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Bp a eae et Het os - & WEN Ripeiece MAY BE MISTRIAL I HAN PATERSON CSE Eduard J, Dressler, One of the Jurors, Stricken with Paralysis, and Unless He Recovers an Entirely New Jury Will Have to Be Chosen. Eduard J. Dressler, of No. 106 Woodycrest avenue, one of the jurors sit- ting at the trial of Nan Patterson for the murder of Caesar Young, is stricken with paralysis and may be unable to resume his place in the jury box, In that event the eleven other Jurors who ‘have heart the produced by the prosecution during the last will be discharged. A new panel of 100 talesmen will have to be drawn and an entirely new jury selected, Under the constitution of the State there must be twelve. dn the box throughout the trail. News of the ilness of Juror Dressler reached Justice Vernon M. Davis to-day o few minutes before the time set for the resumption of th trial in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court. It came in the form of an affidavit in which Dr. James A. Ferguson, the family physician of the ‘Dressiers, swore that the juror had suffered a sudden.attack of or paralysis, PARALYZED ON THE LEFT SIDE! ‘The physician stated that during the past many hours Mr. Dressler has been compistely paralyzed on the left side of his body and that @ blood clot has formed on his brain, He was stricken last night and grew rapidly (worse until thie morning he was in an exceedingly critical condition, After receiving the affidavit Justice Davis telephoned to Mra, Dressler, e-learned from her that she fears that her husband will not survive as it 4s the third stroke with which he has been selzed.- When the malady sud- denly developed he was at the dinner table with his family, apparently en- foying the meal. He had been at his office all day, Ghould the sick man be completely incapacitated trom resuming his Guties as a juror Justice Davis will have to declare the presentation of the ease thus far a mistrial gnd take steps to secure another jury, He has sent ® request to Dr, Joseph Collins, a specialist in disease of the kind that has afflicted the juror, to visit the sick man and write out a report of his illness, ‘This document will be presented at opening of court on Monday morning, If the physician declares that there is little likelihood of the recovery of Mr, Dressler in the near future the present jury will have-to be disbanded. NAN PATTERSON IS SORRY, | Miss Pattereon was in court when Justice Davis announced that the trial would have to be suspended. Before being led back to the Tombs ehe sald: “I regret very much the flness of Juror Dressler, I suppose the trial will now end on Monday, and I will again have to go through the distressing ordeal. I hope for a speedy retrial. I was thoroughly satisied with the jury | that had been chosen and felt confident that would be acquitted.” Lawyer Abraham Levy, Miss Patterson's counsel, said that if Dr. Collins reported that Juror Dressler could not continue with his duties he would apply to Justice Davis to have Miss Patterson's ball reduced to $5,000, which would be immediately furnished. Mr. Levy sald that there would undoubt- odly be a delay before a retrial was obtained, and that he hoped he could obtain freedom for his client during the interim, OTHER TRIALS DELAYED, During the trial of Dr, Fritz Meyer for murder before Justice Barrett in the old Court of Oyer and Terminer in December, 1898, the seventh juror, Benjamin B. Low, was taken suddenly insane while Lawyer Oharles Brooks was summing up his case for the defense. The juror was taken from the jury box, where he was stricken, and conducted to an ante-room, There ‘he was examined by Dr. Carlos F. McDonald and Dr. Charles Dane and pronounced insane, When this was reported to the Court the jury was diacharged and a new trial ordered. THE GENERALLY HERE 10 WED Hardwig M. Paradise, juror No. 4 in the jury that had heard the evi- dence of wife-murder produced against Dr. Robert Buchanan in January, because of the Illness of a juror; but he was merely suffering from rheuma- his duties In a few days, A report that J. Morgan Smith, brother-in-law of Nan Patterson, had now in the Philippines. NAN PATTERSON INNOCEN SAYS WIDOW OF YOUNG Patterson deliberately killed her husband, Her theory of the killing of her husband is that the revolver was held by “Nan” Patterson. That the girl drew it as a “bluff” and aimed it at bim to make him miss the Germanic, on which he was to sall away from her. That Young thought she was in earnest and, believing his life in danger, grabbed at the revolver, That in doing so he grasped the revolver about the chamber eo that whon it was exploded his hand and fingers were blackened by the burning powder. That in the struggle for possession of the revolver it was accidentally discharged while still in the hands of “Nan” Patterson, NOT SEEKING REVENGE, According to a member of Mrs. Young’s family, she holds no personal 1M wi! againat “Nan” Patterson and ts not seeking revenge. She does not for the purpose of frightening hiai into missing his ship. She feels the disgrace of her husband's death, but she knows that he loved her and was trying his best to get away from the Patterson woman. Regarding the story of money being missing from Young’s pocket, Mrs. Young was his treasurer. Kverything he had was in her name with the| exception of two horees in California, the money found on his body and his membership in the Metropolitan Turf Association, worth about $4,000, He carried no life insurance, Mra. Young holds in her name seven tenements in Harlem, an equity yalued at $100,000 in an apartment-house at Eighty-second street and Co- death she borrowed $15,000 for him, In his pockets when found in the cab | he had but $2,400, This led to the report that he had been robbed of the other $14,500, Mira, Young knows that he lost most of the $12,500 at the race- tracks. There was no robbery, @ monument of great beauty to mark his grave in Kensico Cemetery. pea — BISHOP CASE ADJOURNED, | Jeterson, in Wont Pytty.fret street, ap- peared in Justice Fitsgerald's part of Seether Wants ter Taken from ‘he Supreme Court, with her father and # | Miss Hess again to-day, only to hear Charge of Father, ‘the dispute between her father and} Miss Mirlam Bishop, the dark-haired prother adjourned until Wednesday. Uttle beauty for whom elder brother! Miss Miriam was highly indignant at! *# Leo swore out a writ of habeas corpus) this, for she Js eighteen years old, to take her away from her father, Isaac | Woman in the of the law, and G Bishop, wine merchagt, claiming | thinks has a right to choose for that (heir mother, being an inmate of | herself. 8 the Amityville Lunatic Asylum for four- finaly faced ures ot her pee eA ‘ence. her fy a Aven years. thelr father was living Im- ine fjurteen ‘eaperly, with Miss Saran Hess at tbe wont to the asylums, "4 Major Colin Campbell, the British cav- who Is to marry Misa Nan- water of Lady Curson, Vice 1803, was suddenly taken {Il while he and his fellow-jurors were deliberating pir on @ verdict. He had to be carried into court, but, as he was still conscious | reine of the Indian empire, was the most and assented to the verdict of guilty pronounced hy the jury, the judgment | interesting passenger on the American was allowed to stand, The first Molineux trial was postpdned tf liner Philadelphia, which arrived to-day. ee mes Wale ‘The Major ts about forty-two years old and looks !t, but he fs of that who tism, and the report of a physician stated that he would be able to resume] when he reaches the forties Meek ap Dear to leave them behind for a score thereafter, He (a slightly built, of me- dium helrht and with a fair complexion. deen arrested, was found to-day to be groundless, It is sald thet Smith is fle weerd & bicnd eructache, whieh {9 bitten short across the lips. Withal his appearance suggests a person of very temperament. No sooner was Major Campbell ashore J | than a very young reporter had him in “Now, Major, do tell me all about . “ ” it," sald the reporter, “Is it true that Mrs, Frank T. Young, wife of “Caesar” Young, does not believe “Nan” pon ane 6 4 to Nan Leiter?’ Major, but he proved himself an Eng- Mshman, not without humor, ils blue tyes smiled in the corners ani he an- swered; © “Yoo; it te quite true that Miss Letter is my flancee.”” Major, but you don’t mind telling me whea are you going to "No date has yet been set.’ “Then you Gon't' snow who your beat man will be or anything absut tbe bridesmaids or thirgs like thact’ “No,” and the Major laughed heart- ily. He drew his ulster closer about him, said a polke “Good-day,” and prepared | to leave, ‘But the young reporter was | . He flanked the Major and believe the gir! killed Young deliberately, but that she drew the revolver | pecbishe aii dooong tala “You haven't told me, Major. where you are going after you leave this plier.” “Well, you are a sharp sort. I'm go- ing to Washington just as soon as I can ponaibly get away.’ Major Campbell fs attach’ to the ral India Horse and has been in the East since 1882, off and on. He re- turned to England in September. John R. Considine, proprictor of the | Metropole, who has been abroad with his wife, also returned on the Phila- Jumbus avenue, stocks, bonds and mortgages, Just before her husband's! deiphia. The Cunarder Campunia got in to-day, She left Quarantine two hours before © Philadelphia, but she did not get into her bertn until half an hour before A heavy flood ude) Young jeft his wife in very comfortable circumstances, the reports that | Jammed the Campania against her pler | he had died a bankrupt and owing money notwithstanding, She has ordered | "¢@4 and It took six tugs to etratghteo | Incidentally the liner found a} |the Yankee craft, | her out. were Commissioner Thomas: Coombs, of the Salvation Army, who Isito lead the ixtwsauon i Canada in place of Miss! va Booth, who will become Com- | niet of the Army In this) rT Myles, of Toronto, and | with them. The | hoores her father and the) WIRELESS STATION BURNED, ‘The Deforest wireless teloxraph ata on at Highiahds, N. J. was burae ‘Tus loss to $000, ee ; CREDITED IDEA OF HOW CAESAR YOUNG CAME 70 HIS DEATH. : MRS, LYNG I A MANNIE LEITER) TROLLEY CRASH —_———- Major Colin Campbell Follows'Brougham in Whuoh the Wife of Fiancee Across the Sea and the Vice-President of the Hurries On to Washington— Date for Wedding Not Set. West Shore Road Was Driv- ing Wrecked, nm Mrs, James D. Layng, wite of the Vice-President and General Manager of the West Shore Railroad, was sert-) ously injured to-day when her broug- | han: was caught between a trolley car | and an “L’ pillar at Fortieth street and Sixth avenue and smashed to kind: | ling. Mrs. Layng was resoued from the 1¢- bris of the carriage and carried into @) nearby drug store. She was cut about the hands and face, and it is feared re- cetved internal injuries, She would nut 0 to the hospital, however, and was the Nan Patterson trial information ” at killing herself, and that Youss © pistol and in the effort to get it away from her it was exploded, killing him, SERDOSEFE 440909995 9494O8-K OF4894 SHEN GHG OHIOE DEESIDE DOG HOGGING HE IDEEELIDIEOODDD GIMBLN CASES CHAN FD Fight Between Rival Tongs Re- sults from One Aiding Park- hurst Society—Two Wounded and Six Prisoners, ‘The motives back of the great feud raging in Chinatown were to-day laid bare {n the Centre Street Court. It de- velops that the hatred of the members of the Ong Long Tong for the members of the Hip Bing Tong originated by the latter society affiliating Iteelf with the Parkhurst Society In athe suppression of fan-tan and other Chinese gambling games Supt, McCiintock, of the Parkhurst Socloty, admitted thie much to Magts- trate Flammer when the six prisoners taken as a@ result of last night's shoot- ing were arraigned and each held In $2,000 ball. He said: “The Hip Sing Tong members are alding me in effecting the abatement of gambling in Chinatown, and in doing #0 have incensed the Ong Long Tong peo- ple, who are the gambling fraternity of the quarter,”’ Tried to Burn Balld Hul Gow. a lead member of the taken to her mansion at No. $1 Fifth | One Long Tong, made the sensationa) “H'D Dougherty, Mra. Layng’s coach. was own twenty fee. from rua fell He was taken in an to and * ta teared that he will not sur- Turned in Front of Car, The brougham, which was drawn by @ Now York rospitos | members of his society were enjoying a jcharge in court that early veaterday morning members of the Hip Sing Tong | to weet by ‘the linpact of the collision and| tried to burn down a three-story butld- his ing, Nos, 10-12 Doyers street, in which quiet game of cards, He stated that they nearly sucoseded. Then Supt, MeClintock made the one horse, had turned into Sixth avenue | Counter-charwe that Mon Men and Bue y-second street on me et, wide tas couse gougitt to turn in front of i E and had pro-| Sing, of N of the avenue | Then the consne | Of the Ong Long Tong. retaliated by TT Mott street. members woing last night to the headquarters of a fare order f Hn) on the west | the Hip Sing Tong, No, 12 Bowery, and ade, ihe proper side vehicles going | | plained that among the Chinese this downtown. ‘Trolley car No. 467 was coming rap- idly from the south and was ajmost at corner in, the Sopenes of the \ mares that he no warning of the coachman'’ did not slacken his pace, bee ween the brougham was betwe: Carried to « Drag Store, Several ngers on the car r PES OCR Mn etree ox! e wreckage of|at No. 10 Bower Several of t the carriage. She was carried, Blecd:| jets fved by the Chi saints eke ing: into @ near-by drug store, and a for an ypalence Was New York Hospital. Dougherty, her qrorhman, hed fling ae, treaty feet M is head, was Are} ‘carted into the store”? When Surgeon reya arrived from, Yee Ne York oepital he de- glared 1 coachman was robaD. fatally injured. Mrs. Layng’y. nurs were not necessarily of a fatal charac-| when Mock Duc’ badly covered consciousness she asked to be taken home, She would not go to the hospital, and & carriage waa brought 01 o 2 Are You Fitted for the Business You Are In? » — if not, stay IN it and make a) FAILURE—or get OUT of it and make a success. Which will you have? Over 300 Busicess Opportunities will be found advertised in the next SUNDAY WORLD WANT DIRECTORY. There you wif! find a long list of business men, brokers and capitalists who want to buy or sell anythin the business line, from a BOOT- BLACK STAND to a BANK. > “ when the couchman suddenly | across in front of him. Bar- | their hated rivals into ap ambush, car- | intention to turn out | fent to the) | Duck is the b | not forget | man by Mock Duck, stealing the soclety’s sign, He ex- was a most heinous offense, The two Ong Long Tong men ted tying off the sacred sign, Hiding be- hind the “L” pillars were other mem- | jbers of their soctety, and the fAght | bean. Two Men Wounded, With the usual marksmanship of slani-eyed murderers they knelt on the around, pointed the revolvera in both ands, closed their eyes and fired point ank Several of the Hip Sings returned the fire in the same manner. John Baldwin, a laborer, thirty-six | years old, was taking @ drink In a saloc nese feudists crashed ‘ough the windows, and one of them struck Baldwin in the abdomen. An. | other shot flew down the street and struck Horace Lardi, a machinist, thir. ty-five years old, of No. 6 Roosevelt street, He was wounded in the hip. Both men were taken to the Hudson Street Hospital, where It 18 said Baid- win has small chance of recovery, The trouble an several years ago the Tom Lee is in Pell streey Mo: ‘of the Hip Sing composed of t is supposed to have given the autnori- tles valuable Information regarding tue| gambling In Chinatown. The On ny My > g at the head of which js Tom i rambling sleme! the The Ong Lon Al iliting of the Pom Lee anda W weeks shot down while ago Mock Duck wa standing at the very spot on which nis} vietim af two years ago had been! killed. te BRIDE KILLED BY HUSBAND. Married Only Two Months Victim In Shot Down Home. PHILADEL! Rosle Lusander was shot and killed early to- yer husband, to whom she hi ‘ old. y by been married only two months. The crime | was committed in the home of the | Creek, Mich. Eeanders at Edge Hill, a suburd of | not kaowa, my The ont POSE-96-FS 590-95 $4 29 559-90-OFSS SSR 2ICCOOER ‘ He Says. kitled a member of| eform element, and he! | dul” to each phe NEW FAT FOR ~ HSBNDS BONN Court Refuses Permission t» | Widow of Wealthy Brooklyn Merchant to Take Charge of the Burial Ceremony. MRS. SAMPLE ATTENDS FUNERAL AT SISTER'S, Deolares at the Grave She Will Again Appeal to Courts and Endeavor to Obtain Posses- sion of Body. Hysterteally erying “My husband, my husband!” Mrs, Charles W. Sample this afternoon threw hergelf on the coffin containing the man whose last request is satd to have been one that she be barred from ever again seeing him dead or alive, Accompanied, by an undertaker and armed with a Coronor’s permit, Mrs. Sample forced her way in among the mourners who had gathered at the |home of Mrs, Albert J. Douglas, sister wt the dead man, and rather than have |a mene at the funeral, ahe was allowed to view the body. On seeing the much: | changed features she fell on the coin i in @ paraoxysm of hysterical grief: She insisted on being allowed to ride in the chief mourner'’s cariage and at Greeuwood Cemetery declared that while Mrs, Douglas had trium hed in obtaining @ decision from Justice Ma- rean, of the Supreme Court, over-ruling her Coroner'a permit to conduct the burial #he Intended to fight the case and later have the body removed to her lot It was supposed before the funeral that the court decision would be the final move In the efforts of the two women to bury Sample’s body, but Mra. Sample’s unexpected appearance at the services upset all calculations, Mrs. Sample in her strugsie for her humband’s body had the backing of Dietrtet-Attiorney Clarke, of Kings County, Marriage Mis) sed Nelatives, The troube between Mra. Sample and Mrs, Douglas beyan immediately after the death of the merchant, Mr, and Mrs, Bample were married nine years amo and three children were born to them, the eldest, now a boy of eight, and the youngest @ girl of four. A year ago a difference arose be- tween the husband and wife. Mrs, Sam- ple asserting that her husband was at- tentive to another woman and had tur- mished a home for her. The wife fur- ther sald that she knew thie woman was Hiving wiler (he name of Mrs, Sam- pie, & separation, Husband's Body Dented Her. According to the wife there was @ reconciHation last week, although Mra, Douglas denies thie, Mrs, Sample says that she and her husbend agreed to | wh: live tomether, and that she fitted up an @partment at No. 182 Court street for that purpose. A few days later she earned her husband was {{] at her sls- ter-in-law'a home in Flatbush, and on golng there with her four-year-old Geughter was denitd admission. After waiting outside for two hours she de- parted, and although her husband died the following day she did not learn of Kt until Wednesday, She then demand- «il the body. she says, and was refuned. Mrs. Sample then appealed to Justice Marean, of the Supreme Court, and asked for an order demanding that the body be turned over to her. The Justics overruled her and the widow appealed Distr-ct-Attorney Clarke, who sald that the sister had laid claim to the body on the request of Sample, who had asked that his wife be kept away, Mr. Clarke said that such te quests would not hold in court and thar Mrs, Sample was entitled to the body. The widow armed herself with a Cor- oner’s order, but this was overruled by Justice Marean this morning. Dying, Wouldn't See His Wite. Yeeteotey Mrs. Sample engaged Un- dertaker William Daly, of No. street, and went to the Dougla denied them. The Grant atreet police were aaked for help, but had no warrant could not enter. TOO WELL FED, — Olergymaa Not Entirely That Point, There is an Inclination among the ladies to rather overfeed the Dominic | Shoe i, sometimes, and while that indirectly helps the sale of Grape-Nuts, it offers no suitable excuse for the makers to encousage the practice. A minister of Auburn, Ind, writes: “Whether it was from irregular | babits and more or less badly pre- pared food taken during some of my travels, or whether I had been too well cared for by my parisioners does not seem entirely clefr; however, the fact remains that Indigestion set in, and after a period of hard work I jeame down with a genuine case of nervous prostration. “It seemp the trouble had been brewing for some years, for several! insurance companies had rejected mo after careful examination ty their physicians. “T was urged to adopt Grape-Nuts fast and lunch, The request was urged so strongly that I concluded to follow the suggestion, and to my sur prise began to gain quickly in health and strength, markable food, and @ wonderful re- sult followed. | have entirely re- gained my health, have been exam ined by the physician of one of she most conservative insurance com- panies in America and have been ac- cepted. It seems sufficient evidence of the change that hae taken place a result of the use of Grape-Nuts. Name given by Postum Co., Battle Get the book, “The Road to Well- Accoming to Mra, Sample her mar- riage displeased her wealthy relatives and they were rejoiced when there was | UEL WITH PLE Three Robbers Surprised in Mill- ionaire’s House Answer with Bullets Demand of Officers to Throw Up Their Hands. HOT RETURN FIRE MADE HOUSEBREAKERS HALT. One Whe Tried to Get Away Fell with a Bullet in His Spine and Doctors Say He Will, Die, (Special to The Evening World.) DOBRS FERRY, N. Y,, Nov, 2.—Chief t Police Charles E. Storms, of Dobbs Ferry, with five poltcamen, fought duel with three burglars who were| caught robbing the mansion of Henry Sidenberg, a millionaire merehant on/ Broadway, early to-day. The police escaped unhurt, but one burgiar is dying in the Dobbs Ferry Hospital with a bul- let wound in iis back. Two othe housebreakers are locked up in Pol'e Headquarters. Chief of Police Storms firmly believes that the burglars belong to the same ing that has been robbing many country mansions in Westchester Coun- ty, particularly the home of Gen, An- drew C. Fields, near the Sidenberg resi- dence, of $2,500 worth of jewels and rallroad bond coupons; the homes of Charles H. Dale, F. "A, Maher ant Henry A. Fatton, at Larchmont of 49,00 worth of giamonda, Only yesterday the Sidenberg family went to their town house in Manhat- tan, Early this morning the caretaker noticed a light in the dining-room and notified Polleeman Murray, of Hastings, and he in turn called up Chief Storm, The Chiet took three policemen and with them surrounded the mansion. The burglars had detected the ap- proach of the police, and attempted to bolt, after they had dropped a bunale of silverware worth $2,000, Chief of Po- lice Storms shouted to the men; 'Sur- render, or we will ehoot “Shoot and be hanged!" was the re- tort, and a couple of bullets whiased over the policemen’s heads. The police opened fire then and two of the burglars threw up their hands and surrendered. Their companion tried to and he fell with a bullet througi pine, He was taken to the Dobbs ‘erry Hospital unconscious, and it is sald he will dt The other prisoners refused to give thelr nameg and were locked up, Several burgiar tools, including a jimmy, were found In their possession. Entrance to the Sidenberg residence was gained by forcing open a window of the first, floor and from the condition of the rooma the burglars had thorough- Vy, We gripe fe! Ouse. 5 orma sald: "There is no doubt these burglars belong to a gang that ter, They look like professional bur- for the neighborhood. The resklence of Henry B. Stewart, a wealthy New Yorker, at No. 77 Hamil- ton avenue, e Plains, was robbed last night of $1,000 worth of jewelry. Chief Harmon, of White Plains, say he cannot find owt how the bi t got inte the nouse. Jewels worth ich were tn the same dhawer from which a jewel box was stolen were not lowing: One diamond crescent pin and brooch, chain bracelet, three gold br lets, ir gold cuff buttons, db mond eo tn Ct Complete local and constitu- tional treat- | ment for every \ humor from age, consisting of Curicura Soar, Ointment, and Pitts, may now be had of all druggists for one dollar, Coward Good Sense Arch-Supporting Shoc. A shoe especially design- ed with a steel plate inser! comooned of the and cream for my sole diet for break-|to comfortably and correct ly support the arch of the foot. | POR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN, “I persisted in the use of this re-| SOLD NOWHERE ELSE, JAMES S, COWARD, 268-274 Greenwich St., N.Y, WEAR WARREN OTR! Japa ot palgn and War Edith WORLD ALMANAC. cents On stands, BURGLAR SHOT Was ' has robbed many houses in Weatches- lors, and thelr capt ts a’ good thing the burglary is 4 mysterious affair, as touched The stolen jewelry comprised the fol- necklace, one topaz pin and chain, violet ck pins, lady's fob chain, one diamond heart pin, dia- | pimples to scrofula, from infancy to | Bewarelp we % \Pianos| jf 1anoOs) - |] If somebody offers to sell you F 4 $400 Piano for $195 say “No,” Don't let the fiction blind your || eyes to the truth—good worth $400, are never sold fo $195, i Cheap Pianos are made by the’ thousand—made without names on them so that the dealer who buys them may put on any name’ he chooses, ‘The cases look pret« || ty and the keys glisten, The , are strings inside and the worth. Bes less make-believe fooks verve = much like a real Piano, +The |] fellow who wants to hoodwink you puts it in his store, marks the price. tag $400 cnd advertises | |} it for $195, Don’t buy it, There are quite a few people in this || world who have found out the fraud to their sorrow, at |]. Study the history of Piano—y making, Think out the problem of the time, and talent, and fas bor, and material, and money tied up in a factory. It will} prove to you that no $400 Piano: can be sold for $195, a Look backward, if you want look into the future of ; ' & Co, Ask the people of Brook= fo sss Ivr how we treated them ) years ago, 20 years ago, 10 t ago, now. , \ i Our reputation is the most)” valuable part of our business. 7) {1 We purpose to hold the position} ~ |} that has been earned by a lo square and tipright career, Every Piano in our house is] made by a reputable manufac turer: Hazelton Bros,, H, & S, G, Lindeman, | Anderson & Co,, | Ideal Piano Player = | —no matter which you select) you are as certain of satisfaction as Uncle Sam is of his taxes 0 The makers guarantee them, and 5 we guaranteee the makers’ guar 5 antee; EVERY PIANO } LEAVES OUR WAREROO IS SOLD WITH THE EX y= PLICIT UNDERSTANDING § THAT IF YOU ARE NOT ENe e TIRELY PLEASED WITH | af |] AFTER HAVING IT IN YOUR HOME A FEW MONTHS. YOU} |] CAN COME AND SELECT A” ANOTHER IN ITS PLACE A & We assume all the risk, you ag sume none, There is nothing inf © reason we won't do to make you f feel completely satisfied. And, quality considered, our prices are considerably lower than you will find anywhere. That you may |] make sure of this w2 ask you to |] investigate legitimate values here and *elsewhere—buy here only when you have convinced yours self that you can save money by doing so, Payments may be arranged to meet your convenience—somes thing less than thirty cents a day will put a GOOD Piano in your home AT ONCE, Every Piano in this store bears a tag; on that tag, marked in plain figures, is the price of that Piano, and neither you nor ne else can buy it for a dollar i less, In some matters it doesn’t cost F3 much if you are cheated, but if you are humbugged into buying a $400 Piano for $195, it is @ pretty expensive affair, Think mf that n you are select y stmas Piano,