The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1911, 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)

bey WEATHER—Fair To-Night and Tuesday; Hot. { “ Circulation Books Open to All.” | HUNDREDS PROSTRATED NO RELIEF -IN SIGHT [ Citeulation Books Open to All.” 9( DEGREES a WEATHER-—Falr To-Night and Tuesday; Het. Copyriant Co, “PRICE ONE CENT. 1911, by The Press Pobtlshing The New York World), NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 3, 1911. 10 PAGES PRICE ONE (CENT. | SaNeRs OF TEL m ESCAPE POSSE AND HOUNDS, BUT LEAVE FINGER PRINTS Raiders Shoot Down Julius Wiegel in| Hempstead Turnpike House, Take Jewels and Money, Strike Wife and Get Away. HE TAK Self, 1 Ar WANTS Inhal Bloodhounds, the oldest of police expedients, and finger prints, the new- tst, were invoked to-day to track down the band of men who filled old Julius Wiegel with lead early to-day in his roadhouse on the Hempstead turnpike, robbed his body and his till, and fled through a sparsely settled wection of Queens Borough, with a posse of half armed, half dressed citi- gens behind them. amaras, forty coat designer, the room he occu Hotel, Broadway The bioodhounds failed, as they usu- | LONDON, Foljambe, ago he t ad tu A few years house at Hemp wood avenue, rechris wood, and ran {t for th of Belmont*Park visito: ught a road- —Lady Constance ter of the Earl of of the King's astonished society by falling | at I conquered it courage I gave household, tion as Controller of the King’s House- vas about 12.40 o'clock. to Stemmer, was abou c At or that time the whole neighborhood seemed deserted, Mra. Weigel had been asleep some lit- tle time when a crashing volley of re- BEEN ACTING ALN Gun rion. 44 > AC FOR TO-DAY, sets. 7.341 Moon seta, A. df THE TIDES. When Mr. Schot TORMENT GREAT, | COURAGE ALL GONE, “Voices Suffocate My Better! Lost,” He Writes Cousin. HEART PICRCED. Demented and Diagnosing His Case as Hopeless, Armenian Afflicted with dementia and diagnos- ing his case as hopeless, George Pour- five committed day by inhaling gas through a tube in IT'S A TERRIBLE THING TO SUF. FER SUCH ILLS, for the extra day. YEAR AND A HALF. Dents Hotel he informed the police that | Slain Hotel Man, His Roadhouse: How Raiders Escaped After Crime ESHISLIFE m_— Irrevocably JUTE TAWEN BY MURDERERS sc SHERWOOD AV. ENE "OF THE MURDER. AND HEMPSTEAD TURNPIKE BOWLING’ ALLEY les Gas. DINING ROOM years old, a rain- suictde to- Poou TABLI pled in the St. Denis and Eleventh street pes eary marks a aily do, But by certain smeary mark The sulcide, who was an Armenian, ‘— upon a toddy glass the Bertillon experts leh A ibke ak | oor Of Brooklyn Headquarters hope to fix | eaten ie eter SR AIning Gia} t the identity of at least one of the mur- | les, It was written in Frens romances ' derers. | addressed to his cousin, William _— Moreov.., the victim's widow had a} jan employee of the Standard Rainc |—— good looh at three when she sur- ; Company at Nos. East Sixteenth — | street. The letter ran i prised them a minute after they had | t — riddied her husband, and of the | oi Dear wales Pardon me for poe lodgers, who swapped revolver shots @ sorrow which this letter will — <<" aebee with them as they fled, was able sutse- | cause you. I suffer so intensely that — Bar" Roo! quently to recall certain things about | | 1 she no longer Stand this life, I RIULIVUS |. tiem that should measurably ald the| | thougnt I could conquer the harm authorities in identlfying the fugitives. or trouble by work as I did the first WIEGEL USED TO BE IN KING'S COUNTY time. When this happened to me’ = ; - unfortunately I found out to-day = POLITICS. ve ean 202s Shopping” While Lon-| that it is impossibie to resist. any Tullee OW leas! ett Sue nie #5 longer. This morning yesterday) I | PoRcH was sixty years old, @ full blood- Saahsi ae bed : td, good natured man, who formerty | 40M Fashionables Wait in | 'stt the note! to, took for rooms, “4 e . 1o Worried ook a resolu- took an active hand in Kings County P ecpy, tion to put an end to the torment ; : the ‘ | . — pefitics,” He owned s string of trotting Church for Wedding. Whioh surpaussn all dekeripuons we | DIAGRAM OF THES ~*+~—~------” orse, too, and o race them a sickness 1s dementla—the worst ki | Lynbrook. se of sickness, Eat eine | KILLING em AUTO RACER HAS FLOCK OF AIRMEN the first time by the myself by working. | IN COLD BATH asd automot W con racing |{2 Spear at a fashionable church in| But this time all couraze falle me, | ended at Be “as fell off, bur | L@Mdon this afternoon at the time ap-| Don't blame It is a terrible | a meng ed for her marriage to the Rev. A.| thing to suff ch ills Imagine Mt picked up again after the park was , 7 ideas b ARMA inte RA eviation ula H, K. Hawkins your brain divided in iwo and sum, |YOuNgSters Discovered in 8 i en he + divided, the elements opposing and | Wilegel had his small tricts of osten-| The edifice was filled with society iN i‘ tha bal | 1] tation, He ilked to adorn his portly per-| people who watted an hour wondering) S&htng aed tae aguinat exch | Water by Woman Who on A f8t Abgera: wit red pee | What had occurred to delay the re-| close my ears to ward ‘oft the Huei | oO d and secret order cha and he cus-! mony when the bri pee eet ‘ouble pened Door, tomarily carri rckets a huge | | hen the bri »m sent a/ Words fail to explain my thoughts. | roll of mon : r in great haste to the Earl of Night and day my thoughts make me | ven idence to inquire for 1 s I am the greatest criminal o Yesterday was a good day for thelyio reniy ¢ ive er Nee ot ete le vas oh Bester ain ion | When Mra. Margaret Meciiil of No Sherwood. Two amateur ball teams—the | stance “went out sho; this morning | self, You will admit this Hee ents Pia: Hoaet Ninety star atreee tri Oa ‘0 ret| SH =| vr 7 ‘ Queens and Cook's Old Timers of Brook: | Sid has mat vet He able. T can't sleep any more. Tusk i the bathroom on the fourth foor| First of Eleven to "Lana, but|In Avoiding Collision Frey Iya—played in a field near by noe The Earl of A this] you to forgive me. You have treatea [of her house to-day she found the door owe oe eS Tau dkicaly calrooa wills Gieraene alloc ne ed from Lady | me itke a brother, but I am irrev- | locked on the Inside. The door was) Beaumont Wins $12,500 Swerves Car So that It ‘sty n e ‘oad ‘onstance a et that) ocably Jost. Kiss all those that are | forced h htub day long were filled with automobiles | gin was « Peehaally ee ! ‘ at are ced an in the bathtub were found | fe eit re Pe Pas pepe [she Wa a sound. Aceord-| dear to me and let them know what |two little boys, both unconscious trom| Prize in Flight to London. Turns Turtle. jing to the ‘onste vho! happened. | ara oe ‘ About midnight Mrs, Wetzel, whose] tert London on a train thia moening, aie ie) Biatla'in fan Galiad gen A ee jot in the room was turned ef >} beth, ent pst. ad si » ged het t id de- sf the old frame building, leaving her| married. is os whether to kill people who suffered Suchs, elght years of age, who lives in| the international circuit aviation race YTOR DROME. husband to count up Sunday's receipts 1Mse Foljambe's family did not ee jnsurenie decay see | the same house, and Isadore Deutsche, was ended at Hendon Park Aerodrome, | tn the ble auto- NEIGHBOR SAID GOOD NIGHTAT know of tier intentions umtit after Ner| Nin tw thet me hese ke oe, ol t the same age, who liven next door |tn Hendon, Just outside Landon, to-day. | mobtie reves i 12.40 O'CLOCK, dis iw ted Glaelound (eh Mikel Gant tee te uh ant Ninetysaiath (tect, Hoth | Andre Beaumont, a Frenchman, made | Frey, who ¥ Their son Kone to one shown by the fact that the spected. It any alteniate wish ta | Soi taken to the Reception Hos-| the speediest trip from Paria to Hendon, | was seriowly hurt, He wae taken to of the beaches, ( West, the only |and page perform an autopsy on my head |? | and was awarded the London Standard’a | Coney Island Hospital with a dislocated h No one In the house knew when they regular boar at the house and the) t! i they are at liberty to doen T Klos hee fae vahb Hla Ga ihFosms, 46 ob 7 prize of 0, M, CHbert, another | shoulder and @ badly shaken up condl- Son's partner in the electrical business. ! Countess of Liverpool, to assemble for| YOU with all my heart and beg of poued that Sidney invited his young |FFenchman, won the Dover trophy for| tou. ; 5 had been abed some time. Henry Stems | ¢ne wedding, you not to weep. Your unhappy | friend te come over and get cool, and|the fastest passage across the Mngiish| Frey's anician, Paul Bariner mer, who lives on St. Ann's avenue @) Lady Constance attained notoriety two| cousin, GEORGE. that while playing in the room turned | Channel. escaped with slight bruises, but it was short distance away, had had a farewell|years ago by climbing the spire of| P. S—Thts ts the 2d of July. You thought necessary that he be removed . y on the gas. | Vedrines, Vidant, Kimmerling, Renu- Siass with Wolgel at the bar and had/ Whitehall Church To-day'e afar ie| will find $4.65 in my puree, Pay 1 | tt was thought at first that the boys|mont, Valentine “ara Ge ‘eeeoned [0,che Hospital for patohing up, started for his home, This, according | !!kely to affect her brother's court post- 8 | an Troe The avoldent might have proved much more serous, A Simplex "30" had sud. ently pulled on the paddock turn (other= wise “dead man's turn.) Frey came tearing down the homestretoh and past had hung thelr clothing on the gas jet and that in so doing they had turned on the gas, but @ test of the fixture r arrived at the st, | showed that tt much too hard to operate to permit any such accidental Hendon closely bunched, Londoners were early astir to-day to witness the arrival of the eompeting | airmen at Hendon, and before § o'clock | |in beautiful weather many thousands aa. | QUEERLY FOR A |the @rand stand before he was afere A High Water the sulcide was an Armenian, born in| turning. It waa 10.0 o'clock this morn- /sembled at the huge aerodrome, where i porte cownstalts Broulsht Mer Ouk ONL sank ha Constantinople. He was highly educated |inm when the boys were discovered and the progress of the Might trom Calais e ~~ DEOREDSA AE SRS RIAU SH ORE AP LAS, ued K and spoke eight Janguages, “He had|the nel#hbors thought that they must Was Indicated on great blackboands and [rst turn : ACH tRUAG #9 been acting queerly for a year and a|have gone to the bathroom several by the explosion of aerial bombs, An!!! OMer to avoid Mitting the still car, omen | half, 1 Mr, Schor, “He was an ex-| hours ve that thine, elaborate system of pilotage had bean PTY aWerved to the outside, Quicker pert designer und got big wages, Luat| At the Reception Hospital the doctors arranged from Dover to Hendon, an we an the eyed can wink hiy machine January took $890 out of the bank | #aid that both boys had @ chance to live. as at the aerodrome to facilitate an ow hed turtle and crashed t eh the and (old methat he was koine Seek 16 aoeneeesalities - Passage and descent. Nevertheless Train {atl fenes. It was badly mveesd As Constantinop Instead he went to lost hia bearings nea New Haven dust cleare During the first six months of 1901 (ten years ago) the He Washington, where he wuffered an at- CONSCIENCE HURT HIM. 7), compelled to demeend Artesia ieee £9,753 more adve:tisements than The World. tack of aphasia. He knew nothing until] gimote Mam Bends Collectur Loeb [ther mughly, and his una ured cae, During the first six months of 1906 (five years ago) The World printed one day « month later he turned up on “ down hill, was damaged nh an am 78,541 more advertisements than the Herald. Spring street, actlug so queerly that he ‘Two Dollars for Customs, | BEAUMONT WINS BIG PRIZE ON During the first six months of this year The World printed 280,597 # a!remted und went to Blackwell's tribution of $2 to the customs ELAPSED TIME, an event of five intles more advertisements than the Herald. Island. He had not a cent left of the ‘conscience fund” was recelved! vedrines in his monesane was the Jack Tower, driving |§800 and did not know where he hud|py Collector Loeb to-day. Here ts the large to arrive, reaching hera at #M.63 won, Armour Ber- 10 YEARS AGO beeen eee a ogee rit ait [Seat to arrive, reaching hero at Aad mon ne “He was kept under observation tn ons | enclosed: atepned) out of his maak VAAL ana ature snecnerensemee 457,782 WORLD ADS. of the hospitals, on Blackwell's Island mV ANTON Me cheerfully’ auld (hat he tad had a 'eplan: pn i Saturday came to uly 1, 19 id se across the Channel and up foe did passage across the Channel and uy sal ish. UHLE RAL D__|ewesseseee 517,595 mmmazp aps. me and said he w to 0 back to| Dear Airs: Hog aoe Huse Nout tater HIGHLANDERS—FIRST GAME, . =I 59,753 HBRALD'S LEAD. work, He (houwht hie mental troyble| some time ago Lt past tru your custom | degcanded — gracetully, Kin — hud been greatly relieved, I fitted iin | house on my way from Europe and had | Reaumont, V dl Cmte eons out with clothing and gave him $25. He] 7. trunk @ article that 1 had to BP ie Valen ioe ae ee ane 20003 left my office about noon and that was] TY or ue ald not at that time-now | Mitin the next half hour in the ordy and Lapp; Fisher © last I saw of him,” SOF, i z ¥i named ‘ eau appeare Firat wo R LD 000 WORLD ane. the laut t ——— { feol 1 must and will pay tt for con-|%clock, he too having lost hin Way, As months | COTTON CROP OF 1911 sclence sak) ain @ christian man and wot out of his machine yeh owe 2 dollars—the article Aan 4 isos (LHL ER A_L D _ |nsceeescososs mumaxp aps. sen 2 ee ground and in a | Rocce Vinyollo, axed fifteen, and whe 78,541 WORLD'S LEAD, LARGEST ON RECORD, | worth avout 5 dotlare—the article was naux, who has carried a passenger |. cid at One Hundred and Hlalty-afth cloth to an overcoat—will you excuse |yhroughout the race, was reported this LRA APNE Keene? Gee ee THIS YEAR WASHINGTON, July 3—Orfloiat esti- [ne for not duing It in right tine hope |morning aw having reached Hast bourne, | MW! Atel OE gtaune Firet mates of the cotton p report of Wit | You will receive It Da | While Vedrines won the $2.00 prige for! oy itariem Hiver Two Hun- ax, Ww O.R | ee © 760,241 WORLD Ans, indi iat it will be thet tin the 616 Davia sirect. | heing tip ti vf tne ra f , dand Twen The body 4 onthe Sie fan = sta London in t nt been F A HE [HERALD] LD 479,044 HERALD ADB. Hao En rifaehae Pom veeti va, vate, Wert «NRE wee ; id 480,597 WORLD'S LEA®, 4 of 6m) pounds each, exceeding by | Neksie and Jone to fly in the least time World Wuilding Yuruiah athe, poastise 0 ways open. Bat Comparison is made with the Herald, as no other New York newspaper | almost a million bales the record crop | fatale ; rere ue R prints even half as many advertisements as The Werld, OL Bm velone! {Continued om Second Page) pats fe pry MERCURY CLIMBS 10.97 ~ HUNDREDS COLLAPSE IN RECORD HOT WAVE ooo Temperature To-Day, Highest Since 99 Mark in 1901, Drives Thou- sands to Beaches and Parks Seeking Relief. ASPHALT STREETS SOFT UNDER TORRID SUN RAYS. Entire Country Suffers in Grip of Fiercest Heat So Far This Summer. Out of one of the hottest nights that New York has ever known in July, the sun roge in a pale, mist-velled sky to-day to glare down om a parboiled, sweltering city. Following the exhaustion which yesterday and last night brought to people who could not get away for the three and one-half days’ holiday vacation to the sea sands and green trees and the splashing of brooks, the return to work to-day was a miserable prospect. treated at some hospital, Many peeple who felt the preliminary symptoms of prostration made thelr way to the nears rest and treatment caabled them to return home, Even on the alry perch of @he Weather Bureau on the root of @he Whitehall Bullding, almost surrounded Scores of people were prostrated all over the Greater City, beginning early thie morning, the number increasing ax the heat grew more intense, Most of | the vietima were went home aft find eat hospital, where KEEP COOL; IT ITs OnLy NINETY Only ninety, going higher— Keep cool if you can; ‘Think of ice, don't think of fre— Sweat and get « fant Keep your temper, curb your tre— You're not the only man; WEATHER FOREVAST. Generally fair, continued warm to- | night and Tuesday. Light variable winds, mostly west and southwest. THE TEMPERATURE. THE DE. DEAD: | FRANK, ROBE, aged seventy, of No, 1089 First avenue; overcome and died at her home. A YOU 2 DONT You Wi vas i Cor, sWERE A |by the bay, with a clean sweep frem [all wides for every cooling breath ef air—whioch, to tell the truth, were pe | Where more than irritating hot pufte~ rR Tithe Ar the official thermometer marked tem- ly | peratures constantly imbing toward the highest heat records, At 10 o'eleck | it was a figure #o high tat | many Of those who got it from the | Weather Bureau went back to verity tt | It wax followed by a reading of 9T gt 1 o'clock at noon, 97 at 1 o'cleek dt 195 at lock PREDICTS SHATTERING OF ALL RECORDS. | In 141 the Weather Bureau recorded | @ temperature of 9 In the hottest part afternoon. ‘The person on the ye at the Whitehall Building predicted wit rim ct s this morning that the 1901 record id be | | broken al by 3 o'clock this ag tern about noon pre- Seennennnnenenn SMe negnnNN es Seg The Evening World Will NOT Be Published TO-MORROW q

Other pages from this issue: