The evening world. Newspaper, February 7, 1914, Page 1

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— ae tty * x a eda: \ oe $ Te pa a ere ee tr eee nent mete 9 a Complete Novel Each Week Begins on Monday “| BALAOO RG HS NAKE HRN Ali THROUGH SURF FROM VESSEL ASHORE IN STORM SENATE ORDERS SEARCHING INQUIRY ONNEWHAVENROAD Norris Resolution ion bind After Exposures Are Called “Tale of Gang of Plunderers.” Louise, a aa for Days fn Fog; Dashed Onto Squan i Beach in Gale. LIFE LINES ARE USED. Seas So High Life Savers Can- not Launch Boais—Entire Crew Is in Peril. With giant seas hammering her steel frame, buried from the sight of i ‘ 6n shore In clouds cf spume @riving fog, the British freighter| WASHINGTON, Feb. 17—Senater Bueen Loulee, with a crew of forty,| Norris's resolution directing the In- usive of her’ officers, lies bard/ terstate Commerc? Commission to com- und to-dey on the shoals of Squan| tinue its investigation of New Haven near Manasquan, N, J. Railroad affairs wan to-day passed by Capt. MacDonough sent the foll the Senate in modified form. , apndd to Nie-agente thie “Tye Modification was to specify that | the commission need not duplicate eeAvAstitely feceanary to take @4- any of ite previous work and leaving Hetance ths tide. Ship driving up. | {t to the discretion of the commission fi ext tide too late,” as to whether its previous investiga- ‘The chip, whose steering gear wentition had developed all the informa- @f commission when she struck, tion it desired aa’ Bine miles off her course from! As adopted the resolution requires andi, Wales, to New York, witb ®) the Commission to ascertain the fol- (rge of tin plate, blundered upon the) jowing: about 4.20 A. M. Heavy seas) «what became of the funds of sald ted the life savers from launch-| company invested in the various en- @ boats, and three apprentices were | terprises and corporations mentioned, wrought ashore by the breeches buoy: | in the opinion of the Interstate Com- ‘The three inde who made the ad-| merce Commission entitled, ‘the New vegterous trip through ecas that) mngiand investigation in the matter of to tear them from the| rateq: ring were Ernest Row Of| whether the personal operations , Kngiand, Lionel Harrisod| authorizing such investment of the @tonecourt-on-Trent and Charley! ona, of the sald comp: and the upt of Queensway, London. Young! 1.45 or persons receiving the ben- Row, a bright-faced Ind of about Six-| one thereof are linole to punishment seen, gave & graphic story of bow tbe, under existing laws. through thick) “wwnether under existing Iaw such without 8*t-| rungs go invested can be recovered on pig cany bearings, ground into tel. oir of stockholders of sald com- ahoals, where she is likely to leave her pany. qagonas, a5 ho sat in the Manasquan)” an, regisiation, if any, 1s neces- sary to prevent the recurrence of siriilar transactions.” said Tow, ‘Attorney-General McReynolds takes Li to the Plimsoll mark. We! 14. view that any prosecutions for weather all the way across) a. a aciai operations of the New York, gage 0g We lly wel oot a eran arttord Faliroad must come under the State laws, not Se ne other | Federal statutes, cording to @ squint at the statement in the Senate to-day by ‘succeed, and we| Mr. Newlands of Nevada. The At- bout 4.80 this torneyyGeneral’s position was re- Wiad $8.8 ported during debate, when the Nor- g | Tis resolution to direct the Interstate Commerce Cominission to reopen its investigation of New Haven affairs was taken up, teken him up ®| "senator Lodge declared that inves- beard bim 8Y | tigation should be made of the man- at it was queer | ior in which Speyer & Co,, New York @ida't. pick up the Sea Girt | psaxers, floated ‘Frisco Raliroad sys- “Te © five-sccond ‘white fash,’ | | securities in Paris. He sald he! hat fog you couldn't | 114 been informed thitt by paying| ly fireworks exbibl-| Doig bankers comminsions as high W was eo Dlighted thick I'd) 9071.2 per cent. Speyer & Co, in- about got of the bridge when— | 4.0.64 the French people to buy eecurities a few months before tpuemened en Hosen? Fass) rallroad went into bankruptcy. “The result was that American credit was given a greater blow in France than it had ever received be- | fore,” declared Se! r Lodge. to hn Senator Kenyon jaracterized the heave ever tried to catch a hum ished exposures of New Haven ex this to be true, ae as a tale of “tho infamy of » me te noruntis, to wang of plunderers.” : they beyond Sab Y Oliver put into the record junities are not easily) Senator are jour easy the appoimtment of Speyer & Co, ay u | fiscal agents of the Navy Depart. | weather for four t i 2 3k ay rit i it iT THEY WERE OFF TH nf g § ir « in the Hand I: Glare Teas nthe Bask” a 90; however, H you possess your- inent of the United States in London Pr copy of last April. / iH ‘BIG SUNDAY | ING T “DAY. TO-MORROW! SAILING T 0- ia Luise, Havana, Ww q@RIch will be advertised, separately, Vister! . Offers of positions, workers, O® Nedonia, G fom resto at subse &. Carpathi to Amon ye: be honed oy sinese Conditions! The [ “ Circulation Books Open to All.’ | ays. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4 a dad ws 7, Tre Pree Pebltsniog vad ed World| {pital sald Palaszo had been killed ‘York SLAIN IN THE DARK ON WAY 10 SHOP Williamsburg Man Leaving Wife and Eight Children | Shot Down Near Home. MYSTERY IN TRAGEDY. Relatives Know of No Motive to Aid Police in Seek- ing Slayers, There's another notch on the gun- man’s gun to-day. In the drigsiing dark of early morning two men way- laid « third on a Williamsburg street and one of them shot him to death. What prefaced the murder the po- lice do not yet know. Only two persons beside the gunmen them- eelves saw the killing. What they saw wan short and sharp in the act- ing: A man was walking up the treet, ead bent against the rata. Two other men walked toward him Quite casually, and just as casusl|x { one of them flung out his hand with | @ gun Jn it, aimed carefully and sent ; two bullets into the man with the! bent Mend. And when the victim crumpled to the sidewalk dead they | turned and ran. The murdered man was Frank | Palazzo, o butcher, who lived at No. | 44 Hopkins street, Williamsburg, with his wife and eight children. If/ his death is the result of refusal to heed warnings of some kind or of some gang feud, his wife and eldest | sons say they know nothing about it. ; All they know is that Palazzo is; dead. } WAITED FOR VICTIM IN DARK! OF DOORWAY. The police have it down in their} books as & gunman murder, and it is! among the gangs of Williamsburg or: Brooklyn or perhaps among the hired | braves of New York that they expect to find the men who did the killing. | All that is known of ther, and it's ttle enough, is that they were shab- billy dressed, wore blue sweaters and had their caps pulled down over their eyes. It was when Palasso was on bis way to open his butcher shop at the southeast corner of Nostrand avenue and Hopkins atreet, that the two mer | gray " him, It was just a little after 6 o'clock and the streets were dark and he was all unsuspecting. As he passed the building at No. 4 Nos- trand avenue the two mien stopped within a few feet of him and one of them fired five shots at him without |@ word, One of the bullets struck |through his heart, other hit his cheek and he wat ad before he lurched down to the sidewalk, CONDUCTOR AND PASSENGERS THREATENED WITH GUN, At the moment of the shooting a Nostrand avenue car was pessing, and the conductor, William Droon, instantly gave the stopping signal and sprang from his platform in pur- sult. With him went Harry Fein- | berg of No. 608 Park avenue. They | were only @ short distance bebind the gunmen as they raced back to- ward Ellery street. The gunmen, in- stantly aware of pursuit, turned t, and the killer drow his revol- ver again, and with a meaning ges- ture stopped Droon and Feinberg. ‘Then he and bis companion turned the corner into Maroy avenue and disappeared, Pollee Bergeant John O'Grady of the Vernon avenue station was at Park and Nostrand avenues when the shots rang out and he ran to the scene, but all he found were Droon and Feinberg breathless and the peighborhood in an uproar. Dr, Wang of the Williamabyrg Hos- instantly. a eS STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY, so tt A oi 8M, ~ | from internal burts, but his condition |¢heir lives, ~TUNMEN'S VICTIM MILLIONAIRE’S SON ‘1 DODGES BULLETS IN AUTO CHASE Walter Wsiiy st of New Haven Makes Fixed Post Men Jump for Lives. ONE HURT BY FALLING. Police and Watchman Fire at Car, Which Is Finally Overtaken. Wallace W. Malley, Sonpieua.| year-old son of Walter Malley, mil- Honatre merchant of New Haven, was ebot at fully two dozen times by po- icemen and night watchmen as be sped bis gray racing roadste> from | Madison avenue and Siztieth street to | ‘ Seventy-first etreet and Park avenue early to-day. With Malley in the low-swung car was Rédert Esselstein, who gave bis dddress as No. 1370 Broadway, Man- Thatean. The crackie of shooting start- '@d when the automobile howied over @ man et Madison avenue and Six- tleth etrest and kept on going. ‘The injured man said be was John | | Mahoney and that he had no ‘home. He was taken to Bellevue, suffering | fe said not to be serious. Malley, | after estaping the bullets fred at ; him, was locked up in the East Sizty- seventh street station charged with ! felonious assault. | Policeman Cullanane of that sta- tion was on post at Sixty-first street: and Madison avenue and saw Ma- | honey catapulted by the gray racer. POLICE HURT BY FALL IN DODG- INQ CAR. Just as the machine was about to bit him, as the man a block below ; had been bit, the policeman leaped | for his life. Hampered by his heavy coat and boots, he fell, but safely out of the path of the whizzing tnachine. One ankle and one wrist were sprained th tat fall, but Cullanane, as he lay hurt on the wet pavement, raised himself on his injured arm and sent one shot crashing after the y racer, “Btop that automobile,” he yelled. ‘The shot and shout were hea: night watchmen further up the nue and also by Policeman Crowley, who was near Fifth avenue. Crowley commandeered @ passing automobile and took up the pursuit, swinging around the corner into Madison ave- nue on two wheels. ‘The night watchmen meanwhile had run to the curb and four or five of them took “pot shots” at the Malley | machine an it went by SHOTS FAIL, BUT AUTO GETS) FUGITIVES. The next fixed post is at BSixty- ninth street. Policeman William Long and Frank Monahan at that point planted themselves in the middle of the avenue, as Cullanane had done, and tried to wave Malley down, but they, too, had to jump for by Long shot four times at the car as it dashed away and Monahan fired three cartridges. Policeman Crowley in his com- mandeered machine, away with hie revolver and gaining on the fugitive, The Malley car turned east in Geventy-firet street and Crowley's machine circled around it and took the lead. Crowley, standing with bie revolver aimed at Malley, forced the driver of the racer to shut off his power and bring the car to a standstill, where- upon Malley wrathfully demanded to know why he was treated in that ‘Asked if he didn't know he had Bit a man and that be had been fired upon for more than half a mile, he responded: “Why, no. 1 didn't seen any man _—— ' Wontinweg op Gesend Page) - was popping |, Woman Slain in Her Home; House in Newark Where She Lived| i a $2.00 IN DIAMONDS LOST BY ANNA HELD Mother Found Jewelled Comb} in Street but Did Not Know of Its Value. For two weeks last month the dia- mond and pearl hair comb of Anna Held, the actress, valued at $2,000, adorned the raven locks of Rosle Fuc- | Six Americans and 35 ciano as she eng- in an east side paper box factory This period immediately followed Jan, 1, when Miss Held lost ‘be ornament from her hair while walking from the Cafe Beaux Arts to the stage door of the Casino Theatre. Rosie's mother, Marie, found the comb and took it to her home at No. 331 East Twenty-ninth street. Some of Rosie's sho; mates told her that the ornament was made of real dia- monds and pearis, and Rosle intrusted it to @ cousin, who took it to Hel- linger’s pawnshop at Twenty-ecighth street and Second avenue. The pawn- broker advanced $36 on the hairpin, to the joy and amasement of the Fuo- ciano family. Detective Dave Brown, who hat + in ber daily tot! Mrs. sama MANNING. WOMAN KILLS RIVAL TO Gtf HER HUSBAND; DIES BY POISON AS THE POLICE TRAIL HER “Circulation Books Open to All.”’ 19 1 4. 10 P A GES WOMAN CONFESSED SLAYING RIVAL, WHO REFUSED TO GIVE UP HUSBAND ? the family with whom she was acquainted, field avenue. TAKES POISON ON THE STREET. came at 3.15. pital and was 'varely able to speak. earthed the story of the finding of the ornament. Mina Held has been notified that she can call at Sellinger's and get her marry me. gt! it, 1 asked her to. property. It Is not likely that she will take any steps against the Fuc- clanos. aainenitat 41 PERISHED ON TRAIN IN-FLAMING TUNNEL? 1 wore a veil which covered most of my face. |would not suspect me.” Mexicans eved VI f PK Rell ie _ & Plot | She said that he was horrified and shocked when she told im what she 4 a had done. JUAREZ, Mexico, Feb. 7.--Gravest Chief Long sald after the woman's death that he had rat! suspicions againet hei everybody else, but was hamperad because Mre, Cobb and Mrs. Riley instated that the woman who shot feare thet the aiz American rattroad mer and thirty-five passengers on the Mexico and Northwestern train which ran into the burning Cumbre Tunnel last Wedneeday have perished werd*exprensod by ratlroud men this |Mre, Manning wae not Mise Herd- afternoon. 'man. They even had a glimpse of ‘Two Mexicans who left the train at |her face and in the dim light tn Cumbre sald the passenger was not | which they saw her were #0 deceived held up but ran tnto the tunnel in-|that they eald ahe wan very unitke nocent of the danger. The fact that | Miss Herdman, none of the erew or passengers haw| The suicide of Mise Merdman fal- been sven since, although four days |lowed a night and half a day of fev- ing of have elapsed, was reckoned an the |erteh poltee activity, suing into all of “4 surest evidence of their fate, for; the dead woman's friendships and together, got out a which Maximo (Castillo, who failed to |those of her husband. One story that , sing be wae going to the ome leave warning that he had eet a» |the police found during the day was | | slater, Mr, Garrabrant, is. freight train on fire in the tunnel, |tuat when Manning left his home in| Mre, Garrabrant ae, wos regarded as responalvie, her father's place at (he same time. POR RACING SEB PAGE 6, Meptomber, 1910, Miss Herdman |e home Both she and Manning dened, whem @ murder of fie who bas a garage ewe Pues | Maing 3 Believing that she had lost everything for nothing, Miss took the poison on the street. She staggered into a drug store in: Bago. field avenue at a liftle after noon and said she had taken pqleott, a passing automobile was stopped and she was hurried to Nose Hospital as soon as first aid treatment had been given, Drs. Anderton and Maybie took charge of her there and made effort to save or prolong her life, but in spite of their best efforts the sad “Did you shoot Mrs, Manning?” he asked her. “Yes,” she said. “I ved Charlie. He told me tong ago te He said ‘fhe could not get a divorce and that, Harriet 1 I went to her often. _ She laughed atime. You. terday 1 gave her a last chance 1 called her on the telephone. She iaughed at me on the telepione. So | made up P_my mind to. kill tar: THE COUPLE In the fall of 1910 when the alnge separated Manaing was * much tn the company of Migs Dey, the youthful organist of a |1n Watrfeld, near Menteleir. Mre, Manning at that time, that her husband pad gives, 6. diamond ring and @ check vA. to Miss Dey, Immediately car aad hurried ae PRICE ONE Bodies | Miss Hazel Histaae Solves Newark. Mystery by Confessing the Shoot- © ing and Then Ends Her Life by Taking Poison. BEGGED MRS. MANNING TO SUE FOR A DIVORCE ” “She Had No Right to Ruin Two Lives Out of Selfishness,” Declared. / Slayer Just Before Death. ~ Miss Hazel Herdman of Pompton Turnpike, near Montclair, on - of bichloride of mercury poisoning, a suicide, at a little after do afternoon. She had confessed that it was she who went to the i Mrs. Harriet Manning at No. 219 Warren street, Newark, yesterday Noon, shot Mrs. Manning to deatty and escaped, unrecognized by Miss Herdman said she-had béen in love wiht Manning Yor, ieee years and that he had promised to marry heb. Detectives went father's roadhouse on the Pompton Turnpike and asked her.q showing she was suspected. She went to the home of friends int The Newark detectives followed her today. TAG e Herdmaa \To the Rev. John R, Frank, long a friend of her father nls at the hospital as soon as her identity was known, the young made her first confession. Word was at once sent to Chief of Long at Newark. He made all haste to the dying woman's bedside. | Miss Herdman was very weak when Chief Long reached te: me “1 do not think Mrs. Cobb or Mrs. Riley saw enough of af to know who | was. I spoke about coming from Philadelphia so. The young woman exonerated Manning from any part in the conse! they returned. that they hag ¥ 4 i a i 3 o vel eery th = wh

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