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‘WEATHER-—Rain or snow to. EDITION. PRICE ONE _OENT. Sunday. Tbe ‘NO BARGAIN MADE WITH M’NAMARAS __ TO SAVE OTHERS IN DYNAMITE PLOT GOMPERS’ RIGHT iv AN WOULD GLADLY PULL A ROPE ABOUT NECKS OF M'NAMARAS the! as Worse Traitors Calvin Neds Brands Brothers Than Judas or Arnold. THEY DECEIVED LABOR. Duped the Working People Into the Belief That They Were Innocent. Calvin Wyatt, right hand man of Samuel Gompers in New York, who / general organizer in charge of the fice of the American Federation « Labor, at Fourth avenue and teenth street, was bitter to-day in his denunciation of the MoNamara broth- ers, He branded them as even greater traitors to the cause of humanity than Judas Iscariot or Benedict Arnold. “They are traitors to the cause of unton labor,” said Weatt. {t broader than that—traitors to hu- manity, There ts no place tn the world for sych men. “As for that, you will find everywhere, Why, there was one chosen twelve. But the MoNamaras Judas Iscariot and Ben- into insignificance.” What Wyatt sneant was that the Namara's treachery had consisted not of their confession of guilt, but of thelr profession of innocence, Labor ang for that matte country, had been d "Gompers was in tears,” said 700 In the pot. After | disabled and he was obliged to come He was comp! broken H and the gold man had it all| home without it. s he had visited J. J, McNamara ves With Father Lynett he left here yes- nls cell and had looked into his fa Mr. Dunham drew one card, Mr,|terd&y to get the machine and drive it shen the man reiterated is tnnocenee es, also with a thought to deceive, | back. Father Lynett performed tho Gompers said there stood pat, Mr, Dunham bet $25, Mr,| Wedding ceremony, and at Mr. Jen- fe @ Mitt Of the eyes Wilkes, thinking to deceive Mr, Dun-|Binsws invitation the bridal couple de- his story, It carried such « ) 1 still more by appearing vaine| ied to start their honeymoon with a with It that all of us, Mr, Gompers in-| glorious, saw the bet and raised it the| Tide to this clty, where they expected sluuded, felt certain that the two men| limit, king: “I'm sorry for you,}t spend the night. Mr, Holden says were telling the absolute truth, that| I'll bet this hand all night that the auto was running at @ good they were being Pp ited."” Right then and there Mr. Dunham|cliP when Jennings, who was driving, ‘yatt, like Gompers and other lab) aders refused to believe th rts of the confession last n r he said he received word of it t to be believed. faith in the brot changed to the bitte WOULN BE GLAD TO PULL ROPE| TO HANG THEM. 1 aid the Me! the limit of the legal One aspect of t “E will make trattors en beside} 9 Me- men, cently betrayed—that was his point tt saw Gompers last nisht, be Federation's head sta on his | bogly w ‘ labor men puzzling for 8 vich, was the part played by 9e- di ttenpo! Darrow, the man whom the Y ship ployed as counsel for the two dyn It was Darrow, according to re- The r Cedric, was alton he RUNS 96 HOURS ONLINER CEDRI Four Aces Beat Four Queens nd Oil Millionaire Rakes In Big Pot. started in the smokeroom Tues the doctors said that both men have a} night and lasted until the ship was off} chance for recovery the Ambrose lightship last night. It} Jennings Is believed to be injured in-| who even looked ed to break into it. The jnever a moment of the four days and|Gouldsboro, near where the accl- nights when seven men were not in|dent occurred, Jennings regained con- the gan sciousness long enough to recognize his The winners were Paul Wilkes, a Cal-| brother and several relati we hursday 0 all along. Dunham found four queens smil-] and two hours elapsed before wont t him from could be gotten to this city, Local doc- © pot. Mr. Wilkes, who had|tors were then hurried to the scene. ‘ dur aces among his five} Mr. Jennings had been hunting last ol a bit bashful avout! week in the neighborhood of Goulds- ck at him. Others stayed | boro, and while there ls auto became jew more real psychol college professors ied after that w nderstanding by the ralghtea out some kinks in his nierests there, Italian wrestler, Glovann! Ral. who brought with him the m curling, black mustache s reporter h s, and his broth Po} Passengers on the White Star which arrived to-day, were | full of gossip of g poker game which her a friendly game and no- like a third cousin of a professional gambler wi and A. L. Dun- magnate. The rest lost. es Won avout $1,000 and Mr, about $1,000, of the same was that the d by the two winners. morning, early, the Hmit d from $10 to §45—the ante had and other | seen in many flo, his man- “NEW YORK, HUGH JENNINGS BADLY INURED. N AUTO SMASH Detroit Baseball Club Manager | Unconscious for Hours, but Will Recover. PRIEST WITH HIM HURT. Diamond Star Riding’ With} Party Near Scranton, Pa., When Accident Occurred. C (Special to The Evening World.) SCRANTON, Pa., Dec, 2.—Hugh nings, manager of the Detroit American | I @ baseball club, and Rev, Peter F. | Lynette of Matamoras, Pa., who were] seriously injured in the Pocono Moun- tains late last night, whtn Jenning automobile fell off a bridge, were brought to a hospital in this clty to- day, and after a further examination Jon-| | ternally, His left arm is broken, and whether his skull {s fractured cannot be determined until an X-ray of his head has developed. On the train from Father Lynette's right arm, right leg and three ribs on his right side are broken, Mr. and Mrs. David Holden of Matamoras, who were also in the auto- mobile, escaped with slight injuries, Mr, and Mrs, Holden had only been married a few hours before the accident | by Father Lynett. The place of the accident ts tsolated slewed off the road and the auto crashed the railing of the bridge. railing crumbled and the auto! lopped over, turnitig completely around | in falling and pinning the priest and the | ball player when 4t struck the river bed, ey din ith | ers that the best they could do would’ be to loss as little as possibie | an feet below. TUM Whiter ci at eee There was little water at the pla Pe Hirani ey vase where the auto landed. Boys in the | Se: ; sand het Mucenee:|nelghborhood heard the crash, and ‘a . yand, | party aft time managed to haul the Cs (and she is very) wrecked machine from the imprisoned to if you call it Is-ttt; you must| men, Both were unconscious, Mr Jen- y I-sit); they are going to Winni; lest we and the » taken care of b » ball player, 0° haste from | 08 bedside of her husband, the| Later Jennings and the priest were brought to the hospital in Scranton, ‘The automobile was the one Detroit | miters. Bi also were on board. Raicevich is eball enthusiasts presented to Man-/| ports from Low Angeles, who prevailed also a promoter of the Chiribirl aero-|ager Jennings. | upon both men to give up the fight and] plane, in which he has done some suc- —-- plead guilty. cessful flying, He says he wants a “It does look to me as if the t| match with Frank Gotch or the human HANG BOTH WN NAMARAS have ‘been some hidden reason for] sneeze, Zbyszko, and will start off by SAY MISSOURI LABOR MEN, springing the confession just at ¢ wrestling six men for | time,” said Wyatt is « n iison \ x | day in Los Angeles » fight | agreeing to forfeit $1,000 “for | Central ¢ Souncil of St. Jose pa Hear- tween Republigans and Soci | e does not throw, a ing of Confessions Derands | i Harriman, one of t - = aN eee with Darrow in di »|duty to do that, As to returning the) 0 | Dea Penalt MoNamaras, running for Mayor on the| balance, | do not think there 1s Nicely | JOSEPH, Mo., De ae Socialist ticket te much balance left. Darrow t {ing of the Central Labor Co: st “Knowing what the effect of » the kind of a man to mu -| representing nearly ali r hing would be on the Sociail an “ a if a os “ft of e clty, resolut ‘ge chances Ree Ae ink ne confession ei 0 question nously demandir Hatet'a) chances ft osnnos ur that the crime these two men James Band debut why Darrow should choose the eve ialited wa ne AY ae election as the time to announce the | ¢ Macenied, 1 Oat underatand MaNamaras’ confession, Darrow ts bim-| how two such men could do such @ pitch am self a Socialist. He defended Moyer and | tht Union labor dues not stand for| count of the affal Haywood for us, and wé.s our counsel in | such acts. It Is a inst crime and vio- = ee the coal cases in Pennsylvania, Was | lence of all sorts. Stateroom rscrrations sad Vshota tia all Coast (here politics in the JdcNamaras’ con- ‘We belleved these men were honest, Setinore hate woth Americ 4 er feaston?” we believed ‘they wera being perse:| Sita Gai a 1 uted. Mr. Gompers believe he fers. a Wyatt was asked mbout the fund of | uted. Mr Comper bellevel in thems | Giirway. Arc nomething ike $200,000 which labor | jong. tects Park Row, unfons hed raised to help the McNa- He sald the fund was in the| hands of a commitiee of the Federation €., and that within in Washington, 1. a few days $60,000 more would have beor added to It, LITTLE LEFT OF THE DEFENSE FUND. ‘what will be done with this fund?” he was asked. "The obligations we have assumed wih be discharged just as if this thing “That is, the financial obligations, It is our’ el tr. hed ever happened,” said he. $200.000 in, it di Gom| ee ents eee seen friend he stand by t “AIL of us, Ike Mr, Gompers, belleved in the Tho federation decided to do w 4 by @ vote in convention, pers for what has been done. t friend through None of us would think of blaming Mr, thick and thin t one of the socrets of his success, We now real we made a very, very serious mis-| “The Two- take,” | It's the na excite | 1] Wyatt was asked whether the col-|ing, cleverest cowboy story ever written of the McNamaras's defense|in the past ten years. threaten Gompers's hold upon} And it will begin sertal publication in| p zations throughout the| Monday's Evening World. | country and bring about his downfall. |’ Don't mfas one instalment of thts tre. “T do not think so,” was his re mendously interesting stc ber the name~'"The Two-Gun hat| And remember tho date: Monday (day after to-morrow), in The Evening World. Read “Tho Two-Gun Man," | = | THE TWO-GUN MAN. | SATURDAY, DECEMBER % Brothers Who Confess Their Guilt in Los Angeles Dynamite Plots. GO GIRLS IN PANG au OR NOT, ATEXPLOSIONAND = MOVER WOULD FIRE IN SEMINARY Several b were ruined. in Glen Eden Poughkeepsi , Near and us at ni sirls, i lor ond the | » Berma nd Grace were in t wher wer Kas fume done by } exceed $10,000, sutiful paintings 1 th chapel | NEVER CONFESS Gas Pipe Blows Out and Starts Miner Ac Blaze Were, cused as McNamaras | Says Confession Is a Club in Capital’s Hands DENVER, M eration 0: D. Hayw was arr murde five y confession of with slow ml capital not be that Haywood quitted, was dropped. u lige seater Mi to 1 McNamar and while thi Or ein Pettibone the Ida. Cha rn Fed. Willtam 1 as f n were nished “would organized how trast to that given at down to get men to come to me to urge-me to agree to Darrow’s Pro. tie was the tenderest hearted, mo-t| posal. The matter was put to me but | refused to consider it and they | Sener Pia SA ae ne pen Hing did not urge me. Two days later some of them gave me a typewritten, _1911. 12 PAGES — NEW YORK'S WORST BAD MAN IS KILLED TRYING 10 SLAY “Julie” Morell, Riddled : Dance, Dies After Reach- al ae OFFER F if MIR 10) PLEAD GUILTY WAS. REJECTED LAST JULY District-Attorney Tells of Effort to ' Sacrifice James B, to Save John J. in Cone Ma Was Which He Refused Till De- | =e fense Met His Terms. a ing Bellevue Hospi \LEAVES FINE FAMILY. | | 1 Kept Wife and Four Children “Julie? Morell, the most shot-up and [ano the Thocuingent gunner SLATE WILL KEEP AFTER ’ \eeinda. Hip venti 6 teoond arcans|> ODRERS IN DYNAMITE PLORS oke It out ‘as him- Five dance hall last night to “ aa his herald announced, and self shot down from all sides. bullets penetrated his abdomen, Morell was discharged from the Kings |County Penitenuary three months ago. He was wanted for two shootings and another crime, The detectives who were looking for him were only a block away when he was shot. Detectives Closing In on Dave Ka lan. and “Smithy” and May In- volve Big Labor Men. ny heli tu SEES 0; Dau! Ki pvas Gatdahives. ware. alt) way te LOS ANGELES, Dec. 2. District-Attorney Fredericks emphatically” Second avenue, on the hunt for east | denied this afternoon that he had made any bargain in accepting the cone, wide bad men and gangsters, The dance was given by “The Boys of Tho Ave-|fessions of the McNamara brothers, whereby others implicated in the} nue. There had aiso been whisperings [that one of “Jule” Morell’s feuds was scheduled to burn gunpowder. | When Det ctive Ransberg reached the |hall he found Morel! rolling across the | pavement, unconscious, He had just | een hurled down the narrow stairway after he had crumpled up before the bombardment in the anteroom to the big dance hall. ‘There was a bedlam of nolae in the place, and in the excite- ment all the armed young thugs who |mad been “in at the killing” got away. | Recovering consciousness, “Julie” Mor- 1 eaid to the surgeon bending over him: MORELL REFUSED TO TELL WHO HAD SHOT HIM. “7'0 tell nothing. If I'm dying I'll dle silent. ‘It was my own Job and they got mi great dynamite plot woulll escape prosecution, When James B. McNamara has been sentenced, probably to fife ini prison, for the murder of twentysone persons in the dynamiting of they Los Angeles Times Buikling, Oct, 1, 1910, and John J., the elder, brother, to fourteen years for blowing up the Llewellyn Iron Works, on their pleas of guilty, the State will continue the work of apprehending other guilty parties. “Those pleas concern two persons,” he said. “They pleaded guilty and took their chances. There has been no agreement to stop proses cution.” Detectives of the Burns agency are closing in on Dave Kaplan and” M. A, Schmidt, known as Smithy, also wanted in connection with blowing up of the Times Building, and a number of others—pro: labor men—who are implicated, will be brought to trial, it is declared, , Negotiations seeking to make James B. the sacrifice for his older’ brother were begun last July, Only the persistent refusal of District-Attorney Fredericks to listen- to a proposal which would let one man go free; and his determination go on with the trial in which he knew he could convict both, led to complete surrender of the defense and the entering of pleas of guilty by | the two men, t DEFENSE, CAME TO HIS TERMS. District-Attorney Fredericks to-day gave a full account of the nego» tiations, declaring counsel for the defense came to his terms, and that outside influences did noi prevail upon him. Men of standing in the A fow minutes later he died. For the past seven years “Julio” Morell has been listed on the police records of gorillas and gangsters, He was notorious for his savage courage. He fought with gun, kntfe and fist. He fought men and he fought bulldogs. For years ho had a atanding offer to fight any bulldog in the city. He would fight the most savage bulldogs with his bare hands, warding off the dow’s fangs until he could dart tn his hand and araep the animal by the tongue. That ‘Julie’ Morel has participated in five score gun fights tx a conserva, ‘tive estimate, say the police. Me has been at war with many gangs. Ho has! terrorized whole gangs himself, enter- Ing thelr haunts a’ and inviting them to t something.” MORELL SENT WORD AHEAD THAT HE WAS COMING. It was this sort of bravado tha arkie h elin to his leet + ‘ “ a Fy — Pe comnts vteneee| community, he said, had been “up against him” with pleas that in the would follow his appearance at the bi interests of peace and society James B. McNamara be allowed to plead | he sent word shead of him, 1 . . this for theatrical effect. [le wan | guilty and that the case against his brother, John J., be dropped. These gloat over the timid gangsters who - would shrink from him when he enterea| pleas, he said, he steadfastly rejected. Ls etn naneatiea alt told them 1 was not running society,” he said. “Some of the * ne ee See See }men, after talking it over, expressed their willingness to let me handle nim to cilinb ow stairs, hand, and ¢ ie Raterenn: the matter in my own way.” nal from ¢ had warned ent he entered th July he had had an offer from the Fredericks declared that since room a flying wedge struck and NEG . yo . him ime Pag . of his re defense to let James B. McNamara plead guilty to save John J. Mee Mia revolver was) wrene - him before utd pull the trig. | Namira. Hin own pon Was turned “A month ag iJ | were talking in court half seriously him was shot seven ay A » than it would take| about it. The court stopped proceedings, so we quit,” he said. “That five, No arrests were made and no are to be made. | afternoon D. / came to me and made virtually the same offer and I dete ge that it] ; a bilnd | refused to a erro) # wife “If you ever change yo know Darrow said as he left, thelr home ‘{ never will,’ I replied. and Sixty Lived with tt incoln Steffen count of her } | Then Darrow and | got together and Steffens went uch lest his hand, against me ied him Just Bore hy: oa tatement and it was practically the same thing.” York, atid whe I know iw had| KNEW HE HAD THE GOODS. 4 friends the police are shoving “1 said I knew I had the goods, and I did not propose to He + down, 1 asked two or three others, also of the same crowd, If they thought I’d made a mistake and they told me they thought the case» was perfectly safe in my hands, Meanwhile | had talks with Darrow vf a lot of other people's bad reputa ons on nim, Jule was a good boy, “Why, now could @ ttle undersized man with @ right arm partly pernriet | (Continued on Fourth Page.) | ina