Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“ROOSEVELT SENDS A HOT SHOT AT HARRIMAN: » x oe the people were crooks and he could buy ihem; that whenever he wanted legislation from a State Legislature he could buy it; that he ‘could buy Congress,’ y99 WHAT PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT and that if necessary he ‘could buy the Judiciary.’ SAYS E. H. HARRIMAN SAID. Pate Li RESULTS EDITION PRICE ONE CENT. WEATHER—Falr and Cold; Wednesday e APRIL 2, 1907. [ « “Circulation Books * Open to All.”’ | NEW YORK, TUESDAY, BROADWAY arg ROOSEVELT CALLS E.H. HARRIMAN’S CHARGE “A DELIBERATE UNTRUTH” it PANIC IN DARANAL mbTeL EVENING WORLD AACE CHART SWEAR THAW IS EIGHTH DAY AT BENNINGS. Women Guests and Oller Rush Out :. : cae har ess = 3 ae os i on the Fire Escapes and Climb then to Safety on the Hotel ae Metropole Roof. oR ae a eee m ONE UNCONSCIOUS WOMAN ‘Delmas Submitted Peculiar Bunch of CARRIED DOWN BY FIREMEN, 2. | Jerome Summoned All His Alienists to Examine Them. Many of the Fugitives Members of the Theat- 15 tical Profession Who Sleep Late, and They Flee In Flimsy Garments—dHotel Filled With Smoke. A sensation was created in the Thaw lunacy proceedings this after- noon, when District-Attorney Jerome in his efforts to prove that Harry Thaw is now a lunatic, made use of a series of clippings, quotations | from poets and marginal notes which Harry Thaw had turned over to 5. M. Delmas, his chief counsel last week during the progress of the trial, in the expectation that Mr. Delmas would make use of the material in his summing up argument. A still greater sensation was created when it developed that Mr. Delmas had surrendered these documents volun- | tarily to the commission. #500 added; about {F ‘A small fire in the kitchen of the Saranac Hotel, formerly the Ross- | aoe more, just below the corner of Forty-second street and Broadway, caused |‘ Fime—4.13. Winner. b «by Racine—Siiver Queen ‘ ; a panic among the guests and drove them down the fire-escapes in droves i this afternoon. One woman sutferi ng from hysteria was rescued by a . | eb an carried fs wn the Br ay t E a balcony off the first ‘ | The manuscript compiled by Thaw was so incoherent and so ral ete sainena te an ately sett Sek a Le she was =n mee ge |strangely worded that it is hard to understand why any of his lawyers about to ju Th. 1 ave tir: apes served many who hur- | 47 K | should have willing ly surrendered e | tt de 0 firat prt ried out, while so: ing and down throi The « In-the theatrical profession and late | Many ' dof of the Metropole Hotel “adjoin- | owner k’ sat building. | siden were ask board any doqu: » turn over to th tain thelr py - BINGHAM BILL ~ PASSES SENATE BY BIG MAJORITY. faster The clevat regard many of the suK de by Mr. Thaw In his own LATEST REPORTS OF THE FORM OF ALL ee ee ean eet ne at ~ Only Against It HORSES STARTING TO- MORROW AT BENNINGS- nts and avin the. cllp Forty for It. ——-—--— and hid th® stree! Buses above, Nu Hing wan t Jockey and Lysistrata’s} With | Owners Questioned by Sip coe AVA GE HSM TNE AT MSH HER ROM BLOWS sraliys + NEW SPORTING FEATURE ON PAGE 10. one BA einige rie ns st before the session beran Bvolyn out in af | Thaw entered, decked Here are the nine men who voted Bhe looked as #o% herself up for # " in inategd of a day in court-room wT ne with her hailt-t seph ‘Thaw, wh RACE Mulaney (of New York), é of Kings). dial to The Wrening World) April &—The Bingham | Hoors ou y tn thelr nigtit>) lik anied her | paewet the Senate toda to jump, buythe | Wats. _2ireetding Commotesioner Attar the foes of eoure had me Af ; MoGuire fret ¥|& last deapers it ‘| The yous neliningly in onKed | favor of the poard while he| voting for tt, wh Inet | ballots against & forty members Wy nine cast tnetr PATTING ORDER. - for Senators Grady, | t the first session, the Commia-| Democrats whb,.yoted with the Re- id eee a took the lead in examining the| publicans for the bill were Boyce, of fi witness. Kensselaer Puller Thompeon and rs the Thaw Was Rational | Hasenfiug, of Kings; MoCall and Owens, of New York; Hamaperger, of Erie, ang gies f OTeaee. aw trequent- -_ *| BINGHAM GLAD, |P. ROMISIs 8 SURPRISE.WAS x the trapedy. Lt wan in the He seemed perfectly mo quietly.” Guard on the Stand. ne hea inape i) ae noon aa the dot wes inking him across the bridge Me . IIR EH BACH ie ante fa mii od and 3 tos Poste efor yece) & Airey & PY forced Siw ONE BUR, ? Moree (Contawad go Third Kage) ’ The President Decl ares He Never, political and financial circles, - of letters written to Representative Sherman, of New York, Nine Vot Votes Cast}... dent wa Mr, Sherman credited him with making. ments »- lished the President deems it proper that the letters he sent to Congress man Sherman last October shall now themselves be made public.” The following is the correspondence referred to by the Presidents ot Goy. Odell’s letter to me of Dec HARRIMAN DIDN’T LIKE HIM- t he w hed RESULTS EDITION —— PRICE ONE ‘CENTS Asked Harriman to Colleet-a Cent, and Never Discussed Such a Thing’ --Accuses Harriman of Boasting That He Could Buy the People. | ; | HIS LAWYER GAVE CABINET MEETING IS HELD TO DISCUSS IT. Clippings Prisoner Sent Him and Railroad Financier Declares That He / Raised a Fund of $200,000 to Se, cure the Election of the President in the Campaign of 1904—Hel Contributed $50,000 of It. (Special to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, April 2.—President Roosevelt lost no time im taking up the amazing charges made by E, H. ffarriman in the letter written to Sidney Webster and which is the sensation of the decade in The President deemed the letter to be of such importance that he summoned a Cabinet meeting to discus it at 10 | oc'lock to-day The Cabinet was in session for several hours, after which the Pres |dent issued a statement in which he emphatically denied the statement by Harriman that he, at the request of President Roosevelt, assisted im |raising a fund of $250,000 to be used in carrying New York for the Republican party at the election which was then .approaching. This . Statement the President characterizes as “A DELIBERATE AND WILFUL SHOULD BE AND MORE UNTRUTH—BY RIGHT IT CHARACTERIZED BY AN EVEN SHORTER UGLY WORD, | NEVER REQUESTED MR. HARRIMAN TO RAISE A DOLLAR FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN OF 1904,” |\LETTERS WRITTEN TO SHERMAN. The President's denial was contained in a brief statement and coplese The are dated Oct, 8 and Oct. 12, 1906, respectively. The President after-furnishing the letters to the press dictatedathe | following statement: “After writing these letters to Congressman Sherman the Presb assured that Mr. Harriman had not made the statements which Inasmuch as the same state appear in the major part in the letter of Mr. Harriman now pubs Oct. 8, 1906, My Dear Sherman: Since you left this morning | succeeded tn getting hold of the letters to which | referred, and | send you a eopy * 10; 1904 4 As {am entirely willing that you should show this tetter to Mr, E. H. Harriman I shall begin by repeating what you told me he said to you on the occasion last week when you went to ask him fora the campaign. You informed me that he then em SHIGAGO-ELEC HON R ys t contribution to —— Jersey City, 4|CAGO, Ap M ec! , , RY | Pa | N AT MACON k { ATE NEW ORLEANS. WIN Harry Step 1ish, HED OUT BY WH VAN k, twenty-five ye for Geor e mover-of Jersey mm his re Newark, this aft was instantly wheels passing ove Back lived ti ht ae 1 a A A i !