The evening world. Newspaper, November 5, 1901, Page 1

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ELECTION | Exe NO. 2 Che _ EXTRA NO. 2 aw NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVE TEBE R 1901. PRICE ONE CENT. : ~ LOW MAYOR BY 30,000 --———+090-«.—— JEROME ELECTED DIST.-ATTY: _ VAN WYCK BADLY BEATEN. ee | | CHEE! DEY DIDNT DOA TING To Me: —e¢eo—.--- Fusion Ticket Carries with Thousands of Brook- lyn Votes to Spare---Shepard Silent Under Defeat. Croker Concedes (hav, Though Hoping for County Ticket Shepesy in the Lead in Queens and Low.in Richmond. 8 1.4.0:8-598 98292 OOEOOTESO 'CROKER CONCEDES } | LOW’S ELECTION. = Coe Sere ry Says Brookivan Did Did It, ‘bute that County: Ticket Is Safe. P.M. Richard Croker eald to an Evening World re= yn has elected Vow. Tam cozfident, however, that we ty ueket. z As Mr. Croker. finished speaking he looked around for Van” $4 Wyck, who » moment before had been standing beside him. ‘ Van Wyck had disappeared. Somehody hed scen him put c |. his coat and leave the Wigwam. NING V Following are the indications ae ie EVENING WORLD ‘PHONES iOHEDA returns up to 10 P. M: JSHEPARD SILENT NEWS ie JUSTICE JEROME.: ON THE RESULT. can ° LT Tc Mea AS DS Tee Gee ee en og eer rt woe : Low's majority Mayor of Greater New York 30,000. 0 telephone at nls nummer nome in| WAUEIWiN Rey In 19 election dusricts out of 7 941 2 Defeated didate Says He Has No State-! ten non nore onan Detighted to Hes that ieee ier a Make asvet. | Jerome's majority for District Attorney. . 4,500 Suenos Mayor heeded deere oe Justice and he expressed his de- 3 Van Wy ck, Supreme Court Judge, Defeated 25 000. “That's good,” cried the strenuous can- “Do you feel that :nighty efforts have Edward M. Shepard said at 9 o'clock to-night: » Wao ER eT eee Seccess. been made to knife you?” waa asked the “The defeated candidate for Mayor has no statement to make ; Grout’s majority for Comptroller a A . 35, 000. eon fae FO for L : ; cos “was the rep ‘but I feet re Re Peabody said Mr. Shepard wou'd wait to see where he bad Sb, that doesn't sea he said cred." I have been ele ated hefore telling why it hapnened “TL still think that Tam elec Fornes’s majority President Board Aldermen 7,200 Cantor's majority for President Manhattan 10,000. ‘Oakley's majority for Sheriff, Manhattan . 3,500. Sea Selmi PAPER eehebeerberbiers eieieeiibiieh FEPEEEE EEE PEER EE LOOKS VERY BAD”’-- Van Wyck. : Mayor Van Wyck, asked about the election at 7 o'clock to-night, said: “It 4 looks bad,” and turned away. Ocsneoccoccoscen00c00ac00000000000% i “SAFE TO SAY | AM i! ELECTED. “7 LOW. —-——--e $e -—_- Seth Low has been elected Mayor of New York. : : The returns indicate tiat the entire fusion ticket, with one exception, has gone: Mayor-Elect Gratified at Defeat of Van Wyck,/ through, though by a smaller vote. i Oaklev, the Tammany candidate for Sheriff, may win. Dot cele ous. mos eonle: ; For District Attorney, 265 Election Districts out of 887 give Jerome 42.67%; ‘Unger, 41,214. This will give Jerome about 4,500 pluralty. The Evening Wor!d's edition issued at 6.18 P. M. and the white light turned on in |The World dome at the same instant gave the first news. “Brooklyn has elected Low, but we have carried the county ticket,” said > = Richard Croker, at 8 o'clock. y Van Wyck has been badly cut and is undoubtedly defeated. 1,100 election districts:out of 1,537 in Greater New York give Low 206,747 and appears as if Mr. Grout ana Mr.! rest of the week to take a rest. Shepard 183,382, 645 election districts out of 1,537 give Fornes 116,300 and Van Hoesen 103,479. 160 election districts out of 887 in New York County give O'Brien 23,231, and NEW JERSEY VOTE ‘Oakey 229 for Sheri. 1D einielniniinleteeieteieisielelnininiebeteiniet : Fornes were elected) and Van Wyck defeated. mom mown “All [am anxious about new is Jerome. From the figures 1 have it) OQppears that he will prove to be a winer, too, Mr. MORE THAN 25,000. The Associated Press report on the| Clarke, 31,103; Greenbaum,, 32,646; about 4,000 votes. This indicates that| “I suppose it is safe to avaumu that Judiciary shows the following figures | Van Wyck, 26,692; Knox, 30,616, and/in a total vote of more than 300,000 ]1 am elected. All I have to say Is on 200 Election Districts out of 898] Dayton, 30,824. in the judiciary, Van Wyck will run fn Manhattan nd the Bronx: This shows that In a vote of 60,000 | behind 20,000 and that he will be | 2at 1 am very much gratified at the he| I am going to Grea: Barrington,| O'Brien, 60,810; Blanchard, 31,978;| Van Wyck runs behind his ticket | b b Support tendered me. It bears out t going ring! Lean exmore then: 25,000. anticlpations of my friends. | Mass., to-morrow afternoon at 3.30 “Iam also gratified to know that it / o'clock and shall remain there the Low gave out the following CROKER CONCEDED LOW GRUDGINGLY AT THE LAST. Richard Croker had almost to fight his ‘way into Tammany Hall when he re- turned from his dinner. He found there @ great concourse of braves aasernbdled in the room of the Executive Committee. Ofr, Croker took hie seat at the head of the table at 6 o'clock. He wore a blue cutaway suit and had a pink In his dut- tonhole, His face was smiling and con- Hdent. Qpposite him wan a telephone operator fn direct connection with Police Head- ,Quarters. Thomas F. Smith, Mr. Cro- "Ker’s private accretary, read the roturns Qs thoy were received, ‘Those seated close tv Mr. Croker Bround the table were John F. Carroll, Maurice Untermeyer, Maiirice Blumen- thal, John A. Mason, Judge Warren Foster, Alfred Downes, private svcre- tary to the Mayor; John C. Maddox and Commissioner of ‘Accounts John C, Gertie. 3 ¥ Mayor Van Wyck came in after bulle- tins had been read for about ten min- utes. These bulletins had not been dis- couraging but the Mayor elbowed his way to Mt, Croker's side and stood there smiling. The gloom In Tammany increased as the bulletins continued to foreshadow a fusion victory, When the Evening World extra announcing the election of Low reached Fourteenth street the rank ond Mle of Tammanyites threw up thelr hands. A crowd uf young Republicans with a band marched past the Hall at 7.15 o'clock. They made the bulldings trem- ble with the vigor of the yells and drowned the voleen of the: readera of the bulletins In the big assembly-room, From Tammany there came not :in an- awering yell. Tho impression of defeat Was too depressing to aliow of cven' a y Uluct at enthusiuem, Mr. Croker let tt be known to the faithful assembled In the Wigwam that he conceded the election of Low at 8.20 o'clock, When this news fitered through the crowd in the big hall upstairs do- parted ellently, Within half an hour the men who were had a small audience hanging on for hopeful news of the county ticket=newn that never came. MURPHY KNEW IT ALL THE TIME. reading the returns Commissioner Murphy war seated alone in his office at Pollce Headquar- ters when seen by an Evening World reporter. “Tt don’t take much of a guesser,” he said “to tell which way things have gone, -I'don't want to talk about it.” a WAS BAD LY M IX ED. 190 election districts out of 887 give Jerome 29,897, and Unger 28,171 for District- uncon’, Twenty districts out of 73 in Queens give Low 3,221 and Shepard 3,754, a ma- — ifort of 500 tor Shepard. Half the election districts in Staten Island show a Low majority of 94. The first four wards of Richmond give Low 5,939; Shepard 5,282. The same- wards - give Grout 5,879; Ladd 5,143. { Count Difficult and State Claimed by Republi-' cans—Disputed by Democrats. New Jersey Republicans claim the) for, as it is believed fully @lestion of Franklin Murphy for Gov-|the ballote bear pusters nu:| LOW WAY AHEAD eraor by 1200, ‘The Democrats impute i> heir pariten in dierent sacs’ | ON STATEN sean this and say that the count of the voles Domoorats say that if Seymoour ix de-| will show that James W. Seymour will po ed it will be largely due tot win with a small margin, probably 3,008. | Reports from all parts of the State; show the vote to be heavy. ‘In the citles, S adroniic ‘ounty hae propabiy Democratic by 5,000, but in | the Republicans have District, and West Fifteen Mark like Newark, Jersey) City, Camden; t0- hopes ‘ mmany captain in that 4 boken, Trenton, Paterson and Elizabeth] M. agan's election as Mayor over| tricte from which returns hi = Gola tm One each had sates ar there was much pasting of. ballots and|/George T. Smith. celved up to half-past § o'clock {ndi- ry weld im One Day ba Bromo Qu! both sides claimed to be the gainer by, it. money oun it ‘falls ry A long and compiloated count fe looted A ‘Hudeon County re-efected State Sena-| cated a majority of more than 660 for ‘tor Robert M, Hudspeth, the fusion candidate for Mayor, In He ato

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