The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1912, Page 1

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| | ROOSEVELT LOSES INDIANA. or, on Moltke, | # Mayor Gayn WEATHER-Fair t BY DITION. ight and Tuesday; warmer. “ Circulation Books Open to All,” The Welcomes German Fleet to New York ens > eaualaadiniinpaasiauatainanmciieamaeeeenoaneen rok ww if pa DELEGATE (e-night and Tuesday; warmer. PRICE ONE CENT. MAYOR PAYS STATE VSI TO WARSHBS Burgomeister Gaynor Boards Moltke From Deck of Un- armored Cruiser Patrol. GETS 7 GUN SALUTE. City Is Unconditionally Sur- rendered to Sailormen From Kaiser’s Visiting Fleet. “So this is the German squadron'” New York's Burgomeister, at the head of a squadron of his own, sailed up North River this afternoon to pay @ return visit to Rear-Admiral vor Rebeur-Paschwitz on his truculent- looking flagship Moltke, Burgomeister Gaynor, standing on the quarterdeck of his flagship, the Police Iaunch Patrol, and with every other police launch of the harbor fol- lowing in proper alignment behind him, got seven guns, a ruffie and the tar Spangled Banner” when he went o the Molke's aide, and even more gunp and a farewell ruffie when he departed to the-quartardeck ‘of mts own Kieine Kreutzer, Tt was a great occasion for Burgo- metster Gaynor. To be sure, His Honor was late. He aid not arrive at the Moltke's side unt after the German Admiral’s men-at- arms had been standing In rigid antic! pation along the rails for an hour. But at that nothing of the formal frills of greeting suffered. ‘Two men fell into the river in the excitement. With the Burgomeister:in the Patrol were Seth Low and Henman Ridder of the Mayor's Committee, Police Commis- stoner Waldo, R. A. C, Smith, Collector ef the Port WilMam Loeb and the faithful Secretary, Bob Adamson. All ‘wore silk hats a’cockbill against the stiff gale. The Paarol went first to the American flagship Louisiana, where Admiral Wins, low and his aide Joined them. Then on to the Moltke. The first seven guns rapped out from the Louisiana's six- pounders forward and His Honor skipped ever the waves to the Moltke. After the formal exchange of greetings be tween the Mayor and his suite and th German Admiral and his staff the dis- tinguished visitor was shown over the ebtp and particularly the Admiral's pri- vate cabin, TWO FALL OVERBOARD DURING THE EXCITEMENT, The two men who fell into the river from the launches Seabord and Twilight, Just at the height of the excitement, Were pulled out again by policemen in thelr Department launches. Aside from the Admiral's visit to the Mayor and the Mayor's return visit to the Admiral, a suffictent number of in- x nts served to make the firdt day of the city’s welcome to the visiting Ger- mans a g00d promise of more strenuous days to come. Prince Henry XXXVII. of Reuss, the democratic young lieutenant of the Moltke, whose princely blood Rever appears in any trace of af- fectation or restraint, proved early to-day that he was as quick a commander as he was worthy @escendant of an ancient duchy. By bis personal orders, given in- stently and with frm decision, the lives of many women and ohildren ‘were taken from jeopardy. An overloaded ‘“bumboat,” containing eix men, fifteen women and several abies, swung alongside the Moltke's Gangway in the stiff tide that was run- ning down river. Prince Henry, who had been on his post a# junior officer of the deck since four o'clock in the morning, was standing by the rail. He paw the bow of this boat swing under the lower step of the gangway and be- #n to be pressed down by the strength had begun to come in over the bow of the heavily laden boat when the Prince himself rushed -half way down the ladder, yelling in English to the boatman to reverse his engine. ‘Then he called to two of the Moltke’ weamen, who were standing at the foot Of the steps, to fend off the boat with thelr boathooks. ‘New York started in to-day to show the first batch of officers and the first whore party of bluejackets what the New York brand of fun is, Thirty pamlox officers of the Moltke, the Stettin | Copyright, 1912, Co TURKEY TROT S| CAUSE OF DEAT OF YOUNG BRDE Atlantic City Woman Bursts Blood Vessel Doing the Strenuous Hop. (Spectal to The Evening World), ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, June 10- Mrs. Agnes E, Day, twenty-one years old, 1s dead at her home, No, 10 Mount Vernon avenue, as the result of her de- sire to master the turkey trot, Friends who heard of her sudden death early Saturday morning learned to-day that she had deen practicing the dance with her husband Friday night prior to going to one of the pliers to witness exverts do the trot, She was seized with a sudden pain de and stopped the strenuous h minutes later when she with her started from the hou the young woman fell to the floor uncon- scious, Before physicians had arrived she was dead, Examination showed that she had burst 9 blood vessel in her side. <niciaigiabisinianl te WITH $5,000 IN BANK, SHE’S ARRESTED AS SHOPLIFTER. Woman Decked in Diamonds Pleads Guilty After Tearfully Begging for Freedom, A handsomely dressed woman, wear- ing many diamonds and having in her possession a bank book showing de- posits of more than $5,000, was rested for shoplifting, this afternoon, in a Third avenue department store and later arraigned hefore Magistrate Krotel in the Yorkville police court. The woman descrthed herself as Mrs Christine M, Rowe, fifty-five years old, | of N Bramaall avenue, Jersey Coty When she was first taken in custody by a department store detective she burst into tears and pleaded to be set free She had taken only a few dollars’ worth of glaves and Ungerle, and offered to pay many times its value, When before Maaistrate Krotel she pleaded guilty to the charge of shoplifting and was held In $300 ball for trial, and the Bremen were ashore and being Whizzed over miles of territory by 9 o'clock, and several hundred big blond sailors from the northern ocean were out, arm in arm with the tars from the four American battleships to see the town as sailors wish to sve it, Rear-Admiral von Rebeur-Paschwita's visit to Mayor Gaynor, early in the day, d his subsequent visits to Major-Gen, sker H. Bilss of ‘the Eastern Division of the Army at Governor's Island, and to Capt. Albert Gleaves, ; mandant of the Brooklyn Navy Yard, were the single touches of ceremony tn (Continued on Fourth Pa; ————_——_ ee ) Leave German Flagship; f “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ | a The Press Publishing York World) NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 10, GIRL WHO ELOPED WITH BALL PLAYER IN AUTO FLEEING IRATE MAMMA WEE BABY IN FIRE IS RESCUED AFTER MOTHER FORGETS Brave Police Officers Risk | Lives in Flaming House to Bring Timmie Out. Timothy Moyhan, who is at the wholly {responsible age of elghteen months, slept peacefully through moments of fiery peril early to-day with death very near at hand, and Lieut. John McMann and Sergt. Kelly of the Bathgate sta- tion, groping, almost suffocated by smoke and bilstered by flame, tried to find him. It was one of the clonest calls the police heroes have ever had, and if Timothy lives to be @ hundred and makes death a plaything he can never come any nearer being mastered by it. Humphrey Moyhan, a tailor, is Tim's father. The family occupies the second floor of No, 4218 Third avenue, at the southwest corner of Tremont avenue, The ground floor is taken up by x saloon run by T. J. Larkin, who owns the building. An entrance to the saloon and to the floors above !s around on Tremont avenue. There are six children in the Moyhan family besides the bavy, Julia, “fourteen; Margaret, tens Jotun wht; Frederick, six, and floors above the Moyhans Were occupled by twenty lodger A man, Who modestly avolded giving his name, was leaving the back room of the suloon at 2 o'clock this morning, As the stairway and upper hallway wer: ablaze, He tried to mount the bur. stairs to Ware the sleepers, but Griven back, Then he went to the street and sh, ed the alarm tn @ resonant volce of remarkable carrying quality which seemed to reach almost every body in the nelgnborhood, but the { wsivep in the burning nouse, They heard it around at the Bathga:e | avenue station, and MeMann and Kelly ran to the erscue. They found the man hurling stones at the windows to awake | the inmates, but he w apparently un successful, There were c’ when Williams halt ‘The fire escape is in the rear, The] ed with the tenders, the runaways well two officers got @ iadder, rushed to the | in hand, mack yard and, mounting to the es-| Cape, entered the hous dhe twenty sodgers sWarmed out without dressing for the fire had almost eaten its way to the roof, Lieut, MuMann and Sergt Kelly got out Moylan and his wife and| “And the only one who |s not rattled six children, and they were about to about this ts Timmy.” remarked Mrs. jeave the yard when the mother|Movhan, ‘He sure is @ bonnte fire Iad- shrieke: diet" in! Tim! We've left the baby!" There seemed to be a slim chance of getting Timothy out, for sparks span- fled the smoke coming from the seo- | ond floor, McMann and Kelly wrapped their coats about their heads and went back to the rooms, Twice they thought they would have to retreat, but dog. gedly stuck to the Joo of groping 10 hile the flames roared on the way to the roof and the mother outside & was immediately relapsed Into slumber, once he was cuddled to his grateful mother breast. The team of the tender to Engine No, 88 ran away during the fire and went about a mile and a halt eastward until they swung the Wagon against @ Bos- ton Road car, the windows of which were sinashed. No one was Injured. Policeman Williams of the Tremont sta- tion mounted the box and drove the | horses back to the fire, baritone control of the flames by the time the tender showed up, but the building had ed, with a loss eatt- @ cause of the fire was not learned, ee Taft Back From Virgin WASHINGTC June 10.-Prestdent Taft returned at 11.5 o'clock from his trip to Hampton, Va, He left the yacht Mayllower at the Navy Yard wad driven at once to the White House, where the latest reports on the Cubin situation were in waiting to be placed vefore him, mingled with the @ound ber | Sita Sean eee means wailing. 4 ee But they got the kiddie all right, and g adi eal ates Ha being awakened as thay saved him, be G8 Park Bow. °e' } | The firemen had succeeded tn netting | FEARS UMPIRE DAD ~ TOA ALL HUT Mulvaney Makes a Home Run Hit With 19-Year-Old Viola Cobb. George facturer, W. Cobb Jr., furniture manus who outfitted the Publis 1. brary in Fifth avenue, who has heal- quarters in Liberty street and a hand- some home at No. 769 Ocean avenue, Piatbush, hadn't made up his mind early to-day whether he would forgive his | cloping daughter, Viola, who was ilt- erally wrested from her mother Satur- day last by resourcefd Edward Mul- ; Yaney. It is @ romance of baseball and jautemobties, and the young man w! had planned to play first base first marry afterward had his calculations upset when Mamma Cob got on tho job with her swift car, But when she finally overtook the elusive Viola and her chauffeur was about to force her into the auto—Ta- ra-a-a! Mulvaney appeared. He but- faloed the gKasoins chap, whisked the girl into another car and brought her to Manhattan, Mulvaney and his schoolgirl registered at the Hotel Empire, Broa Way and Sixty-second street. He was told Papa Cobb knew his whereabouts. At once Muivaney started to pack up bride for Atlantic City, leaving the hotel shortly after 7 o'clock yesterday eve- ning. He told the story of 1! m= mont in claiming: “Holy mackerel! man know w “It he does, somewhere out his brisk snappy way, @ Does her old gentle- re here? i's a quick jump to of this burg for my me. He'll come over | wife Viola and }here and start a fer sur Young Mr. Mulvaney ts a Fordham graduate and his New York home ts at No, #2 Fort Washington place, > ig weil known in Larchmont, where he has charge of the estate of a wealthy | relative, SHE'S NINETEEN AND HE'S TWENTY-THREE. “Why, the young man, | Cobb is @ Protestant and I am @ Cath- |olle, and she's only nineteen and I'm only twenty-three, and that's all there “Mins 1 mot her in the most proper fashion in her own home, and I used to call on her at the Castle School at Tarrytown, ‘She hadn't graduated—was just @ sophomore, you know, Well, th w lan objection, und her parents wouldn't jet me seo her, thinking that this would 200) us down, 1 hadn't seen her since |tast Christmas—but forget her! Noth: [ing doing In the forget line for elther jot us “Well, I got word to her that I'd be playing baseball with my team—the ‘Trinity nine—out at th baseball grounds Fr! Prospect Park Sne got out (Continued on cond Page) 1912, ips’ Boats Loaded to the Gunwales as Visitors and Sailors Line-up of Battlefleet in North River If Waite dorf HSL FE en AT FEAST TONIGHT 16 PAGES TAFT WINS SIX MORE CONTESTED DELEGATES AFTER BITTER FIGHT Republican Committee Unanimously Turns DownCharges of Fraud in the Indiana State Conven- tion and in First District. VOTE STANDS 38 TO 13 ‘ ON ONLY TEST TO-DAY. Feeling So Bitter That Two Con- ventions May Be Held in Same Hall at Same Time. CHICAGO, June 10.—Theodore Roosevelt was defeated to-day in three more fights before the National Republican Committee, which is hearing the arguments and testimony in cases of contested delegations, In only one case was there a test vote. This was lost by Roosevelt, by 38 to 13. In its way this was unimportant, as the question involved was merely the postponement of the contest from a California district until Wednes- day, although the Taft people intimated that the legality of the election of the entire delegation from California migh be questioned on the ground that the Primary Election Law did not conform to the rules of the National Committee, made before the law was passed. This matter will be threshed out Wednesday, but meanwhile the names of all the Roose velt delegates except two have beer put on the temporary roll ——_—__________——® In the only two contests settled to [day the vote was unanimous against the Roosevelt delegates. These were the four Delegates-at-Large trom Im diana and the ¢wo Delegates trom the PRICE ONE CENT §, MARSHALS rs Walk Out at Wal- Police Army Will Keep Peace. NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK, rough-houso | was against it ard we couldn't sce that. | ofMicera who go to the CHICAGO— Waldorf to-night to be feasted may not 100 —, ;Eiret Indiana districts, Former View eat under a sword of Damocles, but! GiANTS— President Fairbanks, 1s one of the Tagt many police clubs may dangle over 311 piglets id eee hinged ecated. their heads, —onetleniotaniioas # comeating Roosevelt delegation was The police clubs will not be meant for AT BROOKLYN, Rooted by former Senator Beveridge, the honored crowns of the city's guests | pITTSBURGH— aut tae a Rag and bitter wrangle but for the Insurgent noddlos of strik- 0000 — |Large was tiled, bat wh arene Jing walters, who have promised to break | BROOKLYN= Genater Seta lnk tao ded eBebypdi's Jup the banquet by leaving everybody 00 — | ders of the committee in pers valf-fed betwen the entree and the o1 the Opianella anton voting against roast. A emall emergency army of see mmeened The for 0 © four delegates-atdarge and the | United States deputy marshals, “strong: arms” from Headquarters and private AMERICAN LEAGUE. Ame. fromm the" Grat: deter: Seas dotectives ahs moved on the Waldorf in AT CHICAGO. ring Taft's total gaine in the contests advance of the entertainment, and when | HiGHLANDERS— #0 far up to 78. The six from Indiana the banquet commences these Kuardians 0 0 — are the first he has gained in a North- of the roast and the ruases will take UP! CHICAGO ern Ftate, {strategic positions and wait for some- |‘ 00 a There were sharp exchanges of per die i ter 1 and ten of his d ara rene onthe eee cet a Marshall Henkel and ten of hia depu- were protests against the “steam roller,” | tlos wont up to the Waldorf late this! FOR BASEBALL SEE PAGE 10. Seed in cone afternoon, the marshal and his reput disguised alike as marshalls and oach ing his shield, Later they will be ‘joined by Inspector Leahy ard ton de- leotives of the “strong arm" squad and an equal number of private de.evtty with reputations for protective assault and battery. Uscar Teehirky, manager of the ho- | tel's dining department, has recelved the tip that avout one-half of the force which is to werve the banquet will quit lance surgeon, but he managed to beat his assailants off and he ts still on the job, his head swathed In bandages, Delarme, whos home iv at 3 West Nineteenth street and who used to serve as extra man in Mouquin's Pul- ton street restaurant before the strike, Was one of the ninety-five walters who Promised the management of the ree- |tuurant to come work when the | Sixth avenue establishment opened th 438 some time during the meal and walk | morning after being closed for ten day out, Consequently he Je arrange-| Just as he approached the corner o | monts this afternuan to recetve five ex-| Sixth avenue and Tweniy-seventh street pert Walters from cach of the large ho-| six striking walters, acting as pickets, tels-more than enough to serve the! closed around him and tried to perauade |dinner—and these will put on their| him not to go to work, When he re- | aprons the minute that tho strikers bolt. | mained obdurate they set upon him. ‘The reserve force went to the hotel! ‘The non-union waiter had a ba early and wae stowed away in @ con-lof jt for a minute, but he la: venient sun partor to await necessities. | with fists and fect and finally gained leuddte arrangements that have been perfected @ quick glance that sym- pathy may be coming th quarrel with @ spec.al policeman in | front of the door, The spectal threw way of tho#) the man out of the entraace. |demonstratora in the street inntead.|” ppe streets were crowded with work- ere is a dark alley just behind the) ary down from the fur lofts for a | Waldorf and things might happen! breath of alr and tho altercation at therein whieh would never find their] the restaurant door gave an excuse to | way to police records, these to crowd in and hunt for mis- ehiet. T were several hundred pes ‘The frst violence out of at- tempted intimidation of waiters who re- fused to Join their sirtking comrades oocurred early to-day at Sixth avenue and Twenty-seventh street near up-town 4 short to irant. tn » number hegan make threats of window breaking. But the arrival of two policemen from the West Thirtieth street station had # Moquin’s restaurant, when David Del-| sobering effect on the crowd and {t) nick, “that some of the other Califor [arme, & non-union watter, Was assaulted | Was dispersed. Mr. Mouquin told an| iia Geiegates whose seats have net as he waa going to work in the restau- Evening World repo r that, though the threats and had been In prog tempted intimidation # nearly all morn- rant nearby, Delarme was badly beaten and recetved # cut In his cheek which Gecossitated four stitches by the ambu-' opened his place at 8 o'clock bad quit, ; ee os The striking walters boasted |the restaurant door, Juat as he Was! undernand work t | C solng on to prevent fn the early afternoon that they would| passing in he got the knife slash in bis in, contost being disposed of in tte or have & strong force on tn@ street in| left cheek, ; 5 gies 1 : ae er be-| Near the noon hour several striking | front of the hotel when the dinner be-| Near the | again In. front at! Tt will do @ grave injustice to @ gan realy to give “sympathy” to those | *8 8 4 4 ote eal tek ected to strike within, ut from tne | Moquin'’s and one of their number, e sald, “If you send expec 0 strike wi u | vno was French, started to pick | ‘thls contest to the bottom of the calen- ing, none of the waiters with whom he open charges of fraud in connection with the primartes in Indianapolis and of high handed methods at the Indians State Convention, which was controlled by Taft's followers, FIGHT BEGINS TO-DAY RIGHT OFF REEL, | Fighting was begun to-day as soon ap nan Rowewater called the meeting It had been rumored that the ces Intended to pase over the Cellfornla contests which were fret im regular order and take up the Indiama |cases. ‘This aroused the Roosevelt mem to a high pitoh of indignation, They went to the meeling determined to make @ stand against any postponement. When proceetings were opened former | Governor Knight of California demanded jthat the cont from his State oe taken up at once. He said that he had |beon led to believe that there was some It will leave a bad taste in the mouths of the people of the country. If this is @ trick you plan, we want It shown up." Knight apparently carried his point and California was called lnmediately, Ex-Senator Dick, the Taft contest lead- er, urged its postponement, saying that important documents had not arrived {and intimating that the case involved — legality of election of others of the fornia delegat he “We are inclined to think,” sala Mi? | yet been contested were not elected im ry We believe that the Calle fornia primary law in ite State-wilg

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