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5 y ; t * (he use of campaign funda for his own AMiaposed of now fo the court could start fresh Monday. Mr. Merrick re piled that all the preliminary motions had been made. reed to poxtponement unt at 2 o'clock, KRESEL EXONERATES FIRM or| HARRIS @ FULLER. Thereupon the «wrt Monda Refore the adjournment Isador J. Kre- | of cou for the Asnenvoly Manag s read a statement absviving the New York brokerage firm of I &@ Fuller vf any attempt to change thelr books in order to protect the Governor. Mr. Kresel raid the statement wae made on the part of the counsel for the managers in order to remove any misconception that may have been creates by the attitude of the mana kers’ attorneys. At the trial on Tuesday Attorney Kresel placed conside: eomphaals upon an entry in the firm's booke dated Dee 9, 1912, which recorted a “loan” to the Governor Mr, Fuller took offense at the ques. tioning of the entry, and after court adjourned demanded apology from Mr. Kresel in the !ob'y of a local hotel, ‘Mr. Kresel 414 not apologize then. At the opening of court yesterday Mr. Fuller attempted to read @ statement defending hie firm. He was permitted to read it in part. Mr. Krosei in his atateme:.. to-~tay declared th..t experts for the managers had looked over the books of the firm, and had found that the entry in ques: ton appeared regular and that it had | been made “in the reguiar course of | ‘uainess."’ When the Governor begins to offer! his testimony it is enid he will Qnewer every allexzation of the prose- cution, With an array of notable witnesses, including the Governor and his wife Loule A. Sarecky, John A. Hennessy, Lieut.-Commander Joseph- thal, and at least three upon whom! the prosecution has been depending for | page im rebuttal, they hope to rid- Ge the case made out L ‘the Impeach- iment Managers. It le understood that Butter will admit Personal use. He will say that at the time of his nomination he hopeless- ty tn debt and was being pressed by ereditors. Fricnds of his, and he will include in the number most of those ‘who have testified for the State, told him they wanted to aid him. s H t | if i I #4 HH ‘His story, it 9 asserted, will be sen- eational and Re will recite alleged ef- forte made to force him tu give in to the maqbine COURT MAY RESTRICT TESTI MONY OF SULZER. How far the court will enable him to Go with @ statement of this character is probiemation!. If the strict rules of evidence are enforced ne will not be permitted to make what is already being termed a political stump speech from the witness chair. The attorneys for the impeachment managers make nv at- tempt to hide the fact that they will ob- Ject to & departure frum the recognised rules affecting witnesses, and there wili prebably be some exolting clashes, as Bulser, Bimself a inwyer, is expected w inetet on what be will claim will be nis dust rights, Attorneye for both sides hela long conferences two-day. ‘The prosecution inaiate that ite case ie compiste. But ‘no attempt ts made to conceal the fact that several of what are considered the best witnessas were retained for re- buttal They are the men who are pected to riddle the story the Governor nd Mra, Sulser will tell on the witness 4. AENEWED RUMORS OF TROUBLE AMONG COUNSEL, of differences among Gov. dvisers were again circulate His lawyers of record, headed by D, Cady Herrick, Austen G, Fox and Louls Marshall, it le said, are being op- posed to the kitchen cabinet, led by Alexander 8, Bacon, John A. Hennessy, Samuel Beh Thomas and samuel Frankenstein, The Governor, It in said, Vacillaten between the two factions, The court lawyers advise him not to @ttempt to turn the witness stand into ® political platform. The kitchen cabi- net urges him on und criticises the dewyers, There has been one public instance of Griction. Austen G. Fox objected to the Presence at counse! table of 8. Franken: @tein, the Governor's New York law partner. In thie Mr. Fox was sui tained by his associ nd Franken- stein has been ontr: the court room to-da: ed. He entered ‘but took @ pack @eat among the reporters One more attempt will be made over the week-end by counsel to come to a the Gov. definite understanding with gulded by your advicer”’ w. one of his counsel to-day. “J don't know,” was the reply. try not to thiak of ¢ possible." “We ‘a thing being W, Noel, United States district-attorney ated in the prosecution at the tria! here, said | this afternoon that the confession of | Davis, alias O'Donnell, furnished many | missing links in the complete story of the dynamiting programme carried on st the hon-usion contractors of the tant country. Most of the explosions, regarding | which the Government in Its three| months’ trial here was unable to prove the exact person who eet the explosives, were “Jove done by Davis, according to his confession, 4% Who was arrested in nor Jones, taken in custody | here, are under indictment, but both WA) be held to the United States Grand Feary, according to Attorney Noel, —>___. (251 Bal DYNAMITER WHO MAKES CONFESSIO. HIS CUSTODIA | Bas THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, ow Oelrichs Looked To-Day When Leaving the Harlem Court (Photographed specially for The Evening World by a Staff Arti geet FIRE DRILL CALMS 266 PATIENTS AT GERMAN HOSPITAL At First Alarm Sem siperniensent Sounds Gong Sending Nurses to Emergency Posts. PHONE GIRL ALLAYS FEAR Flames, Spreading From Big Kitchen Range, Are Driven Through Flue by Fan. For the firat time tn the history of the German Horpital, the signal denoting that there was a fire In the institution waa sounded to-day. It wasn't much of @ fre, and nobody was hurt, but it served to show that the drill formulated Kortum worked perfectly in ency. re 34 patients in the hospital, Which occupies the slock between East Seventy-sixth and East Seventy-seventh streets and Park and Lexington ave- hues, Two main buildings, separated by 4 and an {solation ward for fering with contagious or infectious Giseases, house the patients, |Ho. The kitchen is in the basement on the Seventy-seventh street aide, directly office. A square, oc- ide of the kitchen, One of the kitchen helpers upset a pot of fat on the stove at 10,30 o'clock to- day. The fat blazed up and the exhaust fan drew the blaze and @ thick, sticky @moke into the flue and shot the com- bination out into the courtyard. DYNAMITER TELLS AMAZING STORY OF HIS MANY “JOBS” (Continued from First Page) “Entertainment Committee,” of which there were ten or twelve regular mem+ bers, Who received $ a day “to beat up Ron-wnion workeri Davia'a first dynamiting Job waa that of an “open shop" bridge at Trenton, N. J. He next dynamited the ratiroad bridges over the Newark branch of Ce Erie Railroad near Harrison, 1907, Frank ¢. onvicted of conapiraty Aianapolia, told Davie that J Namara, ary of the Interna. to Local No, @ to » and the records of the International show these pay- ments, A short time later Davis, accompanted by Webb, visited the Queensboro Britxe and examined it with view to destroy ing dt with dynamite, Davis figuring that It would tke 200 pounds of the explonive to “do the work." Davis rented a room near-by 80 he could watch the workmen and ascertain the best place to place the dynamite, WANTED $1,500 TO WRECK BRIDGE. Davis demanded $1,500 for the Job, but Was assured that McNamara would pay only #0, But from his room Davis could look down into @ near-by power house where scores of men were at work, Ile knew many of them would ve killed by the falling of the bridge; Whereupon he raised hiv price to $2.50" and the union declined to bay hat amount, ao the et re was waved, On Fob. 4, 194, Davis loosened the uy clamps of the Scherzer draw-bridge over Baychester Bay, at Pelham, No ¥., h 7 Tn this, he ed by ‘Red Dugen and Rudolph Tunnings of Looas No. 40, in New York, and instructed by Wiliam Green to the manner of wrecking the bridge Davis telis of the dynomiting or at as tempted dynamiting of bridges near Bradshaw, Md, on March %, 1008; at Morrison, N. Jy at Easton, Pa, and at Baitimore He received from $59 to $100 each of these “Jobs” in New Chelsea Iter, River, which was for 5s, dn the North being constructed by the MoClintic-Marahall Company, on April 6, 1908, for which he received $200 from Webb. Then followed ex- plosions in Philadeiphia, Ball River, Bomerset and Providence ALWAYS PAID IN CASH FOR JOBS. It was in Fall River that Jones, who Wes arrested to-day in Indianapolis, nd whose eléotion after the conviction McNamara end Uerdert Mookip Was expected to end the qua The moment the biase started one of the cooks notified the superintendant. He reached for the great gong hanging Dy hie Geak and sounded ft three times. The tones ef the gong penetrated to every corner of the institution and three rings was the signal that there was ac- tually a fire within the walls. At the sound of the gong every nurse and doctor in the piace ran to a post of duty. Some hastened to the telephon and held the receivers to their ears. perintendent's mnees called up Fire Headquarters and turned in ao till alarm. At the same time one of the hospital employees turned in an alarm from the private box im the hall. In the meantime Miss Kelly had Ad) “There is & email fre in the basement. Tt will be out in a few minutes. No danger, Stand by for further ordors.” Within ten minutes all signs of the fire had been eliminated. SS miting, first was mentioned, Jones Sending Webb 060 to pay Davis. Webbd always paid the money ip currency, 60 \t could mot be traced back to the union ofMfictals. It was from Jones, Davis awears, that be learned Webb was double crossing him. Webb was redelving from $300 to $350 for each "Job, id paying Davis considerably lean, In May, 1908, Davis attempted to dlow up the Pennsylvania Steel Com- pany's bridge, erected for the Ni Haven over the Bronx River, but explosive dropped instead into the river. Jot and attempted ones at Perth Amboy were then detailed. Davis narrates many conversations with Jones and with President Ryan (since con+ victed in Indianapolis) in which they warned him he was “working too fast and was lable to get caught. FAILURE OF FUSE SAVED THIB BRIDGE. The blowing up of a bridge at Reth. Jehem, Pa., was the t work of the conspirators. The fuse refused to work on a “Job” at Somersct, Mass, and Davie quit that because the “job was @ hoodoo.” He was later arrested in Somerset, where he was convicted, re- celving several hundred dollars from the union after his release. Then he went to Indianapolis, where he met John J, McNamara and entered into an agreement to ‘do the Jobe" in future at @ Gat rate of $250 each, Mo- Namara then gave him comp! ine Struction in the use of alarm clocks for setting off bombs, Tt was at the instance of President Ryan, he awears, he blew up the bridge at Mt. Vernon, N. Y¥., In September, 1911, after two attempts, Then he was told by Webb to qet together or geven men he could trust, for the “executive board of the International has dociced to go ahead Jobe all over the country, and the or you ¢o superintendent them. nt to Bt. Loula and got the men then he returned to New PRIC. one “Barry” @ him the una Detective William J. Burns, Walter Drew of the Erectors’ Association, which prosecuted the dynamiters, and Mr. Badort, The sum of $3,000 was of- fered to the man who would kill Ha- dort, $000 for Drew, and an inde- terminate sum to the man who would kill Burns. The union idea, he declared, was to have these "Jobs" pulled arres prosaion that McNamars, and McMani During the conspiracy ‘rela in Ine I OE444 FY OOF 0044400000018 6 ) } Sactae ee Qi LZ HERMANN OFLRICHS. ULP GDOLBDG-OOG-5-284-G-9-4-99O9-9-0-96-G9-4-6-9866-4-4-05-5.96-4O090OO900OD PRS yt tt lc i A SPL LO DASE La an Shaina th Sea oi OELRICHS IS IN DANGER OF EXPULSION FROM UNIVERSITY (Continued trom First Page.) ceal his own peccadiiloes. His clase ™ates are agreed that his conduct in this respect was not “clubby,” as they Dhrase it, to say the least. For twenty-four hours the name of Monte, as D. Montgomery Claghorn was known in Columbia, was banded about aa the man who had stabbed a girl be- cause he could not hold her. The young man's record was looked up and over the telegraph wires to ali parts of ihe country went the damaging story that Claghorn had been involved in a dis- Sraceful scrape. It went even to South Tacoma, Washington, and there Clag- horn, living quietly at home as he iad all summer, nailed the story for the lie it was and sent back to this city an indignant denial that it had been he who bade. Then the pulice DETECTIVE ON GUARD WOMAN'S ROOM. Detective McKenna, one of Deputy Police Commissioner Dougherty's right hand men, is occupying quarters in Singleton’s apartment. He spent the night there and he or another detev- tive will spend every minute of his time there until the girl can be brought tato M! ingleton jie virtually @ prisoner in her own home. Too many stories of proffered money setlements reavhed Dougherty yesterday to make him wiling to take any chances. He is determined that Miss Singleton shall make her accusatiogs in open court. Mr. Dougherty was especially im- censed at what he believes now was an attempt by Detective Theodore Trayer| of the West One Hundred and Twenty. fifth street station to hush up the whole case. Trayer reported to him yesterday, that there was no foundation for a charge of assault; that Miss Singletoa cied particularly that she bad re- colved her wounds by the broken glass of the windshield and that she had not been stabbed. DOUGHERTY ORDERED SUSPEN- SION OF SLEUTH. Only after he had seen the afternoon m papers and had heard from friends did Mr. Dougherty begin to doubt this story, and then he assigned Detectives McKenna and Cassassa to the investi- gation, They brought back the report that Miss Singleton hed sald that she had told Trayer aii about the stabbing and had ed him what to do, where- upon he advised her to settle out of court If she could, Mr. Doughérty im- mediately suspended Trayer, who stead- fastly denied that che gir had telé him anything about being stabbed. Later Commissioner Waldo trane- ferred Trayer out of the Detective Hu» reau, remanding him to petrol duty and eending him to the Tottenvilie pre- cinect, Trayer will have to report there dally at 11 o'clock and as he ts under auaponsion he will have no polloe badge and will have to pay his way to and from the moat remote of New York's police stations, Mr. Douherty said that, contrary to reports, young Qelrichs had not been submitted to any “third degree.” He was told of hie rights and then re- fused to tell the Deputy Commissioner anything about the affair, saying: “I will tell the whole stury to a Gianapolis, Davis, under his own name, was working 1a the ertection of the Hotel McAlpin, in New York, and was advised to go to Mexico, but refused. es tees DROWNED LANDING A FISH. LAKE MILI4, Wis., Oct. 3.—Herman Berlin, @ Milwaukee banker, was drowned yesterday in an effort to land @ large fish. While tugging with the fish Berlin stood erect in the boat, which was evestumed, Judge in court and will nut conceal anything. Only J don’t want to have to tell the story twice When I tell it Teball be ready to abide by the de- cision of the Judge.” ‘The young man was locked up at mid- night A few minutes after 3 o'clock Mrs. Theresa Alice Oclsiehe arrived at the station in a taxicab, She had come trem the Yorkville Court, where Magis- trate Marsh bad accepted her on the 5,009 pond of her con, he gave as ef obo was in Ger own home at 18.48 o'clock, —A curity @ house on Riverside Drive at Seventy-fifth street, valued at $100,000. “Matt McCune, the young man with whom Mise Singleton had the engage- ment which she says precipitated the trouble in Oelrichs's car, 's Marcus Matthew McCune of Salt Lake City. He was a atudent in the dchool of Mines at Columbia at intervals through 1909, 1910 and 1911, but left then, though he had PO LSOLS ES SSSIF6-SSODOOOOES 29 A + 1918. ORDER DEPORTATION “3: OF MARIE LLOVD AND JOCKEY LOVER Immigration Inspectors Firm; Bar Singer’s Counsel From Inquiry. Marie Licyd, the vaudeville einger, ané Bernard Dillon, the famous English jockey, with whom ehe came to this country as his wife on the Olympic yes- terday, were ordered deported to-day by Inspectors of Immigration Mann, Brown jand Stewart, acting as a board of |spectat inquiry, Her five counsel were refused admission to the inquiry. ‘There were 10 cases waiting investi- gation, but that of Miss Licyd and the jookey wae placed first. They set forth in their Gefense that they were to be married as 200n as Miss Lioyd could get @ divorce, and that a divorce case was well under way when it was halted in {the English courts when the King's Proctor decided that neither Mi: nor the husband from whom she rated six years ago was entitled to re- ef by divorce. ‘The singer's lawyers eaid that they would at once appeal to Washington | and ask that, even though the verdict of the board were not altogether re- versed, Miss Lioyd be allowed to com- plete her vaudeville contracts in this, country, under bond to return to Eng- land when sho finished her tour. | Miss Lioyd told an Evening World re- | porter tearfully as she was waiting t: be taken to Ellis Island to-day that she, ‘was completely broken up by the ex- perience of her detention by the immi- gration officials. | “My husband,” said Mise Lloyd, “‘de- | serted me six years ago in England. He went to live with another woman and | they have several children. He has re- they have several children, There was no legal way in which I could marry Mr. Dillon efter we found t'.at we loved each other. All our friends and people generally in England have understood our position and bave regarded us as husband wife. We have lived to- gether and for each other and are as loyal and faithful to each other as a man and wife could be, and have, in continued to make his home at the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity et No. 608 West One Hundred and Thirteenth street. He has always been pleati- fully supplied with money. ——. GIRL’S FATHER COMING FROM TEXAS TO SEE VICTIM OF OELRICHS DALLAS, Tex., Oot. 2—Edwin Single- ton, father of the girl who was reported stabbed by Hermann Oelrichs in New York, to-day denied that nie daughter had been attacked as reported, declar- ing he had a telegram from her con- veying this information. The telegram assured him, he said, her injuries ha been received when the automobfle was wrecked in a cotlision. Miss Bingleton had known Oelrichs for some time under the name of “Creighton,” her father eaid, having been introduced to him by a mutual friend, he has been in New York studying musle since she left Darling- ton Seminary, said Mr, Singleton. He will leave for New York to-mor- row. He is a mining man, whose in terests are in the Taos district of Mexico, —_—_—"~—_-—_ PEEPING TOMS SAY THEY SAW PARSON HOLD GIRL IN LAP (Continued ¢rom First Page) man who had held Miss Foreman on hia knees, Rice conferred with John DeBow end ©. & Van Leer, the other two trustees, and on Monday night they told the Rev, Mr. Schank what they had heard. The clergyman invited them to come over to hie house and go over with him the record of how he had spent each night last week. “After ietening to our pastor we were perfectly assured that there was not a word of truth in the tory,” sald Trustee Rice to-day. "If these young men did eee what they claim to have seen they made a grievous error in Mdentity, We belleve implicitly in Mr, Schanck, and will gend to the Eastern District Confer ence the unanimous recommendation of the church for bie permanent appoint- ment te our church.” To an Evening World reporter the clergyman made this statement: s soon as I heard this scandalous report I called my trustess to me and made a complete aocsounting of every night last week, I have affidavits to eupport my statemem that every night Dut Friday I wae: engaged in parish work and that I spent Friday night at home with my wife, None of the four young men ie a member of my church and to my knowledge none of them bas every known me; certainly I have never een any of them, “1 am preparing gy defense to take befure the Destern District Conference Decause J tear that Jealousy on the part of some who will be m attendance chere Wil) lead them to try to unseat me,” Miss Foreman denie. herself to all caters to-day, but her father, John Foreman, spoke for her, He said; “Thia is an outrageous slur on my daughter's name and I have taken steps to make those responsible for it answer before the courts. I have obtained, in fe my daughter te em- ployed to the effect that on last Friday night she left there alone at 10 o'clock; o- 4 f of Mr. Sohanck, an affidavit from | fact, regarded ourselves as married.” ‘There is a chance that Miss Lioyd may be allowed to enter under bond to carry out her 900,00 contract for the men hit me on the head and knocked posto pevtcadaty Regpscatho) fad that | me cold. ‘Then they took $160 out of my. omy Inside pocket and threw me out of the car.” Inqiury at the garage established that A machcine Was rented yesterday to two nien Whose names were given by Lees, The police are looking for them, HITS HIGH SPOTS ON MOTOR SPREE Brooklyn Police Find Him Banged Up on Road Trying to Stop Automobiles, An dderly man, with dlood on his face and pounds and pounds of mud ‘on his clothes was found in Howard | ladies living in wrhood, Be cause every that I have Avenue near Eastern Parkway, Brook- money the matchmaking mothers send lyn, this afternoon ¢rying to stop pass-|their girls around to my shen wih é view to getting me interested. Bul ing automobiles at the risk of his lf.) iney found out 1 was married they Policeman Bovey arrested him and took | would get mad and boycott ime and Bro! would go to the wall, When I get mare him to the Brownsville tation, “He was) Meir ‘am golng to Introduce my wife soaked Inalde and out, ‘There was a cut on his neck and a bump on his head. Dr. Nichaels of St. Mary's Hospital patched up his wounds and gave him @ couple of sniffs of ammonia, ‘Then the muddy and muddled man wald he wes a printer from Hoboken and hig name was George Leen or something iike that, He as fitty-eight years himself bitterly for ever leaving Ho- voken, “I met two fellows in Canarsie yen- terday," he told the police, and they in- vited me to take an automobile ride, We telephoned to the Brownaville Garage in Jamaica avenue and got a car, All night long we rode from saloon to sa- loon, and we kept It up until about 2 o'clock this afternoon, when we were riding along Eastern Parkway. One of COVERED en, wereee - = ON S4 BARCLAY STREET : Corner West, Broedwa 29 CORTLANDT ST. [PENNY A POUND PROFIT) PROFIT Portiandt, 126th Street and Brovklyn Stores Open rey Evening Untu 0 e'Cleok. 411 Our Mares Open Halurday Kvenings Until 11 o'Clock, SINGER AND RIDER POSING AS WEDDED COUPLE ARE DENIED WELCOME HERE. — <2 Sade oles . LLON HIDES HIS MARRIAGE, © | FEARS BUSINESS RUIN, Butcher Sought by 300 Girl Cus-| tomers Will Introduce Bride as His Servant. MILWAUKEE, Wis, Oct, ing that his business the news of his public, mai were mad ints for mar: i Widule’s name be one of the Hoense “E own a butcher shop and am coin- ing money," he » are more | == than three hun rrled young as a new hired girl.” Under the circumstances County Clerk Widule agreed to suppress the man's name. Discomfort After Meals Feeling opprewe’, with a sensation of stuffinew and belching of wind are symptoms of indiges- tion, With these there will be constipation, les. Fulness of the Blool in the Mead, Nauses, “Heart. burn, Headache, Disguat of Fool, Flattering of the Heart, Choking Sensation, Dizsiuess oa itis Perfect biscuit perfectly , produced NATIONALE COMPANY Alsways look for thatname, | Eternal vigilance is exercised by National Biscuit Company in the se- lection of the ingre- dients that enter into its products. National Biscuit Company products are perfectly pro- tected by being packed in attractive small tins, in pack- ages withthefamous In-er-seal Trade Markor in the famil- iar glass-front cans. Wherever biscuit are sold, there you will find the per- fect biscuit of the National Biscuit Company. Each variety, whether known as crackers or cookies, wafers or snaps, cakes or jumbles, is the best of its kind. Bay biscui baked by BISCUIT « FURNITURE a Opportunity, While ‘ul unity whiie i Last, Opes Sat. Evening Tit ing, Date or cam before the Sint. Ealevacss Hdaea Hh Heat Ste Case, 4m aod | $3.59 oor, qa RING, $1 im adways Pills will ald in frecing ft the, share. ‘atanedonn uly vegetable. ALL 3 or by mail DWAY & Go. NEW YORK of ni ly S; fe id. cnocothtn” FRU * ‘ant Special for Friday CO) LATE COVERED. MO- Es note HCH A i Sone snappy centre ieee 206 BROADWAY i Corner Fulton Street 147 NASSAUSTREET ruce Sts, KEARREY-—THOMAS F., Cla Goat's Caw CARPET J. as. WILLIAMS CLEANING. 305 West Cath Bt, Die.) beloved hastend Kearney (neo Heagaa), at Anna &. jo home, 725 Kastera Parkway, Broek: n neral, 0.30 A. M., Saturday, Oct, @, i + Brookiyn a) » Brooklyn. In and St, John's Plas t Calvary