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Next Week's Complete Novel In The Evening World myself, 50 IT gave her $15. Then it was that Mrs, Carman rapped on the window. “After that we talked a fow minutes and Mrs. Behrens told mo what 4 good friend I had been to her. She got up to go and I walked to the door with her. My wife said T kissed her on the cheek or forehead, but I don't remember #. ‘Then my wife rapped on the door and came in, She demanded the money of the nurse, Mrs, Behrens asked ‘Shall 1 give it to her? ashe counted out $15 and gave it to} Mrs. Carman.” | Q. Wae there any that occasion? A. Yes. Carman flung out her hend and struck the nurse in the face with the end of her fingers. (The doc- tor imitated the blow with his hand.) Q. You are sure that the win- dow Mre. Carman rapped on was the same one that was broken the night of the shooting of Wires... Bailey? A. Veo. Q. What time in this incident with Mrs, Behrens oc- A. I should say about 8.20, but nnot tell Q. Did you see Mra. ¢ n Ko out that night, or do you know how she got to the window? A. No; there were no shades down that night—all was wide o WARNED HI8 WIFE NOT TO IN- TERFERE WITH HIM AGAIN. Q. You talked with her after that about the occurrence? A. Yor; 1 told her that if she ever came there behind the operating cuair. T heard a shot, and Mrs. Balley said in an easy sort of tone, ‘Oh, doctor, I'm shot.’ 1 sald, ‘Oh, pehaw, you're notah ot.’ She fell. Those were the only words che utterd.” Dr. Carman said that he loosened Mrs. failey's clothing, opened the door and called Post and Golder and his aister- in-law. He telephoned to Dr. Runcie, who came right over. Then he sent for Mr. Bedell because Mrs. Walley had spoken of knowing him “Afterward «omy = mother-in-law came into the room,” he continued. “@he was af fussed up. 1 did not nee my wife. She was not in the office at all. I'm not sure whether I gaw her in the reception room. I do not remember seeing her until after- ward upstairs, with the family, either in her room or my aister-in-law's.” Dr. Carman said that Mrs. Bailey lived about two minutes after she was shot. He described the removal of the bullet, which had passed from Mra, Bailey's back t point under the skin of the left breast. He shook and paled as the mashed bullet, which had struck a bone, wae hand- ed to him for identification c “I last saw my wife before the! , shooting at the supper table," Dr. | Carman said. “I do not know when she went upstairs. Mra, Bailey was in my office from elght to ten min- ut I firat heard about the dicto- graph day before yosterday when Mrs. Carman told me she had taken it owt. She did not tell me why she took it out, I don't remember any comment she made on ber action.” a 1 waid ‘Yes! andy the evening aia| SER BVENING WORLD, a THE LITTLE NUGGET An Ideal Summer Story Full of Laughs and Thrills—The Adventures of a Human “Gold Mine. By P. G. Wodehouse [Summer Pirates ‘HD “ ik | Lawyer Levy, representing Mra. Carman, wanted to ask questions. Distsict-Attorney Smith — protes tht he had no standing in court. The Coronbr smoothed the matter over by telling Mr. Levy to submit questions in writing to be asked by the Coroner. Q. Who made the suggestion that Mra. Carman tell you about the dic- and did that again, all would be off between her and me. That was the substance of what I said to her, Q. From that time to the time of the shooting did you have any quar- rel with your wife, A. No. Q. You have often been out gether to functions, have you not? A. Yen; last Saturday night we were together on Mr. Kennedy's yacht. No to- tograph? Ac 1 don't know. Tt was] ccogg words had ever been spoken either Dr. Runcle, or Mra, Powell, of |e ee ane rapped on the window. We ge eee . have been the beat of friends. Q What did Mra. Carman say? Q. When your wife told you of the dictograph, did she tell you when it had been installed? A. Yen; the anme day we went to Raven Rock with Mr. and Mrs, Southard, seven or eight weeks ago. Q. Then the dictograph wan put In soon after the occurrence with the nurse? A. Yen. Q. What sleeping room have you occupied for the lant seven weeks? A. The same one as my wife, the front room upstairs. Q. On the day of the shooting were you In your office In the early morn- ing? A. No; I went out bright and early on calle. Q. Wes Mrs. Carman home that day? A. She went to the city on the 9 o'clock train, I think, with her mother and our little girl. ‘A. She only sald she had put the machine in, I don't think IT made any comment on it then. Did she say why she had put it in? A. She didn't say, but T knew why. It was because she wanted to hear what was going on In the office. Q. Did she want to hear what you raid, Professionally, to your patienta? A. Bhe wanted to hear all that was going on. RAPPED ON WINDOW THROUGH WHICH SHOT WAS FIRED. @ Do you remember that she ever’ before came to the window that was broken the night of the shooting? A. Yes; she rapped on that window six or seven weeks ago. It was in the eve- ning, after dark. Q. Who was in your office? A. A Fat Man Condemned to Walk the Plank - By Eleanor Schorer Nee ee aaaaaaaad Ht | \ ' ' { The physician was then excused, and Archie Post of Freeport, a clerk, twenty years old, who was in the docto®a waiting room at the time of the shooting, was then called to the atand. Post's testimony threw no light on the mystery, but was of Importance in that It contradicted the testimony of George Golder, who followed him. tions I heard over the dictograph Furthermore I want to say that there ix perfect harmony in our home, My husband and I are reconciled. “It Is utterly false that | met Mrs. joy last winter at a dance at the Freeport Club and had trouble there on her account. 1 nev jw her until | saw her in death yesterday.” Patient of mine—a nurse who lived in Seaford. Her name was Mrs. Bebr- ens. Q. Was anything said when Mrs. Carman rapped on the window? A. Ne. She came to the office door and rapped on it and said: “Let me in.” I id sv, and she came into the office with great dignity and sald: “Thin tw a nice piece of business for a married GOT BACK FROM NEW YORK AT 7 O'CLOCK. Q. What time did she get back? A. On the 7 o'clock train, I think. Q. How was she dressed. A. Well, I don't remember; it seems to be she was wearing the dress she liaa on to-day—a blue or black atreet dress. Q. Do you own any fifearma? A Yes, a rifle and an automatic, blue- man and a married woman to be tak-| steel pistol. I don't know the calibre of the platol, but it is a small one. Q. I it the same one you showed me the otwer night in the presence @. Had any money passed between you? A. Yes; shall I tell the story in my own way? W that eve-|of the officer? A. Yes. going to Dr. Carman'’s house for| “I know tt,” she replied, “But there ning, six or seven weeks ago, Mrs.| Q. Did you ever use it? A. No, medicine. She epoke to me as Iwent|is no occasion for these varying Behrens came to me and sald she| but I tried to. in. stories, I came down from New York wished to pay me $25 that she owed She eaid, ‘You lent me $35 and to pay it back to you and $60." I eald to her: ‘I don't ike your arithmetic.’ She said her boy was not working and she@ecdied I gave her th Q. Have you any other revolver? A. No, but I used to own som: QUESTIONED ABOUT TH VOLVERS HE HAS OWN ‘The District-Attorney then asked Dr. Carman about revolvers he might ‘hhave owned in the past. The physi- clan did not remember owning a 88- calibre Colts, but thought he had had @ large “bull dog” revolver seven or eight years ago. Q. On the night of the shooting, are you sure whether you saw Mrs. Car- man immediately after the shooting? A. I think she was in the outer office shortly afterward, but not in the In- ner office. Q. On the night of the shooting, did you cull anybody on the telephone about midnight? A. I did not. Some- body called me up. Q On the day after the shooting, did you go to the Raileya? A. No, 1 did not. Q. How long after the shooting did you go upstaira? A. About half an hour, I think! I met all of them (his family) up in the hall. My wife wax up there. She was in a kimona Q. Did you have any talk with Mrs. Carman at that time? A. No, there was only general talk-—we all talked together. Q. Did you ask her if she had heard the shot? A. No; I did not ask any very one could hear it Expectant (resevers) Mere is = remedy for al! those little aflments which often precede thie very important event, At beige to keep both mind end body in 9 mermal, dealthy state, DR. PIERCE'S | Favorite Prescription } (In Tablet or Liquid Form) Reever | Contry fpr, sores at? No Extre Charge for It. | ting the painful cendiviess ef ti be ad a ee eAEs beet period. Hews | * es Post sald that the woman Golder “Did your husband know Mrs, took for Mrs, Carman was Mrs. jailey?” Mre. Carman was Powell. od. GOLDER IDENTIFIES MRS. CAR- “1 do not know as to tha MAN FROM STAND. eneree: . “Were you jealous of Mrs. Golder, on the witness stand told} Bailey?” Practically the same story that has been printed as coming from him, His identification of Mra. Carmat was the main feature of hin appear- ance at the inquest "I wot to the doctor's house at v'elock,” said Golde man and her mother wore sitting in a hammock on the porch, 1 know Mre. Carman, as 1 have seen her often in the two years I have heen “Indeed, | wae not.” “Did you ever have trouble in the doctor's office with a woman patient?” “Never,” wasthereply, "There was some trouble in the office over a nurse, 7\L cannot go into details, but if ques- toned on the witness stand £ wifl tell everything without reserve." “There are varying versions of your movements prior to the tragedy Tues- day evening,” Mrs. Carman was told. “and Mra. Car “I went away because there were several ahead of men and got back at 7.80 / The same two women were on the porch—Mra, Carman and her mother. I had been in the waiting room five or ten minutes when I heard footateps in the hall and saw Mrs. Carman walk to the rear of the house. Then I heard water running from @ faucet In the kitchen, “She came back and went out on the porch, Thia was almost 8 o'clock The little Carman girl, who had been playing on the west lawn, came into the house and started poun$ing on the piano. Her mother called to her ing.” to stop. I think the voice which Hie, seal its eae he Anes called to the little girl came from the “ d inside of the house, although T had with my mother. I was tired and had @ headache. I ate very little dinner and went upstairs and undressed tn my room. When the trouble started downstairs I went down near to the door but didn't go in. I felt that something terrible had happened, and I felt Weak and faint. REFUSES TO DISCUSS STORY TOLD BY GOLDER. “Have you heard of the state- ment of George Golder that he w you on the porch before the shooting and saw you in the doc- tor's office fully dressed after don't care to talk about | Lawyer George M. Levy, speaking for Mra. Carman after the interview, said the reason Mrs. Carman did not go into the doctor's office when she heard the commotion downstairs was because she had heard that @ woman was a few minutes after the shoot- ing, when she was in her husband's private office. The body of Mrs, Bailey was there, Mrs, Carman's mother came in and the colored maid, The maid remained only a moment. |had been shot. She had a sinking of Then I went home, after koing around! the heart, the lawyer said, and. re- to the window from which the shot | turned to her room was fired, and finding the screen! pistrict-Attorney Smith sald to-day propped up by a stick of 1 80! that when he and Sheriff Pettit, Dr, that @ person could stand close ‘© Carman and Chief Lamb .e-enacted the window without having to hold iy pantomine the tragedy in the doc- up the screen, which was hinged at tors office yesterday a new point the top.” |was brought out, The District-At- Mra. Carman, although held pract!- torney stood outside the window cally @ prisoner in 4. own house pointing a pistol, Chief Lamb stood | consented to an interview over the where Dr. Carman said Mra. Bailey telephone to-day. She sald she felt) -as standing when ‘he shot was fired | that she had a right to make a state- /and Dr. Carman played the part he ment to net aside some rumors that had“piiyed in the real murder. ‘© been born of the tragedy. | The doctor, in illustrating the posi- | DID NOT KEEP RECORD OF DICTOGRAPH TALKS. “In the first place I want to say that I did not keep a diary or any| other written record of the conversa. | “Did you have your hand on Mrs. Bailey's shoulder just before the shooting?” Dr. Carman was ed, {| ‘When the window was shat- 4, BY tered,” he rep! on Mrs. B. back of the stood still, by the doo: Mr. Levy, counsel for Mri ‘arman and the Carman family ventured to- day to explain this potat. He said it was the custom of Dr. Carman to put hfs hand on the shoulders of his patients, It was done in a reassur- ing way, the lawyer sald, and had no significance in any case. PERSON WHO SHOT COULD HAVE SEEN THE DOCTOR. However, the statement of Dr. Ci man made clear that the murdel looking through the window into the office, saw Dr. Carman with his hand on Mra, Bailey's shoulder. The tsurderer aimed the pistol in the direction of the couple, but when Dr. Carman jumped to shelter the aim of the pistol did not change his movement. He get out of The murderer aim at Mi Bailey and fired. All the energies of the deputy sher- iffa, constables and detectives are now bent upon finding the .32 calibre revolver with which the crime was committed, Two revolvers were found on Dr. Carman's premises. One was a .22 calibre automatic. The other waa an old pistol which was kept in the garage. Neither had been used recently. ‘The search extended last night to], cesspools on Dr, Carman's property nd in the neighborhood. It is ap- parently the idea of the investiga- tors that the revolver is to be found within a block of Dr. Carman's resi- dence. A special guard of policemen and constables has been placed about the Carman property. Automobiles are ‘kept in readiness, The guards are under orders to follow any one leav- ing the house and arrest any person not seen Mra. Ci fi that,” was the reply. “There is | attempting to cro! tie county Hee ot om I. arman return from ¥ erformes Ly nothing in his ts. 1 ‘The autopsy was p bie Boren wake meee do | cornell, undertaking shop by a “The next time | saw Mrs, Carman 3 Ro: D. Grimmer and Howar ft Hempstead, and Dr, ~“ill- Fata Funcle’e Freeport néighbor and friend of Dr. Carman, It was primarily for the purpose of deter- mining the cause of death. This was quickly shown to be a bullet wound which ranged from a point below the right shoulder, through the body, vering the aorta. *etrs, Grimmer and Phipps reported to the Coroner that they believed that Mrs, Bailey had either recently un- a3e 4 ody were removed so that a ‘eful ination may a labor “A Habit Worth Forming” FIRST THING In the morning-LAST THING q theranghiy: with © few drops ro of OiOLe in warm’ water, Healthy teeth, a sweet brea! \d_@ clean mouth are the TURAL RESULTS. newspaper woman called me up| tions occupied by Mrs Ralley and from New York last night," #4 Mra.| himself, placed nis hand on Chief “ Lal hdd Carman, “but I didn't talk to her.) Lamb's — shoulder This action However I think I oucht to say some-| prompted a question from Sheriff d | thing now.” | Pettit. | 9 no equal In quality and ength— ow GEO. BORGFELDT & New York, Boston, Chicage, San All Dreasiots. 0 co. Franclsce longer earn money for them, She ‘was turned over to the police. Following her information detec. tives went last night to No. 275 East One Hundred and Forty-sixth street, where they found in an apartment In- dicated by Mra, Hansom, Frances Po- retz of No, 617. Courtlandt avenue, WHITE SLAVERS 0 Norah McConnell of No. 836 St. Nich- olas avenue and Corinne Hanson of No. 619 East <ne Hundred and Thirty-ftt. street. “hey were be- tween seventeen and nineteen years jold. Tne detectives then went to No. > 156 Westchester avenue, Portchester, {and gathered up Francisco Massilott!, Errico Grasso and Emilia De Gray -f No. 17 Pike street, Springfield, Mass. On another trip to the home of An- | nletto Carfaro, father of The Don, he} was taken prisoner with ‘The Don and | Frederico and Rosina di Fiori of No, | 69 Eldridge street. |. The District-Attorney believes that | between the dictograph and the a | missions the girls made*he may be - M P ‘enabled to arrest many other mem-| OTHER ARRESTS TO-DAY | fers of a toose organization for trad. | ling In women which has been operat- ing for years in’the Bronx. | eS WILL SMITH PLEASE | SEND HIS ADDRESS ? | Mr. Johns Has Name but Not Num. | ber of Family Wife Is Visiting. Now, somebody be a good fellow and help out FE. B. Johns, Washing- | ton correspondent of the Army and | Navy Journal, who |s anxious to spend the Fourth with his wife in Now York. He will be at the X office to-day to recelve your message Mra, Johns came to New York to! visit some friends named Smith, and) ave her husband the name and dress so he could come over and spend the holiday with her, When he got ready yesterday to start to New York he discovered he had lost his wife’s memorandum. All he could | remember was that the family she | \' | rath Declares Gang Head- .. by “The Don” Held Her a Prisoner. Dictograph Used in Cell of Men to Overhear Their Conversations, Crescenzo Carfaro, the terror of Bronx Italians, who call him “The Don" and remove their hats (by his; order) when they speak to him, ana} seven men believed to be bis lieuten- ants in various lawlessne: were locked in a big cell in the Bronx County Bullding to-day with a dicto- graph. From the c.atter which came over the wire to an Interpreter work- ing for Assistant District-Attorney Seymour Mork, material was gained for their prosecution for living on the earnings of women. They are under $10,000 ball fixed by County Judge Gibbs, Five women are also in custody as material witnesses, under $500 bail, which will be increased for fear some one may secure thelr release and|was visting was named Smith. spirit them away. Only one of then,, | Boing a newspaper man_ himself, Zealy i \he knew his only hope was the press, Delia Nealy Hansom, @ young widow. 3) the Washington boys sent out the maintains that she was kept a prison- | story with a request that Mrs. Johns, er by members of Carfaro's band. The jor the family of Smiths she is visit- \others would not have run away from [08 notify him at the Mayor's office jto-day. Otherwise he will be a lone- the rooms the men provided for them |iy man, for there are about 4,032 if they could, they satd; their only |Smiths, Smythes and allied branches complaint was that they were not |!n the Manhatten Sirectery and a. allowed to keep any of their earnings. |could hardly call at the home of each From the dictograph, Mr. Mo:‘¢|in_search of his spouse. learned that The Don distrusts his = friends, He told them he could easily furnish $10,000 bail himself, but that he thought it beat to remain In jail and keep an eye on them. He fol- lowed this decision in spite of pro- tests from’ the rest, including his father, Aniello, and his brother, Fred- erlco, The Don has a feed and provision store at No. 251 East One Hundred and Fifty-second street. Mr. siork | has ior weeks been collecting evi- | dence to charge him with extortion as the head of the artichoke trust. | Peddlers who did not buy from him, it ie said, were assaulted; thelr wares were sprinkled with kerosenw and thelr carts were overturned. Sick- ness and death afflicted the horses of those who did not buy their feed of The Don, it was charged. Mrs. Hansom was found Tuesday night in a house in One Hundred and! Fifty-fourth street by a city marshal who had gone there to post an evic- tion notice, She was almost without clothing and haif starved. She was bruised as from many beatings, She) told a story of having come here from Bridgeport in May and being drugged and deserted by the first man with whom she made an acquaintance on the street. While she was still dazed she said she was taken in charge by two men; who compelled her to live in various houses in the Bronx and abandoned her when she could no F you don’t kill friction, friction will kill your car. Get the jump on fi ion with the perfect frictionkiller—use DIXON'S Graphite Grease 677 For Transmissions and Differentials Tt forms a smooth, oily sur= face over bearings that eliminates metal-to-metal contact, resulta in longer mileage, cuts down repair bills and gives long life toyour car. The Dixen Lubricating Chart tall: you when to lubricate. We'll send it te you on request. The Joseph Dixon Crucible Co, JERSEY CITY. N. 4. peed Established im 1827 A complete novel each week in The Mvening World. A book which on the stand would cost you $1.25 you can get this way for ix cents, Rousing Specials for Glorious 4th EEK End Combination Packages—‘or rolng away i indi bi t of the bi Teel Hatin Deny Great” Weativens Each Package ‘securely tached for carrying. 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