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“Marry Young. Many a Man Is Sabed From Suicide \\A\SH'S WIFE (THE EVENING WORL DAWEDNESDAY. MAY 15, 1907. By Happiness of Home Life,”’ New English Pastor of Rockefeller’s Church Declares Marriage Is Always a Good Thing for Men, Though He Has Doubt as to Whether It Is Advantageous to the Women in All Cases. TALKS FRANKLY, THEN TURNS TABLE ON. INTERVIEWER. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “y marriage a cure for suicide?" I asked the Reverend Charles F. Aked,| the newly arrived English pastor of the New York church known | perhaps unjustly as John D. Rockefeller's. A Unitarian clergyman at Ithaca bad said {t was last Sunday tn a ser-! fon, claltaing that famfly ties bound @ man to earth and forbade a too! ‘sudden exit int the world where there is no marriage. ‘ Dr. Aked, who ts tall and well-built, blue of eye and somewhat sandy Of mustache, stretched his long body tn a revolving chair in his newly in- stalled library at No. 2 West Bighty-sixth street and read the olipping I handed him with some Interest. Then he said with a langh: “I should say the only for suicide would be the Resurrection morn.” f | “Yes, of cc e,” I interrupted, “one should say, Is marriage a pre over the affections of Mrs. Walsh was wentive of suicide? the tonic of conversation all day to-day} “Yes,” replied the famous clergyman, “I believe ft is. For one man fn the Brooklyn Somtown cafes. There| : ape were opinio varied as the sande) wonded te sufcide by an unhappy marriage there are a thousand preserved jon €ho shorea of Bath Beach. from it'’by happy famtly ties. Those who have known Mr, and Mrs. | DOSES Anish aac as fe Sei at ee Waleh (have (been laWware tora long winey ally nagged I inter diood vessel. Bo I concluded Lager teegd MpSem dip cece Ucn hah wesdiahengs | “What do yo. th {nagging w! le brother was in danger. But band and wife. Mra, Walsh is the daug- Around the Red tA Uttle exercise and treat ter of John L. Heine, the aged president Aked, “advanced was all I needed.” the De Kalb avenue street car line, | women are bound What do you think of the Ameri- few days ago married a atenog- un Is boing shown|can marriage?” I asked + This marriage cteated comment, | over a hospital by a young aurgeon. The seen many happy American because the bride was younger than Mr, | Bits bt a: woman who has been ‘nearly the itew: Avastin \I has Goin. Heina’s gaughter murdered by her husband ts broug In England there is an erroneous} Mrs. Walsh Hae Social Ambitions. his attention, a F | {dea that Americans have tio family gov- Teens 1. Ty Rae Ee x to Rossip of neighbors, Mrs, the victim. But th : | of ter occasionally during that time. 1 Ish is ® woman with #ocial ambi-! he pities the . by a was told that sh married @ man jiiins Her husband cares nothing for | type of woman that has to be mur- named Kine . prepared to hear Dr | told | society He Hkee-hie home ands #9 ae at the American wife with 2% and he spends whet time he can away eicsisortta mareins icine pessoa, together | from business and home at the Cree aah meant” I began. mber of that| cent Athletic Club. interpolated. tb § | Children the Rulers. ASKS HL IMONY Until the death of Mrv. Hetns, more | Men the Real Naggers. 1 the -eblldrgnit- asa repta| than a year ago, Mr. Walsh and his 7 Boe cre Aved ireh eine \ eate: | Bromaptiys chi Sens tascaen wife were apparently on the best of} 1 an home. I co I am not yet pre- terms. If. there were differences the att Peete pared to Indorse change. Feats | This was certainly | |mother of the wife managed to conceal ft {s worth piled 1 Iam @ little old-fasmioned,” dea. | T asked Ada about ft when I got | them. ' cate But you | e added, his And now," sald Dr. Aked as I arose | penis Pagurthad poet e ety MAPAseTBO: | Without her mother's guiding hand elear-cut Englls ing with an ac-| to go, “do you mind If I interview the| eae hunted up King. He swore to me that | tie tes ® magiguaes tesa parecer cemsion of cor women, don’t | interviewer?” | . + [he had never been served with papers | socially, to attend receptions and dancos caetnae ight They are the inerest| “Not in the least,” I replied ge inj FOtN Suing Her for Divorce,! in th Ne, divorse “eult. although he had | given by the younger folk tn Flatbush, ; pes 23 t worked at the wecne place for nine Valeh had amate a. The response to questions I told him my : alt . Baha soon raled her. Mr. Waleh had the same Boeeing hut tormid-|age and how long Thad been doing} ©¢ in Manhattan, One in |7Sirnis put a flaw on my marriage to| love fo me, the eame love for ath-| Abie than t uceing | 5 work. ; ia, Bho agreed with me that ft would | jet A the mime devotion to his fs a vice with as drinking Is Do you write only for The World?” Brooklyn, se ier fry wehtasl' te ne Fer aon. with ot he asked. "I thought I saw en < not seen her since, but ? pay her all: alsh's Story of the Ser , Sram ed." nt an inter. n her since, by Walsh's Story of the Scrap ‘But about marriage and suicide, Dr.’ yew of yours in another paper. It was mgey Sad counsel fees jars drome, N. Aked?” I reverte | that young aig pea 1| Justice Kelly, of the Kings County | ya! bo Be ype ys Beet tle eo | prsotiog, Aneel whero be pd inad “You speak ¢ an a’ desperate first in The Evening World ana | Supreme Court. ts an erudite jurist and | jngal will you take back your iter | tying vince his separation, Mr. Wal remedy for the Epgilsh enother paper. J the ® «allant man, so he finds himself | Dr Hays was asked “i ; y : . ecgyman’ensw ee ta, bis tone. cise welta foe sent fe coke jeg! Somewhat putsled over the cage of Ada “T cannot gee that tar ahead ¢hrough | *-day weve his version of what hep- Mystery of Retirement “That is treating the subject {P| «go nettmus, “but not 4, at sor’ = /M Kolimeyer-King-Haya, a Brooklyn | the complications,” he scab Na cape |pened to Conway's features, Mir. i Ned pantly, I bdelleve in marriage, Par-| 4 ceereg not intentionally,” I} Sooo) teacher, who ia being sued for| ates Walsa ts & tail handsome, brud-| plained by Story of Wed- tioularly for men—for, women ft t9 not} “sno tne @ivorce by two men and ts asking all-| (eae and athtetio-looking young : ri e Io good, pechape.” AlThen they Just took it I Whe the| mony trom each at the seme time. The | man, smgoth-faced and dark. He sald ding to Knoedler. wFou are rieat there.” T answered, | inerican Rawapaber story.” he added, | ¢atr detenfiant 19 on the payroll of the | APY suouldn's T bate that mast He ie thourh surprised at the admis Bat] eee iwaye belleve. I al-| Board of Education as Mine he is {oe A astld he tReatten one eee se ways sy I can re-lie on the American | Follmeyer, and teaches in the public ja man, Aer I learned of her infaiua:| Roland B. Knoedier, of the firm’ of ; newspapers. aohool at Conselyea and Humboitt | thon I agresd she should get a divorce, | 3 Knoedier & Co., art dealers, of this! ro, An with this Parthian pun we shook| gtreets, Brooklyn. 8h en with her | 1 10 keep the obtid. went to Penn- | Zovlse Theo. | hands and I came away Sareate at ara: an Wictaenih aeeer sylvanla to accept mer T Irled in | otty-end- Paris, and Mime Lovt : ——————__ In the Brooklyn Supreme Court sne| vain (o persaude her to leuve him the actress, well known to, the play | HAD NO HOMES. is a defendant In @ divorce sult prought Monday night. Twas alone hs xoing public of two continents, are de-} | = ae by John P. King, a salesman whom une ing the Giarendon when I gi ared to-day to have been married se- ; A window where the cureatha lared eae ao). T® Aged Women Arraigneg tn eorried ta metab et 5 zee mame IT saw them tn the din cretly in the Fr capital several | replied Dr, Ake - . | -reapondent Dr. Jo} aye, 0} ft my gloves, entered ies a op t yw 5 Foekvitle Court, No. 2 Bixth avenue, & an. | sree ating and called | Youre * yer eS. f 4 women who hed wandered| In the Supreme Court of New York| (Shae stapping | Edmund rider ree Petige passes b p n thelr homes were arraigned in| County the sohool teacher ts defendant ; my # wen aaked about is inet my cou the Yorkville Court to-day, The elder,|in a sult for annulment of maertago| Grandmother of the Heirc Conway Not a Good Pug ported marriage to-day, said that | wes more wor Mis. Maury Baumshett, eighty-three| brought by Dr. Hays. In support of his| ; = He is a big, stout man end should | all vews to bir, wed oc diye. ThOO ‘ re old, was found doddering along | application he has filed an aMdavit Trying to Forget She 4 mare strength tan T eve a9 the | nesra hie brother epenk of Mm ‘Avenue A, near Tenth street, She was| Sines by King. nT was confident that I could handte | He oolg that 1 my brottier It ¥ ee oewicoman teox | THe school wacher ts acti Ever Loved. ved es ha mand he| ‘I feel pretty sure m: acd Se aialy | apparently lost, an pol . ‘hore |! Doth sults. Bhe has asked Uagninet the tat hit him again |oontemplated marriage he. w wi ap omen s ' > th t 2 Ete nd again. He ck wild ah ! ne abou mens har to the tin er eet a ee with «| Reiter court to awand her altme BNO Ore eae Tate ee ie 9ald something to ms)about st aa br as , she said she had been nd }counse! fees from Dr. Hays a: no Floretta Whaley and no| "My only reer that his frienda| not mentioned the matter, howey Pie pane” Mira. Hartman at No. 1092 matt ores, | Brooklyn court to award allme } ake, 80 far aa the slop a fumerous, T would’ have ‘had ) Tam not Ine position to deny Sim | nf ‘The police learned that a Mrs epunsel fees from King. No wonder | ing girl's grandmother, Mre, Whaley, Freat ‘sa pectie! is the report. I will hear from But unfor Qtress several iT wanted I te | whether present ¢o man moved from that aGdress Justion Kelly ts perplexed. | oi yd. L, ¥ whom she | enougy hen tho fght was pocdipendl pea yas % *| 40 1 Gays agc. Lawyers that by asking for all-| home, ts concerned. Mre. | my, Pothes mere: cavered istith poiood. ramor is founded : eles to rexard Mrs. Mary Bussell, seventy-four year*| mony from King she admits that she | Whaley dechured to-day that she never | Sidnt mcrateh Og gos Ph a the e Sinaeudh ited id Pareles 2c if they en the p of h old, wes found asleep on & bench 1m ts not martied to Hays, but she aske | expected to wee the sevonteen-year-old | his nail dug but that mark on my| Knoedier and the ai en bag appa bands they are ridjovied. If Wey do not! rncmpwoa’s Square Park. She sald | or alimony from Hays, thereby admit | granddaughter again, and did not want | tight cheek. T want you "ital thelr own decided to keep the pubite | they are i tomptuor ‘old lenat she had beam Mving with her/gng a marriage And if she claims that |to eve het, but wished to biot the very |°°here la ‘an | peegeaaan pir puede ol ligedutqeede yee mney maid man marriage te daughter, Mrs. Gertrude Rickey, at No.| she is married to Hays how can she be | thought of the ing relat ox ted with the affair which ls to (ne eee ” ips baal peipaies orden together s I believe men| qo wast Gixth astreet, but had been| married to King? egal Aner | | Orect that when Mr. Conway recovers| Intimations of the event were recent! should = young. Ambition very When th i an to vs| fully from the drubbing he recetyed | circulated, and the art ler, who rep- Elica prevents a yous man from mate) “armas Get fate the Sneath on the! 1; appears that King and Miss Koll-| “There be no such person (0 U8 | nis engagement to Mra. V resents the firm in Europe, has been re- But ae a ambition in| 04 oman wes arraigned in court to-| meyer married at a summer resort after|as Floret the woman said announced E + we \peatediy paked if it were'true, To al! zane ut the snd of BT Be day & grandgaughtor appeared and/a brief acquaintditoe, King clals | "She could never be the same. Mir Waleh te the eon of W. Ww |P D f ite anaiyels ts s And there | 7 = " AValsh, a retired Wall street man. | inquirers he has simply eald dan be to without family |S##ed thet she be sent to Bellevue, as|/was twenty years old at the time will try to forget that whe ever | |youne’ Mr. Walsh te reputed ‘wealthy erin wr adeatnoinan te say of Gil on she was tsane. She was sent there for) years ago-and that bis bride was sev No effort 1s bemg made to find ew | man in the Crapoent At ithe C2? | report . : ee a cad observation, Mrs, Baumnehe was sent'|eral years his senior ki sloping preacher. who was up to the more popular than he, and mo man iH a as "fier Steen pele near rd berber ale call prosper case asserts King is t time of his disappearance, the popular|tias better use of his fists Mme. Theo has kept away from inter imran Solraz ahenta ho haere enmenceeeneen te eee years old now, and she Is only tweat)-| rector of St. George's Episcopa) Church page dues MRS. R. 8. M'ARTHUR HONORED.| #* tt Hempstead, of waich August Bel-| His Own Marriage. WASHINGTON, May 16—At the an: Age aside, they could not agree b mont is senior vestrymas. pei | - a upon Hy " nal ould be better | “aotning ie more ule than deter | mani somvention gt the Woman ge | ceuee, the wie lua: upon Now| ate, Whaiay aul t mod be bo What is Castoria mining a man’s age by the years ho| Home Mission Society yesterday Mrs, |>* >* and teaching A for the chure a $ r has lived,’ was the reply. “I was|R. & MacArthur, of New York, was) i 1000, In his gunk, Bis Hempwiead ia Ured of talking of the twenty-two when I married, I don’t! elected acting président and viee-presi., BFOOK!YN. he awears Liat he hove sensation, two full weeks having passed | ASTORIA {s & harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops tilak 1 was too young, I had en in-|dent at large > succes? Mra. J, N,| ner of hoard Of ber fi O9 2etl ty quag | since the pair went away, Mrs. Qooke's | and Soothing Syrups, It is Pleasant, It contains neither Opium, come of about 0 a year in your! fy Mean at the head of the smoclete] Woman who knew hie wife, and t dP wsehold good nave bean eant 10 er Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, Its age is its guarantee. It | money, I Was pastor of @ little country since Ite organization, thirty ye conversation took w personal turn. The| ¢arner'a home at Hagtiord, an ry L 7 . ‘ @hureh and thought myself in rather ongrarr. president. tor ihe Wonwan remarked: | 1 4 | Mplacopal parsonage is now oecupled by | destroys Worms and allays Feverishnos. ‘ It rad pry ie wind ead health. Both my eldest and my elected recording secretary en?” : you avd suarried © man names | weer of the ch Colic, It relieves Tosthing Troubles, cures Constipation av warveids — Hays?” pa | ‘tan litte sister grieved aay and | asstmilates the Food, regulates the Btomach and Bowvls, giving healthy and SatSparaivaed niu, Ho investugated, | night at fret but #he ' said now to] natural sleep, The children's Panaces—Tho Mother's Friend. 4 fount that, mite had 1 to her loss, Floretta has | The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been In use for over really gece, i MS ty Soest » any of ber ériends. *Y | 80 years, bas born the siguature of Chas, HL Fletcher, and has been made under Be is waite yc wv mc Prat | pa mpeg iv on ne i Wrhe to ther | All Counterfeite, Iyitations and “Just-as-good” are but Experiments that the divorce the ehanmt rnc tts Certainly not! And yet ibacher eos & Dr. Ha gine | trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and 4 in April, 1% there are a few “hunters” | that Sve had been divore Pog yoann AOR Children—Experience against Experiment, left who go through this world tripping over gold. bricks, high prices, incompe- tent workers, mediocre positions, etc., while they might, just as well as not, tread the well- Sampled pathway leading to the Land of Plenty where good workers are wa ted; where services are well paid for; where rooms, houses and apartments suit the most economical or fastidious; where bargains are as thick a8 @ London fog--where YOU should walk TO-DAY: purse of time Are wae Have nda of "e regu bellev t t her rake to Hae. ® conmplraey in my tainly aire ine each other with affidavits. Kelly heard the matter armurd! out yesterday ond bas promised to ren Ger a decision before Hays Telle His Story, Just! Dr. I divo: eo the aueeti J Wo of tv ha that he eaw the papers wrved upon Mr te Says Rev. Dr. Aked’ GONE HE TELLS ryou ter white do (ormed "It 1s onpossivle fe | wash ol’ Ba pry Bileged | Tone De plain trut A the. former hus-| busy al de time he don wind Whee her,” 7 putt fer you ter dip Meouher wn ve Pied each other in ehoir | me Dycwet! Ae a bu is @ ex | Ht and pleader for + F about the a whole matler lawyers. sho sald to-day, & witness t wc » ¥Oar i te nid be help * cane + they 9b the} je dae | paing “in | Ra matrh imontal @ he pretty = Brooklyn "he ve ray the end of chiropediet Brother W 5, he keeps stan bru. citizen he ole worl From Coffee to POSTUM has Cone much for MANY, it may do much for YOU, There's @ Reason.” sull long rr Ne OF HOTEL SCRAP Blood a Plenty on His Clothes, | | and It Must Have Been Conway’s. | | | Mrs. George H. Walsh, tormer wite of | the athletic young Crescent_Club man! jot Brooklyn, to-day came dgwn from her apartments in the St. George Hotel, on the heights, tn « state of great agi: | tation, doubtless caused by Treading the | accounts in the morning paper ef the exciting fet duel between hand! John Conway, the street railway oon-| | tractor, Bhe announced excitedly that |sbe would give up her room at once | and oalled a cab. She drove away with- lout leaving hor address. | Conway also disappeared from hie | Clarendon Hote} rooms last night and | the attaches professed ignorance of his| whereboute when questioned to-day. | Mr. Conway's features were said to be tn need of repair and for that reason | he preferred solitude to the foverian | ite of the Clarendon. | ‘Tho farht between Walsh and Conway | | | Noted French Actress Who Quit Stage to Wed New Yorker}: ited the Hippodrome Inet party Jeft Bridgeport, by ae Me mong oe briny so pas: » ~ eat So praeaee wae 2 ident o! the. party, Belaqenortage York on ir apectal train at “LOVES BLIND""—yet shone actual blindness there’ are. ho GB- fects of sight that the RIGHT eye glasses’ will not aid. A correct oom examination mean Jee exams ration of EACH BY proper — scientific instruments in a darkened room—and ONLY by oculists be standing and reputation. The services of our rexistived ? ph 0 are OCULISTS, not salespe ire abvolutely' free, a) 81-Otted with the: 54 East 23d St.. near Fourth Aves 64 West 125th St., near Lenox Ave. - 442 Columbus Ave, Sist & 82d Ste. 489 Fulton St. Opposite Abranam & PAY AS YOU GAN | Qur..Credit. System enables you to furnish jour home com- fortably without hardly feeling the expense at all. BROOKLYN, Sten | years old. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of RICE is the tooa NOW Core and Oat toods beat the bicod and ere G0) only cold weather Peopie of bot live 08 rice. yuriehing of al! graina You know what the Japs, fed on rice beol-eaters The most delicious, pare rice food. 4 cooked just right, it's ready to eat right oul of the package, sold by your grocer, is MALTO-RICE j:, | | Views, but clone friends do not deny | the report. In . her most intimate Women associate gave an answer that cated knowledge of the marriage. Mme. Theo, I feel certain,” aha sald, | "would have nething to say to the pub- | EAST 23ST, lc Just now.” Mme. Theo some years ago suddenly | me, q was given for her retiremen The | tohy of her. marriage to Mr. Knoedler now explains what was before a mys- tery: Her career had been wonderfully successful. She was one of the most famoys of ‘French soubrettes nearly thitty’ years ago, and succeeded Mme. Judig @« the brightest Nght of th French opera-vboutfe, Her mother con ducted the Pavillon de I'Horloge unt! the Commune destroyed It. It was during the siege that youns Loulse Theo made her first appearance stage in a little concert given enait of the volunteer ambu- One of th: many good th to be had at our store this we 1 ea, She showed so much talent that career was then and there mapped Twenty-four years ago, after bay- lan, out ing of the Continent, the came to this clyt for Une fret time and created somewhat of & sensation. Ghe is now fifty-three $6: 85 for this Handsome $42 [i White Enameled Bedstead, f with heavy posts and long hea Ee se Be LO |BRIDGEPORT AT HIPPODROME spindles ob both’ head and foot IE j A theatre party of upwards of soo,|) Phis Bed can be had in all sizes, composed of citizens of Briigeport, vis. W. L. DOUGLAS — sr $3.50 SHOES fen a en WEAR W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES? fap N L BELIEVE | CAN GIVE YOU GOOD AND SUFFICI REASONS WHY IT WILL PAY YOU TO WEAR TI I give the wearer the benefit of arpa oh and preven! know!- pots ) which has ex- pene th fs a reagin years, I give the woarer the benefit of my exclusive method of tanning the bottom soles, which makes them more A and gives longer wear than any er sole leather produced in this ebantry. Qs lam the largest manufacturer of men's fine Hand-Sewed Process im the world, it is necessary for me to purchase leather and other materials in enormous quanti- ties; the benefit of the very low prices | obtain I give to the wearer in superior quality over other makes, If L could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mass, and show you how carefully W. L. Doug~ las shoes are made, you would then understand why hey hold their shape, fit better, wear longer are of greater value than any other make W. L. Douglas, Brockton, Mass 1 i have worn Custo shows for about 23 years, Recently | snare os a pair of W, L. Dogiys $450 shoe ead have worn them since ton. Hereafter x rales Se for sme TREANER, 349 Broome St, New Y Fay, QTHER MANUFACTUR! UGLAS $4 00 GILT EDGE Bti Any Price. J 1.78 AND wen Cet bea pine EDRs Sedicd fase Wt. Tougtun, Hroltgom wy, L. Douglas $3,50 Shoe Stores in Greater New Yorks .