NYT, 1. Mai 1915 - Allies now hold six positions on Dardanelles

News Archiv Kalender: 
Saturday, 1. May 1915
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"All
the
N««s
That's
;
'.THE WEATHER"
Clsnify
todiiy:
S«md«y
protaMy
Fittoftmt"
.
Ijje
\
JCetar
NEW
YOflK;
fair;
iiNdente vsriubfe wlariM
VOL.
LXIV...NO.
20>16.
SATURDAY, MAY
1,
1915.-^WEJNTY-TWO
^
PAGES.
,
ONE CENT
UNKBARBES
WITH
jR(»9seveit
FIRE
TMMM
Say He
SWEEPS COLON TEN DIE INFLAMES
RAILROAD MEN
Supffressed by the British Cens6r
William Le'Querix's book, " Britain's Deadly Perfl," 'wbieh< bitterly criticises the Covei-nment, roases the anthtnities to drastic action. Abstracts of it wilt be published in
6
FOm ZEPPELINS SEEN
ON ENCUSH COAST
Started
J^Btans Over Xwatty->lwo Blpcki and Mkkes 12,000 Persons
GET MORE PAY
Awards by Natibnai
Arbitration
SHEUiSDim
22
TOMOftROws Sunday times.
;
Witnesses
Homeless.
Special Cable to
'
SXtoys to llect Sheehan to
United States Senate.
.IGHT
flonel
ON
PRNTING RING
When
j
Scores
Court
'Admits
Testimony
Con-
April 30.—Ten lives were and property damage of more than $i,000,000 was caused by a fire which swept Colon tonight! Twenty-two city blocks were totally destroyed and the fire was not checkedi until twelve houses in the.path of the flames were dynaTwo mited, by the^^Coast Artillery. Panama pollceineh—'^ere crushed by the walls of these buildings. About falling l^fDOO persons were made homeless. All the banking houses In the city -were
lost
PANAMA.
The New tobk TniEa
Board Affect 64»0i()Q Employes
on 98 Western Ro^ds.
ORDER TOE SUN&AY TIMES OP YOUR NEWSDEALER IN ADVANCE. TflE TlilES IS ALWAYS SOLD OiDT EARLY.
HES JMY
in
Inkmd But Saddenfy Changed Coarse and Headed
Off to
sixPosmoNS
lleport Describes $tie
S^
fficial
Special Cable to
Tub Nbw TOBk Tut**
French Seaport
Panic
WELiLS,. Norfolk, April 30, (DiapatiW Oveir to The £<ondon Dally Mail.)—tfour Zep-^ pellns were seen off here at 6:30 tW«
evening. persons to see titein was the man on duty at the lifeboat station, -who, .searching the skies with a telescope, saw the four' craft distinctly.They were.about eight inlles off the landS to the northward and traveling south, j Tiey were- closely watched for some! time, and Were then seen to turn Inj toward land, going quite near to thej coast; Then suddeiily they turned ' to^j sea and wheti last seen were some dl8-| tancs oyer the water. 1
first

BOTH
HMEL ENTRAPPED: BENRY C. COE, JR.,
SIDES
DISSATISFIED
Missiles from Belgian Front,
Killing or
The
cesiful Landings Ag^inift
GOTACICDSJOB
Allege<l;
'
':
MAYBEIMALASKA
'
Wounding 65.
Strong Defense.
Agreed to Cftanges Only BeArrest of cause They Were Necessary
.for
THOUGHT FLEET ATTACKING
British
EFFECTED WiTH HEAVY LOSf
Land Forces Suffered Most, bsK
destroyed, including the buildings of the Panama "Banking Company and the Inernational Banldng Corporation, both of "^^^ United states ^°'^^ P'^'*'DtrtlMSE"|eo7»friissary, the largest on the Isthmus, also was destroyed, with great loss. The fire started in the telephone exOuelt Driven from Courtroom for change opposite the railroad station, which was partially destroyed. Fanned Applauding a Witneu by a high wind, the fire swept from Seventh and Bolivar Streets, whete it Judge Curbs Henn ne»8y. began, through the heart of the dty. The buildings nearly all were of wood, and in a short time this part of the Special to The Xew York Times. city was all anlaze. The. largest stores BTRACUS^, April 30. After a flay and warehouses were in the direct path «f spectacular Incidents, tbe second of the flames and were consumed en-*c«k of the Barnes-Roosevelt libel trial Urely. ' Colonel Adelbertj Cronkhite, command<Mi4ed in the Supreme Court here this ing the United -States troops at -Cristternoon. and an adjournment was tobal, sent two companies of the Coast 'u^ea until next Monday morning. Artillery to aid the firemen and to Ata incident that^SiUivened tj)e day was assist in the saU-age of property. The from courtroom of fire brigade from Panama also went [jl(e ejection across the isthmus and joined forces Charles H. Duell, 'Jr-^ a Roosevelt en•with the Colon brigade. who brought the name of GovAs soon as It was seen that the flames Itbusiast. •nujr Whitman 'into the case yesterday were likely to cripple the city looting The Coast Artlie production of the Whitman-Duell started in all directions.
cerning Albany Bids.
a Temporary Peace.
Murderer of Father Gets Message Saying His Son, Missing Since JanrMrs. Heilner Now Only a
Matter of Time.
i
Airmen Locate Weapon
niLD DAY
ncecweeJ^^^
uary, Is in Fairbanks.
STRdric attack on NAGEL ~
J.I'

and Bombard It—Allied Warcraft Also Attack
It.
Warning had been sent north andj
'i
\
WA§ TO
JOIN
SHOW MONDAY REPORTED
at
IN
GOOD' HEALTH
to
south along the coast'and also inland, but so far no further reports of the] Zeppelin has been receivsl. .,
^
Some
\
Ships Were Lost, '!
One a Destroyer.

Brothef.hood Mcfn Declara He^.Wac
Un^tted' t0 Declined to
'
Act— President
Remove Him.
Fugitive Arranged to
Trenton
Take Work Stand—All Avenues
*
standard

tW
t
I
W
I
l«Oer.
While ex-Senator Frederick M.
testifying
Da^nport waa
the
Colonel,
Mr.
Duell
favor could not
in
~
of
re--
train his enthusiasm, atid started to Justice Andrews summariiy fplaud. orCtered him from the room. All around it was agg:ood day for the
111
Colonel. dozen witnesses, testifying his behalf, linked the name of Mr.
A
Barnes with "crooked" business '"crooked" ^ politics and swore Barnes engineered the defeat of Hughes direct primary legislation boasted of it. They also swore
and
that the
and
that
Biirnes tried to brine about the election F. Sheehan t6 tbe United </i William States Senate by a combination -of Re-
publican and Tammany legislators. One of the Colonel's- most important victories waa the arimlspilon by Justice An,<arew8 of testimouy relating to the Al-
bany "prlntizs ring" which Mr. Barnes was alleged to have controlled. John A. Hennessy, who ifed been reas one of the Colonel's biggest grtins becauf 3 of bi."> knowledge of rbt-tenness in the State Qtiyernment, was ^j^jL permitted to juy tnor^.tlww a vapi,
,
.
arded
of Escape Closed. Evidently.Firing from Near Nieu* 30.—An arbitration Feat Quite Possible, award, advancing .to some extent the port Joseph Hanel,. sought since Fi^day of Henry Clarke Coe..^Jt., who disaprates -of pay of 61,000 locomotive engi- last week as the murderer of Mrs. Julia peared from his home In Allston, Maas... Say American Army Men. neers, firemen, and hostlers ^nployed Heilner, has been trapped_g|fd his arrest on .Jan. 30, Is In Fairbanks, Alaakat on the 140,000 miles of line of nlnety- is a matter of hours onlyr according, to according to information given. out. last Information telegraphed to Police Com- night, by his father. Dr. Henry Clarke ALLIES ASSAIL 2EEBRUCGE eight Westefti railroads In the United missioner Woods yesterday by Detective Coe, of 8 West Seventy-sixth. Street. States and Canada, was signed here to- WnUam Roddy In Philadelphia. The Harrjf/Bums Detective Agency ot A dissenting opinion ^as filed on vRoddy knows where and ixow Hanel Boston reofeived this telegram from Fairday. He knows the plans banks two days ago. Dr. Coe said: Warships Bombard the German behalf of the Brotherhood, of "(E^nglne- spent Thursday. Hanel made then for his mbvements and "Hehty Coe here and In good health." men, to which the arbitration was he knows the place and. hour of •Submarine Base for Hours The sender of the telegram 13 known jan apbranded as- a failure and the New- pointment which Hanel made for the next to the Bums Agency, Dr. Coe said, and with Great Energy. lands law, under which It was arranged, Monday afternoon. He missed bis man both the agency and the father ha-ve by leas than twenty-four hours, but his sent urgent messages to him and to an Inadequate device for the settletillery and Panaman police made ipany knowledge of the fugitive's plans to others in FetlrbankB seeking more comLONDON,' April 30.—A monster Germent of industrial disputes. " arrests. the police e^bled him to close to plete information. They do not expect, man giin has been brought up within The .award, effective May 10, and elude The Cristobal district was saved. The the one-time steward, seaman, and com- to receive any answers for two or three one year only, was Jtrankly wind blew embers In that direction, and binding for range of Dunkirk, and shells from the days, because of the time required for for a time It was feared that the district declared as merely postponing the actual mon cook every, avenue of escape. Hanel was in Philadelphia on Thurs- coinmunlcatlon with Fairbanks. also would be burned. .Then the flreThe big .weapon, have been thrown into the settlement of the differences Involved. flien and the artillerymen dj-namited day. He liad promised to be in Trenton town is tniand, .and a message from New Frehch seaport^rom behind the German buildings in the path of the ffie, saved The railroad memhers of the board Is- on Monday. Yesterday detectives closed York Is first telegraphed to Seattle, lines near the the district and got control of the sued a formal statement orlUoising feaBelgian coast, about twendown on Atlantic City, Trenton, and \vasb., sent over the Alaska Cable froin flames. tures of the regtila,tions governing tbe All of Colon, between Seve.ith Street Baltimore, and the smaller cities and there to some point on the Alaska coast, ty-two miles away. and remarking that ceron the south to Twentieth Street and arbitration, These missiles killed twenty pet«ons towns to the north, west, and south of and t^eh relayed to Fairbanks through eastward on Front Street beyond Boli- tain concessions regarded as intrinsicPhiladelphia, trapping ,;HalBel some- a nuntber of low-powered wireless sta- antl woimded forty-five. var Street., was destroyed. ally unjust were made for the sake of where in this IncloseSd'' territory. On tions. with the Tonight the British Admiralty he had no suspicdOD his plans Dt. Coe said last night that the mes60RGAS HITS AT GOETHALS. preserving pibace Pritchatid employes. of Richmond, Thursday GerJudge Jeter C. were, kiiown to the police. He may be sage from Alaska had "raised hie hopes nounced that the position of. .the Va.. Chairman of the- board, Vcplalned alrciaf t Criticises Chairman's Sanitary his position, and stated' that while', in still igi.orant of their knowledge of his of finding his missing son: He was In- man gun had been verified by Commissioner Woods does hpt clined to believe that it Came from a recotmoissauee, and that It ^as atplans. Methods on the Canal.. hi^ opinion, the men in certain branehes care. The lines will be drawn closer to- reliable source, and he was particularly tacked last evening,- twelve emair and oi; the .service jvere entitled to greater Special to The Xev) York Times. day, and sometime today or tomorrow, delighted because of the assurance of two large bombs being dropped. ST. LOUIS, April 30. — Major Gen. advances than were made, he had to and if not then, on Monday, Hanel will the good health of the ]^oung man. 1?he Chairman of the Panama make concessions in order that an award b» caught fast in the police net. Goethals, First news of the attack on Dunkirk The short, stocky German -all but father was anxious, however, regarding Canal Commission, wks criticised here might be made, and he found much of eluded the scores of detectives who had his son's mental condition, and in ei^ch came In this paragraph In the <5ay bultoday by Ur. Gorges, Surgeon General a help.^il nature In the award.. been searching for him for a week, and of the messages' sent to Fairbanks he letin, Issued by the French War'Otfice: Charles Nagel of St. Louis, former 1-ad not Hoddy run him down, HJanel," of the United States Army and noted for made particular inquiriea on this point. " Dunkirk his sanitary work in the tropics. yeSterfiay received nineteen Gen- Secretary of Commerce and Labor, who, the police admit, would have had a " good chance of escaping them for all W^le.my son's health may be good," eral Goethals was not mentioned, by with Judge Prltcbard, represented the time, for the former stewaM had' taken Dr. Coe said. " I siill -fear that his. mind shells Of large calibre. Twenty personj Board of Mediation au^ C^ciliatlon on .job 1AS cook In the Barn um & Bailey nan^e, but -as the Chairhian of the com~ were killed and forty-five wfounded. or has been, deranged." hrcd?,' and '(Bit Thtirsday^.he agr«d to is. misBlon. The critliH^ w^ in an ad- the Arbitration
Oil Employe Thought Have Suffered Nervous Breakdown from Worry.
PERHAPS A
BIG
AUJES DROP BOMBS NEW KRUPP TlHtKISH ON GERMAN TOWN^
BerUnReports Fubtreof Attempt
to
TROOPSHrP 5UI9I
CHICAGO,
,
April

Hit by Que^n Elizabeth's Shsfb,
Fired Across the Galiipbir PB'
Destroy
EnginKrihg
Works at HdHngen^ AMSTERDAM,
(via London)
ninsula—Forts fltombarded.
AprU
80.
'
'
,
.
.
.
INTRENCHI -^'Allied airmen are displaying great BRITISH " sa'ya the. activity over Southern 'Baden, Berlhi Lokal Anzelger. "They gaW four visits to HalUngen on Wednesday jQne Line l^ns AcrOSS SoutheiTi ^ between -seven o'clock in the morning and noon, dropping bombs for the purPart of Penihsula, Which of pose destroying the engineering' Inv^ddrs ControL worlis. Only ope of these bombs scored a hit, however, causing little danta^ Two tnen were, wounded slightly. " SevA other ^ombs were dropped on REPULSfet the town, one, exploding at the railway station and ^Mttly damaging two express engines eind slightly wounfing several people. Klne bbmbs droi^ed lii Assert That All But One tarfdinf the suntoundhiR^ dhrtriet frfl harnUessly Attempt Failed, aiM They
,
HAVE
,
.
TURKS REPORT
'
in the
open
fieW.-*
-
sa"me ;day airmen spp«ared over Mullhelm, hut were driven hack I»y shell
"The
Damaged
T^tree 4A^arsfht{M.
.
.
1
Nine machines' flew over Loerrach .without dropping bomba."
fire.
'
AIRMAN AIMS BOMBS AT AMEffCAN SHIP
German
j^itaek^
King George Congratalatei Dardanafks Ofmmaiidi
LONDON, ISaturday,' May
1.
|
^Standard
(HI
Tmker Cnsk^g wjha^Nmtk
SeaButSheBsct
Special Ctfble to
.G^rge has .^nt to Acting Vlee^liAt; mlral John MJchael.de RctliBCk; CSbo*mander of the. AUled Fleet at %kS' Dardttcdlee, and to General Sir !•»
-
Jftamilton,
,
.
Ay, Boon as turther «e«uranee cottW^I
li;&t7lwui|(«i £>r.
The NS' -BOTTEKDAM. AprU.
*
4«^,;twfc
and a. H.
the
Vrael*»ia.
a Bre^-
4eat
otr
1
'
it-ea.t- he' #ai» 4 trustee '6f the Satate -« »UaiaaC--1U-'mt:im it <ipi3)Qr^on contrioy/ed ca&pajgzi -,- „ Havana. I had fully expected to do so, of the iate A<iolpbi£9'Busch, the St. Ixmia X. \:~ fiA«ia te iKftb perflea. and when we Tsthmus -we Tbe aggressiveneES of Wiliiam M. put into effectwent to the anti-malarial brewer, and that railroad securities fornr the same a part of the assets of the estate^ IVtlis furnished most of the fireworks measures that liad been so successful at The. brotherhoods were ^represen ted oh These measures were vigorof fbe day. He unlimbered all his sar- Havana. ously pushed for. the first four years. the board by P. -^A. BurgesS of LouisiSteni against the Colonel's witnesses Ai tne end of our four years' work the mAi tried in every way to discredit malarial rate had been reduced from jai ville, Ky., Asslsfant General Chief Engineer of the Brotherhood of Locomotive them. per thousand to 282. ,, H» tS1ed•^'^^.Bhow 'that ez-^enator "In 1907 a new xjommission was Engineers, and Timothy Shea of Peoria, placed by the President in control of 111., Vice President of the Brotherhood Davenport, whoSfe^ht for the Hughes the Isthmus, and in 190S all the power direct prtoiary bills, »l5^s willing to takS- ©n--Jh6 I sthmus wa^ concentrated in the of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen; aid and comfort from Barnes, the very hahdS~,-or u sTngJe'^man, the Chairman The railroad members were W. L. Park,
Okftgitfii^,
was
Metropolitan SecjiritteS' sliut ottixism telUrir how
Ms
.
man whom
\
.
he violently a'ft^cked on the floor of the Senate.
I
Mr. Davenport
told
^,/— hoi^lh
fightlns
IftWP
I
the passage of the Cobb«!pirect Piilaary, bill at the. Special legisiktlve- ses-
.'alon
(
on June 30, 1910, after thfe Barnes crowd had defeated the measures favored by Governor Hughes, he had beBarnes
of the commission. This 6fficer thought Vice President of the Illinois Central, it advisable (o make radical changes in and H. E. Bryan, Vice President of the the-' of sanitation. These methods changes, ordered by the Chairman, took Chicago, Burlington & Quincy. As exexeciitiion of the anti-malarial work out plained by Mr. Burgess, the essential of the./hands ot the sanitary authorities coacessions to the men were: and pfsu;ea it in the hands or men Conceaslonit Made by Roads. who had^jno special knowledge of antimalarial work.> I. Standaraizatloa of rates ot pay on I argued these
against
'\
.
Xa>ine Inqensed ,at the actions of
in dlrecSng his fight at the door of the ' i jBeo^e chamber and had said to Sena^' firattan, who was leading the fifeht " '
forcibly as 1 could, but to no avail. " I feel convinced that if our. Chairman ot 1908 had been able to put into
changes as
the weight.
we
effect, in 190t, the methods he forced upon me in 1908 we could not have accomplished th4 sanitary success at PanUt the Senate: ama which we had accomplished- prior * Tom speak as the mouthpiece of a to the year 1U08."
poUtlcal
Nero who
fiddles. just outside
the Senate cltamber while
.
Rome
burns."
WEST
CAIi
,
^S DN C ARRANZA.
out loss of seniority rights after May 1, The board was unable, becau») of 1915. the newness of electric railroad service, to fix rates of paj- In detail, but named S-4.30 a day as the minimum for motormen in passenger service ana |2.S0 for their helpers; ice
4.
::. Ovenime pay to passenger firemen and easineers, i&nglng from to 75 cents an hour, respectively. 3. I.ngiflemen ot steam power may transfer to electric power when hutalled with-
a
ly.
Kr. Ivins *cnt at the witptess savage" Waa that a figure of speech? " he
entirely,"
$4.73
for
motor.-nen
in
President's .Agent
aeked. • Not
replied Mr.
-
Daven:
>ert.
"
" Well, was fiarnes a fiddler! "No," retorted Pavsnport "he Wste arrived not a fiddler, exactly, but be was ruth- talk ^of
;
Back at Vera Cr-uz-^Saw_ Ruined Towns. Special Ca'tdc to THE New York Times. VERA CRUZ, April ao.—Duval West
this morning, but refused his trip from Mexico City. to
.
and $2.7o for helpers. Enginemen ot milk trains, ci^cu.^ and other irregular service, such as pusher and helper, receive the rate accorded-- on through freights, an increase amounting to from 10 to lu per cent. 5. The men will be paid for delay while In their cab at initial and final terminals, and for time in excess of thirty minutes
trains,
freigbt serv-
On
the Way to Cuautla, where he met "Why didn't- you refer, then, to his Zapata, he found that a pan of Morelos was completely ruined. Heaps of burned ruthlessneas as well as his fiddling? "' timbers and ashep showed where prosDaell
less, like
Nero."
"1
;
spent in preparing their engines for service. 6. Switch engmemen -will receive an adIn dally pay ot 25 cents on small engines and 15 on large ones. 7. Men held away from home terminals
vaflce
shall, after twenty-two hours' Idleness, receive a minimum day's pay of ten hours, based on last service, out of each succeeding tv.-enty-four houra imtU they get a" run. 8. Through freight wage rates were advanced to 20 cents. Increasing with weight of engine, and 25 cents on some of th^ ex> tremely heavy engines, 9. Way freight enginemen will receive 30 cents a day more than through freigbt men. 10. Surprise tests will be conducted in such a way as not to endanger life, limb, OF nerves. II. Firemen wiii he assisted, where assistance Is available, in keeping coal for-ward, and the coal shall be broken Into, prouer sizes at chutes.
1
'
Starts Applanae. " Well, be was both a fiddler and tf^lew." " Did you rielle.ve it tbe tinur' that _ * Kom»- wa^^umii^^'.' shouted ^K Ivins.
=
perous towns had been. Seiior Zubaran gave a ba'nquet for Mr. West and Admiral Caperton tonight. Mr. West made his final call on General Carranza this afternoon.
snouted Ijack. right," oȣ 'I believed that the Kjjpubiican tarty in the State was je great danger on account of wliat I ^[^ seen going on at of authority Ihe door, the
was
"I haU^sppraAiunity s'eMe of what witness
'
ROCKEFELLER BUYS LAKES.
Oi!
-
Man. Now Owns Both Sides
Watershed.
.
of
|usuAalion over the Legislaturej by a power
out-
tlie Legislature. It was here that Mr. Duell could not restrain his enthusT£^s:7 H^was sitting a few feei behind ihe witness, and be<an to clap 'Sjajhanas. Justice An Crews's face fl "I want the ^ari who started that appiatise takejr from the room," " 1 aor^ot going to have this .aaid. ^ tiling goinar on here.":' coQ^r attendant (aid hold of Mr. Duell a((fd escorted him from the room. 'Ihe ^^utness said tfiat either ^that night or tha\)e.\t morning he met Barnes again at >))e Senate chamber door and
.
side
A
air.
"
BarnesS^W:
.

'
,
tcT Kx.-i?enator Juseph T. Xewcomb- gave •Imilar testimony of what went '«»n at that special meeting. He said. he*^ ac- President Leaves Washington to Atcused Grattan, and Grady, the TamaiOTy tend Baby's Christening. Senator, of. forming a Republican snd Democratic ccalltioh. and that Urattan WASHINGTON, April 30. President replied " ad- Wilson left here at midnight for WillThafB all rlgHt, Senator. mit it,, but you are only sore because iamstown, Mass., to attend the chriswe put [t across on you " of his grandson, Francis Sayre. ot tha rnost startling bits of evi- tening ,Qne dence agatnat ;itr. Humes was fur>xi8t)e4 He was accompanied by Dr. Gary T. by Royal, W. yramae, i-^ecretary .ot the Grayson, his Naval Aid, anfl Miss Helen Hrooklyn Young MS'ivi Kfcp'obllc^n Clt*. Woodrow Bones, his cousin, and will be He told or a eonversatlon- with Bamea in New York tomorrow by his Ir which the.' latter told him the club's joined The >tutudla toward direct primaries w»» 4<iughter, Miss Margaret Wilson. r.!l wrong becaiise It would bring a cSbPresident will return on Monday momJ.aate too much into the limelight. He ingl .said Barnes told him there was not a man iliftiig -whose reputation. could not He Steamer Ashore o.^n Barnegat Bar, \ t>e ruined by tco much limelight. ul&o .<aM Barnes told him he ^nould take A steamer the name of 'which ha» f-iC R*poSl*can rfff-raff of Albany into Hi iiwiinflr pmmailBs and the Dprn- not been ascertained ran ashore on the ,tyc .jcr«ts a< tbe ssimo kind into the Reiib- bar off Barnegat, N. J., early 'today, Hcan prft&Mes aiid nominate such Tot- according to word sent to marine obten canoMKtes that the people woiilff be aervers fii this city. The coast guard ' ~ <t»glisted ffith diffcet prlmarits before from the station nearest the their starfeS. steainer went to K» i tri«l moved along reptdlv tijdar, said. The fcut tictfaet enough to. 3ult.'Ju{stice A»aelon,. during « Jirc^i. CJn "tfne oecasl ''-Matm aCAUi* «
:
pite
fiSenator, ^yoTr*i..age ot all ^uu
I'm-
still
here
The Hiew York Times. TARRYTOWN, N. T.. April SO.-Johp D. Rockefeller has added 105 acres to his 6,000-acre estate by acquiring the John Webber property at Tarrytown Mr. Rockefeller owns the wa"Heights. tershed on the north of the Tarrytown Lakes and by pur(Jhasing the Webber land he owns the South side so that in effect two lakes are practically part of his estate and add to its- beauty. His plans -for the property have not been dfsclosea. - tt contains valuable timber and immense quarries. The price paid is said to have been more than $10(),(XIO. Mr. Rockefeller walked over every foot of the land before closing the. deal..ipeital to
12. Where firemen on big engines deem an assistant necessary. the matter may. If
-
.Oos;«^I try te, rrinm i at ion .JiMiL 1>l > >>Wig |£pto,^e.jt ci^i orji if thai, cannot be done, he, »r oa^ repreveatini him, wlU ciMn? banlta. j>r. Coe; said he ^ until the Alaika .clue wae proved, vonhjngureA on H«i»e]^|i Cluuiee*> less or Henry Coe wa> safely at- hia To Roddy alone belongs the credit for home again. discovering Hanel's negotiations with The seeming location of Coe in Aladta the' circus. .Roddy has been In Philafollows logically upon an early clue andelphia since last Tuesday, when he ac- nounced by the detective agency. The companied Miss Helen Buck, companion detectives said last March that they had to Mrs. Heilner, to the Quaker City to Information that the young man was identify a pair of pearl earrings which a man, recognized by the pawnbroker making his way through the Northwest On as a pedier. His trail, according to the as Hanel, had pledged for *5. Wednesday a turquois ring and a diamond and emerald ring .which had be- report, was lost at Mlnot; N. D. Since tbe disappearance of young Coe longed to Mrs: Heilner were found in Each had been the other pawnshops. theory has been that he suffered a pledged for ?5. So Hanel had had $15 since he reached mental breakdown because of worry over Philadelphia a little before 4;-15 o'clock the condition of bis wite. wa.o tiore him on the afternoon of the murder, the hour a child shortly after his disappearance, at which the earrings were pawned. Presumably Hanel had had little cash and accoinpanying business worries. before the murder, for he had been povThe younger iir. Coe was a trusted erty-stricken and had been glad of lo" RcSdy"'al- sniP'we ot tjie standard Oil Company job at $10 a month. lowed hlin another $5 and began work in Boston, and apparently was happy in on the thednr that Hanel had had i,ja home hi AUston, but on Jan. 30 he ... or less. He figured that Hanel had had , ,j , ; . to live on this for five days and to pay 'Ossed his wUe good-bye, told her he railroad fare from New York, since the would return shortly, entered an auto-»'>"« went away. He has not ^^frd^edtll"c1ia1i'c1Xrhe''hLd'b^Sd been seen -"f any, of his family or friends by So his way South on a freight train. Hanel mirat be nearly penniless again. since. Many clues have been run down as''Th°e''dfet^tsnnX!'ti°o%"nV° Hel^*"-' r^^^K-f '"/',f .*=T "' "'^ ''^ might ship on a vessel as seaman or distinct and broken trail leading throug.l steward or he might, get a job as a the Northwest they have all pro'.-ed cook. Roddy dismissed the first theoiy valueless. since every outgoing steamship in New Y'ork, Philadelphia, and Baltimore had been watched. But the -detective knew Hanel would fear to take a steady job FINDS IS as cook In Philadelphia, where he must guess the detectives were seeking him. His one chance of escape lay In con- G. B. Stagg, Who Killed Watchman, stant travel, and since he must make Sentenced for Dice Game. his living as a cook it; was necessary he should get a job in some traveling Special to The Nete York Times. Where could such a job be kitchen. HACKENSACK, N. J., April 30.—Garfound exce"pt.wlth the circUs? figured circus he. went yes» rett' B. Stagg, a Paterson Roddy, and to the youth, who terday. His first inquiry showed he was on recently was acquitted here of muridcr, the right track, and close behind the after having confessed the crime to man he sought. Hanel had appl,led^ for Sheriff Robert N. Heath, was sentenced work in the commissary department on to not less thap two years nor Thursd.ay and a job as cook had been today offered to him. He iiad taken it thank- more thah tliree years in State prison fally, although explaining that he would at hard labor and to pay a fine of $1,00<> not be at liberty until Monday, when he would join the circus in Trention, its on an Indictment cnarging him with to which he pleaded not first jump after leaving Philadelphia gambling,
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Commander-in-Chief of tks Dardanelles land forces, the following dispatch : Is with Intense satisfaction thait l.l>^Ht,i)flkTS;Ot the success whi<A.
I
K
;Bter<jay
from'P:
"^
fhitt
:U«'«ttiuid*d the combined naVit
J.'iifta
peirfelfuni;
inillteJir operations-,at
the Daih-
the'
aewnia-

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SLAYER
GAMBLER.
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necessary, be adjusted through arbitration. 13. Firemen will not be required t<^ -clean engines, nor will engineers be required to vthen fill grease cups or set up wedges, others are available to do the *oric. 14. The weight on drive wheels of each shall be posted where the engineengine
GOES
honor g randson.

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not granted were the automatic release, time and a halt for overtime In freight and switching service, and the "fiveThe hour day in passenger ser-vice. award on the surprise test, which was a matter of bitter contention in the course of the fAur months' hearing, was describe him precisely as desired uy the railroads. This variance with the police silarm BILE UP. Mr. Burgess, however, listed !t among fQr Hanel merely strengthened the Identification, for Rpddy knew that Hanel's the results satisfactory to the men. Judge Pritchard made the folloirlna hair was very mnch thinner than it had British" Vessel with Cargo of Coal been- two years ago, when the Philadelstatement: " I am satisfied that as respects many rait poBee audga rogue's gallery por- Sest to Bottom by a Submarine. of the propositions submitted we have ghla of h|nK!r^~' ,._ -knew, too, from LONDON. April 30.—Tie British tkat Hanel. approached, as near as may be at th" tl^JtJ ihip, which was reported last night time, a standardisation of many ruli and rates, which will in the future tei teave been sunk by a German suhto remove many thlirga that have been e off the Isle of Lewis, NorOl the cause of innumerable controverslee -Scotland, waa Identified" today as the between the railroads 'and their employes." lAloblle, a British vessel, carrying eargc of coal Otijectlona of Railntad*. The crew of twenty-three'men landi Iw -^-^^ The statement of Mr. By ram and Mr-.' for TIrehtoB. i«*«ther sa«lsfWI>« ' iiMrafwr, tbe7jpoUce«n» tod&y. The officers said the Park •« IS equally brief, saying: iMt hiUM -or fiwiisie to *Mie., " the Mobile occurred on Wednesdi^ji That our signatures to the awani ^^ Netetas Tl«r»?en left ow ~ Woods Jest land that the submarine's Captain al: -may not signify approval of it in prin- OsmiliisBtmi*: to r w«i Mi«w bffW. lowed them ten minutes In wjiich to ta|ia" ciple or in detail, a brief word of ni- UftirTin every ^the boats.. TINT iri llll l planatlon seems necessary. toe£l<m BoMsn elMNt'^irj 01 ;' Any scheme of standardiiatlon, hours lief(v» Oey approacb to it, which does not permit 01 tf<A.otic ev' <»«J»Vfi
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T&e Rejected Deinajid>( Among the requests which were
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Banel. The evidence of tl\e gambling came out To the circus people there seemed at the murder trial and was not disnothing strange in this and he -was puted. Stagg and other employes of the hired to go to work on Monday. Nor American Paper Company engaged In to Roddy did it seem strange. He fig- a game of craps on last Christmas eve, ured that Hanel was fearful of discovHe ery if he came out in the open in Phila- Stagg losing his week's salEK-y. delphia and planned on beating his way struck Louis Walters, the aged night to Trenton, where there -was no reason watchman, on the head and .robbed to believe extraordinary search for him would be made, and then slinking out him. The blow caused death. of sight beneath the circus canvas. The acquittal on the murder charge There was no doubt in his mind that „„_ *'"^' " " 3,,^ .0 thi. «niii.f£ «^"»-^ ^„- ,, jg ^** to. the courts charge the man who had applied. foTthe jobr*^^. of cook was Hanel, fbr the man whb that Stagg was .guilty of either murder hired him identified the- police portrait in the first degree or not at all. Judere ?Lfrt"t^on""'•''"*^''•*'°"'^*'''v"1 William M: Seufert sentenced " T^o chap I saw didn't have near as day. — ^ much hair and he wasn't dressed as you
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Saturday night. .Identified
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guilty.
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dissimilar rates ur opinion, is unsowd.
under which the
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^dl««tfdl<•d. 4?
BSnei,
The account of tBe laadlqi: allied troops does not bear out ttii overoptimlstic reports from Greek to««i| -^lich preceded It and whl<^ menthpe^ tiiousands of prisoners as having beslf captured, the total of men taken by tits on Christians In ASles |«ing officially given as SOOi TUsae s Niw ?. Become Violent. wiere cut off by the fire of the ships. FRANCE, AprllSO, Neither does the report mention cr|M6^ ApiU ^niLFA, T^vnscaaeasia,, patch to The London Daily News.)—.: and L*ndon, Aptfl ».) *•«» o" Smrrxm nor in the Golf iiR. (vt» Petro^oCd Germans opened hea-vy bombardmoit flieroe against the Bulalr line of renewal of the recent Donklrk yesterday morning. Firing be^ tor)l0. ' o'clock and continued J^g^ OhrlsUans in Aremto Is tn u r<» i<el %i|lt it Is certain that these poinu are soon after '-^ Watched to prevent relnforcemMK^ when it
prevailing,
shewing Dunkirk, and this despite tlfe wWch stateme&t In the German headquarters tackled by a German aeroplane, The " the fortress at Dunkirk threw three bombs at the ship. report that was shelled yesterdiy by German ar- first two fell wide, but the third peissed tb the stern rail and eiceedlngljr close tillery." no damage. Tonight this statement -was Issued by fell into the sea. doing At the time the ship" watf flying the the British Press Bureau: " The rumol- that Qerinan warships American flag and had her name paintThis ed on the side in letters six-feet long, bombarded Dunkirk is untrue. rumor probably originated tn a misread- 'there was no excuse, therefore, for the attack. ing of the French official communique issued today." WASHINGTON, AprU 30.— While n« report has yet been received of the ex This statement was added later :| " The shelling of Dunkirk is ndsv re- perience of the American steamer Gushing with aircraft in the North Sea, offiported by aerial recohnbissance to have cials are interested in the incident, and been from a land gun, and the reports expect advices from the American LeKation at The Hague or the American Contlmt German warships were off that sulate at Rotterdam. There are no international conventions port were due' to a misapprehension," Reconnoissance was made by the Brit- in force which govern the acts of airmen. ish also to Ostend, which was cleared A Taube aeroof all iroportant craft. Special to The Tieic tbrk Times, PHILADELPHIA, April 30./- The plane appeared in sight, but kept 10,000 steamship A naval American by GermanCusnlng, which was feet up and three miles off. attacked airmen, is oivned aeroplane chased the Taube, whereupon by the Standard Oil Company, and has been plying between this port and forthe' latter retired. eign countries about three months. The "report from Paris, that tbe Ger She left Chester, Penn., on April 11 man fleet has been seen off the coast with 2,4yl.01O gallon? of refined petroof Belgium is regarded here ae doubt- leum, valued at Sliy,640, and 50,000 gallons of lubricating oil, valued at $8,580. ful, since British war craft were bom- The cargo was consigned to the Netherbarding Zeebrugge .during" the greater lands Government, and the ship Is In charge of Capt. Herland. Her length part of last night, and again today. She was buUt in England tn is i2& feet. Another report, haying to do with na1904,, val activity In the North Sea, cfime in a received from lAmsterpress dispatch TUs said- that urgent orders had dain. ALLIES' been received at the Hook of Holla^c for the Immediate preparation for serv$250,000,000 ice of lour Dutch lifeboats and two Ited These vessels; were jsiCross boats. to wait, with steam up, so tbat Lonidon rected Speeulatef on the Chances they would be able to leave at a moof Gold Being Shipped to Amerment's notice. ' The message added that thiere was 'ho ica France's Secret Plani explanation Of this order or hews of a sea fight, but that it was expected the vessels would be instructed to proceed tiWitfOiS; .'April 20i (Correspondence to tbe North Hinder LiightsKtip, In the of t^e Associated Pres&).—There are-North Sea near the Franco-Belgian bor rumors here. that the Bank of Franco; der. win frelease gold to_ London for part transference -io New York, but this is Say IS-Inoh Gans Did SheUlnar. not generally believed in banking cirPARIS, April 30.—A Havaa dispatch cles. 'When the French check rate on. from Dunkirk sap's that It has been as- London went to 25.67 private advices to banKers with Paris 4:onneccertained that the bombardment of Londcn tlons contained reference to a rumor Dunkirk came from 15-lnch guns sltu- In Paris that if the check -rate i»ent ated behind the German line. higher the Bank of France would have , This may have. given: British and ^enJch seaplanes, which to release gold. rise to the turner -Uiat the metal woula the bombarilment, reconnoltered di^rlng actually be shipped. Since then, however, the rate has were, able to discover no enemy ships in the vicinity of Dunkirk, although there eased, and it ts believed negotiations have^ ftirther progressed for the estab7 was a German -light squadron, off Os- llshment bf a. credit of something l)ke, $-.!5a,000.000 In New York on behalf ofj the AUIea for payment of food and' war :msterial and the righting of the! Cable to ttm Now .TOHXf-TiKBa Special which will ftii'old the neces.DOVER. April 80, (DiSpitcU to 'JJhe exchanges movements either, from sity 01' E''l London Dally Chronicle.);— El^ht Ger- Paris to London or London to New The fact that bankers are averse inp.n destroyers were sighted, yesterday York. more Treasury bills as to issutnr morning off the. Belgian coast between a means of any financing, internatlbnal pur-j Dunkirk and Ostend. This «aye- riee. to chases strengthens the belief that a<;nie: tbe rumor that Dunkirk h^d been bom- such methoa as the foregoing Is la barded from the sea. The destroyers, ooorSe of arrangement. Qeoretive methods are foUowied so fartaking ad-vanta«e of the misty weather as Treasury business Is. concerned, and
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ftjf af teriipon, 4S minutes N, ^ .dfgrees 30 minutes 'E,
Please convey to stf-^ l^imelles. ranks.. including those of dur alUaB, rny hearty congratulations oh tWa splendid achlevfflnent.
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tONfX)!^, April 30.—After very »»> flghthig-k .in which the Turks 0t. a
stubborn
to
resistance,
troops,, according
Bieiit
an. official
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issued tonight, 'have firmly:
1ft*od themselves on the GaUipoli.:^i«taamla and made considerable advaiveiB te-
ward the narrows of the DardaiteH —, hUe tbe ^'i/e&ch have cleared Oev*
i^iun Kale,
.strait,

the Asiatic skle of ths
\
Thus it may be aidd. attitat the/^oond and most aeriotts tincpt fo prce the Oardanellee has be«M
of Turks.
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The 'Turks, under the guidance tbehr German offloers, placed every Btacle iif the «ray of the iiivaders,. against tbe fire of the allied fleet
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o<
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th« gallMtry of the army they ^l^| forced to eui hade The- British fodbpi^ ;)(tt heavily ta: t|ke operation.
^A
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hmmH»m*
tin** at six Pointf^
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CREDTT
MERE AT
Six points wete selected for' the !§. which besaa at daylight of |L At five points ttey were lnuaedil>#> saeoeesful, but *t the etxth, vmt llT; aefW ,til-Bahr, the trooys were ttnable to iiVmMee .ttntll the likening. The Aa»tftftana
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tk« «ieet coast of We QaUppU CT.iiiyitH, dtreeUr across the couatrr fintqf Jflii ? atrMg;^ fortified aairowE. TbeI British troops disembarked at tt'e .4fc „ treoie end of the peninsula, anJAa^^gMi •38th. whai It -was decided to |^ men a rest andtlme to consoHdate ^_,, positions, Uray liad reached the nflpjH^ tioBliood of KritUa,. which is o'kjki road which runs along; the peniiHpi Itfid over whliA they, will iQake a i^ tlon with .their comrades from the ihlnlons and attack the forts (UMMlg ti;« n«rr oWa in the rear. Tbe French took possession ot Knm Kale after they bad prevti attacked toward Yeni Shehx. to south on the Asia Minor Coast. WhUe these tend operatiaiB were ceedlng the fleet, besldse coverlnc tM laodlng of the trtwps. kept tip a b^wbardraent of the forts In the Dardaj and reinfo^(^ements prevented reafhieg the Turks from the 8eat>< 'matsu One Turkish troopship -was
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and Nei^hBlahdecs
)Bi>ded.fiB|
dAH
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by tbe
taeltL.
"British battleship
Queen
which
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beien firing
Is believed again to hvvi her big guns across the
lomla. directed by airtoen.
ship
was stmk
off
iBSiiae
the narrows, wi^jih
tiBship
ttrsL
Trtun^h
MM- the boml^sd and. set
<v
The t_. H^tSi, a tewo-i
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PrUHMMTS
'Of Gclel
>4l|e
ItfeMtke
made
off
when
'
sighted.
tt-^oJBld. not be surprising if *"*
Atoeidy
Men
a large sum
I

tT«a|i(sB<ad ff-'th ig;
WAfCteHPS ATTAOK TIIEj
NORTHERN
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it^-d^K
W^
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suddenly Rty 12-Inch shells were flriedrtUI
o^iB^l^^^^^^^SS^t^i^JlA «-
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imm
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Brlcil^
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