The evening world. Newspaper, March 16, 1912, Page 1

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CITY SILENTLY ___| “ Circulation Books Open to All. "| HONORS MARTYRS OF THE MAINE AS HULK SINKS TD REST For Five Minutes New York’s Activities Cease as Memorial 1 to Battleship Victims. CUEA JOINS IN TRIBUTE. Roses Hide Wreck of Ocean | Warrior as She Is Towed to Last Resting Place. MAVANA, March 16—When the ‘Maine passed by Morro Castle she ‘was covered with a great Ameri- eam flag early enveloping the hull. ‘The fortresses saluted as Ge’ peosed out to sen. At three o'clock this afternoon, and for five minutes thereafter, New York ceased its countless and varied activ- ities and stood, as it were, silent and uncovered, while tho hulk of the United States battleship Maine was ARTISTIC HAZERS CLIP THE FLOWING LOCKS OF ARTIST Art Students’ League Qualifies Arthur B. Loumayho for Ex- hibiting His Picture. FIRST TIE HIM IN CHAIR. Get the Aid of Tonsorial Black- smith Who Uses Clippers as Artist Howls. Great woe has come to Arthur B. hadeae bh tad A The Press Publishi: ante! Woi ott NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH “16, “1912, STRKERS SHOOT HELD UPON ROOF | OFFICERSINRIOT | BEATEN BY THUGS, | AT BARRE MILLS) WHO STEAL $7,000. Six Guards Wounded in Fusil-| Three Bandits Attack Jeweller, lade From Mob of Foreigners While Fourth Holds Him in Massachusetts City. With Revolver. CALL MADE FOR TROCPS|LEADER IS CAPTURED. Member of Car Barn Gang Run Down Crowd in Ugly Temper and] Ex-Convict More Trouble Feared—Five Fighters Under Arrest. in Long Ch | PVaylaid on the vest of No, 213, Bast Ninety-seventh street to-day, Gluseppe De Lucca, an itinerant jewelry dealer, was ro¥bed of his satchel containing $1,000 worth of Jewelry. De Lucca was savagely beaten about the head by blackjucks in the hands of three assail- ants, while the leader, who tater gave his name as Harry Miller, thirty years old, residence at No. 612 Lenox avenue, held @ revolver to the peddier's head, The police captured Miler and recov- ered the jewelry. Inspector Hughes identified Miller as @n ex-convict who served a term in El- mira Reformatory in 102, for the theft of a horse and wagon and whose real name is Wiltam Linley. De Lucca, who Hives at No. M5 Fast One Hundred and Twentieth street, sells (Special to The Erening World). BARRE, Mass., Marcn 16.—A fusillade of shots were fired in a fight between a band of strikers at the plant of the Barre Wool Combing Company here and a detachment of civil officers to-- day. Half a doztn of the officers were wounded and five men, ali Itallans, were arrented. The clash followed the re- moval of loaded cars from the plant of the Wool Combing Company, a move protested by the strikers. One man managed to escape from the off- cers, after he had been severely clubbed about the head. Sixty offlcers and 200 strikers engaged in the clash, In which pistols, clubs and stones were freely used. A call for troops has been made on Gov. Foss and a detachment of the GIRL WHO WAS HELD UP ts me cere me LIVES ARE LOST ON THE BOWERY TO-DAY.| "AS LINER SINKS __ INSEA COLLISION Crew in Mad Fear Fight Pas- sengers for Lifeboats Aboard Oriental Steamer Oceana. 20 BELIEVED DROWNED. Crash of Vessel With German Bark Off English Coast Awakened All From Asleep. NEW HAVEN, England, March 16.— Four passengers and a number of sail- ors, estimated at sixteen, are believed to have been drowned early to-day as a result of a collision between the Penin- sular and Oriental liner Oceana and the German bark Pisagua, off Beachy Head in the English Channel. A wild panic followed the crash, the crew fighting the passengers and beating them with oars for pi sion of the life boats. For soma timo the lives of the liners forty-nine passengers and cf the two hundred ang eighty men of, her crew were placed in jeopardy. ance, however, prevented » heavy death roll. ‘Twenty-eight of the, passengers were Loumayho—and also a lot of wrath— sunk ‘in the bigh seas off the coast’) 1), ig militia. from Worcester 1s expected here | jeweiry in tie Italian colony on rt landed there and nine at Kastbourve in je has ¢he consolation of knowing | to-night, as more:rioting is feared, o of Cubs, with all the pomp and clr-| 0 nag quullfied- ax an entrant In the! One man managed to escape fro1.. the Ninety-seventh street He had a cua- wma Wate. But It toLeared ehat the! ae tomer on the top floor of No. 213 cumatance of.a.naval funeral. exhibit of the society of Américan Fakira|ofticers after he had been severely| anotner on the second fluer feu che nne other four have deen Crowned, together While..the guns of the convoying lubbed aibout the head, biggs te a he top with sixteen members of the Lascar . ering out their | MCh 18 soon to be held. elw abou hea in No, 215, To save time he started to fet h warships were {nuns eri ng ove, with | Where until noon to-day flourished] STRIKERS CLUB AND STONE |oroes the foot from No. 213 to No ety, Bee cenaan et, © east wale farewell salute and the Maine, wy, luxuriant locks there now appears but THE OFFICERS. Linley, with his three confederates, A baat gh Ss Prrwiay Pinal atc the flag of her nation valiantly My-|. 1.14 gome and all the members of| Some sixty oMicers, including twenty | followed,De Lucca to the roof, beat and LAC. NICHOLI Bet nein Suseerne, Oey . After insiati a ing, was einking into the sea, New the Art Students’ League are wearing |Pollcemen from Worcester, sixteen dep-|Tobbel him, ana dashed down through * ‘er insisting all day that all of the York, the city of ber birth and bulld- | oo venira bunches of hair done a uty sheriffs, fifteen @pecial officers and| NO: 213 to the street, with their victim Bi a ee of the liner hat feygpy save ing, was giving her a last tribute 10/17 sinone—the prevailing color of the| ine members of the Maxsachusotta Dis. | Staggering after them. Linley, who, ce ae lite wvauine tiles Ale pela | " aia Yoot| cording to De Lucca, was the man who M silence. |ribbona being green in honor of the| it Police, were massed near the Wool} a i voiver and selged the gry, eral of the passengers were missing. When the entire city aalted in tts / 4.) Combing Company's plant in the Ox een aac ine ot his ee 3 ‘Their names were temporarily with- @ay’s work there were many thuusands pectation that an outbreak might occur. belay iy held. ‘hove minds were sharply confronted| But before Mr. Loumayho was re-| tne management of the mill had| {0M fan into the building at No, 214 i] with the terrible picture of that might duced to his present shofn atate he put! panned to ship @ome cars loaded with | List Ninety-seventh street and to the CREW FIGHTS PASSENGERS FOR in Hrare Harbor, the 15th of Febru-|Up a fight that will be remembered b¥| goods, and elthough the strike commit: Pai an Willlam J. Quaine heard De LIFEBOATS. ary, 1998, the members of the League for many @/tee Jast night agreed not to interfere erles and cornered Linley on A large hole was torn in the port ‘The response of the city was univer- day. It will be a long time, too, before| with the shipments, It was feared that |the roof. Linley put up a desperate re- side of the Oceana, and she sunk five sal, ‘There were flags flying at haif the hall of the Art Students’ League at| some of the more irresponsible among|#stance and was still battling with t hours later whan Cues, were, estemnel- mast on practically all the large office | No, West Fifty-seventh street will| the strikers might make trouble. h when Detectives, Megowsn . ing Leivteeeeeae ue sersened, yeenet buildings, on the municipal bulldings, | house such a lot of loosened locks, When the switching engine puffed into | mrect and’ Second avenue, heard of the beetle as bina. * Psy rath va ‘and upon the craft in the city’s waters.” sir, Loumayho is a teacher of drawing|the mill yard over the spur track, a] trouble and went to Quaine's awsistance, curred at 4.30 A. M, It was unusual Bells were tolled and in innumerable !i, one of the Brooklyn schools and he|STeat crowd of strikers and towns peo-| It was necessary to club Linley into Near and Seaman ase, CaesinOT 6 offices all work ceased and there Was sivas at No, 6 St. James place, He had|Ple Nad gathered about the mill gates| submission. He was taken to the One| 30,000 Sons of Erin In Spec-| cou G Geevite cutie ae allence. The only similar moments the) 1 ties tor the Fakirs' Show, It|®¥aiting developments. The officers | Hundred and Fourth street station and , bated iilalen onouerea’ iliac elicike city has ever known were on the after. |*ent @ picture for the Fakirs’ Show. It) wor out in force, and detachments of lar Trib Ireland’s fi dent MeKiniey was buried, |WA8 one of the most impressioniatic| them were scattered along the railroad |The police refuse to divulge where} tacular Tribute to Ireland’s {passengers were asleep in thelr berths, oar Presiden: the flues on the elty'a|things ever seen on canvas, ‘The hang-| track mie they recovered the jewelry, but expect When they dashed out of their cabins some cases the . k to make further arrests in the « Dy Rai on feeling the #hock of the collision ~ ing committee decided {t would hardly| The work of taking the cars out of 4 “4 atron Saint. ‘bulldti were half-masted from early | y or Miller, they say, Is a member ahane: ‘in other cases they were do for the exhibit, the yard of the wool combing com- notorious Car Barn gang, which ba oi ante He Fast Med the G@rawn down from the staff Hoadisuas ot | TREY. HAD NOTICED HIS FLOW. plant mee neem pied isnot c Ninety-#ixth street and me ; ‘ _. |tower decks ware.awaah in 6 tow mo- $ o'clock, and there remained during ING LOCKS. ence, and the train had gone i i t Im customary to say of each St.lienty, ‘The passengers trying to i up the track when, suddenly a crowd of as held On a charge of as- | pa trio) y parade th a interval of burial. ag| Stil out of friendship for a strug: NEL oe dtrikwa “aurreuhded: a conery | Madly: bn y while De Lucca's Fatale fe mein i tat It is Digger) make thelr way to the upper decks, 8T, PATRICK PARADE HALTS AS | oie artist, the committee though: out alot half a dozen officers, wounds were ed and he was sent nile ate sales bid t men OF athe au dressed i ths Fr night attire, had to MAINE SINKS TO AAS way by which he might come in. When| Immediately clubs were wielded on Peay ee 6 eA irs aig le PARA so nee wees through water up to thetr The great St. Patrick's Day parade) ne arrived with the picture Mr. Lou-| both es, and the strikers began bee er ore imp e turns 5 atreet and Fifth avenue when the] couig hardly be otherwise. ‘The wind | cers, who were severely cut and bruised. | ang anothers aud Two More, Hat | as there nse oronrd | BORORe, sesW pi ip linly: 2 ped eed solemn tolling of the bells in St. Pat-|snrieked as he went up the stairs. The predicament of the small band|” 3 as that which asse ed a long Fifth pial a aes ae en the Rian riok’s Cathedral announced the hour) Ty was decided that Mr. Loumayho| of officers was een at once and rein- ‘They Didn't Tote Gaynor, avenue for’ five miles, forming two|esenee, Ofteers arew thelr revo Gere) Males DAMRAE, ene > Lonce| might qualify if he woukd sacrifice his|forcements were sent to thelr assty-| q, p, MeLoushlin was delegated to-|olid nes of humanity thr which | ea NS dames ‘he Saneata By sen -4 the paraders were halted an hair, The decision was not made known | tance. It was then that stots were|/gay to take the Mayor uptown in a| the column moved | five a oe Pe 3 a! ' 5 before they could be forced to permit motionless for the impressive to him, but it was decided that he | fired, e persons concealed behind the} taxicab to review the St. Patrick's Day| In fact the erowda were xo ° ve ease! minutes, |... |snould go through the tmmolation be- opening fire upon the ofMt-|parade, Me telephoned to the Astor skerhgem ayea oe “ i i une ae penseogers, f9 tang 10e: SEM ‘And the bells began their s!OWlrore he was aware of it. When he | returned the fire jal-| House for a cyb and a fow utes | ae eooee cout atract cnt | By thie time the exeltoment haa be- rhythm, thelr. sound accentuated the|reached the rooms of tie League at assailants were under later, as he stood waiting at the curh |*Venue between Forty-second street and ‘sams a iatenea as of the quiet which had go suddenly come upon tnoon he was inet by @ committee of | cover. in front of his Park Row office a taxi- | tie Plaza that the big force of mounted | SOG #6 Males Ree one the city. Then there came the tolling | giris, ‘Nhey were the Misses Levy, |GOV, FOSS ASKED TO ORDER OUT |cab painted deep orange guour the body | and traffic police had difficulty in leep- | caypiea to the boats. of other bells and from the rivers ms Ormsby and Farrelly. All wore masks, TROOPS. drove up. ing Tifth avenue open, The side streets | “phe first boat lowered was swamped sound of whistles being blown—for the | Mr, Loumayho w omed inside.) Hiring the exchange of shots one| “Take It away,” he at “TL be | below Fifty-ninth were so thronged with | and the passengers thrown into the river craft had no other way, save the }Confronting him there were about seV- |) if) eo ged the face of uh officer, (Setting another of a more decent color." | Pergons anxious to reach a point noar| water, but they were all picked up. lowering of thelr colors, to indicate thelr /enty-five members, each wearing a a Wmcee eae dilantiy, Barareh A message was sent to another taxi-/the reviewing stand chat the various | phe second boat was Juat sinking when participation in the ceremony. cowl, The scene was solemn and Im. |APONEr Onc’ wee allot, and a third | Ca? agency. |bodies taking part in the parade were | q jifeboat from shore reached tt, Ghurehes throughout the city respond- | pressive. cmccr hed a hote shot thrauxn hie hat,|. Another orange-hued cab Jed | hampered in their progress to the places | Lireboate were a! nt out from 4 with solemn tolling, and In many of |’ ‘Then things happened in abundance, | @™Ctr policeman had hit head pitt |Stourd the green traMe signal stand- designated for their rendezvous. On this | shore in reply to algnale of distress, plac” dees struggling to a Ate} Ropes were |B | so Mare ai tats i fe. pne 1 to the chauffeur and persuaded him to| A most imposing fewture of the great TO THE RESCUE. PART OF BODY IN RIVER, | »rougnt out, and at the sight of them and a, bri Bane 1a Ae nee oe 8D | ee outpouring of wons of tn en Isle] One of the cross Channel mail J a lL he became frantic. He kicked and |Mcer’s neck re im helpless for) A third message, sent farther uptown,| was the trioute pald to. the parture stearaars running between Plsppe and 4 he | New Haven saw of dl Three Gold Rings on Right Hand howled the more, But to no avail. In| Print wan cualledin short time | foUsHt a yellow and — black-striped forever from the es of inan of the x a trice Mr, Loumayho was bound to i leads haba ‘ taxi, It was Intercepted above the pulk of old battleship Maine, At the | tre## &nd immediately hove to and Only Clue to Identity, |che chatr hand and foot, and a sepul- ond t! slonted bridge entrance and sent whence it Sour of 3 o'clock, when the M wae | lowered her boats, of which many of The upper part of the body of a man | cara! voice was heard ahd rou bahay sunk In the Atlantic off the Cuhmn , th@ passengers were taken off. It wax who had apparently been a long time Let the barber advance,” St sald, pdm I tke at two mili was| it Was understood when Mr, Me- coast the parade had just got xtraight. | during this Waneier that one of the dead was found {n the Hudson of One |TONSORIAL BLACKSMITH CLIPS|fattivel us dos, Fons srom thes Laughlin left that he was going to eal! ened out and the frst crashing of | #mall boats was reported to have cap- Hundred and Fifty-third street this HIS LONG HAIR Arie in person upon a friend who has 4 ca’ mantial music had echoed up and down | ##e4 4 afternoon, near the float of the Cob- ; ‘ t Phe eHationes Painted @ hright emerald green 1 Fifth avenue, drowned eh ORS web Yacht Club, About it were the rem-| Came along then one Sabbatino, ane Ae aby ‘ added Mr, McLaughlin, “if 1) ‘The bark Pisague after the crash got nants of a blue serge coat tonaorlal blacksmith from ported Gul By Ambien Fe t get that, we'll walk.” PARADES AND: SPECTATORS underway with moat of her headgear There wore three gold rings on the |nue, In his hand he held a pair of! yang RRR, aeeenNares 'BUT| carried away. She reached Dover in a ‘ lrequest was not acted upon right hand, The pol.ce were unable to loippers, At the sight of this weapon | quest was na ane {bie At @ signal from Grand Marshal] sinking condition, attended by several rl 7 o entity It developed that the Sheriff of Wo! inking h y eral find any fa ther cives to the Indentity |r ‘topture groans and shrieks burst! ceptor Me pied a: pee opt yerter- HERMIT HASLETT INSANE, Frank J, Hartin the music ceased, The | tugs. of the dead m: . anew from the victim in the chair.!gay asking that one of the Worcester|Commission Reporte to Court in Pe columns halted, Colors were —— FIRE FIGHTERS INJURED. Sabbatino went on the job at once, \compantes of the State militia be sent eaakire Wi Plot lowered, soldiers stood at attention and] ag any REPORTED LOST clippers ran over, or) to Barre. The company did not start, as| prope, Sa 6 eae ivillans bared thelr hy ‘The bells io ron Nate the top mat that had for | Mt Walsii of tie Governor's maf], Vormer Supreme Court Justice Dickey tn St. Patrick's Cathedral began to toll IN THE WRECK OF AN which caused a los SDOUE | so many years been the object of such| reached the town during the afternoon) (°° Fanig ri “land the cadence of thelr molody pene AN OCEAN $25,000 broke in the plant of the solicitude and affcction, The operation | a found conditions almost normal, McDermott, the committee appointed | trating far up and down the avenue ITAL E. LINER. Marfell Chocolate and Cocoa Company |qiq pot take long, Then Mr, Loumayho| Gov. Foss states that unti! the Sheriff | determine the sanity of Samuel B. Has) gave notice to the tens of thousands of | at Nos, and 237 New York avenue, |\way released and was told that he had avd the police exhaust thelr authority | lett, the Brooklyn “miionaire hermit.” | Syectators tat a beautiful and solemn | CEUTA, Morocco, Marah 16,—A fish- Jersey City this afternoon. qualified. in swearing In epecia! officers, he will] to-day reported to Judge Fawcett in nate factor in @ war | {6 boat reports that an Itallan trans- Three firemen were Injured by being |NIhy Pr a not call on the militia, Brooklyn (hat the aged man was in ‘ ; : atlantic Vessel has been wrecked off ing | “For what?” he asked, waged by the United States was being awent from a fire excape on the rear of} oe te ne was told, and| —_————— The proceedings insuituied as a r paid at the moment more than a thou-| M@ cast of Almanga on the African the third floar of the buildi Atl ; | a, si Ae ‘chews y ris a Com | of former Senator Gardner endeavo 2 208 F “ side of the Straits of Gibralter. The Chelst Hospital it was said they will|ten he was informed that his picture Resi, cen! pouth, American au 1 pone to get powsession of the eatactt miles away, Aisemmen ancare a nashan cf the bly recover. might be placed before admiring e: ea hy Tasca | $5,888, the commissioners each r five minutes the movements of! steamers boats which put off from the Ove hundred employees, many of th all through the show, which will last “a ne $9 and the remainder being distributed weeeregeend veasel capsized an@ that the ocoupants Girls, had left before the blaze started. | {rom April § to April 12 among attorneys and allenise, ued on Secon@ Page) were drowned, soil oo ~ (Cent! s ne 10 0 PAGES. _PRIOE ONE. ‘CENT. GIRL BANK MESSENGER S HELD UPON BOWERY IVTRAP SET BY POL Detectives in Disguise, on Watch for Bandits, Close In Quickly as Three: Highwaymen Grab Handbag » from Cashier. SHOTS FIRED IN CHASE BEFORE MEN ARE CAUGHT. Police Believe Gang the One That Attacked Irving Beckerman Re- - cently Near Same Place. After an attack on a girl bank messenger to-day at the Germania Bank, at the Bowery and Spring street, four men were’ arrested by. a. score of detectives who had heen watching for two weeks to catch the members of a robber gang-which:had been hanging about the bank aTong'lime. The police Believe they have in custody the men sak fy tacked Irving Beckerman, beat him insensible and robbed him in the middle of the afternoon at the Bowery and Great Jones street about a month ago. The arrests were made after a running battle to the acccsniiaal of barking revolvers and the screams and shouts of a constantly increas- ing crowd such as only the east side of New York City can turn out when anything dramatic is going on. The streets were clogged for hours after the arrests, day to drav $98 for her firm. MS WSR =: SSSERE 10 AVOID GOING lor the door, tecking 1 tes. heh BREE ‘9 BACK TO SING SING {bag. As she walked down the ot | the bank she put the ha fn the . John F. Hoods Had Broken His Parole and Detectives big gray flat muff she was carrying. She left the Spring etreet curd and — Were on His Heels. Ella C. Nichol ts cashier of the cor. ‘ering and Supply Company of No. #8 West street. She went to the banit to stood waiting for a crosstown car to A young man ran up behind her, hooked one arm about her threat, reached Into ti muff and dragged eut the hand bag. Miss Nichol had \time — for just one scream before her breath was cut off. She t a tall, gthiett? blonde, and she struck vigorously at the fellow and tried to catch hold of fis coat, Two other men seized her arma, broke her grip on the thief and swung her roughly toward the curb, Than they turned and ran through Spring street. At the girl's first ery of fright 4 was a quick closing in of Marbig tectives who were disguised cart peddlers (with carts), street Fives ers, street railway laborers and Leia Bowery beggars, They had veen watehe: ing the bank for two weeks. H. 8. Breslauer, cashter of » BleeeBer street tailoring establishment, was @t- tacked on the steps of the bank the first week of March, He droke away from the highwaymen and wee ‘week into the bank, As he w out the John F. Hoods, a paroled Sing Sing convict, shot and killed himself in his room at a lodging house at No, 161 West Thirty-fourth street this afternoon, He had brpken the terme of his parole and State Detect! kaon of the Sing Sing Prison staff and H. B. Rodgers, parole agent of the Prison Assoctation, were in the house, looking for him to arrest him and take him back to Sing Sing. ‘The Prison Association had found em- ployment for Hoods when he was pa- roled Oct, 13 last, He had been sent to Sing Sing on an indefinite sentence in October of 1910 for the embezaiement of $105, He lvtt his latest employer two weeks ago without an explanation and | #econd time, under guard => & special | failed to report after that to the parole | Policeman, # man yelled from out of the — oMficers, The police had several com- | crowd: plaints against him for swindling hotels, | “We will you yet. Don't wou!’ | | among them the York, the Imperial and] Other patrons of the bank complained — | the Grand, of being threatened and When Jackson and Schafer went over to Police |the front door they asked the maid| ters and asked for help. Cor where Hoods was. She told them he could be found in the hallroom on the sixtlt floor, Hoods was on the stalrs. He looked over the bantaters and rec- ognized Jackson, whom he had seen at the prison, He ran swiftly up the siairs to the sixth floor, looked {nto the 100m of his sister-in-law, Mrs, LilllanDowning. ‘pney're after me," yelled but they’ll never get m ‘A moment later @ shot sounded, When Jackson and Rodgers rushed into his oom they found him on the floor dead, with @ bullet hole in his right temple and @ revolver in his hand, Rodgers entered | 5 selected by Lieut. McKenna, bs h the danke They d by Lieuts, Reilly. and. Hallinan, and they aroused the angry jealousy of all profersional peddlers and beggare the Bowery by their exemption tek police interferance, DETE.TIVES TAKE UP Ci AFTER ROBBERS, Tho chase was hot. Detective Retity was nearest to Miss Nichols whem screamed. He headgtt for the man had her handbag. With the two ers who had helped him break. from the isl this meg ran. te No. |¢! Spring street, The and men stopped at the door ang trip Reilly as he plunged were arrested later by ot) tives. a ‘The chase led-throwg®> the | 4 NeW, FLORAL & ign today. ‘The ee in, yA Lown district puroRium FRA BAIR 8 BA NOON

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