The evening world. Newspaper, February 29, 1904, Page 5

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} < e <, 4 , | J BABY ON co “ACTOR'S DIVORCE Girl Born in Casino Theatre to Emily Kennedy, Actress, Re- sults in Her Husband Sever- ing Their Matrimonial Bonds. HE WEDS MATTIE ROONEY AND IS HAPPY AGAIN. Knot Tied on Anniversary of His Arrest for Deserting Wife Whom He Said Had So Cruelly Deceived Him. Whey’ were artistes from the "“Ser- geant Kitty” company, just out to the Festaurant for a midnight luncheon “Oh, girls, did you know that Mattie Roo ey and Tom Kennedy wer ried N—o—o!" exclaimed the bevy ~ chorus, and the girl In the astrachan Jacket ejaculated: “Why, I thought Em'ly'« baby" “Yes,” broke in the girl In the bis blue hat, “it was all that baby's work It was on Wa year that Fi desertion and non-support, and and Mattie celebrated the annii or, Me it was such a He was $0 story of how Tom when they were both Louls, in December, had cruelly deserted and left her without by getting married. g00d joke on Jud touched by had married hie appearing in St 18%, and hod + her in August, 19 his support or help of any kind sh the December following, a teen months she had had to support herself. “Bm'ly was half ill at the time and looked” quite interesting in the court, they said, but she didn’t tell Judge Mayo how well she could do for herself as one of the Curtis Sisters. They are out On the Keith circult now. ‘Well, the tender-hearted Judge was much affected and he drew up a docu- ment, which sald Tom must give secu- rity for $2 for the payment of $10 per week to his helpless wife for a r. ‘Tom couldn't do it, but, as Em’ willing, he let them sign an agreement that he would pay her the ten every Saturday, rain or shine, ghost was walking or not. lt Was Not a Stage Baby. “Then along comes that» baby! It wouldn't have been so bad at that, if the baby had been quiet about it. But you all remember how it was born when Em'ly was at the Casino enjoying the usual courtesies to the pro’ and seeing “The Runaways,’ course it was in all the new! 8 May 16 last, under screaming headlines: ‘Baby Girl Born at the Casino!’ “Of course Tom saw It in the papers, If he hadn't seen it, about two dozen of his friends sent marked coples to make sure, You can bet your next July salary Tom lost no time, He cal!- ed up A. 5, Gilbert, told him the cir- cumstances, und the next day Emily of a’ et, with her baby, the papers in a suit for vorce brought by ‘Thom: nedy. No co-r and when the came up for trial before. Judge McCall, Mr. Gilbert just mily made to ‘Tom deserted rand a copy. of showed th afd: Judge Mayo « her for a the birth the Health De- paptnen' ‘ly's mother on the stand to prove it, while he made Em'ly come to court ‘and stand up to be identified. “Tom got some sort of interlocket thing “for three months, It was More than four, thougn, before he got his solid divorce, and then he and Mat- tie, she's the daughter of Pat Rooney, you know, and has been playing in eketches with ‘Tom for the past two years, they just the thing tli the anniversary Tom's arrest and then they got doubled up by a parso: Em'ly Shows Tom's Note. “But wasn’t {t a good joke on Judge Mayo? Eddie says, you can’t speak to the Judge about it'without getting him mad. Fm'ly that Washington's: Birth~ day in the police court handed up iim tow. a note she had cai around day after concluded they had er quit sald he had left her with a loving gond- hy kiss and teara in his eyes the d before she got that note. All the pi fing it next day, and T cut tt out, 8 its ‘Pudge: This letter wit! explain what I have wanted to tell you many Um Jonve you, Pudge, and but dia not the courage. each other, and I think apart, You will acknowl you have thought it al ave come near doing this many times and long ago. Ours was a case of Spfatuation, a clever counterfeit of love, which held’ me for awhile, and when It wore off I realized the truth, “Let me know how much’ money you want from me. meekly. Now Is the time to agree-to a separation, as I am away from you, It is better for us hoth. "TOM “So there's what one wee ba do—a lot of mischtef. And the only lived six weeks, “Dr. Grausman, of No. 227 West For street, was called in to the Casino when she came, so unexpected, and he attend- ed when’ the poor little thing, having ‘nade all the trouble it could, died." WIFE SLAYER ON TRIAL. @enderson Shot and Killed the Woman on Chrixtmas Day, Preston Henderson, a coal black ne- fro, was placed on trial to-day before Justice Kenefick and a jury in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court, charged with the murder of his wife, Lizale, in their apartments, at One Hun- red “und Sixtieth street ‘and Amster: dam avenue, on Christmas Day According ‘to the evidence of the Dis- trict-Attorney, the murder was the re- sult of a quarrel about the proper w. in which a chicken should be cooked Henderson had wont chicken ina raffle ‘the day before und told his wife he wanted it fried a la Maryland. The | D: Woman insisted upon rousting it in the Old Virginian way. ‘This Henderson ob- ected to and chased the woman from the apartment. He shot and killed her W she fled into the street. Sa NORFOLK BANKER DEAD. NORFOLK, Vi, Feb. 29—Walter H. | Do le, President of the Citizens’ Bank orfolk and one of the. most promi- nent men in Southern fnanclal circles, ia doad. ol dress 1 for four: | whether the} 3 ion | lof both hy lal hil teh nie nal can a he . THE WORLD MOND A y MRS. ELBRIDGE GERRY SNOW, JR., AND HER CHILDREN BOTH OF WHOM SHE MAY BE ALLOWED TO KEEP, | MAY KEEP BOTH OF HER CHILDREN Which of the Two She Will Take. Elbridge Gerry Snow. jr., may relent. In fact, it is rumored that he has, and ‘his beautiful wife that was probably will be spared the pain of choosing which of her two children she will elect j to keep while ti> other goes into the custody of Mr. Snow, from whom she obtained an interlocutory decree of di- vorce on Dec, 5 last, Although the lawyers have not yet | drawn up the stipulations, there ts rea- son to belleve that when Judge Truax signs the permanent decree next Sat- y it will contain a provision giving the mother cistody Jwith leave to the | three times a week. By the terms of the interlocutory Judg- ment awarded Mrs, Snow three months ago the children, Dorothy years old, and Elbridge 2d, five yenrs old, were to remain with ntil March 6, when’ she which one should continue jin her custody and which should be given to Mr. Snow. In case the mother wits unable to come to a decision Mr. Snow was to have the choice, The Judge's Order, Judge Traux said he would sign an der making the decree permanent on ch 5, and it was provided that by mutual consent any clause In it save that decreeing the separation might be modified before the final signing. It was sald yesterday that rather than separate the children Mr. Shaw was willing to consent to their remaining In the mother's custody, providing lis right to see them frequently was legally protected Mr. Snow, who ts living with his parents in No. 155 West Fifty-eighth street, could not be scen, and Mrs, Snow, who is with her children in the La Rochelle apartments, at Colurnbus avenue and Seventy-fifth street, sald she was under Instructions from her counsel not to talk. Over the tele however, a woman who said she w Mrs, Snow admitted to a World reporter that she expected to retain the custody children, Speaking from |Mrs. Snow's apartment in La Rochelle, this woman sald: “It is dfborrect: to ggsume that my retention of both the children ts to be father to see them Ceriain new evidence which I was not in possession of when the judg- ment was signed in December has come up, and this will be sufficient to obtain a in the original order of Judge ‘Traux."” Just what this evidence was or if It would ntroduced on a motion to re- open the judgment of divorce the wo- ised to state, bles of the Snown, man v The marital troubles of the Snows ed much surprise among their nds when a divorce action was be- hood ry "he couple Were married in 1893 ed some years iy Summit, N. J., n removing to this elty, Mr, Snow 1s an Insurance broker, with an income of a_year id. He, Js related the Gerry’ fami is the son of Ibridge G. Snow, vice-president of a insurance compan: Snow Was Miss Frances Pickert, 1, belore her marriage, She reat personal beauty and favorite. By the terms of the decree she is to receive allmony rate of $350 a month, Counsel fees to the amount of $2,500 were al- lowed. ‘The divorce action was heard before Forbes J. Hennessey as referee, of ta ia blonde 1 ;|and all the papers were sealed by order! of the Court. GOLF CHAMPION BECOMES A BRIDE Miss Ruth Underhill, Noted Wo- man Player, Is Married to Mr. Harold Fredway White, of Brooklyn, at Deland, Fla. Word was received in this clty yes- terday of the marriage on Saturday last, at Deland, Fla,, of Miss Ruth Underhill, the golf player and daughter, of Walter Mitchell Underhill, of New York, to Harold Fredway White, of Brooklyn. Miss Underhill, who 4s a member of the “Nassau ‘Country Club, won the woman's golf champlonship of America on Oct. 13, 1899, when she defeated Mrs, Caieb F. Fox, of the Huntingdon Val- toy Club, on the links of thee Pntindel phia Country Club, She has won cups all over the country. Mrs, White is a «randdaughter of the late Charles A. ana, a WAR VETERAN DEAD AT 93. (Special to The Evening World. NEWPORT, R, 1, Feb, 29,—Samuel Wright, ninety-three years old, who died -|last night, served in the Mexican War | and alsoxin the War of the Rebellion and.he was also.a member of the Gren- adier Guards at the coronation of Queen Victoria. He had been iM only a few days, On last Fiag Day he de- Hvered ‘a fabl - iv" Ni Loft pone le tool patriotic ad- | Mrs. Elbridge Gerry Snow, Jr. May Not Have to Choose} of both children, | brought about by Mr, Snow's consent. DOW APS HEP VO: SSron LORD FRANCIS HOPE NMARRIES AGAIN Former Husband of Ex-Actress May Yohe Quietly Weds Olive Thompson at the Register’s, Office, London. | i Lord dof May LONDON. . the fort American 4 m Bradlee Styoug, was quietly ma at a country registry office’ to Olive Thompson, daughter of a} Melbourne banker. Only a few rela- | tives and friends were present. H Hi th The marriage of Lord Francis Hope is of as much interest to New York as to London, for it was in this city that | the course of events separated him | from May Yohe and started him on «| series of legal operations that rehabil- itated him with his family, wiped out | his debts and reconciled him to his oniy brother, the Duke of Newcastle, to} whose Utle he will succeed should he } survive him. GOT. A THREATENING LETTER Signed A. B. ©, and Warned Long nd Man to Leave Town, OLA. L, 9,—Isane Davis, thirty-two years old,’ a shoe- maker of Warmingdale. L, 1., notited the authorities: to-day that he had re- ceived a threatening letter and that he feared his life was in danger. ‘The Iet- ter bore rude representations of a pls- tol Sagger and, groms-bones and, w SE eete warned. Davin {Hat imlene he tote town” immediatly his Ife would pay the forfeit. District attorney. games Pe MI Neimann Veteran Cells Bis Experience While at the front fighting for nis country, Mr. James F. Boyle, of Low ell, Mass,, suffered unusual exposure and hardship, He says: “I have used Father John’s Medicine for over thirty years. It cured me of a chronic bronchial trouble contracted in the avmy during the Civil’ War. It is a splendid medicine for the children, and to-day," my* grandchildren are taking it. It keeps them well and strong.” As we have said before, this old remedy is not a patent medicine —it is free from temporary and weak- ening stimulants or nerve-deadening opiates, It has built up and restored thousands to health and strength dur- ing its 50 years of success since an eminent specialist prescribed it for the late Rev. Father John O'Brien, of {St. Patrick's Pari: Lowell, Mass., from whom it derived its name and by whom it was recommended. The money Is refunded for any cold, cough or throat and lung trouble it does not © YOUNG MR, ABEEL LITTLE MOREL VAOERBLT ILL She Has Been Sent to the West- chester County Club to Re- cuperate from Her Severe At- tack of the Grip. el Vanderbilt, the ¢ ar-old “rot Mr. and Mra, Willlam K t, jr. who has been Hl with has Deen sent untry, aperat Tt was persistently stated during tt ness of Uitte Muy was diphtheria, but her physician, Dr. M MUST STAND TRL nes M. Abeel, charged with forgery and bearing tt . B. Van Every, a vice dent of the Western L will have to stand ¢ the indictment Recorder Goff, Company, in a decision handed} down to-day, disallowed the demurrér} iseHard) Pariah Work. of Abeel's attorn fled two weeks when he signed the ] Every. Abeel, who is now out on $5.00 ¢ bail, will plead to the morrow, when a date for tr fixed, Indictment al wi od over to. the the bekt orgailxed parishes int Occupies the Entire Front of the Second Floor. In Our Trimmed Hat Salon The New Spring Hats are in full bloom—every day fresh arrivals are added to this splendid exhibition. IMPORTED HATS, TOQUES AND BONNETS From such Parisian Designers as CHARLOTTE—JOSEPHINE—GEORGETTE—RABEAUX and a splendid showing of Original designs and adaptations by our own artists. About the Untrimmed Section Long before the Spring Days come every woman is interested in seeing the initial exhibit of the styles that are to be.and in gathering together ideas for the Spring and Summer Hats. In our Untrimmed Millinery Department, the largest and best appointed in the city, you will see The New Shapes and the New Trimmings in far greater profusion than ins else. Some of the shapes that will be popular for the Spring and Summer of 1904, FANCY MOHAIR, CHIFFON, TUSCAN, CUBA and CHIP HATS, An extensive and beautie ful collection of FLOWER HATS. Italian, Silk and Satin Braids, the largest variety in the city of FLOWERS, FOLIAGE, ROSES, MONTURES, OSTRICH PLUMES, TIPS, AIGRETTES,WINGS, POMPONS, STRAW BRAIDS, CROWNS and ORNAMENTS. Misses’ and Children’s Hats. A special feature with usis the Misses’ and Children's Hat Section. We devote particular attention to the col- lection of Hats for the younger folk and show a wider range of styles that can generally be seen elsewhere. We cordially invite you to pay a leisurely visit to our second floor and enjoy this unusually interesting display, There’s a wealth of style—an individuality of con- ception—a broadness of assortment in this array of Spring and Summer Headgear which stamps it as being indis- pulably the finest, the largest and the best gathering of pring Millinery to be seen in Greater New York. ss New Millinery Ribbons We are now showing a full line of the best produc- tions of the leading French and American manufacturers in plain and fancy effects in all the latest weaves. Novelties in gilt effects—Elegant Sashes in Warp | Prints, Dresden and ‘Persian effects—All the latest | Metalique effects in Millinery widths and full assort- ment of narrow Ribbon for dress trimming. (First Floor.) Sixth Avenue, 20th to 21st Street. Club to FATHER DALY GETS VACATION | Chaplain of the GDth Rewarded tor Sereepys | | 22x, There is in getting your gre JAMES BUTLER + are supplied with t money, How? The practically pusitiv wort every means é family; enough to p surprising ti of the day trade in the This muniticent f “Pride of S! vroeks ib, nen ba r—highly No and stre Jer and Whi Vinemar—Qt All flay ss a Jar, bott geilten quart Mission Style Dresser oak, weathered or natural finis! Mirror. 6.90 WHILE THEY LA All ‘the Leadin Brooklyn ¢ quality and freshne Double “S, & H.” Green Trading Stamps to Everybody with Everything, A few sample prices are quoted to show how easy it is for you-to save money. Tr. most bag tarch — ‘Hest 15c a; * Aunt Nanna’s Pancake Flour 12st Street :. 2226 to 2234 Third Ave. EVERYTHING ro HOUSEKEEPING Carpets, Rugs, Oilcloth, Bedding, Stobes, Etc. COWPERTHWAIT & SONS, |121st St. @ 3d Ave. EVERYWHERE. las RETAIL BRANCHES. GHOICE GROCERIES a wealth of sound, solid satisfaction ies and house supplies from a, Why? Because our customers of everything for the least | t volume of our business insures | STAM tor he v of new eutones find their way to some of our stores every day? Nothing that will benefit’a patron is left undone. The est innovation is that of GREEN TRADING most perfect and satisfying premium. Sys; of our goods, and enables us t »} tem yet dev It ma the household necessaries sup= wholesale prices. Our customer me luxuries and adornments free of cost. So ip e saving of from 20 to 33 cents on t to fill their books and test o> h of groceries they buy, and this| che purchasing power of the GREEN STAMPS at one of a few years a tidy sum for every’ of SPERRY & MHUTCHINSON’S PREMIUM nt the way to independence. Is it) STORES that we yield to their wishes an once 7“ stores are kept busy every hour decide to. give on MONDAY. TUESDAY Hi eds of thousands of families will| WEDNESDAY of this week, Feb. 29, March 1 aa + Is it to by ed at that hundreds | March 2 a tee gift goes with all purchases of 10 cents or more, but none with C. O. D. orders. Wash-TubHelpers |” CHEESE. sus Pata war Py an The best quality, New York cakes far, Staie wonta—A bottle Cream Cheese, neentrated fla Sample tt once, and you will ale ways on having a supply im \ 8c sents 1 Oe head rice n, B-tb, . 25C Aeyite 10c us strengthen- Coopers’ Gelatine. Unexcelled for desserts a table delicacles. A package, », DOX ength, 8c thing bets 10c an nose rie aloe brand aa Just right for th, 4-1 - L0c Sardines. cient ond. Dest oF a te Win niing food cereals: a p'k'ge, Heese ZC] Genuine French, packed In 25¢ | Alpha Paddin kes a tinge i pure ollve oll; 3 cans for.. Wesnert; in Ma: oc 5c | Scientific balance of finest grade of wheat, rice‘and corn, The pinnacie of perfection in a prepared pancake flour, A package BUTLER’S TEAS. New Importations of our vario: well known and highly popu'ar brands 25,35 and 50 cents a pound: Unequalled in price for purity, strength and flavor. BUTLER’S COFFEES. Fresh roasted daily. Unexcelled for taste and aroma, 15, 20and 25 CHOICE if nd. Our 25 cent Cof- fee aga best. Mocha and CROCE Java, —— BUTLER Chatham Sq.: 193 to 205 Park Row. Two Establishments. EVERYTHING RELIABLE. Mission Style Chiffonier ocak, w esshere finish. 12x20 Mirror, 5.90 WHILE THEY LAST. Couch Sale ! Entire stock of two manufacturers to be sold out at 33), % OFF Park Row, near Chatham Sq. se dou Advertise i in . The Work

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