The evening world. Newspaper, February 26, 1913, Page 2

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ordered to . 80. re allowed to go ces they would ta ymeney to stay out. We can't supply & policeman’ for every liquor place be- Cause there are as many saloons a8 po- We have not tried to throw the eyes of the people of thie Nquor places unles city," ‘The Mayor then returned to gambling ané told of the organizing of tne special vige squad df 150 men under three lieu- tenants, Beaker and twe others. * “@f. thede men only one gratter de- veloped—Hecker, The other two were apetiess although they were tempted. The more di@ with that fore the more we met with opposition, pecially from the hewspapers that the organs of the criminal classe “The disclosures heard of from Sipp would not have oome out if I had not fnaleted on his being arrested after he rem away from the city, Strangely enough, 1 got more abuse for that act tham for anything I have done. It was aald we were hampering the District- Attorney. We have been backing him up ae much as we coukl. “GRULL” TO CALL POLICE FORCE CORRUPT. "The forcd is absolutely splendid as a whole and to make out this force ai corrupt 1s a most cruel thing and un- Just. It tends to disorganize the force. 1 It disheartens the men and it is @ j wrong to the government of this city. ' It fe time to show tha, this corruption | te matter of a quarter of @ century, ; but that at present it Is confined only te @ few spots and possibly fifty men, “L knew when I first took office there were corrupt men on the force. We demoted eleven Inspectors and re- tired oF got rid of Gfteen Captains. It ie Bard to do anything with a man who hag been o grafier twenty-five years. “But J am not discouraged. The abuse and infamy of gambiers and po- pAitical scoundrels, and 1 am not re- terring to any particular party, for those chaps sre in both, have been enormous. It je not easy work. 1 could make my bed @ bed of roses if 1 would NEWSPAPERS ARE “IN" ON THE GRAFT, | “We welcome every exposure, These indrels pay newspaper writers, buy itorials, and the newspapers have in the graft to the armpit twenty-five years. We did not Aime in ‘the newspapers when Rabbi (Magnes and Commissioner Newberger | *! notorious gambling places, We no lying press agent. “I will tell the committee wh: suggested to me for po!lce changes te no use passing any law that community will not cause to de fnforced automatically, ¢ome from young artny office: rung honest newspaper men and othe: ‘who would know conditions and how to handle them.” Continuing, Mayor Gaynor said: i “The graft all comes out of the ex- the gambling and prostitution, The ft has been cut out. ine bling (mum. I favor a with there three thinks. I favor it for the reason that I view with alarm tne ;Ubrowing of the blame for these vices rate force should be cut off entirely mm the police system I pointed out hat another Beoker might be produced, ly notion ig that if the Commissioner 14 have more deputies we would not eed A .eparate force. “But 3 can say to you that legis- of these men who obeyed private indl- STOPPED THE SMASHING INTO HOUSES WITHUUT WARRANTS. |! “The next thing I took up was the; smashing into houses without warrants. It led ta the making of millions In gratt. ‘That was the way they collected the graft when it failed to be paid. When a door was smashed in It was @ notice to all the other gamblers to pay up. “We did away with what we call the ‘epecial police.’ The abuse we got for this would fill volumes. There were 1,300 viduals, It was no uncommon thing for citizens to be thrown out by thug known as special policemen. 1 was or. dered off the block by one of them dur- ing the baker's strike. “I did away with th» promotion graft No politician, tho’ olvil service list. district leader, priest or anybody else can get promotions or appointments on the force now. Mot long ago you could bay o captaincy for $17,000, That wasg’ & notorions fact, bus mo policeman pays 17 cents now.” ‘The Mayor declared that he had also troken up the pawnbroker graft; The old system made the man whose watch wus stolen pay the pawnbroker for it when it was traced, The Mayor added that the detectives usually wot @ part of this money. He said that thie had been done away with, INSPECTORS NEEDED, EVEN WITH TEN NEW DEPUTIES, Senator Wagner aeked the Mayor if he would do away with the inspectors if he got the ten new deputies, “I do not Ko as far @s that,” replied the Mayor, "The inspector is now only a detail anyhow, Some might be needed dn handling the men of the department.” The Mayor, under questioning, said that he did not recommend the sep: arate vice force, and that his te: only was to find a means of relieving the force as a whole from the charge! of corruption and wholesale ubuse. | Senator Herrick questioned the Mayor atone the line of thts possible plan of handling vice and brought out from him the opinion that the ten-year term for a Police Commissioner was not to his liking and he did not think it would work at all. ‘Under olf police commissions things were worse,” he said, ‘Con- ditions were never so good as now Of bis ten deputies plan the M Suggested that they should be remo able at the pleasure of the Commis- r thanked the Ma- id the committee for At the afternoon session Allan Robin- @on, chairman of the Citizens’ Consus!t- tee, gave the information bis commit- tee had gathered concerning bolle se Sonn ditions following the Rosenthal murder, His report appears in another column, BE, A .Outerbridge, one of the Clusens’ Committee, was called to explain in further detail the operations of the Social Welfare Board. Charles B. How lund, another of the same reforming body, explained that the as: police commissaner proposed by his committee would be under the authority of the Social Welfare Board. Frederick 8, Whiting, of the same committee gave a few pages of ancient Raines law Customs, In his opinion the wiping out of the rear salon room on Sundays would mean a lessening of graft and other evils, Dr, Henry Moskowitz, another mem ber of the Citizens' Committee, fol- lowed. ‘Down tn my neighborhood," he eaid, ‘we feel that the law should refi Gesire of the people and we are out flat-footed for open saloons on Sunday from 1 in the afternoon to 1 at night | In our foreign sections the foreigners | want their drink with their meals on Bunday and they are temperate peaple. Many of the poor saloonkeepers cannot affom the hotel licenses and sometimes they are forced to give graft” —— rt: ent of Labor ain Pane: Washington, Feb, %.—The bill to create a Department of Labor with a Cabinet oMcer at its head passed th Benate to-day after leas than an hot consideration, The measure has pr viousty passed the House, but’ amend- mente in, the Benate will require jts per- to: keep Shea from confession, For four lays process servers from Mr, Whit- mal him after his name had been furnished by Policeman Buge: bribe taker agreed to tell ti hun admitted, agents of the “system,” who put tie matter up to him In suoh a light that when he reached Mr. Whitma: he declined to talk. After thi he was indicted for bribery and sent to the Tombs in default of $10,000 ball, went to the Tombi ney’s collector, to-day entered a plea of not guilty, Mr, Levy took occasion to jdeny that Duty | Attorney Whitman ‘hardly able to ait In hie chalr. re- | Shea, who confessed to Mr. Whitman ne hour conference yesterday, kept & prisoner, under guard, all night in the private office of Mr. Whitman, with Detective Edward Leigh and | So far as the licensing Process-Server Emil Kling always at hie| &raft, you will,’find that the French sae. “Keepers from the Tombs this morn- Ing demanded to know why Shea had Not been sent back. They got no satis faction at the District-Attorney’s office. SHEA KEPT FROM TOM To AVOID “INFLUENCE.” Shea spent sx hours with Mr. Whit- Man yesterday, make any statement, bu: finally making & complete revelation of his work in the Bronx, where he swore ‘he acted us one of a dosen civilian collectors of «raft, urning his collections over to Police Se: nt Peter J, Dutty, sald to have been Inspector Dennis Sweeney’: man, Desperate efforts had been made to oMfice had been unable to locate When hes whole story. Then, he he was epproached by office refusal After a protracted session with Mr Whitman and Assistant District-at- torney Groeh! yesterday, Shea made a complere statement. Then he threw himself upon the mercy of the District- Attorney and begged that he be noi Through his attorney, Abraham Levy, Sergt. Peter Duffy, indicted as Swe related in any w. tg Sweeney, Whose nephew he was re- ported to be, Attorney Alfred J, Talley and District- filed bri Justice Gof in the motion of In- vector Sweeney to inspect the minutes of the Grand Jury which Indicted him. Justice Goff announced that he would enter his ruiing after he bad inspected the papers. Sweeney, pale and palpably norvous, was in court during the proceedings. As the time went on, his nervousness in- creased to such an é@Xtent that he was He de- clined to talk for publication and hur- Hledly lett the building, POLICE OFFICERS WORST IN WORLD, SAYS MCLELLAN (Continued from First Page.) 7 the American attitude toward an unpaid Job, You can't help it, “Then, too, the moral police and the immoral pollce would work against each other, The Morals Board and the Po- lice Commissioner would constantly at logwerheads. I am heartily opposed to the proposition.” “Do you favor segr for the social evil?” asked B.r. Buckner, ‘Wei, 3 think it would make graft easier, The wretched women would be at the merey of the police, who ‘would know where to findand prey ‘upon them.” ® hat about licensing and tion?” "It damns the woman. A girl once on tin book never gets off. Sho ie doomed and damned forever with ihe icensing system, She has no chance of reforming, and, a» you know, women are driven to the life by hun, and akquld bave @ chance to met back. tnapec- ® 3h ed 049009940000900O00O00004609090004 040008 8G bac hdd ° police prey on unfortunate women just as much as our police are alleged to So that I think that both licenming and ection are farces in countries wi they are in practice. “What about the excise ques ton” “Et wil never be solved til) we hypocrisy, however, and possibly such @ law might meet defeat.” CRITICISES PRIVATE ORGANIZA- TIONS AMONG POLICE FORCE. Mr, McClellan criticised the form- ing of organizations of oMcials and been responsible for the rottenne: the force, The members worked only for themselves and increase in salar- fes, he deciared, with no thought for the city or cit! “Did you know that a dinner war held Saturday night by the Lieutenants’ Association which am indicted offi- cial wae present?” askea Mr. Buckner. “ 410," sald the ox-Mayor, “What aid you think of it? “Damnapbie.” »d you know that the same asso: ciation had prevailed on a certain Com- missioner to have the numbers tuke off the police Meutenants’ shields so that they could never be reported?" “It's Incredible.” This concluded examination, LOW OPPOSES A STATE POLICE FORCE. Former Mayor Seth Low told the committee he did not belleve in a State force. “The Police Department is a part of the administration of the city,” he sald, “as much so as the Department of Water Supply or Bridges, The Mayor has contro! of thase departments; hi should have control of the Police Ds partment, likewise, The Comminstoner should be removable at the Mayor's pleasure, The moment the Police De- partment gets out of touch with the Mayor its efficiency |s lost. “The police look upon vice without the former Mayor's For that reason I favor Mayor Gaynor's suggestion of remov- Ing the control of the three vices Nquor, the hands of the Police Department, would like to see women on that Moral Board, because men are hard and mer- ciless, Such a woman as Mra. Low, for Instance, might have been a good angel, At any rate it's worth trying, Nothing could be worse than we have had. Let try to make It bette: I think It would be @ good thing to establish on the police force the army code of honor for civic protection,” pea See TWO-BATTLESHIP PLAN DEFEATED IN HOUSE. Naval Committee Report Set Aside and Ameniment for One Dreadnought Adopted. WASHINGTON, Feb. 26.—The two- battleship programme favorably report- ed by the House Naval Committee was defeated to-day in the House, sitting as a Committee of the Whole, An amend- ment to appropriate for one battleship only went through, 144 to 133. ‘A majority of the Democrats voted for the amendment, while the Republl- almost solidly againet it. ambiing and prostitution—trom | ‘ame. (From tie Chicago Fame ts merely an e the victim is placed non which in ordey to give people @ better chance to throw mud at him, - ” strikers to-avoid violence. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, who was ar- rested yesterday for inciting to disorder and went to New York after she had been bailed out, returned to Paterson Just before noon, She sald she did fst intend to make any speeches to-day, Carlo Tresca, arrested at the same time, was also balled out to-day. Chief Bimson, backed by Mayor Me- Pride and Prosecutor Dunn of Passatc County, maintained a guard about the factories to-day. There two uniformed men at the door of every mill to see that the weavers and dyers who out on strike should not molest those who stick to thelr jobs. Patrols !n the factory district were doubled. Many detectives mingled with the crowds on the street. The entire reserve force of the city was held at Police Headquarters, with automobiles ready to take them ewiftly to any scene of trouble, No permits will be tasued for street speaking during the strike and any cor- ner orator who may appear, whether strikers or not, will be arrested. This applies to woman suffrage advocat and temperance preachers, as all such meetings are prohibited by ordinane and may be held only on permit. These fare ordinarily freely granted, but will be suspended during the strike, RUNAWAY ON SIDEWALK ENDANGERS HUNDREDS IN SHOPPING CROWD Team Starts Down Sixth Ave- VASSAR GIRL ELOPES; IS WED WHILE MOTHER TRIES 10 HEAD HER OFF Miss Ruth M. Comins, Whose Father Is Rich, Runs Off With Bookkeeper. (Special to The prea: World. POUGHKEEPSIE, YY. F %8,— Miss Ruth M. Comins, a member of the Freshmen class at sar College and daughter of Martin W. Comins, a weal- thy business man of this city, eloped to- day with Arthur Howard Winn, a young bookkeeper employed in one of the Poughkeepste factories, The younk couple obtained a marriage Hcense at the City clerk's office this morning and immediately left for Wappingers Falls in a taxicad. They ‘had hardly started on thelr Journey when Mrs, Comins, mbther of the girl, rushed into the Clty Hall and demanded to know If her daughter had been there. Informed that Miss Comins and Mr. Winn had procurd a marriage license Mrs, Comins set out to head off the marriage. She telephoned Wap-| pinger Falls and was told that the Rev, Gerald Cunningham, rector of the Zion Episcopal Church of that place had just married the young couple and they) Nue and One Horse Dashes were then at New Mamburgh, eight miles from Poughkeepale, boarding a Into Broadway. train for New York. Leaving the telephone Mra. Coming hurried over to Police Headquarters} Two runaway horses ran wpon the and demanded the arrest of young) sidewalk, at Sixth avenue and Thirty- Winn, Chief MeCabe immediately eighth street, this afternoon, and for five blocks endangered hundreds of lives, Women and children dodged into doorways and into the roadway, while the horses tore along. The runaways were hitched to an Adams Express Company wagon. At Thirty-elghth street while the driver was In @ store, they started off, At Thirty-seventh street the wagon wound itself around “L" pillar and was smashed, leaving the horses free. Harry Schuerrikon, @ chauffeur, stop- ped the first runaway horse at Thirty- sixth street, [he second headed for Broadway and the densely crowded shopping district, and kept right on the sidewalk. At ‘Thirty-fourth street, where the biggest shopping crowd \s found, the horse made his dash for Broadway. TraMc Policeman Bannon, on fixed por epread the police net, and was about to telephone to the New York police to intercept the elopers on the arrival, of the train, when Mra, Comins, having taken counsel with her more caimly ispowed husband, countermanded her orders to the police and tod) the Chief to call off his men, Arthur Winn is twenty-two yeare of age and his young bride Is nineteen, anunaiie ah SHOT BRIDE TO DEATH FOR INSISTING ON KISS IN THEIR HONEYMOON., Married Two Weeks, Vergo An- swered Girl's Pleading With Two Bullets From Revolver. leaped at the horse and missed, A (Breclat to The Rvening World.) crowd gathered, and the policeman TRPNTON, Feb. %.—Her demand for] [a4 a ‘second try. He got the horse a kive caused the death of Mrs, Lesgo| this time. The crowd cheered, Vergo, nineteen years old, to-day. Her husband, who {s two years her senior has confessed to the police that he mur- dered her because she pestered him for a Kies. The couple were married two weeks ago and were appsrontly perfectly happy until to-day. Vergo was preparing to leave the house when his bride asked | him to kiss her, He told her he was tired of kissing her, The girl became indignant and inalated, crying and pleading, then demanding. Vergo was stubborn. He shouted that it was an Unnecessary burden on a man to kiss his wife every time he left the house, Mra. Vergo attempted to detain WHY OLD FRIENDS ARE REST, (From the Chicago Record-Heratd,) “Pa, why is It that old friends are the beat?” “One reason is that if they are old enough they will know It Is ui try to borrow money from you Hoods Sarsaparilla Removes AP humors and eruptions, improves complex: | SAYS CURES WILL REFUTE CRITICS (Continued from First Page.) relieved, mandate: appetite ventent to the works and for those who call on me for heip.” Though Dr. Friedman declined the offer of $1,000,000 made to him by Preasi- dent Charles E, Finley of the Aetna National Bank for proof tat his serum would cure ninety-five out of a hundred cases of tuberculosis, his relations wits Mr. Finley are friendly, and the banker and real estate promoter was about the Waldorf much of the day. The managers of tae Waldorf ha been rather worried for feur that thy widespread accounts of the physician | t would bring a large number of sickly Persons to the hotel, causing frigh) has give tite imp of the bi organ of among the other ore None such pation, were seen about to-day, and it was aa! | bloating that none had asked for Dr. Friet | breathin, mann, Manager Stewart said that the “Tona matter was one which could be attende to when the emergency arone. for, the lack of fuel to run it. “I find that in the testimonials the will be food to enable it to o symptoms are mai ¢ symptoms which may denote thi trouble are too numerous to mention Among others are loss of weight, sr ‘chill’ that directly nervous debility has be: the first thing the body crav y t! oot bert eaty baad after th as return the ot taastion begin to perform their proper fu “Today | am selecting the testimoni of Mrs. dames Jatheson of 3296 Fults Y., whi n me great relief, and wou gladly recommend it to any one requi ing a medicine to relieve them from th run down feeling. weakness and » since taking Tona 1 was troubled ot able to eat, in, which has control of ever the bod; hs » numbness in the lim of the stomach or difficulty i Vita can be purchased in an of the lending drug stores in New Yor 1 find my app: roved and I am feeling muc stronger.” “Since nervous debility is an ailmen é "sue _____THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1918, some people say I violate the taw by that no quarter should be given the | T b Sabha teat: Seetee, Fecrnem oer ss OHEA'S CONFESSION 7 ubercutosis Specialist ~ GRL MADE A PRISONER riven out. Under the present law the 7 will say that I believe I am well within Wall street man who gambles at night Hi P Hi: S rohit aah inet. “iam inthe Tarot BOD Yo"ergen bie wit for tosnorro = ere to Prove His Serum, te gullty of nothing. Only the proprietor jotographed Kepecially for The Evening World by a Staff Puotoerapher:) The tie-up in subway negotiations on tae on. te eae ‘peomeasita "" * guilty. Now if we make a law fend-| eee $42461-04090-464 b309000-00 | because of the Gould Interests In Man- + disorderly houses and gambling houses jot UP the Patrons ae well a the pro- hattan caused ax much Interest, and ** and stay there indefi Cavan, ee . conversation in the financial district te. “That is the situation, That te what | &% day as it did in the offices of the Pivie we did with Rosenthal in twelve NOW we come to the @ocial evil. ' Service Commission. Mr. Gould's deith gambling houses, Then he made his tea to Socce we etait wee bo that he had offered to sell his ho.'ings digolosures and 1 think tt was fortunate [eM Pe a make, Haba va te tn Manhattan for 135 oF @ similar pte ‘Com: vetarieg ‘ i ook hi sold rece q a onure e gid not the women, “hut the law does not oa > | Avpacis ji + . there were ma orta that the whole tha ehronuen“ecnansIm SIt Mot ie" te’ man’ the matter” Yoo Hatfem —Poolroom Keepers |Aress Are Made When Crowd fer Points Out Men She | tcmes mit ne ; might make a sone for thers seg : 1 ye . cchane, arate. Jerome nad a law passed to aid Dut you would have to catch all these Swear They Paid $50 to | ‘Threatens to Wreck Ma- Accuses. er weed wait, #: Sinaia alees nd put them in the zone. on bs ; Me. Coohe him in stopping the gambling In the Women a ‘ ‘ . ‘ and Kuhn, Loe & Co, dy to Mt ity, but. there were Just as many YOU would have to Keep them Inside the | $100 Every Month. | chinery in Plant. Gould now?" w y rovt * gambling houses when he left office as _ the a mt | When Philip Wasserman of No. 22 betore.” lee aay eat ae er rae int ine | Burke avenue was arraigned before % The Mayor stopped ta his discourse | Soh wel ne men did not go, the INFORMER IS GUARDED | An alarm from *the Gehring Dye yagistrate Vorhees in Jersey Avenue 4 feveral times to nevus Bh sob oie newe- \ +onen would not go. The natural ten- | Works at Ryle avenue and “The Valley Gourt, Rrvoklyn, to-day, on the com- / papers" of distorting the tru ny nie dency of such women Ja to Mock to- of the Rocks," beside the Passaic River, piaint of elzhteen-year-old Anna Teffer NO MILLIONAIRE POLICE | ether and in thin way they can be Kept Out of “System’s” Reach Blin Paterson, today took fifty reserve or No, is Hinke avenue, the gift be ’ ADMINIGTRATION. feolated to some extent, i policemen, under command of Serst. came hysterical “When I came into office,” he con-| “Once these women were driven from) After Pleading Guil Coyle, to the place in automobiles. They | Wasserman was charged with having tinued, “the graft In the force was fully | their haunts. They scattered all over ig ty and 2 | found agitators of the LW. W., advo* inauced her to goto Buffalo with bim U organized and had been for twenty-five the town to corrupt xood women. Giving Bail cating the strike of the silk mill Work Fm 6 to take a place In the chorus of years. The heads of police had gon¢| @YGGEBTION TO PERMIT 8UN- | a ers, had entered the plant and opengd Hn y out with great fortunes, with clty the steam pipes, filling the place with |* Musical comedy which Was rehears- DAY LIQUOR SELLING. ” " id they were met at country houses. You all Know Wat i. | “It has been sugecated that we allow| The confession of Ashley Shea th a lenis oy Rowaal Lavies ot We ih ** well as I do, there will be ao mil- bs mauinite | of ley Shea that All the dyera had rushed tnto the Buffalo by Samuel Levine of No. 367 ieaairee waving the foree wader my Sunday lquor selling, On the ‘Conti: “he was a collector for Sergeant Peter yard. Fifty or more seemed in aym+ Willams avenue, who took them to what [Had Been Extremely Weak and | Smiaiotration. and, Seetiand and Ireland they have a DUAY from Harlem poolroome was cor- pathy with the agitators and were talk+ je catled an actors’ boarding house. Was R in * “The politica: scoundrels back of the | ee er ens eee a drinking places TObOrated towlay before the regular Ing of going back Into the plant and ‘phere, according to Anna's statement, as Run Down * gamblers and the corrupt Newspaper? | cloned during the church hours, The Grand Jury, Three poolroom keep wrecking the machinery, under the oi. was kept a prisoner until Feb. 9, © made @ bitter attack when It Was eV | eis Government hates aples acd under oath that they pala monthly cover of the steam clouds. The rest vie, she escaped and returned home. Health. we-dent that Commissioner Cropsey W888 | gouy not use them agalnat these plac 4 saments of from $00 to $100 to Shea, left the place as fast as they could In the midst of her testimony the girl ing to break up gambling. If I put the force on spy duty against With the understanding that he was Coyle went into the group Of trouble | ee een eave pointed to two @ “When you array yourself against 1, saloons, in thirty daye the whole Acting as the agent of Duffy and that makers and told them to get out of the oot sitting dn the spectator’s benches . the rich gambler and their rich he gph graft game would come back, But we Duffy was the agent of Inspector yard and disperse. They refwed and oa coed: RECOVERS HER APPETIT- can open up a dig Peowgar thy ron, have eliminated that graft. I fear that Sweeney. The three poolroom keepers twenty-seven of them were arrested. “Nae ot man gam Levine now, yet my work will continue on ene men, Foatitution gratt Is belng still paid. will testify again before the E'xiras They will be arraigned before the Re- | iaiing with his brother Nathan. He the police uid the more it has eet on _‘Lunderatand you want to know what | ordinary Grand Jury to-morrow. corder to-morrow. is the one Who took me to that horrt’! ‘ . founced. While all thie investigation ag, ‘oe gone toward uplifting the Shea haw told the DiatrloteAttorney There was a meeting of tho strikers After Taking Just One Bott Bas been going on Commissiontrour a free I put an end to clubbing and bru: that there were four or five other col- Hall at noon to-day, The Prine oy vine started to leave, but court off- r ‘ Merger and Magnon, witiothree tilly by the men, Then I stopped the lectors in Harlem who looked after eaker was Chief of Police Bim: Ot to the audience and arrested of the New Tonic, Press agent, have cloned twenty=\inat Bumber of arrests, The number Was gambling houses and disorderly houses. son, who conclided some emphatic ad. Sor Tin RG ie ee ener and took them . ee en et erat rey the number in London for & The names of thene alleged collectors vice regarding the advisablilts of 40'4 Leone the Magistrate, Tona Vita. het evil prs tm contined to ‘one of |Ye8r. People were being locked up over have been given to Mr. Whitman and onler and obedience to iaw vy reading “one Levines were held in $2.00 dail av’ nga stunt for most trifling offenses, This he has men out inveatigating, the riot act. es " . havinEE oe twp districts in Manhattan.” created the profession! bondsmn, but| Closely guarded by Lieut. Thomas ot | & The atrikers cheered him with ap- [CAC on a charge of having conspired E . STOPPED a ok mate with Wasserman, who was held for the} “One of the most frequent sympto: BOASTS THAT HE. there is not one left now, Insted of | the District-Attorney’s staff and several Parent’ sincerity, He had previously | Grand Jury in $1,000 for abduction. debi h d POLICE GRAFT. deing locked you are summoned now. | process ers, Shea appeared be- demonstrated to them, by closing Turn “ ‘ ne net wh sy . Me Lote The Mayor then told of bis effort to| The first year we reduced the number) fore Justice Goff in the Extraore Hal! and every other hail in the elty Beasley Webb, who is amisting int ° stop tie saloon gratt ‘inary Term of the Supreme Court Geena aes SHR Y) Be) oor) Neem tee introduction of Tona : “The oxcise graft at ite lowest was wistrates work with US| to-day and entered @ plea of gullty to from meeting, except under the condi- "The reason for thi: the stoma #6 a month, making $9,000 « year. |now except three, two in Manhattan bribery, Shea was remanded without tions which he dictated, Hwald Koett- | ibeehanis Gane anc sarereek tees ‘All of that was wiped out oy eaforcing |and one in Hrooklyn. They refuse to) bail, but after @ conference with Dis- gen and Giovanni Strobino of the In- ie desire fot Gourlehinest end, th donk the excive law in the right way The|!ssue summonses and spend the time in| trict-Attorney Whitman he was released }dustrial Workers of the World, also quence, the body gets sleggia aid tenb policemen were not allowed to enter | damning us. on $1,000 bail, spoke. ‘They carefully warned the 1 publish from day to day the fact tha Tona Vita restores the appetite stand out asa striking feature. The reason INVITES FIRST PATIENT TO COME AT ONCE. Dr. W. A. Pitzele, President of the Board of Hi Dr. BE. G, & similar officia of Memphis, Tenn.. visited Dr. Fried mann to-day and asked nim to come tc thelr ltl The scientist refused t &o, but said he would Instruct bot) Physicians In the use of his culture anu give them a supply of the bacilli. James E. Cooley of No, 122 East Eighty-second street called on Dr. Fried. mann with a letter of introduction from Ambassador Leishmann, Mr “>oley has a brother suffering from tubersitosis who is now in New Mex!:> .nd is anxious to undergo the Friedmann treat. ment. “Let him come on at once," said Dr, Friedman, cordially, "My t de. sire," continued Dr. Friedman, “ts to get to work to show the merit of the serum treatment as ¥oon as possible serum can do no good at all and only detracts my attention from the real pur- pose of my visit here, Let the requits of the treatment speak for It.” Special for Heong! OP tec tone le Fi the finest and cupe of uned PENNY A POUND PROFIT P.U ver Other ‘container, tien, vhs mew. contends ond RE eS ct him by force, He struck her, She i ITLANDT ST. mia ay torets Be 10%, creates » appetite, gas | 9, COR pall Vergo pulled a revolver trom nis|igestion, and relieves tha _ Pi Row & Nessa St. (Tad pocket and fired twice, The bride tired feeling. ‘At City Hall Pare 6. The man then tried to yl dead, eof Ne own life, but Inflieted only a ehh wound, =a ele ala cea orn the taba called CONDENS MILK ‘The evcellied welche tn cash tnstense inslodes the contalacs,| o BRAND ED ORIGINAL and in such a way that the :argest pos- CLEANING NI wble number may be benefited. A pre- Rawal Wo, Nowe Uminary exploitation of myelf or the|M-.. Kini TRE Atay ee NO burSsienes van 7 ebay Witeer anor, North of 1 ibrar V9 conti ec’a! for Th: "reday smbodied ain all: Lore eames, Only, S PARCEL POST oan 206 BROADWAY Cor. Fulton St, 147 NASSAU STREET Bet Beekman & § Just Bast of 8 Avery

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