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MRS, HALL BEGINS 10 SHOW STRAIN Weariness Creeps Into Face of Widow as Trial Con- tinues to Drag. BY DOROTHY DIX. Special Dispatch to The Star COURT HOU: Somerville, N. J., November &-—1f there is ever a lie on which the yrding angel drops a * that blots it out. it is the one wife tells to cover up her hus. nd's defections. Millions of women—God bless them and pity them—tell these white. lies, They speak of a drunken husband's debauche: 3 the re: wru and unloving husband. And millions of women 1 of the devotion of husbands who are tired of them and neglect them as if they could conjure back the love they y pretending that the 10 be true is true. And so 1 think that the good saint above who writes down the account of what we do and say in the flesh must have thrown down his pen with a smile and a_sigh and sald: “Oh, what's the use? she loved the man. And she’s just a woman—poor thing,” on that day spon after the murder when ‘the attorney and the as cuting attorney, and the grim-faced detectives, and the big policeman, and all the inquisitors of justice, came about her husband Picture of Ordeal. Can't you picture them all trooping ¢, red brick colonial < . one woman , sitting still and 1 before them, all of ered to do battle for the things that she held dearer than life, determined that nothing should break her down and make her ask for their compassion? Resolute that she not let them see the cankering hat she had hidden from the eyes of even her nearest and dearest? And so she lied like a lady about her husband and painted him as a madel of conjugal affection and de- nied that she had ever suspected him of wrongdoing. or had seen anything amiss in his attentions to Mrs.” Mills, or that she had ever had any Jealousy of the pretty choir singer “Yes,” she said, “she had known that her husband and Mrs. Mills were much together, but she had thought that perfectly natural. because of Mrs. Mills’ interest in the choir and church work. Yes, she had known that Mr. Hall had paid Mrs. Mills' bill at the hospital. Indeed, she had contributed part of the money herself. She had felt that Mrs. Mills was such a worthy woman and aspiring to something higher and better, and so she had tried to help her. “Yes, she had known that her hus- band had gone out on that fatal night in September, in answer to a tele- phone call from Mrs. Mills, and that some time during the evening he would be sure to see her, but she had thought nothing of it. Yes, she had loved her husband. Her love had been the one great and beau- thing in her life. . she had never for a moment suspected that he had ceased to love Ler, or that he cared for any other woman.” of a cold thing they want But She Deceived No One. d on, ing woman, the who Know adventure that heart in the litany of a hymn of joy of beyond all pri holds her hu; hollow of her o the SPECIAL NOTICES. aniual meeting of the stock- Ui compuny, for the R to sory 11 be held 6. at_the w. Polls open from By order of the 0 RAND 3. Secretary PONSIBLE FOR : eIf bersonalls: ind Brook sts. ne.) o GAS RANGES REPAIRED. BOWERS.™ hone Main' 7003 _Drep postal. 195 | RESPONSIBLE ~ FOR 3 any, othier than HOOE, Peabody PAIRING Star ‘office OF TH tal Buildine AND UPHOL- %o anywhere SHARE. e Asso on Monday 30 pam By ord w. e INC estimates. Nat BUILDIN remodeling. Bank Bldg. 8 VED TO LARGER QUARTERS. 511 1ith bet Largest line of har- oh | ot e in the 1 & GARFIELD. s plans m, 401 Dist. 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Stzam-lVapor—Water Heating Rmodcling Repaxrmg 1740 Oth St N m)hiAILb 18 weLw HEXTED] N rn for by just | to question Mrs. Hall | ARR [ disguised frank curiosity E. | term of imprisonment for that, - | then had de: the Halls-Mills mystery_story. (Continued from _First Page.) girl companion he was in De Russey’s lane the night of the double slaying and saw Mrs. Jane Gibson there, astride her famous mule. The time he spent in the lane was fixed by the witness at about two hours hetween 8:30 and 11 p.m. He heard no shots, but two automobiles passed down the lane about 30 minutes before he left. The questioning on the part of the defense was believed to be for the purpose of bringing Ehrling's com- panion in as a witness in an effort to refute his story. A discussion yers and of wardrobes of law- ses crept into the case during cross-examination of Frederick Drewen, a fingerprint expert. The witness said he had left some exhibits in the pocket of another suit of clothing. “Ah, like my friend, Senator Simp- son, you have a suit for every day,” suggested Mr. McCarter. Not quite,” smiled the witness. “The nestor.of the bar does my at- tire too much honor,” injected Mr. n. nough,” snapped Justice Parker. Mr. Simpson had the last word: “This sartorial digression was not mine,” he said. Saw Lovers in New York. €. Russell Gildersleeve, first witness called, testified that he saw the late Rev. Hall in New York City in 1921 with Mrs, Mills, choir singer in his church. The witness said this was more than a year before the minister and Mrs. Mills were found slain on the Phillips farm near New Brunswick. Gilder- sleeve, once a lay reader in Mr. Hall's church, was called immediately after the trial, now in its second week, was resumed promptly at 10 o'clock. “Did _you see Rev. Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills in New York”" asked Alex- ander Simpson, speclal prosecutor conducting the trial for the State. “Yes,” answered the witness. “When?"” “In the Summer of 1921. “Where?" “At Broadway street.” The State's purpose in calling Gil- dersleeve was to reinforce its previous and Forty-ninth hand, and that for him all other women are mere shadows. But for all her gallant effort to save her husband's reputation, and to hide her own chagrin at being for- saken for another woman, Mrs. Hall deceived no one. She did not even deceive herself, for the dullest woman alive knows when the man she loves has ceased to love her and found another affinity, no matter how she may deny it to her- self. And Mrs. Hall is keen eyed, highly intelligent, the last woman in the world who could be fooled. What was Kkitchen gossip in the small town was bound to have reached her ears. And to this was added undoubtedly indisputable proof of her husband’s infidelity in the letters that were written by the guilty couple, and that fell into her hands. Certainly it wrings the heart with pity to think of this proud woman stooping to countenance her hus- band's mistress, assoclating with her because in that way only could she silence the tongue of gossip and throw the mantle of her protection about her husband. Seen in the light of this great loyalty, how paltry the lies with which she strove to keep from admitting that she was an un- loved wife, who had been forsaken for.a younger and fairer woman. Trial Tells Upon Her. turday told heavily upon Mrs. Hall. The strain is beginning to show upon her, and before the long court session was over she looked weary unto death. Every drop of color had drained out of her face, and it, was only at intervals that she could'sum- mon up the brave, pathetic little smile with which she greets her friends and counsel. It was no wonder that she looked exhausted, because she had had to go through the harrowing experience of seeing all the ghastly exhibits brought out, and wrangled over, and tagged for identification. There was the blue suit of clothes which Dr. Hall wore when he was murdered, the broken eyeglasses, a blood-stained tie and col- lar. d’ there was the dress that Mills had had on—a blue voile with red dots and trimmed with red scallops, and the shoes that had tripped so gaily to meet death. Strange how ghastly commonplace | sarments can become when they have heen part of such a tragedy. Mr. Pfeiffer tried to shield Mrs. Hall from the sight as much as he could, stand- ing between her and the gruesome ex. | hibits, but he could not keep from her { the knowledge of what was there, and she wept silently as the various arti- cles were brought forth from their box. But Willie looked on with the un- of a child, bending forward to get a better view, even when a black felt hat was brought out that the prosecution claims belongs to him. This, however, was returned to its cache, and was not | offered in evidence, as were a lot of ¢ |letters that were found seattered be: tween the dead man and woman, and “m- contents of Dr. Hall's pockets. { Ex-Trooper Star Witness. | | The star witness of the day was | Henry L. Dickman, ex-State troopes and deserted from it, and served a and rted from the Army, and was now serving a term of imprison- yment for that. He declared that at the time of the Hall-Mills murder he had made many some months, and that in the end | Azariah Beekman, then prospmllor for ! this county, had paid him §2,500 to go }Aun) and keep silent. That, if the jury believes the story of a man who says he was bought and didn't stay bought, and the positive identification of the fingerprint on the | card that was found at Dr. Hall's feet as that of Willie Stevens, by Deputy Commissioner Faurot, were the first ( against Mrs. Hall and her brothers. | The rest of the day was taken up | with piffing_testimony of the kind | that led a cynic to declare that the law is an ase. One good lady, a| perfect type of the woman who | the cake at the church supper. testi- fed that she saw Henry Stevens in an automobile on the streets Brunswick, although she hadn't him for 25 years. not since they pick | violets together in their early yvouth— | |the point being that Henry has said | that at that time he was <ome“nere| |else. Saw Lovers on Bench. Also, she had once seen Dr. and Mrs. Mills sitting on a bench in + park near the Parker Home far In- urables, with something that looked |ake a hymn book in their hands. {Also at the same time she had seen halph Gorsline and Mrs. Minna Clark, but what these revelations had to do with solving the mystery of who killed Dr. Hall and Mrs. Mills, no human being could tell Also, another woman told about sending a cloak and scarf to be dyved for Mrs. Hall, after her husband's death, when she went into mourning. Senator Simpson read deep-dved guilt {into that. but to all the women in the courtroom, every one of whom had {done the same thing at a similar time, | jit was about as significant as Mr. Pickwick’s lamb chops and tomato sauce, And so ends the fourth chapter of (Copyright. 1846.) two real points that have been scored ||| s | f Hall I i THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. [PIG WQMAN IN LANE NIGHT OF MURDER, SAYS WITNESS testimony to show that the love affair between Mr. Hall and his choir singer ‘was generally known long before the double slaying and that therefore Mrs. Hall, who is one of the three defend- ants, must have known of the affair herself. “No questions,” was the response of defense attorneys when he was ten- dered for cross-examination. State Is Overruled. Ehrling testified he saw Mrs. Gib- son in De Russey's lane on the night of the killings. ‘‘Astride her mule, she pulled up be- side my car. which was parked In the | lane, paused for a minute and then went on toward her home,” he said. He testified that he had known the woman pig-raiser for several years through delivering laundry work to a woman who lived on her place. The State was overruled when it attempted to defend Ehrling's refusal to give the name of a woman who was with him in the lane that night. Who was with you?” asked Rob- ert McCarter, chief of defense coun- sel. “A woman.” “Who was with you?" “A girl,” was Ehrling's second an- swer to the question, as he uneasily attempted to fence with the ques- tioner. “Who was with you?” came the question a third time, while Simpson was on his feet objecting that the | witness had twice answered the ques- “ion, Refuses to Give ) “What was her name’ McCarter. “1 refuse to give her name,” plied Ehrling. “You'll have to give it,” Justice Parker. “Will you please give her name, the court has instructed you to give it,” continued McCarter. “Walit a minute,” said Simpson, “I ask that the court hear the witness’ reason for refusing. ohe.” “She's married now and has two children and a husband,” put in Ehri- ing hopetully. Justice Parker conferred with Judge Cleary sitting with him. “Was she married at that time?” asked the justice. “No,” responded the witness. you married?” me. continued re- interposed Rules Against Witness. “The court feels that you must give the name,” ruled Justice Parker. “You'll have to give it, now that the court has ruled,” added Simpson. After several attempts to understand what Ehrling was mumbling, defense concluded that the name of the woman who was his companion in De Rus- sey’s lane on the night of the killings was “Jennle Lenfort.” Ehrling did not know the spelling of her name. Defense was overruled in an attempt to learn the woman's married name. Ehrling testified that he and the | girl were in the lane from about 8:30 to'11 p.m. on the night of the murder. | “Did you hear any shots?” asked McCarter. No,” answered the Did you hear any No. : Then you saw nothing unusual ex- cept the mule?” Describes Strange Autos. “The only unusual thing I saw.” answered the witness, “was two cars, a sedan and a touring car, which passed down the lane about half an | hour before I left.’ The State's contention is that these | were the automobiles in which the slayers went to the scene of the crime. Defense counsel drew from Ehrling a detail story of the time he spent in the lane, clearly asking questions in an effort to find discrepancies be- tween his story and that expected to be told by Mrs. Gibson, if she is able to take th wi nefls stand. In her stories of having witnessed | the double slaying, Mrs. Gibson had | told of following, on her mule Jen- nie, a “nolsy, rickety” wagon, in which she suspected were the corn thieves for whom she claims she was looking. “Did rickety Ehrling. “No. I saw the witness. Closely Cross-Examined. Ehrling said he left the lane about 11 o'clock and took his girl companion back to her home in New Brunswick. Ehrling was closely cross-examined by the chief defense attorney con- cerning Mrs. Gibson’s riding her mule up to Ehrling’s car and peering inside. He said she paused just a moment and then rode on. g “Did_you speak to Mrs. Gibson? “No,” replied the witness. “Did she speak to you? “It was dark, wasn't it, “Yes, “Was there a moonlight? “I don’t believe there was. Another of the many verbal clashes that have marked the trie.| occurred when Simpson accused Mc Carter of misquoting testimony given by Ehrling under direct examination. When Simpson asked that “this per- sonal squabbling” be stopped Justice see or hear a noisy, McCarter you wagon?" no wagon,” answered r BOOKS BOUGHT “Bring Them In” or Phone Fr. 6494 Big Book Shop, 933 G St. N.W. 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McCarter's cross-examination of Ehrling reached a dramatic climax when the attorney, after bringing out alleged inconsistencies in the testi- mony, ‘demanded: “‘Which is true, what you said at the hearing before Judge Cleary in Au- jluut what you now say before this jury Simpson contended he could see no disagreement, but he withdrew his statement, when told that Ehrling in August testified he had told no one but Mrs. Nellie le Russell, a ‘negress, of his visit to the lane, Mrs. Russell, at one time threatened with arrest as a material witness, has been quoted as asserting that Mrs. Gibson was at Mrs. Russell's house at the time the killing was taking ace. . “What 1s the fact?” asked the court. “On the Sunday after the killings, I told my mother I had been in De Bussey's Lane that night,” replied Ehrling. “Why did you swear before Judge Cleary that you had told no one but Mrs. Russeli?” demanded McCarter. Forgot, He Declares. “It passed my memory,” reply. The questioning then turned to an allegation that Ehrling told Willard Staub of New Brunswick that he could make some money by saying he was in the lane on the night of the killing. “A short time after the re-opening of the investigation in 1926, didn’t you meet Willard Staub and tell him ‘if you will say that you were in the lane on September 14, 1922, you will get some money out of it?’ and didn't Staub tell you that he was not there and wouldn't swear he was?” asked | McCarter. | That part of the question bearing on Staub's reply was stricken out. “I didn't say anything to Staub,” | replied Ehrling. “You didn't say that?" | “I don’t remember saying it. Staub | said to me——"" and there the witness was stopped. Staub, who has not vet testified in | the case, galned prominence in the investigation when he signed an | affidavit to the effect that he had been taken to State police headquar- ters here for examination, and had been chained to a cot overnight in State police headquarters here. “Handcuffed to Bed.” “They kept me there about four hours after I had insisted that I had no_information whatsoever, and that I had been on the Phillips farm on the night previous to the murder, on September 13, 1922,” sald Staub in an affidavit which the defense made pub- lic_in September. He swore at that time that a mem- ber of the State police had put his fist close to his face, called him a disgraceful name, handcuffed him to a bed all the night of August 12, placed him in jail the next morning and attempted to trick him into sign- ing a statement that he was in the lane on night of the killings. A general denlal was made hy the police, with the explanation that he had been well cared for. He had been handcuffed to the cot. it was inald, so that tired troopers might have a chance to sleep. * Senator Simpson, on direct exami- nation, attempted to elicit more in- | formation about the cars in the lane. The witness testified that one looked like a Ford sedan, in which he saw one man. “Would you know the man?" asked | Stmpson. *No," replied Ehrling. Simpson’s Hope Misplaced. “What did he look like? Did he | have a mustache?” | was the | “What kind of a mustache was it?" asked Simpson, hopefully. “It was a short mustache," Ehrling. | This obviously did not fit the de- scription of either Henry or Willie Stevens. ‘“What make of car was the sedan?’ Simpson continued. “It looked like a Ford.” ' replied Improvements to Your Home 1to 8 Years to Pay Plumbing, heating. etucco, shingling, Knlnunr apering, kirages and all other inds of {mprovements o' your home. OME OVEMENT Ci WINSTON WELLER, Mgr. 11 Bond Bldg. t h and IMMEDIATE SERVICE Window Shades At Factory Prices The Shade Factory 1109 14th St. N.W. Main 10428 | [ Main 10008 MONDAY, N “Would you swear it was Dodge sedan?"’ Defense counsel objected, and Simp- son announced that he intended to re- fer frequently to the fact that Mrs. Hall owned a Dodge sedan. “I didn't think much about the make,” replied Ehrling. Defense brought out that Ehrling, when he testified that the sedan was a Ford, knew that Mrs. Hall had a Dodge. Defense counsel was careful to get into the record that Ehrling estimated not a the distance from where his car was parked to the entrance to the crab- apple lane as 2,000 feet. Burial Is Attacked. Simpson, in call Scott to the witness | stand, told the court that the State would show that the bodies of Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills were buried with- out proper authorization. Death cer- tificates for the couple, signed by Dr. W. H. Long, former county physician, who performed the autopsies, were presented as evidence, but when the defense counsel objected, they were withheld pending identification of the signatures attached. Before leaving the witness stand, Scott said the certificates reached his office about October 11, 1922. This would be some time after the bodies were buried. On September 26, the bodles had been exhumed, resulting in the discovery that Mrs. Mills' throat | had been cut, in addition to her hav- | ing been shot. Justice Parker today announced in court that one of Mr. Hall's calling sards, found at the scene of the slay- ing, had been found on a desk in ront of the bench and had been im-| pounded by the court. At this point Mr. Case asked that the court act as a repository for all exhibits presented in | mpson objected strenuously, maintaining that the State ought to keep the exhibits In its ssion. Justice Parker kettled the argument | by sayving the court would not act as | a repository. Case did not explain why he want>d the court to keep in its possessior. the State's evidence. Mrs. Gibson’s Removal Explained. Mr. Simpson. who personally con- ducted Mrs. Gibson from a Somerville hospital to one in Jersey City vester. day, said before court opened this morning that radium was needed in the treatment of the patient. Mrs. Gibson has Kidney disease and possi “Radium is available at Jersey City but not at Somerville,” said Mr. Sim son, “so we took the witness to it. “Then, too,” he added, “New York specialists can get to Jersey i much more quickly than ville should they be needed, Mr. Simpson did not know when he will be able to use Mrs. Gibson as a witness, he sald. “PIG WOMAN” EXAMINED. Specialists Called After Mrs. s Suddenly Moved. JERSEY CITY, N. J., November 8 (#).—Four specialists today began an examination of Mr: NEW RIVER EGG The Agnew way of screen- ing this coal is by way of the k Belt Shaker Screens. A trial ton will show you. JOHN P. 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Entrance from PAVED ALLEY They are Homes that invite the most rigid inspection for they are perfect in every detail. Open 9 AM. to 9 P.M. Parkwood Street is just north of Park Road—west from 14th. 2 CAFRITZ = ‘Otltrrnl Btilders of Communities to Somer- Jane Gibson, a VEMBER 8, 1926. State witness in the iZall-Mills case, who was suddenly removed from the Somersét County Hospital to Jersey City Hospital by Special Prosecutor Alexander Simpson yesterday. After examination of Mrs. Gibson, the physicians issued an official state- | ment in which they said she had a | “chronic gynecological condition™ with complications afd, in their opin- jon, would be “confined to the hospi- tal for at least two weeks." With her temperature at 103, Mrs. Gibson was transferred in an ambu- lance vesterday from the Somerville Hospital, in Somerville, where the trial of Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall iand Eker two brothers, Henry and Willie Stevens, is being held. Special Prosecutor Alexander Simp- son failed last week In an effort to have court adjourn to the hospital to hear the testimony of Mrs. Gibson, a raiser of pigs, who claims to have seen Mrs. Hall and her brothers at the scene of the murder. Move Comes Suddenly. Stmpson’s latest spectacular move was made without warning. He and three Jersey City police officers ap- peared at the Somerville Hospital with |an_ambulance. House Physiclan A. | A. Lawton objected to the patient be- | ing moved. The policemen carried her to the ambulance on a stretcher Simp- so7i was asked to sign a blank releas- ing the hospital from responsibility, but he ripped it off the pad and cram- Imed it in his pocket. Mrs. Gibson | signed one. Mrs. Gibson collapsed last Thurs- day ana since then Mr. Simpson has | been dissatisfied with treatment she | | has received and with reports on her | condition. 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