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oe, | All SS _the N ews. | PRICE ONE CENT JEROME FLAYS MURPHY FOR OFFICE GRAB — -District-Attorney, Aroused by| Culkin Appointment, Talks Out. «BEGINS AT COURT CLERK. Attacks Nearly Every Appointee of McClellan and Compares with Low’s Men. Aroused by what he terms the un- bawarrantable removal of William M. f¥uller from the chtef clerkship of the ECourt of Special Seasions to make room '€or Former Alderman Charles W .Cul- Xin, whose appointment Charles F. Mur- |phy has ordered, District-Attorney ; Jerome to-day made a bitter attack }upon Murphy, Tammany Hall and feverything about Tammany generaily | } to-day. | | It appears from this tatk that Tam- | f many Hall has given him to understand ‘that he cannot expect the support of | the organization next fall and that he Fis out to make a stiff fight. { “The Fuller matter." Mr. Jerome enid, “ts a small affair, but the prin-| ciple which prompts his removal Js a isd large one and Is to be deplored ' in our present city covernment. Protests Bartender. “T don’t believe there ty a man in| this city with mora democratic instinct | than I entertain, or one mora svluctant to criticise a man on account of his antecedents. A bartender mirht make an efficient public officer In some ca- {pacities, but I protest the Iden that {the vocation in Iteelf affords a com- Ppetent training for cMcers in our courte and in places of public trust in our city. } “For instance, T don't think such a pave the same idea in regard to other | efMfices, both judicial and clerical." Mr. Jaromo then spoke of Clerk Ful- | faithful and consctentious services | bie the city,” saying he had yet to finc| fm person who had come in contact with | {arr Puller to even suggest @ criticism | of his work. “The most crying evil in our muntel- : pal political system to-day,” Mr. Je- { rome continued, “Is this subservience of | ‘the people to the dictates of the one- man power, and that man in a postion {to wield his irrevocable influence with- ‘gut any direct authority from the vot- ers. . "I don't think that there fs any man who believes that all of the appoint- ments made by Mavor McClellan were } made because he believed they were the “West men for tho places, As to Social Qualifications. I have no doubt that Water Com- { wmtasioner Oakley is a very good fellow, Feut I do not know ho has any epecial qualification for the posii%n to which {ihe wes appointed. Dock Commissioner [Featherson has hosts of friends, who xen he {a all right, yet Chief Engineer i Bensel, of his department, has made a study of water front !mprovement and [.I never heard that Featherson did. Dr, Darlington is a personal friend of mino, * and yet I do not belisve that he himself { witl contend that he bas as good quall- [ foations for the position of Health Commissioner as Ernst Lederle, who | as ousted from his job because of pol- Aes, | ‘Phousands of dollars were spent on “Dr, Lederie’s education to fit him for the povition he held, vet he was Taking up other appointments, the District-Attorney remarked that Mayor Low's appointees apparently were all * good men. Reviews Low's Appointments, “Take Deputy Commissioner Piper, for instance. He is a man who came from a generation of soldiers who have been accustomed to handle large bodies of men; who worked for years at the mal salary of $4,000, Hampered by impediments and detriments, he worked houre a day away beyond any reasonable requirement. Wouldn't it seem reasonable to retain such a man? I say this without making DY reflection upon his successor. “It seems to me that Commissioner Piper’ alue to the ality is quite ‘eat an that of Thomas McAvoy. What 18 the use of saying a man is doing aa well as he can when such obyious things @re done? “If, when I came into office Die- trict-Attorney, I had appointed my sub- ordinates for political reasons, who are »im every way inferior to the men who Jected myself most justly to criticlam? 4nd it wouldn't palllate the offense Git to say that Jerome 1s doing the best Ae can. How Js a man doing as well 4s he can when it {8 obvious that he = can do better? _ =. "it will not do to say a man Is better 7 fitted for these offices because he is a 2 Pleasant man or an agreeable man or a Gyatrong man with the Wall street ele- “Ment, “It will not do to say a man is doing 4 well as he can when his training for the oftice !s manifestly Inferior to that , of ® man muoh better qualified for the place, It will not do to say that a man 4s doing as well as he can when a man in the street can see a number of ways that he can do better—yes, very much y better, ; “Not Pipe-Dreame, Tabet teeta | Valet Joues to actually administer the | Mamie died, Carlton sent for me, tell- | and examined the bottle he bad told me | left the oMce, would I not have sub-| if “ou saay aay Mhat there are all piper | SAYS CARLTON ORDERED HER TOKILL WIFE Mrs. Gorman Says He Told Her to Use Chloroform on Dying Daughter. | ‘Two days before the death of Mary | Gorman Carlton, the inst wife of Fred- | erick E. Carlton, notorious as the Brook-| lyn “Bluebeard,” the man plotted to| have her murdered by her own mother, ay according to a statement made to- to an Evening World reporter by M Michael Gorman, of No. 20 Bridge| street The story told by Mrs. Gorman Is, in effect, that Carlton pried to accomplish the murder of his wife exactly as Pat- rick did that of Mill!onaire Rice, using fatal anaesthetic. Speaking of Carlton's alleged attempt to have her murder her daughter, Mrs. Gorman said: “On March 8 last, two days before ing me that he was worn out from nur: ing her, I was very {ll at the time anz had to fairly drag ingoelf tu their home | “Mr. Carlton had told me and my grandson that Mamie was only suffer-| ing from neuralgia. He had concealed the fact that she had tetanus. He insisted that she was not sertously 111, but needed my attention, as he had worn himself out. Told Her to “Quiet” Daughtor. | “When I reached the hous: he said) that my daughter was occasionally very | nervous, but If I wanted to sooth her) to take some absorbent cotton and) saturate {t with a liquid in a bottle he had put on a dresser a few feet from | my daughter's bed. He sald the stuff was harmless and that I could hold it over Mamie's mouth and nostrils and in this way quiet her. “He then went into an adjoining ‘oom, saying that he was going to gat some sleep. I know that he did not go to sleep, but watched me constantly. “My daughter was unconscious on the bed, in @ deep sleep. She did not be- come nervous at all. After waiting at her side for several hours, I went over | the soothing Nquid was in. “I found that it contained a power-, ful solution of ehloroform and that if I had done as Cariton requested me, 1 would have caused the death of my child and have been er murderer. He told me that Mamie had slight convul- sions and that this chloroform would subdue them. I later learned, although | he kept {t from me, that these convul- sions were the most aggravated symp- toms of tetanus. Not Told of $8,000 Ineurance. “Before Mamie died she and Carlton told me that her life was insured for $1,000. After her death I asked him for the fewelry that I and my husband had given to He said he hed pawned ‘it all. n I gpoke about the $1,000 Insurande he said thet the greater rt of it had been taken up in paying for the funeral exponses. “Not long after that 1 met the under- taker who had burled my daughter at a funeral in New York and I remarked to him that it had taken bractiony, at of Mamie's ingurance to vay his bills, He replied that I was vefy-much mi taken If I thought my daughter wal only inured for that amount. and said: “why, Mrs. Carlton was insured for P00. T know that for I cashed the insurance check myself,’ “Though I am convinced that this man caused the death of mv daughter for his own ends I am efrald that he In too slick to ever be brougttt to jus- Uee."” Stories Amuse Carfton, When the aleged "“Blucbeard” was seon In the Raymend Bircet Jalil. to- day concerning this declaration of Mrs. Gorman and the announcement of the pellce that he had been identified as he De Rodriguez who hed married, plundered and deserted Airs, Luln Kit- tering. of Rochester, he seemed only amused It {s very probablo.” he remarked, initly, to an Evening World reporter, the authorities here will indict me for murder. I such action on th for ANY expecting somo irepart or at least other oharges than tered against me. —— = indletments those now 1 dreams, but we have to be practical. It is Impractical to deprecate the hold- ing of office by such mun when. there others right before sour own nose superior and better qualified, What is going on in Spocial Sessions tls going on In all the other It seems abaolute rot to say people are doing as weil as they an when the most cisual observer can see they could do better. 1 suppose Hooker was doing as well as he could when he made those appointments. “I suppose Justice Deucl was doing as well as he could when he read the proof sheets for Town Topics. 1. sup: pose a number of Sunrems Court J ices did 48 well as they could when they were interested in commercial en- terprises and private transaction: “Can you persunde anyone who {8 not talling for publication that they were doing ax well aa they could? Of course they eay they were acting for clien but does that make any difference? “Gross Improprieties, “Lhe gross tmproprictics of thelr ac- tions should be obviaus to them even it were not forbidden by the statutea “Cana Democrat, Ihave no quarrel | with political parties as to what they | do, but 1 feel I have the right to critl- olge If any one wishes to listen of mat ters going on oefore us in the city. ‘1 do not want to Ko Into persopality regarding Mr. Murphy, As He ia not, a iiblic officer. he ts not ‘subject’ to the criticism that an oMfice-holder hag the right to exnect, | “Bo far aa T know, he is trving to de what Js rit. in so far as his vre- ecestors have done right.” — TAFT GUEST OF JAP MINISTER. TOKIO, July %.~—Gen.’ Terauch!, Jap- anese Minister of War, entertained Seo- retary Taft and pi ¥ at a lune! eon and garden p In the famous DONT SPE “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ from Photograph Taken To-Da: Cariton, N30 YEARS TO BROTHER Miss Janette . Suffern Telis, Why He Cut Her Off in His Will. BY ALICE ROH “Blood is thicker than water,” the old adage, but there Is a gtay-halred woman living In a cottage nestling at the foot of the | Ramapo Mountains in Suffern, N. Y.. | who has lost all faith tn ‘he encient proverb. She is Miss Janette Suffern, sister of Edward T. Suffern, who was cut off without a remembrance from her brother's will. “To the person known as my sister, Janette Suffern, 1 give absolutely noth- ing whatever,” runs the will, | runs lonely, Uttle | “Dead to Each Othe “Note. We (meaning his sister and himself) have heen practically dead to each other, except so far as businens reiutions compelled recognition, most of our lives, and it is my wish, desire and | firm intention that this condition shall | continue ufter my decease. Tu my relatives I give nothing what- I have mentioned this merely to avoid question, because, since we berame of age, we have been sparated, and there has beer no pardicular atfec- | tion existing between us that 1 am/ aware of." To Mrs. Thompson, “my best friend,” Buffern bequeathed all the contents of his tome, and $10,009 to boot, which the executors are directed ito pay promptly. All the residuary estate, real and por- sqnal, goes to the Catherine Henrietta Suffern Fund, of Christ Church, at Suf- fern, Mrs, Thompson, however, has a/ Ife use of all personal belongings of the testator in thg house, No. 70 Weat Eleventh street. Sister Tells Her Story. Mins Janette Suffern stood on the porch of her little cottage and shook her head sadly when asked about the unusual aotion of her brother by an Evening World reporter, “It 1en't #0 that my brother and I had & quarrel when we were young,” sald Mies Suffern, “but I won't hesitate to say that there was no great affection between us. “For more than thirty years wo have | gone our different ways, he leading 4 gay Ufe in New York, which ts one of the most wicked spots on earth, and me trying to live down by a humble ex- fetence all the shadow his manner of life brought on the name of Suttern, Historical Estate. For miles around lies the Suffern es- | tate, and within a quarter of a mf of | the lonely woman's cottage t# the old Buffern homestead, where George Wash- | ington once had his headquarters and where Janette Suffern and her brother were born, The town of Suffern was founded dy Janette Suffern’s great-grandfather, “The Suffern estate reaches from | call, | with Mise Wilson, Sloatsburg to Talmuns,” said Miss Sut- fern, "and if there 1s ono spot on it} that is dear to me {t is the old home- stead. This iny brother has seen fit to deprive me of, and for this 1 will prob-| ably contest the will, | “My brother never cared for my. way of iiving, 1 have always been a hum: ble woman and f Ike to do good for | others. I give monvy freely to charly | anc the church and | love .inimais, i Alone, but Contented, “1 live here all alone, but 1 wim cor tented, 1 nave seen so much wicke amgng men (pat J never cared | ry, although I had plenty of op- portunities, “Ours dy a proud family,’ sald Miss Suffern, “ang a worthy one, ‘There has been "Judge Suffern in every gouetu. | ston sings my great xraundfather settled here. It seems too bad, doesn't it, that | all thi mily notorinty xhauld come | how am the lagt one of our | famaly ? | eo SOCIETY GIRL SUICIDE. Willing Had Bee from Insomnl, Sufferer and Mind Was Unbalanced, VOLEDO, Juiy The body of Mise JAbby Willing, aged twenty-five, wa {found in the Maumee River, above the jeity, to-day, She hed been missing f |two days, and when her hat and pock- e@tbock were found on the bank the river was dragged and the body re- ardens surroundin, arsenal, The ‘abinet, elder statesmen and many off cera of army and navy were’ pre: nt, ‘The party humbered covered. Miss Willing was prominent [ “Circulation Books Open to All.’ | ““BLUEBEARD” HOCH AND CARLTON OBJECTS OF EB WOMAI HOCK, GETS o HOCH REPRIEVED (Continued from First Page.) his efforts to convince the State’s Attorney, Lawy. appeared and created a sensation by producing the needed money. Thompson said he “hated to see a man hanged for the lack of a few paltry |, hundred dollars” and produced the money, REPRIEVE GRANTED Hoch’s attorney immediately called up the Governor and announced| that the money needed was all at hand. | was granted. Jailer Whitman went to the condemned man’s cell and told him of his From the depths of his despair Hoch became a rejuvenated He chuckled and laughed like a schoolboy and cried out so the whole good fortune. man, corridor of the jail could hear: “I knew my chance would come.” Miss Wilson's identity with the ¢ FOR FOUR WEEKS, ase 1s still a myatery and why Lawyer Thompson {ntervened and made a gift of the needed money has not been learned beyond his own explanation that he hated to see a man hanged for the want of a paltry few hundred do The reprieve was granted over Mars, the long-distance telephone by Gov. Dineen in a talk with the State’s Attorney and Hoch’'s counsel, ‘At 2 o'clock this morning Jatler Whit- man was eroused to answer a telephone Some person, who refused to give his name at the time, announced that he would appear at the jail at 10 A. M. prepared to furnish money, the lack of which, it has beon @ieged, prevented Hoch from completing the legal records required by the Illinols Supreme Court in cage of an appeal Jailer Whitman attached portance to the notification at the hour named Dr, Montwomery appeared wt the jail ed tman that they were at onee to the ¢ m Mttle fm- But to-iay Thelr talle conyin were in earnest and st taken for a new appe Hoch Protested His Innocence. WPhree nours before the tme set his execution Hoch had not given up hope ef clemency. Although there seemed ittle probability for interfer by tha Biate, as the result of the acti Goy, Deneen and the State Bi rd Pardons in refusing bim further Priove, Hoch believed he had yet a chance Jor life Hoch slept soundly through the nigh, rotiting about 10 o'clock. He awoke only nee, about 8 o'clock, and complainod oF havin a feeling of nause but soon FOUND BURNED TO DEATH. ANSONIA, Conn.. July %.—Alone in her home with two dogs her only com panions, Mrs Elizabeth Risse wi burned 20 death to-day. the charred re mains of her body Seine found tn the ruins after the house hed been levelled to the ground, ‘The origin of the fire fy not known, bu e are suspicions that t house was first ransacked b hares It won't do to have that trouble go on. It Means Ruin. Stop Coffee 10 days. Use POSTUM sang in the choir of ler churn soenitiy fell asleep end declined tous meal He the nse compara’ y sump- WOMAN'S STRANGE LOVE! ” Alfred H, Thompson Mr. Then the reprieve of four weeks it his usual hour ners in the | FOVE WILL G0 TO UAL IF Re DOESN'T PAY , Magistrate Crane to Enforce | Order that He Give Mother $3 a Week. James Edward Foye, manager of the Waldorf-Astoria brokerage office of | Charles G. Gates, will have to support | his mother or go to Jail. Incensed by ROOSEVELTS rofile of Carlton, from Photo- graph Taken To-Day. man made on his mother through the newspapers after he had caused her ar- rest for asking him for money to keep f] sent for Mra. Foie to-day. After hearing her story, he ordered her to make an aMdavit and then hand- | ed her a summons to serve on her son, Atrecting him to appear in Harlem | Court on Monday and show cause why he should not contribute to his moth- 8 support. Young Foye had an inkling of what was {n store for him and left hurriedly for Saratoga last night. The fact that | he has neglected his mother and taken occasion to insult and abuse her through ithe: Deesiaent went from Ovater Hay [Cle outils Breve tas not amectes les : : standing with John W. Gates'a coterie | to Coney Island on the naval yacht | SR00e Min von Mill be in charge at Syiph and landed at the Atlantic Yacht | Siratoga of the branch of ‘the Gates ub, Sen Gate. ‘There they were met | brokerage offices which will be operated | the werk at the New Yorke Ausoetavion | ‘ere during the rasingveesson, for Improving the Condition of the | If Magistrate Crane hanpeng to be #lt- DODGE SHOWS | Presf4ent Roosevelt and Mrs. Roose- velt were on Coney Island to-day, but | confined thelr visit to the Sea Breeze Home for Chikiren at ‘Twenty-ninth strect and Surf avenue. ‘Che amusement end of the Island was not visited ana the laments of the preas agents could be heard at Sandy Hook. naition of ibe ting In Harlem Court when Foye re- Poor, waieh maintains the Sea Breeze | turne jt will ndt go well with the young Home and temporary hospital for the| nan. When Mrs, Fove told bim today care and cure of children affilcted w ct | of the unfillal conduct of her prosperous The phil- | son he sald: magnificent) “if T can get this man James Edward | tubereuloida in various forms. | anthropy, which is doing | work, was c res.dent by Jacob Riis. |" Mr. Riis and sais daughter and R. Ful- | Cutting headed the reception cot on the c I. N. Sie send him to jail if he doesn't care for his mother, I would like the chance." When Mrs. Foye appeared before Mag- istrate Crane to-day she had plenty of John ‘Arbuckle, on y evidence ; missioner Darlington, Deiano, | °° lepine Pyidence: to: Teove her Hoffman Miller. John am Bevins, | Character and standing. Theodore Wolsey. Arthur Milbanl letter that convinced the Magis- Augustin J. Smith and Constant A that she repre- irewa i Inspector Cross, mounted. and Capt. | 22% 5 3 ration Dy Dr, Dooley, of the Coney Island precinct, | Martin Burke, of No. 127 Lexington ave- ‘ud charge of the police. There were | nuv, who stands in the iront rank of fifty men in uniform id twenty In his profession, This read {plain clothes on duty from Sea Gate to | Sea Breeze. President Roosevelt recog- Decetber 20, 1904. nized Capt. Dooley and shook hands | ‘This ts to cortify that T nave known with hy After Iuincheon at the club-house the | Florence M. Foye twenty-three years, President and Mrs. Rooseveltand the|and during that timo I have always Peas were taken to Sea Breoze In| known her as @ good mother, a con- Fee ae ealce aye ttle wtlents’ Wore | scientious nurse and an hones: woman they Neanl the President was on the | She haa had a desperate struggle for way to, ae them. ee | existence, but has always acted he Presidem and his wife spoke to each of the Ittle ones. It w Signy eee, Speietlay ene to see the pale faces lieht up and the} pain-marked” eyes sparkle as they | Passed lone the lines. After Inspec ing the hospital the I'resident. mide a short addrass from the v Hae on the sand Then he went thing for a deserving mother to be so pack to the Atlantle Yacht Club unkindly treated boarded the Sylph and steamed awuy (erutally and unkindly treated for Oyster Ray with Mrs Roosevelt, Mr. RE Rits and Mise Riis. No, 127 Lexington avenue. Indylike manner. all she has done for them ta a mystery I cannot solve. She has spent thous en eta | ands of do‘lars on them, Tt ts a terrible Rock Ballasted New York to Chicago A rock. ballasted railroad means a clean line—no dust, This important feature with large observation platforms, high-class dining car service, and an eighteen-hour schedule makes The Pennsylvania Special the perfect all here wl Hr him aan’ gulls wer train between New York and Chicago. |iven to hin, MW was. rainin hard, and as Hoch Bi ul the patter he bemoaned the Ly. New York,, Lv. Chicago . 00045 P.M. | "1 fear that it ts going against me," he told: the guarg, "07S SMainat me, To Asxistant Jailer O'Neil he sald he felt “tine.” One the night who had been watching him t of the demned man As }yade hin good-by Hoch sald } “What's the matter? “I'm not going | yet. If they ‘bang me to-day thes” will | murder an Innocent man, Let them go | ahead ae For Invigorating Breezes 5 CENTS AND A TROLLEY to aHome bythe Sea Half Hour from Herald Sq, 1] EAGT ELMHURST, ci. on Picturesque Flushing Bay: || theldeal Place toLive, end Postal for Circular and Views, Bankers’ Land and Mortgage Co., SAT MANHATTAN AV., Brooklyn, N.Y. ROCKERS | ene i Special (wats Cur entire stock of Plain and Fancy Kockers at Closing Out Prices, Chalr (like cut), cobbler | ag Paty y fin- ish, Wort $5; speci 2 50 |B $2.50 Reed Rockers. rere G1,25 $3.00 Upholstered Rockers,,..$1.75 Children's Rockers tn ail styles at very low prices. Porch Rockers as low as $1.25, McCIAIN, SIMPSON & CO,, 539-41 8th Av., N.W. Cor,37 St., Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Ete. QCA OR CRED +355 P.M. | Ar. Chicago. 8.55 A.M, Ar, New York,. 945 A.M, VIA PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Wo ATTERRURY, peral Manager, GFO. W. soYD. General Passenger Agent mhing we know of will make the wi FOR THE COUNTRY } Satter than)" box, Or twordt our pep | prean, wholesome candies are ham to wel away from home. and no depen | Arena ame nelatane state usually found at riral shops FRIDAY ONLY. sf) CHOCOLAT! VANL. » CHOCO ouxn L0c | TRG pairTne,...POUND 10c eres ORTED FRUIT AND 5c | Seo Shoconarms...- POUND 1 OLD-FASHIONED SUGAR i at NTS AN, WINTENGHELNS).,.Pounn 20C ATES 24c) ©H ALL CHOCO- rouxn 25C | 54 BARCLAY Sr. COR.WEST BWAY | <0" 29 CORMIANDT Sr | COR. 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AUCKLEY, widow of| LAUNDRY WANTS--FEMALE, Jamon Henry Oltver. 7 Funeral saturday at 2 P.M. from ner | OO e tere late reullence, 43 Tompkins st., Stapleion as OU Wrens dats Se helper, Hotel Revalten, SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK . | MONDAY MORNING W! i, ’ ee