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- y > - Pid TY 05 SHON ~ TRUS SOCET Second Annual Exhibition by Spaniel Club Opens with Ex- ceptionally Fine Array of Very Valuable Specimens, CANINE ARISTOCRATS CODDLED LIKE BABIES. ported Griffon One of the Fea- tures—Mrs, Howard Gould's Little Black Pug Admired. Bwoll canine society ts all astir at the Waldorf-Astoria to-day for the second annual Toy Dog Show given by the Toy Bpanicl Club of America, opened t»day in the Bast Room and foyer of the hotel, Patrician pups of all varieties are not the only thoroughbreds at the exhi ton, elther, although society and debutantes of the swe there to see that their “preci Ungs" don't get homesick calmly a back seat In favor of the pa Uttle canine aristocrats who a feal lords and masters at the exlbl tion, For at the toy dog show the haughty littl snub-nosed spaniels and fro bearded faced (Giriffons are Worth almost their weight in gold If it were possiole fur the Japancse spaniel to have en put out of joint his retrousse would iave cated at the ‘Toy Dog Show, as py, comical looking iitie Gr Bruxelivise 5 the newest of the da Mra. Belmont’s Dog a Triumph, Mra, O. H. P, Belmont’s imported Griffon, “Monkey,” is one of the new triumphs at the show, and his mistress visited him to-day to see that well with her pet. Mrs. Jam Kernoohan has five Griftons a Thomas W. King ene. one, With their ugly little hairy faces the Unpedigreed Griffons sit and lous sy i and Juiea be 1 pathetically at the ovet-pumpered white maltese spaniels and King Charles, who this morning were « put through all the processes ot a “Whi Vhite maltese terriers this seas. are wearing thely bate te the middie from forehead t of their talls, Two beautiful with long white hair © we and groomed, resting In a pale blue satin-trimmed glasx house, ‘ Boy and Sunny Boy, the property of Mrs. Emma Graeser, Pampered Terrier Unhappy, An unhappy-looking litve ferrier, who was being Urushed and combed, was having his har ted tn pink ribbons, with a bow on each side, Yorkshire preparatory ‘to being put in an elabo- | jcately berbffied basket, wax ‘'iny W., the progeny of Mrs, J. A, Whelpley Mrs. 8. L. Goldenberg's famous dogs from the News wired uMliing Champion Darnall Kitty, who has al- Teady won 386 prizes, are among the thoroughbred toy dogs, while the centre of one of the exhibition rooms |s taken up with the pets of Thomas W. Luw- an, president of che club. Miss H. G. Parlett, of Corcoran Man or. is exhibiting her beautiful Cham Bion Charmion. Among the women anxiously watch- ing thelr vets was Miu May Sruce nnan, the beautiful Kentioky so elety girl, whose famous little .ruby ooaniel Kiss is one of the dogs sure of a prize. Miss Brennan, a stunning black tailor-made sult, with a black beaver Continental hat, trimmed in red roses, & white embroidered blouse and sable furs was one of the features of the morning. in of High Dearee. The tiny black pugs—one owned by Mrs. Howard Gould, another by Mrs J. W. Henning, Black Fairy—and a few owned by Mrs, Golden- secretary of the club and Chair- f the Bench Show Committee, an occasional break in the | of fluffy and silken-hatred span- felt Mies C. ©, Whitney, another exhjbiter; Miss Clover Boldt, whose Buster Riown was carefully waiched by his mistress Mrs. J Plaeew with hee ¥ W. Brown; Miss Elsie Waterbury and scores of beautifully mowned wowel vaso. out the glass houses at which no une jared throw stones. ‘A litter of Japanese spaniels, the prop. | ' erty of Mra, Kellogg, filled the East Room with a series of motley cries. All day ‘ong the Waldorf was thronged with society women, owners of dogs, and this afternoon Mrs, Rich- ard Davia visited her prise winner Japanese Kpaniel, Crossroads Shogun “it Is the greatest dog show over given in New York,” sald Mrs, 9. Gold- @uberg. ‘There never has been such a showing of toy dogs.” Mrs. A, M. Raymond-Mallock, found- er of the club, who has come from En- gland expressly to attend the exhibi- ways she never saw before a finer owing of thoroughbreds and toy dogs FLAMES BAFFLED MOTHERIN RESCUE Woman Beat Down Door with Axe Trying to Save Hed Two but Was Driven Children, Baok—One Dead. (Special to The Evening World.) NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 1.—Overcome by smoke which filled the two rooms in whioh they were Edwin T. Engol- man, two years old, and hiv brother Frapk, four years, were tiken to St James’ Hospital, where Edwin died Prank is in a@ critical contition A little before noon to-day while the two whildren were alone, the younger lying in hie erid in a hall bedroom and the inher, Frank, playing nearby, a fire broke cut in the Engelman apartment, which Is on the second tloor of No 15 New York avenue. ‘The mother of the children waa weeping the back stoop when she heard her children cry. Opening the back oor she foun! that the hallway of the wecond floor was filled smoke. Fearful of her children's fate she 0. H. P, Belmont’s Ime! | jUST A FEW OF THE MANY PATRICIANS AT THE TOY DOG SHOW IN 4HE WALDORF, WislCH 1S NOW THE HAPPY LAND OF CANINE, *Durrat) hitty? UTORAT 6 FUME, SH 9 Beautiful Idalian C. Hayes, Who Is 27 Years Old, Demands $25,000 Damages from Henry Ciay Sayers, Idallan C, Hayes, a beautiful brun- ette, costumes in a sult of brown, was the plaintiff, in the trial of a sult for breach 0 chise of marriage agains. Henry Clay Sayers, an elderly and spectacled gentleman, She ts twenty-seven, and accord.ng to her tige ures Suyers is sixty-three or sixty four, She demands {25.0w damages, The bus.ness off getting a tore Jutsico Scott In the Supreme Court indicated through the ques.ions pu. to the jurors that the gentleman accused of fickivness is a veteran of the war be- tween the States, Fair Ph tif on the Stand, Miss Hayes was called as the first witness, Sho testified that her aged sultur was one of the managers of the Waynesburg Far Association wre) the met him, She offered {n evidence a lot of notes from Hen.y Clay Sayres to her making theatre appointmenia when he happened to be in Pittaburs. “In the latter part of April he pro- posed,” said the plaintiff. “Well, hold on; | don't know what that means,” interrupted Mr, Larkia for Sayers, “Why, L guess that is undersood,” returned Miss Hayes, The veteran of the civil war bent forward maxing a sounding vodra uf tis hand back of his ear and peering At the girl in brown, perhaps forty years his junior, “Well, what did he say?” asked Jus- tice Beott. ‘Why, he fd thy asked me to marry him irl in much astonishment her “conclusion” Was not accepted. id he give you any token of your engagement Mr, Albright asked, ‘Un, You: this ring,” she — ropited, picking the symbol out of her shopping bag. i "'My dear, loving Idalian,' lawyer read from a letter of her 1898, ‘Dear. sweet Idalian, I love you; I can't help loving you: I want to love you and I'm going to love you." Sold Wheat and Bought Ring, Then the letter told abowt a ring he had bought for her, with “four fine Opals and sixteen diamonds,” which »e would bring next time he visited Pitta- |burg. After that was the news that the defendant had bought some more stock In the of wheat for $112, with “Your ring id the letter closed a beauty, with the rushed wpetairs and tried frantically to open the door leading to her roma, in answer to the appeals of her little | ones The door, however, resisted her efforts, After beating vainly upon the | panels Mrs. Engelman got an axe fron low stairs and returned to the as sault. She broke in the doo: panels but was forced back by the volume of smoke and flame which rushed out The woman rtaggered down tal # just ax the firemen arrived. Members «¢ Fingive Company No. 5 galced entiance to the blazing apartments from (6 rear and found the baby with flames about it Several firemen and policemen wer» nearly overcome by the rmoe, and one of the former wae Injured by beng |struck on the head by a ladder — —— WEINSEIMER SENTENCE. ed Until Monday by Coun- | Rea | At the reauest of counsel for the de- fendant, Judge Newburger, in General Sesaic to-day poa'poned imposing sentence on Phillp Weinselmer, the con- vieted labor leader, until Monday next George Raines, of Rochester, chief of counsel for the convicted man, tele- wraphed the request for the adjourn- ment, and It Was not opposed by the Distriet-Attorney. Ww neeimer was exmvic h ago of extortion, in er to pay him =,7 nearly d ‘What notable event happened tw Russia on March 17 e new Ca wi of we ten Cae jucy be} fair and sold 100 buehels | H,’ trom Henry inscription ‘H. 8. and 1 May $a dear git Sayers to Als o Another letter sald; “Dear girl, don’t a4) more of that cocaing; {t might , Mand then what could I do for rupted the lawyer, rein the habit roptled, ‘ letters had such exp as “Pretty, dear, ida Wish you were my own, don't you, dear Ida® But the aged courtier wa thous, too, for he wrote. — you,” “your d—— friend.” and the lke The jurymen were permitted to er- amine the ring one by one, while Miss Hives ensed nt them with great dark Up to this thme not a ward had been sald about ages, and Justice § te Hoved irsting curlosity the audience by asking. T Wor TWenty-two When we became sald Miss Hayes, “and Mr 1 me he was elther Afty-e! or fi ge. Moré lette re read, in which the griagied war veteran sighed like a boys ish Romeo, and spoke dutifully of his paterfanuiiias. “Father says I know more about the tock than any one else,” writes th nY,"" proudly, telling about watering | and feeding the cattle tiie Miss Hayes anid it was finally ar. ringel that they would go to Kansas and be married when rhe concluded hool term tn the autumn and was tly nokahed to All the noait'on tety he offered her as Mrs. Sayers “Bo, In October,” she 4, "1 went to Pittsbure where he was to meet ime. But when T got to the station he wanted me to travel with him to Kan a3 as man and and | refused. 1 had a bad temper aint | was very ine di¢aant and angry and U left him ‘Afterward he came on to Youngs: town and asked for forgivene: accepted Mr. Sayera's explamition, a which everything went on as bef, Later L arranged (o come to New ¥ and enter the Sargent Dramatic Behool, He came on with me and re- | mained three days. [ next saw him in June, 1901, when he came on to marry | me. ‘I was living with my sister, Mrs. | Charlotte Alexander, at No. 23° Wert Twenty-third street. Mr. Sayers sald he had concluded to be married | | Philadelphia, and he would not ha er my sster and her husband as w nesses, | Al y Married, He Satd. | "I pressed him for a further explan tion, and he eaid; ‘Well, I can't legal marry you, I have had a w.fe all these years, and I can't marry you legally, Bot I love you with all my heart. just | the sume.’ When I asked him why he had not told me this before he an- ewered: ‘Because I knew if I did I | would lose you—and I could not do It “Then I sald: ‘Leave me! Leave me forever, Do not Jet me look upon your face again!’ He went away.” | Mine Hayes Cross Examined, | Miss Hayes was subjected to the or- deal of cross-examination this after. noon by John Larkin, and all the dram- atic art she had acquired at Sargeant’s echool during the past three years was put to the teat | Q. Miss Hayes, you say you first met Mr. Sayers the Fair, where you were demonstrating tea; tow don't you remember that Mra. Roberts pointed out | Mrs. Sayers and their children at the hotel that same evening? A. Oh, no sir nothing of the kind occurred. Q. Did you make no investigation os to Mr. Sayers’s soci condition and position? A. Oh, no; I acepted his word for It «Q. Nw didn't Mr.Carter, altting here, tol] you that day that Mr. Sayers was a married man? A. No sir; I never | passed a word, not even the time of day | with Mr, Carter In my ife. Q. Ever see this man before? A tall, rawsboned Pennsylvanian ntood up for inspection with a bashful \wrin on his face, but Miss Hayes de- c'ared she had no recollection of ever having seen him before. Miss Hayes admitted that she had visited Nisgara Falls, Cleveland, Wash- ington, Toronto and other distant plac with Mr. Sayere on a long dri Q. How long did you stay in Wa ington? A. About @ week; I think not as long as we intended. 4 ont all these hehaved with the utmost didn't you? A, Always. | She Dida't Know Clem, | Q. Who Is “Clem,” mentioned tn one of the letters? asked the laser, A. 1 dont know. T had been told ‘t was Mr. Savers's sister. Q. Didn't know “Cem” was his wife Mrs. Sayers? A. 1 did not. To Justive Scott Miss Hay during the three years of th ment she and Mr. Sayers long jaunts vou propriety, said that enga ze: took every oreesvution to keep It a secret from h's tartly and hers, mother sister quarrelied "she said. “They thought | to have received Mr. Sayers’s me On acc of dis age But y ink age made any difference. Besides, he didn't look #9 old then Q. Waen't that quarre! vou had with Mi. Sayers beeause he wouldn't go to Colorado and met a divorce ao matty you? A. Oh, no; certainly T did not Know he was married | That coneluded the cross-exam: nation } The trial will go on to-morrow lm not Mr, Dooley REND Witness Denies that Miss War- ren Told Coroner Miss Dolbeer Was Insane or that Her Death Was a Case of Suicide. Mra. L. ©. A. MeClurg, housekeeper at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, was ex- amined to-day before Commissioner Robert P. Lee, in the continuation of the taking of testimony In the Dolbeer will contest Luke O'Reilly represented the contest D. Frank Ioyd the Mrs, McClurg, in her direct examination, sald she was In her room in the hotel on July 9 1904, when a maid brought word that somebody had ants and pro- ponents. fallen from a window on the ninth floor, She hurried to room 923, Miss Dolbeer's room, where she found Miss Warren, the young woman's companion, and two maids. The maids were restraining Miss Warren, who was hysterical, and Mrs ht was “trying to get out of the room. Mrs. McClurg said she sent the maids away and undertook herself to soothe Miss Warren, Mrs, McClurg did not know who bad fallen, One of the maids tad sald it was Miss Warren's daugh- ter, but Miss Warren corrected her, say+ Ing. “No, it's not my daughter, but my friend. Miss Warren, according to the house- keeper, kept asking for Dr. Adams, her physician, When Dr. Moore, the house physician, od he gave Miss War- ren sume medicine, but she refused to take {t. Then Dr. Homer Gibney came in, Resogairing him, Miss Warren suid ‘Oh, Ae what will L do, what will the folks a. home #3 This testimony was substantially the same aa given by Dr, Gibney. Mra, Me- Clary raid Dr, dibney left her in charge of Miss Warren, and she next saw nim In ruom M4, where Miss Dolbeer’s body was taken, She went there with M Warten. There came in De.ective Bul livan, of the West Thirtieth street stn- tion, and Dr. Gibney and House De tive Bmith. Sullivan questioned M Warren, but Mrs, MoClurg did not re call much of her answers. She thought Miss Warren told how she and Miss Dolbeet had walked up and down the hall, but finding !t oppressively warm, nad gone into the room, Miss Warren then weat to an adjoining room, and, coming out @ minute jater, saw Mise Dilbeer divappearing from the window Mra. MoClurg said Miss Warren had ot told Sullivan she “was apprehensive for Miss Dolbecr's safety.” Did Not Say Sulolde, The housekeeper denied that Miss Warren had told Sullivan that Miss Dolbeer had jumped from the window She sald Miss Warren had not cold | Sullivan nor any other person that Mise Warren had just been in time to see Miss Dolbeer raise the window and jump out, Mise Warren hed not told Sullivan Miss Dolbeer had complained of pairs in her head Sullivan, Smith and Dr. Gibney after five minutes talk left Mre Meclurg with Miss Warren In the room with Misa Dulbeer’s body Clurg took Mise War | room. AML this ms Miss Warren was ery- ing and highy nervous. Mr. Bane, 9s. | sistant manager of the hotel; Dr, Gib- |ney and Coroner Scholer then came Ia, v e Me- n back to her \ ‘ - ey | | ‘Aorrnory De Gibney advised Miss Warren. who wan veluerant talk to ihe Covocer that « should answer hie quoe.tons. 1uen shy repeated what she had told Deteethy bu nothing else, Mr MeClurg fanning Mas Wor ail thie nd co 4id hear every A aid Miss Warren bad ner Sch that Miss De “had been cragy for two or three years Never Called Her Crnay. "Was the word eraay used at all? asked Mr. Lioyd , not at all? Hepiving to a question, Mra. MeClurg sald Miss Warren had ¢old Coroner Scholer that Miss Dolbeecr had consult ed a Paris physician for neurasthenta Did she “say the Paris doctor had d Miss Warcen that Miss Dolbeer would be apt to commit some rash aot for which she could not he held Ferpon- sibh ‘She did not,” replied the witness Mrs, McClurg repeated that Miss Warrig: had not told Coroner Scholer | Miss “Dolbeer had jumped out of the window Was the word jum used?’ asked Mr. Loyd. poy “Tt was not,” sald Mra, McClurg. Mrs, MeClute said she had not heard Miss Warren tell Coroner Scholer that | Miss Dolbeer would ‘act upon the im- pulse of a moment.’ Coronet Aecholer left after fifteen min- utes with Dr, ey and Mr. Barse leaving Miss en with Mra, Mo- Clurg and Misa Alexander, who had come In during the vestign tion. Then Mra, 3 5 thought |t was about 6.30 o'clock The direct examination waa concluded at this point and a recess was taken ft he A a Sang TR ga af FPPSTVS VOTRIPER 10, 1904, GIRL EXECUTES POLICE HEADS ALE TOE Turns On All Gas Jets in Hotel M | Room While Her Male Com-, panion Sleeps, and Both Are Found Dead. Misa Mary McGrath, of No. 52 Grand street, Wilkamsburg, was summoned lfrom her place of employment at No bil The election-night raid on the gam-! 129 West Bighty-second st TX ER ax cAdoo Has Inspectors and Captain Before Him in Con- nection with Alleged Faro Pal- ace Raided by Anti-Policy Men Coroner’s Jury Dit id Grace Pittman After Sik Her Story that’ Killing’ -_——- On her unsupported worth ng houne of Parr & Barkley, at No. piled Jim Wo Kee, a Cl . was the man at No. 301 Bleecker st $3 Rowe street, this city, to-day to @i\eq af markate conference at defense on Nov. 4, Mra @ undertaking shoo on North Ninth| Pouce Hendouarters this afternoon z atreet, near Driggs avenue, Willisms| Them were present at t ‘ ent at the confer: | tore C Jae . burg, to prove that she was not the | ence Commissioner McAdoo, Boro fore Coroner Jackson to<tayy ! Several USN pot re-arrested and the case victim of a double tragedy. Several inspector Brooks. Inspector Walsh, in ably be akowed to drop. 7 | persons had identified bat at whose district the raid was made; In-) Policeman F. Wesley Cu woung woman who, with Peter MoN@M=| soector MoClusky and Capt, Dillon, of R. Halt paw ‘ : . jon, No. M1 Bleecker street . ie ara, of No, &% Driggs avenue, Brook: |the West Sixtv-etghth street station. | morning of Nov. & por db wav ot Iyn, had been found dying from @88/A11 attended the Commiasioner on. a| piece ‘thd saw a tv poisoning in Jackson's Motel, No 2 Grand street, Williamsburg. ‘The parents of Mise MoGrath were (protesting againet the idenctfieation |whon the young woman hereelf arrive! She also Mentiied the dead woman. | in lwho, the police declare, deliberately | | planned and executed the death of her | 1 companion and herael!, as Miss Rose | White, twenty-four years old, of No. 18 Metropolitan avenue, Williamsburg, er’ hurried sumomne. They were locked In the Commission- the minor officers came out they had nothing to say, pected places In the West sixty-elghth atreet Frecin a negress, was discharged by blood smashing her way out Keo’s laundry with @ The woman fell to the saw her. He kicked the Commissioner McAdoo | tn a rear room found the Answer to questions sald |dying from cuts on the ‘I disoussed the Eighty-second street! jim Wo Kee died on the 14. That te all Ihave to gay.” hospital. ‘The women eatt “Was the place on the list was Molde O’Donohue, of that he had visited the Jaq search of her sister and had ds "a private Mea for an hour, When of sua. he was asked - YR Bhe had lived In @ furnished room at! 1) wes on Capt. Dillon's book ¢ ‘apt 0 that address for two months, and noth: | thirty dave.” was the reply. r berets or murderous in tng oou'd be learned about her relatives The Commissioner vai’ Capt. Komp, ty ¢ poe or connections, The Te agiana who preceded Capt. Dillon in the pre-: c, seb jury. expiring in a room they ha cinet, did noe bave No, 19 Weet Fi Coraner's 3 , admitting last nlght at the hotel second strev est FlaNty name was Grace Pittman, ; She had covered her nostrils with @ Jkerchief, and when found she was emiling peacefully in her last sleep. ‘The (oatures of the man were con (orted and snowed that he nad stu gicd with all tas etrength to fight off) the overpowering fumes of gas. They died a faw moments after an ambulance Javrgeon arrived | ‘The parents and steters of Mary Me |Grath convinced Coroner Weat and the| polloe chat the dead woman was not | | Mary MeGrath, after an examination | of the body had been made and before u on on overr Canght f. dictments charging forgery in the sec- sions to-day. senience untt Forbes was arrested in December, 1903, on his suspected Met, <a - “GUILTY,” FORBES’S PLEA. was a married woman. She heard that her sister was at Yfee's laundry and went there af ‘The Chinaman gave her « Up. whith rendered her un us, when she woke up and tried to threatened to brain her he Shé took the cleaver al \ struck him with ft and ran In tion of hee story that the Chinas tried to kill her she sears. ‘ Alter fiticen minutes" jury brought in a verd! an was Innocent. Alter 25,000-Mile Chase, Admits Gatit ta rt. Charles F. Forbes, alias Irving W. umphreys. pleaded guilty to eix in- 4 degree In Court of General Ses- He was remanded for Nov. 18 complaint of his employers, George | oo | | ow y the young woman arrived in person, Ww. Cole & Co, of No. Ml Broadwa | b vy. the FOUN woman is ate OO a ae jeanne! tg’ Brosamar,|AT SEVENTY HE RRM las official the Identification of MISS) forged checks. He furnished 6,000 bail McGrath, which was tneorrect. This | and disappeared . Former Member of mistaken {dentification was given in| Detectives wate ed his wife and found Uses Pistol tm i , she was g¢ . earlier editions of The Evening World Tete a Comte of ut! | HELENA, Mont, Nev, to-day, Romance Was Unhup When McNamara and his companion | a entered the hotel Inst night she was | ch heard to say | “TL have left my happy home for you,” to which he replied; “We have left our homes for each other.” | The man entered on the register “Robert Brown and wife, City.” They | were assigned to @ room on the third | floor and nothing was seen of heard of them until they were disoovered In a dying condition by Annie Cook, a cham- bermald Man in Next Room Overcome. } In an adjoining room John Bayto, who lives in the hotel, was found overcome by the fumes of gas that | had entered his apartment through the transom over the door. ‘There were in the room three gas jets, all of whicn were turned om full Dr, Cameron was called from the East- ern District Hospital, but he was un- able to do anything to save the young fouple, Hayto wor not go far gone und the eurgeon succeeded In reviving iim || Reebes handkerchief which the young wom held over her face, she held in her other hand a theatre pro-| gramme of a play entitled "Why Girls VLeave Hi ome HERD ACA IS LET SHE WOMAK Policeman Monaghan, Who Al- ready Holds a Medal Won While on Duty, Is Badly In- jured in Stopping Runaway. Policeman Michael Monaghan, ¢f the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street siation, already the holder of a certificate of honorable mention for herolam, almost lost, bie life to-dafy in stopping a runaway near the station- house He was taken to Harem Hoe- pital, and will have to remain several weeks recovering from his injuries. Mrs. Samuel Levy, of Mo. 28 Lexing- ton avenue. the wife of a promisen Harlem: politician, and her six-year-old fon were ride in a light wagon, which was drawn by the runaway horse. ‘The prompt ac ton of Moaaghin saved them from Injury. Mra. Levy was driving east through | hassador received verbal assurance of nOe Hundred and Twent h street — Novelties in Paris Tea Gowns Surah and Hand Embroidered Mull, Japanese Silk Quilted Peignoirs Eiderdown Fath Robes. Fancy Silk Long Kimonos Short Kimonos in Crepe, Silk, Albatross and Flannel, Wrappers in Silk and Cashmere. SPECIAL—FRIDAY, Eiderdown Kimonos Albatross Kimonos . French Flannel Kimonos Japanese Silk quilted Kimonos embroidered ‘oral effects — Roadway C196 Street lrmsras eae Constablege -» Women’s House Gowns, Kimonos, Wrappers: lat Park avenue she attempted to cross | in front of a heavy truck driven by | Michael Reilly. Mra, Levy says Reilly had the retna down on the dashbcard | ‘and was using both hands to light his pine. | ‘The shaft of the truck struck the rear lof her vehicle, swinging it around and frightening her horse, which bolted and was soon beyond her control Monaghan had just le(i the station- house when he saw the runaway ap-| | proaching. He ran into the street and caught the horse's bridie, The animal awerved to the north side of th jerushing Monaghan against a grocery | wagon His nose was broken, several teeth were knocked out and his back was hurt, but he held the horse until by- standers secured It, Then he lost con- sciousness and within five minutes from the time he had left the stat.on-house wae carried back Into ft, apparently dead Mra, Levy friend and went to the sta turned her rig over to A -house where she told of the truck incident. A policeman was sent out, and a short distance up Park avenue found Reilly driving and smoking a pipe. Reilly was arrested Pence 10.—President Roose- invitation to Great Britain to take surt In a second Peace Conference has been presented by Ambassador Choate to the Fore gn Office, No forma anawer haa yet been made, but the Am- {te cordia! weleome. of Crepe, in Floral designs. NOVEMBER 117TH. oye eo goes os « « $00 ee oe 50 in exquisitely 30.00 Waa extradited and reach conling our purchases to manufacturers whose product is nored for excellenat,: inferior made goods we have no use for, This insures our customers i Parlor Suit of § pieces, highiy polished mahogany frames covered followed her | Truman, seventy years nt im. He; a member of the noted Q ed New York | in Missouri, has shot ad been | McCabe at Sedan | Truman surrendered, rney's staff, husband and short time ago after hi jaeed 25,00 miles, Announce that they have secured anil tion of choicest German Squirrel Lin remarkably low figures, and are con enabled to offer ft a HIGH CLASS FUR-LINED GARMENTS — GREATLY BELOW REGULAR PRICES, FUR-LINED COATS of Black Broadcloth, 8. dyed Squirrel fur collar........ 28,0 FUR-LINED COATS of best Broadcloth, in black, white, red, tans and grays, tailored cloth collar, very full sweep,, .. FUR-LINED COATS of best Broadcloth, rich fur collar, very full sweep... ...06.. FUR-LINED COATS of imported Broadcloth, in black, white, red, tans and grays, rich fur collar, very full sweep,..... 7 FUR-LINED COATS. of finest imported Broad- cloth, extreme lengths, very full sweep, all with. finest fur collars and cufis— a Se. 55.00 to 125.00¢ our. Wal cf the money, ; wialever you Duy here you may rest assured carries with hat the cuality and construsti'n is as good as can’ be bad for Quarteres 41 Oak Side “GOOD GOODS FOR LITTLE MONEY.” | $1,296 us) aaa Chale, quarter aA in tigured tapestry, Verora velour or damask; worth $55; 4 Special offering al.... ‘ ne CASH OR CREDIT. Wolneeday and hajurday Riv Every Monday, al