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Wl. a & peovent we Giggs teem! trom qvery one in the courtroom by paying: Battle swept on to the cred- the Witnesses for the State, wanted to call to the at- Ge fury the character of witnesees and asking: truthfal mon; were they haracter? Are they men trast? have determined what Fule of the law that the tes- these you heard, | timony of an eccompilee must be cor- what was théir motive/ roborated by independent, untainted consider first teatimony. Now where de we find it in this case? Wo feel that no case haa Gipp in your} been made out against these men, that wn for you by) there has been no corroborative tenti- WARRANT REFUSED |Seme i if i E i H & lf ef 3 OF PULITZER LIBEL | Magistrate Kernochan Decides 7 i hile 1 think we are mony @gainst them, and so we that ts dedeced, corrupt, disrepu-| them off the wind,” Wo teke the re- Not to Order Arrest of table, & man whose word is not to be | eponsibil! taken. Mr. Battle as he neared hie close re- the Mayor. “New, let us consider his motive.| verted again to the contrast in wit- 2 4 come forward? The rea-| nesses, saying: NOt contradicted on this} “On the one hand you have this band hat Sipp was angry at| Of criminals, dive keepers, and on the Gweeney for performing p>-| Other the respectable array of witnesses against him. It inspired in| &t@ produced, insane and matignant hatred! “I read in the papers yesterday of the aw ‘ death of those two policemen whom an was not Bipp's only rea-| assassin shot down, It is the reverse ” the lawyer went on, “for he was|°f the medal. We think teo often of Thomas W. Wal our policemen as some have thought of and was actuated also by « desire these defendants, Let us remember then serve Walsh, whom he feared he might | St least now and then as brave defend- injure were he to stay here and be ex-| re of our safety,” amined.” Mr. Battle had spoken gor an hour , Battle spoke earnestly, enthu-| 2"d three-quarters when he bowed to the elastically, energetically even, but it | Jury at 9.60 o'clock, Qugured il) for Gweeney, if not for all| WELLMAN AILING AS “THIR- APPLIED FOR MARCH 14. i 5F Court Holds Proof that Speech Was Personally Ordered Pub- lished Must Be Shown. Magistrate Frederick Kernootlan, ett- ting in West Side Court to-day, an- nounced that he had decided to refuse intelligen@y for more than an f- If that de wo, then I am sorry for thne now, “But that was sald Afty years ago and perhaps it is not true. You look tired, Out remember that you are not the only il i fl aki i 4 statements. Fol- Magistrate's decision in i E s i it | Heation for @ warrant charging ‘Wiltam J. Gaynor, Mayor of the City of New York, with the crime of publishing t i F i é 3 i 3 re i i 4 i rf Hf i gE ee i if 3 rif re AF it Ht < ‘mee guilty of graft? Se ee to ays not « living soul ever caw prrandd BB ydinen whe ~~ ,|CHARGQED WITH FURNISHING TRANGCRIPT OF OPEECH. “The statements were published the next day in tie Sun end the Tribune, i tt i bi i j : | H : : i EF ; et ; : i E f i i iy i E ‘ aj ft 5 if cosetul war were greeted t ht ih i i rilsge | it ! i! Among thi ill i z HAYOR WELEONES PAGE CENTENARY DELEGATES HEE (Continued from First Page.) M. P., James Allen Baker, M. P., More- ton Frewen, M. P., étenry Vivian, M. P., and H. &. Perris, M. A., representiog Great Britain; Sir Edmund Walker, C. M. G., High Commissioner for Australia, and Eugene H. Onterbrid, Gir Edward Morris, the premter of New- foundiand, Immediately after their arrival at the City Mall the guests were escorted to the Governor's. Reom, filled gs it is with. the furniture, used py George ‘Weshiagton, who waged the first auc committee and the American members » [of the conference, WELCOMED BY DISTINGUISHED COMPANY. ‘ women in the room were Mayor Gay- Judge Alton B. Parker, Andrew Carnegie, John D. Crimmins, R. A. C./ Risso in an effort to escape ran into of the Leading Figures in the Conference To Arrange Celebration of the,100 Years Peace ACCUSING GAYNOR OLGAAA ANA OED ODEDNEGIT ES TEE EOEEN ES AE LAEN O14 00444 90S 4006 LOT wore @ gray sult with aq circulars to all police was begun at noon. killed by an Itallan gan door. representing PAROLED GUNMAN KILLED POLICEMEN AND A GANGSTER (Continued from First Page.) of furnishing gual Louls Possi by the police, Mayor ‘Gaynor Bid ietinguished men and ein front, a black shoes with bull-dog toes, a high stand- ing collar and a dark tle decorated with a horseshoe pin. The work of mailing departments, carrying the suspect's description, photo- graph, finger prints and handwriting, (SAG SELIGMARS SL99S- 000 06-0660000600606000 slightly pockmarked, Diué eyes and was smooth shaven. When seen just be- fore the shooting Saturday Heaney and Tearo go on the poll records as the second pair of policem On April 14, 1901, Policeman George M. Sechler and Albert A. Seleck, on plain clothes duty in Washington Square, were tracted by a fight near the public lava- tory. They investigated and received In- formation which warranted them in starting to arrest a man im the crowd. The man ran into a dark hallway tn a tenement in Thompson street and the policémen followed him in. .He shot them both dead as they entered the The murderer was caught, tried ‘and exectted in the electric chair. ‘The killing of Teare, Heaney and Risso brings the total of murders due over the claim of the ing to @ monopoly for strikebreak- ter, ight he the coat cut roy, black i ers up to five, The Kenmare Street Gang is an organization of gunmen recruited from the old Jimmy Kelly, hick” Tricker and Jack Birocco gangs, which were broken up There has grown up in gangiom 6 lucrative business in the way of fur- nishing protection to atrikebreakers, The members of the Kenmare Street Gang were the first to see the oppor- tunities in this line cf work and fur- nished nearly all the professional gun- mon who act as guards at factories where atrikes are on. The pay ranges from $5 to $7 a day and the job of- @ore natural ‘man, | Umeelf—how ‘auto- Bmith, Seth Low, Chancellor EL E./the subi a tured 0° oy Grow wake tnee oo ons peel might Brown of New York University, Ly-|ieemen, who chased hie on a ceain, |£r@ opportunities for the gunmen to own guilty neck, should color hie _ man Abbott, Joseph Talcott, the Rev.|tte threw away the revolver, which |erult white es from the ranks Sestimony as he believed ne nee Oe ee eicenl a Denes was not found. Risso was et liberty | of the Girls they are supposed to pro- erick us jutton bail ‘sh La oe St the Horace Mann School of Teach: | sisi on the charge of shooting | cuick" Tucker, a former prise fight- Ly Ml i I i I i duced it. This is the rule laid the case of Schosp@in vs. Coffes, N. Y., p. 18 at p. 17. DECLARES MAYOR'S ORDER FOR PUBLICATION 18 NOT SHOWN. “To supply this defect subpoenas were issued for the various attaches of the Mayor's office, They were examined and cross-examined at jength. Their testi- mony does not show any such affirma- tive act om the part of the defendant. ty Hf i fee H aH I 3 i i 5 if if i He sald: araignment of bim a6 2 shame i if i 2 i | Hi though j E i t interests of arbitration rather than by recourse to armed strife, He apoke of ‘bitration of t! case as the greatest ever undertaken. Lom Weardale, head of the Engils' dvlegation, rosponded, declaring the n: tions proposed to cclebrate the Treaty of Ghent with pomp and ceremony, an tted so great an occasion, + Judge Alton B. Parker declared the TOLERATED AT CONEY ISLAND THIS SEASON. ‘Twenty-Ave young men were before Magistrate Reynolds in the Con: Island Court this morning, with te of rowdyism, gathered in by the “etrong arta” squad, ané their offenses consisted of Aghting bawied. ‘this! ‘The barber who was gEgE ow don't!" the elled. fou don’ side were hel ‘Wednesday in 000 ball. The remainder 4 Hotel Piasa, z ef & 2 like to send them to fall before the eeacon had really begun, but he wanted to them and all others that | the authorities will not stand for any rowdyiem on the island thie year. Men not every day & man has the | causnt at it will got the limit of the honor of elng shaved under the pro- lew, Somat Sa | pe ewan ee @ second time ever.” gates given EE gs ‘The reserves got the sign of dis- 3 trom the semi-shaven Orr and as battle formation immediately. Ghent tr brought ing \ ere’ College, Dr. William ©: MeDowell,| ghieldiana walked into @ billiard room President of the League of Peace and| ,¢ No, 25 Mulberry street Saturday personal representative of the Gover-/night and asked Risso, who had his nar of New Jerse O'Brien, Marcus A. Marks, Henry |or the price of it. Risso with a billiard Clews, W, C. Demorest, W. B. Holland, Mra, Mexzander Crawford Chenoweth, Gaughter of the late Fernando Wood, | jeered a Shieldiana, who was proud of former Mayor of New York; Mrs. Will-/ nis reputation as a fam O. Hart of ptt repre- senting the United States Daughters of gnieidiana. With this remark he ran 1176-1818 of Louisiana; W. O. Hart of! ¢> nis home at No, M1 Mulberry street New Orleans, William Allen Butler,| ang got a pi William Church Osborne and George F.) i1arq room he stood on the sidewalk and ‘The delegates and committees gath- ‘There testimony ‘ered in the room ef the Board of Ee- rete that the Ge-| timate to hear Mayor Gaynor's speech. “Your mission is a most agreeable one for the people of this country, and I hope the people of all countries, al- it does mot always appear so, I must confess, It ie a hard thing to teach even individual men to keep the peace—we know that right here in the| "ushed into th city of New York.” ‘The Mayor declared nations in the past have been too prone to which to declare war. tween England and the United States ternational afer ances. Alderman C. De Bruyne, was elected chairman of the conference, Canada, and by Mr. Outerbridge. After sticeremen it the delegation mo- ted tered to the Waldorf-Astoria, where Commissioner Dough: t they were the luncheon, gueats of the | (DePuy wd ieee Pilgrim Gociety. The fret business ees- sion was held this afternoon. at the There was a dinner at the Plase Hotel last night to the visiting dele- tee, Nicholas Murray Butler, Presl- dent of Columbia University, made a speech emphasising the great benefits for lasting peace and better relations between the United Kingdom and the United States becuget about by the Judge Morgan J.}ocat off, playing pool, for the revolver | ° whil cue raised rushed at Shieldiana and a Grove him out of the place. ‘The crowd | (ory OY ea up 4 mai dead. He had been “Til get the — right now,” shouted Returnfhg to the dil- announced his intention of killing Rizzo. RIZZO. WENT OUT TO FIGHT WITH CHALLENGER, @omedody told Risso Ghieliana was “That lun- ger," remarked Risso, 't got more) months to live and I guess I might as well Anish him right now. ‘Without waiting to put on his coat Tucker, Matilo Lorito, alias Heaney, who heard the shot on his post He| nearby, ran toward the dlliiard room. He caw Shiekiiana starting away with curred, jabama claims who fell dead on the sidewatk, Right toward peace| yohind Heaney was Teare, The bra young policeman did not hesitate when ble saw fis brother officer fall, but charged right at BhieKilana. The little gangster, figuring that he had probably kied two men—one a pollcoman—might as well take @ desperate chance. He jahot Teare, inflicting mortal wounds, ran into the tenement at No 281 Mulberry by way of back the murderer. . old, who who was detained as day night a short ti tances arbitration be- ‘The entire outgoing platoon of the Mulberry eet predinct voluntarily wave up @ day off to-day, donned cit!- gens’ clothes and joined the special de- teotive force of seventy-five men organ- ined by Deputy Commissioner Dougherty te hunt for the elayer of; three. of Ghent, out telegraph requests to all police commanders in the country to-day to arrest ShieKiana—which is the police way of spelling the neme. The suspe:t | 4, has aleo been known as Shield and @hields and ‘The Paper Box Kid.” WHOLE COUNTRY ASKED TO JOIN IN SEARCH. He 1s described as an Italian Amert- can, twenty-o1 are old, five feet one by the American commit- 1% pounds and slender eet, chuar, | thick black hair, cut high of the neok, a acllow, rough complexion, ’ fi ; Ww diners to th ere | wal Kenmare street gang to keep out of the etrikebreaking business. INFORMER KILLED IN FRONT OF KELLY’S GARAGE. On April 29 Jerry Matea, who had been a sort of a hanger-on in the Mulberry Bend gang district, was shot and killed in front of Paul Kelly's garage in West Forty-first street. Maiea had been geen in conaultation with detectives at work on the case of the killing of “Chick” F iE a er who had a saloon in West Third street and a gang of his own in Green- wich Village, went into the business of furnishing guards for strikebreak- few months ago. On April 13, he was on duty in front of a factory in East Fifty-ninth etreet, e@hot him by the “Kid Morgan,” and his brother, Rocco, of No, 347 Mul- berry street, who are under arrest on suspicion, are believed to be in posses- sion of information of value Matilo Lorito has admitted that he was shot last November by Risso, The two Lo- ritos were in the company of the man who is suspected of having committed the murders Saturday night and were tight at the spot when the shooting oc- Genaro Stelito of No, %7 Mul- Werry street is in the House of Deten- tion as a witness, he having seen the shooting and obtained a good view of Coroner Feinberg to-day remanded an- other witness in the shooting. This wit- ness ts Rocco Lorito, thirty-four years ives at No, 247 Mulberry street. He is a brother of Matillo Lorito, witness on Satur- ftter the shoot- ing. The latter was remanded to the —__—_ FRECKLES s [ i a. >}and will also ask the trus Tombs as a witness yesterday. Rocco Lorito tel the Coroner that he ‘Was standing in the hallway of the house adjoining the tenement where the shoot- ing occurred, He sald he heard the shots but did not see anybody with « revolver nor did he sce anybody run- ning. WALDO WANTS TO PAY WIDOW FULL PENSION. Commissioner Waldo day that he believed th: him to pay Mrs, Hea) Patrolman Heaney, & maximum pen- yn of $800 w year, although Heaney 5 only @ probationary officer, The Commissioner will also appeal to the of $1,000 for the killed in the performance fund established after the Equitable Fire for relief for Mrs, Heaney and the family. of Teare, who was not mar ried. Drastic police action in the way of losing up the pool parlors and coffee houses on the east side which are the resorte of gunmen i looked for. The order of Mayor Gaynor that policemen must treat all citizens with conesidera- tion and gentleness irrespective of the records and associations of said citisens {a responsible for the bokiness of the Gangmen. It is believed that the Mayor maY be induced to so modity his orders as to allow police’ and detectives to deal roughly with known gunmen and to close their places of resort. Charles G. Hellimger of the National Burety Company, No. 1 Broadway, who served with Heaney in the ,Eiev- enth Cavalry, to-day set about locating ‘ell of Heaney's former comrades in the troop who are now in or near New York that they may attend the funcral. He also expects to raise a testimonial fund among them for the Benefit of the murdered policeman's widow. gisele “BRIDGE TWISTER” GOES TO WORKHOUSE. Bruised and cut after a savage fight with a crowd of hoodiums calling them- selves the “Bridge Twisters,” Policeman Robinson of the East Fifty-firat street station told Magistrate Levy to-day of his arrest of Leo Bens, a rough look- ing young truck driver, which caused the fight. The Magistrate sent Benz to the Workhouse for thirty days as a warning to the roughs of the neighbor- hood under the Queensboro Bridge who are given to baiting policemen. Robinson was badly tnjured in the rescue of Mrs. Bishler from in front of a Gecond avenue street car last. August and it feared at first that his wounds had been reopened by his struggle with the boys, but he was cule ie wet about to-day with only a alight imp. ees sabe TWO GIRLS SENT TO HOSPITAL te AEE A ON INTOXICATION CHARGE. Sgen Staggering Into a Clubhouse and Reported to Police — All Knowledge of Them Denied. Two girls, giving their names as Amelia Rhenwald, seventeen years old, of No. # Mast One Hundred and Fortieth street and Anna O'Rourke, six- teen years old, of No. 490 Kast One iun- dred and Fortieth street, were taken from @ room in the Arapahoe Athlet.c Clu N@. 60% East One Hundred anc Fagtg-aetond street, BY the police to- da’ and booked on a charge of intoxi- cation, ‘They were then sent to Lincoin Hospital f atment. The girls seen to stagger Into the clubhouse vy’ @ young man who told Policeman Joan Tynan o@ the Alexander avenue station. Several) young men found in another room ih the clubhouse depled all knowledge of the girls and n& arrests were madi Later the girls were taken to the Alex- ander avenue police station, but there Amelia became hysterical and doctors ordered her back to Lincoln Hospital in an-ambulance. The O'Rourke girl was held for the Night Court, ptsbeak toe UN OLD WORLO EMPLOYEE DEAD. William J. Wi Pressroom Fore- man, Succumbs to Ei \pelas, ‘William J. Ward, foreman of The World pressrooms, died this afternoon from eryeipelas at his home in Rochelle Part; New Rochelle. For twenty-iour yeara, eince coming from: the R. Hoe Prees Company, Mr. ‘Ward ha@ served as foreman of The World pressrooms. He had never been employed elsewhere. He was seventy years old. He leaves a son, 'W. Ward, who is in Colorado, and ¢wo daughters, Edna and Janet. Funeral arrangements will be an- nounced later. . Make Your Blood Pure By taking THE GPRING MEDICINE Hoods Sarsaparilla Made from Roots, Barks, Herbs and other valuable ingredients. BONTEMT RULING UPHELD IN COMPERS CASE; PENALTY CUT Labor Chief With Mitchell and Morrison Loses Appeal in Boycott Case. ——— WASHINGTON, May 5.—The contempt 0g court judgments upon Samuel Gom- ~ pers, Frank Morrieon and John Mitchell, officials of the American Federation of Labor, were sustained to-day by the @ourt of Appeals of the District of Col- umbla, which, however, revised the sen- tences to give Gompers thirty days’ tm- Prisonment and fine Morrison and Mitchell $500 each with no jail term. ‘The Chief Justice of the Court dtesent~ ing, held that the entire judgment should be reversed. ‘The lower Court gave Gompera one year, Mitchel! nine months and Moreieoh aix months without option of fine, . All were convicted of violating @ court in- junction in the noted Bucks Stove and Range case. An appeal from cision to-day will be taken to the Supreme Court of the United States if attorneys for the labor leaders can find ground upon which to ask the highest court to re- view the judgment, On a previous ap- peal to the Supreme Court the judgment was oeffeétually dismissed and the+oon- tempt proceedings were brought eli over again, In the previous action the decision of the court below, holding the men in contempt, was unanimous, The dixsent- Ing opinion of the Chief Justice to-day probably will present one avenue of further appeal. ‘The castyhas deen’ & hard fought one and attracted wide at- tention because of the promimence of the men involved. The contempt was alleged to have been the publication of the name of the Bucks Stove and Company in a so-called “boyvott in the American Federation of Labor's official magazine after it had been fore bidden by the court. fiche: Oe LIABILITY LAW VALID; WORKMAN GETS $30,000. Indiana Act Holding Employers Responsible for Injuries Upheld by Highest Court. * WASHINGTON, May 5.—Constitue - tlonpiity of the Indiana Employers’ Line bility law was to-day upheld by the Supreme Court in the sult of Haynes Ia ‘kett ngainat Chicago, Indian epolis and Louteville Railway Company: Hackett, @ yard ewitchman at Monom Ind., Will recover $90,000 for tu a of bath legs through the negligence, ae charged, of his immediate auperior, yard foreman. We joved hua (noe ' Branatield.) Notice of funeral hereafter. WALSH.—In New York City May 8, BD. WARD WALBH, aged 76 years, bus! | of the late Jane’ Walsh, 100 Weetshonter " sagacstion ye Oe r Paany Maatesuset art si 10c PINEAPPLE EF xa Stal Saggeatlon Ior Fetods: TEs BAe Rat PLUS PARCEL POST