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WEATHE BASEBALL and RACING f “ Circulation Boc!: Open to All. an ‘| uicide From Romance of Bogus Bion 3 von Arkool DITTO) Lo) we 4 and Saturday. Coosriaht. _o TT bead ONE CENT. F2 SKTY CONVICT MUTAEERS IN SHALES DEFY GUARDS ON THER WAY TO ALBURN t | RETURNED DIPLOMAT Leaders of Incendiary Revo! N | WHO ADMITS SUPPORT at Sing Sing Riot on OF HUERTA IN MEXICO. j March to Train. 400 LOCKED IN CELLS. Close Confinement During Hunt for Firebug Is Warden Clancy’s Order. (Bpecial From a Staf Correspondent of The Bvening World.) OSSINING, July 25,—Warden Jumes Clancy scored heavily against the rebellion of the convicts in Sing) 18, by The Prene Publishing he New Vern Weeld). "'STOODBY HUERTA Sing today when, amid scenes of! unparalleled disorder, he shipped the: firet draft of sixty mutinous felons to Auburn. Because by sudden shift of strategy he included in this draft twenty-six Clase A, or first term convicts, who were the chief firebrands in the ‘veek'’s riot of incendiarism and dis- order and who believed themselves secure from inclusion in the removals to the other prison, the Warden gave convincing proof to the caged des- peradoes under him that he was master. 400 CLOSELY CONFINED DURING HUNT FOR FIREBUG, After these sixty, shackled and les- froned like viclous elephants in a circus menagerie, had lect for Auburn In a special car and under the eyes of State Detective Jackson and five guards, the Warden ordered that 30) of the nearly 140 prisoners remaining who were knowa not to have participated tn any of the rebellion of the past few days CHANCE MEN GET TO NAP PITCHER IN FIRST ROUND } < 4 should be released from their celis and gent to the shops, Later he relea sd more of the rebels until only about #0 \ the worst disturoance makers re-]Wolter and Danicls Slug for) mained bebind bars. Tuesday the sre- \ ond draft of trom W to 1m) will go to Two Baggers and Put Auburn, i ‘ g Meunwhlle Warden Claney continued (gle ck 3 o) to push his investigation Into the origin Locals in Lead. ! of the big fire of Tuesday, whieh \N wrought $200,000 damage by the destruc: ean tion of four of the shop buildings, and THE BATTING ORDER. of the blaze of yesterday, which was discovered in the clothing shop before It ( hed progressed to a dangerous stage. | Wolter, ef Hie velleyes he knows the two men who] Daniels, rf ¢ ret Tuerday's fire the ingle con-| Peckinpaugh, #8 Jackson f Vict who tried yesterday to fire the} Knight, Ih keto clothing shop. Cree if ‘Turner, Warden Clancy *t a maren | Maki BeAGhye | on the men of the firat draft, who, in an: | Sumter Oa e, Hleipation of just what was to happen! Ciypiren—Eean and Dineen, Attends to-day, had been indulging tn incendlar-| ance 4,00) fam and striking every waking hour since , ‘At 7 o'clock, when the (ope ening World.) Oe Te dand| POLO GROUNDS, July 2,—About 4,000 usual call for bre: eakfast is the cell doors are thrown ber happened; not a bolt was drawn, CONVICTS MAKE BEDLAM OF CELL HOUSE. ‘Phe convicts, pounding on the bars of nothing Highlanders to the r first game against wot its first as a come-back. He fans w med t) Polo Grounds in the The crowd Knight Chance sent Fisher to the mound, Cleveland glimpse of was opposed by Mitchell for the > FIRST INNING—Lelbold flied out to Wolter, Chapman was thrown out by Peckinpaugh, and Johnston fouled out |to Knight, No Runs, cchnie struck out, Wolter dou- Danieis emacked a two (Continued on Second Page.) Like a Gentle Rain . | Avot S009 offers to ire, work, Miley Washington ato sell, real. esol ered oyun New Yi separate Wal —:—NEXT—:-— > pr . SUNDAY'S WORLD | Lay aside your umbzclla vf apathy and | let this downpour of upportunitie away your domestic and business ane | ret Ratti ne ‘a good atop of It there is a very particular kind of a) rounder and virow to Peck, fora out position, worker, home, investinent, bare | Turner, Lajole Kulng to third, Graney gain, etc., you seek, stole second. O'Nell got a base on balls, filling the bases. Mitchell filed out to Use a Little Ad. in the Sunday World) Wests, No Runs. Three Left. ‘end it will get a circulation in New| cree fied out to Jackon, Midkitt vot City greater than if published | struck out, Gonwett also struck out, o Runs. he Sunday Herald, Tinws, Sun ™: ai itvibane Combined. THIRD INNING—Lelbold out to Knight, (Continued om @ixth Pan unassisted. Chapman | er pe ~ gioundea | 2 AND GLAD OF IT, WILSON SAY SAYSHERE: Advised Our or cet to Sup-| port Mexican Government, Without Orders. NO OTHER COURSE OPEN| 1,000,000 Bandits in Mexico as “Constituiionalists,” Says Ambassador. Henry Lane Wilson, Ambassador to Mexico, who was summoned home by President Wilson, arrived ere to-day onthe Ward liner Mexico, Mr, Wil- son at the first question on Mexican affairs exclaimed: “Now, I can't talk about that. I can't #ay anything at this time.” But in an instant he burst out: “I stand pat on all I have done as Am- baswador in Mexico City. They ac- Quse me of having stood by the pres- @nt Mexican Government. Well, I have done so and I am glad of It. I stand pat.” Again and again he introduced this phrase Into his talk, ACTED FOR HIMSELF WITHOUT INSTRUCTIONS. “For one hundred years,” he continued, “It haw becn the custom In diplomatic circles to recognize a de facto govern- ment. I followed custom and I am glad. I did send instructions to American consuls throughout Mexico to support the present government by their tnflu- ence, I received no instructions from Washington. I acted on my own Initia tive, “You must remember when you read the garbled accounts of the altuation In Mexico that there are @ lot of persons who want Intervention in Mexico for | selfish reasons, and much that you read in inspired. My Instructions to consuls were designed to ald in bringing about I wanted to sustain They don't un- They call | peace and order, law and not bandits. derstand bandite up here. them constitutionalists, “My idea in putting the Mederal au- thorities in full control when the re- t against Madero was lives of thousands of Americans, It was the only proper course for me. There will be absolute haos in Mexico If the present Gov- ernment does not stand. Nearly all the warring factions are bandits, heltian 4 to protect the There ave 1,000,000 of them In Mexico, | where brigandage work, “If T had not brought Huerta and Diaz together after the bombardment of Mexico City the whole city would nave been in flames.” MRS. MADERO'S CHARGES FORGED, HE SAYS. Mr. Wilson became tly excited when Ms attention was called to the charge of Mrs, Madero that Wilson was personally responsible for her hus oand's murder, “That a all part of @ political game," he exclaimed angrily, “and when T get to Washingtcen I will prove it. Mra. Madero cause to be published letters which are now on file in the State De- partment which are absolute for; , Wilson sent a wirel Pays better than instructions and @ messenger met ship with an order for him to proceed Ainong the N. Brown, By Nations! Rail affairs in | have somete her passengers was EB. He refuse Mexioo, winald Fo dat Valie, who studied yuditions in Mexico by order of se etary Bryan, also vefuded to be juot 1 There Was much difference of Non among otier passengers am to Wilson's course in Mexico, but he Mr ad as many defeaders as he had ad- verse critics. — bast Two Days 0 of {, Big. Sale. N12 Blue ee NEW YORK, “FRIDAY, JULY 25, HIGHLANDERS AT NEW YORK— 1 0 0 0 0 Ratt: 1 ee—Fisher and Gossett; Mitehe 00000 4 CLEVELAND 1913. | GIRL WHOSE FATHER KILLED SELF TO-DAY LIKE RER MOTHER DID| ae | 10) 1 i and O'Neil Broker Kill |Robert Schroeder Third Sui-, cide Victim Following Ro- mance of Daughter. | HUSBAND ENDED LIFE.| Adventurer Squandered $200,- | 000 and Then Took Fatal | Dose of Poison. Robert Schroeder, a wealthy retired | Sixty-ninth street today, His death’ completed a cycle of tragedies in the family, of which his was the third death by suicide. Mr. Schroeder took his life in the! same bathroom where his wife had committed suicide (n the same m ne" about three years before. Rich- ard Arkovy, a Hungarian, who styled himeelf the Baron von Arkovy and whose marriage with Elsa Schroeder broke the mother's heart and led to her suicide, killed himself by potson a: the Carlton Hotel in London April 18 of this year. The whole cycle of tragic deaths had {ts Inception with the runaway marriage | of Klea Schroeder, a beautiful girl of | the blonde Teutonic typa who met Ar kovy In @ vaudeville theatre when she was little more than a girl, and was Induced by him to marry through the magic of golden tales of a title and castles in Hungary. Arkovy was a clerk {n @ cigar store at the time he met Elsa Schroeder. Within @ very short time eof ie daughter's marriage, Mrs. Schroeder, whp had grieved over the girl's un fortunate match, went to the bathroom of the expensively furnished home on West Sixty-ninth street and turned on was dead when found. Bchro death Blea in- ‘ucks in the Jacob Hoffman Company worth §300,000, In- come and principal went largely to Arkovy and the pair gravitated be- tween New York end Paris, living in great state. Robert Schroeder refused to recognize his son-in-law, nor would he see his daughter until she had given up her spendthrift husband. This she did when the crash of al) her dreams came. COST HER $200,000, She returned to New York in Decem- ber, 1911, declaring that her “titled” hue band had cost her $300,000 and that she aid not intend to support him longer. Sho had discovered that instead of being of a noble family he was the son of & dentist in Budapest, Hungary. After Elsa Arkovy’s return @ recon- cillation between her father and her- self was affected by friends, aud she went to live with her father in the | home she had deserted at the time of | her inarriage. Mr, Bohroeder's death was discovered to-day by Gertrude De Bri « of} the houseield servants, v the ter of tae house did not appear for fast at his unual hoar she went | upstairs to investigate, she traced the Jodor of gas to locked vathroom door ¢ second Moor, Unable to break down the door, she climbed onty a fire-esvape and thue rcached the batiroom window. She saw Mr. Schroeder lying, particlly clad, on the floor by the half filled tub, He had @ rug covered over tim and pillows under his head, Gas # found, subse- quently, to be flowing from the open cocks of a small gas radiater in the bathroom, Dr. Drury of No. 112 West Sixty-ninth street was summoned, bu: said that Mr, Schroeder had been dead more an hour, Mrs, Arkovy was are oe » Wife Did When Child Wedded Bogus Baron malt broker and brewer, killed him, elf by inbaling ‘gaa te’ the Rares of his handsome home at No, 46 Weet j @icceed Charles B. Mellen. Mr, Kiliott, SAID HER TITLED HUSBAND| o s Selt Like (ELLIOTT ELECTED PRESIDENT OF THE. NEWHAVEN ROAD, He Will pee hice Chaige of His Office on Sept. 1, Succeeding Mellen. sheer wes 10-409 Of thd Now York, New Haven Gna Hartford Haltroad Company, to ELSA SCHROEDER von ARKOVY {O00 TRANSFUSION FR MRS, PARKHURST Soe W-ERAE CONDON Doctors Take ake Radke Step in Rallying Strength of the | Suffragette Leader. | 0 le now President of the Northern Pacific, was to-day elected to the board of the New Haven road. This announce- | ment was shortly before 3 o'clock, immediately after the adjournment of the meeting of New Haven directors. Mr, Biliott will assume charge of his Office on Sept. 1. In the mean time Mr, foto il jbl rigaeasg shack bodied ous Physicians in attendance on Mrs. im- ‘The pectal committee further roc-|Meline Pankhurst, who was yesterday ommendes that the office of the Chair-| released from Holloway Jail, taxe such man of the Hoard of the New Haven|@ serious view of her condition that Railroad be created. 1 ~ re eS 1 tates in which} {7 o"sered to-day the immediate the N Haven @: m operates be adequately represented by directors who shall look after the interests af their respective States. The legal department, it wae recom- mended, should be amplified, and that efforts shout be made to obtain uni- form raiiroad laws for the territory 4 by the New Haven. late to-day that her condition had im. ‘Mr. Eliiett's idea of @ ratiroad admin-| Proved mlightly since morning, when | the blood transfusion operation was performed. The transfusion wan euc- cemaful, suid Dr Murray, complications Mrs, pected to get bette Bince she w early in the Mrs, Pankhurst had not ful of food in jail. Time has starved herself into a helpleas a: forcing the Home on ticket of leave. Kech las becn at liberty the wonan has ventured out to some pub- lic mecting before her health was re- stored, and has been sent back Into jail by Scotland Yard. Lady Sybil Smith, daughter of the Karl of Antrim; Mrs, Pethick Lawrence and Miss Evelyn Sharpe were sent to | prison to-day for @ fortnight on a charge of disorderly conduct during an attempt to hold @ militant suffragette meeting at the entrance to the lobby of the House of Commons yesterd. al the accused refused to find sure! LONDON, July %—The consulting | Tesort to » transfusion of blood. Mra, Pankhurst's from weakness and inanition the effects of her “hunger and re wo extreme that prehension \y {eit by the doc- to the outcome, Flora Murray, une of the phyal- attending Mrs, Pankourst, said and without Pankhurst tn ex. state thelr grievances to the manage- ment, The New Haven directors, in view of the volume of complaints (some based un ghastly disasters), expressed through their spokes- man, Tueodore N. Vail, that the New Haven neads e head of the kind to carry havy According to members of the New Haven Board, a new office will be coreated for Mr. Billott as soon as a meeting of the stockholders wil! change the by-laws of the corporation. The stockholders, who vesterday saw the market price of the New Haven fall lower than ever tn the history of t company, Benerally supposed to do alm anything that will make their investment more reliable. When Mr. Elilott becomes chairman the New Haven group of financiere—| tiy, and to pick out body of Ee rene ats to take over the details ndling of the business of the teal an Its allied lines La o it shall coase g oo nemy of re went to jail. FIVE CHILDREN BITTEN organisation. 12 PAGES MRE OF CAHILL }dtent and Carrigan, AFELLOW POLICEMAN, RELATIVE E DECLARES: Cousin of Dead foleutie s Wife © ' Declares Victim Made Enemies By Openly Rebuking Shirkers and Cowards on Force. POLICE HINT OF SUICIDE RIDICULED BY DR. WUEST Known to Have Borrowed Revolver | Found Near Body, but Couldn’t Have Killed Himself. Following an official report by Second Deputy Commissioner Dougherty, intimating that Policeman James E, Cahill, found dead in the | yard of St. Matthew's Church, Utica avenue and Lincoln place, Brooklyn, early Monday, was not murdered by church burglars, but killed ‘himself, came a statement to-day from William J. Plander, a cousin and fosters brother of the dead policeman’s wife that Cahill was murdered by» “brother officer” of the Police Department. Cahill was unpopular, according to Plander, because he criticised fellow-policemen for shirking danger and responsibility, even though his censure was in the presence of higher officers of the psa ment. Deputy Commissionsr Dougherty BASEBALL GAMES TO-DAY. |TcPt: which was taken as © cone clusion by the officials of the depart Ment that Cahill had killed NATIONAL LEAGUE. | Sent ime, an nad killed himest AT PITTSBURGH. information: PHILADELPHIA— KNIFE WOUNDS ‘MERE SCRATON- — 200 — | &8/ ACCORDING To DOUGHERTY PITTSBURGH— The description of the position tm 320 _ which Policeman Cehill's bedy wes found, lying on tte back in the churete yard with an out-of-date police revolver, — = hunting knife and the policemaa’e own club lying near, Spaces oa the steel part of the butt of the revolver, | Batteries--Seaton and Kiliifer; Hen- diy and Bin —>— AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT BOSTON. on which the identifying numbers ef CHICAGO— policemen usually are stamped, had Beem, 101 — | fled away. One shot had been fred BOSTON— from the weapon. An octagonal handle 01 — | chisel was also found near the body, Battories-—Cicotto and Schalk; Be-| Marke Ike thoue likely to be made by the face of the chisel were fo the lock of a back door of the Mr, Dougherty said that the described by Coroner's Physician 4s found on Cahill were @ bullet wound in the left temple and wounds on the right and left and on the left thigh just abor kneo, The cut on the right breast a “mere scratch,” according to Dougherty’s account of Dr. Wuegts report. f AT PHILADELPHIA. DETROIT— 0000 PHILADELPHIA~~ oooo0 il i i $ Batteries—Dubuc and dtanage, Shaws key and Lapp. AT WASHINGTON, ST, LOUIS— The cut on the left breast was by. 300 — [the same authority “a very WASHINGTON— t 303 in depth; the out on the Mp was See il | in depth; the out on the wes} Patteriee — Baumaardner, Wellman Unches in depth and 84 tach in wide? and Agnew; Engle and Henry. ——$ WEW LACE MYSTERIOUSLY a sroat part of mie on Proof that Cahill'a body (his present eerviee. | Sevolver was found in ite beri his pocket) was one whi i $ ie a ouraonta STEAMSHIPS. BY 006 ON EAST SIDE surat Fepar. Densely Populated Neighborhood in | Mek eat } Panic Until Policeman Kills Animal With His C! Five childven were bitten t sama, io aanetee, tb, by her father’s death and had to be teated by the physician. a dog ut Kighteenth street an PLAZA HOTEL IN 1911. jeanase apie 4 | ment. Not until the thickly The “Baron von Arkovy" held front) neighborhood had been thrown Into page In all he panera for 1 days) panic wax the dog beaten to death b: ot Maren, Wil, when As ane | Rene mee she dem Nensen $0 'aaesh uy Hotel ¥ on & charge of grand) a m. | The dog, according to the police, t baat, belonxed to Fuldo Nobile of No dullo f sarem hen Che of the! itast Kighteenth street, — Vern Pecdle neul ID) cur, four years old, of No. 294 Avenue ee eee eee eNita| Ai hie brother, Edward, nine years the theft of two platinum crucibles old; Mary Colegeidio, eleven years old, | valued at @00, When Arkovy was seslscote esan, searched, @ pair of brass knuckles with| ia ne spikes like those on a dog's collar were a Kast Fi and F found im the tne ‘poctan.of N86 of hie fur overeeRt.| cosentano, five years old, _ No. t28| larceny revealed much of 402) ‘Thomas Spen-| Mast Highteenth street, were the vice! "bs Satins Oat ea ren | Brooklyn to-da: yer BECOMES OLD RAGS, loaned or given to him by wie foster father—who ts her uncl jek Plander of Uniondale, L, 1, bee Brooklyn Girl Charged With fore Commissioner Bingham inelsted te = nit on a uniform type of heavier revalverm. Changing Contents of Pack- | for ait poltcer age Sent C. O. D. | serene TESTIFY CAHILL BOR — ROWED REVOLVER. William J. Plander, a New York City” who was « table boarder w the Cahill's at No. 120 Chestnut and others testified that Cahill wens to Uniondale on Sunday and borrowed, td old revolver which he had formerly complaining that his new revolver too heavy for summer eervies needed to be repuired, anyway, ; Cahill and thelr five children were ing with Frederick Flander, the father, at the time, Cahill, according to the Mise Ethel Jahrens, who sald she lived at No, 36 Schermerhorn street, Hrooklyn, Was before Magistrate Voor. the Adams Street Court tn to explain « charge of getting $17.80 from Lord & Ta: by substituting worthless stuff for la sent to her C. 0, D. Mise Jahrens, when she had heard the complaint, sald that # he had not | bought the goods, A sister, who since had departed on @ long ocean voya) must have been the purchaser, she ugwested, and ehe said this sister ‘would not return until September, Mag. | °S*t? intrate, Voorhees adjourned the hear ing Paice gs taunt uaccrtacest hees in e