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; & f 4 Al { “woman than Mrs. Morris No: 1. She _ \Wife No. 1 told the detectives and police . Yoreo on the grounds ~ ~ HAS TW WES W. C. Morris, Once Proprietor of the San Remo, Declares He Was Divorced from Wom- an Suing for Abandonment. DRAMATIC SCENE WHEN MAN IS ARRESTED AT LARCHMONT Second Wife Frantically Em- _ braced Him While the Other * Woman Sternly Said, “Officer, Do Your Duty.” ‘William C. Morris, at one time vroprie- of the San Remo Hotel and formerly terested in the Martinique, at Broad-| ¢ Way and Thirty-third street, was ar- jed in the Jefferson Market Court ‘on a charge of abandonment pre- ferred by Mrs. Margaret Morris, who faya she is the undivorced wife of Mr. Morris. The latter claims that he was ivorced from Mrs. Morris eight years go, and that three years ago he mar- vied again. Morris had a copy of a decree of ab- solute divorce with him when he came fmto court to-day. He showed jt to Magistrate Cornell, who said: ‘That don't go in this State. You will have to get proof of actual service.” So he sheld Morris in $500 bail for examination next Wednesday. ‘The deeree, according to the cop, was Granted December, 18%, by Judge Tyler, of Battleboro, Vt. Morris said that he we resident of Vermont two years Before he brovght sult for divorce and that his attorney personally served Mrs, rris Nov 1. “All allegations that I have been cruel to her are false," he said. “She ever had a cent until I married her and TI gave hor everything she had. Ta been a rich man to-day if it were mot for her.” * Mrs. Morris No. 2 {s a much younger Ms equally as well drested and quite pretty. Mo) was arrested yesterday at the Vict Hotel, Larchmont. Mrs. Mar- faret Morris and the second wife met face to face on the notel Jawn, and a ramatic scene ensued. Wife No, 2 clung to the neck of her husband, while to do their duty, First Wife's Story. ‘Mrs. Morris, about fifty years old, with gray hair, of distinguished ap- pearance and fashionably dressed, said im court to the Magistrate, “I was mar- fled to Wilson Cooper Morria and have the certificate ta show. Tijs was in 1881. After that my husband, Using’ some of my money, opened the Ban Remo and for @ Ume we lived a Ufe of genuine happiness. Then came unhappiness. “One eventful night I went to a room im the hotel to find my husband. The bell was muftled and I grew very angry. He came to the door and we had gome words with the result that 1 went down stairs and waited for him. We had some more words when an n he left the hotel and ten days After'I did also, turning the manage- Ment over to some one else. 1 then went. to ters to live and en- eys. ‘The action for di- ed. While the lawyers were’busy at work on the Givoroa pas got @ letter from my hus PaeetieRigivease ih soft enous! ea but we Ihe juarrel listen to bis quarrel after | Fought Divorce Snits. _"Atter that camo the separation and I went to a boarding-house to live and Asked him to send me $200 a month. Ho hever came to see me. Fiftetn months later we had a meeting on Forty-sixth strect and he wanted a divorce. I re- fused and then he went to White River, Vt. He started an gqon for di- of desertion, but I fought that and he could not ob- tain it. ay in “Four years ago I learned that hebad rried’a girl named Kate Mahoney, en I kept a lookout for him and had my lawyers do the same.” as A great deal of excitement Yesterday on the lawn of the Victoria, At Larchmont, when Court OMcer Jobn tried to serve the warrant on . ‘The later snatched it from tho hands an 1 "shan id showed his ay id a Mra threatening + | irs. Morris No. 2 made a leap for her husband and hugged him hys- terically, “Officer, do your duty,’ was the com- mand of Mrs. Morris No. 1 Mr. Morris said: "This woman who! makes the complaint is not my wife. 1 was divorced from her eight yi i ago I married my ent wife. has cost me x gether, and because I have ref Then Mi ts ed to aid her financially she has taken these Measures to annoy me." B08 FITTINMOKSS - LEOPARD IN PERL Animal Aboard Steamer Swazi Whose Cargo of Jute Is Badly | » Damaged by Fire at Her) Piers | ~ } ‘With a fire burning below decks tn the tatso of jute and the roars and screams #%f & score or more of wild animals in es on the uper deck, the officers and, of the British freight steamer | had mbout all the excitement they ed for, Phe Swazi was lying at Fort in “first from the fire. but the the burning jute, cocoanut imboo cane made them frantic, der in the chorus of roars was consigned to Robert Fitzsim- managed to Bm ferce figh back several times by The explosion of sev- PPHDHPPDOPIIP®OHIDHD P BPOD2S9H9-9-9O6-290- POSPESEEEE DG 90 OO06.06.6-46-66-094600 446064 weer THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 18, 1904 HOTEL-KEEPER MORRIS AND HIS FIRST WIFE, WHO SAYS SHE NEVER WAS DIVORCED FROM HIM. 19:0240-944 OO590- $9S9e- oe 249444963429 9OOOOOO FELLOWES JR, SUED BY ICING PARTE Frederick G. Calhoun Seeks 9094646-0OOO088 ALLA LINE AST ON SHOAL IW FOG Passengers and Crew of the Hibernian, from Montreal to London, Safe, but Steamship May Be a Total Wreck. ST. JOHN, N. F., May 18.—The Allan Ung steamer Hibernian, which satled from Montreal May 14 and Quebec May 16 for London, with seven passengers, a shipment of cattle and a general cargo, went ashore early to-day during a dense fog at Stormy Point, a shoal near Cod Roy, thirty miles north of Cape Ray, at the entrance of the Gulf of St. Lawrense. The vessel is Hsting and making water fast, and it is fearedthat shewill begome a total wreok.* wand passengers are safe. The Hibernian Ie of 2,871 tons net, ts 485 fot long, has 5) feet deam and aris feet 7 inches of water. She was is Glasgow in 1902, and was for- iy ni moerly namb’d Orient Point Dissolution of Copartnership Formed Last December—De- fendant in Two Other Actions. REBELS. DESTAD TT MMLAGE Armenian Insurgents Lay Waste Several Small Asiatic Turkey, Driving Out More than 600 Families., J, Cornelius Fellowas, jr., figured as de- fendant in three actions in the Supreme Court to-day. Frederick G. Calhoun, ceeking a dis- solution of a copartnership formed by him and young Fellowes last December | “to race thoroughbred horses,” sought ‘ | for the appointment of @ receiver for Sections of] ty. iva in Justice Greenbaum's part of the court, and A. H. Hummel ee- cured from Justice Dugro a temporary Injunction restraining Fellowes from disposing of the property of the firm. Calhoun alleges that he and Fellowes formed a copartnership in which he in- yested $5,000 cash against threo racing thoroughbreds pit in by Fellowes. IIe alleges that Fellowes agreed to pay | half the expenses, which have amounted | to $718 thus fr, but has failed to do s», and that ~recentiv Fellows took steps to transfer his interest in the three thoroughbs to his wife. The plaintiff in the thira action in which young Mr. Fellowes is named as defendant ts Samuel F. Sniffin, and the case will be tried before Justice Davis some time this week, Decislon was reserved in the matter CONSTANTINOPLE, Mayf 18—Ao- cording to a despatch from the Val! of Bitlis, Aslatio Turkey, seventeen vil- lages have begn destroyed by Armenian Insurgents In the district of Sasson. More than 60 Armenian families have tuken refuge in Mush, a town in Bitlls. —$—$——__—— "DECLINES A JUDGESHIP, NEWARK, N. J., May 18.—dx-Judge Joneph Crgxs, of Union county, an- nounced té-day that he had deolinad the appointment to the United States District Court Judgeship made vacant by the death of the late Judge Andrew ‘kpatrick, of Newark, Jud, “Toss nn Pthat his. advanced sper bey of the appointment of a receiver of the his assuming the duties of thé partnership, oftice. N EMINENT physician of this city recently said: “V, thin people lve from han to mouth, and have little re- serve for emergencies.” Of course we know of persons whose na- ture it is to be thin—‘Lorn that way,” some but there fs a healthy standard b: ich a person who knows himself can gauge his good health or poor health. reason he or she {s helow his or her normal weight, then it ts wise to look out for trouble, In case the germs of grippe, typhold or consumption gain an entrance into the body they find a fertile fleld and develop immediately. We can only. compare this sudden taking on of disease germs by the thin body, to the fertile fleld which carries the seeds of some wild and worthless plant there and they quick- Jy take root and flourish. Almost any grave change jn health is at once betrayed by the loss of flesh, which shows most often in the face. condition almost always flesh up to a certain point means a anut olf added to is estimated at da fiv and the color ‘creased, ‘When If for any |\. lies fallow until an unfortunate wind |¢, This | co-exists | Pierce's with impoverished blood. A gain of/nas been in common use in this coun- rise in other essentials of health; the!ple and has cured thousands as our on deck was an\red corpuscles of the blood are in- file of testimonials will prove—yet no|the cloth-bound, or 21 stamps for the na i improved.!one ever heard of its harming @|paper-covered Persons find themselves losing {single person. That is because it ia only, made.ot purely vegetable ingredients lb selentificaly prepared in the Medical Laboratory of the World's Dispensary, at Buffalo, N. Y., under jthe supervision of Dr. R. V. Pierce, “Last summer during a severe hot spell," writes John Goetz, of 138 East Main 'St., ‘Rochester, NW., Co 1 6th dregiar) Artill thea tery B—Wirst Separate Company, jtlonal Guard of N. Y., “I became (or sleep, with severe pains in groins back, also bilnding, headaches, The dovtors prescribed tor’ me, bate did not seem to gain any strength, so jadvised me to go’ away and try salt T could neither afford j (ime nor money to do that, so decided to try Dr. Pie®ee's Golden Medical, Discovery, as T had heard It so highly {spoken of. Am pleased to stato that a complete change for the better set in almost as soon as IT began using jthis medicine, and within three weeks | was fully restored to health and had gatned eleven pounds in weight, TI feel tt a duty to write and tell you of this. The cures effected by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery are many and so remarkable that an ex- planation of these cures seems almost necessary. To understand the action of the “Discovery” we must go be- yond the blood. If we follow the arlet clue of vein or artery it leads us at last to the stomach, “The blood is the life. True. But what is blood made from? Blood Is made chiefly from what we eat and drink. It fs the food, “which, after ing properly digested and assim- ilated, nourishes the body in the form of blood. But when the stom- ach and the allied organs of diges- tion and nutrition are diseased there cannot be a perfect digestion and assimilation of food. Hence, tn what is called “weak” stomach the nutri- is reduced, and the 4 welght they should need the warning and use the proper means In time be fore disease fastens om them. ~ A} tonle alterative is needed to digest|tion of the. bod) | assimilate the food. yarlous organs which depend on this 1 liver oil was the old-fashioned |blood made from food are put on y for a rundown sys! short rations, Like soldiers in a chronic wasting disease, siege they will hold out on this re- tion of the oi] is a task duced ration as long as they can. healthiest stomach, and But it 1s only a question of tim: hs rebel against it when collapse comes, and “weak ment iy stomach ts followed by ‘fweak heart,” nefit weak lungs, weak" kidneys or weak- for the} sensitive | A great} the means employed nd cure of such cases Dr. P| 8 Golden Medical Dis- covery, Which maintains the nutri- jtion of the body by enabling the per- son to eat, retain, digest and assim- ilate food. It overcomes indigestion | lif present, soothes the cough, and,| ‘by its alterative properties, cleanses | jthe blood, All the organs therefore are fed on pure, rich blood, and the person using the “Golden Medtcal Die- | ery” gains in flesh and strength. | Fever, night-sweats, headac Jdispelled. It is just the r jthe Con: ptive, for the victim of! jCatarrh of the Lungs, or the suffererjabout the body in health and disease, from Bronchitis. also medicine and surgery, without For over a third ef a century Dr, jtechnicalities, should read the “Com- Golden Medical Discovery|mon Senso Medical Adviser,” by R. V. Pierce, M. D., which can be had by addressing Dr. R. V. Pierce, But- falo, N. Y., for 31 cents in stamps for ov for the bi The conclusion is obvious, To help the blood you must cure the stomach, The great success of “Golden Medical Discovery” is in chief due to the fact that it begins with the stomach. lt cures diseases of the stomach and tion, and with these it cures diseases which seem remote from the stom- ach but which’ have their origin in the disease of that organ. / ATURBE'S. BOOK. Thoge desiring to know something try, been taken by thousands of peo- ook, to pay cost of ness of some other principal organ.| other organs cf digestion and nutri-) aE cs aR TEMNM 7 a ae oe ‘ GRAND DUCHESS OF | SAXE-WEIMAR DEAD, Pauline, While on Trip from Rome to Florence, Dies Sud- denly of Heart Disease—The Body Taken to Florence. “FORCE” keeps the + ROME. May ind Duchess} brain waked-up” all day. Palline! of MaxecWWolmar, dled tosday, No mattef whether you The Grand Duchess, who Was Indis- write or figure or saw wood or pound stone: You'll do it the better for eating FORCE.” posed, left In the afternoon for Flor- ence, but after leaving Rome died of heart disease. Florence, Thy death of the Grand Duchess has produced a deep impression in Rome. She hal spent many years travelling through Italy and was @ frequent vis- {tor to the Italian Court. Shopping an Extravaganee. * KOCH & Co. On Thursday ¢ Sale of Silk Shirt Waist Suits. LADIES’ SILK SHIRT WAIST SUITS, of fine taffeta silk, in hairline stripes or shot effects, double box-plaited waist, fancy sleeve and stock, nine-gored side-plaited skirt with inverted back, black, blue, brown, green or gun metal, some piped with combimation colorings; value $21.75, for Thursday.. 12.95 Millinery--One-Third Off. TRIMMED MILLINERY—An excellent and timely opportunity to obtain choice, ex- clusive and high-class Hats at far below cost—all our imported models and the creations of our own artists are included in this great Clearing Sale. $10.50 to $12.00 Hats, $15.00 to $18.00 Hats, $20.00 to $25.00 Hats, 1A 10.00 15.00 New Gauz e Ribbon Hats. UNTRIMMED HATS—Another opportunity to secure the kind that were so much sought after last week—made of fancy gauze ribbon and chiffon, black and white, eight of the newest anes including the large flares; only a plume necessary to create a stylish trimmed hat; reg. $3.98, for Thursday... 2.48 The body was taken to Koch's Uptown Prices Make Downtown Jardinieres & Pedestals.. JARDINIERES, new designs, rich under-) JARDINIERES, pink embossed lily de- inch, sign, 10 $2.25 ., JARDINIBRES & PEDESTALS, 22 inches high, reg. $2.00. 125 11 inch] JARDINIERES & PEDESTALS, 890! 34 Inches high, reg. $6.50. 4,98 Curtains---Rare Values. NOVELTY CROSS STRIPE COTTAGE) SWISS COTTAGE CURTAINS, figured CURTAINS, full length: or dotted with ruffled edge: Value 1.25 1.39 Value _ 1.00 1.25 Pr. at 89c- 1.00 At 750 e Uy Mattings---Deep Price Cuts. CHINA MATTINGS, checks or stripes, in a variety of colorings; value $8.50, per piece of 40 yards ory JAPANESE MATTINGS, in novel destgns and color effects; value $9.5 per piece of 40 yards Slip Covers.--Under Price. SLIP COVERS for 5 or 6-plece ‘Suit (Turkish furniture excepted), made of best quality Belgian striped damask, superioz-workmanship, 20 yards 36-Inch material allowed; equal work and material cannot be obtained downtown for 6 25 eo ‘ rh fesg than $7,98). our price. S. e D e Awnings---Big Saving: AWNINGS, made of best double-dyed 8-oz. striped material, mounted on galvanized iron frames and hung with screw eyes; all work done by skilled mechanics; our awnings work easy and wear best; same size and quality offered by downtown houses for $3.25; our price for windows 3 ft. wide by 6 ft. long, 2 50 5 PUE UP GOMpletesic. os ccsvvcescarecssccrerscdosecccsccdssencsses ce Estimates Furnished for Private Houses, Apartments, Hotels and Office Buildings. 125th Street West, glaze colorings, beautifully blended, in two and three tone effects, every one worth triple: 8inch 9 inch 290 490 regular 1.25 10 inch 690 4.95 Pr. 1,50 Pr. Bétween Lenox and Seventh Avenues, FURNITURE BARGAINS. JAPANESE JUTE RUGS. Were, Now. 6x9 ft., $7.50 $6.00 . 7.60x10.6, “11.60 9.00 9x12, 15.00 12.00 Our own importation. Oriental designs and colorings. GOLDEN 04K CENTRE TABLES, $1.35—$5.50—$10.50 (Reduced from $1.75~87—$14,50)- LIBRARY TABLES, $7—$20—$31.50 (Reduced from $9—$26—$42) \ Some plain, others carved, Long Credit provides for immediate comfort. | ! 104 To {08 West bina H.O'Neill & Co The Muslin Underwear Sale, The Most Successful We Ever Announced. In addition to the magnificent values offered in do- mestic underwear we are makin: big concessions in price of hand made French imported garments—Bridal Sets and single and odd pieces. - CORSET COVERS®*Mad:) of cambric and muslin, tight | fitting, V-shape, trimmed with > | Very Special Value. - Oc everlasting lace, sizes 32 10/ 44—regularly 15; at......00 CowNS ch CORSET COVERS—Madc] [Habe Gites, F ot carabtics Vai eal | DRAWERS, 69c stitched yoke, finished wit! neat emboidery edge—regu- | 15c conser LEN ASL Ec Tatlyaicriatias scceasenecss SKIRTS, Each. CORSET COVERS—Mus- . hn and cambric, French and fitted styles,trimmed with sev- eral insertions of fine lace, tucks and embroidery, ribbon drawn, all, sizes—regularly at 25c. and 29c.; at...... THURSDAY MORNING SPECIALS. On Sale 9 till 12 o’clock Only. No mail orders filled—none sent C. O, D. Women’s Lawn Waists. | Real Laces. Extra Fine Lawn Waists, unusual in | quality, neat and dressy styles, some trimmed with English embroidery, some dotted swiss, all new and desir- | able; regular price $1.50 | and $1.75—9 till12 Sretocky) | . 00 | (Special Tables, Third Floor.) Women’s Percale Wrappers | Wrappers and Kimonos of percales, | Value 89¢. and 98c, 21e Other groups at 45c., 93c., {$1.19 and up i wards, (Second Floor.) Real Lierre Lac: hind made, in Edgings, Belgium and ivory, 6 to hes wide, regular price $0c, 8 to75c. per vard—9 till 12 O'CLOCK seseverseeee tere 256 Real band made Cluny Laces, Edg- ings and Irserting to match, just the trimm'ng for fine Gowns and Dresses, from 2 to 6 inches wide; light or dark colors, citt extra fuil, | "eR Price 386, 70c. and $1.35 mostly from our regular stock; reg) 041), 1 O SISK 224 306 ARC ular prices $1.00 to $1.75— 69C, 9 tiH12 o’clock.........++4 Pcint/de Venise Net Top Laces, (Wrapper Dept. Third Floor, 21st; Galloo is, In ‘s, Repousse, Ap- St. Side.) : plique, others; regular prices 48c. to 75c.—9 till 25c. and. (Speci, Carriage Bags. Black Leather Carriage Bags, full 8- inch frames, leather covered) inside fitted with card case and purse, two strap handles: regular price 75 12 o'clock, Corset Department. * CORSETS—Thomeon’s Glove Fit- ting and W. B. Corsets, newest deep hip, batiste or jean; sizes 18 to 30 inclusive; always 75c. and 55¢ $1.00—9 till 12 o'clock. .... Hose Supporters—All our 25c. Hose Supporters, in white, black, pink re MT ste 8 8 Q0C| sias—o tit 12 o'clock O'CIOCK.. 4. weveee SI tees 6 ina (Special Table, First Floor.) Ladies’ “KAY BAND: | box—elsewhere 25¢c.—9 till 206] wash Fabrics Se oor.) We shall offer a lot ef Cotton Chal- 12o’clock .. (Special Tables, Secon i lies, Printed Lawns and Dress Ging- Imported Fancy Ribbons. hams; regular prices were 8c, to Fine imported FancyRibbons, 33; to 10c. per ard — 9 till 12 6 inches wide—values up tose. Qe! o'clock. bE elie) per yard—9 till 12 o'glock.... Special r (Special Table, First Floor) |_ (Pct! Tables FisttTloor, Rear) Hammocks. White Turkish Towels. Close woven, with pillow and] (Limit, 1 dozen to a customer.) spreader, size 42x86, large variety} Extra .heayf white Turkish of colors plain or mixed; regu-| Towels, rire pueraers with larly $1.75 — 9 till 12 woven imitials; -value 25c, o'clock sesinese $1.00 cach—9 till 12 o’clock...... 10c (Special Table, Third Floor.) (Special Table, First Floor, rear.) . ee Thursday, May 19. Suits, Skirts and Silk Coats. Extraordinary Values in Women's Suits and Skirts as well as strong reductions in Silk Coats from our own regular stock. These unprecedented bar- gains in fine garments should crowd the 3d floor all day Thursday. TWO HUNDRED WOMEN'S SILK COATS. Comprising the best of this season’s productions— short, medium and long lengths—Taffetas, Peau de Soies and Pongees—heretofore $25.00, $30.00, $35.00— Thursday, $12.00, $15.00 and $18.50 WOMEN’S PEDESTRIENNE SUITS— a mixed lot, several styles, all splendidly tailofed and hand- -somely trimmed—Tweeds, Cheviots and $12 a Voiles—Thursday.ee cece ss-eee. ee n Formerly $20.00 and $25,00. WOMEN’S SKIRTS—250 of them, instep lengths, made of the finest domestic and: imported materials in a new and desirable plaited model—all colors $3. a} —Thursday rece. cercccecesececcerees sere pees Regular price $7.00. (Third Floor.) Two Special Waists Both Under Our Regular Prices, Women’s Waists .of ’ delicate striped and checked taffeta, tail- ored and trimmed with embroid- ered neck pieces; also Jap Silks, entire front trimmed with Mexi- ?can drawn work. hig . Regular price $7.50. Women’s Waists of Repousse Lace and embroidered net silk lined; yoke,,collars and cuffs trimmed with folds of taffeta and Regular price $10.00. Untrimmed Millinery. New Shapes and Designs Shown Every Day. READY TO WEAR HATS—Newest designs, best quality trimmings, finest values in the city, at $1.98, $2.98, $3.48, $4.48. SPECIAL. 100 dozen FANCY JAP BRAID HATS in black and assorted colors—value 75c. and $1.00 48 each—special at.. Cc Large assortment of Tuséan, Milan, Italian, Chip, Silk, Satin and Braid Hats at extrémely moderate ices. ey FINE IMPORTED FLOWERS. 500 doz. imported Rose Bunches, Wild Roscs, Forget-mé-Nots, Blucts, Blos- soms, June Rose: Bunches, Foliage, Berry Sprays, etc.—during this 25 Cc sale vt “6 - ee eee $5.00 $5.90 fj wasnss cee venue, 20th to 21st Street. Rate 2 KH, ire tt