The evening world. Newspaper, November 12, 1914, Page 1

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)

SPECT ‘REDS Soma se Paes NEW WEATHER—Feie and colder to-night) Friday cleary i FINAL PRICE ONE CENT. YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 98 PAGES FIRED BOMB “THAT WRECKED COURTHOUSE FRONT AND INJURED WOMEN me hens ‘ ‘Wnarchist Appeal for Revenge ; : |. . for “Martyrs” Found { Amid Debris. \ . f@ \ BEAVERS ALSO BLAMED. | Work on Both’ Theories in \ in Seeking Man Guilty of y Bronx Outrage. V—nreene ‘The explosion of the bomb which fast night wrecked the bevutitcl por- and doorway of the new Brong House was either the work of seeking belated revenge execution of the Haymarket of Chicago twenty-seven ago or the desperate effort of i Of white slavers to kill Judge D, Gibbs, who has been sitting fedgmept over thom. <The frat of these theories had the Avidence to support it in the of detectives working to-day Capt. Wines of the Bronx Bu- ‘Yesterday was the anniversary of hanging in the Cook County Jail 4, Chicago, Nov. 11, 1897, of the Anarchists found guilty of the 3 of Chicago policemen in the ‘ket riot, p2yamid the fragments of masonry ‘ape metal lying before the smashed doors of the courthouse were to-day fragments of a pam- » printed in Spanish and bearing the title “Los Mortires de Chicago” 4°The Chicago Martyri yPhe fragments, they be pieced together, represented B impassioned harangue for venge- on the deaths of the Chicago hists. and a review of their in the light of “emancipation.” Rough wood-cut of the five “inar- swinging from a gibbet was jong the scattered leaves. _ Adding to the weight of evidence "Sending to pin last night's outrage on gee Anarchists of the Ferrer school the letter received by Judge bp on Juno during the trial of elsco Nachalotti, leader of the Chester white slavers. This tet- » one of scores received by {5 © of similar tenor, but distin- | ed above the others by its sehul- @letiou, sai O*It you believe the evidence of per- witnesses you will mect fate as King Humbert of Italy." ed by an Anarchist bomb.) gc%ou cannot conduct a Spanish in- tion with impunity; you will be < @ fact that the Anorchisis ob- of the exe- 13 by exe fed the anniversary ion of Ferrer on Oct. Ing bombs in St. Patrick’ and 8t. Alphonsus's the Yetting off of the bom | the ansliversary of the execution » the Chicago “martyrs” appes ronger than a coincidence. tor Owen Eagan of th Py mene Bue of the explosion to-day und 9 it as his o @ peen of the same type those im the two places of worship ‘Oct. 1. This is what le known among the throwers as a “protest bomb,” ALLIED POWERS WARN ECUADOR AND COLOMBIA pt ab! Charge Wireless rete Nees and Coal to German Fleet Violates Neutrality. WASHINGTON, Nov, and Great Britain warned Ecuador and Colombia in vigorous terms that by those tolerated. The British and French Ambasan- dors here have presented notes for- mally notifying the United States of their representations to Ecuador and Colombia. 12.—France have violations of neutrality countries will not be No request wax made for action on the part of the United States, but the hope was expressed that the American Government would be able to im- press upon the South American states the value of strict neutrality. The two South American countries are charged with having permitted wireless messages to go to German ships, and with allowing the German fleet to coal in their territory. At the State Department It was said the British and French notes were not framed In a way to require a reply from the United States. It is not believed the United States will interfere unless an open rupture develops between the South Am can countries and the allied powers. The United States has hitherto re- frained from becoming involved in al- leged violations of neutrality in Mex- feo and elsewhere south of the Rio the | jombustibles, examined tho pinion that the bomb Grande, OTTAWA, Noy. 12 (Associated | Press).—The order in council making ‘it a criminal offense vo circulate or led seditious anti-Brit- yman papers, which are American rigidly enforced, it Is pos ivh coming into Canada from cities, is to be said ‘The mat Posimasie cers are the law, sto be taken up by the Brera, und special offl- to } appointed to enforce penalty is $5,000 fine or two yeare’ imprisonmen: There ia said to be heavy cireuta- tion of such pap arei}9 Montreal > NEW PRESIDENT FOR N. Y. U. Ss. ©, Moses of Annopn Moses of the University of Ts sl tusday that he would ept the prosider New York In 8. B. announ 4s enigy y of Ae $1 2 Men's O’coats & Suits,$5.95 ‘The siguer Clothiers Broadway, vor SO a Aya, bro pencll stripes ae mised. won aCe ‘ail sine Set orth $12 l ~ ALLIES DRIVEN BACK CLEAR TO SE SIEGEL DEFENSE TRIES TO SMASH BANKER'S STORY ee Contends thatLoanon Which Charge Was Made Was Only a Renewal. FIGURES DAZZLE JURY. Right Hand Man of Merchant Promises to Tell of “High Finance.” (Special From a Staft Cerreenondent of The Evening W GENESEO, N. Y,, Nov. wan was a giddy whirl of figures, of hundreds! of thousands of dollars, of ledger en-| tries, of ledgers themselves, of notes| and checks and finance committee| statements that was to-day presented| to the consideration of the jury which| is trying Henry Siegel for grand lar-| ceny. And in the mass of figures the Nttle sum of $684.05 which he ts charged with stealing became so in- significant as to be of no account at) all, Whatever the jurymen may have understood or failed to understand of this higher finance, they sat with their book of exhibit photographs on’ their laps and tried to follow the fig- ures, One or two of them looked helpless and hopeless when Herbert P. Howell, Vice-President of the Bank of Commerce, said he knew nothing} whatever about the figures in the big individual ledger of the bank con-/| taining the accounts of the Four- teenth Street Store. If he didn't un- derstand them, they seemed to think that there was little chance for them to fathom the transactions, But Ross Lovell, one of Siegel's attorneys, who was cross-questioning the bank of- ficial, kept on with his figures and for hour after hour it was like an oral examination in higher arithmetic, WHAT THE DEFENSE 18 TRY- ING TO SHOW. What the defense sought to show by the figure recital was that the Fourteenth Street Store was the re- cipient of many logns from the Na- tional Bank of Commerce which had heen approved by the finance com- mittee and that its balance at the time of the renewal of the four now known notes for $25,000 each dated in April and May, 1913, the es. | tebli: hin wt had a substantial check- Ing balance in the bank, The bal- ances rangec m 161,843 on Jan. 8, 1913, to June WM, the period in which the renewals were | mame ‘The line of questioning to which | IMr. Howell was subjected on cross- lexamination by the defense early with an eye to appeal. ‘The defe sought to show that the loan f $100,000 to Siegel was not a new tun, but a renewal of an old one. National Bank COW in its ten se was (Continued ¢ — Vax) Trust Checked Again. 7 Public Service Commisstion made known its Intention to-day, through its coun that It does not intend to butt into taxicad regulation in New York City. The Public £er- vice Coramission was the last refuge of the trust, which has defied the etty in refusing to obey the taxicab wrdi- | “ghd eee Where Bomb Exploded in Bronx Court; _ . Judge for Whom It Was Evidently Intended CERMANS MAKE GANS NLATEST BATTLE TD | CONTROL THE COAST Berlin War Office Says Allies Have Been Forced Across Yser Canal— Prisoners and Guns Taken South of Dixmude. ; u IKAISER'S TROOPS FIGHT AGAIN: UNDER NAVAL FIRE | LONDON, Nov. 12, [Associated Press].—A report was cure |rent in the lobbies of the House of Commons this afternoon |that three German cruisers had been sunk in the Pacific at a | place not specified. No confirmation of this rumor is obtainable. | BERLIN (via The Hague), Nov. 12 [United Press].—The | official statement from the War Office this afternoon declares that the Germans have succeeded in driving the allied forces ~~] | across the Yser all along the line. The Yser has been cleared =” \of French and British entirely to the North Sea. 2 | “South of Dixmude favorable progress is being made,” ithe statement continues. “Seven hundred prisoners and |) ‘eight guns have been captured. East of Ypres counter ate . | tacks have been successfully repulsed."’ €@ LONDON, Nov, 12 [Associated Press].—Accounts of the rekindled ac- , Uvity on the part of the Germans in West Flanders disproved the contentles | of the allles that thelr attempt to force their way to Dunkirk or Calais had failed. ' With Dixmude in their possession the invaders were to-day less than fifty miles from Calais and much nearer Dunkirk, and the fight they have | been putting up in the face of tremendous losses seems to bear out what 4 has been sald so often—that they will not abandon this struggle to reach the coast unless they are utterly crushed, North of Dixmude the Germans are on the left bank of the Yser—the side nearest the French coast towns—and their attacks have been re- newed almost on the coast line, They drove the allies from Lombaertayde, % only to be driven out themselves, The official announcement given out by Paris this afternoon says the | Germans again are trying to take Lombaertzyde, which is to the north of | Nteuport and within a stone’s throw of the sea. British and French warships are reported to be again shelling the German line. $65,000 JEWEL ROBBERY REPORTED ~TOTHE DETECTIVES —-<--- Harwood, wright and mand Don Valentine jhe ina p who day calle on iy tor Faurot to , |asniat detectives in Harlem who are d H ia | ke Danger AEE en nine, men or Dixmude Hel for a Wee | tw OF Haltimare while aboard the) sewary valued ut $65,000. Ho suid B th F; h Bl ° ke t a : Mohawk Hast BiKDE at sei ie [tite Jewelry. wax stolen on Tuens 17] e rrenc uejackets ~*~ Jateamer arrived here to-day and held! sii, Drive tu Now $20. Manhatt PARIS, Nov. 12 (Associated Press).—French bluejackets held Dismude | | pending wetion by the Coroner © of flerce attacks for a week, but were finally compelled to give | Hinman was instantly killed, Capt coe The allies’ attempts to drive the Germans out again have thus far } Ingram was shot in the abdomen and 24" BANOO | mn a 1 right received at tin the side. wa As the principal action latterly has centred to a large extent around Pr | | Perkins ERIE oo eens Ape Dixmude the Germans are entitled to claim the advantage, but the French | Motors infileting, any wounds, No] Harwood explained th opt the | are strongly posted in the vicinity, and the possession of the village so far vefore eting any wounds |matter a sveret, Intending tom has availed them but little, ean w the shooting Is known. his wife, Who is an actress, a pr “ ' In response to a wireless call the Kast and south of Ypres the Germans have found fresh masses of of the jewelry | | Une abl of Vessel With Third Man Badly Wounded at Sea. steward of the torpedo-boat| In the case, re a pearl troops to burl into the murderous fray, but the allles are standing thelr Fluxser came to the assist. diamond valued ground, The country here Is undulating, well wooded and covered with a | vnce of the wounded men si woven ankers multitude of farms which are surrounded by large elms, The villa, Ad it was said, prevailed on} them few and small and most of the population {1s centred on these farms, whieh are distant from each other, at the most, from two to three hundred yards, These innumerable and solidly bullt brick hou with thelr walled coum try yards and sometimes with deep ditches, make excellent bases for small detachments and play an important part in the long battle. The struggle {# taking place among the farms in the direction of the border towne Comines, Wervick and Menin, The text of the offictal communication to-day follows: “On our left wing the fighting still continues with violence and has iu, been conducted with alternate advances and retirements without bepscale B was not \tance, Speaking broadly, the battle front has not varied gi Mig iby rd ways he will give) Noy, 10, Jn the evening of yesterday it was atended x the It ding to the alae dhe dowelon tweenLombacrisy de and. Neuport, sho . the CHARLESTON ‘ Ilinman, busi Ww Jacksonville (Pla. Killed and Capt. In, diner Mohawk and ©. of the manager Homolal tof BAL TIMORS, inarian Lawren Hickman thbs aft ht of {noon ordered th K yards closed on) the accoun out * ccount of ihe i nes-Union, wis | » vater m of the Clyde L. Wr

Other pages from this issue: