The evening world. Newspaper, February 10, 1914, Page 1

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____ Guew or rain probable to-night and Wednesday. emeeeeL "PRIOR ONE OENT. " Copretanty ae SHOCKS BROOKLY _ Ge z |“ Ctreulation Books Open to AN?) _ 38, Co. Be sr Hash New Fors e wera), N: EPS THE EASTERN STATE Suew or rain probable to-bight and Wednesday, - FINAL: 18 PAGES PRICE ONE OENT. ™iw wills YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1914. tr OPENLY Th HE'S WITH WILSON IN FIGHT ON MURPHY Governor Returns From White House » Conference, Saying: “Washington A and Albany Have Good Under- standing” Regarding State’s Party. ‘Goy. Glynn, on his way to Albany from W. ashington, stopped ir New York to-day long enough to have a talk with Mayor Mitchel at the: .olel Vanderbilt and to admit that the subject of a conference at the White House yesterday between the President, National Chairman MeCombs and himself had been the rehabilitation, of the Democracy o1 the State.of New York, which, of course, means thé undoing of Charles ds. Murphy as State Dictator as well as “Chief” of _ Tammany. Hall. Asked if he had" anything to say: about tise attitude of the President ce ihe reorganization plans, the Governor said: “The Federal government at Washingten and the State govern- “Taent at. Albany will be found 19 be in full political harmony.” ee WORLD RIGHT FOR ALND MILLION ina the plans cf National Chairman MoCombes and himself fur the future Nothing in tt fot for Paltry $100,- 000—Certain They'll Fly #0. far as Now York State is con- corned. Across Atlantic. Be Asked directly if he and the Prost- lent “had agreed o en antl-Murphy apaign in New York," the Gos, por sidestepped by saying “I won't amawer that question put that wae He did admit that he and the seident and MoCombe had dis- eusond the New York situation and 7 came to a very cood un: { pe 1g Asked f he had Intd his plan of ih ation before the President, the Gov- rnor replied that he had. Asked it ig) the President had approved the plans, Mi? the Governor smiled and told his| Perfectly » Dub not for a ‘questioner that he might draw whut. | Prize of $100,000. It would be a very er inference he saw fit, expensive undertaking and a prize © 4 The Governor would not discuss the | £1,000,000 would be nearer the Groker letter, and he was particularly | mark, anxious that he would not be quoted; 7® $s what Glenn. Curtiss, the S that, Javlator had to say to-day about the ‘Again referring to the Washington | Proposed fight around the world Bip, the Governor eaid that at the frp) je Prien: Paci Exposi- 0 ry was 01 Yr. ‘urties arrived svg eda oe ae ine chat to-day on the Pring Friedrich Wil- Democratic party in the Empire | helm of the North German Lioyd. ate was put in good shape. | He went to Europe in December ex- “We are going to do everything we) P°ct!n® to spend reveral months on tik best to put the party in fight. ‘he other side. He was recalled home by a cablegram from Rodman tom by the time tho next| 1S condition by the tlme tho | Wanamaker who is in a hurry for the completion of his airship, now === belng built at the Curtiss works at |Hammondsport, N, Y., for a filght j@cross the Atlantic, starting at St. Johns, N. F., and landing on the Irish {coast. Mr, Curtiss thinks there is no | doubt that the fight will be success- fully made, | “The distance is about sixteen hun- | dred miles,” said he, “and should be | covered in twenty-four hours, This will mean an average speed of sev- enty miles an hour. The machine | WI carry a ton of gasoline, which will be used at the rate of fifteen to |twenty gallons an hour. It is prob- able that a,naval officer will a- company the aviator, for a knowledge “The flight around the world is (Continued gn Second Page.) } Send This Valentine To Some Friend Dear Friend: You sos acem like the same old some yeare ago. ard fay atep was Arm and Thine we, (oe bright, thy clothes Pheoe hen Pe ata rata paltaes oy Met ine te td aes Toren amilea! Canst thow an an acquaintance with tho winds BS 3 dled and the water. each ne vechons Sieh why Sclay? a | lt the time as we use the gasoline and when darkness falls will be in the best posetite condition for han dling, The machine will be sea- | worthy and follow, as clone as | powsible, the track of ihe ocean liners, 1 question the equipment of a wire- lens outfit, fenring that it will be too heavy, While in Burope [ cam: ; pon, A very compact equipmont, ] which I'am looking: Into ang which may be ised in -seroplenes with ok rae 1,544,239 RATE WORLD ADVERTISE. |! MENTS WERE PRINTED LAST YEAR 771,805 Moré Than the Herald, Mace A 6 ad 727 proripeial 4, ies Your}. =~ : ald Al of navigation is necessary as well | tneerecek “nay clays ||| “We will begin the trip early tn| sia the morning, so as to have all the ane pe will be your Valentine. | daylight possible while the machine —Dame Fortune, ‘Iw heavy. She will be getting lighter YOUNG ARTIST'S MODBL SAFE DEPOSIT BOX USED BY MANNING VC HEFELLINLOVE [agit ae SEVZEDBY SLEUTHS| HAASAN WITH HIS OWN WIFE | AND MARRIED HER OF MRS. VANDERBILT. TREMOR SWEEPS EAST; . MANY TOWNS IN iS IN PANIC PREETI SONETTRETY RET SRY Potsdam Sails Away With Prosecutor Trying to Connect pg ga New York Experiences First Happy Pair Divorced in Him With Killing of Wife OF THE EARTHQUAKE.|| QUake in Its History When City Old Country. By Girl Rival. Kissed’ in’ Selemdeensh 4s Feels Tremor From 1:35:15 the American Museum of Natural History, Seventy-seventh street and Central Park West. —_——- } POLICE QUIT, THE CASE. to 1:37:30 P. M* BROOKLYN FEELS SHOCK COURTSHIP VIA MAILS. P.M. |Veiled Bride Didn’t Divulge|g Preliminary tremer. Prisoner’s Lawyer Gloats Over HATTAN One Man Killed in Cave-in at hamton—Women Thrown From. Their Beds By the Shock. An earthquake shock was felt in this city, Eastern’ Pennsy/ Northem New Jersey, throughout New York State and New Ef and along the St. Lawrence River basin in Canada from; Quebec ¥ ward this afternoon. Widely separated reports state that the vailed from about 1.34 o'clock to 1.39 o'clock. The tremor, was unprecendented in severity and extent for this of the country. There was no severe property loss. One man was at Binghamton, N. Y., by the caving in of the walls of a trench. by the earthquake's shock, Manhattan and the Bronx appear to have escaped the brunt of the tremor, but its intluence was felt downtown, It was felt all over Brookiya and generally on Long Island. Toronto, Canada, reports that the stioei was severe enough to throw a woman out of bed, wreck glass and cfiiad, ware, wanp floors and crack walls, SCIENTISTS FIGURE THE CAUSE. Identity Until After the Failure to Find Any Real || pare WORSE THAN MANHA Ceremony. Evidence. ukcuateee Distance from instrument indloated ae net great. Shocks net severe. GLICK, CLICK, B-A-Z-2-Z1 ‘BOMB,’ SAID THE CROWD Gop, Aided. by Fireman on Ferry- boat, Souses the Thing, and, Lo! It's an Alarm Clock. James Shields ts a ticket chopper at the Staten Island ferry at the Battery, a harmless, pleasant and accommo- dating gentleman, ‘This morning he received a package from a menasenger. “Click! Click! ber. from within the package. Mr, Shields went white and care- fully laid the package on the ground. Crowds gathered and as quickly dis- appeared. Through the ferry-house rang the cry: “Bomb! Black Hand!” Frank Roth, the tallest cop in cap- tivity, approached the “thing.” “Click! Click! B: ai” Sailing on the Holland-American steamer Potsdam at 10 o'clock to-day! j vas one of the strangest yet happiest | of bridal couples that ever went out | of port. They were bound for Rot- terdam, Emil de Groot, forty-six vears old, was the bridegroon!, His wife is two years his junior, For, many years Emi! de: Groot b-3 heen @ prosperous merchant of Rot- terdam. He sold cheese and groceries and ‘schnapps and made much money. But he wasn't happy. His partner was not his real mate. She would permit him to sell) ) schnapps, but to drink it he had to/| % manoeuvre on the sly, This dis- tressed him greatly. When he wanted to go out with the “boys” for an evening, he couldn't go unless |’ his better half went with him.|& ‘ ARTHUR GWYNNE WEDS YOUNG ARTIST'S MODEL County Detectives under the direc- tion of Prosecutor Louis J. Hood, of Essex County, N. J., opened a safe deposit box in the Montclair Trust Company, Montolair, N. J., to-day shotmad ‘killed Mra. Herriet Man- aing las Friday and on Gaturday ; committed suicide. Tuey refused to tell what the papers were, but it is known that ‘ome of them was a will made by Manning in 1910 in favor of a woman organist in a church in Fairfield. Manning ta still in jail although the Newark ‘police have ended their in- quiry, . His counsel, ex-Senator Frank M. McDermit: sala he would get the $5,000 ball before nightfall. The charge onwhich Manning taheld and on which his sister, Mra. Saidee E. Garrabrant, was released late yesterday under $5,000 bail ts “falling to reveal to the authorities” the identity of his wife's slayer. LAWYER GLOATS OVER Wa Ten isndeniy ayo the couple aes Ma disag A divorce was tion “The wite left Peper aie that she was going to Join relatives in British Colv~»bia, For the better part of ten years Mr, Groot was a happy man, He smoked his pipe in the peace and drank his schnapps. His FAIL-|sound came up to bi life was gay and free, Then a spirit URE OF THE POLICE. “Take it away!" cried Mr. Bhields.| / The shock does not appear to have extended west of Buffalo! +: of loneliness assailed him. He longed Mr. McDermit gloated over the| ‘Not for me,” returned the police- AFTER WEEK'S WOOING Fotgiven for oe tocunédl They Part Pending Union by Re- ligious Ceremony. south of Philadelphia. Seismographs at various points show that, shock lasted from ten to twenty seconds. Scientists say that the quake followed the line of certain “faults,” or weak geological forms tions, known to exist in the North Atlantic and New Engtand States ‘ along the St, Lawrence Valley. Occupants of offices ble r- felt a tremor about 1.30 o'clock, but it-was not severe enough to : range any furniture or wall ornaments. The shock was felt in the ‘rial rooms of the Pulitzer Building, on the sixteenth floor. it metely a quiver. The greatest force of the tremor is reported from cities and towns in New York between the Mohawk Valley and the St. Lawrence, afl from tower ofa and Quebec in Canada, Utica, Syracuse, este, Buffalo, ectady and Albany all felt the shock plainly, Pictures w shaken from the walls in ihe Capitol at Albany. oe Father Torndorff, in charge of the seismograph at Georgetown Unk seniy, Washington, D. C., said this afternoon that there was @ pee” luminary shock beginning at 11.41 A. M. and lasting intermittently for. six minutes. The tremors were felt again in greater force at 1.34 o'clock and the seismograph shows that they reached their greatest power at 1.35 1-2 o'clock, which is about the time that they were felt by the entire earthquake area. again for a mate. Not for his Daliees wife did he long but for some gentl loving companion who would pees for him and his home, HI8 BROTHER-IN-LAW FOUND A WIFE. His brother-in-law lives in Benton Harbor, Mich. and to him he wrote, asking him fo find for him an Amer- ican girl, His brother-in-law was prompt in responding, He found a girl of Dutch descent, he sald, and by a strange coincidence her name war the same as his own. De, Groot corresponded with the Benton Harbor lady and she replied. Soon the letters fairly sizzied with love. Mr, De Groot started for this country. He was the accepted suitor of Miss De Groot, Her last letter stiplated that he must take her as he found her and be ready to marry her without looking upon her face. To this he readily agreed. No time was lost in the performance of the ceremony, The night he reached Benton Harbor they were married. The bride's face was completely hid- den by two heavy white veils. But the bridegroom was not curi- ous, The words which his bride had man. “Think I'm the Bureay of Combustibies?” A fireman from one of the ferry- boats joined the cop, and they got «& long boathook. They fished up the package and soused it into the salt water. They soused it and soused it. Then the policeman removed the strings. He found an alarm clock tled between two dry batteries. It wouldn't blow the fluff off a butter- fly’e wing. LAWS TO STOP THEATRE TICKET SPECULATION Aldermen Have Measures Under Advisement and Something Will Be Doing Soon.. Three anti-theatre ticket specula- tor ordinances were introduced at this afternoon's meeting of the Board of Aldermen and referred to commit- tee. They will come up for pas next Tuesday, after a public hearing. failure of the authorities to make good their boast that Manning would be charged with murder and de- clafed that after a five-hour third degree yesterday Chief of Police Long had been unable to bring @ stronger charge. County Detective Teed said Prosecutor Hood had failed to insist Gj @ charge of murder because it impossible legally to establish " i the fact that Mise Herdman had The five-day romance of dobar killed Mrs, M ing. The girl’ Gwynne, twenty-one years old, who fession, though none, doubts says he is a nephew of Mra, Cornelius! pot constitute legal proof, Vanderbilt, and Mise Anna Regina| technically, no one could have been Kenna, éixteen-year-old deughter of|an accessory either before or aftor Joseph Kenna of No, 992 Bergen! the murder. street, Brooklyn, which culminated in| wre, Garrabrant’s bond was pro- @ secret marriage by a Justice of the | vided by Willlam E. Noble and Peace in Jersey City yesterday, is to! Gharies Foesch in time to save her be followed by a religious ceremony| trom going to jail. The charge at. St. Teresa's Church, Sterling) against her and her brother is only place and Classon avenue, the Rev.|. “misdemeanor and ia punishable by Walter Meehan officiating, Mr. and/inree yeurs in prison and a fine of Mra, Gwynno will then start, probably | g1 999, on Thursday, for a honeymoon trip,|" " first to the South and then to Europe. Although the bride, a striking blonde, was considered by friends to ed the sweetiart of Russell Gair of —_—_—_—_——_ WOMAN DIVES 15 STORIES FROM SKYSCRAPER ROOF |be " i Two of the ordinances, introduced The se raph at the Museum of Nateral History, Manhattan, shows 5 > ; Py % for hii, Mure, he would marry ber torgt Gait almost lamediatele when | People Watch Her Climb to Para eee ae teense LaWInS of | shock reached its maximum Intensity ‘at 13345 P.M. and contineed ent under any conditions, The knot was;ne introduced bis chum, Gwynne, to tied, The faces of those at the cere-|per at a theatre last Wednesday. mony were beaming as the bride) Until the religious ceremony is per- stepped into an adjoining room to re-formed Mr. Gwygne will continue to move her two veils, When she came! jive at his elor apartments, No, back Mr. De Groot started to go up| 904 Bergen street, and the bride will in the air—his bride was his divorced| remain at her parents’ home, a short wife, distance away. HE HAD MARRIED HIS FORMER) tn jeaving home Miss Kenna did wi not arouse suspicion, for she bas "he cried. “Iam glad.” been employed for the last three " said the bridegroom, as his) weeks as un artists’ model by a firm wife stood smiling beside him on the| with offices at Thirtieth street and | Potsdam, here we ure again. T have|padison avenue, Manhattan. But she had ten years of single life and both! aig not+go near the studio yesterdi my wife and I have learned to appre-| nor “gid she communicate with by ee er. We are going back fe'huwterdam and are going. to we | eplovers. ‘happier than eve more will se Young Mr. Gwynne said: i bona.” “My father, Abram E. Gwynne, We ell a fe cur prunes | | who died in November, 1906, was a| he said to the ship news re- | brother of Mrs, Cornelius Vanderbilt. | and the lady stopped amiling, |? went to school in Staunton, Va., and ‘We will have nothing of the kind.” of late have been dabbling in Krook be, bie ‘ome Emil.” 1.37.80 P. M., when the last tremor was felt. Georgetown Unversity is the only scientific institution in the recording two shocks, The tremor between 11 o'clock and noon is reported from any other point. PHONE GIRLS FLED IN TERROR. In up-State cities there were mild panics in tall buildings’ Tetphiioa 3 {girls fled from their switchboards in many places. The shock was felt in widely separated parts of Brooklyn. Soon he "ter the tremor had passed the telephone bells at Police Headquarterg bg. |gan to ring, and from all quarters of the city came queries as to whee the explosion had been, The Headquarters operators didn’t know | theré had been an earth tremor and were kept busy replying that so ffs as they knew there had been no explosion, C7 a j The shock was felt plainly at Brooklyn Coliege, a Jesuit Se jon Crown Heights, The seismograph there had keen out of order for weeks, so no record was obtained, and for a time it was thought | there had been an explosion nearby. The tremor was felt in the Hotel Margaret at No. 7 daha ts nets only. 2 shoes pet and Poise Like a Swimmer for Her Death Plunge. KANSAS CITY, Feb, 10.—A fash- loably dressed woman about thirty years old leaped from the roof of the R. A. Long Building, a fifteen-atory structure in the downtown retail dis- trict here to-day, and was dashed to death on the cobblestones of the al- ley in the Persons in an 1 office in a nelghbor- ing building saw the woman climb to the parapet, poise a moment, clasp her hands and dive head first, as she | might have plunged into a swimming | pool, The initials “E, 8." embroidered on her handkerchief furnished the only immediate clew to her identity, BERS ax ieee aes CORR Ry more eet time supervision of the Police Commis- sioner, provides that the price of the ticket shall be placed thereon and that tickets shall not be resold. Alderman White introduced a sim- lar ordinance, which among other things provides that each theatre ticket shall have printed thereon the | following: “This ticket *cannot bo sold for | more than the pfice printed there aaa SAILING TO-DAY, ra, taken, tS

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