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‘e - the District-atterney’s office and the Sheritt. ‘Tee search for the revolver with which Mrs. Batley was killed con- finues unremittingly, but Inasmuch as & systematic quest for the weapon Was not begun until almost twenty- «four hours after the crime there is “Hite Hkelihood that it will be found. “Detectives armed with a search war- rant went through the Carman resi- @ence on a thorough three-hour hunt “to-day. ‘They lowered a powerful magnet tn- te chimney openings, partition open. ings and all nooks and crannies that could not be explored by a light. Ina crevice between the rear of the house and a kitohen extension the magnet Picked up eme of the ear pieces of the dictograph, which Mra. Carman tore from the walls of her home after the murder. This car piece had been mise- ing since she admitted that the dicto- Graph had been installed. ‘The Coleman girl hes testified that he was wasbing dishes in the kitcb- en at the time the shot was fired and ‘that mo one passed through the room before or after the shooting. District. _ Attorney Smith has never credited the story told by Celia Coleman on the witness stand. Bhe admitted there that she had signed a statement pre- pared by George Lavy, Mre. Car- Man's counsel, without reading it or bearing 't read. Ghe swore she went into a pantry Adjoining the office, remained there « ‘couple of minutes and then went into the office. Mrs. Paria, acoording to in- formation in the hands of the authori- ties, was told a difterdnt atory by the Coleman girl. Celie Coleman ip sald to have told Mre. Parie.that at the m mont the shot was fired she wi In har reom on the top floor of the house; that she started down- stalre at once and met Mre. Car- man coming up; that Mrs. Car- man ordered her te go back to her ream and she obeyed the o der, but hurried dewnetairs soon after. NEW LINES OF INFORMATION ARE OPENING HOURLY. Many of them are unintelligible and are written by persons of Least mi A great many noto? ors are pestering the fuerit. re persons are anxious only to get their | ames in the newspapers. tg | one Is young Newman, the youth ar- rested yesterday in Mineola with | loaded revolver in his pocket who | has beon telling the authorities about & “gunman plot” in the tragedy. j District-Attorney Smith and the) Sheriff have been informed that there | {a @ woman of means In Freoport who | | Wae on such friendly terma with Dr. | Carman up to a few weeks ago that | she made a will leaving him her property, They quarrelied, so the @ory goes, and she tore up the will, expressing batred of the doctor. This story, it is believed, wae cireu- lated by friends of Mra, Carman. The defense is busily engaged in trying to jaa that there might have been, and probably were, other persons in Pr: port who could reasonably be sus. peeted of having reasons for nt- ing to kill Dr. Carman. A report reached Lawyer Levy, Mrs. Carman‘s counsel, to-day that a| private detective agency had planted ® Gictograph in thi rman bome and bad run the wire to a room rent- ed in the neighborhood where an! operative has been sitting for sev-| eral days listening to conversations | among members of the Carman fam-)| ily. For some reason this rumor gave) Mr. Levy great concern. He rushed to Dr. Carman’ resl- ence, and with the ald of Dr. Car-| man and other members of the household made @ thorough search of the premises. No sign of any dicto- | wraph save that installed by Mrs. Carman last May was found. OETECTIVES ON THE HUNT FOR NEW EVIDENCE. There is renewed activity among the Burns operatives to-day. They are in Freeport and Minegla, and al- though not alwaya successful in con- cealing thelr identity from the eagle eyed, are reported to be making “progress.” One of them, fn gray strengthens these letters multiply. | | Mra. Helen Morse, of No. ‘BOY KILLS SELF BECAUSE SALARY WAS NOT RAISED 16-Year-Old Large for he Youth Failed to Get Promotion. UNCLE FINDS’ BODY. Was Student of Mohamed- anism and Knew the Koran by Heart. George Lowes of No, 452 Fort Washington avenue, secretary of & lithograph concern, was asked by telephone this morning by his sister, 636 West One Hundred and Seventy-eighth street, to help her find her sixteen- year-old son, Allen G. Moree, who had been away from home all nigbt. Lowes, knowing that the boy had & habit of walking on Fort Washington avenue in the evening, took his bull- dog amd started up the avenue. The dog ran t:to the rubbery at One Hundred and Eighty-fifth atreet and began whining, Mr. Lowes fol- lowed him and found Allen Morse dead, with @ bullet hole in his temple and @ heavy revolver with one cart- ridge discharged, lying beside him. The uncle called Mounted Polleeman Sullivan and the body was taken to the Bt. Nicholas avenue station after an ambulance surgeon had examined it and given an opinion that the boy _TR2 BVENING WORLD, } FRIDKY, JULY 10, 1914, be oe Which Anarchists Threaten to ar Ashes of Dead Bombmakers Through Streets CLAAHUEDEDUN EDTA HELGA IAT EL EDEL ELIT OES EOEES Urn in THIRD BUBONIC PLAGUE DEATH IN NEW ORLEANS ‘MITCHEL REFUSES “REDS” PERMIT 10 MARCH WITH DEAD | Berkinan —Four Cases.in City—Suspect Found in Texas Town, NEW ORLEANS, July 10.—Ane other death from the bubonic plague was announced to-day by the Publie Health Service officers, making @ total of four cases and three deaths since the outbreak of the disease here Announces, How- That Anarchists Will “A Boy Is Latest Victim of the Disease TIL So SEHD S DS OES! The funeral urn in which the ‘by Adolph Wolff, the Jewish A PRISONERS TELL WOMAN COMMISSIONER PHOTO.BYAUNEE ROS Ane 3 i PAOODDIHOGE TEED D beeee fore? ashes of the dead bombmakers are to be kept was designed and made r. [from the close confinement order | | which was made general as soon an| to-day'’s revolt had been quelled. | These fifty-five were put to work at the wharf and in the garden. “LE expect Commissioner Davis will) five guards. They put the hose on each one in turn, keeping it on one man for half an hour until he w: nearly choked to death with water, “Then, when that didn't have the Jeffect he wanted, the Warden ordered the fire hose up from the cellar ,| Sued a statement saying that in view | ever, | on June To-day's victim was Leon de Jean, a negro boy, who was found {11 at his home, No. 2227 6t, Ann street, on July 5 and removed to an isolation hospital for observation, SAN ANGELO, Tex., July 10.—Albere Jones, an oll driller, who came here several weeks ago from Shreveport, La, is declared by four local doctors to ail & victim of bubonte plague. Jones is secluded under guard, await~ ing the arrival of a Government pert from Galveston. The authori admit they are not satisfied with the diagnos! —— SOMETHING SUBSTANTIAL. (From the Kangas City Journal.) n you make me a sheetiron man- Hold Meeting To-Morrow. “There will be no Anarchist parade to-morrow," declared Mayor Mitchel to-day after a long conference with Police Commissioner Woods. “Commissioner Woods feels, and 1 agree with him,” added the Mayor, | “that the parade would tend to breed trouble and disorder and lead to breach of the peace. “Was application made for a parade permit?" the Mayor was asked. “Yes.’ The Mayor didn't know who made aolin? the application, He added: “The! gon), PLE, Put {wan't aye much aheet- General policy of the administration | tron mandolin, anyhi {a not to permit private persons to|,,,/'™.! hold public funeral services in streets | instru or parks. That will be adhered to. | him “The free-speech policy of the ad- in . ministration will also be adhered to, Owi mo however. The I. W. W., or any other | ing to the de: persons desirlous of holding public W Cy in a peaceable manner, jlition of the est- under conditions heretofore laid down, ing, Will be protected by the police. jern Union Buildi ? Late to-day Alexander Berkman is- 199 Broadway, we of the police determination “to prevent | our plans for a dignified and impres-, have been } sive funeral procession,” the Anti-| ore (ilitarist League and the Motber ito vacate the st Earth Association, under whose wn occupied by us there pices the parade was to have been | held, had determined to abandon it, for the past 22 ears. |. He sald that a meeting would be held in Union Square, however, and We shall be pleased to meet our friends ‘This was the new development that |gloves and gray suit, loitered about) Started the day. Celia Coleman is {Mineola all the time Dr. Carman wa Practically in custody and will be|there yesterday. This did not escapo) had been dead several hours Mrs. Morae swooned when she heard the news. Her brother-in-law, Jrunner who went down to order It question of displaying the ashes | deal with the situation with a strong turned off half an hour later told me | there would be settled at @ meeting to hand, as | would have her do,” wag| he looked at the engine room register | D@ held to-night, probably in the Fer- took charge of and saw that It showed a pressure of | Ter Sebool. questioned closely about the story tributed to Mre. Paris. Should she the doctor, and he spoke of it when he returned to Freeport. George H, Taylor, affairs at her home. Mr. Taylor said ‘amend her gtory the District-Attorney | “There were three of them trailing “believes he can get corroboration. me,” he said. “I don't know what) Am exomination to-day of the bul- | they expected me to do. What they/ { let whieb killed Mre. Batley raises a |are doing in this case seems to be new question. It has been assumed |largely nothing. They are welcome to ‘all along that the bullet was fired |follow mo as much as they please.” “from a .3 calibre revolver. The most recent activity of the: ‘The bullet was of the soft nose |Burns operatives has been another ‘wariety and Gattoned in ite course| exploration of the grounds about the| through the body of the victim, It|Carman house. They looked at and has not bean weighed nor bas it been |in and under everything, but did not | submited to the examination of ex-| disclose what they had discovered, perts. There is a possibility that i|!t was said that for the next few) was fired from @ revolver of a smaller |daye Freeport would be fairly over- “ealibre than fun with Burns men, ~ Dr. Runsie, who lives sorcas the| There has been some comment in) Street from Dr. Carman and who/|Freeport that the fri that the boy was developed mentally and physically far beyond his years and had brooded because he could not get the advancement which he thought he deserved. He received a week as @ clerk in the offices of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company and had re- peatedly asked for promotion. He | spent hin time .t home studying Mo- hammedanism and had committed large portions of the Koran to mem, ory. When be did not return at his usual | time Iast evening, Mrs. Morse tele- | phoned to her relations up until mid- je of the Car-/ right, when she called on the police. ‘was summoned after Mrs. Batley was |mans have not seemed to be particu- | 514 waited all night for an answer .shot removed the bullet, which was|!arly prominent with their friendship | “lodged under the skin on the loft side | Just now. But there can be no doubt of Mrs. Balley'’s breast. He used a|that Mra. Carman particularly has! knife handed to him by Pr. Carman |Many warm partisans in the village. ‘Hfrom the latter's instrument case, |One of them, George Wallace, fo before getting Mr, Lowes to make an independent investigation at dawn. Officers of the life insurance com- | pany said inat young Morse, though a hard worker, waa moody and his - However, there is no question about “the bullet produced by Dr, Runcle being the bullet that killed Mra. Bailey. The important point te t! the assumption that it was a .88-call- bfe bullet may have been wrong. This widens the scope of the investigation, for the fruitiess search for the weapon thus far has been limited by the sup- Position that a weapon of a certain type was used. Matron Pettit reported to-day that Mrs. Carman ts more composed and fs recovering from her physical and mental breakdown. She is atill under the care of Dr. Cleghorn, the prison physician. _ Mrs. Cartran received a letter to- Gay trom her nine-year-old daughter, Elisabeth. © ve epistie, which had a profound effect upon its reciplent, ead as follo’ “Dea, Mama—We all think of you always. 1 do not quite know why you don't come ho ig I don't see Mr. Pettit pretty soon I shall write to ask him, “Your loving daughter, “ELIZABETH.” Mr. Pottit is the Sheriff, When he arrested Mra. Carman on Wednesday he promised the little girl that hi mother vould be back home the Rext day. The unfulfilled promise prompted the child to write the le ter to her mother. WIFE OF SHERIFF NOVEL TO THE PRISONER. Mra Pettit said to-day that she pends much time reading to Mrs. Carman, who is as yet unable to con, centrate her mind en a printed page, “To Have and to Hold" was the book that occupied the attention of the matron and the prisoner iast night. There is a chapter in this dove) describing how @ married oo ple, im the midet of great tribul: tion, pledged their love wand drank from the same cup of wi “Bawin and I pledged our love in that way over twenty years ago,” eajA. Mre. Carman, “and we have often done it since. Ereriff Pettit received a letter to- Gay mailed yesterday in Brooklyn, written in a feminine hand and signed “N, A. B.” The writer des- cribes herself as a nurse who has jown Dr. Carman well and con- ste “For God's sake free Mrs. Car- / Man. She is 2 good, honest wom- an. 1 am the one who fired the glad 3 did tt. 1 meant Dr. Carman. “e knows President of the village and “the jiuicide did not surprise them. Ho Father of Nasaau County* tn the had told another clerk within @ day READS | ¥ Legislature, has issued a long state ment criticising more or less the Dis trict-Attarney for his attitude in Mr Carman’s case. This statement sald, | In pa NO EXCUSE FOR ARREST, DE- CLARES WALLACE. “If all the evidence against her thus far obtainable has been pub- lished in the newspapers, the arrest | could not be of any possible advan- tage to the State. A District-Attor- ney should not ca the arrest of any citizen unless has sufficient evidence to secure an indictment from @ fair-minded Grand Jury—ev! dence that would convict at a tri If no defense were offered. There has been little if any testimony yet of: fered in this case which has the dig- nity of eviden: It te clear that Mrs. Carman was troubled with jeal- ousy and put in @ dictograph. That was not criminal; it would be only one link in # complete chain of evi- dence, indicating a possible motly but when @ case js bullt up entirely on circumstantial evidence there must | be no break in it. Even a Grand Jury must decide there is no miasing Mink before they can justly find an indictment. In this case there are more breaks A en links, practicing law. | with muc experience in the crim. inal law and also on the local bench, his statement is deemed of much value by his fellow villagers, | While the District-Attorney ts will- ing to admit the evidence in his hands ie not ao strong as it might be, he re- tains faith in the statements made by George Golder and Elwood T. Bardes, upon which, practieally, the arrest of Mrs, Carman pivoted. But Mr. Levy has already obtained an affidavit from Golder in which he repudiates all the material points in his tosti- mony before the Coroner, Now Mra, Carman's attorney is at work to break down the testimony of Bard who sald he saw & woman an: ing the description of Mrs, Carman in the west lawn of the hou near the office window, just after Mrs. Batley was shot, One story Mr. Levy has brought out concerns a Freeport girl named Florence Raynor, According to Mr. Levy's information, Bardes was with her so short a time after the shooting that he could not have been in front of the Carman house when the fatal shot was fired. DION'T KNOW WHERE CARMAN LIVED, SAYS GIRL. Miss Raynor said to-day: "Mr, Bardes had an engagement to call at my home last Tuesday nix: | Week ago, He came at 8.80 o'clock, but did not say anything about the shot he heard nor about seeing any woman, Last Monday night we went ut for a walk togethe: ne he said is rat ali, RENE us said, ‘No, be lives on fi dl Rant Merri ck roads! for two that he was carrying « re- volver because he expected to have cane with an Etalian, No import- ce was attached by them or by the Seliee to this statement in connection with his death, The boy's watch and other jewelry were all on his person, together with a small sum of money. —_—_— (FISHING BOAT IS SAFE AFTER GOING AGROUND Many Wireless Messages of Disaster to the Atlantic City Caused Apprehension, Frantic wireless mossagos, asking ssistance for a ship in distros, caused excitement along the coast last night. Tho little steel steamer, Atlantic City, of the Atlantic Trans- portation line, used for the summer an fishing boat, had engine trouble while proceeding south through the fog off Sandy Hook, Later the life savera at Atlantic City got @ message from Forked | River that the steamer wag in no im- mediate danger, and finally a Barne- gat despatch eaid the boat ran on the shoals near there but managed to jae off ded for Atlantic City. jouer, WINTERS AND WIFE FREED. Comspiracy Charge in Case of M a BH, Ind, July 10—The case against Dr. W. A. Winters and his wife, Mra, Byrd Winters, who wer charged with conspiracy in connection with the disappearance of the doctor's nine-year-old daughter, Catherine Wins ters, Was dismissed in the Ciroult Court here to-day, by the Prosecuting Attor- ney on the Krounds that there was not sulficient evidence against the defend- ante William Rt. Cooper, who also w charged with conspiracy, was also set free, Affidavits were filed against the three defendants May 30, 1914, by Robert A. Abel, an Inc polls detective, Catherine Winters mysteriously disap- peared March 0, 1918, ing © NEWCAST js Dropped nignt of the Miss Raynor on the shooting, but added: “Nobody knows exactly when Mra, Bailey was shot, Probably every ope is w little off in reckoning about it. Bardes could very easily have heard the shot, seen Mra, Carman walking away fro: he lawn under the office window and th have met Miss Raynot she nay: Mr. Sinith said finally that he he had a case strong enough to bri about Mrs. Carman's Indictment Bardes is still tn the hands of the District-Attorney and is held in the Mineola jail in default of hie ‘en bail aso material witness, WHY THEY REVOLTED, (Continued from First Page) an the head of the bath-house trus- tles, said that there were six short time prisoners who had started the present revolt. They were headed, he said, by John Williams, alias “Bot- the Commissioner questioned him. No. amountof of persuaston could in- duce the witness or any of his con- panions to give the names of the other six. Convicts who declined t join the revolts, all the witnesses said, were bulldozed into misbe- havior by the six. The mutiny of the prisoners in the penitentiary on Blacwell's [sland was continued ta-day when forty men made a ferocious attack on Warden Hayes and ten keepers Warden Hayes with the keepers went to the first tier of the second section of the north tier at 9 o'clock to take the prisoners locked in that block of cells to the workshops. As the Warden threw back the lever which unlocked the doors of the forty- four cells, the prisoners rushed out armed with the heavy buckets which are the only sanitary apparatus in the cells. They bore down on the Warden and his men, smashing right and left with the buckets which weigh from ten to fifteen pounds each and emptying the contents over the heads of the officers, The Warden ordered bis men to use their clubs. In many Instances the clubs were entangled in the bails of the buckets and the battle was waged with t blows and kicks. Keepers from other parts of the prison went to tho ald of the Warden and after five minutes all but three of the con- victs obeyed the order to return to their cells; three were unable to move without help. Two had bad cuts and bruises on their heads and another was doubled up with pain from a sprained wrist. The three were taken to the prison hospital to be attended by Dr. Schecter, the resident phy- sician. PRISONERS IN CONFINEMENT LOOKED FOR OUTBREAK. The outbreak was apparently eagerly expected by the 000 prisoners already in solitary confinement and on @ bread and water diet be se of the disorder of the last two days, The fi. shout of the new mutineers was the signal for a tremendous shrieking and howling from the solitary cells, a banging of cell doors and loud mocking laughter and shouts of en- couragement. “Lady Kitty hasn't got cells enough for everybody,” roared one joyous voice from the quarters of the prison- ers under discipline. "Go to It, buys, and put her up agalnat it.” On the arrival of Commissioner Davis Warden Hayes reported that he thought the morning's trouble was caused by a general feeling of eym- pathy for the six hundred men under discipline forthe previous rioting. “There are only 160 real disturbers Among the whole lot," he said could weed them out and keep them ont of touch with the other pris- oners there would be no trouble, 'T best he tlon of the peniten- tlary are one hundred and five boys who are in the south prison who have not taken part in any of the disturb. ances. ‘They have been tnchided in (he genoral close confinement order in order to keep them from receiving trouble-making suggestions from other parts of the priso Fitted we haved si ve prisoners were excluded , ) all the comment Mayor Mitchel would make, { forty pounds. ill leaving us in our cells, the | en land patrons at any a prisoner with regard to whom! pressure of that big fire hose us in turn. nd Up against an was knocked and didn't come to for an After we had been knocked ut and bruised by the stream we e dragged from our cells and ten with clubs, That's about all the trying to get somethir that and making me months “Just before the two drivers: were ing ‘kites’ c Warden where the letters came suspected what is k as the Randall's f PRISONER GIVES ‘INSIDE’ story! OF THE RIOTS. A man who has just finished a! .77 0) year's sentence on Blackwell's Island | hour. for burglary told an Ev reporter to-day what he side story of the three violence in the last week among pris- loners in the penitentiary. He says the riots of the Fourtn of July and | Wednesday and again yesterday, } when the tailor shop was set on fire, were meant as & remonstrance against petty persecution practised by Warden Patrick Hayes and had nothing to do with the blockading of | {rt Particularly the drug traffic of Commissioner of| “Ww Correction Davis, {the F ‘This man, who has a person mom ance and doesn't hesitate to admit It, is Fred Oxley, twenty-seven years | M old, a former travelling { howl | Me 1s short, trim, dresses well a heard we the W 1d to me for t the store rve two extra Fourth of July abbed for carry= (crooked letters) for pris- Hayes couldn't tell | from, but he nd gang and he close wateh on en we sat down to dinner on urth we thought, since it was a that we might get a little ri stisve extra to eat, ‘Cho dinner k, salesman nd his own in the prison | speech indicates. a good education. | vho w the Randall's his eyes couldn't where the Wnally he Randall's noon cries the Warden, ‘ nd give him a hatreut.’ en m NE 10. VRURGH, cornerrtone ewburgh’s new onic nple wus laid to-day. by Me Freltekt, Grand Master of Mu= in the State of New York, a ainted by Grand Lodge officers. A. pro- gossion of | sever t id cities Y oiot” July Island gang. for him in his old he.ae in Toronto,! “The Warden snapped howls were coming from. other attempt to lay his st “TIL take everybody's privileges in be his experience, is given here in : cre booing the dinner and T know Mount Vernon, Westchester County, oan house in Mount Vernon to see what 1 gang. Commissioner, “While I wasn't exactly a mmission las nothing to do win the rules until May 9, when, with | Who concern havior, I was hauled to the wall and | nd was in another part of “LT hadn't really tried to escape, but) i badly hurt, their heads broken too, After that sent down to the penitentiary from | of hitting some guard who was atand- buckets hit, Workhouse men to change clothes “Let a man try to lay a reqy st be- called back, because I was wearing | 1 : \{ng these requests there are usually forbidden line when a guard grabbed ity. minutes alowed for eseIhe hs | and then sent to solitary for ten ey asked t been going to the ature, because I had “When one inan pockets to buy anything I wanted. | Nobody answer away for six weeks. six weeks.’ Visitors won't even let you get, Sho sent a woman Investigator to mutiny among the prisoners. when the Warden passed}. and saw heard more than one say that there was told that my two months of com- | | hyery soon after 1 had gone into trade an awful din and finally the | GI mut ose on yo! jing up in front Ho has a wife and a three-year-old] |NNOCENT SUFFER WITH THE daughter, he says, who are waiting | GUILTY. Canada, and he plans to get out of / about from place to place, but New York as soon os he makes an-| fell for the Ife of him ry before says, measuring off the Commissioner Davis, Island gang: His experience, or what purports to | |, ("I'll take everybody " I happened to be among those his own words: “I was sent to tho Island from hear me rden, on July 10, 1918, by Judge Platt. 1 where the trouble was, let the puntsh. been out of work and broke into a) ment fall on the Randail's Island Ould lok up. si ane ome of the men went to Warden ign Yan ibe eosan oa Bice tee sand threatened to complain to oi t moéel ‘Go ahead and complain, he told prisoner in the penitentiary, I had| them. ‘I'm ranning this place and the never been caught breaking any of manne Rk Devo ee © were ‘being punished. unjustly Just twenty-three days to serve, tak- | wer ing off the usual time for good be-| “Il laid in Wednesday afte ‘oom when the tale bowls began to charged with trying to escape. jfly. They say ony three o: four n Ww 1 had violated a rule in leaving the | them carrying out atl boundaries of the penitentiary to go| Of them | unconscion: to the Island store and make some | the prisoners In the tiers pusned off purchases. A gang of men had been | water buckets and can. in the hope below, but the vuarda were wise the Workhouse and I was out work-| ‘hot out of the way before the ing with it, I persuaded one of the PRIVILEGES OF ALL FOR OF- with me and then I walked off to- FENSE OF ONE. ard , AC ot! | AGT the. BOER, (ODE BERANE 10. Be the “7arden ind seo what he es, When the tim for mak- Workhouse clothes, “LT hadn't gone ten feet over the} hundred men in line and less than me and brought me back. I was thrown into the cooler for two days The men who searched me reported to the Warden that I couldn't have Warden to let th something bi no money with me, Asa matter of | ‘hought they oughin't to do. fact, I had money enough in my atcall along Who made th When they got me In solitary I found “CAM right) he says, ‘Tl take that my privileges had been taken everybody's privileges in this ter tory “Several days later I succeeded in nd you may know that's pretty | getting a letter to,the Commissioner, | hard Punishment when It stops your At It's foolishness to! look into my case, and I was talking | this “drug business is back of with her on the morning sho came! tho MUNOs een of men they have and I've me. He only smiled, but next day | n found that I was in wrong when 1/8 lots of trouble In store for War- den Hayes. mutation time were gone and that I'd haye to serve my full year solltary a bunch of us atarted to raine a racket, We howled and hooted and Warden wi In, “it y we don't ato) seem vo quiet ny _ ut and cane» baci and bows that, nota from Newburgh ana aed By Knights yboay, | 2 ceremonien, with incites * Liha jeans he mess| n went to have! POLICEMAN HERO HURT. Stops Team tn Daring ; Ma One Horse Falle on Him, A runaway team of horses dragging « heavy repair truck of the Metropolitan | Street Raltway Company bore down on | Patroiman hn P. . lige, of the Bast | Sixty-seventh atreet station, at Madison avenue, near Seventy-fourth street, this afternoon. The horses were going south, | jand Dilge ran to meet them, Standing directly in front of the team he made # leap and managed to grab both bridles. He kicked at the front} feet of the horses as they dragged him for fifty feet and finally succeeded “ throwing the off horse. The other horse fell, too, but on Dilge's legs. oIEo. Bystanders dragged out the policeman, | mePaRTLA: —Suddeniy, at her reste who found himselé unable to walk. lila| dence, Ne, 832 Bast 17th ot., om July 8, left ankle appeared to be broken and he| MARY M'PARTLAND, widow of Mugs was taken to Flower Hospital. The) McPartiand t Mery teaim had run from Eighty-sixth street i Gt at when Dilke made bis daring stop. — HOUSE PASSES SALEM BILL. By Hig Majority Votes $200,000 tor| Rellef of Fire Suff WASHINGTON, July 10.—On a 4 aston the House voted 76 to 33 to pars the Senate amendment to the sundry civil BIN appropriating $209,000 to help the Salem re sufferers, Then on a roll call ithe, House Possedthe appropriation 1 of our other stores, The nearest stores in that locality are in the Woolworth Building; 37 Nassau St., cor. Liberty, and 6 Broadway, Prod- uce Exchange Building. ment Calvary Cemetery, Brooklyn, July 7, JOHN Pat. ed husband of Ames, in the 45th year of hit Funeral from his late residence, if Irving Brooklyn, Saturday, July al at £30 A, M, sharp, then te Church, Interment Cal On July veloved sy Jumps Five Stories to Death. yecial to The Erening Wortd,) MOBILE, Ala, July 10.—Leaving a note, saying he had lost his mind worry- ing over hin busines, John J. Gragard of |New Orleans, committed suicide tht by jumping from the fifth y of the Cawthon Hotel. Gragard was a member of the bankrupt frim of Edward Carriers and Company and was well the Sout Queens County. N.Y. on Sunday. 12, 1914, at 2 o'clock tn the Thisuaras Dou, a eat ‘oat ‘aon t | JOLLY Crowd, Music, Dancing, 1 Eats and a Combination Packa: le of oo Sweets are the makings of a iy Ss i, Pa pruntay) Meare oe Sie. ree al put up for you, eac ly wr OF aeeat ee ere andis atteched for carrying. ‘There are 8 come binatione--all different. ree ery Coram mt ioe oceiaten, cial for Friday, J July seth 7 porti FOUND BOX Reta for Saturday, Siar 110i b RUT TAR Bala 'ctrota and ate a; ApRORTE! int eott, ‘chews and sae | CHOCOLATE © selected Dal our |] | very enect | CHARGE MILK CHOCOLATE COVE ED. cO- fain ad si at ra Boga | hh Vnsrented POUND Box 4y al imaate DVERED Ji e, sour FRESH HAR PDERIUIKS —Juet Vt oe, tlt raw o naontt 7 9, ORT add gua rani TROW & NASSAU ST. New 1 D: ! wi a of? ay Stave "nee path th Cie 1 male Been? 4 od "Tae apecitied weight includes the container in each i Hf,