The evening world. Newspaper, July 11, 1914, Page 2

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WEN PLE NOVEL TEE swar oe 9 rehash to-day that the prosecu- i oy 3 on Person Inside House and Charges : ee ete, aac Plot to Hide Facts. to make a statement that will $ @ither free his wife or render impos- Ge her prosecution for a crime (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) 4 be Ag sed ae organ et HEMPSTEAD, N. Y., July 11.—Mrs. Jennie Duryea, mother of Y; Rave dbusiad ts story of the mur- | Mrs. Louise Bailey, who was shot to death in the office of Dr. Edwitr Car- told by Dr. Carman and mem- of hie family. maade a big mistake in unhesi- yt i Bg 3 E tt of June 30 and | ' I i tically unlimited free- i i H : if f az i i ai i i! ize f f t i § f a i! t iy cy i be absolutely pri- only Mr. Smith, hie tholde the solution of the criminal in hie hand, and that It be best for every ene that that ha to be knows. KNEW DOCTOR WOMAN WERE THERE? fe not understood by the prose. how the shot that killed Mrs. ould have been fired by any g + rf H I de f ; e i patients were in the resep- before Mrs. Bailey was fute the doctor's office. It ts the District-Attorney to fig- 7 person, except some the Carman home, could have Goctor was in his foom if a g how the particular time. b fat wes ey TF from the ij person tor the inside could have known || aight Gon of the mystery. CALLING OF POLICE. Gestimony of various witnesses, in: @tading Dr. Carman himself, this in: hat as well as Bhim when she could get a trolley ca ‘When at bis watch. It was then cithe @ quarter before 8 or a quarter aft ‘They realize that accepting his version of the all the members of and action for after the tragedy. mistake with the ve been unable to ith which Mrs. Bal- fon the time of the . Carman and they juestion his version beginning to end. shot did not come window, but wae peint by a person office through a entrance, has been advanced, be discounted by are powder marks tation on the end case alongaide the ‘ mind Mr. Smith hes ‘arranged the questions he the physician, and either provoke the answer Daatriot-Attorney seeks or make ‘Dr. Carman's desire to conceal it the doctor teatified of both windows of drawn dows. Both tace curtains, and house could have Bo way to eee into the the outside, No one could @ close enough watch on treet side to have @octor was in his office, had watched on the west the doctor to enter his office, ‘all probability he or she would been seen. There is no window rear. ‘The prosecution asks, If no one on @utaide knew the doctor was in effce, or who was with him, who than those in the reception ‘ @eom? Is is bore that s dictograpb figure prominently in @ solu- SNTERVAL FROM SHOOTING TO Upen one matter District-Attorney @enith is particularly keen for infor- ation. This is the interval between @Re shooting of Mra, Bailey and the @etifcation which was sent to the Figured with reference to the tervas is trom three-quarters of an te an bour and a quarter. George , Who was in the waiting room when Mrs. Bailey was killed, testified e could fix the time the whot was fired citber fifteen or Gwenty minutes after his arrival at he office at 7.30 o'clock. Dr, Car- man’s evidence before Coroner Nor- @om wes that Mrs. Bailey had asked Oe Mompstead and that he had looked tragedy. Throughout the interview she referred “Lulu,” the family pet name for her. ness stand in Coroner Norton's in- quest at Freeport on Monday ebe has been in such a state of mental de preasion that none but County offi- Cials and intimate friends have been allowed to eee her. ‘The Bailey home at Hempstead is a pretty place and comfortable, Along a fence that runs back from the street on the right hand side there are great trailing bushes of the rambler, laden with bloom. Other shrubs and young trees give the place an air of refinement and good taste. It showed the hand of a woman—the hand that is now still in death, Now and then the reporter caught glimpees of « slender girlish figure in deeg black who passed quietly through the hallway or adjoining rooms, Fin- ally Mra. Duryea called the git! in and passed her strong arm protectingly about the slight shoulders, “This is our Madeline, my daugh- ter’s little girl,” she said. Madeline is seventeen years old. Her face reminds one of an old medallion, the features being so perfectly mould- ed. Her dark hair fell about her head and the dark eyes looked at one with an expression wistful and appealing. Mrs, Duryea is more than sixty years old. Her face is kind and her manner charming. She bas no feel- ing of hatred toward the woman ac- cused of killing her daughter. Hers are only sentiments of pity. She has studied the case with an acuteness that ts astonishing, and the District- Attorney bas held several conversa- tions with her that have renewed bis vigor and interest in the case, Mrs. Duryea has one great desire, and that is to see Mra. Carman face to face and book at her with those “mother eyes” for only a few brief moments. “Oh, if I could,” sald Mre, Duryea, ——$—_—_— phone rang with the news he looked at the clock and it was on the stroke of 9. Thus is the interval established and District-Attorney Smith wants to know what went on in the Carman home in that interval, three-quarters of an hour or an hour and a quarter. Testimony before the Coroner showed Dr. Carman sent for bis col- league, Dr. Runcle, and his close friend, Theodore Bedell, the black- smith, immediately after the murder, Indeed, aa Archie Post, who was in the waiting room with Golder when the shooting occurred, could not find Bedell, Dr, Carman himself went out and journeyed two blocks from his bouse to find him. The District-Attorney cannot understand why there should have been thie y In summoning the police when a eo! one.” @ real from and persone one outside. authorities. Batley, q@tunned by the WANTS TO her. I cannot help heartl town to view ghe look like?” continued: and mother. everybody. only by sight. &@ dosen words SOME QUESTIONS DR. CARMAN WILL BE ASKED, It doesn’t seem that Dr. Carman did any of the things that he might be supposed to do in such a crisis. Usually a man would run from such ® scene with calls for help, and an immediate impulse to rouse the police to Instant action. But bere is a long period of silence, one may call it, in the Carman home witb a dead wom- an, @ strange dead woman, so Dr. Carman says, upon a couch and notb- ing to account for It except the crash of a shattered window pane and the sharp ring of a pistol shot In the dark. ‘What did Dr. Carman do after the shooting? What did Mrs, Carman do? What did the other members of the household, Mrs, Conklin and Celia Coleman, the colored maid, do? What did Dr. Runcie and Bedell do? And what did they say? This is what Dis. trict-Attorney Smith wants Dr, Car- man to tell him. OTHERS OF THE HOUSEHOLD TO BE QUESTIONED. Indeed all the members of the Car- man household are in a fair way to be put upon the rack by Mr. Smith, Mra. Powell, sister of Mra, Carman, and Cella Coleman, the maid, were at the inquest, and each in her wave evidence of the strain of answering the questions the District-Attorney asked, Mrs. Powell by a tenseneas of voice only equalled by that of Mrs, Carman, and Cella Coleman by an un- expected outburst of tears. And all the time the mai testifying Dr, Carman, from h at about fifteen feet from her, scarcely took his eyes from her worried face, The maid, who is being kept under the eyes of the county authorities is @ valuable witness, is thought to know more than her fene- ghe divul uring verbal iar. Smith at the inquest, thing’ eye t it off. ployed. things. Carman’ BELIEVES “I believe r r ing with : ! MAKE DR. CARMAN TELL MORE, SAYS MOTHER OF MRS. BAILEY Mrs. Duryea Believes Daughter Was Shot by man at Freeport on the evening of June 30, talked with an Evening World reporter about her impressions and deductions concerning the Since Mrs. Duryea was on the wit with her eyes shining in their earnest- ness; “I could then tell whether my ideas are right or wrong, whether she ig the cruel, beartieas womaa I con- estve her to be or @ falsely accused Mre. Duryea'e theory ie that Mrs. Carman came down the rear etalre and ehet her daughter from loor leading into the office the kitehen passageway. After that, she believes, the doctor plans to throw suspicion to some her theory, they broke the window and propped up the soreen. Duryea feels that the truth, if it ever comes out, must be tern from Dr. Carman by the police While Mrs, Duryea was talking Mr. the husband of the slain ‘woman, sat nearby. once or twice and then only to em- phasise eome remark made by the mother of his dead wife. He is atill hearted and cheerful. Everybody atead knew and loved hor. to every little darky in the town, “[ read of the sympathy for the Nttle Carman girl. How do they feel for our two motherless children? “My daughtcs knew Dr. Carman “Lulu was not fll. times a alight puffiness under the that I thought might indicate kidney trouble and I had asked her to pee @ doctor but she invariably put on her husban tionte? A destor ie just like a min- ister, Felke open their hearts te beth. Just to think ef thie jealous to her daughter as began the ‘Then, joerding to Mra. He spoke only terrible shock. Mrs, Duryea’s first words were about the Carman housemaid, Celia Coleman, who was a pitiable object on the witness stand. “I know little about courts and witnesses,” said Mre. Duryea, “but 1 felt all the while that Cella Coleman was on the stand that she had been told what to say. MAS. CARMAN FACE TO FACE. “] would ike to see Mre. Carman. I want to just see her face and steady I could tell then whether she was guilty or not. I would like te go to the jail at Mineola and see her if the District-Attorney would allow me. feeling that she is or she would have written to us and expressed some sympathy for me and mine, She was here in my daughter's dead body; why didn't she come and see us? If she were an innocent woman I think she would have, What does When told about Mrs. Carman's personal appearance, Mrs. Duryea “Oh, she is eo different from my poor girl, our ‘little mother,’ as they called her. She was no taller or big- ger than Madeline here. “My daughter was & pure woman She was ever light She knew in Hemp- She spoke She had never spoken to him. She saw him when he called to see Mr. Kimball who was suffering from paralysis, and I recall on one occasion she said: ‘I rather admire Dr, Carman. looks like a@ man who knew some- She had some- “Somehow she didn't care to call on the old physician we have em- I don't know why, but you know women are funny about these When she left us that morn- @ had no idea of calling at Dr. ‘o, I know that. DAUGHTER WAS TAKEN SUDDENLY '!LL. “I feel in my heart that.she must have been taken suddenly ill with a weakness while riding home and knowing Dr. Carman to be in Free- port, got off and went to his office. It ts @ long ride from Rockville Cen- tre, where she was visiting Mre. Gra- beau, and she was weak from having @aten but little. Or. Carman when he says he didn't know her, He honest when he sent for Mr. jell to identify her. “If Mrs. Carman shot her it was any other jan who had been in the doo- office at the time. She has she then use a dicstegraph to spy EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 11, 19 THE WOMAN'S LAW omance of a New York Gi terce Battle ainst First Photograph of Woman Slain in Carman’s Office : $ 3 b 4 3 MRS. LOUISE BAILEY. Ever Printed 9490 94.4959305-00000 woman listenening to their cons fidences! It would not have been 0 bad had she listened to one ousy against all of her sex. “My daughter is dead, but Mrs. Carman to-night ts worse off than if whe were dead. I feel that I should be happier than, that other mother in Freeport who'ls in her bed, alck| Victed her from a terrible fear. “I have been able to picture the terrible affair in my mind because I have a friend who has been a great comfort to me in my sorrow. Bhe has been a patient of Dr. Carman for more than a dozen years, She hus told me of a back stairway which leads from the upper floor to an entry just outside the doctor's office. TOLD HOW THE SHOOTING MIGHT HAVE OCCURRED. “She was the first one to give me the idea of how the shooting may have occurred. She has knowf the doctor and his family intimately and said to me: ‘Mra. Duryea, I hate to say this, but I must, I feel that your daugh- ter was shot by somebody in the hous ‘The person came down the bac irs and fired the shot through the doorway leading to the back ame to feel the same way, How do we know the window was broken from the outside? Why wasn't that all a clever plan to create false sus- picion? Why was there so much glass on the crowd outside? What ‘was happening in that office between the time my girl was shot and the time the Coroner was notified? Who can tell how the furniture was ar- ranged at the time sho fell with a bullet in her poor little body? nd tell me why the authorities allowed the doctor to travel all over the country on the day following the shooting? Why was he not arrested as a material witness and kept from his wife? Why were they not kept under strict espoinage? “1 feel that the pistol which was used will never be found. Perhaps Dr. Carman wight tell of its where- abouts. It miay be in some of the marsh land around Freeport—any- where within the radius u: @ dozen miles, ‘The person who can tell all about my hter’s death is Dr, Carman. He knows everything. He could clear away all this mys- would. There was a revolver and ind that held and wey didn’t Per- hi nized it. “They have insinuated that my girl was lying down when she was shot. How could this have been if the bullet entered her back. They have also told of her going to road houses and drinking. These are all cruel lies, WHY HASN'T THE AUTHORITIES ASKED FOR DRES8? “Tell me why the authorities have not asked for the possession of the dress. my daughter wore that night? I have not seen it since. I couldn't look at ft, but it shows that the bullets went in just back of the right arm. It is a mute accuser. It tells a etory. and atill the authori- thes do not ask for It, but keep her hand-bag, which contains a few of her personal effects, some money and a check which did not belong to her, but to a friend who asked her to have it cashed. Explain it to me,” The door bell rang and the ser- vant let in District-Attorney Smith. He went into an adjoining room and entered into conversation with Mr. Balley. The son, a manly lad still in his teens, also entered 1 Foor where the District-Attorney sat. Buddenly he was heard to say to official: “Do you think my mother where the @octor said she dia ‘ 1| What a terrib! she was shot?” Mr. Smith's reply could not be heard. “I feel a real sympathy for the lit- daughter of Mrs. Carman, who wi put om the stand to testify against her mother,” said Mrs, Dur- yea, “It did not seem to me to be Revere ary, T also feel a di pity for that mot! It is an awful position or not, If is found guilty by a 8 guilty and not oom crime will never leave her peace. If she should be innocent she has been most cruelly wronged. And the breaking down of the mother might perhaps be lally knowledge has. due to som position is hers, 1 know how her mother’s heart is torn. She was a party to the installing of the dictograph. “Why did Mra. Carman tear it out the night after the shooting? Before the dictograph was found I felt that my daughter had been shot by some Jealous husband who sought the | of the doctor, but when the apparat was discovered I felt then that it the doctor's wife who had fired fatal shot. “I do not believe she fired to kill Lulu, She did not know my daughter, and hence could not feel any jealousy toward her. She shot blindly into the room to frighten the husband. “It {a the doctor who must tell what happened that terrible night. He alone can let light in on this awful crime. He must do it It must be dragged from his lips.” NEVADA, NEWEST GIANT BATTLESHIP, TAKES THE WATER Despite “Dry” Order in Navy, Vessel Gets Usual Cham- pagne Splash at Launching. QUINCY, Mass., July 11,—Despite Secretary Daniel's “dry” order of the Navy, the old custom of breaking a bottle or champagne over & new vessel'‘a bow prevailed bere to-day when the wiant Nevada, the Navy's | somebod latest superdreadnought, water for the first time, In the presence of Gov, Tasker L. Oddie, Senator and Mra. Key Pitt- man, and Mrs. Newlands, wife of Senator Newlands, oll of Nevada, Secretary of the Navy Daniels and Assistant Secretary Roosevelt, Ele: nor Ann Siebert, of Reno, ten-year- old niece of Ni Governor, christened the battleship as it slid down the massive ways, Turbine engines, with of] as fu will furnish the motive power for the latest fighter. The Nevada has a length over all of 583 feet, beam 95 feet and mean draft of 28 feet% feet, and her esti- mated speed is 20% knots an hour. The arrangement of the main bat tery of ten 14-inch guns will be dif- ferent from that on any other Amert- can battleship. Two turrets will carry two guns each and two others will have three guns each, an arrange- ment which it thought will give a concentration of fire superior to that of the five two-gun turrets exempli- fied in the New York and the Texas. The weight of armor is greater than that carried by any ship pre- Viously built for the avy. ( . i took the e {TWO TANGOERS = jet ‘an-Made Rules SHOT IN RIVALRY Police Find Man With Three Bullets in Him Above Columbia Cafe. ONE DROPS IN STREET. Fire Alarm Sent In to Misi Officers Adds to Ex- citement. Charies Bottran of No. 42 Jay street and James Baxton, alias John Burns, ef No, 801 Baltic street, Brooklyn, were held without bail in Centre Street Potice Court to-day to await the death or recovery of youth named John C. Borst, who is in Hud- son Street Hospital with three buiiet wounds in his groin and abdomen. Borst and James H. Oliver of No, 336 Pearl street were shot early to-day at @ dance in the Columbia Cafe, No. 107 Greenwich street, and Detectives Gheridan and Reynolds say Bettran fired the shots. ‘The ball at Columbia Cafe was held by the Robert Kelly Association for the purpose of raising money for one ‘Thomas Burns, who is in the Tombs awaiting trial for grand larceny. It was attended by a large crowd, in- cluding several men who are familiar with the inside of prisons. Bettran was there with his eighteen- year-old wife, Josephine, who Is con- sidered the best “spleler” in the Firat Assembly District. Borst is an pert in the new dances, and it wasn't long before he and the youthful Mra. Bettran were continual partners. Bettran fumed and raged, but took fo action until after midnight when Mrs, Bettran and Borst injected a lot of original movements and pos- tures into the tango. The angry hus- band threw his wife downstairs and started to drag her to the street. Borat interfered and there was a fight, which was stopped by friends of both. Then Bettran put his wife on a car and took her to their home in Jay street. Leaving her there he hurried down to the Columbia cafe and invaded the dance. According to the detecti he be- @an sbooting as soon as he saw Borst. His alm was géod in general, but one bullet went wide and struck Oliver in the leg. The popping of hig revolver resounded with many echoes among the tall bulldings of the neighborhood. Policeman Reichert of the Green- wich street station heard the shots and saw @ man dash out of the cafe. He gave chase and, after a five-block race, during which be fired several shots at the fleeing man, the latter surrendered. He said he was John Burns, twenty-four, of No. 891 Baltic street, Brooklyn, and later denied kinship to the beneficiary of the dance, He was taken to the atation. Acting Captain Tunney was notified and with a squad of detectives and the police reserves he burried to the cafe, ‘The polis rushed In to find every- bocy dancing as though nothing had occurred. Ali eaid there had been no shooting—probably a fuse on the ele- vated had blown out. However, Tun- ney saw a trail of blood and followed it out of the dance hall and up stairs. In a room there he found several merrymakers surrounding the wound- ed Borst, Despite his insistence that he was ouffering from malaria, an ambulance was called and Dr, Valen- tine took him to the hospital, ‘Among those who fled from the cafe were the wounded Oliver and his wife, ‘Annie, and @ cousin, They started up Greenwich str. -t, but at Cortlandt street Oliver collapsed. There is a fire alarm box at this point, and while nearly all the police in the borhood thronged the cafe, y turned in a fire alarm. The lice say Oliver’e cousin probably fd it to draw the police fru. the lo. More wild excitement, for in a few minutes the land and water vicinity held four engine companies, two truck companies, & water tower, two fire. boats, a boat tender, Deputy Chiet Binns and two battalion chiefs. An ambulance had joined in the fire call ‘and it was used to take Oliver to the hospital, where he was placed under quard. OES MUST PAY FOR STOLEN LOVE. Sheriff's Jary to Fix Damages in Allenation § Supreme Court Justice Glegericch to- day signed an order sending the $25,000 tion of affections sult. brought Mra, Elizabeth Armatrong against Abbott of the Commonwealth on Beacon Hill in Boston, to a jury here to assess the amount eu due the plaintife, nt has not appeared in answer to the allowed by law. eae VIENNA, Austria, July City Counell to-day voted an appro- ARMY OF POLE AT UNION SQUARE FOR FORBALL'S BELLE} MARHSIS WET (Continued from First Page) . reviled, but you must grin and bear it. ‘There must be no violence tf we heip it.” POLICE INSTRUCTED TO BE PATIENT. And the police obeyed the order. Practically the entire force of the city had been notified last night to bold themeeives and their night sticks ready for instant descent on Union Square. It was a riot order and it is said to have been the only time such a command was issued except after actual violence had oc- curred. But Berkman and the lesser leaders of the meeting had determined to avoid trouble, apparently, if that were possible. They had abandoned their parade at police behest and they had not tried to display the ashes of their comrades or the fu- neral urn designed especially for the occasion. That remained at the of- fices of Mother Barth, No, 74 West One Hundred and Nineteenth street, where Adolf Wolf, the sculptor, had brought it in the morning. The speakers made themselves heard with difficulty. Two other meetings, one a single tax and the other an anti-socialist, divided the attention of the crowd and cheers for one speaker sometimes drowned the words of another. Then too the aqueduct shaft was only about fifty feet back of the Berkman ros- trom and tho roar of the work there frequently made the voices of the speaker inaudible. Becky Edelson and Charles W. Plunkitt spoke in the same vein as Berkman, Leenard Abbott also spoke, but his words were not im- passtoned nor incendiary. Becky said it was time for the capitalists to learn that “when they use machine guns we'll use dynamite," and she counselled the rowd to use “vriolene when you have the power and have enough of it.” Plunkitt said that he favored vio- lence, declaring? “Our oppressors have the army, they have the navy and they have bullets for us, but we have dynamito for them,” Police Commiasioner Rotert E. Hopkins of Tarrytown, where the Anarchists were driven out of town and where ten are still to be tried, took notes of the speeches, Including that of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, who said the Industelal Workers of the World who formerly had opposed Berkman and his followers were now with him heart and soul. After her speech the band played Chopin's “Funeral March" and a dirge which, Berkman announced, had been com- posed for the occasiyn by Becky Edelsohn. There was no disorder except a fist fight between two men each of whom | admitted after the police had grabbed him that he had been hasty and apologized. The police let them go. Inspector Schmittberger with In- spectors Morris and Cahalane, twelve captains, fifty lieutenants and 700 po- Hcemen, arrived at Union Square a little before noon. They at once cleared the park, driving away the occupants of benches and imme- diately establishing two cordons of police, one around the park proper and the other encircling the territory bounded by Fourteenth street, Broad- way, Seventeenth street and Fourth avenue. There were some 200 police- | men not thus employed and they took seats on the park benches. Other| policemen were in reserve at nearby | stations, Inspector Schmittberger oc- | cupled the cottage at the north end/ of the park where a telephone wire had been installed direct into Com- missioner Woods's office in Police Headquarters, ‘The appearance of the police was the slagnl for a crowd to gather and within a few moments between 7,000 and 8,000 persons, mostly office workers of the neighborhood whose half-holiday began at noon, had as- sembled in the plaza north of the park. Becky Edelsohn was the first of the “Reds to arrive. She was dressed entirely in black except for scarlet! stockings which flashed from under her skirts at each step. With her were two men carrying @ big packing case and, suspecting that the box might contain the proscribed urn of ashes, Inspector Morris peered lato {it before he allowed it to be put in place, Then Becky mounted it and exhorted the crowd to be patient and orderly. Several floral pieces were carried in- to the plaza, There were two big wreaths of red carnations, two boxes of the same flowers and @ big black triangular wreath on which was picked out in red letters the declara- tion: “You did not die in vain.” And there was also @ flaming torch of flowers from the Mother Earth As- STORSTAD BLAME FORLOS OF LUNE WITH 000 NES Commission Finds Empress of Ireland Was Sunk Through Collier's Change of Course. QUEBEC, July 1i—The ccfiler Storstad te held to blame fur the Eim- Dress of Ireland disaster in the finé- Inge of the wreck commission, handed down to-day, The commission dolds that the dis- aster was due to the Storstags change of course, ordered by the third officer without instructions from the first officer, who was in charge of the collier at the time, The Empress of Ireland was eunk in the St. Lawrence on May 39, with @ loss of more than one thoussad lives, ‘The coliter’s third officer found re- sponsible is Alfred Tuftenes, He was on the bridge when the orash curred, ' ‘The report found that there was ae lack of discipline on board the Bu- press and that the Empress complied with all the regulations regarding boat equipment, watertight doors, &c. To prevent such loss of Itfe in the future the commission made these suggestions: “First. That in foggy weather all watertight doors and port holes below the top of the watertight bulkheads be closed. Preferably they should be closed all the time between sunset and sunrise. “Second. That it might be desirable to consider whether rafts could net be placed in such a position on the upper deck that they would float utomati- cally on the water as the ship sank.” packing box platform and began harangue the crowd. ‘ag Sho met with little euccess, hew- | ever. Frank Urban appeared sit® her at the east end of the plese delegate and announced himself as a Peace of the International pea Forum, “organ to antagonise socialienm, anarchy and the Industrial Workers of the World.” He had his packing box, which he used for a platform, adorned with two American Gags, and in the absence of Berkman the other leaders whom they come to see and hear, the flocked to Urban’s side of the plaza. “I was a Socialist and an Anarobiet for fifteen year: shouted Urban, “and 1 am well qualified to talk.” Then he launched into a tirade against Berkman, anaroby, socialiem, the I. W. W. and everyth: which he considered contrary law and order. The crowd cheered, Becky and Plunkitt watched with a crestfallen air as their crowd was drawn away from them. The realized that if Urban continued his rival meeting he would be an sure source of trouble later, but they did not cure to interfere with him, since his remarks were not in viola- tion of the right of free s . Although a great many etill listened to Urban, most of the crowd deserted him when Berkman arrived. This was a little after 1 o'clock. He came down Broadway, alone, except for a chauffeur, in a big red tourin, ‘The band, which sounded a like one of those little German bands which still play in Brooklyn streets, struck up “The Marselliaise,” and Berkman looked a little disappointed that they didn’t play the “Conuquer- ing Hero.” However, he stood majestically at one side, acknowledging the applusee while little Becky Edelsohn, Plunkitt and some of the others hauled more boxes beside the packing case, dec- orated the maas with red and black flags and made a fitting platform for their leader, It didn't matter to Berkman that he had ridden the long miles downtown in a touring ear while most of his devoted followers had walked. And it didn't seem to matter to them. They w faithful, Eleanor Fitzgerald and “Big Dave" Sullivan, the college Anarchist, sup- ported Louise Berger, half sister of Hanson, in whose flat at No, 1626 Lexington avenue the explosion took place. She seemed on the point of collapse. Do You Suffer Even Though You Diet? MAN-A-GEAWATER ‘The Natural Mineral 6 (Not a Laxative. te Nature i promoti 4, = events, aa ity, Sore saat a o> ge eres sea CH. ae, and Druggists. and DIED. M’CARTHY.—MARY A. (neo Mertas), dearly beloved wife ef James ©. MeOar thy, and mother of Charles, Frank, Elisabeth, May and Agnes, ser merly of the Seventh Ward. Funeral on Monday, July 28, at 9,80 A. M., from her late residence, 1012 West Farms road, Bronx, near Simpson st. subway station; thence to @t, Jehe Chrysostom’s Church, where @ seleme nigh mane will be offered for the happy repose of her soul, Interment Calvary Cometery. QMITH.—On July 9, 1914. BUGENTR oe. RAYE, beloved wife of Alezander @ sociation and this, with the triangular jeces, Becky Edelsohn, with the Rep of George Plunkitt, next of the “Reds” to arrive, dragged onte their Smith. Funerel services at ber residence, sin Garfield “eves Richinend “Seat, Queens County, NM, ¥., Gunéey. Tae"te14. at & esieeh ie the etterune

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