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few RTI IG SHE CLAIMED MARRIED MAN AND TOOK ACID Girl Attempted Suicide in Street Near Wife Whose Place She Usurped. While William Doler, his wife and Nght-year-old gon sat on the etoop of their home, No. 179 Eckford street, Will- lamsburg, an ambulance dashed by. A Froup of neighbors came from a drug Mtore to tell Doler that a woman who claimed to be his wife had attempted suleide by drinking oxalle acid. Doter Went into the house, leaving his wife to explain that the other woman had no Tight to his name. ‘The would-be suicide was Lena Roth, who Uved with her parents at No, 208 East Fourth street, Manhattan. She had stood in front of Morgan's drug store, at Eckford an’ Meserole streets. more than an hour. Then she slipped into a hallway, drained a bottle of ox- tlic acid and fell screaming. Morgan, the druggist. gave her a strong emeuc. Bhe was ont of danger when an East District Hospital ambulance came for her, She told the druggist she was the wife of William Doler. The druggist word xo) the elder Willam Doter's re: Kiord Sureet Deler’ jiur , es d to his son's home nd tound his daughter-in-law on the stoon. Youny Doler Was at work this morn- Ing, but his wite told how the news of the other woman's attempted suicide tad been brougnt to them. U1 was separated trom my husband on Account of her,” she said. “I falling to @ woman on ihe streets, tow weeks ago, and when I spoke to him of it he said it was Lena Koth, and that she was threatening to make trouble for him unless -he went back to hi She kept her word when she drank licld yesterday and gave her name Wirs. Doler."" At the hospital was found in the “I am sorr: wrote this I I am dead there is no one t what I have done but the young maz *L have been going with for three years. He made lots of trouble for me !n that time. “When I met him Sunday night I ‘ ore him if he intended to he a man and I got a short answer. He told mu what he was going to do, and I thought it best to be out of all trouble and end my life, because I feel my mind is turn- The only thing I ask for is to arrest him, as he is the cause of my . death. “His name and address is Ve Faward Doler, No. © Mine is Lena Roth, Fourth street, New York, There in my trunk are some letters which will ive you all the information, you want him. I ask to be buried whh my Shtor Minnis, who 1s dead ‘STOCKS STEADY, TRADING ACT ‘Delaware & Lackawanna Made Another Top Record, While Other Railroads and Indus- * trials Were in Evidence, the following letter man’s waist: After an irregular session to-day stocks steadied and several of the lead- { @rs showed gains, Trading active American Smelting and Refining was a strong feature and made a notable gain, pushed from 1201 to 14, a net gain of 35-8 per cent Copper, Ontario and Western and { Mexican Central also contributed to the considerable market & shown in each ss . n Pacifle, Reading, A { f90n and St. Paul were most in demand, but each fluctuated ‘Delaware, Lackaw. continued ch- unchanged. active Nort i nt” bonds Railroad and other , and firm. The total sales of stoc! 669,100 shares, and of b bonds. were The Closing Quotations, To-day's nighewi and net changes day's final (gu aro as follows £ Amal coloring pr Satur st an | Zood- DEPEW STICKS TO EQUITABLE; WILL NOT TALK Director and Has No In- tention of Resigning. Senator Chauncey M. Depew attended to-day's meeting of the Equitable Life Assurarce Society, The committee was Depew said that he had not resigned as | a director, and had no intention of do- ing 90. Chairman Morton stated that nothing had occurred at the meeting to change Senator Vepew's relations wits the| Epitable Society Senator Depew has undergone an amazing change of heart and mind since he arrived here from Europe Saturday night and declared that he would be frank with the public con- cerning his affairs in the Equitable. In the face of his declaration made abroad that he was coming home to face ail the charges and innuendocs against him, he said flatly to-day that he would make no statement to the pub- lic now or at any other time, Nor at Any Other Time. 0, I am not going to talk about my affairs in the Equitable, I will make no statement to the public now or at any other tlme, I am going to the country for the remainder of the sum- mer, i am not Worrying su that iny health is at all impaired, as you may see by iooking at ine. in fact, 1 Was hever feeling better in my lite ‘Mr. Depew would not taik about his reported design to resign from the Senate. His entire attitude waa that Of singular reticence, ant he had un- doubtedly made up his mind sin Sat- urday night not to take the pirblic Into his confidence as he had promised the day he saned from Europe. His attitude mignt be construsd as ured defian though he spoke With peculiar firmness when he insisted vhat he would not tell the public what it wants to know now or ac any cther time, Nelther would he go Into his $2.80 contribution to “Fads and Fancles,” though it was reported that he had given the Town Topics concern this money to ward off any unfavorable re- port of his marriage, which was abou~ to take place when he made the liberai hin had Re vieing to du wi. pressui that will be brought to force him to resign from the Senate oo WHEAT ADVANCED ON BULLISH NEWS. More news of black rust caused wheat ty advance in the market to-day, this feature being suppleme 1 by bullish advices regarding Rur: ops. Wheat in all galned over a ccnt. Corn was teady with Ittle change aad only mod- erate trading. hicago wheat opened firm with a large volume of business. influenced by general ra in the Northwest and promising week os. 9 Qhening prices 9 3-8; September, were 891-2 Chicago Jl : Septemd December, 45 1-: closing prices September ‘Corn—Jul promber, 1 4 to SELLING COTTON BRINGS PRICES DOWN. Cotten opened higher to-day, the gains being from 3 to 10 points, but selling pressure soon caused reaction. The bears helped along the line by puttl of shorts r no effect the call the mar- July, 10. Sept her, 1. 11,10; . 11.16 hid’ Mareh, 11.28 bla; May tay ate i. “WR 10) 10.85 December, 16.05 8 ta aL I 11.07 to 11.0 1 Copper & It Ban. & Oni Hilyn Rap Pa ot SCHOONER A TOTAL Loss. Wreeked ive ight Salvage. Mass The vonla, wh yan re yesterday, s Wreckers to-tay ransferring ler ei at of awe It gan the Livonia will pound ng the day —— | SHIPPING NEWS, ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Bun rises 4 nee 71) Moon rinew 4.21 THE TUDE High Water Low Wate \M PM. AM 12h Heli Gale PORT OF NEW YORK, ARKIVED, Columbus Eladeiphia Curacoa INCOMING TE AMBHIPS. DUE TO-DAY Bre Mi en. Bromen. a iolis. Landon Rotterdam: RAMBHIPS. SANE TOON Nortolk, Apache, Charleston. Gibraltar Finland, Antwerp. Jefferson, Attends Meeting, Holds On as| v} Corn—September, fn the market | hat and trading con- | sin Sirtyped in Hope THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, qu Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Has} Seven Pupils at Sunday- School. | EXPOUNDS SCRIPTURES. “Boys Must Keep in Good Health: to Enjoy Themselves,” Says | Young Instructor. The Sundiy-school class of Theodore Roosevelt, ir. i# not as large as the ne taught by John D. Rockefeller, Ir., but the hov who fs In the Roosevelt | class at Oyster Bay Is proud of the fact and is ie envy of the other boys who have not the youre man for a teacher, heodore. ir. 1s still in his teons. nce he was a boy in kilts from time to time he has attended the Sunday school of Christ Episcopal Church in the Httle village on the 6ound. In ‘he warm summer mornings he has listened to the preaching and looked out of the window at the bee with no knowledge of the Sabbath and longed to be outside instead of sitting up stift and starchy whilo the minister preached. A fow weeks ago the voune man stepped from the ranks of Bible-olass nupll to take up his share of work in the parish x8 a teacher. Yesterday war fi When young Theodore, with IMs Bible under his arm, walked briskiy up the gravel path te the Sunday-sehool a cluster of clean-faced youngsters grouped about the door exctsimed | There's Mr. Roosevelt! and hurried | inside. e. Gr.. escorted his} cousin, Mi istina Roosevelt, teaches another ciase, and they chatting gavly as they approac church. The class that Theodore Roorevelt, teaches are a bright, healthy lot of, youngsters, John Duffy, the eldest, is Just eleven years old. gardener. Others are Willle Rogers, ten, whose father is n Long Island conductor; Christy Carl, ten, a | son; Herbert nk Southern, Jana eight Willie Webste: Y | q hed the respectively, drew closer to their teachers, Roosevelt's young charges almost sat in his lap in their eagerness to hear, they promptly responded: thank you.” q Inoral from the act’ of ¢ His father ts a| Canepi. most four months, je signa and the attending di new vay} at mer’s his parents entertain ten! recovery a carpenter's was stricken Wi works tn the post-office, and Allen Mor- ris, son of a storekeoper: After opening exercises the classes and Mr. He all felt, and Pretty well, rst asked them how they “That's good," said the teacher ear- his second Sunday as a teacher. nestly, “Boys all ought to be in very A clase of seven war piaced in his | 0d Health, They must take care of charge, and in the teaching of it the |‘ "\yog wir’ they assented young man displays all the enrnestanss | Then the Pre. S Son opened his characteristic of the Roosevelt family, | Bible, turvink to th cha showing the Aisporition to do well that | Mory of how Na which Is worth doing at all rosy by Elisha Aippine M times in the oda ant of E! > THEODORE Rooszevzyrr Se TR. | Fists and Clubs. Pelleving he had tried to Tessie Tee, a Chineve-American girl, Chu Chin, a Chinese Jaundryman, No, 2% Pell street, and Tenth avenue. rescued Chu Chin doth his eyes wet blackened, at Forty-fifth stres reached the laundry of a fellow-cou |tryman, Half a dozen patroimen was locked up on the girl's charge. The girl's mother was the “Pelle @ laundryman in Maoison street. | Chu Chin Stopped oped Teal Lee on Street—When She Screamed | Crowd Attacked Him with iddnap a crowd of two hundred men, women and boys this afternoon threatened to lynch of et Before the police re Nis face and body brutsed He and his clothes torn to tatters, |was knocked down and kicked and |chibbed a dozen times nefore he n= es: corted him to the atation, where he of CMnatown" and the wife of Sing Tish, Nas killed “in a Chinatown, feud ana e naman. and his puy ighment by Ell- girls) mother shu turning him into a leper. eheand now lives at No, 4" Baat teal, Getaal lad been honest : fait! thee pity. OES atroet. eacher, Would not have been 20 e sir] says Chu Chin has Iinnished... We should all ba hon-| her on her visits. to Chinatown tor fick’ at all umes." some time and to-day he met her closing the Bible the tencher had al near her home, eelsed her by the arm t A-minute chat with the young-/and demanded that she @o with him, 8 i a | She cried out i nterror and In ne ADA gyhat do vou do in winter?" | a crowd puthered and a dozen ‘men and . boys attacked th: Chinaman with fists, | fest and clubs, Chu Chin did not firht add said y Sagamore fil shedding 18 Breat spe The President hi 7 ast Bi ‘Key |NEW HOPE OF SAVING ‘BOY VICTIM OF MENINGITIS. ttle Joneph Canepi in a Trance Almost Four Ménths Takes a Good Turn 1 to The Evening World) YONKERS, July 8 Little Joseph has Jain in a trance al- again shows favor- org and hope of h wi six years ol spinal meningitis that a clot of blood is who The boy t ts though sing on his brain young Mr. ree were all cu ea otek but tried to run away. u ees | DEAF AND DUMB BOY MISSING told how he broke | Barney Neivet Left Parents’ Home when he wa d how Navangae eee] Last Monday. 10 have. ai the eaea, He,t!4 | A general alarm was sent out to-day t they could, but to be care. | DY the police for Barney Nefvet, a six- teen-year-old deaf and dumb boy, who ‘has been missing from hts home sin | Monday. ce Mrs. Canep! dec! t he boy came down from the Rome re : Dep! declared to-day that she Custodian Asylum at Rome, N.Y. to 2 8 improvement! visit his father, whom he had not sten al years, He left his parents’ Binne the] fOr seo ia Av aC. ke ke his food and tetsin it seemed | , ihe minsine, Boy J tage ands He | avaloante te fain’ At better, | wore a blue serge sutt, button shoes and ayn prateariane we) oS ee formal for. abot tre, HELD ON FORGERY CHARGE. Sudden’ mil T. Luther, twenty-eleht Mag: of Springfeld, Mass... was hefo rate Mavo, In the Centre s vv, charged by ‘the men. (hl of clgars on a forz a in $1,000 ball August borrows of the week. morning. secured under-price. own stoc | \f| Stewart Store. | Thousands of housekeepers if} announcement, whose highest accomplishments of the past. this au, || prices are not reduced. many attractive groups presentation, at regular prices, and not pay ¢ desirable kinds would ordinari cured of dollars’ worth of furniture and Philadelphia stores, Formerly A.T. Stewart & Co, This system of Furniture Sales or of years have created a vast amount of imitation advantage that assists the leader by the reflex froin the follower. by the fact that this is the last of the periodica) Furniture Sales that will be exploited in the Old visited, their stocks examine, # 8 ® ® 2 2 Store Closes at 5 P. M. Saturdays at Noon, The AUGUST FURNITURE SALE @ i 2 Splendid Furniture Exhibition---Rare Economy Occasion 22 Is Inaugurated Today a Monday from July to start the great Furniture The extra day will be needed for the unfolding of the greatest presentation of Furniture that any August Sale ever knew. are eagerly awniting today’s hopes are based only on our They will be doubly delighted to realize how much greater are the benefits we can offer Today our floors are filled with the special-priced Furni- ture. The Fourth floor presents the main showing, of course —though it holds also much of our regular stock on which The aisles of the Main floor display The Second floor has also a fine Angust is the month when the ambitious housekeeper may purchase the furniture whose cost seemed extr: vagant 1y more for it than the less ly cost. Today's splendid assemblage has not been lightly se- All the good factories of the country have been and hundreds of thousands purchased for our New York nated with us. We'll be the better p Tho present Sale is extraordinary in the number of manufacturers represented. It is extraordinary in the splendid array of popular-priced and staple lines of Furniture It is extraordinary in the unusual reductions made on many of the fine pieces from our s, which are to be sacrificed rather than move them into our new building. The great successes through a long series This brings the testi Prese | that did not pass the most er Neither did we take a piece on country. We practically dict popular-priced furniture thay HAVE THE FINEST ASSO TEMPTINGLY PRICED ST( THE PEOPLE OF NEW YO! that there are alwe Sale with the beginning Yet, in all these thousands, we have not accepted a piece | that was unworthy of our regular stocks at the full value price which is marked on the tag with the August price. cession of price as would be tempting to you as well as us, We had the pick of the best and biggest stocks in the manded, and secured, the choicest and most staple, the most There has not been time to prepare detuils today, You'll find them in Tuesday morning's papers. ya scores Of pieces—just one of o kind— choicest "plums" of the Sale, that are picked up early in the sale—rich rewards for the prompt, The entire showing is ready as you read, COME, JOHN WANAMAKE repared for tomorrow nony of flattery and the nt interest is intensified itical examination—not a piece which there was not such a con- ated our own terms, We de- t we found, and TODAY WE RTMENT, AND THE MOST. ICK OF FURNITURE THAT recery with attemnting a RELIGION CAUSE OF FAMILY WOES Insurance Man Tells Strange Story in Petition to Re- open Divorce. Thoma Carrahor, a superintendent of the Prudential Life Insurance Com. pony, to-day petitioned Vice-Chancellor Garrison in Chancery Chambers, Jersey Chy, to reopen the divorce sult deciled In favor of his wife, Jessie A. Carraher, four months a>. In his petition he ding his wife went on her knees to him and {mplored him to divorce her, saying | that If he did not her mother would | commit sulelde. He said he was a Catholic, while hie wife's people were strong Protestants His mother-in-law did not know of his! religious belief until after their wed- ding, and it was this fact that led to the trouble. Cartaher says he refused to divorce his wife and that ahe attempted suicide several times. One day, he says. he returned to their home at No. 101 Mag- nolla avenue, Jersey City, just in time to dash from his wife's hands a pack- age of arsenic which she was about to take. ‘At another time, on returning to No. 79 Beacon street, where he says he had furnished a fine flat, ne found every- thing stripped niture gone to his mother-in-law’s. Later, when they lved at Ni saie avenue, he attempted to $4 from his weekly pay in turning it over to his wife, and he says that she screamed “Help! Murder!" so that, to quote the petition, “the nelgh- bors manifested extreme interest.” Later, he says, returming home, he ma to dodge a fusillade of knife. fork and steak thrown at him py his wife He presents an afMfiday Reynolds, who 1 in ame house with the Carrahers, at No. o26 3! avenue, that Mrs. Carraher thre to commit suicide, leaving 4 lutter ac- cursing her husband of her death. Box Springs, tk CITY HAVE EVER SEEN, But remember Broadway, 4th Av. Mh & 10th Sts. Rockers Couches Sofas Fast black Hsle thread and cotton lar price 25c.;' special at in his $1.00 line all season; Corwet Covering, 18 inches wide, $5.00; to-morrow terns, value fe. to 10c, yard made; a $7 value at, color, silver handles, and his wife and fur- | of Mrs. Sarah | alieves that three days after their wed- | aud pre { | lustily | Special August Offerings in Brass Bedsteads from our regular Stock, at $22.50, 27.50, 29.50, 35.00 Formerly $28.00, 37.50, 40.00, 45.00 Brass Cribs, ranging from $22.50 to 60.00 Formerly $10.00, Full Size White South American Hair Mattress, Formerly $24.00 Exceptional Reductions in Mission Furniture From One-third to One-half Former Prices. Arm Chairs West Twenty-third Street. During July and August This Store Will Close at 5.30 P. M,; Women’s 25c. ace 15c. i fashioned feet; the principal feature is their slnstlcliy rn Men’s $1.00 Shirts, 75c. Just a few pretty patterns made by a manufacturer wh be recognized as soon as you see the label; they have aly) now .. 39c. Embroidery, 19, showy effects, 12 new designs, never sold for less than 32c., $5.00 Dress Trunks, $2.98, Made with iron bottoms, nialleable iron trimmi!ngs, strong bolts, lock and key, 30 inch size, a trunk that retails everywh $3.00 Canaries, $1. 59, Continuation sale of those Hartz Mountain, Switzerland, Canaries goes merrily on to the tune of maavifcent gavlog: member a $3.00 bird for only,............ Ati 10c. Laces, 4c, 10,000 yards Point de Paris, English Torchon and Cluny edges and insertion, 2 to 5 inches wide, slomeat 2850) $7.00 Betlseateca $4.98. Not too late to save money on these home necessities; we offer to- morrow a No, 1 size in golden oak, charcoal sheathing, $2.00 Umbrellas, 98c. For women; 100 In this lot, of cravenette cloth, siviotly waterproof id fi auragon frames, steel rods, with pearl and C.; Value $2.00, at.... " ment [THE HENRY BABY STARTED RIGHT Healthy and “Vigorous —Not Fat, but Alls tated © is a strong, Ws Vigorous enil. How 14 Months ot Wind Welgha $1 pounder He ta not i tit baby, but solid. For several morths ho Las run alone and talks ‘most ¢ thing.” We recommend Lactated fa the beat food for children,’ —M Lactate 1 restores slokly fretful t to health and st Babies thrive upon tt; they g Strong bright-cved ind Thousands of mothers who ha up large familics upon Lactated praise it; bables like it; iC ts within, the yeach of all, Very many 1 could not be etl nh wasted on other foods ruddy and strong on 1 y leading Doc lot Ask Liavtat y ding physicist and ho: pera BEST FOR BABY: The Bent Ci bo | TI > Scientific Food for Rablen. For Sale by All Reputable Druggists, Wells © Richardson Co., Propay Burlington, Vermont. Diamonds, Watches, Ty | can be had on charge accounts, at any of our ‘AIL @TORES. Positively No Extra Charge, Ki Transactions Stretiy Con idsatial, Gat or write for iikuewraned Catakarue No. 44. Si. AIDEN LANE, | x, ae Ne | New York BS. $8.75 $20.00 Side Chairs Desks Saturday at 1 o'C!oxk, some with seamless other full (19 se name neat as well as large, "2.98 wns LBD ment of pa 4ic nt 4,98 98c POPULAR CENTER x ¢ =| )