The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1916, Page 1

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DODGERS’ HITS GAVE THEM EARLY LEAD arene nea ene ne AA EDITION _ Che [" Ctroutation Books Open to All Ad | SS. Rad diadnl one CENT. The New Coneiant 1918, by The Press funtibine Tors Wortd) NEW YORK, TUESDAY, “OOTOBER 10, 16 To-Day's Weather—Fair; frost to-night. LANE EDITION f “Circulation Books Open to All.’’ ‘4 1916, PAGES ‘PRICE ONE ENT. —s —= STEAMER SIGHTS SUBMARINE ONLY 60 MILES FR QUSON SCORES TWO RUNS | WITH TIMELY THREE BAGGER, GIVING BROOKLYN GOOD LEAD Cutshaw’s Double and Coombs’s Sin-) gle Gave Robins “Jump” on Red Sox Early in Third Game of World Series. Score by Innings 00 11 BBBETS FIPLD, BROOKLYN, Oot. 10.—The batteries for the thira! game of the World's Series played here this afternoon were For Boston ~ Maye and Thomas: for Prooklyn—Coombs and Meyers, FIRST INNING oO Oo ow By Bozeman Bulger. Hooper drove a fly to Myers. Janvrin was thrown out by | BATTING ORDER. Mowrey at fret. Shorten staged.) Boston Sestien, 5 ied, but Shorien| Hooper, rf Myers, cf. Hobittscl aiso singed, Hi Pec tied to take third and was ont on’ g Btongel’s throw to Mowrey. No rine, two hits, no errors Myers was hit by a pitched ball Toman : Daubert bunted. Stengel sacrificed, pb Coombe. >. 7 d Daubert sec Umpires assigned as follows: O'Day Myers toking third an a , BOL Ae Ones Oe O'Day ond, Wheat walked, Hobiit2e!! Quigtey in right, Din i grabbed Cutshaw'’s grounder and) Attendance, about 18,000 threw Myers out at the plate, Mow-| rey wan struck out. No runs, one! OOMMENT IN BERLIN hit, po errora, three jet | ON RAID OF THE mT 53 BECOND INNING—Lewis Mied to} - centre. Gardner popped to Culshaw - ne Wheat got Scott's long drive. No Tageszeitung Says It Will Place a left runs, no hits, no errors, none New Light on Idea of Con- Booit got Olson's grounder to firs! hie Wik CS, #n time. Miller was called out 0! girikes, Scott threw Coombs's bound- AMSTERDAM, Oct. 10 (via London) er to firat. No runs, no hits, no er A Berlin despatch quotes the Deu- rors, none left tsche Tugeszeltung as saying it con- THIRD INNING.—Thomas pop sidera the significance of the U-5i's te Cutshaw. Mays struck out. Hoop-/ visit to America to be that it hae ar singled, but was out trying (0 proved German submarines are avle Steal second, Miller to Cutshaw. No |to conduct successful cruiser warfare runs, one hit, no errors, none left in the vicinity of the American coast Boo! w Myers out Daubert The newspaper believes German te thre aah aaeaRied ations In those waters will place aingled, Stongel's smash 3 in a new light the idea of a conflict Daubert to second Wheat fle 9° with Germany, which wo imes even Lewis. Cutshaw doubled, svoring | leading personalities in America have mentioned th puteningly= 1,500 STUDENTS FLEE AS UNIVERSITY BURNS Daubert and sending Stengel to thiot Soot got Mowrey's grounder to first One run, three two left FOURTH INNING hits, no errors, Janvrin filed to Stengel, Shorten singled, bul was ou cealing on Miller's throw to Olsen _ Hoblitze) lined to Myers. No RUNS, Many of Them Have Narrow Es- ONE HIT, NO ERRORS, NONE capes as They Dash From artic : Their Classrooms, Olson beat out a bunt and went ; . econd on Gardner's throw to firs MADISON, Wis, Oct, 10.~Fifteen Miller sacrificed, Mays to Hoblitae), | bUndred students, many of whom had and Olson took third. Coombe ain. | &rrow escapes from death or w gled, scoring Obs Myers sacrificed classrooms in the Mays to Hobiitgel, Soott threw out niversity Wis Daubert. ONE RUN, TWO HITS of unknown | ONP BROW, 1 LERT swept throughout the structure FIFTH INNING fied out | 224 destroyed tt o Wheat, G » Mow - y Cocnbe Scat eno WINNERS AT LAUREL. rung, no hits, no ¢ 4, noe it eT RACKtTe _ Stengel fouled to Garduer. Whe ej botiniam obineon) {ratght $10.60 walked. Cutshow ‘own out by | fore Lobelia Mays us Wheat toc Mowres | show $4.30, age Wheat and Mowrey. Seote threw out | Meontighten, Miller, ‘Two r ne hit pee rrives,, Velour, "pect SIXTH INNING Olson tossed out COND | TACK” Three-veur-oidy thomas, Henrikson patted for Mays | iba Unwant Page and walked, Hooper tris scoring Henrikson. Junvin popped out Hayne Cutshaw. Shorten singled and Hooper | oh 60 scored, Coombs threw out Hoby.|}, uae iigwitzer, inky Two runs, two hits, no erros, one Jett, Piquette "ass ran t GIRL STRANGLED TO DEATH IN CELLAR WITH BOOKSTRAP Eleven-Year-Old ‘Tillie Breck-| ’s Body Found After All- | Night Search. POLICE QUIZ rwo MEN. One Interrogated Over Little Victim’s Body—Wide Hunt tor Clues. Hour after hour to-day in the De- tective Bureau at Police Headquart- ers, two Italian fruit dealers whose storage room is in the cellar of the ‘house wherein eleven-yeat-old Tillie found atrangled 4 leather strap after an Bracker to | death wth attack had been made upon her, were all the skill the po- lice could bring to bear queationed with wult of Mhis questioning, up | this afternoon, failed tragedy tenement at to a late hour light upon th of 184 Monroe Street of the the cellur at 2.80 o' to bring any in the th No basement One latiiang said he had jock yes- Both | of the mur- been tn terday afternoon, bul not later. sald they knew nothing der of the litte girl A thorough examination of the place In which the girl's body was| found, in the rear of the fruit storage place, Which also contained a sleeping bunk, was made this afternoon by Dr Otto Klein and Dr, Pacini of the Cen- tral Testing Laboratory h Ways aids the Polleo Department murder cases. They took away a quantity of the bedding of the bunk, whe girl's clothing Sand kniv from the pookets of the fruit sellers. | The strap, apparentiy a schoot book | atrap. which had been used to stran- lie the girl, was pulled so tightly Jthat ft was at first thought that it had broken under the tension, Ex- Jamnation showed it been cut partly through with a knife, The ‘ered end of the strap was | found under # grating in the front t|areaway of the vullding, beside the steps leading to the sidewalk. JANITOR'S CRIES BRING NEIGH- BORS TO SCENE Morris Silverstein tenement, who four not fdentify it group of girl's mother, to the svene Her identity was not known until Barney Brecker, # barre) dealer, ar- rived and said that she was his wif which al- in analysix two nad janitor of the i the body, could His erles brought uo neighbors, including the and the dead girl their daughter They lived at No. 2 Ridge Street Brecker sald the girl was @ pupti at Public ol No, 41, at Gouver neur and Monroe Streets, only a block froin the cellar in which her body was found Tillie, known to the children of the neighborhood us “Chinkle," was o | pupil In the H giade of Public School N Monroe and Gouv erneuy Streets, but, according to her n vos in the habit of “playing hookey” now and then, Miss Sarah H, Conant, Mrinetpal of the school, sald to t the records showed Tillie to have been absent from her ass wir ant Friday, but to have peen present (he entire period of that day This wes at varlance w the statement made by Mra. Brecker, who suid that Tillle had not been sent school at all on Friday, as it was the day before the holiday, Mro. Brecker also said that Tillie | Ambassador Gerard and His Wife | |\As They Looked on Arrival To-Day te MR AND MRS GRRAR aa EMPEROR WILLIAM LONDON ASKS U -PRAYSTHAT PEACE TO WARN U-BOATS MAY SOON ARRIVE SAME AS BRITISH caresses In Greeting King of Wurtem- Protest burg He Hopes That Its | Blessings Repay Sacritices, | mL Patrol of Cruisers Off Coast Here Recalled by Newspapers. The hope of King Will temberg for , of Wu LONDON, Oct. 10-The in commenting 1 evening J honorable “a speed) d newspapers of London, is a tel cram peace” expres on the activities of the from the King to t rian Chan. Dr. the reque t made by the United States f Great Britain early cellor, von Rethmann-Holiweg, as in\ithe #ean'46 Reuter from spateh quoted in a ' recall Uritish cruisers from trade lanes Amsterdam, The KI MeSSAR, | approxiinaw to American waters and sent in reaponse to the Chancellor’#®) American ports, and contend the 18 follows 53, refer to ‘'RERARD WELCOMED BACK HOME BY CITY: ‘HAS NOPEAC PLAN >—— | Ambassador to Warn epi of Peril in Resumption of — | U-Boat Warfare, ‘ns DIPL' OMAC 2Y be AUDED. Speakers at "Reception Praise! Tact and Wisdom in Deal- ing With Germany. | | | | | James W. Gerard, Ambassador ot) |the United states to Germany, with | Mrs, Gerard, on his frat visit home since the Buropean War multiplied | the volume and reaponsibtiities of his | duties more than two yeara ago, ar- rived on the Frederiok ViIT. of the! Beandinavian-American line to-day. | On the matter of hiv misaion to thie| country, other than that tt was for be | brief rest, the Ambassador smilingly| refused to commit himaelf. He read) the estimate of the diplomatic mitua. | ~~ |tlon between the United States and |Germany garding the reaumption of| “ruthless” U-boat warfare, went by Wireless to The World by {ts ataff cor- respondent, who was the Ambaasa- dor's associate in Berlin for two months and his ahip companion. His only remark was that, innsmuch a the article did not quote him, he could not be expected to comment on Mt. “An Ambassador,” grave amile, “ta, noted.” By his manner, however, he con- veyed to the reporters and the dis- tngulshed citizens o had gone down the bay to meet him the feeling that the article correctly esumated his etaston, TWENTY-FIVE OF COMMITTEE GREET ENVOY. Of the Committees of One Hundred | appointed to welcome the Ambassa- dor to the city only about twenty-five went down the bay in the police ,steaner Patrol, which left the Bat. tery at T o'clock. The attff chill wind mude thone who did go down uncom- | fortable tn body and nervous in mind because of the constant peril to their he nald, of course, with a never | congratulations, ts q « : Rs United States cannot permit bellige high hate, ey sda fal a pieces ent submart Chairman Oscar 8. Straus, bearing erable Won : same waters great sheaf of American Beauty ua further progress. May He guide rows, headed the down the bay/ Your Excellency, in whose wire lead . sub-committes, Other members were | ership I firmly trust ave amplest ‘nour! Henry Morgenthau, Carl 1. Schura, LONDON, Oct. 10.--The followin | nayy'a abiiity to deal with the sub- | former Btreet Cleaning Commissioner message of congratulation vm Bay ne menace, bul we entticd William H, Edwards, Dock Commis- peror Willlam to the K f Wurt-) Kab KHL thie’ c sioner RK. A. ©. Smith, State Senator temburg on the occasion of the sat : a soneideration We | Robert KF, Wagner, Willtam Klein, ter'a twenty-fifth anniversary to the| have shown to neutrals in the exer- | Charles B, Alexander, Wililam M. Bea- throne ts forwarded in un exchange) cise of our sea power shall not be! bury, Frederick J. Middlebrook, Pr telegraph desp: rom Amst udaciously tur to our disadvan. Sauuel McK, Lindsay, President ofthe us follow. Board of Aldermen Robert . Dowling ‘May Your Majesty before long) ‘The sul Mail Gazette says: | Dr. Willy Meyer, Howard Taylor, Carl bring to your people the bles#ings of “Washington must either put a per-,;W. Neuhoff, and Assistant United peace, and may that » repay 4!) emptory Ktop to the proceedings in| States Treasurer Martin Vogel Tho German princes and subjects for the! this avea over which jt clatms special presence among the early rising con heavy sacrifices they nade for meuern, o must withuraw the pro- mittee of a notable proportion of mon the Fatherian est againgt the surveillance e of German descent and sympathies =— — ed by British wars A and recog: was remarked upon in view of con. agi baolexrt in piae that ite diploma owed lack certed propagandist efforts to dis leenounted| tan he fore et raspy vf gsuade such persons from Joining the | but one above ach f welcome. lewhose pupilé @ aoe With the Patrol the Neutrality, the yaar old aunch of the Collector of the Port, eateaseoneaitaloen: D Ambaaador's brothers, Sumaer and brother, Isidor, was HOLD A CONFERENCE Jullan, as th > gueste of Collector Dud |He took her tnto the # 1 bullding © Pinta Majone ahs eins were esterday, and even then she play , me the first to board the Fredertek VII | yestera y, ar : t ‘ t State S FIRST AMERICAN BEAUTIES IN Waen t tle girl did tor Betore His Visit to THREE YEARS. come hoine yesterday © fain Pree dent's Hom: Mr. Gerard appeared at the rail of ily began searching for he They ; sanaih ; the promenade deck and exchanged pO nte nomate oliogs with members of Pane ereriaens me ® wat a “108 the aminiittee while a gang plank REGISTER TO DAY ; to Gorman: kad Cece tea A Arn theca ene To-day is the second day of regia. ; ehoars (nd {oune Mera: Ms ie tration, Registration places open ® 1 BM. Houwe, tng very youthful and pretty in » |from 5.30 P. M, until 10.30 P If President Wiison's close friend and, Sees you do not register you cannot vote adviser, (Continued on Eighth Page.) M NEW YORK TWO SCARES IN ONE DAY BY UNDERSEA BOATS FOR GREEK STEAMER PATRIS —<¢ Halted at Six o’Clock Yesterday Morning in Vicinity of Nantucket —Sees Submarine in the After- noon Near Port of New York. FRENCH AND BRITISH SHIPS NEAR BIG RAIDER ‘The Greek steamship Patris, in to-day from the Piracus-brought@y thrilling tale of two encounters with submarines—the second one only, sixty miles east of Sandy Hook. Whether she met two submarines or one submarine twice is not clear. The ship had 146 cabin passengers and 583 in the steerage, besides a cargo of oils, wines and tobacco, Capt. D. Kairis and First Officer Barbetas were on the bridge when the first scare occurred. At 6 A. M, yesterday the booming of three cannon shot across her bows brought up the ship with a round turn. As Instantly the skipper broke out his signal flags telling her name, her nationality and her port of destination, TWO U-BOATS SUNK IN ARCTIC SEA BY RUSSIAN W WARSHI. | Third Crippled after After an Attack on Wireless Station, Says | Christiania Report. she slowed, the beam of a searchlight fell on her. The officers were able to make out very dimly the form of a submarine wome four hundred yards off the atarvoard bow, They could not tell how many meu were up on the oom. ning tower, After a minute inapee- tlon the submarine shut off her searchlight and submerged. Very tow passengers were awake at the time, The ship was 220 miles east of Sandy Hook In the vicinity of Nantuck Capt, Kairis believes it must have been the U-63 of the Gere man navy. The » o'clock B miy sixty A subme ad visitation was at @ M., when the steamship was miles east of Sandy Hook, was discovered on the starvoard beam of the Patris, Three . | ofMcers were on top of her tower, She CHRISTIANIA, Monday, Oct. 9 (via) 44 Rot fire a gun or hail the steam- London, Oct. 10).--A Russian corpedo [HIP but at sight of her many of the Dassengers were afraid and began w boat yesterday sank two German #Ud-|iook for life-proservers after marines and oripp 4 another Capt. Kairis told the people that the submernibles had attacked the|Greoce was at peace with Germany Ruasian wireless station at Sepna- land that there was nothing to fear. volak. on the Murtnan coast, accord: |te ordered hia str of signal flags ing to information received here to- | nent on the halvards. Ina few seconds day from Petrograd, the undersea boul took a dive inte Several persons were killed by the | ine goa, gunfire of the submarines | “There really was nothing Hike @ = ar suid Mra. Addie KR. Stone, who TROLLEY CARS COLLIDE © == tim 00'S uMomm pen years n Greeve “The AT FOOT OF STEEP HILL 's2°':,05%5 eign’ gt anes men b plain us there was no dange vf being sunk I did not evea several p a wer juce gO ut n deck to # he submarine” Kendle ofa fear oud " ne on is Was quite sure ey ‘a Ot Lewin enu n « sof (he submarine One Hundred an « » orm s OF nok rh it “FRENCH LINER WAS rete idk het * , Pe) 7 ; Toh th aay Gees READY TO FIGHT WITH vera rage RAIDING SUBMARINE ny ' wn as wees H . from 1 e Freneh liner Espagne came into Find Second 1 One Hundred ty With an exciting story of } 3 ents, whe nd | xperience Sunday night and wy’ yen the hill the car Monday wh lifeboats were swung D and the se ' nto}out and all precautions taken for ag. rat * encounte with "Man SUD their seats "marine te lee West) Fiat ow eached the Eeapagne One b ¥ Sunday Ov wireless thet the German isp Huh, HUN- raider was at work in nearby waters, iiceas, wera te ‘@ hospital) @Ware of the danger, though the pre- euffering from shock and contusions, cautionary measures soon gave the § t ree eee

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