The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1913, Page 4

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a U.S. RUUNCTION ASKED TOTIEUP SUBWAY CONTRACT New Control Would Make In- terborough Stronger Is One Argument. Continenta'! Securities Com- Save First Mortgage Holders, Through ts attorney, J. Aspinwall Hodge, the Continental Becuries Com- any appeared before Judge Coxe, in the Unted States District Court to-day, sct- dng in the capacity of a stockholder of ‘the Interborough Rapid Transit Oom- pany. The lawyer asked for an injunc- Aion restraining the Interboroush-Metro- Politan Company and the Windsor Trust Company, at a meeting of the Inter- borough's stockholders called for March 5, certain #haros of the Interborough * pany Claims 1: Intervenes to | the mo extr trade whi fifty-four ia made, and th | terms of Neelf are such that it is almost n that the it. not be at » bulld any new sub: in that time | Richard Reld Rogers appeared to rep resent the Intetborough Kapid Transit | Company; Cravath, Henderson and De! jersdorft for the Interborough-Metro- politan, Rofine and Rollins f ne Windsor Trust Company, and Nicol), | 'Anable, Lindeay & Faller for the other | defendants. a eroce wom exw. FIREMEN FIGHT BLAZE. INEVENNG TOS AFTER ATENONG BANQUET Somerville, N. J., “Vamps” Go Into Action From Festive Board and Theatre. SOMERVILLE, N. J., Feb. 21.—The West End Hose Company of the Vol- unteer Fire Department celebrated ite twenty-fifth anniversary, ast night, with a banquet at the Hotel Cawley, Company recorded in the name of the ‘Windeor Trust Company, recorded in the fame of the Windsor Trust Company, {nm favor of authorizing the Rapid Tran- eit Company to execute @ mortgage and ftasue bonds. The Continental Securities Company asks that the injunction be made to hold pending the litigation now in progress. Should Judge Coxe issue this in- Junction the practical effect will be to tle up the execution of the subway op- erating contracts indefinitely, for, * is said, months will pars ®efore the deci- sion of the Federal Court will be hand- 1 down, during the pendency of which the injunction would hold. SUIT DECLARES TRACTION COM. BINE ILLEGAL TRUST. ‘The motion for the injunction was di- rected to the Interborough Rapid Tran- sit Company, the Interborough-Metro- Dolltan Company, the Windsor Trust Company, the Metropolitan Street Rail- ‘way Company, the New York City Raif- way Company, Thomas F, Ryan, Aug Belmont, Edward J. Berwind, John ;Crimmins, Andrew Freedman, Thom: YP, Fowler, Gardiner M. Lane and Cor- nelius Vanderbilt. The petition for the Injunction ts made in detail by Charles E. Robinson, Neeretary of the Continental Securitios Company, He seta forth that on April M1, 188, the Continental Company, @ Stockholder of the Interborough Ry j | sa enna ering nae Tee NTO ‘ough-Metropolitan Com- ing that the Interborough- Metropolitan had acquired 90 per cent. of the stock of the Interborough Rap! ‘Tranait by exchanging therefor its own stocks and bends, The Interborough- Metropolitan aleo acquired majorities of stock in most of the street railway lines of Mamhattan and the Bronx, thus Decoming, #0 the complaint asserted, a monopoly in restraint of trade Under the laws of New York State, and tho curt was asked to order the Interbor- ough-Metropolitan to return its Inter- stock to its original owner. the action was brougnt laws, it wan tried in the Courts because the par- ties were citizens of different cities and the amount involved was more than 829.000. Shortly after the filing of the ac- tion ‘the defendants a ‘ed to complaint, aakin Ray dis- miss the suit, Judae Ray dismissed the demurrer, and allowed the action to go to trial. Testimony was fully taken before an examiner of the United t States District Court, whose report bi i been filed. The Continental Securi! j Company ask that Judge Coxe issu { j | } ‘ } the injunction to hold until the Court has acted upon the report of the ex- aminer, , Continuing in his petition Mr. Robin- | after which the company took posees- sion of the Bijou Theatre and witnessed a midnight performance of vaudeville and fire piotures, provided for the oc- casion. The guests of the company in- cluded Mayor William V. Steele, the Borough Council, and the members of the other local fire companies. After the performanc je VAMpA were Congregated about the fire house, and ‘wore otil] talking about the last great fire in the borough and wondering when there would be another, when the streets were suddenly illuminated by @ fierce fire, which broke out in the block of manufacturing bulidini t Main and Davenport streets. Many) of the firemen responded :o the alarm in evening clothes. The fire broke out in the fourth story of the E, A. Dewitte Dyeing and Bleaching Works, where « great quantity of chem- feals and yarn was stored, The fire soon spread to the plants of the Henry W. Dix Company, garment makers; the Glen Rock Woollen Hills and the Somer- ville Manufacturing Company, From the Cotalap Company's big fire pumps three streams were turned on the biase, while the local fire depart- Ment fought the fire with aix streams, and after a prolonged fight got it under control, Each plant suffered consider- able damage by water. No accurate eatimate ean be obtained of the fire loss. The origin of the fire is unknown, streslterdt odes NICOLL OUT AS EXECUTOR. buttolk aty Gurregate Owes Ka- j¢ 9N8,NOK.3A, Ro He Hesigns, An accounting was filed in Nassau County Court to-day of the estate of Anna Somarindyck by the executore— Edward P. Lapping, Jon W. Gammack and William G. Nicoll—revealing that the estate was worth $211,601.44, of which $196,703,94 has already been pald out, leaving $14,004.10, ‘The money went lars- ly to St. Paul's Church of Glen Cove, 1. 1; the Bowery Mission and the Home of Bt. Gill the Cripple of Hompstead, L.1. ‘To-day's accounting followed a petition hy Nicoll, who in Surrogate of Suffolk County, asking that he be felioved as executor because of lack of harmony and ‘because he owes the estate $04,308.35 for money borrowed during the life of Ors, Somarindyck, Bi! tol Ee THE CLOSING QUOTATIONS. The following the lilghest, lowest end st tg ae Te meted tinparel ith yvtrdoy coving prs!” Low, last, Oh Amalgnmatel Copper at Ny at uy moet Sugar: Py iy a = it 1913, the Interborough Hapid Tran Comps jon of the Pub- Me Service Com) ion to execute a refunding mortgage and tnsue §170,- 000,000 5 per cent, bonds. In this eon- Corporation law, which provides that NO public) service corporation whall | roval of two- sue bonds without the aj IN HANDS OF WIND6OR TRUST, “But the consent of two-thirds of the stockholders of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company cannot be obtained without the Interborough-Metrop Ai which owns # per cent. of the stock of the rapid transit company,” the pet!- tion recites. “On tl other hand, the #tock of the rapid taansit company held by the Inter-Met was mortgaged on March 6, 1908, to secure an tssue of 970,000,000 of collateral trust bonds, $8.- 0,000 of which have been Isrued and are held by the public. ‘The stock was Windsor Tr but att y wgrees to allow the Interboryagh-Metropolitan ty have the Voting proxies on this stock. “We believe, however, that the own- vet Company eame th ership by the Interborough-Metropol!- fan of any of tole rapid traneit stock Miewal, for all the more important a ns of fact In our sult now pend- ing have been admitted by the defend- ants, thelr defense being mainiy on pointe of law “One of the effects of the new mort- ¢ would be to mak the $70,000,000 in trust bonds already issued terborough>Metropolitan Com- In? reality a second mortgage of ete of the Interborough Rapid "Transit, Company firet mortguge as at present. “The Interborough-Metropolitan now proposes ty have the Interborough Rapid Transit Company execute « mor wage of $170,000,000 or more. Then the 150,000,000 that will be received after the banker's commissions have been Aeducted, will be used to take up an fom inentiona the fact that on Jan. 8,! nection the petitioner cites the Htock | instead of a virtual | of@ bond \eaue of $94,068,000; to redeem Con, Gas, Com Prod, “Co. ‘a 1S 8 at gt ae N Oy AN 8 | Nir fig” Hen tia SR Pouinsyt thy TIN Liste 1 Hk a ge is Mem & ity MARES. ab Ob bby a, 0 is {tog Tuber as if A steel yf. Toa Vian 4 certain notes and obligations, and to equip, operate and miles of new subway and ele *, If the Intervorough is permitted to| ne wo mach) f land « THE EVENING WORLD X— Atrocities in Absence ot Bulgarian Guards. ish troops nmitting unspeakable atrocities n the Christian populations in th sof Chatalja since the withdrawal nany of the Bulgarian troops from front of the Turkieh fortifications, arian Government to-day. The prelate declares that the surviving Christian inhabitants are fleeing in great numbers from their homes, Telegrams have also been received from the dean of the consular corps and from the Greek Metropolitan at Bilivra announcing the massacre of over one hundred men and women in the village of Konaminio, —— SUMMIT HEALTH BOARD QUITS IN A BODY AND A HUFF. Common Council Refuses to O. K. the Bills, and Resignations Follow. SUMMIT, N. J., Fob, 21-The Board of Health of Summit hi resigned in a body because the Common Council re- fuses to pay the billa the board has vouched for. As a consequence there ia @lood on the Jersey moon and a healthy row is in progress. Health Offtcer J. Edward Rowe put in fa Will for his services and the demand was honored by the Board of Health, then sent to the Common Council for approval. The council turned down the DM] because, wo tts members explain, Rowe was not registered as a health “OBJECT MATRIMONY oMcer according to jaw. Promptly the Board of Health, com- prising Dr. Thomas P. Prout of the Fair Oaks Saultarium, Dr, William H. Law- rence of the Overlook Hompital, James G, Ovens and Parker W. Page, a New York lawyer, sent In Joint resignations, to take effect on March 1, Mayor Will- fam Hewton says the matter of accept- ing the resignations and Milling the va- canclos is squarely) up to the Common Counell. — ” AD. SPOILS FIRST ROMANCE. Tailor’s Best Girl Saw His Quest for Another and Then Had Him Arrested. ‘Theresa M. Moyers, a pretty house- maid employed in the home of Capt. Young, New York representative of the No. Magistrate Appleton in the West Sido Court to-day as complainant against Hiek Karesek of G7) Warren atreet, Brooklyn, whom #he once loved but whom she now fears, Fora year, until quite lately she said, the young tatlor had been devoted to her, To be sure, she explained, she Aways paid the car ‘and the refigshment checks when went out towether, but she could Detter afford it than he. Not long amo, said Theresa, she found a newspaper advertisement signed with Karesek’s name asking for an op- portunity to become acquainted with @ young woman of gentle and loving dls- position who would marry him, When Karesek called again she told him @he wanted no more to do with him and showed him the advertisement. He de- nied having caused it to be printed, but he showed him the door, Since then, Theresa told the Magis- (rate, the tallor has been hanging about the Young's home, and yesterday he threatened to Kill her unless she mar- ried him or paid him $100 to release his claim on her, ‘The Magistrate held him in #00 bonds, ae Appraisals of Kata’ Deputy State Comptroileer Wallace 8. appraisals of estates under the inherit- ance tax law to the Transfer Tax Office Troops Commit Unspeakable SOFIA, Bulgaria, Fob. 2L~The rurk. | BLKTON, Md., Feb, 21.—Rofreshed by are perpetrating massacres | a .Purther test!- mony regarding the automati¢e revolver | began fifty years ago, Albion Alexander | i with which William A, Dorr of @tock- | Vanderpool, sixty-five, one of the most | o'clock this morning on the mareh to |ton, Cal, | salleged to have murdered | respected citizens of Newark, 3 4] according to a despatch from the Greek |6 this evening, but their way lay over Metropolitan of Chatalja to the Bul-| sixteen miles of the worst piece of road on the second floor of No. 807 West mick, who was called in, broke it down. |~ Crevices in the window and the door Fraser transmitted to-day the following came: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2 1, 1013. TURKS MASSACRE SUFFRAGISTS HAVE [PISTOL ANDDIARY 'ELOPE AS CLIMAX - CHRISTIANS IN. HARDESTMMARCHON MURDER EVIDENCE | TO LOVE ROMANCE —GHATALJAREGION WAYTOWASHINGTON AGAINST DORR) FIFTY YEARS OLD, | ' , Head for Havre de GraceOver, Weapon Supposed Used in | Worst Stretch of Road They : Killing of Marsh, and Book Have Yet Tramped. With Death Record Shown. SALEM, Mass., Fed. 21. night's rest here “Gen.” Rosalie Jones's Army of the Hudson left at 9) Washington, A stop for luncheon will be made at Northeast, Md. ‘The hikers expect to reac) Harve de Grace about George E. Marah of Lynn on April 11 last was given when the ¢rial was re- sumed to-day. Waker TR. Anderson, shipping clerk at @ Grerms factory én Hartford, Conn., testified that the tevolver, numbered SMM, which, Witnesses said yesterd: was found near the supposed scene of the murder in Weet Lyan, was shipped from the factory to a San Francisco wholesaler in August, 1901. He described between New York and Washington. ‘The Bayside band will meet the pli- arims at Perryville, just across the Bus- quehanna River from Havre de Grace, and escort them over the bridge to their stopping place for the night. ee eee SENATORS ADD $20,000,000 [Stta"tnet'it was tmpornisio to duplicate TO PUBLIC BUILDINGS BILL. |e, "*a7ons 20 marca, ‘Thre revolver in evidence has been {dentified as one that Dorr purchased in Btooketon. in : Other witnesses from in told of and Includes $3,000,000 for heviag scen or hed dealings with the Federal Court Site Here. Gefendante during the two weeks pre- 21.—Approxi-| ceding the murder, They showed that Dorr occupied an apartment mear the home of Marsh from March 2% te April 4, when he cemoved to another house, where he remained until the evening of Measure Now Calls for $45,000,000. WASHINGTON, Feb. mately 620,000,000 have been added in Benate committee to the authorisations ot the omnibus Public Building bill, ch, ae passed the House, carried ‘2 ,000,008. : Leaves from a @ary in which, the Principal Increases were: $5,000.00 for | alleges, the death of Marsh was & memorial bridge across the Potomac befor - At Washington; $9,000,000 for a site for, fecorded by Dorr betore it wae genes & Federal courthouse in New York City; $400,000 toward the rection In Wasning-|"G.0 61 w. Brock of Btockton, who ton of & memorial to the loyal women 4 that at one time he was employed of the civil war and 61,000,000 for a public as a bookkeeper by Dorr, identified the building in Portland, Ore. The limit of | scawriting on the pages of the diary com of the building of the Bureau of] S970) of the defendant. Engraving and Printing in Washington Han Inorensed ts taleene Witnes said that he purchased a ally known that a crime had been com- mitted, were placed in evidence. motor cycle business from Dorr in ‘Mareh, 1912. The prosecution claims that Dorr sold out his Susiness in that month in order that he might come East. i HIRES ROOM, PAYS A WEEK’S RENT, THEN KILLS HIMSELF On cross-examination the witness sald Man Supposed to Be Charles Bencke] that % was not an unusual thing for of Brooklyn Leaves Two men in California to carry fire arms. passstaatates Mach Dares Letters, XcRai SesAE er CaaS FLOOR TRADER IS EXPELLED, Honcke, an insurance agent of No, 491| Consol! Lincoln avenue, Brooklyn, killed him- self early to-day in «a furnished room 4 Exchange Finds The Board of Governora of the Con- Twenty-fifth street by inhaling gas.| solidmted Exchange by @ vote of more According to Mrs. Elsio Koenig, land-|than two-thirds yesterday expelled lady of the rooming house, Bencke| Hermann Kaiser from membership in engaged the room last night and paid a week'a rent in advance. He went out a few minutes after he the exchange, in accordance with arti- cle 3 of the by-laws, The charge was “ovvious fraud and false prtense. had deposited a sult-case in his room| Kaiser, who has been a member of the and did not rteurn till late, Early to-| exchange since 192, was a floor trader. day Mrs, Keonig smelled gas and} His operations were of a small char- traced {t to her new lodg Feom, | acter. The door wag locked. Patrolman Car- Kaleer Guilty of Fraud. ; officiate. Aged Newark Couple Who! Were Sweethearts at School Surprise Friends. Ae the climax to @ tove story that | has eloped, tis friends delleve, Mr. Vanderpool has not been at his home, at No, #72 South Nineteenth street, since | Wednesday morning. ‘Miss Margaret W. Vail, a spinster of | aizty-four, disappeared from her board-| tng house, No, # Liberty street, earlier fn the week, announcing to her land- lady, Mrs. Jones, that she was to be married. “To whem?" Mra, Jones asked. “Te Mr. Albion Alexander Vander- pool,” she replied. Aalf a century old, It began when we were boy and girl together. But married. Eighteen months ago his wife die@ and our old love has been rekin- died.” Mra, Vail was asked where to be married and she repited in Broo! lyn, by the Rev. George E. Marrian of No, 566 Greene avenue. Mr. Vanderpool gave his daughters Adele and Claribelle, with whom he lived, not the slightest inkling that he was to be married. On Wednesday morning, the daughters said to-day at their home, their father packed two sult eases and announced he was going away. | “We did not know father had been at- tentive to any one,” Mies Ad sald. “We can hardly believe that he has married any one.” { “But Miss Vail has said that their romance was halt a century old,” Mise ‘Vanderpool was told. “Who is Miss Vall?’ she asked. “We never heard of her, nor did we know that there was even @ romance in father’s life, except the one with our own mother.” On Wednesday afternoon an elderly couple who sald they were Albion Alex- ander Vanderpool and Miss Margarct ‘W. Vall of Newark obtained a license to marry from Deputy Clerk Josefh 5. Beully of Brooklyn, Mr, “Our romance is Vanderpool said the Rev. Mr. Marrian would prob- “I have never heard of Mr Vanderpoo! or Miss Vail,” the minister deciared to-day. “You aeem ihelined to encourage your wife to be a suffragetio?” plied Mr. Meekton, “if I can thoroughly convince her that I desire her to march and make speeches = be ahe'll get resentful and refuse to do 20.”" frame had been stuffed with cotton which the men had apparently gone out to buy last night. Bencke was on the bed with a tubes. connected with the Jet, in his mouth, °* He left two ‘letters, one addressed “To Whom It May Concern,” the other to “Mra, C. C, Bencke, No. 491 Lincoln avenue, Brooklyn.” The body was re- moved to the Morgue. ee MANN SCHOOL TO BUILD. ‘The Board of Directors of the Horace Mann School announced to-day that the ten-acte property of the school at Broadway and Two Hundred and Forty sixth street, the former Delafield farm, | falling bair, and your scalp will not itch, Is to the devoted to a new department | but what will please you most will be of the echool to relteve the congestion | alter s few weeks’ use, when 4 ou will in the present quarters, Bulli actual; cs baw hain’ Wes ona Gera, coating from $30,000 to $900,000 are to be| 8 firek port really’ ew balr— the erected, Inchiding cottages for the in-| 54 aver erected, inchuting cotagee for ine in-| FA tithe Denderine will immediately clusively for boys over twelve years old, Three hundred boyw muy be cared for there as boarders. It is hoped to hi the buildings completed in Within ten minutes after an ica tion of Danderine, you cannot find single trace of Dan or a loose or jerence fe Dreeiindtna carefully draw ie through an oor hair, taking one small strand LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL, GLOSSY HAR, MO DAMORUF—25 CENT “DANDERINE® Hair coming out?—If dry, brittle, thin, or your scalpitches | and is full of dandruff—Use “‘Danderine.” | and | or injured a time. The effect is amazing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have ap a) ace of abundance; an incor lustre, softness and luxuri- coan the beauty and shimmer of truc Get o 265 cent bottle of Knowlion's Danderine from eny drug store or toilet counter, and prove to yourself to-night— now—that your hair is as prett; and soft as that it has been neglected careless treatment—that': Lay ied yah ean have beautiful h and of it if you will just try a little Danderine. causes run-down health and sickness. Scott’s Emulsion and rest are needed, but SCOTT’S EMULSION ie more important because it enriches the blood, pouriaies the nerves—builds the y restores strength, vigor and immediate energy without interrupting daily duties. Scott’s Emalsion drives out colds and strengthens the lungs, Gcorr & Bowns, Bloomfeld, N. J. of the*#urrogate's Court Heinrich Lover, died April 3, 1911; net value, $67 John Kelsey, died Feb, 17, 1911; net! Value, $6,296, | Nina Burt, died May 16, 1911; net value after deductions for debts and expenses | $33,040. Ladd || Tove Silversmiths Meriden Store is the only in New York devoted exclu- sively to the sale of silverware, Here you will find more different things in sterling silver and silver plate than any other shop can show é you, So that when you want to buy anything made of silv that here your choice has widest range. And our prices are really very moderate. The MERIDEN Co. (INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY, , you will find sync Fruit basket of Gterting Sliver. Beven inches in diameter, $29.00 |BIG GUNS FOR BIG 6’S BALL. | President, Ma Waldomall tne vited to Be There To-Night. President Taft, Mayor Gaynor and Vo. lice Commissioner Waldo are among the istingulshed guests who li vited to the Sixty-third ann and ball of Typographical Union to-night. A big affair is expected, and liberal portion of oatmeal. \ ips ses coe SUCCESSOR) 49-51 W. 34th Street, Through to 68-70 W. 35th Street, New York en All mothers and fathers are proud when their children turn out well at school. But all mothers and fathers do not know how much the children’s success at school depends at home, particularly in regard to the food that is given to them. An ideal breakfast for every school child should include a This furnishes the child, in almost Perfect proportions, just the elements it needs to build up its brain and body andfurnish it with heat and energy. Children like H-O Oatmeal best because it tastes best. Mothers like H-O Oatmeal best because it only requires twenty minutes’ cooking, and is the most economical—costs less than half-cent a dish. Tomorrow morning is a good time to begin eating H-O. E-O Oatmeal ‘ Catalo For the askit This catalogue was published for the special enees of unable to come to our store It Is a Handsome Book of 120 Pages with 1,000 Illustrations. It's chuck full of th w t from it will ron our mod Instalment Plan of $1.00 Per Week and Upward. advantages of buying from Finkenberg’s, the nation’s great furniture store. | HAIR | No matter where you live in. the Unite eas OPEN EVENINGS Prices iu Viain Figures As Sung, WORDS and Music ‘in next SUNDAY WORLD Tegiment Armory, a¢ vavertad into a the Seventy- the ballroom, | veritable tlons this gathering 1 good time. upon their care Auto Delivery Withia 75 Miles his is your/m Open Saturday (Wi Birthday) anti) 1 States you may enjoy the exceptions! the thousand re- values we feature ru ought to see th Hood = ieee ~ WORDS BY EARL CARROLL MUSIC BY ENRICO CARUSO om,

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