The evening world. Newspaper, February 22, 1907, Page 1

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RESULTS EDITION ANG TRY PRICE ONE CENT.] FEBRUARY 22 WEATHER FORECAST, Forecast for New York City + PRINCE HENRY a and vicinity: Fair and slightly colder to-night; Saturday light north winds, : Ten Survivors Taken from the Steamer Berlin as Seas: Pound Her. WRECK VICTIMS ro aa STILL AFTER RACING DATES Queen. Wilhelmina’s Husband] Fight for nen will Be Risked Life Twice in Made Before the State ~ Pilot Boat. | Board To-Morrow. MANY: SEE- BRAVE ACT The fight of the Empire’ City race track at Yonkers for ricing Gates dur- ing the coming eecason Will be roopencd } to-morrow moraing before the State People Brought Ashore After Many’ Se ear he inaramea ati RUe ~ Hours” of “Suffering —Only— $f [ell Ae PERE ENG 32 Nassauspirest Thier —ia—a_period_during— the metro- ~Out- of 480-Saved. {tant Kexson—whenr—the—horees are Yin’ Rgratowa and New Yorkera are Vwithout the sport of kings. This period might be filled in with benefit to local followera of the game with a meeting at the Yonkam course,.and that ts wher BEST FILLIES IN STAKE RACE AT *NEW-ORLEANS Martha: Washington Feat- ure Brings Out Cream of Young. Division. - “the walking, wiley ta Wall ed Se = ne -NEW: ORLEANS RESULTS. LIFE SAVERS FOLLOWED HOOK OF HOLLAND, Holland, Fob, ®—Prince Henry of the Nethoriands, busbarid - of Queen--Wiihetmina; to-day Joined the intrepid fored ot Nfe-onvers, \ Who, wullering greut hardships, batted 1 “fer thirG-twe hols te eive the sur- vivors of the steamship, Bertin wrecked - ‘The ‘Prince, setting a fine example, -praved—mountainous seas and a freez- tag - gale, —‘Twloe he went out fn a Dilot-boat and tried to board the wreck, to which ten persons were olinging. ‘He wns beaten beck each time, but the Prince had the satisfaction of st ing a hanty boatioed of surfmen. not to be” outdone ty him, - drive - through , the ecas to almost certain “death, board the steamers hull amd taice the people there int their boat end row morgue white . draped figures, dower: peat tor «fey enkaen; belere -the body of a fatrhatred child. PIRST RAOE—Donna Bivire (8 to ‘The ten survivors were! Minded eb m0 5 and 8 to 5) 1, Alante (6 to 1 for. ~-etetoctc- afterncon. \Mo-eowers | Ja pit sates wes Co placa) 2, Benevite 3. veached remain on the wreck. It ts not SBCOIND RACE—Wos, 1 to 2 and out) |1; Ohyeea 4 to 1 for place) 2, Bitter Mies 3. THARD.-RACE—Emorg: ergency (even for place) 2, Kohinoor & NEW ORLDANS, Feb. 2—Tee Mar the Washington- Stakes; -tor-two-year- ‘old Oities, was the feature of an ex- ollent——doliday—-cart—at—ths “Falr Grounds to-day. All the dest’ fillies in hag of mast including ting Whiek Broom, win- pars vas nbs junbeaten' records filly + ee eae, ‘ounelttent, Stontoert aod ‘Against the waves and tho wind it was|™@8Y other illlies mado’up a cracking ~Inispasstbta te “pat ont- Nésboata trout ceed Meld. Notasulga recently changed | shore, conditions —to Pande, — SM ne — wie — Lor 9b, Deb, btice for a New Orleans two-year-old. Throngs at Morgue. Seep reces ay rere Cagh Parkinson. of ths Holt fteam- phtp Line, who was on his way to Am- mteréam onboard the Berlin to Join nis ti ng the quali of the ow. “The wreath vet es year fa08 wae And clear and track fast. ‘The pastand: ahoe was one of the Jargest of the ea ROD. rae. gnt_and. and patting: wae. to who Soaring Per Perry Belnont’s colors in last -seaaon,. started rat aie at New Orleans rer Sean “for & good “thing, going to the post a warm favorite. aS i 4s oO 2 36 92. Ci 20 Fs Veteran pilota and’ seamin who 0 watched .tha_B: deing driven to her | SECOND RACE—Seven-eighthe of a mite doom "say the wwae--the' fenceat: ty — Messe Welant Jockey. Bir Pt. many years, One of the tneewea | Wes, 100,, Garner 1-27 ~ out Goscribed the scen¢.es Lollowa: Bh Se cy LE : Boe “Aa the Yoosel approached it yaa er oz 7:10 noticed that ahe wae belng carried out Yollnn, 30 $ of her course by the force of the wind | Murry 's 0h and the tremendous ving power 0! Any Lloyd. se+es 00 5 ind Maver The trained eyes of ey Giri, te: ¥an Dusen: "gD ANOTHER BEAUTIFUL CHARLES DARA GIBSON ART. SUPPLExoNT WITH NEXT SUNDAY!S, WORLD,’ ies (Continued on Second Page.) “IMMEDIATELY SOLD.” | a H. B. MATTHESEN COMPANY Real Estate and Insurance. 14-16 Church Street, New York, Feb. 21st, 1907. _MILBERT B, MATTHESEN, Pros"t & Treas, REUBEN WILSON, Bocrotary. The World, New York City: Gentlemen—We are pleased to acknowledge that although we. made but a sligle insertidh of our Ad. In your paper, thé housewas immediately sold as a direct result. Please 1 again for us by INSERTING ANOTHER AD, as quoted below for THREE DAYS beginning to-morrow (Friday). We trust the result may Lae as prompt aed fgeaeuied as the one above mentioned, | Very Ours, i..B, MATTHESEN CO. pK ocean men aren neh oe Ha ae snow. end 1 te 4) 1, Belle Strome, 1:to g]#nd in all probability an Italian. It ja —ffeet_to-the East River became~tntoxi- books ;scamch the basements, celiere and orisk. event Donna Blviwa.} ct MAN'S FET BOX MAY PROVE MURDER CLEW. Found by Boys ‘Playing in the Rear of.a Third ‘Avenue Saloon. CUT OFF So, Declares Coroner’s Physi- cian- and ‘Police Try to Identify the Victim. MONTH ‘AGO. f PROBABLY AN ITALIAN Detectives Inclined. to Believe that Some One Carrying Box to River + The finding of a man’s feet. together With @ partion of a shinbone to-day in @ ard at the rear of ‘Scratch'! Kenny's saloon, No. 1807 Thimi avenue, accord- 4red-andFourth Street. Station, may give a clue to a murder mystery as! baffling as the famous Guldensuppe Coroner Shrady‘a physician examined pleces of the body found and declared the cutting up of the body ocourred'e Month ago, and that a saw was used in gevering the bone and fect, _ Three boys, Charles Kenale, aged fourteen, of No. 1858 Third avenue; William Wallace, aged alxteen, of No. 3 Eset One Hundred and First atrest, and Andrew Betnie, aged fourteen, of No, 223° East One Hundred “and First stm Totnd the bones while. playing in the They were wrapped tn a pestbosrd box, the «ize of a ahoe bax, which tad been dropped in the yard evidently before the late-heavy fall of ale sing-at-e-snow-plle._With- white-faces- they ran allthe way to the East-One “I. suspect the man may have been murdered ‘and hia body cut up in one of the tenements of the nelghborhood,” sald McGuire-later.““The victim -wes-a-man poes!ble the person who was carrying the cated and lost from his possession this evidence of & crime.” “TW6 Dolce In Tivestigating the cass are looking over the list of parsons reported missing from the locality where the feet were found. There are no marks either upon the box or the paper in which the feet ‘were wrapped that would lead to an indentification. The Detectiviy@ureau was notified of the discovery late to-day, ant—twn—ot Vie Old GUshd Of Hrurder mystery sieuths were assigned to investigate by In- spector McLaughlin. SLate—thle- eflernoon. Capt. Corcoran put out a dozen men under orders to yerds- lithe neighborhood for the rest the-boty, One atyuall peter th a ing with pick and shovels unearthed {Welt the apot-owhers ~the™ feat were -2_phatograph of ® young »om- Qn upon the back of which nras “weit nT. ‘Teer, which t hve ‘alien from. the pockets ofthe person, Staite thé “box. Neg, {anttresn of the -tene- an World rter she was satisfied the box was Jast-alght.--Her own —nee-the-box:—— BLEED BE WSK AND FUR | LEFT IN STATION Enthvly — ttisfied with Ite strange sur- roundings, a‘ blue-oyed baby boy, alx fvecks okt, la wulting in Bellevue Hos- pital tostay for ite diamond-bedecked mother, vho left it with the matron at the Grand Central Depot and failed lo return. The baby Is dressed in an | jexpenstye allk coat and cap, trimmed with fur, and wears a fancy pair of white {ar shoes, Matron Mary Corey, of the Grand Central, waa approached by two hand- somely gowned women last evening. The one who carried the child was abou thirty-fye years old, Gems aparkied on —her-fngers and «urs. Shoe) nald she wished to check the baby for Lost It While Intoxicated, 1 Ing tothe police_of the East One Hun} | stopped the Naw of Blom. Evelyn Nesbit. Thaw. Sketched While I “ Circulation Books Open to AIL” _ ig 1907. Under Cross-Examination by Jerome|. Ws ie the countr. edn DOCTOR.CUTS OFF. LEG HELD DOWN BY CARS. ne Fi | Mr ALAS! SOND. various ‘The engineer stopped the train, but Devello's leg was oaught and’ he ‘could not bo ramoved While De, Volk waa on the way a policeman gave tho nuffering man nome ail by improvising a tourniquet, which public the impression WHOLE BILLION financlal representative, has given out ao statement that is intended to. put an end to all popular speculation: concern | ing his fortuno, ‘The statement Js as follows: | ROOSEVELT WORKED ON THE HOLIDAY. a time, Thia is not undsual at the station, for passengers often ‘take ad- Yantags of ftacilitics offered by the Now ork ‘Central to shave their iittle ones jared for while ras iceou payee leach. The {second wwenty-elgnt {Rape mood locking. With thom wast a {ond of eee eee a puBITQU 22.—Notwith- thes hh, in his most prosperaus ye coeded Afteen-to twenty ‘rnillions generally that jority of the Standard O! again is erroneous. WASHINGTON, Feb. ‘There have beon a great many amius- standing it was ® national hollday, | ing misstatements on the xubject of Mr. President oosevelt spent a bury day, | Hockefeller’s fortune. Several years) 7 UE moat of the time belng occupied In hls | ago Senator Hoar made th» assertion on | Sr Paul, Railway. Ublic. busin afters eldent. received about. on: fifty. membara of the Naval ed States, now m: office on Bindred and Rehae the floor of the United Statea Sena that It was no leas than — $1,000,000, Quite recently the statement has Doan Fob. |/and one woman were killed and a dozen} o¢ the water, wich s¢on was up to her others injured near here ‘to-day in @| shoulders. occurred akon “that hia annual income 18) dred and Forty-tourth-streetextending + ban--0f $10,000,000 actu of the case are that] Hernetalioniheat Nitaselevauthorted the statement tha his ‘annual in- 160,140 cannot have ox- Thomas Devello, a young brakeman/ — ' } his fortune cannot exceed $250,000,000 t on the New York Central Rallroad, cell : | 509,00,00. Moreover, hls ibetween the bumpers and a freight }Gme, fistead of footing up a Da \train hear Hunt's Point road to-day. or anything near auch fy labors under | he owns @ ma-/ ek. That The fact tw that Volk found Deyello mill pintonet I Srapttoske (eitn the. atSek between. the cars An examination Are .onlys abouts percent: convinced phim that the leg lind been! For the frat, tims tn the financial) “By sppiyink bo y rules of amamed bexend possibility Of jrepalt| career of John D, Roakefoller the mublic| 1oRk divialon it will be found baiat tie above. the knee. Develo. showed ro: | nas been.taken into hia contidence ns to) \“iterw trite of 3 Pri ita ate markable nerve while the operation was zi week und. ing on. He was very weak when ha| the magnitude of his fortune, By the geese a day reaches the hospltal but he will et | outhori¢y of the Standard Ol Company z Me well, Some day he will be holding a i feos ‘ red flag ata grade crossing. Frederick T. Gates, Mr, Roskofeller's TWO KILLED AS TRAIN RUNS OFF BRIDGE. down 0 her from the B74 arin 2.—One man] on the Chicago, Milwaukee é | A piseores coach Jumped. the eracke| aod went of a bridge, ‘The accident = mado @nd published ‘widely throughout Imown as Waehin ‘Mitts, | WATER TO taeveral blocks toward tho-Hudeson, | bie excavation thet le being madd on | the west side of Broadway, between | The work is being done by A. Kelly & | Co., contractors, and ‘men Vor rocks an@-dirt-and-a-tmge section of | the city water mala, | pouring out of the wrecked main in a [torrent. | Ae-they poured out or the “excavation }-they—set up cries of alarm, and soon ball | aroused-to. the danger. -Tombs and-Each that White’s Slayer Although the rules of the Tombs prohibit prisoners from receiving visitors on a holiday, Commissioner of Corrections-Coggey made-an-—— exception to-day in the case of Harry Thaw. i at the doar of the counsel room. He turned his head and brushed the- back of his hairy hand across:his face.as the young prisoner clasped the little figure in his arms and sobbed: “My: poor dear, Beye little wife.” i DINAMITE BLAST AES a GREE TORENT Washington Heights Sec= tion Is Flooded by Accident. With a Fusti Wko ® mountain torrent} Ao Hood darted to-Aay—orr— Washington Flggnts with the-blowing tp ofa four. toot water main by a dynamite blast that drove'all of the tenants out of two big apartment houses In panic andy flooded the basements of houses for. ‘Pha featractive -biamt- wae aot off tna) One“ Hundred—-and-- Forty-fourth and One—Hundred—and—Forty-ftth _atreste. avly a hundred were &) the excavation’ when « charge of dynamite lifted out a shower Within a few seconds water was @nd thé workmen had to fee) for their lives. Hardly a man got out hin time’ to’ escape the sudden freshet. of the neighborhood had been Attack on” Apartmant-House. THe want of the ground at that point waa such: that the currdnt of the fast at a pineo| rising water Waa directly, toward two | big _fye-story_arartment pulldings_thit loceupy nearly half ® block In One Hun- }from=No. 613-t0-<@0-- It-came: ikem} jelass wave agninnt the walla of tho two tructures and then, smashing base- ent windows and doors poured. unhin- |dered into the cellars, ‘The basoment rooms of No. 615 were Jocouplod by Mrs. Btrotoff. She was at} |work in the kitchen when the flood burst Into her apartment and before jwhe could gatner her wits she had, been cm off from escapo both at the front \(ind rear doors) ‘Through a Uttle win- |dow she crawled out Into the ara way between the two bulldings, earry- | fig under her arm a small Irish te r=} rler. | Out In. the areaway Mrs. Strotoft found the flood had preceded her, Aw she dropped down from the window [ste net up a shout for help. The water }wue filing around her at an alarming rate. Her-cries soon brought wastatance in the form of a rope that was toxaed | her excitement she could not hol lnrmly to the rope and sayeral times dropped before whe could be lifted out “Hauled Up by the Rope, Finally the panio-stricken woman fol- jowed tersadvice +08 her rescuers and (Coptinued on on Geoond Page.) ‘Console the Other—“No Holiday: © Visitors” Rule Relaxed. MADHOUSE, NOT THE CHAIR. IS PERIL OF THAW NOW. . erorie’s—Alienists—When Called May-T ‘ Trial Be Brought to a Sudden Termination. Wessink res ee Is Insane and the- -His wife was allowed to It was the first public outward ‘display of affection the couple have permitted themselves since Thaw was arrested. There was no doubt of its sincerity. - ‘Thaw cried Ike a.pig boy and his wife» Kae Way to her feelings unresorvedly. It was at Thaw's request that his wife towed “to. vint Y.-H. went word he wanted to sce her if slp could—ponsibly—leave—her—reom=—1 O'Rellly artanged for the pasa und es corted her-to the prison. -Both-in-Teai Her fnce..wan doad white.and- a she met the Criminal Courts Bulld= ing reporters. To their inqulries as, to how she felt she replied: “Oh, I am feeling pretty well." f But her ilps trémbled as she said tt.! Thaw could not eat his lunch, so ime pationt waa he-to sce his wife. Ho paced back “und forth ia his cell until word was brought that was_awalte, {ng him in the counsel-room. He _ down the prison stairs two atva time, burat_into ‘the room Ike. a whirlwind. and_smothered. her in m strong embrace. Prison discipline was a trifle relaxed. on ite oceaalo out In the corridor, wheré he could cem= mand a. view of the room, saw the [Young couple sitting, hand in hand, “fet an hour. Both wept at times, and Thaw'| utroked his, wife's hair and face, as though seeking to comfort her. ‘There’ pkeaa new Weld In her ahe-lete the Tombs and started uptown. As the Impress ‘of Fwvelyn Nesbit | Thaw’s terrible testimony andthe wilt more terrible cross-examination slnig Seaper into’ the mind the. hellef ta. grows ng-among-those who hayes followed the trial of Harry Thaw that the young wife | might ae'well have been spared the ons deal of he past Low: -daya” Uider SF rome’a mérclless questioning; that = th bitter cup could haye been put from hem? |Mps without affecting the result | as the course of the public prosecutor > in concerted, For a majority of those who have Hew tened to” the evidence from the begin- ning belleye that within a week Jerome awit — tall. Josttes: —FHggpereng he tae convi fromthe. teatimony of the des fénse aloné that Harry Thaw te now & iynatic-and- ask for the appointment of a commission in lunacy with @ view to sending him away to Matteawan. ‘The prediction moat often-heard In the ‘court since Evelyn Nésble Thaw: frat took the stand is this: ‘Whatever happens, Ulere1s-not—going tobe ‘a conviction, Hung Jury, or an acquit= tal.” Mr. Jerome must have heard. it. too. He must know the common publio j ‘attitude toward the. greatest: murder caso he ever prosecuted. Bealdea, un- / der bis sworn duty, he cannot continue ~ ta to try to send Thaw to the death chair ono. minute after he becomes convinced that Thaw’a proper place ts the mad- house. Wife Is Near Collapse. Instead of causing . his allentsts to teetify to their belief in Thaw's present santty, should offer ex: pert opinions to the effect that he ts a If Jerome, | paranolac, nothing Thaw's lawyem have done or could do would save him from commitment to the asylum for the criminal Insane, The tssue would never : go to the jury. Thaw If scomed to be In xood opirits in his cell, He sald he. expected t weo his wife if she felt able to drive down from the Lorralne’ to the prison, for Commissioner Coggey at Lawyer Dan O'Reilly's request had issued a blanket permit for any ons of. Thaw's family to vialt him jn spite of the fack that callers are supposed to be barred from the Tombs on a legal holiday, Evelyn Thaw wns nearly a wreck. when al last

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