The evening world. Newspaper, November 24, 1911, Page 2

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| THE EVE NING WORLD, Opplied again through a period of twelve seconds and the 2,200 voltage|tnto the private apartments of Supt. WIFE OF BANKER was dropped to minimum and forced to maximum and then the doctors stepped back from the chair and Beattie was officially pronounced dead. | GOES TO DEATH SMILIN The astounding and even smiling calmness that bore Beattie up| during his trial sustained him to-day when he was led from his cell to No whimper nad escaped him throughout the night; there had been no out- death. He entered the chamber actu: ward burst of hysteria. When Beaitie stepped to ihe eiectric chair Beulah Binford, the woman ally wearing a smile on his lips. for whom he killed his wife, was fast asleep in the home of Leon J. Rubinstein, a moving picture man who brought her to New York from Richmond when she was released from jail. work to-day and was still sleeping ai Beattle’s body was taken to his home, At 4 o'clock this afternoon. It was) thought there would be a night burtal | in Maurey Cemetery to-night, but later | old Mr. Beattio said he did not regard the body of his son that of a mur- derer, that the youth had paid the pen- alty of his earthly crime and that h body was entitled to funeral servic and burial in the regular manner of one who had died @ Christian. FUNERAL WILL BE SUNDAY AFTERNOON. ‘The funeral will de held at the Beattie home in South Richmond next Sunday afternoon. Although there ts a city ordinance prohibiting the interment of the bodles of executed criminals in city cemeteries, the City Council has suspended that rule in the case of Beattie. At 7 o'clock, when Superintendent Woods and two extra guards appeared | outside Beattie’s cell, he was prepared te receive them, having beard the om- {nous scuffle of their feet in the corrt- dor and the creaking opening of a heavy eel door He. stood up in his new fult of black clothing, freshly shaved, | his hair carefully combed, and baltea the prayer on his lips to say affably: “Goo morning, Mr. Woods.” The superintendent stammered a re- turn greeting. Then, with the Rev. J. J. Fix and the Rov. Benjamin Dennis closely beirind the condemned youth and two other keepers bringing up the rea: the mareh to the deatn chamber got | under way. Beattie wore no black silk cap to hide his features, The walk to the cha only a matter of about twenty steps. In about the time that it takes to turn a hand Beattle was con- fronting the chair in which he was to die, The two clergymen moved aside from him and prayed softly. Beattie stood for an instant and peered into the darkness, Only two dim lights burned above the chair, The faces of the twelve witnesses were hidden from the dying man, He scanned quickly the faces of the two official physicians and gave a half sinile and nod toward Dr. Julian Oppenheimer, who has seen him frequently since be was in the Jail. GIVES HIMSELF READILY TO THE CHAIR. ‘Then the youthful murderer gave him- self readily to the hands that caught his arms and guided him inte the chair.. Ag the apparatus Was affixed and the signal given no sound Beattie’s lips. ‘Three times t! te in varying degrees were sent into his body. Laws governing the witnesses at ex- ecutions in Virginia are very strict. Newspaper representatives are one and all excluded. Local newspapers are for- bidden by law tp make more than a bare mention of the fact th: the execution hes taken place. The public interest in the Beattie case, however, is 80 over- whelming that the newspapers have all disregarded the law and have put out extras on the street printing all the de- talls of the execution obtainable. After 8.30 o'clock last night Bei was left entirely alone with his guards, the Prison rule not permitting even his spir- itual advisers to remain after that time. Brattle remained dry eyed at the depar- ture of his old father, last of the family to bid him farewell. After they had gone he seemed for a time at the point of total breakdown. He 4id not weep, but paced bis cell up down and every little site Seas ut in eee cn eee Ne Rad repaiced bls: cOttr Pet is @ fact that the guards had grown fon’ of the youthful prisoner, despite the crime of which he was convicted. He had an attractive smile and a man- ner of friendliness that was not to be resisted, especially when h 04 80 object for pity ae well as con- He began to chat pleasantly telling them that he ap- Kindly treatment. RELIEF AS END DREW NEAR, HE TOLD GUARDS. “I won't give you any trouble,” he @aid to them about 3 o'clock in the morning. “I am really relieved that the od is near. I did not think I could bear up when father was here, but I * and I think I made it easier for him. Tam glad it's all o Tam giad ¢ Governor did not grant me a reprieve, Jong ae in the end there was to be no help for me. What would be the use of | making my father and sister and brother euffer any longer?” ‘There would have hardly been any re- quest that Beattie might not have had ranted to him during these last night hours of ch. But his only solace t 9.30 this forenoon, duty to perform, but It harder and harder for me to contem: plate. Since Reattie death house T have visited him almost td by Instructions from Supt. Wood. I may eay his ph: cellent. Tt t« hard munication with not get to like him, in spite of the fact of his gutlt of thia ertme of which T fee! assured.” A little later Beattie saw Supt. Wood enter the corridor, and stood up, per- hapa expecting the end had come, But the superintendent had brought the clothing he was to wear in hie walk to the chair. Since his incarceration tn the death house ttle had worn only clothing supplied by the prison ae ig ig had been wearing a dark ang this he changed for the black death the young man and Ho had grown romewhat of @ beard, but with two guards beside him, A prison barber was allowed to shave oft the beard with a safety ragor, so {t was the boyish-looking Beattle that went to the chair. His spiritual advi him wince 6.20 o'elock, and after broak- fast he began prayer with them. He 4i@ not pray aloud, but tn earnest whis- pers. And 80 he waited until the final summons camo.and the march to d began, BROTHER DOUGLAS GOES TO JAIL FOR BODY, The only member of the Beattie family Present in the Jail to-day was Dougias Heattle. He was not there when his brother's fe waa taken. Rut 2 friend notified the family at their home that all was over, and some time afterward, that had, the J dispersed, Doug- fas B ttle came "6 the jail and went ‘e had deen with Details of Wife Murder For Which Beattie Died ‘Tt was on the night of Tuesday, Jwy 18, of this year that Henry Clay Beat- tle jr. rode out to the home of his wife's unclo, Ben P. Owen, secretary to Gov. Mann of Virginia, in his auto- mobile and asked the young woman he had married a little more than a year before to accompany him on a brief spin along the Midlothian turnp! He said in the hearing of his wife's kin that he wanted to talk privately to her, and also that he thought the drive would benent her. Her baby had been ve weeks before. Less than two hours later—just be- fore mbinight—he drove back to the Owen house with his dead wife in his arms. A hole had been blown through ber head. Her hands and arms were otiffened straight before her, ee if in an attliude of supplication, Beattie seemed wonderfully qaim as he told of having met an assassin on the turnpike who had stepped out of the darkness, thrown a shotgun to his shoulder and emptied a charge of buckshot at his wife, TOLD OF BATTLE WITH ROAD ASSASSIN. The young man described with tragic earnestness how he had sprung from the car and grappled with the stranger, who had clubbed him with the butt of his weapon and beaten him off. He re- mewed the fight, he said, and finally wrested the gun from the unknown as- sallant, who then fled. The young man had flung the gun into the back of the automobile and then given his at- tention to his wife, not knowing, he said, that her life was extinct. home the gun had been bounced out of the car, said Beattle—he aid not know where. The discovery of this shotgun later and the revelation that Paul Beattie, a poor cousin, nad bought it a: Henry Clay jr.'@ request, proved the most damaging feature of the prosecu- tion's case at the trial. When the young man delivered his wife to her kinfolk she was dead, There was blood on the automobile cushion and floor, Beattle was stained with It, but even these details did not seem to shake his superlative calm. He made no lamentations, offered no suggestions and no theory to account for the crime. He waited at the Owen house all night; was a cl now and then that he held to his lps with a steady hand and orcasionally he asked for n cup of cot- fee. At no time did he sink into a deep slumber. He would recline on his cell cot for about a half an hour at a time, his eyes closed, but It 1s doubtful {f he slept. Then he would arise, chat with the guards or go over to the further end of the cell and kneel by his window, through which he could see a patch of sky, and pray. But it was a black and lowering sky he looked up at through the closely latticed window of his cell. After a day that had ended in perfect funshine a storm came upon the ety and at o'clock in the morning there came a heavy downpour of ratn. There ts a mounded lawn that shut out Reattle's view of the road and the public's view of him, He could only look upward at the sky. Through the ttle window also, if he strained “Is gaze, he could have seen the shining «lock of the Hotel Jefferson tower, with Its {l- luminated face and its biack hands slowly marking off the fearsomely brief time he had to live. Last ARE MADE. At 6 o'clock this morning Supt. Wood had arisen and made a final inspectt the chatr thirt He was soon joined by Dr. William Tell Dr. St. Julian Oppen: who were to act as the electrocution. It was the first time either had served at an electrocution, Dr, Bt. Julian Oppesheimer, who qwatcned for that instant when the man the chair exhaled his breath, the time ogee yed signal for the death cur- a ble statement, sourse,” said, waited, he said, for the first word that was to direct suspicion against him | He had not long to walt after the machinery of the law had started, Evi- dence against him piled in a cumula- tive mass. Richmond, and his career in “rea light” quariers was notorious, were his relations with Beulah Binford, ‘the other woman” in the case. OTHER WOMAN IN CASE A) rhe jury has found you guilty in the | MERE CHILD, first degree, and therefore your life t# This “other woman” was a girl of | forfelted, and the judgment of this seventeen, a child vampire, she was| called pretty, precocious and avowedly bad he Beattle came into was only frocks. gust, Clay Binford. Beaulah Binford sal that Beattle was the father and son her away to Raleigh, N, child was born. w Beattie took the half he made light her thirteeu and stilt A child was born to her tn Au: and in hi f his rela- INSPECTIONS OF CHAIR tens with Beulah Binford. He said he| for a new trial 1» 1907, had first seen the girl in Aug when he was riding in an automobit with friends, She bad called from thi sidewalk and asked to be taken for ride, One of his companions had tol She ‘nad decided not to has become has been in the On that wild ride back to the Owen | 4 He had been the fastest | ° pacing young sport anywhere around | Notorious also life when wore 1900, and bore the name of Henry | a C., where the! | Women, efuttered around the jail. holding them @ long protected at all a akin, and th steps and announced to the waiting re- porters that the death sentence had been duly executed. ee DEAD WIFE’S FATHER RELIEVED AT BEATTIB’S CONFESSION OF CRIME. DOVER, Del, Nov. 4.—The execution to-day of Henry Glay Beattie jr. found the Owen family going about their usual routine as though no tragedy hed evor entered their quiet lives. R. V. Owen, father of Beattie’s mur- dered wife, who is manager of @ large japt in this city, was at his work when the news of his son-in-lew's con- fension was given to him, “Is that 0? I am glad he made a clean breast of it," said Mr. Owen. “He was convicted on circumstantial evi- dence and this fact left . doubt in the minda of some people. His confession satisfles our minds and clears up the case, and to that extent I feel a sense of relleg.” r, Owen explained that ee} the daughter none the family had tad any- thing to say about the affair and would: continue to maintain a dignified silence. “We have not and will not discuss the affair outside the family circle,” he said. But he would talk about the baby, the siz-months-old son, now an orphan. “My wife, much wrought up after the death of our daugh' and our doctor told us it would be better for her to care for the child and relieve her mind. We ‘brought the boy to Dover and it is with us now. We will keep it and raise it.” Mr. Owen said the infant had not yet been given a name. “We call him Baby,” he said. “The question of naming him has not been discussed by the family. You see we have been in this tangle for the jabt few months and no one hee talked about iy baby's name. hid will bs given the loving | care ° is grandmother, She is con- cerned that some day the child may be tolu of the tragic but we cannot help ¢ We dvelhasieddebed HU) Dont we can for the little one. elee, I refused to pay and she got a Jawyer after me, Then I paid, and «.ter that I was the laughing stock of the tle swore that when he married Wellborne Owen he revealed to her the entire history of his relations with Beulah Binford from the begin- ning. He had not told her, however, that he had renewed his relations with the fair-haired girl in April, a few months before the murder and shortly before the birth of his ohild. AOMITTED NEGLECTING WIFE » FOR BEULAH. Hie brutally careloss attitude toward his wife at this period wes 019 of th most shockir ; features of th crime, Beattle admitted on ti that in the weeks preceding the of his wife he spe: his Mondays, Thuradays and Saturdays with Beulah Binford, timony was produced to how that he was preparing to furnish a fat for Bew! Binford and also that he was in the habit of sending her let- tere that gushec with words of ende Beattle explained that these words of endearment meant nothing. | “Did you love this woman?” he was | asked, . “Decidedly not,” he replied contempt- uoualy, “But you admit that she was in love with you, least that she told you | sot” “Bhe probably told every other fel- low the same thing. Her saying that meant nothing to me.” “What did you mean by signing your | ttera, ‘Oceans of love brimming with Kisses?” Beattie was asked. “Oh, that meant nothing at all,” laughed Beattie. “I've sald that to other girls a thousand tim Such was his bearing through his or- From the very first he had been enly unmoved. Only once id he finch, when he was trapped into mak- ing & false statement concerning the, dloodstains on his clothing. AUL BEATTIE SWORE HE. HAS CONFESSED. Before his indictment he had pi the houra in his cell thrumming @ guitar and amoking cigarettes. To his heart-broken father and to all who came to see him, he expressed the most | cheerful confidence in his acquitt He denounced his cousin, Paul Beattie, as @ sneak and a lar, and he shrugged {bis shouklers when Paul Beattie got) upon the stand and testified that (the wife-slayer) had sald to him “I wish to God I had not done it! 1 would give a million dollars if I could sed tectives found of his cousin ements, even in the) face of o prroboration, and he did not quail or wink an eyelash when the twelve jurors filed in and pronounced {him guilty, nor yet when Judge Wat |dellvered the death sentence, sayini In spite of the rain more than five! bundred men end boys, and some colored Dop- | juty sheriffs kept driving the crowd back, | ince from the, YY Would not go away until! Supt. Woods came out on the prison | he sald, “wae naturally " | was tried. undo It! But anyway, she nover loved me. She married me only for my joney, I'd ike to know how those dee | {2 out there was a No, 6| Judge M ping dentate | 8 WHO HAS WORKED | Teds 4 __MRS. CHARLES \ w. MOR: they spent on thelr knees, praying fer- vently that they might rightly judge | the accused man. FRIDAY, FOR HIS PARDON. |STONY UNTIL NEARING HIS LAST HOURS, The spectre of th which stalked ; the Midlothian turnpike on July 18 last, when the life of the young mother was sacrificed, stared hard at the young band, ready to claim Its victim in the death chair, but the prisoner re- turned the gase, unswerving and un- afraid. It was not until the last hours of his life that he began to manifest any human feeling, but in those lest houra the tension broke. ‘The penitentiary in which Henry Clay Beattie jr. paid the penalty for his crime {8 as historic as the ancient court house at Chesterfield In which he It was built in 1797, and once held Aaron Burr as a prisoner. Thomas Jefferson designed the orig! building, ed the State Capital, in wontval, the architect, followed Jefferson's, crude drawings. Burr was a prisoner in te ancient o| Structure in 1807, during his famous trial in Richmond before Chief Jus- 1 of the United States Court. Burr lived Heart brought by sympathizing women. electric thair was not 1 led in this penitentiary until 1908, when it claimed & negro as its first victim. pleads an “AFFINITY” EARLE GETS MRS. DURAND EJECTED. Artist Wins Suit to Regain Posses- sion of His Castle at Monroe. “amanity" F, P. Earle to-day won his mult for ejectment against Mrs. Kellogg ate jd the author who com- mhifted suicide gn a train near Bosion a few days ago, and at once preeeted to take possesion of his castle at Monroe, N. Y., which he has not been able to live in since an agent rented it to the Durands fast summer, ‘The artist returnej with “AmMinity No. 3" from Europe recently and found the Durand’y in his luxurious home. At the time, hé suggested that they vacate and make room for his new bride, who was Miss Dorothea Elbert, Stewart, but the {dea failed to meet with Mrs. Durand's approval. Suit wae begun by Earle to force them to } To-day Judge Car- penter of Monroe issued the papers of dispossess, 1t being shown in court that the terms of the lease relating to care of grounds had not been complied with. —— JEKYL-HYDE MURDER CASE GOES TO THE JURY TO-NIGHT. \Spencer’s Counsel Makes Final Plea for Prisoner—Judge's Charge This Evening. SPRINGFIELD, Ma: Nov. &—The fate of Bertram G. Spencer, charged with the murder of Miss Martha B. Blackstone, will be in the hands of the jury to-night. The argument for the defense w concluded th afternoon and the Attorney-General opened im- mediately for the prosecution. Judge Crosby is expected to deliver his charge to the jury at 7.30 P. pcb SAA OM, JAMESTOWN ENTRIES. JAMESTOWN RACE TRACK, Nov. 2 entries for to-morrow's races are ae follows: TNH eae, 1102 Hale Rayo aT bes A ue bt cap: ‘Springs Ne, 95: allan Jonah, ition: | oes, Apprentice allowance of five pounds. ‘Track fast ea petween the hours of sunrise and set -|may God have mercy on your soul. |GOVERNOR REFUSED TO YIELD 4 TO PRESSURE. All the power and pressure that could |be brought to bear was exerted In vain s|to wring from Gov, Mann a repriet |& delay of sentence or an opportuni And the popular sent. iment of Virginia wea all with the Gov- | ernor in his refusal, co! Beattie had succeeded, throughout tn ‘a| Painting him sa monster, His } sneering references to Beulah Binford ne}than Mri rinst FORA girge-reag olde; seven turing rbrick, 100; Uren, 110; th net (Oi, Mendraaning.* 100 LAvielle, ‘us “Pore Wary 103 Hehe Best, Ci am 108 Uy + rgd i ifbutmaa, “300, Stor: {toa | A On ett wo-year-olds, five furlongs. mag 3 aver? AL ‘Three *Camelli Daii id, 10T; Tat he, ‘Tod, Shel Gram, "da SE-Old Point, Handicap; all ages Hotel Hand saa | 8 (CUMMINS SMILES WHEN SENTENCED; Convicted Financier Gets Four to Eight Years in Prison— Is Confident of Release. ‘William J. Cummins, the ruling gentus of the defunct Carnegie Trust Company, was wentenced to-day to a term of not leas than four years and four months and not more than eight years and eight months in Sing Sing prison. The “skyrocke¥' financier took the sentence with @ calm smile, apparently having confidence that his lawyers could keep him from serving the sentence by ap- peeling his case. When th jury found him guilty, early this week, he sald: “We have only begun to fight.” Immediately after the sentence and al- most before Cummins had been locked into @ cell in the Tombs to wait to be taken up the Hudeon, his lawyer, Max D, Stover, with papers already made out, ‘was before Justice Seabury in the County Court House, securing an order upon the District-Attorney to appear before Justice Seabury in the Supreme Court next Monday morning at 10.8 o'clock to show cause why @ certificate of rea- sonable doubt should not be issued to Cummins as the basis of an appeal. Jus- tice Seabury signed the order. District-Attorney Whitman went be- tore Justice Davis, as soon as tl Cummins matter was out of the wa, and moved that the trial of Charles H. Hyde be set for the first Monday in January. No lawyers appeared for the former City Chamberlain, who is a cused of using his office for profit in Planting city doposits tn the Cumming financial institutions, Justice Davis granted the motion. APPEAL FIGHT ON tifled it recetved and spent $1,076 largest contributors were koger Foster, Cummins was taken before Justice Davis for sentence at 10.45 o'clock. The courtroom was filled with a curious crowd. yemed to be In any way directly in- terested in the prisoner. Cummins walked before the rail briskly. His face was grave. “Has the prisoner at the bar any- thing to say?’ asked Clerk Brophy. Cummins smi} Mr. Steuer, reading motions, ported by the evidence. given by Cummins before the Grand Jury gave him immunity. This also was denied. mins bowed and was led back to Tombs by « deputy sheriff. From his cell in the Tombs later Cummins issued this statement: “When my appeal is heard, my in- nocence will be proved. I had sum- elent evidence, which was not intro- duced durin; my trial, to clear my name of all complicity in any crime or the misappropriation of money.” Cummins did not explain why his lawyers withheld the evidence, —————_. ESSIE FOUND TROUBLE IN PURSE SHE FOUND. Father of Chum Inserted “Ad” and Girl Goes to Police Court. Easie Cohen of No. 8% Stone avenue, Williamsburg, and Sadie Goldstein of No. M41 Hopkinson avenue, found a pocketbook with §9 in it on the sidewalk on Sunday. Essie saw it first. She kept it Sadie told her father of the find wher she went home. My, Gdldstein hurried to the office of the Brownsville Post and advertised the finding of the pocketbook in Essie Cohen's name. Mrs, Sadie Gruman of No, 131 Amboy street went to the office of the Post and claimed the lost money as her own. She was sent to Miss Cohen, who put her off, Mrs, Gruman got a warrant trom Magistrate Naumer in the New Jersey Avenue Court for the arrest of Mise Cohen. Miss Cohen appeared in court to-day with a pocketbook containing less money Gruman said she had lost. James Byrne and Franklin B, each $260. ‘There were few present who| DELAY FOR BEEF TRUST in the United made a nding|neon on the appeal of alne Chicago beside him, shook his head and began] packers for a delay scheduled for Monday, The first was that the verdict be set|trial should open for examination of aside as contrary to law and not sup-| jurors, Justice Davis|be examined until the Supreme Court denied it. The second waé to set aside | had ruled on the constitutionality of the the verdict on the ground that evidence | criminal Mra. Gruman sald {t was not her pock- etbook or her money. “But,” sald Sadie Goldstein, who had been called as a witness, “that isn’t the pocketbook we found.” So Magistrate Naumer held Essie Co- \hen in $000 ball for another hearing on Monday. ——_ JAPANESE WARSHIP LOST, FORTY-FIVE OF CREW DROWN Only Fifteen Survive | When Destroyer Harusanna Founders Off Coast of Shima. TOKIO, Nov, %—The Japanese de- atroyer Harusama’ foundered off Shima province in a storm to-day. Forty-five of the crew of sixty peris! Ordinarily it may not be good form to comment on the table. This coff however, compels an exception. It is always praised. him at that time the child had an ovi}]|and his entire treatment of the subject | o |reputat on. “What was her action toward you reference to the child that was born?’ Beattle was asked, Why, at {t"" the accused man sa Bhe thought she could et mo ‘BROMO QUININE” fe ARAL mt ae WB “L have my, ster'te Date © old ta ‘Ons sks 1600 caer magma ca sald I was the father of |, almost jaunt- y or) him. f their relations rev: do, is character, it was not Ught. | "Phat ne could have plotted and car- ried out such a crime was shocking enought, but that he could have Wahl back upon it without any ® tn shocking to the simple minds of ing of remorte or regret was wa more the twelve men who eat In judgment upon This jury deliberated only fiftys eight minutes, and mowt of this time | led his vicious | If there was any good aida of brought to Prose | COFFEE SEEMAN BROS. NEW YORK Preprictere of WHITE ROSE Ceylon Tea NOVEMBER 24, 1911. COHALAN’S VOTE CUT 431 « SAYS OFFICIAL COUNTER. Many Errors Show That Revision of Tally Sheets Is Needed, Says Canvasser. A. 8. Gilbert, who represenis the Re- publican County Committee at the can- vars of the votes of the recent election which !s now taking piace before th County Board of Canyarsers in the Ai Germanic Chamber, id to-day that there had been many errors in tebula- | tion discovered, which tended to indi- cate that eome revision should be made in the form of tally sheets now supplied to inspectors at the polls, He called at- tention ta the fact that as a result of the canvaas thus far, which Is practical- ly completed, Cohalan stood 431 votes Jo and Hotchkiss 35 votes lower then had appeared upon the face of the returne as originally made. Changes in Ottinger’s vote indicate, too, that he has been bei by @ vote not far exceeding 2,000. Dr. Gilbert ventured the opinion that Mf the vote for any county or city can- didate in @ general election showed only @ majority of 60 or so, under the present system, a recount would have to be asked for to protect the opposing candidate be his political faith what it might. — COHALAN CAMPAIGN BILL IN LAST ELECTION, $4,681. ALBANY, Nov. 4.—The Dantel F Cohalan Campaign Committee, which advocated the Justice Daniel ¥. Cohalan of New York, certified to the Secretary of State to- day that it 4.681 George U. Gillespie Delenunty contributed $00 each ‘tion of Supreme Court received 9,86 and spent ind John Herbert T. Ketchum, who was de- feated for election as Supreme Court Justice in the Second Judicial District, filed a statement showing he epent $2,692. He recetved $50) from W. H. English, Franklin 8. Patridge, Treasurer of the committee which aided the candi- dacy of Henry De Forest Baldwin, 2 Us The Lord Jjr., oe ON COMPROMISE RULING. CHICAGO, Nov. 4.—Judg» Carpenter, States District Court, compromise ruling this after- in their trials He ruled the but that no witnesses should tion of the Sherman law. Judge Carpenter ordered the actual trial of the case postponed until Dee, 6. two days after the convening of the Court in Wash- When sentence was hae a Cum- feetoon be kad ac Panoee thy, SCLID GOLD SEAMLESS WEDDING RINGS ~ a Te, Vitroey Paley SOLD 14-41. OLD, SOLID 10-K1. COLD, a A—610.' SPECIAL NOTICE ees Ae ‘Car."17tb St SCHOONER IS WRECKED, CREW SAFE, ARRIVE HERE. Jamess T. Maxwell, Jr, umber Ship Is Now a Derelict Off Virginia Coast. Somewhere off the Virginia coast, if her stout timbers have held since she was abandoned by her crew of seven men on Tueday last, Is the dismanteled wk of the once trim five hundred ton, three-masted schooner, James ™. Max- well jr. Captain H, Simmons and his six men arrived to-day on the Morgan ihe steamer El Rio, which took the Maxwell's crew from an open boat at four o'clock in the afternoon of Nov. 21. Acording to Captain Simmons, the Maxwell sailed from Brunswick, Ga, on Nov. 16 last. Two days out a flerce gale was encountered, that blew with mich fury that all canvas was soon stripped from the poles and, left with: out steerage way, the schooner pounded in the terrific seas until! the mast went, The hifting deck-load of lumber made tt unsafe for the men to remain on board, #0 they took to the sm boat. Three hours after the Maxwell had been abandoned, the El Rio hove in sight and took the exhausted men aboard, When last seen, the schooner was In north latitude 37.13, longitude 74.30 wea The United States derelict destroyer, Seneca, has been uespatched to search for the vessel and cargo, The schooner was Maine-bullt and owned bj H. Bull & Co., of thie city. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, Gon rises, 6.07|Sun vets, 6.86/Moon sets, 7.17 THE TIDES. Sarsaparilla From the time it was care- fully perfected from the pre- scription of Dr. Oliver of Boston, to the present day, has remained the same. Al- ways best Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs, Glasses Are More Important Than Anything Else You Wear —because they are meant to help your eyesight; yet whether you help or injure your eyes depends entirely upon how your glasses fit. examination. To whom will you trust your eyesight? Eyes Examined ‘Qn By Registered Physicians, Oculists of Long Experience. Perfect Fitting Glasses as Low as $2.50 496 Fulton St, Cor. Bond St., Brooklyn The KNABE Mignonette GRAND PIANO 5 feet 2 inches Price *700 wm. KNABE «co Fifth Ave. and 39th St. (Trade Mark.) Special for Friday, the 24th |Special for Saturday, the 25th TED eH A ae om conned oft Cie fal snstwrad de ionethe blek of liclous Fruits of 2 hia LOC ea! in ay si Uirdlio Pras POUND Bo: 10c OFFERINGS FOR FRIDAY and SATURDAY "a WaT a i ae 19 ras GED PORTEER | HUME Seen ee ath mas, Wate: RAS, Sh oe 29c state a i EEEP wfibP An shoe: ll aa 39¢ the artfea An assortment of to well ries ae min wean Cortlandt stree: our stores open Assorted Milk Chocolates A complete amortment of on iu works bos, Al tasise suited, Creams, eto,, etc., covered i erally with our Premium Milk” Perk Bow POUND BOX stores oven every even! turday evening until 1 prescott Covered Cream Peppermints vatih 11 o'clock, vate eyes 54.BAR arty 4 a The difference lies in the A pleture does not do this Juatice—to ree a pair is to ow them. They're made of fine heavy tan calf, or black moose. heaty double sole, full bellows tongue, and Absolutely waternroot. | They wear better than any shoe Rave ever handled, Out ewe ideas incorporated with thi best English mate JOHN M. FORBES, Shoe Constructor. © West Broadway, 221 Greenwich Bt. ir Vesey. Send for Catalog W. A Player-Piano Must Be a Good Piano very mente 6 and will, member of the family can, use the player-piano, there- fore it will receive many times the °3\use of the ordinary piano; think of the trouble and expense a cheaj grade player will mean; the re bills will make the cost far more than if a reliable instrument had been purchased, are warranted and kept in order for five years, and we give free of charge the use of our music library. This makes the first cost your last. Prices $475 to $750; easy payments if you wish. Write for catalog and music plan, PEASE PIANO CO., 128 West 42d St., near B’way, N.Y. Breoklyn Branch: 34 Flatbush Av. Newark Branch: 10 New St CHRISTMAN | Studio Grand Pianos| Best Small GRAND Made, Only 5 Feet Long tue in seeing them it you gontemplace buying & Grand. havea tone of poeusy be ctu full of sympat Upright and Grand PLAYER PIANOS with all the Latest improvements. Prices trom $400 to $950 ‘benism Our player suatall- ed In an; a wing the case or ke. -! without ¢ G ‘and does not lavriere with nand-ple: ing when the letur is desired. cieen oan 35 to Juding: end ©}, EXMIBITION AND SALE DAILY pes Saturday evenings until 9 o'deck, Christman Sons, 35 West Fourteenth St, tifa Chair,812.50 Value iL t) per MONTHLY RENTS upriGht PIANO, LEREE CARTAGE THIS Weel GOETZ &(8 81-87 COURT ST. BROOKLYN OPEN EVENINGS BOYLE.—On Nov. 21, MARGA Boyle (nee McQuincss), widow ot §. oy le. Funeral from her late residence, No, 2751 Kingsbridge Terrace, Bronx, on Saturday, Nov, 25, 1911, 0.30 A, M., thence 0 Church of Our Lady. of Mercy, Marion avenus, Fordham, Ia: terment St, Raymond's, ——————_—_=====F SUNDAY WORLD'S “TO LET” ADS. Simplify Home-seeking by saving time, temper and tramping, ee

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