Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
i ! ¢~> napa teers cron GUNMAN TELLS HOW HE AIDED IN MURDER OF TWO — McNamara, Who Was Paid $5 Dobbs Ferry Slaying, Also Shot Joseph Carroll. OWLY 18 YEARS OLD. Slight, Innocent Looking Youth Puffs Cigarettes as He Tells of Career as Gangster. Witten McNamara, eighteen years ‘@i4, small of atature, with rosy cheeks and black curly hair, sat in a cell in the Hoboken jail this morning and, Detwoen puffs of a cigarette, dictated to @ stenographer the story of his part im the mumer of two men. Stopping occasionally he turned to Capt. Von ‘Wagoner and detectives, who went over from Manhattan to talk to him, “\, @nd told them things which will go far toward clearing up many gang * murders in this city. . He was arrested yesterday and con- fessed that he was one of the two ~ men who were hired by Kathleen \ _ Mageow, also known as Kitty McCor- @ mack, to xin Antonto George at Dobbs COSMETICS AND *. SKIN PROTECTION If You Use Cosmeti Posl: ‘eg = pd Every woman uses cosmetics will wisely apply > Wie Poalam, fre- A dl and to. perfectly ‘fepuad of ii effects and to perfectly safe skin, Cold creams alone wil peeges Petites, sin ong ood hago And if ordinary soaps irritate, try een acted eth Bees, ‘and superior for daily use on the skin. \d 4c. atamps to E: Sos paapies, 9b ened Ao npe to Emer | an Labora We Revivere Gh. 8 Bold by all Druggists, =A Why Tolerate Catarth? You have noticed, no doubt; that Any cold aggravates nasal catarrh, and the flow of mucous amazes you that such objectionable matter could find | ent in your head. To ignore this catarrh when the cold subsides is wrong because it slowly injures the linings of the nasal pas- sages and clogs them up. To correct catarrh, cleanse the nostrils with a solution of warm water and salt, insert vaseline on retiring, and take a spoonful of Scott's * Enulsion after meals. Scott's acts ra through the blood to feed the tissues, and contains soothing glycerine to ">" Itis pleasant totake, No alcohol. at teal the sensitive membranes. Geom & Bowne, Bloomfield, N, J.—Adrt. 0 follow THE EVENING WUSKLD, Principles More Important tomorrow. I would not dare keep They are ready at any time to fight and of their honor. Let no man dare eay, if he wou! of preparation for national defense 1am not @ partisan of any one diatelg available national reserve, mental thing. How can Americans last night. —_—_—_—_———— Now York police lodged a warrant in the jail charging him zit murdering Joseph Carroll of No, 06 Weat Twen- tleth Street. Carroll was shot at a dance at Harmony Park, Grassmero, Staten Island, on Sept, 12 last, and died severnl days later at &t. Vin- cent’s Hospital. Since the shooting the police have been secking Mc- led Carroll,” McNamara told . Von Wagoner, when he heard of the warrant. “I'm @ damn fool. If Thad only taken my dad's advice and turned myself in for that, I would have got a with it, Now I guess it's the el chair for me.” McNamara said he went to the dance and was put out Carroll for talking to a girl Carroll had been dancing with. He borrowed a re- volver, stood at the door of the dance hall and ehot Carroll and George Burns of No, 227 West Thirteenth Ferry on Jan. 15 lant. To-day the] Than Peace, Says President T cannot tell what the International relations of this country will be silent and let the country suppose that tomorrow was certain to be as bright as to-day, There is something the American people love better than they love peace. They love the principles upon whioh their political life is founded, for the vindoation of their character Id speak the truth, that the question is a question of war or of peace. 1 have sought to maintain peace against very grogt and sometimes very unfair odds, and I am ready et any time to use every power there is in me to provent euch a catastrophe as war coming upon this country. plan, But what I am for, and what every American ought to insist upon, is a body of at least half million trained citizent who will serve under conditions of danger as an imme- It io @ @urprising circumstance thet men should allow partisan feeling or personal ambition to creep into the discussion of this funda- differ about the safety of America? —From President Wilson's address at the Railway Business Men's dinner UE EEEEESEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEeE==eeee nd WILSON DISCOVERS A POLITICAL “MASKED MARVEL” “1 can it out to you a few men—ef course | am not going to name them now—whom every man ought to be afraid of because noth- ‘ne. but the truth resides in them. ave one in particular in mind, whom | have never caught think. ing out himeelf. | would not dare make a pretense in the pres- ence of that man even if | wanted to. His eyes contain the penetrat- ing light of truth before whioh all dieguises fall away. by uppose we were al they do, tl Street, Burns recovered, but Carroll ‘waited until he could get back to his home before getting medical ald and ho died after a fow weeks at the hospital. Im his statement to the police Mo- are adniitted he has been mixed Shooting affrays since he was His ta live in 6 section just above Greenwich Vil- Jage and are known to the police as bard working people, but the boy started out as & gater and “gun toter” before he left school. He has been arrested five times in the last few years and his boyish ap- noe and air of innocence helped im in getting out of much of hin trouble, A “og ny of panes Guese friends opened fire on some of ne: Madden’ adherents on Pieotton night ‘ears ago at Fourteenth Street an S urease was shot, but she re- covered after several weeks in the hospital, McNamara was arrested. ‘When ae, ae wae gulecire vn: wit. nesses hai Jsappeared a to_be discharged. For the murder of George, McNam- ara has told the police, he and the man who was with him were og get $500 from the Magow woman. ‘They were given $5 each, and McNamara saya he went to Dobbs Ferry, but it was his compaaion who cut George's throat. adi MRS. J. J. DONOHUE ILL. Mra, Joseph J. O'Donohue, President of the Association of Catholic Charities of the City of New York, and one of the most noted charity and civic Ren ers of the United Staten, ts seriously tl! at her home in this liys No. Sixty-ninth Street, Bhe {a'in her seven- iPS Tatertain: thi we ollie pri under of Mrs. Will a * vy tant yma 4 DRINK HOT WATER AND RID } JOINTS OF RHEUMATIC RUST Why rheumatism and lumbago sufferers should drink phosphated Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind certain amount of incombus- tible material in the form of the food and drink taken day after day leaves in the alimentar; of ind each iy elit food for’ ‘the millions of bacteria rom this mass where it continues to circulate, collecting grain in the joints of the body collects o1 uch like rust shown abo! thoumatiem or sore, stiff, achii should begin drinking phosphate ible’ material, which a the hinge as PTE ned comen who eutter from lam- hot water each morning before breakfast day's secumulation of tox~ 1 poisons; thus cleausing,sweeten- ing, and freshening the entire alimentary canal, each morning, before putting more food into the stomach. A quarter, pound of limestone phos- hat little at the drag store or lumbago sufferer an enthusiast on the morning inside bath, Mil ticing this daily internal glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate, drank before kfast, is wonderfully invigorating; an excellent health measure because it cleanses the alimentary or- ns of all the waste, gases and sour fermentations, making one look and feel clean, sweet and fresh all day, eating breakfast each morning, drinka| Those who try this for one week may ¥ ae real hot water with a teaspoon- | find themselves free from sick headaches, =. r) it, is Somevonsion, | ie attacks, sallowness, arty - bree ud stomach acidity.— bowels | Adi Tie gw ACER rary conta # turn to ‘America for g America would be the. moet. and influential force in al world.”"—Wilson to the movie men, LOUIS D. BRANDEIS SUCCEEDS LAMAR IN SUPREME COURT (Continued from First Page.) fore the public as a national figure six yeara ago through his participa- tion im the celebrated Ballinger-Pin- chot dnvestigation in Congress as counsel for the forces which were opposed to Secretary Ballinger. Later he was counsel for the shippers who opposed the general Increases in freigbt rates before the Interstate Commerce Commission, He led in the demand for an investigation of the financial affairs of the New Haven Railroad, He was counsel for those who fought for the validity of Working- men’s Hours of Labor Law in Oregon, IUinots and Ohio, and for those who contended for the preservation of the Boston municipal subway system and in establishing the sliding scale otel| System and the creation of savings bank insurance In Massachusetts. He ‘wan in 1910 chairman of the board of arbitration which settled the New York garment makers’ strike. At the beginning of President Wil- son's administration Mr. Brandeis was expected to get a place in the Cabinet. Many of the Administra- tion leadera expected him to be ap- pointed Attorney General. A friend of Mr, Brandeis is re- sponsible for the following account of his disposition of his time: “At tho beginning of each year Mr, Bran- deis sits down with his wife and makes out a budget for the ensuing year, They decide how much they need, including @ savings fund for the future, It may be $25,000, $40,000 Or $50,000. Mr. Brandeis undertakes just enough practice to bring In the required sum during the year—after that he not accept another re- tainer but devotes himself to study, philanthropic work and practicing for those who cannot afford to pay. Mr, Brandeis has recently been be- fore the public as special counsel for the Government In the controversy between the Riggs Bank of Washing- ton, D. C., and the Treasury Depart- ment. Ho is one of the foremost leaders of the Zionist movement in the United States and a profound scholar of Hebrew literature, Louls Dembiitz Brandeis was born in Loutaville, Ky, Nov, 13, 1856. He was educated in the Loulsville schools and at the Annen Realschule, Dresden. He was married to Mise Alice Goldmark of New York in 1891. He was admitted to the bar in Hos- ton in 1871, Mr, Brandeis received the honorary Gegree of master of arts from Harvard ae niversity in 1877, He is the author of many ks and ar- tleles on banking and especially on savings banks, on public franchises and labor questions, ceecnnegeniainneies: NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE. Open. Low. Last Mareh .11.82 1s 12.01 05 12.02 12.21 12.17 1216 12.35 u 124 12.29 7 12.15 12,96 2.30 0 1829 12.50 closed “steady, up 8 to 13 ——___ CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN MARK WHEAT, Tuurtay uae wy: Be ie igh | gs of % Geert aete RUSSIANS WAKE U TO FIGHT THE WAR: NOW HATE GERMANS Red Cross Surgeon, Back From Battle Front, Says Czar's Millions Are Hostile. LOSSES HAVE COUNTED. One Million Russian Soldiers Are in Training About Kiev, All Well Equpped. Dr. Fred. W. Eastman, one of the mirgeons who went over on the steam- ship Red Cross when It was sent out on itm mission of merey at the begin- FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, EXPERT ON RAILROAD LAW WHO HAS BEEN APPOINTED TO THE SUP REME BENC#. | ning of the war, arrived home to-day on the California of the Anchor Line with « story of Jong and hard expert- ence on the eastern battle tines of the European war. The young mirgeon exhausted all his means in « final trip through the German prison camps in Russta, when It was time for him to take passage home he found that he was temporarily with little means and he was glad enough to mek the third cabin of the liner. However, work was found for him and ho reached home cheerful and in good health. ‘The doctor says the “Russians are beginning to hate the Germans” and are waking up to fight the war, “Only now have the Russians begun to show a warlike hostility for their greatest enemy,” ho said. “It is hard to say jhow the Germans have man- aged Jong to avold being hated among the great body of Russians, but they have. It is said that Ger- man money has been used freely, even in Petrograd, but this I cannot con- firm. The commercial interest of Germany in Russia has tended to hold back bad fecling, but now the stories ot bad treaunent of Russians in Gor- man prison camps are getting back to Russia and having their effect. The killing of the men already fight- ing 19 being felt among their relatives throughout Russia and this is doing its work. I mean just whet I my, for tt 1s only now that the Russians are hating the Germans and fighting accordingly. “I was for some time in the camp at Kiev, in Russia, where the prison- ers from Austria and Germany are taken, There are many more Aus- trian prisoners than Germans. The! Am Austrians give themselves up more| Am easily to the Russians than tho Ger- mans. They seem to feel surer of be- ing treated well, “It is said that there are a million Russian soldiers in training about Kiev, They have all the ammunition and equipment that they need.” Dr, Eastman spent about a year in England at Red Cross work, then went to Serbia and finally into Rus- He said that experience showed that less than 8 per cent. wounded who reached England from the front died, and that it was only |{ about eight weeks that a man hit by gunshot or shrapnel was kept away |{ from the firing line. Dr, Eastman js a graduate of the! ¢ College of Physicians and Surgeons ¢ here. —_—_—_———— 10 SLEUTHS PROMOTED, AS MANY CUT DOWN Commissioner Advances Men from Second to First Grade With Increase in Pay. On recommendation of Inspector Jo-| soph Faurot of the city detective force | 5; Police Commissioner Arthur Woods to-day ordered the promotion of the following detectives from second to first grade: seph A. Daley, Daniel Morlarity, Charles A. Picco, James J. Finan, Henry L. Quick, Joseph J. Charles H. Eason, Thomas J. Carroll and Charles C, Hemmondinger- Detective Hughes got his promotion for his excellent work in breaking up the gangs of automobile thieves, De- tectlve Finan distinguished himself in the cases of bank robbers who were ling cash by the hooked method, tectives were reduced from first grade to seoond: Edward J. Markey, Ed- ward Burgess, Edwin McGrath, Neil W. Ruddy, Michael Meyers, Francis Matthew J. Ward and Rand, First grade detec- get $2,250, Second grade men get $1,400 maximum salary, eeierteeeiipeeancss ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. Montana Power. Co.-Twelve months gross, Increase a referred dividend "and depreciation otals $1,00: Equal to bie C en cominon’ stock, compared with 3% per cent, in previous year, Chicago Great Weatern—December gross earnings increased Oy nix ; | montha gross in Net} after tax increas Ontario & Weniern—Six months ross earnings decreased $147,102, Net after tax increased $178, Northern earnings months 00 ‘Ne! Pacific- —Decem increased — $2,021 ross earnin, after tax i site = ast Say Half a million pounds of copper, part of Murch and April delivery, sold “in New York for 2644 cents a poiind. declared preferred Driggs, dividend’ on fire! stocks of 3 percent. and 3 Seabury. sSosneens Mw ber cent respectively and on common stock at of the | Gen Thomas 8. Hughes, Jo-| 5 Ryan, |} cane | eran’ Gorn hind Av In the same order the following do-|!," “a Sa LOUIS BRANDEIS ~ WALL STREET Market opened with advances rang- ine from a small fraction to over a Point in some specialties, Both the locomotive stocks recorded good gains and Crucible opened up 1 3-4, Cop- pers were stronger, and both Mextean Petroleum and Smelters shared gains, U, 8, Bteel gained 5-8 to 84. Follow- ine @ spurt in Crucible in second hour which advanced to 72 3-8, other tndustrial stocks showed strength, Pressed Steel Car gained 2 to 6 Mexican O11 2 7-8 to 105, Aleohol 2 to 153 8-4, wad up 3 3-8 Woollen up 3 1-4 Trading was quiet except in a smal! group of industrial stocks. U. 8. Rubber was a weak feature, declining ) 5-8 to 80 7-8, American Locomo- tive mained 3 1-2 to 66 1-2, Profit taking sales in } afternoon caused prices to decline, particulariy in Industrial group, which lost part of the early gains, New Haven was weak, selling off 3 points to 68. Closing Quetatt ‘With wet changes from previous dlodua. +41 EY eet $2 22 +% $i +3 + ly + ts + 1h 4 Fro" $7, + » iw +8 BS 8 . % as £3 pay fi ‘ iy” * 38 6% Hy > "4 ui” by 1304 nd aay my ¥ Great Nor bt ie Bh + 3 Cicero bir: “23 FA 8 tf Het % Be p18 & ag t 3 aos t Sle $29 itil PETE ¥. Sree e Fer Sere . press. EsSacesz = Fae [t+ 444 [44] [4414441 pee ere I+] + Feseteceress “re estests = SEES PETEEC EOE FS wees RSSSS #5 Le ee THE CAMELS ARE COMING, All the Way From Jamatea, Wh They Were “Movie” Stars, “Hump!” exclaimed the captain of the steamship Zacapa of the United Fruit Line, in from Jamaica to-day, when asked if he had @ pleasant voyage. “Hump! exclaimed the —smokeroom steward, ‘Business was nix. Every one thought he waned to nine days with- Wh v Canale up f “The came! Scotch stevedore as he S coming,” shouted a winter quarters of the Barnum & Bailey of 5 per cent. quarterly for period From Jan, ib to’ Mareh 1, 1916.) show at Bridgeport. Se CAD EES cats imitate the watched, the 1916. SAYS BRITISH USED BLOCKADE ORDER TO GET TRADE SECRETS emeenasipinmaase Senator Walsh Produces Data Bearing on Opening of U. S. Mail at Sea. WASHINGTON, Jah. 28-—Depart- {ng from the mi Tipt of a pre- pared speech, Benator Walsh to-day sprung a sensation in the Senate by reading from what he saéd were Brit- jah oriers to Mockade vessels to ob- tain trade secrets from illegally opened American mall ‘The confidential papers, said Walsh, ‘were orders issued to a British block- ader, but which by mistake were packed in an American mail pouoh and brought to this country. From this mail, seized wantoniy on the high seas, be said, Great Britain) had obtained secrets which would be| used by its merchants in undermining American commerce, | He demanded a cessation of all trade with the allies unless the block- | ade was amended to accord with in- ternational law. instructions follow: Particulars are to be extracted from appropriate correspondence and | submitted on index cards of all direct | sbipinents to Europe (shipments from neutral to neutral, including ship- |ments on through bille of jading), | whether actual or pending, of the fol- jowing commodities, cocor, cotton, cot- ton yarn, waste and thread, fuel ofl and lubricating olls, hides, skins and leather, matze, metals and ores of all kinds, nitrates, oll cakes including poonac, packers’ products (meat, | bacon, lard, juice, oleo or any edible animal fats), resin, tanning extracts, | wool and such other articles as may | be added from time to mo. “Duties oi D, A.’s~The D. A, C.| should see that the letters supplied | to his table are divided before cen- | soring, for the purpose both of re-| Moving correspondence of persons on | the privileged and suspect lists, if and so far as this has not been done |by “the sorters, and also as far as practicable of eliminating periodical correspondence between reputable concerns which experience has shown to contain nothing that requires cen- | ring. Such eliminated correspond- ence should not be opened until the remaining portion of the mali bas been disposed of’ " cond of | SHIP FROM NEW YORK | MAY HAVE BEEN SUNK Spanish Vessel Signals to British! Freighter She Has Rescued Crew, | Probably of the Chase Hill. The British freighter Indralema, | which arrived to-day from Mediter- | ranean ports, reports that on Jan, 22 she passed the Spanish steamer Mar | Adriatico, bound for Barcelona from | New York. Atter signalling the fact that she had a rescued crew on board, the Spanish freighter hoisted flags in- dicating the letters 8 B V J or M BV J. The captain of the Indra- Jema was not sure of the first code letter. ‘There is no vessel in the code book under the letters 8 BV J, but there | is a British freighter, the Chase Hill, which Js in the code as M BV J. The Chase Hill has been under charter | | Reading was only railroad) to gain @ point from the early low. At midday Crucible sold at 72 3-4 up 6 1-2 points, Baldwin at 110 7-8 ot New York on Jan. 13 with a gen- eral cargo. It is thought in shipping | circles that ship met aisaste 2 cupe “Presto,” 1 cup oon malted butter Presto” today to this treat tomorrow, on every package. rou'll have pes in and HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheep substitutes cost YOU sam= pine at his residence, 51 W. 60th at., Dr, CHARLES D. WRIGHT, beloved husband of Aids I, Wright, easts descend the gangway. They *oloc! : had been in Jamaica taking part in a| ¢% Friday evening, 6.80 o'clock. Inter movie play and are en route to the Direct quotations from the alleged | ™ | California, Liverpoo! to the French Line and left the port | Funeral services at his late residence | “How Can Americans Differ About the Safety of America?” FLEECED DIVORCES IN JERSEY WITH AID OF WHITE SLAVE LAW Victims Found in Manhattan Trotteries Were Lured Across River for Plucking. Arthur I. David, allas Robert A. Tourbdilion, alias Don Collins, alias Sir Robert, under indictment for rob- bing telephone boxes and blackmatt- ing men and women through impro- per use of the White Slave law, was taken from the Tombs this afternoon for a hearing before United States Commissioner C, 8, Houghton and was rearrested for using the malis to defraud. David has been In the Tombs several weeks, unable to fur- nish his bail of $50.00. David was first arrested for rob- bing telephone boxes and tmmediately afterward the Federal authorities In Philadelphia let it be known that he Was wanted for blackmailing schemes in connection with William Buth under arrest in the Quaker City seheme consisted in luring ot wealth out of the city with handsome young women as the lure, Then one of the gang, posing as a Federal of- r, Would arrest both parties. The man to avoid the notoriety of arrest would “se the Federal pnt. Mr. Knox has arned that, in ad- Aitton to this form of blackinailing, wealthy divorcees, with a penchant for the dansantes, would be picked | up tn the uptown trotteries, dinner across the river into N sey and theré be arrested by i ited to w Jer- an al- The woman, to d Federal agent ‘oid disgrace, invariably paid the ticket” named by. the blackmailers. — a More Men led to the Colors, LONDON, J 28.— Single men of the ages fr wenty-seven to thirty years, enrolled under Lord Derby's en- listment scheme, will be called out Feb. 3, pasariatale th obamreceah STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. Our prices for Harris Glasset are Low—because of our great volume — the Largest in the World, Consider this—You go to the Harris office nearest you (there are nine of them) and have your bas examined by one of our < culists ( Registered ysis without charge. If requii ‘ our Oculist will prescribe _/ glasses. ‘ They are then cut, and mounted for YOU in one of our 9 factories. The finished glasses are care- fully adjusted by a skilled tician and provided with the Harris Suction Clip, an exclu- sive feature of Harris Glasses. The charge—if you wish to obtain glasses—is $2,00 or more, depending somewhat on the mounting selected. We are enabled to give you such a complele eyeglass ser- vice at such a low cost—be- cause of our extensive facilities and output. Fonn PCy 5 ip te ne Oo., Ni Ton At Nichotas A 1007 Broadway. 489 Fulbon 8t., 683 Broad St c - $5,000 —FREE! 1,000 $50 P| ere aaa Plays ail all mal FOCORLB, «cous sesvecseies FREE!—$5 in new iby tr pee machine. Store open Saturday wotil © BM, 1160 Hrondway near 1th ts » BAM, Wells City, Bristol 10 A, M. Mesaba, London . oT ALM, Rochambeau, Bor 2PM Special for Friday RANGE Sr finished Bon Non utyie. POUND BOX squares of delicious Perfection, pro~ duced from the Products, exai celled Chocolate, 2he. coods, EXTRA § y POUND BOX ‘21c ———————— MILK CHOCOLATE MALAGA Gua Beauties, with snices as sweet as Fondant Cream, able Premium 3t ilk Chocolate, 54 BARCLAY STREET o G.20 p.m: Bat, 10 Dally, 00 eres hOomin! ar MEET trees” to send you delicious, Sun Fine Seedless Navels. MODELS tas, eg fo Ce seat March Number fh and’ tucked wway in duluty shel Gurren, Bbc. ENYA SPECH Tell Your Dealer California’s Selected Oranges Save the tissue wrappers for beautiful silverware CALIFORNIA FRUIT GROWERS EXCHANGE Eastern Headquarters: 139 No Clark Street, Chicago (<3) Ll MMM EY t= America’s Newest Fiction Magazine SUNDAY WORLD “WANTS” WORK MONDAY WONDERS, ‘Cream, eek rico, pel ee ‘Transparent, delicious Fragrant a0e White, lunged are Incompar- sweet, juicy, healthful kist Get a dozen today. Out To-da