Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
at i ne — cussed the miasing man's fondness for ees. Constantly he would be seen) Walking along the street sucking a 4 FAW ess. In the neighborhood saloons he Would drink whiskey and ruck exes at the wame time, telling the bartenders thet made three meals a day on whiskey and eges, and kept himself fn @plendid trim. Such a diet as that might account etrangs peyehos Pathio tendencies auch as must have @misted in the monster who slew Julia B@QSHELL CLUE BELIEVED TO BE VALUABLE. | WB these facts taken together and Wesvtved into a whole have convinced the host of detectives working on the @ame that the eggshell clue is a valuable, ene and should Investigated thor- oughly. The exashelis that were found | fm the flat to which the murderer lured Bie ttle victim were free from dust! and had evidently come there very re ently. When shown to the delicates @eR Owner downstairs he could not tell Whether or not they had been , @hased from his shop. afl selling any exes to the missing man Ser at least thren weeks. | During a period of several months he BAA sold the man dozens of eggs and hag Watched him bore one end of them with a bodkin and then suck them. | Now and then the man would carry | away several eggs in his poc ‘Be comm}t tho murder in the vacant i flat on the third floor of No. $8 Third avenue, the unknown as- sagen thrice ran the gantlet of deteo- tem in passing vieven doors in that building. He committed the actual crime in a flat the interior of which was within range of thirty-one windows in neighboring apartments, and when he Placed the wooden bor containing the of the still living child in the va- Jot Adjoining the scene of the mur- & wetchful eye in any one of as as forty-seven windows could seen him at his dastardly work in gray dawn of early Sunday. fo, 68 Third avenue, as those who followed the history of this case four-story building, the south- the three in the murder block, ‘Third avenue. Littie Julia's in the centre of the block ich i9 solidly built up, and she een by her sister May at 6.9 Saturday turning off Third avenue Hundred and Seventy-seoond Windows were up that night tn ity of the flats around the va- e-etained one. They ought to 004 mediums of souns the flat house whore the committed, has ta pars! of Jullus Weinberg’s de'l- tore on the left, or of Morris '@ butcher shop on the right. This the firat door the criminal gazed fearfully into as he ether with the Connors girl nd, under @ promise to take father possibly, or alone to coming, she having been en- fe by some ie. Both stores of customers. IN GANTLET OF ELEVEN DOORS THREE TIMES, through the door of the flat passed four doors on floor, ¢wo on each alde. Hut ie their baby carriages are three stops up in defore the climb to the second il 28 tite if eeeit li ell s init Eig, head of the fret fight of stairs i +H flat of Moses Stern, owner of and two doors opening of Mr, and Mre. George Pou- top of the second fight of two doors on the south side ilding, entrances to the flat of Mrs. B. Olnhouse. These made peeeegrie riftrete +i lon by the sudden Goor was renewed by the been frightfully third time he egain to ‘aire into Wackyarad and thence through the fenee which separates the om the vacant portion of the joors pass. | three times, to Open upon this evildoer. and I were up until 1 Sunday morning, and we never ww MBy one across th Bert ie i which may account for our failure to hear anythi NEIGHBORS UP TILL MIDNIGHT HEARD NOTHING. If any neighboring tenant had van- over another in location to view the vacant flat, Charles Roselle, a paper banger, living on the top floor of No. #70 Third avenue, enjoyed that posi- tion, He said: “My wife and I retired @t 1230 o'clock Sunday morning. Sev- eral times during the evening I recall Boing to the kitchen sink and washing my hands directly alongside of the win- dow from which is visible practically of the rear of that terrible my recollection that the win- open then the same as now, Ife of me I not under- stand why I heard no cri Hight families living in No. 60 West One Hundred and Seventy-third street were questioned as to what use they had made of their opportunity to view what was going on in the vacant flat through the rear kitchen windows. Mrs. 1. Lifschitz, er J on the top floor, said r windows end looked into the backyard of No. 88 Third avenue, where thi child assassin was doubtiess reconnoiter- ing for an avenue of escape. Not @ sound was heard by the families of 1. Strutovits, H. Rathiew, T. Bchwarts, J loseph @tegel, F. J. Hanan and 1. Lelbovits, all slumbering in No. 60. HAVE POLICE N MIGLED BY A“PLANT"? ‘How the criminal wes able to operate the dumbwaiter, @ creaking and groan- ing affair, 1s most pussling to the police. Five families practically sept with their ears to the’ shaft, and not one heard Its noise. In the early part of Saturday night there were a number of delivery boys at its base. The eriminal had to steer his course around the building so Qs to avold me ‘The police te to-day, but none of them hi b productive of results. They are fol!ow- ing every clue, however Mttle confidence they hi in ft, and it is hinted have im- portant information that is likely to bring about another arrest at any minute. Among the scores of city dotectives and amateur sleuthe who are trying to track down the Bronx murderer Mary Farrington, a cousin of the mur- dered = girl, Mey Conno! Uttle Julia’ if hi bee engaged in t girls or act in any way suspicious, and their work brought about an arrest night. About a block from the spot where the child's mutilated body was found last Runday Mies Farrington, and May Connors noticed a shabby, ut, dwarfish man acting in a su picious manner, The seen him before loitering about the park F he went to Crotona Park and threw AlexanGer, occupant of the south third floer fiat at No. 9710. “My father-in- law, Samyel Sohwarts, his wife, and Gaughter, Helen, and myself, about the Mat all evening within arm's Jength of the murderer, and not one of us even dreamed of what was happening #0 Bear. We sleep tn the front of «he Mat, and all had retired at midnight, WHY OVEREXERT YOURSELF THESE HOT SUMMER DAYS? Swelteting New York does not have to brave the rays of a scorching sum- mer’s sun in its search for cool places to live, restful spots to spend a vaca- tion, shady summei cottages for rent, steady or extra helpers for the home or business place, &c. 3,558 WORLD ADs. YESTERDAY— 825 More Than the Herald, Times, Sun, Tribune and Press COMBINED, The Morning World, the of Opportunity Guides, at test One's Home or Office Wants lay Be Filled by Telephone or Mall, =——— fve-Time by Werld Ads, Werk for You To-day | wien himeelf on the grass, Miss Farrington | pointed him out to Seret. Quilty and Po- |liceman Gibson, who began to question him. | MAY HAVE BEEN STABBED OUT- | SIDE THE FLAT. A large crowd collected and the word ed around that the murderer caught, About this time [d- ard Connors, the murdered girl | father, came running up, angry and ox | elted, and made a Junge for the prisoner, | He was restrained by the poll nd me of 7 was ken to the Bathgate avenue station ‘and said he wae Ernest Houtville, thirty lelght, homeless, and lived by doing odd Jobs. He sald he ca ore & Your ago |from St. John's, N He eaid he knew nothing about the murder and wa jonly looking for a pl to sleep, He was held for further questionin, _———— MOTHER IS GONE; BABE DYING © Return e Will Dt Two days ago Mrs, left her home at No. 63 Bleeker street, | was pi | had bv us Mra. Mi Dau Zonnors girl had | ‘thirty stoyles above the street, took a i TH ALE FROM HE WARN TO MORRO Forecaster, However, Does Not Believe Friday Will Equal To-Day’s Heat. Blessed reltef—for a time at least-- struck heat-mad New York « little after 2 o'clock this afternoon, when one of the long prophesied thunder storms out of Jersey came swinging over the river and spilled .18 of an inch over parched roofs and heads, To be sure, that wasn't much, but sufficient to make the tem- perature tumble from #3 at 2 o'clock +> 16 within twenty minutes. It stood at the latter figure at 2.9 o'clock, and there waa a strong possibility that an- other etonm would keep it there for ao while, The thundershower which swooped Gown out’of the weat was preceded by the customary oloud of Jersey dust, and when it hit lower Manhattan every- thing went—hats and papers and every- thing else that was not tied down. ‘Then the rain came—a drizzle at first and then of a sudden a great plump of rain in drops as big as dollars. The downpour continued for about half an hour and then tet down into the drizzle again. All of this time there was the fine, slanting wind which cooled and the freehns that comes with summer rain. People thanked the Weather Bureau for its little gift, not knowing that the Weather Bureau wagged ite head and opined that this little ra 44 not necessarily mean the end of the torrid spell. The dead reported up to 11.30 o'clock Vincent Tomley, three months old, led at his home, No, 816 Bedford avenue, Brooklyn, Elizabeth Leroy, seventy-four, of No. 216 Tenth avenue, Brooklyn, died at her home, Miohael Tindrick, forty-five, a le- borer, of No. 613 West Forty-second street, died at his work at Forty- eighth street and North Rt One man, who ts unidentified and who now lies in Flower Hopital at the point of death as the result of heat prostra- tion, dropped in the Fiftleth street sta- tlon of the subway early in the morn- {ng and was taken to the hospital un- conscious, He ie about Afty-eight or sixty years of age, medium weight and @ressed in a gray mixed sult. Jacob Rosenberg, nineteen years old, &@ jaborer whose home Is at No, 19 Su’ folk street, became suddenly tnsane as the result of the heat while at work on the docks at Forty-second street and North Rive The man appeared to have a@ fit i when he reco >red from this seizure he besan to attack his companions who had crowded about him, He was removed to Bellevue tn & straightiacket When old Dr, Scarr, up in the cooler zones of the Weather Bureau, some squint at the thermometer at 8 o'clock this morning he whistled softly; the quicksilver Was only at the 76 mark yenterday it had been two degrees higher at the same hpur, But the hu- midity had holsted itself one peg over yesterday at 8 o'clock; It stood at 7. To sweltering folks down in the steaming streets one degree of humidity 1s equivalent in the discomfort pro- duced to about three degrees’ rise in temperature. “Generally fair, with tendency to cooler to-night and Friday,” wee the best promise Dr. Gcarr could give out. “In this vicinity tempera- Louise Mercier | Brooklyn, wing a quarrel with her bu George, To-day her eighteen month's old daughter, Emily, t# eritles | ally il, and Will probably die untess the mother returns, “L have hunted for all over Br a brother of ’ The baby has not touched any food since her r went away and the doctors e won't live unless her mother com back." | Mrs. Mercier Is thirty-two years old. he has been married five years. When ghe left her home she Sees soeoving, but took hi 4 my_sister-tn~ |to give the humidity @ boost, tures will hardly touch 90 degrees thls afternoon and Friday will prob- ably show a further tendency to cooler, Some cloudiness will prevatl, and scattered local thunder showers are probable late this afternoon or tonight. People with handkerchiefs tucked in thelr collars are sceptical about the comfort those “scattered thunder show- ers” might bring after the fllmmer of| early last night. All that did was/ Just to tantalize Yorkers the Weather Bureau jokere handed out a schedule of temperatures all over the E EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1912 ON SAILING TO-DA With Big Passenger List White Star Steamer Resumes Old Route. Among the passengers sailing on the Cedric to-day were E. A. Hodgson and T. F. Fox, who ere on their way to at- tend the International Convention of Deaf Mutes, to be held in Paris next month. They win aleo visit many of the deaf mute institutions of Europe and make a careful study of the methods in use for the education of the eat. Mr. Hodgson is the editor of the Deaf Mute Journal, while Mr. Fox, also a mute, ie associated with him in work improvement of the condition of Mr. Hodgson gars as the of- flolal representative at the convention ot the New York Mtution for the! Deaf, and both delegates will return to| this country early in September. Mr. and Mra. Reginald de Koven, who Were booked to eail on the Olympic st week, finally got away to-day on the Cedric. They will travel over Eu- rope, and expect to return to New York early in the autumn, John Lee, former Vice-President of the International Mercantile Marine, was als0 @ passenger, expecting to be away for the greater part of the summer on business and pleasure combined. Mra, Willlam C, McCloy and Miss Helen McCloy, wife and daughter of tho managing editor.of the New York Eve- ning Gun, went over for the summer. Every berth but one in the first cabin of the Cedric was taken when the ship wot away and Capt, J. 0. Carter, R. N. R., told his officers that he would now take the northerly course, shorter be- tween this port and Livegpool by some three hundred miles than the course to the southward. This is the first time Since the loss of the Titanic that any White Star ship ‘has gone over tho course upon which the glant was lost. Government reports from vessels in the ice region show that no ice 1s now there and all danger for the season in over. Others going over on the Cedric were E. M. Allen and the Misses Allen, Dr, and Mrs, Charles R. Collins and i and, : » Les Motne, Mr. and Mra. G. W. Pickle and Miss Minnie Pickle and Dr. Arthur W. Yale. ae SA ars RINGTON DAVIS SHOOTS HIMSELF IN ENGLAND. LONDON, July 11.—Rington Davis of Easton, Md,, fifty-four years oid, shot himself Tuesday in the Old Ship Hotel at Bright where he had been etaying with his valet since June 4 At the Coroner's inquest the valet sali Mr, Davis had severe headaches follow- ing an attack of influer but never threatened to take his life, On goin, his room the v. on the sofa cv gown, On removing the gown the discovered that Mr. Davis was with @ bullet wound tn his head, the re- volver belng still clasped in the right hand. ‘The jury returned a verdict of suicide, ‘The valet has cabled to Easton for in- structions about the disposal of the body. the country—8?, But Wi topped them both with @ showing of #4, Yet they say nothing good comes out of *Arizon William Christ, a youth whose home in in Maspeth, L. I, became crazed by the heat to-day while waiting in the pen of the Brooklyn Special Sessions Court to be arraigned on a ch of assault in the third degree. The boy's inwanity manifested itself in a singular way, the idea flashing upon him that it was his duty to bathe his fellow prisone Having announced his intention, he stripped off all his clothing, nd proceeded to h water over his five fellow prison- Court attendants rushed in and forced the man to dress again, He waa no sooner left alone, though, than he stripped off all his clothing @ sec- turned on| ond time and strove to aqueese himeeif through the bers of @ window, He ‘United Gtates, with the accent on @an Francieco and Helena, Mont. Bo’ of those spots were about the coolest in was hauled out with difficulty and sent to the Kings County Hospital for ob- servation, HOW TO KEEP COOL---TAKE A TIP FROM CITY'S KIDDIES — ea ty . hp ee ef. LAND FROM BARGES AS RATS ARE KILLED TO PREVENT PLAGUE Passengers Taken Off Ships Infested by Rodents Ex- posed to Infection. ‘Thousands of rats, supposed to have been exposed to the bubonic plague that 1 prevalent in many of the West Indian and South American pori¢, were either amothered or drowned to-day when more than one thousand pounds of sulpher was burned in the holds of the steamships Saratoga, of the Ward Une, in from Havana and West Indian| porte, and the Caracas, of the Red D/ line, in from San Juan and Vensuelan| ports, after they had been quarantined and then allowed to go up the bay to! the Statue of Liberty, where they were forced to anchor and hoist the yellow| flag of the quarantine, ‘There were valuable cargoes on both while the Saratoga brought up ninety-three first class cabin passen- sere and the Caracas came in with| seventy-five, | After thorough investigation by the quarantine officials at the entrance to} the harbor, the passengers were given| permission to land from barges, which| were provided by the Ward and Red) D ines upon the arrival of the vessels at the Statue. The Saratoga’s passen- Bers were brought to shore at the East River plier of the line, while those from the Caracas were taken to the landing| place In Brooklyn, | Many of the rats that Infested the| ships were caught and sent to the quarantine station on Staten Island, where they will be examined by the| staff and reports made regarding their) condition and the Mkelthood of thetr| having been inoculated with the plague, AMERICANS SCORE 16 POINTS OUT OF A POSSIBLE 18 TO-DAY’ (Continued from First Page.) *hot-putting event attracted much at- tention. Ralph Rose was in better form to-day than MoDonald, In Rose's three throws with the right hand he did 16 metres 11 centimetres (49 feet 6% inches) twice, and in his third attempt, he accomplished 15 metres 23 centimetres (9 feet 111-2 Inches, McDonald was unable to do better than 14 metres 24 centimetres (4 feet #% inches) and 14 metres 92 centimetres (48 feet 11% inches) in hie firet two puts, and in his third trial, only 11 metres & centimetres (38 10 inch Nicklander of Finland and « small Turkish athlete were most noted among the other contestants. ‘The Turk looked lke @ child in size beside the Amert- cans, He Was soon out of the compe- tition, but the Finn, with @ put of 14 metres 9% centimetres (48 feet 111-2 | the campaign fund, but I do not know \{n the London Marathon, which he won, | OR = Gum $1,900,000 10 ROOSEVELT 1904 FUND, BUT NOTA (Continued From First P: 0.) while he was at Chicago. He said he never inquired about the matter, Senator Clapp asked about a long st of possible contributors, but Mr. Cortelyou could give no information in regard to them. DID NOT KNOW OF MONEY GIVEN BY INSURANCE MEN. Mr. Cortelyou said he was not aware that several big insurance companies had contributed $50,000 each to the cam- paign fund of 190 until that fact wi developed in the investigation of the surance companies by @ committee of the New York Legislature. Mr. Cortelyou recalled that Andrew Carnegio had contributed $10,000. He had corresponded directly with Mr, Car- negie about the contribution. Mr. Cor- telyou said about $95,000 was left in the treasury at the end of the campaign, Clapp asked Cortelyou whether he knew of any contributions by Chaun- cey M. Depew, J. P. Morgan, George W. Perkins, H. H. Rogers, J. H, Arch- bold or Willlam Rockefeller of the Standard Ol] Company, Speyer & Co., either made by them or in their behalf, “I did not—I do not recall,” were an- swers made by Cortelyou to all such interrogations. “I heard after the election," he added, “that H, H. Rogers had contributed to what amount. I recall hearing that James H. Hyde contributed, but I do not know how much. I belleve that Cornelius N. Bliss made a contribution, | but I do not recall how much,” Mr, Cortelyou testified that at the beginning of the campaign he had laid down geueral rules as to contributions and was not concerned with detailed contributions except in rare cases as) the campaign progressed, One of the rules was that there should be no prom- ise or pledge attached to contributions, he said, Mr. Cortelyou told of one contribution joted under that rule. wealthy man came to headquar- England second; the time was 271-5 seconde. No Americans qualified in the pre- minary heats for the 400-metre swim, | free style, for men. Most of the places went to Englishmen and Australians, "The 10,000-metre walk went to-day to Goulding of Canada, His victory was a foregone conclusion. Katser, the only American who qualified, fell in a faint In the tenth lap and had to be carried from the track. E, J. Webb of England finished second, end F. Altimani! of Italy, third, The time was 45 min- utes 282-5 seconds, which 1s four sec- onds faster than the previous Olympic record, The American entrants for the Mara- thon, which will be run rest Sun stopped active training to-day inal exercise until time for the rives. The chances of the Ameri are declared by the experts to be very posr and the British sharps assert none of them will show in the first twelve home. However, none of these same experts gave Johnny Hayes a chance so the Americans are not worrying. According to the experts, Corkery, of | Canada, and Wide, of Sweden, scem h the best chances to win the In a Receptive Mood. 1 (From the Cincinnati Enquirer.) “Well,” mused Frowsy Freddie, as he stretched himself and left the park bench, ‘I thaven't had a drink to-day, cA. “ROUSEATS LLAR FROM TRUSTS ters," he said, “with an offer to con- tribute something like $15,000 or $20,000. As he was not connected with any big business we were glad to get it. How- ever, in turning it over, he remarked that he hoped that he might be consid- ered some time for a diplomatic post, and n that event that he would have the sood will of the chairman of the com- mittee, I told him that he had probably been misinformed as to how those things were done, and, while I did not want him understand, that we could not ac- ept the contribution.” ‘Some believe all a Chairman does {s to raise money," sald Mr. Cortelyou. “It is not. He has other business, He said he knew of some contribu- tions around $10,000. Several of them. he said, were from women, whom he belleved contributed because of long In- terest In the party or through senti- mental reasons: So far as he knew they were not interested in trusts, He entimated between 700 and 800 per- sons were. authorized to collect money. He said that contribution books were distributed and many anonymous contr!- butions were made “just as to charita. ble, religious or social organizations. TELLS HOW THE MONEY WAS EXPENDED. Mr, Cortelyou gave as the most tm- Portant sums expended from the fund of $1,901,000 the following: To the State committees, $760,000 to $800,000; for literary productions, over $600,000; speakers’ bureaus at the New York and Chicago headquarters, $176,000; Hthographs, $100,000; expenses of the general headquarters in New York and Chicago, $150,000. At the close of his examination Mr. Cortelyou said he desired to take full responsibility for the campaign contri- butions, He denied that he had been selected as chairman because he had been Secretary of Commerce and Labor and was in a position to force corpor- ations to contribute. “At that time the bureau of corpor- ations had just been organize sald Mr. Cortelyou, “and I knew about the affairs of corporations than | any other citizen who read the current literature of the day.” a Senator. 4 Plain Dealer, As you were saying, The Neg Senator, th ‘The Senator (nervously)—Hush, ‘The Negotlator—What do hear? The Senator—That strange sound. it !s again! Listen! The Negotiator—That's the clock, The Senator—Do you think so? It sounded to me like the hoarse breath- ing of a hidden dictograph. Go on! HS There Peterman’s Discovery the pow: erful destroyer of Bed Bugs end their eggs. A sure preventive, Peterman’s Ant Feod—Kills ante and fleas. Peterman'’s Meth Food (Odor- less), kills moths. ‘but my hat's in the ring inches), was left with Rose and M Donald, In the second round, hand, Rose put 1 es 47 centimetres (@ feet 10 inches), McDonald 12 metres 45 centimetres (# feet 93-4 inches), and Nicklander etres 2 centimetres (40 feet 61-2 inche: Miss Fanny Durach of Australia, who | has been @ consistent British point | winner, won the firet heat of the semi- | final 100-metre swim for women, in 1) minute, 201-5 seconds, Mise Datey Cur- wen of England was second, Miss Wil- helmina Wyle of Australia won the sec- end heat, with Miss Annie Spiers of using the left) Special for Thursday, the 11th nT ery REAM 10c landt Street ato Park Row an Milk Chocolate Covered Canton Ginger A delicious soothing of our id Co All_our stores open Saturday ; nox 10¢ 19¢ tL o'clock, o'clock. S4,BARCLAY or. Waet Brosewey 20 GonTLANgY 4 Spectal c BBe. val ‘onen every even evening until gare: Te rent SiH Be TERRIBLE ST WITH BUSTERS Rubbed Face Until It Bled. Thonght "She Was Disfigured for Life. tn Two Months Euticura a and Ointment Completely Cured Her 195 Raflroad Ave., Brooklyn; N. ¥.— “The trouble began a few days after the baby was born — that was March 15, 1911. Her choek first became all red, then little blisters would form; when you put your hand on the side of her faco, it was like fire. She would try and rub ft with her little hand, and rubbed it until it would bleed. I thought sho was disfigured for life. Tt was a terrible sight. I thought it was & birth mark, it looked so bad. We had tried other salves from the drug stores, but it did not show any signs of heal- ing. So I sent for a sample of Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Soap. I washed her face with the Cuticura Soap and then used the Cuticura Ointment, and in threa; days she showed rollof, and in two months Cuticura Soap and Ointment had completely cured her, Now sho has a most beautiful ekin."” (Signed) H. Sayers, Nov. 20, 1911. For red, rough, chapped and bleeding hands, itching, burning palms, and painful finger-ends, @ one-night Cuticura treatment works wonders. Soak hands, on retiring, in hot water and Cuticura Soap. Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment, and wear old, loose Gloves during the night. Cuticura Soap (26c.) and Cuticura Ointment (60c.) are told everywhere. Liberal sample of each malled free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston.": sa-Tender-faced men should use Cutiours cn ple free. ned 1 MATCHLESS LIQUID GLOSS It gives the shine at won't come off. For office or home—automobile bodies — all fine. ed surfaces. Standard Oil Company of New York Regular iB OM Prices Clothin For Ladies and Gentlemen ON OTR, PASY Credit *= No Deposit Just $% a pay Week Lenox “this 2274 3° Ave. |7 w 14m st. » bait & tsb bet. Heh 6 OBEN TS EM! SCD SS Toh! Hn TN al ii a Ps! READERS Of ‘The WORLD Going out of town for the eum- World sent te mer may have the O) ‘2c per wi wi per 8 pmiitanc ‘Canuier* “* often