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his short chin in the alr without any | nome, and I'm going uptown.” Then, ‘Use UD. effort on his part. | the witness sald, Dago Frank Jeft them, | We just wi e to neo a friend. Before Mr. Wate began questioning SWEARS THEY DIDN'T GET INTO, STILL INS ere HE NEVER CAR. the witness-defendant Justice Goff or- | AN AUTOMOBIL' RIED A REVOLVER, dered that all witnesses who had not he Fou tee 2) Didn't you hold up @ woman} been examined should be excluded from | Kea sl al od la ata Pamed Lottie Stanton at No, West geacnesocoooooes: enty-elghth street at the point of the foom, Among thore who were went | Q Did you get in It? A. No. revolver carly Ih iii Artin’ es anet | @ out were the wives of Gyp the Blond | Q, Dia you go anywhere withthe =| whining voice) 1 told you T never car & and Tatty Louie. | strange man? A. Yes. We walked [ried a gun in my life ¢ Phe prisoner, eitting stiffiy In the wit | through Forty-second street to | The Provecutor got the witness to) @ ness chair, with shoulders hurled ba: Broadway and then up to the | {ell of his traveis between the day of ¥ eid ‘tn & loud voice at the beginning, Gadiline Motel. We stopped under | {¢ Murder and the day of his arrest % of tie testimony Wat his name Was the glass ahed. Oe Dee TAR ie cela |S Harry Horowitx end that he was twen- What did the stranger aay then?” | Frank's fiat? A. Firet wo went to : tp-four years ol! He had firet met ked Wahle. | Yonkers; then to Kingston. From Jeck Zell three months prior to the The witness was not allowed to) Kingston we went to Monticello and) @ Rosenthal murtor. He had met Rose answer. we pped in Monticello three days. | ¥ and Behepps one month before Lie kills QW did he do? A. He walked then shheerauy to Hartford and were |@ ing, but he had never seen Vallon and Reross the s#trect and met Rose, Vailon, | @. All thia tim didn't you know t , 5 ove | i 6 didn't you know you Sohepps until the morning of the one re “4 bee Pas pad ‘ tile waikea | Were Wanted for the murder of Herman | ¢ eee ey oer ne ener over toward us. The atrange man| Rosenthal? A. No, we didn’t learn that was living at Rockaway TRACING ACTS OF GUNMEN BE- FORE THE KILLING. @. (By Watle—on leave Rockaway before the 16th July? A. On Sunday, the th of July. Teame up with “Loule” and went tot flat of “Dago Frank” at No, 252 Sev- @mth avenue. We were there an hour and Frank went back to Rockaway with us. The witness said he had gone to th Seventh avenue fat to get “Whitey Lewis's clothes. He took those to a hospital in Rockaway) where Lewis waa! a patient suffering from sunburn. “Gyp" described in detail his journey te “Dago” Frank's flat on the night be- fore the day of the murder. @ Who was at the flat when you got! there? A. “Whitey” and Jean Gordon. Q. Was Frank Cirofict in that flat? A. No, @ What did you do next morning? A. Got up at 11 o'clock and went to a) restaurant. Then we went to a barber shop on One Hundred and Forty-fifth stree: and got shaved. Whitey and Loule went with me. We went to a) hat cleaning place and Whitey and Loule got their hats cleaned. Then | Whitey went to-a telephone to call up hig cousin and his father, He called to ask about his litte brother, who was alok, @. What dia you do then? A. We got back to the Nat about &9 o'clock, We fat around til] about 49. Then Loule Got dreswed and went out. Q. When Louie left you was Whitey there? A. Yoo. @ Was any arrangement made bde- tween you, Whitey and Loule as to where you were to meet later in the evening? A. Yes. “Gyp" said that he and “Whitey” left the flat at 9.30 o'clock and got to No. 76 Second avenu» at 10.9. They were Joined there by Lefty Louie at 11 o'clock. Q. How long did you remain in that cafe? A. Two hours. Q. Was any message brought to you there? A. Yea A message to Louie. REPORTS RECEIVING A MES- SAGE FROM BRIDGIE WEBBER. @, What did Loule do. A. Telephone. He came back from the phone and sald, ‘L gust got @ message from Bridgie Webber’— Justice Goff stopped the witness and he was not allowed to tell what Web- Der's message was. Q. What did you say? A.I said, Ae Jong as you and “Whitey” are going to Forty-second street/ and Sixth avenue T mignt as well go home. But “Gyp" didn't go home. He went te Webber's place and “White: @ man there. . “Did you afterward learn the name of the man you saw standing on the corner of Sixth avenue ang Forty- seaond street?” asked Wahle. An objection sustained. Q. When you, “Whitey” and “Lefty” vaw this man, what did you do? A. and Loule spoke to him. “Gyp" at last got in who the mya- terlous stranger was when he ssid “Bridgie Webber invited us to go up Q. Webber was the man, then? A. Yes. Q. What did you dot A. I went up- otaira. Q. Whom dia you find there? A. Jack Rose, Vallon, Schepps, Frank and « stranger. 1 did not hear him called by aay name. @. Did you say anything to Frank? A. Yes, I said, ‘Frank how the— 414 (you get down here? Frank eald, ‘Ia @ machine.’ I said: ‘What kind of a machine—a sewing machine? continued the witness, ber told us to order anything we wanted to eat or drink. After we had ordered Webber went out with the strani man, GYP" GIVES A DESCRIPTION OF THE “STRANGE MAN.” @. Describe the strange man? A. He was five feet nine or ten inches tall, weighed abddut 160 pounds and had bleck hair'and @ black mustache. "When thie strange man came back what did he say?” asked Wahl An objection was sustained, “Because of what he sald aid you, Frank, Loule and Whitey leave the room?” asked the lawyer, but the ques- tlon was ruled out, Q.Did you, Frank, Loule and “Whitey” and this strange man leave the poker room and where did you go? A, We went down to the door. Tho witness was talking in a high, shrilt voice, with his head thrown back | snd his face absolutely devold of ex- pression, “Gyo” sald that when they got do to the door of the poker room Dago Frank said: “You fellows can go and meet those two cops. Jean expects me “Just Say ‘HORLICK’S it Means Original and Genuine ‘\MALTED. MILK The Feod-drink for All Ages. ‘More healthful than Tea or Coffes. y ee with the ed oe il, nated ge pos Ne og corlaed lunch prepared in" minsta, Tobe np substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S. SS” Others are imitationy, what Cay did you Q° of Sixth av down Metrop stopped ‘hem nite He was walking by him Q. What dia yon see? A. My at- tention was attracted by a shot. Q. Who was shooting? 4. The strange man. Q. Did you see anyone else shoot- ing? A. Yes, Vallon and Webber. I saw Valion and Webber and the strange man shooting. As soon as they saw the shooting, | said Gyp, all the defendants ran, | “We went to the aub: id. | because of his bad leg. took a Lenox avenue train to One Hun- ured and Forty-fifth street and then we! The gunman swore that during all went to ‘ow, dramatically your possession there in front of the Metropole that morning?’ did not,” Gyp almost shouted, | Q Did Frank, Loule or “Whitey” have any firearms? A. They did not! SAYS NONE OF THE GUNMEN DID/ ANY SHOOTING. rank's fl look ‘here,’ cried Mr. Wahle Q. Did you do any @hooting? A. No. | Q. Did Frank, Loute or “White: have a revolver in their hands and do y shocting? A. They did not. The gunman n that when he, Loute and “Whitey” got back to "Dago” Frank's flat they found Frank there. They had been there a short time when & message came to “Dago” Frank that Jean Gordon, the girl with whom Frank lived, had been arrested. Frank went to bail her out. The witness was not permitted to go into this and his laweyr took him back to June 2, when Jack Rose had gone to the flat of “Lefty” Loule on the South- ern Boulevard, This was the day after Lowe had been shot in @ Chinatown brawl, "Gyp" said that Rose and Schepps had come t* the apartment and"White: Lewis had let them in, Q. Who was the first person who spoke? A. Rose. He said,.“Hello, Lou I came up Mere to see how you are. Louie said: “Who sent you up here?” Rowe said that Zelig hed sent him up and he tried to square Bimself. Q.What did he say? A. He talked a He was always talking. He ‘never stopped talking all the time he was in the place. He sald that we were mis- taken about his being in the frame-up. He could prove It to us. Hie stayed till 1 o'clock. He told us a story about squaring a case for @ pickpocket. 1 sald the man was caught dead to rights in @ department estore, but that he had got him off. Gyp the Bloo. denied that he hadi ever met Jack Rose in the Lafayette baths, He eaid he didn't know where ‘the baths Rose's atory about the journey ,of the gunmen to the Garden Restaurant where Rose sald hevhad prevented the, King of Rosenthal by that he thought be eaw a Berns the strevt. Q. (By Wahle.) Do you know where the Garien Restaurant is? A. Never heard of #t till I heard it mentioned in this courtroom. DECLARES HE NEVER SAW HERMAN ROSENTHAL. Q. Did you know Herman Rosenthal? A. Never saw him in my life. Did Rose ever speak to you about Merman Rosenthal? A. Wo, siz, Did he ever ask you to croak Rosenthal? A. (shouting) Mo, sir. @. Did Bose ever sty in your presence or the presence of any of the defendants that he wanted Rosenthal croaked? A. Me never mentioned Rosenthal to none of us. “That ie all,” ead Mr. Wahle and then the defendant's direct examination was concluded. Assistant District-At- torney Mose arose, faced the witne: asked: “Harry Horowitz, he asked, “how many times have you been convicted of came back the prompt answer, the witness braced himself and folded arms. Mr. Moss went over the long list of Gyp's arrests and convictions @nd thén ‘Have you had any business in the last four years?” A. No; not in ten years. . Q. Haven't you for the last five years been living as a genepal thief in the City of New York? A. (faintly) I was. Q. You lived at Dago Frank's flat. A. Yes. Q. Who else lived there? A. Lefty #d Whe lia deus aordony lye with? jean ie atu el) @. Did she make « Miving for Frank? A. (indignantly) No, sir. Q. What business was she in? A.1 don’t know, air. voice dwindled to a whisper seemed to choke over his an- Q. (By Mr, Moss) Ien’t it @ fact that you have committed other crimes than those for which you have been con- vieted? A. No, air. ADMITS MEMBERSHIP ZELIG GANG. Q. You were a member of the Zelig | wang? A. Yes, slr—er—that te—it wasn't | 4 gang Q. What was it? | assoctation IN THE ATt called an | Q. Isn't it a fact that you took part in the shootings between the Zeltg gang \und the Jack Hirocco gang? A. No, alr, Q. You are married? A. Yeu. Q. When were you married? A, May }1, 1911, | '@. pia | A. Not | with Mr. graph himself and the “Gyp" recognized himself named “Kid Seoond.” you lve with you alwa, her aunt. Q. (By Mr, Moxa) Did you and “Dago” at No. 165 East hteenth street in art of the year and put a head of William Lee and | Frank go to a qar Ope Hundred and the early pistol to the demand an automodile tir A. No, atr. side of and | fellow was y station,” he Whitey couldn't ryn very well I got the tick- lets and we got in a Broadway train | | and went to Ninety-sixth street. We! “did you have @ pistol in| witet Sometimes she lived Moss showed the witness a photo- and asked him if he recognized others in the group. and a man til July 23, when we got to Hartford. When we read about It “Lefty” and I decided to come to New York and give uraelven up. We knew we were in ent and that they had got the mur | derers, “We wont down to Poles Headquar prs and Loule wanted to wo in stopped him and said: ‘I guess there's jo use doing that with our records. | ‘They'll grab us right off the reel and | hold us for murder.’ So we went down to Bast Broadway and then to No. 253 fouth Third atreet, where we got a room and stopped for a week. We met a man named Kramer there who faid he'd fixed up a flat for us in Glen- dale. Q. Did you know anything about the man Kramer? A. No, sir, only that he was a friend of Loute were In hiding with of | the time he and Loule they had never communicated friend or relative; that they knew no soul they could trust. Q You did not send word to Jack | Zeli or Whitey Lewis of where you were A. No. Mr. Moss brought the now etuttering and suile witness to the fact of his | vite to Police Headquarters and his | gtatement to Deputy Commissioner Dougherty and his present cross-exam- iner. MOSS ASKS ABOUT AN EARLIER EXAMINATION OF “GYP. Q. Isn't it true you said to Mr. Dougherty in my Presence that on the day before the murder you were in Rockaway with @ woman, A. (falter- and Wobber had done the killing, though you knew they were under ar. ? A. I'd been @ fool ff I'd given my cane awa: Q. Didn't Mr. Dougherty ask you about Vallon and Webber? A. Yes, he sald, “Why don't you get in and cuse those fellows first before they ac- couse your” But you didn't accuse them. A; (Snariing and showing his teeth) No, I told. you I'd been a fool to have given away my case then After the noon recess Mr. Moss con- {tinted his cross-examination of Gyp returning to the subject matter of the examination of the witness by Deputy Commissioner Dougherty on the day of the arrest.’ The Prosecutor read an answer of-Gyp's in which he sald that he had not been with Lefty Whitey” on the night of the murd Q. When you said that, you were asked if you were not In the habit of lapsing from the truth. Didn't “I always tell the truth inc this?" A. No, I eaid that! always told the truth when I was under oath. 1 wasn't under oath then.” You did not say that agcorting to this stenographic record,” said Moss. Q. Were you teling the truth then? A. No. WITNESS ADMITS HE CALLED ROSE A RAT. Q. Were you asked If you knew Jack Rose, and did you repty “Yes, T know him as a rat, and all that kind of atuft?” A. Ye Q. You told Commissioner Dougherty that the Idat time you saw Rose was in the newspapers? A. Yes, Q. To-day you ewore that you saw Wobber fire the shot that Killed Herman Rosenthal? A. Yee, Q., Now, why didn’t you tell that to Commissioner Dougherty? A. (Loudly) Because the Commis. loner didn’t want to know that. Mr. Moss read at length the steno- graphic record of his talk with Gyp at Police Headquarters when the had told the gangster that the District- Attorney's evidence showed that three different weapons had been employed to kill Rosenthal, a fact which provod that ope of the four gunmen might not be .as guilty as the others, Mr. Moss had suggested to Gyp that if he waa ‘the least guilty of the quartet he had better unbosom timselt. Horow!tz had replied that he had nothing to confess; that he knew nothing of the murder, as he had not taken part tn it or been near it. Mr. Moss had urged the witness that he “had better make a clean breast of the whole thing.” Justice Goff intervened and ruled out that part of the record of Gyp's exam- ination at Pole Headquarters. The Court also instructed the jury to disre- ward it. Q. When you saw, as you say, Web- ber and Vallon shooting, did you know they were killing Herman Rosenthal’ A. No, sir. Q. Who did you think they were shooting at? A. We thought that they were shooting at us till we read about Ronenthal, Q. Yet you tokt absolutely nothing | o fthis to Commissioner Dougherty? | A.No, 1 told you the Commissioner ian't want to know it. He had un in- at the point of a gun at No. Fifty-elghth street and robbing her of Blood, first name and he sp _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, "NOVEMBER 14, | Woman Victim, Wrecked Auto And Scene of Car’s 100-Foot Fall PPA SAeeeeeeeseser seeeooresesoeooes i Q. What kind of ® place and pickpockets. Q. Isn't it a hangout for $687 A. Yes, but the Distric threw the case out. “Isn't it a fact,” asked An objection was sustained. affectionate Yes let you? A, (with aby Q. Did you write in that lei Second avenue jeweller who claimed to have been “stuck-up'" was in A. Yes. A. Held up, of course. ding that Jewell who knew ‘h phony holdup were kiddin: wrote to Zellg about st was a friend of his, But Tt The gunm n sald that the o thal was that he was afraid ord, This ended the ordeal of Gyp the Lewis (Frank Mul- and ‘Whitey ler) was called to the st As thi ond of sworn Clerk (Penny nd. eu xked hi Jacob Seldense) He twenty-four years old hitey Lewis was another sa! and with loud emphasis. head as talked blinked his eyes, every rt He and ‘His tongue d his answers, ty Loul was @ friend of years sta had known Gyp the Blood Frank only a few months murder. “I met ‘em at a ball," v witn before that Q. (By Mr. Wahle), When firat met Jack Rose? A. The they “framed” Jack Zelig. I hith nor Webber nor none of that. Q. You were in the Man: Yes (racing his words jumble). Loule and I was was hit in the foot and the through This shoe an’ there w his foot. I was hit, too, on}; the same button (pulling his dicted and he thought he had all the; goda in the world on He didn't want to convict Rose nor none of the | ot j Q. You said here that on the night of | July 16—the night of the murder—you Modern living is tremendous tax on the vitality of the nation. The woman of that splendid physique of our pioneer days, who was the mother of the West, disappearing from memory. The woman of soney anaemic, sickly always tired, sted type, e reason for this a _ simple. PT he call of social duty has imposed on the woman Q. Isn't ita fact that you put a pistol | of today responsibilities that take up too to th of Willlain’ Lee and said: | much of her time and sap her vitality. re ten ee amtamat Ue Wil The wile af the business man, artisan, T tell you I nev A's vevelver it jerk or working man frequently has hia’ dntidwuar to thar. pew in my | just as many social responsibilities as the mother is alive Q. Now, Horowitz, while you were at that took your revolver I never had a revolver, as my woman of fashion, The fact that she has fen't it true that | housework and other domestic dutics jarage @ proba- tion officer named Lagure came in and ¥? A. No, sir, Bul @ man dia ie perform only tends to make her life the jer. Many women think they oe suffering from various diseases but don't really from the back), You can see it was broke, I was hit in the pocket, too, Here's the hole where one lead was. | Well, as I says, there was shootin’ al around us, and then Loule an’ T ¢: out, We was pinched. THE MODERN WAY OF LIVING A SEVERE TAX ON VITALITY know what ails them, they suffer from stomach, foul breath, constipation, kid- ney andliver trouble, anaemia, and other muel regularly, and fail to take healthy out- plai They eat too door exercise as nature dem: lies heavily on the stomach, form and pe on is pumped into their inds of diseases of course are blood, All bound to follow. Cooper's stomach and ds in the a food so that it imparts strength and vigor tothe system, It mal blood, tunes the nerves and a run-down, half-sick, ana tothefull bloom of health. all druggists. A (Goudly) A hangout for thies ‘thieves, disorderly women and pick- Pockets? Isn't it one of the most notorious hangouts for crooks in America? .A. I don't know nothing about gunmen and the others. I Moss, you were discharged on your own rec- ognizance because the complaining wit- ness failed to appear against you?’ voice), It was an affectionate lette he had fled after the murder of Rosen- led out the name livan for choping out his words jerkily her sentence, an he nervously said the gunman No, 2, » “and I ain't never seen with Lefty Loule on the night of June 2 and there was a shooting dn and Loute and I ran for our lives. come on a button on my coat. But, aa T says They have head- many of them have nervous pros- New Discovery tones up the is that? | gunmen, 316 West t-Attorney “that Q. You wrote to Jack Zelig from the! >| Tombs an ter, didn't Kk in his tter that a the Tombs and that you were kidding the life out} of him? Q. What did you mean by “stuck-up?* wasn't kid- r. Tho other, fellows uttered the had framed himéelf tn a| co him 1 ause Jack WHITEY Lewis. TAKES STAND,|‘n* BACKS UP GYP. . | only reason ot his rece mmen was im for his id he was Jack Sul- Jerked his constantly tripped on nding, He | and Dago before the olleyed the| ‘em| was it you night after never seen ‘em before dokin Cafe there. A. rapid-fire there and Louie bullet went ‘as blood on y the bullet He coat around on the too ir ands. Food sours, gases imilation of kes rich, red d willrestore emic person shooting, inal WAS WITH “JACK” ZELIG WHEN HE WAS SHOT. The witness said he and “Lefty” ‘ Loule were arraigned and turned out} he Will duhertt about 670,000,000. sherttt | in connection with the Mandarin Cafe| Harburger sent this letter to young | He with Jack s shot as he was leaving th Courts Building on their way Inepector Schmittbenger's offic * he w, Herman Rosenthal? A. Say, I don’t Delieve he'd dare say nothing like that tome. Why I nev r liked that feller Rose's face from the first. I knew he was onty o stool of of Becker's.” ‘Mr. Wahle had aificulty in stop- ping the witness who seemed over- zealous to pore out # flood of words. ‘Let in 1 me, to * sick Q. When Jack Rose c Loule's flat Louie wa wasn't he? A, He was: Q. Did you hear Jack Lefty’ Loule to kill Herman Ros: Cri 1912. wants you boys to come around to the | J, W, Metropole." teas wit him to the Cadillac. Righto. Frank he don't go along. of Webber's, Frank says, “I ain't bee home for two nights an’ I guess Jean’ begin to worry about me.” blows. of Rosenthal in almost the same Iai frenaied effort to describe how mysterious: ‘Webber had ail been ahoting at once. TELLING STORY. tongue and jatybered: ‘They blazes an’ blazes an’ blazes, shootin’ an’ shootin’ | on ef PVOPIFTOTD the eubw I pays the fares.” an! Lewis. ADMITS HIS SEVERAL CRIMES ON CROS8-EXAMINATION. *Q. you used? A. Frank Muller, Goldber A. No. I didn't want to disgrgce my family. You konw I was a thfef and everything and I didn’t want to use my right name, Lewis admitted that he had been in the United States Army in the Philli- pines and that he had stabbed a fellow recruit. “He called me a Jow,” said the wit- ness, “an’ I stabbed him with a@ ‘little bit of a penknife. They give me three | month The Prosecution read the witne: criminal record and Lewis tossed his head and grinned as if he was proud of It. Q. You have committed other crimes for which you were not arrested? A. Sure; T stole @ lot of stuff a got awey with ft. Q. INd you ever hold anybody up? A. No, I never held nobody up. I was a thief but not a stuck-up guy. Q. Isn't it a fact that you and Lefty Loule and Jack Zelig killed Julie Mor- rell, A. Nothing like KH. We was no lwhere around when they pulled that oft, =e eat o@ See cae God aoe eae FF VVVF TOTS: ingly) Yes. aaa Q. You ied then? A, You, 1 wanted to-Walt and tell the truth to an hon-|% P ASTOR ON SHERIFF’S DUTY. | orable Judge and jury. PosoevesssssssvesH0ss99991 ‘ , a Q. isn't it a fact that at that timo | ————— VOC SELE PLLC ere Cee SVG C COOL TIIOVOST | ivsintmont Comes as Birthday you were making @ statement on which oe to Waggon abit: A. No. and “Lefty” and “Whitey Lewis went| we didn't have nothing to do with the| watt @, You wouldn't’ tell me the truth? |down to No. 76 Second avenue at 10.00 | shooting. Vincent Astor, who wit! enty= You didn’t mention then that Vallon | Clo A. Yes, stant deed Ud dete ab edllo teat dee) ars old ¢ thday -morrow, will celebrate his by Decoming a member of the pane!, Sheriffs jury. Incidentally, thi nen m= to Astor th4s afternoon: “My dear Mr. Astor: T take pleasure in appointing you a member of the IThe witness repeated Gyp the Biood's| "Td panel, Sheriff's jury, in place of Jdentals of Rose's testimony concernth | Your father, the late John Jacoh Astor, Q. Weren't you arrested early this | the hiring of the Rang to kill Rosenthal, | and congratulate you on your birthe year for holding up Mrs. Mary Elliott 1, Did Sack Mose eek you to kill | day.” Young Astor won't feel so very out of place on this particular body. Most of the members are very rich, For a long time {t was known as the “$300,- 000,000 pane! but changed to a $200,000,000 body when Col. Astor went down on the Titanic. With the coming of young Astor the old title will be restored, ad i wore oor EUROPE LEADS 16 FIGHTING CONSUMPTION thal? A. Ah, say, why Loule was in bed and he couldn't croak @ fly if he wanted to. Lewis dented Shak Home ita ever | Great Foreign Remedy Now Being name of Rosenthal on his visit to the Southern Boulevard fat Used in America. =~ Then the ss duplicated testi- oe nda a mony of “Gyp,” concerning the move Spectatists in Europe have Ba 5 slants pers who pinched Zelt don't belong to Becker's staff at all Hughes's staff, an’ they got th orders from headquarters.” STRANGER. to ibe Metropole? A. Sure, er comes in and he says: the stra: “Jack Ri Thore be Only One “Bromo Quinine” Laxative Bromo Ueod The World Over to rie 9 few One ae Always remember the full this signature om every me D BOX Thursday’ 8 Offering CHOCOLATE — COVERE! RRMONDA: ve fue cleewheres poUND BOX 1 Caramels Premium Milk Choe Forsaleat hose coppers SARE, HE WENT OUT WITH THE Q. And shortly after this a strange man came in and told you to go around Quinine C Boon CANBY for Thursday, the 14th |Special for Friday, the 15ta ROASTED 40¢ Milk Chocolate Covered A dainty, chewy caramel centre made up of purest ingredients, blanketed w & coating of our 39c ing Consumption durin w ments of the gunmen on the night of | with gr ft success ht ie a Swies prev: murder, He said that when they ‘ailed Siro sag ba sufferers 1 to Webber's poker room Webber Sirolin has bes " | said to them: uantities, and youse boys came down | oF che ’discase Nere aa it is abroad, cause going to to youse}” sirolin, though Powerful in ‘attack that none of us had nothing go do with a i the ‘framing’ of Jack Zel We're ere ove ft ys, by the cop- Aa appetite het would do credit to pine to Drpye:s De Are the cop la healthy man, thus making its great body butider. ‘Additional inform: be obtained Jn tis the Sirolin Co ork City, Rikei leading drugwiste are di With considerable success. The Modern “Ounce of Prevention” Food particles are known to be infested, with malicious microbes which attack and de- stroy the teeth and cause dangerous diseases ofthe the mouth and throat. bu nel Hon about Alrolt ountry by addre: West Brondway, ributing Sirolin nee ose The constant use of “ Cabal he wash means absolute immunity from this ever-present | menace to your health. Pleasant to use and delightfully refreshing. It will also keep your teeth in a healthy condi- tion, There is nothing “Just as Good” as “ODOL." Price 50 Cents. | At all Druggists and Department Stores. GEO. BORGFELDT & CO. NEW YORK (Trade Mick ASSORTED HARD CANDY: ahe values POUND BOX 10¢ CHOCOLATE COVERED MOLASSES NUTTER CHIVS: our rea- ular Bho mood $4 Dae. 0c ‘open very sven The specified w: include: Q. You went with him? A. Yes. We | Then he Whitey Lewis described the shooting guage used by Gyp the Blood, only in Lewie's case he got #0 excited that he eprang wp from tie chair and began dancing about the witness stand in a the “Itwky" @nd Vaiion amt LOSES CONTROL OF TONGUE IN} shies, an'—an’—but we didn't | son-in-law of Pre wait for nothing more, tut beats it for! was appointed Vice-President of the This ended the direct examination of (By Mr. Wahle) What names have Jacob Seidel and Miller. 4) Q. You didn’t use your right name? ‘al =| Nurfto Is a jexeman Stores and all | CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO M’CUTCHEON NAMED AS GIANTS’ SECRETARY Q. That is, all of you but Frank? | TO SUCCEED O’BRIEN He says he'll go home after we come out n Brush’s Son-in-Law Elected Vice | President of N.Y. Baseball Club | at Secret Session of Officials. Reports that Joseph D. O'Brien woul of the New York National ly in The Evening World yesterday, were confirmed to-day when J. W. Mo- Cutcheon waa named as his successor. cret meeting of the board, At the same meeting Mr. Hempstead, dent John T. Brush, | Gtanta’ club. Tt was no: stated just when Mr. Mo- jCutcheon, the new secretary, would a. sume charge of the club's affairs. M MoCutchéon is connected with the Far- nan Realty Company. The action of tho club's directors in naming @ successor to Joe O'Brien jcomes as a surprise to the baseball world, It was understood that Mr. | O'Brien, formerly head of the Ameri- can Association, had fitted in very well ecretary of the Giants, but the) strain of steering a championship club like the Giants through @ hard season, and especially through a world’s series |had proved too great for the former Milwaukee official. O'Brien is now in the West. Owner Brush 1s very {ll and confined to his rooms at the Hotel Imperial. He | is in no condition to discuss the changes in the club's affairs ee, INCOMING STPAMSHIPS, DUE TO-DAY. St, Ogwald, Nawtce “Ynvereyi Saltoe, s00n relinquish his position as secretary League | Baseball Clu, as announced exclustve- | Mr. McCutcheon has been for some timo| | & director of the club and was appoint: | fine wit Jot all control of his | 4 tO the position of secretary at a so- | thern three times @ day. The ‘RINGWORM ON CHEE AND BEHIND EAR | Running Into Scalp, . Hot and Itch 1; Ing. Scales Fry id, HadtoCu Hair, Cuticura Soap and Oint ment Cured in Two Weeks, Somerville, N. J. —" My daughter's ring worm was quite obstinate, First a red spc Sppeared on her clevk aud another just bt hind tho ear, runnio into her ecalp about th size of a dime.’ The. were hot and ftching Beales formed and cause her to ecrateh, whie., mado it inflamed am sometimes drew th blood. 1 tried —— then aod | salve, but it kept growing. | the hair from the ringworm Pty ecalp, It must have been of two | standing ast had grown toa good aise, whey 1 got my husband to get me e sample o Cuticura Soap and Ointment. 1 wadhet ft with hot water and Cuticura Soap de |epplied the Cuticura Ointment. The fap application benefited her, When my samph ‘was used I saw it was not so large and angry. | #0 I bought @ box of Cuticura Oin Sod a cake of Cucra Soap od ptt for four of five days checked ite growth ant | | in two weeks more she was entirely cured Cuticura Soap and Ointment also cured Ly fon in two woeks of & cape of ringworm.’ (Signed) Mrs. A. E. Nevillo, Dec. 19, 11 Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment ar¢” sold throughout the world. A single est often sufficiont. Liberal sample of. eact’ mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Addres post-card “Cuticurs, Dept. T, Boston.” sa-Tender-faced men should use Cutieurs Bonn Shaving Stick, 25¢. Samplefrea eser BROS Visible 2 || EXHIBITED AT 180 BROADWAY Those Who Can Least Afford Loss of Time HAVE RHEUMATISM Sciatica and Neuritis People who have work to do in the families dependent upon them and can ill affurd to lose time. are the most frequent sufferers from rheuma- tiam, welatica and neurits Tho agonizing pains rei to carry on thelr full wor! family auffora in a | the lens distr world—who ha’ jer them unable” 0 the whole mpathetlc but me 1K to these peopte— ft ts to all sufferers from matic a | enses, It positively reltev unexpected promptness— few hoi well known qnd_ is thoroughly taing neither oplat ical, nor ‘narcotics. but gives this prompt relief because It is aj Antidote—and the first positive on the urle acid poison which Is the cau the pain. | Nurito’ ts making a recurd for throughout the country—proof in affi form will be shown vou, 81 and box. For sale by Riker-Hegeman Stores and all other leading drugKist iteelt it |] At Wholesale Prices |] in the Wholesale District ote $t56, 208 5,8 108. om ergey pounds tad do ‘ou ovy soasting, ‘Gr ata tle are guaranteed, We canuot be undermtd, PRICES AS LOW AS 20c LB. Call and aoe what 9 wholesale coffes house (PP Sooke iike"Gr Write Yor descriptive price Tist, | Mail Orders Sent C. O. D. We Deliver Everywhere GILLIES COFFEE Co. * Bees i BRP Weeniagton, st peapist ts Don’t Persecute your Bowels LIVER PILLS Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price Genuine ewta: Signature wa TOOTH POWDER Better than the Kind You Are Using! ADAMS EXPRESS COMPANY, ., New, Yorks Nov. 14, 1912, orelock PM! Now. IB! tothe to OE} TER H, ALBERT, Treasurer oiEec. RYERSON.—Suddenly on Wednesday, Nov 18, 1912, CHARLES WILLIAM RYER- SON. 49 years. Funeral services at his late residence, 143 Sumi Brooklyn, Friday eve: ning, Nov. 15., at 8 o'clock, Interment Prospect Cemetery, Jemaica, j ving of Dew It 1s the prescription of a physician, «| 66 9 He’s PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANO We don’t expect Pano from us. bec! i. We don't ‘ou to purchase youre we wo make certain, ‘ luenee your chetow by offering prizes or catch sc Ve want you to be the sole judge the quality, tone and dependability our fnstrun just as it should be, and for thi a we Will send to your home Absolutely Free on Trial Weser Uprights or. d 6 20). We only ask xive it a fair tral, and when, Lowest Factory Price’. On Easy Terms -. It you decide not to -keep it, notif us and we will call and take It away. You are under no obligation what All WESER Pianos and Mayer Planod’ fully guaranteed. oi 860, 875, 80 up’ ed from $3 to $4 per month. Send for new Catalogue A. WESER BROS. sisson, Cpe 121 WEST 25D ST., NEAR OTH AVE, Open Eves, by Appointment, Tel. Chelase @414., A ‘The latest hit. Our vlothes are right up to the second ‘and are priced #0 as to ake a hit with you, Down, Only $1.09 .a Weel’ The swellest clothes ve co @ full line of furs are her for your salisfaction at 1-3 lease theo, you'll pay elsewhere. Then, beata ee. ; You don't need cash to wor the LEN ees 2274 3¢ Bet: J 884 & or ae 14° St in & cue MICHIGAN FURNITURE E CO 2IT4-32 AVE BETHB EMI ST No Store By In America Und elu Ask ab In: oe 8 reek te cea