EIGHT WHITE SOX ARE INDICTED

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Defunct American newspaper Not to be confused with New York Herald Tribune, International Herald Tribune, or New York City Tribune. New-York TribuneFront page of the November 16, 1864 edition of New-York TribuneTypeDaily newspaperFormatBroadsheetFounded1841Ceased publication1924; 100 years ago (1924); merged with New York Herald to form the New York Herald TribuneHeadquartersManhattan, New York City, New York, U.S. The New-York Tribune (from 1914: New York Tribune) was an American newspaper founded in 1841 by editor Horace Greeley. It bore the moniker New-York Daily Tribune from 1842 to 1866 before returning to its original name.[1] From the 1840s through the 1860s it was the dominant newspaper first of the American Whig Party, then of the Republican Party. The paper achieved a circulation of approximately 200,000 in the 1850s, making it the largest daily paper in New York City at the time. The Tribune's editorials were widely read, shared, and copied in other city newspapers, helping to shape national opinion. It was one of the first papers in the North to send reporters, correspondents, and illustrators to cover the campaigns of the American Civil War. It continued as an independent daily newspaper until 1924, when it merged with the New York Herald. The resulting New York Herald Tribune remained in publication until 1966. Among those who served on the paper's editorial board were Bayard Taylor, George Ripley, and Isidor Lewi.[2][3] History[edit] Daguerreotype of the Tribune editorial staff by famed later Civil War photographer Mathew Brady (1822–1896), taken c. 1850s. Horace Greeley (1811–1872), is seated, second from the right. Editor Charles Anderson Dana (1819–1897), is standing, center. The New York Tribune building, today the site of One Pace Plaza in lower Manhattan. The Tribune was created by Horace Greeley in 1841 with the goal of providing a straightforward, trustworthy media source. Greeley had previously published a weekly newspaper, The New Yorker (unrelated to the later modern magazine of the same name), in 1833 and was also publisher of the Whig Party's political organ, Log Cabin. In 1841, he merged operations of these two publications into a new newspaper that he named the New-York Tribune.[4] Greeley sponsored a host of reforms, including pacifism and feminism and especially the ideal of the hardworking free laborer. Greeley demanded reforms to make all citizens free and equal. He envisioned virtuous citizens who would eradicate corruption. He talked endlessly about progress, improvement, and freedom, while calling for harmony between labor and capital.[5] Greeley's editorials promoted social democratic reforms and were widely reprinted. They influenced the free-labor ideology of the Whigs and the radical wing of the Republican Party, especially in promoting the free-labor ideology. Before 1848 he sponsored an American version of Fourierist socialist reform, but backed away after the failed revolutions of 1848 in Europe.[6] To promote multiple reforms, Greeley hired a roster of writers who later became famous in their own right, including Margaret Fuller,[7] Charles Anderson Dana, George William Curtis, William Henry Fry, Bayard Taylor, George Ripley, Julius Chambers, and Henry Jarvis Raymond, who later co-founded The New York Times.[8] In 1852–62, the paper retained Karl Marx as its London-based European correspondent. Friedrich Engels also submitted articles under Marx's by-line.[9] Marx resented much of his time working for the Tribune, particularly the many edits and deadlines they imposed upon him, and bemoaned the "excessive fragmentation of [his] studies", noting that since much of his work was reporting on current economic events, "I was compelled to become conversant with practical detail which, strictly speaking, lie outside the sphere of political economy".[10] Engels wrote "It doesn't matter if they are never read again.". In the same correspondence Marx disparagingly referred to the publication as a "blotting paper vendor". Nevertheless, Engels cited this career as a positive achievement of Marx's during a eulogy given at his funeral.[11][12] Edgar Allan Poe's poem "Annabel Lee" was first published in the newspaper as part of his October 9, 1849, obituary, "Death of Edgar A. Poe", by Rufus Griswold.[13] In addition, Poe's "The Bells" was published in the October 17, 1849, issue as "Poe's Last Poem".[14] Political influence[edit] Founded in a time of civil unrest, the paper joined the newly formed Republican Party in 1854, named it after the party of Thomas Jefferson, and emphasized its opposition to slavery. The paper generated a large readership, with a circulation of approximately 200,000 during the 1850s. This made the paper the largest circulation daily in New York City—gaining commensurate influence among voters and political decision-makers in the process.[15] During the Civil War Greeley crusaded against slavery, lambasting Democrats while calling for a mandatory draft of soldiers for the first time in the U.S. This led to an Irish mob attempting to burn down the Tribune building in lower Manhattan during the Draft Riots.[16] Greeley ran for president as the nominee of the Liberal Republican Party (and subsequently the Democratic Party) in the 1872 election against incumbent Ulysses S. Grant in his bid for a second term. Greeley was unsuccessful and, soon after the defeat, checked into Dr. George C.S. Choate's Sanitarium, where he died only a few weeks later. Tribune editor Whitelaw Reid purchased the paper following Greeley's death. In 1886, with Reid's support, the Tribune became the first publication in the world to be printed on a linotype machine, which was invented by a German immigrant, inventor Ottmar Mergenthaler. This technique allowed it to exceed the standard newspaper size of only eight pages while still speeding up printing time per copy, thereby increasing the overall number of copies that could be printed. New York Herald Tribune[edit] Under Reid's son, Ogden Mills Reid, the paper acquired and merged with the New York Herald in 1924 to form the New York Herald Tribune. The New York Herald Tribune continued to be run by Ogden M. Reid until his death in 1947. Former Tribune buildings today[edit] The New York Tribune Building was the first home of Pace University. Today, the site where the building once stood is now the One Pace Plaza complex of Pace University's New York City campus. Dr. Choate's residence and private hospital, where Horace Greeley died, today is part of the campus of Pace University in Pleasantville, New York. On December 15, 1921, The New York Tribune bought two plots of ground at 219 and 220 West 40th Street. The headquarters that The New York Tribune built at that site is now the home of the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism. Archives[edit] Copies of the New-York Tribune are available on microfilm at many large libraries and online at the Library of Congress.[17] Also, indices from selected years in the late nineteenth century are available on the Library of Congress' website. The original paper articles from the newspaper's morgue are kept at The Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin. See also[edit] History of American newspapers References[edit] ^ "About New-York daily tribune". ^ Studio, Times (1939-01-03). "ISIDOR LEWI DEAD; LONG A JOURNALIST; Member of Herald Tribune Staff Was 88 and Had Been News Writer Since 1870 COVERED THE CHICAGO FIRE Also Wrots of Historic River Packet Races--Saw Lincoln on Way to Inaugural". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-10-01. ^ "Editorial staff of the New York Tribune.," Library of Congress. ^ Glyndon G. van Deusen, Horace Greeley: 19th Century Crusader (1953) pp 51-58. ^ Mitchell Snay, Horace Greeley and the Politics of Reform in Nineteenth-Century America (2011). ^ Adam-Max Tuchinsky, "'The Bourgeoisie Will Fall and Fall Forever': The New-York Tribune, the 1848 French Revolution, and American Social Democratic Discourse." Journal of American History 92.2 (2005): 470-497. ^ Paula Kopacz, "Feminist at the 'Tribune': Margaret Fuller as Professional Writer." Studies in the American Renaissance (1991): 119-139. online ^ Sandburg, Carl (1942). Storm Over the Land. Harcourt, Brace and Company. ^ Saul K. Padover, Karl Marx: An Intimate Biography. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1978; pp. 301, 605. ^ "Economic Manuscripts: Preface to a Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy". ^ "Engels' burial speech". ^ "1883: The death of Karl Marx". ^ The New-York Daily Tribune, Tuesday, October 9, 1849, "Death of Edgar A. Poe", page 2. ^ The New-York Daily Tribune, Wednesday, October 17, 1849, "Poe's Last Poem", From the Union Magazine for November, front page. ^ Frank Luther Mott, American Journalism: A History, 1690-1960 (1962) pp 271-78. ^ Van Deusen, Horace Greeley: 19th Century Crusader (1953) pp 283-85, 289, 298-300. ^ "About New-York tribune. (New York [N.Y.]) 1866–1924," Library of Congress. Further reading[edit] The New York Tribune: A Sketch of Its History. New York. 1883.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) "New-York Tribune and New York Daily Tribune". Chronicling America, Historic American Newspapers. Library of Congress. Retrieved February 20, 2022. Baehr, Harry W. (1936). The New York Tribune since the Civil War. New York: Octagon Books. ISBN 0374903352. Borchard, Gregory A. (2008). "New York Tribune". In Vaughn, Stephen L. (ed.). Encyclopedia of American Journalism. Abingdon, UK: Routledge. pp. 343–345. ISBN 978-0-415-96950-5. Fahrney, Ralph Ray (1936). Horace Greeley and the Tribune in the Civil War. Cedar Rapids, Iowa: Torch Press. Guarneri, Carl J. Lincoln's Informer: Charles A. Dana and the Inside Story of the Union War (University Press of Kansas, 2019). Holzer, Harold. Lincoln and the Power of the Press: The War for Public Opinion (Simon & Schuster, 2014). Isely, Jeter A. (1947). Horace Greeley and the Republican Party, 1853–1861: A Study of the New York Tribune. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. Kluger, Richard, with the assistance of Phyllis Kluger. (1986). The Paper: The Life and Death of the New York Herald Tribune. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0394508777.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Lundberg, James M. Horace Greeley: Print, Politics, and the Failure of American Nationhood (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2019). Maihafer, Harry J. (1998). The General and the Journalists: Ulysses S. Grant, Horace Greeley, and Charles Dana. Washington, D.C.: Brassey's. ISBN 1574881051. Seitz, Don C. Horace Greeley: Founder of the New York Tribune (1926) online edition Archived 2012-05-24 at the Wayback Machine Tuchinsky, Adam. Horace Greeley's 'New-York Tribune': Civil War-Era Socialism and the Crisis of Free Labor (Cornell University Press, 2009). Van Deusen, Glyndon G. Horace Greeley, Nineteenth-Century Crusader (1953), standard biography online edition Archived 2012-05-24 at the Wayback Machine See also[edit] The New Era Illustrated Magazine External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to New-York Tribune. Wikisource has original text related to this article: New York Tribune Works by or about New-York Tribune at Internet Archive Works by New-York Tribune at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks) Library of Congress digitized all issues 1842-1866 Library of Congress digitized all issues 1866-1922 vteHorace GreeleyCareer New-York Tribune New York Herald Tribune Liberal Republican Party 1872 Liberal Republican convention 1872 Democratic National Convention 1872 United States presidential election Places Greeley House New York Tribune Building Rehoboth Related Mary Young Cheney (wife) "Go West, young man" quote Horace Greeley Award Authority control databases International VIAF National Germany Israel United States Other IdRef

EIGHT WHITE SOX ARE INDICTED

“Shoeless” Joe Jackson by Charles M Conlon is in the public domain.

EIGHT WHITE SOX ARE INDICTED; CICOTTE AND JACKSON CONFESS GAMBLERS PAID THEM $15,000

* * *
Players Promised $100,000, Got $25,000; Gandil Called Plot Framer; Accused Men Suspended
* * *
Charged Williams Received $10,000
* * *
Pitcher Weeps as He Tells Grand Jurors How He Lost 1st and 4th Games


CHICAGO, Sept. 28 (By The Associated Press). - Indictments were voted against eight baseball stars to-day, confessions were obtained from two of them, and Charles A. Comiskey, owner of the oft-time champion Chicago White Sox, smashed his pennant chasing machine to clean up baseball. The confessions told how the Sox threw last year's world championship to Cincinnati for money paid by gamblers.

Seven Sox regulars and one former player comprise the players against whom true bills were voted by the Cook County grand jury, and the seven were immediately suspended by Mr. Comiskey. With his team only one game behind the league-leading Cleveland Indians, the White Sox owner served notice on his seven stars that if they were found guilty he would drive them out of organized baseball for the rest of their lives.

Officials of Chief Justice Charles McDonald's court, desirous of giving the national game the benefit of publicity in its purging, lifted the curtain on the grand jury proceedings sufficiently to show a great hitter, Joe Jackson, declaring that he deliberately just tapped the ball; a picture of one of the world's most famous pitchers, Cicotte, in tears, and glimpses of alleged bribes of $5,000 or $10,000 discovered under pillows or on beds by famous athletes about to retire.

McGraw Waits to Testify

Around the courtroom at one time or another were some of baseball's greatest leaders, among them John J. McGraw, manager of the New York Giants, awaiting a call to testify tomorrow, and John Heydler, president of the National League, who went before the grand jurors this afternoon.

The exact nature of the information Mr. Comiskey put before the grand jury was not disclosed. The men whom the jury involved as a result of testimony uncovered by their owner were:

  • Eddie Cicotte, star pitcher, who waived immunity and confessed, according to court attachés, that he took a $10,000 bribe.

  • Arnold Gandil, former first baseman.

  • "Shoeless Joe" Jackson, heavy hitting left fielder.

  • Oscar "Hap" Felsch, center fielder.

  • Charles "Swede" Risberg, shortstop.

  • Claude Williams, pitcher.

  • George "Buck" Weaver, third baseman.

  • Fred McMullin, utility player.

While the grand jurors voted their true bills, Comiskey, seated in the midst of his crumbling empire out at White Sox Park, issued the telegram suspending those involved, paid off Weaver, Cicotte and Jackson on the spot and announced that checks for pay due the others would be sent them at once. With his voice trembling, Mr. Comiskey, who has owned the White Sox since the inception of the American League, said this was the first time scandal had ever touched his "family" and that it distressed him too much to talk about it.

"We will play out the schedule if we have to get Chinamen to replace the suspended player," Harry Grabner, secretary of the White Sox, announced this afternoon.

Cicotte Weeps for His Children

The rush of players to explain their parts in the affair started to-day, when Cicotte appeared at the Criminal Court Building and asked permission to testify. Cicotte wept, court attachés said, and expressed his sorrow for his two small children as he told how he did his utmost to lose rather than win the 1919 World Series after he had found $10,000 beneath his pillow where it had been placed by professional gamblers.

He said he lobbed the ball to the plate so slowly "you could read the trade mark on it" in the first game at Cincinnati, when he was taken out of the box after three and two-thirds innings had been played.

"This is just the beginning," Assistant State's Attorney Replogle said to-night. "We will have more indictments within a few days and before we get through we will have purged organized baseball of everything that is crooked and dishonest.

"We are going after the gamblers now. There will be indictments within a few days against men in Philadelphia, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Des Moines, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and other cities. More baseball players also will be indicted. We've got the goods on these men and we are going the limit."

The details of Cicotte's confession follow closely the story told in Philadelphia last night by Billy Maharg, former prizefighter, it was said.

Gandil Named as Plot Originator

The first to confess was Cicotte. He charged that First Baseman Gandil was the originator of the plot and induced the gambler to back the scheme and then corrupted his fellow players. The gamblers agreed to pay the crooked players $100,000. Cicotte believes they gave this amount to Gandil. Somewhere in the deal, however, $75,000 was lost. Cicotte said he believed Gandil or else Abe Attell, who acted for the gamblers, held out the money.

There was only $25,000 passed around, according to Cicotte. He said he received $10,000; Williams received $10,000 and Jackson received $5,000. Jackson, who took the stand after Cicotte, admitted that he had received the amount attributed to him. It was then that the grand jury voted the indictments.

There will be two indictments returned against each of the men, it is said. One will charge them with the operation of a confidence game. The other will charge them with conspiracy with gamblers to obtain money through the operation of a confidence game.

Conviction of the first charge carries with it a penalty of from one to ten years' imprisonment. The penalty for conviction on the second charge is five years' imprisonment and a fine of $2,000.

No arrests have been made yet. The indictments will be formally returned before the latter part of the week, it was announced at the state's attorney's office. Mean time the accused men will not even be under surveillance.

Cicotte Weeps on Stand

Cicotte's testimony was accompanied by tears. He was on the witness stand for nearly two hours. He cried, "I don't know why I did it. I must have been crazy."

Cicotte said that he found his bribe money under his pillow; that after the first game of the series he had gone to his hotel alone, and the money was half concealed beneath the pillow. "There was no note, he said, but he knew what it was for."

"Before Gandil was a ball player he mixed in with gamblers and low characters in Arizona," said Cicotte. "That's where he got the hunch to fix the World Series. Abe Attell and three Pittsburgh gamblers agreed to back him. Gandil first fixed Williams and McMullin. Then he got me in on the deal, and we fixed the rest. It was easy to throw the game. Just a slight hesitation on a player's part will let a man get a base or a run.

"I did it by giving the Cincinnati batters easy balls and putting them right over the plate. A baby could have hit them."

"Then in one of the games - the second, I think - there was a man on first and the Reds' batter hit a slow grounder to me. I could have made a double play out of it without any trouble at all. But I was slow - slow enough to permit the batter to get to first and the man on first to get to second.

"It did not necessarily look crooked on my part. It is hard to tell when a game is or is not on the square. A player can make a crooked error that will look on the square as easy as he can make a square one. Sometimes the square ones look crooked."

Cicotte said he had been troubled with his conscience ever since the series.

"I've lived a thousand years in the last twelve months," he said. "I would not have done that thing for a million dollars. I didn't need the money. My salary was $10,000 a year and my job was sure. And now I've lost everything - job, reputation and friends. My friends all bet on the Sox. I knew it, but I couldn't tell them that the Sox would lose. I had to double-cross them. I'm through with baseball. I'm going to lose myself and start life over again."

Current Page: 1

GRADE:9

Additional Information:

Rating: B Words in the Passage: 1330 Unique Words: 507 Sentences: 88
Noun: 524 Conjunction: 102 Adverb: 63 Interjection: 0
Adjective: 67 Pronoun: 111 Verb: 248 Preposition: 159
Letter Count: 6,037 Sentiment: Positive Tone: Neutral Difficult Words: 263
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