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brakes the care came together, shower- tng ecrape of glass right and left. After a few moments of panic ft waa found that no one was badly hurt. Dr. Hughes | Broadway near the hotel to-day when of the Polyclinic dressed slight cute of |he Was struck by a southbound trolley three or four girie, ear, He was thrown in front of a horse attached to a The euch thought he got the/ iit by Street Car, Ram Over by| ahead. Before frosted aon, of Wilmington, Det, who has been stopping at the Grand Hotel, Thirtieth Street and Broadway, was crossing Wagon, op. Harkness the New York Hospital internal injurtes guftering. from Plano dealer two fractured ribs ec New Yorks Leading Victrola Stores and BROS INC Victor Factory Distributors + Telephone Murray Hill 3700 4STORES: Send for Catalogue 563 FIFTH AVE Common Sense Talk 23 WEST 42°ST. ft on Victrola Service HAT makes Landay Service BET. STH & 6TH.AVES different? It is different be- 427 FIFTH AVE. cause you are assured of a choice of a BET 36TH & 30TH STS 27 WEST 34™ST. very large stock of Victrolas always, we carry a complete stock to supply BET STH @ 6TH.AVES not only one store, but FOUR large stores in New York City. The same is true with records. The records you want to hear or buy are on hand because we watch carefully and keep our stock com- plete and up to date daily. Four street entrance stores make it very convenient and time-saving to come here. It is not necessary to go into a crowded store, up five or six flights in an elevator. Here— prompt attention and quick service are at your command. TIAL UAOMIHA T i NAAT: SA A Favorite! It will be well worth your while to try out Landay service. Add to your pleasure and convenience—come in the first time you are in the neighborhood. Easy Payment Terms Victrolas $15 to $400. Records 60c up. BOR THE CONVENIENCE OF PATRONS Open Evenings at 23 West 42d St. The Brisk Smoke— “Bull” Durham see an alert-looki When young man in a livel t rls “Bal” Bucham cgrte-"s he mata ingest ~ pun a crisp sentence with a of “Bull”, His mii Sponds to the freshness that’s in the taste of “Bull”, Fis senses are ed by the unique aroma of “Bull”. A cigarette of “Bull” Durham just fits in with keen thinking and forceful action. A oe: GENUINE -BULE DURHAM ____~=—~ SMOKING TOBACCO You get more wholesome, lasting satisfaction out of “Bull” Durham than ph for REE pachece of from any other tobacco ever rolled up into a cigarette. Made of “bright” Virginia-North Carolina leaf, “Bull” Durham is rich, fragrant, mellow-sweet—the mildest, most enjoyable of smokes. <Roll your own” with “Bull” and join the army of who have found that so good a cigarette cannot be in any other way. and a package of cigaratt sail bats be weailel foe any address in U.S. on request. Ad- riog “Bull” Durham, Durham, ‘THB AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. | ing birth control, was arraigned bo- | fore Judge Henry D. Clayton in the | Criminal Branch of the United States | It 4s doubtful if it will go to trial even =|spurned this offer and to have in- THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1916. _ ; BIG MEN WILL HEAD HOST OF THES ‘AD MRS, SANGER "AT COURT HEARNG Woman in Birth Control Case MISSING MUSIGAN SLAN OR PRONE, HER MOTHER FEARS Miss Belle Fonrow, Who Dis- appeared Thursday, Often ANDREW FREEDMAN HOME’ Leading New Yorkers Named as In- corporators of Institution for Aged and Indigent. (Gpecial to The Brening World.) ALBANY, Jan. 18.—pectal legisla- tion for incorporation of Andrew Freedman Home, to which the late) Yinancier left most of his fortune, was) introduced to-Gay by Senator Ogden | Defies Government, Refus- ing to Stop Crusade. Carried Big Sum. Fearing that her daughter, Miss Belle Fonrow, twenty-three years old, has been lured away and has either been killed or is being held prisoner, Mra. Mary Fonrow of No, 1453 Forty-fourth Street, Brooklyn, has started the police on a city-wide search, “My daughter had no love affair,” declares Mra, Fonrow. “She was in love only with her music. She was @ fine pianist and a violinist, too.” Miss Fonrow was a music teacher and an insurance agent. She left home last Thursday morning, telling her mother she was going to a con- servatory in Manhattan and would then make some collections from her insurance clients She left the Josephs home about 4 o'clock in the afternoon and went to the Insurance company to turn in her collections, Since the death of her father, Jacob, about fifteen months &g0, Miss Fonrow has looked after | his {insurance business. From the | insurance oftice she went to the| Mrs. Margaret L. Sanger, arrested by the Government authorities be- cause abe sent through the mails a publication called “The Woman Reb- 1,” which contained articles advocat- District Court to-day At the request of Assistant United States District Attorney John C, Knox the case was postponed until Jan, %4. on that date In court to-day Mrs. Sanger gave the impression that she was posing as a “martyr.” Sho refused to retain a lawyer, but appeared in her own be- half and insisted upon an immediate hearing, Beside her stood her sister, Mias Ethel Byrne | Many men and women who are known as “freo thinkers" on sex prob- lems filled the court-room and thore were more out in the corridor. Most of those in the court room had | home of a cousin, Jacob Minkowits, attended a dinner for Mrs. Sanger|a machinist living at No. 38 Market last evening at which Mrs, Rose) Street, It was upon ng there in Pastor Stokes and Mrs. Elsie Clews | the evening that she disappeared, Parsons favored birth control. Among| Mrs, Fonrow sald ¢ bout alx ago & young man, also a music others in the court room were Leon- | we ard Abbott, Fola LaFollette, Jessie | tea er began to call on her daugh- Achiey, Florence Lewis, Mrs, L, B.| ter. When he rang the bell Miss Block, Max Heldelberg, Maude Ma- | Ponrow Would go downstatrs and tatk i i » him in the hallway lone, Mrs. Florence Wolleston, Mrs. | nun was never breusht The young Into the apart- Alice Frank and Mrs, Zelma Corning | ment and introduced, so Mrs, Fonrow Brandt, did not know his name nor his de- When the case was called and the scription, Since the girl disappeared ntinuance granted Mrs. Sanger said | bia visits have ceased. » the Court: Mrs. Mamie Fishbin, the janitress, “{t there is a further postponement | describes this mysterious musiclan a the 24th—what will happon then?" | 4s 4 youth of about twenty-five, with “The District Attorney will keep | thin face, who wore a soft hat and you informed,” replied the Court, “If always carried a violin case. Mrs. Fonrow says her daughter went to a concert with this man the night before she disappeared, returning home about 11 o'clock. Her daugh- 5 who have | ter nad started to take lessons from rushed to my aid,” sald Mrs. Sanger) banuel Goldberg, in Borough a further postponement is planned he will let you know go that you will not) en- 1, Mils, The tneorporators named) are Samuel Baker, Hugene L. Bushe, Riohard Croker jr. August Belmont, De Lancey Nicoll, Valentine P. Bny- | der, Walter Luttgen, Jacob H. Sehift, | Nathan Straus, Edward B. McCall, | Anson McCook Beant, Henry A. Gil-} dersieeve, Charles BE. Rushmore, John Fe. Campbell, Charles J. Wittenbers, Daniel B. Freedman, Alvin Unter- myer, Chartes 68. Guggenheimer, Harry Bronner, Joseph P. Day and Bernard Sachs. The bill states the Home is de- signed for and indigent perwons of both sexes, without regard to re- ligious faith, Imited only to those who shall at one time have been in| good circumstances, but by reasons | of adverse fortune, have become poor and dependent. st SAILING TO-DAY. Korea, London, Mohawk, Jackso! City of 8 | ACKER, MERRALL & CONDIT Fst. COMPANY 2820. New Laid Eggs 39c Doz. | Maplehurst Brand Elm City Hams to newspaper men before t Fonrow said, but when came up. “I am guilty of no and will fight to the bitter end home Goldberg stated that | It was Tenoreee in the Saurieooet | hat saw Stina Fonrow a week aio would promise to refrain from # two lessons, he sald, and both times matter | he had seen her mother in the apart- through the mails. She is said to have| ment, any -more “birth control” The missing girl is described as sisted on a trial, decisions in any form, ‘The bill reads a follows sion shall be rendered or am Jobe Hehnatedt Tells Court Com- ectly or indirectly by any panion Urged Him On, bi ee Siete gee yr John Behnstedt, a watchman of No. |tion under Whose auspices auch 436 Bast One Hundred and Thirty-eighth |mateh or exhibition is h reet, told a weird story of why he } |result of such sparring m: ~ killed Michael Laquinto when he was hibition.” —»—_—— Celebrated 57 Years Wea, Mr. and Mrs, William Woodill of 1! Avenue and Twelfth Street, Long | City, celebrated the fifty-sevent put on trial to-day £ Criminal Branch of th murder in the s nd | got him drunk, snes ni. /f¥ing & revolver and told him hi © enough Ha versary of their wedding yesterday by « to POU Vora Hotes d and family reunion, Mr. Woodill is eighty- A him again ted three sho! ts three years old and his wife, Theresa, tnto the bootblack, | elghty-one. He was formerly local man:| Justice Weeks accepted Behnstedt’s er for the Standard Ol! Company. | pl of guilty of murder in the second Their son, Willlam L. Woodill, is ajdegree, and the man will testify at Deputy Internal Revenue Collector. the trial of Donoghue to-morrow. | 34th Street—-New York 145 Misses’ Suits Brown and Green. Models suitable present or early Spring wear. 85 Misses’ Broadcloth Suits. 115 Misses’ Coats half and full lined; some fur trimmed. 15.00 20.00 net combinations. Fo ———— | fellgwas 5 feet 4 inches In height; auburn hair, fair complexion, well FORBID BOXING DECISIONS. built; wore 4 blue cordurdy suit, blue Bul at Alba with a blue and white striped nowt: on, white shirt waist of linen, e@tockings ue shoes, She loteions fn boxiag bouts got a 1 a brief ‘or her muste and | Jott to-day, in addition to Gov mall watch with a black and [man’s punch of last week. goto: | \a yh of Mant intro¢ jio'pravent abmalutely, anno WEIRD STORY OF KILLING. | } Misses’ Department—Third Floor OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & G Final Price Reductions Wednesday Of Gabardine and Whipcord, in Black, Navy, Reduced to Reduced to 20.00 Of Wool Velour, Chiffon Broadcloth and Seal Plush; 25.00 95_Misses’ Dresses Misses’ Dancing and Party Dresses of Taffeta and Satin, in pastel colors, with lace and Reduced to 1 9}c Ib. | Weight—8 to 9 lbs. each Lean and tender. Finest Fresh Creamery | | Butter | | 39c». Mayflower Brand | All lost or found articles ade’ vertised in The World will be Meted at The World's Informa- tion Bureau, Pulitzer Building Arende, Vark Row; World's Uptown Office, northwest cor- mor S8th ft. and Broadway: World's Harlem Office, 155 West 125th St, and World’s Brooklyn Office, 202 Washing- ton St., Brooklyn, for 30 days following the printing ef the 15.00 for Reduced to 12.00 B. Altman & Cao. A Selection of Chic Hats for Afternoon or Dress Wear specially priced at $17.00 will constitute a Sale of unusual interest for to-morrow in the Trimmed Millinery Department (Third Floor). These Hats, originated in B. Altman & Co.’s ateliers especially for this occasion, reveal the latest Paris mandates expressed in satin, maline and straw. They are suitable either, for Winter resort wear or for demi-saison use in town. Exceptional Values in Taffeta & Twilled Silk Umbrellas at $3.50 ‘ will be offered to-morrow (Wednesday): These Umbrellas are of excellent-quality silks, are finished with novelty handles in interesting variety, and are in styles for Men and Women. Men’s Balta Shoes A special last has been designed, giving the maximum amount of comfort without a sacrifice of style. This Shoe fits closely at the heel and instep and is free-fitting at the ball and toe. It should especially appeal to the max who experiences discomfort from wearing the conventional lasts. B. Altman & On. Evening and Afternoon Gowns in new and unusually attractive models (exclusively reserved to B. Altman & Co.) are displayed in The Dep’t for Imported and Special Costumes (Third Floor) Fifth Avenw-Madison Avemr, MUST be Recs unin Hae be ena purchases ive. t tl my pees for which have been are am it rate, a vielt NOW te our stare, orest flowis pith REDUCTIONS up te THIRD BIG WEEK Open Saturday Evenings 8-Plece Gothic Period Dining Room Suite in Butler Oak, beautifully carved. f Buffet is 72 ins. long, with large 2 and Reeders ON! (OH PPI(C carats] 90%