The evening world. Newspaper, December 4, 1912, Page 6

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t t { ; ; i | NOWSIILESSAS. WFEANDHEDIONT SS AND MAKEUP So Sheriff Continues to Look for Donations From Gen- eral’s Friends. panethonane ny Tt'k all off. There ts no reconciliation between Gen. Dan Sickles and his wie, | a reported to-day | First Gen. Sickles called up Shei itt Juliue Marburger privately this morning and denied the stories printed about hia | Wife having come to the Fifth avenue home, where the General's treasures Awaited the fall of the auctioncer’# ham mer, kissing him and potting wp $ Against the Judgement of $5,000 (n of the Bank of the Metropolis. late titis afternoon Gen. Sickles called the Sheriff on the telephone again and | said that the Sheriff was at to make this confidential Inform public, This Sheriff Harvurger immediately little raise ends 414 with enthusiasm, For th Sheriff has been busy trying money among the war veteran's f fo nettle the judgment without rec to a Sheriff's wale. By freque Ponements the Sheriff has the fina) moment when Gen, Sickls Would have to part with his property And the money has been slowly coming tn. It was evident to the Sheriff, as it was to Gon. Sickles, that the report of & reconciliation and Mra. Sickles's as- gumption of her husband's debt would check the flow of charitable payments, RYAN CHARGED WITH GIVING AID TD DYNAMITER Prosecutor Tries to Show He Helped Convict “Make a Get- away” on Second Charge. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Dec. 4—Charges that Frank M. Ryan, President of the Tronworkers’ Union, and Frank ©. Webb, New York, « union official, helped RR accused dynamiter (o escape, were Made in the cross-examination of Ryan by the Government at the “dynamite Conspiracy” trial to-day. ‘It was brougit out that George O'Don- nell, an ironworker, after an explosion on @ bridge at Somerset, Mass,, in June, 18, was convicted of mpting to kill And that afier his release from the pent- Jeniiary he escaped service of papers charging him with dynemiting. District+Attorney Miller charged Ryan And Webb with helping O'Donnell to “make 4 getaway.” Ryan denied the charge, but admitted the union paid several thousand dollars to O'Donnell, winployed jawyers in his behalf ahd con- ducted a correspondence “to steal a march on them when O'Donnell got out on the first charge.” “Why were you and Webb so anxious ve O'Donnell escape and why did we fo much of the union's funds | to help him when the unton treasury | was impoverished?” asked Mr. Miller, | “We felt he was being persecuted, ‘That was all, now in prison im O'Donnell's As head of Ryan was qu ned whether he sa toned vivience which the Governm hulleges preceded a “dynamiting ¢ palgn” in labor disputes. dynamiter, helped “When y through letters that Philip A had knocked «|W man down in Jeans so that thy man had to have a “iver plate put ta Ma head, did you take any steps to have Cooley removed as a member of the executive board?” asked the et- Attorney, “AU IT learned wes that Cooley had Deen in trouble, 1 took no steps to Jearn the facts,” answered Kyan "Cooley wrote he had fixed things he Court and had hired two wit to testify falsely so he would « fail, Did you take any ac’ about that “I did not.” Ryan also denied know) edge of an. we by Cooley to arrange for explosions on non-union jobs at Hovston. ——»—-—— STRICKEN AS HE TURNED GAS, REPORTED A SUICIDE. Peculiar Coincidence Puzzles. Doe tors Till Coroner's Investigation a ‘on Workers’ Union — No. 3 — Evening World, fy LMS" WO Yom gr Titi which they will grieve? —Eleanor Schorer, "said the telephone re- fast One Hundred Miss Gilbert Calls Up to Tell About Her Chat With President-Elect. Mise Anna 1, Gibert, who was head stenographer for {he treasurer of the Democratic National Committys when that victory-flushed body had need of the services of a head stenographer, tee. pee teat NC Se PORT OF NEW YorK, ARRIVED, Mistress Mary, quite contrary, Who do not delivve; noise, But never remembers bad girls and p and carried # little cane. Mrs, Wilson wore ‘Oh, well, then, . and Twenty-thir reet, where hen RE ANREP —~— Years in Prison for Reviving the “Gode of Honor.” cuffs was made manifest to-day when Pietro Dutto, twenty-four years old, of of the wame address, were arraigned before Magistrate Krotel in the Jefferson eranped a desk telephone to-day WIth wth revolvers in a vacant lot at Elev: a hand that still tingled from the enth avenue and Seventeenth street, ait atout’ it, the left hip. Dutto- wasn't touched ‘On ‘Thanksgiving Day, when Miss Gil- | Dutto and Van Cent quarretied in a po- k They Just agreed to shoot It enographer—Miss Margaret Luke |** ‘ out, and they were shoot! c of No. 1% Kast Fighty-ninth street—| 0 ooitce stati i Taha ball for the Grand Jury. Under the bottled up. ‘anti-duelling law they can be sent to “1 shook hands with Woodrow Wil- “Well, after 1 had transcribed the, Sant’ Avne last of my notes for the treasurer 1, Luca diAosta loveliest Une, and then, a week ago Sat- | 2 urday, came the climax, We were Just! |. de nt store oposite our hotel and ‘ee ladies got out. Don't you delieve in Santa, And is most sure to leave Who brings children toys without nv] Im their stockings black coals over bad boys enna ‘ and was so glad he was attracting lit- tle at ton. “Th ident wore a gray suit and a gray nd ¢ celver at IN VACANT LOT; ARRESTED Pair May Be Sentenced to Ten ‘That the cAde of honor haa not com- pletely yielded to the manly art of fisti- No. 438 ‘Went Nineteenth street, and Charles Van Cent, thirty-two years old, Market Court on # charge of duelling, They admitted they'had fought a duel of President-elect Wilson's, called “4,0 / They had exchanged a dozen shots and Heckman" and told Thé Hvening World] Van Cent was nipped on the brow and bert returned from Bermuda, on board | litical dispute, the le was passed .and the Oruba, with another ex-commit- | the lenge followed. They chose no @ policeman Intervened, the ship news reporters missed her.) ‘The two duellists were held without She simply would not have the news prison for ten years, she sald over the phone, “Would like to hear about it? decided to go to Bermuda for a rest. Mins Lukel went with me, We had the} returning from a drive when « plain driven by a ragged BeEro, drew up ata sitting outside | sald one of | character, | |, aud began to talk Kel and T hurried across the nd into the department store we were more| Establishes Death Was Natural. The intervention of sud heart disease in the case of rs old, of No, et, the Hronx, dead man’s body w Simacileton was on th ing tie ga» In the Kitchen gas sto caunged It to poisoning Whis action on the part of the phy- hire was definitely ‘Red Cross + Cough Meiler seal) for iildven's coldp, be, ads? tv n death by! James | point of tght- | Millinery HATS... GOWNS .. The H-O0 Co Makers of 1 NO EXTRA CHARGE POLK IT, Advertisements for ‘The World may ve left af any Auericau District Moscngw uffie ia the [aw wow oP, an I |e was unable to work, and he wanted Ll, AN WHO DIED UNDER STOVAINE NOT VICTIM OF THE ANAESTHETIC: Coroner’s Jury Finds Compli- cation of Diseases Killed Pa- me he could stand the pain no longer and wanted an immediate operation,” Dr. Bainbridge said the man's injected in the spine way to relieve Hart durin tion, as the patient would scious but free from pain salda fourth of a c was the proper the a thelr expe they said surgeons in London, I lin, as well as in thts ‘The Coroner's Jury, af eration, found Hi complication of stovaine polson ating Dr, Bainbri for his death. nburg and Ber- tient on Operating Table. My delib- For the first time in the history of Coroners of this State a case !n which stovaine poisoning was the issue was heard before Coroner Feinberg to-day. ‘The courtroom was filled with surgeons And specialists, all of whom were mem- bers of the Surgical Congress jn con- vention here last month, ‘The inquest took the form of ‘An investigation Into the use of stovaine as an anesthetic in an operation on Patrick Hart of No, 545 West Thirty-ninth street. Hart was to be operated on for a Alsease in the right groin at the New York. Polyclinic Hos- pital by Dr. Willlam 8, Bainbridge and Dr. Claude A. Fink before members of the Congress Nov. 15, but died under the anaesthetie. Dr. Bainbridge testified Hart had come to his clinics for a month. He wanted the doctor to operate on him. Dr. Bain- bridge found him suffering from alcohol- lam, chronic gastritis and Bright's dis-)= ease. € “Hart told me," eald the witness, “that he was suffering such great pain EXTRA To-Day and To-Morrow me to get him into @ proper condition end of the. season, we offer our entire stock of Imported and Original Model at Prices Regardless of Cost ne £109.00 and up 632 Fifth Avenue Opposite Cathedral Mr. Wilson was buying two. ba’ for Mra, Wilvon, and thelr da . oy Miss Eleanor and Miss Jessie, RW ENUEKP a looking on, Mr. Wilaon had a one ASN 26S nis he asked, and Mra, Wilson 2 3 J 7 ad replied lee eighteen, el} 10 wd see “3 7 ne ighteen, L believe; how S LE ewe e “Quick aa a flash he Agured tt, but A . Adjusted $ pod, because he got! Nelish coins, which he | GO Following our custom at the Maratea 8 Filled Watches Watch Protectors Free. & Gowns rn FINE GOLD WATCHES ving shown at least 25 . $4000 and up foetory, ean b amdueet or extn wanes. CHARLES A. KEENE Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, 180 OPEN UNTIL @ O'CLOUK, Broadway, New York nit | tion was. such that he believed stovaine | | | Sime} By Eleanor Schorer § | [Christmas Nursery Rhymes {=—arcs: = PARA THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, APRAUAAPPAOGRABOBORL DODD DABDLDEDODLD ODDO DDOODDODDOODDODDDBADDDDLDLDDOPDODLP ODO PL ODE BAL OLA BALA ORL PAPAAPLRASHSPRPPARAGP S$SSSSSSSSSSSSHSSSSS You Will Save Many Dollars by buying your Christmas Piano at the “Pease” Sale of Used Pianos The Only Sale of Its Kind Held During the Year and Ab- solutely the Biggest Values Ever Offered for Reliable Pianos. HIS is not a sale of old pianos gathered together for the occasion in a dull season, but is our Annual Clearance Sale of our own and other _ good makes held right at the holiday season when the greatest num- ber of pianos are purchased. For 68 years the ‘‘Pease’’ name has stood for piano reliabiiity, and we guarantee each and every piano, and will allow the full purchase price within one year from date toward the purchase of any new Pease Piano if desired. The Reason for This Sale _ The Pease Piano Co. do the largest rental business of any firm in this city, and as we do not rent to public places, but mostly to the home and to musicians, we must keep our rental stock like new; therefore we hold a clear- ance sale of our entire rental stock once a year, and offer them at prices that should sell every one within forty-eight hours. It will be seen that the majority of these pianos are of our own make and are NOT EXCHANGED pianos which have been given up because un- satisfactory, which is the only basis for many sales of used pianos, but which are in reality sales of abused pianos. We hold only one sale of pianos each year and the quick way in which these many fine bargains are bought by the public shows their appreciation of Wide Le ht VALUES, the LOW PRICES and the VERY EASY PAY- Please note that this is the only sale of this magnitude that is held in the city each year by a piano manufacturer, and also note that they are mostly our own pianos. A partial 'ist of the pianos fo'lows:— Miscellaneous Uprights. | Our Own Uprights. WAS. NOW. | / 5 $40'1 Pease. 1 Julius Bowne 1 McDonald. 1 Kimball..... 65 1 Pease 1 Lyon & Healey 70'1 Pease 1 Miller... 75 1 Pease 1 Meister 75 1 Pease 1 Steck... 851 Pease 1 Emerson. 90'1 Pease 1 Bradford 100)1 Pease 1 Waiters 1 Bates. . 105/1 Pease 1 Standard 115!1 Pease 1 Doll... 115|1 Pease 1 Horace 1151 Pease. . 1 Weser. 120)1 Pease.. 1 Hayden. 1251 Pease 215 1 Hardman 125\1 Pease 5 225 1 Harrington 130}1 Wilbur. 250 165 1 Weber... 135/1 Wilbur. 155 1 Dobson 135 1 Wilbur. 185 1 Stuyvesant... 148'1 Wilbur. 150 1 Chickering. . 145 1 Wilbur. 160 1 Bradford 150 1 Wilbur 175 1 Steinway... 150 1 Pease... ) 215 1 Kurtzman. 150/1 Pease. . 235 f 150'1 Pease. . 245 s 155|1 Pease 250 5 168|1 Pease 325-260 400 1951 Pease. . 500 bap eeEn yer ; e; 265 100 other Pease uprights at’ prices ranging from $100 to $275 that originally cost from $325 to $500. Every piano is marked at the cash ments may be made of One Dollar per Week and upward, according to the piano, for just the simple interest extra upon the unpaid part. Player-Pianos and Grands WAS. NOW.| price, but if desired, monthly pay- WAS. NOW. 1 Pease Player Piano.....$700 $350)1 Witbur Player Piano... .$575 $375 1 Wilbur Player Piano... 550 275) 1 Pease Player Piano. 750 490 1 Wilbur Player Piano... 550 295) 1 Wilbur Player Piano 500 350 1 Pease Player Piano. 700 400|1 PeaseGrand...... 750 428 1 Wilbur Player Piano 575 41013 Pease Baby Grand 600 = 325 1 Pease Player Piano..... 750 —535|1 Pease BabyGrand.. 385 +. 600 Any of these Players or Grand Pianos can be bought during this sale only on the low terms of $8 per Month; with the players we give free $12.50 worth of music and the free music roll exchange privilege free for all tire. Special Bargain Lot 1 Pianola, Rosewood. 1 Chicago Cottage Organ, 1 Pianola, Ebonized. 1 Pease Player. 1 Simplex Player, Mahogany. 1 Clark Square Piano, 1 Bacon Square Piano, 1 Decker Square Piano, Your choice of any of these for $10 Every piano delivered free within 75 miles of New York (except the square pianos), with stool and cover to match and one year's tuning free. No mail orders will be filled, but a small deposit will secure any piano for Xmas delivery. } If you expect to get a piano any tunity you cannot afford to let pass. Open Evenings This Month Until 9:30 P. M. PEASE PIANO CO., 128 W. 42d St., Near Broadway, New York Special sale also being held at Brooklyn Warerooms, 34 Flatbush Ave., and Newark Warerooms, 10 New St. Equally big values. SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS time in the near future, this is an oppor-

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