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WOMANIS SOUGHT INJEWEL THEFT Declared Accomplice of Men Charged With Taking Schoellkopf Gems. By the Associated Press NEW YORK, January Detectives today turned on to the trail of a wom- 1, whom they seek as an accomplice of three men charged by Mrs. C. P. Hugo Schoellkopf of Buffalo with having robbed her of jewels valued at between $150.000 and §500,000. after a Now Yoar party in the suite of Frank Barrett Carman. in West 52d street The woman described as the wife of one of the trio who subiet from Carman the apartment in which Mrs. Schoellkopf said she was robbed She disappeared from the house a few duys before New Year eve, and is be- leved to be in hiding here or in a nearby city, after having prepared an abiding place for the fugitives. Carman Still Held. Carman was still held in custody after two muagistrates had refused to admit him to ball in spite of pleas of his counsel and a report that Mre Schoellkopf believed him innocent of complicity in the_robbery. In an effort to check Carman’s record authorities brought before hin theatrical press agent who indenti- fled the actor by a scar on his head. Which he said Carman sustained in a barrocuy fight in the west years ago. Just what bearing this identifi- cation had upon the present case the detcctives declined to say, hut they declared that Curman later admitted he recalled the incident and talked frecly of his fondness Jewels, suying that casualty panics had refused to insure personal _collection after he had forced per cent settiement for ©s sustained when he was robbed some of his gems Eix manths ago. Given Rings as Gift. prisoner declared, detec- said, that Mrs. Schoellkepf had given him a diamond ring worth $8.000 and an emerald ring valued at $10.000 when he was in Venice a year ago With her and her husband Turther details of Mrs, S colicction of jewels indicated when robbed the was wearing part of ed. Among the gems in safe deposit vault were four huge emeralds, once a sxian erown jewels, Detectives scouted the theory that emissaries of the bolsheviki robbed her in an effort to recover these emer- alds AUTOSUGGESTION WAS KNOWN TO ANCIENTS, DR. COUE DECLARES was for com- his 0 hoellkop! th. only her Buffalo sa1d to be 1ong the ued from First Page.) man in claiming the street® Not that T am autosuggestion to be a covery. Far from it. Autosugges- tion is as old as the hills: only we had forgotten to practice it, and so we need to learn it all over again. Think of ail the forces of the uni- verse ready to serve us. Yet centuries elapsed before man penctrated their secret and discovered means of utiliz- ing them. It is the same i main of thought and min at our service forces of transcendgnt value of which we pletely ignorant or else only vaguely conscious. ‘The power of thought, of idea, is, incommensurable. is fmmeasurable’ The world is dominated by thought. The human being individually is also entirely governed by his own thouglhits, good or bad. The powerful action of the mind over the body which _explain the effects of sugges- tion, was well known to the great thinkers of the middle ages, whose vigorous intclligenco embraced the sum of human knowledge. Fvery idea conceived by the mind, says St. Thomas, {s an order which the organism obeys. It can also, he adds. engender a disease or cure it. The eflicaciousness of auto-SUgges- tlon could not be more plainly stated. Known to Ancients. We: know, indeed, that the whole human ‘organism nervbus system. the.center of which is the brain—the seat of thought. In other words, the brain, or mind, con- trols every cell, every organ, every function of the body. That being so, i8 1t not clear that by means of thought we are the absolute master: of our physical organism and that, as the ancients showed centuries ago, theght—or suggestion—can and does produce disease or curc it? Pythago- Tas taught the principles of auto- uggestion to his disciples. He wrote, ‘God, the Father. deliver them from their sufferings and show them what supernatural power is at thei call’ Even more definité is the doctrine of Aristotle, which taught that “a vivid imagination compels the body to obey it. for it s a natural prin ciple of movement. Tmagination, in- deed, governs all the forces of sensi- bility, while the latter, in its turn, ntrols the beating of the heart. and through it, sets in motion ali vital functions; this, the entire or- ®anism may be rapidly modified. Nev- ertheless, however vivid the imagi- | nation, it cannot change the form of 2, hand or foot or other member.” I have particular satisfaction in re- calling this element of Aristotle's teaching, because it contains two of the most important, nay, essential principles of my own method of auto- suggestion. 4 1. The dominating role of the ima- gination. 2. The results to be expected from the practice of auto-suggestion must necessarily be limited to those com- ing within the bounds of physical possibility. I shall deal with these essential points in greater detail in another article. Unfortunately, all these great truths handed down from antiquity, have ‘been transmitted in the cloudy garb of abstract notions or shrouded in the mystery of esoteric secrecy, and thus appesred inaccessible to the ordinary mortal. If I have had the privilege of discerning the hidden meaning of the old philosophers, or extracting the essence of a vital principle, and of formulating it in a manner extremely simple and comprehensible to modern | humanity, T have also had the joy of seeing it practised, with success, by thousands of sufferers for more than & score of years. Slaves of Suggestion. Mark well, I am no healer, I can only teach others to cure themselves and to maintain perfect health. I hope to show, moreover, that the domain of application of auto-sugges- tion is practically unlimited. Not only are we able to control and modify our rhysicll functions, but we can develo n any desired direction our moral and mental faculties, merely by the roper exercise of suggestion; in the e]d of education there is vast scope €or_suggestion. From our birth to our death we are mll the slaves of suggestion. Our des- ®injes are decided by suggestion. It 48 an all-powerful tyrant of which, wunless we take heed, we are the blind Buy or Rent } Dr. Coue’s Book On Seif-Magtery then | the $1.000.600 worth she own- | dis- | are either com- | is governed by the| | The Star Buil ! 11th Street and Penna. Ave. | SPEEDERS ARE JAILED. Los Angeles Judge Sends Sixteen Up for Two to Five Days. LOS ANGELES, January 5—Jail sentences ranging from two to five days were passed upon _Sixtesn spneding automoblilists yesterday by Police Judge Joseph F'. Chambers. — e linstruments. Now, it is in our powe to turn the tables and to discipline suggestion, and direct it in the way we ourgelves wish; then it becomes auto-suggestion: we have taken the reins into our own hands, and have become masters of the most marvel- ous instrument concelvable. Nothing | is impossible to us, except, of coursc, that which is contrary to the laws of nature and the universe. low are we to attain mand? We must first thoroughly grasp at leapt the elements of the mechnaism of the mental portion of what constitutes the human being. The mental personality is com of the conscious and the subcon, 1t is generally believed that the power this com- upon his consclous self. is beginning to he understood. how- ever, that compawed with the im- mensity of the role of the subcon- sclous, that of the conscious self is s a litte islet in a vast oceun, sub. ject to storm and tempest The subconscious is a permanent, ultra-sensitive photographic plate which nothing escapes. It registers all things, all thoughts. from the most insignificant to the most sublime. But it {5 more than that. Tt |s the source {of creation and inspiration: it {5 the | mysterious power that serminates ideas and effects their mater tion in the conscious form of ac If we agree that the point of Parture of our JO¥s, our SOrrows lills. our well-being. our aspirat Tof all our emotions, is in_our subcor- elf. then we may logically de that every idea germinatid mind has a tendency to reulis e onr of | scious | duet our tion The Case of the Lemon. little incidents of everyday existenc: enable us to verify the trut e all this. To illustrate the action of | thought on the emotive facultics, we have but to remember any grave lcident or harrowing spectable which we have been a witness; mediately to feel the sensations pain or horror, with greater or less intensity, according to our individual ! temperament A simpler and perhaps even atriking example is the classic one Jof the lemon. Imugine that vou are isucking a juicy. sour lemon. and your {mouth will inevitably wnd _instan- {tancously begin to water. What has happened. Simply this: Under the in- {fluence of the idea the glands have igone to work and secreted an abun- dant quantity of saliva lmost as imuch, in fact, as if you had actually taken a bite at a real lemon. Again [just think of a scratching pencil be- ing drawn perpendicularly over a slate and you cannot avoid shudder- ing and screwing up vour face under the shock, while contracted nerves |send a shiver from the back of the {head all down your spine | We must. therefore, realize that it {is impossible to separate the physical {from the mental, the body from the mind: that they are dependent upon | each other; that they are really one. !The mental element. however, is al- i\\i\,\'h dominant. Our ph ical organ- | ac- of im- irm is governed by it. So that we actyally make or mar our own health and destinies according to the ideas at work in our subconscious. 1 mean by this that we are absolutely free to implant whatever ideas we desire in our subconscious self, which is a mever-flagging recorder. and those ideas determine the whole trend of our material, mental and moral jbeing. Tt is just as easy to whisper nto our receptive subconscious the idea of health as it {s to moan over our troubles; and those who do m. be certain of the result, because, as I hope I have convinced them, it is based on nature's laws. 1023, United States, Great Prit- and South Ameries, by Nerth wapaper Aliance aw York { World (Press Pubiishing Company). All rights reserved. | Unlicensed feproduction in fall or T part exprassly nrohibitsd.) | k i 1 ] 1 | { ot | on_ several occa |a desire ! French government | ment refused | one ga FRANCE REJECTS PLAN TO SELZE GOLD Note Turns Down Proposal of Britain to Take Over £50,000,000. By the Assoclated Press. PARIS, January 5.—The French government yesterday issued a note respecting the deposit of £50,000,000 in gold advanced to Great Britain by France during the war, and the reten- tion of which by the British was pro- posed by Prime Minister Bonar Law and Bets of 4 man depend almot ex- | 1 Settlement of the French war debt. | ! clusjvely This proposal was rejected by France t the council of premlers. which end- ed yesterday. The French statement follows: “An _accord signed at Calais on Au- gust 25, 1916, between MM. Briand and Ribot (French premier and finance minister) and Messrs. Asquith and McKenna (British prime minister and chancellor of the exchequer) placed credits in sterling at the dis- position of France for & total of £150,000,000. Article 2 reads: To Be Repaid 3 Years After W “*The French government, in ex- change for the advance of the £150,- 000,000 stipulated in article 1, en-| zuges itself to request the Bank of France to place at the disposition of the Eritish treasury the sum of £50, 000,000 gold, constituting a loan, to be repaid by the British government three vears after the lermination of Hundreds of examples drawn from |the war, at the same time as will be repaid the advance provided for in articio 1.’ “The placing of this sum under the bove conditions at the disposition of the British government did not re- leve it from the obligation of repay- ing in gold. The English government ons has manifested to relleve itself of this obli- gation. It asked M. Ribot on March 13, 1917, to accept in another agree- more | ment that the gold in question could be placed in credit against the French debt to Great Britain on account of tho French government bonds dis- counted in virtue of these accords. M. Ribot refused Loucheur Proposal Rejeeted. “When M. Loucheur visited Lon- don in 1919 it was desired to insert n the draft of an agreement that the ‘would not ask for repayment of the gold detained in exccution of the Calals accord until the moment in which was paid the total of the French debt owing to the English government’ M. Loucheur reserved his adbesion. and upon his return to Paris the French govern- to accept the article in question “The accord of 1916 (drawn up at Calaix) remains. therefore. the only verning the legal status of the Zold transferred to the British treas- ury and, conforming to these stipula- tions, this sum of gold continues to figure in the balance of the Bank of France.” P T SIGN CANADA-ITALY PACT. Commercial Treaty Between Coun- tries Ratified in London. LONDON, January 5.—A commer treaty between Canada and Italy was signed at the foreign office yesterday. W. 8. Flelding, one of the Canadian signers, sald that he had approached the Belglan, Spanish and Italian gov- ernments with a view to similar agreements. A commercial treaty between Can- a and France was signed recent Office Rooms For Rent in g Large Second-Floor Room, 1,840 Sq. Ft.,, $200 per Month (Double Southern Windows) Bright Room, Third Floor, 15x23 Ft..$45.00 per Month Court Room, Fourth Floor, 16x17 Ft. .$42.50 per Month Court Room, Fourth Fleer, 11x25 Ft. .$35.00 per Month Court Room, Fourth Floor, 11x17 Ft. .$25.00 per Month Apply Room 621 Telephone Main 5000, Branch 3 NO IMMEDIATE ‘ CATASTROPHE IN PARIS PARLEY COLLAPSE (Continued from First Page.) but whether she ever will pay at all. It requires to be remembered that the German government and people re- gard the treaty of Versailles, from top to_ bottom, an outrageous injus- Itice. They have never felt any sense of moral obligation to fulfill its terms, They look upon it as a pact of crush- ing oppression, the evasion of which is not only a right. but a patriotic duty. Karl Bergmann, the Prussian| financial expert, Who has represented Germany at all the futile reparations conferences of the past, including Parls, openly has avowed that until the treaty of Versallles is “rcvised.” | lock, stock and barrel, the conditions Germany's conquerors would impose upon her never can and never will be | lived up to. Stinnes Bar to Folfillment. Although men like the late Walther | iRathenau, the fyemer German chan- | cellor, Dr. Wirth, and the present pre- mier, Wilhclm Cuno, rank as ex- ponents of the “policy of fulfillment.” } {the industrial reactionaries like Hugo innes and the militarist die-hards of the Hindenburg - Ludendorif - Bern- hardi school are brazen advocates of a policy of non-fulfiliment. They look upon’ the treaty of Versailles as an- other scrap of paper. It {s thelr in- fluence which has predominated over that of German liberals of the Ra- thenau-Wirth-Cyno type, and which rto hus mainly been responsible | nany's systematic policy of | subtesfuge, evoston and quibble i ] Hughes Allusion Justified. Hu | lusion .to the Secretary hes' New Haven itics” in the repara- 1s justificd up to the thilt by the week's critical develop- | ments at Paris. Self-interest is ever the controlling influence of European statesmen. in London as in Paris, in Rome ax in Brussels. The paramount politics in the reparations situation is the ancient E n_ principle of “balunce of maintained by Great Britain since Napoleonic times. he British traditionally have op. posed the rige on the continent of & power so sirong that it could menace Great Britain's position in Europe. A super-strong France does not fit in with Britain's time-honored European scheme. A France bound always to be more or less fearful of a powerful Ger- man neighbor more accords with British political and military interests. Cate- | gorical suggestions aiong that line have | just been made In the “Round Table," that authoritative British quarterly re- | view, which deals exclusively in imperial and 'international affairs. ~The article in question specificaily discusses France's projected mastery of the Ruhr and deals with the economic und politi- cal menace such a French zrip on Ger- many's resources would constitute for British interests. Do H {tions situation to Two Views in Britain. The British more government has even up-to-date incentive for wishing a strong Germany vis-a-vis France than the oid balance of power fetish Law asserted in Paris early this week | that Great Britain would zain indus- trially and flnancially through the com- plete swallowing up of Germany by an earthquake, because thus Britain's most formidable commercial rival would be abolished. British manufacturers and workingmen hold a radically different idea on that suhject. It is precisely because they wish to retain the valuable German mar- ket for British man tures that Bonar Th jemployed FRIDAY, JANUARY Woman in Capitol Demands Seat ! Of Newberry! When Sergeant at Arms Borry of the Senate reacned his office Wed- nesday morning he foynd awaiting him a well dressed, refined man- nered woman, who announced that she had been elected to the Sen- ate to succeed Senator Newherry of Michigan and desired Mr, Barry to escort her to her seat. Mr. Barry courteously explained that such wax not his function and that, moreover, certain prelimi- naries, such as examination of credentlals, must be observed be- fore she could be seated. The lady insisted that she had studied military law and knew that it was the duty of the ser- geant at arms to show her her seat Mr. Barry reappeared excused himself and with “the captain of the Capitol guards. who interro- ated the visitor. She talked ra- onally on other sul but was inclined to be insistent upon her right to a seat in the Senate. The captain, pleading the neces- sity of further investigation, es- corted her to the hotel where she sald she was stopping, where in- auiry developed that she had rel- atives in Detroit. They were com- municated with at once, while she was requested to awalt further cxamination of her credentials. —_— the Lloyd George program, like the Bonar Law program. of a square deal for Germany on reparations was evolved. John RBull, the shopkeeper of the world, never needed the Ger- man export market xo much as he needs it today. Tle needs the Russian export market for the same reasons— in order that the mills of Lancashire and his other throbbing industrial districts muy be kept going and in order t the British army of may be put to work. John Bull wants Germany re- habilitated, not only for Michel's sake, but in John's Interest. Labor's Volce Felt. With the strongest labor party that ever sat in parliament, constituting virtually “his’ majesty’s loyul op- position,” no British prime ministes for reasons just adduced, will aban- don the program designed Germany op her economic feet as soon as possible. The industrial sit- uation in the British Isles is tho real explanation of the British cabinet's insistence upon liberal terms to Ger- many on re It is not tem- pered by “pro-Germanism™ any more than is the American official attitude that justed before a war-shattered world, in Europe or the United States, can ever hope to recover economic equi- librium. (Copyright, 1923 ) —_— TO SEEK DIRECT VOTE. Michigan May Ask States to Aid in Abolishing Electoral College. LANSING, Mich, January resolution calling upon a to join with Michigan In a dmand for amendment of the federal Consti- tution to abolish the electoral college and provide for election of Presi- dents by direct vote of the people, probably will be introduced in the Michigan legislature at the behest of Gov. Alex J. Groesbeck. it was learned at the governor's office today. Legislative leaders predicted such a resolution would pass with e Sol-Herzo Corne to put! reparations require to be read- | Al 1l other states ! 5, 192. HAS TOBOW WILL OF WIFE !Soviet Leader, Piloted Home When He Exceeds Prescrib- ed Office Hours. LENIN i BY GEORGE WITTE. By Wireless to The Star and Chieago Daily News. Gopyright, 192.) ! BERLIN, January 5.—Even in soviet | Russia the mighty are ruled by their {doctors and—wives. It was on the orders from his doctor that Premier {Lenin failed to appear at the open- [ing of the communist congress, his absence crealing great ecxcitement and giving hise to the report that he as again dangerously ill. And when Lenin tries to exceed the threc hours I4A‘|f)\4(‘d him by his medical advisers for work each day, his wife promptly takes him out of the office and brings im home. These facts concerning Lenin's pri- vate life were givea 1o the writer to- day by Prof. R. Foerster, the famous | German syrgeon, upon his return to Berlin from Moscow, where he looked after the soviet leader for many week: eart Improved, “Lenin heart Is Report. has improved satis- factorily in the last month’ Dr. Foerster sa ut T and the other medical men who have been consulted have prohibited him strictly from at- tending any big public meetings, such as (he recent congress was. because he i still nervous and excitable. o is chafing under the strain wants to run everything himself and If his wife did not come around to his office to get him home every day he would be a complete wreck soon and his condition hopeless. “Just now he is greatly worked up lover the fact that there 1= as much {graft among the soviet officials as i there was among the czarist employe |in the old days. Whenever he uttends a meeting of the exccutive council all the commissars silently throw away their cigarettes and cigars and put out their pipes, because smoke has 4 bad effect on Lenin's heart.” Dr. Foerster was accompanied to this eity by Serge Malvchev, head of the Nizhni-Novzorod fair, who is on his way to France, where he will in- vite Marcel Herriot, mayor of Lyon. and others to attend and exhibit at the next exhibition. “Lenin has undergone a treme ehange in the last two vea M. Malychev, who is a close personal fricnd of the communist chief. “He used to be one of our gayest public men, laughing and making jokes all the time. Now he is solemn and moody and gets excited over noth- ing." |y, Foerster says that if Lenin will take care of himsc!f and obey the or- ders of the doctors he will be all right again in a few months BREWER'S WILL FILED. ST. LOUIS, January 5.—The will of Willlam J. Lemp, president of the brewing company which bears his name, who shot and killed himself {1ast Iriday. has been filed for pro- {bate, While no estimate of the value of the estate was made, it is be- lieved to be in the neighborhood of $1,000,000. One-half of the estate is bequeathed to his widow and the other half to his son, William J. Lem dous B'S &F === Now for some bargains—REAL bargains Herzog’s Half-Yearly Clearance Sale Qur regular men's wear merchandise that we're just as proud of at these great reductions as at the full price. The sclec nstances, are not complete—that's o clearance prices. If yow're a man who likes to SAVE on your some the “why” of purchase—Herzog's is the place. - First- | Suits & Hand-Tailored We Offer O’Coats by “STYLEPLUS” and Other Nationally Known Makers Not “job lots” but cowrse they carry our our regular garments—of satisfaction guarantee as well as that of the maker. All styles, all sizes, all materials. Many s spring wear. light shades suitable for $25 Suits & O’Coats for $19,75 §30 Suits & O’Coats for $23,75 $35 Suits & O°Coats for $27.75 $4) Suits & 0’Coats for $31.75 $4.5 Suits & O’Coats for $35,75 $50 Suits & O’Coats for $38,75 Substantial savings, fine clothes—iake advantage of them., Well hold your choice on o small deposit, Brushed Wool Reefers $1.55 All the populer shades, Reguler SHOE “Old-Tyme” Wool Sox 59¢ Regularly $1.00 All lasts, all shades, all leathers, all sizes, at the clearance price of . ... $3.8 Some are imporied makes, new shades, Si:':x'é}i to 7%4. ns, in these The man who twears Her- zog Clothes is never asham- ed to look in his mirror or his pocketbook. Greater Reductions on Shirts 4 fine opportunity to replenssh your stock of shirts at saving prices. .00 Shirts at ....$1.55 2.50 Shirts at --—-21.75 ,00 Shirts at $2.15 .50 Shirts at ....$2.65 4.00 Shirts at .50 Shirts at .15 .00 Shirts at . 7.50 Silk Shirts at g,ss $8.50 Silk Shirts at $6,85 Equally Low Prices on Neckwear 1.00 Neckwear now 65¢ 1.50 Neckwear now $1.15 2,00 Neckwear now §1.585 .50 Neckwear now §1,85 00 Neckwear now $2.15 Brighton, 19¢ Paris and Eezy Garters Any Velour Hat In the House Values to $12 Al the $5.85 Sale_ Starts 'l‘»on_l_orroywl Saturday, 8:00 A.M. He | PROVIDES BED IN HOSPITAL FOR HURT POLICE OR FIREMEN Miss Mabel T. Boardman has in-| formed Maj. Sullivan, chlef of police, | and Chief Enginee- Watson of the ‘flrc department that a bed at Emer- &ency Hospital, endowed by her mother, will be available when needed by a policeman or fireman in need of hospital treatment. The announce- ment of this offer was communicated | to Washington policemen yesterday in | the daily bulletin of the police depart- | ment. Miss Boardman's lettér to Maj. Sul- livan reads as follows: “I know that if a policeman is in- | jured in the line of duty he is eared | for through Dietrict appropriation but it has occurred to me that seme times they are ill pot as a result of their service. I do not know, in this | CANADIAN SCHOOL FIRE DECLARED INCENDIARY Men Seen Near Grounds Shortly | Before Blaze at St. Boniface Is Discovered. INNIPE Man., Jan which yesterday destroyed the Pro- vencher High School at St. Boniface was of incendlary origin, officlals de- clared today | Three men were seen crossing the ! St. Boniface College grounds near the high schoo! at o'clock vester- ; Shortly afterward the —Fire | CONVENT LOSS. $150.000. Investigation Started of Eleventh Canadian Catholic Fire. ST. GEORGE DE BEAUCE, Quebec Junuary 5.—The Convent of the Good hepherd was only a smoldering heap of ruins today, after a fire which swept the institution vesterday with a loss of $150,000, only partly covered vy insurance. Plans for immediate rebuilding were said to be under way. The fire. which was being investi- gated today, started in the roof, as nearly as authorities have been able to_determine. This was the eleventh Catholic ir- stitution in Canada to be visited by a serious fire since March 29 last. when the famous Church of St. Anne de Beaupre was destroyed. FRAT HOUSE RAIDED. Poker and Craps Games Declared to Have Been Run. Ry discovering that leng tap, and t short raps the door would gain admittance, police raided {a craps and poker game at the Delta Phi Kappa Fraternity apartment, 1022 Vermont avenue carly yesterday, resulting in the visit of forty-five par- ticipants, witnesses and bystanders at the game to the second precine station, and in the c| ge of permit- ting gaming and disorderly house be- ing placed against a man giving his| name as Jack H. Collins, twenty-three years old. Collins forfeited $75 Police Court yesterday appear for trial. i one rec on at collateral Sbed. | saving case, whether there is any hospitui care provided without cost to the “In the Emergency Hospital my mothe has endowed a bed in one of the warc in memory of my father. We have right to name any one to occupy ! 1f at any time vou should know of some member in the police departmen who would like the use of this bed we would be very glad to have it used | him. You could send me the name - such a person and we coyld give it the hospital authorities. “I feel that these mén deserve o consideration and such help as we m. | be able at any time to give them in cnx of need, as they render such valual, service to the city, and their duties ofte: expose them in such & way as to be Jurious to their health. T am writing a similar lefter to X Watson of the fire department. Wit cordial regards and best wishcs for Merry Christmas.” POLLARD IS INDICTED FOR MURDER OF WOMAN Richmond Man Released on Bou After Being Charged With Kill ing Former Stenographer. By the Asseciated Pre RICHMOND, Va., January 5.— owing his indictinent by a hustin: court grand jury late yesterda: 3 charge of murder in connection wit the killing of his former pher. Mrs Ham Richard on the night of December 11. Thoma Pollard permitted to w d of $10.000 and was released fro custody pending trial of the case ¥ ruary Renewal of the defendant bond was granted by Judge D. « Richardson over the vigorous prote Commonwealth's Attorney Dave Satterfield and Special Prosecut Richard Evelyn Byrd, who ineiste that Pollard be remanded to Jja without Lail The indetment, charging first de gree murder. wus reported by t grand jury after a lengthy deliber: tion of the « Witnesses called be fore the inquisitorial body include Herbert E. Richardson. divorced h band of the slain woman, and M Bertha 1 Beck, alleged “othe woman” in the case Pollard is charged with “deliberate premeditated and malicious murder It is averred that Pollard fired pistol deliberatcly with the intentic of killing the woman and that t act was accompanied by malice aforr thought, according to the indictment — CRITICIZE G. 0. P. SPEED. Unable to Study Appropriations Say Moore and Blanton. Criticism of the tions committec leadership for stenogr Thelma was rene ice House appropria- and the republica rushing through an propriation bil voiced th House yesterday Representative R Walton Moore of Virginia and Repre sentative Thomas L. Blanton of Texas both democrats tepresentative Moore particulari: criticized the intention to call up tle District appropriation bill tomorrow that the members have no hiad opportunity to read the hearing and study the bill before heing calle: upon to Pass upen Its provisions was in This is that One Sale we hold every winter —and in it you have the privilege of choice of Every Suit We except only Full and novelty weaves. We'll make alterations if Al Al Al Al that sold up that sold up that sold up that sold up Special Coat and correct .. Suits and Overcoats Suits and Overcoats Suits and Overcoats The Finest Overcoats and Over= coat in the house Dress and Tuxedos— otherwise yeu are unrestricted. Fancy or plain colors. Young Men’s or Conservative models—staple 4 necessary without cost—but please don't ask us to book any charges at thesc prices. 294 392 1493 692 to $40.00 to $55.00 to $75.00 to $85.00 Tuxedo Trousers Mode designed and Mode made—detailedly § 3 8 Clearance of Mode Soft Hats The season’s best shapes in those splendid $4 and $5 grades of ours. $2.45 Some Blanket Bath Robes Good patterns—cut long and from the Christmas assortment. 2 Ebvenihir o full—left Special x $ 3.95