The evening world. Newspaper, September 15, 1913, Page 16

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Ff ( THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, SiyS "BAD | DEBTS” | |Scene at Church and Prominent Pallbearers CAUSED FAILURE if ROSEVILLE BANK Cashier Smith, clares Immense Shortage Will Be Wiped Out. TO IMPLICATE OTHERS Impression Grows That Of- ficial Was Aided in Alleged Wrecking of Trust Co. With the return to Newark, N. J., of | Raymond E. Smith, Secretary and Treasurer of the wrecked Roreville Trust Company, the impression has Gained strength among the depositors that others than Smith were concerned fm the events which ended with the Cloning of the bank. Smith surrendered after midnight Saturday and in the early hours of the morning was ad- mitted to $16.00) ball by Judge Harry ¥. Osborne, who came to Newark from his home in South Orange to hold mid- night court. Ralph E. Lum, #mith's counsel and the fan who negotiated for his return. To-day Bmith was taken before Judge Osborne again and his bafl d.smissed. 1 was supplied again immediately, this time three directors of the trust com- pany and a depositor sharing the bond with Lum, The directors were Presi- dent Willian 3. Odell, Vice-President William Fairee and Edward D. Dunn. ‘The depositor was Ciifford I’, MacKvoy, who organized the first depositors’ com- mittee, SMITH PROMISES TO AID AFFAIRS OF BANK. Before going to court, Bmith visited the trast company and had a short taik With Special Deputy Commissioner of Banking and Imsurance Vredenburgh, Who has been in charge of the company for the State. Afterwards Mr. Vreden- burgh sald that @mith had bad no time to assist in strightening out the books, but had promised to return, strip off hig coat, roll up hie sleeves and get right down to work. Smith himself professes to be confident that he will #o untangle the snarl of the company's affairs that there will be no shortage at all. He made thin declaration in an- ewer to the question: ‘To how much do you think the short- ene will amoun: Arrested, De- The bail was supplied by | | “There is no shortage,” he replied SAV& NO DIRECTOR’ Mo tits) NOTE IN THE BAN “Have any of the ieee notes ‘the bank?” “The company holds no big note of any director. ‘here may be an incon- Gequential note or #0.’ “Then what caused the tr. ble." “| should say it was due to bad deots.” But Mr, Smith wouldn't explain what he meant by bad debts. mith had been absent from Newark for the last four weeks, ever since the company closed its doors and to-day he ‘was unwilling to say where he had epent his time, except to declare that he had left the State only once, and then to visit friends in Delaware and that At the Funeral of ‘‘Big Tim’’ TEARS SHED BY TH QUSANDS AS “BIG TIM” GOES 10 GRAVE Gut eon from First Pare) | tne bier of the dead loader, make a fetes and look upon his face for the ‘last time. These were the huinble work- officers of that body rode behind sum- mers’ carria: Then came on foot bly of the neighborhood who had Kot ‘rom thelr beds an hour earlier in order hae they might pay this tribute to . thelr dead friend. Men came with picks of hig time had been apent at Cape delegations from the House of Repree | yn their shoulders and with kits of car- May. —_—_—— MUST REMAIN IN ASYLUM ®Bupreme Court Justice Delany in Spe- cial Term, Pai to-day denied the @pplication of Mra. Ellen Marie Stuart, widow of W. H. Stuart, for a writ of habeas corpus, Senrational charges were made by the woman and her ai- torn They allege that she had been Kidnapped from her home on Staten Island, strippd of her clothing and Pushed to the Manhattan State Hospital for the Insane on Aus. 23 lant Aasistant Actor era) Joseph DP. Vdelson, “ho appeared for the asytun Buthoritties, exhiiited the commitinent Papers upon Which Mre. Stuart was sent tw the institution, Justiee Delany uh pointed out that the only question be- fore him was whether Mrs. Stuart was Being Mlegally detained. The commit- ding papers, he finally ruled, showed het she had been duly commiited and he refused to grant a writ of habeas Gorpus. ITCHING ECZEMA QUICKLY YIELDS TO POSLAM Every dey many skin sufferers are made happy through the use of Poslam. Ktisa , omerty that does over and over what is By le expected of it, and much ften in a week or two it fosticn and disease, improves color and texture, soothes tender makes complexions clear, hands \aat The best shampoo for dandruff, ty) rea free ” nee cents; hen Tes the Emer- $a West e5th Surest, sentatives and from the Senate. More than 200 carriages were in line. The hearse had reached the church be-) |Penters’ or plumbers’ tools under thelr arin Charwomen and washerwomen trudged to the black-Graped bullding of fore the last of the carriages had sett | the Timothy D. Sullivan Association and on the Bowry. STIRRED BY MOVING TRIBUTE FROM A DERELICT. At the corner of Prince street and Bowery something happened that woul have stirred Tim Bulliva: heart’ blood. Just as Congressmen Dan Rior- dan and Goldfogle were passing the corner a ragged derelict, known the Bowery's length only as “Bligo"—a hat- gray headed olf panhandler-— pushed through the crowd and walked |in the procession of mourners just in front of Riordan, “Don't do that, Sligo.” said Riordan, recognizing the seamed face of the derelict. “Don't you think the ‘Big Fellow would want me to walk behind his cof- fin?" Siigo murmured and faded into the crowd, At the church door Miss Irene Sum- mers, the dead man's niece and daugh- ter of Lieut. Michael Summers, fainted, She was curried into the vestry room and there restored. Wifty altar the in white surpll asket at the church Procession down the them cue ecusket on the shou the Timothy D. Sullivan Association, Then Charles F. Murphy, the leader of Tammany Hall, and Edward EB. McCall, Tammany'’s candidate for Mayor, walked side by 5: They led the hon- orary pallbearers, Tho othera were Abraham Erlanger, Tom Foley, Tom McManus, John F, Ahearn, Judge Rosalsky and James F. Frawley Mr roey and elgbt ais came out to the chancel when the casket had deen lall on @ black catafalque and the Impressive service of the sole requiem mass was intoned, Those ax- sisting Mar. Kearney in the celebra- ton of the muse were Father Foocacl, Deacon; Father John J. Sheridan, Sub- ra of Deacon; Father Gaetano Arches!, Ma ter of Cere Mar. Murphy Father John Father Dante! Quinn, Posive n Sullivan and Father Be J The church was Jammed to the ut- most, as Were Ue streets outside, Burial was in Calvary Cemetery, MOURNERS GATHERED LONG BE- FORE SUNRISE. Tt wag before sunrise ool t people began 490 a“ the front of the bleak-hung building | nn bigh| tight from the great candel mounted the three narrow flights to el in the glow of the candles. en at that hour there was @ re- spectful crowd about the street door, and occasionally two puilcemen had ¢ ‘put thelr hands gently on the shoulders f the tollers to hurry them up the tains. { Aw the ight came and tye Bowery jawoke to a new day the procession of the mourners tradesmen, the clerks—small business men eage time from thelr work in order to pay tribute to the memory of one they had jloved—Joined the line. Each hour brought tts fresh quota, By 9 o'clock the slowly shifting Une had turned the corner into Rivington street; it was two blocks long. Surely the whole Bowery and the litle streets between it and the river were given up to mourning the |dead. INSIDE SCENE ONE OF RARE SOLEMNITY. Tnalde the darkened room on the third floor, whose windows were deadened by the broad etrips of crape that swept {down the outside of the building, the i © Was one of a solemnity n any quarter Was one of sit me the p ie of the city the submerged tenth’ by ‘the sociologists who know them not {to lift up their hearts to the memory of the man whose heart had been wide enough to Include them all. The -foot length of the mortuary room—once the assembly room over which the “Big Fellow” presided in {many @ frolie—was lined on both wid iby chairs, and there sat the closest of [the dead toaders friends. Men and we uly halt w Women—sat jmutely, handkerchiggs to their faces or eyes turned reverently to where the um at {the head of the casket played upon the uilver crucifix at the foot, The casket itself, @ black covered metal one with bronse handles, was al- most buried in flowers, Only the glass front st the head showed under the {fringe of roses and chry themume |The great pull of red roses, fringed ith foot wit order of white chrys: mt niu of the assocation Ax & body—vovered the casket and fell to the floor at elther side, Five thou- sand blossoms were in this one great ENATOR FRAWLEY NICHOLAS JHAYVES EmwarpPR m<cALL for so many years th: whom he loved, Not far behind Miller was “Chi, Re “The Doctor's", ‘“Paresia Hall other dives on the Bowery. ly looks like a man now, he gets hii “Java and sinkers" at the Bowery Mis- color id form and of a mingled per- ume almost overpowering. OUTSIDE CITIES CALLED UPON TO SUPPLY FLOWERS. There were a shield of blossoms, four feot high and nearly as wide, the gitt of Alderman Johnny White; a great Pedestal of daisies surmounted by they The policeman at face of a clock with hands pointing at) Stopped the wreck as he the mystic hour of 11 from the Elks of @Mter. “Chi, Red" began to ery. New York, which chapter “Big Tim") “Say, for the love o' Pete; had helped to establish; a cross of iilles Of the valley, mine feet high, from the price of a bed during the sunny hours. “CHI. RED.” forced to get a ruxh supply from Phila-| with a black border three inches deep, deiphia and even from Baltimore, | and this he wore tucked in the breas this forest of blossoms an uninter-| pocket of his coat. When he wiped hi rupted line moved with mutfled tread) eyes !t was not with the handkerchie! but with the hem of his cuff, from before 7 o'clock In the morning until the time for the removal of the body to old St. Patrick's. Up the nar- ion oF moved past the head oF the casket and then down through an aisle of solid flower colors to go out ana ldown the ataire, Through the front of the coffin the face of the dead leader could be seen. It showed no hint of the manner of his death, DISCLOSING THE HEART OF THE} PLAIN PEOPLE, Had a atudent of the heart of the Plain people sat in the shadows of that room for an hour and watched the shifting panorama, framed by flowers, he would have lgarned much of the power of one man to command through the greatness of his heart, One who stood patiently in line, mounted the stairs one by one, and at last tottered to the head of the and there knelt, was old ‘ier, the “veteran kidney-foo! known along the Bowery, \ was a Walter in the old Lyons restau. me and a bunch of there to Paddy’ the requiem mass. to watch him. TEACHERS IN THE THRONG. hool children were in the line, thet books under their arms. Little girls, death that was on them, minute while they prayed. School teach: e tri the head of the old Vandew: when he was a shaver in ragged knick lines of chairs and watched the proce: “Eadie” had served the “Big Fellow” Applebaum, Sullivan's priva UPSET STOMACH, COSTIVE, BILIOUS, —CASCARETS TONIGHT—DIME A BOX That awful sourness, belching of acid and foul gases; that pals in the pit of the stomach, the heartburn, nervousness, | stomac nausea, bloating after eating, feeling of | food an fullness, dizziness and sick headache, ‘our stomach is sour—your liver \ —your bowels constipated. It {isn’t your stomuch’s fault=it isn't indi- remove the sou! foul matter from the bowels. stomach trouble is ended. to-night straightens you out by morning. floral shroud, Beside the bier and for a space of twenty-fi feet between it and the nearest chairs were piled othe: floral offerings bewildering is Sullivan To-Day je knew his every whim—at least at table. The old man had come all the way from his home in Pitkin avenue, Brooklyn, to Pru have @ last look at the face of one the down-an-outer, whose life has been wreked by the stuf they used to sell at! and | friends come to his asuistance. “Chi hard: | sion of nights, and he pannandles the PORICEMAN “HAD A HEART” FOR the street door arted to have a heart just this onct,” he snivelled. “The leather I've walked on for the last six “Aw, say,” the “Kid" murmured to one who knew him, “if Tim had had rillas ke me up Place to watch him he wouldn't be lying there ready for ‘We'd a’ kept him fe instead of letting him wander like that bunch of English mutts they bad SCHOOL CHILDREN AND THEIR eyes round with awe and the spell of passed the head of the coffin and there knelt for a , who all counted “Big Tim" their 4, were there, too, Principal Wade, Feet achool, which “Timmy” Sullivan attended erbockers, came to pay a tribute to the man whom he had helped to start in life, Among those who sat mutely in the | rant down there so many years thati sion of sorrow wero Mie, Margaret | the knew no other life, and in retires the dead man's sister; Mra, | ment he is restles# as an old fire horse. ven, her close friend; Harry secretary n: 's_biliousness and constipa- fo ‘Try Cascarets; they swecten the fermenting wes; take bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste Then your A Cascaret _1918. many years; Larry Mulligan and of the men high {n the Timothy Ivan and Larry Mulligan Associ ——— TWO INVESTIGATIONS OF WHY ‘BIG TIM’S’ BODY WAS NOT IDENTIFIED. Two independent tnvestigations were begun to-day which, before they are jconcluded, are expected to fix the re- jsponsibility for the shocking negligence which permitted the body of “Big Tim” | Sullivan to He for fourteen days in the Fordham Morgue, unidentified and jclamxed as the type of man who usually jin killed by railroad traine In theBronx hoboss and ne'er-do-wells who are try- ing to beat thelr way into or out of New York. Police Commissioner Rhine- lander Waldo gave orders as soon as he reached his office this morning for an | investigation which, fn thoroughness, | wil equal any Inquiry every conducted by the police. At the same time similar orders were issued from the office of | Michael J. Drummond, Commissioner of | Charities. | ‘The fact that “Big Tim" wan known probably to more people than any other single citizen, that the very men who carried him to the Morgue and Who seurched his body there were per- sonally acquainted with him, stands out In making against every man con- nected with the disposition of “Biz Tim's" body @ strong case of negli: gence, The name of Tom McGuire, who, Uke the King’s tailor, might be called Tailor to Tammany, was sewed in the lcollar of “Big Tim's" cout; the hat he | wore bore in ink upon tho sweatband the name of F. J. MoCloskey, and every one who knew “Big Tim” knew that McCloskey was his hired compan- |fon, guard in everything but name; his clothing was of the best quality; hie shirt was of silk; his shoes were such as could not be bought for less than $8 or $9; his cuff buttons were of gold, each with two diamonds. Every article of apparel stamped him as a man of wealth and not the “bum” as the police label most of the train vic- tims of the Brong. [oe WILL PROMINENT IN INVESTIGATION. However, many others may be con- cerned in tho investigations now started these men are bound to play important Parts; Coroner Jerome Healy, Police- man James Stack of the Westchester station; Detective Miles Kavanaugh, Dr John Rie man, Coroner's Phyrician, and Fielding Gwynn, keeper of the Fordham Morgu Stack officiated when the body was taken from the New Haven j tracks to the Morgue, Gwynn recelved | tt there. Coroner Healy and Dr. Riegel- man are supposed to have made ex- aminations of it, and Kavanaugh was avsigned by Acting Capt. Price of th Bronx detective bureau to investigate the identity of the man who was listed as “unknown.” Healy and Riegelman have already offered defenses to the charge of neg- gence. Rie! jan says he did not know “Big Tim" and was guilty of nothing worse than failing to recog- Mise @ man whom he knew only by his printed Ike: in the newspapers. Healy, though admitting that he had known Sullivan intimately for twenty- |five years, declares that he looked and failed to recogniz ©) Healy's They jdeclare that he is so tender hearted ‘that since he has been Coroner he has ever been able to force himself a tually to on @ body. Heal: od is to give @ quick, shifty glance an’ hurry away from the unpleasant sight ax swiftly as possibte. If he looked at “Big Tim" this way he might have failed to recognize him. HEALY HOLDS THE POLICE RESPONSIBLE. But Heaty holds the police responsi- ble. He declares it was their duty to } vy 7 [discover the name of Tom McGuire in Ferre. Mullasn Asoclstion, hea. © Fecunsiaeeve me ron Tl ene comt and.to Investigate it, Instead slightly smaller cross of snowy chryt a they reported to him only the name in anthemums and palm branches from the| “Chi. Red’ was passed, the hat. The hat and cuff buttons Po- State Aerie of Eagles, Florists sald that "Kid" Griffo, the one-time prize Neat: Stack brought to his office. #0 great had been the drauxht on ilow-|Aghter, was in the ling The “Kid lonege, Gealy says, he passed on to the ers in this city that the had been) had bought a cambric handkerchief . Bronx Detective Bur. requesting + {that an inv ‘ion be made, and Act- ing-Captain Price says he assigned Kavanaugh to tho task. Kavanaugh has been on sick leave for @ week aud @ balf and so far has had nothing to say for himeelf. His official reports, however, show that he went to the morgue, viewed the body and thenci forth reported himself as “‘still investi- wating.” No man can be blamed for failing to recognize another, no matter how well he may have known him, the investi- tors But they purpose to di it wan not found and acted on and why the evidence contained in McCloskey's | hat was not put to some use. | Commissioner Waldo and the other in- vestigators have not forgotten that save for the chance identification by an old ee Timothy D., Bulliven might @ gone to Potter's Field, the grave fee which in life he had saved dozen —_——____ On Retarn Flight te Paris, JOHANNISTHAL, Germany, Sept. 16, {~The French aviator Augustin Louis Seguin, who on Saturday made a non- atop flight from Paria to Berlin, started Jon bis return filght to Paris to-day, y cover why the name of Tom McGuire’ COHON, SHIRTS Makers of Red-Man Collars To appreciate the convenience and great value of the Sunday World’s Want Directory—READ IT. “ — rofite white < worth more eon underpy BIG STORE CELEBRATING "2 ITS 17TH ANNIVERSARY - No Bands Professional Singers, but Bargains for Cus- tomers the Feature. ‘The Big Store begins the celebra of ita seventeenth anniversary t avy Hines for Bal esult of the fight anvitte of the Bosions | the Cincinnati team I ident T. each be was fined $100 for rushing on the fic 1 and assaulting Tinker, In addition ty the %o fue, 3 ker Brass or and will continue it for two weeks. pen for three days Throvghout this period the ‘two big bad language to Umpire O'D bulldings, which face Sixth avenue on Jowin the disagreement with Maria either side at Eihteentp and Nineteenth streets, will be centfes of attraction for the thousands of shoppers who know that bargains abound when ann Versaries come around, Both stores are) gorgeously dressed to please the eye. More than 5.00) fags have been used in the Big Store alone, and every depart- iment—there are 102 departments—has ii- dividual decorations that show tasie and Mise = Liberty, who} tHe main floor rally THK, GLOSSY HAR - FREE FROM DANDRUFF | Girls! Try it! Tt You our hair gets fluffy and luxuri- ant at once, soft, has been given ay Mr. B. J. Gree. it of the Greenhut Megel Cooper ompany was looking | Mies Liverty over to-day. He regards! lind as the Big Store's maacht said he to an Evening W reporter, ‘this is the beginning of ovr eighteenth year and 1 predict it will ve | iapt with oftness and is try Danderine. jon doubles the fluffy and ti dust gre a great one, We have made thing«| beauty of your hair; besides it immedi- look pretty «0 that our custoiners will atel, issolves every particle ye As he pleased, but we have done more druff; you cannot. have ni than that, Instead of brass bar hair if you have danaratle Z) professional singera to help us in our {destructive scutf robs the hair of celebration we have done something | lu s strength ag its very life, strictly original. We have placed ny sale for the coming two weeks goo/ls | hing of the scalp; the hair that will put in the pockets of our cus- engineer eid n and die; then the tomers the money we would have spent | hair falls out fast in extensive musical and concert pro: |. if your hair been neglected and prammee. bid dry, sorngey ie too gly ‘ ! be seen | Rtt.a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's “Many intereating things are fo De. #68” | Teeine at any drug atore or tilet cou on the various " ‘The Food Show, on the fourth floor, t* apply little as directed amd ten minutes after you will say this was the an eye opener. Here more than 100 dem: | best investment you ever made, onstrations are and the] We cerely believe, bs (heed of eamples that are being given out would keep a small family for a month. The decorations on this floor, made up of white maple saplings and atum leaves, are most effective. The Big Store is pat new aml everything else advertised, that if you desire soft, lustrous, tiful hair and lots of it—no dandruff—no itching scalp and no more falling hair—you must use Knowlton's Danderine. If eventually why not now? BACKACHE IS A DANGER SIGNAL Kidney Troubles, Bladder Dis- Rheumatism, and Serious Diseases Follow. There are other symptoms, such as ‘pains i in, the region of the kidney’ dizziness. tired and wornov! k bladder, or urinary which ure just as dangerous, ightest kidney derangement if Jevelop into the deadly dropsy or diabetes. dangerous, but needless. endure the tortures of these troubles, for Croxone promptly ends all such misery. There is no more effective remedy for kidney, bladder trouble and rheuma- tism than Croxone, because it reaches the cause. It soaks right into the ki neys, through the walls and lining: cleans out the clogged-up pores, nen- If you are losing weight, are thin, pale | te pm! diotves the nenenous ure and run down—you i tts Father John’s Medicine will build new flesh and strength for you. It/* to relieve the worst b etGe or over- come disagrecable urinary disorders. is a body builder and strength giver. POISON You will find Croxone different fr It is safe for chil- —— BY — Bia topcatne neice nates dren, too, because it does not contain al- CONAN DOYLE out results, An original package of Croxone costs but a trifle, and all dri Be Sure to Get neglected Bright's disea It is not on! n gists are authorized to return tho pui el Father John’s Medicine cures colds and throat and lung troubles. jin use. 50 Years EARL & WILSON $1.50 to $10 Unusual Fit and Service a,

Other pages from this issue: