The evening world. Newspaper, June 3, 1915, Page 4

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Take 400,000 nein While New Attack and Capture of + Mexico City Is Predicted. "ANSWER TO WILSON. « ‘Envoy Says First Chief Is Ready to Re-establish Gov- ernment — Villa Wins. & LAREDO, Tex., June &—Bvidently Preparing for further hostilities, in- tend of a “get together” plan as wequested by President Wilson, Car- wansiotas to-day took across the bor- Ger 400,000 rounds of rifle ammunition, ‘They will be distributed to arsenals fm Northern Mexico. Furthor ship- tents, ahead of a possible embargo, are expected soon. ‘WASHINGTON, June 3.—Consular Agent Carothers, at Chihuahua, re- Ported to-day that Villa troops in a Sank movement, captured Bilac and Carransa cavalry to rout, Obergonm, the Carranza commander, ia surrounded at Trinidad , and has lost trains quantities of supplies. Biisse Arredondo, head of the Car- ransa agency here, to-day insued the following comment on President Wil- son's Mexican statement: “T believe that President Wilson's Rote Is largely due to the lack of Felations between the Government of the Unjted States and the Constitu- tonalist Government of Mexico, and that this has given room to many false reports which have victimized Mr. Carranza, attributing to him ‘Sets and omissions of which he is in- @apable. “Mr. Carranza has lately ordered Advance of his troops toward the of Mexico, which he wil! un- btedly take before one week tn , and I understand he will imme- @iately establish there a provisional We have a “piano rg 0 oy es ay We offer If you have a 65 note piano, ‘8 your ¢ An extra allowance of 10% on any instrument you might wish to exchange for a new PEASE UPRIGHT, GRAND or PLAYER PIANO. For the next week we are prepared to make this extra inducement because at this time of the year ushers more opportunity to repair at our factory all instruments that bite been taken in trade and have them ready for fall business. every puree.” Convenient terms of payment. Write for Catalogue and Special Exchange Estimate Pease Piano Company, 126 WEST 42D ST., NEAR BROADWAY, tterns of O actory will not make this coming Fall civil, administration, until he can wipe out the remnants of the reac- Uonaries and convene the people to elections for officers of a eonstitu- Uonal government, “There is no danger, therefore, that strife may prolong itself in Mexico and cause greater calamities for the people, which, 1 am inclined to be Neve, is the only thing that worrie| the Goveroment States.” Enrique C. Lorent, Gen. Villa's per. sonal representative in Washington, to-day inwued this statement: “The convention government, of whone military forces Gen. Villa in Commander-in-Chiet, was created in the very spirit in which President Wilson's deciaration was written But unfortunately many of those who had undertaken to support and maintain that government failed in adherence to their pledges. “Since then Gen, Vilia has on nu- merous occasions signified a desire to reach an accord with those who were opposing bim, even expressing & willingness to entirely oliminate himoelf from the situation should oo- casion to #0 demand. “Gon, Villa will certainly give the Most serious, attentive and practical consideration to any Cay tion that reaches him from Wilson, whose rain aol of pose he well understands and apy fectatee persons, nationality wnreport- ed, were killed in a raid by Mexicans on Querobabi Tuesday night, State Department despatenes from Nogales to-day say aftertooting the town the of the United raiders burned five ratiway bridges. A Vera Cruz despatch, dated June hey the crowd gathered ¢ Mon- to buy the daily food ly was d the Government's store was ribution of Amorican Red Cross relief supplies has begun in Monterey, Mexico. Consul General Hanna to- day reported that one car of corn, one car of beans and a car of flour mag arrived. Tho people are not allo to buy more than two or three pounds of either at one time. ‘The Red Crosse will push on supplies to other interior points as transporta- ton facilities are restored. “BUTE NACHT’? BY ARIONS WINS KAISER’S PRIZE Through its dition “Gute Nacht,” the A! ciety sang itaelf out night with the Williamsburg Sac; erbund and prixe, the blue ribbon event of th twenty-fourth triennial Saengerfest ef tho Northeastern Federation of Bingers. font came to an end with a pi in Cypress fg, Park which w it elt Sens. Thor petition, prise. for every person and for VERNER 4s PNAS ANNUAL SALE OF Discontinued Patterns 18 different Friday and Saturd wen Davenport at 20% OFF A Large Variety of Coverings to Select From All Daven-o's Marked in Plain « oe Look for the red tag and take 20°, off of our maker-to-consumer price =" DTOWENG= = WANTS $3,000 FOR ' ENDING $200,000 o ALIENATION SUT Atlantic Cy Law Lawyer Sues Philadelphia Merchant for Halting Carrol Case. SHOWS LOVE LETTERS. Hotel Man Said Wife Had Eloped With Swoyer to Orient ana Euro ATLANTIC CITY, June &.—On the fround that Joseph D. Swoyer, Wealthy Philadelphia merchant and yachteman, bad declined to pay his counsel for “staving off a §200,000 suit for alienation of affections brought by Thomas M. Carrol, proprietor of the Hotel Hermitage, New York,” James H. Hayes, the lawyer in ques- tlon, has Swoyer, in January, 1918, with Mm. Elizabeth C, Carrol, the botel man’s wife. They went to San Francisco, then to the Orient, then to Australia and finally to Europe, Bwoyer returned al Carrol, not long after the elopement, bad bie marriage annulled on the ground that his wife was not legally free when he married her in 1908. A decreo liberating her from @ formor husband had not become absolute when she became Mrs. Carrol. The hotel man next sued Swoyer for $200,000, but abandoned the suit, saying, “You can't start to throw dirt without getting dirty yourself.” Mr. Hayes represented Swoyer in this sult, Hayes, in his sult against Swoyor for the $3,000 feo, filed with the Court of Common Pleas here all the documents in the annulment sult, “PERFECT LOVE AND HARMONY” MENTIONED IN LETTERS. To this official ory he appended letters written by «Jooy” (enid to be Swoyer) to Mra. Carrol, which were made public at the time of the annulment action, Extracts from one of the most ardent are: “My Own Precious Darling: “1 never loved nor craved your eternal companionship so in all my before, and J now live only in the beautiful thought that om Jan. 1, or thereabouts, we will leave here to- gether, to be together in the most perfect love and harmony uatil God separates us, “I've lived a few years, and now that I've met my love in all the erowd and know and foel that I never can live without her, | mean that no one shall take her from me. I love you, my darlio with @ love that en- that ennobies, that makes life wor vi and makes a mas think of the higher thi: of life, want to take you in my arms and kiss you. My very soul orias out to you this minute, for I need you ao. You are my love, my life, my aoul, my all, and ail else counts for naught. “VL take you away the first of th and then sorrow will be no proge, We'll have each other alwa: and we will them have the joy, the beautiful life due us both. BIG HEART BEATING FOR HER AND FOR HER ALONE, “Oh, darling! you so often of the depth of my love you again and again, bel ray! you half. the and | of a ‘att to it all, my darling. ‘Try wot to worry, that the “Mecothiy You know I've told | \ for you, and even though I've gle and know and feel heart In this bod: all for you, and there portourt bod loves you #0 ou to- oe | iw Pi vex you 00 as i ig heart bnd all else im him is yours for ever and @ lite F. a are “A gd and f ni you, in "be ol when the time comes to pro- cay cai to the whole world. ‘I ‘love her her better than all the world, better than any one in it, better than life Neeelf ‘af P gf one Mr. Mwoyer, who is in C part o thi et Hi ‘4 be tary * would not be iaters Ae tor Carrel, we Be Deosn't Care, Being Happily Remarrica. Thomas M. Carrol said in the Hotel Hermitage to-day : “I don’t know anything about Hayes's suit against Bwo: ny is true that I brought a sult ,000 Against Swoyer after be ‘clopea with the former Mrs. rrol, aad then rye | abandoned it. wt koow who rep- resented him. ot, tatoraatad Vi us was ago to-day, and T I'm cme "et the be ond piest bagel: ES on earth.” STRANGLED TO DEATH BY DUMBWAITER AS RESCUERS WIELD AXES Boy Evidently Tried to Lower Himself in Shaft and Was Caught. Passing through the ground floor hallway of her home, ip the five-story house, No, 642 West Forty-siath Street at 6 o'clock last evening, nine- year-old Margery Kelly saw the head | of Frank Lang, fifteen, who lived on @n upper floor, sticking from the door of the dumbwaiter shaft, “What's the matter, Prank?” she asked. “Are you biding from some one?” ‘The boy groaned. The girl tried to get him out, but found the dumb- waiter wedged tight. She screamed and tenants came and tried to get the boy out, Apparently he had got into the dumbwalter to go to the baye- ment and bis weight started it down before he could draw in his head, wedging him between it and the door of the shaft. The tenants could not move the dumbwaiter up or down. The police came, as did Dr. McMorris of the Polyclinic Hospital. The doctor found the boy breathing with great dim- culty and unconscious, being gradu- ally strangled. The police worked at the dumbwaiter, but could not budge it. Firemen from the book and ladder company at Forty-eighth 8 Eighth Avenue were called. Th sician said the boy was The firemen tore the shaft to pleces with their axes and the boy was lifted out. He died a minute or two later, He bad been In the shaft hal€ an hour. fvanléalS «2k DORVAL ENTRIES. DORVAL PARK, Montreal, Can., June 3.—The eatries for to-morrow's ros are as follows: dure, $400, maiden thie furlong 05, tt » eligible, HL Shrewsbury 108, We; haser Bayan, 7 ‘Apriva, rate niall af Mer ma we Hae deanna. ei Miao oe 100: ai 100 nd Mo, ag invades teri If you are unhappy, | i ate 00; thmepear oie ide Tat! Toauters, 10; Gonton, i xi a eT i at 11h) Mor A wi art oes H hreezesrelde tnd : " hurlougs Aa Me Ro vn, A 110; Hearts LOUIAVIT entries for June 3 ‘The rrow's races are as WAck ures) (hve roar able apt 1 Pounce MW ie fume sue-reaneid Blics EE 9) “anny tawlne Martin ¢ penitent Mackweill's Lelend at bie home, No | conference her 2 MRS. WENMAN TOOK z) HUSBAND-T0-BE ON Girl Testifies, |, ° NAMES NOT MENTIONED. | Northport Revelry Figured in Sensational Sui! of Cotton Broker. BRIDGEPORT, Conn, June t— Just as the names of prominent New York men and women were about to ‘be mentioned in connection with gay revela at Northport, Byrd Wilson ‘Wenman's action to obtain possession of his minor son, on the ground that the influence of the boy's mother was not suitable, was abruptly closed. It was agreed by counsel on both sides) § that too much of @ sensation might be created by the testimony. York cotton broker, having « fine home on Shippan Point, Stamford, | Mra, Wenman began an action for di- vorce two years ago, alleging cruelty. He field, but later withdrew, a denial| © to her charges, and she obtained the divorce and custody of the child, “It is always best to live with tho man you are going to marry before you marry him, and then you know what you are going to get,” was the testimony of Elizabeth McGuirk, her maid, at the hearing yesterday, “Mr, Nave apparently was isfactory be- cause she married him about a month ago.” Miss McGuirk bad only begun to tell of the lively happenings in the Northport house when she was stopped and counsel reached ap agreement, withdrawing the case from court without a decision as to who would have the custody of the ehild. At one party, according to the maid, when there were present several men and women from New York “aad every one was drinking, Mrs. Wen- man gave a cocktail to her beby to drink.” Referring to the presence of Mr. Nave in the home of Mrs. Wenman, the maid testified that he occupied a room adjoining that of Mrs. Wenm. "Tt thought he was Mr. Wenman," the maid testified, “until he told me net to call him Mr, Wenman, He told me his name was Mr, e, and later, when I explained my mistake to Mr. Wenman, she explained she ected to marry him. man always had gay port, and there were there was e ry o who attended there pi mentioned the names of La- roque and a Miss Grace Ellis when the testimony was halted. PEACE CONFERENCE HERE JUNE 14-15 Four Former Secretaries of the Army and Navy Will Be Among the Speakers, ‘The Convention Committee of the Peace and Preparation Conference announced that four ex-Secretaries of |the Army and Navy will attend the June 14-15, under the the National Security auspices of Ioawue, | Among those who bave accepted invitations to address the convention laure: Jacob M. Diekinson and Henry rmor Hecretaries of J, Bonaparte » Meyer, former Sec’ the Rev, Dr, Maxim, Al- Kt, Coudert and George Haven Putnam, ‘he programme, whicb provides for) an “army day” and # “oavy day,”) follows: Monday afternoon, June 1.—Meet- rr | en ing for the ussion of army ques tion; addresses and for discus- won; two and & balf bours, hone at *Ruaay morning.~Delegates’ meet- ing: 4G Oae7 geserion. seeds ~Luncheon at | Hotel & Tu wPM Rpesutive sea: | wion egaten for formation resolutions and culminating aetion — | ‘Tuesday eveulag.~Katertelament of wuenta. All of the sessions will be held at) the Hotel Ar capt the masa meet ine, which te to be beld at Carnegia Mall | DIVERS BROKE ALL RECORDS. | HAN WRANCIBOO, Bune bPhirteen ere made in snare for the venete® aie iia hie wore 7} cnlet Part ifs, are poke gy ie HUY Af 2 ioe : TRIAL, MAI MAID SAYS ; TAKE SUDDEN LEAP Best to Know Whe What You Will i Hf ]in"itternoon ‘and closed on’ ratly''to| General Motors Goes Up 10 Get, Was Her Theory, {4 mea ach ail ene teed twee 3.4 Points and Mexican Pe- t ; 1 ‘Onte, Mr. Wenman is a wealthy New|} Quarterly dividends of 1% on preferred, and % of 1 per cent. on RUMORS OF PEACE | CAUSE STOCKS 10 es “ CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN MARKET. Wl iondl: Wednesday chow Oyen ae ih Low. Clone reported onemne of Argentine corn. Cloned oft FESS CEREE EER EF PETE ‘i indhensent-- troleum Shows Gain of 9, br N.Y. COTTON CHANGE. iy Cotton prices on first or from 7 to 12 points. Reports from Washington of the Fit Bad Market. Wed she. & probability of a peaceful settlement oe being sold out. Brokers reported of the controversy between Germany 3? agarin of contracts. Prices continued | ana this country and whispers of the 1% - wise approaching ehd of the European bi Joly War had an inspiring effect on the # 3 Stock Market to-day, Opening slug @ishly che market suddenly sprene Into life and prices began to soa: Apparently about all tho invesio: who have been holding off beca: of the disturbed condition of intern: tjonal affairs, decided to Junrp into the market at once. ‘Tho rise was general all along the line. Typical advances over last night's closing were in Copper, three poins; General Motors, 103-4; Smel- ters, 2 7-8; Northern Pacific, 1 7-8; United States Steel Common, % 38-4, and Bethlehem Steel, 31-4, The determination of the United States to interfere in the interests of peace in Mexico also helped the mar- ket, Mexican Petroleum, for instance, advanced 7 points on heavy buying orders, sBa5 . 3 ernseeeRnene eattnebe entcegrensnoninene 10. it ] ‘ 9.4 Ex % 01 30 104 May 0.53 i 61 Marked cloved strong, 10 to points up. = Beret tis FRECERE FEE FE = * pao Peres ¥ GREE HERE EEE | EEE HEEE EEE EEE pencncetnshe teen WOODS SHIFTS DETECTIVES. r Ar ‘Transferred From the Second Branch B See eS POAT SSuysassssonusersssaseemty “For the good of the service” Police Commissioner Woods to-day made a number of changes affecting the Sqcond Branch Detective Bureau at Forty-sec- ond Street and Lexington Avenu Lieut. Daniel A. Kerr was sent to the Chi dade office for desk duty . Flannelly, to the Fourth DI eau; Lieut, Charles J. Horn- hostel “to the ‘Pieat District; Michael to the F =? a EB Coone Bronx, FEE PSSEEEPS PESO RE Lieut. Patrick Randalls was sent from the Firat District to the Second District, and Lieut. John M. Thompson from the Bronx to the Second District. Detective Sergeant Patrick Curry was ed from first to second grade and Detective Sergeant Thomas J. McManus from se: rade to first, Getectiv a James Stahoney, nd Harold Neat were transferred to rauty aa patrolmen, —>————. BELMONT ENTRIES. ION PARK, N. ¥., a ‘Town Against George Cohan. The ‘Trustees of North Hempstead ‘Township, L. I, have instructed Attor- ney George L. Dowsey to oppose an application made by George M. Cohan, the actor, and his wife, to the Land Commissioner at Albany for @ grant of Jand under water In Long Island Sound, fronting Cohan's estate at Great Neck. A hearing will be held next month. The town claims all lands under water. Seepettetttte June 3.— 8 for to-morrow’'s races are explanation offered by the then Mra, RY ibnes nt t 2 | as follow: Louise Ladew Wenman for the pres«| 1") 8. steel. 4G] eres nac 1306s ence of G. Fritz Nave, a wealthy St.| Cian’ Copper. th Louls resident, in her country homo, | Wh tien t) at Northport, L. 1, according to the) wore Seqent ne —IN—= Victor Service Knabe3?,’ Sth ae ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. American Car & Foundry Co.— per cent. ommon stocks, payable July 1 tock of record June 11. to] Hi Northern Pacifie—April gross de- Mined $664,291. Net after tax in- 34th Street—New York Have Carefully Prepared For To-morrow (Friday) A Very Important Sale of Women’s and Misses’ Summer Dresses Latest fashion developments featuring white, striped and novelty Voile, Linen, Nets, Laces and prevailing Silks. Exceptionally Priced at 6.90 10.75 15.00 19.75 25.00 Introducing a Novelty in Women’s Sport Hats Ribbon and Hemp Combination Shirred White Ribbon Hat. with facing of Hemp in contrasting colors of Rose, Green, Black, Army Blue or solid White, with natty bow on edge of brim. Very Special 2.95 yh if eWo RLD EVERY MORNING m Au

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