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‘Phe indictmont was not read. M entered a plea of not gullts eave to withdraw in two weeks. “PAdout bali, Mr. District-Attorney?” ‘qeéried the Court. “Task that bail be fixed at $20,000,” Said Mr. Srrith. “That will be satisfactory if given D7 & surety company or two property _ Owners,” waid Justice Van Sicton. Mr. Levy announced that the bonds “Nad been signed by Smith Cox and Bhat Randall, residents of Freeport “and neighbors of Mra. Carman. The court approved the bond and Mrs. swore to the truth of her tement that she would surrender If Into custody at the command Of the court. ’ Carman, accompanied by Mr. left the courtroom by the side @oor and descended to an under- @POURA passage Wetween the court- house and the Jail’ There, out of @ight of the curtous crowd Mrs. Car- Man almost collapsed. Mr. Levy Gesieted her across to the jail where they met Dr. Carman who supported her to the room she had occupied as a Prisoner. Her suitcase was packed And all was in readiness for her de- & parture. CAN'T UNDERSTAND WHY 8HE WAS INDICTED. Before her arraignment Mra. Car- man promised she would make a Siatement to the reporters. But her Mervous breakdown precluded that al In a broken voice she ean 1 ean say is that | don't understand yet why the Grand dury refused to hear me. Here ie the second plea | made te them yesterday.” ‘The statement was written on a nid sistant, Mr. Weeks, will look after developments of the case. w At noon after notifying Mra. Carma: with his infectious laugh. danced @ two-step.” THEN TO FARM. leave them just now. As soon as can get awn: our daughter ave going to Delaware Water Gap for a rest of a couple of weeks or more. From there we may go to our farm in New Jeracy. “Take it from me,” Dr. Carman went on, “this man Smith, the Dis- trict-Attorney, couldn't be elected the showing he made tn thin case.” Diatrict-Attorney Smith thinks hie case against Mrs. Carman was weak- ened by hia inability to get hold of Mrs. Variance, the middle-aged trained nurse who was slapped in the face by Mrs. Carman in the doc- tor’s office shortly before the dicto- graph was installed. Mre, Variance dodged the Grand Jury subpoena servers, but it Is sald she was seen at her home in Bedford last night. fled, that Mrs. Benjamin Duryea of Henry street, Hempstead, who is no kin of the family of Mrs, Bailey, was @ witness before the Grand Jury yes- terday. She is said to have testified that she and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Batley, and Dr. and Mra, Car- man were on a yachting trip on Hempstead Bay two years ago. SAYS THERE 18 NO USE IN DE- NYING THE STORY. nr ouble sheet of note paper in Mrs. Carman’s smooth, diminutive band. 1 reads as follows: July 15th. To the Grand Jury—My lawyer tells me you have refused my petl- tion to tell my story before you. T cannot understand this, It seems that you cannot be eo cruel as to refuse mo permission to go before you and tell all that I know. I don't want sympathy, but merely justice, and I cannot be- Neve you can be eo unjust as to hear only one side and refuse me permission to truthfully tell you all that I know. ‘Won't you please be fair and let me make _ my statement? FLORENCE A. CARMAN. ‘The plea was returned to her, she 2 fhe expressed the belief that if been allowed to talk to the Jury no indictment would be pes eR aren oo abe had Grand found. GOES iy A MOTOR CAR TO HER OLD HOME. Mra, Carman left the jail at 8 @elock, In the motor car with he were her husband, Mr. Randall and Mr. Cox, her bondemen, and Mre. Cox. Mr. Levy said that the party would not go direct to Freeport, but ‘would take a long ride through the country. His statement was designed te throw the reporters off the track, ee it is known Mra, Carman desires to return to her home to see her Gaughter and her mother, who {se sick tm bed, and her aged father. Mr. Randall is a wealthy resident of Freeport and a close friend of Dr. Carman. Mr. Cox liv the street from the Carmans. He is the Republican leader of Nassau County, former President of Freeport Villiage and former Chairman of the Board of Supe visors. CALLED ON TO GIVE UP MAID'S EFFECTS. _ 4s Dr. Carman and his wife were Jeaving the jail they were banded a letter from the District-Attorney Commanding them to turn over to Phineas Seaman, county detective and & private detective, all the personal effects of Celia Coleman, the colored @ervant. This indicates that Mr. 5 > Smith will keep the Coleman girl un- 2) «ss @6 surveiiiance until the trial. a), Dr. Carman boasted before his wife z ‘Was arraigned this afternoon that he could have furnished $1,000,000 bail. Offers of help, he said, poured in on him from all over Long Island. District-Attorney Smith, tired out from day and night work on the case, aid he would leave as soon as pos- sible for a rest in the Pennsylvania mountains with Sheriff Pettit. In his q Oh, You Straw Ride! 3 fike to hunt, fish, bathe and swim— To satisfy ‘most every whim; » But whes the moon is shining bright, A Mike to straw-ride of a night. ‘And don’t you think | know not where 3 One may go for sport so rarel— “Summer Resort” Ads. show the way thousands of places to rest and play. p the Big Display of World the use in denying such askel Dr, Carman, when this matter was called to his atten- tion. “Neither my wife nor I knew Mrs. Bailey. We were never on the yachting trip alleged to have been described by Mrs. Duryea. But my wite and I know Mr. and Mrs. Ben- jamin Dury: About @ year ago Mr, and Mrs, Duryea and their daughter Florence planned to pay a visit to my farm in New Jersey but the project fell through.” Another report current in Minool is that the latest statement of Cella alleges Coleman, the colored maid, that when Mrs. Ca Kitchen of her home right after the shooting she had an object in her right hand concealed under her left “How is your wife? Dr, Carman asked as he was leaving the jail rd the “pened that had been fected for bi “ed the doctor, “We just GOING FIRST TO WATER GAP, “I have two very sick patients,” continued the doctor, “and I can't, Minority my wife and I and) dog-éatcher in this community after | It was reported to-day, but not vert- | T owe * $306,000,000 SUIT AGAINST DIRECTORS OF NEWHAVEN ROAD rr Court to Appoint Rece:ver To Prosecute Claims, MELLEN IS ONE NAMED. Others Are William Rockefel- | ler, Robert Taft and the Estate of J. P. Morgan. (Special to The Rvening World.) BOSTON, July 17.—The appoint- ment of a receiver, special master j OF other official to prosecute claims aggregating $806,000,000 against de- fendant directors and directors’ « of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad is asked in a sult filed in the Supreme Court to- day. The action is brought by Whip- ple, Sears & Ogden, representing minority stockholders of the com- pany, ‘The suit is entered for Ralph 8. Bartlett and other trustees under the will of Olea Bull Vaughan, late of West Lebanon, Me., owner of fifty shares of the capital stock of the company, Mra, Vaughan was a daughter of Ole Bull, the famous violinist. Judge Braley issued a fotice returnable next Friday for the defendant to show cause why a re- colver should not be appointed. The defendants, who include va- rious directors since 1903 and estates of deceased directors, are William Rockefeller, Charles F. Brooker, Will- lam Skinner, D. Newton Barney, Robert W. Taft, Charles 8. Melle: James 8. Elton, James 8. Heming- way, A. Heaton Robertson, Frederick . Brews' Heory K. McHarg, John T. Pratt, the estate of J. P. Morgan, the estate of Edwin Milner, the es- tate of I. De Ver Warner, the estate of Amory A. Lawrence and directo! elbow. The girl did not see the ob- Ject and could not say that it was a revolver, MRB6. BAILEY’S FAMILY HOLD NO RESENTMENT. ‘The family of the slain woman feel no resentment toward Mra. Carman. They take the ground that she was insane when she fired the shot that ended the life of an innocent and un- suspecting woman. But they feel that in Justice to the good name of Mrs. Bailey, which has been dragged through the mire of scandal and gos- slp, Mrs. Carman should tell the true of the slain woman, to-day—*ju tlee to Mrs. Carman and justice to the memory of my little wife.” “I have nothing to say about the indictment and have no criticism of the authorities to offer, The District- Attorney bad to contend against great obstacles, It te creditable to him that in the face of pressure and influence he stuck to his duty and proved to the Grand Jury that Mrs. Carman killed my wife. jut until thie tragedy oc- ered | had supposed that mur- der le murder. | had believed, up to thie time, that if a person, diet graph that aroused hie or her Jealous rage should pick up a re- walk with It a distance of thirty er forty yards, break a window In order to get better alm and fire the weapen at another presen with fatal reeuite, a mur- der might reasonably be eus- pected. But it appeare te be man- jughter.” There ure rumors in Nassau County that between now and the Supreme Court term next October the District- Attorney will continue to obtain evi- dence and that he will submit the case to another Grand Jury in the hope of getting an indictment for murder in the first degree. But the friends of the Carman family maintain that the District-Attorney has gathered all the witnesses he can get and that it will be impossible for him to make out @ stronger case than that which he pre- sented to the Grand Jury yesterday, 1¢ is generally believed in N. sau County that Mre. Carman will be ed b: se ees called unwrit- ted ind manslaughter and cocnpe wi email fine, degree the minimum punishment is a fine of $1,000 and the maximum fif- teen years in prison, —————>—_— “LIMIT FOR WHITE SLAVER. Five to Ten Yei Frede Carfaro, the first of the gang of eleven men and a woman char nteen-year-old ler uf No. Bronx, Jone: received the limi day ‘sent him to sing ‘Bing fo Resort” Ads. Te-Day! Gibb eh tl Sing Stas|} avers, who pleaded to the charge of 1073, Washington from County Judge n five years nor more than Twombly, Miller and Brush. In addition the plaintiffs name John L. Billard, George F. Baker, T. Do- Witt Cuyler, Edward Milligan, F. T. Maxwell, Theodore N. Vail, 8. W. Winslow, Laurence Minot, Samuel Rea, Morton F. Plant, De Ver H. ‘Warner, John T. Pratt, Howard El- lott, James L. Richards, W. M. Crane, A. T. Hadley and J, H. Hustis as having been directors since 1909, but, as to whether their failure to cause the road t tion suit hae account of negligence of fiduciary duty, the plaintiffs state that they are not advised and make no specific avermen' The bill of complaint declares that the defendants on account of breach Stockholders Ask Ali | —_ HE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1914. Niece Whose: Testimony Helped Mrs. Carman Before Grand Jury ELOPING COUPLE HERE ~WATTOTEL OTE AS SHELEAVES LER Dorothy Humphrey Wil! In- troduce Self to Parent as Mrs. Ireland. ee eee SAYS JILTED SUITOR THREATENED TO KILL. greemcenees He Denies It, But Must Give Bond to Keep the Peace. Kighteon-year-old Haxel Hoadley, A pretty stenographer of No. 199 Himrod street, Brooklyn, jilted Ed- ward Haggerty, thirty-seven, of New Rochelle, last March, She told Mag- REBELS DEFEATED IN HAYTI. —_———- the Capital and Lose Three Other Fights, PORT-AU-PRINCE, Hayth, July 1t— A panic was caused by a revolutionary outbreak, accompanied by a conslder- able amount of shooting, In the atre of the capital to-day, The rising wax Quickly suppressed by the Government forces and order restorde. Gen, Leon Duque with a Government force to-day recaptured from the rebels the towns of Pere du Midi and Milot and eatablished communications with the column commanded by the President, which had engaged another rebel band Routed tn istrate Herbert in Centre Street Po- Heo Court to-day that she threw him | on the plains CARRANZA TO KILL MADERO'S MURDERERS; WILSON ASKS AMNESTY (Continued from Firat Page.) and no interference will be tolerated from the outside.” The United States expects Gen. Car- ranga to take over the Mexican Gov- ernment next week. Its information f@ that already Acting President for the Constitutionalist “Firs! Chief.” The only terms he asks . of directors’ duty, chiefly through causing the N Haven to acquire Megally its Boston and Maine, trol- ley and steamship properties, are bound to pay to the New Haven $163, 000,000 “withdrawn therefrom wrong- fully and for ultra vires and illegal purposes.” It is alleged that the losses result- ing from these acquisitions approx! 03,000,000 and that und te anti-trust act the Net is entitled to recover from the ‘defend ants three-fold that sum—or $306, 000,000. —— SIX DIE IN TRAIN CRASH; NINETEEN ARE INJURED Excursionists Victims § When Crowded Electric Cars Dash Into Freight at Crossing. NORFOLK, Va., July 17.—Six were killed and nineteen were injured early to-day when an electric ex- cursion train crashed Into a Vir- ginian Railway freight train at a grade crossing near this city. Four men and two women, all of Norfolk, were killed. Dennis P. Lyons of Baltimore, among the injured, ts in @ critical condition, Men on the freight say the cross- in, ites were down, Fro dead are Joseph Cooper, Nor- folk; J. D. Watson, Portamouth; John Goodman, Norfolk; Annie Mee- han, Norfolk; Mrs, Ernest Gross, Norfolk; one unidentified body, be- dieved to be Prof. Lee Hegbt, Nor- folk, dancing teache: —_—_— QUEENIE MERRALL’S DENIAL. Kuglienh Act Missey's LONDON, July 17.—Mrs, Elaie Mins, a young actress who appeared in New in J.B, The punishment for first degree | York last winter in Cyril Maude'’s Com- manslaughter may be a term oftwen-|pany at Wallack’s Theatre under the ty years’ imprisonment; for Becond |name of Queenie Merrall, ts being sued for divorce by John B. Hissey, a bar- in the witness box yesterday, she was only an acquaintance named Bicard, a member of garden partle and at supper, She also denied miacon- duct with Albert Whelan, a widely known English deville artist who ie mentioned as co vd Retter Fact for Queensboro Span, Bridge Commisatoner F. J. H. Kracke wants the Board of Estimate to give hin $2,500,000 to improve traMec facilities in the Queensboro Bridge, His plan Is to have two tracks apiece for an elevated line over span and for subway trains it r .. Kier, Cartaro’ . |t0 be i 0 sa a ple for the young mam, ssving ater, uy "would al YX are torney ri Aa Nirged’ the \ilmmit | Hoard ue eta et aaet soun ot te Fir) month Ukely act on ie te amnesty for political offenders and protection for the men who fought at Huerta’s command, This will be granted if tho United States in- fluence can bring !t about. It is believed certain that Car- rangsa has promised protection of all foreigners as soon as he enters the capital. If eo it will enable the United States to act promptly in recognising the new government. Carranza is expected to repudia' the debts Huerta incurred, but the national obligations authorised by Congress, previous to death, will all be paid Carbajal's informal he would retire in favor of Carranza, and Carranza’s announcement that he will negotiate with the Federals for tatives of the Conastitutionalists will| arrive in Mexico City at an early) 4, date to attend a peace conference to be called by lonal President Carbajal, who announces to-day that all of his efforts would be turned to- ward bringing the warring factionr of the republic together. Reports re- ceived to-day declared the Conatitu- tionalists would accept his invitation for a conference, Following his appointment as Min- ister of War Gen. Refugio Velasco freed all political prisoners, It is generally accept that Carbajal’ plan for the establishment of peac provides for the installation of the Constitutionalista in power at an early date, He hopes the different factions will agree upon & man to @ the government, pending a gen- eral election, and the scheme would then be to appoint this individual Mintater of Foreign Relations in the ajal Cabinet. Carbajal would then resign and his Minister of For- Carbajal has offered to make hated eign Relations succeed him, — HUERTA, IN FLIGHT, TAKES NIGHT’S SLEEP IN REBEL PROVINCE, PUERTO MEXICO, July 17.—Gen, Huerta stopped on his leisurely jour- ney from Mexico City and passed the night at Tierra Blanca, in the State of Vera Cruz, the centre of a district overrun by small bands of revolution- ti who have boasted that they will r let the departing former Dic- totor reach the coast. It was thought likely Huerta would e in Puerto Mexico late in the after- and hurry to atement that | greatly worried his wife, while Senora Blanquet, whose husband, former Minister of War, is with his old chief, was hysterical, —— peaceful transfer of power in Mexico| gan LUIS POTOSI IS City, is regarded as practical assur- ance of peace. ‘The crux of the situation appeared to hang on the extent of the quarter Carranza might be willigg ky,srant his fallen foe. Fears expressed over the attitude of Villa partially were discounted by his statement that there was "no need for apprehension regarding my stay in the north.” He sald he expected to move his troops toward Mexico City shortly. One plan for the occupation of Mex- joo City contemplated that 6,000 troops from eath of the three divisions of the Constitutionalist army aimultane- ously would enter the capital Jeal- ousy would thus be obviated, From Monterey, Carranza announced his plan of conducting negotiations for establishment of the Constitutionalist Government In Mexico City without further sacrifice of life. He declared, however, that unconditional surrender would be the only basis upon which the parleys could resul! ocessfully, ARMY OF CARRANZA IS BEING RUSHED TO MEXICAN CAPITAL, MEXICO CITY, July 17—Two SEIZED BY REBELS. « = BROWNSVILLE, Tex., July 17.— San Luis Potosi has been surrendered to the Constitutionalists, according to unofficial despatches received in Matamoros, opposite Browneville, to-day. The messages, which were went from Monterey, gave no details. ———————— Child Falls to Death at Fire, During the excitement that attended nement bull ine No, 14 Bast On Hundred and a street to-dry seven- sete the Areraecayse Inthe rear of ae fo fire-acape. in the Sate aaa felt to hla deatn. AULTY lubrica- ion is speedin your car to the jun! pile, via the Friction oute, DIXON'S Graphite Grease 677 For Transmissions | who are at the | eloped, trains loaded with Constitutionalist | troops from Celaya are expected to, arrive here to-night, Ricardo Gomez Kobelo, Attorney- General of the Republic, has resigned, | as has Gen, Hernandez, Governor of | Pueblo and father-in-law of Victor | Huerta, son of the ex-President, ‘The and Differentials | side-tracks Friction and rolls your car smoothly along the road of Steady Service, Write for the Dixon Lubricate State Legislature appointed Francisco | ing Char, We waluate see, Canseco to succeed him. | TWE JoserH prxon cauemts C0 ‘The gambling houses in the capital JARSEY CITY, H. were closed last night by order of President Carbajal. It was announce! that no more fenbliag. will be ai- og Eatadtihed in tea — OG ‘When Mrs. Samuel Humphrey of Philadelphia lands in New York from Europe in a few days she will find @ surprige awaiting her. She expects to be greeted by her daughter, Miss Dorothy, a Vassar graduate. The twenty-two-year-old girl will be on the plier all right, but not as Miss Dorothy Humphrey. It will be as Mrs, G. Sumner Ireland that she will greet her mother, And G. Sumner, aged twenty-nine, Vice-President of | an advertising frm in the Quaker City, will also be at the pie: ‘Word rreae hed this Ce ym Philadelphia t e COU; Lo Hotd Biltmore, ha the bridegroom telling bis | father he was coming to New York on_business. ‘The girl’ her wan aware of his young daughter's matrimontal inten- tions but demurred at an immediate wedding on account of her youth. Miss Humphrey and Mr. Ireland, how- had known ch other fifteen and they thought that was wait. LU nous! Bo they slipped to St. Stephen's Rectory in Philadelphia, where the Rev. Dr. Carl E. Grammer performed |the ceremony. Then they came to New York to wait for Mra. Hum- phrey and to tell her all about it. peed ~ thems HIGH BEEF PRICES TO STAY. Saye Government Expe' WASHINGTON, July 17.—"'I can see no relief aa far as the high cost of beet ta concerned,” said Dr. A. D. Nelvin, Chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry of the Department of Agriculture, to- day. “The high prices are undoubtedly caused by the scarcity of beef cattle in the United States, and under conditions such as obtain at present ther» is little prospect of increasing our supply. “A certain amount of beef comes in from the Argentine Repudlic; last month about 44,000,000 pounds. en you stop to consider that in addition to what the United SI supplies or should a supply. ‘ce amount. %t upon the fish if prices. ees BREAK IN ERIE CANAL. AMSTERDAM, N. ¥., July 17.—Twen- ty-five feet of the southerly section of over a creek at Canojuharie was washed out to-day, releasing the water of a aiz-mile level. The eastern section of the State water will be closed to traffic for sever To-Morrow. ‘The funeral of Montgomery Schuyler, author and journalist, who died of Pneumonia yesterday at his home in New Rochelle, will be at Trinity Church, New Rochelle, at 11 o'clock to-morrow, Mr. Schuyler, | who, was seventy-o old, began his newspaper work on he World i 1805, going later to the fun, the Times and to Harper's Weekly, ‘Two sons sui him. to Abo! WASHINGTON, July 17.—To abolish the “plucking board” of the navy, Rep- resentativen Britten of Illinois tntro- duced a batt to-day proposing retirement m of mental and physical ex- would fail of Eromotion, and a secon failure would cally retire them, WHEN HOPE DIES. (From the Cincinnati hagprie) Tf a girl calla you a chi skate, or a Var or'a dead ono, there Je still'e chance for you, But if she ever announces that 'No Gentleman,” you might as Well beat it. There's no hope. had | the aqueduct carrying the Erie Canal |= over because he was too jealous, but he has been annoying her. Haggerty wrote her a letter, she said, asking her to meet him July 4 took Fort 1 of Limonade. eronville and ‘Another force of Government troops! then began its march on Ouanaminthe, the prin- cipal stronghold of the rebela She didn't show up and he went to her home, she said, and waited until she came out with another man. Tho mm gears | FRECKLE-FACE testified. “What's the use of you going with her,” she says he said, “she's my girl, and God intended us to be mar- ried.” On July & Haggerty accosted her, Miss Hoadley said, telling her if she refused to marry him he would kill \her. Haggerty denied this, saying he loved Hazel better than he did his own sister The Magistrate paroled him until to-morrow when he must furnish a bond of $100 to Keep the peace for three months. — BEWITCHED, SAYS WOMAN WHO SHOT HER FRIEND After Shooting, Her Children Aid Her in Barricading Herself in Her Home. Without warning Mra. Mary Chris- tiant of No, 386 East One Hundred and Fifth walked into the aa- Joining apartment of her friend, Mra Agelina Mosi, this morning, pulled a pistol from her dress and shot Mrs. Mosi in the jaw. The victim swooned into the arms of her three xrown children. Mr». Christiant retreated to her own apartment. where she barricaded her- self witn the help of her six children. Patrolman Kilgannon of the East One Hundred and Fourth street sta- tion after turning In @ hurry cail to the Reception Hospital, rushed to the| Christian! apartment. Ho tried to! break down the door, but the chil- dren finally opened it. The mother tay pyadies in @ corner badly fright- ened. Dr, Baer found Mrs. Mosi suffering from a broken jaw. Mrs. Christiant talked so trration- | ally she was sent to the observation ward at Bellevue. She insisted her victim had bewitched her six children. removes give you a perme triffi freck! Flea | “Like Thieves in the Night” The microbes of decomposition which DESTROY the TEETH and otherwise affect the general health, work most); | AT NIGHT, and they do their worl extremely ll, as any dentist can testify. However, as with every other men- ace, there is a safeguard— ” Use it before retiringand yourmouthis “BURGLAR PROOr.” delightfally I Endorsed by the lead- ing of country im the wa Ne Reflable wl 2 Other a GEO. BORGFELDT & CO. 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