The evening world. Newspaper, June 23, 1913, Page 1

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Serer \ ney, An jea@bo) ; PRICE ONE OENT. Copyright, 1918, by The Press Pobtishiag Co, (The New York World). 2 REFORM CURRENCY NOW, SET BUSINESS FREE, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JU JUNE _23, 1913, 16 PAGES PRICE ONE * MALSON URGES CONGRESS AT JOINT SESSION “Control of is desi Must Be Vested in Government,” He Declares in Speech. EXPANSION IS NEEDED. Interests of the Country Are So Imperative That Con- gress Must Not Delay. i By Samuel M. Williams, AVOE Correspondent of The Bvening ‘World. WASHINGTON, D. C., June 23.— President Wilson again appeared to- @ay before both houses of Congress im joint session and read them a special address urging the enactment of banking and currency legislation to. relieve the country of dangor of financial atringency. Crowds did not storm the Capitol to- day a8 on the previous visit. A dreneh- ing rain was falling, Furthermore, tic! novelty of a President going to Con- Gree bas worn off and there were even vacant seats in tie gatiertes, Mrs. -Wi son and two of her daughters wer in} front seats of the Executive gallery. | Several Japariese were in the diplomatic Gallery adjoining. ‘The President kept Congress walting half an hour, The Senate marched In at 1220 o'clock, but it was 1 o'clock be- fore President Wilson appeared. Mear- time there was social intermingling of Senators and Congressmen on the floar. Suddenly there a cry from the Sergeant-at-Arms “The President of the | United Btates.” Speaker Clark's gavel fell with » cali ‘far order and attention, Tho ious rose in respectful attitude. A wave of hand clapping sure: r tue great chamber as Mr. Wilson emerged from @ door beside the rortrum preceded y by his faithful srcret service guaré and the Sergeant of the House. was clad in tight fitting froc light xray tvousers. He exten ident his place at the reading desk a ste lower down than the Speaker's high Position. Without preliminaries or ceremony MY. Wilson began his reading of hin message in clear measured tones, #0 @low and measured an to be almost di- Gactic and filled with repeated em- phasis, There was profound silence, every member on the floor Hstened in- tently as the President's message be- came @ most earnest urgent appeal for t to act on currency reform. It was all over in seven minutes and an- other wave of handetupping applause followed his finish and exit, His address finished, tae President (Continued on Twefth Page.) Sea RESULTS AT LATONIA. FIRST RAC: Malden two-year-olds; Burse $600; five furlongs. eo Skolny, 112 (Loftus), first; J. Nolan, 112 (Borel, second; Big Spirit, U2 (Martin), third ‘Time, 1.°61-5, Billy stuart, J. B, May- low, Oreilly, Bill Combs, Buck Keenon, Toynbee also ran, $ mutuels pald—Leo Bis ‘spirit, show, #2. @HOOND RACE—Three-ycar-olds upt i; purse $600; six furlo: - 1 alge 7, U2 Coteus), won: Tyre, to] (Eatep), necond; La Mode, % (Taylor), thin, Time, 1191-5, Labenten, siti |. Holle of Bryn} SECOND ooo 1 1 BROOKLYN ‘ 0 090 0 0 Batteries: Curtis and Mille GAME. 003s - 5 Oo Oo Mathewson and Meyers. FIRST GAME. } AT NEW YORK— 0001 0 0 0010-2 BROOKLYN. oo 1 0 1 0 000 2-4! Batteries—Ragon and Miller; Fromme and Meyers. (GIANTS CAPTURE SECOND GAME, MATTY PITCHING Dodgers’ Batting Slumps When McGraw’s Star Twir- ler Goes in the Box. SECOND GAME. GIANTS. R. H.PO. A. E. o 1000 o 15 6 O Fletcher, ss.., 1 2 0 2 0 Doyle, 2b... 225 3 0 Merkle, 'b.. 0 0 13 0 0 Murray, rf. . 0 1 0 0 0 Meyers, c 11 @ t 0 Snodgrass,cf... 0 1 3 O 0 Mathewson, p... 1 0 0 6 0 Totals.........+ 5 9 27 18 0 BROOKLYN. R. H.PO. A. E. Moran, rf.. oof 0 0 Cutshaw, 2b 112 8s 0 oo3 0 0 orto o0 o 1 6 2 2 ort 00 et 2B bY Miller, ¢ o 27 2 0 Curtis, p.... Oo bt2 0 Yingling, p. » © @802eoe e Hummel.,...... 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 1 8 #@ 12 2 Huminell batted for Curtain eighth, Umpires—| and Orth Summary for 8 1-8 ninge. Base Hits—Of Fisher 5 in seven in- nings, First Base on Ballx—Off Curtis Day, Nello. Esther Blu ir, Syzyey, elyn Yowric and Pampona also ran. Two-dollar mutuels | pald: | Adelaide '',, straight, $5.40; place, Tyree, place, $3.60; show, $3.70. . THIRD RACK—Two-year-olds, pulse 400; five furlongs.—Old Ben, 109 (Byrel), firet; Susan #., 108 (Henry), second John Gund, 112 (Loftus), third. Time, | 1.0625 Thaka, Pebeco, Brave Cunarder, Super! also van. $& meuuels paid-Old Ben, straight, $7.70; place, #28. Musan B., place, $3.90; sh John Gund, show, $3.60. -_— 94.00, ort of Mextcam Rebel Victory. GLAS, Avis., June %.—Gen. Pedro Ojeda, the Federal commander, who @ three-days’ battle In and Artis, Mexico, with the atta r Obregon, Ba have surrendered While Matty was holding them in eheck the Glante tall! once ino the fourth on Doyle's hit and steal and | Muray's sine, | Curtiss forced a Giant acroes in the Afth, v Giants got tnee More rng an the eighth. Hite by Bietener, Doyle, steve sand Snodgraey, couplet wita two errors and @ (louie steal did the damas FIRST INNING-—-Shafer threw on: | Moran. Matty go¢ Cutsnaw's bounde: | and threw him out at fleet, Matty alto tirew out Stengel, Matty reticed the | side qn five pitched balls. No Runa, Burns was ous, Cutehaw to Dauber: Shafer drove a singly Inte left, Cut- shaw ran back of segiuud and got Fle OMAN PRISONER EAGER TO SERVE AQYEAR TERM Marie Rappa Likes Life at Auburn and Refuses. Chance for Liberty. Marie Rappa, No, 1440 in the Auburn prison for women, would rather con- tinue to be only No. 1440 and behind bars than Marie Rapps, free woman. She has no friend outside the walls of Auburn, she told Judge Tiernan in the Brooklyn Supreme Court to-dag; f dom, sunlight, the world, mean nothing to her and she yearns to wear again the rough convict clothes of the only Ufe # Here’ is the story of Marie Ruppa: In December, 1910, she and Stanislaus Pattenza were convicted of kidnapping and sentenced, each to terms of from twenty-five to forty-nine ‘years in Au- burn and Sing Sing respectively. The kidnapped children, Joe Longo and Joe Riazo, hud been found in the Rappa woman's flat at No, 330 East Sixty- third atreet, after weeks of search by detectives, and when the man and the woman were placed on trial it was the clear, compelling testimony of eight- year-old Joe Longo that wove the heaviest case againat them, "The Appellate Division confirmed the conviction of both kidnappers, but when Pattenza’s case Was Anally revi the Court of Appeals that body the oriainal convtetion new trial for Pattenza, The Appellate Division, acting upon this decision in the Pattenza case, reversed the convicy tion of Marie Rappa and ordered a sim- ilar procedure for her, The second trial Hee eee aria: Scuta | of Pattensa came first, and becatise lit- Bases—Shafer, Doyle. Double’ Plays_|U® Joe Longo had forgotten much to Shafer to Merkle, Hit by Pitcher—#nod- | Which he had testified two years before grass, Umplres—Mossrs Klein and Orth, | the case against Pattensa wes so weak- ened that he was acquitted. (npecial 10 1 ng Work.) A short time ago the woman who had | POLO GROUNDS, June 2.—The Giants] been his partner In the long legal ob- and Brooklyns e@ even in the'r] Stacle race was brought down from AbGbin header Shik a Patna! Auburn and appeared, before Judge Tiernan to plead to the original indict- The frst game requived ten innings.| ment. She entered her plea of guilty. the Dodgers winning on Wheat's home! greatly to the surprise of the Court and run, with Stengel on base. Doyle tied] District-Attorney Cropsey's offic u score in the ninth on @ jome rum She had been nt into the stands. io the prison matron at Auburn, Maria awiaw we Sean tee Rappa said, and had grown to have a anne ee Boe pull out the | reat love for this prison officer, as well | lante in second, He put a stap to for the work {t was hers to do. the heavy patting that marked the| "Word of what the prisoner sald was Dodgers’ playing in the early struggle. | carried to Judge Tiernan, and to-day he ordered Marie Rappa before him, in- \sisting that she change her plea. “But L wan to go back to prison,” ithe woman witnouta friend passionately jerfed, “1 am not gullty of kidnapping, I have no place outside the prison walis, end I want to go back where [ will be happy She will stand trial on a plea of “not clean steal of sccond, Doyle popped out to Fisher, No Ruw One SECOND INNING—Doyle dug up Wheat's grounder and threw him out at first, Daubert was out, Matty to | Merkle. Shafer got Smith's grounder and threw him out, No Runa. Merk’ eany, Cutahaw to Daubert, SHOOTS UP eauRT| ‘Eighteen - Your-OM -Old Convict Fires Three Times When Mercy Is Denied. BULLETS MISS MARKS. First Shot From Hidden Re- _Volver Is Aimed at His « Prosecutor. ‘WASHINGTON, June 3.—Ray M. Stewart, eighteen years old, tried to shoot up the Criminal Court here to- day when Justice Stafford refused to Telease him on probation after cenvic-| tlon for attempted highway robbery, | Before officers could overpower’ hint Stewart whipped out @ revolver and put three -bullets perilously near, Justice Stafford and Assistant United @tates At- torneys Given ahd Haken. He was jafied to anawer a wore sstr| ous charge. Justice Stafford Petition to piace when the prisoner pulled a ftevolver. BRNO TES TELS POLE," TO MURDER MDG, TORE UP EMDENE | =~ HOT SH SHOT AT MURPHY: TOSAVE"F “FENCE” Isidor Rider Cun Continues Con-{4 fession, Implicating Detec- tives as Bribe Takers, GRAND JURY TO WORK. Not Only Collected From “Fences,” but From Men Who Bought Stolen Goods. leidor Reder, confessed ‘‘fence," who swore ‘he handled more than $600,000 worth of stolen goods @ year, with po- lice ‘connivance, continued to-day his startling confession to Assistant) Dis- trict-Attornay Moscowits, giving further ‘| Getails of hie relations with the police District-Attoraey Whitman is deter- mined that?the.Grand Jury shall make & complete investigation into the story tola JI G@wann and Assistact Dis- triet: Bostwick and Mobeowite Yenre he hed certain mambers of the Facing toward Hawken and Given, he|, began shooting ‘rapidly. One of the dullets narrowly oriased 'Hawken'’s head and was buried in a window «ill. Stewart was turning toward Justice Stafford to shoot when several policemen leaped on him. attack came so suddenly that few real- ised what was heppening until t! @risoner had been overpowered. Hawken had prosectted Stewart, but had not appeared against him. Evidence had been brought in to show that he mhould not be placed on probation, and the announcement of Justice Stafford's decision enraged him. It is not known how he got the re- volver in his possession, Stewart at- tempted to rob the wife of a policeman named A, D, Moffett, who was go fright- ened by Stewart that #! now an in- pate at the Governme Hospital for the Insane. —————__. BASEBALL GAME NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT BOSTON. PIALADELETA fe 200 03200 1—8 BOSTON— 010000101—3 Batterles—Brennan and Killifer; James and Whaling. AT CINCINNATI. PITTSBURGH— 3020100 _ CINCINNATI— 2000022 = Batteries: Cooper and Coleman; Ben- ton and Clarke. —— AMERICAN LEAGUE, AT CHICAGO. FIRST Gamer. st, LoUIs— 20-€00000 1—3 CHICAGO— 0000100001 Batteries— Baumgardner and Agnew; Cicotte and Schalk, SECUND GAME, $T. LOUIS— 110 _ CHICAGO: 000 - Batteries—-Hamilton and Alexander; Russell,and chalk, AT PHILADELPHIA, BOSTON— 1o100000 — PHILADELPHIA 11006410 5 Batteries—Colling and Cairigan, and Soha: Postponed. WASHINGTON, D, ©. June 24.1 game scheduled for to-day between the Hightsndeva and Washingtons was Postponed on aceount of rain. ee The court room wes thrown inte an; thousan uproar and many dived for cover. The| furs valued at $4000 had ms ps a dl had seen it, public to-day. After reeiting how he had: been. dealing’ In dtolen goods for years with the knowledge of the gasp Hers der details his firet experience Getective, to whom he has pale pr of dollars. A truek load of Joseph Sohwarts, one of Pils, Rader wag phenyl te the sale of the goodp when a stool pigeon for tho detective overheard the conver- tion, PAID DETECTIVE $150 TO TURN HIM OUT IN COURT. “a ked to the telephone,” sald Ra- der, ‘and called up the Thirteenth Pre- cinct. T got @ detective, and told him that there was a truckload of goods on Ninth street and Avenue ©; that the fellow was throwing it off tae wagon, and i. can gb up there and made an ar- re Rader added that the “stoo!- pigeon” for another detective who was Walting to “tip" off the detective by ba om he was employed also went to the js employer, adda Rader, ‘——- (referring to the detective that had been “tipped” off by the stool Pigeon) seen me and eaid nothing to me, and I wen ut my business and they made the ar After the arrest —— came to me and told me that I wi wanted for the larceny of the truck. J told him he had nothing on me and asked him what could be done in the matter, 1 offered him $150 so he won't m 0 arrest, which I paid him $60 at = time—money I took from my wife.” Rader Geacribed @ lof maintained by him and another man, opposite the Ludlow Street Jail, where, in the event the police pressed him too hard, the stolen goods were stored until an oppor- tunity Presented iteelf for their dia pu “Ee to @ loft made for the purpose,” Bader bays, “bioeked on one side where the stairway should be. In order to get to is you have to use an elevator, ‘Taeve is an exit from it to the rect. Sometimes $100,000 worth of goods were stored iz that loft.” EVIDENCE DESTROYED ON THE WAY TO POLICE CouRT. Rader tells of an occasion when he was arrested in Brooklyn for the theft of a wagon of merchandise from EK, Kelly, Seventeenth street and Fourth avenue, Manhatten, “I was taken to Jefferson Market Court and on the way one of the de- tectives who arrested me sald, ‘Rader, I got something on you with which I can conviot you.’ JI asked him to tell me what it was. He ‘I have got a tag in my pocket that was on some of the goods that's been found in your store in South Third atreet.' He told me he had found it in my pocket while searching me. He told me his partner He showed me the tag. It was from some ol! cloth, and I asked him what tt/ was worth to destroy it. name hig own price. H ae MARRIED ONDARE, NILIONARE HOE ‘ne sso mz Bride of Charles E, Doll, Son of Piano Man, Then Con- fides in Mother. ‘Two weeks is long enough for any woman to keep @ secret, especially so momentous @ secret an her own mai Tlage, thinks Mra, Charles Everett Doll, |heim to t who, untl about fortnight ago, was | Printing peas builder, had two sults for Minn Madeline Sylvester, @o Mrs. Doll has revealed the story of her elapement. Doll is @ son of th Doll, the plano manufacturer, and lives with his mother at No. 6 Weat Seventy-| Miss Sullivan charges that" December, His bride ts a daugh-| 1910, Hos promiaed to marry her one ter ry) Mrs, Nathaniel Arnold of No. | year later, 160 West Seventy-seventh street, John And 5 naire So well had the eecret of the wedding | hail « family. manufacturer, th onvereen anid: me been kept that its announcement fur-| Miss Sullivan sues for $00 for the nished @ great aurprivo for all tho| reach of promise to marry and seks friends of the couple tn this city, There 1s one, though, who may be even more Sreatly surprised when tho news, if it] served with the complaint, He has ever Goes, Anally drifts into the jungle] residence in New Jersey. Miss @ullivan's land of Honduras, That one is Russell | attorney ts Mirabeau L, Towns, Hastings Millward, explorer and archae- He sailed away last Decem- ber for @ three-year stay America and, according to his flancee heraelf, he carried with him her prom- ise to marry him Immediately un his re- Presumably, therefore, he will be} in tne Supreme Court In many months seventh street, in South we|qerich, aitting in Mpectal Term, Part 1! tpone our marria atil his explorations in| Broadway over 4 million and @ half | $10,009 due me for legal services explained Miss Sylves-| dollars In his suit ter when pes had been startled by| hall, executor of the estate of John B, | will agree to submit the record in the news that the marriage had been| Brown, late of Ipawich, Maas, The eult, | case to Judge Lacombe, who tried The idea of people even inti-| which was for breach of contract In- }to determine mating that our engagement has been| volving the sale of stocks and donde to | be paid for ell the money I Qo-00h, It's terrible! ding" for some time, Mi y didn't think of gotuum Nl that evening they were din- 's On that occasion told hii ayn, but th ld he vi |i tl leuve it to me. I promised him $50, Wel! agreed that he should give that tag to! might say he dared Miss Sylvester my lawyer before the case was called wary him right away. And Miss ‘oe In September of F with becoming spirit refused te ilu ub baviag Schelpuaahtcntatimamed i (S FIRED BY SULZER Wt FINAL PRIMARY CL “I Want Himand HisCo-Conspirat to Produce All the Other Libele Stuff, Not Some Irresponsible Tool,” Says. Governor. ARRAIGNS EX-JUDGE CURT: FOR THE PERJURY CHARG Hearing Begins at Call of Gove: on Direct Primary Bills—John 4 Purroy Mitchel to Speak. pee ee ‘ ALBANY, Jtiné 23.—-Gov, Sulzer added another chapter Siilzer-Murphy-Curtls coniroversy iy, issuing, slatements. in rol those given out. yesterday by Charles F. Murphy, leater of Tas Hall, and George M. Curtis of New York. “1 nave read what Mr. Murphy's war board has issued about | Says the Governor's statement. “Of course I'know a few-things | intend to talk about at the proper time; “However, I do not want the Of the State to have their at! verted from the main question of FOR ALLEGED IILT Miss Mae Sullivan Wants Damages for Breach of Promise to Wed. seesion of the Legislature, bitter and outrageuus and unt tacks upon myself. GETS BACK TO THE REAL —PRIMARY REF “What about direct ‘That is the issue now. -J shall diverted or distracted because I more Interested in passing the Dides Usitusch en) can aedNacniieetian Primary Dill than I am getting t $31,000,000 eatate of the late poy ng wailed with the r. Murphy beat the Direct breach of promine to marry and breach | bill in the lant session of the of contract fled against him to-day in| ture, He cannot deny it, Again, the Supreme ¢ t by Miss Mae A, Sul-{him to take his hands off the Bho got married on fiivan of this city. ture and let the representatives ® dare-indeed, she did—after a» din- ner at Dejmonico's, and they flew out| tablished the young woman first at the in an automobile and had Alderman | !iotel Norwood on West One Hundred Jobn T. Eagan tle the knot at 11 o'clock {801 Twont People pase the Direct Primary SIL. BE is the only man in the State who ¢ beat ft. Jt te pertinent big, him us kaow now whether beat again our dill for direst tions." According to the complaint, Hoe s- ater at the Hotel late Jacob) ister at Now. 410 and 420 Riverside Drive Concerning George M. Curtis, an effort made for perjury in Ve censection With the latter's ult te ae pas t counsel fees in a suit ¥ to confess at the last! granddaughter to break the site reapectively, moment that he was married man and Bi: ce has deen @ criminal for $75,000 In the second sult. - ore >, annclnts Hoe ts in the inner tube tire Dusiness stuff he gives out ae at No, Is?o Broadway, where he was about me is manutact rm rg pears upon its face," - SAYS CURTIS MADE VILE TACK ON CLEVELAND, “During the campaign of 1684 man Curtis made the vilest upon Gov, Cleveland ever knoi our political history. People who him well believe him mentally ly 4rresponaible, 4 Curtis saya he will waive the ati a re JUDGMENT OF $1,500,000, One of the largest judgments rendered was filed this afternoon by Justice Gt of limitations if I will sue dim fees in the Watson case, awarding art Browne of 10] “Howey it Curtis will deposit inst Joseph Fair- | surety company in New York © Brown, was not answered or defended. | and all the professional services I According to Browne's complaint, |dered in the Watson: n B. Brown, in July, 1908, contracted | iitigation.”” ne Brow enti ia buy from Browne tho entire atock of | gu) 2am PUBLIC HEAR a ‘THE PRIMARY an and Maiden Lan: pap inenin at eee oeednamtan Aor

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