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» Peer ~ANDEPENDENT’ MR. MICALL + GAVE THE PAP’ TO TAMMANY <4. Ten Years He ‘Handed Down” sands of Plums in References and Receiverships. In Thou- Taminany's candl- | Magiatrace, te wn in an investi: of the Si wation of his public career co ed tos eree twe day dy the © ne’ Mooierpa’ bs oo A tee, to have been ener bh Soneieages bution of Patronage ax « Sup ¢ t lee. Such Tammany F. Roesoh, “iHily' Swe alan brothers, Jolnny Bird Gardiner ant sddward FE. MeCa! Gate for Mayor, is nerly one of the vandoah Chute a ve tit y dudae Foley, Mes we Se presants in the rth Wagner, ler, George M. miny candidate for x; Thomas K, $10,000 State Comp. ommit Murphy's distr + in hie diated ator Hi e Court t Georme | g's + the CO] surrogate of the maev. ASA) Rush, a Tammany nig Het of Tam: | a year vs counsel t many “statesmen era shared |troiier, and Alfred fm Mr, McCa: ndependent” Itheratity, | connected with the St Ym the.ton years Judge MeCall was Partment throw om the bench he “hianigd out." an Bowe | Ot T nigny mot chose Hamer ae Murphy's anche oe aeauitorie t0lsead How and then in the ten years ilet @ay, thousands of references and re-|o¢ yeceivers and ri on appa eviverships. Many of these plums were pold W. Harb niet ged te “good Tammany me friends of | thal, former Asselant District-Attorney; Murp! “Rig Tim’ Sullivan, “Two | Ely Rosen foma"—Foley and McAvoy. There teal. | pold W Bo to be found a liberal sprinkling of , Mell one « Republicans in the Judxe's liste, the Re. | the | Dublicans cropping Into faver toward | CNMI the clone of the Judxe’s wervice on the | Rita bench, when Tammany Judges are Known to become less pliant fndependen,. Before Edward F. MeCail went on the | pany ber bench he was not forgotten by Tammany Judges then sitting. In in street opening proceedings Judge \ = Sereived fees amounting to $9,952, | in he earned tot wee ‘ ie Gt 18, the cae sre pela all nnellan's district, George B. @ected to the bench, he received more| PMMAIL son of former State Senator than 100 appointments as referee and George W. Plunkitt of “honest graft’ * fecetver. How much money in fees the | {mei John Quinn, counsel to Hoss Mur- Judge received: from this “pap" it. a PHY. and Numerous others of the “high Impossibie to estimate, ux each appoint. | 2nd Jows” In the Wigwam decorate the ment varies in the duration of the ret. | 418 Hats. framared oy ine ever. ™"""* | BUTY 9 SPEND $40,000 A YEAR ON TAXI LAW MACKIN HEADS THE LisT AS ma y Senate Ie the 1 ue the estate of x F. Levine, Hoffman, ammany cam- tor, and Pete Everett, form "rt Judge Tommy" 1, who war a member | wer & Carroll Horse Com. hix death; Mitchel L. Er. | now Supreme Court Justice; Smith, Hdward J, Mase Neressman; Charles L. brother of the Municipal Court 1 1. Kiernan of Tammany the | angers : oq | Jude James leert, former ¢ Hoff business: PICKER OF PLUMS. At the top of Judge MeCail's favorites fe John J. Mackin, according to the records. Mf. Mackin was tie Judge's personal attendant, his principal duty eing to help the Judge on with his robes and acting an general messenger, ‘The $1,80-a-year salary was not conald- ered sufficient and so Mr. Mackin got something like aixty-f colverships, Besides obtaining receiverships, Mr. Moeckin in known as one of the best lit- tle stFeet openers in the city, he having been a commissioner on dozens of pro- License Bureau Chief Gives Esti- mate of Cost to Enforce New Protection Ordinance. New York intends to spend $40,000 9 year to protect its taxicab riding public against dithonest cabbies. The estimate of the cost of compelling an enforce- ment of the new ordinance was handed ceedings at $10 a day. to-day to the Board of Estimate by Charies A. Hickey, who was a clerk |Chief James G, Wallace jr, of the te Judge McCall at @ salary of $2,500 q | Bureau of Licenses, year, was appointed receiver in twenty-| It calls far the employment of three two cases from Ootober, 1905 to October, | inspectors at 1,500 a year each and twen- ‘M11. Mr. Hickey was also named referee | ty-two inspectors at 1,200 a year each. THE E | | | | | | | Society, long since tired o! Joy ridin’, bs] wondered at, Soclety, long since tired bly dances, panther giles, cabaret reve tlonable amuaem w tu rehistoric game o’ nN’ fer-reachin’ Influences fer bad soul an’ furnish a few new tlon demands somethin’ t’ make It pa longin’ fer Key, Wiley Tanger ‘Il «ay: “We'd hoped with th’ paaat stones an’ dominoes that th’ fever quet would subside an’ we would eme: connervatiam would rule our diversions, mountain dintrict an’ this new @p fer pop'lar favor, its marvellous recuperative Powers an’ fulness. be heard in almost any neighborhood time assurance an’ brutal features Early an’ a an’ women an’ children echo an’ re-eci our best Jawna while th’ authorities turmoll proceeds unmol AND PHONE MESSAGES WHILE HELD IN CELLS Story of Young Men Inves- tigated by Magistrate “Th' determined effort t' revive croquet in not t' be her heavy eyes mations, Th’ present genera- anything new an’ darin’ a divert th’ mind from th’ simpler an’ better things o' life re mumbly peg, while th’ game, durin’ th’ decade just endin'’, ha« confined ite biithin’ operations t' th’ aparrely settled an’ lawless ft haw been fer from down an’ out, thro ite slimy coils about our very throats, only proves “T'day (oven after nightfall) th’ click o° th’ balls may cheerin’ an’ jeerin’ o' half-crazed men very shadows o' our Jalln an’ courts o' Juatico th’ rattle an’ ted while those whose duty it is | Whither are we driftin'?* VENING WORLD, TUE The Revival of Croquet “By Abe Martin.”’ (Copyright, the A\ ', wabbly dances, pantner amusement, now turne her heavy eyes t’ th’ old, prehistoric game o’ croquet. TOM ty pulpit o' tht Apple Grove Chugeh, Sunday, ;t guard an’ protect us discuss th’ sugar echedule er lay in wait for ome irresponsible ciavffeur. o' Joy vidin', wab- are, er th’ filck Iry an’ girls o° tender t’ th’ ole iuet with th’ hope that its victous bem over near th’ aroune her jaded cussed openly at Jack Keltement o' cro- on an era when But we find that made t’ control er when it seeks t' jen’ cunning resouroe- With all its olo| fall a victim t’ th’ sh’ game goen on. fer towerd solvin' Mo across # livin’ have taken o: sleep. eo” Under th’ th’ mallet, all uni PAY CASH FOR STAMPS. M'MANUS “WORKS” [MRANO MRS, RHMLOW CURT MACHER TOGETHS MANOUT posted in th’ marte o trade. Deali no restraint, eell croquet by th’ box without question as t age er re#ponsibility. ‘I am told that in some o' t exclusive games th’ arches are bons, that th’ mallets are turned from expensive imported wood an’ highly polished and emblasoned with brass tacks other barbaric ornamentation, while grounds are eanded an’ levelled t* th’ precision o' a gnat’s heel. Often th’ lot te bordered with lavish blooms, whole effect havin’ fer its purpose th’ allurment o’ th’ weak-kneed who, under plainer conditions, would never “Former garden plots who bounteous yields went riot away th’ precious hours battlin’ fer supremacy with “In many! dooryards under th’ white light o' th’ corner! @lare 0’ th’ kerosene lamp, young with mallets uplifted strike wildly at th’ wooden sphere in ther mad effort t’ reach th’ painted! airiisn peony bed. Sometimes ther laughter kin be diatinctly heard clean up t' 8 P. M. ‘In many tetances th’ y'a croquet th’ dinner table, wh 8, apparently under ‘There i# not th’ slightest effort even curb th’ soul-destroyin’ game. higher toned an’ more Why festooned with rib- the playin’ th’ game's fatal spell. th’ @reat problem o' th’ high cost o' 2 @ Carnival dress an’ hilarious crowds mindful o' th’ police er Grand Jury. APPEAR TO HAVE IT ALL OVER MR. AND MRS. IARR All Life Is Worth to Live With His Tip to Clerk Is Followed] Wife, Husband Charges in tm numerous actions, although it considered good form to name a@ tendants and clerks to official positions, Some of the judges appoint one an- other's secretaries in a sort of ring- around-the-rosy fashion. ot | There is a $1,Q0 » year expert asked Appleton. for, nlao jenographer at $1,200, a olerk at t me salary and $6,787 for machinists, a tinsmith and two laborers, Chief Wallace aaks that hia salary be| Magistrate Appleton, who is sitting in By Dropping of Assault Charge. | five Commiics. mm Net Hager to Cook Bisculte and Pi WASHINGTON, Oct tH militia officers hy at receiving tn- utes from Judge McCall in four years, /etruction in baking biscuits and pro- Goeerge Mf. Engel, o Bullivan henchman, | ducing ples—an acquisition that the ‘was on Gberiff Julius Harburger’s | War Department stands ready to eup- “Why do it @aft, obtained four references, | PIY? ‘This in the queation the Division Michael F. Conry got {of Militia Affairs to-day Tammany Assemblyman Vincent | Vainly to answer. Although Congress got six, and Bully Allen, the} >a@ supplied funds for such Instruc- Billy Wright's Cayuga Club, | tion for years past militia officers have evinced no desire to take up the rolling late Thomas F. Grady got only | Pin in defense of their country references, but Henry J. Goid-| The department maintains army got schools for bakers and cooks tn whic it Is designed to instruct officers in the art of ¢ nme With w view to thetr teaching the men under their command and jn supervising intelligently the cooking of food in the fell, The mill- tla officers have bulked at the propo- wal, however, and th artment mili- tia officials are in despair, There is no Jaw compelling milla officers ty at- ; tend such schools Graphite Automobile - Lubricants , In the firs: t lerts, Murderers Plead Two of the eighte ing tr eral Sennious aded guilty Friday thirtysone, « y h prisoners Judge Foster on charges of to-day to mans awalte in Gene der before n The two, West Indian of No. 1 West One. Hundred and put the double- VRAR ce Semen, Pheeanat oe . cross on that Bette sain i hes cinone Geeta ‘busy little jinx LES antenna bakit ater chy called “Friction.” ho willed 4 oo, dune §, @urin Ask your dealer, Hundred and Nint Dronped De Modoin JERSEY CITY,N.J.bythe = yuhn Moar Ose DIXON CRUCIBLE CO, a bookkeeper, ' ‘Evatt by Post jon, the he aetng tf dead of ‘heart disease this morning on Broadway, near ith etree Two Hundred and upin stories is just yi » to swing doubtful States raised from $500 to $5,000 @ year, that |the Morrisania Police Court, wrote to- J, Sidney Bernetein# moted in Rilly| his deputy’s salary be increased fram ‘Wright's district, because he is Tam-| $000 to 83,00 and that the Brooklyn many Bow and was anti-Tammany then, | Deputy be given a similar increase. te also on Mr. MeCall’s Het of referees. —_———>—_—. ‘Mr, Bornstein is « iaw partner of auc-| HANDS UP! Genser Bamuel Marks, who til this} The greatest thief in fiction Is Are ne Lupin; just as Sherlock Holmes is fiction's chief detective, Arsene Lupin's almost miraculous Seem V. Coggey, Tammany district | sil) in eluding the law and his utter Yenter an@ Transfer Tax Appraiser, who | jack of caution in getting Into danger ares his leaderehip with Bart Dunn, |have formed the theme of Maurice a ly contractor who was re-|ieblanc's most famous stories. for Mighway frauds in| The newest and by far the best series Redidand County, ts another appointes. | of Leblanc’s Arsene if ©f the Cohalan boys, Daniel F., | out. and Dennis O'Leary Co- ck a “The Confessions of Arsene forgotte: ul . an in ss) ees “The Confessions of Arsene Lupin” Panties sa sl Twill appear serially in The Evening yy Bena tm") World, beginning to-morrow, . Aes Bird Gardiner, former! Remember the date. It means much District-Attorney, who laya|to every lover of a good story. ° @o Game because he once sald “To a vetorm," got two appoimtmenta| SHY AT THE ROL! eee E ROLLING PIN. ‘ROMMANY MEN GET THE FAT| Army Officer: OF REFERENGC! Gumtice Thomas F. Donnelly, as a | GQumasany lawyer, obtained forty refer- to Commisisoner of Correction Patrick Whitney and to Chief Magis- trate McAdoo asking that investigation be made into the chargea that prisoners in the Harlem Prison were required to Purchase stamps and envelopes and also to pay for telephone calls, Mayor Gaynor made the rule that a stamp and envelope must be supplied to any pela- oner free of charge and that the privi- ¢ of one telephone call must be ac- corded to him without cost. Edward Downey of No, 31 Furman street, Thomas McFeeley of No. 15 State and Terence Flynn of No. @ street, all of Brooklyn, brought the case to Magistrate Appleton’s atten- on when they were arraigned before him to-day. They had been arrested at 1. o'clock Saturday morning at Third avenue and One Hundred and Thirty- third street by Policeman Bosatka of the Alexander avenue station, who observed them carrying ten pairs of hip rubber boots which, the policeman says, he found had been stolen from the Me- Mutiin Construction Company, which ts building the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rafiroad Company's connecting bridge from the Bronx to Astoria, The young men were arraigned later in the morning and got an adjournment until to-day, when McFeeley surprised the Magistrate by asking for @ further postponemen “L wasn't able to communicate with my people until this morning,” he ex- plained. “I asked for a stamp and en- | velope on Saturday and was told by a keeper to # while, Presently an or- derly whom I heard referred to as a ‘runner’ said he would get me what 1 wanted for 10 cents, 1 paid and got my envelope and stamp yesterday.” | Downey suid the “runner had charged jhim ten cents to send a telephone mea- sage. Flynn hadn't bothered to notify any one, thinking that the messages of als ny Would be enough. “WIN you svear to these charges? asked the Magistrate, and when the men bald they Would he dictated letters to Mr. Whitney and Mr. McAdoo and granted another adjournment — until Thursday. ae |NEW SEIGE BY SUFFRAGISTS. | [Women to Contre Fight on New| | Jersey and Delawar: WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—Suffragists | propose again to lay siege to Congress fn an effort have it pass favorably | on the pro ed constitutional amend ment for universal suffrage, This was ters at gations In the Senate y plan is and Hous vant of 4 general campaign to Une. The descent on the two State dele nv in Congress is to be preceded Due parades ext month tnd 1 Wilmington, Del the pi ssions a delegation from each {oity will be sent here to labor with the national legislato The suffragiat | leaders hope for sucegas, ‘There was arraigned in the West Bide Court to-day one Peter Cassidy, who was arrested last night at Reilly's saloon, No. 625 West Fifty-third street, on a charge of felonious assault and locked up over night in the West Forty- seventH atreet station. The complain- ant was Paul Janinson, a chauffeur. Cassidy with two other men got into inson's taxicab at Forty-third street and Broadway, and, after riding around the district for a time wound up at Rellly%, where they refused to pay th bill, While Cassidy blocked Janinao: way another of the trio, it jed, asraulted him with « sharp instrument, emashing his face. ‘The arrest wan made, after a fight vy Policeman Brilia of the West Forty- seventh street station. Following the custom tn sueh cases, Brilla went to the complaint room of the police court this morning and ewore to a short affidavit charging Cassidy with felonious assault, “THE” M'MANUS APPEARS—AND STRANGE THINGS HAPPEN. Just as the clerk handed the affidavit to the policeman “The” McManus ap- peared in the complaint room. He walked behind the railing, leaned over and whispered to the clerk. “Give me that affidavit,” clerk to Brill ‘The pol handed it back. The clerk tore It up and made out a slip stating that the complainant wished to withdraw his complaint, as he could not identify Cassidy an his assailant. This slip was presented to Magistrate Harlow, Who asked Janinson if it was true Janninon sald he could not identity Cassidy as the man who struck him: Hefore he could explain that Cassidy was one of the three in the assault the Magiatrate .whipped out “discharged” and Cassidy and MoManus and a small army of MoManus's retainers trooped out of the court in triumph: After the rrence Capt, Ascher Fleming, ® McManus henchman, In charge of the court attendants, addrens- ed an Evening World reporter as fol- lows said the 1 Keep to hell out of that oom room or T'lhave you taken are plaint away from this ¢ pe used DOWIE’S VOICE HEARD AGAIN. Lost Phonographic Records ZION CIT John Alexander Dowie, founder of Z ‘ity, who has been dead for sev years, again . » those of his lowers who filled Shiloh Temple night, ‘Phe vow Wax preserved in wixty phonographie records which were recoy- cred in the wilds of interior Australia after a long search ‘The records were sent to Wilbur Glenn Voliva, present overseer of the city. who Melbourne, He left the when Dr. Dowie became fterwards were sold by a fomper. elder of the church, The search govereg three years, Separation Suit. Mr, and Mrs. Jarr have nothing on Mr, and Mrs. William G, Rahmow when It comes to domestic diMculties, ao the Papers in a e@eparation sult fled by Hubby Rahmlow in the Supreme Court to-day disclose. Mr. Rahmiow, who is an engineer at Columbia University, makes these specific charges against his wife: led upon him a@t the power hou the University and when a large rowd of curlous persons gathered around she threw her wedding dress at him, Next day she sewed her wedding ring to the tall of K, pictured on a pon tal card, and sent the postal to htm, Called him a white slaver and used language “such as is not used by the vilest of the vile." Wrote a letter to the Police Depart- ment, charging him with having patd graft to a Boiler Inspector to get his engineer's license. Threatened to burn his eyes out and on two occasions threw acid on him. Hit him with an umbrella as he was parading in the city employeer’ pro- last June and then tried to threatened to “get him" some day. Told him that ehe had hired a gang of negro gunmen to beat him up, Took his savings out of hia desk and bought herself a new pair of false teeth when she didn't need them And after enumerating these things Rahmlow says that “it is worth my life to live with the woman.” Mrs, Rahmlow alleges that her hus- band has failed to support her during the recent years of their married lite and she denier that #he did the cruet things charged against her by her hubby. Supreme Court Justice Bijur, reading the wife's afMdavits, that she Was entitled to $6 4% mony pending trial of the #e uit, The Wonderful Audiphone Makes the fici oc atn's.c2i""3h t sound, lope aud car strain after Med all- fon Years abeal i ecnaitiveness to sound, Al most unseen in use,’ Try the wonderful Audiphone at ear %. fear it 30 Dato tes tom : ie wal ainly *:: Qu came payment plan, Write today for tral’ offer, Stolz Electrophone Co. Th) MARBRIDGE i MTH ST & MHOADWA’ NEW YORK, fed a razor in her stocking and DAY, OOTOBER 7, 1913. | WILLS HIS BODY "TOBE CAST TOTHE DGS, THEN DE “Tam the Most Radical Athe- ist in the World,” Sui- cide Had Written. In the smaller of two little rooms in which he made his home in the rear of the aecond floor of « tenement at No. | 519 Kast Fifteenth street, lew the body of @ man who wrote himself down “the most radical atheist in the world.” To the neighbors who had at beat only a howing acquaintance with the man he was known as Alexander Bock, and they understood he was an art student. Though he had Hved among them for three years, no person in the Louse knew more of him than this. | Bock killed himself sometime last |night, going about his task with rare methodical care. He had fastened a long gaa tube to the kitchen stove, led lit through a «mall window into his bed- | room and fastened it to his mouth and nose with an intricate arrangement of linen bandages. Mra. Sophie Graw, the Janitress, found him so this morning October 1 Address 15 Dey St. 190 Orchard St. 58 W. Houston St. 93 E. 26th St. 15 W, 38th St, 9 E, 59th St. 2087 Brondwa: 109 W, 125th St, 366 E, 150th St. apartment. strange note: On the table Iay thi ew dollam which were found in his pocketa. He left $8 to the Janitress and | $2 each to M. Lesser of No. & Columbia street, A. Rubin of No, St. Paul's glace, the Bronx, and Carl Gross of No, 3% Bast Ninety-firmt etreet. To Leaser he left also a copy of Emma Goldman's book “Anarchiem and Other Kesays” To Gross he left a separate note reproaching Gross for having ne- Slected trie of late. From some of these three the police hope to learn more of Bock. He was about thirty years of age. His roome were clean and well cared for, The jani- trea said he attended to them himesif. ‘There were many books on philosophy about and the walls were covered with studies such as artists make. Beneath the sketch of a woma: head was the mame ‘Cecile Hart,” and the date “Washington's Birthday, 1912." The Carl Groas mentioned ty the aul- clade is @ young art student. He said “Bock wae a very odd individual,” he continued. “I showld say he waa about five hundred years ahead of hie time. He was born in Austria and he tolé me he had a sister in Brooklyn. 1 @@ got know her name. He came to my house last Friday night and told me he was voing to kill himaeli, but T pala no attention ¢ ochat because he had eften said the same thing before.” pouanttnni>” aaah TWICE TRIES TO DIE. But Jerseyman W 1 Deeptte Gas and Nig! Loule Averina of No. 107 Hague street, Jersey City, tried twice to dio last night, the aecond attempt being « jump from the secon4-story window of the hospital where he had been tefren for treatment after the failure of the first. He survived even the second chance at death and will recover, the doctora of the City Hospital say @o- day. Averina first turned on the ges {are rooms on Hague atreet, he Giecovered unconscious and rughed to the hospital. There he ley on tts os@ at midnight and he saw another @p- portunity. The nurses of the svar pe: tired to cook @ midnight mead, orderly, who ts over seventy, in his chatr, Averim etole from hia cot, opened one dows end leaped into apace, ‘The noise of his fall roused man at the hospital's mein ‘and soon the determined man was ried in and placed on an operating ‘The doctors found thet he had internal injuries and broken bones feet, but that theae results of dis to die were no more certous them & g il when the odor of gas led her to thejhe hed knovn Bock about two years, | gas had been. | Telephone Directory? The New ral Edition Goes to Press Thursday, New telephone service, new or changed listings, should Morningside 12000 Melrose 2090 453 E, Tremont Ave. Tremont LONG ISLAND CITY—Bridge Plaza North, Astoria FAR ROCKAWAY—Birdsall & Central Aves. Far Rockaway 12014 TOMPKINSVILLE—444 Tompkins Ave. WEST NEW BRIGHTON—145 Columbie St. West Brighton 12066 NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY uirements can Address 81 Willoughby St. 925 Ninth a 860 Nostrand Ave. 691 Flatbush Ave. 923 Havemeyer St, 1030 Gates Ave, 12000 12000 12090 . 12080 12080 pt 12090 70 Main St. Tomp! 8 Hardenbrook Ave. be arranged for on or before that date in order to provide tor correct Directory information. Business and Social by including your name, address and Selep pane number wit thase of over 800,000 listings now pu important Directory. Tenants of Apartment Houses which have Private Branch Exchange Telephone Systems may have their names listed in the Telephone Directory, with the tele- phone number of the house system, for a nominal charge. Why Not Get YOUR Name in The New Book? Telephone, write or call at nearest Commercial Office MANBATTAN-BRONX Telephone No. Cortlandt Orchard Sprin, Madison Murray Hill 19090 Plaza 12090 best be met lished in this most BROOKLYN Telephone No. Main South Bedford Flatbush Williamsburg Bushwick maica Flushing 19016 kineville 12064 INTERFERING WITH BUSINESS, THEN WE'D BETTER SUSPEND BUSINESS, BOSS! See Next Sunday’s World Magazine