The evening world. Newspaper, November 19, 1915, Page 1

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om —= “ Pedestrians Are Thfown From Their Spe tener pn ermine ete corner Se FANSL Copyright, 1918, Oe. ne’ New __PRICE “ONE CENT. fork We Press Publish: ing World) YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 19 15. Sone MS eg Ry -Mile Gale Hits City and Coast; Many Hurt, Damage Heavy ‘Che | “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ Weather—Rain and colder to-night; Saturday clearing, . FANSL PRICE ONE ‘OENT. Circulation Books Open to All.”’ 2 8 ? A G td 8 ———o—— HILLSTROM DEFIES THE FIRING SQUAD AS HE IS SHOT TO DEATH FOR MURDER - SCORE INURED IN STREETS AS SIGNS ARE BLOWN DOWN AND WAGONS UPSET BY WIND Feet by the Blow—Steamships in Harbor Crash— Damage Is . Heavy Along the Coast. * & seventy-one-mile gale from the southeast swept up the Atlantic Coast and through New York City today, causing great damage to property and injuries to many persons. H'tting the city at midnight, the wind in- creased in velocity during the morning and forenoon. It was very violent @uring the hours when New York was going to its work. Shipping in the bay and harbor was de™oralized. A big freighter was torn from its anchorage off Liberty Isrend and crashed into another. In- coming steamships did not dare to make their way by the Hook. One that attempted it set signals for two tugs to help her along. Bath houses and protective tiling ¢——$—<—&$@<—$____ Manhatten Peach to see cate stone | LIST OF INJURED IN THE HEAVY BLOW the Coney Island ocean front. Signs were ripped from stores all along Surf Avenue and the Bowery. Yachts The police report the following per- Sons injured in the storm: BLOOK, HARRY, carpenter, thirty-two years at City Island suffered severely old, of No, 316 Kast One Hundredth Street Behooners anchored there were torn from the moorings and crashed to- gether. From all along the Jersey coast came reports of damage to] struck by wutomobile at Park Avene and One A Hundred and Kighty-third Street while he held orts and shipping Wyman resorts 80d: shipping umbrella against the wind, To Fordham Hoe A barge was reported to be in dis-) pital, euffering fren internal tafuriea, tress somewhere off the northern | prap, anranaw 582 Beck A: . the coast of New Jersey. ‘The message | Bronx; bit by fall at Fifth Avenue and Twenty-third Street, fealp wounds, BYERS, JOHN, of No, 838 Prospect Place, came to Sandy Hook over the tele- jellevue Howpttal with phone wire that connects the Coast Guard stations along the shore, but before the name of the station could be learned, or the location of the barge, the wire was snapped by the storm and the phone went dead. The wind reached the maximum of | its strength by noon and then began | Res brulee of the fase and sions of the left elbow, MOND, A, La, sixty yoars old, @ clerk, ot No, 84 West One Hundred and Thirty-eighth Suet, blown against an electric light pole in front of No, 17 Battery Place, His left shoulder was dislocated and scalp lacerated to fall off. At 1 o'clock the machines lawaers Lge in the Weather Bureau registered ALDO, VInC ENz0, ot No, 1 sistenth forty-one miles an hour, Tho fore-| gysiigit of store at No, 1602 Neptune Avemee 1602 Neptuue Avenue south- caster said that a series of easterly gules might be looked for In a statement issued by the Weath- | er Bureau at Washington the storm was called “one of the most remark- able developments witnessed in recent was blown in, CIANNINI, VINCENZO, No, 1002 Neptune Ave : cut ahd bruised when skylight of store was blown in. CININEL, SAMUEL, thirty, of No, 488 Jerome Brooklyn; head out by flying glass at » Broadway No, year COHEN, JACOB, driver, of No, 468 Riverdale In Now York City many persons| Avenuo, hit by falling sig at No, 41 Latayotte were injured, ‘Two women wore| Street, | Skull fractured, To ‘Hudson Street jcopltal, blown from thelr feet in City Hall Park and badly bruised. Three per- sons—two girls and a man—were hurt when an iron sign weighing 200 pounds was blown from the six-story . JOSEPH, forty, . Ann's Aven laborer, of No 190 hit by falling sign at One ty-eighth Street and ‘Thint atusions of scalp and back, ORG, carpenter, No, 2550 Thint 1 at te Lafayette Street, Avenue; struck by falling sign et One Hundred building ¥ and ‘Thirty-elghth Street and Third Avenue; contusion of back. (Continued on Second Page.) piel At KATZ, ISIDOR, nineteen, of No, 100 Kast Broadway; hurt by broken’ window at No, 880 STORM ON COAST FROM Broad way no FLORIDA TO MAINE | U02uxea. pnd. nineteen yearn off, of No, + Elisabeth Street, hit by sign at No. 41 Street, io Hudaon Street Hospital WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—Heavy Mis IDA, of Tarchmont; hit by gales and rain whiped the Atlantic} falling sign in Fifth avenue near ‘Twenty-sccond Coust from Jacksonville to Bastport, | Steets ankle broken, ata GGA adniiiar sondivions preva: MBISER, ABRAITAM, thirts-two, of No, 106 In n tervale Avenue, the Broux; right cheek out by through the Great Lakes region and) iniken window at No. 580 Broadway the Ohio Valley during the night in MORGAN N, ISAAC, Aiaty-nine, plano teacher, what the Weather Bureau oMicials| of Kast Sisty-elghth Street, blows described as “one of the most re-| from the sidewalk on Kights-seventh Street near markable storm developments in} imal Fark West, receiring fractured skull ny years.” The two storms early many yea ¥ TCH, ANNIE. fifty, struck by bottle to-day were heading toward each augue oui @othn, et Non oxo eesl toe other and moving northeastwardly. teenth Street; skull fractured, Taken to Bel: Early reports from along the South | !¥¥ Atlantic Coast indicated that shipping | CONNOR, KATE, thirty-two, dressmaker, of No, 134 Kast Forty-aixt blown dow: had prett storm's fury Killena was esxeuped the tween Var nt fractured, 4 Thumb find néo. Flower Hospital U-BOAT RAIDERS SINK FOUR MORE BRITISH WARSHIPS _— > Berlin Reports Activity of Ger-| man Submarines in the Mediterranean. TWO GUNBOATS SUNK. Auxiliary Cruiser and Armed Merchant Ship Also Sent to the Bottom. BERLIN, Nov. 19 (via London).— Two British gunboats have been sunk in the Mediterranean, off the Esyp- tian const, by a German submarine. Official announcement to this effect was made by the Admiralty to-day. A British auxiliary cruiser was pnt out of action, The statement fol- lows: “A submarine on Nov. 6 in Sollum Harbor, destroyed by fire two Anglo- Egyptian gunboats—the Prince Ab- bas and the Abdul Menem—each of which was armed with two guns, The same submarine ailenced with its fire an armed British merchant steamer and captured tts gun, “One of the submarines on Nov. 5, on the North African coast, sank by a torpedo the British auxiliary cruis- er Para.” Naval records contain the names of two Egyptian gunboats—Abdel Monaym and Abbas—which probably are the warships referred to in the German announcement. The Abdel Monaym, 598 tons, was built in 1902. The Abbas, 298 tons, was built in 1891, and, according to the latest naval records, was armed with one 3-pound gun, The Gulf of Sollum ts on the North Coast of Africa at the boundary be tween Exypt and Tripoli No British vessel Para tioned in nav corde, KITCHENER IN CONFAB WITH FRENCH GENERAL Sees Sarrail at Salonica and Leaves Grecian Port Without Debarking. is men 4 SALONICA (Via Paris), Nov. 19. Field Marshal Earl Kitchener, the British Secretary of War, to-day con- ferred with Gen. rrail, commander- in-Chief of the French Army of the Orient, and left immediately without debarking. Field Marshal Lord London Noy Ketchener left 6 for the Eastern Madi- terranean in order to investigate the situation on the Gallipoli peninsula, in, Sir Charles Monro, Com- of the British forces at the Dardanelles, having made a report recommending that the troops be withdrawn. A despatch from Athens under date of Nov. 18 said that the British Secre- tary of War had arrived at the Island of Mudros in the Aegean Sea and had later left for the Gallipoll peninsula WINNERS AT BOWIE. FIRST WACK Shor tw ' Brunswick, G nay VILUS, Mr Washing the South, hisses ead Hat al yi Men's O’coats & Suits, $5. 95 Hipeipps eb este hy Oh aE Me Ie (one: Wasiwentn } ROMA, PANNE are 0 ft No. 74 B . i nd Btw Muthorry 31 ta # Ne Dlack thibet pene i i ‘ dork mixed v edly all sive $ to 44 lynne t ' ie Worth $12 in uny other store. Our spe: | “ nd Suture: celal price to Open Saturday wight till 10. 95.95, Hub | ihe ak Bighty-« ntsal Park Woot anda Hoh feel thigh “ ‘ Wet ‘ hott ati " ‘ Stiner. | i HK i} \ r ON Ben x exp old 1 furlong a Wn * 4 $4. Bo, " 1 Hi 1 sinh rim wo ON Peale M W i tithe nan i a rf) 5 H . 6 “ime. | aud 6 Knickerbocker Set! re, Broadway, cor, Barclay st,—| ey nish itl, Rey. akwond, Catton “ep, Wal White’ avy, wrighass, Petia aloo’ ran,” Y*%°8 ILW.w. Poet Who Died To- Day by Shooting i in Salt Lake City JOO OOOO JOSEPH HILL STRO! MONASTIR REPORTED TAKEN; 0,000 MORE SERBS CAPTURED Serb Force of 50,000 Driven Back by 80, 000} Bulgars Along the Southern Line—Allies Can Give No Aid. | ) BERLIN, Noy. 19 (by Wireless to Sayville).—The capture of 5,000 Ser. bians belonging to the main army was announced today by the War Office. LONDON, Nov. 19.—No war despatches have come to London from either Athens or Salonica since early Thursday morning. The silence, if not caused by Greek censorship, is regarded as most ominous for the Serbian armies, which are engaged In a precarious retreat in the face of an overwhelming force of Austro-German-Bulgartan invaders. sistance in their dificult retreat, ‘Dp sald exeit CALL IN RAGE ~ASSAILS HAYWARD Over Court Row Motion to Action gainst Third Avenue Line. |H AYWARD LOSES FIGHT. “If 1 Were Throw You Out Judge in Case I'd if You Kicked!” Shouts McCall. At a meeting of the Public Service Commiaston this afternoon, Chairman McCall his mently denounced Hayward for insisting the Commis- lost temper and vehe- Commissioner sion take legal action to compel the |'Third Avenue Raliroad Company to |repair its tracks in Weat Forty-nec- ond Street, as demanded by the the- atrical managers and property own- ers. ATP. S.C. MEETING | Take} AS EXECUTIONER TAKE AIM LW. W. LEADER SHOUTS AT THEM, “FIRE! LET HER G0!” | Fighting Furiously, He Attacks Keep- ersas Death March Is to Be Taken Up—‘Will Not Die Like Coward,” He Cries. MEETS DEATH BLINDFOLDED AS HE SITS IN A CHAIR. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Nov. 19.—With a defiant ery of “Firet | Let her go!” on his lips, Joseph Hillstrom, itinerant poet and 1. W. We leader, was shot to death at 7.42 A. M. to-day by a firing squad of five riflemen, Four bullets pierced his heart as he sat blindfolded and strapped ina chair, The shots were fired from a distance of twenty paces through portholes cut in the door of the prison blacksmith shop, in which the exe- cutioners were hidden, Hayward pressed a motion that| ‘This was the State's penalty for the counsel to the Commission be In- LITTLE GIRL HEROINE {eres John G. Morriaon, a grocer, structed to proceed tn court against and his son Arling, a crime which the railroad company, He was vot- Gov. Spry, in refusing President Wil- od down, three to one, McCall, Will- jams and Wood stand ng toxether against him Then Commissioner Wood tracked the proceedings again by moving that counsel simply be in structed McCall, this and Hayward against it the proceedings a company During the to investigate and report Thus, uinst the railroad In sidetracked. Chairman McCall to Hayward 4 snap of my were a8 Jobate lly “Lt don't care finger not pros shall be shout this proceeding. 1 pose that tihs Commission aide. Williams and Wood voted for | put in a ridiculous ht when it gets int ocourt. [ want my record to how that I exercised common sense | in the matter and I won't be carried off my feet.” “| want to tell you that if | sat as a judge in this Third Avenue case | would take you by the scruff of the neck and throw you out into the middle of the street if you came in to me and made a son's wt nd plea for the condemned man, Was one of the most brutal ever committed In Utah, Under Utah law Hilistrom was allowed to choose be- tween shooting and hanging, One of the guns used in his execution ecar- ried a blank cartridge, Hilistrom went to death fighting in ingham Thought Rescuer an Insane fury, He tied the door of hia cell with strips torn from his Was Her Father. blanket, and fought the guard fiercely . = with the handle of a broom he had PINNED UNDER CAR ASKS ‘DADDY’ T0 SAVE Seven-Year-Old Ruth Froth- Ruth Frothingham, tho seven-year, |*Mitehed from an attendant in the old daughter of Charles Frothir 5, | Sonor, New York fireman, The prisoner reti calmly last getiaol (acday te night. He remained apparently in Hull Stree Bn Her sister, sleep until early this morning, About Helen, twelve years old, was on full] 4 Clock he arose and began to shake time, but ttle Ruth was not dugun-|the cell door, shrieking as if in a ti! 10.80 o'clock, She got as farasthe|Plehtmare, All the prison officers corner when the gale blew her um-| rushed In. The prison physician tried brella inside out. The child went| With slight success to quiet the man. It was decided not to interfere with him until necessary, and he wae not disturbed until the time arrived to home crying, Mrs, Frothingham told her daugh- the ter not to cry about umbrella, complaint about it. Wrapped her still more warmly and, take him to the scene of the execu- Unconfirmed reports have come through Rome and Paris that the Bul-| “I want to know before I vote faded iat Hee #0 out again into the storm, | tion. is back of the action, I want to know] Tho delay had made the child a littl When the guards arriv sarian advance guards have entered Monsatis, whether Lam Justified in placing my-| late, and sho ran along the sidewalk | purpe Witenes Vea none The Serblans probably will retire self on record and that Iam not go-| with her hoad bent against the gale.Jagely with the broom handle, which to the heights between Prilep and| railway from Mitrovitza south t# not |ing to ultlinately make an ass of my-| A Rockaway Avenue car bound| he had broken in two, leaving a sharp Monastir, the inhabitants of which|4V#ilable, as the Bulgarians bar t elf and reflect on this Commission, | north approached Hull Street as the] p 1 iad A Deputy War 1] Way at the Uskub junction and the|-rhere Is no will/child was akipped off curb. | den. re ihe ghia # are taking refuge in Albanian and | icatonanik Pass, while the most ava © oft Motorman Davia had no: Hitlatng ee Greek territory. Large numbershave| able roads are pot suitable for the f wie aaumd teal poaa: cone a » Hitlstrom’s weapon. lait. arrived at Florina, Greece, but the| transport of large armies With KUNS|remper and t ad Wil Wisi: Ruth ae atrial fn ee -. eh tae Seen i more well-to-do are going to Sal-|¢od commissariat wagons |voting dow i shboard, He od y manitheted Mah regia, Pest onica. | n a fow yards but tho b and to him The military Governor of sronastir| AUSTRIAN SUBMARINE iHOT FIGHTING REPORTED |: ne was fast in the forward 1 s is all nonsense,” gaid 1s reported to have appointed a com- | amar "esant taleahonea ate w to you mean? You mittee of notables to preserve order, REPORTED DESTROYED! IN HILLS OF ALSACE.» te ‘Knattie Oto; He ani Smeal ne ' 8 : lke a man.” but it is feared it will not be possible ' | : baura and pried the tar wpe| ft stcom hesitated sap to restrain the bands of Komitajis ; ie ——— | Wireman) Mhomas ‘Giasuan erator’ ” through," he said, “But (rregulars) in the environs of the|l{aly and France Using Fast Vessels , linhonias Pickton: awied ine 4 can't blame a man for fighting sity, to Drive U-Boats From | Artillery, Tirengh:Gngines: and Grane te store: che car qwaalcalent Biel ee wate The Serbian army 1s expected to re- . . | ades All Used in the M isapan cae was ralsed. The} 1 will die Aghting—not lke 9 treat toward Albania, It Is estimated Mediterranean. \ * ? ward,” he shouted, while the guards there are 50,000 Serbs in the Monastir — = Coml Rhee oct ne ' pinioned bis arms to his sides, jregion opposed to more than 80,0 ROMP, Nov, 19. ition by , , bt i t ivged him to cease fighting Bulgars Franco-Italian torpedo cat tan} PAR a a Fa fe the death chair quietly, The Austro-German advance from Austrian submaring in the Medi ; Le ak t resistance was useless the northwest approaches the Sanja! ! ranean 1s reported toda zat " weitled down suddenly to of Novibazur, having reacted to tho| | ig eee \ ne north of Reska, Thence it pass oe ae 7 . ad LEG Me I with @ clear con- through Kursumlya and Radan, end nbined in formation of « Motil In A ie t@ point between Leskovatz fast snvall ve ' >the firing squad w Vranya, ‘The occupation of Kursum- | own, the , , rou ! ‘Warden -Arthanties lya brings the invaders close to Mitro: I the African cou u t ! vitza and gives them the key to one ats have been ext ated i} of the few great crossroads cutting 1, between two deputy sher Serbia from west to east, 1 ' n's eyes Were not bl There appears to be no hope th f di been taken into the Anglo-French 4 lund ’ ard. (t washes wishto Salonica can give the Serbs any a 1 ‘ (ve uid bas won-| face the fying squad with open eyes, Gerful vitality, (but @ thick, heayy band of eleth was B}

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