The evening world. Newspaper, April 24, 1912, Page 3

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TAGE CHARGE HEATTADED WEE “@lubman and Mrs» Beach “Closely Guarded on Leav- sone ing Kaiser Wilhelm Il. ' Former Mrs. Havemeyer Smokes Cigarette While Both Refuse Interviews, r ‘ « TALK OF AIKEN. Frederick O. Beach and Mrs. Beach in New York early to-day @bdara the steamship Kalser Wilhelm Il. of the North German Lioyd. The Beaches boarded the ship at Cherbouri oBhey,.Were met at Hoboten by thre » who refused to give their names Gapd who, had a large touring car in waiting. { pBecause of the large amount of thelr wameege—six huge trunks and a number of ‘smaller pleces—it took the Beaches considerable ume to get through the cvstoms. Mrs. Beach wore a purple @siG A heavy black vell made it im- (wetible to seo her face. Mr. Beach interposed every time an effort wax made to address his wife, Ho was asked if he had anything to say re- | warding his case and whether he were going at once to Aiken, 8. C., where a * warrant charging him with having at- tacked Mrs, Beach Feb. 2% last, awaits him, "I have absolutely nothing to say,” fepited Beach. “After consulting with my attorney I might make a statement, but it ts doutbful.” “Are you’ going to Aiken?" he was ed, ‘Why should I go to Aiken?" he re- It Was explained he was ~ante’ by ‘the Alken authorities. ‘7 -"£ gon't know what I am going to * wae Beach's final reply. o YY GUARDED AGAINST ALL INTERVIEWERS. During the rest of the time on the ‘pier, while the custom officers were ex- Sm his baggege, he and his wife . Redgef about by their three = who kept al questioners at & > @jatance. When they were cleared the Beaches, surrounded by their bodyguard, walked raplaty to the waiting automo fhe and set off at high speed for & New York. Heretofore they have Kade ate Deadquarters at the Hotel te Attempts to get a statement from Mr. Beach before left the Kaiser had been as unavailing as attempts on the pler. The Beaches were found in suite No. 29, on the promenade deck. ‘was preparing to shave and Mrs. ch was sitting on the edge of a berth cigarette. $y"E have nothing to say,” sald Beach. E-wish to be informed of the situation ty Sidlisha Dyer, clubman and sportsman ‘anda close friend of Beach, was aboard the ship. He said: ( I can't sbelieve this stuff at all, I have known Fred a for years know that the B hea are a happy couple. Beach toi me bimsei that he Pesilen't understand why this charge Hd be made. In my opinion Sourhern fudice is back of it ail, and this, goupled with the desire of a fow detec- tives to make a reputation, explains the ‘TTACK ON MRS. BEACH A SO- ts, CIETY SENSATION. The attack on Mrs, Beach was the society sensation of the late winter, The handsome former Mrs. Carley Have- seized in front of the et home and gashed in the throat with 4 sharp weapon, The affair ‘aused tremendous excitement. ‘The first Tetory was that a negro assaulted Mrs. SBegeh. Mr. Beach safd that he ran from “the house to his wife's reseue when he rd her screams, As the weeks went on and nothing definite seemed to be established !n con- Enewtion with the case, talk began to con- $nect Mr. Beach with it. On April § last, lafter Mrs. Beach had recovered and she land Mr. Beach had returned North and ed for Europe, a warrant was issued joa the aM@davit of M. 8, Baughn, an Tangueta, Ga, detective, accusing Mr. h of the attack. + On the same day it was asserted that ine county prosecutor was holding, as ‘an important plece of evide: &@ certain fe with a Jewelled handle, ‘®. @. Henderson, an attorney for Mr; “Beach in Alken, received on April 18 « cable message from Mr. Beach declaring ‘that he would return to Aiken at once, ‘asking that every effort be made to * nasten the trial. “TE ghall fight the cases to the last was ‘ @ich,” declared R. L. Gunther, the county tor at Afken. “If Mr. Beach to trial I propose to go to ee of thie matter, hurt whom may.” Bee Fuller of the New York law @rm of Nicoll, Anable & Lindsay, who went to Afken , Beach's dehalt, {a eald to have returned ¢o the city, ‘hat the convict who escaped was 8 Very civil sort of fellow?" “Bes, air. peren, woee tion Jed he lett ing me’ xcuse e ue ‘wah taking.” aa. ' ca ; ; { wher THE EVENING WORLD, K Home From Europe With Wife to Face BEACH CONES BE Charge of Assaulting Her at Aiken SHIP RECOVERING BODIES WON'T RETURN FOR 3 DAYS White Star Line Sends Another Ves- sel to Relieve the Mackay-Bennett at Scene of Disaster. In response to a multitude of queries that were pouring into the White Star Une offices to-day concerning the cable- laying steamer Mackay-Bennett it was @nnounced that the vessel would not return to Halifax with the bodies it had recovered from the sea until Saturday or later, No additional Mats of bodies recov- ered were received to-day, but there was a message that the cable-laying steamer Minta would meet and relieve the Mackay-Bennett to-day. Tho Minia left Halifax with 150 coffins aboard, with instructifns to cruise about in the vicin- Ity of the Titanic disaster until all of the coffins were filled, The Mackay- Bennett carried 100 coffins and went out | with similar Instructions, ' Tho last report from the Mackay- Bennett boat stated that she had re- covered seventy-seven bodies, forty-four of which had been identified, This re-| port was wirelessed via another vessel | and Cape Race. Since then the cable-| laying steamer has not succeeded in forwarding a wireless report. The Minia has been heard from and gave her posl- tlon, from which it is figured tha: she will run up to the Mackay-Bennett to- day. | HALIFAX 18 24 HOURS’ RIOR BROM BOSTON. i For the benefit of those who desire to| meet the Mackay-Bennett in Halifax 1t| is announced that Hallfax 1s twenty- four hours from Boston by express, with | two trains out a day, one at 8 o'clock in the morning and one at 8 o'clock a night. Any one starting to-day or to- night would arrive in Halifax in ample time, | ‘The White Star Line will not pay the | fare of relatives of the lost to Halsifax. Many requests of this character were Roebling, W. P. Bowman and a Mr. Rothschild. P, A. B, Widener of Pi delphia recetved a telegram from ence H. Mackay which establishes that one of the recovered bodies is undoubt- edly that of his son, George D, Wide- ner. He at once sent Capt. Chase, com- mander of the Widener steam yacht, George D. Widener Jr. and George W. Elkins, @ brother-in-law of George D. Widener, to Halifax to bring the body to Philadelphia for burial, V. G, Mitchell, assistant manager of the White Star Ine in Montreal, has ar- rived in Halifax to assist in Identifying the dead, and Howard Kelley, vic: ent of the Grand Trunk Railway, rived from Montread to see if the body of President Charles M, Hayes can be found among the bodies on the Mackay-Bennett. THE DEAD WHO HAVE BEEN POSITIVELY IDENTIFIED. FIRST CLASS PASSENGERS—W. D. Douglas, Ramon Artagaveytia, Fred Sutton and A, M. Holverson (sent by wireless as A. J, Holverson). SECOND CLASS PASSENGERS—Louts M, Hoffman, John H. Chapman (sent by 88 as Jobn A, Chapman), W. Cor- 2s_as W. Carbines), Harbeck, John Gall (sent by wire- as J. 8, GID, Nicolas Nasser (sent by wireless as N. &. Coles Ra » Mra, Mary Mack, Reginald Hele (sent by wireless as Reg Hale). 8 TE ERAGE PASSENGERS—Mary Mongan or Mangon (sent by wireless as Mary Mantgan), James Farrell, James 3 Henry D. Hansen, Mauritz Dahl wireless as Mauretz Adah!), Inski, Earnest P, Tomlin, Josef ovie (sent by wireless as Yosipe houl), Malkolm Johnnson (sent by Wireless as Malcolm Jonnson), Nesite Williams (sent by wireless as Leslie Williams), The following names of Identified dead (as recetved by wireless) are not on the passenger Ilsts of the steamship company turned down to-day. The line will do| W. Marriott, George Rosenshire, Rn. a tn ald Ashe, Nihilschedid, R. Batt, A. Plat dive dng ooeed ag Oy jHayter, Jerry Morrose and Steward Vincent Astor has been in constant) © communication with the line in an effort! to get news of the recovery of his| a body. Capt. Roberts, skipper Astor yacht, is now in Hallfax awaiting the return of the Mackay-Ber- nett. Vincent Astor will not go to Hal- | ifax unless he receives assurances that | the body of Col. Astor has been recov- ered, nor {a it true that the Astor yacht Noma is on her way to Halifax, The position of the Mackay-Bennett ‘se more than 600 les from Hall or about @ three di sall for a ve: of her speed. Her wireless radius is only about @ third of the distance and the only way @he can get reports ashore is by having them relayed by other ships. Mourners are already gathering in large numbers in Halifax, awaiting the mber Seventy-s!x. return of the Mackay-Bennett. Many persons have engaged hotel ac- commodations jn Halifax -by mail. Among those due to-day are K. G. : ws ML tae Ue ile- | WE x | DNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1913, MAYOR'SFUND DID NOTSAVE BAG |DROWNED ON WAY FOR SUFFERERS FROM SINKING SHIP,’ TO MEET DAUGHTER NEARS $100,000; SAYS GOLDENBERG Nearly $3,000 Added To-day|Merchant Explains He Got to Sum for Relief of Grip ‘With. Toilet Articles Titanic Vivtims, from Carpathia’s Barber. —_—— That the Mra, Mary Mock of South. ampton, whose body was reported by the Mackay-Bennett as being amon: the identified, ie Mrs. Mary Mack assorted yesterday by her daughter, Mra. Agnes Haran of Fifty-first street, this city. week: Mother buried my ind, and after much My part she consented to Gemmet 1, Goldenters, one ‘ot the saloon passengers who escaped death on the Titanic, denied to-day that he had saved his luggage from the eiakin, ship, ae had been reported. Mr. Gokl- enburg is head of the importing firm of GoMenverg Bros. & Co, at No. 100 Broadway. He lives in Paris and trav- tle to this city several times a year. When he landed with his wife from the Carpathia he had ree canvas beg PITTSBURG GIVES $1,314. Highest Grade Suits Reduced 3 75 Churches, Clubs and Loddges Are All Represented in the List. ELA a PRS "AmD, LFLO7 BE ACE FRIENDS OF TITANIC’S VICTIMS IN HALIFAX TO IDENTIFY DEAD. (Special to The Bvening World.) HALIFAX, N. 8.—April 4.—Frienés of those who were tost in the Titanic dis- aster began to arrive here to-day to, walt the arrival of the cableship Maockay-Bennett, with the dead. Among the New Yorkers are Capt. Roberts, rep- resenting the family of Col. John J. Astor, and 6. H. Wallach, representing the family of Henry B. Harris, the the- atrical manager. While nothing has been heard to lead to the belief that either Col. Astor’s or Mr. Harris’ bodies was recovered, hopes are entertained that they are among the unidentified dead, not identified because thelr clothing contained no paper or marks, “ Sentinal ae, ‘NEARER MY GOD TO THEE’ SUNG BY ALL AT TITANIC REQUIEM MASS IN PARIS PARIS, April 24.—Myron T. Herrick, United States Ambassador to France; Sir Francis Bertie, the British Ambas- sador, and several resentatives of the French Government with a large number of prominent personages at- tended to-day a special requiem mass which was celebrated at the Madeleine for the victims of the Titanic disustet. The ceremo of the French Red Cross Society, ‘There was a touching scene as tho entire congregation Joined in the sing- ing of “Near God, to Thee.” —_—_———__ CONFIDENT TITANIC DIDN'T HIT ROCKS. WASHINGTON, April %.—With the Virgin rocks fully 20 miles north of where the Titanic foundered, navy hydrographers express the opinion {t 1g exceedingly improbable that the liner #truck those or any other seml-sub- merged rocks. While no soundings have ever been made In the {mmediate vicinity of the position where the Titanic went down, }they explain that soundings further northward show @ sieady decline of the sea bottom toward the ship's posi- tion. It ts declared at the Hydrographic Of- fice that as the water where the Titanle struck 1s approximately two miles deep it would take a formation with an enor- | mous base to bring the apex anywhere near the surface, and soundings at # ton-knot distance would show a rise in the ocean's bottom, The nearest sound- ings made south of the point where the disaster occurred are sixty miles away |and these show 2,100 fathoms, | Nothing ts known of how the Naronte | met her fate in 1892, but the records say she might have struck an !ceberg, been lw ed in a field of tce, or had an ex. | ploston, but atl the charts reveal is that | two of her boats were found on Mareh 4, 188, at latitude 42 north and longitude & west. In.the “first row” for style and they’ve al-| ways been there.| You're in good com- pany when you wear a Young Hat. Young Derbies and Soft Hats, $3 and $4 y was under the auspices | 7: Nearly $3,000 was added to noon to-| of Giatsrene, shape, about three feet a° day to Mayor Gaynor's reiief fund for|4ne by two foet deep. Annoyed by the a erere from the Titanic disaster, |"ePOrte fhat he fad gaved the only Real $20-$25 Values % the sufferera Pleca of baggage from the Titanio, Mr. | Many of the contributions came frgm | Goldenberg. mave out. the foflowing To-Morrow, Thursd churches, lodges and clubs. Some came evn t vat ‘ » ay @ = Titanto . . } from distant hele Se ioe tie. ead dressed in my pajamas, coat, tesantts, A sale 0 with extraordinary 1 Mayor Willitm A. Magee for the people} drensing-gown and rain coat, Alip- good values that we would advise early ; of Pittsburgh. pers (not shoes.) I had time to take ing. An offering that comes most 4 ‘The following subscriptions were res] ‘Wo rugs with me, for my wife and mre ny ing t - 4 prion Se ay elt, On Feaching the Car- seasonably and that brings you strictly q : 8 1 was told the dari high-class, the-minute garments An Amertean some tollet articles and othe: things t pr idrealousty I ALL. ” So to sell, 1, therefore, made the neces- OF G price te Ow. Murrell, Alte, Indlanapo! eary purchases of toothbrushes and B, Weneeriia nay other toilet articles, includtny: « One Style Pictured ‘ Mra. J. Bookman...... i and collars for my wife and my Favorite models, choicest materials, Pi “A Drop tn the Bucket™.....c006 pair of lowest shades, are economically com- 2 Rev, W. G. Cragg, for First them into im ti bined to mect the need of every woman, vo pi giana bo of Rieh- and he wold mo a and every model is a-sparkle with latest j LN. Y¥... fas kith On reach: i ii George A. Helm ing New York I put all of the r style one trimming thoughts—smartly 4 iimone & Mager 00} maining things Into th 4 thin braided jackets, handsomely peau de } Cash". .....++ 6.00] {4 the bag that was mentioned In the cygne lined, in the favorite shades. : Joseph Barondess 10.00) * ort net | L Hitler, & Son..... 5% Alterations FREE 4 a Taube . Virginia Sawehen rey \ with all SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 4 Beer, Sondheimer & Co. 50.00 wers T had no thought Collection of German Evangelical of saving any of my luggage at such | eae oi Geen, 120,00] ® moment and actually did not save | any. recttae aatier © an BAMUBDL L, GOLDENBERG, 1 a African (Zion) Methodist Ep Mr. Goldenberg refused to tell | his ‘ eee Chatel of City New York 10.90) 2t0ry of the disaster or hows he mane a Edith Vall Taylor aged to escape from the Tifanic, ex- | 2 Ol cept to may hia wife preceded him in 2 na Sepa COU ign leaving the ship. Whether he went in| 14 and 16 West 14th Street—New York i the same boat with her he would not say. He declared he had been annoyed by the publicity attending: his rescue at aca. 400 and 462 Fulton Street—Brooklyn Mrs. Caroline B. Chamter: 648-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J. Ingomar Goldsmith & C L. Unterberg & Co Maud Elise Webber. = Julla Steindt ...... 6,00. William A, Brockhurs! eee %.00 ‘Clan MacDonald No. 33, Order Scottish Clans, Brooklyn. 69.00 Sates Lawrence. By} wid T. Leahy. . i Isaac Cohen 10,00 Quality Apparel Moderately Priced Adeline P, Brown and Mrs. Alien D, Brown. . 2 Wess 10.00 200,00 ir orn 100,00 National Athletic Ci fy tlon Centre No. 12. 1,00 Parsons Trading Compan: Miss Nellie Bookman... E. dM. 8, Briedrich BF. Neidiinger Bros.... Cloak, Suit & Fur Co., ‘Trolley Employees GC. & 8, 254 th Mra. V. E,W ; 6.00 David 8. Hays 10.40 and Ave., Between 16%2 and 17 . Caroline and Ruth A 1.00 256 Edith A. B y0.00 Blind Men's Improvement Club of New York Clty....cs.c0+ 10,00 © e H. Wilson Taylor jr, Seymou W. Bly, Ledile Berry and Re- 6, { delta Vall Taylors 805 Faith 8. Nichols a Mayor of Ch Lina D. Owsley... Heceph ak ert Tailored T. A, Jackson . Suits Hand Made cn J. fford Chase. N Hand Made Anonymous ~ —_ Columbia Lode A Canadian Amerie F. Viseont! . Check from people nt through Mayor William A, Ma- M. J KE. (cash) Total this morning...... Previously acknowledged, Total to date Weigh and Measure then test potency. It goes twice as far by double strength. | e WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Uniformly Excellent. Taffeta Silk, White Serge, Cheviots, Diagonals, < Bediord Cords 1,200 of our finest tailor- ed suits to be sacrificed at this price; the lowest was $25.00; all regular stock. Every one sold at a loss. weather is responsible. IF YOU NEED A SPRING SUIT YOU CANNOT FIND IN THE ENTIRE CITY GARMENTS OF THIS CHARACTER AT DOUBLE THESE PRICES. No Charge for Alterations. EE CS White Rose Coffee, Pound Tins, 35¢ Poor have— exclusively —the LINOCORD BUTTONHOLES --they'’re easier-to-button— they don't tear out. Geo. P. Ide & Makers, Troy, N. Ys NO KATA CHAKGE Wow IT, 90, Faron va VJ 1880 Broadway Broadway S40 Broadwa aT Ni * bey Brooklyn Store, 319% Brnedway bey ti el Opposite City Halt, Node j his cece cnet bncitintap PCn anpnrcnraitna nat ae ; ive oy rectianments fot Tun World werican ‘Wesscager Se wit :

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