The evening world. Newspaper, June 4, 1919, Page 1

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— RICE TWO CENTS. Coreen 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). — NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 4, 1919. 24 PAG Wiorio, | FINAL} [“Cireutation Books Open to All.” | Books Open to All.’’ ES __,__PRICE TWO OENTS. PRICE TWO CENTS. AUSTRIANS VOTE AGAINST PEACE TERMS "Vienna Report Says the Vote of the Government Was Unanimous. “WORK ON GERMAN PACT. “Meanwhile Everything Is in Readiness for Advance of Troops, if Necessary. VIENNA, June 4.—The Austrian Government has decided unani- mously that the peace terms pre- sented at St. Germain on Monday ere unacceptable, the Neues Abendbiatt Says, [An cartier despatch from Vienna said the Austrian Govern- Ment had decided the terms were acceptable.) PARIS, June 4.—The Council of Four met this forenoon to complete its reply to the German proposals. Indi- cations are that the answer will be ready in twenty-four hours, as the experts who have been investigating the German economic suggestions have practically completed their work Neutrals as well as Allies are mak- ing preparations to meet the situa- tion that would be created by refusal of the Germans to sign the treaty. Everything along the Rhine is re- ported in hair-trigger readiness. The Allied armies are understood to have taken up strategic positions, ready for a quick advance into Ger- many, and to be in possession of full “marching orders.” Interest ig now centring in the de- gree to which the peace terme will be a unanimity of opinion that they will be modified. In French circles | it is @uthoritatively stated that they have received the definite impression from the Americans that there will be no fundamental changes in the dreaty. + Promier Lloyd George was ex- pected to issue a formal statement to-day, outlining the changes in the text, as euggested by British, French and American ex- perts. Norway ) { has declared itself with Switzerland in refusing to join in the blockade of Germany, in the . event of a rupture in negotiations, po Reet GERMANS PESSIMISTIC Correspondents at Versailles Believe Answer to Proposals Will Be an Ultimatum. BERLIN, June 3 (Ass —The correspondents at most of the Berlin pessimistically’ to~lay under the impres- on that the Allies will German counter-proposals with an ulti- ated Press) sailles of write Vv newspapers Cor the Germans to sign the treaty The correspondent of the Tageblatt summarizes the situation by declaring that Premier Lloyd George has shown ineeting of the British Ca President Wilson is off est opposition against any concessi: it would be well, he concludes, to on po modification of import, a LET AP OE aon punt > {HE WORLD TRAVET, BURFAU, ‘Arcade, Pulitzer (World) Building, 8.63 Park Row, N.Y. Beekma; ‘Telerbone Cores room for baggage and parva night. and (ravellone’ ic ‘ve modified, since there appears to contemplated | ABOUT TREATY CHANGES: answor the| matum which will make It impossible | Woman Crying She’d Jump From Ninth Story Is Saved By Fireman’s Daring Leap is Bath Freaks | Of 2 Babies | Ona Hot Day a! One Unhurt in 28-Foot Fall; | Firemen Rescue Other Who Locked Bathroom Door and PAURANT. al for Po 1 f wich. Hh enh a aol be Hho Dine ei pots Waid iain, aida, WAS POLICEMAN'S OLD WAR BUNKIE | Wounded, 2 Re and Cap- tured Together—Is Forced to Arrest Him. They bunked and fought side oy side in France, Albert Jensen and | Frank Upton, both of the 11th En- gineers. They fought together Chateau-Thierry, were wounded and gassed and captured by the Germans together. And this is what Jenson said to Upton when they met again early this morning in Central Park Wes' “Hell, Corporal, were a cop.” at} I didn't know you you were a burglar.” ‘Whether Jensen is a burglar or not remains to be learned at his trial, but arraigned before Magistrate Froth- ingham in the West Side Court an a burglary charge. Tt wase in the courts | room that the strange story came to light. Patrolman Thomas MoNamara told at. I was in Central Park West near | 59th Street,” he sald, “when I heard| shouts of ‘Stop thief’, and I saw a) man running, It was this prisoner. I caught him. Mrs, Matilda de Ri- vera, No. 65 Central Park West, said she had seen the man leaving her apartment through a front window, fearrying a clock, The clock was smashed on the sidewalk, I rapped with my night stick.” It was the rapping that brougnt ‘een to the scene and caused the re-unton of the former soldiers, In court Jensen showed a scar “Hell,” said Upton, “I didn’t know | | Two wemen who sat on the stoop of Judge Nott’s home in East | by Inspector Tunney ard Sergeant Barnitz of the bomb squad in 1915 |exploded in the early morning of July 5, 1915. \for trying to blow up St. Patrick’s Cathedral. N Y, REDS DIRECTED TERROR PLOT; _ BOMB MAKER'S IDENTITY KNOWN IMPEDFUGIIVE TWO PITTSBURGH EXPLOSIONS TRACED TO ANARCHISTS HERE POLICE HUNT FOR TWO WOMEN SEEN ON STOOP OF NOTT HOME JUST BEFORE BIG EXPLOSION Believed to Be Same Pair Searched For After Bomb Blast at Police Headquarters in1915—Fragment | of Metal Another Clue. Gist Street for an hour before the explosion of the bomb early Tues- day morning which wrecked the front of the house are being sought by detectives, It is betteved the woinen may be the same pair who were sought as the persons who put a bomb at the door of police headquarters which These women, according were close friends of Carbone and Arbano, wiio had just been sentenced to twelve years in prison by Judge Nott fo Tunney’s information, The women apparently left the city after the bomb exploded al police headquarters and possibly returned to Europe. Trace of them was lest. on his forehead, said he had been shot through the head in France, and There is information that along with many other anarchists and advocates of violence, the wemen suspects returned to the gity when police vigilance with regards to the I. W. W. and Reds was relaxed, The information of Mrs. J. E. Muckenstuerm, who was at 4 window across the street from Judge Nott’s home from 8,30 until fifteen minutes before the explosion, that she had seen two women on the Judge’s door step was temporarily discredited yesterday because Dr. McKew, whose home is next door to the Nott house, told the police he thought Mrs. Bomb Maker Named by Seized I.W. W. Leader Also Reported Under Orders From New York Reds— Haywood Alleged to Have Sent Plotter West. PITTSBURGH, June 4.—Evidence that anarchists respons ible for bomb explosions at the homes of Judge W. H. Thompson of the United States District Court, and W. W. Sibray, Chief In- spector of the Bureau of Immigration, Monday night, were operat- ing under orders from Russian Radical Headquarters at No. 133 East 15th Street, New York, was in the hands of the police here \ According to an amnouncement this morning by Superinten- dent R. J. Alderdice of the Bureau of Police, John Johnson, Presi- dent of the Iqcal I. W. W. organization, who was arrested yester- day after a fight with detectives in a downtown office building, came to Pittsburgh from New York two weeks ago at the instance of “No, 1001.” - William Haywood, President of the National I. W. W., accord- ing to Mr, Alderdice, bears the pass number 1001. Johnson, who, the police say, was the directing genius of the bomb plot in this city, was held in jail to-day with a score of other alleged Anarchists, who were arrested yesterday and last night. Bail was re- fused in cach case, In a jsartial confession, made to the police late yesterday, Johnson is said to have named a Cleveland man as the maker of the bombs ex- ploded here, This man, whose name the" police withheld, also is said to have operated under orders of the Radical Headquarters in New York, and is believed to have gone to Chicago after the explosions here, A search for bim was being made in that city to-day. Among the important suspects arrested last night was Mike Bielesta, also known as Zeleste, said by the police to be secretary of the Russian Soviet Organization in Pittsburgh, and a delegate from. the Petrograd Council of Workmen and Peasants, sent to this country to spread Bolshevik propaganda, A large quantity of I. W. W. and anarchistic literature was found on the suspects, which the police turned over to agents of the Depart- ment of Justice to aid in running down perpetrators of the nation-wide > Muckenstueyn had seen his three daughters on their own steps. More careful investigation obtainedé from Mrs, Muckensterm brought the statement that there was no possibil-| WILSON GETS A ity of ‘her having made a mistake. “I saw the three McKew girls on London Daily News Say Immediately;—Borah their own step from about 8 o'clock until 10,15," the statement said. ‘They were eating ice cream. ‘They stopped| the watchman, Boehner, and gave him some ice cream at about 9.30. Then they walked toward Third) Avenue, }came back and’ went into the house It was more than an hour later that 1 saw two women sitting on the top of the Nott house steps, with their backs against the front door, HEARD WOMAN'S SCREAMS BE- FORE THE EXPLOSION. “Fifteen minutes before the ex- plosion my husband, after sitting at] the window with me, persuaded me to go to bed, I did not go to sleep, It} was too warm, I heard a woman scream, and right after that came the| explosion,” detectives HE Daily News said to-day it authority that President Wil: reform will b Ww. 1ING ‘ON, June 4.—The 8 conference to give a hearing to Ini ‘The committee amended the re to the “Irish republic" on the grou! believe that the] mm was an involuntary shout of horror. or warning when the women| Reported to Senate. standing from Premier Lloyd George that “a wide measure of undertaken in Ireland immediately,” to-day favorably reported Senator Borah’s resolution urging the peace bomb plot. PROMISE GEORGE WILL IRISH REFORMS s Movement Will Begin Resolution Amended Johnson, according to the police, told the name of the bomb maker after he had been confronted -by evidence fvrnished by Miss Flor- ence Becker, who gave the police « description of two men who, she says, placed a package on the porch of @ house across from Inspector Sibray’s home shortly before the explosion occurred, ‘ Miss Tecker described Johnson, even to his manner of dress, as one of the men, according to the police, JOHNSON HAS NEVER BEEN NATURALIZED HERE. Johnson has been in the United States twelve years, but never was naturalized, Federal agents and city detectives Say all the suspects under arrest are Anarchists and members of the I. W. W. Those arrested are John Makows- sewski, Michael Romanit, Adam Balalak, Stephen Barnatowtcy, Mar- tin Stefcunkat, Frank Braida, Louts Bachul, J. M. Walsh, John Blum, Rudolph Blum, Michael Belesla, David Boradin, all of Pittsburgh; John LONDON, June 4. had learned on the most reliable son had obtained a definite under- enate Foreign Relations Committee ish delegates, solution by eliminating a reference nd that might constitute a recogni- who had left the bomb on the steop| tion of the republican government and were hurrying away saw th faithful old watchman approach it, a . , remembered nothing of the alleged Turned on Water. velelooys igrpaeene ape “It's a sad case,” said the magi- EPISODE NO. 1, strate, “but all I can do {s hold you At 1,80 o'clock this aftern vir- hi J Mrs, M. M. Canda, Mentally Ge Gallcs a if Pee We Granta rar ginia’s bath was almost ready for 88 Unbalanced, Trapped at Ho- | 4, Virginia is fifteen months old. SUFFRAGE DEBATE ON: tel Bossert After Two Her name is Delagi, She resides with } Hours. her parents in a second-floor apart- VOTE IN SENATE NEAR | ment at No. 2299 Southern Boulevard, ee Deputy Chief “Smoky Joe” Martin,| the Bronx. Wadsworth Leads Attack on Federal Battalion Chiefs Heffernan and Good-} Mrs. Rose Delagi, Virginia's mother, Amendment as Test erson and two companies of Brooklyn | placed her on the pillow of the sofa. Approaches. firemen won a two-hour fight at eon she closed the shutter and] WasHINGTON, June 4.—Debate on noon to-day to save Mrs, M, M.| stepped into the bathroom. When|the woman suffrage resolution was Danan Swita On a écntin: from an| Mts. Delagi emerged from the bath- |opened in the Senate to-duy by Senator r . i “| room the shutter was open and Vir-|Wadeworth, Republican, of New York, insane effort to kill herself by leap-| (iia was gone. who said if the people wanted universal jing from the ninth floor of the} Mrs. Delagi looked from the open nerage the soneteyoos of the vate Ppt 2 slutely |OUS States were adequate to grant it Hotel Bossert at Hicks and Montague | window. Virginia—drewssed absolutely | ‘A vote was expected before adjourn | Streets. for the weather—was playing with | jon¢. Mrs, Canda bas been under the| "or Pink toes in the sand twenty Senator Spencer, Republican, Missouri, cight feet below said Missouri's Legislature had ap observation of physicians at her! ‘phey made a minute examination |proved equal suffrage, and Senator home, No, 121 Bighth Avenue, Brook- | at Fordham Hospital and Dr, Liliian|Reed, his Democratic colleague, re- Jlyn, She left ho yesterday after| aiendal said Virginia was unhurt, |torted that incompetence of men in her hushand had urged her to go to] At 2.12 Mias Virginia had her bath, | State Legisutures was notorious | an ites Eee (i satis Senator Smith, Denworat, South & Leiregies Iya, end at § Colocks _ EPISODE NO. 2 Carolina, characterized the resolution night registered at the Bossert. She} Annoyed by the heat to-day, Hud-| <0". «pandora's box of evil,” and said |became hysterical in her room sev-| yon Miles, a sixteen-months-old baby|*” vote for it would be « ‘vote to eral times during the night of No, 140 Claremont Avenue, slipped | turn loose on the South another era of It was not until this morning that} away from his nurse, Mrs. Lena trouble.” jthe manager of the hotel got into] raptnett, toddled into the bathroom, onator Brandegee, Republic, {communication with her ‘husband, |jocked the door and turned on the| Connecticut, also opposed fhe resolu- who was searching for her in Man-| water, The u loped intellect of |t!o8 4% 4M Invasion of State's Rights | s hattan. Mrs, Canda had refused to] ,,, egret ar 5 of bi eg. {and Home Rule, saying the Constitu piopen her door when Moyes of the | ie paby was the cause of his neg: | on was being ‘prostituted’ by having F ) [lecting to. anes per In the tub local, police regulations inserted. hotel called to tell her she was dis-! ins, Hartnett cried; the baby ay a turbing other guest lcovoed from within, The superinten- Nonke Inspects When her husband 1 1 toatl the apatites? atarouet’ hie| Amie am +t has reached | threatened to break in the door oc utnalle ha inemiteee af th that Gustay fo r ally the members o i . . h . i Minister of L screamed tha would jump from spl ah the ~ a NOs) 98 war penled | y @ tour of the = | ) axes and crowbars they coast defenses an | (Continued on 1 Page) down the door and released b to be prep <— WORLD Ry [towing i wos te bown snes QAYLIGHT SAVING. REPEAL | DEFEATED AS “RIDER” Detectives House Passes $31,600,000 women ture Measure After Eliminating opinion that to place the ure of the were selected he] bomb because their presence on the street or on the door step would not tinued o nd Page) — | as aan Muang TAKE BELLA lime Chang i all Melba me WASHINGTON, June 4—The House Agricul- re Johnson, Phillipsburg, Pa; and Demeter B. Dobridreff, Granite City, to-day passed the Agricultural Appro- ul. priation Bill carrying $31,600,000. John A, Vorat, Afty-two, of Brooks The vote was 345 to 1 lyn, a chemist, who was arrested in Repeal of daylight saving was|@ downtown hotel, wilu committed to knocked out of the bill on a point of | jail for @ further investigation, He passed, was mixing chemicals in his room husetts, was the | when arrested by city detectives, they opposing the passage declared, mi ities Mayor Babcock to-day declared war * corten vis ew Lon Bolshevism and anarchy. “hada a. TS me. Police and Fire Bureaus will bill of the Seite, Weshtogten, | dersey June 8, Cs ‘Jeiurday’ widatant

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