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Er —se . Murderers escaped, the cross-examina- not guilty, On next Tuesday they will Qppear with Becker, when their coun- #41 will make the usual motions for) Permission to inspect the Grand Jury minutes and other privileges. It is ex pected that Mr. McIntyre will begin) @& attack on the indictment arraignment of the prisoners fol- fowed the inquest. Coroner Feinberg eafed that formality to order at 1 o'dock. The jury, of which Daniel Frohman was Corenan, was on band and the Coroner briefly explained the pur- pose of the inquiry, Assistant District+ on” Rubin then addressed the wore to the fact that the Grand | has already taken action in regard to persons responalbie for the kiting of jan Rosential,”” sald Mr, Rubin, “you will not be called upon to fix the esponsibility. Your only function now fe to establish the cause of death, and I hall present evidence bearing upon that ampect of the cs Coroner's Physician Schultz, who Performed the autopsy, was the firat witness, He testified to finding two bullet wounds, one in the brain, the other in the Jaw and tongue. The bullet wound in the brain was the cause of death. “Did you recover any of the bul-| Jote?” asked Coroner Feinberg. “The bullet in the brain was recov- ered intact,” replied Dr, Schultz, “It) was of .32 oalibr Dr, Schulte aid the identification of the body of Rosenthal wan made by Policeman Daniel Brady, who had «| fized post at Forty-third street and Broadway. Foreman Frohman of the} Jury asked how the identification was made. COULD, NOT CLASS SIZE OF| ‘SECOND BULLET, Dr. Schults said that Brafy {den- tified the body as that which had been) lying on the sidewalk in front of the/ Metropole after the shooting, In an-| awer to the question put by a Juryman Dr. Gehultz said that the bullet he covered from the jaw splintered and its calibre could not be determi: Policeman Brady testified that heard four shots, but did not sheoting. When he re: i the sce the: body of Rosenthal was lying ov the sidewalk. Thomas Smith, head waiter of the Metropole, told of secing Rosenthal sitting at a table prior to the shoot- of hearing shots and of going out seeing Rosenthal's body. Johr Bestiand, @ waiter, told of running to the door after hearing the shots, rec- ing the ody of Rosenthal and noting @ man in « brown suit running away. oft| 41d not see any revolver. n William File, who was and in the Metropole at the time | of the shooting, told of hearing the ehbts:and rushing to the street with revolver in his band. Previous to tl ghenting, he said—about ten minutes— saw ‘Bridgie” Webber walk nervously through the cafe and hurry out, without to anybody. File told how he had been unable to } any information from anybody imme- Snip the shooting, and how he other policemen vainly jgirsued the touring car. He said that on his Fibard trom the chase 0 caw Webber mear the scene of the shooting talking to Simmy Thompson, proprietor of the Gerden restaurant, and « man named Wddte Hayes. File was cross-examined by Aaron J. ‘Levy, counsel for the indicted chauffeur, ‘William Shapiro, who got from the po- liceman that he did not see the driver the car. BY RELEASED, TELLS OF ,AMAZING “IDENTIFICATION.” Mr, Levy spent some time in an effort File to admit that he had been the murderers of Rosenthal had escaped from the scene in another @utomodile than that driven by Levy's Glent, Shapiro. File said he had heard there was another automobile and promised to give the District-Attorney the names of his informante on that pent Inasmuch 8 Shapiro has confessed ‘What he drove the car in which the four | he the up ea tion of Mr. Levy did not change the Position of his client. File's testimony Closed the inquest and the jury re- erdict that Hosentha) came to his death at the hands of persons unknown. Coroner Feinberg then announced that he had been requested by the District: to discharge Louls Libby, who shares with Shapiro the owne! the gray touring car. Libby wi cordingly released from custody. He had been wnder arrest since a few hours after the murder. As e00n as he was free Libby beg! to talk. He made a statement as to happenings in the West Forty-seventh @trest station following his arrest which adds more confirmation to the charge of the District-Attorney that the’ police ‘Work in the case has been either stupid oF not “on the level.” “7 didn't know anything about the car being rented for the night of July 16," @aid Libby. “That happened after my ‘work was done and I had gone home. “E was in bed when detectives came @nd yanked me out and hustied me into my oily, greasy working clothes. They @ first to the garage and then to the Forty-seventh street station house, 1 @idn't know what it was ail about un-| Ql they told me Herman Kosentnal had | been killed, and even then 1 didn't know how the car figured in it. 1 told the policemen that the car had been iu the | @erage since I put it there, and, wo far| @a I Knew, that was the truth “MAN WHO FIRED THE sHOTS, DOUGHERTY SAID. “When we got to the station hou! Commissioner Doug ue and inap Hughes were there. Bath were greatly room Was full of Boashers and Hughes made a rush i the man now!’ erty. “Put him in line.’ “They put me in line Move well dressed men. one that bad on greasy ‘Then oery called persons, a Men and 4 boy in @ be'/hop's uniform. | Both these persons had been in the Foom and had scev me brought in and Placed in line. “The man walked up to me and picked fe out, The boy hung back, but Doug: erty shoved him forward, telling him $e touch me—that I was the right party. the box pointed me out "These men identify you as the man fires the shots,’ sald Dougherty, got you said Dough. with @ dozen or 1 was the ony working clothes. were never still. in | that wople, | THE EVEN | Headquarters and kept me there two! i] days before I could get word to any- quarters to tie Criminal Courts Bulld- q ing, on the second day, I asked « de- tective to please telephone to Assembly- | man Aaron Levy and atk him to come And see moe, That ts the way I got Mr. Levy for my lawyer, | Libby, as soon as he was discharged, was Immediately subpoenaed by the District-Atforney Grand Jury | | GANGSTERS SWARM ABOUT | COURT GUARDED BY POLICE. | ‘The combination of inquest, arraien-| Magistrate Will Supply Evi- ment and Grand Jury sion served to attract an immense crowd to the| dence and Also Cross-Ex- Criminal Courts Pullding. All tho} streets mround the structure were! ii ii Jammed with the curt and tho amine Witnesses. congestion was especially heavy In front of the * and In the street N ON WAY HOME between the Tombs and the Criminal | FLY Courts ullding, over which pa the Fridge of Sighs. Sp al details of policemen, under 7 H comman. Capt. Ther 7 ot the EI citea- Chief Investigator, Borrowed beth street station, kept traffic open and cleared the way to the doors of the Criminal Courts Butiding. In the cor+ From Uncle Sam, Will Be- Fidor court officers and detectives in gin Work To-Morrow. lon clothes had all they could do to P awerms of eager persona from iar ng the doors of the court rooms. City Magistrate Joseph F. Corrigan, In the crowds were many who bore! who fret made the public charge that the unmistakable marks of enst side |the city of New York was “wide ope desi, Bade There were also MANY and that there exiated a strong com- gamblers and frequenters of underworld binath resorte—friends of some of the prison- ion between 6 ters, gamblers crs in the case. Admission to the in. &94 police, which resulted in a bitter quest wan by ticket, and only those | "ht with Mayor Gaynor, whom by having business In the court room were |Charked with direct responsibility, hi admitted when the Ave men under in- | fered to ald the Curran Aldermanic @ictment were arraigned for pleading | Ommittee in its investigation of the batore Judge Mulgu: Poties Department. Magistrate Corri- offer han been accepted, an ROSE FEARS ASSASBINS WHILE was admitted to-day that in addition OUT OF PRISON. to furnishing @ mass of evidence, he the prisoners who appeared Would probably attend personally the meetings .of the committee and anat Attorney Emory Buckner in cros the only one who betrayed fear and amining witnesses, apprehension was “Jack Rone,” the| A special meeting of the Curran Com- chief informer. Tho reports that Rowe | mittee will be called for the middie of expects to be assassinated were fully | confirmed by his demeanor while he| ratify th was in the public eye to-day. | ehlet of the Obviously Rose is #0 frightened that | United siate he 1# physically ill, ae well as men- of all New York division of the Seoret Service and for several months @ Deputy Police Com- ‘aw York, to be chief in- in the developments of | vestigator for the Curran Committee, to-day, his shining bald head and nat-|in charge of the corps of private de- urally pasty features emphasising his |tectives who will work with the com- unhealthy pallor. The eyes of Rose mittee in uncovering police graft and They shifted with | corruption. the rapidity of Hght from place to| Chief Flynn, who has been loaned to Place\and he frequently turned hit/the committee by Secretary of the head to look behind him. ‘Treasury MacVeagh, has been away on Rose's foar was first betrayed to the his vacation !n Maine, but galled to- outside world when, with “Bridgie’ day for New York. He is due het Webber and Harry Vallon, ho stepped to-morrow night and will immediately out of the West Side privon to board «| confer with Chairman Curran and At- van for the trip to the Crimfnal Courts torney Buckner, preparatory to assum- CORRIGAN, WILL AID INQ WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1912. Prisoners Who Face Trial for Rosenthal Murder and Blanket Indictment That Accuses Them'| Court of Muller, Jacod Reich Becker, Harry Horow: Meiotnd SRE General Sessions of IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF NEW ‘Tus Psorts ov Tas Grate or New Youn againet Charles Secker,Harry Horowitz,Louie Rofent and William Shagj, 4ts,Louis Ro, UPHES FIR ‘The said Charles lsecker, i, Frenk Muller, Jacob ‘York aforesaid, on the Building, where this presence was de-|ing charge of the investigators, Chief manded at the Coroner's inquest. Web- | Flynn will probably remain for a week ber, with his clothing creased to the or ten days at his desk in the secret minute, was smiling and seemingly giad | to get out into the air, while Vation we unruffled in manner, ROSE CLINGS FEARFULLY To! TWO DETECTIVE But Rove as he stepped from the barred doorway halved on the threshold and his eyes sought the surrounding territory before he showed himself. He looked up and down and across the street and then searched with his pene- trating gaze the gloomy shadows of the L" road structure overhead. At the Criminal Courts Bullding Rose shrank back when he saw the crowds Aarembied in the streets, He hung clone to two detectives in the walk from the curb through the crowded corridors to the General Sessions courtroom which | had been set aside for the use of) Coroner Feinberg. Subpoenas were issued by District Attorney Whitman to-day for offic- {ate of six savings banke—the Dry Dock, | the Kast River, the Emigrant, the Grea Wich, the Mt, Morris and the Harlem— who, the District-Attorney expects, will | testify to deponite by Becker aggregat- | ing about $10,000, These deposits, said? would be in addition to already discovered, Another contractor at who built Becker's new home on Olin- | ville avenue, the Bronx. WALDO DECEIVED FREQUENT- LY, WHITMAN 18 INFORMED, In bis investigation of affairs in the Police Department Diss Whitman has ploked up ¢ fervice bureau in the Custom House before resigning, In the meantime, his information tending to show that I'o- efagatrien ofa a been ratified by Nee Commissioner Waldy has vees de- ; ceived in-many casos by nis auborai-| FLYNN TO LOANED FOR'A FULL YEAR. Although Mlynn will formatty resign from the Secret Service, it is with tho Understanding that when his servicos with the Curran committ e onded, Chief Fiynn ts to return to become Chief of the Bureau, in plage of Chief Wilkie, who assumes command of another de- partment. pointed unttl nates, Additional information along ling was contributed to-day by two citizens whose names were - not made publte. They told the District-Attorney that they had oocasion to viglt Police Head- quartera not long ago and complain about a disorderly house. They were recetved by Commissioner Waldo, wh, Mr, the after latening to thelr story, sald understanding being that he is to be he agreed with them that the place) soared to the Curran Committee for Flynn's return, should be closed and promised tp close it a full year, If nece ary, Alderman Curran to-day declined to The house was not closed and the! gigcuss the appointment of Chief Flynn, two citizens made inquiries, They] oner than to express regret that it found that Commisstoner Waldo, 1) was made public by the Washington of- pursuance of his promine, had erlled|joiais. te ad hoped to avad in the tispector of the district in] jimself secretly of Mr. Flynn's work, which the house was located and told!” When he left >» Department him of fhe complaint, The inspector] where he had been acting as promptly proceeded to minimize the which he was “loaned” by affair, according to the two complain rvice, it is sald Mr, Mynn g citizens, Finally, according to thetr | carrie y with him & mass of val- version, when Commissioner Waldo in-| uavie ve to police core sisted on action the inspector charged | ruption (me of his resignation that the men who had plained | from the ment, It was re- were uctuate | they had t effort to open up @ thelr own, solely by spite because turned down in an disorderly place of in an effort to break the bo: bound the gamblers to the police, and [WHITMAN DECLARES POLICE| that when he fallot In this, he refused jonger to remain, KNEW WHERE SLAYERS WERE. | nn) entrance of Magistrate Corrigan | The offering of $5,000 reward for the! into the affairs of the committee was capture of “Lefty Loule’ and “Gyp the not unexpected, With Secretary Whit- Blood” came after Mr, Whitman had | ink a re 1 Somenn tte a Fourteen ‘ H aiagistrate Corrigan has been makin found the police strangely inactive. The nightly investigations of conditions in actions of the detectives who allowed tne Tend, y and these investiga- Behepps to escape from the Catskills) tons, he suid to-day, had tended to and consequent developmenty led the confirm hiv previous charge of police | Distriet-Attorney to give out mark-| collusion with gamblers and disorderly | able statement in which he openly says) houses, iS ‘4 he “cannot escape tha conclusion that| Magistrate Corrigan's offer of co-op- eration with the Curran Committee was de At a conference with Alderman urran and Attorney Buckner in the Hotel Brevoort, at which time he said | he would be glad to te: to several graft centres whioh he had sponte in hia investizations and 1 Ds capacity as a presiding Magistrate. at least some members of the Police De- partment have known, if they do not know now, the whereabouts of the mur- derers He would rather trust to the cupidity and treachery of the-gunmen's friends). [ia the belief tbat Mf a gangster can be hired to commit murder for a hundred dollars, many can be found willing to 1 the committes | It was two years since Magintrate Corrigan declared emphatically that the city was wider open thai he had ever on the part of the high city ofMici He first made the charge at a meeting of the Calumet Club and later repeated them in his controversy with Mayor! Gaynor. He further charged that the removal of the plain clothes squats we every grafting police captain and pector an excuse for Latin his dis- trict wide open. All to do is to say that without plain Peta men he cannot get evidence on which to; make raid | made at the time and that he intended to do so through the medium of the Curran committee. ee HAD “GYP THE BLOOD” CAGED, THESE TWO BROOKLYNITES THINK. In the Erle Basin neighborhood of Brooklyn several staid and steady citi- sens are sorrowfully confident that they let the missing “Gyp the Blood” and the $2,600 reward offered for his capture slip through thelr fingers to-day. Chief among the mourners are J. Gus Roeder, a Court street saloonkeeper, and Rich: ard Roach of No, 28 Hamilton avenu' avenue. ! Roach, on leaving home early to-day, found a sad-looking man sitting on box near Erie Basin, The morose of the fugitives.” But it did not occur to Roach to leap on the sorrowful stranger and how! for assistance, Instead, ho” walked away and kept his eye on the supposed fugi- tive, who made his way to the saloon of Roeder, In Roeder's aaloon the stranger drank much and talked @ great deal. The burden of his talk was that his con- science was troubling him and he want- ed to give himself up to the police. Roach wanted Roeder to go out’and cali 4 policeman, and Roeder wanted Roach to go out and call a policeman, but each was afraid the other would try to claim the whole reward, so they stuck toweth Finally th ranger, after announc- ing his intention of forthwith, started up Roeder trailed along, with Roach bringing up the rear. Near Hamilton! avenue the stranger met two men who looked lke detectives and vanished with them Roeder hung around hood a while, He says he heard later that — the “Gyp the Blood” and that he had been arrested by two detectives. “Why didn't you nab him and clas the reward?" Roeder and Roach we: asked this irnoon, Wha,” they replied, “and have him shoot usi” The rurfior that “Gyp the Blood” had been seon in the Erle Basin district spread gradually up to Brooklyn Po- lice Headquarters, Detectives George Priday, John Manning and James {O'Dea ‘were sent out to make an in- ventigution, ————— Authors’ Fem! Pen-Na (From the London Chronicle.) ‘The Russian lady who confined her Ubrary to the works of women might have been excused if she had admitted one or two books by men inadvertently. | For there have been men who disguised the neighbor- Reich late of the Borough of Manhatt tment, accuse Charles ‘ank Muller, Jacob mberg, Frank Cirofiei, s, in the County of New duly + at the Borough and ” ht did make an assault, ands and one leaden bullet, which Horowitz,Louis Rosenberg, M4iliem Shapiro the said vin their Herman their malice aforethought Harry Horowitz,Louis Reich and William Shapiro THE INDICTMENT - THE INDICTED- |cHILD LEAPS IN WATER THREE PENNIES ALL THAT SLEFT OF $80,000 THEFT (Continued from First Page.) hands to any of those uhremunerative occupations in which the hands and not the head ore hired. Always he was haunted by fear of the law, He heard that his native State had a bank com- missioner named Dolley who was're- lentlessly running down all those who had trifled with the banking laws. Kach week he moved from one cheap rooming or boarding house to another, TO SAVE HER FRIEND. Both Nearly Drown, but Are Fin- ally Rescued After Great Difficulty. NEWTON, N. J., Aug. M%—Two little girls nearly drowned to-day In Whit'- ingh 8 Pond. Dorothy Devore, eleven years old and Frances Frace, fourteen, were wading in the pont. They got to a raft and did not notice that # floated into deep water, The raft parted and Frances went into the water. Dorothy screamed for heip and as her friend came to the surface she jumped from the raft and tried to save her. They both went under the water, lwhen they came to the surface Cor- telyou Fisher, who was close by, man- agel to get hold of them. The two ‘girls clung to him and it was @ diMeuit \task to get them to shore, Fisher fin- jally ue ded and then had to be re- vived. Hig wife uncompiaining'y accompanied him, Then came the climax to all his hard! knocks—the event that resulted in hi arrest yesterday, On Tuesday his need for money and sympathy had become unbearable, He hunted up @ one-time stranger confided to Roach that he WaS friend, This friend had «place of troubled jn mind and suffering from yusiness at Third avenue and ‘Twelfth | ant of sleep, ee dal “I have done something,” said the Street and was surprised to see Cashier stranger, “and the pollce are looking Flack in his shoddy raiment, The friend forme. I have @ notion to give myseit, mount things over. He was very Nth sorry he didn't have any money to “Aha! gaid Roach to himself, “One Share. “But if you'll drop in to-morrow,” he! promised, “I'll probably be able to do! for you.” | His FORMER FRIEND CAUSES HIS ARREST. he He did do something for Fiac! tive in the employ of the National Surety Company, and A, M. Birdvall, amanager of the company's claim department. Thus the inevitable, which Flack had been dreading for two years, came to him, But !t had jost its terror, Flack readily admitted his identity and said he was ready to go back to Kansas at when ahe heard of his 4 also that the period of over, Things could not thought, She left to-day the home of her rents at Kn Kan. A shemgt's deputy is on the Way from Abilene to get Flack, and it \is expected the one-time banker will > only @ few hours behind his wife on the | sorry return journey to the W. Flack was Probate Judge of Dickinson County, Kansas, for two two-yea terms, In the middle of his second term—about ten years ago—he was mar- ried, His wife was Miss Elth, She filled out bla term, and then for four | years more, while he was employed friend Hallam's bank, she served uty probate judge. A NEW MAN Beatty of No, 18, Nesau of youre ‘ha and T'eaine to. | their identity under feminine pen-names. Alphonse Daudet, for instance, chose to wri as Marie ye Ce Horace Mayhew on occasions ed himeelf as Busan Crick, Mire, Ramsbottom was the pen-name first ‘chowen ‘Theotore who at one time wrote in the Teve aaeneh 0h. # ne ar. Sentry. nen 98 | muh, on ee ad geen it before, and that Gate. cent Tetabere ther than Algernon Charles Hook, while the @tra, Horace Manners} ‘The children are none the worse for their impromptu bath, but they are both loud in their praise of Fisher's heroic work. | ———_——_ BREAKS SHORTHAND RECORD New York Man Writes at Rate of 378 Words a Minate. | All world's records for shorthand | mpeed were broken to-day when Nathan Behrin, official stenographer of the New | fore Supreme Court, and formerty of jclal reporter at Police Headquar wrote on an average of 278 words a minute for. five consecutive minutes. The previous world's record was 23 words a minute, Bebrin's record was made at the Hotel Vanderbilt, where the shorthand ex- perts are holding « convention, | Star Saves Mi witt, the Princeton foot- ball star and @ lifeguard at the Brigh- ton Beach bathing pavilion, had an opportunity to show his mettle to- day when Richard Tearl, @ clerk, war seized with cramps and shouted for help. Dewitt hastened to the swim- mer’s rescue and brought Tearl ashore unconscious. Lee of the Coney Island Hospital, revived Tearl after working ovér him for hour, —————— Infant Falls to Death, Michael Mozurka, six months old, of No. 213 Seventh street, rolled off the roof of his home to-day and fell to the street. He was instantly killed, pecial for Thursday, the 22d FIND HEA aN YoUND nox 40c|~" Milk Chocolate-Covered Fres Fruits batt vented ia & ear, reitatte tik ry ‘chocelate, * cues oath bor | would make !t ‘aid the killing and break his leg for Coney, ne moths specitiog all ch instance Official Voting This Coupon ites the Hotder to Vote for the Most Popular Mea York, who, om Sept. 9, at the KING « “Carnival of Week of Sept. 14 L VOL® LOP.sssseceessceesseeens MARDI GRAS FESTIVAL AT CONEY ISLAND Fun” seeceecescccceseee fOr King Contest Closee 12 Noon. fept, 5. 1912. Keel WH tala vrei BOX 1854. Or votes may be No candidate ts to be voted for Mall VOTES to EVENING WORLD MARDI GRAB EDITOR. P. 0. in at The World's various branches! banded Bronz, 408 E. 140th st. Untowm 1393 Broadway: Harlem, 249 W! 125th 0t.1 Brooklyn, 202 Washington et. and Pui » Park Rew, N. Fe except those regularly mominated by the Executive Committee. See list published elsewhere, “1WASFRAMED BY ROSE,” SAYS “BlG JACK” ZELIG “My Friends Would Have | Killed Him if | Went Away,” | He Declares. “Big Jack” Zelig, ex-convict and gun- man, unbosomed himself in @ confession of innocence to-day when he emerged from the Grand Jury room, where he had testified against Detectives White and Steinert. He sald: “In the first place I want It distinctly) understood that I know absolutely nothing about the murder of Herman | Rosenthal. If I was not in the predica- ment I am in at the present time J point to find out who him. “Herman Rosenthal was my friend, I am convinced by facts that Jack Rose framed me. If I had been sent to prison for fourteen years, as it looke. at one time, Rose well knew that my friends would kill him—I meun that they would avenge me. ‘Jack Rose had me bailed out. He| and “Bridgie’ Webber and Schepps and) Harry Vallon put up the money to get) me out on $10,000 ball. Jack Rose was/ scared. It had been rumored around that he was responaible for my arrest. He was interfering with the conduct of my case and with my counsel. “[ didn't know who was trying to ball me out till I was brought over from the Tombs and saw them all in the Disirict-Attorney’s office. That w: on July 2 I didn't care who got me ont. I was only too glad to get out. T left the Criminal Courts Building with Schepps in a taxicab, I went out of y had been set be- for July 10 and I) rned to the city that morning. Be- cause of the illness of Detective White my trial was postponed indefinitely and I went out of town again and did not return till Tuesday. “Much has been published about my travelling in company with the fugi- There is not @ word of truth in “You knew them, though?" interposed an interviewer, “I knew them by sight,” sald Zellg. “I think they are decent chaps com- pared with this fellow Rose. Rose would hang his own brother to clear his skirts. I know he framed me and I don’t think Becker knew anything about the frame-up. I am under no ob- Iigations to any of them. Names Bull Moose Treasurer, Provisional State Chairman Hotchk'ss of the Bull Moose Committee announced to-day the appointment of August Heckscher of Suffolk County to be campaign treasurer and Chairman of the Finance Committee for the New York progressives. POLLOK “MAKES DENIAL, The application of Mrs, Mary Bmitly Pollok for $260 a month alimony and $2,500 counsel's fee from Harry Pollok, ‘porting event promotor with whem Jack Rose stopped after the Rosenthal murder, was taken under advisement to-day by Supreme Court Justice Am Pinall in Brooklyn. AMdavits were sub- mitred without argument. In an aMdavit Pollok denied that his {ncome was anywhere near as large 0® his wife alleges—$25,000 « ye: He alto declared that he was almost without funds at the present time. The aMdavit contained a general denia) of his wife's charges and @ declaration that the only woman who has been in his apartment » has been a housekeeper, who is em- ployed and works for wages in ecsking and caring for the apartment. He also charges that his wife abandoned him and that he has been ready and willing at all times since then to take her back had she returned. He adds that he new. owes $5,000 to friends and $2,000 on jud@- ments and that the fact that Madison Square Garden has changed hands hee seriously hurt him in @ business Milton Hicks, twenty-four years o@ age, a man on the schooner “Carrie D. Ware,” hailing from Dorchester, Canada, was drowned to-day at the foot of Fox street, Long Island City. The police say he “had been drinking and fell off the pier. Resinol a safe skin-treatment ‘OU need never hesitate to use Resinol Soap and Ree inol Ointment. There is nothing in them to injure the tenderest surface. Resinol is a doctor’s prescription which for seventeen years has been used by careful physicians for all kinds of itching, ee un- sightly skin prescribe Rena trans freely, dent that {ts soothing, healing action i ‘ht about by agente so bland and gentle as to be suited to the most delicate skin —even of a tiny baby. 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