The evening world. Newspaper, January 30, 1912, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

! BOTH SDESREST IN MACFARLARD MURDER TRAL Rapid Work in Case of Pris- * oner Accused of Poison- ing His Wife. | LETTERS READ TO JURY.| Prosecuior in Summing Up | Declared the Defendant Was | Afraid to Go On Stand. | Both State and defense rested to-< fn the cave of Allison M. MacKarland, on trial before Chief Justice Gummere | 4n the Court of Oyer and Terminer tn | Ne ‘k for the murder of his wife MacFarland in their Park ave- home on Oct. 18, Frank M. McDer- mott, counsel for the accused, took ut seventy ininutes to put in his . calling only two wiinesses—the je of the prisoner and the prosecu- or's chief detective. The uncle said he had known Mac- Farland and his wife to use cyanide of Potassium in photography. It was the | contention of thé State that MacFar-| land put cyanide of potassium in a} hottle that had contained @ headache mixture. As iils final evidence Prosecutor Wil- bur AL Mott of he letters that | paesed between MacKarland and Flor- ence Bromley of Philadgiphia, with whom he was infatuated. The letters, | he declared, would show the motive | hat MacFarland wanted to get rid of | tts wife to marry the Bromley girl. The contents of the ‘stters were for the! mrost par In hie ne jucy, Prosecutor Mott taunted the defense with befag afraid to put MacFarland on the stand. QUOTES FROM FLORENCE BROM LEy’s LETTERS, Mr. Mott in his address to the Jury | he letters, the full contents | een intended o=' > for uoted this from | ley'’s letters to pleased letter came yester- Knowing that you are coming running, knowing that — will have has just made me happy ni laughed ever since your last letter, There Is in It that makes me know » mine. Heart of future is jus: journey is almost sl to plan a jolt.” She wrote to him in May of lust year knew tat it ® that tt was du and wrote ie thing’ that he on from the factory of tae eler Company. dohar sald that his vife Gentiemen’s Guaranteed Diamond Solid 14-Karat Gold -DAY AND. TO MORROW we wilt make another dy thi pro- nding, that Tene sane “wind ot Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, 1 SQ arceaway, new vors was only @ plain woman,” declaret the Prosecutor. “Yes, a plain vi wir” tT As Mott hurled hie Invectives at Mac- Farland the defendant never Minched. Mr, Mott In closing asked for a verdict and your : art Ma | defense, of murder In the first degree. up at leas, two years of Hfel tion had shown Walter Godfrey, special detective of Remembor, above all things, dearest, [with her parents Rockland. Occa-j crime, He admitted there the prosecitor, was on the stand when! do not worry over it, What is to [sionally MacFarland sent her move jteen an tnfatuation bel wee: court opened. He told of a conversi-| be will be and at the worst we « ntt read a letter written by Mra jlund and ¢ tion with MacPariand referring to a] die, Koap close to me on trip to Philadeiphia which MacFarland| jess, Remember, 1 think took on the night after his wife: was It seems such a found dead. A letter from MacKarland to Flor- ence Bromley was then read, I, was written to Florence Bromley by Mac- Farland while he was detained at the Fifth Precinct station and was dated the letters are read. | three days after his wifes death. The re Mee en took the stand, He potassium letter was a follows!” ant ona. vite at iy ve. You | aaa tia ret with his son-in-law | aning the sliver Dearest Bunny: Received your ‘i Ale had been pleasant. He {dentified tele- paar er heme e three letters, but none since my last. P, @—I wrote two letters and card, [grams that passed between MacKarland! STEEL TARIFF IN SENATE. 1 am hold for causing the death of | Didn't you get them? I think one of [and himself after his daughtel th. my wife, but am not worrying about | your letters was dated since Mr. Crockett admitted that te 1 it as, of course, It tx preposterous | pea WOMAN'S PARENTS ON |‘° senda lettor, following one telegram, and will come out right in the end, as you know my lady had agreed to WITNESS STAND. you change your mind after see] WASITINGTON, Ja everything, and while she might Coroner's Physician MeKenzie was re-]ing have taken her life purposely, I jecalied and was telling some think she did it by error, P! not be discouraged about { ture Sale! will be a most successful voyage. news of which will be printed in to-morrow night’ peal to the pocket—for home furnishers. calendar, if, in so doing, it could not have maint —which the New York public have already learned ciate—and to ly await. its extremely high average of with an average of one dollar saved in every four. for Its Exceptional Lingerie Blouses at $1 to the beginning of the month. Therefore, we have ber for tomorrow, so that you who have waited select from crisp new merchandise. The Best $1 Blouses The Best $2 Blouses The Best $3 Blouses The Best $3.95 Blouses The Best $5 Blouses that we believe have ever been made are the kind will find in this sale. Quality is our first consideration whether the be a credit to the House of Fashions, to sell at moderate prices, too, The number of those who rest and comfort in these sci steps rits are so appreciated by are suffering from foot ‘troubles. ready. Children, there are Women’s Dress Shoes, in a grac The styles for Women are $4, $5, $6.50 and $8, The styles for Men are $4, $4.60 and $6. The styles for Children are $3 and $3.60, Other Arch-Ease specialties are Shoes for low inatepe, Bunion Shoes, and Shoes with very high arches, All fitted by orthopedic experts. Becond Floor BARES Re PR Ta AEs . Forget all shout it for the press our affairs were going #6 LOVE LETTER WRITTEN THREE) It will he two weeks of so defo DAYS AFTER WIFE'S DEATH. anything more happens. 1 will write | you if you want me ty, but knows about us, but there 18 nothing getting outside, Write care of Dis- trict-Attorney's Office, Newark, or don't write-as you think beet 1 do of the manner of Mrs, MacFarland’s| mitt. fight ahifted to a new stage, 4 a jeath when her father and mother en-! “Well, no, I think I cnanged my mind! ure cutting the metal dutles of th GIMBELS Thursday-~February First-- The Gimbel Furni- Day after tomorrow we shall launch the third Semi-Annual Furniture Sale to be held at the new Gimbel Store in New York, on what we are sure The happy augury is based on the Furniture itself—full This news will be absorbing in interest—founded on its ap- Furniture Sales are such a time-honored institution, and there are so many different sorts, that it goes without saying that Gimbels would never have adopted the idea in its store high plane of excellence held by its other merchandise events _, It will be well to make a note NOW to plan an early visit to this Furniture Event on Thursday morning. GIMBEL BROTHERS, New York January Has Been Notable Tomorrow, the Final Day of the Sale, Will Be Important We had thousands of Blouses made for this Sale, but it was impossible, even if we had so desired, to present all of them at Blouses every day and have reserved a bounteous num- More than fifty advanced Spring styles await your inspec- tion tomorrow. Third Floor The Gimbel ARCH-EASE Shoes| _ $25 to $82.50 Suits, $15 Are Here in Spring Weights built Shoes for tender feet and we is constantly increasing, that many are sending to us, wi : | solicitation on Our part, patient out | $18.60 to $25 Suits, at $7.60 and $10 $35 Suits at $19.76 The Spring and Summer weights of Arch-Ease Shoes are now ’ esides the common sense last for Men, Women and | Dresses for morning, aflernoon and evening wear, also coats eful, ye toe style, with high heels to suit the high arched Rts peo 1a THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 380, 1912. ' “ e father Is Goose after talking to the netahbors id. | FENSE CONTENDS. Bromley ¢ nd to ler mother the day t er deaty, It was the lati f a daughter to a mother tell of her household affairs, of the min meat she proposmd t hoof the children the warning that her father must take | are of his cold. MacFarland looked on stolidly ae bey heard tead what must have appenred | ¥ to him vife's last utterances ® pi Everybody but had changed his mind. Awalt Hearings. seculor's Detective Godfrey, who porting of (he Deine more detatis| went to Rockland?’ asked Mr." McDer=|the Senate to-day, | a yard for it, at — »W vastly pleased with the Sale’s opportunities. But the possible savings are just as worth while 's papers. “INC MOTIVE SHOWN THE DE. any | fe Penis hearings to many Iles" and Widths, for Men and Boys. ed] BIL Goes to Finance Committee to Wherever Women Gather, The Talk Is Of The Beautiful, Fashionable Weaves in This Gimbel FEBRUARY SALE OF SILKS This Annual February Sale of Silks, which, for reasons of convenience, we have pushed ahead into the last days of January, bas stirred New York from center to circumference, just as fast as the good news could travel. A Saving of $72 on Six Yards! One of the very earliest customers came with a sample of fine brocaded silk in her hand. ‘Can you match it?” she said. “I paid 618 ’s.”" Yes, we could match it very closely. “I'll take six yards of it--that saves me just $72!’ And she went out staple silks as they are on these superb Gold and Silver Brocades A double-width Dress sacl’ W. L. DOUGLAS *3 °3:28 °4 & °5 SHOES All Styles, All Leathers, All Sizes Paynes Mdrich law f signed by 8, THE STANDARD OF QUALITY Effective Home Remedy FOR OVER 30 YEA erculosis THE NEXT TIME YOU NEED SHOES give W.L. Douglas shoes a trial. W.L.Douglas name stamped ona shoeguarantces superior qual- | ity and more value for the money than other makes. His name and price stamped on the bottom pro- tects the wearoragainst high prices and inferiorshoes. Insist upon hay- ing the genuineW.L. Douglas shoes. Take no substitute. And, depend upon it, there were lots of women who knew of her good fortune before the day was over. Great Savings General Throughout the Sale among the Satin Charmeuse, for instance, at $1.85 a yard, regularly $3.50. Satin of superb lustre is $1.65 a yard, regu- larly $4. The immensely smart All-silk ‘Ture’ Pongee at 75¢ from Paris. The chief beauty of the Sale is its lavish suppliesOF THE 4 yard has never before been sold for a cent less than its regular SILKS PEOPLE WANT. Hereisawonderfully finished double-width price, $1.50. More of the Season’s Popular Silks There are $1 Messalines at 76¢ a yard, and $1.25 Messalines Amour at 86¢ a yard, regularly $1.50. And so one can tight toappre-] | + 96¢ a yard—both 35 inches wide. Women are perfectly de- down through the list and find silk after silk of precisely the kind The half-million-dollar stock, $100,000 worth of which H ‘kable qualities of Crepe Chiffon represents special orders or ppeciel purchases, is notable for lighted at the remarl q be uty, desirability and PRAC- TICALNESS. Economies run from $10 to $50 in $100, not to miss. For we chose nothing but Silks from the Why This Clearance Sale of Women’s Tailored Suits Is So Magnetic Styles Distinctive—Quality the Best — Prices Unmatched Because So Low | Of course, you know the magnetic power of a lodestone— how it simply draws a thing. It is irresistible! And when a woman hears that she can get an original model-Suit by Drecoll or another equally famous Paris tailor- | dressmaker that was $350 for $65, the Costume Salon at | GIMBELS has a bit of magnetic power—has it, not? Another woman who wants q severely Tailored Suit to that you | | finish the Winter and to begin Spring with will be “drawn | to” this group of $15 Suits. | $45 had new may also blouse is $1, $5 or $45, because we wish every blouse in this Salon to This is a Sale for every woman, as it represents our entire i remaining stock. This means that every Suit is of guaranteed Style is our second consideration. And we are $0 fastidi- quality and that it is a reproduction or adaptation of an ous about this that we go to Paris to get the most beautiful | | endorsed Paris model. Fabrics are the best and every suit is blouse Fodela in the Cae merely io have most of them | copied in America to sell at prices within the reach of every | | . ining 4 i » certainly | one. Of course, we import many French hand-made Roun The few remaining imported model suits are certainly man-tailored. “lucky stars” for the women who are not satisfied unless they have real Parisian costumes. WOMEN’S TAILORED SUITS $385 to $42.50 Suits, $23.75 $45 to $55 Suits, $29.50 v- | $57.50 to $60 Suits, $35 and $45 Their Physicians | | Young Women’s Tailored Suits are fj entif, $25 to $28.50 Suits, at $15 $46 Suits at $26 . Third Floor | for young girls of all ages from 6 years upward al economies thal come only al the End of the Season at Gimbels. Third Floor | most needed for Spring and Summer dresses, suits and coats-—not at 76¢ and forgetting the 1912 Foulards at 76c¢ a yard, and the cool-looking 85c a-yard, regularly $1.25 and $1.35, and the delightful Satin Striped Summer Silks at 65¢ a yard. The Direct Telephone Service to the Silk Store which is in charge of an expert silk salesman, is being much ap- can and foreign makers that we considered desirable enough to sell preciated by women unable to come to Gimbels to choose their silks in our regular stock at full prices. Hence the saving is absolute, in person. Just call up Madison Square 8200, Extension 209, and and perfectly safe. Enlarged space, and an increased sales-force, your order for silks, or request for samples, will be received and are provided again to care for tomorrow's response. promptly filled. It is a Silk Occasion that it is to your interest Be Sure to Visit the Sale Tomorrow! best Ameri- Second Floor, Broadway Front Today and Tomorrow--- The Gimbel Month-End Sale In the Subway Store This month-end sale, now a year-old institution, has enjoyed a steady with each succeeding month. Two reasons for this:— irstly, the unusual offerings of thoroughly desirable, dependable mer- chandise, at the lowest prices of the month. Secondly, many more shrewd shoppers are learning to take advantage: of these month-end offerings. To keep up this splendid record, these offerings for today and tomorrow are, we believe, better than ever, and all 75 sections of the Subway Store par ticipate. Here are specimens of the exceptional opportunities: r 0 $15 coats for women, $5. 40c seamless bleached sheets, 54x90 in, 2ée, id $12.50 Manchurian dog sets, $5.76, 45c bleached sheets, center seam, 72x90 in., 260. increas 4 $1 muslin underwear, soiled, 60c. 70c seainless bleached sheets, 81x90 in., 480, $1.50 and §2 kimonos, 96. : Xe bleached pillow cases, Te, $1.60 a!l wool serge suiting, 980, 10c unbleached muslins, mill lengths, 6 yd. Ibe Burnaby costume gingham, 9¢ a yd. Reraante, lta while gros. 48 40c natural linen suitinys, 22¢ yd. $1.75 Gem carpet sweepers, $1.26. 60¢ Irish dre . $5 Lo $6 gas lamps, $3.76. Women Remnants 70c to $1 table linens, 60¢, $2.60 and $3 portiercs, $1.26 each. 75e ruffled and flat muslin curtains, 60. Sunfast" window shades, soiled, 360. $15.75 brass bedsteads, $13.60. jody Brussels rugs, discontinued pat terns, grade, $16.60. Men's $10, $15 suits and overcoats, $8.60, Men's $3 and $3.60 trousers, $2.60. hats and derbies, samples and seconds THIS IS THE LAW OF THE MONTH-END SALE Everything advertised must be decidedly underprice, and everything must be materially lower in price than it has been previously during the month, even if it has been reduced in price before. The above and hundreds of other splendid economies today and tomorrow in the Subway Store, Balcony and Lower Floor. 1912 Wash Cottons Pnerpectedly Pleasant, indeed, to secure such choice lots of the new Spring Silk-and-Cottons as these to sell so far below their true market value. The eagerness of certain makers to enter business relations with Gimbels gave us our opportunity which we were quick to accept, and now pass on to women with Summer trocks to make: 465c Changeable Pongee, 25c Yard Silk-and-cotton, 24 inches wide, und similar in weave to the pongees made from raw silk, 80c Silk-and-cotton Tussah, 18c Yard from ivory to navy blue. enoaDway NEW YORK THIRTY-THIRD ST. 26 inches wide, a charming silky fabric with bow-knot design, in qian colors eer insivicninaraeniaaniinsnetannscansmamtsiicins: nase g ttt OC CC NOC AO CCE RN Ei OIE fe ~

Other pages from this issue: