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TTEARST" 3 SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA. OA.. SUNDAY, JULY 4. 1915.
Chines
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“Catch*
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K
10 TRAP RUSSIAN HORDE
llindenburtf Expected to Move Southward to
Co-oj)erate \\ r i111 (Jen. Maekensen in (Jiant
Scheme to Envelop Grand Duke’s Forces.
Submarine
Trapped on
Sea Bottom
While One of the Kaiser’s Terrors j
Lies Helpless Twenty Fathoms
Down, Others Sink
Five Ships.
Continued* From Page 1.
11 mien unabated. Deports from the
front received from Berlin state that
the Russians already are removing
their troops from Ivangorod, th»*
mighty fortress ht the confluence of
the Vistula nnd Vieprs Rivers With
the northward sweep of Von Mack-
ensen’s army, It is expected that Von
Hlndenburg In the Baltic provinces
soon will begin a southern drive in
an effort to envelop the millions of
Grand Duke Nicholas
According to a statement Issued
by the main army headquarters at
Berlin to-day. the Teutonic forces
have advanced to the Bug. between
Kumiunka and Htrzumilowa beiow
Krylow. They are rapidly sweep
ing northward toward thMr objective,
the great fortress of Brest.-Litovsk,
the nerve center of the entire Rus
sian campaign.
West of the Vistula the Austro-
(R rinans are rojv rted to be already
well to the north of Tarlow, their ad
vance unstemmed.
Advices re cived here to-night from
Amsterdam Mates that it is reported
in Budapest the Russians have evac
uated all of Northern Bessarabia.
Mrs. Raine, Ex-Atlantan,
Writes From War Scene
Borne way, the big war and its
phases seems more a personal mat
ter when you hear from it at first
hand, y.iy, from a friend of yours
who is there, and has followed the
fortunes of war and great armies in
many fields, as Mrs. Leonora Sheehan
Kamo has done.
Mrs. Raine is correspondent for
The New York Sun, and the letter
is written by her to Mrs. R. Wayne
Wilson, of Atlanta. Mrs. Wilson
knows Germany very well, Indeed,
having spent her summers there for
a number of years. Mrs. Raine visits
her sisters In Atlanta every year,
and is well konwn here, having lived
formerly in Atlanta.
Here are Homo extracts from her
letter, written at Berlin last month:
“We speak Dutch In Germany.
English and French are lost tongues
here, but you always can find some
one to help you out. The Germans
have always been good, kind, hu
mane people, and this war has not
changed their nature. In spite of re
ports to the contrary. Such a shame
that another country has to resort Jo
such subterfuges to win the sym
pathy of neutral countries! I was
in Belgium for The Sun In January
and February, and found the reports
of destroyed villages greatly exag
gerated. I heard of no atrocities, be
yond the unfortunate crimes commit
ted in all war# by occasional drunk
en soldiers.
Paris a Dead Village.
“Nothing Is going on in Paris—no
theaters*, no concerts, no opera. A
great, dead village. I was glad to
get away.
“Berlin shows little change. Were
It not for the presence of uniforms
you'd not know- a war was on. Plenty
of delicious things to eat, all the
theaters and operas flourishing; peo
ple well dreesed and by no means
weeping
"When and how will it end? I be-'
lieve the finish will be as precipi
tate as the start, also that neutral
nations will 'draw up the papers.’ All
the Germans with whom 1 nave talk-,
ed seem to think the United States
can not act as a neutral, because it
has favored the Allies according to
them. You car not convince them
that this is not true, uo 1 have stopped
arguing.
“Really, the manner In which Eng
land has assumed Control of the
Channel is most surprising, and I do
olame our good Wilson for not stand
ing up for hia country’s rights more
firmly. He knows what war is, and
no one can blame him for temporiz
ing, yet he should stick to a decree.
The English would like to draw the
United States into the war if only
to call our fleet to the North Sea to
light the German fleet—which so far
England has shown a delicacy in do
ing.”
Alwsys Defended Germany.
Mrs. Wilson, by the way, was in
Berlin when the war began. When
she got back to New York she was
the center of a number of distinguish
ed gatherings and always defended
Germany warmly.
In one group she spoke so well that
a former student at Heidleberg,
wearing the Kaiser s medal for schol
arship, insisted on presenting it to
her, saying, “I think you deserve this
more than 1, who am on the side of
the Alllew.”
Mrs. Wilson also ha a one of the
famous iron cross rings, given by
the Kaiser to Dr. Zoepffel von Quel-
lenstein, former Consul here, and by
him to Mrs. Wilson, because of ner
interest In Germany.
( By •International News Service.)
LONDON, July 3.—Disaster has
overtaken once of the Kaiser’s trou
blesome mechanical swordfish, the
U-30, which is lying at the bottom of
the sea *tt the mouth of the Eras River
In twenty fathoms of water. The na
ture of ttie uifiiculty that prevented
the submarine from rising is not
known, but she lias been located be
tween the Islands of Kottum and
Borkum, and the crew has exchanged
ugnals with divers, who hurried 'o
her assistance. Three of the crew
have already succumbed and lltue
hope is suggested that any effective
rescue work can be accomplished in
time to save the rest.
Assistance has been sent from Wll-
helmshaven and the Germans assert
that they will be able to recover the
submarine.
Sister craft of the distressed U-30
destroyed at least five ships In the
waters about the United Kingdom to
day. The Londonderry steamship
•adsby, a vessel of 3,600 tons, from
Sydney to London, encountered a sub
marine twenty miles off Wolf Rock
and was sent to the bottom The crew
aped in lifeboats and were latar
picked up by the steamer Leon and
landed at Movllle, Ireland.
The steamship Richmond, a steel
vessel owned in London, Queenstown
to Boulogne, wood laden, probubly
with supporting timbers for tren h
work and gun emplacements, had ;:n
experience little less thrilling than
that of the Armenian before her sklo-
per abandoned his desperate flight
and hove to, permitting his ship to ‘ e
sunk. She was riddled with shot and
shell and had been subjected to a
raking bombardment before giving up.
Members of the crew, who drifted
about In open boats for twelve hours
before being rescued, state that the
submarine attacked and sank another
good-sized ship, but they were able to
pull away from the scene.
The British steamship Cralgard,
from Galveston June 3 and Newport
News June 11, with a cargo of cotton
for Havre, which has been a subject
>f apprehension through the finding of
two of her lifeboats drifting emn’.y
at sea, is now definitely known to
have been torpedoed by a submarine
in the lutter's favorite hunting zone
off the Scilly Islands. The crew
reached the port of Plymouth to-day.
The Belgian steamer Boduognit,
owned by the Antwerp Shipping Com-
pany, was torpedoed and sunk off Fal
mouth In the early dawn. Her crew
reached Falmouth with little diffi
culty.
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Lime loss in Tuberculosis
In The Journal of the American
Medics! Association (January >7,
1914), was the following:
“It has been many times stated
that In tuberculosis or In the pro
tuberculosis stage an Increased
amount of calcium (lime) It lost both
In the urine and feces. In fact, a
demineralization has been thought to
be a forerunner of the eveln^-ent
of tuberculosis.”
If tuberculosis is due to lime, lo.sa,
the success Eckman'a Alterative
in its treatment may be due. In
part, to its content of a lime salt so
combined with other valuable in
gredients as to be easily assimilated.
Always we have urged consump
tives to attend strictly to matters of
food, but often some effective reme
dial agent is needed. In many cases
of apparent recovery Kckm&n’s Al
terative seems to have supplied this
need It contains no opiates, nar
cotics or habit-forming drugs, so Is
safe to try. Sold by Jacobs’ Drug
Btores and. other leading druggists
Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia.
Georgia Magnet May
Go to War as Nurse
NEW YORK, July 3 Theatergoers
will remember Annie Abbott, known
hh "the little Georgia magnet" be
cause of unusual stunts she once per
formed on the stage. Miss Abbott
weighed only 106 pounds, and strong
men could not lift her from the stage
floor unless she willed It so.
She is no longer “the little Georgia
magnet," but Mrs. McLeglan, wife of
Captain S. T. L. McLeglan, of the
First Regiment, Royal Cavalry, who
was called to the colors with other re
serves while In Australia, and now is
at the front In France with the British
troops if he is still alive.
Whether her husband is living or
dead Mrs. McLeglan does not know
and can not find out. Hhe was at the
Hotel Savoy en route to England to
obtain definite Information. The last
Information she had, some time ago,
came from his mother in London. It
said “Think Sidney has been cap
tured. Father is to see Lord Noel and
try to stay execution.”
"What all this means Tdo not know,”
said Mrs. McLeglan, who was at the
San Francisco fair when the infor
mation came. “But I am going direct
to England to find out. If I can’t learn
there I Intend to go to the front as a
Red Cross nurse and find out for my
self.”
Armenian Not Naval
Vessel When Sunk
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, July 3.—The
steamship Armenian, sunk by a Ger
man submarine with loss of Ameri
can lives, was not under British Gov
ernment requisition when she sailed
from Newport News July 17 with
mules for the British army, but prior
to this voyage she had been requi
sitioned by the London Government.
Although the British requisition
terminated before her final trip, the
Armenian had not yet been put back
on the regular galling list of the Ley-
land Line, owner of the ship.
This statement from the manager
of the Leyland Line at Liverpool was
reported to the State Department
to-day by Ambassador Page at Lon
don.
A dispatch from Consul Armstrong
ut Bristol to the State Department
to-day brought definite word that
the Armenian attempted for 46 min
utes to run away from the German
submarine, and that she hove to only
after she had been sret afire by shells
from the Gerrrm’n vessel.
The dispatch was so abbreviated
that the State Department was un
able to determine exactly what Con
sul Armstrong meant to convey re
garding the launching of the boats
of the Armenian and the escape of
her survivors. The message will be
repeated.
WIFE TRIES TO SHIELD
’lirows Herself in Vain at Maniac in Hallway
of Home as' They Unexpectedly Come Upon
Him Waiting With Pair of (Juns Drawn.
Continued From Page 1.
New Diver to Decide
War, Says Inventor
(By International News 8ervice )
SAN FRANCISCO. July 3 —Visited
secretly In Oakland by Commander
van Knoor. German naval attache at
Washington. Washington B. Vander-
lip, inventor, explorer and member of
the Institute of American Mining En
gineers, to-night told of the confer
ence and expressed unwavering be
lief that he bus invented a submarine
warcraft capable of deciding the
gr» at war.
"No offer satisfactory to me could
be made by Commander van Knoor.
sukl Vanderlip. “1 lmve offered to
go to Berlin with all my plans and
blueprints If guaranteed a substan
tial sum In the Interim negotiations
have been opened with re present a
tivos of the British government."
Prior to the secret visit of the Ger
man Ambassador’s naval attache the
inventions, according to Vanderlip,
were offered to the Navy Department
at Washington.
SWOBODA AGAIN ARRESTED.
PARIS, July 39.- His recently grown
mustache shaved off. Raymond Swoboda
again has been taken a prisoner and
again Interrogated. The authorities re
fuse to communicate 4he details, but It
is asserted that inquiries in the differ
ent French towns Swoboda visited elic
ited nothing against him.
Russian Naval Fight
Shrouded in Doubt
(By International Nows Service.)
LONDON, July 3.—The Russo-
German naval battle in the Baltic
Is still shrouded in mystery in spite
of oiticlal statements from both sides
and several unofficial reports. The
only sure thi*-~ is that the German
mine layer Albatross was driven
ashore. This Berlin admits, saying
that she fought four Russian armed
cruisers for two hours.
A dispatch front Copenhagen to the
Daily News* says about ten cruisers
and ten torpedo boats took part in
the battle, the Germans having an
absolute superiority. Evidently it
was the same fleet that bombarded
Windau The battle was started by
the Russian cruisers which attacked
the German torpedo boat flotilla. Im
mediately afterward several- fast
German cruisers appeared, the dis
patch says, but gives no further de
tails.
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Shell Invalids Chief
Of French in Turkey
(By International News Service.)
PARIS. July 3 General Gouraud.
commander rf the French expedi
tionary forces at the Dardanelles, has
bean struck by a fragment of a phell
which fel', near a field ambulance,
where he was visiting the wounded.
His life, according to official re
ports, is not in danger, but he has
been invalided home.
General Rallloud has been given
provisional command of the expedi
tionary forces.
DR.J.T. GAULT
SPECIALIST (for men'
32 Inman Building
; Atlanta Ooargla
C. Christensen,
"The Danbury H attar."
Hats of all kinds cleaned and re
blocked Into the latest style*.
| 17 1-2 Walton 8t., Cor. Broad.
(Next to Healey Building.)
New Zeppelin Goes
Out Every 20 Days
I GENEVA (vis Paris), July 3—News
dispatches reaching Geneva from Frlad-
j riohshaven set forth that double shifts
of men are now working in the Zeppelin
factories, which are turning out h eom-
pleted Zeppelin every twenty days.
1 One of the two Zeppelins destined for
I operations against Italy was sent from
Frledrichshafen yesterday to replace the
dirigible destroyed over Belgium recent
ly by the Canadian aviator Warnetord.
statement:
“Mr. Morgan is resting easily and
no complications are expected.”
Set Capitol Bomb.
Holt to-night made a confession In
which he declared tin* bomb explo-
«ion In the Capitol at Washington? on
Friday was his handiwork.
To Detective Captain Tunney, of
New York the assassin said he
planned firrt to blow up the Capitol
as a protest against our failure to
maintain strict neutrality, then to
kill Mr. Morgan.
The confession has not been made
public and there are startling rumors
at Mineola that a third outrage in
volving the life of another distin
guished man was also planned by
Holt.
Both of Holt’s shots entered In the
region of Mr. Morgan’s hip. The sec
ond bullet, said to have caused the
more serious wound, was evtracted
shortly after 6 o’clock this evening.
Mr. Morgan’s own bravery, the
heroism of his wife and the strong
right arm of Henry Physick. the Mor
gan butler, combined probably to save
the financier’s life.
Heated at the Morgan breakfast
table with Mr. and Mrs. Morgan when
Holt entered the house, a revolver
drawn, was Sir Cecil Spring-Rice.
British Ambassador to the United
States, who had been an overnight
guest at the Morgan home.
Holt, In appearance and speech, ex
hibited all the characteristics of a
demented person.
8ays Heaven Inspired Him.
In the GLencove lockup he made a
rambling and smetimes Incoherent
statement to the effect that he count
ed Mr. Morgan responsible for the
continuation of the European war.
He said that he was inspired by
Heaven to do what he did. It was
in Mr. Morgan's power, he said, to
cut short the horrors of the war by
preventing further shipments of arms
and ammunition.
In almost the same breath he cried
out that ho did not intend to kill Mr.
Morgan, but merely to frighten him.
But as the gates of the Nassau Coun
ty jail shut upon Mm later in the day
he said that he had done his duty and
that it now remained l’or Mr. Mor
gan and the rest of America to do
theirs.
But amid all the furore of the day,
the doctors at Mr. Morgan’s bedside
maintained a taciturnity that gave
rise to many rumors At 6:15 o’clock
the physicians declared their patient’s
condition excellent and said that no
vital organs had been involved. Biitj
rumors of *a deadly infection and to
the effect that the accord bullet had
torn through Mr. Morgan’s abdomen
persisted j Junius Spencer Morgan,
the wounded man’s son, was besought
to enlarge upon the meager infor
mation issued by the doctors. Byt
he shook his head and declared that
he had been advised to add nothing.
Issues Rambling Statement.
Holt, who talked like an insane per
son. Issued a rambling statement fol
lowing his incarceration in the Glen-
cove Jail, in which he declared Mr.
Morgan was responsible for the coi.-
tinuation of the European war, and
his act was prompted by a desire to
bring the struggle to an end.
Mr. Morgan's activity as fiscal agent
for the British Governmen in supply
ing war munitions to the Allies in
spired the attempted assassination,
according to Holt’s statement. The
latter is alleged to be of German an
cestry.
Mrs. Morgan was at her husband's
side when the shots were fired at him
in the hall of his home. She made a
heroic effort to put herself between
her husband anJ Holt, who advanced
with loaded revolvers in cither hand,
both of which he fired simultaneously.
Mr. Morgan leaped forward ns the
two shots were fired, and grappled
with the maddened man. As th y
met, the banker grained one of the
revolvers. The two men fell to the
floor together. Henry Phyilck, the
butler, leaped on Holt and snatched
away the other gun; then, tossing is
aside, and as the man was about to
rise, he brought an Iron hod with
crushing force dowA upon Holt’s head.
House attendants rushing in, Holt
( was scoured and Mr. Morgan, rising
with the assistance of his wife, calm
ly walked upstairs and called up his
office on the telephone to give assur
ance of his safety.
This act probably prevented a panic
in Wall street, as the news of the at
tempt on his life spread with light
ning speed and the Morgan office was
able to give assurance of its head's
condition simultaneous with the
spread of the news of the attempt on
his" life in the street.
Quick Aid and Arrest.
Attendants quickly telephoned for
medical aid and the police. Within
fifteen minutes after the man had
forced his way, with drawn gun. Into
the Morgan home Holt was under ar
rest and on his way to jail, and Mr.
Morgan was receiving the attention of
physicians.
Dr. William H. Zahriskie, who was
at Mr. Morgan’s bedside In the after
noon, said:
“It is very difficult to say whether
or not Mr. Morgan's life Is in dan
ger.”
On the grounds of the Morgan pla 'e
later the police found a suit case be
longing to Holt containing seve.*\l
sticks of high-power dynamite and a
vial of nitroglycerin.
An eyew itness, who was in the Mor
gan house at the time, gives this ac
count qf the shooting:
"The assailant arrived at Mr. Mor
gan's place a few minutes before 9
o’clock. The butler opened the door
for him. He handed a card to the
butler, at the same time saying:
"T want to see Mr. Morgan.'
" ‘What do you want to see him
about?' asked the butler.
“ ‘I am an old friend of Mr. Mor
gan.' was the reply, and I want to see
him.’
“Mr. and Mrs. Morgan were at
breakfast at the time in a room off
the main hallway. The butler admit
ted the man to the hall and paused
again In an effort to learn the caller s
business, whereupon the latter drew*
a revolver, and, pointing it at the
butler, said: ’You see this gun; well,
1 have another. Now. I want to s°e
Mr. Morgan.’
Called to Morgan to Flee.
“At this crisis the butler did some
quick thinking. Looking down the
barrel of the drawn pistol, he speedily
evolved a plan. Racking away from
the man and toward the Mbrary. which
is on the opposite side of the hail
from the main dinin'* room, he waved
toward the library, as if to indicate to
the caller that Mr. Morgan was with
in. At the same time he moved to
ward the kitchen, as if he were about
to summon the banker. Then, seeing
the caller hesiUfte, he lifted his voice,
and, turning toward the dining room,
cried:
“ ‘Upstairs, Mr. Morgan: upstairs!’
"Leading from the dining room to
an upper floor is a servants’ stairway.
Hearing the cry of the butler and
thinking something was wrong wuh
the children on the floor above, Mr.
and Mrs. Morgan rose hastily and
hurried by the stairway to the upper
floor. 9
“It Is unfortunate that they did not
remain there. But arriving on the
second floor and finding nothing
wrong, Mr. and Mrs. Morgan at once
determined to descend again, to lea. n
the reason for the butler’s cry. And,,
us ill luck would have It, they chose
the main stairway instead of the in
ner one by which they had ascended.
“Down In the hall the butler was
facing the caller, who had drawn both
revolvers and was apparently striving
to make his mind what he should do.
The rustle of Mrs. Morgan's skirts
descending the stairway immediate;/
behind her husband gave him his cue.
There Is a turn in the stairway Just
before the first floor is reached.
Leaps at Assassin.
“As Mr. and Mrs. Morgan made this
turn the caller's gaze fell upon them.
They saw him at the same time. The
warning cry of the butler was too late.
Mrs. Morgan screamed and threw her
self forward just as Mr. Morgan
caught sight of the attempted assas
sin and made a flying leap at him.
"The caller stepped back as Mr.
Morgan’s body was hurled forward,
and, throwing up both revolvers at
once, pulled the triggers.
"Almost at the double discharge Mr.
Morgan was upon the man. He threw
his arm about him, and with the dis
engaged hand grasped the revolver In
the caller’s right hand.
"Together they went to the floor,
Mr. Morgan on top, still clutching the
assailant’s right hand, and holding it
so that the revolver pointed to the
floor.
“Mrs. Morgan, whose screams for
help brought, by this time, half a doz
en attendants to the scene, Joined m
the struggle, but the butler threw
himself on the man’s body and
wrenched the second revolver from
him as the fresh arrivals took the
first.
“Thereupon Mr. Morgan arose and
handed the man over to his servants
and coolly walked away. The as
sailant was dragged into a nearby
room. Smiling at Mrs. Morgan to
assure her he was not badly hurt,
Mr. Morgan mounted the vtairway
to the second floor, where he at once
took up a telephone receiver and sent
tlie reassuring news to his office.”
The story of the eyewitness ends
here, but it was learned subsequent
ly that after telephoning to his office,
Mr. Morgan also called up hia mother
and gave her assurance of his safety.
“I wanted you to hear it from my
own lips,” he said, “so that you
would not be uneasy.”
Fells Intruder With Hod.
It was learned also that Physick,
the butler, as Mr. Morgan rose from
the floor releasing the assailant, seiz
ed a coal hod, and as Holt made a
movement as if to jump at Mr. Mor
gan, brought it down upon the man’s
head, felling and rendering him un
conscious. While he was in that con
ditlon, ropes were procured and Holt
was bound tightly to await the com
ing of the police.
Physicians found Mr. Morgan
bleeding profusely from his wounds,
but he immediately responded to
treatment.
.On the heels of the physicians came
Constable McHale, who took Holt
into custody and removed him to the
Glencove Jail, He apparently was
suffering from the blow in the heatL
given him by Physick, the butler,
and he complained that he had been
bound up too tightly by the servants
in the Morgan home. At first he
declined to give his name.
Informed that he had wounded Mr.
Morgan, he said:
“I did not. I shot to frighten him
I did not hurt him. Why, 1 hope to
God I haven’t hit him. 1 hope he is
not hurt. I shot away from him
just to frighten him. He rushed at
me. He didn’t wait to listen to me.
But you can do as you wish with
me. I did my duty. You do yours."
Later Holt revealed his identity
and made a statement concerning
himself and the shooting.
Holt arrived in Glencove Shortly aft
er 8 o’clock this morning and hired a
taxicab from Fred Ford at the sta
tion, asking to be taken out to the
Morgan place. Ford declared that
Holt spoke with an accent which he
identified as “English." He carried
a suit case. It is three miles to the
Morgan place, Matinicook. from the
Glencove station, and as the taxicab
neared the estate, Ho.lt pointed to it
and s>aid:
“There's where the man lives who
is responsible for theiwar.”
He alighted near the Morgan gate
way, and paying his fare, dismissed
the taxicab. Ten minutes later the
shoot’ng occurred.
He quit his position there at the end
of the university year, he said, to
take up a school position in Texas
His wife, he said, is in Dallas, Texas.
While talking in his cell to news
paper reporters, he borrowed a pen
cil and wrote the following dispatch
to his wife:
“Man proposes and God disposes.
Don’t come here until you get my.
letter. Be strong.
“FRANK.” |
The telegram was addressed to No.
101 Marseilles street, Dallas. It was
learned later that on June 11 Holt I
shipped by American Express a pack- f
age addressed to F. S. Sensabaugh at'
this number.
After he had calmed down, Holt re
ceived the reporters, and talked free
ly with them about his case. He is
5 feet 9 inones tall, with a prominent
nose, dark curly hair and small, gray
ish blue eyes. A white cloth stained
with red was bound about hi? head,
indicating the wound he received
from the Morgan butler.
Though Holt declared he had no
accomplices, immediately after the
shooting armed guards were stationed
about ' the Morgan home and were
kept there throughout the day and
right.
Estate an Armed Camp.
The Morgan estate to-night bore
the appearance of a military camp.
Reporter* were met on Jhe bridge lead
ing to the island by Stephen Price,
the lodgekeeper, and his sturdy son.
Both were armed with repeating rifles
of heavy caliber, and each carried a
heavily stocked cartridge belt.
“I can’t let you cross this bridge,”
said Price. "Even if I could, i |
wouldn’t let you. I would be afraid
that you would be killed.”
Then it developed that no fewer
than 27 detectives and 25 employes |
of the Morgan island, all armed like j
Price and his son, were patrolling the j
place. The beach, on which the j
searchlights of the yacht Corsair ,
were playing all night, was patrolled !
by half a dozen men.
Wife's Father,Pastor,
Won’t Believe News
DA LI.AS, TEXAS. July 3.—Mrs.
Frank Holt, wife of the man who shot j
J. P. Morgan to-day, refused to sue j
reporters. She is the daughter of the 1
Rev. O. F. Sensabaugh, No. 101 Mar
salas avenue, who Is presiding elder ;
of the Methodist Church, tis father- j
in-law refuses to believe that Holt did |
the shooting, in the absence of direct |
word from him. He has known Holt
for the past ten years the length of
Holt’s married life, and knows of no ,
traits of character that would indl- !
cate an anarchistic disposition.
Sensabaugh says Holt was of Gee- |
man descent and was educated in the
Polytechnic College of Texas. He has
always been a dutiful husband, Sen-
sabaugh said, and that if his son-in-
law committed the crime it was dur
ing stress of mental aberration.
Holt was to have come to Dallas in
August to accept the position of pro
fessor of French at the Southern
Methodist University, which opens
this fall. The Sensabaugh family is
prominent here.
There Is probably no significance to
the express package Prank Holt is
supposed to have sent from Ithaca to
Dallas. It is believed to have con
tained only personal effects, as Holt
intended coming to Dallas in a few
weeks.
whilch were more or less frequent
during the fall, but he did write let
ters of protest to a local newspaper
because it criticised Germany viola
tion of Belgium neutrality
No Malice, Assailant
Protests at Hearing
GLENCOVE, July 3.—Wearing a
blood-stained handerchief about h’s
head and trembling from fear and
weakness, Frank Holt, charged with
assault in the first degree, was ar
raigned at 3 o’clock this afternoon be
fore Justice of the Peace William E.
Luyster.
“You are charged with assault in
the first degree,” repeated Justice
Luyster, “with intent at malicious
killing. How do you wish to plead?”
Holt, bespattered with glood, sway
ed as if about to fall.
"How do you wish to plead?” ~e-
peated the Judge.
Holt gathered together all his
strength and a flash of anger swept
over his face.
"Take out all that about the mali
cious killing.” he shouted. "It ought
not to he there.”
"How do you plead?” he was asked
again.
He mumbled something, which was
not audible even to Assistant District
Attorney Weeks, who stood be? da
him. He repeated the incoherent re
mark several times and finally a ple\
of not guilty was entered for him. lie
will be arraigned Wednesday.
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ITHACA, N. Y., July 3.—Frank Holt,
the former Cornell Instructor, who
shot J. P. Morgan to-day, finished his
service at the university two weeks
ago and had accepted the chair of
French history in the Sout: ern Meth
odist College at Dallas.
Holt taught German at Cornell. He
Is an accomplished linguist. He came
here two years ago from Vanderbilt
University, where he had also taught.
Holt was primarily a graduate stu
dent, but in order to eke out his in
come and support his family—a wife
and two children—he secured a posi
tion as instructor in the German de
partment. His rare scholarship won
the friendship of his nrofessors, and
they gladlv recommended him for an
instructorship.
He was never a prominent figure In
the bitter disputes about the war,
CHALMAN THE TAILOR
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I am tha real doctor of tailoring.
JOHN CHALMAN,
Peachtree and James Streets,
McKenzie Building.
Statesboro Minister
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The Rev. J. Powell Tells How He
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The Rev. J. Powell, of Statesboro,
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He struggled on under the handicap
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