Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~ D Convict Rioters Hold Remarkable Conference With Woman _be ‘COMPLETE NOVEL |“ Ciroulation Books Open to All” | EACH WEEK IN THE WEATHER—Cloudy to-night and Saturday. ~ tld, FINAL Circulation Books Open to All EVENING WORLD —— a osee ONE CENT. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, “JULY 10, 1914. PRICE 0 ONE OENT. STEAMSHIP RAMS PILOT BOAT; ALL ON BOARD SAVED, The New yg in Fog Off Angprose Channel, Hit by the Manchioneal, &. 0. S. CALLS HEARD. | Pilots and Crew Get in Life-| boat and Liferaft as New Jersey Sinks. fo | Just after Capt. John Lyle, com- fmander and senior pilot of the steam pilot boat New Jersey, had boarded the Lusitania in the thick fog off Am-| Brose Channel Lightship to-day the pilot boat was rammed by the United ‘Fruit steamship Manchioneal, out- ward bound. The tricky waya of fog deflecting whistle signals kept the Pilota from having any warning as to the direction from which the Man- ebienea!'s big horn was blowing. Al- niost as soon as they had seen the bow ofthe fruiter ite bow was crunch- ing Into the pilot boat's port bow | pe. Im Capt. Lyi absence Mate Hoff- man was in command. While the wireless operator Began sending out 8B OB signals Hoffman ordered out a lifeboat. Pilots Stephen H. Cooper “and August Johnston Rad been hurt 0 they could not move. Cooper was bruised “bout the tegs and Johnston about the chest, caught jn the splin- tered wreckage. They were lifted into the lifeboat and sent away with screw. By this time the New Jer- y was sinking rapidly and Hoffman and the rest of his crew and five or nix pilots took to a life raft just be- ere their boat went under. Capt. Hendrickson of the Man- Jentoneal, which is @ small boat and ‘has no wireless, stood by unttl El Sud of the Morgan line, which had caught one of the three 8. 0. 5. warnings which the New Jersey had been abdle to send out, came up. Hoff- man told Capt. Forbes of the El Sud that the pilots would remain where they were until help came from the city and asked word wirelessed to the Pilots’ Association at No, 17 State street that all were saved and the New Jersey sunk in shallow water so that sbe could be raised. ‘The United States dredge Maritan caine along and took Hoffman and the injured pilots and the thirteen men of the New Jersey's crew aboard and landed them at the Battery. ‘The other pilots stayed down the bay until two sailing pilot boats and the tug John Nichols, chartered by the Pilots’ Association reached them with ten additional pilots. "This temporary flotilla did pilot patrol until the steel steam pilot boat New York, which had been coaling at Port Reading in Staten Island Sound, was reached by wireless and hurried to the acene. The Manchtoneal, according to Hoft- man and Capt. Forbes of El Sud, ‘wag not injured by the collision. The revenue cutter Onondaga, which was at the Brooklyn Navy Yard when the wireless call reached the Sea Gate etation, went out of the harbor in hurry, but found nothing to do for the wrecked pilots. FOUR DROWNED FROM BOAT. Ma hes, His Two dren a Vietims in River Acciden BRANTFORD, Ont., July 10.—In o Dealing accident last night Thomas ar- ISLAND PRSONERS TLL WOMAN COMMISSIONER WHY THEY ARE IN REVOLT Miss Davis Lets Mutineers Pick Spokesmen and Holds Remark- able Conference in War- den’s Office. Following the fourth outbreak in the Blackwell's Island Penitentiary within a week, Commissioner of Corrections Katharine B. Davis moved her office temporarily from the Municipal Building to the Warden's office on Blackwell's Island. She put Deputy Commissioner Burdette G. Lewis {: charge of the main office of the department and said she would stay at the penitentiary until she got to the bottom of the insurrections there, and could remember having heard from the convicts followed Miss Davis as through eight delegates from each: AT CINCINNATI, tier, She asked ¢hent'% call out from | BXGOKLYN— the names that were shouted, picked the eight on the list who had the wood deal of bad language. From some of the cells came the united on Batteries—Enzman Benton and Clark and Rigler, —_—_>—_ AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK and McCarty: stopped them, even at the cost of calling out the militia. she went through the buildings, an- behind the bars the cell numbers of og most votes. Umpires—Hart The first whole-hearted cheers that ¢——————$——$————______ nouncing to the 1,400 convicts her the men they would like to have CINCINNATI— 1 When Mise Davis approached the any keeper Blackwell's Island plans for giving them a hearing NATIONAL LEAGUE. their epokesmen, and, noting down ali) cell blocks there was hooting and a volces of fifteen or twenty men at WiRsT Game, once cry! “We want food. We| HIGHLANDERS— want food. 000100001-2% “You will get food when you obey} CLEVELAND— the rules of this institution,” Miss 100103101—7 Davis called back Ina clear voice, Fa ttanan=icee and OINGiK “Lots of us are innocent,” yelled a) hop, Pieh and Nunamaker. U mpires avaoner. Hildebrand and Dineen, “So it has been from the begin-| 8¢¢ Sporting Page for Box Score. ning,” replied the Commisstoner, SBOOND GANT “when there ts general wrong doing,| HIGHLANDERS— the innocent auffer with the guilty.” 0 The first olght prisoners who went | CLEVELAND— before the Commissioner made it 0 = perfectly clear to her, she said, what ae nort of complaints she waa to hear. Each and every one said that the revolts were protests against the In- FEDERAL LEAGUE. AT BROOKLYN discriminate harshness of Warden] gROOKLYN— Hayes, He inflicted punishment right 00000 and left, taking no pains to plek out the men gulity of mlaconduct. PITTSBUPGH— Under administrations previous to 10010 Batteries—Knetaer and Berry; Juul and Lund, Umpites—Goeckel and Cross, FOR DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF GAMES SEE BASEBALL EDITION. —> MRS. ANGLE’S FATHER FAINTS FROM SUSPENSE that of Miss Davis, some of the men told her, protests against the War- den's cruelty were not made because they only brought torture in thelr trail and not possibility of relief. Under the new administration the opportunities of the Warden for in- fiicting Wnusuel and unfair punishment had been greatly diminished, but still caused much bitterness and hatred of him. The willingness of the prisoners to join in a general revolt was in the hope of bringing on a general in- vestigation of the Warden's methods, “L have had an application for « interview with you, Commissto held up for three months,” said one man. “I know it has never reached you, in spite of your invitation to us Strain Too Much for Him When Ballou Inquest Is Adjourned Until July 20, wondent of ‘The STAMFORD, July 10.—-Fy TROOPS SAVE FURY’ Prison Head Who'ls Letting FROM LYNCHING FOR ASSAILING THE KING iia Woman Dragged to Street When She Springs on Step of Auto to Reach Monarch. SURROUNDED BY MOB.' Fight Crowds Bent on Hanging Militant Who Had Petition. Soldiers and Police PERTH, Scotland, July 10.—A ‘fury”, uttering exultant yell,! sprang on to the footboard of an auto- | mobile in which King George and Qneen Mary were driving through the, streets of Perth to-day and started a riot in which troops and police saved her from a mob that threatened to lynch her. The woman, who was identified as Rhoda Fleming, from Glasgow, | naking her attempt to reach the King seized the handle of the door of the! royal automobile before the momen- | tarily paralyzed police were able to} act. { She was then seized by two police- | men and it required a score of mount- ed soldiers to hold at bay the angry nob bent on lynching, The woman turned out to be armed only with a petition against the forcible feeding of imprisoned suffrageties, A large force of troops was requisi- | tioned to protect her from the popu- ace as she was conveyed to the police station, Earlier in the day while in Dundee the King and Queen had received at- tontions from another “fury” who Pitohed a bundle of papers into their notor car, YOUNG WIFE ENDS LIFE AFTER BREAKDOWN Returns to Her Former ‘Home and KATHERINE e DAVIS CANADIAN POLICE CHIEF GETS YANKEE BOUNCE AS CUP CANDIDATES HANG CLOSE IN LIGHT AIR Not More Than a Half a Min- ute Between Three Sloops in Boarded American Ship to Serve Capuain Who Has Him Put Ashore. ST. CATHERINES, Ont, July 10. A Canadian chief of police was thrown, he alleges, from the steamer Cadillac, an American vessel, to a canal bank Warrant on } |to-day when he borrded the ship to Turns on the jserve a summons on Capt. Sullivan Three Hours of Sailing. : Sullivan contended that no British ‘ Gas. peace officer had the right to board gaara ; Fr . an American veasel, and, according to CALDWELL, N. J. July 10--Mra. | the inant, ordered two of bis NEWPORT, July 10-—Tn the lightest Heatrice L., Willlamsaged twenty-six, officers and the erew to deposit (ME oe aire and nilonwiniitine ‘ox was found dead to-day in her home | Chief of pullce on the Hank rested bY the three Amoricn arene i, a apt, Su " “ ey arrested by the three America Cup yachts we on Chestnut road, in the Sunnywood liyg police offleers from Port Dal- , ‘a 0 i) re Heighis section of Verona, She hal |housie and heid in $4,000 bail sent away to-day in a thirty-mile seal ele aot been asphyxiated by Hluminating gas contest under the auspices of th She had suffered from nervous pros New York Yacht Club, ‘The cours tration, and she and her husband had Cl Y P Y H wan triangulas, thei first lex being a Jecided to «ive up hounekeeping and to some summer resort. They c oped their house day before yester- | heat of ten the second log tles to the southward, reach eastward and INSULT AT CONNOLLY. sii ee ah A then another reach home. ‘The wind y, Willlams went to the home of| *, had hauled around from the north ot r Nutley, takl two- t , aan a ca umiter end Mrne Willlama | Borough President's Offer to Fight | into the south when the course was ent to her mother, Mrs. Charles W set The preparatory whistle wos Lyford of No. &6 Porter place, Mont Not Accepted by blown at 12.16, and ten minutes later clair, Mrs, Williams told her mother : Yesterday she felt better and wauld:| Eustace the warning whistle was sounded xo to New York to do some shopping.| The starting whistle was blown at When nothing was heard from her| “You are the meanest, dirtiest| ty 39 and the start was made as to-day, Mra, Lyford telephoned to a) scoundrel in the city’s employ!” feiowa friend in Verona and Mrs. Williams) hese words were hissed into the | ene” was found dead with the gaa in the! Ce pcrough Prenident Maurice K. room turned on. | Connolly of Queens, as he was leay- me — = The thets yachts broke out net; @ wealthy farmer, his two children The other occupant of id, tiver bank and ‘boat and its occupants hed disappeared aid arrived, ‘The two children ears old of the accident, exccpt to say boat overtuied, throwing him in f | | mS an cut lost their lives on the | wam to the! Me sead for you to tell our Com | owing the adjournr to-day of he | 4 Few Facts to pe When ing the use AN OF the nes of ee [Jim topsuiis and the breeze picked np Lasoo tarjen|inauest Into the death of Waldo R. [mate this afternoon by Joseph He) pit, bringing with It another fox ‘The keepers are like the Warde Placing Your Sunday Advertising: | Eustace, # $2,000 a yeut examiner ini ying which quickly lost the racing said another. “They tear up notes) Ballou until July 20, Cor er Phelan. == |the Bureau of Contract Supervision. | cone from along shore. | addressed to the Warden before our)County Prosecutor Homes 8. Cam Connolly, turning to Comptrotier | a ; ; ; | After standing to the southeast- fac If the Warden gets a com-|imings and City Prosecutor Philips | Give It the Right Circulation: | Prendergast, asked latte Gis tuts Gad Busihos tA sked |quiry and never hears the Prisoner's} which they agreed that the vartous New * York City exceeds that of the | Roard of ut doing aby- along on the starbourd tuck. Reso- | sid jenalyses of the bloodstains found in Sundev Herald, Suaday Times, jun- | thing?" we fi jute then crossed Vanitie’s bow and Others complained that letters from|Mrs. Angle's flat were not comple day Sun and Sunday Tribune) gaiq’ che Comptroller “sou can du au forced her about, Resolute did well friends outside wees nok only cpened and other investigations would be ADDED VOGETHER! ae ‘ in the Matt alr and soon after 4 in the search for drugs, but were fre- ofctock had a lead on her rivals. tquently destroyed Blondel, father of Mrs.| Place 1t Where Ad. Readers Look: yi The Rec @lige@usd wan medal lA | A moat intelligent prisoner whol Angle, was in her cell, just over the That World Ads. attract the greatest | eT ren OF very fuky streaky airs in which succeeded former Inspector Hussey jofice of Prosecutor Cumin’ Aw) number of readers and produce the, fi favored lute H — n as the meeting wan over i“ best resuits is evidenced by these} Eustace Resolute rounded the mark at (Continue on BS jecond Page.) rushed to the sidewalk ana topple! | figures ginear He 4054 and was folluwed by Vanitie over into the arms of a newspap ; jwhen Co it 2.2.68. Detlance rounded the mark Last Two Days of Big Sale. (nun, We was token toto the Cis 686, 264 falta, Ouro | ete you haveans oat a3 812 Men's Blue Serge Bult 5.91 Etat ih : asl Six Months — " 8 We where he pleaded with Vorone 5 address (hem tom don't be > (OLB ASTOR Hootin to co on with the inquen.| 316,473 MORE THAN THE HERALD | whispering with my engineer When told this would be impossibte | eee | Eustace hovered about the ho: SAILING TO-DAY. shoe until the meeting Was adjourned 1 fainted, He suid he could ne long stand the suspe World “Wante” Work Wonders say { =, } cot lee were ee) then followed the Borough President to the corridor and spoke to him | jouthampton Connolly told Bu Phat hal «| Bau aaianeme “meet hin outvide,”” Rustac nae tile wt if nitace i Algenauln. Santa Domingo | Scturday Is a Bustling Day at All World U, & 8, Culoa, Vera Cruz.. | Gffces, So It Will Be Wenge Werld Ads, Ready ToD. | ' RESOLUTE LEAD IN RACE i HUNT FOR REVOLVER IN CARMAN HOUSE: MAGNET IN CHIMNEY Officials, Backed by Search Warrant, Spend Three Hours in House, but Get No Trace of Weapon That Killed Mrs. Bailey. NEW EVIDENCE WEAKENS ALIBI OF THE PRISONER Mrs. Carman’s Maid Said to Have Told Friend Her Employer Was on Stairs After Shooting. By agreement between counsel, July 21 was set this afternoon as the date for the examination of Mrs, Florence Carman before Justice of the Peace Norton at Freeport on the charge of murdering Mrs, Louise | Bailey. As part of the stipulation Lawyer Levy, for the defense, is to be jallowed to question Elwood T. Bardes, the leading witness for the State, who is locked up in Mineola Jail, District-Attorney Smith will spend the time beiween now and the 24st investigating new evidence, Part of this evidence tends to discredit the testimony given in the inquest by Celia Coleman, the maid employed by Dr. Carman and bis wite, which is the mainstay of Mrs. Carman’s alibi, oY Mra. Alfred Paris of No. 48 NO FINES FOR FIREMEN; | sra\ntsy sweet Rockville Con: WILL STOP OFF DAYS District-Attorney. He has infer mation that Mrs. Paris, who ie @ es friend of Celia Coleman, will Commissioner Adamson Believes cay that ~ aint Sal bee brit New Plan Will Benefit the shooting ocourred ond horas Families of Men. upstairs from the ground floer right after the murder. OR. CARMAN AND LAWYER VISIT PRISONER AT JAIL. Dr, Carman and his lawyer Georme Levy visited Mra, Carman tn the Mineota Jatt to-day and had @ long talk with her about the case. The Carmans have employed Val O'Far rell, ex-leutenant of detectives of the New York Vollee Departinent, to counteract the evidence of the State. is looking for the people thave had a grudge againat Carma Mr. Levy told Mrs, Carman that he “It is my intention to give @ fires) yy) 1 Aoi exuelita falbatenate | tink that Bardes would stand @ ¢rows-examination, ind if he does not show w desire to im.) 70" prove, 1 will dismiss him from the de- | n't wee why they did not tm- After a careful study of the system of fining firemen for infractions of rules of the Fire nson an: the Department Commissioner Ads nced to- day that he bad adopted a new plan, “The system of fluing has been une satisfactory “When they were brought up on charges and fined from five to ten days’ pay, according to the offenses, the loss of pay directly affected the mother and children and not the fire- men. sald the Commissioner, Se ee oe Gao TAA ies | rest Bardes's story before put- will deprive him of his day off until | MMe rw, ne Mrs, Corman® Mile the amount of the fine is paid, In this After coming out of the Jail Mr, van will be the real suf- ig used in the| with great suc- levy said that the thing that ap- ared to comfort Mrs, Carman moet was the way her friends are standing ferer, United cons. iis system States army ii |by her and expressing their belief in Innocence. “There is nothing in BACK 10 PAGDED [this case unless somebody plants | something," said the lawy | SHOULDERS FOR MEN) The woman who made threats against Dr. Carman a year ago, as related by a man named Howe,’ who | Lf, 2 lives in Philadelphia, revealed her- Next Year's Coats to Be Chesty, but] gee to-day, She is the wife of Dr. (Think of It, Claude!) Sleeves Horace Evans of Freeport, an enemy , of long standing of Dr, Carman, Will Paper at Wrists. “It is true,” sald Mra ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, July 10.—| frankly, “that I threatened to do The annual session of the National| almost anything mean to Dr. Carman on the occasion mentioned by My, Howe, I hate Dr, Carman and I deat hesitate to say so, He has dose Association of Clothing Designers is ing held at the Hotel Royal to-day, ye atyles for men's « as out | Hined for the ensuing year, Are some~ great injustice to my husband, But what different froin those of 1913 and} T didn't itll Mrs, Batley, nor aid I [1911 ‘The sults this fall will have|@ver attempt to do harm to Dr. Car- [the padded shoulders, de at the shoulders and tapering at the wrist, The coats will be low) District-Attorney Smith has never eut and fit to form, the trousers nar- | credited the testimony of Celia Cole row and the waistcoats will be cut|man, He claims to have good reason low with @ peculiar convex sweep at|to believe that she will tell the top to give 1 chesty look to the|story after she hag been. wearer, with the facts im | ®. i A with sleeves | man, although I think I would if the chance presented itself.” ae