The evening world. Newspaper, December 7, 1904, Page 3

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“J ° USES PICTURES TD PROVE CASE AGAINST WIFE Henry R. ‘ae: Ooles An-| swers Mrs. Coles’s Suit for Separation Charges. BUT OFFERS TO PAY $200 A MONTH AS ALIMONY. Wile Accuses. Him of Abuse, and His Reply Alleges Mis-| conduct Almost Ever Since Their Romantic Marriage. Ta answer to the sult for separation brought by his wife, Margaret, Henry R. Remsen Coles filed in Part 1. of the @upreme Court @onal reply, in which he accuses her of misconduct, naming three officers | The court todk | fn the British Navy ‘the papers, reserving decision. The reply of Mr. Coies to his wife's charges of abuse and habitual Intox!- cation has created a great dea! of oom- ment tn olub and society circles. Mr. Coles 19 related to the THeekman, Remsen, eBlknap, Seward Webb, Lenox 4nd other old New York famille ss & member of the Union, the New York Athiedc and several other clubs. | He dow not ask for separation or @ierce. His accusathaus @Gpport bile opposition to ‘Wile, has sade for $1.00 counss (ees @pd alimony of $400 a month pending the hearing of the action, He says that Ais income is not in excess of $4,000 aac offers to pay to Mrs, Coles $200 a} Month for the support of herself and er seven-year-old won. Photographs as Mytd Accompanying cis aMdavii of Mr. Gulee whore are several photographs, Ghowing his wife, it is alleged, in 1 company of varioys men, some of whom are named. These photograpia were tn possension of Mrs, Colea up to a Gort the ago when her busband broke into her boudoir by foros and @elsed them against her remonstrances, This appears to be the beginning of the end of & pretty romance that creat. @@ qreat interest in New York aod abroud eight years ago, Mr. Coles, ound for Burope, met on board ship Mergeret’ Davidson, the beautiful | G@aughter of Sylvester Davidson, ‘wealthy merofiant of Fishkill Landing, and proposed td ber before the oosan wan crossed, Bhe rejected his first proposal, but fe persisted in bis sult and married her in Geneva, Switzerland, on Fup, 1, 6. After & tour of the continent | they returned to New -York and soon | Appraisers at §1,00 a Year, when he efter Mr. Coles erected a handsome! ttage at Easthampton, on Lon rr ghd, “where he and his wite tacks ing part In the fashionable sporcs and entertainments. cwenty-three year i) Wile 4wonty. ‘They spent thelr winters in Bermuda, and it was first became suspicious of hy ‘or the past three years quar- 3 ‘were frequent, and nally, on Oct. last Coles left the house of father-in-law at Fishkill Landing, ey been living With his wife, thia clty, engaging quar- iors at at the "New York Athietle Club Offers to Pay $200 Alimony. Two weeks after this he wrote nis wife a note, warning her not ty con- debts in his name and offering to y her $200 a month for the OY gy of old erselt ang the boy, He asked her to address any communications she might wish to ¢ to him té hia attorney, J. Campbell Thompson. The reviy of Mri ‘oles wan to file @ sult asking for bet separation, me monte and tL counsel fees. Apparently this was what her husband owas waiting for. In his affidavit be mentions ¢ names of Edmund MacKinnon, Aiges non Faught and Lieut, Browne, Se intel omtoere. tn abauion borne. cusea his wife of being addioted to the use of intoxicating liquors and mor- hine--In fact, he fath a line of er- Faignente covering the eight yearn pag. fe, rs. Coles will make further answer to these allegations before the final hearing of her claim for alimony and mael fees. She amdavits Pup rting her charges of crueity an xication, covering a period of tou ears. ————— HEIRS ACCUSE FATHER. Deolare in Court Salt He Destroyed Grandfather's Will, NOROPOLK, Va., Dec. In sensa- tional suit brought here today by W. R. Jataes and Mrs. Daisy Elmore. Jamex Dakin, of Hannibsd, Mo, to re- cover valuable bequests claimed to have Deen made them by their grandfather, the Inte W. A. James, of Norfolk, the plaintiffs charge their own father, Charles & James, with having seized and destreyed thelr grandfathers will to prevent execution of his dying wishes. Charles BE. James, who is accused, Was only loft small life income under what in filed a@ reconstructed will be attorneys wiho drew original, Charies B. James and his children wiv a Ww eulng, felt out when he married a sec- ond time, A NIOHT with with Counter | to-day a sensa-} nd! © made to! cdaim his| re, Was then | proceedings caused Secretary Shaw to; there, according to Coles’ | ¢rie te | ford, nia} *| guilty against Mrs, Jewell. MANY LOVES OF MRS. JEWELL Chambermaid Alleges Remark- able Escapades of the Beau-| tiful Young Wife in Different | Hotels, Who Told Her All. |SAYS DIFFERENT MEN DRANK IN HER ROOM. | Aged Husband Lost His Govern.’ ment Position at Disolasures! in Beginning—More Sensa- tions Expeoted at Hearing. Mrs, Caroline 1. Jewell had a chance to defend herself against the charges preferred by Col, James A, Jewell, nor | septuagenartan husband, who sued her tor an absolute divorce to-day before Justice Leveniritt and a jury In the! tny court-room of Special Term, Part 6 Colonel Jewell was one of the Dem- ccrats on the United States Boar of sued his wife, twenty-elght years his juntor, and the notoriety of the scandal- ous aMdavits presented on the alimony force him to resign. | He accused Mrs. Jewell of being too ndly with Judge Francis H. Beck- gf Laconia, N. H, during her summer visite to her old home, and with a Mr, German, a stock broker, at Aviano City, Her Counter Charge, The Colonel was ordered to pay her $10 a month alimony on her counter- charge, naming Allce Ferguson, the chombermatd; Josephine Strong, & clerk In the Treasury Department, and Mrs, Allen, a nurse, as co-respondents, Later on Col, Jewell's plea that he had lost his jobeand his house, a $18,000 mortgage being foreclosed, alimony was out to $75.a month, although Louls J. Grant charged that he had allowed the mortgage to be foreviosed, his thirty-year-old son bidding in the property to defeat the alimony motion. ‘The case waa called for trial last | M sa. the maid. “I met Mr. Caldin tn Wy here did you asked Judge Cohen “In Mrs. Jewell's bedre answer, 1 you know a Mr. Goff? ‘Oh, yes. In 189% Mre, Jewell told me Mr, Goff would catl, and w put some beer and some wine on the igs, Bne said | “*Mr. Goft is one of my fellows, and 1 am colng to mest him downtown to- morrow see Mr. Caldin?’ * was the ‘oom She often told of the nice times she! had had with Burt Chapman “Once I took a letter to Mr man. Mrs. Jewell sald it was him for money. Anyway, back te her.” De you know about the relations of v4. Jewell with a man named Hen- it?’ Judge Cohen asked to agk I brought $ “Yos, in IM Mrs. Jewell, who had been out, was standing at her dressing mirror, Suddenly she put her ‘hands up and exclaimed “Why. I haven't my earrings!” How She Lost Mer Parrings, “And then she told me she had been at a hotel with @ Mr. Beanett and must dave, left the earrings on the wash- 1 do? What shall I dot ever find her earrings?’ asked Cohen. omen ehe said she had been—1 don't ber whether it was the Imperial oF he St, Cloud Hotel—and she sent the cook and her aad aah man to inquire for Mr, Bennett him to get the Jewelry. They ‘akinet See Mr, Bennett, 2 but he sent the earrings to her in a day or two.” During (hls recital Mra, Jewell, slt- ting unabstrusively in a rear seat, w: an expression of one in patient | tering. Her Vipit to Laconia, ‘The text story told by Miss Ferguson was the old one of her visit to Laconia with her mistress and the Sseteren of her mistresa afer tye visite to Judge Beckford's office, Phe maid "added that Judge Beckford once called and that she “opened a half dozen bottles, which they drank, and after ‘the Judge lett Mrs. Jew il told me abe loved that man and that he kissed and hugged her all the time “Mr, Beckford Is going to get a di- vorce from his wife and | from the Colone! Then we are going to live in Was ‘ton. That concluded the direct ¢xamina- ton. Louls J. Grant's cross-examination was expected to be sensational, HORSE DIES IN NEGLECT “AFTER BEING SHOT TWICE. Animal with Broken Leg Left Saf- tering All Night on Dook=Hu- mane Society to Investigate, A fine big gray heres died to-day at the foot of East Forty-ninth street after almost a day of the keenest suf- fering, a suffering which might have been avoided had the policeman on the beat or veterinary surgeon who was called fo shoot the anima! yester- day when tt broke ita leg given It neces- sary and humane attenticn. The cage has been put in the hands of Superiq- March, and Justice Clarke forced it on, despite the fact that Mes. Jewell was| of! at the time {ll in Dr, Chapman's sani- | tarium at Katonah. The only witness | exam|ned was Alice Ferguson, the maid and co-respondent in the counter suit. Miss Ferguson told a wonderful story.'| She sald her mistress made her her mother confessor. The Chambermaid Knew All. She also related that Mrs. Jewell ani Broker Geron had adjoining rooms in an Alantie City Hotel and they ex- changed visits, all the cireumutances of which were afterward related to her by Mra, Jewell. The trusty chamber- masd salt she kept these secrets to herself until 1902, when she told alt to Col. Jewell, The Appellate Division promptly re- versed Justice Clarke and ordered the vase to trial when Mrs, Jewell could be present. The higher court said that Miss Ferguson's’ story, uncorroborated, ; Was not sufficient, even if undenied, upon which to predicate a verdict of | Because of the cramped quarters Jus- tice Leventritt adjourned the trial to the chamber of the Appellate Term, | which is not In session to-day, Col. Jewell had ex-Justice William N. Cohen, of the Supreme Court,, at the bar In his behalf to-day, Mrs. Jewell in the Court. Mra. Jewell, who has never appeared before In the litigation, came to-day 4 | pallid and apparently | prematurely gray, but stili attractive, in @ snow-white walst and Diack skirt and a large hat Alice FeFreuson took the stand and ‘told of the dotngs of her mistress, add ing to it tales of escapades with a few more mén Tn answer to Judge Cohen's question the maid sald that never knew| ything of Mra. Jowell's doings, ex- pt what that lady told her Mf, and that she began to tell her in. 1883, ‘In 183 Mra. Jewell told me that while she living at Mrs. Chap. man's house, after the reat of the fam iy retired, she and Burt Chapman would wo up to her room. She Kissed Him, i / I atink beer: to- gato, 996 end im 1 am sick woman, |v tendant Hankinson, of the Soctety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, The horse was the property of the Howes Transportation and Contracting Company. While carting {ron from 4 |scow the ene, fell on the dock and boy fa leg. The driver, Andy For- fest, unhitched the animal and called for a, veterinary to shoot him. Two shots ‘were fired into the horse's head, but failed to kill. him, The veterinary left i thera, satisfied that the horse was a, But the horse did not o All night long it pene in the cold, and lay undisturbed on the dock a bie morning when 4 policeman to the society, The ite ot ort the cape | io -- y. he animal ai away, with no one to cut sort Ma misery. Supt. Hankinson sald to-da: “This is 9 * of the worst cases of neglect of duty IT ; ever, oere, be re *¢ to. my tention. or I get & ‘| take immediate Beton, rhe on the = saw that horse, and nt is their to report such cases % once, The sutering of that must have been awful. shall take every measure io bring the negligent pariies to the attengion of the courts.” "At the Bast Fifty-first street station tt was denied that the animal had lived through the night. Policeman ee was sent down thore, and he aaid ¢! waa every, evidence the’ horse had od directly after being shot, COLUMIBIA BOYS HONORED. er «= Seholarship Win Chosen Class Day Officers. Among the students elected by Col- nbin's @enlors yeateniay as class day cere were two winners of the Pulit- r Scholarships, Chester Welde Cothel 4 Gustavus Adolphus Younger. This honor means that the recipients repre- sent thelr classes at the end of the course, Cuthel was elected to the of- fice of clase pr * and Younger class | historian, Cuthel since his entry Into college has rétained the position of coxewain on the varsity crew, and bis class crew. He ip also the manager of the basket- ball team. Pa tlon to athletion, He worked from ue position of er > managing edi- ton:ef the student daily, the ted by the class —- Chap- | | ‘which attempt he was a prisoner in) ] 7m etki WEDNESDAY ie, DECEMBER + 7, 1904, PHOTOGRAPHS USED AS EVIDENCE IN THE SUIT FOR DIVORCE BROUGHT BY H. R. REMSEN COLES. | Ldnund PREFERS DEATH TO RICH BRIDE: Morris Monheimer Tells How He. Loved a Poor Girl, but Had No Money to Marry Her, | a member of the National Guard team PARENT, DEFIED, DECLINES TO ASSIST EIGEN § |Dejected Sweetheart Registers! at Hotel Where Later He \s| Found Unconscious, but Is| Revived and Arrested, Mortts Monheimer could not marry the poor girl he loved because he had failed in business and had no money, and he could not get money from his rich father, Ialdor, After figuring in- tently over the problem, Moritz at- tempted to solve It by Inhalations of l-| luminating In consequence of Centre Street Court to-day, charged with attempted suicide. Morits says he determined to end his life last Monday night when he re tered at the Occidental Hotel on the Bowery. The Occidental not being equipped with suicidal conveniences in the dhape of rubber tubes In the rooms Moritz postponed his gas inhalation uns ti! Inst night. During the day he bought a tube of his own, A chambermaid emelied gaa in the vi- oinity of the room occupied by Morita early to-day and notified the office, The door was forced and he wes found with the end of the tube in his mouth and on. The Occidental Ho- is tMined if “first ald to the injured," and by the time Dr. Lennon | arrived with an ambulance from 81 Vincent's Hospital the would-be suicide had been massaged into consciousness, He was taken direct to Mulberry street station. Moritz says his father was in the neckwear business for y at No. 688 Ithy, With the promise of his father’s backing he started in busine: for himself last April. The backing falled to material ize because he loved the poor girl in- Younger. has paid only alight atten- bu stead of the heiress his father had chosen. Mac Kine | booths will be artistically decorated and | busands of Women Have k Trouble and Never Suet i 4 MEN suffer untold misery pete the bed Of their disease is not always” correctly understood; in many ces, when doctoring, they are led to to believe that womb trouble or female weakness .of some sort Is responsible for thelr when in fact disordered kidneys-are cause of their distressin troubles. * erhaps you suffer almost cont with pain in the back, bearing-dewa ings, headache and utter exhaustion, Your poor health makes you and at times despondent; ‘but housands of just such suff ‘roken-down women are being 0 healt : ad strength every day by use of that wonderful discovery, ‘Dry | Kilmer's pak Root, the great kidney, fiver and bladder remedy. Why Swamp-Root Gives Strenigth Not only does Swamp-Root bring new life and activity to the kidneys, the aus? of the trouble, but by strengthen. ng the kidneys it acts as a general and food for the entire constitue | | The mili and extraordinary effectsof | thd world-famous kidney and bladder emedy, Swamp-Root, is soon reallved, It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the mosi distressing cases, A rial will convince any oné~and you ny have a sample bottle sent free by mai In taking Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root ‘ou afford natural help to Nature, for vamp-Root is the most perfect healer ind gentle aid to the kidneys that has ever been discovered. Don’t make any ‘ida Ka al ite rob | Chad tried 40 many emeadion with MH that wae 4 Siecouremed, * [few dave we Fmamo-Kont t bean 1 was out of b ut dene tine un down een | | | | SUICIDE WITH ‘ACID AND PISTOL Conrad’ Deecan, of Stapleton, + had no appetite, was dizzy fered with headache most of the time did not realize that my kidneys) were tha | of my trouble. but snehow felt tht be and | eran taking Swemp-Root ave stated. There is such a pleasan amp-Rovt. and it | §. le Waved Hand to Children re pee iene yet : take, but remember the naine, ee | ta 1 | fully recommend it to ail t, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and Then Ended His Life in siratetully youre, the address, Binghamton, N. Y, on every 21 MeDaniol &., Atianta. Ga bottle. | Bedroom. ‘3 To Prove What SWAMP-ROOT, the Great Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of the World May Have a Sample Bottle FREE by Mail. _—— | ONE DAUGHTER IS DEAD, WIFE BECAME MANIAC. EXPERT RIFLE SHOT DEAD, SPECIAL NOTICE—No matter how many doctors you have tried—no mate | ter how much money you have spent on other medicines, you really owe it to ourself, and to your family, to at least give Swamp- -Root a trial, Its Charles HH. Laird Gnesasaied to Th Misfort So Pi td i ds to-d: th ho had almost given up hope of ever becoming riends to-day are those who had almos wees beet : - " sidag ese Mistortunes 30 Freye again, So successful is Swamp-Root in promptly curing even glerye NGTC dec. T.—Charles i cases, that to prove its wonderful merits you may have a sample bottle 1 a 4.0 t rife shot and winner Upon the Man’s Mind that He of valuable tormalioe, both sent absolutely free by mail. The book the stoyal championship in’ Qould Not Throw Off the) many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from at pere as the result of and women cured. The value and success of Swamp-Root is so well known stroke of paralysis, He was born in Depression, our readers are advised to send for a (kl bottle. Columbus, O., in 187, and had bee In writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co,, Binghamton, N. Y., be sure to say that employed in the Poat-Offce De: partment] read this generous offer in the New Ts erecta World, ’ The enuineness of for twenty-five years. ss. «, | Offer is guaranteed. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what In 179) he won the Wimbieton Cup in Sowrmd Deca, & brewers of No 61) need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles at all York, which @ained him the title Broad street, Stapleton, Staten Teland, ‘ stores everywhere committed suicide this afternoon in his " ome by drinking carbolle acid and then shooting himself twice in the right the $2.01 Hilton trophy four consecu | cemple. He had heen in the depthe of tive years, He was one af the twelva | Gesponidency for a month past over the men of the National Rifle Club which |@eath of bis eldest daughter and the went th Dublin in 1880 to shoot agai |lunacy of jis wife ; | ot of the home, ; being thietegn Necpetoutive bal's-eyes Be ‘von Inatantly killed. Her mother, vt 200 yard, who had been Ml for some time, lost all Interest in |ife and family, afd three \weeks ago became so violently, insane that she was committed to aa asylum. Deecan's three surviving children, « boy and two «irle, were on thelr way J.BAUMANN & BRO. stmas aS. BUY war You NEED, PAY WHEN YOU CAN. of international champton, and he was fA the VAastrlot of ‘columbia, which won Ee FAIR TO AID THE POOR, A bagaar for the beneMt of the A. C.| H. Bisterhood of Personal Service | will be opened tr-night at Tuxedo Hall, |home* from schoo! today and waved | Pittieth otreet and Madison avenue |saw standing In a front window. He waved back to them and then left the window. Aa the children‘ entered the house they heard a pistol shot and a {This Assoelation ministers to the poor of tho lawer east sidg and ts maintained by many promincat’ charitable women moment later another one, They rato of this borough. The opening address her's bedroqm and finding | will be made by Mr. Isidor Strauss, and Hed in neighbors, With the the Hebrew Orphan Asylum Boys’ Band hed 4 sho Banpened of thirty-tive pieces will furnish a fine (0 pass, the door was broken down ani| ‘COMBINATION ROC musical programme under the direction Deecan waa found dead on the floor. A Hoole §) i353 Py ty ti an’ of Mr. Charles H. Harris, The many empty bottle, which hud contained ca: exes Forsnr tin ied bee acid, wrasped in hie left hand while in the right was a smoking revol- ver useful and fancy articles disposed of at attractive prices IANOS We purpose to produce in the Waters the best-toned and most durable pianos that can be made—and We are able to sell an artistic piano of the very highs est grade far below the average price of high-grade pianos, Send postal for catalogue with reduced prices and terms on the Waters Three-Year System, giving you three years on a piano without interest. A Three-Room Outfit for $75. Send for alist of what we give, 4 5 1 also to New Praight Cutirn cteent to Oped Seen Bore. Gus Uiberat Terme sppty Ld =] TET] Everything That’s Good in Furniture and Carpets. Would You Save 25 Per Cent? If $0, then take advantage of this Special Sale of Carpets and Rugs. A remark able concession made us by the Alex. Smith & Sons Carpet Co, enables us t0 offer their product at far lower prices than has heretofore prevailed, as follows: CARPETS. | AXMINSTER RUGS. Saxony Axminster, 87c. per yard. | 9x12 foot, at.........45 78 Regular price $1.25. | Regular price $30.00, Pr Extra Axminster... 98c. per yard. | 8.3x10.6, at........ecseeee $i Regular price $1.40, | Regular price $26.50, Savonnerie $1.17 per yard. | Royal Wilton, 9x12, at.. Regular price $1.65 Regular price $0.00, Embracing the Choicest Oriental and Floral Patterns, Ana opeaeaneeeenad Pid 9S A Home Completely Furnished Ali Three Stores; 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th St. me OPBN BYBHINGS . 127 West 42d St.,near Broadway. Until Jan'y ist. 254 West 125th St.,near 8th Ave, OLD CHUM CO-RESPONDENT, Warned in Sult of Herbert A, Rowse for Divoree, Herbert A. Rowwe, bicycle dealer at No, $6 Eighth avenue, in @ suit before Justice Greenbaum to-day saXihiatife- long friend, Wooster, who had been an almost dally visitor for the elght years of bis masried lift, suddenly stopped calling at all in 1903, and this aroused his suspicion that something was wrong, So he employed Alphonse J, Patterson to find out. Patterson told of shadowing Mrs. Rowse and Wooster by turns, and how he trailed the two together on the night of May % last to @ hotel at Bheepsheag Bay. Charles A. Rowse told how he and his brother Herbert were summoned to Sheapahead Bay and, arriving at 6 Am, surprised Wooster and Mra. Rowse, Decision was reserved ————— Getw $11,000 for Husband's Death, Charles Green, employed as'a’ cioax operator for the’ firm of Peller Brothers, was ctpshe between the elevator ond the wall and antly killed on April 4 inet. His eidow, Rachel Groen, brought an actiun in the Supreme Court through her coansel, Alfred and Charice pee kay and recovered $11,000 damages 9 death ah egninet the owner of: cir Oppenheimer and thi Pop oN eee CASH OR CREDIT. PRBEIGHT AND CARFARE ALLOWED ON OUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS, Open Every Monday, Wednesday ant Saturday Eventog, United Cigar Stores Co.’ Certificates Tt Lord & Taylor. Direct Attention to a Holiday Special in | Women's Waists, consisting of Several Hundred High-class Waists | of Repoussé and Valenciennes Laces, Peau de Cygne, Crépe de Chine and Novelty Silks, in all the fancy and new shades, including a good range of styles in black and white. These waists are in semi- dressy effects, and are alt | | in representative models. The prices in an ordinary way | would be $15.00 to $20,00, for a Holiday special we offer these, .catly put up in white boxes, At PI2.50 cach ) redeemable for sale in any quantity. Useful Holiday Presents Globe Coupon and frading Stamp Exchange, {1 PARK ROW, Opposite Post Office, Also 224 Seventh Ave., Cor. 23d S' juno WORLD WANTS WORK Broadway and Twentieth St., Fifth Ave., Nivetecath St. /(7 . MONDAY MORNING WOND m

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