The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1916, Page 1

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Che “Circulation Books Open to Al Copyright, 1916, by The P Co. (The New York ¥ EDITION sc WEA EL) ONE _OENT. Pablishing rd). NE PERSHING TO GET 3,000 MORE MEN FOR VILLA HUNT a a a lil a . - “Circulation Book: [“Circntation Rooks Open to All.” | W YORK, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1916. pial ] | OPERA SINGER ACCOMPANIED i, rao | ~ DENTIST WHEN HE Puce MON TUBES OF TPHOWD CULTIRES Husband of Woman Who Occupied aRoomat Plaza Hotel With Alleged | Poisoner Retains Counsel and Consults District Attorney. os yf aes Under in Graphic Stor it Another Rheims. | “alls | IS LIKELY TO HOLD OUT.} | French Soldiers Safe in Under- ground City as Shells Burst Above Them. ;, ‘ + pr HEADQUARTERS oF FRENCH ' Mrs, Margaret Horton, who shared a studio at the Hotel Pliza w vad ors ARMIES AROUND VERDUN, Mare Pr. Arthur Warren Waite, became an important figure this afternoon in| }33 r battled in thetr he investigation into the charge that Dr. Waite killed his father-in-law, | onter Verdun, the Ger effort nan are now retion of ¢ ohn E. Peck of Grand Rapids, by the administration of arsenic. e | see bent on dest fwas confronted in the District Attorney's office in the Criminal Courts os Building by a man employed in the laboratory of Cornell University, + ; 5 nivale. Babi nane Medical School in First Avenue near Bellevue Hospital. and residential districts. In. these ‘This man identified her aa a® $$$ —— sections L sow several large fires rog- @m a date in March—-the th, 7th or| IT G s ne \ @th—when Watte purchased, ur il WANTS WAGES RAISED s lay p ve n Whe pretext that he was a physician mes A and bacteriologist engaged M- | Stork Br Pre the itary view nt V Portant oxperiments, tubes contain-| +5 His Home—Adds 1 is unacratched, Otherwise the Ong malignant typhoid cultures, Mrs. | Twins 18 Mon y seems destined to become an admitted that she accom- | : athe theeat eee saratted ther 8 MEDIA, Po., Mareh w * 4 panied Waite to the Cornell Medical! pays a’ toaster ’ ening t of its Bohoo!, for a ralee ir mesh pemutiful palace . The District Attorney is intensely He gave as ‘i her bullaing interested in the purchase by Waite |quadrupiety. at bis home. 7 3 fe chelle Gall ul ef cultures which, if introduced into! girlg and w boy were born dur Our party arrived ir ‘ e system of an unsuspecting per- morning at coffee time when there the night and all are doing well, bon, would have brought on was @ lull, We asked the general in a viru-| on, | Twi boys were bo: tou M ie fent attack of typhoid. He is th meant ratenlage ra. Pas: oomimand tf the bombardment would More interested inasmuch 4s { eceur ' “March 9 Waite purchased the arsenic | “Certainly.” he eald with @ smile. Which killed his father-in-law 'GERMAN TORPEDO BOAT “That's our daily ration Prior to being called to confront the | NEW BOMBARDMENT OF THE CITY BEGINS. spoke the explosions recom ee ee ain ter| MIOSINOAPTER FIGHT! .. dove among a flock of crows," re- | ced from an elev outside t rold Spielberg, a lawyer, to| ; ,, |town, ‘The scene was tensely grip aa Bee Mr asisine rg said his Berlin Admits One Has Not Re- ping. ( rad sicke, plerced client ai not anticipate becoming | turned Since North Sea | by far away red shafts of flame, rose | More involved in the difficulties of Battle, Jover the city. Guns hammered an ac 0 ready, bi paniment rae aainiatnone ret |, LONDON, March 2%.—A torpedo. a tn northeast the crest of faght it F unforessen develop. (Dost # missing since the een Aghting | nouaumont, ecene of #0 much bloody ) san aR: age Gt URtoressen P'|which followed the British air raid agting, was being | a ents. on Saturday morning on German avi : hak : ial i i ) "| fre from French § | Mrs. Horton poranally, owaee Dis- ation sheds in northern Sohleawig- Mite. aii b pach he legions Den ae annet’ way (man atatement received here by wire-lnan sheils exploded thickly in flashes Bit acre i : lone, Gh Are: Sinks gavaers auch unl ke Watter Drew, counsel for Waite,; The statement ts as follows: magic mushrooms. + gouk the fret etep to-day inthe direc. “Th English naval aeroplane at} pars was confident about the situ-| ¢ t tting up a defense of in- tack on the North Frisian coast failed | ation at Verdun when we left But 4 tt 1 tikely that Perey Peck Completely. Two armod flahing stoamn- Ie aannaltnetaxiaen iuat: chal l ser | ange Lita Waite's wife, while | 0 OF outpost service fell victims to| one gets to the front, the conf. | A yh convinced that Waite killed | E26li#h vessels, Our naval aero-| dent are the French soldiers to be Rhey are ° planes attacked the English naval| | quite true. During the und their father and mother and planned ht, rorces sue fbo kill them, too, will ald financially fighting forces and suc Jod in scor- |ing a number of hits and in seriously bombardment we en- 4 | pmd otherwise in bolstering up the | ’ tered the und city of Ver “ Qontention that Walte is insane be- | #nasing & torvedoboat destroyer. | dun, dug beneath tho citadel many fpause they want to save him from “Of the naval fighting force which | gonths ago in preparation for Just Phe electric chair. They are sald to|™” sent immediately, only a tow tor-| such a shel fire. Soldiors, off duty ¢ | Pedoboats came tn touch with the r¥- treating enemy during the night of mly were on boxes of army lying pn cots or sitting d with horror the prospect 0} foe's f, absorbedly lis. he husband of a member of the fam-| March 2 ‘Ono of these torpedo- ly meeting auch a disgraceful end | boats has not yet roturned." |tening to a young violinist playing refer to believe he is <——- Saint Saens's * yone” and ner ae tr 8 |GUNBOAT MARIETTA tase ou, Mr. Drew presented to District At- | ORDERED TO TAMPICO; else wh Ma sapere ms re men ging Swann to-day a statement | PONT COCKY vaqeg | Writing, shaving, baking or idling live by Warren W, Waite of Grand | KENTUCKY TO LEAVE, | rround in small routine affairs, as it Rapids, young Walte's father Th!) WASHINGTON, March 27.~Thel world and only petty events occurred elder Waite visited Bellevue to-day | d gunboat Marietta wa with another son, Frank, but did not | ¢), +, to pass the time away, above the ordered to-day 2, relioving the battlest PD) guns cre shrieking fire Bo in to sce Arthur. Ho signed tho) Kentucky, which will go to Vera ene he ‘hs ira Bs sf atatement aftor Frank had briefly | Gu, Marietta will enter thal aun front will net eurrciae @onferred with his brother j river at Tampico and the moral effect | soidiers, but they believe they are Mr. Waite avers that his father, | is expec to bo g or than the rig secant in) falluna, (OM be % hile mentally de-| Kentucky would have, lying some dis- | feredoom: ally cera aay Milo W. Waite, while mentally Rance mit inthe ha they would like nothing better than a ranged, left his home and family at poring! continuation of th Cannonsburg, Kent County, Mich, in pi con! attacks, since the th wt enmoe 1871, and never returned; uleo that} Commander Evangeline ©. of) (Continued on Fourth Page.) ) one of his cousins, a child of bis {the Salvation Army was unable to speak | —_ 6 scheduled in the Madison. Avenue | SUORT EASTER ORUISER, } mother’s slater, died in the Miutulgun! a» artis! Chinen "ypatardayy on tha Orke |g EAteratare, tlokels “i a steam Wn Atniy ott was Tea) Nein « Be ltig he wl ¥ oth hes & severe cold” Bein Gi bates eve t teansauns 5 bras Po. b pow WILLIAMS UNDER PRESSURE (200KE oes AGAIN REFUSES TO NAME MAN i's urrsune NV $500,000 BRIBE OFFER slp Bandit Expected to Make Last Stand Before Seeking Moun- © WALARDTELS WY eri F | incoee vwrvess! HE DID NOT KNOCK = \ x-P. S. Chairman Says He OUT FRANK MORAN Did Not Think Any Official | COLUMBUR! Nii tae Over 3,000 additional United States Guilty of Bribery. troops, now at the border, were pre- paring: to enter Mexico to-day. Military officials at the base camp their belief that the be exterminated | Head of B, R. T. Dodges Question While on Stand Before Committ DEAD LIE IN HIS TRAIL. Expeditionary Army Is Badly, Hampered by Lack of Supplies | ee Would Have Bad Effect on Boxing in New York— Won't Quit Ring. Co). Pimothy % of the B. Will ‘T, repeated on the wit- | ums, President here reiternted Villistas wo without @ long, sald there was no reason to bellove that Villa was surrounded by Amer- ican or Carranzista troops at present 1 this aftern oon his refusal | to him | Id not hard campaign. ‘They an w Jess Willard New York to-day with Other. ywed no fil-effects of lis when the dual contracts ‘or the new! CHICAGO, March 27. ne and told him | arrived from his right han ibways was pend uld see the support of a pow- | 1 tn bandages. 1 for a bribe of $500,000, | Wise he at nw ndmitted that he had}centest with Frank Moran in New] Preparations bearing out their pre ida talk two or three weeks ago} York Saturday night dictions were seen in the arrival of 1) ex-Publie Service Comm ner| The champion will remein with his|huge quantities of supplies of all hero until Willig KR. Willcox, but denied that | family starting his season|yinds in the past twenty-four how Mr. Willeox had reported his re-| With @ circus April 29. It was said] punareds of cavalry horses are belng harks correctly. He admitted, how. | that his contract with the circus calls face the mounts brought here to r ever, that Mayor Gaynor was the om. | for $150.00 already worn out in only twelve etal he had tr 1 as the ‘I did not knock out Moran because . aes Hite UY: Ak get 1/4 knockout would have a bad effect |14y# campatening, tho boxing game in New York,| FIELD HEADQUART AM fe brthe. At the close of the session this af ternoon Senator Thompson announces tha he expects to get from Col. Tim othy S. Williams, President of the B. R. T., the name of the man. The Thompson committee waited! nearly all day while its messe there is enough feeling against it * said Willard, do not Intend to refire. much of a fool, even if they do th # about me. Dave Lewis hn, who told New York newspaper me that [ intend to retire ICAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE COLONIA DUBLAN, Mexico, March 26 (by aeroplane to Columbus, N, M March 27).-Gen, J. J. Pershing an nounced last night the establishment of @ new base in the pursuit of Villa h nearer the Tam not | wn | doesn't The second base ts muc tried to find Col, Willams, It w cae on) Mune BBOUS my. hunine location where the bandit ix reported near 8 o'clock when Senator Thomp-| | Willard gr nned whon asked if tho) i) retreat than the old base at Field fon dec that his men had/ Satchel he carried cc 1 tho Hei B Iquartera, idence that Pancho Villa is pre- paring to resist the American pursu- ing columns and that the Mexican people are not as yet rallying to him has been collected by the officers and the scouts of the American troops | money he won. searched everywhere without auccens | for Col. Williams and that the com mittee would adjourn, As he the gavel to call the session to Col, Wiliams walked in, aceompanted by Chief Counsel George D Teen ans | ¢ the BR. T. I've got some of It valid, “and Tom Jon with the rest.’ champlon was greeted by a crowd at the he atation all right," he roming alony are and an array of Tho new headquarters, it ia pre- yers, The Colonel was called te ** GIRLS TRAPPED ON RAILS sumed, will be maintained as an tm. arb | portant Unk in the supply station | “Do you remember," Counsel Frank ARE KILLED BY TRAIN | system, the chain of bases forming aug an ae Rn eectete rete Me |a strong military line, readily de RE A a fensible, reaching a distance into the Caroline D. the call of a man upon you in refer- | Miss Duror of This|{ererior ot Mexico ence to your being able to get rid of} City and Student Friends Faced | success thus far has been attained {fee ROeNeiy OF Meares Meper He) “Death on Three Sides, by the ability of the American cay seein alry to travel fast and far on light T wouldn't put 1t that way—n BARAROO, Wis, Mare 27—| rations, accustoming iself as it travels rey Col, Willams Trapped at a sharp curve while walk-| jot only to @ semi-native diet, but pent i ng along the Chicago and North: |aigo to dimcult climatic conditions “1 had atalk within the last three|Western tracks, with an abrupt cliff] several cavalry organizations have weeks with Mr. Willeox,” sntd Col,|at one side and Devil's Lake at the] yen out for considerably more than Williams, “It was generally on mb Miss Caroline D. Duror,|@ week after a start made on a little nty-one y matters and years old, of New York | y Miss Lola Bb wenty-two and rice or beans has come 2 this investigation i T recall the circumstances, he re marked that he didn’t belleve any man connected with the city govern ment had been improperly influenced | tn relation thereto by any corrupt| consideration, Tagred with him, with | think T told beef, coffee Not a word of complaint back from these troopers. EL PASO, Tex, March 27.—Flying jcoltumnw of American cavalry to-day were visiting |are aeeking to entrap Francisco Villa and his band by sealing up ali the and Whitmore, years old, of Utica, N Y,, were killed by @ train to-day, The kw en, students in gooloxy a feago University, here: exception, 1 trails and passes in th Mr Willcox generally why I had ac (LOCKED IN ‘BOX CAR district south of El V doubts about t particular individ outlets barred, squadrons of cavalry lial’ What. tnaieinialla neat noel f nd detachments of infantry, operat- Did you speak of the individual | jrandes, will comb the country to who offere Victim Wa arrled ¢ On Train: That | tive she bandit: dn the open. I spoke of the Incident that vom! Lert Youngstown, O., for ( This is the plan military authori . me shout on. Baturdas abe 2) » for are following capture the pald Col, Willlame | land, N. Y., Ma 1¢ gand, Villa and his band are mov ‘Wasn't t Mattaneuaulanaial nee | YRTLAND, No ¥ ing rapidly among the foothills of! lid Teak Pani vit aA ribad af an ‘ 4 Sierra Tarahumarea, hotly pursued| 4hh.000 and to the individual | ei 0h 46) A Gases J by. thre: lumns of American cav- alied on you? lasers ere, wan openod day, (any: § George A. Dodd te directing I don't recall ng| Frank Carroll of Syracuse, N, ¥., waa) Se movement to Mr. Willcox about t m found in the car, dead from starva That Villa in dis Might southward Wasn't reference made t Mayor was Killing deserters when caught and nynor?’ iad ingstown, Marc) Ki¥ing Mextoans the chotce of tho fir- T thine he latherahe wa TGA gor Tae Ty Pa ke squ Joining him was evident h dent 1 Was mp from @ c/ngored report from the ex- (Coptioued on Secand Page.) papers i ihe victs we pockets, ‘pediionary forces, cord, 14 AGES | | | | mountainous | le. With the |" Raln probable to-night end Tuesday. Colder, AL EDITION to AL ‘PRICE ONE CENT. GERMANY WILL DISAVOW ACT _ IF U-BOAT ATTACKED SUSSEX <4 -—$____—__ TORPEDO HIT CHANNEL SHI, DECLARES A BRITISH JURY: U-BOAT ISSUE VERY GRAVE Authoritative Announcement Made in Washington That Germany | Will Offer Full Reparation to United States if Proof of Subma- rine Attack Is Given. |TWO AMERICAN WOMEN SAW WAKE OF TORPEDO WASHINGTON, March 27.—It was stated authoritatively to-day that should it be shown that a German submarine attacked the Channel liner Sussex, Germany would disavow the act, offer reparation, punish the submarine commander sitisty the United States that the act was in and violation of instruction It was also stated authoritatively that the German Ambassador, Count von Bernstorft, was mainly responsible for the recent retirement f Grand Admiral yon Tirpitz, who is understood to have been eliminated because of his views on submarine warfare after Count von Bernstorff had made certain recommendations to the mperial Chancellor, von Bethmann-Hollweg These statements were made after it had been announced that United States officials regarded the submarine situation as taking on aspects of much gravity. The possibility of breaking off relations with Germany, it It should be proved that the Channel liner and the steamer Englishman had been attacked by submarines, was openly discussed. President Wilson had a long conference with Secretary of State Lansing over the telephone, id itis stated that the official reports thus far received jindicate clearly, although they do not prove positively, that the Sussex was struck by a submarine torpedo, Consular Agent Whitman at Boulogne reported to-day that he was informed by French otticials that a piece of bronze, resembling a portion jot a torpedo, had been found on the Sussex. Two American women passengers on the Sussex, it is understood, are quoted in official despatches to the State Department as saying they |saw the wake of a torpedo just before the explosion on the Sussex oc- jcurred. No mention of that was contained in despatches made public at the department One long despatch from Ambassador Sharpe was given out with | part of the original sontents eiided, This statement related all the evidence obtainable up to yesterday regarding the wrecking of the Sussex, and told of his efforts to clear up the question of how the vessel was sunk. His |information, he said, was based on statements obtained from John H jHearley, Mrs. W. Warren, Miss Gertrude Barnes, Samuel F, Bemis and |P. W. Culberson, all of whom were aboard the Sussex when it was attacked At the time the Ambassador sent his c: Jat least three Americans had lost their lives, placing Prof. Mark Baldwin and | t y the number. [Later reports from London state the Baldwins were saved. ] DOVER, England., March 27.—That the Channel boat Sussex was |“‘struck by an enemy torpedo," was the finding of a coroner’s jury to- Jnight at an inquest over the bodies of victims brought here. ablegram he still believed that 110 Lives Lost on Sussex; Torpedoed, Says Paris Report TONDON, March 27 Three more aboard the Cerne are known to have rit. | been saved and tt te Ddelieved the | Habo's crew was reacued, Nine of the Khartoum's crew are missing and probably drowned, Two of the crew wore raved Lioyds reports that the Britten steamship St, Ceollta, the sinking of which was announced yesterday, was They are ) ataamer Hebe, | blown up by a mine, Soe had a gen- the Hritish steamer Cerne and the! eral cargo from Portland, Me British Gah carrier Khartoum All] Investigation to-day made It appear steamers—one French and two sh~have heen sunk In nearby waters with the probable loas of nine liver since the channel torped ner Sussex was last Friday, All lestreyed within the lnat twenty-four hours mined or three have heen Ee eee

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