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16° HE'SACROOK! MAN! Wife of British Coal King in New York Tells ic Times Square Station Scene of Lively Fight. one ‘William McClure, a 1 wyor of No. Bleecker stret accused the other of having n his wallet in which was + @ small sum of mone: “1 felt him take it, and when [ @rabbed him he passed it to a com- Pani who escaped,” sald Mr. Mo- ho eald he was Will- WANT HIS FINGERS SOILED BY POLICE. “I won't soll my fingers and you can't make me. I'm a reputable busi- mess man, and I have been cruelly as- quilted. Why, my eyes have been Dlackened by this crasy man here, and best I can get is to be arrested.” . His bluff nearly won him his free om, Lieut. Allen was still speculat- ‘tag ever what course to pursue when | Dethotive Edward Shelvey entered the Quresu, Shelvy listened to the argu- t for a minute and took a good at Wilson. Then he exclaimed: Mr. Wilson, elias Thompson, we've got your picture times, We've got your Chicago and Portland, caught picking pock- ve you two hours to get Ma agit 4 + 5 i BEgEP 2 | : i i i il 1 : i F r : tf it Coben, No, $1 Bainbridge street; Eni Marshall, No. 29 Co wi Fr ‘fo, 227 Hicks atree' art sane i of the on evidence Derectives J nd y before, ‘T the club on the day of t aud secured additional evidence, it was promised the men, would used against them unless thoy the game again. At that fme ‘ere held for for sect Roviens triale have not yet been eriticlam at the time fol- y the da; SHOUTED, THEN THE SAGE BERA Northbound Subway Car and PRISONER OLD TIMER | Her Sister, Daughter and Objectirig to Bertilion Identifi- cation, Officers Recognize Him |Laughed At, Then Im- priseoned, When They Sought Votes by Law- | ful Means, Says Mrs. Thomae—Forced to Fight, They Will Never Turn Back. Cousins Among Prison “Martyre”’ to the Cause —She Devotes Fortune : to It—Accuses Asquith = Paty Why English Suffra “those militants.” Having formed already your ploture of Mra, Thomas as a wild-eyed harraden oh that she ts proud to be numbered among revolutionista. Even after ake tc you half approvingly of win- dow emashing and the burning of prop- erty in that soft Britth voice which gounds Mke poured honey, whether it Giscourses of love or murder, babies or bombs, you do not quite readise that you are face to face with » British militant. WHY THEY ARE FORCED TO SE MILITANTS, militant operations that I wanted to do my dest te explain our position to Americans. ‘ant to tell you Arst of the spirit that 19 permeating this revolution of Women, and then later we will discuss conditions, I will try to make you un- feretand why we cannot gain things peaceably aa you do, You American Women area little bit spoiled, I think. Your husbands have just one thought to work for you and give you what- ever you want; and 1 am sorry that eo many of you want to rush off to Eu- rope to spend money while the men re- main here and keep on working. It eeoms o bit unfair, 1 think it is ao want that you do not understand the Position of English women, the hu- miliation, the flouting, the general conception of woman as an inferior. Why, only recenuy an English boy I know—a boy of gentle breeding—wrote to bis father, ‘How funny that the women should want to vote The horses and the dogs will be asking for votes next.’ I think that attitude, whioh is common to many Englishmen, will explain to some extent what we have to contend against.” “But have you any hope of winning the vote by militemt methods?’ I asked. FORCED TO MILITANCY, FIGHT TO END, "We have no hope of winning it oth- erwise,” Mrs. Thomas repiled. “It wae hot until we lost all hope that real mittancy began, Lt will nev th the vote is given us, Mra, Pank- hurt hopes and preaches hope. Poor, fragile little woman! I saw her juat before I left England to surprise my husband by arriving here last Friday, It wae the thirty-iret WILL smashing thirty windows, Her two cousins are proud of having been in Jail and of having obtained their release by hi ‘and per \eatd, haps I don't know how to go ebout It. | pusin, easy for you to get the things you | nd une | these dayw one cannot eseape @ reference, generally a hostile réference, to And now one of the foremost of these militants is in New York. She is Mrs. David Thomas, whose hus- band fe known in financial circles as the “British coal king,” and who Gevotes practically her entire pri- vate fortune to furthering the cause of militant suffrage. Mra. Thomas was one of many English women who walked in the funeral procession of Emily Wilding Devison, who lost her life by stopping the King’s horse at the Derby. fier daughter, Mre. Mackworth, walked with her. prominent Last Friday, on reaching New York, she learneed that Mrs, Mackworth had been arrested on a charge of Gropping explosives in a mail box, an offense for which she will be tried next month. Mrs, Thomas's @ster, Mrs. Janet Boyd, who is more than sixty years of age, served & sentence in jail recently for in, too, we have formed recently the Justice League, to which I belong. (The members are all women of inde- Dendent property and they pledge them- elves literally to give to nothing till wotes for women have been won. Be- fore I joined the league 1 received many begging letters, of which I an- ‘Swered only a few. Now I answer jevery one, telling avout the league and saying I am pledged to give to nothing, mo charity, no hospital, no individual, until women have the vote,” “I can see the advantage of that,” I “and also of a boycott of such eae men as oppose you, but why letters and houses? Why smash lows? How does that advance your ‘cause? “I will have to go back a little to ed. in when the hue and cry cy began, THERE WAS NO MTILITANCY, It was purely an in- wention of the Government. In Eng- dand at political meetings it ts entirely ‘proper to ask questions of the speakers. Gn fect, there is at the end of every ‘wpeech what is called ‘question time’ WERE FORCED TO “MILITANCY” TO GET A HEARING. “At @ political meeting Annie Kenney ‘and Christabel Pankhurst rose during ‘Question time and asked if the candi- Gate of the Government was in favor of votes for women, They received Bo ceply, Then they wrote the question ‘and sent it up to the platform, Earl Gray took it, laughed and passed it to another speaker, He, too, laughed. As ‘the question went from one to another they all laughed. But no one conde- ecended to reply. “Then Christabel Pankhurst stood on @ chair and repented the question. For seized and with Annie to prison. When Annie Kenney was released she found she had lost her position. She was @ factory and they would not take @ woman who had been in jail. For @ dong time there was no more militancy than simply asking questions at ques- aion time, But for this the women were roughly handled, insulted and sent #0 prison, Then they began sending Geputations to Parliament. I had two ‘cousine imprisoned for merely walking dn these deputations. “I must explain that in Egland, while & member of Parliament has the right to introduce @ bill, @ private bill has abso- Jutely no chance of passing unless the Government {9 back of It. In fact, it | {a never permitted to reach a vote. | imitation for suffrage was no general ft had #o many friends in Parlla , Ment that the Government finaly ca | a whole week to t ke 4 suffrage measure, But) i¢ @ a) /? ~~ SEE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 191 ~r Fon Cur ring y Siok S whieh {t would have been possible to attach an amendment giving womanhood ouffrage as well. PUZZLE OF LOST BOYS SOLVED BY EVENING WORLD AND RELATIVES FOUND. WILL NOT GIVE UP FIGHT TILL THEY WIN. “He knew that while the parlamen- tary majority favored votes for women peoples blr Droperty owners it oor Publication of Photos of Littlest to consent manh womanhood sutrage. And so,| “John Doe” and Louis Witter treacherously, at the last moment, to ote tho wards of Loyd George at a Leads to Their Identification. Meeting, they “torpedoed the Con-| Punitcat photograp! citation Pill.’ Tricked and cheated and |rogt heya fa tho! Brecing wore ptiing the militants whe had ceased % ail hostilities renewed operations. It is day resulted in the finding of the miss- my opinion that they will never cease |{B Uncle of Louls Witter and the re till we have won the vote,” ‘turn to his parents of the littlest “John “But how will such an act ag Miss|Doe,” a nine-year-old lad who had re- Davison's advance you?’ ‘mained at the Children's Society for “I don't know that it will,” Mrs.|mine days suffering from aphasia, Thomas answered. “I know that Miss| A telephone call from Newark to-day Davison intended to stir and stagger |told that “John Doe” had been recog- the world. Do you know Abercrombie's |mised as Ralph Yannusi, son of John oem of ‘Vashti?’ Yannusi, a merchant, of No. & Nassau “Thi sis my event; I am its choloa |street, Nework. After an investigation ‘Yea, not as @ storm but as an eagle, | by the Newark police It was found the ‘tather was a fit person to take care of ‘nis lost son, and a policeman was sent now It swoops on me; and though I am ite prey trom that city to take the missing boy I am Mfted by majestic wings, my |‘home, His return will come as a sur- soul rise to hie father, who wi!l not be not!- ‘fled until the boy {s surrendered to him. Memory returned to the Yannuzi boy “That is the mpirit of the women's| when his name was spoken and he cried Fevolution in England. It ts the epirit|from joy and relief at the end of his which antmates us all. Jong struggle to recall his identity. He “My sister has told me that the most| cannot yet tell how he wandered from dimoun hour of her life was that pre-|'Newark to Amsterdam avenue and ceding the time set for the smashing|Gixty-elghth street, where he was found of windor he sald that she could|by @ policaman on June 23. Nerve herself to It 1s the intention of the soctety to acne | Tequest that he be placed in a achool for | Sefective children at Rhineland, N. J. The Witter boy's uncle was found to have left New York and returned to Kingston, Pa, whence the boy had started seeking him. He will be re- turned to-morrow, (SS hour, My sister vaso She is «| widow | ROBBED OF KITTENS, @ large fortune which \e- votes to the Woman's Political Union. CAT ATTACKS CHILDREN. She went to prison for window smash- Robbed of her litter of kittens a cat re Pg atter a hunger lo nol now wi yeaterday leaped from the back fence te sta etter Tot wenlang [and dashed nto the fat house at No. in tact on Friday, when Mr. Thomag/ 80 Blake avenue, Brooklyn, where it and I were celebrating the thirty-first| attacked several children. onvereey € our narriegs noe" - Golomon Wolfberg, nine, tried to kick x you eve ie cat an ff th mi and I. mouse bin will have the affect of di- San aired hs te crverar tian tes vii also bit him. ‘appear to had that] Mrs. Wolfberg attempted to sweep ‘No oie er Phat the the animal back over the fence with a sald through she felt as if she had smirched her soul forever. But she did not care, z by so doing had advanced votes roar and the children, two score or more, were yelling and fleeing in all direc- tlons. George Jukens, a baker, killed tho cat with a club and a doctor was summoned vo: | to attend to the Injuries of those whom ithe cat had attacked, $75,000 was subscribed at a ing inst month. 80 long of England have they have a jewel to they have bodies to souls to be smirched, ¢! ingle meet- the women Penny, #0 long as lution will go on. CLEANS THE HAIR AND MAKES IT BEAUTIFUL—26 CENT ~DANDERINE” In a few moments your hair looks soft, fluffy, lus- trous and abundant. No falling hair or dandruff. and invigorates the scalp, forever stop- and falling hair, beauty of cloth with tly. your hair, Just moisten a what fresh Danderine and draw it ca me iret in and sunshine are to Tt goes showers of vegetation. In a few moinents zed, Your hair will be parable voltnea fuse and | urlapos, ral jut fhe baaaty ond shimmer of true = ory nie ‘ + 4 8. KEPT NGHT VIG gettes Are ‘Militant’? QUISIDE PRISON, AT DAWN, A WIDOW Prayed Through All the Dark Hours for Husband Doomed to Electric Chair. GIRL FOR COMPANION. Doors Opened to Give Mrs. Manco Her Dead. Al night long in the eweltering heat, under the walle of Sing Sing prison, a Uittle women in black sat and told her beads and mumbled her prayers, with now and then @ fitful glance at the sombre pile looming above her. Some- where inside those massive gates, some- where in the shadews of the builtings, they were getting ready to send her husband to the electric chair in reprisal for the murder of Philo Campanillo, whot dead in the street in Middletown, N. ¥., by Andrea Manco on the evening of Sept. 22, 1912 ‘The little woman in Diack sat on the bridge which leads to the warden’s of- fice, waiting for the law to make her & widow. The law had epoken the last word. Andrea Manco must die. Gome- time in the gray dawn he would pass through the iittle green door, through which no man headed for the electric ohair has ever returned. All this Mrs. Manco knew, She ed only for the time, when, the law's demands satisfied, the body of the dead would be turned GIRL INTERPRETER KEPT HER COMPANY. At Mre. Manco's side was @ strange ttle girl to whom she sometimes spoke, who sometimes stood by her and at other times stretched herself out on the bridge and tried to sleep. The little @irl was there to act as interpreter. It was @ strange vigil for the little one. When she tried to sleep she would @pring up with a faint consciousness of what was going on behind the stone walls, and would cling to the woman dn fright. In her crude ignorance the woman aoothed the child as best she could. She patted her on the back and pointed to her beads, telling her muiely that there ‘was the hope of both, the hope of all. In the death chamber of the prison house there was a dim light, but Mra. Manco and the child could not see it. ‘The hours were speeding Manco’s doom. There came a clanking of chains; and a shudder passed through the inmates, ‘They had heard that great door sewing open before. They knew that the little procession coming through the portal ‘would keep on through the little green door, leading to the chair, and that Manco would join the procession. ‘The stillness of the chamber was ‘broken by a sob as the door of Manco's cell was opened and the condemned man led forth. Occompanying Acting (Warden Connaughton and his deputies ‘and the prison doctor were the Rev. Wather Cashin, prison chaplain, and the Rev. Father Mantan: of the little @talian church in Mott street. Between athe two priests the condemned man walked, as they prayed for him, GIVEN SHOCKS AND PRO- NOUNCED DEAD AT 6 O'CLOCK, Two shocks were administered to the murderer in the electric chair. The fret came at 6.51:80, and the second just a qinute later, At 6 o'clock he was pro- mounced dead, ‘The vigil of the waiting woman and her ttle girl friend was over, The sun had beon up long before and the air had be- ith @ greater heat than which they had passed the At 6 o’Clock Sing Sing’s' ore | Ment. ‘The @eor of the warden's office swung open and a deputy beckoned to them. Then to the woman was given the! remains of her dead. | going to kill Augusto and would return and kill her and himself. He met Cam- Panillo and Augusto, and the bullet in- | tended for the latter plerced the heart of | his companion. Axsusto fled and the murderer was caught. YEAR IN PENITENTIARY FOR “MODEL YOUNG MAN.” Clerk Who Stole to Be a “Good Fellow” Is Sentenced in Special Sessions. Wiward Harrison, twenty-five, who six months ago robbed his employers, was to-day in Special Sossions nentenced to the penitentiary for one year. According to Probation Officer Mullins, | Harrison came here trom Syracuse five years ago. Two years ago he entered the employ of the International Silver | Company in Twenty-third street and} there was looked upon as @ model) young man. ®ume ot money that were paid into the concern were appropriated by the young clerk to use for the parties in cates that had come to mean so much for him, First he took "0 and at another time @ $100. Then each week be took money fram customers that should have been applied to thelr .c-| Counts until one day a young woman ‘who hed given Harrison $25 on her account compiained to the firm that she had not been credited with the payment. | ‘When Harrison was asked to explain the shortage, he said he would seo about it and thereupon left the city. This was on May 18 and on June 2, Harrison re-appeared at the atore of his employers, told them that he had been @tealing from them for many months an dasked to be sent to jail. “There ia not much for me to say for myeelt,” gaid the prisoner when brought before the Justices for sentence. “I | Mved beyond my means, I tried to be & good fellow and I failed. I'm not | asking for any mercy for myself and I'm willing to take my medicine.” | Manco had not Intended to murter) ti Campaniilo, A month previous to the shooting he had attacked Nicholas Au- | Kusto, Who shot him in the arm, On the September night of the murder, Manco had taken his revolver and upon leav- | Ing bis house told his wife that he was Strike in the Gold Distetets JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, Jul 2—A strike has broken out in the R district which thr to tie up the en} of South Africt out of a simple ques! aing hours iv @ Ne ve and from there gi tect property A Vacation Suggestion We beg to remiml you that your vacation ment is INCO jess you hi att or two of “ODOL” fa your grip. Rinsing the mo’ morning, perry food particles are infested / and ich are responsible for danggress anes of the mouth and throat. IDOL” will aleo harden the aa keep ‘he teeth in a healthy condition. ‘There is Nothing “just as good” “ODOL.” Price 60 Cente At alt Druggists and Department Stores GEO. BORGFELDT & CO, NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO RED MAN COLLARS SHIRTS TROY'S BEST PRODUCT EARL & WILSON 34th Street On Sale Thursday, July 3rd. Exceptional Values. WOMEN’S BLOUSES & UNDERWEAR Batiste Blouses trimm value 3.75 to 5.95 white vest and flat collar. Ecru Batiste Blouses cuffs. with Irish crochet lace and spierre model. Has rigs eda ted Soba eee Lifestyles Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery A Delicious Seasoning HOLBROOKS SAUCE Imported Absolutely!! An assortment of Stripe Habutai Blouses,— low collar. * MUSLIN UNDERWEAR. Gowns of Sheer Nainsook, Cambric and Cotton Crepe; round or square neck; trimmed with lace or embroidery. Gowns of Sheer Nainsook trimmed with Vae lenciennes lace and embroi Gowns of Sheer Batiste trimmed with Shadow and Valenciennes Laces. Skirts of Cambric and fine lace and embroidery. e _ Combinations of Sheer Nainsook trimmed with Valenciennes lace edge. Corset Covers of Bati: celennes lace, embrofdery and ribbon, Drawers of Cambric with dainty embroidery or lace and fine tucking, value rin to 1.50 5Oc to O50 86th Street James McCreery & Co¢¥ These Stores Will Close at 5 o’Clock. Closed All Day July 4th and 5th. and embroidery, combined with fine tucking. Colored Stripe Voile Blouses, finished with values 7.50 and 9.75 5.95 and 8.75 White Ratine Blouses with colored collar and White Linen Blouses,—low collar; trimmed Blouses of White Crepe de Chine,—Robe- 28rd Street ed with Valenciennes lace 2.50, 3.95 and 4.75 value 5.75 4.50 with embroidered collar. value 8.95 7.75 crochet buttons. 5.95 value 7.50 5.00 and 8.95 values 6.75 and 9.75 value 3.95 2.95 value 1.50 950 dery. value2so 1.95 values.75 2.95 Nainsook trimmed with 95ce, 1.50 and 2.50 valucs 1,50, 2.25 and 3.50 value 1.80 OSe ste trimmed with Valon- EGc, O8e end 1 FO valuos Toc, L2G and 2.59 and Nelnsvok trinmed