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4 * ’ A a is A j ie vy * estimates the duration of the shock { CTS SHEN BY EARTHQUAKE Shocks Are Felt from Hartford to Bar Harber, Buildings Be-| ing Rocked Like Ships in Tur-, bulent Sea. LINE OF DISTURBANCE ~ FOLLOWED THE COURT. Damage Done in Boston, Ban-| gor, Portland, Bath, Augusta,’ Manchester, Taunton, Lynn’ and Other Places in New Eng- land. BOSTON, March 21.—Boston has been visited by an earthquake, In this city and the suburbs houses were rocked, fishes were broken, plotures and other articles were shaken from the walls and furniture was broken in many homes. eShe.earthquake began in St. John. N. B., and ts sald to have done consid erable damage tiere and in Maine, well_an it Massachusetts. t Augusta, Me., several chimneys | knocked down and houses rocked | like ships at sea. | The shock was felt as far south as| Taunton, Mass. Reports from Man- | . H.. and Springfeld, Mane., | tions were distinctly £ in those cities. The most damage tn this vicinity was: done At Revere, a seashore town be- | tween here and Lynn. Residents were | thrown from their beds, and in the telephone exchange an operator, Rus- sell Clark, was thrown from his chair, | Policeman McKenney, who was In the | headquarters of the park police at Re- vere, was thrown to the floor and slightly injured. | In Everett, four miles from Boston, ; it THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 21; 1904. cree, Wao 1s neipe oF acTOR | |CIRL 18, BRIDE OF | ACTOR AGED 70 Virginia Ann Arlund, of St. Paul, Married to Atkins Lawrence Former Leading Man with: Mary Anderson. | ANXIOUS TO BE AN pe INESS | Parents at First Forbade Dalighiee to Receive Suitor's Attentions and She Took Poison, but Recovered. When Permission Was Granted. | Eighteen-year-old Virginia Ann Ar- Jund and her sevent r-old husband Atkina Lawrence, are on their wedding trip to Reading, Pa., where the v actor is playing in “Shore Acres, ‘che courtsiip cf Mr. Lawrence and Miss Arlund was olosed last night in Philadelphia when the two were made one by Magistrate Harrison in the par- lors of the Continental Hotel. The happy ending of the romantic attachment be- tween the girl, not yet out of her | teens, and the gray-heired veteran of the stage—who was older than Miss Arlund’s own grandfather—came only after battle with the course of true love, Miss Arlund first met Mr. Lawrence in her home city, St. Paul, and fell in love with him and his stories of the stago and of actresses he had known They were often together during Mr. Lawrences run there, and at last tho |attention of Miss Arlund's family wi drawn to the fact that the feeling be- tween the two was not platonic, but serious and heart-burning enough to have made each plight troth with the other. Then ructious times followed Just what they were may best be told in the words of Misa Arlund just be- foro the nuptial knot was ted last night. “I have alwaya longed to go on the ehairs upon which two policemen were Boston, Dorchester, Roxbury and other) suburbs to the south, Reports from Bangor, Portland, Rath, Eastport and other places in Maine 47,1 he photographic dark room of the obser-| Pretty Madeline Parker Named vatory the water tanks, which were) . . neatly filled, were shaken to such en} a§ Co-Respondent in Suit of extent that much of the water was Mrs. Blanche E. Jerome fer sitting at headquarters were moved, ani | in Chelsea houses were shaken and| much crockery was smashed, | much dama; was done. spilled on the floor, Ht s Divorce. The shock was very severe In South | ! Earth waves were marked. In t R. Colson, of the observatory have been about three seconds. J Kdmands ts convinced that the a tion of the eurthquake was trom north to the south, Shocks tuve been land before, Was felt in Have Hamstend, Mass H. In January ¥ Mass., Wis visiled by an earthqua and two great fissures opened in < earth. HARTFORD, © n. eral resid, hit of Hi Bi ne ep show whieh Was felt elses Tngland TR fae Madeline Parker, pretty sten- ew Eng-|osrapher anc typewriter’ who bought ° furni are, fine art and pretty bric- M. Jacobs, for which a og department score won a judgment Isuace M, Jacobs, banker, at 74 Broadway, is named as co-re- ent in the divorce suit of the wife of the eiployees of Jacobs. he E, Jerome says she was mar- Jerome in Jersey and that he left Mareh 21.—§ moved. vas not noticed a fi Bas d at the Hollenden Aiversiiy Observat ‘ veland, and brought back to AS No observer was o by Central Office de ck, when the shock on- | bye cenira)s OMice! datectlves are no instruments |i" fecember to answer an indictment arthquakes. there. charging him with perjury. Mre. Je- rome alleges that he had been living at the Cleveland Hotel with Madeline oo ee | | Parker, and that they occupied the same stateroom in the sleeping-car back to New York. while the eleuths watched their prisoner from across the car, SI) AVEVING PARTY Wants #50 Weekly “Alimony. ——. for recarding Charles E. Le Barbier applied to Jus- tice Gildersieeve for $0 weekly allmony . for Mrs, Jerome, to-day, and also moved One Private of Constabulary ura: « counter-charge made by Jerome sited Philadelphia with - 7 jthat his w! Killed and A. S. Perkins, Lead-| sities mun in Sentember, be weriexen er of Party, Wounded During ‘ets rn. ian Row outa throu the Skirmish Near Calamba. qpme has not obeved an peoreigs EG of September and urt to serve a bill of particulars upon Decision was reserved. MANILA, March 21—Ladrones at-| qirome Mr Le Barbier ty ¥ 4 uced himself in various tacked a surveying party yesterday ten | brother of District-Attorney Jer tiles north of Calamba, A and gained many favors on fhe strenk ti A, 8. Perkins, who was in charge of |of i, Last fall he was indicted tor the surveying party, was wounded in| forging a draft in the name of M. feos, Jacobs & Co., and ran_away. golng to Clevel: le id “One private of the constabulary was |QiKe hic Tut taking Madeline Parker Killed and another wounded. ‘The Datts Hasse, who wounded| Nauker Had to Pay Her Bitl Major H. L, Scott diring an engage-| Shortly before thie Madeline Parker ment in Jolo in Novembe? last, has |had been arrested, charged with getting been killed by pursuing troops. All the |$267 worth of goods from ‘he. depart: ather Datton uided the troops in locat: |inent store by fraud. She showed that fag Hassen. Everythin peaceful now | Isaac M. Jacobs had authorized the pur- ‘With no oppositioon y Idnd to the | chases on his credit and was discharged, Nitiericar: rule on the island of Jolo, Then the department store sued Jacobs and got judgment by default, Mr. Jacobs being in Europe Jerome js now out on bail awaiting trial for the alleged forgery. os tacked Her. AGAINST CHINESE LABOR. (Josephine Kaffenberger, « nurse, elgh- a teen years old, employed by Paul Lien-|Introduction of Covllen in south jerger, ‘of No. 717 Bushwick avenue, Africn Declared a Menac rooklyn, aroused the police of the dis-| LONDON, March 21.—In the House trict last aight with the cries of “Bur-|of Commons this afternoon the Lib- Ha, *ShG, had gone down Into the cel- eral Lender, Sir Henry Campbell- Bto fetch some coal. couna the | Bannerman, moved his vote of censure rl unconscious on the coal pile. When | presented March 16 to the effect that i recovered her speech she told the| “this House disapproves the conduct Hee ee eee ee eet ex stare | Of His Majesty's Government in .ad- affenberger showed a gash | Vising the Crown not to disallow the ordinance for the introduction of Chi- eee CORSET STEEL STABS NURSE Girl Thought Big Burglar Had At- ment Mins An examnindtion of her cloth n examindtion of her clothes was ‘ je and no. cut was found in them, | Nese labor in the Tranava nthe women members of the house:| Sir Henry said nothing the Gov- hold took Miss Kaffonberger upstairs to | €FAMent had done since the close of the fulet her fears. It was discovered that| South African war had so sorely trled Aucorset steel had burst. its covering | the people of this country’ ax its sanc- afd jabbed the nurse in the side, tion of the introduction of Chin ————— labor into South Africa It the ne i leparture was not checked It would be a t checked 4 1d LINER NEW YORK MUST.DOCK | « source.of future, weakness, not only : to the Transvaal but to the whole of South Africa. It was impossible to con- es greater departure from the prin: Then ciples by which Great Britain hitherto SOUTHA: _ ug a c, fe ks ip the ip ete ERR: the importation of allens as the bonds- The American line steamer New York, | men of mining speculators. ‘The Buro- Capt. Young, trom New York March 12|peang in South Atrica, Sir Henry de- for Plymouth, Cherbourg and South- |claced, were by a large majority opp ampton, which to yellow labor and the object of bh Case motion. was to stop the Governmen ‘and, afterward wam in collision | Polley In {ts earllest stage. these waters with the British troop- a PRISON CHAPLAIN: RESIGNS, 4 leh will go into drydock sat ss ter fc OSSINING, N. «i, March 21,—Rev. Pi Laer ase, pik, ames’ | fe are chap oF tnd ‘Which the New York 4 bys athe water sh Taking om Water After Groundt stage,” she said, coyly, “but 1 never had a chance until Mr. Lawrence came to St. Paul and I met him, He asked me to lunch with him several times and I just got infatuated with him. Who could heip it? “But one day while we were lunching : i together.a great big policeman came in and sid I must run home at once be- oy jee my parents had sent him to get me Mrs. Tomlinson, 75 Years Old| , Te™ Vetson Ont of Flaw “I went home, but | was so angry Brooding Over Delusion that! tnat 1 took ‘some poison to kill myself. I was awfully sick, and Mr, Lawrence Her House Was to Be Torn) came to the house. He asked papa i , what was held against him, and they Down, Commits Suicide. talked together untii papa anid I might = marry Atkins, Then I got well In a hu Brooding over a delusion that (he promised to get me a start on house at No, 5 Delancey street in whica | the slage, too, 1 just couldn't walt any she had lived for fifty years was to be! Jonger and started alone to come to torn down for the approaches to the’ Philadelphia, It was a long, lonesome new Enst River Bridge; Mrs, Mary) trip, but it is worth it. The train was Tomlinson, seventy-five years old, qom-| delayed, and 1 thought Atkins would mitted sulcide to-day by inhaling gas) think I wasn't coming when I was late, through a rubber tube. so I spent a lot of money telegraphing | The old woman had been married in| to him,” es tine, he nd| Phe veteran actor and the young girl bi rages lobe Nas aes hs ss orhirz took their stand before the Mag.strate be bibbaelibhid Or Gtnen pas! and the ceremony was performed years she had been cared for by her| quickly, Friends of the bridegroom son, John Tomlinson, and his wife. acted as grovmeman and, brides When the younger Mrs. Torlinson| Mise Anand ve aoe ncarked the ce! went to wake her mother-in-law to-day! mony. she found her stretched out on the floor! Many congratulatory letters and tele: dead, with an end of a rubber tuba! Brame were, ter voianned to have the} that was fastened to a gas jet in her entire cast of “Shore Acres” in attend | mouth. She had been dead several, ance. but only a few were present. Nr. hours, | Lawrence's brother sent a long tele- ‘According to tho dead women's son,| S™m for the famil neighbors had told the old woman that) _ She DI ¥ eee Obey. it her house was soon to be torn down), When was mentioned that the! for the bridge approaches, This idea! 90C% pe iS Rea en ey had become fastened in her feeble mind ing! : and she had brooded over it day and night. ed: Didn't you promise to, obey | me, Virgie?” To this Mrs, Lawrence re- plied that she would, she thought. | Mr. Lawrence stood up and, ‘with his hands i: pockets, commented | on the nervou incidental to men ——————— Two KILLED BY A TRAIN. Victims Struck While Walkt the Tracks at Niagara Fai have been around’ — i te NIAGARA FALLS, N. ¥., March 21.—| J gitiishness and | prettinsss ‘a ge Mrs. Law- Darwin J. Tessler and Harry McHenry | F2\0y "will win. She ian extremely were run down by an Erle passenger | pretty brunette and hardly looks her train here early to-day and were In- | eighteen. years formerly was leading n. stantly killed ir, Lawren' ‘They were walking on the track, man with Mary Anderson. of them must be) uit we fellows who Special Sale Wash Shirt Waists in Basket Cloth Cheviot in large and small weaves, striped and figured madras and momie cloth, at 98c., $1.25, $1.05, $1.95, (exceptional value.) Silk Petticoat Department. A Manufacturer's Semple Line of Taffeta Silk Petticoats in black, colored and white, including a number of em-| broidered flounces in black, also white, from $5.75 to $15.00, at about %4 their value, | Watking Length Petticoats | (37-39 inch), Black, Black and White and Colored Taffeta at $0.75. Mohair Petticoats in Black and Gun-metal with silk founcings, at $4.75. | Lord & Taylor... | Broadway and Twentieth Street and Fifth Avenue, pets | esis ene, Wiha le han taNR MN Re a te sk is of the room to await the calling of ner] cane, and had been seated thete only a ; | or two when Sheriff Beavey | . accompanied by the little boy bowing her head the tears} that Aled her Then, over Creates Scene in Boston When She Sees Her Five-Year-Old Son in the Custody of the Sheriff. ‘ transferred ns, and while she el lusiness wa time for the! | er, was no wined from | COURT DENIES HER PETITION. the mother jn and placed She Fails to Get the Custody of Gu Her Boy and He Will Remain at the House of the Angel ni on 8 As she could | legally ide the child, Brother | Guardian. The superior, asked that he hel wived with a writ of —— = uthority of th kiven into BOSTON, March 7 Charles ¢. avey. and the hearing on the Supreme Court this morning. On Aatur-|” Judge Barker later denied the petition she had petitioned Judge Barker for} of Mrs. Hendricks for the custody of & writ of habeas corpus, praying for the| "*r 80 ————— transfer of her five-venr-olil son from UNCONSCIOUS FROM GAS. the custody of the House of the Angel Guardian to Sheriff Seavey, the ohild =: having been placed in the Institution by| Mam Found in Near Room of Jer- her husband, Dr. Charles C. Hendricks,; sey City Snloon May Not tive. without her knowledge or consent. A man supposed to be named Charter ‘The writ was granted on Saturday, the! Rich, but whose address is not known child formally transferred to the custody | was found wnconsclois in the rear of the Sheriff and « hearing wet down|room of Charles Pomisky's raloon at for this morning. No. 170 Grimth street, Jersey City, When Mra. Hendricks entered the|early to-day. The gas was turned on court-room she found the gas case in The man, who is about forty FW years old. was well drowned, and papers Progrems and Attorney Whipple examin} found on him ied to the belief that he inc Henry H. Rogers. ia Charles Rich. He was removed to Bhe slipped into o Stern Brothers Silver Plated ,Ware Choice designs in quadruple plate on hard white metal, bright or gray finish, the product of the best manufacturers, 1 condition, = At about / Below Regular Value Cake Baskets, Bread Trays, Crumb Trays and Knives, $2.95 Bon Bon Baskets, $1.25 $1.50, 1,95, 2.50 Sugars & Creamers, Each 95c, 1.95 i Fruit Bowls, $2.50, 2.95 $1.95, 2.25, 3.50 pacing Dishes, $3.50, 5.50 Water Pitchers, $2.50, 2.75, 4.95 Water Kettles, $5.00, 6.00 Soup Tureens, $3.75 to 7.50 Coffee Sets, $4.25, 6.00 Tea Sets, $6.00, 8.75, 14.50 waiters, from 6 to 19 ins. 65¢ to 5.75 | Exceptional Values in Brilliant Cut Glass NAPPIES & FANCY DISHES, $1.35, 1.65, 1.95 BOWLS, 8-inch, 52.95, 3.95, 4.25 DECANTERS, handied and unhandied, $2.95, 3.95, 4.95 ICE CREAM. TRAYS, $4.75, 5.95 |. CLARET & WATER PITCHERS, 85.95, 6.95 Rich Cut Flower Vases for Easter LILY VASES, to-inch, $1,Q5 s2inch, 82.95 CENTRE VASES, low squat shape, S§.00, 8.75, 13.75 About 43 Below Prevailing Prices. Third Floor. West Twenty-third Street. Largest Trimmed Hat House, ANNOUNCEMENT. Spring Opening, TUESDAY, MARCH 22; WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23. Trimmed Millinery. A Superb Collection of Over 2,000 Models to Select From. 279 Sixth Avenue Bet. 17th and 18th st: west side of avenue. Selling Out! Selling Our! The Cloak = Quit = and Boys’ Clothing Depts. in Kod NAMPA, “Since Owned and managed for the past ten years by the firm of L. ROSENGARTEN & CO. and J. MAYER. Phust Be Sold Before April 1st om account of inability to renew lease. Stock consists of Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s Jackets, Suits, Skirts, ‘Waists, Wrappers, Furs, Petticoats, Raincoats and Wool Sweaters. Boys’ and Young Men's Suits and Overcoats for ages 2% to 20, Pants, Waists, Caps, and Kilt Suits. Everything Must Be gold! | GLOVE DEPARTMENT. | The most recent production in Motoring Gloves. B.Altmanko. importations for the Spring season in Women's Marvex Suede Blue, Lavender, tints, also White Glace Kid embroidery and Bandelettes trasting shades. Mushroom clude THE MARVEX GLOVE, in the follow- ing styles, to which particular attention is invited Pink. Flesh Gloves, and Gloves, of con- For TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY: One Thousand Dozen Pairs Women’s Kid Gloves, Glace and Suede, $1.00 per pair. Misses’ and Boys’ Glace Gloves, 68c. per pair. B.Altmans@o. (First Floor.) Dress and School wear. For Tuesday and Wednesday: Hand-made Hats of Fancy med), Black, White and colors, $J Bunches of Roses, various shades, 55c, Rose Foliage, . . Braid Untrimmed Hats, Millinery Materials, Etc. Flowers, Foliage, Straw Braids, Untrimmed Hat Shapes, Ostrich and Fancy Feathers, Ete. Simply Trimmed Walking and Outing Hats. Misses’ and Girls’ Trimmed Hats for ak Cauntrim- .20 each. «= 35 ee ots Elgdteenth Street, Nineteenth Street and Sixtd Aveame. | Oriental Average size 3x4 ft. 150 Fine Daghestan Rugs. a 250 Antique Persian Ru; (Slightly imperfect), average size 3x (06x11 150 Turkish Bagdads. Another A. A. Vantine & Co., Broadway, bet. 18th & 19th Sts. Rug Chance. Orientel Rug business in ns‘ comething Average size 3x4 {t. i i R 150 Antique Silky LS, a cya for 100 Hamadi and Sara Sula Rugs, at $4.09 t Average size 3.6x5 ft. 810,00 and $12, 50 125 Antique Mosul and Guendjec Average size 4x9 ft. at 2 2 Suitable tor Portiers and Couch Covers. ft Sig.00 B*S'00 te $75,00 , $2.25 Prices Cut to the Limit! Don’t Miss This Rare Opportunity! Sales daily from 10 A. M. to5 P. M. No goods sent C, O. D. ° PIQUE SETS, B.Altman& Go. Outer-Garments. Woo! Materials, Chiffon and Lingerie effects. ALSO COMPLETE LAYETTES. nie igo soca aati FOR INFANTS AND LITTLE CHILDREN, PRINCESS ROBES, trimmed with real laces. Baptismal Cloaks, Crps and Veils. REEFERS AND COATS of Silk, Crepe de Chine, Light-weight Hand-embroicdered Nainsook over silk. hand-embroidered, consisting of Coats, Bonnets and Carriage Covers. Pique end Dress and Morning Hats and Bonnets of Straw, Fancy Baskets, Hampers and Bassinettes. Spring and Summer UnderClothing and comprising a varied assortment of foreign and domestic articles, among which may be found individual styles of original designs. FINE LONG AND SHORT CLOTHES of Glace Nainsook, embroidered and entirely hand made.