The evening world. Newspaper, January 12, 1914, Page 1

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—_— —_, | ‘ » FINA EDITION WRATEBR—Fatr to-night and Tu PRICE ONE OENT.. BAIL WILL LE day; mo colder, c ena tent, 191 ‘The Prese tine’ Now York World). L he “Circulation Books Open to All."| NEW YORK, MOB OF 15,000 WORKMEN AT FORD PLANT; FIRE HOSE 180 10 Start of the New Plan To-day to Divide the $10,000,000 4 Profits. RUSH THROUGH DOORS. Hurl Bricks and Stones in a General Assault Which Lasts Until Police Arrive. (Special to The Krening World.) DETROIT, Mich. Jan. 12.—The fac- tory of the Ford Motor Company wen @toned to-day by thousands of men who had been showered with water from hose in the hands of the city firemés.: A dig company of policemen was sent to protect the plant from the Ghia of the men and boys who -have .athered in, Détroit to seok e:n- Pleyinent with a concern that began to-day to pay not less than $5 a day to al] laborers uo matter how humble! thbie thon. Mineorthe Winouncembat that Mr. Ford fe (9 ittribute $10,000,000 among his en- ployees, establish an eight hour day with a $% mininvam wage scale, and add 4,00 men to the working force of the com- pany, Detroit has been the mecca of the unemployed of the Middle West. As @ matter. of fact, it is believed that ede of mechanics have thrown up ir joba in automobile factories in towns and cities in Michigan, Indian: Ohio and Illinois, and hastened to D -troit to get in if possible on the Ford 4istribution and improved working con- ditions, CROWDS OF JOB HUNTERS CAME THE NEXT DAY. On the day after Mr. For made the announcement of his intentions with respect to his automoDile Ward of 2,00 men stormed e fa employ: Almost without exception these w Idents of Detroit. Muny of them Were out of work, unskilled, and look- ing for laborers’ jobs, Others were mechanice employed in other ants, who took a day off to seek employment in the Ford works, ‘The seokers for work were tuid that there would be no change in the method of selecting employees cation would be inv men fitted for the work would be s lected. A vain attempt wae made to {mpress upon them thatthe increased force would be recruited slo that no good could possibly & forcible attempt to get But the crowd had dou the next morning. On each stccreding the mob clustered abour the big plant win volume. al the gates al! night to be « a: the opening hour in the morning, The imax cam? to-day swhen Jeadt 15,000 men ‘had assembled arow the plant by daylight, At frat crowd. waa 4ilet and affectet only such excitement as would be naturn in such @ large as#emblage of Job un the re Were no aligns of the emp! vf men, the mob became reatless MANY IN THE CROWD SUFFER FROM COLD. Je was bitterly cold. the thermomete; (Continued on Second Page.) a Big Increase In Answers to World Ads. To the comparatively Omited am- ber of Worlt dvertisements nrinted last year bearing addre: ~re of The World's uptown office, at Broad- ’ and 38th stree! = ANSWERS WERE 456,787 “necever— OVER 88,000 MORE THAN DURING THE PPECEDING YEAR. Many remained , Mt Pays Vo Ware World Ads! ——— KEEP IT BACK ERO WEATHER QUE TO-NORRO HIT RED BALL Mercury Will Register 10 Above by Midnight To-Night and. Continue to Drop. By midnight to-night, according to the weather forecaster, the thermome- ter In New York will register 10 de- grees above zero, and to-morrow aight it will be down to sero, At 11 o'clock | this morning the frat flurry ef snow was wafted in from the West and the mereury begun to fall, © The cold wave which will hold New York and vicinity for several days is al, * York lies over Montreal and New- foundiarid, hete is a second greater storm centre advancing ‘: idly from the West. The anow fe: ering, which began late this morniny Wan only the first advance work of the forces of Gen, Boreas. i ‘The red ball went up on the lake in} Van Cortiandt Park to-day. This the open season for a And skates and skaters were in evidence in re- sponse to the high ball, By noon about 90 men, women and children were cut- ting some Ice. And the ice was fine. It was cold last night in the park and is morning, B: rt mean furs and heavy xperts went out and | looked over the lake, The Ice was bet-| |ter than five inches thick. So they | hoisted the ball. | Pretty soon the news travelled down- | town and the gubd\ ay and “TL picked with people who had | What did they care about the cold? |And pretty soon it wasn't cold at alt in the park, Not if you hud your akates With you. Rosy cheeKed girls ant bright eyed lads were whirling and swirling around on the frozen pond, Come on, fellows, the skating’s fine! \SAYRES ENDING HONEYMOON | White House d Groom Satt| for Home We: %; | PARIS, Jan. 12.—Francis Bowne Sayre | Jand hin bride, Miss Jessie Woodrow Wilson, w h to-day af a luncheon | Ambassador and Mrs. Myvon |rlok. Mrs, Anna Wilson Howe of Phila- deipiia, & sister of the President, was among the guests + Mr. and Mra, yre, according te thet nt plans, will sal! for Welnesday o board ¢ Ma jest from Cherbourg. The Majeatc has been or substituted for the Philadelphia, wate’ | was 1o have sulled on that day Sayre passed their time visiting most of the Mr. and | n Paris} places of Mes, — HIS ARMY. JULIUS DISBANDS ‘The present centre nearest | ‘ POLIGE DOING WELL, [BLAST BY MITCHEL DECLARES MITCHEL;| IS FIRED 10 OPEN TOLD TOUSECLUBS} AQUEDUCT TUNNEL Must Exercise Discretion, How-|Hundreds of Feet Under the ever, in: Wielding Sticks on | Ground Mayor Pushes But- Ordinary Law Offenders. Slayers, Approves Strong-Arm Crusade Against Gangsters. ‘The police eeem to be doing very well,” eald Mayor Mitchel to-day. They are going along vigorously. That's what I told the Commissioner I wanted them ,to de, I told him to be unremitting and heep right after the gange. “Mr, Mayor,” he was seked, “your statement of Saturday was interpreted to mean that you will countenance the use @f clubs on gunmen." “Yes, T hope the police use their elude on every gumman on whem they can lay thelr “hands,” replied the Mayor. “I don’t by eny means, however, intend to relax the very admirable policy of the late Mayor Gaynor with reference to ‘use of clubs om decent citisens. I shall bave no hesitandy, however, in sanctioning the use of clubs on men who start ‘gun clots in the etreet.”” Judge Rosalsky, in General Sessions, in imposing sentence on two ‘« of the Paul Kelly gays, con- xt of manslaughter, declared that the courte would ald the police and the District-Attorney in ridding the city of gangs. “Modern methode should be adopte Judge Rosaleaky said, “in suppressing = thi gangs of young hoodiums that infest our city, They quarrel among themselves and shoot promiscuously, with the result that in- nocent persons are either killed or bad- ly injured. It is time to call a halt.” Santa Barbera, twenty-five years old, of No, 58 West One Hundred and Bix- teenth street, and Josepa Vinert!, twen- ty-two years old, of No. 3% East One Hundred and Thirteenth street, who shot and killed Jerry Maida, another gang leader, in front of Paul Kelly's garege in West Forty-first treet, last June, were arraigned for sentence, ‘The tentimony showed that the mem- hers of two gangs had quarrelied as to the territory thelr White Slaves were to patrol. Judge Rosalsky sentenced Barbera to Sing Sing prison for a term of not lens than elght years and three months nor more than nineteen years and six months, Vivert! was given a sentence of not leas than seven years wnd nine months nor more than efghteen years and alx montha. {jo “KAISER WIELDS AN AXE ON fis PALACE ESTATE | sult of Labor, to Peasants— ndwes He | | if Julian Marburger to- | Whose term of office expire Dec, 31, 1913, ve been Jost." 600 perso: at midnight C) the former have used the aterical Coudition pital, years old was eet and Madison avenue iaken to the Metropoliian Hospital for observation unable to tel! Policeman Ho- i 110 pound: ight complenioned, were @ plue v Bai, bide coat and blaes : wt RISEN ale sais GIRL FORGETS HER NAME, | Kaiserin an Overseer, YTSDAM, Germany, J. 2, — Bi r statement requesting ex-| Pots rmany, Jan. 12.—Emper or Willlam for several daye past has ty Sheriffs to return their | : ia his Nu. 48 {Joined the day laborers tn sawing and . splitting wood on the imperial estates Marburger #aid that there are| Surrounding Sans Souci Palace. He was advised by his physicians to take a {course of manual labor and he spends every forenoon in the grounds working zealously with one or other of the |laborers. His Majesty In said to take great pride in piling the fuel into neat heaps waich he then presents to the laborer for tse Jin his home. Those why have Watched the Bm | peror say that he Wieds tie axe with \his wonted exergy while the Rmpress of hysteria nea: | often looks on and Jokingly checks the! work he accomplisien aides-descamp are occasionally upon to assist in the work, ate cniee SAILING TO-DA Advance, Cristobal Pemzsyivesia, Pus Mase. The Emperor's called TOULING WITH WORKMEN Saws Wood Too and Gives Re- | ' ton That Sets Off Charge. COURTS PROMISE AID.|CITY OFFICIALS PRESENT Judge Rosalsky, Sentencing} All Are Lowered Down Shaft for Ceremony—Tube Now Open Entire Length. Surrounded -by @ distinguished com- pany of city officials, Mayor Mitchel, standing at the foot of the Catskill ac- queduct shaft at One Hundred and Fit- ty-ninth street and St. Nicholes place, 60 feet underground, fred the inst biast for the opening of the 110-mile long Cate- kit aqueduct tube between Ashokan dam and Schermerhorn street, Brooklyn. {n the preparatory work Saturday a hole was broken through the rock. The Maxot’s “shot” today cleaned out the ore to ite full diameter. The e9-called “elty aqueduct,” the section between Yonkers and Brooklyn, is now the long est tunnel ever @viven in the world; it pb eighteen milée and « litte meh 4a length, While the whole tubs fs 118 miles ‘Mayr Gittehst went to the head of Bhatt No. 9, which ts at One Hundred and iPitty-ninth etreet, at 12.90 o'clock, He ima been preseged by Presitent of the Board of Aldermen, George B. Mv- Aneny, Comptroller Prenderbast, Bor- ough Presidents Marke, Pounds, Mathewson, Connolly, Police Commis sioner MoKa; Fire Commiasioner Adamaon, Bridge Commissioner A. A. C. Smith, Park Commissioner Cabot Ward, Commissioner of Accounts Bruet Aquedyst Commissioners Straus, Chadwic! and Galvin and bout @ hundred others, ali of whom had been taken down by turns in bucket-holet carefully gocoured and oa- pecially carpeted for the occasion. “Welcome,” spelled out in electric lights, greeted the Mayor as te out into the big chamber tn at the foot of the shaft, Mer. Straus, President of tie aque duct commission, made @ brief speech in which he congratulated the Mayor on being in office when euch a critical step in the greatest of waterworks un- dertakings was accomplished. ‘The Mayor replied that it was a great fource of satisfaction to him to have an actual part in the completion of so great an undertaking, algnificant as it was of the greatness and resourceful- neas of the city of which he had the honor of being Mayor. Then Engineer Smith led the Mayor to & battery on @ deal table. The Mayor looked as though would like to, but he could not hold ears and push the button With a whim There & mighty shock, the rock | trembled and sand and dust dribbled down the rough sides of the rock chamber. Instantly from the place of the blast, ) feet to the north, came a mighty poft of alr which staggered some of those who were teetering on elr to tips The bulkhead door which safeguards shaft chambers from the full ¢ sion of blasts, was then thrown op |and the guests and officials were seated little dinky Window. vorite m | ways in @ panic. jlaated only a few seconds, HAW ROA Mi TCHEL TO POLICE: “CLUB THE GUNMEN” -° MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1914. Mayor as He Fired Last hat Opened Ca STREET GUN FIGHTERS. SHOOT A WOMAN AND PUT CROWD IN PANIC Man Cut by Glass as Stray Bul- let Goes Through a Store Monroe atreet, near Catherine, a fa- et place of the lower enat aide’ was crowded at noon to-day with |men and women when two Italians met in front of the bank of R, J. BajJardi, at 'o, 6 Monroe street, and drew revolvers. ‘ach fired two shots as he ran for cover. At the report of the first shot there| surted in as | was a chorus of wild yells from the; street as the crowd scattered for door- Women were knocked | pwn by men who thought only of eacap. ing from the gunfighters, and the street U8"! was in an uproar though the shooting When Policeman Rowan of the Oak : Pel FON Blas 350 EARTH SHOCKS WITH VOLCANIC SPOUT | TERRORIZE JAP ISLANDS Two Villages Buried by Ashes and Many Residents in Peril —Rescue Forces at Work. TOKIO, Japan, Jan. Kagoshima, difficult. , Aghes fave fallen all day tn Ki Circulation Books Open to All. LIBERT tskill Aqueduct 12.—A series of 38 earth shocks terrorised the town of Kagoshima, at the southern end of the island of Kiushiu to-day, and were fol- lowed by the eTuption of @ voleano on | Sakura, 9 “pl Iwland in the Guit of | e two villages were Tho earthquakes continue incessantly and the work of rescuing the Inhaditante | of Sakura by boats, which has proceeded there, across the intervening three miles of water from Kagoshima, to extremely in rock cars which are shima itself and tel ‘aphic commun ‘propelled by electricity from a ive wire| rect station, wh» had heard the ree) ition with the capitals interrupted. |swung within easy reach of the paa-|Ports, got there ‘he found the phish Be sengers. Foremen and watchmen con almont deserted, but Mre, Maria F letantly shouted ‘Kwok aut for the 1, & young woman of Nu. 46 Cherry, NO HELLOS ON THE CITY. |live wire. Keep vour heads and hands| street, was screaming in front of Con- . - jdown,” but there were no fatalities, |doloro Gatto's grocery at No. 6 Monroe | Muatu't Une Fal Within a hundred yards of the nite of the blast the car wan stopped by | scattered by the blast party clanbered over a ) tarough the cleared aw emerged into that part of controled from ¥} ‘ broken jrock Yr One Hore thy Walla of ij the tube eu neatly cemented Jana the w Dleasanter. Every: vody was to the surface again | and the veremonien wore over ———— STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. Borinquen, Porto Bic | Mieuw Amsterdam, Rotterd: 20 P. m. paren, Antwerp rm ———— | POR AACING 2m PAGE 18 . street, left arm by # bullet that went wild. A eee Pe UME tact as aay orders to-day that telephones in his de-| Several hundred coal mine ateikere 20 Monino of No. i Monroe atrect, partinent . tf| lined the streets and cheered wildly, whose face was cut by glass, whien &n emplo: ¢ the departmant wanty| While Mother Jones waved her hand in jhad been showered when one of the te phone Wifey that he won't be home | FesPonse, oa | bullets had passed through Gatto’s shop t Minter he must get spectal dispensa- | ae window. Psion, an it were, The young tady in| NO PARDON FOR TOLMAN. Capt Mahoney and the reserves uf the switchboard Will ask his! Jwearched the neighborhood, but t down. At the end) ALBANY, Jan, 12-Gov. Glynn thie trace of the nen wie did the sh k who will madmit this Hit te /#fternoon announced that had re- Gatto declared that he knew noth): fused to pardon D. HW man, the of the #hoot and that it wasn't « it | Kk. Hoe sald that it woukt be rected at him, ast October re to determine within two kK Hand was d |ceivet several Pi Jon Oot. If hin # bom, Mrs, Parauto w eon Street Hospital home. The police have a ef tee men who 416 Lae show! ae nee es ited Ww She had been shot through the to the Hud d Monino wi descrip Feet. 12, 1g tent yesterday, fe QW fe0i and wan Geshed te plecen, Lieut, tor, while making | inan, who has maintained offices in all from a height of | Spey WEATHNR—Fatr to-night and Tuesday; mech eot@eh, = ee PRICE ONE OENT. UNDER BAIL BOND ee ae Bail Accepted by United States Court Will Serve as Passport Anywhere |: in the United States, His i CARMODY IS PLANNING i Thaw Expected to Avoid New Tangles by Remaining Near Con- i ‘cOmsulted with authorities on the Federal laws and that the Federal Court in this district will act as e safe pasaport for him anywhere in the/United States, even in New York State, according te the umten standing of his lawyers. the final determination of bis appeal to the Federal courts from extradition warrant granted by Gov. Felker of New Hampshire. Mile counsel have heard that the New York authorities will seck to one his arrest in any Federal district outside of this state He also been advised that it might be dangerous for him to go te New he would probably be arrested on some technicality and be pelled to resort to habeas corpus proceedings to procure his freedom. Thaw appears to be deeply satisfied over the defision of the mission that he is mentally @t—this having been his contention several years past. “MOTHER” JONES TAKEN PRISONER BY STATE TROOPS & tie vi Since bis detention here he many ecquaintances, some have invited him te visk was planning, be eaid, to visit at the home of one todiane, Sherif? Halman P, Un. Drew is the official im near Colebrook ton from Canede. arrangements profide for a | ering nearly every section ef After counsel have had time to study Bimes ry an ef Hy it bill My i ; i mission Unit will q@ive another hi i petition for admission to bail, ‘The date: ae “judge “Alarite ie: te beamee, She Returned to Colorado srobably will ot be. ae. to a court pol Strike Centre After Deporta- | tnen mene ne bearing = New York attorneys tion—Held Incommunicado, | Pear in the ‘case win TRINIDAD, Col, Jan. 1%.—'‘Mother” Marthe Jones, strike leader, who was @eported from the Southern Colorado com flelde Jan. 4 by the militia, re- turned to Trinidad to-day from Denver. As econ sa her presence was learned by the military autho. ites she was ar- rested and taken to the San Rafael Hus- pital, where she was held incommuni- cade, ‘Mother’ Jones left the train et the outskirts of Trinidad and later appeared at & local hotel. She wes arrested by @ detail of State troops, hurried out of the hotel, placed in an @utomobile and whirled through the streets with @ ocav- airy escort galloping at ful speed in front and behind the machine, onths the value of the $500,000 worth oh ‘Tolman sak’ he would ed executive clemency. Attorney Whitman had declined to recommend any action. Tol- burn if ‘He wald Diatrie pars of the country, wae eentenced to lows tcopriecament. | Y FOR THAW Lawyers Declare. 4 TO ORDER ARREST AGAIN | cord Until Final Decision: ©. ~ CONCORD, N. H., Jan, 12—Counsel tor Harry ‘Thay say they howe Be the Federal Court Commission thet Thaw io cane wilt indure bim iam aity from arrest by State authorities anywhere after he is admitted te bail by Judge Aldrich. In other words, « ball bend sccepted by the However, Thaw says that be will remain in New Hampabire pending

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