The evening world. Newspaper, April 25, 1914, Page 4

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SUNT WAR STORES; POUCE TERRORIZED Rule Foes Get 5,000,000! “Ammunition Rounds and | . 70,000 Rifles. AUTOS CARRY ARMS. ment of about 70,000 riftes| f 200 automobiles to the various Headquarters of the Ulster @f Home Rule were mobilized early jon of the arms had been com- successfully last night, In Donaghade. Early this morning and the®&ntire volunteer force to the task of distributing the throughout Ulster. ‘The Fanny had transhipped her argo en route to Belfast to two amall One of these carrying 63,000 arrived at Larne at 10 o'clock night. The unloading was com- Pieted by 3A. M. The town had been tely cordonned. All wires wet and the authorities were unable this time the unloading of HUNGER STRIKE ON HER WAY TOISLAND 1. W. W. “Won't Work” Ora- toress Says She’ll Emulate British Militants. thousand volunteers were wait- motor cars and as fast as the ‘were brought ashore they were away to the arsenals estab- throughout Ulster. Geveloped to-day that the entire teer force was mobilized at ic points throughout Ulster the night. Belfast was closely yunded. At Larne, 600 volunteers d the railroad station, and oth- junded the homes of all cus- Micials. One coast guard at 0 dd \d_ of itement. EARFUL HUMOR }POVERED FACE— " RESINOL . Covered With Pim, Bia N.J., Dec, 9, 1913: “About ‘ to show, first in small sf and them gradually: covering were sore und the rash was end my face bad a most un- appearance. I tried different also ‘e strict ‘dict, but T could get prpelief,Resinol Soap and Resinol T can truthfully say that and looks, due to Res the best for any skin trou- ae. (Signed) Robert Troyano, 209 é Bist St. ol Soap and Ointment heal d other akin eruptions, stop tantly, and are most valu- imples, dandruff, sores, burns, jes, etc, For ey free, to Resinol, Dept. &-R, Baltimore A few wiserupelous dealers try to substitutes for pears a for any of the prises, Sach win Berd a ese VIET Rage” of or 80 serve, ov can bo molied to VOTE GOOD FOR ONLY ONE CANDIDATE THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRI ON, BUT SERS. KEP UPSHOTING Clashes at Different Points in Colorado Riot Zone and Mines Surrounded. NT A Ae boat Uh Th ea Aas 43 NEW YORK ZZ THEATRE Na eras & JNINAAS _ => <= = TRINIDAD, COLO. I the State troops and striking coal min- Jers of Colorado resting on their arms | és to Belfast and Other jin the Ladiow atstrtct, in accordance Pp ints Cui as Cargo Is Un- | with the two days’ truce agreed on, Jinterest to-day centred in the outcome conference between [strike leaders and Adjt.-Gen. John i —--- Chase of the Colorado National Guard o5.—A The union miners will be represen- a BELFAST, Ireland, April 25.—A) Tein Lae, , ‘ jboard member, John McLennan, pres- ; Dhesany wan landed ut seotated | 08 of District No. 16, United Mine te on the coast of Ulster during| Workers of America ight and distributed by means | Bolton, international organizer. All during last night union leaders Volun-| Were engaged In an effort to enforce the temporary truce agreed upon, but Ulstermen who declare them-| notwithstanding occasional shots were determined to offer a scern{exchanged between the military out- resistance to the introduction | posts and strikers. ‘The centre of expected trouble in Jest night ard guarded tho landing] the Walsenburg district shifted from ‘and the roads until the die-|the Victor American and Colorado Fuel and Iron properties on the south to the non-union mines north and Fhe police are powerless to inter-| west to-day. The report reached here fore and all communications were) to-day {aterrupted. twelve miles northwest, had been vis- fifles and ammunition were) ited by union forces, and that the from Hamburg on the eteam- | Jackson and Turner mines were sur- Fanny,’a month ago, and were] rounded. Every train is loaded with people consignments, at Larne, Bangor] jeaving the district. ‘The visit to the Gutomobiles were pressed into! wag, according to ita superintendent, of securing high 000 men in the Helfast district) Lower rifles, suppored to be there for use against the strikers. As there the strikers said they would protect the employees in event of trouble. A despatch from Denver states that Gov. Ammons of Colorado, en route to Degver, late yesterday, called on the Federal Government for troops to ald in composing the strike situation in Meomeunica Colorado, and last night nad. wettusnes sucks swer that the War Depa ry guard that the police were help- | spare no soldiers for this purpose, ‘oaded at Night from Ships jot an and Robert G. NOWHERE WV Tono BoT —— the Sunnyside mine, Sunnyside mine for the purpose were none, ——— Although New York, in Manager W. A. Brady’s Opinion, Doesn’t Care How Early It Leaves the Theatre to Tango, Other Towns Demand a Full Evening’s Entertain- ment — Authors Have Accordingly Been Warned Against Turn- ing Out Short-Weight Drama for Next Season. By Charles Darnton. PAVE you ever gone to the theatre at 8.30 only to find yourself out on the pave- ment again thereabouts wondering what under the stars you could do to round out | 1) what even the most sober of us might call a full evening's entertainment?! ‘The season that is now finding its way beneath the daisies has certainly been distinguished for plays that may be classified as the short-weight More often than ever before the curtain has gono up late, through No effort to be fashionable, mind you, and come down early simply because the play couldn't hold out any longer. This has been particularly true of ght comedies and slim farces, waits and short acts Ko to make up one of the tricks of the theatrical For example, let me tell you what I was told not long ago: The actual play! d, so glad you're leav- ing us,” sal Varden Hanley of the ED Tombs prison to-day as» Becky Edol- gon, the Anarchist anti-war, work oratoreas was taken from the 2 gray building and started for the Unsightly, Instantly Relleved. | ry, -xweil's Inland workhouse. Becky, who preferred to pose as a martyr ng ar lace eean te evaak a rather than give $200 bond for her ‘and my face was all spotted and | €00d behavior for three months, has and it itched me very much at] started a hunger strike and Warden and caused me no end of discom-} Hanley didn't want any of that sort After a month or s0, pimples and | o¢ business in his establishment, be “1 don't wish anybody . said Hanley ak Becky was escorted Getire face, Ht was awful, The) io tne prison van, “but if the lady doesn't want to eat it's my opinion {t would be brutal to inject food in of soaps, creams and her." Lant night Alexander Berkman sent Py q Becky a fine traytul of e: Caused me instant reliet. | BY | plump and explonive Anan pad cake al Resiaol Soep were Aeine. it ig time of a farce that ran for months at a Broadway theatre was one hour and forty min- How's that for two dollars? While it may seem grievously sordid to put a play on @ time schedule, the indisputable fact remains that public demands quantity as well as As a rule it expects to be m on « hunger strike for was | {Pee speech,” she declared. cure, My face had assumed | to be a martyr.” color “It won't be wasted,” the prison nd Resinol Ointment. They | guard informed bar appetite menelf, This morning Becky declined to eat breakfast, and Hanley began to wor- He had never faced any cantankerousneas in his life. attempt of the police to prevent free eech guaranteed by the Conatitu- | tion will not “L will not eat, and I won't "FT got @ good AA he |often falis short in this respec else his play is cut short by tho pro- ducer whose expertness with the blue pencil is by no means equalled by his facility with the fountain pen, is destroyed, but none in turn The result is a play that leaves a great deal to be desired by patrons who have an unfailing sense of pe portion, | nounced Resinol. Look out eeehye taken conscien- nto consideration in GOOD FOR ONE VOTE IN hie & Cornell’s Free Popularity Contest La tiner An ckreeets Free Round Tri Sera cats FOR Occasionally one is put on more in ppean Tours Railread Empleyee and Citizen. advertisements Me, Xantippe,” a farce fenough to stretch through an ev Because tt was the first of the I made it the means to an end in a afternoon with | contemplative eyebrows raised at the Gueation as to Whether the publie is value for its plays distinguished chiefly for their “The answer to that question,” he replied with deliberation lowed for a smile of satiafaction, ‘tn that already word has been sent out to authors to write plays running two hours and a half. 'We Dance Away From Short Plays, But ‘‘The Road’’ Holds a Stop-Watch NEW YORK DAWCES ore HOME - C)eAcyad light plays of the year huve been too short to satisfy the general public. For my part 1 prefer to gy to the theatre at 8.30 and be out by 10.30. And go far as New York Is concerned I don't think It cares how short a play is if it has a new idea that's bright or the ‘punch’ that means so much, But other cities bitterly re- sent the play that falls short in time. A protest has gone up all over the country against the play that is over almost a8 soon as it begins. “Phe public wants something more substantial in the way of an eve- ning's entertainment. While New York is ready to dance off to the tango halis at 10.30 or fifteen ininutes later, the road, as we call it, virtually holds a stop-watch on plays and calls them strictly to account in the matter of lime, The successes that have gone on the road in the past two years have been plays of length and ‘punch.’ If moving pictures have done noth- ing else for the theatres, they have brought them to the point where per- formances of generous length are a necessity. And before long you will see plays that are a combination of pictures and actors. Two or three movements of this sort are already on foot.” Mr. Brady shook his head at the suggestion of a reduction in the price of tickets to a play that is merely a using trifit. he objected, “it wouldn't do at all to bring down the price to $1.50 for such a play. The public would immediately say, ‘There must be something wrong with It,’ and stay away, The only thing to do ts to bring the play up to the requirements set by the public, As for a curtain raiser {t would be regarded as a sign that the main manager in Ni from experien: of the public toward tain-raisera, That's why we have done everything possible to get along without them. Tho producer of a short play can ‘sneak’ ten minutes in raising the curtain and fifteen min- utes at every intermiasion—that is, he can do it in New York. But he can't do it on the road. ‘There audiences manifest their impatience by stamp- ing and whistling—-they almply refuse to sit atill and walt. And, of course, the prospective success of a play on the road in always kept In mind by the producer, That's one reason why authors, beginning with next season, will find themselves obliged to write plays with their eye on the clock. And, take my word for it, they'll do it" ii MUSIC NOTES. The Roard of Edu public schools to an end next Thurs: day, The programme for the week is: Sunday afternoon, at the De Witt Clinton High School and at the Mor- ris High School, organ recitals, Sun- day evening, at Public School No, 101,| nd th “The Story of the Opera." Monday | ™ evening, at Washington Irving High | investigation, pur School, “Dance Forms"; at Public! Behool No, 62, Opera, ‘Composers and Music of Russia.” aday evening, at Public School 40, “English Ballads.” Wednea- ‘ening, at Public School No, 87, Franz Liszt.” Thursday evening, at Public Rehool No. 59, “Robert Schu- mann,” and at Public School No, 165, “Russian Folk and Peasant Songs." Paterson, N, is to hold its an- nual music featival on Monday, Tues- day and Wednesday of next week in its Fifth Regiment Armory, Among the soloists engaged are Frances Alda, John McCormack and Orville Harrold, They will be supported by the Paterson Featival Chorus and the Paterson Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of C. Mortimer Wiske. there will be a change. You're quite right in thinking that some of the There is to be a concert at the Waldorf on Wednesday afternoon to raise funds for the enabjing of En- ~ L 25, 1914 1000 WITH BAND NEMESIS CAUGHT “HI ELEVATOR AND BEAT HI UP Wife's Brother Was After Him and Spied Him at Waldorf as He Was Going Up. j rice Alessandro, a tenor said to have been approved by Caruso and by him | 2248 of music accompanted the es- promiged free lessons next winter to|Cort and went on the boat to the continue his studies. John McCormack's farewell for the season is announced for Carnegie Hall| Th Pler was profusely decorated He| With American, German, Irish and to sing at Covent | l’apal flags and the Berlin was com- a week from to-morrow night. sails on May 6 ————$—<— —— HUSBAND'S PARENTS OFFERED HER POSITION AS SERVANT GIRL Mrs. Rita Provost Tafel Sues) bicasing upon the great gathering For $50,000 For Alienation Of Affections. Surprise nearly overcame Louts 0. Tafel and his wife, Mary Tafel, an| are acting for the best. They should aged and wealthy couple, when At- torney William FE. Murphy called at Park place, Brooklyn, last night and strved them with papers in a $50,000 sult brought by their daughter-in-law, Mrs, Rita|no declaration of war. I shall pray Provost Tafel, who charges that the old folks allenated the affections of |/A&t message to the people of the coun- her husband Dr. Charles F. Tafel, a well known young physician of Brook. (long before my The young wife, who is the daugh- 1 ce lo ter of a church organist in Patchogue, | and vicar-general respectively of the L. I, decided to bring the damage | Archdiocese of New York: Right Rev, until her who told of wealth, failed by the ation will bring {ts season of fre lecture recitals tn | "The Story of the) First avenue the * and at Public School No, 119,| Bert Gogery, the lodging-houre, and locked bim up| notified on @ charge of says he found o ‘The detective ained knife in Gog- ————a ‘Two Brakemen Hust by Cars, Two brakemen were badly crushed} of Fishkill Landini in similar accidents within an hour to-!jast night by fallt Fre ae Pee nte2 | hal death was the reawt o He fatled to| Hellman was emploxed in Butting in make the coupling between two freight | embroidery machinery for a N ror’ cars and waa caught between them, Was sent to the Eastern District Hospi-| Weat Hoboken yesterday and suffering from second Was James Greeley of No § Nagle street, Uh similar injurt Wiliamsburg Hosy —— SARL IAT Tah an seph Carey of ie firm. He installed some machi injuries, who suffered | ‘fe’ retired about 10 ‘ovclod nd was taken to the 4 SEE CARDINAL SAIL TO WIT THE POPE Head of Catholic Church in New York Centre of Great Demonstration. Cardinal John Farley, with a party of dignitaries of the Catholic Church, sailed for Italy to-day on the North German Lioyd steamship Bezlin, to pay a visit to the Pope at Rome. All the Cardinals, Archbishops and Bish- ops of the church are to visit Rome during the year 1914 to personally report to the Pope the condition of the Church in their various jurisdic- tions. Cardinal Farley is the first of the three American Cardinals to go. The venerable Cardinal Gibbons, with a large party of clerics, will sail from this port on the Princess Irene on May 5, and Cardinal O'Connell will} | fet out from Roston. ‘The visit of the Cardinal is in the nature of a pilgrimage. Formerly it was the custom of cardinals to visit Rome once every ten years to confer | with the Pope. The gathering of dig- nitartes in Rome this year a due to tho belief of Pope Pius X. that he has not long to live and his desire to meet the commanders of his religious army for the last time. ‘The departure of Cardinal Fart | was made an occasion of much dii |play. ore than 1,000 priests and \ prominent laymen escorted him from the palace at Fiftieth street and | Madison avenue to the foot of Weat | Fiftieth street, where the steamer | Bridgeport was in walting. Two | North German Lloyd plier in Ho- boken. pletely dressed with flags and bunt- ing, An immense crowd gathered to witness the departure of the liner, and when the New York delegation with its music and bannerg arrived at 10 o'clock the capacity of the great pier was taxed. Cardinal Farley was escorted to the suite of Capt. Harrassowitz, which was tutned over to him for the voy- age. There he held a reception to hundreds of priests and laymen who wished him a safe trip. Just before sailing time the Cardinal went on the bridge and was photographed by the moving picture camera men and the newsps ler photographers, From the bridge the Cardinal bestowed his aboard and on the pier. At the solicitation of an Evening World reporter Cardinal Farley con- sented to speak briefly of the state of affairs existing in respect of Mexico, He said “The situation in which we find our- selves is deplorable, but I fe no ubt the President and the Congress have the united support of the people. ‘The President and hi dvisers know the real situation far better than we do, id in what they have done they ha) ( been guided by the highest ven. hope and trust that there will be that peace be speedily reached and my try is a wish for peace and that our difficulty in Mexico may be settled In the Cardinal’ Rey. Mar. P. J. Rev. Mgr. John Edwards, chi O'Connor, D. D., she discovered that her oe Rov. Thoroaa t. care husband had given up his practice, and had gone west, according to Mr. Murphy. The lawyer said to-day that | Rev, vies apomolle roll, secretary to the Cardinal; Rev. ‘William J. Guinan of Newark, Right and the Rev. he suspected that Dr. Tafel had gone ‘ ‘ West to institute divorce proceedings omen Oesterich, D.D., of Richmond, in one of the Western States. In the papers, which will be filed in the Supreme Court on Monday, Mra, Tafel alleges that her married life had been very happ: husband's folks persuaded nga’ face wen ae aoxta| POLICEMAN STOPS IT the aged folks what was to become of her, she alleges they offered her a position as a servant girl in their|Fire Started by Candles Thrust home. This arrangement she refused to accept, thus calling down the wrath} ‘Through Holes in Floor Is of her husband's her, she alleges, that their son ought Quickly Extinguished, to have married a won a STABBED FROM DOORWAY. Special Officer je -Arvent te Mi # Day, one of the special ofM- Department of Municipal Lodging 432 East Twenty - fifth cet, was walking down Twenty-ffth last night when leaped out of a doorway and si him twice across the face and neck Day fell to the sidewalk and the man fied, Detective Massan, 4 been on the watch, expecting since the recent lodging-house a. —_—_———_— FIREBUGS SET BLAZE, Detectives of the West Thirtieth street police station are investigating an attempt made last night to burn the offices of the Luxemberg Patrol Company, on the second floor of the three story building at No. 128 West Twenty-ninth street. The fic was discovered before much damage was done and was extinguished by Pat- rolman Dnotaky or the West Thir- man|tieth street police station, without ed | the ald of fire eugi Dnoteky amoke co! from the place and ent to investigate. He found that three small holes had been cut in the floor of the office and a the holes and lighted. One of the candles had burned out and the wood ty was just taking fire when the snoke In a saloon at Twenty -ith street and! grtracted the attention of the pat- a lodger at rolman, Detectives were assigned to investigate and the ‘ire Marshai wos ——~—— FELL TO HIS DEATH. Otto Hellman, twenty: veight years old, was kept fo late at the Work that he went to t\ Maple Hotel to stay for the night. + ome erward men in the barroom beara @ thud on the sidewalk outside and on fens gut found Hellman dead on the walk. martied only about « month ago. takes to Quinn's morgue candle had been inserted in each of | the Court of 8; Spokane, in. days ago and put up at No. day. hotel. in no defense to-day be; was making slanderous about Mrs. Williamson, hi VILLAGE IDLER KL, WIFE, HER DAUGHTER A NEXT HSE Good Woman Supported Him and He Was Enraged When Girl Offered Reproaches. keep of the family. children, idlens mai Up. wife, of the pi tol shot, was the shot went true. daughter 'ying in a heap. i i | How Harry Cotter of Helena, Mon., | got his brother-in-law, Volney D. | Williamson of Spokane, Wash., in an elevator in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel jast Saturday and gave him a thor- ough beating was told to-day Yorkville Police Court by Willlam- son when Cotter was arraigned on a charge of avsault, Magistrate Nolan | held Cotter in $200 ball for trial in clal Sessions. Both men are wealthy mine owners and were formerly in partnership! Williamson, who is fifty years old, | married Cotter’s sister. ‘The William. sons separated some time ago and Seventy-second street. The two had some acrimonious conversation which culminated in the fight of last Satur- Cotter, according to the testimony, waited in the Waldorf corridor untli he saw Williamson enter an elevator, and then popped in after him. the car started up, Cotter, who is thirty-six years old, and muscular, jammed Williamson against the wall, blacked his eyes, mashed his face, and choked him. By the time the elevator operator got the car back to the ground floor Williamson was in bad shape. Cotter hurried from the Williamson went to the police court last Wednesday with a lawyer and got a summons for Cotter, which was not served until yesterday, Cotter put ond saying that he had come to New York be- cause he had heard that Williamson Salvatore Caruso, an idler in the village of Carlstadt, N.-J., shot and killed his wife, his nineteen-ye stepdaughter and himself to-day. The double muréer and suicide was the result of the protests of his wife and her children against his constant loafing and failure to aid in the up- Caruso paid court to his wife when ahe was the Widow Esposito. Her former husband had left her in the ponseasion of a good market garden, the tilling of which brought her in a comfortable living. She had seven children to care for and she was & busy woman. After marriage Caruso installed himself in her home and be- came the head of the family. however, he would not do, and he be- came a burden on his wife and her His nineteen-year-old stepdaughter worried over the labor her mother had to perform to keep things g0- ing, and, in high temper, reproached her stepfather this morning for his The girl was to have been to-morrow and the final ar- rangements for the wedding had been made. Caruso turned on her with @ marl of rage and when she per- sisted in her reproaches he picked revolver and shot her dead. His entering the room at the sound t to death with the second bullet. Caruso then | turned the weapon on bimeelf and The little children of the family ran screaming to the neighboi the village constable was summoned, He found the idler, his wife and her TELEPHONES FAMILY AND HALTS MOURNING Similarity in Mustaches Led to Supposition He Was Train’s Victim. A sandy-mustached man, walking on the Long Island Ratlroad tracks at Far Rockaway yesterday was run down by an electric train driven by Motorman Harry Ashmead, Ashmead saw the man and sounded the whistle but he failed to get off the track, His head was severed from his be 7 and carried two hundred feet before the train was stopped. Detectives from the Far Rockaway station searched the body and found in the pockets a iness card of H. 8. Crawford of No Cooper street, Brooklyn, a contractor, together with a letter signed by Crawford. Detective Little of the Far Rock- away station went at once to the Crawford home in Brooklyn and there is a divorce action pending in| asked to see Mr. Crawford's photo- | srapl Willlamaon told the court he had | been in New ork for two months, stopping at the Waldorf. His brother- w came to New ork about ten It was shown him and he identified it without hesitation as 4 picture of the dead man, Then he broke the news to Mra, Crawford, who swooned, A physician was called and neighbors summoned the eight: Crawford children and notified them of their father’s death. Mr, Crawford was building a house in Far Rockaway and an apartment house at No, 223 West One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street, Manhat- tan, and his family believed he was at the Manhattan address, A hurried telephone call there failed to reach him and then tho family became con- vinced that he had gone to Rock- away to look over the work there and had been ki Just as Mr. Crawford's brother and sons were preparing to go to the Far Rockaway station to tdentify the body they were startled by a tele- phone message from Mr. Crawford himacif. He was at the building in to Maniyttan and had not RockuQay. He jumped into the nearest taxicab and rushed home to find his wife in a state of nervous collapse, Later Mr. Crawford went to Far Rockaway and identified the body of the train's victim as that of James Finnan, a laborer he had emplo} to work in Far Rockaway. The @e- tectives explained their identification by saying that the only mark by which they could identify the dead man was the sandy mustache, which was cut exactly as Mr. Craw-~ ford'’s wa: Finnan lived in White street, Brookly: Petco ha Ene American Diplomat Wed: LONDON, April 3.—Hugh R. Wilson, Secretary of the American Legation @t Guatemala, was ried at St. Chureh, Easton Square, at noon to Miss Katherine Bogie of Ann Mich, BURNING AND (TCHING INTENSE Of Eczemaard SaltRheum, Affected | o of a Pky Would . Caused Many Sleepless Nights, Used Cuticura Soap Ointment and Was Cured. = * €18 West Ovwracéer Ave., Syraceuss, 3. & Hit: HHS i iui ~~ i i il je i ayia my donde much were ape eoateined tye te =~ Millions Thankfully Praise Carter’s Little Liver Pills . A vigorous sto: work: liver ond toempeh, perfeck wate to all who are wise enough to arter’s Little Liver Pills. vegetable, ¥ Imitations are numerous—look out - for them. Insist on Carter’s Little Liver Pills if you want food health, a Setinaes bllsusness’ fontace eet ziness, biliousness, headacl ‘ indigestion, Small Pil, Small Dose, Small Price | GENUINE must bear signature reedom from } fy" f %

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