The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1912, Page 4

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eesv ars. nreeueneve ter ersenens AXEL THE WHITE DOPE + | BELIEVE | GoT THE REAL IDEA FOR YOUR TRAINING. WE'LL Go DOWN TO “ StA-GATE* AN’ THRow THE DISCUS. SEE? THE EXERCISE WILt TAKE OFF THAT EXTENSION FRONT OF YouRS Quick! SEVEN NOW DEAD ISLAYER HID. AFTER MOTORCYCLE} HIMSELF AMONG | ORDER TO DISINTER CITY'S POLICE BODY OF MRS. SZABO CRASH ON TRACK Newark Horror-Stricken at|Finally Attracted Official At- Tragedy Which Ended Lives » of Riders and Spectators. “ DALLEY, RUSSELL, twelve years old, ‘Me. 110 Fifteenth street, Newark. FISHER, BDWARD, seventeen yoars 014, Mo, 416 Tenth avenue, Newark. SCEBNBY, THOMAS, fourteen years 014, Ho, 196 Sixteenth avenue, New- AMBERG, FRANK J., fifteen, No, 668 South Orange avenue. ROLLE, EDWARD, fifteen, South Eighteenth street. WILLIAMS, CHARLES E., twenty-alz, No, 38 Orange street. GRIBSABER, HERBERT, thirteen, No, 2 North Twenty-second street, Irv- ington; right arm broken. GRIESHABER, GBPORGE, brother; left leg broken. COMBS, CHRISTOPHER, thirteen, No, @ Newark street; contused wounds. BSOEHMEN, JOSEPH, twelve, No. 138 Bixteenth avenue; contused wounts, KERSENBERGER, HARRY, fourteen, No, @ South Eighth street; body tn- juries. WISCHOTTER, FREDERICK, thirty- four, No. 48 W Kinney street; jaw broken and face hacerated, MOWERS, MICHAEL, twenty-eight. No, 1% Johnson avenue broken. SMITH, HUGO, twenty-one, No. 68 South Eleventh street; Jaw broken. DON, DAVID, fourteen, No, 10'Highiand Terrace, Kearny; right arm broken. MLOTZKE, WILLIAM, fifteen, No. 689 South Eleventh street: nose broken, and face lacerated. RICE, IRVING B. Wakeman avenue; bruises on face. HARNFORD, MICHABL, No. 12 High- land Terra No. el fifteen, nineteen, No, 6 scalp wound and eentenee Newark with tts suburbs was in a @ase of horror to-day as its people Fealized the tragedy of the accident at the Vailsburg Motordrome yesterday evening when Eddie Hasha, one of the foremost of motorcycle daredeviln, made @ reckless attempt to pass his Jeading competitor, Ray Seymour, on the upper lp of the bowl-shaped track, going ninety-six miles an hour. Leaning down to throw more g: his engine; Hasha lost control of the machine as it jumped abead. It ran up & three-foot perpendicular guard fence Mke a huge fly, climbed a heavy wire Jatticed fence and hurtled into the dense erowd of spectators, Within a few seconds from the time he tried his fooleardy spurt Hashu himself was killed and six others lay dead and dying, while @ score were mangled and injured to such an ex- tent that the overworked surgeons at the City Hospital and German Hospital in Newark could not attempt to say how many of them would die within the next twenty-four hours. The authoriti f t into Kenale sald today that they were un- able to place the blame for the accident except to attribute the tragedy to Hasha's recklessness. Seymour, who had just passed Hasha, four feet from the upper edge of the 60 degree incline, maid that thers were just two ways In which Hasha could Rave gained the lead. One was to do the feat he aitempted, | the incline end run his machine along the perpen- Moular fencing at the top, and the other was to fail back and pass below, Sey- mour said it was clear to him Hasha hha’ tried the almost impossible feat of riding against the perpedicular f Aluright, before Le died in his wife ‘arms at the German Hospital last night, was conscious for a moment and sald Practically the same thing. > fave Your Goat, Cure Your Throat. Red Cros + Cough Doves, hc. per bas, *6* {. ‘ ateei Wintersteen, a wel at Bar Harbor, was arraigned to-day. ‘Wintersteen’s capture was sensational ‘While all the detectives and police of the city were looking for him, he sat in Headquarters at City Hall and edited of the murder tracted attention, ret. McBride asked him his in- ‘with a pencil till he ‘When the Colonel, ‘the Fire tention by Editing Stories of the Killing. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 9—Laughing and rejterating that he shot and killed Hairy Tyson yesterday in @ Vine strest hotel because the object of his hatred had slandered him, James M. Winter- who says he 1s @ brother of A. H. -known lawyer, now newepaper storie: erest in tho story, he replied: “I'm the man who killed him,” As he spoke Wintersteen reached for his revolver, but was everpowered snd lodged in a cell. “I went to Tyeon's room,” he said, 1 upbraided him for scoffing at me and de- mamoing me. Then I moved away from tam perhaps twenty yards and shot him through the mouth, I can see him now, the way he looked at me when I fired at fim.” Wintereteen elso told the police that before killing Tyson he had intended to kil @ Women and another man, but he retused to aay who theso were. When eeareh bankbook in lis possession @eywed that he bad drawn 41,100 of $4,000 entrees a8 Nene) Oe Aree 9 ee huckiing. “Hp was fully dressed. SOCIETY SUFFRAGISTS DID NOT SWAYT. R10 “VOTES FOR WOMEN’ Colonel Says It Was Sight of Poor Working for Legisla- tive Rights That Won Him. SPOKANE, Wash., Sept. on, rights at Islation I determined have the ballot.” In a #peech at the Masonic Temple Wilson's wage the Progressive Gov, minimum Roosevelt condemned declaration that the plan as set forth in platform waa futile, ‘Thera must be a minimum wa) limit for women, tn order that wom may receive sufficient remun: remove the vice temptation, clared. Col, Roosevelt intimated that looked upon Wilson as a achoolm who lacked practioal experience. pte att Mg FIRE CHIEF EXONERATED. Fatle Asi Rattalion Fire Chief Rio shall was to-day exonerated of char brought by Dr. Henry Maff of No. Doctor Madison street, who aars the Chief had Assaulted him while putting out @ small Before Deputy Fire Marshall tedduced the missing policeman, Julius |Schrelder, on account of whose absence | * the trial was put over last week The policeman testified he had been Sift when the lut- Chief, inking. fire in hig home. Comaussioner Olvany to-day ordered to arrest D ter was interfering with th hall had not cord for nineteen years tment shows he h touched iiquor oF tobacco, %.—Col. Theodore Roosevelt to-day addrassed fan audience made up nolely of women in opening his campaign in Washing: In explaining at length why he advocated equal the Colonel declared votes for women intial if @ “square deal” was to be secured. “The fact that the women of wealth favored the movement for equal auf- frage had no effect upon me,” “fut when I saw women ike Jane Addams leading the movement and learned of the ineffectual attempts of women, wage-earn the polls declared to secure leg. hat they should tion to he de- he ard J. Mar- THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 19 ( Figuring It on an Angle, the Return Trip of the Discus Was the Better Throw. ) cee! wHere BANE DAS DISCUS ? say! KEEP THar THING OUT OF MY BACK YARD [PROSECUTOR ASKS (Continued from First Page.) to-day as unruffied and grimly defiant . When informed of the project to disinter the body of Mra. Szabo he said that he had no objection whatever to such @ move, provided, there “was no monkey-business.” LAWYER GIBSON CLOSELY WATCHES DEVELOPMENTS, Mr. Gibson had acquainted himself with all the latest reports of the prog- ress being made in the probing of the drowning and the mystery of the will before he arrived at his office. He was a little more grimly defiant than on the occasion of the several interviews vouchsafed reporters last ‘but not a whit less vehement in his positiveness that his conduct 1s above reproach. He began his state- ment by a reference to the mother of M Saabo. ‘I have,” he said, mm the mother of Mra. Rosa Ritter—the name under whioh he buried Mra. Rosa Mensohik Bsado, widow of Count Ssabo—and, of course, subsequent to her daughter's death. Everything I have done in con- nection with Mra, Ritter has met with her mother’s full approval, She was informed all along ef the action I was taking. “The reason I buried Mra. Ritter un- der the name of Rosalie Ritter te that that was her only legal and lawful name. In due ¢ime I will produce Mra. Ritter’a mother, and this will put an end to all the calumnious statements being made against me.” “Why do you not produce her now?” asked one of the interviewers. “I cannot go Into that now,” sald the lawyer. ‘My statement covers the eub- Ject for the time being.” NO OBJECTION TO THE EXHUM- INQ OF THE BODY. “What about the exhuming of Mes. Saabo's body?’ was asked. “I have no objection to the exhum- ing of Mrs. Ritter’s body,” came the sharp reply, “provided there is no monkey business. I wish you reporters would notify Assistant Dintrict-Attor- ney Wasservogle and also Mr. Whit- man to the effect that I offer no ob- fection to the exhumation of the body. I saw to the burial of Mrs. Ritter's body and paid the bills, Under the lawe of New Jersey it is necessary to come to me and obtain a permit for the removal of the body or else to take the matter before the Supreme Court of New Jersey. “You may tell Mr. Rogers and Mr. Whitman that if they will send @ re- sponsible person to this office—accom- panied by a Manhattan policeman—I will render them all the aid in my pow. 1 will gladly sign a permit and accompany them to the grave of Mra. Ritter, All that f ask Js that precautions be taken to prevent mon- key busine: ‘The lawyer declined to explai he meant by “monkey busine He sald the statement of Mrs, Szabo's age an thirty-three in the cemetery re ords was an error for which he was in no way responsible, Mrs, Szabo was more than forty, The body of the dead what woman New York Bay Cemetery, Jersey City, The grave is No. Gibson %0, be had in the cemetery. Frederick Tilden, Superintendent Thin, brittle, colorless and scragg: hair is mute evidence of a neglec' .ere is nothing so destructive to th hair as dandruff, It robs the hair of it lustre, eventually producing a feverishness ani itching of the scalp, which if not re soosen and die~then the hair falls ou in | fast. er any time—-will urely gave your hair, Is buried in the Cedar Lawn part of the 48, and cost Lawyer It {9 the cheapest grave to! ot 25 CENT “DANDERINE” FOR FALLING HAIR AND DANCRUFF—GROWS HAIR Don’t pay 50 cents for worthless hair tonics— reliable, harmless ‘Dan strength and its very lifer d died causes the hair roots to shrink, A’ nittle Danderine tonight—now— the cemetery, eaid to-day he had re- ceived no official request for the disin- terment of the body and that he would not undertake the work unless he wa: served with a Supreme Court order. | TELLS OF INQUIRY ABOUT THE PRICE OF GRAVES. The cemetery superintendent said the first communication he recotved concern- ing the burial of Mra. Szabo was in the shape of a telephone mesgage from Un-) dertaker Boylston of No. 2336 Second ave: hue, this city. Edward Crane in charg of the cemetery office took the message, It consiajed of an inquiry concerning the prices of graves. Two hours later the| undertaker telephoned in, ordered a) rave, and said that a lawyer named| Burton W. Gibson would pay for it. Two hours after the receipt of the ond message the undertaker’s wagon arrived at the cemetery, accompanied by two men, one of whom gave the! name of Gibson. He paid for the grave and said the dead woman was Mra. Rowalle Ritter, thirty-five years old, of No. 46 West Sixty-fourth street. There was no ceremony of any kind at the grave. No request was made to mark the grave or indicate who was buried there save by a number, George T. Techmann, whose inquiry Into the death of his friend, Vrs. Szabo, was responsible to a large extent for the investigation begun by the Austro-Hun- garian Consulate, to-day turned over a letter of Deputy Consul-General Frits Fischerauer in which the threat 1s made to violently avenge the death of the Avetrian woman. NEW LETTER SAYS WRITER WILL SEEK REVENGE. This letter, addressed to Mr. Tlech- mann at his home, No. 3%0 West Fifty- fifth etreet, reads “Newark, N. J., Sept. 7. “Mr. George T. Tiechmann Dear Sir: Rosa was murdered. * * * Read carefully the letter I'sent to the Austrian Consul, You must cail at his oMfice and get i. I ehall avenge her death, She was @ kind end admired friend of mine. It is terrible, If her munierer escapes the chatr I will kill him. “A FRIEND OF ROSA.” Dr. Fisoherauer received on Saturday ‘a long letter from Newark which half signed and told of the intimate acquaintance of the writer with Mrs. Szabo, The writer related in detadl how Mrs. Szabo discussed her family with him and stated that she had received letters from her brothers and sisters in Austria and Hungary. Lawyer Gibson persists in denying the existence of these kinsfolk, notwithstanding all state- ments to the contrary and cablegrai from the Austrian authorities in Vienna, George Fir tho first time, to-da Tiechmann and his wife 6a statement of their long acqual with Mrs. Szabo and of the now vastly important correspondence begun by Tiechmann for Mrs, Szabo with her kin in Austria. “when Count Szabo died in 18%," Tiechmann said to an Evening World reporter, “his widow was young and beautiful. My wife and I knew her intimately up to the time of the death of Count Szabo, but almost from that time until the death of William Schu- mann in December last we saw very lttle of her. “We had met her occasiénally when she called herself Mrs, Ritter and was living with Mr. Schumann as his housekeeper on Forty-third street, TOLD OF THE DEATH OF WILLIE SCHUMANN, “One day last winter she came to our ho beautifully gowned, w ing diamond rings and car drops and looking ke a woman of fashion. She said she had been living in One Hun. dred and Forty-third street with Wil- Me Schumann, Then she fell over on fa lounge and cried for a long time, ly Willle 1s dead, she said, ‘I have no friend now, I came to you to see if you could help me,’ Those -Use old, derine’’—Get results, Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and after the first application you wil say it was the best investment you ever made, Your hair will inmme- diately take on that life, lustre and luxu- riance which is so beautiful, Jt will be- come wavy and fluffy and have the ap-| pearance of abundance; an incomparable | gloss and softness, but what will please you moat will te after just a few woeks use, when you wili actually see a lot of y d it were her exact for @ long time. “Now when Count Szabo died he and Schumann, who was past seventy when he died, had business. pital many in her twenties and one of the hand- women somest Schumann was her bills and saw to it that she had ex- pert medical at: ut of the hospital she went to keep house for him. “Bome time before his death Mra, Ritter, as ‘his death she talked always tlon, She bega: and ay how anxious she was to hear from them, 8h. heard from them in many years—fitteen years at least. addresses. URGED HIM POLICE. “T told her It ter to locaté th ing to the Chi She was delighted at gave me all their names and urged me to write. The me their addresses and I wrote. | furnished me a I wrote to Dr. Ladislaus @ brothe three sisters. Menschik, mediate reply. the death of his mother in the winter Following Count Saabo his widow was ill in the nm @ told me Willfe would have married her had not his {liness prevented. After t words, and @he wept bed it w. #he had not heard kind of death of started some the months. She was then I have ever «een. devoted to her, paid all tention, When she came I met e called herself, and) made up her mind than $10,000, was despondent and about her lonely condi- n to discuss her family e had not written to or She had forgotten their ter. When I read TO WRITE VIENNA would be a simple mat- em, and suggested writ- ef of Police of Vienna. the suggestion, wite She sald this Vienna police chief sent He list of five brothers and her relatives. sending of them. and got an im- In this letter he told of of 1910. “Rosa called right after I got thir letter. I told her I had a letter and|over to the lawyer that {t contained bad news, She swooned, and when she recovered her eenses she began to moan in German: ‘L know; Iknow “eq read the letter to her then. oO 1859 JAN RO —O Hl ON OHI N -O —1 OUM—1 W—-O—-1 OUW-IN-U -1 ON O— Co=! ro =O -1OUido—| fine, downy bair— hair—growing al: over the HAs : NEW LAID Gold Dust »19c 80 —my mother is dead.’ eloped with Count It told -I9t2 ~'85 THE’ Z EGGS A&P Evaporated 20-ounce can MILK 7c Pure Lar 13c PUMPKIN «. 7c Peaches 9c Apricots «ar lle Tomatoes “s:’ 9c SOUP.. By the Pound Evaporated @ pound Evap. pound WITH ANY OF THE FOLLOWING 10 S&H Stamps 1 pk Fluffy Ruffies Starch , 2cans Jona Spinach. . . 1 bottle Cider Vine 1 can A&P Columbia River Salmon, Jcan Asparagus . fi 1 cake Paraffine Wax... 50c} 2 10c + each Tie Me ie STAMPS with 1 Ib A&P Bak'g Powder of her mother’s long illness before she died; also of how she said on her death @ great sorrow to her that; years. She commandde her other chil- dren to get in touch with Rosa. They did not do this because they did not; know where to write. It 1s not the cus- tom in this country for the poll keep records of the moving of family of any importance in th large cities, This Js done in Vienna and the chief towns in the Austrian Empire. continued to correspond with the Menschiks in Vienna for Mrs, Saabo and early in March she tola me she had showed me that she had saved more RELATIVES SENT FOR HER PHO- TOGRAPH. “It was some time in March that I got @ letter from Dr. Menschik, saying that he and his brothers and like to receive photographs of thel she went at once to @ photograph studio and had nine photographs taken—eight for her brothers and si for a nephew who lived in Budapest, “After she got these photographs my offered to address them for her. would not be necessary and showed to us nine typewritten containing the name She said that Lawyer Gibson had had these written for her and that he was going to attend to the “I understand that Lawyer Gibson still denies the existence of any brothers and sisters and asserts that he never heard of any such photographs. told us she had turned the photographs formed her they had been mailed. . Szabo came to this country on the steamship Elba on the last trip that vessel made before it sunk. officer of Austrian cavalry and Campbell's Tomato 25 STAMPS with 1 bottle Extracts. . from Rosa for many estate of the Saal not belleve in the estate, and, as I ry} mann family. halt-brot! who had Fitth to return home and| Mrs. Ritter said she a will, this letter to Rosa Fischerauer.” “After the death mann," continued nd one and addresses of Rosa, and she of her married life She | child. and that he had ine and he fell She had|he married Ros an/|this country he man | t Szabo, who of excellent family. one time that she had first met Lawyer Gibson after the death of Count Saabo. He had come to her then and offered his services in getting for her a vast in Austria. She did further acquaintance with Gibson until to, after the death of Mr. Schumann. Gzabo told us after the dea! mann that Lawyer Gtbson wi @ big settlement for her from the Schu. M of the Schumann Brothers & big jewelry establishment on ifth avenue, near Twenty-third street. ‘Tt was just about this time also that make a will in this country, but to walt until she got back to Austria with her brothers and sisters. Gibson had been worrying her to make Early in June, members of the Sthum: agreed to pay her passage to Europe and to give her money besides. She said she was going to her lawyer's office to wet the money tha’ were paying. My wife and I have made afMdavits covering all the which are now in the possession of Dr. Szabo lived alone with her cats and the old parrot that had been her companion ever since the death of Count Szabo. This parrot had been in Count Szabo's family for years before he eloped with was passionately at- tached to it. The Count and his wife had brought the bird over from Austria{ with them, and during the few years) and her husband had cared for that Parrot almost as if in love with her. family, I believe, cast him off because upported himself by 2” Rosa told us at ence of any such ratood tt, had no of Schu getting Schumann was had decided not to She sald Lawyer he sald, the in family ha the Schumanns hi for Tamber’s head. left arm to protect himself and received the full force of the blow between the atatements, of Willlam schu-| The woman ran from the store end Tlechmann, “Mrs.| Tamber yelled. “Neighbo: shopkeep- ers and Policenan Wendel checked the flow of blood from the severed veins and arteries until the arrival of an Pi Rosa told me she it had been a “Rosa had taught the bird to sing. You know she was a music hall singer in Vienna when she met Count Ssabo His When he came to -I9t2 —!85 HONEST MERCHANOISE [——————————— eer etcenmeren taee CNTR YE ATLANTIC#PACIFIC = It is with great pleasure we announce our Fifty-third Anniversary Sale. Bountifu' supply of Pure Food Products at prices which will appealjto everyone SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PRICES Monday, September 9th, to Saturday, September 14th 11 25c| POTATOES Matches Starch tauniy 2 us 7 7Ro 25¢ Raisinsseiei 3s 25c Prunes . 3 25c GrapeJuicet:10c Special Anniversary Price BEST CREAMERY Butter 29 ib Spedialty selected shipments from the creamery districts just for our Anniversary Sale Iona Corn, ¢ cans 25c Iona Peas, 2 cans 25c 3 cane 25 Extra S&H Stamps W'7,7Ry & 30 STAMPS wih - . 1 1b BL RYAD COPTEE SSe 25 STAMPS with , . BOSA COFFEE 32¢ 20 STAMPS wih! [11h GULTANA COFFEE or HERRING . Marshall's Kippered PS wie @iraurewins SD! 25c |2 STAMPS with 1 bot. Queen Olives . Toil Paper 1 can Dus'troy 1 can A&P Lunch le A&P S: i can Sultana Spice 25c} 1 Pacific Sapolio 10S&H Stamps STAMPS bottle Olive Oil . The high cost of living, reference to meat, was forcibly impressed upon Abraham Tamber, a store at No. and First stree Moskin of Ni and First stre; demonstrauon, which si rm, Mrs. a cents. and. almost severed Tamber’s left said Tamber, 37_ cents.” Mrs, Moshkin argued no further, cleaver Iay on a block ar her night She picked CLEAVES BUTCHER'S ARM _ IN DISPUTE OVER 2 CENTS. Moskin asked for chuck steak, Tamber sliced of steak, weighed it and set the price at Mrs. Moskin prote “You're all robbers!" poor Derson can't live any more, give you 3% cents.’ “Being as I have cut of? the meat,” “I'l give gt to you tor elbow and the wrist ambulance from ital. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the dbl tip let Cocoa Drewing 9=1912-18 Bignature of Large and Mealy By the Peck Wendel arrested Mrs, Moskin and took her to Harlem Police Court, where she was held on a charge of assault. Capttlitza 9-1912-185904 1 bor Shaker or D.C, Cooking’ Salt k Grandmother's Prepared Flour with 1 124 West One Hundred 22c 825¢ cake 7c WITH ANY OF THE FOLLOWING with specta! a butcher, with by! Mra, Annie vest One Hundred Mra, Moskin, in her used a cicaver, with a piece of a chunk rm she A it up and swung it He threw up his J. Hood Wright Hos- WO =§N OW = LOU COOK TN O- 1H FIN = O-1WNOHKIN - 0 =I OUOO- IN = -1WNO=-IN-O-1 OM@-O 22c

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