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& POWERFUL AID "W BERAL O A SUSPECT || (es, Charged with Shooting Bar- tender to Death, Peter F. O’Brien Is Released on $1,000 —Killed in Saloon, JOHN J, MURPHY ON BOND OF FOUR PRISONERS. Wife, Bringing Dead Man’s Breakiast, Is Told He Has Been Arrested on Excise Charge. Powerful influence ts being exerted to- @ay in dehale of Peter F. O'Brien, held yesterday by Magistrate Pool tn the| @mall dail of $1,00 as principal in the} killing of Thomas Buchanan, a Cana- dian bartender at the Dagmar Hotel, No. %3 Third avenue. Capt. Gallagher, of the East Twenty- fecond street station, dented that «# “pull” wsa being exerted by the Mur phys. “Why, ean hang-out, Gure thet O'Brien belongs to that party. Frank Keyes, who runs the place, Is 9 the Dagmar is a Republl- he sald, “Tam quite Republican, and there is no significa fm the fact that Mr, Murphy went on the bond of the prisoners Orders Special sa peeeineliee Distriet-Attorney J e Neves that !t Is a case which shat We thoroughly investigated, and has as- shgned Mr, Garvan to make a careful inquiry of the facts tn ed on with the murder. which occurred at 5.05 yra- terday morning ‘ husband was a peaceful not even have a revolve a's wife to an Evening World e porter “He was a brave man rer served for a number of years in the Ninth Canadian Ritles and the Queen's Lancers, For several years we lived In >, Ont, and he nly sent for me ten days ago. “Tam practically deaticuve. My hus dand's first weeks wages brought me on h , and T have b to help out by doing some se i there is justice and if Tom's colds blooded murder is not avenged 1 shall| eppeal to the British Consul.” | Must Have A noe, Mrs, Buchanan left her rooms this morning and after ylewing the body at dhe Morgue set out to find some kind-| hearted pereon disposed to help her gave It from going to a pauper's grave. Buchanan had been. in the city leas than a month. He has a brother tn the Lquor business heve. He was a quiet man, and the last person to start a quarrel, Among the effects found on his person were medals given for ser- vice in Canadian and-Bnglish regiments, | and buttons of the Toronto Police De- | partment. He waa thirty-eight years | old, and ts sald to have served in the late Boor war, Buchanan, who lived with hie wite | at No. 127 Third avenue, was serving drinks yesterday to a crowd of men who had been on an all-night spree. In the front end of the pla james Mullaney, of No, ‘wenty-seventh jeep when the ‘hey at oe bgan having fun with the man in B rough, boisterous way. B si The police say that then one of the men seized Mullaney’s watch, Buchan- an called out: “Here, this won't do.” and at the same time he selsed the fman who held the wateh. Buchanan knew the men. All of ‘them he suspected or knew to be mem- bers of the “Gas House" crowd. The @ang set upon Buchanan as one man, They feed him to the floor with a chair, they kicked and mauled him and ‘then one of them held @ pistol to his body and shot him dead, Buchanan's wife came to the hotel with his breakfast bafore his body, ‘which had been carried to the rear, cold. ‘He has been arrested for violation excise law,” a policeman told "You go home, He will be there in a short. while.” The wife went home, In a few min- tes they brought her husband's body to her. All Out on Small Dati, ‘Within an hour and a half the police arrested Frank Reilly, of No, 425 East Beventeenth street; James Maboney, of No. 99 Bast Twenty-second street: Peter F. O'Brien, of No, &42 First ave- ‘nue, and James Mullaney, All the pris. oners were released on $100 ball as wit- nesses except O'Brien, who, the police @ay. did the shocting. O'Brien denied ft in the Yorkville Court, and was held ty $1,000. ball as a “suspicious person” for examination to-morrow, Bail for all the prisoners wes furnished by John J. Murphy, brother of the Tammany leader, O'Brien, when seen later at his saloon fm First avenue, denied knowing any- Gio ‘about the shooting, He sald he ‘hadn't heard of it, and that he hadn't been in the Dagmar Hotel. hn J. Murphy sald at Club lat night: “O'Brien was born in this district*and & good friend of mine I never knew | to hurt @ man, and 1 never heard fot him in trouble before, I don't think a oo a eee the Ana- }can do everything but discuss ethics, poe NEW WONDERS — ~ IN OLD TOYLAND | ssa PR That Will Arouse Enthusiasm Even Among Grown-Up Boys and, Girls of Great Metropolis. Toyland, Toyland, Little Girl and Boyland! And such Christmas toys! turned loose on New York this year, and Toyland |e} | if there sa small worshipper of Santa Claus who doesn't have his eyes opened | by the wonders fram the toy shop he is | a very blase young person indeed. There isn't a thing that the toy shop4 doesn't offer In miniature, from the com- plete furnishings of a house to the toy automobile; from mechanical toys that wilt drivé Christmas children int sles ot delight to wonderful dolls ¢ And All Prices Too. | There aco toys ot all prices, Great and | wonderful toys for the children of the| rich that rival works of art and acience in their mechanism, and next to them | simple, Inexpensive toys that will bring lf hearta of | 4 ust as much joy into the Willie and Mary in their tenement house home as do the marvellous creations in the mansions on Fifth avenue. Juat take a stroll around Toyland in one of the big New York stores, and e if you are a grown-up boy or girl you will want to buy everything tn sight, Here (s a brand-new Humpty Dumpty game that conte $150. It is a wonder and there js Humpty Dumpty himself, the elephant, horee, clowns, a whole cireus | ring full of actors 4 anima! they are worked on balls and soc! that they can be placed in any position. ‘The figures in the $180 game are almost lfe-size—the size of a very small boy, | but there are cheaper Humpty Dumpty games on a less elaborate plan that range from 60 cents up to The game 1s played like a pantomime performance or a circus, and consists in the figures being put through all kinds of manoeu- vres. i] Then the Motor Cars, And vhen there are the motor oars 3 Real toy automobiles that look so much like the grown-up ones that it la haré to believe that the emell of gasoline doesn't go with them. But those minia- ture automobiles, which cost $50 for the best ones, are worked by peels just like a tricyole. ‘Talking qpout motors, there wateam train in one of the toy stores that costs $250, and it Is enough to make @ rallroad king out of an aspiring young boy. | ‘There is the engine, perfectly equipped | with every detall just like a real loco- motive, Then there le the tender, the! and a dining-car with tables lala and sllera d For the boy of a mechanical turn of mind there ls the New York workshop, which costs up in the three figures. Here there is everything in the way of electrical and motor appliances, dynamo, presses and all kinds of equip ments for the big machine shop. And the real trains that run on really truly tracks around through forests and tun- nele, stopping at stations, past lamps and water tanke—everytting like a train of care is likely to pass by aa the | whiatle toots forth ite warning. Little Housekeeping Outits, Por the amall girl, what a wonderland there is for setting up dotle housekesp- padour style over the footboard and | headpiece, with dainty moe draperies | ture. All this time a music box is pla 4 | for sale, runni: baggage car, a day coach, parlor car tae pantries—everything just ke real trav. a | mug Just lke All of this ture is for the big Paris doll that 4 big as a small kirl, and what beauties there are in the doll dress parade! But that is get ting ahoad of the furniture, For the dlning-room, there are little china closets, dining-room tables and buffets an| sideboards, with tiny chafing-dish; and if you ara economies! you ean fur- id@h the dining-room for $100. But, oh, the kitchen! That the delight of every little housekeeper’s heart. Even the doll from Paris wouldn't shut her eyes at the alight of that miniature gas range that Is lighted by real gas, con- nected by @ tiny ges tube, and It really and truly cooks, too, A gas range may be purchased for $26.50. ‘There ts a stove-stand that ty $32 thet iw thing about the “grown-ups m the nickel and porcelain pots and kettles, makes any one want to go to housekeeping Here's a Cheaper Doll House, There Is a wonderful dol] house, too, that costs iin Tn it ts a dining-room, with the butler and servants waiting on the table, the jor, library, wostairs the nursery rooms and everything like a real tomar The mechanical toys are the ones that send the small boys into fits of de- Me for never hayé thbre y new devices, One of th of two figur 5 ins to paint on the can- held by another figure. | Suddenly the figure holding the sup- begins to dance, and geen cgnvas nally pokes his head through the tn, "Bie artist, becomes very angry, while the other Agure grimaces and’ sticks out his tongue in derision. Another mechanical y which sells at $f Is boy, a bird, a_kite. a and a fence. The boy ile the expensive toga run up into the hundreds of dollars, It doesn't nec- esearily follow that Santa Claus has forgotten to after his emall friends | whode fathers and mothers were nat | Gifted with the pure of Croesus. Elevated Train for #4. For instance, there ie a real elevated railroad with a train of cara running on it for $4 Tiny typewriters shat run just ike big once may be geeen #& from np to #% Then ferent markets and stor miniature, with all thelr wa from $8 up to $16. But of the real cheap toys that strike Ra to small Christmas ae. there are ow A Polys of ail the * a ‘acters, big and Te yp the foope th that aay be purchased for 76 ce 8 | nachines that | are ovina up “and elim an incline for | © cents, mono raila for %, and lots of mechanical devices that may be pur-| chased by people whose homes are not on Fifth avenue, | jeal toys Is wondert just Ike the ones at Coney land and all he sum- mer resorts, and when a doll takes a in one of those decorated cars she | hold on gee her life. ar, Was there such a display of | n, cat na defy de Jee iroes ren] cate rom re ati marvel lambs, each one of | them as natural as if you would meet them on the farm, wi rinl German Toys, Don't let the children fail to see the Nouveau Art toys. These are quite rom eumany that decidedly mediaeval In appearance. The coloring is primitive, but the toys are | artistic and rective, as they are @ reat departure from the conventiona ine. There {@ @ wonderful hobby horse for $20 that looks Ike a steed from an old German legend. A square, woolen cat Rn & movable tall le made out of k of wood that would stand being manered about by the most energetic peop Ther . Band a sot of square, railway cars for #.¥). aru ulling a strin ds, and wonderful figures t make Santa Ci ‘shop and few Yor wonderland. It really Cie any more, ‘and. won't be up to Christmas time. Just look around the streets yourself and vi will belleve Angelina and Reginal nm th rou that it is really a: OYSTERS ARE SCARCE. | Great South Bay Frosen Over, and particularly of the ety, are going to be scarce Blue Great Gouth Bay, the home of the fe: tive Blue Point, is frozen over, This {a the first time in the memory of the | oldest oysterman that Great South ond has frosen over before tt Mabipmants of Bi of Blue Points have tlogally large, owing to. the mand | weather that hae pve jed up to the |}! pal IRR orders were in tern ahipeen houses a, over the coun-| ne ‘turday aver.) will be ti nea ,couay, unsatie- int. like the bear, will be until Grea oe | THREATEN PRISON FOR ADULTERATORS OF MILK. Wholesale Dealers Cantioned that Those ‘The Justices of the Court of Special Reasions to-day served a warning on ® number of wholesale milk dealers who ustply retail dealers with Impure milk, t the penitentiary awaits them svidence gathered by inspectors for the Board of Health submitted by Health Commissioner Darlington to the Justices showed that more than 10 per cent. of the milk received in thie city daily is below standard and a great deal of it adulterated with chemicals that are a menace to life, “The use of such preservatives must be stopped," Justice Olmsted told a dealer who had pleaded gullty to the use of formaldehyde. “The stuff that you have admitted using kille many In fants, A pénitentiary sentence will be riven you upon @ second offence.” One retail dealer, John Hellman, of No, 9 Pel) street, pleaded guilty to iling adulterated milk. “It {9 not my fault,” Bellman told the Court, “I have to take the milk | Silk Mantel Lambrequins. WATERS PIANOS The final test of a good piano is its tone, and by this test you can prove the superior excellence of the Waters | Pianos, They havea rich, deep tone of great power and brilliancy, with a fine singing quality. Don’t fail to hear them! | Wecan certainly suit you as to tone and quality, and satisfy you as to prices and terms, $225 to $400. Payments from $6 to $10 per month. without inter- est. We also offer a. beautiful new piano, style 86. Ches- ter, which we highly recom- j mend and fully warrant for $190 only. $5 PER MONTH, Stool, cover, tuning and de. ; livery free. All three stores will be | OPEN EVENINGS until January ist, HORACE WATERS & CO., | 134 Fifth Ave,, near 18th St, | 127 West 42d St,,mearBroadway | | 284 West 125th St., near 8th Ay. | "WHE WORLD: WONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 19, 1004. fii PAPA IN “TOYLAND WITH MARY JANE AN) THE RICKUMS KID FACES MORE PERILS THAN EVEN OLD SANTA CLAUS. the wholesale dealers bring me. satisfed am I he said “Your action {!s commendable,” re ler, Bellman was spended sentence. Assistant Corporation Counsel Walk- | marked Justice allowed to go on that the wholesalers adulterate the milk that I have deter- mined to go out of the business.” Bellman surrendered to the Court his Health Board permit issued last June. | “You can't get good milk in this city,” | del BOY SHOT FOR John McCormick, Hit Hit by Snow | Missile on the Street, It Is Al- leged, Lay in Walt for Young- ster with an Air Rifle, { LITTLE VICTIM HAS LEFT EYE DESTROYED Revengeful Act Rouses Wrath of Neighborhood, But Police Hurry Shooter to Jail—Held for the Grand Jury. Angorel by being hit with a snow- ball, John McCormick, eighteen years old, living at No. SL Warren street, Jersey City, it ls charged, waylald Le Le ile, twelve years old. of No. Ray street, to-day, and shot out hie left eve with an air rifte, Ma mele, with other lade about hs own aK. snowball struck McCormick on the head and he ran to his home, near by, Going into the house, he seoured hie air rifle, and went to the stable in the rear where he,took up his watch for Lemen- elle As the boy passed, MeCormick lifted his rifle and pulled the trigger, Wit 4 seream, Lamenetie fall, and MoCor- migk ran into the house, The wounded boy was carried into @ drug store and a physician called Considerable excitement was causet | of Mcs'ormick, and vhreats were je, but the police hurried him be- we Judge Higgins, in the Firat Crim- inal Court he was held for the | Grand Jury I have no way to find out whether it has been watered or chemicals used in it er, Who prosecutes all the dealers ar- | [> rested for adulteration, brought eight een offenders to the bar, All pleaded ry teen waged, guilty and were fined sume ranging From $ih to $76. ©The Gas Htore,” 1181-84 Broadway cor. sth 8.3.7 Furniture and Upbolstery. } {departments:— Fancy Cushwons.. Embroidered Covers . CUSHION TOPS. —Aho— TINSEL, COVERS. LEATHER COVERS, We direct attention to the endless variety of Useful jarticles, suitable for gifts, which can be progured in these $5.00 to $14.50 KAFFIR SQUARFS. LEATHER CUSHIONS, COUCH COVERS. Lads’ Writing Desks.. seveasees $12.50 tO $65.06 | Mahogany Must Cabinets........ $ 14.00 to $30.0 | Gold & Mahogany ParlorCabinets. $27.50 t0 $125.00 | Mahogany Fancy Tables........... $9.00 to $45.0¢ | Rockers and Odd Chairs....++.4.. $7.00 to $40.0¢ | MOPHtd CRAHE ccrce cancer es $7.50 to $35.0¢ Mission Furnitere. l, this ever desirable furniture we are displaying a | extensive rape¢ of unique designs in:— | CELLA’ {TTES, TABOU, STTES, TABLES. ARM CHAIRS. DESKS. NOCKERS, BOOK RACKS. CLOCKS, SCREENS Lord & Tavlor Yroadway and Twem'eth St., Fifth Open evenings. Christmas BUY WHAT YOU NEED. ered Golden Oak or Ma hogany frames, with re versible velour * 4,98 or leatherette cusbion Freght and Cartare allowed & Highly polished quarter. sawed double ers, We Furnish Four ‘Rooms for $125. A Three-Room Outfit tor $75. ¢ ve. “ineteenth eeds. "Open Bveniags. PAY WHEN YOU CAN. Fancy Round Parlor Chairs, with highly pel ished Mahogany frames, upholstered velour or dar mane 48 Oak Desks with draw- 8. 08 Write for our sew Booklet. ps yen Buyers Our Liberal Terms also apply te and Connecticut was pelting peasers-by, A} $3.00 to $11.50 $2.50 to $8.50 m2 in the neighborhood by the revengeful | = RENT Your Houses, The Kind You Have Always Bought INF ANTS: ‘CHILDREN Promotes Digestion Cheerful- |i ness and Rest.Contains neither Yo ree nor Mineral, OT NARCOTIC, Aperfect Remedy for Cs Pg ooh Stomach Dior iies Worms Convulsions Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP, Thirty Years CASTORIA Safety Folding Bed | a a ew PUI PALE Ph A erect old Dosis JPCINIS i qt i Saves Work For Those Waobveliaea Bg he Sup meiree em til ‘The ‘sled tet he hat 3 B. halal rok Kage Se ft 2.9% ry A Sis oo DROADW AY, NEAR TWENTY-! et i Cemgnatzate, ioe ae tad tn We We ban « fi SAFETY FOLOING BED Go,, LTD, . Solety Cita, y ‘nau Siu oe ber CULT 9 Alexander Merry Christmas To the Children. A pair of our Storm es. Rubber Boots will delight the boy's heart. “? $2.00 to $3.75 me According to size. vs « fe A pair of dainty slippers will please the litle girl, 75c to $2.50 “ Warm leggings in all colors to match coats, ; ; $1.00 to $3.00 me Baby’s Carriage boots and bootees, 50c to $1.00 Shoe N.E. Cor. 19th St. Sixth Avenue 10 Ss. & H, Green Irading Stamps ven free at any depot of Sperry & Hutchinson in exchange fo ¢ label and wrapper from each 20c. bottle of : Pann S SAUCE The Only 2 eee Worce: HORACE DE Lisss.! ‘WenvADWay, x ; Your Rooms, Your Apartments, Furnished or unfurnished, by advertising them in rae} WORLD. No other successful “‘Wanl ’’ medium approaches (ee te WORLD in elly circalatton,