The evening world. Newspaper, June 17, 1905, Page 3

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DITION ay EVENING’ [FINAL EDITION Lean she News, PRICE ONE CEN lean cAll the News. “ Circulation Books Open to All.”’ WOMEN INA PANIC ON BLAZING LINER + Fire Starts Among the Cotton Bales as the Kansas City Is Coming to New York and Passengers Are Frightened. . . NEW YORK, JU STREET DECLARES HE WILL WED GIRL WHEN HEIS DIVORCED a 17, 1905. aa EDNA MILLER, STREET’S FORMER TYPE WRITER, (Posed to-day for an Evening World Stall Photographer.) TRIED TO KILL TWO, THEN SHOT HERSELF DEAD Girl Commits Suicide in Third Avenue Store After Attempting Murder. my i Pretty Edna Miller, in Luxurious Harlem Apartment, Tells Her Story of Steam- ship Company President’s Attach ment--Others Call It Infatuation. Insanely Jealous of the man who had paying her attentions for two and who had ay her last night by golng with anovher girl, Miss Minnte Btoes bwenty-noven years [old to-day shot and ¥illed herself tn the shoe store at No, 190 ‘Third avenue, [after snapoing a revolver theea thes at her sweetheart, Louls Mayers, man- Jaser of the store, and at another ¢m- |pioyeo, | Phe young woman, who was a dress= maker and an accomplisied planiste, | pre of face and figure and a fash- Jonable dresser, lived with her parents, Mr. and Mra, Paul Stoerner, in a flat- house at No, 19 Hast bighty-ninth strect, For (he last two years she had heen recelying the attentions of May- thirty years old, who Hyves at No, ')M8 Lexington avenue, Avoording to her parents and to Mayers, @he hue always boon very Jealous of the latter, although no engagement had been an- eet ‘The steamship Kansas City of the Savannah Ine got Into port to-day, with @ fire raging among the cotton bales and turpentine casks in her lower forward hold, and her sixty-eight passengers hotfooting it up and down the decks to find a place where they could get away from the terrifig . heat. With hatches closed, ventilators stuffed up and large quantities of steam being pumped into the burning section, the crew mannged to keep the flames from getting further headway, but {t was a stiff fight and w hard one because of the heat, which made it impossible to live at all on the forward part of the ship. When the fire was first discovered and Capt, Lewis had no idea ‘fof Ite extent, every Ife-boat on tho Kansas City waa swung out on the davita and slocked with food and water for use in cage It became necessary to use them, ‘The Kansas City left Savannah on Wednesday night with an unusually 1 passenger lat, Shortly atter 0 o'clock this marning she anchored oft Barnegat on account of the fog, and tt} was then that the fro was first dis-| covered ile Mos jat r | the ment, tions Yea, Thin n to an r to-day, with y her mother "T haye no tsnnotle Influence over Mr. Street, T have never had any such ‘ower over anybody, and It seems to | We that it te a little hard to oa) or a purely platonic friendsip, | simply friends; nothing more, | pnown Mm since 1 was a lite | We all fh in Jersey. quite | ne another, and he knew me krew older 1 came to know Ubetter, 1 met hin mornings trains. ‘There Was no harm. for after all, Lam only @ girl Ja mere child. Lots of young girls who Jcome into business every morning |the trains get to know the gentlemen | |who travel on the some trains. 1 phever heard of any m coming of it In the girl's state. Evening World re- frequent interrup- Lying pital to-day and head of ¢ pany, whose n seve! te typew has | prospects and left his wife aud ven dependent on t arity relatives, told an Lvening We | | na ded Int James: es » Ply Street, organ! euinship Com for pretty infatuation Edna ruined bis M eneye BIN some of the Cay women to the pante-state , Headed for New York, AS on 44 porsible Cup) Up anchor and headed toe Nowy eed aded for New ¥. fast wa tho engines could go. tte pide Up ihe tug MoArdin oft ite Leland she came’ along with him, Near the | Hook sity picked up several othor orages Which turned and went In alongside Of 1” her, Lowls, Where G ‘OF porter to-day that he would surely mare ry the Miller givl he could get a divorce from his wife or she got @ divorce from him He added to-day dings in the cou cif as Presiden of the Str @bip Company, & porition which thy Btceamship people cluim he resigned at their request some weeks ago C.F, Gregory, of the Inte Harvester Company, the giant in ROOM AK Rs us U ers, M w ur B f ts In on c nounced, Her Joalousy led her to suspect that she was not recelying @ll of Mayers's | atten and last might she played a At Quarantine Capt, men had ‘been iigiting the fire all WAY, Kent word to have nssistinoo him at the Pion at the foot of Spring feet, and when. the a roots and when th neas City ate national . | which is one of the backers of the Bireet Steamship Company, and which J. P, Morgan Is interested been selected president inp! Btreet. It was Gregory who pursued Btreet and the Miller git] to Pine i in e Catakills, and saya that he th e red 8 8 resignation, Girl Knows His Love, Following ia Street's statemont: “Edna Miller js a pure, good girl and % mean to marry her, We friends only now, although she knows of my dove for her and js ready to marry me when Iam free. Of cours) we marty now, but as soon asa divorce |b granted we will wed “LT have known Miss Miller since ahe was four years old, She Is a good, pure girl, no matter what they say of her, She never answered telephone ealis from my wife at our office, an in stated. And I want to say not paying the rent of the Gresham Court apartment she and her mother occupy, of contributing in any way to heir living expenses, Tie haa ben forced from his position as head of the steamship company; In fact, has lost prestige In all the bu enterprises In which he was engaged his wife and alx children are penntloss and dependent upon tno charity of a has of maiden sister of the foremr, who keeps| @ boarding-house in Englewood. whilo Btreet himself is now in the Polyclinte Hospital slowly recovering from an op- eration for appendicitis, which almost cost him his lite, Meanwhile In the fashionable Gresham Court apartment-house, at One Hun- @red and Fortleth street and Lenox avenue, lives Edna Miller, the pretty @'rl who la responsible for the undoing ©f Streot. Bhe Ic known there an Mrs, Btreet, and has attracted a great deal of attention among the other tenants on account of her great beauty. Hana Miler and her mother were soon @t Gresham Court to-day, The girl ts very benutiful, She looks even younger than seventeen years. She is tall and willowy, with perfect features, perfect figure, big blue eyes and a wealth of golden hair, Mrs, Miller 1s a atout, Bquare-Jawed woman, and any one mvho approaches her daughter has to deal wih her first, The apartment in whioh they live is the best in the fiouse and ts furnished lavishly, The girl has attracted attention, as well foy jhe mugnificence of her gowns as to Aer great boauty. Platonic, Says the Girl. Bho Is the daughter of the late Dr, William Turnbull Miller, who was @ prosperous dentist at Palisade Park, N. J., and a highly respected man, The Birvets always lived at Englewood, N, J., three miles away, and although the Girl and Street both claim that the fam- flies were old friends, Mrs, Street says it 1» not so, and that Streot first met the girl coming to business mornings on an Erle train, Mrs, Street. with her confidence tn her husband still strong in spite of the harsh treatment she has received, at- tributes the situation to some hypnotio influence, When Edna Miller heard this to-day she laughed long and loud WOMAN'S STUDY OF THE PRETTY By Emmeline Pendennis. “Bir J, was old, and her hair was gold end ber cyes were a deop cerulean,” is & very ola story, but Edna Miller | strongly denies, not only that she and James Street are anything more than friends, but that Mrs, Street's assertion thet her husband's infatuation for the girl is basea on hypnotic Influence is More than the pitiless invention of a Jealous wit ‘When interviewed at her home Gresham Court, Miss Miller ahook h golden head in perplexity and looked Ql! that fe childishly injured from ceru- Jean eyes as she pondered helplessly, J'How the atory ever started?” s Miaa Miller Is @ pretty type of blonde. teat small ond exquisitely eae trust | | | {n cannot} that I am/| Became Stree.'s Typewriter, “Mr. Street jiked me and I liked him. T had @ position as typewriter that I Qid not Mike very well. I apoke to a friend of nilne, knows Mr, Street, about making & change, and he sald | Would gee If Mr, Street could noth me to something better, He did speak | fo him, @nd shortly aftempard Mr. Btreet dome he had a for mo in. the rhev Gompany, of which he was then Matt time he was about to or- Rallze the Street Blaamehip Company and he told mo that I could break in with the Barber Company and that if company with him as' worked ‘hard to please r last I got the me one is now trying to ruln Mr and they are uring me as a mea They say Tam known as Mra aN et he ly known as Miss “ina toname, Mr » who Is largely responsible ofr | Street's troubles, has always been mean to me and I do not believe he ix Rood friend of Mr, Street at When we came to New ¥ rst to No, 20 Seventh avenue; then | We moved ere, Mr. Street Ia a. ft ‘vent visitor here. Why mhouldn't he her We are old friends, Of course he omes here very often. Was with Street at Catskills, “And he! % svelcome,"’ put in Ris Miller, “We think a good deal at Mr. Streot,’ But Juat oay that ono mare LENS Ms ever contemplated, OF course That yeeteet had a divorce from his wite {hat would be a different thing, and 1 on't say that ro might not de a putiat nt no marriage is “It is true that whe i nT wos dir al frat ut ine Ht in the Catakill 14 that “Ki Street eae there, Tt ts true ha ¥ came snoo} | BXvund there and found us, but 1 rant 0 MY that never saw Mr. Street there’ when some one ela. ws not around. Now, thit is all there Jato | Sy. oxcerting thar when I realtzed this Niele thing was coming out, T went othe hogpltal and saw Mr. Btreet. | told him the situation and he aald’ we ft we went ould, have to lvt it come out it "And Just may that 1 pero, raid Mra, Miller, i hie tn my ne, not Mr. Hireet’a, HN ardour 2 though he Is n spite o! 88 Miller's te that she is kpown only as Mis (liter, no present employee at Gresham Cou or neighbor has ever known her anything but Mrs, Street. The Secret Discoveerd, There 18 no telling how 10 . rangement right have een pa ned without exciting “the “suspicions of Street's wito ot his ome, bur for - Sudden’ iiiness that attacked. the girl ‘This illness necessitated a serious oper: ation, which wae pertormed by ‘Dr, Bante, W. yrotey,, Who liven a the q n fi of the Polyelinic, Hi ian Bo Mlesk “The girl's ilnes: med t I 1 Street’ {iterally eragy,” bald Dr. ‘Povey in frankly explaining ‘hin. connection With the caso to an Hvening World ro: reer. "Why, one night In the ea of her 'ifiness “he ‘tried’ to Beat tae braina out against tho books brary, fo was literally 840—80 mulch Mo that ne mado ail kerangements ‘an Attend the ceremony, | Yet ma to penta Breet a rown-eyed woman, with a, tend, markeq deed with the tt care, There Is an alr of breeding ach quality: shout her that suffering ‘eannot spel” Four of her little e Braupad about her wien tHe elas Paul of her sister's homo Btory on the Sn, Paste wso “Yer, it {8 absolutely ti been abandoned by my aid. This «irl, Hana Miller, has hynoptl him, No. better-man than my heaband ever lived. No woman ever had a more considerate, affectionate husband than had I before this girl came into his lite, rue that Wuaband ake TYPEWRITER. | cheoka,’ that dimple as she smiles, and that ts frequently, for her mouth |1s singularly mobile, Her fguro ts tall [and the and graceful, her (manner aulet and sweet, and her voka low- pitched and softly modulated, In dress her tastes are apparently plain, She wore to-day an embroidered White shirtwalst and stock and a plait- ed black skirt that were Puritan in thelr neatness. Her cojftuere, too, evl- denced an effort at simplicity, Halr that te naturally curly and rogulsh was |eeverely, parted fn the middie and |wathered back into the back of her head, Wi ith dees Miss Miller's only ornaments were a mall norogramed heart whape locket, & walvh and @ class pin of the Hack- Bohool, from which 1908. ‘Tite last Btreet's caroer. an ence?” ventured the reporter, ee Miller certainly it Zor have bewitched othor charms than those all women as a feminine Byengall, fant it. upon Mr, Street, who is penevolen| protector and no more "E wish I could find out how the atery started,’ nail Oy xirl, puckering her brows and looking out In indigna- tion from earnest eyes framed in long gold lashes, “I think 1 know, and 1 am only waiting to get evidence ot what I suspect bas been the cause, Then I, shall begin my revenge “It is very trying to have to suffer the notoriety of fo hurttnl a story My mother is a wilow, and we two are defenseless, We haye not even a lawyer to advire us “E am confident has originated tis Is the very person who has for years | been doing his best to wreck M Iam simply a vietim | Personal animosity | that the man who scandal avout me | f another man, for "my. friend, Uxdone wo Knew of our ass tlon could Call jt uther than pin rsnnenie: not even platonic love. freee das yee, a ttleddl of Mos iat id me. e¢ has Visited us no oftency hap Mesnvenuicn adimiin, “wee "ie ho evidence, no matter v a likat ay be tirown. on nae oan iota Ar. street or myscit to criticism Witchery of a Zoraya, “We are (riends,” said Miss Miller with emphast "and how infu absurd a person bout the hypnotic “Now what could be moro than that, Do 1 look ike who could hypnotize anothe: No, in the usual sense of the word, does not. But quite comprahonsible that, like a, the Gipsy sorceress, she may her lover’ with “no ti The girl ts quite pretty enough for eh wh for But no one would ever describe hor There is nota- ing in her look and manner to war. “It te dreadful to sit here 4 { tivity while those stories run riot, nats the girl, clasping her hands nervously. ‘I know there is nothing else to do But I wish, wish, wish T could 7 the world believe ‘that this man {2 pat my lover, but my friend, And the, while i she was sneqkin “this man.” on his couch inthe Pols: giinio, Hoapttal waa protesting his lov for ha “Edna” and proclaiming his in. tention cf marrying her as soon divorce from his wife could be cured. a “SIEGE” PAPER STIRS WARSAW WARSAW, Russian Poland, June 17. | A mysterious confidential docum ant | received p yall the bighor Russian of- Neiala cf Wareaw has cuused a sensi- | whe omcta ai | Ne oMictals are directed to report to Gen. Boyalubow, Chief of the Commis. fat Department hore, where wish to go.Jn the event’ of * of Warsaw," and oJso how mem hers of their famiies they will like with them and Waa. oailokd they pio Bore to travel on” i There ie much speculation as ta wh significance in_attachible te te wor | lege,’ and every one ia at a loss to underdtand the reasons notualing, the @rowar, but it ta Known, that batds of voughs Nave been organizing wth th view of nillaging the home of eh el |. fens, and the palice warned the Russ flan oMicials to wend the'r families away AA A meamure Of safely Numbers of mone are denositine ther valuables Ii the banks and are | fentiring Mayavorts in readiness to leave at short notice, | {that tured in the Bowery ac DEATH, CHAUFFEUR, FINDS MORE VICTIMS + Motorist Out for a Good Time Breaks a Man’s Back, While Two Girls Are Dumped Into a Ditch and * Seriously Injured, Three more victims of antomobile accidents have been added to the long Hist In the city hospitals, Dominico Zeto is dying in Gouverneur Hos- pital with a broken back, He was run down on the Bowery, near Houston street, early to-day by an automobile driven by William Wheltley, n pro- fessional chauffeur, In the Jefferson Market Police Court to-day Magis- trate Cornell held Wheltley in 3500 ball for examination next Monday, Mary Phelan and Mary O'Connell, pretty saleswomen, are suffering from serious injuries in Fordham Hospital, the result of an automobile accident, and the police are searching for 1. E, Edsall, another professional chaufieur, who is said to have been driving the car in which they were hurt. In one of these accldonts at loast the found the machine late yestorday, automobile was being wsed by the chauf-! was traced by the number to Mr. feurs without the perml sion or knowl-| ert, and Inquiry at Fordaam Hospital edge of his employer, A. M. Brom-| bruugat out the story of the wrecks ell, Sesretary of the Munson Steamship The Bowery Accident, pany, $9 the owner of the machiac| mo powery accident ovcurred shorte Ident. He ‘ refol ivbreak to-day in front of Will ald the authorities rogocutin| ‘ 9 Hh CBP SAUUAD ELSE UN BEUR u 8 restaurant, on the Bowery. Wheltioy, 1. J, Rickert, a real estate| Hosnito the hour Wheltley, tho ehaute operator of No. 1 West Thirty-fourtn | gory, AHat He wae bringing tha street and No, 11 Broadway, owns the) machine A vaHAIS BROW IND RRIS machine in which the Phelan and) ty, O'Connell girls were hurt, Miss Phelan!) With made a statement to-day that she and Miss O'Connell were really the guesta of rKe Rickert, a son of id that he, was n the aceldent occurred. Tho Owo latest accidents will probabl lead to some dmastic action on the par Of automobile cwners to protect machines from thelr chauffeurs. Near. ly every automobile acefdent at nig in and about thia elty attended by loss of Nfe personal injury ig caused by the recklessness of a professional ehauf- four, of Instances It has bi t the ehauert «| were ton of vy friends withou knowleds. r eniph Late automobile Was w nue, new the Parkway was running it steered tt Miss Pholan's skull was fractured Miss O'Connell's jaw was broken, A inan d the girl, one at a time, to Fordham Hospital, He gave the namo of ll and explained that he had met with an accident, When the girls had been taken to a ward ho| Chauffeur Wholtiey's guests,.in thetr Gisappeared, saying he was going to spectacular uniforms, leaped from the look after the maohine, ‘The accident | machine and legged It at thelr best gait Wan not reported {0 tho pollo, and | into a side street. As the chauffeur got Rothing wae ora, @f it outside the down trom his car he waa nabbed by « a says > It Pick- Wheltley in the the uniform. of I who, according were very noisy r vietin var years street, He was Hospital after from under (he ear, suffer om broken back and Internal Infurtes: Zeto and Dominico Tonto, also of No, Spring street, were pushing a low. Nat curt, piled with bags of paver, ajong © troney trac ie Bowery when the auto came fying up pehin’ them. They wore in from of Lyones restau. rant whon, hearing the chugging of tho machine behind, they turned from the wy track. Pho chauffeur turned at the ume Lime, the hue machine descend- ing Upon the cart and grinding tt to plecos. Zero fort great car passed over him, Tonio ju ed to one side, but was hit and hurled twenty fect, escaping, however, with no further hurt# than a distocated shoul- der, r were’ two toh Hix > witne too, fs Domi of ken Toto pring | y| he f ne vi th night the Rickert! ¢ kel in Jerome ave: The man who to a diten, and amid the wreckage and the | p> | |large white ploture hat the young wom toctive and shadowed the store manager and another woman to Ninetleth atreet and Lexington ayenue, where she con- fronted them, During the violent scene that followed Miss Stoerner pulled the other woman's hair and attempted to Assault Mayers, whom she upbratded tn stvong terms, The man and his com panion magaged to escape on a north bound Lexington avenue car, Prepared to Kill. This morning Miss Stoeraor kirsed her father good-by after breakfast and left the house, saying that she would return goon, Mr, Btoernor notiend that his daughter was unusually agitated, but did not learn why, Attived in @ hand- some cream-colored outing sult and a au entered the shoe! store. Mayers at the Ume was behind a sereen in the rear of the store, Ho started toward the middle of the store to meet hor, when #he pulled out a 82- calibre revolver and pointed it at him. “You don’t love me any more and I'll kill you!" screamed the frenzied wom- an, As she spoke she pulled the trig- ger, but the cartridge tailed to explode, Mayerg ran toward the rear of the store shoyting for help, As ne ran she again pulled the trigger, but again the cart ridge failed to explode, Thomas Hickey, of No, 312 East One Uundred and Sixth street, a salesm employed In the stoge, hearing yer! cries, ran upstairs from tho basement, where he had been working. As he ran into the @lore Miss Stoerner, angered by the repeated failure of the revolver to work, puinted the gun at him us he started to order her from the place, dacre Wis & sharp click apa again a detective shell prevented ‘a murder. Shot Herself Dead, The determined woman wien pointed lovoiver at the screen benina waien Mayers Was cowering and again a chick aiwveu 6OUe LUO HUW tad NOL eA jioded. With @ ory of thwarted rage the gir! placed the muzzle of tne revoiver to ici Pieust und agin pulled the trigger, Unie time there Was & sharp report and she fe to the Moor, dying almost in- in a Har- mulance and pros d. The t ay One Mundred A and detectives Ase, told his story pondea Hospital yoed the wom taken to the i and Fourth street ata werg sent out on the oon as he pad disappeared from the neighbor- hd tie police Were orde: to acarch for him to detain him in cus tody as a whtnesp for the Coroner, al- though no. suspicion attaches to jm, Later, when Coroner Scholer arrived, Mayors returned, but was not held. The Lather and etgter of the suicide called, (ater at the Bast One Hundred Sha Mourth, street station and raked to gee the body. Beret, Powers directed them. to the Harlem Morgue, where Coroner, Scholar ordered “the corpag taken. ‘Dey said they would get an lindertaker and arrange for the burtal, They, were shown the revolver and shuddered. when they saw it. Tt was Anew weapon and had evidently been Purchased by tho young woman very fecently for the purpose she partly car- ried out this morning been walking on tho sidewalk, keeping pace with Chu cart iis browher wus pusite 1B. Poor Women Ald. ‘There were & score of more poor al wiv entvanee of Lyon's 1 e walling Lor tne bread dispe: awh, Lhey rushed wo tue anjured man, who Breas MBONY, wid woile on Acad "In ner lap. th Y wuld to reheye nis Surgeon Hasty apri un Mu CONVERT TTRT OCT i k Was GroKen und saat ney injured, The wai bulance doctor said he Would die within w tow hours, Taougn Whe idont Was not far was Ut the ear in Brooklyn ¢ hip town, Mr, Bro hone by an Evening W tor he declared that. Wheltle had hia. permission to take ous the automobile, Ho sald he would ald in the prosecution of his chauffeur If It could be snown that he was In any | Way careless. New Yorker Fined, STAMFORD, Conn., June Paces ac} Jey protested that the | WAvOldable and that he running. the ear above she was locked up in ation, He sid from a repair kis employer ny the the he shop nell was called up on nid te) had coast, Who has be Thorne, a nker from "h Hie oa sex ve ‘Tonio, who had ‘The captain Jost no time in having an Investigation made, It didn't take him long to learn that the ship was actus |.» ally on fire, Hoe had the crew beaten to quarters as quietly as possible, and ¥ force and the free boa MoClellan” Were he Sac a Affor the flremen hac vr some time, they the fra about ‘out, hever, tt started ‘again had been wong! hourht the A iittle inten’ nee than’ ever, A fireman of. th AL an of the George B. MeClellan opened one hatehes and Aiscavered that 200. fe th eT wand fark ef the hold, Ablaze, An alarm was turned In more firemen ‘nd several eompinte Tived, “Soveral sireams Ww non turned into the bold and the fremont .then made be 4, ter headway against the mere ‘ around tho ‘pler and the Macdougal Street police had to sond for iifty extt reserves, On accocnt of the turpent! And other inflammable materials in tho cargo it way feared that there might be an.explosion, and the crowds wero driven to the east side of West street, where regular fire Maus wero estat: [XZ\ look at any collar advertisement and if you find it tells ‘ou how sclentiically it is made and fails to tell you of the material it ip. made of, you can rest assured those collars aré made of cotton, No collar at 1Sc, Is linen unless the word “Linen” {8 on the collar, no matter wheretelse you see it. Demand Triangle LINEN" Collars). f Your haberiasticr, ay wwrite-for “Intormatbon fred then sont the stewards through the staterooms to rouge the passengers and get them dressed and on deck. 9 Before many passengers had been callel, however, the noise of boats winging out brought a number to tho decks, Tho hysterical ones were + lenced with difioulty, Many of the more excited of the women hed chil- dren with them, hese olildren were almost as hard to handle as their parents, but the male! pusengora acted splendidly and worked with the crew to reassure everybody. Just one man among the passengers lost his head, He had three ohildren with him, amd when he heard that thel 4 ship Was on fire he grabbed the children, rushed jnto the main cabin with them und fell an dis Knees to bray, "I don't care for mysulf, but save tho children!” be orled. Ho was ex-, orting heaven in eloquent Hon to save tho children and himself and ot- fering to confess everything wrong that he ever done, When some other wassengers grabbed him and yanking him to his feet, managed to suppress him. His fright was rapidly reducing HOWARD GIB, OF BROOKLYN FIRM, DEAD. of Loeser & th crowd gathered on and and Well Known Ciab Member, Died in Paris, Friends and relatives of Howard Gibb, @ managing partner of the firm,of Fred- erick Loosor & Co, of Brooklyn, re- celved word to-day that he died last night In Parts, ‘The case of death was not announced in the cabled despatches, Mr, Gibb had been, married twice, His cecond wifé was Mra, Bilzabeth be Baun and the merriage created a sen- satjon in Brooklyn society circles, for, unl the ceremony was performed, ik Was not generally known that the first Mrs, Gibb, who was a Miss Burr, 0 Brooklyn, ‘bad regelved a divorcg, Mra, fe helio: formerly the wife of @ wank ¢ he first Mrs. Gibb was:marred to M, Marcel Vernet in 18 and has since made her heme in Paris, Her daughter, Minnlc, was married in 1:97 to Count Henry ‘de Moy, of Paris, Mr. Gibb was an enthustastic horse- man and one of the founders of the Brooklyn Horse Show. He was a mom: ber of the Hamilton, Brooklyn, Mans tack, scont Athletic and Riding and Driving olubs THE FRONTENAC |) Unites the twin attributes of style Skin Tortures From Pimples to Sorofula From infancy toage, are instantly relieved and speedily, per- manently, and eco- nomically cured by warm baths of Curt- curaSoap and gentle applications of Cutie curA OINTMENT, when all else fails, “Having the 'Slip-Basy" band, it tao admprably suited to the fashionable broad scarfs. It than th ally fo ““Yralat thet yourdenler supply you “Brontenae!! Collar stamped Warranted Line." a for 25¢y :} If your dealer won't ay py. you, pond ns his name, asking for hook= Jot," Linen versus Cotton,” and get collar-wise, Yet it conts yc jerlor cott HENRY HOLMES N fy 81 Union Square Weat New York 10 CARPET me GH, BRO CLEANSING . COMPRESSED AIR, Lat Us Clothe You, My Walker St. store on Broadway would cost a fortune in rent. Then, too, Lam a manufacturing clothier, Can't you see where the 334-3 more value is possible here? Moe Levy & Co., 119 to 125 Walker St., Three Blocks East of Broadwa; Branch at 1457 Broadway DBA Mother, NIGHT W Apnly, A. Kay nh, Townsend, 1198 Ledford ay. hit Heindly amd fat; white ap Under collars lont Brookjyn yesterday, owors & Bon, lyn. LAUNDRY WANTS—FEMALE. Pucing on liborad ts White 8001 Boulpvat rewari online pi |

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