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4 —————e HALL JURY FACES DIFFICULT TASK Must Hunt Carefuily for Truth in Mass of Conflicting Testimony. BY DOROTHY DIX. Special Dispatch to The Star. SOMERVILLE, N. J., 26.—By rights, the Hall-Milis jury should. be composed exclusively psychologists, instead of which the 12 200d men and true, who hold the de- fendant's fate in their hands, are just plain, eommon sense farmers, who have given much more thought and fudy to the temperamental vagaries of a metting hen than they ever have to thelr fellow creatures. But in reality, only men whose trained minds are capable of tracking a subconsclous thought or obscure im pulse to its source in the human brain, only men who have the uncannny skill to vivisect a soul, only men whose hands are delicate enough to hold the scales in which intangible values are welghed, are fitted to deal with the most mysterious case. Just Question of Belief. Tor in the end, everything has come down to a question of belief, to a ques- tiom of who is telling the truth, and who 1s 1ying. Never was there a case in which the witnesses so flatly contradicted each other, and in which there was so little circumstantial evidence to throw a side light on thelr testimony, by which it might be judged. So, as the case draws to its close, it presents itself to you in this fashion: Do you believe Jane Gibson, a wom- an of loose life and who was held in small esteem by those who knew her, or do you belleve Mrs. Hall, & woman who has lived a blameless life, a re- liglous woman, a woman who has spent her time and money in good deeds, and whose family for genera- tions have been the backbone of the community in which they lived? Jane Gibsou’s Storfes. Which one of Jane Gibson's many stories do you believe? Do you be- lleve she told the truth when she said at first that she did not recog- nize any one at the scene of the mur- der? Or when she said that in the flash of an instant she recogniz four people whom she had never seen before? One time she sald she was riding on a mule in the lane when she heard the shots. Another time she sald she had hitched her mule to a stump and was peeking through the brush when she saw the tragedy. Did she tell the truth either time? Jane Gibson sald that the moon was shining brightly at 10 o'clock when she saw the struggle and heard the screams and shots. The almanac, backed up by the professor of astron- omy at Princeton University, says that the moon did not rise that night until 11:26 o'clock, and that the moon was in the last quarter. Do you believe Jane Gibson when she said she recognized Henry Stevens as one of the murderers, or do you belleve the 13 men and women who testified that at the hour the tragedy occurred he was fishing with them on the beach at Lavallette, 60 miles away? Do you belleve Mrs Demarest, ‘who says that while getting off of a car she recognized Henry Stevens, whom she has not seen for 26 years, in a passing motor car, or do you be- lieve these same Lavallette friends and neighbors who swear that at the time Mrs. Demarest says she saw him they were seeing him in his home? Woman or Daughter. Do you belleve Mrs. Demarest or|examined testified that the enlarke-|,nq gecided to go through De Russ- her daughter tells the truth when the mother says that she saw things that the girl says she never saw when they were out together? Do you believe the young man who says he saw Mrs. Gibson on a mule|tion to the jury on the enlargement, | after you had passed into De Rus- in De Russey lane, or the girl who was with him, who says that they did not see her at all? Do you believe the hearse driver who says he saw scratches on Mrs. Hall's face at her busband’s funeral, or three clergymen and host of friends who were with her, and who declare that she had no marks on her face whatever. Do you believe Mra. Gibson's story that she saw Henry Carpender at the scene of the murder, or_the testimony of a prominent New York business man and his wife that Mr. and Mrs. Carpender were dining with them and playing bridge at the very time the murder was committed? Two fingerprint experts of wide reputation have declared that the smudge on the card found at Dr. Hall's feet was made by Willie Stevens' right index finer. Three other experts equally renowned have declared that it is not Willle Stevens’ singerprint at all, but a forgery— which do you believe? Mrs. Hall Self-Contained. Do you believe that a quiet, digni- fied, pecullarly self-controlled woman, such as Mrs. Hall is, could ever, under any circumstances, commit a_murder, and particularly such a brutal murder as this one was? Do you belleve that any two men, such as Henry Stevens and Harry Carpender are, men of the world, men of affairs, men of high honor and in- tegrity, would assist any female rel tive in the commission of such crime? Do you believe that a person of the mentality of Willle Stevens could be grilled by the police for hours and cross-examined by as astute a lawyer as Senator Simpson for more hours and tell the same simple, coherent story unless clling the truth? Don't vou 1t g hiding a s bound to betray hims Do ynu believa that would kill her husband, finy and deliberately strew thelr love let 1ors between them, or that any man would assist at such a crime and smndge a card with his thumb-print and leave it at their feet? a Hard Questions for Jury. 1o vou belleve that any murderers ever hung around the scene of their erime for flve or six hours, as Jane won says Mrs. Hall and her broth- crs and Mr. Carpender did? These are the questions that the jury will have to answer, and they will have to depend upon their intui- tion to separate the Ananias and - phiras from the truthful James and -acious Janes. They will have no fncontestable facts to help then tor now, when | the evidence is in the mystery of who killed Rev. Mr. Hall and Mrs. Eleanor Mills is still unsolved. We really know as little about it as en they were found Iying dead in field under the b apple tree. (Covyright. 19820.) The Woman's Bank of Shanghai, -ontrolled and run wholly by Chinese women, 48 & flourishing institution which includes among its customers rany prominent Chinese merc ‘ < well as mative women 6f we; of OATH SAVES HALL DETECTIVE FROM ARREST IN COURT (Continued from First Page.) ried books and papers from the Hall jresidence a. few hours before the bodies were discovered. Other State testimony had accused Edwin Carpender, a cousin of Henry Carpender, of similar actions, and when Edwin Carpender was called to the stand on Wednesday he said that s box which he carried from the Hall {home on the afternoon of Sepiember 16, after the bodies had been found, contalned ciothes in which Mr. Hall was to be dressed for burlal, while November jan empty one was for the minister's vestments. Henry Carpender testified today that he was in New York at work until about 1:20 p.m. on the day the bodies were found and that he pever removed “paper boxes, drawers or packages containing letters or papers” from the Hall home. Carpender sald that on Sunday, Sep- ¢ | temnber 17, three days after the mur- der, he went to Spring Lake with his wife and returned late in the alter- noon. “Were you at the home of Mrs. Hall that morning?” asked Case. “No, sir,” anewered the witness. Denies Taking Bundles. “Did you that morning take any t}:l\;‘xjw e<,” papers or boxes from Mrs. i “IMd you see anvthing that morning of Mrs, Bearman?" “No, sir.” tate's witness had said she saw Anna Bearman, a relative of Hall's. In the automobile in which the State's witness said they saw Carpender taking away papers. “Did you take any letters out of the house?"’ “None whatever." Stmpson in cross-examination saked: “When you went to Spring Lake was it a warm day?” “Yes,” answered Carpender. “Do you remember whether a re- porter came to your house there and sald black smoke was coming from the chimney and asked if you were destroying letters?"” “Did you ever meet State Trooper Dickman in Prosecutor Beekman's office and have a conversation with him about a checkbook?” “No; I never in my life was in Mr. Beekman's office.” Henry L. Dickman, former New Jer- sey State trooper, testifying for the prosecution, said that in 1923 he was given a $2,600 bribe by the late Aza- riah Beekman, Somerset County prosecutor, to give up his investiga- tion of the double slaying and leave the State. Carpender Leaves Stand. ‘The defense later proved that Dick- man was a deserter from the Army end Navy and it was brought out in court that he was a military pris- | oner at the time he testified for the State. Carpender left the witness stand and was followed by J. H. Taylor, fingerprint expert of the Navy Di partment, who earlier this week te: fled that the fingerprint represented by the State as being that of Willle Stevens was not his fingerprint at all. The alleged fingerprint of Wiilie Stevens was on a visiting card of the Rev. Mr. Hall's which the State contends was found at the scene of the slaying. Taylor was recalled for cros: examination by Simpson. The wi ness told of taking a fingerprint from a metal box two months after the imprint had been made and after the box had been sent to him in Wash- ington from an Asiatic station. “What is the greatest length of time you have ever taken a_finger- print from a card or paper after the fingerprint was made?” asked Simp- son. “I've never been able to get ono street | from paper after over two or three| yorcutions with Mrs. Gibson. days,” answered the witness. He added it might be possible to make photograph of a fingerprint on paper after two or three days, but It was improbable that one could be made. Sandberg Testifles Again. Frederick Sandberg of Washington, the second defense expert to be cross- ment of the fingerprint on the calling card was correct and missed no de. tail to be found in the original print on the calling card. “You made your whole demonstra- did you not?" Simpson asked. *“Yen.” “Then, if the enlargement has miss- ing ridges and ridge characteristics that would affect your opinion?” Sandberg did not understand the question at first, but finally answered: “Yes, absolutely.” Both Taylor and Sandberg agreed with Simpson that fingerprinting was an exact sclence, that there was no room for difference of opinion and that a fingerprint either was or was not that of a particular person. Sandberg thought a print on a dull white card might last for three or four days before development, pro- vided it were handled carefully. Another of the defense fingerprint experts, Gerhard Kuhne, of the New York Police Department, who had testified earlier this week that in his opinfon the supposed fingerprint of Willie was ‘“superimposed” on the calling card as an “after thought,” was next called for cross-examination. Simpson Offers Test. He denfed he had communicated vith Frederick Drewen of the Jersey ‘ity Police Department and finger- print expert for the State, and asked that he be cmployed in the case by the prosecution. Kuhne, on direct examination | earlier in the week, had testified that graphite or charcoal was used in de- veloping the supposed fingerprint of Willle Stevens on the visiting card, while lampblack or boneblack was used in developing other prints on the card. | Simpson showed dozen cards and & what di them. actly what powder was on the cards, | but that he could tell graphite or charcoal from lampblack or bone- bluck, as he said appeared on the card in evidence. Kubne was questioned on whether he had told of v the witness him to were a tell on! the late William Pitzpatrick, Middlesex County detec , had a calling card of Mr. Hall's with fingerprints on it He sald that Fitzpatrick, a former student of his, came to him four years ago with a_photograph of a print in this case which the detectlive told him had been left upon a piece of writing | paper. Later, Fitzpatrick told him he “couldn't get the fingerprints in." | Fitzpatrick Not in Court. | Kuhne testified that he told Com- missioner Beggans of Jersey City that Michael Fitzpatrick, a Perth Amboy patrolman and brother of the detective, should know about the form their opinion, | fingerprints if anyone did. | Michael Fitzpatrick was called by | the defense, bur fafled to respond. Henry A. Langhein of Franklin | Park came next. | 'On the night of the Killings, he { testified, hc drove past De Russevs | Lane with Elisha K. Soper. Soper, | when called by the State, said he had | Gibson of having ridden through the ' vatue from Mrs. Hall or her family?” Although Dr. Mann might not, recognize this as his fini, it is identified as “Hi-Boy the giraffe,” by the Southeast We % * _THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER ‘ I LOOKS LIKE HE HAS BEEN IN BAD COMPANY | | | | | | | | citizens, who promise to have it on exhibition at the community carnival which opens tonight at Hine Junior High. Adds Thrill to Trial l i | | | | Sipel, a neighbor of Mra. Gibson, was called by the defense and asked if on November 12, 1922, he had any con- The witness was unable to fix the date, but said he had such a talk about a week or so before the grand jury session. “Do you remember that at that time she said to you she would like to have you testify for the State that on the night of the murder you were | driving home along Easton avenue eys lane to Hamilton avenue?” Offered $100, He Says. “Yes, sir.” «“And did she want you to say that seys lane you saw a woman and two men standing by the road?” “Yes, sir.” «“And did she say she'd like to ha you say you saw a woman on a mule further up the lane?” “Yes." “Did she want you to say that be- cause you were carrylng money, and Were afraid you'd be robbed, you de- clded to turn around and go back to Easton avenue, and that when you turned your car you saw the woman and two men by your headlight?” “Did she offffer you $100 to say all this?” “Yes, she dld.” This story, which the witness said Mrs. Gibson asked him to tell, would have supported the story told by Mrs. lane on her mule and of having seen Mrs. Hall and her brothers in the lane, near where the double slaying was committed. On cross-examination by Francis Bergen, prosecutor of ~ Somerset County, Sipel said that Martini had come to his farm and thanked him for his testimony before the original grand Jury. At this juncture, di ) in the courtroom in defense attorneys. v Bergen read excerpts of Sipel's tes- timony at the first grand jury investi- gation when Sipel was quoted as tes tifying: “She (Mrs. Gibson) said to me: ‘You go around a great deal. I'm looking for a Ford roadster that drove into De Russeys lane that night, and I'd give $100 to find that car.’” “Did you so testif) ed Bergen, “Yes," answered Sipel. Denies Receiving Money. sipel, recalled for re-direct exam- ination after the noon recess, was asked by Case: “Have you at any time received any money or anything of artini appeared he company of No sir,’ answered the witness. Earlier it had been brought out that Sipel had written three letters to Mrs. Hall after the first grand jury investigation in 1922. In these letters he gave her advice which he thought | would be to her advantage in disprov- ing the story told by Mrs. Gibson. | In the second letter he pointed out that his appearance before the grand ' jury had taken up ‘“practically an entire week” of his time, and sug- | gested that he ought to be ‘“reim- bursed for the loss of my time.” | Sipel added, however, that he would leave the matter of payment to Mrs. | Hall, and assured her that so far as| his appearance before the grand jury | went he “would have done the same for a_woman who had to go out to work.” The letters were voluntarily | produced by the defense. | Sipel, in one of the letters to Mrs. | 1. which had been read before ¢ left the witness stand to give way fer Di Martini, had taken credit seen a car ncar the lane with two men and a_women in it. testificd today that he had seen no such car and that he did not notice any car parked at the entrance to the lane on Easton avenue. Simpson, on cross-examination, questioned whether the witness had the cars through for thei Langbein | having ! his story to the jury. for having prevented Mrs. Hall from been indicted at the first grand jury investigation by telling The last letter of the series said | that the writer “had a caller today | which gave reason to believe another | investigation would be under way aud told of a country doctor Ravin: d it Henry Steven 4 New Ex-Service Man's Body Held in Morgue Becsnse Busis] Allowonce b Too Sinalls The body of Hobart Smith, 27-year- old former service man, who commit- ted suicide a week ago because he could not get work and found the $14 allowed him each month by the Gov- ernment insufticient to meet bare liv- ing expenses, still rests in an under- taker's morgue. The $45 the Govern- ment allows for burfel of indigent members of the military forces will 10t pay for removal of his bedy to his | lliam F. Franklin, adjutant of | tostello Post of the American Legion, had the former soldier's body removed ‘o the private morgue while he noti- | fied Smith's father, in Kentucky. The | latter asked that the boy’s remains be | sent home, but Mr. Franklin could not raise cnough money for th: Now, unless something is done qui iv. the post adjutant intends to send the hodv to the receiving vault at Ar- lington National Cemetery until the father perhaps claims it. Smith, a barber, joined the Army too late to be classed as a veteran of the World War. Consequently, when he contracted bronchitis and became unfit for further service, he was dis charged on a pension of $14 a month. The discase wlso disqualified him for a position arber. Last Saturday he sought relief in death. When police found him in his room on Third street he had just $2.02 left. Mr. Franklin interested himself in the case at the request of James F. O’'Shea, lawyer. On investigation he found that the $45 burial allow- ance was prescribed y s ago, when such a sum would defray the expenses for a moderately respectable funeral. Now, however, It does not meet re- quirements and is far short of the sum that would be needed to send Smith’s body back home. Brunswick on the night of the killings | He Denies Extortion. “Were you Mrs. Hall to extort money,” mpson asked. 0, replied the witness, wished to be repaid for my What did you mean by threaten- ing her with a new investigation?” “I only said that it looked that And you sald it for the purpose | of getting money?” | “No, for the purpose of avoiding | trouble.” At the request of Simpson, Sipel s notified not to leave the court- | room. “We want him,” said Senator Simp- | son, after questioning him at length on the conversation regarding Henry Stevens having been in New Bruns- wick. Detective DI Martini was then called, and Senator Case took up the questioning. Di Martini testified that he did not know there_was such a_person as Mrs. Mary Demarest of Plscataway. Mrs. Demarest, a_State witne: had testified that she saw Henry Stevens in New Brunswick on the | morning after the killings and said that Di Martini had tried to bribe her to_keep quiet. Di Martini said he never was in Piscataway while working on the case ur years ago under the direction of Mrs. Hall's attorney, Timothy N. Pfeiffer. He said he made no such offer as that alleged by Mrs. Dem- arest when she testified that he had offered her $2.500. Only Heard of Mrs. Gibson. “Did you ever know a woman named | Jane Gibson?" asked Case. i “I had heard of her only.” “Did you ever go to her home to see >, sir. . Gibson, in her testimony for the State, had sald that Di Martini, while employed by Mrs. Hall, came to her home and, pointing his finger at her, told her that she had “better keep her mouth shut.” She said she stamped her foot and, holding her gun in her hand, made him leave the house. Peter Sommers, a detective who had been employed by Di Martini to help in the investigation for Mrs. Hall, had testified for the Sgate that Di Martini had told him to &b to “sa- loons, cigar stores and other place: in New Brunswick where people con- gregated to get the names and write down the remarks of people offensive to Mrs. Hall. Di Martini denied he had given any such instructions. “What were your instructions to him?" asked Case. “To get what information I could to help solve the case,” answered the witness. Simpson Takes Witness. xamination of the witness v Simpson started at a heated pace. You don’t know Mrs. Demarest?” the prosecutor asked. I only|© 1_never knew her in my life.” Your classified adver- tisement in The Star may be addressed to a Box. Busy merchants cannot stop at frequent intervals to interview those answering their advertise- ments. Appreciating this, The Star offers without charge its Box Service. Have a box assigned your ad- vertisement. A ticket will be issued which will entitle any one presenting it to receive replies. Your messenger may be sent for the answers and vou read them at your convenience. The name and address of ad- vertisers using boxes are re- quired, but are held in strict confidence. * answered Di Martini emphatically. “Then why did you speak to her in Brooklyn in an élevator October 4, while there were four policemen in iying, ‘Hello, Mrs. Demar- Mr th Case objected that the State had not proved such incident had taken place, Simpson said that this would be proved. Judge Parker instructed that in_the meantime the prosecution should not ask such a question. AUTOISTS RAM TREES TO SHAKE DOWN NUTS Special Dispatch to The Star. GROVELAND, N. Y., November 26. This township, named for the many hickory nut groves on the Genesee flats here, is attracting scores of mo- | torists intent on laying up a store for | Winter use. Not many of the hickory | nuts yet have fallen, but quite a few seekers are bringing' them down with sledge hammers. Blows applied at the | base of the smaller hickories jar the | nuts lo Some of the autoists have invented a still more effective method where | their machines are equipped with bumpers. They throw into low gear, | head for a young tree and, just before | they collide with it, release the clutch. | In this way they bang into the smaller trees with an impact many times heavier than a sledge-hammer blow, but light enough not to damage their | machines, and through their ingenuity get awy with a lon's share of the | nuts. EDISON AT SON’S BEDSIDE WILMINGTON, Del, November 26 (#).—The condition of William Edison | of Centerville, Del., s Edison, was reported “fairly good" are Hospital today after an ion for appendicitis. Thomas A. Edison and Mrs. Edison arrived in Wilmington from Detroit shortly before noon today, and this afternoon were remaining at the bed- e of their son SELECT YOUR XMAS ORTHOPHONIC VICTROLA NOW and Pay For It NEXT YEAR a small deposit Now —and the balance in small weekly . or monthly payments NEXT YEAR. 709 14th St. N.W. 26, 1926. SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at_and_Sailings From & -NwYorI. QUEEN GIVES WATC 10 COL. CARROLL Official Host Says Marie Is Hurrying Home to Attend Operation on King. ARBIVED AT NEW YORK. Westphalia—Hamburg F rge—Bermu | American { Dante Alighieri—Genot . { DUE TOMORROW. Chicago—Bordeaux EXPECTED ARRIVALS AT NEW & Albert ‘Alaunia—Live American YOI ) | | Queen Marde curtailed her American trip to return to Rumania to be pres- ent at an opeartion to be performed on King Ferdinand, according to Col. John Haydock Carroll, who was in charge of the cross-continent trip, and | who has returned to Washington. l Col. Carroll displayed an expensive watoh, which the Queen hadl given | him, to reward his services on the tour. He said that, contrary to re-| ports, the trip had passed without triction, with the exception of his ex- pulsion of J. B. Ayers, Ford Motor Co. representative, from the royal train at Seattle, and the “butting-in” of “social climbers” and unauthorized press correspondents. The dedication of the Maryhill Mu- seum and the patronage of Lole Fuller performances in an official capacity were the sole and express purposes of the Queen's voyage to the United States, Col. Carroll declared. He denied that the Queen had hoped to derive any nnancial benefits from her trip. The Maryhill Museum, as yet far from completed, will eventually house not only Rumanian art objects, a shipment of which was carried on the private train, but treasures from the French govern- ment and other European sources. ‘The Queen was authorized by the Rumanian government to attend per- formances by the Loie Fuller troupe In various cities of the United States, m. | of which half the proceeds were to be devoted to Rumanian charities. Loie Fuller is a co-director of the Mary- hill Museum, an_incorporated institu- tion, Col. Carroll stated. Farmers, miners and other people of the working class were admitted to the train at various points thréugh- out .the West for the Queen to chat with, Col. Carroll said, that she might get first-hand information on laboring conditions. 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