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nye ts ¥ 7 OP Ds ORIOL OOO IOI I CI | SRD A OO IO CW SOCK BBP ADNAN TRAN P RROT C CO NEXT WEEK'S COMPLETE NOVEL_IN_THE EVENING WORLD == WILL BEGIN IN== - e By Harol d McGra th The story of an exiled New Yorker's Mon day's Ey enin g W orl d t strange adventures on the other side a nsaidieeneaphaichdh Achddadutababatatalisanoushasbudoninsiasibelicebiig inalacaalaataatalataaisie distiaudabaabobbittie nt cet tcacaiin niches tint cuted a ulaiolh users iadubeiaiaaisalatadenter assist 1 ARMY CAN DANELS TO FACE | ASQUITH DEFIANTLY says. | ‘WMRNATAG F UNMONGTS DENOUNCE HM... ===-- ‘Son While Torreon Recovers After th _— to Withdraw From Contest Prsmler Opens His Campaien| [JES NCLE JOE TROT? SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 1916. HE EVENING WORLD, Men Driving Federals From Torreon; First Photograph of Actual Fighting POVEAAE ONL ODO DE 11-1 PUEDE DONG 1064-04 6-00-4-0496-406-4-10-00 14. swampy @ gearch wae made for a nundred feet in every direction, but no trace of the second woman could be foun COLLEGE BOYS WERE UNCON: 6CIOUS FOR HOURS. Tt was late in the morning before news of the accident wae conveyed to the parents of the boys and to Mre. White. The young men re- mained unconscious for some time after reaching the hospital and geither, when he did regain senses, told more than bis nai ia an address, which in each case proved to be wrong. Young Mra. Ridder, Schneider's sister, started at once for the hosp!- tal from her home, No. 44 West Geventy-seventh street, and George | There | > eo RRORREEE Six Days Battle Rebels Pursue Federals. for Appointment. a rane Pave “WATCH ME” HE SAYS STORY OF CITY'S FALL. hs is sadatinnartiet \e tan Stoves WASHINGTON, Api contr. Wi ff No. 184| ation of inthro| 4 jele is =, R&MS at Hyde Park. 1 bearish gral Me migra alia alg state Commerce Commission, after the notable three-day Senate fight, City at once also, Dramatic Scenes Amid Death Mrs. Richter and Mra. Ridder were “ALL YOUNG MEN DO” Beja ren SPEECHES MADE. and Desolation as Victors wre followed to-day by the revela- ia ‘ Took Possession. Wiieon to withdraw his name ané thus stop the contest, which he bel'* Neved to be embarrassing the Presi! dent, and that Mr. Wilson refused. as He Sails, He Wants Dow- | TORRWON, Moxtoo, April 3, via Fi! 4 ed, trom ma, and, reciprocally, I will hear nothing of pollti- fitee datas | i ! ager to Dance With. “tmele" Joe Cannon salied this morning on the Royal Mall Packet steamship liner Arcadian for Ber- muda, where he is to have a rest—e swoet rest for the next two weeks. “No,” said the former Speaker of House, “I don't want to talk pdl- I am getting away trom pel- itica and all business. It's no secret where and how I stand, but I must say that I am surprised at the atti- tude of the New York papers on the tolisgom constwise vessels. But it doesn't make any difference whether the newspapers suppress the truth or tell it, the country ts pretty well in- formed on the situation, and it won't make a damn bit of difference in Bext November's elections.” “Unole” Joe remarked that the Ar- Paso, Tex, April 4.—This city, from which Gen. Refugio Velasco and most of the uninjured of his command fied yesterday, was occupied by the Rebels in force to-day and the work of burn- ing the bodies of the dead, clearing jaway the wreckage of shell shattered adobe walls, street barricades and barbed wire entanglements was be- gun, While Villa took « large number of prisoners Velasco escaped from the Canyon de Huarache with a consid. erable proportion of his force. He Was pursued last nigh by Gen. Her- nandes, who to-day reported that he had fought a small rear guard on- @egement with the retreating force and later Gen. Villa with reinforce. ments (eft here to make an attempt to capture or annihilate it, Non-combatants here with whom the Associated Press correspondent talked to-day, estimated Velasco's So Says Former PASTOR TOLD WIDOW HE, A WIDOWER, WAS QUALIFIED COMFORTER ORB-5-22] 6 PBEM BOWIE O46 EDD HPT OR GIULIA MOROSINI Sunday School Teacher in Story Told Church Court. Clopyright. Prem Lastrating Oo., N. ¥.) OPO GIRL JOY RIDER KILLED, | night all tired out, an seen her. She was a picture. She worked hard as a model for Rothenberg @ Kahn, No. %4 West Twenty-fifth street. She got twenty- two and a half dollars a week and paid me six dollars board. She even @id her own washing, so that she might send money te her mother. was @ good gi “and men will live? They got off, didh’t they? They always do. And poor Betty bed to go, can't bear to think of it. She came in last I said to her: ‘You are going to bed early to-night, aren't you? You know you were up late the other night.’ And she said) she was: that she was all tired out. GIRL MADE ENGAGEMENT AT THE ASTOR. “We talked a while and were getting ready to go to bed when the telephone rang. Betty answered it and I beard She! in: There was natural satisfaction at the White House to-day that Mr. Daniels had been confirmed. The abarp contest was regarded by of- clals as of importance in revealing the attitude of Senators toward the physical valuation of railroads. ‘White House officials sald there was no truth in the story that the Pres- ident had expressed to Senators his own views on the theories of physical valuation of railroads, but had merely sisted that Mr. Daniels would be a valuable addition to the commission with fair and equitable attitude to all questions coming before it. There was lively speculation and various attempts at construction of the Preside: support of Mr. Daniels in connection with the railroad situation. Senators to whom the President ex- Preased his desire for Mr. Daniels's confirmation found the President tak- ing the attitude that he expected oaly that Mr. Daniels would be fair. The opposition to Dantels arose out of his decisions in certain public utility cases in New Jersey, notably the \ — ‘When he rebels ‘entered the piace | Women of his congregation was con- they found only one nurse, Dorethea|tinued to-day in the Metropolitan de la Crus, in attendance. She aaid| Temple, Seventh avenue near Four- assumption of the| garrison did not number more than BARS HERO HUBBY W STUDENTS HURT Don't talk here, Walt UULI| "TRENTON, N. J. April 4—Prot Geclared he felt it 6,000 men, of whom 1,600 were killed ‘Then she went to the| winthrop M. Daniels of Princeton to- to the highest in- of wounded. When Velasco The secret trial of the Rev. Dr. Bet aap eT rd wil’ meet ou tareana| Gey feslgned se a member of the 7 be fled he Cf See Bey. Pe 1 will meet you at the) Hoard of Public Utilities Commis- the Mate and the! ~you don't any?" remarked the enge|left behind in the military hospital|Jacob Embury Price, pastor of the ator. she came in I asked| gion, following his confirm: by ef Danville, “well, see if you can't find | 900 wounded. ‘Washington Heights Methodist Epis- L | ae eee ee Fa, Cut, Ot that | the United States Senate as a mom- Gisoumsion of the AMERICAN CONSUL PROTECTS |copel Church, on charges of frivolous abn | ———o bot, that ane, waulda’t be late: “abd | Per of the Interstate Commorce Com: wes -egala. wildly RDS. and over-affectionate conduct that’s the last I saw of her, th a vi j ald: (Continued from Firat Page.) | (Continued from iret’ Page.) gir” @ POC, | that he would appoint former Judge the Board of ies Co! succeed Mr. Danicis. John W. Treacey of Jersey City, to it ramission. to i : ‘i 3 i teenth street. As the fourteen minie-|Ut they refused to say anything. It|said that he had been with Mrs, | a | 8 t H i : 5 5 r i t | Hl epeakers . ay Parliament of » % were expressed that i : i | i i i or ae Hiti B=E ~8F pray ” tt! 5 L "political ‘machine™| atts te Appear in Mobile for First beg _ was soothing « dying pa er eae to call on him on church | home since the first snowstorm. ple pueeee: 3 8 rio badge Schoot of Mista in Fobreaty. aoa exceptional circum- Delilah Bradley Case. 2 ” 4 .| The romance of beautiful Gtulia| PFO SWAY Sor Fnetor care to have left shortly for South oa tae army might be wd tient, whe with bie tast breath joined business," she sald, “and he sat be i v birth even veura|€Foss the tracks, Beside it runs the | Ame ta, mining en- g el an 4 Lt said that in ouch| Foster, millionaire poultryman of |" Persona who oay they were ecg( tight and said that alnce I was al Ago, when Werner, one of the /(ues mele 2 200. | Rhnelder ts student at Ste-| p= Pathe Brown's Mills, N. J., failed te appear witnesses declare that Vel sum-| Widow and he was a widower any- smartest members of the Traffic vens Institute of Technology, but; litan/ in court to-day for trial on @ charge mace fg | oe, from thei cod ir full sheuld imme- “this grave Tous” FOSTER FORFEITS BAIL. MOBILE, Ale, April 4—Joel M. growing out of bie residence at a hetel bere with Delilah Bradley of Pember- ton, N. J., his eighteen-year-old etenog- Foaster’e $800 ball bond was declared ties | both. it] himeelf wae wounded, but thie re- of Charles Stuart, for many years vice- president and general manager of the of Clearing House ban! nies for the week sho’ id $10, requirements. $11,884,460 from Jamestown entries for Monday's bert | races are as follows: i] were but nine. None of them was t i] vices to Villa, and the lat f 40: | structed him to continue his work in i| the city was without ceremony, The :}ot the ;| now talk confidently of ¢ al|tions by newspapermen. that the other nurses followed the army. ‘The patients were in » high atate of anxiety, for they had been told that Villa took no prisoners. They were reassured by H. 8. Cunard-Cummins, the British Vice-Consul at Gomes Palacio, who entered the hospital Gret, climbing over bodies of the wounded who had died there, The British official announced that Villa bad assured him none of the wounded would be harmed. Those who had the @trength raised themselves on their elbows from their pallets on the floor ind from their cots and cried a feeble marily executed three Spaniards whom he accused of firing on his troops, The wife of one of these, Lotero Lopes, attempted to sbield her husband and the same bullet killed It wae reported that Gen. Velasco pert, like the one that he went in- eane in the trenches, could not be confirmed and the impression pre-| vaile that he ie teill at the head of | of hie troops. Two Federal Gen le were killed and three wounded. Villa was in his headquarters at Gome Palacio Thurezday night, when | Torreon fol!. Almost up to the hour of the Federal fight he could not see for it seemed as if his artillery was inadequate to dislodge the enomy | from their positions in Huarache. His black, thick hair was museed and standing straight up for the most part, and a six day stubble of beard was on his face. News of the evacu- ation had reached him and he smiled, | fairly purring his anawers to ques- “Tell the p AG pled ee! rei num: ber of "Americans were in Vilia’ army. As a matter of fact there killed er wou . a an American resi it of Torreon, was the only phy: {clan on duty when th rebels too! He transferred the hospital. The formal ontry into victory has greatly raised soldiers, who hat through «@ trying campaign services announcing that the Rev. Mr. ¢/asked her to keep away from the _ evidence and was excused, \lce Cream Company; William Gamb! ters, who were commisaioned by the |¥“ stated by persons connected with New York Conference as a trial body, jthe household that Werner was not Aled into the church they passed a |@t Mimburst, large lettered notice of to-morrow’s| Sleuths from a private agency In the pay of Mra. Werner have been trailing Werner, it is said, for months. Whether Mrs. Werner intends to ap- ply for a divorce cannot be ascer- tained. The residents of Riverdale and lower Yonkers have spent much of their time of late discussing the af- fairs of Werner and his wife. Werner, they aay, has been going his own way for mome time. Mrs. Werner has not | been seen much in the vicinity of her Downs would preach to-morrow on “Do as You Please, but Nr ‘The first witness against Pastor Price to-day was Mrs, Hilma Dohl of No, @1 West One Hundre@ and Fortieth street, a young widow, who once taught Sunday school in the church, She told the court, she re- ported afterward, that she was forced to leave the church by Dr, Price’ aide me on @ sofa and hugged me| Moronint had its birth seven years Squad, was riding along a road in the Bronx on bis prize horse, Mr. Jones. He saw a runaway ap- broaching and stopped the horse at the risk of his own life. The driver of the horse was Giulia, the beauti- ful and independent daughter of Giovanni Morosini, the banker and former associate of Jay Gould. GIRL’S FATHER GAVE HERO CoP A JOB. Miss Morosini told her father of her adventure and Mr. Morosini sought out the policeman and found him a clever, fairly well educated, good looking Young man. Werner knew a lot about horses and was tendered the position of manager of thing we did to comfort each other was right. He frightened me by his actions and I ran out of the house.” Mrs. Doh! was asked about efforts that had been made to keep her from testify! She said she had been warned by Ephi Ai friend of Dr. Price, that {f she ter inat the minister she would wish she had died first., Miss Bertha Taylor also court, she said. But Mra, Dob! sald she opened her Bible at random and found her finger on Proverbs xxi' 44-25, under the chapter head! “Moral Virtues and Contrary Vices: “44, He that saith unto the wicked At the time he rescued Miss Moro- aini, Werner was living apart from his wife. As superintendent of the Morosini estate he was thrown much into the company of Miss Giulia, who lived with her father. A son had be- come estranged because of a mar- riage that did not suit the old bank- er and another daughter, Virginia, had been cast off when she had eloped with a coachman. Shortly after Werner took charge ‘6. But to them that rebuke him shall be delight and a good blessing come upon them.” “So,” Mra. Dobl sald, “I took It as a finger of fate pointing out my course of action.” Mrs. Dobl sald the court did not question her regarding this divine direction. Wilbur F. Bruce, one of those who med the charges, had only hearsay Headly sickbed of @ aon in Baltimore to at- tend the trial, told @ story much like that of Mrs, Dohil, She broke down and wept while on the witness stand. Dr. Price took the stand in his own defense in the afternoon. He would not describe his testimony outside ex- cept to say that he had denied e usation made against him. Fran! former Assistant Diatrict-At- ‘W..R. Comforts, of the Reid plentifully supplied with money and filed a suit for divorce, Opportunely enough Werner inade his appearance in Carson and was served with the papers. en he departed and Mra. Werner got her divorce on Sept. 37, 191 ‘Werner married Giulia Morosini on Jan, 12, ‘at Somerville, N. J. Thi wedding wi kept quiet until th. when the bride, the hoates: ge birthday party at Elmhurst, ir as her husband, orn and other character witnesses were also heard, The case will be closed this evening and reported to the con- ference Monday, Just before the conclusion of the morning session Jane Est, an J. W. Ww. tator, wi was known for many years as the best dressed girl in New York and the best horsewoman in New York. Shortly before her fath- aid she spent $200,000 the aid of Policeman Brennan of the Lyons earlier, but had left her when he and Schneider met Miss Mack and started for the Holly Arms Inn at Lawrence, L. I. If there was a seoond girl in the car, she is supposed to have escaped practically unhurt and to have made off before resouera arrived at the scene of the accident. This was on Queens road, the old Hoffman Boulevard, which stretches from the Queensboro Bridge plasa to Jamaica. A temporary wooden bridge and trestle crosses the Long Island Railroad tracks at Woodside, some three miles from the plaza, A nar- PENCE. Sechnetder missed the path meant for automobiles, though police Jan- terns light the spot well. He drove hia car up the trolley tracks for fifteen feet. It leaped and jolted over the ties, switched the steering wheel around in Schneider’s hands till he lost all control of the car and then skidded off the structure to the road. The car struck on its and, with full power still over the ground, crashed through a fence, carrying away twenty feet of the flimsy structure, and then shot headlong over a fifteen-foot em- bankment, bringing up at the bottom care of her,” al . and should have looked out for her.| Our home is in Peperell, Mass., and there were eight of us, four boys and four girls. Betty was the baby. We all worked hard and Betty was doing Al kill my mother, White had and at the Phi Sigma Kappa f1 house, No. 660 West O Hundred and Fourteenth atreet, was eaid that the girl not known to any of the members. They eaid that Schneider and Rich- ter had been at the house last night. spent a great deal of time at the Peernity house, having formerly attended classes at Columbia, It was early in the evening when id they had ngage- ment at the Hotel Asto! id left in Schneider's racing car, a two-seated affair, It was the last any of the fraternity men had seen of them. —__—- COAL PRICE BOOSTERS AFOUL OF GRAND JURY Whitman Getting Ready to Act on Evidence That Market Is Fixed in Advance. crash was heard by Caesar Oliver. night watchman on the bridge over the viaduct. Oliver was standing in the door. way of the shelter house at the end of the bridge, when he heard the whirr of the automobile as if went by, mak- ng for the bridge. He did not see the var, however. Oliver ran to the spot where the fence was torn away and groped peo aca days of fighting of the Morosin! estate the elder Moro- bankment, Before he|irculara advising consumers to lay ated Terreo ving their d d/C, Black, another who signed the|pini died, Werner became practically Come, be sane he saw the car | thelr year’ supply because of this NORFOLK ENTRIES, wounded behind them. That charges, followed him, the head of the establishmen 4 are also in the District-Attorney's ‘Lilian Miller, who left the|first wife went to Carson City, , | apaide down, the dead girl lying + | possession, Coal is now $6.76 a ton NORFOLK, Va. April 4.—The tl : in the summer of 1910. She was| ‘ew feet from it and the men, whose «roans be could hear, lying eom+ vards beyond the machine, as though they had been catapulted forwarc when the auto turned over. ‘The watchman turned, scramble: nack to the street and ran to thr vearest telephone, a block distan’ where be sent in a call for an am oulance from St. John's Hospital, an: also notified the police. By that time several men who ba beard the sound of the wreck b reached the scene. Among them wer: firemen from @ nearby engine house As one of the injured men, regainins upside down, with Miss Mack buried win an investigation into the fixing of the price of coal in this city. Com- munications have been received by District-Attorney Whitman saying that there is a combination of coal dealers who fix and regulate the prices to suit themselves, Advance quotations on coal for the current year. sent to the District- Attorney, show that “the price per ton will be Increased 10 cents a month.” Cleans Gloves, removes spots, from all cloth and leather; will not damage the finest fabrics nor leave evidence of use, Atall Druggists’, 10c per box. “WITCH” SALES CO, 12 West Broadway, New York. under It. the end of the battle, and that morn. |thow art righteous, him shall te) se, sorogint's eatate, which he ac-|" ‘There were no eye witnesses to the| ‘There is a likelihood that the| Ing had telephoned for bigger canuon, prone SORE cepted in 1908, dash down the embankment, but the|Grand Jury will be requested to be- — He Did Just The Right Thing! Safety Razor Five Milllon Men use the Gillette. ‘The Blades are Get Gillette teday. aad A young man from Kalamazoo Longed for something to do, $o World ads. he read And ere time for bed He bought an Auto or two. | _ And so would you, in all probabil | it You ‘read World “Used "Care Bog trucks, etc. . had attempted to ron her clothes, At one Horee Sale” Ads. and saw how little fer; | of the national capital itaelt, ‘cone earlier in the day, tried | show ahe displayed seventeen. differ. | consciousness for a moment, had sal: to pay nowadays for “irled ah trae —— | to fo her way into the trial. She|ent gowns in six di Here je a list | + |runabouts, limousines, touring cars, APPRAISALS OF ESTATES, | ws# removed from the premises with | she made of only of her annual the firemen and others righte = xpenditure for wardrobe, coverin, ‘Weat Seventeenth street atation. Once as ahe expressed it, the essentia! : a wrecked auto, There was no sec ond woman under it, “L guess ebe must have got away,” che injured man and lapsed ato unesasolowsess Ao the ground ot tet point RELIGIOUS NOTICED. Why not Use a World “Used Wanted" Ad. and then take pd choice of the bargains submitted?