The evening world. Newspaper, June 22, 1914, Page 1

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nes ONE CENT. Copyright, 1934, Ce Lar se The York World). Press Publishing NEW YORK, MOND! AY, pesieisr st meeee JUNE 22, Meson, Bietich, A After Seven Years, Victim of His Love of Daring. ¢ LAUGHED ‘AT WARNING. Was to Have.-Martied Girl Who Owns the Savage Beasts. ‘Hundreds of former students of the Erasmus Hafli High School, Brooklys, sympathize to-day with Mr. and Mrs. E. G. W. Dietrich of “Wo, 062 Bay Parkway for the tragic @egth of their spn, Emerson D. Dietrich, who was killed by six lions 4 {n Chicago last night. ‘The family received a telegram to- “ay trom Minn Aijie Castillo, of phose Hon show young Dietrich was and press agent. It was Gated yesterday and read: “At 9 P. M, to-dby, while feeding Mon Teddy, unfortunately Mr. Emer-| Gn Dietrich was attacked by Teddy nA died from injurjes. I am leaving “With bedy to-morrow. Will wire you ef departure. My heart ts full Vt padness and I féel all broken up. Paste Castillo.” that Teddy had attacked his son In anything but play and believed that Emerson not been knocked from fais feet he would have escaped. %- “Teddy was my boy's favorite,” said Mr. Dietrich. “He often wrote of him and declared that Teddy loved him.” _ If the body reaches here in time @uneral services will be held in the ees seme Dietrich will be buried in reenwood Cemetery on Thuraday. Y For seven years Emerson Dietrich fae been gaining a repute for tear- fepanees and dare-deviltry. His hid- qous death was consistent with the eare-free courtship of death—with a sByugh on his face—which he had been following ever since he became old ‘mough to escape the strict control | ot his parents. Beven years ago Emerson Dietrich, ..omly @eventeen and a student in the Zrapmus Hall schoo), became inter- .e@fted in a pair of Hons which Bob _Hitsstmmons, once champion pugillst <,@f-the world, kept in his Bensonhurst ame across “the stibet™ from “the 2, Districhs. Football and water polo Bad already begun to pall on the Youth. He saw Fitz wrestle witb the Mons and begged a chance to try con- ,@lysions with them. ‘The lanky prise-fighter—e grown "man with a child's sense of responal- was overjoyed to have a part. | in the gam Young Dietrich ‘wreatied with the lions as often as he @esired, But the feat lacked an audi- ~ @nee and the boy wanted the satis- ~.fastion of having spectators shudder {n_admiration of his recklessness, . ME BEGGED FITZSIMMONS TO) GO INTO VAUDEVILLE, Boe begged Fitzsimmons to buy more ons and engage in a vaude- ville enterprise which would tour the “World. The canny Australian batked and Dietrich turned in“disgust to the Bostock animal show at old Dream- land. “Knowing that the man who has no; fear of the big outs is in the least @anger from them, the amateur was the Bostock beasts. He had no trouble with them. Lion trainera whe to-day discussed his killing in Chleago said that they could only @ecount for the action of the lions fm attacking bim yesterday by essuming that, in scuffling and sky- ‘larking. with them good naturedly, received a alash of claws, | tinued on Fourth Page,) 1 OK vOUTH i AULD IN CAGE OF LIONS Mr. Dietrich sald he couldn't believe | Dietrich home on Wednesday night) allowed to take his hand in tratning | W.KCVANDERBLT AND MORGAN YELD $855.00 CAN Hollins & Co. Will Therefore Be Able to Pay All Credi- tors in Full. a In settling the tangled financial af- fairs of H. B. Hollins & Co., bankrupt brokers, in the United States District Court to-day, there was revealed an exceptional phase of the friendship that the late J, P, Morgan and the present William, K. Vanderbitt held for Mr. Hollins, On réquest, Judge Hand ordered that the name of Mr. Vanderbilt and the estate of J. P. Morgan be stricken from the list of creditors. The Vanderbilts claim was for $546,596 and the Morgan estate | claim for $309,850. ‘The simple meaning of these legal proceedings is that Mr. Vanderbilt and the trustees of the Morgan es- | tate, knowing the warmth of the friendship the dead financier had for the unfortunate Mr. Hollins, forgot that Harry Hollins ever borrowed $500,000 of Vanderbilt money and $300,000 of Morgan money to tide his firm over hard times. They said they | would regard these large loans as purely peraonal transactions between friends and not to be included in th: {schedules of the firm's labilities. Some day Mr. Hollins may be able to pay them back, but if he does not that will be charged to the profit and loss account of good fellowship. With consent of the other creditors | there was turned over to Mr, Vander- bilt and Mr. Morgan collateral with a | nominal value uf $978,000, which Mr. Hollins had given to his friends as accurity at the time of making the loans, but the real value of the stocks | and bonds is so problematical as to | count but little in balancing the gen- erosity of the two creditors, They said they would take over these slow assets and if anything was realized in the future all well and good, but if not it was all the same. Mr. Hollins filed witb the court a schedule of hin individual |tabilitie and asset. “He had a pititul $260 in cash, a bank account of $145 and personal property valued at $1,630. In the liability column there were | the $850,000 claims of Morgan and Vanderbilt, and in that asset column he put down the doubtful value stocks and bonds whieh his two friends took for future realization. ‘The result of this extraordinary {example of Wall street benificence | was the settlement in court to-day of | x, BROOKLYNS BEAT PITTSBURGHS ON HUMMELS HITS Two ‘aly: Dd Doubles Gave Dodgers Four Runs Early in Game. BROOKLYN. R. H.PO. A. E. O'Mara, ss. es | Daubert, 1b. 20213 0 0 123 00 0320 0 tb ft bk ® Stengel, rf. 0 0 1 0 0 Cutshaw, 2 023 60 Fischer, c 013 00 Pfeffer, 0 00 1 6 Totals. $12 27 144 ~« 1 PITTSBURGH. R. H.PO. A. E. 0 0 4 041 000 4 0 oo2 1 0 o 1 too 010 0 0 032028 -1 2 1 0 0 0902 1 0 oo181 0 8 oo 1 2 0 ooo1 @ .0 0 0 0 06 0 1 0 0 0, 0 0 0 6 0 Total............- 1 84 9 1 Hyatt batted for Gibson in 7th. qenenon batted for Conzelman in 9th. SUMMARY. First Base on Balls-—Off Pfeffer, 1; off Kantlehne Struck Out—By Pteffer, 2; by Harmon, 1; by Kant- lehner, 1. ‘Left on Basies—Brooklyn, 3; Pittsburgh, 3. Base Hit Dalton, Hya' Tummell (2), Ko- Sacrifice Hit Double Pla farmon to m to Kol chy; Omeara , to Daubert,” Wit by By Harmon, 1. Umpires Hart und Kiger. Attendance-—3,900, special to The Evening World.) EBBETS FIRLD, BROOKLYN, N. Y., June With more than 1,600 school children, including the mem- bers of Public School No. 10 of Brook- lyn, champions of the Public School (Continued on Shorting Page.) _————_-——_- FEDERAL LEAGUE. | AT KANSAS CITY. | PITTSBURGH— 00 KANSAS CITY— 02 Ratteries—Dickson and Be lop and Easterly. Ump' ‘ormick and Goeckel, WINNERS AT LATONIA. FIRST RACE—Purne $600; maid- en colts and geldings; two- year-olds; esterton, 112 (Mar- Foxy Griff, 112 (Keogh), Langhorne, 113 (Taylor), third. ‘Time, 1.011-5, Gray Squirrel, Heidelberg, Stonewood, Moneymaker, » Eleven Penc ir Will- the bankruptcy proceadings against the Hollins firm, By wit al of the Vanderbilt and Morgan claims, | the abil amounting to one-sixth of ties, there Were enough assets left lto make satisfactory arrangements | IND RACK 1 $80; three with all the other creditors, It waa | year-olds and upwo? rlongs. Jagreed to pay ten per cent, of the! Moc, 108 (Conneiiy). Hank | claims, within five days and give! Rill, 103 (Mott 4; Justice Go notes for the remaining ninety per jpel. 1038 (t Time, 3.1 vent, to be pald as the assets, von- rk, Laiglette, Head | sisting of various Kinds of securities, orty Niner, Joe were liquidated, Charles By also few months ago H, B, Hollins itneis paid: Mar, straight, | failed with liabilities of $5,834,000, 3 *, $2.90: Bank | To-day through the generosity of two Tuatice |men, one living and the other dead, {but ‘his trustees carrying out what| pure RAC in; for |they believed he womid do himself, Anica purae $600; five furlongs and a Mr. Hollins finds himeelf rehabill- | paif, sunset, 167 (Connolly), first; tated, on Linda Payne, (Keogh), second: Misty Morn, (Martin), third WRECK VICTIMS BURIED. 1.07 1-5. London Girl, Allee 5 Blanche Lewis, Dorothy Fo Commauretta, Planetary and alao ran pre Two-Dollar Mutuals Paid—Sunset, straight, $13.; place, $7 QUEBEC, Que., June 22.--Forty-seven | unidentified bodies of persons who. per- ished May 29 In the wreck of the Em- press of Ireland were buried to-day by Forder of the coroner. | Bervices ware conducted hy both Protestant and Cath. Deena k Carey also ran. mutuels esterton, _atraigh 4. 60; show y_ Griff, ; show, Langhorne, how, show, $3.40, Linda Payne, place, $5. Misty Morn, show. —_—————_ A complete novel each week by'a fa- thor in the Evening World See ening World for details, 60;|chine had met with an accident and .| buildings near the Battery and from |the water front came word by tele- | om NATIONAL LEAGUE aT NEW YORK— 000 & GIANTS WIN, CINCI NATI 1 and Taste. 1 Sas Ames a 4 Mathewson and Meyers. Oo Oo AT BROOKLYN— 2PROOKLYNS WI WIN PITTSBURGH 1 3 Oo- 2 Umpires—Klem ‘1914. Great Playing Up to 4 That Stage. id a ae ¥ ° ag 1 = miro. A. B, Pfeffer and Fischer. ne comma, “nn a ek: : “ft ie ; : Q FEDERAL LEAGUE © : i ‘ tft FIRST GAME. ay we SAY) | 1 69 AT ee BRON mae | 1018 0 ana Batterion : Henderson i Lan Umpires—Crors| % ,: i 0 2 FLIES OVER CITY | BROOKFEDS DROP iit ATGREAT SPEED | FIRST OF DOUBLE ‘see =< EE DONGARSTUNS) BL TO HOSES == 23 Charles S. Niles Suddenly Drops Out of Misty, Sky and ‘ Whizzes — Past. The fearsome flying pterodacty) which dropped down out of a misty | sky over the City Hall at about 2.30 o'clock wan Charles 8. Niles, other wise known as So! Niles, in his Mols- ant monoplane. He was on his ~ay to give an exhibition in stability off Governor's Inland to officers of the United States Army and the Aero Club. “Stability” in the Niles dic-/ tionary means looping the loop, the spiral dip and other hait-raising air stunts. Niles made his trip over lower Man- hattan at a rate which seemed almost incredible even to those who aaw him whiz overhead. He had jeft Hemp- stead this morning at 9 o'clock, but dropped to Jamaica Bay, balked by the heavy fog. It did not clear in an hour and he went back to Hempetead. It 2 o'clock before he made a fresh atert, Almost before person# wha were called to windows in New York by those who chanced to see him had a chance to get @ look be shot southwest about three hundred feet above the pyramid top of the Bankers’) Trust Building, took a curve with the wings of his machine at right angles until he was headed due east, and then pitched down at an angle @ little sharper than 45 degrees. Many who saw him disappear over the roof line believed that his ma- he must have been dashed to death. Nothing of the sort happened. From phone that Nilen had headed down | for the municipal ferryboat Bay | Ridge until her passengers ran squawking and squalling for fear along her promenade deck. About a hundred feet from the boat the monoplane whirled skyward and) skimmed to the parade ground of Governor's Island, where It rocked |p quietly to the lawn, Though he was too high in the air and going too fast for groundlings to see it, Niles carried a big American | g trailing from the after works of | hia machine. He had it when he left | Hempstead and it wan still fying when he reached Governor's Island. mR James Buckley, Conaul at Prescott, Ont., died they Ut ara alk ies + eases i$. Indianapolis Got Big Lead at! Start Which Was Hard to Overcome, FIRST GAME. BROOKFEDS. R. H.PO. A. E. Andersoncl.......0 0 1 0 0 Holt, cf. . 1 0 1 0 oF Evans, It . -9 0 1 0 0} riggs tb -0 1 7 0 OF Myers, tb 10 0 0 oF .0 0000 -!t 3 1 0 0 -0 1 2 0 0} “11 4 0 -v 0 3 @ @ 0 1 620 -0 0 t 6 0 0 0 0 0 a} 006000 .0 0 0 uv oO to 4-7 8 ‘Watwon ran for Land in 9th. Bradley batted for Lafitte in Murphy batted for Ey. INDIANAPOLIS, R. H. PO. Rariden, c Henderson, p SUMMARY: Firet Base on Ralls—-Off Lafitte, 3 truck Out | Henderson, 4 Left on Raaen- dianapolis, mond, Two-Base } Chounard, Griggs. Bac rifi # mond, Myers, Double laporte to porte to Carr; Me Kechnie. PF ant FEDEHAL aT CM BUFFALO— 3000 cMICAGO— 0001 Rateriee hata east, aleeo-co--n~ 9. Three- Bane 7 qr aac or eee | co-nwno-w Rane lw-onw-noeo”™ l-we- g ty he First Base on Ralle—Off Ames, 1. Struck Out--Ames, 8. Left on Besta —-New York, 4; ge oT 4. Three- ‘Base Hit-Hersog, Two-Rase Hit— Meyers, Sacrifice Hit—Groh. Stolen Rasea—Herzog, Burne, Double Play —Fletcher to Doyle to Merkle; Hob- litzel to Herzog; Robertson to Merkle. Umpires--Klem and Ems ance 4,000, ‘HOW GIANTS WON ‘IN NINTH, | 370" Vhler now playing left fleld for C1 cinnati. Burns popn to Her Fletcher walked. Doyle got an in- field hit advancing Fletcher to recend. Horzog tumbled Merklen grounder and the bases were filled, Roberton sin-! gied to centre, scoring Fletcher with the winning run, ONE RUN, (Rpecial to The Evening Wortd,) POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, June 22.—The dull, gloomy afternoon cut the attendance down this noon to 4,000, but it had no ing influence on the enthustasm of (Continued on Sporting Page.) NATIONAL LRAGUE. AT BOSTON. st. LouIs— 0001000 0100100 Batteries—Robinsen ‘Tyler and Whaling. Miapiheenael ley and Easton. A —_——_—- AMERICAN LEAGUE, AT CHICAGO. x s 3 -By Lafitte, Rrookfeda, 6; In- Hit—a- | Hita~-Campbell (2), Hite-—Fa- ite to Gagnier by Pitcher-——Henderson, 2. Crogn nnd Mennesan. 1,200, Hit Umptres— Attendance LEAGUE. | ICAGO. | and Blair; Mo- Scott and Maye} brand and O'Lou AT 8T. Louis. | ATHLETICS— 0 $T. LOUIS— 0 AT DETROIT. WASHINGTON— | OETROIT— -. 100 hue and Stans, Chill and Sheridan. landers and Cleve! per yee this afternoon om account (= es) Attend | = — int FROM HOME AS MYSTERY VICTIM Mother of Thateed aid Faust Identifies Cloth on Torso of Body Found as , Like That of Garment Worn by Her Daughter. SHE VANISHED WITH GIRL | NOW SOUGHT IN YONKERS From - (Special to The when she went away, 4 pink inside RESULTS AT OTTA FIRST RACE--Purae $400; three- Year-olds and upward; selling; five \f furlongs.—-Hirka, 98 (Van to Band 1 to 2, fi Sack Clot, 10 (Ambrose), 16 to 5, te B and 4 to 5 second; McCreary, 109 (Warrington), 20 to 1, 8 to 1 and $ te 1, third, Time, 108 4-5, Jim Ly Lord Ladas, Henotic and Hare- | SECOND RACE Purse $450; two- year-olds; selling: five furlongs.— | Ceaabdp, 106 (Murphy), even, 2 to 5 and 1' to 6, won; Zindol, 109 (Ciold- atqin), $ to 1, 3 to 1 and 11 to 5, sece 1 and $ to 5, third, Thne—1.02 1-5, Raincoat, Burwood and Margaret G. algo ran. THIRD RACK-Purae $400; year-eldn and upward; selling; and 9 half furiongs.—-Elma, 102 (Bbillipg), 25 to 1, 12 to 1 and 5 to 1, frat; Dr. Dougherty, 107 (Claver), 41-2 to 1, 8 to 6 and 7 to 10, second; | Ameret, 116 (Warrington), 7 to 1, 5 to 2 and 6 to &, third, Time, 1,08 1-5, Supreme, Right Easy, Bulgarian, | Rye. @tyaw, The Rump and Amaze- are ShrH RACE. $1,000 added; Bit- ‘and Trophy; selling handi- 3; three-year-olds and up: six fur- Mahan), 12 to Marjorie A,,| » $16 (Burns), 5 to 1, third, Time, 118 3-5 The Usher, Cariton G., in B. and *Sherwood also rie nt entry RACE-—-Purse $450; three- (oa year. and upward; nelling;~ six F fa.~Droll, 99 (Van Dusen), 6 to 2, @ te'10 and 2 to 5, won; Stout Heart, 108 (Claver), 5 to 1, 3 to 2 and 3 to 6, aecond; Dick's Pet, 101 (Cal | anand, 9 to & 7 to 10 and 1 to 4, third, ; Time, 1.34 3- +6. Zodiac, Harvest Ss Chad Buford and Righteasy algo ran, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUS, city, grv— @01 | ee--Keete | Gl and Reynold AY PROVIDENCE. 100020 hear CR - Beeler and Stephens ia wee and McMurray; ond; Proétor, 110 (Taplin), § to 1, 3 to) n and 2 to 5! Schenectady Police Still Unable to Trace Head and Limbs Severed i Corpse. Evening World) SCHENECTADY, June 22.—Theresa Faust, sixteen years old, may | have. been the victim in the Mohawk River murder mystery, in the opin- fon of Chief Rynex and the police here. The girl has beer missing from her home in this city for two weeks and, according to Mrs. Faust, wore vest similar in texture and quality to the piece of such a garment which was found with the torso when it was taken from the river last Friday. ——<—$— $< —____—<<—__—— The police of Yonkers have bese asked to look for ‘irl named Blair who left her home with the Fayst sirl, The two have been traced ead are known to have been together entil a week agg last Wednesday. Sines then the Blair girl has. been heard of from Yonkers, from which towm she wrote a letter to her mother, but she made no mention of Theresa Faust. While physicians sald that the torso of the murder victim wae that of a woman about twenty- old, the police have learned that Mise Faust was large for her age, and it ts argued that if she ts the victim Rer excellent development might have de- celved the doctors. POLICE TRACE MOVEMENTS OF THERESA FAUST. The purents of the missing girt beyond the ‘Identification named have been unable to help the police. They say their daughter simply dropped out of sight. She had mo reason to leave home, so far as they know, and did not tell them she was going Detectives have found that with Miss Blair she went to Gleng Fails just two weeks ago to-day and trem there journeyed to West Sand Lake, where the girls remained ustil @ week ago last Wednesday, when they | announced that they were going to Troy. After their departure from the lake the police lost track of them until the letter was received from Miss Blair. Mrs, Faust failed to recogniag the skirt which was wrapper: around the | torso, but her identification of the un- | dervest make the police lean to the theory that the murdered girl waa really the missing Theresa Faust. The only other clue the police are working on is the disappearance of Sarah Meader from Quaker Springs, Saratoga County. Miss Meeder has not been seen since May 25, but her mother is not worried over her ab- sence. She told the police to-day that | her daughter was in the habit of going away sometimes for @ month o” two at @ time and frequently not with her home ; throughout her absence, Mra Meader believes tho girl is simply away on one of these trips and the police are inclined to agree with her, ‘The river is still being dragged ter other parts of the body, but none has yet been found, | Pope Receives Aro! bishop ef Mantle | ROME, Italy, June 22—Tho Mast Rev. ee OE Ne ee eee

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