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tie alee JAMES M’NAMARA GETS LIFE, JOHN 15 YEARS - Girls Attack Asch ane, Employers at Their Trial © q \ PRICE ONE CENT. ht and Wednesday; warmer. Covyrieht. ihe New We York Pita is aa _Sbe orld. En—Kalr to-night and Wednesday; warmer, FI EDITION. 300 GIRL WORKERS MOB TRIANGLE WAIST BOSSES ON TRIAL AT COURT-HOUSE Blanck and Harris Attacked on Way to Answer for Asch Building Deaths. MEN CAUGHT IN JAM. Screaming Women Stop All Work of Judges in Crim- inal Courts Building. Tho always nolsy corridors of the Criminal Courts Butlding became like bedlam to-day when three hundred wildly hysterical girls and women made @ demonstration of their revengeful hatred against Max Blanck and Isaac Harris, propre of the Triangle Shi , Whose loft in the Asch Building burned last Maroh with | the logs of 146 lives. The two are -now on trial before Judge Crain in General Sessions on seven different counts charging mansiaughter in falling to Protect their employees, One hundred and fifty witnesses have been summoned by Assistant District. Attorney Bostwick and Rubin to give evidence at the them ard east © to the Crimi nied by f trial, accom: s of the disaster and by many relations of the gi r ives. The ro- tunda of every m. the The corridors building were ‘ky Marris and i up the broad street side re was a heavy wom sieps a little ahead o t litde girl screamed trom the sidewalk: GIRL CRIED TO MOTHER TO RE- VENGE “POOR STELLA.” famma, mam) nm, mamma, for killing The woman looked around, and with an angry scream swooped upon the as- tonished manufacturers, She d from under her shaw! a black bordere photogr: She began yh of a young girl. screaming at th in Yiddish, Blanck, Ha and Steuer hurri. around her. They were met at the doors fifty or more girls who had heard the yelling outside, These too nes and threats at t rer began yell n manufacturers, and down, sir they could. ot Women ran 4 ching as loud as yr to tier of the came nolse more were shut off from Hd mass of angrily hey turned and raa ‘They fairly had to excited Women, for' the stairway. nght thelr way up. The women were clf coat tails, striking and them and calling them murderers, beasts, thieves and child-killers, When they reaclied the court room door Mr Steuer pushed them in ahead of him ng to their clawing at (Continued on Second Ps ss WIFE DEAD; THEN KILLS HIMSELF. a Pull ventral, 24 West One n porter on turned to his Hundred and Thirty-third street, and tried to make up with his wife, with whom he had quarelied before he went away on his last run, Get ou ald. “You are “Datsy,"” daisy Douglas, d help me re? al his wits er he fired her head she valled in the kitchen, ellow bun out 1 drew a revoly ming toward he two shots Into the back. of When she fell dead he own head and dropped body. ‘ a WOMEN LEAP FROM FIRE IN ST, JOSEPH HOTEL. ran scr y | Preme Ci Centre | MISS BAYES GOT COLD FEET, $0 HE CALLED LED JANITOR Manager of Musical Comedy Tells Tale of Woe in the Supreme Court. How to get along with Nora Bayes, the actress, according to Charles Marks, manager of the “Little Miss Fixit" com- pany, was disclosed in court to-day. “One must be a pal, a humorist, a Manager, a millionaire, a doctor, a nurse, and a sort of all-around joke." This recipe for the making of a sue- cessful manager for a female musical comedy star was contained in a letter Marks wrote to Werba and Lu who. produced “Little Miss Fixit letter was read to Supreme Court Jus- tice Ford by Attorney Henry J, Gold- amith. Mr. Goldsmith appeared in the Su- urt to argue Werba and Lue- n Jay unetion to scher restra Jack songs of vaudeville sketch which they Mr, Goldsmith read the follow- ns of expense Marks contracted for Miss Bayes, Justice Ford 1ughed pud ‘One of Miss meal on accounts of foolishness ayes, H.12; two pints of wine on account of Mr. Norworth, because he didn’t like the town (Chicago), §4.00."" “At the end, of cach wee wrote {am in proper fin condl- the Fixit" (was “cold feet.” Idemith declared trouble with “Little Miss that Miss Bayes got Continuing the Marks lett smith reac “Ponda My. Gold- 8's cold, so had a fight with Bert Whitney and had the furnace started, Yester- Jaay Miss Malcolm forgot one word in 1e with Miss Bayes, 80 rsed Miss Mal- vinced Miss Bayes th matinee p¢ really was in bad her some bum joke In another lette Marks tells more o P hind the scenes, Here is what h “Lam afraid that the character we an will have to be ged. She he was able to (although ive @ formance Englishly stubborn, and she also grate on Nora Bayes's nerves which | hay properly filed down as yet ance they fight like a Innocent, though playful, w Benjamin N Miss Bay the a & Luesc lients and they used exclusively The contract, intended th Miss Fix ft was not wii State Courts to grant an a copyright, but that the was the place to apply for suc! Justice Ford reserved devision in the case. j | Charles Marks, who is now man: Jof Bayes and Norworth, in a stateme aving court said the other side after led » do i to Ke publicity. He was particularly up a@ statement that he had spent y, When asa matter of fa Would show that he spent but $15 in two weeks, He also sald Miss did not have “cold feet,” as| was infer but that while they were playing in Detroit Miss Bayes was not feeling well, the theatre was cold and he asked the management to turn on |! le steam, —_——_ Deny Request of Ten porters. HINGTON, De JOSEPH, Mo., Dec, 6—Fire in tea importers that the ha Hotel Metropole annex early to-day |" partment was kept from the main building, stringent test of tea to de All of the eighty-three guests in the | colorin ‘ etary’ @anex got out of the building. Several] of the The present women jumped from second-story Win» | method of analysis adopted in October dows to the grass of the courtyard, | and uniform Mrou Rescuers broke into one woman's room and found her overcome by smoke, No one was severely hurt. States will not probably will be Court, taken to the Custog whole | wight foot was] ) lof |tion in the alienation guit for $3,000, of GETS 15-YEAR JOSEPHINE OY'S HUSBAND LOSES ALIENATION SUIT Blackmail Evidence Brings a Verdict for W. B. Sterling, Sued by Elmer Sturtevant. LOOKING FOR THE WIFE. | | Actress Well Known Here Said to Have Boasted of Her Record in Fleecing Men. Special to The Evening World.) PITTSBURG, Dec. 5.—Overwhelmed with evidence of blackmail, the presocu- Almer Sturtevant, husband of Josephine Joy, the vaudeville actress, against William B. Sterling, the Erie, Pa., banker, threw up their hands and quit when the case was called and a verdict was given the defendant by Judge | Charles P. Orr in United States Circult Court to-day, Sworn statements made recently be- fore G. H. Brevillier, a notary public of New York City, by Van Ness Harwood, reporter for the New Yerk World, A. S. Phillips of the Herald and Mrs, Helen D. Jenkins. a wealthy woman of Goth- am, makes a startling atory of alleged holdups in high life. Richard Parr, Deputy Surveyor of the Port of New York, who figured prominently in the sugar exposure of that Mrs, Sturtevant was in ekmailing game because she Her husband, she is alleged |to have said, she used as a catspaw. The names of men she had Dlack- mailed from Boston to the Pacific coast were included in the evidence of fe: ‘obl acts for blackmail played Effort Will Be Made to Solve mportant part in the affidavits, Sturtevant shedding her clothes Mystery of Twelve-Year- stated sum h and having bell- in her employ stand wateh, Roth sides are now looking for Mrs. Sturtevant. Old Alice Randolph, SAY SHE CALLED HERSELF! airy 4, Virginia Evers of No. 54 BLACKMAILER, East One Hundred and Nineteenth In the depositions, the witnesses de-| street, wife of Frederick W. Evers, a clrad' that Airs, Gturtevant while on the) s.bitaes manieaoturer, tovay pleaded zza of her Summer home Passaic i i 4 < guilty in the Court of Special Sessions to charges of brutally beating fided to her Interviewers Jenkins that shi and to was one of the her blackm , badger work- | twelve-year-old ward, Alice Elizabeth ers and confidence women" in the | Randolph, country. Assistant District-Attorney Wilmot According to the deposition, among) and officers of the Children's Soctety 1 omen sh mitted, having shape) by telling | y should pe | ea hn J asked that Mrs. Evers be remanded Henond One ee ssy old” man) inti Friday While efforts were mae named In the papers and said to be a Roston ba He Js sald to have paid| t learn the identity of the chin, her tuition at a Boston school for music| Whose history tg now @ mystery, Jus und later 1 tices MeInerny, Steinert and Salmon agreed to this and Mrs, Evers was sent to the Tombs, “CHILD OF A LYING DISPOSI- to have “shaken down’ for $1,000, cording to Ni 8 de- position, is said to have told of a disrobing act in a Boston hotel bywhioh yeon she secured, $1,000 n the Boston man. TION,” SAYS LAWYER. Honing, whe dives Bt No. G18) supt. Thomas D, Walsh of the Gerry rive, New York, in her) goctety testified that the child had been 1 testifled that Mrs, Sturte-| heaten repeated! vant made in the Mlehling, when asked by Justice hope that the r would Introduce Steinert to explain why beaten the child, replied the woman had her to some of her millionaire friend She testified that the actress offere he Dhllaikt S alapombani" to give her "50 per cent. interest in] Ada Hart, a ness formerly em- the first two suckers 25 per ecent.| ployed by Mrs, Evers she lived interest in all the others, providing|in the St. George Ho Brooklyn, | Mrs, Jenkjns introduced her to. the| sald snes she desired to blackmail." “she whipped the child with a riding *| WOMAN'S HUSBAND GAVE BILL WA 4 do not Know why she wht her, She was a most truthful OF PARTICULARS. obedynt child at all time Aimer V urtevant brought the it Mrs, Evers w arrested No 3 on against several months ag Ne) the f cruelty to her ward as the charg m with the alienation of the efforts of Rey. De Witt L. % q e, Sturtevant en tor of St. James's | ‘opal thy bill of parth ars, mak} Churc hy which the era attend and in usations 4 | which Alice was a member of the Sun- vant ©\day School, The child had complained eca | to her chum, Geraldine Harris, that she igh Jes in automo fT m Buffalo re After th sult in Pitts “ALS burg the name ephine Joy was eons prominently me ed in connection} FanArt ha with the val Helen Dwelle Jen-| stp, ayers t kins smu case, It w aid atl Price and that time was Joseph oy phy ad who had firs mluced the principals! prooklyn in that affalr Rear Sha, Da ieae | Jof Mrs. lve % DOG GON’ IT: oa KAA N Sy That “FUN” book Park Wow, ‘Feiephoue Beckman 4000, ~~ NEW YORK, K, TUESDAY, DECEMBE ER 5, | JOHN h M’NAMARA WHO SENTENCE. WOMAN WHO BEAT | as given every week Stateroom rese ty Hh yt edo A with the sunday Ceuctat } ‘ aide 2 World just makes an® nig ti Axor ‘mone gS > me laygin. tre lfers elec Ward Travel Bas mi = ‘Circulation Be Books Open to All.” | —__—— 1911. 22 PAGES, PRICE ONE CENT. — DYNAMITERS ASSAILED IN COURT SENTENCE AS MURDERERS AT HEART McNamaras Go to San Quentin After James B. Makes Signed Confession How He Blew Up the Times Building. BOTH MAY BE FREE AFTER SEVEN YEARS District-Attorney Fredericks Declares Labor Leaders Who Denounce Pris- oners Are as Guilty Themselves. JAMES 8 B M'NAMARA WHO GETS SENTENCE FOR LIFE. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 5.—In accordance with the agreement en- tered into between counsel last Friday when the McNamara brothers pleaded guilty and saved Los Angeles County $890,000, James B. Me” © Namara was sentenced io-day to life imprisonment aiid John 3. MCNa-— mara to serve fifteen years in the State Prison at San Quentin, near San Francisco. In imposing sentence Judge Walter Bordwell denounced both men as murderefs at heart. He said their plea that they did not intend mur der when they conspired to blow up the Los Angeles Times building did not actuate him in withholding the exaction of the full penalty allowed by law. “Other reasons” moved him to clemency, the Court announced. These réasons have been fully set forth. In return for confessions which will aid the Federal Government in getting to the bottom of the dyna- ” mite conspiracies and for saving to the county the cost of their trials had they been fought out, James B. McNamara was granted his life and John J. M¢Namara was let off with a sentence that may watrant his release from San Quentit’ in about seven years if he obeys all the prison rules, TAMES MAY BE FREED, TOO. by (BEEF TRUST LOSES, pares PANES US FACE KING'S RECEPTION | TRIAL TO-MORROW PAVILION AT DELRT |e. surme co res STRANGELY BURNED) ieesvins wa While Reviewing Writ. e Sensation on Eve of Arrival of George V.—Many Arrests JUDGE BORDWELL WHO WASHINGTON, mil- Honaire pack must stand trial to- morrow tn Chicago under the criminal section of -he Anti-Trust law for form- ing the Beef Trust, the Suprem| in Bomba of the United s Even James B. McNamara, who pleaded guilty to murder in the y- fused t0 grant 0 A first degree, may be released after seven years if the Parole Board so | day Chief Justice White announced that| rules, The future of {he two men in that respect rests largely with the DELHI, India, Dec, 6.—The magnifi-)the motion filed yesterday by counsel degree of aid they can render the Government. Although twenty-one lives were lost in the explosion that destroyed ihe Los Angeles Times building, but one victim was mentioned in the pro- Jings that led to the climax of to-day. James B, McNamara pleaded guilty to the murder of Charles F, Haggerty, the man who was closest to | the scene of the actual explosion when he came to his death. cent pavilion in the Du r camp, with {t# massive silver supports and brilliant decorations, in which the Kin whs to be by the Princes on his arrival here, was tiene for the packers was denied, The appeal based on the that the Anti-Trust tional remains only possible contention unconstitu on the court docket step now w received cee hearing on th down to-day. CHICAGO, Dec. 6 This ts the second disastrous fire of cot-Attorney Wilkerso wha has a ‘ Ri unknown origin in the Durbar camp aa secuted the cases ‘ast itp paaie John J. McNamara is forty-five years old. If he serves his full term with week and the occurrence has| ers, was elated at the news from Wa he will be a broken old man when he passes to freedom through the doors SAURRGS ® aneation aces been Hah ee tau | of San Quentin, Preccieypen murray ony mrt fog (SOUL, ro BOT!) MADE. FULT, CONFESSIONS, sta Tha (tbr db We plok 40. hagea Kicwl aeene ana RG the Cried It is understood that in addition to the published confession of James ree and Queen Mary, wholesale ar | gin!’ |}. McNamara both brothers made extended confessions to District-Attor- rests of suspleious character | ney Fredericks last night. The pg of these confessions have not been” iy ei (i ny th rarlenthey «| WICKERSHAM "STRICKEN r mace public, and will probably be kept secret until they are rouge \« b thelr trip to AT CABINET MEETING, | f ! through the workings of fs machinery of the Federal Grand Jury city, Indianapolis and New York, Fifteen thousand pe zope packed the streets leading to the Hall of is, filled the > and formed a great serpentine line that Durb The Fifth a Attorney-General Able to Go Home! in Auto Atter Treatmeat for 1 Sixth Reg [ infantry day and will int leave to-nigit n the Durbar, The to take part “| Rieter ateeroe Ore WA AT a hopetunesain L geatlanes A Sabaeys trailed down the stairs from the eighth floor nearly to the basement at The native press to-da talns Jong | a sudd Hine uitending the| 10 o'clock this morning, when court was advertised to convene. A hun- ” ts ° _ gent sutione that K ng] Cabinet moat ths atternoo The dred deputy sherifls were needed to handle the crowd, Neneccnar the Rule le Rance: sige an aun ed ‘ Foon) ant lo force a wa rt soners across the street, through the ‘ Mri Mlseation ils ave Bombay t | Wiekersha man at- | courth urd and ind up in a public elevator, manifestly was for the ancient Momul cebite and in no dan }to be under ily if no other means could be devised, and Judge he Durbar ceremonies are to be ik bs Br A OE MRR SNAR ori k il the courtroom of Judge McCormick in the Hall reat eRe Reape tlio eoniin Ps By break: | of J {joi vas vacant to-day, swung the trial into SIX GIRLS IN FIRE PANIC, |! UND Gack te toe nee IA possible to bring the prisoners into the courtroom without sida Lt Jor : ti ml w 4 1 the moment they entered the doors, hers Plee ax OU Sta |s Dr. Ds a W " hen PROCLED NGS VERY BRIEF, oder Among The ib Dk Dulaney adenue ludee M nick's courtroom is very small, Only the officers of ye AUN aseg ta bask sofm | “ ; See rt, at pectators and the newspaper reporters were of Mrs. Wileu Craig, at No, | at V ( mitte The proceedings were over and the men were on their way Lh cag Roe ae a 4 : net i \ i owd about the Hall of Records knew of the Sune of them , dressmake : Rontwell at 102%, A. moment , 1 ' Heady rs, A 4 ‘ " t ie Compre : ; ; tered as, us, in i ant b wire te eee } yea ne ( elt ‘ ® were gone from their manner, and fee Gas ce so me five tosmorrow mocnlps | vy! appeared on the verge of nervous Cc He shook oe | Rea wae an tniniinnichineiThalt ‘