The evening world. Newspaper, April 4, 1914, Page 1

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ae Een nea COMPLETE NOVEL EACH WEEK IN THE EVENING WORLD “Ctroulation Books Open to All au.” | Cie PRICE ONE CENT. IRL JOY RIDER Oran, 1 Co. \dend a KILLED, i TWO STUDENTS HURT WHEN Miss Betty Mack, Cloak Model, Dead in Crash of Machine at Woodside, L. 1. WOMAN _ DISAPPEARS. Otto Schneider and C. Richter in Hospital, the Former in Serious Condition. Otto Schneider and Charies Richter, , college students ani members of Phi | Bigma Kappa fraternity, the former a brother of young Mra. “Joe” Ridder, daughtersin-law of Herman Ridder, and the latter a son of Mr. and Mrs. George Richter of No. 46 Washington eonvaldecing in St. John's . Long Island City, fggm in. feveived in an automobile acct, debt early this morning, But asa result “@to phe Joyride on which the youth pent last evening from the Hotel | Astor, the body of Miss Bossle Mack; @ beautiful golden-haired girl, why) Was employed as a cloak model, and lodged With Mrs. Clara White at No. 216 West Ninoty-ninth street, les in| Laké’s morgue in Corona. ». @ehneider's back is thought to be) broken and he is not expected to live Dr. Meyer of Manhattan was called im consultation. “WHERE ARE THE GIRLS?” HIS FIRST QUESTION. © Dr. Lavelle, who responded with an ambulance to the first call for aid from the scene, says that when he reached the spot his first move was! to gu td the woman, who was then fying alongside the wrecked automo- bile. He halted long enough tu neo that she was dead. He then went on to where Schneider was lying. Schnet- was revived by him and the frat Haction he asked was, Dr. Lavelle “Where are the girls “What girls?” Dr. Luvelle says hoe asked. “Those in the "responded | Sohroeder. | “How many wore there?" “Two."* Then Schneider lapsed into uncon. | ectousness. The police are lookiug for another mysterious young woman #upposed to have been a Mra, May Lyons of Ope Hundred and Fifty-seventh street eu@ Broadway, The young men are reported at first to have satd that @me was in the party, but later @ebnetder denied this and Richter (Continued on Second Page.) Human Nature | A fundamental rule of life is to follow, the course of least resistance. | YOU MEN WHO SMOKE: How often have you stepped aside to some pillar, fence or wail to light ‘a match and found that the very spot Fi) had chosen as a place to strike a light was match-worn? YOU WOMEN WHO SHOP: How many times have you picked out a certain bargain offer from among a whole page of advertised announce- ments and, thinking you would be the ONLY one to take advantage of this particular opportunity, found’ yourself In the midst of a crowd of eager shoppers? fumar nature, slmost unconsciously, | seeks the spots where time, energy and money may be saved During the first three months of this yea’ there were printed 323,031 | 152,751 More than Separate World Ads the Herala About 6000 Perens Will Freie ane Uso, teas Woe Toe + EREDERICK WEYERHAUESER aivak OF ROCKEFELLER | IN VAST WEALTH WHOSE DEATH OCCURRED TO-DAY. | aaa mS 97 = | FORMER COLUMBIA. PROFESSOR JUMPS: "0 INSTANT DEATH eo mented Leaps to Areaw AV From Window of Eighty- second Street House. | JS. J. 8. Sulter, a forme: the French Department of Columbia University, was found dead in the areaway in front of a boarding bouse at No. 63 West Elghty-second street early to-day. He bad jumped or fallen from a window of his room on the fourth floor. He was past fifty yours old, and it Was understood at the house, where all the boarders are French, that bh has a wife from whom he has bee separated for some time. He had! instructor ty been boarding there since last Octo-| saulnelm, Southern Germany. {n/ from the hospitals brougt hundrede | Valke! Milee to Se tat ber, but no one know much about) i4s4, and until he wan eighteen yeare! more in their wake | Walket Miles to See Officials waa ulno reported to Mra, Werner) bias, old tilled the vineyard on his father’s; The building which ts beine con fore fie Found One to Re- ie her husband had been visiting Salter had not been connected with| farm In is? he emigrated to’ structed by the Thompson-Starret! : Aitce Columbia for quite a while, and bad! America, bringing his mother and} Company, is already up two stories lieve | {t is usserted, made @ living going out to teach| sister with him and going first to| The uprights for the next two stories 4 ponery grewsed Itallan walked into Thursday night when We who French to private p ile When| Hrie, Pa Rock taland, Ill, became | are now being et in place and bolted |yjjg rcp nore flew vat Arthue ancl | eet been away. for 1 oeees at found be wore trousers, shoes and} iis home tr 1856, and {t wes there together by 2 Working on ap aac Heat, fale ee WO ‘ax+por shirt. His coat and vest were found | jnat he became acquainted with the false Mooring uf wood steel ino ei bls ws Gh theuieakl pores ce gan ee An aad abet in his room near some evening papers ome ae a laborer in a) H" cromm girders giong the top of the af Clerk William Br he grounds:.of the osint estate he had taken tn last night. saw mili, In six months he became first tie: ‘fam Jobn Gragno'of Noy 8tt Gals | ret OR Meade Cnt @ MARAE OF @ alte Tho window is only 4 short dis-| manager of the mili, ani a short time, ‘The twenty-ton upright on the Pine | jnont avenue” aad ne. “lat Banks, | eOae She river south: df two Hundred ‘ance from the floor, and it is pos- | later went into partnership with ¥ t aide, near Naauns street, was! uge isthe body of my baby Carmella. |e eoNrt trent Thea guarde aiine bu onimmaliied nulclde. (No cote) nh eatin cen eurae cc aureeh atte, Heat Samay teat, weal axe Ja: of toy baby Carmella | were smisming when Werner rewched of explanation was found. The am- | yyyi; | waten ce saree atronis eontiwian tated Gea rotted am the sauin gute ulanoe aursecn’ trom Folycliali Hose | lee beginning. of the epartaouelac thie as < ran'e thumb, Some toot wen Hay Ap srgun | FOUND TWO STRANGE GUARDS, pital who pronounced hin dead sald | Weyerhaeuser fortune we witnessed | thin j and the'end of the bie | but thn hat they coud ON DUTY he died Instantly and that Ife had| pis] REABAC EBA RUT OF YAS Bie LO ley could BOL! iistead of bis own men he found Been tht fie penn bes in 1864, when he wen! into Wieconain| beam dropped, smashing through the bury ons + the Hoard ot | | q Prof. Salter was a graduate of the and hought a great strip of waste tim-|faine floor as though it were wet Health « them permission 1 | "Wo Strangers posted. They said they Univeralty of Paris, und It is reported | her for a song. With thin ind as al paper and crumpling the cross gir walked (hints-« eks to the Hoard | WEr® members of w private detective ea family and relatives in Ocean) yucleus, he organized the Mississipp! | ders, Che workmen were knocked Heaith ant they y bes it and ve maith they refused to ie e River Boom and Lagwing Company,| jyto the hole with the wreckaxe ult hl A unlens y i a A e aire Tea, GRE , » jwhich has remajned the governing) Prom all over the butlding other ® YUP perm eg ‘ ina ibaa cee ere ee BELMONT’S 2-YEAR-OLD | body of hia tranauctions and {ta power! workmen, alarmed hy the clanging] nadie it was one ot twins born mage | :he house on the telephone and got WINS AN ENGLISH STAKE, |i atitt fet: throughou: the worlu, hear nai rire etree auto kage Hae j ne reply ; iy greatest for of Naber acquired | regoue ‘The men were lifted out and | ei re Ae aT minnnre: wae Victory of Sandmate | Weyerhaeuser came thro "he carried te tha tool houser on the; Wemae to seylum Drowning |sconnected to-day and the quarda! Thin Senson by Amer Normner Moot Rullioad aia the qioegt level, and thence on stretchers, ' neneae ti Ie eis. Dae Racing Contingent Pea Guat ae while the crowde {n Cedar und Pine ,™™ u eaten, nae ¢ “4 hg latreeta murmured eymputhy to firet of th r ot wl Cis * + op | Smbulances 4 % wah racing contingent to win » rece on iti hA He af $8 at at Capt, Fahey of the Old Slip station i the Engilen turf during the present ses» amount Hit wif 1911 j took charge of the police arrange * : ih ily ue Mnarolg, Sendmels tordey Hever ohild-on atirvive ee so nena and cleared the building of ; ‘ rey, (aaina:, B Oeld of sistoge Fu runne H\ Hock Island, Il, Mr. Weyerhaouse) wungreds of the curious who tad 3" od Mrs W us was vasatisg Gurion ai tag old home, mri body left at Boon! reed their way past the watchmen tae - - ae wale’ ea ee trolay e Wwe contraners, Yer 6 tume (Gosuaued/en dasend Pane) “ Teal wer weve) | Worked as Mill Hand Then | millionaire lumber pneumonia | ind kindly man and a man of deep|cis P. Howard, N NEW YORK, F. WEYERHAEUSER, |SIX WORKERS HURT CONEOF THE WORLD'S AS TWENTY TONS anes OA MEN, AD OF STEEL TUMBLE, SATURDAY, APRIL 4, | BEAUTIFUL “HEIRESS WHO HAS BARRED HER ® | | | | | | | | Weeks at the New Equit- able Building. Qreat ctu, Which May ‘. Reach $500,000,000. A hollow twenty-ton ateel upright, forty-five feet long, being lifted into BEGAN AS POOR BOY. i Fast Forged to Front ‘in Wealth—Led Simple Life. | PASADE erlek = W A, Cal, April 4,—Fred- rhaeuser, the multt-| man of St. Paul, home to-day. of | iliness Inating | three weeks, | Weyerhaeuser was reputed to be one of the wealthiest men in the world. Weyerhgeusor contracted a severe | cold three weeks ago, which he was! t Whable to throw off. Capillary pueu. )Itt bdce In the {ramework of the New | monia quickly developed and big ogn-, Mauitable building on the bloc dition bad seen serious for more than | bounded by Broadway, Cedar, Nassai. Ly week. ya or hive Pee Dhyai-/and Pine streets, fel) with a terr!t ' clans resorted to u of oxygen to * stimulate bis waning vitaltts, and he | TA!" to-day. has been in a coma for two days The| 8!% tronworkers, employed about the | lmpot where it tore to pieces the plat end came at 8.30 A. M, His sons, John, Frederick, Ru- | form on the ievel ct the second story | dolph and Charles, and his daugh- |of the builing, were hurled through | \ters, Mra. Margaret Jewett, Mre, W.|the hole it made and thrown to the | B, Hill and Mra, 3. 8. Davis, were) ground. | | Atlenst three were hurt so that ie! at the bedside. died at his winter after an Possibly the weatthiast, certainly | surgeons at Gouverner and Hudson second only to John 1. Rockefel-'Stfeet Hospitals hold out no hope for ler in rehes, Frederick Weyerhaeu- | their recovery | sor left an estate the value of which his most tntimate friends cannot come within $100,000,000 of estimating. He probably was worth over half a billion dollars, most of his wealth be- ing In vast timber holdings through- out the North and Weat. Personally he was wo Win iniimaies as a The injured men were waltam | Monroe of Lexington avenue and Eas: One Hundred and Twenty-sixth | street, William Albright, nddreas not | given, Thom Crommett, No 9% Columbus avenue; (harles Cooley fo. 845 East One Munitred and Mfty- radox. | (ifth street; William Veutty, No gentle /Dainvrvidge street, Br MR 1S) pale, S GUILIA SRNER ) Shown ast Nine. ‘ve were religious convictions, his name was teenth street. The first mania He hated publicity Weyerhaeuser was born in Nelder. | quick of ambulances | succession 1914. HUSBAND FROM HOUSE. | POLICE CHARGE 1. W. W. AND ANARCHISTS; MASS MEETING AND PARADE CALLED GwLA MOROSINI __| BARS HERO HUBBY, _ SAYS BUSY RUMOR Former tok,” Wh Who situ Banker’s Daughter, Finds Guards at Gate. The beautiful Glulla Moroatol Wer- her, heiress to the bulk of the for- antirely unknown tn the public fleid taken to Hudson Street Hospital and | st charity fis friends assert that Howard was taken t Gouverneur muitte neld Gp the} tuas of the late Giovannt FP. Moro- he gave to charity, but always with | Hospital. ‘The Rev. Fathor Dineen of *! Bes HMMS a police shoul-/ sini, hus parted from her husband, | the warning that publfetty meant im- bat Peter's Churoh gave absolution ty (2K abd pushin psiored traffc, kooording to reports current at River- | mediate withdrawal of his support. | Monroe, Crommett and Cooley on in. | Many pers u the skyscrapers! dale-on-the- Hudson, She has placed Weyerhaeuser’s hnabite were ex-| formation that they were iliraly to die ave . . Peet AL mY Kuards over (he Riverhead eatate to tremely frugal, He had no hobbies. One| at any moment Noo them by Ite bulk sad) keas Werner out: it ls eald: Werner automobile was enough for him, He GREAT CROWC MURRIES FROM Ptsht) ciamored for an Invertigation| vax « mounted poltceman In 1907 was a stranger to yachts and art gal- FINANCIAL DISTRICT. tee tn Laptahate Benes ‘ < : ‘ ae IR aeiotcan oe levies and all other expensive fads! News of the accident, the thin | a i, Si sin ste Ge) Merogint by stopping @ runawiy, and of the rich. f its Kind within a fev weeks, |” pba abel ac wa married lity Cour years later Studious always, but studiously | flasbed through the finan !s, district, eta he had divorced his wife. silent an intimate friend safd of and platoon after pidtoon of police CARRIES DEAD BABY Th lias beer discord in the fam- him recently that his genius for) had to be burried tr toe spot te for w yaar or me says the secretivenows amounted almost te a) bold in ®check the «xeited rowds hE 1S T00 POOR T0 BURY tumor, Werner was;much given to which surged about the square. seeking the ompany of former friends on the police force, to reports wh according h reached his wife, It tn, a Hi BROKEN UP HY CHARGE OF THE \Mounted Men Wtth Drawn Clube. Ride Into the Midst. of the | Mob and Disperse It in. | Short Order. BLUECOATS IN EVIDENCE: | 4 w . Y w | ALL ALONG FIFTH AVENUE: y Orders Given to Allow’ Reasoni | Speech but Nothing to Provoke: of Advise a Breach of the Peace. The sight of hundreds of policemen in uniform ind: sn banked around Union Square or planted in stores in the vicinity; the promoters of a mass meeting of 1. W. W. and anaretists | the affair off this afternoon. An attempt was made to organize a parade to march tip Fifth avenue, but Inspector Cohalane broke up the assemblage bya charge of mounted men and two agitators carrving red banners inscribed “Tawneni- baum Must Be Freed” were arrested and hustled to the East Twenty second street station, Ry direction of Commosmloner Me- Kay Inspector Cahalane hud taken extraordinary precautions to prevent) Ne |B trouble in Union Square and up alone lt prevene cee eeeUaee Fifth avenue. ‘The precautions were| the peace will be - or brendh of [Prompted not only by the fot that] apot, If there te ey reo or. the |the 1. W. W. and Anarchiats had ad-| against the authori oe vertiand a masn meeting to begin atl will meet It with forse bei 3 o'clock to protest neainat convie-! Boon after this red and a Hon of Tannenbaum, but because! cards readi; unions of cloak and suit makers aM-lteibated: toe flows. were ' Mated with the Central Federated) «4 Unton had called 4 mass meeting for née ae pee 4 o'clock and had recetved parade per-| hs1q w demons bave mita covering ail the streets adjacent | oo got 4 «py ration ie Union and Iwading to Union Square. pril 4 the mass meeting ef tip unemployed advartieed for the ey The |. W. W. and Anarchist leaders day h had received no parade permits, nor ae jae been postpomed until ape had they notiiied the police of their intention to hold « mass meeting. But] Alexander Berkman, the Aetectives have been reporting to| Mounted the ntand at the north: ¢ of the square and explained: call Brat anybody comm! Detectives who have beon min- ling with the anarchists reported, too, that aome of the loaders had been talking about making raids on big Fifth avenue hotels and rea- taurants, For that reason all pre- cinct detectives In the affected dis- for @ big demonstration this after- ! meeting remained an@ arted to organize @ parade. Erg : noon, and also for another parade up them. “Let's march up BYth aver Headquarters for the last four days to the crowd. Rut these who Fifth avenue like that of two weeks ago. Then twa men banners described above appeares yelled men and women, ‘The surging mob could agt kd that the Anarchists were preparing wathered in anticipation ef: maple the easterly side of the eayere handled by foot policemen, se trict were assigned to the hotels this|tor Cahalane seat’ hie “a afternoon and uniformed men were| men tn. posted, out of sight, In Delmonico’s,| ‘The horseback cope antied iene’ | Bherry's, the Waldorf and other | with drawn elube ‘They. - Fifth avenue hotels and in vacant|men who were trying te store rooma conventent to euch backs and quiekly broke thé || places, Hoots, howls and curses ‘were: + | The £ W. nd Anarchist began 4 \to gather at the north end of Union ‘Square at 1 o'clock, In the meantime Inapector Cahnlane had distributed his forces, Everywhere waa the bleam of uniform buttons, Mounted police- }men end policemen on motorcycles |ctreled slowly around the equare, Dozens of detectives moved through the crowd, The display of police force waa the largest seen in Union Square since the bomb throwing, There was a lot of disconnected it nothing tn the way of con- action, Detectives took notes nurka made by men who tried to} srangue smal! erowds. ancoir. Steffens, one of the pro- inoters of the “LW. W. mass meet- ‘np of the anemployed,” asked In- apector Cahalane if th would be | anypolice interference. | “We bave no, right to injerfese £5 ARIE ig ale Oona eaacnRacatmemealama aT

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