The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1912, Page 2

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Sn Clerk, Fire Commissioner and Sheriff." he sald. Q. Do you know Mr. Alfred Johnson? A. Yea T consider him my friend. 1 have called several times at his office Rroadway. © you In his office In December, mi? A Yes. 1 called to see him about his fire alerm business, My call Was purely personal. ‘I was thinking of becoming financially interested with him, Q. Dit you know George C. Norton at No. 11h Mroatway? A. No, sir, 1 merely beard of « man named Norton, but did not know his first name. Q. What was your conversat Mr. Johnson? A The number -115 Broadway—caused me to remssiber 1 had heard of a man named Norton who had an office there and whom I had} heard hi one in hot possibly recall who told me about Norton, and 1 Know no one had men- ned any specific cases of erat 1 merely asked Johnson if he knew Nor- ton He did not say more about him. Q. Was discussion of police graft 0 common you merely mentioned !t tn passing? A. That's all we said @ Did you not tell Johnson you knew of one person who paid Norton $200 @ month? A. No Q. Do you know Paul Kelly? A, Yoo Q. Where does he tive and where do you live? A. He lives in Ope Hundred And Sixteenth street and I on One Hun- dred and Bloventh @. Did you ever hear that Key was in business? A. Yes, I heard he kept sling house on Broadway Q. Did you not eay Kelly paid Norton #2) a month? A. No, Q. Did you ever talk to Kelly about that? A. No Q. What did Johnson say when you told him you heard Norton was col- lecting fpr the Police Department? A. He only made a memorandum; 1 don't know what he wrote CAN'T RECALL MENTIONING NAME OF SHEEHAN. Mr. Hayes then said ne never heard was collecting graft for a n doing brsiness for some Johnaon anything further. Q. Did you discuss the name of the Commissioner's aecretary, Mr, Sheehan, with Mr. Johnson? A. I may have. Q. How? A. I don't remember men- Honing it, hut I may have. Q. Did ‘you discuss the name of Mr. Sheehan at any other time? A. I've Aiscussed the name of Myr, Sheehan many times. Q. Where? A. At my olubhouse in One Hundred and Bixteonth street. 1 see fifty or seventy-five persons there every night. Q. Did you discuss the name of Sheehan tn ce ection with that of Paul Kelly? I did not, I never discussed it with any except to say there was a rumo' hat a man named Nor- was collecting for somebody in the Police Department sald Mr. Sheehan. you," and then we all went away Q. Did you tell Kelther Mr, Sheehan had telephoned to Sheriff Shea about him? A. No. Q. PA Sheehan's companion (Norton) come up while you | wring his hands know me.” A. No the men all A with | Rue ing." ne Police Department. T can-| had b ft necessary, many cam ansigned which are not reported to the desk ileutenants, and that. therefore, the re mianior crime In New York are not true Now, to get I why yen dia not report that case? A quest cal eatix and clutter up the records with them, do you? A, No, sir; but if we fatl to report any case which haw as collecting grafting |eerice of what he termed pd Soul questions hy Alderman who was asking Cooney about technical come in while Twas there. WERE DOING, THAT'S ALL. Q. When you heard \the charge that the men ware tampering with the mat}, what did you do? A. T Just asked | hat they were doing: that's! Put that on reco shouted Mr. Q. Do you generally investigate @ case by asking the accused men if they are guilty? A was differen Q. Pid yo Q Then you suppren this? A You, wir Q Why difn't you make a further in vestigation about the charge of tam- pering with the matie? A. Well, you nee, T hadn't been tn the detective bu- reau long, T waa a novice and I didn't know what a good detective would do| under the clreumstances. Q. It Is reported that there area great on which detectives are rts on which the Police Com- r makes up hia atatiation of ht on this, T want to know © 1 did not think ft was founded on anything substantial, Here A nine rman Dowting took up the Q. You 4o not report these nonsen f tion we will be Instantly dis mianed Aldermen Dowling then objectad to a ackling terbrook, entries on police blotters “What's the use of hammering a po- deeman,"" anded Dowling, “when we are here to look after graft?” Here Aldern Q. Did you take any stock In the 4 atory of rifling the letter box? A. Yes, | °F money?” air: T did when T was called there, Q. Didn't you know Sheehan called you there merely to find out who these men were? A. No, not have mattered anyway, not even for the Lord Almighty. 1 would have acted am my consctence dictated THEN THEY ALL WENT OUT in Folkes interposed: AND HAD DRINKS. Q. Where 414 you go_after Sheehan got through with you? A. The two Q. Can you give the name of any one | mon, McManus and I went out and had with whom you @lscuased the matter? A. T cannot. Rumors of that kind in New York are not extraordinary Q. Mr. n swore you told him there was a branch office for the collec: tion of graft at 115 Rroadway? A. atan't. Q. Did you ever discuss the matter with Paul Kelly? A. 1 did not. Wasn't enough Interested yonaon tell you he was going ste what you told him about Norton? A. He told me he had @ report and 1 tol! him tt was @ foolish thing to 49, Q. Did you read the report? A, I did. 1 tore it up. It wasn't of interoat to although T hadn't been friendly with Sheehan, Q. Why did you tell Johnson he was foolish? &. Because he hadn't got any proof. COULDN'T HELP WALDO GET THE COMMISSIONERSHIP. Q. Didn't the detectives’ report strike you as interesting? A, Intoresting be- cause T was out of It Q@. When were you tn it? ALT was never in it. Q. Did you ever have any conversa- tions with Mr, Waldo about his being Police Commissioner? A. Yes. I met him one day In West Forty-fourth street and he asked me to help him get the Commissioncrehip, 1 told nim T could could help himself ‘4 Hayes's examination, ‘This ended 3 and Detective Coo! one of the po- called, He waived immunity Q. Do you recall anything that bap- pened last D. retary &h ut 10 P.M. Detective 3 welt were in the Forty-seventh station when the Heutenant In charge sent us to West Fifty-fifth street, where, he said, some one wanted to see us in reference to | piclous persons, When we ar- Wintleld, Sheehan, Ti of the huiiding tells me two men are here tampering with my mail, Ll want you to Investigate and take whatever police action ta necessary.” I went in and talked to the two men, T vaid they were looking for John C. Sheehan, One of the men, who & special deputy sheriff's badge, eald h was named Kelly, The other said he war named Clark. 1 went up to Mr. Sheehan's apartment and told him what the men told me. He anid: “Is that allt Laald: “Yea, at He sent me down to bring Kelly ‘back up to see him, but Clark said: “If Kelly goes up- s, 1 go up So Kelly did not ¢ 4 Shoeh downs: the men: “Do you want me for any- thing?" They said: * we sare look~ ing for John C, Sheehan.” “All right," vi There are many desirable ===APARTMENTS==— yet to be had. Read the splendid list to be adver- tised in to-morrow’sWorld. More in next UNDAY’S WORLD. All. prices, sizes and locations, = No other Sunday newspaper o} fers its readers the number an variety of “To Let” advertisements to select an apartment from as does the Sunday World. Lust | The World printed 2,080 ry ads, or 404 more than the Herald. engineer, to see the Ma The Mayor's secretary at that time was John O'Brien. your privat under surve Q. When WALDO HEARD ALL ABOUT SPY. ber in connection with) Mr. Sheeban said: “i am Mr. | fuperintendent | naid T wai dinappy Mr. Waldo was questioned as to the duties of Mr. Sheehan. He said hin \accretary had absolutely nothing to handling the uniformed force or Jepectal details, ‘The janitor of the ullding, the Commission owed | with of the org wembling squads, ou recall that the rst of your special Central Office squads was com- !rs and sald to! manded ve Costigan t Jhan? A. row | ordered. | POLIC a drink Thomas Hi ett, mentioned promt: nently in the aMdavit of Potlce Captain Relth, wan called. He said he was now confidential adviser to the supervising rmen. Q. Do you Alfred Johnson? A. Yes. Q. Do you know Police Captain Reith? A. Never heard of him until yenterday, Q. Did Johnson bring Tleutenant Reith to your office when Reith was seeking promotion? A. No, I never saw Reith in my life. Q. Was any man seeking promotion ever brought to you? A. No. Q Will_you say Mr. Johnson never brought Reith to your office, then? A. No; but to the best of my! knowledge, I never saw Reith, Mr. dny had Johnson. Buckner then read Retth's am- in which the officer swore he n taken to Hassett’a office by T cannot recall auch a visit wald Maxaett. “Ie ts probable, then, that a police- King promotion might ask you ‘m secretary?” “T cannot recall any such thing,’* sata Hassett, who was then released and ‘ommigsioner Waldo was recalled to witness etand. Mr. Buckner ex- amined Q. Did you ever hear that Mr, John- omen jsent for by Secretary Sheehan | gon had hire © arrest Private Detective KeQher, was | private detectives to keap secretary, Mr. Sheehan, lance? A. T did. A.At the time it occurred. ING ON SECRETARY. Mr, Waklo then told what Mr, Shee- han had told him the day visit of the private detectives to Shee- han's home. ft the @ Did you tell Capt, Kelther you were disappointed at bis brother putting your retary under surveillance? A, I no disappointed and I'm never a. said, the only Person who reports to the avcretary. Sheean's duties are entirely clerteal, Mr, Buckner them took up the matter Q. De y Lieut, Keck: A. You, Q. Who had the second? A. Lieut. Costigan. Q. Do you recall any special con tion with ma re rt to Mr, Shee oanaenens ? CAPTAIN REITH AFFIDAVIT WAS DENI TO “PLEASE WALDO.” Police Captain John T. Reith, who startied the Alderma: Committ was to a it would & falxe and ing to pa Tho captain, who mado the aMdavit | ast Py “T am through with | sult by Bingham against Mavor ween at the Macdougal street police station to-day by an Evening World re © there and » men mn did I never heard any such statement at any time, ASKED THEM WHAT THEY know why Capt pay $10,000 for promotion when !t take more than ten years to save Price out of hin salary increase of fi A year, and what made him make ont the proposed money transaction, when his name was Miasioner Bingham for con- Reith was willl At firet the captain refi Any statement for publication, as {t is Against the rules of the Polloe Depart- Ment, but when he was confronted with | the statement that he had atempted to loner Waldo by reflec ing on Gen, Bingham's administration, he became indignant and exclaimed: Tt In unjuat to insinuate That aflidavit wan drawn up by me to expose a bad state of af- ed to make ner, “that all he did was ‘noth- Please Commi but this case) “PRat's a le! | such a thing. report this case to your desk Heutenant? A. No, sir. No erime ) committed and I didn’t think| shaken down.” at the Commissioner's suggestion that I I paid, in my tonti- mony yesterday that I never believed for an instant Commissioner Bingham recelved a cent of contribution money, id 1 do not bolleve he knew of ‘shake downs, ‘To several questions relative to the Reith refused ewer, following the Department ruling. answer some quos- tone which had to do with his te: mony of yesterday. life of m pollce-ieutenant, at the time the lst for promotion made the aflidavit. He said that desired to raise himselt would not have to work a night “PAYING FOR PROMO. TION,” HIS IDEA. “Was it according Pollee Department to pay for promo-| to where ho “It wasn't paying for promotion when | your name was on the list of eligibles There was the custom of getting money from men who were to be appointed, and although I thought | Mt unfair, I wae willing to pay, but be- #0 crooked and unjust I At, with the Inten- | for promotion. made out the aMd tion of exposing It. “Were the men approached and asked “Who approached you” “I will not answer any questions along sit; and it would] that line,” replied the captain, fused to comment on suggestions made by the reporter, as they were out of the line of what had been brought out at the hearing veaterday. ‘of, that @ considerable sum of money lefi by his grandmother to him and his mother, which was used for its income. “I wouldn't have ail this notoriety sald the Captain, finally. upset my mother and is all I will say that I have only about $700, saved in the aixteen yeare I have been on the department, He was rk commiasioner| and you can draw what inference you I don't think ¥ told him that—I know I| ana chief clerk under Mayor McClellan | like from that. ne nd later secretary to the Board of Al- JURY for a fortune, and make the —— COUNSEL FOR BECKER GETTING AFFIDAVITS OF HOT SPRINGS FOLK HOT SPRINGS, Ark., Sept. 19.—G. W. Hart of counsel for the defense in tho case against Police. Lieut. New York, arrived here to-day. He at once began taking aMdavite additional to those already secured by District-Attorney Wahttman in the Sam WALLSTREET With American Can 1 the early stock market falr-sised advanci Overcoming initial the list began to work upward when tho tnt Tam not a we ha the police fore In nearly all Chief among these shares American Can stocks, both mon and preferred away with unlawful batte treatment of eltizeng by po over the city decent peopie had been clubbed, mistreated and insulted for} Nothing had been done to stop it. The evil grew all the time. I think We have practically put an end to all It was accomplished only by dis- missing several from the force for un- Jawful violence and rudeness. lice now understand that they are the of the community, not their vent dealings ruled firm, Deatings in American Can securities monopolized afternoon attention, these {esues, remponding to a heavy buy- ink demand, rot to the highest price ever recorded, Steel continued the best the active features years. that. with @ rise servants master was ndt due to the men of th but to the arbitrary in which they had been handled and| ruled for y . “Becond—We then taught the force not to arrest people and lock them up| for petty things, but to take their) Late realizing shaded the Hat at cloa- ing time, but small fractional advances predominated at the finish, oslay's highest, he and of nek finat figures are Se ere even that was ne an accomplished fact in this elty, These | petty arrests have been largely done| away with, and where arrests should be made for minor offenses we have taught the force to resort to the method of summoning, where the accused per- sons have a residence and are known. In this way we have protected citizens generally from being locked up with criminals, often overnight, only to be discharged the next day. “We bave also in that way de- stroyed the occupation of the pro- fessional bondsman, which was the to such dondsmen and also to offciais in do. Bete: i fs Ess ttl ltt+te, SSESI5 + nization of the special SES i pies ++I 111 PF PPEPLEEOEE TERETE igan? Did you tell * % * § : +++ SeEF b narily). I never told any man to report to Sheehan, Q. And didn't Contigan say to you: “Mr, Commisstoner, T will not report to Mr. Sheehan"? A. ‘That te not tru T nev Sheehan. “. tor told Costigan to report to Mr. If I had told him to do so he would have done so, Here Mr, Buckner said he had reached the point where he wa sume examining Comn relative to police administration, and asked for an adjournment until to: mor morning at 11 o'clock, which was abe sane: about to re- ner Waldo trtttel+ ++ = Eee Sart [+++ sestecert reste PECEPE FEPESPEECEE FFE 55, easeize: ‘ FSF FE FPERS: i+] z Milwaukee team, American Association, became known nt Was Issued Investigating yesterday by saying that he for promotion aptainey for the “sleep at night’ ye him, to-day denounced as palicious the report that he had drawn up his aMdavit to please Commissioner Walto and discredit Gen, Bingham. afternoon when a statem Alice Havener, had dispensed with Dufty's Mich., Sept. this afternoon caused the post- THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1912 Camera That Will Take a Picture While Aimed Away oe. rom the Object fs ki fl 4 b “ he x, . Q\i2sR DRI n/SSENBERCUP SECRETS OF GRAND | FED TO PRESS, SO GAYNOR WRITES (Continued from First Page.) tire police force might affect the men indifferent to the per- | formance of their duties. No one can deny that all possible has been dono to break down tho discipline of the! Police force. But I am glad to assure you that from close observation I am able to may that it has had iittle or no effect ether on the potice force or on | ent community to say to you what effec it has had upon the degenerates of the | community. NOT SURPRISED BY CASI Higemt and d RAIDER BECKER. “The case of Becker did not sur- prise me at all. Although we had |; done much to remove grafting and / | make {t impossible in the Police Department, I know very well that it would in all probability orop out in more places than one, “The one instance which has cropped | out has enabled the degenerate press to characterize the whole for of «rafters, but I am certain that the | intelligent community still have in mind, and have had in mind ali along, what e done In the way of reform tn In no otifer depart- ment has #0 much been successfully done. Let me enumerate some of these | things “First—The first thing was to That they had forgotten d lawless w. names anf have nmoned, source of large reve: the Police Department. PHOTOGRAPHING BEFORE CON- VICTION 18 ABOLISHED, “Third—The practice of phot ing persons arrested for criminal fenses, an toi their photograp! persons convicted of serious crimes, “Fourth—We have done the former practice of t take police in strikes to prese peace, In order t had to try) and discipline certain ficers who took presents, in on their bidding. “Pifth—We do away with the eo- called special police, There w over 1,300 of them. As you kn: they were sworn in as policemen, thereby becoming public offcers. They were then turned over to private persons and put under thelr pay and ord MORE THAN 4%, 000 YEARLY of to-day's Grand Circuit ‘february when (the $1,0% Mbel| race program uatil to-merrew, GRAFT @TOPPED. hotels and saloons in the city. had long been subject by those who rul over the police, in connection wit certain outside persons or influence. ‘The moderate average $20 a month from each would amount to about $4,000,000 a year, But the gross sum of the extortion Is was done away with, F or member | ‘ at will, espe-|fintments and promotions. For many with them, | Years they had been paid for, We r the enforce- to go into these places cially on Sundays, and and take money of them, |of New York. instead of reporting each District-Attorney for him to get a war- rant and arrest and prosecute, all preseribed by nth—For many years me Mayor, the police had been in sso without warrant not to blame for tiila, The blame was | with the persons In rulership over the They made the police do these oF stitution and the laws forbid of houses except under a warrant ob-| tained from a Magistrate. We put this @ raid follow DETECTIVE FORCE NOW COVERS | COUNTRY. ‘Bighth—-The detective force has been entirely reorganized. All the incompetent persons who there by politioal and like influ. ences have been put out and com- gubstituted in their I suppose you are aware that it has done splendid work, and is recognized as ot best secret service for world, In fact, it largely does duty for the whole country and not merely for the city of New York. as a band |by starting a hu "sand mis- | cemen, All| | base 5) was dealt with se Police Department. corruptiop of the force by the gamblers Corruption was possl- point of contact. race tracks on which almost every day In and about the City of New York had been done away with just before T became Mayor, The po- races were run e force, | mblers who tracks were put out of and thrown on the clty.| lice had a most dificult situation . We organized a special force ai With gambling, of 150 men was put under the Commissioner himself. ‘Three Heutenants were put in charge of them and made the orders of the Commis- gambled on the That is now That special “It happened recently that one of these Gieutenants was found tnk- ing graft from the gamblers. haps I should not But it is so charged. course, it was ® painful thing to the Commissioner, to be deceived in that way by one immediately under him, But the same might ny Commissioner, the jefaloations of bank of. floers and trusted employees are con- stantly happening. It was painful to me, although I fully expected of graft would de- very well that x could mot at once destroy the deep. seated graft of forty years’ stand- aph- even boys before convic- or for minor offenses, and putting # in the rogues’ gal- lery, thus disgracing them, and often aking criminais of them, has been ped, That practice ts confined to “In the midst of the din and fury 1 kept saying to myself each must pe patient, way with ative to work hard with them corrupting police offl- cisls here and there is = hard ut I think we will do it. Already taken most of graft out of the department, and by patience and persistence it can all be taken ont. 5 GRAFT FOR APPOINTMENT AND PROMOTION STOPPED. Tenth—We have entirely eradicated yartment all graft in @p- sorted to the simple expedient of polnting and promoting from the ell- | soribed by that law Itself was put| #ible list in numerteal order. into effect for the first time in the city | that system it ts impossible to sel) faw Was a| ointments or promotions. Eleventh—I come now to a mournful subject—namely, that of unfortunate | women. They were in the world the berinning of history, yes, at that borderiand where fable scarcely ceases nd history hardly begins, and they are here yet. They wil continue to be here until, by the ald of inoral teach- ing, the hearts and propensities of men shall be subdued and made better. These women are what men made them, Deating with thom is @ routine. 1 jhave never made any change in that routine. In other words, I have never adopted any new policy In respect of them. I did only one thing in respact ¢ changing the method of enforcing the law with regard to them, Before I be- came Mayor St had for years besn the custom to send policemen to drink wine and eat with such women, and take them to the rooms of t houses in which they lived, and have them un- dress, ‘This was to get evidence. “% iamned orders that no police- man should be assigned to any such degrading service. To subject po- cemen to such temptation and de- gradation was an ontrage. “But let me forbear, The subject Is ‘one to weep Over, rather than to bring into politics. And yet In this city ttle | politicians and investigators every few | years try to crawl into office over the ‘bodies of these unfortunate women, or and cry about them, But none of them has ever succeeded. Nowhere else in the world has such @ setacle been presented, And there jare others who, in this respect, and in | all matters of vice and crime, are con- tantly bent on humiliating and degrad- ling this city—the most decent and or- of Kambling | derly large city in the world. all along the) by captains and Inspectors of the ‘The result was much! J, Noble Ha ‘Sincerely yours, W. J, GAYNOR, Mayor. New York City. closets, etc., a little Sold everywhere in quart bottles. to accomplish what you have set out des in strikes and labor disputes, to God's will and commit unlawful acts of opprea- sion and violence therein, The police now understand that thelr whole duty the public ompiish this we Police Commissioner Is doing. abuse and falsehood more keenly than | all tho nagging made @ most wetigation, not through “In the midst ase an much as $1,00, from employers to do have our bearings. and the scoundrels who are allied ji pinta—There ave edews 39,000 “tn ne ta Ss BOX | Thursday’s Otfering | No STYE LdLaT ES . en every event serilandt (street cores wening “until Tt ea open Satu Milk Chocolate Covered Cocoanettes Shredded, cocoanut. mixed in with of uw ate 39c joaed Under | ap- | Esq, 8 Maiden Lane, Fevers prevail in the Fall, To destroy ‘disease germs and foul gases the last thing at night pour Into the waste pipes, Pliatt’s Chlorides It is an odorless, colorless liquid dis- infectant which promptly destroys foul odors and disease-breeding matter. It PONTE FROM YOU SPSHOT CANER TES YUR PHOT German Scientist Looks Away From Subject While He Gets His Picture. Herr Dr. Welssenberger of Berlin, who Is visiting with the German doo- tors, Is somewhat of an amateur de- tective along sctentific lin Part of his equipment consists of a camera, which 1s calculated to deceive even the most wary subject. Dr. Welssenbverger has photographed every member of the German physicians’ party he wanted to, and none of them knew a thi about ft. He lifts what looks like a amall telescope to his eye and looks away from the very man he wants to snapshot. His interest seems to be centred at right angles from the sub- Ject, but if the man who is unwittingly photographed chanced to be swift enough he might catch the instant gleam of a powerful little lens eet in the side of the rounded barrel of the fake telescope. As the operator of the camera looks aparently out tc sea, for Inetance, the im of things beside him are focused clear before him. His finger te on a hair spring and a pressure records what was on the finder, Detectives in Berlin are being equipped with the cameras, which com about $100, 80 finely constructed are they. The suc- cess met with {n taking suspects for comparison with existing police photo- graphs has proved the value of the crafty litte instrument. So decelving !s the apparatus that the reporter who snapped Dr. Welssenberger using the camera did not think until afterward when he was told by the doc- tor thet he would exchange pictures with him that he himeelf had been snap- shoted in return. — —___— INCOMING STPAMSHIPS. DUE TO-DAY. 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