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‘COMPLETE NOVEL EACH WEEK IN THE EVENING WORLD Che “ Circulation Books Open to All,’’ PRICE ONE OENT. ‘The Press Pubtishiog Onpreiete (ene Now Terk Werte THOUSANDS OF SHOPPERS SCARED INTO THE STREETS IN DEPARTMENT STORE FIRE PARLIAMENT FIGHT OVER HOME RULE; “LIAR” SHOUTED Sir Edward Carson Resents Statement of Devlin and Bonar Law Warns Asquith. Ses Newark Building Is Emptied of Customers and Employees as Blaze Gains, _ ALL ESCAPE TO STREET. ——" mk Five-Story Structure Not ;) Greatly Damaged, Though Business Is Suspended. Waite trowds filled Hahne & Co.'s Wg department store, which covers the block in Broad street, Newark, facing Military Park this afternoon, ® fire started in the candy kitchen @& the ground floor in a defective ‘Give and shot up the flue to the roof. were crowded with shoppers end eight hundred girl clerks were -habind the counters. Smoke began to, make itasif notice. }- Able in the store and immediately there Whe ‘uneasiness among the ATTACKS GOVERNMENT. Voie of Censure Asked on Se- crecy Over Bill—Unionists Now Call for Referendum. LONDON, March 19.—Animated cforks whe crowds, Theu, as it became thicker, there was a rush for thé @oors. Women and girls fled out {nto Broad street and into Military Park and the news that the big de- fartment storé was on fire brought thousands of persons hurrying to the FIRE. ORILL PREVENTS PANIC IN BUILDING. ‘Though starting in the cellar, it was scenes and the exchange of strong epithets marked the introduction of a vote of censure on the British Gov- ernment Andrew Bonar Law, leader of the Opposition in the House ‘The word “Har” by of Commons, to-day. was hurled at Joseph Deviin, Nation- [alist member of Belfast, when he de- |clared that Sir Edward Car: {Ulster Unionist leader, had at one on the,top floor of the five-stor: puflding that the fire broke out, hav- | gf traveled) upward through the |gdward Carson, jugs.. The fire drill was sounded here and the girls marched out in ‘hig language, Sir Edward su good order and with little excitement, j¢o, jt; “The statement is a wilful thelr calmness doing much to prevent l¢aigehood.” & panic ‘among the shoppers, who outs of protest and cheers in sup- were hurrying to the street, ignoring | yo of both members filled the cham- elevatora in their efforts to reach the | ber, and {t was ome minutes before weer Scere. }the Speaker was able to make him- Officers of the company, making 4 | sei¢ hoard in an appeal for the avoid- Quick examination after an alarm| oi. of personalities. had been turned In, gave orders for’ 4 proposition by Mr. Law that a the employees on all but the top floor | referendum of the country should be to stick to their posts. The cool de- | taken on the Home Rule bill and the meanor of men and girls behind the.) jocai option proposal for Ulster, was @ounters quieted the shoppers, most | rejected by Premier Asquith, who ae-whew were women and girls, sald that he belleved the ne Only one alarm was turned in the | ment's proposals offered the only hope firemen quickly quenching the flamed of « lasting settlement. after they had located the source of juguouLD BE SETTLED BY BUL- the fire in the defective fue, The “lls paTHER THAN VOTE @tore however, wan closed for'the rest} se course of hin apeech preced- sd hoa ing the decision of the Premier, Mr, Bung about in the park | yaw in threatening language said evitently expecting tho flames: ‘tol 101 if afr, Asquith refused the course out again, but, according fo the | ievesied it could only be “because Mt wan only a trifling blaze | 446 Government thought, In the words amr somege wae done, of Winaton Spencer Churchill, that % the question should be acttled by bul- ter Tex Bill Passes. | iets rather Than by votes: March 1%—The Hopkins} hg peroration of Mr. Law's tax act for] speech concluded with the following: “What about the army? It is only rder the army will [time been a Home Ruler “It is an infamous lie, and when the @f the Legislature this afternoon MA wo to Gov. Glynn within a few a: biyman Law said this afternoon believed it would be signed by the jebiet executive. tion of civil war the sol zone like the rest of the people. The army will be divided and that force moved by Bonar Law, wax based on Premier Asquith’s re- fusal on Monday to give details of | the scheme of local option by which ithe nine counties of Ulster would be \permitted to vote separately on the ‘question whether they should be left World “Lost” ee Find! |; iy, Marea 16, 1¥14, 2 it tt and, Foun eal yout ernment to give @ guarantee that if the Goy- ernment would take a referendum of bet this is nothing remarkable when you consider that World ads, get a circu! tn New York City P er than the Herald, Times, Sun and) Tribune COLLECTIVELY, both mornings and Sundays. Rule Bill and the local option pro- | (Continued on ued om Teath Page) ee pred i roared Sir n which we depend for | lout of the control of tie new Irish, e leader of the opposition offere: | the United Kingdom on the Home! HERO SAVES THREE CHILREN AT FIRE RUNS FROM PRAISE Motorman Dashes Into Burn- ing Flat and Brings Out Unconscious Tots. 9OO6SH0-00000600894 0000000 Th HE COLLAPSES HIMSELF. Later Locks Self in Home to Keep From Being Con- | gratulated. Before two thousagd people, who cheered tim on, Henry Sherick, a motorman on the Union Railway in the Bronx, this afternoon rescued three little children from a burning apartment at No. «#4 East One Hun- dred and Seventy-fourth street. All tires of them were unconscious when Sherick got them to the window, where two policemen were waiting to help him, and he himself collapsed when the rescue work was done, Afterward, to avold congratulations, he went home and locked himeelt in. The fire was in the bedroom of the of Mra. Louis 4 second ~ ~ of the big tenement, and was caused by the children themselves. They were Annie and Max Frankel, six and,four years old respectively, and Dorothy Rubenstein, four. Mrs. | ‘ Frankel had left her two children in the flat while she visited Mrs. Max | Rubinstein across the hall. Little Dorothy went to play with her small | neighbors. The children got a box of dS 22 0800600 04-9506060 4859 09000050550095.90008 matches for a toy and the blaze | followed. Mrs. Sherick, who lives over the way, at No, 49) East One Hundred and Seventy-fourth street, saw smoke ‘in the Frankel rooms and told her ‘husband, who was off duty, When | he reached the second floor he found the two mothers screaming in the hallway and the whole place filled with smoke, causing a panic in the tenement. He promptly closed the door of the Frankel home and told |the mothers that he would get the children out. Out upon the cornice he went and broke the gigas of one of the front windows, When he crawled in and tried to make his way acrosn the floor he was almgst overcome and had (0 go back to the window for]... air, At last he was compelled toj+~~ break another window and make an-| FORGES ANOTHER 10 QUIT C CABINET window. Then he went back Into Minister of Marine Pose ee the room and got the other children, By this time Policemen Greenbaum and Davis of the Tremont station | were on the cornice and took the) children from him, All three were/ unconscious. Sherick, overcome by the smoke, / fell into the arms of the policemen, | Dr, Siskind came trom Fordham | Hospital with a puimotor and soon had all four of the victims on their feet again, The fire was soon ex- | tinguished. Joins Hus-| band of Calmeite’s Slayer _——>— — STOCK IN BALTIMORE FEDS IS SOLD TO-DAY AT PAR, $10.' Ere in Giving Up Seat. t18, Mareh 19 Mine. Cuillaux' Shares Go at One er OP In Hid Qid Bid ASAE SL 1 oof Gaston Calmette editor of the Bigaro, brought about Aehed. another pange in the Preneh Cab Md, March 14, inet to-day. when brn Monis, Min \s Raitt Federal | igter of Mavine, added his resignation | League bayebalt club are being traded 4, 4, * iniixe Miniatar in-on the Baltimore Stock Exchange Pip meeting of the Cab Forty-aix shares were sold at par $10, and later bid at 9 with lla preferred stock Exchange 1 resign emt Albert BL ” The brought to the was and for the pre Minister of ‘as Ministe M by | ker who pald # small fee for the un a bro. Monia ¢ n from ) usval trading } ‘The stock is not 1 dcan onl lé sold on the Exch the nd fe leugues bad int jor they would re quest of sume member coma stock of the club was bid for nt a share, but there were no sales. the appointed by Chamber of Deputies for examination to-morrow. Om tbat day Joseph It is thought if the league proves | summoned to appear belo euceessful the shares may become an oft eo of inquiry active trading featur market NEW ‘YORK, “THURSDAY, MARCH 19, - . s, 2 SC ab-os 26 EOPE MG PE CSS SEE O84 H0-5s BH Se SESEESESOEOSEO €. * ® Salada little Caillaux, M. Fabre, the Public Prose- cuter, and M, Bidault de I'Isle, Presi- ) alao will) | dent of the Court of Appet | ku before the committee ate Harres, the academician ind novelist, who ts ragarded an one for the leaders of the new spirit in nee, is among those added to the parliamentary committee ap: | in 1911 to investigate the affair, The committee has to twice daily, The revelations, It is sald in parliament- muy deeply affect the which are to b@ held on laa i pointed | Kochette } de rolled meat uy cireles, elections April 26. Mime. Caillaux In still the object of » popular sympathy, and crowds advantage of the mid-Lenten y to gather at the gates of prison, the women's penitentiary, where she in in custody ‘The people manifested great curioslty In the visitors to the jail, whe in chided the lawyers engaged for her There y friendly he Saint-Laxara demonatra tions } cheers for the prixcner were given from time to thine A challenge to a duel may be sent by Coulaus, husband of Calmette's slayer, to former Premier Berthou 1 member of the Chamber, The r 1 Minister of I " exception to charges against hin in onnectun wth the Henry Roehette fair, Which M. Berthou read in the ‘hamber yesterday friends of M. Catliaux are tryin | dissuade him from sending the chal- lenge. ‘They say he would make him- solf ridiculous by seeking satisfaction (Continued om Fourth Page, et 1914. Wale and colder to-night; cow peobable Friday, 1 . FINAL Cabinet Minister’s Wife Who Will Plead Unwritten Law Defense for Killing Paris Editor errr DODEOL EDL IODED I DDDODHHODEOE $O0-24-99559559 GIANT IMPERATOR BATTERED BY GALES), BUT SAFE IN PORT! Terror in Second Sat sel Third Cabins as Tremendous Waves Roll Over Her. ‘The ntic steamship Imperator of the Hamburg-American line after a Jong stay in drydock 1n Germany came Into pogt to-day badly battered by @ flight against wind and sea in tesrible hurricane in mid-ocean laut week. For more than twenty- four hours on Friday the 13th and Saturday the iéth“the huge vensel wan toned about like @ cockle shell Four of her lifeboats were washed| overboard, the forty-foot wings of the bronse eagle which serves an the figurehead on her prow were torn off and a ates! plate amidships near the upper deck line was shattered as though from the blow of a atsam hammer | The Imperator sailed from Ham- ‘burg on March 11, and had good weather until noon on Friday, when she ran into a southeast gale. The P| wind gradually #hifted around to the p south, the southwest and the weat, and finally into the northwest, Om- cera and 1 willing to swear that the waves were over forty, feet high, At any rate, they washed across the foredeck, which ia @ixty feet from the mea |e yel_of the water, | ENGINES STOPPED WHILE BIQ SHIP ROLLS ON WAVES. ‘The storm lasted until midnight on Saturday, Three times during the ‘hetght of the gale Capt. Thomas Kler | stopped the engines and let the ver- nel roll on the waves for an hour at a time. At those pertods the wind | was blowing #0 hard and the seas wore #0 high that the propellers were jracing to @ degree that endangered the voswel While the storm raged the ateorage | passengers were locked in thelr quar- ters and cabin passengera were warned against going ou deck. Few of them essayed beyond the safe con- fines of the saloons and cabin spaces. In the first cabin there was a collec. tion of extraordinartly good sailor who paid little attention to the roll- ing &nd plunging of the ship, but thers was great discomfort and ter- ror in the second and third class cab ing and in the steerage The Imperator carried 871 frat + ABE wer 1168 steerage passengers, Her crew (Continued on Second Page.) pis aeiicanies Steamahip MW The Hamburg a message to-day saying steamer Batavia, from iH * Baltimore, which put in at Ponta Det KAUN, the Azores, yesterday with steer- ing gear disabled, has made repairs and| will proceed after coaling, ‘The Batavia ‘eas 396 passengers on board —~— _PRIOE ONE OENT. ~-SAN 199 MUTINEERS LINED UP AND SHOT AS TOWN LOOKED ON $/Castro, Who Commanded Huerta Troops, and Eye- Witness of Execu- tions Tell Détails of Public Slaughter of Mutineers. SOLDIERS WERE MARCHED \ BY PILES OF THE DEAD Only Thing to Do,” Says General~ Victims Met Death Stolidly in Squads, at Dawn. (By United Press.) MEXICO CITY, ‘March 19.—Vivid detalls of the bloodiest execution in recent history were brought here thts afternoon by Capt. Adan Toledano, who was an eye witness to the shooting of one hundred and forty prisoners and the hanging of their nine leaders following a mutiny at the Jojutla barracks in the State of Morelos. “It was on the morning of Friday the 13th that the men were lined up and executed,” said Capt. Toledano ¢o the United Press. “It was hor- | ible, but was the only thing to do. The nine leaders were hanged to Itrees near by the spot where thelr followers were shot. The mutineers. were brought out in squads of a dozen each and the executions were mbers of the crew are) Jana, | 419 third class and | PROF. MERCALLI BURNED TO DEATH IN HIS ROOM j Mount Vesuvius Expert Had Often Escaped Perils in Depths of the Volcano, NAPL&s, Italy, March 19.--Prot, Giuseppe Mercalli, Director of the ob- servatory on Mount Vesuvius, was found burned to death to-day io his bedroom, The professor, whe occu- | pled also the chair of vulcanology und seismology at the University of Naples, retired to sleep at hie usual hour and the cause of the fire ts not definitely known, although @ lamp is said to have exploded in the apart- ment, Prof. Moercallt had often escaped Geath In perilous descents into the crater of the volcano, ee BOSSERT LEFT $2,122, 467. ‘Transfer ‘Tax ‘Apprateat or Fatate ta Filed, The State transfer tax appraisal of the estate of the Inte Louls Bossart, hotel owner and manufacturer of Brooklyn, was filed in that borough to-day and showed @ value of $2,122,467. The value of the Hotel Honsert la placed at $523,000 and of hia mill plant at $475,000, the widow's share is Of the estat approximately $3: Mra. Harriet Louts 000, Mra. gausnter, f jaughters 000 reapec- tively. The sons, John and Charles Lee Honnart, got approximately $315,000 each —_——-—— | INDICTED FOR MURDER. 4 ‘ Sheotiag Thought t He for Revenge. Grand te Albert and John Giamart and Nicolo were indicted to-day for the mur- [der of Vincenzo Cardglio on last Dec, 17 They, with three others, were arreat- ed Tuesday after an investigation begun |by Deputy MP “ommiasioner Rubin, {who brought some knowledge of the r u by District-Attorney's of- # appointment to nt, he had been ip elde Bureau. th i charge of the Hi Cardello was shot down on the night slot the day. that Michael” Glamarl, brother of two of the prisoners, ‘as bbed fi back as been onares & me: » 143 Cherry street. der was supposed to have ‘Veen vengeance, I carried out rapidly with the whole army looking on, eee SS “AB embankment served ag a wall before which the traitors were lined up. As they were shot the bodies were piled up and the troops thes were marohed by eo that the seléiers could get a close view of the end M@utineers and profit by the lessen, ‘This te the usual custom tm cases ef execution fer mutiny,” Gen. Castro, who was in command at Jojutla at the time of the whole ale executions, this afternoon sald! “We captured Jojutia after three houre of fighting and 1 personaly: ordered the execution not only of 140 Mutineera, but also of 60 others cage tured in mearby towns the next mern- ing. The 149 men were shot in squads. It pela the only way to quell the mutiny and to compel disc! SAV HE MADE A REPORT To HUERTA, "I did not personally witness the executions, but have received full re< porta from my officers showing that they were carried out as ordered. And 1 have made a complete report te President Huerta,” Capt. Toledano. sald that he was with the troops at Cuernavaca one week ago to-day, when word was re- colved telling of trouble at Jujutla. “The reports sald that the soldiers had revolted and killed Gen. Al- triste,” said Capt. Toledano. “We etarted with special trains immedi- ately for Jojutia. Gen. Castro, Milt- tary Governor of the State, was with us, and we reached Jojutia at about 7 o'clock in the evening. “There were 900 of us and 250 tineers, By midnight we had taken the town and the soldiers brought im 149 prisoners, “Gen, Castro held an inveatigat and, according to the evidence he ob. tained, most of the prigonera we! convict soldiers, mainly thieves pickpockets, and he ordered them ti be shot in aquads the next morning, Friday, March 13, MOST OF THE VICTIMS FACED DEATH BRAVELY. “Few persona slept ia the town that night and everyone was up early. Friday morning. The executions were carried out rapidly with great ° Precision, It was a terrible thing to eee, but the officers agreed that it could not be avoided. The firing _ Gquate 41d their work well-sad mest). hp EF ROS TE eS eTeRT = — A TOE: