The evening world. Newspaper, March 25, 1912, Page 1

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POLICE GUARD JUDGE IN FEAR OF POISONER R “PRICE ONE r) Conrriant, 1912. by ENT. (The New York Wertd). The Press Publishing NEW YORK, MONDAY, “MAROR 25, PARIS BANDITS SHOOT IN TWO DARING HOLD-UPS; ESCAPE WITh ‘Murder Three Men and Wound Two Others, Then Baffle Police by Flight in Auto. FIRE ON PURSUERS.| After Killing Chauffeur They Dash Into Bank and Slay | Cashier and Watchman. PARIS, March 25.—A band of six automobile brigands, belleved to be the same one th1i terrorized many districts in France in February, made its appearance to-day in the neighbor- hood of Paris, killed three persons, wounded tw6 others, robbed a bank of 987000, held up an automobile, kept Pursvers at bay with a fusillade of whots and escaped in a motor car, a Stolen one, which they abandoned fa 4 suburb of the capital. More than fifty detectives are s¢our- {ng the subnrbs in fast automobiles 'n search of the bandits and others are posted at all the railway stations in » but so far no trace of the murderous band has been found. For blood thirstiness and execution to-day's crimes have seldom been paralleled, The police admit they fare without cl ‘The police have descriptions of the four men who murdered and robbed to ay, but they had those descriptions be- fore and they proved worthless. They have an abandoned high powered auto- mobile, stolen by the robbers after they had murdered one of the occupants and wounded another, It does not ald the solution of the crime. ‘The police believe the men were disguised and that in a place of safety they removed the dis- guffe and are now mingling with the boldn ot Public, possibly aiding their bewildered pursuers, HELD UP CHAUFFEUR, KILLED HIM IN CAR, To-day's crimes were duplicates of others with the exception that more vic- tims fell before the deadly fire of the desperadoes. The first report came from the outskirts of the city, Six men took Up @ position at a cross roads leading into the city. A number of automobiles passed them but they) made no move, Finally a high powered car with owner in the rear and chauffeur at the wheel approached at a fast rate, One of the men stepped into the roadway, He waved a handkerchief as a signal. The machine halted. The max in the road look over, then gave a signal, There was & rattle of wutomatic pistois and the ehauffeu: sauk down into the bottom « the car with the top of his head almost blown off, With the first shot the ras in the rear of the car vaulted over th end, ani, pursued by a volles, ran, Ji bullet wound in his ivew the bleedin. form of the into the gutter and jumped into the car, It d peared in tie direction of the city fore onloo sould make a move to atop the murderers, RAID LANK, KILL AND GET AWAY WITH MONEY, The police sent a burrie? warning broadcast and then gc y news of another crime. I ¢ Kiy. Of- felals at Chantilly, site of the great race course, sent word that six men had ei) the branch bank riddled with bullets the watchman who had offer ance, appropriated all of ‘eight and departed unm auto, jour later the ea f abandoned on the ic tly.) andits 4 were missing. Inquiry in the neighbor hood failed to reveal trace of them. The biicands arrived at the racing centre, at 10.90 v'clock, F f the men, armed wiih revolvers, entered the local branca of « & Paris where they shot the cashier and another employee dead and dangerously wound- ed a third man with wo revolver shuis im the back. The four ruMans then selzed a poi'- follo contaliuing $5,000 in notes, f bandit was in the mean Ume s guard at the door of the brak with a loaded carbine, while a sixth sat ready ve of fauaued on Second Page). BANK'S MONEY BRIDE DOCTOR ACCUSES OF STRIPPING HOUSE OF [TS FURNISHINGS: DEEALE LIPMAN SAYS BRIDE LEFT HIM FOUR WALLS ~—ANDBARELY THAT Dr. Lipman, Sorry He Said “Yes” to Proposal, Now Seeks Divorce. Dr. Joseph Lipman of No. 307 East Fiftieth street has brought suit against his wife, Leah, for divorce, He is forty- five years old, Mrs. Lipman is twenty years old. She !s a daughter of Samuel Beluck, No. 707 Colu were married 1910. Dr. Lipm leges that his wife ran around at night with young men, often remaining away all night and sleeping all d He names George J, Hankin, well known to theatrical and Broadway circles, spondent. ‘The Lipmans have a y ld baby, ‘I did everything in my power to make ‘ ppy.” sald Dr, Lipman to- bus avenue, They in as co- day, “ did not seem to appre- ciate my efforts, I gave her costly clothes and furnished a beautiful home, ut it Was no ure, She ran about at nizhe with young mea and pald no at- tention to me when I remo: 1 Two weeks ago tow foamy s Then Lorde od her out of tt * and she went to the home of »ple, taking the baby, Two days during my absence, she went to house 1) wagons and stripped it its furnishings, 1 the walis jeft, ally proposed to me. I first m , As @ physician, I was called ty attend her mother, Mre Lipman would call st my office to get the medicine, One day she said she wish) to Bet ma: tty girl trouble In get Ihave @ you should not tng married, 7 remarked “Well, you wouldn't have me,’ replied "Yes: engaged.” Mrs, L Lewis F. to her husband's charges. not discuss the case beyond ra husband is not telling the tr ee 100 Among ite "HIA, March 3).-tga a rich manufacrires of she 1 would,’ I said, and we were her attorney ers og tas i denial > would Dividew #50 Me ang the gery 1 emp fit been w than ifteen : aiiged from $500 to 92,0, acowrding sty of service. One of the employers sep Deano with the firm fiftty-threo years und four fog forty year, ing het | HUMAN ARSENALS FROM WILD LAND GIVE COP A SCARE Pair From Caucasus Come to Town and Start A-totin’ Their Guns Aroun’ LOSE THEM IN COURT. Lawyer Frees Sol and Mike, but They’re Minus Weapons and Whiskers Now. “Smush bomba wogalush” (phonetic spelling), was all that Magistrate Fres- |chi could get out of Mike Chastashvil jand Sol Taraderai, who were arraigned before him, to-day, charged with the | most tremendous violation of the Sulll- van law since tt was inscribed on the statute books, Patrolman Dobbin, who arrested Sol and Mike on Broadway, declared sol- emnly the two prisoners were the tough- est looking pair of gun toters he had ever seen outside of a moving picture show. They not only carried immense revolvers in open holsters (a brace each), but wore, dangling at thelr ald the most villanous-looking sabres 1 |aginable. Dobbin then held up for the Court's inspection seventy-two pounds of hardware. "How about this? asked the Magis- trate, turning to the prisoners, whereat they both replied in choru: mush bomba wogalush ‘They sald the same thing to me,” said Dobbin hotly, “so I run ‘em dn,” Before he went any further with his inquiry, Magistrate Freschi made @ care- ful study of the prisone: Mike wore a combination form an Arctic explorer's undress, to- gether with a beard of the wind-shift variety, flat and fanlike and seeming! in constant motion, Sol's beard was the conventional design favored by Rus- sian bomb-throwers and capable of ¢on- cealing in its bushy Inclosures at least three bombs, “SMUSH BOMBA WOGALUSH” NEARLY KILLS INTERPRETER. Mike and Sol had @ lawyer, but he was late in arriving at court. His Wondrous pair of clients had worked thelr “Smush bomba wogalush” slogan half a dozen times before the barrist burst in, An interpreter, who arriv be him and who had slightly dislo- cated his jaw in an effort to interpret “Smush bomba wogalush," was almost on the point of swooning when the iavv- yer arrived, Mike and Sol wanted to kiss the tax yer, #0 glad were they to see him, but he fought them off with a savage Rus- lect and then opened his bat- of English on Magistrate Frescht. | He exp ed the two! prisoners were wild) mountaineers culled from the Caucasus in Southern Russia, They had arrived here only a few days ago on their way to one of the beaches to appear in some sort of an ethnological exhibit. When the got thus far in his dis- caurse, Mike and Sol burst out again: mush bomba wogalush!"’ “What 1s the meaning of phrase?” asked Magistrate Freschi, “That means.” sald the lawyer, In a deep, sombre tone, “that they deem-it & distinguished honor to be the guests free land,” reviated stuff,” observed | that * wild mountaineer dialect,” lawyer, ¢ wo about this hardware and * asked the Magis- “Your Honor," explained the lawyer, “wild ay they look, that ts the simp: dress of their mountain villages, The revoivers and sabres are also @ part of | thelr common vestments. It is not safe for thers to go unarmed, Wolves and beare abound at every hand and the | Wildeats of the Caucasus are most pro. | Iific." | CROWD OF THOUSAND FOLLow. ED THEM IN STREET, “Buy the sabres!" protested the ey are very handy for chopping down the wild foree. trees," answered attorney, “and"--= the gli 1 inat'll be about al," tnter- “It Is dpparent these e unfamiliar with our cus- | then there Is something in the 3 an law about concealment of weapons, Officer De admits prisoners Wore thelr noe lew a} and bay > we Ktow wil al $s 0 [men lad! this arm, harge the: erranged by Ung Mike and the lawyve ash bomba fared meekly Ceucapions visited ® barber AeA thelr besinie beautifully | the advice of counsel, = 1912. 18 “PAGES tee wy “PRICE ONE CENT. The Wonder of the Year! This Is the New Panier Skirt ‘ WILL THBY WEAR IT? a “O wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful; and yet again wonder-| and after that out of all whooping’—is modern woman's dress, Yet how charming! Who could ask anything daintler than the modern panier gown as here shown, a creation based on those of the middle-ojghteenti. century? We shall see what we shall see as regards the popularity that it {s to claim, ful, exation of the Propaganda suspended the gene day and to-morres cold which {8 ac ugh and by eatarrh . tort uope to » allow the Po to continue Nein widiences to-morrow. Pontit? Bothered With C “oui gh s Plus, al- (hough i secelved Cardinal Angelo | Pietre anc aigr. Laurenti, decrotary, re able ae 55 RAILROADS REFUSE MORE PAY 10 ENGNEERS , Flatly Turn Down Demands, | and a Vote on Strike Is Now Likely. BOTH SIDES SEEM FIRM. Head of Brotherhood Blames Interstate Commerce Board, for Reducing Freight Rates. A committee representing fifty-five raliroad lines east of Chteag flatly refused the demands of °%,709 en- gincers of these systems for an inctease of pay and the standardization of on all roads. No counter proportion was advanced by the railroad manepzers. They simply informed comspittee representing the engineers thag the roads are unable to pay the increase de- manded. j The committee representing ithe en- Bineers mei « is afternoon at thy Broad- way Central Jfotel to take Betioh on the refusal of the refiroads to conpider the wage increase quostior the ‘The committee of mae Ogoak suibertaed the aa Get tae intiasate tives ty Ss | ace demands Of Jan. 08 ant would awaft a feconsidération of SAYS THE RAILROADS HAVE OROPPED THE MATTER. “While there may he another confer. ence with the railroad managers,” said Warren &. Stone, Grand Chief af the Brotherhood of Locomotive Kngmeers, “I hardly think sv. They have flatly refused to grant our demands and, ap- parently, have dropped the matter “It thelr position ts a y state, namely, that they are unable io pay the | Incgease, and, with the engineers det mined that their demands ve gra and in @ position to enforce the! mands, {t looks like the only Will probably be for the Interstate Com. | merce Commission to quit trimming oft | the profits of the pallroads at ry corner, ‘The Commission has just cut the rate on coal, Tt caused me to wonder what would happen if the engineers re-| fured t> haul coat for a while, engineers are s0 organized In the Eastern District that no more than 2,00 engine drivers are not aMitated with the ‘brotherhood. In case of a strike many of these men would go out with | the brotherhood and the rest would be | of no service the railroad in the movement of traina. “Since the rafiroads have flatty re- fused your demands and the engineers, as you may, are in poxition to enforce |those demands, what !s to be the out- come? Mr. Stone was asked. |SAYS THE AGREEMENT CAN BE EASILY ABROGATED. “Well,” he replied, “you know what n agreement with the fail- froads now," Mr. Stone went on can be abrogated by either side thirty days’ notlee, The comittee of gineers now {n session here has no J authority to ¢ a mtrice, They can only re the on of the ratiroads to the members of the Brotherhood who will act on ft, 1 think, by vote, “The Grand Chief has the final say} about a strike and can veto the demand of the n if he sees Mt. It seems to} me a Mar 9 railroads are t ernment from making enough money to| thelr employees wage :acreases made ‘mperative by the increase in the cost of living. Everything that @ rail- buys has one up, while rates have ne down," Members of the engineers’ committee, while disappointed at the standpat po- sition of the railroads, sald they did not think there would be a strike, ‘They te be kept by the Gov-! | pas j ‘ook for future negotiations which wt!!| result In a compromise agreement be- wuse one wide has asked for more than | it expected to Met and the other side has refused concessions tt will eventually vave to grant. WOULD INCREASE EXPENSES $7,553,792 A YEAR. ‘The representatives of th have figured that co grant th ed by the engineers would add per penses of the | of of 18.03 ver cent. ew of the fact that the fifty-five roads of the Fastern District advanced the pay of engineers 19.73 per cent. per ‘sSaesesal 9 Rovod Soen) a . Judge's life. Unknown to Judge Rosalsky, who came to the Criminal Courts” Building to-day, riding as usual in the subway accompanied only by his secretary and a lawyer friend, detectives stationed at the Hendrik Hudson apartments are not only examining every bit of the Judge’s mail but all the food that is sent to the Judge’s apartment. and provisions are taken up in the dumbwaiter detectives stationed by. k Acting Capt. Tunney examine each article of food separately for the | presence of poison, as it fs thought the bomb sender may, ailures, turn to this method of accomplishing his Purpose, ————__—_ SERVICE BOARD A PROVES TWO SUBWAY ROUTES LICE FEAR POISON PLOT 10 KILL JUDGE AND WATGH FS HOME [Detectives Stationed to Examine Food Delivered at Rosalsky’s Home: After Another “Infernal Ma- chine” Is Mailed to House. MORE SIMPLE IN DESIGN, MADE OF NITRO-GLYCERINE. Posted on East Side and Collected Through Grand Central Station Gives Police Small Clue. — Realizing the determined character of Judge Otto A. Rosalsky’S would-be assassin, whose two attempts to blow his victim to death by bombs sent through the mail-have failed, the police to-day are making” ~~ afsperate etforts to block any third attempt that may be made on the Steinway Tunnei Connection | and Seventh Avenue Tubes Receive Favorable Votes, The afternoon approved a route under they used to may at school about an ir. | Mighth avenue easterly to connect with table force striking an tmmovable | the Steinway tunnel at Fifth way Publlé Service Commiasion this for a sub- Forty-second street, from | WENIGE Is D DROPPED. of affairs if the | Captalu of the Fourteenth Capt. Fourteet tional Brooklyn, has been under tion w from charged mand muster Went jenwineer tn th Supply, at No. haven, in the BK, ehu the Sh Fal IrALL mands an Ativer tion. to- hour were atry Has to Res! - Arthur BW of the nth Infantry, York Na+ Guard, with Healavicinen in charges, according to inforr hich reached New York tow Albany, Capt. Wenige with permitting was men to tm- sonate absent members of his com- at the annual of tho regiment ge, In clyil life nspection and is an assistant ent of Water Gas and elty He lives 300 Columbia a Wood- Queens. He was once a teacher Hidle class of St. Matthew's P. rch, Wenige Is @ graduate of eMeld Seientifie School at Yale, 1 River Strike Threatened, 4 RIVER, Mass. March 2.—De- for @ flat Wage rate of 22 cents served upon the Fall Cotton Manufacturers’ Associa- day by the 350 firemen employed in more than ong hundred cotton mills, The ws urers ,are given until avenue, | reason its solution should be allowed te pproved a route for a subway |Fest with the police without any qm. Tt also under Seventh aveny from Forty- street souch inder the [extensions of Seventh avenue and of| Varick stree: to Weat Broadw Theso approvaly will now Ko to the Board of Estimate and the Mayor fo similar approval when they will become legal putes. rmitted to resign | | | i} |JUDGE SAYS. BOMBS MAY {some of the th: Idiseu | cro: | Drive, and immediately suspected tt 4 t ans Before the groceries after two | Just before resuming the bench 4 | Part 5, Court of General Sessions, toway Judge Rosalnky made his only pubile statement since the discovery in @he malin last Wednesday of the second bomb, SULT IN MANY DEA’ Tho Judge refused to theortes on whtch the police ate “Any interview on this subject,’* | mid, “will have to come from Commie: stoner Dougherty, The Com: {9 making & most thorough and Investigation and he is fully to devise ways and means with « to detecting the person of persons. sponalbie for this second attempt. The very character of the crime shows. the | | murderous design of the sender, {does po seem to realise that his tion might <esuit in the death or ous injury of @ number of persons in the course of thelr duty, are i upon to handle the malls, The matter therefore, does not concern me | but the entire community, and for barrassing interference or suggestion oo in close touch with the Judge it was learned to-day that the |poilee, as well us the Judge, are \° tive in thelr oellef that the sender was inspired by the Brandt “Some one with a diseased mind, jably @ paranolac, has fon of the Brandt afta! k jared ‘The Evening World's internal . nd haa appointed himaelt avenger of these fictitious wrongs, rat thought the bombs were sent a po ie criminal with a personal grie Jagainst Judge Rosalsky due to a tence imposed by the Judge in case or other, but it seems all tainty mow that a madman, hs the cunning that goes with such form” of insanity, has constituted himself the avenging power in the cause of Brandt.” SECOND BOMB FOUND BY CLERK bd G IN SUB-STATION, a ae Last Wednesday a clerk in Sud Stas tion H, tn One Hundred and Seconda street, near Amsterdam avenue, & package addressed to Ji Rosalsky at the Hendrik Hudson, Hundred.and Tenth street and Riv yj another bomb, Following Insicugti he notifled the Post-Office inspect and they hurried to the station. Ji Kosalsky was notified and gave sion to turn the package over to D Police Commissioner Dougherty, in charge of the investigation otha bomb. ‘Max. Dougherty was wea

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