The evening world. Newspaper, March 3, 1915, Page 1

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! } ) ia | * _ Turks R ort Sethack of the Allied Fleet in Dardané | FINAL PRICE ONE OENT. MEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1 | BOMB MAKERS HELD IN $25,000 EACH; POLICE PLAN ROUND-UP OF “REBS" ye r ate HR Circulation Books Open to A =e 1915. 18 PAGES 8 PRICE ONE O nt. BOMBS FROM LAND AND SK DRIVE BACK ALLIED FLEET, CLAIM IN CONSTANTINOPLE papi onay ‘Warships Reported to Have Quit After New Fight in Dardanelles. BRITISH TROOPS LOSE. Attempt to Land Force Along y Gulf of Saros Said to 1 Have Failed. CONSTANTINOPLE (via Bertin eas), March 3.—Turkish forte in feet Dardanelles forced the allied fleet i ed retire after a three hour bombard- ment yesterday, it was announced by the War Office this afternoon, The felling of the Turkish land works ‘was unsuccessful, At the same time another fleet pre of four French cruisers and destroyers shelled the Turkish Fetvon on the Gulf of Saros, across Peninsula from the Dardanelles. ‘Their shell fire was ineffective and sbbey-werg forced to withdraw. ‘ Turkish aviators during the bom- bardment hurled bombs upon the «memy’s ships near Arak. Near Abos a skirmish occurred be- tween two squadrons of British cav- gry, supported by machine guns, and @ Turkish reconnoltring detachment. Vrne British wore forced to flee, leav- ing fifty dead. 4 PARIS, March 38, — (Associated Preus.)—The Haves News Agency ‘gave out a despatch this afternoon confirming the statement published \in the Paris Matin, this morning, that lan allied fleet resumed the 1 )mbard- ‘ment of the Dardanelles yesterday, esday) morning. This despatch “The bombardment of the interior fortifications of the Dardanelles was Fesumed this morning, The allies have @ total of 52 warships on the scene. Five of them entered the straits. {While this movement was going on Your battleships began the bombard- ment Of the Turkish positions front- ing on the Gulf of Saros, which is meparated from the Dardanelles ‘y the Gallipoll peninsula.” PARIS, March 3.—The Turkish for- Pitress of Napoleon was destroyed by \.ehe French battleship Gaulois in yes- ““torday’s bombardment, it was an- nounced officially this afternoon, Shells from the warship set fire to the barracks, the garrison fleeing, —_————_ GERMAN AVIATOR TRIES TO SINK SHIP; DROPS THREE BOMBS. DUNDEE, Scotland, March 8.—A German Taube made an unsuccessful attempt to blow up the Glasgow steamer Dalbair in the English Chan- nel, ‘The aviator hurled three bombs at the Ralbair. Each of them narrowly missed its mark and fell into the sea. STILWELL LOSES APPEAL. The Ex-Senator Must Serve Out His jemce, ALBANY, March 3.—The Court of Appeals to-day granted the motion of District Attorney Perkins to dis- miss the appeal of Ex-Senator Btephen J. Stilwell, convicted of bribe = rextortion, ‘The ex-Henator is now serving sen- POLICEMEN KILL DOG AND SAVE CHILDREN Animal Believed to Have Been Mad Runs Through Crowds of Little Ones. Prompt action by three policemen saved several hundred school children from a dog, which aeemed to be mad, at noon to-day. {SMUGGLING PLOT {RISKS LIFE 10 END REVEALED BY RAID | FIRE IN SHED WITH |: ALONG THE DRIVE} TONS OF DYNAMITE Letters Siised os PS in Rich Rubber Man’s Apartment and Owner Arrested. CONVICT ALSO TAKEN. Say Conspirators Expected Quick $200,000 Profit From Opium and Cocaine. Raiding an expensively fursishea The dog was a small white setter,| spartment at No. 87 Riverside Drive owner unknown, which began to ranigt One Hundred’ and Thirty-fifth blindly down Park Avenue from 1n| gtreet, Fedorai Customs Ingpectors, front of the residence of Vincent As-! ign’ by. Assistant United, Stateq Dir tor, which is No, 1021, on the nortb- east corner of Highty-fitth Street. Noon recess had just begua in Public School No. 6 on Eighty-fifth Street as well as in the big school of St. Ignatius Loyola, at Eighty-third Street, and the sidewalks were full of éhildren. Policemen Feaster, Healy and Wai- lack of the East Eighty-sighth Street station saw the running dog, and shouted to the children to keep out of the way. Feaster took the east side- walk and Wallack the west, pushing aside the little ones, while Healy pur- sued the dog. The anima! turned into East Eighty- fourth Street and ran up the front stoop of the residence of Joseph Mee- han, No, 69, The outer door was open and the dog went in. Healy held the door ajar and fired three bullets before the animal ceased to struggle. The body will be ined for rabies. ———_—— TWO EGGS A WEEK FOR EACH CHARITY PATIENT Thirteen thousand patients in the institutions controlled by the Charitios Department were made happy to- day by an announcement from Com- missioner Kingsbury that the inmates will shortly enjoy two fresh eggs & week, It was Comr. .ioner Kingsbury’s ambition when he took office four- teen months ago to give each patient in his institutions two eggs a week, but when he came to figure It out he found it would cost the department $27,000 a year. The annual budget would not meet that expense. “Here's how we've done tt,” said Commissioner Kingsbury to-day, “The installation of a piggery on Staten Island is saving $7,000 a year which was formerly expended for fresh meat, Our artificial ice will eave not less than $14,000 a year, The other $6,000 will be made up when our cof- fee roasting plant ts in operation, We can buy the green cofts paratively small expen: roast it until It is needed. — o_—_ SAFETY GUARANTEED TO THE RELIEF SHIPS THE HAGUE, Netherlands, March % (Associated Press).—The German Government to-day tgformed Dr, Hen- ry Van Dyke, American Minister to the Netherlands, through the German Minister, F. Von Mueller, that rangements had been made to grant. safe passage through the naval war zone to American relief ships bearing supplies for the people of Belgium. ——>_——_ Bernhardt Has Quiet Night. BORDEAUX (vie Paris), March 3.— trict Attorney Harold A. Content, to- day uncovered the details o. t Government officials declare is & con- sptracy to smuggle aplum and c. caine from Europe and dispose of it in New York City. Held ag the moving apirit iff the con- spiracy is Tonko L, Millg, Vice Presi- dent of the Peruvian-Chamayro Rub- ber Company, which, until recentiy, had offices at No. 60 Wall Street. Mi- lic, who had the Riverside Drive apartment under the name of E. L. Lertora, is the eon of Loya Milic, owner of vast plantations in Austria and a power in politics in Dalmatia, The raid and the arrest of Milic were timed to occur just as Gustave ‘Waldeck, aliag Charles G. May, was released from Blackwell’s Island, where he was sént last May for sell- ing cocaine illegally. While the raid- ing party took Milic, other Federal officers arrested Waldeck as he left the island ferry. Customs Inspector Lewis, Collins and Kyte, by authority of a warrant issued, by Federal District Judge Mayer on information furnished by Special Treasury Agent Esterbrook, gained admission to Milic’s apart- ment with Content by ringing 4a- other bell. Miltc, taken by surprise, submitted quietly to arrest, and then watched giumly as the inspectors turned the apartment upside down in @ search for evidence, More than fifty letters said to contain details of the plot were confiscated, ‘The letters, it was announced, will be used as the basis of formal charges against Milic and Waldeck, who, when arraigned before United States Com- missioner Houghton, were held tn $5,000 each. Many of them were writ- ten by a woman, said to be one of Millc’s agents abroad. Milic, Federal authorities say, hoped to make $200,000 by his first year’s work under the smuggling plan. The letters show the alleged plotters made $2,500 in a short time on an invest- ment of $25, when their origina! plans were held back for lack of money. The opium 4nd cocaine were to be smugeted into the United States from Austria and Germany through a woman agent, who was to slip the contraband drugs into bales of sage shipped from the Milic plantation at Siano, Dalmatia. Young Milic, who in addition to his rubber activities in an expert chemist, was all ready to go ahead when there came a hitch. ‘The men who were to handle the opium and cocaine abroad refused to ship it unleas Milic first put up a cash deposit as guarantee that he could pay for the stuff when it was delivered to bis New York agent, (Continued on Fourth Page.) —_> Hero piven it Fight With + Flames Saves 300 Children in School Nearby. PEOPLE FLEE HOMES. New York Central Trains Are Halted:on Either Side of Beacon Danger Spot. BEACON, N. ¥., March &—The pluck of one man who, single-handed, fought a fire in.a ahed in which more than two tons of dynamite were jatored, prevented an explosion fere to-day which ‘might have cost many Nves and would have wrecked an en- tire neighborhood, The, man was Edward M. Granger of Beacon, fereman of a gang of workmen engaged in four-tracking the New York Central line which goes through thie village. The fact that he was blown up by dynamite twe years ago and eo injured that he was many weeks in the hospital did not hold bim back an instant when the fire started. A passing locomutive set fire to the store shed, which is close beside the track, and at the first cry of fire the laborers, always qary of the small wooden structure, ran to safety. Gran- ger was the only »ne who ran toward the shed and began unreeling the emergency hose kept in readiness nearby. One corner of the shed was aflame by the time he got the water to play. By this time, too, a warning had been gent throughout the neighborhood and there was a general retreat, Four hundred yards away was the Tioronda Public School, with 300 pupils at their desks, They were quickly marshalled and marched from the building. ‘The warning carried to the village caused two or three dozen families to leave their houses on the run and there was a panic in that part of the community, For a acragrete “ pig half a mile the people doors as an explosion was a any minute. ° The railroad people heeded the warning in time to stop all trains, both northbound and southbownd, a half a mile from the burning heed, Six trains in all were thus held, And all this time Granger kept at his post with the hose until at last the fire was extinguished. —=== Union Denotes Strength! From the “walt till 1 get you alone” Of the schoolboy, to the “United States of America” as a governmental organiza- tion, the fact that “in union there is strength” is reflected time anc again. Just as the WORLD ALMANAC AND ENCYCLOPEDIA gets its great reputa- Loa) hag olend Sirvaletion, as a book of ready referen presenting “a wh library of seful information,” so ola (4a7" THE WORLD WANT DIRECTORY IS THE MOST VALUABLE GUIDE TO THINGS WANTED PRINTED ANY- WHERE, Comprising, as tt did, for example: 3,446 YOR Vesreray— 739 FE Fa da | buy an armful of newspapers to tina the position, ytd home, invest- | ‘&c., you seek when THE WORLD coffers more such advertised ° ii than “The Armfu!* ieee Policeman Who Set Trap: [eeseereneneseses bees ph atts BEES5L5OO9OO6-99 0090-06 006-6-6-5-4 6-00 0$6-86-64-660656-0G G6GS SEE EHEEESE PET IGHESEE GPE EGE PODLOOETIOOH For Men Who Placed ap POE OEE SOR . rs 2OOo--4-+6» SCHOOL CHILDREN SEE BOY KILLED BY AUTO: CHAUFFEUR ARRESTED ing Nine-Year-Old Victim of Accident. Crowds of children, who had just left Public School No. 78 for the noon hour to-day saw an automobile owned by Max Pollack, a wealthy thread merchant, run over and kill a fellow pupil, Samuel Greenberg, nine years old, at One Hundred and Twentieth Street and First Avenue. Pollack, who is blind, was riding In the tonneau of the car with his wife. The machine, which wis going south in First Avenue, was operated by Carl Fitch of No. 1075 Park Avenue. Because of the neighborhood Fitch was running at reduced speed. Just as the car reached One Hun- dred and Twentieth Street, the boy suddenly darted out from the side- walk and ran directly toward it, He was struck by one of the lights and then fell beneath the wheels, The body of young Greenberg was identified by his mother, Mrs. Regina Greenberg, who, told that an uniden- many children in the}; doy had been killed, left ber civilians bi home at No, 334 East One Hundred and Twenty-first Street to view the body, She fainted when she recog- nized it. Fitch was arrested, pending an tn- vestigation by the Coroner, Mr. Pollack and his wife went to thelr jhome at No, 60 East Eighty-seventh Str Hix place of business is at | No. 28 Waverley Place. Mother ruin After identity-| SEVENTY-CENT GAS AIM OF SENATE BILL ALBANY, March 3.—Seventy cent gas for New York in sections where 80 cents now is charged is the pur- pose of a resolution introduced to- day by Senator Doll, He asked that the Down-State Public Service Com- mission be instructed to aycertain if @ W-cent reduction cout be wade and a fair return to the gas com- panies on their investment still be | insured. | | The resolution was referred to the | Public Service Committee, —_——.—— Hatd Just Of ty Sergt. Keller and a squad tives raided the h u | Kel on charg tisorderly house and ¢ Liquor Law. She guve $5 uch charge, Kalner Gt to Ald War BERLIN, (by wireless to William | has man soldiers ‘and Vrance, ponent of held prisoners in >| an amended statute adopted at the last session of the Legislatures as follows: . |introduced a bill to-day to permit a iJ ations only when he ts unable to find i!would have to notity the State Com- |’ Abarno and Carbone, Who Are. pected to Plead Guilty, Now. Ac ES ‘cuse Police Spy for Inspir- ‘ge ing Destruction. | ie ALL VIOLENT :“REDS* ’ UNDER EYES OF THE The Grand Jury found an indictment this afternoon against Abarno and Charles Carbone, whg manufactured and placed two in St. Patrick's Cathedral yesterday, ‘They were arraigned before Jud Swann and were held in $25,000’ bail each until. neat Wyidey, vom will be called for pleading. * Atarno toil Sie Court 18 Oe oe ee placed the bombs, another man had done 75 per cent. of the work. 1 man, Carbone said, he believed was a detective. Since leaming) man they knew as Baklo was a police spy Carbone and Abarno have, ified the unconditional confessions they made at Police Headquarters git terday. Then they made no accusations against the man they. ks Baldo except that he was a party to the conspiracy. Now they dl that he inspired them to go to St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The indictments were found under Section 1895 of the Penal: C “A person who places ta, upon, under, egatsat or mene today) building, car, vessel or structure gunpowder or any other - sive substance, with intent to destroy, throw down or tngere the >’; whole of any part thereof, under such cireumstances that, intent were accomplished, human life or safety would dangered thereby, although no damage is done, is ony and upon conviction shall be punished by State prison for not more than twenty-five years.” ‘Although Carbone took no actual part in placing the bombs Cathedral it is held that inasmuch as he manufactured 1 the use to which they were to be put, he is as culpable as trial of the pair will be called as soon as legal requirements is expected that the men will plead guilty, in the light of thelr confessions. ‘Thus far neither man has implicated anybody else in the plot to blow up, the Cathedral, destroy the homes of the Rockefellers, Andrew Carnegie and the Vanderbilts and raid rich New York banks, They admit that they have heard Alexander Berkman, Carlo Tresca and other Anarchists make speeches in which personal vio- lence was advocated, but they will not admit that these speeches or other syecehen Influenced them to manu- ST facture bombs and try to Patrick's Cathedral. The testimony of Policemen deo Polignant, who joined the Anarchist group under the mame: Charles Baldd, associated bimselt' Abarno and Carbone and frustrate® their designs upon 8t. Patrick's Cae | thedral, will be bah 4 of a corrokerae | tive nature, he light of thetr feasions, Seciea it te the policeman has furnished sioner Wodds with a mase of information about anarchism and archists in New York, and a watch Is being kept on the wi of the “intellectual” Anarchists, while disclatming acquaintance Abarno or Carbone, loudly proclaim’ <n ANOTHER ALIEN LABOR REPEAL BILL OFFERED ALBANY, March 3.—Senator Law- son, Republican, who ts opposed to the repeal of the Alien Labor Law, POLICE TO ROUND UP LECTUAL” oRoU Ue wee contractor on public work to employ lcitizon employees, ‘The contractor missioner of Labor and then permis- |sion would be given to employ aliens. | This bill also meets views, tn ‘part, of Minority Leader Wagn |sottloment of th n labor question, [it was thought possible that an ate |tempt would be to substitute the measure for Spring bUL

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