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jae PLURALITY FOR JEROME, Which Is unprecedenter mamas! 1,450; MCLELLAN, 3,485 about the election, ; The Hoarst mén are suspicious of y the count from ous Feature of the Election, The most conspicuous victory in yesterday's election {s that otto inepeccors | District-Attorney Jerome. Returns to-day give him a plurality over Osborne of 11,450, date not backed up by a political organization, ~| gone for him, Wola. ot Complete returns to-day serve to emphasize the force of i ‘| real to take the election to the ‘With the matter, Tho Tai y i a i i ‘ 9 fy all Ave peg Mayor of Toledo by the Republican party as its regular nominee, e in ee ence vals tality of 3,485 votes. t. Hearst contesting this election. District—contested the elec- %, -@t Patrick Chambers, the ‘Tam-| Many Hall stole the election, Bronx Aldormen, sitting as a canvass- pared pen ee toy Hip thelr Ne Hearst people. ‘a ie 8 vd is cash to the - “Bovreme Court, whieh uecited ina: the| {JEROME TO SIFT CHARGES. ry And that its decision could not “qyhe changed, if this precedent is fol-|fraud made by the Hearst people. He does not share the view othe only court to pass upon Mr. wg Votlna, Tim” Sullivan, was due to fraud, He thinks rather that it was due 3 wes ch sali gl rage at} ignorance of the election inspectors and tally clerks, * to him last nig’, and when it was ob- * “Wows that the oficial tount was to se McClellan's election he made this! most desperate since the days of John Y, McKane, a reas aki a. dbiah de bb Bares, In Staten Island things were declared to be so suspicious that Yi to ave to It lot boxes under surveillance and inspect the returns, contest this More than 690,000 votes were cast for the three leading candidates, of it to the bitter & which Ivins received 137,449, McCiellan 228,651, Hearst 225,166, ed & acheme by which th a printed tally sheet on which he Hately afiet Mr, Jerome heard) records, is to have th Ny sh Kee che. ge} they "wil be/togd fs appearing to have run ahead of his ticket. the vote in any district where ‘ 0) isk We Aecuabed te have acted seninet Metz is elected Comptroller to succeed Grout. “My office will do everything In its wer,” said, the District-Attorney, “to| to 23 for the Democrats. iw connection with the counting of the te, It is up to the Attorney-General, ever, to have @ recount made, not do anything except where «| lo crimes are charged, Mr. Jerome did not get up untll 10.29 Nelook, Then he had breakfast with his that was manifested by Hearst, M’CARREN SNOWED UNDER. pal Ownership candiates on the county ticket are elected, thelr jubilation at the Divtrict-attor. | ough President snowing him under, od that the late returns had| balance and the charge was made that the returns were being he "That's fine” Then returning to the | night. bject of the charges of fraud made! Om every side was heard the in Murphy's and Sullivan's districts he | there was evidence of the methods ( many ter down the ¥ ‘Of course I have not had time | lear Jerome were bei all over the east side, Perron re raegom Por Jerome workers on every side. yaployed by Mr. Mearst, 1 will go| protested he was nearly killed. er all this as soon an} get to cast thousands af votes, In spite of the precautions taken to prevent the courte will have ndthing to| “Golden Rule” Jones, and Jones had previously been placed in office as That the Board of Aldermen’ ts Complete returns for Mayor re-elect George B, McClellan by a plu- was cited as a precedent which William R, Hearst, in the face of the returns, claims the election, and be of influence in the event of] wil] contest. He says that he is confident that a canvass of the votes will Jonoph Krulish—Fuston candi-| show that thousands of defective ballots should have been counted for Aacrman in the Twenty-elhih/ him, and that.a recount of the ballots will prove conclusively that Tam- i ines, The “Marnatian and! \ ‘Bets on the result of the Mayoralty election are not being paid to- ‘ping, board for Now York County, de-|day, pending the contest and th, assertions of fraud made by the} Hrs of Aldermen wee supreme in:euch District-Attorney. Jerome has promised to look into all charges of the Board of Aldermen will Me H managers, however, that the delay in the returns from the “Hearst's contentions of fraud and Wegel | Eighteenth and Sixth Districts, those of Charles F, Murphy and “Big the storlos of fraud which were taken Brooklyn, it is said, was even worse than Manhattan, and some of the chances taken by the McCarren gang in their efforts to win were the « Hearst men started for Richmond to investigate and to keep the bal. tohers tallied ihe vote In It is sald that in the greater city there were more than 30,000 defective ‘the different election districts of this| ballots, making a total of some 620,000 votes accounted for out of a pegis- hy Every watcher was provided | tration of 647,000, with the Soclalist and Prohibition vote yet to be totalied, led vote. For the number of votes registered, the percentage polled beats all harges of fraudulent voting he ordered Tammany’s county ticket in New York is elected, Hayes, for Sheriff, candidate, McGowan is elected President of the Board of Aldermen, but Tam- ‘Will Prosecute the Guilty. many loses the Board, the Republicans and Hearst having 50 members ‘onecute those guilty of criminal acts Neither Ford nor Stokes developed the strength all along the line The whole county ticket of Patrick H. McCarren 1s snowed under, * Bird 8, Coler s elected Borough President of Brooklyn and the Muniols 's splendid victory, The election 1s without a parallel in the history of elections in this city, The District-Attorney, when he| Not since the night when the election of Cleveland or Blaine was in the “Fraud!” and on every atae | had been resorted to by Tam. |4 system of careful mathematica { Hearst and Jerome, Workers tor - ough yet to look into these mat-| While the count was on and before the polls closed men were telephoning» to Hearst and Jerome headquarters that Tammany thugs were assaulting erie of frond and other crimes One man with a broken arm reached the Hearst headquarters and dis- watehers| played his injury and setd Tammany was stealing the district and when he Defeat of the Political Bosses by the District. Attorney’s Candidacy the Most Conspicu- ¢ won by tt is the biggest victory ever accomplished by an indeperident candi- The fact that Flammer remained on the ticket, although no_candi- date, cost Mr. Jerome some 13,000 votes which otherwise would have Mr, Je- ied Its work | rome’s successful fight. Opposing the bosses of both parties, with no she count imay be **! machine behind him, no alliance with any faction, no campaign fund ex- ot be done before | cept that which came of voluntary subscriptions, and with the voters un- y the opinion at Tammany Haul] der the necessity of voting a split ballot, he succeeded in winning de- that tn. spite of Mr. Hearst's | cisively, The achievement has not been duplicated, except by one man, { | of the to the at day- Me and son, William Travers Jeromo, Louls F, Haffen has been re-elected President of the Borough of the! in tho Rutgers streo: flat, Me was| Bronx, Charges of fraud are made, hoarse from the speeches he had Cromwell, Republican, ts re-elected Borough President of Richmond, | ‘Make (n the Gileey House last night Cassidy, the boss of Queens, is beaten by 6,000 votes, Bermel, the can- wite ahi boy were bubbling over| didate of the Republicans ahd the Municipal Ownership League for Bors It was charg. | that gangs of repeaters had gone through the elty and t fraud, His Power Limited, | Assembly Flammer, Oshorne, Shearn, “That is as far as 1 can move tn the | Districts, (Rep.) (Dem.) (M. 0.) Matte-. It is not within the functions of, 1 ; 124 633 my office to order a recount of the vot 287 1,166 ‘and tuke any proceedings of that char-| 822 1,481 moter, The Atvorney-Ggneral can do 206 1,730 ‘thet and I can only act in concert wita 369 1,415 , : 289 1181 “T believe that ti delay in reporting 807 1,826 vote in the Bighteenth and sixth | 831 1,287 Assembly Districts was more dye to tn. 1,842 experience and stupidity on the part of 1,978 the election inspectors than to fraud. | Aly T had all my meu in every pert of the 1,619 1100 polling places In Manhattan and 1,636 ‘the Tironx tally up te vote on specially 1,561 prepared, printed tally sheets. Imme- 1874 Glately I heard tht there was nome- 2,141 Aning wrong in the counting of votes age J ordered these sheets locked up ana fh Uso them In the recount of the voto, |? 1,109 they are al! sworn to by i ‘ é 1,749 tohera” aS en 18 | Saan ' 3,by7 ne ‘aint FA , t 2,084 eA Arest Disayvotmement, ) | 94 oy ‘ K tot jy (Pren the Chicago. Titbuas | 2 : 3 1,124 “Wesh tad turned (ue dove loose trom | 36 i f 1,888 ' $7. ‘ ‘ 5 e 178 no resting-place, it had re- 26 4 uit hint 20 993 Le, L Axpocte’,” ode. muttered, | 20 4 2,765 YeRte will hassling peor the tn- 31 ‘ 8,602 3,635 Biss Wore yy! : ee mannose orem OE ETE VOTE FOR DISTRICT-ATTORNEY | Jer (Ind,) Sik 1,324 1,919 1,212 1,630 2,662 930 3,317 ins BETS ON MAYORALTY 979 1,756 1976 2,571 166 18 2,028 6,209 2412 10,042 2,872 6,215 Of & certain sine a8 a basis were bo- 2,425 Ing settled, bets on the general result} + 3,556 2,504 lation of Mutual divioends was as near | and % -. Br4 cone nh In Novemper and thereture .¢ 18 uh and nobody in the country oan find | pay divilends? A, I don't calculate It. business and the uniformity of past lures of the year before with ali no divide any assumed amount of earn- b s much excitement and bitternoss 4 id back a A I Is correct, 0 it een al c! c 088 a8 Wi ‘ought his plurality up to §,000, sald: | has there ‘as displayed Inst) | Moco nck became rattled “under jot computation.” He axgerted that It was not & mere matter of guessing, but |. toatay,” he sald, “I found there when 1 entered the company, I don’t wish to have it or the practices of the other actuaries fathered upon me. Other companies do just what the Mutual te doing. @ years the expenses of geiting business ‘Yous WOU: WEDNESDAY Ly couse, NOVEMBER 8, iyo, HEARST ANNOUNCES THAT HE WILL CONTEST M’CLELLAN’S VOTE, “I don’t give a damn to be Mayor, but, by God, I am going to see to it that every man who cast his vote for me gets it counted. 1 am going fo contest this thing and fight it out to the bitter.end, “We have won this election, All Tammany's frauds, all Tam- many’s corruption, all Tammany’s intimidation and violence, all Tam- many’s false registration, illegal voting and dishonest count have not been able to overcome’a great popular majority, The recount will show that we have won the election by many thousands of votes. “1 shall fight this battle to the end, in behalf of the people who have cast their votes for me and who shall not he disfranchised by any effort of criminal bosses.”—-WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST, HECEMAN CALLED ("32cm BY GOV. HIGGINS. BY PROBER HUGHES | crmens> car x. ‘Thankagiving tion: Insurance Inquiry Resumed | — “avundant prosperity hus blessed ie N a‘ Deople of this State in the past year, With Actuary McClintock No rumor of war nor threat of domes- tle violence has disturbed our peace- On the Stand, ful progress. Law and order hwy Prevalied within our borders; labor hay been fully employed; all forms ot in- President John R. Hegeman, of the J dustry have Mourished and the future Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, te bright with the promise of material who has made oath that that corpora and moral betterment; tion has always stood by Its polloy: “Now, therefore, im conformity with holders and «hat it has presented them Jf our anelent custom, I, Krank W. Hig- in gifts more than $8,000,000, was called J sims, Governor, do hereby designate to the witness stand phis afternoon at | Thursday, the thirtieth day of Novem- the legislative Insurance inquiry. ber, 1006, as @ day of general Thanks- ‘The story of Hegeman started off with | #ivtne to Almighty God tor the great the erowth from hundreds of thousands J benefite that we have received at his of doMars ia 187 to billlons of dollars J hands, in 194, In 18% the Metropoliton hi “Done at the Capitol in the elty of A surplus of $863.00, ‘To-day It hae Albany, this elghth day of November, surplus of $14,835,741, and Its capital 198 Fin the yeur of our Lord one thousand Increased from. $500,000 to 82,000,000. In T pine hundred and five, that period its ordinary Mfe outstanding “PRANK W, HIGGINS. riska have grown, from $1§2.081,077 to “Governor.” 31470124981. Dhe Increase on indus- : tral insurance has been from $147,768 297) r Le to $1,127,890.22. It recelved Inst year) * == = oe ja premiums $0,908,994, ax against only) AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. $6,000,000 tm 1887 | When tho legislative inquiry was re-) PIRST RACE—Belling; three-year-olds sumed to-day all of the legislators) nd ypwart: six and « ‘bat furlongs. were on hand on time, with the ex- ise aie ase ‘ é BW *Creattan coption of Assemblyman John \Mo (378) Incantation. Sas Keown, of Brooklyn. McKeown bie) ef Pe i feated yesterday, the only one of the bg Girdle |... five members of the committee who be sieeve i stood for re-election who was not a Soran He Feturned to office, ae Sid Bm H Tt was expected that James Hagen = pole ie Hyde, former vice-president of the! fy saayin' ©. i Equitable Life, would be sworn as a hy Rupsion, witness to-day, and that was the pro-| i i i gramme, but at the iast moment it was) 2 Drone tineee Gecided by Mr. Hughes to finish his! = Mf foyerglam is pit 5 examination of Actuary Emery Mo- i Clintock, of the Mutual Life, before | taking up any new line, | MoClinwck was in the witness stand} when the committee took its pre-elec- | tlon adjournment. Chief Counsel Hughes ( Adios ...! +All Right “OND RACE-—Handie “M3 Dedar 8) Tames Road went at hin to-day on the oid question mahi of why policy-holders’ dividends have| THIRD RACE—The two-year been shtinking copudstently during the 98 Fun Fa past twenty years, all the While the 836? Bellentoker hid company's earnings and its assets have 2 eur Tank 90 rling> a Increased. 985 *Mine Point 80 DMcClintook admitted that the caleu-| FOURTH RACE. BI right ag @ny human being could gvt Pantie tiem. ‘The dividend of one year, ue said, js predicted on the rate of the preceding year. ‘Lhe cacculation I» taade possible lo tell what the earaligs of ihe company for the year may be, and the resuits of the year oefore are uved aga basis, “The withase wi.ieds FIFTH RACE—Maiden two-year-old “We must always in mind that | furlo there should not Be violent Jerks in the BEF stantie iad figures elther upward or gomn were, 1 4 wey nast haye done my work as It should be don pt ae: s| #8 fault with it, Every actuary uphoids pay. How do you caloulate the gain trofa tiene ‘to. year out of which you! We know the general progress of the hts. ik And then you simply use the Ws modifications #0 aa to produce what you) pelleve to be @ just result? You do eClintock became rattled under a cal- ation, ‘The system in vogue In the Mutual “We'll take one company at a time,” remarked Mr, Hughes, “Well, IT am giving you the facts whout all of them.” | The witness sald tNat “the gond judgment of the actuary and the In- structions of the poard of trusteos" also cut a figure Inf the mathemation! computations which Increase or do not pollcy-holders’ dividends, McClintock said it was @ fact that for had exceeded the amounts derived from the “loadings” on premiums, He would be glad to see 4 change but he didn't think one would ‘ake place right away. It developed that in the Mutual Life dividends to polley-hoMers depended largely on what dividends other com: \ panies pay to their poliey-holders, In the witness's way of putting Ii, the matter of appearing to good advantage in comparison with other companies was most important, ARE BEING HELD UP Hearst Backers Refuse to Settle Until Official Figures Are Received. On the curb to-day only those bets that had been made with sivralities) for Mayor. end for District-Attorney FL being ‘held wp until defnite Mgures on | Y™: the result were ‘obtainable, Backers of Hearat refused, ax a rule, ‘Keholders to surrender th owe who had taken the Mo- while those who had bet were eoually {nalstent | went Inte the IN MCLELLAN VOTE - TG TIN Granger Beaten at Polls, ‘cited Gang, , in Juggled ‘Out of Decision | im’ on™" * 1s eee Says Fitzgerald In- According to the Fightet | cz! s33's, 4% away. from poy ACCUSED BY | WALLOP SAYS the public knows who handed them thet wallop, and 11 ‘Nhat’ hae you oun put your eoin on ierey "L haves more than one oocasiol erees tried to give it to’ tl ie ing toate eee firlea gh ) ry world’s gamolouaity eper in’ Oni 0. an ~~ tn r ‘By! ate tat morrew to ‘atop O'Brien from talking, ether uy Why He’s For Hearst, = . wasn't in trict Tong enough to Fitz’s View, y wail but T am a ottizen of Now York Want to see tots ‘Municipal Owner. or ship business @ through. y { exactly what th are te arian yy 4 Henry 4, Granger, & famous! “Fleanst will bo the next Mayor of/ YU can bot he's on the square, if Princeton athlete, son of Arthur Now Yo Granger, & Georgia millioratre, Hes fn 0 critical condition fn the Alabama Hotel at No. 15 Baa} Bleventh street, the victim of thug tality while he was acting as a Jerome watcher yesterday in front of the polling place at No, 27 Ohryatle street, He charged that State Senator John ©. Fitagerald instigated the brutal attack upon him, The young man, who is 6 feet 2 inches in height and weighs 25 pounds, wi bit on th ehead with a blaekjack and then Jumped on by half a dozen men. One man kicked bim in the face while he was down, dislocating bis Jaw and breaking off nearly every one of his teeth, Amother ruMan attempted to gouge out his right eye, and he will rg lose the sight of it, Four of ribs were broken, and his entire body Is covered with cuts and bruises. Assailants Escape. O'Brien, So say! from _ hi tropole, “Every me that An Attache of the District-Attorney's office heard to-day the story of the al tack upon him and proceedings will be begun at once against those concerned in it. tes or Granger, his father and brother, who bad come on to New York from their home in Cartersville, Ga., responded ty a call for Jérome watchers. Charles Brewster, @ lawyer of No. $2 Liberty jatreet, who had been @ Republican wateher in the district, the Sixth As- j sembly District, of which Tim Sullivan jis a leader, advised thom that. they were going into a dahgerous place. The last time Mr. Brewster was a watchor at the same polling place he was sand bagged. Fitzgerald Defies Law. The father and the two sons are ble. athjetio men and they announced that with Mr. Brewster they ought to be able to take care of themselves. While |they were assembled in the Chrystie Mreet polling place Senator Fitagerald came in and declaged that he was gving | to crowd them out by engaging a wateh- er for every candidate on the Tammany | Ugg | ¥dlng Granger, who is a lawyer, ad+ vised him that such @ thing weuld be iiegal, | “1 don't give a damn for the law,’ Uhe Senator shouted, according to the Grangers’ story, toway, “I'm now going © have this place filled witn a lot of — Jerome watchers.” Then the Senator went outside and stood before the polling Pics Young Granger went out and told him that the Mw M hydarag that watchers and heelers ehould not stand within one hundred feet of a voting booth, “The Senator swore at me,” said lyoung Granger to-day, “and walked down toward hy 19 Chrystie street, He hallway of that house and a few minutes later came out on the street. I walked down [n that di- rection and the Senator passed me. Attacked by Six Men, “A moment afterward I was struck from behind with a blackjack, 1 foll on the pavement stunned, whereupon a haif dozen men jumped upon” mé, kicked me tn the face, trampled on my body end attempted to gouge out my. tine, ‘ime of the assault Mr. Mrew- vow, ships or P [ner gid the elder Grater demantes |] OGG, @ YARRA BUTTER. LOC) UREERnGRNattows Rorkn1Se| cane as ey ae mere ener ema that Senator Fitagerald be arrested, but nO pol could be found in the Aletriet who had the temerity to make arreat, EE BLA TAKES TIME. What Happe: ‘Then, sometimes \it fastens its hold upon the victim by slow degrees that are not noticeable for a while, But one it begins, the day will surely come when the coffee-drinker will be “up against it” and must have relief. A Indy writes from Cal.: \ “We were great coffec-drinkers in our home, using {t at every meal and frequently drinking {t in the event with friends, and It was not uni ° after the lapse of years that we ba- an to realize that it was doing us ny toms were not so bady “My sym re although my health suffered in many minor eed wy Poles became afiieted a most painful stom- ach trouble, He could not assimilate ‘his food properly and everything he ate gave him great distress. We we now see that it was caused use of coffee, + F mat last he determined to quit gether, and like a ‘ood wife I did so too. We worried along for a month without hot table beverage, till one day a friend happened to to Food from Cadlfornia after I meet this fellow] ship scheme will give ed to brush one of the jargest frock’ bit of steak from dis table at the Met Munielpat Ownership, but I do’ know] “In the au Willle Hearst, and I am for him,” was |*nree of the v, v Bob's frat «tab at politios, thing quieted down as wo robled i ce her? Well, I guess not, 1|N% they didn’t think 1 way a candidate, went around to see that Hearst Was |starting anything wher / my boy, whether It he tn poll- WISSNER High Ideals Lanes AND Co eay Fei 10¢ CHOCOLATE bd hal 15¢ Some Years Getting There and he: Aa eg plete tan Toland, foc n, lereey City, i The poison in coffee does not al- My 5 at warn, work tis ‘beiet ovis |] QR ea ap 107%” PARKTOW:NASSAN, i) Order Dept, MEN’S natural wood handles, sterling silver trimmed. ‘ lew terling * A k big pay gun metal and 6 silver 2.73 , the truth, but) Made wore slow to suspect the iy vee rk ust an wore ae T will bring| 8? ive the people a the heavywetait champtonshin bck] Ay'T uidertee a believe: he 4 nd it his Municipal Own erybody a “ chance to ride on the and i. ing, Bab Fitzsimmonn attemot-| (%° Sfternoon newspapers to read on | the way for the one price of five “IL Was at the EF bgt is wrist and tossed his dogs #! eonfer with the Neder vant tees dt © tipped all of them off vd hold back thelr ooin and not pay beta “L don't kgow tmich about this| Ul the main referee telly ‘us who { ts the tile, wtomobile I took in twent; | but I suppose they didn’t see no use in square deal, but, like other | around, While t diame scetre were Successes, I ride in an auto-|P!ng, I know that this election waa not mobile, and 1 jd not come in contact |0? Me sduare. A chap was polnted out with the riff-raft,”’ to me this morning wiio they sald was caught last night with for ears Wallop Alwaye Wine. ballots in his pocket, There's men who will swear to this, and ao. you think ‘body 1 meet on Broadway tells ' that’s on the square?” Hearst will be the next Mayor, | ° witesimmons wa An early caller at and I believe it. You can just lay your /the Hearst headquarters and dough down that way. Do you seq? |4!! the prixate off! Uevlar i A tong freckled Anger punctuated this| Prominent feats gies tus Hoarst man, remark as It tapped the tablein a sig-/ Fits says that it is with regre! great pal for the walter. ae to leave town before Hettet I want to put you wive to’ one coming to him. but the is trek Westward to-morrow to begin training for his battle with O'Beien, He says that he haw made the ring: The man with the wallop will cop the eon, Champion. |*Frangements to fo Informed by wire th i dlections on paper don’t count. | ut of the ¢ ty Fa kicks MoCieliag Some pianos are good-—others are better—and others, again, are best, The Wissner house makes no compromise with mediocrity or accepted Standards, The unswerving policy .f the house is to produce the BEST at whatever cost in time, labor, sacrifice and intelligent en deavor, Slightly used pianos by the most eminent makers at very Tow prices. New Pianos to rent 6 Fifth Ave., cor. 15th St. §40 Fulton St., Brooklyn. IANO . i in Loft’s candy and get eaaye. A FIVE pound box of Lott mtd tN healed seplallen ‘SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY . SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY, BONBONS....POUND BUPTER TOFFEE, .POv Park Row Store Open Evenings Until 11 o'Clock, 54 BARCLAY ST., Cor. West Cor. Church St. Hoboken or No goods sent lipped from our At City Hall Park. Fine Silk Umbrellas x3 Cont cg 9.98 2 Men’s Colored Dress Shirts _ ot fin neat designs, Coat style, 1.09 BES J. cacti iat tare " 4 i +h Dn