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DISMISSED ENVOY’S WIFE WHO DREADS TRIP TO GERMANY. _——. BIG STEEL CABLE SHIELDS WARSHIPS ATNAVY YARD HERE Precaution to Protect Dread- noughts and Other Craft from Surreptitious Damage. | SEARCHLIGHTS AID, TOO. | ' -a Net of Iron Rings to Supplant Present Device as Soon | as Possible. DESELIOD 0999 96-96-9-9-3-9-0+ In order that the dreadnoughts, battleships, cruisers, torpedo boat destroyers and submarines lying at Tepair berths or tn dry dock at the Brooklyn Navy Yard shall be properly Protected against surreptitious dam- age, the Navy Department has or- dered that the big ship basin be closed with a steel wire cable. This cable 1s in place to-day and com- pletely blocks entrance from the | East River. Tt extends from the coal dock to the root of Gibson Street, a distance of pproximately 1,200 feet, and les about ten feet below the surface. This a2 oe haar ph 3-D9-99-8-9-6-2- 99-3 O-9-O0-S. + & ® of Miss Grace Parker, National Com- would effectively prevent the passage @ @! ‘ Me SF any crate of ita. In eddies to © ata a arene % | Mandant of the newly organized Na $B 90609-00464 | onal League for Woman's Serv the cable, which is about two Inches in diameter, searchlights have been mounted at each end of the steel ® BERNSTORFE SAILS barrier to sweep the entrance at night. As the value, In dollars alone, tie war craft now assembled at the Brooklyn yard runs far into millions, the Na the |No. 105 West Fortle No, e' 3 th Street yester Department is un- FROM HOBOKEN AT day afternoon and said to the ele willing that there shall be the least ask as to their safety. Tho East River has hitherto been © avenue of comparatively easy ac- coms to the yard and its valuable} othe \ manufacturing and repair shops. | Watchmen have always been on duty | &t this gateway, day and night, but! Frederick VIII. in these uncertain times the cable! ‘waa deemed a better auxiliary than the revolver and whistle of the| watchman. \ But the wire cable is not considered | ey the ultimate barrier which is to be placed over the basin entrance. Plans are being evolved for Its re- placement by a net of steel rings similar to the torpedo nets carried by British men-of-war. This, made of rings of half-inch steel, will be buoyed ecross the entrance and hang to with- fn a short distance of the bottom of the channel, It removal to permit the passage of an authorized vessel will be a much easier matter than the slacking off of ‘the cable now in place. “When the cable is lowered the services of two locomotives on the coal dock are re- quired to rafse it to place again. The number of watchmen at the! Navy Yard has been more than! day announced that arrangements doubled in the last few days and stern had been completed there for tho de- precautions are taken to prefent tho! parture of Von Wernstorff and his entrance of any one who has no busi-| staf, They will leave Washington ness in the yard. re over the Pennsylvania Tuesday night Safeguards have been so redoud The train will be switched to the that all the workmen were sent t W déteey Central dracka at day in squads to the yard in photo- and will be taken to Weehawken, grapher to have their pictures t n where it will be switched to the Erle and secured, with jovernment und taken to Hoboken, seal, to their fdentification cards. Count von Bernstorff will leave the Instead of permitting the workmen train at Fourteenth and Hudson entrance by the usual gates, runways Streets, Hoboken, and will go fi have been constructed at the Flush- there to the Scandinavian-Amer ink Avenue gate, and Inspectors and watchmen stand at them every morn- tng to check off the arrivals by means sonishiliiniene Guaranteed Safe Return—Party Won't Come to New York. Count von Bernstorff will sail on the Frederik VIL, next Wednesday at | 2 o'clock. Word was recetved to-day | by the Scandinavian-American Line | from Copenhagen that everything had been firranged satisfactorily for the steamer’s departure next week. The vessel will stop at Halifax | d of Kirkwall, and the German Government {has guaranteed the safe return of the | steamer through the barred zone. | | Safe conduct had already been | guaranteed for the dismissed German | | Ambassador by France and England, His party will consist of 200 persons, |for whom arrangements have been made on the Fredertk VIII. Despatches from Washington to- n Line pier, where he and his retinue He will and will board the Frederik VIIL be escorted by Hoboken fe of thelr work badge numbers, The members of the United States sec men are required to exercise the service. reatest care in preserving these —_—_—"- Dadges, as the loss of one means the SOME GERMAN CONSULS suspension of its owner without pay Cc a aaa | GOING TO SOUTH AMERICA Roemer a Victim of When F ght, hired ul Klose, forty~ @ room a few days ago from Mrs. na Renner at No, 154 Kast One Rindred and Fifth Street, he said he had left his wife and that'his son was Ordered by Government to Take New Posts on Leaving United States, employed by the Adams Express Com- pany, Mrs. Renner smelie « this Spy ett eS " Durning. and traced it to “Klose | WASHINGTON, Feb, 10.—Not all room, She called Policeman Ayres, | the German Consuls who were ro- ; ‘found Klose de Mur prene 18 Anu) SUNG Ad'1 ieved from further duty here with the breaking off of diplomatic rela- tions between the United States and Germany will accompany Count von Bernstorff out of the country. It was learned to-day that a num- ber have been tnstructed by the Ger- man Government to depart from their former posts for points in South and Central America. Names of the consuls who will not Woman Needs All Her Strength Keeping house is d enough when well, The woman who has had a bad back, blue, nervous spells, di head- returne to Germany are withheld on SGU Missy. heads N the ground that tho Entento naval a ee forces. might endeavor to prevent PE DAGGer role Be them from reaching their destinations. bles, has a hard $74 lot, for the family } cares and The men had been instructed to use the greatest caution to prevent their movements from becoming known never let up. and to take every precaution unteer to write us In which one of our | L , Probably: it's all du oe eee conducts have been or willl emergency groups. they wlan to be |aaid Hut the outcoine was unknown, | the reeutt of hid: he asked for the consults, They will} vroiied, wiret of these is the social] 1. tana of Fernando de Naronhe ney trouble and not 4 reaching their new. posts welfare group. Wherever there 18 &|iy yituated about miles off the the much feared a | | > | military camp there is a soclal prob- eastern extremity of Brazil, — 1 Pai te 72) © | ENSIGN ASTOR DISLIKE: liem involving young women | ne j the kidneys “with | s) \sociAL AID AND SAFETY NEC YOUNG AMERICA, Doan's Kidney Pills, used and recom- mended by women’ the world over. They are just as harmless as they a effective and may be used for’ chi dren with weak kidneys, too, DESK DUTY IN OFFICE: iSo ¥ nung Millionaire Goes on In-| Reackivn: Risat i pection Work at the East Mrs. K. Kuler, 264 Prospect Ave. River Bridges, says: “IT had been suffering for Ensign Vincent Astor was relieved to-day at his own request duties of Chief of Staff of the Naval Militia guarding various points tn the city, He has been on desk duty tn an office In the Custom House for several months fi moa dame back and the pain felt a» if was hitting me. My feet and ankles were s' and the pressure of my fingers left a white dent iv the flesh. The kidney seeretions were unnatural, 3O9O9-9-9-9-6-90-4- of the|day. THE EVENING WURKLUD BATUNR Just Back With European Experiences Miss Grace Parker Is Fitting Every Volunteer to the Work She Is Best Fitted For in Taking the Places of Men Who May Go to the Front. Dont put wonen to bo ge socks c neu be used Dont pot women, t work on Somethin they are unfitted fer A woman uho can het own Car would By Nixola Greeley-Smith. What can the American woman do |to serve her country in time of war? | How can the woman power of/ America be mob. | Mllzed, made ef- fective, If the severance of dip- lomatic relations with Germany lead to actual hostilities? What can you do in that emer. gency? What can I do !f I don't want to feel that to be a woman Is to be one of the \effectives of peace and the ineffec- \tives of war? | I asked these questions yesterday which was just flyo days old when the German Ambassador received his Dassports, but which has mado itself count so much tn the last few days that when @ patriotle stenographer wandered Into the headquarters at an who could drive her own car and carry communications would do real service, Another of our groups will In- clude general service — women who can work in offices at stenography, at telegraphy, at the switchboard You understand that thls work Will be standardized, and no person Will be permitted to serve whose work is not up to standard “In the agricultural group we will vator starter, “Where's the war?” ho answered promptly, “Room 1101." In room 1101 1 found Miss Parker classify women who will do poultr and a half dozen other women wholand dairy. work, &e. In about two were there to enroll women volun- ks we hope to take up the supject standardized physical drill for teers for whatever war service they considered themselves most fitted. driil will be held ones 2° oak, and The volunteers came to. volunteer | there will be a unitorm— everything! short skirt and Norfolk jacket, ¢ <a wk + telephone} Members will be subject to regular ee a h a pretty telephon inspection by a Government officer, operator who wanted to offer hevl'The unit of organisation will’ hong services to her country during her] group of women of not less than ten nor more t lunch hour and on Saturday after- if pe hoons, and with a distinguished matron who dropped in to say that the members of the league might have her country house any time they wanted It, Miss Parker is one of three women who have becn appointed members of the National Council of Defense, her colleagues being Mrs. J. 8. Martin of Ph” .delphia and Mrs, H Scott of Washington, D, C, Miss Parker re- turned recently from a visit to Eng- lund, where she made @ snecial study of the patriotic service of women in war time, so she is peculiarly well qualified to head a movement to mobilize the woman power of Amer- fea, SYSTE* an thirty formed Into deta detachments will national division WILL HAVE THEM READY THEY ARE NEEDED. “We hope to enlist the co-operation of all the patriotic societies of the country,” Miss Parker added, “and to have 100,000 members in @ very short time. Our purpose is not to call upon women now to do things which are not needed, but to find out what women can do IF they are needed, to register and classify them so that they can be mobilized at a moment's, notice. “And if These groups chments, and be under one | these women are never done some good by organizing thelr co-ordinative energies. ‘Take the women who run their own, cars, for instance—remember, no woman driver wili be accepted who can not take her car to pieces and put it together again—if no call to serve the country comes, how fine It would be for them to call at hospitals and take out con- valescents; what a splendid demon- ation of democracy it will be for girl who can give two hours of stenography or of telephoning to realize that her work makes her count for her country and that she niust mobilize In tts service, Among the women who have al- ready mobilized as members of the Organization Committee of the Na- tional League for Woman's Service tn answer to the league's clarion call, “For God, for Home, puntry, are Miss Maude Wetmore, New York, Chairman; Miss Anne Morgan, Mrs. Willan Cummings Story, Mrs, Coftin Van Rensselaer of New York, Mrs. | Harrett Wendell of Massachusetts, | Mrs. Hugh Scott of Washington, Mra. vewis Stillwell and Mrs. E. R. Hewitt of New Jersey, Mra, George Isham of IN CO-ORDINATION THE FIRST THING, “The first thing women should do is to systems so thelr efforts," Parker told me, “The National League for Woman's Service hopes to co-ordinate all the energies of patriotic women all over the country, At present our patriotic societies work each one for itself, and there fg much duplication and little collec- tive effort. We don't want to swamp the country with bandages that may not ve need '. We don’t want to pur every woman to knitting socks that may never be worn, What we seek first of all to do ts to systematize the patriotic work of women. “To-day you see workers here tak- ing down the names of women volun- teers. We find out first from these of New r volunteers what thelr educational | linols, Mra. FV. Hammar of Mis- | ’ souri, George Hoadley of Ohio, qualifications are, whether their) Mrs, Willis Martin of Pennsyl- as been general or tech- | vania, training has been & aia, nical; we ask about their health) we sore lina, Mra Willlam W. Sate ask them in which of our emergency | op Virginia and Mra, C, A. Severan: divisions they feel qualified to serve | of Minnesota. and how much time they can give us. __ Our primary aim ts to register the TT E IT | oulitien of che women of the country (BATTLE WITH RAIDER Mrs, Thomas Owen of Ala- Mrs. Lindsay Patterson of “England at the outbreak of the war had no knowledge of its woman | power—no more than America has -day, Consequently, many women). , <a ope to work in industries for | British Cruiser Squadron Said to which they were unfitted. Many Have Fought for Four women were set to farming who had | Hours. o equipment whatever for such} Say ier had mobilized her} BUENOS AYRES, Feb, 10,—Spectal woman power, so when the men went |despatches received to-day from Per- to the front her registered women /nambuco declare that w battle oc- stepped into their places, The: ‘curred Thursday off Fernando de duplication, no waste in Ger-|Naronha between a British crutser no many. We ask the women who yol- |sa\ dron and the German raider, The fight lasted four hours, it was! ESSARY IN WAR TIMES. “[ thought the war baby problem| in England had proved more or less fantastic,” I interrupted . “it did,” Miss Parker answered, “But surely a girl may lose her self- ways t On petition of the pupils, an American flag now veils the Kalser's portrait in the German room of the Springfield, Mass., high school. respect in other aye neve! ie = Ka war baby © don’t Want @ — | eed piuation whieh permits xirls)/ LINCOLN HONORED IN SOUTH.) to hang around military camps all| | And if we have a social Wel-|pnree-Day Celebration of | fare group to inquire into the reere: Misihday Manan in Tennonsse. tional possibilities of the towns which} CrpeRLAND GAP, Tenn, Feb. 10 have encampments nearby, if We #0)” Caiabration of the anniversary of that wholesome amusomént is posal- ble to the men, we solve one of our|the birth of, Abraham Lincoln began rtion tired me and T Jost all ambi- . here to-day at Lincoln Memorial Uni- ‘ days and the confinement irke: . | problems, a I n. After usiie five bexes of Doan's Ore OP mn nt irked him. | Prep nother of our emergency groups|versity. The programme, which will Fidnev Pills Twas completely cured.”! The youn® millionaire sald he axes in the ¢ t; women who|fextend through three days, will be| : u to get out In the open and!ean cook and who might be needed at|participated in by many men of note| wren KIDNEY} £22" 122° tactical experience. “He |rost s s and railroad canteens|comins from various sections of the OAN haw been put on inspection duty on |during the transportation of troops. |eountry, aieeite | PILLS the East River bridges, His succes. |TROn we nant mot arene Ona als | by G Howard for the | _ _ §0¢ al ol! Drug Stores for as Chief of Staff is Ensign War-|Suposo at somo critical timo a foreign |7Pecntl bemeGit of Dove aud girls in Foster-Milbi.r. Co, Props. BuffaloN¥.§ ren E. MoWhirk of Niagara Falls,/sympathizer should cut all Wires Tennessee, Soutnwe Virginta and! Eighth Division, Third Battalion, about a military encampnient, a wom- Boutheastern kentucky | hol | lighte OnAce PanKEn VAY, FRBDRUARHY 10, Woman Power of U. S. Mobilized BRITISH ADVANCES To Aid Nation in Event of War QNWESTERNFRONT . Classify women for poultry and dairy Work 191i. MISS HELEN DRAPER BECOMES MRS. TAFT IN BOSTON TO-DAY MEET REPULSES Berlin Reports Heavy Fighting, < at Many Points—French in | Night Attacks. | \ | | | BERLIN, Feb. 8—(Ry wireless to Sayville, Feb, 10.)—Heavy fighting ts under way in the Ancre Valley, the Overseas News Agency says. Thers have been severe artillery and infan- | jj try engagements for several days and ;; the British have attained small suc- {{ cesses north of the Ancre at the cost |; of heavy losses. RE |_ The village of Grandcourt, the |, { Newn Agency says, was evacuated by the Germans on Monday, after hav- |ing been mado useless for defensive purposes, and it was not until three, |days later that the British discov- jered the village had been evacuated. The German artillery on the Verdun front broke up in its inciplency bens | attempted attack by the French on| | Hill 304 yesterd A minor attack by the French on Pepper Ridge, north | of Verdun, was repulsed, Thero wero lively artillery activity and numerous !raiding operations at many points along the front, The statement reads: + “With the army of ®eld Mar- | shal Duke Albrecht of Wuerttem~ berg, the Ypres and Wyt- schacte fronts, and with the army groups of Crown Prince Rupprecht in the Artols, as well as between on HowaeRno pRapeR A marriage of more than usual in- terest in the East will take place to- wegian-Ameri tablished headquarters on foot of Th of mysterious water front. Two fires ing Co,, of No, State hattan, which was tied up outer end of ablaze before the with destruction until Willlam J. arrived and Nghter away, plete loss, Another fire started ynor and towed the at was burned. barge away from the pier and towed it into the bay, where the Seth Low Part of the drowned out the fire. cotton was destroyed While everybody was busy with the cotton barge fire a Mghter laden with 500 bags of flour and tled bout midway between the land er 1 ay from her mooring line head at the hi was stove In the sank before any hull he can't understand all those a CRUISERS MAY GUARD LANES IN BARRED ZONE ing off in Amount of nage Sunk Is Thus Accounted For, WASHINGTON, Fob, 10 the mathematical Lioyd’s reports on ship destruction tn ( campaign probably lies a story of British counter 1 asmuch as the tonna wrecked now seems While the falling sunk the last two ¢ temporary, somo in it the possibility orm dwindlin off in rities TWO FIRES AT PIER IN SOUTH BROOKLYN) © AND THEN A WRECK Lighter Burned, Another Sunk and Barge Damaged at Nor- an Moorings. An eMctent and energetic jinx es- the wegian-American Lino pler at the loth Streat, South Brook- lyn, last night, and conducted a series performances, created all sorts of gossip along the and a wreck comprise the damage done thus far. A lighter laden with steel and be- called upon I think we shall have| longing to the McAllister Bros, Tow- reet, Man- at the pier, caught fire early to-day and the deckhouse was watchman in an alarm, The pler was threatened the fireboats Seth turned The lighter Is a com- 8 o'clock this morning, in the cargo of a cotton barge moored to the plier about fifty feet from where the McAllister lighter A Standard O11 tug and a Pennsylvania tug got’ the the Ancre and the Somme, there | aay when Miss Helen Howard was repeatedly increased rvienlied | Draper becomes the bride of Wal- by the artillery forces. Under the | pig ‘aft at the home of the fire British bri protection of artille nce of | Sailly there was an ad | Draper, and Mr. ‘Taft son of Mr. and achments of some strength. | Mrs. envy Waters Taft of this city, © advances against our posl- | and a nephew of ex-President Wiliam tions were everywhere repulsed | Howard Taft. After the ceremony “army group of the German | there will be a large reception. Crown Prince—On the west bank | Mrs. George H. Snowden, sister of nch opened a By our effici- Mr. Taft, will be Miss Draper's ma- tron vf honor, and the other bridal of the Meuse the F violent fire at noon. ; # parents, on Commonwealth reconnoltring detachments Ad~— | Avenue, Boston. Miss Draper is the vanced at many points, South of daugh of Mr. and Mrs, George A.! BILLY’ LYONS’ Gl ISTAKENBY COURT AFTER INNER ROW Broker Charges Westerner with Threats and Permit from Rosalsky Is Impounded, William C. Lyons, known nationally as an enthu#iastic sportsman, Whe arraigned before Magistrate Murphy in the West Side Court charged with having threatened Her- man R. Lingg, a stock broker, of Ne 50 Broad Street, with a deadly weapon. He was arrested in Petera Restaurant, at No, 169 West. Forty- ninth Street, on Feb, 7, by Schmidt of the West Sixty-eight Street Station, on the complaint of Ling. The broker said Lyons bed | insisted on talking with women Lingg was entertaining, and when asked to | fo away had displayed firet a big roll of bills of high denominations and then a loaded .45 calibre) Colt's revolver, x On behalt of Lyons, Joseph Rosal. sky, bis attorney and brother ‘of Judge Otto A. Rosalsky of General eager Produced the following par- mit, signed by Judge Rosalsky Feb. 16, 1914; “I hereby authorize and e: Mr. William Lyons of No. 602 I~ way, a citizen of the United States, to me personally known to be a per. vn of good moral character, to have or to carry concealed on his person, {or to have in’ his possession « pistél or revolver or sword cane. The tea- son for this issuance of this license jis that the applicant carries large | Sums of money and articles of value upon his person for business pur- poses The permit was not on the ordinary printed blank but was typewrttten én Judge Rovalsky's letter head, In apite of the exhibition of the permit, Lyous |was held in the West Sixtyseighth | Street station when arrested. He tele- | Phoned to Judge Rosalsky, who went |to the station house at onde and ent fire, an attack against HUM attendants will bo tho Mixses Ray 304 (northwest of Verdun) was | Slater, Eleanor Sprague, Ruth Cheney suppressed while it was in prep- | of Boston and Ursula Fairfax Harri- aration, On the east bank of the son of Warrentown, Va. William Howard Taft 24 will act as his brother's best man, and the ushers river, on Pepper Ridge, an ad- vance by hostile compantes failed. Near Vaux, north of St Mihel, one of our raiding detachments ench lines and de- their rin, Arthur P. McKinstry, Theodore | P. Dixon, William J. Sturgis, Angier B. Duke and Reese D, Alsop of this city. . On returning from their honeymoon the Tafts will live at 125 East Sev- enty-second Stroet. Nor- entered the stroyed the dugouts with garrison.” PARIS, Feb. ficial report was given out here to- day: “We made surprise attacks last night on enemy posts west of Au- berive and in the sectors of Be- | | SPIRIT OF CONCILIATION zange and Parroy, fae) took e ‘ | DOMINATED SPAIN'S REPLY fighting last night on the front’ | premier Hopes That His Country's between Vacherauville and Cau- | ( heres Wood (Verdun front), but | Help May Be Used in the Cause of Humanity, no infantry action. “A German alrplane Was brought PARIS, Feb, 10.—Premier Roma- down yesterday near Regnieville= | nones of Spain, discussing the Span- en-Haye by the fire of our spe- lish answer to the German note with! cial cannon 4 Madrid correspondent of the Radio| ‘Last night one of our aviators | Agency, 1s quoted ag saying: “Our nswer to the German note set forth to drop bombs on the railway stations and barracks at | was solely inspired by the peculiar |situation and special interests of Karlsruhe (in Germany about fifty miles from the French bor- (Spain. It was our absolute duty, a 10.—The following of- | which the low ning der.) His objectives were at- |duty which is Incumbent upon ail blazing} tained. He set forth Ina French | Governments, to protect the lives and machine at 10.50 P, M, and re- | properties of our eltizens against all ad of the pler ne outer end mysteriously sli nd tide carried her against the bulk- turned at 2.10 A, M, this morning, his mission having been accom. plished, "German illegal att “We drafted our answer In a spirit of conciliation and. with full con- fidence that the German Government ks, aviators — dropped bombs this morning in the region Santis would be moved la Its own conduct ei ort Tubhe, and by’ the mame sentiments of friendship to the} there were no vicuins at Dune) [toward Spain: but, while giving proof : : of our conciliatory feelings, we soughg Kirke One wornan was killed at 115 tnake cloar the serenity and firms 4, i 4 ombs also were | ness of our position, born of long and dropped on Naney and in the | serious reflections, Our decision Is A big) feet of je Md Vincent. One | 1, uit all calls of duty however and the| Cl¥ilan wasvkilled and four were | painful they may. be. 3 era of “frightfulness” in the area is to be short lived It was suggested that En ready has © of crulsers is also be Germany ber submarines the Lril Adu report Some of Germany's unde have possibly put back t before now, supply of tor count for the up 1k y, though there is sti Ity-—that some of ¢ are being hidden bc Admiralty and I wo United states Ste tet poratio 474,054 tons plished guar within the eved by already naval a has lost Nough on aity ha ish pont eff British uing could be Jensen, pier superintendent, says things, that Germany's barred area. led lanes | and ith Frohman. Klaw & ryt jly experience from German shell fire nd Nixon & Zimmerman carried out ‘ Iti tho development of the syndicate | esterday. He had expressed a do- athoritles | idea, in 1911 he retired from business, |#TO to seo the ruing of Ypres, and Ris many of|tranaferring his theatrical interests | (utomobile was just rounding Dead point |to his brother, Alf Hayman, | Man's Corner into the Belgian olty mado no} As an enthuslastic yachtsman ana| When @ shrieking 5.9-Inch shell burst the owner of the Sapphire, Mr, Hay. | f¢w lengths be hind, | ; man sp h time abroad prior] A few yar uthen long the {to the war, Always keonly Interested | automobile becaine stalled, | When tt ir | in ng that touched the ¢ ‘was found the car would not budge ni ® $10,000 to the Actors’ and | the party sprinted for shelter, as sev-| ro fina 4 was for several years its {etal more shells broke over them, 1 another ident, He ts survived by al ten catl rmany's | widow, |German Firm Gets Attachment om by the| eae A cpap | 21 German Ships in Philippines, a's Woman Hurt ta Subway Cre } MANILA 10——-The Behamercr| Dunn, a dressmaker of No, 59 mpany of Manila, a German firm, has West One Hundred Fifteenth | secured writs of attachment against jStreet, was removed to the Knickers |twer'v-one German ships} by the ap pocker Hospital today, suffering trom] american authorities at Manila, Cebu ste ut of the subway. by being | and Hoilo to ver half a million pesos crushed while trylng to board # south- | for maintenance of the vessels and their woundes “Our answer to Germany was in- spired by the same sentiments and the same principles as our answer to \the peace suggestions of President | Wilson. Spain's conduct since the | beginning of the war shows and will AL HAYMAN, FAMOUS THEATRICAL MAN, DEAD Prominent as Manager for Thirty Years and Credited With Origi- nating Syndicate Idea. Al Hayman, for moro than thirty years one of the leading theatric managers of America, died early to- continue to show the fullest’ ind pendence, upaffected by all sugges- tions from outside and based simply | on the rights of her citizens and the | duties of her Government “Spain's neutrality does not dimin- twh in any way her Impatience to see the hour when her help may be of| some use to the cause of humanity.” SHRIEKING SHELL WHIZZED Ton- Back of} day at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel after an illness of several years, | BY SENATOR HALE'S HEAD boat] Mr. Hayman is credited with hav- | i] amatic|ing originated the theatrical syndi- | sures, in-|eate idea, and probably v the] Statesman From Maine Has a Nar- reported greatest influence in placing the - > iy hile View! | theatrical business on a sound finan-| | ‘OW Escape W hile Viewing tonnage |clul pasis. He was born in Wheel-| the Ruins at Ypres } ys may be only jing, W, Va. in 1852, and began his! WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN| ere see | ma! eer in £ rial 10 [from a staff cor- in 1553, In 1889 he began operations | respondent of the Associated Press), in New York with tho Inte Charles|—senator-elect Hale of Maine, who Frohinan, and ten years later took|has been visiting British front over tho Columbia Theatre, Chicago, | for the past several days, had a Mve- barred the nd al- \bound train crews \ nce the outbreak of the war, signed @ ball bond furnished by a se- curity company, releasing Lyons, Magistrate Murphy held Lyons for |the grand jury in $2,500 ball on @ | will be Eben 8. Draper, brother of the | °M"s* of threatening Lingg with the bride; J. Watson Webb, Lee J. Por-| revolver, and sald: “I am impound that permit for the pra > ton of the general public. I do believe that the defendant 1S proper person to hold such a 7 The Magistrate explained that naa previously received a com; that Lyons had displayed are in a squabble at the Garden taurant and had ordered the confiscated, but had not Impousdee the permit, with the apparent result that ayons had possessed himeelf ef another revolver, The hearing was acrimonious, torney Hosalsky said he thi Magistrate Murphy had prejudged case. The Magistrate replied another Judge might commit the law. yer for contempt, but that he rest with a promise to eject if the remark were repeated. Magistrate Murphy made note of the presence of a man in front spectators’ bench in the - room who was taking notes dw the proceedings and asserted he Judge Rosalsky’s private secretary, “Bully” Lyons ts a well known eitl- zent of Denver, Col. He bag a interest in a clothing business which he acts as New York sales manager, He was a sergeant-at- arms of the last Democratic National Convention and has been a deputy sheriff in Colorado, He acoompaniéd John Lind, President Wilson's ig. vestigator of Mexican conditions, as a bodyguard while in Mexico, was reprimanded in Night Court August by Magistrate Appleton an indiscriminate display of his re- volver on Broadw The Denver man achieved natimal prominence last fall when he into the ring at the time Billy gave his sion to Freddi over Charley White at Springs and stood off the mob threatened Roche. J Judge Rosalsky’s friends said to- day that he and his family known Lyons for many years they were grieved and surprised “this unfortunate incident.” Lyons's wife, from whom he Sad been separated for seven years, com: mitted suicide by asphyxiation Jan 20 In q furnished flat at No. 60 West One Hundred and Seventh Street, where she had been living under the name of “Vivian King” with Robert Widney, formerly a rich Pacific Coast real estate promoter, who called him- self "Richard Kini Two Girls Ran Down by Aute, While on their way to lunch at to-day, Sadie Houser, a milliner, of 251 West One Hundred and Bleventh Street, and Ida Drangle of No, 408 Avenue, Bronx, were knocked down front of No. 3 Weat Twent Street by an automobile o' driven by Taanc Goldberg of Long Beach Miss Drangie was removed Bellevue Hospital suffering from. sions and abrasions, and Miss was attended for slight Injuries went home. Austin, Hichols & Co’ UNBEA COFFEE Order from your Grocer INSIST on ‘*‘ SUNBEAM”