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+ * mites the ateamer. * malt. They stowed and stowed and , Pumaica to-day the Very Rev. Dean Her- | repre ga MAKES ITH TIME ‘HOWMESHM Him a Cable Comes From Bride. Saying “‘Happy Ie the Bride That the Rain Falle On” and Are Merry in Congratula- tions for Herself and Her Husband. GHIES ON THE WAY HERE. | Yacht Noma Awaits Own- ‘ er and His Bride to Take Them on a Pre- liminary Honeymoon Trip Up the Hudson— Sentries Guard Wed- Guests Repeat the Old)'q: adack trode i Se a ding Treasures in Tudor fees Mansion. Py (Rpccal Grom 0 Stall Commmpentent of The Bre. | { ning Wertd,) boo ag STAATSBURG, N. ¥., April 30.— Otte ‘WiiHam Vincent Astor and Helen frem Dinsmore Huntington were married enough @t noon to-day, the hour originally nets eet. Even to the last moment some poly friends and well wishers of the young Tee milionaire were apprehensive that jaw he would be too ill to go om with the eo arrangements, although the father of nie the bride had reported him “very | @ Rowe well indeed” in the early moming| | — and Mr. Astor's physitian bed gtven | ( en@eres’ separation @emurance that the patient was cen- be took valescent, but somewhat thin from his long attack. It was @ cheerless, soggy rain that @aturday broke for the wedding day. Ho; Desbury land House, the home of Miss Hunt- ‘t@taking ington, stood gray and drenched in un the mist, while florists and caterers Viner were bustling indoors. Oeto All this mess of weather was taken to 8 @ good omen by the guests, who im. eatled | parted cheer to the bride and brido- groom by reminding them that “happy ‘was the bride that the rain fell on.” A guarded van arrived early from Poughkeepste bringing from the ee- curity of @ safe deposit vault many of the valuable presents for the bride which were laid out tn glittering ar- ray in the drawing room of Hopeland House that all the guests might see and admire. Aa Mr. Astor is a member of the | Volunteer fre department of Staate- helm, scheduled to sail at 10 o'clock | burg, this organization had planned this morning from Hoboken, Otto;to give him a noisy, rousing chari- ‘wes taking no chances on miasing | vari, the real good fellowship sere- this steamer. He was on board at nade of rural communities, but ow- 1.80 o'clock. ling to the quiet nature of the wed- A number of friends accompanied ding, this nolsy demonstration was ttm to make sure that he wouldn't abandoned. The firemen say they The minutes be- may give him a God-speed when he gam to hang heavy on the party. |leaves for Europe, after his boney- Gomebody suggested that they go to moon at Ferncliff. | the Hoboken House and stow a bitof The yacht Noma, the crew of which receives twenty-dollar gold Pleces to-day from MY. Astor as a wedding remembrance, was as clean as a Dutch kitchen, ready to take Mr. Astor and his bride aboard after the wedding, taking « trip up the Hud- son, according to plans previously | arranged | HOUSE WAS ONLY NINE HOURS LATE. Otto missed his boat by nine hours. With friends he repaired to a Hobo- keen tankery and attempted to drown tiie sorrows. He bought a ticket to Rotterdam on the North German Ldoyd steamer Prinz Friedrich Wil- bade Otto bon voyage, or however they do it in Holland, Upon their pleasure came the long, Geep, penetrating blast of a great fron-tongued whistle. Otto glanced with fright at the big clock hanging above the bar, the only tick allowed im the Hoboken House. It was a @elock. Otto groaned, then gasped, and sunk to the floor in a dead faint. | FEUDAL CASTLE. Hie friends gathered him up and | A squad of moving picture oper rushed him across the street to the | Ators sought to take Hopeland House North German Lioyd pler. by storm, but the line of deputy “Btop the ship! Captain! Cap- sheriffs guarding the grounds dis- tain!” they y ; couraged them. | ‘The police made way for them Mr. Axtor was up and about Hope- | Otto came to, but his legs refused to | land Housse shortly after 9 o’olock, work. They continued to carry bim. jand with Miss Huntington went on a Hab! Otto's luck was once more in | tour of inspection of the mansion, the ascendant. The steamer was still | Watching the florists decorate their at ber dock. She had been delayed | Wedding room and adjoining cham- ten minutes awaiting the last mails. | bers. ‘They slid Otty on board ike slicing Never was feudal castle more Holland cheese. He was there. He closely guarded by its sentries from was on deck. dusk to dawn than the Tudor man. ALONG COMES A MESSAGE. een Ks te HMBHSRIOBS Lip hed 2 ou night a company of deputy wane, deo proud friends when tberitin, the mayority of them em- down the pler came'a wav- | Dloyees of Robert P. Huntington, the bride's father, patrolled the broad op the ship! acres about the house In command e whistle of the I'rinz Friedertch | of Deputy Sheriff Patrick Murpoy, of ‘Wilhetm set up a blast that drowned Dutchess County, and Charles Han- all other sounds, And Otto was on mon, superintendent of the Hunting- deck, Coating big rod bay hy | ton estates, Also among the guards P- were cheering him from the; Was Edward Pinii:nm, the overseer of dook. Lig rtige Ped . sore aa | Vincent Astor’s demesne at Ferncliffe, toe joom time w: {which les just north of the Hunting- as oral Boy whine ‘Che: * ton property. These inen were sworn ®, Carl,” returned Otto,)in by the Deputy Sheriff at Pough- resoeninitg his brother, keepsle, iate yesterday afternoon. wort ee a japhone and| Not only was the patrol of the Steamer Gropped out into the stream: | €Founds maintained trom fe house to “A cablegram from Edwina! She | the Albany Post road, which swings eae: ‘Otto, wait for me. I will/ past it at ite dastern boundary, but Gere right beck from, Rotterdam.” in the house itself were watchmen, af band Swan gay on deck | sleepless and vigilant. They took | was gay except where | practical possession of the house after His mouth was wide the members of the hounehold retired. If for no other reason, the numerous valuable presents for the bride--the great pearl necklace froia Vincent Astor himself, and the Jewels which | had arrived too late for despatch to the safety deposit vault in Pough- keepsie, which already holds many of the rich gifts sent to Miss Hunting- ton—made a guard over house and grounds imperative. In watches of four hours each the squads of depu- ties kept vigil throughout the night GUARDED LIKE A hand to i why be missed the ship. Edwina, mearing Rotterdam and would en her way back before he could He would probably pass her the bigh seas. Edwina! Ob, Ottot well! —_——— Dean Farrell Hurt by Fall. Tm alighting from a trolley car in! > BK. Dinsmore, grandmother of the bride, who ilves only a mile away, and other blooms, orchids and roses were brought from Mr. Huntington's conservatories. About the massive marble mantel which Mr, and Mrs. Huntington obtained in Rome five years ago, the plants and flowers were banked in a mound of fragrant color. | and at one side of the room @ mass- | ing of blooma and potted plants marked the improviaed chancel be- fore which the ceremony was to be performed. The wide-sweeping staircase of yellowish ble, down which the bride can with her father, her sister Alice, her oridesmaid and her two flower girls, was also entwined with living greon. In every available nook and cranny of the first floor flowers were arranged and the house was heavy with their perfume. WMONEYMOON TRIP WILL BE POSTPONED. ‘There was no rehearsa! of the wed- ding cereriony of to-day, The sim- m2 ave ING. fast guests, Loads of flowers, most | brother, who is home from St. Paul's of them spring blossoms, came over |echool at Concord; Hermann Oelrichs from the greenhouses of Mrs. William |@ law student and olose friend of Mr. Madeline Dinsmore, another aun! Mra. Charles H. Astor executo: of the Astor estate The walls were hung with greenery, | Archibald Rogers and Mr. and Mrs, Plicity of the oirde’s daacent of the hroad staircase and h eling with Mr. Astor after cross:ng the “long room" or entrance hali iiad¢ no re- heareal necessary. The wedding party was merely instructed in what was to be done and that was all. The orchestra of twenty pleces which played the wedding music arrived on an early morning train and went at once f Hopeland House, The Rev. Charles H. Dunoan, rector of Bt Alargaret's Episcopal Church, Staateburg, read the Episcopal mar- riage service. Though no official announcement has come from the Huntington fam- ily ag to plans {mmediately following the wedding, it was practically ad- wi: Farrell, rector of the church of Star of the Sea at Far Rocka-|and they will be on guard until the and fell on the brick pave-'jast guest has doparted from the ue Oeslae Pee dlalocat | Nouse and it revues again the rich ital, Jamaica. monotony of its existence as 8 mil- San ee! Monatre’s country residence, Oolored War Map of Mexico, | Scan after breakfast this morning: anleal ind railrosd map, | the flortats’ and the caterers’ men all important tow moun- | descend upon Hopeland House, fea vences, Gee lust trom $ontingtos hoes, and cot chow’ tee Right teak of esmpleting the deccretions of mitted to-day that there will be no honeymoon trip at present. The young multt-miiiivoaire left his K ss “ ve +d “ valesced from the lung abscess which caused his serious illness at the home of his finances. ‘Among those present at the wedding were: Mr. and Mre. Robert P. Hunt- fmgton, the bride's father and mother; Mre. John Astor, the bridegroo! mother; his young sister, Miss Muriel, who is to be a flower girl; Miss Alice Huntington, who is a school girl at fhe Miss Master's academy in Dobbs Ferry, was the only bridesmaid; Robert Huntington, the brid CONSUL AT TAMPICO SURRENDERS OFFICE. Turns Over Business to British Representative After Trip Ashore. WASHINGTON, April 80.—Ameri- can Consul Miller at Tampico .re- turned to shore to-day to settle the affal of the Consul and turn them over to the British Consul, Rear- Admiral Badger reported. Mr. Miller went ashore under a guarantee of safe conduct from the Mex! Fed- eral commander. The American Consul at Tuxpam was reported on hin way to Galveston aboard the British steamer Waneta Secale = NO SHOTS ARE FIRED Astor, who was the best man; Mrs. William B. Dinsmore, the bride's grandmother; Mr, and Mrs, William B. Dinsmore jr., the bride's aunt and uncle, with their two children; Mi Duncan, wife of th performed Nicholas Biddle, one of Secretary Dobbyn Mr. and Mrs, rector who mony; the cere: th Tracy Dowa, neighbors and q ,) and Miss Margaret Dows. Huntington wore a gown ‘ white tulle aimply designed with a train of white satin worn by her mother at her own wedding, and by her grandmother, Mra. iiiam B. Dinsmore, at hera, The flower girls wore corn colored chiffon and dotted net with Nattir roses. They carried old-fashioned bouquets of email flowers tightly gathered, and their hata were adorned with gar- lands of the same blooms. The bride's mother wore a gown of blue taffeta and chiffon, Americans Had Nothing to Do With It. WASHINGTON, April 30.-The re- port from Mexico City that the port Among the wedding presents are e few from tenement dwellers in New York wnom Miss Huntington has befriended. There also some from old servante of the two famili “‘Reel’’ Pictures of the War as Printed in the Journal} New York City, April 29, 1914, To the Editor of The Evening World Enclosed please find clipping 1?8m the Evening Journal of April 27 and hope you will use this to show the public how it e being deceived. 1 wteh to call your attention to the picture which is supposed to show United States bluejackets advancing up the beach at Vera Cruz, Merioo, As a matter of fact this picture was taken either at Sea Girt, N. J., or Peexakill, N. Y., on the State rifle range. You will cbwerve the stakes that mark the range and bear the numbers of the targets (hat the men are shooting at. You will aleo notice, that {vo men are standing at each of these stakes, which in customary, one man firing while the other is loading. LIBUT, C, H. B. Forty-seventh Infantry, N. G. N, Y. New York, Apri) 28, 1914. ‘To the Wiitor of The Evening Work: ‘Why don't you expose the Dvening Jecrnal in regard to tts fake war pictures? In yesterday's Evening Journal we nee a few sailors prectiog on a rife renga, and that paper tries to make its readers believe that they are looking upon the bluejackets as they advanced up the beach at Vera Crus. A. NIELSSEN, Ne. 456 East One Hundred ané Forty-nints street, , ——— BY SHIPS AT MANZANILLO Conflagration Occurs There, but | of Manzanillo, on the Pacific coast, had been bombarded by an American warship was denied at the White ie eres ‘wort; THURSDAY, APRIL 60, ~ DM SHP LOSER, |Astor, Still Til, Weds Miss Huntington at Hour Fixed; Hopeland House Lost in Mist on a Soggy, Rainy Day\ FOUNDDEADIN House to-day. Investigation disclosed that @ oon- choked up, flagration, said to have been of incen- !n diary origin, bad occurred there, but American forces had nothing to do! men may find with it. 191 them. There is a tween No. 5 and No. 6 a added hope. The men may passage: Tel is were =recel' from Mr. Guiterman by 8. . Vice-President of the compaagy ing him an the situation. s Several of the directors of @ wenh companies visited the way offices to-day for infor some communicated with Mr. over the telephone, Mr. Ri that the fact of tl operation leasened the prospects degree of heat existing at the of the mine. BURED MINER NED COLLEY ) | Little Hope That Any of 178) 3 | Men ‘Have Survived Explosion MISSIONARIES, SAFE That Entombed Them. ARE FLEEING MEX ECCLES, W. Va., April 9.—After) Methodist Board Hears that » | twenty-four hours of exhausting ef- + ‘ ni |fort Chief Henry and a party ai Are Making Their Way to West Virginia mine inspectors early | Puerto Mexico. 3 “reached the bottom of Shaft! oe of the New River Colliers Com-| ‘The Methodist Board of pany, where 178 miners were buried| Missions received a cablegram by an explosion inst Tuesday. Vere Crus to-day, saying (hat ae J. W. Paul, Chief Engineer of the &* known, all Methodist Pitteburgh station of the Bureau of | '® Mexico are safe. | Mines, descended the shaft in com-| Most of them are making pany with Government rescue men| Way from the interior and will from the other two crews here. They | the country by way of Puerto Menten, had proceeded only a short distance = from the bottom when they found six bodies huddied together and so badly burned that identification was impossible. Penetrating further into the galleries they located other bodies and the work was temporarily sus- pended while a man was sent to the surface to prepare the crowd for the news, Soon after the first bodies | were hoisted out and placed in a temporary morgue. The crowd made @ rush for the tip- ple, but was held back by deputy eberiffs and guards. Fans were ot comes started in the hope that the entries could be cleared of such gas as remained after the plosion, and the pumps were set in| motion so that the rescue parties could reach the furthest recesses of the mine. It is thought that by this afternoon progress will have been 5 | such as to determine definitely wheth- | er any of the miners escaped. | All night long the throng of waiting | people kept their linea on the moun- | tainside. Many of the mines in tho diatrict closed yesterday and the min- ers and their families joined the peo- | jing rheumatic, ple of stricken Eccles in their weary Doan's Kidney Pills wateh for news, Many of the miners r ills by curing the 3 have been deputised by the Sheriff to! pol: ne at in keeping back the crowds and | Testimony— , Tassel, 250 W. pes gees “ Pbwperted on ne Emilie Van real eutent of the catastrophe be-| $+ New York City, N. Y., sayst had a very bad attack or ri ' eld, who returned to jeaton last night, is expected here | } pains it back and limbs, y and will ally assume lysed. I. ‘ge of the doctors who have hu d here to care for such of the men iT may be brought out of the mine live. Grave feara are held at the office of M. Guegenheim & Sons that the one! hundred and sixty-seven miners al 7 z a 7 iy A 4 “Every Picture Tolle @ Story: Many who suffer from ind weak kidneys are u irritable, fretful and nervous. ¥ only does constant backache on the nerves,” but bad Gee to ate all the uric acid trem the system, acid the nerves, keeping you “om ved in the New Rivers Collieries mn t Bluefield, Weat Virginia, may have succumbed to the gasen lowing the explosions, So far only | the moat manare information haa come from Franklin Guiterman, pres- | ident of the company, who arrived at | the mine early to-day to take personal of the work of rescue, several of the miners were | dead to-day hope is held that | othera may be rescued. “The rescuers found the mine said one of the officials ‘But it there js @ cavity or bottom in which the @icient air to enable them to live until rescuers reach Colored War Map of Mexico, — Topographical, and railroad showing all important tow: tain ranges, &c. Just from F Right up to date, E age in colors in next Sui 3 Marazine. Mr. Gulterman's office tu possible ti amber ut t 5 Order from advance. Edition limited. STERN BROTHERS Forty-second and Forty-third Streets, West of Fifth Avenue We have prepared for To-morrow and Saturday, on the Third Floor, a very important sale of Men’s $30.00 Sack Suits at 22.50 These suits are practically hand-tailored; made of seasonable flannels, worsteds and soft unfinished materials, in plain blue or gray; also in neat stripes or checks. The suits are cut on conservative or extreme English models, in sizes for men or young men of all - tions, ranging from 34 to 46 chest measure. Coats are half or quarter lined with silk or mohair and have silk sleeve lining; plain or patch pockets; skeleton waistcoats. Also for To-morrow and Saturday, a Clearance Sale of Men’s Spring Overcoats at $19.50 and 25.00 That Are Regularly a Quarter to a Third More. Included are Chesterfield models for dress wear, with silk and cloth lapels, full silk-lined. Also single and double-breasted and knee length coats for young men; quarter lined with silk; and Balmacaan Coats of shower-proof fabrics, in black, navy blue, Oxford or Cambridge gray, and neat mixtures; im sizes 34 to 46 inches chest measure, in regular or stout proportions. Attention is directed to our enlarged department on the Fourth Floor, presenting Everything for Out Door Sports assembled in complete varieties from the best Foreign and American manufacturers, Fishing Tackle is provided in every variety letles sea and fi water fishing. Special, to-morrow—Two-piece Rod, plated, brass ferrule, trumpet guide, cord grip, double hole tip; Regularly $3.50, $2.78 Salt water mahogany reel to fit above rod, $1.08 Tennis Supplies—Include newly imported rackets, with frames of selected wood, finely strung; regular value $3.50; special at $2.50 Also all other tennis supplies, for laying out the court, as well as playing the game. Golf Goods—Include everything in clubs, balls and other accessories for the game on % eating Seton Fe ton oF por ch i links. mockjat. . . . www ee O18 OO Also the new game ef Clock Golf, recently Bicycles—Made specially for us; light and durable; in all sizes for men, women and chil- dren, & $20.00; with coaster brake, $25.00 imported from England, to be played on any lawn; Prices: $2.50 to 10.00 a Set