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cla} support. © “Phta tea painful duty," sald the Coroner, tears streaming down his * tiles, “but I have to do it. You know I have to do it.” “We know,” replied Mrs. Carman, simply. *. The Cofoner, with trembling hands, drew from his pooket commitment papers he had prepared. He placed them on the doctor's desk and in ie form provided by law informed Mre, Cy: ' vaa acensed of imurder. “MRS. CARMAN PLEADS NOT GUILTY. “Do you plead guilty or not guilty?” he asked “I plead not guilty,” replied Mra, Carman fn a low voice. Ae he woman spoke she looked at her husband, Ho stretohed out his! ‘arms and she threw herself on his breast, sobbing. He embraced her and in-the reception room the Sheriff and the District-Attorney wiped tears from their eyes, , Platt Conklin, the aged father of Mra. Carman, entered the room. He as Almost tn collapse. With streaming eyes he embraced his daughter, and assured her of his beHef In her innocence. Outside on the porch Cella Coleman, the young negro maid, and an elderly negress who has been In dre service of the Carman family for many years walled and rocked in ‘werestrained grief. Mrs. Conklin, the mother of the prisoner, waa lying In her room on the second floor of the house, near to the point of death from the shock of the | tesued. While the arrangement was under way @ Imousing car was dr the side entrance of the house. The curtains of the car were drawn, “ghe was followed by her husband, Sheriff Pettit and Deputy Sheriff Archer $-Wallace. Dr. Carman assisted his wife Into the car and followed her In. wy Mhe Gheriff and his deputy entered after the pair and the car moved away, \ <<. Mr.,Qonklin stood on the porch with the two negro women, weeping, He watched the car until it disappeared and then re-antored the house pgeroorapenion dy the servants, Goromer Norton dij oot leave the Carman hous? until the curious séfewd hed dispersed. He walked mround to his office, crying. To several friends whom he met on the way he bemoahed the duty that had forced him * # end the wife of his friend to jail. On the way from Freeport to Mineola the car passed the Morgue In passed within 200 feet of the Bailey home in Hempstead. feached the Mineols fail at 4.01 o'clock. SHERIFF HELPS HER UP JAIL STEPS. ae the party at the door. After the formalities attending the registering ‘Of @ prieoner were completed, Mre, Hulse led Mra. Carman to a cell, Dr. and’ the Sheriff remained for some time. Mineola jail {s a modern structure and the quarters for the women priponers are comfortable. Mrs. Carman will remain there until next Mon- ~ day morning when she will be taken back to Freaport for her preliminary examination in the Town Hall. - ‘The arrest of Mra. Carman was brought about directly by evidence ‘given et the inquest today by Edward T. Bardes, an insurance agent. He “1s @ resident of Freeport, knows the mambors of the Carman family by sight and was peesing Dr. Carman’s home at the mioment of the tragedy on ‘the night of June 30. Bardes saw a blonde woman wearing a dark skirt and a white watet fon the lawa outside the window of Dr. Carman’s office a moment before me shooting. Later he saw the woman walk toward the rear of the house amd turm the corner. * When Mre. Carman wes arrested this afternoon Baries was also placed funder arrest and held as a material witness. Ho was not locked up, but ‘Was put in the custody of Constable Tom Murray, whowas ordered to allow f @ne except the District-Attorney or persons designated by the District- atornoy to talk to the witness: Tho authorities are not afraid Bardes will viry.to got away, but they are trying to prevent any one from approaching him. He will be released after he teatifies before the Grand Juty to-morrow. Bardes ie the most important witness found thus far. He is probably the only eyewitness of the tragedy. ‘Mr. Bardes dif not know the report he had heard was a revolver shot. ‘He thought it was an explosion of an automobile tire, But he looked "foward the doctor's office and saw the woman walk away from the win- “@ow. She disappeared around the rear of the doctor's residence. Then ‘he heard © commotion tn the doctor's ho Witnceces heard at previous sessions of the inquest have tes- tifled that within half an hour of the shooting of Mrs, Balley they - saw Mrp. Carman on the lower floor of the house. She wore a black | ee dark bine shirt and a white waist, Mrs. Carman is a blonde, {CORONER DELAYS MAKING A DECISION At the conclusion of the inquest Coroner Norton said he wanted to read | ows and digest ali the evidence before giving his verdict as to the cause | of the death of Mrs. Bailey. The reading of the evidence, he said, would | require eoveral hours and he might not reach @ conclusion before night. | Massa } dered rf ‘evidence wane 3. J. Burns, the private detective who was engaged by the Maseau County authorities to make an investigation into the tragedy, ren- ~ report to the District-Attorney to-day. The report states states that the detectives were unable to find any evidence to show that any person—except one—could have an object in peeking the life of efther Dr. Carman or Mrs. Bailey. It had been announced that as soon as Mr. Bardes gave his testimony DistrictAttoracy would ask the Coroner to issue a warrant for the arrest, ‘Mrs. Carman. But, when the inquest was over, the information leaked that the Coroner had intimated to District-Attorncy Smith that he would not entertain euch « request until he had rendered a verdict on the ‘This aid not amount to much in the plans of the District-Attorney, be- The decision of the Coroner will not the other. He has not been working in har- mony with Sheriff Pettit and the District-Attorney. Mr. Gniith eaid this afternoon that he had not taken Mr. Bardes before Mrs, Carman and asked him if she was the woman he saw outside the } Goctor’s office. Nor does he contemplate any such action. { ‘ “It would mot be fair,” he explained, “to ask Mr. Bardes to make an identification unless Mra. Carman should be placed in the 1» position ecoupied by the woman he saw on the lawn. No oppo: mo authority to ask Mrs. Carman to submit to such an ordeal metther she nor her attorney bas expressed any desire to have ‘witnesses confront her.” a Bardes, when called on the witness stand, sald he was Jamaica y manager for the John Hancock Insurance Company. His home is at No, 43 Bedell street, Freeport. He has lived in Freeport for some time and waows| “ ghoat everybody in town by sight, at least. ‘The reason Mr, Bardes refrained from telling the authorities what he| knew about the tragedy until last night was because he was afraid that, if called as @ Witness, be would be compelled to sacrifice a great deal of time from his business. He watched tho developments of the case carefully and | told eome of bis friends that he knew @ lot more wbout the murder than )* guybody else, At last, after consulting with friends and his employers, he decided that it was his duty to tell what he bad seen, Hie testimony tn full follows: (¢ Q. Where were you on the night of June 30, 19147 A. 1 had dinner * ime restaurant on Main street at 6 o'clock. 2m Q@ Where did you go after that? A. I went home F Q, Did you go ont after you went home? A. You, 1 went south en| Main stroct to the Merrick road and walked wert, Q. Where were you going? A, I was going to Dr. Carman's office to @onsult him professionally, wee at Q, When you arrived at the doctor's premises did you go in? A. No, i T Kept on as far as the next door to the west, I turned wround there and ‘eames back, 1 had changed my mind about seeing the doctor. » -' @ When you came back did you hear any sound? A. Yes, I heard a| they @tod thie a moment. Coroner Norton woapt without reserve and out, tragedy. Her daughter had kissed her and softly fled from the room hatt | ag hour before when word had reached the house that a warrant had been | ot a Carman hotice both ways up a @ What dia you ese when you looked toward the Carman house? Did you look toward the arman house? A. Yeu, | eta at the A. |} enw « woman walking through the lawn. @. Where was she? A. She was to the weet of Dr. Carman’s residence— opposite bis office. Q. How far west of the office? A. Ten or fifteen feet. Q. Hbw was she dressed? A. She wore @ dark ekirt and a light waist. Q. Did she have a hat on her head? A. No, Q. Which way was she going when you eaw her? A, Toward the rear part of the house. Q. Waa she walking rapidly? A. No; dhe was strolling. Q. How tall was this woman? A. Q. Could you see her distinctly? Q. How much would you say she bapa 160 or 170. Q. Did you stop in front of the Carmen house? @. Did you see anything more? Q. How goon after you heard the report did you eee this woman? She was about 5 feet 7 Inches tall. A. Yes, | got @ good look at her. welgbed? A. About 150 pounds, per. A. No; 1 kept on. I did not look @round again, A 4. No; As goon aa I looked eround—a matter of a few seconds. Q. Do you know where Dr. Carman’s office is? there once, Q. Have you ever seen the doctor’a wife? A. Yes, I have been A. 1 don't know her, but I | Reve acon a women I Judged to be the doctor's wife. Q. Can you say you know the woman you saw? Q. When were you in the doctor's A. No. office? A. Barly in June. Q. What thne was {t you sew this woman after the report on Tuesday bight? A. I took no note of the time, but I should think some time between awn up to|® quarter before eight and a quarter after. Q. How do you fix this time? A. By the time ft took me to go from Mre, Carman wan the first of the party to atep out of the elde door, | ™¥ home up there. Q, Did this woman look like any one you thought you knew or had seen before? A. No. Q. Have you any opinion as to who eho T have. Q. What wns the color of her hair? A. It was light. ft wae dressed. Q. But you ere positive that she and waa bareheaded? A. Yes. was? A, No, J oannot say that I cannot eay how had on a dark skint and light wast Q. Was her back turned to you or did you get a side view of her? A. Her back was toward me all the tima ‘This ended the testimony of Bardes. As ho loft the stand Coroner Norton Which Mrs. Carman viewed the body of Mrs. Bailey lart week and 180) jciared the inquest terminated, and The prisoner | pistrict-Attorney Bmith maid he had no more witnesses he wished to call. Tt had been hia intention to call Mra. Conklin, Mrs. Carman’s mother, but Her husband preceded her up the steps to the Jatl entrance, carrying | owing to Mre. Conkitn’s tliness he de- & sultcase, Mrs. Carmay leaned on the arm of Sheriff Pettit as she} cided it would not be beat to subject gilmbed the stairs. She had her handkerchtof to her eves under her vell.|her to the ordeal. ‘William Hulee, the Warden of the Jall, and his wife, who acts as matron, ASKS THE COR ONER TO M A QUICK DECISION. “I ask that you take Into consid- eration all the evidence and m your decision as speedily as possible,’ said Mr. Smith to the © -roner, “I ask, hovaever, that you do not mako {t here or at the present time.” Tho Coroner replied that he did not care to make hia decision at this time. Just before Bardes was placed on the stand Coroner Norton looked over the spectators in the overcrowd- ed courtroom, “I believe,” he said, “there are a number of women here solely because of morb!@ curiesity. 1 think I shall ask them their business here, as it is more becoming that they should leave.” ‘This created quite @ commotion among the women. Sheriff Pettit arose at 0} “IL think you might ask the same question of some of the men here,” he aaid. “Til do that too,” ner, This brought applause from a num- ber of women they squeesed their way out of the court room, At the replied the Coro- company with her mother and com- pleted arrangements for renting Aictograph; how he sent Francis Burnell, an expert, to install the dlc- tograph on May 26, when Dr. Car- man was absent from home on a trip to New Jersey with his wife. The witness declared Mra. Car- Man eaid sho wished she could cet the services of @ detective to work outside the house {tn connection with the dictograph Inside because she he- Neved her husband was meeting wom- en outside, If her suspicions were confirmed, she sald, she would ask her busband to do the right thing, and if be refused she would tnsist that he occupy # a¢parate rcem in the house, She eald positively that sho would pot get @ divorce on account of her daughter, Mre. Carman, the witnese said, admitted geome time after the dictograph hed been installed, that she had kept a diary ef con: versatione ehe had heard. Thie an Important statement, be- Mra. Carman hae denied she kept a diary, Elizabeth, the nine-year-old daugh- ter of Dr, and Mrs, Carman, a beaut!- ful, wistful-eyed little gir’, was the next ~itneas, She eaid knew the nature of an oath and was s\‘orn. Before | tragedy, she eald, she was playing on the lawn outside the house, She went in shortly before § o'clock. Her mother wag upstairs. Boo sat at the plano anu played a few minutes and her mother called down wer to etop playing. door one of the women turned and sald: “I never heard euch Insolence.” The inquest was resumed in Police Headquarters at Freeport before Coroner Norton at 10.80 o'clock this morning, The court-room was jammed with eager Freeporters, among them many women. Through- out the village business was prac- tically at a gtandstill as the word had gone around that sensational de- velopments might be expected at any minute. Gaston Bolssonnault, manager of the Detective Dictograph Department of the General Acoustics Company, No, 220 West Forty-second street, was the first witness called. It was he who rented to and afterward sold Mra. Carman the dictograph which she In- stalled In her home in order that she might overhear conversations between her husband and his patiente, The witness said Mrs. Carman visited him Grat on May 19. She told him she was @ dressmaker and wanted @ dictograph so she could hear conversations in ber workshop, but finally under pressure of questions told her name and her real object. “Bhe eaid,” teatified Mr. Boisson- nault, “that she was jealous of her busband and that she suspected bim of improper relations with women. She wanted to hear what was going on in his office.” TELLS OF RENTING DICTO- GRAPH TO MRS. CARMAN. He ‘ben told tn detail how Mra, ‘Carman visited bis office again in SSaGGQwQr ee World Ad. Finds \$“Fine Tenant” for \$Summer Residence! Baldwin, L. 1, June 29, 46 New York World: Enclosed please find cieck for my World advertisement, 1 am very much pleased, as this adver- tisement brought me a fine tenant, who leased my. place, and 1 think The World !s the best adve ¢is!.g | vaper. | Very respectfully, MRS. B, KARGOLL, The admission of the little girl that her mother called down to her to stop playing Is regarded as impor- tant by the District-Attorney. It is bis theory that Mrs. Carman was Metening at t! time through the dic- tograph to the conversation between Dr. Carman and Mrs. Bailey, and that the nolse of the piano prevented her from getting @ clear record of the eonversation. Little Elizabeth said that after she stopped playing the piano ehe went into the dining-room where it was dark and sat tm an easy chair until ebe heard the shot. The District- Attorney was surprised at this. “Then you were not upstaits in your room as your mother and fatber have sald?” he inquired. “No, sir, I was in the dining room.” @. Have your mother and father told yeu te say you were In the dining room? A. No, air, | wae in the dining -oom. They tent me away after what hap- pened and | haven't seen my mother. Q. Have you talked with Mr. Levy, your mother’s lawyer? A. | talked te him Sunday. Q. And did he tell you to say you were in the dining roem? A. Yeo, sir, but | wae in the din- ing room. ‘The girl eald that after the shoot- mother coming down ataire, BY PROSECUTOR. Visit to the dining room. bers of the family. the ohild explained. window.” across the hall. ning I saw ‘name. IT IS RESULTS LIKE TIS THAT HAS MADE IT POSSIBLE FOR THE WORLD TO PRINT 5,403 “TO LET” ADS, LAST WEEK, 93,619 MORE THAN THE HERALD, jone going up er down «airs. ‘While she was in the dining room ing she went upstairs and saw her mother in her room in @ kimono and slippers and met her aunt and her CHILD CLOSELY QUESTIONED The District-Attorney queationed the little girl at length about her He asked her why she went there instead of going upstairs with the other mem- "I don't know why I went there,” “1 just went in | there and eat down and looked out the Q. ‘It wae dark in the room, wasn't 1t? A. Yeo, air, it wae dark, but there was a light in the reception room Q, Who was in the reception room? A. I don't know. Warly in the eve- lady and @ boy go in, 1 know the boy because 1 have seen him at echool, but I don't know his The District-attorney 4i4 not ask | the little girl if ebo had heard any The |door of the dining room leading to |the ball !# at the foot of the stairs. be Uitte girl eas@, Celia Coleman, the RES WINS. VAGHT RACE ON TIME ALLOWED Vanitie Led Most of the Way Around and Finished Half a Minute Ahead. DEFIANCE NOT IN RACE. | She Became Disabled in Sail-| ing for Starting Line in Heavy Sea. NEWPORT, R. L, July 8— Working! her way out to the starting jine for! the first of the Newport Cup yacht| series, the Defiance, known as the! Tri-City sloop, developed troubie with her peak halyard and was| forced to take In sat! and be towed back to her moorings tn Newport Harbor. A heavy weather test of the yachts was promised when the Reso-! lute and the Vanitie reached the starting Hoe, four miles southeast of | Brenton's Reet Lightship, | A snappy Mfteen-mile eouthweater| Swept across the course and the sea was covered with whitecaps, | “This ts the day we have been took- | ing forward to for some time,” sald! W. Butler Duncan, chalrman of the! America's Cup Committee, who wit-, essed the race from the steam yacht | aty. The course for to-day's race was a fifteen-mile trash to windward wnd| |returm, the yachts beating toward) Block Island of ths first leg tn a southwesterly direction, h biocks The start-| atle was blown at 11.45 and! went over tho !tne in this| Vanitie, 11.45.27; Resolute, They split tacks on crossing! the line and broke out their baby | fib topsalls, ‘ Shortly after the start Resolute) worked out to weather of her rivai| and took the lead from the Cochran} oraft. There was a thick fog. The lee ralis of the sloops were awash and wave after wave broke over thelr bows, The wind held true and strong from the Southwest. The Resolute pointed higher in the wind than her rival, but did not ap- pear to foot as fast. She carried mainsail, forestay sail, jib and gaft topsall. Vanitle carmed the sume its, Since the last of the Long Island mene contests there have been nges on Vanitle, and in to-day's ce, under the auspices of the East- ern Yacht Club, Vanitie allowed Resolute only about one minute and twenty seconds, Vanitie showed fast footing ability on the beat to the outward mark and vvertook her rival. The outer mark was turned as follows: Vanitie, 1.51. Resolute, 1.51.60, After rounding the mark the two skippers broke out their balloon jibs and set thelr spinnakers to starboard, Vanitie was leading by nearly two minutes at 8 o'clock. Within three miles of the finish Resolute began to pick up, although Vanitie seemed to be carrying @ better wind. Vanitie crossed the line first, but Resglute won on time allowance. ‘The yachts finished as follows: Vanitie, 6.48.26; Resolute, 3.44.01. As Vanitie allows Resolute about a minute and twenty soconds the Her- reshoff sloop wins to-day's contest by about thirty seconds. It was the closest and best sailed contest that has been held between the two sloops since they first met off Larchmont early in June, (ees SIR CAVENDISH BOYLE WED. 11.45.31, chi BRIGHTON, marriage took place in the synagogue here to-day of Sir Charles Cavendish Boyle, former Governor and Commander- England, July §&—The {n-Chief of Mauritius and @ relative ot the Earl of Cork and Orr a Mise Loutsa Sassoon, a niece ‘of the sinte Are thur Sassoon, was an Intimate friend of King Edward. iceman colored maid, was washing dishes in the kitchen, When the child had finished her testimony Francis Burn the ex- pert mechanic who Installed the dic- tograph in the Carman home, was called, He was sent to Freeport in the afternoon on May 26th and by a prearranged plan walked by the house, returned and entered through the doctor's reception room door, holding bis hat tn bis left hand, By that means he identified himself to Mrs. Conklin, Mrs. Carman's mother, who is now at death's door in the Carman house. M Conklin told him where to place the transmitter, back of an in- atrument case in the doctor's office. From there he ran the wires under) the carpet to the reception room and! the hall, behind a telephone wire up the stairs and around the baseboard of the upper hall to Mre, Carman’ room, where he installed the pecalver| in a drawer in a cabinet, While he was at work In Mrs, Car- man’a room, Mr, Conklin, Mra, Ca man’ ther, who was ignorant of the lot, entered the house, His wife sent im on an errand and Burnell, who; had been hiding in a closet, continued, his work. When the Installation was complete Burnell seated himself at the receiving end in Mra Carman's room and Mrs. Conklin, down in the doctor's private office, spoke ani moved about. He heard her voice and) DEAD ARE CREMATED | declared he coud not make the bodies EX-STATE SENATOR WHO DIED UNDER OVERTURNED AUTO EDWIN BAILEYJSR DESPITE PROTESTS OF THE ANARCHISTS (Continued from First Page! Mee at the requost of the undertaker, who | ready, 90 {t was a few minutes before | 12 o'clock when the band of a score of Reds marched into the morgue and passed around Caron’s coffin. Leonard Abbott and Berkman were there. Becky Edelson supported Loulse Berger, in whose flat the ex- plosion occurred and who collapsed | when she found her half-brother's body must be burled “piecemeal,” as} she expressed it. Isidor Wisotsky, Charles Plunkitt, Rose and Marie Yuster ond little Lillian Rubel, in short skirts, were tn line. Each wore a mourning band of black, four inches wide, on which was sown an inch and a half strip of red, and each carried a red car- nation, which was dropped on the coffin as the line passed. Then the mourners lined up ten abreast in front of the morgue and followed the two hearses bearing the bodies to the Thirty-fourth street ferry. OP=RATORS HIRED BY BERKMAN CLICKED THEIR CAMERAS. Moving picture cameras clicked as the procession advanced and dozens of policemen lined the streets, for large crowds gathered on every curb- stone, but there ‘vas no disorder and the parade, being a funeral proces- sion, was not interfered witb. There were no services when the crematory was reached, except the playing of the “Mareeillaise” on the pipe organ and a short speech by) Berkman, in which he repeated that | there would be public memorial | services in Union Square at 2 o'clock! Saturday, to which the urns of ashes would be brought from the office of| Mother Earth, No, 74 West One Hun-| dred and Nineteenth street, by a: band of paraders. Then two big doors In the chapel were thrown open and the plain pine coffins were discloged on the movable platform which was to, carry them into the cremating fur- | naces, The platform began to move, | the doors of the furnace swung open and the coffins disappeared behind them. Louise Berger, already faint; with grief and excitement, nearly collapsed. There was another spectacio in store, however, for Berkman invited all who would—and nearly every one accepted—to a plate glass window in the rear of the furnace, where the gas flames were Problems vhs" » It's the ie triflingly small. ey Wes need gf ARS: peaihannitt Canc tigen a BOX 10c ¥ STR eR aTnETy a0 CORTLANDT. ‘ager raRi how * wanna T8T. ET otto 8 seen ree ns her movements and knew he had done @ good job. | Bir, Bardes, the insurance sgent, wes the next aad last witaesn f “ek SENATOR BAILEY AND FRIEND KILLED IN WRECKED AUTO Prominent Tammany Leader and Theodore Brooks Are Crushed Near Medford. 5; HOURS BEFORE FOUND. | Car Leaves Road and Plunges Down a Seven Foot Em- Former 8t. ir, Tammany ty and one of the ber dente of Long Island, and Theedore chogue, were killed In an autom: accident early this morning half a) mile out from Medford, L. |. A $5,000 machine, owned and driven ) s-se-4+—--_. =H by Senator Ba’ while attempting the turn Into the) Old Tunnel road and went down a| weven-foot embankment. of both men wero broken, supposedly | by the wheel, which lay on their heads | when the machine was found. | Senator Bailey went out for a ride| last night with his friend to visit some other friends along the Long thelr hom after midnight when the accident oc- | curred. The turn into the Old Tunne! road is at right angles. ‘as driven too far to the west and went over the embankment. lin both cascs was inst-ntaneous, The dead men lay under the over- \turned machine until 6 o'clock thls morning, when they were found by | William McAuley, an employe of the Bailey lumber mill In Patchogue. ‘The lights of the automobile were, still burning and ther looked ghastly | in the early morning. with the exception of the whe intact. | eplinters. tilated, the auto simply covering them | over withou: any pressure upon them. Benator Bailey's brothers, Joseph and Robert, were apprised of the acct- dent and they broke the news to the dead man's immediate family. latter comprise his widow, Mra Sarah Bailey, two married daughters, Mra. pcmemenneeiemniens the coffins until they were concealed | by the fire, off this view and Berkman and the | others returned to Manbattan. | Mra. Marlo Chaves, victim of the explosion, was not | buried to-day. Chaves, a Cuban clgarmaker, from hls home in Tampa, Fla, and | said be would take charge of the| body, although he had been separated from his wife for The Morgan Collection ee ey et eile MONG the most fy ‘was mate A" narkable gather. — KEENE LI Parcel Post Solve Your Candy you leave the City on your vacation of Getting LOFT sw ETS to you, in the eame Freeh, me condition as they leave our factory. The cost of Frank Gilsbe.and Sire. Vernos * and 4n unmarried daughter, Mary Emma, a girl of eighteen. The family has been prominent eo- cially in and about Patchogue, as” well as other parts of Long Istand, for many years. The former Sesator is reputed to have been very wealthy. once the junior member of the firm Edwin Batley & lumber millmen and exte: tor during the term of 1908-4. was the author of the Bailey Auto. law, one of the features of bankment. nator Edwin Bailey | jader in Suffolk Coun- known rei Good to look at, long in wear and LI choice of the man who knows | hdatpies was overturned Established 52 Years. All Eye Troubles, No + Matter How Slight, Are Dangerous The necks | Trust your eyes only to registered eye physicians. You're taking serious chances with any one else. ‘yea Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physicians. Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to $12 INew York: 184 B'way, at John St.t: *223 Sixth Av., 151 road. They were returning to at Patchogue some time The machine Death Brooklyn: “st Fulton Sts co Bend $i. \*) This Btore Open Satarday Until @ P. a. Gold Cents tlle artd ALAA AA ALLALU TOLLED AMEE IBE The machine, The wheel w mashed to! ‘The bodies were not mu-/ The ‘Then sliding doors shut an innocent | Her husband, Pastor arrived | eral years. | Every where" ings of art ever gotten Diamende, Watches, Jewelry, bs ey only a transient 18 Broadway,New Yerk. guest at the “Metropolis Open Vath 4 » Retardare tan Museum. Better see it now— and by ‘bus is the pleasantest way to get there. “(Eddys” Sauce is all good and good for all. Grocers and Deli- catessen Stores Sell getegen Stor Se" 10c Made by E Pritchard, 331 Spring St..N. Y- BOLL.—On July 6, 19: beloved wife of George and doug of Mr. and Mra, Chories Leppia, ages |. Economical way Pure press Hille Comatery. eamworn. ‘At Black al ire We dees | Gaughver of the late Matthew and Phoebe = "T0c ve ESE Hall, Conn, nds, co i GS aa POUND TIN the sum ar eaauee » NEW YORK WORLD