The evening world. Newspaper, October 3, 1912, Page 1

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WRATHEN—' Fi EDITION. A Circulation | Books Open to All.” The late Put Through in a Hurry When Convention Re- assembled To-Day. BOSS KEPT HANDS OFF. Republican Plan for Bi-Par- ~ tisan Judicial Ticket Turned Down al To-Day’s Session. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Goveruor—William Sulzer of w York. For Licut.-Governor—Martin Glyan of Alba Vor Secretary of State—Mitehell May, of Kings. Fer Comptrotier—William Sohmer at New. York. For Treasurer—Johu J. Kennedy of Erie. For Attorney-General Carmody of Yatey, Engineer sad Wedegier—eka AY Bensel of New York. — Thomas Fer Judges of the Court of Ap-| Onondaga | Peals—John W. Hogan and William H. Cuddehack of Erle. By Martin Green, » Ma Correspondent of The Evening | ‘world, CONVENTION HALL, SYRACUSE, Oct, 3.—Thoroughly well satisfied | with themselves, the delegates to the ‘Democratic State Convention left for their homes this afternoon, They are of the opinion that they have put before the people of New York a strong, vote-getting ticket and al progressive platform. Below the top of che ticket among the nominees for positions on the executive department of thy State is but one new candidate—Mitchell May of Brooklyn, who {8 running for Secretary of State in place of Kdward Lazangky, All the other candidates we! lected two years ago and tholr renomination ts In the nature of © of the adminiat The nomination « Mr, Hogan ! wipes out th ng out the endorsement platform. ad ion in the back of Appe an agreement der which cans nominated Frank Hi place open for a Dy rat, suppor Morris Spratt of Buffalo. The - Hean committee appointed by the Sai toma convention for that purpore new proceed to name another candidate for the Court of Appeals. CONVENTION WINDS UP BUSINESS QUICKLY. The work of winding up the buai- ness of the convention proceeded to- day with neatness Gort nominating speeches were made and the roliculls were hurriedly ac- complished. Ac 12.48 o'clock this af- ternoon the convention, after oxtend- ing @ vote aw thanks to the city and Citizens of Syracuse edsourned sine bac Temmany special train sched- ule called for the departure of the ‘braves for home at 4 o'clock this af- ternoon, They will reach New York about midnight. The consens' witi ITs of opinion among Dem- (Continued on rth Page.) > NATIONAL LEAGUE, AT BROOKLYN. oo00000 BROOKLYN— 10010 AMERICAN LEAGUE, AT NEW YORK. WASRINGTON— , 10100 HIGHLANDERS~- 01000 a wind f PRICE “ONE “CENT, BDEMOGRATS.RENOMINATE PRESENT STATE OFFICERS ON TICKET WITH SUUTER rs ns ea | was arrested to * gengere out on a fishing excursion, 1018. br FIVEARE KILLED, FOUR HURT, WHEN | lee Among Dead—Flying Wreckage Hits Two, PITTSBURGH, Oct. 3. were killed and four inj this after~ noon when train No, 47 on the Penneyl- vanla Railroad, westbound, crashed inte An auttomoblie at the “Death of this city. The dead are “Rev. W. 1. NICHOLSON, pastor of the First Presbyterian Chureh at Wil- merding, Pa NICHOLSON, ae years RY DIAMOND, Withingbuve JOHN KE, BECK, Wilmerding Unidentified girl. Beck was driving Rev. Mr, Nichoixon and the minister's gon to Wilkinbura's silver Jubilee celebration when the mia- [chine got stalled on the crossing and | the train smashed it to bite, Mrs. Diamond was pushing a baby carriage nearby, when a plece of ihe j wrecked au struck and killed | superintendent of nur: \h r, the baby ng unhurt. Island City College Ifor, The untdentified girl was killed/in a) heen discharged. Also they learned | similar Lr $100, 000 THEFT / CHARGED AGAINST Failed, From Mining Company. Accused of Stealing BOSTON, Oct. 3.-—Stephen R. Dow, head of Stephen R, Dow & Co,, brokers, on @ warrant charg- ing him with the larceny of $100,000 from the Franklin Mining Company. The arrest was made on complaint of Awslstant District-Attorney Webber. Stephen R. Dow & Co, made an as- signment on Sept. 24 to Fred H. Wiil- lams, owing, according to the estimates of creditors, upward of $500,000, Dow, "| who was the only member of the firin, was expelled from membership in the Stock Exchange yesterday, cnet LIFE-SAVERS RESCUE 27 PERSONS WHEN BOAT IS STRANDED Row Out From Jones Beach Station and Take Passengers Off Fishing Craft. Life savers at Jones Beach Station reacued twenty-seven persone from ldrowning this afternoon by taking |them off the fishing boat Mildred of | Wreck Load, ‘The Mildred had become atanded and | wan being badly when the life bers of the TRANS ATO Pastor and Son Going te Jubi- ; trained nurse, who tried to keep the secret of her ident » and shield the | family when she Trap" |ed guilty of lurceny In the first degree grade crossing in Wilkinsburg, a suburb! [detectives found sue -BROKEROFBOSTON Stephen R. Dow, Who Recently | *| child to its parents for five hours after ‘The Prose tubtishing NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1912. “] Gave My Thousands To Campaién Fundsto Aid The he Cause of the People” 22 P ‘YOUNG NURSE SOBS, “Money King’’ Who Told Senators FULL CONFESSION | TERE IN Ma Down and Admits Robbing Dying | Woman. | TO BE SENTENCED AGAIN} Prison Robbed Her of All the! Coolness With Which She Tried to Shield Parents. | After a year in the pentitentiary, Helen Loulse Watson, « twenty-four-year-old and maintained accused of steal BS '., broke down in the ‘non Court to-day. She pleau- Prison pallor showed in the face of the pretty nurse, and her deflant man- ner at her trial Rad given way to utter hopelessness. She bowed her head 01 | the table and sobbed. No one expect 4 she could ever lose her nerve xo completely after the exhibition of coo!- | ness she displayed when detectives | and agents of soctetion were trying to learn the naine of her parents, Even when (they had determined to their own satiafaction the identity of all her relatives, the girl steadfastly | sought to protect them from dingrace by r tad deniain, When Helen Wat was arrested Iv artleles from ihe hospital were found at her home, Other| purses said the young » was auffering from kleptoinania, as the ar-| ticles she took were often valueless. HER FIANCE, A_ PHYSICIAN, BREAKS OFF ENGAGEMENT. | In Raymond street jail, Brooklyn, the | nurse declared she “simply hud to take | certain things” w “ ia serious the! fe Inventigatic father of the girl was dead, He had hoen a professor in a Western univer xity, One of her sisters 4s the wife of a clergyman in Chicago, of her arrest Helen Wi engaged to Dr. Dona the hospital. He broke off nent. From the time of her discharge from the hospital until her arrest, six months [later, the nurse had worked in the homes of several wealthy families, At one time she had charge of a baby in Bay Ridge and neglected to report the death of the that many yaluo the child had died, money and Jewelry valued with her. Her next position home of a family named Ei r Fiatbash, And when the nurse left Mrs. Edwards miswed $900, Several other fam- nd $30 In|} 375 went le' “f just couldn't help ‘taking litte things—that wasn't stealing,” Was the nearest thing to a confessjon they ever got from her, When she was sentenced to the peni- tentiary for eleven juonths and twenty~ nine days ahe knew that officers trom Mamaroneck would await her release rve @ warrant charging grand tel fri mt picton, The wife of W. B. Dever ‘& mine ownér, had been atric! her summer home at Mamaroneck, A trained nurse wae called In by the phy- sicians, and this nurse was Helen Wat- son, Mra, Devereaux was dying when the nurse arrived, In the hous) at the time were the Ge (Continued on Becond Page.) WORD FROM GRAVE ROOSEVELTKNEW = GIVES SON CLUE TO | Man of Mystery Dies in Nor- folk After Leading Strange Isidore Grebinar of No. 419 ( treet, Norfolk, Va, funeral of @ man passing wT am you ar Wolt Gretdnar immediately oom of His $150,000 Gift to Was, of Course, Much Intereste in the Result of the Campaign, in a Business Way."’ § Elect T. R. | ‘We Never Made a ji Subscription to] Any Election OF OIL TRUST GIFT, ARCHBOLD INSISTS Head of Standard Repeats His Accusations on Return from Europe. LONG-LOST FATHER} Dual Life. John D. Archbold returned from am ty] Europe on the White Star liner dfa- Jeatio to-day, and before he stepped eiterated his charge that Col. Brooklyn, sent to-day, ordering ¢ ini jephono at his place of busine! ai eet mere avd paok as telephoning jend's jast from wan t 1 he Norfolk, My rach Grebinar.”’ Ga there ia no Question that Theodore Roosevelt had knowledge of the contributions and yen informed. I os: that ‘They lived happily until twen- yeare a0, when my father werted his wife and the children and came to America. bps that line to want I Bave te “Be diac 4 my father an = Deters 2 pm pula called a provided e ‘hase fat a Mr. Archiold moemed in ma very genial frame of 4 willingly | Jonna posed to be » | Dold met b #trong and hearty, | Vixen w to thelr Tar Mr, Areubold will be called ta “ltity to-morrow at the hearing tn | ault of the Waters-Peres Ol Com. much for u*! pany to prevent absorption by the Btandard ON, th, We never heard o he name of Uireene, he io a tight wa controversy oy. Marahall ago was dismiased to-day by the Grand campaign.” ‘MORGAN $100,002) HE'S A TIGHTWAD SAYS MARSHALL After Roosevelt's Gift in T. C. & 1. Deal, Too, Is Sar- casm of Candidate. WORCESTER, Mass, Oot. %.—"T read the morning papers that Morgan @ 100,00 to the Republican cam- paign fund," aid Gov, Thomas R. flies had cause to remember Helen} name of Harry Greene, who tel there} Of the Stan-| Marshall of Indiana, Democratio Vice- Watson. s : Hay 10 the 1904 cam-| Presidential candidate, at @ rally h When at last the crash came and the eee eiey, oe Dastponed wat Re could | paign fund when the contribution was| to-day. ‘It that 1s all he nee pretty nurse was ted, the police eM Bartole Ree View: thn: Body: tegea, a tight wad. He did not give halt carted away a Wagon load of wearing Grebinar has reason to bellove the man Mr. Arehbold refused to discuss the enough, Apparel end) many Jewels from. her father, Hirsch Grebinar, and that!chargen contained in the current pub- resident Roosevelt gave him the room at No, 157 Congress street, Brook-| facts cloaking a mystery will be found |Mcation of Collier's Weekly, that the! right, in violation of the law, to amal- lyn, She maintained her innocence un-|to surround his death Standard Oil letters published in| gamate the Tennessee Coal and Iron der the fire of police questionings.| Late yesterday afternoon, Wolf ¢ j Hearst's Magazine were forreries, He! company with tho Steel Trust, That Never, she protested, did she stealliner, g trothen of the lead man, te, (Maid When & copy of the Collier's pub-| acai netted Morgan $69,000,000. T repeat money or valuable things, Heved to be Grebinar, wi ded to him nat if he only Mave back §100,000 of it West Broadway, ani a volce the ry Gov, Marshall devoted most of his| “This ts a friend of the late Murry matter atl speech to a criticiam of the Progressive Greene, who died to-day tn Norfolk. t candidate. He declared that Room elt'a | with Prestdent Taft ans was not @ contr , but one of pernor ako thin afternoon larency, but she still declared that sho num! in Norwich and New Lonton. He! had not robbed Mrs. Devereaux, seiee tile Beane pi) his nephew, planned to go to New York on a late ° : to» DYING WOMAN GAVE HER] “isty tatner wan torn. in Warsaw, train to-n CLOTHES AND GEMS, SHE SAID, | Poland. He ra ‘ay from home when Tn this case Helen Watson had he wan fifteen and when he was alxtoon coptional luok at firat in avoiding ried my mother, Fannte Schley, he murdered a woman three years The | declared the | boangin “ | murder wae aie by @ man named Norman, who Alsanpearad, Hix fon, even to @ tattoo mark on arm, tallied with that of the —_— oo te anes Pansies AND OTUBKS | ullteer in the erat rath, Moom Andrew Will bo set tree to- | eS tape i i WEATHER-Fatr FI EDITION. AGES. PRICE ONE CENT. MORGAN SAYS HE GAVE. WHAT BLISS ASKED FOR ~ AND WASN'T THANKED —_ -+—— — {Ready to Help Swell Campaign Funds, “Money King” Swears on Witness Stand, and He Would Contribute to Election of a Democrat if He Thought It for the “Best Interests of the Country.” {PUT UP $150,000 IN 1904; BUT $000,000 THIS YEAR | Taft's Committee Got $20,000 From Finan- When They Wanted Anything,” and He May Have Suggested Others—Harriman Never Asked Him for a Contribution. Not Pinancing 1912 ‘‘Hopes.” Senator Clapp—Did you contribute to the 1912 pre-convention cam+ paige of any candidate? jorgna—Ne, sir. Banker Senator Clapp—Or any of your associates! Banker Morgan—No, sir. Senator Clapp—Or anybody tn your vebalf? Banker Morgan—No, slr. | WASHINGTON, Oct. 3.—J. Pierpont Morgan, for the first time in jhis life facing the ordeal of testifying at a Senatorial inquisition, told, junder oath, with apparently the utmost frankness to the Clapp Commit- tee to-day of his contributions to national campaign funds since 1904, when the Roosevelt Committee, he says, got $150,000 from him, $50,000 of which, he swore, he had reason to believe went to finance the cam- ee | palgn of Odell in New York State. The “Money King’s’ answers were ready for the inquisitor and his Statement of his contributions was prefaced by an emphatic denial of reported conversations by phone with Theodore Roosevelt. Mr. Morgan showed his only lapse into excitement during the hour which his testi- mony consumed when he denied having referred to the President as “that — fool in the White House.” For the campaign of 1904, Mr. Morgan declared, he contributed $100,0000n Oct. 1 and, a month later, added $50,000 to his donation This latter sum was needed in New York State, though both payments were made to Cornelius N, Bliss, of the National Committee. Payments were invariably made in cash, and the witness coukin’t exactly remember all of the sums he had given to various campaigns. Naively he said, “they always sent Bliss to me when they needed anything.” $20,000 FOR TAFT; NOTHING IN 1913, Most interesting of Mr. Morgan's recollected contributions was his statement that in 1908—the year of the Taft campaign—his firm had pai¢ only $20,000, this sum having been given to Treasurer Sheldon, in cash, as usual. In that year he had given nothing toward a Congressional campaign fund, that he remembered, or if anything, it was “moderate— nothing of consequence.” The witness emphatically declared that not a dollar had been eon. tributed to the pre-convention campaign fund of any candidate in 191% Then Mr. Morgan added, with equal emphasis: “1 want It distinctly understood that J, P. Morgan & Co, never wade » sIngle subeription to any election with any promises or expectation of any return in any shape or manner, and we never made a subseription unless we thought it best fer the interest of the Government and the people. We m had a com- munication from any candidate; we never had an application from any candidate. The only Interest we had was in the welfare of | the publie. We never asked any commitment, We never exe pected any returns and we never got any.” Questiongd about the alleged solicitation of Harriman in 1904 and {the Yeeling of the moneyed interests about the campaign of Roosevelt, {Mr. Morgan said: “If we had thought the election of a Democrat was for the best interests of the country we would have contributed to his Mr, Morgan arrived at the committee room five minutes ahead of time. companied by his son-in-law, Herbert L, Satterlee, and his damgh- ter, Mrs. Hamilton, The Capitol policeman at the door, with a low bow. asked Mr. Morgan {nto the committee's private room. Senator Clapp Perhaps State Caused Worry in 1904, Banker Morgan—More money seemed to be needed for carrying New York for the Republican National ticket, Senator Pomercne—Thon the Democrats had the Republicans worried! } Banker Morgan—Perhaps they did, cier, Who Says “They Always Sent Bliss * MANS SS Ee

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