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re id nn Prince Arthur, Duchess of Fife, His Bride, And Some of the Guests at Royal Wedding, PRINCE ARTHUR WEDS HIS COUSIN, DUCHESS OF FF Americans Mingie With Roy- alty at Brilliant Ceremony at St. James’s Palace Chapel. BRIDE LIKE PICTURE. King George and Queen Mary | Lead Guests—Honeymoon at Waldorf Astor Estate. TONDON, Oct. 16.—Prince Arthur of Connaught, son of the Duke of Con- maucht, Governor-General of Canada, and Princess Alexandra Victoria, Duch- eon of Fife, eldeat daughter of the wit- owed Princess Royal, Loulse, were to- fay made man and wife in the ancient chapel of St. James's Palace, where hoth of them had been baptised. There was room for less than 30 In | gathering of royalties and notable per- eoneges as on this occasion. Besides King George, Queen Mary, Mother of of the Alexandra, the King and jopway and other royal rela- couple to the number of a more tne congregation con- members of the diplomatic the British Cabinot and of the royal households and of a few distin- guished persons who had been especially honored. AMERICANS AMONG GUESTS AT THE CEREMONY. Among the diplomats were Ambas- fee or ot of ming clothes and the only person there who wore neither a decoration nor uni- form. Among the ladies who had received special invitations were Lady Deciss, formerly Miss Helen Vivien Gould, and Lady Alastair ‘nnes-Ker, formerly Mise Anne Breese, both o: jom were accom: panied by their husbands and wore their famous jewels. The chapel, in fact, @iittered with diamondg and pearls, al- most every woman préesent wearing a tara and necklace each of fabulous value. Lord and Lady Strathcona and Mount Royal and Lord and Lady Mount Ste- phen were also among the very few to whom invitations haé been tasued. The bride, who entered the chapel be+ tween King George and her mother, leoked charming in @ dainty dress of white charmeune ra, with were Princess Mary, daughter of the King and Queen; Princess Maud, only wister of the bride; Princess Victoria and Princess Helena of Teck, daughters of the Duke and Duchses of Teck, and Mttle daughter of Alexander of Teck. made of delicate shell-pink charmeuse and cream lace, and they carried beautiful bouquets of carnations and lilies, the same flowers a9 decorated the chapel royal. ‘The pages were little Prince John, the King’s y feat son, and Prince Olaf 0¢ Norway, whom everybody in the British Iske adores. Prince Arthur wore his uniform as a Captain of the Royal Scot Gra: ite bright scariet tunic and high r ekia bushbdy, and all the men among his royal relatives giso wore military uni- forms covered with decorations, The King wee dressed as a Field Marshal. ‘The Queens and other ladies were In beautiful costumes dazzling with jewels. The ceremony wi remely simple and was performed the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Bishop of London as dean of the chapels royal, and Canon Edgar Bheppard, sub-dean of the chap- ele royal, before an altar embellished with gold candelabra, WILL @PEND HONEYMOON AT WALDORF ASTOR'S ESTATE. Prince Arthur and his bride uttered the reaponses in firm, clear voices. After the ceremony the Archbishop | 4 of Canterbury delivered a short address, hich he pointed out that while only w had been able to assist at the ceremony, millions of Britons allover the world joined in rejoicing at the marriage of an English Prince and Princess, Part ofthe honeymoon Is to be epent at the fepicence of Waldorf Astor at Sendwith Ray, on the south. east coast of England. The wedding presents were nu- merous and costly. Care had been taken, however, to prevent duplica- tom and the newly-married couple will not have to worry themselves over what to do with, say, pineteen pianos, as King George any Queen Mary had to twenty eare ago. The King’s gift to the bride Wan @ magnificent act of dia- monds and the young princes clubbed together for a diamond crown. —_——_———. Increased Danger in 101 (From the Chronicle.) ‘Tho Increased da of the London streets ie realized very vividly when we compare the speed of vehicles be- fore and since the motor era, Twenty according to @ pollc: te- vane trav eight miles an hour, the travelled at about six miles hour, the hansom or private carriage reached ingine rarely exceeded ow the motor bus haa elve miles rate and an es, the taxi ie while the pri- not the fear of th | Katon home at Assinippi. peed of rather less than ten miles, | THE EVENING WORLD, ¥ MRS, EATON HEARS CHARGE OF MURDER AGAINST HER READ Sits Unmoved, but Later Quails Under Prosecutor’s Talk— Jurors Visit Her Home. PLYMOUTH, Mass., Oct. 15.—Mre.| Jennie May Eaton heard the indictment charging her with the murder of her husband, Rear Admiral Joseph G. Eaton, read to the jury im court here today. But listening to the charge that she had poisoned her hueband, the Prisoner maintained her alr of absolute composure and followed the reading of the document with evident interest. Immediately after the formal opening of the trial the prosecution requestod Permission to take the jurors to the Mra, Eaton waived her rights to accompany the Jury on the trip, The twelve men im- mediately etarted for their inspection of the Eaton home. They will visit all points which will be mentioned during the trial. The trip was expected to in- clude a visit to the grave of the naval officer who was buried without honors of any kind. As the inspection trip of the jurors ‘was expected to take up most of to-day, the State did not plan to start the taking of testimony before to-morrow. Mrs. Eaton displayed some nervous- nean when DistrictsAttorney Barker made a brief opening address after the irdictment was read, Court then ad- oo d for the day and the jury board- a special car for the Baton home at Assinipp!. —_————— CASHIER PLEADS GUILTY TO ROBBING PUBLISHER Chudoba, Salary $25, Kept Chauf- feur, $30 a Week, on Fox’s Money. AdvIph Chudoba, for eighteen years an employee of Richard K. Fox, publisher| of the Police Gazette, pleaded guilty to/ an indictment charging @rand larceny In the second degree before Judge Swann in Part 1V., General Sessions, to-day. ‘The indictment, one of three, alleged the theft of $115, but Aaniatant Diatrict-At- torney Idwards told the Judge that Chu- dob&'s misappropriation ran close te) $100,000, Chudobe is thirty-nine years old and! has a handsome home at No, 412 East Fourth street, Brooklyn, This house, | lavishly furnished and called ‘the mya- tery house” by neighbors because it hag | & sub-cellar stocked with expensive "| wines and orlental rugs, and enatner | residence at 407 East Fourth street, Flatbush, are in the name of Chudoba's wife. She formerly worked for Mr. Fox tn the bindery of ida publishing house. The clerk denied that George A, Oxx, who was manager of the Fox office an? who Is now under indictment, worked collusion with him in the wholes thefts of cash, Chudoba admitted owned an automobile 800 pas? @ chauf- 30 @ week, aithoug.: ‘9 salary was He was remanded to the Tombs om Oct, 34, zs } One blown blast. The ~~ The street, rested eeen Aim hanging about the neighbor hood for neveral hours before the ex. plosion. He protested that his broth who lived at No. 52 First street, had Promised to pay him $200 last night and thet he hed waited all night for his brother to come home. The police w Pepe had a brother in the house he in- Gicated, though they eaid the panicky state of mind in the neighborhood pre-| ¢, vented them from getting much acourate information. ‘There was no report of Black Hand letters sent to any resident in the street. ‘Tae police ony that the bomb was more powerful than any ever set off in Jersey | Sy Cry aince the attempt to wreck the Ley ce. ANS FRINGE Se GIANTS’ MAGNATES | “READY TO TESTIFY IN TICKET SCANDAL Waiting for Mr. Whitman to Accompany Him Before the Grand Jury. President Harry Hempstead, Secretary John Foster and Vice-President Cor- neliua J, Sullivan of the New York Base- ball Chub appeared in the District-Attor- ney's office to-day in answer to sub- poenas issued for the purpose of secur- ing their testimony before the Grand Jury in the World's Series ticket scan- dal. With wan Miss Skinner, the stenographer in Hempstead's office, who had charge of the ticket schedule and through whose hands all of the tickets to the games in New York passed. District-Attorney Whitman was not at his office and Assistant District-Attor- ney Lockhart told the three baseball magnates they would have to wait his coming before being taken before the Grand Jury. Sullivan, who ts counsel for the New York Club, made this state- BUSHMILLS Some men say that a taste for Irish Whiskey is cultivated. Maybe so. Most worth while tastes are cultivated— And a taste for Bushmills Irish is a decidedly worth while taste. Ment concerning the Grand Jury in- gation of the ticket scandal: Ve have been all week orders, letters, &c., to th Attorney upon his demands, ready to throw open all of our accounts to the Grand Jury. We are just as anxious to have a@ full investigation as he {s, for we are conscious of no wrong- do on the contrary, we di thing in our power to bing of tloketa by our hope that the develop a remedy which w (n future seasons.” Sullivan said he hi if had turned in an application for tickets which was unfilled and that he was not even able to get @ seat at the games for himself. wil may apply —_—_—_—_—_ OLD-TIME DOCTORS’ FERS, (From the London Chronicle) The official fee of the doctor being now to the fore, one recalls how the medical man of the seventeenth century who physician-general received 10s, a day, the Spolapiary 668 it off one wan again a day. Monck considered suMicient that (in 1658) he jurgeons to be entered as e muster roll of their regi- ments, in orfer to give them an add tional Od. a day.” Irish Whiskey FLAMES COMPLETE | HAVOC WROUGHT BY BOMB EXPLOSION Fear-Stricken Tenants Rush From Tottering Homes in two acorched and four others shaken and battered by the explosion of a bomb in| = t} the reav of John Cambida's barber shop jat No. 363 First Street, Jersey City, ‘J early to-day. bullding #0 shaken apart that {t burned quickly when flames started after ‘he dressed in their night clothes. next door, No, Sl, was soverciy shaken, ae was the house on the other s ia a pled by Angelo Teoornio, a jo’ tenants of both houses piled sc into the etreet. Both houses were rehed, though the firemen prevented ious damage. Connolly’s saloon at No, 840 and Fred- erick Reidler’s dry goods store at No. 367 were c) windows of a butcher shop and a dairy were blown in, Frank Pepe of No, 21 East Fourth WRUNBSBDAY, OCTOBER 15, £918. FIRE IN CIGAR STORE. | ora Team of Mice and Matches Works Ruin on Greene Street. Mice set off several cases of matches In @ closet of th at No, 11? Green Prince street, to- They smouldered until Joseph Jor i, the manager, opened the piece thie morning. He found the air in the store suffocating with sulphur fumes and in an effort to find the fire opened the closet, which at once burst Into flames, Rattalion Chief Helms and firemen under his command ripped out @ sec- tion of shelves containing hundreds of cigare, cigarettes and many cans of smoking tobacco, which were thrown to the sidewalk. As soon as the police | guard was withdrawn there was @ scramble and a rusk of spectators and the neighborhood waa redolent of -an- sorted brands of burning tobacco for the reat of the day. reot, Jus Night Clothes. house waa wrecked and burnet, HAVE DARK HAIR AND LOOK YOUNG Nobody Can Tell When You Darken Gray, Faded Hair with Sage Tea. The barber shop was to e@plinters and the rest of the The tenante got out safely, house In which Cambida lived Grandmother kept her hair beautifully darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tes and Sulphur, ever her hair fell out or took on tha dull, faded of streaked appearance, thi simple mixture i led with wor |. Acgoas the street the | derful effect. Mf Big ing at any dru, ore for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy,” you will get a large bottle of this old-time Socios teady to use, for about 60 cents. ‘his simple mixture can be Ce nded upon to restore natural pice and beauty to the hair and is peed for dandruff, dry, itchy scalp and fail air. A well-known dowatown druasist rie saree uses Wyeth's Sage ae it darke! plate glasa windows of Jeffe~son ‘Wynn Terrace, Brooklyn, was ar- by Policeman Pladdys, whe had niy th unable to find that coe dampes 6 6 raw it through y: one stvead at a time. ace oF two, it is restored toite natural color and loohs glossy, soft and abund- Sunday World “Wants” Work Monday Wonders, pelparsy hen good looks and Ith. From birthday to oe. the years go by— these two possessions give great- est cause for thankfulness. And the vital foundations for well-being are good teeth and Good Teethkeeping, There’s no wiser course to take than to visit your dentist at least twice a year and to rely on the habitual night and morning use of Or.lyon's PERFECT Tooth Powder Bale — efficient — preserves the teeth by keeping them beautifully pullshed and absolutely clean, Dr. Lyon's is emooth, pleasant and gritless. It cannotinjure the enamel, Use Dr. Lyon's night and morning—espesially of night, Develop the eame habit in your children. Then they will enjoy the lifetime benefits of sound, beautiful teeth. ‘What Dr. hoon 'o does net do ealy your dentist is competent te de. Sold Everywhere Are You Reading Ur, Lyon's Mawasine Advertisements? bo beter BIG TREAT FOR Sunday World Readers’ A New Series of Remarkable Drawings Depicting | the Life Story of Pretty Dorothy Perkins. By JAMES MONTGOMERY FLAGG FAMOUS KITTY COBB BY SERIES OF DRAWINGS To Be Featured Exclusively in 24-Page Illustrated Magazine of The ALEX DISH AW/ eco ny SUNDAY WORLD J , eae? MISS FIRST PICTURE OF THIS GREAT| SERIES NEXT SUNDAY. Everybody, To the Serta Electr ne a el t a myst ectric is But, my seat 2 YY. What of that ? It is the stuff That's big enough To make a new era of living, To put little man cn the way ~ teach the super a ae oe the Grestastin puts him there to a on pong Look this w: It cooks his uals, ke his house, ins his cotton, his cows, f tuns his wa Boats and cars, It takes o message Through the stars, him health, it cures his ills, It knocks his And his pills, It digs his coal, It pumps his oil,, I¢ mints his coin, It tills his soil, In office, fleld and mine it takes ‘The places of old things and makes The ancient order like small Potatoes in a hill, that’s all. All these it tackles mre ae ty . It's for what else come, Because it’ built that way; I¢ does its work by different laws From those of airy frce that man Has-thus far ever tried_ to can. But, scat, What of that IF it gets there just the same, Ain't that the game? —F. J. 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