The evening world. Newspaper, December 2, 1919, Page 3

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~ CONGRESS READY 70 BAGK LANSING IN JENKINS CASE Note Deity the Consul’s Release Not Yet Deliv- ered to Mexico. BANDIT MAKES DENIAL. Kidnapper of Jenkins Says the Victim Had No Part In Plot. MEXICO CITY, Dec. 2.—An- mnouncement was made at the Mex- fean Foreign Office last night that the latest American note calling for the immediate release of Consular Agent William 0. Jenkins had not been delivered to the Mexican Gov- ernment. It was learned at the American Embassy that there were numerous errors in the cable trans. mission of the note, which explains the delay in its presentation. ‘WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—The firm stand taken by this Government, which leaves no alternative except the prompt release of Jenkins, is backed up by Chairman Porter of the House Committee on Foreign Af- fairs and Senator Fall, Chairman of the sub-committee that has in charge the investigation of the Mexican situ- ation. After a conference with Seo- retary Lansing Mr. Porter said: “I wish to say that I believe the State Department means basiness this time. I also be- lieve that when the State De- partment’s firm stand Is put be- fore Congress, we shall give it our strongest support.” Copies have been received of a statement by Frederico Cordova, the vrigand who kidnapped Jenkins and held him until he was ransomed. He says the main object of the kidnap- ping was political and that Mr. Jen- kins was not an accomplice. The statement, in the Revolucion, a Mext-| can paper circulated surreptitiously by the anti-Carranzistas, quotes Cor- cova as saying he did the kidnapping ‘to combat in this manner the dicta- trial Government of Carranza which, unfortunately for Mexico, has estab- lished itself in power” and that he and four subordinates accomplished the kidnapping “without outside in- terference.” While Senator Fall would not dis- cuss his conference with Mr. Lansing, | Chairman Porter said afterwards “The danger to the United States of this condition of continual unrest and feeling of hostility toward us in Mexico Nes in the fact that it provides a fertile field for anti- American propaganda, aud even for a base for attack npon the United States by any foreign country that/ eNected a combination with Mexico. Ry this the spirit, if not the tetter, | ef the Monroe Doctrine, would be violated, “Property rights have been vio- ed and the Mexican courts have} declared constitutional the confis- catory provisions of the Mexican fundamental law against which we have taken a strong stand. I have a copy of the Mexican court’s decision in this matter, If we permit the property rights of our nationals in Mexico to be thus violated, where can we stop? —— MEXICAN MASSAGRE RUMOR |°°":" CREDITED ALONG BORDER | Villistas Said to Have Killed 674 Carranzistas to Avenge Angeles, TL PASO, Texas, tlonal story of the slaughter of 6741 the Rancho | Espejo garrison by 1,000 Villistas ts credited along the border to-day, de- 1 denials. | jomez of Los Angeles and Dec, 2.—A sensa- | Carranzista soldiers of © 1, B, Perez, agent of a New York) mporting concern, declared they wit- | nessed in Santa Rosalia scenes of | in nourning on the part of wives and | relatives of the slain Carranalstas, | Dr. Gomes, one of tho last friends | of Gen. Felipe Angeles to be with the | cbel leader before his execution, sald the attack on the Carranza’ rison was to avenge Angele: Villa is said to bo in northern Mexico with 2,000 strongly armed followers, Perez heard rumors that Villa was planning to launch a new campaign of which the Rancho Es- pejo massacre, norty of Santa Ro-| salia, was the beginni } to Be Those of Dog. | The bones found near Greeley, Pa., | whioh it was thought might be those of Jiminy Glass, tho missing son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Glass, deter- mined to be those of a dog by Dr. George D. White of No, 311 Union Street, Jersey City, to-day, Wour other experts’ concurred in “the opinion, Jimmy (lass disappeared in May, 1915. More than twenty communities between the Atlantic and the Pacific have ''dis- eaveres” the lost boy since then, were THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, ‘Henry Clay Frick, Steel Magnate, 1919, | J SHOT HER HUSBAND |PLOT TO KILL HENRY FRICK | Who Died To-Day, and His Widow INTERNATIONAL PLOT TO KILL TAFT IN SELF DEFENSE, - WIFE TELLS GOUT OF LIQUOR SLEUTH Pignuolo Says wit Worked en Investigation of Plan for | Assassination. | | Brooklyn ak Wounded | Three Times —Two - Year - Old Daughter at Shooting. Anton Henelt, a clerk in the Irving | National bank, is in the Wyckoff Heights Hospital suffering from three bullet wounds, and his wife, Wilhel- mina Henelt, is a prisoner in the Gates Avenue police station, charged | with felonious assault, as a result of a@ shooting affray this morning at ¢ o'clock at the home of the couple, No. |302 Palmetto Street, Brooklyn, nate ex-President William H. Taft, Mrs. Henelt, with he rtwo-year-old, Pignuelo was a witness in his own | daughter, ‘Dheodora, told her story to |l¢fense and made the statement when Magistrate Charles Dodd in the telling of his previous experience and Gates Avenue Court when arraigned reputation, He denied emphatically, this morning, She said her husband @% did MeCarver yesterday, that he |was in the habit of staying out late, ;2ad received any money from either | then coming home and quarreling un- | Brennan or Carew, whom he and Mo- tll morning. Recently, she said, her | Curver sorved with a summons to ap- husband, after beating her, locked Pear in the Federal witli said ew 1 |that he and his partner bought her out of the house. She called a! qin s in the saloon of Brennan and policeman, who pounded on the door Pasquale Pkenuelo, under indict- ment with Charles P. McCarver, both | agents of the Department of Justice, | {tor allered acceptance of bribes from mioon men to assist them in evading the dry law, startio™® thove in the| Federal Court this ping by nar- | rating that he had . \been on an| Investigation into a pi. \to assassi- i} | ' | | ‘ROBBERS CHOKE DAUGHTER OF CAPT, THROCKMORTON Escape in Auto After Raiding Home of Commodore in Red | Carew and taken them for evidence. | and ordered Henelt to let her in.! ‘The trial is going on before Judge | Henelt, the wife said, went down the papery . Paces nea is esverted tg { a go to the jury before night, Pignuele |fire escape and was gone two day*. ‘said that he had been in the country | Mrs. Henelt said that she feared for 24 years and with the Department of her safety and went to Hoboken, | Justice for the lant ten, It was white . 22 o. | telling of his experience as a Govern- Wilsre Re Cougit & wether jment agent that he brought in the volver. |Taft assassination plot, but his tes- Last night, she said, Henelt came |timony in this respect was cut short, |home late and immediately started |The whiskey which he and McCarver |to quarre! and to threaten her. She|took from the saloon, was offered in [said she took the revolver from her | evidence pillow and fired six shots at Henelt. Two of them struck his left shoulder and one his left hip. | After the shooting Henelt staggered into the hallway crying, “I'm shot.” !He then reeled back into the apart j|ment and collapsed on the floor. | When Detectives Kaufman and Woo- | dle of the Watsoh Street Police Bta- | |tion arrived they found the little girl | ‘ the father on the parlor floor; mother standing over him, | still holding th smail revolver, | Bank, N. J. | He is twenty-five years old and | ‘The home of Capt. Charles B. Throck. is twenty-four morton, Commodore of the Merchants’ Steamboat Company, in Upper Broad | ‘BUY A RED GROSS SEAL AND ASSURE YOURSELF | A HAPPY NEW YEAR Street, Red Bank, N. J., was raided by | burglars early to-day. Miss Katharine Throckmorton, daugh- ter of the Captain, heard the robbers | rummaging through the lower part of| the house and went down from her bed- lane IN CHICAGO UNDER Ruthenberg, “Most. At Arrested Man! iMmetion. The case was settled Gut of GIVE Yourself a Healthy New | in America,” Again i urt by the reorgunization of the! Sate aay in America,” Again in " Carnegie Company. That reorgani- Year. wah a Cell. mtion mado several Pittsburghers — millionaires over night, It made Mr. ; r | | CHICAGO, Dec, 2.—Chartes B, Ruth. 'Wrick one of tt aithiest men in| ‘4 Red Cross Corsimee oat lenbere, National Executive Secretary of {the Unit + but it later was 1S an Insurance Policy for a cent, |the Communist Party of America, to-day (Continued From First Page.) disappoin 1 when Carnegie, | siesta |Was under arrest here, upon telegraphic prada, with th tt request from New York, Ruthenbers, known in radical ctretes| It Baa been anid that he was worth | In the very scheme he previously had Christmas: | Ruthenberg, kno \d ol 4 oa | red ‘Out of this interest came, Db Bve 1 as tho “most arrested man In America,” |™OF@ than $100,000,000, perhaps as! TSO ae fnancing of the United, GIVE Everybody A Healthy |had been indicted on a charge of viola- | MUCH as $20,000,000, States Steel Corporation. By this New Year: [Yon of ithe New York state Criminal | Mr. Frick built up the greatest coke | again Mr. Frick's fortune was dou-| sy Red Cross Christmas Seale, USE Red Cross Christmas Seals ndicalist Act, age said, business in the world. He acquired | bled. His $11,000,000 in the Carnegie polenta’ i, Da |stuch vast intercats in ateet that he | Steel Company was turned into $61 { Ns x 300,000 United States Steel. Sut d escription | INVESTIGATE Hos! HOSPITAL DRIVE} was che of the principal magnates| 200000, in, United Stutes Stoel. Hult ge bel phi i Olinaty Winer ik abe artes | of that industry. In rounding out his|Schwah was made. President of the _ ee: OM | pitnda Are, and How Used. career he became known as one of Steel corporation and Mr. Carnegie's Your Family, | @ istrict Attorney O'Leary of Queens vorial alle . | representativ Your City: County has started an Investigation |e vores sreat collectors of mas-| Ti *breach with Carnegie never Bi aoteteae od ante | AS elarretamnatiteabgt Mi Satie ter paintings, The farmer's boy died| way healed ed Cross Christmas Sea | | ne is shaven | this morning in one of the most costly | "On Dec. 15, 1881, Mr. Frick was mar- oo - Hospital Association. je sald 7 of i) SIF TT Imorning that body ‘of peopte ‘in ‘tne|#8d_ most artistic palaces on Fitth| ried to Mise Ada Howard Childs of, M,C, A, Buttding’s Fiftteth An- MADISON AVENUE - FIFTH Richmond Hill and W: Avenue, He was the largest owner | Pitsbureh ip She ren: Were Born niversary. ve been collec i of lands and buildings in Pittsburgh, | {0 ‘em. two boys and two girls. Mrs.) ge sad Street Y, M. C. A. Will cole- Thirty-fourth Street afer, some th that he His summer home at Pride's Cross. | Ftck one son and one daughter 8ur- bate the fftieth anniversary of the tepged 10, Ana out ‘who see preeaiey, ing, Mass is the show place of th vive. Wn Lane ee dedication of the first Y. M. a whether they had ¢ ange monet: |North Shore, ‘He was born Dec. 19, building In America to-night at 8 o'clock. | Jif-so what they had di th Tt and | 1849 at West Overton, Pa, Sulclde by Leap in We . ichard C, Gener what ther intended todo,” '* 8°") At “the “age of twenty-one the| ‘Thomas J. Reilly of No. 159 Hast s7th| Richard C. Morse, General Aecretary of {sett aad he bad summoned the follow- coke industry was in its infancy. | street committed suicide this morning |the Tnternational Committee of the Y. Monedict Vent. Dr. Tosh De esitey |The ionmasters of Pittsburgh were | py jumping into the art River at 7th |M. C. A.; Harry Holmes, National Bec: | i Plorens Ds Eretag. | ae Derioniog. fo Ruprecieie the| street. The body was recovered and peri ios abi on ee eee | 7 a 0 heir furnaces. | at it es rthur Chamberlain, ational i pier Deyo | Youn Brick had an oppor ye te a on ee eect men |seeretary for the British Islex, and ex- Uhl. All are of Richmond. Hill, to acquire a Mmited interest in a| icy “ation. p im Governor Charies S, Whitman will spenk Dr. Vogt, who lives at Chester Park,|Plant near Bradford, and out of! oo The first building stood at Fourth Ave- nd Dr. Lavison, who lives in Manz|his profits he acquired other hold- | ; PP ad NY) al ings, He later joined a company to|Kias Makes Tittonl President i |the year this road was opened, Mr.| {zing the Parliament for the new| BIG RAPIDS, Mich., Dec. 2.—A search | Frick organized the corporation of| session was continued to-day. For f the ruins of Mercy Hospital was Bafidings Hous! Tailor! Frick & Co. which bought coal land |the organization. of the Senate the |YNder Way to-day In an effort to de- | Shops Burned at Greenwich. {and coke ovens in the Connellsville (President of the body \s named by the termine | it ymore than, three patients pect a district. ‘This was the basis of King, and His Majesty to-day desig | known to have lost thelr Hyes were GREENWici. Gon Dee foe fortune, © basis of the) ited “Tomasso ‘Tittoni, the. former |trapped in the building which "was | G + Conn., Dec. oe any | The Carnes! th develop! Minister of Foreign Affairs, for the burned late last night. One man, it) valuable fur and seal opera coats and! their great at bonis, ity token | office, was said, Was stil unaccounted for. | ead ae alo tag ereatthy | large holdings in the Frick Coke| * = suneneneninshanay enennetenmampemineed were de. y to-|Company, and in 1882 Mr. Frick day in a $50,000 fire in the ladies’ ‘tailor | ‘found them willing to take him into shop of L. & Croce, who formerly had | an establishment on Fifth Avenue, New | the firm in consideration of further | York | interests in the coke business, In this| Mrs. Prederick EF. ‘Turner lost a coat|Way Mr. Frick ‘became also a grei at | of Alaskan seal d at $1,000, and | manufacturer of steel. Mrs. James leopard | Mr. Frick achieved national promi goat valug aather sosere »inence for the first time in 1892 at irs "yea, a $400 ber Homestead, Pa, Differences had cont, and Mrs, Hasking, a $700. opera! anisen between the Carnegie Stec! | muel Zeigler, owner of the building, |CO™MPany and its employees over a/ lived on the second and third floors,|Wase scale, culminating in a strike |The family lost everything, The Duild- | Involving thousands of men, the call- | adjoining, owned by J. H. O'Neil|inz out of the National Guard and the | and occupled’ by” his tailor ahop, wi ‘| proclamation of martial law. It was 4t thig period that Alexander Berk- | man, anarchist tried to assassinate | nim, Berkman walked into Frick's office, also destroyed. A gas tank in the re of the O'Neil shop exploded and blew out the show | wind ows. — WATCHMAN HELD ) FOR THEFT. the position of he Fric DIS HERE AFTER succeed 44 1LLER| room to find them bundling up silver- Vink ‘bean onl thal ware and cut glass in table clothes. 4 At | Contribution Is Best Means of; "Miss ‘Throckmorton screamed. ‘Two | applied. to his. defaleatio Swenson | flavor is a spur to. OE eee ee eae One (cuits men leaped at her and choked her into| declared his downfall was due to a| a {Snare to well thems, Aa Wishing Everybody a Merry —jInrensiblity, She "Wan. found ‘uncon: {debt of $165 contracted four years. ago. appetite. iN \f SYNDIGALIST AT veloped. Carnegic tried to scious on the floor by her father and|He took the money from ‘the bank | | Toard of Managers declare Mr, Christmas. ’s stock forfeited at par value, Frick replied with BUY a Red Cross Christmas Seal | a sult for an in- i in interest! | | WISH Everybody A‘Merry | | “Beélter Chocolates aka Lower Price” CANDIES) Special for To-day and To-morrow Miik Chocolate Fig Balls which have bee uniformly (and There's something about fi | nelanbors who had been roused by her funda and found it thi "Tho burglars escaped in an automo- Stroct, bil ings, The Store is closed at 5 P. M. da Extraordinary Value will be offered, beginning to-morrow Misses’ ur=-Trimmed Suits A number of unusually smart models, variously developed in yalama, siivert nutria, sealedyed coney or Australian MILDRED FOWLER GIGNOUX JURY FOR DEMPSEY IN WINS MOUNT HOLYOKE CUP MALBONE WRECK TRIAL | Former Vice President of Company , | Charged With Manning Trains } | _ With Unskilled Trainmen. Twelve Jurors were secured to-day = \for the trial at Mineola of John J. | | Dempsey on a charge of manslaugh- | |ter before Supreme Court Justices Kep- per, Dempsey was Vice President of the |B. R. T. and Genera! Manager of the | | Brighton when the Mal- | bone Street Tun) ident occurred jon Nov. 1, 1918, | persons wor 209 injured. Responsibility Dempsey on erated ‘the in the claim charged against that 5 = trains, during a@ a which was then on, and untrained men chief prosecutor District Attorney Lewis of examined the prospective H. Gorman was exeused coming « talesman because acquainted with @ relative of victims of the wreek. ———$$—<>—_—_— | 5,000 Navy Vietory Rattons Here. | The first supply of 5,000 Navy Wie- tory buttons has been recetved at the | Navy Recruiting Station, No, 24 St Men discharged from reir diacharges Regular Navy and Naval Reserve a YY Force will be furnshed with "ice PAR ltory "button “upon prosentation of “ VERS | MiLORED. Fowines “SIGNOUR? Senior Is Honor Student, So-; ciety Officer and Leader shorn of his hair in Athletics, | he lost his strength. When @ thletic | grain of wheat is ‘‘scalped” the HEN Samson was Miss Mildred Fowler Gignoux is) S#me th ng happens. In refine the most physically perfect young) "8 white flour the valuable woman in Mount Holyoke Collego,! bone and muscle building ele- enior class. She has just been, ments of the grain are lost. awarded the Sarah #treeter Cup, Wheatsworth Real Whole Wheat Flour saves all the six- teen food substances the body needs. Ground which goes each year to the senior who ranks first in the college physt- | cal examinations, Miss Gignoux is among the snout k active athletes at Mount Holyoke. | ireah: ddl She Is an honor student, an officer recipes in every in several societies and played on the | all good provera. Good at class hockey team wiich won the| ¥./. BENNETT BISOUIT CO., y. ¥. championship on field day, She Is a daughter of the late Mrs. Louise Gignoux, who was known as 4 lecturer af outa ; BANK EMBEZZLER IS HELD. 11 Street Got Mont | le Took, er paying teller Bronx branch of the Columbia who has confessed t nt of $33,400 during four | Albin Swens of the ([— ANCRE 7 With the Genuine Roquefirt laser’ CNEESE ‘Trust Company, m the embeza! |years, was 0,000 “ball to-day |by Ma yek in the Morri- | It makes a feast of sania F arts aon was in court, loyal to husband, It te said that $8.00 of colinteral that the fori has with # Wall Street hor plainest fare—its asy to cover up » continued his peculations. Wall | he says, got most of hia’ steal- Made by SHARPLESS, PHILADELPHIA an & Gn. AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fifth Street (Wednesday), in comprising one and wool velours and trimmed with all of prices possum; their taken from stock and very specially) reduced to $55.00 be] drew a revolver and fired, the bullet {J that you Just can'e Fosists they're ao Juley and gull of ree lodging in Mr, Frick’s neck, Mr. | lanment, And when they re He atill more delicious 29 “ by @ blan richest. vel lk Chocolate reat Charged with steling bottled Iquors, | Frick wag shot 'a second time, Then ||? [RS host ty Milk Chocolate the trea Cc Suet and condanhed tulle teen 4 he grappled with Berkman. During Piers Nos. 96 and 97 at the foot of Street, Murray and Max of No. 601 West 1 Street, were arraigned to-day in West Side Court on short affidavits charging Brand laréeny and held in $2,000 ball each for examination Thursday. The three were watchmen furnished by @ private detective agency to guard the pier Ask Settlement of Angarica Satate. Application was made to-day In the Surrogate's Court for a judicial settle- ment of the estate of Mrs, Ines BE, An- eartca, formerly of Havana, Cuba, who ied on April’ 28, 1908, In behalf of Andres M. Companioni, who is a trustee, The estate Is estimated at $221,850.77 After provision was made for several hews and nieces, the reaid was bequeathed to decendent’s sister, Mrs, Tomasa A, Depinosa, widow of James W, Lawrence, who ives in Red Bank, N, J, the encounter Mr, Frick was at the cost of Fi Carnegie put in his pocket. Mr, Carnegie, however, was left in | 4\ ick’ $1,000,000, which stabbed three times, but he downed his as. Milk Chocolate Caramels—Greut, big Nuggets of ¥tra Special sailant and held him until the police pure caramol—the Kind you chew on and enjoy tilt came. Berkman was tried and sent the very | Bie with @ blanket of the to the Western Penitentiary in Pitts- fees F ty Milk Chocolate, The candy favor- 4c burgh for twenty-one ye. | Moms youre inten Me Peiok cone Extra Special for To-day and To-morrow ceived the proposition of buying out Milk Chocolate Peanut Chips Milk Chocolate. Ta? Royale Carnogie—and came to know his first | of r Jellies—Real fruit jelliés—with the failure. Also he embittered Carnogic, most fragrant of flavors, soft and who promptly began trying to drive | toothson ered wil ureat Aim out of the peel bunintes one || Milk Choc A candy delight for trely. |] ina neat, white, gar Canegle demanded $1,000,000 for a glistening’ con MII I | R’ : 90-day option on the business and|f ‘ainer. Wa teh 4 4 s You'll ike’ them asked $157,950,000 for his entire hold- or inca 2" '"® | SIX CONVENIENT STORES | better with each ing. | Batra Goecial. | #40 742 Broadway is The Frick plan called for a total of aatta Specie sh Extra Special $250.000,000, The matter was taken to! Broadway the first J. P. Morgan, He was not 39 4iet 8 44 impressed. The Frick option expired | c sais eee Cc = Pound Box Specified We: Extra Special for To-day and To- -morrow Pound Box | Pound Box Mail Ordere Filled. Sale in the Department Miss (Second ee Performances for the benefit of the Actors’ Fund will be given in all the Theatres on Friday, December 5th. Ald a worthy cause by your generous patronage. ses’ Suits LT LAL AA CCL A LL LOL LL LR i + re ee

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