The evening world. Newspaper, January 11, 1915, Page 2

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) BSESsre: FATEROF SIAN i and not very intense cannonadi } trast In the region of Ypres our ar- the artillery of the enemy, and sent woll placed shots against the | trenches, i g iff Bl ae 333 | John Plescia Is Accused of tL ES q i? i i & g : : trenches, slong & front giwe t} Shooting Girl During a dla we a ieansbis = capiared Family Quarrel. Jon. 3 HH CASE PUZZLES POLICE. #39 THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JANUAEY 11, 1910, |Japanese Red Cross Nurses Who Are Here on Their _ Way to Aid Sick and Wounded in the European War | : Child Killed Trying to Protect Her Mother, Is Their Theory, Responsibility for the shooting of six-year-old Marianina Plessia, at No, ot Carey Avenue, West New Brighton, yesterday afternoon, was fixed upon John Plescia, the mur- Handy im the New Rrighton, 8. the father tn $10,000 bail on @ charge Gerea girl's father, by Magistrate, Court to-day. The Magistrate held, of manslaughter, for further examina- tion to-morrow, Tho father, a man of sober reputa- tion, protested his daughter had been ehot by an unidentified person on the oop of their home; hin wife tear. fully supported him in this. But it fa charged the little girl was shot while trying to protect her mother Qgainat @ revolver drawn by Plescia during the beight of « family quarrel. Geveral mystifying ciroumatances @urround the shooting, Yesterday at a Wttle after 3 o'clock a voloe over the telephone told the West New Brighton Police Station that “a girl fa whot at No. 668 Carey avenue.” Hit CF | rit ih ra lies HITE i i | | if H if ‘| aif B Bz a j bay ult a F H i 5 ¥ af sir Hae é beet ual! troversy With War Depart. ment by Summary Action. by Gov. Blease. rtheoming on t th Ot (ov, iiease today, but War® Dee ment officials uth Carolina National Guard reor- ganized after bh the + Aad we goen out of His fortune gone and his i ter a if 2FF F i Fr 4 feyue Sioupital at’ nestt? © Vow trouble” Hewes plowed uy itt Re Hl: F iB ——_—_——— TURKISH CAMPAIGN AGAINST EGYPT IS fF 4 t 3 E i campaign definitely ing here to-day say that becaum the landing of troops at Syria w! threaten their communications ¢! ‘Turkish expedition intend has been recalled. Th situation” ie in jad is reported here New Yorker, Jan. 1L—President |. #, Thiel, Sitting, left to right: Mra. T. Murata, Miss Y. Katauta, Miss 8. Kiyooka, Mr, M, Kuwabara, Dr. J. Susuki, Dr. T. Oshima, Mr. N. Otsuka, Miss Y. Yamamoto, Miss K. Mateusono. Standing, left to right: FINLEY FAVORS TEACHER OTHERS, 6 ABANY REPORT Head of State Educational Board Said to Have Settled School Problem. Miss FE. K. Hosoya, Miss K. Ogasal Hiroso, Miss K. Hatsuda, Mise E. Nishiyama, Miss H. Hisayasu, Miss M. Ono, Miss K. Kasal, Miss 8. Kamijo. GRAND JURY TRAGES || DRUG; MAY INVOLVE ROGERS IN POISONING (Continued From First Page.) Mies H. Hisayasu, Miss 8. Miyabara, WALLSTREET t opened strong an: there was a fairly good volume of tivity in the first half hour. showed a rising tendency and senti- ment regarding the business outlook was helped by @ good tonnage state- ment of U. 8. Steel and by the ad- vanoe in copper metal to 13% cents. Sugar gained %, Bethichem Steel 2%, U. 8. Steol %, with further gains toward the end of the first hour. In the second “hour the market im- proved in respect to breadth and ac- Mra, Mary O'Neill, a hospital nurse, Rogers was not subpoenaed. ‘While waiting to be called before the Grand Jury, Dr. Hague said: “I hope all the facts in thi case will be brought out. If they are, ho jury can fall to see that this poor | necessary. ‘woman was suffering from temporary | insanity, brought about by the weird-| ment and her conversations with the eét combination of circumstances im- | Coroner and his physican, Dr. John Jean Libbey, in her| Riegelmann, declared best love fiction, never wrote anything | jowed twenty-two and a half grains | of the poison, while her two children | Were each giver about seven and a half grains. The pathologists found a | . [present recovery. New York Centra} rong feature, gaining 8% to 89%. All steel issues and industrial stocks showed aubstantial gains in agi the early afternoon, while some of the saillroad stocks were up from 1 to 2 Delniy, Maxwell Motor issues from 1 to 5 points. In the late after. noon the market was stro ihowing in many stocks, Hagvester sold up to 99 3-4, ALBANY, Jan, 11.—Persistent, though unofficial, reports here te-day declare State Educational Commis biongr Finley will favor the teacher- compared with this true story. “If Rogers would release the ban of @ecrecy he has placed on his first wife’ auch’ wquld be learned that ‘would benefit the unfértunate mother of the children he bas lost. tions and utterances of Rogers's legal wife, who was Miss Giddings, and of her brother, Prof. Franklin uired into for a proper of this case by any jury. No matter what the Grand Jury may do, there will be no dif- culty in establishing an insanity de- | fense for Mrs. Walters,” It was reported to-day that Rogers THE CLOSING QUOTATIONS. With met red with . changes a9 compat previous as public school tea York City Board of Educa’ they absented themselves to become mothers. The board alleged ‘neglect of duty.” The women claimed the is the owner or part owner of a gra pit up State from which h an income of severg! thousand dol- lara a year. This income, it was stated, enabled him to maintain a couple of domestic establishments. Emory A. Buckner, £ I a appeals ister trou —_—_ is i (TEMG FOR INVESTORS. New Hayen Railroad November gross decreased $609,106, Net after tax de. oveased $29,418. . Deficit after charges 170,764, decroase $60,188, Five months’ Groen declined $1,990,650. declined $165,066, Surplus after charges increaged $17,450. People’s Gas, Light and ee BY Bio Mrs, Caroline Giddings Rogers, legal wife of the lawyer who is “the man” story of love and in the etrange death, prepared Mrs. Rogers's divorce suit. Ida Sniffen Wa! ed named as co-responden' Distréct Attorney Martin, though busy with the Grand Jury, will try to find time during the day to in- vestigate a report that Rogers visited and conferred with Mre. Walters at Labanon Hospital after he (Mr. Mar- tin) had given strict orders to Police Captain Edward Bourke of the Mor- South Carolina Executive Ends Con- wr SEE EEE OF BEREEEP EE FE FPEFEEOS — COLUMBIA, 8. C., Jan. 11.--The or- ganised militia of South Carolina was disbanded by an order aigned to-day juris. $87-068, SSR oR Pit tite indrenne. $18,788, sf bret risania Station that Rogers was to be excluded from the woman's room. WOMAN DOES NOT CONVICTION. Neither Rogers nor Mra, Walters expects a conviction on any murder charges against Mra, Walters, and Mrs, Caroline Giddings Rogers's di- vorce auit will be welcomed by both, They oxpect to be married when the price has been advanced WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—Gov, ‘@ prominent copper con: Bloase and the War Department have long been tn @ controversy over the ir Mot to 13% conte by corn. — we —>——— q CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN |} ‘a, Migs T. Kondo, Mrs. M. with Mrs, Walters as her attorney ts not recognised by District Attorney Martin, as she has named Abraham | Levy as her counsel. Distric® Attorney Martin sald to- day: “The investigation before the| Grand Jury will be a broad one and every effort will be made to aacer-| tain If she alone ts responsible for the act which brought about the two deaths." Rogers explained that to make both ends meet when he was living in a luxuriously furnished apartment on Riversido Drive and Ida: Walters was accepting the of neighbors In a modest Bronx dwelling, it was nec- essary for him to work as a book agen, when his legal practice did not prosper. He is prepared to take up the vocation of book selling again if Mrs, Walters in her sworn state- had swai- large amount of bichloride in the or- sans of the children, but the District Attorney is not prepared at this time to atate that the doses given them ook ber- aclt. While much time qill be given to determine the quantity of the polson taken by the woman, District Attor- ney Martin will also search deeply into her life and her relations with Rogers. Her brother Frederick, who SHONTS, BELMONT AND HEDLEY ARE BEFORE CORONER (Continued From First Page.) aceldent. dents? Some of us are rich by dent; eome of us are poor by acct- dent, Mr. Belmont—Ie that a question? barrass you. President Shonts followed Mr. Bel- mont on the stand, The Coroner called Mr, Shonte tention to the motors of MoMahot tral nand the dates of their inspection. of the equipment department, was the one best qualified to give testimony about motors, % ere Riordan questioned Hed- y. Q. Do you approve the running of trains from the fourth car? A. Yes, If necessary. Q. During rush hours? A. During any hour of the twenty-four if it were necessary, u Q. When ts it necessary? A. In this case—the time of the accident—it was necessary, After Mr. Hedley had said that the normal proper place for the conductor of a train was between the first and second cars, the Coroner asked him where his place should be when a train was run from the fourth car, ‘At the front platform of the first r. And in such an emergency he to take his place between the first and second cars.” Q. Why doesn’t your company use steel cars on the elevated? A. Be- cause all steel cars made up to date are too heavy to be carried by the elevated structure. Q. Why hasn't the structure been sufficiently strengthened? A. If we didn't have the oars to run on it we didn’t, strengthen it. But it was strengthened in part. Some parts couldn't be strengthened; they'd havo to be rebuilt. Q. Which parts would have to be rebuilt? A. The Sixth Avenue structure is made of pliers, eye beams, channels and eyes. That kind of fabricated steel can’t be strengthened. It would have to be taken down and rebuilt. Q. That megns the whole Sixth bona 3 line? A. No; the pier etruc- re. subway was the first to put them in, By the way, Mr. Coroner, is this an investigation of the eé! subway? by saying the point is well taken. Q. If @ siding had been provided, is under orders to call a station man | f Q. Wh are not all the oars in tho subway steel? A. Because at the time the subway was built the all-steel Passenger car was not known. The ted or the Coroner Riordan—t'll answer that dred and Sixteenth Street re bee avoided? Such @ siding dose go: seem to me to have been necessary. The Coroner—To my mind, it was, Q. The train which collided at One Hundred and Sixteenth Street could have been put out of service al Rector Street? A. Yes, but the de. spatcher would have got himeelt dato trouble if he bad ordered It out, ait was not necessary. In the matter of the life of motors Mr. Hedley said that with proper caro they lasted indefinitely. “Every day the motors are rigidly tested, and after.a car has run 1,000 miles it i run into the shop and there exam- ined and adjusted, such repairs as [zea not the accident at One Hun- Sixteenth Street? A. I approve of nol are necessary being made. The next witness, Arthur W. Les, Q. Unless they are happy accl-|train clerk at One Hundred and Fitty- ninth Street and Lighth Avenue, tes+ tifed that the four motor cars on Motorman McMahon's six-car trail which collided with the express, made 1,340, 1,240, 1,140 and 1,120 ae respectively before going in for im- Coroner Riordan—No, I'll not em-|spection and adjustme! nt. Mrs. Theresa Minnich, of No. West One Hundred and Sixt Street, widow of Gottlied Mint » one of those killed in the accident, the station hothe. She collapsed upon one of the court benches after He replied that Mr, Doyle, the head leaving the etand. So simple a packet would net be imitated if itd contents were not so popular. FYose CEYLON TEA White Rese Coffee, Pound Tias, 3Se. The Usual Cause of Headache Is Eyestrain N You will find after using correct glasses the sight improves and N headaches are quickly relieved. N Eyes Examined Without Charge N by Registered Eye Physicians. | New York: 184 B’way, at John Se. 223 Sixth Av., 16th Se. 1015, DELIA joved wife of J. . No. 2069 Cro- at. Funeral Wednesday, Jan 13, at 930 A. M.; thence to the Church ef Bt. Mar- tin of Tours, 1824 st. and Belmont av., for mass of requiem, STRAYED from 112 W. 110th ot,, eoall black Pomersnjan; liber! rewart, Mies May Burke, came here from St, Augustine, Fila. to aid Mrs, Walters, has held a long con- ference with the county prosecutor. Mrs. Walters has not expressed any desire to see her brother since she re- luctantly admitted her relationship In the hospital last Thursday. is under the influence of this man,” Mr. Sniffen said, “but I hope and pray that she will have a change of heart." hi The defense of Mrs. ‘alters, should she be indicted for murder, will be tn- sanity. This information comes from @ man closely allied with her inter- ests. At least two witnesses will be called upon to testify that on several occasions she had complained of feel- ing that her mind was giving way. It will be claimed that when she pol- goned the childran she was afflicted with emotional “inaanity brought on by unusual depression. ——— Werkman Falls to Death. In @ rush to get to lunch at noon to- day John Zeigier, forty-two-year-old ironworker employed on a building in course of construction at No. 388 Oak- ‘Williamsburg, stepped on divorce decree is handed down, Rogers's claim of @ right to confer RTECS! SeeCOEER GER ECE TESTE [Eeeeeee Hee] Peete eet eet ett PEEEEPER EEF PEEBE EE Qaverday oo Ba ee BS BY COAM, 8S. SESSE| * eee Seemann ONCE RICH, DIES PENNILESS. soon after the opening on SSS IE FE ranklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts. Announce for Wednesday, Jan. 13th A_ Special Purchase of = =e $++ advancing to above Saturday's and turned weak e eurly afternoon, losing from 1 to 2 points from the carly broke sharply on he Pe oF: ae FFs yt 3224 rhe 6 hy commili ny lowed with net losses of from 3 to 9) fran caster at the hedge aBure, ni mal When the Wheat 'tono chanwed and prices ITY "cont ees ftte4| ttt es PRE Boaz es. NEW ORLEANS RESULTS. FineT RACE. Inveatment, 108 (Dishman), 2 to t, e88 OM! 7 io 10 and 1 to 3, first; School for Jal, 105 (Pool), even, and & to 5, Wail) Scond;, Cincinnatl, 1it (Goldatels), to Band 1'to % third, Time, —_———— SAILING TO-DAY, DEFINITELY DROPPED. |” ATHENS, Jan. 11.~—The Turkish i) Soeeeenrtents Women’s Fur Coats and Furs N. Y. COTTON MARKET. si Cotton opened quiet and steady. Opening call, ‘There tea Which Wiil Be Offered reat in the market, but a areaaees be At One-Half Former Prices up about 6 points from Satur: Norfolk . i|C. ef Columbus, Savannah. Avie For Prices and Particulars See Tuesday Evening Papers. } “At present I realize that my sister end board projecting over the cot forty feet above the sidewalk. | The board slipped and Zeigler fell to the His home was ve Hundred and ttan | | | MASTER TOUCH WHICH COMPLETES THE JOY OF THE EVENING, whether at Home or at the Theatre, is a nice Box of LOFT CANDY. The Die- lows of our | new Sweet Special for Monday |] | AssonTED HARD CANDIBS—A te- lect varlety of long lasting sweets in |] | pleasing diversity of the newest nov- cities, a6 well ae ell the Id-time favorites. ae POUND BOX 10c } Extra youre of” tovdare ed Specials Are on || ageaeet | Tb. me Z WAHL 12 stores are constantly telling Story of recent hi in the |] | World of Candy, “You will proat by kecping in touch wich then, Special for Tuesday ibe jaie at All Our Stores, 206 BROADWA’ ore £ yet Sian ed # 157 Shear ns of the 415,629 World. ‘Help Wanted" ‘Ads, Last Yeat 332,801 ORE THAN THE MONT MRALD, 68,463 Fork “Biyainem OD: "etania ‘Rin tat Povey 48,119 MORE THAN THE HERALD, Work “For Sale” ace Mae wears 11,036 MORK THAN THE MERALD, Zodiac in the Publicity Firmament 266,776 World-"*To Let” ade Last Yoar— 168,398 MORE THAN HenaLy, ee 79,551 Worlt “Real Batate” Ads, Last Tor— 10,407 MORE THAN THE HERALD, Nor adaTaee Year 36,743 MOKR THAN THE MERALD,

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