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: 5 5 7 ; ‘ yeady deeply burt and grieved me,’ ' speak for him a statutory plea of not eS states tho facts.” » calmly. ‘Monday night of this week, after T had galled on you at your own request While this was going on Robin stood back of Mr. Jerome, teetering back } forth on his heels, grinning and his features, He seemed t ¥ sly tickled at something, an Wanted Order Changed, «Me, Jerome said he thought the order Should be amended to show that In ai) Ane recent proceedings he had acted »s Robin's jawyer at the express request of Mutige Swann. District-Attorney Whit- man here suggested that the words “at My request” might be interpolated by the Court Into the language of the order, Mr. Jerome said that wasn't going far enough. He sald Iny witnesses who might testify to the early life and fam- fly history were not called at the lunacy hearing. He sakl that in his private conversation with Judge Swann and Mr. Whitman on Monday night Judge Swann told him (Jerome) that he (Jerome) “had plenty of evidence,” from which Mr. Jerome had inferred he sail that no more than the testimony of the allenists would be needed. Judge Swann pointed out that at the conclusion of the hearing on Tuesday Mr. Jerome had been offered the oppor- tumfity to present any additional evi- denge he might have and Jerome had deaiined. Judge Swann here called upon Mr. | Jerome to show wherein the Court had been detinquent oF unfair in the con- duet of the lunacy hearing. He added that whatever Mr, Jerome might say wiki be privileged, and no matter Mr. Jerome might say, his Jan- mage should not be held to be in con: | tempt. | ‘ Calle for the Jury. | Podge Swann then asked: "Are the wy which wat Tuesday here?’ ™Yea,” came a chorus of answers. JecVery weil then,” said Judge Swann, those same jurors now aa} to. judge whether Mr. Jerome | "The jurors are not in position to Know all the facts,” said Mr. Jerome, Then he proceeded qs follows | “I was present, as I have pointed out | before, and I participated in the pro- ceedings on Tuesday as a friend of thoy Court. There was present Robin's | mother, who might have told of my | —— lien il-health—and right here I wil! say that. when the truth is known re- garding this unfortunate man's condl- tion nobody in this community will de- fire to see him = puntshed, no matter) what his offenses may tve been. Tf this man had stolen fifty dollars would have been in Matieawan tong w@o. But because he js charged with | greatercrimes he ix to be forced into a | tral when every scintilla ot evidence | white with suppressed rage, stood lean- ing against the rail with his hands be- hind him and his eyes fixed on Judge Swann's face. “The clerk started to read the charge when Robin broke In. “Your Honor,” he shouted shrilly, the same time beating the flat of his hand on the rail, “I want to say somailiing—I want to say that I'm per that haa been gathered by elther the | fectly willing to let Judge Jerome do State @p the defense shows him to be| all the talking for me, because he's Jowane, got the spunk and the courage and the ‘T dig_mot think It was necessary to | arit and the honesty to stand up here call witnesses after the alienists, in the face of everybody and defend! had testified, becaure T understand from| me, and vecaure he prosecuted the | Your Temarks that you had/ men that Mr, Whitman here doesn't atreedy aad rd angus to convince you| touch. I'm willing to let Judge Je-| that Rebin was Could ‘Have "Salted Alleniste. the District-Attorney and ee ean nesses, ir alae alei of. the Would have stated Taken Back to Cell. As Robin quit speaking a turnkey led him back to his cell. Mr. Jerome moved for an {immediate trial, and Judge Swann, at a nod from Mr, Whitman, wet the case for to~<morrow marning. At this Juncture John F, Sussillo, one of the furors who declared Robin sane, came forward and rend the following sixned statement on behalf of himself ‘and his eleven associates: “If your honor pleases, in behelt of the members of the jury in the | Robin case I desire to enter a pro- | test againat the attacks made upon this Court and the members of the Jury by a disappointed lawyer, an oMcer of this court. We do not feel that it is right for a counsel, simply because he is an ex-District-Attor- ney of this county, to make such re- marks concerning the Judge of this court and the jury as he is credited with in certain newspapers to-day. In behalf of the jury I respectfully call your attention to ry printed in the newspa this morning re- flecting, not only upon your Honor, upon the jury that you impan- elied in the Robin case. Ax a member of the panel of the jurors in your court this term, T want to assure you of our heartfelt thanks for the courteous way in which you haye treated us and to compliment the citizens of this county upon the Way iui * You as thelr representative upon the bench dispensed justice. “Gentlemen,” #aid Judge Swann, “the Court than! you. 1 desire to thank you one ond all.” ; —_——— JUDGE SWANN RAPS FORMER ASSISTANT GANS WITH JEROME hat was bitter und severe toward me?” ‘I do not understand what you mean exactly," eald Jerome. “Well, then,” said Judge Swann, refer- _ Ting to a newspaper clipping, * way that the proceedings eonducted by me were & travesty on justice?" “Not in those words exactly, but in effect I aaid that,” answered Jerome Would Have Said it Anyway. “Did you know that reporters were | Present?” “I did not know It then, “but if Thad known t resented I would have aaid i: just t same. Tam willing to answer in public for what I say tn private.” “Z trust I have not invited a repett- | tiom by you of lang which haw al- * aald Jerome, press was rep: sald Judge Swann, “and which has heli up this court to ridicule throughout the, country.” “I have no intentlon of repeating what I have already said," replied Mr. Jerome, “but I stand by everything I| Daye said.” *Do you still regard yourself as a Miend of the Court?” asked Judge Swann, YNo, T am now counsel to the defen- dant by ignment of the Court and have been such si: "Understand Former Asaistant . District-Attorney Howanl 8. Gans, counsel for Frank L. Grant, president of the Northern Bank of New York, Perjury, came in for a scoring by Judge faid|to enter a plea “Tam not intending to visit | the Court directed, Mey Glapleasure upet, pean wae 4° Wistt | Judge Swann ontered a plea of not only to give you every opportunity to | lity entered and fixed batl in the sum Prove the truti: of what you have wald | of $10,000. reflecting upon this Court. Jerome was tn the court room when} “T have said all I could say,” 4 Mr, Jerome “Then,” said the Judge, “1 will rerard | that incident as closed and 1 now enter | answer- for asruming too much on the acore of his former employment as an assivtant the amended order and I direct your | Prosecutor. Mr, Gans had been mak Ment to plead guilty or not guilty? ing an elaborate oh in behalf of aie Renews /iis Motion. event and in 4 ogation of the indict Became he is not competent mentally | Ment against him when Judge Swann to understand these proceedings I de- hed him, line to enter any plea for him,” said} “Mr. G sald the Judge, twirling Mr, Jerome, “and 1 renew my motion | his givel, “I want you to understand, oe po cad of hia sanity beta as well as every other” (scor ing em- ely ¥ the introduction of thir- | dhe i M; teen alienints and six lay witnesses.” Peinaos mara dg fice h cere “The motion is overruled,” said the x werams) “parang th Judge “How 40 you plead?” this court-room, that there is no dis- “We do not plead,” was the anewer, | tinction in these courts, All are treated Here Whitman moved that inas- | alike. much as Robin's lawyer declined to Gave Gane Two Minut Judge and Former Prosecutor Who Quarrel Over Robin’s Sani'y some here handle the whole job. That's | rT j binoviteh, Indleted for } Swann later on, and when Gans failed | Judge Swann began to berate Mr. Gans | THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY. STANLEY ATTACKS PROBERSOF EXPLOSION FALTOFIK BLAMEFOR DYNAMITE'S GREAT HAVOC who made arrangements to furnish ball for his client. All of his motions had been dented, ROBIN’S MILLION IN STOCK TRACKED BY MR. GIFFORD United States Commissioner Thomas Alexander preshled to-day at a hearing in one of the half dozen bankruptcy | proceecings against Joseph G, Robin und his enterprises, in the search for Robin's property. The hearing was {held on behalf of Peter Alexander, who has been made receiver. James M. ness, He was examined by Samuel Golasmith, Mr, Ing ®& case In court. Robin also Gifford had stolen a million do! lars In securities from him on Deo, 24, he knew about the purchase Morris Park property. His Work as Attorney. said, “except in the purchi Northern Bank. banking interests to buy the bank. They then offered 165, but Robin wanted 20. In September I went to Germany, 1 re- turned on Dec, 9 and found the down- town Interests ready to buy the bank at Robin's figures. Robin called me on the ‘phone and said he wanted me to well the bank, ‘What figure “ ‘Any figure,’ at YT asked. he eeplied. learned that the bank had been mined, that {t was under suspicion and was to be re-examined.” Goes to See Robin. Mr. Gifford said he went to see Robin and found him ill, His sister, Dr. Ra- Was there. She protested thus to visit him would kill him, but he finally saw Robin. “I had heard he had $1,000,000 of the securities,” said Gifford, “I told tin ave immediate relief or the nk was burated,”’ After much delay Gifford finally had Robina's safe opened. It was empty, same for some small lots of Insignificant sl rourtties. bia says T stole a million,” said fford. “I have been able to trace the stock as follows: The Carnegie Trust Company 4.500 snares; Rivers! #0; Northern Bank, for the South . There a appeared in the Illinois Se- curity Company, given to protect a bond of Dr, Rabinowitz. 000 of the $1,000,000, “There 1s $87,000 due in taxes which Robin was supposed to have pald, but didn't.”" depositor: Tal ‘The particular case on to-day 1s that making 7,90, and 600 shares This accounts for THE STEEL TRST;| TELLS OF SOF TAREAT Congressman la Pitty for In- “vestigation Spikes Gary and Roosevelt. WASHINGTON, (eb. 2.—Representas tive Stanley of Kentucky made @ tast fight in the House of Representatives today for action ‘by that body on Me resolution calling for an investigation of the United States Steel Corporation, He characterized the corporation an a | “lawless, defiant and pernicious mon- poly," and demanded that the guilty, no matter how high or powerful, be ought to the bar of justice.” | “Dt this Government,” said Mr. Stan- | ley, “Is weriously and earnest tn tts de- termination to enforce the Sherman Anti-Trust law, dt fe In honor bound to ‘aM thie greatest of all combines and mort all-pervading of all trusts to jus- thee." Mr. Stanley deciared that the "Stee! Trust,” in fear of competition from Andrew Carnegie, paid him the colossal sum of $520,000,000 for a plant rated two years before at $76,000,000. He cited the absorption of the Tennessee Coal and Tron Company as an evidence of the audacious strength of the trust and a red t! BE. H. Gary and Henry C. ick went to President Roosevelt and told him that If he dared interfere with their plans, whether legal or tllegal, the “so-called prosperity of his adminis- tration would end in a financial cate- clyam.”* “Never,” continued Mr. Stanley, ‘since the Prince of Darkness appeared to the Nazarene on the Mountain was such @ visitation of evil and far reach- ing dominion unveiled to the vision of God or man, And the hero of San Juan Hit! and the Saviour of Men assumed the same relative position toward the Arch Tempter. ‘The Saviour #atd, ‘Get thee ‘behind me, Satan!’ and Roosevelt cried, ‘I will get tn front of you, thou Omniscient Devil. 1 will paratyse the arm of fustice and stil the voloe of popular clamor while you sanébag a competitor and loot a dominion in the South rich and vast as an empire." ——$—————— BEAT 80-YEAR-OLD FATHER. of the Railway Traction Construction | gom sent to Werkhouse Agea Company, of which Hobin was the! bs bed owner, and which was to build his Ex-Policoman's Request. South Shore Traction Company's road.| For beating his aged father on the Gifford, who was counsel| head with a char and attecking him for the Northorn Bank and also at-| with a knife, Robert Moulinger, thirty- torney for Robin, was called as a wit four years old, of No, 1117 Fulton ave- nue, the Bronx, was sent to the work- house for five months to-day by Magis- | Goldsmith ts the lawyer who was| trate Appleton in the Morrisania Police accused by Robin at one of these hear- ngs with deserting him and abandon- Court. i The father, Adam Moulinger, is eighty years old, and a retired policeman. He was retired from the force with « pen- sion in 1882, He appeared ip court with Mr. Gifford in his testimony told of| his face bandaged and his arm done up hia acquaintance with Rabin and what|in @ sling. He sald: of the “Your Honor, it was a sorry dey for me when this boy of mine came into tho world. He has been a curse and a “y was not attorney for Robin,” he| course to me, He has never worked tn of the Riverside Bank. I was counsel for the | Bothing and cares for nothing but drink. Last spring we had an offer from some solid downtown hia life. He knows noth'ng and can do When I refuse him beer money he beats me. I must be rid of him, Judge, so please send him away for the limit.” ———_— FISHERMEN MAKE PROTEST AT RECIPROCITY HEARING. Gloucester Delegation Declares Free Fish From Canada Will Ruin Their Business, WASHINGTON, Feb. 2—The first hearing granted by the Ways and Means Committee of the House upon the proposed reciprocity agreement with Canada was occupied to-day with the protests of Gloucester fishermen who strongly oppose the free tish provisions of thé compact. Men long identified with the fishing trade testified that the industry wouki not be able to survive the effects of the free admission of fish from Canada, They said that the Gloucester trade had been little more than holding its own for many yea: and that the removal of the tariff ba rier would wipe out all, profit, Arthur Millet of the Bureau of Fisheries testified aw to the value and condition of the Gloucester business, He eaid that 143,881 me erty valued at $2,176,000 are embraced } Immediately after tne explosion the barograph at the local Weather Bu- reau moved its penpoint upward ex- ctly elght-one hundredths of an inch ” Caloulated by Forecaster Sc th: would come down prepared to turn over | Ure had been caused of seven-tenths of @ million dollara to me. one pound to the square Inch on all ob- “I wish I could have got hold of a| jects to which it was exposed. million,” said Gifford. would have| Carrying out those figures ant apply- turned it in for the stockholders and |ing them to plate-glage, it is seen that upon a surface of glass measuring 10 by (Continued from Firat Pa veatigatere will be produced. By tha time the responsibility should be fixed. It has already been established that the Central Ratiroed of New Jersey had no permit to transport explosives through Jersey City, and that the very transfer of dynamite from a freight car to a lighter at the pier was @ vio- to the bottom of thts awful disaster,” said Prosecutor Ger- ven this afternoon, “We must process On facta, not conjectures. The finger of suspicion siready points to certain men who a@fe under surveillance, They cannot get away, tf they should be #0 minded. “It should be a comparatively simple matter to fix the responsibility for the explosion. The 1: wa of New Jersey woverning the Landiing of explosives within the ftate and along the water front are explicit, as are the laws of Jersey City. That the law has been vio- lated tn this instance appears to de es- tablished. “The Interstate Commerce Law may apply to this case Gecause of the fact that the explosive was in course of sey tO another jurisdiction. If we find that the case is one for the Federal them to the utmost, Our that the guilty persons shal! be pun- ished.” Believes Beller Exploded. By direction of Col. Beverly Dunn, Chiet Inapector for this district of the Bureau of Explosives of the Ordnance Bureau of the Wer Department, H. P. Conrye, special agent: V.. P. Bieatie, | chemist, and D. J. O'Day, local agent, visited the scene of the explosion to- day, They gave permiasion to the Du- pont de Nemours Powder Company to remove the loose dynamite left in tl It will be loaded on light FEBRUARY 2, 1911. ® very few tons of dynamite on the veanel. Attorney Miller, acting for the Central Rafiroad of New Jerse¥, took charge of a general investigation of the causes and conditions of the wreck and the ex- act damage to persons and property to- day, presumadiy with a view to. detend- ing the multitude of damage suits which will be brought as a reault of the ex. ploston. “I am retained by. Ad company and not by the pubic,” Mil day, “and I am not vrarcan tng out any information. company, not for me, to give to the public any of the work I am doing for i.” —— M‘NHATTAN DAMAGE MARKED DEFINIT'! LY AS CYCLONE ‘PATH ‘Twenty-five inspectora of the Manhat- shipment out of the State of New Jor. | oF authorities “we shall co-operate with |” Unter tan Bureau of Buildings searched the city below Twenty-third street to-day to determine the exact extent of damage done to butidthgs by the Communipaw explosion. They found thousands of shattered window panes, scores of de- {Molighed plate giass shop fronts and in- numerabie doors warped upon their ‘i Dut, so far, no serious case Oo! cracked walls or disturbed foundations, Battalion chiefs of the fire districte and policemen cenducted similar investiga- ttone. Chief Inspector Alfred Ludwig of the tole idea ts) Bulding Department said he believed that, owing to the absence of @ ground shock in yesterday's disaster, no seri- ous structural injury has occurred any- where on Manhattan or Long Island. Said Chief Inspector Ladwi Cut Path Like Cyclone. “The wholesale shattering of gl | @eeme to have been due enfirely to velocity of air currents set in motion Dy the exploding dynamite. peculiarity of this explosive to out a very definite path through the atm: phere, like ¢! of @ cyclone, which ac- counts for the freaks of damage seen in so many localities to-day. “Apparently the path of yesterday's concussion was narrower than the width and trangferred to boats anchored in| of an ordinary street, as is shown by the reservation near Eilis Island given over to craft of that character, in my opinion,” said 3 Conrye, the fact that while on one corner the entire plate-giass front is blows out of a building, the glass on the opposite comer remained intact. The velocity of ‘the explosion of dynamite was set Off the air current set in motion by the Jer- primarily by @ boiler explosion. When | sey explosion was at least equal to that the dynamite was taken from the car|of gale blowing sixty miles an hour, %& was frozen. explode frozen dynamite. “I am of the impression that some of the dynamite that had been placed in| pressure of elghteen pounds pi It ts very difticutt to]the velocity of whieh is elenty-eight be feet per second. “Plate-giass windows ordinarily with- stand @ gale of this kind, exerting a square the hokl of the Catherine W. was neat foot, if worked up gradually and steadily, sustained. enough to the boiler room to thaw. ‘Then the boiler exploded—of course, this is only conjecture—set off the pertially thawed dynamite, and this cancussion was sufficient to eet off all the frozen dynamite that hed been placed in the boat. “But the explosion, happening below the level of the pier and on the water, viown around like kindling woed''sctely to shock.” Owner Admits Beat Wee Unlicensed. Capt. James Healing, owner of the Catherine W., the dynamite boat which blew up yesterday, gave an interview to an Evening World reporter to-day at his ship chandier’s store, Hudson and Morris streets, Jersey City. The cap- tain did not appear to be greatly con- cerned over the charge that he was engaged in carrying explosives without @ Hoense. “It’s strange,” remarked, ‘that these vigilant offici have just found It out. Why, the Catherine W. has been engaged in the transportation of explo- atves in these waters and from Jersey City doeke for the last four yeers. All the city oMicials knew it. They knew the boat had no license. They know that neither the Whietier, the Jeannie nor the Reponte, all operated by the Du- pont' Powder people and all engeged in the same business as the Catherine W., had a license. “The Catherine W. was licensed to. carry freight and passengers. Four years ago I engaged with the Dupont Powder Company to use the Catherine W. in transferring explosives for them. I made inquiries about a license at that Ume and couldn't find that I had to have one for the boat. ur of Crew Were Licensed. “Four of my men on board the Cath- erine W. had to have licenses from | the United States Bureau of Combus- | tidles, They were William, Traver, James Lamdrigen, ® man named Stoipe end a man nemed Ackley. These were qualified handlers of Plosives and were #0 licensed by the United States Government. 1 never knew and no- body elee handling explosives in this harbor ever knew that any other kind of a ioense was required, lived up to all the Government regulations, “Yesterday morning the Catherine W, Gelivered @ quantity of powder at Wee- bawken to the West Shore Railroad, New York, to the New York, New Haven and Hart. ford Ratiroad. She reached the pier at Communipaw to take on @ cargo of explosives at about fifteen or twenty minutes before twelve. “Dynamite is loaded by sliding tt lacked the force to set off the frosen| Capt. Erle Dannell, dynamite in the care—between tweive| the full-rigged ship Ingrid, which was and twenty tone, 1 should say. If that| Packed and dismantled by the explosion had gone off I fear the whole lower end| Of 4ynamite on the lighters Katharine of Manhattan loland would have been| W: end the Whistler and the freight devastated. It remained intact and was! © because it wae fronen and unresponsive| hi. cy sailed |. But the impact of an expio- Hon differs in being sudden and shock- —— FEARS SEVEN DIED ON SHIP WRECKED AT RUINED WHARF. commander of the pier across which she was was mooning about hid ship shaking hie head mournfully. with her as mate and eaptatn for thirty-five years, since she was launched in England. He kndws y spar and plank t' was in her. She was named by the owners for his Gaughter, and {f she were indeed his daughter he could not love her more. Capt. Dannell was in New York, at the offices of the consignee of sth bone shipment from Buenss Ayres when the dynamite went off. He had been in port only @ few hours and was making his report. He had started an extra big of longshoremen unloading the ‘moored, to-day. "Por one thing I may thank the good God," he said to an Evening World re- porter as he stood on the ragged edge of the em d pier and looked dow: | into the dirty confusion of his broken “None of my crew is dead. I some hurt, but ship. have found them al not seriously, The Andersons, the mates, are all right. Yesterday I thought that they and some of the crew deud. {[t ie not so bad as that, “But the longshoremen! I am afraid six or seven of them dead, Two, the Moro brothers, we have found. There may be several more, I am afraid. “But the poor ship. Look at her! Only once before has #he been hurt. It was at sacola in 1906. There was a hurricane. A tidal wave came in and Ufted her to the top af an eighteen-foot pier and then the side of & warchouse fell on her. not so bad as now, “In thirty-five years, all over the world, I have been with her through all the storms that ever blew and off the wickedest coasts where ships go! down. But have anything Not ‘The. al ot the Ingrid was not » ously damaged, though it was strained a that she leaked sufficiently to make the use Of pumps necessary in taking her to dry dock in Brooklyn. Of her cargo of 1,400 tons of bones, the long- shoremen hed already taken out thousand tons before the crash. Thi remainder is still in her hold or scat- tered over over a circle of a quarter mile radius about her berth. _——.—— FERRY SERVICE CRIPPLED AFTER BIG EXPLOSION SUFFERING FROW SKIN ERUPTION mained two of the big craft in service. An emergency squadron was made up of two of the discarded Pennsyivania | Brooklyn Annex boats, which have less | paints es i Red Blotches on Face and Scalp. + Disfiguring, Scaly and Dry. Be- n to Itch and Burn. Scratched Intil He Drew the Blood. than a third of the capacity of the big Centrat boats, and the Erie Late Ridgewood. Before 8 o'clock the incoraing tide ot} commuters swamped the carrying ca- | pacity of the improvised fleet. The dig | Wagon runway between the waiting- | rooms and the ferry sigps was packed «0 | densely that it was impossible for any , vehicles to crowd through, and between $ and 9 o'clock few wagons, save United ; States mail wagons, got across the river via the New Jersey bs hy route. —_—— The little sidewheet ex-Brookiyn An+ nex bonis were jammed until” they | Cuticura Soap and Ointment Entirely feemed top heavy and went slewing across the river like amwieldy turtles. Relieved That Awful Pest, The commuters endured the delay goodnaturediy, however, and there was very: little disorder and no one was injured in the Jam. “T have been using Cuticura Soap end Cuticura Ointment for the past three monéba and I am glad to say that ESPONSIBILITY FOR tnvoying skin erupuans R pe EXPLOSION DENIED fed blotches sPhoarina ok BY POWDER TRUST though they were rather disiguring, I did met Directors of the Du Pont de Némours Company, after nearly twenty-four hours’ deliberation, authorized Man- ager F. C. Peters of the lucal office of the “powder trust” to oMecially deny think anything of them @ until they began to get scaly and dr in thd burn unga si {'ttean to uss's 4 p, thinking that my old kind might the company's culpability and negl-| ing me, but that didn’t seem to do any gence in ¢ Communipaw explosion. ‘went to two different docto s Manager Peters declared that his com- | rae aa Oey. chine many tee F pany's only connection with the dis- feratning it ew "the on'my. aster was the presence there of the! aid head. ‘Then I started in to use the Cush Hghter Whistler, which was there in- pre Remedies and in two months J nocently. Lima relieved of that awful was ee to how m to me M80 We feel satisfied’ ‘he! concluded, | podfoanyane See ae at“neither carelessness nor neglect | as one who used it successfully. Ta fg chargeable against our company.! delighted over my cure by Cuttcura Remedies " While we admit the explosives that I shall be gad to tell anybod; prt made by us, none of our men was en- Tigin Ste New York Geceeene, 2 ee 4 seget in their transfer. We are making |“ Outienta Boa ) and Cuticurs Ointm jorough investigation and will assist | ¢gh')} sre sold Mrouchowt the world the authorities in any inquiry they may | Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., sole prova., 138 inaugurate," Columbus Ave. Boston for free book on’ skin tnd scalp diseases and thelr treatment. Chteago Woman Saya. Stovepolish Peddler In Missing Girl. CHICAGO, Fe! What may prove a clue to the whereabouts of Miss Dor- | othy Arnold, the missing New York Sho was much burt, but| Uke this.) eiresa, is being investigated. A pho- tograph of Miss Arnold has been identi- fled by a woman living on the South Side as @ Mkeness of a girl who called at her home yesterday selling stove- polish, | the theft of all wa the y pustoarenh to-day the hty per cent. of the homes the girt! I am sure of it.” ae exception, The is likeness ibetween the photograph and THE According to this informant her vis- | sh eho wore. howtess, whose name for the time sind ‘ is country have pianos, Other women in the neighborhood on looked upon, to-day as a necessity ‘ is being withheld, exclaimed, “That is a home without one is whom the girl called admitted a striking | are children to edu- and cen a lux where there cate. the polish peddler, THIS WEEK OLD including @ handeome cage and a SCIEN- TIFIC EYE EXAMINATION by a well known “Rentstered” Specialist of years’ exnerience, All for 61. If yeu need winsses | don't miles this opportunity, ALEXANDER CO. J. W. Bolemon, Successor. Ocullst-Opticians, established 15 years, 180 Kast 234 St. (Lexington Ave.). A Pease piano in your adds distinction to the polly name stands for reliability and known worth and its fine tone quality has attracted over | 82,000 purchasers in the last 67 - years. Our prices are not high, quality FINAL CLEAN-UP SALE. FURS FROM TRAPPER TO WEARER’ consieved, and we have many “Buy htly used pianos at poe Bi the FAMOL KRAMER FURS - luced prices (3125 wy up oeay direct from America’s; payments if desired and old in- leading manufacturers struments exchanged. Write at our wholesale! for catalogue. salesroom and PEASE P IANO CO., v the middieman’s enormous profit. KRAMER FURS = —_ 128 W.42dSt., nr.Broadway,N.Y. KNOWN Brooklyn Branch: Newark Branch: THE WORLD OVER ‘H Flatbush Ave New St. “SINCE 1873” 7 BLOW STOREKEEPERS' PRICES, REGARDLESS OF THEIR SPECIAL SALES. Beware %, mae he eee | C6" > - POUND BOX 4 Sot 2e Special for To-Morrow, the 3d \GSOBTED, ha TT. Ati box ite ale prives GENUINI SIAN MOIRE EAL. a ge La at er fur ccate, other fur Sih, i $35 MEN'S CLOTH COATS, lined with Muskrat, Marmot and other furs, $20.00, $30.00, $40.00 AUTOMOB Te. Raccoon, De Wallaby and ot | $15.60, $21.00 & § S.00 | MANY OTHE! EXTRAORDINARY VALU ES KRAMER FUR CO. Pneumonia to be feared more s One More Whack, 12 feet, of which alze many were broken | slowly down smooth pine chutes. That| New Jersey Central Rattroad com- than death f gl hot. GUMty should be entered to cach charge. | ,,JUst Decsuse @ man has been Ms! 1, gismissing the panel of jurora that |in New York, the ext hae been found to be the safest method, | inuters were from half an hour to OF NEW YORK, om gun § “Ht 1s 0 ordered.” said the Judge; | trict-Attomey or Asalstant Disiriet- | nad served in his part of Goneral See: | 12,088 pounds. Forecast They couldn't have been loading more | three-quarters of an hour tater in 18 EAST 16TH STREET, “Net the pleas be entered.” Attorney, he need not expect any differ-| sions last month Judge Swann took reading the barograph, remarked thet | "an ten or fifteen minutes yesterday reaching Manhattan to-day owing to| jae¢, Bway and Sth Ave, New York. ‘The frequent changes of temperatute tm Wanted Some One to Speak Up, |! °F More favorable treatment than | another whack at Mr Jerome. Atter |e oles y window in the | When the explosion happened. Ido not the crippled condition of the road's| take elevator to wholesale salesrooma, | {ti ani winter, months are the source of “Perhaps the detendant would iike to |*2% ther lawyer recelves here, ‘The | thanking the Jurors as & pana! the Court | {t We* & wonder every {. | believe there could have been more than ferryboat fleet as a result of yaster- Rew, demo, ‘cold irr esoc, aie oles Mae P plead for himself since his counsel re. | #20! this 1s impreswed upon the minds | addressed the twelve men who had sat| OWer Part of the city war not sha =| tums at produclag & crop of colds aud cage fuses to do #0?” suggested Mr, Wnit-|° certain gentlemen the better. Now |! the Robin case and said tered. Faas, ead to poeumon he a st man, evidently hoping to get an answer |Your cent will plead, Mr. Gang, and 1) "1 am glad that you pala such par- fest Damage itiat was neglected, ‘Thoasanits a fromi womebody on the wide of the de-| Will Kive you jumt two minutes by the |cwMF Attention to the defendant | #ee* et “one ete Yt a'e renult"ft'is‘tiore eeriain io ‘a da fence. clock in which to enter the plea." Gat oa vont Tome Coase.” Sizetc | (etaver:tetore have tha ‘eocibnnles. [p OND wades chill, melee tne “A 00d idea,” said the Judge, “Robin, | Judge Swann flaed hin eye o dict on your own chservations, The NM h: e . jeu chill, rising fever, h 4 oa pon the rs hoarseness, runing’ nose, Theadach do you wish to plead?” COC AS ne wetted A ePOn, tHe | evidence given by altentate is made up| #uring plate glass been hit #o hard in The closest bosom friend you {ul brescbing are “the fheulnc, tou 4 ‘There was a moment's pause. ‘Then | eek. M8 fs Ur Gans) merely of opinions and should not one district as they have as the result . avoid the dangers ‘tay tin ea : rf ‘0 another series of mo-| ways be considered as gospel truth, 01 . + | Mable f olds and eu) Peres portent tially, Bald: | ions, saying tat he would denur to — sosnel truth" Lot this explosion, “The plate sam in- have couldn't stick closer to you Dra Bally Const yr.” Lt oes nok rame handle this job for me—I the indictment, and that he would of 4 A . ss hartootly, 8 he inows bis burinen ares noce ot the Dtrst-assorney | 28 SAILORS DIE IN STORM. jecctens coy end wader tet ceerere! chan the non-bulging bosom of the aac Sait ae “Very well,” eaid Judi that he desired permission to inspect | Score of Fishing Craft Wreekea|on glass, #0 that their losses from or- sod compietely, “Test it Tiss ote gtatl q you anything further to say, the minutes of the Grand Jury. But dinary mishaps are generally small, DONCHESTER Ch tt Shirt BREEN.—On Jap. 31, 1911, MARGARET, | stor a tive sasnnle, | Adutoss “Ar G, 4 Jerome.’ | he patently disregarded the Court's ine on Const of Spat J. Carroll French, secretary of the a ue. beloved wife of John Breen and slater of bo. aalutote ea, Hiatt aie’ no 1 *E desire to object to {hose proceed- | junction to enter a plea, RARCELONA, Spaln, Feb. 2A wia New York Plate Gtass Company, aatd Hare ewe Satine ef Geely Armagh. aay, “wad yBeowuse the iadicttonts have not’bees | PXActy Aas the two minutes ticket] storm swept the Spanish conat ast 'r48¥: ; } ‘ $2.00 and $2.50 "Ponerns: trom ‘hen. tote:-r ‘weed Re the Getondant” joff Judge Swann let down his gaye! | plight. A score of fishing craft were Within the memory of ingurance’ thet an error had been com- | eae eaniea 48 ee OEE areca af enenet, cipon the rocks and many of widespread as this on plate glass only Cluett, Peabody & Co., Troy, N. V, Makers of Arrow Collars BBG dy Mei bh Judge Swann, whose voice was plea of not guilty Is entered, Bali] thelr crews toy » Now York that was due to accidental rend and Rid ‘with feeling, directed the clerk (0 is fixed in the sum of $10,000,’ Po-day the bodies of twenty-five sail- ee. Probably there was nothing high requiem mass wil! be sung, Inte the indictments. Jerome, who was) This eft tually silenced Mr. Gans, vere picked up along the o (like it since the Civil Was, J { ment Calvary, ) , f eisai rena el . — er a, cs - te cee Tee nies cae eh 0 tt TTT TST TE REET a