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“1 CAN PUT MURPHY AND FRAWLEY IN JAIL,” STILWELL TOLD HENNESSY IN SING SING WEHEATHER—Fatr PRICE ONE CENT. INA NIGHT oe CD |“ Circulation Books Open to Al Copyriaht, 1913, by Co, (The new ‘The Prese Publishing York World). NEW USING WHIPS LITANTS LASH ASQUITH, AS HE RIDES WITH DAUGHTER AND JUDGE | Companions of Premier Also BRITISH PREMIER, WHO Attacked by Women Who Mob Auto in Scottish Road. \) THEIR CAR AMBUSHED. Suffragettes Hurl Shower of| * Paper to Halt Party and | Escape After Beating. EDINBURGH, Scotland, Nov. Premier Asquith was attacked to-day | by militant suffragettes armed with | dog whips while be was driving near | eK Stirling in an automobile, accom. panied by his daughter, Miss Violet | Asquith, and Sir John Graham, a Beottish Justice of the | The automodite war paasing through | the villae of Plean, flve milos trom | Falkirk, when 1: ambush. The are called here of papers, ru labored the Premter and his tons, They then peared before the polie: thet of the Premier had ecene. ‘T © victims of the at frightened than burt. pote as PRINCETON BEAT YALE IN CROSS COUNTRY RACE. ~, Tigers Surprise Yale With Spurt \ During Last Two Miles of Journey. (Special to The Evening World Noy. 1.—Surpria- two miles, ne u team won the the Ells to-day by the Peace, ran into a suffragette| “wild women." as they under cover of a shower i at the car and be- compan- as suddenly disap- car following} reached the ck were more score to M4. Princeton won three out of the first four places At the half way mark Reinveton led in the scoring but Yale came up on the Second and last round and within two miles of th five out of the hh first seven en. n the last mile Princeton forked ahead. Capt. Morrl- won of Princeton led nearly the whole race, bul gave Barnett first place at the finieh Summary Won by Princeton, 2 puints; second, Yale, 4 points. Winner, Barnett, Princeton; second, Morrison, Princeton; third, Clark, Ya fourth, Hayes, Princeton, fifth; Yale, sixth; Punter, Princet: . Burtt, Yale, eighth; Atha, Princeton, ninth; Young, Yale, tenth; Gulliver, Yale. Only the first five man to finish counted Jn the sooring. Officials—Referee, Dr, Ken- Princeton. --Dr. Briner, Judges at finish—Dr. Vox, Mr, Stackpole, Mr. Gordon, Liryan. Clerk of Course | oir, Go eke. = 140,889 WORLD ADS. LAST MONTH 67,830 MORE THAN THE HERALD REMAKnaAbLE CROP OF WORLD ADS, THAT! MEANS A GIGANTIC} | HARVEST OF RESULTS WAS LASHED WITH WHIP BY SUFFRAGETTE BAND. we NAsquitn DEVEREUX MILBURN ‘BIG-4 POLO PLAYER, WEDS AT WES WESTBURY | Miss Nancy ec Steele His Bride—Nearly 1,000 So- ciety Notables Attend. WEATBURY, L. I, Nov. 1.—Not since the International polo mateh with Eng- land have so many well known people | attended a Nassau County wedding as those who came out to Westbury at noon to-day for the ceremonies that at- tended the wedding of Miss Nancy Gor- don Steele, daughter of Mr. and Mre. Charles Steele to Devereux Milburn, the famous polo player, son of Mr. and Mrs. John G, Milburn of Buffalo, Nearly one thousand guests attended the wedding breakfast and reception that was held after the marriage cero- mony at Sunridge Hall, the homo of the bride's parents. The marriage took place at the quaint little stone Church of the Advent, which was bullt by the Meadow Brook ladies. The Rev. Dr, Stires of St, Thignas's Episcopal Church, Manhattan, performed the ceremony and was assisted by the Rey, Richard D. Pope, the rector of the Westbury churen. The full vested cholr preceded the wedding party singing, "The Voice That Breathed O'er The bride was |siven away by her father, Charles | Steele. Tho mald of honor was Miss Kathryn Steele, alster of the bride, who will be @ debutante this winter. The bridesmaids were Miss Marion Holling, Miss Helen Dinsmore Huntington, Miss Lisa Stillman, Miss Sarah Remsen Man- fce, Miss Josephine Osborn and Miss Eleanor Lawrence, The best man was Perry Osborn and the ushers were Ber- tram de N. Cruger, Sidney W. Fish, Harrison Tweed, Albert Ames, Philip Carroll and Louis Crawford Clarke Jr. Among the large gathering of well known peuple who attended the we ding were Mr. and Mrs, Edwin D. Mor. and Mrs. De Lancey K. Jay, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 1. Mrs. Stanley Mort.mer, Miss Edith Mortimer, Mr, and Mrs, Henry P, Whitney, Miss Flora Whitney, Mr. and Mrs, J, George Milburn Jr. Count and | Countess de la Gr the latter @ sis- ter of the bride, Mr. and Mrs, James Stillman, Mr, and M Thomas Hitch vock, Mr, and Mrs, Jullan Peabody, Miss Helen Hitchoock, Mr, and Mrs, Frank Grey Griswold, the Misses Mary and Laura Canfield, Mr, and dirs, Jor Davis, Mr, and | GIRL'S ELOPEMENT LEADS MIS. FRENCH TO SEEK DIVORCE Parted From Husband When She Gave Blessing to Child Who Married Chauffeur. SUIT NOW ON FILE. Retired Banker Refuses to Dis- cuss Action Taken by | Wife at Newport. | NEWPORT, R. 1, Nov. 1.—Papers in | divorce proceedings inatitued by Mrs. | Pauline Leroy French againet Amos | Tuck French are on file here, it was j Stated dy the Clerk of the Courts to- day. They were filed three weeks ago, No return of service has been made | Under the law divorce proceedings | reed not be made public until the case place on the docket for trial, and the untomary secrecy accompanied the fil- ing of Mrs, French's papers and has {been maintained until now. | Mra. French would not discuss the | matter, M>. French, who has been here but rarely in the past two years, | was said to be elther at New York or | Tuxedo. He is a brother of Mrs. Elste | French Vanderbtlt, The Frenchs have |two daughters, Mra, Samuel Wagstaff land Mrs. Jack Geraghty, and two sons, Amos Tuck French jr and Stuyvesant | Leroy French, A report from Newport states that Mra, Amos T. French, social mother of Jul startied soctety by eloping with “Happy Jack" Geraghty, a Newport chauffeur, two yeare ago, his brought sult for vores. Mr. French, who is a retired | banker and spends much of his time on his emate at Tuxedo, refused to deny or affirm the report that he had | been served with papers tn the case. "IT can't way anything about it,” he replied to the inquiry “Wil you admit that sult has been brought?” he was asked. ‘I can say nothing about it one way or another was his reply. According to the Newport despatches it is intimated that the estrangement of the Frenchs, who have been married twenty-eight years, began soon ufter |the Geraghty elopement. Mrs, French wished to effect a reconciliation with her daughter and it ‘= sald Mr. French, kreatly embittered by the elopement, re- fused to consider the idea, Mra, Geraghty has since received materni | forgiveness, but Mr. French has lve apart from his wife since the reconcilia- | don took place ee SAILING TO-DAY. Saratoga, Mavana Pastores, Jamaica . ari Soburs, Jamaica. United States, Cristiansand Russia, Liban Touraine, Mavre . ————- — Woman Shot Fighting Thief. BUFFALO, N. ¥., Nov. L—In trying to prevent a robber from escaping with the contents of the cash register Grace Webb, twenty-eight years old, cashior baum's restaurant at No. 316 ) strect, Was shot through the loft shoulder to-day, ‘The robber got | away with $1 nniibeees Fireman Killed Racing to Blaze, ROCHESTER, N.Y 1.—-Georke Major, fifty years old, was killed and four otlier firemen were badly injured when an automobile hook and ladder truck overturned while responding to an alarm early to-day. The biaze caused $60 damage, The Injured men were re- REKRER | moved to the hospital, seph 8, Stevens, Mr, and Mrs, A. Duncan, Mr, and Mrs. Charles R. 8co Mr. and Mis, W m A, Hazard, the Misses Hazard, Mr, and Mrs, Arthur Scott ‘Burden, Mr. and Mis. James A. Burden, Mr. and Mrs. John 8, Phippa,| Mr. and Mrs, H Polpps, Mra, Clarence Dolan, ¢ Dolan, Mr, and Mrs George Mr. and. Mra Vaul D, Cravath, Mr. and Mrs. M. 8. | Burrill, Miss Burrill, Mr, ad Mra, Oliver W. Bird, Miss Clair Bird, Mr, Mrs. mont, Mr, and ke, FF, 8 Von. | IN » Mr, jand Mra il ¥. olfrey, Mr. and Mrs. 13 G. Milburn and many of the other members of the Meaduw Brook and Rockaway Hunt clubs, ISWEARS MPCALL BORROWED $21,000 . FOR NOMINATN heretics 459 Son Makes Affi davit That Father Made Loan | Before Judicial Election. REPAID SIX YEARS LATER Check on N. Y. Life Insurance} Company Given to Liquidate Long-Standing Obligation. District-Attorney Whitman has tn his} Possession to-day an affidavit made by | William W. McLaughlin Jr, eldest son of former Police Inspec! we W. Melaughlin, stating that his father) loaned Edward E, MeCall $21,000 In 1902, when Mr. McCall was seeking a Supreme Court nomination. Young McLaughlin ewears he saw @ photograph of the §21,000 check given in repaying the loan, and that it was on the New York Life Insurance Company. He declared his father had great difil- eulty in getting hia money back, and 414 not obtain it until 1908, and after many interviews with Justice MoCall. Young McLaughlin said he frequently had heard his father say he loaned the money in cash to Mr, MoCall, the latter having asked for it to enable him to pay for his nomination to Su- preme Court. For more than two hours last night young MoLaughiin was queationed by District Attorney Whitman at the lat- ter's home in East Twenty-sixth street. The prosecutor got much additional in- formation besides that contained in the it and said to-day he would re- young McLaughlin to appear be- fore the John Doe hearing or the Grand Jury on Monday. It tm likely the elder McLaughlin and other members of the famfly aiso Will be summoned. WILL TELL STORY AT THE JOHN OOE INQUIRY. Mr. Whitman sald that although the MoLaughiln affidavit contains somewhat different allegations fram those in the Hennessy atory, he regards It “the moat circumstantial and important plece of evidence that has yet reached me," con- cerning the financial relations between Mr. McCall and Inspector McLaughlin, because McLaughlin's is mostly first- hand knowledge, while Mr. Hennessy's is hearsay. Young McLaughlin is thirty-seven years old and a cripple from hip dis- ease. He told the prosecutor that t years ago he and his father had @ vio- lent quarrel because he desired to marry & respectable young woman with whom he had fallen in love, and that they had not spoken aince, except about lai Maroh, when he 8 turned out of the MoLaughiin house by his father, plained thet the girl ie a drees- maker and the G.ughter of poor parents and his father thought he should marry some one {n better circumstances, He giving hla sister money from lary as court attendant to put away fer him, he said, and it amounted BNA THEN rate w fo-ntaht Sanday, . [FINAL NIGHT “«C¢ rculation Books Open to All? YORK, “SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1913. Many Society Folk at Wedding DHOOODEG CGP GC OOO C 6 HOSEL L016 ‘. @er Bondoc DEVEREUX MILBURN end’ sieee HANCY STEELE at © INTiLRRATIONAL WBROO! ue MEADO' TO JODO COG OF MITCHEL BY 90,000 VOTES, MCALL VICTORY BY 50,000, RAL CLAIMS OF LEADERS bie Ee a for Fusion al TAMMANY MONEY Johnson, for Pcnieuae Give Their Final Esti imates. Predictions of political managers on the result of Tuesday's election are directly contradictory. to about $4,000, He insisted that this] EXxuberant Fusion boomera claim be given him so he could marry the| 100,000, Manager Adamson says 90),- girl of hia choice, and this brought on ome’ the quarrel with hie father. Young Me-| 000 Tammany leaders claim for Laughitn does not drink or dissipate. their candidate, MeCall, 59,900 plu LOST HIS JOB WHEN M'CALL| rality QUIT THE BENCH. He said after his father forced the rm ya up between the former Inspector and Justice MoCall, and thereafter, while young McLaughlin was nominally Mc-| Call's confidential attendant,” they sel- | dom exchanged a word except in the! course of business. John J. Mackin, he the real confidential attendant, McLaugwlin) was tgnored e: ® Justice McCall became head of dency of succens, t of his loan a coolness sprang| ¢T# base thelr dec! wave that has been rolled up in the las ing that the tid Each side professes the utmont confi- The Fusic ations inst Tamman vexsy on T any braves took hes ays ao and are now lou has tur other w ave is rolling the wert that by Tuesday it will for MoCall as It was for Mitehet a ROBERT ADAM mm command on the tidal, y by the ate) ny and rt only three Hy procaine wd be ax hig week mpalgn mat IN THE BETTING RING Odds Offered on Mitchel at 3 to 4, but There Are No Takers, No MoCall money appeared tn tho bat: | ting centwen to-day. Men with money had complete pos- 1, but could find po session akers, Odds remained 3 to 1 on Mitchel, with | Jeume down for tn oecasional reckless offer of 4 to 1, Wt tht Wags by excited In professional betting places thera was watehfulness for som yany, but ut street markets at taste Comptrolier Prendergast. Increased hin bet on none had mate- today to to 7 3 Fust candidate for Hroa Hoar Alderinen, ruled at ay humm, ins reported I hat New York he #200 to Service Commission, about 4 Coun eu that seven Months ago, Mclaugniin lost his at 4 Hees ee; | Dist Kherifr position at the Court-itvuss, He naia| dictions used by political prophets Junt | Piste, Tammany HM he wrote two or throe letters to Justice | %fore oe ect call hatty rae McCall asking him see “ sah eal cial bE i mee tie taltare wal observation outburats uf | i Me family would ao nothi pe peiet <a he has since lived Aaah acune | Wim J, Barus Sued for 810,000, |for expenses and his Tapeh Panta William J ris, hed « e turns liven nim, he suid, by his sister out of | BAO KY J Detective Agency, haw been a Bs. poegp rare i fendant in a suit for § Ke . Whitman admits he has obta OSDY ERAS £96 hohe oth Ain Via > SOME PREDICTIONS BASED ON] )."') Uren h No Nae : | “OBSERVATIONS.” im, wha alleges. that va | Fue dictions of the that cass, {he WAN run down by Burns . 1 Fifth « ” t based ¥ an observat and ge Feral conditions, are Aw cughth street Verely injured. pee SI SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS. 10 PAGES ‘Dashing Polo Player and Bride; PRICE ONE CENT. “ime BLACK BOOK’ SHOWS HOW STILWELL PROMISED THE PROGE --——2¢2—_ ——— But Convicted Senator in Talk With Hennessy at Sing Sing Insisted on Pardon Before Doing Any- thing for Sulzer. NOT “PEACH” ON SENATORS WHO WERE HIS FRIENDS. Promised He Would Scare Seven or Eight of Them Into Voting Against impeachment. This is the story of the Black Book as reported by the detectagraph planted by the Burns Detective Agency in Sing Sing prison to record the dramatic secret conference between John A, Hennessy representing Gov, Sulzer and ex-Senator Stilwell. For hours the negotiations ran on in the Warden's office with a stenographer as an eavesdropper—Stilwell, suspicious, evasive, cunning, |fearful of betrayal; Hennessy, at times purring assurance, balancing the freedom of the convict—a pardon—with disclosures which if corrobo- rated, would permit the Governor to challenge impeachment. But the | desperate Stilwell was ceaf to Hennessy’s pleadings for a full confession. |A pardon first, he insisted, was the only conditioh. He pictured the horrors of a return to Sing Sing, if the pardon was conditional and he was unable to find the corroboration necessary to convict. Hennessy, shrewd wary of accepting without the power of realizing upon the bar- gain—of sending the convict back if he failed to fulfill his promise, re- fused to yield. And Stilwell did not confess, He vaguely referred to alleged graft in the erally we want in certain cases addi- tional proof so that we can get after the the payment of large| proposition, That is what you under- broughtin the naines of Murphy, | stand, Senator? But ins. ted upon| Stilwell—That was my understanding. release before he would attempt to sup-| Hennensy—What is your propositio ply the proofs, Stilwell—Why, as 2 have told Mr. U., And the negotiations were dropped the ome proposition that I wanted seat The report of the detectagraph Ie broken |e you ts that my condition in here ie and disjointed, thie bel: explained | thas g cammot do anything; that there partially by the noise of passing trains. | mast be a pardon if I am going to pro- But as a dramatic document the report | quoe that testimony.. I can't go back iy In iteelf interesting as showing the /im neret Z might better serve twenty desperate verbal duel between two keen | years, mon, and as tMuminating behind the!” Hennessy — The pardon will come scenes, work tn connection with the IM-!anaty, The only question is this, in peachment, The Lvening World here-| giving this pardon the Governor would by reproduces much of \o report, Print| have to be satisfied that what you have ing & for what !t Is worth. The int. tial “U" used weveral times ts that of 4 lawyer who Was present during the conference. | HENNESSY ASSURED STILLWELL SULZER WAS FRIENDLY, Hennessy—Dtd you close the door? Is the door open? Lawyer—1 don't think anybody can he ||well—They can’t hear, Hennessy—Sonator, you know why 1 Mr. U. has been up to ple of times and has con- » Governor that you're friendly tu hin, and the Governor is friendly tw you, and ho has stated to th ae times that you are wil uf public Service In case you get an un- conditional pardon, In taking up the question of an unconditional pardon gens ving | or four times, had to say would make It sure, pretty sure, about giving @ pardon to you. Of course it could not be done any other way. Of courao there {s no way to oon- vince them of that uniess by what you want to nay, Stilweil—Why, I have told Mr. U. the whole thing, We went over it three ly. L told him I aid not want to talk 1 over with others, You see, Iam in a peculiar position, I must look after myself. This man came to me and I told tim what I could do if 1 was p rdoned, because otherwise 1 ran @ chance of injury to myself. Now I told Mr, U. tse whole thing— what he could lay before the Governor, what I could do if 1 was pardoned, 1 Presume What be wanted more than nything else wits to Win the impeach. ment proceedings. Stilwell Said He Had Proof Against Murphy and Frawley Hennessy—Woe won't attack th ate, but we Would Like to show up sor of the Who are su ative, It ta very doubtful If we will ever need any | 4xains it Stilwell—I sald no, 1 didn't want any friends dmphoated, its au un 1 Ay far aw Murphy ts sre aco to Now, to get down to facts, Sulwell—There were two men only—| Frawley and Murphy 4, 1 expected to ypportunity to do as | y 89 do In Fegand to the tt nt, and then if they don't a then it a different proposition, ' ' Agatnat two vod then have addi- the others whe you ive unless they go 1 will give them T will be honest Give me an oppor- foot) Want to pro these comdl- way. ho are tese two mem? and Murphy, you wo llog to tell me jnlesa the pardem te an opportunt and tunit (he names oft Stilwoll—-Not {mean you want the ou make alt U—Z will give you the ome wit Well, or anything, but 3 can't go before the what I wanted to do is to furnish preot @rend Jusy. 3 will ge the limit. & wil) a iv = ee ann at ne eee sea pee eee ea