The evening world. Newspaper, January 9, 1913, Page 5

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}DOGTORS ANGRY > ATTHREEPARDONS. NADEBY GOV. ministration of Gov. Dia: Name. Chi Albert T. Patrick, murd Louis J. Abrams, fak Benjamin A. Valentine, tora Charles Reilly, murder 1 J. Furlong, Beib Blinn, Conrad and Gladman | ‘ Set Free After Convictions | for Megal Practice. | Merman L. Heimberger, murder Martin Kegan, inurder second di Martin Tighe, manslaughter... George, Davison, Frederic Carlton, larceny and bi Patrick Kiernan, murder firet Kaiward Wise, murder first Hervey Fanning, murder fi Michael T. Stet James KE. Mina Dr, Edward 1. Beven thousand members of the New York State Medical Society are aroused | to-@ay over knowledge ofgshe restora- | + on to eltizenship by Gov. Wix of three former physicians convicted of mal- Practice, In each case the convicted tan took steps to have the revocation = @¢ ble Ucense annulled immediately | Qfter Executive clemency had been ex- Conrad, Illegal ir. George J. said an officer of | yoo cyst SICK BOY RESCUED | ROBIN URGES COURT Seat cemucwewy or | FROM BLAZE THAT PUT | TO LET HIM WITHDRAW ( ‘TWO OTHER REVOCATIONS. | “Dr. Francis Grey Blinn, whom Gov.! 14 LIVES IN PERIL * Biz pardoned and restored to citizen: | 6 —e tty, le now runnin, ‘M. J, ané@ bis pet Rew York Board of Regents ‘ Béward B. Conrad had a lawyer write | Bundled in a Blanket, He Is “@ letter to the same bod; We are @f these men.” } Gov, Dix pardoned the three physi- | ‘clens—the officers of the medical soci- ‘wiles that procured their conviction way +—without giving the crgantzation op-| 5.0... . pertunity to show why executive clom. | Eisht-year-old Robert Dickson by a Policeman. Gemoy Chould not be extended. who {s suffering from chicken pox, was “Me various county medical societics | WTepped in a blanket and carried out . the State do all our prose-|0f his nome by Policeman Henry puting,” sald Dr. Wisner R. Townsend | Reuther carly to-day when he was in wt No, 15 West Fifty-eighth street, danger of suffocation by smoke. ‘ketary of the New York Medical Societ The fire started in Charies Oelirichs's te an Evening World reporter. “They | grocery store, on the ground floor of a four-story apartment bullding at Throop Pestion of the public. and Putnam avenues, yn. Mra. @ot trom unselfish motives in the pro- © “§e they were not alert, and active t 0 would be no protection of the ‘public from charletane and physicians willing to cdhmit illegal acts in their Practice. HUNDRED& OF PHYSICIANS |crackle of the flame _ “Dr, Gladman was prosecuted by the ‘Onondaga County Medical Society, Society. One hundred and fifty lead- Ing physicians were directly behind the | yother to the street. first prosecution, while 2,40 doctors | qoor jive Daniel Cullinan, pee te a five children—Walt Hiunn prosecutions, The vi or the respective count, worked with the Dietri inties. Our daughter Masie by the hand, if they are not rigidly e1 Walter carried Daniel, the youn! THE EVENING WORLD, ENGINEER'S SMILE COSTS MAN A LEG, How Gov. Dix Used Power for Pardon and Parole. Here are a few examples of Erecutive clemency during the ad- rat degree. tloneer.. * Long Island Ratiroad na Capt. Peter €, Hains, manslaughter.....$ to 16 years yowita a $0 eH William MeNelfl!, murder, second degree ment of | board a moving tra’ » even! second degree Who Is This Man? | |He Is Known All Over the World for| His Wonderful Vegetable Compound. | He Isthe Famous Dr. W. S. Burkhart. Wiillam &. Truman, manslaughter nslaughter.... y, murder first degre murder first degree. . operation Dr. Francis G. Blinn, ilegal operation. Dr. George J. Gladman, illegal operation... i 7 In the cases of Patrick, Kiernan, Wise, Fanning, Ste Minaugh their death penoitics had been commuted to life imprisgn- ment by former Governors, but Diz turned them out of prison. HIS PLEA OF “GUILTY” Facing Sentence To-Morrow, He Now Wants to cations made by both} Carried Through Smoke ‘De. W. 5. Burkhart Ae He le Te- Hie Robust Healt Pounds te Taking Day. Owes | Gain ot 90 Just ask any druggist, Who! te Dr, Burk: | y toedag a. vitae tn Sartt. Ho Sl dalloyew Gat be. Un6’ Be Who allows you to deposit 80-day treatment of D District-Attorney Whitman deilvered | which Joseph G. {0-morrow morning in the r sentence after having ou are not cured of stomach, liver wel trouble, the druggist will return your 25 cents. | And he has been doing th urges that he be al his plea of guilty are used annually showing what a rei Dr. Burkhart has a reputation to be proud ne it i Robin's contention {s that dupe of others and that he pleaded mullty because his condition was such at the time that he felt a trial would end only In his being found guilty or adjudged insane. He points out tthat he had beew in- in bringing about the con- viction of Joseph Relchma nand Wil- tam J. Cum:nings for thelr share in the undermining of the Company and taht tt was his testimony smoke and the William Hatfleld into the otreet BACKED THE PROSECUTIONS. fog turned in an alarm. Policeman (while Drs. Conrad and Blinn w ‘Meanwhile Harold Hatfeld ran up- fed by the New York County Medical lgiairs, shouting “Fire!” on the third and fourth floors, before he escorted nis more for a quart uid ask $5.00 for, and see that you get Dr. Hurkhart's Vegetable Co of | tamily out of bed and led his wife and THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 19138. trainmen “twelve-pound looks’ ana and City yards, He sald Engineer Raylor smiled at him as the train said mean things about late trains, saw it A jury In the Queens Count Supreme Court discovered the co! erin. Carmine Graeco, Who lives at No Forest street, Brooklyn, algo is entined content with the awarded that ti The Jur and Annette led her sister Laura. mssociation had 7,000 members, and its! down when he County Medical Society. the third floor. SOCIETIES UNIT preys over the three Dix pardons, end feterred the reporter to Mr. Van- liver. At bis office in Nassau street ‘Vandiver said that while he did not 0° discuss the eubject for publica- | fered from it too. Hen both ee 9 Gaenters and Leah Robert was taken into the neree ote D ty med! eccietics were u! in \d put to bed. le Was go f@ent against the pardoned physicians |"eiSriny Srotected from. the cold by the State Board of Regents. | the blanket in which his father swathed Bering tie two years as Governor Dix { we Setweens thirty and forty pris. |tim that be euffered no setback, / and commuted ence upon 100 thers. immed ‘hertes n Hushe tn double the time yf the Hatfield apartment. It was only elev pardons, and fifty- tinguished with only @ few hundred dol: en comfffutations. |lars damage. STERN BROTHERS Announce for To-morrow and Saturday, on their First Floor, an Important Sale of Men’s Black or Gray Silk Lined Overcoats « $24.00 Actual Values $40.00, 45,00 and 50.00 These Overcoats are custom tailored and made of fine + Vicunas, Meltons, Kerseys and Diagonal Over- ‘ coatings, in black and Cambridge or Oxford gray, all sizes, 34 to 48 inches, in regular or stout proportions. Also or To-morrow, a Special Clearing Sale of Men’s Winter Underwear Natural Merino Shirts and Drawers, Li Natural Merino Shirts and Drawers. winter weight, Former Price $1.50 Each, at $1 00 Imported Balbriggan, also White or _ Gray Merino Shirts and Drawers, medium and heavy weight. Formerly $1.75 Each, 1.25 imported Natural Wool brits and Drawers, Former Price $2.50 Each, 1.85 West 23d and 22d Streets Townsend ‘added that the State Reuther met them ¢oming counsel wee Althuth C. Vandiver, who | floor. He turned back and pounded on Was also counsel for the New York|the door of the Dickson apartment on Is Provided For 9 In New York's 4 Shopping Centre "| any other piano of the samie or greater price on FI I == Ss “a id ited against the second, | the payment period ‘occur to tho purchaser, ail ua, Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City Piano Buying at Its Best N America, ‘‘breeding”’ loses its right to title unless accompanied by the living elements of worth. Q Pianos are human things. Some lean heavily on tradition to maintain ; 2» @To practical persons, real worth means more_than reputation. Great America prefers actual accomplishment to vague indulgence. 4 A piano is worth what it costs to manufacture, plu!a reasonable profit; it cannot be worth more. Q Consider the piano for its actual capabilitths. IThe Summit of Piano Excellence--Priced Within Reason | ‘The Dicksons have two children, Rob- If, within 30 days of pur- 4 James, eleven months old. Mr. yeu 00 desire, we wil , TION TO PROPOSED ACTION. [Sic.S0n ‘took eo lone to bundle up Dr. Brooks H. Wells of No. 623 Mad-| Robert that the halle were very thick fleon avenue President of the New York | witn smoke by the time opened the County Medical Society said members of | door and adenitte policeman. any piano purchased of us an penny to the purchaser. atrument will be cred If, at any time within one year, the yur- chaser wishes, he may exc’ ‘hange his'plano tor | paid balance will be voluntarily cancelled. The firemen kept the blaze confined to Reputation is an appraisal; D.adecessor the Oelirich store and the rear room: their prestige. Character is the reality. medium and heavy weight, Formerly $1.10 Each 85- The Stratford Piano. Judge it by any $225.00 Piano sold else- Whi Our price is $170.00. Privilege of $5 first payment and $1.00 per week. No int: The Kohler & Campbell Pianos ~six different styles. $100 more than our prices elsewhere will not buy the splendid worth of these pianos. Six different styles, $230 to $310, with payment privileg ranging from $7.50 down and $1.25 per week to $10 down and 37.8 r month. No interest. PLAYER-PIANOS The Stratford Player-piano at 70.00; payment privilege of $10 down and $2 per week. The Pianista — two styles — $410_and_ $430. Payment priv of $10 down and $2 per week. No interest. The Autopiano — the most re- sponsive and the most dependable player-piano manufactured, $475 to $610 (Art Nouveau $1,050. May be purchased at $10 to $I£ per month. No interest. eed, Indicating to hie was going to slow up a night ciimb a ow, up. to Gr Island serv Dominating Sale of Aristocratic Overcoats An Offering which is Master among All Current Sales in both Size and Reality of Reductions and the You can SAVE as much as $22.50 on your choice among the most elegant and costly coats in New York OATS of Unquestioned Social Status. Style vee" Supreme. Coats of Lofty Lineage. Built ‘ without stint by the most skilled among our . tailors, modelled by our chief designers. Only the most costly woolens, the most expensive silks, satins and trimmings--the smartest products of the exclusive mills of both Britain and America. Ulsters and Great Coats with shawl and convertible collars, of Chinchilla and ‘rough, woolly fabrics, many imported. Half silk or satin lined and with sleeves similarly lined. Many half lined with camel's hair and with silk or satin yoke. Conservative models in Ulsters, in black, oxford gray, blues, browns—self colored and mixtures. English worsteds, meltons and kezseys. Many double breasted and with belted backs. Half or full-lined with silk or satin. Hosts of staple models, with or without velvet collars, mostly full silk or satin lined, in quiet monotones and mixtures. Smith Groye(9- JOADWAY AT WARREN ST, — NEW YORK ~ 5? AV. SET. 271" & 28ST, or ST.AT FLATBUSH AV.—BROOKLYN —C ROADWAY 4T BEDEORD AV. received In that city on Jan. 6 aged ued sured it for 6 at a nd that he hat Photonrap! of 10 cente, Ae Rroken Nem Mra. Hoskt photogra filed claims to-day branch of the Post- ve which was broken « misfortune or swore he didn't amie, He's with the Wall st Office for engineers in the Looe and he told the jury he until after the acc had witnesnes; some Surrowato’s ( to her hust t. Mrs. Hosking left Bw C¢ + Hosking, U, 8. Ay No. Weat Graeco, formerly a wateh ald he didn't.) tion a negative to B.A. Bmith, operating | Forty-Afth atreet, $10,000, and $25,000 an ef | road, wued It for $i jury Jed he did] manager of the American Hridge Com-|to her daughter, Jennle Dean Hoskins Hers his left leg He tb .00 worth and awarded a ver-| pany, a branch of the United States |Conrad of the same address, The hus- s Long Tare diet for that amount to Graevo, Steal Company, In Chicago, and it was band is made the executor, ANNOUNCE A Magnificent, Luxurious Coats involved. Aristocratic Overcoats at Democratic Prices $27.00 Reduced $50, $45, from $40, $35 Higher Prices in Majority ondition. The negative was val- #, although the Government in- The will of Blanca Guiterns Hes- king, who died Jan. 1, 1913, leaving au estaie of $36,000 personal property, "| was filed for probate to-day in the A home without a piano is comparable to food without seasoning; to clothes without style. The last essential is lacking. O'Neill's has made piano purchasing a simple, safe, easily-effected matter. The pianos themselves are true to the best ideals of fine piano manufacture. The prices have been put on a fair basis. Large, single profits have been elimi- nated in favor of more sales. Payment terms have been revolutionized. Small, frequent payments have been adopted. Finally, interest has been abolished. You pay no interest. The price is absolute; there are no extras. You can buy a fine piano for $170 and pay for it, $5 down and $1.00 per week. You can buy a superb player-piano for $370, paying $10 down and $@ per week. You can even buy de wonderful Autopiano for $475 and pay for it #10 per month. Let us send you our book of ; piano photographs. Slap sign your name and address to the coupon and enclose it in an envelo) Book of Photographs— addressed to O’Neill-Adams Co. You will FREE Fill Out and Mail This Coupon Teday O'Neill-Adams Co., (w) New York City placed under no obligation whatever. Pay $1.00 for any music roll (excepting Solostyle Ar- tist Records) regardions of list prices, You then have the Please send me your book of piano privilege of exchanging at a cost of only 5c per roll per photographs. It‘is understood that exchange. ‘Ten rolls would cost 810. Exchanged once thie request places me under no each month for one year at 5c per roll would give you the obligation whatever use of 120 rolls at a total cost of only $16.00. And you always own the 10 rolls in your possession, ONEILL-ADAMS Co. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street Fifth Floor, Main Building. #2nd St. Elevators.

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