The evening world. Newspaper, July 24, 1913, Page 2

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I i i i which was demon. ‘the few oritical minutes Tren Srecrea tho quarts to bo = trouble at an inetant’s no- fer te healtate to use extreme tod meena the necessity ogres Breakfast passed to-day wi @ivorder than that which marked the {peal yesterday. Thow there was bling about the ity of the the presence of extra guards pre- ented the hurling of bread and des- of foud which passed un- yesterday. Yesterday's anticipatory grievance ament the rumor that certain equads wore going to be removed to Danne- mora atid Adburn privons, instead of to maw Comstock prison at Great Meadows, continued to-day to be & @trong reason for insurgency among BG BREAK OF MUTINEERS “AND ATTACK ON GUARDS. ‘Warden Olancy minimised to-day of disorder in the prison yester~ that iti he is] th iz ii eff : i E he = 3 3 a HS WBED NO MILITIA AID, SAYS SUPT. RILEY. July &.—Shortly after noon | to-day Bupt. Riley of the State Prison | Department received word from Warden Glamcy that the armed guards at Bing | i FORTUNE TO WORK AS A SOCIALIST | i i i | i hk : i fa 5 a H i 5 i t i i ried fy gt ‘ft i z it iif tf i “ i i i t i i ae i i fF i | THE EV one HERB’S THE LATEST FAD; WEAR HANDKERCHIEF IN RING OF THE CUFF. f BRYAN MEDIATOR TOPAGIFY MEXICO | S PLAN OF WLS President Proposes Tender of Friendly Aid to Republic in Conciliating Factions, HAUDIERCHIER iy ora AT WORK ON’ PROJECT. House Committee on Foreign Affairs Considering Means of Ending Rebellion. By Samuel M, Williams, (ue WASHINGTON, July %—Mediation in Mexico ts the new policy devised by President Wilson. The House Commit- tee on Foreign Affairs ts considering © quggestion from the President that this country try the echeme of tender- ing our friendiy good offices to help bring about peace in the suffering re- Dabilo across the Rio Grande, ‘The proposition is to apply in a gen- eral way to o atrife-tora nation the Dian that is being worked to settle the confitet in our o' railroad = world, where capital and labor are on the ‘They've stopped wearing their handker- verge of going to war. ohlefe tucked up their aleeves in Wash- Whether or not the Mexican factions|!"6ton. Honest! But that doesn't mean Will aocept a tender of American good| they've reverted to the more usual cus- Offices is an unanswered question, but packs. Maser, homey br siete ea the President desires to try the rele Of) tiatian mmbassy staff, has inaugurated Peacemaker. +|¢he new custom. He wears his gaily If the friendly tender te rejected, then| colored handkerchief carefully drawn the desperate condition of affairs in| through a narrow gold band which is Mexico will inevitably domand stronger | deftly attached to his left cuff button. treatment. Intervention in some form| Washington jewellers will probably be would be almost the only course left. sestal now with orders for the new Mediation means an offer on the part | Novelty. _ of the United States to investigate the leadership and @ prociaimed murderer Papas rapa } contending an w the strongest man to restore enresee siop fighting while ¢-| order, The mediation plan eotu- Gotiations are being carried on, and a} tion, Dian worked out for having a fair and} Navy officers are not Deaceadle election in Mexico to deter-| usual excitement when ie going mine who shall rule the country. rounds, Intervention would mean ‘The President's proposition is to have| othing for them eave so @ commission of able men sent dows to| locRade duty without frin, period een reabaereodien prey erae yoy ieee e in‘arcene tobe ven a eso fo renee, ut bunwnastin cam: Constitationaiists under Carransa te|scatteren eonar’ pe pparcegid per} Submit their causes to the electorate udorganised bandit, There's no glory Only the general outlines of the plan| for any army officer in Wave-been suggested. T. details are|Bo the army and frohaaprig in reallty being worked over to-day to evolve|peace- advocates oo far concerned (Spectal to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, D. C., July %— jeplaying the tal Some definite form and method. HOPE TO FORMULATE DEFINITE PLAN IN FEW DAYS. “We are trying to formulate some Plan for mediation in Mexico," ‘sald Heary D, Flood, Chairman of the House Committes on Foreign Affairs, to-day| LONDON, July 24.—Sir to the Evening World. ‘The proposi-| Grey the British Foi tion es yet te only in tentati but we hope to be able to evolve some- | British Admiralty in case the presence thing definite in a few days, I am| ofa British warship in Mexican waters Making an informal canvass of mem-| should be considered e@dvieable, Thus bers of the House sounding out senti-| far, howe: » the British Minister in ment vd getting ddeas how dest we can| Mexico City has not reported British proceed. @ubjects to be in danger, “I can speak at present only in most] “It is pointed out by the Foreign @eneral terms of the proposition, be-| Office to-day that the Britian in Mexico ause there is nothing concrete or defi-|in common with other foreigners have mite, but you may say that there le|sufféred from the continued disturb- jer consideration the idea of medie-| ances. fe in some friendly form to bring about a settlement of affairs in Mexico. “In @ certain sense it would not be unitke the mediation that is now go- ing on in the threatened ratiroad stirke. Just what wil) come of it cannot now be Predicted, but J ehall feel out the sen- tment of some of the gentlemen of the Heuee, and we may be adie to work out ‘& solution.” : If Congress approves of the mediation plan and provides for @ commission it fe probable that Secretary of State = - “e my _-~ BRITISH READY 10 SEND WARSHIP TO MBXICO. —_——_ HAWTHORNE FAVORED FOR PRISON PAROLE Morton, Sentenced With Him Here for Misuse of the Mails, Also Recommended for Release. OY £ ae ts ih ! : i j Bryan would head it. An opportunity ‘would be afforded for Mr. Bryan to use his exceptional persuasive powers and to gut to practical service his peace propaganda, Mr, Bryan will arrive in Washington to-morrow morning from his Western lecture tour. All hia ad- vance dates on the Chautauqua ciroult have been cancelled. Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson, coming home f; ! E ; rH E i: “i # eR E i if if fl i 5a 57 Mexico City, is due te arrive'in Wash- ington @aturday. The next few days will witness rapid march of events in our elations with the neighboring re- public. Neither the United States army nor the navy is enthusiastic over the pros- pects of going Into Mexioo. Navy oMfvers report: from Mexican waters that no matter what crimes Huerta may Bave committed he is the strongest man in the country and if he falls chacs and anarchy will foliow. ‘The sifting of facts ts ‘bringing out some strong points im faver ef the Dic- tater, While there are @ lo? #8 black marks against his record, there also are @ large number of things tp be eald im bis favor as & man of strength and | : i it i ts ef E i H i t | i : § i i z m m so a =z = 2. W. W. Agitater Says He Will s¢ill ‘Talk ¢o Paterson Strikers. aris PRET j the LW. W. agitator, who was! ability. Among the ragplutioniate the & to from two to veven| most prominent leader te Governor Car- Yeare in State prises, wae released to-|ranse of Chibuahus Reporte received Gag om a -writ of error, pending a re-| give him certain credit, but eay that he ‘lew of bis trial before the Gupreme| is not big enough and strong enoush.to im November, Qssume the Presidency of Mexico ia these troublesome times, GAY HUERTA HAS TRIED TO PRO- TECT AMERICANS. ’ According to navy oMcera, Huerta has Gone more to protect Amerioang than the revolutionary chteftains, He has been handicapped often by lack of soldiers, but im @ number of cases where demands for protection were made by American representatives, be displayed extreor- ‘Ginary vigor in doing eo One report from a high naval officer otates that the majority of American refugees from the interior coming to the @ast coast assert that Huerta is, the strongest man in sight and that they know of no one else who can cope with the situation, The Washington Government found it~ self pumuled to choose between sentimen- fl favor of revolutionets whe Jegk il at i ii sik ge $3 ai Ez WASHINGTON, July %4.—Julian Haw- ‘thorne and Dr, William J. Morton, serv- ing @ year's sentence in the Atlanta penitentiary for misuse of the mails, have been recommended for parole by the parole board, and the question of thelr eelease le now under consideration by Attorney-General MoReynolds. ‘The soari’s action did not become To | aetinitely known until to-day. The pris- oners are now eligible for release, having jeerved one-third of their eentences, PASSENGERS INJURED with Fordham Car at 138th Street. switch opened ‘The front plat! the care collided, were thrown to the floor, cut and bruised. Appeared to be unhui blocked for half an ho / BY CRASH OF TROLLEYS Morris Avenue Car in Collision A Morris avenue car, southbound in Third avenue, the Bronx, started across One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street this afternoon just as a Fordham and ‘Woodlawn car, bound in the opposite Girection, took the crossover. There le a witch which sends ears into One Hun- dred and Thirty-eighth street, and the Morris avenue car etruck this just as it came abreast of the Fordham car, The of both care— dig ones of the pay-ae-you-enter type— were emashed and the motormen were ‘The aldes of doth cars were torn and many passen- Sere were tossed from their seats and Mra, Jeannette Barby of No. 103 Weat One Hundred and Eighty-seventh atreet was thrown across the oar and landed so heavily that she was knooked eense- lees, @he was carried to a waiting room at the corner, and an ambulance was summoned from Lincoln Hospital, She wae badly bruised, but otherwise The line was MAN SHOT DEAD BY POLICE IN HUNT Willlam Butler of Kenvil Shot by Chief After He Wounds Another Policeman, Corduan, Who Killed Wife, Found at Dover and Taken Back to Newark... taped to The Brenna Well) DOVER, N. J., July %.—Wiltlam’ Cor- at No. 163 Walnut strest, Newark, on Monday. Then he fled. Chief of Poliod Hthelbert Byram heard thas’ Cordusa wes hiding in this neighborhood eady thie morning he and Pow Baxzstrom secreted themecives in the ticket office of the Dover Race Track on the outairts of the town, euspecting that Corduan might te concealed 'e the grandstand. It was 1 o'clock and « brilliant meee Ut up the race track when Byram and Baxstrom saw & man emerge from the shadows of the grandstand and walk toward them. His appearance fitted ex- actly the description they had received of Corduan. Baxatrom stepped from hiding with his revolver presented at the man who approached. “Just a minute there,” he exclaimed. | “We want to speak to you” | The man started in surprise and then, fo quickly that neither Bazstrom nor Byram realised his purpose in time to prevent it, he drew @ revolver and fired several shots at Baxetrom. One creased the policeman’s forehead and he pitched to the ground. PUGITIVE FALLS DEAD FROM POLICE CHIEF'S SHOTS. Byram, hed stood moti Grew his own revolver and sent three bullets tn the direction of the stra ‘The man etaggered, and then ran. For 100 feet he fled with Byram sérding other shots after him, but suddenly he stopped and then crumpled slowly to the ground. Byram and Baxatrom, who was mere- ly scratched by the bullet which had Bresed his forehead, ran to the man ae Mexico 1% and found him dead. Two of Byram's nough bis ” body to Giller “Morgue and there friends identified it as that of William Butler of Kenvil, a neighboring town. In one of the man's pockets was a bot- tle of laudanum the police be- Neve that Butler sought the race track to commit eulcide, They ac- count for his shooting on the ground that he was so taken by surprise he Delieved himself attacked dy robbers. The reports of the several shots aroused the neighborhood dnd several other policemen came running up. Their prompt arr'val undoubtedly prevented the escape of Corduan, for, soon after- ward, Byram found him hiding in the! grand stand, whore he had been through- ‘out the shooting. He was locked up and then Byram and several men went to the home of Arling Stitte in East Black- ‘well street. TWO WITNES®ES OF ALLEGED MURDER ARE FOUND. ‘Word had come from Newark that Stitte had been a witness to the murder of Mere, Corduan, and it was because they believed that Corduan would try to Teach Gtitte’e heme that the, Newark police decided he might be in Dover. News of the capture was wired to Newark and Chief Byram was informed that Getectives would take Corduan and Stitts to Newark. They sent the news also that Hattie Lindsey, who is eup- posed to have been in the Corduan home on Monday night, had surrendered to the) wee in @ half Newark police. atupor and could not be questioned. Senate WILL REMEMBER THE MAINE. ‘Twe Men Burned While Melting Iven From the 014 Warship. Co, at No, &6 West Twenty-seventh wtreet, to-day, Alfredo Venturini, thirty- eight, of No, 1% West One Hundred and Sixth street, and Francis Vairi, thirty, of No, 28 West Twenty-ninth street, were engaged in melting tron from the battleship Maine that was biown up im the harbor of Havana. exploded. Venturini was badly burned about tho the New York Hospital. Vairi, though Representative Edmonds of Penn the Constitution to provide: ‘Congress ehall have the power to establish uniform laws on the subject of marriage and divorce for the United States and to provide penalties for violation thereof," ———_>—_—_ COATS OFF IN COURT. PITTSBURGH, July M.—Clerks in ti Court of Couvmon Pleas, Judge Marsh: Brown, appeared to-day without coats. “A man is a gentleman whetha he has his coat on or not,” ruled J Brown in coulg FORWIE SLAYER | HIDING AT RACE TRACK. duan killed his wife, Emma, in their home | er | tween husband and wife which, by In the goundry of John Williams & From geome unknown reason the ladle head, face and arme and was taken to terribly burned about the face and shouléera, refused to go to the hospital. pec ta FOR UNIFORM DIVORCE LAWS. WASHINGTON, July %.—A constitu. tional emendment to empower Congress to regulate marriage and divorce was proposed in @ joint resolution today by sylvania, The resolution would amend DISTRICT-ATTORNEY WHO HAD TO FLEE FROM POLICE CAPTAIN. ' CAPT. DULFER FIGHTS POLICE TO ATTACK DISTRICT-ATTORNEY (Continued from First Page.) certain questions which she had refused to answer in the jury room. Mr. Hirach protested against the District- Attorney's course in examining the po- ce captain's wife. “The District-Attorney has deliberate- ly insuked and bullyragged this wom- an,” he said, “until she has been, forced to the verge of hysteria, He in- sigts upon her answering queftions con- cerning confidential conversations be- she should not he asked to answer. Judge Dike ruled that Mra, Dulfer could take defense behind the provisions of the law regulating confidences be- tween husband and wife and need not question Cropsey had raised Then Mrs. Dulfer went Dark to the Grand Jury room. D BY WIFE'S CONDITION TO ATTACK CROPSEY. Bhe remained there more than an hour while her husband atrolied about in front of the court house. Finally the door opened and Mre, Dulfer, sup- thd rotunda, wife's condition and Dulfer She whispered some- Capt. Dulfer’s face me get at him! Show me where * he yelled, raging up and down the corridor. Just then Mr. Cropsey stepped out of the jury room and the Dig police captain made a dive for him. Four policemen who had been watch- ing Duifer jumped at him and pinned his arms'to his side. Mr. Cropsey took the steps to the floor above three at @ time and disappeared in the library, His rage seemed to smother Dulfer. He fought to free himself from the grip of the policeman and then suddenly fell on the floor, #hrieking and drum- ming his feet in a frensy of epilepsy. Mrs. Dulfer screamed and tried to throw herself on her husband's neck, but men restrained her, fearing she would be hurt. Policemen and civilians carried Dul- fer, still In the paroxysms of the ft, into a coatroom. ‘where he was held until an ambulance surgeon from Brook- lyn Hospital quieted him. Later he and his wife returned to their home, SHAKES KILL THREE, ANOTHER CHILD DROWNS While Mother Searches for, Little Victims Her Baby Falls Into River, KNOXVILLE, Tenn., July 2%4.—Three children of Mr. and Mrs, John Gooper, of Towngend, Tenn., were fatally bitten by rattlemakes late yesterday, and while Mra. Cooper sought for them an infant she had placed near the dank of & stream fell tnto the water and was drowned, Funéral services for the four children took piace to-day. fon NINE tN MOTOR BOAT SAFE. TRENTON, WN. J., July 4.—The party of three young women and six men reported missing and believed to have met with an accident while in a motor- boat on the Delaware River returned to their homes two-day. The young women said they had been visiting the relatives of one of the party, .|who Were camping on the shore of the Delaware, near Florence, N. J. Perc Peat cial os Blames Dope for Shooting. John Cassidy of No. 446 West Twen- ty-minth etreet, New York, who shot po- ice Laevt. Daniel J. Shea when hea caught him entering the home of Gen. Ralph B. Prime of Yonkers on July 10, was held for the Grand Jury to-day in $3,500, Cassidy was a dope victim and Mt 4p @aid his defense is that the use of ected his reason. . ir oreo. Mre, THOMAS ING WORLD, THURSDAY, SULY 94, 1 SHS BRITISH ARIY OFFER WAS MERELY A FLOURWALKE Lloyds Lawyer Offers Prove Capt. Fish Set His Yacht Afire. to hundred men who are interested in the| insurance company known as United States Lioyds, whom Capt. J. Albert Fish, of the British army, ts euing to recover $18,000 for the loss of hie yacht Centre, which was destroyed by fire, Lawyer Jesse W. Toboy, of No. 0 Wall street, attorney for Fish, asked Supreme Court Justice Donnelly to-day for judg- ment on the pleadings and incidentally to allow aim costs for serving all the de- fendante at their country homes. cision wae reserved, sv in the building was kill sould ba servem one tabsihe tat eres PHI. toy Mae | A touen or Afteon girls usually. emt? potice that ‘sash Sage agl erptlihneel Geren Hoek 18 i ts ployed there handii : would accept service when found at his| Hell Gate 40H tog | gelatine were temporarily off duty. offices. A sult was brought to recover $160 from Adrian feelin jr, one of the com- Dany, and Lawyer McLean sald that they were to abide by the result of the Teelin sult, or “because we have no fear of the result, When the matter comes up for trial we shall skow that this al- leged captain of the British army was & floor-walker in one of our department stores in this city, and that after paying lees than $5,000 for the yacht Centre he got an insurance of $15,000 on it by false representations and then actually set it fire for the purpose of collecting the insurance, We have never been able to but our hands on Capw.Fish. H io more.” SALVATION ARMY WON'T Employment Bureau Resents Use by Employers That Results in Attack on Applicant. Ait. PolNemus, in charge of the Sal- vatin Army employment bureau, an- nounced to-day that the Salvation Army fe not in the strike-breaking business, Recently he sent Milton Solomon to a factory at No. 417 Canal street. Solomon reported back to-day with a blackened eye and « cut in his lef cheek sewn up. ‘He said that as he approached the place to-day several persons beat him, calling him a strike-breaker and an enemy of the human race. Adjutant Polbemus recently drove from his office, he said, an agent of the! Paterson millowners, who had tried to/ arrange to get strikebreakers from the Army. Also he had been informed thet printing establishments in whic was friction had threatened to from the Salvation Army. “I'@ like to see them try It,” sald the Adjutant. “Our printing establish- ment !s unionized from top to bottom.” ——.—___ Sh wee More. Lyman J, Smith, a baritone sin; and Yofmerly choir leader for General) Booth in his evangelical work with the Salvation Army, was added to Sheriff Harburger’s army of special deputy Declaring that it.wae extrediely diM-| tre:and,” sald Mrs. MoCandless, “I used cult §€ not impossible to serve the one! to make my own clothes, some of them the members of the United States Lioyde| 5un fiees., 4.4v/san sete. dently doesn't swim in these waters any Pi wed trom the top of bashes HELP BREAK STRIKES} ts%t0 eriffe to-day. Willlam H. Egan, a| liding contractor, of No. #5 East One Hundred and Ninty-seventh street, and Joseph C. Werne were also. new re- crults to-day. Kee * ful refreshment and no matter what the thirst—Coca- Cola will quench it ard satisfy you— absolutely pure and wholesome. 1S ees p Cool No matter what the temperature—nd , matter what the strenuous exactions } of the day—you can find cooling, rest- COLA COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA. _~ PREFERS A HOOPSKIRT TO THE MODERN HOBBLE Mrs. McCandless at Ninety-eight Likewise Deplores the Turkey Trot and Suffragettes, a to The Drening World.) ELIZABETH, NJ, July M—Mre, Margaret MoCandless of Myrtle street was ninoty-elght years «id yesterday. She spent part of the day running & sewing machine, She still does her own housework and can read with glasses. She deplores the slit skirt, the turkey trot and the siffragettes. “When I was a girl in Londonderry, on the spinning wheel, so I find no labor in running @ sewing machine. “I wore a hoopskirt, and 1 think It much preferable to the present day hobble skirt, although I doubt if it would do in the voting booth if these busybodies get the ballot. The world seems to have made wonderful progress ince I was a girl, but I don't know that the women who want to abandon thelr homes for politics helped much.” Miss Mary MoGcnigie, who was a girl chum of Mra. McCandless's, Cled yester- day at her home in Inslee place, aged Vietime Meet De: MONTREAL, Que., pany at Belotel. 5 cause of the explodion is Marshall McLean of No. 27 Cedar| piney-r'mevigr ove Kaew President ee egret! street, opposed both motions and he ex- pond The shock of the explosion. broke plained to the Court tht one of, AIMANAG FOR TO-Day. Moon riess..10.28 BUY YOUR TEA andCOFFEE AND START A BANK Nein) At a Van Dyk Store account with your savings EST CEYLON TEA. DUCHESS COFFEE. 335\cor. ‘This is car regaler 23¢ leader VAN DYK 2-6-2) West 125th Street ween 7th & 8th Aves. on highea! mee: tae eed slopes 262 ‘Are Guaranteed. MAN BLOWN TO PIEC WHOLE VILLAGE SHA Deatn and Panic Follow Explosion of Seven Sticks of Dynamite’. Carried by Victim. ROCHESTHR, N. Y., Jaly 24.—Beven sticks of dynamite which Jonn ‘ Byeritt, thirty-five years old, was carrying In @ basket out of a shed in the heart of the village of Honeoye Falls to-day, et ploded and blew Everitt to pieces, ‘The shed was reduced to splinters, nearby buildings rocked, windows ken for a wide aera and the residents thrown into @ pantc, Only bits of i ‘tte body were recovered. ——— SEVEN MEN BLOWN TO ATOMS by Explosion of Ton of Gunpowder. July %—Seven men were blown to atome to-day by the explosion of @ ton of gunpowder at the plant of the Canadian Explosive Com- Pieces of brick and wood fell a mile windows in Belolel, three riles away, Specials This Friday and Saturday 295 21s 262 cits cei SSSause Wah Brita font ot take" aad Sneed tiene” a Vea bh Oe i f in a glass of Be sure to get the genuine. Ask for it by ite full name—Coca-Cola—io avoid imitations and substitution. Send for free booklet. 4 Arrow of C 4 you eee an

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