The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1916, Page 1

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career AI ' EDITION —— PRI CE ONE CENT. by The Press ‘New York World). Che Publishing MER PUT R NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1916. FR AN D BRITISH LINERS HELD IN PORT BY U-BOAT PERIL CHENEY RELIEVES MARQUARD WHEN RED SOX LONG HITS BEGIN TO PILE UP RUNS + Dodgers Start Off Like Winners in| Fourth Game of World’s Series With Two Tallies, but Gardner's: Homer Takes Lead Away. Score by Innings Boston:. 030118 Brooklyn. 2 0 O O Of) BY BOZEMAN BULGER. EBBETS FIWLD, BROOK Oct, 1 World's series started with Marquard and Meyers opposing the battery of Leonard and Carrigan for Boston. FIRST INNING-—Hooper died on @—— en easy that Marquar A threw to first fourth of the The zane bounder BATTING ORDER. Janvrin out struck Brookly Boston Walker also fanned, No runs, no | Johnston nt. Hoo} nf M t Janvein, 3b, bite, no errors, none left ib W. Walker, ef. Johnston tripled. Myers singled ue Hoblitgel, Ub, and Johnston scored. Merkle walked Pitcher Gregg of the hed out from the bench to warm up 1D. Wheat hit to Gardner Jaavrin, forcing taking third took second who thr Merk out On a@ wild pitch, Wh OF THE HUDSON TUBES Janvein shaw's hot grounder and he w spel | Myers scoring and Wheat taking | Brotherhood Chief Meets Company third, Wheat was caught off tit President and = May — Bring Carrigan to Janvrin tw Gardner sian RM saci itatownstune, too About Settlement, bits, one error, one left G. H, Sines president of the SECOND INNING Hoblitze! | ttainmen's brotherhood, and Presi walked, Lewis doubled. Gardner's Fisk, of the Hudson ‘Tube cym- homer acored Hoby and Lewis ahead PANY. met by appointment at 4 of him. Wheat dropped Scott's drive, /O'Clock this afternoon to discuss the the runner taking second. Carrigan threatened strike situation, Prior to sacrificed, Marquard to Merkle. Leon- the meeting Mr, Sines said he nad ard struck out. Hooper grounded out S°me hopes of an amicable le. to Merkle—Three runs, two hits, one; Ment, although Pr nt Fisk bad error, one left, suid earlier he had made no conces Gardner threw out Olson. Chief | sions of any character. Myers walked, Marquard was out,| Mr. Sines said the shift of 146 men Leonard to Hoblitzel, Scott threw #oing off duty at 4 o'clock this after- out Johnston, No runs, no hits, no|#00n would go to Fisher's Hall, in errors, one left Jersey City, and remain there under THIRD INNING—Cuishaw threw| orders. The shift going off duty at out Janvrin, Walker beat out a slow nidnight wi ilso go to Fisher's Hall, roller to third, Hoby find to Myers, | The Jersey City police have informa Walker was out stealing second,| ton t fa strike ty declared it w Chief Meyers to Cutsha No runs, | 89 into eifect as the Whifts change a one hit, no errors, one lef: midnig iffecting the men coming Hi Myers filed to Wa Me on duty 4s well as those going off. filed to Scott. W Beunnno new 6" BUSSHANS. ROUT TURKS GMa it cot” fa FROM MOUNTAIN SLOPES Further Success of Drive on the bell Leonard attempted to take se ond but wes out, Mey to M e Caucasian Front is Reported to Cutshaw, One run, two h by Petrograd, errors, one left be Cutshaw doubled. Mowrey w 1, PETROGRAD, Oct, 11 (via Lon- Olson popped to I x av d-=The following announcement flied to Scott, ‘Pretf ted for M vas made to-day by the War Office quard, Pfeffer struck oul, No pur coastal region on the Cau one hit, no erre \ ast? 9 font our gallant troops dia Cheney now pipteh I » Turks from the mountain FIFTH INNING HI . ar Soga and Oinardjik and Janvrin siruc t 1 eht bar of the River Hoby dashed ‘ 8 fir scorlng Mor i. \ ware 4 One run, one h iment ‘ . Kaste: anand REGISTER TO-DAY ‘ To-day is the third day of regis a —— tration. Rogistration pisces onen SAILING TO-DAY, from 6.30 P. M. until 10.20 P.M. If Santurce, Turke lele 3P.M. you de net register you cannot vote, Guiana, St, Thomas i se nace OPLM, "NO COMPROMISE NPEAGES HAE,” ASSERTS ASQUT |‘Allies Will Require of Enemies | Adequate Reparation and Security for the Future.” ASKS NEW WAR CREDIT. Loan of $1,500,000,000 Sub- mitted to Commons-——Gains in War Reviewed. LONDON, Oct. 11.—Premier Asquith sived a tremendous ovation In the House of Commons this afternoon when he declared in the midst of a speech in which he moved new war eredits of $1,500,000,000; This war nnot end in a patched rious, dishonor! & compro- mise masquerading un the name Jot peace “This Isn't the moment for faint hearts and ¥ Mint in sile vindicuive, but they will require from the the past a No on vering 8," a er when the ; + “The allies are not couns ios enemies adequate reparation for urity for the future, 1 se RIOTING OiL STRIKERS SEWE BAYONNE AND STORM POLICE STATION TO FREE PRISONERS o————_—_ STAR OF THE MOVIE. WHO IS DEFENDANT ! Firemen Armed With Rifles Aid in| Repelling Mob— Machine Guns Mounted to Guard Tanks—Sheriff Kinkead Rushes Deputies toScene. Striking employees of the Standard Oil Company at Bayonne, N. J., terrorized that town for several hours to-di y, taking advantage of the fact that the police force was inadequate to hold them in cheek. The violence which has marked the strike since its incaption several days ago, resulting {n several clashes in which police and strikers have | been wounded, reached @ climax this afternoon when 2,000 strikers, most |of them armed, drove everybody from ibe downtown station of the Cen- tral Railroad at Bayonne at the point of revolvers and ritles, and attacked the few men who tried to argue with them Following the riot, notices that no® more teuinn wea son tvewe 8" REPORT GERMANY SPENT EIGHT MILLIONS HERE DOROTHY GREEN DOROTHY GREEN, MOVIE STAR. IN DIVORCE THRILLER tlon were posted | | | A crowd of strikers threatening = cit | izens at the West Eighth Street sta-! Socialists to Ask Hollwee About 16h Of Tie OO mbARY. Waa Olat Cost of Propaganda in U. S, and —_——_o—_ six of the ringleaders were arreste desires to prolong for &) Not jong after taking possession of| in Other Neutral Countries. Court Told How Actress Was single moment longer than is necessary | the railroad station 300 strikers! Lonpon, o ‘t « a bh A t. 11.—Accord oa asiag j | the tragic spectacie of bloodshed and] marched to the potice neadyuurters at | 5 According to's! Besieged in . Home and destruction, but we owe tt to those! Twenty-sixth Street | Berne telegram to the Wireless Press, supreme unavailing,’ sacrifices shall not have been | Parliame sald the Premier, had what was equivalent tot s before Jexpenditure for , although that period inelud- twenty outh African War. When he moved the last vote of credit in July he estimated the average » of ex penditure at approximately $25,000,000 daily iat forecast t ed to be almost exactly corre At commencement of the present week Premier continued, there was stil in hand $502,500,000, which would carry on until Oct He wave the aggregate expenditure in 118 daye of the financial year as: Army, navy and munitions, $1,849,000,000; loans to allies and dominions, $786,000, 000; food, supplies, railways, &c., $165, 000,000, The daily average of expend!- tures had risen slightly, he said, and was $25,350,000 for the last seventy seven days of the financial year. LOANS TO ALLIES EXCEED ESTIMATE Expenditures for the army had Hen off stightly, while those for munitions had increased somewhat Loans to Great | Dominibns were exceeding the Budget lestimate, at the present rate. Surveying (he progress of the war since the last vote of credit, the |Premier said hot weather had ham |pered operations in the secondary |theatres, but that in Mesopotamia |substantial progress had been made | with rail and river communications Jand the health of the troops had im- The defeat of t Turks at the | Katia i ast of the Suez Canal had gone far to remove the danger of attack on the canal and had impaired l'rurkish prestige in Arabia and Syria In Western Fgypt the Senusnt tribes nén had educed to impotence ea nies on the Salonica vor i fl d heavy losses on the " nd prevented them tr R I (Continued on Second Page,) | Who have given their ves that theie¢ Britain's allies and| Avenue © and : Confronted by Husba wth the avowed purpose of releasing | German Socialists are planning to in- Confronted by Husband. three atrikers arrested earlier in the} terpellate Chancellor von Rethmann-| 41, ; ane ne movie man lost a ha day for carrying concealed weapons. | Hollweg in regard to allegations thar! ge a fim this whe a he 1 Before going to the static : © the | 200,000,000 marks was spent for news incidents which occurred in’ apart strikers turned in false alarms Of! paper propaganda in the first two|ment 3B at No. 706 Riverside. brive fre In order to draw the few pollce| years of the war, One-fifth of this!and in the course of which one of remaining to other parts of the clty-|/ sum is suid to have been spent in movieland'’s best known “vampires MOB RETREATS AT SIGHT OF/America and large sums in G was vanquished REVOLVERS. \4 Turkey ‘The story the thriller was us Some one informed Chief Reilly the patch says explanations Will | recied to-day bef Supreme ¢ ad mob was on the way, and when the|be demanded of of what value has justion nbaum, who tried \ strikers reached the station house he | been received vorce ult brought by Samuel H met them at the entrance with a re- | Sei sealed ipainavetian ae Dowathee He} volver in each hand. Two other po GERMANY CALLS MEN anc known as D licemen, similarly armed, guarded | Green, portrayer of vampire i other entrances to the building. | UP T0 THE AG the screen Chief Reilly threatened to shoot the | E OF 63 While Miss Green had the steila first man that placed a foot on the stops leading to the building and the| (4 r A@ part equally as important was ides All Previously De-| ?! by Mannie ayed Chapy ne of Inc} mob backed away, muttering threats eee : ~ Isha onertannint mate eth ‘ and curses, In the mean time firemen clared Unfit for Military Heoaay Gin an hae 7 came to the assistance of the police.) Service. spondent The firemen were armed with rifles | Bs : Learn de aia thaitneny. wets and etationed in the upper Windows): SUNDOWN: GOK aiemh a * An: igetiyaa eHow RL CER Or alin aba je building, 7 br nel Mrs. Pomerance for wecks, wh ee ae, reached headquarte | Tagebla tt, of Berlin, to the oftest that et romerens mine mole that groups of strikers we c Blcaras - sh pepe m ne y CIMANES | nam Buy, they found about the city beating » | , ie en hetweeh the], ether eativ inthe mot ages of fifty-eight and aty-three) interfered with their operatic / : ; : “ Bayonne officials appealed to the Je Re hose A ete th “A month ‘ta the! 5. “ sey City Police Departmen! for help sete 9 e eb nb nowhieh| ut Sheriff Kinkead, who played a provi. | erin itgates ; nent part In scttling the last oll atrike| | The disnaten the order refers Ue ad \ |in Bayonne, sent twenty deputies to] t al! those who previo Ave been went upstairs Pyne declared unfit for military service, ued’ KE (ha pes bbl aki | Seventy-five special pol egram, M Pomer ' | zens visited police heada 4 he di l i Lee ea eee ccnte i pees] AMMRNHUN AD T BOUSBELS |incise neaat cha ne The strikers are practically in pos ' ward e said, ‘D i session of the town, all but @ small . ai t door whate ou number of the few hundred police- Two Met Death, Paper Asserts, rhen M Pomera t |men, armed with rifles, being sta When Guns Fire at British 1 tioned behind a barr a short irder! Pol Help distance from the company's plant Vu to prevent carrying out of repea AMSTE Twe 1 threats to set fire to t huge oi} Americans hay ” Killed In the tanks. These policemen teh Ave Ga Henrl, B st by ; i : : several thousand more who an e dire 4 r are behind a barricade a few blocks J erog so to th \ ; away, armed wit s ersand 4 ! wtones. The ¢ e tt A ' KEEPING STRIKEBRBAKERS OUT Minister at 1 Is is | OF TOWN of y ‘ it is were ut t erin Noted Ger F (Continued ob Second Pege.) toms broker, wae publianed, ED SOX | Cireulation Book Open to All.”’ 20 PAGES ‘ a IN LEA an ee To-Day's Weather—FAIR AND COOL. | DITION <= —= PRICE ONE CENT. 42 >> ERMAN SUBMARINE SCARE | ~ SPREADS TO ENTIRE COAST: PRACTICALLY A BLOCKADE ——--—- <4. |British Admiralty Takes Charge of | Schedules and Sailings of Liners and Munitions Carriers Are Pro- hibited Until Further Orders. NEUTRAL SHIPS ONLY LEFT THIS PORT TO-DAY The schedules for practically all vessels sailing from thissport. par- ticularly those under the British and. French flags, are completely dis» organized to-day as the result of the German menace. The officials of the British lines said they did not know when tnelr ships would leave port, as sailing orders were now in the hands of the British Admiralty, which would transmit word when it was advisable for ships to venture into the Atlantic, \ he | The salting of the British sits to jaar under) the contre! of Admicsl janianee Drewning, whose bead- \quarters are at Halifax, and who ts |in command of the British fieet of {| B | fast cruisera and destroyers igh jsre patrolling the American comat aa }far south as the West Indies aad ‘for the merchantmen to sail is given lit will be transmitted through the wach eameend ) British Consul General at this pert Meclares They Are In, Accord-|}or through the British Naval Atta re, | ‘apt. Gay Gaunt ance With Law and Pledge | to the United States. ‘The officers of the French Line ald to-day they had received orders. ut to permit any of their ships to ieave, BERLIN Oct, 1h ¢ ut they would not disclose from Associated Pres ‘ Whom the orders had come. it te ’ atti antunssds owed that the British admiral at the American coast, according to the |#@lifax ts also directing. the ce barture of the French vess firm conviction of Admiralty and |" np, | © only vessels leaving the port Foreign Office circles, undoubtedly 18! as usual are the Dutch and Nor- | be onducted full accordance Wwegians, although their skippers with the recognized rules of cruiser | P@@llze they are targets for attack fe eo an ne enc ta ee cape they are beyond the three-mile dertakings toward the United States Weisiaan! ‘wheat Lo RO Tak: eatboat wiaiae ssels came to port to tereeinrammer steeper pro- | 28¥: mainly freighters trom southern Mfety of passengers | c248t Ports and the West Indies, They : brought no news of warships or sub- , are urt Marines, but after being warned by 4 imer Wireless, hugged as closely as safety x : : bermitted to the three-mile limit : : ‘ \ NO WIRELESS NEWS ABOUT U Hult) : BOAT ACTIVITIES, N B ommander Upham, aide to the | " fede " mmandant at Lvooklyn Navy Yard, sag : ¢. have no option | “4 RO wireless reports concerning 4 bai oe he U bout activities had been re: <a ; Amer. St!¥ed. at that station, He said the p pay ap vattleship Nevada would leave the , ip. Yard today for “a little exercise os to the |2lonw the Atlantic Coast te pegged As @ result of the disarrangement ’ Bie { sailing neduies, t Cunarder H ! A smiad, due to sail yes Ly from ee vend Bay, with a big eargo of War materia), is still at anchor in the st, ¢ er Cunarder, and ve to sll for Liver. w k her North River 1 ' Kastgate, ' ship under ivier to the I Tayi Ott vt was lo have Havre to-day. The Minnes se A port Line, mney ' ved mera, ¢ e 5 so ships run- @ trom th Wan on the ached. t Py ‘ Bul she and € 4,000 tons of war material arg el both Mguratively aad practically tled ‘aah i

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