The evening world. Newspaper, May 23, 1912, Page 2

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‘here thoy ruth 9 of the et: 2) i Fa dog) in American life. avery audience crooked bhsiness and crooked © against ua all that including the ma- great New York da’ which, whether from conviction or 1 'Y | Proper reasons, represent Wall atreet, i his justiNoation. 1 don’t | Por instance, 1 urtous fact, and 1 only want him to cease | iustrates Indifferent to Any politics except th revolutionary ¢uroulence | in 1904 In phe election, are now cham- the South American re-|ploning Mr. Taft against me for the ot see many turbulent |B<mination within the Republican ee A eee | Bat wo have led aeninet vo Miday before me.” (Cheers and | sincore and wallemeaniny cauae for fea: New| ts. We are hu sense that Washington and ‘Lincoln and thelr colleagues were revolutionary. We $ — preach hatred of no class except the ‘jthey won't. And you won't”. class of crooks, and even in that case, NERS FAVORING TAPT POST. LT, hate the crookedness and do not £0 ALL / ROUND. hurt the crooks unless it is tionary only in the absolutely necessary in order to stop crookeiness, We preach discon- eat oper up only with Injustice and wrong- evidences e Ing. ‘on the move in| “Let me illustrate by two or three ex- here |amples just what I monn. We wish th je, That meang that we fepresentative of the alliance de right, et me | Politics which has been the most fertile THE EV BiG EXCISE RAID GETS A RESERVOIR Commissioner Farley and 70 Raiders Make Spectacular Sweep Over City. INVADE A YACHT CLUB. Agents Catch Laborer Leaving | Hendrick Hudson Float With Bottles of Beer. ¢ The biggest and most spectacular ex- cine raid in local history was begun to- day by State Commissioner of Bzcise William W, Farley and @ fobee of weventy uniformed and plain garbed Policemen disposed of in automodile fy- {ig squadrons, and skirmishing parties on foot, Inaide of fifteen minutes three jora “better the politiclane can choose them them. So as rewards industrial jus STATES HIG POSITION ON THE TARIFF. f the tariff, for instance, I believe & protective tariff, but I wish to see the benefit get intothe pay envelope of the workingman as appear For this reason I if ‘vestigate protected industry and sce that the protection does really benefit the werkingman. ff i i { i in tenement women from 3 Ej itt ah trial enterprises en- mmerce & super- Interstate coi lar to that which now ob- anid in part in bie type- | Bure’ in Cel. Roosevelt in ‘welteen apeech at Pat tains over all big business concerns en- ite essence this in interstate transportation and yet I think t of |over national banks, The Anti-Trust oan thereby be made really of- ive instead of, as now, a sham when agsinet big interstate business that deen sully of-swindling practices, it the-came time honest business, small, will be protected, fl Hl i f ; j RER?? FUE i i i z s it i FaE a cuitior suc: mame the |Sey teary Get we reson Ue man man, but we re ie er ae iae Sok wha Seke'e cantare {tit big busines contains within. 1 it j@uch possibilities of menace to the age, restored ngpeton otogenert bi ot our {eral Dubie, both to the employees of the fl | concerned, to its competito f its product, as i RF i Hy E ef H h t i t 1 f j F E i fF . made s stop at Lodi, méfe a short aes . The with Italian and halt of, the Passaic Gohool Mr. Roosevelt addressc) a ont of them puplie. He did in Raterson, thi { i i : i i pi s i into the Day envelope rath: they step in an office, Th streets in Paasalc were all aflutter ih flage from hotels, porches, win- and ropes between trees, Hi rH i 3 . i tis aiff Af iirt E s s J 3° S A FOLLETTE WON'T DISCUSS RUMOR HE IS TO LEAD BOLT. E s B = for @ practical . getting - | BIZABETH, N. May %—Wh afternoon to’ stories printed Went that if he were not nomn- by the Republican Nationa! Con. Chicago he would make the as Gn independent candidate, he ra- to discuss them. 1 am a candidate for President,” he sald, “and I simply will not.answer such @ question av you put to me." fle i Hl Bl i : Hy : g fF ik i / i der-romance, “A Worlds” eft i s in Amproper, we wish to put a stop to y npans ‘ and fe.pesich the perpetrators, ‘ < artes ie ie on other hand, the .con- i 1 We re0oR 'The Callisto and the comet, ty Tests upon wi ety to change the conditions. re te the case, we work in no spirit ‘Rostility to the peovie who have been by these conditions; but we ‘to continue conditions which have a5 to a few people of & great many people. fore evident that in this @ are Sighting what ts much & factional or even @ part; it We who ee the Sapabiican citizenship, THE BOSSES AND “gig “a BUSINESS.” (“We have us in Aight @ representative and of the old ayatem of privi- ‘ts in politics and in business, us em majority business enns nh 4 —— Sullivan 6 ply. The only dooument book—a fantastic, semi-scientific won- It is a startlingly original story, deal- wine atores on Bullivan and Macdougal streets had been selsed and thelr stook of liquors confiscated, ‘There are fifty raids on Commissioner Farley's achedule for to-day and before the raiders have completed thelr work it 4 pected that reservoirs of strong waters will have been confiscated, This unusual and elabdrately or- @anized crusade is directed against the bu-|®™mall wine and diquor stores that are traMcking without a license. Scores of them eltuated in the lower sections of the city, on the east and west sides and in Harlem, are on Commissioner Farley's tists. . OF LEGAL RM E b KNING WO Gucting @ bar. The rooms of the litt! shop were jammed with qeks barrels of wines and liquors, which were seised, DONNELAN__ HELPS |= L NI ‘ PILOT THE RAIDERS. The raiders began assembéing this morning at‘the Metropolitan Building with Commissioner Farley and Deputy Commissioner Thomas F. McAvoy, as sisted by Charlies Firestone and George 14} Donnelan of counsel to the State Bx- cise Commission. They had with them & dozen or more special agents and about as many olerks, and they were armed with fifty summonses with which tobegin action against the violators of the excise ta As boon as all of Mr, Farley's personal waft fad assembled théy moved on the Hotel Mariborough where they met by Arrangement six separate squads of uni- formed policemen and plain clothes men. Ravh police equadron was provided with A great crowd choked Broadway as Commissioner Farley was Mmerehalting his forces and telling off separate detachments, About half of the plain clothes mgn were sent scouting various win ‘stores that Were on the day's aohedule with instructions to wait there until the raiders arrived. Th remaining raiders piled into the six automobiles, and headed by Cony \lssioner Farley's oar, Proceeded awift.y downtown. All that was needed to herald the approach of {hp raiders was a band of heavy brass, and @ squad of bugiers, ‘The first raid made at No, 18 ot, in the basement which js the wine store of B. P. Pei ordi, Achille Proselli & Co. This little ohiant! shop was open and going, with BE, P.\Perorai in charge. An immense throng packed the street as the police- men and excise agents piled into the place, Perordi was asked to show his State license, but was unable to. com- had to ex- ‘hibit Was an internal revenue license for which he had paid $100, Commissioner Farley went -into the rear of the store and found a cabinet nd shelves laden with glasses, evi- he. said, that the place was coa- Journey in Other ule, ‘ At No, 10 ofa “wtreet the raiders ; ‘Bir rYplf, tn the front of wy ‘ot empty barrel: There was a man in charge hie name was Cesario Atonelll, je nied that he sold any Naquor or that he kept any in the place. He had hardly made this statement when Commiasion- er, Farley forced his way into @ rear foom which was crammed with barrels and skins of wine. Atonelli was arrest- o4 and taken to the Mnacdouga! street ota tion. Antonio Rainey, who runs « little wine op at No. % Carmine wrung hands and wept when served with a summons end informed that'his stock was confiscated. There were more tears | by A. Pivyono of No. % Carmine street, who had @ bar in his shop but no Einsves. OMALL OEALORG WARNED TO * GET A LICENCE B. Frola of No. 2% Carmine street ‘was not on the fadders’ lists, but the inspectora went in and took a look. Frola bad no 8 Mi i was warned that if he didn’t get one by Monday he would be raided and «fined 08, There were one hundred barrels of wine in B. Marchese & Co.'s shop at No, 29 Bleecker street. Mra, Marie Marchese was in charge and acepted | the summons, She protested hysteric- ‘ally, but vainly, to the selsing of the stock and the posting on the premises Of an excise agent. As the raiders turned into Bleecker | &' street the uniformed police escort had to fight their way through the jam of x The crowd jeered and raiders, but there ware lemonatrations of violence. About thirty’ plain clothes men followed the automobiles and mingled with the treet. 7 j At No. 18 Bleecker street the Excise Commissioner seized a roomful of +Call- fornia wine, and at No. i Macdougal atreet he warned Ovidio Pardi that his ite shop would be raided unless he got a State License by Monday. B. Drago was warned at No. 110 Macdougal atreet. The second arrest was made at No. 91 West Houston street. This shop ap- Deared to be a geocery and the pro- prietor, Andrew Capelll, protested that RLD, ‘THURSDAY |Policemen Who Caught Burglar, Taxi Driver and Priso MAY MARRIAGE APPEAL TOVATICAN IS WON, PRINCESS ASSERTS (Continued from First Page.) Geteagied the British frigates in. th rons Land, Bend mother wi owen! Row hter of a former. orf toctuaty, | American MARRIAGE wits PRINCE AFTER LOVE AT FIRGT SIGHT. . Marie Re!d, who was born in 1870, was ‘martied eomething over twenty years agu to Col Frederick ... Parkhurst of ‘Ms., a member of the Legi ‘and je-de-camp of the Gov- . Parkhurst was a Protestant, and & dispensation wap necessary before the mariage ceremony could ve performe Mgr. Chapelle, now Archbishop of Ni Orleans, obtained the dispensation and performed the marriage in Washington, ‘The’ event @ brilliant one social LIOR a3, 193%, FIRES FROM AUTO IN CHASE OF THIEF _ FREED 11 TIMES) OF BIGGEST HOTELS &$ was taking the policeman along it also carried a trunk filled with the most cost- ly ostrich feathers. Krummel feels sure that the chauffeur had been made other that it seemed strange. “{ think it is°a turn off,” anid Fas- salo, who used to be in the Detective Bureau, ‘We'll look into tt.” ‘The driver of the car was etanding on the sidewalk, and In the space next to that he was to occupy on the fromt seat was @ large trunk, As the policemen approached the car two men came from the doorway of No. 4 Bond atreet carrying oult cases, A third man then appeared with a large package wrapped in paper. At the sight STRIKE OF WATTERS MAY TIE UP-FOUR (Contitued trom First Page.) folled 80 per.ceut. of the walters and cooks of Manhattan. “The hotel men,” sald President Reed of the Park Avenue Hotel to-day, ‘“‘de- Bire to accord the best of treatment to and take the test care of their em- Ployees. For thie purpose we deem it dem to deal with the long established sccteties, which, we find, represent an Agsregate of 8 per cent. of jand restaurant worke “The International Union does not even claim to represent & majority of the hotel employees, We notified the International that we would hold no further dealings with that organisation. ‘We have aiso notified the of societies that we wilh be giad to hear complaints nd suggestions from property acoredit- @4 oMiciale of their organization.” STRIKER@’ UNION CLAIMS CON. TROL OF ALL. ‘The officers of the International Unon Drofess to have no fear of the stand taken by the hotel men. They, deny in- temal strife, say the funds and books are all in hand amd that the member- ship, la Growing, now being in excess of “We control the ip of thi jernoon. 10 hemiy ved making. up that organization are dissetisfied. Some of their officers are ‘too friendly with the hotel men. “The Snternational Union will hold a mass-meeting in Bryent Hall at ¥ o'clock to-night.» A¢ this meeting we will determine on what action to take with respect to the atand of the hotel men who have refused to listen to our of the policemen the three dropped their bundles and fled. Belleving the chauffour scheme, Fassulo at first The chauffeur protested > Gen. Booth Under the Knife. LONDON, May %—Gen. Wiliam Booth, head and founder of the Salva- tion Army, was succesbfully operated on for cataract of the left eye toxay in PMPLES $0 SORE COULDNT WASHFACE Many Blackheads, Tried Remedies, | No Results, Used Cuticura and Ointment 2 Months, Hasn Seen a Pimple on Face Since, was in the selzed him, so the others had made for cover. ‘Two men had darted in the direction of the Bowery; the third made for La- te street. into your car and follow those said Fassaulo to the driver and | in a second the car was after the fugitives, One of the two slipped around the corner and wan gone before the car reached the. Bowery. The other was sighted on the other side of that thoroughfure, Meanwhile Krummel had taken up the pursult of the m: hurrying east with the result that he captured him in the subway station. BOTH CAPTIVES TAKEN TO PO- LICE STATION. The two men were taken around to! the Meresr street station. Fassulo's| captive described himeeit as Mix S*1- | verman, @ taflor, of No, 171 Ludlow | street. The man Krummel caught satd | that he was Joseph Gordon, a« printer, | of No. 156\ Monroe street. An investi- gation of the premises showed that » way had been sawed through the cell-| 4 : ing of Ginsborg'’s place, Ginsberg told| J | the police that he had rented the floor about a week o; before, and it was the opinion of the detectives that the tobbers had hired the place and had gone to work at their leisure. | The chauffeur told a story that the police believed to be straight. He sald @ Parkhbrate made their home in jor. Di mces arose a! a few years, and the Parihursts séparated, Then came @ divorce and to the husband was jarded the custody of the children. The decree left boih parties free wed again, but . ra, Parkhurst, being Catholic, was of course bound by U rule. of her church. Later, ho she ‘Yearned that Parkhurst had been baptized at the time. of his Marriage to her, and xo felt compl free, as the Church does not recognise the marricge of tmbaptized persons. At Bar Harbor in 1901 Mrs, Parkhurst met Prince Rospigliosi, then fifty-three years old. They fell in love at tient aight, and without asking the Chur before thelr wedding, to declare the marriage of Mi hurat Invaltd, country place near Florence 1901. na <r al NATIONAL ‘SPORTING CLUB on Sept. he had no stock of liquor and sold none, An Inspector went down into the cellar and found about fifty barrels of rum, ‘was arrested and &, long lst of dowatown raids lef raiders went to the Marl- ‘borough Hotel for lunch. Then they set out for @ tem Rete nd look Folli ini association that Paroda rep- Fesents has furnished the Excise Com- mission with much of the evidence upon which the present crusade is based. CATCH LABORER WITH BEER AT YACHT CLU! ‘The final raid of the day was made on the barroom of the Hendrick Hudson ‘acht Club, @ motorboat owners’ or- mization at the foot af West One Hundred and Sixth street, across the railroads tracks. from Riverside Park. ‘The clubhouse, which is on olty land, {e owned by Mrs. Mary McDonald, who has sold refreshments there for the Dast twenty-four years, ‘The raiders swooped down through RI de Park across the tracks and into the clubhouse. As they entered a laborer employed by the New York Central was met coming out with a bottle of beer in each hand, which he had just purchased. Mre, McDonald said she sold only to members of the club, but the New York Central man admitted he was not a club Member. Commodore George Dixon, who was found in the clubhouse, the orgemsation rented from Mrs. Mc- Donald and had nothing to do-with the ‘wet goods department. Mre, MeDonaid had @ $35 internal revenue license but no State license and her stook of whisky, ‘beer and liquors was confiscated, ———— OUTGOING STRAMSHIPS, SAILBD TO-Day, HEARING AGAIN POSTPONED. ‘A large slice of Gotham's sporting ‘populace gathered in the court house thie afternoon to bear arguments on the temporary injunction granted the National Sporting Club, restraining the Boxing Commission from revoking the club's license asa result of the club's referee giving Vecisions at a recent bout in open defiance of the commis- sion's ruling. The case was on the calendar for this morning in Justice Gerard's Court. ‘The number of cases on the docket caused @ postponement until the after- noon session. With Boxing Commis- sioner O'Neil, the club's lawyers and many interested parties present, Jus- tlee Gerard suddenly decided to re- mand the case back to Justice Erlang- er, who granted the original writ. Jus- tice Erlanger could not be found after ‘@ diligent search and the hearing was finally put over until to-morrow, ‘The oli, therefore, will conduct ite weekly bout without molestation to- night. Platts = Chlorides The Odorlese Disinfectant Prevents Sickness Bold here. Write, Heary B. Platt, ein N.Y. for illustrated booklet, that he was John Cataldi of No. 333 ‘Third avenue, and that he has a stand at Fourteenth street and Irving Place. -He aid that about 10 o'clock last night he was approached by @ middle-aged man who told him that he had @ job for him tater. The man @aid he and two of his friends were ealesmen and wanted to have a trunk and some sult cases taken from their place of bust-| ness in Bond atreet. | Catald! was told to be at a garage at | No, 138 East Fifteenth street at 6.30 aclock in the morning. He met the middle aged man there at that hour and | they drove out. At Fourteenth street | two other men got aboard and the cab| was then driven down to the Bond | et building. | In the room that the robbers had rented the detectives found burglars tools, jimmies and saws. They also} came across a pair of white kid gloves that the thieves had used evidently with a view of not ieaving any finger marks. —_-_—S ELECTRIC PARK RESULTS. FIRST RACE—Three-year-olde and upward; selling; albout five furlongs.— Good Acre, U8 (Fainbrother), 13 to 5, even and 1 to 2, first; Tennesses Boy, 113 (Pickens), 10 to 1, 4 to 1 and 2 to J, second; Gold Check, 111 (Robertson), 3 to 1, even and 3 to 5, third, Time, 0.60, Fair Atalanta, Ace of Olubs, District Attorney, Hibernica and Blue Day also an. "COND RACE—Three-year-olds and ‘Warner 2 to 5, second; Garneau, 106 (Ferguson), $.to 5 and out, third; time Urea Major and Roseburg 21 He. Al 18, 5 Stores,” oF tom St. Brookly (Trade Special for Thursday, 23rd FILBERT#: 2950. value. 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Suits, elsewhere |OARPET LOL va | CLEANING 253 Waal baths, will keep you and your family well: ‘dressed. q at the above term3, on any BT, No “‘Ifs,”” No “Strings” Select your Ladies’ or men’s Clothes here and enjoy ie benefits of our EASY CREDIT Pier Come to either of our two steres account with ms: JW, WILUUAMS

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