The evening world. Newspaper, June 20, 1913, Page 4

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$4 P 7 ¥ 4 nS un | HOMME EAT GAYNOR ATTACK Matter of Supreme Indiffer- ence” What Mayor Has to ; Say in Hyde Case. Selther Mayor Gaynor nor R. R. City Chamberlain, was at his to-day to confirm or deny the Peport that Mr. Moore will resign and ‘Phares H. Hyde, acquitted by the Ap- Pallate Division yesterday, is to get his Peaition of City Chamberlain back Mr, Hyde remained ellent @eject. Supreme Court Justice whom the Mayor scored at length, to discuss the attack. ‘Fhe juriet who presided at the Ex- “trnordinary Term of the 6upreme Court, under designation of Gov, Dix, Mee wacertain to-day, when he went ve I reed it. Anyhow of aupreme indifference Gaynor has to may.” 1, John 33. Stanchfeld, application for Hyde's re- as @ lawyer may be made depending on the wish of has yet to be consulted on LE TO REINGTATE- creepy BEE gt re s Fs ‘tnatated ae eooh as’ he petitions the court for euch relief.” Mayor Gaynor made the dismissal ef the Indictments for bribery again: Hyde fhe subject of @ bitter attack on Justice Goff and MPistrict-Attorney whit to-day, He did not mention either by name. But he enld that “thirty or forty Judges of the upper courte” had refused to touch the Hyde case before Justice Goff took it up; aleo that undue pressure was browsht to bear on a reluctant Grand Jury to vote the indictment; moreover, that “hired preas agents” were used to inflame pub- Ne opinion againet Hyde. The Mayor's remarks were dictated by him to a stenographer a few mo- ments after he heard that tho Appellat Division had ordered the dinmissal of the indictments againat the former City Chamberlain and his release from the Tombs. He said “INFAMOUS PIECE OF BUSINESS,” SAYS GAYNOR. “Everybody can see now what an In- famous piece of busine this was. The decision the court is what every Judge and lawyer knew it would be. It wae perfectly known by the Bar and the Bench that the indictment atated no offense whatever. It was just as well kn@wn thet there wae not a par- ticle of evidence of any criminal of- fense at the trial. Treaponse to the clamor of « took time to get this majority. And then it was found that of the thirty or forty Judges of the upper courts hereabouts only one among them all could be found to stand for a trial under the Indictment. “That one was found after much dill- gence. And when he got through oon- vieting the defendant he coolly said that he wae in grave doubt whether there was any offense stated or shown. Then locked the defendant in the country from which this Judge emigrated when a young man, They had long used Judges like him over there to crucify people in ,olitical cases. “Interviews were given out dally by Press agents that it would be proved that the defendant took.money from somebody to do what he did. At the trial there was not @ pretense that any such thing happened. The prosecution 444 show that he and another had dis- counted a note in the trust company on ample security and that it was paid on the day it became due, But this dis counting of the note happened four menthe after the alleged offense was committed, so that it could have had nothing to do with the case. And yet/ the Judge received it in evidence. DWELLE ON “PUBLIC CLAMOR” ‘THAT CAN RAILROAD A MAN. “It makes sensible men pause when, guch things can gcecur, If the public court. Thip community certainiy has mot forgotten that. And thie infamous character Robin, who tried to accuse uthers in order to save himeeif for his crimen, haa almost succeeded. When first arrested for robbing the bank he pretended he was iMane, and almost ot off on plea, But when he wi found out in that he began to try to implicate others and invent things about ‘things tha! told Finally when aj) was over he was brought before Mr. Juatice Seabury and sent to the peniten- tary for twelve montha. ASTONISHED AT LIBERTY AL. LOWED BY COURTS TO ROBIN. it of habeas corpus wan obtained to his being kept 14 the penitentiary. The writ was argued before a Judge, who dismissed it and remanded him back to prt But nevertheless he has been over the Tombs Prison, and has served no tUme whatever in the penitentiary, all by means of t' sling with a writ of habeas corpus. “The astonishing thing to me ts that the judiciary o: this county does not take notice of this whole case. This man Robin ts to be seen around town here with a keeper nearly every day In restaurante dining and wining. Now that the clamor is over we had better has been going on. ‘en worse than the criminal Brandt, whom ually took out of State prison him nearly discharged on @ habeas corpus until the Ap- mn interposed and put a use, the whole thing be- It officers and our courts are to listen to ‘and respond to clamor. “Tn ancient times, when clamor and the hue and cry were raised against an accused man, there were certain a1 tuaries or places of refuge to which could run and be safe from the Nobody could touch him while he re- ‘We all thought lace of refuge for “It o high time that this thing be taken up by our Inteliigent newspapers. If we cannot have @ fair administra- dion of justice then the te and li- ertien of nobody are safe It was reported to-day that City Chamberiain R. R. Moore will resign | g; to give Mayor Gaynor an opportunity to reappoint Hyde, who resigned after an indictment was returned against him charging bribery. It was intimated at ‘the timo that If Hyde was exonerated he would get his job back. —sS—- SLIGHT SCRATCH FATAL. Blood Peisoning Kille Wife of Prosecutor ef tersen. ‘Mra. Amelia Dunn, wife of Prosecu- tor Michael Dunn of Paterson, N, J. 1, now for several montha, in| 5 Ning WORLD, OF THE CENTRAL LINES IS DECLARED LEGAL cause Millions of Securities Are Held by Investors. ALBANY, June #—Justice Ch in the Supreme Court to-day rendered A Gecision declaring that the called over $12,500,000 Innocent pur- it $76,000,000 of in hands of in- certificates are chasers’ hands and ¢ unpaid prior issues a vertors. ‘The action to have the trust declared Mlegal wan brought by minority etok- holders of the Michigan Central Rail- road. Bix railroads were defendants in the auit. —S———— INSTRUCTRESS DEMANDS $5,000 FOR HEART BALM. Declares Balton Always Addressed Her as “Dearest Wife to Be.” Mies Anna Pauline Smith, an instruc- tres, isn’t so piqued over her failure to become Mra. Charles Baiton as she is that Balton should have addressed her as “Dearest Wife to Be” and ‘How's My Chicken To-day” and then Gone off without saying a word and wedded another. Hence, Mise Smith, a jcomely young country maki, living Promise to marry were filed in the County Clerk's office to-day by Thomas H. Gmith of No. 45 West Tenth street, attorney. Balton is the secretary to Arthur Boomhower, the millionaire rug importer, of No. 100 Fitth avenue. Mr, Boomhower lives at Kens- ington, Great Neok, where Balton acts es manager of ‘his estate and where the secretary lived while courting Miss mith. Mies Smith alleges that Balton ‘kept company with her’ gever®i months, frequently visiting her in Manhattan and generally addressing her as “The ‘Dearest Giri On Berth—Darling Wife- to-Be" On May 9% last Balton sud- denly ceased coming around and then Ales Smith learned chat he hed magried CANCER CURED IN378 CASES OUT OF 1,000 TREATED (Continued from First Page.) as evidence of cancer, the X-ray ranks In importance In the early diagndsls, Rot Bo much because it shows the cer Itself, but because it shows found in @ majority of the This would appear to indi- cancer of the stomach is preceded by nome lesion or ulcer. the minal test for cancer is the explora- tory operation. “Under present conditions the patient who {s submitted to exploration with a Probable diagnosis Of cancer has a lit- tle over one chance In three of a cure, @ little less than one chance in three and about one chance in three that the operation of a palliative operation, will be merely an exploration. ONLY 24 DEATHS IN 376 CANCER EXPLORATIONS, “Every operation for cancer of the stomach should begin as an explora- tion, In the 876 explorations for can- | cer in which nothing further was dor there were six deaths, during or !m- mediately after the operation. of these cases could the operation have been called the direct caune Of the death. In most of the fatalities the disease was far advanced, “In an exploratory operation an in- @ision ie made in the epigastric mid- Mne and the stomaci portions of the liver are examined with two fingers. In case the hopeless con- ition of the disease is ascertained the anaesthesis with movocain nt is disturbed but little. times it is necessary to Intro- Guce the hand for @ further examina- tion of the organs. In case parte of fally performed and the patient can} enjoy a few more years of comparative le. 4 muscuiar defects that are But health, ‘ “Moderate involvement of-other or- ly, the pancreas, does oferation. Superficial increas can be cut out. tions have @ field of usefulness, but should not be per-| 4, formed except for the relief of me- chanical conditions or obstructions. “With our present methods cancer of the pyloric end of the stomach can be diagnosed and cured in at least half of the cases. There is a prospect of @ five-year cure in 25 per cent. of the asem, @ three-year cure in 38 per cent. and few patients fail to get less than one year of relief following their re- covery from the operation.” FOREIGN SURGEONS RECEIVE INSTRUCTIONS FROM MAYOS. The Mayo brothers, William James and Charles Horace, hold the unique Position in American medicine of being Inetructors of many of Europe's most and practitioners. eal men from Ing out to the Mayo brothers’ tarlum In Rochester, Minn., to witness thelr marvels of surgery. Their repu- tation te international. ‘The sons of Dr, Wiliam W. Mayo, a poor country practitioner, the Mayo brothers managed to gain medical edu- cations and as young @raduates they Joined their father tn ‘his local practice out on the Minnesota prairies, Their surprising mastery of surgery, their skill @nd daring {n attempting feats Marble Succeeds Mim as President of Merchants’ Association. Henry R. Towne, President of the, hanta’ Asociation since 1908, re- @igned that office yesterday, in accord- ance with an understanding when he began his sixth term last Januery tl he might retire as soon as the associa- tion should be settied in its new quar- tere in the Woolworth Building. He Will continue on the Executive Com- mittee. William A. Marble was elected Preat- dent yesterday, and Daniel P. Murse suoceeded him as Vice-President. Under Mr. Towne the membership of the association increased from 1,200 to BOYS AND OBILD rx WINDBURN there’s nothi “just as good” a VELOGEN “Beauty's Guardian!" to Cool and Soothe a Sum burned, Windburned Skin At yous druggist te colle palble tubes Te ~4 For The Week-End which other surgeons s00n won them fam and invitations cam: In none | © ROME, June 2.—A fought between the Italian troops and the Tripolitan Arabs at Ettangi yoster- day cost the lives of one Italian of- nineteen soldiers, while five officers and 217 me re wounded. According to an official despatch from Derna, Gen. Salsa ‘ But William and Charles Mayo ag Norfolks for the Boys from $5.00 ot the American Lourdes,” #0 mar- vellous have been the cures effected by —_>——_ TWENTY ITALIANS KILLED IN BATTLE WITH ARABS. and 217 Men Wounded in Engagement severe battle ised a native ed, lasting reports, were losses are un- . A Norfolk is the Real Thing in \ Outing Suits. We've several models. $18 to $40. to $15.00. : , Wash Suits, $1.50 to $5.00. Young Men’s and Boys’ Soft Shirts; Fine Russian Cords, separate col- lars and French cuffs; sizes 12 to 144%; $2.00 Values, $1.18. Boys’ Negligee Blouses, with col- lars attached or separate, 8e Young Men’s and Boys’ Worsted Jersey Bathing Suits, new color \y combinations; $2.50 Values, $1.85 BROWNING, KING & €O. Broadway, Between 3ist and 33nd Streets. Cooper Square, Opposite Sth Street. Brooklyn: Fulton St. at De Kalb Ave. ied last night. While closing @ win Gow in her home two weeks ago she had tho right index finger scratched by a plece of metal on the window screen, She thought the injury was not serious, ‘While attending the Yale-Princeton baseball game with her eons iast week ahe first noticed that her wrist wes eore and becoming swollen. When ehe re- turned home she consulted her ¢amily Dhyslolan who found she was bvedly Polsoned and the poison had @o that a)l efforts to save her failed, li pike Fit Tite Zea E i g 5 i Fi | Hl ={ : iy a in: z i others in time of clamor and their cases were ail reversed and thrown out of : z $8 SATURDAY LAST DAY Our Workshops Are Turning Out 400 SUITS A DAY which being added to the ~ ENTIRE S N’S OUTPUT at the All-SMITH GRAY Sale Now in progress at 4 stores Every hour brings a new opportunity to select from an immense stock of $18 to $45 Suits ‘ ‘gaunc at °14°° to $2Q5° —=" @This is NOT a Sale of “left-overs” from some unnamed manufacturer's stock. Ss Fill your saucer with crisp, toasted wheat - flakes, ‘“FORCE.”’ Cut over it thin slices of ripe banana. | ' Upon it lightly sift some sugar. Pour at the side some cream or milk, Oh, men, women and children—it’s good. * “FORCE”’ is because it’s made from the right grain—wheat, properly cooked with barley malt to make it digesti le and healthful, and toasted brown and crisp to make it ‘‘tasty."’ q It is OUR OWN STOCK—this Season’s Clothes backed by the Guarantee of the Smith Gray Label. di NOT a Sale of nondescript “Stuff” gathered in a hurry goodness-knows-where. . It is a positive sacrifice of genuine, tested, standard garments, worth far more than the original prices. No other establishment in New York or anywhere can give these val: for the money because no other has behind it such roa sad efficieney— such ability to buy ite own fabrics right and make ite own clothes right. Tidate wi Silo vesegens ote sunten rosentien sal ia ont pure pens FRAEST, wi in of 7 stores such a juctio: padded prices. Moreover OUR stock is being repleniaved at the ratsof 400 caltedail’, The BIGGEST Sale in Our History sata" Now #14 | S3ehx.wo now 12.4% ii aba NOW $29", Suits that $ 50 25 to us” NOW °19 ¢ STORES OPEN TILL 6:30 P. M.

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