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* made thie anawer in the manner of & “FIRST ASSAULT eS Oo No eS oe = Tt was love 1 wanted and she turned me away th hi cross-examinsaiion io-day At n@ Mooney asked flu t from the then Mra, Cu dated Sioux Palle, South Dak,, in Gctover, 1907, when the fair Brunehilde was getting her divoree from former Mayor Cum+ t Stamford, Mrs. mmings urged Ruzale to destroy the Jeter and the next receiving it Ruzzie wrote a letter which produced in evidence, “Wae this letter of yours written in answer to the one from Sioux Falls he asked. Ruszielamh read wis letter carefully and sald it was not Attorney Mooney then read the epistie to the jury It stated positively that Rurzie hed troved all the letters he had recatved om hie lady love. * tne one I got yesterday,” he wrote Attorney Moe then turned Ruzale hack to the tender banda of Attorney Gordon for redirect mination and immediately the mystery of "Mra. ©." was unvetled. “Who is the ‘Mra. €.' opposing coun: mei has questioned you about?’ asked Gordon. ‘She is a Mre, Crowe, sixty or aixty- five years old, who has been a friend of my mother and grandmother for many je. “She used to lay, and when I was short of money ale helped me to go to a sanitarium at Delaware Water Gap for @ rest. My mother jater re- imbursed her.” Attormey Mooney had made the inein- vation that “Mrs. ©." and Ruzzle had gone to the sanitarium together. Ruszio wanted ft distinctly understood that the suggestion of more than platonic friend- | abip betwedn bim and “Mra, C." was! absurd, henge his willingness to-day to tell who the mysterious second wom: anise. Having made thin explanation his lawyer rested Russie’s case, DEFENSE CLOSES WITHOUT CALLING M188 SMITH. Attorney Mooney put only one wit- ness ow the stand-—Mary Barrett, a servant employed by Miss Smith— merely to ask her how long she had been employed there. He then rested bia case, to the surprise of every one, without putting Mias Smith on the etand. ‘Mooney degan ht address to the jury by explaining hie reasan for not ques vonting Miss Suvth: “Why shoubi I put thts lady to the further humiliation of answering theae trivial charges, such as that of holting this young man’s land on the train and rending him tender love notes? What we have to deal with is the question, 414 ‘this woman promise to marry the pi , if so, aid she break her promise? We hope to be able to con- vince you that in no way have they made jt clear that such @ promise was | Attorney Mooney | -ONTOBACCO TRUST ' PLANS DEFEATED _— } vene in Suit or See Rec- ords They Wanted. |MAY ATTEND HEARING. Lawyers for Dissolving Corpo- ration Refuse to Comment on Opposition’s Attack, The United Stat 8 this aftern Cireult Court of yn denied the pet!- the National Cigar Leat To- S80 the Cigar Manufec- Ansociation of America and the Independent Tobacco Salesmen's Aseo- ciation of America that they be allowed to examine books, documents and other papers of the American Tobacco Com- D The court also refured to per- mit them to Intervene in the ‘suit of the government against the trust, but| graned permission for them to take part in the hearing to be held Oct. 29. | ‘Thin was the first assault in the Promised fight against the pian of dimntegration of the American Tobacco Company to be waged by the Inde- pendent tobacco: interests of the coun: try, who have been assembled by Fell H, Levy, a former spectal Attorneys General, of No. & Liberty etreet. Louls D. Brandeta of Boston, the legal star of the Bailinger-Pinohot con- troversy, is working with Mr. Levy for the independents, Samuel Untermyer ts understood to have offered his services in the Might, but Mr, Levy decided upon Mr, Untermyer. however, jet into the fight later as counsel for individual tobacco independents. ‘The plan of disintegration as proposed by the Tobacco Trust, according to the ation, Independents May Not Inter.) ad “Home Run | ve | | | Brandels-Levy petition, is fundamentally made or broken.” Mr. Mooney then went after Russie’s credibility, insinuating that he had it bie the Com co Bank not because of 11! health, es he had testified, but to enjoy @ te of ease and comfort under his mother's wing and in the witching glow of Brun- ide'e eyes, Miss Smitifs attorney then pointed out the absence of any direct reference to marriage in. any one of the hundreds of letters read by Ruzule's counsel. ARRAIGNS RUZZIELAMB FOR DRAGGING IN A WOMAN'S NAME. In closing Mr. Mooney ecathingly ar- raigned Ruzalelamb for having od 4 woman's name and reputation before the public, Ruzzie sat with folded arms, a look of patient resignation tn ‘pretty Mitte eyes,” while he heard hie action in coming into court imputed to tase mercenary motives, Not once did Ruazie glance In the direction of his one-time Brunehiide, who eat calmly, with unveiled features, her Ups curled slightly in appreciative acorn es her at- torney lambasted the much euffering Ruzaie to a finish Lawyer Gordon in hia closing speech turned loose a burst of oratory that made Ruzzle perk up considerably. “We are not here to judge a case be- tween @ man o1 years and experience against a young and inexperienced xirl,” he #aid. ‘No sentiment shoud guide you in considering this case. Here was no simple schoolgint throwing over a boyish sweetheart, but @ mature woman luring love net a tend had never bef ‘ to the meshes of her youth, whore heart e known the quicken- iz deat of love or the fire of passion. "Deliberaly she—-a married woman— ‘him on until he became her abject jave—always at her beck and call, his heart and soul and mind here and only hers. For nine years sh kept this boy absolutely under her control, He was spellbound by the deep and all-abiding love she had inspired in him. And then she tossed him aside.” In his charge to the jury Justice Brown explained in simple, terse language the course the jurors should take in rev ing a verdict, He said must decile two questions: Was there @ promise or verbal contract to marry and if so was there a breach. He urged the Jury to weigh Ruzzielambs testimony carefully and decide for themselves whether or not he had carried the burden of proof and made out his case, If they should find he had then they should bring tn @ ver- dict in his favor and name the amount of damages to which he was entitled, GIRL WHO CARRIED HEAVY INSURANCE FOUND MURDERED Pretty Catherine Brophy Is Mysteriously Slain on Lonely Road--Young Man Sought. SYRACUSE, N. ¥., Oct. 18.—Catherine Brophy, @ etty young woman of town, was found dead with a bullet in her left temple on @ lonely road near Savannah, Wayne County, yeuterday. She had been murdered, bu: ne motive for the crime is @ mystery The victim lef: Watertown Weeks ago and Went to Buffalo. Th she met a friend on Mond and a day of shopping started eastward She arrive? at Savannah early Monday evening. The county authorities are searching for Albert Demears, aged twenty-4!x, of Oswego, on the suposition t he May know something about the crime ne Brophy had resided in varl- vus cities of the State, At is understood she Was born at Albany, She '# said to e carried a considerable ac: Mle tawurance. ‘ hie] various corporations formi: Fo eta eer se magna gam ie tb cer no defective in that it fails in substasce @n@ effect to conform to the require ments of the deoree of the United States Bupreme Court. They claim that the adoption of the plan would not in any gubstential sense restore free competi- tive conditions in the tobacco industry. INDEPENDENTS MAY BE HEARD AT HEARING OCT. 390. - ‘The independents win only thelr re- quest to be heard by counsel at the pub- posed plan. They particularly wanted the written data upon which ape based the tabulations showing the Various factories controtied iby the Tocco Trust, the various brands of tobacco other articles produced by them, ‘and Uste of the stockholders of the the trust. Further trouble for the Tobacco Trust loomed up to-day when it became known that the Attorney-Generals of North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia would meet in New York to-morrow to discuss the proposed plan of disintegra- tion, If these State officials reach a decision that {t will not restore com- Detitive conditions they announce they also may oppose it. The R. P. Richardson Jr. Company of Reideviile, N. ® trust subsidiary, has already objected to the plan, and within the next few days will fle an amended petition for ita rejection. “There is nothing I care to say about the petition filed by these tobacco or- Ganizations,” said Delancey Nicoll, counsel for the American Tobacco Com- pany, “That is our postition for the present. Until we have our day in court there will be nothing from the American Tobacco Company for pub- cation. Such opinions and beliefs as we hold ehall be addressed to the court.” TRUST WON'T TELL HOW IT PLANS TO DEFEND ITSELF. W. W, Fuller and Juntus Parker, also counsel for the trust, took the same position when seen at No. 111 Fifth ave- nue. It is clear that the trust does not propose to unmadk ite batterie: upon tho independents in the net papers. ‘That .heir opinion in ite essen- tial details will be approved by Judge E. Henry Lacombe ts thelr belief, and privately they insist that the proposed disintegration carries out both the let- ter and spirit of the mandate from the highest court. The National Cigar Leaf Tobacco Association 4s an organization com- posed of the tobacco boards of trade in @ score of the principal cities of the country. The Cigar Manufacturers’ Assoctation of America 1s an organization composed of sixty-five different concerns engaged in the manufacture and sale of cixars while the Independent Tobacco Sales- men's Association of America ts an organization of tobacco ealeamen, as its name Indicates. ce EE Ss SOUND LINER HITS WRECK, Commonwealth Goes to Dry Dock Alter Crash With Newport Derelict, The steamer Commonwealth, of the Fall River Line, which reached this to-day, struck a derelict in N tty sett Bay last night After the pas- séngers left, the vessel was sent to dry Jock at Hoboken for amination, Supt. Nickerson of the Mne, said “The aceldent did not amount to any- thing and the boat will probably go out again to-night. The passenge: were asleep and did not know anything yt the matter — > SHIPPING NEWS, ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, Sum rises, 8.191900 sets, 3.17 Moou rises. THE TIDES. High W Low Water, 4 he TA, bi 4 ih 14 ia F Nh PORT OF YEW York, Aun zi GAKER 450 ‘THE EVENING WOR Baker, Bate NPGRAWS TEA NBLANT OVE POSTPONEMENT (Continued from First Page.) honors modestly, Baker's arm, which was epiked by Snodgrass when he threw himeeif into third base feet first in at- tempting to steal yesterday, was given immediate medical attention last night, and he ts going about to-day with a bamiage on the injured member. ‘The defeat of Matty is the one thing that has made old Bil! Penn turn over ip hie grave even if the Athletics should not eventually win the championship. For six years now the Athletics have waited for an opportunity to get even with the peeriess pitcher of tho Giants, and that result, moat happy to them, was brought about when Baker smashed the home run drive into the bleachers after one man was out in the ninth inning and sent the Polo Grounds epin- ning on its left ear, THAT HOME RUN SMASH WAS A LUCKY 8TAB. That smash of Baker's was a lucky stab at that, as he went after a curve ball that clipped the outside corner of the plate. The fast ones on the inside had been his favorites, but knowing that Matty would never give him such a thing in @ pinch he crowded close to the rubber, and when the bender began its outward swoop the Athletic's slugger gave it an awful clout. The hearts of 87,000 rooters still foel the pain that shot through them as that bail tore on a mad career toward the right field bleachers, The chances are that it has decided the series. But for that stroke the Giants would have won the second game and would now be 2 to 1 favorites {nvorites in the battle which is still raging. To prevent any possibility of a and to have a good nigh ep ani thorough rest the Giants changed their plang after the game and left New York at § o'clock last night for Philadelphia, Few know of their change of plans, and they slipped out of Now York so quietly that not @ rooter was on hand to wiso them well. Thousands of fans who have made pians to see tho entire se ¥ the Pennsylvania sitaion in } this morning in the hopes that they would get on the special with the Giants, but to thelr surprise they found that the National Leawue champions had mbarked for ¥ battleground t hours before, BLAME THE UMPIRE AND ALS0 BATTING SLUMP. MoGraw and*ali the pla are very acre over what they consider unjust um. piring by Umpire Connelly, the Amerl- can League reproee: ve on the bases They declare mace three mistakes at second bi The one on Merkle tn the tenth tn- ning, in thelr opinion, ts the one that lest for them the game, Merkle had jade a dash for second and ding \o big way of thinking wag safe, Um piv Connelly called him out, and as se Was the third vietin that retired ihe wide, In the next | Herzog followed with a two-bag. Merkle had been calle that Herzog’s wa e they figure it} p sa'* McGraw, “and that ts all there ts to it, Matty pitched @ beautiful game, but how could you expect «© team to win when the batters make but three hits in eleven innings? 1 have net our team bat so badly, and it is not‘@liogether “due to the fine pitching of the Athletics. Combs pitehed beau- tiful ball, but he was very lucky, Not once in the game did he have to resort low ball or change of pace. ‘Naturally I feel somewhat hurt at the decisions of Umpire Connelly. He may have thought he was right, but three of hig decisions were very bad and had an important bearing on the gam INFIELD WENT TO c GIANTS’ PIECES IN THE ELEVENTH, To one who sat in the press box and watched the Giants with a calm eye aim as possible under the circum. nces) the trouble seemed to be that the great machine that toro its way through the West to a championship cracked badly in the eleventh inning. Up to that time the Giants had got tho biggest share of the luck, but Dame Fortune suddenly switched to the Ath- letics and enough of the luck broke their wayto give them the game, The crack- ing of the machine was the thing that told, however, As soon as Collins ached first on his single in the elev- th the Glan: infleld, which up to this time had stood like @ stone wall, went to pieces. LAWYER CAUGHT FOREXTORTION TRAPSETBY ANT Woman Says He Has Got $10,000 From Family by Threats, Arthur W, Kaufman, a lawyer and actor living at the Hotel Cadillac, was arrested at the Lincoln National Bank to-day by Detectives Hegney and Bir- ‘est One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street station on a cha of extortion preferred his aunt, Mrs. Frank Greenfield, of No, 6 West One Hundred and Sixteenth street o her story, the lawyer has terrified the members of his family for thres | years and extorted $10,000 from them by reats, Ils mo is Mrs, Kaufman, also of No, 64 Weat dred and Sixteenth street, He er, Mrs. W A few days ago Mra, a letter from the young man (he is twe ty-six), demanding #500 he family op j Unis letter and de loa jassigned to the case, Mra, Lp, WEDN Mrs, Greenfield was present at the arrest of her nephew, She had taken | part in the trap set for him, According er, who has two Greenfield got Me said tn his tor thet he “was going fast,” but that conference over ied to appeal to the ‘The two Harlem detectives were | charge of extortion to await array Greenfield ESDAY, OOTOBER 18, 1911. ‘GOT EVIDENCE IN \Detectives and Other Em- | Ployees Tell of Mrs. Jones and Diplomat’s Son Jones was begun late this afternoon, be- fore Justice Greenbaum in the Supreme Court. There was a great number of witne private detectives, employees of the Waldorf and of the Alwyn Court | Apartments, where Mr. Jones now lives with his two-and-a-half-year-old son, Mr, Jones was the firet witness. He ‘told of his marriage and said that he ‘had never condoned the acts of his wife and that he desired the custody of Stew- art Ogden Hill Jones, the boy. Frederick W. Thornhill, formerly a de- tective at the Waldorf, told of seeing Manuel Portela, the handsome son of the Argentine Minister to the United [States and himself miittary che |the legation, coming from the room of | Mrs. Jones in the early morning, in Meron, 198. He set a watch on the room and saw Portela go to her room the next day. With Anthony Rey, a waiter, and the manager of the hotel, Thornhill said, he went Into the next room and listened at the connecting door, There was au- idle evidence that the proceedings on the other aide of tho door were most affectionate, Frey corroborated Thorn- aL Wether Courdray, @ maid eo French than she could hardly make herself un- pretand, told of a trip Mre. Jones had made to Boston with J. Leopold Braud, the eupposed Austrian nobleman with whom Mrs. Jones afterward eloped. Braud or Brodie and Mrs. Jones oceu- pied adjoining apartments at the Hotel Touraine, but the maid was put in a room around the corner. She told of the Austrian’s visits to the Alwyn Court in Mr. Jones's absence and said she was ‘etill in the empoly of Mr. Jones. In answer to Justice Greenbaum the maid @aid ehe had never told Mra. Jones anything she knew until a law- yer ewked questions last March. EuUBlack, @ hallboy at the Kinlock, in West Fifty-eighth etreet, eaid there was a euly in the house which wae frequently sublet by the tenant for hours or days at a@ time to select patrons, He identified @ picture of Mra. Jones as that of a woman whb' frequently visited the apartment with &@ man last spring. Justice Greenbaum eaid he had heard enough, but Lawyer James W. Hyde, for Mr. Jonea, insisted on a complete vecord, and that he would call more witnesses, a HENRY J. DE ACOSTA STRICKEN SUDDENLY. Brother of Mrs. Lydig and Mrs. Root Dies From Heart Fail- ure in Home of Mother. Henry J. de Acosta, a son of the late Ricardo de Acosta and brother of Mra. Philip Lydig and Mrs. Oren Root, died suddenly to-day of heart failure. at the home of his mother, No. 1087 Madison avenue. Mr. de Acosta, who was twenty- fivé years old, had been in falling he: tr nearly @ year, and was under care “W@>r. John McParlan of No, 1089 Madison avenue. ‘The doctor was hastily summoned to the de Acosta home at 9 o'clock this morning. When he arrived he found Mr. de Acosta aead. As he was not present at the time of death, he deemed it his duty to notify tne Coroner, Cep- oner Winterbottom and Coroner's Phy- aician Weston found nothing to indicate that death had resulted from a cause other than heart failure, The fune! will be held on Friday from St. Patric Cathedral. Mr. de Acosta was an only aon, Other sisters besides Mrs, Lydig, who ts in and Mra. Root, are Mra. Wilifam Mrs, A. R. Sargent of Brook- line, Mass. and Miss Mercedes de Acosta, pe ee at R. K. MUNKITTRICK DEAD. IDENTFES Bo}, LAN AND ROBBED, AS ENGLSHMAN'S Victim Was Charles Shoe- bridge, Formerly Private Sec- retary to.Business Man. ” The body past up on the beach near New Dorp, Staten Island, last night identified to-day as that of Charles Shoebridge, thicty-elght years old, an Englishman who had lived in New York for twelve years and had been employed as private secretary to a business man in the financtal district. The identifica- tion was made by R, C. Wilson of No. 961 Broadway. Although the body has been identified the mystery surrounding Shoebridge's death is as deep ever. Dr. Mord, the Coroner's physician, says death was caused by drowning, but the condition of the clothing suggests that Shoe- bridge was robbed before death. Both wriats were cut. The cuts were clean, ag though made with a ragor, and the veins were severed. The weapon did not ch the arteries. Coroner Jackson 1s of the opinion that Shoe- bridge was robbed on @ oat and thrown overboard in the Lower Bay, and that the cutting of the wrists was done with the intent of making tl case look lke one of suicide. Shoebridge, who lived somewhere on Washington Heights and was un- married, disappeared on Mond. Mr. Wilson was notified yesterday’ that Shoebridge had not been home since the day before, When he read of the finding of the body and the descripti: in The World to-day Mr. Wilson went to Staten Island and made the identi. cation. Although Shoebridge was out of em- ployment. there was no reason for him to take his own life, according to Mr. Wilson. He wes simple in his tastes, saved his salary when he was working and was well supplied with funds. Sewed into the back of Ghoebridge's waistcoat was a sectet pocket fastened a with four buttons. This pocket bad been torn open when the body washed ashore. There was a wallet in the pocket, but no money. The wallet looked as though {t had been cut open and ¢ified in a hurry. ee SUMMERTIMERS’ DANCE. Lake Nantington Col: its te Have Reunion Here, ‘The summer colonists of Lake Hunt- ington, Sullivan County, will hold their ‘annual reunion this year at the Palm Garden next Saturday evening. It {s ex- pected they will turn out one thousand R. K. Munkittrick, many years known for well through his books and verse, died yesterday quite suddenly at Stamford, Conn. He was an English- man by birth and was fifty-eight years old. In 1881 he became # member of the stat of Puck and was the editor of Judge from 1901 until 1906, F He attained a great deal of popularity by his short rhymed verses on topics of the day and was also the author of a number of novels, among them “sfoon Prince,” "The Acrobatic Muse and "The Slambangaree.” He was newspaper writer of experience and a frequent contributor te the Ameren magazines. The trial of the autt for divorca} brought by Stewart H. Jones, the mil- Monatre, President of the Canadian Bronze Company against Eleanor T, ot| MLLONARE' SU } } Taft's train passed last Monday morn- a With the Mighty Swat SPIES AT WALDOR TWTSTRAN ACA IN PERL WRECK AVERTED Locomotive Wheel Slips a Tire While Special Is Crossing Desert in Nevada. LAS VEGAS, Nev, Oct, 18.—A serious mishap to President ‘Taft's train was narrowly averted late last night as it was crossing the desert twenty miles west of Kelso. A slipping tire on one of the traller wheels of the locomotive was discovered by the engineer while a stop was being mnade for water. The tire wat in such condition that tt | might have been thrown clear off the, whee! in taking a curve at high speed. Mr. Taft's car was seventh in the long train, There was a delay of snore than half an hour in getting a spare engine to the isolated spot where the dangerous condition was discovered. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, 18.—George | W. Inge, an expert on explosives, ev ployed by the Southern Pacific Ra road, to Investigate the alleged at tempt to dynamite the El Capitan 8. foot bridge, twenty-five inile# from | Santa Barbara, over which President Ing, expres#ad the opinion here to-day | that the twenty-five sticks of dyna-| mite found beneath the bridge had/| been placed there before the President's train passed, and plans really had been made to blow: up the structure. while the man adjusting mite,” ald Mr. ‘that the Mexican bridge walker, Gomez, discovered and fired upon him, The man ran and as it was dark no g00d description of him could be given. “It was not until tater in the day that Section Foreman Brown discovered the presence of this charge of twenty- five sticks of dynamite with the fus attached, There was not suffclent ex- plosive placed to completely wreck the structure, but from what I observed, {t was clearly the work of an expert.” plied nde Mn WIFE DIVORCES HIM, CO-RESPONDENT LEAVES. Poughkeepsie Woman Won't Reveal | Name of Other, Who Is Back With Own Husband. Mre. Ruth B. Luther of Poughkeepsie and Bay Ridge was the chief witness for herself before Justice Blackmar in the! Brooklyn Supreme Court to-day in her ‘action tor divorce agatnet ler husband, Everett A. Luther, a Poughkeepsie mer- chant. The sult was undefended. The young woman said she had re- ceived an anonymous letter from the usband of the co-respondent begging hi to hold her husband in check so the writer could recover the love and affe: tions of his wife. He was willing to| forgive and forget everything, he wrote, | it he could only get his wife back. Mra. Luther further testified that she went to @ hotel at New Hamburg and found her husband and the woman in the case registered there under tho name of “Everett A. Luther and wife.” This testimony Was corroberated. At Mrs. Luther's request the name of the core- spondent was not revealed as she had| gone back to her husband and they were living together happlly again. Justice ; Blackmar granted Mrs, Luther an tn-| terlocutory decree. Terrible Suffering All Over Body “When my baby was four months old bis face broke out with ¢. zema, and at sixteen months of age hin face, hands and arms were in ao dreadful state, The eczema spread all over his body. We had to put « mask or cloth over his face and tie up his hands, Finally we gave him Hood's Sarsapa- rilla and in » few months he was en- tirely cured. Today be is n healthy boy.” Mrs. Inez Lewis, Baring, Maing, Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures food dis: eases and builds up the system. Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs, : T Pins W. 14th UPHOLSTERY CO. | 108 West 14th sre. 2565 Chelsea, BLI Reunholstered “ ii like new. ‘Val. @18, q iN) call with ai oon tated tar nd Aexivered tree within 3 rales, strong, and that the festivities will be | conducted with thelr usual eclat. | “William Adon!s Mason, who discovered Lake Huntington and blazed the trall of Lover's Lane three times around the lake, will appear in his coronation v ments and a new diamond ring, the of an overgrown carrot He will lead the grand march with one of the forty- seven winsome beauties to whom he has proposed during his summer sojourns, Oe ae ee then walk out into Forty-second at with him. * Kaufman, Mrs. 4 called up on Saturday and demanded the money without delay. Mrs. Greenfield NORMP Ellas CUP 10¢ HIGH GRAPH, ASSORTED 25c POUND BOX ried out, the money passed amd Kaw man walked into the arms of the wait Ing detectives. He was locked up on a hocolate Covered Plantations | ment In the Harlem Police Court, | nave drivea thom her nephew would undoubt-| In Harlem Court Magistrate House, at ta a Loft ortgination and it's a co Merile home and won the & edly follow up his detter with a teles | Kauffman's request, adjourned the ca pos who. anni rod “the oat Smagins Aside’ from the ump , howevar, | phone call. Sie was told chen unt ate fixed at $5,000, {ny Mile Chocolate. am MoGraw Civows a light on the gaiwe) to meet him at ip Lincoln, National | Court papers Kaufman was ant “ai ie BOC which really tells the story of defeat, | Bank and to take there with her $0 In sy Kaurman.” but the police aay "The Giants are in a batting slump,” marked bills, give hin the money and | arthur is bis proper name, Special for Wednesday, the 18th |Special for Thursday, the 19th stores open Saturday evening antil 11 o'clock, i he Went “the two children of his|named to-day and promised to have the 7 ° e; ” - re Row and Cortland: street stores open ¢' F would ao with Wine money at the bank, The trap was car: Pe 7 ond (Trade Mark.) Bi... 10€ evening until 11 o'clock, ¥ PMOCOLATE UARVEST | i} iffeé weight in each instance includes the contatner, DRY GIN DISTILLED IN AMERICA THE honest, whole- | some gin, bottled un- der a label that tells 1 the truth. All high-class stores and ca Baird-Daniels Co. ) Distillere 4 2 x] NO MUSIC , 7 x yl EXPENSE : if you buy a Pease Player Pfano, as we give the free and unliiftites use of our music roll library “With each player we sell. ‘ If you buy a Player Piang be sure to get a GOOD one, us? you will use it more than the aver- age piano. Pease Player Pianos fully maintain the record for @ura- bility set by this firm for 67 ypars. Prices $475 to $750; casy spay- ments if you wish. a Write ‘for Player booklet? an music plan. PEASE PIANO GO., 128 West 42d St., near B'way, ry Y. Brooklyn Branch: 34 Fiaibash AvP i) Smart New Plumes FROM OLD Discarded Feathers Ostrich feathers are all f2; Bring tn your od pium oO Matter how dalapidated they are. you won't to distinguish them Deantiful, | new. expensivet fer they have bee ed by "the meRr rt feathera Feconst London Process. + We are the larges manutagut turers “OF “Onesie Felthers My world, We employ thy eat skill to Then our factiltieg? complete equipment. wiv us advantages found now! P ele ly lower than you'll pay ef where for inferior work Bleaching, Cleaning. and Curing. ried on your hat Dyeing, Feathers while you w London Feather Go. 21 West 34:h St., New York. DIED. Zz MEEKFN—On Oct. 16, 1911, SAR@H, Puneral from her brother-inviaw's x han, 30: Wiaure tormeng CP" UNDER AREN ~aDirt in ntgaueai WILLIA Ad NECKER," Woriu-miue-nuowa cnuertager. Lai geri aiid ds COMprere anderta: ing establishment in the world. Home oltice and tactory, Bergenline Ay. and Main St, Union Hill, da J. Phone 120 and 121 UNION. n Funerals conducted all over, Not too small and none too large. Branches all over Brooklyn, New York and New Jersey. For other information pp 6? hone the Home Office and Factdy or ave representative call’ Positiv: Save you money and independent of the ‘ust, Complete funerals for $43.00, $75.00 and $125.00. HELP WANTED—MALE. STATE PAR S LSTA SOT. perien: Tweet. Cail aunerintendent’s office. vt Johaesfenvitie Co, fout doth st, Sout rook. L stands for Lost, \ A woe that befalls Most all of us when n Dame Misfortune calls, ey When treasures are missing'© Don’t wait fora day, (7 But send a “Lost” Ad, 4 To The World right away. Then it will be given aycir- culation in New York *City GREATER than the Hétald, Times, Sun, Tribune and Press ADDED TOGETHER, 4 World ‘Lost & Found” Ads, Are Always Prominentlygpis- played on Page Oppositeedi. torial Page Week-Days, ang on First Page of Want Section Sundays.