The evening world. Newspaper, January 12, 1914, Page 2

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ee ws Bet yraeseer eee itt ye Harry Gets at Champagne -Rvatyn Nebeit Thaw: “Kismet; 1 know something terrible wil! happen + B6eh. Dén't ask me what it will be, fess he starts mght away fer Burepe. And he ie « fool if he doesn't. He ‘Would be all right if he would keep away from champagne, but he can't Attorney-General Carmody: “Nothing will Ge left undone to secure the arrest of Thaw and bring him back to this State should leave Now Hampshire.” & 5 : ih i i i i i | i | i t | ! i! i i i i is on 17 last, of G, Btreoter, a lawye. of this ci! Morton Prince i i i is as Hospital fer ‘the Ia- R, L, ané Dr. Onaries Superintendent of the Hospital for the Ia- é § fi Fecognition to New oYrk's rights cane,” declared the Attorney- “Et ta inconceivable that Thaw be released on vali after Gov. ised And vigned the Carmody to-day to confer with William Trav- , HAVE TO LOOK ovT. ‘Travets Jerome, Special At- for New York State in of the surroundings or ich atir hie insane de- into activity. I venture to pre- that if Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, Dr. Melane Hamilton and Dr, Aus- ‘Fr in Concord the Commis- speedily get evidence that he etimulants since Matteawan—even whei erty im the cu: Iman Drew and United Mr. Jerome said Hs ldrich will not act is most careful and delib- bail, it will be “how the bond y Wimit him to the city Umit bim to th bet you won't have to walt long, un- be Inclined to 'y that we clearly have the right to ar: it him if he returns to Grate ‘Judge Aldrich han signified his de- sire for an oral argument on the ha- beaa corpus provecdings after he hus consklered the briefs of New York State and of Thaw's counsel. 1 shall of course go to Concord if the Judge Gesires to hear me. “There are just four questions to be ~~“ THE EVENING WORLD, PINK SHIT TWAS ~ BND AL KEEPER —PISSESINCHASE ferred to Trenton, Escape From Bridgeton Prison. ALSO TIE UP “TRUSTY.” Steal Jail Keys, but Make No Effort to Free the 48 Other Inmates. decided: Firet, ls Thaw charged with « crime? Second, Has the Btate of New York made proper requisition upon the Btate of Hampshire and has the lampahire granted the Fendition of Thaw in proper form. ‘Third, I Thaw a fugitive from justice? Fourth, Have the proceedings been con- Sistent with the Constitution of th United States and the Revised Statutes woverning extradition between the Stateet’ SAYS COMMIGBION TOOK ONLY THAW'S EVIDENCE. ‘The printed record of the proceedings in the habeas corpus proceeding piled up on Mr, Jerome's desk would make a Volume two inches thick if bound to- gether, Thaw's lawyers have yet to sub- mit thdr brie The commission, according t» Mr. Je- rome, took only Thaw's own evidence Qs to his meptal state, “They thréw out,” he sak evi- dence offered by Thaw during his first and second triale as to his insanity. They took in hie etatements and the evidence in his favor submitted at the three hearings to establish his sanity. They left out of consideration that a lunatic with fixed delusions harbors no fesentmem againet new acquaintances such es Sheriff Drew and Marshal Kaute.” “Don you fear Thaw as @ personal menace if he is at large?’ Mr. Jerome was asked. “I do not think Thaw hes any & Personal grudge agai Mr, Jerome. “He always but in a gloomy, sorrowful way. regards me as a man on regards starvation, | @ink, or es @ mariner regards a terrific hurricane. Hie feeling toward me is quite imper- sonal. But let him mix up, as 1 sald, with Des. Filnt or Hamilton, or Evelyn Thaw or Delancey Nicoll (who was Stanford White's lawyer), be a very different stor; ot have the slightest ‘Dearing on the status of Thaw as eane or insane except for its moral or ethical influence on the mind of the Judge as to the ability of Thaw to know whether he was doing an illegal thing in conspiring to get out of Matteawau. OSBORNE SAYS BONDSMAN WILL BE KE R. James W. Osborne said that to admit Thaw to vail would practically mean giving him his freedom with his bonds- man as h's keeper. “His bondsman could go anywhere in the country and get him and surrender ting away to Kurope, @ he would try to do, ‘his bondsman Weuld be powerless. ‘The bond would be forfeited, but there would be no way of extraditing him. “If Thaw should come into New York State he probably would be arrested. Hin bondsman could then take out a writ of habeas corpus, or a friend of his might do It, The writ would be sustained as against any State commit- ment, the process of the Federal courts being supreme. w York State, In my opinion, would have no more right to hold Thi han any other State, If the Unitied States District Court in New Hainpehire want- ed him It could reach out Ite hand and get him, no matter what any particular State wanted him for, But Thaw prob- ably would move toward Europe if he | Four boya, the oldest fifteen years, ; were arraigned to-day in the Children’s Court, Jamaica, on a charge of having robbed tho safe in the drug store of Frederick Kiemcke of No, %4 Wood- ward avenue, Ridgewood. They were Louls Behaefer, fourteen y old, of No, 1865 Cornelia street; William Rohner, fourteen years old, of No. 1101 Cornelia etreet; Elias Kauss, fourteen years old, of No. 44 Woodward avenue, and An- drew Wiskofaki, fifteen years, of No, 118 Woodward, all of wood, Klemcke said the boys broke into his store through a hallway door on Dec. % The safe was not locked, #0 they had no diMoulty in getting the $15 it con- tained, The boys all admitted their guilt. A fifth boy who knew about the Fepdery got $1 becaune he threatened to “aqueal" if he did not get a share of the spoils, They were remanded to the children’s Society until Jan, 18, — fick Man Leaps From Window. John Scudde: @ stenographer, left hin home at No. 8% Columbus avenue and Visited yin parents on the third flor of No. 42 Columbus avenue. He had a nervous breakdown recently and had done no work since Christmas. He was chatting with Nie father and mother when he sprang to the window and Jumped out, landing on his face on the sidewalk, fracturing hi He" was sent Hospital, He probably will res Jacobs, a “trusty” tm the Cumbertand County Jail, Beard greane shortly be- fore 7 o'clock thie morning coming from an alley which rune alongside the a i i : i E i f hi i fy ie ! i 3 3 c gz 5 z z 3 F 3 ! Fb 444 HF fl Hg He Ht rE i if E 4 i F : Fy EEE HI RFE ‘ tf 2 5 $8 i ; . | century students graduated for one hundred, and Connolly and Jor don with Blew's keys coul@ have lib- erated every prisoner had they cared to do eo, CATHOLIC CLUBS’ DANCES GIVEN UP FOR BISHOP Organizations in Brooklyn Yield Respect to His Opinion of the Modern Steps. The hostile attitude of the Right Rev- erend Biahop Charles E. MoDonnell of the diocese of Long Ieland toward the modern dances has resulted in the can- cellation of al dances for charitabl purposes evchediied by Roman Cat ollo organiaations in Brooklyn, Kmeraid Club, which had made all rangements for ite anual ball on Feb. 2 ded the way and eight other organ- imationa followed sult, Tt was announced to-day that the St, Francis Xavier Academy dance ar) the annual dance of the senior claes of Si Francia's College had been abandoned, The Cathedral Chub's dance has been postponed unt after Lent and may never ve given, No oMcial notice forbidding the mod: ern dances hae been sent by Bishop MoDonnell, But the Catholics of Brovk- iyn know hie position and they realizo that unless the modern dances are per- mitted the batle might just as well not be given Because the young folk will not attend them, pase ae el to amen, Mayo: James H. Preston of Baltimore visited Mayor Mitchel to-day and invited him to @ Guest at the celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the “@tar Spangied Bannor.” The celedry- tion will begin Sept. i8 and will last a week, Muyor Mitche) accepted the in- vitation, ——_<»——_—- A BOOK BY A FAMOUS AUTHOR, Complete in six instalments, a week for ten weeks, in the Evening Ny emupen World. “The Return of Tarzan;" sequel to “Tarzan of the Apes,” be Fa! Boss Monday. Order from ay ONDAY, JAN Daughter of Copper Millionaire Who Wed Son of Diplomat To-Day j) GUGGENHEIM AND YOOVGDOGHODIHOTSCGGHISGHOOSGC sa eel \Convicts About to Be Trans- PREDICTS NO BIRTHS OF CRILDREN IN FRANCE OR ENGLAND IN FUTURE Prof. Cattell of Columbia Gives Waring on Present Day Conditions. BATTLE CREBK, Mich, Jan. 12.— Dr, J, MoKeen Cattell of Columbia Uni- versity, peaking to-day before the Na- tlenel Conference on Rate Betterment, Dut forward the suggestion that the cost of bearing and rearing oMikiren should be equally shared by all. “In order that the existing population be maintained, or indeed that the race may survive,” he said, “it will appa: ently be necessary to make a jenio selection of healthy thers and to provide that the cost of bearing and rearing children be equally shared by a” Dr. Cattell, apeaking of the decreas- ing birth rates in the families of col- lege graduates, said that if the size of such families should continue to de- crease as it did during the nineteenth in 1936 would have no children, Of the con- dition in Buropean countries he sal: “Wf the birth rates in England, Ger- many and France should continue to decrease as they have since 1880 there would be no children born a hundred years hence. “In France the population is now at, tionary, while in some departments there are four deaths for every three births. In other nations an increasing population has been maintained through a decreasing death rate; but in England and elsewhere the death rate must in- crease, being now #0 low on account of the age constitution of the population, Tt is only in Japan that the Oirth rate is increasing, though {t otill remains high in Rusela. a BISCHOFF BANK SOUND. Examiners Repert Mom More Than Enough te Pay Depositors, At the oMfices of the State Ranking Department, No. @ Broadway, thin afternoon, {t was maid that examiners had examined the books and resourc of the Bischoff Bunk, Incorporated, do- Ing business at Reade street and Broad- way, and that the Institution was found to be in a atadle condition, The exam- iners found more than money vnough on hand fo pay off all deposi “This muat not be confused with Gio private firm of Bishoff & \ is in the hands of a receiver, State officials. There had been a quiet run on tho bank all day. ener OLD DANCE HALL BURNED. “Billy McGlory’s old dance hall at 1 OVEGOOON NOB OF 15000 MEN ATTACK FORD PANT AS DMSO BERKS (Comtinued from First Page) N registering 9 degress above sero, The factory doors were closed and no ghel- ter was obtainable in the neighborhood. Hundreds of the men were actually freesing. The officers of the company after looking over the sttuation decided that i would O9,uRWise ¢0 attempt to recruit any men under the prevailing condition: Word was sent outside that no new em Ployees would be taken on to-day. ‘The anouncement was met with a roar of disapproval and disappointment. A policeman stationed at the main on trance to the factory ordered the crowd disperse and tried to push the leaders from the door. It was a bad move for the policeman. He was overwhelined in a second. His clothes were torn off and only by good fortune did he escape being trampled to Geath. Several hundred men roshed the doors and got inside the plant, where they clustered about steam radi- ators or swarmed to parts of the fac- tory where there were fires. As the mob would not obey requests to disperse and an ugly mood was be ginning to develop, lines of hose were stretched and streams of water were directed at the mob. This was an un- politic move, for, while it dispersed the clamoring thousands, it didn't drive them from the neighborhood. ATTACK PLANT WITH STONES AND OHER MISSLES. rious men with ice covered cloth- ped forcibly entered stores, dwellings and other buiiings and grouped around stoves and radiators until they were @ry, Then they went out and gathered etones, bricks and other missiies and charged the Ford plant from all aides. In order to give his employees plenty of light Mr. Ford has constructed his factory Jargely of glass. It was « shin- ing mark for the rigters and they did % of damage fore the police re- could reach the acene. Not unui borhood. allroad detectives atate that job seekers are still coming into Detroit. The Ford management ie in a quandary and the city t# confronted by the proposition of an army of un~ employed charging in from all direo- tions, with the coldest days of the winter impending, ‘Tammany William J y as clerk of the unieipal Court at @ Hundred and The job pays $3,000 per annum and the term of office is #ix years, Wright is Tammany leader of the Thirty-first District. He Sevent District Manhattan and Twenty-fth fe ia the firet of the Tammany leaders de- firemen had reoming the flames, which consuming the ground floor when Patrolman Brown discovered them and turned in an alarm, , noon put an end to the dancing, Since then the building has been various purposes, tly, as moving picture theatre. T i auditorium was ruined in this mornin, fire. —_ To Name Rampolla's Successor. ROM#, Jaa, 13.—The Pope to-day re- One| celved @ Jevutation of the canons of \St, Peter's who the appointment of th to take the aboot ew archprieat of the late Cardina; posed by the recent change in admin- istration to be placed in another posl- tion. Quit Thinking You Cannot Eat sod. W @ Food eo when % thing. you like, end AWATER Promptly Restores Good Digestion. Not & ianai'y most probable candi | Rampote. ROWS! detes vO Cae are Cardinal | VARY 141 MARRIAGE UNITES [INTERNATONAL NCKEL STRAUS FANS |More Than 500 Invited to the Ceremony This Afternoon at St. Regis. More than five hundred guesta—mem- hers of familles prominent an social, financial and profepsional circles—are in- vited to the wedding of Mies Gladys Eleanor Guggenheim, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Guggenheim, and Roger Wiiliam Straus, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar 8. Strauss, which took place ‘this afternoon at 4 o'clock in the grand ballroom of the St. Regis Hotel. The Rev. Joseph Silverman performed the ceremony. The manriage united two of New York's wealthiest families, ‘The father of the bride is one of the seven Guggenheim brothers, whose cop- per and other mining in! ite extend all over the world, Mr. Straus is the son of the former Ambassador to Tur- key, & member of President Roosevelt's Cabinet and noted for hie charities and pubite spirit. The bride is only eighteen years old and her husband is twenty-one. ‘The engagement of the couple was an- nounced last summer when they were in Burope, The date of the wedding Became public on last Dec. 4, when the young people appeared at City Hail for thelr marriage license, Miss Guegenhelm's attendants were her eteter-in-law, Mra. Leonard Hoch- stedter, Mrs. Edward Schafer and Mrs. H.. ¥. Guggenheim and Mra, Mm. @uggevhetm. Her maid of honor is her cousin, Mise Nettle B, Gerstie. ‘Mr. Straus had fis cousin, H. Grant Straus, as best man and the ushers, most of them His relatives, were Nathan Straus jr M. Robert Guggenheim, H. F. Guggenheim, Edward Schafer, Leon- ard Hochstadter, Walter Rothschild, Sam Markham, James Seligman, second, Stanley Halle, Louis Kohn ang Harold Loeb. Young Dantel Guggenheim, second, land M.Robert Guggenheim jr.were pages and the little Miss Madeleine Schafer and Emilie Hochstadter, flower gir! Members of the families invited to the ‘were ¢x-Senator end Mre.8imon Gugegnheim, Mr. and Mra. Murray Gug- genheim, Mr. end Mre. William Guggen- heim, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Guggenheim, Mr. and Mra. F. R. Guggenheim, Mr. ud Mrs, Nathan Straus, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse I. Straus, Mr. and Mrs. Percy F. Straus, Mr. and. Mra, Herbert M, Straus and Mr. dnd Mra, Lee Kohn. Many school friends of the bride at Rosemary Hay School. and friends of Mr, Straua at —Pringston were Mnvéted, and in addition thirty invita- tions have been sent to friends here and abroad. Among these were Sir Er: mest Cassell, Mr. and Mra. Nathanie! Gauddeauz, Earl and Lady Grey, Am- bassador and Mrs, Herrick, Ambasea- dor und Mre. Morgenthau, Ambassador, Mrs, and Miss Page and Baron Edward de Rothechiid. Others include Lawrence Abbot, Mr. and Mrs, George Gordon Battle, Mr. and Mra. Andrew Carnegie, Mr. and Mrs. Abram Eikus, Mr. and Mrs. George B. MoCiellan, Mr. and Mra, Henry Phip) Mra, ‘Bheodore Roosevelt, Mr. and Mrs. Teac Seligman and Mr, and Mre. Sam- vel Unterm: —_—_—_——— SENTENCE FREES PRISONER. He Had Already Served More Days Than Namber Court et. Justice Jaycock of the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court, in Rrook- lyn, evidently did not think much of the judgment of the jury which on last ‘Thuredey found Harry Zedder, twenty- one years old, guilty of ma hter in the second degree. The in last August, while driving a wagon, ran down and killed Mary Sees, ten years old. He was indicted and held in the Raymond Street Jail, ‘The epnaity for manslaughter in the second degree is not to exceed fifteen years, When Zedder came up for sen- tence to-day Justice Jaycock sentenced him to the Raymond Street Jail for five daye. As he had already served more than five days he walked out of court @ free man. WILL SHARE ‘PROFITS WITH 4,500 EMPLOYEES Will Sell 10 Per Cent. Stock it! 110, and Extra Dividends to Workers Who Keep It. The International Nickel Company, of which Ambrose Monell is President and Robert M. Thompson, the copper magnte, te chairman of the Board of Direotors, has announced a profit shar- ing-plan fon its employees, with a sal- ary ‘bonus for those who accept the plan of profit sharing. The company, offers common stock to its employees a 110, to be paid for by instalments, dividends are ied to the purchasers i e 200n as the fire ingtalment is pad, with an extra 6 per cent. divkiend to employees who hold on to their stick and remain in the employ of the oon- cern. The International Nickel Company ts @ 942,000,000 concern, with works at Constable Hook, N. J., and mines in Canada, The common stock has been paying 10 per cent. a year dividends and the company even at that has been laying up @ surplus. There are 4,600 employees who may take advantage of the offer, though officers of the com- pany at No. % Exchange place said they did not as yet know how many employees would tak: opportunity. The stock,” not del listed by the Ni York Stock Exchange and seldom dealt in on the curb, For the purposes of the stock aud: scription, officers and employees ar divided into three classes, which are again subdivided according tq the wages and salaries paid. The first claas is comprised of those who have been with the company for lese than five years; the second class those who have been with the company from five to ten years, and the third class those who have been with the company for more than ten years. ‘Those tn the first class, whose wages amount ‘to leas than %% a year may eubseribe’ for one share; wecond and third classes, two shares, Men with salaries up to $1,375 may mubscribe to two shares if in the first class, threo if in the @econd and four if in the third. ‘Those receiving more than 4,766 a year may subscribe to four, seven and ten shares respectively in the three classes. Gubecriptions will be received from employees until Jan, 1. Mf more than 4,000 shares are eubsoribed for the lotmeats will be out down, The d!- fectora of the company beskles Mr. Thompeon and. Mr,-Monell ere J. R. Dorema, William Nelwon Cromwell, ‘Duncan Coulson, Benjamin Strong Jr., EB. C. Converse, W. T, Graham, E. Freceriok Wood, 8.’ H. ‘P. Pell and ‘Witlard H. Bronson. The company is capitalized at $62,000,- 000. There is a large amount ‘of stock in the treasury of the concern,left over from the amount needed for absorption and consolidation of the various com- panies which entered the corporation. Of the authorized stock $33,000,000 of the common has been Issued and $8,000,000 of the preferred, which per cent. ———._. Express Robbers Get $9,875, FORT SMITH, Ark., Jan. 12.—Local officials of Wells Fargo & Co,, reported to the police to-day that their office here was robbed of $9,876 last night. The money was intended to pay the miners of the Western Coal and Min- ing Company at Jenny to-day. It arrived here yesterday from Louis. The loss was discovered whe express officials prepared to place the puckage on a train for Jenny Lind. STUBBORN COLDS Gite easily relieved“ by Scott's Emulsion, and it does more—strengthens the lungs and upbuilds the HEN Physicians Say “Eat Candy” do not mean any kind of confection m pce Hs under the name of Candy but rather, hePurest money will buy- Suggestion for Monday SA POUND TIN Row, Cortiandt, 125th M6, ea m1 watll 10 oelock, All our jeres open saturday Freshest, Most Wholesome Candy that to come to the point, LOFT NS Phiten sen, end chal Suggestion for Tuesday 7 P D are wit ‘BU y L tee a, nae vedrisand LOC m every evening 11 o'clock, you BROADWAY « Fulton street nd Brook! “The Return of Ta: PIAN{ Horace Waters & Co. invite you to see the new Waters Pianos and hear their sweet, musical tone; also to examine the new Waters-Autola pianos, which combine the wonderful Autola player action with the Waters Piano, and which can be played either by hand or with music rolls. A Special Offer at low prices & on easy terms: Style A---Watars Upright An artistic piano of high- est grade, celebrated for full, rich, deep tone, with fine pe popula styles, calys $250 $10 down and $7 wal a ehenes tor eee Style 5---Player- Piano with full scale, 88. notes. and’ automatic tracker. A most, Ceasar and we pie : : er-Piano simple} and easy to play. Price $390 Send Postal for Catalogue. Horace Waters & Co, Three Stores: 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th Se, |127 W. 42d St. near B’way. Branch (( Evenings) 354 W. 125th St. nr. Sth Ave OLBROOK S = SAUCE ) H a NTHAL.—On Jan. 11, MARY, B.. beloved daughter of Willlam Necker, HELP WANTED—MALE, BP) J lesbain MN WANeRD Boga ‘boy to act es footmas and te ore ‘Kovis 10% GOth at y between 6 and 8 P. World Ad. Recovers Lost Dog In Six Hour iN York, Jen, Oth, 19) New ort” World: nelowed yuu will find $1.08 oa for tay fet doa Hie’ wat *° $0" my" hotne x hous } Spptared in your ‘Mal For lost articles use a World “Lost and Found” ad. It will get a circulation in New York City, morning of Sunday, greater than the Heralg, Times, Sun and Tribune ADDED TOGETHER. TION THAT'S THE CIR “LOST” ADS, 1 |A COMPLETE NOVEL FOR 6 CENTS . Buy the Evening World from Mon- day to Saturday, next week, and get ” geatel “eo “Tareas of the Apes” Order em semaines Be,

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