The evening world. Newspaper, May 13, 1912, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

“BOTH SIDES OF THE SHIELD” By Maj. ARCHIBALD BUTT, Aide to President Taft NOW RUNNING “ Circulation Books Open to All. PRICE “ONE CENT. Copsriaht. 1912, Os, (The CALLS HIM A DEMAGOGUE AND A DANGEROUS EGOTIST FLASHLIGHT SHONE __DNSNOOZING PAIR 0 Aa Fe “It's All the Time With Him,” Says the Pres- ident in Ohio, "1 Like,” Declares Taft, “aj ye Man to Tell the Truth | Says Hubby’s Electric Lamp Straight.” CAMBRIDGE, 0, May 12--wit:| When They Raided Home. his fighting blood up President Taft | started to<iay on his ten-day ewing! «ry > ’ around Ohio, in which he will travel)! RAME-UP,’ 1,000 miles and make many speeches. Col. Roosevelt will follow him into the State to-morrow. i Mr. Taft's first speeches to-day were somewhat miki, but when he reached this city he made one of the most bitter attacks upon Col. Roose- velt tHat any audience has heard. He held Roosevelt up to ridicule, Dragged From Own Bed by Fire Alarm Ruse.” Mrs, Mary Jamin to-day began a fight before Suprame Court Justice Ford and called him sn intense and danger ous egotist, a flare? and demagogue,|* Jury to prevent her husband, Fred and sugested that there would be|J&Min, @ prosperous Bronx grocer and “ut Uttle hope" for the future of this) Félative of a millionaire family, from nation if Mr. Roosevelt were wafted | taining a divorce. Sec Wd: ‘dkice a chats Mrs. Jamin declares she refused an prophet of old and there w left to do the job Mr ‘the country needs hi: The President's sy Boiled over with att of Col. Roorevelt. “You'd suppose there wasn’t any- body in the country to do this job that Mr. Roosevelt talks about but shouted the Prosident at “It's (‘I ‘fall the ike the no one| Roosevelt said to do, would get m divorce so he could marry “a younger and handgomer woman,” long and| This proposition was made to her sev-_ nd criticism | eral years ago, she aaya, after his re) |turn from a trip to Germany, on which jhe was the guest of his rich kin at Frankfort-on-the-Main, When she refused to grant Jamin his freedom, the wife's attorneys told the jury In the opening statement to-day, a timo with bim.” / | “Suppose you feed that egotism ana {conspiracy was formed to place Mrs, wanity and put hiny in office with ajJamin In an apparently compromising senee of power and a disregard of con- | position so the husband could sue for a atitutional restrictions, it would bejdivorce, An exciting Ume resulted on Gangerous for this country ® | the night of Dec, 17 last at No. 72 Bast PRESIDENT SAYS HE HATES A!One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, FLATTERER. jwhere Mrs, Jamin had an apartment “T hold that that man {s a demogogue | after she left her husband, and a fatterer who comes out and The apartment, both sides assert, was the people he knows it all, { hat entered by “a raiding party," headed flatterer, 1 lke a man to tell the|vy J ho flashed ane trot whe ¢ nd J hate to see a| searchlight and revealed to the gaze of ‘man try to honeyfugle the people by |"his companions’ Mrs, Jamin and Adolph telling them something he don't be-|Langennahn in bed together, 1¢ was tes- lieve. | titted. *Do you think,” he asked, “that Avra-| Henry P. 1. Johnson, a salesman, ham Lincoln, to whom Mr. Roosevelt| who admitted in his testimony that it too often refers and to whom he likes to| was, he Who “told on’ the wife and ‘compare olmeeif and to whom he be: brought about the “raiding party,” says , Jets resemblance than any e I know] Mrs. Jarnin and Lungenhahn were jin the history of this ry, would | sleeping soundly when the electric flash. have acted as he has misrepre- | light diluailnated thelr faces. Johnson @ented me as he has? Roosevelt |and Langenhahn rented a roem from , Bromises the inilien free m| Mrs, Jamin which they occupied toe dowses, Well, then, why wasn't thore | gether. @ millenntum during the seven years he| Mrs. Jamin’s lawyers declare they was in the White Hl will prove Jonson was the first of ATTACKS THE COLONEL IN A|the raid ng. party iia invade the aperls ROOSEVELT TOWN, eee aa ee a chee ree ‘They tell me this is « Roosevelt! ary purted her into Langenhahn's bed, tora,” was the P. ne's opening re-| susi before the ¢ cere ark to a orcwd that met his trata at)’ it te also claimed by tho wife that, xter. 4 1 onder to ¥ out of bed quickly, ‘It Is," yelled a man on the platform. | Johnson st @ oan alarm of fire and hey gay you are nst me," con- | when she sprang up to run from the tinued the Preside: recause T was In| flames he seized her and dragged her favur . ¥e a ity sib a 1) throug the door and on to the bed aa in favor of reciprocity and I was| in the adjoining room, in favor of It because I believed it for Johnson was the firat witness heard. the good of the farmers and every | A pocket flasniight was shown him and other class.” fap he identified !t as the one Janin had t ae Mr. nish that sent-|oarrfed on the night of the raid, the train st to pull out | Presse d of cross-esamination, he ad- p the eald the President | miued he Was not sure it was the to the del inany of ils hearers, | game one, bui that it looked exactly T want to talk to these peop Like It Justice Ford admitted the | 2 "we sell ofttooastutts and agrioulturel fachilght ‘in eviden e over the protest | roduc ‘anada four times what'| of Mrs. Jamin’s couni they sell to us," declared Mr vaft, LE —— after the crowd had walked torwa , surrounded his car again. ‘They Boss FLYNN s T. R. FUND. net ya orn up there, ther valve the Nardiost ¢ Arey | He Put Up $22,700 in the Allegheny bo greatly to the benefit of th “| Campaix pra. wit CHP Chine ip Gond PITTSBURGH, May 12—The Roose- ee einly tMowteal et ots | velt Republican Leakue spent $31,88.15 aoe die ieniy wical in oppowns Me | in the recen mary election campaign ou account of reciprocity when the fact | {PS iiegheny County ty that before T entered into reciprocity | "phig ig shown by the account prepared at all 1 wrote to Theodore Roosevelt |... tne treasurer, John # Weller, to he nd told him ail , ancuments, both {filed to-day in the office of the Clerk Ayays, He commended me most highly | oe tne Cour Of this William "yan for going into the ousiness and approved oo outed $22 2, ft in every way, Now that he finds that : geciprocity is not popular with the farm. Maldon Terkise Bethe, a, Aurhjee endo Bk __ SContinued pn Becone Page.) ow Work Wer ore Wert TAFT RIDIGULES COLONEL, Wife Declares That She Was}! offer of $1,500 from her Busband if she | Peottonine NEW ‘YORK, “MONDAY, 191 MAY 18, BORN AFTER DEATH OF MOTHER, BABY Ny TARVIN WELL Quick Aton of Por of Fordham Hos- pital Surgeon Prevents Death From Claiming Two. Ten Minutes After Mrs. Lip- schitz Expired the Eight- Pound Son Arrived, A baby brought into the world ten | minutes after his mother's death was Revealed Wife and Roomer | kicking and gurgling and clenching ite | pink fists at Fordham Hospital to-day. He is perfectly formed and tn thi lustiest of health. His coming will be quoted and described in medical books SAYS SHE, | 8" lectures all over the world for years, ‘The operation which saved his life after such an unheard-of interval fol- lowing the death of the mother was performed by @ hospital surgeon, Her- man Schorr, who is only twenty-three years old, and who had to do his deft and marvellouely swift work without | te advice of any other surgeon. The mother of the child was Mrs. Rebecen Lipschits, wife of Samuel Lip- |schitz of No. #4 Bast 178th street, Thursdayevening just after supper she prised her husband by complaining £ feeling unwell. She had never had jan illness in her life, but now before she jeould explain how she felt she fainted. |Dr. Tokman was called and he saw at ence that the womah had had an attack of apoplexy, He had an ambulance |called and Dr. Alexander Forman took the dying woman to Fordham Hospital. Mrs, Lipschitz reached the hospital gt 945. Four hours later, at 145 A, M. Friday, she was dead, From the first her condttion was recognized as hopeless, but Dr, Herman |Schorr, the young surgeon who attended jher when she was brought in, had a jnurse watch her continuously and do everything that was possible to proionx her life and ‘maintain her strength, It was his hope that the woman would live long enough to give birth to the child whose advent she had been expecting shortly. When ‘the nurse summoned the doc- tor and told him Mrs, Lipschitz had [passed away, he found that the p: lysla which had killed the mother had not yet extended to her baby. Assuring himself |that the mother was r [that the child was alive, lquickly determined to try |1ittle tite. | There was no time to remove the body to the operating room. It was only a question of moments before death would extend to the child. Nor was there time to get the ald of an older surgeon. While the nurse placed @ screen around the bed, Dr. Schorr ran for the instru- ments he needed. The operation took ninety seconds. ‘As the surgeon held in his arms the |baby, which would have perished with its mother but for his skill and swift decivion, the nurse reached for it with the anxious Inquiry, “is it alive, doc- to save the tor?” Dr. Schorr gave tho child a |wentle slap, and with its firat cry it Janswered the nurse's question end | brought tears into her eyes for the dead mother who could not hear that sweet- est of all music, her baby's first ttle jory. Swathing the tiny fellow in a blanket |the* nurse hurried with him to the |children'’s ward and very soon he was washed and dressed, sleeping happily and all unconscious of his strange and pathetié birth, and being peeked at and jadmired by all the nurses. He was |weighed before being dressed, and he |tipped the scale at just eight pounds. Despite his tragic birth his heart and lungs were found to be as healthy as his limbs were well formed, and his ap- | petite gives promise that he will flourish land become as bonny a little chap as ever a normally born baby was. was reported at the hospital this morn. ing to be doing finely. Dr, Herman Schorr, who performed this rare operation unaided, 1s ‘only twenty-three years old, He !s a gradu- ate of Cornell, Specialists discussing the unusual case, declare they would have thought it Impossivle. Dr, Leopold Marcus of No, 1215 Madison avenue, one of the m expert gynecologists, said that to save the child after an interval of elght to ten minutes after the death of the mother was @ most remarkable achievement dnd few would have pRought tt posaiblen : FIXES A NEW aba He | Two Young Wom To-day on Trip Around World| | | | en Who Arrived MAN NOT NECESSARY TO TOUR WORLD, SAY | BELLES OF BIG LINER Misses Wood Arrive on George Washington, After Thrilling Experiences Abroad. ——_ The North German Lioyd liner George Washington arrived in this port to-day bringing in two younk women who had the interest of the wnole ship's com of their grace and thelr startling beauty. They were the Misses Florence and Elizabeth Wood, daughters of a Los Angeles real estate broker, They were chaperoned by their aunt, Mrs. W. H. Perry, from Los Angeles to Cairo by way of Yokohama, Canton, Singapore and India, At Catro they Wood, Mon; ‘The young women had a lot of adven- tures to relate. First of all, the lin and thelr nine-year-old sister the mob passed on, From Singapore Delhi to see the glories of the Durbar, at which George V. was proclaimed Emperor of India. There was a scar. for them in that J. C. Goodrich, the son of a friend who as travelling with the party from Los Augeles, was taken with smallpox and died becais: the party went to be obtained which they in the village were passing. through The boy's and was able to jofn his friends lat ‘There is no more any reason for any- bedy to be afraid to travel now,” sald the sisters, Any body can go any where In the world in perfect safety without the protection of a man, these days.” ES eae ral BONHAG’S FATHER DEAD. Great Figure tn Olympic Games. William Bont father of Georg Bonhag, te amateur champion distan: | runner and member of the Lrish-Ame Htean A, C. team which is to represent | America the Olympte games jn | Sweden next mi |night from ce cage waa repe office to-day. Mr nth, died suddenly last hemarr nage to the Coroner's Bonhag wa work in his ice cream store at No. 197 Aim sterdam avenue when he was strick: It is understood that the death of Bonnag. distances father the records of miles, to drop out of the t is a civil engineer use who t up to | | | F | | OROCK ULM, May 1. With heavily armed ct acting as barricaded ho tiles afterno brief funeral fees and buried in the Crocketayiile ete perches LL FOR BA PAQF ~ ws pany from the time she sailed becguse | were met by their motner, Mrs. Medina | Minnesota, was hit by a typhoon « da: out of Yokohama, and was tossed about on the waves Iike a chip in a drinking | trough, but nobody was harmed. While they were shoppin. In Can ton, a group of rioters against th declaration of the Chin republi whirled into the street in which they were selecting some jade pleces in! a native shop. The shopkeeper at once began to barricade the open front of his booth madd so little progress. that the sisters helped him and found them. selves imprivon for @ Mtule t unt the services of a physician could not! * father also was made ill, but survived! Distance Runner May Yot| BAR ASSOCIATION ASKED TO INQUIRE | INTO COURT'S ACTION Judge Mulqueen’s Ruling in Re- cent Black Hand Case Is Questioned. Police-Commissioner Waldo this af- ternoon made public a letter from Com- | missioner of Accounts Raymond Fos- lick, who declared the actions of Jus- tlce Mulqueen of the Court of General | Sessions had been called to the atten- Uon of the Bar Association. In his letter to Commissioner Waldo |Mr, Fosdick declares an examination of the Court of Special Sessions, made lust year, revealed certain Information which he thought ought to be trans- mitted to the Commissioner Mr. Fosdick recites that on April 18, 1911, Detectives Capone and De Gillio, working on a Black Hand case, arrested four Halla for alleged attempted surglary at No, 322 East One Hundred and enth street The men were Indicted on the char \of burglary tn the third degree and two of n were brought up for trial be- ‘ore Justice Mulqueen on May 4, 1911 vetective Capone was the third witness ' ‘rhe following, according to Mr, Fos- tick, is taken from the offical court yr Que | torney d= of the Jury two boys do ay? Answer (by Capone)—-We we stand. ny in @ hallway of No. 8% Kast On Hundred and Seventh street, watching the fe mises at No, 334, ich had been viofn up with dynamite’ — Hy Justice Mulqueen—Strike that out Now I can understand why the polico are criticized. It 1s because they are anxious to take care of other people's | business. Now I am going to direct the jjury, OB account of the improper state- nent, to Fender @ verdict of not guilty. ve ete AL you tgll Jemen Just what you saw t In the promises on (by that | Che statement was made deliberately by (his witness to prejudice the jury against (hese defendants.” Mr. Fosdick calls attention to the| |fact unat the other prisoners, tried th sam afternoon before Justice Mulqueen on exactly the same evidence | were found guilty | Mr. Fomdick’s letter ended with the statement that the matter had beer called to the attention of the Bar Association, fe aeeieaieeetemer “IN THE EVENING WORLD A_STIRRING STORY OF NEW YORK “OFFICER 666’ LAUGHS AND THRILLS 2. 16 PA ROBBERS KNOCK MAN SENSELESS ON HIS WAY TO BANK Daring Hold-Up on Busy Cor- ner of Second Avenue With Crowd Nearby. $210 TAKEN FROM MAN. Victim Did Not See Assailanis and Police Are With- out a Clue. Two or three men-—the detectives have deen unable to definitely fix the num- ber—assaulted Tony Bilanci of No. 3% East Twenty-fourth street in Second avenue, a short distance north of Twen- ty-fifth street, this afternoon and robbed him of $210 which he was taking to the ‘ank for his employer, John Scully, @ saloonkeeper, at No. 52 Second avenue. Bilanci did not see the men who robbed him, and the police cannot find anybody who will admit having witnessed the hold-up, which took place directly tn front of a grocery store and a short dis tance from a busy corner. Bilanct {s the cook in Scully's place. For two years It has been Scully's ent tom to send Bilanct to the Fifth Ni tional Bank at Twenty-third street and Fifth avenue on Mondays, a little after noon, with the Saturday evening and Sunday receipts. There was no necret about the proceeding. Scully made up the bankbook, called Bilancl and pass tt to him over the bar with the money and checks. The usual thing happened thia after- noon in Scully's place about 1.16 o'clock. Scully called to Bilancl, who took off joon, which is on the east side of the aveuue, between ‘Twenty-elghth and ‘Twen ninth streets, Bilancl, bank book and money stuffed Into the right hip pocket of his trousers, trudged down Second avenue, intending to go to Twenty-third street and turn weat As he approached Twenty-fifth street and war passing the grocery which has a Vegetable stand attended by two young men ém front somebody struck rim from behind, From the appearance of the scar left by the blow the weapon used Was a plece of hose stuffed with sand ov shot, A mark extending fro the base of the skull around the hi ind face to the mouth shows where the flexible weapon landed. Bilanc!'s teeth were loosened and his lips were broken. He dropped senseless to the sidewall rhe hignwaymen evidently knew wher to look for the money, for they wasted no time tn finding {t and getting away Nobody paid any attention to the un- conscious Bilanci until Policeman Shea happened along and found him on the sidewalk. Shea summoned an ambu- lance from Bellevue Hospital, and Ty Sovak attended to Bilanet’a hurts and took him to his home LITTLE GIRL KILLED BY 6-YEAR OLD BROTHER. Boy Was Playing With a Shotgun During Absence ot His POTTSVILLE, Pa 1 Bh Wise tits a wily shot and car-old sister Arhine. ‘f Wve While instantly and the charge of # th | ‘ breas | _ | Phitippine Holters tor Rn MANILA, May 1 vention of | Jelected as contesting delegates to the jChicuea convention Mr. Squires nd | Li xe White, who are pledged to oanevelt or any other progressive wadjdate for nomination, al HIGHLANDERS. | of the tity 0: lineene ved his cook, Whetl ler he will wive his idea to the police and run the chance of vengeance ts a nates to be settled in his own mind a NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT CHICAGO. GIANTS— 000 - HICAGO 010 _ AT CINCINNATI. BROOKLYN 000 INCINNATL— 000 - AeA AMERICAN LEAGUE, AT NEW YORK. DETROIT 101 - o10 «= his apron, put on his coat, took charge ef ie Bank book and #10 and started! Tuesday, To-day the rolls show a membership of 8,000, There are lor the ban! : ‘ Apparently persons familiar with the} fifteen organizers at work in the hotels and leading restaurants and sea ee eo ot foul’ | they are making a particular effort to round up the cooks, with the | Detectives found an astonishing lack of Information In the neighvornood of the hold-up. From the stories they | heard it is possible to knock a man down tn the public str and rob him n ad daylight at Twenty-fifth street and Second avenue with the same de gree of security from o! vation that nt obtain on @ lonely country road BEGINS TO-DAY WEATHER—Falr and cooler to-miwht. GES PRICE ONE CENT. 29,000 WAITERS MAY WALK OUT OF HOTELS IN Ble STRIKE TO-NIGHT Army of Employees Will Strike, Tying Up Every Hotel and Large Restaurant in City, if Com- mittee Issues Order. CHEFS WILL GO OUT ALSO; UNION’S FORCES DOUBLED. Membership of Organization Has In- . creased 100 Per Cent., Half of City’s Waiters Being Under Its Influence. Encouraged by a growth in membership of 100 per cent. in a week, - officers of the local branch of the International Hotel Workers’ Union’ began planning to-day for a strike of waiters and cooks in all the hotels and big restaurants of the city, to enforce a demand for shorter hours, better w: the abolition of a system of fining’ waiters and other fe forms in working conditions. The executive committee of the Hctel Workers’ Union is to meet to-night to discuss tne situation. The organization had only 4,000 mem- bers in. Manhattan when the Belmont Hotel strike was called last to 26,000 waite ral strike, COOKS COMING TO AID OF WAIT. With an active membership of 8,000, the officers of the union claim to be able to influence 50 per cent. of the and cooks in @ gene walters and cooks of Manhattan, If/ this claim is reasonable, and exper! ERS IN LARGE NUMBERS. enced hotel and restaurant managers| The question to be decided at te meeting of the Executive Com- is whether it would be well to advance at once upon the Hotc} Maa- Association with a demand for ® conference or wait until the mem- bership of the union is larger. The sentiment of the rank and file ie for admit there is some justification for it, the union could call out from 20,000 | To APPEAL BRANDT CASE AND TRY TO KEEP HIM HERE. immediate action. \ ; D, e jf| Swarms of cooks and mtzor chete are Lawyer Gets Postponement Of | saroliiag to the orgentaatton Rare Order Recommitting Schiff —} 10,000 note! and restaurant cooks in R annemora. Manhattan and they have a long lat of , Burglar to Dannemo ie ane| levances, ‘The chiet complaint 1s that The case of Foulke Hi. Brandt, the) tiey never get a day off and they Schitt burglar, cceupled the time of the that each cook works seven Appellate Divisioa of the Supreme Court for a brief period again this afternoon, Assistant District-Attorney Jolnson ap. peared before (ie Court and filled for formal order, in accordance with the court's deci#ion of last week overthrow- ing Justice Gerard's writ of habeas cor- pus and remand!ng Brandt to Danne- and sixteen days overtime every year. The calculation is based on the excems over elgbt hours s day and six days e week, a cook's hours ranging from twelve to Mfteen @ day. The cooks want eight heures for « day's work and radical kitchen reforma, j including platforms in front of rangea mora to serve the remainder of 41®) and conventences in handling materials. thirty-year sentonce. | Also they Want more money, Mr, Johnstone requested thac the order) ‘The cooks and chefs are to holé « by signed at « A representative of mass meeting Wednesday night at No. Mirabeau L, owns, Brandt's counsel | 11 West Forty-elghth street. By that {nterpored an ch.ection and asked that! time, it ts expected the hotel managers eee ot order be postponed Will have been approached by @ commit until to-morrow morning at 11 o'clock. | tee from the union and will have given. Mr, Towns \s out of the city to-day." | an answer to @ staggering array of de- sate o> to| inands and Dit Edward Blochlinger, Financial Secre- rem ; tary ef the union, said to-day, genera) strike ts among the possiai? s, He Ucwpate that the hotel man. vestaurant proprietors will t the demands of the men without fight EXORBITANT PINES AT MAR TIN'S, WAITERS’ HEAD Says, “We have served notice on the mane dum with t from Is hts pu s and I Brandt ke ston of the possible, to ork and admit RESOLUTION 10 LIMIT to bail, pen TERM OF A PRESIDENT ag \ largo nuNver of hotels that the system of exorbitant fines for FAVORABLY REPORTED: waters in vogue in thelr establionments | moat ase,” said Blochiingel 4d we Majority of the Senate Judiciary) have been successtut in some instances, Commitiee Favors the Six- fore : Dotiled usr ro ante nae Year Plan. a wwe Will de VASH TON, M r nate € are now about to start on the irants. » Martin's 1s almost @ aes ray, ry mont with respect to ez restricting Pre U) tenure of OPMRaNt Anes, We have notified Mr, PACA DE SSS PAHOA ES) deg Martin that he will hav to reform hip * raggh eb aaevlots F ingte | Methodle or we call ou: bis walters Pe a i : ative ie fand cooks, We can th up every big from the committee. . reports are| restaurant on Broadway if we @nd expected in a day or two. such action necessary,” | estimated one-fourth of the pope J ulation of New York would be affected May 1—|by a strike of hotel and restaurant own weather | wat and cooks, One person in four ehty-olghth | takes ac least one meal every weels vme hore to-day, day in @ hotel oy restaurant, Em a es

Other pages from this issue: