The evening world. Newspaper, June 13, 1914, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

\ THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 19 SORDRESD SNELL SOI RESELL SE I I ESLIE EDS SOLE INERINDDI PY SOME BI ELESEINS IIIS L laidedndbdahinish om") THE BEST MAN By GroceL.H.Latz | WILL BEGIN i h ) ) y y EXT WEEK'S COMPLETE NOVEL | IN THE EVENING WORLD _ RPA IARI i AAT KAMARA RARE The Story of a Secret Service Agent Whom Fate Tosses Into a “June Wedding" Complication | MONDAY , we svat eden. HOW THE PRETORIA |S.55 BASEBALL (SUBWAY CONTRACT [HUNDREDS OF STES only five of them returned to their berths. The rest remained HIT THE NEW YORK "ae sic tne_wam,ratarne, te oa FAR ADVERTISING OFFERED e VERNMENT up talking about the collision and reciting their experiences. The w Brook last mon\ | s(mrgve sees 4 QISBDURAGES BS) RESERVE RNS NATIONAL LEAGUE. Probably the coolest passenger on the ship was Mrs. Ben $. Allen, who left her children asleep in her cabin while she came deok after the collision to discover what had happened. When found that the New York was not badly damaged, she con- that she would not wake the little ones and they knew “ne oa the collision until they were aroused for breakfast (ik Saeias tents, walie Inne We 6 some of beat polo players in the Augustus Barrett, a musical director; Guy Hoppe, an actor,| feet'Tone"'by it tae aesp. Just above thet waser hnee Srem'nns | Haiies cua heistotea Sone abseteety| 0.210 00100 —| ditions Are Unreasonable, ‘and the Rev. Francis E. Clark rendered great aid to the officers Pretoria scraped along the New York for feet before she ver al 100 Over in sunate 8300000010 and crew in calming the women who rushed on deck as the New xt try for the cu; there was an unfor- Bai York settled back to an even keel after the collision. Arthur the Hurlinghare, Club, teok’the Boe = @. Miler, a grandson of William Harris, the New York theatrical H A PION [0 A F to Muavid early lo Pebruaty. Beas manager, was one of the first on deck. He remarked that his Sindee Becta nateee Op oie AMERICAN LEAGUE. time had not come, as did that of his relative, Henry B. Harris, Tate than thei, own, AT DETROIT. Who lost his life on the Titanic, ‘ 20000 It was said that the Pretoria was out of her course and New York proceeded cautiously, sounding her whistle at regular the : England boasts, this added weight 1s 00012001 — yay saraniage rhe Americans! netterieo—Goyelman and Cibeon: All Rejected Because i anda, OP VITOR Auto Sales Co, Tells Public| Directors Will Have Charge AY PHILADELPHIA Service Commission Con- machine, newsstands, station and car| ° advertising privileges in the entire bway system of New York, has sent @ letter to the Public Service Com- onable es to preclude my clients from mak'ig any bide for the privileges, that she should have been miles away from the New York at the time of the collision. Captain’s Story of the Collision; Some of Those on Steamships ‘The American liner New York, bound for this port from Southamp- |, Milburn | was thrown over the ton with 600 passengers, and the Hamburg-American liner Pretoria, bound from New York for Boulogne and Hamburg, with 70 passengers, col- lided in a dense fog at a point about 200 miles cast of Nantucket at 3 o'clock this morning. The only news of the collision, except from The Evening World's correspondent on board, has come from Capt. Roberts of the New York, who reports "that his vessel was slightly damaged and no one was injured. ‘The New York will reach port early to-morrow morning an schedule time. ageygs ilyitle ele Sotelity phat shefedii u | | Kf if #4 a rl i sir : il} iulb la eee BP He 43 H F as tft Eo i 7 ef 7 3 i UIPTON’S SHAMROCK FAST WW RACE WITH OLD BOAT Yachting Experts Say Not Another Yacht in Europe Can Point So three houra to-day, when Gir Lipton’s new yacht was put @ auccession of testa, in all which she demonstrated marked breese Shamrock IV. &@ marvel on the wind. @nother boat in Eu- point as close to the was the unanimous verdict of experts. ten-mile beat Shamrock IV. minutes ahead of the older latter Dore away short The challenger’s time fram sightnmle tun she wast min: $18 Stoo ahead, but on a free Ihamrock came nearer ber own than on the other MADMAN ON LINER STABS 25 PASSENGERS | ox: Rans Amuck in the Steerage Just Before Canopic Reaches Azores. PUNTA DELGADO, Asores, June 18—Twenty-five steerage passengers om beard the White Star steamship Cabopic were elabbed by an Italian @illow-passenger who suddenly went mad and ran amuck while on the Bive of the wounded men are in je yenterday of the shor way to DRAWS CROWD OF 35,000 Sienscessi=|—t (Continued from First Page.) \ and fn the next scrimmage Milburn’s borse fell, jorse’s head, striking heavily on his right should Time was taken out and resumed with two minutes more to play. The ball sigzagged up and down the field and was finally driven to within a few yards of the American goal just as it seemed a certainty that Eng- land would score again, Larry Water- bury nipped the ball out of the way and Milburn drove it over into Eng- lab territory. Lockett and Cheape carried the ball back half the length of the field and Barrett missed the try for a goal. aie ree one. egy ie the oe Throughout the frst ‘period ng- *| land's ¢eam work was far superior to i fi FI é Ae MARCH OF THE ‘‘FURIES’ TO HORSE SHOW STOPPED Suffragettes Seattered by London Police When They Reach Albert Hall, LONDON, June 18—The guffra- @ettes had made preparations for a demonstration at the Netional Horse Show this afternoon, but their pro- cession was allowed only to get as far as the Albert Hail, om the way to Olympia, when the police interfered and scattered it. A fine of $75 was imposed to-day on Arthur Barnett, clerk to the at- torney for the Women's Social and Political Union, who pleaded guilty to the charge of conveying into Hollo- way Jail drugs for the purpose of making the suffragette prisoners vio- tently il] after they had been for- cibly fed, so as to secure their dis- charge. Mr. Bodkin, counsel for the Government, declared that previous to the introduction of dr there had been no apeptome of Hinsas any prisoner iF forcible feeding. Queen Mary has decided in case of further suff; tte demonstrations in the vicinity of royalty to quit London and leave King Goorge to finish the season alone, according to @ source in close touch with the court and the ernment. The Queen is represented as being in @ state of nervous tension as when and where the next suffrage: will appear. TWO BALLOONISTS SAFE. Berry and Morrisen Reach Oregen City After Wreck, PORTLAND, Ore,, June 18.—Capt, Berry, pilot, and George ¥. Morrison, enemy tt berth ne eee ten America’s, The play was nearly ail in American territory, | HOT WORK AGGAIN IN SECOND ea some of the polity the Eng- | Meh. pla: ed by thelr ots PERIOD. Second Period—La Montague and Larry Waterbury took the ball down the field twice and each time milased the goal shot by a foot or two. Monty Waterbury had a third chance and again missed. The ball rolled up and down the field and Larry Wi: - bury twice stopped Capt. Cheape's long drives. ingland had anot! chance to score a goal and failed. Working with a grent deal more pep, Milburn brought the ball down directly in front of the English goal. Here the flying hoof of an English Pony spoiled the shot and the ball was back and fortn in front of the goal post for ten seconds. Larry ‘Waterbury placed the ball tn front of the goal posts and Monty Waterbury coming through with a rush, drove it through, Seore, America, 1; Eng- land, 2, After another minute of play a foul was given against the English team. | ti reducing its score by half a point. End of the period. America, 1; England, 1%. 35,000 Crowd Stands | When the Game Begins) oro iy 4 pur BY ROBERT EDGREN. MEADOW BROOK, L. 1., POLO FIELD, June 13.—The first game of the great internations! polo match here to-day had an even more spectacular ‘eetting than in former years, With the new stand, at the south end, the field is nearly enclosed. At noon the scene was much like that at the English Derby. All around the fields were hundreds of wagons fitted up ab refreshment stands. Bverything from circus lemonade to the Hempstead brand of huckleberry ple was displayed Some of the wagons were doubledeckers with a small tes, through them and on along nds. who held no seat coupons lined up along the fences, jealousy guarding their places against later comers wi tried to elbow them along. The junds never were in better condition. The great infield lay 11 & broad plain of velvet green. The | So: grams had been mown in strips, giv- ing the field a striped appearance. In the centre was a small white-washed | 0 equare, The only other break in the flat level plain was furnished by a gumber of small shifting spots of red and brown, where robins hopped about looking for the belated worm. LIVELY SCENE THE COUNTRY ROUND. Flags were everywhere. They flut- tered in the breeze all along the crests of east and west stands American and British alternating. Once started, the crowd grew amasingly, Where the huge stands bad stood flat, tinted in lead color, spots of white, purple, violet, orange and carmine appeared. Scattered at first, they began to group and bunch together. The leaden hue disap- peared and instead the field was surrounded by banks of varied colors Uke those of a Pasadena flower gar- den, The local fire department, in dark blue and with impressive pomp, marched across the polo field. Red capped ushers bobbed up and down ip the stands. The flags snapped in the strong south breese. The biasing oun was hidden behind banked purple clouds and over the field and the wide stands swept a low lying hase of yellow dust raised by thou- sande of automobiles that came to- ward the club across the flelds in endless lines, No oiled roade could keep that dust down, It sifted in everywhere. All sround the stands there was @ cease- leas din of rumbling engines, aquawk- ing, hoarse cries of ice-cream ven- ALL SOCIETY A MARK FOR CAMERA MEN. ing in, On every side a great battery of cameras kept up @ constant fire, the clicking of the shutters sounding like the rattle of a Buddhist prayer- wheel, Society smiled and emiled and posed and walked gracefully past— for the pictures. From the club house society fous@-tte way into the weat stand. A roll call made of t! social register here would have shown but few absentees from s0- clety's blue book. The entire stand was given up to partitioned boxes. of the well known society leadera giving box parties were Ty Payne Whitney, Payne Whit- August Belmont, who m: , George Robert P, Huntington, . Campbell, E. C, ‘converse, William Earl Dodge, W. Moore, George I 8 clay, Geo: ‘W. C. Drex Thompson, T, Peters, T. D. Rob- inson, James A, Burden, J. P. Grace: Richard Delafield, George J. Gould, Foxhall Keene, John G, Milburn, Cowdin, Richard Mortimer Hitchcock, James B. Taylor, » Mrs, W. P. Douglass, W. mn and F, H. Prince jr. The Polo Association had @ string ft boxes for its officials and guests in the front row. Members of the American Polo team had reserv choice boxes for their families anil friends, Unfortunately, among the missing was H. L. Herbert, Chairman of t! ‘alo tion, the one whose efforts have done much to bring about the international polo matches. Mr. Herbert suffered an attack of ptomaine poisoning last night and was removed to his home at Lakewood. A GREAT COLOR SCHEME FROM AUTOS TO GOWNS, Early in the morning the crowd of 86,000 began to gather, The remark- able aspect of this crowd isn't in its numbers, but in a certain quality, it isn’t like either a baseball or a foot- ball throng. There is a brilliance of color seeu nowhere else, Everything has color. Looking down from the of the grandstand at the on- Bngland and Europe that at the last moment Capi Cheape and John Traill were invited join the team. This naturally up- im Spain. Capt Cheape, one of the best players that ever came here from England, was fortunately hurt last Sunday, being ik on hs me by @ flying oe ee e hand closed, ican Polo Association very sportingiy atponed the first game, which was have been played last Tuesday, and Capt. Cheape’s injury has been re- Seed oe before and tnat bie play will The substitutes on the Amert team are Foxhall Keene, Phipps, Maloolm Stevenson and C, 0, Rumsey, Tho Westchester Cup was donated in 1886, and in the international series played since, the English teams have ‘Won two and the Americans three. thrilling of all international compenis rilling o! international co: \o1 Polo iteelf is the f: the world. Kven tively tame. igh society” are namby-pami ings. The polo field is no Hi for weaklings, and if any ever find their way there t t last long. E SCARES WILLIAMSBURG Smoke Sweeps Over City and Women and Children Run Into Streets part of a staff of four hundred who, except on Saturday afternoons, work in the fur-cutting establishment of the Pellelainger Company, Nos, 31-49 Stockton street, Williamsburg, were driven out of the two-story brick fac- tory this afternoon by a fire which started in the rear of the first floor and rapidly spread through the bulld- ing. Albert Schults of No, 9 Floyd street, Rudolph Hornig of No. 65 Floyd street and Valentine Segar of No, 87 Nostrand avenue were the firat to notice the smoke pouring from the place and they ran in and marshalled the girls into the street. Clouds of smoke were blown from the building into the tenements which inclose it on all sides, and hundreds of women and children were driven into the strest, though their homes were not How the fire started is not but it gained quick headwa; practically destroyed the the plant. ‘| THREE MEN ARE KILLED WHEN TRAIN HITS AUTO (Special to The Brening Wertd.) DUNKIRK, N. Y., June 18.—Fred 8, Bird, foreman of the boiler shop of the Brooks plant of the Ameri- can Locomotive Company; bis son George and bis brother-in-law, for- mer Police Commissioner Otto #. Waltsr, were instantly killed early to-day when an automobile in which they were driving from Dunkirk to od! Erie was struck by a@ fast train on the Lake Shore Railroad at For- eytb, near Rij 5 ‘Two other who were also in the car jumped and escaped with ht injuries, MAYOR FATALLY HURT IN RIOT OF MINERS BUTTE, Mont, June 14—Rioting | tary, Batteries—Ba: “ yre and Shi han and Waterman. Umptres—Lin- coln and O'Reilly. miners, intent on wreaking vengeance on the officers of the union because of alleged mismanagement, attacked Mayor Frank Curran here to-day when he sought to prevent the wreck- ery|ing of the Miners’ Union Hall. The year ha elled in the European style, with an effort to show some striking original ity In color design, lingly like that of a dish of straw- b Herd and huckleberries meee vie The American team ts favorite in the betting. 2 to 1 on, while last vear he ish were 1 to 3 favorites, ecem easily Mayor was burried to @ hospital in an unconscious condition, Several hundred miners refused te & parade in cele- bration of Miners’ Union Day, Their Fefusal waa a protest against heavy | £et. assessments levied for support of the strike in Michigan ai ordered raised by the Wi tion of Miners. The: the here and hurled ro President Bert Riley of the Unton and hia subordinate offici The latter were rescued by the RO e and found shelter in the sheriff's of- fice, The mob then attacked M: Union Hall: ang wrecked its fural- fustfied by | ture, Cavet and Stanage. impiree—Dineen ‘Connoliy, AT CLEVELAND. Batteries—Shawkey and Hagerman and O'Neill, Chill and Sheridan, FEDERAL LEAGUE, AT 8T. Louis. 00000040 —4 Lovis— 14200000 —7 erece Chase ties Blair; Krup- impires—Goeckal per and Chapman, and Cross, AT INDIANAPOLIS. RGH— INDIANAPOLIS— Batteriee—Camnits and Berry; Bil- Sickle and Andersen, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUS. AT. PROVIDENCE. atTY— 0000001001 PROVIDENCS— 10001000 —2 Twenty-five girls and fitty men, | opattertee SW ublems AT MONTREAL, 002000000—-2 22000020 —6 Batteries—Johnson Mason and Howley. Batterieo—Hearne and Snill; Miller and Madden. AT ROCHESTER. VineT GAMB, 01026200 4-15 R— 130811000—-9 enwider and Kril- ‘Williams. AT BALTIMORE. K— we 000000110—2 01100100 —38 Batteriee—Bell and Heckinger; Ruth and Egan. BECOND GAME, Batteries—Lee and Heckingbro; Cot. trell and MoAvoy. Deyo and Wall. U: Weekly Newspaper Bankrept. and, a8 @ matter of fact, we doubt whether any responsible person or for terme running front five to fifteen yeare, for which it was to pay about $11,000,000. The contract between Ward & Gow and the Interborough Rapid Transit Company, the present operators of the subways, was about to be let without competitive bidding when attention was called to the fact that the Public Service Comission had enough votes to approve the contract when The World story wae printed. Commissioner Maltble led a fight against permitting the award without competitive bidding, because, as he ex- plained, there were concerns which might make far more advantageous offers than Ward & Gow. It was fin- ally decided to refer the matter of open td@ing to counsel for the commis- gon. Now while it is pending comes the announcement from the Auto Sales concern declaring that the terms of the contract are such that an out- eet temeatul Widder” will be obliged ul Sy 000,000 Pela dl aoa the it Ward & Gow “About the time Mr. Ward made his first offer,” says counsel for the Auto Sales people, ‘a bid was re- ceived from a Frooties source con- taining approzimately the same terms as thoee Gow contained in the Ward contract. Thereupon one of the di- rectors of the Interborough Company eaked the board whether, if Mr. ‘Ward consented to increase his offer reply was made to this question. it's pears, therefore, that the terms of ‘the pending Ward contract were induced by competitive bidding only and that the action of the Interbor- ough in awarding the contract to Mr. ‘Ward without asking for public bid- ding and without reference to your commission or the city of New York was wholly disregardful of, in fact act of defiance to, the interest of the Company and of the city, receipts from the contract during t! pea i portion of the term thereof.’ It is further charged th: if th conditions demanded by the Int borough for ot machine, car vertising and station privileges are not changed, competitive bidding will possible. be im: MOVIE STUDIO BURNS IN “JANE EYRE’ FIRE Leading Woman, Actor and Camera Man Caught in Flames at Cliffside, In taking a movie film of the fire scene in ‘Jane Eyre’ an outside studio of the Whitman Feature Com- pany at Cliffside, N, J. was des- troyed to-day and Miss Alberta Roy, an actress, Martin J, Faust, another member of the cast, and Jake Dada- rack, a camera operator, were slight- ly injured. Diffusion curtains hung over the stage setting to make the glare of the gun less pronounced caught fre when the artificial flames spread faster than had been intended, $500,000 IN FILMS BURN. Thousands of Feet of Reels De- stroyed in Philadelphia, (Opectal to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA, . June boy was fatally hurt and moving picture filme valued at §500,000 were destroyed and @ block of houses was burned to the ground to-day a8 hich wrecked @ one-story brick used a vault for blown ° de of tem, tick ‘building’ soos oY she ‘Nous Ne, BOM Worth’ Garnet BL atte and many tainted: Names Justice, \TRENTON, N. J., June 18—Gov, Fielder to-day appointed Judge Charles @ Black of the Circuit Court of Jersey | employ at the Treasury Department Washington are really the only per- sons on Federal payrolls who will have @ part in the operation of twelve sew banks. Each of the banks will own employers and handle its by The World. It was understood | in HALDEY—On Thurvday, use 11, ot Fesidence, 641 Water ot, after o Gilet Ulness, EDWARD BHALDBY, Buebené of the late Margaret Masaca, Notice ef funeral hereafter, HELP WANTEO—MALE. E = ee! i i i rj Ly ff i auiu bid £ ? hy l f

Other pages from this issue: