The evening world. Newspaper, April 20, 1904, Page 6

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LADY MIXER “SECRETLY WEDS Amazes British Society by Be- poming Bride of Sir Edwin Austin Richardson After a Sudden Announcement. ed LONDON, April %.—Lady Constance feKenale, who has detied convention- ‘who !s famed as the best swim- in the nobility, an expert horse- ‘woman, @ golf-player and an all-around athlete, again lias amazed English soci- by becoming the bride of Sir Edwin Austin Richardson. Her engagement had been announced to Capt. Fitzgerald, @f the Eleventh Hussars. ‘Dhe breaking @f her engagement to the Captain has 4% no one cutelde the quaint wn. Pi Waitin wast Tit thaidetcnta that ry was 0 (af edreged is heiress prospective Gromartio, ‘one of tho oldest tities i ° Sootland. ‘These estates amount to ward of the immensely Duke of Sutherland. 4 ate visited the family of itney in Aiken, 8. C., in 1902. ‘also spent some tims in New York, she is well known. ler husband is a Scotch baronet, cap- he of we third Battalion of the Biack HERES WED LE Hou Noe Cards Issued for Formal Church Ceremony, but Bridegroom Had to Hurry Back to New York on Business. @ALLAS, Tex., April 20.—Society cir- Mes of this city, pfter making great Preparations to attend a fashionable ‘Wedding to-night, awoke to-day to learn ‘that tho bride, one of the most attrac- Gveheiresses in the city, had been cap- tured by a hustling New Yorker, and ‘that the bridal couple was already far onthe way to New York. we were issued ago cards the wedding of Miss Elizabeth ‘Thor- ‘wedding was to have been at 7,20 to-night, the First Presby- ‘Church, that hour being arranged it the couple to take a fast east. * : Rand arrived unexpectedly at 2 J yesterday, and after sending a to the Presbyterian minister ‘At once to the Thorburn home, he there. ® carriage and drove ded that he start train, which left Dalias at 8 o'clook an hour after his arrival. away on @ fast express ROBBED GUESTS AT A WEDDING Two Pockethooks with Money Elder-Chalmers Nuptials Was Being Performed in Church. The police of the West One Hundred and Twenty-ff{th street station are searching to-day for a soctal highway- man who last night, while the wedding of Miss obert Duncan a at the © nat Lenox and Twenty-third street, went about rob- bing the wedding guests. The newly-wedded pair had been Mra, David C, Chalmers, of No, 21 ‘West One Hundred and Twenty-third street, the bride's parents, were re- ceiving the congratulation of friends, when an excited man; Andrew Fietoh- er, an uncle of the bride, rushed up to Mr. Chalmers and declared: “I have been robbed of a roll of bills amounting to $100 while I have been in the church. It was taken from my waistcoat pocket since I came into the church.” Hardly had Mr, Chalmers recovered from this shock when a woman, lubor- ing under great excitement, rushed up to him and sald: “I have lost my pocketbook. It con- tained a considerable sum of money. It has been stolen from me since I caine into the church,” Immediately an investi gun. It was recalled tha minister had been seen ° church. He appeared to be perfectly At his ease and 19 waid to have had a card admitting im io the wedding. Inquiries showed that no one knew him. The police were notified at once and description of the well-dresned given them. remony Was performed sdgar ‘Ma! rominent residents @ wedding, wld was maid of honor, and the bridesmalds were the Misses Cntherine Fletcher, Florence Graham, Abbie Crowell and Netti¢ Mil- ler, The best man was Harold M colm Searles and the uahers were Fir erick E. Donaldson, 8. Lester Searl William A. Young and F, G, Chalme a ee France’s Educated Farmern. (Brom Harper's Weekly.) In France, as in the United States, agriculture engages fully one-half of the popula oa Since 1822, when the Institute of Roville was founded by Dombaslo near Nanoy, the French free training system has,’ with many ups and downs, gradually extended until It covers all France and all forma of soll Seustiter of Mrs, Lucy Carrington] oujture. beac rsisperp ped heer ekygnch children, under Government aining, are fir ut in pr leader, and E. C. M. resi! genooine therentter, to ase up Phrowg the wank a0) Protective Security| all departments to the National Ins| 5 0. 49 Wall New| tute. It must be adm! that t term “French peasant” means some- thing vastly more than a farmer of any other nation, When the French boy from the institute he js no ut an educated man who ca: @ most of the smallest sven °. He knows familiariy all life on the farm, animate and inanimate, all objects, organic and Inorgania He in ‘fully equipped to create wealth from the smallest means. Through him we Understand the vast combined wealth of the French peasantry. Were such a. system in vogue and comp’ In forty, Million farm~-worke: merion, would be elevated from a homely an commonpince existence to an educate mass, capable of wresting untold riches’ out of @ vast soll which to-day is often ‘worked In the moat He sipok and hum- ram manner, producing & mere lv in, ly, and. generally eu its present Porth. , 2 “hem beatth your wonderful Malt Whiskey.” DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY | March 24, 4 The te tded by over 9,000 doctors and hospitals eare for mn, coughs, colds, grip, _ Rerve and muscle. BEADING DOCTOR SAID: ‘s Pure Mait Whiskey is “oy iherveus women, and sickly ‘yous, and the young ch stron, positively ha 2y hen leh-gt ving at be! consumptio: tarch and all diseases of throat and lungs; indigestio somach trouble, nervousness, malaria and ®| ‘Yew fevers, and for all weakened, run-down, _ ipqnsed or wasting conditions of body, brain, Dofty’s Pure Melt Whiskey not only ‘tives out disease germs, but builds up new +) asues and renovates the entire system. It aids digestion, enriches (ho blood, stimulates | Gipowlation, tones up the heart, quiets the [| ‘Rérves, and Dourisbes and builds up the body 9 that it will throw off and prevont disease, At‘ medical convention tr Albany A “I would eather have Duffy's Pure Malt Whis- key to cure consumption and dis- of the throat aod lungs than other medicines in the world.” pe the doctors present agreed with ulm ‘aluable for tired-out, overworked, worried men, ildren. It promotes health and’ long life, keeps ttles only; never in Chemist,” on the labe! CONSUMPTION CURED. uld Not Live, 2 Malt Whiskey Cured Me in Three Month but Duffy’s Pure “+1 Had Hemorrhages and Was Re- duced to a Skeleton, but Your Wonderful Kemedy Built [Me Up and I Gained 60 Pounds,” Says Cora Riley, Coatsvill “Four years ago I was @ mere skeleton. Thad been in poor health since childhood. ‘The doctors told me tt was consumption and that I could not get well. As winter ap- proached my cough became more severe and my condition so serious that I had a num- ber of hemorrhages, and my weight was reduced to less than ninety pounds. “I first learned that Dufty’s Pure Malt Whiskey was good for consumption through reading one of your edvertisements in o Philadelphia paper. Then my family took the matter up with our local druggist, and be recommended your whiskey as such a grand cure for consumption that I began taking tt {0 October and continued its use throughout the winter. I began to improve Mt once, and within thres months I was cured of awful consumption. to tell you now, after a Igpse of nearly four years, that I am tn. perfect welgh over 150 pounds. I attribute my being alive and strong and well to "04. Great Consumption and fhroat Cure, exclusively as the one complete and perfect bronchitis, asthma, pleurisy, pneumonia, ca- i mB, dyspepsia and every form ef my for rmfal. only absolute Mtles. Mask or Stolen While Ceremony of | driven away in «carriage and Mr. and || ton, jr., pastor of | Be at ash Aap Ye Raa et et, aed | | | | | Mrs. Fairbanks tells how neglect of warning symptoms will socn prostrate a woman. Shethinks woman’s safeguard is iLydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—Ignorance and neglect are the cause of untold female suffering, not only with the laws of health, but with the chance of a cure. I did not feed the warnings of headaches, organic pains and general weariness until 1 was well-nigh prostrated. I knew [ had to do something. Happily, I did the right thing. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound faithfully, according to directions, and was rewarded in a few weeks to find that my aches and pains disap- eared, and I again felt the glow of health through my body. Since | have been well I have been more careful, | have also advised a number of my sick friends to take Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and they have never had reason to be sorry. Yours very truly, MRS. MAY FAIRBANKS, 216 South 7th St., Minneapolis, Minn.” (Mrs, Fair- banks {is one of the most successful and highest salaried travelling sales- women In the West.) When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general de- bility, indigestion and nervous prostration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, Irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, “all-gone” and “want-to-be-left-alone” feélings, blues and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia B. Pinkham’ Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any othe! medicine, for you need the best. “Duar Mrs. Prvxnam:— For over two years I suffered more than renee can express with ‘kidney and bladder trouble. My physician pro- nounced trouble catarrh of the bladder, caused by displacement of the womb. I had a frequent desire to urinate, and it was very pain- ful, and lumps of blood would pass with the urine. Also had backache very often. y “ After writing to you, and receiving your reply to my letter, I followed your advice, and foe] that you and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound have cured me. e medicine drew my womb into its proper place, and then I was well. I never feel in now, and can do my housework ms. Arron Lamon, Kincaid, Miss. ta the world has received such No other medict widespread and unq firs. Pinkham Inyites all sick women to write her for advice, has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, M: FORFBUT it we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of $5000 er eee Sh SL BSE MSN GitS Se hwe, mance She Third day wonders in that great piano sale. EVERY value offered is a bargain wonder. They're used pianos, but we've put them in good condition and offer them at prices so low that everybody who has a desire to own a Piano can gratify it and not miss the small monthly Payments 4 5 required to secu one of these instru- ments, If you want a new instrument within one year from date of purchase we'll slow oa full am tinea en |Sold 34 pianos Wed-| |nesday, That makes| jo altogether. Shows what people |think of this sale,| Idoesn't it | Now for 10 i Thursday bargains 1 GROVESTE, oy 1 DUN: ARE. «0. $5 QQ) | Ina gainer evan si *5.00 tcarved Tore Fares n° Saturday, Aprit 23 — Most SCHMI A piano-players thi: —— teaalis word pany ope 65.00 We sal offer paver pees pies 1 QRACE. WATERS $165,00 sob ke: tee aietos great bar ee, Fourth Floor. Thursday, April 21— organ at- a tachment and originally cost y 1 PIAN All | Rises EME reer $15.00 ft STEINWAY SQ! E.. $ Tabaasten pratiin1oo 00 1 yiscner ARE. 9 AMP pour sientha ah we ¢ fll mafl eons a t on ai pecited in our | nday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders ale Heme i ila ex a@vertiseme) WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING. APRIL 2, 1904 SS —- Dns | | ah 2 AERATION NBA SOIT LM RIT 500 pedestrienne sKirts *4.50 yF YOU'RE looking for something unusual let us hold up before your eyes one of these handsome pedestrienne skirts at $4.50 to-morrow and you'll marvel at our ay to offer such a fashionable creation in Canvas etamine at so small a price. It’s one of those unusualities you seldom encounter. *Thursday is positively the only time ~ean_ his_excelient quality The liveliest sale of hosiery. SEEMS like people simply can’t get enough of this: pees quality hosiery at the extraordinarily low prices quoted for this sale, Even after increasing our selling space three times, the aisles and counters were thronged with eager purchasers Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Main Floor. There'll be no let up to the activity to-morrow, We want you to help increase the con= $ ¢ ¢ and share in the great- etamine, at $4.50 est bargain event of the sea- —seven gored— ©: fon, bands of taffeta from top to bottom on each gor abit back. The only place where you can secure this quality and style at $4.50 is at Simpson! Crawford Co.’s. ‘Third Floor, ‘$10 jackets °7.75 Women’s jackets of black worsted chev- iot, 21 inches long, collarless, tight- fitting, neatly stitched, trimmed with! black silk hercules braid and gun metal buttons, lined with good| 19¢, for men’s 25c. hose. quality satin, a good $7 75 7 25c. for men’s 45c. hose, Vast crowds buy *3 dress goods at 69c: E FEEL positive that you do not want to miss the greatest dress goods treat of the season, so we want to urge W you to dee RIO HERES something to emphasize this warning—the vast crowds that are buying. We couldn't 00 ecy if we wanted to; there’s but one altemative for you—come quickly, re Main 5 It’s a sale that involves the purchase of thousands of yards of the finest_new Spring materials, that_never sell for less $1.25 per’yard, and from that price the values run $2, $2.50, $3 and up to $4 per yard—prices at which they are sold elsewhere. 14¢. for women’s 25c, hose, 18c. for women’s 25c, and 35¢. hose. 25c, for women’s 50c. hose, 356, fou women’s 50c, to 1.25 }0se. 69c. for women’s 1.25 to 1.50 hose. 89c. for women’s 1.50 silk hose. 1.95 for women’s 3.50 silk hose. 12146. for Men's 19. Half Hose. 35c. fer men’s 50c, half hose. 39c. for men’s 50c. half hose. \ Tweeds \ Button Plata Embr’d Cheviots Boucle Stripes ‘French Novelties German Fancies New " German Mixtures ‘Swell Volles Golf Suitings French Volles Canvas Cloth English Etamines ‘4 Baskot Weaves Engin Scnocss New Cheviots Sarge Saltings New Granites | Melton Suitings ¢ ; ; ish Armures Polka Dots Scotch Cheviots a fale Spouse sere eae Site EivipeZibeline —-enicker Broches London Checks 10,000 yds: of laces priced at less than half price. N the part of the importer—10,000 yards of the richest A An unequalled lace selling occasion. Main Floor. THER great purchase—at a tremendous sacrifice on ea of feaessanto be sold at less than half their actual value. c for 50° and c for 1 and c for'2,!250 § J 4 5 for *3 to 75° laces (4.50 laces and *3 laces Py 5 laces \ When we refer to them as the richest laces of the season we Speak of those wondrously beautiful new conceits from St. Gall, Plauen uf and France—surplus lots from the leading importers, They include Net Top in great variety in the correct widths and tints—St. Gall Band: ings and Galloons—hand-made French Novelties—black silk Net Top and black silk Chantilly. Great offering of $20 lace robes at $9 and 100 others to-morrow. Still another of those inimitable Simpson Crawford Co. fashionable robe sales that always set smart followers of the newest styles on _¥- the qui vive. To-morrow interest will centre about these unusual offerings: $9 for Robes $ I 5 for Robes $2 4 for Robes worth up to $20. worth up to $35. worth up to $50. In all there are some 125 of these rich creations—about half of them imported, while the others were fashioned in America—lace and linen conceits, including handsome hand-made lace and batiste robes. There’s no doubt about your desire for one. An early call won't be amiss, Irving library of famous boolis. - ‘ A superfor cloth edition, with large When you see this book you will confess at once it would be good PO Na 3 ie wees That extraordinary sale of 200,000 good books. A clean-cut edition in linen cloth binding of Soe eel fale Geis talea =e Ae ARE value for 25 cents. It was printed and bound to be 2 regular 2Sc. line. for Robes ; worth up to $75. Library of famous anthors! Third to half below Printed on fine wove paper from new plates, with large, clear type. See 25c Henty Library, 1Sc, 122 | the most famous works of English Literature. 2 long bt of titles arex it. . Library cloth binding. ay Right in the middip we cut this price. And in doing so we feel we are] Bravest of the ‘Clive in In- 50 3.! offering to our customers one of the most wonderful book values that ever Brave. pavtay'e|U ae oe Deabwa mY. they have seen. Among the titles are: fete. : 8.50 mt Little Minister. Adam Bede. | magnate Prince | HOR of Aeme. Fran 1.0 3,96 Ishmael, Bile ‘Venner. neat Reaiizavers: Hume's History of agian Sel{-Raised. First Violin. Breis Tom's Gabin. | ro land, 6 vols. ‘90 Black Beauty. ex. 0 Old Curlosity Shop. ‘ibe, Da Carlyle, 10 vid in T Count of Monte Cristo. | Scottish Chiefs. Andersen's Fairy 65c, Temple Shakespear, Rawlinson, 7% 3105 Deemst Robinson Crusoe. 6s. t Jeather, 40 vols., each.. Bronte,|6 vols 0 3: East Lynne. ~ Master of Ballantrae, | Last Days of Pompeil. Sooper, 16 vols 0 5: Scmantha at Sara- old . Last of the Mohicans. | ance of Two] irerbon Tatra Ree Voss $1.08 Recent Fiction, 49c. $2.50 U. S. History at *1.00 | | wortas. ; | Verity Fate. wlth WolterinsChss)|| riers eccenticaa laaw ee ne er ‘Tom Brown's School-| Jane ace, tm Virginia, | lar Recent Fiction, selling everywhere Household edition of the United | | deys. Jchn 2 With Lee ine Brave, | 8t $1.0 ut 4c. each. States, by B. Egleston, the most ‘Tom Brown at Oxford. | Lamplighter. Bravest of the Brave. | O01) ‘tne titles’ to select from. standard and authentic of all pop- Tale of Two Cities, KenJlworth. ‘Tempes' tlar United States histories. Com- Under Two Fings. ‘Wormwood. shine. Hawthorne Library, I9c. Paper, binding and fully worthy of a the titles are: lete in one large volume, with illustrations, por . $2.50 edition for tuitn maps, &o-t Handy library of world’s best books. a Handsomely bound in finen cloth, printed from new appearance k. Among plates on good paper. Nearly 200 titles. ‘ 8c 75c. Scribner copyright Children of the) Tennyson's Hiawath Old Mam‘selle's Seoret. | Emerson's Ei . . novels, 19c. Ghiid's "Garden of | Poe's Poem Ving eae Last cf the Bar-| Daniel Deronda, ae rere e Verse, Rubatyat, Uncle Tom's Cabin. ‘ons. Mill on the Floss, Titles such as “The Lauton Girl,” | | Evangeline. Black Roo Wonder Book. Last Days of! Vani iM 2 John Halifax, Sketch Bool es. from” Shakes- | | ‘Pompell. Egyptian Prin- by Harold Frederic; “An Echo ot ngfellow’s Poems. Ten Nights in a Bar- . 2 vols. Picdinburgn. | “coe. Passion,” by G. P. Lathrop, select- Torus Poems. 5 ‘ide, Wide World, 2 & joke re. pele ed by Chas, Scribner's Sons from | | Camille. Franeure pelea BYoitios Of o Bachelor, eummn’'s Fate y Fae Hable. their most popular $1.50 fiction. gane Bye se: Romo pre Rob and His Friends. Jane Syre. yanbea el Spring sale of pure foods: greatest saving of the year. AVE you been among the thousands to share in the test saving on strictly pure foods, wines and table H Nahe ever made AE Only such a colossal trade event as this could bring prices to such a low ebb. Sixth Floor, Purchases involving a good-sized fortune combined to make this event the shost important of the year, Amazed at the extent of Simpson Crawford Co.'s orders, the producers granted discounts larger than ever known, That's why you come heré to- morrow with absolute assurance of the most phenomenal savinj u_ever encountered. (tant ordcre carefully packed. | ‘orders carefully packed. 0X TONGUE—Swift’s Premium, |. sugar cured, 5%"to 6 Ib, size, Ib..140 de er PREMIUM AMS — Swift's extra | Pa ata me re Nn MANZANILGA LXV S—Pinest fi i quart Manon Ser. BARLY JUND fre aunilty, iby ean {Sor Gores: 81,80 EVAPORATED onBA Borden's BLAVORING Ex- CONDENSED MIL K— Magnolia, Re ae rere Brands; 8 cans, 25c.; BREAKFAST COCOA—Walter Bake- er’s finest quality; %-Ib. cam.....18¢ CoTTAGE fresh SWEET PRUNES— ONE BSE—Made Best Santa Clara Valley 10°. 50: > RYE Wiis- Mt PUR) P KEY—m SUGAR CORN Seminary a, MONONGAHELA packed, RYE WHISKEY—old

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