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, Bb THE EVENING WORLD, EYEMTESS SAS | BALKAK WAR’ LE FOTBAL CANE Every Move of Allies Planned With Team-Like Precision, Declares Ex-Minister. | SAW FIRST GUN FIRED. | Mr. Moses, on Tip From King Nicholas, Was Witness of First Battle of Conflict. “The armies of the Allies have been moved just like a Yale or Princeton football quarterback swings eleven men with absolute precision from one play into another. This war 1s a great foot- bail game in {te strategy, everything moving by prearrangement.” Such was the characterisation of the deadly struggle in the Balkans, given to-day by retiring United States Minis- ter C. H. Moses of Concord, N. HL, the first eye witness of battles between the Allies and the Turks to bring back to this country graphic pletures of the grim precision of modern warfare. Mr. Moees, who got in on the steamship Mauretania, has been American minia- ter to Greece and Montenegro for three and a half years and has just been tetleved by Jacob W. Schuman and re- turns to his home with scenes of battle fresh in his recollection. “The attack of the Allies upon Turkey was absolutely prearranged,” he sald. “Every foot of the campaign and thi part that each of the little powers was to play, in tackling their giant neighbor and common enemy, were planned last May. At that time, @ secret meeting of the military strategists of Montenegro, Servia, Greece and Bulgaria was held in a litte town Dalmatia; accurate 1 formation as to the strength and KNEW WAR WAS IN BVITABLE. ¢ even while the big European @aying peace could be tained, the leaders of the various nations knew war was as in- es the rising of the sun, be- cause it had been determined upon. “Two days before ‘the Montenegrine ed hostilities, King Nicholas, the much beloved monarch of the little i Gave me an advance tip. “If you will go to Detchich,” sald he, naming a little Turkish town just across the border from Montenegro, o'clock next Wednesday mornin; will eee the fret gun of a war Grea.” “TI followed his advice and promptly at the dot of 8 A. M. a big piece of fleld “ordnance deloched a solid shot across the valley to the fortifications behind the Turkish town The war was on. “Instantly, all of the heavy cannon the Montenegrins had secretly moved across the frontier durifig the night and vlaced in positions previously selected, »pened up on the fortifications and the Curkish guns replied, I stood back with the staff of Gen, Martinovich, the com- nander of the Montenegro army, and watched the action through fleld glas HE WITNESSED FIRST BATTLE OF THE WAR. “It was grim; it was terrible, But there was something tremendously in- spiring in the sight of the two columns of Montenegrins, moving forward with preciaion &@ football squad ad- cing the ball. Under cover of the heavy artillery firing the two colum pushed boldly up the heights toward the fortifications, deploying as they went, and soon the roar of volley firing sup- plied a steady undertone to the boom- ing of the heavy guns. “TL could see the rending and smashing of the Turk! fortifications under explodin, ells from the Montenegrtn: guns; watched the long line of white cottonball puffs along the parapets where the red crescent flag waved; fol- lowed the detached blocks of men clambering up the heights, inexorably ing in on the doomed t& aa. “Finally, after about five hours of fighting, there was @ faint cheer borne and I saw the Montencgrins ot guns, mweep forward in the final dash up the lope to the parapets of the fort itself, Boon it was al over. The red flag wavered and dropped, and in its place | rone the flag of little Montenegro, while bugles saluted it.” MONTENEGRINS ARE WONDER: FUL FIGHTERS. Mr, Moses said he witnessed two other minor engagements at Tuz! and Tchip- | chamik and saw the preliminary skir- | mishes of the siege of Scutari, which the Montenegrins ure still investing. He | left Cettigne to return home on Oct. %, | with all of Montenegro in a ferment of enthusiasm over the crushing of the ancient enemy. "The Montencgrins are born fighters, said the retiring Minister. “Physically, they are such magnificent men that any- bedy under six feet in height Is counted & dwarf. Gen, Martinovich, the com- mander, is the one great dynamo of the eountry—commander, secretary of State, treasurer and everything else combined He ts a marvel. | “The first victories over the Turks were expected by the Allies, but it has been @ great surprise to them, as well a to the Kuropean observers, that the Turks have not recovered from their initial reverses. The All | ' Garden Theatre, has no thought of re- peating the vanishing stunt just because they knew just when and where to|* strike, in the face. the @upreme Court to-day when at- to the Pending trial of the action. played the leading part In to-day's pro- ceedings. He assured the court that his client had no thought of leaving New York because of his marital ter troubles. In fact, the lawyer said, the actor's diMculties had made him more determined than ever to remain here and fight the case, as he feels he will be vict the today, and Attorney Roth dug down State, called me to an audience and lin "nis pocket and pulled out a check for $250, Roberts's attorney. ple at 8] the courtroom beaming. BANDIT FORSBREY “I shall blow his brains out, here and now." the Sheriff before leaving the Criminal Tombs that Forsbrey has sald I shall tion the Headquarters, where it is customa take the finger prints of all prisoners; on their way to Sink Sing, ‘Supreme Court in Brooklyn for the mur- FORMER U. S. MINISTER TO GREECE, WHO SAYS WAR’S LIKE FOOTBALL MENSCHIK WOMEN TELL OF ALL OF ROBIN'S . wwe LAWYER GIBSON'S STRANGE QUERIES) DEEDS ARE BARE MAKES THE GHOST (Continued from First Page.) Dr, Arthur 8. Moore had testified along ‘the same lines, Dr. Arthur 8. Moore, assistant phys! cian in the State Hospital at Middle- town, wax the first witness called. | Piled on the large table around which wat the fo of the defense, now Augmented by medical experts, were twenty-reven huge technical volumes Gibson sat eyeing them as if trying to divine what lay within them that | might prove incorrect the diagnosis of the oMciating and attending physicians | at the Szabo autopsy, who swore the Assuming these facts concerning th woman was not drowned, but strangled. | Do*ition of the throat organs to be true, SHOWED BEEF CONTRACTED BY | “St In your opinion, was the cause of their displacement?’ asked Elder, sud- EMBALMING INGREDIENT. | denly of Dr. Cuttell, after the phy- Dr. Moore demonstrated the con:rest- sician’s lecture, Ing tendencies of formaline, which was| The expert replied that he thought the chief ingredient in the flued with the change perfectly natural, conaider- which Mra. Szabo's body was embalmod, |!ng the handling of the body, ite em- He produced a bottle containing a|balming and ite long interment, In re- plece of beef. This, he explained, he Ply to another question he sald he had had injected with formalin yesterday. | made several autopsies of bodies of “The beef was contracted about 175- A Dersons who had been strangled. 1,000 of an inch einoe the injection,” he your opinion, would it be possible, testified. under the conditions assumed, te pro- “Would there be the same effect On| duce strangulation by the hands with- human flesh?” asked Elder. out leaving marks on the neck?’ asked “I think there would.” Mr. Eider, ‘Thia was stricken when Mr, Waseer- | ng," w * “No,” was the prompt answer. vogel, the Prosecytor's assistant, ob! When the attecnoon" session fe began cross-examining Dr. Cattell, in the courtroom were country folk from Chester, high school @ris, grandmas, Goshen folk and city folk from the Orange County Metrapo- Middletown, which ts seven miles (Continued from First Page.) Gibeon joined tm t ter. general ta All the morning he had been sit- close to his wife, whose devotior {has never faltered. Hedged in by hi. counsel he seemed jess interested He and Mrs. Gibson had pa’ Pencila, with which they too: .. said, “that I am going to let you home for Thanksgiving Day dinner sold night seasions to do it” There was a broad emile through jury box. visitors, and veveloping Com: In the Carnegie Trust Company. have been hit by the failure of Trust Company. facts,” said Mr. Steuei Robin make that $130,000 loan was interests would have been ruined to permit this line of questioning continue, By taking another tack Steuer brought out that several of Robin concerns did produced a corpse similar to that found in Mrs. ‘RIGID DEAD BoDy. | Mr. Wasservogel got the expert to admit that he knew nothing of the Szabo case at first hand. Then came this question: ‘Are any muscles affected in the “It can be done simply by moving v4 the body backward and forward.” turning of the head of @ rigid body, af. Ret Suton of the experiment | ‘er death, that are connected with the concerne deposited em—and the Northern, Mr. WALK COURT Theodore Roberts, the actor who dons prearing act several times a the Ghost in “Hamlet” at the %0-a-week alimony bill is staring Justice McCall was so informed in lor Mra, Lucy C. Roberts asked him punished for failing to pay imony ordered by Justice Davis, Orne! Herman L. Roth, attorney for Roberts, the physictan told of having cut a hole | {oneue, the soft ane the mm @ larynx?” ack of the neck of the corpse |'".NCi" was the slow answer. gow.” | Questioned as to cer e fall on Hilsb Sl Dr. Cattel remember @ good Dr. Moore tevtl-} remen p= The defense rested, and the called witnesses in rebuttal. HAD NO EXPERIENCE WITH) ti statement of Thomas Garrtron, a| veloping Company, § THROTTLED PERSONS. Greenwood Lake guide, was refuted by | Shore Traction Compan: Under cross-examination Dr. Moore| Deputy Sheriff De Graw De Graw ‘The other accounts, said he had never performed an autopsy | iso dentet he knew William Osgood-|--were nominal.” on ® person who had been throttled by| by, who had sworn the deputy told him the hands. he “would convict Gibson, employed as an| Hazen a guide, and expert for ti nae was asked. | brother, engineer, corroborated De “Three days ago,” the witness an-|Graw. awered. George Teichman swore that last ‘Then Dr, Moore was led to admit there| February Mrs. Stabo asked him to find nge in the beef|out if the mother and other relative: had {t not been put in a bottle. were still alive. He wrote letters for ‘Through « long mase of technicalities,|her, and got an answer from Vienna the prosecutor New York led his/ that informed the woman her mother ‘The doctor was asked ques-| was dead. pany. standard Weil, I it \- ang have forgot: | tis Bank had $60,000. In addition, state} Washington Savings Bank had 000; the Sot $15,000. CERNS WERE ALL IN DANGE All of this money—nearly $500,000— detense contended, would have » fost by the failure of th ure of the Northern Bank. Most of Robin concerns, it was shown, did us. tice McCall suggested that might begin making payments Then which waa turned over to Mrs. This seemed to everybody, and the lawyers left TORN FROM GIRL TSERVESENENE = (Continued from First Page.) “T was not unnecessarily severe,” sald Courts. ‘I have information from the not get hin to Sing Sing alive, I shall deliver him there, though my dead body ts carried there, shackled to his.” On the way to the Grand Central + van was stopped at But Sheriff Marburger refused to allow For: taken out of the van. ver half thrust in the pocket reout he stood vigil at iho door of the van until the other six prisonors travelling with Forsbrey had been re-| turned. Then he took a seat beside the driver on the front seat of the wagon, He acknowledged the salutes of friends who recognized him in this exalted pos! “| upon whom the defense had depended ye after the cy GIRL FOUND MURDERED, HER BODY DISMEMBERED. Bloodhounds Trailing Slayer of Daughter of Rich Farmer in 000 loan was “forced.” autopsy, and in which his competen a8 an expert was tested. “Would you care to examine the throat organs now?” asked Mr. Was- rvogdl. ‘1 should Ike to,” sald Dr. Moore, after @ moment of hesitation. ‘Name the muscles of the throat.” ‘The doctor heall ‘Then he aid: Arkansas. I'm afraid I can't. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Nov. 3.—Porses ‘You wish to qualify as an expert, eh? That's all," said, Waseervogel. Dea Wy Deveneemen (ore Orerenian coat y, ager of the|the murderers of Miss Mary Barnham, t_Pompton Plains, N.|17 years old, whose mutilated body was found to-day in the vicinity of her aid not know :s, witness back | home near Pleasant Ridge. Bl Peis the coroner'x| Mise Barnham was the daughter of a! of the bank, He eaid Minturn had| wealthy farmer, Yesterday she mount: | before Hyd could not ‘that | ed her horse and rode to the postoffice. | the city had far more than $160,000 Her failure to return resulted in & | deposit in the Northern Bank. Paterson, N. J. formerly | serch and the young woman's body! vr. Steuer brought out that Sterling Forest Hotel, ‘wen ‘was found this afternoon. and legs had been chopped off and hi on tho train | obviated the necessity of making A LARGE PHOTOORAVURE FREB. ' 130,000 loan. it a “his family wi is fem! be e coupon) with next end thus rel! oat tipped over and they wi I saw two heads to pay thin $233, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, AT HYDE TRIAL Mr. Steuer resumed his cross-exam- vation by asking Robin if the Fidelity ny, which Robin con- not have big accounts in August, 19 explained that he asked these qu tions to show how hard Robin would “If I am permitted to show those “I can show that the impelling cause that made very fact that every one of his own the failure of the Carnegie Trust Com- pany, and that to save himself—and not to favor Hyde—he made the loa Despitd this plea Justice Goff refused ave large deposits in the Carnegie Trust Company in Au- Gust, 1910—when the $130,000 loan was made—end that they would have been embarrassed financially by the trust company's failure. Others of the Robin the Northern Bank, and these acounts would have been lost by the failure of the North- Steuer brought out, would have been crushed by the failure of the Carnegie Com- The Northera Bank, Robin said, had on deposit in the Carnegie Trust more than $250,000, and the Washington Sav- fm the Northern Bank; the Fidelity De- said Robin, TRIES TO SHOW ROBIN'S CON- rnegie Trust Company or the subsequent fall- go under when these two failures came. Mr, Steuer harkened back to Robin’: conversation with Hyde, when the $130,- Q. Did you say yesterday that you told Hyde you did not see how he could deposit more than $145,000 of the city’s moneys in the Northern Bank in pay- ment for the loan to the Carnegie Com- pany, because you had up only a bond of $160,000 to protect the city? A, Yes, Q Well, is it note fact that Sve months before you ever saw Hyde, the deposits of the city of New York with the Northern Baak renchef $699,314 — which was 9849,316 more than your bond? A. reading from the report showed that for months alleged threat to Robin the time Her heed | the Northern Bank loaned $130,000 to Robin ompany $233,- the situation? A, I I would do sv if Cummins and 1912. Reichman would pay to the Bank the $170,000 they owed There were many vdjections on the of the State against this line of question! Mr. Steuer then took @p the au of Robin's sanity, in an effort to show that Robin's sister, Dr. Louise Rabin wits, had him placed in Dr. Carlos Mc- Donald's asylum on the day he was Heted, All hia questioning along line was balkea by Mr. Moss's objections, Robin's alleged repudiation of parents wae taken up, but tion was ruled out, save on not D In a flash, Robin exploded “no,” but the Court ordered the answer stricken from the records, “How many days since you pleaded pent go wet In the District-Attorney's office Objections were sustained. Q. Has it not been promised that as the be permitted to withdraw your pl id Lo mead and be allowed to go to trial? 0. in was not allowed to tell of his ‘suicide.” je you were in the Tombs, did y to Mr, Montgomery, former president of the Hamilton Bank, that you knew nothi bout Mr. Hyde, but that great pressure was being brought to bear on you, and that you had had to yield to the pressure as the only way you could get out of trouble? A_No. BELIEVED CUMMIN'! STORY THAT HE WA8 WEALTHY. Robin was questioned on redirect ex- amination by Mr. Moss. @. You sala you were under the im- pression that William J. Cummins ang Joseph B. Reichmann of the Carnegie Trust Company, wealth. How did you get that impres- sion? A. They told me so. (Laughter,) Q. You told Mr. Steuer you would not give your true name because it might incriminate you in some other country. In what country was that, and when? A. In Russia, when I was five years of age. (More laughter.) Robin was excused and William L. Brower, vice-president of the defunct Northern Bank, in charge of the bank's Joana, was called. He was examined by Assistant District-Attorney John K. Clarke, his testimony being a technical escription of the $130,000 loan made to the Carnegie Trust Company, Frederick E. Goldmann, who was as- sistant maneger of the Tremont avenue branch of the Northern Bank, explained the method by which deposits of city money were made at his branch. Mr. Steuer, interrupting the technical testimony, sald it gave him a headache, and that he was willing to concede such He the the by to Mr. the the 000 the jury @ great mass of documentary evidence, These documents—about 1,000 pounds of them—consisted of deposit slips and ledgers, showing how city money was deposited in the Tremont branch of the Northern Bank. It took the witness more than an hour merely to tell what the books represented, From them the witness had compiled a voluminous 1t of results, showing the total deposits ot city money dally in the Northern uth R. the the not a butler, sald Mra, Pneuritoh. “What for?" asked Mr. Pneuritch, Well, to look after the wine cellar, ana"— “Not much, Prisctila! I'm capable of looking after the booze myself. “A butler lends dignity to an estab- Nehment, too. “Well, when I get #o hard up for dig- tT to ‘borrow {t from a T'll quit and go back to the re- tall grocery business. You manage the hired girls, Priaciiia, and I'll attend to running the man part of the shebang. you on ane Have you tried it? 000 Meats Tasty tim D. W. Elimore, a private detective, told of @ visit to Minturn Sept. 17, in which the latter said that at the time of the occurrenci hearing sounds, and saw preceded, The second heavy gun in the medical ba dopa d of the defense was Di staff positions, and is book on post-mortem Cuttell ts the expert now revising pathology. Dr. * sen mae thy geitineaniee ereruans HE copy of Francis He had heard Dr. Schultze's timony and part of that of Dr. H ing and Dr. King. GIBSON LAUGHS AT CURIOSITY SEEKER’S DISAPPOINTMENT, rigor mortis in serted in the Christmas e State's witnesse: technical and during the occupied the 300-odd ap | jammed Into the courtroom, women by |courtesy occupying the front benohy wonderful art achiev tion with his left hand, His rigat never strayed from the butt of his weapon On the train the Sheriff had Forsbrey shackled hand and foot to one deputy, ®ationed another in the seat in front, and with his big revolver slipped under the fold of his eoat took up station in t behind, warning the criminal y from time to time that his first motion to break loose would mean a bul- let through his brain. FORSBREY MURDERED HABER DASHER, SWEARS PAL PUT ON TRIAL, The defense of James Cassidy, on trial ber Justice Aspinall in the der of Walter Meseritz, the Flatbush avenue haberdasher, who Was shot to death in his shop last summer, was} begun to-day With the presentation of ap allbt. The defendant was the first witness and bekan his testimony by putting the murder up to Reynolis Forsbrey, He unted the fact that he had ed the safety razors stolen from the murdered man's shop by saying that he had met Forsbrey on the street and 0 with young desperado's to pawn them for him, Cassidy alleged that he was at his home, No, 56 State street, Brooklyn, at the hour of the murder, and hie brother Frank corroborated this teait- mony. reproduction is 22 x 16 the magazine, and is in colors of the original throat,” relieve irritation and leave a cool, fresh taste. For coughs and colds Quick sank, that his great pictu placed within the reach American family. Reading, MANUFACTURING CONFROTIO! ‘§O EXTRA CHABOS FOR TS, Advertioements for The Workd be Memengee rd ‘ Saat. great painting, “Better,” in- Home Companion marks the most American magazine making. This size, occupying two full pages of It is a fitting tribute to the famous artist, who met death when the Titanic D. Millet’s Woman’s . ement in inches in the exact painting. re is now of every Northern) STRAIGHTEN HUNCHBACK’S were men of s#reat) matters. The State then placed before | SPINE WITHOUT THE KNIFE. Another Bloodless Operation for Curvature Performed and Said to Be a Success, PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 22.—The sec- ond dloodiess operation for the cure of a case of congenital curvature of the spine or “hunchback,” was performed at the Medico-Chirurgical Hospital he yeatel day, when Dr. J. P. Mann of this city, by a series of manipulations and weights Jgilened the backbone of @ thirteen- D $5 & S$ ‘ Derbies and Soft Hats, $3 & $& “High-steppers” are not confined to horse-flesh. A man feels that way when he’s well dressed. Wearers of Young’s Hats are in that. class. A's Bertha Moon was taken Into the op- erating room on a rolling chair, as het deformity was so great she had never been able to walk. 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