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BELLBOY TELLS NEW VERS BATHE! ie it and aa farmer. FINAL EDITION. vets PRICE ONE OENT. Coprvight, Oe. a by The Frese sy ‘Mow York World). _ f “ Circulation Books Open to All," l NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1911, Boy and Girl Saved by Aunt AGED BROKER NEARLY BEAT LASHED To DECK, \ YOUNG SLAYER IN STRUGGLE BEFORE DEATH, SAYS GEIDEL In New Confession He Says Battle Ended Only With Strangulation of Jackson. UTTERLY INDIFFERE Mother, Hurrying Here to Aid Him, Lays Downfall to Finery and Cigarettes. While Paul Geldel, the bellboy who murdered William H. Jackson, is maintaining an attitude of absolute indifference anu ig shocking old pris- on guards by his lack of appreciation of his crime, the police to-day gave out a revised confession that differs’ in some points from the one signed the nigut of his arrest. Under the} third degree Geidel 1s said to have given this version of the robbery an‘ murder at the Hotel Iroquois: “The old man saw me craw! through the bathroom window, I know he did. He was sitting in his pajan and While he pretended not to know he did. I could see him all the| frightened, but -he pretended Not to see me and not to be afraid. Hi got up from the chair and began to hum and whistle and wet to the window to show that he was not afraid.” GEIDEL PLeASED BY ODISSEC- TION OF CASE. Geidel seemed pleased over his dissec- tion of the case and then went ahead | to tell about how he waited, like a tiger | under cover, to spring upon his victim. ‘Why didn’t you go for him then?” fone of his questioners asked. “Oh, no; not then," replied the boy. “Why, he would have raised a ery and brought somebody in to aid him. I just waited. It must have been| twenty minutes before Jackson at last Put out the light and went to bed. In about two minutes he was snoring, but it was only a fake. He was only pre- tending he was asleep. 1 knew it was) at ‘L took a wasicioth I had brought along and saturated {t witl> chloroform. The cloth was about a foot and a half long. Then I crept carefully to the side of the old man, trying to get exactly Where his nose and mouth were located, Qrid jammed the cloth down on his face. “To show that the old man had not been asleep he was awake and full of life the winute I got to him, Me fought with me for « time and once he had the better of it. “He got me on my back on the floor, "Then I fought to get him by the throat and after « minute I did, He couldn't stand that and pretty soon he was almost power- rt But he still tried to fight Then Geidel told how he released himself from the old man's grasp. GEIDEL MOST REMARKABLE PRISONER IN TOMBS. Geidel was to-day pronounced Devuty Warden Henry of the by ‘Tombs (Continued on Second Page.) We Lively Buying |_| Thousands are placing orders to- day for Sunday’ World Ads. To-Morrow It has been ascertained that Sun- day World Ads. may be best relied upon for Monday Resulte and it was directly because of this fact that there were published CEEECCECE eee Ce as No Other New York Newspe, Did Last Sunday, or Will To- Morrow, Print Even Half as Many . as the Sunday World. (BER aa FO | Kauster a, ATRACTED CROWD, THEN OROPPED SU STORES TO DEAT Alcoholic Patient Lets Go of Cornice When Policeman Approaches, Pedestrians on West Sixty-seventh street late this afternoon were startled to see a man hanging by his hands from the cornice which edges the roo? of the six-story building at No. 149, oc- cupied by) the New York Neurologicai Institute. A crowd quickly gathered and watched the man with fascinated Interest, As they watched he suddenly let go his hold and fell crashing to the pavement. He was instantly killed and his Lody was taken into the East Sixty- seventh street police station next door. The man was Girshon Kauster, a tine amith, of No. 1769 Prospect plac lyn, who was admitted to the alcoholic ward on July 17, He was considered convalescent to-day and was taking an airing with a number of other patients on the roof. The nurse in charge notio- @@ that he was somewhat morose. While this nurse's back was turned climbed over the eight-foot fence which surrounds the roof and let himself down very carefully, When the nurse and a physician whom she sum- moned tried to reach him, he dropped to the stre O.YEAROLD GIRL WANTS TO ADOPT DESERTED BABY Send John Doe No. 93 to Me for a Little Brother, Writes Dorothy May. A little girl in New Haven wants the unclaimed baby found at Thirty-third street and Second avenue, ttle brot name as reg- at the Ch clety 1s John who was No. 9%, She has written the fol- lowing letter: 1 read your Uttle piece in the New York I heard about ¢ Ite as found at ner of Thirty-third str avenue, I felt very sorry to hear \t 1 like you to please send the Uttle boy named Jo} » to Miss Dorothy May, No. 1998 Townsend ave- nile, New Haven, Conn. I am nine 1 would just love him Ks so cunning in the and I just love lttle DOROTHY MAY Iren’s Soctety, New York. V's has received ns from persons the ehild, Letters rave een recelved from Metuchen, N J: North Adams, Mass., Hartford, Conn,, and Washingtot FLUSHING MAN STRICKEN INA PULLMAN CAR, F, Campbell, Returing Home From Chicago, Dies as Train Nears Philadelpni: PHILADELPHIA, his way from Chicago to his home in Flushing, l. 1, H. F, Campbell died on a Pullman car attached to a Pennsy! vania Railroad train when nearing elty to-day, He Was accompanied by his wife, The train was stopped at North Iphia and the body re moved. nk L. Abbott, who was summoned, pre the man dead and the Coroner Was notified, Can bell had been to the University of C jo for treatment for etomach trouble, July 2%.—While on MOTHER AND BIB "SURVIVE WRECK Taken From Schooner by Sound Steamer While Pas- sengers Witness Rescue. BABY BRAVES IT ALL. Slept All Night in Mother's Arms as Waves Swept Dis- masted Craft Off Cape Cod. BOSTON, July 2%.—That the story of the gale that swept the eastern New England coast yesterday will not be told completely for some days seemed evident when each hour to-day brought succeeding chapters of shipwreck, dis- aster and loss of life from one of the Jearliest West Indian hurricanes that has rushed up from the tropics in many years, Many of the rescues from the wrecks were thrilling, especially the taking off of the wife and baby of Capt. Albert Mazerill from the schooner N. E. Ayer and the saving of the crew of the Cata- waumteak by a volunteer life saving crew off Provincetown, The passenger steamer Bunker Hill, from New York for thie port, sighted the Ayer in distrena and went to her aid. Mrs, Mazerill and the baby, who were found lashed to the deckhouse of. the ship, were taken off the craft with much difficulty, the pa: ngers wit- nessing, the rescue, Capt, Mazerill re- fused to leave his ship, so the Bunker-| Hill sent a wireless to the United States cutter Gresham calling assist- ance for the schooner. After being revived aboard the Bunker Hill Mrs. Mazerill told a thrilling story of her experience. Throughout the night Mrs. Mazerill was lashed to the top of the achooner's deckhouse, drenched by every e that broke against the vessel. During all this time her fourteen-months-old baby boy slept ip her arms as peacefully as ff he had heen In a cradle on shore. The officers and passengers on the Bunker Hill tried to outdo each other in kindness to Mrs. Mazerill, furnished ner with food and warm clothing and per- forming other acts of attention. To most of the passengers the morning's proceedings were most interesting, as few, if any, of them had ever before witnessed a rescue at sea. The N. E. Ayer was bound from Ban- gor, Me!, for New York with a cargo of lumber. Last night's northeast gale carried away her mainmast and opened her seams to such an extent that only her buoyant cargo kept her afloat, It was the second time in eight months that the Ayer narrowly escaped going to the bottom in a@ storm off Cape Cod. As the result of last night's astwise sailing vessels were fast on the rocks and beaches, or helplessly adrift off the coast, while from Cape Cod to Bar Harbor there was scarcely @ harbor that did not show disabled yachts, The principal vessels that met with accidents were: British schooner Tay, wrecked off Bar Harbor, One man lost Schooner Catawaumteak, ashore off Race Point, Cape Cod. Schooner Lizzie Lane, land. Schooner N. EB. Ayer, waterlogged off tape Cod ashore off Port- ne storm was very severe within a radius of one hundred miles of Nantucket and repor re anxiously awaited to-day from the fishing fleet off Georges Banks and various yachts on thelr way down the const With three of the large Hfeboats shed in, her deck seats torn up, ven- tilators knocked down, deck rails and 196 passengers, me > GOV. DIX TAKES ACTION | ON APPROPRIATION BILLS. ALBANY, July 29.—Gov, Dix completed work on the legislative bills to-day and commence his vacation on Monday at the Stebbins Cottage on Lake George Iiills amending city charters have heey at the Senale and Assembly nd will not be considered by the | until he returns at the end |the month, Th rnor’s action o |the ‘appropriation bills allotting bis | sums for legislative employees and fo. ther purposes will be announced norrow, The Governor handed out sever more vetoes to-day, fined to their berths during the entire | |trip. A sailor wat washed overboard and thrown back on deck again, RACES 2,000 MILES TO HAVE CHILDREN ALLOWED 10 LAND Aunt Arrives in Time to Pre- vent Deportation of Her Nephew and Niece. BOY STOOD BY COUS Lad Refused to Be Admitted if Immigration Officials Held Young Girl. After @ frantic dash across the con- tinent from Butte, Mon., to resoue her nephew and niece detained at FBillis Island and !n danger of deportation, Mrs. Margaret Duffey arrived in New York to-day and immediately secured the permission of the immigration off- clals to take young Patrick Duffey and| Mary McLoughlin to her Western home. Only one of the two youngsters really was detained by the immigration of- clals. The law prohibits the entrance of children under sixteen years of age unless accompanied by @ parent or guardian or met by @ responathle adult who can guarantee them proper care. Under the statute pretty fittle Mary McLoughlin of Tebogan, County Roscom- Map, @ rosy and handsome eleven-year- old colleen, could not set her foot on the American mainiand. Hre cousin, Pattick, a fine, strapping Jad of twenty, ‘Ged Hot Come within the law's scope, but when told that he could enter refused to leave the little cousin whom he had ®o carefully guarded all through the strange, long voyage. While on the train for New York —— Ba Mra. Duffy sent telegrams to President Taft and the immigration officials and enlisted the sympathy of the other passengers to the extent that messages were poured in upon Congressmen and Senators in behalf of the youthful immigrants. Mrs. Duffy wae expecting the arrival of her nephew and niece, but not being acquainted with the immigration laws, anticipated no trouble about their ad- mission to this country, as they both had been plentifully ‘supplied with money to take them to Butte. They have been detained since their arrived on the Campania, July 22, pe ascendant SCORES TO-DAY NATIONAL LEAGUE, AT ST LOUIS, + AMERICAN LEAGUE. |= — HALTS 27-YEAR CRUISE TO FREE HIS CHAUFFEUR. 3 0 02 2 0 0-10! Minionaire Hammond, Who Start. 0002000 | ed Around World, Hadn't Got AT NEW YORK FIRST GAMB, CHICAGO. | 00 FROM RUIN” ION OF MURDER | Pateicxk DUTFY ANO Mary McCLAuGes WOMAN FIGHTS BURGLARS | WITH ARDSLEY’ BANKERS MUSK AS 10 PAGES GATES SUFFERS A CHILL; HIS CONDITION WORSE. Lung Congestion Adds to Serious Plight of Magnate Sick From Being Deported as Paupers River Pirates Blow Safe and Defy Capture in Revolver Battle—New York Millionaires Join Hunt for Them. red several hundred dollars. EDITION. PRICE ONE CENT. MORGAN KEPT Vigil ALL NIGHT WANTING FOR 0. K. FROM ROOSEVELT Lewis Cass Ledyard Tells Steel | Probers Financier Engineered Sale of Tennessee Coal to Save General Ruin. PAYNE ANGRY BECAUSE HE MADE A MILLION IN DEAL. When Inactive Stocks Loaned Moore ( Schley Made That Sum He Sent It Back. lawyer who as counsel for Col, Oliver H. Payne arranged with Mr. Morgan the swallowing of Tennessee Coal and Iron by the United States Stéel Corporation, talked for three hours to-day to the Congressional Committee investigating steel at the City Hall. regarded as a marvellous exposition of the way big business was done in the panic of 1907, Florid, white haired, with smiling frankness of gan’s library, where the captains of millions struggled with the spec DETECTIVE Mr. Ledyard told haw he went to Mr, Morgan and proposed the sale of T. C, & I. to the Steel Trust, how Mr. More wan talked, how Judge Gary and H. C. Frick were summoned and how the want deal worked out, with inetdental examples of the generoaity of Cob Payne and others in lending millions te euch other ag newaboys handle pennies, According to Commodore Ledyard the Ananclers of Wall street made loans ef millions from J. Pierpont Morgan in the dread pante days, as gamblers do acrogp He green cloth, “on the nod,’ Mr. Ledyard made it cl sale of the T. C. & I. perien | Was forced, He ar tiflable in order to atop a complete panie smash which would have followed the collapse of Moore & Schley, Col, Payne's brokers. Congressman Martin W. Littles PLEADS FOR MERCY Perkins With Partner Franklin Convicted After Affair Fol- GIANTS— Reganiless of flying bullets, New York ) partition dividing the ticket omes trom| lowing Tomb Desecration. | ton only spurred the fi 0 ~ financiers who went to Ardsley-on-the-|the remainder of the bullding, Mrs My and more earnes nse of Mr, A ‘ Hempstead opened fire and. th saat organ as the savior of : ST. LOUIS— Hudson to spend the week-end, to-day p 6 men , lor of the country, 0 engaged in @ burglar hunt in which It paenly soll ted Tho cracksmen re-| RIK, Pa., July %9.—Gtibert B, Perke ee Leryn kno d : . turned the shots. Postmaster Hemp- nrivate detec: ‘or the syndicate mai 3 ® “l one of the thieves was sert- i a of the Perkins pr t NAagere—tho Ratteries —Marquard and Wa Seheved -a09: ct the thieves: wae @8rls | stead tried to get his: wife out ef thel tm 1eee ie Charles H, Franklin, ,2¢ didn't get a cent for it trom — Steele and Bliss, oumy wounded. ‘The fashionable Ard | range ‘of the pulleis, but she Inaistea | ve agency, and Ch 2 yn, | Manager L. C. Hanna testified yest Rea ley Club was in an uproay when the} on remaining with him and taking part|™&naer of hts Philadelphia paee peta BET tore AT CINCINNATI, report of an explosion sounded. Brok-| {ny the battle. were to-day founu gullty of misuee OF) wwortng Cong aman cine a mg BROOKLYN— ers and bankers tumbled out of bed and} By this time the attacking party had| the United States mails, was attorney for Col. Oliver H, Payne, 40 - in thelr pajamas hastened to the lawn! been re-enforced by club members, The] They were arrested some weeks ago vate in 1907 Col. Payne told me,” CINCINNATI— as they heard the cking of pistols! fustlade continued for several minutes charged with having sent threatening sa!d Mr. Ledyard, “that Moore & tu — following the first report. n the cracksmen made 4 break for] tetters through the mails to the family | is deeply indebted to him, Batteries—-Rucker and Bergen; Smith| The explosion had been caused by| erty. As they ran out at the station! of Charles H. Strong, the local miliion-| He was greatly con ed for them, and McLean three river pirates blowing open the sate| Hempstead and Coulter fired thelr last) girg, whose mausoleum was despoiied | Col. Payne told me that the banks (oF in the Ardsley raliroad station, whicn|(Attrd&es, and one of the trio stag-| by ghouls last winter, some bunks), had called thelr loans of AT PITTSBURG. is also the postofiice, Pos-master #. w,| ered aad fell. A companion grabbed| ‘phe Government claimed that Perkins T. C. and I. stock, He said there was | BOSTON— Hempstead and his wite live next the | '™ and with their revolvers pOPPINE | ana Franklin, whose detect! »8 Mo lent te Rone ee 0000212 :0 0 0 = 2jetation, which Is but a short distance | {Me PUréiars hastened to the rivery| siginally hired to run down the & saved except by the of T. C. ang PITTSBURG from the Ardsley Club. where {hey Jumped into @ motorboat! rowers and were later discharged, ,to the Steel Company; there was ao URG— and escaped, by means | Mr. ang Mrs, Hempstead rushed out, | “i . spired to frighten the Strongs by hn 406100 5 belt) Be sR hand, and James Coulter, Fhe peliee ot Dopby Ferry and Irving-| o¢ a letter demanding the payment of| “How much dtd Moore & Schley ewe Ratteries-Weaver and King; Bteele| ngineer of the “Ardsioy Club, Joined | 02 ere notified. and inaiead of play-| To. "in the empectation that they | Col. Payne?” interjected Mr, Lattiston, and Simon. linen: Dheaugh th ko they could| bers’ are trying to find. toe, bergen | would be engaged again to guard the| “He had lent them securities whion fee three men ct against the! The trios dallece, | mausoleum, Were negotiable and good collateral and This Perkins and Franklin denied and they alleged that thelr arrest was due to a conspiracy on the part of Rurna detectives because they had been! Then came out a story of Wall street hired by labor men to prove J, J, Mc-| loyalty and friendship which thrilled Numara guiltless of the Los Angelea| the committee, though it was eade : | from the subject of the Inquiry, nentenced| “I should say this," said Mr. Ledyard, had taken in exchange inactive securle ties, The amount was several million dollars." mmediat Judge , 2 kill in Paris Franklin to five years and Perkins to) "that @ year later, when Col, Payne Batteries Walsh and Suitivan, | Further Than Yorkville, in Paris, thus years in Leavenworth prison, /ame back from Europe, he asked me yaumman and 3) James H, Hammond, the millionaire} PARIS, July 29%—The condition of | perkins broke down when he heard the Sart he bat cee out im the Moore typewriter manufacturer, who recently| John W tes, the American financier| verdict of the jury and weeping!ly ap- Schl 7 ; AT PHILADELPHIA. leat ’e 1 &@ crulee tha sald he ex-| Who is seriously 111 at a hotel here, was|pealed for merey INACTIVE SECURITIES WERE | DeTROIT— pected to last tll he had reached the] worse to-day following a chill which| ‘Mercy, Judge, I am an old man!” ig HORTH A MILLION MORE, 000 — face of 10—ne is ‘ A-} developed @ sight pulmonary conges rkina when he had heard the made up an account for him, It ATHLETICS peared in ¥ t to-day in the] eg eine iia t. t, and hia daugh Mrs, Adams, | Yas s'range thing. The inactive ee. aaiia tei 2 | inte of his chauffeur, Patrick] charies a, ore 4 to comfort tes which Col. Payne had taken to 610% - | Kehoe, who w aligned on a charge sea earn We noted Anan not stirred, but eve Moore & Schley had Increased Ratteries—Lafitte and St Plaok| op conning & tomopila ar, wald to-day he feared his! n Judge Orr asked the men if |in value In the interval far more than Jand ‘Thomas "Ke we with a summons : De gcover from hin\ ey had anything to say. Porkins | the active standard stocks which he had | — — Y la tack, Dr. Gros, however, re-| ‘ » tears from his ey nd in (lent them, Col, Payne had actual while he wa $ empioyer down , wiped the tears from hi es and tn | ly made | AT BOSTON, Fifth avenue ye lay afternoon, The| ! to way anything more than that| 4 faltering voloe mald |# profit of over # million dollars, Ist Lous oan Jold millionaire very wroth at the only A (A “ faving chance] «yefore God, [am an innocent mant* 1 showed the account to the Colonel, ei ene arres nied that his car had) the ness and that he| pwranklin deciared: “I have nothing to} It made him angry. He didn't want any | 0 0000000 oO; plume amoke, | stil had th un © excensively lpay except tht I did not do ' | protit-wouldn't have it, He said he | BOSTON— Whe - s dt that hot we af the clty| Judge Orr then # et to, wanted the whe usiness cancelled. 01001201 §| pe would save a erent nave n4| three years in. the Hv didn’t want Moore & Sehley's money. Ratterles—Lake and hens; Wood! vay a fine of $5 nh 1) Leavenw Ka 4 [It wus done, The securities were exe and Carrigan the fine. five r changed back as though {t had never — fammond refused to sa | Adam hen she happened. Moore & Schley got that 1+ | i Bi. Hammer carry es WIESBAD! Prussia, July 2.—Rob. penne carried ft.” ® * | 1 by a ste ert A. 1 elder son of President |onamber | erious ¢ r. Ledyard told of going to eee rted in a specially) Taft, arrived here to-day for an ex-/for the accused jen Will appeal (rom the Morgan, ty-foot cruiser, ‘tended atay, Verdiow "Mr, Morgan said to me, —- Lewis Cass Ledyard, intimate friend of J. Pierpont Morgan and the . His testimony was . manner, he told the story of the troubled days and nights at J. P. More ° oa