The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1913, Page 2

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~ eacape/in the rear of pteam before they struck the biasing / Aw in the Triangle fire In New York yy were crushed to death by jump- ing. from the top floor windows and landing on the stone pavements. The first fire company to arrive stumbled over two bodies, those of a man and a Woman, lying at the foot of the fire the building. Other lien were found later, In the fear and in front, but it is believed that the baths of the victims perished on — the third’ and fourth floors and went @own Into the ruins. E! 3. Lawrence, bookkeaper of the company, said he was working in the @Mice when the first alarm sounded. The flames were under the front atair- Was. There alto was a rear stairway and fire-encaper at the south of the Building, THOUGHT IT A FIRE DRILL AND 1 BID NOT HURRY. {Most of the women were employees ia the machine operating room on the fourth floor, They made no attempt to from the building at first, think- fag that the alarm was for a fire drill. Messengers then rushed through the Wullding to. drive the women out. “dust then,” said Lawrence, “the Whole building burst into flames. It ‘was of the ueual factory construction, @ith timber supports and brick walls. Bet went up as though it had been powder, When the flames rushed up the from otatrway it was awful. The had 125 names on my payrolls and to call the roll and get a« line oa tare ERE RALROA PUTS EW SMARL IN SRE SUNT Its Managers Confer With Na- tional Mediators Without Definite Result. OUTLOOK IS OMINOUS. Union Men Say There Will Be a Tie-Up Unless Erie Backs Down. Representatives of the Erie Ratiroad and its eubsidlary edmpanies, the New York & New Jersey and the New York, Susquehanna & Western which with- Committees of Railway Managers when Negotiations were begun with the Order of Railway Conductors and the Brother. hood of Ratiroad Trainmen to settle meeting the Federal Board ef Medie- tion and Conciliation et the Hotel Men- hattan. The conference lasted from 8.80 o'clouk to 2.20, and then J. C, Stuart, Whose home ia at No, 17 Grant street, Port Jervis, and whose back is broken, Was the only one of the victima con- be held. It was considered an ill omen by the railroad men who had expected mood to etand much dillydallying and ‘Have not hesitated to make this known, Up to 2 o'clock this afternoon when the Erie men and the mediators went into conference, plans fo: arbitration between the other forty-two railroads north of the Ohio and east of the Mis- sissipp! River and their 100,000 employees were at a standatill. WEAPON FOR HIPPING ERIE ! hs confreres bed fed an opportunity to discuss the matter with rie officials, The railroad men agreed and « meeting scheduled for this morning between the | mediators and the men was hueriediy called eff and this afterndon's confed- anew ever * THE (eran) UMBRELLA Ores THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY ~ FIVE YEARS AHEAD IN FASHION Seventh of a Series of Advanced Modcl« by Will B. Johnstone. — carried in the galls without any danger | of Proposition Taken Fiom INTO UNG. Led by President A. B. Garretson of the Conductors and President W. @. ence with Brie officials arranged in its tend. What may 60 the outcome of this conference which ie still in session can- _ > SAW GHOST OW HIS BACK » Guard From Warships. ——— Glades provinces Charge Williams at Woking ‘has called upon Rear-Admiral Misheloon for a guard of marines from =<. Asiatic squadron to Kuling to Province, which recently se- ceded. . Martial law was prociaimed to-day in ‘Kiangs! and Kiangeu provinces, accord- tag to State Department reports. 4 Sn MOTORCYCLISTS THROWN OVER TAX! THEY H @ash Into Cab at High Rate of © Speed and Land Senseless on Payement. PBeventh avenue at the junction of Hundred and Twentieth street 't wide enough for a motorcycle Joseph Schwarts, o salesman a ano. 1844 Madison avenue, and Asron Jacobus, | Mundrea printer of No, 20 Kast One and Twentieth street. In , Marming north they collided with a taxi- = bound north in Seventh avenue, thelr own vehicle and the and gustsined injuries that neces- ®@ visit to Harlem Hospital. * No. ind avenue, who ‘te ea paasbngers two men and a mays he tried his beat te avold ‘tRe motercycle, which shot out ef One and Twentieth sirest end a mp the avenue et & rapid rate of “4 ‘The motorcycle etruck the taxi best behind the left front wheel and almost upset it. aris and Jacobus were thrown Pp \ ecrogs the taxi and landed in the et unconscious. Brody was cut by " from the wind shicid of hie "ma- BohWarts has a bad soulp wound + many cuts and Jacobus is believed +. . have suffered a fracture of the right SM wits other injuries, MAN’S HEAD OFF; Workman -Suddenly Goes Insane * and’ Kills Foreman—He “'Gscapes Lynching. ‘WILKES-BARRE, Pa, July 2.—Wahtle over arranging some levels, Hotching, foreman of & gang 6 laborers laying water pipe, was de- qapitates to-day by one of the work- a iovigner 1a Plymouth Town- Lee of the Trainmen, the railroad mei @eclined to proceed with the arbitration plans been drinounced unequivorally and pub- Holy, This ultimatum was delivered last night to thé Federal Board and at that time—It, was, learned to-day—there was put Into” tte" hands of the mediators a weapon that may or may not have of use in suasion which was ; to bring the Erie even to a of Up to last night its deol- was irrevocable,” What Messrs, Chambers, Koapp and Hanger might have used as an argu- ment was the material supplied to them inst might by President Lee, who chargea that the Erie's attitude was directed by J. P, Morgan & Co., and two big banks, the names of which he didn't mention, but which were under- od by the Federal Board to be the tional City and the Firat National ‘ou will recall that in 1910," de- clared Lee, Erte declined to abide by the Clark-Morrisey award which settled the wage difficulties of the New York Central and to which all other Eastern roads subscribed. 1 went to Boston at that time to eee George W. Perkins, : “I found him in bed in his hotel and was received in his room, 1 outtined the situation to him and told him the dun- ger of the Mrie outside tue pale. He reached from his bed to a telephone and called up President F. D. Underwood of the Erie. “He talked to Mr. Underwood as I wouldn't talk to @ messenger boy and when he concluded he had ordered Underwood to bring the Brie into line at once. You may recall aleo that this was done at the last moment. The only way to deal with the Erle ts through Morgan & Co, or the banks.” Judge Chambers replied that public opinion was something stronger even than banks or Government and he asked the railroad men to défer eny strike action on the Erie until he and Absent-Mindedness Probably you have heard about the fellow who went hurrying through a crowd of people at one of the World Fairs and excitedly in- quiring of one person and then an- other: “Have you seen my wife?” In these sultry, summer days one is apt to lose a pocketbook, suitcase, watch, ring, dog, parcel, &<., and go about its recovery in some such in- effective Way. If your “Lost and Found” Ad. is printed im the Morning or Sunday World it will get a circulation in New York City greater than if pub- lished in the Herald, Times, Sun and Tribune COMBINED, And The World accepts “Lost and Found” Ads. over the tele- phone. Call 4000 Beekman action will be sunpended, however, only until some definite action is obtained the Erle, Thon, if this be unfavo {he mep the atrike which will 9,900 conductors and trainmen will be ordered at once. Cannot prevent the ultimate ween officials and em- other forty-twe roada, Erie Erie Already a day bas been lost, for it is felt among the men that the railroad managers were pre- Dered to waive their demand that their own eight grievances be arbitrated at this time and the attitude of the Erie alone remained in dispute. With it wettied, articles of agreement as to the questions to be arbitrated could bave bee: drawn up and signed to-day. The Bret day's work by the mediators resulted in considerable progrese which hae now bee. held up. It was agreed that mediation would not suffice and that resource must be had to arbitra- tlon, QUESTION oF TERME OF ARBITRATION. ‘Then regained only the question of settling the points to be arbitrated and walle no announcement «ug from the board that the managers had withdrawn from their position, it was felt by the men that euch an- Rouncement would have been made at the hearing planned ¢or this morning. yesterday—frat with the managers, then with the trainmen, and again last night with th port of this ce was to have been to the trainmen this morning, This report will be made as soon as the difficulties connected with the Erie are settled. The trainmen and con- ductors hope that this will bé accom: plished to-Gay and that the announce ment of the Erie will be such that arbi- tration conferences can be continued at ones, If the Erie remain obderate, however, ell arbitration plans will have to wait upon the galling of a strike on the Brie. BOY BLOWN TO PIECES BY DYNAMITE IN POCKET Wrestling With His Brother When| He Falls and Explosion Fol- lows—Other Boy Injured. POUGHKEEPSIE, N. ¥., July B.-A stick of dynamite in the hip pooket of Martin Funk exploded and blew him to pieces when he fell during » playful wrestling match with hie brother, Row- land Funk, the brother, had his left hand blown of, Martin was eighteen yeare old. Both boys resided in Hudson. The ac- cident occurred last night in @ tent where the Punks were camping near Germantown. a “STOP THIEF!” The votre hor THIEFI” caught r eye, bai why you're reading this. And the story whose title is “STOP THIEF!” will catch your Interest with the very first sentence and will hold It tn mental handcuffs to the last chapter's end. “STOP THIEF" ts the greatest laugh- story of the summer. It is novellzed from the successful play of the same title, and it Is one unbroken succession of | and thrills, with a triple-love tunning through it. “STOP THIEF!" wil in in The y, July 30, Evening World on W Write down For that is the date. ARRANGING | T tknew he admitted it might be Port du Conferences were hei by the mediators | Salut, Cheddar, Cammemiert, Roque- siven All he wan certain of was that the CARNEGE: “BOMB” WAS LOADED WI DEADLY UNBURGER (Continued from First Page.) tigation up to this point, Now they bent Inquisitive noses over the package. “Smells lke fromage de brie," has- arded McMann. “I had some onve at a table d'hote. ike that,” declared Unger. ie chee: ‘e I come from. it's limburger,” declared “There uin't another cheese “y Fogarty. that size that could get up such a aa forthoom- | ninety horse-power smell.” think Dr. Kennard, who is @ chemist and should know about such things, wouldn't hasard a guess. For all he fort, Stilton, Edam, Gigucester, Ches- hire, Dunlop, Gorgonzola, Gruyere, Lincolnshire, Neufchatel or eapsago. deadly bomb which had terrified all the Carnegie employees and which had had the police guessing for nearly twenty-four hours was plain cheese, “Well, I'm glad hit it, anyway,” declared Will ‘a begun to think 1’ lost my /_ “You hit it, all right,” answered Eagan, “but I'm hanged if I believe you. Milled it.” ‘The story of the receipt of the bomd, as the police have learned it, le that Mr. Clark, alarmed at the peculiar appear- ance of what he had unwrapped, hur ried with it to Charles Ru verts, an ele- Vator operator in the building, and told him to “dispose of It" without publicity, “It must be a bomb," gasped Roberts, 4 Mr. Clark admitted that such was his euspicion. EAGAN’S SEARCH IN MYSTERY OBSTRUCTED, HE SAYS. Roberts made for the roof and depos- ited the sinc vessel there, after which he summoned @ traMo policeman. The traMc policeman thought the affair too technical for him and notified his sta- on, Detective John T. Barren was Geapatched from the East Fifty-firet street station and guarded the bomb ua- Ul Inepector Kagan arrived. “*We don't want this to get in the newspapers’ the clerk sald to ma” Eagen informed @ repo eald. “This is @ private mat ion't want any fuse avout it’ «se “I was angry and told the clerk was my duty to make @ public report of the contents of the package, I de Bianded to know the address of the manager of the office, The clerk told me it was against the cules to give sch information. “I cannot understand why auch mys- tery should be made If the package Proves to be an nal mach’ th detectives are losing muco valuable {ime because those employed in the a! fices refused us information On the other hand, !f it is a hogs then J and other city employees have wasted | time” - aul was called by telephone, @ man h IN RECEIVING JAP ENVOY’ Tokio Tells Mexico Anti-American | of ite contents being lost, thougn if | nitro-glycerine is inside, it's a marvel the thing didn't explode.” POLICE OBLIGED TO WAIT OVER-NIGHT FOR CLUES. When the summer home of Robert A. Franks, agent of Mr. Carnegie, who has his office In the corporation rep! that Mn Franke had atart- ed for the West in the afternoon. This speaker said he could not giye the ad- dregs of Mr. Clark. Roberts, the ele- vator operator, who lives at No. 704 Ninth avenue, refused to make a de- tailed statement. “There will be @ lot of trouble over this when Mr. Carnegie hears about it,” maid a member of the clerical staff of the corporation. “I was told to refer reporters to the Kast Fifty-firet street station and to say Mr. Clark would ve glad to talk to-day.” ‘The Carnegie Corporation was created by an act of the New York Legislature in 1911. It te the biggest of all the Carnegie undertakings and was formed to administer the funds for libraries, eclentific research and other public works of the tronmaster. -Besides Mr. | Carnogie the trustees are Senator hu Root, Dr. Henry 8. Pricchett. Dr. Rob- ert 8 Woodward, Charles L. Taylor, | W. N. Frew, Robert A. Franks and James Bertram. MUST NOT HIT AT U.S. Demonstration Will Not Be Sanctioned. MEXICO CITY, July 2.—Japan, through its Charge d’Affaires here, has suggested to the Huerta Government that it will not sanction any demon- stration upon the arrival of the Jap- anese Minister which may partake of an anti-American character. The Charge d'Affaires said at the same time, however, that his Govern- ment was pleased at the manifesta- tions of Mexican friendship. pees TURKS TAKE ADRIANOPLE. —i— Sultan's Ferce Also Re-enters Kirk-Killoseb. CONSTANTINOPLE, July 2%2.—It was officially announced hero to-day that Turkish troops commanded by Enver Bey had entered Adrianople this after- noon and that Kfrk-Kilisseh also had been occupied by the Turke to-day. LONDON, July 2.—Apparently con- filcting reporte as to thefate of Adri- anople come from Sofia and Constanti- nople. It appears, however, that a de- spatch from the Bulgarian capital an- pouncing that the Turks merely recon- noltered the position and then retired was sent off in the night before the news of the entry of the Turkish troops had been received. SUES FOR $50,000,000. state of Missiasippt Begine Action Againet Two Railroads, CLARKSDALE, Mites, July 2.—The State of Miveissippi to-lay brought sult here against the Illinois Central and the Yazoo and Méssissipp! Valley Ratiroade, asking 90,000,000 in penalties for alleged violation of a law forbid. ding consolifation of parallel and com- peting lines of railroads, and demand- ing that the two roads be ordered to conse doing business in the State. In the bill filed towlay it is con- ténded, as announced yesterday by At- gorney<General Collins, that a majority of the atock of the Yasoo and Missis- sipp! Valley Line ie owned by;the Tili- nois Central and that the State auf. fers by the alleged combination of the roads, which the Attorney-tleneral deems, formerly were in competition. “I can't think of any explosive liquid to begin| that would withstand the shaking up I the ex," sald be. “The box Scustaiy, wfidared on shad 1b anal bo WHEN ACTION ON MEE SKED {Fall Stirs Upper House, Insist-| | ing on His Bill for Protec- | | tion of Americans. |SAYS TIME HAS COME. Party Lines Broken in Support Democratic Platform. By Samuel M. Williams. (itae Cer oe Phe Bvening | » WASHINGTON, D.C. July 23.— ‘There was war talk te-day on the floor of the 8 Such phrases as prep- aration for war, armed force, inter- vention, time for action, an end to de- lay, Were heard from the lips of ve- rious Senators. It was like the old days before the Spanish war when Jingo Senators spouted about the suf- ferings and wrongs of Cuba. Now, however, the belligerent Senators are Hlled with indignation ico, @ country torn by rev by internal dissensions, weaker than she was in 148, when this nation first swooped down upon It im ald ef the re- volting Texans. The debate had Its inception In a reso- lution by Senator Fall of New Mexico @esigned to force protection for Ameri- can citizens in at the hands of and next from the raids of revolution- ists and roving bandits. CALLS FOR PROTECTION OF AMERICAN CITIZENS. The resolution was as follows: ewolved, that the Constitutional rights of American citisens should pro- tect them on our borders and go with them throughout the world, and every American citixen residing er having Property in any foreign eountry is entitled to and must be given the full Protection of the United States Gov- ernment for both himeeif an@ his prop- erty." There was as much political strategy as expediency in the resolution because its wogling ts verbatim from the Balti- more Democratic ptatform and the Re- publicans took delight tn crowding it home on protesting Democrats. Senetor Fall, representing @ border State, ie full of aggression. He declared that procrastination of beth the Taft and Wilson administrations had led us up to @ point where conditions had be- come 80 strained and delicate that we could not make a declaration to protect our own interests. Senator Lodge of Massachusetts urged an adoption of the declaration. On the Democratic #ide Williams of Mississippi and Stone of Missourt were for it and assumed aggressive attitude toward Mexico, Bacon of Georgia, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and O'Gorman of New York, tried’ to side- ple of the Unked Stat | Position of responsibility “at this time | and any enunelation of principle euch ae this should be thoroughly con: y Aa to whether thie resolution enunciates the truth should not de diecussed at this time,” he eaid. “Thies ts entirely a question of expediency.” Benator Fall, aroused by what he termed intimations from Senators that ne was seeking to precipitate war with the resolution, made @ etirring reply. ‘My sole purpose," sald he, ‘through out this arfd the former Administration has been to prevent war with Mexico. 1 urged the last Administration to real- ize the altuation in Mexico and to act so as to prevent war, But matters have dragged on unt!l now we are told the situation is mo Gelicate that we should not make a declaration of this broad principle. CONGRESS BILL CALLS FOR INTERVENTION. WASHINGTON, Jtly 32.-—-Representa- tive William H. Murray of Oklahoma, well known as “Alfalfa Bill,” intnoduced in which he invites the Senate to concur, directing intervention Im Mexico if order and peace are not restored within thir:y days after President Wileon issues o proclamation to that effect, Murray's resolutions characterise Pro- his regime as “founded upon treachery, duplicity and murder.” ae ENVOY WILSON COMING HERE HAVANA, July &.—The United ke-ind wi ees ess att teen ene enn itn | an olaborate set of resolutions to-day HUNT EC CONIC AS MURDERER OF POLKEMAN CAL Church Robber Said to Have Vowed He’d “Get” Man Who Captured Him. LURED BY A FALSE TIP.| Slain Policeman Mysteriousty | Summoned to the Scene of Murder. “| Two facte unearthed to-day by the| email army of detectives who are work- | ing under the personal direction of Deputy Commissioner Dougherty threw | the first strong gleam of light Into the ahgdow syrrounding the murder of Pe an John E. Cahill in the yard of St, Matthew's Roman Catholic Church, Lingoln place and Utica avenue, Brook- lyn, early yesterday morning. One is that some information which | Cahill had caused him to hurry from one end of his beat eight blocks on a Utica ‘avenue trolley car to a drug store opposite the church and there con- ceal himeelf in the dark doorway, whence he coujd command a view of the rear door of the sacred edifice. The other is that a recently freed convict from Sing Sing, who passes in underworld under the sobriquet of 'Hooky" Taylor, had vowed to take the life of Cahill, who had been reaponsibie for the three years behind bars ti Taylor had completed just two months ago. 0 BELIEVE THE POLICEMAN WAS LURED TO DEATH. Dougherty and his uides believe there 1s a sinister connecton between these two circumstances. In the light of these facts, Juat uncovered, ticy ere incline? to the bellef that Cahill, who was a torror to the shady citizens of “Chi- cago Row" and other » ons hadi ed by criminals in his di , was lured to his death by a ‘el! ® pict, and that the evider of attempted burglary ‘on thi an harsh door were mane ufactured nierely to throw the police off the true trail. Detective gleaned the firat {luminating bit of circumstance fron the conductor of a Utica avefue car. He said that at) 2% o'clock yesterday morning Police- man Cahill, whom he knew, nad{ boarded his car’ at Atlantic avenue, elsbt blocks away from the church and had ridden to the corner of St. John's place “There he had Jumped off and | hurried over. to the doorway of Gack’A | pharmacy, on the northwest corner of Utica avenue and 8t, John's place. ‘The condactor looked b: passed and saw the poll in the shadowed doorway tently out through the angle of the show window in the direction of the rear of St. Matthew's Churoh. MAY HAVE RECEIVED FALSE TIP FROM SLAYERS. Nothing gould have caused this u usual,action of Cahill, Dougherty a gues, exeept the knowledge that some- | thing was going to happen in the| churchyard which Cahill thought he} ought. to watch. the politeman was deliberately lured to hie death, the detectives beileve that | while st the other end of his beat! Cahill had received a tip that the church was to be burglarized and had | waited in the pharmacy doorway until! saw figures moving in the church. | — eae + to fiave vowed to. “x6” caught by the polléeman Ls i robbing another Catholic Church vielnity of St. Matthew's, Of the five suspects who wene examined during the night. & watehman of No. BI as held. He has a watch: ‘s ihanty at Malbone and Kingstohy niues, lend than tliree blocks from. @Hare the murder of the policenme ort He is being held for further examina- tion under the Sullivan law because of @ revolver found in his shanty. BLOOD FOUND. ON PRISONER'S HAT. On a@ aoft felt hat worn by Salert are stains that doctors from st. | Johd's Hospital said looked jike blood. The y Baleri admits they are bined e them by saying that nose bieed. ds Lieut. McCurdy and Detectives ‘Greve, Van Deusen, Byrnes and Reynolds made the arrest after information unearthed by Greco, They, heard that, Salett been associating with a young Itallan known aaa “bad man” who.bad served fifteen months for assaulting « min with a knife, This latter proved to be Angeio Lulsl, thirtystwo of No. 40 Mid- wood street, the police say. After questioning these two men for three hours the police sent out and-gotdhe other three, whose names Wareeste® given out. ’ ne ‘The funeral of the murdered poflcerad will take place totmorrow after:i 2-o'clock at his late residence, Noma Chestnut street, the pastor of.she Male Avenue Lutheran Church officiating. 94 sergeant and seven patrolmen of Atlantic avenue station will act #¥ escort of Honor when the body Is te- moved to Lutheran Cemetery for He terment. “ acme Capt, Owen Rooney, two: leuteneante and forty men of the same stathenseill also be In attendance, with the .polige band to head the funeral cortege. ity a *. ss WOMAN OF 74 HANGS S&LA Mrs, Elisabeth cide im Cellar of Her Beokx Hamm Mrs. Elizabeth Levy, seventytoti¥ years old, hanged herself in the cellar of her home, No, 893 Union aventie, "th Bronx, this aft non. Her body ‘wae discovered by her sister-in-law!” Ste Frank C. Sauven, who Hved with Mitt, Levy. sere Mrs, Sauven told the police that ‘MAW Levy had been suffering from. ite melancholia lately, though she had give en no evidences of @ suicidal mania: a1 pant eral ale? ENGINEERS’ GALA DAY, '* i" Those hardy chaps who deep down below the sidewalks of New York, {n'a region of continuous heat, kaép the’ éh- gines moving that causes all the gféat trade energies to reapond—the Intér- national Union of Steam and Operat! Enxineers—will have their annual outin: next Sunday at Celtic Park, In their precarious calling there are many acol- dents from day to day that kill of maim without warning, and so the sick apd benevolent fund of the society has.e drain upon it. To keep this fund re- plenished is the object of the outing next Sund : mt 7 fe uphered in Jersey City by Hughey O'Nef, an old-time boxer and trainer, to-day led him to apply to the Jergey City po} for a thirty-day sentence in fall. ié asserted that he could get lodging» no- where In the city, and if the police re- fused to lock him up he intended forcing them to do so by breaking a window. Te save the window the leu! nt complied with O'Nell's request. G'Nell was onew trainer f Scottish-American A. G. of New cant M ors After ears WASHINGTON, July Postmaatel General Burleson was summoned to-4a¥ to appear before the Senate Post-Oft Committee Thursday to explain by yhét 2, On the theory that! outhority he proposes to reduce pargel” post rates, The summons Is believed ty be the start of a fight to prevent the extension of the parcel post syst as proposed In pl foot. 84 BARCLAY STREET Corner West +» Women ob Rierite A ial aloe meas BL , 206 BROADWAY © ** ner Fulten Street”! ler NASSAU STREET Between Beckman & , SUNDAY WORLD “WANTS™ MONDA v MOnDERS | soetedile he

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