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wt. ‘these men,” said Thaw dramatically as | » mony. « the crowd as the THAW FARING ARING |View ¢ of the Tall Tower and Swaying Footpaths of Manhattan BARBERS, USED ATOR RIMSEL “J Will Not Trust These Men,” He Says in a White Plains Shop. NEW FIGHT POSTPONED, | Latest Move to Have Sanity Tested Is Off Until | September. After a brief hearing Defore Supreme Court Justice Isaac N. Mills at White| Plains to-day the argument on the ques: | tion of granting Harry Thaw a sanity | trial by jury was, through agreement, continued until the ¢hird Monday in Sop- | Thaw was remanded to his present | quarters at Poughkeepsie after he nad told the Justice in disconnected @entences that it was his understand- ing that A. Russell Peabody, his law- | yer, and Dietrict-Attorney Jerome had | agreed he should not be returned to | his old plpace in Matteawan during the | interval. But these things were dimmed into In- wignificance by an incident of the early morning. When Thaw reached White Plains | ftom oughkeopsie his guards took ‘him to a barber shop to be shaved. In Fear of Barhers. "sp ill not trust my life to any of | he entered the shop. ‘Give me a razor | and I will shave myeelt.” “What's thet?” asked one of the three Dutchess County men who had him in charge. Aetonishment made | him stammer, | “T said I didn't propose to trust my-| telf to any stranger at such a time,” said Thaw, with an extravagant ges- ture and a staring look in his big,| wild-horse eyes. ‘A man placed as I fm should be very caretul. If I'm go- {ng to be shaved £ want to do It my- ell.” Before any oue of his surprised guards could make up his mind what ought to be done in so unexpected a contingency, a half-frightened barber hed handed Thaw strapped razor and was fixing the brush and théglather for the distinguished cys- tomer ® newly Thaw Shaves Himself. Standing In the middle of the floor, Thaw shaved himself carefully, Banked about the door and with their several noses pressed against the only window o! the little shop, those of the popula- tion of White Plains as were not out of town or bedridden watched the cere- En masse they had followed Thaw from the trolley station, and now they were getting a treat such as not even the most hopeful had counted upon. De Hghtful shivers ran through razor glided over Thaw's fat-covered Adams apple, mow- ing away a two days’ stubble But Thaw neither cut his own throat Mor the barber's, nor the throats of those who had him in their kee When the job was done he handed tie razor and the kit back to their owner with a smile of th s, stowed upon him a tip of augment size, judging by White Plains standards of barber ship liberality, bay rummed end towelled his unald coat on and marched out of hund for the court-house with ging along behind. Plainly Thaw he “had created, heat waves enjoyed the se He fair of self-importar ving operatio his head sidewise with ab to make sure out o that he had an appre Dr, Amos T. Baker, Matteawan Insane, was t at the barber shop Plains to testify age thet Thaw s suffering fro: ous and incurable form of lunacy Dr, Baker's Comment. “What better proof of mental condition could any asked Dr. Baker. ‘The persecution which {s somewhere in the t has chosen to mar an unmistakable way Just as fested itself when Thaw kil under tt persecuted the parano eelf-Import admitted he feared an de made by man's want?’ sion always hid of @ paranoa: orechausen Interrupted aay that his information on We subject ca ape Thaw himselt. Ee believed tha EE 1908. __ THE EVENING WORLD. MONDAY, JULY 135, ew GIRL BURNED WN Bridge Taken by Daring Staff Photographer of The Evening World STREET DIES AT Photographed Especiaily for The Evening World by W. C. Harris, t BUSISESS FAST Expects to Rejoin Jnlin Bowne! He Scaled Towers of New Bridge. See ap Reena oe TTING BACK To Hh TOMO BY W. C. HARRIS. (Staff Photographer of The Evening World.) Wd ia | What were my sensations up there on the footwalks of the new Manhattan Bridge? Right cool, mighty lonesome and tired, oh, so tired every time | took a step along the footwalks runnit out from the Manhattan tower. How did I get there? By Rng it slow and keeping m} in the sky, There were 320 st the tower, then 160 rungs in t tem. Not so hard until I reached the apex of t found the trap door at the head of the and bolted by the ironworkers. when t Saturday half-holiday. By throwing my camera over my shoulder and seizing an iron bar which ran beyond th { managed to crawl over the edge of the toy The rest was Miss Bowne whom Cordo as ul eae of tte + Plants Cited as Proof, Grows in ileres Approaches 8 before | re mi ee different | and ele 1 manag cided Improvement easy, Although th 23rd “treet Beach, LADIES’ DRESSES. sa JAMES McCREERY & 60, leads, f 2érd Street 34th Street Daring Photographer Telis How aires SEMI-ANNUAL SALE of Furniture Continued, lace trimmed, White Enamel Bedroom Suites; Brass Bedsteads and Willow and White Enamel! | urniturein suitesand odd pieces, ‘ Bureaus.....+...16.75, 23.00 and 30,00 | prices 25.00, 30.00 and 39.00 | 00, 19,09 and 27.00 form Chiffoniers..... , CORDOVA SOON TO BE FREE. ven Linen Coat Suits. ‘Princess Dresses, batiste with border, White Linen embroidered panel, A HOSPITAL Bonfire Sets Her Clothing Ablaze—Three Others Are Injured. \ n the rear yard of No. 167 East Ono Hundred and Ninth etreet this morning elght-vear-old Lottle Schiick made a bonfire of a heap of waste paper, where- upon all her little friends swarmed in to Lottle caught fire, wheres a child of five, see the fun upon Christina Sper herotoally went to h and fought to beat out the flames with her puny hands, In doing ¢o her clothing tool flame and she was so badly burned that she died this afternoon in the Hurlem Hospital Lottie ran home when the fire in her clothing was beaten out, but the flaming Christina rolled over and over In an agony ire: Sam Wittenberg, a butcher, of No, is? East One Hundred and Ninth street, and Jour J. Hughes, « con- tractor, of No. 1486 Park avenue, ran up. They ed to wra’ pe eulld it h m Vnwittingly sha eluded re and Max the Janitor of No. danced yelling to some one to a blanket or a com> upstairs, A truckman came with ey durled { ered the flames, But s lover, Her body nd her nair was | | disfigured that | Mrs, Emma Schilck, mother of the fd who had etarted the whole thing, na to be her own dau, d up the poor nd ted with her to the the floor, There am © surgeor al, found her on the urned body »king soda, while glander tried vainly some sort of order in the great crowd of excited dwellers of Little aly who had invaded the tenement, Real Mother Learned Truth, The ambulance was taking ait dying d been frantic mad with rage, screams her—she murdered thf) brought othet debrews and thé tie and the hhlick household from inv JAMES McGREERY & GO. 34th Street On Tuesday, July the r4th, In Both Stores, Sale of Summer Dresses, SA Luter, EET Dotted and check Lawn Princess and Bretelle Dresses, Repp or Stripe Duck Coat Suits, 375 and 5.75 *5,00 Tailor-made or 8.50 Made of dotted 6.50 Skirts, with hand: 5.50 Hinete: 1 int Tien tinny ae Bin | ty h fo ses 22.00, 27,00 and 33.00 CORSETS. /n Bcth Stores, Has Narrow Escape Eanes fi Toilet Table Ceaatanihe 17 Bi rte All Corsets Carefully Fitted, y eels i) : Chairs, Rockers, Costumers ae Mirrors, C, B. a la Spirite Corsets. Models ee i Brass Bedsteads, for every type of figure, Front and side ; ; f : : ; ppotters, 1.00 \ iis hn 100 models tobe discontinued, with 2 Eygien ; ‘ k fi inchtubing and heavy lateral filling, Fin. b C. fi ala pa ae High ‘ ‘ Ws ished with best English lacquer. All sizes, Wiad ar badade Ce ftact OS y ; rh 15,00, 19.50 and 24,00 figures, Models for well developed fig~ ‘ Atta former prices 21.50, 27.50 and 34.00 ures with long back and heavily boned, i iene ‘ 1 g Aikbe : Front and side supporters, 1.50 ‘ea ; Wil'ow Furniture, C. Byala Spirite Corsets, Models k , ‘ : Scams : The collection includes suites in for every type of figure, Many de. eit York ; 4 WOMAN BEATEN !S rose, white fig blue er aey Odd Chairs, signed for well developed figures, rile al 40 : “|| FOUND DEAD AT HOME, Rockers, Tables, Settees and Garden moulding the over-developed proportions WOMAN HIT BY CAR, | 2 Chairs in red, green, tan and natural. into correct and graceful lines, oN ; ads Ras a At one-third less than usual prices, 2.50 to 8,00 i vA CASH FoR sick Basics. |X? P editing IMR ee a} 48 al L ay: prings; White Enamel and Brass Cribs, JANES MACREERY & GO. 8 : Several w N16) de 23rd Street 34th Street aird Street 34th Street Stcekinie, ‘ ack Shoes a Fema ar Hilt, N.Y. ar ui The police believe that the woman’, ‘ ’ stocking i. CG each sent jied from the eating. hi