The evening world. Newspaper, May 2, 1914, Page 2

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i peer 8 i ; “Our protest is not so much against fell into the mourning march at 1 ait s re ag ee Pitt} il Tp | tii | oH i % i i if ener would be arraigned before Mag- fetrate Murphy to-morrow morning. Upton Sinclair, who released bim- elf fiom hunger striking in ¢! Tombs by paying $2 of his $9 protest,” was among the Gemonstrators at the Standard to-day. He was still aif @iaclair showed no iil effects of his breviated strike. \¥S ABBASSINATION WOULD NOT DO ANY GOOD. “While I am opposed to violence,” aid Sinolair, “I would advocate the fgevassination of Rockefeller if I thought that taking bis life would @ocial conditions, 1 do not see Mt could do any good, that’s all. ‘Mr. Rockefeller personally as it is against the Standard Oil conspiracy, which bas established invisible gov- ernment all over this pation. For tbat reason we shal} be bere to-mor- Fow, though the building will be tty Mre. Henrietta Rodman, who joined ‘the ploket line to-day, Is among those whe dees not of the bad lan- aint Marte Gants to Mr. ier. Mra. Rodman translated ‘the description of the militenaire into MRigbrow language and called him “an jem.” The detectives went ting for a dictionary to sce if she it to be arrested. @ue-legged man with a crutch je refused to give his name, to the Feporters: “Just say 4 soul a Socialist.” d petals case] BOTH ROCKEFELLERS _ HBAVILY GUARDED AT TARRYTOWN HOME. TARRYTOWN, N. ¥., May 3— , Beth John D. Rockefeller and bie} "gem and namesake being at the Po-| @antico Hills estate, which is the home of the family, every approach it ts peing guarded now because the threats whom no =e about the hy om epg so came on the 10 in from New York. There Rockefeller automobile waiting lon, and they went directiy in and were driven ip has it they are skilled detectives who are to se #F il Hl fF oF son, icceed in passing the lothing more definite gossip ts sutbori etl Hi ss PENSION FOR PLEAD FOR VOTES Attract Crowds in All Parts of the City. APPEAL DIVERSIFIED. Parade of Old Days Gives Way to Speeches From Seven Organizations, The legion of women and the few courageous men who are making the fight for women suffrage gave New York to-day a novel exposition of their earnestness, This is Suffrage Day throughout the country and all the women who are working for the franchise are arrayed in hamlet, town and city in the name of thelr cause. New York was to have had a parade, ae in former years, but the celebration was rearranged to make it series of Mass meetings throughout the city, all related in their object, but distinct in their appeal. ‘The celebration began with a gen- eral meeting in Washington Square early in the afternoon. There, in a «reat number of automobiles, each gay with the colors of the seven grea suf- frage parties of the city—the Women's Political Union, the Woman Suffrage Party, the Equal Franchise Society, the Political Equality Association, the College Equal Suffrage League, the New York State Suffrage Association and the Men's League for Buffrage— mobilized for the work of the day. ‘When they had been marshalled there was a bugie blast, and in seven different parts of the square the o ganizations started thelr mass mect- ings for those who had gathered about them to listen and learn. From the vantage point of a motorcar seat the speakers for each of the parties addressed the crowd and pleaded for recruits to the “Votes for Women” standard. ‘Then there was another bugle call and @ general reaolution in bepalf of woman suffrage was read by each of the speakers. This was practically the termination of the Washington Square meeti for, with another signal, the automobiles, of which there were at least two hundred tn Mine, formed and beaded up Fifth avenue to @ great cheering and flut- tering of banners. This was a means to an end rather than @ parade, because after they had gone a short distance up the avenue the organisations separated, each go- ing to a different part of the city to resume the mass meeting work. At the Plaza the Woman Suffrage party made its stand with six of the motor cars while the Men's League bad one car with Mr. and Mrs, Mon- tague Glass and James Lees Laid- law, President of the league, aa oc- cupants. Mra, Laidlaw's car was at the Fifty-eighth street entrance to the Plaza, and Ip it were Mrs. Robert Adainson, Mrs, Frederick Gillette and DEATH OF WER SON e Hl ie ene ‘SIX TAKEN IN TWO RAIDS. Pelice Enter Gambling F! Get Alleged farses Patics Inspector Thomas Ryen_of the @inth Inspection District, accompanied by Lieutenant Dan Costigan and his quad this afternoon, raided two al. gambling houses in West One and Bixteenth street, round- ax John Doe warrants by McAdoo, fundred and aie atrest and emashed in the door e on the ground floor, Bpout turty tren wore thefe: sever ot Miss Lavinia Dock. At the western entrance to the Plasa was the car of Mra, Joseph T. MoLane with Mrs. Havelock Ellis and William J. Schieffelin beside her. Af- ter speeches were delivered there the six special care of the suffrege party gathered their occupants and made @ run to the Polo Grounds, where they met the oar of the Men's League and addressed the ball game crowd. On the Mall tp Central Park, Mra. Harriet Stanton Blatch, head of the Woman's Political Union, with band o: twenty-five speakers and pleaders, including Mise Helen Todd of Californie; Mrs, Norman ue kK. Whitebouse, Mrs. Jobo Kogere jr, end diss Klisabeth Kilsworth, ar- 7a, Oliver Hi. BP, Belmont delivered ber first out- door speech, It was there that ber organization, the Political Aquality Association, held furth with the ivi- lowing speakers: Miss Alice aul of Washington, Charies Lawerd Russell, Mrs. Crystal Eastman HKenediot, Mrs, ines Milbolland Bolssevain, Mins Lucy Burns, Dr. Maude Glas, Miss Ger- trude Waldemar, Miss Mrs. Maud Swarts, Mrs. J. Remin, ton Charter, Miss Dorothy Miller and Miss Florence M, Harmon, Mra, Belmont had the Sixty-ninth iment Band as part of her aggre. on, and to add @ further intercat e had Miss Mabelle Blake Seliver e wore ¥. RUnan B. Antnony in the recent an address in the costume agUe Dageant eecaped through Sens The they raided « room in the Ata meal ~~ a ‘Over in ‘Greenwich vill ‘were proprictore of the establish-| Inray nirest ote obits famebur ge the ol riage wae Oe meat. an ladison | Red aie zi} FROM 200 AUTOS ner| Eloquent iaeen of Cause ‘Tgual peed ae aver aay un f Charles Tiffeny|a WHITMAN ENVOY. OFF 10 SEE T.R TO TALK POLITICS Representative Takes Ship to Meet Bull Moose Leader in South America, Sailing on the United States Fruit steamer Calamares for the tropics to-day was a close personal and po- Utical friend of District-Attorney Whitman and Col. Roosevelt. His name did not appear on the passen- ger list given out at the office of the United Fruit Company, but an in- timation of his itinerary indicates that he Is to be an intermediary in @ transaction looking to a coalition between Mr. Whitman and Col. Roosevelt in the fall campalgn. It has been persistently rumored tn! Political circles for some time that the politicians who are working for District-Attorney Whitman's nomin- ation for Governor on the Republican ticket were mentally disturbed over the prospect of the Colonel coming back to New York and jumping into the race himself. The departure of | the gentleman mentioned above for the tropics to-day indicates that the Whitman backers are going to try to meet the Colonel on his way back and make him @ proposition. #or instance, the Colonel ig to be assured that, In case he holds off and does not put a Progressive can- didate in the fleld againat Whitman he will have the support of the Whit- man wing of the Republican party in the primaries for the nomination for United States Senator. It is believed that this is the plan the secret mis- sionary is taking South, The first stop of the Calamares in at Kingston, Jamaica. There she will cross routes with a Royal Mail ateam- er bound for Barbadoes. It is part of the report concerning the mission of the man who went away on the Calamares that he will stop at Barba- does and await there the arrival of | the steamship which ts to carry the | Colonel from Para, Brazil, to the! United States. En route, the political gossipers have it, the special friend of both sides will present to the Colonel the idea of a coalition between his forces and fe of Diatriot-Attorney Whitman, anticipated that the o be given a lot of It Colonel will inside information about the condi- tion of the Republican party in this Btate of a nature to inspire him with weal for a working agreement with an active reformer like Mi Whitman, —— Mis Shot Killed Brother, (Special to The Evening World.) MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., May 2.—While laying with an old gun, which was not nown to be loaded, Russell Bull Jr, | eleven years old, to-day accidentally shot and killed his Brothe: Harold, fourteen years, at Circleville near here. = and Mrs, Walter Hervey were among! the speakers in the auuare. There ge be a mags meeting thie | evening in Carnegie Hall under ii auspices of the Women’ Union, Mayor Mitchel will iver the address of weicom: Comais- wloner of Corrections Katherine B. Davis will be ono of the speakers. When the suffragists were in Wash- ington Square a large nur ber of I. W. W. work thered with them. While the latte pt to the outskirts of the great crowd and were always under the alert eyes of the augmented | detail of police, supplied by Commi ioner Woods at the solicitation of the suffragists, they took advantage of the gathering to offer pamphlets for sale, One of them was “A Little Love| Without Marriage,” by Emma Gold- man, Attached to the workers in every | ne of the suffrage automobiles was whose bus\- in the crowd iy wee with the susrege lite vne bo Siow wien an ‘te buy. THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1914. Dero adiinieaahat-iadiniciciinianhiedhinini tees ae. VELVET’S WELCOME saeco senses eeuananesnenncnotentthe ronan sree: atin astengecinianteacseteitaehtil KERRIER NT B65. (Spectally Photographed by an The Adenine: of a Man Who Carried $160,000 Loose in His Pockets on Broadway A piri BARRED oospiepepscnnnaenenonastates AR RRM FIT NMRA RRR PRT Evening World Staff Photographer.) "GARRANZA AND REBEL ARMY BEGIN MARCH ON TAMPICO Head of Constitutionalists Believes United States Will Withdraw When Rebel Cause Be- comes Triumphant. CHIHUAHUA, May 2.—Gen. Carranza will not recognize the armistice. The rebel army will move on to Tampico at once. A review of the troops headed by Carranza and Villa was held to-day and to-night. The two leaders, members of the Cabinet and the military staffs and a number of lesser officials took part in a love feast at the Gubernatorial Palace. As the troops were passing the, ae foreign club Gen. Carranza espied an has been lying In a rebel jail at Cum- American newspaper man among the| Siatwes OF chine Poly dhe as spectators. He halted the procession | of doupeful title. Repeated represen. foreigner’s hand. The act was plain- ly intended to make evident to Mexi- {ean onlookers that the official attt- tude toward Americans is friendly. In fact, every Mexican understands | that anti-foreign agitation or demon- | stration means death to the offend without result. Byington, it ported, has been subjected to great hardships during bis long imprison- | ment The latest appeal in partinent Immediately instructed Con- When Carransa leaves here it i8/eui Letcher at Chihuahua to renew understood the rebel capital moves! its previous insistence that the Amer- with bim, first to Torreon and then/ican be discharged or given an im- with little delay to Monterey. From| mediate hearing. Officials here say they are without definite information concerning the evidence against By- ington, but they do not believe the They say there tosl, Zacatecas and Aguascalientes, |4re no political charges against him. A. B. Emery, manager of an Eng- The rebel American phase of the oc-| 114) owned mine, who was reported the latter ctly he will direct the cam- paigns against Tampico and Saltillo and after that against San Luls Po-| case is a strong one. cupation of Vera Crus, which for ume after the issuance of Carranza’s|erals in Zacatecas, is xa note to Secretary Bryan looked grave, | Mexico City, according to is considered closed. Gen, Carranza] {9 tha Sinte Departs assumes that the Americans will) Consul reported that leave Mexican soil at once upon the| ransom has been settled. vumplete triumph of the revolution. Reports of the evacuation of Saltillo | Vag waived are premature, it is officially stated | did not indicate. Cruz. Canada said he battle before the city is taken, and! _ for this purpose forces are now in motion from Monterey and Torreon, —~— AMERICAN AGENT SAVED BY ORDER OF GEN. BLANQUET MEXICO CITY, May 2—Dr. Ed- ward W. Ryan of the American Red Cross, who waa captured at Zacatecas vy the command of Gen, Joaquin Maas and sentenced to death as a spy, was saved by un order signed by Minister of War Blanquet at 11 o'clock Thuraday night. Dr, Ryan will be brought to this aity anoer guard of Federal troopa, esident Huerta has ordered his immediate release, The release was directed after urgent personal repre- sentations to President Huerta by William W. Canada, the American Consul at Vera Cruz. Huerta telegraphed to Mr. Canada yesterday that he did not know that Or. Ryan wae to be put to death, but that he had ordered the Federal com- mander at Zacatecas to liberate him et once and give him transportation | to Mexico City, From the capital | President Huerta promised to send him to Vera Cruz. in the capital for the presen Undismayed by the refusal of Ca in the rich oil fields about Tampico, the South American Envoys to-day re sumed negotiauions aiming at a sett! ment of the Mexican crisis. Whi Carranza's refusal was variously i terpreted, the Administration offict here held it could not be consid a» having any bearing upon the m diators' alista. jurances from Gi day that with would protect thi Carranza that here, Sir Cecil Sprin, ice, and Gen. the Federal forces, to safeguard the valuable there, Gen, Carranza, in his refund’ the State Department that ready controlled the oil flelds w there. Vera Cruz are reported doing well Kirk Christy, seaman, jon the New Hampshire. tations have been made in his behalf to the Constitutionalist leaders, but is re-|have been Byington's| to arrange for a general ase came from Consul Simpich at | Nogales, Sonora, and the State De- | #0" of respect. i } to have been held for ransom by Fed- and well in despatch to the State Department to-day by The matter of Whether Emery paid to obtain his release or the demand for ransom the Consul's despatch acd here. The rebels expect an important |recelved his information from Em- ery’s employees, just arrived in Vera ‘rug, who said that Emery intended ranza, rebel chief, formally to agree to the establishment of a neutral zone proposal that hostilities cease between. Aiuerta and the Constitution. State Department officials said to- Tampico oil interests and negotiations on between the British Ambassador Huerta to obtain a like promise from they felt that everything possible was being done perty to agree to a neutral gone, informed he al- and id safeguard the foreign interests} “f All of the fifty-six wounded men at has been dix- charged from the Solace and returned | NATIONALHONOR | PLANNEDHEREFOR HEROES O WAR Pert WOMEN |SILVER-TONGUED SUFFRAGETTE IN WASHINGTON ‘SQUARE—ONE OF THE COLOR-BEARERS (| MRS. HERGERT CARPENTER. Bodies of Men Who Died Will j States to surrefder their arms and| s larumivaition elicited the following Be Carried from Battery | gcasonent from J. F. Welborn, Presi- Perc ere dent of the Colorado Fuel and Iron to Navy Yard. Company: anoles “The order of Secretary Garrison WASHINGTON M. 2.—Sattors} to disarm both aides suits the oper- NGTON, May 2— tors perfectly. We told Major Hol- | brook the day he arrived that we | were willing to turn over our arms the minute he said he could control and marines who were killed at th occupation of Vera Cruz will be hon- ored with funeral services of a na- tional character on the arrival of | the gityation.” their bodies abourd the United States | Comparative quiet prevailed in the cruiser Montana at New York, th) southern fields to-day, where the Navy Department announced to-day.| rederal troops are in control, but Secretary Daniels sald that arrangé- | from the Northern fields came reporte ments for the services had been placed | . Lag Fogeativee in oe Pie the eavy a m ry guard there. in the hands of Capt. Albert Gleaves, | [TX SoNntRG. Cok, May 2 The commandant of the Brooklyn Navy | first move toward actual disarmament Yard, and Capt. H. O. Dunne, Naval‘ in the Southern Colorado strike zone : was made late to-day when It was Supervisor of New York Harbor. They | To nounced that B. J. Matteson, amsis- instructed to co-operate rant general manager of the Colorado | with the civil authorities in Now York | Fuel and Iron Company, had agreed City, should there be any desire there | to deliver to the United States regu- domonatra-|!@ts all the guns in possession of the jsuards at Kouse. | It was tentatively suggested that a| funeral procession from the Battery to the Brooklyn Bridge and thence to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, followed by military mass at the marine bar- racks there might be arranged. Orders were sent to Admiral Bad- ger by Secretary Daniels to-day that the Montana might leave when ready and it was believed that she would | get away by Monday, which would | b.ing her into’ New York the first of | the following week. REFUGEE HERE, TELL OF THREATS TO KILL AMERICANS From New York the bodies will be sent at Government expense to the ; homes of relatives and Secretary Dan- (Continued from First Page.) fels said that naval honors at burial | services where desired. Already ar repens neve. est y Dye Sta, | #4ve his consent for us to leave, We escort from the Naval Tra: | tion on Lake Michigan for the burial | eae made up a special train procession in Chicago for Samuel!f freight cars and were rushed to Meisenburg, private of marines, whose | Puerto Mexico, where we boarded the home was in that city, and similar | or gonian arrangements have been made at | BROOKLYN MAN REFUSED PER- M A hone f FH. Forh- Hehatelny wsallone Baler MISSION TO LEAVE. “The Federal troops, however, re- S WON ORDER TO COLORADO WEN poaseasion of the offices and seized the — | Kates and money. Why they held | Schumacher we do not know and they fess to say. Fre Palmer, electrician of the | Enetinitaun, when he Sehumacher had been detain him, weld stand by ish subje: he at he might be yc Caml GREG protection, Tio British Consul at Puerto Mexico alse | sald he would do what he could to | prevent harm coming to Schumacher, | "In Puerto Mexico, we found the British cruiser Berwick, It was aome conaolation, | can assure you, to find that big boat, ‘The military governor of Puerto Mexico announced that if} the United States cruiser Nashville] Jor any other American warship showed up he would set fire to the (Continued from First Page.) localities where the United States troops are present, In explanation of the proclamation Secretary Garrison made the follow- ing statement learn from the commander in| town 3 ‘treat along the rallway| Colorado that the use of firearms had t caricad! oF heen widespread. In the district from | dyna things, and | Walsenburg, an area of 10 4 y had mined the! nites, the: fare at leas: sixty mines. | ine the Amer! ———— acontiate rateba 1tule, hay been They are located mainly |p canyous tro: 1 and sent i : sty 4 and are very difficult to veach The | land | NOW ON DUTY IN MEXICO | Vortiia y Rojas, retired. The Span- | them have rvent!y ocganised and . FOR UNITED STATES, | informed of the appointment WASHINGTON, May 2.—The mag: | (rediators. ish Ambassador here was informally by | cable this morning, He. is communi- cating the new appointinent to the ad seized about $150,000 in cash in the offices of the road at Rincon An- tunio, He said that all the rolling stock of the road had been seized and that the Mexicans would run the armed themselves and the operators have had hundreds of mine guards who are also armed. “The State troops in certain locali-| road with native help. The engines ; . 4 sported to thi pitnie a Amerie YO operetiona| nAdniapartment torday that the| tes have served to aggravate the/ se oll and he sald there was a plen- neat te the Nave Department et| Federal garrison at Tainpleo bad |troubles. Certain stores ty Walaen- Uf Sunn on han a the report to avy epartme! been somewhat reinforced,” but that |purg were broken into by some troops) ENGIN 8 AWAY IN HIS the arrival Vera Cruz yesterday of the battteships Virginia, Georgia, and Nebraska from Boston, The su- perdreadnought New York is due there to-day or to-morrow. With these vessels the United States wil have 85 warships, ‘transports auxiliary craft operating in including ‘teen battleships at Vera Cruz alone. State Department officials with some show of impatience wre Te- wry |b from demands made ‘arransa, the Snes & aceter ea for Oe Telease or ot! fighting ceased yesterday and had not been resumed up to midnight night. of Ruis’s appointment to the Argen- tine Legation. and|at once called together, and bassador taking part. Cross headq' bi Con ul- Ge Mr, Hanna havin last | ‘The Spanish Ambassador, Mr, Ri- ano, carried the cable announcement ‘The mediatora were con- | Mexich,| ference began, with the Spanish Am- |calling for all parti rter $2,500 to the credit \plled with & ud fled the de | were needed for | 4), pind Bh mature of Monverey 89 | al who! the Constitutionalists. WORKING CLOTHES. Robert Montieth, whose American home is at Topeka, Kan., ran the ast train ac! the Isthmus, So hurried was the departure of the Montieth cams up in his and wore his grimy Deaked cap aver Nis ayes In the party were the following William B, Ryan and his daughter Juliette, twenty-one years old; Will- jam Cartwright, ; Dr connected with the State organization | land articles were take ‘onditions in the Canon City dis- trict ave similar to those in the Wal- senburg district “It is heped that the proclamation | to give up arms and promptly com- great source of dan- DENVER, May 2.—The prociama- | ‘John Collins, somaucton lon of Becretary Gatrison calling on | ton for, uber RY] Pe) li persons in the strike district not lere, commissary, jim the military service gf the United five childrens’ Robert Mendes, en- able |) wineer; Charles tendent « Smith, stencwrap! er, ashier; A. M. ¢ tendent of maintenance a stenographer dimaster; M O. Quonne, reel auperi w. assistant 8. tendent of maintenance; wife and eee, WORLD’S RECORD BROKEN IN WALKING MATC Er LONDON, May 2—The twelve ho amateur walking mi at Stamford Bridge morning, was won by who co m the specitied time, amateur reed for twelve hours has been 72 miles, ards. yX World's record for eleven mite, created by Robert Bridge, a one-hi postman, who travelled that distan 1 hour ‘4 minutes 945 seconds, a thence to the sixteenth mile in ¥ hours minutes 394-5 seconds, when ho retire Bridge had beaten all the best previo records, . rent this Spring be sure you are near a “bus line. Open air rides mean Health and Comfort. Fifth Avenue Coach Co. CARPET Thl H8 ¢ CLEANIN 4, 3. WW WILLIAMS NHS West BIG MELON| , “Results” Will Be Cut and Divided To-Morrow The ‘Ye. its” will be in the nature of positions, services, homes, investment opportunities, miscellaneous baigains, lost artic cles, &c., &c., which will be dis. tribute . among the Atout 8,000 Advertisers IN THE BIG SUNDAY WORLD TO-MORROW! Why Not Be There at the Time?

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