The evening world. Newspaper, December 31, 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, THURSDAY, ta ie. Wee the Western Argonne region it is stated that several of the French trenches have been taken with 250 prisoners A Preach attack on Flires, north of Toul, has fafied, while attacks on ae Ww German positions at Senhneim have broken down In the eastern theatre of action it is stated that fighting is in progress @long the Bsura and Rewka, Wt that eleowhere things are quiet LIFTS MARKET UP Germans and Austrians Repulsed, Say Russians; Big Losses Admitted ob fon FOR THENEN YEAR @eclare that the Germans are being d)'ven back at several points on the/ Brokers Give Shares a Boost Vistula and Rawks Rivers following « eerien of attacks and counter attacks fa which both sides lost heavily. The advantage, it is stated, is with the Russians. ! The Galictan operations are progreasing, the Anstriana being compelled to retire farther into the Carpathian passes. Reinforcements are being rent ‘to the southern front and preparations made for foreing the passage of the ‘Pasees and opening the way for the invasion of Hungary. + To the west the Russians have ¢aken @ number of Austrian positions on the lime in Galicia cam of Zakiicsyn, capturing many prisoners and a wnamber of machine guns. + The fighting in the Caucasus ts increasing in volume. The Turkish armies there are being strongly reinforoad and thore has been a tmttle tn/ ‘Progress ir. the vicinity of Sarykamysh for sovora! days, The Kusnlan in Order to Set Pace for Twelve Months. WHEAT KEEPS RISING.| Bethlehem Steel Joins Proces| sion in Rumor of Schwab's artillery 1s reported to be much euperior to that of the Turks, who have| Big War Orders, found 1¢ impossible to construct intrenchments that are not easy for the | ‘Ressiaa guaners to demolish. : ; a A atrong Turkish column te reported to have been attacked by the! Othe Btock Exchange to-day there was not much exuberance, hut the brokers, always @ bit musceptidie [to superstition 1 ft would mean cavalry north of Garykemysh and forced to retreat after losing | Turkish forces which were yesterday reported concentrating 1M | hag jack for the next twelve monthe the Vicinity of Yalanusdjam Paes are today eald to be advancing in the! 4, usher in the new year with a de- Girection of Ardshan. clining, despondent market Ho they) framed up « Jittle boom all around Denies Russian Claims _|\2.321 00 er toutes ote ud Says Advance Is Checked | wen icc nent (raaing and quota. (United tion were made on relatively few Presa).—The War Office in ite review of | ftocks, but in nearly every case the jee gh eg efforts of the Russians to force the Car.| Prices were drenaed up a fraction to onneee, ‘The danger of an invasion of Hungary | "#ke 4 Kood howing. In a fow spe- etrong foress sow dominate every pass through clalities there wan genuine advance. Alaska Gold Mines Company, Bethle- hem Steel, American Can and Amal- gamated pper enjoyed climbing up to peek at the New Year over tho headn of the crowd Particularly was there rejoicing for the insiders in Alaska Gold. This is @ mining company owning low grade old mines near Juneau, Alaska. The atock 1# $10 par value, but to-day’s cul- mination of @ steady rise carried It to 271-4, ‘Tho Ill wind of war bas blown good Ressians attempted a surpriee attack at Uzeok Pans but wore in Cera curpriced and defeated with heavy loss. ;Twere has been somo fighting near Zakliczyn in Western Galicia, but ‘at mo point, the War Office cays, bave the enemy gained any material ad- (According to the reports from Petrograd several positions were taken from the Austrians af this point and men and machine gune were captured. The reorganisation of the entire Austrian lines made necessary by the throwing of enermous Russian reinforcements tnto Galicia te prac: theally complete and the new positions, it ls stated, have been eo selected! to iethiechem Steel and its hustling that danger from an enveloping movement has been eliminated. president, Charles M. Schwab, who ALSO HALTING OUR SHIPS IN PACIFIC re m Rumors have it that ea Pe eee the year's showing will be fe tor Protest Made to Congress by Official of Pacific Mail “At any rate, I am glad that some-| the company. [ts common etock had bool rerbre terre baer haa aroused} rise of 1% pointe to-day and Tote thas Ritch where! touched 46%. ‘The preferred is selling tat Gena morely ‘tut. | at 91 3-8, the highest price of the past Steamship Line. ‘WABHINATON, Dec. 31.—Eniarge- Of the President's authority with ROGERS LED A SAYS WOMAN have made mattern worse! I have Gcoomplished just what I wanted to Prevent and have made it worse! 1 em glad that I cannot get well. I hope I may die quickly.” Dr. He gue, who aaid he had learned to regard ‘Mrs. Ida Rogere with a Great deal of respect and admiration fo the two and a half yours he has attended her eince the birth of her firet child, added: “And it is, perhaps, the best for the poor woman that her wish for death must come true.” The physicians at the hospital have learned that the unhappy woman was about to become a mother for the third time and attribute to that fact her desperation and also @ certain natural disorder of mind which might tend to Irrational action. REAL WIFE SAYS SHE STILL LOVES HER HUSBAND. Mrs. Caroline Giddings Rogers was 10 in bed to-day at the home of her brother, Prof. Giddings, No. 303 West cut,’ be sald, year, ss U. S. PROTEST IS Prosident Noble of the Stock Ex- ANSWERED BY GREY change jasued # statement about maintaining minimum pricea below IN TALK WITH PAGE wh h F transaction is permitted. le anid: ywing to uncertain position inot- LONDON, Deo. 81 (Asnociated| dent to war and the abnormal condi- Preas).—-Walter Hinca Page, the toa of foreign Saneheha Ne mee Vere American Ambassador, had an jeemod wine to guard against sudden 2 y uades oon on this afiernoon| 22moralisation of prices that might come with some unlooked for news. with Sir Edward Grey, British Becre-|Minimum prices furnish thie safe tary for Foreign Affairs, on the aub-|suard by arresting @ panicky de- Ject of President Wilson's note of] line automatically, “It is not the intention, however, Protest against the detention of] ena: minimum prices should be used American shipping by British war-/to valorize or sustain the market at ahtpes. any arbitrary levels, It is the object As the note had been diacuased by| of the hag eggs te Bet Poorgvieneyd = prices as far as possible in conforin- {he bio yengg bly WAM poi Cabinot| hy with supply and demand while He npr cody bats, the mane time using them as @ check bassac: against unforseen pantie.” Rd Ads views of himecif and) “%, Cotton Exchange there Was very _ Uttle business transacted, because of| O¢ Hundred and Fourth Street. At SERVIANS NOW PLAN ¥ £ ‘Gamemitiee, in connection with that JBety’s hearings on measures to pre- (reat Ghipment of munitions to bellig- eald this nation ought to the uncertainty regarding ocean ship- | tie office in Kent Hall, Columbia Uni- ments, No exports were reported| versity, Prof. Giddings made this TO INVADE HUNGARY, wate diveliont market of the country | husband has or bas not done— and I HER ENVOY DECLARES. immed tt i believed and always will believe that with large purchases, despite efforts of a bear clique to keep It down. There | 51...» “The Servians will not march on “Woman's love is tncomprehen- “ forelgn nations, Decom| wheat rose Rarajevo,” said Dr. M.R. Veanitch, the |to'g1 17 6-8 per bushel and the future to a statement by him published here. ota tor mp % find Rogers and find out “They penet: what he has to say. This is not a f wil rate either to Ayrmia, wwonta, | STOCK QUOTATIONS, 1 P. M Hungary, by way of Bomiin, or Ranat, and « baif years I have felt that my region of Southern Hungary, by way G alster was unbappy. I questioned Sune ‘Serecten of Bouin ond Werer-| 2B NE more certain. It was not what she gevina, populated by Alave and which| Aw cee id told me but her refusal to tell me ui DUAL LIFE, WhO TS DYING (Continued From First Page.) of Information about the domestic tangle yesterday, and instructed Mr. Jacobs to talk no more, putting him on his obligations as an attorney, In sending for Mr. Jacobs, he told A. E. Gutgsell, another associate in the office, an acquaintance of nine years, “everything will clear itself and show that there hus been no legal or moral wrong done." DISTRICT ATTORNEY ORDERS A SEARCH OF THE HOUSE. District Attorney Martin of Bronx County had Central Office detectives making an investigation to-day seek- ing to check up the statement of Rog- ere yesterday that the authorities could find no evidence of bigamy against him, A search was made of the Rogors half of the two-family house at No. 224 West One Hundred and Sixty-eeventh Street. Beyond a glittering Christmas tree and scat- |tered toys around the apartment, a drum and @ doll, all evidences of a happy family Christmas, they learned nothing. Mrs, Burns, who rented the apart- ment to Kogers, guid that the two al- ways acemed to be happy, though Mrs, Kogers stuck very close to home aud seemed to have no spending mon- ey. She ofien asked for small ad- vances which she paid when Kogers returned home. John H. Halden, in charge of the @partment house at No. 1431 Univer- sity Avonue, a few blocks away, where Mrs. Ida Rogere lived for two years until last October, sald that when Mrs. Ida Hogers hired the apart- ment and moved in her baggage was event from Nyack, N. ¥., and bore the name of Ida Waters. Rogers arrived three days later. Both were secre- tive, They bad a little worn furni- ture, and Mrs. Kogers was always in Straits to pay the milkman and to-day. statement for hor: ‘Whatever my wheat resumed its steady rise in price he is, essentially, a good man, I love FARIB, Dec. 31 [Associated Presa].—| vere reports of heavy ofders from atble,” Prof. Giddings added. “It 19 Gervian Minister to France, nocording| ootion for May was two cente bi the easternmost county of Slavon! complete surprise to me. For two bap greed her and her reticence made me still Cy Me metab yd | Pee ee which convinced me she ae 4 SES Bui Fr La meston of unwary, especially’ i $ he ty ti was tn great trouble, I questioned RY mS a” i Rogere and he passed me oft with f eat the remark that my sleter was not at e $2 $68] wen and wan over imaginative. If s”* &* &" y* the woman in the Bronx, of whom | : Wy i HR G8 |never beard before, was told of an KAISER REPORTED WOR 1% 1S 10%] agreement by which my sister was CTH TH Tt Gs t0 divorce ner husband, aha was de- TO HAVE SUFFERED 7 HN BS Be eee tam mune” SERIOUS RELAPSE. ith aly i 1. | Prof. Giddings went to Lebanon At HS ity RY Hospital and gave Rogers his wife's ROME, Dee 81.-—-A rumor has! fede ye. BS BP BY BR] meceese. “tam very erutoful,” said reached thie city that Emperor Wi!!- trteh Oo + ty My OM! ah Rogers, “but Iam in no contition Be to she Sone t9 De with iN” aiaq 18 arf | Row to talk to anybody, Later I shall ulted {i ‘Ey Hy By fy] explain matters to you.” SUS OS US] put what about the othtement sf ry 1 the woman upstairs that you told ‘See the crowds ph i it i ty her my eleter was to divorce yout” bf anked the professor. of merrymakers — |{/10,000 ExHausTED Hh AS A [ertcte gout woudn' talk about tonight— GERMAN SOLDIERS ARE in hp that!" yelled Rogers, turning threa- teningty. “You heard what I eatd.” Then he went upstatre to the dying woman. “IT am glad,” eaid Prof. Giddings, as be left the hospital, “that my sis- ter is eafo at home with me. I do not know what might have happoned to her out on that deserted mountain in Now Jersey.” Rogers himself appeared at the hos- pital at 7 o'clock this morning, atill acting and talking wildly and went to the bedside of the dying woman. He left word at the office that no messages were to be sent to him until he was first informed from whom they were coming. He sent tor M. L. Jacobs, a lawyer bea! whom he shared offices at No. 68 Kroad-| cn, n TAKEN BACK TO BRUGES, |§ Nie AMSTERDAM, Dec. 31 (Central Nowe | | Cable).~-Ten thousand exhausted Ger- man eoldiers of the marine brigades, | | cavalry and bicycle corps, arrived at | winm shettieut Bruges trom the front on Tuesday, ac- | fwushern Pati cording to a despatan from Bluie (Hol- a Jand) to the “Handelsbiad.” pellnss~adeoatlaen KAISER WILHELM’S FAVORITE SON WINS — |i # fe PROMOTION IN ARMY. | u a AMSTERDAM, Dea 31—Prince Eitel “ gieser oe fri sree Ref favorite son of the Em. | wteat, vorn vat neo ie te eimmianaciate tnd of the Pint Drignde ofthe moe rial Quend ————————— emecientios See the beautiful Christmas trees at Columbus Circle and Madison Square— See them Comfortably 3Tzs=2, SSF CTE ¥EBer baker, She always repaid small loans @# noon as her husband came home except a few debts contracted before the family moved to One Hundred and Sixty-seventh Street. Though Dr. Hague would not say anything of Mrs. Ida Rogers's tamily except that it was one of refinement and that two of her brothera were high government officials, persons who were present when the birth cer- Uifleate of the girl baby, now dead, was made out, remember that sho de- ecribed herself as Ida Sniffen Rogers, thirty. two years old, and born in the United States, Robert Mills, a Brooklyn newspaper reporter, appeared at the hospital and said that he once knew an Ida Sniffen who lived at No, 246 Cumberland street, Brooklyn, and asked to be allowed to seo her. He waa taken upstairs and on his return sald that he recognized the woman, though she refused to acknowledge him as an aequaintance, When he knew her, ten years ago, Mr. Mills said, sho lived with a widowed mother and a brother Frederick, who was @ purser of a Fall River steamer. Her father had been a noted horseman, DIVORCED WIFE AND 80N CALLED ON LAWYER. Nobody connected with Rogers knows the present whereabouts of Mrs. Anna Roquemore Rogers, his first wife, who divorced him in Reno in 1909, and by whom he has a #on eighteen years old, who is now a wireleas ‘operator with a Pucific steamship line. Lawyer Jacobs was responatbje for the statement yeater- day that ‘Mrs, Anna R. Rogers, after the divorce, wus on the friendliest terms with her former husband and aften visited him at his office with her son. His associates sald that Rogers had a fairly busy practice from the time when he was in part- nership for a while with former tiewh Gov, Lewis Stuyvesant Fay Gnd whe GaTRont seme dittate MS pleentesente. DECEMBER 381, 1914. __ BIG FRENCH ARMY REPORTED ADVANCING THROUGH ALSACE _ the winter abandoned bungalow col- ony at Mountain Hill Grove, N. J. aroused the outspoken pity of the three families who live in the village all the year round. They said that early in September Rogers appeared with his wife and looked over a bun- |galow owned by Miss F. Wilson, a | nowepaper woman, A few days later they moved tn, Rogers was almost never seen there after that. Thomas Batley, manager for the Broad Acres Realty Company, one of the neighbors, sald that Mrs. did all her own work, wood chopping, borl Rogers even to the She resented nelgh- interest and refused to let Y help her with her heavy wood- chopping. ROGERS CALLED HIS WIFE ON PHONE IN JERSEY. “Last Monday afternoon,” said Mr. Ralley, “at about the time the news of the polsoning was made known in New York, Rogers called mo on the telephone. There was no telephone in the bungalow. He was very much excited and wanted me to fetch Mra. Rogers to the phone at once. I went for her. She was very much affected hy whet he told her and wept ae che went away. Both Dalley and H. L. Hammond, the keeper of the village store noticed when she left for New -lYork yesterday, afternoon she was weeping uncontrollably. Mr. and Mrs, Henry King and Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Norton, the only other dwellers within two miles, were outspoken against Rogers for allow- ing his wife to live in loneliness on the mountainside through the dead winter. WOODS ASKS PROSECUT( TO PROBE POLICE CASE Magistrate Discharged Men Who Were Arraigned on Charge of Burglary. Police Commissioner Woods wrote a long letter to the District Attorney to- day calling his attention to @ case which came up in West Side Police Court last Sunday and was decided by Magistrate McQuai Patrolman An- thony Hornow, William Gundelsheimer and Edward R. Gerguson of the West Forty-seventh street precinct ar- raigned before Magistrate McQuade, William Fitagerald of No. 664 West Fifty-iifth street, Peter Ryan of No. 792 Eleventh avenue, and Peter Gray- ner of No. 785 Eleventh avenue. Fitz- cere had @ swollen nose and @ black “Nornow charged that the three men had burglarized the clothing estore of Louis Brill at No, 777 Tenth Avenue at 3 o'clock in the me@rning. A clean handkerchief identified by Brill as one stolen from his store was found on Fitzgerald. Testimony was of- fered to establish that the three men ran from Hornow, who fired his pistol in the air and attracted the attention of the other officers. Hornow and others testified that Fitsgerald re- sisted arrest and that Hornow hit him with his Fitzgerald charged that he and his friends were peaceably proceeding. home when Hornow assaulted him with a nightetick, Magistrate Mc- Quade promptly discharged all three prisoners Bad repriganded Hornow for hitting Fitzgeral Commissionor Woods wants the Dis- trict Attorney to bring the matter of Fitzgerald before the Grand Jury. —_————— MOVING PICTURFS AT HOME, (From the Somerville Journal.) Hicks-—Did you go to the moving pic- t tages last oe y wite mede me stay at'home and rehang’all the pictures In the parlor. ULDEN'S se TRYITON Sandwiches, Ham, Cheese, Sardines. Roast Beef, Corned Beef, MAKES Cold and H to Tasty READY TO USES IG CENTS At Delicatessen and Grecery Stores, EEE HOWION.—On Thursday, Dec, 82. 1 the 76th year of his age, HENRY 1 HOWISON, Rear Admiral U, @. N.. re tired, Funeral services at his late residence Jan, 1, et 4 o'clock P.M. In torment at Washingten, D, 0, Please omit Sewers, ‘or ASKS COURT TO TEACH HIM HOW. TO BE SAILOR But State Reform Schools Have No Course in Seamanship, So Youth Is Paroled. Jacob Epstein, twenty-four years old, of No. 124 West One Hundred and Twentieth Street, and Samuel Hirsch, eighteen, of No. 1327 Fifth Avenue, were arrested a fow evenings ago for loitering about No. 1 West Thirty- second Street, where they had no business. The mothers of the bo: were in court to-day and asked Magis- trate Appleton to aend them to some correctional institution. Epstein chose to learn bookkeeping, so he was sent to the Now York State reforma- tory. you ks to tearm steamfitting or plumbing or electri- cal engineering?” the Magistrate asked Hirsch. “Not at all,” replied the young prisoner, quite seriously. “I think all that kind of business is too confinin; I'd like to learn how to be a sailor.” That trade is not taught in any State institution; so the boy was put jon Probation for one year in the cus- ee of his mother, During that | Period he must keep out of poolrooms | 0 ‘and go to bed punctually at 9 o'clock | every night. STOCK EXCHANGE YOUNG VOLUNTEERS LEAVING BERLIN FOR THE FRONT |VILLA'S MEN DRIVE \ CARRANZA TROOPS. | OUT OF MONTEREY City Is Cocupled At After Enemy Evacuates It—Break in Cab- inet of Gutierrez. WASHINGTON, Dec. 31.—Car- ranza’s forces evacuated Monterey. the largest city in their possession on Dec. 29,,and Gen. Villa with large force is now occupying it, ac cording to official despatches to the State Department this afternoon. They also stated that the raitway between Tampico and Monterey had been cut and that trains have been fired on. Villa upon Tampico and to clear the northern border of the small Car Tanzista forces in that section. Disruption in Provisional President Gutlerrez’s cabinet was also reported to-day in an official despatch from Mexico City. The Minister of Public Instruction has resignod. Provisional President Gutierres's proclamation of amnesty was made Public by the State Department to- day. Guiterrez pointed out that exe- cutiona without due process of law had excited the horror of civilised nations and called the atention to the fact that unless better order and government can be maintained in Mexico there will be no hope of rec- ~ ognition from the powers. State Department officials admitted that dispatches from Special Agent Stillman contained no asurances that Villa and Zapata would respect the proclamation. a VILLA JAILS GEN. BLANCO. Was Prisoner Former Militery rf of Mexico City, - WASHINGTON, Dec, 31.—Gen. Lucio Blanco, who remained in military com- mana ot mexico Ulty ror some time after the withdrawal of Carranza foress and pending the arrival of the Vifla and Zapat forces, has been imprisoned by Villa, amg to @ despatoh to-day ro elved by the War Depa ner Gen. La gees tba secret service men 8 Ville re The Btato dam thelr will, 13 to- day became denuded of fae, i Vilisatas and Zapatistas when ating under Soomend Ks Ville ad 6b0 soldiers, surrendered hi himself to Gen, Ooregon. in geltipen offered his sword to” eran ope VERSES FOR SAMB, ALL CO! of Ghessiais producing’ e sw — ne MIXED CANDY—a ection of sweets comprising CNitke "need old-time favorites and novelties in eplendid * 6-POUND BOXES Special New Year ane MILK CHOCOLATE COVERED MALAGA GRAPES—Jeo os direct trom panieh vineyards: packed In cork to keep them chioeed in caten casks. Each grape with all ite luscious juices intact ty ‘a richest suger cream and finished off with @ covering of our famens Premium Mills richness, ‘Milk Chocolate; unescelled be iytoig! Regularly old ot 80c; os on EXTRA NEW YRAR'S SPECIAL, ITALIAN STYLE CREAM CHOCO- LATES—ravorttco with Milliess of Lott Candy Lovers. These erosta are i) vases Cream end eatslde eo ef Bitter Sweet feta Bn ee 30c 64 BARCLAY STREET. 28 CORTLANDT STREET. PARK KOW AND NASSAU STREET, 400 BROOME STREET. 36 BAST 23D STREET. 472 FULTON 6T., Brecklya. TO USE AT YOUR NEW YEAR PARTY, Special for Thursday: CHOCOLATE, CovERED ROTA PEPPERMINTS —rhte sweet bes iicsorbebis chars: The Package That Will Make Your New Year Calls Doubly Welcome ou SEAL CHOCOLATES OR BON BONS AND CHOCOLA' cee er Sore aot it ne ALL OUR STORES OPEN TO-NIGHT TILL 12 O°CLOCK, ‘The Specified Weight Includes the Container in Each Case, At The Threshold The New Year E desire to express eratetl ‘Soeren on and Good Aureieaed heap our tregrans FOUND BOX Bees ass GRADE eclateean and parity, MILK CHOCOLATE COVE! RASCHINO CHERRIES ~ 206 BROADWar, 147 NASSAU STREBR, 266 WEST 125TH eTREwE, 23 WEST 34TH STREEF, 140TH ST. & THIRD AVE, 157 MARKET 67., Newark. is now expected to maroh

Other pages from this issue: