The evening world. Newspaper, February 29, 1912, Page 1

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stad sca WEATHER-Falr to-night \Ee =a - PRICE ONE © MANY H and ¥rtdas. EDITION. “ ENT. GET READY 10 TWO OF THE TAXICAB BAND PLEAD GUILTY: ~ PLAN TO BETRAY PARTNERS Kinsman and Albruzzo, Indict- wd To-Day, Expected to Con- | Bess in Court To-Morrow. (OPENLY AIDING POLICE. Montani and Lamb Also In- |. dicted for Robbery in | the First Degree. @4ward Kinsman, alias Collins, and Jess Albruzzo will plead guilty of the taxicab robbery. The progress of justice in this case was swift to-day. The Grand Jury in- @icted four of the suspects at 1 o'clock thie afternoon. They were arraigned in General Sessions an hour and a half later and pleading was postpone until to-morrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. The indictments chars burglary in the first degree, the maximum penalty for conviction of which ts twenty years fm prison. Besides Kinsman and Al- brusso, Geno Montani, the man who Grove the taxicab, and Joseph Lamb, allas “Sootiy,”” who piayed a minor part fm the rob! y, but had to be content @ith but $0 of the loot, were indicted. When the four prisoners were ar raigned before Judge Crain for pleading Srank O'Neil, @oner, appeared as counsel for Kins- men, Harry Goldsmith appeared for Abruzzo and Lawyer McDonald for Mentant. Lamb was nurepresented by @ounsel and Judge Crain seked Mr. Goldamsth to appear for him, BAYS ALBRUZZO IS WORKING TO AID THE POLICE. *% fear,” said Mr. Goldsmith, “that he interests of my client Albruzzo will WM contilct with those of Lamb. Al- fbreaso 1s working to aid the police end | the District-Attorney.” Luts Siegel was accordingly assigned | €o act as counsel for Lamb, On request eounsel for the accused the pleadings postponed until 2 o'clock to-mor- Pew afternoon. 2m the mean time TM. O'Netl and Mr. Goldsmith, on behalf of Kinsman and (ABbrusz0, will confer with the District- Qeudt that these two will plead guilty @he court, but they naturally want to @pen some negoilations for a return for @helr services if they tell al Ithey know @nq turn State's evidence aguinst the others. The three women under arrest—Annie Wall, alias “Swede Annie; Myrtle Holt @m4 Rose Levy—tried to get their ball Peduced this afternoon, Their move was @pposed by Assistant District-Attorney Delehanty, who said the authorities ex- ect to prosecute them as accessories After the fact. Judge Crain sald he Would hear arguments on the matter of fhe bali for the women to-morrow, OTHER CASES TO COME UP NEXT MONDAY. Phe cases of the other prisoners in eustody—Splaine, Pascale and Delio— will be presented to the March Grand Jury on Monday. The District-Attor- ney hopes to have the whole gang cleanod up, in so far as court action ts concerned, before the ond of March, Pascale conplained of being violently Qi tn his coll at P np, a big urray of bandages littering agare State Boxing Commis- | GABRIELLE RAY JILTS A GRANDEE AT THE CHURCH Noted English Stage Beauty Leaves Eric Loder and Wed- ding Guests Waiting. ‘WINDSOR, England, Feb. 29.—Gabri- elle Ray, world renowned as the most beautiful, winsome and charming musl- cal comedy actress in the British King- dom, left 2,000,000 pounds sterling wait- ing at the chureh to-day, ‘having, of swift whim, suddenly decided that the handsome young aristocrat, Eric Loder, was not her chosen soulmate. The young grandson of the immensely wealthy Sir Edmund Loder had arrived at the Windsor Roman Catholic Church in state, all plumed for the wedding. All the British Isles were on tiptoe waiting for the news that the surpassingly beau. titul Gabrielle Ray nad entered into the bonds of wedlock. The cholr was all ready in the great choir loft, ‘The priest waited: in his robes, The | nave of the church was jammed with folk of fashion and noted favorites of the stage. The best man was there, and rray of ushers, pulling at their ches end exclaiming, ‘Wouldn't it Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed and |the blond complexion of young Loder |took on the tint of the poppy. But the bride came not, neither did she send ao much as a .ittle bird (o whisper that she had suddenly chasged her mind and would not wed the supposedly success- Circulation Booke Open to All." Coorelecs. UFke Now Tork Worl) Che Press Publishing NEW ARREST “GUN MAN” ASSLAYER OF TWO INEAST SIDE FEUD Alleged Murderer of Julie Mo- rell and “Ranese” Is Captured. Gabrielle NAME HID BY VICTIMS. Other Shootings Are Traced to “Zelig,” Picked Up After Months of Hiding. ‘The man who 1s delleved by the po- Moe to be the murerer of Julle Morell, the east side killer of men, the mur- Gerer of Frank Risso, better known as and the shooter of numer- ous east side enemies who he did not kill, was arrested to-day at Gixth street and Second avenue by Capt. Henry Foye and three detectives. Ho is Will- fam Albert, but his underworld title is ‘Jack Zellg.” ‘Zellg was a Goorkeeper of the ball of | the ‘Boys of the Avenue” at Stuyvesant |Hall, at Ninth street and Second nue, on Dec. 2. He had previously shot Morrell in a ealoon fight on @econd ave- fue, and Morrell had announced hie in- tention of going to the “Boys of the Avenue” ball and getting revenge. He walked in and wag shot down. MORELL DIED HIDING NAME OF SLAVER. Morell died two daye later, but re- fused to tell who shot him. There was ® chance that he might @et well, he thought. He therefore desired to re- serve to himself the privilege of getting hie satisfaction rather than turn it over to the law. Frank Rizzo went to Eighth street ‘and Third avenue to keep an appoint- ment which had been made by a letter | signed by the name of a former sweet- | heart of his. As he lottered around | tho corner a man stepped out from a |corway and shot him dead, Capt. | Foye says the man was Zelig. | By a queer coincidence, Zelig war ANSON STORY COTTARE WATCHED WITHOPERAGLAS Woman Detective Tells How She Saw Mrs. Story and YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRU ful rival of Lord Dalmeny and Marquis; @/#0 hunted by the police for @he ot Anglesey. jetabbing of Frank Rizzo, known as The great honeymoon motor car that at No. 10 Second avenue, stood at the churoh door was des-| "ince the first of the year. A fow patched to the magnificent apartment | #8 later, according to police in- Where Miss Ray lives, It was learned | formation, he entered a moving picture there that she had digmissed the car| Place !n ‘Rutgers street with Rusty that young Loder had sent to carry her| Lewis, Eddie Yaller and Little Nathie, to the church. She had vouchsafed no| Chosen friends of similar tastes, and explanation, nor did she grant any to| "hot Sandie Mertz, the proprietor, for to the special messenger from Windsor. |#" @ct which they thought contrary Actor in Dishabille. It was @ Hfe In etriking contrast to that of a bachelor actor on Broadway that Stanley H. Forde led at Tower Cot- tage, on Navesink Beach, with Mrs. Helen Hilton Story last summer. He bargained with hucksters for vegota- There appears to be little) @mé throw themselves on the mercy of Headquarters | The honeymoon motor rolled back to the church and the doleful news was sent within that a wedding was highly improbable, Thero was a great fluttering and whis. | pering within the church. turned deathly pale, and, after waiting ‘an hour in the vain hope that hie |Gabrielle would appear, was supported by his ushera to his car. It fs sald that once within the seclusion of the limou- hot tears to flow from his large blue eyes, the while biting 01d head of his cane, planation” for the non appearance of the beautiful actress was faguet to-night. It sald the “wedding of Miss Ray wae postponed because of her iliness” Ldttle attention wae paid to the wtatement, the general opinion being that she merely got “cold feet,” Late this evening Gabrielle Ray, through friends, lanued a second atate- ment paying that ehe was confined to her bed with {llness and consequently | was unable to appear in church, She | aid not nay why sho failed to notity her fond lo ———— REPLICATIONS FILED | IN STEEL TRUST SUIT. afternoon in the United States Distrtat | Court @ repltaation to the answers of Pascale stopped the United States Steet Corporation and the fifty-five other defendante in the Then t tor rolled up his sleeves | wait by the Government for the disso- and cali ‘onteers, He suid he julon of the Bteet Corporation, wanted at BS) strong Mek ‘There are nine separate reptieaiions Pascale ind {dentiod in languawe. They are in belleved woe ub nswer to the nine distinct angwere tied atimulant the defendanis individually and in ‘ Pascale #roups 1 ac ak ail v4 rewientiony are purely formas and , ck to vents 882 (het the Government De, a 4 Lh ahaa Vin witty Will wer, maintain and prove Ste peti- 5 0nd Pasiile will have to be a PrORY con uy iva true, eortale and suflalent In ptek man before he can wet 4 doctor tO iaw w the amawars of the detendante,” Poldee Heulquayters to look him over Wve Lieutenants Clare end bead |. Wentiowsd on Second Page) ‘Phe repieations are ined by Dig- trict-Attovney Johy B, Vreeland, Ate torney George W, Wickersham end wpecial qouneel Jacob M. Dickinson and Heusy @. Osten, Young Loder | bles. He donned an apr: 1 and helped with the housework. He swept the ve. randa. He took Mra Story for boat trips on the river, He gamboled with \her in the surf and r ‘ered ferns with her on the Highlands. ‘An account of this {idyllic life was given on the witness stand to-day, in the trial of Allen Lawrence y'a dle vorce suit by Samuel Levhine, etreet real estate dealer, who, family, cooupled @ cottage overlooking Ghrewebury River and immediately in the rear of Tower cottage, the summer dwelling of Forde and Mra, Story. Mra, William Cumming Story, mother of the plaintiff, accompanied by a woman friend, was an interested auditor, Mrs, Willium Cumming Story lives at No, 44 Grameroy Park and is prominent natlun- ally in the D, 4, RL ‘Hoe eald he was at Navesink Beach from June 10 till October 1. For the firs: ten days of the time Vorde and Mrs to the etiquette of heir se. | Zellg was taken to the Coroner's of- fice and was held without ball pis Mien tea IR. WILEY DECLARES he WILL NOT RESIGN; ALL TALK OF “ENEMIES.” Pure Food Expert, Denying Story, Threatens Attack on Those Who Oppose Him, ‘WASHINGTON, Feb. 9,.—Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, chief chemist of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, dented to-day that he had any intention of resigning from om He charecterised as “preposter- ous” and “pure fiction” the rumors to the effect that he was considerin, faction and that he probably would come out with @ statement attacking |Becretary Wilson and the Administra Lo tory were at Tower Cottage, he ead, tate Miss Vorde, sister of the actor, wan came from “enemies,” who recently had inder of the time, Lev- attacked him in other ways, _—— |SHOT WIFE, 2 DAUGHTERS, THEN KILLED HIMSELF. ma- tron were alone in the house, with tho exception of @ couple of maids, who Were aodustomed to go out and stay late at amusement resorts in the neigh- thig afternoon. He rolled on the floor| — bawhood, end embraced his abdomen and uttered | Untted States Government Answers! pam ymascind0, Feb, @—Bewmael| “What did you Mr. Forde and excruciating cries and moans, A eall the Papers Filed by De Fisher, a business man, to-day shot end|Mre. Mtory doing’ asked Attorney was sent to St. Vincent's Hospital and kdlled hia wife and twe davghteve, Ruts, | Mooney, Dr. Carey responded, fendant Companies, aged eighteen, and Irene, aged cixteen.| TELLG HOW FORDE AND MRE, Dr. Ca aking Pascale's pulse| TRENTON, N, J, Pet ~The! Ho ¢hen set fire to Bis home ang whea| @TORY BATWED IN G6URPF, and tempera solemnly got out a! United States Government Med phia| the fire reached him Blew out hia brains,| +] gaw them bathing. They would eome up from the beach tn thely bat! tng oults, They alwaya changed thet |clothes in a rear room, Ms, Forde would @ into the room firet and Mrs. Story would walt out on the poreh. Navy Hamt-\ sometimes she would open the door 4. and look in where Mr, Vorde was. 2 | Afier ta iad heen in there a while pn in involuntary DeAkUPLOY | would hand out his bathing suit Wes filud (his afternoon in the Wederai! and sie wou on thy District Court againes the Madrid | 20 0 mas SORE He Ont On the gontn Company, which oondusia the Cate) is jeviine tad of another poveston Madrid at Bo, lish Heoadway, The! wien onde vorrowed hiv rowboat and petition was signed by fhree oreditors| wen, across the Bhrewabury Hives to Shoes aia sporenete WINE | during| Histlande with Mus story, 4 couple laa Mileged in the petition | of howw jater they returned with ‘The of the restaurant pom-| ™eny ferns. ne ‘pmaunt to. 6m “He called ime ‘Haieo’" ald Mr. aptinesd om Geesud Page) WEATHER—Falr to FI EDITION. RY 29, | ““ Circulation Books Open to All 1912. 18 PA GES. ‘PRICE ON URT IN COLLISION OF “L” TRAINS © Indicted Taxicab Bandits Face 20-Year Terms in Prison ight and Friday. <= E CENT. National LONDON, Feb. 29.—The greatest strike in the world's history wan started to- day when 1,000,000 miners in the colltertes of Great Britain threw down their tools and began the war that means national ter for the British. For weeks! Premtor Asquith and other members of the Cabinet have been working with leading business men of England in a ain effort to avert the crisis. | They were atill making @ desperate jeleventh-hour attempt to bring about a | |nettlement between the mine owners and | workmen when the firet of the miners struck, Roth sides wero stubborn, and the time Imit on calling the strike having been reached to-day, the men walked out when thp hours for chang- ing shifts were reached. Upward of 760,000 coal miners hai laid Gown thelr tools and gone on strike by 4 o'clock this afternoon, and to-night the number had reached 1,000,000, Troops are maesed at uli the garrisons ready | for rlot calls from any quarter, Beforo to-morrow, unlens some une pected change comes over the situation, |over # million men and boys now em: | | ployed in the mines will be idle and) |tens of thousands in other trades will | be foreed into imilar condition, | ‘The delegates of the miners were ap- | pached this morning by Sir Geor Askwith, the “strike breaker” with | ome of his colleagues of the Hoard uf ‘Trade and also several Labor members of the House of Commons with a view of finding some way out of the crisis. At the same time fhe coal ownera gath- | | ered again at the Forcign OMice wiere they conferred with Premier Asquith and several membors of the Cabinet. Negotiations coal ownere @id pot show a conciliatory attiude while the owners insist that the miners were fetermined to strike mo mattor what terms were offered, ‘She chieg demand of the miners is for 8 minimam wage scale; in other words, working house, but om & sefezenduni | Ray, Famous English Stage Beauty, Who Jilted Heir of a Nobleman at the Altar WORLD'S GREATEST STRIKE CALLS OUT 1,000,000 ME Miners of Great Britain Drop Their Tools, While Government Leaders Try to Avert REAREND COLLISION = ON THIRD AVE. “L;” 12 PASSENGERS HURT Brakes Refuse to Respond on Grade and Cars Smash Into Rear End of Train Stalled by Workmen. \CONDUCTOR TRIES TO OUST | FIREMEN’S RESCUE PARTY Five Victims Go to Hospitals From Sixty-seventh Street, and Others Are Sent Home. Twelve persons were injured—five so badly that they were sent to jhospitals—in a collision on the Third avenue elevated road at 1.35 o'clock jthis afternoon just above Sixty-ninth street, A five-car Bronx local was |pasnines by 2 four-car train bound for One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street. among the passengers was intense. \ Thi 1 * ‘THE TICKET: | WABHINGTON, Fob. 29.—"If the | women had the ballot,” «ald a We ern Wenator to-day, “it would be pos sible to unite the Progressives of both exes on this ballot: The Bronx train was well crowded and for a time the excitement Bast Third street, Vernon; scalp severely cut. GALVER, ALEXANDER, fifty years old, laborer, of Wo. 96 Penn street, Brooklyn; lacerations to hands and arms. JORNSON, GILBERT, of and scalp ovt and WHITE, MARION, eighteen years old, of Mo. 870 Third avenues shock and cuts, VAN WYCK, BLSIZ, a school- Disaster. or President, | TRBODORE ROOSEVELT of Mew Yors, Tor Vice-Presiden: MARY GARDE: of Tilinols. the scale, The Government proposed a prinotple of a minimum wage acale, with broviwion of adjustment of that wale in the different districts. where conditions vary. The mino workers have rejected thie broposal. Thetr representatives tnaist on & scale of minimum wages according to “Andon this plato the schedule they have drawn up, The and the bare back. National Minera’ Federation, in making thelr reply to the proposal, adopted the | Mary G following resolution “There can be tio nettle Present dispute untors the p Individual minumum wage “The bare head jen Takes the ot a Joke. of (Special to The Bvening World) Moot the pILADELPHL Feb. 2. eofan aiitui Gn dows i ue suggestion that ah posed Mary take kindly sirl, of Mo, 207 B Street; shock and lacerations of the face, The first three were sent to the Presbyterian Jtospital, The two «iris | Were sent to the Flower Hospital, MANY OF THE INJURED WERE SENT HOME | Others who were 4 but who went home “ d by the Jambulance surgeons wer les Haine |aky, forty-four years old, a tailor, of No, Wis Webster av * Bain, 49 Kast One Hundsed Kround workers te agreed to by tie cont | RUREIAION Heat ° celts runt and Mra, penere: | nominee on the Progressive ti ee Mary It ts understood that the Government | yg, Garden declared to ‘The venty=ti ts OM, of No, me has drafted @ minimum waxe bill with) Word ourrespondent that whe Nac eANe. safeguards for the owners and tw ready | ar train cad comy to & melt very poor sense of humor and th proposition that #he enter polities was not at all alluring. Premier Asquith is said to have ‘The propostiion does not appeal to given am ascurance to the miners’ dele | me," assorted the winger, “and I never Gates thet » means would be found | 414 care for humorous stories." compel the minority of the coal owners | ny positively declined to discuss any to fell into line with the majority on pintform upon whic . the question of the eomcession of ie a a mielane whee 70 BE TRIED IN ITALY FOR MURDER DONE HERE. tween the coal owners « A number of meetings of railroad dicted by the Heh Tt was stated this evening with some Premier Asquith hi ted a new [careniere, Arrested Abroad for Staten eafeguaris wideh the owners employees passed resolutions pledging | Jury fur the murter to rush it through Parliament in case of necessity, she might run show of authority thag thera te some Prospect of a break in the deadiook be- | proposal to whe mi} who, tt ta as Island Crime, Can't Be Brought rled, have now elgnified their willing to This Country, adquarters ag 4 corollary to the estabiimnimen word minimum wake panty Grand les Noble ino Workmen Were making ‘te pairs to (he track about fifty yande f Siaty-ninth street, The four 1 pulled out of the Sixty. { station to make way for train, ‘The road takes an ineline this station and when Motorman ‘Thomas Cavanaugh of ¢be four ca sppiied his brakea he found that were out of order, Mis ine with gather ed Inte the stalled led train was but the fiat t rammed tt wae rash all those from their the care Pact, INVA CONDUCTOR RESENTED SION OF FIREMEN, thonmmelves to abstain from handling | at st. George, 4. I trom trains and coal produced by non |e tgied in Luly for tho rime, ‘This Te collision wax witnessed from he untoniate, e , t |street by four firemen, Darcy, Bi . pcordusioe with éxisting treatios, y, Buma TROOPS HELD READY FOR ee eenn urrestod Jui, 26 last A¥ie# anid Devlin who are attached @ OTRIKE RIOT CALL, at Arsano, Neples, Fire Headquarters in Hast Sixty-seventh Meanwhile the garrisons in every| On the night of Nov, 6 last Hdward stseet. They re returning fem army fort and post in the country are! gimpwon, a fruigit checker ii the Bal- |lunek when they heard the crash evap In readiness for instant use. Troops, tunore and Ohio Hailroud yards at Bt. head: notified Fire Halt however, will nat be called out uniess | Corey “heard « iow and a call fr |and the police were ely necessary. Bo fai lp. He found Noble, another checker, | told © collision and 4mbulaness per of the me xoailent. be by reece id se ei eas h beak aif fees urged them to remat Perey ct on tie sraund, Binosor 4 t jority would dom seul & man running 5 1 pillaré and ' that th. jin Wa nico ' ‘ . Anrombly Noble died that nis ay is “ . . ALBANY and baby. The pulic ving « Jones, the condu of tt peeling Gie F ne ® information about the case OTT r od too interference of the Btate ath vnailasion for the regu- cated with the Italian Consul s jation of burns, Was reported favora with the result Hat Graulere Was aie force of the collision disarranged we Sa sevens er wesid ware bed nT by the Awwembly Judiciary Commit-| arrested in Taly Pesto ln atthe fina qa aa te wage scale, | tee to-day xe ene Le 4 wea pee: | ee RveeaEN ~ aecond train and it Was not unt) 230 ded vy Gov. Dix, wi t jast | Statervom neeryations and ticketa via att fomst. | " (Whe mintnum wage orale bas deen a6: | Pt i) Sinate will hot take ally ure | Mine tonto Aid's ant, “Hahuads | o'clock that these hud oven straightened cepted by sixty per com. of the mine! tion on It Saniners, room, for Rasingy and ascot out ao that the train might proceed, Jn wwnem, Those of Ni ——— eee the mean time ail traffic on the mepaiy Geotiand and South Wales nave FOR @AGING GEE PAGE 7. Bee bound track nad been tied um

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