The evening world. Newspaper, December 12, 1912, Page 6

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MORE WOMEN Mary Goode’s Amazing Dis- closures Go to Grand Jury With Purther Evidence. USED AGAINST BECKER. Whitman’s Aide Tells Court . She Helped Convict Lieu- tenant and Gunmen. The Grand Jury of the Extrnor- @inary Term of the Supreme Court will investigate the charge made by Mary Goode, a disorderly house keep- ef, that she paid protection money to | Mayor, |Commissioner can prevent graft under | | the establishment of a citinens’ commit. |tee oF otier commission of uninpeach- a — WITNESSES TO EYPOSE GRAFT SYSTEM AT ALDERMANIG IQUE Vice in constantly growing in New York, she declared, and neither tho} District-Attorney nor Police | She advocates | the present conditions, | able charcter to regulate vice, and sald she had written to Mri mont to enlist the ta pases MARY GOODE REFUSED TO TELL OF GRAFT TO DEPUTY, WALDO SAYS Mary Goode, who gave atartling texti- mony of graft before the Aldermanic|of Mra, Nathaniel Arnold and gave the | connection. In fa e declared, the| town, where the imaginations and minds m dered you get happy relief in five minutes, Investigating Committee — yerterday, | gossips another shock by leaving town | jatter young woman was entirely wn-|of the defective children could be de- | With Architects Palmer and Hornbustle | put what pleases you most is that it) Put an end to stomach trouble bj Idenied on Nov, $ Inst, necording (6) the same night. Meanwhile Miss Syl-| known to her, even by name. veloped by individual care free from|&n4 Frederick A. Goetse, dean of the | seongthens and regulates your stomach | getting a lnrae (ifty-cent case of Pape's loner Waldo, that ahe had pald | vester declares that out of town] FELL IN LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT, | tne humillation of belng put with ehil- | School of Mines of Columbia University | 4 you can eat your favosite foods with- | Diapepsin from any drug store. m7 of, Boliceman, |for a few days and tuat the wedding ‘ldren far younger. The guild voted to|and representatives from the Hudson | out fear, 4 realize in five winutes how needless it je Soode explained this on tho! will ocour very, very soon. SOON ENGAGED. make an appeal to the Board of Kdu-| Fulton Association: | °"Most ‘remedies give you relief some-| to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia of yesterday and added that she wan afraid to admit to the tnapector that she had paid for protection The Commissioner wrote: This woman was arrested Nov. 4 the police, ind‘rectly and directly, for the privilege of conducting her {1-; legal business. In fact, Mrs. Goode hed already told her story to the Dis- trict-Attorney before she went on the @tand before the Aldermanic Investl- gating Committee yesterday. Matters now before the Grand Jury | fm connection with the investigation of tie Tombs do not allow of the immedi- ate examination of Mre. Goode, She will be summened within a few days and It {@ anticipated that her evidence there Will be more circumstantial than tha: which ahe gave to the Alermanto Com- mittee. ‘The case of Mra, Goode on the charge of conducting a disord flat in West One Hundred and Ninth street wae on the calenéer of the Court of Special Bessions before Justices Steinert, Sal- Mon and McInerny to-day. When the Name of Mrs. Goode w: Ant District-Attorney the caso be dismissed. | WOMAN AIDED STAT: ‘THAL CAS! “Acting on the District-Attorney's Fequest,” said Mr. Smith, “f ask that this defendant be discharged on her on the ground that : ne dofendant has turnished the Stato mith evidences against Lieut. Becker aad tho four gunmen recently convicted ‘ the murder of Terman Rosenthal. ; @ has algo given tho Metrict-Attorney | miéh evidence In an investigation now ) wnder way, and is ready ahd willing to | furnisls further investigation.” . The charge against Mre. Goode was ready to proceed with the case. Goode will be heard again by the Aldermanic Committee, probably next She now become a part of ma of investigation, As a of her testimony and the man- | in which It wan received, tt ts te that other women of her kind forth with evidence of hay’ ‘Mrs, Goode has furnished ic Committee's detectives deal of matter which nas brought out, and the Unes opened up are being followed. Par- attention is being paid to the getting corroboration of her ff the methods used in collecting HaFET ne! g at i t-Attorney's office refused in what important pert Mra. . ; fed in the preparation of the Book: na four gun- as not A Witness in either i z Hf iF bod F amd a half ago "Gyp the of the gunmen, and four invaded a disorderly flat nduoting in West Fifey- it and, with drawn revolvers, tmmates and five male vie- and rebbed thom of all their money So far as is generally ie the only connection Mra. ‘had with the Rosenthal i sj an : EM BADLY SHAKEN BY GRAFT EXPOBURE. wiveet beer bottler, an ol Woli, the avenue liquor dealer, de- geribed by Mrs. Goode us the downtown and uptown collectors fyom disorderly houses, both deny that they ever coi- Protection money from Mre AS @ matter of fact, she did way she paid any money to Wolf, she did say that Policeman Skelly, taking her first payment of $25 told her Wolf would do the “collecting. ‘Nothing since the Kosenthal and Jack Rose alidayits has created @o much ex- @iement tn poll Mary de dresses quiet! anes and nas ears eye: Which she says she is, It le sald name is Mary Miliot. “Manhy" Maas, the Lust Foriy-ninth| jreaith Mle appearance of a ovllege-vred wom: | on @ warrant issued by the Chief City Magistrate, charging her with keeping and maintaining a disorderly house. The officers making the ar- rest reported to the Inspector of the district that at the time of her ar- rest she had made @ statement to the effect that they had better see Skelly before they arrested her, as Skelly was the Inepector’s ‘“confi- dential man,” On Nov, 8 Mary Goode brought amined in the presence of there | ficers and a Lieutenant of Police. She denied that she had ever made the statement that she had paid Biaft to @ policeman or to any other person. On her ssamination before the Aldermen #9 admitted that she had been sent for i+ the Inspector @nd that she had aeted to him knowing Skelly: She sieisd before the Committee that she i»? paid Skelly twenty-five dollars anc vas immediate! thereafter = arrea' 1 Skelly apparently not having bee: | able to deliver the protection ai». alleges he promised her. : On investigation K was found that Patrolman Skelly and two oth Policemen had been detailed repe: edly to house duty and to make aminations in the precinct, in vio! tion of a General Order of the De- partment. As a result Skelly was transferred to Tottenville, Staten Island, and the other swo men were also transferred to outlying pre- eincts, The captains who had been in command of the precinct where these violations occurred have been Maced on trial. Skelly at no time has been detailed to duty In plain clothes nor asmgned to any office or tn any way charged with the en- forcement of laws for the prevention of prostitution. Deputy Commissioner Walsh, wh is investigating this case, made eve: effort to personally interview Goode woman. She refused to be | terviewed, to make any statement to come to his office. Deputy Co! ‘Missioner Walsh is continuing a most thorough und searching inves- tigation. His report will be com- pleted within a few days. This women admitted before the committee that she has been driven es by the police, mony she does not allege id money, directly or In- ¥, to any person in the Police Departinent other than Skelly, and she further admits that she never recelved any protection. HE SPURNS “CELL DE LUXE.” Tombs Wa City to Pay for His Quarters Outside Jail. The little house in the prison yard of the Tombs may be a ‘‘cell de lux for prominent prisoners, but that it Is not @ house fit for the Warden of the Cky Prison to occupy was contended 1 y before Justice Cohalaa and a jury in the Supreme Court to-day by counsel for John J. Fallon, Warden of the ‘Tombs. ‘The eu again the city le for $806 that the Warden was required to ex- pend between Aug. 1, 1910, and March 3 last because the quarters in the Tombi yarde which were assigned to him w: not fit to live in. The Warden receives $3,000 a year and domicile. ‘Charles Strauss, counsel for the War- den, said that the quartera in the prison been heard Cum: yard, which #o much hay about lately because Willian J, mins, fined th had been Counsel Mitohell admitted that the Warden had recelved perm’asion to live outside, but faid that he tad not received permis- sion to render @ bill to the city, POSLAM BRINGS FREEDOM FROM SKIN DISTRESS Poslam stop cools, roth Ago she came to Fer tour tag furnished room houses. Then a! Met Bessie Powoski, who kept « dia @PMerly revort, and nursed her through @ dangerous illness. married and turned over her but Mrs. Goode decided to he Das had plenty of Mory to the committee yester- had paid fi 'y month, but thar protection doesn't always protect; another rake off on the they have to pay for s bond, 4 after that the Powoski woman Maanlnda and constant increase of its n to the Goode woman. The former and comforts as soon as applied, rapidly cures eczema (even in two weeks) noses or inflamed skin ight. * Day by day this work is repeated by | ard has been living during ile! Byivester was ra if the university, the historical assectae | sojourn in New York, developed to-ay | Meeting oi a Jance only three | University authorities for *-veral years, | tion and the city , the pur- the fact that the young explorer had | weeks aso, the pai first! The Hudson Fulton Aesoclation has | poses of al! three v st served. | packed up all of hie heavy clothing in) sieht and were th Hi Friends Say R. H. Millward Is | in riot alt all pleaged at the precipitous: | sontcinir rides stwit on leading Jersey, | toward the Hudson from Riveraile ‘ indie Balite witie ceee rouns” Washingtonian conducted APA tS dol cel UI ol hold” 50000" a pactatorcet made land, tolTime it! In just five minutes there will be no Indiges- i lov ie, Ti the medium of! me 3 ’ nt ; be ancted 49, salen sf vives: [OVE attain, Through, the mevium of) irhere are boys and eiria in the | Which Commissioner Stover will present tion, Sourness, Heartburn, Gas or Dyspepsia. whose ward, now said to be on the broad reaches of the Gulf of Mexico, bound for the heart of Central America on a three years’ expedition, Inst Thursday afternoon by getting a license to wed the attractive daughter A Genuine Pianola Piano _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 132, Jan from all accounts. | scale has been talked over by Columbia | Been studying over a means of orecting | motheproof tranks and put them in stor. | n other's a ml Wat wamoral to Ue die {Axe Ip the meantiine pure Fall 9 the effect that Millward | rae be The Matson River ane the | ime Adele Mavic Rique of Ne Vrond tekete for New Orleans, which {9 en engaged to a well-know ~ s Riaue Ot ae the departing for Contral Amer-| treme have proved groundiens. " inventor of the steamboat. Commis. | \\ert Seventy-second street, [ican steamers, it ja sald thee he wit! paternal @ioner Stover has urged the pulid-|scrived herself as “Soul Teacher and ‘steer diret for Guatemala, via Helize, | | ing of @ stadium by the olty and sas| High Priestess of Soul Thought of the Spanish Honduras, and will there take | MONTCLAIR, OF ALL PLACES, i pong hie he ar to use a cue weaker oe ‘ me Ip arohe foal and geographical work | mart rel ‘of the purpose | guilty y a with hla associate, D, K. Campbell of | HAS DEFECTIVE SCHQLARS! Was not approved by public sentiment. | without a license and was placed on comes card It was agreed at the conference that ' suspended sentence in General Sesstone, thin, city. FIANCEE EXPREGCES ENTIRE CONFIDENCE IN HIM. Mins Sylventer expressed entire con fidence in him, and declares he will r turn by Monday next. Friends of Mi ward say positively that the young mai will be gone for at least two yea | possibly longer. It seoma very evident that Mra. Na- thaniel Arnold, mother of Misa Sylv Don Carios Bliss, the new #uperin- tendent of Schools of Montclair, N. J. stirred up a lot of talk to-day a peech he made last night heford the Men's Guild of St. James's Eptacopal Church in Upper Montclair. Mr. Bilas ead that in spite of the liberal appro- priation of Montclair for schools, there were more backward al fective pus pils than in any town of the size of witch he knew, in apite of the fact that OF HS WEDDING Park Commissioner Stover Wants $10,000,000 Structure Over Central Track. * “REALLY DOES” PUT STOMACHS IN ORDER AT ONCE—PAPE'S DAPEPSI. Off for a Two Years’ Trip. A ten million dollar stadium ballt out @ bill to the Legislature in January. The tentative plans cali for the hiding of the New York Central tracks at the foot of Riverside Park by leading them through a tunnel under the stadium. The site proposed covers the ground be- tween One Hundred and Sixteenth and One Hundred and Twentieth streets. There was a conference on the plans at the office of the Park Commissioner several days ago, In which he consulted ninth street, Mill- eologint, in schools who are nino years behind the grade in which their age should place them. There are boys ofe fifteen with the mental equipment of children of four. There are 2% defective children of whom only seven are to be found in the three schools of Upper Montclair. Nearly all of them are negroes or the children of foreign-born parents.” Mr. Bilas advocated the pure! a “parental schoo! apartment in West Seventy-ninth street, Mrs. Arnold deciared that there was no wedding and would be none for a long time. She admitted that her daughter was “engaged” to Millward. Mrs, Margaret Milward, mother of the explorer, declared last night in Washington that her son had lately de- scribed his matrimonial plans to her { detafl, and that he had certainly made no mention of ‘Ivester in that Diapepsin is quick, positive and pets your stomach in healthy conditiog 99 the misery won't come back. You feel different ax soon as Diapep. sin comes in contact with the stomach —distress just vanishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, se eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine, come foods eat hit beck— tang quod, but worl badly: ferment into stubbora lumps and cause a sick, sour, id Mrs. ice ths’ down, Pape Di a, . ja- leaving noth- peat areca ence how badly your stomach is disor- explorer and a Millward, who startled uptown society ofa near farm for cation to carry out the ide times—they are slow, but not sure. | any stomach disorder. Inquiries at the Hotel Ansonia, where| The courtship of Millward and Mins| | The erection of @ stadium on @ giant —for Christmas Select the piano that suits your purse from this famous group. —Each is the leading piano of the world at its price. —Each contains the marvelous Pianola, the recognized Standard Piano-player of the world. —Each offers to artist and musical beginner alike, and—the means to play it perfectly. No Other Gift Like This In giving a Pianola Player-piano, you have the satis- Yaction of knowing you are bestowing the supreme article of tts kind—the Player-piano preferred by the leading musicians, Rulers, and cultured classes of all nations. You have the satisfaction of knowing that the happiness your gift confers will continue through the years, outlasting countless Christmas holidays. Think for a moment what the possession of a Pianola Player-piano- would mean to anyone—to you for instance— Imagine yourself in possession of one and seated at itskeyboard. ' What shall you play first? Airs from the musical comedy you heard only last night, pr popular songs and dances of the day? You can have them. What next? The old airs you’ve known since childhood? You can play them every one—from “Silver Threads” to “Sweet Evalina” and “The Mocking Bird.” Then what? A_venturesome excursion into wonderful concert melodies. Play them all! Play “Faust” and “Carmen” and “William Tell.” Play “The Moonlight Sonata” the “Ballade in A Flat” the “Melody in F.” Play Grieg and Moszkowski. Play Liszt and Mendelssohn. Play everything, for look you—seated at this marvelous in- strument you have absolute command oVer all the good music ever wrillen, rer ramen What a gift this is—the ability to command all music, and greater still, the ability to play it yourself. Only at Aeolian Hall Can you buy the genuine Pianola Player-piano. It isto your ad- vantage to know this. In buying any of the other instruments which the success of the Pianola Player-piano has brought upon the market, you forego important advantages like the Metrostyle, Themodist, Graduated Accompaniment, Sustaining Pedal Device, etc., which are essential to genuinely artistic playing and contribute vitally to the pleasure it gives. These advanrages are all offered by the least ex- pensive Pianola Player-piano, and are to be found on no other make of player-piano, irrespective of price, Prices from $550 a perfect piano =k <= a JERE ENN es Ae = ee ET we 4 f = PP e-reeceererrenereneennersnnreveen oo wes Poslam with uniform success, and this positive merit is alone responsible for the val users und that in ac- tual accomplishment all clai Poslam are greatly exceeded, POS LAM BOA is so pure that it ma; be used in the mouth for cleansing teeth and gums. It is especially adapted for | tse on tender skin—soothing and de- Best and safest for baby's i dandruff, | 1 whenever scalp | made for and greatly benel difficulties exist, sell Foden (price 50 For free samples, write to the Emergency Labgraterie 8% West 25th Street, New York City, Informal Public Demonstrations From 10 to 18 in the morning and from 3 to 6 in the after- noon, the Pianola Player-piano is publicly demonstrated in the Musician's Club Room at Aeolian Hall. All ave cordially invited, In addition, private demonstrations are given cheerfully at all hours entirely without obligation on the visitor's part, THE AEOLIAN COMPANY Largest Manufacturers of Musical Instruments in the World Aeolian Hall 29-31-33 West 42nd St. t ¢

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