The evening world. Newspaper, October 16, 1906, Page 1

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INAL RESULTS EDITION WHATHER—Cloudy to-night and Wednesday, | RESULTS ‘eoition | PRICE ONE CENT. “NEW YORK, HR, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1906. PRICE ONE CENT. THAW. MAY NOT BE TRIED ALONE, — JEROME HINTS tt ict; Mio Tells the Court that “Somebody Besides Young Mil-—— 11s ~lionaire May Be Indicted for Killing Architect. % =D Harry Thaw may not stand trial alone for the murder of Stanford White. In_arguing that he should) not be prevented from conducting John Doe proteedings inthe Thaw case, District-Attorney Jerome to-day told Recorder Goff there is a prospect that some one else in addition to Harry Thaw may be indicted for the murder of Stanford White on the roof of __._Madison Square Garden. : Pe “Your Honor, said Mr. Jerome, with great earnestness, “we ~ should not be bound-in our efforts to conduct our inquiry” further. Any Grand Jury has a right to draw a superseding indictment. Who knows but \ what we may draw an indictment coupling another name with that of Harry-Thaw i in this case? Under the law any person who aids, counsels, urges, advises or, abets in the commission of a murder is jointly liable with the murderer, whether that person be actually present at the time of its commission or not. SIC doen not appeur yet where Harry Thaw got the revolver « with which he shot Stanford White, It does not appear whether words were apoken to lijm which le@ him to shoat White, These are (ings in which U nave o right to inauire with tho object of securing the tnaic: nt of an pccevory, to the orimo," ‘Thay, for a writ of, prohibition re- __gtraluing the District-Attorney’s office, from summoning the witnesses for the defense before him and before’ the is i . 4 Grand Jury to answer, question&. Mr,| Ver have been brought toh Gleason..inaisted. thatMr,..Joromie bad | gute qe mayo -puven ee ea fssued John Doe subpoenas for the|and-he was inclilied, he suid, to lssuo purpose of asglating. the prosecution | an order returning the wholo ‘matter to 5 the Supreme Court. mt the trial and to learn what the case Dee ofthe defense would-be He—tnsistea dee Otleted tint brlefe should be pre. pated and filed.) If after examinin, that as the June Grand Jury had al- 2 qe briefs Justice MacLean astill-refuses teady indicted “Phew, the October Grand} to Judes the merits ofthe -controveray Jury or any other grand jury could it is expected that the Recorder will = KT act. “ne Tonger havea proper and Jegal and legitimate Imerest in hearing the stories -.0f the witnesres, The Writ-ot-Prontbitton, Then, Mr. Jerome used tho language which begins this. story, —When—he-hnd + finished gn Said that he was in°doubt Whether the matter should f i aa fort At thetime the motion was orieinatly | made a temporary writ of prohibition was granted against the District At- torney-and-to-the Grand-Jury. It hia been over two months —“sinct Ly u Strate skedfor hin writ LOUISVH.LE-WINNERS.- --otprohibition The motiohwas_made SSS AST ee mien UR LOUISVILLE E.TRACK, Oct. 16. =Tho Faces here to-day resulted as fol- low: 2a ES ee aes mane & halt-furs Honesty ool t Louise (3 to 1 and ever)}— Horentter (6 to.3, for. place) 2,:Refined Lo iimectors. SECOND RACE-Oitle.—Hadur @ to 1 odd even) 3. Iapector Girl (8. to. 6 tor place) 3, aha 8. Tme—1.4 1-5. THIRD RACE=Thres-quarters of mile—Biise OMuous-Go-to-1-and-t-t0-4 1. Lightning Candustor.d to 3 or piace) 2, Fair Fagot 3. “Time, 14 before Justice MacLean in the Supreme Court, That Justice passed thé matter Recorder Goff, saying that the ease, in its prescnt wtatus, Neing bette General Sessions, no phane of it should s-beoprimarily considered in the Supreme Court. Accordingly, Mr, Gleason of- jgtered before the Recorder to-t He pressed the-tssusso-aharoly that ———he- drew-—from- Mit Jerome-the-algnit!- <——rant declaration that more.tndistments + Ee a7 LL eae in the White:murder_are-{n contempla- | jija—Maadon—Breeze {6 tot and 2 tol tion. - tt. would ~be—-wrone, admit." sata} =r, Ferom T were engaged in try- ing to prepara tie caso of the proseou y= Alon-by-Uelng the = ay-ontes to-extort stitements trom tho} witnerses of the other side, I declaro| “that such {a not my object ‘at all, It ts properly “wittiln my power to summon any witnesses for the purpowe of ascer- teining whether another than the man 4)-4. Miltiades @ to,1 for placa) 2, Envoy 3. aim: e115, TROLLEY CAR BURNS. — Trolley-cairNo.2tt-of.the Third-arxe nie-Hne,-disabled_and—belng_towad_to. | the ay ERU took fre thith morning ¢ in One. Hundred and ‘Twenty-isen jatreet. ‘opposite the West End Theatre, jand Was burned to Its frame. Trattic Nau tied up for twenty minutes. until the trucks of the car could be towed tothe barns. . 34, 171 WORLD ADVTS, LAST WEEK. 1 6,925" MORE THAN THE HERALD, 6,289 World Advie, Gaines Last Week. 5,583 MORE Than Were ‘Gained by The Herald, Columna of World Ad- vertising Last Week. 1894 "MORE, Than The Herald. ecm APPEALS COURT — FAVORS B0-CENT RATE FOR GAS Holds that Company May Be Restrained from =o oeeng a Pele Justice Giegerich Sustained fe His_ Decision. that State Could Fix-Prices A decision handed down by the Court of Appeals at Albany to-day establishes the conatiiutionality of the Jaw mak- ing 80 centa per thousand feat the price of gas in this State insofar_as_the Court of Appeals has power to estad- lish. Tho decision of the court Ja that the Supreme Court of New York County has the right to issue injunctions re- straining the Consolidated Gas Com- pany from charging more than 8) cents per thousand feet. The contention of the Gas’ Trust hat it hag a right to charge a dollar @ thou- stand feot, although the Legisiature hax established the maximum at 80 centa, ia entirely overthrown by the Court of Appeais.-It-means that any -conaumer may go into the Supreme Court and se- cure an injunction prohibiting his gaa company from charging him more than 80 centw for each thousand feet of gas! consumed, and that the gas company has not tho right of appeal. Court Wouldn't Refuse It. Nor will any Supreme Court Justice in-the light of the decision of the high- est'court of tho State venture to reMse @ writ of injunctlon-in.a proceeding to , the “matter” “ot 80-cent oF Si_gas has not been finally rettied by | this decision handed down to-day. The proceeding in the United States Court, which {s to be appealed, by agree- ment, to the Supreme Court of the Gnited “Sbetes, Ts Teleurery—drcextre | along, and unti] the highest court in the ton finally passes upon the conatitu- nality of the law the Gas Trust will | ist undoubtedly inalst that jt has che right | (o charge $1-per Thousand fect and de- powlt the excass, to be returned to its -patrona Jf the cave should go againat it. 80 fat-as the local situation {s con- corned. the decision establishes tha &- CO rates Tie Mater went sis an injunction granted by Justice Gle- gerich restraining the company trom charging & patron more than § cents for 1,000 feet of gaa. The question was pargued at Iehgtii-by the wieest Inwyers th the employ of the Gas Truat,, they holding ineMfect, “thatthe iw” should Protect: the Trust In its efforts to pay dividends upon the ocean of water in ita stock. Juatlse _Glewerich “held that the State actuhlyinvested-in-ite-bilsiness—-Upun appeal_the Appellate Division passed -tha-matter-up-to-the Court-of Appeals; whore Juatice Giegerich Is upheld. This la taken by lawyers as a line vpon the able oulonie of the case when ite ets before the Supreme: Court of the Unite dStates, LOAD OF HAY ON FIRE DRAWS A BIG CROWD.| 2 Department Had to Be Called Out to Extinguish Blaze at Busy Street Corner. The Fire Department was called upon to ext ae blazing load of hay at Eighth ayenup and Thirtleth street afternoon, T\e fire drew a crowd ay big as would \have gathered to watch a skyscraper burn. Edward Smith was driving a team, Pulling twenty-four bales of hay ‘for Horace Ingersoll & Co,, No, 643 West ‘Thirty-fourth street, on Eighth avenue, pust the Pennaylyania Rallrodd’s tunnel hecayetianl when sparks from an en 5 ‘set fire to the hay, The load Wax soon blazing and the driver nye purzlod as to how to smother {t. ‘Tho burning bales were dragged from the wason and rolled over {n an effort to extinguleh tho fire. The street was blockaded With wagons, street cara and pedestrians by tha time the first en- gio arrived. It took but a few minutes then to end the excitement. 4, nti ioe a SL =| Byening World predicted revert} dare} a Feascuable dividend upon the amount |— ROSEBEN SMASHES A ALL TIME RECORDS, _ WINNING $14,000. Sprinter Broke Record Which Had Stood for Years RosEBEN. REAL HEARST MEN VICTIMS OF BLNCO GAME Independent League Peti- tions Filed for Only_ OR OWNER JOHNSO longs in 1.22, Beating Mark Made- Back in 1890. PLUNGER BET THOUSANDS HORSE WOULD GO UNDER 1.25. = Champion Sprinter Runs Seven Furs on Straightaway Track’Way | Murphy ee Without Pace of Any Kind and at 1 to 80 in Betting, Speed—Champion—Creates Turf \ Petition None Straight. Wig wam Candidates for Supreme} Court and- General Sessions... ‘The placity with which Charles F, Murphy has viewed the numerous nom- {nations by-the Independance League of Assembiy,— Senatorial amd — Judtolary by petition “was expinined torday when Tammany leaders begun to filo with the Board of Blections Independence League petitions indorsing the Tam- many candidates, In other words, the Independence League “Gileey House Clique" haa indorsed prantically the en- tre Tammany County tekst! The Tammany jeaders have been busy tor days getting ready petitions under Independenst League’. emblems. nomi- hating thelr own candidates, Thexo pe- ; tittoris-have been signed ts thousands of voters, and on every petition up- pears the.names of Max Ihmsen, Frank Shober and ‘Timothy Driscoll, of the In- dependence League. The Independence Leaguers who think they have been nominated by their or- kanization to oppose the Tammany Hall ticket will meot with a sad surprise to- iidtrow when they find thelr right to the emblem haa been preempted in fa- vor of the regular candidate, As The SWEAR PTOMAINES CAUSED DEATH OF MRS. BROUWER . \ Dr. Foreman, Who’ Attended Her, Saw No Symptoms of Strychnine Poisoning—Aged : Mother on Stand. — (Special to The Evening World.) TOMS RIVER. N. J., Oot, 1h—"'I bo. Weve Mrs, Brouwer died of ptomain» polsoning. ‘There was not a symptom during her Illness which Js not present in ptomaine poisoning.”” So testited Dr, McLane Foreman, of Breeholdat—the—trlal of Dr Frank. zen 7 93 Brouwer,chatged—with- the -murder—of eng ssaguble aeree ees than | tls wife to-day. Dr. Foreman, who has GuIse MAU ths “time Tor OMng homina-| Dractwwed medics Yor forty yeurswas oo] Ptomaines Killed Mrs. Brouwer, Three Physicians Swear. Three doctors teatified as experts in behalf of the “pris to-day. thea —pereet—| that airs. died of ptomaine poisoning. “I believe M of ptomaine polaunirg. ago, Mr. Henrst's managers_have- giver Brouwer tons should oxpire, called In to attend Mrs. Brouwer in her [wymptom indiented 4¢."—Dr. Mo- One of the firat Independence League | last illness, He was also present months # Lean Foreman, who attonded her Petitions to be filed was that indorsing | later when the body was exhumed and fi. jas: {inosn, |The’. MeMunus.‘Cymmany leader of | «n-antopey-held; - “a ~ the Eleventh District, for the Benate.| ‘The autopsy failed to reveal wuy Pps epee toute ne pereeeiemenaass stated at tho trial, Mra, Brou- Wer was killed by ptomaines. Br. He —-Hance, declared’ ‘Had oning the-cor~ and Owen Bohan, Tammany nominee for the Assembly inthe Ninth cause of death," he whe died of arsenical “po Fiorrie | Sullivan “signed “along” Independence | dition of the internal organs would ,.— ana of Lakewood, League, petition laboc ye pre ican dls have shown {t p'ainly,"" George Gould's famlly phywictun noy grexeman dfog! Th he ”. Se ee bein hehe che | (Dre GH. Hance, who’ 1s George | ‘Ptomaines."—Dr. J. W. Mo uded Independence League office-acek- | Gould's physiclan at Lakewood, ' also aiitan od erg, wake up. wered a hypothetical ton eOv= > & eeeersnsnenanian ‘Owen McManus 1, authority for | “2® ypothetical question ering the caso’ by saying: i bellove Mrs, Brouwer died vf 07 terme e ime porte hme ge!) ptlared Seen < er ticket by Tammany Hinll | se netomat eed thet wich Lelccean, jatevehnine’ poisoning, aes Rey et Takia ir} od--the Brouwer house he—wee—met by} —“Dz Brouwer called me_onthe‘phonw ie oS tha it rae i Khon salt] Nurse ‘Lippincott, She told of the cone | snd sald that’ bla wife waa haviiy-cou- goons were fn ‘olrouta Hon et Yulafons df the patient and of het own, Yulslons and he thought she was do- od Sal eee practi: spicion that Mrs, Brouwer waa sut.|¥eloping cerebro-spinal mentngltis. eal ny ond 4 not SR2| rering from atrychnine ‘poisoning. told him Y could not get @ train from [el So TAREE: Set: warsied: “De —Poraman aac} Toon OM ands tol Wi get en AIS a mobile or some conveyance, His man- nerowna very urgent.’ —Nifeo Told Buspictone The witness, sald he want to Dr Brouwer # house the next day and was met by Miss Lippincott, the nurse, ing that @ similar Roe was tied afternoon nominating the whole of udictery kel Be ham inAted on <i ae ho symptem a wi Fitth—Harding 2-5, Cliften Forge 2.4 Sixth-Or atoria® 4-7 Arthur Cumme aaa LUSH eo had been ade] Thus warned what Yd you mt? ere frome ie {drawn Her legs drawn up as a Feault of abdomen." HDi you see Mins Lippincott again? Yes when I went downstairn. 1 told her that her suspicions Were probably | groundless.’ Q.Did the autopsy Alscloas the o of death? A. No, Q. Wan the appenrance of th stomach such that oOmaine pols- ian oh been the caune % of death? A, Xe | Q. In arsenic In a bednncenr (3 detect after deatht) A, ¥ | Q. Wan there one CaaS no- toed during the {Ilnenn of Mra. Brouwer which In not prewent tu ptomaine potmoning? A. Not one. Ptomaines Killed Her. Replying to long aue to the food and drix Brouwer, and a detatled recital of, the symptoma In th Dr, Foreman sald “LT believe the frat se rosult of the polsoning caused These symptoms would not presence of arsenic becau: BROUWER'S DEFENSE CLOSED. - TOMS RIVES. N. I Oct. 16.-—-The defense int . Brouwer was closed this afternoon.at 4.2¥ o'clock. ne trial ov Witnosees in rebuttal for the prosecution were called. | 4 op KILLED PICKING CHESTNUTS. toseph Handworker.. forty-one years old. of 2068 Hughos avenues Bronx, was picking chestnuts from a tree on River: dale avenue near Darcy lane tris afternoon. He climbed out on a branch to pick a'larne cluster of chestnuts when it broke. andh he fell to the ground. He died:in Fordmam Hospital. 30, ees ‘ Q. What particular feature of pto- aly acre Woe Me old, of Ne. $01. East Sixtioth (Continued oh Segond Page) af of street, fell throwgh the opening, ofa fire-esoape th tne-r4 ont reli othe fa", it a kt nity sata! Stitt teor0 4-4, Beauclalre (out for place) 2. ats meron -€ables:-Son—Not=to--Sat in Rancho.del Paso Stakes. BY FRANK W. THORP. BELMONT PARK RACE TRACK, Oct. 16.—The peerless Rose- ben this at eneT took all horse records into camp by running seven fur- ~ longs in 1.22, There were several remarkable things about the fifth gelding scarde them all out excepting Bea ey... There was no betting.on the race:. The “bookies” put‘up/1 to on Roseben and 60 to 1 on Beauclaire. Shaw was up on Roseben, BELMONT RESULTS. to the front at. the start, FIRST RACE—Saylor (16 to 5 and| away ahead of Be tearing around tt Turn” ata record 6 to 5) 1, Gypsy King (2 to 1 for place) 2,.Deuce 3. clip, In’ the stretch Shaw sat down He went jAnd hand rode to the wirg.. He got every Neck of apesd’ out of Rosoben, "Whats the matter with Shaw?’ roguinrs: cried, — "What's fe running Roseben off his fect for when. the obher horses are twenty lengths away?! There was a cry of astonishment {from the crowd when. the tuners dung: (8 to 5) out The time smashed al recs SECOND RACE~Boun Brook (7 to 10 and 1 to 3) 1, Caller (3 to 5 |for place) 2, Adams 3, L THIRD RAGE— ‘Zambes| ____History——Tourenne, at10to1, Repeats ———____ the race ae were-thirtyen-horses-carded-to-race-with- Roseben, but-the-——= 1s | ords for Uhe ‘etraight co fe F ea leony Rht course and jand 7 to 10), 1; rents ? ( Jaround the turn, best previous jfor place). 2; Glenham, 3. ume was made by Bella B. at Mons mouth Park in 180 over the straight course. Huilfax held the redord around the ring, the time being 1242-6, Sbee—teason tor oan a eee ing_was—not—disctossd—unGi—etter—the face. It was then learned that Davy Johnson had bet $1 ay | FOURTH RACE—Tourenne (12 to! 1 and 4 to 1) 1, Philander (5 to 2 for place} 2) Sewell-3, | FIFTH RACE—Ros R ies ben (1 to 80) SIXTH RACE-Sailor Boy (11 to 5 and even) 1, Angler (even for place) | 2 Orly ed 4 misgloner, that foacben would) do bets ter thun 12) and he bet Billy, Dubols $4,000 that Koseben would beby Am, Rosshea-to-day—carres protiraches Eh 44. city Ne sped Mars eso}, 156 gecude. the: whoed cracking good necond Daniel tue Nursery Bund= Saturday was reiuaragle, was taney pr Ho Vel suey Stikes to-day, and jae hodie un easy winner, ich CHER Vids! Ap 01 brecadd | Beate TievONtS, Sewer Teed W.. B. Jennings tett-a ohotce pleco: ot property beiind him —when he decided to let L, Williams remein behind and I rige at “this meetiag. Willams etthor or has an attack of heart failure dur- —and-Says-“May-Shortly tine Fe had ie ea oe g Y 9)" Alvert F. in tae i t race. Finca See You. See tka tna Grt hero nenl Up, Cerone ee ! ais wae fas 1a had a0 Richard Croker will’ soon on mee eet A Clouse “comp. sini o “of lu tot in the {agete-tert-at- the past talis-oft-e- mounts he wil} make an ext Boventy tour oii Infuimauon as to the Mr, Croker to cross (he n the shape of a ser elved from him ra dr, intention of AUantc ‘cam ina c Sailor Boy All the Ww tue Way. m the run tires ‘ Orly (ron. Croker, BALLEL TU KLOCUE ‘ Ur in. SANL ELIE, with a n Dussy, a ns you use that ithe ¢ n the a, that xtiehe Sant oy Inde diag ann oer sentence Is tik sloxing t dedhiuch fa eon. an ite, 2 (sgorntullyy 1 with rt t at Yourself , { ved Aly st ele ction perf formancos, wart f ¥ Tul OF ! ‘ote in ney. eee faa AG a Word Almanac. will, tell. v aay a the Mage ja yours miection.: District j Sane int Hille was and year. It tell vou the part, ls Nile. Diesy had ghrown Ew tons! tn the Titty ninth Canercas ‘And Peer a Aldeyou In fering on tha complexion ch npega ftp yy aie) of the Sixtleth, 7 ¥ Pelt Dai

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