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———— . ~ - —_ _ " - . Fi THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1917. ' Ly / Ss The Prosecutor leaned heavily on| State, Ho pointed out thy the | MARGARET E. TREVOR TEACHER SUI GIVEN i i the fact that lime had been found| night of the disappearance of Pipor| 79 THE BRIDE TO-DAY OF . L BARKE | » In this cellar and that lime had been} the evidence submitted by pros y, , CHANG U : ! found on the clothes taken from the| ecutor showed that, when a shot n DR. IRVING H. PARDEB' . + E BY GIRLS’ PARENTS ‘ i } Condon home, on the seat of the Con+| heard, the neighbors all ran ina dis ¢ageeeegeeeneneee see tooo At Last the Mystery Is Solved and Now We Know What rs a} don automobile and the body of Piper| rection away from the Condon house, |} B rf Bierman, Accused of Annoying 4 © g | Wet It was discover Jang that tn the accused physic ° ‘ecomes of the Coney Island Spielers, Cappers and Children, Defied Order t Ey Justice Bergen | ng the y| home there was no light and no ds-| f S fi rder to ah } c gon in charging tho jury| home ther : juaw! the Seaso joses—The i * P pointed out that it was their duty] turbance, and not one of these ne ‘ a kers When Season Cl Hot Dog Leave Neighborhood. H | : Valedietori ak gl ’ | F to consider whether a man in xis] bors saw any one enter or leave $ aledictorians Mount the Political Soap Boxes and) + pro, tency mierman of No. ate : hormal senses would have let a negro | house : Infest Co i _ Wadsworth ; " h r the cellar, knowing that a body| ‘The testimony of the negro w ; est Every Street Corner in New York — Every Pe ee 7 hope | was iving where he Would be sure to| Whittington, was met by the : Neighborhood Has an Open-Air Political Barker, and) ines. oct ot the canta —— ; vive [seo it. At the same time, if they/entation of twelve questions ; . : “ inp Bl Shek say ba + ~ Prosecutor Admits Showittg) yer. satiattea that tt had been estab. | what a furor would have said « : the Best Thing About Him Is the Open Air—“Each en lived he might have Keeps Chancellor in So as to xa OC aah sph Ee ‘ ses * charge of endangering the : No Premeditation—Asks Sec- |iishea that human tiesue had been| had he found a hw no od : Barker Has a Brand of Political Bunk That Might) morais of minors ana the shame which Save Big Men for © uses Sawdt Mxcovered on an automo cover | c *, The fact that after WI e . 1 ” ‘ised im to commit autelde. This “4 ” ond Degree Verdict. found in this same compartment of! ton's story had been told ever > Swing the Un Vote. statement was made to-day by De- Peace Table. |the cellar {t would indicate direct! who wished to go there w: : a hg ed an bale oe 5 y r Corsemponae <1 “ation of the . e cella. thout } rman's ™ | NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J, Oct. 27. “Ene Sune ent . __Ifrom the testimony of the prosecu. | ® ___Coutaht, 10, by We Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Rvening Wot his wife and six-month-old baby, On| °Tet Of Emperor Willlam's unwilling- ' > HUG és ihe Wiatl | peeks might On er, thE | tion's witnesses, $ IPE is a mystery that {s composed of a million mysteries, When you | (he records of the Coroner's office he in| ss to remove Dr, Michaelis at pres~ H ie case aie . 0 i . why Dr. Condon did ——$—»—-——- ° get a hole {n your sock you never know where the cotton goes that eat the to ae died from polson. | ent, despite the Chancellor's admitted | Witiam J. Condon, hie army eur. | pulse hia Intention of going to Free-) BROKER ACCUSED OF FRAUD. : | was Ju the hole before it was a hole. The bird who slugged BINY| According to Detective Mahon any. [loss of control of the political sltua« { geon accused of the murder of John) Hlth even Af there was an obatruc:| a : Patterson 19 still an unsloved riddle, So is hash, Why are dotiles?/man was mispected of annoying the| tion, is. according to an article in the ; V. Piper, a Rutgers C t] and they siete ot eile atl LU Jbl deg won| ¢ wes Mancaget Which ts the front end of a ferry boat? elght-year-old daughter of H. Hallam. | roxay Ansetger, that! the Si graduate student, went to U lit ncatot: was fred at 40-9 hom se Funk w Ce : TREVOR What becomes of the barkers, splelers, cappers, equawkers, yodellers | "ha liver in the sume apartment house | 6 q canny baseball manager, ta sa¥e ! § this afternoon. . | the night of Pipor's dieappearan aight ine Ne pebaesesseneseseusese and slillabers who earn thelr daily biscuits at Coney Island when the hotter of scott Grover of No. 371 Wade. | ing his best political star for the all- Prosecutor Stricker in addressing|alibt produced by the de dant | c 4 Bartholomew's Church this dog is in bloom? What do they do to earn their cakes when the frost {8} worth Avenue. Another child, of No,|important service at the conclusion the jurors said the State had to admit|onty partial, He had accounted for M 4 Trevor, |On the tourist and Coney Island {3 folded up for the winter? babe ae te Avenue, was also men-| of peace and thereafter, and is reluct~ it had deen unable to produce any] his movements until a minute or tw 1 Mrs, Hen- | “ . saomimaaaeaon munis womeiny sud fe fathers of the children two] ant to exh { it Ni ‘ eva ¢ : | ones \T* 3 whereabouts of Coney Island's . weeks ago ordered Bierm to . tan exhaust his stamina by putting » os ahowiny spel Ae 1|after 10 o'clock, but had not substan- . eta CON Levi thick nickel and thin dime orators Mor betta alla baibeistdes A the neighborhood. nan t9 Weave} him in now. Meanwhile, Michaelie or that reason vould abk for a} tiated by witnesses his atatement that : Chkine Pardee son of Dre and Mre, |was a mystery until this tast political) "at of that campaign paraphernalia, niernan denied the charges and de-| Must hold on under the hammering as verdict of m n the second | he had been in a bar sen B, Pardee of No. 74 West 48th | campatgn broke out, The corn-on- but being wrong ts no novelty for ®/cisred he would stay where he was | Dest he can. gree only. He admitted furth that] shaved in the quarter « Me. J. Couper Lord ta her siater’a |the-cob vatedictorians don't allow heeteyrathe Just 90 up as heer Leer Eel eye night he was summoned| Rudolf von Valentini, the Em Detective Ferguson mado a grave| lowing, when Piper was supp r and the bridesmaids | thelr larynxes to hibernate during the] FTA» the cones Lose ume ve | teet bd dcl Bb mllar Sued pla PARE arte stoal del bemehaibte She mistake tn : cellar ’ 7 Helen Ts 8. | winter ey oe : eesti hE Moser Se down, pel Lokal-Anzeiger, mentioned im « negro witness, v iy | ; summing up for the defense, d ee Mice Ame, | There ten't n difference between | ve tn ae Se ae were; [on behalf of hie wite and baby. "Mal ey | con sebahton with tho Reichstag lead~ Condon cellar when t | itussell EB, Watson made his strongest . hnson, Miss Hieanor 1a |etlogizing hot dogs and panegyrizing| ‘N* Vole that they don't o applied to Magistrate Nolan for @ war- | erroin ones OF Dersons whose qual turned there 1 galn for peal to-day by applying the evi-| fore end een Meat night in tia ty s@, Miss Dorothy Dwight | sia candidates, they say, Polltical voracity and Ver-| rant yesterday ifications for the Chancellorship he B nety te doctared edaHithe i upiwilnenseN tiriiEl enon Y Wal Ida Florence Earte Jot eit enter se auctioneers | City are pronounced the same. A #08P| Detective Mahor met Tierman on|TecoRnized, but whom he believed _ — be are bombarding the voters’ eustachian box chirper slips the public a bundle} 187th Street last evening, but before the | "ROUld be reserved for the peace’ - i of gor a v y t tumble] office id ° re table. POLITICAL. _ POLITICAL, POLITICAL. tubes with vocal confettl, Drum fire te : pal ear tae Thi See Wal Mi Canes ee in tac a he seniority gavin Guar was originated in hb pgdetig torts didates are buzzing at the same time. plained of feeling i The French} stag are inclined to hold that the drum fire was evolved In New | Habel was a monologue compared to| ‘cher collapsed and died a few min-|emergency probably? never will be very street corner In New York and utes later In a drug store. edt sane abet this. path haa greater than now, and the Emperor suburbs has its local orator, Some of hi Can you blame the New York voters Perhaps ts disposed to reconsider his them are very local. ; H NCE 10 PO dectal , Every neighborhood possesses tta| for developing @ mental flat wheel? decision. Rios Valeatial on Thursday ps " : 0 summoned Karl “rrimb c open-air poli barker. The best| Fach candidate calls his opponents) AT BIG BAZAAR ON T0- HT | ioace w Biethee oodteient pry burglars, sheep astealers, professional r, to @ further conference on the |feature about an open-air political Y tt | pallbearers and widow robbers, ee + | situation, The Reichstag leaders have forum is the open air, An open-alr| P* t' N _ 7 Sst ty (taken the week-end recess and have ration 18 tanitary {f nothing else, | WhIch tn a promotion for some of ’em.| Noted Stage Stars {o Take Part Int gone nome to consult thelr constites These hot dog Demosthenes's give| A candidate starts in by labelling his) chow at Grand Central Palace | ents, so the question whether a crlais Dreamland | the Manhattan voter credit for having|@ntagonist as a swindler of near- : ‘ s existe wilt about ay much sense as Simple Simon, | sighted orphans, a murderer of crip for Field Comforts, oe s rn Bak vena acute again es ; | 9 muc seas q See etiaea|| efore the middle of next week. \who paged whalea with an empty| Pled veterans of the War o' , and A bazaar that will be more than al op, one of the Horeca wal es Dty| iwindler of flatfooted and other ex-/atasaar” te announced by the United| 7° Relchetag leaders have bem hook in a pail. They page votes with 4 moat considerat ft empt citizens, From there he gradu-|States Army and Navy Field Com- rate of the feelings and Great ‘ | vacant conversation. They go after a aiiy: works up to. the alltnax forts Committes to open at Grand| Preromatives of the Emperor and [Vote Wie) Perse) way, they go diced ep And the other bird comes right back| Central Palaco to-night at 7 o'clock everything has been avoided, accord- . Playgrounds j hick's nickel on Steeplechase Pier, at him by calling the first witness a[@ continue throughout the follow- ing to an inspired statement, and will L@ Is about as welcome as 4/7.) see Captain Kidd and Blue. | ("5 week be avolded which could the im- ch — i ara f the Cit |L poor relative, A political hot don} teers vompined, And not one of the| , MARY other relief orgahtéitions, in-| preasion of any exercise of pressure. . SL, atti ° ie Uity Jorator’a facts are as reliable as an|Deard combined. And nok ate Te Mtl ciudiny the Good Bamaritan, the Anl-|'The written declarations of policy : _ “ epitaph. A curbstone Dantel Webster! ose wnistie, No matter what one uae Witlioescey Seaike, Militia! submitted to von Valentini neither Ahout Dreamland and Rockaway V HEN Hylan talks about “the useless purchase of Dreamland”, he shows he doesn’t know how much fun the public have down there. On hot summer days they come by hundreds of thousands—the sand is thick with them mothers and childyen—hosts of little boys and girls wading and swim- ming in the surf. The Park Department provides specia! tents for mothers and babies and thou- sands use them. Out at Rockaway is another beach, only it is ten times as big. It is a vast unspoiled tract—the last such area that was left near New York. Already great numbers of children are being trested and cured of bone tubercu- losis out there in the fresh invigorating sea au. When the Flatbush Avenue extension is completed across Barren Island, these great Rockaway Beaches will become the playground of the millions. During the hot days last summer thou- sands of mothers and children practically covered the sands of Dreamland and Rockaway in an effort to get away from the stifling heat of the big city. These two parks promise to be not only the most popular, but the most val- uable shore parks that New York City has ever owned. Hylan calls that a waste of money! Here are the facts about both matters Dreamland came on the market after it was swept bare by fire in 1911. That Fusion Committee of 1917 me. Keep Mitchel on the job! {%* Photo Copyright | Underwood & Underw oot | made it a good time to buy—no buildings | to pay for and tear down. | Alderman Dowling, now Tammany’s candidate for Boro-President, got the Tammany Board of Aldermen to recom: mend the purchase. The Fusion majority in the Board of Estimate agreed and ordered Mayor Gaynor's Corporation Counsel to get the property by condemnation. The condemnation price set by the court was too high. Mitchel contested it through the cher courts successfully and had the award thrown out. A hearing is now going on. Not one cent has yet been paid for Dreamland. By contesting the award, Mitchel will probab!y save the city half a million dol- Jars when the city finally acquires the property. As to Rockaway, that again is a case where Mitchel and Prendergast had nothing to do with the cost except to protect the city by getting an advance option. The purchase was firgt authorized when McClellan was Mayor and the Tammany Board of Estimate wa: unanimous for it. | | The condemnation was in the hands of Gaynor's Corporation Counsel and the courts, and’ the matter was all settled and complete before Mitchel became Mayor. Mitchel has chailenged Hylan to debate this o any other question before the public. Has Hylan accepted? No, , He's afraid, because he knows he’s not telling the truth. Do you want a man like Hylan for Mayor? If not vote and work for Mitchel and Fusion. vote alon talks from the ears down. His argu- ments are mostly gestures. We think a curbstone spleler has most of the curbstone under his hat. They stick to the truth lke water sticks to a mallard’s shoulder blades. The line of chin goods spilled by soap box chatterers might nail the incubator vote, but any voter with an adult skull north of his Adam's apple should know better, Each barker has a brand of political bunk that might swing the unweaned vote, but any man who has reached the age of number sixteen collars Is wise enough to know that you can’t get fat on echoes. Every candidate 1s the friend of the workingman, but not of work. Each nominee is the friend of the workings man's vote, You eald it. Every office vspirant 4s the friend of the working- man, There are moro friends than workinginen, Every candidate ts out on the atreet corners making his ante - mortem statement, The post mortems will re- RACE RIOT IN CAMP; NEGRO TROOPS THREATENED Alabama Regiment Threatens to Drive the Fifteenth New York Out of Camp Mills. CAMP MILLS, 1. 1, Oct, Officers f the “Sunset” (41st) Division to-day aro Investigating the race feud between the Alabama infantry and the 15th New York, a negro regiment, that brought yut a day of fights yesterday and re- ending pulted In the negro troopers just night under arms in preparation for day and carr! loaded rots of the 15th were jeered they passed an Alabaman on cording to the complaints they nade to their officers, Numerous fights ped, last night the Alabamans got and sent out @ warning that ould run the negro regiment out » before m 6 night awalt ¢ Alavanvans nk the attack of —— SMOKER DEFIAN 35 HURT. to Gait Smok- Crash, MONTH Two cars con- taining more than one hundred passen- gers collided on the Lachine-to-Mon Thirty-five tor enger had ohing, ore renuy with a aiding waa while ral & Bec i, crashed ir Was running eo —More than of Mra, Marta . widow of Robert D. ¥. waa be- onal and na of the “Y, $120,000 Gift for Camp Libraries, WASHINGTON, Oot A gift of $220,000 toward the work of providing amp jibraries for Amertea's soldiers , 1 to-day by \ttes of the ion , ot one! candidate calls another, tho other gw can always trump it. Who are we going to vote for? A voter has about as much choice ag a pedestrian in a rowboat with a hungry lion. If he gtays in the boat the Ion will eat him and if he caroms over- board he will drown. With the candidates turning State's evidence against one another, no voter can squawk for a recount if he dis- covers that he voted for an assasain, There are no secrets in this cam- paign, All the cards are on the table and all the cards are marked. No matter who you vote for you are sure to be wrong. ‘The only safe thing to do is to go home and vote for yourself. And you may be wrong then, Once Remember: That the idea is a mistaken one that the Government itself, as a Government, has unlimited funds and, therefore, doesn't need the cash belonging to its citizens, part and Mortgage & Trust Company Offices 55 Cedar Street 73rd St. 125th St. at 6th t Broadway 75th St. at Madison Ave. A Friars’ Frolic, in which George M. Cohan, Frank Tinney, Nat Goodwin, James J. Corbett, Fred Niblo, Sam Nernard, Raymond Hitchcock and cther celebrities will take part, will be staged in the War Garden twice daly, There will be a shooting one may pot Ka wn Prince, Von ery, Withelm, lonburg oF 7 Election ALBANY, Oct, 27.~The voting pret- erences of nearly one-tenth of the electorate of this State, as expressed at the polls next Nov. 6, will not be known until nearly eight weeks later. This arises from the fact that ap- proximately 135,000 of tho 1,700,000 voters are now enrolled in the mill- tary forces, ‘They will cast their bal- lots wherever they are stationed. More It does. That an oversubscription to the Second Liberty Loan will convince the whole world that the American people are determined to fight to the limit with dollars, as well as with men, That this Loan is bound to be an unparalleled success and you should welcome the opportunity of being a parcel of that success. In less than 24 HOURS the Books will be Closed Will Your Name Be There? United States Ave, Open Until Midnight and We Will Lend You the Money could nor did arouse any criticism or objection aa to their form or coms tents. Dr, Michaelis answered these mild statements with an article In the Cologne Gazette declaring that any attempt to exercise any influence whatever upon the Emperor's decision would be contrary to the spirit of the constitution. Fall in Peanoe, . H. 'T. Seymour, rector of Chriat Church, Piermont, N. ¥., Whe 91) sailed for France as Field Secretary of the Y, M. C. A. a month ago, died tm France Wednesday as the result of « fall, according to a cable message res ceived by Bishop David H. Greer of the Protestant Eplacopal Diocese of New York, Mr. Seymour was born at Bast Orange, N. J., forty-eight years ago, He was unmarried,