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‘ Mystery of the Delay in De livering Ismay's Message at Last Partially Cleared.’ CALLING ROOSEVELT FIRST HELD UP FOR PIVE DAYS. Filed on the Carpathia on April 45, but Not Sent Ashore Until 17th. ‘Teat the message sent dy J. to’ P. A. @& Franklin, notéfying ether tt was delayed by the relay- tng operator on some other ship will have to de determined. OPERATOR DENIES HE SAW ALLEGED MESSAGE. ‘The same of the mysterious operator ‘whose! eon is said to have told E. Jy Dunn that a message from “Yamai" to ‘“Esletrank,” telling of the los of the (Mitanic, was received in New York on the Monday morning following the dis- aster, is Fred Dauler, far forty-one yeors an employee of the Western ‘Union, and now in charge of the de- Mvery department at No, 1% Broadway. Dauler was examined at length by Sen- ‘ator @mith, He denied emphatically that he had seen any such message on April 15, adding that the first message he received was on April 17. ‘This was the mesage in which “Yamsi” urged “[etetrank” to hold back eo that the Titanic's sailors might im- mediately be reshiped to England, KB. F. 2rooks, general manager of the Western Uaton, told Stnator Smith that when code messages were received by the Marcon! people from persons of ship voard, they frequen*!y were turned over to the Western Wnion and Postal for delivery, im case “the code addresses were registered with the land lines. Brooks produced the original of the message sent on Monday night, April ith, to Congressman Hughes, of Hunt- ington, W. Va., by the White Star Line, telling him that the Titanic was safe, that all on board were well and that the Mner was proceeding to Hallfax. The sending time on this message was 261 P, M., although it was known in New York at 6% P, M., the same night that the Titanle was sunk, This mes- gage was sent from the branch Western Union office at No, 11 Broadway in which ip located the offices of the Whjte Star line, EXPLAINS SENDING OF THE REASSURING DISPATCH. M was explained that tie reassuring message was vent an hour after the truth was known becanes the operator had a lange mass of messages before him, and wae probably delayed for two hou mere before he reached this one. ‘A mechanical engineer, a passenger on ove name Senator Smith was Chamberlain, but whose ind- he withheld, confirmed the story yesterday by George A, Harder of eit: Mr, Chamberlain told Sen: mith he had seen sallors work- keys on Deck H, marked "W. T. oo i th ents), but adJed that the key: Red to turn and the nations. talled to close the water-tight compart which they controlled, HOLD UP OF TITAN TRACED BY SENATOR SMITH TO A WIRELESS OPERATOR and probably Sunday. ! | C NEWS TAFT TALKS FIGHT, GNSORT OF BISES “1 Am a Man of Peace, but ef the sinking of the Titamic with; BALTIMORE, May 4.—Preeident Taft oes of Ue, was held back twe|began his fight for the support of the ey @ Marconi eperetor, was éefi-|Maryiand voters in Mondey's President- eutabiished wy testimony brought! {ial primaries early to-day with speeches to-day by Genator William Aiden/at Hyattsville and Laurel, in which once tm trie tnvestiguitons at the Wal-lagain he attacked Col. Theodore Roose- Even a Rat in a Corner Will Fight,” Says the President. velt, accused him of misstatement and necessity that forced him to come out ary candidate. ‘the witness stand|misquotation of his speeches, said Mr. @ pdlitical campaign uké an ordin- “If only my personal ambition was concerned,” he seid, “if only my personal repu stake I shouldn't bother, but I consider that I represent @ cause. and we are ation wes at “Tho innovator !s abroad in the land told that there ‘e new should ‘be introduced, for in- recall of Judges. If this policy Is adopted it will mean that in we.nocratic years the decisions upon taws will be Democratic and 1:. Republi- the Cedric | 1.3 4er { can y jhe began his attacks on Theodore Roose- ‘8 they will be Republican, So we'll have varying interpretations of the Constitution depending on a single vot “T am courageous enough to come out and tell the people wha they already know! they recognize the shortcomings of a sudden decision of the people. “Ail I ask In a square deal,” said the “Mr. Roosevelt beleves in standards of port as I don't object to it. that he give me a equare deal.” The President declared that Mr. hoosevelt's chargé that Mr. Taft's po- Iitical friends were bosses and his were maxin But all I ask is by the facts. ‘When he asked if he had received a square deal from Mr, Roosevel persons shouted, ‘No, no," ‘The President, said he believed ti 2 to be the executive head Roosevelt believed it was to “No, the job Is to introduce social revolution, according to Mr. Roosevelt,’ sald the President. ‘I tremble to think what would become of the country If Theodore Roosevelt were to die with so much depending on his life, ‘The President replied at Hyattsville to ‘Attorney-General Bonaparte's American people didn’t want him elected President in 1908, ‘Well 1 Many people said tne Presid anybod: urged with being an oligarch or an aristocrat I don't belleve Mr. Bonaparte could escape." ELKTON, Ind, May 4. several hundred people ihere to-day, President Taft for the first time since velt, strongly intimated that much of the support of the Colonel is receiving comes from the trusts and the “imter- cate.” jays I am owned by the interests,” said Mr, Taft. ‘He says that I am for special privilege, that I am for everything that is wicked, the bosses, special privilege and the inter- ests. What I attempted to do In my administration to carrw out Mr. Roosevelt's policies, and one of those policies I thought to be the prosecutin of the trusts under the anti-trust law, and so I gave orders to the at fe is that I prosecuted the Steet Trust and the Harvefter Trust, @d Now I am not making any charges against Mr. Roosevelt because he did his mind about the anti-trust law, he owe Hi eee f | stands, the hearse stopped and six men Vi, 4 Hl wie ss LA. COL. ASTOR BURIED AFTER FUNERAL AT RHNEGLIF CHAPEL Body Brought Here by Special Train for Interment in Trinity Cemetery, WIFE IS_ ABSENT. Her Wreach of Flowers, De- livered Late, Remains Outside Church During Services. In the little rough stone Church éf the Messiah at Rivinecilff-on-the-Hud- fon funeral services were read to-day | over the body of Cul. John Jacob Aa! recovered from under the shadow of the Ice cliff which sent the Titanic to the bottom of the Atlantic. A few hours thereafter the Rev. Witten T. Manning, rector of Trinity Church, Btood at the aide of a new fe in Trinity Cemetery up over the Hudson at One Hundred and Fifty-third street ané@ crumbling a clod in his hand, ri peated the solemn “KE ashes to ashen” of the funeral liturgy. Sinyplicity marked every stage of Col. Astor'n last journey to the grav There was no extravagant pomp of ciroumatance and parading of gyi either at the church in the little Hudson villaze below the Astor estate, Ferociiff, or at the grave in the New York cemetery, Not more than one, hundred ‘persons, all admitted by card, f] set in the odords shadows of the church to listen to the final words come. ; ‘Against the catafalque before the lec- tyrn of. the church upon which the heavy onk casket rested was a spray of red roses, placed there by order of the Prince of Wales. The blossoms of the Prince were surrounded by bank: of purple orchids, sent i last remem: brance by people whose names are high in honor both here and abroad. FIRST MRS. ASTOR DECLIN' TO ATTEND. Mrs. Ava Willing Astor was not pres- ent at the funeral, though her son, Vincent, had asked her to join himself and his sister, Muriel, at the church, Col, Astor’s first wife remained in her room at the Ritz-Carlton during the entire day. After the funeral service had. begun @ florist’s aneasenger came hurrying up from tho station four miles away and tried to enter the church, He carried and orchids tled with bon. The sextén told him ‘he could not enter the church then, and, taking the wreath, laid it againet the door outside of the church. ‘There it stayed until the end of thé service. ‘The wreath bore on @ cand the name !Mrs, John Astor.” It was near noon that the bells of all the chugches in Rhinecliff began a mea- sured tolling. Down the hill from Ferncliff and through the winding columns of the freshly green elms came a hearse, followed by a few curtained carriages. In the carriages were Vin- cent Astor Gnd his Madeline Force Astor, her erine, and Mr. and Mrs. William Hy Force, her father and mother, Mrs, Orme Wilson, a sivter of Col, Astor, was also ® member of the little party of mourning kin, At the corner of Montgomery and Chestnut etreets, where the church carried the great oak casket, covered with @ hanging pall of orchids that Almost screened it, to the doors of the church. There the eight honorary pall bearers, standing on eliher side of the vestibule, met the casket and accom- panied {t to the catatalque of flowers jin front of the chancel, These were Richard Delafield, JAspenard Stewart, Edward A. Wickes, Charles F. Kauff- man, Stuyvesant Fish, Peter Cooper Hewitt, Dr. N. Mifer and Dr. Joseph F, Goodeall. FRIENDS WENT BY GPECIAL TRAIN TO RHINEBECK, The coming of the little group of be- reaved from the hil! estate filled the few remaining pews in the front of the church whigh had een reserved, Be- hind these were the intimate friends of ‘the family who had come up from New York on the special train that arrived at Rhinebeck at 11.20 o'clock, and ser- vants from Ferncliff, more than fifty of them, old retainers all and trusted members of the household for years, Among those who had come on the thinke now that {ts operation is not good, and he criticises me tecause I funeral train were Douglas Robinson, Levi FP. Morton, Robert and Lewis (Continued on Second Page.) { e NEW YORK,, promising resurrection and a Ife to} - DRINK ALL NGHT "SCOTT CAPTURES my C fonal nr cm 85 ON BROADWAY IF | “YOU ORDER EARLY Court Decides That Rector’s Graduated Bottle Plan After 1A. M. ts O. K. The graduated bottle has come into ita own again alongs the Great White Way. ‘The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court has Just decided that any one so ‘Aispoxed’ may buy eh Mquor in| New York restaurants as he choosen be- | fore the hours fixed by jaw for closing and coneume the same at any time after hours that he pleases. Rector's."ol& restaurant was singled out as the place of assault by Maynard L, Clement,‘the then Commissioner of Excise, three years ago. The graduated bottle and the little decanter were the | implements of war, and the graduated | bottle’ has won out, Clement alleged that on three different occasions his detectives purchased liquor after hours in Rector’s. ‘The liquor, they said, was served to them in little de- canters, Rector’s way charged with having violated the Excise law, and if the Commissioner's contention had been upheld would have been subject to a heavy fine or the loss of the restaurant Nquor license. And right here is where Rector’s got ahead of the Commissioner, Maurice Meyer, a counsel for the restaurant, showed that the email decanters were not used for serving siquors in Rector's, it was the custom of the restaurant to serve as many drinks as were ordered before 1 o'clock in the mprning (the legal hour for closing), but that no Grinks were served after 1 o'clock, “Of couree,”” said Lawyer Moyer, “there was drinking tn the restaurant after 1 o'clock, but we showed that nothing was sold after that hour. We anticipated there would be @ rumpus, an@ that was why we used the gradu- ated bottle. By its use we were able to prove to the Court the correctness SATURDAY, Louis Scott, South Paterson A. C., Who Won Marathon Race To-Day MAY 4, i MARATHON RACE Big Crowd Sees Runners Fin- ish Contest at the Door of City Hall. Athletic Club, won the annual mara- thon for the Evening Mail prize con- tested to-day by nea fiftes hun- runners had’ fairly to fight thelr way to the time-takers, G, Stravino, also of the South Pater- son Club, was second in 1 hour 9 min- utes and 21-6 seconds; John Gleason of the Pastime Athletic Club was third tn 1 hour 10 minujes and 18 seconds, wus fourth, The dingraceful sce en of a y ag when the runners trooped int) the City Halil to change thetr running clothes to street atire and disrobed and tad their rubbers work on the mon tavicn and rugs all over di ding, with scant considerati« f the presenc y women in the hail, were no ted But the boys had « rough time of {t They had been told that an automob'le would be in waiting at Park Row to take them to the © ferry slip at the foot of Chainbers street, where a ferry- boat was in waiting to be used as a dressing room. automobile, About fifteen of the boys crowded into it and were taken to the ferry. The rest wobbled around the park almlessiy, Some tried to walk to the scandalized women in the Chambers streat cars by attempung fo get aboard, of our position, Each bottle contained eighteen nitches, eual to elxhteen drinks. These bottles were delivered to patrons before | o'clock, when or- dered, and naturally there was no actual le of iquor after that hour. It w simple ay the nose on one's face.’ The case wae tried before Justice Erlanger and a jury in the lower court in Februssy, Wil, and resulted in 's verdict in favor ofRector's. The Appol- Jate Division now affirms the judgment the lower tribunal. 1912. IN RECORD TIME, 20,000 WOMEN ALLHATSALE SUFRAGEPARDE 37-Cent Straw the Uniform Bonnet in Remarkable Demonstration. MERE MAN IN THE LINE. Couple of Thousands of Him Will Trail Procession on Fifth Avenue. ‘The ouffrage parede, sohetuled for a Jate start up Fifth avenue this after || noon, has grown to euch large propor- | tlone that it threatens to become large- ‘ty @ night function. With more than 2,- 0 women and a couple of thousand men in line, darkness is bound to inter- IST WITH WIND AT BACKS vene before the vanguerd begins to the line of marrh. Not only te to-day’ try, demonatration ever given by women, in atrict untformity tp inpl in uniformity in Low-heeled walking shoes are for the and e hi ment Col. Roosevelt hi mittee he cannot he wi there will be Rotifiea the com: ad the men's brigad 1 be In. Maryland, the world. ninety to three, to hundreds, in Europe’ to give women the vote, will all have the Jargest flag and the small- ost representation. Only three women, 0 far as found, will represent Finland, but whar make up in spirit, ‘The smallest suffagetios wilt Marie Satter, Madelyn * Bali, Marte Moore, Gertrude Dmelch, Helen Single- ton and Helen Falconer, rang! from seven to ten, They are bers of “The Rose Maid” company, One of the foreign countries to he prevented {s China, Mrs Leo Lan, “poss of Chinatown,” will carry a flag Louis Scott, of the South Paternon | reading “Women Vote in China, Why Not Here?” Mra, Winston Churchill, wife of the New Hampshire novel will jead the delegation from that Btate, dred young runners, His time w @ record for the course from Jerome | avenue and One Hundred and Elghtieth street to the City Hall—one hour, elit minutes and twenty-elgit and two- fiftha seconds A great crowd saw the finish in front of the City Hall, The police prepara tlons were Inadequate and the erawd broke through the lines and formed @ narow lane through which ¢ 1 and Miss Fola La Follette, daughter of the Senator, will be at the head of the visitors from Wisconsin, Mme. Gregorl, who writes the songs for suf. frage, will head « group of women from Greece A late recruit to the parade is little Miss White of Syracuse, daughter of Mrs, Leonard White-and olece of form. er Gov. Horace White, mother is an “anti,” little Miss White declared she was going to march in the parade, and she ts here to do it. FUTURE VOTERS WILL PARADE IN CARRIAGES. The eleventh division is to include a feature that {# sure to make a hit, It is the baby carriage brigade bearing the fu\ure voters of the nation, Mrs, Tillie Strindberg, =a (Continued on Second Page.) Thumbnail Sketches of World Ad. Results ferry, and others in thelr slight attire A few gathered their friends about them and stripped in the open afr, struggling into trousers and sweaters a soon ap ble. Romaine 4s of No. 3 MoCann's place, Elizabeth, N. J., fell fainting at Fifth’ avenue and One Hundred and Fourth street. He w: Hospital tn an ambulance, Gaynor buttons, inscribed deat,” appeared to-day. Attracted by the well-proved value of | World advertisements, persons in search | There was just one|of workers, positions, homes, tenants, | investments, lost articles, bargains, &c., had printed: 108,161 WORLD ADS, IN JANUARY, 1919—| Moral, 48,750 More Than the 111,041 WORLD ADS, 45,246 More 137,183 WORLD ADS. IN MARCH, 1912— 54,405 More Than the Herald, 181,819 WORLD ADS. IN APRIL, 1912— 50,736 Mere Than the Herald, A precedent worth following by ad. ‘as taken to Harlem | vertising in | suffrage parade to be the largest ever given in thie coun- ‘aderes have cost #7 coats each, uch an amasing unanimity of }] opinion about hats has never happened | 'n feminine Astory, and alone serves to pmake the demonstration one of moment in the progress of the suffrage move- But jlenty of other attractions, There will be all kinds of women, and from all parts of the country, not to say ‘They will range in ag» “om nd the delegations will they lack in numbers they be Although her niece IN FEBRUARY, 1919-4, ‘ham the Herald. swarm about Carnegie Hall, the end of death. SHOOTS | LEXINGTON, Jahan, former and it te thought few hours. man, telegraphed hloodhounds with npsailant. with the Cox in April, 1903, July, 1902, and May 3, 1908. He complicity in then acquitted. factions, kaon and ior i | | | John Deaton and peace pact, | hee been kept. NY. commencement on to-day. The bullet killing him ED, CALAN Kentucky Mountain Fighter's Body Riddled With Bullets as He Stood at Door of Store. Ky. sheriff of County and noted in the feud troubles of that county, was shot from ambush and probatty fatally woundeg se he stood in the door of hie store at Crook, etteville, twenty miles trom Jackeon ¢ day. Ten shots took effect in his body, Wilson Callahan, a son of the dead ‘The «pecial train with the hounds left ehortly after noon, Callahan wae prominent in the Har- wis foud faction which was charged assassination of Dr, About four years ago a feud broke out between the Deaton and Caliah Both clans descended upon town in @ state of citizens at peace with both eid terceded and secured the signatures of which so far as known we td Child Kills Himselt With Ptotol. | Qeneroso Lamobiente, the five-year-old json of Dominick Lambiente, a | keeper who lives on the fourth No, 117 Mott street, got his father's volver from under the pillow |foolimg with it shot himeelf in Mystery of Titanic News Hold-Up Is Solved at Last | — CElorld. Circulation Books Open to All.’* 10 PAGES REID, SOCIETY AVIATOR, = AND BIRDMAN BEATTY: ———— AL Dash Into Fence at Mariners’ Harbor. and Jump as Machine Turns Turtle —/ After Covering Thirty Miles.of .& Trip to Philadelphia. ARTED FROM NASSAU __ Reid, on Maiden Air Trip, Wired Friends to Meet Him at League | Island Navy: Yurd. Marshall Earl Reld, the society aviator who started from but it ts to be the most remarkable | Field at 11.17 o'clock to-day with George W. Beatty, his tutor, as @ Passenger in Weight bi-plane, to fly to the League Istand Philadephia, came to grief before he got fairly started on hie the order of the day. ‘The straw hate| engine went wrong as he was pasing over Staten Island. He, ia at Mariner® Harbor on the north shore, the aviator narrowly esc Reid hit the ground 4 ferrifle smash arid his machine went through fence, ripping out two posts before it stopped. Fortunately Reid his passenger were thrown on soft ground scratches and bruises, HIDDEN ASSASSIN damaged aeroplane Fie. Reid and repaired, FEUDIST for ENiaabethport, N. @ hill, but he couldn’: May 4—E4 Cal Breathet he can Itve onty « to Lexington for whioh to track the B.D. James Cockrel! in B. Marcum on tried for alleged murdera but wae i gE trae i jome days kept the terror, Finatly | wa t Bd. Callahan to « FOR SUBWAY TICKEES, May 4-—-At the ane OLENTON, nual meeting of the trustees of Hamil- ton College to-day, it | that $100,000 had been donated to the college for the purpose of erecting a new Itbrary building. The name of the donor wil! probably not be made known until the centennial jebration and was announced cel June 17, j iy J penetrated the brain, | and escaped with A wagon was chartered to tate would make another attempt te fly Philadetphia as soon the Biplane to the time the eng went wrong the trip had been » success. Nearly a mile a minute Deen averaged in speed. Reid had just crossed the Narrows! from South Brooklyn and was heading’ von Kull when the engi he was forced to steer iniand and a & long glide to the ground. He to clear the fence ane aligit in o eit where his machine could have % a x & po & mine vack te Beattie sala mopped aut 2% t mise the amounted to $36,568,334, Following are the total