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Back t ae WEATHER FORECAST. Partly cloudy tonight and Sun- day. Warmer tonight. ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOT. A SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1923 FINAL EDITION PRICE FIVE CENTS - BELIEVE SLAYER PLANNED STAND SIX ¢ GERMANS ARE KILLED BY BY FRENCH | MILITARY ‘TOOK GUNS 0 WORKERS IN KRUPP WORKS RESIST FRENCH Refuse to seoewmenien Author: | ity When Occupying Forces | Enter Motor Works MACHINE GUNS FIRED| French Extend Occupation of | Coal Areas, Siezing Valu- | able Loadings Berlin, Mar, 31.—Six German work- |} ers at the Krupp plant in Essen have been killed and 20 injured in a con- flict with the French military, says a Central dispatch from Essen today. | The trouble occurred through the! ch unexpectedly proceeding to cupy certain of a Krupp motor works, whereupon the workers stop- ped the ines and went outside to offer opposition, the message states. The officer in charge of the French tried te persuade the men to return to duty but they refused andj surrounded the troops, threatening} them with attack unless they with-| drew. ! The officers pointed out that they must carry out orders but the work- crs were obdurate, declaring they! would defend their plant. Four ma-} chine guns then opened fire, adds the | message, and six workers fell dead,| while 20 were seriously wounded. The | remainder scattered and the French then proceeded to occupy the works.! WILL EXPELL STRIKERS. Dusseldorf, Mar. 31—General De- te’s proclamation that all strik-| ing German railway workers in the; occupied zone must either return to| work or be expelled finds the allies} Ruhr and Rhine-} in the} i ment of the order, it seems, | the transportation officials { in possession of a! | land rail lines except those British tely half a million persons includ- : the families of the men, may be] cted. It is expected that the pro- of expulsion will take several weeks and special transportation to} the frontier must be provided. ' TAKE GOVERNMENT MINES. Hssen, Germany, Mar. 31.—Gover ment-owned coal mines at Emsche-! lippe in the Gelkenkirehen di were occupied today by French engi- neers, escorted by a detachment of] troops with tanks. This is the ninth} mine in the Ruhr taken over by the| French and Belgians. Thirty thou-! sand tons of coke and great piles ot} coal were seized. The French engineers found that! the Germans in expectation of the occupation, had taken away part of} the machinery. The German mine di-/ rector was ordered to have these re-/ turned. He disclaimed any knowledge} of the disappearance, sting they! must have been taken by the work- H men, He was arrested. Several thousand miners employed at this plant went on strike immedi-j ately when the troops appeared. HEALTH BOARD ADOPTS RULES Will Require ire Isolation ot! Pneumonia and Sleeping Sickness i i i Regulations affecting ‘cases of pneumonia and sleeping sickness were adopted at a meeting of the state hourd of health here. Isolation will be required in such cases for the safety of others, Dr, H. E. French of Grand Forks, secretary of the board said, adding that this should not be confused with quarantine. The board also decided to include pneumonia and sleeping sickness in the list of diseases to be reported to the state board by local health officers. Weck- ly, instead of monthly reports, on the} number of eases of communicable dis- case, also will be required. The board ratified the appointment made sometime ago by! the secretary| of Dr, Louisa Boutelle as director of child hygiene and public health. Funds for this work are furnished by the federal government under the Sheppard-Towner act, The present board of health, com-! posed of Attorney General George Shafer, Dr. W. C. Nolte of James- town and Dr. H. E..French of Grand Forks, will be succeeded by the new State Health Council created by the last legislature, as soon as members who have been appointed quality for the offices, , BANKER R ENTERS / PRISON HERE ‘George Dickinson, former Walum banker, who was convicted’ at Val- ley City recently on an embezzle- ment charge and sentenced to serve five years in prison, has entered the penitentiary here. He has been in jail at Valley City on a stay of sen- tence granted. | 000,000 girls and women in Europe | than males in {involving {mates for these {and threats of new wars. | ting as many ' paid male escort. j dancing with 20 MILLION WOMEN AND GIRLS IN EUROPE DENIED HU SBANDS AND HOMES ee eee | Graphic Hisly tH the Surplus $100,000 FIRE of Women in Europe After War Told by Brenner. ' NEA Staff’ Correspondent (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, London, March 31.—Nearly Inc.) 20, today are doomed to die old maids. They are sentenced to sex-starva- tion; no husbaid, no home, no moth- erhood. It's a situation without precedent in history. It's the biggest human interest story in the world. Yet governments close th: to it, statesmen and politicians jj nore it, reporters and authors avoid it. It’s too vast in all its aspects— political, economic and moral—for them to grapple with. There are 20,000,000 more females urope today because of the vagaries of the birthrate, the survival of mo-e girl infants than boy babies, the decimation of men | by war and the er toll of males taken by famine and pestilence. FUNDAMENTALS OF LIFE INVOLVED These millions of so-called super- | fluous women are ercating questions | hing of fundamental | importance; the sanctity and preser- vation of the home, the social and political equality of women, work and wages, and the next gencra- tion's her'tage of good or evil. In the British Isles the superflu- | ous women number 2,000,000. In} Russia, 8,000,000. Their 10,000,000 sisters are scat- tered throughout the other countrie Not only are there no legitimate 20,000,000 superflu- young men ig by lack cuts in wages, scarcity of cost of necessities ous women but eligible are deterred from marry of work, houses, higher The result is that a spirit of after- the-war recklessness pervades Eu- rope. Men and women alike spend more of their wages, they are keen- er in pursuing pleasure, they are ‘moresdefiant ef the conventions and lax in their morals. The male is supreme. At dances he has ‘six sf rls to pick from, where formerly he had to compete for a partner, Everywhere you see many girls dancing together; hostesses giving balls have a hard time get- men us women. « developed: the In Paris, in Nice, in Monte Carlo you'll see him | well-to-do women of middle age while charming girls are wallflowers. In every ¢lass of society girls will put up with almost any rt of a! man for the sake of having him to} i go out with. To make themselve companionable | | ginle pike, @muk, pet-ond cial ube | er indiscretions. MORE BABIES BORN OUT OF WEDLOCK More children are being born out; of wedlock than ever before, In Eng- | land the increase has’ engaged Par-| liament’s attention, but the latest official figures show England least | badly ‘off in this respect. i Out of every 10,000 babies bora,’ the number of illegitimate was as follows: A new type has England and Wales . 455 | Scotland m1 | France 879 | Italy 417 | Belgium O41 Holland 213 | Norway 699 Sweden 1494, Denmark 1043 Throughout Europe is an increas- | ing movement to assist unmarried moth and to ¢ children wer) out of wedlock rights they never had before. Maud Royden, the great woman preacher, says: “The right to motherhood is a| claim based on the beligf that the! creative impulse is more—or more (Continued on Page 2) H FIND BODIES IN SHOW CASE San Bernandino, Calif., Mar. 31.— After the finding of Richard Jensen, five years old, unconscious and the body of Bean Mecham, aged four, in a show case in a vacant building here last night, police here today were in- vestigating the possibility that some- tne had put the boys in the case and| shut the door. The Jenson boy died! four hours after being found, without | regaining: consciousness. | The two children disappeared last | Saturday ‘and since then posses and | officials here and\ in other towns in} southern California, had hunted for them. Police at first believed the | boys hag crawled in the showcase and pulled the door shut after them, but discovery of bruises. on their | bodies and that the door of the; case fitted so tightly that it was) difficult for a man to open it led to Ayre investigation. British | RAILROAD MAN DIES. Chicago, March 31.—Edmund Sea- well, vice president of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad, died at his home here of acute pneumonia.. He had been il) only a | short time. tof the locomotive, causing 'wreck of the Big Four railroad yes-j ‘POOLING PLAN |0.P.S RAGES IN CITY Watertown, S. ‘D business districts on Maple the Lamb hardware and the Smith | Hetches department store had been gutted and flames had spread to the Dilruth block which includes the} Foto Play and another business, in a fire which broke out at 6 o'clock | this morning. The origin of the fire is unknown. Loss at 10 o'clock | was estimated at $125,000 and the blaze was sufficiently under control | at that time. DEATH TOLLIN RAILCRASHIS BROUGHT TO 8 | Student Locomotive Fireman a toad of cos on Big Four Flyer Wreck- ed by Auto Is Dead | OTHERS IN HOSPITAL Railroad Officials Have Not! Determined Cause of Fly- |, er’s Derailment { Ohio, Mar. 31.-The; death of W. L. Siebert of Cincinnati, a student locomotive fireman, this morning increased the death toll of the wrecking of the southwestern lim- ited of the Big Four railroad at the northern outskirts of the city rel day to eight. Three men, all aboard the train, the, sp of which was estimated at io miles an hour, and a woman and her two small children, sole aha of an automobile which the tpebeie: tive struck at the grade c were killed instantly, Eleven iaguredl in hospitals were reported on the road’ to recovery. One hundred and eight passengers were aboard the train. ! Railroad officials have not deter mined whether the train buckled afte: sudden application of the air brakes or if some part of the demolis tomobile got under the “pon: Columbus, V3 ed au- wheels” and six ral passenger cars to leave \ of the si ithe rains, SISTER KILLED. Jamestown, N.-D., Mai Jones, Northern Pacific fireman, re-! ceived word that his sister, Mrs./ Frank Hemminger, was one of the} eight killed in the Columbus, Ohio, | 3L—T. Ci terday. FORNORTHWEST LS PROPOSED Representatives in Near | Future Is Called — | St. Paul, Minn, Mar, 31.—Thi feasibility and’ possibility of one gi- | gantic organization for the mar keting of wheat produced in Minn- | esota, North and South Dakota, and | Montana is to be considered at a meeting of Farm Bureau . officials from those states at Fargo, North | Dakota, on April 6, J. 8. Reed, presi- | dent of the Minnesota Farm Bureau Federation, announced here today. - Representatives of the Northwes' Wheat Growers Association, th Equity Cooperative Exchange and, United States Grain Growers Sales | invited to the meeting. Decision to | call this ‘meeting was reached at a/ conference of Farm Bureau official | from the Dakotas and Minnesota at Crookston Friday, Mr. Reed said. | WART CLOSES MEETINGS) i The three days’ meetings of the “Flying Squadron” closed at the Mc- | Cabe Methodist Episcopal church last night with an address by Oliver P. Stewart, of Chicago, head of the or- ganization. There was a large audi- ence present, JACOBS MURDER “TRIAL HALTED San Diego, Calif., March 31.—Pros- ecution ang defense ig the case of Dr. Louis L. Jacobs, mp Kearney health service hospital! physician, charged with murdering Fritzi Mann, dancer, took a rest today in preparation for resumption of the trial on Monday. | Matias Sa eee ‘ONE DROWNED, ‘Company of Minneapolis have been | ings are scheduled to be held this | kill and do bodily harm. jfendant is engaged in the dry clean- LOVE FLIES ONE ESCAPES, , Joseph dive é of Fort Rice, Is Drowned in Missouri §, 4 River South of Here AUTO WENT THROUGH] J. Morford Escaped Through; Swimming and Floating | on Cakes of Ice \ Mandan, Mar. 31.—Joe Fogarty, 40, | pool hall proprietor at Ft, Rice, Avas drowned in the Missouri river, final |Jesse Morford, also of Fort Rice, nar- | rowly escaped a similar fate late afternoon when they at- tempted to cross the stream ins an} |Automobile. | The men in the morning had hauled ice to At) |Kless, a farmer residing on the easi jbank of the Missouri, opposite Fort Rice, in Emmons county. over the In the afternoon, about 5 o'clock! Anita Stewart (above), motion the two men drove across the ice in} picture actress, and her husband Morford’s Ford car. They had near-| Rudolph Cameron (below), have! ly reached the east bank when the jagreed to live apart. ‘But. we're ice wi Fogarty, although an j not contemplating a divorce,” excellent swimmer and a former U. S.| Anita. Marine, went down with the car a ee IS SEEN FOR says and supporting himself on tan | cakes of ice, managed to reach solid | ice and was hauled to safety. Fogart jhad lived at Fort Rice for 10 years ‘and leaves a wife and one child. It is doubtful if the body ever will be re- covered as the point where the auto went through is in the east channel and a heavy flood of water would carry it far down stream, ‘CLAIM MINE GUARDS BEGAN | Russ Reds Persist in Plans to Execute Catholic Priests, Dispatches Say Moscow, Mar. 31.—The death sen- - ‘tence imposed of — Viear-General ‘ Defense Relies on This Testi-, putcnkavitch commutation of which money in Second of Mur- iwas denied by the Central Executive . i Committee, has not been carried out. der Trials ‘It was announced at 5 o'clock this ce lafternoon. The general impression Marion, Ill, Mar. 31.—With tes last night seemed to be that thi mony from a large number of Wit-/ was slight probability ,of the Cen- nesses in the record all to the ef-| tral Executive Committee changing fect that the guards of the south-j jts qecision to give no clemency to fern Tlinois coal company's mine | th prelate. here fired the first shot and Appeals have been. made to the responsible for the first slaying in foreign office by the heads of the | the Herrin riot of last June, the de- | polish, British, Czecho-Slovak and fense today was ready to call ad-! ftaliun missions. ditional witnesses to support its! Under ordinary circumstunces | contention that acts of a: ion | when el refused an execu- on the part of the guards precipitat- | tion ed out within a few ‘ed the outbreak, | hour: hether the Central Com- | Judge D. T. Harwell ordered 2] mittee m In yextersay 10 j session of court today. As yet none | consider its ion in view of the of the six defendants, including| many verbal appeals had not been! Hugh Willis, state executive board | ascertained officially this morning. somber ety the Hlinois mine workers ; Father Walsh. representative of | alled to testify. Eibhtcen ee IGEN Nachetes wate Gn the stand yesterday, relating alleg- the Catholic welfare board, told the Feorrespondent he had no answer to ed acts of assault, aggress and| minister the last sacrament to | violence attributed to mine guards ; Monsignor Butchavitch. | and telling of the slaying of a un-! Foreign relations which asked ion miner. ; that clemency be granted to the; ——_——_———— {prelate were without information at | noon as to whether he had been ex- I | ecuted. CONFERS IN MINNEAI POLIs. Minneapolis, Mar, 31.~Gov, R. A. jNestos, of North Dakota, conferred {here yesterday with Major Star ania of the Washburn-Lignite ul Company. relative to the general i" opment of the lignite fields of! HELD; CHARGED Also Held on Charge of Mix:| Miata cee ecules canclananarattiles . {Feached. Mr. Nestos will go to Ch ing Poison with Drink- {oieo “today for a conference with g Water {bond attorneys concerning a pending i North Dakota mill and clevator bond \ issue, Minot, Mar. 31.—-Preliminary hear- ASK SCHOOL BIDS MAY 4 New 10-Room Building to be Fireproof, Board Says fternoon for Arthur Dolman, a: rested yesterday on charges of mix- ing potassium cyanide with drink- ing water, two counts of assault ; and battery and with threatening to The de- ing business, occupies quarters over a store owned by, Herman Brauns- | tein. He became angered, police de- | clare, after papers were served on him ‘compelling him to move. Dolman is alleged to have as-' | saulted Mr. and Mrs. Braunstein! Bids will be received ‘here on with his fists and to have made /May ! by the city school board for oning gharge, author- | the building of a new 10-room grade | ities say, originates from an analy- ischool building, for which $85,000 | is of water kept for drinking pur- | in bonds were voted at a recent city | by. th ins whieh re- { election, Leydia Srs Prspbate na DIR! SOr he vamleciulldlag wilt becfice-proof and of most modern ‘coostruction, it is threats. Py tated. The by it. will cont: CLAIM LENINE a room which may be used as 4 community room and gymnasium, IS IMPROVED and will -have a stage in it. There also will. be a cafeteria in the base- COMMUTATION {his request that he be allowed to ad- | MAYOR, OTHER» OFFICIALS OF CITY GUILTY 'Fifty-Five Defendants Indiana, Convicted in U.S. Court IN LIQUOR Government Charged spiracy Among Official Violate Volstead Law Con- to Indianapolis, Mar, 81.--Fifty-five idents of Lake coun- tried on a the b ity and Gary, Indiana, icharge of conspiracy to violate Volstead act, were found sguilty jury United ates dist court here today. Among the most ‘fendants found guilly were Re j well O. Johnson, mayor of | Gary; i} William I, Olds, sheriff of | Lake ‘county; William M. Dunn, judge of the Gary city court, a ( attorney. ty-five — persons de prominent living in Gary and Lake county. v ed by a federal grand jury last nber on a charge of conspiracy to violate the Volstead act. Of this} number five pleaded guilty before | the trial, one indictment was nolle prossed and seven other have not been arrested. | Other prominent defendants found ‘guilty are Dwight M. Kinder, cuting at- torney of Lake Lewis E. Barnes, former sheriff of Lake coun- | ty; Clyde Hunter, former prosecu- tor of Lake county; John Bennett, ‘treasurer of the Republican ¢ committee of Gary and Charles Clemens, a justice of the peace. Had Mushroom Growth ( called the steel city, lies on the shores of Lake Michigan, near Chicago. It had a mushroom growth, and was peopled early with | many foreign workers in the steel peompany plants there. Tt has been the scene of stormy polities for many years, and charges of lawless- ‘ness have been made on many ocea- | ns. “| Mayor Johnson was prominently. spoken at of as a one ti andi date for Governor. | Sensational testimony marked the |trial here. One tourist asserted that he had been arrested in y and “shaken down,” although — he ‘had no liquor in his car. The gov ernment charges that the — liquo: ; ting, through control of — officials ‘and some courts, operated with im- | munity. N.D. WOMAN IS BANDIT VICTIM | . IN IOWA CITY): {Robbers Leap From Auto to | Taxicab and Take Jewel and Money Mar, 31.—Jewelry, Moines, teash and diamondS valued at ap- { Des proximately $1,500 were stolen from GC s. Mrs. Johnson of Des Moines W. B. Wishard of Cleve- while they were driving in a taxicab here last night. Three j masked men jumped fro a touring ‘ear aboard the taxicab and held up the driver and women, | Six diamond rings were removed from the fingers of Mrs. Wishard and they robbed Mrs. Johnson of her purse. No attempt was made to rob | the driver, A. G. Schramm. Fan BOOSTER BODY Mott, N. D., March 31.—The “As- | ioe new booster body which has just I been launched under the direction lof F. G. Orr of Mott. Its purpose lis to bring new settlers to south- | western North Dakota and northwes- !tern South Dakota through co-oper- | ation of various agencies. | Banks and businessmen, civie or- ' ganizations and newspapers will join jin an organized campaign of public- ity, with follow up letters, and a | personal canvas for prospective pur- [chasers of lands. A thorough can- | vas will be made for listing of lands j from outside owners. “Dirt farm- ete are wanted. of | RING] and Blaz Lucas, | defendants ; NEW SKIPPER Appointment of Captain Herb Hartley master of the Lev! ‘than, la t American ship, has ‘been announced by the Shipping [Baud 't ‘MADE BOMBS — USED IN WALL “ST, EXPLOSION Alleged Confession | Is ported in Los Angeles by H. Wilson Mar Many purported confes- Wilson, confessed the details of the of Herbert Angeles, of sion mail robber that he and former evangelist, manufactured the killed and destroyed property valued at thousands of dollars in Wall st New York City, Sept. 17, 1920, are explosive in the bomb that AY persons withheld from the public “for the present” it was admitted today by | county and fe al agents. Wn. u of st J in- “ FR 8, director of the bure vestigation, department of 5 tis arrived here teday from thama Island, dénied that was oni his way to Los Angeles to look into the mystery surrounding the Wall Street bomb explosion two | and a half years ago in which thirty | Jnine persons were killed. Mr. Burns, shown reports — from | Los Angeles to the effect that Her- bert W ted murdered and former E st, had confessed he helped to-make the bomb, character= ized the reports as “bunk DISABLED VETS HEAD COMING Capt. C. Hamilton Cook to be Guest of Local Chapter Capt. C, Hamilton Cook of Cinein- nati, Ohio, national commander of the Disabled Veterans of the World War, will be the guest of the Bis- marck chapter of the Disabled Vet ans here tonight. A banquet will be tendered the commander, who is 9n his way to the Pacific Coast, at the nd Pacific hotel 7 o'clock, any problems of particular int to the disabled veterans will be ed by the commander, Alll dis- bled veterables are invited to the banquet. Moré than 25 have already signified their intention, of being present. |CARRY VICTIMS OF DUEL EIGHT : MILES TO REACH MEDICAL HELP | Harlan, Ky., Mar. 31,—Kight mile. of rugged mountain trail impassable td wheeled: vehicles: lay ahead of friends of Jess Puce and George Belcher today when they started from Straight Creek to a hospital here had been killed in two fights in this section since Tuesday. Moonshine whiskey was blamed for both fights. Alex Lyttle and Claude Short, deputy constables, were slain in a fight at the home of H. Gilliam, a brother of- ficer. Gilliam’s son, aged 6, was ‘| the girl Re-, Moscow, Mar. 31—Premier Len- ine’s generat condition has improv- ed, according to the official bulletin issued at 6 o'clock afternoon. His temperature is given at 37 8-10 cent. (100 Fahrenheit) and his pulse 120. ment. The lines will be along ade of the Richolt school, most recently built of all schoo! buildings in the city, with a different exterior. North Dakota brick probably will be used with the two men desperately wound- | killed in the fight. ed in a pistol dues yesterday. Re- Kelly Walker, a deputy sheriff, lay teams of stretcher bearers were|Isaac and George Strong, and Mrs. to bring in the men. Cause. of the|Isaac Strong were killed in an on- duel was undetermined. + counter between a, posse and the Prior to weed affray seven persons | Strong family in Leslie county. BARN AFTER HE KILLED GIRL: George diuaebeyen Found i Darkest Corner of Albert- son Barn Near Baldwin | | BoDI ES BROUGHT | RER* | Inquest Is Planned to UC ' cover all Possible Details | of The Crime | Belief that George Ha» eckeyk planned to make stand aganist a posse after he had murdered Ellen Albert son at the farm home of hei ather, Erick Albertson, wes' |of Baldwin, sterday afte: ‘noon was expressed by a | thorities who returned he: \last night with the bodi , the victims of the murder ar | suicide. | After Haneckeyk had slain he picked up two guns, a 12-gauge shotgun and a .22 calibre rifle and went t: the hayloft of the Albertson i barn. He may have lost hi | nerve or simply was overcon ; by the consequences of his act and then decided to kii | himself, authorities say. The acts of Hanecke just before the tragedy fo the most part will remain closed secret, but it was ap parent that after he had kill ed the girl by beating he: over the head with a stovi | poker or shaker his acts wer« calm “and deliberate. Han- ‘eckeyk was .an ex-convict | having, been sent to prisor ‘from Minot on a charge of as saulting a girl with intent to kill. He served three and a half year The weapon with which he ctushed the girl, spotted with blood, was placed back upon the stove. Haneckeyk picked up two guns, a shotgun and 8 rifle which had been left ne: a door, walked to the barn a into the hayloft. He we into the dark corne | There, perhaps within 15 min utes after the murder, he si down upon the hay laid one gun ide, placed the shotgun to his breast just under t} heart, and with a long rev {pulled the trigger. Th« charge tore a hole the six | of a silver dollar in his brea and the shot t again ‘his back. He heart was : «| most literally blown out. | GIRL WRITING LETTER. The tragedy probably had ox 1 about the middle: of the el ft noon, while Mr. Albertson was aw jto get a load of coal and his daught ‘about 19 years of age, and Haneck: were alone in the farm home. ‘The girl had been sitting at a te jwriting a letter, it being addres t is understood, to Paul Engstr: neighbor boy now studying telegray jat Valparaiso university in India A letter has been overturned. It probably was but a few minu from the time Hancekeyk approacl the girl until he had crushed her ‘the floor. phere were marks uy her throat, p bly the impress of his nace sas he gripped hy There were tufts of hair in her han which she had doubtless pulled f1 his head while. resisting his advan One of the girl’s finger-nuils almost torn off and the end of : finger badly crushed. The curious workings of the praved mind of Haneckeyk at the 1 ment are a matter of speculation. 1 father dots not believe there wa; struggle. The indications, were tl she had made a terrifie fight agai: the man seeking to overcome her w assault in his mind and that struggled so hard that he killed h. The father believes that she \ struck from behind us she was wi ing the letter, There were four bad wounds up« her head. The scalp had been cut \» the forehead and there were thre: distinct blows in the back of her head One of them, physician said, cow pletely crushed the skull and wa sufficient to cause virtually insta» taneous death. The body was lying full length upon the dining roc) floor. Weapon a Stove Shaker. The. weapon used by Haneckeyk i¢ murder the girl was not a gun, i: first reported, but a stove poker «i shaker, an improvised utensil of iron about a foot long, rather heavy, ant with two sharp, upturned edges at either end. The: ‘girl’s head was mat- ted with blood when the body was picked up. A The father of the girl told. of his a fianp at entering the home in the afternoon, pervaded by a Pen} ail i (Continued on Page 7