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Two Suffragette Bombs on Train; ‘Another Sent to Judge WBATHER—Showers to-night a! FI ‘Thersday. EDITION. “ Circulation Books Open to All.”’ | The PRICE ONE CENT. BOMB SENT 10 BY MILITANTS TWO MORE ON LONDON TRAIN (Attempt to Kill Judge Bennett, Who Has Sent Several Suf- ragettes to Prison. MANY LIVES IN PERIL.! Infernal Machines Menace Rail-| way Passengers—Another Residence Burned. LONDON, May 14.—The suffra- gettes were exceptionally active to INTCHEL CALS AT WATE HOSE 10 SEE WALSIN Coosriatt, 1918, MAGISTRATE WHO PLANT Announces Later He Has Made No Pledge to Remain Col- "lector Four Years. by The Press Oe. (The New York Werld). JOHNSON WIL SIGN ANTIJAP LAND ND MEASURE California pee, Despite Wilson’s Advice, Announces He Will Make Bill a Law. REPLY TO BRY AN READY. Works All Morning on Message Telling His Stand, Then Makes Declaration. SACRAMENTO, Cal, May 14.—After working all morning on his reply to Sec- retary Bryan regarding the allen land Gov. Hiram John act, n announced shortly after noon to-day that he would day in thelr campaign of violence. CANDIDATE FOR MAYOR. me the bill which was sent to him wel ‘They sent a bomb through the mails ‘to a London Magistrate, planted two; days ago with the almoat unanl- mous approval of both houres of the more on a crowded train running into] Appointee Now Free to Make] ‘<sisiature. this city from one of the suburbs and burned a mansion at Sandgate: on-Sea, near Folketone. Police Magistrate Curtis Bennett,! WBv has presided at many of the Bow Street Police Court trials where members of the Women's Social and| Political Union have been sent to} Holloway Jail, was the Justice made} the mark for the wrath of the mili- tants. The bomb was detivered to him by the postinan with a batch of letters and papers, the explosive being labelled “Votes for Women" and wrapped in suffragette literature. The auspicious character of the pack-| age Jed to a hasty examination and! danger of an explosion was averted. Phe packnge was marked “immoedi- ate” wnt, disliking the look of it, « ations court officer took it ontside and plunged it into = pail of water. ‘When the package was opened it was fomma to contain a tin tobacco box bound with wire and filled with gnn- powder, shot and cartridge, Attached to the cap end of the cartridge was a ail, which if it had been struck, would have fired the bomb and exploded its contents, CROWDS ON TRAIN IN PERIL FROM BOMBS. ‘The other two suffragette bombs were found in one of the passenger cars of a local train running between Kingston- on-Thames and London on the South- western Rallway. It was the third out- rage of this kind on the same line within 1wo months. On the arrival at Waterloo Termiius ‘on the Kingston train, crowded with pas- ngers on their way to business, the conductor noticed in one of the com- partments three parcels which aroused suspicion, On Investigation two of them were found to contain tin canisters filled with combustibles and wrapped in sut- fragette placards. No explosion ov- curred asd the bombs were tianded over to the police, A militant suffragette “arson squad’ during the night destroyed a large un tenanted residence, “The Highlands,’ at Sandgute-on-Sea, near Folkestone, on the English Channel, Postcards ad- dressed to the "Dishonorable Prime Minister” and to the “Dishonorable| inald McKenna, Home Secretary,” were left lying about on the premises, ‘There wag also a postcard bearing the | words, “We hope this js not ® poor widow's house.” Schoolboys on being released from thelr lessons are taking @ b in help- ing the militant suffragettes (n thelr velgn of terror. So “bombs” found yesterday and to-day, which on exam- ination proved to be dummies, have been traced to the pupils, The latest “bomb” to be found was picked up this afternoon in the area of the churchhouse tn Dean's Yard, Westminster Abbey, The discov- ery of the machin reated 4 @enaation wntil the pollve ‘ed its harmlessnuss, | PLOTTED THE KIDNAPPING OF, LLOYD-GEORGE, | How kidnapping plots of the suffra- getted were foiled becaine known to the police to-day, Chancellor of tie Ex-| chequer Lloyd-George was to have been | The the victlin of one of these plots, —— ‘ Plans for Campaign Against Murphy. (Special from a Stat The of ‘Wortd.) WASHINGTON, May 14.—John Purroy Mitchel, newly appointed Collector of the Port of New York, had a confer- ence to-day with President Wilson. Af- terward he said to The Evening World: “I intend to take office June 1, but T have not made any agreement to stay] of a coal company at Eckhart e. | the full four years’ term. On the con- trary, Put any such obligation on me. I in- tend to enter actively into the New York State campalgn and do all T can to bring about full and complete direct primaries.” This means that Mr. Mitchel in free to enter the mayorallty ra so that he will be # leading figure in the fight to overthrow Murphy's leadership in Tam- many, Dovk Commissioner Smith accompanied Mr, Mitchel to Washington td have a conference with Secretary of War Gar- rison about New York harbor iinpr ments, Mr, Smith said: “We have come to a most satisfactory axe nt with the War Departnient sarding the temporary extension of the present Chelsea piers, 39 and 60, which run beyond the line, The permit for these existing extensions expires soon, ‘The Secretary has agreed to continue the permit indefinitely pending the com- pletion of the new 1,50-foot plers at -fourth street. This provided that the olty of New York takes immediate definite action to proceed In good falth with the new up- town pier construction, Therefore, have agreed that on May 22 and 3 the Board of Estimate will pass final ap- proval of the plans, and I hope on May 24 to drive the first pile of the piers 1 found Secretary Garrison cordially desirous of assisting in every consistent manner with the improvement of New York Harbor and keenly interested in the development of {ts trade and oom- nerce,”" RICH MAN SHOT IN SCUFFLE; WIFE AND CHAUFFEUR HELD. | oj, yevpna— 001 1. P. McNeil, Nephew of United States Judge Emory Spear of Georgia, Has Bullet in Head. etl, nephew of I'nited . @tatea Judge Pmory Spear of Georgia was shot and probably fatally wounded in a vcuffe with hia wife to-day at Pablo ‘Beach, Mis. MeNel! and Plush Lee, MeNeil's negro chauffeur, both were placed under arrest pending an nv. tigation. the President did not seek to} di new ete 1,700 POUNDS OF DYNAMITE, 70 KEGS POWDER BLOW UP; THREE DEAD; TOWN SHAKEN. Explosion of Coal Company's Magazine Causes Deaths and Heavy Damage. CUMBERLAND, Md., May 14.—Seven- teen hundred pounds of dynamite and| seventy kegx of powder in a magazine mle to-day, killing three men and a nage to houses In the coma: mated at thousands of dollars, sallest ees oleae STABBED WIFE TO DEATH ON ROOF OF THEIR HOME. Thomas Messener attacked his wife, Annie Mearen with a knife and stabbed her to h on the roof of the house at No, 4% Kant Sixty-ninth atroet late this afternoon, according to @ re- port which has reached the police of the Bart Sixty-seventh street station, Messener was captured by policemen and taken to the station. ee es ck |Basehall Games To-Day NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK. CHICAGO— 5300 GIANTS— 3402 AT BROOKLYN. CINCINNATI— 000002 — BROOKLYN— oo1000 ~ AT BOSTON. st, LOUIS— oo0o00 BOSTON— 00003 - AT PHILADELPHIA, UM so0oo011¢0 o10 — AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT CLEVELAND. ACKSONVILLE, Fla, May 14—H. P.| new YORK— 01000 CLEVELAND— o1000 AT DETROIT. BOSTON— 0 - The MoNeils left Jacksonville to-day | DETROIT— for Pablo Beach in thelr automobile. According to statement attributed to the chauffeur and to Mrs, MaNeil she was attacked by her husband, the statements, had drawn a revolver and was attempting to shoot her the scuffle the pistol was discharged, the bullet eniering MeNell's head just wehind the ear | ST. LOUIS— s| 00 ooo1 AT 8T. Louis. Bhe a | grappled with MoNell, who, according to WASHINGTON: cacy AIDA Ohad PAGE 1 NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MAY “14, 1913. FIFTEEN RESCUED FROM SINKING BARK AFTER LONG FIGHT Three Survivors of Heinrich! Emma Reach Here With Tuaaing Tale of Peril. | LASHED TO MAST. | ALL {Captain Saves Pet Parrot | Desperate Leap Into Swir- | ling Waters. | | “Missing at Lloyd's" for the three- |masted Russian bark, Heinrich Emina, has been altered to “lost at sea.” |Capt. Linderman, First Mate Ritsman and Second @fate Schilttenber of the jlomt vessel arrived to-day from Colon on the Hamburg-American ner Cart Schurz, The Heinrich Emma sailed from Pascagaula on the Gulf coast Feb, 28 with a cargo of lumber for Masagal, Morocco. On March 26 the bark ran into a south- easter off Cape Hatteras, ‘he gale struck the vessel suddenly, and alniont without warning, Word wi ven to shorten sail, but the wind, shrieking through the rigging, tore away the fore- topmaliant sail and ripped the mainsail from its fastenings, The canvas went scurrying through the sky like flaken of snow. The topgallant and topmas:n went crashing to the deck, and part of the crew hurried forward with axes and cut away the hanging rigging, let- ting the masts go by the board. ‘The gale had increased to the force of | hurricane, and the bark was sen scudding through the tempestuous se under bare poles, Waves swept the ves sel'n deck, and each green comber threatened to engulf her. Everything movable was washed overboard and | crew had to hang on for their lives, 01 of the blackened sky, the lghtning | blazed, and thunder roared about bark with the voice of a thousand can- nons. The mainmast was struck oy lightning and went down with a crash, MEN RISK LIVES IN EFFORT TO i SAVE SHIP. At the risk of their lives, the men ‘backed away with their axes at the rig- |ging of the broken spar. The mast, dragging in thewater, gave the veaso! & dangerous list to port, but the crew stuck to thelr work, until the wreckage Was cleared and the ship again rightes, | Then the cry went up that the bark | ‘naa sprung a leak, ‘The men, well nigh Jexhausted from thelr labors, were sent to the pumps, but the water gained on them in the hold, All the while the | storm was growing more furlous, The wind was singing through the shrouds and whistling through the tattered can- vas, while the waves rolled over the ldeck, shooting spray above the crow's \nest. With terrific thumps mountains ‘of water pounded against the bow. The |lightning streaked tho dark skies and | the thunder still ro: 4 Night fell, and the next happening was the carrying away of the mizsen-| mast, More work for the tired seamen, who stuck valiantly to thelr task of| chopping away the mizzen rigging, with the deck of the Heinrich Emma awash, Capt. Linderman realized all hope for the vessel was gone and he ordered the men to the only remaining yard of the foremast, The crew took what pro- ‘yinions they could carry and lasted themselves to the rigging. Capt. Lin- derman had @ pet parrot, his companion of ten years, and he carried the chat- | tering frigh do bird with hin Jinto the rig Then the crew waited \tor the end. There wan no chance to| ‘\eave the wreck, for every boat had | been smashed by the seas, | SURVIVORS OF STORM RESCUED | BY PASSING STEAMER, | On March 2, three days later, the sleainer San Jose, of the United Fruit lune, bound “from Hoston for Port mon, Costa Tica, sailed out of the rm, into @ bright eky and « awell- The lookout reported an object far away on the horigon, He thought it w a mast, and there seemed to be men on it, The captain's glass re. some dark objects on the yard, and course of Lhe steamer was altered. | Soon the Jose was close enough }to lower @ lifeboat. The bout went Jaway in charge of the second mate, aud the 6Mcer saw that he da not go too near the derelict for of belie sucked In by the swelling and rolllag ling in @ skiff on the poi BOY HERO AND CHILD FOR WHOM HE GAVE HIS LIFE IN WATER. 9-YEAR-OLD HERO GIVES LIFE TO SAVE HIS BROTHER OF 4 Salvatore Ciccone Sacrifices Self Rather Than See Iginio Drown. If the recording angel displays emotion he must have smiled tenderly as he hovered above the corpse of nine-year- old Salvatore Cicaone, lying In a plain pine box at No. 7% Washington avenue, Belleville, N. J., to-day, Tho angel may even have shed a tear of pity as he entered the boy's name among the honored rolls of “gehtlemen unafr For Salvatoer Ciccone did a brave deed. He died that his four-year-old brother might live, and he died knowingly and unafraid Yesterday afternoon he rescued his brother, Iginto, from drowning, after had fallen out of @ skiff, and while holding the little fellow up to the gun- wale of the boat he was seized with a cramp, Reallaing that if he, too, clung the low gunwale, the boat would verturn, he elected to try for the shore and sank after @ few yards, Both brothers, with a companion, James Arthur, nine years old, went row- at Hillside Md Circulation Books Open to All.’? WEATHDR—Showers to-night and Thareday. EDITION. 20 PAGES PRICE ONE OENT. GUNMAN'S FATHE ARRESTED AS B WINE FOR ALDERMEN OR ALDERMEN IN TRIPLE MURDER \ Girl Witness Swears She Saw} Two Shot With Weapon Handed to Son. FIND HIDDEN REVOL VER. | Cousin of Fugitive Shillitoni Captured in Flat With Pal, Who ,Tells Secret. Michael Shillitonl, fifty-four years old, the father of Or ‘Shieldtana,” who ts accuned of killing Pollcemen Teare | and Heaney and John Risso, a gangman, | in Mulberry street a woek ago Inet Sat- urday night, was arrested to-day and} locked up at Pollce Headquarters | charged with homicide, It 1s alleged that Shillitoni handed his son the weapon with which Risso and at least one of the policemen were shot. Shillitont has been in this country twenty years. He owns the tenements at Nos. %1 and 241 Mulberry street and n@ son Oresto lived with him at Ne. U1, Relatives of the family Hved there, too, and by trailing two of there to| Harlem last night, detectives found the fevolver with which, they’ believe Orato id the killing, ‘They also arrented « cousin and a pal of Oresto and are hokling them on a charge of violating the Sullivan law. GIRL WIT! SAYS SHE SAW WEAPON PAI 5 Following these arrests a swarm of detectives, working on information un- expectedly gained, began’ a house to house search of the tenements along Mulberry street in the vicinity of the scene of the crime. Acting Capt. Mc- Kinney was in charge of the search and early to-duy he located Nellie di Carlo, sixteen years old, im the home of her *|Orerto, both of whom she kne! Park, N. J., nearly opposite thelr hone. Iginio sat in the stern while the other two paddled out. When they wer a hundred feet from the shore, Iginio tried to clainber up to the bow. LAD GOES INTO WATER FOR BROTHER. ‘The boat rocked as he ato and he toppled sidewise Into the water, Juat as he felt himself golng, the boy oned out to hin brother, Without walting an instant, Salvatore Jumped over the side after him, Bn. cumbered by his clothing and only @ or swimmer, having Just learned be- yond the “dog paddle” stage, he made indifferent progress, but was able to reach Iainio ax he came up the second time, Somenow, he managed to hold him up, While the other boy, shouting for help, attem to bring the aki to Where his companions were strug- gling, 1; Was some minutes before Ig- inio was able to grasp the gunwale and hang on, supported by Salvatore, who trod water sustaining hi Men on the shu heard the ertes and launched another boat, leaky and with: out cars, whii poled along with t Ao ee cm ee a aR a stick and paddled siowly, Meantime] the bare little toon which is the best Salvatore was getting exhausted, His! his parcats can afford, le will be) face showed pain, and he tried to jift| buried tosmorrow, and the entire Itallan| his brother high enough to enable the! colony of Belleville will follow the ether boy to help into the skiff. ‘The! ke Mough they ave rough people, sunwale Was scarcely aN Inch fin the) they jam that in the crucible of life lin iad tn the boat leaned | Raina Was tented to the ui & cramp. He found bis fingers con: tracting. Ho might have caught at the bowt und joverturned it, He would have saved Himaelf, but Iginio would have surely | drowned, Bo the nine-year-old boy re- | « Lampeter wean te Parents on the sceond floor front of No. AT SECRET MEETING ON TAXICAB RATE LAW oa NS le Grimm, Head of Committee in Charge of the Ordinance, Tells Grand Jury of Joy Rides in the r Yellow Machines, CHAMPAGNE PARTIES FOR CITY OFFICIALS. Witness Says After Leaving Stand He Has Told All He Knows ° About Rate Law Hold-Up. Under a waiver of inymunity Aklerman Senry F. Grimm spent ¢wo hours before the Grand Jury to-day and told of joy rides and champagne parties given by officials otthe-Yetlow“Paxicab Company to city of ficials and of a secret meeting held at an uptown hotel two weeks ago. at which taxicab legislation was discussed, DRESSMAKERS CALL A FRAUD AND CHEAT has tecusd that he took part im amy - Also an Atrocity Perpetrated Those who attended, he said, were Harry Swarts, vice-president and ae- tive manager of the Yellow Taxiead Company; Bert Hull, a clerk im ¢he Board of Aldermen, and himeelt, tola im M3 Mulberry street. The police had deen looking for the «irl, ‘ She signed an aMdavit swearing that on the night of the murder she wan leaning out of the front window of her father's flat, listening to the muste of a band playing to celebrate the opening of the vafe and poolroom of Perotto Doe naselo at No, 2% Mulberry street. She saw the elder Shilliton! and his son, well leave the poolroom and walk up the Street until they were directly under her window. Michal handed his son an object that wlittered in the Hght and Oresto slipped it up his rght sleeve. Then the two walked back and stood outside the pool- room, Soon John Rix, Oresto's enemy, came out in his shirt sleeves, Ho was eating something which he carried tn ils right hand. Orente stepped slipped w revolver from his right and shot Rizso dead in racks, Two mon dragged the body of Kizao into « hallway, BAW POLICEMAN HEANEY KILLED BY ORESTO, TOO. A an (Heaney) ran up, the girl swore in her affidavit. Oresto pointed the revolver at the policeman, (Continued on Second Page.) eee = leased hie hold on Iginio and swam stiffly toward shore. He had only gone five yards when he sank, SALVATORE !S8 HONORED IN DEATH AS IS A HERO'S DUE. The rescuing party arrived and hauled Iginio into thelr boat. There was trave of Salvatore, not even bubbles they found irons, ‘o-day the little hero Wes in the same te in which he met death with- out fear, while many candles burn in ising, Two hours afterward the body with grappling %. Theo Gaivefoce ene <aieuh ‘alib: 26 Mas tases ane anite sionaiilane OOM WE Secret meetings, But he admitted this |One netret eneeting to the Grand Jury. on Americans by Foreign- ers, Chicagoans Add, “I told them everything they wanted to know and I think I convinced them that there was nothing wrong abou; my actions. I am now ready to submit * report to the Board of Aldermen from the special committee, The repor: will go in next Tuesday and will, { think, advocate doing away with private cabstands, Aldei Daniel Coleman, Frank Cunningham and John McCann, always regarded as being the “majority” of the committee in favor of the retention of the private hack stands and the high rates, joined Grimm in Assistant Diatrict-Attorney DuVivier's effce and with him signed formal waivers of immunity from prosecution. NOTHING TO FEAR, SAY THE ALDERMEN. | “We have nothing to fear and t! fore no reason to ask for Pesaadbir iy they declared, answer all asked us." “Are you all willing to swear befors the Grand Jury that there was neth- more than moral euasion and aer- ‘aon used to hold up this ordinance for 4 year and a balff they were tasked, “We certainly are,” chorused the four Aldermen, “It was the Three races, I think, who held up the ordinance 90 long," aaid Alderman Coleman, CHICAGO, May 14 — The naughty slash in the tight skirt was denounced an an “atrocity perpetrated on an in- telligent nation by a people who them- selves do not believe in or wear it” by members of the Chicago Dressmakers’ Club at thelr annual banquet last night, The allt, which in 4 French invention, also was referred to as @ “fraud and & cheat,” und the dressmakers asserted themselves for American fashions for American women. They went on record as opposed to the wlawhed #kirt and all similar deaigns | which uppeal to or suggest linmodesty, ~ — “MILE-A-MINUTE MURPHY” GOES RIGHT UP IN THE AIR WHEN FINED TEN DAYS’ PAY Declares He'll Quit the Force for Aviation When Commissioner Finds Him Guilty, Charles M. Murphy, @ policeman aty wus to-day fined ten days’ for leaving his post Ave minutes “We stand ‘ey ie questions that Jamatea, pay before quitting time aad went right up| Alderman Cunningham, in Jartioular, in the air, Phat te, he dic wo right | ¥4" anxious to appear before the Grand up. but be in going up. Hin defense | JU “I went on this special commit. was that he Was called into a saloon | {* CMY two months ago, when Alder. J eaign, and that he made note of it, according | pee on By gecie ss) Ps icrg ce to regulations, tn his book, and had #0} t0 attend a aingie meeting. I droppee told Capt Alonole, who preferred the charge against him, Deputy Commis- yner Dillon, at Brooklyn headquar- tera, couldn't get Murphy's viewpoint and fined the policeman, “Well,” ¢ big policeman, when he left the Commissioner's pre, in, accidentally, at the last meeting of the Committee, and that’s the only time I have attended. So 1 couldn't be held responsible for the delay.” All of the Aldermen dented that they had ever ridden on a free taxioab pase, and thelr names do not appear on the "I'm tired of this Job. I've been at the | DOOk# of the Yellow Taxicab Company kame for twelve yegrs, and I'm going | 2% fectPlonts of auch favors, to try aviation, I've got the nerve, A|/CAPT. JOHN ~W. O'CONNOR year ako at Savannah I got on a bleycle CALLED A “FREE RIDER.” attached to a balloon and was carried The name of one other hign police 40 feet up in the air, I'm solng up in| officlal, who hag been » user Of « free the air again.’ pass from the Yellow Taxicab Com- Murphy was once a motorovole potice- | pany, was revealed to-day. It is that man in Now York. In June, 18%, he| of former Inspector, now Captain, J yele behind a Long Island! W. O'Connor On the “free list” of ced him for a mie, He Yellow ee ee aby oH ered jaan 40. GhAA 8 rode ou w train, whid Ae eie S e |