The evening world. Newspaper, January 18, 1913, Page 1

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~ J WEATHER-Rain FI iebts clearia; EDITION. days © oR The “ Cire wlation | Books s Open to All.’ | They fell Peace Proto- col and Hold Riotous Meeting in Astor Place. DEMAND HIGHER PAY. Policemen Are Scratched and Beaten When They Arrest Rioters in Crowd. Gettied, as the leaders thonzht, thie Morning, the shirtwatst strixe got be- yond the control of the un‘on officials this afternoon, when thousands of the strikers vigorously declared they would Ret return to their benches next Mon- day, as the unton had ordered. ‘They eavagely denounced the union leaders, asserting they had been sold Out Cor the benefit of the manufacturers and that the fight had not been won, as the Executive Board of the union had @soured them. The temper of these so Protesting was plainly aroused, and as they apparently represent a substantial majority of the strikers, serious com- Piieattons will likely ensue, although this morning the prospect of peace was mest cosy. ‘The most impressive manifestation of the anger of the strikers over the action of the union officials, in ordering them baek to work without first submitting the proposed protocol arrangement to; & vote of the workers, occured at Cooper Unton, shortly after noon. Here more than two thousand strikers, neariy all of them girls and young Women, met to learn from unton repr sentatives of the ending of the strike. No gonner had Pasquale di Nerl, the union's emissary, begun terms of a protocol, made with thw manufacturer's this morning, than yells of pi were heard in all parts of the throng and in a few moments the din beoame so great he could not continue. INDIGNATION MEETING HELD IN ASTOR PLACE. ‘The mod thereupon from the hall, nearly causing @ panic. Gathering in Astor place, the strikers an impromptu indignation meetin effectually blocked trac untii the arrival of extra policemen, Practically without exception, they declared in stini ing terms they would not obey the ma: date of the unton. Some of the moi hot-headed agvocated leaving the uni for good and affiliating with the 1, W W, A leader appeared In the person of Nicholas Lauritana, and addressing the mod, he dea ded that the strikers wear not to go back to work Monday. ‘This the mob did with a will and the crowd gradually dispersed, muttering imprecations on the heads of those whom they declared had betrayed them, The chief grievance of these disat- in the industrial war now being waged that the peace plans do not provide for the increase of s for Which the workers walked out, Instead of increases amounting 1n some cases to 2) per cent., the le of the revolt against the union declar but 6 and 10 per cent is promfsed. NO PEACE TILL EMPLOYERS YIELD, THEY SAY. ‘The workers hold that, having begun the fight, there should be no peace un- ti! all thelr demands are granted, and that in any event the union leade: have no right to come to terms with the manufacturers until the strikers them- eelv Rioting and disturbances tures in the manufacturers’ quarters to-Gay and six women and one man were arrested. The police were obliged raw their nightsticks, some of the women fighting them like men, The etrikers gave the police some busy and anxious moments in La- Fayette end Bleecker etreets, this morning, where trifling disturbances loesomed into lifewized riots. In front of the store of Alfred Benjamin &@ Co, on LaFayette street near Astor place, the picket line was as difficult as @ barbed wire fence to get through, and the pickets were hostile to the strikebreak Trouble started here when Gledala Lombardo’ grabbed & young woman atrikebreaker by the throat and s¢'d her not to go to work. The ott an@ Policeman Wedenkot® Mercer station elbowed ‘, an@ shoved bis way to the weeceeded in laying hands on meBant. Then hands were Jaid\ WOontinccs on Becond Page. , reading the, rushed pell meil) WOMEN STR ‘MUTINY WHEN LEADERS AGREE FOR 20,000 10 RESUME, WORK / The petition eets forth | Sullivan, a broth “BIG TIM'S” KINASK COURT 70 MANAGE $100,000 Personal Wealth and Much Realty Listed in Plea for Committee. FEARS POISON IN FOOD.) D Symptoms of Malady Af- flicting Bowery Boss, “Big Tim" Sullivan, who wae com- mitted to an Insane asylum @ week Axo, 1s suffering from hallucinations that his enemies are trying te.put polton {A hia food and at times tries hie utmost to committ sulcide to cheat his fancted pursuers. Such {s the sorry: plight of the “Big Fellow,” as described by Drs. John EB, Herrity and William B, Pritchard, upon whose certifications Supreme Court Jus- tice Amend ordered the Bowery leader confined tn Dr. Bond's sanitarium at | No, 960 North Broadway, Yonkers. The affidavits of Dra, Herrity and Pi accompuny a petition asking the Su- preme Court to appoint @ committee cf the person and property of Congressman Sullivan, and also to appoint a commis- aion to ascertain bine exact value of his estate. ‘The petition 1s made by Patrick H, of the Insane bow: Lawrence Mulligan—better known ry"—hts half-brother; and Mar-| garet Hickey, his half-sister, The law! firm of Ellison & Ellison, legal papers in the case. day" Sullivan, Mulligan and Mrs. Hickey state they know “Big Tim's" personal estate exceeds $100,000 in value, but beyond that figure they are !n doubt An exhaustive investigation by a com- mission will be necessary, they be- fore the exact value is know “Foot drop extension par origin man’s condition, made by Dre. Herrity and Pritchard. The g e is virtually incuravie. In his aMdavit, Dr. Herrity declares ‘T observed the following facts: the patient is fairly well nourished; color good; heart, lungs and kidneys show no evidence of organic disease; has foot drop extension paresis of re- cent origin, left foot; knee jerks sound and equal; lumbar punctufe negative: that the patient showed intense anxiety and seemed filled with terrifying fore- bodings; he insisted that conversation | should be in whispers; he insisted that) he wan being ‘doped’ by his enemies; that ‘dope’ was put in food and forced | into the alr of his room; was discon- | certed as to time, but showed quite some ingight, ained,sconcerning his history | that the said ‘Timothy D. Sullivan nad! fan uncle who was in an institution for of recent the tnsane, but was discharged there- from Improved; that said Timothy D. Bullivan had been considered of normal mental standard and had no previous) octors Tell in Affidavits of; of which | William B, Ellison, one time Corpora- | tion Counsel, 1s a member, drew up the, # the diagnosis of the Congress- | i Serie (tte Sew Tore Weta i} | | | THROW “COP” OUT |Woman Tells Detective She} HIS BlG PROPERTY) |hearing in the West Side Court, before | epartment the policeman out.” | “lL have instructed my client to do wo,” said Mr. Harowitz, “and to| use violence if necessary. We'll go | right up there now." The Magistrate held both Mrs, Gub- | v The Press Pa! nine ~ IS COURTS ADVICE TO POKER HOSTESS Police felted We Her Private | Home Game, Mrs. Gubner Protests. SLEUTHS GAVE SIGNAL. Lost $14,000—Another Had to Pawn Gems. | Sarcasm and talk of throwing police- men into the street enlivened to-day Magistrate Corrigan, of Harry Bgilliant and Mrs. Belle Gubner, accused of con- ducting a gambling house in the Firenzo | Nos. 205-208 West house, inety-second etre: Mra. Gubner’s apa Former Assemblyman. Harowlts for Mrs, Gubner, said that Inspector Dwyer bad fabricated a list of men and women alleged to have been present last night and that Detectives Armstrong and Sutter, who were inside when the raid started, were only admitted because they vame an friends of friendg of the family, who sometimes jolted in'a social home poker game. The only ether'persons pres- rding to lawyer, were her Edward Block, is general r in Chicago of the Nattonal En- gineering and Printing Company, and Max Block, @ freight manager for the West Shore Railroad, and his wife, Mra, Gubner charged that the rea!) Teagon for the raid was the resentment| of Vie Enden, whom she described as a, jambler, who had not allowed to} Join in gamen at the hou: THROW OUT THE POLICEMAN, SAYS MAGISTRATE. “Your Honor,” said Mr. Harowits. ‘the police have stationed a man in uniform in my; cilent's apartment. !e) was there all last night and was to o¢ relleved at & o'clock tais morning by| another man. 1 want @ warrant for) Inspector Dwyer for oppression.” “1 cannot do that,” sald Magistate Corrigan. “If the facts are as yo state I should go down and have a talk with Mr. Buckner, counsel for the Curran Committee"—— ‘And @et myself subpoenaed as a| Inees,”” said the lawyer, interrupting. | no nourishment for me in * continued the Court, “you might go down and talk with Mr. Waldo—or better, with the real head of the Police Department, Mr, Gaynor. Perhaps District-Attorney Whitman might help you. But if I were in the | situation you describe 1 should throw | ner and Brilliant {n $1,000 bail, which; was furnished by Mrs. Hertz, the owner! of the Firenzo Armstrong and Sut according to inapector Dw; iu Rector’s, | Forty-fourth street and Broadway, | Wednesday, when they made the ac-| |quaintance of two weil dresved women, j who asked them if they ever gambled. | The detectives, posing as men from 1! West, seid they did, and the four to @ taxicab and drove to th ‘ipety-sece ong etreet house. according to the detectives, they attack of insanity, and that he had been! in the said Dr, Bond's hou ce Sept. 18, 1912, as a voluntary patient, and that he had never in his life used jiquor, to- bacco or drugs; that the earliest time at which the present attack began or was recognized was about March, 19:2, and characterized by alternate ex citement @nd depression, threats of | suicide and less often of violence, de-| and per lusions of conspiracy cuto delusions, almost continuous olfactory and gustatory hallucinations, has less of the visual hallucinations that (Continued on Second Page.) PANAMA CANAL Fesorration sand void it {tage World) ‘ “cRUIAER est, information | Mre Bella Thompson, No. ‘Big, Rvee em A Blasi. . Wins so adie Sa Cae Se eee ae introduced to @ poker game in | which the limit wae the roof. No less thap $20 worth of chips could be bought. ‘ ‘DO Ca aITE POLICEMAN FOX OUT ON $5,000 CASH BAIL | Women Strikers Riot After Leaders’ Order to Work - Ke WHATHER—Nain tacts indays vo ‘10 > FI NAL] : * EDITION. “ NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 1, |Banker and Wife Who ‘Sues, Naming Leader of Society. BISHOP... CROWD IN BATTLE, DESPITE POLICE, AT SERVICE BOARD | Usurper of Chairmi and Invader of Private Room Are Ejected. That section of the room where vive Commission was hearing protests against proposed extensions of the B. R. offered every attraction of lot this afternoon except pink lemonade rear the T and peanuts. With a big overflow crowd the commissioners | ONE WOMAN SAYS SHE LOST! 914,000 IN GAME, One of t! ber husband had been ki t in ignorance of jt. The other wom: sald she had jost large sums of money, and most of | © ber jewelry bad beep pawned to meet ber losses. Both sald, the detectives re. ported, they had been forced to. become “cappers’ for the house and that's what they were doing when dining in Rec- tor’. The detectives bought chips at $20 a stack, they said, and played for a little time. Tnen they went toa window and waved handkerchiefs Inupector and x squad of raiders "There Was wild confusion and scrambling under beds and out of 1 windows to the fire escapes, the police say, when they entered, Some of tie ni listed by Inspector Wert Tetts Hundred and Twentyefitth street Hella Ross. No. 18? West Seventiet street. Miss Ro Ledenson, No. 9 Wes One Hundved and ‘went t street Mies Brown, No 1 Wes: Righty-elghth | street. Mise Georgia and Mis both of No. 160 West Nine. and confusion. Two pobi ing and they sighed with ax four more brawny hastily summoned by the n the afternoun, Hb Broowiynites, attra one of Tribune Building the Pubit 1's Chair] Ser. |* clrens In the haul, strove desper- ately to transact thelr business in nolse Pickpockets plied thi dein the crowds, both in and out o: women who introduced the | the courtroom, and at Intervals perso jectives sald she had lost $14.00 and who had distinguished themselves above the ordinary run of noisemakers cam ‘apulting through the door en were on duty all morn- writ hs. = Hat S BISHOP. HENRY LUYTIES, OF TAM MYSTERY, FOUND IN DENVER »\ Brother Hears From Young | Tobacco Dealer Who Dis- appeared Last September. Henry Luytles, @ wealthy young to- !bacco dealer who disappeared trom | tax ab on Sept. & ts in Deny cording to Information received by his brother, Otto Luyties, with whom he formerly resided at No. 67% Riverside Drive, Ever since Mr. Luytiea's mysterious disappearance after entering the ta: cab at Riverside Drive and Kighty- ‘ond street, relatives here have been king to find some trace of him, Once, on Sept. 1% The World succeeded in find- ing @ clue to hia whereabouts, It wat learned he had been registered at the Congress Hotel, In Chicago, several days before, But Mr, Luytles, who left New York with $500 in his pocket, two sult cases and @ yellow chow dog, went almost directly to Denver, Chicago only to break the journey. «| Little te known of bis early actions tn | the Western city, but he has written he |is now the manager of a bottled wa: voncern. hankfulness | SWEETHEART, companions,| Otto Luyties was loath to explain ommissioners | tie reaton for his brother's departure. | He admitted to-day t it was be- ed atte he to their ald. t indignant | cause of @ young Woman he admired alls i alling out. ‘This young woman was Self by rising in the room and shouting | waid to be a Mise Curtis, daughter of @ * top of his voice: “I want to pros) banker. Miss Curtis was.in Europe a tect against tis hal! oedroom hearing, | the tine of Luyties's disappearance, I have just had my pocket ploked and and for a while it was thought he had every nickel T had {6 gone, Now 1'i| gone abroad to be with her, have to walk home “My pvether was not engaged to Miss! In the front row another man Curtis,” said Otto Luyties to-day. "He umped up. Was merely one of ber admirers, and No you won't © ad my ownlafter they had a tif! he decided tt pocket picked, bit Team spare th would be best for him to leave New said, and he passed to Dean an York and @ transfer He says he Wrote me a note advis The plekpooket's wigsim was still bes | ing ipe ne wis levy for Denver, moaning his lows when another man| Never received it, Hdon't know why f iaaned Ub | but 1 gues# Henry was miffed Lean't hear way back hear,” he sald | I failed te reply, TL don't knew (Continued om Second vege) ee ee iy he picked Denver or why he wae 1 C aeapplive tm Bie departure’ . stopping over in| HAD TROUBLE WITH HI8 YOUNG! nf with whom he had had a! le sarge baw! in silverware and jewelry. [ Cireulation Books Open | to All.”’ | 12 PAGES MRS. BISHOP NAMES, SU MEN TOOK PART sua IN RAISNG BABE FIND ~FOR SPP AND DORA 1913. _ PRICE ONE CENT. <————— i 3 Banker's Wife Declares Mrs. J Temple Gwathmey of port Won Husband's Love. We +: Whitman Gets Names of All Con- cerned in the Attempt to Silence ths Accusers ot Police- man Fox. WOULDN’T PAY DEBTS. “Charges Wickedly Untrue,” Is Comment of Woman Brought Into Suit. Mra, Abigall H. Blahop, wife of James Cunningham Bishop, who !# a proml- nentéclab man and member of the firm of Redmond & Co, bankers, of No. 33) Pine street, has sued her husband for an absolute divorce, naming as a c respondent Mrs. J. Temple Gwathmey, e of the most prominent wom: the Newport and New York excel circles, wife of a on the Cotton E GRAND JURY WILL GET FULL STORY ON MONDAY Brother of the Indicted Policeman Urges Him to Expose “the System” and Save Himself Punish~™>-t °. for absolute divor. towel and was an amendment to @ ault aration which Mrs. B! her husband tn preme Court. It wes only « little mora than a week ago that the fre: intimation of marital: @mleulien In the peominen: Bishop family vecame public through jthe insertion by Mr. Bishop of sonal” in the advertising oojumus of a morning newspaper, fact that he woutd no toni pivle for his wif debts. Events in ti lewal aspect Rishop with swiftness, When Mr, Bishop was interviewed a week ago concerning hiv! Eugene Fox, the policeman under indictment for taking Protection money from George A. Sipp, was released late this afternoon under $6,000 cash bail. The production-of bail was unexpected, took the District-Attorney’s office off its guard and savored of the underground methods that have characterized the Fox case. Louis Grant, Fox’s lawyer, furnished the $5,000 in cash. He refused to say where he got the money. The District- of the marital battler have moved wiuct action having. been tewthutea| Attorney could have held up $5,000 real estate bail for geaingt im are, puanoe would ro"! forty-eight hours, but he could not refuse the cash bail. an order was signet by Justice Amend, the Supreme Cour Posn atreet, No court was in session, bstiiuting Louts » a lawyer of No. 20 Broad for the Dos Paasos Brothers, ‘sat the saine uddress, in the suit for # separation brought by Mis. Bishop againat her hur band. IVORCE INSTEAD OF SEPARATION. To-day Posner filed an amended com- plaint in the orig:nal action, which the action one for absolute di- instead of for separation. He aS Convinced that he knows who raised and contributed to the fund a part ot which was paid to George A. Sipp and Thomas J. Dorian for leaving the city, District-Attorney Whitman has arranged to bring this phase of the graft investigation before the Grand Jury on Monday. George Sipp, his son, J, Howard Sipp, his wife, Mrs. Thomas J. Dorian, and others will be witnesses, and the District-Attorney thinks he will be able to produce evidence which will warrant the Grand Jury in finding indictments. Six men are believed to have figured in raising and Oe tributing the money. SING SING CONVICT LEAPS INTO RIVER; STOPPED BY SHOTS vorce served the papers upon Henry Taft of No. 4 Wall street, Bishop. ‘The amended complaint recites that for a year past Mr. Bishop has been guilty of misconduct with several wom- en, whose names are alluded to only by initials, but It recites a specific Instance in which Mrs, Gwathmey Is named and | wherein the misconduct complained of | 1s alleged to have occurred In December in the Hotel Astor. Mra, Gwathmey readily came to telephone of her apartment in the Hotel Gotham, She was told by a represen- tative of the Evening World of the ac- tion of the lawyer for Mrs, Bishop in amending the complaint, answer was prompt and sweep- attorney for Mr, ‘® The identity of the men who made J the fund meant to silence Sipp and Dorian is a matter of open commént !n Police circ None of these men will) be called before the Grand Jury, as it ts Mr. Witman’s determination to any chance of giving them immunity. Fou's brother spent an hour with Aim im the Tombs yesterday, pleaa- ing with him to save himself, The She auld brother told ‘ne charges made by Mrs. Bishop commune ‘gain by giving tin absolutely and wickedly Whitmas all ee hown to be untrue | OSSINING, Jan, 18—A convict She tas be tried | from Sing Sing Prison to-day), eeded in getting as far as the river, into which he plunged. A few shots fired in his direction to frighten him hed the desired effect, howe’ and he sw teken back to the prison. The man who broke for liberty tw, William Jones, who was brought here from New York on June 17, 1911, to Indeterminate sentence of years to life on @ con- It 1s only charitable to suppose tnat Mra, Bishop {e laboring under delu- What effect the tremendous pressure from two directions will have on Fox {e @ matter of Interest in the Police Department as well as in the Distric! Attorney's office. GRAFT RING'S EFFORTS HAVE NOT HELPED HIM Yer, ‘The graft-vice ring t credited with having raised @ 625,000 fund for Fox’ benefit, but thus far it hasn't done hi any good, and it {s believed when he (Continued on Second Page.) — BIG STORM COMING. Heavy Weathe: Alens 4 The following waa received at the local Weather Bureau this afternoon: ‘Firat northwest storm warning 3.30 w Te- | | | | etle Coast. POM. Storr: central over Lake Erie sees how powerless the “System is to moving northeast, which will shift! gre jas ben employed in the brush| 4d him, he will turn to the District-Ai> to west and northwest to-nigat and] oo) torney @s ao many others have do: pie i Ny aeons esse Fh Jones, undetected by the guards, |!ately, rather than sacrifice themselves port’ climbed up co the top of the treatie and | fF those whose tools they hay been, § Policeman's Fox's trial at Hea | HUNTER MANSION LOOTED. into os Aine because neither Sipp, his son, mor away, but he was seen by ari ‘Thomas J. Dorian appeared when it was he was about fifteen feet from the called again yesterday. The Police De- |partinent, it is understood, will take legal steps to try to compgl the attends shore. The gurrd fired @ shot over the fug!! sh to wcare him and other | guards who ran up also fired, but took |ance of the Sipps. care not to wound him, Jones was| District-Attorney Waltman does sot evidently terrified by the shots, for he |understand the pecullar eagerness of the STAMFORD, ¢ dence of Rovert Hunter, recently 8a date for Gover ft Connecti- pi menAiaNe far a fe this diaries - quickly turned, He was go exhausted | police to bring Fox to trial on the also the aw of Anson Phelpa| that he tad to be led up to charges against him in the department, Stokes, -millionalre, was ran-|dock by a rope, The guards say that| He pointed out that even if Fox At by burglars, Who used to open closets, desks, if he had gone ten feet further when he swam away from the shore he | would have been inyistble from the land Jones, who is thirty-four, will be put on a, diet of bread and water as “| punishment sacked last ni a skeleton key ovawere and trunks. Mr. Hunter in at Pinehurst, N. C., with his wife and family. Until he arrives the extent of the loss cannot be ascer \tained, It is believed the burglars made free he could not be compelled to tify at a police trial as long as a similar erimli charge is pendi against him, If he ts acquitted in ooui i: would be impossible to convict Bu ja the police case, and'if he ts conyi te court, he eutomationhiy qensen t smc ne MRC ATE RR A OMI A Kay SET

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