The evening world. Newspaper, February 11, 1914, Page 1

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pase” Rasy hi met beak ey PRICE ONE OENT. eC ae | Fao WOULD-BE BRIDES RUSH OUT: MAYOR GASPS FOR FRESH AR PRIEST WHO SLEW | ANNA AUMUELLER _ STRUCTURE IS EMPTIED, | SENTENCED 10 DIE Bows His Heke: to the ai ; and Receives Notice of YY te ONE EXPLOI i WSS OF DBRS: Black -Handers-Attack When Guard Is Removed From Grocer’s Home. TENEMENT. | § , Blaze-That Starts in Old Docu- ment Roo.n Fills Whole ee With Smoke. eb 285049 24200 00008 88805 ® |Man Who Refused $500 De- mand and His Family Es- cape Serious Injury. » sss Has to Keep His Head Out of Window to Get | Fresh Air. 9640690000 For two months detectives have, been keeping nightly watch in the | six-story brick tenement at No. 430, $ P A bundred or more would-be brides | Doom With a Smile. Pte AN Ms i ahd z | catch Black Handers who have been © and bridegrooms waiting for their / BS tk é @tiven. like wi Me, , threatening Antonio Caltbellotta, pro- ad 5 ith a smile, Hans Schmidt, the prietor of a grocery store on the % B wheep from the basement of the City Hall to-day when clouds of dense smoke suddenly encompassed them. ‘The smoke came fror a fire started convicted slayer of Anna ‘Aumuetier, | heard Justice Davis in the Suprema | STound floor of the building, Court to-day sentence him to die in| They concluded a few nights ago the electric chair in the week begin-| that the Black Hand halPbecome dis- ning Maroh 28. The discredited H A the waste paper room right Liye Driest bowed. his the 3 couraged end so abandoned their, wear basement entrance. hilg rein ate prosra vigtis. | 4 wee we v bys mate Ute owe sheriffs manacied the condemned man| This morning a heavy chareé ot! ie led him Laotira ‘the Bridge of! dynamite was set off at the entrance he to the He was 1e- * } day (Pipes wha aie # linme-| to Caitbellotta’s living quarters. The | |the death chambef ut Sing Sing there | STF, his wife, mother and rrother | \3 to be kept until the date set for his|Were pitched from their beds and execution, buried beneath splintered wood and Schmidt spent his last night in the | plant Twenty families ran trom | $ ; Tombs in prayer. He knelt bbeside the shaken building into the anow- | the cot there. Keepers found him in| covered streets without stopping to a, pana ae ated that position early this morning. put on clothes. Scores of windows | er with @ 1088! When the newspaper reporters called were smi ter. As they opened the door | ¢, say their f j from the marriage license bu-| 10, nee eee farewell Schmidt refused | wrecked reeu to the main. basement corridor .,, 3 i there was a golumn of smoke rolling | Wie to aay," he told the cast end of the building. inom something.” the door of the bureau could . : be closed a wave of smoke had en-| tered and the brides-to-be and their, eecorts began to cough. “My God, the house is on fire!") yelled @ little Italian girl. Immediately there was a stampede. Girls forgot their future husbands and acattered right and left. In the @erridor by this time the smoke was unbearable. Two of the young women | collapsed and were carried out to the atreet by Taggert and Paul, who left them on the sidewalk in the care of Paseereby and returned to the base- flerasly by the time the fire brigade of the building and tho regular down- | towa companies ved. The fro was discuvered by Officer Thomas Taggart and License Clerk Patrick Paul, attached to the mar- riage Moense bureau. A bride-to-be, waiting in the hall outside the bureau, | Sr | | al y r hed, the lower hall was| and the back yard was! strewn with debris. The explosion occurred shortly af- | “but 1 will write|ter midnight. Policeman Woods of | " This is what he the West Thirty-seventh street sta-| ? ““MieS ANOERSON tion, on fixed post at Thirty-ninth | 4 “Beyond this vale of tears | street and Tenth avenue, hurried to! gaeeg. ‘were is a life above, | the damaged building, to find the fire- | ‘VANDERBILT'S $1,000 — Y Unmeaaured by the flight of years, escapes Jammed with men, women And all that life is lov and children, scrambling to reach the -———>— AUTO DASHES THROUGH eee eeeetins cate PLATE § GLASS WINDOW {results from the panic, Plaster dust ‘tilled the hallways, It looked like Chauffeur Runs Into Building to Save Lives—Jar Readjusts jamoke, and the tenants thought the Bo'sn Cermesco Garried Mrs. Van- | building was burning. FOUR TAKEN UNHURT FROM, MASS OF WRECKAGE. ‘When the police reached the room in which Caltbellotta’s family slept ter From Wrecked Yacht. “It's an ill wind that blows nobody meat. | Machinery. good," remarked Vincent ¢ ‘By this time the smoke had found) ’ they began meroning for bodies. The! yon of the United F > tte way upstairs and choked the cor-| Harry #. Foster, a chauffeur em-|Fear door of the bullding had been mirante ax he stood on the pier fidore and offices there, emptying) loved by Dr. J. B. Given of No, 463 | shot into the back ee the door 2 watched his ship back into the 1 ( them of clerks, Mayor Mitchel had to| Ninth street, Brooklyn, was driving his |the flat was demolished and Mash- | iver wy.day preparatory to a cruise lights showed four figures huddled in the midst of wreckage. But by some freak of the explosive mo one had been badly burt. It im believed that at least five pounds of dynamite was fired. Sev- eral hundred dollars’ damage was done to the building and by the breaking of glass in the neighbor- car north in Sixth avenue, Brooklyn, this afternoon when he found. he had | tost-control of the speed gear. There was a block of trafic in front of him, and t. avoid a collision he turned to} the Fight, jumped the curb and ran across the sidewalk, intending to risk contact with a blank wall. ‘The car skidded on the icy walk, slammed against the plate glass; window of Phels's cigar store at No, | 454 Sixth avenue and then plunged through the window of Rudolph Jeschke'’s tailor shop at No, 462. Pheis was knocked from his bench, but not seriously injured. Foster n his head from the window to get through the West Indi @.breath of air. 2 Dragaing the hose with them, Lieut. and Detective Sergeant Phe- Jap of the Mayor's personal staff, Patrolman ‘Frits and Acting Custo- @ian Rooney went down stairs to ; fight the fire. | They found the waste paper room, about fifteen feet nauare, one mass of as which were eating their way ugh the adjoining woodwork. It v required twenty minutes of drench- extinguish che fire. Tho natty Mrs, Vanderbilt and the Duchess of | Manchester from the deck of the | Werrior into the Almirante lifeboat two weeks ago. As a rewagd for his work the Vanderbilt party sent him | $1,000 and the United Fruit Company ‘gave him three wi ‘The bos'n has been w Bince August the letter writera of pretty Mary Ferguso: the Black Hand have been spoiling Hoboken, but aldin't |Galtbellotta’s nights, In all he has money ahead, The $1,000 for Vincent and Mary, and |received five notes, giving him the (rey Witt be married wt th shore uouoree of Kennel and] saved himself from the shower of| alternative of delivering $500 to the bride, home of . Halt Parke ‘always ready for| broken slave, by, bending over 4nd agents of the gang or being blown to’ Just before the Almirante | wslied of excitement, soon had a! ‘The cur atuck with the two front | Dleces. Wy evan Nelda neni ecart tie ‘of about three thousand people.| wheels through the window. ‘The jar, In Novémber he was told that to )):0)) soe hon tA pene! eave pin one circulated the report that) of the collision readjusted the m- | save his own life afd the lives of other package contuined a gold wateh Be rricne) wae ee nenr 18 Bie ote fevyp hi rns Foster was able to stop | hig relatives he must hand over the and chain from Mr, Vanderbilt for ‘arrival of tho engines added | ‘2-™ — > aah, He was instructed to carry the [Chief Officer | Kdwurds, om had excitement. The Mayor didn't “He that Can Read end “Medilate | money to the New Jersey dock of the [Aa08" o « fo party at) 1 D ne ~Manchesters and Vander- We ofice, | He, was too, buey, | Will Not Find His Evenings | Po™:2eco4 strest ferry and that in iilts aboard the Almirante trom the | which smokes ave as much Life Tedi ” | the waiting room he would meet @| Warrior. — ‘any fire, 30 what happened to-day Logs, or ious. | man wearing a red bandana about —— ' wos ‘but an incident. This is especially true sf one reads and! his neck, The man would recognize | CUBANS NOW GET Vn SHAKE. | meditates over the remarkable number} him and ask, and wonderful variety of want-filling rthauake Shook oe advertisements printed from day to day in “Have you got the fiah?” At this signal Caltbellotta wae | |Meavy EB to surrender the money. Alarms FLIES OVER MONT BLANC the People of Sant | | 1 " M BBMOHD, | cartentotta took the police into’ his | eusthaun a fer ne ALA ME MORAY. AE AOSTE, DEPARTMENT OF IKE- World ads. are as Interesting as they are| confidence and went accompanted by | ment among the population. No. re= ports of damage we two detectives disguised as luborers. | No one appeared to Inquire for the instructive, “RE, France, Feb. H.-A Might over whey reflect the wants of employers, | Ment Blanc in a dense fog at a height | workers, landlords, Henan, investors, | fish. ant j ; bl Sarge miles wi } 0) ers, tourists, bankers, Hhnierop William A. Larney, former secretary * igh m by * Pi eenekts, fic. in truly human, | caltbellotta, who has been in buss! a ine wire Department, who wus in ve " ad A td M neas in his present stand for two " eh aviator. He a anted here | interest fashion Ls dicted yesterday bf grand |v in in a few hundred yards of the | years, 19 regarded among his country> connection with » State coptract for ba | men aa prosperous, bullding # laundry at the Central Ishp lees and related that he had atart- a He deciared t y that his nerve insane Aaium pal arraig before 4 2 she morning trom, cienere, WORLD, 406 wes tot shaton and that he would day ‘hrouen’ bin guinel wars | e had been waiting LAST WEEK | “tie | ear aa 9nd that be: would 487, mara” eutersa k’ uieat of, bak to foake tb the. EOF ADIN AND PROFIT BY continue to huld out against the SEARS EPRNP Ah PORN. Png mein’ ek mm Bail was fixed at $2,000 which ran turaigned Poca iead ecw ENABLES HIM TO WED. | derbilt and Duchess of Manches- | It was Hoa'n Cermesco who curried | 'Co- Respondent Who “Peaches a9 and Wife Who Sues for a Divorce BURIES 4 UNDER g-vrrrmrwrsgasarrsssmrrsent) ON. AL ANDERSON, i $ $ $ a : $ & $ : 7 C5 FOL094 HO D049 OOOOOO /SEAMEN HELPLESS AS LIFE LINES ARE SHOT TO SAVE THEM Buoy papanrat & Drop on Rigging, but Ship's Crew, Frost-Bit- ten, Unable to Reach Them. ) HIGHLAND I 'T, Masa, Feb, 11—A_ four-masted schooner wan ‘driven ashore two miles south of Cape Cod Light during a bitter northeast gale and heavy snow to- day. A tremendous surf for a time pre- vented the launching of @ lifeboat, and the lifesavers from the Pamet River and Flighland stations set up their beach gun apparatus in the hope of rescuing the vensel'’s crew in tho breecheg buoy. ‘The first fow shots carried the line a ‘oss the vessel's rigging, but the seamen were no badly frostbitten that they could not clamber up the masts and secure it and the life-savers tried to send the line across the achooner’s deck. While the life savers were still at work a sudden shift In the gale float- ed the vessel and she was driven out to sea. ‘Two life-saving crews were making and one surf boat had capsized, when the wind veered from northeast to northwest blew her into deep | water. d ‘The eight men from the over- | turned Hfeboat swam ashore through | the breakers her he could not see her any more, | ‘Pho schooner ran down under the| that hin lawyer had told him not to | lee of the H ds of the Cape, and |see her, Yes, she was willing to an she apr king @ radio | “peach” on k. No, no reason all was s snue cutter, |Whataoever. No, sires, no such thing Her identity could not be determined, | 48 belnk paid for testifying. Noth~ ax her name boards were hidden by ing except that she wanted to tell the the thick cou®ing of ice on her bull, | truth but she was loaded and was thought ‘Then there were letters read, one ¢ bound for Boston. furnishing much amusement for the ‘The schooner had not been anchored Court and jury. ‘The letters told of she signalled for help te man) Anderson's anxiety to be with Lor Jumps and the Pamer River lite rain, amt Mr. Bamberger read the Io for another battle epistion with telling effect with the breakers One of Anderson's fetters in’ part It ix thought that the vessel was| read: the Gustin Cressy, bound from # Southern port for Portland with # tae cares of hard pi < att MODE “PEAGHES” lf ACCUSED BY WIFE Broadway Otentat at Her Be- trayal of Her Doings With Rich Young Husband. ——— NOT REALLY “CLUBBY.” Wife’s Mother, Says Detend- Her to French Count, Mine Lorraine Parker, tiny mode! and favorite of the White Way tan- goes, unpardonably offended Broad- YY etiquette to-day by “peaching”— the word she used-on John A. An- deraon, who came into Justice Whit- taker’e court to defend the divorce efforts to reach the stranded craft) sult brought by Mre. Marguerite Eb- Mng Anderson, a bride~of just one year, Muffled in white futa and speaking hardly above a whisper, Miss Parker permitted Lawyer Ira L. hen» ara ha fo drag pee avhole weet af of [ese but not uawilling lips. Preggs $e froms of the witness set Mrs, Atidéreon; Wetrese of millions, clad in gray furs, a dainty, blonde. hatred girl, not yet out of her teens. Her dark eyes flashed defiance at Anderson who eat directly across the counsel table. The triangle-husband, wife and co-reapondent, are extreme- ly youthful. Alongside of the aged jurors and lawyers and dignified court the parties seemed quite like children being brought before their elders for stealing cookies, In the back rows of the court room were telephone girls, wardrobe miatreases, door men and girls who know how to tango and do it every day—all wait- Ing to be called to tell of “An. derson, wealthy man’s son and little Lorraine. MET HIM THREE MONTHS AFTER MARRIAGE. Anderson by?” wan asked directly after Miss Parker had dropped int« Sa big chair. “He's wy sweetheart,” «irl muttered the she “looked at Jack and Jack looked at her over w table in Buatanoby's one night and then they got up and danced a tango. She asked Jack for }hin card and next day he called her |Jack’s marriage to the attractive young Miss Ebling, but how should Lorraine know that? ‘Then Jack called often and fre- and, yer, often he did not go home ho Pelham, where he was supposed to be 1s with hin bride, but re- mained in her apartment, A few feet away Anderson scowlad and looked daggers at her, but she sald she “had made up her mind to come Into court and tell the truth.” NO REASON TO PEACH; NONE AT ALL. Once she sald Jack got angry. wan in September, She NO, 'taken plenty to drink, She thought she misbehaved because that night Jack scolded her, and she—well, she just slapped his face good and hard, ‘Then there was a long hiatus, and when next she met Anderson he told Dear Lorraine suppose you (eaves on deeend Boge : ant, Got Her Away to Marry ? “What other name do you know) | | She told in a faltering voice how| \up. ‘This was just three months after | quently he took her to Bustonaby's | It) was out to! Rustanoby's, and afterward she had! Fu PAGES PRIO MURPAY NOW READY 10 “WPUT” PARTY. AND FLECT QSBORN Tammany Chief Declares Gov. Glynn _ Is the Leader in the State and Pointedly Ignores Attack on Him by Croker. MUST BE A CLEANUP, M’COMBS OPENLY SAYS Regime, Which Is lutorview that he, Murphy, “Well, at one time wae’ Giyan.” “Do you meae that Glyna is.State NEW GRAFT HUNTERS NAMED BY SPEAKER OF THE ASSEMBLY It Is Announced Also That | Whitman Will Be Called | Upon to Assist. | ALBANY, Feb, 11.—Speaker Sweet to-day announced the following Ae- sembly Graft Investigating Commit- tee: Republicans—-John Leo Sullivan jot Chautauqua, Chairman; —Wil- jMam J. Mater, Heneca; Franklin W. |Christman of Herkimer; Alvah W. Burlingame of Kings; #. A. Jones, Chenango. | Democrate—A. E. Smith, Minority | Lender, of New York, and Charles A. Brewster of Steuben Progressive—Michael Schaap. “We will get together at once,” maid | | Sullivan, ‘We will employ the best counsel, but I don't know who it will include. Undoubtedly District-Attor- ney Whitman will be called upon to siet us," } While the committee was getting! together thin afternoon, the Ciover- | nor's graft investigator, James W. Osborne, was pursuing his inveatiga- | tion into highways scandals, unmind- ful of the duplication that the As- sembly was undertaking A clash will come in a few days! when the Assembly Committee tries to steal his thunder. Then Osborne will drop Highways and strike sud- donly into other State departmenta— especially those where Kepublicans | have had some control. If the An: | sembly Committee plays politics, and [fails to go into anything save High- | ways, the Governor's investigator | will do the exposing ‘The Assembly Committee plana to have Harvey Hinman of Binghamp- ton for ita « 1 bat when i ques to other citles HW t t-Attorneys ¢ Jury “The testimony sievs," wald My Osborne, “that at least $6,000 wi etolen by some one ep this toad.” NAL Expected to Unite. All Factions of Democrady. -, Charles F. seuinay NGI eis oon leader of the Democratic party tetas State: The Ca ee came Dig. He's out. After that egme Sulzer. He's out, toe. Now “Yes, he te,” Mr. Murphy replied promptiy. |phy drummed his ey: | way OT > ormaniaation?” ee to-might) Thursday clear, col& 4 IGHT | etal \* aula Marphy. | “He's. ont, leader?” he was asked. Mr. Murphy was to-day a ferent man from the week struck his hand and announced that he and instead of striking the desk rocked back and forth gently is Bis swivel chair. “What do you think of the ment of Gov. Glynn about the reer- ganization i of the @arty in he first question of the “Chie! i was the Fapiy. 2 Coe “That's past “You're State leader; are you not?” “No. There are two or three of them.” “Did you see Gov, Giyna sbontG reorganisation yesterday?" “T did not, and I haven't seen | since he became Governor. DODGES THE QUESTION at GLYNN'S ELECTION. “AVIIL the organization-support Gov, ~~ Glynn for the bangs to “succeed : himself?” “He says “It he's port him?” “That's for the future.” the desk and looked up for the sent question. “What about the plan to reorganine — the State Committee and make Osborn » chairman in Place of Palmer?” # “Mr. Osborn isn't objectionable, “It — Palmer wants to resign I'll not object _ to Osborn.” “Do you know whether Osborn wants the chairmanship?” “No, I don't know anything about I haven't seen him lately.” “Do you know auything about the calling of a meeting next week of the State Committee to make the Osborn- Palmer change?" “No, nothing whatever.” “Would yon object to such « meste ing?” 4 “No, | would not.” WILL BE GLAD TO AID PARTY “UPLIFT.” “Will you give your ald in the re- organization of the Democratic party here in the State? “L mhall be wlad te aid im te see uplift, it-it uplitt's Uwe word” Here's where he | ‘Tom Amith wiih the = “De you think the it. Kel up at le. Party “L've just answered that willigg to ald. “Wasn't it Richard Croker's kf wae peave bil the be:

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