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B e Bm i if i ‘ jk gE ! i af i t [ F ® z | i i Hi hia ij it [ i E # fi Bi Pe - iy, it i | as 27 s z ° 2 i efile i 3 s ; 33 i I H ' i i! i i i iY it | t if i | | 2 | I tf to Wheat. Maranvilie soaked a long fly to left center, which Wheat collared after @ eprint. NO RUNS. Gtengel popped up to Sweeney. Cut- 5 fs sa ti i? i prone i It | i i fit eg23e tT aT i nan, : | Lf iif i Ff f id | i li i H Hi £ New York asopened its 42nd Street Branch on the Southwest corner of 42nd Street and Madison Avenue. Toa legal depository for money paid {nto Court. ot i Seeeint to act wo emnowten, administrator, guardian or ether position of trust. . Allows interest on deposite—return- able on demand, or at specified dates. Letters of Credit and Travelers’ Checks, DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU WANT, THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAY 9 1919. WITNESSES REVEAL MULRANEY'S PLOT TOESCAPE CHA Convicted Slayer Planned Per- jury Chain While in me?” asked Mra. O'Brien, ‘The attendant’s reply was hot audible. 1 ( y4b Cc But the elap of the open O'Brien fist { - on his eye was audible in the ares,| (RS he killed “Paddy the Priest’ without his | ty t Judge Rosalsky at once sent for Mra.) « Patrich to get the whole She staried for Magistrate Ker-| The captain of the court squad and | 77> Court Officer MeLaughlin n- | two others went to his assistance, She y} aN fe 1 The District-Attorney and Judge} n Rosalsky were very much interested | tercepted her. used the mesh bag on the captain's nore Jacobson's story of his fre- and a hatpin on the thighs and knees of fas the condemned man's brother and atone time taking # wit-| day, sir, replied Me enn for personal coaching by Mule}; 2 ing him as: another fear reronnens ply to His Honor that 1 had drink in’ prison for her excitement to eubside. Mulraney got. many letters out Of the | qe jeath house giving elaborate -det . or “Arrest that woman!” shouted the tS r, And Mra. ‘Brien was sent over to “| HE Kg CAV»: 2 A . xt | Esty eetttts ‘The whole complicated fabric stories told to Governor Sulzer and Judge Rosalsky in the effort to save “Happy Jack” Mulraney from the death «| hate went to pieces today et o hear- ing before the Judge. Mulraney was con- vieted of killing Patrick Breen, known BRIDGE AND SINKS Flood Refugees Being Taken to Natchez, Miss., Victims of River Collision. NATOHEZ, Miss, May %.—Twenty- two persons were drowned to-day when , the the steamer Concordia, running out of Prison for the inquiry. maide: Judge Rosalsky on hie ceturn told | sank in eight minutes. two-year-olds; four and one-half fur-|Buell about the accusation. Buell was| Patrick Groghan, « prominent planter, i? be “ angered and (aid Gare the whole plot to | and W. L. Crims, his clerk, were among ry. the drowned. The others were negro sald that the plot wae managed |deckhands, A relief train was rushed! ‘by Mulraney from the death house and/ from here with physicians aboard, as icholas Jacobson, | ten injured were rescued. { ran. §2 Mutuels Paid—Pirdman, straight,|@ Man now under indictment for burg-| The Concordia was odringing to has been one of Mulrancy‘s| Natohes flood refugees rescued from Woot, % (Taylor), second; Art Rick,|eet Mul 4.40; place, $2.00; show, $2.40 Woot,|Jery, who "i most important witnesses. Place, $14: show, $1, Art Rick, show, | me eae noeage rot gh nae itd pvt) hey the| of the sinking of the steamer was re- whole tru le e uJ can-|cetved here motorboats were sent t OF MAN HE SAYS SLEW GIRL. | teases that mutrancy hed written to| clayton érom Ferriday and other parey ‘Diarich ate ber eredg bef by oteed Sage ietell ga on | points. bd Dist: fe, torne’ Arrive ya fended con: ion Sheriff and ict y Mulreney unless Jacobson consented the necessary witnesses. —_—_——. OUNBAR WON'T TELL NAME 860 Nostrand Ave. Bedford 19016 19090 691 Flatbush Ave. Flatbush 19016 Murray Hill 19090 993 Havemeyer St. Wii 19016 by a Plaza 19090 to| MRS. O’BRIEN SLUGS COURT Riverside 19000 | 6 Hardenbrook Ave. ATTENDANTS, GOES TO JAIL. . stills dtc |Hot Pugilistic Row in Court Follows! test Because Case | From Maine and Question Convict in Vain. Richard J. Dunder, serving a year on FAR ROCKAWAY—Birdsall & Central Aves. Far Rockaway Blackwell's tsland for grand larceny, | 414 not rémember that Mulraney was Pct wpa ‘ompkinsville whe confessed that he was an acecssory | helplessty drunk in Harlem just before WEST NEW BRIGHTON—165 Columbia St. West Brighton 1906¢- Incl fay teen, in Readville, Me., Aug. 17, 1905, re-| wae true i NEW YORK @® TELEPHONE CO. night after the murder, To this testi- fused to give the seme of her slayer) ve, wes added that of Mre, Patrick, tncla Mrs. Agnes O'Brien, a large, athletic | woman of thirty, summoned to court by ‘said | her husband, Frank O’Brien, steward of yesterday. Gheri@ Colby Getoheli and Shanley’s restaurant, who lives at No, 106 Weat One Hundred and Third street, Can Each Save from $5 to $10] In This Startling Sale of Spring Suits:Overcoats At the Brill Stores To-day and To-morrow 5,000 Will Buy $. and $20 @ Suits and Overcoats of distinctly new and seasonable fabrics; propriate for S Suits and Overcoats Including almost every one of the season’s “biggest hits,” pencil stripes, hairlines, chalk lines, checks,plaids, plain grays, gray mixtures, brown mixtures, blue mix- tures, blue serges in a most remarkable assortment and made up in wonderfully smart, soft rolling, English cut coats with Patch Pockets, and, of course, flat lapel; conservatiye models, if you prefer them. ring Overcoats offer you a particularly fine lot of ks and Oxfords, silk faced to the edge, and many of them silk lined. , oS. patterns and colors a) mer _ for be an om grays, blues and tan mixtures, plain colors, stripes and numbers of fine fast color blue serges. a tinctive models thoroughly well tailored and finished, every suit worth from $15 to $20. will find a splendid variety of gray and brown mixtures and th silk faced to the edge. iy—not at 49th street estore. Will Buy the Very Finest of Men’s *25, °28 and ‘30 Spring Suits & Overcoats In this lot is shown a wonderfully These 610 Suite are on good assortment of splendidly hand-tailored suits for men and young men — no more real clothes value can be bought at any price than is offered you in these marvelously good suits, and i the season's chiocest patterns can be had anywhere. silk lined, and every other good color or pattern that you can think of. ly fine fancy mixtures and blacks and Oxfords, silk-lined and silk-faced and "20 279 Broadway, near Chambers Street Union Square, 14th Street, near Broadway 125TH STREET, CORNER THIRD AVENUE—OPEN EVENINGS Union Square Store, Open Saturday Evening Pencil stripes, chalk lines and hair- And in Spring Overcoats, wonderfull tailored in a superlatively good way. To Men Who Want Suits Made to Order See our announcement on another page of this paper of 530, 535 and °40 Suits Made to Order for Broadway at 49th Street 47 Cortlandt Street, near Greenwich have maintained their suprem- acy in. the glove world. “KAYSER” Gloves are the result of a life- time spent in Silk Glove making—in striving for the attainment of that superlative degree of excellence that makes the ‘‘KAYSER”’ Glove the standard, by which. all otlier Silk Gloves are measured. There is no excuse for accepting the “just as good” kind—“KAY- SER” Gloves “cost no more” and carry with them assurance of qual- There’s a way to tell the genuine—‘‘look in the hem,”’ if you find the name *f KAYSER’’ you have the glove that ‘‘don’t wear out” at the finger ‘‘tips.’’ : ‘ A guarantee ticket in every pair. Short Silk Gloves, 50c, 75c, $1, $1.25, $1.50 Long Silk Gloves, 75c, $1, $1.25, $1.50, $2 Jultus Keyser vor Maken Good soap washes clothes: well—if you use. enough elbow grease, brit Gold Dust washes | them more thoroughly—and with little or no { rubbing. Gold Dust saves half your time, and | spares your poor back. eo Another great advantage of Gold Dust—use ‘(' “a of water you like. Gold Dust softens ‘ and makes it soft This Line is Busy as rain water. Aes: Gold Dust is just a vegetable -oil soap . in powdered form, with other cleans- ing ingredients added to make it work more thor- oughly and quickly than soapevercan, “Let the GoLD pusr rwins do your work’” THz N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago BROOKLY : Tue Largest Millinery Storc ia America” 9 MYRTLE AVENUE AND BRIDGE STREET $1.98 to $2.98 Ready-to-Wear Hats} Our Special for Saturday at 79c}. There are exactly 15 dozen hats in this lot and they ought not to last long, as this is without doubt the Biggest vi it t 4 Se Eee Tae Extra Special Saturday at 79c a Open Monday, Tharsday and Saturday Eveniags Simplify Home-ceeking by saving time, temper and trampin