The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1912, Page 1

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; t \ * i) 7 at a | i i ( } WEATHEM-Clearing Fi be EDITIO Saterday fair. Che N. PRICE ONE : E N T. Comrmtae: UELS New Todt Word $500,00010 | HOSPITAL BY ‘DIAMOND JIM" Brady the Bon Vivant Makes, Promised Donation for Re- newed Joy of Living. WAS TREATED THERE. | Had His Stomach Made Over at Johns Hopkins and Gives Money in Gratitude. BALTIMORE, Oct. %— James B. Brady, “Diamond Jim," of New York, financier and horseman, who was @ re- cent patient at Johns Hopkins Hospital, ths city, haw presented that institution his promised $500,000 in appreciation of its work and for the extension of {ts activ. ities, Announcement of the gift was made by Dr. Hugh Young to-da; the terms upon which it was tuade had been favorably acted upon ‘by the srus- tees of the institution. Mr. Brady's gift 1s @ personal tribute of gratitude for the restoration of his health after treatment at the hospital. When a@ cured from Johns Hopkins several Weeks ago he announced that a new Jeuse of life and the joy of living had heen restored to him. He added that he Again could start at th top of any menu and go through it to the bottom and be happy, a solace long denied him. In telling of his renewed heaith and Joys Mr. Brady mae the statement that he would present Johns Hopkins Hospl- tal with $900,000 to further the work in which it ty engaged. ‘The gift which “Diamond Jim’ gave for having his stomach made over is divided as follo $200,000 at once for new bulldings, $15,000 a year for maintenance during his lifetime. An finite sum a his specified in the will, Dr, Young says the gift practically smounls to m0, Mr. Urady was a patient at Johns .top- kins ta July and August and was treated by Drs. Young and Plagsmyer, the lat- ter doing Lhe operating, He endeared dAmself to all in the hospital and the children in neighborhood by many kindne Once he purchased opera tickets for all the nurses at $10 . When the aircus came to town he bought a bunch of tickets and dis- death now “Diamond Jim" was discharged his LEFTY LOUIE ROSENBERG. CUPID SHOOTS UP “HE HAS TEN WIVES AMILLINERY SHOP; | AND SOME MORE,” after SWGRLY VICTINNS} SAY TWO MO SLEUTE taal Think of This— seria? ate sat Are Scattered Over They’re All Going to Be Married at the Same Time! Country and the “Some” in Philadelphia, Is Charge. Our sentimental btrolled into The young friend Cupid Evening World of- fices again to- his cheruble cheeks pursed in @ smile of happy self-srati- fication, and with alr of modest triumph and with the ald of a chatr, swung & bare, pudgy leg over @ reporter's desk, unstrapped his empty quiver from PHILADBL HTA, Oct When Ad- dison F, Ellsworth was arraigned this afternoon before Magistrate Beaton on & charge of embezzlement Detectives Timlin and Tucker testified the man had at least ten wives in various of the country, and several in P) delphia, his fhump ttle back, shook his blond) Elisworth was arrested while lving curly locks sagely and began to talk, | with the latest Mns, sworth, who “Busy days, son,” he laughed, hap-; Was present at the hearing and de- clared she would « to her husband no matter what happened. Since the arrest di ‘tives have re- ceived numerous legers from women liv- ing in Maryland, New York and differ. ent parts of Pennsylvania who clalm pily borrowing the reporter's handker- chief to dry his perspiring forehead— you, Cupid, on account of tradi- tion, can't even wear kilts, 80 he hasen't any place to keep a kerchief. “Just think, I winged six girls at the] they are married to Ellsworth, In most same time and all in the same place.|cases the women caarge they were Shot them right through the heart; not |*Windled of whatever money they pos- & mins, Got every one of them as they | sessed. were selling hate in the millinery whole- sale house of Richard Sentner & Co., at No. 62 Broadway. How’s that for a work? All of them are going to be married Magistrate Beator held Elsworth under $500 bail, and as he was unable to fur- nish bends wus remanded to jail Earlier to-day Ellsworth was held in $2,000 bail on serious charses pri tributed them to children in he hos- by Misa Anna Stocker and his seve e pital, Having too many for this pur-|@ the same time. Their boss was rather | year-old daughter, va. The prisoner is Me, he went outside and gave them to|elimed to feel sore at me, but I talked |Wanted by Allentown, aston, Meee octidean on: tha atte {t over with him, and now he thinks it's] Pittsburgh and other State authoriti Mipally, theivatter ho. took scores of St #0 he's giving them a banquet |!t 1 sald. children to stores and bought them soda | %N4 dance to-day in thelr store in honor and candy and freely distributod| Of the coming weddings, nickels, dimes and quarters among the Kiddies. There Was great sorrow PONE WEDDINGS, among the children when Mr. Brady] “Wen, Cupid," asked the reporter, returned to New York. Though theleatching some of the little fellow's en. little ones we y that he had ANNA GOULD SIGNED NOTE FOR $106, UNDER A THREAT Court Now Holds Transaction in 1911 in Which Arrest Was Held as Menace Is Void, —|isince. “They wanted to be married laat ut he asked them to wait until = y season was over, and they LEIPSIC, Gerneny, Oot. et i fe Se ia | « week he took Miss Sophie; Maalevreat (Anna Gould) the sum of Arons, lis secretary, into his con $106,500 was declared yesterday to be Falls within the founded on extortion and usury by thek (Continued on Page.) Aegina A real estate company having claims) $12 Men's Suits &O'coats,$5.95| jury, ainourn » the Due de against when they were ening her with arrest. 4 cided that the note was not valid, pre wad because Talleyrand sent al representative to the Duke and Duchesse staying at a Berlin 0. hotel in 1911 and forced the Duchesse) Bult to sign w note for the amount, by threat! worste ‘The court de-|breastea’ worth rir “BOSS” ASKED THEM TO POST. ADMITS 17 MURDERS, WOMAN IS SENTENCED TO PRISON FOR LIFE thusiasm and reaching for some copy Paper, “who are your happy victims?" “Let me see,” he said, and took son La France rose postals from the inside of his quaver, He looked at some notes he had made on thelr surfaces, “Yes, here are thelr names: Miss Rosalind Wing of No, 765 Trinity avenue, the Bronx; Miss Lilian Kronish, No. 421 SS, 2, of “Saertfiic Kast Sixth street; Miss Marion Link, Negress, Head of “Sacrfiice No, fd East One Hundred and Eighte: ; hg mitee street; Miss Minerva Adelaon, No, i2| Sect” in Louisiana, Cries Out Fifth avenue; Miss May Hyman, No. 42 East Third street, and Miss Anna Le- Vine of No, 168 Delancey avenue." He put the rose petaly back into his Her Guilt in Court. you ever saw. The youngest ts elgh- teen and the oldest twenty-two, start Sect," was found gullty day and sentenced to life The woman confessed under to- nprisonment They to work with Mr. Sentner four and they've been here ever dence and told her that he wanted to THE “MB” Clothing Comer, Broad- | not “gullty way, cor, Barclay 3t, opp. Woolworth “Lam the ax woman of the Sac Butiaing (highessin tie world), will sell heck" she sh her priac -day and Saturday vane Men's Winter | "°° igs three ks led women and babies, and 1 hus *them tng! le or double any other store igo cur 30, 82 dead bables to my breast. guilty of mee Butt KS heir epgeial Batapday bed Circulation Books Open to All.” _NEW YORK, FRIDAY, “OOTOBER 35, WHITEY (JACK) LEWIS. quiver and watched the reporter care-] LAFAYETTE, La., Oct me ay erage rage bred ay: aya Une Barnabet, the negress, eelf-con- Do ha Bi @ prety & Dale Goaeh OF KITS OO eoseed ax woman the Sacrifice | 1 BECKER DEFIANT, FIGHTS FOR LIFE; VERDICT TERRIFIES THE GUNME WEATHER—Clearing FI to-night) Saterday tatr, 912. 28 Fok h dei. aI “SKIPPER” AND “MATE” OF ROWBOAT UPON ITS FATAL VOYAGE TO SEA, Your Fortune You are taisng a long hance If vow took ibut You'll Not Disappointed In You Seek It Through World Ads. ) “Husiness Op 'DAGO FRANK” CIROFICCI. HARRY BOY SKIPPER GAVE UPLIFEFOR CANINE CREW OF ROWBOAT “Big Tim” Was Floating to “Sea Alone, so Clinton Swam Out to Save Him. A leaky, half waterlogged, flatbot- tomed rowboat with her side stove In drifted ashore early to-day at the foot of Fiftieth street, Coney Island. There were three tiny shoes and a pair of stockings washing lazily about in her bottom, but not the slightest sign of the little boy nor even a hair from the coat of the shaggy big dog for whom launches and police boats had been searching all night out beyond the min- areta of the summer Bagdad. There were two in the crew of the stodgy craft—adventurous souls who had “played hookey" from school to to battle the storm-toxsed elements— when she entered the treacherous, tur- hbulent waters of the Potato Patch ye: terday afternoon, And the Potato @ miniature maeistrom where small boats and boatsmen have grief, lived up to Its repuiatic When It had done its worst one small boy, wet, bedraxgled and exhausted, was lying on top of the breakwater which separates Herbert Jones's house from the That was elevon-year-old William Tay- wea, lor, the first mate of the rowboat; but the skipper, Clinton Fox, had stuck to the ship with the canine crew and was being whisked out to aea on the turning 4 tide, ‘The rescued first mate was able to tell all that happened to-day—that 1s, to tell all that happened up to the time distance and the mist hid the boat, the frightened skipper and the sea-dog from his anxlous eyes, The epirit of adventure at Coney Island ta not dormant in winter, a8 some sup. poxe, he explained. And Clinton Fox, although the son of an u druggist in Ancelin'’s pharn (Continued on Fourth Page.) FOGEL MUST SELL OUT, ACCORDING TO THIS STORY. PHILADELPHIA, 0» that the Philadelph Club will be sold, 1 of the present mi ently ctreulated. T ay & story came from Cine!nnat! at Charles P, Taft, who Is reputed to 16 the owner of the majority of stock Jin the « Horace 8, Fogel | until Get and nth, t unley A, Doane, P unent, Mrs. Plorence Daane, In the Supveme Court to- , fled suit for veparation from Beas- Duane, who she says 1s & stock~ “round ve of the American Note Company of No. 70 Broad Mrs. Doane says ner husband ER AEA sae genni EDITION. AGES PRIOR ONE CENT. HOROWITZ. “GYP THE BLOOD.” JACK ROSE FEARS THE VENGEANCE OF GUNMEN'S GANGS He and Other Informers Si- lent in West Side Prison After Becker Verdict. A mensage in the dark reached the third floor ter in the West Side Prison a few minutes after the clocks had fin- {ahed striking midnight this morning. This was the message: “Becker gullty of murder, first degree.” Jack Rose, Harry Vallon, “Bridgte’ Webber and “Sam” Schepps, the smug Httle, gllb little maker of picture frames, were four men there in the dark of the third ter to whom the message out of the night meant much. The received it in silence; they did not even whisper, one to another, For each in his heart felt that sure am the vengeance of the law | private vengeance of creatures beyond the law—inen of their own kind—will be ft to visit itself on their heads. As- sistant District-Attorney Frank Moss's assurance to McIntyre—given at a ver- bal passage at arms during the trial— that the frlende of the gunmen would seo to it that these four—Rose, Vallon, Webber and Schepps—"did not walk Broadway again to conspire to do mur- der” was Welghing on thelr minds, “Hecker guilty of murder, first degree. Found guilty by their testimony and ‘Gyp the Blood" and the rest of the gunmen soon to be subjected to the same weight of testimony. No, not « murmur, not the buzz of @ whisper was jthere when Keeper Dan Sheehan an- sweret! the ring of the telephone and re- ted aloud what Lawyer Bernard Sandler was saying, All the prison had been on the qui vive from the tine the word was passed that the jury had gone out to find its ver- dict, The four men, whose cells are together at the eastern end of the third fluor ter ar the so-cal talked across from cell to cell in hushed tones from the dinner hour until “Lights out" time, Then the murmur of whispered conversation from cell to cell droned to silence w, the sleep in the third floor even after Keeper Shee- ted aloud the message allowing that to be ment for ears that Were strained t fn, smothered sighs and restle punded from the elle of the four State's witnesses, To- none of ay in comment, Vallon and Schepps went so far as tol dictate for newspaper men this signed disclaimer: t announ No statement haw been tssued by the undersigned with respect to th ed by the jury convicting Charles Mecker of mur- der in the first degree. As Cha 8. Whitman, the Dis- trict-Attorney, has refused to make any statement, we must, there fore, decline to make any comment on the jury's verdict, Behepps appears this afternoon be- fore Magistrate Kernochan in the Wost Sie Court, as he has done many times last nine weeks, on the charge igh jis trying Joseph Cx ‘WIFE VISITS BECKER AIDS IN HIS FIGHT 10 ESCAPE DEATH CHAIR Convicted Police Official Defiant Af: ter Conviction by the Jury of © Murder, But the Four Gun- men. are Panic Stricken. WHITMAN SETS NOV. 7 FOR TRIAL OF THE FIRST ONE, a Justice Goff to Continue the Extras of Alleged Accompli¢ns Police Lieut. Charles Becker took his first step he pect an pel from the verdict of guilty of mur Tir Te Tirst Segre rende: . him at midnight when he conferred with his counsel, his mrs and: oe brother, Lieut. John Becker, in the Tombs this afternoon. The convicted man was cool and confident during the brief talk ha: had with his lawyers and his brother. His emotions overcame him when he greeted the game little woman who had stood by ‘thim with such amaze ing stamina throughout his ordeal. He asked that they be allowed a minutes by themselves and the lawyers and the has guard stepped one side. WIFE’S EMOTION AFFECTS BECKER. Mrs. Becker was weeping convulsively and her emotion shook the \? iron nerve of the condemned man until he could steady himself and strive to console her. For her sake he cut the visit short and his brother ted © her from the prison. She was heavily veiled and requested that no’ viewers be allowed to talk to her. pai When the lawyers returned to the conference they found their client — 4 the same stiff lipped, unshaken man he had been throughout the strain £ of the trial. He was eager to get down to the business of pte preliminaries to an appeal, which will first be presented in a motion for | a stay of execution, The appeal will be a costly process, as almost 4,000 pages ot. testimony were taken, all of which will have to be printed at the a of the appellant. Mr. Mcintyre stated after his talk with his client: that’ he would bring in about 4,000 exceptions to the evidence and the Court rulings. ‘a Commissioner Waldo this afternoon dropped Becker from the pales rolls under the provisions of section No. 302 of the City Charter. While Becker has borne himself with stoical calm under the expected shock of the verdict, the four gunmen indicted with him pai the murder of Herman Rosenthal were thrown into a panic and are. ; to-day in a state of grovelling fear. The desperate plight of these assassins for hire was borne home to stances accept a plea of guilty fami any one of their number, must be tried separately for murder in the first degree in the same ¢ anu before the same Justice who presided at the Becker trial, PREPARES FOR TRIAL OF GUNMEN, District-Attorney Whitman announced his plans for the trial of the = gunmen immediately he arrived at his offic ‘¢ at 10 o'clock to-day, i was pleased with the con the evidence,” Then the prosecutor announced that Justice Goff’s extraordinary of the Supreme Court would be continued until next summer ifn sary to dispose of all the homicide cases growing out of the murder of. the gambler-informer. There will be an intermission while Justice G y for the murder of Joseph Fettrick, a h in the okt Times Building last July. This ¢ it is expected, w quickly disposed of, and then will come the of the shooting ssters, Mr. Wahle, their attorney, called on Mr. Whitman to-day to his plans for the trial, and atter a brief conference the. District. stated that he would move the trial of one of the four on Nov, 7% HH will notify their counsel in a few days of his choice of which of the men to try first. Mr. Whitman would like to try them all at one this the defense will not permit. “Jack” Sullivan and William Shapiro will be ithe long list of alleged murderers to face Justice Goff and a Whitman said to-day there is every Ii that Jack ‘J who was shot to ; hte TA

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