The evening world. Newspaper, October 21, 1912, Page 1

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i ¥ i E WEB ny WEATHEN=Polv teenie “PRICE ONE C MORGAN, PERK| 4 Tuesday cloudy, é by 7 ® Che 1 BER HATED GAMBLER ROSE. BECKER WITNESS SWEARS O : Circulation Books Open to All.” E 1° Vrexs Publishing York World) NEW. YOR K, MONDAY, ocT OBE NS AND GOULD MADE TO LOOK LXE ‘PIKERS: V RYAN IN saveinlignensane He'Gave $450,000 That Year; Not for Parker, but to Pre- serve Democratic Party. PROTEST BY PERKINS. Banker Who Calls Himself a “Retired Workingman” Hits at Penrose and Hilles. WASHINGTON, et. 21.—Thomas Fortune Ryan and George W. Perkins to-day disclosed to the Clapp Com:mit- in ) their purses Mr. Ryan tee how they loosed Political campaigns. a mitted giving $450,000 to the Democrats in 194 and seid that he gave between $70,000 and $89,000 this year to Gov. var chest, and $35,000 to Rep- resentative Underwood's campatgn. Ryan's testimony was remarka in that he said he was against Judge Parker ijn 1204 and yet gave $100,000 to 4a@ cimpaign and §%),00) more at its) ciose, paying up every debt of the par- y, "to keep it from disintegration.” ¢ Perkins, who dessribed himself PRonaree Workingmsn,” deno' as an ‘unmitigated falsehood” the chargo that he had underwritten the Roosevelt pre-coavention campaign this year in the sum of §3,000,000. He testified thet his total contributions were $122,500, Rising rom the witness chair before the Clapp committee and shaking a clenched fist, Mr. Perkins shouted “Among te long list of unmitixated throughout this campaign, that statement ought to be placed at the top, because it Is largest. “I was in hope that Senator Penrose would be here this morning, He, made that statement on the floor of the Sen- te and he ought to be required to pr it, or like a gentleman, he ought to ta {t back. There ts not @ scintilla of truth in St, from A to @." Perkins also deniea that Steel or Harvester Trusts were backing Roosevelt. He branded such statements flatly and squarely as “lles—mude out of whole cloth.” He demanded that Chair- men Hilles of the Republican Na junal Committee be called before the commit- tee to produce proof to substantiate such charges, RYAN TELLS WHY HE GAVE $450,000 IN 1904, either the Mr. Perkins gave his contributions to the Roosevelt pre-convention fund as follows: To New York State committee, $19,000; to E, H. Hooker, for the national fund, $22,600; to the Washington Bureau, $22,600; for polls, &e., in New York and Brooklyn, $16,000; sent to other States, $19,600; to E. W. Sima, $17,00 1904 CAMPAIGN LIGHTNING WRECKS RNG BALLOO ABOVE THE LOUD Lieut. Gericke, Winner of In- | ternational Prize, Hurled to Death With Companion. DROPPED THREE MILES. | Making Test for Race Next ; Saturday They Are Caught | in Thunder Storm. Hl FPERLIN,, Oct..2—Phe announcement of the death yesterday of Lieut. Hans ‘Gericke, winner of last year’s interna- tional balloon race in the United States and head of the team of German de- fenders in the races to be held from Stuttgart next Saturday, created a pro- found sensation here to-day. He was thrown from his balioon at a heizht of three miles by the explosion of the as bag, which, ts believed to have been ® by Nghining. Hi je, Lieut. Steer, was also killed, | « and Steler were making « trial fight t test the new balloon, which they expected to use in the in- ternational races. of G sto by Just above the town ossenhain they met a thunder m, which they attempted to avold rising above the disturbance. When m in the air their craft w ight in an eddy and became unman- aseable. After a terrific shoot straight upward the bag burst with @ loud ex- plosion, Both men were hurled thr miles to the ground and were dei when picked up. The shattered instruments which the balloonixts carried on thelr Mlght were examined to- The recording app: ratus showed that they were :lding at a height of 6,000 feet when they were suddenly hit by @ vertical guet of wind which pushed them straight up with the violence of a hurricane to a height of over 15,00 feet. At this altitude the bag burst, either fre e sudden change in pressure or, as is more likely, from belng struck by a lightning bolt. The balloon embodied all the latest ideas In gasbag construction and was l|regarded throughout Germany as the kely winner of the International cup THIEVES RIPOPEN | CELTIC PARK SAFE, ~ GET §3140 LOOT | § Burglars Poison Dogs i. y Night and Carry Off Sun- day’s Receipts. 3 Mysterious Message About Fire Sent Yesterday to Lure President Conway Away. — POLICE FIND NO CLUE,|} Burglars broke into the storeroom of | the pavilion in Celtic Park, Long Island City, last night, stole $319 in cash | and Tom Lynch's gold watch and chain | and diamond pin, polsoned three valiant watchdogs and were far away witn their booty before the crime was discovered. Of the stolen money $2,110 belonged to | the Irish-American Athletic Club and $1,000 was the property of Tom Lynch, the manager of the park. Yeaterday the occasion of the annual fall games of the Irish-Ameri- can Athletic Club @t Celtic Park, which | \s the playground of the organization. More than 6,000 enthusiaslasts in ath- letics attended the meet and the re celpts at the gate totalled $1,300, TRIED TO LURE PRESIDENT CONWAY BY FAKE MESSAGI There {8 no doubt that the burstars were keeping tab on Mr. Lynch or that the robbery was carefully and skilfully Planned. The practices of the Celtic Park management in respect of caring for money had been studied by the thieves. It was known to them that within the past few months the custom of carrying the money taken in at the park on Sundays to a safe place in Manhattan had been discontinued. ‘That the burglars had the job in mind yesterday afternoon {s Indicated by an Incident recalled to-day by P. J. Con- way, President of the Irish-American Athletic Club. Had the receipts of the day been taken to Manhattan last night Mr, Conway would have taken oare of them and he would have been escorted from the park to his home in East Six- eth street by a bodyguard of husky athletes. While on the athletic field late yer terday afternoon Mr. Conway was ap- proached by one of the park attaches With the information that his home in New York was afire. The information had been transmitted over the telephone by @ man who did not give his name, “Tell Mr. Conway that his house ts on fire and burning up and that he should come home at once," said the volce over the telephone. CALLED HOME AND FOUND STORY WAS UNTRUE, Instead of starting right across for Manhattan Mr. Conway called up his home on the telephone, The members of his family were gratly surprisd when he told them the alarming me he had received, There had been no sign of a fire in Mr. Conwayfs neighborhood. Having @ great many matters to a’ Perkins, Retired Workingman; He’s the First of This Class, And Worth a Measly $10,000,000 fat 15 He Was an Office Boy and Worked His Way George W. Perkins In 1877, fifteen years old, was an office boy in his father's office, and at the ag: of thirty-nine became the partner o: J. Pterpont cumulated a fortune estimated at the very lowest at ten mililons of dol- Jars. Perkins was born Jan. 31, 198%. There he received his education and early ing. When fifteen and entered business. After two years’ service as office boy he was promoted to the position of assistant bookkeeper In the Cleve- land office of the New York Life In- surance Company. made cashier of that office. motion after that was rapid until in 182 he was elected third vice-presi- dent of the company. came second vice-president. he became a partner in the Morgan banking house, Since Perking became with Morgan he has bee tral figure in this country's finance. year He hai all of neered by Morgan and has been in- volved in many international schemes organized by the great financier. Per- kins was one of the agent# appoint- ed and sent abroad to negotiate the “STEVE” O'BRIEN RETIRED BY WALDO AGAINST HIS WILL Faurot Is Made a Full Inspec- tor and Hughes Is Sent Inspector Michael) better known as ‘‘Stev: retired from Up in Finance, when Morgan. He has ac in Chicago on business gave up In 18% he was His pro- In 1898 he be- In that identified the cen- the firm played an important part In mission on the great enterprises enci- otherwi: he ha to Brooklyn. Stephen O'Brien, * O'Brien, was the Police Department Joh symmetrical. Russian war loan, portant witness In*the in of the Ship Building Trust and thy Insurance compan The annual income of Pe been estimated at the Street's knowledge ings of other Morgan po tacit, stands that each partner | an company receives a yearly com- Me $09,000, he ‘Ve business, 21, “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ 1912. 18 PAGES. -# NTHAL, N STA ND dy. FINAL|| EDITION. to-night; Tuesday cloa PRICE ‘ONE CENT. ‘COL. ROOSEVELT ~ HOMEWARD BOUND —ONAFASTTRAN, PUT UP TQ WEBBER BY cago Hospital to Auto on Way to Station. CROWDS ALONG LINE. |Says He’s Feeling Bully After Doctors Put Him to Bed in Stateroom. | | (Special from a St t of The Ere. ning Wort) vas an im ON BOARD hovs .T CAR, Fort stigations Wayne, Ind. Oct, 21—The following bulletin was sued at noon by Col, Roosevelt's physicians ita Roosevelt ls renting well and ix pased on of the earn- ers and under- \ the Mor- He has been a hard worker always and a man who lived a aimple life He is tall, compact and not SYDNEY, Australta, nm will flucht Oct. in His head 1" “square; @ brocd forehead and full, AUSTRALIA BARS DHNSONBECASE OF CHCAGOCHARE Fighter, Accused of Abducting White Girl, Will Not Be Tol- | erated—Offers Cancelled. 21,—Jack Australia Hugh McIntosh, who had offered John- ortable, é ALENANDER LAMBERT. SCURRY L, TERRELL Surrounded by a compact squadron of nursing sisters uniform of white, Theodore Roosevolt, with every appar- in ent sign of health, walked, unasalsted, down the steps of Mercy Hospital, Chi- cago, to-day to begin his Journey to his ; home in Oyster Bay. None could have guessed that under a shattered rib in hia right breast lay tire vain bullet of a would-be assassin, “Goodby, Mother!’ he shouted laugh- ingly to the Mother Superior, and flapped his hand at her. The other sis- jters, tremulous and excited, drowned out her Kindly answers with thelr ner- | vous and sympathetic laughter. Medill McCormick's auto was at the curb. It is not a big car, But Col. Roos tt a8 so sure that he would not and shoul and could not be made to ride in an ambulance, that his present captors, Mrs. Roosevelt and the physi clans, compromised with him Instead of letting him walk or ride a bicycle, with a bullet resting under his spiin- tered rib, they permitted him to ride in a comfortably padded automobile. Thirty-tive policemen mounted on horses and motor cycles swarmed about the e except for the crowd which expected around a terminal city early in the day, There was a rolling chair walting at the curb when the Colonel and his escort pulled up !n front of the railway station across the bridge over the Chicago river, but he is to be in & big There was no crowd at the station) MOTIVE FOR MURDER WITNCSS FOR BECKER Police Lieut. Duggan Testifies Tha{ Gambler Blamed Slain Man for an Assault Upon Him by East Side Gangsters. THREE BECKER RAIDERS MIXED UP ON THE STAND Shephard, White and Steinert Are Forced by Prosecutor to Admit Se- rious Inaccuracies in Affidavits. Direct testimony that “Bridgie’ Webber and Harry Vallon—State’s witnesses, before Justice Goff in extraordinary term of thé Suprem Court, against Lieut. Charles Becker and co-defendants charged with th’ murder of Herman Rosenthal—had cause to hate the slain gambler wa: offered ihis afternoon, ‘he testimony was given by Detective Lieut William W. Duggan, The detective swore to conversations with Webber in which the | gambling proprietor had charged Herman Rosenthal with inciting gang- sters to rob Vallon’s place and to assault Webber. Duggan, seid We’ , charged that Rosenthal had erxployed “Tougt | Tony" Feracci to rob Vallon’s house and also to assault him (Webber) |with brass knuckles. “Tough Tony” had committed both the robber: and the assault, ‘ough Tor. had been assisted in the Vallon tobbery by “Spanist (since murdered), “Boob'’ Walker and a man named Baker. But John. F. McIntyre, chief of counsel for Becker, was balked ir; his effort to show that Becker had‘ nothing to do with the allegec “framing” of “Big Jack” Zelig. It is one of the theories of the prose- Leui * 4 * against his will by Commissioner Waldo to-day. O’Brien is over sixty years >i and has been a policeman thirty-seven years, Aa he 1s not a war veteran the law permits his arbitrary retirement by son $50,000 for fights with Sam Lu ford and Sam McVey or Joe Jeannette, cabled to-day to W. W. resentative Ke In Chicago, negotiations, to cancel all S| soorned it as though it stretcher, ly, his rep- TO PRIVATE CAR. had been o SCORNED CHAIR AND WALKED ed Michael! Stephen O'Brier childhood he was called Stephen and for nearly three score years he didn't know his right name wa: Recently O'Brien has been in charge From his Federal asi over the He told District-Attorney Wilkerson telephone that he was pre- pared to furnish a $25,000 cash bond Cameron, the pretty white girl whom he 1s accused of abducting, vitality when watching the Colonel's gallant refusal to acknowledge to-day that he was hurt, much less down. The teeth gleamed, the eyes flashed, though be with an unusual trace of mols- cution that Becker caused the arrest of Zelig for carrying concealec’ weapons and that in return for his alleged efforts in having the gangster set free he ordered the gunmen to “croak” Rosenthal, rd On the witnese ntand to-day Shephard the Commissioner because he is over| McIntosh explained that Jonnaon'a| Was he carried to his car? He was White and Steinert, the atrong arm mer the elnteesear axe: link: part in the alleged abduction had so} not; he walked, and who saw him who raided Rosenthat's place, anserte: O'Brien joined the Police Department | angered the sporting men and publicof| walk across the football gridiron of that they had been ordered by Police In 1876 as Stephen O'Brien, It was not| Australia that the matches were no} Franklin Field in Philadelphia, from Inspector Hughes to arrest Zelig and until a few months ago that he learned longer desirable, . the Army to the Navy aside, ulong ix 4“ 1) | that Becker had nothing to do with thy from tnapection of his birth and pap-| | CHICAGO, Ost a pAnother attempt] years ago, could not but be reminded STOP GUN-TOTING artes, Tho defense called Inspecto: ~ | wa: » ck Johnson, negro » urrive f tism records that ‘he had been christen: | Sas made by datk Johnaon, negro] of that gleefuiness and superadundant A ies this afternoon for the purposs of corroborating the strong arm raiders, but Justice Goff would not let him tes tity. POLICE WITNESSES FAIL TO JUDGE DECLARES ! HELP BECKER'S CAgE, “ D ly n= next Saturday's contest. ‘This statement ie absolutely com-/in next Saturday tend to during the afternoon and eve-;°% the @ixteenth Inspection District In} 20. °t,4 giet, who te being held in the During the ” Mr. Perkins, "My total| Gericke and Steler had expected to Brooklyn, which takes in the Flatbush &@ line of Chicago police. morning @ succession of 1. dt vey ty for an altitude record in the course| 198, Mr. Conway dismissed the inci- i to-day for duty | Rockford, Di, jail as a material wit- lien stretched across the trun shed, | Federal Control Is the Only] potcemen nad teatined tor Becker. contributions were #IS0M engaged lo! yesterday's flight and had equipped |4ent from his mind. Before leaving cane ranteen deve, [Rese in the Government's case against |ireny treated, Mrs ein, aie, Their testimony could not be construed The Genator and Mr. Perkins engaged |)0 yeu! os tai the park he saw the $1,300 gate money tion of seventeen days.| jeanette Dorr, who ts accused of vio- | y fingers tn awkwar: ; f Checking Carryi we telng deatracn tn a heated exchange while Pomerene |their car with oxygen tanks and appa | the Dark he sam the $1800 gate money | Commissioner Waldo ordered him tol ycanette, Dorr, whe ts accused of ViO- \galutes ag Mr. Roosevelt hurried throush| WAY 0} ecking Carrying |s* Deng destructive to any important y mu tus to assist them In enduring the - 1 ss to the step of the oar Ideal, which was phase of the prosecution's theory of the endeavored to find out just how m pe night Lynch placed in the safe in addi- | Headquarters and retired him, over his! bringing the girl here from Minneap- > » Which was so feet fs Mr, Perkins gave i or collected for tie |tavefled a@tinosphere of the high altie| 10th Sieh sees tt own $1,000 | Drotesta that he is atili competent to (cise attached to the rear of the train. Some! of Weapons, Jurist Thinks. | 7". men : . 5 5 t out of “Goodd: Roosevelt 191 fund, Mr. Perkins aail{{lvm | os oe no war, the| the sum of $840, known as the “bank,”| Perform police duty. You are under suspicion in this |MAndclapping and @ shout of “Goodby, | Beonea eae ree: cnambere ot that the several items in the 1901 list pus | he Bi Geb Abies Lar Of oe wees Tae which represented the cash working| Acting Inspector Faurot, the finger-| case." Wilkerson told the negro fighter, | P¢t4y+" were the only sounds as he dt'- White and phe tate Squad—Shephard, ecdlceted [PSSA : ; 001 . Lam: — in by Kilmer B. Dover, crediting “G. WV) metre from Stuttgart next Sunday, |basis of the operations of the bar and|Print expert, was promoted to a full| and I will not approve « bond fur- pore nnd Torvelt at anc re tee tat: | tn sentencing John O'Brien and John | nage Moet ee with contributions, probably wer Inspectorship and placed in charge of] nished b: NW i bdaisoui tho de cael Ed concet 5 ere ee eee et by Mr, Biisa from (Jt Was stated In aeronautical circles |restaurant. nent Leas ane OD eae 4 in the stateroom firat forward of tie| Franklin for carrying concealed weap: | were serious discrepancies in the aff. contributions obtained Uy ins. He could |2ere to-day, Members of the Danish| Shortly before midnight Joe Solinky, |the Detect! bureau Inspector es Wilke ran said he expected theinext | i cvation’ end of the ca Jona, Judge Fawcott in the Kings Coun-|aavity upon whioh the warrants were nen suggested oy Mr, Perkins. He could | here to : the watchman, made the rounds of the Ward Hughes, who was in command of|move would be to get a surety com-| by igen aa " Merci netning about contributions to va-|Aero Club eepresesa the fear thet che| te Walcumon, made (ie reunds of tbe) Tad i, vaoreau. until be. con: |Dany. to after bond fer the gish, and me pit frat atop of the train waa at|ty Court, Brooklyn, to-day referred to tmued for Becker's raid on Rosenthal's rlous States in 191 except in the case of | Dalloonists might be killed it Ne} and the three watchdogs at large on the |tracted a severe illness in the Catakills| added significantly: mglewood, ere had been uw report) the growing Mat of crimes committed | Kambling house last April, Shephard the $10,000 sent to Senator Beveridge, | Halkans and perhaps Killed if they} & 1a,” 40 124 o'clock Lynch and his |hunting for “Lefty Louis” and “Gyp the| ‘Hut the bond will have to be ap-|i##t Might that Col, Roonevelt was tol yy persons armed with forbidden| and White were forced to admit that ‘} remember that,” said the witness, |!anded where pebilag \s yi rape bes assistant, Michael Kenny, closed and| Blood,” has been aselgned to the Six-| proved by my office.” be pu peau A) Englewood. This) weapons, O'Brien had been convicted | they had not included in thelr affidavit pecause he sent the mc 1] but messages from prospective contes-| Coes ng gate, wecured the atoreroom | teenth Inspection District to succeed| Federal investixution against Johnson caused '@ gathering of nearly « thou-| oy cacrying @ blackjack and Franklin | “"¥thing Itke an accurate description of Se nee whe tants uniformly opposed Postponement ee ee ee eroom | ie prion moved swiftly to-day, Twenty-five sub. |*and p 0 open platform|~) “caerying @ loaded revolver, gna| Herbert Hull, Mrs, Rosenthal’s nephew, ne | declaring the race will be all the more poenas were served on the pugiiist’s ag-| There Was @ rush up and down along. i pon wh a it wag the first time on r Maer ercinithe adatiloncl wae ond floor of the pavilion, Sollsky also| O'Brien had a more or less stormy |) <n" Were {6 apnear side the last car, Tue 1 1 fen had admitted he and Franklin | YPon Whom one of thelr John Doe war- ever knew of any public man tr g | oxciting from: the additional risk. went to bed, Jand eventful career as a policeman. Noli). Peder ee to find the window of the Colonel's |were waiting to hold up and, perhaps, |Tant® Was served. They ewore they for aft ho returned a dolia : \ or yr All three men heard the dogs bark one ever quevtioned his honesty, but hel. rnment. seeks that iakaeorn nese pee amed MeGuire on | 2 Ste! the boy in the gamb house Purkt cterised the WARRANT FOR DR. MANSON, |anout 3 o'ciock this morning. The burk- |was hanicapped by an utter lack of] yimated the Mann White Say AN the blinds of ail the windows vay home et 2 o'clock In the marne | Wien, they Went the: Het evidence, tion o: the Kary Steel Trusta — ing war out by the main gate on Celtic tact, Which deficiency made him unpop | Prosecution also waa start: Wana dathanod ther tepe ieuciniiie fe oof 4 MY but in thelr affiday ton thie al. ke “aot only legal, b y "| Neurologint In Accused of At-laveuue and was of short duration, ular in the departm JoWnsen for oliutia: nae pean wean Po tae hate La ; ; 1 na tain | Ose Viale they ibed a tal Ryaa when val i tempted Gra tnbeens | Thinking the dogs had been aroused) In the days of tor B velack RNG COAG Sa gue eine Tia ele Nig py Seip a IWR apaligin Se alge Eg ee M®) forty-five instead of a told the | seat Filia @ yuan Welles a Ganon ,|2¥ seme persons moving along the O'Brien made a brilliant record in wane t lial Gncwpeadva, cEasio aA a Nee entra Geccit ve enteen-y 0,00 of the de Judge Swarn issued a bench warrant) road the three men went |Detective au, He was take } Lesh ‘ © frearmy,” sald Judge Fawvett, “it do shouldered $2000 of the dep tn the Court of Gencral Sessions to-day | poet), Raat So) slate, (Datastive aurae fea aR Wen aden Rasengan multitude by svaking hands. 1t was! not appear to ba effective PATROLMAN SHEPHARD FIRST eee te tne caripalen te for Dr Louis 8. Manson, neurologist | ‘The brief barking of the dogs was ox-|when the Colonel way Police Coinmis-| io wis in ehurae of that ayuad until | eons tata with eat von ete aid) “T think we should have Federal WITNESS OF THE DAY. gave $60,000 to the fund, although I was /and Insanity expert in many criminal] plained to-day when the three brutes |vioner and put to patrolling a beat, In] he * ae removed by Commlasioner Wale | Aiur the Colonel, why, # friend of the Control of the sale of firoarma, When the trial was resumed Patrol- opposed to the nomination of Judge | tials, Anarene te Biya oi bi At- I dropped dead one after another. They |18%6 he was mado a captain and put in|"! ea TE ee git8"Y | Colnnel would serve as an excellent | O'Brien was gents Hkniea Reforma-{mna Joseph B, Shephard, former mem- Parker. I gave probably $50,000 In small- bo oe ey 4 bouts Cr a sap barked as a thief approached the fence |charke of the Central OMece. He dl- ata tr ou aye ie tha muta tute tory =e antie paink “Blneteen - sn8 ver of Becker's strong arm equad and er contributions, When the end of the ” A Miatelet Ab taraar ih and toswed over & lot of poleoned meat. rected the police investigation in the| "Sin, hie removal trom. t tic} Tae Steel Trust's chimneya were ait | PTA? jet (es af me was wontione of the star witnesses for the de campaign was drawing near, und it was [told at wie Dis Homey 8 office) The robbery was not discovered until |Guidenseppe case and personally uided |aquad 'lirien h en Inspecting out |@ending black amoke slanting acrowa | Sine Sing for two and a half years ‘tense, faced crossexamination at the tte apparent that Mr. Parker could |!ast Friday by Hobert J. Jamiegon, a 7.39 o'clock this morning, when Sollsky|in arresting Mrs. Nack .and Martin Flatbush H> retires with the rare|the #k¥ a& the train paswed Gary, The| Jue Dike, in the Kings County! hands of Assistant District-Attormey wate er eiacted, some of my friends|Paralytic, who had been carried from|went downstairs to open things up. Tho {Thorn after newspaper reporters had | distinction of being the only. palicenun |riiite and the bendy ware all Working, | COUFL to-day sentenced Stella Moore, [Jmunk Moss, {rot ewe and told me the campaign |Helievue Hospital. | Jamieson, whol dogs did not greet him, as was their [located them. who over returned to the Clty. a ee ee *\@ comely young girl, found guilty of] On Saturday the patdolman, who was me to me an tee cq Picaded guilty to a perjury charge as ant custom, when he appeared outside the| H* was made an inspector in Jan | vanced expense mon # revolu- (Cantinued on @ixth Pace.) smuggling ‘les to prisoners engaged | sent back to patrol duty after Becker's would callanse «nies the congpil. marth of the filing of @ porgar. avillon. He found them atretched out, | ari: 1807; demoted a few month later | tionar rmance took place jon beatae in @ plot to break out of Raymond |urrest, swore be had entered H ceived financial assistaree, ury sult amas & ‘New York, New | P! A ou andgsnade a full inspector again in 1910) 0'Rrien's return from Bur ‘He ——-{(—__— » ‘Teor . Ps ymon aware, e lerman “% anally agreed, in order to pay Haven and tford Raiiroad, asserted | Unable to move on the grounds. Then | coitnin:ioner McAdoo sent him abroad | hanled Commiasioner, Mea all the} POI L PAR’ AND ornens | Street Jail, Brooklyn, io sentence| Rosenthal’ gambling house with Des ‘workers and preserve the integ- | Dr. Manson had urged him to swear he|he found the door between the restaur-| tq giudy police metiods of. handling | iron ne he nt wpent of the eum | can fe ny Aapeinbly Hail in the Puliter|was from three and & half years to!tectives Steinert and White, who lated venty had been injured in a wreck Fjant.and the storeroom open and gave | strect traffic In London, Paria and that had been given him for his ex-| HwiQnd. sintiog 30. Bnd ong seating 7. |yix and w haif years in Auburn Prison were Indicted for “framing up" (estioued on Fourth Page.) Middletown, 31, ¥., Aug. 37, lL. [tngtaiarm, [other Ruropean cities, and on his pensem _. 1420 Pullteer Word, "aatiainge Yee | tor bs | ie Melis, io gulse of gamblere and (

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