The evening world. Newspaper, March 17, 1915, Page 1

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Artbetship aid May and Mayor Review Stalwart Irish Sons at Cathedral. uf “GIRLS ALL OUT IN FORCE. I, = Dinners Dances Galore #' To-Night Will Round Out Joyous Day. ‘ , All cbeervers agreed that the Bt. Batrick’s Day parade which started and hea} New York has ever seen. + Never were the Sixty-ninth Regiment fhe Irish Volunteers more brisk @oldlerly, never was there such a/ Gaplay o8 good cheer in the march- ing ranks. And néver was there such a crowd. The buildings along Fifth Avenue banks of green and red, white The sidewalks were packed line to curb and every ’ ‘Window along the line of march was @ point of vantage enjoyed by as Many spedtators as could jam them- @elves between the frames. ‘There was a terrific jam around St. Patrick’s Cathedral, where the re- ing stand was located. Mayor and other members of the ity administration required advance (guards of policemen to force a way ‘for them through the crowd. Takin; edvantage of last year's experience, frhen spectators broke through and delayed the parade, Chief Inspector Bchmittberger had a double police minth Street and a Readiness to supplement the work of the patrolmen. spring which seemes to settle on tho ter’a frown doth fado away.” (Continued on Fourth Page.) | SOLDIERS WEAR » SHAMROCK SPRIGS | W)THE TRENGHE ” Fighting Front in France and Flanders, 1 a lege a —~ Northern France and Fianders, a it. In lon thousands of women, in- cluding many members of the nobil- ity, headed by the Countess of Lim- ‘erick, were on the atreets, in the shops FINA L “* PRICE ONE OENT. Omer rae’ Now Tote AMERICANS SLA BY MEXCANBAN BORDER RAD Robbers Cross Into New Mexico, Plunder Stores and Kill Three in Fight. from Forty-second Street at 8 o'clock} santa FE, N. M., March 11.—A ip afternoon and moved up Fifth| number of Americans are reported Avenwe to Harlem was the biggest | killed {n a fight with Mexican ae who raided the town Grant County, souineatF “alver City, last night. The Mexicans es- ; caped, and at last accounts were rac- ing for the border, with a reinfgrced posse from Grant and Luna Counties riding hard to head them off. The Mexicans rode into Dwyer and robbed the general store of, Frank Paiper of a considerable sum, 20} high power repeating rifles and 1,000 rounds of ammunition. After shooting | in all directions to terrorize thé in- habitants of the town, the raiders rode eouthward, heading for the bor- der. A posse was organised at Dwyer andwell mounted and heavily armed, started in purault. After a chase of twenty miles the posse overhauled the Mexicans. A running fight fol- lowed. George Tidwell, Lafe Justin and another member of the posse whose name has not been learned were killed, according to reports reaching here. Albert Tidwell was reported missing. Advices from the from Forty-second Street tO} scene of the fight did not state flying | whether or no gquadron of mounted men was held in | were killed. t any of phe bandits ‘The Dwyer posse did not succeed in stopping the Mexicans, who continued It was Bt. Patrick's weather—just | ineir aight eouthward. Sheri iff Mc- ‘the kind New Yorkers have now come] Grath of Grant County was notified to,fecognige as the opening of the/1, telegraph and formed a fresh posse which started southward, join- “patel day of Ireland's saint when win-ling a band organised by Sherift Stephen of Luna County, The Ameri- ha turn-out it was! There mever| cans at inst accounts pursult of the fleeing Mexicans, Bronx Man Held in $3,000 After /GIRL SOLO FOR $25, “DETECTIVES CHARGE Police Trap Him With Marked Bills. ‘The eale of @ nineteon-year-old en for day against Lou's Abrams of No, 908 $25 wa: Foley ‘in Morrisania Pelice Court. Abrams was held in $8,000 ball for examination to-morrow, The girl, who gave the name Lillie Levine und her address the same se Abrams’, was in the charge made to- held as a vagrant and will be exam- Vioe Society had yee ed i, roduce, The duly afte: = tom srded te the front © few dave /iay fai Gistributed to the Irish | and had gone to Abrams’ room poldier bora under the cover of dark- ees last nigh! LONDON, March 17.—8St. Patrick's |ined in the Night Court to-morrow. Day wae not forgotten in the trenches; The arrest of Abrams last night od after two weeks’ accomplish: ‘of bunches of shamrocks, bed Ad fant ie who stated in court had posed as a siser dealer, iked to A@rams about to see a girl ight stated, was on 58 marked Dills, and “ Ciroulation Books Open $0 AIL” NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1915. UBMARINE RAIDS THE IRISH COAST; TWO BRITISH SHIPS TORPEDOED RECORD THOUSANDS CHEER ~ BIG FIFTH AVENUE PARADE IN HONOR OF ST. PATRICK still were in representative of the "Anti: Abrams om MILLIONAIRE PA IS OUTWITTED BY GIRL BRIDE SRUSE} Young bie hoot Accused of Ab- ducting Girl, Married Her Again. Secretly. WAITS TILL SHE IS 18. His Cousin Wed Eloper’s 15- Year-Old Sister—Now All's Serene. Cupid and his faithful satellites— two youthful sweethearts—have again put it over on Cupid’s principal enemy, the angry father-in-law. And this time it was done in a brand new way, which only goes to show the everlasting accuracy of the old adage that “love will find:@ way.” Incidentally the mystery of why Herbert E. Huber and his seventteen- year-old bride, Horacina M. Huber, daughter of Adrian H, Muller, mil~ Honaire real estate man, dissppéared for a few weeks last month while de- tectives scoured two States for them is explained. The story is told in pa- pars filed in the Supreme Court to- day dismissing the petition for an in- | junction by young Huber to prevent his father-in-law from interfering with the marriage. This is how the sweethearts’ coup was carried out: In January, 1913, Huber and Miss Muller and Mias Muller's sister, Jessie, and Rex Jones, Huber’s first cousin, | Jeft their paternal domicile at No. 364 West End Avenue and eloped to Mary- land, where the two couples were mar- ried. When they returned Dr. Muller was irate—doubly so—not so much because of the marriage, but because his two daughters had been missing from home for days without sending thelr parents the slightest hint as to their whereabouts, Horacina was only sev- enteen and her sister Jessie only fif- teen, and Papa Muller threatened to invoke the-law and have their mar- rages annuled because of Horacina’s youth, Huber tinmediately consulted a law- yer and sued for the injunction which, he hoped, would prevent Papa Mul- her from Interfering with the match. A temporary injunction was obtained and then Horacina returned to her father’s home and promised not tosee Herbert for a whole year. In the mean time Herbert learned that his injunction would not last for- ever. But, {njunctions—pooh!—love Jaughs at them just as Herbert did. The injunction was still pending. Her- bert and Horacina had something up their sleeves—something that would give the law and Papa Muller’s plans a —knockout blow. Horacina would be eighteen and her own boss on Jan. 81. They waited until Feb, : and thea, unknown to Papa Muller, they went to St. Agnes's Episcopal Church and were remarried. This time the ory which had been only loosely tied by the first marriage, was tightened so securely that Papa Muller and annulment proceedings would be be for naught. And, of course, it rendered the injunctio; Enscesd! nes useless, 60 they were to-day by Su- preme Court sitatiee Bijur, This dig not end all, however. indictment had been found by the Grand Jury accusing him of abduc- jtlon, but w! District Attorney Per- |kins was shown after the remarria, that the youthful pair were deeply in hr dinmamad erin ip mec pareos ¥, Just how Mré. Rex Jones ont her his | your scrubbing the stairs and hall. A. Papa | There was & basty adjournment and ANGLE CASE RESTS ON HOW A WOMAN DISROBES Fl FOR BED! Grilling jisk daa Angle, State Asks Why She First Removed Shoes ‘and Stockings. $PPOBSEOESESEOIESS QUESTION UP TO JURY. Accused Woman Near Col- lapse as She Is Quizzed About Footprints. $606 848644855 (Special from a Statf Corresp: of The Evening World.) BRIDGEPORT, Conn. March 17.— Did any woman, preparing to go to bed, ever begin by taking off her shoes and stockings? In this question lies the reason fo: the tnatetesee of Prosecutor Homer 8. Cummings on a jury of married men to try Mra. Helen M. Angie, charged with blame for the death of Waldo R. Ballou. Mr. Cummings dove not beiteve any Woman ever did such @ thing. Ho does not! think ‘mer of any intimate acquaintance with @ woman will believe it. He is sure tiat if he can show that Mrs, Angle’ ie not telling the truth in one détall the jury will not believe the rest of her explanations of the things ehe did just after the death of her elderly suitor. The cross-examination closed a little before 3 o'clock to-day, after Mrs. Angie had been on the stand ten hours. “Had it not been for the crimson printd of a woman's bare feet, leading to, the door of her apartment from the spot where Ballou was found dying, about midnight June 23, Mra. Angle would not be on trial. If Bal- lou's death was an accident, the secret of which died with him, the prosecu- tion thinks the defense must explain qby Mrs. Aggie, having dismissed her visitor in @ conventional manner, was barefooted be stumbled two steps from and fell. ‘Mra. Angle, in ber testimony to- day, insisted she slipped off the shoes and stockings from both her feet, as the first act of undressing, because one of her an! was lam “| DON'T REMEMBER,” HER AN. SWER TO MANY QUESTIONS, @ What @i4 you do when you pre- pared for bed? A. Took off my shoes and MAN IN RAGE HURLS SLEEPING CHILDREN TO 60-FO0T FALL Summoned to Court by Wife, Father Throws Two From the Fifth Floor. Badie Liebman, seven, and ber brother Samuel, five, are dying in Mount Sinai Hospital with almost every bone in their bodies fractured. Their father, Samuel Liebman, quarrelied with their mother early to-day because she had him sum- moned to the Domestic Relations Court. When she went out to a store he lifted the children, sleeping, from their beds, and hurled them one after the other sixty feet to the bottom of an airshaft from the fifth floor of No. 13 Kast Ninety-elghth Street, accord- ing to Miss Lube Rubeheim, who saw the act from a window on the other side of the airshaft, four feet away. Liebman has disappoared and gen- eral alarm has been sent out for his arrest. The details of the brutal crime came to the police from Miss Rube- heim, who lives with her sister, Mrs. Fannie Feinberg, on the fifth floor of No. 71 East Ninety-eighth Street. She glanced across the airshaft os her attention was attracted by the opening of @ window. A man stood at the window. his arms he carried @ sleeping girl. He leaned out of the window with the child in bis arms. Miss Rube- helm tried to cry out, but could not. Deliberately he hold the child for a moment and then threw her into t! airshaft. There was a thud as the body atruck. Hypnotized with fear and unable to speak, Miss Rubeheim continued to stare at the window. Quickly che man reappeared. This time he car- ried tho na He, too, waa sleepi: and the folds of his nightdress fell about the man's arms. He stirred stockings. Q Where? A. In the front room, Q Sure that was the first thing you aid? A. Yes. Q. Did you wash your feet when you came upstairs? A. No, Q. Do you remember that Chief Bren- naan looked eat your feet and found they had been washed. A. 1 don't re- member. Q. Js there any reason why you can remember you didn't wash your fect and cannot remember that the Chief examined them? A. My memory is very vague. Q. May it not be vague as well as to I never went downstairs bat croe, @ Can you be eure you did not do it and afterward forget it. A. I am. Q You are sure of your memory on some things and not on others, A. I suppose so. The immediate consequence of this cross-examination was @ collapse of the defendant. Her father, her con- stant attendant and@ comforter, caw it coming and spoke to the lawyers. Leonard Blondell caught bip daughter about the waist and hel; jer to the Sheriff's office. It was three-quarters of an hour before she was able to Mrs, Angle on the Witness Stand To-Day Under Cross-Examination POPOL DLE LEED EEEDHODETH SEL EEL LEG N41 O44 OFF SOSODOOH | gaged for shipment and contracted Tesume the stand. Mr. Cummings |ineasily as the cold air chilled his was inflexible on pounding into the hear, and then the man quickly threw (Geatinued on Gecond Pegs.) | M\Thes Misa Rubsbelm creamed, J ~ 90 yaene PRIOR BRITISH STEANSHP. ATTACKED FROM SK BOMB DROPS ON DEG Submarine Raiders Torpedo Other English Vessels, One to the Bottom With Members of Her Crew. BLOCKADE COSTS THE U, S. $100,000 A DAY IN REVE! LONDON, March 47-—in. addition to’ increasing nee submarine attacks on. British metchant vessels, aaa fight on shipping from the alr. . A German aeroplane dropped Sea, damaging the vessel and submarine sank a British, ship. attacked a British vessel off 16-8645 $606555559466666 Admiralty does not accept the theory that the Géermans have’ base, near the British coast. This tends break of the war that Germany's newest gubmarines were dash across the Atlantic, if ordered, to attack B: of the Admiralty report says: : “The British steamer Atlanta, 619. & P. Hutchison of Glasgow, was torpedoed marine off Inishturk, on the west coast land, about noon of March ‘14. The ere Island and the vesgel is now in the harbor. “The British steamer Fingal, of 1,563 COTTON SHIPPERS GET SAFE CONDUCT FOR WHOLE MONTH British Modify Block Blockade Order Northumberland coast. for the Benefit of uae lives. cs pete re State ous Americans, The crew of sixteen men were which started shortly after she. was ‘hit. and were picked up later. The British steamship attacked by the She is the second stea! vessel recently reported that a taube flew over ber in the Maglish G and that three bombs were hurled at ber deck, narrowly missing beg, United States Will Refuse To Relinquish Any of Her Ri WASHINGTON, March 117.—That|upon the latest order mo C England's attempted justification of | modified blockade and the her German commerce embargo Will|tt parallels the North's action to © meet with no response in Admihis- |Civil War ts to be ignored. tration circles ‘was indicated to-day. The request that this country look AHEARN FIGHT IS OFF. —E Brooklyn Contract Ferces With- drawal of Garden Bont. By an edict of the State Boxing +|Commission rendered day after a special meeting, the fight between Young Ahearn and Eddie McGoorty, ted for Madison Square Garden Fri- night, has been called off, Manager Johnston declaring that he had gone to considerable expense and had already wold advance tickets of more thas $2,600 will not ‘put on @ substitute, bat will refund the money already taken tm, ‘The decision grew out of Ahearn's contract with the Irving A. C. of Brook- ‘WASHINGTON, March 17.—Further modification of the restrictions on cotton shipments, determined upon by Great Britain, will give safe passage to cotton for which contract of sale had been made before March 2 as well as cotton for which freight engage- had been made before that ments date. The original order permitted only such cotton as had been both en- for before that date. In any event, the ships must sail not later than March ‘Tho arrangement was made to per- mit Americans to fulfil contracts and sales made before the allies under- took to stop shipments to Germany. —————. STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY, Manchioneal, Pert Antenie American, Pernambuco Line of March While the sons of Erin present an AY iring spectacle on their rade! through tHe city streets to-cay wortp ADS., carefully Classi ied as to ind go Zorth, as usual, into more New 3 ze E a | ; : ! | | | i i $e City homes and offices than reached ty box Saturday night againet| . lene a the Werald, Times and Tribune COM: |p: {2 Pox nd In addition to shutting BINED. |e eet detent beters ee ee ; The one will pay homage to “days of | vore,” while the other will offer pros- | perity for days to come, | Both “parades” are pemoenrations of virility that should not be mi: ese. Erin for gone , itF LEROY, N. ¥., March iene, broke out at 12.80 o'clock this z

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