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- THE. SUNDAY: e e e RACIAL LAW MAKES YOUNG GIRL SLAYER Like Many in New York Police Experience. BY LEMUEL F. PARTON Soecial Dispatch s NEW YORFK million foreign-born brought with them an ancient 2 stubbornly resistant to the codes and social forces of the New World the old Sicilian law that only blood can | expiate dishonor which led 15-year-old Mary Arenchia to Kill her betrayer, and the grand jury will hear the case Mon- According to witnesses, her father | with her to the house of Saferio | as the child of the | age. It was | body i accordance Sicilian custom. A woman becomes a family but she alone must take the toll of life for honor. Under Sicilian cus- | Mary it now eligible for marriage which sh~ would forever have been had she not killed Pantellina. Revealed by Police Records. so far as for- concerned, are | strands of me- dettas and all the | vengeance and agnilio, an d her son’s r For six yea.< she had slept on a hard floor with no pillow or blanket. until she could find and kill the slayer of her son, as the Sicilian tradition requires. Likewise Mary Arenchia lay on a hard floor until she killed Pantellina. Not only in these sanguinary encoun- | ters, but in innumerable habits of daily | lfe. are the forgotten centuries echoed in new America. Any one observing Al | Capone and his friends. in pleasant so- cial intercourse around the Hotel Metro- pole, in Chicago, will have noted that | certain members of Mr. Capone's club | embrace and kiss one another on each cheek. while others do not. The ex- | planation is found in the old Sicilian custom which reserves this salutation for those who have sworn an oath of fealty. The work of remaking the tenement districts in New York frequently is blocked by the stubborn refusal of some Sicilian or Italian to vacate his prem- ises, regardless of the price offered for the property. Here. again, the Old World speaks. 2If one has prospered in & house, it is the worst of ill fortune to leave it. There are thousands of prosper- ous Italians here, wtih means to provide | luxurious homes, still living in squalid. cold-water “walk-ups” because of this ancient belief. Ceremony for New House. But if prosperity has not been such as to prevent moving. there is an ancient ceremony to be observed in | entering the new house. With certain venerable - incantations, salt .must be sprinkled on every floor in the house. | Otherwise, there will be nothing but | Bad Inck in the new home. P AR KON Fund lebts which go back to the 27 U - - beginnings of the Misericordia in| WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass., ust 18 Florence are still being paid in New | —China's future course in Manchuria York. One sends a gift or a memorial | IS “in the lap of the gods” Dr. C. C. on the occasion of the death of & friend. | Wu, Tepresentative of the Nationalist The family of the latter must similarly | fovernment at Nanking, today told dele- observe the later demise of the donor, |gates to the Institute of Politics and his family. in turn, must take not ‘We are prepared,” he sald, “to pro- of the next death in the friend’s fami ‘The books become complicated, but they wre carefully kept (Copyr prepared to Prot object to Japanese political domina- tion. It is to be hoped that China ht. 1928 will not become a military nation; that o | this day be settled by means of force: ART STUDENT GIVEN (1 S8, 1 B 0 SUSPENDED SENTENCE. : Holds Area Chinese. Manchuria. by history and population he declared, is an integral part of China d has been recognized as such by the world’s great powers. “But today.” he continued. “Japan |exercises in Manchuria a political con- | trol destructive of Chinese sovereignty. It was obtained through victory in the Russo-Japanese war apd was extended {when Japan, at the point of the bayonet, presented her famous '21 demands.’ “While it is true that Japan devel- opend Manchuria’s natural resources, that truth gives J;%m no moral title to the territory e time has come when the Nationalist government m have its opportunity to show what i |can do.” ‘William Kennedy of Washington, Charged With Beating Girl, | Released at Rockville. i Bpecial Dispaich to' The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md., August 18.—Wil- Calhoun Kennedy, 19-year-old art student of Washington, who was found guilty in the Police Court here | early in the week of assaulting Miss | Gatherine Kennedy of Takoma Park by | striking and her, and who was | committed .to fafl to await sentence,| was today sentenced to the county jail | for 30 days by Judge Samuel Riggs. 3 vouns Kennedy reburned 1o Wash.| Forecasts Niearagun Canal ngton with his father. He will enter| A round table conference on Amer- an art school in New York City. |ica’s place in Nicaragua brought from The defendant, it was shown at the | Prof. C. F. Wicker of the University of trial, became exasperated when in-|Miami the prediction that “within 10 formed by Miss Kennedy that she had | years the United States will have built arranged to attend the movies with |@ canal across the Nicaragua Isthmus snother young man and that she would, | = 50 Gl therefore, have to break a date with . > . him. Kennedy testified that he did 8 not intend to seriously hurt the ;mu:g!Ll“er Of [ "pp" 8 woman. Judge Riggs characterized the s . attack as unjustified and declared that | Win Sentenc ed ])()g ;n for the youth of the defendant and S I E i is promise of an art career he would av C O el T b e e cenect he ponid | Ti8IAY ‘01 ‘Execution 7 Spacial Dispated 1o The Star MILWAUKEE, August 18— Judge Donovan in District Court today had fined Ham Gorman $15 for having a dog which had bitten two children and three adults and had ordered the dog shot, when the owner re- marked: “Judge, that dog had six pupples a few days ago. What am I to do about that?” Judge Donovan knit his brows in meditation, then had a solution “We’ll grant a stay of exscution for three weeks” he announced “until the puppies can get along without their mother.” PITTSBURGH MINERS ' REPORT WAGE PACTS lofliual Says 3,500 Are Affected and That Some Open Shops Have Recognized Union. ust t THREE MEN TAKEN BY RAIDING SQUAD 172 Bottles of Beer Seized at 212 Ninth Street—Two Others Held for Gambling. In three raids police of the first pre- ecinct yesterday afternoon arrested three men, one on a liquor charge and two on | charges of gambling. In the first raid at 212 Ninth street they arrested John Richard Purdy, 26 214 B street northeast, and confiscated 172 bottles of beer and approximately two quarts of alleged liguor. Purdy was charged with illegal possession. At 525 Eleventh street, they arrested James Edward Quinn, 22, of that ad- dress, on a charge of setting up a gam- ing table. At 218 Ninth street, John Herbert Rowe, 29, of that address, was arrested on & charge of permitting gam- | ng squad was led by Police- R. Browning of the first pre- By the Assoiated Press PITTSBURGH, August | Murray, international vice president of the United Mine Workers, announced ! here today that coal companies in the Pittsburgh district, employing a total of 3500 men, had signed new waj | contracts with the union He added that several of the concerns signed previously operated open shop. The union official said negotiations | were being carried on with other firmy 18— Philip ASKS DAMAGES. Women Who Fell on Icy Sidews $20,000. e sustained serious | falling on the 5 Eleventh Demands Declaring 1 injury b sey sidewzlk in P street anuary, Lulsa de Gregorio v 936 E street, has filed sult to rec and that contracts would be made pub- $20,000 damage from Sophia R. Harris, | lic in a few days. Hultop Manor: Fred B Goodhart, 825 Murray sald a census made during Eleventh strect. and the District of Co- | the past two weeks by officials of d jumbia. Bhe sa'x an accumulation of | trict No. 5 of the United Mine ice was allowed to remain in front of | ers had shown 12,285 idle union miners the property and cha negligence [ in the Pittsburgh area, who, with their against Mrs. Harrls as owner of the| familles, were recelying relief rty, Goodhart as tenant of the|the unipn reguladly each week. fi'!dmz and the District of Columbia| Eleven thousand miners, he said, had for failure o keep the sidewalk clean. | peen working now and then and re- Bhe is represented by Attorneys F. J. | cetving relief only when out of work Sloan and Alfred D. Smith | while 22,000 had obtained steady job: . {in mills and on highway eomstruction 10,000 GREET FLYER. projects The PARIE Harry W who flew the monoj ome ioday 10 recesve its of is fellow townsme | A crowd of 10,000 greeted the avialor, slhough & beswy ran tlipping president said the miners found other _employment naintained their union affliations and would return to the mines when the spportunity presented hi Me ” 16 the Latest estimates are that docks being constructed &t the of the Magdalens Rived of Columbia will not he comnleged for several vears, from | BUCHAREST, the madern | mouth ! 'CHINA'S MANCHURIAN POLICY !Nationalist Leader Says His People Are ect Japanese Eco- nomic Interests There. | “Every problem in Ni one answer— 1al,” he said. |follows the manifest policy of the S | Department that all strategic points on {the Caribbean be contrplled by Wash- I ington. | “This is the modern significance of |the Monroe Doctrine—nonintervention tect Japan’s economic interests, but we |of forelgn powers, and the consequent | tion, some going by steamboat from th |duty of intervention by the States in disturbed areas.” Under the existing treaties. United Prof. title to personal property must not in!Wicker said, the United States is given | pany No. the exclusive right to build at. the only iTemaining point & waterway joining the Atlantic and Pacific and a potentially important naval base at Fonseca. Sces Damage to Plan. ‘Overthrow of Nicaragua's Conserva- tive party,” he said, “might result in | invalidation of this agreement and be- cloud the canal issue in unfortunate | confusion. “The course of the United States in|Lynn Florence, C. M. Hughes, Clar- | | Nicaragua, therefore, is not directed [toward the subjugation of a neighbor |people, but toward the maintenance of acquired rights in this alternative canal Toute y will the United States insure its ow safety and that of Caribbean republi Miss Barbara Donner of Oshkosh | Wis., submitting a report of a survey of American financial interests in Ni aragua, reported American I testincnts | Gl & Crupper, H. E. Howard | jeft a wedding anniversary celebration | there do not exceed $10,000,000, that all American loans, with the exception of |onc of $1,000,000, have been repald, and | thet Nicaraguan interests now control | both the Nicaraguan Bank and the Nic- {araguan Raliroad, formerly the property | of American interests 'EIGHT ROUNDED UP IN GANGLAND SLAYING Philadelphia Police Continue Their Search for Those Who Killed McLoon and O'Leary. By the Assoclated Press PHILADELPHIA, August 18 —Six men two women were in jail to- night, as police continued their round- up of persons sought in connection with | the murders of Hugh McLoon and Joseph O'Leary, shot to death in the latest flare-up of gangland war Two of the suspects, Francis Peterson, and Bamuel “Shorty” Fel 3 charg | are Davis Glass, | William s Del Rossi are | charged with being accessories after the fact; and Samuel B. Grossman, alleged driver of an automobile from which |scheduled to reach the resort at noon, |[to visit his sisters, | McLoon killed in the street, is held { on suspicion of murder | Grace Willlams, 23, and Jennle | Brook arrested as suspicious char- I acters, cld as material witnesses. said ts won't be long before | F bed had of O'Lenr * door to his mied, are in jail ptain of Detectives Beckman said Jennie Brooks has been positively tified as the woman who lured y to the room in which he was shot in apartment that | iden O'lL ki | wounds taday. He was shot in a saloon | last night when he said in a statement just before he died, he made & | remark defending the character of Me- Loon He identified H. J. McAtee bartender, as the man who shot him The Intter is held without bail |POLITICS SEEN IN GREEK | SEIZURE OF ALIEN WOMAN Work- }l(.m‘um of $8,000 Is Demanded of Rumanians for Release of Mme, Nocilesco. Rumania, August 18 Friends of Mme, Irina Noclesco, the | Rumanian woman who 1s held by Greek | brigands, believe that political motives were behind her capture. They I this on the fact that | & Mucedonian fam Mure Noetleseo ) Vasilache of Bucharest I merly Rumantan consul Grecce The kidnapers have given the family until 10 a.m. Monday (o pay & ransom of Aunroximately 88,000, she comes from a daughter of Dy He was for At Janina James Daly, 24, died from pistol | the | STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., AUGUST. 19, 1928— PART 1. RESERVES SHOW SKILL WITH SABER AT FORT MYER. Bl - A charge by members of the v. now in training at the Col. Gu: t My 207th € post. Below mander of Fi over a barrier. V. Henry akes his horse yer, Star Staff Photos FIRE AUXILIARIES PLAN STATE B0DY Alexandria Leader to At- tempt Organization at Vir- ginia Convention. Ipec Dispatch to The Star ALEXANDRIA, Va., August 18 (Spe- sial). —Efforts to organize a State as- sociation of fire department auxiliaries will be made by Mrs, John W. Travers, president of the Alexandria Fire D partment Auxiliary, Wednesday morn- ing at Ocean View, Va., when she will appear at the opening session of the nnual convention of the Virginia State | Firemen's Association. The convention also will be in session Thursday and Friday Fire Chicf James M, Duncan, jr., an- nounced toda: that the drive to raise 0 to send the Alexandria Citizens' | Band, a 32-piece organization, to Ocean | View has failed and as a result Alex- ria will have to compete for the e awarded the best appearing de- hout a band. The local hters have won the State pri for the bes' appearing department with band for four years, with the aid of | the Citizens' Band. The parade will be | held Thursday ill de cide the various prize winne Seventy firemen and 39 members of the au: 'y will attend the conven- A { Prince street dock Monday and Tuesday | nights at 7 o'clock and others making |the trip in automobiles. Engine Com- 4 will be represented by 37 members, Truck Company No. 1, by |27, and Engine Company No. 5, by 22 | Detegates follow: ‘ Engine Company No. 4. delegates Leo H. Deeton. Henry Metsger, John | Posey, Stuart Jones, “Clarence Moore, Courtney P. Smith, C. M. Robey, Rob: ert Darley, Leo Moore, *Charles H Duffy, Walter Young. Ellwood S Wheatley; alternates, Samuel Berman, Elmer Moore, C. B. Cook, Carl Metzger, Bartlett, George Stone., Gus | Moore. Truck Company No. 1, dele | gates, J. W. Travers, Frank K. Davis, | T. B. Rowland, C. L. Lyons; alternates, | ence Silva, L. F. Myers. Engine Company No. 5, delegates, C. D. Moore, W. C. | Davis, R. A. Cline, J. W. Baber, George | Struder, Edward Cockrell; alternates, William Zell, A. B. Elliott. H. A. Suth- {and L. G. Berman. Fire Chief James M. Duncan, Jr. president of the State Association, wil leave Monday night by boat and on Tuesday will hold conferences with his officers and various committees, who are as follows: O. C. Mugler of Phoeb ice president; J. C. Clarity of Cha lottesville, treasurer: L. E. Lookabill of Roanoke, statisticlan: C. C. Manger Ocean View: E. E. Lawler, jr. Alex- J.T. Lawson, Hampton: J. F. Newport News, and Curts Charlottesville, executive com- Senator Frank L. Ball of Thomas J. Sheehan, Hamp- O. G. Atkins, Newport News, leg- ive committee W. R. & E. RELIEF OUTING | TO BE HELD WEDNESDAY | Varied Has Ar- ranged for Thirteenth Annual Affair at Glen Echo. | The thirteenth annual outing of the Washington Raflway Relief Association | will be held Wednesday at Glen Echo | Park, when employes of the various de- | partments of the Washington Railway & Flectric Co. and its aMliated con- cerns will stage a_program of events Program Been ranging from athletic contests to dance | | competition The excursionists are | when the program will begin, | W. 8. Ballenger is general chairman of the committee and F. J. Davidson is secretary. Other members include: W. | F. Ham, 8. R. Bowen, A. G. Neal, A. M. 3 D. Brooke, L. E. Sinciair, 1. g s, jr.; Stephens, H. M. Keyse C. M. Sharpe, H. A. Brooks, C. A. 8 Sinclair, R, D Vohall, Miss E. M. Ben- nett, Miss E. Dolan, E. C. Elliott, G. O. | Kraft, H. Jackson, W. L. Jones, F. Kee- |1y, H. C. Kimball, M. Mellington, J. H | Molineu and Dr. C. A. Weaver. | SouTH CAROLINA G. 0. P. NOMINATES ELECTORS | Party's State Executive Committee Selects Nine to Be Voted for | at November Election. ¥ the Amsoclated Press COLUMBIA, 8. O, August 18.—Nine | Republican electors for South Oarolina were selected here Thursday at a meet- Ing of the State Republican executive committe The sesslons of the com- mittee were not public and the ticket was announced after the meeting by J. W. Tolbert of Ninety 8ix, chalrman of the committee and Republican na- tlonal committeeman from South Caro- lna In making public the names of the men who will appear on the Hoover- Curtis Republican ticket, which will be placed i the field against the Demo- cratic Smith-Robinson ticket in the general clection this ‘Fall, Mr Tolbert pointed out that all Republican elec~ tors were white men. They were se- {lected, he asserted, with a view of mak- Ing the strongest appeal to the “best Jeitizens of the State.' B | - |after covering a_distance of approxi- PLAN INSURANCE . LIQUIDATION MOVE | Commissioners Expect Sale | of St. Louis Holdings to ! Pay Stockholders. By the Associated Press ST. LOUIS, August 18.—The eight | ate insurance commissioners investi- | ating tangled affairs of the Interna- | Uonal Life Insurance Co. today an-| nounced they expected to recommend | soon that the insurance be sold to some | other company, assets liquidated and | stockholders paid in full The recommendation, subject to ap- | proval of Federal Judge Reeves, August | when the receivership case will be reopened, awaits receipt of formal rein- | surance ‘proposals from the Missouri | State Life Insurance Co., St. Louis, and | the Kansas City Life Insurance Co. i The insurance commissioners said | either of these two firms is financially 11,000 Persons Inoculated at Wil- TYPHOID SWEEPS TOWN. liamsport, Md., to Check Spread. Special Dispatch to The Star. HAGERSTOWN, Md. August 18. An epidemic of typhoid fever in the Williamsport, Md., section caused State health authorities to intervene. Ap- proximateiy 1,000 persons have been inoculated against typhold by State and county health authorities during the last two days. More than a score | of persons are ill with the disease in the district. A preliminary examina- tion of milk and water indicates that the typhold was spread by bad water | from wells and cisterns, many of which | became contaminated during the floods | this Summer. There is considerable | typhoid in Hagerstown, but it is yet | widely scattered. TURKEY ATTACKS AUTO. | INGERSOLL. Ontarlo _(Special).- Annoyed by the continual stream of motor cars that interfered with his en- | joyment, & turkey gobbler near here re- | sisted and lost his life for a principle. | While the rest of the turkeys, fright- | ened, rushed to ety on the roadside, the monarch of the flock flew straight |at a car and crushed through the wind- | made able to protect the policy holders and | shield. stockholders of the International Life. They rejected proposals of Massey Wilson, one of the founders, and others that the company be refinanced and | continued in business. It was estimated approximately $5.550,000 would be re- | | quired for rehabiiitation. | | o B Greenvood, head of the Great | | Southern Life Insurance Co. of Hous- |ton, Tex, who said he controls a | majority of International stock, told the | | commissioners he would like to see the | { International reorganized, but would | not object to reinsurance. | _ Hearing on a Missouri requisition for Roy C. Toombs of Chicago, president | of the company, wanted here on charges of grand larceny and issuance of false stock certificates. will be held at 10 a.m. Monday, at Springfleld, Til TOOMBS HEARING DELAY Referee in Bankruptey at Chicago Continues Inquiry. CHICAGO, August 18 (#).—The ap- | pearance of Roy C. Toombs before a Federal referee in bankruptcy was de- layed today until Monday, and the | referee continued his inquiry into the affairs of Toombs & Daily, bankrupt brokerage fAirm, headed by the Chicago | banker and insurance executive. Toombs has been in seclusion since several warrants were issued for his {arrest two days ago, and police were prepared to serve warrants when he ap- | peared before the referee, Garfield Charles, The most important of the charges against the financier is one of grand larceny of $85.000, placed against him by St. Louis authorities. Although Toombs has not been ar- rested, steps have been taken by St | Louls authorities to_extradite him." His | counsel, E. L. McGary, sald the ex- ‘trndmox\ ould be opposed. i nce d. Toombs' house of fina started tumbling in on him two weeks ago, | | while insurance examiners were investi- | gating the affairs of his company, the | International Life, in St. Louis. Secur- ities and assets totaling more than | $3,000,000 were reported missing, and "roumh! was blamed for their absence. He was arrested, but released on a habeas corpus writ when no charge was placed against him. Then the war- rants were fssued. On the heels of the insurance com- | pany disclosures, affairs of the broker- lage firm in Chicago were aired, and Toombs was blamed for causing its fail- ure by manipulating its assets. He re- | signed from the presidency of a subur- | ban bank and yesterday the bank was ! closed. ‘Toombs has denied acting un- lawfully in any of his transactions. { 'AUTO CRASH KILLS | NEWSPAPER MAN William A. Corbett of Hagerstown | Dead and Five Injured in Ac- | i cident at Gettysburg. | | Special Dispatch to The Star. HAGERSTOWN, Md., August 18.— Willlam A, Corbett, 28 years old, | Hagerstown newspaper man, is dend.l Only by protecting this route | John Evans, R. T. Lucas, William De- | puon Graig, 25, Gettysburg, was prob- bly fatally injured and four others | were less seriously injured when a car | driven by Donald Beaver, Hagerstown, crashed into & telephone pole at Gettys- burg early today. The party had just | at the Corbett home a few moments béfore. Mrs. Gladys Cruger, Baltimore, prob- ably sustained a fractured skull, and her ‘sister, Victoria Clayton, Waynes boro. Pa, and William Colvin and Beaver, both of Hagerstown, were hurt MAIL THEFT GANG HUNTED Arrests Made in Illinois and Yowa Cities—On Leader's Trail. | CHICAGO. August 18 (#).—Posta inspectors tonight are engaged in a widespread search for a gang of mail | thieves who are rumored to have stolen thousands of dollars worth of currency and goods from the mails carried on the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad during the past year Arrests have been made in Chicago, | Aurora, 1Il; Galesburg. Iil, and Bur- | lington, Iowa, but Federal authorities | have made public no names, pending it s said, the arrest of the “director" | of the gang | TEAM | | Pair of 014 Horses Driven From | | Florida to Maine. BOSTON _ (Special). —Percy Morton |arrived in Hallowell, Me., from Florida Mr. Morton made | the journey overland, driving two hor: {one 12 and the other 20 years old, {1t took him three months to complete | the trip. \ On. their arrival both driver and | horses were In the pink of condition GOES 2,000 MILES. mately e years ago | Mr. Morton, with the same animals, left | Maine for the South, going in the sam manner and consuming the same lengti |of time to get there | EXPERIMENT IN MUSIC. APPLETON, Wis. (Special) —What i | belleved to be the first music district of |1ts kind in Wisconstn has been formed | Outagamie County by o group of | rural schools. | The plan was devised by A. G. Meat- ing, county superintendent of schools, and Dr. Earl L. Baker, supervisor of |music in Appleton public schools and (head of the music supervisor depart- ment at Lawrence College Conservatory, Under the plan a music teacher will have charge of 25 rural schools. She will spend a half hour a week in each school, overseeing the work done durin, the week by the regular teacher an outlining the program for the week ahead. The plan was presented to the schocl districts of the county at the annual meeting several weeks ago and already 39 achools have signified their intention of co-operating in the plan, and there | are between 40 and 50 more districts to report One of the greatest difficulties the rogram is expected to experience I8 the nability of the regular teachers to han- dle the music work because of lack of training. Some school districts have turned down the plan for that eld. The turkey was killed outright, but B. Powell, one of the two Milwaukee tou ists, sustained injuries which requircd medical treatment on arrival here. | VILLAGE ACCEPTS COUZENS” SCHOOL. New Building, Senator’s Gift, Replaces One Blown Up by Maniac. By the Associated Press, BATH, Mich., August 18.—In a holi- day spirit, the village of Bath today iccepted the Senator James Couzens gricultural school, built on the site of the structure blown to bits 15 months ago by Andrew Kehoe, a maniac, with the loss of 44 lives Bands blared on the streets, gaily | clad refreshment stands beckoned to passers-by. Children played cheerfully with the new playground apparatus. The village stepped completely out of the obscuring grief caused by Kehoe's demented idea that taxes were too high. Even in the formal dedication services, when the keys of the building possible by Senator Couzens generosity were turned over to the vil- age Board of Education speakers made every effort to turn thoughts away from the sorrows of the past. Rev. Scott MacDonald, pastor of » 1 L the church next door, which was dam- aged when Kehoe let go his dynamite | blast, and father of a gir] who died in | the tragedy, put it when he opened the dedication cetemony: « “This is & solemn, yet a joyful hour. ™ In addition to the formal turning over of the gift, it was homecoming day for Bath. Many former residents returned. Few strangers were in sight, the State evidently having d: cided to leave the village alone with i joy and memories. MONUMENT TO DEAD LOVE. Husband Breaks Up Household Possessions to Let Public Know. BRAZIL, Ind. (Special).—"A Monu- ment to Dead Love" is a sign in bold letters on the house of Guy Daugherty, clayworker, living northwest of Bra-il which seldom fails to stop those pas ing by. Embittered because he believed his wife was_unfaithful to him and had deserted him, Daugherty broke up the household goods, including the kitclicn | range, and stacked it into the “monu {ment.” All the cups and saucers were | smashed and put in the pile. ’ When Daugherty first was informed by a Terre Haute woman that her hus- band and Daugherty's wife had been “keeping company” Daugherty at first refused to belleve it, but later he had affidavits made out against his wife and her sister-in-law, Mrs. Walter Pierce. charging they contributed to the neg lect of Mrs. Daugherty’s daughte: Quality at a Price! Advance Sale of 'NewKara-Kurl - COATS at these Rvmurkubly Low Prices 17 A charming straightline model with turn-back cuffs and the new Johnny col- lar—both of self material centuating the natural newly acclaimed Johnny effect will prove to be one of the models of the coming season able value! Sizes 14 to 42 A dainty bit of trimming adorns the collar, thereby ac- charm of the This style most popular A remark- ne effect lapel, with high collar and deep uxuriously soft moufflon—a fur favored by Fashion woman who wisely selects this stunnin style will be smartly clad for every cold weather occasion. J Fur | |Fabric) ‘&l A new single-button model. cut to t s of Fashion's semi-flared It has an appropriate The discriminating Sizes 14 to 42. Fashioned of a new material that has the lustrous appearance of real fur. All are serviceably lined with alpaca. Don’t wait to choose from these two smart models—jfor the later in the season. Regular $1.25 Values! $ ‘What value! And what quall!{ is so apparent in these sturdy p! ‘They're of all leather with unusually fine quality rubber soles. You may choose either style with that it is correct and healthy for your child. Thrifty mothers will quickly take advantage of this chance to save! Sale! Children’s Play Oxfords and Sandals Children’s Sizes 6 to 2 1 and skill of workmanship ay Oxfords and Sandals! the absolute knowledge will be far higher priced A small deposit will hold your coat until Fall.