The evening world. Newspaper, May 20, 1913, Page 1

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_ PRICE ‘ONE CENT. Covvriaht, 1918, by The Preee Publiohiag Co. (The New York World). COLLINS ON STAND TELLS HOW HE PLANTED DYNAMITE TO KILL LAWRENCE STRIK stats vot ABEPTSLTONS CHALLENGE FO AMERICA'S CUP State’s Evidence. IT WAS 'New York taht Club Agrees to Race Under Present Rules of the Organization. Breen, He Says, Was to Made Mayor for His MEET SEPTEMBER, TOLD “JOKE.” Be Part in the Plot. BOSTON, Mass., May 20.—One sen- sation followed close upon another to- | day when Dennis J, Collins, indicted an accomplice of Willlam M, Wood the millionaire woollen manufac: turer, and Frederick Atteaux, the milladpoly (suanatactirer, ov shel Slt tiowsks Considers Terms} change of “planting” dynamite during |! a, 4 , the strike of the Lawrence operatives of Acceptance Mean Vic tory for Him. 1914, lact year, turned State's evidence and from the stand gave incriminating| evidence against the president of the! American Woollen Company 2} LONDON, May 9.—The New York Collins, indicted with the other two| Y#cht Club to-day cabled to the Hoyal and until his sudden switch to the side| Ulster Yeoht Club defluitely accepting Ipable with them in the eyes of the| America's Cup. Prosecution, has been promised tmnu | pig paces will take placd In deptem= nity In exchange for the whole truth, and from th testimony he gave on the | be 114, stand to-day it is evident that the, Club's present rules as to metsurement, Cambridge man has rigorously kept his lame allowance and raging rules, eile of the bargain. Collins, professing that at no time aid . he know 1t was dynamite he handled or| “tons of acceptance of his challeni that he wns velng made the tool In a|¥¥ the New York Yacht Club are @ plot o de: elit the Lawrence strikers, sreat victory for him, Jie says they told @ straightforward story of how °| will enable him to build a good sea- had helped Jobn J. Breen, the Lawrence| worthy buat, pullttelan and undertaker “plant” caf There are, he says, a few small de pounds of “juice’—that being the term|tatig yet to be settled, but he feels sure by which Breen denominated some tong | that these will be ahee hiace ticks that “felt cold to the! i ceoriy. , GITADERS Sete: touch." anton One of theae dificult! shis WOULD BE MADE MAYOR AE RE: ee ieee een WARD FOR “JOKE. whether Sir Thomas Lipton will be al- The a b ‘ ta f 1: j lowed to tow his yacht across the At- je dog breedor sald unequivocally | neice Ag to this Sir Thomas says he that Breen had told him that William} , 3! Wood was in un the “Joke” of the| feels sure the members of the New distribution of the dynamite sticks, and| York Yacht Club will do everything that iat besides sharing $100 for the work | ts right in the way of granting this aon- of perpetrating the “Joke” he, Breen, cession, but he continued: would be made Mayor of Lawrence! “As they have decided upon @ good tyrough Wood's Influence, claws of boat, It does not really matter “L met Breen, whom I have known for| much whether Lam allowed to tow or many months, accidentally on the eve-| not Anyway I should not want to tow ning of Jan. 19, 1912," he sald. “The meeting took place on Court street, in Boston. I was asked by Breen if 1 would help him out on @ little matter and I told him that I would do so. He ed me to telephone to @ certain num- ber and ask for a man, 1 did so, but I hed the wrong number, * “We then went to a saloon at Wash- ington and Franklin streets with Breen, He there waited for two nen, who later came along. One of them was Mr. Rice, and I am not sure about the other's name. ‘The other man was quite stout. Breen told me to wait for him, and he dead calm,” Auked whether he thought the de- fenders would meet him with a bigger boat than the chullenger, Sir Thomas Lipton replied: “That does not give me the least worry. They have always treated me erous and sportsman- difficulty I have felt been that of arranging a this was settled, they One have always done everything pousible mate’. to make {t pleasant for me, Charles i, Nicholson, the yacht de- signer of Gosport, Knaland, is elveady ‘King on the plans of the boat. The New York Yacht Club's accept: (Continued on Second Page.) “DWARF GATHERED CROWD. He Tells Is Discharged, Jance of the challenge says: "The races are to be sailed as sug- My and Business,” hnore wulde tn 4 it Coney Island, was a friend, Prank Mona- requiring highest Umit of cases shall not apply & yacht to rate class in to this mat the show ted with T 4 nue and On 1c 'Thid avenue and One —_ vorty-ainty street tnis CHILD IS BITTEN BY DOG. ‘ susing & crowd to col- ees i vere arraigned 10 the pottiveman K Animal After oorisanka ‘olice Court Magistrat n Corrigan asked Gilmore what he had to outings ft ray for hit oelf, Little Nellie McGuigan of No. 191 Why, Your Honor,” said the dwarf, | Second avenue was on an errand to “r always draw a crowd, That's been her aunt's this afternoon aud was just my fortune or misfortune all my Ife. entering the doorway when 4 dog Me me friend we our Way to dashed toward her, The animal was to look aninaly. We snapping right and left. Paralysed with m the suoway at One terror, the child could only stand and ' Vorty-nint and a scream, The dog by the left noand lek and tow solos wit touring r Coney. leg ‘The dog sprang away as Larkin Vit go drew near and st bp the avenue, stand and ket the ‘aoncy." Larkin Jumped on a and followed “All said His Honor, “go to Ninety-seventh str where he ebead.” ‘hoa the cases were dismissed, ‘killed the brute with club aud revolver, again the Bronx for me, | Never i to Re of the prosecution considered equally | Sir Thomas Lipton’s chalienys for the} under the New York Yacht) Sir Thomas considers that the con-_ except In the case of @ head wind or a) cing rule, it being understood that, = Te $45,000,000 BONDS IS JUST ABOVE PAR | Offerings More Than Three | Points Below a Former Issue of 4%s. HOUSES COMPETE.| , aoe 's Credit Good, but Sale| | mats Widespread ‘Depres- sion in Financial Affairs. BIG | \ | Comptroier Prendergast opened to- day nearly 498 bide offered for the $45,000,000 new 4% city bond faaue. Though exact computation cannot be made until all of the returns are de- | termined to-night, Indications are that |the bond insue has been four or five! | Umes oversubscribed | The significant feature at once made} | Manifemt upon the opening of the bide is that the 4% city securities will sell low- er than any similar issue before. Four and a half bonds, aiways a favorite With investors, were ireely offered in the market at from 100316 to 100%, The decline in this favored security, |seemingly in tune with the depression everywhere noted In the market, ts marked by the diffurence between the figures rated to-day and the selling | price of 4% bonds in the February and Notember issue of 1908, when the price was steadily 104. ven the $50,000,000 44a Issued in 110 sold at 101.08, | The total bids opened up to 3 o'clock | were $71,000,000, t i BIG FINANCIAL HOUSES BID FOR | BONDS. ‘The firat bids opened caused Comp- troller Frendergast to smile with satia- faction, for they were from some of the biggest houses and banks In the finan-| clal district, This evidence that the big dealers still have confidence in the city's oredit was specifically this: J. P. Morgan & Co. for $5,000,000 at par; Nato! City Bank, $2,500,000 at par; C. J. Turner & Co, $100,000 at 100.06; $100,000 ut 100.07; $100,000 at 100.08; $100,000 at 100.11; $100,000 at 100.13; Ameri- can Exchange National, $2,000,000 at Hanover National, 100,000 at $75,000 at 100,272; Imterborough, ,000 at 10.02; Harvey Fisk & Son, $1,000,000 at 100.277; 300,000 wt, 100.17; $2,000,000 at 100,07; All of the biggest banks mentioned tn this Hist had been much heavier inves- other city bonds, notably when J. P, Morgan & Co, headed a syndicate |to puren: cent. loan of May, 1912, and came near subscribing the whole issue. ‘The 4% of the memorable $40,000,000 issue of September, 1907, were an in- stant success and sold at 102 meant # 4.39 Income return Four and a halfs, th reached the highwater mark in the 1908 fesue, when the city received 1,168 bid the largest number ever received at a city sale. The loan was six times aub- scribed for at an average of 104 ‘The November issue of that year, re- duced to 4s, sold at 102.38, and even the 1910 41-4» topped the prenent price of | 41-29 with an average price of 101,68, RE ROSES SUPPLANT MISSILES IN CINCINNATI STRIKE. | }Men Who Last Saturday Hurled| Steel Bars From Lofty Building, To-Day Drop Flowe: CINCINNATI, ©. May », uppermost tlours of a lofty where on jast Saturday pathisers moarded a manned imported meu braces of steel, barrels of plaster tri street car) by tossing | bags of cement and upon tt, ny the strikers | way of telling the citizens the fact that peace once more reigned Thousands of roses and carnations to-day supplanted the stee! and plaster and fell upon the heads of thousands | o juse who had gathered to see the the age worked for fifteen minutes scat. | tevlag dowers from the diay heights. lthe Grand Jury. ( Retsel, who explained that she had | World “Wants” Work Wonders. | POLIGE RUSH 57 STRIKING RIOTERS |: | @ TO PATERSON JAIL Silk Workers Invite Arrest in Order to Get Food While in Prison. OFFICIALS CLOSE HALLS Leaders Decide to Abandon Plan to Tie Up Whole City for 48 Hours. Fifty-seven striking silk operatives Were arrested to-day in front of the | Arthur Price Company mill in Pater+ son, N. J., where eighty-five were ar- rested yenterday after a revolver fight with the police, Yesterday the crowd was determined and ugly. To-day, act- ing apparently on orders from thelr leaders, they offered no resistanca to the police and seemingly courted urreni, the Imprisonment meana much to trikers now, for food is scarce the city must feed those in the jal Tt was significant that most of the Prisoners were young, unmarried men. Recorder Carroll later held fitty-eiz of the prisoners in $500 bail each for He paroled Mrs, Net- u not been picketing, but wae caught in the crowd and could not escape, What to do with the prisoners is punaling Sheriff Radcliffe. Last night the coun ty jail was housing seventeen persons more than it is supposed to lodge. To- day the fifty-six more were crowded into the already crowded cells, | TRESCA GETS TIME TO FIND A BONDSMAN. Alexander Scott, editor of the Pas- gate Trsue, who war indicted for crim- inal libel, gave himself up to-day and was released on ball, Carlos Tresca, under indictment for inciting to riot, wan in town to-day trying to get a bondsman, He has not given himself up, but the police are allowing him time to find some one to go his ball ‘There were more than 1,000 pickets on hand when the forty workers of the mill appeared to go to work and they hooted and Jeered at the men who had abandoned the strike, crowding about them and jostling them, but it was evi- dent that the crowding and jostling were simply excuses to be arrested for no real violence was offered, and as fast as they were arrested the atrik- | ers climbed grinning into the patrol wagons. As has been the case hereto- fore they will probably go to jail for | ten daye each, CITY ORDERS TWO MEETING PLACES CLOSED. Nor was there any violence at Turn or Helvetia Hall, which the City Com- missioners last night ordered closed, Chiet Bimaon had extra policemen on hand who guarded the halls, but though there wi plenty of atri in the Gtreets there was no trouble, The atrik- ers hooted and Jeered at the police but did nothing more, and when they had had thelr fill of this Patrick Quinlan, the recently convicted leader of the In- dustrial Workers of the World, led the crowd to Haledon, t! Social: ham- let, just out of Paterson, and there ha- rangued them. Thomas Cappe, one of the lessees of Turn Hall, who te a lawyer, went to Newark to ask Vice-Chancellor Stephen- son for an injunction restraining the Paterson Poltce Board from interfering move. It deplored the threat as calcu- lated to bring discredit on the atrikers. yo SB DOSESIEL Doe ROOCSSCEOSDIOTS | and sympathizers to-day took # untque| an {dea and would not countenance the! | NEW YORK, TURSDAY, MAY 20, | ROO e-Dax9- funded fle $419 O8% eooee o0oooseoeee | “ Circulation Books Open to All, 1913. '««Neat Little Pajama Girl’’ Jilted Openly by Lord Edward FitzGerald POOLSHIEHOTHEEILEDD ELLE oEHIdee? | POISONED BANKER MAY WIN FIGHT JILTS PAJAMA GIRL: AGAINST DEATH) ISSUES STATEMENT: Doctors Giving Walker of Macon Special and Hope to § Ga, May 0.~Th MACON, Treatment Save Him. vase of B, Sanders Walker, the young banker who last Wednesday swallowed A seven- grain bichloride of morcury tablet, mix. taking it for a puazling his physicians. day was reported proved, were indications that he im er. headache remedy, Mr. Walk to be slightly nd his physicians stated there ht recov. He suffers no pain and {s consclous, ‘is to im- Water is being given the patient in- tra-venously. en him every twelve hours, A pint of olive oll is giv- nd Walker | {6 Kept in steaming blankets to elim.- nate acid, ‘The kiMheys are responding slowly to treatment This is the fifth day since Walker took a dichloride of mercury tablet by mistake for a headache cure in medical annul paraletix No case his, the usual experience with bichloride being Walker's alna mater, Wh team had won the patient expressed |the year th | pleasure and immediately went vack to | Yented from entering into There wae joy, however, over the | sleep, arrest of the fifty-seven, for the county Jail ie already overcrowded and strikers realize that the olty 4s be hard put to care rothe prise re. city offelr ure considering a plan of | Ne konding sule Of the pelsoveMm® to the Bergen County Jail Penitentiary, It hae mined yet whether ‘Phat there is real not been deter tits t9 legal. (Continued on second Page.) \ ¢ to Snake in| ¥ eed now of food | consis | on day ued It dispe at $100) % chic of & The prop widow and ols sone propert told Dies Poor, oun o hi { ‘turned from his 18 PAGES 6-86 EGOS ETO5-00- 25600 TFESESE LEGS ESTEE SE SEH % $6-09426 report. » | committee, YOUNG IRISH LORD ST. LOUIS— 0000 GIANTS— oooo0 PTR OH Brother of Duke of Leinster |. eooxyn— Says Engagement Was An- 100 o nounced in His Absence. WEATHER—Cleady To-night an@ Wednesday. = ccomplice Swears Trust Planted Dynamite to Kill Strike™ EDITION. PRICE TMI PAIS DUD, TRUST STANDS BARRED IN REPORT FOR LAW Alderman Grimm Submits to Board New Ordinance That Embraces Reforms Evening World Has Fought Three Years to Get. ;||HOLD-UP COMMITTEE ALL SIGN BUT M’CANN Bill Ordered to a Vote Next Week, With Full Assurance That It Will Be Passed. Baseball Games To-Day NATIONAL ONAL LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK. AT BROOKLYN. aT PHILADELPHIA. An ordinance abolishing private cabstands and reducing tanicab teres was introduced in the Board of Aldermen this afternoon in the ‘@ a report from the ‘spectat26ttimittee appointed in FEBAITy; reform taxicab abuses. On motion of Chairman Grimm of the special committee, the ordinance was made a special order for next Tuesday. All the members of the committee except Alderman McCann signed the Alderman Marks, who signed the report under protest, intro: duced an ordinance of his own, which was referred back to the special Pred Fer pgl ordinance which will en- ly be passed next Tuesday be- porn pollo Private cabstands es- tentigens me following tariff: bulk rate is 70 cents for the aie nd 60 cents for each euccesding mile, oousLa cAU 7 CINCINNATI— or three 00000 1 0 0 O— II ciatmes tn LONDON, May %.—Phe romance of | piiLADELPHIA— which will “when we Were twenty-one” that has - overchar-e unde eyotem, existed between Lord Edward FitsGer- OA 2 9) 910,01 5 Alderman .k ald, brother of the Duke of Leinst Guetie mater premier peer of Ireland, and May Ether- epieaapee BOSTON. the report fdge, the “neat little, sweet little” pa- 07000 betere the Jama girl of the Shaftesbury Theatre, ial a re has come to @ rude termination and lit- BOSTON— ¢ trol tle Miss Btheridg lane as ex- o1000 = aeenece pressed by herself—"“we will live et a rate of @ Lord Edward Fits ancestral home tn Ireland''~are doomed, apper- ently never to have fruition. The boyish nobleman is our with @ statement to the piess declaring that the reporte of bie enga, pent to tl equally youthful actress are false. His! formal statenent read | “Lord Ex | NEW YORK 2 ST. Louls 10 ward Fits, 14 hae now re | Oday and de to | WASHINGTON. ° no foundation for the atate that there with the ha'l, Whatever intaht be the| death of the vietin within forty announcement of hin engagement pud- | 04 outcome of nin request, however, he sald! hours, In Walker's case, 7 lished during his absence.” | CLEVELAND there would be no attempt to open the| paralysis of the kidneys On the other hand the friends of Mise 20 hall without permission of the law. but tothe surprise Dh thiy Btheridge are declaring that family ‘The new plan of the strikers seems tol condition was apparently to. {pressure brought during his auaence be one of paxaive inactivity. The Ex-] gay from {he pretty show girl's alde is ree slesuelve, Gomimittae tasuea a apatanvent| “Mocly. vive qiccoiins atten the nadens |apadatule, or hearted jiiting of | PHILADELPHIA- repudiating the threat of Adoiph Lesmig,| pad slept peacefully tov « aber of |the pretty « © predicting « 01 fa local leader, to tle up the city with al pours, he awakened stulling and wanted |Presch of pr sult or handsome | pETROIT— forty-eight hour genera! strike Thelto know the "score of the Georgia |compensation for the young woman at 012 committee announced it never had such! Tech baseball game.” Georgia Tecn the leaat. the Duke of Letnater, in he came of His brother, BAI less desirable match—marriage with an out and out adventure: Rifle Shoot! SEA GIRT, May were begun here t ammunition onal MSHIPS y ser Kurt » 2, and the at. Hae ternational asd P, sayiures bad acy a ada) aud wight Tomas ‘eae | see te prosident, AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT 67. Louis. AT CLEVELAND. AT DETROIT. ALL AND RACING PAGE 14, ee Tests at Sea Girt. %0.—Government teats to-day to determine shall be used in the ( fle Maton at Cy ade Perry, | dinances inresuens in the Boark bes! ie matches for tn rigid rules that will hold | EVENING WORLD WINS THREE- VEAR FIGHT, Outside of the double rate prevision, the ordinance submitted by the com- mittee embodies all the reforms aéve- cated by The Evening World in ‘te three-year fight for tazioab reform. There was no Giecuasion over the or- ce. to-day on tho ON-yard range for) explained wiy he signed the aommittes The tost ta in chargo of the| report, Board of Ingpectore of Rifle Pra: of waich Brig.-Gen. Bird W. Spe and the Marke ordinance waa referred to the special committee withe

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