The evening world. Newspaper, October 23, 1913, Page 1

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PRI CE ONE CENT. GRAND JURY INDICTS Che iaht, 1913, b; Co. (The Mm yy The Press Publishing York Werid). { LY ‘rculation Books Open to An.” | 4. NEW Ree THA YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER INDICTED FOR CONSPIRACY; QUT FOR THEM WARRANTS | Jerome Takes Case Before Supreme Court Grand Jury —Quick Action Follows. EXTRADITION EASY NOW Vain Fight by Counsel to Thaw, Insane, Incap- able of Conspiring. ‘The Supreme Court Grand Jury found @ Ddlanket indictisent this afternoon eharging Harry K. Thaw, Richard But- Yer, Michael O'Keefe, Roger Thompson 4 Eugete Duffy with conspiracy. The indictment is based on the escape of Harry Thaw from Matteawan Insane jum and the plot preceding the who was formerly in the Ag- eembly, is ead by Willtam Travers Jerome, who presented the case to he Grand Jury ae @ epeclal Deputy Attor- hey-General, to have deen the chief Move: of the plot. Me says the con- ng hatched In Matteawan Auy- tum aw and ast one Person wnd tha: an ag ployed Butler to execute the ‘Mnompson drove the automovile which Thaw escaped wid was Jater are rested in Canada, Duly and O'Keefe were Butler's active aldes. in ARREST. Butler, Duffy and O'Keefe disaye ired two days after Thaw escaped and have remained out of the State @ver since, Bench warrants were |s- ued for their arrest this ufternoon gd warrants were also issued for the a t of Thaw and Thoinpso: | the indictment the fugitives may be arrested anywhere. The bench warrant and indictinent against Thaw will be made tho basis of & demand upon the Governor of New Hampshire for his return to this city. Thaw is at present in Concord, N, HM. tm custody of the Sheriff and a United States Marshal. Willard M, Olmsted, vounsel for Thaw, made in protest to the District-At- torney against Jerome's plan to indict the fugitive millionaire, The basis of the protest was that Thaw, oeing legally 8 lunatic, could not engage in a con- The Grand Jury paid no at- protest, f TIME TO GET MENT. Mr. Jerome thought it would take him @ couple of days to present his evi- nce to the Grand Jury. He was sur- prised to find that the jurors asked tor enly the facts and did not attempt to ¢ross-examine the wilnesses, uf wiv there were eighteen, og The inquiry was finished and the in- @ictment was found with's two hours, Anasmuch as the cons:iravy to rele INDICT- On Second Page) — GLYNN NAMES HIS AIDES. and Townsend (Continu: tary Secretary, ALBANY, Oct nounced the appe jov. Glynn to-day itment of Krank A. erney at secretary oFith a salary of $5,500 Vapt. Reynolds K, Towns: ‘tary secretary, with a salary of other | nt of Thaw em-| plans. | WARRANTS OUT FOR bd lla MITCHEL FAVORITE to 10 to 8 Against Judge McCall. | Since John A. Hennessy Injected nim: self into the Mayoralty campaign there has been a decided shift in the election betting. Mitchel is now favorite at from 10 to 9 to 10 to 8 Wall street and Tenderloin petting comminsioners have loads of Mitchel money. They say they i able to place bets of any size last Sunday, but they figure that there will be # reaction toward the end of the campaign which will bring to Nght speculators willing to take a chance on MeCall, Judge McCall was the favorite in the betting up to a week ago and consider- sums were wagered on his chances. y of th ork who have ba: all ule now endeavoring to Is y “lay i. Ho Smathers. the horseman, ans dat the Waldort to-day that fe hus $10.00 to bet onMhel, Noe body has appeared to even talk about odds to him, A. sporting man in the Bruna vet $340 on Mitchel last week and has a big roll left to go the aame way ~~ ee 15 INDICTMENTS FOR ILLEGAL REGISTRATION \They Are From All Parts of Man- hattan—Twenty-Five Other Cases, ‘The Grand Jury in the Court of Gen- essions handed down fifteen Indlct- ents this afternoon against as many men charged with false registration. No warrattn were tuwued, but the men Indicted been put under survell- lance. The Aftoen Indictments were found out of twenty cases submitted to the Grand era tn nave Jury to-day by Arthur Traln, Spectal Assistant District-Attors epresenting the Honest Ballot Assuciat He will submit twenty-five additional cages to- When all the Indtctmen und arrests will be made ¢ Is no evidence of any eoncen- fort at colonization. ‘The of- armed occurred all over Man- hattan. met of the evidence was fur- nished by policemen who were desig- nated to check up the registration Iists, LYNCH TAKES OFFICE. morrow been have e State ALBANY, Oct whose ntment as State Co one: Was unanimously con firmed by the Senate lust might, to-day was sworn into office py Deputy The new Co would inake no retary of State Pigeon, missioner annou appointments In his department to-day, More than ot hundred Jwith sulacies ranging from $1, oo ure at his disposi —_——<-———_ of Shot Wound, ening World) N. J, Oct. 3.—~Game Reinbold of Hacken- who Was shot in the addomen by Warden John ©. wack, IN THE BETTING. | Tie Odds Range From 10 to 9! © been un-| tallan hunter whom he Was endeav.| LOSE HOPE FOR 200 BURIED MILE DEEP INRUNED MINE Twenty-two of Large Force Trapped by Explosion Are Taken Out Alive. FIRE ADDS TO. PERIL. Dozens Known to Be D the Workings of Colliery at Dawson, N. M. DAWSON, N. M.. Oct. &—What Is the fate of approximately two hundred | men remaining a mile down in the | workings of No. 2 Stag Canon mine, who, with dozens known to be dead and twenty-five rescued alive, were en-| tombed by a@ terrific explosion at 3) o'clock yesterday afternoon? This was the question on the [ys uf! hundredx of mothers, wives and chil-| dren to-day as they pressed the line of guards thrown about the mouth of the| mine. This was the unconscious incent- | ive that spurre@ hundreds of volun-| teer rescuers in an endeavor to pe trate workings strewn with debris and filled with pulsonous gases, Clearly the hopefulness that pervaded the camp immediately following the explosion and throughout the night had | jadyen way to-day tu evidences of doubt. | RESCUERS INSIST OTHERS ARE, ALIVE. When we reach the alrshaft we will find many men safe.” was the hope |soiced throughout the night. Three men | alive and only partly conscious and lthree bodies wax the reward when the airshaft finally was reached to-day, However, mine officials still insinted that others would be found alive. ‘This afternoon fire broke out in old) Mo. 3 Stag Canon mine, which connects with Mo, 2, It wae feared that the flames would spread to the workings in which the mem are entombed. This/ | added to the hopelessness of the situ- ation, It is estimated that 264 men were in the mine at the time of the plosion, | Oniy of the dead have been en identified, us—Arthur Bnalisn six and Walter Jonnaon, Daring the day scores of experten lo felis contin. ah mdaaite) sent into the workhuse ay their ssors reed exhausted unk ax tu the cause of the ex- plosion differ, It was flrat asserted that Vlackdamp ixuited and exploded Later it developal that at this tine of year the mines int mt svuthern district of Colurado become dangerous from the prevalence of coal dust which no amount of water seems able to keep under control and Jed ty the bellef that the sane condition inight have caur 7 ja | were i the ¢ caster here. STAG CANON MINE WAS CON- SIDERED A*MODEL. ng the all-night tight with the the rescuers penetrated to th Jfourteenth level, about v mile into the | do of Black Mountain and they were) yet fur from the tore than 2 re. maining victina ‘The twenty-flve who | wore rescued were poked along the lev- | s in ones and twos and could only -| point the Way onward to the depths for the rescuers, % Douglas elas, Arie, } manager of Phelps-Dodge & Go. of New York, owners of the inine, | is reported from Kl Basu, Tex, tw be }coning here on @ special twin with « corps of The St Was considered | @ model of coal mine engineering, and the disaster that befell It staggered this tow for most part of Lta terduy has! composed ers | Joring to arrest in the Woods near ‘Tup-| Mayor i, L. 4s vf Dawson has Both appointees are residents of Alvany. | jay just Sunday, died early this morn-|organiaed a relief camp at the tine, Mr, Tlerney formerly w loyed On} ing. An Italian thought to be une of the| where rescuers are being ¢ for, saul Gov, Glynn's local news! . and hastiwe men encoun’ red by Reinbold te! where minors as they are taken vut will acted as his secretary since he ander arrest. Re nbold Was about chirty. f wate ms sc « | LAeutenant-Governor. He also was & six and engaged to be married. we evan wodica) axsixtance if needed, : ; —aaeeer retry of the State Factory tnvesti- | gating Commission, which recommended » foe Recker ona G nee red the women and children i ceilattnh. ‘anasted Tue Court of Ap- nets a ° PEESRE Me late? Apgiaia nb enaceae postpone reument tn {of the entumbe miners. The miners’ ‘I he next | pt, Me oUt is Ing officer gf the National Guard tn aad lain bouy uf miners onturnt Active service to be appuinted military > Cee an hve: faite secretagy. He ix captain of Company A, $12Men's O’coats & Suits, $5.95 tne superintendent's ceoour Tenth Infantry of Albany, and through |? m@me “mud” Clothiers, Broadway nes | dix arrangement with the Adjulant-Gen- F UB: a aeeiainemmeeee eral's office will retain his command AF) Coney ie ny hae mane h For Golf and Racing See Page 16. le is the son of the Isto De Pranklin Bunty rays, browns: pencil trips ee ——— He wisend, who Was 4 friend of Grover dark mixed worsteds, all sizes; worth S H heed : $1! in uny other store: our special yr Sunday World Wants Cleveland, and ts the gra mer Adjt-Gen. Franklin Townsend, son of fore and Friday, 95.95, eo “Mub,’ od br a way, cor. Barclay St—Advi. Work Monday Wonders, Wife of ‘Deposed Governor _ Tells of Threats on His Life Mrs WILLIAM SULZER -+*> MPCALL FAILS 10 ANSWER CHARGES OF HENNESSY Accuser Says Another Judge Gave His Note for $35,000 in Recurn for His Place on the Bench. John A. Hennessy had it all his own way to-day in the campaign he is making against Edward &, McCall and Tammany Hall. He wasn’t arrested. He wasn’t indicted, Accusations” he contradicted. It is said that Hennessy has in his passession documentary evidence that he is saving Up for use in case he is called into court. He professes nd Charles F. Murphy under oath, “Li I've been tying about McCall,” said Hennessy tn his last night's speech, “let him try to prove it The only way f can con- clusively prove what FE say about McCall Is to get him in a court of law, where be can be put under oath, If he ly anxious for that test PM promise to Hbel him in any way he desires sv that he may start w criminal sult, He can’t take action any too quickly to suit me.” The Panmany Hall lawyers who have! hie aseoolates on that alde of the fight been see out some method by nie f Ai the Same ny ansare fi it cate to be insthuted Could Institute proceedings against Hon- orion shee, GIRS SUNS Miitcen BeMsY Without asking the Diatrtets Ate 1 procesdings agatast Wi Spiriasito ace But any- | Sulaer, or Juha Hennessy, oF Doth NAV thin they a Fags earned that H hope 10 188) be made conclusive befo: ction, and y's ottice Phey Mr. Whitman would mtually be that even culled upon to use hia ottice In any should presen) te Mr. Witt event upon Which to base chorg No evidence baa b laid before or sbinder the District-Attorney would) me.’ said Mr W day, © pure |not present such evidence ty Che Grand porting to show that either Mr. Sulzer Jury until atter eleeth or Mr Hennessy ha vntnitted Inasmuch as Mr. Whltnan crime Vntil such evide is submit. didate for District-Attorne ted to mg L shall not we f course."' 4 t friends Williams braver Jerome denied to-day 1 wa in the wa rim Nithew teainat M fi An sid tat hie ae st ealior pe (Continued on See nd Page) teu uh A a FAKING MRANS, } 2 igh elepuece Bbommags | 1 es law Merial Gawaare * meen | Gobds Adie ' W AN: | | | | | | | | D RESCUERS | “Circulation Books Open to All.”” | ' 23, 1913. 22 PAG Weather—c FI EDITION. PRICE ONE CENT. MURPHY DEFIES HENNESSY TOGIVE NAKER OF NOTE “Chief” of Tammany Says It} Is a Duty Owed to the Pub- lic to Get the Name. HE ISNT TO Says He Feels Too Good to} Give Up the Place of Leader. Charles. Murphy, looking abmest fovial and showing by no sign that the |fear of Edward FE. McCall's Mayoralty success which has permegted Tammany Hall had heen communicated to hi (broke the silence that he usually main tains and answered to-day @ few ques- |tiona which have arisen since the start of the campaign, asked about the charge of Hennessy that he had held In his hand « note of $25,000 given thie year by # Supreme Court Justice, He replied: ‘ “If Hennessy knows who gave that note and whe got it, he has the right to tell—the right and duty to tell. Why RESIGN. ‘doesnt net" “How about Suizer's atory that after he refused $2,000 contribution Anthony Brady, it reached Tammany Hall?’ Mr. Murphy wan asked. | The leader's (ace lost ite genial emile Jat mention of Sulaer and he repiled | earnestly. “L will not answer Sulser on that = — FULL STORY OF PLO 10 DESTROY SULZER IS TOLD BY HIS WIFE “Scores of Death Threats Came by Mail,” Declares Mrs. Sulzer to The ; Evening World, “But I Prevent- ed Him From Seeing Them.” “ALL THE CARDS STACKED; HE COULDN'T BEAT GAME.” “We Are No Longer Free When a Boss in Fourteenth Street Can Send Threats to Governor’s Wife.” “I realised from the middle of February that an underground subway was being built between the Executive Mansion and Delmonico’s,” said Mrs. Sulzer. “I breathed easier when my husband was impeached and I felt that at least his life was no longe« endangered.”” point now, or on any other point, but I will answer all of that when I get to It It was suggested that possibly the ora- tory of Sulzer and Hennessy might be come a deciding element tn tho cam- palgn, and Mr. Murphy answered; 1 do not think that any attacks by Sulzer and Hennewmy will have any appreciable affect in this campaign.” It waa a delicate question to put to Mr. Murphy, whether or not he was about to relinquish the control of Tam- many Hall, and it was put finally with the suggestion that perhaps the “Chief” in need of rent ened his shoulders at the frat wi and when the question was) 1 he declared: 1 am not tired. I aleep very well |and 1 eat very well and I have no tn- | tention at all of retiring.” | It was atl Mr Murphy cared to say fur publication and he returned to the end: stream uf visitors who called one after another at the hal —= made last night were nut BIG STORM KILLS NINE, INMURES FIFTY OTHERS Ito be anxious to repeat the statements he has made about Judge McCall, Tornado in Sweep of Southern See- tion of Louisiana Also Does Heavy Damage. IW ORLPANS, storm that Ort 26 -A terrific | ts feparted tu have taken ut lenat nine lives, tnjured a halt a hundred persons and done great prop> erty damage, swept over uw narrow atrip of Southern Louisiana early to-day, Wires are down yuthwest of tht ctty and news of tie storin’s dam) Ald not reach untt! after noon ee vol Huens, Cor In. Alidren shen fre broke were on ratralled tn fire tof the bullding None wis on dangered for a tine —_— BALL PLAYERS To ati k Dledicing aceie thew wad ela naare felt weurted with his iabore and was! Mr. Murphy straight: | | East Side and she showed the same solicitation tor his every need as is her “I knew that the cards were stacked against my husband in that boss-bound Legislature. He had no chance for justice. He was lynched by orders from ‘the Chief.’”” By Sophie Irene Loeb. I had never seen Mrs. Sulzer in a more cheerful mood than she way last night in her rooms at the Broadway Central Hotel. Although she was a calm and collected woman when | saw her in the Executive Mansion a week ago yet tow there seemed to be a load lifted from her mind, The Governor was preparing to leave tor a series of speeches on the wont, “Lam #0 glad it ts all over,” said Mrs, Sulzer. “I breathe easy now. L am so proud of my busband—a man who can rise above such @ terribie siege und KO On fearlessly, Morally he is the bravest man in the State. At first I was opposed to his running for the Assembly, since I felt he needed rest and change and quiet, but he ts w fighter aud the fight bas just begun. le will go to Albany and keep up the fight for honest government, Do not inisunderstand ime, The pomp and ceremony of the executive man- sion count for little, but the fact that he was elected Governor last year by 205,000 plurality ts the true expression of the people's confideuve in him. BREATHED EASY WHEN LIFE WAS SPARED. “Perhaps you will think it strange when I tell you that | was greatly relieved when he was removed, for I breathed easy in that at least the Boss had spared his life. “Scores of letters have come to the Executive Mansion from the Tammany camp, threatening his life. As ET usually recelved and opened the mail in the morning and read these, you Imagine that it was no little worry to om Of course, 1 did not wish to give the Governor any unnecessary concern and 1 destroyed them, “But from the contents | knew that a subway was being dug from tha executive mansion to Delmonteo's, and that they in the ‘get him’ sooner or later, would rhacular Six- | beon ae “The cards were betng stacked agains: him every day and T knew that it wan Impossible alinost to beat their game with the L lature under the thurn? of the Chief, but I dld hope that there would be enough honest ‘nen’ to ris above petty politica und give tim @ fatr deal and Judge the case from the evidence, ax required by the State Constituttun, 1 Which case ho would Rave tred indeed, even this Tammanyized court did not dare to vote him guilty of five ont of the eight articles of impeachment, but unan! monsly acquitted bim thereof, ‘They did not dare go so far as to m it impossible for him tu go back, aud he is going back to cuntrol and pose the movements of Frawley, W. AYS | “LE have been asked If L will take the stump. No, [have no intention ot x-story frame| making any speeches, but Lowi be with tim wheres e worm, Sua ty owe neart 1 vellevo he is as truly th Nernor of the uf New Yoru ae he ey turned infever wa efireres ‘Thel Purther, fam urging him to go ty the Supreme Court of the United States mity te to test the validity of a court tt focuser aust fudme LD cannot yor a | believe that such @ thing Is posstile tn a great and free country Whose proud re trict, |boust te that We are a Goverument « WS ant tot of men from Fourteenth street can o es to wm Governor's wife in order that she might induce her husband to stray from the ‘vtreet called straight,’ we can well understand that mo longer are ww Living tn @ free Republic but in © Btate that is controlled by an arrogant B a eee awn: me

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