The evening world. Newspaper, July 13, 1912, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY Mt ten’t #0, Tt ten't 80. My littlest stater Axed only a month ago and since then “wy mother hadn't been able to stay !n the ofa flat, She thought it was haunt- ed, Bhe did—hon If she saw a ribbon or @ little shoe, or—or—anything, she'd | break down and cry Bverything brought back Tita to her mind “What could we to? to move away. We had to get her away from there, It was killing mother. So we moved out to live with my aunt in bast New York. That was why we did it, But they say that it was because we thought Nathan would be accused of the murder. If they think Nathan did it why don't they find him? I wish they would. He could tell them; maybe, they'd be sat! WOULD TELL IF SHE KNEW WHERE HE 18 HIDING. “Did you say you would be glad to give him us if you knew where he was?” whe was asked. “Ne, I didn't,” she answered. Then ahe paused. “Well, 1 didn't say I would give him up," she went on, “but ff 1 knew where he could be found, 1'4 tell you. I'm as anxious as you are+we all We had several of the most exp Jin the department were # over to New Jersey, where, it is sald, | young Schwarty was reported to be {n hiding, SISTER INQUIRED AS TO RE. SPONSIBILITY OF RELATIVES. That members of the Schwarts family had cause to fear Nathan had com mitted the flendish crime was reporte jfrom several sources to-day. Lillian, [tho eighteen-year-old sist nd the brightest of the Schwartz children, Is al- leged to have asked last Monday—only twenty-four hours after the finding of the tortured and dying girl in the v cant lot adjoining the flathouse in which the Schwartres then dwelt—df a murder committed by ona member of a family could be visited upon the heads of the murderer's kin. ‘This question was addressed to Miss Sarah Janick, who is employed in the hairdressing establishment of the Misses Jeannette and Jermanski on Webster avenue, the Bronx, Lillian Schwarts was employed in this place for more ma -hunters are—to clear things up. 1 don’t hope my ‘brother will be found, and killed. I'm human. I may not love him, but stil! I don’t hate him. You can't help feel- ing that way about your family. After all, he’s my brother. But every time T think of that poor Iittle Julia Connors’ she shuddered—“eyerytime I think of her, I hope the man who did ft will be caught. I feel just as badiy about it as tf she was my own sister.” “Did you tell your employer, Mr. Blain, that two of your elsters on the night of the murder looked across the airshaft {nto the bathroom of the vacan: apart- ment in witch Julla Connors was mur- dered and saw fF brother walking ebout with a little girt in his arme?” “Oh, I never did! Miss Schwarts tested. “I never did. How can people tell such Mes! The first I heard of the murder was after I got home Sunday afternoon. I had been away since bh fore the Fourth. There wasn't anybody in when I got home, and I went out into the park to find my mother, You seo, eince Rita died my mother wouldn't sta, in the flat any more than she could ‘nelp. YOUNG MAN TELLS HER OF KILLING. “On my way to the park I met a young man I knew, and he says to me, ‘Hullo, Lally; did you hear about the murder? ‘And he went ahead and told me about Wt, and I was shocked. That was the first I heard about !t.” ‘ “But you saw your sisters later, didn’t you?” she wes reminded. “Of course, I did," she answered “But why do you ask me #0 many questions? They all ask me so many questions, and I can't help denying my- self, Tt isn’t fair.’ Bhe would not say any more, except to reiterate that she had never said that her aisters had actually seen their brether carrying the Connors child tn his arms about the “murder flat.” It was evident that she was distrait and than a year, ond while working there studied stenography. She became an in tmate friend of Sarah Janick. “Lillian came to me lust Monday morning,’ said Miss Janick to an Eve: ning World reporter to-day, “and Seemed to be greatly worried. She td the bullding In which she had been em: Dioyed had burned and that temporarily ashe was out of work, 1 agked her if that was what worrted her. She shook her head and then said suddenly: “Sarah, if there was @ murder in the | family, would they do anything to th members of the family Mise Jeannette had come tn and heard the question. We didn't know what to make of !t ‘She repeated the question, Then} Mise Jeannette said, ‘Why of course not, Lillian, Only the one who commits a murder ts punished,’ SHE THOUGHT IT WOULD BE A DISGRACE, “But tt would be a terrible disgrace to the family, wouldn't it?” Lilian sald, And Miss Jeannette and 1 agreed with her, Nothing was sald ai the time of the Connors murder, for none of us in the shop had then read of it in the newspapers. While we had heard about he Is foreman, worked there until about the # Natho who know him as talented and cunning. He 48 & good electrician, writes poetry, | some of which is considered excellent does some drawinng, and is a natural mechanic, He 1# a great admirer of prix fighters and particularly of Leech Cross | Cross ja an arsumed name, adopted by ‘the Menter so that his adventures in ‘the ring would not mélitate against suc- ebs in his profession of dentist, Crows ja a friend of Ir, Welnstein and tt was |through Dr. Weinstein that Nathan Schwartz met the ntist-pugiliet, POLICE STORY OF /YOUNG MAN’S CUNNING, As an filustration of Nathan chwartz's cunning the police tell of an incident that occurred a couple of days after his attack on Miss Alexander, He was hiding and the police were unavie mmer reduction of work, to get @ trace of him. Disguising ine Volce, the young man telephoned to Dr, Weiney sald that he was a detective and obtained complete details of all the evidence against him that the detectives had, a# well as thelr plans to capture him, Mins Alexander's family moved some time ago from their Lenox avenue ad- dress to No. 41 Convent avenue. She is & daughter of Mrs, Samuel Strauss, Mrs. Strauss, her husband and children are camping at an up-State resort, and their furniture is in storage in New York. Hana Alexander has married since she was attacked by Nathan Shwart three years ago, and her family ts exceedingly anxious to keep her name out of the present police interest in the Schwartzes. That Schwartz waa wanted by the po- lice has been known in the neighbor- hood since about 6 o'clock Monday afternoon, when a uniformed officer Kave to Capt. Price the information that Schwartz had been seon around his father's flat as late as 4 o'clock the pre- vious Saturday, The failure of Schwarts to avail himself of the opportunity to come forwart with an alibi was exclu- sively told in The Evening World last night, it in @ vague way we didn't know any of the particulars, Before she left the | shop Lian Schwarts asked Miss Jar: | minsky to give back a photograph of her (Lillian) that she had given to Miss | Jarminsky while she worked here, ‘Something may come up,’ she said, ‘that would send people here looking for that photograph and I don't want them to have “Miss Jarminsky gave her the photo- &raph and she went away.” Lian Schwartz, with ter thirteen: year-old sinter, Mary, der invaild brother, Philp, fifteen years old, and © now at the home of Nathan Orrenstein at No. 953 Cleveland street, East New York, where they moved to last Thuraday after they suddenly broke up their home in the nervous. ‘When she was asked about a question she ‘was said to have used to & girl’ friend—“it would disgrace our whote family if one of us was accused of murdering Julia Connors—she al- most wept. “Oh,” ashe exclaimed, “I never seid ny such thing, I never said—that 1s, I only said it in a general way. I wae—I was—oh, you know the way you talk, sometimes, general—like, 1—I was" — ‘And she broke off. “Then there was the picture of your- self you asked your chum for the other ft the reporter asked. “You told her that you were afraid somebody might get hold of it, didn't you?’ “That's another lie," the little stenog- repher asserted, yehemently. "Mics Ray Jermanski is my dest friend, and whe ‘hed @ picture of me, on glass, the best one I ever had take: My mother asked me for it, and when we out to East New York, I knew I probably wouldn't get up to the Bronx again soon, a0 I asked Ray if she would it back to me. My mother wanted it. That was all. It was just that my mother wanted it, and she was feeling so ‘bad on gccount of my little sister Rita. I thought it would comfort her.” ADMITS OTHER REASONS FOR MOVING, “You sald you. family had decided to move inst Thursday simply becau Your mother could not stand the mem- ory of your little sister,” the reporter continued, “Are you sure that was your only reason?” “Well, yes, there were others,” Miss Schwartz admitted, after a moment's re- flection. “Family differences, but only the kind you find in every family. “And that was all?’ Ghe wae half hysterical again by this time, trembling with emotion. “Oh, why do you question me and question me?” she pleaded. “They all have done that, and then they go and make you say things you never meant to say. J can't bear to think of it, It's horrible. Why don't you go and find the man who did it? He can tell you. | Find him. I'd tell you where my broth- er was, if I knew. But I don't know,” “Did you care for your brother? Were your family fond of him?" “Kve told you that already,” sho re- plied excitedly. “I told you before. 1-1 You can’t hate your brother, even it you don't love him. You can't, can you? I—He's my brother, isn't hi Bhe stopped, and her lips quivered pathetically. “It's bad enough for the rest of us,” she resumed, at last. “We'ro sinking under the shame. If you want to know any more, you'll have to find Nathan and ask him, I told you I'd tell you where to find him if I knew, And I would—even if I was sure he did it.” POLICE NET I6 SET IN TWO STATES. The police net has been cast for Wathan Schwarts in every borough of Greater New York and spread through the entire Btate of New Jersey, ‘Though marked and tagged by the Prison Parole Board trom whom he was to have obtained a pardon on July 5, as @ convict paroled from Hart's Island, where he spent eighteen months ‘Be punishment for abusing a fourteen- F-old girl, a score of detectives have to obtain any trace of his move- mente since he vanished on the day of the crime from the flat adjoining the ef the Connors murder. { the ‘police have had the Gebwerts clue for several days and ‘were running it down with great seorengh ness, | # saying Lilian had told him that two Inspector Hughes and bis} Morris then obtained employment for flat across the airshaft from the vacant rooms in whieh the Connors child was slain. Samuel Schwartz, the father of the family, 1s Dourding with friends somewhere In this borough and with him are his eons, Newman, nineteen, and = Maurice, twenty-nine. — Jacod, another son, lives on Kast Tenth street, Jacob has been out of touch with the family for more than a year. Mra, Francis Alexander, another daughter, who had been living with her parents at No, 3870 Third avenue, went with her husband and one child to another neighborhood remote from the scene of the erme. The police were so tardy in picking up the Schwartz lead that the family had scattered three ways practically before the inquiry began and it was not until to-day that the various mem- | bers were located to be kept in view in case the vanished Nathan should at- tempt to communicate with them. All that the mother of the hunted youth would add to-day to the non-! commital statements inade to detec | three daughter j tired about midnight. | concerning his brother-in- FAMILY SUDDENLY STORES GOODS AND SCATTERS. To further complicate matters Samuel Schwartz, once a public school janttoi and father of the missing Nathan, to- gether with Nathan’e mother, their Lilly, Mary, Anna, and 4 son, Phillip, who was graduated la: year from the same school little Julia Connors attended; Henry Alexander, a young lawyer, and his wife, France: another daughter of Schwarts, and thel child, Helen, without any warning to the police, closed wp their flat and scat- tered, The furniture of the flat, although their rent is paid for nearly a month | ahead, was placed in a moving van and I» now stored at Walte's Stor Warehouse, Tremont and Park avenues, | Bronx, The elder Mrs. Schwartz and! two of her daughters were traced | to No. 648 Cleveland avenue, Brook}yn, | while Mr. and Mrs. Alexander and thelr Uttle child were located in @ bulld- ing on Ninety-sixth etreet near Lexing. ton avenue. The whereabouts of the other members of the family ts also known to the police. To an Evening World reporter who called on the Schwartz family last Tuesday and spent fifteen minutes in their flat, there being evidence upon all sides of a contemplated departure, son- In-law ‘Alexander said: None of our family heard the slight t noise in the flat across from us Saturday night. My slster-in-law Lilly was not here, but the rest of the family Were all in, and I should say they re- We sleep in the front of our flat, and as the crime wi committed in the rear of the other flat we heard nothing.” Not a word was sald by Alexander w, Nathan tives before she moved, wan that she had put Nathan out of the home next | alled “murder flat” a week ning, or about twelve hours before the little Connors girl) was lured to her death. MOTHER OF THE YOUTH SAYS | SHE PUT HIM OUT. | She suid to an ning World re- | porter when seen 1 the East New| York home of her sister, Mra, Orren- | stein: “Nathan would not work, #0 we put him out, It was hard enough for us to get along without having any loafers to support.” ‘This was said through an interpreter, and the mother refused to say any more. | Lillian Schwarts hi by Blain Bros. almo: members of the firm w: been employed | @ year, One of the ‘quoted to-day sisters had looked out from their bathroom window last Satund. night and saw their brother, Natha through the opposite bathroom window across the airehaft, ‘They saw him, the sister is alleged to have confided, in the vacant flat where Julia Connors is Deli i to have been tortured with a knife and then st dine packing box to be taken out into the Thy Vacant lot to dt Nathan Schwartz was found gullty on | | | girl named Edna Alexander, and for this crlme was committed to Hart's Island. Through this affair the police had obtained considerable information concerning the young man and bis family At the t ander girl ployed by of his attack on the Alex. than Schwartz was em- George G. Weinstein, a 5T West One Hun- dred and Eleventh street, It was at Dr, Welnstein's office, then at No. 3 Weat One Hundred and Eleventh street, that the offense against Miss Alexander was committed, She lived @ short distance around the corner on Lenox avenue, ONE BROTHER A LIFESAVER AND ATHLETE, ‘The Schwartz family has been looked pr dentist, now at No. after by two ¥ sons, both highly respectable, Maurice is foreman for @ tailors cutting concern on West Twenty-fifth street, and Jacob is Mfesaver and athlete, Last year these two sent their mother and younger brothers and sisters to Woodbine, a farming colony near Philadelphia, but rural Mfe was not to the family's lik. ing and they all returned, against the wishes of the two brothers, who were footing the bills, July 4, 1910, of an attack upon a little! Schwartz, His name was not men- tioned. At this very time the flat wi surrounded by Detectives Cavanah, Re- Hchwartz is regarded by those Central Office men did not show any | Nathan in the cutting shop of which igns of activity until fast night when | The younger brother two weeks ddenly sent !ago, when he was laid off on account of THAW HAS SPENT ‘$1000, STATE ~ $390 000S0FAR End May Not Be Yet, for He'll Seek Hearing Every Year Till Free. READY WITH FORTUN Present Effort for Freedom Has Cost Probably More Than $150,000. In a few days Justice Keogh will de- cide whether Harry Kendall Thaw, slayer of Stanford White, is legally in- sane. The hearing just concluded at White Plains was as sensational as all the preceding contests between Thaw and the State of New York. Former District-Attorney Jerome, retained by the State to fight Thaw's attempt at release from Matteawan, is certain Thaw will be adjudged insane. ‘Thaw's mother and Attorney Shearn can see Taxpayers of State Have Paid $350,000 | to Keep Thaw From Killing More Citizens YOUR LAw eR nothing but his release, Twice before has Thaw attempted to procure release from his legally insane state, and the hearing just concluded makes the fifth battle the State has waged to keep him forever behind prison bars for the slay- ing of Stanford White six years ago. The allenists have presented their bills for the trial, ‘They amount to more than $12,000 for a few days’ attendance and the presentation of conflicting tes- timony. Jerome 4% to receive $10,000 from the State, it is said. The witness fees, costs of court and other items Will make the trial cost to the State tn excess of $0,000! What the cost is to the Thaw family no one kno previous trialy tt has alw the cost to the State. Thaw has said, “I will have a trial every year until I am set free." If he ets it he will be the most expensive prisoner in the history of the world. HAS COST NEW YORK COUNTY $350,000, The mass of clippings filed away on the Thaw case has reached huge pro- portions. About only one other person has more been printed in the news- Papers of the world—Theodore Roose- velt. A recapitulation of the trials shows these fact: It has cost New York County $360,000 3 In ‘8 been twice to put Thaw in Matteawan and keep him there, In his fight to get out Thaw has spent between $900,0% and $1,000,000. ‘The true amount will never be known, because much of the expense was for secret work. ‘'housands of the ,Shaw fortune went to chorus girls and other @ Sir Galahad. Attorney Hart- , Who afterward was tried for his actions in the Thaw case, is said to have spent $96,000 in the Tenderloin “squaring Harry” with women, The first trial began Jan, 23, 1907, and lasted seventy-nine days. Court Penses were $500 a day. The Sta! allenists received $23,000, The jury was housed and fed at @ cost of $1,500 a week, Witness fees and care of wit- nesses cost $5,000 more. When the jury, after forty-elght hours, returned a dis- agreement, the State had spent, for nothing, a trifle more than $100,000, Thaw had spent’ nearly all he pos- sessed, he sald. He had given Hart- Tidge $104,000 and that attorney entered pette, Clark, McKenna, Casassa, Bud- demeyer, Motole, Flynn, McCarthy, Degilio, Quick, Wickman, Young, Barry and Conway, working in six-hour shifts, with Capt. Price less than a blozk off directing the whole proceedings. It wi the hope of the police that Nathan Schwartz would call back home before the furniture was moved, He did not. POLICE PLANS TO SURPRISE NATHAN FRUSTRATED. On Thursday afternoon a van backed up in front of No, Third avenue, and while the detectives divided the: selves into Kroups, trailing various mer bers of the Schwarte family, Lieut. Wndy Wines, cliet aide to Capt, Pric (nduced @ dozen or so newspaper me: Qo enter the cellar of No, 3968 Third ave- Bue, where he exhibited a hole in the floor, and discoursed upon the possibility of an attempt having been made to bury the body of little Julle there. When the newspaper men emerged again into Third avenue there was not a Schwartz on the block. The reporters How understand why they were asked by Capt. Price to keep away from the Jocality on ‘Tuesday last. The questioning of members of the Schwartz family by amateur sleuths in- terfered with the surprise plans of the police, and up to the present time Na- Schwartz has not availed himself of the chance to let Capt, Price know where he Was Saturday night and early Sunday morning, Here 1s @ description of the missing Nathan Schwartz which has been going the police rounds since Monday last, having been drawn up about the time Florence Molz, the youthful “identi fle ‘ssed to hoodwinking the po- lice: “Twenty-three years old, five foot five and three-quarter inches in helght, weight 140 pounds, dark complexion, sal: low and silghtly marked, dark ‘hair, wavy, muscular, and walks erect," Before living at No, 3970 Third avenue, the Behwarts family occupied a fat at No, 8741 ‘Third avenue, At this address the janitres# sald one member of the family, @ boy older than Nathan, ts an inmate of an insane asylum. Another son, Jacob, she said, Is a Mfe-saver liv- Ing in East Tenth street, while Lilly, | 4ged seventeen, 18 a miliner, Schwartz, the father, after he lost his position as publ hool Janitor, earned from $10 to $2 a week making aeogipenceesmare One Death From Heat To-Day, ‘The only death by heat recorded to- day was that of Ferdinand Ludvick, thirty-six years old, @ laborer, whose address could not be learned. He was prostrated while working at One Hun dred and Third street and Madison ave- nue and was removed to Harlem Hospi. YANKEES VITOR W TWO HOT RAGE AND IN HH UMP (Continued From First Page.) with Reldpath and Braun running neck and neck, some distance behind him. Then Lindberg forged ahead from a bad fourth, passed Reidpath and Braun and finally overtook and passed Meredith at 00 metres, Nearly every stride made a shift in places. Meredith, who seemed to have run himself out at the start, was passed by Braun and Reidpath, running breast and breast and finally, fifty yards from the finish, the speedy German took the lead away from Edward F. Lindberg of the Chicago A. C, But the Teuton was fast weakening, while Reldpath, seeming as fresh as ever, drew rapidly up on him. He forged to the front just ten yards away from the tape. Though all of the spectators were on their feet during every second of the race, it was the finish which had them in @ frenay of enthustagm, . Reidpath, the Syracuse man, who had not won a first place in any prior event of the Olympic, was in the lead, with Braun ad away from Lindberg, Down the stretch to the tape they came, the German striving desperately to anatch the lead away from Reldpath. But the Syracuse man carried the yel- low 5 on his cheat against the tape just @ shade in advance of Braun; one could not wee daylight between them, Lindberg was so close a third as almost to make it a dead heat with the Ger- man, Harold Haff of the University of Michigan finished fourth, TIME 18 ONE-FIFTH SECOND SHORT OF WORLD'S RECORD, ‘The time, 481-5, broke the Olympic record held by Hillman of America, which was 49 1-6 seconds, though it failed by @ fifth of @ second to equal the new world’s record hung up by APPEARED FOR THE STATE sult for $50,000 more. Delphin M. Delmas, “the attorney from the Pacific slop Was pad $40,000, Other law; sums from $15,000 up to guesswork. Law- yer Gleason is sald to have received $60,000, SECOND TRIAL CUST THE STATE $100,000, ‘Then came the second trial, which co tho State another $100,000. At the end uo: this trial, when he was adjudged insane, Thaw from Matteawan declared he was bankrupt. ‘The two trials had cost him $498,000 in money already spent and he owed $453,000, Valuable coal lands were sold and more money raised by Mrs, Mary Thaw, the prisoner's mother. The proceedings in bankruptcy were brought In Thaw's home, Pittsburgh, a move of the utmost cleverness, for shortly afterward he was commanded by a Federal Judge to appear at a hear- ing there, Defying the Federal law, Jerome refused to have him sent from New York, Legally there was nothing against him but insanity. Out of New York State he might or might not be insane, New York State won; Thaw re- mained at Matteawan. In 109 Thaw began another fight for freedom, before Justice Mills at White Plains. He had paid his creditors 20 Per cent. of $433,000 and was solvent again. The contest looked favorable. Jerome was out of office, but the State hired him, and Thaw stayed in Mat- teawan. Cost to the State—about $46,000; to Thaw—more than $100,000. Two years passed and Thaw declared he should have another hearing. He had more allenists ready to testify. The allenists recalled the first trial, when ten of District-Attorney Jerome's allenists presented bills for their ser- in the following amoun: . Carlos Fy McDonald . : Auatio Fiat Willian, Maho Kovert Kemp Co A, R. Dietendort William BB 5 ‘is7 | Pritchard” ‘The uccount investigated and | cut down, STATE ALIENISTS’' ONLY EXAM. INATION IN COURT, Jerome's alienists at the first trial 18, 1912. FIVE JUDGES HAVE HEARD THE THAW PROCEEDINGS THE STATE WAS CALLED FOURTEEN ALIENISTS WINE LAWYRAS HAVE EARGD FOR THAW | him at $150 an hour. thing down with a notes on the method. was examined for tra was more legible than speare, Dd he jot som: pencil, they too His handwriting es of insanity, It that of Shake- In the recent hearing at White P tains 0 Words of testimony were taken. 8 makes 3,600 typewritten pages. In | beck form it would make eighty novels the size of the best seilers, Should Thaw fail to be released he jn- tends to have another hearing next yea He has @ secured income which is | cumulating and which he can devote to jthe fight for freedom, The State must | oppose him | Nearly e' wyer connected w the case on Thaw's side has met with i fortune, Dan O'Reilly was arrested [in connection with the robbery of the | Bancroft securities and his career | blasted. Clifford W. Martridge escaped | disbarment by one vote following his demand for $50,000 more from Thaw. | Delphin M, Delmas tn the height of his fame received a straight fee of $40,000, Jess than the others, but he was to have the honor, Since then he hardly been heard of tn the East, although he wot a disagreement. He came as the Demosthenes f the West and his ora tory flowed and flowered until the court- | room rang, He coined the famous plea “Dementia Americana” and his name was heralded everywhere, The Thaw) trial was the last of his great casei A. Russell Peabody, associated in Thaw's defense, 1s dead, as are the brothers George and John Lee. ‘Thaw's mother, a pitible broken figure, 1s using the greater part of what for- tune she has left to help him in his| Neht. And Evelyn Thaw, the cause of it all, | Just finished testifying against her hus-| band, She has said she would Ike to, seo him remain in Matteawan for life. | But Thaw will not remain in the prison for the criminally insane if he| can help it. He will fight again {f de- | could not make an examination of Thaw. They sat in court and observed feated this time, and such a fight would cost another fortune. day's race was a matter of general comment among the spectators. ‘The presumption was he had run himself | out in his tremendous effort of yester- | day, | Mel Sheppard failed to show any: thing like his old time form, As soon as the race was over Braun ran up to Reldpath and shook his hand warmly, ‘The other American runners | clustered around the plucky Germa: and shook hands with him = whil salvos of cheers burst from the grand- stands. AMERICANS HAVE GOOD CHANCE TO WIN DECATHLON, Interest early in to-day's meet centred about the Decathlon, the ten-event trial of all-around fitness in track and field, wherein each athlete must undergo sev- eral tests and the winner is he who has the least points scored against him in the tota Here is what every aspirant for De- cathion honors had to enter: A 1W0- metre flat race, running broad jump and running high Jump, putting the shot with best hand, @ 40-metres flat race, & 110-metres hurdle race, throwing the discus with best hand, throwing the Javelin best hand, pole vault and a 1,500- metres flat race, Points are awarded according to posl- tion in each event, the reverse value for first, second and third places obtain ing of those in the other Olympte events. But in this Decathlon, as with the Pentathlon, won by ‘Thorp, the lete with the lowest aggregate in the total of ten events {8 the victor, First Place counts one, second two and third three, In the second event of the Decath- lon to-day, the running long jump, all the representatives of the United States cleared well over six metres (19 feet 8% inches). Kugene L. Mer- cer, University of Pennsylvania, led the fleld with 6 metres $4 centimetres (22 feet 6% inches), while James Thorp, Carlisle Indian School, was second with 6 metres 79 centimetres (22 feet 3% inches). ‘The 1 points, after the second Eugene |. Mercer, James ‘Thorp, United States; 8. Jacobson, Sweden: Rohr, Russia, and C. Lomberg, Sweden The 100-metres print, first of the Decathlon events, opened the ball on the elghth day of the track and field petition in the stadium to-day, ‘Twenty-nine athletes entered the various heats and three of the American team ' jwho won the pole vault a couple of | P Oklahoma Indian of Carlisle, the ath-| THE TOTAL OLYMPIC SCORE. IN ALL CONTESTS. ‘TRACK AND FIELD EVENTS ONLY. United Statees . Finland . Great Britain. Bwedeen Canada Greece Germany Norway France . Hungary ... Traly THAW WAS CALLED |beon canvassed and is against me, SIKTEEN ALIENISTS LORIMER AND HE CALLSIT ACRE (Continued From First Page.) Jask nothing because of my vecause of my {deal home life, CRIES OUT HE WOULD NOT RE- | SIGN AND TELLS WHY, “It has been said Senators that the worst foes of Lo: have not im- Peached his Integrity. They have said that his word was as good as 3 bond; that he never turned on a friend; t he has been consistent, right or wrong. But Task no consideration for that When Senators ar making up their minds, when they are deciding whether [they will believe Lorimer or Charles [A. White, all I ask 1s to consider In connection with a record of forty years my truth and veracity, as stated by my enemies, I ask the consideration of Senators as to whether they will believe the bribe-taker, who has Hed time and again, or belleve me. ‘Much has been said about Lorimer resigning,” he continued. “If at the family or by beginning of this case I had believ: that one man had been bribed to vote for me I would have. walked in and laid my resignation on the Vice-Pres- {dent's table. But I know the record. I know there was not a corrupt vote cast for me. -"To resigm@Jn the face Of that know!- edge? In thé face ‘of that conviction? Why? Because they say the Senate has been canvassed and enough votes have been found to turn Lorimer out. Resign because they said defeat stares you in the face? Oh, what an argu- ment, What sort of a man is it that runs in such a case? “And he who is so cowardly as to run because defeat stares him in the face has no place in this body. This chamber 1s no place for cowards, It was not built in cowardice. “Oh, Senators, though you all vote to turn me out, though every vote ha: yet will Z not resign. Wo, 0, Tl not resign. If I go from this body it will be because more Senators vote for that resolution than against it.” “My exit will not be for fear, it will not be because I am @ coward. It will be because of the crime of the Senate of these United Stat “I am read; he added dramatically as he took his seat. ‘The ousting of Lorimer had been fully expected but dt was believed his strong speech had swayed several doubtful votes, The taking of the vote was pre- ceded by a pathetic incident. Senator Tillmon, taking the floor Just before the calling of the roll began, asked permiasion for the clerk to read from ft I hope he will go baok to Illino!l* and devote himseif to that work for which he has proven himself #0 © quently able, the uplifting and bette ment of his fellow-men.”” Senator Tillman wept as his tribute to Senator I wht being read, While the other members of the Senate found it difficult to hide their feelings rimer t his reference to his own failing cons dition As Lorimer walked out of the Senate door into the Republican cloakroom, t fef Clerk of the House, Jerry Sou , announced to t ate the im- peachment of Judge Robert W. Arch- bald of the Commerce Court. Compared with the vote of Marom 1, Jo, when William Lorimer was hell to have a valid title to his went, ¢o- day's rolleall showed the following changes nators m of Tilinots, Curtis of sas, ot New Jer- sey, Watson of West Virginia and Sim- mons of North Carolina, who had fory merly supported Lorimer, to-day against him. Senator Jones of Washington tormert him, As Senator through the cl ters of Cha galleries, pressed Ml to exprers their regret to him. A number of wom- en and other admirers alo shook hands with him. At his office In the Senate office bulld: who had opposed him, to-day supportsd seed out PD of Sis- been tn the Lorimer p Ing a physician was waiting. He ad! ministered ald to the man who was thoroughly exhausted by his efforts, To newspaper men Mr. Lorimer sald he had nothing to add to what he had said on the floor of the Senate, He will not leave Washington for several day: SUMMER LUXURY forSkin Irritations ASoothing bath CUTICURA SOAP Cutloura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world, Liberal sample of each mailed free, with Bp. book. Address “Cuticura,”” Dept. %, Boston, @F-Tender.taced men shave in comfort with Catle ura Boap Shaving Stick, ‘Sc, Liberal sample free MATCHLESS LIQUID a statement he had prepared, which he himself was too weak to read. It stated his conviction that Senator Lorimer had been elected without fraud. TILLMAN WEEPS AS Hi8S TRI- BUTE iS READ. “[ realize now that I have but a little tlme before I inust meet my Maker, said Senator Tillman’s statement. “L st my vote to-day secure in the con- viction that the Senator from Iliinols {a entitled to his seat. If he is driven Doors and Floors days ago | L. F, Lukeman, the Canadian, won a| first, while James J, Donoghue of the | Los Angeles A, C. pulled out a second | and George W. Philbrook of the Uni-, versity of Notre Dame got a third in| his heat, | The Olymple Committee decided, | early to-day, that only three of the ten feutures of the Decathlon should be worked off to-day: the 100-metre dash, the running broad jump and the shot putting; the remainder of events will be held to-morrow, Wrest- ling matches, in which the Americans have no entries, were in progress all of to-day, ‘To-morrow's Marathon, the crowning ffrture of the whole Olymple, is al- ready the topic of general speculation And here, once more, comes a roar from the British men, The Ene- lish, South African and Canadian of- ficials protested, to-day, against the change made in’ the rules governing the Marathon made by the Swedisn Olympic Committee, Httherto Mara- drew winning places in their respective the pheromone! Meredith, yesterday, in hie i-final, That Meredith did tal, where he died, not show among the winners in to- heats, These were Thorp of big University, and Harty 8, Babcock, the Columbia lad thon rules forbade the taking of any refreshments during the race, though exception was made in 1908. The new ruling of the Olymple Committee per: mite runners to take refreshment If the | earll Cleans Everything Manufactured only by JAMES PYLE & SONS, New York. MARRIED. KADANS—BRODSKY,—On July 11, 1912 LOUIS KADANS of 300 Greenwich # to FRANCES H, BRODSKY of York, ita | STOLLMEYER—On July 11, at 730 0th ‘avi York City, FREDERICK JOHN STOLLMEYER, aged 42, beloved husband of Della Stolimeyer. Funeral Bunday, ot 2 P.M, Int Calvary, Arrangement by Un they wish. William Necker, GLOSS Makes dusting easy because it collects the dust instead of scat- tering it, Try Matchless Liquid loss on your lino- leums and oil-cloths, too. It removes dirt and grease and brings back the original brightness, At hardware, furniture and departm ores everywhere. Standard Oil Company of New York MMMM WHY To th DENY whodocsn't keep YOURSELF posted relative to the wonderful evolution in Apartment USE uniding COMFORTS ? | that ‘has ‘bees going on, a visit to some of the up-to-date multi-family dwelling houses lately thrown to homeseekers wil] prove a reve- MODERN HOME lation, Finish, sign, equip: ment wil all ABOUT manner of mod- ff 1 ern utilities and 800 SUNDAY WORLD conveniences are to be found in the apart- ment house of to-day. “TO LET” ADVTS, TO-MORROW.

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