The evening world. Newspaper, September 18, 1911, Page 1

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game. oe Fh ethene « | TAFT UPHOLDS DECISIONS ON THE TRUSTS EDITION. - 16 PAGES | ’ PRICE ONE OENT. EDITION. CU | NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1911. Circulation Books Open to All.“ Copyright, 1011, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Wort PRICE ONE CENT. —— Kt NOBLE BOY LOSES HIS JOB FOR ELOPING WITH WIE OF MILLIONAIRE SUYDAM Mrs. Grundy Causes More Trouble at the Little Affinity Flat. OUTLOOK IS NOW DARK Landlord Refuses to Let Noble Live in Flat and Mrs. Suy- dam Keeps It Alone. That Mrs. havd upon those who mize her code of home sharply to young “protector” soul-mate Lispenard Suydam $r., Grundy refuse to recog Frederick Noble, out of a job. A few days ago the boy eloper had figured that by a lttle pinching and wqueesing he could support away wife of the Blue Point million- alre in comparative comfort. To-day the props of his hopeful computations Were knocked out from under him. The heads of the Boston manufacturing finn that employed him sent him word that his services Were no longer required. He received this ultimatum after he h. admitted the © on that love was so overwhelining that he could ent and is not bring himself to break the affinity Mra. bonds that had Suydam toge drawn him and Mre y upon the received when landlo: Regina Apartments notified th om Saturday that would have vacate thelr three-room LANDLORD ALLOWS HER TO KEEP FLAT BY HERSELF, After much pleading Mrs. Suydam prevailed upon Mr, Serviss to » her to maintain the flat by hers Fred would get a room somewhere in Brooklyn, possibly at his father’s home, ‘Tho tears and pleadings of the young woman prevailed and her boy com- Panton packed his Mttle grip and hastened across the br There was a rumor that he had gone that the romance had hanr: end. He dtey 1 when he turned up at the little apartment on West Twelfth @treet, his foo‘ures long with gloom, » tell Mre dam the sad news of how he had his Job. Mrs, Suydam sought to cheer the boy up, but he couldn't see any silvery lin- ing to the cloud that had settled over cher aMnity flat. Everything w aking badly, His father, who a few 5 ago had appeared to be on the verge of sympathizing with him, had gone off on a long reach in the opposite direction, The other members of his family were beginning to look upon his romance just as coldly. No matter how things turned out it did not look as if they would ever go to hia home witb ‘open arms to welvome theme Looking at thelr situation from her side Mrs. Suydam could not conjure up a brighter picture. not hurrying along the divorce pro- ceeding! In fact, he had lapsed into @ stony silence and not a word had been heard from his agents or lawyers for several days. PARENTS SAY SHE MUST GIVE UP THE YOUTH OR —— ft her to face the Her parents had ‘3 a relenticss cs Was brought of Mrs. Walter when his em- ployers notified him to-day that he was the run- Her busband was “JIMMY’ OLIVER, ASSEMBLYMAN, WHO DIED TO-DAY, JIMMY OLWER, | POLITICAL OL OF EASTSIDE SDEAD Assemblyman Known as “Par- adise Jimmy” Passes Away at St. Vincent’s Hospital. Assembyman “Paradise Jimmy” Oliv. er of the Thint Assembly District, for many years @ political !dol of the er oast side, died to-day in St, Vine Gets Hospital, Death was due to a complication of diseases from which he had suffered for several weeks. A number of Tammany friends were at the bedside shortly before Mr. Oliver lapsed into unconsciousness and he was able to say good-by to several of them. They tried to cheer him, but Mr. Oliver said he knew death was near, and a few minutes later he closed his eyes and became unconscious. “Mi. Oliver got his sobriquet througn hin stump speaking experiences in Para- dise Park in the Five voints, one of the moat congested sections tn his district, When making his many political fights old Paradise Park was his main stand. Assemblyman Oliver was about enty-one years old, He was vorn on Cherry Hill and lived tn the district all his life, The scene of his first political Interests was the Bowery, which soon | took a great fancy to him and gave him | all the political honors {t could. | Mr. Oliver was educated at St. John's |College, Fordham, and studied law, | When still a youth he became interested in polities and had quite a following in the old Fourth Ward. He allied himself to Tammany Hall and broke from that organization only twice in fo— 3 ection when Mayor jternative of belng supported by the and again in 18st youth with whom 1 or giving him up forever ppb ‘ ‘ond Page Her Jewels and sily would oe Page) not carry them very in view of the action taken RS arte rete that he ever had one. They would Duster Company of Boeiaa did HOt vave found a Golden West where Mrs, look as if F re _would ue an a8 | Grundy doem’'t exist. time in getting * 7 NEXT FEW DAYS WILL TEST There was one report that Mrs, Suy- dam hed drawa $20,00 from @ local bank, ruefuly. ehe rom on te tint. With $20,000, tribulation They would their whither journey When the down-hearted elopers read that to-day !t made them smile ‘The young woman said that ad not even had a dream of such 4 she said, nd Fred Noble would bo thousands of miles from the present scene of have vanished into that happy limbo of con- those soul- THEIR LOVE. Sizing up their fortunes at the time of taking present in\uice, young Noble and his aMnity admitted that their love would be tested to the limit with- in the next few weeks, “But,” they announced, “we are going to stick it out.” “We are going to separate ostenat- |bly,” sald the young man, “but we are not going to part. bow to the conventions for t Ume tentment tes upon Whom Fortune smiles. Fred | being #0 far as rot lving wider th Fiat ee eee only not be Wortying about same roof ix concerned, but we are ens rm ig Job, but would have forgotten not going to give up our love, | | Levy Act. In a decision this afternoon, Justice Gavegan, in the Supreme Court, de- | Monday. We are going to) ee NEW ELESTONLAW UNCOASTIUTONAL, SAYS. GAVESAN Candidate of Many Parties May Have Name Printed in Column of Each. PROVISIONS ARE UNFAIR. | Enjoins Election Board From | Printing Ballots Under the clared that the new Levy Election law) was unconstitutional. ‘The decision !s regarded as a victory for the Republicans, !ndependence League and Citizens’ Union, which com- bined in the attack against the new law. That portion of the Levy law to which the greatest objection was raised provided that a candidate nominated ‘by more than one political party could not have his name appear in more than | one column on the official ballot. For inetance, if nominated by the Demo- cratic party and the Independence League, it was optional with the candi- date nominated as to which of t! two party columns he Would have his name appear in. John J. Hopper, Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Independ- ence League, and Samuel 8. Koenig, Chairman of the Republican County Committee, asked the Court to enjoin the Board of Hlections from printing the ballots to be used at the election this fall under the provisions of the new law, Justice Gavegan granted the ap- plication “The question to be determined is whether the Legislature has the power | to restrict the printing of a candidate's |name to one party column,” said Jus-| tice Gavegan, There are involved in| the question the rights of candidates of two or more parties, the rights of political parties and the rights of electors. Where the Massachusetts ballot prevails that !s where the party columns have been abolished and the names of candidates are grouped un- der the title of the office, and a vote for each office requires a separa mark, there can be no injustice in pri viding that the name of the candidate shall appear but once; but where the New York form of ballot obtains and the political party ie treated as a sep- arate entity and the party column ts restricted, all parties must under our constitution be treated alike, and no party can be deprived of the privilege secured to any other party of having the names of its candidates appear in its party column. “The right merely to nominate is empty and ineffective unless the act of a con- vention or of those nominating by peti- tion be followed by compliance with other provisions of the Electiou law and be reduced to the form of an official bal- jot to be submitted to the electors.”” It was announced soon after Justice Gavegan reniered his decision that an ppeal would be taken to the Appellate Division at once. The Inwyers are pre- paring thetr briefs now, and will proba- bly be ready to argue the appeal on Justice Gavegan was elected to the Supreme bench in the fall of 1900. A Democrat and at one time favored for @ nomination by Charles F. Murphy, he was a candidate with Nathan Bijur and Alfred R. Page. He was for many years counsel for the Central Labor Union of this city and fought through many elec- tion cases for the labor people and the Independence League. sicshioad | BANK IN CINCINNATI CLOSED BY STATE ORDER. CINCINNATI, Sept 18,—The Metro. | politan Bank and Truat Company ¢ | Ite doors to-day on the order of ta Banking Depar t of rnd State Hank Exaniners ' C, 8, Baxter will vary my jthe bank until a D pinted: | The bank, which Was organized s!x years ago, has a capital stock ing to $110,000. Its total resource $932,000 and {ts deposits about Of the deposits $12,009 are city and county funds, which are guarantee. The officers of the bank are President T. J. McClure, Vice-Presidents John J Bruce and R. M, Leblonde; Cashter Alfred Morrison. In statement given out by them |they claim all depositors are tully pro: | ted and that there will be no loss, The reason given by the State authori | then losing the bank was that the| | offictal: of the institution had b " given too much latitude in making luang Oa culldteral not approved by Lue State i mount> are | stood hand In hand before Justice Hoyt Uitte boy of blond complexion, brown | es and curly auburn hal, He was! |found Aum. 12 by Policeman Sheeha in Central Park, near $ fifty street, | and was taken to the Ar al and then} to the society's rooms, He was sma ly dressed in a@ white fr lace AS JOHN DOES4 AND 95, BABIES. ARE SENT AWAY Children’s Society Nurses Bro-| ken-Hearted as Two-Year- Old Foundlings Leave. ONE WAS KIDNAPPED., Other Found, Well Dressed, in Park, but Neither Has | Been Claimed. John Doe No. % and John Doe No. % fn the Children's Court today and the heads of the two of them were so far below the railing that His Honor direct- ea that they be brought around Into the inner sanctum so he might see whom he was dealing with. Both John Does are two years old or thereabouts, but John Doe No. 4 in a trifle the smaller and a shade the pret- tlest. And, as Supt. Walsh of the Chil- dren's Society declared in open court, they are the sweetest and the cutest pair the soclety has had charge of since he has been with {t, and the heart of every nurse anh attendant te broken because they havo to leave. The cases of the two Johns are similar to hundreds of others that come to the notice of the society during « year—chlldren lost and held for weeks) without being claimed, and then turned | over to an institution by order of court and their identity swallowed up in the roll of years. ‘They are all named John Children’s Society's Cutest John Does CZAR'S PREMIER STOLYPIN: DIES Sinking Spell Followed Re- moval of Assassin’s Doe—that is, all the boys; the girls are Jane Does. This pair of Johns differs from the usual run, because one of them was smartly dressed and was plainly a son of prosperous parents, while there Was | @ suggestion of the Black Hand in the strange plight of the other. | SAID HE FOUND BOY INA HAR. | LEM BACK YARD. John Doe No. % was brought to the society early on the morning of Aug. 21 by Michael Marino, who said he found the child in his back yard at No. 314 East One Hundred and Fourteenth | street. That was all the Information they could obtain from Marino, who said he had never eeen the child before. It was plain that the little boy was of Italian parentage, for the few words he could speak were in Italian. After Marino had left him with the society, Detectives Curran and Walsh went to No. 314 Fast One Hundred ana Fourteenth street, ‘but there was no record of Michael Marino ever having ved there, and the janitress, Mrs. An- toin Prince, eaid it wae not true that a child had been found in the back yard. So the Chtldren's Society detectives are convinced that John Doe No. 96 is a kidnapped child and that his abductors are using the society to separate him from his parents, who evidently refuse to pay ransom. Leonardo Quatrino of No, 119 Elizabeth street, whose son, Pietro, three years old, was stolen and held for ransom, called and saw Jonn Doe No. %, but could not aid in the identification GOES TO PROTECTORY UN- NAMED AND UNKNQWN, So unless the detectives should hap- pen to run across the mysterious Mich- uel Marino, the chances are that John Doe No, %—a roguish, black eyed, win- some little chap—will receive an educa- tion in the Catholic Protectory, where he was sent by Justice Hoyt, and will start in life with every opportunity to make a successful American citizen. John Doe No. 94 16 @ sweet-faced | trimmed, and very detail s! had had loving care, But all the efforts of the society to find his parents were in vain, and he, too, after being held the requisite time by the society, Was sent to an institu. ton by Justice Hoyt. He goes to the Five Poins House of Induatry, No. 442 West Twenty-third street, and will also be educated and taught a trade, If the parents of the doys should ap- pear to claim them they will be com- pelled to pr ‘elationsh ip. ed World B im Tarkinn athe, aimays a priva ra Berber end manic Chitppodies km ate Debdease, 64 Kore om ‘et Bullet To-Day. 1% —Premier Stolypin died wound In- RIEV, Gent this evening from the piste ficted by Dimitry Bogroft tn the Munt ‘pal Theatre last Thursday night. ‘The Jews are departing from the city precipitously in fear of anti-Jewish ote, Cossacks with loaded rifles patrol the street: One hundr fifty arrests of lawyers and other soquaintances of Dmitry Bogroff, the man who shot Stolypin, have been made in Kiev. Bogroft talked frecly to-day of his past life and furnished the authorities with valuable clues, The original con- dent behavior of the prisoner has given Place to despondency, and he is now receiving medical treatment. Premier Peter Arkadievitch Stolypin was born in St. Petersburg in 1863. From infancy he was trained for a life in diplomatic circles. ‘His mother was & Gorchakov and his father of the prominent generals of the army. RAPID RISE IN SERVICE OF THE one GOVERNMENT. After an elementary schoo! education he was sent to the University of St Petersburg to study Immedjately after his graduation he war « lven a position in the law department of the Government at St. Petersburg. In 1888 he was appotnted Governor of the Province of Korno, A few years later he was made Governor of the Province of Gono In May, 1%, Stolypin succeeded Goremykim, (he first Minister of the Interior, He served in this capacity for four years, when he was appointed Minister of Agriculture Tt was during his first year as Mine tater of the Interto at t attempt 9 ade upon o July 4 was thr r Stoly puse by anarchists k and servants € fatal tn in aries rade as nin Killed, Stolypin served im Mintnter of Agriculture, by all in European diplomatic etre as the “man of the hour’ in Russia He was looked upon as averting a revolution which seemed linaveldabte, His wonderful work during this erisis caused Emperor Nicholas to make his Premier and Minister of the Interlo Stolypin was onsidered AFTER OPERATION AVIATOR RODGERS - ABANDONS FLIGHT AFTER BAD FAL Airman Crashes Into Tree at Middletown on His Way to Frise | | ‘The honfoo continues to pursue the contestants for the Hen 1,000 comnts oast Might prize, The combined of all te th ators who have Tetarted 1 than one-sixth the total distance from the Atlantic to the Pa ife, and only twenty-two days remain in which to James W. on himself by starting from New York fon Sept. 18, came down at Corning, N. Y., shortly before noon after flying fifty-six miles from Owego. A new en- gine which he had bad shipped at Owego was out of order and he did not know how soon he would resume. Cal, Rodgers, who flew away from Sheepshead Bay racetrack #o bravely yesterday afternoon and kept on flying until he got to Middletown, fell a vic- tim to the hoodoo this morning. In attempting to continue from town he ran his alrsnip into a completely wrecked it Rodgers es complete the flight Ward, who wished a hoodoo head and the loss of a good found, after inspecting his machine, that It cannot be rebuilt tn accordance with the conditions of the contest. His lonly course now is to return to New | York and make a new start with a new the aviator who started fr still at Col ed his ma- |chine by hitting a tree on his second day Jout, He may not b je to wtart be fore the end of the week. The hotel in which he was stopping burned to the ground Sunday night and he had a nar woupe neers TRIP TO NEW YORK ENDS IN DEATH OF TWO MEN. Laborers | jerse ersey Didn't Turn Off G Coro Ordered Removal { Bodies Without Viewing Then | tre 1 Broadway, On retiring taat night one of them did not fully turn off the Bae pt. Dominick Henry of the Mercer ot station visited the hotel when the “0 Was reported to the police and found Frank Campbell, an undertaker, the bodies, Camp. authorigation of re Holah ‘haw TAFT, DEFENDING COURT ~YITS OUT AT BRYAN; SLAPS LA FOLLETTE President, Upholding the Decisions Against Standard Oiland Tobacco, | Challenges Nebraskan to Show Where They Are Wrong. DRIVES AT LA FOLLETTE FOR ACTION IN SENATE. Defends “Unreasonable” Clause in Court Finding and Says Domina- tion of “Bad Trusts” Is at End. DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 18.—Scoring William Jennings Bryan and |“other publicists and jurists” who have denounced the Supreme Court, | President Taft to-day came to the defense of the Standard Oil and To- |baceo Trust decisions of the court. The President also took a solid whack at Senator La Follette, his spe foe in the Republican ranks, whom he charged with spreading on the Senate records a quotation from one of the President's messages. as being at variance with the “rule of reason” laid down by the court. The President asserted that his views as expressed in the message were in exact accord with the decisions, In particular the President detended the reading of the word “un- | reasonable” into the statute by the decisions, declaring that under the Sherman law as interpreted by the court every case that ought to come | within the law can be successfully prosecuted. The President strenuously jopposed any amendmentt to the Sherman law which would eliminate its interpretation “in the light of reason.” : ‘SCORES TO-DAY (iciz2 ne see that persons who do not understand the NATIONAL LEAGUE. decisions and really do not understand AT PITTSBURG the law have had a great deal to ser about them. It was not fair to the GIANTS— 340000000~7 PITTSBURGH— Court, he declared, to say that é had 00000200 0-2 read the word ‘reasonable into the anti-trust statute. OPPOSED TO AMENDMENT oF ANTI-TRUST LAW. “IT am entirely opposed to an amend- ment of the Anti-Trust law,” said the | Batterios—Mathowson and Meyer,| President. "It 1s now a valuable Gov- PR er realcamt ene eey ernment aaset and instrument. Tested | -———— and brought into benefictal use by aT ch (Gago. | twenty years of litigation and construc- REGOKLYNs ten pre ighe! court, why should Le _ ap © usefulness by experi- ments? cHicaco— | ,,The outcry for amendments, following 1 — J) the Supreme Court decisions, the Presi. Barker and Erwin; Michie dent sald, had resulted in proposals pre. |Pared without a rea! understanding of ee the law, and he added that while thi: . AT 8ST, LOUIS. agitation might serve the purpose of ae FIRST GAME, |Dromoting “unreasonable” and unrea- S eA soning discontent, it certainly ought 0 2 d — —|not to be considered seriously, ST. LOUIS— Mr. Taft referred to the fact that tm- 001021 ae mediately after the truat decisions were anded down by the Mi; alas sonwen| ¥ the Supreme Court, 4 Batteries Howe and 1; Harmon | Senator La Follette opread on the yi | records a quotatio | Sn President's messages | AMERICAN LEAGUE. ance with the from one of the a being at Vart- rule Of reason” laid down : by the court. The President asserted air KEW VORIC that his views as expressed in the mea- apreoirat mage, were In exact accord with the De 2a oe ee 1 4 a s ; The President declared that the fact iIGHLANDERS— | {hat under tts tnterprotation of the ant 000 - trust had « “it ae DECISION SHOWS FREE COMPE.- LEVLL ut A ' TITION IS POSSIBLE, } 1 - “Did the court not condemn th BOSTON— Standard O!1 Company,” he demanded, 0000 —- | "the father of all trusts, in the history BatteriosKaler and O'Neill; Hagers | O¢ Which every form of criminal legality man and Williams was practised? Did it not, on the other | hand, condemn the Tobacco Trust of AT PHILADELPHIA | mueb origin, and framed under the ad- jen FIRST GAME, vice of cunning counsel, for the very | cH1caAGO— | purposes of evading the condemnation 00000100 0— 1| of the statute and at the same time se- ATHLETICS-- curing and enjoying the monopoly the oo —. 3 | framers of the statute intended to pre- sree and punish”? two decisions, the President satd, 1 that in the opinion of the area: vat wibunal in the land the time bag 0290 10 For Baseball Results See Page 11,

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