The evening world. Newspaper, September 15, 1908, Page 3

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aod 4 Cae ee BANKS REFSHL FRED FAL BROWN CO. PLE Rejection of $200,000 Note Is Given to Referee As i Prime Cause. NOT ‘ACCOUNT NO. 500,’ (Office Member of Firm Testi- fies As to Subscriptions By Members. The examination of members of the @em of A. 0. Brown & Co, on behalf @f ex-Congressman Charles E. Little- Geld, receiver, was resumed before Ualted States Commissioner Alexander te-day, Daniel P. Hays, of Hays & Hirshfield, counsel for the receiver, eonducted the examination, Mr. Little- field was present. Counsel for the bankrupts were Dix ‘W. Noel, Edward Lauterbach and George W. Schurman, House, Grossman & Vorhaus appeared for the creditors. Albert O. Brown, Samuel C. Brown, Louls G. Young, Edward F. Buchanan and Walter Rhea Whitman, members of the firm, were again sworn. Buchanan's Eye on Everytning. In reply to \.:. Hays'a question, Mr. Whitman sald that A. 0, Brown had Dought and sold on the floor of the Stock Exchange. 3. C. Brown attended to the Cotton Exchange business, Mr. Young to the Stock Exchange business, Mr, Stout had attended to office work, he (Whitman) to the books and Mr, Buchanan to “everything.” “Has an uccount of the assets of the firm been taken by an auditing com- pany since March, 14?” Mr, Hays ask “No,” “When did you suspend?" “Aug. 3." "On that day the Hanover National Bank refused to discount your note?" ‘es."” “For how much?” “1 think {t was $200,000. “That was your cash balance In the) bank on that day?” “1 don't know.” “As a matter of fact, was not more han $3,000, was it?” “T don't know.” “What would you say caused the fail- are?" “The bank's refusal to certify our pote,” Accesunt a Mystery, Under Mr. Littlefield's suggestions the witness was questioned sharply to aoooun: No. 600. He said that ha not opened the account and that Its @tri had been made by two book- keepers. It had been opened, he ve- Meved, by Mr. Buchanan's direction, he looked at the ledger leaflets and ad- mitted that the account had_ been opened without any margin on Dec. 9, i Not much business was done on this account in point of number of transactions prior to Aug. 3, 148. On July 31, 1908, there was $108,796.35 to the Gredit of this account. Mr. Buchanan was subjected to an examination as to the capital put into the firm by him. Mr. Buchanan sald that he had ocon- tributed his share of the capital ($10, @0 as shown by the books) from his share of the profits. 5 ys then asked: “Did y. if tne Spening of No" bi accounts” “et Mr. Buchanan's reply w “T da” “It was opened without a margin.” res.”” “For whom?’ “George I. Whitne; swWho is he?" “He is from Pittsburg.” ‘Mr. Littlefield—Of Whitney, Steven- won & Co?” “Yes. He was a capitalist, director fm stock companies and president of nis.’ 5. “What Is he now?’ “I think he is trying to get together fhis_shattered fortunes.” “When did he fall?” “About @ year ago.” “And you opened that Account No. 00 subsequently?” “I don't know whether !t was before rd after Mis failure. It may have been Mr, Buchanan sald that Account No. $0 had been opened to make money for Mr, Whitney, who, he sald, had failed, ‘owing A. 0. ‘Brown & Co. $1,000,000, Including $900,000 owed by hie frm. “Did you suggest or Mr. Whitney wuggest its opening?” “T don't know, mutual understanding of the case for me to explain to you that both my- and Mr. O'Connor, my private sec- etary, held Mr. Whitney's power of attorney.” Mr. Littlefield and Mr. Hays brought @at the fact that $30000 In coupons and $90,000 In bonds had been “loaned to ac- gount No. 600" from the accounts of a Mrs. M. F. Young, and Mrs. J. B. Gbrpne, before the date of failure. Mr. jehanan said he did not know who Ordered the loan, but that the entire clerical force of the office had been en- @aged in carrying out the usual course, mn the same account, it was pointed out to the witness, on Aug. 24, accord- books, stock to the amount B had been sold short. In r, Buchanan sa.. that the firm had been more or ‘secuted,” by personi ey had been obligated or legal reason.” SOUGHT DEMON IN ry “without moral It may facilitate our! THE EVENING WORLD, | Show Girl Who Failed to Keep WM M- SCHWENRER | MBS-WM M SCHWENKER | Wead.ng a Secret, and Her Husband PRINCE BRO | ABANDONS WIFE TWICE WED , Chicago Girl Whose Marriage | WasOpposed by Husband’s | | Parents in Sad Plight. | |MUST DEFEND DIVORCE. | She Declares She Has Sup- | | ported the Prince, Who | Now Accuses Her, | | PARIS, Sept. 15.—Prince Robert de Broglie, whose matrimonial tribulations | |1n 1908 and the year following were ven- | \tllated in France and the United States, has abandoned his wife and child, and} his lawyer has announced the intention | |of the Prince to bring an action for dl- | vorce on statutory grounds, The Princess de Broglie is an Amert- can woman. |. . maiden name was Es: telle Alexander, and she lived in San | Francisco, of Sidney B, beit when sne married the Prince in Chicago in 196. The Prince's father was opposed to this union, and , he succeeded in having he Chicago mar- | riage declared void by a french court. | | | i} She was the divorced wife | Following this action the Prince re- | married Miss Alexander under the | French law. When the Princess was seen at her| home to-day she was intensely Indig-| nant at what she characterized as the’ “cruel and cowardly act of her hus- band.” She sald that the charge of, SHOWGIRL LOPES TOWED HOBIE May Murray Feared Papa-in- | Law Schwenker Would Ee | Angry if He Knew. Cupid has again invaded Stageland, with the result that Miss May Murray, unfalthfulness was baseless and that tt! had been simply trumped up by the | | Prince. who doubtless wanted to rid/ STANDARD MAN UNDERSOLD purpose of marrying another woman) or to effect @ reconciliation with his family. Since the de Brogile family had had the first marriage annulled they had continued thelr efforts to part the cous | | ple, Continuing, the Princess declared tances regularly to the Prince, who was his time at Chamonix {that she had supported her husband ll | by her earnings on the stage this sum- | | mer. While at Ostend, singing under| the name of Manitza, she sent remit-_ aaa ‘Idling away and other resorts.” Just before he re- /Salesman Testifies He Didn’t| turnea to Paris the sent him @ con- ae , siderable sum of money. Know Dixie Had Been =| When he returned home, Aug 8, the one of the show girls of the "Follies of 1908,"" has become Mrs, William M. Schwenker, jr, Her husband {s the son of a wealthy dealer in brewers’ sup- piios, of this city. Back of the announcement, which ’ came as a surprise to friends of the young pair to-day, there is a pretty romance, Its culmination, which, in Itself was quite out of ordinary, | was in Hoboken last Sund. afternoon, although Broadway did not hear of the event until to-day. “We did not care to make our mar- riage public at present,” said Miss \ ray, bashfully, “as Will did not know how his parents would take it. How+ ever, it's known now, and 1 suppose tt is just as well so," Will, who was standing beside the pretty show girl, nodded his head ap- | provingly at everything she sald, Final- ly he told how It all came about. “Misa Murray and I were at luncteon Sunday,’ he sald, “and we decided that | we'd get married. Had we been engaged? |No. I muat confess I had been very |fond of Miss Murray from the first day |I met her several months ago, When I |saw that this was reciprocated, I just thought I'd say the word and have it| all over with.” | After “the word" was sald, Miss Mur- ray and Mr. Schwenker jumped inta@ taxicab, and were whisked away to the Hoboken tunnel station. | "It was not an expe: all,” said Mr, Schwenker, “and we went | about It In a quiet, matter-of-fact sort | of way. When we reached Hoboken We went straight to the home of the Rev. | |Mr, Ricater, of the Lutheran Church, and had the knot tied. That's all there | was to It.” | | The parental blessing was forthcom- | Ing when the young pair returned to Manhattan, William M. Schwenker, sr., father cf the bridegroom, said all he regretted was that they hadn't sald something to him so that he might have ettended the wedding, The Schwenkers live at the Riverdale Japartments, No. 9 Riverside Drive, Young Mr. Schwenker {s assoclated in business with his father at No. 312 East Ninety-second street. He 1s twenty-four years old, a graduate of Yale and well- known {In club circies. ‘The bride {s nineteen. She has been. on the stage for about three years, | having come to this city when a child from Richmond, Va. She will not leave | the stage for the present. EARL'S SON SECURES ~——WMARRIAGE LENSE Hon. Hugh Melville Howard, and Miss May Sands at City Hall Bureau. A tharrlage license was secured In the | | City Hall bureau to-day by the Hon. | [Princess sald, she noticed coldness on Absorbed. his part and taxed him with it, He thereupon left the house and told her to call upon his lawyer if she want™ Referee Franklin Ferrls to-day re-,an explanation, sumed hearing evidence in the Govern: This the Princess did and was told that ment’s sult to dissolve the Standard! her husband had left er forever and Ol Company of New Jersey as a that he Intended to bring an action for “tru divorce, He claimed that the amount The testimony was mostly a repetl-|of her last remittance to Chamonix of that given by Standard em- proved that she had obtained the money ployees, until Lemuel Wilmer, a Siand- dishonorably. The Princess replied that ard salesman from West Virginia, took even had this money been obtained {m- properly, which she denied, the Prince had not hesitated to live upon the pro- ceeds of her dishonor. the stand. He told he had encountered w ot the opposition le fighting the Red “C" Ol! Company In Yorkville, W. i ‘ dies The Princess descrives her position as Va, He said he had found barrels of gesperate, She 1s besleged by creditors | oil, flve in one case and six In another, and has nota penny to support herself {n which the number of gallons con- and baby. Her only hope ts to secure tained Was overstated. another engagement on the stage. “There was a great deal of mud slinging in that section,” sald the wit- ness, “and the competition was sharp, I got so | looked for ickery, and I usually found $t"" | Then Mr. Wilmer told of his work in Richmond, Va., when he was a sales- | man for more. He did not the d owned the Dixie denied it. He from the Stand Oil Company. “Did you, a8 a Dixie oll salesman, visit Tidewater, Va. and canvass the trade?’ asked Mr. Rosenthal, “Deed I did, sir, ‘deed I did,’’ sald the witness. “With what success?” continued the wyer, Well, sir, I sold, in twenty-six work- 's, 73 darrels of oll, and most | St eqram were Standand customers. I'm | ——. certain the Red O couldn't sell that | much olf there In a year,” declared Mr.) Brook] Man’s r WI your wite ever go out and tol- | yn Reco’ ery Comes About Through Cooper Treatment. | low the oll wagons of competitors and GUNES WORK wal aw then report back to you?’ asked Mr, Rosenthal,“ Mall has so testified.’’ “My wife was walting for a car one in Richmond, and noticed a com- tition of! wagdn unloading at a stor just across the street, which she kne had been a customer of mine. Natur- ally she casually inquired that evening {f I had lost that gentleman's trade. That was the first I knew he was bu ing oll elsewhere, and upon that Inc dent that man based the contempt story that my wife was following wagons,” said Mr. Wilmer. A statement for publication regarding | the Cooper remedies now being damon- strated daily at the Riker Drug Store, ing at Buffalo avenue and Degman street, Brooklyn, Mr. Allum says | “1 am one of the many who have | | benefited by taking Cooper's New Dis- |covery, For years I suffered from kid- TWEMLS «Ss Eee badly broken, and I lost much rest. I became greatly weakened and run down, and four years ago was com- pelled to give up my work entirely, I — | consulted doctors and tried remedies; of various kinds, but my condition grew steadily worse, and there appeared to From Five to Eight Reported |*, "nothing in the way of medicine that * : | would give me relief, I firmly believed Killed and Score Injured in that my case was hopeless. | : ed “Through reading the newspapers, | Crash in Missouri. however, [ became impressed with the remarkable results the Cooper medi- \cine was accomplishing. After read- KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept, 18—From | ing a number of statements made by five to eight persons are reported dead | those who attributed their restoration TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1908. _ WIFE PLANNED THEFT; RELENTS, SAVES WAN SLI auage ee Woman Summons the Police When Confederates Were Beating Her Husband. TWO ARRESTS MADE. Conspirators Hoped to Secure $600, Zellosky’s Savings of a Lifetime. A conspiracy to rob a man of Nis savings, $900, was thwarted early this morning, when one of the alleged con- | spirators, the wife of the proposed vic+ tim, relented, and gave the alarm which resulted in the arrest of the two men who the police say were the con- coctors of the scheme. The Intended victim {ts Constanizella Zellosky, of No. Varick street, Jer- sey City, The prisoners are Anton An- tonivitch, of No, 28) Bay street, and Joseph Bolisk!, of N The wife, Mre. Mary Zellosky, twenty- two years of age, 1s also detained by the police as a witness, According to the story the worman Is alleged to have told the police, she and the two men plotted to rob her and, who !s nearly fifty years old, of #00, which represented his savings of a lifetime, He is employed in a freight yard, and managed to save the $00 out of his $6 monthly salary, According to a prearranged plan, the two men entered the Zellosky apart: ments this morning, shortly after 1 o'olock. They climbed through a win- himself of his American wife for the| down from the hall to a bedroom, but | sirable addition to a universit: they made @o much notse that thev aroused Zellosky, who was sleeping in the next room. He rushed into the room and was {mmediately selzed. They threw him on the floor amd were pum- x him severely, crying “Kill “Stab him!” when Mrs, Zellosky rushed jn. She si them kicking her husband as he lay on the floor, one of the men wielding a big pocket knife as he stood over her husband. The woman rushed to the window and soon had the nelgh- borhood aroused by her cries. The men, evident'y too frightened to look for the money, rushed from the house and made good their escape in the darkness, | Po'lceman Chinery, when told the story, advised Zellosky to go to the sta- tion house and leave his money there, and this he did. He gave the police a good desuription of the two men, and his wife later on told the police where they could be found. Detectives were sent to their homes and they were found in bed. They denied knowing anything about the alleged conspiracy. Mrs. Zellosky, according to the police, confessed that all three of them planned the conspiracy, but that when she saw her husband getting such a_ beating, fearing that he would be killed, she decided to call in the police. KIDNAPPED BABY OUND IN NEAR HER HOM pe Police Seek Old Man Who Was Seen to Leave Build- ing Earlier in the Day. Two and one-half-year old Mary Daly, of No. 115 Manahattan street, who was thou-ht by her parents to have been kidnapped. was found alone tordi a deserted loft, having been left there, presumably by a decrepit old man, who was seen to leave the ullding at 830 this morning. It was six hours later that men In- specting the bullding for a business oi terprise, found the little waif dirty and sobbing on a remant of an old mained imprisoned indefinately. Mary was faint and could hardly stand when discovered . Later she de- veloped a high fever, but the doctor who examined her, sald she would re- cover. Frank R. Blount, his son Nelson and William Lawrence who control an “alr burning’ patent. toured the building to- day to plan space for demonstration On the third floor, whioh is tenantle they found the child, The story of the kidnapping had travelled the ne! hood and the men instantly recogni her, In a few minutes she was in her mother's arms. AUTOISTS City ee HIRE A SHIP. of Savannah Chartered Carry 400 Ciub Members, to The Automobile Club of America to- 188 Morris street. | CLOSET, FIND BABY Michaelena Rostano was amusing her Mitte brothers and sisters on the third floor of No. 147 West One Hundredth street, to-day by pretending there was fome sort of a demon In a closet in the t of the hall (without permission of | She poked a broom | lenry W. Savage), {nto the darkness, and as much to her own terror and surprise as that of the| other children a long, loud wail was | , heard. After a great deal of persuasion the g's mother got a light and went Into | 4 cupboard, There, neatly wrapped in @ dlack shaw! she found a baby boy. It) ‘Was neatly dressed In white clothes and) was crying lustily. It was taken to the| West One Hundredth street police sta-| fon and later removed to tho J. Hood| right Hospital, where it was said it ‘Was about three weeks old. People in the house sald a beggar wom- an had been through the hails about | halt a hour before the child was) faye} nd belleve she left the Infant the closet. Hugh Melville Howard, who is marry Miss May Emily Sands, daugh- ter of Benjamin Aymar Sands, in Southampton, next Saturday. He is a son of the Earl of Wicklow and an Irish-born member of the British no- bility. Miss Sands's father ls a mem-! ber of the law firm of Bowers & Sands, Hugh wore a monocle and was yed In a eray morning sult. His mplexion is tine, with a glow of| health on his cheeks, evidently from an outdoor summer. He has been at his summer home, which he gave as his residence, the Villa Howard, Tremezzu, Lake Como. | Miss Sands Is a good-looking woman. | She wore a blue travelling sult, with a r. She gave as No, 8 West Forty- olue hat-and white fea her residence hth street, ‘The marriage will take place at 8 o'clook Saturday afternoon, Sept. 19, at 8 Sell Dune Churoh, Southamp- and from sixteen to twenty others | injured, some of them perhaps fatally, | as the result of an explosion of a car | of dynamite at Windsor, Mo., to-day. So much confusion exists at Windsor that accurate “gures on the casualties are unobtainable, Only four of tie dead are accounted for, the victims being Frederick Yakes, station agent of the Missourl, Kansas & Texas Railway Dee Hall, of Windsor, a drayman,; a laborer, not identified, and a tramp. eee STRIKERS IN FIGHTING MOOD | AT CANADIAN PACIFIC SHOP. WINNIPEG, Sept. Several hun- dred strikers marched to the Canadian Pacific Railway shops to-day with the object of terrorizing the strike-breakers, hey attempted to break Into the yards and nearly succeeded, but rein- forcements of police arrived in time to hut the massive gates leading to the inner inclosure’ and prevented a confiict. to health to Cooper's New Discovery, | I obtained proof that left no room for|48¥ chartered from the Savannah doubt as to Gio abe ie genuine. | Steamship Company the flagship of lis “With renewed hope I decided to call| fleet, the City of Sava D to upon this man Cooper, and did 80. I lhe the tastes coas ners seputed recounted my troubl ‘and inquireu| De the fastest coastwise vessel in com- about his medicine and its effect on the| Mission, to carry 40 of the club mem- system, with the result that 1 took! bers, their friends and the necessary at- home a treatment of Cooper's Naw Dis-|tendants and mechanicians to the y. I nad taken half the treatment | mile automobile race, which will be Te Its effect became noticeadie, | held on Thanksgiving Day, around the then my, recovery came about quickly, | thirty-five: Chatham ty course Refore’ the treatment Was exhausted jon the outskirts of Savanna i } was able to return to my work, the] The vessel will leave New York on first I had done in four years, |Saturday, Nov. 21, and from that time “[ have since regained my former | until Tuesday, W zood haalth and am now entirely well, | return, the entire party will live aboard There {s not a trace of my former|her, She ts expected to arrive on the trouble, and I consider it remarkable | Tuesday before the race. what Cooper's New Discovery has done! for me, Any one suffering from kid- | ney or bladder trouble would do well | to give It a trial.” For a short time longer Cooper will maintain his headquarters at the Riker Drug Store, Sixth avenue and Twenty-| Saturday the wind was tigi third street. where he or his assistants | loon tore loose, bumped agains will continue to meet callers daily. The! neys and telephone wires, finally gat Cooper preparations are now on sabe; entangled in wires on a roof and was at all the Riker stores and can also be obtained at any other drug store. *»* Dec. 1, when she will _— NEW AIRSHIP RUNS AWav ST| PETERSBURG, Sept. 1.—At me second trial of the dirigible airship on out injury. towed off. The aeronauts escaped wit& | Maxwell D:scusses a School | Course in Matrimony + By Neola GreeleyeSmith, “The time Is coming when a course | preparatory to matrimony will be of+ fered in onr public schools in which | young men and women will be taught some important matters relative to marriage,” | Such is the remarkable prophecy | made by Prof. F. H. Blackmar, head} of the Department of Soclology at the University of Kansas, In a public address at Topeka, But more remarkable than the, prophecy itself is the fact that Will. tam H. Maxwell, City Supertatendent of Schools of New York, accepts It seriously and with unquestioned When I saw Mr, Maxwell yea terday after a committee meeting at No. 59 Wall street I fully expected him to laugh at the Kansas notion of teaching the young idea how to get married. Even though Mr, Maxwell! | is known as the exponent of fads in education, | thought he would reject | the suggestion of a school course in matrimony. | But not at all. | SOME NEW TEACHERS, PERHAPS. Mr. Laughter and such strange sounds as “Hiugnes,” "Odell," “What do you think of Parsons?” &c,, which floated through the closed doorway at which I sat Ike a somewhat vor, Maxwell's committee meeting had been a hilarious one. | bored and dejected Pert at the gate made the meeting sound move lke a political | conference than an assemblage in the interests of education. From it Mr, Maxwell, bluff and smiling, issued to discuss at my request the | possibility of a class in courtship and marriage in our public schools. "The idea is an excellent one," he pronounced immediateiy, “I can see just one difficulty {t presents, that of finding some one wise enough to be the | teacher.’ “How about yourself?” | Oh, no indeed, I'm not nearly wise enough,” he laughed, “Would you advocate men or women teachers of judicious matrimony?” 1 inquired, GOOD FOR UNIVERSITY USE. “Seriously,” sald the City Superintendent, “I would not advocate such a course at all In the public schools, Tho children are too young. I am not sure ‘that it would even be advisable in the high schoole, But & would be a very d course. Problems relating to matrimony have a legitimate place in sociologs “And'what do you think such a course might include?” “The discussion of economic and hygienic questions,” Mr. Maxwell for in- stanced. | “The Evening World starts to-day a prize contest for the best letters show- ing how a young married couple can get along on $18 a week. ‘The writers are | to show how Joe Brooks, the young husband in aid in Full’ who stole to main- | tain bis wife, might have lived honorabiy vn his income of $18 weekly, Should | the course in matrimony Involves such practical problems ag this?” I asked. SOLVE PRACTICAL PROBLEMS. “That is just the sort of problems it should solve,” acquiesced Mr. Maxwell. | “Marriage would be less hasty and ill-advised if young people understood more | of the cost of living. A knowledge of the best way to divide a stated income— what percentage should go for rent, what for food, &c.—woutd mean happiness to many a young household,” “But, Mr, Maxwell,” 1 protested, “do you believe that any amount of theories absorbed in a course on matrimony will prevent a young man from marrying a fluffy-haired doll who doesn’t know the difference between a dime and a dollar | instead of a spectacled prize pupil of the college of courtship who knows to a fraction the difference in the relative food values of beans and potatoes?" “Well,” temporized Mr, Maxwoeil, “there are some young people willing to accept the wisdom of their elders.” “Another thing—should the teachers in the course of matrimony be men or women?" “Both,” the Superintendent replied. valuable in coeducational colleges." HE DODGES ONE QUESTION. “It ten't often necessary there," 1 objected. ‘The pupils learn so much,trom each other. But, now that {t's settled that the course in matrimony should have men and women teachers, tell me, should the women teachers have equal | pay with the men?” I knew when I asked this question, which Interests me because I would Ike very much to see the women teachers get .he financlal equality they deserve, that Mr, Maxwell wouldn't answer it. He didn’t He merely grinned and went back to his committee. SHVS WIFE CHEERED (cts soe WEN YO EAT “Such Instruction would be especially | JAPAN CUTS INTO EXPENSES. TOKIO, Japan, Sept. 15 — Premier Katsura thinks the world should know that Japan's new policy of economy will enforce heavy sacrifices In the war and navy departments. Works planned for the next eleven years, but now post- | poned, mean a saving of $180,000,000, 1 KNSER Ct ERING PEACE 10 WORLD SS CARRE He Hopes the Angel of the Lord Will Soon Appear to the German Emperor. BERLIN, Sept. 15.—Andrew Carnegta has written a letter from Skibo Castle, Scotland, to Representative Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri, President of tha American group of the Inter-parlia- mentary Union, which convenes in this city Sept. 17, In which he says "1¢ 1 were in Berlin and had a word to say my thoughts necessarily would flow in one direction. I cannot escape the conclusion that the abolition of war among civilized nations as a mod@ of settling international disputes ts very easily accomplished, There will be one man in Berlin while your Congress is in session who has only o speak the word. If the aperor Germany over realized ils mani destiny peace would follow, He has it in his power to abolish war among civilized nations. All he has to do is to ask Great Britain, France and the United States to unite with him in declaring fom peace, "Whether his Majesty Is to fail im this great mission and pass Into history, as one of a long line of rulers, not men of ach but only of’ title, or to awake norning to his duty ang perform his mission, We cannot tell, but T shall hope that the Angel of the Lord will ap unto him.’ Solid Gold Eyeglasses $1.00 a Pair Generally Sold at 35,00. tor This Week. nis i @ remarkable chance and one that ould appeal strongly to all eyeglass wears on it big saving in ortunity |e than thirty. with a widespread n for nd_ correctness ihis means ti Lnot only get a pale ot Five . 1 eyeglasses for Onc Dollar, that these glasses will be guare 1 5 i correct and right in every ey refunded No Charge for whether you buy glasses from me or not, L Mazapdes 106.2348, IY, " vee onl Ful 9), BA stablished 187%, ar De Kalb Ave WEEKLY; Peyabie $1 Every 2 (ek i NOTHING DOWN H We will send cn approval eny-: where within 300 mies, allowing } freight charges, this handsome FULL Boston Leather Couch SIZE Guaranteed 5 years, S ‘{tully scrolled quartered oak eta ith claw. feet, open sanitary construc! full leather ufted; hair one arly sold at $92.00. Special "Factory Price, $18.50 We Also Furnish Homes Complete on Easy Terms Kalmus Bros 107-109 WEST 125TH S11, Open Monday and Saturday !\enings, Cabinet Maker Tells Court | Remarkable Story of Persecution, | | John Knop, @ young cabinetmaker, of | No, 417 Bast Sixty-elghth street, told Magistrate Wahle a story of pesecution | and hard luck in the Yorkville Police | Court to-day Nearly a year ago Knop had a pistol fight with his brother-in-law, whom he | had accused of breaking up his family. Knop drew and fired first, and the “AND ‘BON Sixth avenue and Twenty-third street, | mattress. Had the inspection not been| brother-in-law was Killed. He pleaded | New York, 1s given by W. Allum, Ilv-| made to-day the child might have re- | self-defense, Three months ayo in Gen- | eral Sessions a jury acquitted him, | | Since his reiease, he says, his wife , and her people have been doing their | best to get him into a jail. He has! ~ 7 ‘ been arrested for intoxication, for | I HOUSANDS of abandonment and for disorderly con- Drecemakers duct. Each time he wag discharged Last night he was walking along Stx-| ty-elghth street, near First avenue, when he was attacked by severai men. | He told Magistrate Waule that he could| have gone home to spread the new figure gospel. The greatest see his wile in the party urging the! men on, Knop was terribly battered corset eventof thisperiod about the face and chest before help : came. He accused Louis Semes, ald 1S the remarkable dem- painter, No, 423 East 8 ty-fourth * street, of being his chief assailant onstration of the figure Semes made a counter-change of intoxt- burlding of the cation against Knop, and both men stayed in celis all might BON TON CORSETS. Knop was swathed in bandages and ; ara. ine he could hardly stand up right when he Not only dressmakers appeared in court, The Magistrate’ but thousands of corset turned him loose and held Semes {or trial in bonds of $500 on tne charge of assault. wearers were convinced that the Bon ‘Ton Corsets are not only figure build- ers, bul the most comtort- able, sensible and weara- ble corset obtainable. Ask to see the newest long- skirt model, in the BON TON AND THE ROYAL WORCESTER LIN:S, $3 to $12 at A Yellow Skin often results from coitee drinking. POSTUI| gives ons the ruddy glow of heaith “There's a tieason” WORCKESTER NEW YORK ROvAL WORCESSE CORSETS THE ROYAL WORCESTER CORSEI COMPANY, Makers of ROYAL WORCESTER CORSESSgfrom $1 to $3. N CORSETS from $3 to $12 and ADJUSTO PORSETS from $3 to $5. TON All Dealers’, CHICAGO SAN FH ISCO

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