The evening world. Newspaper, December 10, 1915, Page 17

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—- CONSUL GENERAL |” FACES PROSERUTON "IN PASSPORT ASE Charge von Nuber With Try- ing to Get Papers Through ’ the British Lines, i USE U. S. DOCUMENT. Lansing Agrees to Criminal Action on Demand of At- torney General Gregory. WASHINGTON, Doo. 10—The De-| wertment of Justice has « full report @m the facts concerning the manner ‘m= wOieh the Austrian Consul Gon- evel in New York, Count Alexander wea Nuber de Pereked, attempted te emuggie correspondence through | the British lines, presumably under} the shield of an American passport. ‘These facts, along with others, lagve been laid before the State De- pertment, with the suggestion that mt to lay the facts before the Grand Jury, so that vem Naber can be indicted. Secre- tary Lansing formerly appeared to be opposed to this procedure, but It is anderstood that he has finally con- sented to allow the Attorney General to proceed. RR ta also reported that District At- tevney Marshall, in New York, has aso busy recently examining several employees of the Austrian Consula! here, among thom several stenogr: phers, messengers, &o. | OMicials of tho State Department would not comment to-day on tho Deobable action to be taken by this Government in the case. In the event | teat Baron Zwiedinck, Charge d'Af- faire of the Austrian Embassy, can be shown to have been a party to the eetion of von Nuber, tho State De- partment will ask for his recall, According to information given to the department by the Providence Jeurnas the Amerioan citizen who used Alp port to wid von Nuver is Mar- cus Braun of New York, editor of Fair | CAROLINA, ODILA and CHARLES SOINS«« here by the Rev. John de Ville of steamship Nieuw relatives in the Middle West or be given homes in Chicago, about half of them are ex- pected to be released from Ellis Island The rest\will be detained for further medical observation, Play, who left that city June 10 on the Beandinavian-American liner Us- e When the steamer tp ot Kirkwall Braun ie hoped the document jon of a seat in Britieh officers, how: papers and took thom. dipek ts deciared to have written to von Nuber afterward asking if he had | intrusted to Braun “an official report destined for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, together with the official ac- ; eounts of the Consulate,” and if “the e Were taken from him in an Eng- iii harbor.” There has been a wide rift between the State Department and the De- partment of Justice since von Nuber's name was mentioned in relation with apunition conspiracies. Secretary Lansing has been anxious to dispose of the ence by diplomacy, but fe understood that Attorney Gener, Gregory preferred to have von Nuber indicted without delay, thereby re- meving the necessity for action of « r sort. | ry Lansing, apparently in- | fluenced by diplomatic consideratio: usually has demurred to this policy of hesance failure to find the guilty Oscar IL, I was met by 4 servanc umight embarrass this Government in ¢rom the consulate on tne boat who ~ Preparedness The Vital Factor-- not alone in affairs of the Nation, but with the health of every citizen, One stidom knows when the common enemy, sickness, in one form or another, is about to strike; and the best form of preparedness is to keep body and brain healthy. Active brains and vigorous bodies are the result of right living—food plays a big part. Grape-Nuts made of whole wheat and malted barley, supplies all the bone- and brain muscle-making elements of the grains, including the vital salts, often lacking in the diet of many, Grape-Nuts is easily digested—comes read; and dust-proof packet is opened. With nourishment. A ration of Grape-Nute each day is a safe play for health, and “‘There’s a Reason” ——sold by Grocers everywhere. e Little Refugees From. War-Stricken Belgium Who Have Sought Haven of Refuge in America & - ee Ses 3 so Tey Pp 2% jan refugees brought]}on the Nieuw Amsterdam was Mrs. | lived there three weeks with the cow, Anastasia Korchepitz of Wilmington, Del, who was visiting in her native near Czernowitz, } Galicia, when the war Logan, On the farm where sho was stay- ing was an old cellar with hay and potatoes in it, When the Russians came, she drove a cow into the cellar and then hid there herself, conceal- ing the entrance with tree boughs. She drinking milk and eating potatoes | while the cow munched the hay. Then | the Russians Ieft and she came out. | sWith the arrival of the Austrian! however, she hid with the cow again, until some high officers arrived in the neighborhood and she felt safo enough |to show herself. She then sold the cow to the Austrians for cnough to pay her faro here. ' |its international dealing: ment of Justice iy sot The De-!said he had loft a package in my tateroom for me to mail on the other told the servant or messenger purpose can be that 1 would look after it, the diplomatic arise from the f by considering angles that might lure of the Govern- ment to get verdicts against these asked to mail or express it from the | en. Baron Zwiedinek, In his package disappeared | te hi wrote the coi | return to New York w neral von Nuber, ald no great harm had been no and that the loss of the pack- would be an inconvenience to his clerks, who would have to repair the won, because this as made no amends for inaming von Nuber in a semi-official | statement as one of the men who are ‘complaint, by impl. | Government h: It is understood that he | got a non-committal answer. Detective McDonough Dead. m C, McDonough, attached to the Sixth Branch Bureau in died of Bright's di sof Papers Admitted by Bra Braun when told of ence Journal story sald: ents was given by me to the De- rtment of Justice here last week, hy my sailing from Brooklyn on the {known as a lightweight pugilist Aghting 10 hod disappeared from § building, nerve- and Phosphate of potash, etc., but imperative for bounding good health. | Yorit and then |b ly for table directly the germ-proof, moisture good milk or cream Grape-Nuts supplies complete SEEKS DIVORCE FROM |flames, she would have writhed or at- | tempted to run and would undoubted- jburned shoes had been modish. Leader, $75 | /HE SPANKED HIS WIFE, < THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1915. FIND CHARRED BODY ZIGZAGCING TAXICAB OF A WOMAN NEAR RICH MAN'S HOUSE, ONE EMD, 2INURED, sr wn 80S heen ‘ | $40,000 TO SAVE CHILDREN.. jChauffeur Dies in Hospitat Burned Beyond Recognition,| \Where Other Victims Lie— | Was Probably Murdered Else- | Vehicles Wrecked. where and Dragged There. NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 10. ahadow Pgncre Now Orieana’s most |" Fifth Avenue near Sixty-fourth fashionable residences the body of a|Btreat early this morning killed one girl was found carly yesterday, tho|man and landed two others in the foatures and clothing burned beyond | Moupitat the point of identification. Rajesh tape It in the general bellee that the| The men are Maximilian Lamar, young woman was murdered at eome a lithographer, who says his homo other place, the body taken to the |! in Canada, but that he is now place where tt was found and burned stopping at the Hotel Astor; Harry to destroy identification. Carr, the owner and driver of the The police say there is a pomstbil- | taxicab, of No. 68% Tenth Avenue; ity of suicide, but this they say is )and Patrick Keogan, of No. 446 Wost In the) not backed by the circumstances, Fitty-sighth Street, tho driver of | A milkman making @ delivery at|the milk wagon. Carr died in the daylight at the home of Frank Vat- | hospital ter, wealthy merchant, atumbled over) Lamar is thought to havo a frac- the blackened and ebarred body lying | tured skull. Keegan's left kneo was in the sheiter of an abutment of the | badly wrenched. A second passenger Vatter home and shielded from view | with Lamar in the taxicab, Sigmund of the street or from an adjacent | Spingarm of No. 52 West Nineteenth re gine! YS sae oe boats Street, escaped without a scratch, house were iable to explain the| Keegan was delivering hs morn- f the corpas, ing milk when the taxi came down of the house on which the| the avenue. Pedestrians who had body was found is not occupied, they | watched it for ten blocks in sur- a. And (Ail of the windows | prise told Pollcoman Braumchio, of ation proves that the body | the East Sixty-seventh Street Sta- gn the spot where It was /tion, that Carr drove trom one side Keurched “into tee vpaveine Was lof the street to the other, and ap- s © the pav ft leaves und bits of paper in the pave. |PAarently did not know the milk ment cracks had beck burned, Wagon was there until he landed Hosides the fow bits of ‘charred | against it, head on, pe pola sinwie heen reat ihe | Braumohle had to drag Lamar tained an inflammable fluid, anda halg| from under the wreckage. jburnt match stem, The girl appeared | police say that Carr was much tho | to be about olghteen yoars old, ite wi 5 bee es A murder theory is accepted by the | Worse for wear, and no member of , however, because of the evi- |tho taxicab party was able to givo shown in the ashes of the re-|a very definite necount of where mains, ‘These were not soattered, Dut thoy had been, or what doing remained distinctly in the outline of sac Peal body, None of the ashes were ‘ed, a8 Would have been the, U. %, Steel Tonnage Away Up. the police suggest, had the girl’ The United States Steel Corporation firo to herself, Tortured by the to.day reported unfilled tonnage totaled 7,189,489 on Nov. 30, against 6,165,452 1, 6,917,618 Sept. 30 und 3,324°599 EO. ly have screamed, No outcry was heard. | Serutiny of the premines showed = scraped markings that continuously | = followed the sidewalk from the front to the aide of the house where the body was discovered, Several | strands of brown hair were found on | the sidewalk a blook from where the| H| body was found. The victim, it is said, | PAY $1.00 A WEEK. | had brown hair. Particles of, ‘the victim's | dreas| Cc | bi showed that she ha worn mater! Of an expensive nature, Her under- olumbia garments were of linen and her i MAN SHE CAUGHT Mrs. Krauss Led Detectives in Chase Through Three States, With her husband and his aMnity in jall at Providence, R. 1, Mrs, Flor- ence A. Krauss, a sister of Gustav B. Schorn, a coffer merchant of No. 548 West Forty-sixth Street, to: prepared to have her erring husband served with papefs tn a sult for ab- solute divorce. Jutl sentencos for her husband, John F, Krauss, and a young woman he eloped with wero Mrs. Krauss's first demands. “My sister {s still suffering from the shock of her discoveries after she had sought her husband for a month,” Mr. Schorn sald to-day, “and sho ts resting with friends in the country Her lawyer, Franklin A. Mackenzlo, 1s going ahead with the sult, and when my sister ts divorced from Krauss she will be very happy.” Tho disclosures led to the sult came to Mrs, Krauss after her husband disappeared a month ago He gave up his position as travelling salesman for a shoe firm and was to take up the management of a de- partment store in Springfield, Mass., preliminary to going into business for himself. Mrs. Krauss remained with relatives here and @ month ago was startled to learn that ler husband hurried to Spr 1 private detective n the search. I he same day he disap that on . Miss Gertrude Percy, a sale ie depart girls in the store then said they bad heard the girl teli of being friendly with Krauss Mra. Krauss determined punishment of her husband woman he had eloped with, detectives tra Friday the ¢ rding hous th th At midnight a ed by Mrs, Krau entered thi ound Kre and the y« Krauss tric ap from a win dow in his night attire but was selzed. The girl pleaded with Mrs. Krauss for forgiveness and d young woman committed to an institution, Mr. and Mrs, Kr, bave been married thirteen years, WITH HIS “AFFINITY 1 s While She Was Standin, ll |It Was While S Standing Up,| | BUT NOT ACROSS KNEE. | So Cruelty Charge Is Dismissed. Between spasms of weeping, Henry R. Teepe, in the Chancellor's Court at Jersey City yosterday, told how he spanked his wife. The court held that his wife's charges of cruelty were not substantiated, and dismissed her sult for divorce. “You,"" sobbed Teepe, “L spanked my wife when she told me to shut up. But | I spanked her when she was standing up—and clothed—and it didn’t hurt much.” Teepe admitted that he beffeved his wife was a good woman, and that per- haps he had been hasty in belleving evil reports of her, Her physical chas- | tisement came after he had heard she was running after a druggist. 1] —vOX———— | PARAGRAPHS, ronautution,) utomobile we are | pay ned it on your! ation, 4 Bon'tilntt your well-earned vacation Get A Columbia On You need the rest, and your salary wi! Ne egrwarded ‘overs weet Tete ant) = Easy Payments equal to demands don't hesitate to draw We give you the advantage The last fish story You sent in was of our famous credit terms. greatly enjoyed by all hands because tt N. od t 4 Cc a rT 8 pore the stamp of truth. You are the|' No red tape. Come and open ean tell a fish story without an a charge account with the vantas coloring, | | || Completely enctosed upright ||| cabinet” grafonola, handsomely | finished in mahowany, satin | walnut, or quartered ‘oak, in olden, fumed or early Engliah ||) finish, | i | i Columbia Grafonolas $15 to $200 ‘ica. LIVING IN THE PRESE America (From the Le josh, Wd Uke Well, young drink you might “1 Know, 5) ‘ida’ & Sons 3rd Avenue | Park Row at 121et Street Chatham Sq. t store, left town. Othor | she did not know Krauss wa re ried. They were arrested and the next morning Krauss was sentenced to eight months in prison while the Lg . . e Gives most dishes ‘a more tempting flavor For instance, try it with chicken — fla- vored when cooking — Delicious. Send for our new Kitcben Recipe Hanger and learn how to make the most common- place dishes, appetizing, Sent free on request. LEA & PERRINS, 40 Hubert Street, New York City ‘TO PREVENT UNLOADIN SMASHES MILK WAGON; Trade Commission is preparing a Dill —_—_—— domigned to render impossible any at-| “Let us gave the kiddies,” began am tempt by a foreign country to “unload” | @ppeal by the Manhattanville Nursery dyontuffe or other competitive products | Am#ociation for $40,000 with which te | European war. tight aa officials can rmaxe will be} submitted to F completed. When the cab with a atationary milk wagon | fy mitted to | ‘The collision of a sig-angeing taxi.) the German this country every time American mami- Corn Exchange Bank, Broagway, facturere reached a point in the develop: One Hundred and Thirteenth | See the latest records | || —~and we charge them Oldest Furniture House in | “| COWPERTHWAIT | ~.2ioes PRODUGTS AFTER WAR): <on"stttan umping prectiogs, A 4 the effect of s —_ means of elther - tade Commission Preparing a Bilf} with limitations the Siportas WASHIN TON, Dec, 10.—The Federat | the United States at the close of tho | Ould ® permanent home for Ittle dhil- dren needing care which their ii or i hhowilh by m 4 The bill, which will be as nearly air sectarian charity, 1% | Js the only one of ite kind in the district lbetween Morsingside and Washingtem Hoelghts and between Bighth Avenue |and the Hudson River, Proceeds of a bagaar at the H ntly that | piaga to-morrow will be devoted, othe esidont W when visions are be trans- Hy upon ft on wrens, Tt has been charged tre 4 was dumped tato | ceived at the Univ: rat Germany's superiority in the ivetion ding fund of the new nu 1. Com of dyes la erly to the fact that tributions to. thts nd Has u ity treet. | Christmas Specials In Play Suits For Boys and Girls Gifts That Will Bring Joy To Any Little Girl or Boy Don’t youthink your little kiddie would be one ot the hap- piest little kiddies you ever saw if Santa Claus brought 2. him a real, sure- enough Cowboy, In- SR dian or Soldier Suit? , Think how tickled RS you’d have been to SS) get one when you | were a boy! Boys’ Play Suits COWBOY SULTS $1.00) COWBOY su ts INDIAN SUITS sees 1,00] MILITARY SU} ig TAN Sta 1.00] MILITAR ITs. . 2.00 . 5. MAKINE SUT ‘Ss. 1.80] BRONCO BUSTER CHAPS; 350 APLIN SUITS 1'50| TEXASCHAPY. ane Girls’ Play Suits SQUAW SUITS -.. 1.00 COWGIRL SUITS INDIAN MAIDEN SUITS... ire VAssete CHARLIE CH Christmas Specials in Boys’ Overcoats & Suits $445 $645 For $6.00 to For $7.95 to $7.50 Values | $12.00 Values Chineh d fancy mixtures Fine quality Chinchilla and Fency button to many of ‘ ; Shen weal oe Mixed Overcoatings—sizes 3 to 9, Norfolk Suits ol cheviots Norfolk Suits—this season's new- in gray and brown mixtures, many] est models—many with paine ef with @ pniry of knickers; sizes 7] knickers. Smart fancy utiataress to 18. splendidiy tailored; sizes 7 to 16. 3 y 3 ey cacaat® BROADWAY, near Chambers St. 7 COBTLANDE. 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