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THE ~TAMISEN 1S DEAD: MOURNED BY MANY _ How Picturesque and Forceful _ Figure of East Side Life BB, Became Famous. Lee OUS IN REFORMS “STRENU Forced Himself to Public Of- fice During the’ Regine © "of Mayor Strong. J¥ormer Sherlff J. H, Tamsen ts dead. ‘The man who originated the expression “Der chiail 1s owid" passed away to-day at his residence, No. 1 East Elgh.,| teenth street, and New York loses an- Other picturesque and virile character. Mr. Tamsen suffered a stroke of par- alysis a week ago. His health had been poor for some time previous, and, swith the burden of Ofty-elght years of agtivity upon hiv shoulders, he was un- able to rally. The end came peacefully, ‘with the wife and grown children of the dying man about his bed, Mr. ‘Tamsen came to New York in tate -wixtiex from his birthplace In B Genmany, Although he was never. Ne to master the Intricacles of Bn- _ eiish pronunciation, he was a man who Gould make himeelf ynderatood, and he had a great deal of executive ability. In tine he amassed « competence in the bookbinding and banking business. | Was Power In Politics. i ‘With a natural bent for politics, he Splayedthe” game onthe tar—raat-side, and 1f he had originally allied himself with Tammany Hail he would have held many a fat job. But Mr, Tamsen was ®& Republican and a reformer. His party wgnized his services by placing him ig. the Schoo} Board, where he served for ten years without pay. He was ‘chairman of the Committee on Lan- Guakes and took great pride In his po- An the reform wave of 18M Mr, Tsm> wen was elected Sherif on the Bieag ticket. “At that time Fedeent prisoners Sere confined tn the Ludlow ‘strect I. Three of them got out and were @lost ii the crowded east side defor the escape was discovered, “ Whether Sheriff Tamsen ever maid it not. ts Smmaterlal, At any rate the fees, Words Made Him Famous Ht mado him famous The tace of er! mse! cturesquely f at black whiskers, of which he was lined romewhat to boast, appeared in perlodicals all over. the world, He Was interviewed and featured. Shortly the historic occasion “he made er speech at a Sheriff'a Jory dinner the Manhattan Hotel that. made the fessional humortsts “prosent hide their diminished heads behing their 0 Klaanes, ‘After hie retirement from the Sher- 4a ofMce Mr, Tammen never figured in politics again. His health went back ‘on tim and (t was reported that he had _ Fort conciderable money, He was an earnest, confiding man, a woxl, clean citizen. ‘The many. wh met ‘hire wheh he was in the public ¢gp-and hekt long and interesting con- tal converantione with him in his apapern reported ‘that when he rd of the delivery he shouted “Der ul is owtal” liftle place of Mypainess over bdyvond tho etto, wit Hear of Biscend with en- Lipp sorrow, COL. AYRES RETIRED ON ARMY BOARD FINDINGS. NVASHINGTON, July 24—Lieut -Col chases E. Ayres, Fourteenth Cavalry, has deen placed wpon the retired Itt ofthe army, from thia date, on the fipsing of & FEU DoOard that he te ieaprotinted ‘for netive service on nc- otha, } m--—CGunt of. disability incident nenvice. Help Wanted -__To-Day !- } | } WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1907. At, Flowers. Hersceboera . AdGreseurs Ironers .... —Aments Apprentice Artsts |. “Bakers + Hittglery Help Jiartender Ji Jeweller é Kitehen Help. _Tookkeepers dis 4 Lirmseworkers 4 Norves Operators Bnet a nbole Muker., 1 Patnters Printers Plumbers Hehery Canvasecrs Carpenters Cashiers . @hambermaids Chet Collectors Comporttors Cooks (Male). = Cooke (Female). Coopar 4 Cutters Prossors Premunen ler Btablemen Rteani fitter : era (Ml) Slenogra ¥ Hands. Peeders L¥intahers .. ons Polder ..-- Yrorelady Gracery Citas Upholaterer Winders Walters Wattre Warners Maker) _ Rowson ork <0 Vaintreseers ‘Byery week, month and year, The ‘World prints more “Help Wanijed” Ais, than any three other New York Bye 4 brant 10} ro POISON AND LIES T0 JURYSAYS HAYWOOD LAWY Box Not to Judge Prisoner .on Perverted Facts.. HIS CLIENT AN ALIEN. ‘Taken. Among Strange People and Forced to Make Un- ~-equal Fight for Life. BOISH, Idaho, July M.—When Clan, ehee Darrow, of Chicago, began the losing address for the defense to the jury in the Haywood case to-day the court-room was crowded to its capacity. In opening, Mr. Darrow declared that thé defendant waa In Idaho aa an alien, bro\iht 1,600 miles from home Into a community and before a jury which does \not view Ife or industry as the men \ccused of the murder of ‘ex-Gov. Steuninberg have been taught to look. "The\ defendant in this oase and the men-in\ the jaf] below,” declared Mr. Derrow,| “have been brought to trial in the home of a man who was killed In the most cowardly, the most brutal way that any man was ever gent to death. Many of You men on the jury voted for Gov. Sipunenderg. One of you had business relations with him, while in the house of anotHer of you he made his home for\two years. {Kou are almost the family ¢lrcle of the murdered man, and none af you has ever had any communtry of-inter- ost with these defendants. Under these tircumstances I-can but ask you to lay aside ax much of the passion and prej- udice as you can and look at us as if Woe were one of you. Give us the fair and Impartial trial you would give if you had not known the docéaved, “You men for morp than a year past have had your minds polsoned by len tn the local newspapers, but now that you have at here for more than two months and have heard the testimony you know you have been fed upon pol: son and lies. Lay aside as much as you can of this polsonous stuff: try to ~|get your minds free and be guided only by, the evidence, “The prosecution In this case knows it cannot convict on the exact evidence, but it relies on the strained, forced cir- cumstances: to get a Hct from you ‘This defendant ‘was taken by force from his home, brought 1,500 miles and set down before a hostile jury to be tried Yor his life. magine yourselves, men, taken from ur farms and set down before a jury in Ghicago to be /trled for your fives and then you can in some way feel as this man does in this case.”’ Haywood Not a Coward. “I believe that undet these circum- flances you will hesitate to act on the Totten testimony given én this case to take away the life ofa fellow citizen, But wome of you will say, perhaps, that while there 1s not enough here to warrant fending a man tp death, there iu enough evidence as tojcrimes having been committed to the Western country to vote to put Bill Haywood tn jall— to compromise on « vendlot for man- slaughter or murder In the second de- gree. You have that right, wentiemen of the jury. “put 1 want to say that whatover else you are Ido not belleve Are cowards hat whatever ls not ‘And ant to 8a: else BI) Haywood may. be, he a coward, I wonld not thank this jury if it returned @ verdict of assault and battery and assessed a fine of 35 against this defendant. | ii “Chix murder —was—epld—bioeted, te liberate, and cowardly tn the extreme. If this man sitting tn his office in Den wer, fifteen hundred miles away, em- ployed an assassin to do this cowardly sot, then yor ought to hang him by he neck Until te For God's nu_Jo not if you believe the ‘tory Mat NA® been told against thie man bere be, aul reasonatle doubt, then take him and hang him., He ‘has fought many & fight agalnet the persecutors who are hounding him into this court, He has fought them in the open ba held and ho fs not a coward. If he haa to ay he will die 4 haa lived with face elther Bi) Tnnor eullty, ye nothing to say, aA case of Ore! ond There Ix nothing at tin the evids Withont-him* Hawleya-Hired-Man_ Darrow here ysunched Haywood i to Tt he Mr in lengthy, vituperative venuncta- H. Hawley, the State, He as- uated by ther mot State of i 4d) Idaho might inwidy and: Dar, daily, and | have been tr | Words until during Haw oouMU ted wrath giinement of a aration and fn tpn fro before the the Jurymen aang: ;: i Tdahi Verdict toktimon sing the argume ny aatd that if t Haywood, 4 will nelze the . anye mil! banner CHARTER REVISION COMMISSION NAMED. | Seth Low, E. M, Grout and W. M Ivins Among Members of the Board, ALBANY, July M—Gov, Hughes to- day Appointed as members of tna Rev Commission to In al goveriiment of t and augwest legism Ex-Mayor 1 I 1 er ‘ant M. Grout, + Edwayt B. Whitney, Thomas’ M. Mulry ers as the Alder member: | The Mayor an roller of the city are eof the Somunlssion, ) Darrow, in Plea, Asks Men in -| the GIRLS IN PANIC BECAUSE OF FIRE IN NEXT BUILDING Police Reserves Handled Them ~So Well that Nobody Was Hurt. 8 BROADWAY — BLOCKED. Chief Croker Sent in a Third Alarm—Damages Over. $50,000. Broadway traffe wai pocketed for an hour at Franklin etreet during tha morning rush: hour to-day and a great ‘throng of people had an opportunity to watch Chief Croker and a three-alarm relay of apparatus tackle a bad blasd In the rear of No, 99 Broadway, a tive story building, running 176 feet back to Franklin place. The flames had shot up the elevator mbaft and were mushrooming out on the various storeroom lofts by the time the Fire Chief gut there, Denso smoke filed the narrow street and there was @ panio among the employees of ad- Joining buildings that the reserves of the Leonard street station handled well They prevented 260 girls In No. MS’ Broadway from trampling upon one another {n thetr wild ruah to the street. ‘The fire had its origin in the rear of the cellar of No. 36. It was caused by defective insulation and had set fire to a clutter of packing cases before Will- tam_Qrr, the janitor, discovered It. realizing that it/had eaten 4 the cellar planking, he did not send in an alarm, but called upon Jack Cohen and Thomas Kennedy, xt work.on the basement floor, to help him smother It with pafla of water, The three men narrowly escaped with their Myes because of their Il-adviaed effort, for when the heat drove them back they found thelr only way of en- cape dense with smoke and crackling with flame The smoke leaked Into the kitchen and rathskeller of Holtz’s restaurant on the Franklin street corner in a thick | volume. and drove the waiters and! Kitchen staff tnto the streat. One of jthe walters turned in an alarm: that brought the first complement of fire apparatus, Likewise arrived Chier Croker in his red racing auto, When Croker got thera the fire had eaten Its’ way to the freight elevator shaft and Wax sucked up to the roof by an open draught. ‘The rear of the cellar extending back to Franklin—place was filled with stifling smoke upd flame that stubbornly resisted the volume of water poured on It, | ‘There were very few peopiq in the building at the time, about thirty in ail, and they got put readily \through tho front of the bullding. Thp store- | room lofts jn the rear were pretty thor- oughly gutted, however, and tha loss js estimated at belWoen $6,000 and) $75,000. Weber & Hotlbr dry goods mer- chants, suffered most, as thelr atock was stored on the first floor, Losses were also autlered by William |Bohimper & Co, manufacturers of \metal goods. on the wecond floor; M. KE. Schooning, musical instruments, on j the third tloor, the Gartield Shirt Com- pany and the St, George Manutactur- ing Company, ot the fourth floor,” and. ja. J, Boyar und Moritz Pubs," luce manufacturers, on the top Moor, For & while the fire threatened to spread next door to the six-story bulld- (ing at Nos. 265-951, and Chief Croker_or- Uered-the-eterator nen, Gharies CL Man! |rano, to «et all the men and women out for the-butiding.--"Phere--were-gbout 299" jkirla on the first and second floors of this structure and the majority of them refused to walt for the elevator, stam- peding down the stairways in a scream- Jing panle. The Leonard street reserves were hustled fo thelr assistance and ar- ived just in time to prevent many of the younger and smaller girls from being trampled. The biaxe resisted control for an hour |and for a while threatened to invade | Holt’s Restaurant. As it was, th | smoke drove every one ouy of the plage | Aud-tulsed the. foad.that was belng-pre- ly Into | demands for is extremely against the with’@ view to enforcing Harge-suma of money, It difficult to get evidence Joaders of the assassins because the Hunchakist has branches nil over ihe world and the men who know the marked for the gate of ‘Tayshaniinn. “This olty,”” sald ‘The Evening World's informant, “ls finu ground for .the Hunohakist,. There are maby yealthy Armenians in New York and !n “‘ttios few hours’ ride. They scan be Toana: tn every large clty of the coun- try, Here in New York the Hunchaklst has worked without potice molestation because Use city is wo big and the police are 9p bimy with other, affatrs. If we had enlisted the laot fe poliog when the Hun dastceeeenoa: to show ita power we might have crushed it. Now we are all afratd for the sakes of our families te appear in open’ hostility. Collected $2,900,000. formation that I trust—the Huncha- kist of ‘thie elty has collected over $2. 000,000 in. the past four years, Some of this haa gone to Armenia to be devoted to patriotic purposes. The ma- jor part of It has been diverted to the personal uses of tho leaders of the BINGHAM SAYS HE CAN DO NO MORE — TO PREVENT CRIME (Continued from First Page.) secrets fear to betray them leat they be | “po amy -knowledge—pased— upon _in= aoclety, The Hunchakist of New York |has some 20 or %0 menibers. It te | atvided into two. rival organizations, | Hanging to It are otter amall black- | mailing sucleties, but thege we do nol | fear. We do fear the Hunohakist, and the/ fute of Tayshanjian showa that our) fear Is well founded." | In an effort to trace the “motive be- hind the assassination of Tayshanjian, [the pollce and the District-attprney re jh determined to question Father | Lavont Martoogesstan, an Armenian priest, @nd a leader in the Armenian eolwony, in various Armenian nmurder mysteries Fatlrer Martoogossian has voluntwered his wervices to the police. {In at least one of these affairs, after working up 4 case against a suspect, he appeared prominently in the man's Gefonse when he waa wrought to trial. He volunteered information to the police at-the tims Father Kaspar Var- Marian’s body waa found in a trumk in & tenement in Weet Thirty-ninth street. EVENING WORLD AUWEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1907. COWARDS, SAYS TURE WARS ARE WORST FORM 0 BINGHAM, AND | BAD THINGS, SAYS SUSPENDS POLICE) 1 Oné Patrolman Charged with] John Condon’s Advice io New ‘Hiding Instead of Chasing York Turfmen on Empire Warner, Track Matter. MORE CHARGBS COMING. WEST NOT INTERESTED, Says State Racing Comniission Must Pour Oil on the Troubled Waters. Murderer Once Tried to Kill His Father « and His Stepmother. ; Commissioner Bingham took his firat step toward, makity good his promise to inyvest'gate the conduct of the police at the Warner shooting yesterday morn- (Spectal Ro Tie Eventing Whol.) CHICAGO, JInly .M—“Let there. be Peace in New York turf circles," says John Condoa, the “blind racing bos Was Seen With Slayer. Father Martcogessian and Heéros Hampartzoomian, the-man who killed Tavwshanjian, come from the'aame place in Armenia. Twice last week he was seen in the company of Hampartzoo- mian, although the assassin sald when he waa arrested that he did not arrive from Chicago until Sanday ‘night. ‘The Diatrtot-Attorney In anxious to discover {¢Hampartzoomian told Father Mar- togessian anything about the plot to kil) Tayshanjian FROHMAN BACK WITH PLAYS, SO. Playwright Chambers Accom panies Manager on the Kaiser Wilhelm. a Frohman and Frital Bchoff nea tie leading theatrical lghta aboard the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, which arrived at her Hoboken dock .to- day, Mr. Frohman ts back after eight months abroad, cornering the London ‘and Continental dramatic markets, He was accompanied by Haddon Chambers, ‘one of whose playa he will produce this fall. He also brought with him several playa of Henry Bernstein, which he will duce during the next two years, pros : Misa Scheff has been abroad since May, ang returns in excellent health. Whue tn alate a aaeceen tes ‘as desperately il, = Sonera py her parents, Dr, Scheft, a prominent Berlin throat spectalist, ‘and Mme, Jaoger, prime donna of tho Frankfort Opera Company. They will eo to Loon Lake, in the Adirondacks, for the remainder of the summer, re- 9, when Mins Sch will turning (ihe Knickerbocker in “Mlle. fodisto.” eee ‘Another celebrity of the footlls! was Misa Mary Creignton, who appeared Tn Haddon CGnaimbers's play, “Sir An- ‘rhe advance guard of members of tho English opera company which ts 40 play the London musical comedy, he Dairymaid,” for Charles Frohman, at the Criterion Theatre, arrived to-day on the Oceanic, of the Whe Star line. Tn the party Were” Mrs, Btanohe- Raye and her two daughters: Misses, Ruba and ‘Thelma Raya, Huntley Wright, the comedian, Dorald Hall’ and Gerald Kirby, WHITNEY ESTATE NETS $25,000,000. (Gontinued from First Page.) ‘od, 260. pie fit $8.200. _crectite Storage Battery Company, $1,253,250. 2) whares, fifth) Avenue Trust Com- pany, $10,600. pared for luneleon A. E. Horseman, Mmanptacturer— of toys, the Wire was finally checked that had lost all of his stock Mi the base- ment. | Wille the smoke eaters were hting [the fire their apparatus choked Broad- | \ in oftther direction, causing miles of | lcongested cara to string along north Knd south. The traffic squad men werd ordered to Frankiin street to assist th eserves from Leonard street in ha. ing the -eromde that thnonged ty Fat rn straet and blocked the Broadway aidewntka peepee BINGHAM'S NEW DEPUIY---WOODS Former Newspaper Reporter Will Look Out for Repairs and Supplies Department. | oda, of No. 12 Wreat Forty: | Fourth } to-day. aye Supervision over the De nl the Bureau of Ro- applies. oda wax horn tn Boston and years old. He studied | is a graduate of Har and topped off his ed- pairs ar Mr V thir ts at Groton ¥ rd Untversity of Berlin. Up to last apring, when he becdmd secretary to the Citizens’ Com- mittee on Police, be was a newspape- reporter, Mr, Woods In a member of! the Harvard and Pacquet clubs wi ees tlie a atoms WILLCOX A GUEST AT SAGAMORE HILL. OYSTER pay, July U.—Prestdent Hoosevelt entertained at ‘luncheon to-! day President Willcox of the New York Public Service Commission, Feported-“wiali | ation with & course at the University | 2 | at $19,110, ang one rhe Langdon | ex-bMclo | Warner, of Boston, and Louly B, Bwit:,| Many Copper Shares. 3,873 Guggenhelm Exploration Com- pany, $4,061,254. 7 SH Goon 4,100 sharps Havana y, $112,700, Pag) sharon Industrial ‘Trust Company 100 shares I noney} way, and for @n hour no. care mored | of Providence, $26,000, Metropolitan Magasine ame com- together at 1,000 shares Company and $181,000 of the pany Noss, are 310,000, 30 ‘shares Bietropolten’ Opers and Treat Entate-Coe T7262 snares of the Morton Trust Com pany, $32014-600 shares of this tock Ere. according to the report, pledged th wenire payments of nolos ARETeRAt- xe $700,000, i eines Nassau Tight and Power Sompany. $70,000. om hares, Negional Bank of Com- o 18,622.87, mmaree, MIG srorse Mow Aueo- c 000, Passos ataron National Lead Company, pemmmon. at $85,600. One inindred and seventean the mame stock at OT 1-8, 4,727.50, Bix hundred and seventy-five shares af th same company, preferred, at 10, $157.60. i Mehty-one shares of the name com. pretarred, 97 1-2, $7,897.60. ‘TwY six thousand eleht nundred and seventy-five thares Nevada Con- iaated Copper Company, $876,200 Nine thousand nine hundred shares Naw York Transportation, Company, 58, 781.28, Hh Shares Newport Casino, $760. Interested In Racing. Sik hundred and aixty-three shares of the Saratoga Asaociation for Improving Fareed of Horses, $06,3%. (ve, thougand Standard Ot! at 67 15.68! .) hae (No pays that 0 sharen of this stoc% are pledged to secure the pay. ment, of notes aggresating. $700,000. Four thousand mares Westchester iyr_Ansootation, 0,000, Wrltney had shares Aron of peny Mr in many cline mony | Angitng Cin te placed at a value pf $12. A f the Pallachudols Clb ‘Threw shares of th Rep panlen CTR é ouch Sa’ ——9 HACKSTAFF A DIRECTOR, Vioo-Presdent A. G. Haghataft of the llindls) Central Railroad, was torday AS FRITZ SCHEEE and Parla, dhe eaid, | One share of the Camp Har- | GLIDDEN CUP CARS FINISH Straggled Into New Jersey in Trip Cleveland. j ‘The fourth annual tour of the Amer- jican Automobile Association, aggregat- |ing’ 1.570 miles from Cleveland. O,, to [the Atiantic coast cities and covered Jin twelve days, ended to-day with the |run from Philadelphia to Jersey City— |ninety-six miles—which was coverd in five and one-half hours. The en- tire party arrived at Jersey City at }12.30 to-day, and crossed over to Man- {nattan at ‘Twenty-third street. The | members lUned uri on Twenty-fourth | treet, near the ferry, until all were lover, and then started to Broadway and Fifty-ninth street, where the tour was oMolally declared ended. Although several women started from Clevelan®, the only one to finish with the party was Mrs, Andrew Cuneo, She endured the hardships of mountain travel and never fiinched when con- fronted with diMculties of the ‘road which drove other women to sive up the trip, Her companion travellers plan to wivo her @ loving-cup an a mark of ap- prectation of her bravery and endurance. Itwas anid to-day that, while the act- ual offctat figures of the run are not yet obtainable and must be compared and possibly revised in some tnstances, still the Buffalo Automobile Club, | Buftato, N. ¥., won the Charles J Gitd- j den trophy for admirable qualities dis- played both by Its machine and repre- sentatives on the tour. There is to bo a meeting of members of the party at th Hotel Astor to-night, when official fg- ires will be gf out and the tropry- awarded. : In at, there were about twenty-foui cars which made the entire rum, includ- ing four cara for press representatives The party started from Cleveland on, July 10, and the actuel running time consumed in the trip was twelve days. Short stops mwere made at several points, Probably the, hardest day's run was that from Toledo, O., to Bouth Read. Jnd.,.a distance of 170 miles, ovhich da chstered _tn_nine honta ‘Throughout the trip the ry wea Lanter tre wuttence of -8¢-B- Hower, chairman of the Touring Committee of the: Automobtling, Association. Tho party Was aocompanied by Charles J. Glidden, donor of the Charles J. Glid- den Troghy. The two contentants for the best rec- ord for runabouts during the trip are HK. Sheridan, of the Cleveland Auto- mobfie Club, and C8,” Smith, of the Quaker City’ (Philadelphia) Motor Club. The acorea of these contestants. are re- marknbty close; -and-e-epectad min-may have to be arranged In order to deter- mine the winner, Each contestant made exceptionally good time and waa In ood Condition at the finish. THROWN ON TH!RD RAIL, MAN ESCAPES DEATH. Sustains Only. a Scalp Wound and a Few Contusions of the Back, Struck by an electric trate, tossed through the alr a number of feet and lIanding among third ratly and switches and sustaining only @ slight scalp wound and contusions of the back, was the ex- perience to-day of Jam: Hart, fitty years old, of No, 313 at Fitty-firet street, a laborer employed by the Inter- bor i h Company on the Ninth avenue Ine. Hart was struck by a Ninth avenue train ae he was working on the “L‘* jetructure in front of No. 37 Greenwich ‘street. An ambulance was hastily called, | but Hart refused te go to the hospital. | ns | SUICIDE WAS ERNST. Identifies Body of | Found in Central Park. | At ‘the Morgue. to-day Hilda 2rnat |identified the body of the man who com- mitted euicide near :the Kinderbuné, 4 summer house in Central Park, Jast nicht, ag that of her brother, Alfred tRelntiold “Bras, Atty-four years old, inarried, and a turrier, of No. 60 Bixth Street, this clty, Tiida Ernst oald that her brother had long. threatened to Kill himself, | | sinter Man lelootel a director of the company to|and that he had been both despondent| All the vacancy oassed by the death land fil. He had been twenty-five years ot John C. WeQing. Hacketaft ta alin America, his aistor said, and the Herriman man, but was not opposed by | past fifteen’ years in New York. oils Htuyvouine Fi, Who was praweot “{)catger and: mother live in Germany, ahé eo g saig Ths, aiater took the hedy. of the, Est Fifty-first street station, on charges of cowartics, and conduct un- ing, when he to-day ordered the m penalon of Patrolman Steven 8. Walsh snd_Paxtrolman Tracey 1. Hossa, both of the Wostern turf, whose fight against Ed. Corrigan for many years and at nearly all the tracks from Chicago to New Orleans has been the most bitter feud of all turf history, Involving as it has millions of dollars and even human dives. Condon was interviewed at his home here to-@ay by The Evening World correspondent. In view of tho report that the Western turf associations were interested in the opening of the Empire Qty track at Yonkers in defiance of Uie wishes of the New York State Rac- ing Association and Jockey Club, which leaned to the support of the Saratoga meeting, Condon was supposed to have & personal interest in the matter. "He ly will a power tn the Western turf and probably has more money invested in Tace tracks through the West and Seuth than any man In Ameri His evasive replies to direct questions were characteristic, for) Condon has never_advertised his plana and motives in advance. His 'counselé for’ peace ure surprising and might be taken to indi- cate a possible truce Yetween himself and Corrigan, and a ‘reopening of the tracks here by those who do not under- stand the {implacable hatred’ between these men who have fought each other with the ferocity of bulldogs. Turf War Is Bad Thing. “A turf fight, as I have learned by bitter experience, 1s a bad thing,” said Condon. “I hope the State Racing Commission of New York steps In and pours ofl on the troubled waters, It would seem that the Empire City track at Yonkers has as much right under the law to race as Gravesend, Coney Island, Belmont, &0, As for the era} situation, it ts too early to form an optnion.”” "But the Empire people declare that they will race any way. Would not a meeting under such conditions be likely to Involve the whole turf In a war, Mr. Condon?" was asked. “it the Jockey Club should decide to refise dates to the Empire track and the management of the latter courva decides to race at the risk of being out- lawed, 1 cannot see st would be so bad. Eastern tracks have had thelr taste of oullawry, and the offending turfmen lave been taken back into the fold after the storm blew over.’ Western Backing Is Lacking. “Would the Western ‘turf -organiza- tlons back the Empire track in case of a real fight between It and the Jockey Chub? “Well, I cannot tell anythin about -thet—then—-eny ober turfman. All would ‘depend upon the number of horseowners, who were not afrald to go to the Empire track and rivk the ban of the Jockey Club.” becoming an officer. From the evience thus far gath- ered ft {m alleged that Walsh hid him- elf for more than twenty minutes in the spalding Building yesterday morn- ing while Warner was hiding there, {n- ‘stead ot going after tho mumierer, Ros- wax ty nocused of cowardice In falling to pursue Warner when he eaw him run Gown the street with several inan in purmult and disappear tnto the Spald- Ing Bullding. These two officers, \t is anid, were among the first policenin io arrive on the scene after the shoot- tng. “ Witnesses who were examined teati- Ned that Wateh had an opportunity to’ draw bis own revolver and fire at tho Tugitive and failed to do #0. That he had @ chance to capture the man and failed to do this. They also sald that the other police who came to the acene ought’to have sent one or two men to the rear of the building to watoh the fire-efeupe and rear yard, but they all said chet Walsh was really the only polloeman who saw Turnur and had a chance to make a capture. It ls stated that several other patrol- men who were present yesterday at tho scene of themurder will be brought up on almilar charges, and if found guilty they will be broke Walsh te the policeman who recently so impressed Commiastoner Hansen with his story of hazing by some of bis brother police- men that three of them were dismissed trom the foree. Werner Fights for Life, Frank H. Warner, murderer of Fa-{ ther C. Norling, whose crime has brought to light the fact that he ts an ex-convict, a murderer at heart tor twenty years past at least, {s lying In Bellevue Hospital fighting for his life. He has @ bare chance of recovery, ac- cording to Assistant Superintendent Rickard. There is a puncture in his brain made trom the bale hook In the hands of Jacob H. Rose, a brawny truckman, who dared do what a company of cow- ardly police dared not do—capture a ‘man who had committed the murder of An innocent woman, defied a mob and 20 policemen end escaped. onty to shoot down a man who had offered to befriend him In another part of the city, and then defled a second mob and a aquad more of pollce. Condon sefused to. discuss the local track. matters and when asked 1f there Wieon—Will—Recever, was any prospect oF an litimedttte re] John C. Wilson, the millionaire hat| cvenin of the courses here, replied th length of the pol! formers’: t it would depend largely, tipon, the fuical lives of the "Re- used them to be cloned. manufacturer and clubman, who was Warner's second victim, is in St. Vin- cent’s Hospital with two serious bullet wounds. but the physictans sey he ts | resting “well to-day and there is every chance for him to. recover, Miss, -Noriing’s body 1s in Stephen Merritt's burial estabiishinent, where it Was taken after” Warner had killed her and, holding off the police, made hts escape. re" who. 3 Foot-ease, @ powder. [t painful, . smarting, ~ nérvous” feet, und instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight i Was-an-Ex-Convict. or new shoes feel easy. It is a cer- That Warner, gray mustached, gray/tain cure, for sweating, callous, haired, soft spoken save when be was in.dtlnk, -was-an-ox-comvict, came-ax-n complete aurprive to those wha bad. known him in business and trusted hin uni] to-day, when his Tull history was 4ooked up. : Warner ls the son of old Peter War- ner, a hotelkesper of Batavia, N.Y. Frank Warner is now itty-six yoars old, Way back on May 15, 187, tairty Yeurs ago, Warner rat developed the vendency lo kIU those who Were in his swollen, tired, aching feet. Try St tovtay. Soll -by> al —Draggiste and Shoe. Stores, By mail for 25c in| stamps. Don't accept any sudstitute. For FREE trial package, also Free Bample of the FOO7-EASE Sanitary CORN-PAD, a new invention, ad- dress Allen 8, Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y. path. His old father had married th cond time, and on that night War ex determined his father and step. mother must die. He crept to the win- dow of thelr room, and waile they were sleeping fred upon Liem, ‘The fret shot struck the hotel-keeper but did not injure bim mortally. tis screamed for his wife to save horecit ri suo leaped from bed he fired ‘What mre the wild waves say! aia iho Phe charge of tha aun "ee: |] Doubtless they ‘are saying that La! candies at » “Penny a Pound hold more unadulterated summer than the-salt of any old ocean, SPECIAL for this. THURSDAY tered her ankle. Warner then set fire to the curtains in the foom, with the in- tention of burning both victims to death and to cover his oriine, hetore Warner could be apprehended he fied to New York. Three weoks 7 Hist da" the ‘Bonsry., where bacmai || STRAWBERRY WALNUT 4 ()q Seer at pack to Betavie wiser (| BONBONS ..-POUND HE BLIND BISS SHAKE WTO YOUR SHOES) | SCALP ECE Lasted Four Years—Lost a Gi Deal of Hair and Head Covered With Scabs—Gi Worse Under Treatments: Ui PERFECTLY CURED BY CUTICURA IN 4 WEEKS -_— “TY feel that it ia my doty to others that suffer as 1 did to: tell what tho “ \ @aticura Romedies have done for moe. About three years agn I was troubled with eczema of the scalp in. tte worst form, alot of hairenine out in spots sud my. head was covered with ecabs, IT con- sulted a-doctor and be aed me that se was only’ a sore an 9> it’ would econ heal u up, He ‘gave me some salve for it but ft did not do any good, Then I consulted another doctor ‘and he could not tell'me what it was but gave me some salye for itand some medi- eine for my blood, but the trouble still grew worse. At last I was advised by '@ friend who had suffered as I did to the Cuticura Remedies. 80 I went urchased a complete set of Cuticura for one dollar and after using them for two weeks all the sores disap, and in about four weeks I felt | was com- pletely cured. Altogether I had the} eczema for about four rs and I ena confident that if I used Cutioura\ deal RTE paver Ky for 5 and loss of mqney Crea) ea hb I fool that I ) am perfectly cw still use Reeolvent ns a spring tonic, Ed Arris, McKinley 8t., C. jam beraburg, Pay May 2, 1906 and Feb. 24, 1907.’ CUTICURA CURES The most terruring: and disfi; humors, eczemas, rashes, itchings, tations, and inflammations of the aki scalp, and blood of infants, children, Vectulte, are instantly irelleved and speedé lly cured, in the majority of cases, b: warm baths with Cutioura Soap, ‘gentle applications of Cuticura Ointment, and ld doses of Cuticura Resolvent or Pills. Cuticura Boap (Se), ‘Otmtment gd Cuteten Rersren, 1000) or gS om (50e.), nae Sarat Foughout word, Potter oe CTD Eiee Sa diene eee : : s : Responsibility. No “sales’—but REAL Eye Service by - an old and responsible firm retain- ing Five “Registered Physicians and operating two complete factories. Glasses Only I/ Needed. Always at Moderate Prices, ESTABLISHED Nearly 50 Years, 223 Sixth Ave., Below 15th St. 350 Sixth Ave., Below 22d St. 1274 Broadway, Below 32d St. 217 B'way, Astor House Biock. ‘New Store; ~ 41401 Nessad-St.,-mear-Aae-Sh- '7-30Malden Lane.N.Y.City 359 Fulton Bt.. Brookiya. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPO POs Ls CED WOR while th Bude rent mlg, on our afar || CHOCOLATE COVERED 4 ()p Kerem ie incase fas] FUDGE... .. POUND was in arrested while making for || Park Row store open evenings) until ee 11 o'clock, 54, he Pennsylvania Hine. the Pegentenced to Ten Years, Warner was tried the following month and was convicted of assault and ac. tempt to Kill. He Was sentenced to the Btate’s Prison at Auburn for ten years, ville In prison he learned the hat | trade and on his release camo to tals | Sty and began to make uso of the he had gained in th knowledge nent A Fained in tho prise career af- earn ace! PeYinese and thon fallure—the fellurs ts conception in: his lov. 5 Sate wlarnier plotted tot “Kingtat DIED.: Seseor a4 Mayar a, Me S00- | OPKINS—CORNELIUS HOPRINE, be- When ‘the Subway was bal bullt |) foved husband of the late Aan Hopicine: through Forty-second street and bual-| native of Lametiour, County Longford, eas on that thoroughfare was impos. | Iriant. ‘ sible because of ban! dirt Pe the®sidewalk: Warner had a turniohing | _ 70Rere) frem his Inte realdeios W. 44th at ‘Thareday, July 8, at 9.20 ¥ it Forty-second street MoFe eyiamed the Mayor: Helmontand| Ac Mi thence to Ot Ragheat'e Roma Mr, McDonald for hfe lous of trade | Cathollo Chureh, 40th ot. weet of 10th ‘Warner believed in killing persons who| ay. Relatives aod frionde reepecttully im- stood in the way of bis success. vited to attend, Interment in Calvary — Cemetery, S HELP WANTED-—MALE, Te 1D AND REWARDS. | aad ities, ~Ouppien, 7 talent et, | bO8T) FOUN se Hy er LGaT— Monday. mornihe, ‘going tiem corner eS a eT Balt WOODWORK, L paper; rvet be ex) Mock Soa 0 Sry PAT. INSECT SPRAYER FiTS ANY BOTTLE. se Receipt Gr acgtotln “of all Trine ot peat 1th 8: a 4 Betoun ay. Ni Axshte! wanted, : py a Oaiy Co, of tts “We Bait eae Red TRUNKS & BAGS Bought, Bold, Exchanged, Emergency Baggage Repair Co. 20-30 B 14h Bt, Bet, Gih Av. @ Unien or Bandi Lr in ib Ny Kintera Charge for It ilepdentirgonll aA ad ele ond idan nea A s \ {