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_THE EVENING _WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1914, | De Carmen ‘he eald it was not wholly| around the baseboard of the room | the little porch that gives entrance to tree, His wife, he said, did admit] from the cabinet to a closet in which ft from the walk at the side of the Golden, e she kept her own clothing. Tho re-| house. At almost the same instant) sant with the affaira of her husband, | couch this woman folded the victim's s “But.” he dectared, “it wan my|celvor was hidden behind a skirt. |the light upstairs was extinguished | and somehow or other the seemingly |hands across her breast Become a Bride on July 4 sister, Nrs. Powell, who as- |The enough free wire attached |and one could ploture to himself the | wild idea came to him thet perhaps! The first diroctions that Dr. Cart| gees. eas 30666 a M4 »: ss fie with the body of Mra.|to it to allow tts being carried out Passage of the party from room to/a dictograph was playing & part f1 man gave to any one, Golden went ove VEPEEDETOESOEESO0OSOEES OOOO OO OOF OHO9O0 0990008 ” into the room. | room: | thelr household affairs. on, were “Go get Hedell, the black- Golder’s statement that there were| SEEK CLUES TO TWO MEN MEN. | This, it wan learned afterward, was! HIS “WILO CUE8S” PROVED £0! | smith,” and Post went on this twe women in the waiting room at! TIONED BY DOCTOR. ee time of the shooting was news! Constables are out to-day working p/the authorities. They are new|in a desultory fashion on eral ys ss cnen arom cpa searching for the women. Mise Hazel Comi Private secre- tary te ex-Judge Clinton M. Flint of Freeport, said this afternoon that she ‘wae in Dr. Carman’s office fare the shooting. Her statement in- that Mrs. Carman saw Mre. jiley previous to the tragedy. “1 reached Dr. Carman's house,” Wie said, “at 7 o'clock. The family qwas at dinner. Soon after my ar- Pival a woman came in. She, I think, was Mrs. Bailey, Later on a man the bell and was admitted by irs. Carman, who showed him into reception room. ‘While the man, the other woman I were walting for the doctor the Aelephone bell in the room rang. Mrs. Carman entered the room and an- the ‘phone, Mrs, Bailey wai Jn the room. Mrs. Carman talked to ortly weer on the wire any then went irs. | \W MRS. BAILEY ENTER THE, DOCTOR'S OFFICE. Sievhen the doctor came out trom | er 1 was the first patient ad- ited to his office, 1 left before the | Bhooting. The woman who had been iting with me wax admitted to @octor's office as I left. 1 did wee Mrs, Carman as | was leaving the house.” np Freeport is all upset over a report jing from official soucres that Dr. wife bought @ diary at the a dictograph installed in husband's office last May. In thi . it is reported, she kept a rec: | ord, dated and mentioning name conversations she heard through the dictograph between her husband and hie patients in the office in which Mrs. Bi to death. @ announcement that Mrs. Car- man, who, by reason of her dicto- graph connections, might just well ave been right in the doctor's office, yk a record of all the confidences in him by his patients, and it the record was in the hands of peace officers of the county, fell in Freeport like a bombshell. For Ume it aroused more comment than the tragedy itself. _ Dissatisfied with the failure of the County and town authorities to make ity material progress in solving the Raystery of the assassination of Mrs. ‘Bailey, several of the leading citizens Freeport held a meeting to-day and that in case there is not more + igor and decision shown by the local ‘thvestigators they will appeal to Gov. @tynn to appoint a special Deputy ‘Attorney-General to take charge of ‘the case. “/ District-Attorney Smith was ine fermed that many of the people of Breeport and Nassau County belleve | ‘hat the investigation has been scat- ‘téring and purposeless and has not) centred on actual clues, He sald: | fe have been following vigorously | ry clue we found, Thore has been lacs of energy or purpose. But if it 48 found necessary to ask the At- General to help I shall wel- his assistance.” y"Are you atill satistied with the Presented bry Mrs. Carman, the wife?” the District-Attorney asked, sald last night that I was satia- that she had established an alibi,” 4 Mr. Smith, “but that isn't what nt to say. I will now that made what appeared to be a pei y straightforward statement. This not mean that she has estab- 4 an alibi which frees her from ther investigation.” Carman make use of the Raph receiver in her room while Batley was in ner husband's of- Tuesday night?” “She says she didn't,” answered the trict-Attorney. Coroner Norton called at the home of » Carman to-day and Mre, Carman him if she was under survell- ce. He told her that she was not, advised her to remain indoors In to avoid the annoyance of be- followed by curiosity seekers and hers. Dr. Carman refused make any statement about the dic- through which his wife heard mie office conversations. hen the dictograph was put in the by an expert on May 25 the ¢ was run into @ drawer in a in Mra, Carman’s room. and Joyous 4 Look in the Morning World id you will find about sume er Resort Hotels, ing Houses, Plenic Places, Boat Trp, Railroad Excursions, ec. separately advertised. So pack your , take along rod and reel, tennis et, golf clubs or a good to read, and spend your * holiday week-end at some nearby spot where Nature awaits to paint the flush of youth on cheek and send you home Kepie and healthier for the clues which were furnished by Dr. Carman, One concerns a resident of Lynbrook who is said to have been disappointed recently ti his hope of | becoming a father, Another involves a man who, It Is alleged, telept Dr. Carman a short time ago threat- Ing Violence because of professional | services rendered his wife by Dr, Car- man. The discovery of the dictograph connection between Dr. Carman’s of- fice and bis wife's room does not ap- their search for the sinyer of Mr Bailey; nor have they been aided ap parently by the knowledge that in Mrs, Carman’s room on Tuesday ‘night there was an automatic pistol belonging to her husband, That re volver was in the possession of the authorities all day yesterday. MEDICINE HAS NOT YET BEEN ANALYZED BY DOCTORS. Coroner to have the medicine which day night and which was found in he purse analyzed .by a chemist. Carman says the medicine was pre ascribed for malaria, Dr, Carman that he did not know | Mrs. Bailey are coming to light all) yet they are in the form of gons!p to allow their names to be used, nay that Mrs. Galley attensed «| dance at the Freeport Club In South Grove street, Freeport, last: winter, at which Dr. Carman and his wife wero present, and that Dr, Carman war so attentive to Mrs. Batley that his wife became infuriated and went} home alone. This gossip was a part of several points of interest confront- ing the authorities when they re- sumed their Investigation to-duy One was the discovery of the dicto- graph in the Carman house, placed there surreptitiously by Mrs. Car- man's orders while she and her hus- band were spending a few days at Raven Kock, N. J., about six weeks ag Another was the pitilessly searching investigation to which Mra. Carman was subjected last night in the very room in which Mra. Balley had been killed. And not the least ‘uesome touch in it wi the fact that Mrs, Carman sat in the very chalr in which Mrs. Bailey had sat & moment before she arose and r cotved in the heart the bullet of t murderous, mysterious band at the office window. For more than three hours Mrs. Carman sat through tho questioning of District-Attorney Smith of Nassau County, and of bis assistant, Mr. Weeks of Minevla. There were two others in the ring of inquisitors, Cor- oner Norton and Phin Seaman, the county detective. They sat allent; their very presence was inquiry enough from them. To give support and comfort to Mrs. rman, be- cause she fe quite unstrung by the events of the past twenty-four hours, she had beside her George M. Levy, her attorney, and Mr. and Mrs. Platt Conklin, ber father and mother, and her alster, Mrs. Ida B. Powell. While all that went on in that gruesome office, where so short a time ago @ woman had died in a blood pool on the floor, was not dis- closed, there was something entirely dramatic to the actting of the stage outside the house, Dr. Carman’s re: idence fs on the much travelled Mer- Mick road and ts @ rather unpreten- tious two-story structure painted yel- low and white. WAITED HOURS FOR AN AR- REST. At any time before Tuesday night there would have been nothing at all to attract to It the attention of the passerby. But last night for more than three hours in a cold rain a crowd of New York newspaper re- Porters stood across the street and never took their eyes from the house, And all the people who passed, sither afoot or In motor ca: halted or dawdled by for a glimpse of the dim structure, the misty squares of yel- lowish lights that marked the win- dows and the shadows that occasion- ally came like the personages in a film drama upon the window shades, The reason for the gathering was the report that had flashed over Free- port that there was to be an arrest “within an hour,” and every one de- termined to keep close upon the heels of the District-Attorney and the Cor- oner. Wherever they went they were followed, and when they went to the Carman house the reporters went into rough camp upon the sidewalk until one of the squad of police on duty on the doctor's lawn ordered them away, and then they went across the street. It was possible now and then to catch sight of figures moving about the rooms in the lower story of the house, to see them as they sat down in one of the big wing rooms. Then suddenly @ light would spring out in 4n upper room and there every eye would turn, For a long timo a light was kept burning In Mrs. Carman's| room in thé front of the second story, and now and then silhouettes ap- peared on the yellowish curtains, only to vanish again and set every one wondering who was up there and what they were doin; CARMAN HOUSE SEARCHED FOR pear to have aided the authorities In| jrusty revolver, He certainly came Into the re » with the automatic in his band, and after a moment or two No attempt has been made by the) asked where Dr, Carman was, os he Dr. Carman gave Mra. Bailey Tues-| him | would take the pis jput it in bis pocket.” | LAWYER TELLS OF WOMAN'S Stories disputing the assertion of | over Freeport and Hempstead. As| during the search of the house for| firearms by Mr. Smith. It was at the! conclusion of the search that the In- quisitors repaired to the office for the examination of the doctor's wife, This kearch resulted, according to District. | Attorney Smith, in the discovery of a | rusty revolver, an old one that had not |heen fired for « long tine and was! probably not in working order, in the garage He told the reporters he {found no other weapon, But when Mr. Levy, Mra, Carmen's attorney, was asked subsequently about the in- quisition of his client ae sald he bad seen the District-Attorney come into the room with @ .22 calibre automatic pistol “This pistol,” he sald, “was found in the top drawer of Dr. Carman's } bureau, and It was Mrs. Carman who told the District-Attorney that hi | would find it there, Tam at a loss to understand why Mr. Smith should have sald he found nothing but the sald he desired to As Dr. on ®& ease Mr. xive the gun to Carman was then out Smith said that he| 1 himself, and he ORDEAL. It was Mr. Levy who gave oe | count of the questioning of Mra. man in her home. He said: re he Roaldents of Freeport, who refuse| Mrs, Carman was conducted on the theory, obviously, that she had com- mitted the murder of Mri searched into every nook and cranny acts before, tragedy. “He firstasked her why she had had the dictograph Installed in her bouse, why she had had it set up behind the during and after the lead up to a closet in her room on the second floor, She replied that she him, She told Mr. Smith that she she and the doctor were spending a few days at Raven Rock. HEARD NOTHING TO CONFIRM JEALOUS FEARS. “But she told bim had never heard anything through the Instrument save words which re- friends had related to her. on Tuesday, She told Mr. Smith that in the evening. after her return, and as soon as sup- disrobed for the night. with them continued to the first floor, where there was @ great cont- motion, she sald.” “Did Mra, C upon the lounge in Dr. Carman's of- fice?” one of the reporters asked. “Bhe did not, She did not touch Mrs, Bailey,” Mr. Levy answered. “How did Mrs. Carman explain to the District-Attorney her removal of the dictograph and when she had taken it down?” was the next ques- tion. “She sald that she bad removed It early this (Wednesday) morning and had done so becau house would be searched by the po- lice and the instrument found. Sho did not want it shown to Dr. Carman, but as soon as she had taken it from its place she did tell her busband it TOLD HER HUSBAI:D OF THE DICTOGRAPH. It was Bheriff Stephen P. Pettit who got the dictograph from Mrs, Carman. Word had come to him from Assistant District-Attorney Weeks that such an instrument had been installed In the house, and just at nightfall he went to the Carman house and asked Mrs. Carman about it. And this ts how the Sheriff re- lated his part in the drama as he stood in the reception room of the Elks' clubhouse, the dictograph in a news “As soon as I about the dictograph she admitted there had been one in the house, one part set under the bookcase in the doctor's office and the other part in a closet in her room upstairs. I asked her why sho had put It In, and she replied that it was because abe wanted to know what was going on in her husband's office. She Jed that she was suspicious of bim, “I saw Dr. Carman, too, by the way, and I told bim about tho in- strument, and he said he knew all about it, that Mra, Carman had re- vealed it to him. Mra. Carman ald sho had never been able to hear over the instrument very well, bi she had not heard a thing that had not been a comfort to her, She made that very clear. I asked her if a! went Into the doctor's office after the shooting, and she told me she had not done so, and had never seen Mra. Bailey, dead or aliv Romething had convinced him that] woman tn the room helped too, and Mra. Carman wi ingularly conver. | after Mra. Bailey was laid on the Noted Sportswoman Who Will OLD FASHIONED L THE NEED OF OUR RACE, As he had a friend in a company in errand, To explain this request of the doctor's ft will be recalled that é | Mra. Hatley had told him she had BE TRU: the three county offtcial: that they had eliminated Mrs. man from the caac, © become convinced that! at tho moment the shot was fired [Inquiry to which Mr. Smith subjected | Which killed Mrs. Bailey, Mrs. Car- man was, as 2) upon her bed in a Batley, It| ‘tict-Attorney Smith, only her own word for this, but the of her mind and of her worda and| testimony of her mother, Mr Conklin, Powell. 1p & room opposite hers about §& o'clock, She and they were talking! across the hall to one another at in- | y tervals. bookcase In her husband's office and fred they had exchanged some re-| marka. Mother and sister say posi- had more than a friendly interest in| Upon her bed: pudiated every rumor ber unkind|there remained no clue as to the perpetrator of the killing, the manner | “There is no mystery in the fact |in which he or she escaped afterward, that Mrs. Carman went to New York jor even the motive. she went there with her mother and | Mra. Carman was not implicated the that they returned about 7 o'clock |oMcials turned their efforts in an- She had @ headache | other direction, per was ovent went to her room and | theory that # lunatic killed Mrs. Bailey She was in| when shooting at Dr. Carman, The bed in her nightgown when there was | doctor has served upon many lunacy a muffled crash downstairs. She did | commissions in Nassau County, they not recognise it as a pistol shot, but | explained, and they believe some per- she got up and started downstairs. | son who was committed to an asylum Midway to tho first floor she cam@| through his instrumentality sought upon the other members of her house- | revenge and missed his alm. hold and after stopping for a moment | ej;gt MAN AT MURDER SCENE expected to ald materially in the de- rman assist 10 @nY| velopment of the case 1s to-day in way tn tho placing of Mra. Balley | tne nands of District-Attorney Smith. tt made to two county officials by Joseph Golden, Post, was in the reception room of Dr. Carman when Mrs, murdered. guarded from other interviewe all details of bis statement ba been given out, but it is known he !s considered a valuable witness for the people, took place in the physician's office just after the shooting. went to Dr. o'clock Tuesday evening to get some/ medicine for bis aged mother-in- law, | with whom he lives in Milburn street, supper, be left and returned at about 7.80. in the doctor's office talking with room to wait. ‘The sound of volc The discovery of the dictograph in FIREARMS. office of the physician and the Carman house was the result of West Forty-second street, thin city, | which had Inatatied dictographs, he made inquiry of him, and was re- ‘ferred to a branch office in Jamaica, | There he found the man who had set the machine In the Carman how and it was plain salling after that. Sheriff Pettit was armed with all the information he needed when he went | to th to Mrs. Carman with bis inquiries about the instrument. All that re- mained for her was to go to the warret and got It. And it was within ten minutes after Pettit returned to the Elks’ Club with the dictograph} | wrapped up in @ newspaper that the! Digtrict-Attorney, Mr. Weeks, the Coroner and Phin Seaman set out from the club for the Carman houne | and began the three-hour tnquisition | of itm chatelaine. All the afternoon there had been flying rumors that an arrest in the/to appear almo case was imminent, great mysteriousness about it on the part of every one why urged th@/ yp the road, or down it, following rumors on thelr way. OFFICIALS CLEAR but there was) oocTor’s WIFE OF SUSPICION. Shortly before midnight, after a final conference at the Elke’ Cirled announced | Car- | “We bent Leahey) Ad kim Platt and ber elster, Mra, ‘They were sitting together Just before the shot was The officials went to their homes had had it placed in the house while | @fter making this statement, and the war at a nearby table. police guard withdrawn from the Carman house. ‘The avowed failure of the dicto- grapb development to amount to any- iso that ehe| thing threw the case into still deeper | mystery. With “that evidence thrown out, But with the announcement thet | They will work to-day upon the TELLS STORY. An important document which 1s the transcript of a statement who, with Archie Balley was He has been rather safe- and not 2 being able to describe what Golden told the county officials he Carman's office at 7 Freepo! As the physician wi At that time Mrs, Balley was him. Golden sat in the reception Post also was ther Mra. Bailey’ and the doctor’s were fairly audible through the closed door, and once or twice Goldon thought he heard Mrs, Batley laugh. It was impossible for him to hear any of the words that either uttered, He sald that he had not been long in the reception room when he heard a pistol shot and a woman screa: “My God, doctor, I'm abot! He sprang from bis chair and opened the dovr jeading into the doctor's office, There he saw Mrs. Bailey lying on her right side, her feat al- most under the operating chair and her bead toward the door leading into the house proper. Dr. Carman cried for help as he bent over the body. WOMAN HELPED PU; BODY ON THE COUCH. Archie Post was at the door as quickly as Golden, but the latter said that Post, who ts @ young man, was rather unnerved by the sight, and shrank back. Golden, however, went into the room, The house was in- stantly in an uproar, and several people came into the oMce. Golden said one of them was a woman he thought wi Mra, Carman, but it might bave been Mrs, Powell, her sister. She was wringing her hands in clement and seemed almost overcome. ‘the rumors tl “We vee at | Ida} seen him a few d ago at the « funeral of a relative of hers named 7 Kendall, which Bedell also attended. Another bit of information Goiden ve the authorities concerned the wire screen over the window through which the murderer's shot was fired. fe said that after he had helped bluce Mrs. Bailey on the couch he went) 2 ide of the house to take a look. » at the window. There he found the © wire screen, hinged at the top ao it | + might be swung outward when ¢ the window required washing, wan | propped up open with a bit of atick | & three or four inches long. This made! @ it possible for any one desiring to, © break the window and thrust a hand % through the aperture te the | out baving ol hold up the screen at) the same tm Cart Darenbure, othe chlet of the village police, w jokes a pipo| * and wears t with brass| buttons on it, stood about the steps | 2 of headq arters on South Grove| % street as he expected Phin Seaman, « minute wins @ prisoner, When as to the where officials the reply would be: “The: darn good clue, They'll bring son | * one In, you ju But the day! went by without an arrest, for all)? t had kept ‘Freeport | @ breathless most of the daylight hours | and well into the night. pean eh ‘PRESIDENT SEES J.P. MORGAN ABOUT : BG BUSINESS (Continued from First Page.) of the opponents of the measures to | ad the bills. or ‘Ss .rrr MISS EMILY RANDOLPH, Underwood & Underwood, Miss Emily Randolph, daughter 9f Philip 8, P, Randolph of Philadelphia | MAGNATE HELD UP BY SENATE |8nd Lakewood, will be married on!July 4th to Philip KE. st Narragansett Pier. in the country. She has gained an international reputation as a polo) inmclifpiminis Dr. Horner of Cleveland De- cries Eugenics at Meeting of Homeopathic Institute. SPIDH FIG: S-HTOHOD ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, July 2— Less eugenics and more old fashioned [love fs what the race needs, said Dr. J. Richey Horner of the Cleveland fomeopathic Medical College, who to-day read a paper on sex hygiene before the Bureau of Sanitary Science of tho American Institute of Homeo- pathy “Eugenics and education go hand iM hand,” Dr. Horner sald, “Children should be given instruction before the ige of nine, and the instruction should be given dually rather than in clas hild should be taught to hold his mother in respect else he will hold no other woman in respect. If laws for eugenies are pasted they must be universal else they will not count for much,’ r. Horner 1 it was his belief at as long as man was attracted by ity and woman by strength eu- nics would in @ great measure take re of itself, ulso Impressions by the lay press have aroused th wrbid curiosity of the public en leprosy and have de- velo mystery, superstition and speculation in regard to this disease, accord) to Dr, Frederick M. Dear- worn of New York, pathetic that lone and af- ficted persons are driven hither and thither by reason of the fear which j inspires the public of leprosy,” said Dr. 10 n a yh. cavalitlg Ander word cases are no more hope- enson at| !*s well established cancer Miss Randolph is one of the most noted sportswomen | physician, ees SAYS MEDICAL EXPERT” \ s the way to the Senators’ gallery, “Got a card to get in here?” de- manded the doorkeeper when Mr, ator Root.” dian of the door tartly that other gallery where they let any- body in without a card.” to the general where he could hear the Senate's pro- ceedings. the financier and he was apparently unrecognized from the floor. Senator speech upholding the Administration Trade Commission listened with evidences of interest, for a while and then motored to the railway sta! New York. that Mr, Morgan had asked for the engagement. meeting was that Mr. Morgan had his views to the President. an informal conference with Henry Ford, the Detroit manufacturer, who of Commerce. est business corporations Chicago men primarily to discuss Golden, according to his statement, At last @ light blazed forth An the|@ shot into the alr, as it were, by |belped Dr. Carman carry the dead | they are so vitally interested. in] Assistant District-Attorney Weeks | women to the couch, and he said the| By a series of informal conferences a mo eet ct had been jealous of the doctor, as| tively that when they started at the DOORKEEPER. several women «! her acquaintance | Und and went to find out what was = While Mr. Morgan was lunching had told her of other women who | the matter, Carman was there! ajone in the cafe of his hotel Attor-| player, ney-General Mc ry Ga teynolds and Secre- rrison entered together and Later Mr. Morgan visited the Congressional H- and then went to the Senate of the Capitol, where he inquired 't,” returned the finan- “But T am acquainted with Sen- “Can't help that,” returned the guar- 40 around to Mr. Morgan smiled, and going about gallery took a seat No one about him recognized While Cummins was making a bill Mr, Morgan | Mr. Morgan listened to the Senate tion and took a train for It was said at the White House Another version of the been invited through friends to give Noxt week the President will have will be entertained at luncheon at the White House. It was said the President had invited Mr. Ford, Another important conference will be held by the President next Wednes- day with a delegation of business men representing the Chicago Association In the delegation will|ern Boulevard, be representatives of six of the larg- 1 Chicago, having interests all over the country, CHICAGO MEN TO TALK ANTI- TRUST LEGISLATION. The conference, requested by the anti-truat legislation, was readily granted. The delegation is also ex- pected to confer with Secretary Red- fleld. OfMcials close to the President sald Mr, Wilaon would take such an op- portunity to outline his views to the heads of “big business” in person. Mr. Morgan's engagement was moro or less of a surprise to those who have observed the course the Pres! dent has taken since he entered the White House in having conferences with captains of industry. it had been pointed out that Mr. Wilson was receiving the big buai- ness men of the country less fre. quently than his predecessors; in fact, had not been asking their advice at all on legislation affecting business, as many other Presidente have done. When the Curreney bill was in pas- sage through Congress the President even declined to receive some mem- bers of the Morgan firm. White House official id to-day that one of the features which had entered into public discussion of the Administration's trust legislation pol- ey and what the President had char- acterized as “a psychological depres- sion” caused by a campaign to halt the trust bills in Congress, Was an in: | ference that Mr. Wilson did not care to meet the big business men of the country face to face, and discuss with them personally the issues in which de wich those with ae, atorgan and | CANADIAN LINER AGROUND Mr. Ford will be the first, it is the idea to show that the President is| HAS 400 PASSENGERS approaching the subject with an open | mind, willing to hear the views of bix business first hand and outline bis own views in return. GIRL AND BOY INJURED Heavy Dempite the heavy steel screens that grag Company here from the radio| have been stretched around the New station at Sault Ste, Marie, Ont. — | ultable Building top) t passers-/ Ty communteating the ship's plight by from being struck by falling ob! the wireless operator on the boat said jects two persons were injured to-day was walking north on 4 on her way back to the office where she ig employed as a stenographer When she reached Cedar street, where the overhead screening is heaviest, a teen years old, who was walking a few feet back of Miss Dillon, was struck in the head by another bolt tained a severe laceration of the sealp. He was taken to his home at No, 215 St, Nicholas avenue. REWARD OFFER NOT BINDING. Bat Retsenbera 500 Should Be Ht George Relsenberg of No. 1047 South- ture entitled There were signa in the lobby offering he had seen thi yee the same picture and the same sign in the Sa atreet prietors of both theatres, de pay and Reis « iMerney, in the Second District Muntel- fi of a reward did not constitute a con- uppealing, May Be a Delegate to Conatitat Wireless Says the Assiniboia Is in| No Immediate Danger—Rescue Vessel to Her Aid. MONTREAL, July 2—The Cana-| BY DROPPED HOT BOLTS) |» Pacific Railway steamer Assini- ee | bola, with one hundred passengers | Steel Screens Around Equi- aboard, went ashore early to-day at} Bad Neighbor shoal, Cove Island, | Georgian Bay, News of the rrounding reached the offices of the Marcon! Wireless Tele- a table Building Failed to Pro- tect Them. it was thought the Assin'Sola would | back off, as she was swinging, and there were eleven fathoms of water under her stern. Her forepeak is) leaking slightly. The weather this | morning was calm and foggy. Catherine Dillon, eighteen years old, u street ‘The steamer Manitoba was called red hot bolt struck her on the right : ee i hi Her drers was burned and her to the assistance of the stranded ves- | hip was badly bruised. She was taken sel, although it was sald she is in her home at No, 1193 St. John's| no danger. lace, Brooklyn. | The Assiniboia wos bound from George Nolan, an office boy. seven-| gault Ste, Marie to Port MeNicoll. He sus- ——>—_——. Thinks the Bronx, visited the Metropolis Theatre in the Bronx one Sunday recently and saw a moving pi “Lost in Mid-Ocean. $500 reward to any one who could picture before. Reisen- berg was astounded the next night to ty-fourth od "to Judge and Good W: Waiter and Jerome Rosenber wht suit, Ne mal Court, dismissed the suit to- The Rosenberg brothers held that their only to then- y deel trai Reisenberg announced his Intention of | emanates ONE OFFICE FOR ROOT. —o! Convention, State Chairman William Barnes 4r. announced to-day that United States Senator Elihu Root will be a nominee for deleggte-at-large to the Constitu- tional Convention, He has agreed to run, Mr, Barnes said the retirement or | nator Root did not affect in any way | mia Mitereat in Republican affairs. ing w cut Inte cube oy Sugar Cream and Matches frermium Tita SPrct) 1914, JAMES KEOUGH, beloved hus- Keough (nee McCarthy), Church at 0 A. M, of requiem will be offers: oe soul, Interment at Cemetery. Plainfield, N. J. WEBBER.—JOHN. son of the late John Webber of Tarrstown, at the home of Edgar L, Ryder, Ossining, N. ¥., oy > 1, 1914, se loves PARK ow * pei AUST 400° ‘roomy. STRee Chines M.: EX-INSPECTOR GILLEN FINED MONTH'S PAY Found Guiliy of Neglect of Duty While in Control of Old Tender- Commissioner Woods this nounced a fine of thirty sed Upon ex-Inspector , now ranking as cap- tin a brief note d » Deputy Conunisstoner was culpably negli- sent when he was inspector of the old loin district between Fourteenth ‘orly-second street. Godley proved he urth avenne station, with reduced pay. The Commissioner nounced the promotion of Capt, F. J. Morris to the rank of inspector, and Morris takes the old Gillen Job, o” Thomas H. 1 to an inspectorship, se Deputy Commis- failed to say whethe Murray was In the Gillen ¢; while under » be settled at the result means riod of his suspens 1 ‘ he result of raids on disorderly bo- tela in his district, W"**. End Combination Pacteces for going away times ae indispensable to your enjoyment of the Big Day Each Package securely wrapped Age tied with @ cuosg attached for carrying. ii Mox’'tde, Roecial, HIGH GRADE CHOCOLATES or BON BONS and CHOCOLATES: cormted boxes in true patrioth i, Ne "Sweeta, wile they. A QOCQLATE (COV ERE lenalny 157 MAK! i wr rg NWA ithe specified weight includes the contaings in maa pe