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Unsettied to-night; Wednesday FI probably fair. EDITION. { tid Circulation 1 Books Ope AN? | Che PRICE ‘ONE C ENT (One Prisoner Held at Hacken- sack Turns Out to Be the Wrong Man. RAID ON GANGSTERS. Seven Witnesses of Slaying of Two Policemen Questioned by Dougherty. Results of the police net spread Around the city to prevent the es- cape of Oresto Shieldiana, accused of the murder of Policemen Heaney and Teare and John Risso on Saturday Bight, began to show to-day in re- Porta to Police Headquarters of the @etention of suspects at points all pod the metropolitan district. The case are closing in on the places jere it is supposed that the mur r ie in Giding. and from informa- Heb at hand at Headquarters it Is considered quite certain that Shicld- fana is still in the city. Ohief of Police Dunn of Hackensack Gent word to Headquarters thin after- noon that he thought he had the fugi- tive locked up in the Hackensack jail. Detective Cavine, who was in Passaic ‘working on a clue, went over to Hack- ensack and found that Dunn had the wrong man. The Hackensack suspect Was released, An arrest of a suspect was made in a Fteamship office in Battery Place and another in the West Twenty-third street ferry house, Dozens of men were held up at railroad stations and steamship Diers and questioned by detectives, Dep- uty Commissioner Dougherty has dou- Vled the force on watch at all exits from the city and descriptions of the fugitive have been sent to the railroad detec- tives in the East and South. Seven men captured in raids on resorts of gunmen last night were released at Headquarters this afternoon. These mer were in the Mulberry street poolroom when Rizzo was shot. All of them know Shieldiana, but whether they gave any information of val to his e- abouts could not be loarned from Com- missioner Dougherty. EVERY PORT IN THE COUNTRY 18 WATCHED, ‘The police believe eventually he will try to sail from some American or ‘Canadian port ane watch wil) be kept at all steamship plers indefinitely, It fg not believed it will be dimoult to recognise the diminutive gunman when he comes from cover, as the police have sent out complete descriptions, togeth: ‘with Information starting when he be- @an his career of orime at the age of @leven years. Deputy Com joner Dougherty thinks he has a “fairly good line” on the whereabouts of the man, but until he is certain he will continue to keep @ll avaliable wires at work in other directions, ‘The detectives were not certain to- usal to pay for a borrowed ri was the only thing back of murder, and the consequent kill- ing of the policemen by we murderer, Gang enmity and jealousy, it ts believed, will be shown when all the facts are brought to light. ‘There Is a belief in the department that policemen will soon get modified orders that will enable them to properly handle men known to them to be “bad.’ Now they must approach them in a spir.: of Bentleness and tolerance excup: In cases where a crime has been com- mitted or 18 about to be. } report that an order may day to search every suspicious person (Continued on Last Page.) — eer ‘Two Appointed by Wilson, WASHINGTON, May 6, — President ‘Wilson to-day nominated Albert Lee Thurman of Ohio to be solicitor for the Department of Commerce and Sinclair ©, Townsend of Georgia to be Collec- for of Customs for the District of St. Darvas Wartd Wanta Work Wonders. |i: There is a of detectives at work on the’ Bo out to-| MANY SUSPECTS CAUGHT IN NET POLICE SPREAD FOR SLAYER OF THREE 29 MEN WOUNC_J AS STRIKE MOB OF 400 FIGHT POLICE Rioters in Syracuse Use Bul- lets and Stones Against Pistols of Officers. SYRACUSE, N. ¥., May &—Twenty- five men, strikers and policemen, were wounded to-day in a series of riots that forced the calling out of troops and brought to @ crisis the strike of the ; laborers and hod carriers in this city. Two of the riotere were shot, one fatally. Four policem@n ang eight of the strikers are in hospitals, “Shoot to kill” was the order given the police this afternoon. It is probable that martlal law will be declared by night. Joseph Haltee, a striker, was shot through the stomach and will dle, while Giovanni! Deopolo, another rioter, suf- fered a bullet wound in the thigh. Po- liceman David Tumpkowsky's skull is believed fractured. Other policemen injured by flying sto Jacob Manheim, Gec Patrick Grifith, Louis Zinameister, Thomas Driscoll, Charles Hopkins and Jacob Schmidt, The most serious of the dozen riots occurred In front of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, where practi- cally the entire police force and fire- men fought a mob of 500 strikers, all of whom were Italians. The rioters hurled showers of bricks and stones, while the police used their revolvers, first firing over the heads of the crowd, then later shooting at the men. Many of the strikers were armed and re- turned the fire of thepolicc, In this ra fell under the bul- seriously hurt wounded. ‘The strikers we iting the better of the police when the firemen were called and, turning a hose on the mob, forced them to evatter, The rioting was in St. Mary's Cir: aaiy two blocks from the city's business centre. Sheriff Matthews and Police Chief Caddin hurried to the scene and, real- jaing the serious condition facing the clty the Sheriff held a consultation with Mayor Schoeneck and the iocal militia was called out. Riots in other parts of the city were quickly quelled, ‘at a dozen men were injured in the clashes. The princpal riot began when the mob interfered with the men who wete pulling down the old house of Bishop John Grimes to make place for a new itty policemen arrived on the scene and fought the strilcrs, revolvers against bricks. Another clash followed at the Firat Baptist Church, After the first outbreak, which took place directl, opposite the county court. house, the fire hose was used and the mob was driven down on Onondaga street to the corner of Warren, in the heart of the business district. Here the rioters made another stand and shooting began again this time in the vicinity of the cathedral, Rioting was renewed this afternoon und Chief of Police Cadin sent all his men out, with Instructions that if they lad to shoot to shoot to kill, Major J. B. Tuck announced after a conference with Chief of Police Cadin taat Company € had been called out, Lieut, Harry H. ner is in com- mand. In the event that the other two panies were called, Gen, O'Ryan 1 a staff officer to take charge uation y © Was held at the armory fully equipped for service, ne the strikers called a and seven policemen ‘The strike of the building laborers started @ week axo, The men demand an increase of wages. They now re- cents an hour and ask for an on @ aliding basis from 32 to 40 cents an hour. The contractors rejected the demands of the men, and the laborers, about 2,600 in number bry nearly all Italians, have paraded erecta daily. They tried to induce ether laborers to stop work, 4 bao 101%. by The Preee Poblishing (The York Werld). further threatened dismiesal for several HIGH SCHOOL BOYS CREATE A RIOT AND |: Overturn Tables and Destroy| $ Food Intended for Stuyve- sant Pupils. FREE FIGHT FOLLOWS. Teachers and Pupils Mix It Up and Police Have to Be Called, A free for all fight between the pupils and teachers of the Stuyvesant High School this afternoon called out the! reserves to the ald of the teachers who were hard pressed by the angry pupils, ‘The trouble started at noon when the boys went downstairs to luncheon and refused to eat following their assertion that they would go on strike over condl- tions which existed in the school. Pursuant to a plan formulated by the leaders, they overturned tables and broke dishes, scattering the contents over the floor, They drove back the teachers, who came to restore order. After they had returned to their clase rooms the teachers warned them that they muet not | @ building until school was dismissed. The teachers whose names had been taken in connec- tion with the disturbance at noon. At 2.30, Just as school was over, more serious trouble started. The boys col- lected outside and locked the school doors against their teachers while sev- eral more daring ones began to hurl bricks at the windows. When the teachers managed to get out they were attacked by the pupils, and they rolled about on the ground kicking, biting and punching. Th coming of the police who were telephoned for ended th disturbance. No arrests were made but an Investig: tion has been started out of which it is @atd will come arrests and @ general dismissal from school of all those who Pashcart Ordinance Passed. The pushcart ordinance drafted by Mayor Gaynor’s commission was passed by the Board of Aldermen this afternoon without a dissenting vote. The Mayor hah already announced his approval of It, so that his be attached. 7 to remove peddlers from the atreets. sets aside for their exclusive use spaces under the bridges, besides authorizing covered market places for them in other parts of the city. They are to be charged @ nominal fee for stand privi- leg: eo Reporter Takes Gas a Dies. Raffale Adinolphi, thirty-four years old, @ reporter living at No, 152 Went Forty-elghth street, committed suicide by taking at his home thie after- noon. His neighbors broke down his door w they smelled the gas in the nd found him stretched out in his hallways on the floor with a gas tube mouth, ey NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK. CINGUOATIc: 010011 110400 aT F BROOK Ly N. CHICAGO— GIANTS: 0300000003 BROOKLYN— 20000 b20 -—4 aT “BOSTON. PITTSBURGH— | 000000 = BOSTON— oo020000 AT PHILADELPHIA. $T. LOUIS— 000000201 PHILADELPHIA— 3 NEW YORK, ‘TUESDAY, CLSOHHS TL OHO SECSESS OCHS STE RS, ARYAMOLLEN 3 2 994000464. SOOO OO rae O-b4 64 $44-006004 BACK TO THE HATBOX FOR THE EARLY STRAW LIDS! COLD WAVE'S DUE! SOPSI-OVTD HOGS SOOOSOSEHOODO9OOS S99 Precocious Headgear Will Be Frozen Out To-Morrow, Weather Man Says.. Straw hats, GOOD NIGHT! Good old May fifteenth ta the date, after all, These “sooner” the nifty lds of finest plait, better Hsten to what Old Dr, Scarr, the weather specialist, had to say from his to this afternoon: “To-morrow Sure, “How cold? “Well, or make it ‘cooler.’ “Cold enough to make a straw hat look foolish?’ “Well, that depends on taste, of course; but the man who wears a straw hat to-morrow will feel un- dreseed—that's all Just naturally naked! ‘The cold—or cooler—wave is due to wrap itself around New York some time late to-night and the little stranger will be in our midst all day to-morrow and maybe hang over !nto the, next day. The atmospheric pressure !s ali foozled '@ out over the Atlantic Ocean are going to have @ “general as the result. n't expose a straw “eady’ reaction to-morrow resonant and reverberating hor will on you. OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE DECLINE JUNE DATE HERE. ORD, England, M. 6—The ath. thorities of the Universities of doand Cambridge have declined the challenge from the Univers! Harvard and Yale for a track and meet at the Harvard Stadium tn this year. The reasons given are lack af the nocessary funds at thagelme and cold." cold, that's all; to any © 0 0 0 O 1 O_O O— Altre facts that the craminations will| and smrageted across Te CO They euggeat the being mo ns) Sy ene ae MAY 6, April Fool Bride and Mother Who -Asks Court to Free Girl 190900080800 F1 HH HOTO1OOEEH MILITANT CAUGHT PLANTING A BOMB INLONDON HOTEL Was Placing It at Entrance to the Grand, Crowded With American Tourists. LONDON, May 6—A militant euffra- Sette caught at 290 A. M. to-day by the police in the act of vlacing a bomb at the entrance to the Grand Hotel, which wae crowded with American tour- {ets, was brought up at Bow Street Police Court later im the day and re- manded by the Magistrate for further = laugh | t-'@pectors at all porte of entry inquiries, She the name of Ade Ward. ‘The bomb was tn canister to which Mghted fuse, while the words “Votes wrapped around it. The policeman discovered the woman the form of a tin wae attached « @ placard bearing for Women” was chaps, with | just in time, as the fuse wa: beginning to n briskly, He seised her and she struggled #0 hard to escape that it was with diMculty he managed to stamp Gut the fire and prevent an explosion. The hotel which was the object of her attack is asltuated on Trafalgar Square facing the spot where the dis- turbances at the foot of Nelson's cok umn occurred on Sunday between the police and the militant ‘euffragettes ‘and thelr supporters, ' Another outrage attributed to the muffragetton followed the discovery of the bomb at the Grand Hotel St. Cath- Church, the parish church of m, in the southeast of London, gutted by fire a few hours later, the blase is placed by the police to the account of militants. The edifice, which belongs to the Episcopal Church and whose vicar was the Rev. Howard J. H, Truscott, was well alight | before the fire was discovered, and the | Foot crashed in soon after the arrival of the firemen, Itev, Howard | vr smoke (ssuing from the windows number of hassocks were found rated with oll, Seotiand Yard has learned of an scheme of the Women's Bo 4nd Political Union to have their sup- Preased Suffragette @ Bers mnt Ta Customs in. belled “women's wear.” fupge warned of the plot ad al) 1913. | tt save he maw | three women in the church shortly be fore the fire broke out. He assumed | they were worrhippers, an the edifice Was always kept open for private prayer throughout the day. The Vicar loft che building while the women were still there and shortly afterward saw — APRIL FOOL BRIDE WANTS THE COURT TO END HER JOKE Seventeen-year-old Model Ran Away in With A Millionaire. Auto FLED AFTER CEREMONY. Miss Mullen Had a Rude Awakening When She Real- ized It Was April 4st. The April Foot's Day marriage of Miss Sadie Mullen, a Gibson model and frontispiece of magazines, to Lioyd Read, a romantic millionaire lawyer of Akron, O., in Pittsburgh last year, came up for annulment before Justice Gerard to-day, when the little bride asked the Court to end the matrimonial joke. With Miss Mullen was her mother, Mrs. Marie Phillis Mullen. Mrs. Read attracted unusual attention in ‘the divorce court, Her appearance was @ striking symphony im brown, from the drooping brewn hat which adorned luxuriant brown halk te the tiny brown slippers. Her gown was brown military effec out. Miss Mullen met Read while en tour with a Broadway beauty show at Akron, in Read's big car the couple were wed- ded by a Pittsburgh Alderman whom they routed out of bed early April 1, 12. According to Mias Mullen, she sud- denly awakened to to realize that she wan an April Fool's bride, Without « moment's further reflection she left Read in his car, boarded a train and went back to her company in Akron.that night. Two days later she came to New York and told her mother of her foolishtene. ‘Mrs. Mullen promptly engaged Lawyer William Klein and an action was atart- ed to annul the marriage, Read appeared by counsel, but when he learned that New York State laws hin wife is entitled to have the ceremony quashed, he decided not to offer fur- ther objection. Read was not present when the suit was tried to-day, Although the present law of New York which Justice Cohalan recently criticieed because of ite “trial pear 4 provinion was the one invoked Read, Mr. Klein arndiona an eatieuaice volume of the atatutes of Pennsylvania of February, 17%, which provided that Persons not of legal age cannot con- tract marriage, He eald that even in King George's provinces there was a remedy provided for the young who marry and tire of their epouses before attaining legal age. This etatute is @nid to have deen drafted by William Penn, The law is @ rigorous one and forbade marria; unless banne were published and t! parties were residents of the county in which the ceremony was to be had Mra, Read je ving with her mother in West One Hundred and Third atreet. Mrs, Mullon exhibited her daughter's birth certificate, showing that at the time @he and Read eloped to Pittsburg that Sadie was only seventeen years and « few months old, oo WAGON KILLS A CHILD. Play. While playing tag this afternoon with @ number of other children in front of his home, No. 1155 Washington Avenue, the Bronx, Samuel Friede, aged five ran headlong Into @ sorse driven by G. Henry Welshaus, of No. | | M2 East One Hundredth street, Bofore| | the horse could be a! |, the front Dussed ov | wheel of the wagon causing instant death, Polle of the Morrisiania station, arrested Weixhaus, but no charge was preferred against h eye witnesses declaring he was »! ie was wet free. Kea purporting to be feminine attire 1 be rigidly examined, Miss Nina Boyle and Miss Anna Munro, militant suffral Were arrested rid. | “ Circulation Books Open to All.’ oe 18) PAGES Casecttied to-night) NGPECTORS IEEE ITSELF PROVES GUILT, WHITMAN'S LAST WORD? Alibi of Thompson and Obtaining f° Affidavits Against Sipp Evidence — of “Frame Up” Informer Had Filed. BIG CROWD RUSHES COURT AND WAITS EDITION. ‘Wedneotay probvabiy tain E ONE " OnNT. Before Graft FOR VERDI Counsel for Defendants Base Plea on Denunciation of State’s Witnesses as Perjurers. The jury retired to deliberate on a verdict inthe case Gf Inepestam t of fashionable! Sweeney, Murtha, Thompson and Hussey late this afternoon. Distrieh. Attorney Whitman summed up with a demand for conviction, after 0, After a furious cross country drive| earnest erdeavor to show that the defense’s own tactics had Proven te guilt of all four. Thompson's alibi he reversed into a boomerang, that; showed he had ample time for a part in the conspiracy to send Sipp out Sweeney, he bos gathered his accusing affidavits five days. he “character” testimony he ridiculed as top: ‘of town. before Sipp had left. easy to be obtained. Justice Seabury then charged the jury on the points of the law, A great crowd that filled the Criminal Court Building, recalling the. scenes at the trials of Thaw and of Becker, assembled during the lunchsom: — hour and remained awaiting the verdict. MOVE TO RECALL ‘HIGH HAT’ MAYOR FOR ‘MOVIE POSING Some in Rais te Mass., Object to Hurley Being Pictured Sav- ing Silk Tile From Fire, up (By United Pros.) ¥. Hurley, famous aa the proud wearer), of the “tilted” high silk tile, to-487lorought up by counsel tor and confessed’ he might “pooh-hooed” the movement on foot to recall him because he posed for the “movies,” reapuing the aforesaid high ailk tile from the fiames enveloping his of Sin hundred of the 1,700 signatures necessary for @ recall have been ob- tained and citisens who are angered be- cause of the Mayor’e “antics” say they will have the others within a week. In exposing his posing and riding through the streets in @ placard-be- decked automobile with the ‘movie" men Mayor Hurley declared that it was good advertising for the city, He said that manufacturers seeing the fine apparatus for fighting fires would be attracted to the city. —_————. Italy Must Pay War Claim. THE HAGUE, Netherlands, May 6,— ‘The Franco-Italian Court of Arbitrae tion dealing with the selaure by Italian warships during tie Turco-Itallan war do Police Captain Tierney of the Bits Deth street station had twelve reserves Ground Justice Seabury’s court ream. trying to hold back the throngs, It announced that the 4 Opened at 21 It was the jury returned from then the doors were meantime the court room dante, who had been admii side doors, eo there were dosen vacant seats when ‘Were opened, CROWD RUSHES COURT, DEFIES POLICE. Angered, the crowd tried te “rugh™ the court room, The threng became ee unruly that Capt. Tierney was Saalig compelled to give the order to clear | the corridors and his had great difficulty in obe: It was nearly 24 when SALEM, Mass, May 6.—Mayor John} Pesan to speak. “But I want 1 to keep ta urged earnestly, “that our has not been refuted. case on the record of thie Practically denied. eloquence. member that the oa fact adil! stands out. These defendants at the tar are gulity, Eloquence and oratory cannat ‘\; change this essential fact." : Mr. Whitman then admitted some ef i , hie witn painted hom he had prosecuted as baad But, he reminded the jury that ee men are not bosom companions crooks and grafters. i si joo! efter i el SS OP ee i li it with favored quests of i et He [ f Po 5 | a i He begen by would be difficult, in the short could take, to angwer petate te : them, uncontradicted ‘Tt want on «were ae black as fe acoused Inspectors and hope I am prosecuting these men.” not consort with sinners, thar h of the French steamers Carthage and Manouba decided to-day that Italy was in the wrong and condemned the Itailan Jat evening pling to hold @ mecting in Hyde Park, when brought up at the police court today and Cyitteen Cars’ inpriseee ate frcsehee to the’ payment ef & fine of five dollars each. “Of course will mot pay.” they told the magitrae Government to pay $32,000 and 9800 in the respective cases, WHITMAN SCOPFS AT “CHAR | as “We have bad te take cur ACTER” TESTIMONY.