The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1912, Page 1

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Brady Bquar ‘Third Game World’s Series THIS EDITION BOX SCORE OF THE Che [ “ Cireutation Books Open to Ait.” | GIANTS W x Aqnitte eyes noma” Wenig co THIRD PRICE GUNM EN IDENTIFIED LINED UP IN COURT AT THE BECKER TRIAL ———__++. Calling of Policeman Brady,Who Tells About the Shooting of Gambler Rosenthal. Interrupts BECKER LAWYER FIGHTS EVERY INCH OF GROUND McIntyre Opening Address, but Most of His Objections Are Overruled. A crowd as large as any that assembled in the Criminal Courts Build- ing during the trial of Harry Thaw besieged the doors of Justice Goft’s courtroom this afternoon clamoring for admission to the Becker trial. The lower floors of the big building were clogged with men and women vaigly | the Narrows to the new aviation fleld struggling for a chance to get a sight of Becker and hear the evidence. Such a crush had not been anticipated, and the police guard on hand during the intermission for luncheon was insufficient. jury had been selected, that every direction. SAYS HE DOES NOT KNOW HARRY VALLON, £@ Dla you don't know him File had seen into the Metrop the shooting. hotel and in a few ereconds I walk out again In conclusion, the witness told of have ing seem many automobiles in Forty kt he was on post in Times and Forty-third two o'clock A. M heard several shots fired. the sounds and ran about seventy-five yards to the Metropole Hotel. saw the body of Herman Rosenthal on the pavement. bruises on the nose and forehead, Brady gaid he took charge of the body. Policeman William J. @lothes followed Brady to the stand. Q. Were you in the Metropole on the Britgle third = street shooting. Dr Hospital testified Central Hotel the amined the body, The Prosecuto: | Phyalclan Otto H body. chauffeur! Jacob She was Rosenthal passed hi Mrs, st about! group on July 16, when he jine de He traced Herbert of R. Then be | stand almost The directly Brady had __ noticed File in plain Krause had been WHITMAN OF BECKER AS HE OP. Harry Valion? A We walk her come any © sald the witnes of that sure immediately He had not ex- called as the first witness for thelins four men Ne men grouped abou prosecution John J. Brady, a patrolman] i,” 0 was ghot Mewn tie’ attached to the West Forty-seventh| couian't 4 4 eet station, who you he after He tify any of them While Hecht was testifying Mr, and Parsons joined spectators fendant's wife, change caused her ind her see A. Standing when the shooting was going 1 I saw them standing over the Sulllvan was smil- the Dago it and spoke morning of July 16 and did pu see Herman Rosenthal dining there? A.! wien Rosenthal came oul Yes, I first noticed him about 1.80, File saw Rosenthal go out and buy @ newspaper an) then return to the hotel. A little later he saw Rosenthal) 3 1 am no! go out of the door, + » | Prank. "And then did you hear pistol shots” | 1°" t “Yes,” replied the witness, “and it]” ss ae) — went ‘Hing, rat-rat-rat!’—-and the police- se re br man pounded his fist in the palm of his) @#ked Nr hand. Harry Vallon / Whe When Mr, Mekatyre took the witness aes i re were he drew from File a lst of persons ae | POAT WN had seen in the Metropole Just before | 0" a tb the shooting 8 File told Becker's Inwyer that when | OK MS be looked at he got outshie of the sotel Immediately es toe gent after the shooting he ad seen “Loob ER And Tack a jon’ Walker on the pavement. File also had hand J f een between thirty-five and forty per- if sons running They were running in . Gyr wh h the Loule"’ ang DER FIRE § COUNSEL atrocious a untry and S HISCA nd any time (Continued on Sixth Page.) ‘Case Gets Under Way with the The news that the ict-Attorney Whitman had delivered his opening address, and that the trial proper would begin right after noon was sufficient to draw an immense aggregation of curious persons, ‘When the jury returned from lunch et the Broadway court officers in charge were unable to force a way through the jam on the ground floor, Ten policeisen were fur- nished and they opened a path with a flying wedge and protection formation, through which the jurors reached their room. Then Justice Goff ordered the corridors cleared and Capt. Tierney of} the Elizabeth street station with thirty) men were half an hour in driving the evriosity-seekers out of the bullding. In the crowd was the old and feeble mother of William Shapiro, of the murder car and one of the men under indictment with Becker. eo insistent on entering the court room that the court officers supplied her with / | coat. POLICEMAN BRADY FIRST WIT- NESS ON THE STAND. After the jurors took their seats A’ sistant District-Attorney Frank M Dennis Taylor of the New York I had been called to the Metropole, had seen the body of Herman Roserthal, and pro nounced the man dead next called Coroner's » Schultze, who had ‘ormed an autopsy on the gambler's WAITER HECHT TELLS OF SEE. ING THE SHOOTING. Hecht of Ni Hundred and Fourteenth street, was employed as a waiter in the M pole last July, was called and told of being in the restaurant of the hotel when Rosenthal went out and of having witnessed Hecht was standing In the doorway and ™6 West One he] chine on a level keel, the surrounded} ran to the heap of After recess to- |day Mrs, Becker changed her seat so a8] airman dead. o wet a better view of the witness] from under the wreck of broken wings to alt} and shattered propeller before anybody husband. Only at rare intervals did be turn iis head to glance at her. More bystanders’ testimony duced when Louls Krause, a Coney and waiter, followed H as ad- sl- ht on the stand. nding outside the Metropole and was still standing there Q. Who did you see do the shooting? A. Whitey Loule and “Gyp the Blood." I saw them shoot and I saw Roseweix about I cannot swear that he did any there? A. Jack Sullivan and the four gun- that the w Blood,” unnin AIRMAN BEATTY | DROPS 1,500 FEET, GETS A SCRATCH Bride Had Alighted From} Machine a Few Minutes Before the Crash. AEROPLANE DESTROYED. Brooklyn Crowd Surprised to See Pilot Emerge Unhurt From the Wreck. George W. Beatty, the aviator, dropped 1,600 feet from the higher air lanes in record time to-day, cleared a farm house near Forty-seventh avenue ‘¢]and Seventeenth street in the Kensing- Whitman’s ton Park section of Brooklyn by a scant ten feet, piled his aeroplane up in a ploughed fleld beyond, and was hurled rty feet out of his seat onto his face. This without more than a few scratches and brutes to show for his fall from the sky, though the aeroplane was wrecked. It was only because of Beatty's ex- cess of caution that his bride of two months was not with him on his drop from the alr tracks, As a passenger, she hed sailed with him from the Gar- {den City Aviation Field to go across at Oakwood Heights, Staten Island, where Beatty expects to give a show for the sailors of the fleet on Saturday, but when over Prospect Park, Brook- lyn, the skipping of the engine brought Beatty to earth and he refused to allow his wife to continue the air Might with a balky engine, The aviator and his wife left the Garden City Aviation Field together Jin one of Beatty's two biplanes at a little after 10 o'clock. They mounted up to nearly che 1,000-foot level and headed direct for Brooklyn.’ As they reached a point over the big park Beatty drove his machine about in sweeping circles, like a buzzard on the wing, hunting for @ likely landing spot. Hundreds of people ran to the roofs and hurried through side streets to the park when they saw the machine de- scending The aeroplane finally trundied to a stop along the green sward of the park, near the Fifth street entrance. Mrs. Beatty alighted and before the crowd could close in Beatty was off again. He ewung quickly up to the high tracks id and was off in the direction of Borough ro Park. Residents along the fringe of streets bordering the fields beyond Borough to his death, | Park saw the aeroplane grow larger as the murder, it winged rapidly toward them. Then & black puff of smoke was seen to im in response to the| shoot out behind, the big bird wavered message that lured him to his death, The walter did not see the faces of enthal and began to drop. Beatty could be seen valtantly work: ing his levers trying to keep the ma- But despite his best efforts the aeroplane descended in rapidly narrowing circles and atruck the ground with a Crash, Persons who orn canvas and Xpected to find the ad Beatty was out plintered struts In could give him @ hand. He departed for the aviation fleld in an automobile after telephoning the news of his accident, less SS LOUISVILLE WINNERS. FIRST RACE—Two-year-olds; maid- ens; special welghts; five and a half furlongs.—The Grader, 112 (Andress), won; Rooster, 109 (Henry), second; Jimmie Gill, 2 (Goose), third. Time, 1.07, Over ‘The Sands, World's Wonder, Rock Bar, Royal Amber, Hasson, Farmer Joe, Ducal Crown also ran, Two-dollar Mutuals paid The Grader, $2.70, Jimmie firat, $9.70; place, $4.00; show, Rooster, place, $4.00; show, $2.90, third. . Sump pald—Great $3.30 Bri- tain. $2.10, C Smokehouss tight “oar Merrall & Condit 7.R.$100,000FUND RECEIPT BURNED, SAYS: ARCHBOLD a Paper With Signature of Bliss for Standard Oil Gift “Not a Pleasant Thing to Look At.” HANNA LETTERS SHOWN. Also Missives Telling of Money Sent to Foraker, Quay and Grosvenor—He Explains. WASHINGTON, Oct. 10.-John D. Archbold, President of the Standard Ot! Company, testified to the Clapp Com- mittee to-day that a receipt the late Cornelius Bilss gave him for the company’s $100,000 contribution to the Roosevelt campaign fund of 19% had been destroyed just before the death of H. H, Rogers. “It was not @ thing of pleasure to look at,” said Archbold. Previous to his testimony on the Bliss receipt Mr. Archbold nonchalantly waded through dozens of his letters published in Hearst's Magazine. He freely admitted relations with ex-Sen- ators Foraker and Mark Hanna of Ohio, the Jate Senator Quay of Penneylva- nia, former Representative Grosvenor of Ohio and Representative Sibley: of Pennsylvania. ‘The Standard Of chieftain admitted paying $44,900 to Foraker in 1900, He id it was for attorney's fees to For ker, declaring the Ohlo Senator was the oll company’s counsel in Ohfo, He also admitted giving $10,000 to Senator Quay in 1902 and $1,000 to Grosvenor in 1900. | Both were campaign contributions, he insisted. | Archbold testified in compliance with & promise made when he was before the committee last August. He said then that he would search his letter files for che receipt. MONEY TO FORAKER WAS FOR LEGAL SERVICE The first letter shown was that of March 2, 1900, addressed to Senator Foraker of Ohio, purporting to ve} signed by Archbold, “1 have no doubt I wrote the lette said Archbold. Clapp read the let which enclosed $15,000 for Foraker. “What was the subJect matter?” ‘The payments were for the services of Senator Foraker as counsel in our Ohio affairs in that and that only,” sald Archbold. Another on April 17, $14,500 to Foraker was Archbold. “That relates to the same business relationship,” said Archbold. “We wi rifle surprised at the amount of thi 1900, inclosing identified by Stull another letter sending $10,000 more to Foraker was explained the same way Another dated Dec, 11, 1900, transmitted $5,000, “They were for the same relationship as courisel,” #aid the Standard Oll head, EXPLAINS LETTERS SENT TO SENATOR HANNA. Archbold was then shown the letter to Senator Mark Hanna, dated Jan. 19, 1900, saying he had no doubt he wrote it. This letter referred to “threatened and objectionable legislation” in Ohio and @ proposed investigating committee. We want to enlist you to defeat measures," was one sentence of the e , Archbold said he could not recollect (Continued on Second Page.) TICKET OFFICE Cosstwise. Beratede Stcataahig lines, “Traveler « mover, onders, aguas ‘ant, epen day and nei Word ep x orld) Buliding. 834 ee The Winning N ine These are “summing up’ days. Baseball and football scores are being counted, votes are being estimated, ravies and armies are being compared And, of great interest to publicity- seekers, advertising mediums are being weighed. During the first 9 months of this year there were printed: vo Pnee, The Sunday World's M y May Man. |ton Fashion Magazine wil, b next Sunday's Wo Edition Order tm advance, Hmited. wiven with) 1,164,994 World Ads. } 627,510 More than the Herald. During the first 9 days of this month Find ane WORLD ADS. 52,353 wert 23.5) And the Herald is York Newspaper that HALF AS MANY Ads prints as The World, | | World Ads. Are Consistent Leaders| even | was o two bagger. Wagn' Devore got his second hit im the eighth, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1 = TANTS 912. FEATURES OF THE GAME AT A GLANCE TT Devore celebrated his returm to the fret of O’Brien, Gerien by gottig © clean single, the Marquard made Yerkes his frst victim om strines after “wasting” two “Med’ Murray started things right im the secona vith © two-bagger to deep centre, Mooper’s wonderful felding preventeg o beer. Merzog’s long fy to Mooper brought Murray home wis the fret «un. Lewis got the first hit of Marquard, & single 4, cutre. Lewis. ‘Marquard struck out Wagner when any king Of @ wt would have scored Sten) shut of @ possible triple when he held on ¢0 Doyle's hard hit liner im the third, Marquard struck out both O'Brien and Mooper in yy third, making four victims up to this inning, Speaker got « clean hit off Bube im the fourth, imto left field. Mersog hit safely in the fifth « double previous errors, scored him with « timely With Fletcher and Devor® om base, O'Brien Tt was up to Sn were full. and the bi Ritting the frst ball pitched DEVORE’S GREAT CATCH ENDED HOPES OF HUBITES 34,000 Fans at Nerve-Wrecking Point When Spectacular Game Was Brought to a Finish. SCORE BY ¥ _|_“ Ciraglation Books Open to Au” | 24 PAGES” GIANTS —Off Marquard, Totals..... 2 72 Base Hits—Off Marquard, 7; off O'Brien, ; off O'Brien, 3; off Bedient, 0, First Base on York, 0; Boston, 1; Left on Besuwe—New York, 5; Boston, 5. Struck Ouleiy Marquard, 6; by O'lirien, 3. ‘Three-Base Hite-Murray, Herzog, Gardner. Bases—Fletcher, Devore, Stahl, Wagner. FENWAY PARK, BOSTON, Oct. 10.—The (Hants won the second game of the World's series from the Red Sox by a evore of 2 to 1. the most spectacular fight of the series and when the Giants finally stopped an exciting Boston rally, 30,000 fans were almost on the point of heart die ease. The victory really should go to the ;eecond was a slow ball. O'Brien tailed WEATHER—Showers probable to-night and Friday, PRICE ONE CE BEAT RED SOX 2 TO 1 WITH MARQUARD IN THE BOX Marquard, Giants’ Left-Hander, |Bostons, Shut Out Up to Ninth, Who Won To-Day’s Game| Made Desperate Rally and Scored Their Only Run in eredit of Josh Devo! half of the ninth, with two on bases and two out, started like a deer after @ smash from Cady's bat and with his back to the wall caught it over his head. point of going to pieces, had been made behind Mara’ easy chances to retire the aide. the stunned and disappointed Boston | fans crowded around flelder and made of him a hero. ! The National Commissio: attendance and were as follows Tota) attendance, 4,424. ‘Total receipts, $43,142 National Commission's share, 6,314.9. ere share, $34,006 6s, Fach club's share, $11,346.64, The two runs made by came from the hands of “BR and Fletcher, ‘Gusts’ second run, “walkeg? Doyle in the Afth odgraes thee, he flied out. Stani registered the third hit of Marquara tm the arp. ® spectacuia: onehand catch of | Murray turned @ somersault making ‘Wagner's long fly. It was @ life saver, ‘The ground rules rob! this inning. Stahl of & homer Sy Rilled al! chance of 5 wiy. Baodgrag, also got in # hit in O'Brien retired from the game im the ninth, Mooper got the frst pa hth, th Engle and Ball were sent in ee pinch hitters Engle fied out and Ball “whittea. edicnt tock O'Brien's place as the Med Sox went behind the bat, Speaker made a wonderful catoh of looked like a triple, The Red Sox got the frst rum of the when Lewis scored om Garduen’s double, to Gret iseucea py Marquari in the last half of 4m the jut half of the eighth, the ninth and Cady tp the ninth that | Hooper naif of the ninth | 1m the gerenth and all he got ani the the fel n whi The Giants were just on the game n war FIRST INNING, The firat bali pitched by O'Brien to evore went wide of the plate and the the man whom the New York fans wanted McGraw to take out of Giants on the way second, when went to third on } scored on Mu he darting about Iike a swallow, O24 Fletoner, mating amends for) 4 41 the bat was always dangerous |MARQUARD COMPLETE PUZZLE TO RED SOx. ward pitched a t His eighth ini ea a! M recelpts for the game hit erkle’s sacrifice and Herzog’s long fly third Hertog combed O'Brien for a two- bagger and Fletoher shot a single into right that scored abused Fletcher him, Last Inning. TS. RED SOX. ‘ g POA B Re. POA 2200 0010 0310 o141 1000 01341 15 0 0 1240 05 0 0 @o102 1130 oan i 18 10 0 0 0 3 134 0031 0020 ooo ft 001 8 0000 ey 000 0 qBall........0 0 0 0 Hendrickson. 0 0 0 0 8 1| Totals.... 1 7 27 18 ‘Batted for Carrigan in eighth tBatted for O’Brien in eighth, Hit by Pitcher—Herz BY BOZEMAN BULGER. and inside. Two errors rd with Even a atrike, The next counted @ ball, the little left {It was up to Doyle # figures for | Speaker's hands. on first pitched seal straight Into RUNS. ONE HIT. Marquard missed the try for @ ball, His n strike, the ball coming let. ‘The next was a and Inside. New York a" Murray rray started the to victory in the for two bases, | WhO got It back next one split the pli wasted one, but fool In the! The much-| like a demon He was all over od went over his head, NO HITS. masterful game} The first pitched to He was a com-| ball, and on th Kea 8 It cleanly om the nose nning | deep centre for two bu | ul flelding on the this drive would have clreuit, Merkle | was superb wed , wax to Hor. | nutplayed to | Jubitunt wot to third, ball Heraog went at ie Soe Lewis aiade the first arqvant would have | 50% When he caught a {rose and rammed tt 4 single Marquard put aide. ‘The Giants were NT. INNINGS ..0100100 0 0-2 teereeeee 9 0000000 1-4 off Bendient, 1. Firet Base on BAe who in the last/to get one over, pitching @ curve bw The next two split te plate squarely in the middle and then, when O’Brien put one In the groove, Devore smashed it into centre for @ The first ball to Degle was 4 spitter that eplit the plate for O'Brien got another strike over with a fast straight one, smashed a line drive straight Snodgrass got « ball wasted a ball as Devore started to and Carrigan made throw to Wagner, and Josh was gut. Snodgrass then hit another line drive Speaker's hands. Hooper went after the next one and popped an easy fly to Fletoher, of second, ball pitched to Yerkes was wasted, The the next one and struck him out, The first pitched to Speaker was @ ball ¢hat hot one which Doyle broke down with one hat and then by @ great throw the Boston sar at first, SECOND INNING. next one Jack smashed played game until he got two baile and then sacrificed to O'Brien, advancing Murray and drove a long fly to Meyers s r straight at Gardner ead n oul at first, ONE RGN, Gardner and then gave Bim ® bell gul+ laws closely 40 as to prevent @ steal, “Ge t ——— Steken 08. It was by far was inside and to hit and he into ball. O'Brien & perfect No Plate on his fret ext was @ clean over like a bul- ball, being low The frst Rube then ed Yerkes with Speaker lined @ NO Ri Murray wee a and sent it to * But for won- part of Heoper gone for the the waiting after the second hit for the Red Saat one om the ato centre fora & stAke over of

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