PAGE TWO THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 191 2. INVESTIGATING CRAFT AN THE SYSTEM IN W Whitman, Golf, Gurran and Buckner Constitute trio Big Four. By JAMES A. EDGERTON. WHEN the Now York board of aldermen decides that any thing la bo bad thnt It needs Investigation tbo public la entitled to Its own conclusions. Homo will opluo that the abuse In question must be very bad Indeed, and some oilier will shut one optic and remark that n pood, stiff coat of kalsomlno Is nbout to be applied. These two views nre not as Inconsistent ns thoy would seem, for tbe worse tho conditions the more need of whltownsh. In case things lire so bad that oven whitewash will not cover them something else may Imj necessary. Two or three scapegoats may bo trotted Into tho wilderness, and there may bo reports nnd doings of various kinds. Hut the "system" can stand things of that sort, ns It has stood them before. Tho "sys tem" has more lives than a cat, for a cat can be killed, but no ono has yet killed tho "system." Lexow thought he had done so, and other Investiga tors havo harbored similar delusions, but tho "system" has only shifted Its baso and continued doing business. Publicity Is a great corrective, nnd some people 1m1Iovc It a sovereign rem edy for most of tho ills that afflict us, Including graft, bribery and all the brood springing from tho nnlon of crooked politics and crooked bnslness. Investigation is a form of publicity nt least sometimes. At other times It Is a method of satisfying tho public and holding matters In nbeyanco until the thing blows over. It all depends on just how much tho dear peoplo are n roused. Publicity may not mako peoplo good, but it nt least makes them careful. That Is the effect It Is having In New York. Since the Itosenthal murder there has been one continuous scream of pub licity about protected vice and police Kraft with the result that tho under world Is growing somewhat circum spect and cautious. Several well known Kim men are hiding out, several police men and "men higher up" aro on tbe anxious seat, and several politicians nre doing heavy turns and dark brown thinking. Gambling on the Q. T. Ah for gambling. It Is now more ex clusive than the smart set. No society leader scans her list of guests more closely than does the owner of roulette wheels, faro banks and poker tables. The papers even say that these Joints nre closed altogether, and there nre folks verdant enough to accept the statement Suffice it to say that there Is never a time in New York when ono wishing to gamble cannot havo Ills de sires gratified. Nevertheless there is n panicky feeling around tin; Tender loin these days, and cltizeus of shady occupations walk warily, for pub licity is still screaming of vice and graft In Gotham, nnd the Investigating committee in nt work In the land. The big four of tho inquiry aro Dis trict Attorney Charles S. Whitman, Al derman Henry H. Curran, chairman of tho investigating committee; As sistant District Attorney Emory It. Buckner, counsel for tho committee, nnd Supreme Court Justice John V. GoiT, who is to havo charge of a John Doe Inquiry and la expected to pre side at the trial of tho Itosenthal sus pects. These men are in earnest and have tho confidence of tho community. Tho Rosenthal case has made Dis trict Attorney Whitman one of the really big men of tho metropolis. It takes n nimble mnn to stack up in New York, for Gothnm is full of able men, akio full of knockers. The iop ular motto In the big town Is that a man must "deliver the goods," nnd nobody amounts to much who doesu't "put it over." In other words, Now York Is looking for results nnd meas ures n man by what ho actually ac complishes. This Is but modern slang for Judging a tree by its fruits, which has been un honored modo of charac ter reading for 1,900 years. How Whitman Makes Good. The talk of the street Is that Whit man Is making good In tho Itosenthal case. IIo himself says nnd nearly everybody agrees wltli him thnt ho not only has had little help from tho IolIcc, but that he lias uctually been blocked by the police. Mr, Whitman was born in Connecticut nnd is forty-four years old. IIo graduated from Am herst and studied law in tho New York university. Ills first oOlco was that of assistant corjwratlon counsol. no then became a city magistrate and Inter was made president of tho board of magistrates. It was In this capacity that he stirred up tho animals by n series of raids. In 1007 ho wns ap pointed by Governor nughes n Judgo of the court of general sessions nnd in 1010 was elected district attorney. Personally Mr. Whitman Is quiet in speech nnd manner. IIo Is tho sort of man who makes fow false moves, but can get a prodigious amount of work dono without seeming to hurry. IIo goes to tho heart of n matter in tho shortest posslblo tlmo nnd digs to the bottom of n enso for tho facts. Ills methods havo been illustrated by this very Rosenthal case. With little help They Are Ail Fighters and Are Very Much In Earnest. from tbo police nnd despite nasntitta on him by tho mayor nnd police com missioner, ho has continued dettowluc the goods. By Inducing sovorfll men to confess ha hns worcn n chain of vl denco nronnd one nontenant of jU ud has unearthed enough widcDoa 6t graft to set tho whole city 'by th ears. In the expresstvo language of the day, Whitman Is making good. Goff and the Lcxow Inquiry. Justice John W. Golf, who is to bo the trial Judge, was tho nttornoy of tho famous Lexow investigation eight een years ngo. Now York has never for gotten the thorough manner In which ho carried on that inquiry, nnd It has created universal satisfaction that ho Is to be to prominently ldcutllled with this prolK), which promises to go vn deeper than did that of 1894. Goff has boon a terror to tbo underworld arcr since thnt day. IIo was born hi Ira land nnd came to America in boyhood. Ho wns educated in Cooper Union, rend law and was admitted to the bar In 1S70. In 1SSS ho wos mudo assistant district attorney and later wns the Ho will havo as great nn opportunity to distinguish himself ns did John W. Goff In tho Lexow inquiry or Charles E. Hughes In the Insurance investiga tion. Buckner is thlrty-flvo yenrs old nnd has had n brilliant career. IIo has boon in New York only flvo years and lias been admitted to tho bar but four, nnd yet ho has mado nn cnvlablo tuuno ns clean, honest, capable nnd a hard hitter. Ho was born In Iowa nnd Is tho nou of n Methodist minister. Tho boy's oariy llfo wns spent In Ne braska, where ho was graduated from high school and next taught school to enru money to put him through col lego. It wns then that he met the proocnt Mrs. Buckner, nnd both re solved to mnko enough money for a college education before they married. Tills took pluck, but thoy won, young Buckner not only teaching school, but acting as a court reporter. They en tered tlie University of Nebraska in 1900 and n yoor later were married. In 1004 Mr. Buckner graduated, after which ho entered tlw Harvard Law school. Tho samo year lve was admitted to tho bar, 1008, Mr. Buckner distinguish ed himself in n counterfeiting cane and wns appointed nn assistant in tlto office of tho United States district nttornoy. In tlw following two years Ito partici pated In tho prwecutlon of tho cele brated sugar trust cases. In 1010 ho beenme nn assistant to District Attor ney Whitman of tho county of New York nnd slnco then has had charge of Uw prosecutions In the criminal branch of tho supreme court, ono of tlie most responsible positions before tho Now York bar. A Responsible Post. In this capacity ho has conducted such famous cases as thnt against Daniel O'Reilly, tho counsel In tho Thaw case, tho "Biff" Ellison trial and Photos by American PresB Association. NEW YORK'S GEAFT PROBERS. 1, EMORY R. BUCKNER, ATTORNEY OF THE INVESTIGATING COM MITTEE; 2, ALDERMAN nENRY H. CURRAN, CHAIRMAN OP THL COMMITTEE; 3, CHARLES S. WHITMAN, DISTRICT ATTORNEY; 4, SUPREME COURT JUSTICE JOHN W. GOPF. counsel of tlw law association in the Investigation nnd prosecution of elec tion frauds. For twelvo years he was recorder of the city of New York nnd In 1900 was elected n Justico of the supremo court. Alderman Currnn has had several bouts with Mayor Gaynor through the public prints und has not minced words. It wus ho that demanded an investigation when Gnynor wns as serting that there was little or no po lice corruption. Curran rejoined hotly through the papers nnd then got enough signatures of aldermen to com pel tho mayor to call together the board. Tho nlderrncn themselves did tho rest Tho investigation was order ed, and Curran was placed nt tho head of It His next niovo was to demand enough money to carry on tho Inquiry, and when tho mayor refused to call together tho board of estimate to mako tho necessary appropriation the alder man nccused him of trying to block tho inquiry. A Career and an Opportunity. The samo chargo wns renewed when there wns an uttompt to foist on tho commltteo nn nppolnteo of tho cor poration counsel as tho attorney for tho Investigation. Tho committee it self called on District Attorney Whit man to appoint Its counsel. Whitman named one of his own assistants, Em ory R. Buckner, and it is safe to say that Mr. Buckner will bo tho official attorney of tho inquiry, IIo will nt least if Chairman Curran has anything to say about it Mr. Buckner is to havo a frco hand. mo enso of "the shooting showgirls," Lillian Graham and Ethel Conrad. For a man who wns admitted only four yenrs ago this career Is nothing short of phenomenal. Today ho has nn op portunity such ns falls to tho lot of few lawyers, young or old. Ills prevl ous brilliant work holds out tho prom lso that ho will make good. One of tho most hopeful things nbout tho "big four" In the pollco graft In vestlgntlon Is thnt they aro nil fighters. Thoy will need to be If they buck up gainst tho "system" In New York city. It will not be child's play. Ev ery effort will bo mado to turn tlie In qulry into a fnrce, to withhold testl mony, to block its progress nnd to cov er up and whitewash tho wholo nffnlr. Hnvo these men tho moral stamina and tho Intellectual ability to thwart these attempts nnd to unenrth the truth? If so thoy will start a new era not only In tho government of New York, but In thnt of other Amcrlcnn municipalities, for there Is no question thnt If thoy go to tho bottom a mass of corruption will bo turned up that will causo n revolution In city government Already Philadelphia has started n parallel Investigation Into hor own po Ilco system, Detroit Is having an over hauling of n slightly different kind, nnd other cities will follow. It is high time. Municipal conditions In America havo become n disgrace and n menace. It Is charged openly on ev ery hand that there exists n working ulllanco between criminals and tho po lice. 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