoontul of Paw Paw and see how quickly it. will. refresh and invigorate her. I urge upon brain workers particu- larly the use of Paw Paw. It will im- mediately give tone and energy to the whole nervous system. If the toiler who feels the pesone stimulant will step into the drug store and ask for Paw Paw he will have no further use for whiskey, beer or other stimulants, p I belfeve that when the public be- comes thoroughly familiar with the virtues of Paw Paw it will not only be used in every®home, but will be adopted into the United States Army end Navy; and used in every throughout the civilized world. iat Sa eer S| GET A FREE BOTTLE T Up aire se ay nee In order that everybody may TROWER—AVants & chance to test thi hiatn vias Bt buying, I have arranged for free fae Rigr jal a et tribution of Lottles from offices” DAY a (New York American and Journal, After vou tave taken it tile us and tell us the truth, If cured you tell us so, If it has fited you say so. He ieee: ae, no Ea By at us BEG ~ reenact) id