The evening world. Newspaper, August 13, 1913, Page 1

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“ Circulation Books ) Open to All.’” PRICE _ONE © CENT. WILL LOCK UP LE IF THEY RAID HEALY’S, MAGISTRATE DECLARES Deuel Will Issue Warrants Against Offenders and Show Them No Courtesies, He Says, When He Is Told That Healy’s Is a Hotel. M’KAY CONSULTS MAYOR * AND SAYS ORDER STANDS Healy Assures Patrons He Will Keep Open To-Night as Long as They Care to Stay. Magistrate Deuel in the West Side Court this afternoon arrayed him- self with Chief Justice Zeiler of Special Sessions against the police in their recent atiempt to shui at 1 o'clock sharp all restaurants where liquor is sold. The occasion was the appearance before him of Acting Captain Hart of the West Sixty-eighth street station, whom Thomas Healy, owner of the restaurant at Columbus avenue and Sixty-sixth street, which the we entered and cleared of diners by force this morning, had summoned tO court on a charge of oppression. Healy’s summons was applied for yesterday and was directed at the act of the police on Monday night, when they had merely refused to let those who remained in the restaurant after 1 o'clock leave the place. beenter Pi yt ____O& {The Hew 1 Tork World). Magistrate mind the high handed action of the po- Nice wito, led by Inspector Dwyer, rushed the restaurant this morning and ejected men and women alike, hustling and ghoving even the women out through the doors with no gentle hands. “Z shall issue Bo more sum- monses in cases like this," de olareg the Magistrate, in- stead, I will issue warrants arrest of these policemen and lock them up, and extend to them 20 courtesies.” Har: was accompanied to court by Inspector Dwyer and Assistant Corpo- ration Counsel . Healy had Edward Kelly of No, 36 Nassau Gtreet, his Iawydr, with him. Mr, God- frey asked at once for an adjournment of the case, saying that he had not had time to study its merits, HEALY’S RESTAURANT PROVES TO BE A HOTEL. Magistrate Devel, under a misappre- hension of the status of Healy's restaus rant, said: “When I issued this summons I did so because I thought it my duty to put an end to this police persecution. But 1 won't continue it, 1am golng toy dismiss it at once, 1 was under the impression that Healy conducted a 4, Your Honor, #0 he : ‘That's just what it is, a hotel,” | interrupted Mr. Kelly before Magistrate | Deuel vould continue, “You mean it is a regular hotel like | the Astor or the Waldorf or any other big hotel?” inquired the Magistrate, as though he doubted, “That's exactly what I mean,” on Kelly, “It's @ regular hotel, 3 much a hotel as any In the city.” Devel evidently had In ¢@———--— JOHNSON’S WINNING RECORD ON COURTS HERE BROKEN BY TOUCHARD. Sensational California Youth Loses to New Yorker in Meadow Brook Meet. SOUTHAMPTON, N. Y¥., Aug. 13.—W. M, Johnston, the apectacular young Call- fornia player, went down to defeat in the fourth round of tennis singles at the Meadow Club to-day before Gustave F. Touchard of New York. Touchard won 63, 0-6, 11-9, Other results were: William J, Clothier defeated Robert Leroy, 6-0, 64. Howard A. Plummer defeated Stanley Wainwright, 6-1, 6-2. Frederick C, Inman defeated George M. Church, 4-6, 6-8, 6-4. The results in men's doubles (first round) were; Babcock and Trevor de- feated Brown and Leroy, 2-4, 6-2, 6-0, Harte and Caner defeated Sproul and Thomas, 6-2, 6-1. pa PASSED OVER SULZER’S VETO oT hb BAM In ALBANY, Aug. 13.—The Senate to-day Passed over the Governor's veto Sena- tor Brown's bill increasing the size of the State Committee to 160 members, e from each Assembly District, This the bill, Gov, Sulzer asserted -would increase the power of political bo That puts @ different ight on the propgsit declared Magistrate Deuel. ‘Had it veen a cafe, pure and simple, the police would have been justified in eapeiting the guests when they re- fused to leave at the legal closing time, In thos case, however, they were not Jstiued in placing @ hand on @ single 1k proper complaint 18 made to me) again in a case like this against the po live I'll issue no summons, I'll issue @ warrant, If this man Healy is keeping fa hotel and has a proper license he has & perfect ri to keep his place open and to serve his guests with food. The police Nave M more right to enter that place and disturb persons at meals than they have to go upstairs and disturb pers. | ‘all do everything In my power | p uch disgraceful scenes as were enacted last night, 1 shall be right here whenever I am wanted and I shall la- que warrants when they are asked for," @iace the charge against Hert was > teentinusld 90 Last Powe) even ey the most praise cls cumstances, is often proved to be “bad business.” The four great essentials of a judi- cious investment are: 4ST: See that your money Is SE- CURE; 2D: Be si PROFIT-YIELDING, 3D: That it has a LOAN VALUE; 4TH: And that it may be quickly TURNED INTO CASH Houses, Lots, Farms, Shops; Stores, Markets, Hotels, Cafes, Restaurants, Etc, If wisely chosen, answer these requirements, 2,484 World “Real Estate" and “Business OPT Mee Ads. last week— oe Bey se a ee your security is ind Consere- Tenn World | pretty young girl, NEW YORK, "WEDNESDAY, ‘AvausT 13, MAN FOUND SLAIN, GAGGED AND BOUND IN STRANGE ROOM Police Hunt Two Youths and Girl Who Rented Place Last and Disappeared. SUSPECT BADGER GAME. Victim Is William G. Martin, Prominent Milliner of Toronto, Canada. A tall, elim man, with a saturnine face, who passed under the name of Johneon, and @ bleached blonde who was known as his wife, walked out of the furnished room house owned by Mrs. Theodore Jones, at No. 453 Weat Fifty-seventh street, last Monday af- ternoon, after having been ordered to Give up the back parlor they bad been occupying for just siz days, “ At W o'clock last night Mre Jones and her husband, letting themesives into the vacated room with a passkey, fotmd the body of a man lying on the bed, fils hands bound behind his back with » pisce of gas tubing and @ towel stuffed in his mouth. Coroner's Phy- wiclan Weston determined by autopsy that the man had been strangled. The murdered man was soon identi- fled as W. G. Martin, @ well to do mill- inery 4 with a large establien- ment at No, 76 Chariton etreet, To- ronto, Canada. He had been robbed of @ diamond ring worth $250, @ gold watch, scarf pin, cuff links and Bis wallet containing severa) hundred dol- law. Late in the afternoon two persons whose names were kept secret by the police called at the West eventh ed with Commissioner Dougherty, c fe of the detectives i, neatly dressed n decided! doth possessed a provincial not seem like city dwellers, Neither they nor Dougherty would reveal the ubject of their mission, ONLY CLUE COMES FROM THE MURDERED MAN, A single clue to the murderers of and one pelleved to enough to lead to specuy @ one givea by the victim himself a few Mours before the time he is supposed to have walked into a death trap. Going apartment of Mrs, Hannah Bar- rett, an old friend of his, at No, %6 Ww Fifty-eighth street at 6 o'clock, Martin exclaimed tedly: “I have just seen— ( police have). He an old friend of mine and he wants to come around and see his two sisters, who are nurses in gome hospital here, before 1 go back to Toronto to-morrow. Martin then left the apartment on West Fifty-eighth street and was never seen alive again by his friends. Here the story of a crim the rear parlor of the lo at No. 453 Weat Fifty-se and concerns itself with th that room. On Tuesday, Au, people called at the furnis house and told Mrs, Theodore Jones they wished to look at # room, One was an undersized, very over dressed and dandified youth; the other a woman whose hair was so lMght she might almost be taken for an albino. The youth Introduced himself as Mr, Johnson, said the woman was his name the | brother's wife and that when they had picked out a room the brother would come with thelr effects later in the day. They chose the rear parlor on the ground floor. Near night « tell, elen- der man with black hair and @ thin, drawn face, came with two grips. He sald he was Mr. Johnson, husband of the woman who had already installed herself in the room. in the flashy clothes left when the older man came. Nothing occurred in the rear parlor to break the even tenor of the room- | ing house until last Thursday night, | ‘Then, near oldnight, pleeps in the front parlor, was roum from sleep by the noise of a fist bang: | ing on a door, The bang-bang con: tinued uninterruptedly. Mrs. Jones, going to tho wall which separates the front from the back parlor, heard the noise of whispering in the room occu. pied by the Johnsons. Then she heard Johnavn open the door and call: ‘Beat it, you! We won't let you in ma don't want rou aroune Rarelt ; | Must not.” ‘The dapper youth | Mrs. Jones, who | BROOKLYN WINS — FIRST aT 1 0 0000 GAME. 0oo2i1-—- 4 PITTSBURGH 109000 0 Batteries—Curtis, Wagner and Mille! 0 200- ft; Robinson, Camnits and Gibsoa, 3 BROOKLYN SECOND GAME. Q 303 0000-—' 7 PITTSBURGH 003 00000 0- 3 Batterios—Yingling and Miller; O'Toole and Simon. HELD NREN ARANST WL BY GS, SAYS GRL Miss Warrington Declares She and Chums Wanted to Go Back to Sacramento. BAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 1%.—Taking wp the story of her relations with Maury I, Diggs where she interrupted Mt at yesterday's adjournment of court,; Mise Marsha Warrington to-day re! Moran, rf. sumed the stand in the trial of Digas) on a charge of violating the Mann ‘Whit@ Slave act. She sketched briefly wi the events preceding the arrival of her- aelf, Diggs, Caminetti and Miss Lola Norris at Reno and then said: “After our arrival at Reno we went to Riverside Hotel, where Diggs and I occupied one rvom and Miss Norris another. Diggs introduced me at a real estate office as his wife when we wer? trying to locate a bungalow.” Miss Warrington declared that after the quartet reached Reno she and Miss Norris wrote letters to home friends, | but Diggs would not let them mail them. | “We girls wanted to go back to Sacra- mento, but Diggs and Caminett! sald we anid the witness. ‘They said if we went back that would reveal their whereabouts, “It was when we went to a real estate office to rent @ bungalow that I was Introduced as Digg's wife, After we had taken the bungalow and were In- stalled in it, Diggs and Caminetti told us girls not to leave the house, as we might be seen by some one who knew us. Special Prosecutor Roche was relent- less and refused to slur over any of the detatie of the life of the quartet in PIRATES BEATEN IN BOTH GAMES BY BROOKLYNS \First of Double-Header Went Ten Innings—Heavy Bat- ting in Second. SECOND GAME. Cutshaw, 2 gel, cf t, If, Daubert, Ib. Smith, 3b. Fisher, ss. O. Miller, ¢. Yingling, Ruelbach, ~|coo---n--o7 eo |--co-nno-e | -e~oonseH—6 @ | cooneo-onopP eleconco-co-com Totals.......... PITTSBURGH. x 3 Byrne, 3b. Carey, If Viox, 2b Wagner, J. Miller, 1b Wilson, rf. Mitchell, cf. lecccco-ccccc--7 lecooce-ccoc--o-= jisecee-ecrnceeee loc-coo-co-weo-? Reno, He foroed the witness, painfully, to tel serve. Under entd that her ready had been improper. After lengthy examination regarding the three days spent in the bungulow Roche switched to the night the quartet were arrested. Miss Warrington said: “When the oficera rapped on the door we were in the bathroom. Mr. Hradley, came into the bungalow with When we saw him we girls started to cry and he put his arm. around us to comfort us. At the quest of Diggs 1 telephoned to father at Sacramento and asked him to have the warrants for our arrest wita- drawn, He sald that he couldn't do it as the matter was now out of his hands and in the hands of the State.” ites eo Bs SARATOGA WINNERS. FIRST BACE—Lady Lightning, 16 to 5 and even, fret; Money Bee, 8 to 5 for place, secosd; Royal Message, third. Finte, 1.19 4-5. BEOCOND RACE—Juverence, 7 to 1 and 6 to 9 first; Bill Andrews, 4 to 1/ for place, second; Octopus, thirt. Time 4.98, TRIRD BACE—Ol4 Rosebud, 1 to 6 and out, fret; Black Broom, 2 to 1 for| place; Pomette Bleu, third. Time,| 1.18 8-6. FOURTH BACE—Light o' My Lif 11 to 6 and 4 to 5, first; Princess Calla- way, 8 to 5 for place, second; Barnegat, third, Time, 1.38 FIFTH BACE—Mortherner, 5 to 1 and 2 to 1, first; Old Ben, 6 to 1 for place, second; Yankee Tree, third, ‘Time, 1.07. GIZTH RACE. Virile, 3 to 1 and jen, first; Scallywag, 8 to 6 for place; Little Jupiter, third, Time, 1.40 Mrv. Jones opened her own door then in time to see @ tall man whose face she could not distinguish turn uncer- tainly and walk down the hail to the front door, He carried @ sult > of al occeccoe--coccon™ 342% 1 Simon in 7th. Hyatt batted Camnits in 7th. om Base on Balle—Oft O'Toole, } Struck } Outeny Yu fits by Cam: Two-Hase Hit Pases-Fisher, Moran. Wheat to O. Miller; Umpir ance, 6,000, Double Plays— Warner to Byrne. YDay and Emaile. Attiend- (Apectal to The Evening World). ERBETS FIELD, Brooklyn, Aug. After @ hard fought game which went Into ten innings the Dodgers celebrated McKeever Day tn an aus- picloux manner, They came trom be- hind and after teing the me in the ninth inning won out in the tenth by scoring one run on a timely bit by Callahan, @ pinch batter, which scored Jake Daubert from second base. The final score was 4 to 3. The game was a pitchers’ battle up to the elghth inning, when the Pirates man- aged to get two runs over the plate by @ base on balis to Vii Wagner's two bagger and J. Miller's single. The Dodgers came back in ¢ ninth in tyle and tied the y O. Miller, Meyer, Moran's Cutshaw's single and Stenge! or first second orowse ate on Callahan's Ine driv Vagner's head, which was good for @ single. After a short rest the teams started the second tussle, with Marty 0% pitehing for the Pirates and Yin, doing the fMinging for Brooklyn, was 04 Thin ole's first appearance In the he wa operated upon for is July When the game there Were close to sixty-five hundred persons present | PIRST INNING — Byrne drove @ grounder to Fisher and died at first, } Carey bounced one to Smith, who tossed | him out. Viox's hot grounder took a (Comugued a Tain Page) 1913. MURPHY, AT PHONE 16 PAGES ___—*PRICE ONE Ds ocheton 24 HOURS, BREAKS’ HIS GOVERNOR Warwick of Tammany Tri- umphs From Silent Back | Room Before ‘Ringing Off.’ M’CLELLAN,THEN SULZER Portraits Shrined in Library of “Boss” Vanish as Puppets Are’ Dethroned. . ‘They spoke in whispers an@ walked on tiptoe to-day in the house ef Charies F. Murphy at No, 98 Bast Seventeenth street, for “the bose” slept late. Neth- ing must Gisturb Bim, 6o the orders were, unt! he awakened of his own accord. All through the night this Warwick of Tammany, whe made o Governor and then pulled tim down again, had kept ceaseless vigil over the proceedings of the Legislature The telephone was tie long arm ef authority btretebing trem the back room of nie Rouse that could be called @ library !f there were books in it, up te the Capitel om the Bill et Al- Dany, where impeachment of Gov, Sul- ser was voted by orders of the invisible ruler in Now York. SULZER’S PORTRAIT FOLLOWS THAT OF M'CLELLAN. In this back room once steed om an eesel a large portrait of George B. McClellan. Mr. Murphy made him great) end thea let him pasé out into oblivion Decause they quarrelied. With the pase- ing went the portrait, It was svc- coeded by one of Gov. Bulser, smaller {in size, lese prominent in position, That too has gone. ‘There remains, however, the tele phoae, eo secret a channel of com- munteation that does not leave @ dan gerous trail of letters and checks. This was the sword that “the boss” wielded at long distance and with tt decapi- tated = puppet who dared defy bis authority. There is nothing about the exterior of the brownstone house at No. 38 Bast Seventeenth street to distinguish it partioularly from ite newwhbore, There are summer awnings over its windows and the brasses are polished brightly, but the same characteristics are no- ticeable next door, But last night there was a difference 35] within doors, The lights of No. 3 burned until daylight, although the front shades were drawn. To write what went on in the brary would be merest guess ing, because “the bor-* does not go into battle surrounded by crowds of r and adiveers. Three or four o! chosen confidants come and go, but he kes to operate best in silence and in secret, HIS VICTORY WON AFTER NIGHT IN CONNING TOWER, When the first vote of impeachment was reported to him, after 6 o'clock this morning, and the ordere given for to- day's clinching of the victory, Mr, Mur- phy hung up the telephone receiver and went to bed. It was near @ o'clock—the hour when the rank and file of Tam- many |e wetting up fo day's labor. “The boss’ had won a great His vigil had been a long gan early Tuesday morning at Good Ground, L. 1, when he took a train to New York to assure active command of the fight, From morning to morn- ing he had been close by hin reliable telephone— enty-four hour day. But it was worth the effort, De throning and impeaching # Governor is not a trivial task. It is @ chapter in political history, ‘Therefore, the victorious “buss” slept late to-day while family and servants guarded him from iutrusion—even via tele phone. >——_— RAIN HALTS GAME AT POLO GROUNDS. POLO GROUNDS, Aug. .~—The game two-day between the Giants and St. Lous Cardinals was called on account of rain in the first inning after one St, Louis player had been retired. There will be © double bender te-morsom GLYNN 1S GOVERNOR; SULZER IMPEACHMENT TRIAL OPENS SEPT. 18 Summons of Senate Ordered Served This Afternoon, but He Claims ~ He Is Still Executive and Prepares to Fight. COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE SHUTS OFF STATE FUNDS, — No Force Will Be Used by Glynn—_ Republican Senate Leader Urged — All to Support Acting Governér,. Martin Green. 1 (@tal Correspondent of The Bveaing Westy AUBANY, Aug. 13.—Gov. Willlam Sulzer was deposed from olllee by the Legislature this afternoon, to remain deposed until the Court of Impeachment, consisting of the Justices of the Court of Appeals and Senate, which is to meet on Sept. 18, disposes of the re him. Late this afternoon Acting Lieut.-Gov. Wagner, as * President. of ts Senate, signed a summons commanding the Governor to appear before = the Court of Impeachmnt. Attached to the summons were the articles Impeachment prepared by the Assembly, The summons was given to. Patrick 'E. McCabe, secretary of the Senate, with instructions to serve-It upon the Governor personally, Sulzer declared that he would not allow MeCabe to serve the summons, Gov, Sulzer will not vacate his office. No attempt will be made 2. put him out by force. He will continue to direct the departments undef hls control. Acting-Gov. Martin H. Glynn will act in concert with (60 Legislature and the departments of the State not controlled by the Governor, TREASURY CLOSED TO SULZER. ps The Acting Comptroller, Michael Walsh, will recognize the governmem and the Sulzer government will be unable to pa) S money from the State Treasury after to-day. President pro tem Wagner called the Senate to order at 3.18 o'clock, the Constitution barring the Lieutenant-Governor from participation is the impeachment proceedings. A committee of three from the Assembly bearing notice of the im- “| peachment of the Governor reported to the Senate this message: “We do impeach William Sulser, Governor ef the State of New York, for wilful malfeasance im office and for high erimes and misdemeanors.” “The acceptance of the articles of tmpeachment, it was contended, automatically removed Gov, Sulzer from office pending the outcome of his trial. Mr. Levy was twenty minutes reading the articles of impeachment, accusing the Governor of grand larceny, bribery, oppression and other. felonies. The document was handed to @ page, who passed it up to the presiding officer. Senator Wagner aunounced that, acting ae of the Senate, he would convene the court of impeachment at noon | Sept. 18, FRAWLEY MAKES A STATEMENT. Senator Frawley said he desired to make a statement concernipg @ publication relative to a call he mado on the Governor last night. “I did call on the Governor,” said Senator Frawley. “It was e call ot friendship, and I shall call on him whenever he wante to see me My friendship for the Governor endures even in these his darkest moments, had a duty to perform to my colleagues and to the committee of which was chairman, and that duty I tried to do in @ manner eminently fair if every respect, As far as my appealing to the Governor or to anybody for protection or to hide anything that has happened in my legislative career I have nothing to fear from Sulzer, Mr, Hennessy or anybody in this State.” Senator Brown called the attention of the Senate and the Legislature to Article 4, Section 4 of the Constitution, which pre-e; vides that the Governor, upon impeachment, shall be suspended ‘ by such Impeachment from office, shall act as Gover until the disability removed. Senator Brown, the leader of the mimerity, sald he |. hoped the Legislatare would contribute all Im its power te the ald of a single, reeogaised government of 5 Ere es as ane

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