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fot such a vacation, or one-quarter of It, during the hard winter. What Mag.: s Say. AM the City Magistrates were deep- ly §mterested in Magistrate Corrt- gan’ deliberate pronouncement last night that New York was a wide-open, timerously policed town, In which tho gromser forma vice and violence we: on the increas T w interested in Magicrate Co nese in charg described by him directly u id= g the condition of things » Mayor Gaynor and “fifteen months of govern | ment by epistie.” All the Magistrates w admiration of Mas.st dependence in voions None of them was Willing to ate mem of facts or his conclusions. Mag istrate Butts in Harlem Court said ne thought this the most important beur- ng of the stat t Called Fearless Public Servant. “Et Judge Corrigan | 6 all the ditions he desert fixed the respons) vility own mind after careful oo wes his high duty to speak out io the citisens of New York. I'll go furtner and say he has rendered a great public service and demonstrated to our citizens that their magistrates are fearies: independent public servants.” Magistrate He ment was exceedingly interesting, but declined to talk about it for pubiica- doa, n hh Squarely Up to Mayor. Magistrate rigan had carefully prepared his statement and sent a copy Of St to each newspaper in the city. He began with the bald statement that crime waa increasing and the appre- henaion and detection of criminals de- creasing, but that some people were not able to fix the responsibility. Then the statement continued: “That responsibility rests upon one | man and on him alone, and that man Js the Mayor. The prevention and de- | tection of crime are in the hands of the | police, and Gaynor rules the force. He has cunatied the power of the com- missioner, attempting to exercise It himaelf, and by so doing he has de- moralized the force and made easy the way of the transgressor.” Later in the statement Judge Corrigan enumerated eight ways in whioh the| wide-open condition of the town is dein- | onstrated: 1 Complete ¢isregard of the excise law. | % The prevalence of crimes of| violence and robbery, connected with the social evil. 4. The failure of the police to molest | Xoept with a few spectacular raids | ‘open | and the viait of the collector gambling houses and pool rooms. 4. General graft or partnership between | policemen and jaw-breakers, 5. The city is oyerrun with impudent etrong arm beggars, 6. Criminals from all over the country have gathered in New York for a pre- sumably safe harvest. 7. Crimes of violence, murders, high- Way robberies, gang battles increase and the criminals are undetected and unpunished, 8 The police are contensedly afraid to o their duty. “If a man keeps out of trouble he is doing well.” The safest way in the presence of @ crime, “ls to turn the other way." Government by Epistle, ‘The statement concludes as follows: It is to this condition of the force that all the other evils must be attributed ‘When a policeman feels that he has not the support of the dominant authority, that the word of any convicted crook will be taken in preference to his and that he must submit to a beating at the hands of the criminal or a complaint under the Mayor's orders, it Is idle to hope that he will even attempt to do police duty. “That all thie is true any one may prove to his own satisfaction by asking &ny policeman he may to know or any reporter in the city whether the facts are not as I have stated. We have had fifteen months of gov- ernment by epistle, and this ts the re- sult, ‘The remedy {s obvious, simple and drastic, It les in the hands of the citi- zens." The Tribune reported to-day that Mayor Gay iy to the statement when {t was read to him last night was "Good night Cae Sane ROSALSKY SAYS POLICE FEAR DRAWS CROOKS TO CITY. Judge Rosalsky in the Court of Gen- eral Sessions to~lay declared that poltce conditions existing in this clty constitute 4n invitation to crooks of other oitles to come here and operate, He added that the police was dem Attitude of the Police that policemen were pickpockets bv plaints would be made against them by ause crooks, The Police Commissioner, he as- sorted, wes only too eager to entertain such complaints. “We are trying*police officers and not crooks,’ aid the Judge. The comment of the © the trial and conviction of Alexander Marks, etghteen years of age, clown, who was found guilty of ates ing % from a woman's purse in the Grand Central Station of the » The arrest was made 1 Rotohtord. Pickpocket Arrests Few. After the prisoner had 4 to the Tombs until Apr tence will be in aid to the Jury “Nearly two years have passe 1 had a pickpo f for trial. Som were able to break up 4 1 va of these offenders posed, Judge Rosais that the police are timid about making arrests of these people, due to the fact that the policemen fear that crooks will lodge com- plaints against them to the Police Commissioner, who is only too eager to entertain w#uch com- plaints. “we are no longer trying crooks, mg to me, but police office: “The present demoralized con- Aition of the Police Department ts largely due to the conditions that exists, Officers are afraid to make arrests of pickpockets for just- ling, and as shown in this o Bave to wait for the crime to be ot committe Should Arrest Crooks ow @ay other Judge i ciizen ty at stake and that ni n in thelr Federal Official Absolves Her From on It Kallenberg, Also Arrested in Mail Fraud Scheme, Makes and | n said the rtato- | sistant United States A ompllelty in the “Hible™ awind The Countes the 31 friend. He cal a year ago from Sweden wh his fa In made by & smug old ragca: to a system which he has devised for preying upon the religious sensibilities of pers whose family a bereavement has ri cently occurred, by pretending to have sold Bib collecting the fictitious balan the purchases. “Ite a -wonderful scheme,” he re- marks suavely tn one act, “a wonderful scheme. Religion and death are claoely Unked, That's the secret. The postal authorities first got word of the real life scheme from Mri Un J, Hynes of No, 24 Troy avenue, Brooklyn, A few days after her hus- band died she received a letter saving that the dead man had paid $9 on a| Bible which -he had arranged to buy Postal Inspector Jo using Mrs. Hynes covered that the letters livered at the home of Mrs. Anna Oxen- stein at Huntington Terrac from the Huntington railroad station, A registered letter which was sent by she li pralized owing to the and] arrest | was @ countess and pro ©, She would not go into details eare n- | was a servant the home of Ss. Howland, She was taken to Brook and detained, as was Louis Sonndhe: her brottier, who was found in t house. Mrs. Oxenstein insisted that he art followed a cireus Declares Nobody of robbing the t us wide who trave other surface lines. “These and other cases show (COUNTESS TAKEN AS SWINDLER IS NOW EXONERATED — mplicity in Scheme to Rob Kin of Dead. a Clean Breast. tess Anna Gustav Oxentlerna ave been fully exonerated by As- rney Bick of tor , the Count and Bertel ‘Kall nberg were arraigned to-day before ke Chi field in the United States In Brooklyn. it Cou nt of the Washing Kailenberg Confesse Kallenberg made a clean breast of the whole affair this afternoon, and | ry he told convinced the prose-| cutor that nelthe Countess nor her husband were in any way involved. Kallenberg, who will plead guilty, | claims that he was the victim of mis 4 confidence. He entered tnto the ne, he says, on the advice of a @ to this cou only e nays, er 1s @ court attendant in the Jace. The “Hible’ swindle ts being thor- mughly exposed just at present in a current Broadway melodrama. Pretended Sale of Bible: this play extended reference 1s in es to thelr dead relatives and due on Mar- that $6 was still due. A request the balance made. The letter was signed “C. W. Schmi¢t” which is alleged to have been the name used by Kallenber| Mra, Hynes knew husband had not purchased a Bible and she sent the letter te the postal authori- positively that her As fresh complaints continued to pour in from half a dozen or more intended victims the Post Office people were able to fix the perlod of greatest activity as just before the Christn time when the thies are most e€ as holidays—a n's sympa erage silly aroused Sends Decoy Letters, @ correspond: e with Schmidt, name, and dis- ere being de- two miles ‘sons Was receip for in -®chmidt’s name by Mrs. Oxensteln, who was found be the owner of the house in which Inspector Parsons questior ertay. She insisted that ye a ttle, ctor let Kallen & answer a tele @ was Gusta ave Oxenstel warned Kallenberg to clear ce JUDGE PARKER'S DENIAL. noMr. Allan A, I the Sens 1x 1 c ng six ates, have veen re y seeking \ Mr 1 stly arrested, nevertheless roke should be ed whon they are | “The conditions that emt elty ave simp): 8 of oth vad pursue their nefartous bust ness, Apparently the police are afraid to do their duty." in this an invitation to th towne to come here | of the aeroplane in rushing a body of | | plane for a distance of two miles. He ing from 50 of the twely and the combined welght of the ma eh r noble husband, the Count Gus. | pounds. ae ANNA, | OXENS- TIERNA <n CITY KEPT INDARK | ONCONDITIONSIN CARNEGIETRUST (Continued From Fjrst Pase.) and her husband were | arrested yeuterday at thelr handsome home at Huntington, L. 1, and Kallen- berg was taken at the home of Samue Howland of No. 43 Bast Forty-ninth etreet, brother-in-law of August Bol- | mont and Prest n | Nat lbes | | | ae Mama had been Superintendent of the) The Public Service Com he wrote the letter he w Letter to the Bankers. A copy of the letter by which “In re Carnegie Trust Compans he broke away § Cummins crowd not from now. Mr. ¥ known from ¢ P ‘oting practically half of f cleaning ‘ondition that then existed in rnegie Trust an interview with (District-Attorney | as its attorney, th do €0, or to go on Its board as was » requested to rlew Arthur Moore jr, of the Carnegie Tru: those in control of tts affairs met Mr, Willlam J. Cummins, whose home, until shortly before that t had been In Nashville, Te was assured that community, Mahest esteem ané regard aaa min Why He Accepted Post. “At his urgent request IT told him act for him and als > this with some 1 was at the time act- of Patms, the American the National pany and a trusted Heutenant olds; six furlongs.—Bayerin, 107 (Wil-|@Ps 80 that I thought their ea \xon), 8 to 1, even and out, 1; Kinelion, |drop off. I washed, their he feved we all des Urged Them rt Quaver, ¢ Senff, Coletta, | wonderful.” (s A Archduke, Charl finished as nam nN. Parsons be- | fairs should be in a for to anization of their all objection- transaction of to nuke me its attorney whatev sin alding ther 4 purpose to accomplish a | hale fuftongs. lorie. Bryan, 108; Allandal Queen, 109; Indora, 108; Lilly Paxton, | 1u Grand’ Peggy, 103 5 Dee Sam M: end eliminatin, methods in the ances T have various notes and © ted her inno- | Advised Quick Colle as prosident of mann took his place, on » fully advised that steps and pol- n Inspector Parsons went to ar- rest Kallenberg last nixht he found hin putting on his livery preparatory to assisting the butler in serving dinner Before he made himself known, the at he whould spare no ef call. He stood at his elbow he man talked. Parsons says and that ut at | | JORDAN J. ROLLINS Y sald to-day ne | situation and | Oldest Lager Beer Brewery in the United States 2 an interview “The P. &M. - Bock Beer On Draught at All Customers’ Bottled at the Brewery ae “ F Family Trade Supplied by Leading Dealers & Groce: Peete rence a ean | Brewery and Bottling Works, PARK AV., 50th TO 51st ST.,N. Y. aod Restaurauts THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAROH 23, 1911 'Countess Taken as Swindler Vindicated bu Prosecutor. TWELVE NOW FLY IN ONE AEROPLANE; NEW WORLD'S RECORD MADE IN FRANCE: me Aviator Louis Breguet in Army Test Carries Eleven Passengers Two Miles in Four Minutes. PARIS, March %.—The possibilities xcouts from place to place as needed in | time of war was demonstrated at the | Doual meet to-day, when Lieut. Louts | Breguet performed the amazing feat of | carrying eleven passengers on his bi- | flew across the Brayelle aerodrome in four minutes. This was a new worl record for number of individuals car- | The fight was mado at a height vary- | feet. The total weight | persona was 1,316 pounds | @ and its occupants was 2u1 Louis BREGUET. ‘The best previous performance of the! on Feb, 2 took up seven passengers on kind was made by M. Lo Martin, who! a five minutes’ trip. |ioter praising Comming and asking aid! SERVICE BOARD PROPOSES for him rn fio tm January, Wot, and which) APPROVAL OF NEW ROUTES. ‘waa presented to the tronmaster by | Cummins himself, The Cumming syndi- | ca trying to raise cash to keep the Carnegie | Company gome. oom: ostrand and L was then wildly scurrying about \Vants Estimate Board to Establish yonia Avenue es. Williams Pralsed Cummins. | Until a few weeks before Clark Wil- Li lon to-day at the time sent a communication to the Boand of State Comp: | estimate and Apportionment suggesting 1 modification of the proposed Prospect | Park extension of the subway 8; Banking Department, a roller. New Indictments Coming. Supreme Court Gri Jury was ession to-day, When {it meets w it will hand to Jusitce Day ents against two director rnegie Trust Company. las approved by the old Rapid Transit Commissioners, a modification of the of ““yhese indictments are based upon | the same transaction which led to the indictment of William J. Cummins— the alleged misappropriation of $335, 0 of funds of the trust company bor- | | rowed from the Van Norden Trust Company and the Nineteenth Ward Hank, Counsel for the men to be in- H eis dicted will be notified to have them in court { -morrow afternoon. ah Wattman was asked By Cuticura Remedies, Children n hing to say about torney six months Nicol! went this afternoon fondest these riminal Court Building and held | with ecrema. I could not sleep at ni half an hou: nee doctors 5 Mr. Nicoll dented that his visit had | 4 and none anteed: anything to do with the tnvestigation | could do Company After Mr, Nicoll left the District-At- | torney went to the chambers of Justice | Davis. \ saw the CET SEE Tae adver. JACKSONVILLE RESULTS. tisemens of the Cuticura FIRST RAOR—Selling; two-year-olds; Remedies | var and one-half furlongs.—irishtown, 2 la in the; Me 2,7 to 5 and 7 to 10,! hg / paper.We ind ‘Thomas, US (Loftus), 9 | Used the Cuticura Soap, Ointment and ° | Resolvent, and they cured me of eczema. 1 and 6 to 1, second; Yankee |[ also used them ‘on my five childre 1 (Troxter), 18 to 1, 6 te 1 and) Two of them had ecrem 3 y thind. Time, Ss. Coletta, Lady |When my children had eczema, I was Nanuie MeTee, Gagnant, |@0t worried at all, as I knew the Cuti- Mate, Hyntca, Stolenfit, Traymore |2ufa Remedies would do their work, Little Dutch also ran and finished hair would fall out, and they would SECOND RACE —Sellin; three-year-|on their heads, face, and in back of the | would is bodies with Cuticura Soap and they are as clean as the driven snow. Cut Soap and Ointment also cured my chil- . dren of ringworm. I would not be with- Ana’ Collins, Sem! |out the Cuticura, Reme: ies... They are | igned) Mrs. ern Star, |26S, Redfield St., Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. also ran and| 29,1910, @ 103 (Schweitzer), 49 to 1, w to 1 and 6 to| ; Myrtle Marien, 104 (Burton), 6 t to Land even, 3 Time, 1.154 Outeast, Oakley, erleane JACKSONVILLE ENTRIES. | Norld. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. e | Boston, for free book on akin and scalp JACKSONVILIE, Pin, Mar 2 The entr | gigeases and their treatment, TIRST. RACE. Mreates jure, five and 18, Elmeta' Hamilton, 1005 Cattoke, 100 Nit, Hie nat My Molton Daley 114 shCOND ing; four-year-olde fae sort te Lefnin, 105 Wanlen, 10%; Miss Ida May, 108; Lady Deiat, 1s n, 108; Goklen Pearl, 110) The | 108; 110. MD RACK six furlo roe-yearonida and | ts, 8: Babbler, | it aw, 08; dt v car-olds MAKE NEW PLUMES oa “sic: | 1 From Your Old Feathers Herbert Tumer, Aspizin, 104 sou sgieiiigs dpe gpa: ez |TAt Half Their Original Cost, G 8 LOL; Missive, 103; Firewood, "203; ‘Tima, faded and seeming!» Ben ‘Lomond,’ 100; "Definite, 108; Hiren | fli er var east Sixt exe olde and up- | Sniltency feerviceable as new—but fo mile and oneeighth.—tGredan Bend. |f a ALR THE Cost. irae “own, 100: ‘Gaiconda, 100; "First Peer, || Cleaning. Curling. Dyol: St, Josh, 100; Sem Bervard, 109; Poco: | amazon bande the latest, hat. trimming At Ae trom old feathers; Marabout Stoles inade Tignotes three prune apprentice allowance mp Onn Leathers ran Be B; vee five pounte apprentice, allow tp Near st etitmed. Weather Strack muddy | 260 West 125th St. Yer" sy ABA. ose ABs To License Moving Picture Men. ALBANY, March 23.-—Assemblyman Walker of New York to-day introduced a bill compelling operators of moving INSON’S pleture apparatus in etttes of the first RO class to take out a license after pass- flats, ‘practical examination, . In ‘New PATENT BARLEY ork the Heense is to be granted by Propane of Water Supple, | The Only Infant Food etricity; in Buffalo and All Grocers and Drugs! the Mayor. pi aL ak Zz ® ” Fastern Parkway routes and suggesting s{atso that routes te c trand avenue and Livonia avenue. Both these routes have heretofore been approved by the commission, at least in hed for Nos- sends {ts recommendation to the Estimate that ed by that body als al rapid transtt routes, “Just Say” HORLICK’S Original and MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. More healthful than Tea or Coffee, Agrees with the weakest digestion, Delicious, invigorating and nutritious, Rich milk, malted grain, powder form, A quick lunch prepared in a minute, Take no substitute, Ask for HORLICK’S, O@& Others are imitations, 44 West 34th St. BET, B'WAY AND STH AVE, FINAL) Clean-up (LIMITED TIME ONLY) It costs 50 cents an agate line for us to publish this advertisement. eat, insist- ent claim is this— what we adver- tise we have. Now, wouldn’t we be foolish to advertise all me- dium and heavy weight garments in the store, re- gardless of cost, at $9.50 and $14.50 unless we were able to back upourstatement? You’ll find exactly what And every garmentistheuncalled- for product of some famous Merchant Tailor, built to order to bring from $25 to $75. We are the originators system away back in 1879. All $15, $18, $20, $22.50 and $25.00 Suits and Overcoats Don’t you want your piano to be something different from com- i A piano of a rent design and of monplace pi distinctly differ make whose distinction to your home? PEASE PIANOS | then are sure to interest you; the j tone has a distinct quality of its | own; it is sure to please the most em, rophecy that he wit Scratched Night and Day. Mother | clegant’ and nat’ rephed with «| Suffered 8 Years, Cuticura Soap | “Pease” record for reliability cov- Sieve cust be ate” and Ointment Cured Ringworm too, | ers over half a century. Prices mode e and terms very “When a child, I suffered eight years | liberal. Whitman which lasted for more than! {aq had sorea all over my chest Wright | makes Hae EE Seat guar- fwe claim. rite for ¢ | bargain list. TE teat! "PEASE PIANO CO., 128 W. 42d St.,nr. Broadway, N.Y. Brooklyn Branch: 34 Flatbush Ave. Newark Branch: They had sores all over their heads, their | med |seratch all night and day, They had it | AL FOR 1O-1ORROW, THE 240A ura LATES(20 kinds POUND BE RCLAY St RTLANDT ST RX BOWS NASSAU BROADWAY iolet Cole, | AN $28, $30, $35, $40.00 and $45.00 Suits and Overcoats 14 And we hold nothing back. These pricesmean Albert, Dress Spring and Winter Raincoats, Cravenette: An assortment of the new Eng- lish soft-roll sacks i and the savings on all remaining Auto and Fur-lined Coats are nately just as big. Cuticnra Soap (25e.) and Cuticura | sip aarmnamarenpgadl Ointment (50c.) are sold throughout the | Corp., sole props., 135 Columbus Ave., | Don’t Persecute your Bowels Cut out cathartics and Parestives, ‘They ase brutal y CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS 1 Tuxedo Suite, Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price Genuine ante: Signature CONVENIENC) HELP WAN 44 West 34th St. Between Broadway and Sth Ave, NEW YORK, Also Siores at SWITCHBOARD ‘ MUST BE COMPE KRANTZ 14 & 16 Summer's, PROVIDENCE, HLOSSOM.—On March 28, at 1.20 A, M., STANDARD OIL COMPANY Schaefer... | A DENIAL Persistent reiteration in various publications that Standard Oil Company has prepared plans for reo} in anticipation of the decision of the United States Supreme Court renders it necessary to state officially and emphatically here is absolutely no truth in such reports. ave been made; no preparations undertaken, ts to the contrary are untrue and misleading. STANDARD OIL COMPANY, By H, C. 23, 1911. Nassau Boule @ held at is late res: 5.0 o'dook ta the Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders