The evening world. Newspaper, January 10, 1912, Page 1

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EDITION. Che Conrtage. 1912, by The Press Publishiag (The New York World). “wear ne—rate to-ntahe iz EDITION. f Mi Circulation Books Open i to All,” } NEW _YORK, W "WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, _20 PAGES ‘PRICE ONE CENT. CARNEGIE TELLS * aS IFPI Ruins in Rotunda of Equitable Building, Showing Unharmed Statue of Henry B. Hyde OF HISDEAL WITH | BLACK CAT RAUNTS - THESTEEL TRUST) SHIP AFTER DEATH Fool to Sell His ids Proper for! |So Declare Sailors of the Sarah| $430,000,000, Statement to and Lucy, Following Sui- Congress Committee. | cide on Yard-Arm. HE EXPRESSES REGRET. HAD TRIED TO SLAY IT.| Sécured Five-sixths of Mines, When Animal Disknewarea, Its) for Smal! Sum—Trust Paid Pursuer Sang in Glee, ; Big for Other Sixth. Then Hanged Self. ndvew Care| That the soul of a bia at haunts y before the|the two-masted Sarah and the Steel |Lucy, at an oft Red Hook waiting rnegie Steel |@ tow to Perth Amboy, was the start. Company had purchaved five-sixtha of iN Information cor td v4 hi the Oliver Mining Company's stock eee aia ea usec! taco tha nineties, Mr. Stanley asked him |)'Tc6 of the body of w sailor why the final sixth was purchased on a|jangeq limaelf in the rigsing Valuation basis of $17,000,000 for the! whole tract, though originally the com:|rotied up in thelr bertha in the fore- Pany was capitalized at only $1,200,000 | castle. ‘Mr. Carnegie expreesed surp at} The su! Wis question. “At that rate," he exclaimed, would have pald $85,000,000 for the w tract. I'm not surprised at anything newadays, If t we were to rell our property to the} length of the versel and cursed it for Untted States Steel Corporation.” @ hoodoo, , St was then explained that the $17,-/ Two of the achooner'a hands saw the 690,000 valustion basis was that of the | assault on the cat and turned pate, tr Whole tract and not the sixth. Sven |i" the cat hed had all ite nine lives then Carn toked out of it. While it is bad luck ig egte said that if sudh Bis nave a black cat come aboard @ quam as indicated by those figares was) viscoi just before sailing time, it Is paid he was surprised that he “was jinnttely more ominous for a black cat gach # f00l to sell our property to the to io slain atoard, Steel Corporation on the basis of $490.) Hut tiv: black cat was not dead, as her 000,000.” {14 soon made manifest, She had Then, after a moment, Mr. Carnecte 1 up the ratiines and perched upon ttimned to the chairman, aivard block of the mainnast, where pri, she clung until the satl wan hoisted. “My friend,” he sald, “you will have oy. schooner was well out in the Sound task somebody who knows about tho-0 | yetore the eat came down, ‘The mun at figures. I never heard of them before.” | tie wheel aaw only the big, luminous Carnegie in his testimony ading, but he heard, from Kaew, of course, that there iny to time, the woebegone meow of pte tural pools, a ally supposed ti were doing what buainess was doing. cat Wad feduuod him for miles. “The Sherman Anti-Trust law wa L must kil orted wildly, “for passed in 189," sald Congreswma Hell it follows me like @ spectre of blood” “Did it ever occur to you tha: from THE CAT VANISHES—AND GLOOM a0 until you retired from the steel DESCENDS ON SHIP. Danone you “were persiatently and # other forecastie hands were Nagrantly violating the law determined Lundbery should noi kil) #2 never thought abont it. That wes ta careful watch waa kept all left to my subordinates,” was Car- his movements. Several times a megie’s excuse. sht he would sneak out of the fore- @arnogie said that he believed that crstio wilh a belaying pin in his big aay law agaizet pools and price agree. fist, but there waw always a man at + heels ay his hand, 1f he came ments should not prevent pools in stee! WASHINGTON, Jan, 10. Wewle while testifying to- House Committee investigat! ‘Crust explained how the Ci a eeley street, Bridgeport, Conn, port last Friday and as he came | hin a mangy, black cat. ,When Lund- 1 he) eves dew © steel 1 natur- ime, Lu away very one in the steel | relies. | upon the cat. a A 4, | The cat way also on the alert and| Mr. Carnegie was an Inv WI) whenever she saw Lundberg coming ness, The steel magnate, who Waslghe sot up aloft and swung the first roquested to appear, and upon de-| rigging in the bitter gale that coated cliping that invitation, was pevemptorily | the schooner with ice and smothered her summoned to Washington, was wanted | in cutting spray, But, strangely enough, te elucidate many of the details of the|the cat vanished Saturday night, and organization and operation of the Steel|/ could not be found on the following | ‘Trust and its domination of any indus-| morning !n any nook ur cranny of the try in which he * ae for #o many years| vessel. & predominating figure. Tundberg laughed wildly, when he| GINNING OF THE CARNEGIE | heard the cat had vanished, but his a new turn. He fell ¢ STERL COMPANY, famous Stevenson ballad When Mr. Carnegie took the witness on 0 Aead mace Shean, atand he furnished the committea w! 1a bottle of rum," a@ statement regarding ste : this incessantly Su conditions and told of his career in the! pie): when by to d vudiness from the outset. t for the privilege of continutns| Mr. negie was uccumpanied by J i MW desde 4 3 of Pittsburga, his counsel. h thie schooner nchor of Her peed as < Mook, and wh eased It committee room was crowled w tators, including many women, | He was sworn by Chairman Stanley "SHI" AND SAILORS TREMB:.E, nd aang bine Mr. Carnegie said he began his ; a career !n November, 1861, with the t stopped abruptly 4 Ee of Miller @& Small, and that tn ty was an immonee relle?, and borrowed $1,500 from the National B: who hi t little the of Pittsburgh ship in engage in a party >, dropped off in a dove. mill In Pittsbu of the organizers of the Buperic Mi and Furnace. In 1863 we bul) loGomotive works in Pittsourgh, and tn 187 we united two other mills fn Picts- mercy burgh. That was the beginning of the me b Kh sea Carnegie Steel Company, Limited." ee isnernet "In interesting other mer these early days,” Ch asked, “did you do so abe im Wall street or atier exchanges orb! ds'you get men of eapertence fn ine | Reen ¥ {fm business?” | & Luck a "Oh, no, I did not look for men w mo | Beet Pome. hod no experience in the tron business. | third catastrophe. 1 was pne of the youngest of these men, pe ah At differs World Butiding Torkteh Baths, Bath with p: Vi in o had | terday | raoon while his comrades were | je was Andrew Lundberg of | ipped aboard the schooner at/ at is true what fool®|Horg saw the cat he iklcked it halt the| SLAYER HOLDS OFF SHERIFF'S MEN AND SHOOTS DOWN FOUR Rochester Troops and Police} Rushed to Aid in Negro Barricaded in Home. “THIRD TERM” GRY HSH LBRN FUND STARTED 10 HELP WIDOW CF GHIEF WALSH Evening World Will Act as Treasurer for Subscriptions in Appreciation of His Heroic Work. The Evening World will receive, acknowledge and account for for the widow and five children of Battalion Chief William J. Walsh, who sacri: | ficed his iif to duty in the Equitable Building fire, | The fund will be held subject to the wishes of Mra, Walsh and her friends. Half a dozen or nwre public Iberg had stowed his the farecastle and | fded to Wis mates that the infernal! People Fear He Would Ne Capturing | Limit Demand for Exten- sions of His Office. nembers of te Demo: | raat house at Scotts- a revolyer and Willam Twiman, belleved to have gone | caded In a two-story bodies and scores of citlkens have already con- tributed or expressed willingness to contribute to the rellef of the widow ana] her little ones, The Evening World will act as custodian for tho various funds that have already been started and thus concentrate the cor Battalion Chief Walsh died the death of a herolc fireman. under tons of debris with » line of hose in his hands after ho | that his position was perilous, ad gone Insane | plenty of cartridges, tvance with | off a posse of deputy sheriffs and con- | 3 from Rochester n this who hurried to His widow and children are left | sources and confronted by a mortgage on a little home thelr |father had recently purchased on the easy payment plan 'y glad," said Fire Commissioner Joseph Johnson of the collection of a fund for the rellef the contributions should be wrouped | Many bankers, business men and citizens in | ce kel me how they could 1 shall inform all inguirers to wend thelr contributions to ‘The! anil i ‘venting World and shall turn over to The Evening World such contributions, will hurt te Fire Headquarters or may come later.” he surrendered | The Evening World will take cha: of the family of poor Walsh. ‘14m one fund in responsible hand: All walks of life have called m @ relief fund, ey was a great | win ennaytvanta Lnie twelve miles south of Roches- | > posse attempted opened fire, killing | have already reached have a | ALDINE ANANIASES “| WEREN'T EXPECTED TO SNITCH ON ROOSEVELT know just what That Club Dinner Guest Not Supposed to Talk. PICTURESQUE SAYINGS OF THEODORE AND NOW ILL LUCK PURSUED! WHO VOTED FOR GUFFEY NOT ALONE lutely without foundation.”* elt was pressed for At 3 P.M. on order was obtained from Supreme Court Justice Benton by | District-Attcrney Love to -yound gun from the tate Outlook offices ster one crew went] ma wes | barrtonded, it) Any man who came down trom the dinner and quoted me isa “The story is abso The Lvening World t had declared night that he would or be @ candidate for Pr Woukl accept @ nomination it pressed | 1.4/),")" i His wite was at a sick neighbor's, at the Outlook | Covgawr te Inve tiealina would not again | dent or that he Twinan walked out tis hands above and surrendered to the vas placed in # closed automobile| to. to be taken to Roohesten, The Colonel was |No. 128 Broadwa vacated at WALLS NEAR FALLING, FQUITABLE NEIGHBORS Chief Langford Drives 150 Tenants From 16-Story American Exchange in Fear of Burned Out Shell Across Street. /BILLION FROZEN IN VAULTS IS BELIEVED TO BE SAFE. \Stock Exchange Again Suspends. | Deliveries—Hunt for Walsh's Body, | Buried Under Debris, Goes On. The sixteen-story office building of the American Exchange Bank, at the northeast corner of Cedar street and Broad- iway, just across from the burned Equitable Building, was ordered 2.30 o'clock this afternoon by Deputy-Chief Langford, in ack of the fire department work around the ruins, There is a decided bulge in the Equitable walls on that side and ie is feared they may topple against the bank building. Inspector Cahalane sent policerhen through the bank building im- | medis meee, to notify the 180 tenants and all their employees to get | entrance. CHRYEND +> _ A halt hour after ordering tenants TRIPLETS COME INTO WORLD | ONE ON EACH OF 3 DAYS. it Girl Last to Arrive and Two Boys Who f receded Her All in out of the bank butkiing Deputy Chief langford became so apprehensive that the Cedar street walls of the Equitable Hullding would fall that he ordered the firemen out of the American Exchange Hank Building, The men left two thed- lown ines of hose playing on the ruins upper windows. Although the flames In the ruine of Aaron Itable Bullding are practically aa extinguished, the vaults, containing The thir xecurities and cash to the value of o with more than 4 billion dollara, are att) badles apparently buried under tons and tone of foe. Bn- nade —— wines are still pumping water into the OVERCOME BY HEAT! wreckage, and the disablement of bus- iness in the financial district, due to Innce Surweon Says So and| the fire, has not been relieved. DELIVERIES SUSPENDED AN. OTHER 24 HOUR! ‘The Board of Governors of the Steck at @ meeting held before the penis of the ange to-day passed & resoluuion further suspending deliy- eries for twenty-four nours. In effect | eveat {heat to-day this resolution suspends deliveries of Piies stocks traded in Monday indefinitely, 10] much fo: at work in the en-| fo the Law Committee is authorised Na-|lives at epregentative | Hore From th r “me p , . here breezes «| Winter Ni verheating From the rom the winter iile and Iie yourse:t away to breadth-o'-sea But * ta Free < BRANCH OFFICES send for the most a valuable guide | free by any newspaper, of its kind ever given by the re: ution to make further ex, and tension of the suspension rule as ece that | donly tumbled « sion may require, The ! pulan As long as the vaults of the Baui table Bullding remain inaccessible ¢he business of the Stock Exchange will be re than hundred Stock s have all thelr securi- the vaults of the Mercantile posit Company, ilivers of the safe deposit concern 4) the contents of the vaults will be ud intact, Nevertheless the brok- business men who have hun- ls of millions of dollars’ worth of cash and securitles locked up in the ‘ uid vaults ave quite apprehen- vive about the safety of their prop- erty. HARRIMAN ESTATE NOT WOR- RYING ABOUT ITS $125,000,000. \t thw new offices of the Union and \ Pactilc railways and the Har- nan estate, ou the twentieth floor of y Investing Building, clerks were nw schedules of work to be t next few days in straight- it complications caused by the The was no particular worry int Winter Resort Hotels, lere over the $125,000,000 of seouri- . : ., sof th tate deposited bi 1 Steamship Cruises, sntile. vaulth bite sn . ; Railroad Routes, Confidential experts have assured Mre. Ha no and hee managers that these At any rate withstood the tira yi that their contents are intact, Bur here {¥ serious anxiety regarding the its of the vault ip the offices of the Harriman intereste on the fourth |Hooy of the burned building. the stock dealt in Monday om the es was in this vault awatting . An effort will be made to-day veastiiage thers Neeiaions

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