Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘ THE EVENT! Silence again was restored save for the fasting of the papers which Clerk tier tremblingly held in his hands which he proceeded to read. fat “Gentlemen of the jury, Is that your verdict?” ‘The answer came from each juror, “It 5 ‘Then began the further reading of | © ma brief message which pronounced ¥ one the fate of the other cefen- nly request by counsel for the defense after the verdicts were read was | by W. N. Harding, who asked that the jury be polled, The Judge replied that ft would take too much time to polt | each juror on: each count against each defendant and the matter was passed. Any motions by the defense will be made Monday morning, when sentences are to be William A. Gray, Philadelphia, counsel for Michael J. Cunnane, said no attempt to get bail would be made to-day, as he believed it would be useless. He sald, however, it an appeal on a writ of error would be made Monday and that bail pending the hearing_of the appeal would be re- quested. In the report of the jury, as handed in by Foreman Dare, the names of! Maries Wachmeister and Frank J. Murphy of Detroit, and Hiram R, Kline | of Muncie, Ind., were written in the margin of the sheet of paper and the Court requested an explanation, BUCKLEY ACQUITTED, RUSHES FROM COURT. Foreman Dare sald the names wero written in the matgin merely because there was not enough room at the bot- tom of the sheet and that they were incladed In the list of guilty, “If ever any of you jurors are drawn for jury duty again in this court, ai rn have to dp will be to tell me at_you served in thie trial and you Will be excused,” sald Judge Anderson im discharging the jurors. “I want to express publicly the thanks dué you from the community for your faithfulness to du You have been cut off here for three months from your families and friends and not Kline, formerly carpenters’ union in Detrott, and Tveit- moe, secretary of the California Bulld- ing Trades’ Council, are the only men convicted who were not members of the iron workers’ union. @eferring to Kine, who was then on | the stanc in his own \ehalf, Judge An- derson aid: conapiracy Waa as white as the driven compared with that of some of the other Tveitmoe, Clancy and Munsey aid not the paymaster of the Pacific *" and was directly charged with furnishing David Caplan and H. A. Schmidt, indicted on murder en of James B, Mc- as having got Mra. ‘alifornia so @he could not be used in prosecution there. “ON THE JOB” SAID SMYTHE AS HE STARTED FOR JAIL. Tveitmoe twirled hin hat on his cane as he waited his turn to be led away to jail, He smiled as he marched up to | Marshal Schmidt and was placed in charge of a city detective. Ryan looked neither to the right nor the left as he came forward. “On the job," responded Faward Smythe of Peoria, Il, when he was sked to step forward, and his florid, round face was wreathed in smiles, JB Salt Lake City, walked out of the court. room with a cigarette in his mouth. ‘The prisoners were held in line in the corridors, which had been cleared, and each handcuffed to a bailiff. Marshal Schmidt and Superintendent of Polle Martin J. Hyland led the march to the Marion County fail. The thirty-elght prisoners were placed in the section of the jail reserved for charges of the Federal Government, which is on the second floor of the building, on the south side. SOME WERE DISMISSED DURING THE TRIAL. Since the trial began on Oct. 1, eight defendants had been dismissed on the Bround that no canes ex'sted against them, . At the opening of the trial those discharged were; Patrick Ryan, Chi- one word of complaint has been heard from any of you.’ ‘When the jury had left the room, Judge Anderson ordered court «d- Journed until 10 o'clock Monday morn- foreman of the jury was Prank lew Lisbon, Ind, a retired All the ether jurors were oF country merchents, Buckley of Davenport, Ia. tate when the Judge announced @ischarge. He rushed in front of the others and his face showed he did whether to laugh or cry. Her- jert of Milwaukee waited until ‘was called by Marshal Schmidt. After about half of the prisoners had been led away, Marshal Schmidy Drought smiles to the faces of those Who remained by announcing that the oe to visit them to-morrow in jail. asked that the word be passed to prisoners who already had been euacions SEPARATE THIRTY WIVES FROM HUSBANDS. under which they could be pros- as showing & motive. “Lam mot ready to believe that or- Banized jabor yet stands for the thin, yom Anderson's statements to the “This ts not a trial of lavor but of union officials accused of wrongdoing.” About thirty wives with almost as children a0 separated from their the verdicts, While tue wae being ehacted in the court vy eald. severe punish- soon as his pame war called Frank K. Painter of Omaha pulled a stickpin ‘his pocket and handed them to one of his attorneys. James Cooney, one of the Chicago pris- ® Rewspaper while the v: before the Court. GREAT STREET CROWDS PRISONERS LED OUT. Immense crowds assembled in The brought out, cago; J, W. Irwin, Peoria, Jil, and Andrew J. Kavanagh, Springfleld, 111. On Dee. 2, when the Government rested its case, the following were discharged: John R. Carroll, Syracuse, N. Y.; Moul- ton H. Davia, Westchester, Pa.; William K. Bonson, Detroit, and Spurgeon P. Meadows, Indianapolis. On Mec. 1%, \Clarence BE. Dowd, Rochester, Y., N. fense. All the overt acts were charged as be- ing related to the series of dynamit: 4 altro-glycerine explosions, including those on the Pacific Coast, as well es those in New England, which were di- rected against “open shop” structural iron and steel contractors, against whom & strike was called by the International Workers’ Union in 1905, After receiving their sentences the Prisoners are to be taken to @ Federal prison, probably at Leavenworth, Kan. A special train probably will be used. The finding, of a verdict, coming as it strain of nearly two of waiting and when a “hung jury” was being freely prophesied, caused a ‘The men were not charged actually | thrill of tense excitement to run through with «causing explosions, The only| the whole city. The scene in the court- id at the end of da. room when the jury fled in evidence as to violence was competent) paralleled for dramatic climax in the/ ing requested tho dynamiters again be history of famous trials. ‘The chi upon which .he guilty tion of Bridge and Structural Workers ts “illegally transporting dyn: mite and nitroglycerine on Dassenger trains or conspiring to do the same.” ‘The men who were tried in thii sensational case since the McNama greatest bitterness bet: witness for the Government, naming numerous men as having assisted him plosions, and Edward in causing Clark of Cincinnati, who pleaded gui! y at the opening of the trial here, re- main to be disposed of, Clark probably will be sentenced He con- fessed to blowing up a bridge at Day- with the others on Monday. ton, O. McManigal has been here in custody of a deputy marshal of Los Angeleer County, California, as a Fed ‘loan” to th there to blowing up an ironworks, NSATIONAL TRIAL. The trial, Anished to-day when the out of his necktle and his purse out Of |iweive men of the jury filed into the courtroom, red eyed and haggard from Want of sleep and the etrain of th tremendous responsibility, had been in ners, sat with outward calm, reading | progress since the firat day of October. dicta were] All the labor world has hung breath- being read and threw down the paper|lessiy upon the developments of the only when bis name was galled to step | case and its outcome, Leagues, of man- have been no less bound by ufacturer compelling interest. United States District-Attorney Char- Chief Prosecutor for the the | Government, put on the witness stand #treeis about the Federal Bulldigs when | no less than 549 witnesses before he an- the Lip Ag were beng returnedSand | pounced “The people rest." Their tes- timony alone covered 2,000 typewritten handeuites between two deputy | pages, United States Senat les W. Miller chief counsel for the organizer for the “His connection with the own behalf. Tveitmoe Munsey, allay “Jack” Bright, of formerly of Detroit, 1q]W4s discharged on motion of the de- re ing another ee there on Dec, 3, dicts have been brought against thirty- that have been shown here,” was one of} eight men, most of them officers and | moe’ members of the International Associa- Iron ‘most trial ‘were gathered from almost every point of the compass in this country and during the course of their trial the nm opposing Be] counsel has served to intensity the ef- ba4/ tect produced by the remarkable teati- Prosecution, He probably will not be sentenced here at this time, but will be returned to Los Angeles County, it sentence on his plea of} Structural Ironworkers on the one hand JURY'S VERDICTS ENDED MOST Jonna W, streets became #0| Kern, candidate for the Vice-Presidency ith William Jennings tn 1908, of the jury's deliberation, as the Gov~ ernment attorneys saw it, Is that the conviction of Olaf A. Tvietmoe and Bu- gene A. Clancy of San Francisco and J K. Munsey of Balt Lake sustained the Government's charges that they aided fn plotting the dynamiting of the Los Angelos Times Building, wherein twenty. one men were killed, and assisted in the | escape of James B. McNamara from the fcene of the wholesale murder. By ite verdict the jury also sustains the Government's contention that the MoNamara brothers, now serving life imprisonment in San Quentin Prison, | California, were aldel in the nation wide dynamite plots by almost all t executive officials of the Ironworkers’ Union and that they knowingly carried on the conspiracy for years by causing explosives to be transported on pas- oenger trains. As head of the union of 12,000 mem- berg, President Ryan once sat in the councils of the American Federation of Labor, ‘Tveitmoe Francisco charged with not only supplyin: men to assist in blowing up the Los Angeles Times Building, but also with having asked for more explosions on the Pacific co He is Secretary of the California and an editor. TRIAL RUNG FROM EXPLO- SION IN LOS ANGELES. ‘The charge upon which the union men were tried at Indianapolis had tts gen- esis in the murder of twenty-one people in the dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times building at 1 o'clock in the morn- ing of Oct. 1, 1910 When detectives picked up the blind trail, beginning | With the smoking ruins of the news- jew Plant, they ran onto more and nspiracy of tional Brec- | tore’ Association, builders of structural fron work and others opposed to union labor, Just a year after the Los Angeles outrage the Government considered for the first time the possibility of pros- ecuting those who were believed to be involved in thin conspiracy. On Feb. 6, 1912, the Federal Grand Jury in In- olis found indictments against labor union officials, On the United States. Pant C. Fweod ‘and Patrick Farrell were two arrested in New York. The one great feature of startling emphasis of the whole trial was the testimony given by Ortie, McManigal, the telf-confessed co-ognspirator with the two McNamara Dfothers in the blowing up of the Times building and scores of other “jobs at destruction. McManigal, on the stand for many days and exhibiting the most unusual mem- ory for details, told as coolly as if he were reciting the details of a day’ work at horseshoeing a story of orime and bloodshed, paid for, as he swore, by oMcers of the bridgeworkers’ unlon with union funds. Muoh of the evidence that was pre- cluded at Los Angeles by the pleas of guilt by the McNamara brothers came out here. Federal Judge Albert B. An- dereon ruled that while the specific charges were illegal transportation all other evidence relative to explosions might be offered as showing @ motive. The testimony was that the destruction bf the “Tim beers ‘was not atrictly against non- in an effort to unionize various trades in Los Angeles. James B. McNamara, bomb, was who eet the proprietor of that the dynamiter to the coast at the solicitation moe, @ recognized union labor leader, and that Tveitmoe furnished David Caplan and M, A, Schmidt, who were indicted for murder, but who never ‘@ captured, All the 100 explosions came tn for scru- @ny by the jury here and the fleld of operations extended from Boston to Los Angeles. One by one the defendants heard the charges repeated against them. Tveltmore heard his name mentioned often, He was accused as having fur- nished Caplan and Schmidt to help blow up the Times Building. He was named as having sent word to McNamara the sent to Los Angeles, later acknowledg- Christmas pres iy Ay he vealed at Tveit- . only ivsoly y's Clancy there, Johannsen was mentioned by witnes: ‘ing helped Tveitmoe. William J. Burne testified old der of Los Angeles the day after the ex- plosion that “Tveltmoe and Johanna part of Undon iron and steel work, bat was dono| NG WORLD, SATU RDAY, rata WTiee yy ae 1912, OF KILLING GR, THEN CONFESSES; William Ateenoter Clears up the Luella Marshal Murder Mystery at Trenton. i } | Apecial to The Evening World) TRENTON, Dec, 28,—William Atzen- holfer, twenty-six years old, is under arrest and is being questioned by the county authorities on his confession of the murder of Mias Luella Marshall, for Which twenty-five men have been ar- rested in the last three weeks. Atzenholfer is being questioned by Prosecutor Crossley and his staff, but the prosecut left the room long enough to telephone that the man had confessed killing the woman. He de- nied having made a criminal @ttack be- fore the killing. He said he had mis- taken hia victim for some one el: The prosecutor authorized the state- ment that the man confessed the killing, but refused further information until he ‘had finished the examination. Atzenholfer arrested after he had been trapped into talking to Dr. Joseph G. Denelsbeck while the prosecu- tor and a detective were secreted in another room, but within hearing dis- tance. The man first gave information in delirium. His nurse informed the doctor who called in the County auth: ities, He was hurried to the ecene of the crime and there rehearsed it for the prosecutor and the detective. Atsenholfer was one of the men first arrested, but he was set free. Hm- pPloyees of a dairy firm for whom he had formerly worked sald that he had got on a drunk Before the killing, having | received some money on a pension. I { had been discharged, but was aid ‘. {ng on the dairy fagm, near mile beyond the acene of the ‘cll Ca The prosecutor has suspected this man, Dut could not get the evidence until Atzenholfer was taken sick and dis- closed it in his delirium. GAVE GRAPHIC DESCRIPTION OF THE CRIME. Alzenholfer hag been jiving in an apartment house known as the Dolton| Block at Warren and Hanover streets, this ety. He was taken sick recently. While suffering from fever and in a delerium he talked of the crime and described so graphically the part he had taken that the nurse attending him biieved it to be more than mere imagination. Miss Marshall was on her way home when attacked on the roadway, She wa: dragged through a fence into a fleld, where she was found unconscious hours later, She lay between life and death for several days and then died, never having been able to give any description ssallant, although It was thought tried to say that she by & negro. «Several by Track. Michael Donovan, gateman at the en- trance to Pler No, 44, North River was run over and Instantly killed to-day by owned by ‘Max Levy of ssex street and driven by Abo Sattenberg of No. 42 Lorimer street, Brooklyn. The driver was held at the Greenwich Street Station for trial in the bets Court on a charge of man- slaughter. Donovan lived at No, 59 Beach street and leaves a wife and three children. off a dynamite charge hours after the! dynamiter had left the scene of ¢ contemplated wrecking. It was Herbert S. Hi “Tago of the conspiracy,” who first drew Ortle McManigal into the dynamiters' ring. He kuew McManigal to be a union’ man who had lost his card because an Infraction of rules and he easily se- cured the degraded union man's services for @ “Job.” Thereafter by holding the threat of exposure over his head, Hockin drove MoManigal to the commission of one crime after another. McManigal took! orders from no one but Hockin until he discovered that the clever secretary of the union out on him” in supplying penses. In the course of his work McMant ‘kin, called the were behind it." Testimony about Jo- bannsen was permitted on the ground that though not @ defendant, “he had been shown to be a conspirator J. E. Munsey, Salt Lake City, was charged with harboring the Los An- dynamiter for two weeks. A In Salt Lake City sald he altered clothes for the dynam! other witnesses @nid they maw Munsey, also ‘known as “Jack Bright,” and MoNa- in Boston when the Pacifilc coast explo- sion occurred, and as iurrying weet af- ter telegraphing “Clean hou mean. ing, as the government charged, to de- atroy evidence. H. W. Pohiman of Se- attle, was mentioned as bringing Mo- Namara and Clancy topether in that city. —>— DYNAMITING STARTED IN WAR OF UNION AND ERECTORS’ ASSOCIATION. The history of the war between the International Association of Bridge and and the Erectors’ Association on the other, as developed chapter by chapter in the Indianapolis trial, dates from came to New York upon the urgent quest of Frank C. Webb, the local mem: ber of the executive board of the union. Webb took him to Hoboken and pointed out the exact spot in the Hoboken via- duct where he was to lay his charge of explosive. The viaduct was wrecked. Later, upon Webb's request, McManigal blew ‘up the bridge over the arm of Pelham Bay near Pelham. ‘The series of outrages continued—at Peoria, Ill, in Detroit, in Boston, Cleve- land and ‘Pittsburgh. Demands came into the union headquarters for more a dynamite the Judas stepped back from the forefront and be- gan to undermine the whole pirvoture of the conspiracy. ‘This was Hockin. He went to J. L. Jewell, manager of an erection com- pany at Pit him the dy for 1911, The while working us secretary-treasurer of the union in the place left vacant at the arrest of J. J, McNamara, he secretly betrayed his fellow members, especially the Mc- Namaras, to William J. Burns, When the McNamaras were convicted he gave information which led to the rounding up of the other conspiraturs; but with no promise of immunity. The men on trial were unaware of his treachery until one day the Government's attor- ney moved him from hi mong February, 1908, and eighty-nine expio- attributed to the uni Government jamara, then one of the hi in the national organization, ts credited with having been the guiding mar & corps of expert dynamite: dividual membe: ald vi rY special Job" was called for by the local head of the union, turn the trick and get away without incrimin ing the members of the laca} union in any way. To pay the expenses of this corps of terrorists money was diverted “for emergencies” from the treasury of the union with the knowledge of Pi dent Frank M. Ryan and othors of the high councils, eotieme of umng an alarm clock fo set McNamara devised the eat the defendants to the table of the prosecution, an BENEFIT TO UNIONS SAYS THE PROSECUTOR Miller, the United States District Attor- ney who prosecuted the dynamite con- spiracy case for the Government, sald of the verdict; ‘Nothing else could have been expected, The evdence of @ nation- wide conspiracy which began in local muggings and assaults on non-union workmen and grew beeause local author- ites failed to prosecute became finally ‘80 bold that dynamite was resorted to, TELLS IN DELIRWUM | May Maloney, « showgirl, on Jan, 9 last. Wella and | iappiness. never saw @ couple apparently more devoted to each other than young Mr. and Mrs. Wells, ‘obe has Seen prepared for the expected visitor, and the eyes of the father-to-be fairly shine when he talks ‘wonderful good fortune,” his joy in life and his fondness for “the earest wife in the world.” his actress wife are happily awaiting a visit from the stork, expected in the next few weeks, and there are rumors that Mr, Wells sr., delighted over the prospect of being @ grandpa, is rapiuly relenting and almost ready to say, mari not only the Los Angeles Times Bulld ae ‘| BRECTORS’ COUNSEL | MRS. J. RAYNOR WELLS. Reconciliation Talk as Stork Hovers Over Cottage of “Jimmy” and Bride. A reconciliation between James Ray- nor Storrs Wells and his father, William Storrs Wells, millionaire president of the Fairbanks Scale Company, 1# one of the New Year probabilities. The father and son have not been on the best of terms since the son eloped with But now young ‘‘Jimmie” “Bless you, my children.” about hi: ag The cottage The A wa neighbors the secretary of the union, to wet ai be carried on systematically. what made him bold enough to send his brother James B. McNamara to blow up WILL APPEAL CASE SAYS CHIEF COUNSEL. WASHINGTON, Dec. 28,—Senator Kern of counsel for the defendants, when told of the verdicts at Indlan- apolis, declared the cases would be ap- pealed. “Preparations for the appeal were made in advance," said Senator Kern, “and will be made to the United States Cir- cult Court of Appeals in the regular way SUiener than that Senator Kern de- clined to comment. ————— CONVICTED MEN MAY FACE OTHER CHARGES. WASHINGTON, Dec. 28.—Attorney- convicted men on charges of belng ac- cessorles to murders and destruction of property’. According to Department of Justice officials, tt is possible that sentences for the Federal conviction might suspended while the men were tried tn | State courts, or after serving part of | thelr sentences they might then be turned over to the State authorities, Assistant Attorney-General Harr, who has directed the Government's case from Washington, will take up the ques- tion with Attorney-General Wickersi when the datter returma to town Monday, “ PRAISE VERDICT “1 think the conyletion of thirty-eight | men in the Indianapolis dynamite con: | spiracy canes ts a tremendously good | thing for organized labor," was the comment to-day of Walter Drew, coun- sel oor the National Erectors’ Associa | tion, Drew was largely instrumental in “The dynamiters grew bold tn vio- lating the Federal laws im carrying these deadly explosives on passenxer trains Decause they mever dreamed of| 9 riny's young wiie untons to their iy will. the Bridg: Union Morrin, H were convie Mri Helen M James ‘Weldon, s’ Union, availing from this on the dynamite tors WASHING Kern, of counsel when told of the fo ce, “Preparations made in udva ringing about the indictment of the ironworkers following the Los An ‘Times and other bis explosions and was way.” ST, LOUIS, Mo., Dec. declaring appropriation of $1,000 a month | enough," he continued. so that the work of destruction might} Were to-day convicted in Indiana can be It was| found in other labor organizations. “It would behoove all labor untone to ‘put their house in order,” a Dee. for or erdict. eens GOMPERS SILENT ON THE VERDICT. “I have nothing to say,” Actress Wife and Her Husband, Whom. Rich Father May Forgive J. RAYNOR S. WELLS in Rye, where young Wells and his wife have made their home since last summer, fairly radiates say Hotel Vie- | own advantage long uch men as They prob- ‘There 18 much good in or- Members of ¢ and Structural Ironworkers’ . 18 gathered. in thelr meeting hali immediately after word was celved of the conviction of 38 union men and pledged unanimous support to Paul J they would siness agent of their local, Barry, doth of whom vd at Indianapolis. mother of Mr, Mor- who is prostrated in an Indianapolis hotel, said she would start at once to her daughter's bedside. member Board of xaminaiion of the Iron Work- this afternoon began recelv- ing subseriptions for a fund to pay for 4n appeal of the convictions Sceeniaeanbet WILL NOT CRIPPLE UNION, SAYS RYAN. of was the only answer made by quel Gomper president of the American Iederatio: of Labor, in response to the question ase verdicts, Subse quently Gompers left word with the| telephone operator at tl switchboard to give the same | to all inquirers, without dis- | turbing him ‘in his room Been Pre- pared, Bays Senator Kern, 28.—Senator the defendants, verdicts at Indlan- declared the cases would be ap- the appeal said Senator Kern, “and will be made to the United States Cireuit Court of Appeals in the regular Further than that Senator Kern de- | clined to comment. they NO $25,000,000 FUND FOR SMALL CHARITIES, SAYS MR. CARNEGIE | Denies Published Story and | Says He Has Made No Plans ,, for New Philanthropies. | Andrew Carnegie denied to-day that he has set aside a fund of $26,000,000 tu be applied to the benefit of amall charities. Mr. Carnegie eald he has made no a: rangements for enlarging his philan- throple work next year, ‘The statement that Mr. Carnegie had decided to present $25,000,000 to smal! charities as & New Year's gift was printed to-day in a newapaper. ‘The Per- | sian Consul-General was given as the authority for the statement. ‘The newspaper said the Persian Con- sul called on Mr. Carnegie at the Car- neste home, Ninety-first street and Fifth avenue, to solicit ald for the Red Cros in Constantinople; that Mr. Carnegi not only agreed to make @ eubstantial contribution to the Red Cross, but told ot his $6,000,000 plan for email chari- ties and talked at length of politios and things in general. “The Persian Consul-General called on me jast night,” sald Mr. Carnegie to an Evening World reporter to-day, “pur- auant to an appointment about a mat- ter which I could not act upon, T ‘was @ genetal conversation, but he ¢: tirely misunderstood any reference I made to the fact that I had retained @ sum to continue my pension fund. “This is no new fund. It was an- nounced at the time I transferred the funds to the New York Corporation last November, I can only account for the mistake on the theory that Consul-General did not knowledge of our languag was said, as far as I can recall, it the Red Cross organization, There is not the slightest truth of any action of that kind. REIT Hs ‘SUES asin i FOR NO IER 4 EVERLASTING WANE |Gown Maker eats She Business Because Halt Was Damaged. a Alleging the defendant did not to an “everlasting wave" in her haley on the contrary, failed and also bey @ged the hair, Louise Hecla, who makes ‘and wears Parisian gowns exhibition, started auit to-day ii jupreme Court against A. Simon: No 606 Fifth avenue to recdver"eROND. Mian Hecla declares in her cor olden that she was injured not only, epebu of the faflure to produce the wares Dut because through damage to ge hair, she fatied to acquire a cer; “mount of business while or Her, to Paria Miss Hecla then goes of to er that she went to the Firen av place to have the wave putin her hate for the express p of. avoldiny the wearing of hat. If she had ty? wave, she says, she could have moval among folks of the fashionable without a hat while on shipboard thus displayed her g to more vantage. Likewise, her activities weet restricted on the Continent for ; they same Limiren Miss Hecla “ desman Moar ——- and these books must supply the core rodoration of the men's declaration. that for more than five years they paid: Fox for the “protection” of their hotels” sterred from Kast One Hund and Twenty-sizth street to West ‘Gee. Hundred and Fiftty-second street. 2 —_—_— HAYES SUES WALDO ; TO BE REINSTA ribs Police Commissioner Waldo's dismiséal™” of Inspector Cornelius G. Hayes is ¢o te SAY ACCUSERS VANISHED AFTER | 35° TELEPHONE TIP See See (Continued from First psa aneieina: &@ chance to use his force to get this man Sipp.. He's got 10,000 men to use.” When Fox's attorney objected that Fox has to go to trial on charges Mon- day at Headquarters, the Magistrate re piled: “That gives the Commissioner @ Goubte incentive to get this complainant. NEITHER MAN SEEN SINCE CHRISTMAS DAY. Fresh subpoenas were then issued by Magistrate Kernochan and Deputy Com- missioner Dillon, and policemen and de- tectives were hurried from Headquarters to find Sipp and Dorian, It was thea learned that no one appears to know where either man has been since Wednesday. Bipp livgs at No. 6 West dred and Thirtieth street. Mre. the only person at home lest have not seen my husband since Thanks- giving,” she sald, ‘He was here at the house Christmas, though, and in the ‘afternoon ate his dinner alone, He went | Sanized labor. Let them follow Clancy's | away without telling anybody where he f\ing, but also plot to blow up the Whole) Gavieg and “ean ou aa i ney’ oes en, Oy Bs ete tng be a beneft to Altpough I seldom see him, until this organized jabor. It will purge it of the COLLECTING FU FUNDS time he has been Oe, Seay 9 en ook~ rough tactics, The whole United States TO PAY FOR APPEAL, | “2% 2% oy ing home. haies owes @ debt of gratitude to that Jury.” Just now absence seems —— stranger because he wes to have under. gone an operation by Dr. W. H. Upten. I have heard that Dr, Upton told him he was injuring his bealth by getting mixed up in these vice cases," Mrs, Sipp went on to say chat a eud- poena from a Magistrate's court wae left at the house Christmas Eve and one from Deputy Dillon the following day: Last night policemen were at the house with other subpoenas, but would not leave them. Dr. Upton, who is eleo Capt. Walsh’e physician, said the operation was to have been Thursday, but he hadn't seen Bipp since Tuesday. He denied that he had told Sipp anything about his activity in the vice cases injuring his health, An effort was ifiade to find Sipp at Teaneck, N. J., where he was under stood to own @ home, but it was learned there to-day that he sold the property & year ago. re- re- the General Wickersham will consider the Pore ge gr Sine wank Lar tye STUDYING HOTEL ANO BANK sy ; various | Ryan of the Iron’ Workers’ Union, one See arn orsence taleen at (Of, the convicted dynamiters, sald of BOOKS FOR EVIDENCE. the dynamite trial for such action as |e verdict: Commissioner Dillon continued his tm> local authorities might wish to take “This will not cripple the union. The tigation Into the Fox case yesterday, j local wi he | Work will be done just the same under | despite his failure to find Bipp and toward the possible prosecution of the| Scher ofticers, In case an appeal 1 un-| curiae, ‘He had before bim @ ~ documentary evidence, which included, {t was said, the books of the Avonel and the records of Sipp's and Dorian's bank accounts, Neither man, it ts understood, kept his cancelled checks, wi reviewed by the Appellate Division, A’ ‘writ of certiorari was hoes ie Cae Girecting the Commissioner Ppt Leading Fromch Restmaran? 7) STAAL ED faa 4 Secend Ave. and Tenth Street ROMA = ard oiEco. YRNE.—On Deo. Many aT rie, of lat in SE4 Notice of funeral inteactoere More Than 1,500,000 Advertisements Have Been Printed in THE WORLD This Year. 700,000 More Than the Herald or Any Other New York tansc es a0 3