The evening world. Newspaper, January 16, 1909, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Hi Circulation Books Open to All,” | NEW YORK, SATURDAY, PRICE ONE CENT, lV TICKET HANGED HIMSELF IN GELL “"D WILLINGLY CDEeyy ATG MEER BY NOMEN DOT CVERAGAN” m HANS DECLARES i » Out of Work, Who Was Said by Benefactress to zarpro rg 2 i Have Stolen Her Hidden Hoard, Tries to Die G ARR ] IN in Police Station, = i ; ' ae “If Major Needed Me for Pro- Mre, | Revenia h alittle had finishe f ne Ade er ; - a wk Sinth Bod morniug. . few minutes later she tection Would Do the Same \ Mule me counenorimian aut ae ve at s ifs ite Thing, 8 f coffee in the dented stea ) id tha } spiouioney Nor A ead (ounce an wasnt WILL CARRY HIS GUN, » (rns satan) i coffer turn it 1 in fee Mrs He was ed in a ¢ it lo ri rf : Keith & Procter Adopted New change tis afternoon, At Lh ihe “Can't Tell When | Might iN room passed his cell, ¢ ' = oy * Mode of Procedure at his own necktie Have to Use It’—Captain’s ng man doy rial in March, " Fifth Avenue Theatre. (GET AID OF MERCHANT larceny and DASHED Acio N HIS WIFE IN EFFORT 10 DISFIGURE HER 1 Adopting a now mode of procedure In Beautiful Trenton Woman Fights Desperately t a Hus- dhe war against the ticket speculators , . hand's Attack, but Her Neck and Back Burned— t the management of Kelth & Proc t paren Avenue THoathe)s Biowuiyay yan Policeman Rescues Her and Arrests Assailant, ‘wenty-ninth afternoon (qvith merchants occupy } "I'd willingly do It over again. If my brother, the Major here, got into trouble and needed me for protection I'd do the xComplaint of Disorderly Con- Paris duct Made Against the 1 ie Ticket Sellers, is the position of Thornton Je: kins a 8, acquittal by a jury in Queens County yesterday of partict- pation in the killing of William EB has , whose Annis New York than any verdict In recent years Hains believes and does not hesi- tate to state that the jury acquitted him un and he Promises to write a book setting forth his views upon the right of a deceived husband to set at defiance the law of the land. more discussion in r the Tnwritten Law," street, tores adjo iin made complaints charging the spec CAMDEN, N William t street and was ad tted and then wiators with disorderly conduct. As C to-day his made the attack Mains, now that he is free, boldly | yesult detectives under Acting Ca) by burnt e with murlatic Mrs. Cote wi e down! 8nd aggressively takes the position Waly, of the West Tl acid. He succeeded in scarring the back back und where that his brother, Capt, Peter C, Hains, vee arrested five me: neck and sh and back| it landed on } eck ran out Into the} Wa8 Justified in killing Annis. But he! When the theatre opened after- ate fight yard does not forget to Insist that Peter C, fnoon the management secured the serv [with her tn his efforts to get the acid!) Her hush Hains {s insane and was Insane at the es of fliieen men In addition to the} to her f time of the killing. Aymptoyees, ho stationed th Mrs. ( y beautl: what remained of the aci “In my ¢ aid Hains at the Hotel pout the sidewalk mingling wi! ful Ww and her husband appears to fought lim oft, Lint “there was no question ot (dozen or more speculators, Wheney | been causlessly Jealous of her. remainde the acid was spi | t sponsibility to consider. ;{pereon purchased a seat from the spec-| ‘They had a quarre lon Sunday and Cole Cole's mother, who Witnessed the was simply @ question of my sora julators the employee would notify the| left home and it appears now went to n to the street. and he responsibility for the murdi older that the ticket would not be ac-| Newark. He purchased the acid there brought a polic wien logical man who followed the teat kepted at the door, This enraged the| according to the label on the bottle. On Cole mony and views the verdict In the light | igpectators and several anciments arose | reaching this city from Newark this Cole was arrested and committed inf the sae charge must admit that | rday set the ‘unwr tat law ‘abe ep the written law of the State of New York, Compliments to Darrin, Hains remained late in his room to- morning he went to his Home on Chest default of $198) bath Merchants Give Aia. Finally the management secured the | onsent of the merchants whose stores| Kpasoin the thevtre and complaints were |prade charging 8 with dis j ues His father, the General, was up| erderly, (conduct Capt. Dally) ou efore him. His brother, Major ‘ was notified nala) dagen) and his mother had breakfasted potectives sg ulckly fore he made his appearance. When feene. Complaints Hel waa Reon by an Evening World re- ally against five porter he was the profane, domineer- ghey were take voluble 1, Jenkins Hains who tharges of disorderly asketvall chami-, and Public School No. i444 0% Broo took his brother's domestic affairs into Manager Irwin, of i Public Schools Athletle | just nosed o e Kist iyi, own hands. He expressed his Theatre, made the 8 decided this a at, one » of the District-Attorney of five prisoners, second and. of various wit- as Isva ¢ City we » prosecution with start- \ avenue wand vevy, of No. 1906 Public Scheol “T didn't sleep well last night,’ said | |prookiyn; Charles Ma ilostavollhi gamey, ing jfains, “Sleeping in a brass bedstead Albany avenue, Bi ciao diana ( na luxuriously furnished room was jMarx, Garden Hotel HS MEMES ETa * an exp e that did not tend to com: Fatreet and Madison ave m Was necessary Was! pose ine to slumber. I slept better on ) iP. Martin Ne acne eharinty } he iron cot in the Queens County jail minth street. All of Asahi despite the vermin that infe were bailed o1 cell. According to M Twin from Mrs the “That's one thing Darrin did to me} undertaker sion to em them soo if the mis- | (hat was dirty When we were first put to gee in jail Connie and L had comfortable fold then | quarters, ‘Then, at Darrin’s we | Would be fined ee OSS) were put in rotten cells, They put Con- | Rothachild was to that he {nie ina cel! with two prisoner stool- r police or the Depart-| pigeons, who tried tu force damaging ive the other un- 7 om ; | admissions from him, | Mrs: “Absolutely Broke.” “All T need now 4s rest. 1 am going | over to see Connie to-day after I get some sleep—I think I could sleep a} ek—and as as possible I am going to get to work, 1 am absolutely | P T am wearing summer lclothes. It is necessary merchants Ww RECCRD, CROWD Ai SANNA RACES ms ~ UNDERTAKES N “ARHT 10 SEZ OMAN’ BODY @ with hin 1 to-day t soon my tup. | that L should} SS they are unable to break Special EARNS Event and! Burial Director et TAFT AS PRESIDENT WILL taom= money imac, "| Lales” Day Responsible | ‘That Rival Tried to “Snatch” WAVE $12,000 AUTOMOBILE, fi sss, Save sents apie for Big Turnout, Funeral Illegally. The only way 1 kuow Unwritten 1 Gs : NY ASUNGHON ie The |to make m is by my pen, and I've | resident of the Unitec 8 to pln to wet busy. I expect to spend some AVANNAH, Ga., Yacdalincan ah pli got toe t ¢ ee aiaee una S$ A. Rotherhtld. an yndertaker at No. ||) i , “e : Tha ime eo next few days going over t skies and came known to-day > Ho gioe Sat are beainning: to. y st 7 Lexington “avenue, complained to! ¢, ‘ stacks fee ye re H i Committee on Approprt ome in ne and to the other mem- magnets that drew © Coroner's office to-day that another ' PaReiniontemereaet my crowds out that has yet attended , mie A t ay ) for ithe pur : BN reer ey) i hl as Why permission of the famil Mrs, It was expt t Judge ‘Taft had | worst night I ever spent. It was not— Bethe futire i \ Wilner, of No. 503 West One | iiiimated th an \ moee aute by any means. I have spent nights on | fand as an added ‘a Hundred and Twentleth street, to pre t have the tig | shipboard in storms that were much jepayee ap steeplecha pare tha woman's body for burial! of his admin-| more nétve-racking, As a matter of | FIRST RACE—Purae; for Rotliselild attempted to nts | gaot, T wasn't worried during the night | nd upward; five and a halt ficate of burial and was shown th about the jury. "Baby \ rows, entry at the Coroner's office bearing Quite eavly in the game I got from Yar ont, i the memorandum opposite the record ¢ © MONTENEGRO'S | S RULER TO a reilable source that the Jury was 9 to {to J, ever me , e' Ly ¢ ‘ Pore 7 ! 5 yor | hoy (Leach), even, 1 ty 2 Certiieate of removal grane-| ABDICATE IN SON'S FAVOR, my favor. A cop who had been ‘ime—!.10 Ray Thomp ted,’ with the name of the undertaker oube in the Jury room window told SECOND RACE—P for four-year-| Mrs, Wiliner dled from a fall on tMe) pants, Jan, 1i—A epectal despaten {Me tat: | was sure Men of a disagree: | ide and upward; short course, Handl-) rs 4 nursed is Ni aS . lespateh | vant at le ‘ c OF atueplechese ePrince ot Prise a | pavenwent on Thurvday, and yesterday |secelved ‘nero trom Vienna eaye it 19 |™*% & [SAsii aa Gia iROba worry. | fo Sand out, first morning o'clock the undertaker | rumored that Prince olas of Mon-| Jardine “A Good Chap.” | Gohngon), 3 to 1 and out, complained of turned up at the Coro- | tenegro lins abdica filers ‘ in favor of his. “But I was worried when the jury iharies ¢ ates rs of aap ”: on ah hint Charles em, Wy) 12 Cand | nen's office, and upon presenting au- | #0, Prince Mirk went out. I wouldn't have given a Sams also ran. jthorization from the family was giver nickel for my chances. That man Dar- THI eh ACE Seven f mea ja eens i , | rin, say what you want about him, purse ees and Up.—Anha| Rothschild sald to-day that he leaened {QE made a masterly summing up, —him, Gnd 4 to 6, fire Wine New Turkioh Matha PAs As aith. het ung |e had me going. I thought he had m 0" re to; to. oP), 18 to 5, Be stn ees Pulltaee Bi | Ravaltert sits, * ay %" ot hes owe Bay | impreened the jury. | ibrocm, 10 ( aa besten Se at! eel Aedes ‘And “yuu ‘But when I heard that two-thirds ot | | were buried In the ruins, and Mr. JANUARY 16, 1909, ‘American Consul Whose Body Has Been Found in Messina Ruins, ‘BODIES OF CHENEY AND W GUND IN The QUAKE RUINS a os Rome, places the number at 90,000, Mr. , , ,. Lupton estimates also that there are Sailors From Battleship Illinois ee AT SO pC i aN) Cte The work f getting information con- Individuals who yvere in Messina timo of the earthquake is ex- difficult, as there are undoubt- tens of thousands under the rulns and other tens of thousands have scattered themselves throughout Sicily and the Peninsula ‘The neople still in Mosstna are camp- nutskirts and It has been take any census of cornly at the Qu in Recovering Them in Messina. MESSINA, W.—After lying buried in the ruins of the Consulate at Jan. Messina for a period of nineteen days, Arthur 8. the the bodies of ¢ Impossible to American Consul, and his wife were to- 1th —Mr. Billings, an ex- froin Boston, ar- ay and Joined the Amer!- joan Rellet Committee of Rome. He will being held | it the return of the rellef ship Bay day recovered hy a detacliment of sail from the battleship Hil they were unearthed placed in coffins that were bodies w sand vonvered aboard tho | oi, yerore deciding where to go In the ship Culgoa, which left here at | rhe Bayern lei newine ey TS , | It has not yet been decided Major Landis, the American military | sicher she tx to return to the devas- attache at Rome wir has been super> | (ied district or not . intending the work of excavating the; pappRMo, Jan. 1¢—The chartered ruins, des American Consul at Nap official to obtain pern authorities to ship the rem ford, Conn,, on the firat ay chant steamer. Wrapped in Amerizan Flags. The bodies of the Consul and bis wife were removed with much reverence by the officers and satlors of the Ilinols They were disfigured, Each member of sent a wirel h * to the | steamer Bayern, carrying $ asking this | ed with mone jon of the local | ;- rt ns to Hart- | Mable mer- ef supplies subsoribed in the Morning ran Con- & crowd from the meg into port. ei ae 16.—Pay Inspector Me- rn has come ashore from the bat. HteShip Connecticut and will take rge of the posal of the supplies on board the Celtic, which satled the American party seemed to realtze| Now York last month. This vessel that he was working to pay a last | probably will be sent to Messina and | | Regsio, The Connecticut is to leave tribute to a man and a woman who Pecan to rejoin the other Amer= | lost thelr lives at thelr post of duty; | ican, battle-ships at, Villetranche, to countrymen who had been cruel! HAVEN, Conn, Jan. ti—The ; ¥ | yodies of Consul Arthur’ Cheney and overwhelmed by the forces of nature. | \fry. Cheney will be brought to. this The bodies were placed with extreme | city for burial. ve tn two caskets, which were then —_—_—_—————— offin was wrapped In a an sallo and started they made A REAL POKER GAME It happened at a big New York host- tallan soldiers a Just like shis peorts took off r hats, + arneared in the eyes of many of the| A Cleveland, Ohio, millionatre meets a spectators nulti-millionaire of ‘bet - a = million’? Stuart K. Lup he Amertean V, me {n the hotel lobby. After an “old- Conaul at Messina, was living in an-| times” talk, an mvitation to “come up sand 1 xtended and accepted. waiting with ¢ 4 fame start jilion"’ and anys: “Settle afterward.” Juat exactly what happened ts too good to tell in limited space, so It has tMen decided to print and illustrate the whole story in to-morrows Sunday World, vhis was prohably one of the most onderful games of poker ever played. sure and read this story to-morrow other house at the tlie of the earth-| quake and to this fact he owed his life. | As soon as possible on the morning of Dee. 8 he made his way to the rulns of the Consulate only to discover that the site was covered by a mass of wreckage thirty feet high. The three-storled build: ing had entirely collapsed, The Cheneys Lup ton soon perceived !t would be tmpos- sible to resoue them. It ts presumed that they died Immediately and did not | Miner alive under the debris. | and learn how rich men gamble, and 90,000 Died in Messina how the Clevelander wow $4,000 in leas An official eatimate of the earthquake /than two hours and diin¢ know it, dead in Messina, made by Stuart K. | Newsstands are soon cleared of Sunday Lupton, the American Vice-Consul, on’ Worlds. Order your copy in advance are A poker is banker, rom | AT $1,000 PER CHIP, | "| pliott, Pendleton, NIGHT TRAIN HORROR VICTIMS ARE BEHEADED PRICE ONE CENT ] MEET DEATH AND 40 MORE DYING IK NMGHT TRAIN SMASH ae Dead Mangled in the Wreckage oft Denver and Rio Grande Flyer Which Crashed Into Freight at Remote Point in Colorado. '8 OF THE VICTIMS BEHEADED: THE INJURED NUMBER 50. Two Relief Trains, With Doctors and Nurses, Rushed to Aid of Victims—One Carrying Injured From the Scene Is Blocked by Cars Thrown Across the Tracks, DENVER, Jan. 16,—Seventy-one dead, fifty injured, at feast thirty of whom will probably die, That is the record of the wreck of Denver and Rio Grande westbound passenger train No. 5, near Dotsero, twenty miles from Glenwood Springs, according to a long distance telephone message from Glenwood Springs to-day. The smashup occurred at 10.30 o'clock last night when the flyer crashed into freight No, 66, eastbound, on a blind, siding at the lik named, The passenger train was flying dewn the grade, making for thesiding, five miles west of Dotsero, where it expected to meet the freight, and the freight was also trying to make the siding, ‘The result was a head-on: collision in which the engines were smashed, the baggage car of the pas- senger train left standing on end, one of the day coaches telescoped by the car, immediately behind it, and many persons in the day coach and chair car mangled almost beyond recognition, Those killed were: Gus Olsen, engineer of the passenger train, of Salida, and seventy passengers, whose names are not known, DEAD WERE MANGLED. To add to the bad situation one of two relief trains on the way to @en- woo! loaded with injured was tied up for some time by the cerailment of ; the freight cars. The first rellef train bearing a number of more slightly injured reached Glenwood this morning bringing reports of the wreck, which appears to have been one of the worst in the history of railroading, Of sixty-nine pas- eight are said to have been killed, The one Most of the slaughter was done in the chair car, sengers in that coach si ar-old girl, who was found under the dead person to escape Was a body of her mother, and who {s too near dead eyen to remember her name, further than that it Is “Alice.” The dead are in many instances so horris bly mutilated that identification will bo very difficult. SOME OF THE INJURED: A partial list of injured follows: John Ross, Cleveland, O.; Thomas Ia.; W. Adair, Ravinna, 0.; T, B, Miller, Denver; Mrs, G. B. Lanke, Wapolin, Mo.; Charles P, Mance, Mrs, Charles P. Mance, W. M, Barber, Anthony, Kas.; B, H. Hayden and child, Buffalo, Okla.; Fred Jen- son, lowa Falls, Ia.; Mrs, Nellie J. Morton, Standish, Cal.; Mrs. A. W. Me- Deilley, and child, W, C, Moxey, Los Angeles, J. B. Thompson, Bookens, g, Dak.; F. Chandler, Denver; Clyde FE. MeGown, Pullman conductor; Clar- ence Vassau, Middleburg, Vt. Among those who were on the train and escaped were Dr, Charlotte Hall, St. Paul; Bmma Stafford, Cleveland; Mary E, Speer, Oleveland; Myrtia L. Roff, Winside, Neb.; Hugh Gregg and family, Har- Speer, Cleveland; | risburg, Ill, The passenger train going across a switch station or telegraph office. senger coach WA8 wrecked. All the sleeping cars remained on the track and no {n them were {njured. FAST RUN BEFORE SMASUH. The passenger train is sald to have heen going at a high rate of speed when it reached the siding at Doserto. It is osed that the engineer of the passenger train thought the freight had passed the siding and was going too rapidly to stop his train when He saw the danger, The great locomotive attached to the passenger train was demolished and the chalr car and passenger coach were turned on thelr sides and shattered. With the arrival of the relief train from Glenwood Springs !t was pos- sible to start the work of rescue of the bodies The injured were pinned under the wreckage and the herole work of the passengers on the Pullman s rs sayed many lives, Train No. 6, which was wrecked, left Denver yesterday morning. It was well filled with passengers, many of whom were to get off at this point, ‘When the relief train reached the scene it was found thet a long string . lof traight cars on the freight train were in the way, and the only way theg Liars train crashed Into the leading engine of the freight L which is a blind siding, without a air car was telescoped and the first pas- sero, of the passengers suppe

Other pages from this issue: