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een —— ee Soc Teeny Tine peer SE ee Somer oe eo BRONX INSURGENTS \Four Ti Bolters in B Yaad tie Deas” The Br EAN 10 SHOOT ORGANIZE TO WAR AGAINST MURPHY Tammany Revolt Against the “Boss” Is Likely to Spread to Manhattan. FIGHT AT PRIMARIES.) Eugene McGuire and Arthur Murphy Send In Their Resignations. The resignation of four Tam- many Bronx district leaders from the Executive Committee of Tam- many Hall, which action was orig: nally based upon the refusal of Charles F. Murphy to indorse the! Bronx County bill in the Legisla- tare has brought about a revolt | against Murphy's leadership. | Organization arrangements are! already under way for a dig fight} at the forthcoming primaries, and | the fight will certainly spread into Manhattan before many days. | Eugeno McGuire, leader of the Thirty-second Assembly District, an@ Arthur Murphy, leader of the Thirtyfourth, have already ten-| dered their resignations to the Gen- eral Committees of their district | — organizations. Neither resignation | has been accepted as yet. Charles F, Murphy {is not anxious that ac- ceptances be forthcoming, but Me- Guire and Murphy are out and thelr friends say they are going to stay out and fight independently for con- trol of the Bronx. Morris \/ith Insurgents. | Witllam E. Morris of the Thirty-| fifth: District will stand with Arthur | Murphy and McGuire, He ts an officer | in the Sixty-ninth Regiment and ts et present in Texas attending the army Manoeuvres. As soon as he gets back | he will follow the example of his col-| they had agreed that If our comp: THORNE LIFTS LID ON MONEY SCANDALS | (Continued From First Page.) | Fentlemen—the Morgan Intereste—and | ny | Teagues and send his regignation to| was sound they would protest ux, ‘Then, the General Committee of his organi-|!t Was that Perkins named the first! tation. comm @ to Investigate us. I came Garvin, although he accompanied | 10%" the morning after at 6.90 o'clock, Murphy, McGuire and Morris to Tam many Hall a month ago and formaily | resigned from the Executive Committ bas been more halting than the oth ia his progress toward complete sever- ance with the organization, | * | The commite ep came at 7.20, That Started the Run. “But the Perkins statement had been | Printed in the Times that very morning and there was « line of depositors when | We opened. ‘The statement practically sald to our dep 0 quickly and McGulre has cut himself completely | et money." away from Tammany Hall, having not | “The committee named by Perkins only resigned his leadership but bis |did not make any report. The run membership on the State Committee. | began. Then the second conimittes He 1s regarded as the leader of tne | was named by the trust comp: It Bronx revolt. His district 1s one of the | Was composed of Mr. Francis, George largest in the city and hi trarily divided by Murphys, t, H. O'Neill in McGuire, however, has handled the dis- trlet, | ‘The Bronx, as a matter of fact, h en @ source of anxiety to Charlies F. Murphy for some considerable time. Louis F. Haffen long ago lost his pop- wlarity with the Murphy-McGuire com- bination, Charles F, Murphy, however, in the face of opposition, continued to ze Haffen until the latter was | ced into retirement by his own peo- been art who forced | Lean Days for Demosra: Since the last election the Bronx has had practically no patronage from Fours teenth street. With a Republican Bor- ough President and an unrespons Mayor, the Democrats of the Bronx y have fought the battles of the organi don and make politics a business experienced lean days. have However, the family and friends of Daniel F. Cobalan have not been over- looked. It Is charged by the (amishins rank and file of the Bronx that Charis ™. Murphy has handed everything he | auld get ho of to the Cohalans, Out this condition of helplessness the lastric rst turned to the | enticing pronpect a count government and grabbing off the patron: age of that form of adininistration for themselves. Charles F. Murphy dit not look with favor upon the project to make a sep ate county of the Bronx for tan easons. ‘The cl such a division ¢ would build up be River, in a district F nd bounds, an independent p : ganization such as was 1 4 in Brooklyn by Patrick MH. MeCarveu. Ail e power of Tammany was exe Kul the Bronx County bill and the war expeditiously put to death. Insurgents Loet Fight. In the mean time Eugene Mc Arthur Murphy and Gary in an effort to swing M 4 cut away from hin by handing ‘heir ignations into his ke 1g. They evie dently thought this action would cause Murphy to pause his opporit.on the Bronx County Bill, Murphy dia 1 pause @ second. MeGulre and having tnsurged, were co: by the exigencies of politics on Insurging. With "Big Tim" sul re and and Morris. Ply {nto Line, mpelied to keep mn all ready to break away from Murphy on the east side and swing some leaders in otier parts of Manhattan, and with the al-| tion ways smouldering Tammany op, n Brogklyn Mable to break ou: ny pment, Charles F. Murphy is facing a ot politieal tin In addition there is the up-State in- dependent movement whicr being systematically organized for the purpose of wresting control of the State organize ation from Tammany hands, Satlelcaieemeson SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS | an additional leader. | (00 we needed, $10,000 000, Church and made its rep njamin Strong. It t and we got the $15,000,- We had previously goat It was not the first or Per Kins committee that gave us the help; it Was the trust companies’ committee. “Then {t was not Mr. Morgan who Jadvanced the money?" “Mr, Morgan gave you no aid?" “I wouldn't say that; he gave us hia Influence and good wishes.” “The people who gave me the money asked If 1 could pay it in eighteen months. ¥ told them that T could pay ft in ten months. They said that I ought hot to promise anything that T was not certain to be able to do and T stuck to | the ten month proposition. I patd the sum in nine months: do not believe that Mr. Morgan Personally knew anything about the t that was given out by Mr. orks Ln talked with him ab uit the matter and he has assured me that he did not know about the statement. 1 fo not believe that he would He to me Says Perkins Forge! at ave your relations with M ~ HUSBAND TOSAVE HER DAUGHTER ' Mrs, Fauser Not Insane, Alien- ists Say, Thotigh She Threat- | ened Her Husband. GIRL. SENT TO CONVENT. | Magist ate Frees Woman Whose Fifth Spouse Made Charges Against Her. On the testimony of Dr. nd) having 1 to t threa husband, shoot Alienists Agree. Magistrate Rreen committed Mrs. F. ser to Dr. MeDonald’s sanitarlum at vias otis Central Valley for a ten days’ observa- or ean related to his |; The b 1 employed Dr r bank, is amply shown in this further! ay hig alientst. Hoth phystelans. said Statement by Mr. ‘Thorne, who fought tO | yey had examined Mrs, Mauser ad met his bank in tis pla found her to be perfectly sane and ra- testified before the Culberson | ijonal tn every respect Coron ee in 1909 that the Trust When the charges were preferred Company had no interest In the SOCK | agate hor Pauser he had enterod friendiy-—that is to say, our relations Peasant. I have talk wer the matter with him since the atenen ade publie and wher an ‘ t he doesn't re mem 1 do tr, Peri tr Mia eneo with i. Gary of Steel ‘Trust to-da but he would not talk after the confer ence 1 W, Gates was at his off Noo 17 Battery place, but he could not juced to make any adalti Thorne to Be a Witne It is expected that when Mr. 7 S called as @ witness before the § Investing Committee of the House Representatives his testimony be t mittee will develop that the © to y of Steel than Was related by Jibn W. Gates. nis atement made by Mr. Thorne is re arded a Meat e will Ko { than any one else had yet gone Mr, Gates unc dly made a clear recital of concern= ing the merger of enness 1 Tro. ny with ol Trost, go far as he has gone, The only mistake he has made was in the atntement that the Trust Company of America wan directly interested tm that transaction” Had Some Ot! er Reason, ment, toverher with ihe fact that tl st of Amertoa had only WM of loans en Bee Coal and Iyon ¢ ny Stock apparent that the Mc ts 1 other veasons for th Xe the trust company than are co a in the Gates testimony, My. Thorne 4s expected to say what these reasons from the t tions of the late full of 197 and make plain for the first time the real inside history of the ante, How Mr. Thorne views the Stes] mer- vig | | ‘ of the Ten’ Com: ssee Coal and Ire | his studio had threatened not o wher, but that on Nov. |i ghoot him, but to also k Joaned $452,700 to six Ine | og tapher and dividuals holding the stock at $0 a He (old the Ma ahare as collateral, Jwho Is @ former Kentuckian, was a All of these loans were paid off in November, with the exception of two wonderful shot and had a |shooting; also that she record had been 000 each, | herself. “1 really did not know that the Fauser is her fifth hushand, accord: Steel Trust was after the Tennessee | jig ty his story, and has been married Coal and Iron Company until after [44° ner for five years, He says one the deal had ibeen concluded, al- | ian has been kliled for paying atten though T was a member of the orig- tlons to her, At this time sne was in Pittsburg securing third husband, She had left the court- | room with a man and husband met! inal syndicate of the stock, “The sale of that held a majority nnessee Coal and tock was certainly a forced | nd brought about b ythose who | them, wanted to acquire the stock.” ‘The husband drew a revolver and Taken as a whole, the Thorne testis! tried to shoot her, but her escort mony, which hax not been brought to! stepped in front. r and received the surface In any previous tnvestiga-| the bullet, falling dead on aide: Hon, will, it 1s generally conceded, de-| waik, The husband then fired three velop ® finunclal scandal of large pro-| }\iiets inte his wife's body portions. | istrate O'Connor complimented SES A Ad rebels : oz | the alienists for thelr testimony, say- ork to-day did not snow any effec pleasure to find phys the expowure made by Mr. Gates—that | Ue !t was a pleasure to find ph 1 by the uniting in the jus- prosecut nte But there was a {9 to say, in prices, curtaliment of voiumne that 4 ted | ina: tos sennan: the daine vi & desire on the part of speculators and | —— investors to do little until some word | ame along the ne concerning the|HELD ON HOMICIDE CHARGE. futur a Steel opened in London and in New| paw ivan and David Drohan York within a fraction of the Saturd Ac med, closing, which was the closing of a wee! that showed a net decline of 2 points in {ol Sullivan, twenty-three years 5 common, and in which 635,109 | |panie! Sullivan, (twent apes of the stock were turned loo sree aon 2 4 A Judge BE. H. Gary, head of the Steel | David Drohan, twenty-four, of N 4 Trust, came back from Chicago to-day, | ast One Hundredth street, were held and the only to-day without bail and remanded to the statement he m his arrival went as far afteld from the| Coroner by Ma: ate Corrigan tn the topic of chief interest as a statement | Harlem Court on a char: nicide. could Well Ko. It dealt with the meet-| They were arrested last night In eon- ing of directors of the trust at the Rail- | nection with the. tindlr the body road Club to-day, at which the attitude |an unidentified man at t om att of the Republic Iron and Steel Com-| airanaft of the hou 185 pany, which has recently cut’ prices, | Ninety-ninth street was discussed, Outlook in the West. “It ts hard to tell what the general} outcome of the Republic Iron and Stee! ‘ompany's action will be,” said Judge | — MARRIED SIXTY YEARS, A married life of sixty y ra wa am hoping for the best, and| ebrated yesterday by Dr. and Mrs. Joba there will be no reduction| Levering at their home, No. 373 Gowe. As to conditions in the! avenue, Mount Air everything is all ri rosy and| Dr, ring is in his ninety-first year ly prospe y are rows, ‘The steel plants) and still nicely and the gen-) uated in 1 best, and If we| lege of De and hearty, He was grad- from the Philadelphia Co! tal Surgery. Mrs, Ls is year the bual-| who wax Miss Mary Shugard of ( ness sho. In’ @ prosperous | town, ts an invalld condition, But in spite of the statement that the | = = = iviness of th be the di #| dealt only with the Republic Iron and | Seermrersresmcescmmmen any's insurrection, the finan- | sumed that the directors the Stanley s work and ot nt Mterature » some not Investigation committ the contribu to ¢ from John W, Gates. It {s also supposed that the fina committee of the Steel Trust, wh! meets Wednesday, a day abead of usual tine, will go over the proba line of examination through which Judge Gary will be put in Washington mn Thursday when he is scheduled to be @ Witness before the Hou mmit= » and (o tell about the merger of t Vand Iron Compan ’ facts which are ce | | _ EAGLE Convenient, Econom! Any sk ish whiten causes 2 noyat ma, herp¢ yas! plunles om any form of surface tr iil be promptly disposed « the use of a little Poslam. N ing ever has equalle. the work of this remarkable remedy in curing obstinate surface diseases and ¢ ing ted skin, Hegeman's, Ki Kalish'’s and all druggist two sizes, 50 cents and » for free sample to the I Writ gency Laboratorie: fiith street, New ¥ a divorce from her!) Best Results in Your Cooking ~ BARS HELPERS, BUT BLOCKS HOLE WITH HIS OWN BODY . F, Wilson of Bushwick Ave- nue, Brooklyn, Foils Edison Company Pole-Setters. HE HAS TWENTY AIDES. | Carlos F. Me-} While Mr. A. F. Wilson of No. 11 Donald and Dr. George M. Parker,, Bushwick avenue, Brooklyn, i# unable Magistrate O'Connor tn West Site) personally to occupy amore than one tele- Court this afternoon dismissed the 'n-| rap! pole hole at a time, he has a band sanity char brought against Mrs,| of recruits on hand whd have volu Mar user by her hushand,{ feered to sit {n al! the holes the Gus Haus 4 designer gnd| Company digs on his Bushwick avenue | orator with a studio at No. 41 rdw} B:9Pe are tay ste. Twenty-tirst et, who Ives at No. 1] wn Hid aah) Bt vanee one|| won o : | Wr- a, who i a small, thin man, tned | vest Elghty-firth street ale As score of recruits and started Fauser complained to Magistrate f Gut the theligibies, ‘There were | g ihat his wite had threatened | five 200-pound volunteers to whom Mr. | shoot him. The alienists to-day told! Witcon apologized profusely, saying rate O'Connor, who succeeded! “Gentlemen, while I appreciate. the| ate Breen in the court, that Mre. |), able pub } this ovcasion spirit you manifest o nd while Tam touched to Her but said, the r om the inmost depths of my soul by yo! for her threat was to protect her da S| willingness to launch yor f In my ter, She charged that her husband had cause, it would be manifestly unfa |pald Improper attenitons to the girl} for you to attempt to help me and dol who ts elghteen yea do and t8 a} what fam to do—— By Jove!} daughter by Mrs, Fauser's firet husband. | the hole’ fin nd T must sump tn.) The girl corroborated her moth ‘ With which antl-ellmaxic Peroration Mrs, Fauser said that as the result off Mr. Wilson sprang from the steps of her husband's attentions she had been| his he brushed aside th dison obliged to xend her daughter to a con-}Company dig and jumped into the} vent in New Jorsey hole to his neck | Defies the Workmen. | | "Now T defy you! he erted out to the! reman on the Job. “You dare not put any pole in this hole while I'm in St, In it ti the sun goes ther one,” retorted the taunted Mr. Wilson, one and my friends wit! | the overs you dig.” Kin the hole up to his ward, but he threw far enough to reach a thousand e persons, who gathered round Again he called his volunteers to him | nd afte ent thelr way or mo: t sh the crowd he went on with his Are you still willing to stick by me?” “We are," chorused the twenty, in- | chiling the five fat men, Again Mr. Wilson endeavored to Jeliminate the five fat candidates with honeyed words | “As T was telling you | paused and repeated the * ‘was telling you gentlemen, five he ve" “As T he began again, but stopped suddenly because of n, part of which he barely missed swallowing. ‘Darn It, You're Too Fat. Go on, Wilson,” cut in one of ti candidates, “we're with you. hat's just it ried Wilson, know you're with me, but, but, darn it, | ny you're too fat. It's bad et man of my size to fit In t any of you chaps tried it stuck, You'd get in, .ut you couldn get out, 1 can’t be responsible for that you know ‘Oh, rats.” replled one of the fat men, “we ain't so fat. Ite all im- agination on your part, Wilson, Just come out of th. hole and we'll show you. er!” cried Wilson, after remo' ing a handful of pebbles from his lps uy stay In this hole till this digging stops, It isn't comfortable and It {sn’t | an, but T know my rights, and no| soulless corporation {8 going to put up| unsightly poles on my property," | Tr dous cheers drowned out fur-| ther remarks from Mr. Wilson. He ts! still in the hole and two of his recruits, the thinnest two, are standing by ready two other holes that a to jump Inte in the making. ‘The children and dogs the neighborhood are having thelr pplest day of the y . Coakley Plente June 3. nie of the John J. Coak- n will take place at Sul- m River Park next Saturday | June Jonn J. Coakley has} more than twenty medals for | persons drowntng, — Ase] nolyman Aaron J, Levy will lead the and mareh at the plenic, More than M east siders will attend, | zer's Har recely BRAND cal, and Will Give You 3 | some property AMAZING STORY OF AGED WOMAN'S ported From England, Ac- cuses U. S.-Ambassadors. Miss Julfa Adelaide Wobbard, | returned to her native land as a des ported allen from England tn the steer | q lai : age of the American liner New York, |A ants Wait Ready to} Shien arrived In this port on Saturday Plunge In as Soon as night, tells a story of her struggtes to get work in England on the con- Workmen Finish. | tinent, of the siow but eure depletion of her small fortune, and of being eventually sent to a London workhouse, from where she was sent back to the United States as an undesirable allen, ¢ declares that her appeais to our ministers and consuls abroad met with scant courtesy, although all she asked for was assistance in getting pupils for music lessons, Miss Hubbard is seventy-one years; old. She ts broke: down with her! struggle for life. was janded in America yesterday with one cent in her pocket. Her Father a Physician. born,” she sald, “in Elgin, 11 my father was a practising phys He died in 1892, After his offaire were settle yselt the owner of on the Maryland border and some $10,000 tn different securities. » 1893 1 moved to Washington, D.C on account of my health. I heiped out me gerived from my stocks by ing music lessons. In Washington I had apartments at the Burlington, In 1906 T was advised by my phystcian to travel In F suffering from nerv Berlin in August of r, carrying with me, besides m deeds and stock certificates, a passport and a letter from the State Department. 1 remained in Berlin for Finding that my income was ough to Support me, 1 wrote to sador Hill, asking his assistance fn getting music pupils. No attention was given to my letter, although I was asked on more than one vecaston to “tw wile lan subscribe to fairs for charities, “From Berlin I went to Paris, where I made a similar appeal to Ambassador Waite, which met with no reply. When Bacon succeeded White I ote to him, but got an answer that nothing for me. I did my best to get work in Paris, but all my efforts were fruitless, I remained in Paris eighteen months. ually to sell my stocks and had sold the last before I left. Poor Luck in Brussels “Hearing that Brussels was a cheap city to Ilve in I went on there with TRIALS IN EUROPE Julia Adelaide Hubbard, De- seven | @ could do| ‘To support myself I had grad- | who] @ i i | | } | Here 1 rematned untll May, what remained of my small fortune. The editor of the Belgian Gazette, to whom I applied for assistance, treated me with courtesy and tried to get me work, but Minister Bryan and Consu! Watis paid no attention to my appeals, After {Wo or three months in Brussels 1 went on to Bruges and thence to Ant- werp, all the time trying to get work. “In December last I was at the Grand Motel Terminus at Antwerp, and being unable to meet the bill, my two trunks were selued and I left for the Hotel de la Paix. There I stayed two days, when the Maitre 4’ Hotelsof the Hotel Ter- minus, who had taken an interest in my cane, arranged for my being sent to England, from which country I hope to et parsage back home. I had to leave my handbag, with my papers and deeds at the Hotel de la Paix, as I was un- able to pay the bill. I was given ten francs #nd sent to the American Soctety London, where I arrived on Dec. 21 of Iaat year, Sent to a Workhouse. “The secretarry F.C. Vanduser, helped me for two weeks, after which I was sent to Paddington workhouse. 1 Was utterly unable to stand the condi- tlons there, and after nine weeks asked for @ release. “T still had a few rings left and these 1 sold and eubsisted on the vield from them while T wrote Ambassador Reid and also to King George. ‘My letter to the Ambassador met with no reply. I got a reply to the other letter from a member of the Cabinet. The letter was couched in very cour teous language and expressed regre at my sad case, but It seemed that the King did not care to Interfere between an American and her natural protector, the Ambassador. “On March %, having no way of find- ing @ livelihood, 1 had to apply for per- mission to enter St «Workhouse, when Syd- ney Ashley, an attorney connected with the Institution, gave me a choice be. tween returning to America or going three months tn prison with hard labor, Deported From England. “T chose the first course and on May 20 was sent on to Southampton, where T was deported in the stecrage of the Was given o ticket to Iphia and ten shillings in easy. This, although 1 protested that I knew no one In Philadelphia Lands With One Cent. “L spent nine shillings tn tips to rds and other expenses and was taken to Ellis Island yesterday with cents in my pocket, For lunch there I spent 24 cents and when 1 was re. leased as an American citizen, landed at the Battery with one cent “I went to the Methodist Episcopal | Immigrant Home in State street, where d with kindness, and where “On landing yesterday, T wrote to Dr, L, Robins of Washington, the phy: | asking for advice and help, BURMAN MAKES NEW MILE RECORD IN FLYING AUTO “Speed King” Drives 200 Horse-Power Machine in 35.35 Seconds. MOTOR SPEEDWAY, INDIANAPO- | LIS, Ind., May 2.—Bob Burman, “The Speed King," driving his 200-horse-power Biltzen Bena car this morning, estab- Itshed a new world's record for one mile, going the distance in %.%, The previo record was 2.63, held by Barney Old- field. Barney Oldfield, who held the pre- vious record of 35.63, watched Burman's teat from the grand stand. The pre- vious record for the kilometer was 21.45 and for the half mile 17.00—Bur- man's qua’ Burman established new records for the quarter-mile, half-mile, kfometre and mile. The new records are quarter- mile, 8.16 seconds; half, 15.68, kilometre, 21.40. Burman’s average speed was 101 milen an ur. The new crowned “Speed | King’ made but one attempt to lower the old records, which were held by Barney Oldfield. As he dashed over the Ine the right tire on the big Benz blew out, but by skillful driving Burman kept his car running true and avoided an accklent, ‘The quarter-mile record set by Burman ts a new mark, ‘The old records were: mile Kilometre 21.45; half 17 flat, Horn Philip McNichol, truck driver of No, 115 avenue, =f was held to-day in $2.50 bail in York: | ville Court on a charge of stealing a horse and hansom cab valued at $1,000, The complainant is Edward Scott of No. M8 East Forty-ninth street siclan who had advised me to go abroa’ “AN my clothes and papers are still in Antwerp, While I was in London [ asked Mr. Vandusen to recover them for me, but he was apparently unable to do £0. “What T rhall do f don't know. All my relatives are dead and all my money is _zone."* Ten opportunities for enjoying Royal Bengals <— Box of 10 for 15 Cents Get them—| INSIST if you must—but get them. a real smoke. aes BS arts. OPENS AN + ASCOUNT | OPEN EVERY YOUR CHOICE OF ANY OF THESE 3 ARTICLES WITH RY PURCHASE OF Lorn yey ‘QITG - S°AVEs: W8END i EVENING LONG ACRE Electric Light, Heat & Power Co. 165 Broadway, New York NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC Consumers of Electricity in the forms of Light, Heat or Power who are contemplating long time contracts or who_have contracts about to expire are advised to delay the closing of new contracts until the completed plans of this company can be pre- sented. The franchise of the Long Acre Electric Light, Heat & Power Co. covers the whole of Manhattan Island and the Bronx. The company will at once commence to extend its present lines andtomakecontracts with the users of Electricity atReduced Rates LONG ACRE ELECTRIC LIGHT, HEAT & POWER CO., JAMES F. SHAW, President. ign }APARTME NTS COMPLETELY FUPWISHED JU 99°" 10"500_ UNTIL wocctocn Keep alittle Landlord in Your Pocket. ‘What's tho uge of handing out @ lot of “rent money” every month to some third person Just because the title of the house wherein you live is reg- istered in HIS namat If it were Msted in YOUR name you could put your rent money from one to another of YOUR OWN pockets and there LET IT REMAIN. A emall payment down and & promise to pay an equiva- {ent to ur even less than rent will STOP YOUR RENT AND INCREASE YOUR SAVINGS Read the tien for 1 sedmeat tm Lhe Real Baia aoe tions of tie morning's WORLD,