The evening world. Newspaper, November 14, 1914, Page 2

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Acct Bee mite aie Ha pass! he whirled around sean he enough to « @ECOND QUARTER. teams shifted enda, Ainsworth | eigh' and) mad bute ity brought ve le Ee tairty coores- yard line. On| Knowles to Ainsworth to Le ‘Went out of boun: bad the ball at last, but at @4vantage. Driggs’ punt and into Ains- ‘Tigers ¥ ba, the first failed to connect. The me by Brown, who ‘held twice with only a Conroy waa hurt and out. The rovters took this to give a Yale yell for Con- made a forward pase who caught it cleanly and away, but before he bad gone he was tackled so fiercely fell from his hands when he the ground. Yale recovered the For a lone minute, the ven rua, lines, apparently not out of the field he ball to unted over to Yale ‘was laid out. line once and then kicked right bac Mt to) Civil Service Commission, twenty more before broke through for three and on the second attempt tdok more. Knowles mede the wi ‘with a headiong dive over the @eal line got three more. iam emashed through for seven oft he aan to After a poor to sme, who by Beovitie, te after one line phy back to Amen. one Ca) rolled avai let pad enaep "aD before eS bad 6 i brought it back to yard came a series of punts. ‘| protest if the examinations ary re- advertised, “/ST, ANDREW'S CHURCH fers thy ton Bu . Dall! Stvera, lately ‘eleval “lbp SQUADRON =| OFF GL! FLIES JAPANESE FLAG kado’s Ships Was Seen Is Now Explained. VALPARAISO, Nov. 4 (United BOSTON EER EXPERT ef IMPORTED ISTURNED DOWN W. L. Sears, Candidate for Employment Bureau Head, One Year Too Old. Walter Lincoln Sears, brought on from Boston by Mayor Mitehel and City Chamberlain Bruere to assume the superintendency of the new Mu- nictpal Employment Bureau, eup- poned to open Monday morning at Leonard and Lafayette streets, has been turned down by the Municipal ‘To-day Bears presented his formal applica- tion as candidate for the job, which fe in the competitive Civil Service olasa. “You cant quality because you're above the age limit,” eaid the elerk. = in the City Record says the mite shall be twenty-five and ‘ears for superintendent of the employment bureau. According to your own application you're Sfty-one and that lete you out.” “But | am temporarily filling the werintendency pending the oxamie | nation, which I am sure I will pase,” Drotested Bears. “You know from the newspaners that I have been get- ting the bureau ready for Monday's opent oper dlan't know you were picked for the job," said the clerk. It's a com- petitive sata and there are sixty-three the State agenc: here, feeling setae “thn thet nek pase the examination. Matantenes counts 70 cent., you know,” It is understood that the “mistake” in inserting an ad. in the City Rec- ord, which would bar the oi! otar candidate, was not discovered until too late, afd that since that time au- other ad, has been prepared fixing the minimum only, wes | youla Jet in the candidate from Bos! But it that ‘there fe just now @ Btate investigation of the Mu- a] oom a, Civil Service Commission, and anything which might savor of ir regularity would naturally be th Saiy- aren believed all will enter a vigorous ————— SITE FOR COURT HOUSE ‘The site of St. Andrew's Catholic Church, at Duane street and City Hall place, 1# to be acquired by the city for the new Court House. This became known to-day, when Corporation Counsel Polk filed ie a County Clerk's office papers emoation proceedings, witch. wu include the fr acm scr, a by the church that | 8 for ite 280 A. M. night workers. marauiaoe ot of 0 5 Andrew's prop- wpe When Ma Eure ted from the lene, -| hood, was Mopresshed regarding the condemnation of the property, he nement of action inaf'a return. The ling of the papers to-day was the firet intimation that an agreement had been reached, ‘The aite of the Five Points Missinn also is included in the present pro- ceedings. them. He was roughly tackled Boland, who bad gone in for | Ms exe avENING wort, Dreadnought Which } Was Sunk By Germans Off the Irish Coast! Germans Cross the Yser Again, BOMB IN TOMBS COURT PART OF PLAN OF ANARCHIST GROUPISENT 10 BOTTOM BY GERMANS (Continued From Fin From First Page.) again, but this time O'Connor had decided that it would be a good thing] the te drown the infernal machine, So he picked it up for the second time| unde: {a Gp experience with tt and gently slid it into the water. Then with extreme care he carried the bucket and {ts contents into the pen of the OLYMPIC WAS WARNED OF PERIL. polices court where he eat it down to await the arrival of Owen Eagan. INDIGNANT OVER WATER SOAKING. Owen Bagaa, the bomb expert of the Bureau of Combustibles, was on| island, and fear of these mines was the official explanation when she un- the scome in a ehort time. Preceding him were Inspector Faurot, Detec- expectedly put into Lough Swilly. tive Gegaa, who handled the I. W. W. cases last winter, and a swarm of detectives from Headquarters. Eagan was indignant when be found that the bomb had been water soaked. He found that the bomb had been manufactured of a qugrt olive ol can with @ screw top. The screw cap had been punctured to admit the fuse and the can was wrapped with heavy picture wire. Inclosing tho can to give it the appearance of a parcel was a copy of the Yiddish news- paper, Forward, of Oot. 22, and securing the newspaper wrapper was red. cord, neatly tied. “There was enough powder in the can the courtroom. The effect would also the courtroom. said Eagan, “to have wrecked have been to scatter bullets all over YOUNG ITALIAN PLACED THE BOMB. Policeman O'Connor and others agree that the bomb was placed by tall young man who looked like an across the aisle from O'Connor. seat this man went out. As be was hi Italian. He was altting on a bench As soon as Magistrate Campbell took his urrying through the aisle toward the exit it was seen that ho had a lighted match in bis hand and a cigarette detween bie lips. Smoking is noted him because he was smoking. Adout 80 ecsonds later O'Connor bastened cet and made a pretext of of! mateh to the end of the fuse. not allowed in the police courts, and a policeman called to the departing spectator, who quickened his steps. an Evening World reporter who was entering tho door. He brushed against The reporter Ho was about 6 feet 10 inches tall, what | chin, dressed ino light suit, and had a small black moustache. discovered the bomb. The man who lighting a saab bil touched his After Magistrate Campbell had taken the bench and apn court he called Policeman O'Connor to the bench and congratulated him on his exhibition of coolness and nerve. “I thank you personally for your brave act,” said the Magistrate. | daumod by the high sea which was running. Some of the boats were cap- “I think you are a credit to the Police Department, and the Department sized, but the men were At, and I understand that there was only one life ehould be congratulated on having such a man in {ts force.” O'Connor blushed and said that “! POLICE ALL AT SEA AND WOR- RIED OVER THE DANGER. Following so closely upon the bomb outrage in the Bronx in which the fe of County Ju Louis Gibbs was courtroom had a profound effect upon the Polloe Department and the city administration. It was admitted on all eldee that the time has arrived for Grastie police action. No trace has been found of those who set off the bombs in St. Patrick's Cathedral and near pt. Alphonsus Church on the Sfth anniversary of the execution of Ferrer, the Spanish Anarchist. Capt. Wines of the Bronx Detective Bureau admits that his men are all at sea ever the bombs ex- ploded at the Bronx County Court House on the twenty-seventh anni- versary of the execution of the Chi- cago Anarchists who were convicted of causing the Haymarket massacre. ‘The heads of the Detective Bureau ar convinced that these bomb out- rages cannot be accounted for na tho sporadic outburate of individuals ‘They are, in the judgment of the best police officials, a part of a general Plan of terrorists under the direction of an organisation or a collection of agitators. DELIBERATE CAMPAIGN, JUDGE Gipee Says. Judge Gibbs of the County Court of Bronx County, whose severity in Gealing with organised vice is be- ed to have caused the explosion | Trenkmann, From the twenty yard line Yale yi) to the made the ooel. Meta of @ bomb at the door of the Court- House early in the week, was told by an Evening World reporter of the Soting <n. deny 0 Coston. Seah it was nothing.” Court. “It 19 more than a coincidence,” he said, “that there should be two such ocourrences within a week. It is clear proof that there is a deliberate campaign by the criminal element to intimidate the courts and their om- cers in the discharge of publie duty. The knowledge that such a band is at large is a menace not only to life and limb but to our whole administration of law. Judictal oficera should meet the challenge by unswerving and in- creased activity in dealing with such criminals of this type as come before them.” Inspector Faurot, in discussing to- day's bomb outrage, said: “There are points nbout this bomb which distinguléh it from others re- cently exploded in public places— those tw St. Patrick's Cathedral and Bt. Alphonsus's Church and the one set off in the portico of the Bronx Court-House, They were tn the gen- eral nature of ‘protest bombs,’ as the Anarchists and Black Handers style them—mere scare bombs, not neces- sartly designed to take life, The bomb which O'Connor discovered un- der the bench in the courtroom to- day was meant to kill; it was far deadiler than the others.” RECOMMENDS POLICEMAN O'CONNOR FOR HIS ACT, ‘The following letter, written and de- spatched soon after the discovery of the bomb, explaina itself; Hon, Arthur Woods, Police Commis- sioner, My Dear Commissioner: Just after 1 had entered the Firat District Court this morning, at 9.15, I found consid. erable excitement among the eourt am 0 "| {t docked at Belfast on Nov. 2. Ok mpenitor Oo Soe: | Bs ery wovuwi z “aT FRMANS ACROSS Y, ER AGAIN, SA SAYS THE BERLIN WAR OFFICE | GERMAN ATTACK ON BRIDGE AT NIEUPORT 1S REPULSED, OFFICIAL REPORT IN PARIS: OFFICIAL GERMAN REPORT. Says the Berlin War Office BERLIN (via The Hague), Nov. 14 (United Press)—An official state ment from the War Office to-day declares that the Germans have been able to cross the Yeer canal west of Langemareq. It fs also declared that the town of St. Eloy, about three miles south of Ypres, has been taken. BERLIN (Via Wireless to Sayville, L. 1.), Nov. 14—Fighting is now in progress near the Sues canal, an official statement issued here to-day declares. Advices from Milan, the statement says, declare that four wagon loads of British soldiers wounded in fighting between Osmaila and the Sues have arrived at Cairo. In many fnstances, it is stated, native troops have mutinjed and many Egyptian notables have been arrested. Ground Gained at Bixschoot Offensive Along Aisne. PARIS, Nov. 14 (Associated Press).—The French official tien given out in Paris this afternoon says: the part of the enemy in the region to the east and to the Ypres have been checked. Between the canal at La Bassee and Arras our troops hav Drogress. Berry-au: “In undertaken, there is nothing to report.” READNOUGHT AUDACIOUS Position about Ypres, but the attempts to pierce the allied line are far from having been abandoned. allies. g to prevent the German drive to the Coast (Continued From ed From First Page.) inking ship, struck the deck of the Liverpool, cutting the legs from gunner. The man died in a short time. of Solssot Germans were found behind the front trenches of the British. The advance of the French east of Bixschoote, which {s to Ypres, indicates a straightening of the Ypres wedge which The Audacious eank twenty-five miles off the Irish coast. which the Olympic was skirting, The liner sailed from New York for Glasgow on Qct. 31. She had been warned that there were German mines off Tory ine forward would carry the French toward Langhemarog as @ new wedge in the German position. The Olympic's passengers saw the flash of the explosion and watched the mighty warrior sink. Then their ship turned her prow toward Lough Swilly, Small craft cleared the route to make sure it was free of mines, From Oct. 37 to Nov. 3 the Olympic lay at Lough Swilly, during which time no one but naval officers were allowed to board her. An immediate investigation of the loss of the battleship was begun. Charles M. Schwab was the only passenger who left the ship before to be treated ot,! to invite you | business will ha be present and defend yourself. Your personal card will admit you and your friends t of charge seat you fi any part of the house you desire. This retrial of the case in public is a bit unusual, but it appears that we of the disinherited class are unable to t justice in y other way. We beg leave to remain, faith- fully yours, SOL FELDMAN, Vice-Admiral Sir John R. Jellicoe, commander of the Home Fleet, visited the scene of the disaster Nov. 1, and it was with him that Mr. $9,980. Schwab went to London. | Olympte at Lough Swilly and all supplies were taken aboard by men of | the navy. After the steamer entered Belfast harbor one of the waiters on board was arrested, charged with being a spy and detained for examina- tion. The Olympic carried about 300 passengers. Nearly 100 of these were English reservists. All passengers other than British were denied passage from Belfast to Liverpool and were compelled to go to Dublin, which is an open port, to take boats for England. Secrecy regarding the loss of the Audacious was enjoined upon the crew and passengers of the Olympic, who were urged to refrain from dis- Campbell reached the cussing the naval tragedy which they had witnessed pending complete! criminal ie cater Building, about ten investigation. The crew of the Audacious was removed from the liner as| minutes before the in foul soon as warships for the purpose were available. the bom. Fe. Sie en. “The crew of the Olympic was magnificent,” said one of the passengers. | First Brigade, “A warships crew could not have acted with greater courage and precision, | the bench with Bim ‘sur ue routine Everything aboard was in readiness for launching the boats as soon as the rY Olympic was within reach of the Audacious. The liner’s crew was not Magistrate Campbell and turned it over to a detective, who was instruct- ed to look up Sol Feldman and Helen L. Fisher and Bouck White. The | public to-day by the " statement on to explain to the police if there; mitec and of $1,000 to t! was any resentment felt because Mag- | ence League. istrate Campbell did not attend the! meeting last night, and if this resent- statement showed scel, ment was voiced by any of the Social, and expenditures of $9, Revolution leaders in the presence of their followers. BUTT INTO LONDON, Nov. Nouncement was made t! tan, of his peop! no local lost in the sea.” SMALL BOATS SEARCHED FOR MINES. While tn the vicinity of Lough Swilly the passengers of the Olympic saw many small boats sweeping for mines, though with what success they could not know, Many of the passengers expressed the bellef that the! sinking of the Audacious possibly saved the Olympic, which might otherwise | have entered a mine field. Others held to the theory that a submarine torpedoed the warebip, | ra! basing their opinion on the fact that she was wounded astern rather than forward, which would more likely be the case if she had come in contact with a submerged explosive, The Audacious was completed in September, 1912. She entered into active service early in 1913. She was s sister ship of the dreadnoughts Orion, Conqueror, Monarch, Thunderer, Ajax, Centurion and King George V. In her trials the Audactous exceedod the speed of twenty-two knots an hour stipulated by the Admiralty. She carried a crew of 800 officers and men. Her displacement was 23,000 tons and her cost $9,826,535. She was armed with ten of the new 18.6 inch guns, mounted in five turrets on the centre line, Shi currence until the excitement was Concerning the bomb, Magis- | Turkey. am not altogether surp thie or that those fellows of t I. W. W. should have attempted this thing in a court presided over by myself. I had 300 of them before me during the I. W. W. troubles lagt nd when they demanded sepa- I gave them their wish un they got tired of it.” he opportune presence of Patrol- nor in Centre Street Court out of his arrest of A: and pr medanism. $50,000,000 A DAY. walk at Mott and Keni and when O'Connor ordered him to! move on he cursed the policeman in| Italian and English, ‘Thereupon O'Connor nabbed him and took him down to court. Molissi was arraigned before Mar- {strate Campbell at noon, Said the gistrate to Mollzz! “It was fortu me that vou fhe used abusive | age to this police | officer, Otherwise he would not have | ‘been here, and it is quite probable | |that many lives would have been} nacrificed, including my own. You are fined 95. Molissi had no money. He was sent to the Tombs. aera GARRISON OF TSINGTAU, | NUMBERING 5,000, ARE | SHIPPED TO JAPAN. | ing to a Sw men were under the end of Augu: initial and consequent room. Upon investigation I found aby the sens t Fifty-seventh street |bomb had been discovered on the |and Eighth avenue, went to the West third bench from the rear on the |Fifty-fourth Servet Cours and was forward: there to Centre Street Franklin street aide. Court, areivlon this morning in the Patrolman George L. O'Connor of frat t mail: the Twelfth Precinct saw the same ¥ urch of the Social Revol and with great judgment and much ‘No. 46 Bast Fyrentye Ry atret nerve took hold of it and squeesed out | To Magi: te Campbell. the burning fuse and extinguished it.| Dear Sir: Six months ago you sen- It was about as nasty looking a bomb|tenced our pastor, Bouck White, to the Workhouse on Blackwell's Island. as you could imagine, some @ inches ft way stated by ux at the time that long and 6 or 7 inches wide. Theithe h daring, courage and forecight of this fi iy ee) ‘oung oMocer are in m judgment , Fe’ url months that Vorthy of special mention, ana Tam, he has been behind the bare you and glad to be able to commend him to| your fellow dofenders of the mone: jyour highest consideration, olaga have been in a position to JOHN L. CAMPBELL, | your side before t! City Magistrate. ‘een musaled a: Just before the bomb und in| Fal |the court room Campbell jreceived and nm poe pres: | nailed to him on Nov. 12, to be pres: nt at the mass-meeting of weleome | tended ut Carn fall leet ra eas White. aes 1014, BRIDGET £. Patrick H. Bo} Ing you accorded him was jusly inadoquat Appeal was by the Anglo-Japa: of the capture of sent to Japan. tured num! oMecers of the G tow 2 public, while he! fettored. rds. of Tsingtau fa! Arcade, Orient is now rea @ are to give ou! lor A reception Curnegie Hall to-morrow, Friday, ht, Nov. 1 ane by engi) narrate the weal mol, DS ine 6 the close questions Between Canal at La Bassee and Arras—Kaiser’s Troops in New “In Belgium a German attack against the head of the bridge at Nieu- port resulted in failure and various efforts at offensive movements on “Near Bixechoote we have progressed one kilometre toward the east. the region of Lassigny and in the vicinity of the Aisne, as far wad » the Germans have attacked, but without success, fe Argonne the fighting has recommenced with greater spirit. The enemy endeavored, but in vain, to recapture Four de Paris and*St. Hubert. Particularly in the vicinity of Verdun, several partial offensive Movements on the part of the enemy were checked by the fire of our artillery before the forward movement of os enemy's infantry could be “In the Woevre district and in Lorraine, where bad weather prevails, PARIS, Nov. 14 (United Press).—The crack Prussian Guard has been thrown back with terrific losses in one furious attack upon the British It is reported {n some quarters that Dixmude has been occupied by the pd is sald Canadian troops are now in tad participating ia the cumiieea offensive movements by the aaa French troops northeast e reported. The Germans are well entrenched in this section, however, and advances are made only after the sharpest fighting. The War Office was warm in its commendation of the British troops ‘tm repulsing the Prussian Guard's attack upon Ypres. Seven hundred dead the German lines. With Ypres as the pivot point, the swinging of the allied GLYNN SPENT $8,690 IN STATE CAMPAIGN Py . In, Addition, Committee Working for the Governor Expended Director Lecturer. | ALBANY, Nov. 14—Gov. OLYMPIC WAITER HELD AS A SPY. HELEN L. FISHER, |apent seit Innis unwucousatul Even officers of the White Star Line were not permitted to board the) 12, Garremecdine Secretary: |campaign for re-election, accord- Inspector Faurot took the letter from | ing to his election accounting, made | State. No receipts were recorded. The showed contributions of writers of the letter will be called up- | $2,500 to the Democratic Siate Com- The Giynn Campaign Sear WELL, HERE’S A RULER THAT DOESN’T WANT TO 14,—Official in London that the Sult isturbance as a result ot the war between Great Britain and Kelantan is a state on th side of the. Matay poniueuls ‘with an area estimated at 5,500 square» male jes @ population of 290,00 ailing religion is Shafft Monat IS COST OF THE WAR; 20,400,000 IN FIELD. $2.50 per man per day, this wou tion Bureau, Pulltser Building rk Row, e and communica southeast of made mizor at this point the north ot extends tato the point of Secretary of he Independ- 910,445 THE WAR. an- afternoon of Kelan- hi a petty native atate in Slam, | had given assurance of the loyalty le and that there would be expens Wertd's

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