The evening world. Newspaper, June 6, 1905, Page 8

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| } iq ee The Bride, Beautifn! in Most Gorgeous Wedding Gown, Is the Central Picture in a Scene of Great Splendor—Bride- groom Goes to the Alta in Regimentals — Cere-| mony Simple and Ofi-| ciating Clergy man Gives Bridal Couple Advice— Americans Prominent at| Berlin’s Royal Wedding., After the Royal Couple Had Exchanged Rings They Took the Oath in the Civil Ceremony— Great Throng on the Streets Anxious to Get a Glimpse of the Princi- pals and Notables Who Attended—Grand Duke , Michael Gave Wedding Dress. ya INE NE NNIY 6,80 P. M.—Greut reception, supper tour of Italy, BERLIN, June 6.—Crown Prince Fred- @rick William and the Duchess Cecilia ef Mecklenburg-Schwerin were married by Dr. Dryander, the Court Chaplain, in the small chapel of the Palace at 5 @'clock this afternoon according to the witual of the Taitheran Churehy which fs the same for a Prince ag for a wubject. About naif of the four hundred per- | Bons present were Princes or Special Ambassadors of other countries, with | thelr aldes-de-camp. Ambassador Tower wns prosent os the Extraordinary Ambassador for the United States. Mrs. Tower was with aim. The other guests were diplomatiats Aeomeditd to this court, the. members | of the Cabinet, generals and admirals. When Chancellor yon Buelow took his Chief Events in To-Day’s -Royal Marriage Celebration 4.30 P, M.--The Duchess Cecilia enters the Hall of Electors in the Royal Palace, where the Crown Prince awaits her, 445 P.M.—The civil ceremony begins, only the immediate family of the bride and bridegroom attending, 6.15 P. M.—Half an hour elapses between the civil ceremony and the beginning of the religious function, In which the pomp and cir- cumstance allowed by strict observance is permissible, 9P.M—The Crown Prince and his bride leave for their honeymoon — The German Emperor, and dance at the White Hall, Place In the chapel he received the quiet congratulations of those about him on his elevation to-day to princely rank by Emperor William, After the other Persons were in thelr places tho visiting members of royal families entered, Espewally distinguished among them were the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, representing Emperor Francis the Grand Duke Michael of Prince Henry, Consort of the Queen of the Netherlands; the Duke and Duchess of Aosta, representing th King and Queen of Italy; Prince Are thur of Connaught, representing Great Britain; Prince and Princess Albert of Belgium; the Duke of Oporto, repre- senting Portugal; Prince Ferdinand of Roumania, and the Crown Princes of Denmark and of Greece, The junior members of the House of Hohenzollern followed, and finally came the Emperor and Empress, Prince Awaits Bride, Crown Prince Frederick William en- CHOATE SENDS BIG LOT OF BAGGAGE. ‘Thir on Casen, Six Craten, rriages and Two Horses on Minneapol On board the Minneapolis, which ar- rived to-day from London, was the bag- Two wage of former Ambassador Choate It consisted of thirteen ca. aix crates, two c: yes and two horses. { On the manifest of the vessel was a marble bust consigned by Rysley & Company to 1u Root Some of the cabin passengers w Robert P. G. Bucklin, O. P. Conant, Arthur R. Clark, Miss Zoe P. Blair, Andrew Douglas Kitchner, Francis H Leeeett, Col, John H, Minns, A. A. | Mudge. Percival S. Penfield, Allan M Peofeld, Mrs. W. B, Pic Miss Panny Ross. Mrs, Gorham P. Sargent, Mies J ¥, W, Sim. Another Te i Div. r. LONDON, June 6. Mr, and Mrs, Cay- endish Bentinck gave a diiner last night fat thelr residen Richmond Whitahal!, in honor the new Amerioan Mra, and Miss Roid tinguished comy the Duke of P Duchess of N other titled perae of Whitelaw Reid, Ambassador, aad There nt, wa b and numerous Anarchists Expected, ROME, June 6.~The Italian potier jon that some Ttallan An- ft the United States for nave been taken to watch have infor archists hay Taaly, Steps PHS Ne Positions e Stores Hon LAST WEEK | 2 through Aorning Mold. Kanis. | E DOTSON DISPUTE THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 6, 1905, tered by a side door of the chapel and walted at the altar for the Duchess Cecllia, who, on the arm of her brother, the rejaning Grand Duke of Mecklen- burg-Schwerin, and followed by ladies and gentlemen-in-waiting, had left her Napoleon B, Dotson, a promoter. She charges jll-treatment and abandonment, Decision was réserved. Counsel for Mrs, Dotson sald that TAKEN TO COURT, Wife Charges that Husband Has Tried to Force Her to Bring a Collusive Action fo Divorce. | | collusive divoroe suit against him, pron. | Mrs. attorne to-day applied the Supreme Emma R. Dotson through her to Justice Glegerloh in Court for alimony and . H, Twells, H. B. Spelman and | counsel fees pending the result of her action for @ separation, brought againat June 6—Charles J, Will succeed Paul More yon the late binet on t Roose- WASHING snaparte te | Received by the Pope. |Nathan Hale Anniversary. | EAST HADDAM, CONN,, JUNE 6— anniversary the birth of Nathan Hale was rated at Nathan Hale Park her ay dn t with the annual me ot % heoteut Soulety, Sons Revolution. Tublic commemorative exereiaes were held afies the forenoon meeting of the Modet Vmong those paailolpactinge r Got y and Miss Jan the only living de Jos ‘ in wh 0 moe t was dedicated b '. ASLAN one Span- 6 stricken day Are 26 Lo 80. we, Wickware wo of the and (reo at Panama, Kalph 1H Bow Tom Dennison Acquitted. DPS MOINES, June 6--Tom Dent ed Oak for Shereliffe in of diamon | New York comploity with | me, and he has desired to rid himse | of her,’ raver, Btotesburg & Gregg, | Changed the defendant al noted Omaha polloy King, on trial at Frank ‘worth eo eft of Sif, rea wtera tat might. the defendant had threatened to dis- pose of any property he had here and leave the State ot New York. ‘Phere have been disagroements We tween the husband and wife for some said counsel. “For this p pose he has requested her to bring a ising that Jf she will do so he will p {maintain her, ‘There are two ebiltven of the marriage, a daughter, seve anda son, fourteen years old. ‘Phis de: fendant has threatened his wife becariso she will not bring this collusive diyor2 action,” Abram IL. Plkus, representing the 4 fendant, said M . ment, the other collusive divorce thrown in as makeweights, She did n alloge that he had refused to suppo: er, nt Foreign and Telegraphic News. | Bonaparte at White House. | Gen, W. T. Wilson Dead. COLUMBUS, 0., June Ge=Gen. W.lavenue, Brooklyn, who Is a all sales | Mr. Reld had quite a long talk with T. Wilson, eighty-two years old, une of| man tor H, Mendelson & Co., of No, 23| King Alfonso, who referred to some of | the two survivors of the delegates to|Greene street, passed The World office | the Ambassador’spas t services, the first State Republican convention, | y juat when one of the amateur! At the request of the Spanish King, Ww » Was held here in 1856, died here | ha was getting busy with his Raf- | Mr. Reld presented Secretary Carter and wy. Gen, Wilson enilsted tn Ups| fies panorama, the other members of the Embassy to | isky as a private in the civi!! Mr, Sherwood looks very much Mke! tho royal visitor, ait wane out as & breveted brigas| wales: in fact, It was a very natural] Subsequently King Alfonao, escorted | EEE error for the amateur sleuth to male, vy @ detachment of Lite Guards, pro- - x Bilsstully unconsclous of the fact that |ceeded to attend th of No Warships to Be Sold. he was being pursued, Mr 4 |mase at the Recah Gado Ouateannt | LONDON, JUNE 6—Premier Balfour) walked up Broadway, At the co }at Weatminater, rmed a questioner in the House of |Grand street he first became aware jeve Was some excitement on the | Commons to-day was not aware part of eithe any warships bey \to Great Bricaii ¢ ago. American Talks on Cotton, MACHEST 16.8. 8. that any the Governmen Intention on the nd the four ships sold und Japan some time Dale, the to the Cotton Co session hea made a bi today's sea sion He suid American cotton associations had not revched the poin restriction of tne an cotton, ‘Phot sadoning, vn States doubles would be anore ready to foln the internat nal organteation, ot rence Of te tentis Chadwie ra in the Ohto Per aud was stayed pending nia fi AR t h ring of (he appeal, was filed in Ualted Auten Clreult Court of Ap TEAST. BLMHURST ls tn this elty to-day, ‘The document ON_ PICTURESQUE JUSHING BAY. very. YOIVAIINOUR horn oy | BH MORE APTA CEIVE, FOWNSITE ‘6 typewrltten pages, Tt wae at dookoted, and the came will ho t taken up &t the er 10: G0 undor the urder wiles granted th ry of sentence 0 on being only | Chill or Argentine to sell y for cons ‘firs i n pam pes engage oT MOTTA IN ITIP poet coronation of Emperor William I. at Versailies, Gorgeous Wedding Gown, The Duchess wore a wonderful train of silver brocade, made at Moscow, and rooms fn another part of the palace and passed through a long corridor hung with pictures iilustrating the glory of the House of Hohenzollern, among them being battle acenes of the time of Frederick the Great and the FERRER SENET MOTOR POP The German Empress, corsage was cut low and trimmed with dukedom of Mecklenburg-échwerin, Also, “ore ohm eee LE PANNE 7 e ———— Quoting the Biblical Text, | “Whither Thou Go, I Goest,’’ the Court Chap- Jain Draws the Life Les- | son for the Prince and His Bride in Their New | Estate—Both Make the Responses to the Cere- monial Questions in a Clear Voice—Pages Bear the Train of Dress of | Duchess. ‘Great Reception in the | Whité Hall of the Em- peror’s Palace Follows | and Is Succeeded by a and Dance in Old Cus- Revived — Later Supper Which Many toms Are Bridal Couple Start for Italy. Dr. Dryander spoke briefly beauty of jo t large tes resting on youthtut heed for {he support of faita wal vision, or then asked the Prince If tt of God's hand to have ana and to. God's) word eSs Cecilia? Jace, poe onswered "Yes." ‘The bride's vell was of old Brussuis question wos addressed to lace of great delleacy and beauty. othe Duchess, wite Cie additonal Wore a ara and the broad blue ribbon | ton of “and ehey," to whieh she of the Grand Star of the 1 Order, | answered "Yes bestowed on her by the Emperor on| hese were the only responses. y \fek ws Were Lhen exch ged and the *rince Frederick William wore | bri: and brid om knelt while jithe light blue uniform of a major of | Dryander read the Liturgical Prayer, the First Foot Guards, with red and | closing the ceremony, which had taken white facings. Across his breast was | precsely twenty minutes, the light blue ribbon ot the Wendische Crown, the Inghest decoration of the} the Prussian Order of the Black Eagle, “Whither Thou Goest,’” The service began with the Cathedral The Civil Ceremony, ets adjacent ty the palace dd during the service a for hours before, although nothing waa emt the arrival of tho vhelr apart- choir, high up {a the clreular gallery | 45 around the dome of the Chapel, aing- Ajeet Ing in double quartet “He Shail Give pt it occlook In Roo, His Angel's Charge. What iy calied (he Electors’ it Te te file wrivilewe of the pastor ac-|belng administered by Minister von cording to the Luthern mite to rend | Wedel. . elther one of the several admonitory Ths Bride's Gowns, laddresses to the bridal couple or to make one of his own, Dr, Dryander| To-night ta the great reception, sup- dlested to, lay aside tho book, king | per and dance at the White Hall The ax his subject the Book of Pua. Chaps | festivities there Ne ee ur tens Pea GOR) eee Sixteen mie eetener | Grown Prince and hia bride will leave on @ honeymoon tour of Italy. ‘or whither thou goest I will go. PRIDE CROQIL the gift of the Grand Duke Michael, was borne by two pages. The em- broideries on the train, which was near- ly fourteen feet in length and seven fect wide, wore done after the designs of Prof, Doepler, in pink and allver, The hodn't the faintest {dea A moment later the youth approached with falter- ing footsteps and eaid timidly: “Can you ‘tell me waere St, James street Is?" Mr, Sherwood couldn’§ but [ Was about to tell the youth ‘some other things when the latter suddenly scented danger and trembling violently and, turning alternately white and red, he Managed to stutter forth: “You “are the mysterious Mr, Rat- es of The Ivening World.” | ‘A grent light broke over Mr. Shor- woot and he had a good laugh, The polloeman Mughed and so did’ sevoral Others, but the youth with the Rafe fever ‘was heart broken, He was ab: rohitely certain that he had the right man, ANYBODY CALLED YOU RAFFLES YET? Mr. Sherwood Was “Sleuthed” | by a Young Man for a Long! Time, but It Ended in a Hearty Laugh. —————— KING ALFONSO MEETS| AMBASSADOR REID. Young Monarch Mekes Much Americans, and Embasay sto Are Presented to Him, If you Jook anything at all Ike the ot | mysterious Mr, Raffles of The Bvyen- | tng World, tt will not be well for you 0 lol 1 wildins eee ee ae sea NEL HaInk | LONDON, June 6—The King of Bpain number of ambitlous young hunters | opened a long programme of engage-| after Mr, Raffles's $100 note, who are | ments to-day with the reception of the | morally certain that several timea a| Diplomatic Corps atBuck Ingham Pal- day he visita ‘The World office, and/ ace. All tho Ambassadors and Minta- they wait outalde to catch him, armed | ters now in London, with the staffs of the Embassies andL egations, attended, Including Ambassador Reld and the other members of the American Em- basay, graphs | Raffles | with coples of all of the po that have been printed of Mr fn his various poses. William L. Bherwood, of No, 108 Lew 1 | way there, caused by mombers of the ti that he was an object of unusual inter- | escort being thrown, owln, i 0 ent to some one, A pale-faced youth | horses slipping on the wet Mephai, darted in front of shim, rapidly soanned Sa NOU ie 1! his features and then consulted a ple- ture he had in his hand. ‘Phen he ran behind him «and took 4 look there, Ho alvo got a look from the sides, and by the time Mr, Sherwood reached Broome street the youth had made five ctrotes around Alm, Sherwood couldn't Imagine what was the matter, and his curiosity waa Sudaen IM, Court Adjourned, Becauso of the illness of two justices of the Court of Special Sessions, Brook- lyn, adjournment was taken veaterday Wntll to-morrow. Justice Keady, ached. \wled to be on the benah this week, is sick at his home. and Justice Courtney, who was to take his plac ‘ ——oO" “(DER EMPEROR AM 1.’ BY WALTER A, SINCLAIR, Ler Kaiser of der Vaterland You bet he iss a pippin, He paints and sculps to beat der band, In all games he ise dippin’, To-day he's bossing all der show Of lords und ladies high, One phrase he hass to make it go— “Der Emperor am I.” Cecelie wants her dress made 80, But Wilhelm wants it thus, And to her plan he thundered “No!” And raised an awful fuss. | In vain dit Fritey frown and tret, | In vain dit Cecelle sigh, For Wilhelm sait alreaty yet— “Der Emperor am 1,” He bossed their entrance into town, And for a little starter He had the duchess in her crown Distributing hor garter, In this and many other ways He butts into the ple And te all protests only says— “Der Itmperor am 1," L’ENVOI, Oh, duchesees, you have to learn To sinile and “hold your jaw," No matter how your cheeks may burn, When Wilhefm’s pa-in-law. No Time for Anything Bls: (From the Bt. Louly Post-Dispateh,) If Mr. Rockefoller proposes to argu tha matter of the ‘honosty of his busi news methods ho had better drop all other busines: yore than ever piqued when he discov. ¢ the youth talling exoltedly to a ie man on the corner, ‘The polic {| man was evidently urging him on to do 1} something, but whet Mr, Sherwood Call and IF U mente trom WANT TO MAKB MONEY or Secure an Ideal Place to Live SEND POSTAL FOR CIRCULAR AND VIEWS onoe “(i NEARER THAN BROOKLYN. li Bankers hand and jort Corp. TU RT ed See ITF FOR LISTS OF Goons, Make eal 0 #4 Be Bt Anart MEDICAL EXAMINER Of the United States Treasury Recommends Pe-ru-na, Prominent Physicians __Indorse Pe-ruena, R. LLPWELLYN JORDAN, Medl- eal Examiner of the U. 8. Treas- ury Department, graduate of Co- Jumbia College, and who served three years at West Point, has the fol- lowing to say of Peruna: ararstudero you for the bene- fit derived from your won- derful remedy. One short month has brought forth a vast change, and I now con- sider myself a well man after months of suffering. ‘*Fellow-sufferers, Perunal will cure you.’’—Llewellyn| Jordan, Doctors have been catarrh remedy because ry catarrhal diseases have puzaled the med- foal fraternity for many decades. More prominent physicians use and in- dorso Peruna each year. Dr. A. Morgan, 314 Gater street, In- Cianapolis, Ind., writes: ‘(Regular physicians do not, as arule, indorse patent med- icines. I have, however, found in my practice that Peruna Is a notable exception and not at all like any other medicine generally sold as ‘patent med- icine,’ “Tn examining tt I find th cclentifically prepared medic! com: boved of herbal remedies of high medi- oinal value, "It {9 a specie for catarrh of the hoad, lungs or stomach, @ fine remedy for female troubles, and invaluable to mothers and ebilitr ‘After fevers or other protracted {ll- ness It {s one of the ‘best tonics I know of to restore the system to normal con- dition and I recominend it to conya- lencents, “(Allow me to express my| Ipath it fn a DR, LLEWELLYN JORDAN, | Medical Examiner United States! Treasury Department. t ik a high-olase for young and old.” i Peruna occupies a unique position tn medical aclence. It 1s the only internak systemie catarrh remedy known to the Medical profession a Catarth is a systemic disease curable only by systemic treatment. A remedy that cures catarrh must alm directly at the depressed nerve centres. This is what Peruna doos. Pe-ruena Contains No Narcotics, One reason why Peruna has found family remedy, good ‘A. Morgan. permanent use in a ” many homos {x thatvit ' contains no narcot| ot ki une is perfectly harmie: It can be use any length of timo without acquiring a dru habit, Peruya does not produco tempore: results. It fe permanent {n its effects, It has no bad eflect upon the system, and gradually eliminates catarrh by removing the cause of calarrh, Thero are a multitude of homes where Peruna has boon used oft And on for twenty years, Such a thing could not be. p it Peruna contalnod drugs of a narcotle ngture, " OUTFITTERS TO MAN AND BOY ust Right For arly Summer As pretty a lot of SUITS for little men as you ever ‘ ay, ote ete Gy) and they're priced Just low enough ‘o be tempting. You can’t go amiss i They'll tast ali summer, li is FS SAILOR BLOUSE WASH SUITS, in neat stri Roane in Bata ookaed) neat striped galatea, also madras collats. 0. mm pam ey 49c to 95c ETON BLOUSE WASH SUITS, tn white duck or pique, crash and unbleached linen, also in the newes! 75¢c to $1 50 shades of madras cloth,, BOYS! SHIRT WAISTS AND BLOUSES, a large varlety to choose mt) A from, including percales, cambri¢ and OM Bde and white 69 West 14th Street, b % by Stripes and fancy figures; sizes from-3 to 14 ic to $1 wi sth sss aia recanted sereenes year vv 88 t0 fy

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