The evening world. Newspaper, April 13, 1914, Page 3

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aay AST wire ee | 13, 1924. |Juatice Goff in the Criminal Branch |of the Supreme Court Nov. §. Their | trial was swift. Despite the efforts joe their counsel, former Magistrate | Wahl @ conviction wae recorded in | Otne days. District-Attorney Whit- | man, an in the Becker case, divided the actual conduct of the trial with Assistant District-Attorney Frank THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL Slain Gambler and Man Who Paid Gunmen After Internal War Among the Gamesters ye bees “ NATION-WIDE VOTE BURSTING MAIN “ON PROHIBITION BY ; FLOODS CELLARS cover we vee | QUESTS OF HOTELS NEAR WALDORE watt oe WAR OF GAMBLERS CAUSED MURDER FOR WHICH GUNMEN _ WERE PUT TO DEATH IN CHAR Rosenthal, Branded as “Squealer,” Shot Down Before Crowd in Front of Hotel Metropole by Men Who Fled in “Murder Car.” c f Faphae| mien wore Rose, Vallon and Webber, | who told of hiring them, taking them to the Webber gambling toom, es- corting them to the Metropole, point- ing out Rosenthal and seeing them fo away In the gray murder car.|' Likely to Be Adopted by Ly) igreement ever tion to be ~ ‘paid was recited an © payment 9 ciati with “funds advanced by ‘Hriagie| Hotel Men’s Association. ; Webber the next day. In addition there waa the evidence of Morris Lit- |ban, Krese, a man not previously acquainted with anybody in the con- |troveray, who waa on the aidewnlk | and recognized the gunmen and re- | ;Inembered them; Stanish, 4 Hungarian jnobleman in reduced circumstances, | who saw them run to the automo- | bile, and Shapiro, the « Resolution Providing for It Thirty-third Street Geyser, | Near Fifth Avenue, Causes | Big Cave-in. | | | A twelve-inch water main in TAirtpe | third street, seventy-five feat weet of Fifth avenue, and In front of the More Than 500 Hotel Men "#t entrance of the Waldort-Astoria | Hotel, broke at 4 A. M, to-day and Are in the City to At- — jeont » geysor several feet tnto the MEETING AT WALDORF. Berman Rosenthal was shot to death July 16, 1912. The United States bes been through wars which bave pug Into an uproar by a resentment against police laxity in dealing with erlmes which returned profit; Rosen- thal a gambler, loud mouthed, vindlc- tive, and a common acold over bis) own wrongs, real or fancied, bud) stirred up much of the scandal. | His murder was a challenge to tho| power of the city to enforce law; it have them brought to book by the administration of law were punish- eourse into quick forgetfulness and occasional reminders or revival of in- York bas been changed. Gambling bas become sporadic and stealthy. “I have this much advantage of them. I know and everybody else knows that the men I am after want to get me out of the way. lowered tones on thu lonely corners of restaurants or in shadowed door- ways had been Rosenthal’s tactics for years, When his place in Harlem was raided in Mayor McClellan's ad- ministration, Rosenthal made the City Hall echo with his wrath. He charged public oMciain as well as po- licemen with atterapting to blackmail him, When a trial in which be was one ho could buttonhole. In the open. Rosenthal’s nephew and an- other man were arrested and pun- one in authority, He besought Police Commissioner Waldo and others the police. District-Attorney Whit- other time. Several of them were crn: victed and have served or aro serving terms of imprisonment. conse- nal for a general hunting down of all defiers of the law, Metropole au hour or two before mid- night. He told Mrs, Rosenthal had received a telephone message acquaintance, met Rosenthal on the Th quences of the Killing of Rosenthal) | account of those ho considered his against the police and offctain of the Police Department which, {f true, pointed to the commision of a crime, gambier aud parasite of the under world, Becker had shared in the prot. day with Mra. Rosenthal, who could refresh his memory as to the names f corroborative witnesses and could Rosenthal, always lvose of tongue, gambling houses were in sight up Yorker In ten thousand, ‘They talked the newspapers and the District-At- torney Uireatened their only means] of getting a living—their freedom to victims of Rosenthal's selfish crusade found themselves after raids which bars of fine cafes and low dives in ness?" Rosenthal was the must conapicu- oux person in the dining room of the night. ‘Those who thy famous man who had detted the thing called the “Police System" and the gumbler’s code of sileace at the HERMAN ROSENTHAL cab that had arrived with a had been immediately engaged an taken away by # succession of mon who came out from the shadews. senge? | times through the head. One bullet ita engine and shot away BRIDGIE them was correct. ‘To the minds of od what might come to tof thin atrikin they we each ony or to all home by a newspap in a quarter of an hour he had insisted on giving the police his besinning with this hardly clue, In the department ca: publi¢ memory went—the most © apicuous enemy of Raaenthal. Every~ body forgot the bomb explosions and Harry Vallon small gambler Rose and Webb the car to Tom ‘oon, In Shari thal, to obtain from her statements | get an affidavit from the Gilbert wo- WEBBER ered. Valloa was found by detectives. Hefore the three had been in jail | cording to this story, tired of walting | uname, feasion. Rowe Web these od July nfesmions . but with result triadic As 4 true if It were established that which was superseded by the one Including the police Heutenant, The police had reason to believe that all four sunimen had spent two weeks Catekills, In the search for them in the country detectives actually had their hands on Schepps and let him >» again without recogniain, show, : and near a laundry, helped ‘i mer Captain Dominick Riley, then Heutenant of detectives, to find their hiding place, They surrendered with- influences on porsible witnesses made him. \aaid-he saw them all | revolver, with one shot fired, found in | his Glendale hiding place, was js | duced as a mute witness against | | The four took the stand In their own defense All agreed that Jack Rose had induced them to meet at | Webber's in order to bave a confer ence with Steinert and White, two policemen of Becker's strong-arm squad. Rose, they sald, professed to be afraid ome of Zelig’a men would | Kilt him because he was suspected of having betrayed Zellg to Steinert revolvers and fired none and that they did not go away in the auto- | The Court of Appvals in the same day in which it ordered Hecker tried Rev. Rabbi Goldstein, the Rev. Father Cashin and the Rev. Mr. Hur- ton H. Lee, and from their counsel tho public aguing the injustice of the gpntes of the Court of Appeals. Horowitz and Frank Cirofict turned clear in faith who had ever paased out of ft to the chair. —— EXPLORER FROM BROOKLYN. , who | Lefty Loule’ tend Reunion. hibition t# being considered by the members of the Hotel Men's Mutual Benefit Aesociation, which is holding {ts annual reunton in thts city. | At the business session in the Wal- | dorf-Aatoria to-morrow the resolu- tion providing for the taking of thie | vote will be introduced, and if adopt- | | od—an it in thought it will be—the | day when the hotel guests will be warded to Congress. | now pending in Congress, These bills | | ‘and thotr meaning will be discussed More than five hundred hotel men | loser relationship Hobie 7] of oatablis tho bonifaces of Europe and tho: this country, men and thelr hoste will be just one banquet, luncheon, theatre party, dance and entertainment after an- other, The official banquet of the as- FROM THE FOURTH STORY he passed the Washington Hotel at! alr. Asphalt was showered in all directions, and then the street caved in to a depth of fifteen feet, leaving rooms for machtnery, and reached @ depth of two feet before it was stopped by closing the compartments, which are water tight. Tie hotel management said no damage was done, The bakers kept at thelr work and pun:pa were immediately set to getting out the water, Four feet of water was reported in the cellar of the Cambridge building 4 Went ‘Thirty-third street. Fi ‘The Ponnsyivania tubes run unger t 1 any Pr " Anothor resolution dealing with pro- | apring of 1912 his Forty-fttn street |Of Kosentual and his altidavit, He} the pollcema must have come more} many days the rumors regarding the | for the policemen to come and went | all able by swift assassination. ia ices place fen raided by a squad under| "us a conmon enemy. Avcording to[quickly than\y any oue else tho tre) WF €utined naied Ih the Under home, ‘The others sald they were |Dibition to be conaldered at to-mor- | Thirty-third a but no water Sinariea eavilestipa: sd a sitet the command of Lieut. Charles Beck-| the testimony of Nose and some of} mendous significance which the raur- hat Water, ‘ Nowe ad | lred to the Metropole with the de. | row's Lod alubeedbatel pa Meal tse Se act aieriod ib tbe tena Or ig aaa. waa eae Po ey shocked |¢r. A policeman was placed on guard bg haar te Pate the opinion of }der was to have. ‘Thotr usual tntel- im various dintricts | berate purpose of making them poet a oe rac brohatibn bills food, MV bt i *. pee Se osu tivity, had raised the | seape, jobson and Works Pro \ that the tragedy did not run the usual| in the hall to see that tt did not re-|be did not shut up.” His running to| lisence & Le Sg F aubdcription, ‘THiodah {ere ee ew ore cney Bad no Policeman Moore notified the West Thirtieth street sta when he heard ' the roar of the water, and reserves down of a police accuser agresd to de the sume, through ile. Ti ( by Percy Androus of Chicago, Prest- terest. ‘The whole course of the un-| shed. Leathe pet Distriet-Attorney Whitman nad | Max D. Steuer Vallon declared Mhim- | trea he Jury Id net valleve | ent of the National Anpociation of came with ropes to keep away the derworld and its methods in New| The gambler complained to every- ae be back rooms of satouns, 19} been awakened by teleph his | self wilting to do the same, : Coimdsatos and: Labor, lerowds, Chief Engineer Bingham of the Water Department was notified and as soon as possible the water was Forty-aeve! : f the country are in ho resent: | over their telephones, at thet ‘ al ix which | the West Forty-seventh street ata- ing, approved by the|again ald that though it was not|from all parts o Ae ceo 3 ; closed gambling houses, wcrosa thel had insisted on | Seales Kis If their story wan found |i was certainly proved that, hired or| continue until Wednesday, when a the nelkhborhor city. $<» ——__— READY TO “BLOW’” SAFE, BUT WERE SCARED AWAY —_——- = erts in a hope that the men would be caught. His place hus been forced three times, and it seems as if the i" oysters for his patrons, Ho sal mouth, in the event that her hus- Pty ies daira gaa Hing, | bad been fired through bis bald spot whieh wonld, when publiched, dis | him an abject of great Interest to the| Margaret Dwyer of No. 357 Furman Her Is Held for Murder, | that he placed no value on them, Just band did not atop fighting publicly | Co » nhewa to hil a f credit him and tend to keep him silent | Dixtriet-Attorney and the accused, | treet, rooklyn, eleven years old and aa |baving put them aside as they were for “his rights"—the same being the) Seif than he could help breathing.| ‘There was a scurry, Detective File,|rGrive him out of town. Hecker, | Was xhot dead by Red Phil David- | yelf-posneased an she ie pretty, came] Philip Brown, a newadealer, of No. | und from year to year. privilege to conduct a gambling house | He was greatly excited by the pros-| who had been In the dining room,| who was at prize fight at Madison | son, ne'er do well, who bad a money |to Manhattan to-day to visit her “Aunt|90 Clinton street, Hoboken, N. J., told| ‘The cash register was drilled and without police interference. Abe] pect of revenge on those who had cut] fn oul and found halt a dozen men! square Garden with Jacob Helch | quarrel with Zelig, Bridget." Sho crowved the bridge and| Recorder McGovern to-day how he | opened by the visitors, but they found off his source of income—whil shouting and cursing on the sidewalk. | (Jack Sullivs welt sty ing | rcpaeiiaies had heard a woman’ scream twice as |!t ormpty. The police say the mom Hablo, a bookmaker and an intimate ju hile open »mobile on the other side of the } had asked them to Chapter IV. | were frightened just as they were ipter IV. about t blow the safe, They carried not more disturbed New York City. Het get Gert Chapter V. A it tt the queate of |® hole forty by thirty feet. A ‘The murder came at a time of pouiti- | vermPody will know why.” |THE rroar fal ESCAPE aay ae the country to vote, Water beean to flow into the sube Public wpheavais over troubles sna specified day, on nation-wide pro. |cellar of the Waldorf, where are the eal disturbance. The city had been! whieh most gamblers discuss only in THE NET. Koa ly bake shop, wine shop and storage” was a challenge to the good faith of | ad W when Big Jack wae| asked to give their views on the |at No, 2 West Thirty-third street, @ 5 the Police Department; it was a gon- CHAIAAY | Colna. bung Howonthal ————--- = - —---- + - - ee ee alli a vine Ken revolvers; momentous question of temperance ten-rtory structure, putting the ele- eral notice that attacks on the lib-| 2 in and out and all through the | Hoob Walker, Dollar John Langer, | taking of their names, Four difterent| Moltce Moadquarters and gave himeeit| He wanted the four, the foremost of | Will be set. The result of the prox \vator machinery wut of commission. * erty and prosperity of gamblers.) ridore, impressing hia version of Si Uuul and others whose nates] versions of the license number of the |UD. Webber, who had vinited bead | Zoig's followers, to boar bis vindica-|Posed poll--whether against nation- | There was also two feat of water If My crooks, bribe-takers and un effort to| 1. etter and his wrongs upon any-|Were hut then known to one New| ray automubile were taken ot | ttasters voluntarily. also BUFTEAG® | tion by the detectives. rank, ao- | Wide prohibition or not—will be for-|the celine of the Security Bank, Wey : vr of the gray | .| party of 170 mombers will sail on the man was enabled in this provalling enemies. He took his troubles to the|every part of the city where “sports” | Vorm#on, of the Hugiber of the gray) ng one of them had fired one of the |net, thoy killed Herman Rosenthal. | part i | "There was no: shortage oP Ul ’ | om bile, “41,813""—which é ven, | 7 spirit to cause the Indictment of maay newspapers. The World accepted | congreguted, in the resurts of thieves | Mee ne umber had boon. tite ee ae MIE Ria team arrested tn| act rita nites aeateaey boven asics Gear or Meuroper AE baieenenenresepicaiinina yee policemen whose wrongoing would from him and published af amMdavit Fs oe ig Mai rapa ot polls ata transcribed, ver, by the € tekille at Fleteohmat sta. (from their relations, from their becca sw) P ohia fear tts te aedy otal other connection was made that pro- 7 ons, was heard the question: “Wha ato) thie > atudy ho! ; haye been condoned or slighted at an-/in which were embodied chargos|is coming out uf this Rosenthal busle A cata tion under a previous indictment |fitual advisers at the prison, the/joct of thin rour tn te aludy Mott vided u supply in that section of the x Deputy =| Until the sailing of the steamshi Ment far beyond thone -vho were| This aMdacit charged that through| knew hitn called the attention of othe | civ pettled down, to nyate: togetnar tear See ee ee ae Ga Bes exe the Govern: Peerage the lives ‘ted by the visiting. hotel be gullty of that crime. It the siK-| Jack Rose, a swindler and seasoned |ers to his prosence and pointed out] Becker had beon—ax except Frank Ciroficl had gone berg addressed two or three bric! } |its of Roseuthal's gambling house|same time. Rosenthal moved about|shooting affrays by which Rosenthal \out two Or thee Sth A final effort | cctantion ill be held ip the Walder? | (1, . ‘ Chapter I. and had invested money in ft. Roven-|fFom one table to another. | 1t bud and numerous of hla enemien: mils 88 aia “ive rdowing ‘with ‘wantty’ and| bY {heir counsel reeulted In the to-morrow evening, but there will be Had Rolled to Rear End of Store ; Hever been established Just whom he| Bridgie Webber a chel Braun, | grant natice ay | another et in the Biltmore Syl : ROSENTHAL, THE IN-\toat said they ad quarrelied over| erpectel to mivet, though his, wite| had tried to destroy each other Dee | fepennee ee COD OF Me Might of an onder to show cause Why eee een On Weduesiay| and Packed Clothes Around it FORMER. their money relations and the rald) suid afterward that he expected to|cause of quarrels over the division) Pokey Hite rials were over la new trial ebould not be allowed.| arternoon ‘the visitors will be taken Deaden Sound 1 hal waa killed at 2 o'clock in| ™de. a8 he reported Becker as may-|inoet a mun who wanted tu reconcile of the profits of their nefarious busl- | Oe Wit ne! oha® was not legally | TWO witnesses were produced who| for u trip up the Hudson on the to Deaden Sound. thet eore ing In front of the Metropole | 1M. ‘"to fool Waldo," wan really a| {im with Lieut. Wecker if not with) i0y, emt an, ora the lume | Held responaible as an accomplice, Pra eesetheny epee iene gens Berkshire, To-night there is) 4 thoroughly professional attempt t amb | defying a policeman, i - con- “ F - 1 if 9 wliceme io Ghin a ae) i" " 9 A } the resort of those who shun daylight,| “M# ude in earnest. talked th Mith about sokets for an} Ho ci record of the deparunent| the Gordon girl, He insisted then|it--with Webber and Vallon aa the) Among the visiting hotel men are) fish und oyster dealer at No. 944 (4 Its -buslest hours were between mid- "1 SUES Warcr on wae enpeniee vepsts| (oi flamed out. 7 an he has insisted until his voice |actual murderers and the fugitives In /charios A. Allen jr. of Chicug lumbus avenue, was made some time night and dawn. Racing men, book- Chapter I. Peer me bie Dab BC ed ginal Man mulled forever to-ray, that, he Toe eee sw Ghar ASSIRRAT. DR Honey Breslin of tho Hampton. Hos: during yesterday or lust might, Dut tt i 3 v M ae. 6c " sehr stayed only a few moments at Web- | $ %. Ud ‘ d makers, swift livers, swindlers and THE KILLING. Hae confessed that he went to the) ii tefusing to uct until te bere, ltt’ before the whouting ang/trict-Attorney Mose had ntated hie) -rhorndike, Hoaton; John 1, Finn of | ld not prove wucessatul. Adait found crooks who organized their frauds as} A statement supplementary to this) thal a fe th ve iat ‘© tha ; gears taken aguinst him. M returning to his home, spent ths night din the order late. saturday the Hotel Lackman, Cincinnati 3, (the tumblers of the safe ripped oper men of no lese Intelligence but some-|aMdtwit had been given by Ronenthal|shoment, wade w pertunctare orate) nor. expressed his dis trying 10 set the Gordon girl out on gienere Fitageral |when he began business to-day, the ’ ° ; 1 ‘ett Oy a goen ecker admitted that | bail, as she had been arrested by . . * Mae is Senge ce: ore, Morality. SIenEsY Hier to eee Se erra for Bap eatin: ABE} He BU CHe e gheee ae eet, Ome ene With Airy and Mrs, Rosenthal | Policeman Robinson (who ina con-| All visitors to the death hotwe ho. | i wipe nee peg ba nee ve (a oe : cantile and financial concerns; prize jover, Fret OTN ey Peete eee tUPAitie (0 Che eo tte nic eee ere | most intimate terms, but he Vict dt Sing Sing to-day). He latd/ ported that the four tad Hon of | service of the Hie Four Railroad; and rugs and everything realy for fighters and their managers, actors of |™4n, who was at Newport, bad | {ih helurning to the table. picked out to 'increaae the storm by degrading | great on the fearleas way he | (reply, Tenwious ofc who was bap-|C: Fryman of the Hotel Haywards, |setting off thy “juice” or nitro ; of |amreed, after study of the affidavit, | Ro artcles about himself and showed) the policeman before evidence was | had ¢ the police station, with. | thelr Bl, Low Angelen; A. H. Gunnell of Hag: | gtycerine the flashy type and the variety of 0 y luvit,| them proudly to Jis neighbor Al cvailable. {out that he had narrowly | tized @ Roman Catholic but had be-| om Suwe i: Oe re tteld of the| , women usually to be found with auch|t? come to New York for a stranger to mnost of those In the place "“irore the sun rose on the day of escaped being present at a murder. |come an Eplacopalian, returned 101 Hout’ Maryland, Milwaukes, | ‘The burglars had rolled the safe ts, ranging from homely, faithful] ®ece with Rosenthal, whose ARURTTNES a ah He baaalee ihe Pa-| Rosenthal’s murder detecti#es had) Rosenberx and Horowits were not | h'* Teb: hoya, who once scorned | "Ham" Luckland of the Hotel Statler, from the front of the shop to the wives trying to follow where their|complainty had not been definite! | Gwalblon’ Kin (thee oy the! found the gray murder car. It was|caught until Sept, 21, They had been} The Hepren bevm whe mink SAOrnat | cleveland; David Lauber of the Hotel |rear and were so thoughtful in their 3 ehDuel tor:pusitiveac: At . a livery car operated by William) living ina tenement tn Glondale tn ty, Sho | Galvez, Galveston; FE. M. Statler of] work t i : husband led, to painted and beruffled tel V action, Mr. Whit | handkerchief, Shapiro and Libby, his partner, from) Queens, visited stealthily by thelr ebrated the ceremonial feast of Hotel Statler, Buffalo, and John F.|™ rk that they had Iain on its beek women who called themselves chorus}man and Rosenthal had a talk, Mr.) Raceyt for a. grou vf en who The Boulevard Cate, in Dwer Second | wives, wno repratedly evaded police | Paasever Fire iy ih ka i ee Sweeney of the Grand Hotel, Zanos.|® clock on the office mantel. ‘The gira whether they had ever been} Whitman suid he must have vor. ing, An Thay? ACAnteds (hel taton cel al ul voay i Pb bossa is Hers, but who dropped clues us to) sioret muste from the phonograph | Ville, O. clock toppling ove® and smashing through a stage entrance or not roboration before he could lay Mogens | those who came through the street, Zee stowers on. thelr] overheard by Mook pigeons, ‘The diac] 2nd tho advice of thelr pastors, thay ——__—>—_ would have added to the noise of the ia From his police guarded gambling} thal's story before the Grand Jury.| Forty-fifth street was almost silent’ | NN rsilare ehaparo it | connected facts that they lived in a inpenened. a et a chseryers of explosion, The hands marked 1.25 as * house in Went Forty-itth street, near|Jt was ugreed that Rosenthal abould | There Were no waiting taxicabs and| [etrne ar had been hired house with wooden fire-eacapes, over- | "On In The death hater am the mow SAW WOMAN THROWN Aha Baie atithefob: eee ye nouthal walked to the|&® to Mt Whitman's home the next] £4bbIine chattifeurs at the curb. Each | {ia "event hy Jack Rose, looking an open alr moving. picture | P! ; Mr, Adsit called for Angerprint @: a 5 ina : Rosenthal's foot hardly left the! jc enth street, after another car) out a fight, when the detectives i burglars are determined to vob Gules Him ont, Ehe tereed Rim: <o ia ‘ igh Sate qeatnblors had! threshold before the sits cracked | reaerouen down, walked in expecting a gun battle, On Testimony of Passerby, Man|jy'the nafe—a 4,200-pound ani ane | stay at home; threats were made to} teld her about their dishonest deal-/ the quiet and the gambler pitched to! Rose and Vallon had bee visiting | A few days Inter, Oct. 6, Jack| + Dwr lonely, Who Was in Hotel Ri With | 4°, pearls which the oyster man has iy her over the telephone and by word of | ings with policemen the pavement In a heap—shot three! pora Gilbert, the first wife of R “eli, whoso teatimony and ‘whose 0 fee Aunt 10 Was in Hotel Room Wil collected during the years of opent a r he enst Men pointed at it, eryin; that he thought he could Washington and Ferry streets, Hobo-| all their toole and explosives with way to the hotel and advised him to|4nd down the etreet from hia dark- | t rie ha A + erying! man, ne nOUg " 9 Fo back homo, saying that the feeling |ened windows. The news of bin en-|2Ut “They did It" File SEE a AS ea Sy THE TRIALS. ken, early yosterday morning, and, | them. sds " of 7 rae oj m — against him was very ugly amony| agement with the District-attorney|y awitter, means of pursuit. Te Sty eocant bere Hecker was yut on trial Oct. 7. He Mia ak MIRE RVenaS ARG ThE: | emine SP Ned) seen OAR PUD 8) ning BITES WIN DAMA men who would not stop short of) brought the plots and threats and| {ound a tow men gathered ‘ahout|" From Sharkey's the automobile sped |Was defended by John F. McIntyre. |{visaventh.wtreet, avenue and Fil-) woman from a window on the fourth GES. Rosenthal’s body, but Bridgie W: pore li vague ugly talk of his enemien to a B b-|to a hous in Seventh avenue, near |The informers, Schepps, Morria Luban | |) “Will vou pleaae tell me where Mra. [floor of the hotel. ‘The body, clad in ; fam safer in a hotel with a crowd | quick and relentless decision Ritectabpers the negeamblers, the) One Hundred and Forty een eoticl, |A2@ Shapiro, teatified against him.| Aun Weidget, and’ Ione seam tobe | single undecgarment, fell onto an|Gtrl Awarded 9150 for Injuries Sat- around than [ would be at home,”| At the outing of the Sam Paul As-| sipped swiftly away. Uniformed po-| though Shapiro. did not give the |TB® thres men who were to go free if | able to find only had 20 cents}iron rail surrounding the basement fered tu Ne! “Vm all right #o| sociation, to which belonged nearly | licemen were on the spot in another Cirofict had left they could prove that Becker tnati- eald the gambler, name at the time entrance to the cafe of the hotel and Ten-year-old Alice Casey, whose legs When fee! miserable, Gade frequent headaches it is will cleanse your system in a natural, h Es-Lax will relieve your bowels of the Get it at your drug store Don’t Let Your Stomach Trouble You run down, have a bad taste in the mouth, coated a sure sign, that your stomach, liver and bowels are not in order and need a good, thorough cleansing at onre, EX-LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate ealthy manner, without pain or griping. undigested waste matter and in several hours your head will be clear and your eyes will sparkle. One 10c box of Ex-Lax is enough to con vince you, today. 0c, 25¢ and 50c, snowball on the first day of a thaw. Tt blasted reputations and left a trail of political upheaval, crue) diggr: broken fortunes and political up heavals which has not yet reached a point where the end can be seen ‘The hunting down of the murderers was proved far more dramatic and Important than the killing of the gambler. Chapter III. THE HUNT. Word that Herman Rosenthal had been killed was flashed over the city before the table sheet from inside the hotel had been drawn over the body, Within a quarter of an hour a amall army ©‘ detectives and police- men were snoumering through the crowd which gathered at the hotel, Everybody who admitted having been near the place at the time of the @hooting was rougni; qnestioned. Many were allowe¢ to go without the | Rose, to take his car to the frontofthe M ropole and to keep it there with the ngine running until further rs. e obeyed, ‘The shouting startled bim out of & doze at the wheel, follr men piled into the car behind him and he had dashed off to the east with them nd had drepped them when they | were sure they had lost all pursuers. Meantime the stuss games and coffee rooms in the lower Second avenue were filled with gossiping men who repented rand over again | the names of Gyp the jood, Whitey Lewis, Lefty Louis and Dago Frank The names meant nothing to the newspaper and pollee investixators who heurd of them, except that they were followers of Bla Jack Zelig. Webber and Schepps, were known, Rose waa hiding in the rooma of Harry Pollok, a prize fight promoter Webber, whose real connection with the case was nebulous until after the confessions began, was about town, but not found by the policemen sent to bring him in, Neither was Vallon. Bchepp# vanished, It Was shown that Hock prize tight, went to Park early copies of the newspal nthal's latest , after the Row for rs con- outburst, had taken Sullivan to Broadway and Forty-second street and had gone to | bis home in Edgecombe avenue. Kore and Webber told of summoning him downtown after the murder, of con- spiring with him to conceal the per- petrators of the crime and pay off the gunmen Hin conviction was finally reversed by the Court of Ap- peals Fob. 24, The court held that Schepps was an accomplice, and that Luban and other witnesses were un- worthy of belief, ‘The prosecutor waa also charged with undue anxiety to conviet Hecker at any cont fa shortly to be again with the unfair testimony, as indicated by the Court of Appeais, eliminated. Rosenberg, Seidenshner, Ciroficl and Bovker | More thi 5 otiate left the Grand Central Station this morning at 9 o'clock for Albany, where they will go before Gov. Glynn to advocate the signing of the McClelland-Thorn bill which will make it legal for Christian Scientists to practise their method of healing In New York State. ‘The trip was made in 4 spectal train of ten | conchen The rights of the Christian Science practitioner will be submitted by d ward W. Hatch, one of the law part- | ners of Judge Alton B. Parker. ‘Th McClelland-Thorn bill has been paanes by the Senate and Aspembly and th Governor decided to give it a final hear. ing. ff made law the bili vill cause New York State to follow Massachu- setts, where Christian Science practl- Honere are allowed to practise uni | pered. | Selentiste Go to Al —_—_——_ — ‘Teo days later Rose walked into|Horowitz wero put on trial before: pS Tasw ual, SESH, TARING, floor which Brown indicated. It had been occupied Saturday night by man who said he was Joseph Welt: a fireman on one of the Ward line | steamships, and the dead woman, | who he had described as bia wife, | Bertha, | Weits was found in bed, and after he had been aroused he sald that when he had fallen asleep the woman | was at his side. He declared be bad not before awakened her. out ball on a charge of murder, Weitz admitted that he had met the woman In West street, Manhat- \tan, and ald he bad no idea who she was —_——_—_ SOMETHING TOO MUCH, (Brom the Milwentee Bvening Wisoonsis.) indignantly)—-I don't, furry May care; I think Esterloigh ts Sownright ad shot a sev hat when he shot ‘another pair of alti I'll never speak to his seat \ fer me. ‘ | the witness 5 has econd, With File they took posses- artment where he lived with | gated the crime—and that no one of xpinined that there Brown rushed into the hotel, callin; long as they do not get me when Tall of the gamblers and tough ehar-|sevond, With File they took posses. apal arnare he lived Ore ih there was no| Brown ru , Bl bear the scars from the bites of @ Gotan lacters who in a decado had drifted IR CL. Bich was aie. every | a8 nero Py tat up| ne fired a shot—had been locked Har father went Hee aie ar'a|to the night clerk that there bad | vicious bulldog, was to-day od On the afternoon of that same day,|uptown from the east side dives to de a futile chase after the gray sping with Jean Gordon, | UP together for months in the West and her mother went shopping | been a murder, $150 damages by a jury in Justice Férd’s Rogenthal, standing near the door of |furnish Broadway with gambling and to be known afterward always young woman: [Side prison. “They placed tne ne ee ee eee det Ha ote | Ho said the clerk laughed at btm. |part of the Supreme Court, ‘Through the Cohan Theatre, just across from other forms of vice on a cheap and Bat tne as SUERCOning ot the ¥ cap bay were blame for the ordering of Ronenthal's | waa notified from the West Forty-sev-| He then hurried to Pollce Head-|her father, the child sued Mra, Addie the spot where he was to be killed, |tawdry scale, were Jack Rose, Harry| Rosenthal was not Ais ecuwer tine 100k tee ee bouie Nheve othe: 2eath on Becker, and maid he bad |enth street station and came after her.| quarters, returning with Detectives |!» Gern man of Caner said to an Evening World reporter: | Vallon, Bridjie Webber, Sam Schepps, | question, “What is coming out of this|junmen Whon he did not thea know | freed them to get Zelig to supply the Daniel Kiely and Thomas Garrick, Rosenthal business?” The answer| were waiting, and was directed four gunmen apd drive them to act 500 AID HEALING BILL. who went to the room on the fourth |t rolled up bigger and faster than a hey decide ehild was entitl ses, On 4 Alice admitted that wone uninvited to Mra, chard. ose CEYLON TEA a White Rese Coffee, Peand Tins, 360. el

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