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FSSA TNTER ES Next Week’s Complete Novel in The Evening World ingly he despatched his friends, | room, where she was surrounded by , Jules Dalstein, former Military | doctors, of Paris, and Emile Bru-| One of the Republican Guards took @e Laborie to Judge Dagoury | off his tunic and made a pillow for @ demand that he meet him in a /her. to wipe out the Insult. The physicians, who had thought ~ Asother version of the affair mays! she was suffering merely from a What yesterday, while the discussion | passing fainting spell, decided, when letters WAS| she remained unconscious, te give her a hypodermic injection ef ether. & remark that the time for &/ Mme. Caillaux appeared to have had arrived. Judge Dagoury,| broken down completely and was Was seated beside him on thé! breathing with diMculty, and such bent over and said in 40) was her condition that her husband “You disgrace us, Sir.” | was admitted to her side. two judges, after they had! shortly afterward Mme, Calllaux inte their private room during! recovered consciousness and said ehe fovees, engaged in « heated dis-! reltstrong enough to go on with the hearing. ity, Judge Dageury ed-| 4. Cailaux then assisted her into : that he had said more than! tne prisoners’ imvlosure in court and Wevhad meant to say and apologized! 4 chair was brought for her to alt +. Maitre : 4 Genri-Robert,, Labert and) on instead of the prisoners’ benob. intervened as peace-maker@ | sig was livid and haggard and her the two judges and the Indl} ostures were drawn. After he had seen her comfortably arranged, M. Caillaux took his place once more among the witnesses and Maitre Labor! made the announce- ment that so more letters would be read. LETTERS INDICATE THE CLO! E6T FRIENDSHIP. Following !s the full text of the first letter from M. Calllaux to the that the letters he read| Present Mme. Caillaux before hia di- hot the ones Mme. Calliaux| Vorce from his firet wife, as read in Calmette might publish, and| court to-day: caused her to kill him. “My Dear Little Rirt: “I have read with the attention it 3 Teoat ano Laie ala ibd merited the letter which thou haat written me, and which oalls for an explicit response. “For several days I have had the intention of diasipating any min- understanding by a complete expla! tion. Wheg I met thee, I felt the impulaion of my whole being toward thee. I should nevertheless have re- } sisted, and should no doubt have had the courage to conquer myself, if I should have been happy at hom: DECLARES HE WAS UNHAPPY WITH FIRST WIFE. “But I was not happy. I was hu- miliated and wounded by the action I had undergone and no one can make me forget my bruised feelings. No one could solve my injuries, On the contrary, they aggreavate them. There fore, 1 threw mywelf toward thee with passionate fury or rather with furious passion. Nevertheless, at the time of the incidents to whiok it is unneces- sary to allude I considered it my duty to release thee entirely by giving thee in a letter thy full liberty. “As @ matter of fact, I did not feo! myself sufficiently sure of recovering my independence to give to me the right to engage thee to obtain thine. ‘With fine courage and with the beau- | tiful boldness which love and con- fidence gave thee, thou has conquered seconde te hie colleague. to his promise that be would letters given him by Mme. Maitre Labori began, as @@ Court convened this morn- te read them pubifcly, though Teaee Albee ‘conoteeed whe | 12 substance, ‘I ask of thee but one of the hearing. engagemont—that is to give me thy love now’ and to this thou have ad- NDS PROTEST AGAINST | 4oq +1 shall not believe quite in tho READING LOVE LETTERS. | fujiness of thy love tf thou doest not x Feading of the love letters was| succeed some day in thyself becom- te apicy morse! 20 long awaited by| ing free.’ Paris, Every one in:the| I anwwered thee that I do and will " court-room leaned forward/ love thee. I certainly expect to re- they might not miss a word as/ gain my liberty some day, but in started the reading. They/| any case, I shall not move defore the Watched Mme. Caillaux to observe| elections. gfe effect it would have upon her. As not that it, my Riri? igs erumples up in her chair, a piti- jatters went on very much as | [ei Agure of woe, sobbing aloud, pro-| had forescen during | year. Then from friends came from every| events followed in quick succeasion of the room. and my conscience, which is of a Labori to proceed. | delicacy carried to a point of scruple the collapse of Mme. Caillauz/ and sometimes amounting to folly, @ourt was thrown into an uproar. | quffers a little at the thought that eendemning the procedure | my heart has influenced these events. wer mingled with theee urging that) To speak frankly and clearly, it is should be known, certain that things would not have Pudge Louis Dagoury sat beside! developed as rapidly as they did if I 2 cengeed Judge Albanel on the| had had thee and had had love in my to-day despite the fact that| heart. That that is secondary and I had been challenged to a duel. | fully realize that from this point of of the letters read, began: “My/| view my scruples are excessive. . very much beloved,” and de-| ‘The second letter, sixteen pages in 3 length, was begun on Oct. 18, 1909, “1 must return to Le Mans, | and finished on the following day. It | preside over the General | was written on the official note pa- per of the Prefecture of the Depart- 7 ment of the Sarthe and said: 1 am discouraged. | DECLARED HE FEARED ONLY BECAUSE OF BLACKMAIL. i red thought of you; the thought “My beloved Little Rirl—at having you in my arms, as at last I have @ minute to write thee.” Then followed a long ac- count of the cattle show at Le Mans and of a visit by M. Call- , adored.” laux to Paris, and it then re- En the mean time Mme. Caillaux had] gumed: “Thou must be very rea- (aia upon @ bench in an ante-| sonable and stay at Binard for the present. I fear only one thing—blackmall, Perhaps some one will make @ scandal. Some- times I am very discouraged. What a life! I bave but one con- Medicines is proved by the very large mil eaten of POYReIAnS tie PISTOL HELD NEAR THE BODY ¢ OF DEAD EDITOR. in every drug store in}! np, charies Paul, medico-legal ox- » but, as they are @| pert, who examined the clothing of en in Latin, few patients $| Calmette after the shooting and also ize this fact aided in performing the autopsy on ° the body was called as a witness after the reading of the letters, He de- clared four bullets, fred at a distance approximately six feet, entered ‘lalmette’s body. The last bullet was fired at a little ye a place inevery family x foot. Two of the bullets ‘ine chest, and it is most Tey Carranza Will Spare Lives of FOREIGNERS ARE SAFE. State Department has received from Consul Gilliman the approximate terme on which Gen. Carranza will deal with Provisional President Car- bajal. They provide: Mexicans who have not violated the criminal laws of the nation. foreign and private property within the confines of the nation. terms will prove satisfactory. Under them the leaders of the Huerta rev- olution receive no protection, but the rank and file of the Federals secure amnesty. In addition, it is expected private assurances pill be given that thy freedom (divorce), saying to me| fro: GRANTS AMNESTY TO HUERTA TROOPS All Who Have Not Violated Mexico’s Criminal Laws, Even Zapata Will Accept Terms and Lay Down His Arms, WASHINGTON, July %8.—The Constitutional guarantees for all Guarantees of protection for all It to believed certain that these the Federal army ‘will be amailga- mated with the pick of Carransa’s forces to form @ new weapon of na- tional defense after the rank and file of the Constitutionaliste are paid off and sent back to their farms. ‘The parties to the negotiations In- clude Carranza, Carbajal and Emil- {ano Zapata. Carranza has sent word to Zapata, who heretofore has been an irraconcilable, that the programme of the Constitutionalists ides for the restoration of the land to the peo: That is what Zapata has been fighting for, and oMcials of the Latin-American Bureau of the State Department, who know him well, say he is very likely to agree to support Governm it. ree Ville concerned, time alone will sh w his sincerity. Th and supplies from this border and, thus hand! capped, will have to confront his fel- low revolutionists in battle. ——>—. VILLA STARTS ARMY TO MEXICO CITY; MADERO COMMANQS. CHIHUAHUA, Mex: July 25.— The movement of In, Franclaco Villa’a army toward Queretaro and Mextioo City has begun. ‘The first trains, carrying the Bri- gede Ortegs, commanded by Gen. Raoul Madero, brother of the mur- dered President, pulled out of Chi- huabua carly to.day. The movement ‘will soon be general, as other bri- ee are apiererins to Gen. jaclovio Herrera’ re training at Parral and ¢! of Villa and Zaragosa ready. Villa ia due here from Guerrero to- day. He has allowed his a Vaca- tion of three days and the officers have gone to the border. They will be back Monday, It is expected Villa's headquarters train will leave for the South Wednesday. pon BOYS HIT A LIVE WIRE. red im Steal: Freight Tra: of @ youth come hurtling down to the tracks from the roof of one of the cars as the train pulled under the Bryant bridge in the Bronx on it: Mott Haven yards. He w burned on the hands and arm: hie fall didn't hurt hi ie and a companion had touched the live feed wire under the brid; it foot were burned. was William | McCullough, ‘2 old, of No. 16 Bureh boy whi uf hird street. ridges had been ielng weCullsagh in Boston and they beat their way to this city, Hoth boys Hospital. They will under arrest for trespassing. == == at material such as Calmette's over- coat was made of. Dr. Socquet corroborated the tes- tiomny of Dr. Paul, having performed the autopsy with him, ctors Hartman, Cuneo and Rey- mond, who operated upon Calmette, afte he was removed to the olinic at Neuilly, followed, defending their manner of attending the editor. Their tostimony was obviously in- tended to discount the assertions which a physician Labort may call will make, Prepared to declare that Cal- thet nad he bean siven ieee at paces tad tg flow of blood Caimatto ‘would have been within ¢en days, ro 1s a THE. BVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1914. THE THOUSANDTH WOMAN By E. W. Hornung, Author of “RAFFLES” TREATYOFPEACE | %5"Gioen ‘Blow by Love Letters ‘and | in @ blind rage as soon as he saw him. e* ‘ ° OWN PUBLIC UTILITIES. SLAIN BOY ELOPER MURDERED BY RUM, HIS FATHER DECLARES) (Continued from First Page.) MME. CAILLAUX, ° an Unforeseen Climax P. S, 6. EXPLAINS y New York Telephone Company Was Made to Appear as Only Concern § NEW CONSTITUTION) wt sorsssr. | NOT SATISFACTORY ALBANY, July 25.—The Public Ser- \ sane cearraia! made some explanations to-day re- —— ” garding its order of June 16, referring . », _ Mayor Says Cities Should Be} to ‘siepnone discriminations, A publie| Francis Joseph’s Envoy and statement made in behalf of the com- ~, * | Cut Off from Legislative | rission said that the order of the} Staff Quit Belgrade After } Interference. of giving free or reduced rate tele: Presenting Note. \ d phones to individuals in certain dis- j Gressed to “the New York Telephone] BELGRADE, July 26. — The Gov- Company” instead of to “all New York |ernment newspaper Samouprava 1 i Attorne’ He] “Asa matter of fact," the statement Although an Ys continues, “in none of the reports be.|SeMerally accepted as indicating the Hopes Lawyers Will Not the existence of improper free tele-[the ultimatum sent by that govern- phone service was the New York Tel- | ment. original order was actual! id alleged discriminations of the ‘sort ;fect neighborly r@ations with the s up-State corporations only. - platform at Chautauqua, N. ¥., to- cA nother misapprehenaron ta predle necessity of maintaing such rela. Convention, said home rute for New/that the New rk Telephone Co: readily comply with all the demands York and other large cities would be/pany took advantage of the oppor-jof Austria-Hungary which will serve der as authorising it t manded. pend all referent ai contracts, At y |festations and disorders in neighbor- tended it would be a “profound mis-|oompany. In sending out its notl: “Decause the Servian Government. fortune” tf lawyers were a majority| of cancellation of such contracts | wonsiders it is thereby fulfilling the was In precise accordance with the| obvious duty of a civilized State, the the new State Constitution. He sald/torms of the order, The fact that|Government will in all sincerity do treated as an object of state. He| intended to proceed in that sum-| tonye desire for friendly relations “Efficient city government commen | corporation acted, The commission] VIENNA, July 25.—Shortly beforo only when there is responsibility for! makes this explanation as an act of |¢ o'cloc the Austro-Hungarian Min- 7 upon the cities and upon the people grt to the Servian office saying the.re= \ of the cities, To-day the responsibility! ST. LOUIS DO THIS? NOPE! {ity to Austria's demand was unsat- \ local authorities and irresponsible, con- Minister and the Staff of the Lega- trolled legislatures. tion then left Belgrade. forward to the constitutional conven-/ tive Bartholdt of St. Louls to-day told | fused all the requests of Servia to ex- tion, or a means of restoring to the/ the House that he was deeply offended | tend the time limit for the reply te Recerd to the effect that 26,00 people | '** Note: ‘ pererore: in hie city bad signed « petition for| BUDAPEST. July °%.—Special edl- rule for cities broad and as com-/ existing as to whether there are that|nounce this evening that Servia hav plete as that recently conferred upon| many nee in St. Loui unconditionally submitted to the de- yn LONDON, July 25.—A special ca- ‘eo, in New York City, declare to- blegram received heer this evening the cities of this State to manage) 4°, ix announcing that Servia has accepted their local affairs is the essence of! gations are misrepresenti Austria's untimatum has the addi- political democracy, and that a real) fy church to run @ municipal bome rule should be firmly ae King Peter has abdicated, WORTHINGTON SCORES 73 An unconfirmed despatch from ° A New Crime Mystery Story With " BLUNDER IN ORDER. vice Commission of the Second District commission sought to stop the practice tricts, and inadvertently it was ad- Btate telephone companies.” publishes the following, which 1c fore the commission which indicated| tenor of Servia's reply to Austria of invention. Control the Co ephone Company Involved, and the! — “gervia desires sincere and eor- Mayor Mitchel, speaking from the} mentioned on the part of other and|Dual Monarchy. Comvineed of the day on the proposed Constitutional) ..164 upon the alleged popular bellet| tons, the Servian government will one of the main changes to be de-| tunity to improperly construe the to suppress all criminal acts;mant- A lawyer himself, the Mayor con-/ such assumption js unfair to the|ing countries. ng the delegates chosen to frame the action of the telephone company New York no longer deserved to be|the Commission had not deliberately everything possible to prove its in- said in part: manifest good faith in which the| With the dual monarchy.” results. That responsibility should be|every-day justice. ister at Belgrade presented a not» 1s passed between half-ompowered isfactory. The Austro-Hungaria: “The people of the Btate are looking] WASHINGTON, July 2.—Repre: Austria-Hungarian Government re- cities the autonomy that means their| St the declaration in the Congressional ‘e want in New York State home! jronipition. In addition to the doubt|tions of the newspapers here an- the elties of Oblo by the Constitution | side of at q mands of Austria day that the right ‘of the people of from Belgrade by way of Vienna. Sf people. It ts in the f f byt ch to run the state tional statement that it is rumored established in the fundamental law of the State. Vienna to the Central News saye the “We declare that this should in- OVER SHAWNEE COURSE. Servian Minister announced soon af- clude the right of the cities to form- --————— SHAWNEB- ON - r, ter 6 o'clock that he had received a ulate, adopt and amend thelr own| if Or piiiee aoa ti aeruse telegram from Belgrade accepting all charters and enact laws rerneuts any amateur ever displayed on this|the Austrian demands, pete fetrpeveceasieead veer pa course, BE. S, Worthington of Shawnee destruction should the opportunity of- | exercise “8O¥"! ended the morning round three up on fer. ernment, and to adopt and enforce! J. N. Stearns jr, champion of the Nas-| Bris-7Ge Carr Dies in Chicage. rs0 bed abie| within their limits such local police, |*au Country Club, in the thirty-six hole| CHICAGO, July 25.—Brig-Gen, Cami His remorse ts described as pitt within 4 other similar regula-| Ral to-day for the chief trophy in the | lo Casattl Cadmus Carr, U. 8. A, re by those friends who have seen bim.| #anitary and other ta invitation golf tournament of the Shaw-| tired, veteran of the civil a Anna Maria Cleary Newman, twen-| tions as local experience may d@-/nee Country Club. Worthington cov- * bag had married Anna in Weehawken a week ago. Cleary has many friends among eved the course practically In 74 only | Wars and many Indian campaigns, Eases bi Saat side politicians |/ty.one years old, who had been | monstr wine, Just and neces-| ore", luke worse than the best made'in| at his home here to-day. eRe bb - 5 nce aneice &o on fishing | | 14e only six daya when her fathor’s | sary. the rectn professionals tourney here. ‘ ps in Rocklan: unty. Among | aot made her @ widow, ie reported in “We maintain that municipali- | ,,,Uach was out in 40 and the match these friends are ex-Sheriff Thomas Stearns then developed a a serious condition and under the| tles ought to be authorized, in | vicious pull on his drives whioh H1; J. Foley and Michael Delagi, tho law-| care of @ physician in Manhattan.| their own discretion and without |Accounted for his being s0 far down at . yer, Mr, Delagi hurried up to Rock-| ne Cleary town house ie at No. 610 plication to thi oa Se fund County to offer his professional | west One Hundred and Fit: y-second| acquire, construct, own, Suleide Identified by Sister Revie ony as soon as he heard) street, where Mrs. Cleary and her| and finance through mortgage | the body of the woman who was of the murder, daughter are in strict seclusion. lien publio utilities. found dead from illuminating gas in a fl “I had a long talk with Cleary in " jt ft bi-partls Ni le New Cily yesterday.” waid Delagt, *I VICTIM 8 FATH SHAS SEVERAL ‘The vresent system of ‘partisan | furnished room at No. 218 West Twenty: ul ERS. election boards, made up largely of | fourth street last Thursday afternoon, wae a, ly Miss inf proteepicans Mr. Newman says he has several| henchmen and creatures of the two| was identified to-day as that of Rosa Self S pacity, and so far I am the only tieal parties, ahould be| Smith, forty-three years old, who had man Who has heard his side of the letters written to his son by Miss leading poll! Parties, bolished. The syatem has been a| bem employed as a laundress at the story. I am not, however, privileged Cleary while the voy was working| abolis! Hotel Majestic. Fear that she would jlure. It has, in man; to repeat what he tcld me. This in Gayannah, Ga, last winter, but) notorious failu 7 | tose her position because of the installa- much I can say; the unwritten law says he will not produce them unless| districts, placed men of low order | tion of machinery in the hot Will be bis defense.” other sources it was learned that in| boards, and gross frauds have com. | n@Fdine jo aire. Curtin of No, #70 W i what attitude Mrs. Newman, the girl ri Uy bride of the slain boy, would take at | {ore Witb Our marriage, for, If need HER “GIDDAP TO HORSE according to Mra. Curtin of No, 270 We fense would be raised. When asked ‘Don't let the lacx of money inter- forced to do so by the cot.ts. From|and no politica: morals on the election | was the cause of the woman's suicid Delagi would not explain what de-| one of them was this statement: monly resulted.” her slater, who made the identifica be, I can teach music to help us get ) man, i@ an accomplished musician. E. Bosca, who pleaded guilty to placing T realize that she is in an awkward | Min. 0° of ee attempt to question two mortgages of $35,00 on his own position, with her husband dead by | tne eye-witnesses fully at the preim- property, the White Cannon Inn, in her father’s hand, but I am ignorant te ry Coroner's Snaueet 2omterday, Little Mary Cross Badly Injured] East Rockaway, while acting officially hink - ey are @ intima’ eg ny OYr7 88 See Jn Her Fanas | & ary rand have ‘declined to make! While Playing Around Father's Feed, trom custody to-day by Gougty an a ement Oo repo! je James T. lemann on @ suspende: take,” said Delagi. tnverstood in Haverstraw that they Delivery Rig. ‘sentence is lawyer had given the SLAYER 18 NOW GSUFFERING IN| can tell more than they have told, it court a check to cover the amount of they desire. One of tne busiest men! Gustay Gross drives a delivery wagon pty te mortgage placed by Bosca. b it r ale Jn Cleary's bebait ts Sheriff Larry| ang gets $12 @ woek. He went home| from his nine weeks in jel | ™*™ “Cleary,” the lawyer continued, “is prisoner in the New City jail. Ber-| to-day to luncheon with his wife and = under a great mental strain and 18/nard Fox, one of the eye- witnesses, | three little tots on the top floor of No. HAMILTON ENTRIES. suffering a great deal.” went to eee Cleary yesterday. 547 Hast Twelfth atreet. The children ] Young ‘Newman was & Methodist. 4 ts Delagi said he did not know |pineral services will be held for him|ran down to pat “horsey” and giv®! siaxiLTON, Ont, July %—The @ whether he would represent Cleary |to-morrow afternoon at the home of| him a lump of sugar. Evelyn, elx| tries for Monday's races are aa follow. at the trial and explained hia trip|bis qfandmother, Mrs. A. H. Kennedy] years old, and Sammy, aged three, “ts, roe Peer of 100; Tn earelee aay , XM to New City by saying that ho|of Haverstraw, conducted bY | the! cimbed up on the seat and called rake bs, Pare By, F went in the absence of Frank Co-|3°¥—p Church, The services will be| upon five-year-old Mary to follow. ; COT Re pase, geen: SOAI mesky, & prominent lawyer of Ny-| private. Interment will be in Mount/ wniie Mary's foot was on the etep her kK e 10D vais: ack, who has been Cleary’s attorney, Repose Cemetery, on the outskirts of! jit16 brother sald “Giddap!” and the aj eet Rororts “108; | Assisted in case of irritation of the Comesky ts now in Canada, Dela. |Heverstraw, “horsey” responded, | skin or scalp by light applications gi, who has had much experience in Mary was thrown to the ground Ong ‘ i Manhattan criminal courts, may be ot| LOCKED UP AGED WOMAN, | ee vee ee eer body. | Sk uveum Qlatnen), sean Up counsel at the trial, The screams of Evelyn and Sammy Bome of Cleary's friends in Haver. | Picked Up and Put in a Coll Until! OY UT rather and mother to Semples Free by Mall Cutiours foep and Ointment sold througbaut otraw reported to-day that Cleary Friends Call. the window, and it was all that the wes practically @ crasy man for ev-| 4 well dressed elderly woman who| father could do to restrain Mra. Gross eral days prior to the murder, His|gaiq she was Mrs. Josephine Cooley of| trom jumping down the five stories state of mind, they say, was brought | No, 924 Kast One Hundred and Twenty- | the street. about by Information he recelved| first street, was found at 2 o'clock this! “yiary was taken to Bellevue Hos- from a physician to the effect that | morning sitting on the steps of @ house! 1111, an ambulance and her mother his daughter Anna and young New.|{n North Broadway, Yonkers, She) te 1, nurse her, although man had called on him and congulted | Sculdn't tell, Polleeman Covle what she ‘ t oll th nd, deciding that she|the doctors said the child was prob- him, Cleary began to drink, hia| was demented, Coyle took her to the| my tatatty injured, friends say, and in ignorance of hia| Fourth Precinct station, ing father could not go t daughter's marriage killed Newman | nic dlnanasias but instead of sendin tal He could not even tal hi call comfort the ot! in home ene maa for if he did not report fo! Wtlok | id" ‘oight toe le 00 ana’ her | takes all of $13 a week to care for a wife and wi y, Funeral from the residence ef grandmother, Mrs, Jesepn Coyle, Hudson ot., en Sunday at 2 P.M is | CONNELLY.—On July 33, 1014, MART! CONNELLY, husband of the late Connelly. % Funeral on Monday, July 87, at 8 4. M., from F, Herbst @ Gens’ Cleary is closely watched tn the New City jail, He ls a nervous wreek and