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| » WEA PHER=Cloody To-Niaht and The eae aS CAN wriant. 308 Bil NOU VERMONT Tah INDICATES WILSON WILL SURELY WIN ThlS FALL ENGLAND WINS CUP FOR MOTOR BOATS WITH MAPLE LEAF Ankle Deep and Baby Reliance Il. Break Down Dur- ing Final Race. Roosevelt Party’s Poll on Lat- est Returns 15,546, and Taft Forces 25,561. DEMOCRATS GET 19,787.) Election of Governor Thrown { Into Legislature, Which Is Republican, + WHITE RIVER JUNCTION, Vt, Sept. 4.—A more accurate {dea of the strength of the Democrats and Pro- gressives in the balloting yesterday) was to be had to-day from the revised and almost complete returns froin the 246 citles and towns. As no candida for a State office received a major! of vetes the Legislature, under the Jaw, will elect. With all but six small towns hoard from, the vote for Gov- ernor stood: , Allen M. Fletcher of Cavendish \ (Rep.), 25.561; Harlan B, Howe of Si, Jotinsbury (Dem.), 19,787; Rev. Fra- wgemMetager of Randolph (Prog.), 15,- j $46; Clement F. Smith of Morrisville Pro.), 1,616; Fred W. Suiter of Barre 'Soc.), 1,054. ( Tho missing towns were Granville, Essex, Mendon, Tinmouth, Royaiton| and West Rutland, which cast a total vote two years ago of 1,178, of which) Republicans polled 789 and the Demo- ONLY America Held It for Five Years. HUNTINGTON, L. 1, Sept. 4. About a week ago a ilttle party of Englishmen, bringing with them a couple of motorboats, Janded im New York bent on Ifting the Harmsworth Cup, the classio motorboat trophy that has beon in the possession of America several years, They were aske’ what chance they thought thy had of taki the cup. Their only reply was have foie very fast boats this year." 'This afternoon they proved {t, with the result that America ut about to bid the trophy bon voyag } crats 864. This afternoon Maple Leaf IV., a for- i The returns for Senators and Repre-|ty-foot hydroplane owned by J. Edgar \ eontat from three-qu of Mackay, won the third and deciding heat of the regatia, be. can entry si!ll running, Reliance IIL, by 1 minute 6 seconds. Shooting ar mile course at speed hardly she finished {n 47 minutes 43 seconds, over a minute faster than the citles and towns showed that the KR, publicans will have no difMculty in seat-| ing thelr candidates for Governor and other State officers. ‘The Republican candidates for the! minor officers are follows: Lieut.- 4 Gov., Frank H. Howe of Bennington. | best time previously recorded during Treasurer, Edward H. Deavitt of| these races. It was a stunning blow to Montpelier. American pride, but American spor Secretary of State, Guy W. Balley of|:manship again asserted itself and tie | Essex Junction. Pritish victor, her crow and owner were | h Auditor, Horace F. Graham of Crafts-! accorded a lusty ovation. \ bury. Five boats, three Aimericans and two Attorney-General, Rufus E. Brown of| Englishmen, started in what proved ' Burlington. the last heat of the race, Ankle Deep, DEMOCRATS LOOK AHEAD TO|one of the American entries, led the NOVEMBER ELECTION. way for three of the four rounds of A@ditional returns for members of the the course and seemed to have a good Legislature confirmed the estimate of/Chance of winning, Then something last night that the Senate will stand 2] ¥eMt Wrong with her engines and she Republicans and 4 Democrats and Pro-| ¥@s ed to retire. Raby Reliance Rressive fusionists, and that the House]! which aided by no small amount q will have 178 Republicans, 4 Democrats} luck, captured the first t last | and % Progressives, or 63 Republicans more than the necessary majority to] W&8 many minutes old, elect State officers on a joint ballot, |the other English challenger, Mona, ! Cong! men Greene and Plumiley, Re-| began to miss, and tn a few minutes publicans, are re-elected by large major-| went dead and withdrew, ithe THOUSANDS SEE FAST CRAFT The Democratic and the Progressive RACE leaders both state that the Presidentlal : election in Vermont !n November will be stubbornly contested, ingiishman and one American, tn the ‘The Vermont Republicans yesterday|"U"™NS and the superior construction for the first time failed to elect their] 4%. iiful operation, perhaps, party candidate for Governor in a Pres-|! the challenger at length triumphed idential year by a popular majority. American hopes went a-glimmering , Yesterday's vote, as figured on the|Some time before the only remaining atest returns, was a loss of 43 per|Tacers flashed across the finish line and sent. by the Repuolican party over che| the only consolation left Aerica was ote cast four years ago for Gov.|th of her defenders won a heat } routy. The Lemocraue nd another at least finished in the de- iding contest eaine period Was 41 per cr cadets desmsed ihe result Wasa “sirou,| Weather conditions were ideal, 90 It yy are) le for the boats to m De (s pound out that many wo e of the regatta, ant ce i yesterday openly an- the heat being run also brought thou- a thusiasts to Huntington Bay id tage arriving by and train boats took lu ¢ _ aiayacae ne nei, aed: ’ | Dirt \ | } ' ie . 4 99 009 1 } r Eng L22 OPA Wot 4a ‘aft afl €3,991 Moro Tha bo Kerala Ufted ot 19,659 More 1 ALL OTHE ove M i Co, the New Tout" york World TWO AT FINISH.| Trophy Goes Abroad After e| © the only Ameri-4 Saturday, broke down before the race |! A little later | These mishaps left but two boats, one | En WALDO LETTER FORBIDDING POLI WRATHER—ct indy To-N ir EDITION. ht and Tharaday. Some of ‘the Moosers ai Grand Central, About to Board Train PARTY OF BOLL STOOSERS “AT Zea MOOSES SING AS MORSE, IN GOOD THEY TAKE TRAIN HEALTH, BACK ON FOR CONVENTION; WALLSTREET J06 “Thou Shalt Not Steal; the|Pardoned Banker Rents Of- Way We Feel,” Men and | fices at Old Stand and Opens Women Warble. for Business Fridays The Bull Mooses and Moosettes—that. is, gentlemen and indy delegates to the! convention of Col. Roosevelt's party of the third part—started for Syracuse Reports long current in Wal! street that Charles W. Morse, the banker sen- tenced to a long term in prison at At- lanta, but later released by President o-duy on a twelve-car epecial train (hat| Dart because of medical reporta atating naa 8 Kleas buffet car and to! 16 could not live long, would soon be smokeless smoking cars in its equ nie back in the game, were confirmed thls It was expected that three special} Mfternoon when Morse appeared tn his trains of the same length would be| ld office bullding at No. 4° Exchange necessary to transport the Mouse en-| Place and rented an elaborate sutte. thuslasts to the convention city, but| Morse arrived at the building unac- there was lots of room left over in the | companied. He was nattlly dressed and initial dozen cars. At 1190 @ crowd of| appeared in perfect hearth. His cheeks 20) had gathered at the gate over whicn| were red, and his eyes sparkled with hung the Colonel's banner-sign the fire of ambition. ‘ew York tate ol i . Pidalduds 2. pica meer Many of the old attendants of the ‘ a be building recognized him #oon as he ‘There did not s @n appropriate carnivad spirit in this waiting throng, {Cntered. He knew them, too, and gave so Willlam H. Tappe of Brooklyn, who | #!! @ hearty handshake, He was in ab a ) bass volce and writes songs | exuberant spirits and did not seem especially for it, began to carol his|consctous of the fact that he was the | newest politico-ragtime composition. sure of all eyes ax soon as tho “Thou shalt not steal; that's the way! report flew around that “Morse was We feel," he sang cver and over to fayain back on the job." tune vaguely suggestive of the late! mne financier, who was convicted of Houn’ Dog motif. violating the Federal banking laws, And then the ladies began to arrive |and who got into trouble as a result | with thelr hat boxes and husbands and! of skyrocket fMnanciering, has been fellow-de es in trousers, » #ate- | home from Germany two months. He man, who a minute before had stood] was teken to Norhetm Springs for his mplacably at the barrier, whisked open | health and was accompanied by his de- the Kate and the Moosettes piled! voted wife, whose untiring efforts arough, Tas and short, slender and|caused his .parole by the President. inclined to embonpoint, blond and bru- nette, old and young, pretty and—w not quite so pretty—they tripped onto! the cara, humming the persistent Mr. Tappe's retrain. | THEY CHATTERED, DISCUSSED, BUT DID NOT GIGGLE. One hundred and fifty women It was rumored on his return that he would soon rehabilitate himself in the Street. When Morse entered the office bulld- ing to-day he went direct to Supt Hooper's office, Mr. Hooper was sur- prised to see him, “I want to rent an office, | to be regular, unhobbled delega.cs at Syra-|smiling in perfect good humor. “Fiave| cuse, and it feemed as !f most of them|you any left?” were on the train, Strong, purposeful| “1 guess #0," answered Mr, Hooper. women they were, and they did no. act like an ordinary gathering of choir sex ‘The banker was shown several suites and finally selected a commodious one They did not chatier-—they Ciscuased.|/on the nineteenth floor, He will take They did not gixgle—they smiled cratt-| possession Friday. ily, mysteriously, They did not cling)" sorse will resume business as head rather they were ng to by m men of a corporation to be known as the lost tn the macincom of travel. | cuive Gecuritlen Company. It has va. Edward Lauterbach was there,|ieen incorporated under the laws of and Sirs, Harriette M. Johnson, who ts 0; s x Maine, It 1s sald to be capitalized at a lawyer, you know, und Miss Flor. é ‘ Jence Guernasy, who belongs te thinee, (considerably more than a million dol- lars. t clubs and ver utter: vord ‘| vise phigh hoe gids bade The financter has taken his son of complal here was Morse, in partnership nim. | Wiitam Grant Brown, who took un tims See an tek HT eee he that 4s, tha one from w that he would soon be back, +r cepted & nom anizing his many interests. It wa L f to-day that he already had control equal suffr two } steamship compa oy ware ing from New York to th who their names tr 4 Canal and one going from he * umes since oN ra? out for the Morse } sMficcs for many years Jano xchange place building, He wa: wieas, In all this array of suf fifteenth fi 8 nly one Ww th {tn th belligerent "Voies for Women" aasa whom } was Ms# Mary Donnelly ° ayed no bite way over t n glee uarter# to the Grand ( hie truetio: e task me who I'm ¢ sup- ® furniture, Am thin ia abe ' Phe “ te miles an hour.| port for the ne iy aid. | which is expected to arrive to-morrow. Get h, month yut Were confident that the mechanical] ‘Just ask me if I am going to insist ——— A Call te Pros enius of this notion had evolved boats] that labor legislation and such »tvarla aan Ree Maths, ri - be ch fay e Ww + ‘ | the fanaa (Continued on Second Page) wee e ‘ew. t a ea re yo Morse satd,| TNE Ass. | PROBE INTO WILL OF MRS, UAB | Wants to Change & Executors of Estate of Woman Who Was Drowned. | Request to Investigate Probat- ing of Document by B. W. Gibson, Lawyer. Dr. Frits Fischereauer, Vice-Consul of Austro-Hungary in this city, fled with Surrogate Fowler late this after- noon an application to set aside let- ters testamentary issued to Burton W. Gibson, @ lawyer, as administrator of the estate of Susan M. Szabo, and praying that he himself be appointed. In the afMdavits supporting the peti- tion, which were made by Alphonse P, Rinck, a Pinkerton detective who tn- vestigated the circumstances surround- ing the drawing up of the will and the woman's death by drowning in Green- wood Lake on July 16; and by Arpad A. Kremer, counsel for the Austro-Hun- ian consulate, various are made concerning Gibson. Rinck tm his affidavit states that he investigated the circumstances aurround- ing the making of the will and that he fearne’ that Gibson did not live at No. 20 Hast Nineteenth streot, as alleged in his petition for letters of administra- tion never had lived there. contrary he lived with his family in Rutherford, N. J. The detective had not been able to locate Gibson either tn Rutherford or at his office at No. 6 Liberty street. At @ house fourth street, where Mrs, lived, the detective swears that he heard that on th: after the wealthy woman was drowned while out boat- ing with Gibson in Greenwood Lake the lawyer called at the apartment, wave away all of the dead woman's clothes and shipped her trunks to hin own home in New Jersey on the follows ing day. Gibson had been a daily caller upon at No, 46 West Sixty- three months before her death. kept her constantly under surveillance |and «pent the greater part of each day | with her.” SWEARS LAWYER RUSHED AWAY AFTER RESCUE, Tho detective's affidavit continues to say that as soon as he had been roa- cued from the lake, according to Sheriff w. ¢. De Grew of the town of that name In > baon had ruched into the room occupied by Mrs. Szabo at the hotel, had seized her handbag ana {had hurried to New York on the first train, Kremer in his affidavit sets forth the | allegation that several thousand dollars jhad already been withdrawn by G from the dead woman's account. Letters received to-day by E. Kirch- knopf, the acting Consul General of Austria in New York, from Dr. L 1 na, the Chief of of that city, assure the local au- thorities that Mrs, Szabo had deposited in New York banks at the tine of her death more than $13,000, LAWYER ATTACKS DOCUMENTS FILED IN COURT. The affidavits filed in the Surro- gate's Court, which Lawyer Kremer attacked to-day, were docu ts signed by the three witnesses to the will, Agnes T. Boyd, Seda Sosseur and William R. Petze, an affidavit made uy Lawyer Givson asking that the let- ters testamentary be amended to enable Jnim to collect funds under Mra. Saabo's |Gibon lives in Brooklyn, his home Thuther- affidavit attested by * nacht of Ch IKremer contends is " ts the |deceased, whereas Mr, IX > show that the er died in Vienn, er sald } ved that th n had five brothers ant * in Australia, all alive, In Says her sole survivor te her rm la Menschik, whi in Chicago, Mr. Gibson's af read as follows: Hurton W. Gibson, being duly sworr | says, Iam the sole executor named ! the last will of Suseena Menschik Szabo I wan acquainted with the deceased and her husband, who is also deceased, dur ing their lifetimes. (Contiaved on Second Page) WAS AUSTRIAN SUBJECT | On the} Szabo last) Mrs. Szabo, continues the aMdavit, for | He| ne, an affidavit to the effect that Mr. | whereas Mr. | | PoLice COMMISSIONER CALLED AS WITNESS AT GRAFT INQUIRY. SHARK NO MATCH FOR THIS PRETTY YOUNG VOYAGER Mile, Cecile Des Place Amazes Ship’s Passengers by Thrilling Catch. Mile. Cecile Des Place, girl with the color of France in her the ro heeks and passenger on the Hamburg-American ner Pring August Wilhelm, arrty this morning from @ cruise from the tral American coast, Cuba and the e) West Indies. Mile. Des Place all her life has been used to having her slightest whim gratl- fled. Among her accomplishments that of fishing. She ts an expert with the rod and reel, She has fished in the Seine and has taken a seine and fished in other waters, But in all her young Ife the pretty girl had never captured a shark. She pined for the conquest of a man-eater. For ordinary men she cared not, but that is @ story which hae no place here, The good ship Pring August Withelm was in Port Limon, Sharks abound in these waters, Whon the girl heard of this she Immediately gougit Purser A, Gravenhorst, rotund, jolly and good- natured, and declared that she must catch one of the big fins, "Sure," said the purser, dofMng his cap. He got her @ line as big as @ guy rope on the Woolworth Building, and & hook the mse of one of those on a Dainter's scaffold. The hook was baited with meat and they told Mile. Cecile to watch, Never was lover's tryst more faithfully kept than the girl's vigil fo @ man-eater. hook and batt went overboard that she was awakened from her reverie by sight of w big An gilding through the she exclaimed, and at the sound the head of the shark appeared above the water and the man took @ squint at her, then dived down lo where the meat Was, There w; mighty pull on her line, and she krabbed the slack and yelled at the same time. It was well she screamed, for whe was halfway over the taffratl when P. L. Lyon of Pittsburgh and J, EB. Cushing of New York caught her in their arms and beld her, while general alarm Was sounded through the ship. The already been passed through a block rigged up aft, aud now the crew was pressed into service to aid the heroine, With @ yerho and & hun ya yah, the with the line over | Mile. Cecile clapped hands and danced about the while the man-eater was hoteted out of the water, The terror! of the seas, a8 he sauirmed ang twisted end of tue rope, cast a| reproachful glance out of his limpid| eye at his captor, but no remorse filled the breast of stunning young ¢ It was thumbs down for the shark, Cecile Des Place has a collection of most shark's teeth. Tee eset a ae a ees a TONNE CHE @ charming ot he blue of her country’s skies in her eyes, was a It was an hour after the | ter| | ST. LOUIS— 000 | CINCINNATI— 000 PRICE ONE CENT. = TNE HSPOLICE TOENTER VICE DIVES, WALDO TOLD M'ADOO Deposed Inspector Hayes Has Letter of Department Head to Use In His Defense Against Charges of Neglect of Duty. COMMISSIONER A WITNESS AT CITY GRAFT INQUIRY Ordered Before Aldermen After Mayor — “System” Jarred by- ‘Hayes’s Talk with Whitman. Friends of former Inspector Hayes threw a bomb into the camp of Police Commissioner Waldo to-day when they gave out a copy of a lete ter written by the Commissioner under date of July 22 last, whicil, , Hayes’s supporters claim, lends weight to the deposed Inspector's state- ment that he was not to raid disorderly or gambling houses in his "dis-” trict, The letter was in reply to one addressed to the Commissioner by William McAdoo, Chief City Magistrate, regarding a refusal of Lieut. Charles O. Nelson to serve a warrant in a disorderly house, issued by Magistrate COrrigan, ‘The letter in full follows: POLICE DEPARTMENT CITY OF NEW YORE. Office of the Commissioner, July 82, 1912, Mon. William MoAdoo, Chief City Magistrate, Belgrade Lakes, Me. My Dear Judge: I have your letter of July 20, Under the present regulations the department members of the uniformed force and of the Detective Buresu are not permitted enter alleged gambling houses, saloons or alleged houses of prostitution for the parpose of obtaining evidence. All work in connection with the enforcement of law against places of this character is entrusted to » special squad, known as the “Central OMice Squad.” ‘The police oMicer bad no right to refuse to serve a warrant at the request of a Magistrate, I hope you are having @ pleasanut vacation upon your return. Sincerely yours B. WALDO, Police Commissioner. It was said to-day that an examination of Lieut. Nelson, which was ‘ recorded, disclosed information that there was in the Police Department ah order which prohibited members of the uniformed force and detectives, with the exception of those reporting to the Commissioner, from entering gambling and disorderly houses for any purpose whatsoever. i ep Baseball ScoresTo-Day by Ju Corrigan after his refusal to NATIONAL LEAGUE. rve the warrant which had been fa- AT PHILADELPHIA, r 4gainst Max Enoch on July 14. Nelson swore that he was not permitted to enter the alleged disorderly house, even for the purpose of serving a Magist- rate's warrant, without first notifying and getting permission trom sued in the case of Hugo Bartelson ST GAME, GIANTS— of the “head inspector.” This state- 030020000—-5 babi promaved Judge Corrigan to write DELPHIA— ‘or information to the Chief Magistrate, Mba 1 0 0 0:0 0 0 O— gQ{*nich brought the above letter, bl A former memper of the Detective Bu- . BECOND GAME, reau, who gave an Evening World ree GIANTS— 0 porter @ copy of the letter, said that Ime 0 —— | spector Hayes has two other letters PHILADELPHIA— bearing on the same subject. One of the 300 — letters, he said, 19 addresssed to the en President of an anti-vice society, The AT BROOKLYN. letter ia beifig withheld by Inspector ee Hayes for the purpos of his defense. ROT ON 00000 ___| It ts sald to deal with the work of pre- cinct men and detectives rsgarding BROOKLYN— disorderly and gambling houses ‘, @ oo00000 AT CINCINNATI, janner which sustains Hayes's conte. tion. MINTYRE TO FIGHT HARDER FOR DELAY OF TRIAL, John F. MoIntyre, counsel for Lieut, Charles Becker, who ts summoned to rial for bis Bfe on Sept. 12 will rt only at contempt of court slack of the line on deck nad! waite | WASHINGTON— AT CHICAGO, tn ea is effort to gain more time in which PITTSBURGH- to 000 prepare the his cliemt. to-day in a formal CHICAGO— Btatecent which he out at the 00 _ | Criminal Courts Buiding. I'm not going to do anything die ; re 4 Intyre, AMERICAN LEAGUE | to invite any eriticlam nor do that which proper OF Come e Goff, 18 (o do everything the permit to give me @ reasonable AT NEW VoRK, PHILADELPHIA— 0 000 HIGHLANDERS. law will opportunity to prepa ie 1 | Lteut, Becker, Even men AT BOSTON, | the most heinous crimes tn the country have been given more tme to prepare thelr defense. Molineaux had a year, ooo0101 Crolgosz, the assassin of President BOSTON— McKinley, had months ang 040101 — jf Guiteau, who killed Garfield, bad three