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A ee, WILD ORGIES HELD AT SWINBURNE ettled to-night; 8 FI EDITION. y probably fair, Rw meen mrremrnren wens PRICE ° N E CE NT T Lengel me. Ria _NEW YORK, _FRIDAY, JULY 28, 12 PAGES af “PRICE ‘ONE CENT DOTY’S ASSISTANT THREW [SEX SCHLES COL; WARIN'S ASHES AWAY | “Sere 10 MX omen Witness at Inquiry Tells How He Disposed of Ex-Com- missioner’s Remains. MIXED A GIN RICKEY. Nothing Else Available in Dr. Doty’s Office, Declares . ; Assistant. ‘A dit of evidence as horribly gruesome @s anything which the imagination of agar Allan Poe ever conjured up was ftroduced late this afternoon at the Quarantine investigation, when Arthur Denyse testified that he had mixed a in rickey tn the urn which had con- tained the ashes of former Superintend- ent of Street Cleaning George E. War- ing. The ashes, Denyse said, he had first dumped out the window. All this | ocourred in Dr. Doty’s private office, | where he and his friends, including two Young women, were having a lark. Denyse said that he‘had gone up with the party for a good time. They had ® bottle of gin. “I thought we'd better make some use of that gin,” he said, “and I told them #0, Some one sugzested that I make a rickey. I said I would, and we looked around for something to make it In. There wasn't anything handy, and so one of the men went into the laboratory to get something. ‘He came back with a vase, or urn, I guess you call it. ‘Here's Col. War- ing'a ashes, he said. 1 took the urn over to the window, dumped the ashes out and made a rickey in it after we'd washed it.” “What occurred after that?" “Well, we had a good time," replied the witness. ‘The witness said that Col. Waring had dicd of yqllow fever on Swin- burne Island and that his body had been cremated. “His ashes were knocking around there a long time," he sald. “Nobody claimed them. I don't know that bis @shes were in that vase, but some one's were in it, That's certain. Denyse had previously offered tes- timony to the effect that smuggling was formerly extensively practiced @t Quarantine, that the clerks em- employed there frequently entertained Young women in Dr. Doty's private of- Bice, which was popularly known as “The Greenroom," that gambling was @ls0 indulged in in this same office and that immigrants were frequently treated with cruelty. Questioned by Mr. Cohen, the attorney eppointed by Gov. Dix to conduct the Investigation, Den; said that he worked at the Quarantine station from 1900 to 1908. It was part of his duty to board all incoming vessels between sun- @own and midnight in search of news. He was authorised by the deputy health officers of the port to clear incoming coastwise vessels. He said that he would merely row out to the coastwise vessels in a small boat, receive the ship's report and the fee of $8 In a bucket and drop into this same bucket the “pratique” granting the ship clear- ance. GAMBLED AND ENTERTAINED GIRLS IN DOTY’S OFFICE, “Who signed these pratiques?” asked Mr. Cohen. “I did,” replied Denyse. “I signed the name of the boarding officer on duty that day and my initials after it." "What do you know about gambling in Dr, Doty's private office?" | “I know that there used to be a lot| of it done there,” replied the witness, “We used to play sup there at night. We called it Greenroom! "| “Who used to play | “Oh, a buneh of us, a lot of clerks | and Mr. Schofield here.” “You mean the learned counsellor who is representing Dr. Doty at these hearings?” asked Commisioner Bulger, looking towaré Attorney George 8, Behofield. "L certainly do,” the witness, “We broke He lost $40 I guess,” Mr. Schofield's face looked like the Historical chameleon trying to “make good” on @ piece of Scotch plaid, and every one present, including the com- L @Continued on Fourth Page.) ¢ | this afternoon and dropped to the roof | N Veteran Warrior Declares He Will Continue to Be CONEY CHARIOTEER en ORES MAD RAGE "= Scr" Believes She Won’t Press In- TLL HE KILLS HORSE junction Suit Now Pending in Supreme Court. Runs D Two Persons and A suit entitled “Eda Sickles Cracken- Collides With Automobile — | torpe motion calendar of the Supreme Court in Two Btocks. to-day discloses the estrangement of the nation’s foremost living war hero from his beautiful daughter, who was .|& great favorite of the late King Ed- Lashing his old horee with a whip Al-| 1.04 when whe wedded an humble bert E. Roth, a cabman of Coney Isl-| yoine embassy: secretary In London. ie and, did an imitation of a Roman char- | jog, fot race through West Fifteenth street] ‘The precise nature of the sult te con from Surf avenue to Neptune avenue to-|cealed by lawyers for both eldesf but day. In the two blocks of the course|enough was said by the famous old he knocked down and injured two per-| Warrier to-day in his relic and book sons and wound up by colliding with am| adorned home on Fifth avenue to in- automobile, killing the old horse. dicate that Mrs. Crackenthorpe, who Roth, who had been drinking during|has seen her father only a few times the morning, turned into West Fifteenth | !" her life, proposes to enjoin him from street fr ene, at No, 8712 Eighteenth avenue, | %€ had an: ~nced. ‘The daughter's mo- Bath Beach. The horse became fright- on for an injunction restraining her ened at the corner and Roth cut him| ‘father from making as beneficiaries with the whip. Heaking Into a run, | eftin societies and institutions with the old horse started up West Fitteenth | (1° Ne nas peste teh aites ES street with Roth standing up ie BH] next. Wednesday stice Bischoft wield! h whip an yelling Ke A feat wielding hig whip and yelling Uke] NEVER BEEN A DAUGHTER TO At Mermaid avenue the horse and car- HIM, GENERAL SAyYs, rage bowled over Cornelia Contorello,| “I am unwilling to discuss my daugh- seventy-seven years old, of Neptune | ter's sult,” announced: the courteous old avenue and Sixteenth street. Half a|soldier after discussing other general block further on John Campbell, six-| topics. “She has never been a daugh- teen s old, of No, 342 West First] ter to m street, was knocked down and run over.|1s concerned. { have been separated West of Coney Island's Italian colony, A mob | and she has been in Mddridgand else. appeared to epring out of the ground | where almost that long. HY moth after Roth ran down the aged Mrs, Con- | lives tn New York, but I never see her torello, Men and boys ran yelling after | now.” the cab, and Roth, hearing the noise,| There was a note of deep sadness in looked around. the General's low voice. His words In turning he pulled on the reins in| were frequently interrupted by cough- such a way as to steer his affrighted | ing spells. and ancient steed into an automobile| “You may say, however, that the inde- standing at the curb near Neptune ave- | pendence I have shown in life in d nue. The horse was killed instantly. | ing with persons and things has caused Roth took @ long sail through the air,|me to exercise the same spirit in dis- landed unhurt on the pavement and| posing of my property. I don't. think soon found himself surrounded by a mob|she will press the suit. However, 1| of Italians who were trying to Kick him |have made up my mind and have de- to death, cided to bequeath it in a way she doubt- Policeman John Faulkner arrived op-|lessly does not fancy. I have not heard portunely, dragged Roth into a hotel|that her mother or my sop are parties and telephoned for an ambulance and|to the action,” the reserves, He held off the mob un-| Mra, Crackenthorpe ts a daughter by til assistance arrived and then took|Gen, Sickles's second marriage. Her Roth to the station house an@ locked|mother was Senorita Creagh, a daugh. him up on a charge of intoxication and|ter of a Spanish Councillor of Btate, reckless driving. whom he married while he was Mintater An ambulance surgeon from Coney |'® Bossy ia anh. While living in Paria, Island Hospital fixed up Mra, Conto-|Mhere, me Sictlewes resided after this rello, whose injuries were not serious. ane . nd aon, ante now in the consular service o; The Campbell boy, probably injured in-] United States, were born. When’ an ternally, was hurried ¢o the hospital| Sickles returned to the United States for examination, Mrs. Sickles refused to accompany him and lived with her mother until 198 in Ls RECIPROCITY WITH MEXICO Madrid. The daughter remained with the mother, Mrs, Sickles came to At - PROPOSED IN HOUSE BILL. | ico ana was temporarily reconaien ts the General. She lives in ap uptown apartment house. DAUGHTER DANCED IN LONNON Texas Congressman Calls for Im- mediate Action by Taft for AT ROYAL PARTY. Freer Trade. Mrs. Crackenthorpe achieved notable WASHID TON, July 28 Reciprocity | social successes in London and Wash- with Mexico similar to Canadian reci- | Ington, where her buaband was con- ; ted with the British Embassy in 1892. procity 1s proposed in a resolution intro- | NecTe4 don she daficed befo: duced to-day by Representative Burle- tn London sh bg re the King and Queen, Being half Spanish, Mrs. son of Texas, calling on President Taft] Crackenthorpe donne Spanish ‘arb to immediately start negotiations with|and tinkled the castanets before thelr Mexico “looking to freer commerce be- | Majesties. © King was fascinated ; d Mrs, Crackenthorpe Was the suc een the two countries and He Aven the 5 bs ess of seve royal seasons, Her SIE 7 husband is now in Japan, She ts in CRUSHED ON FIFTH AVENUE, | tondon witn children, grandehil- of Gen, Sickles, whom he has not Sa seen but on It {s understood the Crowd o B4th Street Sees Stone! other's inte it in the Sickles estate Fall on Mason. is in behalf of her children, A heavy plece of stone coping slippad from a scaffold at the third floor level | Viet! of the new Altman Bullding addition, | CHI ‘Thirty-fourth street and Fifth avenue, | Hussain, the rifle, wounding elght people in the crowded loop district Tuesday, to-day of the protective bridge covering the| was formally charged with murder, sidewalk, The police declare that unless he ts On this roof a mason, who was trim-| pronounced insane they will demand ing & stone, was struck by the falling! the death penalty, Archie Hunt, one missile, of his victims, died last night, He was taken to Bellevue Hospital $12 BLUE SERGE SUITS, $5.95! suffering from serious Injuries, rival of the ambulane p busy col rh a 1 ae He nian 'e Aha ta bu ¢ aie "xUB Clo ing Corner, Broad- © collected — ar ame » cor. Barclay St. opp. Post-omic through which circulated all sorts of | sell to-day and Saturday 1,006 exaggerated rumors, 6B erge Suits, fast color; also large, vartety of Outing Suits in ‘ight and dark colors; satin lined; all sig World pa a toh, | Bat worth $12 tn Je or double breasted Abs Oa a Eis orators: cute cesaiaey tad Bat, $f Daniel E, Sickles" on the | n Surf avenue bound for nis|Usposing of his estate in the manner j that the American Tanning Company | fleld and Geori as far as being at my side| ‘ifteenth street is in the heart | from her mother for nigh thirty years, | Hindoo who ran amuck with a Mauser | FOR $420,000 STOGK SWINDLE mse Post-Office Inspectors Raid! American Tanning Co. Produce Exchange Annex. HAD FINE NEW PROCESS. “Selling Agency” Handled Dis- position of Paper for $1,- 500,000 Concern. Several thousand persons tn this victn- | ity will doubtless be interested in the | information that Post-OfMfice Inspectors Kineald and Booth to-day raided the offices of the Ameri¢an Tanning Com- pany tn the Produce Exchange Annex in Beaver street, and arrested four the officers of the concern on a charge of using ¢he mails tn a scheme to de- fraud. It would appear, according to the In- spectors, that about all the investors in the stock of the American Tanning Company are going to get for the $420,000 they have chipped in im a geries of shocks. ‘The first shook’ came more than @ year ago when the announcement was made had gone into the hands of a receiver. Persons who had bought the stock asked the Post-Office afithorities to in- vestigate, and the authorities did. In consequence Eugene R. Robinson, secretary of the concern; Adam Koch, director, who is also a chemist at 1883 Lafayette street, and F. C. Can- H. Smith were arrested to-day. They were arraigned before Commissioner Shields in the Federal Building, who held Koch in $10,000 batl, Robinson in $7,600 ball and the other two in $2,600 bail each for examination in October. HAD NEW TANNING PROCESS WORTH FORTUNE. The American Tanning Company was organized in May, 1900, with a capital (Continued on Fourth Page.) SCORES TO-DAY NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT ST Louis, GIANTS— 000 on ST. LOUIS— 101 Batteries--Mathewaon and Sallee and Bliss. AT CINCINNATI, BROOKLYN— 0v0 - CINCINNATI— 301 — Batteries—Barger and Erwin; Fromme and McLean. BOSTON- o00020 _ PITTSBURG— Batterles—-Brown and Kling Adams| and Simon, Oe Sr AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK. CHICAGO— 01035 - HIGHLANDERS— Hatteries—Lange and Sullivan; Ford and Sweene; AT WASHINGTON. CLEVBLAND- 1000 - WASHINGTON— 0000 - Batterles—Knapp and Fisher; Hughes and Street, AT PHILADELPHIA, Ss? GAME, | DETROIT— 00000000000 0 ATHLETICS — 00000000001-i Batteries—Summers and Stanage; FOUR ARRESTED Bell Boy Who Murdered Banker Za se! Bon SHOULD HAVE KILLED PAUL ‘GE IDEL SHEPARD DYING AT COUNTRY HOME; SICK SIX WEEKS Relatives of Lawyer and Polit RAT. MCGRANE, POISONED CANDY, BOUGHT FOR RATS, KILLS A WOMAN Arsenic - Laden Sweets on Table While Mrs. Lytle Is Away. Await the End. LAKE GPORGE, N.Y., July # ward M. Shepard ts dying. tor of hours, perhaps not more than, This was the bulletin Issued at 11.901, day by Dr, Henning, the fam- physician of the Brooklyn attorney. Shepard's bed most of the » members of his fam who have been told that live until sundown, suffered ar ty AT PITTSBURG. hed no this five years old 4,:r000 = tee side since in I of having of consultation family and told them that the ¢ approaching While his ret chamber waiting for employees of the Shepard estate, F wost, waited in tears outside 0000 es | Phere them, Henning or a nurse gave brief bull from time to time, being more discouraging rats » would the couple's | quently rewarded Iberally for petty #er each succeeding one | 16 and semes of brought had been cri candies she] form ta ection h of whom | Just bee | t beoame | of the crime. colds contracted in Ne: His condition t different stages her daughters, Just members of his family however cation deve Lytle | $24.75 p had bought the pink candies from a peddier, ‘They contained arsenta, Shepard's niece, and Mrs. Bender and Thomas, i well. ANKER DIFFERENTLY, BOY MURDERER SAYS +-———_—_— Paul Geidel Declares He Never Thought Broken Chloroform Bot- tle Left in Room Would Give Police Clue. DIDN’T EXPECT HE WOULD BE CAPTURED SO SOON Intended to Leave City at Once, but Had No Money After Buying Suit of Clothes. Paul Geidel, dressed in the suit of clothes he bought with money for which he confessed that he murdered William Henry Jackson, the aged and wealthy broker, who was beaten to death in his room at the Hotel Iroquois, at No. 49 West Forty-fourth street, yesterday morning, was to-day indicted for murder in the first degree. Following his full con- fession that he chloroformed and killed the aged victim for the purpose of robbing him, Geidel was arraigned before Coroner Winterbottom, who remanded him to the Tombs without bail to await the action of the Grand Jury. That action came swiftly. Tt was 11.45] murtered man, made a vist to Poftee clock when the Coroner acted. Th Headquarters this afternoon to thank witnesses, with Dr. Franklin Jackson, ommisstoner Waldo for the prompt brother to the deceased broker, went | "ner in which the Police Department from the Coroner's office to the Grand Ma polved the question of his brotherta Jury, and before 1 o'clock an Indictment | P)i"'er, ant for the quick action that was returned before Judge Thomas Cen i lOfain in ta GURY ce Ce aanl Bake ‘ankiin met Deputy Commissioner Dougherty and td to sions charging Geldel with the crime] phar ww a fuperasaivictys: work, I he had confessed. want to congratulate you and the @e M'GRANE NOT INDICTED, MAY BE | partment upon it. It ts a great bene- HELD AS WITNESS. fit to the community to have a case Patrick McGrane, a bellboy who was|'0Unded up so quickly. You and your implicated by ‘Geidel as an accessory | 7°" deserve great credit.” after the fact and who was held as such | W!SHES HE HAD THE JOB TO DO by the Coroner, was not indicted, There OVER AGAIN, HE SAYS. Was @ question with the District-Attor- 1 young murderer told James Finag, ney whether he should be indicted oF | chaumeur for Mr, Dougherty: held a a witness, The question W48| +7 guess it ts all up with me. I didn't left for subsequent determination. eine thas ta Edward Kane ang his wife, Josephine. | wren 1 the Jatter of wim had bought the Would get me so soon. the newspapers yesterdey I saw at the police did not chloroform used in the murder, and at! the Hottie could be traced, snd f thous whose home the two boys lived and! inere wouldn't be any clue, f weere were arrested, were taken before Magis to get out of town, mn trate Breen, The detectives asked that it I did not have the money and could the Magistrate discharge them. Magis) uy wisn 7 peur ty do trate Breen declined to take this action again,” he added. “I'd do it ‘aa over ‘on the ground that the new law did not nae } ferentiy,’ give him jurisdiction, He directed the ONER HURRIEDLY IM. detectives to take the prisoners to the] PANELS A JURY FROM STREET, Yorkville Court, whore the reauest W88! Coroner Winterbottom aught the repeated by the detectives. Maststrate| fever of haste that has tm AD Barlow then discharged the Kane couple| clearing up of what had promised es from custody. be @ mystery case. He sent his clerk Tt was announced that Geldet would | into the street and into the corridors ef be arraigned to plead to his indictment | the Crim{nal Court Building and picked Monday and the additional announce-| up a jury in ten minutes after bis ment was made that the trial would | determination at 11 o'clock to hold an be pushed in August, elther before | immediate inquest. The jurors were Judge Grain or Judge Malone, restaura QUICK WORK FROM MURDER men and lawyers’ clerks, le of the building a crowd cam. ger to catch a glimpse of VERY TO INDICTMENT. pager to cat shags ae ieee ee, me ewiftly upon |e youth who had confessed an atror fale es Tet tReeee Me BE potion (ODUS MONAT el and McGrane tol work which has been done in many Blk the Coraner's ame day, In thirty aleepleas hours during Aineatae sae whieh he broke down two automobile and there {s much of [stoner of Pollee, followed the trall that | Wey found inthe man who. la : Jed from the ‘hotel room In Whe ae eee ete ee euch ee kind-hearted, elderly man, had been case, He wor sult of clothes that with the frulte ef | killed by @ boy wh he had fre. hig murder, He looked In admiral them on| vice, and had him arrested and indicted. ae sand satant leathin anion 4 The Deputy, with Inspector Hughes | sat gtotidiy, ali of his nervous collages mire before and several of the beat detectives on | Tone through the hearing of test e. the force, traced tle of chioro- stow A against him. fewark, back to a roo No. werk, Deen to a reom Bt his pedigree the Coroner aT West Bittleth street, where th at Geldel is Seven Kanes lived, and where the two be to wan hore ee arded, and (hen obtained @ confession ' Conn. ; © has been a bellboy @ll of his working life, that he ts 5 feeg ® inches tail and that he has fair hair and Both of the young men who were tak- en at Kane's had been bell boys in the hotel, and the one nad eascuted | n other concealed Jesperately eMilbited the " re r whieh the total reward was yf t had be ned, age sented by $9 In cash, a] vked with oform, inte wate: was pawned at Goldstein's, | the mouth of the aged victim who hed |No, 108 Bowery, for $15, and a pair of n the murderer tp after tip amd cuff buttons that were thrown away. ‘had generously handed him money, eo. ‘Ds, Frankiin Jeokeon, brother of ¢he companied by smiles of gracious ag % ‘ ar 1 ia, ee - a Se a :