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THE EVENING WORL: winter, Mr. Mess cross-examined, aam- | called on business, He also got from SENQRA DI VIGIL, WHO WAS KICKED OUT OF TAXI BY CUBAN. ing: ‘eme'a Church in Flatbush, was another eharecter witness. has known Mur- tha for nine and if years. “What is Murtha's reputation for tn- tegrity?’ asked Mr. Glidert. “Good,” replied the witness. ‘Then came Mer. Patrick F. O'Hare of the Church of St. Anthony of Padua, Fiatoesh. He thought Murtha's repu- tation was excellent. “E think I met you before,” said Mr. Croge-examination, and Mgr. ij i “Tea,” went on Mr, Moss, “Tou were @ @earacter witness for Charies H. ‘Hyde, weren't you? That's all.” Aretgbald MoLean, Chiet Engineer of kind eacaped ‘Then Mr. Stanchfield ealle’d Béout. John MaDermott of the ‘Wet One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street station, and, showing him the Bietter, sald: your attention to Dec, 2, 1912. Be there any handwriting there of Capt. 3 g > ¥ 3 rh z ij : Hi E i‘ se & if Es 5 if ii HI i F E it ? i HT i H totee i ° i slefl i E ii | Hy i ! FS E i bE tr il A i Beeie i A @ P K ¥ i = ir, Talley asked me tf IT had sent Hartigan to Walsh, because Hartigan had told him such was the case.” Patrolman McDonald, th ger, corroborated Lieut. Wal: of sending him, though he could not remember the date, Miss Martha W. Mundorff, sister of Hartigan's wife, testified that she was at Hartigan's home on Sunday, ®. G@he identified MoDonald as the messenger with whom Hartigan had left, saying he was going to ¢he station Mr. Stanchfleld called William H. Tait, who aw Thompson at Liberty Deo. 2. William J, Intermann testified seen Thompson at Liberty Dec. 2% and SWEARS THOMPSON WAS QUEST AUG. 4 TO SEPT. 27, 1908. jtanchfield then produced his sec- ond promised alibi for Thompson. Will- jam J, McGrath testified that Thomp- fon -had been at his house at Liberty from Aug. 4 to @ept. 37, 1909, a period when Walsh says he paid him graft. P. &, Tracey was called by Mr, Smyth laa a character witness for Hussey. He knbw nothing but good of the former Inspector and was not cross-examined. John Mulligan, also called as a char- acter witness for Mussey, raised a laugh in which Coust and jury joined when he waid, angrily: myth had euggested that he was husband. Sweeney looked steadily he: ttle gray haired woman had to take the stand. Mr Battle reverted at once to Deo. 9, and asked her what Gweeney had done on that day. She testified he spent the day at home and in the evening went with her to his sister's 3 i } RE Ext 3 TEOTIFY THOMPSON SAW Y WIFE AND SLEVIN. 1900, was called by Mr. Stanch@eld. Bhe recailed Thompson's stay there while|crose-examination, asked: “Do you recollect whether he hed any “No one except his wife,” the witness ‘Walsh had eworn he twice paid ‘Thompeon graft while the latter was in “You have nursed @ greatemany per- i i charge ef the di July 30, 1 4 call on the Captain at bis Dec, #7 A. Yes, about 230 you talk about Hartigan? A. Lieut. Michael Tierney show from the blotter of the Bixth In- apection District that Thompson had} be say! A. He asked | been on sick leave throughout the mum-|the temperature send Hartigan to see him. 1 ‘Hayes was mentioned in to~day’s tea- timony as having been suspected by f : 2 i : H drive him out of examined him. Q) The statement has been mede here jeeney took police steps against @ipp's Central House at your direction, Did you ever make any request to Bwee- | ney concerning this hotel? A, I did not, Q. Did you have any interest in the; Hartem Hotel or any hotel in that neighborhood? A. I did not. Moas cross-examined, @. Do you know the man who owns Q. Did you know any of the former Q. Pid you ha’ Great many dive keepers and crooks in your association with whom you associated? A. No, sir. Mr, Moss named ten or more places in ae though he regretted that the testified that Sweeney called on Walsh about 9.90. Q. What time did you go down? A. A little before 7 o'clock. Q. How long did you stay? A. About two hours. Q. You went right home. A. Yes. Q, Did your husband go out again that night? A. No, air. WHITMAN PERSONALLY TESTED “Did you hear your mother testify?’ “No, ali “Did you know John Hertigan?” “Yes.” IN FINAL ROUND OF BALTIMORE TOUR semifinals began in all ten divisions | placed her ine lof the Baitimore Country Club's golf ae ea mean time lifting his THREW HER BAG TO ATTRACT TAXI DRIVER, HY said |pope ir. Baltimore. Rach of the five | be? baad hes solation istrict from June 31 to Labaged Sy He was not cross-ex- More than one hundred entries have DENIES DIGORDERLY | been received for the handicap for PERSONS BELONGED TO CLUB. 'which nearly all the New Yorkers have Of surprise in! remained, along with the @outhern din- the court room as Mr. Battle called for;ner this evening under the trees, with real Maryland trimmings. rr beat Small, 6 up and 4 to go. Kerr played better than at any time during the week and in finishing said ped him, just as was the case last fall when he reached the national semi-finalg at Chicago un- \Ger broiling suns. He was out in 38 weeney's efforts to! Which is only a stroke above par. His usiness, Mr, Bartle; best’ points were on the fourth, w’ ve he was @ bit over the green on uls Grive of 270 yards and at the seventh a “birdie” in 8 to par 4, on a twelve- foot putt. Small was never up after the first hole, Indeed he won oniy one hole thereafter, the thirteenth \There were no stymies, Kerr played out the bye holes for a handicap score and tallied 74, the best medal count so far thia week, Card: Kerr: Harlem known to old residents as dives lof the lowest repute, and asked Hayes Wf he knew thelr owners. Q, How many thugs were membere of | foot pust for a 2 awainst par 8 your association. A. I never knew that| eleventh, W7 yards, Pope laid him that Mr, Tal- . the estate uf! It wes an uncomfortable Mteen min-| Corkian and Kerr met in Tdeutensnt utes for the former Sheriff, whose eyes round, yards, In two atrokes and holing atymile on the Afth which was halv charge of simple aenau! Edward C. Nagle, chauffeur of the taxicab, and this was most distasteful the jaw. Rose tried to have Camino held but one class of a quart of o After dinner he took the Senora to the Century Theatre, and after the show he took her to @ restaurant Circle, inson, a Mercereburg Academy sprin ie to-day credited with a new woi the t GALLANT CUBAN HFLD FOR KICKING Chancellor of Consulate Sore-|Anti-Jap Measure May Reach ly Distressed When Asked | Governor To-Night, but He to Get $1,000 Bail. SPENT FRIEND'S $250. Woman Swears She Gave Di Camino Money Before They Started Out. What happesed to Angel Peres 4i Camino, chancellor of the Cuban Con- ulate when he was arraigned in West Bide Police Court to-day before Magis- trate Kernochan filled him with dis- tress. First he was held in $600 bail on a charge of simple assault preferred by, Senora Maria Zanacona Viuda 4! Vigt, the beautiful young widow from Then he was held in hold the Cuban. Senora di Vigil was in court, accom- panied by friends. She wore about $10,000 worth of diamond jewelry and Glittered like an iceberg. Through an interpreter Senora 4! Vigil sald she was the widow of a Spanish tenor who was killed by a in the City of Mexico surrection in March. She came to New York from Havana Afteen days age to see her young gon, who is in school here, and as it was her first visit she hampagne. in Columbus would take tho Senora to Maxim's, /mot inherit land. Upon the death alien jand holder his property sold by the probate court coeds distributed to his ‘The wovereign right to enact any However, he soon fell asleep on the floor, Camino was represented by counsel im court today, Counsel said Camino would eoon furnish the required 61,000 bail Senora di Vigil promised the Magistrate that she would remain in New York to eppear as prosecuting wit- ness against Camino when he is ar- ned for trial in the Court ef Special Sessions. en ROBINSON, MERCERSBURG BOY, BEATS SPRINT RECORD. STATE COLLNGE, Pa., May 2.—Robd- ‘a record, the 230 yard dash in 204-5 seo- onds, made in the Interscholastic meet here. Five timekeepers caught the fig- ure, and engineers are to-day measuring the distence to further verify the rec- ord, Robinson also ran 10 yards in n|9%-6, equalling the record, ooo NT FASHION SUPPLEMENT, coploasly TO WAIT FOR WILSON. Johnson Will Give President tary Bryan's mission to Callrornia is ended. Without waiting for the Assem- bly to take action on the anti-alien land holding bill he will leave Sacramento for the Kast at way of Los Angeles. What observations the Secretary has to make on his visit will be contained Havana whom he kicked out of a taxh in his report to the President; he hed ab in Central Park West Thursday nothing to say of it here. Mr. Bryan night when she repulsed hie advances, 18 hurry to Wadhington without in- pail on a t@fTuption, accepting no invitations to make stops on the way. At Tucson, Fis., he expects to be joined by his son for a brief chat. In the mide of his preparati to Camino, for Nagle broke his right la Sacremento Secretary, of 8 ie preferred by | picked up to-day the w: @te and began final co! the Bloodgood bill, which is identical with the Webb redraft of the anti- alien bills passed early this morning by the Senate PRINCIPAL PROVISIONS OF THE aliens are permitted for a period of not exceeding three years. There is a ques- thon as to whether renewals would be lawful, ! ! Ir bn fe Hu rH: fe CORNELL WINS DUAL MEET Michigan met in @ dual meet here this ond, @ feet 21-3 inches; McCutcheon, Cornell, third, @ feet 3 inches. first; Hembaugh, Michigan, second; Cadiz, Cornell, third. Time, 9m 38 1-58 feet @ inches, Gles— Phillip!,Cornell, firet; Shelton, Cornell, second; White, Michigan, third, Time 26 1-58, div taky Gah Sa. vast Will Not Hurry Signing. “Reasonable” Time to Make Any Protests. SACRAMENTO, Cal, May 8.—BSecre- 5 thie afternoon by hand hitting the Cuban chancellor on Bryan sent word at noon to Gov. John- Finally Policeman Walter son and the presiding officers of the «wo @ houses of the Legislature asking for charge of disorderly conduct, but Mag-‘another conference at % o'vlook this fatrate Kernochan ruled that the two afternoon. charges of assault should suffice to} Gov. Johnson is expected to have in his hands to-night an allen land bill barring Japanese and other allens ineligible to citisenship from the ownership of land in California. He has agreed to delay signing the bill until opportunity shall be given for hearing whatever protests President Wilson may desire to make, In the Governor's own words, this delay ‘will cover a “reasonable time,” probably mot more than ten days, certainly mot more than thirty. Although the act is designed to ex- elude all aliens ineligible to citisen- ship, it is drawn in conformity with treaty obligations and guarantees to every alion his full treaty rights, omit- ting the phrase “ineligible to citisen- ship,” objected to by the Japanese, ‘With this programme the Assembly ‘k of the Sen- ration of BILL. ‘The principal provisions of the bill are as follows: 1, Allens eligtble to citizenship may ac- quire and bold land to same extent as citizens. 2 All other aliens are limited to the specific rights conferred upon them by the existing treaties between the United States and the nations of which such aliens are citizens or subjects. + In the cage of the Japanese the bill prohibits ownership of farming or agri- cultural lands, while permit own residences and factories, manufac- tories and shops, tting them to 3% Leases of agricultural land by such 4 Allens ineligible to citizenship i if “4 ft i k & a iG 1345 sbi FROM MICHIGAN EASILY. ITHACA, N. Y., May &—Corneli and Two Mile Run—Stelden, Cornell, Pole Vault—Halsted, Cornell, first, 13 ‘Van Kennen, Cornell, second, 11 et 9 inch Milton, Cornell, third, 11 ‘Two Hundred and Twenty Low Hur- Two Hundred and Twenty Yard Dash , Cornell, ousens, Cornell, jan, third. Time, Hammer Throw — Kohler, Michi; first, 160 feet 7 inches; McCutcheon, Cor- Mell, second, 150 feet 3 inches; Bannis- ter, Cornell, third, 14 feet € inches, High Jump—Sargent, Michigan, first, 6 feet 2 inches; Warner, Cornell, second Michigan, third, 5 Half Mile Run—Jones, Cornelli, firat; ‘Chapman, Cornell, second; Bond, Michi- gan, third, Time, 1m. 54 2-58, Broad jump—Whinery, Cornell, first, 21 feet 6 inches; Waring, Michigan, sec- ond, 21 feet & inches; Lynch, Cornell, third, 31 feet 2 inches. Total scores: Corné’ 9%; Michigan, 31, —_—o—__ Soccer Tithe for Harvard. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 3—Harvard won the intercollegiate soccer cham- plonahip of the East to-day by defeat- {Ing Columbia, 4 goals to & AY 8, 1918. CALIFORNIA SENATE VOTES FOR WOMEN SUSPECT MILITANTS! WIFE OF EDITOR PASSES ALIEN BILL; | PARADE IMPRESSES SENORA IN TAX, BRYAN GOES HOME| A GREAT THRONG, ATRAILROAD PLANT} TIME FOR DVD (Continued trom First Page) OF $500,000 BLAZE| SUES A SECOND ‘4 ‘ ‘representatives of the States which have already acknowledged the right of wom- en to vote, bearing the banner of Okla- homa. Ghe was dressed like a squaw, ut wore no war paint, leaving that, as she @aid with a quiet emile, to the sisters| BRADFORD, Engiand, May 8—Exten- sive sheds belonging to the Midland Rafiroad and containing quantities of freight were burned down here during the night, causing « loss of $500,000, Mysterious fires these sheds on three successive Friday nights. The militant suffragettes were Suspected of arson, but there was no Proof of this. The latest fire was evi- ently incendiary, as the firemen discov- ered that it had been started simulta. Meously In geyeral parts of the building, | lesal separation. which ie $90 yards long by 60 yards wide. The fire began at 10 o'clock last night AN manner of devices were used to convey to spectators an impression of the growing strength of the Suffrage movement. Street wide framed dan: ners, inecribed witn cause, were carried by platoon after Groups of pretty girls, all reseed exactly allxe carried Mage on which were inecribed explanations of what Votes for Women would mean to the workingman and his daughters. The spectators were almost unani- mously orderly and respectful. There were few attempts, once the parade had ted, to raise a daugh mottos of the their tempers, Pientiful police guard had little to do except to keep the crowd ‘ack to the curb ling The heat bad its effect on he paraders before the lines were formed. Tho square and the aide streets showed many flushed and perspiring faces and feare were expreased that many of the marchera might be overcome before the freight care and quantities of dry goods and carpets being consumed by the flames. The firemen were able to save the adjoining buildings only by directing all their efforts to them and flooding them with water. Earlier in the night a fire hed been started in some cars loaded with straw in another yard apparently to divert operations of the incendiaries, ABBRDEEN, Scotland, May %.—One of the public schools of this city was partly ut, burned early to-day by militant suftre-|o'", Gettes, the damage amounting to $2,600. A large quantity of suffrage literature ‘was found scattered about the building. ‘Mise Dorothy Evans, the Minister of t! War in the cabinet of the Women's So- ber and Political Union, the militant ° suffragette organization, was arrested today at Dover as she was going on] VASSAR GIRL PUTS SHOT board a steamer bound for Calais, France. agreement of the suffragiste to ignore man or woman anti- suffragist might do or say to cause their tempers. Girls in white mortarboard caps and gowns strode calmly down Fifth avenue to thelr assembling points deat and blind to the Jeers of hoodlums, who were already being herded back where they belonged by the police at one o'clock. POLICE PRECAUTIONS AGAINST HOODLUMISM. Every official of the Pollce Depart- ment was determined that the marching women should have a chance to go up Fifth avenue with all the dignity and militant display they desired to show. Word went out that there was to be nothing of the hoodtumism of the in- euguration crowds at Washington on March 3, who jostled the women and laid hands upon them, to-day. Chief Inspector Schmittberger made the prelimingries for the parade his own business, He assigned 1,200 policemen, who were posted ten to each block be- tween Washington square, where the procession formed, to the Plasa at Fifty- ninth street and Fifth avenue, and from Fifty-seventh street and Fifth avenue to Carnegie Hall, where the procession di- vided, part continuing up the avenue to the Plasa and the other going to Car- negie Hall, where a mass meeting was Detectives Traps Francisco Tibaldi By Marked Money Through the connivance of Y. 8. Ki sit!, @ wealthy Japanese tea merchant ot No. 21 Bast Fifty-seventh street, de-| waited upon him to-da! tectives managed to-day to apprehend Francisco TYbaldi, the young eon of an Argentinian planter, just as he had made all plana, they charge, to sell seventeen-| gopoaied as a last year-old Susie Glenn into white slavery. The girl was found cowering in tear of her life in an apartment at No. 151 West Fifteenth street, where, it is alleged, she had been kept by Tybaldi lured her away from her home Washington Square and Fourteenth street the police arrange- jere in charge of Inepector |, Lahey; between Fourteenth and ‘ty-mecond streets of Inspector James H. Gillen; in and about the re- viewing stand in front of the New York Public Library, Fifth avenue and Forty-second etreet, of Capt. Alfred W. Thor, in command of the West Thir- tleth street police tation; Forty-second etreet and the, Plasa of Inspector Cornelius Cahalane, and be- and Forty-seventh sie Hall, of Inspector tween Fifth a street and Car John F, Dwyer. The march was up the avenue to Fitty-seventh street. There the Wom- Political Union rnegie Hall, where @ suffrage meet- ing was held, the other marchers con- Unuing to the Plaza, in the vicinity of which four open air meetings were ago. A few da: street, the Bronx, and told them their|in the saloon and mar! daughter, whom he had known while|passed by him to the ashe was a waitress in @ boarding house | slaver. When the two came out tl in West Ninety-sixth street, was a| Japanese gave the signal to the wat prisoner in the South American's hands and that Tibaldi had offered to sell the girl to him for 62,060. The missing girl's | ried down to the Fifteenth street anxious parents had the Japanese re-|house. There he was arrested, The peat his tale to the police of the Mor- risania station and detectives there ar- ranged with Katagiri to decoy the Ar- gentinian into Ketagiri went turned west to HUSBANDS REVIEW MARCHING Mrs, O. H. P. Belmont’s Political Equality Association marched into marching wives, No women appeared on the reeviewing stand. The euffrage banners were dipped in salute as the marchers passed. _ Two conspicuous figures in the parede ‘Were Mise Alice Paul, Chairman of the newly organized Congressional Assocta- tion, composed of the wives and reia- tives of Congressmen, Senators and Cabinet officers, and the Rev. Antoinette B. Blackwell, pioneer eu one yeare old. Her carriage place of honor in the column, George Lansbury, Member of Parliament and at present a militant suffragist, was bound over to- day at Bow Street Police Court in the sum of $10,000 to keep the peace for a year when he was brought up on a charge based on ao statute of Edward TI, of inciting to crime and misdemean- He declined to find eureties for his behavior and the Magistrate pronounced @ sentence of three months’ imprison- Lansbury afterward consulted some friends and then told the Magis- trate he would like time to consider the queation of an appeal and the Magistrate consented to berate him on ball of $10,000, which was forthcoming. ‘Mra. Carrie Chapman Catt was an in- terested spectator in the courtroom, i SOUTAR BEATS ENGLISHMAN FOR WORLD TENNIS TITLE. “Jock” Soutar afterward defeated ‘Williams. Goutar took the four games in easy fashion and in doing 20 put to- gether 43 aces, Bes! the men played for s stake of, $2,000 o ftragist, ninety- had a formerly Soctalist HELP WANTEO—FEMALE. ee Se REE (BON Acre, 20 wih 356 Hires, Hom He) Number of Fires Started at}Mrs. Richard D. Wycoff Once, Destroy Sheds of Names Brooklyn Woman Midland Railway. as Corespondent. against her husband before Justice Jay- cox in the Supreme Court, ; naming as corespondent Cecilia who 18 said to live at No. 119 Mo street, Brooklyn. The Wyckoffe hat broken out in 8 o'clock next morning i ing and asked who was there. At College Athletic Games She Top SON OF RICH PLANTER Figures of Inez Milholland, Made in 1909. POUGHKEEPSIE, May i—Miss Elizabeth A. Harden of Elisabeth, N. J., to-day broke the world’s record for women in the shot put at the Veesar College field day with a put of 33 feet % by Miss Ines Milholland, the suffragist AND GIRL IS RESCUED |S" Sess see ee leader, in 1900, i JULIUS TO CLOSE SHOPS. sive the poll ort to Julius, —EE Mrs, Richard D, Wyckoff, wife of the editor of the Wall Street Ticker, has brought sult for absolute diveree deen separated for some time, Mrs. Wyckoff having instituted diveres pro- ceedings several years ago and subse- quently amending them to @ guilt for Charlies A. Forshew, an investigator of No, 2 Rector street, Manhattan, tes- and spread quickly, nineteen loaded | tfled for the plaintiff concerning goings on at the Montague street house. For- shew's story concerned occasions when he said he followed the defendant to hie Tt is alleged that Miss Sheer had apartments in the same bulid- ing, that Wyckoff paid visits to her foom and that he remained there from T o'clock in the evening until midnight attention from the principal scene of | *"7 “fer. On one occasion, Forshew asverts, he saw Wyckoff go into the apartments at 7 o'clock and then the light wad put The investigator sald that he got guise of a gas man who had come te ad- Just the fixtures, According to him ‘Wyckoff let him in, the woman opened bathroom door in her night cluth- 32 FEET; BREAKS RECORD. | Sheriff Harburger has promised to take the matter of delicatessens which As “Deal” is Closed. keop open on Sundays into his own hands if the police do not enforce the to-morrow, He wil} chance to-morrow, he told the committee from the Dell- catessen Dealers’ Association, which ‘The committee expressed Itself as be- ing oposed to anybody keeping open in thelr line on Sunday and as the police won't close up the shops they One Hundred and Sixty-third| This afternoon K: aD. the home of Tibaldi! is being held as a witness. B. Altman & Ca, will hold the following Special Sales on Monday, May 5th: Women’s Imported Wraps and Coats, Tweed and Eponge Coats, Crepe Afternoon Gowns, House Gowns, Misses’ and Small Women’s Dresses and Tailor- made Suits, Women’s Hand- embroidered Robes (unmade), Dress Silks, Trimming Laces, Novelty Cotton Fabrics, Imported Cretonnes, and’ Summer Cur. tains and Bedspreads. on Went Fifteenth street, and there, in the presence of the missing girl, a con- tract ef sale was drawn up between them, he says. The Japanese told Ti- bald! to meet him at a certain saloon Katagiri went to the | in Columbus Circle to-day and there the home of the girl's parents at No. 410|money would be paid. ing detectives and they followed Tibaldi when he jumped into a taxi and her- marked money was found in his pooket. ‘Three charges will be lodged against Tibaldi whem he is arraigned in the Morrisania Court to-morrow, The girl