The evening world. Newspaper, May 17, 1912, Page 2

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Pecubar conditions,” he sald. “Aithourh | there is @ spirit of unrest (hroughout the country, I think It ix exaggerated. The people of the world are movin: aed this means progress. In other! Words, we are progressing. Now, | am s(ROt qoing to talk politics, he nai Soares ‘. get dangerous; Because Hed a progressive, it oot feeds that he ine anuartave, or @ Gootalint, or an Anarchist “We must not ignore the goose tagh hag of the public, but mu to profit by what Is said about my hope we can get above and beyond the Mere making of money for ourselves be real citizens of the country, to see the principles upon which the country was founded upheld and the , laws of the country carried out.” Phe American Iron and Steel Institute 4 Composed of stee! men throughout the The members represent firms tm competition with the United States “ @veel Corporation, which is alxo a inem- er, A formal meeting is held every pov@r, ending with a banquet, and a tour of the various industries of the city Judge Gary, who !s president: of the Institute, presided at the meeting to- fay. Many prominent steel men took go Bart in the discussion on trade condi- h ' * % : We ¥ @ttens. Among them were Charles M. { YeGohwad, Willis L. King, James A. Far- ; # rell, President of the United States Cor- e * jon; John A. Topping, head of the 2 le Iron and Stee! Company, who festifed Wednerday and yesterday the Government trust hearing, and many others. { Po-night a banquet will be held at the Weltor?, and to-morrow ‘the steel men MwM look around the city. PING PRAISES COMPETITION, ie | SUT @CHWAB KNOCKS IT. ohn A. Topping, Chairman of the Re- public Iron and Steel Company, read a ‘brief paper relating to competition. “Competition should never be destruc- tive, but shoukl be #o clear and whole- gome that only good can come of it,” said Mr. Topping. . He declared competition stimulated uainoss, and aki cnore good than mon- opoly to every one concerned. ‘1 supplied several of my competitors @uring the jast year with my selling heh ned and mre them general informa- tien,” Topving in his opinion, this ra & Good practice, and if adopted by “Oneries Ding. _ Sueaters of the Institute a great competition would result. M. Gchwab followed Mr. Top- ‘ ' @rown up in he said, “that #0 different from {the destructive com- OUTLAW ALLEN | (S FOUND GUILTY. MUST DIEIN CHAR ~ ALN FIGHT Jury Wiacne a L Verilict in| Court House Massacre Case After All-Night Session, After Foreman Reports a Deadlock. WYTHEVILL®, Va., May 17.—Ploya Allen, first of the Hillsvilie mountain- cers tried for the Carroll County court- house murders, was adjudged @ullty here to-day and will pay the penalty: of his rime in the electric chair at Rich- mond. The jury wae out all night and it was not until after 19 o'clock this norning that the twelve chen reached an agreement, When court opened to-day the'jurore told Judge Staples there were a number of points of difference and it was doubtful whether a verdict could be reached. Judge Staples declared the case was ono of such magnitude he felt he must send the jury back with a few Words of caution and advice. He said that when a number of men were thrown together in intimate isolation for a long period of time, with all their thoughts and attention centred Upon one matter, it was but natura! there should be a tendency to different views and positions. ‘Along with this tendency, he id, there was another tendency of the human mind to fix deep rooted in one's own thind dnwar- ranted opinion in an earnest effort to convince others, of years ago that it shows the that {a being made. We have advanced in manufacture, advanced in the way of doing business, and now we ‘6 a wattion advanced in the methods of ling goods, #0 that the old destructive coostition Je @oing. “I predict for every industry as great ‘an advance in the future in the method Of the Aleposition of their products as they have had in the past tn the manu- ow Steet Corporation, the Pei ine conse pet ae cont of at alwayn correapand with the mar- an ket ee a CAROLINA MAN SUICIDE WW BROADWAY CENTRAL. |oiine Carolina, committed suicide in Broadway Centra’ Hotel by shoot- Mmeelt in the head with a twenty- suicide was discovered by a Who tried to enter his on the seyenth floor. The door boked and a hallboy was sent over transom. The suicide was lying Sed with a hole in his forehead who came to investigate, found letter which showed the man 4 ®@ civil engincer and” landsc: , @nd was out of ctigleyment, had regtetered the re gaging on May and, according to fairly well A to-day cmp announced the ing to traffic of the Dardanelles, when the Italian warships, en- tt the present hostilities, turned fr attention to the Turkish islands, Leng Kills € acy Magnin, wx years old, of No. West Mixty-fourth street, died in the Hospital two-day from an on the right lung cauéed by a the child had swallowed several ago. Penneyivania Bank GuARION, 3 Pa., May 1 of this pl one Institution a. ee its deposits are than 400, ~The Second e Was closed & capital of ho do NOT look will not see, 1 who has failed or whose is declining will spare a time and see what real bar- Estate and Business [nter- are advertl; . he will SEE a way to recou; 8,078 World “Real Estate” and “Business Opportunity” Ads. were printed last week — 160 Mere than the Herald. 4 in the Wcrld from! Judge Staples declared the jury had not been aworn to do other than to reach one conclusion—the guilt or inno- cence of the accused. He said if the Jurors lost sight of that issue in any Private individual opinion they would dp wrong to themselves, an unintended violence to thetr solemn obligation and Grave injustice either to the conmmon- wealth or to t! The jury again retired, and It was only @ short time before announcement was made an agreement had been reached. When court reassmbied: the fe an read the verdict of “eunty charged in the indfatment.’ Judge Staples hdta Cor Noah 6 Pina at PAU rash, “e swullty ih Be Ai it Agaree, the penalty ition. Sera Allen was charged apecifically at this time with the murder of Com- Mmonwealth's Attornd William M. Fos- ter, prosecutor in the Carroll Coun: Court at Hillevilie, last March, when the trial of Floyd Ajien culminated tn the Killing of five persyps—Presiding Judge Thornton L. Mam — Prosecutor William M. Foster, Sheriff L. ¥, Webb, Mise Elisabeth Ayr gustus Fowldr, The up of: nounced sensation and horror throughout the country. The tragedy created a panic in the mm | Uttle mountainside town of Hillevil! clansmen in deadly ral of the All followed but five of the principals escaped to the mountains. Rewards for their arrest resulted in three of them taken, except Sidna Allen, leader of the clan, and Wesley Hdwards, his nephew, who are still at large. The other prisoners, it ie expected, Will be tried immediately, not pronounced on Allen as he may be called to testify ther cases, Allen had been cheerful in expectation that @ mistrial woud result. When the ~~ Was announced he relapsed into pair, There was bi ely a handful of people tn court, hee of Whetnee this wi } u ty im not Known, but there wai for such fe Armed searched persons ehtering roo! ee NEW SUBWAY ROUTES APPROVED BY P. S. BOARD, Bits Uptown, Downtown and in Brooklyn Agreed on in Tues- day's Conference, The Public Service Commission to-day formally approved a rapid translit routes three bits of way which included in. the agreement reached at the conference last Tuesday between the commission and the spectal transit committee of the Board of Estimate and Apportionment, One of there, oofficially known as Route 4, 1s in Broad atreet, from the northerly side of Beaver etreet south to the river front, connecting with the Whitehal! tunnel to Brooklyn, This Mne in Na heretofore approv Brooklyn tunnel, which have been als lotted to the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company. Another, Route #, !s for a subway under Flatbush avenue and St, Felix street, Brooklyn, to form # connection between the Brighton Beach line and the Fourth avenue subway in Fulton treet for the B, R, | The thin, Route is for a | nection between the present subway and the court- Interborourh Forty-ninth at One thon Army holds real ostate in the vari- ous states valued at $5,006,576, upon which there are mortgages totalling §,- 191,027," according to its annual report filed with secretary of State Lazansky. i nents see! World Tt . , 9, Palishes feat + wed enti acre ha ‘Whe personal property of t tion ts piven G hing The re in New te ie estima’ 385,063 and iy martgeges for Set eetnaamnim = a, 70h BACK BY JUDGE | Court Insists on an Agreement | the Lexington avenue subway for the 4 iga- ‘eblale ‘THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1912, HOW BIG ROCK FELL rT ” VIRGINIA OUTLAW SUBMARINE CREW. “recs rocormore. «TWO "WILD MEN” |""wse'r Corvin, TO BROADWAY ber. y SAVE VESSEL BY gine Repaired While Seas Pound Hull. STILL Two Revenue Cutters Speed | to Relieve Diver, Which Reports All Safe. (Special to The Evening World.) ATLANTIC CITY, May The peril of Capt. Dannohauer and the four mem- ders of the crow of the submarine Tuna, Who remained rvourd the stranded craft Qll Inet night while heavy seas pounded her on the sandbar off Longport whero he struck yesterday, was greatly min- imized to-day when the wind died down and the sea fell to a compa: Thi rnoon's low tide put the almost high and dry on the quicksand bar. The craft was plainly visible { the Longport walk, and thousands of persons gathered to Ket slimpse of the first submarine ever seen from this shore. A high wind blowing off shore ts ex- ected to be wig help when revenue cut- ters arrive to get the stranded diver off. Jatest reporta, flashed ashore by wire- lems, declare the five aboard to te in good shape. It has been discovered that Stranded Tuna’s Fonts Choad En-| FAST UPON BAR. IN “ALTOGETHER” STIR HARLEM FLAT Actor and Electrician Marathon | | \ one of her propellers is bent, but other- ‘wise she appears to be intact. When the brisk westerly wind had cleared the film of mist which had shut Off view of the sutynarine from shore, the life savers saw that the waves that had been breaking over the throughout the were running looked as if the revenue cutter that had deen sent out from Norfolk would ba Kittle diMculty in hauyng her off the sands, DIVING SHIP SURVIVES TER. RIFIC POUND! Talking through a megaphone te an Evening World correspondent who went out in a lfebost, Capt. Dannehauer eald that he expected no trouble in Getting into deep water with the aid of the cut He added that, notwit otanding the pounding of the breakers, (he submarine bad suffered: no tutorial damage. The Tuna, which will be officially HOTEL MC ALPIN ANDICAR HI Wan ; STONE — Dotreliinetenows course or aToue Usted as G2 when she in ‘accepted by the Navy Department, was fying with her nose aimed directly at the shore, three and @ half miles away. She way resting in @ bed of sand and had not taken in a drop-of water. Some of her | trimming tanks had veen ballasted to: hold her steady on the bar, Four lite! ing crewe had remained on duty ali night, ready iw go out to the sub- marine and take off the Ave men who atvek to her, upon a prearranged sig- nal. ‘The fourteen members of the orew who were taken off yesterday afternoon were also ready on call to respond for rescue duty, A great crowd collected along the shore easly to-day to watch the life- oats wo out to the stranded oratt. Only one boat put out, however, and the crew of this boat was assured by Captain Pannehauer that he did n need assistance, Speaking from conning tower through his megaphone he said: “E had thoroughly examined the! Tuna when the tide was off and found | her intact #o far as 1 could nee, so uring | the night ty engineers <uscesded in| Fepairing the enxines which were jam-| med when wo struck. T expect to bo) on my Way “gain as BOON as the cutter comes along and the tide lifts us of! this afternoon,” | ‘The fourteen members of the crew who were taken off will be put aboard | again wher a revenue cutter arrives, COLLIER SENT "FROM BROOKLYN TO AID THNG, The Navy Department dered the cvoliler Lebego from the York Navy Yard to ‘go to tho as N sistance of the submarine Tuna, The ollier sailed from the yard at 8 o'clock, expecting to arrive at the scene of the wreck 1 ABHING'TON, May 16.—Revenue cutter officials to-day despatched the from Norfolk to At- ho relief of the alb- ripe Tuna, . Kflorts wre beng made xo to reach the cutter Itasca, which: cruising somewhere between Norfolk and Montauk Point Sergeant Conway of the West Thir- Heth sireet at tunmiediatels to | the scene of dent wih the ree serves. Ho mbed to the top| story of the new ho’ wilding to make an investigation which would fix re+ sponsibiMty for the falling of the stone. Arthur Murray of No, 229 Wilkipson ja@venue, Jersey City, foreman of ;Masonry in the building under, con- | Struction, was arrested by Sergeant jConway and locked up in the» West { 9 morning | eriminal AS ROCK FALLS OFF BROADWAY HOTEL (Continued from First Page.) gence Church, who also happened to be w passenger lt by her side and ave her the last rites of the Chureh. was rather poorl dreswd, seemed to be about thirty years old, She wore @ mixed gray sult, @ white shirtwaist and black shoes and stock 4 i} hirtioth Street Station on a charge of negligence. Murray could throw no Hht on the cause of the stone's dislodgment, He said he was not on the top floor at the time’ of the accidént and knew nothing about the fall until many minutes after it oo- curred. Rats So Mra, Mason W Release. Mrs, Sarah Taylor Masun began @ suit in the Supreme Court to-day for an an- nuiment of her marriage to William ‘Mason. ‘The complain application of owed that Mre. + Up and Down Hallways of the = arthage, WILD: CALL FOR POLICE. First Patrolman Sees Nothing, | but Second Expedition Gets Ample Evidence. ‘Two young men deacribing themselves as Joseph Bufns, twenty-five, an actor, |~ and Joseph Multiolland, twenty-one, an electrician, were arraigned early to-day in the Night Court on a charge of cre- ating a near-tiot by marathoning through the halls of The Carthage, an apartment house at No. 38 West One Hundred and Twenty-second street, in the altogether. Early last evening a womau'e voice told Jdeut. Farrel] in the West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street police station to hurry around the reserves to the house and catch the “wild men." When. Policemen Praei got there he found the occupants chattering outside thelr apartments, OF MURDER IN COURT ARMOUR COMPANY (S INDICTED BY U.S, GRAND JURY cxesealiitinas Charged With Criminal Viola- _ tion of the Meat Inspection Law. CHICAGO, May 17,—Armour and Com- pany was Indicted by the Federal Grand Jury to-day for criminal violation of the United States meat inspection laws tor alleged inerstate shipment of meats without inspection by Government agents. The indictments were returned before United stat: trict Judge Landis. ples ly GOV. WILSON ASKED TO EXTRADITE ARMOUR. RICHESON HEARS. |. HIS FATE, BUT SHOWS NO NO EMOTION (Continued from First Page.) “What's the matter?” he asked. Every young woman blushed and looked sekance at her neighbor, as if imploring ber to furnish the details. POLICEMAN DIDN'T SEE ANY:/not collapse in any way but through | Which cover a period from Maroh 1, 1910, THING WRONG THERE, “I can't see anything wrong,” re- gumed the policeman. “What's on up| the occasion of astonishment to me. here, anyway" with a sigsie. “What did you see?” he persisted. “Bnough to convince us that somebody ought to be arrested,” put in another young woman. Then an elderly woman whispered things to the policeman and he decided | ;,, to stick around. But nothing else hap- pened, though he was there for an hour, and finally he returned to the station and reported a false alarm." Several hours leter Lieut. Farrell's telephone began to ring excitedly, and he could hear a whole chorus 6f voices. Each one wanted to tell him of two young men running garmentless through the halls of the apartment houso and creating “awful scenes.” Four policemen were hustled around, and the first two to get In saw enough to convince them they would not go ‘Sack empty ‘handed. They pursued the tWo youths to their room and ordered them to dress. AND THEY SHOCKED THIS UN- @XPECTED BEHOLDER. ‘ ‘Miss May Ryan told the policeman she was walking upstairs toward her apar' ment on the third floor when two girl In close pursuit were two objects she took to be men. Neither wore any clothes, she wald. “There'll have to be a complainant, one of the poicem observed, Thi young women looked appealingly each other, and finally Miss Ryan said she would be the martyr of the ocoa- sion and go to the police station, and e had rented a room 1 aturday, and had been anxious for thelr woek to be up, particularly when one of them put his fist through a glass in the door last night. The janitor and his wife went up to remonstrate, but when they got one look at the men hurried back down- stairs, Burns and Mulholland told Magistrate Krotel they weére wearing bathrobes, But they were held in $600 ball for Spe- clal Sessions, ee ASKS BAIL FOR BRANDT PENDING HIS APPEAL. “No Use for Prisons,” Is Appellate Justice's Comment on Coun- sel Towns's Point. ‘The Appelate Division of the Supreme Court heard mr to-day on the radeau L. Towns, coun- sel for Foulke E. Brandt, to have Brandt released on ball pending arg ments before the Court of Appeals ov the peal from the decision of the Appellate Division upsetting Brandt's wnt of habeas corpus. Mr. Towns based his application €or bail on a provision of ihe code which reads: “Where a prisoner who stands charged with an offense has perfected An appeal to the Court of Appeals from a final order of the Supreme Court af- firming an order refusing his discharge, the court from whose order the appeal ts taken or a judge thereof? must. upon his application, admit him to ball. Assistant District-Attorney Johnstone answered; “The section applies to a privoner bharged with an offense, The prisoner in this instance has been con- | victed and sent to prison, If tention holds good all prisoners in all prisons of the State can be released by simply swearthg outa we of habeas us and furnishing " cetbnder whieh conditfon,” interjected . “there would be no need Justice 8: for prisol It js not likely that this Court will hand down,a decision before Monday. Peculiar to Itself Hood's Sarsaparilla Has No Equalas a Blood Medicine, + thinks there fe no other blood medi- equal to Hood's Bareapart! 1 have fly of five little ones, and have useq which other medicines lack, My husband was bothered with bella, He was so bad scarcely get around, He took cation from Mr, Morse with the spirit of’ fortitude which he hi hibited from the beginning. He did) me | the trying ordeal showed the romark- able courage which all along has been ‘He stated to me that his principal muoh,” ventured one young lady | thought as he faced execution was aot | were fugitives from justice for himself but for the sorrow of his | familyy and friends. OFFICIAL LIST OF WITNESSES OF EXECUTION. ‘The official lst of witiuesses of the| execution was given out to-day ay fol- we: Dr. Charles C. Foster, General of the State Militia. Dr. George B. Magrath or Dr. Tim- othy Leary, Medical Examiner of Suf- Surgeon- folk County. Dr. Joseph I. McLaughlin, prison ymiotan. Warden Bridges of the Charlestown prison. Deputy Warden Allen. ‘The Rev. Herbert 8. Johnson, spiritual viser. Associated Press representative. Five prison guards. | Two other persong to be selected by the warden. Sheriff John Quinn may be present if he desires. District-Attorney Joseph C.' Pelletier of Suffolk County may also be present or appoint a substitute. Despatches from Lyaschburg, Va. state that in all probabliity Richeson's aged father will not come to Boston to did his son goody before he ts elec- trocuted. Other members of the family wiil visit the condemned man at the State Prison and say farewell to him. These Include his slater, Miss L, V. Richeson/ of Saranac Lake, N. ¥., who came to| Boston about ten days ago and made a personal appeal to Gov. does to spare her brother's life. Douglas L. Riche- son of Chicago, a brother of the mur-_ derer, will probably come to Boston to| see the condemned man also. A report that Richesof had repu- diated his confession of murdering Avis Linnell was circulated here to-day, but it was immediately denied by Charles Street Jail and Charlestown prison offl- clals, and by Rev. Herbert 8. John- won and Attorney Mors ‘The condemned ‘man went to bed last night unaware that a deci been reached in his case. The report eudmitted to the Governor by the alien- late states that Richeson was not legally inwane When ho committed the crime and is not legally insane now. icheson {3 condemned to die the week of May 9. TI our is to be decided by Wasd Bridges, who usually does not ait later than Tuesday to carry out the law's sentence. It [# understood th Richeson proclaimed hi Violet Edmands and was the best friend he bad. he wanted to go to trial, but hie lawpere overruled him, t to the allenists pecial for Friday, May 17 17 S AqMORT D 1c) tn ee Oc ‘OCOLATE COVERED As. ae ee ee rented te f contre ‘ouppert for e rich thick | Milk Chocolate Covered Maraschino Cherries— Hood's Sarsaparilia. and it cured Mason was only fifteen yeure qld. when she was married, Jan. 3, 1900. No tea- aon was given for the delay im bringtn| ‘tee ennulment su, ~Mre, Lillian Dixson, Pike, Ohi @et it to-day aus! Howld fi ehesclated lawels valied Sasentabe. | afternoon on the application af Prosecu- | eutor lence in New Jersey at that time war- | as the man wanted. sey Prosecutor Says He and Morris Are Fugitives From Justice. TRENTON, N. J. Woodrow Wilson gave May 17.—Gov. hearing this tor Garvan of Hudeon county for the extradition from Illinois of J. Ogden Armor and Fdward Morris. The Gov- ernor took the matter under advisement and will announce his decision later. Indictments were secured against the | Sears in Hudson county In 1910 for | conspiracy to artificially raise the price ‘of beef and poultry. They are also charged with belng fugitives from jus- thee. Couneel for the packers contended to- day that they were not in the State at the time of the alleged offences, Feb. 10, 190, except to take passage PA @ ship sailing for Europe: Prose- Garvan claimed that their pres- ranted ¢} ir extradition and that they | pre dre Reto ‘SHOOTS RUNAWAY PRISONER. Gets Man Who Slugsed | Him After Arrest. ‘Walter Bruce, twenty-nine years old, of No. 40 West Geventeentit street, 'v arrested for disdrderly conduct this aft- ernoon éy Patrolman Arthur Davis of the West Seventeenth street station. ‘Davis had got his prisoner to Ninth avenue and (sixteenth street when Bruce pulled SB his arm and slugged him in the jaw. Davis was stunned and fell back. Bruce was half a block away before the mist of at Davis drew revolver, after his prisoner and began 5. ‘A bullet dropped ‘the fugitive at the corner of Eighteenth street and Nint! avenue. The wound was painful though not dangerous. A surgeon at St. Vin- cent’a Hospital dresged the injury and Bruce was locked u | Pottcem: Morner WATERTOWN, N. Y., May 17.—An Italian known in Massena as Matt! Con- gan and arrested there on suspicion of being Edward Di Donato, the supposed murderer of the Morner family, near Troy last winter, taken to Troy to-day to allow the relatives of the murdered family to try to identify him Charles Moffat, thirty-five years old, a former member of the real e@tate firm of Griffin & Derby at No, 150 Broadway, was found dead to-day in his room in @ boarding house at No. 164 Centre avenue, New Ruchelle. The windows were down and gas was flow- ing from a jet. Moffat left the firm more than @ year ago and ts sald to have been at- tempting to sell real estate alone. Recently he had complained to friends that business was bad. His mother, M Charles Moffat, an invalid, Hves AGAINST iNC ANCOME TAX. WASHINGTON, Ma May y ~The Gane Finance Committee to-day authorises a favorable report on the Lodge substitute for the House Freo Sut wo-called House Excise-Income Tax bill, which proposed a tax on incomes im ex- coss of 1,000 a ‘The Lodge @agar bi would elimini he differential and duties standard from the tariff and leave the duties otherwise practically as at present. SHAVING STIGK For Tender Faces Indispensable for those subject to red- ness, roughness, and other irritations of the skin. Ashaving luxury. No mug, nO soggy Soap, no germs, NO waste of time or money. In nickeled box, 266.,at stores or by mail. Liberal sainple free. STIGk} Address “*Cuticurs,” Dept. 28, Boston. Youths’ Size, 12 to 2, $2.00 Boys’ Size, 2}4 to S, $2.25 Men's Size. to 11, $2.80 etd gniy by JOHN M. FORBES Shoe Constructor. @ West Broadway. 281 Green Near Ves Bend for Catal wiels Ot. Iver Johnson Bicycle Highes ality—Low Prices Heterman's Odorlesa—Kille file ry love for Miss |= CARPET ‘Tel. 200 ICLEANING = 353 ar 40, WWILUaA (Oolumpus, ‘Kar, 1876, t 64th St Special for - Saturday, ‘ay 8 ive: ides | HRS RHAN Se ere SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY | dine oP Ha KISSES —A) Eid tes OFFERINGS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY a 405 Broadway, Below Canal se. 126 University Pl., bet. 18 @ 14 ote Ticth stores Open Saturday Es Newtorih1 90) bY G3) New Player $ Pianos georeciecs WISSNER PIANOS Ss and s7'Flatbush Aves, Bisek- Ven, lyn; 0 Fifth Ave., New Yorks ee _— KEEP IN SIGUE a Bins Saperins Keeler’s ur" The Perfect Skin Cleanser CHAS FOKEEEER CO OUND ND REWARDS. newiRo— weweale ih Dap dog lost co ' ednesday after wees Satta

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