The evening world. Newspaper, November 9, 1911, Page 1

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, . POLICE ROUTED I IN WHITE WINGS RIOT ___WHEN STRIKERS ATTACK NEW DRIVERS PRICE ONE co Copyright, ico. UThe New Ter ENT. nr en ee A The “ Circulation Books Cpen to All.“ Pablish! orld). zal NEW _YORK, THURSDAY, ‘NOVEMBER 9, 1911. BOSS RULE BY NN CATY AND STATE MUST EN), DEMOCRATS GRY amines Nine Years of Him as Tam- many Head Encugh, Party Men Declare. HE FACES REAL FIGHT. Will Make Battle, Too, for He Wants to Name Democratic Presidential Candidate. ©haries F. Murphy has been boss of Tammany Hall for nine years. Tam- many Hall is the nominal Democratic organization of New York County and in the judgment of Democrats who are not bound to Tammany by ties of office holding or financial profit, a nine-year term of Murphy rule ts plenty. | The movement started immediately after the reeult of the election became kbown and it has spread in forty-eight hours throughout the city and the for Murphy, not content with controlling the local machine tn all boroughs, has made himself State boss. For the firat time since Richard Croker handed him the leadersnip—and with reluctance— Charles F. Murphy is up against a real, sure enough fight. Ae for Murphy, he will fight back. Entrenched in Manhattan by the powpr of patronage and holding a similar lever up-State because of the control ee has exercised over the depart- ments with the largest appropriations and the biggest salary lists, he 1s in shape to put up strong resistance. Murphy*loves power, and it ls his ambition to control the New York del- egation torthe next National Demo- cratic Convention and to have his say | in the nomination of the candidate for the Presidency. Murphy 1s more or less an accident as leader of Tammany Ha’ ‘or many years he was a saloonkee| on the t side and leader of the Wighteenth Assembly District, During the term Mayor Van Wyck—from 1898 to 1901, inclusive—he was Dock Commissioner. Richard Croker was then the undis- puted boss of Tammany, but he had made no effort to spread his control over the borough of Brooklyn, which had been turned over to the political leadership of Senator McCarren by Hugh McLaughlin. Croker engaged in looking out for hi own pocket all the time to such good effect that his wealth and arrogance inspired antagonism in his own organl- zation, Public condeinnation was pili up around him, He discreetly resigned fis leadership and turved the organiza tion over to John C, Sheehan. ‘Asa leader Mr, Sheenan was a monu- mental fa'lure. Mr. Croker ¢ ie back from Europe, took up the reins of lead- ership again, looked over the situation and then passed them Into the hands of the triumvirate, Charl F, Murphy, Louls F. Haffen and Darte! M Mahon Seth Low was Mayor and the city was in the hands of the Republicans. Tammany Hall, without sustenance MURPHY BLAZE IN SHERRY'S EMPTIES STH AVE, Diners at Restaurant and at Delmonico’s Flee as Dense Smoke Fills Rooms. ‘WHITE WAY’ IS SCARED. Murky Pall Over Whole Ten- derloin Makes Folk Think Town's Afire. If the axiom, “Where there is much smoke there must be some fire” had held good this afternoon, there must have been a big fire in Sherry’ restaurant and hotel, Forty-fourti street and Fifth avenue. here was a little fire, but the smoke it made| was out of all proportion to the o: and carried in its thick, wide: course the semblance of a g flagration, Grease use, in a range in the kitchen, which is on the greund floor of the ten-story building, caught fire. The flames spread into a big chimney, which Was coated Inside with greasy soot that had been accumulating for years, Soon the chimney was belching clouds | of black, heavy smoke. A brisk wind from the northeast carried th.s smoke dlagonally across tc Way in the Tend Was hooded with the | was avy and} | | ground that all who saw it imagned tae fire must be ne TraMe policemen from as far down as Tiirty-fourth street ran Broadway to Forty-secona street, looking for the blaze. Guests o1 the big hotels in the Longacre dist kept toe telephone giris tusy ashing about the fire. Nobody in that section knew where it was, GUESTS AND DINERS RUSH| FROM HOTELS, | ot only did the smoke spread all| over outside Sherry's but it penetrated} to every nook and corner inside the | buliding. The guests in the hotel has- tened e street, So did the patrons of the restaurant, leaving their food on the tal Delmonico's, opposiie, was emptied of guests, and the miliiner snops along Fifth avenue from Forty-| second to Forty-fifth street fairly dis- gorged girls. O Connor of the East Fifty-first sireet station happened to be near when | from the Public Treasury, was seething with discontent. About this time William 8. Devery broke {nto print (Continued on F Fourth Page.) MRS. CRAIG RIDDLE SMOKES ‘WHILE A CROWD LOOKS ON. Philadelphia Society Woman Cre- |" ates Sensation by Puffing Cigar- ette at Hotel Window. (Special to 1) ning World.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa... Nov Pier hath Craig Biddle, one of Philadelphia's! ‘Phe actual damage done in Sherry's leading society women, who Is well! + ie did not amount to more! known in New York, Newport and Hot than $50. | Springs, Va., as well ax other resorts of — > aaa ie gatherings, both inthis’ WILSON BOOM STARTED, | country and abroad, created a sensation | this afternoon ,by smoking a cigarette t 3 eye sags Se At the Bellevue-Stratford Hotet- in. full | Democratic 4 sight of hundreds of pedestrians along | Jersey Indorses Him, Broad street. Mrs, Biddle accompanied by her hus- band and another man and woman ar- rived at the hotel and went to the res- taurant where Mrs, Biddle took a seat at a window near the door on the Broad street side of the hoste Mrs. Biddle lighted a cigarette and began putting smoke in a careless and enjoyable manner, ‘For a time she escaped obser- vation, but when passers by noticed that a woman held the el te a crowd of curous soon ¢ Mrs. Bide was amused at tie attention directed at her. At the Bellvu Stratford tt was sald that women frequently smoked in the! Palm room, but that this was the first time @ woman was known to have smoked in the resteurapt, ngracmenient so ee twamnn anne = the first smoke cioud burst from the| chimney. He ran to Engine House No, &, in Forty-third street, and turned in ja still alarm, after which he telegra; ‘to his station for the reserves, A police officer then turned in an| | alarm from a box and the vicinity of| | 0Bs erry’s was soon alive with flre appa- ‘atus, The job of extinguishing the blaze was jsimple. A few firemen went to the roof and attended to that, But the Job of straightening out congested traffic | occupled half a hundred policemen for TRENTON, N. J. Nov. 9.—The Demo- ratic State Committee of New Jersey |met here to-day and endorsed Gov, HOTELS AND SHOPS WOMAN HAS KEY TO MYSTERY OF SUICIDE AT ASTOR pn sone ° Mrs. Mary Stuart Brady Views Body of “Maurice Stuart” and Identifies Clothing. DOESN’T REVEAL NAME. Her Story Leads to Belief That the Suicide Robbed Mrs. Brady’s Husband. Only a pride and dread of notoriety stand between the authorities | and a positive identification of the mys- terious “Maurice Stuart,” who com-| mitted suicide In the Hotel Astor last | Monday. Coroner Feinberg expects the | mystery to be solved very soon. ‘The woman who Is belleved to hold the | key to the secret is Mrs. Mary Stuart | Brady, a trained nurse, Mving at No, 10 West One Hundred and Fourth strcet. Mrs, Brady, attractive looking and about forty years old, made her first appearance in connection with the sul- clde mystery to-day, when she called at the Bighth avenue undertaking rooms and asked permission to view the body. After looking long wpon the features of the dead man, Mrs, Brady asked !f she might see any clothing that had come from the sulc.de’s hotel rom. The un- wom Woodrow Wilson for the Democratic nomination for President of the Untted | Btates. The committee decided to open| and maintain permanent headquarters) in this city to further Gov, Wilson's! nomination, A sub-committee was prepare a statement to the ww the result of last ‘Nuesday's tion, The members of the State ommittee profess to belleve that the election was @ victory for Gov, Wilson| and his policies despite the fact that! the Republicans retained control of the B¥4 Senate and captured the Assembly ae the Democrats, appointed to public an- GIRL PUPIL FALLS 400 WET BLOM: TALY'S. Tine ote tae | WHITE vINGS AOS WEATHER Hain to-ntaht and pro SPREAD OVER GITY AS. NEW DRIVERS START Broken When Stri::ers Attack «= Men Sent Out: to Clean : the Streets. : ARMY OF 5,000, HIRED, BEGINS WORK TO-MOR?OW. Many Wagontis Idle and Refuse Piles Up on the Sidewalks All Over = the Greater City. ‘a The first effort of the city to break the White Wings strike this afternoon was sl:ort-lived and attended by rioting in Manhattan and the Bronx. Police guards were beaten and stoned and strikebreakers were driven to wild flights by howling mobs. Thirty strikebreakers who went out witly a dozen wagons from the One Hundred’ and Fifty-second street and Corl..ad avenue stables were stoned by a mob of hundreds, and were last seen fleeing in'the direction of the Harlem River. While the Bronx was in an uproar, there was even more strenuous rioting at First avenue and Fiftieth street, in which the police guard ate companying seven ashcarts were beaten and stoned by twoscore strikes ers and driven back to the shelter of Stable H, at No. 424 East Forty eighth street. ® In addition to the army of strilaee breakers Commissioner Edwards 1s @e dertaker brought out a sult of clothes, In which the body was to be dressed | ' for burial and the bathrobe “Stuart” } had worn when he shot himself, I know thet sult and bathrobe,” said { Mra, Brady. “Look and seq if the trousers and coat siceves of the sults wi not shortened after the sult was | ore a rade. —aomedieneie The undertaker examined the clothing fale : ; and found this to have been the ease. | Miss Forman Pitches From War Minister in Cable to W ashington Declares : tis ry DESCRIBES THE TIN NAIL BOX) ; Arabs Committed Atrocities and That “the FOUND IN SUICIDE'S TRUNK. Window Through Skylight |. ‘ Fi ; ry “T read that a small ..n box of nai! . Punishment Fitted the Crime. ad been found tn the trunk,” continued at Physical School. the woman, by this time visibly affeoted. i “Was the dox , shiny ene, full of | WASHIN Nov. 9—That “the | ble my, men who fought with- dents, with a hinged cover, and were the| Wate reated on a{ punishment fit the crime” and “bloot| Ut regard to the re ions of w nails three-quart rage tha’ POUR HU Rane GEO toad” on ‘Tripolitan battlefields | rh punishment was proportionat tar i ved arthact ° ; shia ae ae Fe he crime, Tooth by toot f i ale Banani Maree was declare in a cablegram to 1 our 80: ment, attired Mrs # descrip. 4 : Glull ers fought. The ‘ession pass: to come to his office and tell all she} Miss Ada Fo con years Tealian @eintatar: 06 Waku TOserOg. Oe | blood = knew about the case. The Woman as-| Was seized with an k of vertigo | reported Jtalten atrocities against the Turkish Ambassador, Youssou! sented, and after taking another look] and fell backward. She turned com-] Turks an¢ ‘abs. cha, left Washington ‘ . sable 5m San Glullano was Mngton to-day for at the dead man's face told the Coroner pletely over in the air and crashea |, The cublesran Fee a yal, stxiaronat York, At the embassy It was a story of great interest. through a Akylight over tho swimming| \nger the caption: “Italian Heart; | stated that the purpose of his visit was She sald she used to live at Booth-| poo1 in the basement, The air was] Unter the. cae At the outset ne | POF known bay, Maine, and that her name had) tound iying halt in the water, on the, recognized the fact that people abroad| | dispatch from Tripoll dated Nov. & been Mary Stuart. About fourteen years | Ooh oe tne pool | the teported acts’ of the|frwarded to-day to the Itallan Eme ago a New Yorker anmed Brady went | ©78® of the pool, regard ; Ity and de-| Assy here by the Italian M, te Boothbay and pitched a summer camp| Policeman Flannagan calted an am-| soldiers as excessive crucity OP | ww, Banetuil in Minister of . een ance from the Flower Hospita! clared that, to be understood thoroughly’| War, § uilano, . says: near her father’s house. Brady a bulance from the Flower Hospitat, LD: ‘i sary with officers and| “Detachments of t tnoty-thi her father became friends and the New | Miller attend! and the girl was|taike were necescsty Wtnose of the|fantry, Company & trom feria York map soon fell in love with the rushed to the oper om, She we Mere Meragiteri—“those who suf-|Sclarasctat, provoked a lively eng daughter, and before the summ unconscious, An ex.minatio yenth » battle of October | ment which terminat “4 ver they wel n nany severe cuts and vrulse | fored the worst in the ‘battle nan ninated in the retreat over they were eni ; ; 4 ye oueet and EFL f the eneniy, who left tty dead, Ou: Jarly in the su the girl's father | broken bones, She ts believed liuan an ine nad given Brady of nails to use| injured internally, and the physiclans| ACCUSES ARABS OF KILLING) mes Were tiiteen wounded, ‘The tight around his ient. It was the first git, | have little hope of her recover RED CROSS MEN. anthenchment pen pountry outside of any kind from the Stuart family vn Forman was Fe new pupil at the! our soldiers occupied the entrench: ak. domsenanhiy kh ; Jand when Brady: and Miss Stuart be j2¢h0ol, She came from South Pasa-) di Mes the Minister of} 6, tne cove at Homs has sent Loe pap 4 the New Yorker said he [dena, Cal., about a month ago, and Wee! Ware Lee) continues, "and be-|'0_t0° HOY ninent w report of brilliant Hq Ni Yu stitute of Mu No, |,¥4 sien uw nack | OPerations of Itallan troops Gc ane nails from the sentiment attached to ea Cee ee ne wile tO of the village there had ts ished | C de be the daughter of a wealthy California : slot The 1a diers |Cnemy. At Derna and Toovk |v pney were married’ and ved happily | man who died recently Reet Baseecs of thelr rations to the| Pere amall skirmishes with until a few years ago. Why they partea | The only witness of the accident wan | Vat 0 ee ee made neato tie OMe%. Yesterday General « ; Mra, Brady would not say, but she in-| Miss Carter, who Js In charge of the| Arabs ani’ tney Die si events | claimed the annexation of isnt ad that Brady went to California | Women's department of the piysteal per 1 because of their poverty and Cyrenecia in the presence of ‘ ae ae ii health, Two years ago | culture school iss Carter told the) Piece soldiers raid without any dispute | suthorities AD Oe ae : “| police that Miss Forman was chatting | 6 earner om t she recelved word that her husband had Lea ree ee es | toe everything they pure haved fr mt (RIES bdr COMMANDER THANKS dle os Angeles fri e pelas, iS ; . ome officers even bo! ¢ died in Los Angeles from erysipelas. | aoniy toppled backward, clutched at the| Arabs. Som mh I think that ERICAN CONSUL, She was then still lving at Boothbay, | in doy frame, shrleked wildly and, bec | ins for the naked chi dren ‘ Shey, | SUP OLL oN tintian) Cane i 0) ‘ame, sh 1d ) be | 0 began that neve Sy 4 bash NEW MYSTERY ENTERS INTO/ fore Miss Carter could reach her, dis-| since such WATS Mitt To indness, |COwmanding the Italian forces, today THE WOMAN’S STORY. appeared through the opening. natives Lp ied 8 the midat’ of the |tseued an official n in which he Now enters the remaining mysterious — ae ting, from the emall white| Le wea ie Aioert an con Mr feature in the case. Mrs, Brady told r rom our soldiere, there| Woe? for his “Joyal conduct" s tae Coroner t after her husband's SNAKES ALL IN A BALL. Arne Maes err tas men, Inhuman! |) 1Y ay ones hot to leave Tripoil death she sent a man—a close friend— rushed o h fed, Aw tale |A008rd the Amor! crulser Cheste to California to, see that the budy was yors Step Into a Den of} ang horrible things happen ‘ ¢)ihd for having ean! to Washington o fornia to, see ti D| 01 killed by the father of| tng as quie Tripol! ans buried decentif and to settle any per- Knotted-Up Rattlers, tan surgeon was lalled by the father Gf] that all was dulet at Tripot! and. th sonal estate her husvand had left, She {Special to The Evening World), & air Re Oia who had been left} ‘The Itallans understand that the knew Brady had quite a large fortune | MONTCLAIR, N. J., Nov, %—While| 4 woun Ament by his comrades, | Chester was ordere oie Jin gilt edge securities that were nego-| surveying a tract of land that Is to be|#lone for a moment wy we 0 uence of fal anne Uable at any Ume and she was surprised | broken up into bungalow sites near the | !ad his throat Celta vag ie when her emlesary returned from Cali-| summit of Wavchung Mountain, Her- | nt stealthily pe pial fader Turk fornia a few weeks later and sald Brady | bert Conklin and William Jones, two |dead and wounded | had left nothing of value. young surveyors, to-day came upon a| tics unspeakable, Cer ere | WOMAN HELD J AS A FENCE, “He had lost all his money," she|den of, rattlesnakes “fed Cross attendants | carrying) said he told her. Surveyor Conklin first barely missed | stretchers to aif the wounded THFKS) Woy Caratine ce ea ‘She asked him about her husband's| stepping on @ five-foot rattler, Yne|were treacherously slain by these) bah clothing, books and personal effects, | snake coiled up ready to strike. A man| wounded imen, Isolated soldiers, sur-| mitted Without Bail, Her agent said everything had been| hunting ravbite in a nearby patch of|prised In the interior, were bia | Mrs. Caroline San Ma in whose burned because of the contagious na-| wood was signalled to, and he came! nowled apartment, No, 45 James street, detec- ture of the disease that had killed over and abligingly shot the reptile STRANGE INCIDENTS OF HORROR | tives ¢ the night of Nov. 1 $5,000 maar afterward Mrs, Brady tert | {°%, Lenten eter Rarve or Jones ON FIELD. wo woods, was committed t no: 3 c ate) to the ratuesnake Lnere . erie | Boothbay and came ew York, pb ‘a score reptiles in the un 1 Strange incklents of horror there WIthOUE ba M ry had been hollow, all colled in @ solid mags ae te wore, An Arab was seen fleeing with nthe Centre nurse dur the custom with snakes when they go pity of human flesh stuffed into an) O° Bec th 5 ‘, \into winter quarters, There were five 4 oldie Gnanaank acidias opi ative Murk Cross, No. (Continued on Second Page.) rattiora in this ball of snakes. Tho | alia soldier's knapaut, Che nuidl Jentifed $200 worth of pro Eee ap remainder were blacksnakes, bull snakes WAS |The i ae to be obliged t from « show window on Jan, Lervom reservations and. ticke: ae and garter snakes, The hunter dis- li) det brea pl the [feat keman, No. 109 Madison street; aft iano. ae pout sens ‘ani let" | patched the hibernating serpents aj tight in a hetwor Frow Pats Willan Kasipeky, No.100 Madison street, 7 AN RRR RE I TS HEREC NT A omen redone. i009 ip eel RAGING REAULTO ON PAGE. 16 | flanked by high wails of land, having| and AgGordon, certainly that before you, behind and’ identif gf eeatine ron thave eves be nities that the two surveyors skinned the rattlers. . $4 Madison street, deen stolen Srege spi. about $300 worth of clothing eased on proving thelr identity and in- listing through half @ dozen agenciés, MASKED BURGLARS BIND WOMAN AND RANSAGK HER HOME the Civil Service Commission hes promised to supply him with 6,Qa% men. to-mor morning; 2.000 frqge » eligible Ist and 4,000 who have mag Iyat reached the eligible list. sin FOLLOW FIRST ATTEMPT TO BREAK STRIKE. It was shortly after 3 o'clock whem the initial attempt to break the strife |from Stable H was attempted, preeipe ‘{tating the riots on First avenue ant [necessitating the rushing of forty pie trolmen to the scene from the Bast ' a ., Vifty-first street station. . Boldly Ring Bell fn Bell in Brooklyn | Although ‘District Superintend@em@e te : nes $. Brogan had been equipped and Seize Her as She ha force of 100 strike breakers and 1 guard of th'r’y pol nen he dectdad Opens Door. nake bis frst sally into the epem with only alr * He manned each " art with three men snd they wens 4 ; forth In single Me with four policemes When “mira, Haile Lala ere ee jut thelr head and three more scattered years old, of No, 1185 Fortleth stroct, |21 Auer Ina’ BM Son, The romaine Hrooklyn, opened the front door of ber| or the patrol, acting under orders & home In response to the ringing of the | Fol © Headquarters, remained in the bell this afternoon, she was confronted 1 by two men wearing masks, Without 4 The procession ef carts turned, whe word they forced thelr way Into “he mo! i, Into First avenue at Fortye grasped Mrs. Leinter, bound and eighth street. A group of two ede 4 her with towels, threw her tio strikers ha red on the cormet, joset and placed a basket of clothes but they scattered at the fizst charge top of her the four poll » In Seattering Mrs. Leinter to the men. the strikers nio two bodies, vciting her one of half on 9: e of the and halt hem came to the closet, dragged her on th he wagons out and tore Hiamond earrings o Fitteth » at a given from her ears, She was shoved back %!# they first taree into the closet and remained thi for Wagons In ¢ struck down the than an hour, A gas tor r policemen af ore F spe who ame to look at the meter 1a the ks at the strilap re rans aan aang gn Piha Ria Simultaneously there wee | way into the house and freed her. to the roofs, from walsh Dr, Wallfield of No, 4101 Twelfth ave- od 9 shower of misailens nue was summoned, + found the woms POLICEMEN DREW REVOLVERS an bleeding from the ears and suffering AND STRIKE BREAKERS FLED. from. fright is unable to Kive a patrolmen Who were Knocked teacription of her aswatlants, The took y thelr revolvers and threete ae SOVOFA! VEIUAD: > sho but the strikers were Bog re east overawed, The hall of AMERICANS HELD AS SPIES Uinued to come down and the * carts, dragged along the pavement, : cuffed and beaten. The moment they | ANDORA, 0. Nov Imprisoned a8 coud roar themselves free they scooted German spies for abe Ne during 4 for the shelter of Stable H ion i ty Rae PE preter mn myer By the time the reserve force of pas Bey, AE eee Pandora, | tolmen arrived from the stable the Tracey Nather, Noah w local merchant, ttle guard that had originally eet £06 hie by a 1008 sa out were in a bad way, torn and bleeds ee for them from the Mg and vainly waving taeir revolvers r gainst a storm of brickbats, Théy officials at Feltre me sus: | had lost thelr hats. 1 been punched plelous when ane e brothers got out in the jaw, Kicked and cuffed, and tn nia age and it a, take three cases blo their ntghtstiong, but the Hades 0 The a M Nyen the extra force of thirty mea Fae ee tt ne metonTmnies | was not enough to put down the rioting rrogated by clvie and mil- They were finally re- they w itary officers. ein and twenty more men were sent out a patrol wagon from the Kast street we eer a na

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