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., 7 ——_____. MRS, PANKHURST NEARING SHORE; WILL SHE LAND? Immigration Officials May Halt Militant Suffragist, Due on La Provence To-Morrow. WASHINGTON IS SILENT. Inspector’s First Question to Alien Visitor Is: “Ever Been in Prison ?”—Then What? Mra, Emmeline Pankhurst, “chief- tainess” of the British militant suffra- wettes, is a passenger on La Provence $ of the French line, arriving here to- morrow. Mrs. Pankhurst was recently released from prison after serving a term on her statement that she, might be held personally responsible for the partial destruction of the country home of Henry Lioyd-Geo: Chancellor of the Exchequer of the British Govern- ment. Sympathisers with the votes for wo- men cause and those who do not sym- Pathise with it are keenly intercated to know whether the immigration au- thorities here will allow Mrs. Pank- huret to land. She has been here be- fore and only @ little more than a year ago caused @ good natured riot in ‘Wall street by appearing at a midday meeting. Byron 8. Ubi, Acting Commissioner of Immigration, sald to-day that he had re- ceived no orders from Washington re- garding Mre. Pankhurst's arrival and «=~ pected none, Francie 3, O'Neill, coun- el for the suffragist organization, said that he bad received word from Wash- ington that no orders rding Mrs. Pankharst had been ie Mr, Uhl eaid that Mrs. Pankhurst would be sub- Jected to the same questioning ad other . foreign born passengers. When the im- tion Inspectora board La Provence: at Quarantine one or more of them will be detailed to visit the first cabin. Une of the Gret questions to be asked of an alien 18: “Have you ever been in pris- ont’ ‘The inspector is assumed to share in the general knowledge that Mra Pank- hurst been in prison, so that even if she evaded the question it would be his duty to ineist on a full answer. He must, if a prison experience is admitted Dy the allen, ask the causes of the im- prisonment, On the answers to this question it is 'y of the inspector to make up CORSETS mold the flesh into long, slender lines, firmly support bust and ab- domen, holding the figure erect and graceful. Form-creating, they show any figure to superb advan: tage; range of models and sizes pe s perfect shape and perfect fit for every figure, Un- breakable steels, splendid fabr warranted not to tear or break, insure long wearing. $3.00 up. 08—Fiastine geres at back, low 104—Med. bust, 63. band at book $5. Ne. 106— iM—| ree No, 78A-~Med, bust, batlete, $8, u to rust, 61 Ups —_———— Wew Xork Welngarten Bros, Chicage WO RVENING WORLD, PaiDay, OdvdBER imprisonment “involves. moral tufpi- Mrs. Pankhurst haa been engaged to by address 2 auffragette meeting at Madi- DEAD ' GAS TURNED ON | tude.” {fhe believes that it docs, Mel jon Square Garien next Sunday night ' y order the exclusion and deporta- | and at a meeting In Brooklyn Tuesday. | ton of the passengér. In that case the| te she is detained at Ellis Island ter Passenger may appeal to a special board) traveling companion, Rheta Childe of inquiry. If the iret is In| Dorr, an American citizen, will deliv doubt ft is hin duty to refer the pas-| her address by proxy, and Incidentally 7 ‘ty senger to such @ board. tay a tow worde’about our immigration | Man, However, Attribute Death Friends of Former Standard Oil|qead in bed. | made up of three inspectors each are! ————— | tn session at Fills faland whenever there! gem, qoot to see Target Practice, | When Willinm Pluner, a fellow lodger Insurance business at No, % William! street, was #0 methodical in his hal that it was a common saying in lodging house that one might set his watch by Lenninger, Piuner went ta his door to rouse him and ametied gas. He forced the door and found Lenninger | 17, 1018, | ae Rest h | is business for them, It Is for them to] wonTRESS MONROE, Va., Oct. 17.—|%t No. 28 West Fourteenth street, did on retiring he partly opened decide her Mrs, Pankhurst’e record | senator Hoot went to sea to-day on the| Mot hear Philip A. Lenninger leave % As Yous By makes her an undesirable immigrant. | battleship Arkansas to witness the tar-| his room at § o'clock thie morning he/ very vid friend who once had held an behaseh With their decision against her she may| get firing by the Atlantic fleet on the| thought ft strange, Lenninger, @ book-| important position with the Standard Oi! appeal to the Department of Commerce |eouthern drill grounds. keeper for C. E. Squire, who has an| Company. 7 QONEILL-ADAMS SIXTH AVE., 20TH TO 22D ST., NEW YORK CITY SIXTH AVE., 20TH TO 22D ST., NEW YORK CITY TLIS is a story of success—of unprecedented success. It’s a story of planning—then of concentrating unlimited power on working out the plan until it’s a story of such stupendous success that the telling is spontaneous. We could not help repeating it if we would or would not if we could. It's inspiring. It runs off the pencil faster than we can write. The reason for it is the plan itself, ere : Don't miss a single syllable: @ You get » piano, which is worth and sells regularly at three hundred and fifty dollars, for twe hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy-five cents, saving you at the outset one hundred and one dollars and twenty-five cents. @ When you finish paying for your piano, if bought in the usual way, you still owe from Keb ea to thirty-five dollars interest. Th ough this co-operative plan when you have paid your two hundred and forty-eight dollars and Reventy-five cents you have finished paying. There are no further payments to be made, either on account of interest or for any other reason. 4 Instead of paying twenty to twenty-five dollars asa first payment, and ten, twelve or fifteen dollars a month, as you will in e regular way, e iin ee co-operative sale you pay but five dollars to join in this co-operative movement and then but one dollar and twenty-five cents week. tt tt ae The whole plan applies to player-pianos as well Three hundred player-pianos are also being sold on this same co-oprrative plan’ The usual price of these p janos is five hundred and fifty do'lars each, The co-operative price is three hundred and ninety-five dollars, with NO INTEREST to be added. The player-piano will also be delivered immediately upon the payment of five dollars, The payments ure two dollars a week—giving you one hundred and ninety-five weeks’ time in which to make your payments, the same ason the piano, Th me unconditional guarantee that is given on the piano is given on the player-piano, You can also get your money back at any time within thirty days, R ea d thi Ss: antowan, earattat® al witn Yau, Het the same privilege of exchanging within « your as that given jo ae toda ae oe e pial Which we will at once Rive you @ receipt, All of the unpaid balances will be voluntarily cancelled in event of death, This five dollare ta credited to your account on the co-op- Also « player-piano bench and nine rolls of music (your own selection) | “7 M ivecala: then alleme.one hapared are included without extra charge. Jn which to pay the remainder ‘An arrangement will also be made with each purchaser whereby new or two Gollare as week ‘It You select Ils can be procured at a cost of only five cente a roll, ho further payments of any kind to be player-pianos are standard S8-note players; that is, they play every note on the piano when the music roll is in motion, These pl nianos have an automatic shifter, which compels the music to play tly. Most pla; ut from two hundred to two hundred aud fifty dollars more than these will not play perfectly. ‘These player-pianos have lead tubing. Most player-pianos have rubber tubi The life of rubber is one year at most, Lead laste forever. It cannot wear out, aud the tubing in these player-pianos is so placed it cannot be broken. )NFILL-ADAMS Ca ‘oa Tired iness ot social duties, @ RG email | VELOGEN His friends and his employer believe F c ulations and their administration. 19 Aecide that Lenninges’s death was accidental, Et ah eh len ao ak ae 9 Accident. ‘They say he had .no reason to commit 4 believe that after turning, ONFILL-ADAMSCOQ SIXTH AVE., 20TH TO 22D ST., NEW YORK CITY SIXTH AVE., 20TH TO 22D ST., NEW YORK CITY Once again we tell this whole piano story Coperight, 1913, ty O'Neill.Adame Co, @ You get the strongest guarantee ever put ona piano; a joint guarantee signed by the manufacturers— The Newton Piano Co.—and our selves, giving you protection for five years | You get the privilege of returning your @ Within one year from the day you get your piano, without so much as a penny’s loss, @ All pa: through this co-operative plan, you may exchange it for any reason whatsoever, family meats remaining unpaid are voluntarily cancelled in event of your death—thus leaving the piano free of encumbrance to your @ You get through this co-operative plan an o PHortunity to ene casis dividends for each and every week's time the life of the co-operative rani dod pide Neen aed twenty toe erected. ‘Througls this privilege it is posible for you to earn cash dividends amounting @ And finally you are given opportunity to secure others to co-operateja this plan. This still further reduces the coat of your instrament, Covyriabt, 1913, by O'Nolil Ad. About the piano itself The pianos themselves that go into this sale will gtace any home. For downright durability they are \ as a as any pianos made. ‘Take the physi- cal Piano itself—that is, the woods that go into the case, the ivory that goes intothe keys, the German felt that goes into the hammers, and the steel ‘ ra jointly guarantee J upire that goes into the said piano for the period of : five yearafrom date. Any de- ( Stfings, and so on and so t raterial or workinan- Fon, and you get as much—in will be repaired, of the fact you get the same identical 9 replaced wit materials—as youget in many four hundred or four hundred (Signed) and fift, feet ianos. pee y are made by the Newton Piano O'Nelll-Adams Co. Co. in one of the largest piano manufacturing plants in the world—if not the largest— mil che fens * where pianos are built well and this “co-opeen economically, and where there is an abundance of capital to procure the best there is to be had, and to “back up” our guarantee—the strongest ever placed on a musical instrument. Exchanging the piano A paragraph in our co-operative agreement reads like this: “Privilege is given to exchange Piano No. at any time within one year from date for any other new piano we handle at time exchange is made (whetlrer of equal or better grade), all payments made on above mentioned instrument to be credited on new contract.” Do you get the full force of this part of our contract? (Mind you, this is part of our contract with you. This is part of the agreement we sign and hand to you the minute you become a member of this Co-operative Society.) aranter le our Mond eae SA tine, “ourehasers will be found tled This simply means this: That you purchase your piano or player- piano through this plan subject to one year’s trial in your home, And if at the end of the year or during the year you feel that the instru- ment you selected is not what you wish to buy and keep as a permanent investment, then you may come to the store and select anvther piano— we will make the exchange free. If the piano is of the same grade there will be no additional charge. lithe piano is of a higher grade you will of course agree to pay the difference, The point is—you have a whole year in which to thoroughly satisfy yourself as to the character of these pianos, puts the layer - piano your home, also Let us make this plain. It costs you no more, as an initial outlay, to put the player-piano in your home than it doesthe piano. The player-piano itself costs you more than the piano—Onehun- The balance on 25cents weekly, ‘The balunce on the player-piano is payable 2 dollars weekly, WITHOUT INTEREST. This gives you 195 weeks timein ahich to pay for the piano or the player-piano, dred and forty-six dollars and twenty-five cents more, Your weekly dues are larger, also: Two dollars a forthe piano. But your i to make your payments (one same whether you select a piano or a player-piano. In other, words you pay five dollars as a privilege to participate in this co-operative sale, This tive-dollar payment is credited to the price of whichever instrument you decide to take—and_you are then privileged to take your choice— the piano or the player-piano. ‘This makes it plain, doesn’t it? ONEILL-ADAMS Co Sixth Avenue, 20th, 21st and 22d Streets. Main 5 week, as against one dollar and twenty-five cents a week initial payment and the length of time given in which hundred and ninety-five weeks) are identically the tore, Sth Floor, Take 22d Street Elevator,