The evening world. Newspaper, May 7, 1913, Page 2

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)

JOAN, of. HARTI [THOMAS FR THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, SEVEN POLICEMEN CONVICTED SINCE ROSENTHAL’S MURDER [At ie considerable speculation as it may be the sentences impoved former inspectors by Justice Bea- on Friday. They have veen con- ota the pu for which may be @ year in pris- ne of 00 or both, No one that the maximum punishment tm, uy i 83 § BURIED WITH HONOR i i - nish at im the cases et te to suppose thi Seabury may extend some lent | Commissioner Waldo and Po- ipeon and Murtha, against triet-Attorney’s case} ice Band Accompany Body to the Grave. tl counsel for Murtha, arrangement with Jus- be *e| GANGSTERS JOIN HUNT. be no occasion for hurry the matter of & certificate of reasonable thie be ranted it will Reward of $1,000 Being Raised of proceedings and Possible to get the Inspectors’ § = tg Help in Séarch for Triple Slayer. Mr, Qllbert said that ap- id Be made on Friday, — eral of William B. Heaney, one of the two policemen killed on Saturday night, was held to-day from the little $11 a month flat he occupied 55i,f fi futther fighting in this way only could they triale for bribery them all were to be tried, for they had agreed iif ieee. veonahed ‘ae dasa court pos. | With his bride at No. Tif Prospect place, sible, He eal Brooklyn, John Hizso, the gunman EXPECTS WHITMAN TO HELP| "*® wae killed by Shioldiana, ,wan buried yesterday, and Charles Teare, the other police victim of the dwarf asanasin, will be buried to-morrow, ‘The funeral of Heaney wan attended with full police honors, Capt. Kinsler of the Mubberry street station, two Heutenants and a platoon of policemen f HASTEN APPEALS. “If Mr. Whitman will co-operate with us we oan have these appeals ar- ued in the June term of the Appellate Division. If there be any delay, how. ever, the matter will have to go over We the October term because of the Cross Cemetery in Matbus;, loner Waldo, Deputy Commissioi MoKay and Police Chaplains McGurl a Heaney's widow, who Js soon to become & mother, broke down in St. Theresa's Chureh during the requiem high mass, but insiated on going to the cemetery with the father, three brothers and mister of murdered policeman. ITALIANS PAY TRIBUTE “MARTYRED HERO.” ‘There were many ‘al tributes, the) chief of which were a floral shield from Heaney's comrades in the Mulberry Street Precinct and an immense bouquet which bore the card “Italian tribute wo ® martyred hero.” This latter was sent to the house by business men of the Mulberry Bend Italian district, The esearch for Shieidiana continued to-day without abatement, After Heaney's funeral the policemen of the Drecinot who were off duty reported at the station howse and went out in @tizens’ clothes to ald the detail of de- tectives assigned to the hunt for the murderer by Deputy Commissioner Dougherty, The Booth Steamship line ie oo-oper- ating with the police In running down @ rumor that Shieldiana escaped from the elty aboard the Clement, a Booth coast- @r which sailed on Monday for the Har- badoes and South American ports. POLICE MAKE UP REWARD FOR GLAVER’S CAPTURE, In the hunt.for ‘hieldiana the police have tho aid of members of the Ken- Mare street gang, with which Risso 3 i z I ¥ i i! | i i ie To t ee & £ i i Gre ostensibly working with the police. Aid in the search is also being given by the merchants, restaurant keepers and billiard room proprietors of down- SLAIN POLICEMAN | BY HS COMRADES \Trio Arrive Here After Thrill- Chicago, and Alma Tredge of No, 28 clous ponseasions, H Miss Trodge 1s the holder of many of | £ ‘the champtonships of the akting contests PRES PLRIGMODREISEIOS SSRIS OSSD: ore here reesee SAFES GL FRENDS LOST MOUNTAAS ing Experience Amid Snows of Norway. ‘Three Norwexian girls of the lithe, Pink-cheeked, blond type of outdoor folk who live beside the flords arrived to-day oh the Scandinavian Amerivan Uner C. F. Tietjen, They were Augusta Christiansen of Christiania, Emily Ele lertsen of No. 143 Lincoln Parkway, East Elghty-second street, New York. Fach had tucked under her arm, as she came down the gangplank a carefully wrapped pair of skis—thelr most pre- at Hoten, north of Christiania, She froen back to Norway every winter to fend her tities and win new honors, a local repu- tation, for speed and wooden skates, Miss Tom Chicago ta Norway for a visit with , her childhood friend, Mise Christiansen, Along toward the close of the meet Miss Christiansen and Mise Hilerteen took a trip to the mountains, They pected to be out only a fow hours, and) town “Little Italy,” who have sub- soribed §200 toward a reward for the capture of the asrassin, Policemen of the Mulberry street station have con- tributed $100 to this fund, and Pa- trolmen'n Benevolent Association hh ard $1,000, The police belief (s that Shieldiana is hiding with: friends, in one of the Italian quarters of the city and that the offer of a reward will be a powerful factor in bringing his hiding place to light. Policemen who attended the funcral of Risso yesterday reported to Commission: Dougherty that there was a large at tendance of members of the Kenmar street gang and other gangs who have flocked into the Third Assembly Dis ict aince a primary fight has been in- Qugurated by Larry Mulligan and Paddy touched tl doubled up index finger of hie right hand in his mouth and bit the joint. This ts seid by Italian detectives to be the Gicilian method of vowing vengeance fur the death of a comrade. Mrs, Longstreet Fe WASHINGTON, May T—Mre. Helen D, Longstreet, Postmintress at Gaines- ville, Ga., widow of the former Confel- erate general, has addressed the Senate setting out her fears that Influences her working against her reappointment or her confirmation should President “Wi- @on mame her, President Taft reap- pointed Mrs, Longstreet over some ‘opposition. Oppost From “A man je known by the company he ‘keevs."" but don't flatter yourself that if you're good and your companion is | bad the latter will be brought up io! your level in the eyes of the community, | had recently been purchased, | cline, and as the machine was going at carried only @ light lunch. Confused by & snowstorm, they lost their way, and were finally forced to take refuge in a cave in a desolate mountainside, AN the expert ski users at the meet volunteered for the searching party when they were missed. The Government sent & company of soldiers to help, But it was Mins Tredge, working at the head of a squad she led away from the gen- eral body of searchers, who found them after three deys, starving and freesing. The three separated after t! meet, and Miss Christiansen and Mi Bilerteen lout Miss Tredge’s address, and. ‘expected to see her again. TI two adventurous friends overjoyed to find Miss Tredge on ¢ Tiotjen, They were inseparable on the vo! young ‘men who seemed to desire iso- th any or all of t will entertain eek or two, and has Promised to visit in Chicago the girls whose lives she saved, - > TWO KILLED WHEN AUTO CRASHES INTO TROLLEY. = (Spectal to The Evening ) PHILADELPHIA, May 7.—Two per- sons were killed this afternoon when an automobile in which they were riding down Skippack Hill, near Collegevile, crashed into @ crowded trolley car, One a the victima ie the driver of the car, who ls belleved to be William Engle, chauffour for Willtam Geratley jr. of No. 29} South Bleventhstrest, this city. The other victim Is thought to be a friend of Engle whom he picked up along the road while out testing the car, which The collision occurred on a steep in- & speed of about fifty miles at the time the bodies were catapuited into a creek, which skirte the road about Afty vards distant, ‘The passengers on the trolley cor injuries HEROINE OF THE SKIS {SUFFRAGE DEFEAT AS VOTER BROUGHT OUT party in power, the suffrage bill secured said there was ample evidence that a very Ja country had @ahown by constitutional aptitude of women in dealing with ab- struse economic questions involved in social and industrial legislation proved ‘Wons of foreign policy, which were fur ‘They became acquainted with Miss: Tredge at Horton during the aki races, | mm Complicated at seldom an issue vaded with an atmosphere of Slain Policeman Being Carried From Home On Shoulders of Comrades at Funeral T PORN EED EEE REDE EG NEES TERETE IDG O4G4 G1 99-469 909011998 094-46 4:5-5-4-04-648 FF OO ODE HY . _ $4-4-440O0088 PUEDE edeedeoEdooesgoe $9$00904000066F-46000-16000006606, SHOWS A MAJORITY FOR GIVING BALLOT (Continued from First Page.) bill In the House of Commons it night. | Although strongly opposed by Premier | Asquith, and, therefore, officially by the | &@ majority of three among those in the House of Commons voting purely upon the question itself, ‘The bill wag de- feated by u majority of 47, ai Secretary for Foreign Affairs, supported the bill. He section of the women of the that they favored the enfran- ment of their Militanoy he cterized as “the inconsiderate and conduct of w small body of individuals, with who jw had dealt and ought He contended that the demonstrated that they were possessed of suffice: intelligence to pass judgment on que: general elections, Lord Robert Cectl, advocating the bill, contended that to vote against It be- cause of militant outrages would be utterly illogical and unworthy the high atandard of intelligence claimed by the Members of the House of Commons, The Right Hon, Walter Hume Long, in opposing the measure, contended that the passage of the bill would not stop militant tactics but would only lead to flercer agitation for a larger measure of enfranchisement. A motion to reject the bill riei—208 to 218 The House was thronged and per- etrical excitement when the division was called on the motion of Arnold Ward, son of Mrs. Humphry Ward, the author, to reject the bill, Among those who voted for the measure @r Edward @ Foreign Minister; Chancellor of Exch r Lioya Geort President of the Board of Trade Syd- y Buxton; Chief Secretary “for Ire- land Augustine Birrell; President of Agriculture Walter Runciman; Sir Rutus Ieaecs, Attorney General; and Under Secretaries Sir John Simon, C. Fr. @. M rman, F, D, Aciand, Dr, Macnamar and McKinnon Wood. The only front bench Unionist , supporting the bill was Stuart-Wortley. a care Premier Beoretary McKenna, Firat Admiralty Winston Churchill, EB. Hobhouse, J. K, Josep» Pease and Herbert and on the Tory side Lord ibot, Sir Robert Finlay, Sir ‘William Anson, Walter Long, F. K, Emith and ex-Speaker Chaplin. Neither Mr, Balfour nor his successor as Unionist lea al s) 1918, TS eA NEY. th AMES F. THIMPSON GEN. WINGATE’S -Day. Comptroller Declares It Sue perior to That of Board’s Committee. ‘The Coney Island boardwalk project, As suggested by The Bvening World, was again discussed to-day vy the Commit- of Gen, Win fe to build brealswaters, raj building of the beach proper, be- cause of the action of the ocean watts. to the Comptroller. anid “I think the Wingate plan is better than ours, for not only does it appear to be morg economical, but it also takes into consideration the addition to the beach, and our plan makes no provision for the rehabilitation of the beach at all.” The Comptroller told Walter E, War- {ner, who appeared at the head of a deleation from the West End Improve- ment League, that while the committee might consider any pian less expensive, {t positively would not consider one more expénsive than the one it has al- ready advanced. Mr, Warner had ob- Jected particularly to’the Wingate plan and sald that while the members of t' we End Improvement League cons! ered the committee's plan preferable that, they still thought the Leagu original plan, calling /for the acquisition of a 10-foot-wide strip of upland for the boardwalk, was the best of all. “The plan we have advanced js just as far as we are willing to go,” sald the Comptroller emphatically, Comptroller Prendergast admitted the city’s plan would involve the do- atruction of a good deal of property now built up to high water line, Gen. Wingate declared this plan would cont cabled to-day to Andrew Carnegie a8} petween $5,000,000 and $6,000,000, His follows: plan would not cost more than one- “What right have you to pose as an|tenth of this sum, he said, American citizen when you are regis- WON'T QUIT FAITH FOR TITLE. Pee eee eee oe eS CARNEGIE'S STANDING BY A MILITANT QUERY Secretary Says He Is American Citizen and Could Not Cast Ballot in Scotland. LONDON, May Miss Mae Scott- ‘Troy, the Suffragette of San Francisco, tered as @ voter In the parish of Dor- noch, in the County of Sutherland, oMclal list received by me to-day from the Sheriff of the county. Why did King Edward offer you a Dukedomt | BALLTIMORE, Md., May 1.—Misn Mr, Carnegie ts described on the vow | Louse Warfield will not abandon | ing Met as, “Occupation, gentleman. |feligious faith when she weds Co Place of abode, Skibo Castle, Viadimir Ledochowski on Thursdu = 8 made this announcement to-day Carnegic ts an American citl-| when discussing her approaching wed- eh ne be Srivare Ging at the home of her father, Edwin ne so with- out naturalization because he came h Merete rey a (ae wie: 4s a minor when he was eleven years old and his father was naturalized be.| “that I never have considered adopting fore he became of age. If he is regis-|the Catholic faith.” tered as a voter in Scotland had] The ceremony will be performed by nothing to do with It personally, He|the Rev, William A, Fletcher of the faa Lakintya o * there and his|Cathedral, and Cardinal Gibbons will ne probably appears on the registr: Mat in connection with that tact, He is et could not vote in that country be- Nevel Kxeuse. cuuse he {# an allen thers (From the Boston Transcript.) ——_——- Jack of being @ male cov JAPAN INVITES AMERICAN aes east? BALL TEAM TO PLAY THERE. aid hls continued philan was merely @ course of sentimental ercise he was taking to keep his heart SEATTLE, Wash that May international compli serles of ‘The Ja leave here on Aug. 6 and return Oot. 24, ‘The faculty has taken the invitation under consideration. Ly CHICAGO, May 1, deposed by Pri eat surprise to me," “A foul tip struck me on the foot last week and I in- tended to stay in Chicago a few day to allow my foot to get bett Spring Is as isnportant in your physical system school of experience, and ¢hat inatitu- ton hae no college yell. \ as in’ your house, Take CONEY BOARDWALK PLANS FAVORED tee of the Board of Eatimate having the matter In charge. The Comptroller, who is @ member of tie Committee, said he was favorably impressed with the plaa These structures will enable the natu- ‘The so-called Wingate plan, because of its economy and practicability, appeals fe admitted the Plan of the city should give way to the more practicable Wingate idea. Apropos of the entire situation, the Comptroiler struck by @ locomotive and wa right leg was cut off. He asked for $25,000. GOV. SULZER CAL THE EXTRA SESSION TO MEET JUNE 18 Likely to Include Niagaral Wanta Power ‘and Stock Exchange Piano Incorporation Bills. On Trial Then our approval rental plan will interest you, for it is often the best way to buy and to be sure of securing a piano that suits you. We rent new Pease Pianos at $5 monthly and a small for cartage one way only (usually $3), and then if you buy within 6 months we allow the full amount paid and give you 3 years to pay the nce. EASE , OS are not an Serioatt there Ny over 3 generations of practical experi used to-day in their manufacture—that is why we can place our pianos out’on this approval rental basis and feel sure they will please you. Prices now from 325 up. Used pianos at liberal reductions. Write for 1913 catalog. PEASE PIANO CO., |128 W.42d St., nr. Broadway, N. % 34 Flatbush’ Ave. 10’ New St. A full line of Victor and Columbia His (From the Chicago Tribune.) Besides singing for the expert, she had given him the entire story of her life and sufferings. i “Madam,” he said, after she had fin- ished, “you have a voice of magnif- cent promine’— “Oh, thank you #0 much!" “A voice of magnificent promise, ma dam—for conversational purposes.” | ALBANY, May T—Gov. Sulser an- nounced at @ Conference of direct pri- mary advocates to-day that he would call upon the Legislature to reconveae in extraordinary session on June 18 to consider direct primary ant other leg- Islation, Gov, Bulser acai to-day he had received & letter from United States Senator O'Gorman, expressing regret that the Legislature tiud failed to pass the bill demigned to give New York #8 trol over the diversion of waters at Niagara Falls for power purposes. The Legislature passed a resolution provid- ing for an Anvestigation of the subject by a legislative committee which is to report mext year. ‘The Governor is considering the ad- visabiiity of renewing his recom- mendation for the passage of this bill at the extraordinary session of the Legislature. He also has under advis ment the question of again asking the Legislature to pass a bill to incorpo- rate the New York Stock Exchang The Governor belie that unless the State takes favorable action on these propositions the Federal Govern- ment will assume control over them, The Governor says he signed the Frawky laws, increasing from 4 to 1" per cent. the rate of Interest on Atate bonds held by trust compantes, savings bunks and Insurance compantes, upon information ¢urnished by the State Comptroller's office. He says he will in- vestigate the ina! —ee— ~“ ILLINOIS SENATE PASSES VOTES FOR WOMEN BILL. SPRINGFIBLD, 11, May 7.—Senator Magill’s woman suffrage bill was passed in the Senate this afternoon, % to 15. The bill given woman all voting rights, without a co stitutional amendment. It gives them the right to vote In city, village and other local elections. Po PR Ss EEE Gets $10,000 for Loss of Legs. A verdict for $10,000 dam was awarted yesterday by a jury before Supreme Court Justice Van Siclen, in Long Island City, to Orlando W. Brown of Rockville Centre, who sued the Long Island Railroad Company for injuries received in January, 1912, Brown was Umbrella Incomparable for Sersice, Appearance and Durability. Miller Bros. & Co. way, York HAVE YOU TRIED IT? COLD MEATS & SANDWICHE! Lifted from the nn ae 8 and Bia hen DEN’S MUSTARD, Galad: Dressing is made L.GRETSCH&Co. (Eetadiished 1871) Importers of Wines Cordially invite all their customers and friends to the opening of their new quarters to-morrow, May 8, at “ton BOYLE,—Suddenly on BOYLE, native of Parisi ounty Monah ABELLA ‘GALBRAITH + beloved wife of ar Mi |. trom Tinaat Losin te or it Cypress Hills —_——==_==_==——= LOsT, FOUND AND REWARDS. —Bisck Pertoito te: | terme 310 B i ne eee 2 immediately,” Hawura to iho BT WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS,

Other pages from this issue: