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i WALSH of evidence upon which Mr, Whitman hopes to base indictments. SWEENEY, HUGSEY AND THOMP- SON CALLED BY WALDO. Sweeney visited the Commiasioner twice to-day. In the morning he denied to the Commissioner that ¢he story told by Walsh to the District-Attorney last night was ¢rue.. This afternoon he was summoned to Headquarters, noti- fied of his suspension and given an opportunity to make s statement, Hussey and Thompson also were summoned to Headquarters this after- noon, Commissioner Waldo announced that he had set an investigation on foot which might bring eurprising re- sults, He promised that he would have a statement to issue to the public late thia afternoon or this evening. Walsh, now that he has surmounted the firet barrier of ehame and fear that operates so powerfully to restrain @ policeman from “squealing,” je will- ing to lend active aid to the author- ities, He is refreghing his memory by the persual of papers and documents and has recalled the names of persons in the Police Department and outside who may be able to eubstantiate hia of the newspapers show that when Thompson, then an inspector, was sent to Hartem tn tT he made several aide on disorderly houses in the Best One Hundred and Twenty-sixth Gtreet precinct over Walakg head, When the excitement over the ride quieted down hotels resumed eas as before. sh sayn that it was after these reide that Thompson deciated himself in on ‘ was ussiess to try to protect Lhgeod Mr. the graft. Dr. W. H. Upton, ‘Walsh's family | Hartigan prove’ hard to handle TO BARE Fotlowing de a Met of the mand of precincts im the Siati oollections: now at Gates avenue station, tion, Brooklyn; Lincoln Gray, now at Ralph avenue aetation, commander. mander. present commander. and saddle anything on Walsh, physician, sald after a visit to the| stuck to his original etory for @ tong much more cheerful stale of mind than he has been in since he wa ill, about aix weeks 680. “He {x etill a very sick man, physic patient thie afternoon, that Walsh was| time. Inspector Bwreney apent o busy day jaken|at his headquarters in Harlem. He wes @o nervous that his hands fut: tered end’ his ips twitched, but he ally," said the mpyaician, “but I thiak| kept bimeelf in action. Among his the release of a great weight from his|callere was Patrolman Jahn J. Skelly, mind has done him a lot of good. How-| Who t# under indictment, charged with ever, 1 will not consent to (Re remeval| obtaining $36 from Mary Goode for of Capt. Walsh from his héme in his} permission to open e disorderly house present condition under eny ciroum-|ia the West One Hundredth etreet stances. I would not consent, even though he should be indicted.” Notwithstanding Dr. Upton's state- precinct. Skelly, on bail, is iting trial. Ldeutenamt Washborn, now stationed District-Attorney Whitman ex-j}in Brookign, and Capt. Day of the pm to have Capt. Walsh before the| West One Hundred and Fitty-second Grand Jury geome time next week, The| street station, also called on Sweeney. Distric Attorney anticipates that | Besides, the Inspector held communica- Walsh's teotimony, together with what|/tions with others, tn he can gather from persons whose| department, by mensenger and tele- names have been furnished by Wash, | phone will furnish matter for the serious con-| The Police Commissioner tesued an sideration of Inspector Sweeney. o'clock to-day. WALSH DIRECTLY ACCUSEG SWEENEY OF SHARING GRAFT. ‘Walsh said he divided with Sweeney order suspending Capt. Walsh at 11.9 No order was issued Sweeney. The suspension of Walsh followed a consultation at the Criminal Courts Bulléing between the District-attorney and Third Deputy Commissioner Newburger, who was ap- ‘was pointed yesterday. Commissioner Waldo, immediately upon reaching Ble office, sent Deputy Commissioner Newburger to see Mr. Whitman for the purpose of getting} tears ‘ the collections. Walsh's contession has shaken ‘the; WALOO CALLS whole Police Department. It is re warded as more important and far reaching than the conviction of Lieut, Becker, for it involves so many high in authority, directly and indirectly, that the District-Attorney has almost « limit- Jess field for work. Commissioner Waldo is genuinely ex- ercised over the development of the past twenty-four hours, particularly in ight of the fect that both Walsh and @weeney had positively dented to him that there was any truth in the confea- sion of Patrolman Fox, which opened the revelations. The Commissioner was shocked when he learned that Walsh— on hearsay evidence—had accused one of the chief executives in headquarters of sharing in the graft, After talking to Inspector Sweeney in his office to-day, the Commissioner questioned a couple of Bweeney’s plain- clothes men, and then sent for Fourth Deputy Commissioner James E. Dillon, ‘The Fourth Deputy 1s an inepector in the Police Department technically on leave of absence, and appointed = dep- uty ¢o Commistsoner Waldo tn May, ;W11, with the consent of Mayor Gaynor, WALDO HURRIES TO CONFER WITH MAVOR GAYNOR. After talking with Dillon, Comm‘s- sioner Waldo burried to the City Hall for @ conferench with the Mayor. * Partial corroboration, at least, of the charge made by lox and Walsh that Inspector Sweeney and Waleh chipped in to raise the fund of §1,000—or $90 or thereaboute—which was to have gone in its entirety to George A. Bipp with the order to get out of New York and stay out was obtained by District-Attorney Whitman to-day from Patrolman John J. Hartigan of the West One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street precinct, Harti- gan has done plain clothes work for ‘Walsh, in his confession, said that the money contributed by Sweeney and him- self put in an envelope and to Hartigan with instruction that it be delivered to Patrolman Fox he Crim- ‘nal Courts Building. This was prior to the time @ipp was called before the Grand Jury and {t yas to the interest of Walsh and Sweeney to get him out of town., Hartigan admitted to-day to Mr, Whit- man that he took @ bulky envelope handed to him by Capt. Walsh to the Criminal Courts Bullding and turned it over to Fox, The envelope was handed by Fox to « lawyer, who was to sce that it got to Gipp. According to Mr. Whit- man's information, the money passed through the hands of three lawyers be- fore it got to @tpp, and in passage it shrank to $700, Edward J. Newell, who was Sipp's counsel, is already under in- dictment for Ris share in this transac- tion, and Mr. Whitman expects to in- corroboration came from Mr. Whitman, Owaenev's PLAIN CLOTHE@ MEN. Inspector Gweensy visited Headquart-| ere and was closeted with the Commie- Stoner for twenty minutes. When at Headquarters yesterday, Sweeney was asked by Commissioner Waldo about the charge made by Fox that the graft collections were split between Walsh and Sweeney. The inspector positively Genied that he had taken a cent of Graft. Whether he repeated his denials to-day Je not knewn, Goon after Sweeney left Headquarters and retumed to his office in the West One Hundred and Twenty-ffth street etation house two of his plainclothes men appeared at Commissioner Waldo's door, They were Denis Mahoney and Harry Horn, and they said they had been summoned to the Commissioner's office. District-Attorney Whitman positively paid to-day that he had made no prom- {see pt immunity to Capt. Walsh. He says he te through with granting im- munity, What cogstderation is to ve given to men who confess hereafter is to be left to the courts, The District- Attorney ts of the opinion that he has started something in the ure of @ snowball rolling down hill, and that cumulative evidence will pile up suffi- ¢ to reach Into the heart of the em of graft collecting and stamp it out. ‘The confession of Walsh as reported {a the nowapapers to-day was a great eurprise to Commissioner Waldo, Fo!- lowing Fox's confession to the District- Attorney yesterday the Commissioner sent his new deputy, Newburger, to Walsh's home in Harlem, where Walsh ‘was supposed to be in a dying condi- ton, ports made by po- presence of wit- nccres, questioned Walsh for nearly wn hour, Walsh eteadfastly denied the truth of the allegations of Fox that io (Walsh) had abared in graft. He w tearful in Protestations of inn cence. Deputy Newburger reported the result of his visit to Commissioner Waldo, and within two hours Walsh was tearfully making a complete con- fearion to the Distriot-Attorney, EXCIGE GRAFT STILL COLLECTED DESPITE MAYOR'S ORDERS. feasions that St. Nicholas avenue station (established last summer): Walsh, now at West Fortyseventh street station; Patrick L. Walsh, Captains During Five Years In Inspector Sweeney’s District captaing who have been in com- ih Inapection District during the past five yeare covered by Cept. Walsh's confession of graft East One Hundred and Twentysixth street station: Thomas W. Walsh; Daniel A. McElroy (recently appointed to succeed Walsh). West One Hundred and Twenty 4fth atreet station: Frederick G. Carson, Brooklyn; John J. Farrell, now In- e@pector in the Bronx; James F, Thompson, now at Lee avenue sta- resent commander. West One Hundred and Fiftysecond etreet station: Lou's Kreuscher, Brooklyn; William F. Day, present Lenox avenue station (established last summer): Bernard Keloher, now at Herbert street station, Brookyn; August Kuhne, present com- Edward 1, West One Hundredth street station (taken from Inspector Sweeney's control last summer and given to Inspector Dwyer): John D. Herlihy, now ingpector in charge of Staten Island; William H. Shaw, now at Bedford avenue station, Brooklyn; John L. Zimmerman, now at Weatehester station; Matthew MoKeon, present commander. be “show: h aries to understand that if Capt. Walsh made a clean breast of everything he would have little to fear, but the prosecutor would make no | toga in advance of hearing thelsister, Mrs. Mary D. Myton, and Rufus night Capt. Walsh eent for thi jet-Attorney. Mr, Whitman taxicab and picked up his assistant, Frederick Groehi, on the way, They went to Walsh's home, No. 1968 Madison avenue, reaching there about 10.90 eolock, in ded, weak Capt. Walsh wa: from his illness and in a state of excitement from worry and fear. His voice was Weak, but hig condition did not seem to be dangerous, HAD JUST LEARNED OF FOX's CONFESSION. It was learned that he was not told of Fox's confession until yesterda: that the information caused @ relapee. Dr. Upton, who haa been treating Walsh for « year for affection of the heart, stomach and kidneys, had just ieft when the District-attorney and sistant arrived. Walsh was plainly fear of dying, and wanted to purge bis consclenoe, Capt. Walsh greeted the District-At- torney tearfully. He explained he @a@ known Mr. Whitman ae a Magistrate and had every confidence in him, First he talked to Mr, Whitman hoy after might being warned that anythin; say would be used ee im, part begged the District-Attorney to eave pe husband. Freq ehe interru @ story of et ag ) Worm man On the bed with her pleas. Wawwh told the Ditrict-Attorney he Remonheers aces payment ey of the monthly collections, Besides this, he had cor Fay gennrnsed of another sort te supply to On Tuesday morning The World pub- Ushed in a summary of Fox's confession his statement that one-half of the money paid to Walsh was turned over to In- @pector Sweeney. Neither Sweeney nor Commissioner Waldo paid any attention to this any er charges made by Fox against Walsh and others. Yesterday Mr. Waldo sent for In- spector Sweeney, and after a leng con- ference with him a statement was mate by Bweeney that he purposed beginnin an action for Iibel against The World. Later he did. Sweeney's sult against The Wortd ts for $100,000 and the eummons was coe volley Yesterday through Charles F, of No, 28 Broadway. The action was begun before Walsh, confessed that Sweeney shared the graft that Walsh received—as Fox had stated. —— SWEENEY’S UP AND DOWN CAREER AS A CAPTAIN AND AN INSPECTOR. Dennis Gweaney has twice been ap- Pointed to be a police inspector. The first time he lost the rank because the man he was appointed to succeed was retnetated by the courts, Here is the record of his assignments ee inspector: Appointed inspector and assigned to Harlem June 20, 195. Reduced to captain Apri 1f, 1908, Reappointed inepector and assigned 1o Harlem April 23, 1908. Reduced to captain by law and imme- lately reassigned as inspector, assigned to Harlem, April 19, 1907, ‘Transferred to the Bronx, May 13, 1907. ‘Transterred to Willlameburg, July 9, 1907, ‘Transferred to Jamaica, April 14, 1908, Transferred to Kast New York, Feb, 1908, Transferred to Williamsburg, July 6, 1908, ‘Transferred to ‘The record of ment is as follow: Appointed Nov. 17, 1838. Promoted to be roundsman 1892, Promoted to be sergeant Nov, 31, 1997, lem, June 13, 1911, in rive in the depart- Fed, 2%, NING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRU WHOLE GRAFT SYSTEM 4 |Mames of Mr. and Mrs, John Belden, and/q slouch hat and @ dark coat. She was seu id SHEARS SHE WAS. Aepured lub COMMON LAW WIE ~ OF ALFRED SULY Sui Against Financier’s Estate Makes Frank Admi: O00 00000000G, | Witness in Doctor's ion, | A atrtkinmly beautiful woman wear- Jing an opera seaixkin coat and blue velvet toque confessed to Suntice \Gavegan in the Supreme Gourt to-fay that she was the common Iaw wife of the Jate Alfred Sully, ratlroad [financier and colleague of Jay Gould, and claimed that he waa the father of her three children. She said her name was Kathryn Brown, and teati- fled in behalf of Dr. John B, Riaseii | jot No, 40 West Fiftydifth street, who brought @ult to recover $700 from ‘Sully's estate for nedical services rendered her at the birth of @ child. Since she went to Europe as a six- teen-year-old girl with Sully in 1898 Mrs. Brown has had several names and weveral husbands. From reluctant lips the lawyer for Bully’s executors, his ADACDSMOT CE are J. Ireland, drew the admissions that she had mareied two musicians, Flec’ and Ballou by name, and had been known under the names of Belden, Brown and ‘Travers-Brown. ‘While Sully and ahe tived abroad thetr | § first child, she declared, was born at Lucerne, Gwitserland. It was the®birth of the third child in Brooklyn that Dr. Bissell attended, she said, at the aug- Gestion of Sully. She said Sully and she lived at hotels and in West Thirty- €ourth street and at Hackettstown, N. J., until 1998, SHOWED AN AGREEMENT Giv- ING HER $3,000 A YEAR. “Mr. Beach was gone but a moment. ‘Qirs. Brown, as Dr. Bisseli’s only wit-| When he was out I remember saying ness, declared that from 188 until 106) to Marion, ‘Shut that door and keep whe recelved $3,000 a year from Gully,/ that black man out.” and produced an agreement signed by/ “pers, Beach,” said Beach's lawyer, Alfred Sully and Kathryn 6. Bowley, | “your husband is charged in the indict. which she said wea her maiden name,| meat with assaulting you. Did he do by which ghe was to recetve $3,000| sep" yearly the rest of her iife, Me G14 not do 18," whe exclaimea with Asked by counsel how she came to use the name Belden, Mra, Brown dis- played @ ewetty set of teeth. “Mr. Belly euggested we CEPLOCO FREDERICK helped her to a lounge. upstairs for hia gun and tmmediately | Jfood’s lane to Mrs. Lyons and my wife ran out of the house. | emphasis, Describing her assailant, Mra. Beach ald he was what they called “ginger take the} brown” in the South and that he wore 1 quite agreed with him,” she answered. | positive she had never seen him before. ‘The Jawyer then Gashed ® paper pur-| ‘Mrs. Beach glanced smilingly at her porting to be a release eigned by Mrs. {husband as she remarked a moment ‘Brown as to any claims aguinst Gully. | later that he knelt by her couch and “ON, indeed, I algned it, for I signed| she “held tight to his hand” while several hundred of them. Every timo'gtitches were being taken in her neck Gir, Gully would eend his secretary to to bear the pain.” pay me my allowance he would exact! Elaborating on negro assailant, @uch @ receipt from me. J signed them| the witness sald she did not regard it willingly enough, because I needed the! ay strange that he should bring her a ee message as he mentioned Mrs. Harri- Mra, Browa and Dr. Bisse chatted! man's name, bees rs. Harri Dleasantly during the time the lawyers! they had frequently sent ser |areees oat ee Fictgale Aner oe ko} | messages to each other, Lauterbach, who was called by the de-| DENIED SAYING MOTIVE OF fenee to testify as to whether or not ho| , ATTACK WAS ROBBERY. knew ¢hat drs, Brown at one time lived |_Th4 only value of the earrings she lin West Thirty-fourth street. Lauter-| Wore the night of the assault Mrs. oh aid that he did not remeniber the [Be&ch declared was that of association, place, but recalled doing work in some|** they were her mothers, One of the rt of mettlement as Mr. Sully's coun- Jewels was exhibited, and Mrs. Beach th Rewne quickly excused. fastened it to her ear and then pulled | "Mrs. Brown etated that her three|{t Mf showing how ensity they oould children are grown and that all but one vanomenee) Defense attorney have adepted the name of Sully, This|BYFne also tried tt on his ear. She de- one goes under the name of Belden, | Med ever circulating the report that the Court reserved decision and asked the lawyers to submit HRS, EAE SAYS NEGRO KNFED HE UPHOLDS HUSBAND (Continued from Firat Page.) A juryman wanted to know if Mra, aaa Beach could distinguish the differ- visible to the jury. Mer hat was alence in voice between “Northern and plain black. Router nlager rf , a witness said ahe could. band that he frequently left her alone} Miss Marion Hollins corroborated at Aiken when away on trips to New| Beach and his wife in every particular York. She said Mr. Beach overlooked|%% to her part in the evening's events the fact that her two eons, the eldest of | “fter and before the assault. which le twenty years old, were with| Miss Holling sald there wax a great her, One of these sons, ahe acknowl. | 4a! of blood on Beuch’s coat, vest and edged emailing, Wea Over oix fest tail. le, and that she also got some on her In graphic phrases ehe told of being | MEME clothes while assisting Mrs. Beach. struck down by a negro as she stood on| BEACH ON THE WITNESS STAND the lawn of her home, Every detail DENIES ATTACK. of her testimony dovetatled exactly with} Mr. Beach in his testimony did that given by her husband, not depart materially from the tale Mrs. Beach launching into her story,|he has told since the attack—that| said: his wife was struck by a negro when | Motive of the assault was robbery, Attorney Byrne next brought out that the inst time Mrs, Beach saw her hus. | ‘dand's Jewelled pocket-knife it had two | unbroken blades. i She could not recat! exactly when this was. Prosecutor Gunter tried unsuccess- fully to confuse Mrs. Beach on cro: ®)examination, but did not succeed in ’ breaking down her evidence. The wit- n showed considerable spirit at times in parrying his questions, bit- terly denying, as did Beach, that Beach tried to get her to put blame on Pearl Hampton's brother, when they were together in @ room at the Mayor's of- fice. Prose- ARY 6, i919 TO GRAND JURY He then went | 19127" Jewelry was worth “thousands” and the|™ Promoted to be captain May 6, 1908. Promoted to be inspector June %, 1906, Reduced to captain by law April 17, 1908, Promoted to inspector April 33, 1906, Redired by law to captain and pro- moted to be inspector April 19, 1907 walk did not atop collection of excise graft in Kast One Hundred and Twenty-s street precinct, The order did effectuali and minor officers trou graft, but, according to Walsh and Fox, that aource of income was at once ap- propriated ii rlem district by Ln- spector Bwee: jo sent his own man watch: an. There galnst him on two compinints He was dict the other two. The District-Attorney wae not eatin- fled with Hartigan’s statement that the money was sent to Fox by Walsh, because it was at variance with Walsh's declaration that Sweeney aent | '¢¢ the money, Hartigan was allowed to return to @tation and Mr. Whit- ‘man sent for Patrolman Eugene Fox, the original police informer. Fox aif he wes certain Hartigan told him the money came from Hartigan wes summoned ‘Whit. chat out after (t. Hartigan will be questioned fo nd guilty of standing a conversing 4s (0 his knowledge of collections from |e 194, and was fined half a day's ff ore | Bay Was reprimandel May 30, 198, Siaoen garare Who kept Open Guring for- | POP snowing feine Payments from other precincts in the Of the blotter and ¢) Inapection district, Waleh bel.eved, net- ar ah the Inspector equally as much as | toned for that of the East One Hundred and | ?iNe @ runaway Twenty-aixth street station, but he has te Tenderloin Ro personal kn e of the collections Charge of . | Broadway defor polnt we a captat ferred the in them, Th 'e four other pi Yesterday afternoon the Dist torney had an intimation of what was) Coming when representatives of Capt. | Walsh visited him and asked what tho Captain could expect if he told it knew of police grafting. As in all he always in- Recent cases in which persona escaped inor infraction punishment by turning State's evidence, of the rules which came to his notice, Later Weat was trans- One Hundredth “When I left the sitting-room to take my two dogs out, I noticed a negro man standing on the corner under the light, He came in the gate and stopped, in- quiring: ‘Does Mie. Beach live here? 1 have a message for Katle Smith and some one 1 can't remember! “@uddenly the mas jumped, putting jnis Bamds om my ghoulders. Yhen 1 | Wae @o terrified I don’t believe I even soreamed, I was thrown to my knees twice ana my throat cut. I dia not Yealise {t until I pus my hand to my iE and felt the warm blood. I re- member striking the man im the face and them began screaming hysterically. “A door slammed and the man ran out of the wate after hitting me on the aide of the head with @ stick Mr. Beach ran to my asalstance, I w Jeaning against the post at the end of the’ porch when he reached me. 1 Neglected to say that when the man ame into the yard he was twirling a heavy atiok.”” ‘Mre. Beach eaid that her husband carried her inside and turned her over to Mise THottins and the servants, who she went outside her cottage with her dogs. He maintained his accus- toed calm throughout the grilling cross-examination to which he was sub- | Jected by Prosecutor Gunter. He con- | adicted himself once or twice, but edily corrected his statements when | reminded, and apologized for his faulty memory. Only once during the entire exami- | nation did he show any signw of disturb: | ance, That was when the prosecutor asked him !f he had not asked nis wife to “lay the crime on Pear! Hampton's brother once when he thought they were alone tn the Mayor's office?” “Taat * exclaimed } Beach, r4sing in hi Beach, upon taking the stand, said he ‘as fiftty-meven years old, that he wa ‘@ property-owner at Alken, and had been spending the winters here for Seventeen years. “When did you marry Mrs, Beach asked Congressman Byrnes, of his coun- sel. “Nov, 99, 1880. “Have you any children? ‘Yes, two. “Where were you living in February, ecused Clubman, Who on ; Stand : Stabbed His Wife POGHOOGHODDGDOODODGHGOOGOHOHHGDHGSHOHDHOHOO NL 1} O} O. BEACH. “I had rented my house on and I were living in the cottage ad- Joining. “Did you ha y guests on Fed. 2 “Yes, Miss Holling. She arrived the day before.” “Did you have any gueste for eup- per that night?’ “No,” “What did you do after supper?’ “The three of us, we went into the room fronting on Hood's Lane. Hollins retired about 9.10 o'clock. | We continued reading. Suddenly we! heard « scream. My wife exclaimed: ‘My, what's that? I told her 1 thought! it was some negroes quarreling. Then | we heard another from the direction} of the Lyons place. Two or thre minutes later my wife aaid she thought ehe would go to bed, but that she would put the dogs out first, She went out with the dogs, closing the sitting room door behind her. “A minute later I heard her scream. ZT ran out the fromt door and saw my wife the post at the corner of the porch. I started for her and had gotten about quarter of the way on the path when a negro darted by me across the bushes and out the front gate. I could have intercepted | him, but instead, I rushed to the assist- ance of my wife. My thought when I heard her scream was that she had found Gena or dying the woman we had heard screaming a few minutes before. “When I reached my wife she ex- claimed: ‘He has done something dreadful to me.’ [ carried her onto the porch, opened the screen door and laid her down inside. Then 1 saw the out in her throat and realized for the time what had happened. I rushed upstairs, obtained my gun and went into Hood's Lane in search of the as- mailant. I returned in # short time and found the door had slammed to, and knocked vigorously, and Miss Hollins came to the docr and asked who was there before opening It. HELD WIFE’S HAND AS DOCTOR SEWED UP WOUND. “IT replied ‘It's me, Beach. Let me int" Beach said that he left the house soon again to telephone to Dr. Hall, bis phy- siclan, He met the two Wymans, doc- tors who lived across the street, cominy: n. He telephoned Dr, Hal! from the Alken Club and then returned to his wife's side. When Dr. Hall arrived and began sewing up the wound in her id he held her hand be- very paintul je held " onto me. He adid that he did not remain in her room during the night because Miss Holling was there with her, but he declared that she sent for him eev- eral times during the night. A day or two later Beach sald he em- ployed Col, Henderson to represent nim in the Investigation. The attorney toia Beach then that some people suspectes hima of cutting his wife. ‘The detective he employed worked for two weeks un AVOID IMPURE MILK! tor Infants a on Invalides HORLICK’S. Tt moane the Origina end Genuine | MALTED MILK: Whats au Imnitations’ | ‘The Food-Drink for all Ages | Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. , For infants, invalids eed, ing children. | Pursnutriion upbuldag i wl body | and the \ Een teas mieten nd ene | Yaehe no cubstitute, Ash for KORLICIS AORLICK'’S Contains Pure Milk oreo. Wednevda CASEY.—On JOHN J. | intention. He told the Mayor, he said, Bj that he would stay it needed, but that the case without success. ‘Then De- tective Baughn, employed by the city, took it up. He tol of giving his knife to Baughn tn the presenée of Mayor Gyles. “How many blades did the knife have when you gave {t to the detective?’ asked his counsel. | “It had two, blade.” ch @aid he had several conferences with the authorities in regard to the as- sault, and when he got ready to leave Aiken, the latter part of March, he went to the Mayor's office and declared his there was no broken official {Informed him jt was all right for him to go. “Bo a good boy and have a good time,” be said the Mayor told him, pping him on the back, ACH, GRILLED BY PROSECUT- i OR, MAKES DENIALS, Prosecutor Gunter then began cross- examination of Beach. “Did you have an engagement to play you | awoke!” “Mr, Joe Harriman was sit- {ing On the front porch talking to Mrs. | | Benen." “What did you do later?” to the club." “1 went | over.” “When your wife went out with che dogs you had the same facilities for hearing her scream as you did those} other screams, didn't you? “Yex,’ “Didn't you hear your wife talking betore oi reamed?" “i aid not.” “How long was it between the Inst scream and the Lyons's and your wife's scream?’ ‘Four or @Ve minutes.” “Why didn't you stop the negro you saw running away from your wife?’ “I didn't dream at that time that the man running away had attacked my wife” “How Jong were you gone from the house searching for the negro after you carried your wife in?” “Not more than thirty seconds.” “It was then that you came back and knocked on the door demanding, ‘It's Mr. Beach, tet me in'?” “Yes.” “Are you sure there were two blades | in your knife when it left your pos- session?” “I am certain there was no broken blade.” “Didn't you try to induce y. in the Mayor's office, when y you were alone, to lay the assault on Pearl Hampton's brother?" “That is absolutely false.” cried the witness, greatly excited, “Didn't your wife say that ahe would not Iay the crime on an Innocent man?" “Absolutely not. The prosecut to the death of « ur wife ig lawyer then referred ‘narles Havemeyer, band. may ive when Mr. Have-! was killed?" “Roalyn, I. if ‘ere you there at the time?’ Do you know anyth “4 mater?’ vo." ing about th: watched her husband closely, and at one period she shou her head as he was telling about their whereupon railroad journey to Aiken, Beach corrected himself 4: The witness admitted th: he went ew York, Beach alone at Aiken, His timony was a denial that millionaire, siderable length how he learned of suance of @ warrant for his arres: he was in Paris, and of hurrying to America. faving closing tes-| he war a He had detailed at ¢ Mrs. when back Thursday’s Offering MOCOLATE COVERED T\N~ at apn. tn 84 BARCLAY STREET Cor. West Broadway 29 CORTLANDT ST. Cor. Church Street Park Row & Nassau St At City Hall Park | ficted like he was the benefit of his {wo that afternoon?” “I did, but Llexperience James Rigney of 109 remained home. It rained." | Amsterdam Avenue, New York, made, me: did you do that afternoon? | the following statement to one of the “I took a nap. itn experts: | 1" “Wae any one there when ad not been in the best of health thought | | ‘OUND PRUETT PLUs PARCEL ?OsT ese The specified weight in each instance includes the container, ’ STRENUOUS CITY LIFE AFFECTS PEOPLE'S NERVE: James Rigney Makes Willing Statement About the New Tonic. PRAISES TONA VITA It Brought Relief to Him After Many Years of Sickness, Wishing to give others, who are al: s, Exactly the matter with me would be hard to describe, because it seemed as though I was afflicted with some trouble which would never stay in the same organ , long. At times I was afraid that I “Did you take something there?’ “I hn uffering from kidney disease, suppose I did. I returned home for! then it would seem like liver troubl er and remained till the thing was|and eo on, It got me so nervous thal T could not eat or steep well and I swallowed countless remedies without btaining any appreciable relief. ‘One day I heard of Tona Vita, and teading an account of it in a local paper * I found out that [ was suffering from, nervous debility, the trouble that this new tonic has been manufactured to combat. I tried some vi immediately felt relief. ery dose T felt better, and now after the first bottle 1 already am sounder in health than I have been for many years. 1 it entirely to Tona Vita.” Mr. Rigney's statement serves to point out one of the chief peculiarities of nervous debilit the Tona Vita expert. “The symptoms of nervous debility are so numerous that it leads a man Who is afflicted with it to be- lieve that he is suffering fronr all sorts of organic complaints. Pains in the head and back; a feeling of heaviness about the limbs; dizziness after an: effort; lack of vitality and ambitior a sense of fullness after meals: a. “The report from the local Gan stores is that Tona Vita is in great demand every day.” “, ‘When Your Complexion Is admired by another woman isn’t that a compliment? BUY A BOK OF a FACE 2 POWDER to-day and have this experience, Atall First-class Drug & Depart- ment Stores—In three tints, Flesh, Wihiite or C ‘OF send 5c to La Debutante Toilette Products Co. Dept. H pt. 2 & 4Stone St, New York SEND 10CENTS FOR SAMPLE BOX’ 2 CPrade sur.) Friday, the 7th HONDS—A thick daintily in van, POUND BOX 7. Scin! how a3 ed nuckaees can he Incured | 206 BROADWAY ) Cor. Fulton St. 147 NASSAU STREET Bet. Beekman & Spruce Sts 266 W. 125th STREET Just East of 8th Ave, Not long ago I hurried to the doctor's and asked Go get a horse and carriage and rice “And you will Une Dollar Bill is not a man to p:y A “Horse and Believe me when 1 tell you tat resu'ts 1 bought a barg Exactly 9,450 “Horse & Carriage” Advertisements Were Printed in THE WORLD Last Year— 4,773 More than in the Herald Adventure 11 y health broke down and everything seemed blue, m what to do; a lot,” aid | get your health pack just as quickly ‘as can be." high prices, so e-—Wanted” ad, into THE WORLD did go; came thick and fast- Nn, and for health toutclissed they say I'm