The evening world. Newspaper, January 3, 1913, Page 1

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The “ Circulation Books Open to All.” orm ms) pe, PRICE ONE CENT. ) MUR TURNS iT BOSSES; WARNS THE LEGISLATORS HE'LL STAND NO FOOLING FINANCIER-TURFMAN WHOSE DEATH TO-DAY FOLLOWED OPERATION. Refuses To-day to Hold a Con-| ference in Private With ‘The Pree, Fubitehing rh Werle). NEW DVNANITERS ARE TOBE FREED, UNDER Bonds Fixed at $10,000 for Each Year of Sentence, Ryan Giving $70,000. ONE DOES NOT APPEAL. State Chairman. ARRANGES FOR INQUIRY. It Will Start Monday in His! Own: Office; Verbeck Case Comes Next. ALBANY, N. Y., Jan. %—Following | the Maes of his declaration of indepen- | denee from pressure from Cha! F. Murphy of Tammany Hall, uttered ye terday evening, Gov. Sulzer to-<d rubbel It Into the poitticians of his / party by refusing the request of George M. Palmer, Chairman of the Democratic State Committee, for a private conte «nee, Bulser, apparently, ts on the wa: pate. “Let's talk it over in the back room,” suggested Chairmen Paimer, relative to . \-matter he had brought before the Governor. “No,” repited Sutser, ‘wi ere and talk in the open. ov. Sulzer followed this by making Supplemental statement about his | ention to have the State Departments tented. “Tm gotag to begin right here im the exeontive dopartment,” he wala, “Tt wom't take long. When 1 Yaow el about this 2 can start eleewhere. I do not bel thi Legisisture will interfere in nny way with the work. If such « thing happens I will place the matter be- fore the people and get their judg- ffo on the theory,” he said, “that the members of the Legisia- I stay out JAMES R KEENE JANES R. KEENE LEFT $20,000,000, 7 tare will do their duty at all Pr % Phe cvestigators will begin work in} ili He toe Governors office next M Tia i wih be followed by an investigation of jolt LENT Ta Other Estimates Place Fortune pit neescoee of Turfman-Financier at $5,000,000, A Few of the Many World Advertising Is ni 1 in the case of the death discussion of the passing, early tos y, of James R. Keone, the apeculator i i 1 horseman, shifted in Wail street Victories in 1912 the uptown hotel district to dis- ion of his ‘obable wealth. In no bs recent similar case hax there been such Year There Were Printed: ||2,"'% iv*rsence of opinion as to the aire. 896,869 Some of Mr. Koene's friends think hi World “Hel; Wanted” and will is certain to dispose of @ fortu of clove to 000, Others who were “Situations Wanted” Ads. fully ap close to the financier say the 616,041 More Than The Herald. || total of Mr. Keene's wealth will be found under $5,000,000. Mr. Keene, long in danger of death, made @ will, It understood, some time ago disposing of joc “To Let” Ads.— a ” “Busi- Keene fortune. However, thetr argu- | World ‘For Sald” Ads.— recall that James R. Keene cleaned up more than $4,000 in one aeason with his racing stable only five years ago, and | in this class are the prophets who say the Keene fortune will equal if not exceed Lean Fune Chureh, Ne and Fleventin street, 068 World*'Inetructior?” Ads,— 3,500 More Than The-Herald. man publicly esteemed to be very | ments are not considered by those who! vices will be held at Grace| ' |Long Legal Battle in Prospect as Court Grants Coun- sel’s Motion. OHICAGO, Jan. 2A writ of super staying execution of. the sen- tences imposed upon the dynamite con- spirators recently convicted at Indian- apolis, Was issued wy the United States Court of Appeain here (o-da yaned on the number of | sedeas, BIG BAIL, ON LON APEAL REID'S BODY HERE FUNERAL WARSHIP NEARLY HITS LINER: North ikea er Narrowly Es- capes Ramming Oceanic in Dense Fog. | GUNS BOOM A REQUIEM. | British Cruiser Natal Anchors in North River; Body Carried Ashore. Big guns sounding the Ambassador’ salute Doomed a requiem this afternoon as eight biue-bloused man-o'-waremen Ufted from the deck of the British ar- mored cruiser Natal the body of White- law Reid, late United State Amba: dor to Kngiand, and reverently lowered the prisoners had been sentenced | serve-$10,00) for each year. ‘Thus Ryan's bail was fixed at $70,0m, | Those who received sentences of lx ark must furnteh 940,000; four years, ees and #0 on down to $10,000 for the one year's sentence. According to defense lawyers, the Judges Seaman and Baker sit- | jeemed impressed by the ments presented this forenoon. fense lawyers stated money enough to | admit all to bail would be forthcoming. | Herbert 8. Hockin will not appeal. Attorney . Zoline of Chicago pre- sented the petition In bevalf of the con- victed fron workers, and argued in port of It, as did Attorney Chester Oline de ed that De n such the pres » the! soners have the right of bal, par | viarly as the defendants were se noel to sent to Leavenworth before a ° ne on a writ of © nad been held, Mge Raker stated that the point | f the writ of error was not well taken: [ie added thes was no occasion for the | Court of als to intervene ina e unless it is shown that the pros of Lae lower court was quest law ig to this, Zoline argucd th, e evidence on whlch convictions were ‘obtained at Indianapolis was “vague ant wate,” and that the Judge vurt should not have alnwed of the defendants to he lower the cases of many ko to the jury Ata CASTRO GETS WRI, | ~ STARTING AFIGHT TO REMAIN HERE size of the esiate of a reputed mill'on- | Won't Leave Country H e Announced. y | Gen. Cipriano Castro te not going 10 his property. € ‘a 4 160,11 Move Than The Herald. It does not appear that anybody out-| leave the United States without a fight of Mr. Keene knew much about) fils announce’ int " ting his affairs. His ups and downs were| quietiy on the Amerika toemorrow went epectacuiar, but he had many ups than | sida iata thik whei and “Fi- || downs, Within a year ne was forced |, een Asuht scrconeelone ness Ad eal to pay $900,000 to the creditors of | Stock Exchange firms wrecked in «| 94,481 More Than The Herald. || 001 ne manipulated, but the loss of! ay rival that great sum ts said to have been! girge Gordon Rettle fled an applica- nen but @ mild setback to his resources. | tion for a writ of Habeas , on Of course $1,000,000 ts not regarded as Jods Holt ii - ort Resort’ adge Holt in the Fede e Ads. seaner the: cuinle measure. of ate Keene's | writ, was directed to Commniatonar of — wealth, But some of his associates be Immigration Willlatos, and Judge Holt 40804. Mose Than The Herald. || !'eve tha: $1.00, additional won | Emmis APH Nea rea tegg hy ery pretty nearly sound the extent of the! iim qgemorrow. ‘The burden chen will be vermment tw alow cats ontinue to hold put upon the ( why It should [in ousted tro. | Legal action on the part of Castro was & surprise to of! Tt had ox | pected that he would make a fi ry fore a eperial stigating co in his effort to get into the ¢ thie expectation was dissipated tion to leave quiet |announced deteraiin ly without furthe: | 1,560,587 World Ads, | sonday morning, chiet among tie]! “rhe writ wan nuked for on the gions H pallbearers will be J. Plerpont Morgan! that Castro had been dented tie right Altogether—- And August Relmont. Other pallbearers) to, consult counsel. selected are F. K. Sturgis, H. K. Knapp,| Lawyer Rattle, armed wit 720,191 More Than The Herald, |) samuel Bocock. Alexander stevens, | order, staried at unce fo 4 Rolomon Hanford, P. Hritt, J to serve it upon Comm , Follansbee and Algernon Paingerfleld.| At the Battery he found cy A meet the Juckey tied up by the fleree gale World Ads. for Best Results! eon oi tosmarrow te yuld tive in the stern Koene, e - ee enettneaaaenniatenet ements ~ Suddenly Changes Mind and, {t overside to the feet of a file of ma- Tines on a lesser funeral ship—a nav tug—nestling alongside the cruiser. Nineteen times the cannon roared, at intervals of one minute, carrying to the city the message that the Natal's race across the Atlantic was ended. The bat- teries of the United States battleship Florida, of the cecorting equedron, and of hs Niital epat friendly, solemn fire at each other alternately until the ealute was over. ‘The British funeral ship and its Amer- Iean escort reached the anchorage in the North River, between Ninety-sixth and 2 [One Hundred and First streets, after a | fom-bound, halting Journey up the bay, that twice came to a full stop with anchors overside, | Through Ambrose Channel the Natal |crept, with a New York pilot aboard, | the white Britivh war flag, showing the ross of St. George in its corner, half mast and the American | drooping from the main truck. lowing her, at a of six ship ngths, was the United States battle- da and behind the Florida was the North Dakota, The destroy-| Jers Drayton, Roe, MeCall and Pauld- ei brought up the rear | FOG DELAYS ARRIVAL OF FU- NERAL VESSELS. heavy fog during at} ensign Foi-| distance So ihe this | was art of the journey that the speed of ue column Was reduced Ly necessity to a funereal pace, Al Quarantine the North Dakota's offers and men denly saw before them a looming hulk was the White Star liner Oceanic, at anchor, A whistle , voices shout- ed sharp commands and, In the nick of | time, the course of the battleship was | altered and she slipped back into the og without a0 much as scraping the) of the liner YORK, FRIDAY, TAKES FIRST STEP 3, 1913, WRECKS ALL AROUND CITY IN FIERCE GALE; DEATHS IN STORMS THAT SWEEP NATION: “C Circulation Books Open to All”? | 22 PAGES eT ee Cleariag Cat Te-night; Sateréay Fair. INA EDITION. “PRIOR ONE CENT. “JANUARY | GREAT RAILROAD MAN * WHO DIED SUDDENLY IN THIS CITY TO-DAY FOR THE ARREST OF ROCKEFELLER Chairman Pujo Plans to Have House Issue a Peremptory Attachment. WATCH KEPT ON HOME. Billings Denies That Million. Yacht. -Chairman | Trust ine WASHINGTON, Pujo has caiied th. Jan Moi y Vestigating Committee to’ meet to-mor= row to plan ways to capture Willlam Rockefeller. The result may he a certl- fication of the facts to the Ho! with @ request that a peremptory attachment be {esued by resolution charging the of millionaire with contempt. Such an | attachment would give the Sergeant: Arms of the House authority to forcibly seize the person of Mr. Rockefeller | and bring him to Washington. Mr. Pujo 1s inclined to doubt the story that Mr. Rockefeller had left the | country, Ail clues jo the whereabouts of Mr. Rockefeller will be run down. —_——>—— ROCKEFELLER HERE, OFFICIALS SAY; HE MAY SURRENDER. IS FOUND DEAD Information reached The Evening World to-day from a source close to the! Pujo Congressional Committee, inveat-| | 4 oe gating the Money: ‘Trust, that William Former President of Chicago, Rockefeller is tn New York City the same source came the heen that Mr. Rockefeller, alarmed and chagrined by the wide publicity attend mn Milwaukee and St. Paul Expires Suddenly. ing the sensational vigil which Ser A Riddell of the House of ee erty tera tteet aid; Roswell Miller, Chateman of the Board Fifth avenue, is arranging througa Yf Directors of the Chicage, Milwaukee | counsel to to service of the gub- and St, Paul Railway, was found ¢ poena which he has been dodging for in his bed in hin home, No. 19 more than two months. Sixty-aecond atreet, Jo-day. Mr, Miller The Evening World's juformant and had | i and under the care of phy | investigators In the employ of Ser alelata tor aetaa alias tHONEM REIE to ateArmu Riddell sagiaeb alr. Rocks | keep office hours with hiv usval ad- im not in Bermuda or eruthing Am Souths | perce to ran emi waters on C.K, G. Billings’s yacht | s " Vanadis. The circum ccount of | bck: thig morning & mal Mr. Rockefellers movements sent from |wnder Instructions from Dr. Tindall of Brunswick, Ga., is not credited by Mr,|No 1% Kast Fifty-fourth street. en Riddell, who has ordered hia guards to| tered Mr. Miller's room to give him remain on duty at the Rockefeller mane sion, A cable ¢ muda, medicine, She found the millionaire and railroad premident dead. Dr. M. Al- len Starr, with whom Dr, Tindall was associated, was called to the house and aid that Mr. Miller had died of a stroke of apoplexy some time before. An Mr. Miller had been in the care of the phyaictans for some time Dr, Starr patch from Hamilton, Ber- this afternoon said neither Wil- jam Rockefeller nor the yacht Vanadia, on which he was reported to 1, had arrived there ‘The big squad of deputy Sergeanta-at- have \ | | HEAD OF RAILROAD, GA-MILE WIND WRECKS | Men on lug in Distress Saved by a {and iad served one term in the House! Bron and the big ferry did not dare te | For @ time ho served as United States! manoeuvre no near the lip. Conmul at Georgetown, British Gulam. | When about 100 feet off the slip VESSELS IN THE BAY; CREWS ARE RESCUED Ferryboat—Four Barges Crash Into Battery Seawall and One Is Sunk. 3 we THREE DISTINCT STORMS LEAVE RUIN OVER NATION Gale Rips Mast Off Lighter at North River Pier—Crew Abandons Tug and Barges. _—_—_——_———- The roaring sou'east storm whirling up the coast filled the Bay with such a big wind this afternoon that every half hour brought a new story of wreck and the near approach of tragedy among the fleet of the shallow water vessels. At one time there were no less than three tugs in dire distress in different parts of the Bay between the Battery and Staten Island. The crew of one toundering tug, with the exception of the white-headeil oM skipper and two who stuck with him, were taken off by the Staten Island ferryboat Bronx, Another tug began to fill within one hundred ards of the ferry building at the Battery and was warped to smooth water with her gunwales almost awash, 4.10 o'clock trip her oMfvers heard faint whistles of distress coming down against the wind from a wallowing tug off | the direction of Robin's Reef, The tu seemed on the point of turning turtie, such @ list to port i: had; the crew could be seen on the deckhouse with life preservers strapped about their ohests. SKIPPER REFUSES TO LEAVE Wedemeyer of Michigan, Who} nie unwteidty craft on the windward side of the tug, which proved to be the Lost Reason at Panama, | Leader of Newark. The Bronx waddiet alongside and lowered a ladder, but the A sean ware 90 high none of the crew of Drowns Himself. the disabled Leader dared make the - Jump to the ladder, | Finally, after long manipulation, while all the passengers on the Bri tive William W. Wedemeyer of Anm| crowded the rail to witness the strange ® When the fereyboat Rronx, Capt. Joneph Silty commanding, was bound CONGRESSMAN IN from ‘st. George to Manhattan on her ENDANGERED TUG. Capt, Smith turned the Bronx, and b: delicate manipulation managed to ge! Arbor, Mich., who suddenly went in-{phenomenon of @ ship resoue in the sane at Colton, Panama, at the time of] bay, « gangplank was thrown from the President Taft's recent visit to the} Bronx to the deck of the tug. All of | | | | WASHINGTON, Jan, 8.—Representa- ae but Capt. McKeon and ae deckhand and a atoker—scurried es ’ been | 2cross the plank. ship Panama, PA NDR Ga Beg teen |. The Roary-headed old captain, who taken at Colon. je body has been on the bay for twenty years, vovered. , refused to leave his boat. From the | he news of the Congressman’s U!-|piiot house lie shouted that he would cide was received by the War Depart: |beach his craft somewhere on the day, It was known |étaten Island shore. ever wailed early yess terday on on the liner Panama. Representative Wedemeyer went to the Isthmus with @ Congressional party ment via wirelen here that Wede With the two men who remained loyally by him down in the flooded fireroom, Capt, MeKeon Wave the signal for full speed ahead and the wounded tug limped off toward the shore, listing so beavily that It om Co at the name time the President visited " ooked as Af each succeeding ways there, On the voyage from New York | 00 tt) ie ae nee he collapsed and was taken first to a TUG 18 SAVED WHEN IT 8) ma ABOUT TO SINK. Just as the Bronx was drawing megr her slip at the Battery with tne five rescued sadors @board, another thrilling spectacte of @ tug in distress was offered the passengers, The big tug Transfer No. & of the New York, New Haveo sanitartum in | ama and |, was put in confinement tp @ hospital where he became violent and raved about his it olmctt He developed a tendenoy and wan closely | Wedemeyer's close friends say that a fow daye befure leaving for the Ieth> mus he fell and truck his head on an|and Hartford ine, bound down toy atdewalk, It was not regarded as| River, tried to negotiate the turn at the serious, and @id not deter him from] Battery and took on heavy seas every going with the Congressional party, Wedemeyer was thirty-nine years old minue, The tug whistled for assistance, but there was none at hand except the At the sumo time that news was re-| where the revenue cutters tle up the ceived here of Wedemeyer's death nie! tug seemed on the point of foundering. leaguer in the House receivd a cable! Men on the of the dock tossed from Pana that the Representative) lines to her and swiftly ee pulled in Wax en route here in cyarge of an at-[the cables and waa drawn into the He was repdited as having| quiet watel of the alip beside the reves he word that the Natal, heralded for| Arms of the House and private dete Y days, was at last on her way up theltives which was placed around the | NOt reeard the case belo for the river Prought an immense crowd tolgome of Mr. Rockefeller and the aa. | Coroner's act 4 no notice was sent {the Battery seawall, joining homes of his suns-in-law, Dr, |t? te autiorities, Coroner Feinberw, Sie Tak Was oo danke WA Reale Baad H Ipin and Marcelle face, [ho made inquiries when told that Mr, Admiral Piske, commanding the ercort-|ey Dodge on Monday night, will not | Mller had died muddenty, accepted this ng squadron, thought it best to anchor | be withdrawn until it is definitely ag. | °xDlanation. J off Tompkinsville. A n hour's walt |certained that Mr, Rockefeller in elso.| Rowell Miller began the career | he got the funeral ship under way again, | where, Hainsoaked, cold, ut not dis. | *hieh made hin One of ihe comlnanh only to drop anchor once more before | cou the watchers stick to their | Pliroad bad bay ied Ler ase the had proceeded « half ii [points of vantage from which every {4TUK clerk Ik Auburn, 3 ie was FI oe peta Baran the fog {exit trom the Rockefeller home or the born in Hartford, Pa, sixty-nine years taorened and another attempt was made /houser ad " at Pitty fourth | CRI eee car a ater) I teteiiaeateteamine eiosly; canes it) est information in| Mr. Miller enlisted in the Third New | possible to pro aid Mr. Riddell, at his| York Arti! and saw service in Vir- Up the river went the meitke | headquarters In the Martinique Hotel| «inia and South Carolina throughout the sraft until they reached the anchorage, | to-day Mr, Hocketelter is tin at nis| War He wax muntered 0 ut os a cap: home, ‘ om ‘ifth avenue. do not) tain and becam ” ° n rosid | SERVICES TO BE AT CATHEDRAL | yn iitidence in the report that Mr. /aldex i the construction of the Cairo OF ST. JOHN Rockefeller sailed away from Jekyll and Vincennes He was mada an: From the deck of the naval tug the Island off the orgia coast on New| sistant to the sup ndent when that ody wae ken inte @ launon but L have two detectives) road w i" » When tt was veyed ashore, Eacorted hy @ re to Kot at the truth sold to the Wabash ayatem Mr. Miller guard, the eighteen pall ‘marched that on New Year's morn-| chose to go with the Chicago and West- Cathedral of St. Join the Dt. ing It was por dvely @tated In some ern Indiana Vice-President and at Amsterdam avenue and One newspapers thet Mr. Rockefeller was) Treasurer er @ year he went to Hundred Pweifth street, There a @t his son's home in Greenwich, the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul 4] guard of twenty marines took ‘That story was even mo) an anwiatant tot neral Manager, posts to remalh untl tthe funeral tial than thp report whica comes from | whom he swoon succeeded ins to-morren Brunswick, a. about Mr. Rockefeller! With Alexander Mitchell, one of the osident ‘Taft, accompanied by Seere- having fled o a yacht, Well, Mr, | ploneers of Northwestern railroading, tary of State Knox, oti Rockefeller» ot at Greenwich on! Mr. Miller orqaniged a road which, with cers, Ambassador James New Year'e Day and I don't beleve | te oteit ri became the greatest members of the Dip) ' Was at Jekyll Island on thet day eitne:,|railtaad in the world tn point lof milo leave Washington to-night to attend tie "1 cannot believe that even Wiillam | age closed the St. Paul headquar- funera The Goverw General of Can we flee from the United n Division, took coarme Duke of Connaught, will ne he wieiter of an English colony of Hie road {” person and shook the ed by bie multary a Col ermuda to a ni together to much an extent that, Lowther appear before the own worda: “Lf you etepped on: | Hanks and Commerce of the House of of a ewitchman in Milwaukee $10 Men’ 1'8 0" coats& Suits, $4 95 Hoprensn Titeariee Mr Hookete ear & ail Crom the station Nided service for yrone howe President of the aune he ia aw Taso e@ continued tn thar yet, Returday Tien wy doesn't Mi, Rookefelia years and came to New fhe Mach. thibes ept service and pruveed to make his Yuk 4 airman vf the board in| a ee uses in the regular wa Vertaialy | i" Me “ 1 in sea Mary | os Olngr store Louise Roberta at hte Twe son O00 Chas botuiday eee SWynWaued no Fouse Fagen | aud © deuslier eurmave dtm wt arsine etre TP anEM

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