Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Gocs Into Rage When Judge Martin Extends Time of Pleading of Importer, MOTHER SICK IS EXCUSE District - Attorney Declares Courts Are Being Tricked and Trifled With by Smugglers, Because Judge Martin.in the United States Circuit Court granted a further extension of time in which Benjarfin J. Duveen @an come into court and for | the second timesplead to the charge of smuggling art objects into this country, Ymited States District-Attorney Wise | to-day stalked ongrily out of the courte | reom after low ‘lly declaring he would never move the case again. ‘I put it right up to the Court,” he eald, white with anger. “I refuse to have anything further to do with this esse, 1 will not move it again,” ONE OF THE MOST PECULIAR CASES IN COURT. For Four Years She Has! This ts one of the most pecullar cases that has ever come before the Federal courts of this city, Benjamin.J. Duveen | ! ds the youngest of the four brothers who| comduct art galleries in London and at} Wo, 902 Fifth avenue, this city. They! Were, arrested 1n October, 1910, charged Mh emugeling, many of the objects they got into the country without pay- fmg duty on them adorning the walls ef Fifth avenue mansions. Louls J. fand Joseph J. Duveen came to this country last spring and were eacn fined | $10,000. The New York branch was con- @ueted by\ Henny J., who expected to be Waroneted at the recent coronation, and Ben§amin J. Duveen. ung Duveen, after Henry J. had paid a fine of $15,00, pleaded guilty lastt Apri. After making the plea he Permitted to withdraw it until the fol- lowfng-day so that he would not have to. spend that night in the Tom He did-not appear in court the day after) withdrawing his plea, Mr. Wise assert- ing as cause that he feared he would be aént to prison. Since April he has been | inflondon. His case was called in Octo- ber? but was postponed until to-day in order to give him ttime to get here from London, but he did not appear and Mr. wanted the bail forfeited. n-B. Stanchfiekt opposed the mo- vand announced that he wanied furtter extension of time as his client would eventually appear and, when he will plead guilty, He submitted {ts from four London physicians which stated that Duveen’s mother was erftically 111 and the absence of her son | would be a risk to her life. | ATTORNEY WISE PROTESTS, AGAINST EXCUSES. {J have also investigated the condition Mrs, Duveen's health,” said Mr, e, “and I find it is no different than | has been for a are ageing in the mo pretext secure further have Ween using the nam rand health for the >wing ££ eens to ex 4it in elty."" Judge Martin, though, sald that he 14 not see how the Government could inconvenienced by granting a post- ement and set the case down for Dee. 4, stating at that time young Du- Veen must either be in court or the bail Would be forfeited fAfter Mr. Wise had left the court In a , Assistant District-Attorney Wal: managed to get the Judge's remarks record, In the corrijor Mr. Wise pressed himself forcibly against the y of delay and said the courts were | -tricked and trifled with by the eens. g $25,000 In fines the| ‘dn addition to payt in Government $1,200,- eens paid to ‘the pin penal : -——__—_—_. jow He Can't Sleep Slept Ten Days: at All After sleeping continously for ten days, Isaac Belote of Forrestville, N. Y., finds now he can't sleep at all. Doctors tried in vain to arouse him for almost two weeks, and y he awoke of his own accord, Since then he has been able to sleep but one hour and that was a doz Big Offering of Apartments As the little country store com- pares with the big city emporium, eo do oth newspapers compare with THE WORLD as “TO-LET” AD. MEDIUMS there Last week were printed 646 MORE 5,698 THAN DOUBLE the Herald's 2,526, WORLD “TO LET” Advertisements Do you not see the advisability, therefore, of rushing to THE WORLD'S columns when desirous of renting a HOUSE, FLAT, |APARTMENT, STORE, OFFICE, LOFT, ETC.? World Ads. for ~ Variety Always! | trol of the estate of her husband In Sep- | required the immediate supervision of a | stockholder in the Union Pactfic and THE EVEN Mrs. Harriman’s Gift for Civic ING WORLD, Science Makes Her Benefactions: $2,000,000 Given to Charity From Husbard’s {71,000,000 Estate Without ‘“Im- pulsive Philanthropy.” Latest Donation From Wonderful Woman of Finance Makes $200,000 Available for Training Men in Public Busine Tt is only when such an annuoncement is made ag that of to-day telling of Mrs. KE. H. Harriman’s gitt of $80,000 toward the maintenance of a school for the training of public officials that the pub- Me is reminded that Mrs. Harriman is quietly anq successfully administering the largest fortune ever left to a wom- an in this country. Her husband left her outright an estate of $71,000,000 in a Will of ninety-nine words, No trust fund was created, no sug- gestions or directions encumbered the will, Mr, Harriman turned over to his wife $71,000,000, with full confidence in her ability to conserve the money wisely for their children and to carry out ideas he had in mind when he was prema- turely taken away from lif's activities. In a sense this great fortune ds the re- turn from an investment made by Mrs, Harriman thirty-two years ago. She married E. H. Harriman in September, 1879. He was a poor but ambitious broker, She was rich, as riches counted In those days, and within a few years, when the ambition of her husband re- quired the investment of a great deal of money, which he did not possess, she supplied the money. On the finan- clal foundation thus planted grew the immense power of E. H. Harriman in the financial world. HAS SHOWN HERSELF FINAN. CIER OF HUSBAND'S CALIBRE. ‘Mrs. Harriman assumed absolute con- tember, dispose 199, Since that time she has of trust company Interests that man of Mr. Harriman’s calibre and were dangerous without that sort of super vision. She has also sold a Way, on elects Laht plantapare Metal” HUne alee RiGee anal awes: Hert here } "| husband's estate she has given awa ibe Garena HE soe bats We characlanartace tear Mednane 2 'n ctions have been made pub- Mrs, Harriman ts the largest individual jjer tyinure. “ate “knows onla to hor close friends or her business associates. IMPORTANT GIFTS REACH TOTAL OF $1,433,000. The most important gifts follow: To the State Park in the Mountains (ex- | Southern Pacific railroads and in the | Wells-Fargo Express Company. Besides | she has large stock ownership Interests in other rallroads. Under her direct matmgement—through subordinates, of cour: are a gold mine in South Dakota, an fron mine in New Glusive of 10,000 acr York, a blast furnace in Pennsylyania, of land)...,. $1,000,000 avitry farm, ‘a big road Bujlding-enter-| To Fale Forestry Behool.. 100,000 | prise and the improvements on the Har-| TO raise a mortgage on riman estate in the Orange Mauntains. the Boys’ Club.... 113,000 She 1s consulted by active managers of| Te ® gymnasium for 8 the Harriman railroads on every im-| @@oFge's Episcopal Portant proposition. that comes up, and| § Chureh, = Hempstead, her interest In these railroad questions| _% %-.++ sere is active and personal. To Dr. ‘Tradeau's tuber- |FINANCIAL INTERESTS IN FORTY| *ulosis institute in the DIFFERENT DIRECTIONS. Reever ae 7 To a public park at ‘De aa- She exercises stock control of the Har- wood, 8. Da . 80,000 riman Bank, formerly the Night and| o the maintenance of Day Bank, which was one of her hus- Civic Science School.. 80,000 yand's favorite projec In the course ae of a business day she may be called| ‘Potal . + + $1,433,000 upon to decide matters of moment in at} Mrs. Hariman has contributed heay- feast forty financial directions, for the |{ly to the suport of the Bureau of Mun- estate in her hands has that many rami-| {cipal Research. fications, designed to extend th* scope of the Mrs. Harriman has an office at No. Bureau be providing for the education th avenue, on the second floor, sk {8 at the front of the sulte, look! out on Iifth avenue and the new Pu He Library, She devotes four days in the week to business at her office, and while she does not confine herself to set hours she always remains at her desk until the work at hand {s finished. Whether living at her country es- tate or in town, Mrs. Harriman reaches her office between 10,30 and 11 o'clock of men anxious to enter public service. The school Cost about $40,000 a year, TO STUDY EVERY DETAIL OF) CIVIC ADMINISTRATION, The training will consist In doing gov- ernmental work and seeking facts aovut methods and resukts of such work, As | xamples are mentioned analysis ot | nudget estimates, charter irafting and explaining; installation ot | cost records; tests of milk inspection ana | Her studyzng, | |in the morning, At 1.30 o'clock she| physical examina‘'on of school children, goes to luncheon at the St, Regis, gen-| standardization of salaries, contracts erally in the company of some mem- | specifications, methods of assessing ang ber of her family. desk in an half, she r o'clock or It is no & Returning to her hour or an hour and a nains generally until 4 little after, et that Mrs, Harriman was not only the confidant, but the adviser of her husband in his great business enterprises, He was @ mas- ter at turning the working of mfnor details into the hands of trusted aides and devoting himself to big matters, collecting taxes, watching and reporting the proceedings of boards and aldermen, and preparing public statements. The bureau's directors, Willlam Allen, Henry Bruere qgnd Dr. F. Meveland, will be in charge of the work, Dr. Cleveland is already chal, President Taft's efticiency and account- ing commission, A number of elty do- partments are expected to co-operate. The bureau announces that It Is ready | H. A.| Mrs, Harriman lacks none of this es- | to begin work now and has several stu- sential qualification in the manage- | Jents on its list, four bureau gradua a business man, an attorney and former ment of great affairs, tdge, and a civil engincer, While the SECRETARY GUIDES ONLY BIG) iterprise will be begun in New York, MATTERS TO HER, it is planned to make it natienal in | The work of the office is highly4 character. systematized, Her secretary, C. C.] Part of the official statement given out ‘Tegethoff, was for many years the con- | reads: fide etary of Mr, Harriman.| “In order to make possible a five! Mr, Tegethoff attends to the sifting of | years’ test for a training school for pub- routine matters and guldes to Ms. |ite service Mra. Ha Harriman's personal attention only | crous_ offe a contri such matters as are of importan ar and $10,000 9 Visitors are promptly met and pr four years, ¢ ssed when thelr business Is over, ons of $30,00 a year is no nolse or confusion in the of- hira, tourtn and fifth Mrs, Harriman is hurried obtained. These contrlbue Her ability to assimilate and dispose of | tions have been received from the fol- a mass of letters, reports, statements | lowing people, thus creating a fund of and imilar documents 1s a matter of | more than $10,000 a year for five years: force of |MILLIONAIRES BEHIND SCHEME OF EDUCATION, John D. never ending amazement to her clerks. Upwards of 5,000 begging letters are sent to Mra, Harriman every year, of them reach her hands, but every one Rock- HL. recelyes attention through machinery designed for that purpose, Experts in modor the Bureau of Muntetpal Research tn- M. Harte, win Haw it vestigate many of the appeals for ald. Mrs. Harriman has endowed a research laboratory at Roosevelt Hospital. The amount this endowment has been kept secret, but !t must have been quite large, as it provides for the constru tlon and equipment of an extensive and | expensive Iaboratory and for the run ning expenses, Other endowments of a similar nature have been kept within the knowledge of the donor and the benefilciartes. Mrs, Harriman 1g not @ believer in what she terg™ “impulsive philan- Dodge, Adolph Lewisohn, I ley, Robert Goelet, J, W. J. @, Schmidiapp, M | George W. Perkins, Cleveland H, D. Frank A, Munsey, Prof, Jaines Doug! Felix M. Warburg, Willlam ff ¢on- bright & Co, H. M, Byllesb, Myron 1 of George W. Perkins, C. A. Coffin and Mortimer L, Schiff havo been asked to serve as an executive committee and rustees for this fund and to assiet Mra, farrimaa the practical working out of her general plan. Her gift of $80,000 is} nan of | MRS. VERMILYA'S ATTORNEY HERE SEEKING EXPERT Lawyer for Alleged Murderess Can’t Get Poison Informa- tion in Chicago. Joseph B. Burren, attorney for Mrs. Louise Vermilya, under arrest in Chi- cago accused of several murders, is in New York to-day. “My mission here {s the search for a poison expert,” he sald at the Waldort- Astoria, “In Chieago I cannot find an pert to testify for the’ defense, “Prof. Walter P, Haynes, the leading expert in Chicago, has testifled for the State exclusively for thirty years, Prof. Haynes 1s a large stockholder in a big Chicago laboratory and through It exer- elses an intluence over the others, “I am seeking a physician named Vaughn to determine whether arsenic can be detected after the user has been dead a considerable time. Arsente 1s one of the best heart stimulants known ‘and I shali show that if Mrs. Vermilya {gave arsenic fo the men with whose murders sho Is charged it was given to stimulate the heart. “The charge that my client polsoned her son is outrageous. She loved that boy as dearly as any mother loves uer child, She nursed him recently through Hine Weeks of illness. Looking on it commercially, he was worth more to her alive tnan dead, for he had a good [income, As @ matter of fact, the deaths of the other men profited or} nothing, That destroys the assumed | motive. story that Mre, Vermtlya at- tempted suicide while under guard in Ihome is false. She was given. black Pepper e morning by a nurse, It was too coarse, so she asked for white pep- per. The nurse made a mista and brought her a package of roach ps der. {That is the sole basis for the le Mr. Burren sald that his client's six | brothers would defray the expenses of her defense. KIND TO FOSTER FATHER, GETS UNEXPECTED WEALTH, | state She Thought | Valueless Is Worth $125,000, was kind to her adopted Re! ca Gold of No, 306 ue, Brownsville, finds b an estate worth betw: #, cause Mrs. aven 88 to -father died Mrs, Gold | was so Involved and | valueless th. It was scarcely worth the ‘ouble of filing the will, Persons told | % probably would be a topnotch concluded that as her jer had been kind to per- respectful not to file od tt Mrs. foster-fa haps It wouldn't t | rane ft Gold's foster- father, died in 1901, It has just devel- j oped that in 1878 Kaeger bought 3% city | lots in Long Island City. Years ago n fi re proceedings were usilid ax ivis, but Merritt St. John of ) ‘am street, Man- hattan, who is Mrs. Gold's lawyer, last week made the discovery that the for closure proceedings were defective and that the property has reverted to Mra. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, (OPERATIC STAR OF FORMER YEARS SINGS ON SHIP Mrs. T. H. Shank, Formerly Norma Romana, Entertains Guests With Aria. IS HERE FOR VACATION. Capt. Duxrud Congratulated on Receiving Decoration of the Order of Leopold. Head gales almost all the way over from ‘Antwerp marked the trip to this port of the steamship Lapland of the Red Star Line, which ended to-day, Among those on board were Mr. and Mra, 8, H. Shank, thesfirst namod being Ger- many, while Mrs. Shank was formerly well known on the grand operatic stage as Norma Romana, a dramatic soprano opera companies and other organizations and also many thmes in Italy, where she was @8 much of @ success as in her native land. She {8 a native of Michigan, and both are now on their way to Filnt, in that State. For a few days they will be in this city, after which they go to De- troit and then on to Indianapotis, the American Consul at Mannheém, who sang with Savage's grand home of Mr. Shank. Last evening, while the cabin passen- gers were at dinner, they were enter- tained by the beautiful soprano votes of Mrs. Shank tn an operatic aria, and 1911. TJEKYL-HYDE TRIAL RECORDS TAKEN BY PHONOGRAPH Court Changes Method in Case of Bertram Spencer, Charged With Murder. SPRINGFIELD, Mass, Nov. 18.— Bertram G, Spencer, accused by the police of being a modern “Dr, Jeky) land Mr. Hyde," was placed on trial here to-day on the charge of murdering | Mise Martha B. Blackstone, who was shot to death by a masked burglar on the night of March 31, 1910, More than | two hundred veniremen were sum: | moned by Judge John C. Crosby. It is believed Spencer's defense will | be that of insanity, for the police claim to have @ signed confession to the mur- der. One of the most unique features ever tried In a murder trial was the abolition of court stenographers aad the introduc: | tion of phon graphs to take every word | | of testimony, The trial is regarded as | of such importance that the State does not wish to have one word wrong on the offical court records, As eac! sraphic record is made, a now sraph will be started and the completed | record given to a typist, who will t an: pose the testimony absolutely verbatim, The rolls will be preserved, so iat there can be no dispute as to @ single answer or question. ARREST OF T:IE ACCUSED CAUSED A SENSATION. ‘Tho arrest of Spencer created a sen- sation in Massachusetts, for he was re- ed ax @ sterling young business ainat who.* there had neger been other songs. She was heartily upplauded | any suspicion, The potice allege that nd then warmly thanked for her volun-|he was a respectable citizen by day and tary entertainment. She has jived inj bandit by night. Burope for eighteen years and said that sho {8 heartily sick of it and glad to get | Shank back to her native land. Mr, has been Consul for nearly five years, the period of thelr marriage. They wil be here for a vacation of two months, Mr. Shank sald that the American In vasion of Germany in commerce was no what It should be, but that {t could be improved if American merchani exporters would understand that, order to sell their products in Germany, and they must build thelr factories there and not undertake to manufacture here @nd pay the {mpor duty. Germans resent our attempts at in- nd, vasion of their fleld,"” he said, generally, !t is difficult to get what tn- formation American merchants ask con- consular reports are getting better all the time, because American manufacturers are beginning suls to obtain. The to understand that consuls are not em niscient in their knowledge and must be asked for what is wanted. When wi get requests for certain information we go after It and usually succeed In get ting {t, but not always, re against us, diplomatic If we would ceed do here. This is because the facturing {# done here, while should be American shoe factories tn Germany. This {# the case with every | article that {8 not made thare, and un til Americans understand this the Ger- thelr own terrl- mans will be safe in in| for the trade Kl we have to suc- American makers now send to Germany about 1,000,000 pairs of shoes annually, but we pay 2% per cent, more per pair for them in Germany than you | manu- there His arrest was the culmination of @ two-year reign of terror by a lone ban it who, masked, entered homes at night and held up the occupants with a re- volver, On the night of Mareh 31, Mi: Blackstone was visiting the Dow family on fashionable Round Hill. The women were sitting in the living-room when a masked man entered and confronted them with a revolver. He commanded them to keep quiet. One of the women screamed and the bandit began firing. Miss Blackstone was killed and Mi Harriet Dow shot in the head, Mise Dow, however, recovered. A citizen's committee offered a lari reward, as did the Governor, Private detectives finally arrested Spencer on the slenderest of clu PICTURE WITH INITIALS LED TO CAPTUR A picture bearing the initials “B, G. S." had been found several weeks before the murder In the yard of a home where the masked burglar had been surprised climbing through a window. Enlarge- ments of the photographs proved that they were likenesses of Spencer's sister and another relative, He was arrested later In the wholesale house where he was employed. A search of his home, where he lived with his wife and baby, revealed thousands of dollars worth ,of jewelry, which later was identified by various citizens of Springfield whose homes had been robbed. rt tory. 1 were congratulas |. After Spencer's arrest, tt was decta éd ‘at Hagar aby creat aS ae his mind was affected and he was sent Cant. I D. Duarid of the Lapland |t the State Insane Asylum at Bridj | when they learned that he has recently | Water for observation, After a confine-| feceived. at the hands of King Albert I,| Ment of six months, he was brought of Belgium, the rare ing. Capt. Ouxrud has a record in this respect that ts unsurpassed by any commanding officer on the Ocean, ed “STOLEN” HORSE FOUND ROAMING IN PASTURE. Sheriff Finnegan of Greenwich, | Conn., Unduly Excited, Has Fruitless Search, Were Sheriff Finnegan of Greenwich, Conn, humorously inclined he might write in his records an “off again on again" entry conce Benjamin Fairenild's bh M Falrehild, the noted New York chemist, has a coun uy place at Greenwich, decoration of the Order of Leopold for his heroism tn Ife Atlantic back here for trial. —— Wite, » Bird John Murray told Judge Gay at Seattle that he was drunk when he broke into t beat, he drank because he was @ bachelor, irt offered Murray a chance to penitentiary 1f he would mar- a canary bird, a parrot, or a dog to live with, but Murray satd he didn't want to lve in a wenagerie ana | dition mu Ny Late yesterday afternoon some one telephoned from the Faire 1 farm to the Sheriff that a valuable horse had ct a been stolen, A detalied description o: wt the horse was given The Sheriff passed the notification along to the © coup as ff Presto! far as Danbury. nd his son ot ut in the official automoblh . : . wich, put over Into New York and Pure and Sure, it makes delec- searched the roads and farms clear up table dumplings and perfect to White Plains and back. It was a h f in |hard ride in the cold gale, and not a pie-crust, wit never a fall or trace of the missing horse was discov: failure. A‘‘hurry-up’’ success. Try Presto on Was apparent to-day. The i , e found roaming about a pis next time you're late. Recipes ture on the F° It had es in every package. ped from the the twilight THE H-O COMPANY, Buffalo, N. Y. sterday » hostlers assumed that len, a% horse thieve been active in Conne New York border of late. Lindt and flavor, The first taste of Lindt reveals its superiority, Imported in Cakes and Wafers at $1. peo pound at the best stores everywhere, Alll Sizes, 5c.-$1, cut along Choicest materials, scientifically blended give | its) velvety smoothness Chas, Soits, Mur., 10 W. 210t St. Nw Yor The linrtsaté Co. | wi? 53 Vite wr $BD9999H 090-9 90409009 All jomt or hertlned i Hated at World's iuitem” Otfic 3 sokasa Otte i a0 8 Ny Meili: HT tie brlatiay RICHESON FIGHTS HIS INDICTMENT FCR GIRLS MURDER Accused Pushers Counsel At.| tack Legality of Bill as Date of Trial Is Fixed. BOSTON, Nov. 1%—The date of the trial of the Rev. Clarence V. T. Riche- Reon for the munier of Avis Linnell, the Hyannis chotr singer, probably will be fixed to-day when he Is arraigned on the indictment returned against him rently, It is a month, lacking a day, ince the girl died in the Y., W. C. A. bathroom from cyanide, which she av- | parently had taken as medicine, be- Heving tt would remedy a physteal con- that had caused her much anxiety, Although the police have been quietly at work since the finding of the indict- ment, it i understood they are still un- able to prove how Miss Linnell got the olson. Friends of the preacher say the fact that the proseoution has learned that he once went to the Rev, Edward 8. Cot ton at Brewster with Miss Linnell to | ask the minister to marry them when they decided’ on the date will amount to nothing. The incident occurred more than a year ago. There Is no denial, they say, that Richeson was at one time engaged to Miss Linnell, but that the engagement was broken, they say, will be established. Evidence of more importance, how- ever, ls reported to have been discov- ered. A Cambridge woman has been found who says that she is ready to testify that she knew of Richeson and Avis Linnell being together in her house for several hours at a time. It 1s understood that attorneys for Coats Reduced, ; $18, $208 $22. 50 Models Reduced | 2 ie Terneisin Tuesday It is a usual th ng for Becell.to give won- ‘erful values, but this great reuction sale, coming as it does, in the height of the coat season, far surpasses any offering it: has been within our power to effect. Vicuna Reversible Coats Coa Dressy Black vicun reversible coats. Swi eaves, with bold Hig! ! : Swagger Mixture Coats Many stunning styles, all in the correct fashion of the time; rich, cosy double-faced cloths, fashioned into prs r ulsters of ru land plaid bac! Dressy black kerseys, and hosts of others for daily wear, moto-ing or evenin; Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 14 & 16 West 14.h Street-—New York 460 & 462 Fulton Street-— Brooklyn, N. Y. the prisoner wif! attack the I the indictment on Which hi raigned, Preliminary to the other motiogs: defense, it 1s understood La} A. Morse will file a pleading req that the defense be furnished » the witnesses before the Grand J) copy of the autopsy report, a | the report of Prof. Whitney's anal the contents of the’Viscera n the young woman's body py of the stenographie notes at the Grand Jury proceedings... . —acatlenee |ZENATELLO HAS A HAI ts Tenor Here With Wife Whe wedae tocks, 4 Shorn of the flowing eurls that the nen patrons of Hammerstein opera to find so perfectly lovely ano, Glovannt Zenatello, onee thersgar te or of Impresario Oscar's. forces war jrt on the steamship George Wa: ington to-day, The reason for the tgn~ or's haircut traveled with him. . eqas Mile. Maria Gay, whose favorite sougr: atic role ts Carmen, «Mile, Gay utello h on close, friends j years, hey return this By er, as man and wife, | said Mile, Gay, “we were |rled this summer in Italy. We ate, y ake him cut off his" hair on men, @ten happy 1 don't 1k great tenors. jatellos are engaged for the Boston Grand Opera Company. 4 60 LABOR CASES IN COURT. Some Pay Ff Employment of Minors + iy Representatives of /sixty meredwitie establishments were arraigned bef@te Justices MeInerny, Hoyt and Offfimed in the Court of Spectel Setsions realy for employing children during pi ‘hours, for falling to provide propér Wi !commodations for thel* employees aad for keeping doors locked auridg worm hours. Frederick 1. Cynningham, count the State Labor Department, appeaaed to prosecute. He told the Courtettmt many of the concerns accused thad j warned before qnd had failed | advantage of the warning, sand a lot the accused pleaded guilt; A few pald fines ranging — allowed to go free on a sisi | tence. $10 to ? 645-651 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. Do You Want A Piano Free of The Price and Quality guaranteed? Come, then, to the Fischer Piano Factory and buy a piano from our immense Franklin Pianos $ 185 Upward Factory Salesroom, 417 West Olde Selling from the factory, we sav: to the selling prices of piano stores in the high rent districts. . J. & C. Fischer st Piano Makers in New Yor all Risk assortment on easy terms. Fischer Pianos $350 Upward ¢ you the heavy expenses added e 28th Street, Near 9h Avenue. mIQOSOCOSOSCOT © sisi are fi led---nearts made g'ad ° v 2) 2 By th Cj ¢; timely use of a World Went Ad (e tssseersaenaseornnnens OS @OOS22 006m. DOs Gite ahead: oman