The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 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)

) SUYDAM TO FREE WIFE TRA ey FOR N riety OBLE TO WED — & KING ALFONSO FACES A CRISIS IN SPAIN WUATHER—Unsettied to-night; Wednesday fate. FI EDITION. “ Circulation Books Open to All,“ PRICE ONE © ENT, Copyright, 1011, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). “ Circulation Books O, ty Wednesday fair, EDITION. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1911. ROOPS FIRE ON RIOTERS PUSHING CRISIS IN SPAIN: PLOT ACA Twenty-six Shot in Streets of Bilbao When Attempt Is Made to Rescue Prisoners. MARTIAL LAW DECLARED Nation-Wide Strike a Cloak for Great Conspiracy That Throne. Threater TAO, 19.—Troopr this af. ternoon fired on a crowd that was en- to’ free prisoners, Including rs, who were being taken © streets. Twenty-six: pers! » wounled. ‘The situation ts crave. WADED, Sept. 1 —AN Spain fs seath- Inge with evolutionary spirit to= nig The thro King Alfonso tx ends Martial law preyalls every- wer A general strike of py unto workers, Including al! of the rallway emp! , haw been ordered and will Ko, just ay soon as the ordeta The hig cities armed camps rushed there to into effect rach every member, bl ore- situation is admittedly #0 serious that the Premier and Cabinet are in constant consultation with the King, and orders have been Issued to put down all uprisings with an iron hand. TROOPS PLANT BIG GUNS STREETS. The most serious uation fs at Valencia, where a general strike was declared yesterday. The city 3 at placed under mar- tial law and, though Uiere was more or IN once ess rioting throughout the day, the Authorities had matters pretty well in hand until after dark, when the dia- turbers vented their fury tn an attack upon the ocials in the adjacent town: ship of Culler, The rioters murdered a Judge and wounded other officers of the court which had been engaged in the trial of those who had been arrested earlier tn the day. The mob was finally dispersed by guards from the Custom House. Strikes have also been declared at Gilbao, Saragonsa, Huelva, Se- ville, Gijon and other cities, In some of these places the movement has been but partially successful, | Premie alejas announces that the Government has its possession the de taille of a rev tlonary plot uncoveres at Valencia and Barcelona, Part of this plot was to assassinate Gen. Weyler, Captain-General of Catalonia, The Gov- ernment claims to know the names of all the conspirators and the sources of thelr supplies. It 18 claimed that the movement at Barcelona has ‘failed of importance. ‘The General Union of Labor to-day ect to call @ general strike eto be fixe Ca throughout Spain on e later. eral regiments of artillery have hurried to Barcelona and Valen- leading to have been cut and soldiers have been ordered out to repair them. | p is again fn force and] on ig the progress of the dis- turbances 1s withheld, | BOILING WATER SCATTERS THE RIOTERS. There was renewed rioting both in Barcelona and Valencia to-day, and the y of the mob was so great that the police resorted to stream: of boiling water to soatter the rioters, Many per- sons were injured. Cavalry was hur- ried to the scene, but the streets were so wet the troops could not utilize their horses until the slippery pavements had been sprinkled with sand. The rioting at Saragossa was renewed to-day and there was continued fighting between the Civil Guard and the work- ingmen, ‘The mob had started to parade through the streets bearing banners with revolutionary lines inscribed there- tn when the troops interfered and the fighting began. | eaders of the strikers declare | The NST THE KING MYSTERY ON LINER IN SUICIDE OF MAN BELIEVED ANOBLE |Shipped as a Stoker, Youth Admitted He Had Been German Officer. /FLEEING SOME SECRET. May Have Been Wanted in Washington, but Identity Is Forever Lost. tocratic bearing, who sought to fly from his country and hide his Identity by shipping as a atoker on the Steamer Grosser Kurfuerst when she| salled from Bremen Sept. 10, will never | be solved uniess the North Sea gives up tts dead, And even if that should hap- | pen, it Is doubtful tf the oblivion which the young man craved coulé ever be pierced. The Grosser Kurfuerst arrived to-day and the mystery of the strange youth Whose desperation drove him to send a bu: rough his brain when the ship Was (three days o w the principal topic among offcers, crew and passen- through the greater portion of the| voyage. Man, stories were told affect- ing to explain his identity and his rea- sons for kill himself but only on one point did they a athe Was a man of fine birth and breeding and was eager to p® s0n calamity hig own coun- try held for him, HAD HELD COMMISSION PRUSSIAN A:MY, The young man's reat name {= not known to the ship's officers, He shipped under the name of another ° erf, of Bremen, and me was used b his companions in the stoke-hole during the brief time he was among them. tte sald little, but after his suicide every one questioned Rott was ready to swear that ) noble birth and one that be had held @ commission tn © Prussian army—that the young map if had confessed as much, The sulelde of a stoker te not an un- ymmon occurrence at sea, The men as a rule, eo terribly affected by heat and the racking work in the stoke hole that they rush uncontrolledly to the deck and throw themselves into the sea IN 1) was of 0 wild or dra- of this atoker, One morning after he had“finished his early watch he quietly went into the washroom and shot himself. No scrap of paper or other means of identifica. tion was found In his effects, and the next day the brief burlal service was held and the body cast Into the North Sea, KEPT OUT OF SIGHT DURING STOP AT PORT. “IT Aid not talk with him,” Capt. Rott said, “but Judging from the Jdeas formed by wome of our officers who did, there was something very systerious about him shipping am a stoker, He was a very good looking boy, quiet and weil behaved, and he held himself proudly. | 1 understand he acted like one welghted down by some secret sorrow, and kept to himself when not at work, When we stopped at Boulogne, they tell me, he kept out of alght and seemed relieved when we Were on our way again, “Two days after the sutcide I received | a wireless telegram from the Depart- ment of Juatice at Washington which 1| thought might explain the mystery. It asked if a certain man was aboard as a passenger. I do not fee! at iberty to give the name ured, but I thought it might be this young man, and searched ng his things, but I could learn nothing “Whoever he was, It ta certain he was that the railroad employees will Join the | anxious to leave Germany, and whether strike by to-morrow at the latest and if they do traffic will be absolutely tled he shipped with us to reach this coun- try, where so many names and reputa- | “WWALEINCIA, Spain, Sept, 19.—During (Continued on Second Page.) oeveae eros tions from the other side are swallowed up, or merely for the opportunity to |pink into absolute oblivion Ido not think will ever be known.” - Chae a JOY RIDE WOOER SPEEDS AT FINISH OF SLOW ROMANCE Mantell Declares the Love He Concealed Two Years in Time to Save Girl. COURTS AIDS “POPPIN Halts Commitment of Anna Klare to Home and Will Marry Couple. The hesitation of a bashful swain, who had loved her mutely for two years, nearly caused elghteen-year-old Anna Klare to be sent to an institution for | wayward girls to-day. As the papers were about to be signed the timorous wover rescued her. Bo the handsome brunette will this evening become the MOTHER PLEAD WITHAVATORTO ABANDON FHT Mrs. Rodgers Terrified by the, Bad Luck of the Cross | Continent Airmen. HE INSISTS ON GOING. Ward’s Engine in Shape Again, | but Dense Fog Keeps Him | on the Ground. Terrified by the persistent bad luck that appears to attend the three avi- ators who are trying for the $9,000 Hearst prize for an airahip flight from coast to coast, the mother of Cal P, Rodgers went to Middletown to-day and tearfully pleaded with him to abandon the contest. Mrs. Rodgers wite of the chauffeur who hesitated to tell his love. Anna Klare's romance began two years ago, when she fell in love with Frank Mantell, who gave her many long rides on Long Island. This went on until Anna’s brother, August, who ls the head of the family at No. 206 Himrod reet, Brooklyn, told Anne to destet her nightly rides with Mantell. Anna tola August to mind his own business, | Whereupon, inet May, August brought Anna to Myrtle Avenue Court, where Magistrate Harris put her on probation until this month, warning her that !t she did not mend her ways and give up her chauffeur, she would be sent to an institution, To-day her probationary period was up, and she came into court defiant. “T will not give up my friends to sult my brother's fancy,” @#he declared indignantly to Chief Magistrate Kemp- ner. “Then there is nothing for me to do but to send you to the Wayside Home for six months,” Magistrate Kempner told her, and ordered the commitment to be made out. Anna wept, but refused to promise obedience to her brother. The clerk had filled out the blank when a tall young fellow strode to the bench. found her son superintending the r building of ‘his airship which was wreoked yesterday by @ collision with ‘Ys Providentially asved from death yesterday. I fee) that you will be killed or seriously in- juread if you continue. Give up flying for my sake.” Rodgers was deeply affected by his mother's pleadings, but he chewed reso- lutely on the butt of his cigar and an- Bounced ‘his intention of resuming the fight ‘as his machine Is in shape. Mra. W remain in Middletown until he makes @ new start. Jimmy Ward, who started from Gov- ernor's Island on Bept. 13, accompanied by @ hodoo he is unable to shake off, was held to-day in Corning by # heavy fog. He ts the only aviator of the three in the race who has a whole machine. Ward was compelled to remain in Corning all of yesterday and last night because his engine fatled him yester- day morning just when tt appeared tha: his troubles were over, ‘To-day his engine was in perfect shape, but he di not dare go Into the wir in a fog b cause it is necessa: the Erie Raliroad tracks in sight. order to fly high enough to clear tr buildings and wires he would be con pelled to seek an elevation that would r him to keep in “One moment, Your Honor,” he satd, “I should Ike to talk to you about this se before you send her eway.” Anna's eyes brightened, What interest have you se?” asked the Magistrate ‘That's the man with whom she broke in Brother Au- in this . I'm Frank Mantell,” the young man declared, Then, swallowing hard, nt on: “I love this girl and T want to marry her.” “Well, why in the name of good- ness don't you ask her?” exclaimed the Court. "I—I—never ha—ha—had the nerve,” said young Mantel! “But you love her and want to marry her?" inquired the Magistrate. “Yes, 1f she'll have me,” Mantall de- clared “And you, Anna?’ the Magistrate asked, “do you love him?" “I-T-T-do," and blushing she buret into another storm of tears. "If Il agree te tear up this commit- ment, will you marry to-day?” inquired the Magistrate. Wille," sald Frank, on Magistrate Kempner, his face w ed in smiles, tore up the commitment, and sent them rejoteing to the Marriage License Bureau with Mrs, Ida M. Tiletien, his probationary officer, for escort, and told them to come back with the license when he would be happy to marry them, seriall er ae FALLS OFF ROOF TO DEATH.| Teacher Had Been Invalid Since |! Taking Overdose of Medict Louls Salzman, for six months vous invalid, was killed early to tailing from the roof of the fv tenement In which he lived at N Hast One Hundred and Forty-fourt street. Mrs, Rachel Sacizman, his w said that when her husband first came ll, tWo months « of medicine which 1 prescribed halt d had not been righs In be- as a dose a bott his physician teaspoontuls a by allow the fox to form an opaque cur- tain beneath. Robert G. Fowler, the first to start in the cross continent filght, ts still at Sal., where he with an je may start again Thurs few York. None of the avia- tors has succeeded in getting out of the Stwte in which he started farle L, Ovington has arrived from Boston, and announces that he expects | to start from this city for the Pacific on September 27. He expects to use a monoplane. RCE TRACK BIL ARAN TO FRONT NLERSLATURE Backers in Albany Claim They | Now Have Enough Votes to Pass the Measure. ALBANY, Sept. 19 his mind since. Tho family had made an effort to watch him, but he got out of bed after daybreak so quietly that no one in the hou’ eard him stirring | when the policeman came up to tell of his Salk He died at Lincoln Hospital, | Baleman was e teacher of Russian, to relieve racetrack directors from crim inal ability for racetrack gambling js to be moved for passage before the Lew sto as Lower el inved 1 would moy i att art portunity, The bik r 1 change of sentiment and ¢ Aired Votes to reconsider have be ured, “ |Miss Rutherfu Ogden Mills TOULOUSE, France, Sapt. 19.—Flabor- ate preparations are being made for the entertainment of # large company of distinguished American, French end English guests, who are arriving by n and automodtle at Willlam K. anderbilt’s beautiful chateau near this . to attend the wedding to-morrow r. Vanderbilt's step-daughter, Miss aret Rutherfurd and Ogden Mills ot New York. he number of Americans expected, especially, Is large, and includes pumor- ous members of New York's soclety and f several Euro: ricans rd, Who Weds Jr. To-Morrow, who have spent the summer tn Europe have delayed their departure for home 1n order to accept an invitation to the wedding. . The bridegroom-elect ts @ son of the widely-known philanthropist of New York and Is a cousin of Mra, Whitelaw Reld, wife of the American Ambassador to Great Britain, Mr, and Mre, Reid and Henry White, the Amertcan dip! mat, will be among the guests at the wedding. Miss Rutherfurd t# one of the pret- test and most popular girls in the so- clety of New York and the American colony in Parts, ARCHBISHOP IN CRUSADE AGAINST LONDON FIGHT. Urges British Home Office to Prevent the Johnson-Wells Ring Battle. LONDON, Sept. 19.—The event t 1 ha that taken, written don the Home Office yuppress the cont —_—_ oe MAN ABLAZE ON DYNAMO, irging Current Rushes Theongh Body an Torch ¥ Clothing. ceive |CROWD SEES LITTLE FIRE AT 5TH AVE. AND 42D ST, Traffic Blocked While Blaze Is | Fought in Westchester Chamber of Commerce Rooms, Traffic at Fitth avenue and Forty- second street was blocked at noon to- ¥y 4 crowd Of several thousands watching ¢ tment tackle «| small blaze wh din the offices | f the Westchester County Chamber of nmerce, on the fourth floc } West Forty-second | ery one Was out to No one knows how It was discovered by Assistant Sucretary Job man out, sald ni Stateroom, reserva Bette rcale, Nullteer’ (Worlty: Mulidlen, ‘og Fars Wow, “Piowe Ueermas sya eye # 16 PAGES PRICE ONE == OENT. TO SUE MRS. SUYDAM IF NOBLE AGREES 10 ~ WED, SAYS SUYDAM Ocherwise No Divorce Action Will Be Begun, Declares Young Blue Point Millionaire, Who Was Deserted by Eloping Wife. DEMANDS COMPACT AS IN RUSKIN-MILLAIS ROMANCE. Woman Eagerly Awaits in Affinity Flat Any Proposition to Give Her Freedom, She Says. Walter Lispenard Suydam jr., his multi-millionaire father and their lawyer, Joseph P. Losee, called this afternoon on Loulse White Lawrence Suydam, the runaway wife of the young Blue Point aristocrat, at her affinity flat on West Twelfth street and offered to free her from her irk- some bonds of matrimony if she and young Frederick Noble would enter into an agreemnt to marry immediately after a decree of divorce was ob» tained. The conference had not been previously arranged, but Lawyer Losee had obtained information that Mrs. Suydam was patiently awaiting the jarrival of a process server in her flat. Plumber Noble of Brooklyn was telephoned to and requested to have his son attend the conference, when he could prove whether or not his love for Mrs. Suydam was as serious as he had proclaimed. The couple were to be given the alternative of not signing the agreement and never having a divorce suit ‘Degun. SCORES TO-DAY (isan e Att Aecided to-day that the best method ¢o | hush the scandal and provide for the NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT PITTSBURG. future social standing of ¢he eoul-mates | would be to carry out the plan made’ famous in the Ruskin-Millais marital tangle. The younger Suydam had hoped: iNTS— 11100000 0; PITTSBURGH— 00000000 1—:} Batteries—Amos and Meyers; Loitield Against hope that his seif- } Wife might undergo a petitiggliyos | |8P4 return to the jururious home he had! Provided her with for olght years. ELOPING WIFE'S PARENTS* PLEADED ALL IN VAIN. Rec cleo His parents advised stro his ever taking her ace tt ipo AT CINCINNATI. they gave in to him and tmplored thi BROOKLYN— parents of Louise White Suydam to urge 4 ied —_ |her to return to Blue Point. The Whites anc te pleaded in vain. The young woman ree yal — plied that it was tmposatble for her to change her mind. Her love for Walter Suydam was utterly dead. When at last the young hus and Batterioe-Atecle end Bargen; Compton and Clark». AT 8T. LOUIS, FIRST GAMR, the hopelessness of the he BOSTON— bean to consider the divorce situation, 10 23.200 & OM 12 oie the ature oe iy eenoURCed. was ST. LOVIS— provided for. '# wife should be | He would not und 0 2000 3.4 0 4—13'to obtain w divorce that would ‘being Batterioe-Pertue and Kling, Golden "ly further shame and disgrace upom and Wingo. the wife who abandoned him, ~ Attorney Loses then Sugeest AMERICAN LEAGUE. marriage contra. % and this idea at \ cic appe the Suydams, tt _eenmeees woul throw tirely diffe: CLEVELAND— {would provide for the future of the 000 J |tlepers betoro the divorce proceedings HIGHLANDERS— 1"'Betore Mra, 8 , ‘e Mra. m™ Was told that her ovol — | husband and n-law were on RatteriesKrapp and Fisher; Fisher! their way t bode to Hair the way for bh r & K ah Ras ih ay M marriage to Fred Nobl AT PHILADELPHIA, ania alten oe Papin uning divorce proceedings. 5 00 00 0 any sting very patiently for ATHLETICS ite a 00000 ke Very franks Biteries—(leorge and Clarke Kravee Views on divorce, seconding Saeed the views of Col. John Jacob Autor thet es the barriers to demating and remating AT BOSTON, ™ hated coup! shoud be less difieuls OETROIT— jtocasate 1000000 0 — \|SHE COMPLAINS PEOPLE WiLL BOSTON— NOT UNDERSTAND, 01010000 — have 0 to be frank," * Toon j to | “Tho w Id know and FOR BASEBALL REPORTS seEc/%° Know go about In the hardp PAGE 11 shell ar Puritanism, preaching a — ir ousness, If they could TO Turkish Baths, When nok Wearing theme ary} t make anything bug Me A prety speciucls Frankness may be nannies: ae Scag nee toner eats nashstereanuntteamseieesgie & oe ened ee

Other pages from this issue: