The evening world. Newspaper, November 12, 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)

WEATHER—Ra’ FI PRICE ONE CG. to-night or We day. Che EDITION. .; “ Circulation Books Open to All.”’ ENT. Coorvin'gs, rhe 3 Now w Beek Weel NEW GUNMEN DRAMATICALLY IDENTIFIED YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, BY SHAPIRO AS SLAYERS OF ROSENTHAL 1912, ae P ceeninase Sofia Reports Bulgarians Vic- torious in Great Battle That Has Raged for Days. Bee CON LONG WAR rl King Ferdinand’s Army Now at Strongholds on Sea of Mar- mora and the Black Sea. LONDON, Nov. 12.—Reports are eurrent to-day in Sofia that the itu garian army hes captured the line of | forts at Chatalja in front of Consian- tinople, according to a news agency despatch. A Bulgarian columa is aid to have ached Biyuk Chek. medye on the Sea south of Chatalja. ? <iher report says the Bulgarians ured Chata: the prineipa! point fa: donstantinople’s last cefonse line, ‘The Bulgarians’s northern wing was} also said to be closing upon the fortifications south cb Mack Sea extrem!! the southern win: « Derkor of the line, while Marmora SOVIA Nov 12.—The Bulgarian f ian troops en- gaged In th siege of Adrianople are working in hearty co-operation. Clashes with the Turkish garrison of that stronghold occ all Some of b Turkish troops taken prisoners during sorties of the garvigon ceclare that cons ditions in the are de erat population, they say, sugar have been se at exor= pitant prices, and the supy thyse commodities are now exhausted, ‘arge numbers of Turkish trreguiars frave for some time been pi Village sround Adrianople 1 have now s int @ looters and esta aunistration. A coluni £1x otticers: CONSTAN Uniess t nople ts brought tion there will h there as modern t ve according to messixes to-day stricken city. Not only has !t been aitely that the dise: broke out among the Tui atic cholera, but sm. nstantl ter an ep from th a speedy shed defi ecently ’ sh sol ox has made {ts appearance. Typhus has been raging for some time. ‘The epidemies were all reported to-day a8 spreading rapidly. Cholera tras algo broken out among the Bulgarians at Chat BALKAN DE: JTILL CONTINUES DIPLOMATS HOPE: LONDON, Nov. 12.—Every effort Is being made by uropean diplomats to prevent the question at issue in the Balkans from becoming a controversy between the two great camps into which the European powers are divided, The ) Ambassador at London of one of the great powers in an interview to-day on "the international situation sald be “The governments of the powers hap- pily remain calm, however excited som of the newspapers may be, Our great alm 1s to prevent any Issue of the war from becoming a matter between the Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hun- gary and Italy) and the Triple En- tente (France, Great Britain and Rusela). “Whatever digcussion may have taken place between these groups it is a fact that no official utterance on thelr behalf has been made, This being 80, it would be well not to attach too mueh impor- tance to interested statements or Inter- views with Ministers. “One thing Is absolutely certain, and that is that no one wants war. On the contrary, we are all determined to have (Continued 0} Second Page.) _O if ders Berkman 400," e¥ SHATALIA FORTS CAPTU LAST DEFENSE OF TURKS AT CONSTANTINOPLE GONE? cf Marmora to ihe| was at Chemdne-; Starvation, and it is tiought the Turk | ish warrison will be siarved out In % i days at its utine Bread, 1 en of | peace, and do yqu think a question such | ‘SURGEONS SEE FRACTURED HIP Conference Watch a Sur- prising Operation. CARROLL UNDER KNIFE. BLEW UP BALLOON ‘SOD FT. ABOVERIVER: /ANDDROPSUNEURT man’s Skull Lifted, Expos- ing the Brain. Fifty of the ieading sur; Western hemi titrd annual ' Parachute pear Does : Fool- | hardy Feat on Hudson for Moving Pictures. spikes and a hammer, A smoke-colored canvas balloon sailed up over the Hudson from the Jersey| was performed by Dr. A. C. Bristow. shove opposite Grant's Tomb at 10| Sterilized steel spikes were driven jo'rlovk to-day. On a cross-bar # home with hammer blows. When the ng beneath tt was the slender figure| bone knits the spikes will be with- lof a man, The tugboat Libble chugged | drawn. Another delicate operation, by a score of sirgeons, wi by Dr. Hospital, with Joseph D, horseman, as the subject. ifted a portion of Mr. Carrot! jalong under it, When the balloon was jabout five hundred feet in the alr and {a third of the way to the Manhattan jsvore the whistle of the tug squeaked {three times, A sharp. cracking explosion shook the Palisades and the apartment houses on the balloon had been. Murky bursts|on the road to recovery. of yolliag flame rolicd out of the smoke| In one hundred and seventy clinios in cloud and in turn were swallowed by ita| the different hospitals of the city, vielt- billowing waves which reached after] {ng surgeons from all parts of this them. country and some from other coun- While the echoes of the exploston| tries, were interested onlookers to-day rumbled away up and down the river,| at all kinds of operations and demon- the figure of the man who had been on| strations of the latest methods and in- the trapeze dropped swiftly out of the] ventions in surgical science as demon- uly cloud. The imp parachute um-| strated by noted eurgeons. broll watch was dropping with him One of the mogt appealing operations i pened and ealled him sofuy to]from the layman's point of view wa the water the work of Dr. A. L. Sores! on four. year-old Louis Angeli at Miss Alston’ Sanitarium. The little fellow was suf- fering from a serious condition of blood poisoning and anemia. Good, red blood had to be had at once, so the boy's father offered his, Both were put on the operating table this mornin, Then Dr. Soresi employed PROFESSIONAL DAREDEVIL FOUND PADDLING IN WATER. nan Law, professional daredevil, died around waiting for the tug to mie and take him aboard. Law undertook to prove, for moving | picture purposes, that Melvin Vaniman a pai own and his four companions who were] method of blood transfusion. The usual killed when thelr great dirigible blew up| method In blood transfusion, Dr, Soresi on Hts trial trip at Atlanue City, might|¢SPlained to an Evening World repor- slfave deen savel If they had’ taken | te? !8 to open tn each patient an artery Bes |in which the blood flows away from the mus. Toe victims of tat! heart, The operation then destroys the so burned by exploding | artery to a great measure, hal no chance to save) ADVANTAGES OF NEW OPERA- hen they fell into the TION OVER THE OLD. said he would fill a balloon mable gas, explode it which would make the envelope much bi Now a patient cannot afford to lose an artery or a part of one a@ easily he can efford a vein of which there are more in the body. So Dr. Soresi has evolved a process of using veins instead with b with dynamite, shock and the Man SET WITH NAILS) Noted Practitioners Here in |Part of Well Known Horse- ons of the here, here to attend the Clinical Congress of the urgeons of North America, journeyed | over to Kings County Hospital to-day to see a fractured hip nailed together with The operation demonstrates a new method of setting fractured bones, and witnessed performed Frank Hartley at New York Carroll, the Dr. Hertiey seul and exposed his brain to the visiting Riverside Drive, A great ball of flame | scientists for treatment. A tumor had itch black smoke shot out on all | been removed from thé brain only & Tew ove and beneath the spot where| hours before and the patient was then Spanish Premier, Victim mof Assassin, | As Seen in Consultation With King PHeTsS Wad sudmesen- PRIME MINISTER. CANALEVAS AND UAING Mad lh eee ANARCHIST ASSASSINATES SPAIN'S PRIME MINISTER King Alfonso Near as Assassin Fires Four! Bullets at Senor Canalejas While He Ap- proaches Government Building in Madrid. MADRID, Spain, Nov. 12.—The , tended by no bodyguard, Spanish Premier, Jose Canalejas, was] Men and elvilinns w shot dead to-day while approaching | wipe tig ee eee tuns of the and to regulate the crowd. the Ministry of the Interior here to! ad forced himself into the though polic numerous tn the Min Zarrate sey than that caused by the expiosion FAC tania of the Vaniman balloon and come out | of arteries In the operation. This meth- |attend a cabinet meeting. His assail-[0f the throng and had no difficulty 18 | When he gave the signal to release the | year-old son. an Anarchist, aged twenty-elght, of [N° esilsed hls object. Then he acted | balloon he Was dressed in woollen Kknit|” Another advantage of th's method was| i) Grado, Provence of H : 9 quickly that It was Impossible to clotht m the top of his head to the} that the healthy blood, instead of hav- ) Frovence of Huesca, Was | stop him, soles his feet. Wool resists fire|ing to go over a long Fouts ero the| arrested and then committed suicide The Premier did not turn his head, ery Py i ie body of the boy, as would be the case| a turned {Cut or throw up his hands when shot, lashes, He wore, a football player's|in arterial transfusion, and in this way The assassin only revently returned} tt Coutapend Instantly leather ‘helmet under Di n hood] idsing some, if not ali, of its virtue,|from a stay in Buenos Ayres, Argen-| ‘The big square was packed as usual and a thin woollen vell hung down over! went. from the neck '@ the father! tina. Te RIG SaUAra, HA: 2 nis eyes, About his walst under his] straight to the neck the boy and 7 ne of the #hooting. sweater was @ preserver, These|thence directly to his heart, where it King Alfonso, who hurri at of Mad confusion followed the crack were all of his precautions, began its good work at once. Severni, the Ministry as soon ae he heard of | of the pistol. Policemen came run- DRESSES IN WOOL FOR PRoO.| hours after the boy was in Dr. Soresi's| the assault, was deeply moved by the) ing from every direction, drawing office in an excellent state, with his| tragic death of the Prime Minister.| their revolvers or cutlasses, Dozens TECTION FROM FLAMES. He held a trigger string In his hand as he sat on the trapeze string cross father in as promising condition, The different clinics all over the city vere #o crowded with the visiting su Want mo to freeze to death for the Marts Pate Gadi NeG Mei] FOR RAGING BEE PAGE 12 y asked to meet at 6 o'clock int 1r00) ‘ e od car- pictures, too?” of the Waldorf-Astoria tor ne Haare The Minstry of the Interlor fronts] tt Lope " anil “i 44 is A score of hands were reached over|of representatives and the reports ¢?| on the Puerto del Bol, or Gate of the [Med hurriedly into the inintatry® of the the side to help him aboard. py Bun, a big square in the centre of Mad- | :2teFier and @ doctor had arrived within “Go easy,” he said, "The backs of my| ‘This evening's session will also be held | rid, the buslest spot in die city. The|* fe moments, The Premier had died, hands are scorched a Ittle. I gues#/in the ballroom and will consist of the} shooting took place at 140 A, M, ja BOMever valmost Instantly, I'm kind of foolish, 1 forgot to wear| reading of several papers. Interesting | front of a }oul-stall at th ne ot) Many arrests were made following the | gloves.” n to the lay mind should prove Dr, | @ ita ier | ansassination. Practically every we He clambered aboard and dragged his|George W. Crile's paper and tantern | arretes street. near t e to pene Madrid TH parachute after him demonstration on the latest und best | the Minis f the Interior DOWN SHATRIOL A BAGG AK KOH As ‘Told you #0," he sa udly to the| method of applying anaesthetics in op-| Senor Car as had just lef are | IF . RDS ed. heen laked WA reporters, ‘Resides, nw It wan't] crotioce ant the doit away with the| lage when he was killed and was crows. | Wiihin two or three hours. ‘The poltew time for me to be Ietled yet." Matcata ana AGAMTAOABIO: of OAih GROTHA|OK walk toward the entrance to| ws xiousx both guar anaesthetics the Minisiry bie attempt ut a general NEST ae He had always been careless cone —— |Zmmediately after the crime His Ma- Jesty was acclaimed by the people who had quickly gathered at the scone of vil guards, @ kind of military po- poured out of the Ministry of tho terfor, Mixing ir bayonets or all, 1 »' which would set off the dynamite| Sons that the hospital oMictals were Leal nk i > Bar whish would ie dy ard put to tt to accommodate all, who | 2, shootin taht ; ne (clipe (af Gartsidges Into sheie| nee te time while he was going up| Wanted to witness the operations, Every | Hing Alionso 1 over the corpse] ‘lea ae th | on his reckless errand during the mush- stort wae being made, however, fo al- ey are in his bgt Tis hs aje SCARED GENERAL OUTBREAK ming out of ve Hoke J, even | ford je Bre y of surgeons—there | said a short prayer and th ati a | Through the moment when no one know | Were tered up to this | sulting the Ministers present, returne 4 AFTER THE SHOOTING, whether Law would come out of the} ™orning—the best chance to see thelr) to the royal palac Among the authorities it th pall dead or alive, and during his drift | fellow surgeons at work. ‘The Cabinet later assembled and de- [| ¢Vident impression that a gen nt Gown to the river the moving picture| In the courso of to-day's clinics, 8] cided to appoint to the position of Pre-| Dfeak was scheduled to follow and an men were at the cranks of thelr clicking|th® Program shows, almost every part | nian arquis Manuel Garela Prieto, { attempt to clear the square was be machines, whirring away in calm indif-|0f the body was operated on by the | ' ry , ; “') sun immediately, corence to tis fate atest methods and by an expert in| #t present Forelgn Minister Syed Ue It suited the peculiar sense of humor|¢2°h Mne of surgery. And the hun-| Martin fired four shots at Premier} Of " Ms #0 wreat that this was of the adventurer to lie back nthe ware, | (reds, of patients affected by thene! Canalejas, three of which struck the 2 t an ousy matter, Throngs stumpeded ‘and piay dead when the Lidbie first] Operations are getting the benefit of| statesman behind the right ear, and he| fF the streets leading out of the Puerto puffed un to him. Outsiders who had | Sire creat Rind Of #tudy and beat pos) ye) dead on the spot. Other tirong# rushed forward to learn been invited to go along as witnesses!” special arrangene: the accom.| The shooting caused the wildest what was the matter and the cafes were ciucking and) murmuring with| moncce, Srrang’ the ‘accom | 1 oPRepatvr tag ease ferred Loe the Puerto empled aut} athe! pity. e \e- r ay eed | s mobs of customers, fympsinetio p Hive Buk the moving Ple-| made by the Department of Charities for DN cle | a nonium continued for many | Fee eee re oad with a| (hore #UFKeons who wish to visit Ran- | cape, who led the cha | gaat Mice saa otnten, | ar nese lk has dall's and Blackwell's Islands, Member-| captured the man and he was being fore the police anc : jerk, threw Back cloth screen over| ship cards are being accepted in lieu of | hurried off to prison when he drew hi nd by a detachment of cavalry his face, showed his features and roared: !the Department passes usually required. | pistol and fired a shot in hin head, kill coded in scattering the crowd and eee She er you guys?| The members of the congress were estoring at least temporery order. ing himself instantly |'6 bie personel safety and was CRIPLEDBOY DRAGGED FROM QUICKSAND BED High School ‘Lad Had Sunk to Chin When Men Came to Rescue. CRIED LONG FOR HELP. Companions on Fishing Ex- pedition Finally Heard and Summoned Aid. Jacob Morrell, who has been swing: Ing a crutch for the best part of his seventeen years, went fishing to-day with two other spectal students in the Newtown High School whose course leaves them free on Tuesdays. The trio—Morrell’s companions were Rob- ert Williams, son of @ police Heutenant detailed at the Elmhurst station, and George Mettler—anchored their row- boat in Flushing Bay, off a loneiy stretch of shore between Corona and Flushing. Williams and Mettler had most of the luck and seon ran out of bait. They rowed ashore for more, leacing Mor- relt to guard the boat. After the were out of sight the crippled boy became restless. He stepped ashore and started hopping toward Hun nearly a half mile away. For the first Atty yards the sand was firm; then the crutch suddenly sank beneath him. He had stepped into a patoh of quicksand. -The boy strug- Bled to release himself for several min- making no sound, for he feared derision of his comrades, with the whom he sought to be on equal terms physically. The crutch, wht at @ tangent, gradually was wrenched from beneath Morrell'’s arm, and he had to abandon it, With two sound legs he could hard- ly have extricated himself, but with one Paralyzed it was an impossibility. He did not come to this conclusion, though, until he was waist deep in the sand, and sinking every minute. ‘The wind was blowing stiffly off shore and threw back the cripple's cries for aid, There was no one moving around the ‘hotel and anxious glances along the shore did not reveal his bait-hunt- ing companions. Further and further Morrell sank, his cries increasing in volume with each additional inch of submersion, The sand had risen to his armpits when Williams, strolling along the beach in advance of the other boy, rounded @ point and came within the cripples range of vision, “Help, Bob! Come quick!" yelled Morrell. Wiliams looked up quickly and scanned the beach, He did not see Morrell, and so did not increase his lelsurely pace toward the boat, ‘The sand now was up to the cripple's shoulders and lie began to yell inco- herently, Thist Wiidames heard and began to run, cali.ng to Mettler. Will- fams stepped into the quicksand and sank to his an! ‘That made him see the futility of fuch a course of rescue, and he ran to meet Mettler, ‘The two boys starict to vroak up a raft to get Umber for a Morrell was silent las he watched. ‘Tire quicksand was close to his ehin, Lugging © heavy, waterlogged plank between ther, Willlams# and Mettler came to the edge of the quicksand, | ‘hey threw the plank out toward the| crippled boy and then, elimbin out beside it, tried vainly to drag him t them. The grip of the quicksand was too strong. While Wilitams, with his hand und ' les chin supported him, Mett- ler ran to the hotel, He returned wit two strong-arined truckmen just tn] time to relieve the exhausted Will- jams. The truckmen were powerful enough, with What assistance the boys could give, to drag Morrell upon the plank and carry him Bim ta firmer ground, “BABE” w DONALD ) SAVES CROWD ON BROADWAY. | Horse Dashes on Sidewalk but Is Match for Giant Athlete. Leaping from the street to the alde- walk at Broadway and Forty-second street this afternoon a hone attached to a delivery Wagon caused a panic, The driver of the Wagon, Martin Pardelleto of No. 429 Seventh avenue, tried to puil the horse back to the street, but in do {ng #o pulled the bridle from the horse's No leaving the animal free, Patrol "“MeDonald of TraMe C, thg vamplon shot putter, whos? Forty-third street and Broad ran and selzed the horse by ax {t swung out Into the str ind turned south, McDonald lost balance and was thrown heavily to sidewalk, He managed to cling of the shafts, however, and fin gained his feet, He brought the animal to @ stop just below Forty-second street, rs | AGES PRICE 0 ONE CENT. FLIGHT OF THE GUNMEN IN THE MURDER CAR DESCRIBED BY SHAPIRO Chauffeur Swears “Gyp the Blood” Held Revolver to His Ear, and De- clares He Feared He Would Be Slain for Testifying. KRAUSE SAYS GANGSTERS ALL CARRIED REVOLVERS. Swears That “Dago Frank” Didn’t Shoot but That All the Others Fired at Gambler Rosenthal. William Shapiro, who drove the gray murder car in which tle assassins of Herman Rosenthal rode to and escaped from the Metropo« Hotel, identified “Dago Frank,” “Whitey Lewis,” “Li “Gyp the Blood” as the men who were his passengers this aticraoc The identification was made under dramatic circumstances in the trial . f the four gunmen before Justice Goff in the extraordinary term of the Supreme Court. The appearance of Shapiro on the stand frightened the four defend- ants. They were unable to conceal their apprehension as the witness was sworn, because they knew what he was going to say. As he began his testimony all four leaned forward on the counsel table with their eyes strained at the witness chair and its occupant. Shapiro wasn't any too comfortable either, JOURNEY OF THE MURDER CAR. Shapiro said he was at his stand at the Cafe Boulevard’ on the night of July 15 when a telephone message called him to Sharkey’s in Four- teenth street. There his car was boarded by Jack Rose, whom he had known for ten years, and Sam: Schepps and Harry Vallon, whom he hat known but a short time. ‘He was ordered to drive to One Hundred and Forty-fifth street and Seventh avenue, where he picked up “Bridgei’’ Webber, whom he knew slightly, and “Dago Frank” Cirofici, whom he knew well. The car was run down to Forty-second street and Sixth avenue, where all hands got out. Shapiro was ordered to wait across the street from Webber's poker room. There ‘ne was joined in a short time by “Dago Frank,” “Whitey” Lewis, “Lefty Louie” and “Gyp the Blood.” Shapiro said he was ordered by Jack Rose to drive to Forty-third street in front of the Metropole. Ho went up Sixth avenue, turned west into Forty-third street, went to Long- nacre Square and turned, coming back into Forty-third street with his car heading east As the turn was made one of the gunmen sald: “It's all right, There's no cops here. Hecker's got everything fixe Shapiro stopped the rin the shadow of Cohan's Theatre, The four men fot out, Shapiro suld he remained on the sent. In about twenty minutes he hea: the sound of shots, “Four men ran up and boarded my oar,” he said. “They were the same four who had left it twenty minutes before, Bach had a gun in his hand.” Shopiro was ontly reflected undiminished optimism, “Wasn't your car near the Criminat Courts Butiding on the day Jack Zelig wee et by Torti?” asked Judge Wahl he car was near here, 1 replied the witnei dies « Q. Who was driving the car? A. Louts Tabby, my partner. t, Wahle droped this line of \- tioning. It showed that he hopes Pye tablish that Shapiro's car was used by the gang that went to the Criminal Courts Butlding to kil! Zellg the day Tort! shot him in the head. SAYS HE FEARED HE WOULD BE KILLED. Shapiro said the reason he refused to tify the four gunmen when he was 1 to Identify the men. With his Hps twitehing and his throat Arrested and for fluttering he walked down from the} thine afterwards was witness stand and pointed out the fou | ald he would efendants, calling them by name, The} ald he had no promi young men he was accusing almost] ‘om the District-Atorne; snarled at him as he stood close point-| Before Shapiro went on the stand the ing an accusing finger, After he Identi-]4unmen had been identified by fled them one by one as they stood up, Loulse Krause, who had fur- “GYP THE BLOOD” PUT A RE- one of the sensations of th Becker trial, Krause, nervously and with evidences VOLVER TO HIS EAR. ‘Two of the n n.” Shapiro continued fi ‘got into the car from one side and ear, stepped up to the prisoners’ two from the other, p the Blood’ |‘ at the direction of Assistant Dis- Attorney put a gun to my head and told me t Moss and pointed to the wal gut’ at’ hare’ deesa) TAAL | fo as the men he had seen pouring “ET ran to Sixth avenue as hard aa} Volley of lead at the defenseless and I could drive, turned north at full) Unarmed gambler, speed and went up to Fifty-ninth atreet,) |All exeept me," chirped “Dago where { turned. west, We went up| rank” as Krause pointed to his co- Central Park West pretty fast to One| #efendants, Krause was ordered not Hundred and Forty-fourti street and|t® reply and he seemed migaty glad Khih_ avenue, where the four men|t@ get back to the witness chair, got out told me ta Ko back down-| He had failed to tdentity “Dago wn. All the way up they were whis-| Frank! as one of the shooters, but he tat they had made ‘a clean] there was small comfort in this for getaway and Becker had fixed It! © leader and spokesman of the This closed the direct examination, |“Murder quartet,” because the moméng Shapiro had made good to the District-/the witness was back on the stand -| Attorney. Mr. Moss was clearly elated,| Justice Goff took him in hand an@ the gunmen were depressed, but the |dvew from him that he had seen “Dage round face of Counsellor Wable appar? Frank” Cirofic] standing oves Resens

Other pages from this issue: