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ql te qt*, ‘ Hd } ¥* UDNEW YORKER { 7.50 10.00 15.00 | JUDGE DINNEAN DEAD; WELL-KNOWN FIGURE ON THE EAST SIDE oleintninlelatainininlateteinteteta DINNEAN’S DEATH REMOVES QUAINT ntate Justice “Tom” Was Known to} All Bowery Denizens in | “Good Old Days.” WIDOW SURVIVES HIM. Took the Palm in Beefsteak Contest, Eating 103-4 Pounds. made some years ago that the sacred A Quaint and picturesque character of} 54me of the Bowery be changed to some ol, New York, @ well-known Tammany |"¥ and hifalutin’ title, Dinnean was Doliticlan and friend of the Sullivans in Cig nes io implore him te meyers thelr patmiest days, has passed away in /ine sactiioge, The “Dig Fellows didwe the death of Justice Thomas P. Dinnean| need any persuasion, but he pald a ®t his home in Emmons avenue, Sheepa- [tribute to Dinnean’s powers of argu- head Bay. ment. “Tom” Dinnean wes known to every Occasionally the Justice got above one who walked the Bowery in the Fourteenth street, He presided at « days when thi y “good. | Panquet given four years ago at Del- Me an Pred Was still "6008." nionico's in honor of Senator Jack Fits waa born fifty-eight years ago In| gerald of the Third Assembly District, [sTaI Jout the | Is O those periods have bee num progress but little tory. is the ste ands, morning by r, are as tos P. 3 M tol PM and half a day first-class men, week. Jaquads of four te lower eas! ed to use only pea far no disorder h though the iw the old Fourteenth Ward and spent! and his constituents said he made a most of his life east of the Bowery. | creditable showing, For many years he was clerk of the! big fellows. Police courts of Manhattan, He spent| For many years a bachelor, his leisure reading taw and was ad-|Ditnean married a few years ago. Mitied to the bar in 18%, In 18 he a Was elected for ten years a Justice of | the Munloipal Court, Second District. | He delonge! to the Tim Sullivan Asso- ciation and was a member of the New York Athletic Club. Dinnean was seen at his best when in February, 1907, he won the beefsteak | eating champlonsh!p at the Musha Bera | Club in a contest held in the Atlantic Garden, on the Bowery, Beefsteak ere at that period the favorite is of the men about town with re leanings, and many picturesque eMaracters gathered to see Dinnean win the belt with a record of 10% pounds. ‘Mwer> was enormous cheering when the winner modestly announced at the close of the feast that he could easily have eaten more. WAS FAMOUS FISHERMAN AND YACHTSMAN. Justice Dinnean spent much time at Sheepshead Bay and was a famous fish- erman and yachtsman. He owned tho| auxiliary sloop Nomad, in which four | seasons ago he made a tour along the coazt totaling more than a thousand mules, and won some notable races in| the Sound, in Jamaica Bay and in the} @hrewabury River, She was forty-three | feet over all and fourteen feet beam. | By his attractive personality and | ready Irish wit Dinnean held his place | on the East Side. Fifteen years ago he won # case for aix Chinamen accused | of stealing electric current by spring- ing on the prosecution the sudden pus: | sie, “What is electricity?” None of them could answer and the Chinese were acquitted. “They couldn't tell | what had been stolen,” Dinnean used to boast. He got twenty votes for himself in a house in Suffolk street by walking in! and telling the astonished inmates that he used to live there wien he was a boy. The Out-You-Go Club of city! marehais was with him to a man as @} matter of principle. He always stood up for their fees. When the impious Justice His | wife, but no children, surviv prominence. new styles draw of correct footwear. of now tion wae fixe Hing among the | Witiam Crozier, Chief of Or Arm the United States be obtained at strike he ton Hall, the strike rm expressed th highly pleased over the p Aw was the case in form as outline to9 P.M; Saturday, M., with two hours of or wages ranging from The method for bringing the men out is the sending of a large number of ckets ea THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1913. _ KE HABIT TAKES BARBERS OUT AGAIN. FOR $24,600 ALIMONY): = 7..." ast Side Shaveless Third Time in Mrs. Van Ness’s Claim Aguinst For: Two Months When Walk Out rdered. | having more than an ho! legal hollda » $13 a week for whose salaries now average, it is claimed, but $9 or $10 a ‘ \ Nall through were instruct pa nm reported, al | of the picketing Williams of Washington mony in to be pe ! George's, Hanover Square. SHOES } Never before have women’s feet been brought into such The at- tention to the shoes. Careful dressers are pay- ing more attention to this. They know theimportance We have helped a great many women in this matter. Queen Quality Shoes are a guarantee style and “right ” fashions. $3.50 to $5.00 A few at $6.00 and up QUEEN QUALITY BOOT SHOP 32 West 34th Strect Midway between the Waldorf and the MecAlpin. O Will Hold Wednesday Second Floor 121 Tailored Suits Five Fall models of Novelty Bayadere, Diagonal Cheviot, Wool Poplin, Chiffon Broadeloth, Combination Styles in all the Fall colorings. \ 20.00 Regular Values up to $32.50 75 Smart Blouses Best & Co! A Very Unusual Sale of Women’s and Small Women’s Apparel at this season’s lowest prices 18.50 85 Silk Dresses Fight Models for Street, Matinee, or Dance wear, in Charmeuse, Meteor and Fancy Crepes are represented. ,in all the Millinery colorings. Regular Values up to $30.00 85 Coats ) | { Four Models in Colored Chiffon, White Crepe de Seven Models, Silk Lined Wool Plush or Boucle, } Chine, Cream Shadow Lace and Cream Net. Velvet Trimmed Chinchilla and Plaid Back Motor | Coats. | 4,25 18.50 \ Regular Values up to $6.00 Regular Values up to $30.00 NN Will Close Out 40 Serge Dresses A collection of Foreign Trotteur styles, in taupe, black, ete. navy, Formerly up to $25.00 25.00 Will Close Out Riding Habits severa Custom imade in tine quality English smart models, Cloths, Formesly up to $45.00 j biey AGED 92, SHE SUES fives mer Husband's Estate Goes Back 41 Years. ipreme rday for $100 4 6 estate of her former ed a divorce from whe later mar wall-on- Hudson, The administrators of Ransom and “a Never judge Oatmeal by the cost alone, or by the size of the package, stu 8. arland, pre which Mrs the taste, Van contend, was paid $10,000 wettlenoent is untrue. Justice Renedit took the case from the jury stating It was one of law and will announce bia decision lat Van Ness is stopping at th her son-in-law, Albert Koss Parsons, at Garden City. Thts, Mrs. Van Ness says, <—-—-- LONDON POLICE FORM UNION Rash to Join Organt ton to Kine force Demand LONDON 28. The policemen of Tondon have become {noculated witht The WO Company. 8 UFFalO.N.Y. the trade-union idea and a provisional = ONEILL-ADAMS Co. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City § Dollars anda .- Happier Home * Copyriaht, 1018, O'Nel\l-Adame Co, FTER the evening meal, there is an hour or so that usually decides whether the home is a real home or merely an address. If your home is genuine—if its members are fond of it—there is musie in the evening—the finer and more varied, the better. Most every one realizes this; but unfortunately there are many home pianos whose pianists have gone away—to school—to work—to a home of their own, perhaps. The piano is silent—the days are dull. For $5 you can change all this! For $5 you can have more and better music than the ordinary pianist could ever furnish. For $5 you can place in your home this week a splendid player piano. It only requires the in- sertion of a music roll and the pressure of any one’s feet on the treadles to play all of the best music in existence. It will play your favorite operas— dance music—songs—any and all melodies—in a brilliant manner and in perfect time. You will never regret it if you make this initial $5 payment during our Co-operative Sale. It will bring you a wonderful instrument immediately which will brighten each day of your home life like a sunbeam breaking through a dark cloud. The Best Player Piano Come to this store expecti for the piano. Each piano is beautifully cased. as any you ever heard. music. You don’t need to know a thing about music except to know that you on this co-operative plan. absolutely. Read it, It is printed large in this advertisement. —giving them the player piano free and clear of any further payments. A business man was piano, won't they?” player piano—your own selection, fi indefinitely. i you over 45 cents in all, Cut thiy coum O'NEILL AD. Oth Ave. 2 New York All of the features of the co- operative plan are carried out the planos, with the tion that ‘the terms are one dollar and ent & week Instead of pianios wld un your twenty-five as on the player plano—two lara a week, by the number of dishes the package makes, ¢ to see a standard $550 player piano. You are entitled to buy cither a $550 . player piano for $395, or a $350 piano for $248.75 and pay only $2 a week for the player piano and $1.25 a week A $5 first payment puts either the piano or player piano in your home immediately. Now we want to show you exactly what this player piano is—how it looks—how it sounds—how it plays and how you can test all these important points. Because you have got to be absolutely satisfied with this co- operative purchase—otherwise it will be a bad thing for this store—and that isn’t co-operation, you kyow. It will beautify any home in its rich mahogany and pure design the tone—coming from the best of hammers, wires and expertly built sounding board—is as full, clear and sweet When you play it as a player piano you will be amazed at the ease with which you can produce acceptable controlling the expression are readily grasped—the operation of the treadles is almost effortless. We can only repeat—you find every advaatage of a $550 player piano in this magnificent instrument, we are offering to you You may say “But I can’t discover all this in the store!” Nor do we expect you to. quainted with the player piano or the piano in your home. If, within a month's time, you feel that you have not secured a wonderful bargain—tell us, and we will come and get. the instrament and pay back every penny you have paid us. And if you feel that you would like to exchange the player piano for a new one during the first year of your ownership—do it. We will send a similar or higher priced instrument to your home without money loss to you. For five years, our guarantee (which is also the manufacturer's) stands back of your player piano Should you die before the player piano is paid for, we will at once make out a receipt in full to your family To begin with, you get nine rolls of music with your i These you can exchange or other rolls for 5 cents a roll, You can get nine other entirely different selections (your choice) in exchange for 45 cents. These in turn can be exchanged for still different selec- tions (your choice) for 5 cents a roll, and so on and so on, In this way nine new selections never cost ONFILI- GRAND RAPIDS FURNITUR: él Our Terms Apply to New York, New Jersey, Long laland, Conn FREE ry oe We Pay fe cc. Freight detober only “$4.00 A WEEK furnishes Your Home with 350 Worth of Serviceable Furniture Judge it by | Sewing Machines on Credit. All Goods Marked In Plain Figures and | Ever Sold at And ; Co-operative . ., Guarantee We, the Newton Piano Co, manufacturers of piano Num. be + and the under. rs jointly guaran. ‘pu ike it. The simple devices for plane tor the petted ars from date. Any in material or worke manship appearing within that time will be re the piano replaced it new one of like grade, with- out cost, upon its retu the under, rd. ese You will get ae- with the mu @ olin, Why Music Rolls Cost But 5 Cents Each---at O’Neill’s just at the point of buying o these player pianos the other day when he suddenly stopped. He thought of something. He asked, “What will the music cost me? I suppose the rolls will cost about as much as the » of at any time for t dollar a roll. $395 ‘This guarantee bs our Bond of Coan. This tag will | vlan oF play= offered fur sale through this roo Rolls that will cost you elsewhere 1 dollar and 23 cents, 1 ke Your Own Terms tieut. a f 69" ‘QQ 98] Fraaea 449” ERB | Another thing: Under this plan, if you want more than these nine rolls, you can obtain any music roll in the catalogue dollar and 50 cents, 1 dollar and 75 cents agd 2 dollars each | 4 can be had here at the flat price of 1 dollar a roll. These also can be exchanged for other roll and these in turn for others at 3 isic roll question is not an expe so, you one here, be found in America, Sixth Avenue, 20th, 21st and 22d Streets Main Store—Fitth Floon—Take 244 Street Flevatore, an endless chain of music rolls at your command for the small fixed charge of only 5 cents a roll—and the selection of this chain of rolls is constantly available out of a library of over 40 thousand rolls of as well selected music as there is to at 5 cents a i see, You j geen