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“STARTED TO WRATHER=LiDe: snow to-ntgtt) clearing Thuredn> FINAL © . i él (|SF SADIE OF 10 TE PRICE ONE CENT. CLUBS ON GUNMEN” POLICE RECRUITS INA “Circulation Books Open to Au? { FAMILY OF FOUR - WIPED OUT WHEN THE MAR Sra ather, Wife and Two Young Girls Found Shot Dead ¢ But Citizens Are Not to 515 000 009 GIFT | in Bronx Flat, Beaten, Says } at) ’ | Sle K | ALL AGREED TO. DIE. Mitchel. USES GAYNOR’S WORDS. | “Tells the Uniformed Men They | Will Receive His Moral Support. \ | | Impressing upon policemen that citize: digcriminately, afternoon told the Recruits that he clubbed and that in clubbing them the police would receive the moral! encouragement of the city officials. Mayor Mitchel ts the first May ever to attend Juation exer are never to be clubbed i Mayor Police Mitchel this School of fle terest thelr set~ 1 their methods subluing fighting adnutes, Ibi as to eck youre “This drill leaves your physical fitn > selves and cit! with your own * hands and without clubs, which are given you not a a badge of honor or for indiscriminate se, but for sour own protection and the protection of citizens. “A good deal brs been suid lately bout the use of clubs, and | want to 7 emphasize upon you the cond words of the late Ma: that clubs are nut to be cept in cases of necessity. “But if your Mves and those of cit). eid vena may be threatend b the view lence of that class of crivina's that are knityvn as (¢ noand ‘thugs’ in this city, you voto pret the u pro. tect yourselves and the citizens hy use of those weapons which placed in your hands by the law." Mayor Mitchel added that he w more than please! with th training given the School of Recruits, und that he intended to sée that it was developed during his administration to w point that bad neve> been yoached in the | past, He remained at Hoadquarters ave bi and forty-! TO BUILD TWENTY RADIUM HOSPITALS > — Police Believe Even the Chil- | dren Were Urged to Give | : Up Life. ged Bene-) jutius stierheim, an Ellis Island Hungarian interpreter, forty-six years old; his wife, Josephine, aged ltorty-one, and their two children, Edna, aged twelve, and Gladys, nine, were found dead to-day ip the flat occupled by the family on the fourth floor of the apartment house at No. 1088 Bryant avenue, the Bronx. The wife and children were shot to death ost of $15,000,000 for free radium treat-| 1)” ierneim, who completed the ex- ment of cancer was made to-day by Pt p y kit is President J. M, Flannery of the Stand. | tinction of the family by taking hi own life. ae es ‘ ee ey oe ittabarEB TG etter and a will found in the © the ise Mines Committee. ‘ hh inetitution» would have fve/ “At show that Stierhelm and his wife i , |were purtiex to a suicide agreement. grains of radium | ments He indicated that neither Rocke-|The abpearance of the scene 0 felle® nor Carnegie wi " [regedy indicates that the children volved. SEARIBL VAS tho Fane lm Hee also terrorized or persuaded in- Mlannery’s announcement was made|t? allowing themselves to be killed. in the course of an appeal that the) Each of the victims was shot through Government not unuertake to regu-| the reof of the mouth, and only four radium extraction. His exact| bullets were used in ending the four, words were: Wh DEATH OF RELATIVE STARTED SEARCH BY HIM. Congressmett Told A factor, Not Named, Plans to Provide Free Treatment. WASHINGTON, Jan, 21.--Announc ment that “an aged millionaire” ha: plan to build twenty hospital a late stigator of the plan, She had been There is a philanthropist who bas|despondent, Her mother, Mrs, Charles @ plan to put up twenty institutions) Deutsch of No. Kast Righty-sev- in the centres of population, such as/enth street, to whom she and her ‘husband were deeply attached, died a | week ago Sunday, ‘This blow rs to have completely broken down the mind of Mrs, Stierheim. Her husband had been tl for months, The family waa in Sea ble circumstances, but it is assum bd that Mrs, Stierheim Gould not think Jof leaving her daughters, who w New York, Chicago, Byston and tho rest, at cost Of $15,000,000, so that ull| cancer victims may be treated free of charge, He wants to have five grams} of radium for each of those twenty place ‘That's « lot uf mor Interrupted Representative Austin. “We're from Missouri, and I'll have to be shown.” “That wouldn't be the first time! bright, pretty children, behind, The Missourians have been shown real| wife, apparently, urged the husband the witness retorted, “This}wlong until he saw bis way clear to isn’t so remarkable when we!accomplish the pitiful tragedy, WOMAN NEIGHBOR HEARO THREE SHOTS. Inquiry tn the house this af established that the two children and the wife were killed about 10.30 o'clock last Monday night, Mra. A. Simms, living in the flat below that of the Stierheims, heard three muf- fled explosions at that hour, but did not realize thelr significance, She is sire she heard only three shots, so must have waited after offer consider ail that the country’s million. | , such as Carnegie and Rockefe!- have undertaki Mr, Flannery, who is president of the Standard Chemical Company, pioneer! in Ameri-a’s radium business, told the romantic story of his struggle to upbuild {t, how he had secured claims and the valuable secret extraction process as the result of a Iifetime of earnest effort, aire lel noon, The wife, it is believed, was the in- | NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1914. Millionaire Clubman and Wife MRS GOELET ASKS ABSOLUTE NORE FROM MILONARE | She Starts for Florida and He's} Going to Europe as Suit Is Filed. Who Asks an err re CRUELTY ONE CHARGE, Wickedness Marriage Covenant” Is an in Violation of} Added Complaint. Mrs. Robert Goelet filed suit for absolute divorce yesterday from the millionaire clubman and sportsman, The papers were sent from this city | % to Providence, R. 1, for filing thin|: afternoon, Mrs, Goelet left the city this morning for Daytona, Fla, Rob- ert Goelet, it is said, will sail for Europe in a few weeks, Intimate friends of the couple have been expecting something of this kind for months, but many of their friends did not know that while they occu- pied the Goelet mansion at No. 647 Fifth avenue, they were not living there as mun and wife. While they lcontinued, however, to keep up ap- pearances intimate friend4 had hoped for a reconciliation. Within the last month Mra, Goelet had made up her mind to take the final step. ‘Thin morning with her |butler and maids she left the house |for the last time, Arrangements had | meanwhile to close the house on the first of next month oe 6 ORO OO ED eevee Auto Manufacturer Good Promise to Take Care of Gentler Sex. n of the servants were given notice ROIT, Mich, Jan, Henry that their vives wer longer , the automobile manufacturer, ee and only a fe res |did not forget the 650 women workers ainod, \in hin icHai papaia vena mesa a Goslaiwitn't plant when he announced his $10,000,000 “profit-sharing plan an at first reported oe women and giris employed at ihe blg auto plant, when |they drew their pay to-day, found (that they too had shared in the big- kest melon ever cut for labor's hene- fit. Their wages in every case had Leen practically doubled. “Tm too surprised and ¢ say muc for Mr, and othe d wickedness | "extreme cruelty | huy jand coy Ni attorney, All he would say this after- hoon was that any papers whieh had | been filed would show all that was to be suid of Mrs, Goclet's complaint, Mrs. Goelet, he said, did not regard her affairs or thone of her family as matters of public interest or concern. Mrs. Goelet was formerly Miss Elsie | Whelan of Philadelphia and was re-| Ixarded ax one of the most beautiful girls in the country when she made jher debut in society, She in to-day Jan exceptionally beautiful woman | very clever and an artist of no m lability, ‘The couple have two child |for the custedy of which Mrs, Goelet j wil ask, mixbe- pugnant to the marriage lighted to bh except Jo add my prain Ford and his pl mal’ Miss Alice Hockmuth, telephone erator at the Ford plant, When Mixs Hockmuth drew her fo to-day she n doubled a duy, works eight nd her sulary had ow receiven $3 urs, has an hour for lunch and two ten minute rests. Cee e oC ee ee FORD GVES 650. WOMEN'N WORKS | T'S $15,000 000 DOUBLE SALARY OF BUILING Makes}Waste of Space, He Thinks, RUIN ME,” SAYS SULZER ON STAN | Absolute Divorce ‘ H . . ry ye FF Ose e544 Re ee ee er MAYOR KNOCKS and Department Heads Object to Quarters. \ $15,000,000 Mantelpal Office at Chambers and Centre mukes hit with) Mayor who told the Sinking Fund axion to-day that he regarded t building as a “large waste of Per as it in at present conceived, Jbadly planned in its ortginal concep tion." rhe Mayor's comment meeting of the co Hasion afte jretary T x . Whitney of t He Ser ninsion had declared | the t aside for the Public not adapted on behalf of the commission, asked that t flees in the ‘Tribune Bullding | tained until the com amlon conalel | t its own home on land it owns on | | ‘The | Building | streets | Mitchel, came at a Rec aby ree | lonpe: Canal street rly ull the “city departinents which have been assigned to quarters in the Municipal Building have com- | plained that their new offices are un Jsultable. ‘The buildings way plann Zz “Circulation Books Open to All.” 20 PAGES Nie Mont ce Comraissioner MeKae | lsplred by the death of a relative stierheim \ a aes waned under Mayon vi ye hk from cancer, Flannery declared thut|killing the family before ending bie fain | i ba > taba > @he set about to discover a cure for|own life. No one heard the sound of SAILING TO-DAY. | 0 F f N }to wave the city w rental af $1,600,000 _+ cancer, Experts he sent to Europe |the shot that finished his career. en ome | aaa ere WORTH A MILLION, veturned with the report that radinm| ‘The letter found in the flat-way La Provence, Havre..........10 A.M.| | Mayor Mitchel ¢ day to ' small plant he started to -|of No, 317 Bast Fighty-seventh street, a on. , oO ae we ommisster tee leh sees ihe mineral salts. enh t brother of Mrs, Stlerheim, and wan; Sante Marta, Jamaica 12M. Ue Kracike to find out just what is to be | written in Hungarian, In a general | EATS done in assigning space in the new STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. = Mr. ‘Currier of South Orange eepts the Position of Poli Record Committee of di, Inst night The Town Orange, NS. Francis 3. « ¥ : manufacturer, is sald to be eonsiderably over $1,000, on Prospect street in mm exclu urrier said that | duties ability, le he was not a lawyer, he had he would certainly fulfil t! ofthe office to the beat of hi south elected rier to the position of Police Recorder at a salary of $200 @ year. Mr. Currier, who is a retired worth of and lives uth Orenge OFFERS RADIUM TO GOVERN. MENT AT $80,000 A GRAM. He found miners in Colorado who were willing to sell for # song their curolite ore filings, he witnesk said {i took 850 or 400 tons of ore to prodive a gram of radium, Flanery declared that © has enough radium 10 supply “the entire world’s cancer vir- tims five times over.” 200 grams he estimated as the amount needed for sufferers in theTnited States. A be willing to contract to furnish this amount in five years to the Goy- ernment at a price lower than the Government could dnufacture it—at maximum figure of $80,000 a gram,” he asserted, ‘ Radium, he declared, was twenty- Ace @ fair knowledge of tho law und he |a.. times more valuable in other dis: thought that the position was one | that should be. filled in a dignified the |for rhournatism and other painful dis- | manner. It was not a case of eases than cancer, it is a positive c man seeking the office, but the office | eases, He said that it sets forth that Stierheim and! way his wife had agreed to hill theme | veives, but nothing ix said about the Vadeliand, Aniwerp ” sam. hildren | Caribbean, Bermuda . 9 A.M.) “We bey you to excuse thiy whole | Noordam, Rotterdam . 0 A. M. thing. wrote Stierheiin to tis | Neckar, Bremen .. . 1PM. brother-in “Under prevailing | = loircumstances we cannot get along | if 1 and Josephine go over this whole | {~.. 3, lthing again she will ao crazs || Graduation Days It is} our wish to be cremated’ { | WIFE PERSUADED HIM TO WIP OUT THE FAMILY. | Inclosed in the letter was Stier- |heim’s will disposing of & vings banks and the pr The first semester of the school year is coming to a close, Students in’ schools and colleges the country over are getting ready || to pass on into higher tields of ins || struction. Is this not a propitious time for grown-ups who are ‘agging behind to step forward into the great ad- vanced class of WORLD ADVERTISERS? Isn't it time to realize that even a big ad. in a little medium cannot compare with a little ad, in the big New York World, which kas a cir- five life insurance policies in fraternal | tes | Stier. te powers anizations, ‘The will distr the property with minute heim left behind five sepa | ued on Second Page.) (Cont! structure. Ashurst, Its Sponsor, Assured ANTHONY Support and, Urged to Call for Vole, Loses Heart. ALBANY 1 Phe Lied World 544,000 in pay WASHINGTO: N, Jan. 2h Womafts) on the estat: suffrage had a chance of passing the Brady of Al Muited stat Senate today but for received to the inability of its ehamp: Mena. Sohmer. | The ry hurat ca AAD, ne timated val Ashurst of Arizona, to refrain | $70,000,000 on from making & set specch on the sub- | ‘By paying ject. Very unexp: ly (he suffrage limit, which question entitied phate Hesolution N dar, and a num ‘1 popped to the top of the ealen- of old time 8 1 $146,000, — Jan. 2 p TAN Wi morrow, the executors #a BRADY LEFT FORTUNEOF $70,000,000 A check for $2,- | the transfer tax Anthony ‘N ment of the le ua’ 1 within t woul have six montin’ m hoxttated and the Kolden opportunity | twa “No, he Mnally said, “1 think 1 will tors at once clamored for a Lodge, Gallinger and Bristow, on the for women was lost Republican wide, said to Ashurat: on, let us have the question Make Ins speeoh tira” settled now allinger for it We are all going to vote Lodge and other old-tine Instead of an al- } Vol, Alexander Uacon, had # cont a power ett te | Following — committee hearing, ate Orange a fair and impartial! Flannery flatly refused to discuss! the way and Carnegie Police Recorder, and, wf course, the the offer further Daye Gane maiintiacwa etc there salary pg A se Recorder tn 4. Eubileity would spoil the plan,” | are now 20,000 cancer victimm in the ofetan to that of Police Justice. alr, Ne declared, “but it seems to me that | United States, He suid this number 4 » MN. te a good idea if an old man wants| Could be treated In the twenty insti- Currier was formerly president and} here man wants ‘ded “in. the | anager of Cyrus C, Currier neral machinery. philan- offer, He placed the yearly oe ade toll at 75,000, ? to use his money this way when: it| {utions won't do him any other good. That's sarontet M4 We will give you enough votes culation in New York City than the Herald, Times. eee Tribune ADDED TOGETHER? | to put ie through Ashurst glanced around at erats who |have growled against women's suf- | frage and grew afraid that his Dem- beratic colleagues might fail him, He THINK 17 OVER AND ADVERTISE JUDICIOUSLY! vote on behalf of wat of thot op the Arizona to sp empty It will be weeks before the opportunity again arrives, nea benches, \ FOR RACING SEE PAGE 16, oy : ) % ai Le D WEATHER—Light snow soasahay IN ¢ FINA — I0E ONE CENT. PR TO WRECK ME IF | ~ WOULD NOT QUI SULZER ON STAND. TO-DAY , rere paren “I See Where You'll Wind Up Damn Quick as Governor—You'll Make a Hell of a Governor Butting In — Where You Don’t Belong!” Was the Threat of the Tammany Boss, ASKED IF O’GORMAN HAD TRIED TO INTERFERE — Senator Quoted as Declaring Gaffney Was Sent by “Chief” to Hold Up Contractors for Big Contribu- tions—Sulzer Goes Before Grand — Jury To-Morrow. ni Under oath,’on the witness stand, after waiving immunity in the Joha Doe Inquiry before Chief Magistrate McAdoo this afternoon, ex4iov. William. Sulzer directly connected Charles F. Murphy with the now famous Barge Canal contracts Nos, 71A and 72A which James Stewart put in bids for in the fall of 1912, but didn’t land, Sulzer swore that Charles F. Murphy sent for him and censured hint for trying to ald Stewart. Stewart has sworn that a man representing himself to be James KE. Gaffney called on him after the election of 1912, sald he had been assigned to solicit campaign “contributions” and demanded 6 per cent. on the value of the contracts, which totalled about $3,000,000. Stewart refused to give uf. whi the ¢ came myaterious moves by nal Board about the contracts. ning his story, “to give whatever in formation I can, On the eighteenth Sulzer swore to-day that he Inter ]of December, 1912, I received a tele- ested himself in Stewart's behalf in} gram from G. H. McGuire that the — December, . Just before he was|}Canal Board had been called in @ Inuugurated, and asked the ‘enall xpectal meeting to inspect the bide of Hoard by telegraph to withhold ae- tion on the Stewart matter until afier Jan. 1 MURPHY DENOUNCED HIM FOR BUTTING IN. next day, Sulzer swore, Murphy nt for him through John Delaney. He went to Delmonico's and saw Murphy, who accused him of “putting in on a good thing” and told him he would regret it if he did any- think like that again, Later on, Sul- ver swore, Murphy urged him to ap- point Gaffney State Commissioner of Highways Sulzer swore that he asked Senator O'Gorman mat making Gaffney Highways pmmissioner, rman , according to Sulaer the Stewart Company. It was told me that their bid was thousands of dollara under all other bids and a great Injudtice would be done if their” bid was rejected. = “Aa Governor-elect T felt it my duty. to save the money of the taxpayers, so I nent a telegram to the Board asking them to withhold action uatil 1 could confer about the matter, ‘My recollection is that it was sent the day I received the message from MoGuire. ‘ TELLS OF PHONE MESSAGK FROM JOHN H. DELANEY. “On Dec, 19 John H. Delaney called me by telephone. He was connected with a New York morning newepaper, He seemed very much excited—im a a ¥ “If you appoint Jim Gaffney you'll| fact, ['d never seen him so pere f tppoint a crook.” turbed, mf At the conclusion of his testimony “He came to my office and wy Sulver was asked by Mr. Whitman| said: ‘My God, Cengreseman, (Va to appear at the Criminal Courts| what have you done?’ i Building to-morrow afternoon. This! means in all probability that the ex Governor will appear before the Grand | Jury wt that time to give eviuence tn | the matter of the attempted hold-up of Stewart the man who re sented himself as Gaffney Before Mr. Sulzer was called to the | witness chair, he, with his coun! “t asked him what I'd dene, “He said: ‘Congreseman, you have epilled the beans, The “Chief” (meaning C. F. Murphy) is wild. I've never seen him se worked up. I'm afraid all is off between you. My Ged, Congrese- man, why did you de it?” “In explaining his demeanor he asked me: “Why did you send that telegram to the Canal Board? It’s angered the Chief and he wants to) see you right awa: READ THE M'GUIRE TELEQRAM OVER THE PHONE. “I told him: ‘This ts easy, and I read to him the telegram I had re- celved from McGuire and told him I'd wired, the board not to do any- thing until I got to Albany, “Delaney always refer’ to by ne with Mr Whitman over the waiver of immunity from prosecution which the Distriret-Attorney requires of all wit- nesses in the John Doe investigation M Sulzer arrived at Mr. Whit- n'a office a little before half-past “ mpanied by Detective Al. ‘Thomas of the Dintrict-Attorney’s staff, who met him at the door of the Criminal Courts Bullding, ‘The con- ference lasted for more than half an hour, during which Mr, Sulzer and| Murphy as ‘the Chief.’ He came te Sty: Mr, Whitman talked over the line} me at the office after the phone coms. of the former Governor's testimony | versation and told me he had come at | and then Mr. Sulzer signed the| Murphy's suggestions, Hi ¥ waiver of Immunity and went at once|the telephone in my office and to the court-room and took the stand.!up Mr. Mu at D i “1 am bare,” said Sulser in begin- talked with