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PRICE ONE CENT. JEROME PLAYS HIGH CARDS No Loophole for Action by Immigration Officials. CHAUFFEUR THOMPSON to Test Fugitive’s Sanity in Cana ‘a Is Balked. (Bpecial from @ Staff Correspondent of The Bvening World.) change Ini the stration until the Grand Jury meets in October. was postponed again, th W. T. Jerome, who “Special = Deputy-Attorney-Gi ieral of York to take Thaw back to Mat- is time until next Wednesday, » here asetr PHILLIES DEFEAT GIANTS IN TEN Gouin, Premier and Attorney- General of the Province of Quebec, nd to-day, on his return, he deciared he would not make another effort to see Bir Lomer. lk is the opinion of that the Premier would lawyers here al at ilberty would arest him then, at once, and he would be deported within @ few’ hours. CHARGES AGAINST THOMPSON DO NOT AFFECT THAW. When Thompson was arraigned to- ay it develqped that there had been tn- troduced @ second charge against him. He was charged originally with having assisted an insane alien to enter Can ada, and also with having entered the country himself by stealth, There Is little prospect that either chargo will have ‘any special bearing on | Pletcher, s © It was thought at first th Doyle, 2b Might be found necessary to estavlish | Merkle, 1b Thaw's mental status in Canada, BUC BIS) Mucray, If lawyers have found a way to avold this by depending upon the official records of Thaw's various hearings in the United States, There remains to the New York State lawyers the single hope that a Grand Juror will convene the King’s Bench Grend Jury in extraordinary session fo investigation of the Thaw case It ‘The immigration oMclals Bases on Fatal to “Big Jeff” Tesreau. Two GIANTS. R. | Burns, | Shafer, 3b leoenenw-anve iccco--—ns-~e—* le-ccoccuncc? wleecee-oco-e Totals... 7 129 «10 Grant ran for MoLean in the 9th startling developments will ensue There were io crowds in the streets when Phompson was driven down from jail in joff Camnita, 1. Struck Out jreau, 3; Cammita, 3 ly jooked as though it never had anything to do. ‘There was @ tedious delay in starting the hearing because the oficial stenog- |Bason. Attendance—-5,000 (Continued on es i Page.) Ind to-day Athle of we rs Aan mat lan ona ALMANAC FoR To DAY of wet grounds plaged to-morrow. % ne ‘New York Week AND LOSES IN LEGAL GANIE TO RUSH THAW 10 ASYLUM Baffled in Attempt to Obtain Inter- ference by Quebec Premier, Is Left GETS ANOTHER DELAY Hearing Postponed for Week—Plan Roger” Thompson, who drove Thaw on most of his long flight from Mat- teawan, was arraigned to-day before Magistrate Mulvena and his hearing INNING GAME Balls Prove First Base on Balls—Off Tesreau Two-base Hit Knabe to Doolan to Luders, Killifer to | Knabe. Umpires—Monsrs. Brennan and | NATIONAL LPAGUE PARK, PHILA- Lb igs tae . by The Prese | ord GREENWICH BOSS GRILLED ON STAND AS MAN HIGHER UP Judge Fines and Sends to Prison Gamblers Police Say Walsh Protected. WEALTH OF NO AVAIL. Chief Says He Didn't Dare| Close Place or He’d Have Lost His Job. {Special to The Evening World.) GREENWICH, Conn., Aug, 2.—James F. Walsh, who once ruled thir town with a hob-nailed heel and feered joy- ously at certain of his fellow citizens who declared that they would yet smai his firmly welded Republican-Democratic machine and take from him all the titles and profits perquisite thereto, sat on the witness stand to-day before his long SHERBROOKE, Que., Aug. 29.—The case of Harry Thaw seemed| time foe, Judge Tierney, and meekly an- ewered humiliating questions in the to-day to have come to a halt, with the prospect that there would be 0] goiee gambiing trial while the sweat “Educated | pourea down upon hia wilting collar. The event was so momentous that all Greenwich walked on tiptoes and in- uired in whixpers as to the Intest news from the courtroom And there was more to come. For Ambrose H. Boles, who has waxed rich from the proceeds of a brazenly open gambling house for sixteen years, was found guilty and sentenced to sixty days in jal and fined #50 altogether on two counts; one was for keeping a gambling house and the other ¢or allowing minors to frequent @ place where liquor was served. BOLES HOPED 8088 WOULD PROTECT HIM. Roles slosed ie place as seen ax dude ey by the threat physical force took the pench wway from Walsh's man and hoped to ve let alene with bis wealth, was horror | ABDUCTED, SAY POLICE. of} “PM SAFE” WIRES GIRL WHO WROTE Hoboken Miss Turns Up at Home of Aunts in Rutland, Vt. Detectives Start for Vermont to Investigate Girl’s Strange Disappearance. The belief that the mianing girl te * runaway, lured by hidden ideus of the romantic, caused the dispatching to- day of two detectives of the Hoboken police to Rutland, Vt, from where a telegram purporting to come from A dele Glasheen, the beautiful Hoboken ‘SLAVERS’ HAD HER. ; NEW “YORK, Bld ethaalely Girl Who Sent ‘‘Slave’’ Letter and Then Wired Mother ‘I’m Safe’ school girl who disappeared from her home Wednesday, has been received. that the girl is safe, has relatives, but her mother still clings to the belief that her Gaughter was enticed from her home, possibly by white slavers. Several developments to-day lend plausibility to both theories. A letter supposed to have been sent by the «irl from the Grand Central Station to her home, No. Zo. Twelfth atreet, HM sieken has aroused suspicion Not t at important is the fact that Mrs. Glash- een {8 addressed “mother.” = Mra Glasheen declared to-day that her other name than “mamma.” In addition to thie the letter, in which the girl de clared she was in the hands of white slavera, was badly constructed and full of misspelled words, One statement was that the girl had knocked a man down near her home at the in the letter, time she says that # yoand friends al physically Impossible. POLICE THINK MOVING PIC stricken. Never before had the mantle of Walsh failed to protect him. He would gladly bave pleaded gullty et the start of the trial, he eald openly, if he could be sure of getting of with a Gna (Continued on Lest Page) —_— E 6/BASEBALL GAMES Q en 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE, D AT PITTSBURGH, 0| CHICAGO— 0 00051000 0-6 0| PITTSBURGH— 0 10000000 0-1 0] Batteriee—Cheney and Archer; Mo- | Quillan, Hendrix, Gibson and Simon 2 : AT CINCINNATI, fe admitted that there is little hope of! ¢Two out when winning run was scored. | ST. A 2000 accomplishing this, Meantime ‘Thaw 1s as safe in che! PHILADELPHIA. BINGINNATIED county jail here as he would be had R. H.PO, A. E.| ~ 0 000000 his case been heard and he been at! Byrne, 3b 2 1046 1 OO Co ccise-Gatlee and Wi: fy Aberty by process of law. No one can|Knabe, 2b 005 30 ae jee nwo; Packard teueh him and while ae at remain | Paskert, cl 1 o 3 uv 0 in bis quartere are fully as com- —_——— foriable as those. he occupied in htat-| Mt 4 1 9 © 0| AMERICAN LEAGUE. Saou ae Hering Dre raid igdh dy 00810 AT 8T. Louis, pam Ait 'QRENe a8 “Sereeiaes Doolan, ss. 0 1 2 3 1|CLEVBLAND— SHERBROOKE EXPECTS NO | Kililler, ¢. ao age 0100 — STARTLING DEVELOPMENTS. P 9 0 0 2 O/sr, LouIs— Interest in the case ls flagging, with | qo, . 3 #0 Bt 0.9 90 . Le the prospect that Thaw will be here for jatirien Kenverg and Ca weeks, and that oo unedpeoted and SUMMARY Baumgardner and MoAllister, SARATOGA WINNERS, a closed carriage, and, while Magis- | Snodgrass. Sacrifice Hit—Snodgross.| PIBOT RACE—Progressive, 7 to 6| trate Mulvena’e vourtroom was packed | Stolen Bases—Magoe (2), Cravath, |and 1 to 2, fret; Scallywag, 7 to 10 for the doors, it Was by @ crowd which | Gnodgrass, Shafer. Double Playe—| place, second; Trifler, third, ime, 1,16. | | DBLPHLA, Pa, Aug %--With a con-!and@ @ to 5, Gret; Inspector Lestrade, POSTPONED GAMES. j stant danger of rain, heavy clouds and |Owt for place, second; Patruche third. Time, 1.43. | the ponnant already an eled, the fan FOUBTM RACB—Atrey, 7 to 1 ana‘: poo Grow NDS, Auk. % pila showed meservaN’ 9 ¢9 4, first; Princess Callaway, 5 to § « m ochis afternoon and held second; Plate out, fires; Meartbeat 7 to 5 for place, su care Sdbue sete G40 Moon’ rises, 2.14) 90CORG; Flask, third. Time, 1.31, . Hue Tpke. | SIRTM BACB—Carroll Reid, 5 to 2 Kes “P's; [ana @ to 5, Gres; Gilbert, 6 to 9 fi 3 place, second: Prospect third Timi a8. n ' TURES MISLED HER. That the girl could have penned the missive under duress in the Grand Central Station does not seem tenable, for @ man could not have accompanied the girt into the ladies room, the letter must have been written. The theory of the police ts that®the girl, who aamittedly has been an ar dent devotes of moving pictures, has been affected by the ances pur trayed in pictures she has seen, and upon some mysterious impulse has fled her home, but gone to a place where she would be safe. In Rutland she has two aunts. ‘The mother, Mrs. Margaret Giasheen, widow, who is matron in the West Twenty-third street ferry house of the Lackawanna railroad, doubts the police theory and is firm in her belief that the firl never loft home of her own accord. NEIGHBORS AND POLICE WATCHED OVER THE GIRL. Ardele, who was to have entered high school this fall, was of @ quiet, almost | moody disposition, and, outside of mov- |ing pictures, found no greater pleasure than remaining clone at home, doing housework while her mother was away She eeldom went further from the house than the street doorway, and if she ventured further a dosen watchful eyes were upon her. The unusual beauty of the child made her well known in the neighborhood, and shopkeepers and the police of the Second Precinct, the ata tion house of which te directly across SECOND RACH—The Usher, 5 to 1 jana 7 to 6, Sret; Surprising, 1 to 3 for pines, second; Unele Mun, third, Sime | “TRIED BACE—Beaucoup, 11 to 10 the street from her home, kept their eyes upon her constantly when she was + outside her home. | On the morning of her disappearance she left the houme about 10 v'ciock, teli- ing girl friends whom she met in the | street that she was going downtown | Previnusiy she had told her you brother, Paul, that she had fears of two men who Were nanging about the corner. She did not, however, say that they had spoken or even omled her. Wien she left she wore an ordinary house dreme and one of her “second ‘haw, This is a Panama with br ag a sha fear daughter never addreased her by any | ; “0 0 0 0 band Her skirt was wf brown, and she wore a wiiite middy blouwe and white shoes and stock Mhe “ware one set Wt an ametiyat and with @ ginal diamond, and a | braveler with the initinis AUGUST 29, 48S EHOOOS AT PHILADELPHIA— 1 1913. GIANTS LOSE [< Circulation Books Open to AIL” IL 16 PAGE 8 CEALIA GEOL OHS LOTTO ED 1 0 0 0 0-2 PHILADELPHIA 20000000 01 Caninite and Kantter Hattariee Tesreay and Mclean, DE PALMA LEADS. RACING AUTOISTS IN BiG EVENT AT ELGIN Italian More Than Six Minutes Ahead at 251-Mile Post. ELGIN, D1, Aug. %—Ralph De Pama! had a long lead tn the race to-day for the Chicago Automobile Clit trophy At M1 miles, atwut three tors of the distance, he let Dawson hy or minutes, An enormous wd lined the elght-mile course. Joe Dawson wan the first to get away. lromptly at 11 o'clock Starter Fred Wagner gave the signal and Dawson wns off tn a cloud of dust and} owed tn rapid comlon amd the crowd at the start ing Une settied down to await the ap pearance of the speed kings on the frat lap of the 301 miles and 4,040 feet Overnigat the entry of the Nyherg car, driven by Harry Endicott, was a ted as the Endicott gov trante Pie starters Endtevt al and away Wii the olner en ! firat lap held thetr respective places | envacher, Wishart and Chandler; 3 a» follows Dawson, De Palma, Rick Mul- ford was mixth, having passed Endi- ott Ru bacher, hero of the Lib- ortyville races two weeks ago, gained vnde on De Palma and Lb on, Mulford was chasing Kickenbacher hard in fourth postion At the ond of the fifth lap Ricken- bacher was leading. He had averaged iniles Mulford, 7 an hour. wecond, averaged 71.4 At the end of ten laps (4 miles), font led with De Patina sec- |) 96 seconds behind. Rickenbacker Just tWo laps from engine trouble. Mulford limped to the pite disabled eight minutes after De Palma surked Past on the eleventh Iap, the Italian | star, winner of both events last year, having established w good lead Mulford was credited with the faet- ost lap befure he quit with « broken rank shaft 0/01 At 125 miles seven cars were running, ‘LEFT $10, 000 IN BONDS , ON RR. STATION SEAT RURPAIA, Ane ’ —s PRICE ONE CENT. ————— | DOWN TAMMANY AV MITCHEL, AS HE TURNS DOWN HEARST Refuses Designation by Independence League Because Bound in Honor, He Says, to Stand by Col- leagues They Rejected. TAMMANY THE ONLY ISSUE; PRINCIPLES ABOVE MEN McCall, “a Willing Tammany Agent;” Gaynor, “a Disgruntled Tammany Adjunct,” He Says. John Purroy Mitehel has declined the Independence League Romination for Mayer hecause his colleagues, WeAnedy and Prea- dermast, have heen rejected hy the Leagne. Mr. Mitchel expects hin colleagues to he ax loyal to Fusion ae be is and to decline indorsement from the G: doneph M. Price, chairman of the Fusion Executive Committee, called upon all Fusion Hoard of Evtimate candhlates to reject Bominations from other parties, Mr. MeAneny fe silent. Mr. Prem dergast ts in Europe. The Hearst Independence Teague in left without a head te ite tleket and does not know which way to turn. Mayor Gaynor will have himself nominated for re-election by ‘amation of a public maxs meeting om the City Hall steps next Wednesday noon lenders hope to put an end to the confusion abuat came didntes hy starting an agressive attack on Tammany and pointing out the danger that Murphy may capture the city through dissen- sions of the allies, The hidden and anbtle influence of the traction interests fm politics will be revealed by Fusion Candidate Mitchel as an carly sensation in the campaign, John Purroy Mitchel, Fusion candidate for Mayor, firmly decfined the Hearst Independence League nomination to-day because that organiza- tion had refused to indorse his colleagues, McAneny and Prendergast. There were three emphatic points in his letters 1—Loyalty to Fusion and his colleagues, 2--An intimation that his colleagues must be equally loyal and refuse to go on the Gaynor ticket without him. 3—That the tssue of the campaign is Tammany Hall which seeking by subtle means to disrupt the Fusion cause. Mr, Mitchel’s letter was as follows: New York, Aug. 29, 1918, Mr. William J. Ta: Chairman Independence League City Com mittee, Dear Sir: The City Designating Committee of the independ. ence League having now completed ite ticket and having failed to designate for nomination my colleagues om the Fusion ticket, I ‘am compelled by loyalty to them and to the cause I have been called upon to lead, to decline the designation for Mayor with whieh you have honored me, This I hereby do. ‘The issue In this munielpal campaign is perfectly plain and very simple. It Involves unreserved and unrelenting opposition te Tammany Hall and to all the pernicious influences that fow from {t, and the interests that minister to it, Im meeting this issue, the Fusion candidates are confronted, first, by the open and impudent opposition of Murphy and Tammany Hall itself, and, seeond, by the hidden and subtle opposition of those forees behind the Gaynor candidacy that would weaken the Fusion ticket by destroying ite unity and integrity through ple! off candidates from it for ime dorsement and support. My sense of loyalty to the Fusion cause and my duty to my colleagues upon the Fusion ticket alike prevent mo from accepting any offer of advantage which Is denied to them ‘The importance of » united stand against Murphy and Tammany Hall mast outweigh every consideration of apparent personal ad- vantage, It Is my purpose to ask the voters to support me im a fight to repudiate both a willing Tammany agent in Mr. MeCall and a disappointed and divgruntied Tammany adjunct in Mayor Gaynor, Sincerely yours, JOHN PURROY MITCHELL. The Kiusten Committee took a mittee, tssued the following this mmornong to sna to further tions from ite t Livecting ©] “very camaidate for @ Boara of me ‘oat Messrs MeAnen Vrender: |timate position om the Fusion ticket wast, who are supp 4 be willing | should stand for that ticket alone and to take an indorsen on the Gaynor Mitchel out, Joseph of ihe Suslon mar Ucket, leaving Mr ah ES