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DEED OF JEALOUS YOUNG HUSBAND Jealously nerved Victor Roland O’Shea to kill his young wife at the home of her parents in Chicago last week and attempt to take his own life after a vain effort to shoot her mother. The tragedy brought to light the fact of a secret marriage over a year ago and a growing disposition on the part of the wife to repent of her choice. A courtship extending over a year culminated July 2, 1»01, in the mar riage of young O’Shea and Miss Ame lia M. Hogenson at Waukegan with out the knowledge of their parents. The young couple returned to Chi cago and went to their respective homes, intending to keep the fact of their marriage until they could gain the sanction of their parents, but through the misplacing of some papers by the young man his mother, Mrs. Patrick J. O’Shea, discovered all Sept. 7, 1901. Then began the unhappiness of the young couple. The bride’s father ob jected to the union because of the youth of O’Shea, who is 22, and be cause he was not in a position to provide for his wife. The young man's father, Patrick O’Shea, an at torney with offices in the Unity buUri- I VICTOP P. OVSHgA AND WIFE 1 MAKES DEFENSE OF SOCIETY. Miss Sarah Biddle Eulogizes Wealthy Set of America. Miss Sarah Biddle, a member of the Philadelphia family of that name and a young woman of social prom inence in the east, has written a de fense of smart society under the ti tle, “Letters of an American Con cerning Love and Other Subjects,” which will be published in Novem ber. Miss Biddle’s book is consid ered an answer to Henry Watterson’s recent attack on the “400.” She says such attacks are unjust and un called for. The true “400," accord ing to Miss Biddle, are composed of men and women of refinement and culture, who have gained entrance to the charmed circle by their gen tility and brains, and among them there is no lack of morals such as is attributed to what is called the so ciety of the east. Miss Bibble’s “400” know none where virtue and intellectuality do not constitute the highest badge of man and woman. “Not even the countries of the old world,” says Miss Biddle,” can show a nobler or finer set.” EVILS OF SPITE LAWSUITS. Very Poor Way of Obtaining Satis faction or Revenge. One of the most unprofitable, and in the end most unsatisfactory, pro ceedings in which a person can en gage is to commence a lawsuit mere ly because he is boiling internally and can think of no other safety valve. It is very much cheaper to buy a punching bag. There may be certain preliminary satisfaction in reading notices the plaintiff himself has caused to be inserted in the news papers that he has sued his enemy for a round number of thousand dollars. After a time, however, the litigation, if it has not substantial merits, be comes irksome in itself and expen sive, and the humiliation of a spite suit that ends in a judgment for the defendant, with a bill of costs, ranks among the acute forms of human misery.- -New York Law Journal. Ing, is said to have opposed the mar riage at first. Young O’Shea went to the home of the Hogensons and asked to see Amelia, saying to her mother that he was about to depart for Mexico and desired a last word with her. The young woman stepped into the outer hall and closed the door behind her. In a few moments Mrs. Hogen son heard the report of a revolver and a faint scream. Running to the hall door she opened it and saw her daughter lying on the floor and the young man sitting beside her, a re volver in his hand. Seizing a chair near at hand, Mrs. Hogenson struck O’Shea over the head as he pointed the revolver at her, felling him to the floor. As he fell he turned the revolver against his chest and fired twice, one bul let passing through his body and the other lodging in his lung. He may re cover. The young woman was wounded twice, one bullet piercing her heart and the other lodging in her right side. She died almost instantly. The young man regained consciousness, but offered no explanation for his deed. AN IDEAL AMERICAN CITY. Peaceful Life Led by Inhabitants of Mount Cory. Ten miles southwest of Findlay, Ohio, lies the peaceful hamlet of Mount Cory. It is a model utopia of righteousness, according to the Kan sas City Star. Seventy-five houses compose the village, and seven of them are occupied by preachers of the gospel. No saloons are there. In the winter the residents swap yarns by the side of the friendly stove in the corner grocery, and in summer they whittle hickory sticks and cut their initials in the soft pine of the store. There is a mayor, but no brawlers are ever brought before him, and his chief labors are those of a notary or uniting two souls whose lives have flowed into the course of the other. Years ago there was a calaboose, but now the hut is used as a village pound. ST. LOUIS BOODLE COMBINE. One of the Principals Has Made a Full Confession. E. E. Murrill, a former speaker of the house of delegates of the St. Louis city council, made a full con fession of his part in the boodle combine. He is a brother of J. K. Murrell, who came back from Mexico to free his mind. John K. Murrell made the follow ing statement to several close friends about his flight from the city and the causees that led him to come back. “The penitentiary could not hold as many terrors for me as being a fugitive from justice. My own mental an guish and my wife’s desperate plight in St. Louis, where she was deserted by those who had promised to aid her in my absence, were causes that prompted me to come back and di vulge all.” Youthful College Professor. Prof. J. Anderson Fitzgerald, who has just been named by the State Board of Regents as instructor in Greek at Marshall College, in Hunt ington, W. Va., is perhaps the young est college professor in the United States. He is but 18 years old. GREW ON THE SABBATH. Little Girl Feared Plants Might Be at Fault. John Philip Sousa sat listening the other evening to the history of the pier, now called the Steeplechase, on which he Is playing his Atlantic City engagement. Among other things he was told of the fuss that resulted when the authorities there fined a manager for giving a Sunday per formance two years ago, although Sunday is the day when the crowd of visitors and amusement seekers is the largest. “Incidents of the kind,” said Sousa, “always recall to me the story of a little country girl who, very early one Monday morning, took a basket of freshly picked, dew-glistening rasp berries to her family’s minister. He was delighted, and said so; but he added, doubtfully: “ ‘Er—l hope you didn’t pick them yesterday—the Sabbath—my child?” “‘Oh, no, sir—this morning!” she hastily said. But her face grew seri ous as she falteringly explained: “But —but they was a-growin’ all day yesterday.’ ” KNEW HE HAD A GOOD TIME. Heard Policeman Tell Judge About It in the Morning. "Down in Tennessee one day,’' said Senator Carmack of that state, “I met a person whom I knew slightly, and who was of convivial habits. He had all the symptoms of a ‘left-over.’ In fact, as he came down the street he had so close a resemblance to a man who had surely been imbibing the previous night that I stopped and said to him: “ ‘Did you have a good time last night?’ “ ‘I did,’ he chirped, with a cheerful grin. ‘I had a magnificent time. H i a funny thing, though, Senator,’ he added confidentially, ‘I was out all night, and yet I can’t remember a sin gle thing that occurred after nine o’clock.’ “ ‘You can’t?’ I said. ‘Then how on earth do you know that you had a magnificent time?’ “ ‘Because,’ he explained, ‘I heard the policeman telling the judge about it in the morning.’ ” Vegetation on Rome’s Monuments. The monuments of Rome are now under observation, not only by foreign ers, but by the Italian goverment. It has been discovered that parasitic plants grow at the top of most of the Roman monuments. At the top of the white marble column in the center of the Piazza di Santa Maria Maggiore there was till a few day 3 ago a thriv ing plant of a wild fig tree. It was beginning to eat away one of the top most Ornaments of the column. But it has now been removed. Twelve figs were found on the plant. The monument is now under repair. The affair has caused quite a little flutter and the Piazza has been crowded with people to watch the uprooting process. This column is the only one left of Constantine’s first church in Rome. Accurate Delay. Many stories are told of the lack of punctuality upon railroads in the southern states. It is said that when a New England man found his train, advertised to leave at 11 o’clock, starting at exactly that hour, he com plimented the conductor. “Just on time, I see,” he said, geni ally. “All this talk I’ve heard of the lateness of your trains is without foundation, I’ve no doubt.” The conductor smiled at him gently. “This train, sir,” said he, without a trace of embarrassment, “is not to day’s eleven o’clock train, sir. It is yesterday s eleven o’clock. To-day’s will probably not get here from 'way down until to-morrow, sir.” Wanted a Change. When the Rev. Thomas K. Beecher, pastor of the Park church, Elmira, died the difficult problem of filling his place confronted the trustees of the church. The choice finally settled upon the Rev. Annie Ford Eastman, one of the few women who have made a success of the calling. An enthusiastic admirer took a friend of his to hear Mrs. Eastman several Sundays ago. At the conclu sion of the sermon the friend was asked how he liked it. “The sermon w*as all right,” was the reply, “but I hear a woman preach six days in the week, and on the sev enth I prefer to hear a man.” A Strange Coincidence. Three events occurred recently at the same moment in one house In Waehring, near Vienna. These events were a baptism, a wedding and a funeral. While the family of the de ceased, an iron molder, Albert Hrui zek, were bemoaning their loss, An ton Schutz, a young carpenter, and his bride, were celebrating their wed ding in the rooms beneath them, and at the same time the Cihak family, who occupied rooms in the basement, were all arrayed in holiday attire in honor of their lnfcnt, Gabriel, who was being baptized Wins Rosebery’s Love Lady Nay lor-Ley land Said to Have Captured Heart of English Statesman. (Special Correspondence.) |UMORS have reached New port that Lady Naylor-Ley land, the richest and most I beautiful widow in England, probably ere long will become R the wife of Lord Rosebery, and that a visit from the leader of the opposition in Parliament, and one Lord Rosebery. of the richest of Great Britain’s noble men, is among the possibilities of the coming season. Lord Rosebery has been here sev eral times, and there was no expecta tion that he would repeat the ex perience until it was known that the beautiful widow of Naylor-Leyland was to visit the country of her birth — for the first time since she left it as Jennie Chamberlain, of Cleveland. So potent were her charms that she took London by storm. In a few months after her arrival half the court beauties* of England were green with envy. King Edward, who was then the Prince of Wales, made no effort to conceal his admiration of her. It was His Royal Highness who made the match between her and Sir Hubert Naylor-Leyland, an immensely wealthy man and one of his closest friends. She who had been Jennie Chamber lain then found herself mistress of one of the half dozen most sumptuous residences in London —a veritable palace at Hyde Park Gate, with marble staircases and a gallery of priceless paintings. This happened while Consuelo Van derbilt was yet in pinafores. The lat ter was before long to become the wife of a Duke, but she had millions, while Jennie Chamberlain had little besides her beauty. The Prince of Wales attended the first ball given by the new mistress of the Hyde Park Gate house, and stood sponsor for her first son. The second son had for sponsors both the Duke of Cambridge and the Duke of York. Dukes, Duchesses, Earls and Countesses were familiar figures In her drawing rooms always. Her titled husband was a tall and handsome captain in the Life Guards. In the beginning of their married life Mentmore Towers. people predicted that the beautiful American would help him in his ca reer. When he ran for Parliament for Colchester that prediction re ceived its first verification. She aided him in his canvass, showing herself everywhere. Voters found it impos sible to resist her beauty and her most engaging personality. The prediction held good when, three years later, Naylor-Leyland re tired from Parliament and announced his conversion to radicalism and free trade. Soon afterward he was created a baronet. The fortunate husband of this Amer ican girl continued to advance in a career in which she figured so po tently until 'his sudden death in May, 1899. He left her a fortune of several millions. The report now current that shs will marry Lord Rosebery brings into prospect the most interesting nup tials outside of the royal blood. Such a marriage will unite two persons who fill the world’s eye in their re spective personal accounts, and bring together two great fortunes—for on the death of his wife, who was Miss Rothschild, Rosebery inherited sev eral large estates, besides a fine bank account. Lord Rosebery—with all the space he fills in the public eye—is by nature and by habit a good deal of a re cluse. He is one of the most omni vorous of readers, and for that rea son is never really alone. So habitu ated has be become in his solitary communing with books that often ne rushes from London to the country in order to be alone there; and, vies versa, very often he spends Sundaj Lady Naylor-Leyland. alone in London because that happens to be the day when most of his own class are out of town and when, there fore, he can be certain to remain un disturbed. There is scarcely a being more restless in Europe; or one who so flits about from place to place. He has a beautiful house in Naples. He is to-day at the bath in Hastings; to- morrow at the bull fight in Barcelona; the next day one hears of him in Vienna or in Paris. He keeps up sev eral palatial houses —at Dalmeny, in Scotland; at Mentmore, in Bucks; at _ the Durdans, on Epsom Downs, and at his house in Berkeley Square. And it* is hard to tell when he is to be found I is one or the other. The one thing cer- 1 tain is that he will never stop very long in any of them. Head of a popular party, he never theless has given up none of the man ners and customs of the great aris tocrat, if one go to any of his dwell ings, there are all the outward marks and tokens of the great noble; indeed, it is almost like a plunge into the eighteenth century to visit some of his residences—with the cornet every where, the retinue of retainers, ample and varied equipages. You I may see him in the Summer time el ing from one great house in Buck inghamshire to another with postil lions, quite as if he lived in the days\ before the railway; and, in short, he J is grand seigneur to his finger tips.* Soon—if the news that Newports hears with so much interest isfl authentic—Lord Rosebery will another house to flee to when his own bore or fall to inspire him —the palace at Hyde Park Gate, with its staLvases of Carrara marble and its by Murillo, its tapestries by Kopu, its panels of Della Robbia faience, and its mistress, who is the subject of Amelia Kussner’s very exquisite miniature Id ivory,