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THE WEATHER FOREC - r-,rV tm. Generally fair to-day 'nrJ siowiy rising temp Detailed weather reports will on pace 1 1. sir--. j o4Knd VOL. LXXXI NO. 309. SURVIVOR OF BOMBEXPLOSION ELUDES POLICE Mmpli.t. Who Might Kxplain Aimivliists' Deaths, Disappears. AG1TATOIIS' 1IOJIKS TO m SBAKCHEI) StiPpert iiifr riot, Authorities Will Look for More Kxplosives. jiom r iskkg is I'or.VI). Mt'TILATKI) 4 j. W. W. s Plan I'ulilic I II- neral for the Four Victims. Michael Murphy, 1? years old, of Mwrchlstle tendencies. Is apparently the rslj- person living who knows the real Hon-, of the fatal explosion that wrecked the building nnd killed four persons at 3SSS T,cxlngton nvrnue on Saturday Morning. And Murphy, known some ' times ns Auspcntl, has disappeared lis ( rompletoly ns If lie loo liad boon blown 1 to bits. Instead of driven down three ! foors In a Mass of debris, from which )ie was dug out unharmed. Plncc he ran Into tho Hast 104th street police stntlon, told there that n subway fjplolon had done the elainngc and then went to report to Alexander. Ilerkinan st the ofllce ..f Mother L'eirft the young man has not been seen. He was directed Vy nerkmnn to go out to Wostllcld, X, J., at once and see Leonard I). Ab- t'Olt who was giving a picnic at his . . . t coutr lu- r tc nnarcmsts, j. w.j . . W. atlU the 'lurrytOWU prUimTS, .Ut , he did not obey. He blmply dropped out of sight anil has kept himself away, inKtv the efforts of thu whole police foue of the city to find lilm. What they will do with Munphy when tuj' do get him Deputy Police Oommls. doner Hiibln ndniltteil yesterday that it didn't know. Neither did Cupt. Max Carey of the homicide bureau, nor acting Captain Jones of tho Thirty ninth precinct, who aro In direct charge cf the strange case. Murphy has com mitted no crime fot which bo can bo hclJ. the police say, nnd !f h Is out tf town and wants to stay there Is rthlns tn hinder him. Hut Cant. Jonea hopes that sooner or later ho will re nppear in New York and that be will allow the authorities to indulge in a quiet little tnlk to find out what was going on In Artnur Cnnm's flat." MI.k Heritor IMritiU iKimrmirc. W.th Murphy Kone, the police had unly Louise llirser, stepsister of Carl Hansen, one of the dead men, who lived in the flat, and Kloanor Fitzgerald, a member of the staff of the anarchist publication and a teacher In the Ferrer (School, to Interrogate. Thoy did that Job thoroughly. Tho two women were riled with questions practically ull day lmg by Cnpt. Cnrey nnd Capt. Jones. Holli stuck to their stories of Saturday and Miss Burger, even when shown n tim.ng device used Jn exploding bombs and sicn nlurm clock", In addition to an aiioniatlc plhiol that had npiiar ntl been in tho flat, maintained that to Irr knowlcdgo there had been notli !ng of the sort there. So 'lie eight hours session for the to failed to bring out unythiiiB en lilhtcung nnd they were let go nt 9 o i lock last night. Now It Is nil up to Murphv to explain the mystery If ho will, (Inirlt-N llfru'o lloily Foil ml. Th. inutllatid body of Clinrlcs Hers as found In the ruins of tho building ' H (dock yesterday morning. The h 'ids i,id been blown off ami other I'ar s uf he body torn nwny, but the torn, practically unmarked, was ills 'oer .l pinned up against thu wall nd hidden by a heap of wreck 1 1 was taken to tho police Sta lin ,,mi nUntlfleil there by .Miss Her R r in n nignirul tho hair of Ca'run's' "i". oniniiNiluiicr Hubin said laht ' '' mii ilif list of dead will contain I ii imnns, :h all of the other II -'ii- w.ui lived In Iho bulldilig- 105 "iiinliir I I been accounted fur. 1mt f .iinieiite nnd Vincent U'AiiKelo, "j are hi ho.-pltMls, wero doing well it iit and probably will recover. ' ' uiiiiii'Hi into iho e.ploslon will ' ! d t.i.ilny nnd after that Is over An ar 'i i AiiMinder Ilerkinan will put In 1 "in for h" bodies of the llneo men, 1 '"'i.ilf of the Five Speech League, M'liArr .'ori, tho Ferrer Aioclutlon J .'iliu i.nllcal iirguniEatloiis. Tho rnnv f jir .M,lrl ciincz, nil innocent Vl'mi was at the moigiio yesterday, ''.t w.il be takm by relatives. Arthur "'ir yMt.t .,p:iiy.sevcnth ,lr'et, callfd at Hie siatlon houso ea ird.y it inquire about taking ch.ir?e c' Ml i h.tver.'s body nnd to ask about vamtnufu on Hrcoitrt rape 4 UNER DODQES LINER IN" FOO. Walrhfnl .HUlnprr of St. Vnnt Keeps Clear or OuronilnK Mrnnurr. The American llnrr 8t. Paul, In from Southampton and Cherbourg, ran through thlrty-tno lullrn of dense foe on Monel.iv night, blowing her whlsllo right seconds In every minute of the obscuration. Cnpt. Passow hoard n hoarser roar than Ills own, apparently dead nlir.nl, and, as he rcmaikod yesterday, ho "took the head, way off" tlui .St. J'nul. The skipper of the other steamship did likewise, lloth vessels then proceeded cautiously. Tho stranger, Invisible, passed to lh south of tho St. Paul and sho to the north of the stranger; that Is, each had pre sented "red to red" or port to pott, as the lulo of tho road requires. To do the trick Cupt. Passow put his helm hard over. Pas sengers peering fram ports say they saw the wash of the other steamship rolling toward the St. Paul. CUDAHYS START A STOCK FARM. To pen it 1I,(MM,II(M) on Itnnoh In llreeil rnrklntr llonvr Cntllr. IIockt Fonn, Col., July D, - The Cudahy Interests have shipped to heir laneh near Ordway 2,000 cows to lie used , as the nucleus of what Is planned to be I the largest stock farm In the country fori the breeding of packing house cattle. The cattle already raised on the rsnch h.ivu cost the Cudahy interests inoie than .uu,uvu ano nicy win s)cnu inure man 1.000,000 for additional stock and tin- proveiuents before their plans are ful filled. The Cudahy Interests have acquired an Immense tract near Ordway, which Is being converted Into the stock ranch and ' will bo equipped with everything neccs- General elections were held In Mex sary for the care and breeding of tine I Ico yesterday for a Provisional Prcsl beef cattle. Tnc cows which have Just dent, Vice-President, Senators and been purchased were bought In Xew Mex- Deputies. Gen. Hurta received a Ico. Colorado and Arizona. majority of the votes for tho provisional 35,000 MEN TO TELL STORIES OF HARD LUCK Former Employees of Illinois Central ii ml Hnrrimnn Lines in Symposium. Chicago. July 5. The railway em ployes' department of the American Federation of Labor has begun to gather data for the greatest hard luck story cer written. Sordid chapteis fiom the llvc of 33,000 ! Ill 1. !.. .1 ,,! ttl IaII !., I '" .."" i story of the hardships, tho MiifcrinKS, the ; -1M rt th nntnn hm.nw,J ,... out of ,vork thli tv-thtee months ttRO )jen bor dlfllcultles arrme between 1 it, nl) Investigation of the two railroad' 'and the Harrlmnn lines. evidence Is being collected by an attorney. Frank Comerford. nnd will be presented ill' turn ii.i.ui.ii. ... iiiivMiiaiuu o..'. In an Investigation of the two railroad systems before the United States Commis sion on Industrial llelatlons In Chicago next month. Sixty thousand question sheets will be circulated to-day by a corps of twenty International olllcers of the Ialor organiza tion. Sonic of tho questions which each man Is asked to answer are: "Since the strike have you lost your homo liecauso you could not make the payments? "Were you compelled to take any of your children out of school and send them ,0.."rl!? ,i . . , Was your wife compel cd to take up ......... ...... forced out of your Job? "Have ou been forced to get alonsc 1 with poorer and less food and cloth: g'lnp'tni not a vote was cast. for yourself and family since tho strike? "Have you had sickness In your family since the strike, directly or Indirectly caused by poveity? "Do you know of any striker or mem ber of his family who committed suicide because of the poverty Into which he was forced by the strlku?" There are fifty-two questions In all, and upon the back of the circular Is a space where each man Is asked to tell the story of his llfo since tho strike. The Investigation will show how iuni homes have been broken up, how many men have been made tramps, how many havo been forced to seek charity, tho number of deaths due to reduced stand ards of living and tho number of suicides. Relations between the roads and their employees were broken on September SO, 1911, The roads maintain that tho men went on a. strike, while tho unions do cl.u e that the men wero locked out be cause they amalgamated nine crafts under ont federation. BALLOON CAUSES $100,000 FIRE. Sri Scvernl IIiiIIiIIiirs Arlnmr at I liifliinutl Stock ranis. Cincinnati. July C. A paper balloon landed to-night on tho roof of ono of the bullfllngs at tho Union Stock Vaids and s'arted a lire which caused damage of $100,000 and destroyed buildings c ver Ing several acres, Tho buildings burnt down weie the sheep, shipping and quaianllnc pens and several others, nil two story frame build ings. There were no cattlo In the struc tures. Tho buildings were the pioperty of the Cincinnati Union Stock Yards Com pany. The damage Is fully covered by Insurance, PAPER BALLOONS SET FIRES. Oiip Wntorlmrjr llonii- .Nearly De lroril Hoy Jure n hrronil, WATKimimv, Conn., July 8 One of the hot nlr balloons sent up from Waterbury last night dropped on the loof of Dr. Iloystau Wagner's house on Buckingham street and set tho roof on fir". Thu house was nlmostj completely destioycd. The physician was at his summer hoi nt the time. Another balloon set fire to tho old Colonial homo of Dr. Thomas D. Dough erty of New York, opposite Poll's Theatre. A boy put this fire out before tht flremn rrlved. NEW YORK, MONDAY, LANDSLIDE FOR HDERTA IN HIS OWN ELECTION Dictator Gets .Majority in "Knee" for Provisional Presidency. BLAXQUET LEADING FOR SECOND PLACE Scattering Votes Arc Cast for Gam boa and De la Uarrn. ii"tiio it i iii.i, .'lAIIMfUn liliA.Mhl) FOIl THE lU'.ItKlj SI'IilT . .. . . va nf 1 itn 1,11,1 'V 01 '"l" President Aimed to Control the Next Government. ' Presidency, with Gen. Munquet In the second place. Intrigues by the Madoro family look ing to tho acquisition of a predominant Influence In the new government of Mexico nrc blamed for the spilt be tween Villa and Carranza. A settle ment Is said to have been reached which will spoil the scheme of the Maderos. Sweeping changes In tho Constitu tionalist Junta at Washington aro pre dicted as a result of the patching up of the differences between Villa and the First Chief. Gen. Jesus Carranza is reported to do organizing an army of 40,000 men to attack San Luis Potosl. He is now about fifty miles from that Federil . . ironjinoid. TlfrT. - v vm a a , nit-lnlor la Firm In Ihr Klrctln ProvUIn lp ih' relIent. .. - , v-itt. jui o. ucn. Huerta re-J LCU ea n nJ""lty of the votes oast to- "'. :iecuon noiu tnrough-! ; out the territory held by the Federals for a provisional President, Vice-President. Senators and Deputies. Gen. HIanqtiet, Minister of War, re ceived the next highest number of votes. llilo ontmirwr m, ... .1.. , i " " .vc t-a dency. Scattering votes were cast for Fran cisco de la Harm, Federlco Gamboa nnd others for the Presidency. Tho voting was extremely light everywhere, ' There wcre resnr 'trketl) in tllr ' neither the Catholic party nor the , n ,.. t,,., , lUb 1'nvlng shown the slightest In- j terest In the election. At scores of polling booth" In the In the election for Senators from the Federal district Zamncona V. Inclan was first and Gen. Pedro Gonzales second. In tho election of Deputies Kugenlo Paredos was first and Antonio Paredes second. Gen. Hlanquet, the Minister of War, declares that It Is untrue that Gen. Gustave Manjui Is returning to Mexico city from San I.uls Potosl. He reports thut nil Is quiet thorp nnd at Queretnro. The statement that Gen. Xavarrete Is to be named as Governor of Vera Cruz or Pueblo Is denied. MADER0 INTRIGUES SEEN. Family llellrvril lo llf SrrUInu Irr ilomlnnnt Influence. Kt. Paso, July S. The discussions nt the conference between the representa tives of Gen. Villa and Gen. Carranza at Torreon, by which Villa has won the title of Commander In Chief of the Army of the North in return for con cessions to the First Chief of tho Con stitutionalists, revealed that the real cause of tho split between Villa nnd Carranza was the Intrigues of the Ma. deru family with tho aim of controlling the new Government of Mexico. Members of the family of tho slain President have, as Is well known, been among tho wealthiest landowners of the republic, nnd when Francisco Madcro, the only Idealist In the family, started his. revolt .against Dlnz ho was derided by nit his relatives, who tried hard to prevent his success and Joined him only when Dluz wbh overlhrown and Miulero was In supremo power. Thcia same men, believing now that tho success of the Constitutionalist re volt Is assured, have been, It la said, seeking to gain a hold over Villa, who Is not an n.stuto politician. In the hope of using him to gain financial benefits when tho new reglmo Is Installed in Mexico city. The Maderos, realizing that they could not deal with Carranza, it If believed, provoked the split be tween tlio chiefs. Ono of tho concessions granted by Villa's delegates Is tho dismissal of Federlco Gonzalea Garza, according to the stories credited here. Garra Is the man who framed the report of the Ben- Continued on Third Pagt JULY 6, 1914.-,,,, im. $100,000 BAIL FOR GIFF0RD. Ill I'nthrr AVItllnit In I'nrnlsh II I'rnillnK Kreoml Trlnl, Ai.hant, July K Malcolm Olrfoid, Sr.. the wealthy Hudson mnchlnery manufac turer, Mantis ready to put In cash nay release of his son ponding the tatter's see - ond trial on tho chargo of murdering Frank J. Chile. Negollatlons for bait will begin next week nfler William T. nyrne. of counsel for U I fiord returns from Denver. One of tho Jurymen, John II. Qulglcy, verified to-night the, reports that tho Jury stood seven to five for it verdict of murder In the second degree. He said that tho flvn who held out for acquittal based their decision on the ground that the Dis trict Attorney did not prove n tangible connection of young til (Tor. I with the mur der. The seven Jurors who favored conviction for econd degree murder did so. It Is said. In tho belief that while UlfTord did not do tho actual killing ho knew some thing about the crime. I0RIMER TOOK $1 ACCOUNTS. tlnnU 1. 1st .IimI ltetvitli.il Also Shows J'rlrmUlilp Deposits, Ciiicaoo, July r,, Publication here to day of a complete list of the depositors m the Lorlrr.cr-aiunday L.i Salle Stiett Tlank reveals the Tact that many of 1irl mer's friends were depositors, that many charitable nnd social organizations main tained checking accounts there because of friendship -with tho former Senator anil that there were many depositors who had It each a the result of a campaign by the savings department of the b.ink. Ileccher Nlblnek deelln.u to make any estimate as lo what part of the funds may bj caved to the depositor with checking accounts, which total t2.tBn.3S7. The sivlnss deposits totalled 1316,513. KEEP OF MURDERESS IS COSTLY FOR STATE: P.ill for .Mrs. Ferola's Mainte nance and Education Is 000 a Month. They sit up with Mrs. Madellna Ferolc -ine two matrons, and the only two matrons attached to Sing Sins and they struggle to teach her Hngllsh while ho faces bravely a futuro which holds possl ble death In the electric chair. Maybe there aro some who will say that It Isn't worth while for two able bodied women to walk Into a prison houjc every day and turn nnd return the pages of Itallan-Kngllsh grammars for the bene fit of h convicted murderess. Maybe it j Isn't worth while, but certain It is that tnc matron like it ami Mrs. IVoIa likes It: so after all there Is perhaps no harm done even to the mueamlsh ones, unless " nni .irs. i-eroia's maintenance and education aro costing this State Just IC00 a month. She resides, does Mr. Ferola. who was convicted of killing her faithless sweet heart by plunging a carving knife Into his "-". ' n'" nanusonie oiu folonlal stone thing of granlto Mocks built" In the '30s which stands on the hill Just ! back of Sing Sing prison, and Mie is at- ' tended by a retinue of two matrons, one 1 cook, three guards and a gardener. That Is the reason why her expense to ' uir .Turn- is ouu a monin. The old man s'.on Is a fourteen room house with lofty ceilings nnd an Imposing exterior, which lias been l!ently gazing at the Hudson ICIver for three-quarters of a centiiiy. So the new warden of Sing Sine. Thomas J. McCormic!;, a man who halls from Yonkers and wants to make hit, 1 maintenance fund go ns far ns possible writhes In his chair and says with ns much ehemence ns his good nature will permit: "Itldlculous!" Ilut that Is tho view of a buslneiw man, one who has a million dollars worth of things to do and only half a million to do them with. Ho wants Mrs. Ferola to le sent to the women's prison nt Auburn nnd he doesn't hesitate to say so, but he adds that ns long as she has to occupy ncr fourteen icom mansion nhe will I well cared for, even If sho stays for a 1 jear. Mrs. Ferola wns sentenced by Supremo Court Justice Davis to die at Slug Sing during the week beginning to-day. Hut an appeal was made and so It will he a year before her caso Is finally disposed or. For the most part sho seems happy even If sho Is the first woman to be sen tenced to death In this State since Mrs. Martha Place murdered her stepdaughter In U9S. Her days are taken up with the study of Kngllsh with needlework and with reading. The matrons say that she Is learning tho language very quickly. .Mrs. I-ciola Is 43 years old. She, ran a boarding house at 529 Morris avenue,! The llronx. Tho mail she killed, Carmeio Canestrale. a pedler, was a boarder who' had promised to marry her, but nt tho I last minute declined to do so unliws she paid him too, PANAMA ELECTIONS QUIET. AUmlnlstrntloii C'nmllilntes for llir Saarnihly An- Victorious. .lrctal CaUt rinpatc. lo Tur. Sin, Panama, July Ii. The election for members of the Assembly was held to day and passed off quietly, much to tho surprise of many people who feared that there would bo an outbreak at the polls and that American troops might bo needed to subdue rioting. The Administration candidates wero successful. BOLT KILLS A WOMAN IN STREET It Tear Off llrr Shoes, but Falls to lilt Her Iliiahnnel. GLovEnsvu.LE, N, V July fi. Mrs. Harry Hart of Mayfleld wan Instantly killed by a bolt of lightning this after noon while walking with her husband on the Mayfleld road In this town. Her shoes were torn off. Mr, Hart was uninjured. , . . the Sun Printing and Publlihlng Association. AUTO HITS TRAIN; TWO DEAD, ONE DYING i"0"'""" H II 1111 1)011 1 CraSHCS Into lions: Island Ilnllrond Concli i nt Crossing. WO.MEX CONCEAL NAMES YVreeknjre Causes Short. Circuit nnd Throws Passengers Into Panic. llealh's toll nn high In nnlnmnhlle aerlilents flrnln). Mne persons were killed, two are djlng nnd lit were tnjnred. A llttlo automobile runabout holding a man and two women tore along the Hempstead Turnpike near tho village of Queens at full speed Just nftor dusk yes terday nnd smashed Into a J-ong Islund Itallroad train. The driver, supposed to be Samuel Molostowsky of DM Kast 16"th street, was killed. Neither of the women was Identi fied immediately. One of them, who re covered consciousness for a few minutes after the crash, cried out: "You can't ge my name there won't he any scandal about me!" That woman died In tho Jamaica llospl tal thirty minutes after her exclamation. The other woman had not regained con sciousness at midnight nnd the phistcnna who were working over her didn't think hhe ever would, The two j omiK women occupants of tho wricked automobile were Identified by their sister early this morning as Kllcen and Ilesslo Zatulovc of 929 Kast 167th street. Itessle, who died shortly after tho accident, was 20 years old. Klleen was 30. Their mother, Mrs. Lather Zalu tove. Is critically 111 at their home and was not informed last night of tho ac cident. When the train, a local, pulled out of the Cjuectvs Million at 8:03 o'clock James Thomas, the watchman at the Hempstead turnpike crossing, tin or blocks away, lot down the eroscnrin gates and with them , a rid lantern that spelled danger to any approaching traffic. Awtt ,l,w" Hie road Thomas looked "n" ro,,r nutoniohile headlights near Ing nt terrific speed. "A race," he said to himself nnd dashed hack to the side of the road shouting a warning. Ono of the cars, a big touring automo bile, pulled up to nn .abrupt stop 100 feet from the railroad crossing. The little ear neither wavered nor slackened pace, although It was quite apparent, so Thomas nays, that the drlxcr wns doing Ills best to apply the brakes. " The train was traelllng about fifteen miles an hour. Witnesses thought that the automobile must have been going foity miles an hour. When the crash came the motorrnan shut orf his power and put on his brakes, but the runabout had been dragged in n topsyturvy posi tion, the three occupants clinging to It for -KM feet before the train was stopped. At that Instant there was a great flash ! " 11 irrrinc explosion. rart llf wreckage had got tangled up with the electric shoe and a short circuit had follou,'d Tnc ,lrlver wn!' 11 brother-in-law of the ,wo '""K "omen. He had owned tho automobile for two weeks. j AUTO KILLS ONE, INJURES PIVE. Ilrltrr, Atolilliu; Clillil, Kills .Neurn mid Thru Cmvtirs Into Tree. One man was killed and five were In J"''cd In llrooklyu estvrday aftornoon wle" n crowded automobile struck a curb and hit a tree. Tho owner and driver, Frank Haas of lfisi Pacific street, ran his car onto the sidewalk to avoid run ning over a negro, Henry Langford of IS Ilaucroft place, who wns hit by n front wheel nnd In spite of the desperate attempt made to me him was killed. Haas was driving along Pacific street near Saratoga avenue nt n good clip when n llttln girl, according to tho passengers In the tonncau, tan directly townrd the front of tho niac'iln. In order to avoid striking her Haas swerved to tho left, only to find himself only a few feet from the negro, I.augfoi'il. llefore Hans could np ply Ills brakes effectively tho machine had knocked Langford down with tho right front wheel, Haas then turned tho car onto tho ulilcwalk on the left. Ono of thu passengers, James Fox of 179 Pacific street, seeing the tiee straight ahead, called out to tho others to Jump and himself leaped to the street, rolled over and over, picked himself up and ran homo without looking nround. The Injured were Fred Pcsch. 39, of B21 WeHtern mcnur, cuts on the head and body; Charles Nelson, 33, of It '''ourth stieel. Union Course, I.. I., cuts 011 11,0 bend; C.eorge Muller, 3fc, of T3 fchineitads uenue, bruises nnd cuts; all ,alen 10 ,lle Hushwick IloHplt.il; Charles Hi em it, :'0, of 11S1 Jamaica avenue, cuts on head and legs, taken to the St, Charles Hospital; Frank Haas, 3L', scalp wound, taken to St. John's Hospital. NAVY OFFICER IN AUTO CRASH. I.lrntrnniit - ('oiiininiiilrr I'oote's .Motlirr-ln-lniv U Killed. Haaatoga, .V. y July C In turning aside to pans another car near Corinth, ten miles north of this village, to.day an automobile driven by Lieutenant-Commander P. W. Foote, U, S. N of Sche nectady turned turtle, crushing lo death Commander Foote's mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Feud Clary of 1102 Nott stieet, I Schenectady, who with Mrs. Foote and I her small child wero occupants of Iho i iiimiilne. Commander Footo Is In a hospital here suffering with severe shock and bruises, WOMAN KILLED AS AUTO UPSETS. Her lluoliitml nml :t Others Throtrn From .SLIililliiic Cnr rr Hurt. IIoston, July 5. Mrs. Kplualm Hamel of Lynn was crushed to denth and her husband, her daughter Geraldln nnd Mr. Cnsfliturd nn Third Pngt JULY DINERS GAIL FOR HEAT. Find Nineteenth Floor of Illllmore Too for Frit!. T. C. Townsend of Dallas, Tox., was courageous enough, even In the face of tho calendar, to rcquost a. waiter last night In the Cascade, tho nineteenth story restaurant nt tho Illltmore, to turn on tho heat. Mr. Townsend and a party of friends were there for dinner nnd one of the women complained of tho chilly atmosphere. Tho wnltcr went to Manager John C. rtowman with tho request to turn on tho steam. Mr. llowman merely remarked Uint It was "soino July 6" and ordered the engineer to ratso the temperature. LOST GIRL'S MIND A BLANK. "Vnskern" All Put lent In lloaton llosnltnl Can Itrenll. Hosto.v, July 6. A young woman who has been In tho Ttcllef Hospital suffering from amnesia since Friday night and be lieves her namo Is Frances Huntington has excited the Interest of the physicians nnd police. Hho Is about 23 years old and except to say that she has ridden considerably In a touring car, that sho went to school In Vonkcrs nnd that tho natno Huntington Is the mot familiar ono to her she lias no recollection of whero her home Is, where she came from to lloslon or who her friends are. Miss Huntington was found suffering from n severe headache nt tho North Sta tion, having como In there from South Lnwrence. She had money, a mileage ' Iwok and tho names of ten magazine ' writers In her purse, ns well ns nn llleg- i Ihlo letter nddressed to Mary H. Stanley I from Dr. L. W. Itlch of Columbus, Ohio. Tho young woman says she boarded with Mary Stanley In Yonkers. A heart shaped locket bore the Initials "H. T. I." and contained the picture of a child. The pa tient said to-day she had lived In New York and thought her parents were dead. EX-GOLF CHAMPION HURT ' WITH 4 IN AUTO SMASH Gilbert Nicholls nnd Another Nenr Death Cars Collide on Shore Jlond. Ocr.AN Citt, N. J.. Jul. t. To petsons were fo badly hurt that they probablj will die and three others were less seriously Injured In h hcadon collision between tno automobiles going nt high speed on the Shore Itond at the end of Ocean City Houlevard to-night. Iloth cars were re duced to a tangled mass of twisted metal. The two men seriously Injured arc Gil bert Nicholls, ex-Metroiiolltnn golf cham pion and now connected with the Wil mington Country Club, concussion of the brain, compound fracture of leg and broken kneecap1 and William O. P.owiand of Jenklntown. Pa., concussion of the brain and probably Internally Injured. The others hurt are K. C. Page of Itosemont, Pa scalp wounds; H. A. Headley of Snedesboio. one of the largest shippers of produce In this section, lacerations of fnce, gash In head and fingers broken, and Carl Chrlstman of Mulllca Hill, broken right nrm. Nicholls, Itowlnnd and Page, after their Injuries were dressed by doctors at the ecene of the crash, were taken to the At lantic City Hospital, where It was said to-night Nicholls and Honland might die before morning. Headley had brought his wife to a physician here for treatment mid was returning home with Chrlstman at the wheel, when the crash occurred. How land, NIchollK and Page had been to the Capo May .nlf Club and were on their way to Atlantic e.uy. (Jllbert Nicholls Is one of the foremost professional golfers In tho country. He has played over almost every course from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Ho won tho Metropolitan championship at Knglewood In 1911, but a recent lllnets kept him out of tho game, for a year. WELL TEST NEW EXPLOSIVE. .ninl (Itllrrrs Will DlachnrKr Tor prilor lit Hlrel Caisson. Nonrol.K, Va., July f. Whitehead tor pedoes containing a new kind of explo sive will be exploded ngalnst a steel cais son made to leprcscnt a battleship In the Kllzabeth Itlver at the navy yard on Tuesday. The experiments are to be conducted In the presence only of naval olllcers nnd lepresentatlves of the orilnanco depart nicnt. Tho observers will be on board the monitor Puritan, which will take a position 600 yards from the caisson. Those on tho Puritan will be required to take to cover during the firing. WANT VOTE TO SAVE FORTUNES. Iliiclima of MiirlliorotiKh Tells or Mprnillhrlf I fion-ln-lnT, Newport. July 5. Tho Duchess of Marlborough told an audience at the home of her mother, Mrs. O. H. P. llelmont, nere to-day that wenlthy women are ad vocating suffrage with the object of pro tecting their fortunes from spendthrift sons-m-iaw. "Many persons wonder why wealthy women want tho ballot," ald the Duchess, "but there would bo little wonder If they knew the story of women whoso sons-Ill-taw nave squandered their last penny. Legislation Js the only protection for trjp wealthy mother-in-law of many a young spendthrift. It is tho only way In which they can save themselves from ruin." MUSHROOMS SUPPLANT BEER. They Will lie Cironn In n llrrvirry In Nt. I.onU. St. Louis, July G, The plant of the old Union Ilrewery. Is to bo made Into' a mushroom cellar. The Mushroom Cellars Company has leased the brewery and will start work nt onco fitting It up as nn experiment. Some "dry" workers here say that this Is due to tile fact that tile brewers be lieve Missouri will go "dry" Inside of a few years. The plnnt formerly was part of tho Anheiiser-liusch equipment, but tecvully has not been used because of being sep arated from tho other Busch plants. PRICE TWO CENTS. MAN ON BICYCLE FIRES 3 SHOTS AT DR. CARMAN Attempt to Slay Physician in Whoso Office Mrs. Bailey Was Killed. ASSAILANT TITHES AWAY TX DARKNESS Nearby Residents Contradict Talc of Firing nt Car. CAHMANS DREAD FOES WILL HIDE Gi;. IN HOUSE Keep Watch to Prevent Trick to Fasten Guilt Upon Doc tor's Wife. Fnr.EroiiT, U I.. July 5.-Dr. Kdwln Carman, In whoso office Mrs. Louise Ilalley was killed on Tuesday night by n shot fired through n window, entered the Freeport police headquarters nt 10:50 o'clock to-night nnd declared that nn attempt had been made to assas sinate him by a man who rode a bicycle. This mnn, he said, shot thrcp times at his automobile as ho was driving along Centennial nvenue between Itoosevelt and llockvllle Centre with Garland Gaden, an actor-manager, living at Itoosevelt, but that the man with tho gun didn't even hit the car. Karllcr tn the day Dr. Carman said that lie fears somelnidy would hldo a revolver In his house to fasten guilt upon his w1fo and repented his story that lie was confident that the person Who murdered Mrs. Bailey Intended the fatal shot for him. Still another angle to the mystery was exploited In a rumor that three women and a man were concerned In a plot to take Dr. Carman's life. The District Attorney admitted that detec tives wcre Investigating a story that one of the women killed Mrs. Ualley nnd that a man was present and nldcd her to escape. Tho four persons nro drug fiends, according to the talc. Actor Confirm StorJ. After telling his story of the shota at his car on n lonely wooded stretch of road by the mysterious cycler, whose appearance ho was unablo to describe, the physician said he was more con vlncenl than ever that somebody wanted to kill him. According to Dr. Carman- -nnd his story was continued by Guden when Sheriff Pettlt routed him out of bed nt liis home In Itoosevelt ill a lato hour the attack on his life took plnce shortly after 10:30 o'clock. Just after he had passeet a man riding u bicycle nnd slowed down because of a ditch. "We lienrd a sharp report," said (laden, "and thought that one of the tires had burst. We didn't get out of the car, but I looked out of tho back window of the machine It was n closed car and saw a man on a wheel about forty feet behind the car. "Just then there was another shot. Tho man had come up about ten feet nearer. Thirty seconds later he fired a third shot. 1 said to the doctor: '(lis like hell!' and lie did, speeding the car nbout forty miles nn hour to Itoosevelt, where I got out." This version of the attack of the mys terlous cycler coincided with the start ling story which Dr. Carman related tC the police. Hunt Slarla for l rlll. Sheriffs, deputies nnd policemen climbed Into high power nutomobllea and went on a hunt for the cycler and his gun. Sheriff Pettlt, Olllcer Clarence Van Hlprr of Freeport nnd others went ovur Dr. Carman's cuurso and on his return said that he visited the home of Hem Holder, brother of XJeorge (Solder, Jr., wlio was In Dr. Carman's ofllco when Mrs. nalley was slain. The Sheriff said Hint Henry tlolder told him he was In bed and nwalte when he heard two shots.' Golder said he got up. looked out of his window ami saw an automobile standing in tho m!i die of the road. Then the machine moved forward nbout 1,000 feet, Golder said, stopped again nnd a third shut rang out. Golder declared .that at no time did he sec a man on a bicycle. George M. Levy, Mrs. Carman's counsel nnd ex-Justlco of tho Pencil i. H. Wallace arrived at Golder'H house KlmultnneouHly with tho .Sheriff and his party nnd heard Golder tell nbout the shots and the queer movements of the automobile, ' Sheriff Pettlt said that two other men living In the neighborhood Interviewed by him Insisted that they hadn't heard ' nny gun firing. Dr. Carman and Guden ngtccd as in these fncts, which led up to the tide in the automobile along Centennial acnue, where they ran across the poor marksman. The physician tailed at the Gadcn