The evening world. Newspaper, May 16, 1911, Page 1

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OIL TRUST OFFICIALS MAY FACE TRIAL emer en ennene nanan nnn tnnnnnnannns eeine nn: RACE RESULTS AND ENTRIES 7 eaanaaanaad a en tia be PRICE ON E CE N T. Copyright, 1911, » by The Pre: Publishing Co. (The New York World). WOMUN WITH GEMSWWTEET "222% TELLS SECRETS OF COINERS' GAN » TRACKED BY HER SMILE mine wore SENATE ROTOUS After Arrest of Band Pre- | pared for Flight to West. | AS BRONX COUNTY FIVE yo hie | BIL IS IS ATTACKED | Accused of Planning to Flood Alaska With Counterfeit $5 Certificates. | When Door Is Locked to ‘The gem-lined smile of Mme. Cleo Preserve Quorum. Genard, boarding-house keeper and, confidant of a self-confessed group of ; trapped counterfeiters, had lost but ipecial to The Evening Work), Uttley of its glitter when its owner | AUMBANY May 16.—The Bronx County walked into the Custom House to-day, | Bil! held the centre of the stage in the ready to turn Sta Legisiature to-day and certainly stirred her four alleged confederates, then re-|UP a row. In the Senate the proceed- Dosing In separate cella in the Old | {ngs were almost riotous with the hon- Bip station. orable senators locked in and some of LED 7 ‘TO COINE RS. This lady wears @ clear blue diamond | them threatening to break down the eet in each of the gold mountings of her! doors with axes If they were not re. two eye teeth—a touch of feminine van- | leased. ity which made it all the easter for the| Altogether the fll was not kindly weoret service men to trail the #an#| treated. First it and finally, yesterdi dust killed tn the Ai the referendum to New Yor. © y. dent imitations of the fiv . Ha dao jollar cert This tate : flcate that bear the head of the great | iy Cert “Me Pasaee i i beset hye pone te een ae The extension of the referendum ‘ | he fact that her and was among |.) ha ull new. in eek Ou Planers dia “not F places the no n such shape that eem to lessen Mme. Genard's ¢heerfulness any. Following MarkoTagonich and Sam Pekovich of Montenegro, suspected of Preparing false money here for circula- tion tn European cities Richard H. Taylor, who Succeeded former Deputy Police Commissioner Flynn as chist if it ever should pass the Legislature have to be voted on by all of New York Coun: hattan ae well as the Borough of the Bronx. Hopeless in Assembly. @cret Service, traced them to the house| WS seen to be hopeless fro mthe start of the Glenards, who took in lodgers a: |As8sembly Semour Mork of the Bronx No, 462 Eighth avenue. Mr. Taylor and] and Minority Leader Mgrritt led the Operators John Henry and Frank Burke | $Upporters of the measure. Mork has MEXICO CITY, May had observed that the Glenard woman|® broken leg and supported himself on pillage oodtirred at Pachu @nd her husband had become more in-|a crutch while he shot in his argument. | 4¥ following the surrende timate with thetr Montenegrin lodgers} The Democrati Jority, sure of|t@ the revolut Bhan seemed reasonable. its ability to Kill the bill, hustled the|@runk and _— the roceedings along and then sent word townspeople jn ts Knew Her by Teeth. Byer to tye Senate thet it had yare| thelr homes and Yemained hidden, Glenard and his wife and the Monte- ‘ banks were dynamited Megrins moved with great speed and at-| formed Its part of the contract. Pachuca was captured temptrd secrecy to a place in West] In the Senate the advocates of the] 1.00 cancious fashion Fifty-third Then Mr, Taylor fe measure had the advantage of numbers 40,000, the capital of t that his suspicion that Glenard and the | &t the start of the session, Accordingly lady with diamond mounted incisors|the Tammany Senators under the lead- bad turned countertel too, was not|ership of Agner and Grady fought unfounded, It was never hard to fol-| skilfully for delay, At one time the Jow them. No matter where they went,| bill, in its original shape, could have to Hoboken and back to New York|been carried by a vote of {4 to 22 had again, it was easy to ‘pick up the trail! Senator Stilwell of the Bronx been able of “the lady with the diamond teeth”|to bring it to a vote. go, and 1s one of camps in the repub! miles northeast of Mex’ the first state cap! ply, an hand ‘8 of their Dy neighborhood gossip. enator Loomis offered the amend-| vere a aha He Mrs, Glenard told her story without a] ment extending the referendum to the| the cin shone whimper while the men in custody cried | Borough of Manhattan. Senator Stil- Uke children, Then she chirked up| Well and Senator Brackett, of the mi- bery zingly when Chief Taylor told her | nority, fought the amendment bitterly. | unde ehe might go home unguarded, providing ator Fiero, who was in the chairs] pjode Wherpver entrance she would report to him to-day and | feared that enough Sen tors to spoil a] fected the | hold herself in readiness to obey him.|quorum would try to eseape as the rioters then turned Under the Federal statute, which re-| time for voting on the amendment tion mmoretal wards the wife of a supposed criminal | proached, Accordingly he ordered the | " of such of their fs being under duress and coercion to|doors locked and instructed the oor-| the mob \ D carry her husband, he knew it would be use-| keepers to hea off by force any mem- jess to try to convict her however | bers seeking to escape. ty by 800 rebels atrong the evidence of complicity might Brackett Wild With Rage. Hernandes de. Senator Brackett was wild with rage als are en route fo: fhe woman spent the night at her|tie knew the amendment had enough al trains and’a fight 1s Jodgings and at 9 this morning she was| votes, He threatened to use an in Mr. Taylor's office. There she}on any door any doorkeeper that | stayed several hours amplifying her | impeded his progress, but he stuck | °°. original admissions, as Commissioner | around just the same. The passage of | joa Shields had not arrived and the ar- | tne amendment was greeted with joy raignment of the captive coiners had}, the Murphy followers and gloomily |to ¢ m postponed until afternoon, |by Arthur Murphy and Eu was the ene Me-/| the 1 r , At the preliminary hearing’ Assistant | uire, the Bronx insurgent ‘Tammany | lawless ted t United States District-Attorney Abel L.|yeaders who were here to boost the | thus made frec Bmith asked that ball be fixed at $10,000 | hoot. along | This forenoon a se each, for examination May 2%. This| In the House the vote was 77 against | as been re jue pi was agreed on, Willlam Michael Byrne | the bill and 49 In favor of it, Assembly h ‘Was assigned as counsel for the four jman M men. They were sent to the Tombs, —_ | however’, succeeded in: putting the }o he table so that Planned to Go to Alaska. Leet She , who fathered the measure iit @ to reco ¥ | The gang, It is alleged, had taken sev- was lost, The ad eral proofs of the counterfeit and were are Mident that y have the Preparing to go first to Chicago and ent the reconsideration o then to Alaska, where they planned wo, Print bogus $5 bills at the rate of one a minute—or $300 worth an hour, | (Mra, Glenard told Chief Taylor t ed on the blotters of the Old Slip and |, Chureh street police stations are: enor, 1 day that they worked only at night) J, Mis GLENARD, forty-five years | the. oftic« #0 none of the neighbors, most of whom | 9M, formerly a captain of the New Or-| had hidilr went to bed early, Would get suspicious. | jeans police force. The f “Our press worked by hand and four| MARKO ‘TAGOMIC, thirty-elght, sin-| was be impressions had to be made on each bil gle and a Montenegrin by birth, {tal of the State of H two on each alde.," whe sald. The seai| SAM PEKOVICH, twenty-five, a| Sunday by the ‘ Montenegrin who calls himself president | afternoon on or @nd*the other markings of the same * color as the seal were printed on sie {of the “Alaska King Rivgr Mining Com-| The 1 a any of Dow i second impression after the ink on the pata tt Riis tea ita ASUSVICK, an first Impression had dried.” engraver, of 435 Wet alyeh « ‘The namge oF the pionere, es recagd: bora in AlvARIM & BE Miace os AWarys paths ae LAAN a + to capture them jsembly by @ vote of M7 to @ “Then it they were about to start west) was taken up in tho Senate where an ‘With & stock in trade consisting of 89 | amendment was tacked to It extending engraving outfit and a supply of excei- | yf y and be signed by the Governor, it would —— meaning the Borough of Man-| Reign of Terror While Banks Are Dynamited at Pachuca operator of the local bureau of the| The fight for the bill in the Assembly and Treasure Carried Away. e state of Hidal- al to fall Last night many of the themselves Mberally to the axed, wel rebels helped promiscuously wlessness soon took the form of rob- | wes of dynamite were placed » walls of the banks and ex- were looted h | The Smile Fades Away. ists Pachu itico where he] AK HHNSON'S DURE BY wl BUST WILL COST LEFT BIG FORTUNE HIM JUST $1,100, TO TRAINED NURSE Pugilist Loses Suit Brought by Bulk of His E | Sculptor to Compel Pay- $2,500,000, Bequeathed to ment of $4,000. . Miss Eleanor Peregrine. CROWDS FOLLOW HIM, DOCUME | Champion’s Golden Smile Ir-| Beneficiary Acted as Compan- ritates’ Justice Newburger | ion for 12 Years After Brok- During Trial in Court. er’s Neck Was Broken. | Jack Johnson lost another suit tht By the will’ of Walter ™. Duryea jafternoon, It was for a bust made of | tt® crippled ex-athlete and broker him after that event in Reno tact | Mich was filed to-day with the Surro Fourth of July, and a pury in Justice | Rate of Naxsau County at Mineola, he |Newburger’s part of ‘the Supreme !¢ft the bulk of his 4 which Is [Court decided that he champion must | CMervatlvely valued at two millions |pay the sculptor $1,199 of the $1,(0)| and @ half, to the trained nurse, Miss price for which Cartaino Sclarrino af | Eleanor Peregrine, who acted as his |No. M45 West Fifty-fitth stre6t sued. | hausekeep When the Verdict was announced, | last twelve years of his life, Jobnson simply smiled hia golden smile| To Miss Peregri the direction of his pocket. It has got| house and furnishings in Montclair, to be & natural movement with him, J, where Duryea died, valued aj he gets fined and otherwise mulcted so | proximately at $125,000, and the re often. Moses Sachs, counsel for John- | die of the whole | ment for ten day woman's share to upward of a mil- Johnson's gold-filled smile w: Honor pounded with his gavel every | Cove, L. I, a country place at Cla time the smile flashed and gave the | ton, in the Thousand Island desk before him so much punishment | lesm she desir that the splinters flew and the cham- | foot steam launch. pion's attorney had to warn his citent rales. Mer Mhitiifuinses. |to draw the curtain over his incisors and keep it ‘drawn, A separate clause of the will is 4 The sculptor was the first witness, grates to a testimonial to Mi | He explained that he had studied in Stine's faithfulness and devotion to Florence and Rome and had taken| Duryea during all the time that he | prizes. A friend told him Johnson ea ® hopeless cripple, with a broken wanted a bust and he called at Baron Wilkins's hotel in West Thirty-titth | _T@ hie niece, Julia Sprig, of New street a week or two after the Reno| York City, a daughter of his eldest fight and solicited the order. He made | *#ter, Grace k. Sprig the hotel and paid $75 for the prelim-|C- Sprigg, inal held in trust. ked hi ble or bronze, if he wanted it !n mar- bronze was more appropriate." this bequest Is to be held until the bene- |terms and he had told Johnson the buat | interest is to be paid as an annual in- would cost between $3,000 and $4,000, to| come. When the nephew and the two which the champion agreed. But when| Dieces are of age they wil get the prin- the sculptor went to collect Johnson put | “pal him off every time and when he sent] Mrs. Sprigg gets $20,000 in trust. A his collector to Hammerstein's, where | #econd sister, Mrs. the fighter was spi as the star act|Tesiding in Sweden, is given $10,000 in on the vaudeville bill, the collector could | trust, and a third alster, Mrs, Martha never get near him. V. Cox, New York, $5,000, also in trust Now, isn't it a fact, Mr. Sciarrino, Some Other Bequests. “asked Lawyer Secs, ‘that the sree | oiner bequests are as follow ment was for Mr. Johnson to pose for . ‘ you and you to sell the bust in Eng. | ,chlldrens’ Home at Mineo! land and give him 2 per cent. of the price $500; Arthur K, Dawson of Glen Cove, | "It Was not," said Sctarri Bidar | . 000; Charles F, Wood of Montelalr, Johnson, sitting at a tale facing the ed Louis Conasil'ar cian chien eae |Judge, broke into a snicker which ex- 3. 8 | James 1. Sadler, a houseman employed posed the famou: te ra- Glance fs amilo tn all its rath, Duryea, $1,000; a valet, $500; cook, $500; Gerald Duryea, an uncle, Frank Carpenter, $5,000; Elizabeth 5,000 mer nurse, $5,000; a former governess, >» and Bang! went Justice Newburger's gav- eading, P el, and the smile faded. eee tense gad ‘Who was in the room while Mr. | male Guardian Soclety, $5.00; Mountain- nson posed for you?’ asked the | de Husintul font Je RRR nnnnnann an nnn cane 18 PAGES PAE hah dr fd dea ONE CENT. ' fi WOMAN WHO BEGAN WAR THAT WI} GREAT OL, TRU sT tate, Valued at} | FILED. | | : and companton during the | is given $50,000 and made an involuntary movement in | outright, $80,000 more in trust, the a M. Salinadedsccr ee SCORES ESTO-Dé DAY NATIONAL LEI LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK, ST. LOUIS— ate after the other [20M Bot @ stay of execution of judg-| legacies have been paid. This, it is He will take an estimated, will swell the young Mon and a@ half dojlars, Included In no ir-| that which will eventually come to her ritating to Justice Newnurger that his|i# @ thirty-five acre estate at Glen and, un- to sell it, a sixty-five AT BROOKLYN. BROOKLYN— Mr. Duryea left | the clay model in Johnson's rooms in|!" trust $60,000. To his nephew, James | ger 70 a child of the sister, a| work of casting It, similar amount Is bequeathed, to be! Batteries—Weaver and Archer; A- BOSTON. PITTSBURG— sald the sculptor, “and| Marcia Cox, another niece, gete $10,000, | 60001 after an argument I persuaded him that|4# In the case of the Sprigg children gosTON— Sclarrino said they had discussed] ficlary is fourteen years od, when the | ne aa Ginsons and Rariden. AT PHILADELPHIA, CINCINNATI— | PHILADELPHIA— SUE ESOS LOUISVILLE RESULTS. Elizabeth Hatfleld of Piqua, O., @ for-| (McTaggart) ‘| ods and Business Connec- : “BUSTED” OL TRUST WILL BE DISSOLVED AT ONCE, HEADS SA Standard’s Constituent, Companies _ Probably Will Be Reorganized as Separate Concerns, Each With Its Own Governing Body. 'BIG BOOM ON WALL STREET; ’ | OVER MILLION SHARES SOLD |Bryan and La Follette Declare Deci- .sion AmendsSherman Law—Crim- inal Prosecutions Considered. Criminal prosecution of officers and directors of the Standard Oil Company is favored by influential interests at Washington, according to despatches received this afternoon by The Evening World. The Supreme Court decision upholds the Sherman Anti-Trust law in all iis phases, Radicals like William Jennings Bryan and Senator La Follette are not satistied with the decision, Mr. Bryan says the Supreme Court has amended the Sherman law and rendered it ineffective. The Standard Oil Company is taking its medicine with all the equanimity required by a situation from which there is no appeal. Chief Counsel Elliott of the corporation announced to-day that it would pro» ceed with all speed to dissolve as ordered by the Court and that the con! stituent companies would do business hereafter under their own officers and with separate organizations, The Stieet experienced a big boom to-day as a result of the de- cision. A total of 1,003,033 shares of stock were bought and sold, as against only 146,000 shi res dealt it in Mi day. + Sherman Anti-Trust law ie «& ert sinal statute, In Section 1 it pro- vides that every person who shall en: wage in a conspiracy in restraint 6! trade among the several States or witl foreign nations shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and, on conviction; shall be punished by a fine not exeeed- is $5, or imprisonment not exesed- Ing one year, or both, Section 2 of the Sherman law makes & misdemeanor of monopoliaing or at- tempting to monopoliae, by conspirac: any part of the trade or commerce be: | tween the several States or with for- <. ; ost > Moj}y,| sn nations, The punishment provided Committee to Lay Bare Meth+|{."0 ine sot to exceed $6,000 er impris- onment not to exceed one year, or both, Pressure for Prosecution. tions of Big Corporation The decision specifically states that ndard Oj Company is engaged ya conspiracy in » In a coneptrac traint of trade anc to monopolize trade lawyer, To Roosevelt Hospital, #15, to WASHINGTON, May An investi- nd commerce. Undoubtedly strong “Mr. Sig Hart, his manager,” sald | sav Jat Mineola, $5,000, and | sation of the United mt Steel Cor-| iressure will be brought to bear upon the sculptor, |4o be paid out of the amount held in j oration was ordered by the He the Department of Justice to carry the ‘My goodness," said Johnson in a Mrs, Thelberg upon Mrs. ‘Tt to-day when it assed the Stanley | gtandard Oll case to ite logieal eondius sibilant whisper that could be heard all} the Polyclinic Societ plut roviding for such an inquiry. | sion by the ertminal prosecution of the around the courtroom, and the smile iit : The resolution was adopted without | men guilty of th har ged. broke out again. a ‘ »pposition, following a short debate, | nm Sullty of the conspiracies @ v7 "Bang; Bang!" spoke the gave Women i ch | oppagnttion:. sablontna: ene tg | Attorney-General Wickersham has nop But it’ was while Salvatore Bastino, nu'a Eplaconat 1 rized | PxPressed himself on the adviaatiity of the sculptor's bill collector, was testify: arch at Glen ¢ 5,00" | elected by the Hou I} be authortens Spe multi a AUN aelleator, eae aay Eau Oh le On aie gaan eee OL EARS uP,” SAYS SCHWAB. les caaiiie ihe \avestiaallon Inatitucing oelminal prosecutions, |) broke forth, Brooklyn and R. Percy Chittenden, As I called at Hammerstein's several Corporation Counsel, who’ was um nd every tlme when Johnson] \ tines triend of the testa saw me he would run.” suid the wite|" Water Duryea died last Friday MM itches tah ee FFL csorning, He wae the of the This time the smile was almost al late Edgar BE. Duryea, a starch manu- guftaw, the gavel played a regular | facturer, Until he was past thirty the tattoc young man Was prominent as an ata- When the case was adjourned for re-] tete, nd yachtsman, In 3 J Ww wore own sult) August, hs diving from the herring-Honed stripes a couple of inches) Casino in Glen Cove, where he then| here inthast Reet Ninaon Sena (lived, Mr. Duryea broke his spine, Af- stud and a ring that would make Dia- [ter ten months in Roosevelt Hospital, nond Jim Brady crawl away with| following two wonderful operations, follow'd by a crowd of sev+| io so far recovered that souKn un undred across Row to his! able to move his body or limbs, he lawyer's office, went into Wall street and by skilful| Crowd Follows Champion. operations as a broker increased the hl Anot crowd, numbering t lestate which his father | him from |this time, followed Johnson | about @ million to more than two mil- started back to Court and he and Hons. rring partner, m Monahan, had to Meanwhile, his two sisters had coi Joattle a way through the crush. The] ested the terma of the father's will pion seemed to enjoy it all hugely, | oy although they were deteated, ¢ | the sralinions of sheir lamasitn in tos ot eae A od of stagnation, 1 is dated at M The, Worta Tarel Pare, (Conjinued on Sacond Page. 4 aae deremring * & Walned puree by the Ghacks ond wone) ondem "ee t voeaking tor 2a bY lawyers that, In the event that edentasive Btanley F 4 the hace tt Government proceeds and the Stand- . ord Ol men plead the statue of Iimita- oraStanly Shs ms, the point may be made that the ts ore Oe conspiracy in restraint of trade and for ani 4 ve te os He furtherance of monopoly was a con> tracy untfl the moment the ‘ rdered it dissolved, None of the officers or directors of thé jing that a Maney) heer dard Oil Company will talk as yet ade in tay te tials, auld mo" | abaut the future plana of the organisae eget tion, It is known that the lawyers for en i the corporation, anticipating an unfavers Neg es Jecision for months past, have been latandued ing on a plan of dissolution and re» ‘ or nigation under the law. They may Harlan was rig ask for an extension of time beyond the six. months allowed by the Supreme No statement will be issued by the lard OF Company, it was announeed nas di © yeey tonday, until M, F. Lillott, chief eoume sel, of Chicago; John G, Milburn of New John O. Johnson of Philadelphia Watson of Pittsburg, asso. un EN eevortment | s nea, have vead and dige: ote lise *, Pid") Wied and sentenced over 7 4 ORS ae | | | : |

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