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EDITION Nae | “ Circulation Books Oper to All.’” is PRICE ONE CENT. NEW YORK, MONDAY, ‘EMBER 21, 1908. WCLELLAN HAS Mayor-Elect Announces that To- Night at 9 He Will Make Pub- lic the Names of the Lucky Ones Chosen for High Offices. SOME OF THOSE WHO ARE CERTAIN TO LAND. Not Much Stock Taken in the Story that M’Cullagh Will Re- ceive a Christmas Gift in the Way of an Appointment. Tammany Hall leaders and the ex- Pectant army of officeholders, who have heen making slates and smoking politi- Pal dope ever since election day, will kknow all about ‘the Mayor's cabinet at 9 o'clock to-night. ‘Mr, McClellan told an Evening World Feporter this afternoon that he will an- ~ Bouhep the names of several of his ap- ointees at that hour. An early caller at the McClellan home, (No. 10 Washington Square, North, to- day was John T. Oakley. Mr. Oakley is 9 stronk tip for Water Commissioner, although the Mayor-elect refused to confirm the appointment, saying that be Would keep his information .until to-- ight. A Ife-sized rumor, with sleigh bells on it, was driven.into Tammany Hall to-day. It was that John McCullagh is'to be first Deputy Commissioner of Police under Willlam McAdoo, There Mave been so many surprises — HS LIST READ FAVORITES LOSE AND BOOKS WIN i two POLICE PHOTOGRAPHS OF EMIL TOTTERMAN, WH IDENTIFIED AS THE MURDERER OF SARAH MARTIN IN A LODGING-HOUS i { Capt. Arnold, at Odds of 6 to 1,) Outctasses His Field and Wins! the Second Race Easily from Tribes Hiil, } INQUISITIVE GIRL IS HOME.FIRST IN THIRD. Falernian Started the Talent Off with a Winner, but Subse- quent Results Had Bad Ef- fect on Players’ Rolls. THE WINNERS. FIRST RACE—Faiernian (11 to 10) 1, Harmakis (9 to 2) 2, Louis Kraft 3. : SECOND RACE-—Capt, Arnold (6 to 1) 1, Tribes Hill (5 to 1) 2, Ran- kin 3. THIHR RACE—Inquisitive Girl (4 to 1) 1, Bronx’ (8 to 1) 2, King Croker 3, FOURTH RACE-Exclamation (7 to 2) 1, Bondage (2 to 1) 2, Mauser 3. RACE TRACK, NEW ORLEANS, La., Dec. 21.—The track was lumpy and heavy, to-day, Horses worked illes over it early in the morning in 1.50, but the wind and sun improved considerable tn Tammany Hall under the leadership 6: Charles F. Murphy that the rumor ‘was not greeted with the open derision hat was secretly felt for tt. John McCullagh, is an avowed Repub- Vigan, He was forced out of the Police | Department by the | ministration, He was then appointe: E\irerintendent of Wiections for Metropolitan District by the Republican Acministration at Albany, and t st of his energy trying to.get square with Tammany. H His deputies went into Tammany dis- tricts and arrested hundreds of regis- _tered oltizens, hustled them to his office, kept them prisoners for hours, and ar- felgned them in police courts. Out of | were not vistble to the naked eye, Then came MeCullagh's conneotion mith Phil Doblin and Lemuel fly | ulgs in the alleged*attempt to bribe Kongress to vote for the purchase of | Holland submarine torpedo boats. Mc- | Cillagh was summoned to Washington | to testify and his testimony earned him | bye ill-will of the State Republican ma- phine. He was turned down for reap- intment, McCullagh does not live in this city. home is in Goshen, N. Y, In the ®steem and veneration of the Police De- partment he ranks with Dr, Parlchurst $nd Frank Moss, Some Who ¥ Us The Evening W beo, the Second Dep Get ‘There, pan ounees weeks Commissioner- James Collins, Superintendent of aye, whose fflends have.advanced at obosition that he stioul al- to remain on his record, which exceptionally 00d. William n, Who was Commis- of Water Supply under Van and_is leader of the Bleventh ly District, will, it ts said, be pointed Gorpming oper of Public mores. under zh Preeid - Phearn. Tt is velieved that Davee more hears to accept the place. although it known that he was desirous of a important — commfasionership. ich until recently he expected to get. ae Present policy of Tammany, “how: is to not appoint any mah Who bia an important place under Van vel oe EA a, "CLELLAN SENT HIS RESIGNATION TO ODELL, WASHINGTON, Dec, 21. — Speaker non to-day received a letter from epresentative George B. McClellan ung that he had forwarded his resig- 08 a @ member of the House © he resignation becomes effective Teceipt by the Governor. re “hts WEATHER FORECAST. ~ Forecast for the thirty-six hours ending at 8 P. M. Tueaday for New York City and vicinity: Gen- R by the time the races commenced, The weather was perfect and the attendance $4,000,000 SHRINKS TO ONLY $289,821 emarkable Dwindling of the fmembers of the Naval Committee of | TF excellent. R, . fix and a alt tusfonee Be Saag cieralen io) iteiet Sa | Litigation Started byDaughter : "$ Kauwell MY 8 . Hiawatha, ae sen $ 2) RIVERHWAD, L. 1, Deo. 21.—Phe Caybon, od ou de 48 9) sonal fortune of the late Austin Corbin, {Heed 108, Remit 8 fate ae se éstimated at: the tlme of his death at ence, 100, Creamer. 6 10 20/ upward of $4,000,000, has now: shrunk SFC kooe’ Won envity, Thie—1.28 28.0 | 1h the thoufands, a condition due 4 rushed to the fre an runaway race of It, H trouble at any stage of the trip ani n all the last fur- i makls was hard rid the hundreds arrested the convictions Jong, ‘but he could never get to the win- 1m SECOND RACE. One mile. Bett Starters, whts., Jocks. St.HIf.Fin. Str. Capt. Arnold, 26, 0 BY 6 es HIN, 107, 1 W. Tlen'sey’ Stand Pate 03, a 3 met, 99, Livingston 8 a0 Van Neat, 9, Mishers. 10 7! 1 ‘Wainw'ht,11 11 11 . Won"eagity, Time—1.41 8-3, front at the start and set a fast pace. stretch, where they tired. ‘furlong Capt. !ounch. THIRD RACE. Whip will go to Judge tency F, Hag- there appears to be no way of getting pry of Brooklyn, if he wants it, Judge | Seven furlones. Betting. | the matter out 6f the courts for a good erty is Patrick McCarren’s law Bix ay many years to come. Per the z es Depity Commission- 12 4| he, first apprieal of the personal hip ts claim: yy the friends ot 4 95 l wealth of Mr. Gorbin, made in 1897, put ormer Civil Justice Want Lynn, 15 4-5) Wea * in, é dat this writing he appears to ya| B M0 201 it et $4,902,809..The’ total, cash balance isle ttc nat 1 og Misanthransy a % Blto-day is $289,821, ‘The real estate of expectation is that several of | h ® i 2 I gaerarcment’ heads Appointed. Ie iia Beas 0) Ron 2 bee Corbin sill in US Bd ve oe. ee x9) Democracy om, the Greater New| Mudred 21. 08 HlxKine 10 Pitted up, 18 bsta dibs AU pac Ma ak Sida ‘or! pert Evora erat Anon Ynthe} Start Rood” Wont easily. Timeni.30. vast estate up to $1,847,200. is does n best to win. up or go to the extreme outside. rushed through his for home, ‘cue the corner and saved ground. Girl came away and won as she pleased, MAN CONFESSED TO FOUR MURDER Qther Crimes. on piace on trial to-day in the county Brooklyn, for the mur- der of Captain George B. Townsend on | his schooner, the George Bucklen, off ae vag Hoare ore on Nov, 10 éast, ari only admttted ite eaike pate old 0 of Tellus threg other rally fair to-night; Tuesday part- ly cloudy, probably light. rain; elon westerly winds, shifting to south y, men at various times. Burness said he ‘wa stired of lying in prison aut wanted to go to the elec- Ina ‘sworn statement to the District- Attorney Bursess sak said that his frat murder was in Boston, where he shot a. teamster for. interfering in a fight with another ge The secon he kiled, he " yar cae a pier i off flying in thie race, ernian got onde rai | was never in at the end. Har- ting. PL Bon Mot and Elsie L. rushed to the They showed the way until well Into the! has fought it constantly and there {s In the final | Arncld shot out of the} and, coming ‘with a rush at the | pears to rather enjoy the situation. gnd, won, golng away from bis, field. | fast as the executotrs have obtained funn tie carly stages: they finished | favorable rullpgs‘on the points raised sirong in ithe last furlong and ‘passed tiring horses, Inquisitive Girl had to be pounded the At the start she was; crowded back and Fisher had ot pall fe field in the run down the stretch, and, nearing the turn In the run home Inquisitive Frank H. Burness, on Trial for Killing Captain of Schooner, Admits His Guilt and Tells of . Personal Estate Left by the Late Austin Corbin Through entirely to the constant ltlgation which has gone on since the will of the Long Island Railroad magnate was first filed. ‘To-day Judge Nathan D. Petty, of the Suffolk County Surbogate's Court entered a decree settling the second Judieial accounting of the executors and trustees of the estate. This decree con-; firms what everybody knew, that tre- mendous inroads on’the estate had been made hy the fight in the courts, but no one thad any adequate idea of the ex- tent of the shrinkage. Mrs. Anna Corbin Borrowe, daughter ef the late Austin Corbin, is the only member of the family who has kept the estate in the courts, Since the will was offered for probate Mrs, Borrowe id no indication of her Jetting up. She ap- As by Mrs. Borrowe, she has taken ap- peals and unless she 1 conciliated by any means represent all that is left of the fortune of Mr) Corbin, There ts @ good deal of valuable real property left which does not figure in the present fight at all. At the present rate of decrease, 0 HAS BEEN SPECIAL EXTRA. ARREST TWO ‘WOMEN AFTER Mrs. Mary Ann Lopez and‘her mother-in-law, both of: No, 2098 Lexington.avenue, were arrested on a charge of shoplift after an exciting chase for a block through a crowd of shopper: ‘for a One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street department store, and Policeman Newman. They were taken to the West On Hundred and~ Twenty- -fifth street station, where a quantity of silverware was*found in their muffs and satchels. pe LATE RESULTS AT NEW ORLEANS. Fifth Race—Annie Max 1, Bud Embry 2, Ivernia 3, Sixth Race—The Regent 1, Satire 2, Malay 3. MUNROE MATCHED. TO FIGHT SAILOR SHARKEY Winner of the Match Will Meet Jeffries for the |there will ‘be oe Uttle Jeft of the per- sonal erate of the railroad magnate in a few yi SANTA CLAUS DIES WAC CHIMNEY Joseph pric oa Suffocated While TryMng to Climb Up tie Flue in the Fireplage—Wife Found Him Dead. To satisfy his children as tothe pos- sibility that Santa Claug would have enough room in the chimney of: their home at No. 1735 St Mark's ‘avenue, Brooklyn, Joseph Corrigan crawléd in- to the fireplace yesterday and | pushed his head up the flue, He was thete a long time before the children thought to, call for assistance in getting him out. Mrs, Coftigan dragged him from the Sseclaony and found that he was dead. ‘The case. was reported to the} Cor- oner’s office, and an investigation is under way. It te supposed that feaaban ducements, the bids for the contest to be opened on Jan. 15. Championship—Entire Gate Receipts ‘ Will Go to Victor. , Jack Munroe and Tom Sharkey will be the principals in the next big heavy-weight battle. They were matched this afternoon to fight on or before March 1, 1904, ; The winner of the match has been promised a battle with Jim Jeffri tor the world’s he=vy-weig..i championship. Sharkey and Munroe will fight before the club offering she best in-! There are, however, several restrictions to these bids. 1 San WINNER ‘WILL TAKE ALL. ‘The winner of the match is to take the entire gate receipts. ‘The question of @ side bet was advanced, but was objected as Munroe’s backer, Issy Putter, refused to make a wager at even money, stating that the sailor would be @ warm favorite at the ringside and he would therefore get-the worst of the odds, Putter, however, offered to bet any part of $5,000 at ringside odds and STREET CHASE ing on West Cne Hundred @nd Twenty-fifth street this afternoon) o The two women were caught by Miss Mary Lloyd, detective Sharkey refused to fight inj‘ San Francisco, claiming that he had been given the worst of it in 'Frisco}| BRIDE FOR KING ALFONSO. and that they would not let him fight there when. he was matched to! Come RAR ING meet Jeffries. Munroe, on the other hand, would not listen to Sharkey’s proposal for a sixeround contest in either Chicago or Philadelphia. Francisco, Chicago and. Philadelphia are, therefore, barred from bidding for the contest. t | | | LAWYER ATARGET | TW COURT QUARREL fears an Ink Bottle Thrown} ' by Angry Ppponent After He Had Been Challenged to “Go Outside.” (Special to The Evening Worl) NEW BRUNSWICK, N.'J. Clarence Kelsey, a Jersey Cty lawyer, And ex-Senator Robert Adrian had a Uvely tilt here to-day in Mr. Adrian's | office. The trouble a during the tak- ing of testimony in ¢ William Fisher bankruptcy case. Mr. Kelgey put a question to a wits Jectionable to Mr. the Jersey City ta ess which was ob- | ian, and he called | “shyster." Mr. Kelsey was boiling mad in a sec- nd. Jumping to his feet, he referred to the former President of tho New Jersey Senate as a skunk, could whip him, and that he was taking advantage of a court-room to say things he would not dare to say in the street He Invited Mr. Adrian tothe street there and then, and declared that he Was not afratl to take a round with him, “Coine out!" he yelled, but Mr. Adrain made no preparation to leave the com- forts of his own office for a cold quar- rel on the sidewalk, Lawyer Kelsey became w longer he talked. stand fn front of him on the tab tat: two ink-weils, He ¢ of them and hurted it at Mr. Adral it flew past hishead and landed amor xome law books in the book-racks ‘The Jersey City law: ad for the socond ink-well, but Lawyer Das: chal grabbed his arm and prevented him. Kelsey was caimed down. Then he declared that he would nisti- tute a sult for $50,000 against Mr, Adrain for defamation wf character. Referee Parekr’s efforts to restore order were not of much avail. The hearing came to! a sudden end. Mr, Adrain, while he became a little pale, did not eeem frighte (ERLE eel pan PAINTER FELL TO DEATH. Winflela Nafis, a painter, fell from the second-story of a building at No, $13 Courtlandt avenue, Borough pf the Bronx, this afternoon and was in\tantly killed. He attempted to step from a window to a scaffold and missed his footing. Nafis lived at One Hundred and Fifty- aixth ‘street. and Courtiandt “avenue Charles Icker, the c ting painter in charge of the job, was arrest = shal SENATOR HANNA IMPROVED.| Senstor Marcus A. Hanna, of Ohio, who has been ill at the Waldorf-Astoria since Saturday attack of grip, was ste i cd, it was Ria} that he would ave his rol m | | to-morr. and that t Kk Was not |icoked upon as altogether @ serious nature, ————=_ | MADRID, Dee. 21. nish newspaper: According to the A Project is on yt for the marriage of King Alfonso the daughter of his aunt, the Infanta Paz, ta de In The Ini ela Paz ts the duvaria, eld- Adalhert of Auiria del Dec. 21.—! and sald that he | | “Old Cob Dock,” in the hotel at No. 9 James slip. */to ask him his name. POLIGE CAPTURE nIPPER OLA ER IN ECORD TIME Emil ee Found in a South Street Sailors’ Boarding-House, Answers Exactly to Description of Man Who Killed Sarah Martin in a James Slip Lodging-House, HAD ON SHOES AND SWEATER and Coeneiite the Sanedt with Crime Said by Police Who Are Working 2 4A. Ae SUNDAY—Sarah Martin butchered fn little hotel Jone. 5 P. M.—Murder reported to police, 7 A. M. MONDAY—Detective McCafferty saw wrapping paper of p age which had contained sweater and shoes purcha! Bridgeport ard on which was written the name “Fred C. Belemo,’ 7.30 A. M.—MoCafferty discovered there was a schooner named “Fred. !] 7.40 A. M.—McCafferty found that the Belemo arrived at Bridgeport | last Saturday, the day the shoes and sweater were purchased. 8.15 A. M.—McCafferty on a train for Bridgeport. 10 A. M.—McCafferty on board the Belcmo, learning that Emil “Totter. | man was the only mcmber of the crew discharged , and | that when in New York he always stopped at the sailor's boarding. | house at No, 37 South street. 10.25 A. M.—McCafferty at long distance telephone telling Ins McClusky, in New York Police Headquarters, “Send men to. South street. for Totterman.” 11.20 A. M.—Detectives Cronin and Henneesey entered No. 37 souk! 6treet. r 12.15 P. M.—Man entered boarding-house wearing a sweater and new shoes. 12.102 M.—Cronin sald to this man: “You ate Emil Totterman;_ come with us. The Chief wants to see you.’ 12.40 P. M.—Totterman in Police Headquarters and positively Identi- 4 fied as the man who took Sarah Martin to her death chamber. | knife coated with blood found in his pocket. 1 P. M.—Photographed? for the Rogues’ Gallery. Then the “third de- Fmil Totterman, a sailor, who has also gon2 under the name of Emil Nielsen was arrested this afternoon in a sailors’ boarding-hous> at No, 37 uth street and was charged with the murder of Sarah Martin, known as Totterman ‘wore a sweater and shoes which the police said ba mur. | derer had. Besides that, Totterman kas been identified beyond doubt at the witnesses, who say he is the man who took Sarah Martin to the room. and who was last seen with her. When Totterman was searched at Police Headquarters a knife with: blade three and a half inches long and covered with blood was found in his clothing, concealed between the sweater a: ‘ his undershirt. The police say that this undoubtedly is the knife with which Sarah Martin was butchersd, On the slip of paper found in the room, the paper in whick had been wrapped the new shoes and sweater which had been purchased Saturday in Bridgeport, Conn., Detectives McCafferty, Cronin and Hennessey found this ~ inscription: “Fred C, Belemo. Emil Totterman. $22.'" | HAD THE SHOES AND SWEATER. i They found that Belemo was the name of a schooner which is now tied up at Bridgeport, Conn. The detectives went through the sailors’ boarding- a houses and at No. 37 South street they found Totterman. They did not have He wore the new shoes and the sweater. * ; Totterman, who the detectives found had gone under the name of Cary Neilsen several years ago, the mime which was written on the hotel regise ter by the probable murderer of “Old Cob Dock,” was hurried to the Oa: street station and from there to Pollce Headquarters. Totterman was taken before the witnesses in the House of Detentioi and all who had seen the man take Sarah Martin to a room aeclared out hesitation that Totterman was the man, * Investigating further the detectives discovered that the schooner Belemo. arrived at Bridgeport Saturday, and that then Totterman was di and was paid $22 in wages. TRACED TO BRIDGEPORT. . The man who murdered Sarah Martin purchased a sweater and a pair shoes in the store of Meigs & Co., Bridgeport, Saturday and came to} York, carrying the sweater and shoes in a paper bundle. After but us March ta. Pilar, was born —— KILLED BY COAL WAGON. Christian Andersun. seven years old, of No, 164 Thirty-fifth street, Brooklyn, was run over and Killed by a coal wagon ‘driven by James Molloy, 1780 Twent: cugh, to-~ charged wit “sixth vatreet, in. tliat alloy was arvested omicide, of No. admitted that he had been discharged trom the Belem in the wor.a” after the fashion of Jack the Ripper the murderer bloody garments, put on the sweater and shoes, left his shirts shoes in the death chamber and stole out of the place, Totterman denied that he was the murderer. Hoe sald he had p the shoes in Portland, Me., and that a sailor had given him the aw