The evening world. Newspaper, June 24, 1915, Page 1

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7} ; 1 + —S——= ‘EDITION PRICE ONE CENT. “19 15. | “Cironlation Books Open to All.’ 16 PAGES t Te Daye Weather-PARTLY CLOUDY, , 8 PRICE ONE CENT. | ALL BERLIN URGES NEW DRIVE TO PARIS, WITH LEMBERG VICTORS LEADING VAN “WL ASK PRESIDENT ELIOT [NE NUTE Ws WHY THAW LEFT HARVARD: SLAYER DENIES EXPULSION wasn sisiicn, Wi Wil: Inquire Into Hitherto Untold Story of College Escapades. ‘MANY SWEAR HE’S SANE. Canadians Tell of His Actions “After Escape atid Pro- .nounce Him Rational. Deputy Attorney General Frank K. Cook announced at the opening of thig afternoon's session of the Thaw depity trial that he would 4 ply to Baghicn, tok, “défore ‘Wh n the trial is in progress in Part Il. of the Supreme Court, for the appoint- Ment of a commission to examine ex- Obarles W. Eliot of Har- vard University concerning ‘Thaw's retirement from the undergraduate body of that university in 1892. “| understand Harry Thaw was called into President E ffice at meen ene day and told to leave the University and to be out by 3 o’clook that afternoon. This, so far as | have been je to find out, Thaw did.” / The escapade which caused Thaw's digmiseal from Harvard has never been made public. ‘Thaw had been a year and a half in Harvard at that time, according to Mr. Cook. He was taking a course in special subjects, President Emeritus ig at present in Cambridg Masa. WANTS TO KNOW WHY THAW WAS EXPELLED. Mr. Cook said he wished to find out why Thaw was called into President Eliot's office and what was said to him while there. When Thaw was asked, “Why were you expelled from Harvard?” he replied: “I never was expelled.” Before the calling of witnesses was begun this afternoon one of the jury- men handed up to Justice Hendrick a letter he said had been received from a crank. The Court smiled and said: “Just hand me any more of these letters which come. I get scores of them during the course of an import- ant trial. Witness after witness took the stand . before Justice Hendrick to-day ana swore that from personal observation they believed Harry K. Thaw was perfectly sano and that his actions were those of a rational man, That Thaw, however, faces a bitter fight before he can ever win his free- dom was shown when the State an- nounced it would call him as the chief witness against himself, His aged mother, too, will be -sed against him, Bhe may even be forced to take the witness stand, The State will flPst at- (Continued on Eighth Page.) acetone SWINDLERS SENTENCED, Wour 4 Guilty to Using Malle to Defraud. After being on trial for three days in the Criminal Branoh of the Federal Dis- trlot Court, Adolf Jacobson, his son William, and Jullus Cohn to-day en- tered pleas of guilty to an indictment charging them with engaging in 4 con- macy to defraud through the mails Harland Howe sentenced won, who ix sixty-four years to serve a term of woven years’ imprisonment in the United State: Me Atlanta, Ga.: gave. William J en 8 Ave-yeur m and Witlam year and a day's incarceration | In the same institution. ©. C. Mitchell, a r of the conspirators, who also ad- his guilt, was let off with a fine waich was paid. ] of CARNIVALE SENT UP FOR 20 YEARS: HISSES THREATS Instigator of Giamari Murder Warns Relative of Victim in Court. Muttering imprecations against his prosetutors and his accusers, Rocco Carnivale, alias “Rocks Cornell,” con- victed of murder in the second de- gree for instigating the murder of! Michael Glamari, one of Tom Foley's Heutenants, was this afternoon: sen- tenced to Sing Sing Prison for not less than twenty years by Supreme Court Justice Vernon M. Davis. An Carnivale, manacled ta a deputy sheriff, was led down the aisle of tho courtroom on his way to the Tombs he suddenly stopped and peering into the face of his victim's brother Albert hissed: “You will be the next, then your brother John and Mike Santangelo The deputy sheriff had to drag Car- nival away. “There's no yellow in me," Carni- vale told his guard, “and what I said I mean.” “What have you to say why judg- ment should not be passed upon you?" Clerk Penny asked Carnivale when brought before the Justice. ‘The prisoner started to say some- thing when Mr. Stryker bade him keep quiet. As Justice Davis imposed the stat- utory sentence Carnivale listened at- tentively with a smile on his face. He will be taken to Sing Sing to-mor- row, Carnivale ts the second convicted for Giamar!'s murder, Gaetano Mon- timagno, the actual slayer, was con- victed of murder in the first degree and now awaits death in the electric chair, Frank Fennimore, a Brooklyn aloonkeeper, Indicted with Carnivale and Montimagno, is in the Tombs awaiting trial. Michael A. Rofrano, Deputy Street Cleaning Commissioner, whose name was dragged into the case, resigned after the conviction of Carnivale, say- ing that he had been fully cleared by the testimony. GERMAN SUBMARINES COULD RAID NEW YORK Munich Newspaper Says That in Going to Dardanelles They \ Travelled 5,000 Miles. THE HAGUE, June 24.—A Munich despatch to-day quoted the newspaper Neweste Nachrichten as pointing out ITCAN'T BEDONE, IELNES ARESDOCTR vous, He Says, at Robert- son Divorce Trial. SHE TELLS HER STORY. Declares That in 14 Years She A Never Kissed Mr. Robert- son Even Platonically. The defense that Miss Mina Tem- Pest was too nervous and hysterical to give Edward F. Robertson, mill- fonaire importer, the one-minute soul described yesterday by wit- ‘was raised to-day before the Jury trying M-s, Laurien C. Robert- son's suit for divorce in Justtes Del- ahanty’s part of the Supreme Court. Dr. Oscar M. Leiser,’ No, 268 West | Forty-fifth Street, for eight years | a." physician to Miss Tempest, furnished the testimony showing how impos- sible it would have been for a wo- man of her temperament to sit in a} window sill, seven stories above the street and imprint sixty-second kisses on Robertson's lips while he in great esctacy swung his arms like Sousa leade his band, Counsel for Mrs, Robertson tried} hard to bar the physician's testimony. Justice Delahanty allowed it, Miss Tempest was overjoyed at the Court's ruling, She clapped her gloved hands! and nudged two friends sitting beside| her | “It would have been impossible for Miss Tempest to commit the acts complained of,” said Dr. Letser., I found her in a highly nervous | 5 state, very h}sterical, due to an oper- ation performed by Dr. McCosh, | head surgeon of the Presbyterian Hospital. “Her condition was such that I ordered her to the European Spas, It would have been impossible, and is now impossible, for Miss Tempest to be unduly affectionate. It would do her irreparable Injury.” Q. She couldn't even kiss a man— ia that right? A. Anything that would tend to excite or throw her into hysterics would prove very in- Jurious, Q. Then you say that no woman nervous and hysterical like Misa Tempest could mako love—is that right? A. Not all women are affected in the same way. own story on the witness stand, Gus- tay Lang jr., Mrs, Robertson's lawyer, asked Justice Delahanty to order that Miss Tempest submit to physical ex-| amination by Mrs. Robertson's phy- |? “When she called me seven years ago|} M While Miss Tempest was tellingther | 24% Racing Results and Entries FIRST JAMAICA RAGE | ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF BAD STARTING) Broomvale, Favorite, Left Standing, Edna Kenna, a Fast Breaker, Winning, 8 to 1. JAMAICA RACE TRACK, L. 1, June 24,—Bad starts have been the ‘all important topic of race-goers re- cemly. Favorites have been beaten day in and day out at the post until now the subject has become almost an obsession with those who can see no reason why favorites should he beaten, with all things equal. The first rate of the day here furnished a con- timuance of the complaint of the methods employed in getting the fields away trom the barrier. FIRST RACE, Kos sited fire Betting. ‘og. a i 7 ok 7.49 2% ‘Atkin, Hight Hine Rook, Dr. so, tanm, iroousvele, Lady Morse, Divan, ‘Helle of the Soratphed—"Startling, Tritwlo, Cremer The favorite Broomvale was prac- tically left standing, and as a result finished a bad fifth to the accom- paniment of roars and hoots of dls- approval, Edna Kenna, « fast break- er, chased away from the barrier like a quarter horse. Plumose tried to catch her, but failed dismally, and never could gain an inch. Edna Ken- na won breezing with Plumose, fii- ishing under ¢ whip a length in front of Little ‘Alta, ECOND RACE. Styee.roar-olde ond wymmard; rare g Poet 0: one LO}, Oe ‘hime, len outt pace dite: Ear: Ve uince— Benita jtte. Trainer. M. Bann Ih Home, weight and Jocks r Pl Te: Ben Quince, 10 ahs er wo e ton, Ben Quince has evidently run him- self into form, judging by the way he beat the field in the second race, He raced off in front, only to be taken, back by McTaggart on the back stretch, behind Robinetta, until the far turn, when he moved to the front and stayed there to the end, Robi- netta held on in game fashion and easily beat Loveland for the place. Paton “walked” away from the post as he usually does, trailed the field un- til the far turn, then threatened to come on, only to stop badly in the stretch, THIRD BAOE Won liandily by Peay o' Day. Johan, ‘Trainer, ing. Winner, oh, ¢, ty Bal fit wier, | F. OT Betting. i, Home, washt and jockey Big. 5 Ts 8: 7Mae Maiden, 98 at ca 10 185 | Also ran—Piay, Lady Barbery Another bad start marked the Tempest agreed to the ordeal, provid- ing that her own physician, Dr. Forbes Hawkes of the Presbyerian Hospital, were present. Just! . Delahanty so ordered and, at Miss Tempest's re- quest the hour was set for 3 o'clock Continued en Second Page.) ——_——. 7 GERMAN SUBMARINES PASSED GIBRALTAR INTO that tho distance a German subma- rine travelled in going to to the Dar- danelles was 5,000 miles, whereas the is only 8,609 miles. “This,” the newspaper was quoted as saying, “is an undisguised warning to the United States that In event of America making war on Germany, German submarines are ready to cross [the Atlantic and torpedo American men-of-war. We hope the news will make the war party In America think twice, distance from Bremen to New York! |having been received from Rome that | MEDITERRANEAN SEA, June %.—Official TOKIO, reports seven German submarines have suc- cessfully entered the Mediterranean through the Strait of Gibraltar, the Japanese companies have Issued warnings to all steamers traversing the Mediterranean and also to extend war insurance on vessels from Mar- |" weilles to Port Said, } : viclan, Max Steuer, Mis mpest's counsel, characterized it as out- | rageous suggestion.” Finally, Miss hird racet—he Mighigan, one of the lcart’s features, ‘This tmie it was |Plxy which was left, Rhine Maiden |was away first and Top o' the Morn- ing next. After the first sixteenth |Top o the Morning went to the front jand although he did not open his usual gap, he went on to win by a length in handy fashion, Sea Shell, which was close enough up all th way, had more left than Rhine Maid- | jen in the stretoh run and got the place by a length from the latter, Pixy closed a lot of ground, af! ing lengths out of it and was beaten for third only by a length and « halt FOURTH RACE. Stakes; for two-year olde; a Post 4.03 value Wine) ‘Owner, © place same h "flan ‘ ment Hil * wer “York tr Tagen Ling, Var “|was compelled to go to the home of | ALIMONY AND DIVORCE va iit Universit LATONIA RESULTS. Fist Wace, Jonge 0 (Jones), 1.00 2-8, oot sa inland ond an ” linen seth gp JAMAICA ENTRIES, JAMAICA RACE TRACK, L. IL, June 4.—The entries for to-morrow's races are as follows: wag {BST, RA oe. hal re y 2 rw Yeas Mine ‘Meter, ree-vear olde and yp: RAC ~. For, ‘esinune, ‘yg ier ie sae He 1 a Rendicap: t m vga ite and a sense: Thorns ls od L 3 112; Lasull, 105; AFTER FLAG RAISING Thought Headache Would Be Only Temporary but Had to Forego the Afternoon Exercises Mayor John Purroy Mitchel was taken il during the flag dedication ceremonies at the City Hall at noon to-day and was unable to take part in the tablet unveiling and other cero- montes held later in the afternoon. The Mayor 1s suffering from one of his jungle fever headaches, It was noted that he wan pale and weak at the beginning of the flag raising. At 12.80 o'clock he was un- able to stand the pain any longer and Paul Wilson, one of his secretaries, at No, 121 Washington Place. “T'll be back in an hour,” he told Gov, Whitman, Mayor Blankenberg of Philadelphia and others who were to have been his guests at luncheon at the Whitehall Club, However, after remaining at Mr. Wilson's home an hour, Mr. Mitchel was in such condition that he was hurried to his own home in the Peter Stuyvesant Apartments in Riverside Drive, His private secretary, Theo- dore Rousseau, read bis speech in the afternoon celebration. > FOR MRS, M’KINNEY Wife Will Get $25,000 in Cash and Interest on $160,000 in Trust Company Mrs, Annette Reynaud McKinney obtained @ divorce to-day from Glenn Ford McKinney in the Superior Court | at Bridgeport, Conn,, on the «round | of desertion, Mr. McKinney ts ordered to give bis | with the Equitable Trust Company of | New York, who will pay the income | to Mrs, MoKinney. She also receives | the seven-aere estate ‘at Greenwich, !Conn, The Court further orders that Mr. MeKinney shall send their six- teen-year-old son Raymond to a pri- school and later to Princeton | | rane y Letter VIENNA (via Berlin wireless), June 24.—Emperor Franz Joref received the Spanish Ambassador to-day and de- byes « personal letter to King Alfonso, 4) a iched— Tos orn Succem, Blue Hosa, capressing (riendly sentiments, t I | o'clock this evening, WILSON CONFERS WITH COL. HOUSE VON LISINGEN'S ARMY ONEUROPEANWAR) CHASES THE RUSSIANS “| Stops for Day at Roslyn, L, L., on Way to His Summer Home. GOES TO GOLF LINKS. Declines ‘to Address Meeting Because. Trip Is Only for Rest. Two hundred feet above Hempatead Bay President ‘Wilson is spending a restful day in the summer home of Gordon Auchincloss, at Roslyn, L. I. Midden away by shrubbery and [screened ‘by trees, with Secret Mer- viee man bn gyard at the gate to keop wwey all Intruders, the Presi- with Col. BE. M. House, father-in-law of Mr. Auchin- close and thé President's unofficial source of information on the EQro- pean conflict. pulled out of the Pennsylvania Sta- tion at 6.17 o'clock this morning and was atopped in the yards while Mr. Wilson and Dr. Grayson had their breakfast. Two of Long Island City’s most imposing policemen joined the six Secret Service men in guarding the car during the meal. At # o'clock the two policemen climbed aboard with the rest of the body guard and the car proceeded to Roslyn, where it arrived an hour later. Then they. entered the waiting automobile of Col, House and Mr. Auchinoloss and rode to the Auchin- closs home, two and @ half miles north of town, Later in the day the Colonel will report to the President upon the in- terview he had with the leading Gov- ernment officials of Germany, Great Britain and France. There is to be nothing official in those interviews, but they are expected to throw some light upon the possibilities of peace proposals. After a conference of an hour and a half, and shortly before luncheon, the President and Col, House, their arms linked, took a walk over the country roads for a mile to the bome of Harold Godwin, a personal friend of both, whose house was once oc- cupied by William Cullen Bryant, The President was shown over the home and then walked back to Auch- ineloss, During their walk the Pre: dent and Col. House apparently were engaged in serious conversation, After luncheon the President was npted to visit the golf links at Piping Rock, a short auto ride away, | A Becret Service man was dispatched | tor the President's clubs, which were | in the private car at the station, During the morning a telegram was received from Herman Ritter, editor of the Staats Zeitung, asking the President to address a meeting in New York before going north. The wife $25,000 and to deposit $160,000 | telegram was answered by Dr. Gray-| North German Gazette, Govern- son, who sald the President was reat- ing and could not address any meetings. ‘The President's oar will be attached to the train leaving Roslyn at 7.18 He will dine tn the car. Jersey through the tube and will be| taken to-night on the Federal Express bound north. The President is to ar- rive at Cornish, N. H., the summer | capital, early to-morrow morning, dent. is ideally situated to have a i | Aulet conference The President's private car was) taken to Long Island City, where ity It will be taken back to New| ACROSS THE DNIESTER Berlin Reports That the Czar’s Troops Fought Desperately at Lemberg Until the Austro-Ger- mans Had Broken Lines in Two. NEW DRIVE IN BALTIC PROVINCE IS PLANNED BERLIN, via The Hague, June 24.—"On to Paris!” was the cry that ran through Berlin to-day on the wave of enthusiasm that has followed the capture of Lemberg. Popular sentiment unanimously favors an abandonment of the Gal- ician offensive in favor of a gigantic drive on the French capital. In the streets, in the shops, everywhere people assembled to talk of the victory over the Russians, was voiced the belief that the Galician army hosts should be hurried from their scenes of triumph in the east and hurled against the Frerich and British lines in Northern France. No hint has come from the War Office regarding what Is to follow the fall of Lemberg. But well informed military men here to-day doubted |that Mackensen’s armies would be seen in action along the Franco-Flan | ders line in the near future, The general belief is that Germany will send reinforcements into the Russian Baltic provinces and renew the drive upon Riga. The Kaiser is | said to be determined to deal the Czar’s armies a blow from which they can not well recover before starting a fresh offensive against the French. In offictal circles it was declared that the importance of the Austre- German victories in Galicia cannot be overestimated. It was sald thet since Mackensen began his forward movement on May 1 he has retaken’ more territory than 1s included in the New England States of America, He has practically cleared Galicia of enemy troops and has reserved s terri- tory rich in copper, sinc and ofl. Miners already are en route to Galicia te Teopen the abandoned shafts where copper deposits as rich as those af * Michigan and Montana lie buried. SS 2 56 BRITONS KILLED, 138 HURT IN AIR RAIDS German Airships Have Bombarded Coast Towns Fourteen Times During War. LONDON, June 24.—Fifty-six per- sons have been killed and 188 injured in fourteen air raids on English towns since the beginning of the war, Under Home Secretary Brace stated in the House of Commons this afternoon. The attacks were chiefly on unde- fended towns, he said. bod ate the casualties as follows: Kil 21 women and 11 children: 5 women and 17 children, ——_— NO BELLIGERENT ASKS PEACE, SAYS BERLIN A further victory for the Aue- tro-German forces in Galicia wae announced to-day at army head- quarters. The army of Gen. von Linsingen, which has been meet- ing with stubborn from the Russians along the | Dniester River front, ed in crossing the river, Von Linsingen, is pressing forward in an effort to cut the lines of com- munication between army that retreated from Lembery and the forces operating around Stanislau. Detaile of the taking of Lemberg show that the Russian troops put up ® strong resistance to the very last, and this in spite of the fact that their situation was hopeless, Before the city fell the armies un- der Gen, von Mackensen and Arch- duke Joseph Ferdinand had driven wedges deep into the northern sec- tion of the Russian line, even as far as Tanew, cutting bis line into two detached parts. Under pressure from the north- west, and following especially an ef- feotive artillery bombardment by the army of Gen. Boehm-Ermolll, the Archduke completed the disaster by breaking the Russian centre which was oupported on Lemberg. At the same time Gen. von Mackensen pressed steadily on the soldiers Emperor Nicholas, who retreat along the fine to Rawa Ruska, Gen, assumed the pursuit of the the northeast and east of As soon as the investment berg had been completed, the sians, threatened by the vance of the Germane ment Organ, Gives Flat Denial to Rumors. BERLIN (via wireless to Bayville, L. L), June 24.—The North German Gazette, the official organ of the Ger- man Government, to-day declared that, rumors to the contrary notwith- standing, none of the hostile nations hi hed Germany with a nee the beginning of the i EB 22 Hi it i i Imperial knows ‘nothing of reports that any of the bel ts is preparing to sue for peace, tated, '

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