The evening world. Newspaper, October 19, 1914, Page 1

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INAT EDITION Che_ [*Cirontation Books ¢ [*Cirontation Books ¢ Books Open to Open to All.”’| dd =— / PRICE. ONE OE CENT. Copreignt, 194) by The oat Wont Publishing oes 16 “PAGES | Nala Lb ttine Te-night and Tuesday; Warmon 0, FINAL PRICE Oo NE CENT. —————— F }GERMAN LINE AGAIN SMASHED / BY ALLIED ARMY IN BELGIUM TWELVE JURORS FOUND IN FIVE HOURS 10 TRY {NMS FLORENCE CARMAN es * Record Speed Made in Selection of Men Chosen to Decide Fate of { Woman for Murder of Mrs. Bailey. JURORS IN CARMAN CASE. Juror No. 1—R, H. LUDLUM, a builder, of Oyster Bay. i Juror No. 2—ALOIS AMBEN, a barber, of Central Park. Juror No. 3—ALBERT MOUNT, a builder, of Oceansid Juror No. 4—William D. HOVEY, @ salesman, of Woodme Juror No. 5—MAX GOTTSCH, a gardener, of New Hyde Park. Juror No.6—ALVIN W. SMITH, a painter, of Cedarhurst. Juror No. 7—J. V. GERARD, a gardener, of Merrick. Juror No. 8—JACOB ANTON, retired, of Mineola. Juror No. 9-JOHN H. MOLLINEAUX, @ liveryman, of Port Washington. Juror No, 10—JOSEPH H. ASHTON, manager, of Port Wash- ingto: { Juror No. 11—EUGENE E. CARPENTER, a contractor, of Port fz Washington. i Juror No. 12—CHARLES D. STRYKER, seedeman, Floral Park. (8pecial From a Staff Correspondent.) MINEOLA, L. 1, N. Y., Oct. 19.—The first surprise of the Carman trial was the filling of the jury box on the opening day of this sensa- tional proceeding. At 4.35 o'clock this afternoon there were twelve jurors in the box. | Many of the talesmen examined manifested almost an eagerness to serve as jurors in the case of Mrs, Florence Carman, accused of the murder of Mrs. Louise Bailey. When a recess was taken at noon the jury box was half filled. . The twelfth and last juror accepted was Charles D, Stryker, a seeds- man of Floral Park. He was sworn at 4.35 o'clock. It had required Y exactly five hours to complete the jury. Forty talesmen had been examined. The prosecution had used eleven of its twenty peremptory challenges, and the defense three. Eighteen talesmen were examined ¢——————__ fm the two hours and ten minutes from 10.20 until 12.30, There were six ‘peremptory challenges by the prose- eution and one by the defense. Justice Kelby addressed the six Jurors briefly. "I regret having to @irect that you be locked up during the progress of this case," he said, “but it is for your own sakes, I re- gret keoping you from your families, but I want to protect you in every way from any statement which may be publivhed in the news You will be quartered at the Garden City Hotel.” With the same expressionless face, the same calm stride with which she fhas borne herself for three months of ordeal and suspense, Mrs, Carman entered th urtroom this morning. As the yellow oak door swung open to admit her it was the parting of a curtain which brought her face to face with the grimness of the law and its hand outstretched to take toll for the murder of Mrs, Louise D. Balley. What she suw as #he crossed the threshold of the oaken door was a courtroom with every seat filled— familiar faces, If she looked at them, on every side, a great panel of ta men from which the men to decide her guilt or innocence are to be se- lected, the mechanism of ‘the law in the quiet District-Attorney, the grave Justice upon the bench, and the dic- tograpl with its dangling wires on the prosecutor's table, District-Attorney Smith and his as- sistant, Charles R. Weeks, were al- | ready in their places, Almost under the shadow of the witness chair and Surrogate Graham, her own attorney | was also there, with George Levy, his | associate. | The scene was set, Her entrance Allies That Win ‘A business man seeking some- thing by means of a World Woman Prisoner and Victim of Freeport Murder, and Judge Kelby, Who Is Presiding at the Trial QUKSAD ITI BUREDTHREEDAYS MAY ETB SHE Gets Air Through Diver’s Hel- WOGE KELLEY met and Is Fed by Tube While was the sequel for the beginning of the drama, It was twelve minutes after 10 o'clock that Mrs, Carman entered the urtroom by the ouken door at the t of the Justice's bench, She was gowned in a blue serge sult and a white shirtwaist with a high collar lying across her shoulders, Her hat of black velvet was eur- mounted by a cluster of black and white ostrich plumes, the same sort of | feathers that crested her hat and| throbbed a visible pulse, when she ad. They nearly always suce 24,464 8,799 b | 10,41 7S Readers + Reliability=Results. WORLD ADS. LAST WEEK. MORE. Th More Than the (Contisued on Fourth Page) I we ais se eos sinew sherseneomne—svenspes 66 emesen wail ednnpnien ys! CANADIAN TROOPS IN 36 SHIPS SEEN CROSSING THE SEA Convoyed by Seven British Battle Cruisers on the HOUSE-TO-HOUSE FIGHT IN FRENCH VILLAGES WON BY THE ALLIES Paris War Office Reports a Battle , Of Ten Days Without Respite in | the Neighborhood of Arras— | Ground Gained Along River Lys. GERMANS CLAIM SUCCESS IN FIGHTING NEAR LILLE PARIS, Oct. 19 [Associated Press].—The French War Office gave out an official communication this afternoon as follows: “In Belgium the heavy artillery of the enemy has cane nonad>d, but without result, the front from Nieuport to Vladsloo, to the east of Dixmude. “The forces of the allies, and notably the Belgian army, have not only repulsed further attacks on the part of the Germans, but have advanced as far as Roulers. (Roulers is thirteen miles northwest of Coutrat and about the same distance a little to the southeast of Duxmudem It Is about twelve miles from Ypres, occupied last week by the allies, and ts an important Belgian raflroad centre.) “On our left wing, between the River Lys and the Canal of La Bassee, we have advanced in the direction of Lille, There has been very stubborn fighting on the front from La Bassee to Albain and to St. Nazaire. We are advancing trom house to house in these localities. “To the north and to the south of Arras our troops have been fighting without respite for more than ten days, and with a perseverance and a spirit which never for a moment have been relaxed, “In the region of Chatutnes we have repulsed a strong counter-attack delivered by the enemy, and have won some R Force Work jured and talked with tho rescuers, Way to England, Danas escue For OrKS, Physicians, however, who titted the “ yi ree 9 lyf : diver's helmet on his head said that) + ree ‘On the centre there is nothing to report. : the strain of his forced position had Tha Atlantic Transport 1 “On our right wing in Alsace, to the west of Colmar, wii il to The rt ning La 1) Sr resulted in h exhaustion, ship Minnowaska last Tue: our advance posts are on the line between Bonhomme, ARE, Mavs., 1c 9. ju = — e | noon passed within fi Son = . wey ‘ Sulzern. re to the ye C1 twenty-flve feet below the surface in|CANADA PLANS TO KEEP y_ | leet of thirty Hers and ulzern, More he south we still’ occupy Canadian tr hann, quicksand since Saturday, Maurice | Mier eaaibane kart sine tony te eee atin rice ey were conv oo . air supplied through a diver's he 1 . Hevea 3 a 7 hat | which had been placed on his head, BESURME ay Hh passenger to t ‘ rails | OFFICIAL GERMAN REPORT while food and stimulants are fed to OTTAWA, Ont,, Oct. 19.—Orders went n pups were moving east ponnschini wal him through » tube Xt from militia headquarters to-day te ward in a long single Mle, six milos| . eaina Winther ux district centres to. proceed from the foremost ship to Just Alli R ls d Nea Lill ZOTAR BRE AIGRIRR © Weil tithe res recrulting for the new] Takachiho Sent to Bottom Off} ancaa steamed threo crulsers abreaat, ves MeEpuLse ear Lille, SE DAS UOMO WHER TO RYEUOR & AMOK: of 20,000 two more cruisers patrolied each flank | e sand and sank, When his peril was | Entrance to Kiaochow — | and tie rear was browsit np by two! S Berlin War Offi: discovered by his wife only his head Entra os pvechiggeareirs Ge tehtan wae ays the erlin ar fi tce was mabe tha hata of te i to Luma, am requested | Harbor, identified through glasses as the BERLIN (via London), Oct. 19 [Assqelated Press].—German army head- police and fre departments w ®, probably nits of ey iicoan foval . summoned, but arma Was the — | © airnala Wore exchanged between | luarters has given out. an official announcement under to-day's date as eavation that only one man on a! TOKIO, Oct, 19.—The Nght Japan-|the cruisers and the newaska, | follows lowered ladder was able to dig around | GERMANY CONSENTS eso erulser Takachiho hax been suok| The ships of war stovued grimly The attacks of the enemy to the west and northwest of Lille have been Allen's head with his anda. Relays] TO ALLOW FOODSTUFFS | |**? srultr Takachine ns tl ead ils akkcer lecuine tie) ries of men on the ladder brought the dirt TO REACH BELGIANS by striking @ German foating mine} iy oiyinds of Canadian voiuntoers | PePulsed by our troops with the infliction of e losses, to the surface in pails, | */ while patrolling the co off the) destined for the buttleflelda in Prince “In the eastern arena of the War the situation remains unchanged” Lie Sak MBER SA 28 ESS AW his] WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—Tho Ger-| HAPbor entrance of Kinochow, the Ni Nesene Bngtd, Oc& We BERLIN, vite The Hague, Oct, 19 (United Press).—The official War nees when a second cavein occurred | jun Government has consented to the man concession on the Shantung| A large number ‘ Mai troops 5 | my . and the rescuers on the ladder had |ndimiasion of food suppiics tor destitute} Peninsula Jwere landed @o-day in Kayland, The OMice statement to-day characterizes the general situation in France ai narrow escapes, Several times Allen pa Japanese destroyers heard the €X-|tirst news the lowhspeujie had of Belgium as unchanged. Troops are being reassigned to new positions, it is 1 3 1 rival w f the fit ® : has been partly clear only to be » British Ambassador here and] plosion and saw the flames that re-| their arrival was {he of the Ato! sted. t tatie cf these a ss withhe caught again in further earth slides Jeu Ambangid Ip London! sulted. They hurried to the agulatance, and the drum in the ate The mon Stated, but details of these movements are withheld, Late last night a second hole was. started about fifty feet from the weil nd a force of fifty volu a ditch thir nt down | from this hole to the well, boarding the walls as fast as they dig, In jthis manner {t is boped to rescue ' alien before he succumbs, Torday be waa apparently unin- conastructin City, saan tether taba — oe epee ay tar teeter ee _> toon notified by ihe State Depure © hundredth & ing of New of the eruk ¢ whi | ippeared quickly, 4 Us.) is was possible to rescue Twenty-clght officers, 54 non-com- Volk | missioned officers and 189 seamen perished. Another report wore loat and thirteen saved. a that 344 men ' | tion not Hately announced, >_—_—. ned ii — || Gertrude Atherton, the novelist, will write of the \| Carrian trial for the read- || ers of The World. a destinas While there has been continuous Aghting on the right wing, and espe | clally at points south from Ostend, it {8 announced that at no point has there Only a necessary girrison has been left in Ostend, the report says, the remainder of the troops moving southward, WASIIINGTON, Oct, 19 [Associated Press].—The German Embassy to-day announced the receipt of the following wireless from Berlin: “Official headquarters report on Oct. 18 that the western theatre of war was quiet yesterday with the situation not changed. In the contern been decisive result ; | | j

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