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Pe! iss i be f ‘A © Baal Gespairing effort to induce him to interfere Ho was unsuccessful There then camo to the father of the )/eemfemned man a proposal that there ‘Wee ove untried recourse to gain respite Ge appeal to the United States § ~ HUSBAND TELLS )pteme Court. Beattie’s counsel advised against such a measure. 1 @ev. Mann has effectually stopped talk of eleventh hour interferen me a) “Tt te absolutely cruel to keep re | | Sewing reports about additional appeals fo me in behalf of Beattie,” ho sald. “Their necessary effect must be to fill the prisoner with false hopes which Ste re are doomed to disappointment. I have | ,, " ald absolutely the last word in con Young Mrs. O'Shaughnessy Tmeotion with the case. A POSSIBILITY OF CHANGE, BAYS GOVERNOR. “EH anything so miraculous as to make change my mind were to o et nd for the reporters to explain. matter ia ended for me, 1 have ht over the case and prayed over Bt 1 have studied everything about st lain awake at night thinking about Nothing can alter my view of the Teeter.” | ‘The names of the jury of twelve that Witness the execution are kept a Testifies in Her Own Behalf at Trial for Murder. Husband and Her Pleas They must report before 7 4 lock to-morrow morning end bring for Reformation. of admission. Beattio’s cell is some twenty fect east the death chamber, which is a low- inged room about twenty-five feet and fifteen feet wide, built of = masonry, and whitewashed. There three bolted doors to the death ber, One is on the south side to @ narrow corridor through h Beattie will be led to the cha! er door forms an entrance from Mrs, Frances O'Shaughnessy, Who shot and killed her tals George ¢ her soul, took the witness stand afternoon at her trial for murder be. fore Judge Foster in General Sessions. Word had gone out that h nd, which can be switched on or off, ving the room light or in semi-dark- @s the officials wish. Tm the northwest corner of the cham- fa @ group of twelve cha'rs, whero Witnesses, after being admitted th the north entrance, will sit. Three feet from the south wall of chamber is the electric chair on a j-fovi square rubver mat. The chair of oak, with a cane bottom. HAS NOT ASKED FOR LAST SIGHT OF BABY. An oblong plece of oak covered with ther sets out from the back of the ir to hold the body of the occupant She told of her early Ife in Ireland and of going to Liverpool as @ servant She met O'Shaughnessy in Liverpool and they became engaged, O'Shaugh- nesay preceded her to America by three months, ‘The defendant appeared leas concerned on the witness stand than while sitting in her chalr beside the Tomb's guard and her lawyers. A note of the pathetle crept into her volee when Lawyer Ro- salsky asked her where she and George spent their honeymoon ‘We had no honeymoor.,”” ares she replied. to have had it last sum: Position, One large leather strap) Mrs. O'Bhaughnessy told of the fret encirole the body of ti con- | intimation she had of h husband's man and two smaller straps! aequaintance with Tessie Hayes, She + will hold his arms, while two will bind | 444 7 the ankles. sald George volunteered the informa From the cetling projects a connec-| tion that there was a cashler at the tem ‘above the chair, and to| store who worrled him, thie are famened the wires attached. to} “And we both laughed about it,” sald the copper aponge-jined cap that willbe | the defendant. — ‘the — ‘and ng x. right of the : aig ®! # became suspicious AuRe that faces north ts tho ewitch. | !¢ “ld not cal! for her while she was a screened from view by an iron| ald in the employ of Mrs. Ford. He @oor. On either side and above the| Proposed that they go back to England ehair are suspended lights, and she consented 0, She told pa- If Beattie is to see his baby again be-|thetically of their plans for a wodding fore he Sam woth 4 known of t.| colevration on April ‘ fio far as the public knows he hi atesltea 43 ee nnnneey ‘Bever evinced any desire to see it. Bave her a silver meshbag, but some w it In the hands of time later she ‘esate H . SEES HER HUSBAND TALKING WITH TESSIE HAYES. She first saw Tessie Hayes one eve- ning when she went to the store to meet her husband. O'Shaughnessy was with the girl, When he saw his wife coming he started to run. Mrs, O'Shaughnessy sald she asked Mary Shanahan, one of the cashiers in Healey's grocery store, who promised DUEL FOUGHT BEFORE CAMERAS ~QVER MIME. CURIE French Editors, Surrounded by | Photographers, Fight Until One Is Wounded. hessy to go home in the evenings. Mrs, O'Bhaughnessy sald on the Sun- day before the shooting #he had asked her husband to go to church with her and that he refused, but that she found out afterward he had gone to church with Tessie Hayes. When ahe chided him and urged him to go with her to see a priest he told her all the priests in New York covld not change him. | CONFRONTS HER HUSBAND AS HE WALKS WITH HAYES GIRL. Four days before the shooting Mrs. O'Bhaughnessy said she followed her _ PARIS, Nov. %3.—A dispute over the me the charges which Mme. has instituted against her Nhsband M. Langevin, professor of gen-| husband and saw iim meet two women. eral and experimental phys! at the| She spoke to the one who held him arm College of France, involving the pro-|—she was Tessie Hayes—and acked her feasor’s co-worker in scientific research, !f knew’ he was_a married man and Mme Curie, resulted to-day in a duel) that the girl replied that she didn't swords between M. Chervet, editor That night she and her husband talked GI Blas and Leon Daudet, editor of the matter over and be promised to Francaise, valve the girl up. He did not keep the ‘There were several flerce bouts under | promise. cameras of a score of photograph-| On account of their! disputes over Finally Daudet was wounded in| Tessie Hayes shee sald her husband put arm. A reconciliation followed, her out of his bedroom and she had to charges in which the names of|sieep with Mra, Geyer, the landlady. two eminent scientists, Mme. Curie| A bundle of letters written to George Prof. Langevin, have been in-| O'Shaughnessy by Tessie Hayes and have created an immense|found by Mrs. O'Shaugnessy under her @mount of comment in the Frenoh|husband’s pillow were offered as evi- Capital and have raised bitter party|dence and read to the jury by Lawyer The allegations were founded on | Mahoney of the defence. These letters fact that Mme. Curie and Prof.|wre gushing and contained many were in constant close | Giation in their scel | The first witness called to-day was Thie gave rise to w jealous feeling on| Mrs. Mary O'Brien, matron at the the part of Mme. Langevin, who there-| Tombs, who told of conversations she upon: brought sult against her hus- had with the defendant. She said Mri feand, coupling his name with that of |O'Shaughnegey told her that ehe shot Mime. Curie. her husband to save his soul—the same sMme. Curie has attained considerable | monotouous stayment that the sirl has @s @ sclentiic worker and was|made to everyone who has asked her @reat assistance to her late husband |for an explanation of the shooting. tis discovery of radium. After his| Mrs. O'Brien sald th: on the day of death, which was brought about|the burial of George O'Shaughnessy, @ carrii @ceident on the streets of Frances asked her to pras' for the slain in 1906, Mme. Curte wax nomi-|man's soul. ited to ocupy the chair of physics) Matron O'Drien testified that Frances he nad held at the Collewe of! O'shaughnessy was & model prisoner Sinoe that time she has madi Serene ‘ | Phe defense tried to show through her Te te nal trae Dae atte to tctence| testimony that the prisoner was Irra- Wass woman she would have bees | tional when first taken to the Tombs, & member of the French | but the prosecution brought out pre- Asedemy of Sciences. vious statements by Mra. O'Brien to the pawns effect that whe had sald Mra, O'Shaugh- an”) | neasy was rational at the time of her ; “JOE” KILLED BY FALL. | comtng to the Tombs, | “a TOMBS PHYSICIAN SAY8 THE | Firat Name Only Before Deatn, PRISONER WAS NOT RATIONAL. H | Dr, Bishop, resid physician at ,A& man fell to death into the street) Bellevue Hospital, proved rather a fa- from & window on the third floor of No, | vorable witness for the defense In his @ Madison avenue late this afternoon. | early testimony, but as he proceeded the prosecution Worried him, and when he was finally called upon to give his opinion as to whether Mrs, O'Shaugh- nes#y Was rational or {rrational an- hed been sent to the house by the York Window Cleaning Company, ‘Who employed him, He was just finish- | ing dis day's work when he lost his bal- | mace. swered that he regarded her as rational, “He was carried Into the house, whete| Then came au argument between Mb was fast adle to whisper that his first | ° for the defense and counsel for was ‘Joe and that he had a wife (ie people a to the meaning of the obildren. Before hig full name | * rational aay te could be learned he died Dr. Bishop explained that he used the | word in a medical sense and he was 4 on culled upon (to y whether the Saw, SeeseaB TA ot | el wae rational or irrational using 2 ’ Ara BRIDE WHO SHOT RIVAL'S LETTERS READ. Slayer Describes Scene With the bride Shaughnessy, in order to save this the young woman would testify, and a number of to ald her in getting George O'Shaugh-| defendant, and vacant nessy's look in Mrs, O'Shaug! yes when she was first sent to the ‘Tombs. On _cross-examination by the prosecution Mrs the defendant had als her as being Intelligent. } Miss Mary Shanahan, Nealey's Krocery store, O'Staughnessy “was clerk, identified | written b | ter with |love, She told | O'Shavghnessy the of meeting night before Mrs. ‘had a “wild look” in her eyes, On cross-oximination by Prosecutor Ed- | wards It was brought out that she in- formed Mrs, O'Shaugnessy of husband's relations with esate Hayes. outside on the north and the third | women came tn the court room, This! t words in their general acceptance leads to @ small chamber just | was the first appearance of any save | And he replied that she was “irratlon- of the death room, into which | the prisoncr since the trial bexan. Mra, | #)." tie’s body will be carried to be |O'Shaughnessy spoko with a soft Irish | When pressed for an explanation he for burial. There will be no/ accent, but In #0 low a volco that it] AAid that Mrs. O'Shaughnossy’s actions J - while in Belle were not those of a was diMeult to hear her, as she told! an ordinary person. A cluster of Incanceacent of the shooting of her husband and) Mrs, M. W. Auberle, an orderly in | the centre of the death cham-| gaye her reason for the killing. the Tombs, was called by the defense to tell of talks she had had with the She told of a glassy stare @ cashier in where George employed as a a bundle of letters Tessie Hayes, another cash- whom O'Shaughnessy was in the see, I wax working, but we were | shooting. She said Mra, O'Shaughnessy her SOUGHT TO HAVE HER HUS. BAND PUT ON ANOTHER JOB. Mrs, Margaret Healey of No. 121 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street, wife lof the groceryman by whom George O'Shaughnessy and Tessie Hayes were employed, told the jury that Mrs, O Shaughnessy asked her to have Georgy transferred to another store away from tho Influence of Toasie Hayes.. She lect a package of letters written by Tessie | Hayes to George with Mrs, Healey, Mrs, O'Shaughn hours before the killing, y's last visit was two Mrs. Healey sald the prisoner impressed her as be- ing Irrational at that tim | Father Innocent of the Capucian Or- jer, at the Queen of Angels’ Conyent }in One Hundred and Thirteenth street, Third avenue, told of visits of Mrs, | O'Shaughnessy, In which she asked for | prayers for he husband, and urged the | priest to try to bring about a change of | heart in George O'Shaughnessy. | Mra. Simeon Ford of No. 48 West Sev- lenty-fourth street testified that she met Frances O'Shaughnessy aboard a steam- er crossing from Liverpool. The girl watted upon her on the trip over, and later was employed as a maid by Mrs, | Ford. The girl remained tn Mrs, Ford's Jemploy until a few days before the | shooting. \ Mrs, Ford sald Mra, O'Shaughnessy was a “perfect servant,” and that her reputation for truthfulness was excel- lent Dr, McGuire, the Tombs physician, testified that Mrs, O'Shaughnessy was irrational. ee ae |M’MAHON TELLS HOW | HE SHOT LEARY DEAD. Philadelphia Man Claims He Acted for Daughfer’s Honor—Uu; | written Law Barfed. PHILADELPHIA, Nov Efforts of counsel representing Frank W. | Mahon, on trial here on the ¢ |murder in Killing George A. | failed to inject the “unwritten law” Into | the case to-day when Judge Bragy re- | fused to permit the mother of the girl in the case to testify as to the relations | that existed by ‘een her daughter and Leary The iatter was shot by Me- Mahon by it is claimed, he re- fused to mar daughter. | MeMahon took the stand this after- } noon In his own behalf and told what led to the shooting, He said he met Leary on the street and asked him to marry his daughter. I do not want money, you to do the right thing, testified he said to Jeary. “*You are a good actor, to me and I ing, Ther ut T want MeMahon Leary said told him I was not act- was some further talk and Leary told me to go home, T told him he was a dirty cur, and I don't know much what happened after that, IT was either seized or thrown into the streot I always carried a revolver with me for protection and I used it that wight, I guess. | ——_—___ | JAMESTOWN WINNERS, | FIRST RAC ‘urse $00; two-year- olds; five furlongs.—Hft, 107 (MeCahoy), 4 to 1, 2 to 1 and 8 to 6, first; Siim Princess, (Bruce), 5 even and 1 to 2, second; Cloak, (Turner), 5, 8 to 5 and out, third. T 1,01 1-6, Tahoma, Firat Atr, Tack Tack, Billy | Murphy, Loathly Lady and Norma Girl alwo ran ‘OND chase; to 102 RACE--P three-year: 164 (Booth), 9 to 1, even nse $800; stoaple- Cro nder the Katte, STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Noy. 23.— Crown Prince Gustave Adolph of Sweden, the aondn-law of the Duke and Duchess of Connaught wae operated on to-day for appendielti Ills condition ts quite satisfactory, >} had suffered slightly for several montha and was operated on at his own re- quest, ee ww Revolt tn Paraguer. BU) A revolution bas begun is Paraguay. mv 8 Ide and upward; two |and out, frst; Black Bridwe, 148 (Now, 6 2, even an dout, second; Lizaie Wiat, 1% (Chartrand), 7 to 1,°2 to 1 and even, third. Time—4.10, Pathfinder, Azure Maid and Dutela also ran, Ringmaster refus 28 AYRES, Argentine, Nov. 23, sti tory, lowes Hotel came clattering street and in al lumbus ~_ONEAND ‘EXPLOSION OF DYNAMITE KILLS = CAUSES GREAT PANIC (Continued from First Page.) reet is Corn Exchan, and Adrian apartment houses are near. by; the Hotel Hargrave ts at Ni West Seventy-second street. Windows of the Park & Tilford build- Ing were shattered from the top to the floor, windows of the Hargrave SHANTY DOOR employing 300 girls. the Hudson Branch of Bank. Across the the The Portland na fn bits to the the houses for halt the block between Broadway and Co- avenue glass fttini descriptions were completely demolished. | 18 BLOWN TO; all of BROADWAY. the station. ‘ere thrown from The door of the shanty was blown the entire length of the block to Broad- way, where it rested finally against « cigar atore. At the moment of the explosion scores were on thelr way up the steps of the | elevated and & crowded express train | was standin going up the steps their feet, the structure rocked and it Persons was three minutes before the trainmen could quiet the pasi wera in the ox. Press sufficiently to allow the train to proceed. ‘As glass began to rattle down to the pa vement from the Park & Tilford bullding, several of the employees, with rare presence of mind, ran to the doors and !o7ked them so women customers, some of whom had been blown from thelr stools by the shock, might not run out and get cut in the hail of sharp vits from the upper floors. When the explosion was felt some one in the building sounded ‘The call did not excite any of the girls employed in the packing depart-| call 1. the fire drill ment. and they were not at,all panicky in wa: Stoll, 8 seriously a bookkeeper, ing to the stairwa: person in the grocery estab hurt was whose home is at ‘The only ment who Edward H. No. 28 East One Hundred and Twenty- fourth street. His right for badly cut by flying glass. A neighbor- | ing physician took three stitches in the} rm was arm and he was sent home. HOTEL GUESTS RUSH TO STREET IN TERROR. At were either at breakf: the day. Miss Agnes Costello, the tele- the Hotel Hargrave the guests or dressing for phone operator, plugged every room In the house and gave a hasty assuran over the telephone that no one in the building was in danger. Ing didnot mu ests, completely assure They came pell mell from the But the warn- the hotel to the ‘street, anxiously asking questions about qui ake, among them, no ece the seeming earth- Manager John McGrath ran telling them there was ion for panic and his efforts soon brought results. Every window in the hotel had been demolished. The front of the Corn Exchange Bank completely wrecke* A clock standing in front of the bank building was the only thing about the place that refused to be disturbed. It kept ticking on as though nothing unusual had hap- branch wi per ned. But while the thousands of dollars of damage done by the explosicn was con- ined to half a block near the scen shock was felt for more than Patrons of the Hotel and Seventy among those who came rushing to iny.stlgate the upheaval. Many private residences are in the immediate section, Seventy-second street !q the home of | Robert Dunlap, widow of the hat | Up to a few days ago the shanty In which the explosive wi located on the sidewalk in| way kept was front of her home, cfty and it w front of the Hotel Hargrave, at No, Then the hotel joined tn the complaint, and yesterday the shack was from the sidewalk in front of the hotel to ite resting place under tho el structure at Columbus avenu manufacturer. She At the halt a Ansonia, at cond street, No. 11 West Protested to the moved to @ point in 1 taken ated In the block between Central Park | West and Columbus avenue |homea of Nathan Strauss, J. Van Vech- jten Olcott, J, Hampton Dougherty, Max ®. Bernheime! W. Jacoby, Dr, and Mra, Henry Morg Greenhut and Robert A, C, Smith, re the George ntnau, B. J, |HURLED FROM DOOR OF HOUSE TO ELEVATOR, Of the injured John Kozell of No. | 174 Becond street was taken to Flower Wi |the left ankle. shanty when the wreck took place. | | Lamont Beebe, an elevator boy at the! St. Chari Me wi Hospital with a compound fracture of Passing the No, 101 street, was thrown from the front door of that pat es wear oe house back to the elevator {and had both legs broken. taken to Flower Hospital, | The police found the sewer work in Seventy-second street, pr which the j@¥namite was used, was a city jod, tn | jWhich Reilly had the contract. His jfather, Patrick Rellly, was foreman in | charge of the work, Both Reillys were taken before Magis- jtrate Barlow and remanded to the Cor- oner on the charge of homicide. Thomas A. Reilly, the ¢ said that he did not know that dynamite was in the | jshanty. He protested that he had information as to who took the exp! into the house or when entrance He was} no alve it was taken t | 0 hook and ladder companies, | junder Battalion Chief Terpenny, re- sponded to the alarm that the explo- sion sent automatically. The flremen found nothing for them to do. The reserves from the West One Hundredth | and the West Sixty-elghth street sta- | tlons found a different story. The streets were packed with curious and excited rsons, who jostied and pushed in thelr eagerness to get closer to the scene of the accident. For more than two hours the police struggled to keep the streets clear. FLORIST’S HELPER SAW EXPLO. SION AS IT HAPPENED. John Carman, employed tn a florist’s shop at No, 114 West Seventy-second Street, was the only person who actu-/ ally saw the explosion, He said ie was looking toward the shanty when he saw @ cloud of smoke. “Then he heard the roar and saw the body of a man hurled into the air, John A, McCarthy of Albany, a guest at the Hotel Hargrave, was blown into his bathtub, near which he stand- ing, by the force of the blast. Har: Montague, who has a newss’:nd at ¢ corner of Columbus avenue anu Seve! ty-second street, near the shanty, was Jarred back into his stand and his papers scattered all over the stre FB, L. Goodlove, a rubber manufa turer who lives at the Hargrave, w shaving when the explosion occurre he shock threw his razor blade again his throat and inflicted a slight cu Mrs, Mary A. Phillips, who has a large boarding house at No, 120 West Seven- ty-second street, was in the kitchen of her house. The shock threw her against a gas stove and one of her hands was burned. Alfred Jones, son of Oliver L. Jones of No. 115 West Seventy ond street owes his escape from injury to the fact that he got up during the night and changed bedrooms, The bed tn which he id started to take his night's rest was covered with bits of glass when the vent windows of his father's The coroners were toid that for weeks residents of the section hg been mak- |ing protests against the blasting work. 8. W. Gunther of No. second street wrote yesterday to the Park Department and to the Street Cleaning Department protesting against | the careless work of the explosive! handlers. He said stones flew as high| as the surrounding bullding- when at the St. Charles Apartment House, and Was among those who were shaken up by the big blast, as were B, H. Reynolds of No. 124 West Seventy-second stre 1. Kohen of No. 113 West Se ond street, Co! tom ci determine the responsib! death of Wetsell, the steam flit found that the entire handling blasting work had been carele shanty which held the dynamite d have a sign indicating the dangerous aracter of its contents, as required by Jaw. that had held the dynamite “Highly exp e—Dangerous.”* RESIDENTS HAVE BEEN PRO- TESTING BLASTING METHODS, They found a piece of the box a marked blasts were fired. Thomas Robinson, of Combustibles, tement inspector of the| made this! RY IS CHOSEN OR SHOW GIRLS WMO SHOT STONE (Continued from “irst Page.) who sald he man, used a peremptory challenge. “DOUBLE STANDARD OF MoR- ALS” BARRED BY CouRT, After this get to, the Court refused to allow Mr. Jordan to question any more tales as to their position on the double standard platform. Dominick Landoifl, a clerk living at No. 313 East Nineticth street, was the second talesman to pase safely through the bombardment and anchor in jury chair No. 2 He was followed by Frank A. Campbell, of No. 278 Bainbridge avenue, Bronx, a boardinghouse keeper, married and unprejudig¢ed against the stage, “Old Coves,” women defendants or a plea of self-defense. The fourth |talesman to be scated in the box was Charles L. Sammiss, an agent, living at No. Sedgwick avenue, Bronx, Charles Richard Wagner of No, 1925 Seventh avenue, a young man in the label business, was the fifth juror necepted. Otto F. Vetter, secretary to a con struction company, living at No, 2062 ntine aver man accepted The nth jurot proljsionally ac- cepted was Davis Tanonblun, a mer- 18 at No. 1592 Madison ave- Bronx, was the sixth nue. The shth No. 64 West One Hundred and street, took box. Peter He Ste’ the eleventh seat tn heimer, clerk, of N« last juror. Having announced thelr vaudeville en- gagements and European tours thatare ‘On Aug. 20 a permit was issued to Thomas A, Reilly to nave twenty-five pounds of dynat.ite in a tool the street. Patrick Reilly, his father, was named as blaster, Under no cumstances the men allowed take the dynamite into the shanty. “I found twenty-three pounds of dyna- mite in the toolbox, 200 feet from the scene of the explosion, I turned it over to the Du Pont Company for safe keep- ing. In the shanty there might have been three, ten or even a greater num- ber of pounds of the explosive. The temperature this morning was twent: nine degrees, and the dynamite was frozen, The men had probably taken the dynamite into the shanty and put It on the stove to thaw out. | “The whole proceeding was due to gross negligence, Was 4 violation of the law and without authority.” SENATOR DRYDEN’S CONDITION STILL LOW. | Newark Statesman Passes Quiet | Night, but Doctors Still Have Little Hope. Reports from the bedside of former Senator John F, Dryden this morning were that he had passed a quiet night but that his condition was hardly more hopeful. Mr. Dryden was operated on Satur- day at his home, No. 1020 Broad street, Newark, for the removal of gall stones. The operation left him in a serious con- dition, and st was feared yesterday that he would not survive the night. His physicians are Dr. Edward J. Il and br, Charles J. Tl. Mr. Dryden 1s the President of the | house cauwe clattering down in the shake-up of the block, PIECES OF STOVE BLOWN FAR FROM SHANTY. The pipe that had been attached to the shanty’s stove was blown through the window of the Corn Exchange Bank. It fell down the stairway into the basement of the bank building. Charles Tubbs, who lives on the fifth floor of the St. Charles Apartment House, was at breakfast with his family, A plece of the shanty stove came flying through the alr, crashed through the window of his apartment and landed squarely in the centre of his breakfast tabl * A. C, Oakle; leep in the bedroom of his apartment on, the floor under Mr Tubb's home, had an even more exciting experience, A portion of the shanty roof came flying through his window and fel! directly upon him. Anna Schiller, a maid employed at No. 48 West Seventy-third street, was tron- ing in thy basement of that house The explosion broke the réar window of the basement and thréw the woman across the room, Her ankle was sprained, Dr, C, G. Pease, famous as an oppo- nent to tobacco in all of tts forms, lives For Friday and Saturday $5.00 VALUE FOR $1 Gold Hyemiasses with Patented Clips, Price includes @ sclentific examination by. an. Ocull Kegiatered Physician. of man nce, who” Was" con- nected with pitale, Tf vou ne don't miss this op- portunity, EATABLISHED 20 YEARS, Alexander Co., | DR. J. SOLOMON, SUCCESSOR, 1150 East 23d St., petnren sda Open Datiy trom 8 to 6. ‘ Prudential Insurance Company. paises Lc ane “HAD TO EAT”—STOLE. | Living Once Be-| Sullivan Got His fore Out of Postage Stamp John Sullivan was arraigned before United States Commissioner Shields this afternoon charged with stealing postage stamps from letters in street boxes. When asked where he resided he laughed and replied “Anywheres, anywheres. Home? Gee, 1 don't know what that means. I'm down and out and I ain't had a square meal In three Weeks—since 1 came off the Island. I hang around Chatham Square and you might as well say my| f home {s the Salvation Army hotel. I had to eat, and that Was the only way T could get the grub,” he said, “I sold the stamps for a cent aptece so I could pay for my bunk and sandwiches.” Sullivan had just ended a six months* sentence for the same offense. —_— gc or Taya. th ied POUND BOX POUND BOX 30c Sp c to follow their “sure acquittal" they came demurely into court to-day and| © "| May 6, 1911. turned their eyes on the panel of tale men from which thelr jury was to be selected. They were elaborately cos- tumed for the trial and evidently pre Pared to make the most of its throes and thrills, following the precedent they established at the police court hearing at which the famous “Old Covet’ ietters of the miliional; owner of the Hotel Ansonia were introduced and read. Whetner or not .ve mysterious Aus. FREE TRIAL WESER PLAYER-PIANO ent free to your home with free musio and free ieacher to teach you how to play: it. After you have learned to play, if you devide to keep it we make you the special LOW PRICE OF 3450 On Easy Paymente—MNo ta- terest—No Extras. If you devide not to keep {t, notify us and we will cail and take it away, You owe us nothing and have had the ad- vantage of being taught how to play and have enjoyed tho instrument in your own home, We make this startling offer only to convince you of the supetiority of our Player. Piano and ~ prove our claim that IF Is Zquar TO ANY $000 PLAYER ON THE MABEDT, New Weser Uprights From $190 to $600 Terma to su; Low as $8 Down, Our Pla Planog are ft anteed, WESER BROS (Piano Manufacturers.) Factory Solesroome, 131 West a34 mt (Nr. 6th Av.) Factory, 520-530 West 494 8t. ad are fully vt - (Trade Mask) he 24th cy sv D D BOX stores open Mil eredCream Walnuts, ae Hox, ec aid cl jay was @ private sec- | Decatur avenue, Bronx, was the | trian Countess who came from. Europ to New York to warn W,'E. D. Bfgk» against Miss Graham Will apy ® the trial uAs not been definitely aséer tained. Tac value and sensationalisa of her test!mony has been hinted a from time to time, but her identity ha: remained shrouded in a mystia back nd. Bolied down to an epitomized law yer's brief, Mr, Stokes charges that 5 went to the ttle fat in the Varuna t get letters he had written to Mis Graham prior to his marriage to th: young and beautiful Mrs, Stokes No. 2 Miss Graham had threatened to sen¢ these letters to Mrs. Stokes. Not wish ing to have his wife bothered in thi: fashion, Mr. Stokes, at Miss Graham’: invitation, had called to discuss the re turn of his letters. Miss Graham, he welcomed hin |to her flat by waving a gun in his face retary, went along swimmingly with both aides, until Attorney Jordan put his pet question .about the double standard of morals. The talesman | blushed and hesitated. He is married nd asked to be excused from answer- After a heated ment, the Court allowed the talesman the privi- lege of not expressing his opinion on | +4 this delicate subject and the defense | “Twas bothered with pimples and black heads in the worst way for over four years, My face and arms were completely covered 4 with them, The pimy would come out on my face demanding that he sign a doce ment admitting he had slandered hei and her family, When he refused to a ffered the alternative o death.” He replied that he? id accept death before he'd pay the $25,000, Then Miss Conrad came in witt her bit of shining nardware and the shooting began, he declares. PIMPLES $0 DISFIGURING iE ' SHUNNED FRIENDS \Face Completely Covered. Black- | heads, Too, Lasted Four Years. Used Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment and Face ls Now Smooth. and | cream bal fteenth | and the pimples, oh say, | S42ARG and fester all up, They would scab over, and make my face sore, besides so disfiguring that I shi ay friends. 1 tried fectal and bensoine man chosen was George | with no effect. Honhorst, &rocer, of No. 1384 Bris- | “One night I asked @ tow street, Bronx. John L.'Dixon, sece friend what was good for retary, of No. 315 West Seventy-ninth panies, he advised me att Wad Abe ninth | $e try Cutieura Boap and Cutleurs Olntepent sigh t. Sommer ae {Which F did, 1 would wash my face A tenth wag found in Paul Schmolck, | with hot water and Cutlcura Boep, and @ clerk, of No. 0 West One Hundred | then put on some Cuticura Ointment, let and Sixty-vixth stree! [ft stay on five minut 4 then wash Terence Hinkle, pn merchant at |™Y face again with Cuticura Bop. It would draw the blackheads out as nice, it was one grand relief to go among my friends and be jolly again, After using two cakes of Cuticura Soap ‘and two boxes of Cutlcura Ointment, y face is as smooth as if there never had been @ pimple on it, I cannot speak too highly of the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and I hope others will profit by them as much as I have, I know they will after giving them just one trial.” (Signed) Arthur BE. veil, R. F. D. No. 2, Portsmouth, N. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold throughout the world, a liberal sample of each, with 22-p. book on the skin and ecalp will be sent free, on application to Potter Drue & Chem. Corp., Dept. 8A, Boston, ALE OF OSTRICH WILLOW PLUMES AS LONG AS THEY LasT Special Sale on Just 3 Numbers 1 inches long, 15 wide... . $2.35 21 Inches lung, 18 wide.... 3.45 24 Inches long, 20 wide.... 4.20 Mall Orders Filled, Mall Ordere Fitted. ALL MAIL STOCK CHARLES A. SCHAEFER, 143 Ea 0 Tus Proriz’s Reurpy for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Whooping-Cough, Brone chitis, Grippe-Cough, Hoarseness, @ta, Hafe and sure, Price, % conta, 4 Rooms, turnished completely, $4 4 Rooms, $74.9 || § Rooms, $124,986 CkEDIT Vhs $3 DOWN ON worTa £5 Down on $75 Down on $100 Open Monday and Saturday Evenings, AR 267 0.125 "51." AV ____ AMUSEMENTS. TIOU | TALON SHIEH CLASS Mat, Daily 10. * louse t= TTT =F wat an At 140 Bast Ho M'QUADE Ni fons MeQ: Siery. a funeral . M. Inter. mont Caty ‘Areangemnn by Undertaker Willlam Necker. = HELP WANTED—MALg, Eats aid ym Oe ET TLE