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Who Worked for B. R. i Co. Claimed He Sent Out Circulars as a Sociological “Experiment. B OF THE CLASS OF 1906 OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. Gave the Name of Williams, bs "a Is Fiotitious—Sentence | Pieaded Guiity. | Pleading that the.srime of which he accused w mmitted partly in a of fun and partly for the purpose sociological experiment, a younx Says he |s George Williams, of Of 198 of Brown University ‘idence, R. 1., was allowed by Judge Holt, sitting in the United States Cir @ult Court, Brooklyn, to go free after Hearing 4 sharp lecture from the bene) 3 wus under indictment for used the United States matis in | @ponection with an sileged green-goude There ts a mystery about the ease Assistant United States Disiriet- ey Chatfield, in charge of .ts tion, refuses to explain, Mr tela udmits that Willlums is jc b right name of the defendant. Never It was under this name *hal (ie Wen was indicted, Named Many Friends. ‘When asked by Judge Holt If he had BAY statement to make, Willlims men- - tieped as personal friends several Su- préme Court Justices in Maine with | "whom Judge Hol: is arquainted ; Wiams's former home was N nridge Peck, Me. His family, the Federal « @ learned, was formerly wea Dat lost its property and William to his own resources to secure un Mucation, Friends aided him while Le Was finishing a high-schoo! course, and hen he started to work his way ¢ Brown University. Last year It became Decessary for him to drop out of his] @lass for a time to earn money for tuition, He became a conductor in ihe “@mploy of the Brooklyn Rapid ‘Transit ny. iy last May Edward Devereaux Norridgewoek, Me., reccived a lett: ted in Brooklyn, which told of ® #0 bills for sale at the rate of for 10, and signed Perley of R. J, Jones. Devereaux had heard only 4 Week before of the death of his ol! friend Perley Voaaie, and after think tam the matter over he handed the Fetter to a Secret Service man, * who arrested R. 4. Jones at tro Flatbusi | @¥emue address in Brooklyn, Jones de- that he knew nothing of an cl @reen-goods game, and that he Was simply receiving letters addresse) to “Perley Veaaie’ as a favor to @anual acquaintance named George Wil: | Dams. Jones |s awaiting trial | Williams arrested July & ay rt, m,, and had been in Btreet Jail from that tim unable to obtuin §0 | y that t hoving 4 ho wrong. was arraigned } Wound pleaded no guilty Never Got @ Dellar. “When I went to work as a tr tor,” Willams told Mr. “ang we used to talk on va ts. We had been readin, in the newspapers about a gr swindle one day, and Jones a hb red as the newspape' 1 did not then know to be who were mutual friends id myself, That js the whole to eh money from any v: hom I wrote," tives a Witams did not leara & week ago of his plignt was in court with him yester he corrobo! te the sw ty toll jolt the Judess Hon that he ehange his plea to on. Resi ity, with the understanding that should be suspended, and this >: made rievous mis of abhi and ndvantag ‘ned 4 ton, Tt was a que clared the letters for fun getting money. A Poul give him a chance. —_—_— LOST FROM BATTLE-SHIP. Seaman Feil Storm and Atiempied Resewe Maite WOOD'S HOLE, Masa, for the purpow from Missonrt to she was putting to sea to avold Wednes- day night's gale, lost a man overboard Part of the crew were securing the an ea the bow of the Missourt wher “ay ry Se Wiwo salcore. wit the man in an ai st “My Nose Was Never In. tended for Eyezlasses,” iy an expression we frequently hear “HARRIS SUCTION CLIPS” make it possints for ANY ONE to | wear eyeglasses. They do away with all tilting and slip- ping—take hold of the nose with ¢ Softest, surest, ‘smoothest grasp and bold as riz 48 spectacies. The : polnts of contact, combined with the Suction Pressure. iase . 4 comfort. he cyl glasses for 35 cts. Fiolt then sald that the defen?-! y rate, he sa'd, | 90 Sept. 16 -The| Tnited States battle-shtp Missourl, as} After next Wednesday litte " in ete them. Ther mo he last’ February, and father, James Bo Ha Twentyef ‘ o and m since the athe to be wh blindness in that & ning of | had a hard strugg' wt ohis wife he home for Iwenty ef live there until July 1 was Cirown oul of employme a West in Twenty=fo “the employer UW, of No. 195 bat ¢ Mall and y sister ire to be tu homeless | strevis unless some good angel comes to vielr resoun They hive knowa as yet only happle whar is! dled nthe 1 both H used to nent begins West} FA THER OFFERS TO GIVE AWAY HIS TWO MOTHERLESS CHILDREN, In this extremity the hildren to board in t fricnd at Spring Valley, colved word yesterday t epuld not remain (he t they would be sent ork next Wednesday Y ing of his litte’ ones. out. saying he did Huster for children. not and some one who can care for t sald. “They are good and h st qollar 1n paying for the “Dimples * never known a single i ‘THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 18: 18; 1904, niger ps a He to The Word yesterday to heip| piue funk, for ‘in tte w ems as If T must give them t0| oi or growimitgerfut em TERRE WAIL *INCOUNTY JA Sausage Bins nats None Is in Sight, Prisoners Kicking Over Sad Piight, Warden Worrying | by Day and by Night. ‘Not an inch of bologna in Kings County Jal,” said Warden Pat Hayes, turning awfully pale. The convicts are aging and qiashing thetr teeth as they gaze through thelr port-holes upon the back heath. The great sausage cheats are empty and void, “Th’ blank sausage-maker went back on his wold,” quoth Deputy Warden Keenan to Turnkey Dan Boyd. “T ordered a mile" roared the War- ik inch of the hog me Hark to the ery of my fr They are putting their shackles to terrible WN tests. I've argued, persuaded, cajoled and besought, but the wretches rep'y with only a snort. “‘Bologat, bologna,” they horridly shriek; ‘bologna, bologna,’ their clank- ing chaing creak. From bread and front biscult they turn in disgust; they apurn the brown bean, the bacon and crust. er sent the The whole crew's in mutiny from firs noune of | er to last; thelr rusty old chaine will t the chil. | wever hold fast and | twenty-four hours they'll burst from New thelr dungeons and break from thetr If succor comes not in ent yard towers.’ Thus walled Warden Hayes, all in a his great prison he had not a chunk of liverwurst, weiner- country or blut frankfurter, aal- For two weeks the packers have falled to deliver a lnk of prime pig, suckling or liver ap wurst, unhappiness, They are Si) tHe elm His guests bore it bravely for over a the worl now an it Is only In je ‘ ery last extremity that I offer to sur- | week; no word of reproach di@ any one r them But 1 cannot them | speak. They bow d to his promises of and If 1 ean see them in a g00d | pods of fresh links, took it for guspe! are Hittle what be: t a home for tem. and)omy In the sear mt omy tuem up for thelr own god. ome 5 otras applied for work In the subs 1 it may be that I ca rv And wo It Tean find & good iuine little ones Tam willing to give 133d Street Because there Is no flagman tracks at One Hundred clock at night Thomas Duffy, into a fre pert of the cked completely y had no warning and hea with for was brokeo 0 the nm struck horses were picked up by the train was stopped. ACTRESSES CHEER FIRE Wateh Hiase In Honne, Anumber ef 3 at No. 42 West Twenty day e, thinly clad, sion of house. Aigcon filled with smoke. ed the root it w por fl Ww flame of Are You Staying Ua Fine tt eome dietrossing skin aftr peed of I, Hosts of sapp) motherr ¢ it ‘does for he mont sooth’ Nights with the Baby?) at the grado crossing of the New York Central | Company No and Thirty third street and Twelfth avenue after driver The wagon | sinect ard no as just outns Duffy was thrown into the air and the} plot and | a) | carried, the heavy truck hanging over the side of the locomotive un) the MEN. Members of Anna Held’s Company ng women who board ninth street ato the The blaze the ms? sol aily Ue baby ing and nnd purvery 80a) ed, Antivep He, ) Pragran.. Try it, You'll te convinced cakes, Box, 3 cakes, Satisfy Yourse't, and ¢ at Once, FREE SAMPLES age and we will send health aD seat ted Booka, lage Be. s br om tree i Har. Dangerous Crossing Left Un- Williamsburg A ane guarded After 6 o’Clock Re-! sults in Serious Smash-Up at! from Engine on Way to Fire Directly in Front of Follow- ing Wagon—Back Broken. | George Wil Bouth near Bow » Willlam Ant see the prostrate In front of over the body, T hed ta the fl wheels of the heavy his back, fracturing his spine, few hours. hy Hay’s 4 Twi LACM GONE, THE FREMANISCRUSHED TRAIN HIT WAGON” BY HEAVY HOSECART Fal engineer of Fire Second streat sure, form of the ens m and drove right! yoots of the horses n’s chest, and the! cart passed over o¢ | Willlams war taker to the hospital, | where it way sald he could live but a Falling Out, Turning Gray or Faded Restored URES and cut up high St But final) murmur ran through the ranks,“ did we trust and give up our than! they whispered through chinks | dark, gloomy cells, "Surely tne story that grim turnkey tells of a famine of | sausages can't be belleved, Hist! Hark! |Sdeath! We've all been deceived! From a murmur thelr anger rose to o roar; they rattled their chalne and wranched at the door; they walled and they sobbed in flendish chant, con vineed that bologna couldn't be scant And now thelr anguish hes reached such a pitch that Warden Pat Hayes ‘rs in the last diteh. bologna, dear packers, he not “Bologna, pra "Tis a question of minutes, hours or, days, Tf three miles of sausage ‘8 not here to-morrow no power on earth will hold in their sor- row, So grind out the links and tle on Ly) akin or Brooklyn will suffer a rio sin.’ is eas Naess PULLMAN PLANT SHUT DOWN CHICAGO, Sept. 16,—Seven thousand workers In the model town of Pullma: are in despair. The entire plant ha 18) been shut down indefinkely, What aatérn District Hospltal) cauged the most anxiety among the n back and internal In-| gigoharged men was the wording of the Juries tecelved early today by being) order dismiasing them, It sald In sub of a truck, had no warning of an ap. | run over by the hose cart of his com- stance Proaching train and was smashed by tt, | be" “Your services will be required no Duffy's kneecap was broken, his buck | Willams went out with Me engine tO! longer, and you are requested to re- injured and his body bruised in ma he tual fire on Kent avenue, He W88 move your tools at once.’ places, He was taken to pis home No, [hanging on the rent of the vehicle, ig employers of the company said 0 Manhattan street eiven He turned ply to avoid running ane latter part of the notice was un One of the horses was eo badly burr into # trolley ear and was thrown off) usual 4 he 1994 atrik + 4 en 4 ” ad and naere: conscious, “Een during the strike we wer | it had to be ks The other was cnt, % hie head and rendered unconscious. vor told to remove our tools,” eald John Inuised and probably injured tarorantiy, | Cze hundred feet behind the engine (he Crowe, a foreman in the finishing de- It wit! aleo have to be killed In all] Hose cart wae thundering down the “TL feel that many of cho mer probabil The wagop whe trimmed SOVE ment The driver of the tendy taken back excep! at Pan nurrender Hans. PANAMA, Sept. 1) —Herman E. Fi charged with having embeazied $%.0/ from the Corn Exchange National Band ofChicago, who was arrested vesterda) in Colon, will United States, papers Haas will remain in ny feoure it to the same se fice et 's Healrhealth with Harfina tear hie po. Ad ited the (edieateatoap, Bath CIA ries Con Man stat Hoi im # a pai 1H, * Pb e Tab tte bbe ther Se SHOCKED 10 DEATH Bi TELEGRAPH WIRE i ae Schoolgirl Picked Up Line Sup- posed to Have Been Crossed by Deadly Current Three Miles Away, gloves properly fitted, () not merely stretched across the knuckles GREENWICH, Conn, Sept. 16.--Abble itt, daughter of Joseph Merritt, of lapboard Ridge, was instantly killed by @ live wire while on her way to ool yesterday. Bhe and her younger slater espled lying in the road a tele- graph wire which had been broken in Wednesday night's storm. She grasped it, an fh a scream fell to the ground, Her alster grasped her and also fell, but In falling released ber hold. It ts believed electric light wires in the | village three miles away had crossed 4 the telegraph wire and made {t deadly, Abbie died before she could be re- | it her slater will | * carefully snd thor- oughly fitted, os 7 Oneece, thele come 3 recover, an A Quartet of Seasonable SUITS and DRESSES For Misses and Children, (Third Floor.) Misses’ Suits |Children’s Wool Dresses ; of fancy mixtures, loose shapes, velvet collarand plaited skirts, 10.0 ‘An 0 ss serene get omy yy Value $13.30 0 | s4.,' Bhssaceers . $1.25 Misses’ Cheviot ue ; of blus, black and brown cheviot, | Children’s Dresses loose shapes and halt belf, skirts full Russian elect, trimmed with braid | side phited model... @ 4 fp 75 Value $18.00 Untrimmed Millinery (Second Floor.) and chic styles in Toques, Bounets and Hats at exceptionally low prices. And offer specially for Saturday several leading shipes, stylishly trimmed up, $2.48 + $2.95 We pay very special attention to Children’s Trimmed School Hats—extra values at 95¢c. $1.45 Boys’ $4. ,00 and $5 00 Suits | For $2. 79 New fall styles in Double-Breasted two-piece Suits, Norfolk Suits, Sailor Suits, Russian Blouse Suits and Eton Suits, splendidly made and finished—sizes 3 to 16 years—value $4.00 and $5.00, Sat- $2 79 ¥) f ps of School Sui's at lower prices than are asked else- where—$8.98 down to $1.93. Boys’ 75c. Shirt Waists, 39. A table full of elegant School waists and Blouses, made of percales and cheviots, attached and detached collars, sizes up to 14 yeass—-value ie special at 39c Boys’ 50c, Caps, Ic. Boys’ and Children’s Caps, mad: of blue cloth and serges, in the newest auto, golf and yacht styles—all the latest patiern caps, specially made up and 2 worth up to 50c. cach; to-morrow... +4 {c Children’s Serviceable Hosiery For School Wear | Black Ribbed Cotton Hose, double | | Ettten "Hose double Mit Black . ‘otton Hose, dow soles, heels and toes, sizes 6 to. 18 | heels and toes, sizes 6 to 10— 9%—3 pairs for $0<,; per pair. Cc 3 pairs for $1.00; per pair. Children's extea fine and heavy | One special line of Children’s Black Ribled Cotton Hose, sizes 6 ne Comeet ae extra fine and heavy, 10 9; pe to 10; per pait..+rs i DOC "29¢ pair. 19c. and 21c. Ribbons, 126. a yard (First Floor.) Satin and Taiiet be 3 5-6 and 3 7-dinch wide, colors white, }, nile and black—regular value 19. 12¢ Women’s Neckwear 10c. and 25c. Worth 25c. and 50c- Embroidered and Hemstitched Mull Ties, Stock Collars, Dutch Collars, etc., wade of Laces, Embroidery, embroidered on Silk, Crash, Linen and Batiste, white, cream, ecru and Arabian shades and in combination of colors. (First Floor.) Women’s $2.50 Shoes At $2.00 a Pair. Button and lace uppers of fine soft vici kid, with patent leather or vici tipt, also patent leather vamps and dui kid tops. New toc shapes, high ees low heels- cepa vane $2.50; Sa‘ur- day special. Boys’ and Girls’ School Shoes Mistes' and Children’s finest vici kid and box call, Spring heel, but- ton and lace shces, oak tanatd Leather soles, broad tozs with t'ps. rein $1. 50 nite 2, $2. 00 $130 Boys’ Shoes, satin calf vamps, dull dongola tips, new toe good stout soles that will sland hard wear—Sizes 13 °§$ Our patrons have © put on the hand and § We are now showing a full line of exclusive in Chenille, Silk, Velvet, Brush and Fur Felts | HENRY ESDERS, Near 6th Ave. Open Saturdays’ Until 10 P. M. New Fall Models of Suits and Top Coats for Men, Our name may be unfamiliar to many New Yorkers, but we are not newin the business. Have many successful stores in Europe, and we are determined to merit your custom by giving the best quality of materials, the best workmanship ever given for the money in New York. |} You might ask, How can we do this? Simply by buying our woollens direct from the mills and manufacturing all our clothes on the premises, saving thus middlemen's profits. Sack Suits, all-wool black cheviot, also in fancy mixtures, in single or double breasted styles... Single and double breasted Suits of black thibet, worsted and gray or brown mixtures........5 Sack Suits of cheviot, serge and fancy weaves, in the new season's models, with full back, broad shoulders and wide lapels. . Fall Top Coats of covert or w cord, in tan or gray...... | BARY OR WANs ce scrcsaccrereraas Separate Trousers, in a large assortment of worsted and cheviot, all the newest nei and fabrics DEV ENTREES Young Men's Suits tom, Fe Fall Suits for Boys. Norfolk and double-breasted Suits of all-wool chev-| At iot and tweed, in neat patterns or mixtures......+ | 1.95 Sailor and Russian Blouse Suits of fancy mixtures, {2,50 serge and velvet, in navy and BOW. sss se+eees] 3650 pe Bh oe) _. West 125th St.. near 7th Ave. Furnishing Homes | am $8.49 sr yhee Homes Is Our Specialty! OGICAL and natural, there- | fore, that we should get a5 ¥, 4 2 +, ¢, 6.00 9.00 weve, $2090 4,95 to 9,00 veveeee 42650 1.50, 1.95, 2.50 | | $8 4 for these . $13.50 mas- sive solid oak Chi. foniers; carved top with French tevel mirror, 2x16; ewell top, dix% rolid ~~ trade, said t| brass trimmings. you n eye treatmen = yeu woulda't toto bucks, | S, & H. ‘ou needed medicine you | _ Stamps. In’t go to a cObbler, A hee bottles of medicine do | wr constitute a drug store. | Neither do several pieces hd furni- | ad ture make a home outfitting em- for these porium. This is exlusively “$4. 9B hajustabl house furnishing store, and it is jen oak, cane teat, Pa the store of its kind in New York, | tent lap board, ete. Comeand see our gigantic stocks! Liberal Credit Terms. Look at the prices! Figure ow 9 See | Open Saturda ot si is Tate 758 canbe cuties sret-| Open, Saturday Evening Homes Furnished Completely, $120 ial Red The Hand Book of Intelligent Men. No other book is needed for refer- ence in the Presidential Campaign. The New Campaign & War Edition —OF-— Ta WORLD ALMANAC JUST OFF THE PRESS. ANSWERS EVERY QUESTION. SETTLES EVERY ARGUMENT. ENLIGHTENS EVERY INTELLECT, Party Platforms, Pictures of Candida ites, Names of Committees, full campaign information, The Japanese-Russian War| In complete review for quick reference. 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