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PALISADES VICTIM unifor she belonged to a motor he often saw her in a gray He also knew she had been knew corp: that for | an active momber of the Red Cross. ARMY MAJOR’S WIFE Soldier Husband in France— Threatened Suicide Jan dead New York. woman found !9.—The voung| the Palisades | Sunday on epposite Riverdale last \dontified vesterday as Miss Azeele | selcwood, daughter of George H.| Packwood of Tampa, Fla. | The Identification was made at noon by Mrs. Bradford who lives at 844 The results of an on the bedy elusively that mitted suicide, Was Major's Scered Bride. | In an interview given out| jast night Mrs, Fllsworth said that Miss Packwood was socretly marriod | ta a major in the army, who died last October in Franes frowa influenan, His death hroke the young woman's hear Rhe refused to ha eonsolod | and Mes, Blsworth itod hor | than, enimly doelnrod sho would maks away with haesslf in such o wis that it disgraca oithor her femily ar the Had Crosm, Mre, Ellsworin oxpinined nefdom rend newspapor fast gha madc idantifien the vesult of a stertous | eall she reeeived Mondsy afternoon, | A man, who did net give his name, askied her if ehe knew n esriain per-| Hoa nate sha was un- | night, When she | A0, ina raan sug. | was | Ellsworth, a friend | West 87th street wuiopsy performod | seem to indicate con- the young woman com- whnea she weuld not thnt sha| and the | ion waos | talephone | fhe the mendoning a anie (o recail lasi replisa that she did gesied ihat she buy nawspapers und | read of the dend wom wha had | been found on the )‘nllun! L] | Mirs, th s | titied fhe ey out for iha eve-| ytlon of Miss | exdallant | sediately, | her 1ifa | ot T ana he girl" sl tako flashed Into her mind Her Recognition “1 deeided my Mre, Ellswor o look n 1 arrived Inglewood There wns ne doubt tho | tha body, Then I want to itackensack and told my story eronecutor | Huekin, my ident con- fismad whe 1 looked t Lo clothaos, BOMA of which 1 reoognizo i "1 had know Puc bout | " yea: ] toquainted wlth | her 1 tha of the Rod Cross Motor coqps, Ior e Joag timo I didn't know her nar:o er that sho was mar- ried, A short {ima after October 1 she| failed to appear at tha Red Cross, [| thought sho was {1l and went to her! nome at 26 HWant 48th stroet, I sound her very mslancholy, Sho thea confided that cshe wus secrotly mar- ried Lo a major In the army who had been ia Franco. Bhe had jusi learned | fie had dicd from influ 1 tried to console ho there was anything the Bhe smiloa pr me, Was duty, the body. | nbout noon. | nt I saw | vood heani oa i member e nway at j Cross Go to 1k with will nor my famil wag ! ) a about loved her soldier husband was appi ent, The reason that she kept her| marriage o eecret, I have boen told | by two Of her friends, was to ombln her to g0 to France as a ce. o army regulations prev a woman §oing overseas for such wor sho is | related in aay manner to a soldier.” Corroboration of her marriage to an army officer and the scene the night she received notification of his death from the war departmeat wags told last night by Hugh Camoron, superintendent of the apartment house where she lived. Mr. Cameron sald two-room apartment floor about two years ago for which | she paid $99 o month. She alwayn ltved alone and had no visitors. Ho WOMEN FROM NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST Recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s | Vegetable Compound as a Reliable Remed'y for Woman s Hls. aing | ihat she { she rented o on the third Spokane, Wash.— menpd0 Lydia E. Pin Compo\md for wor helped me 8o much d —Mre. MARTHA CO! Avenue. Abilene, Texas 1 was unfit todom 0 from female ills. VegetableCompornd restc after ph i f E. Ow Rockville; Con from female il choly. L E. F nkham’s V egetable | Compound restored my health after | eu-rythmg else had failed.”’—MARY Wirz, 3 (namberlam St. Oakland, Cal.— dia E. Pinkham’s Vuyzctablo Compound gave me such relief during Change of Life, I wish | every woman could know about it. I surely nrmsc t. s great rorrvdy for] women'’s ills.””—Mrs. MARY S. ASHLEY, 6709 Dover Street. The reason Lydia E. Pinkhem’s Veg- etable Compound is so successful is because it contains thef curx‘aiuve, strengthening properties of good old fashioned routsp and herbs, which act directly on the female organism. s Vi ailment: !’lo ago, Manstield “For almost o year y Wi as I suffered Lydia E. Finkham'’s | cdmy health | | one evening he | she cried, | been killed | firmed the ident | or three | was | of the skull. | Financial | —Losses susta } the | barrier | from | plundered Last October sho renewed the lease for three more years A few days afterward, when she returned handed he a@ gram from the \War Department. Miss kwood opened it turned g stly white. “My my darling! in France!" and God!" He has Never Told Husband's Name.. Soon afterward, Miss Packwood cancelled her lease, and had all het furniture and belongings shipped fo Fiorida. Since her departure Mr. Cameron has not seen or heard from her. ile thought she had returned home. He never heard her mention her husband’s name. He had seen her several times in the hall, weepin Prosecutor Huckin In the Palisade Hotel at Englewood last night con- cation Ie had just York after o long Ars. sworth. Several Mr. Huckin had learnec made public. He said Mrs and the two intimate Miss Packwood did know her married name. The theories that the dead woman was of good family and must soon be tified were Jjustified. The one roublosome factor, that of her elabor ite preparation for death, are ex- plained. Miss Packwood told two of her friends she had taken a course in nursing and had learned son thing of the administration of anas- thetics. The wood's France several returned from New with facts that were not REllsworth friends of talk ide Prosecutor said Miss Pack husband had returned from times during the war, and had been assizned to temporvary duty at Camp Merritt. While he was there, the Prosecutor said, she doubtless went to see him and dur- ing their walks they visited the Palisades. The date of Miss Packwood’s sui- cide remains unceriain. Late last night Mr. Huckin learned that one of her friends had received a_ télephone message from her on Dec.” After the Autopsy, the Coroner. Dr. William Willoughby and County Examiner Ogden agreed that she had not been dead more weeks. All the organs were in excellent condition. Only the lungs showed a state of congestion which caused by the anaesthetic and the cold. There were no marks on the body to -indicate violence, and no fracture The stomach and other organs were sent to Bellevue Hospital laboratory for chemical ana George W. Packwood was notified of his daughter's death by wire last night and it s reported he had left Tor New York Who he is has not been learned, but that he is well to do believed from the manner in which his daughter lived. She owned a small black automobile, which she drove constantly. Where she had lived since her de- parture from the 48th Street apart- ment and the name of the officer she married will be cleared up, it is ex- pected, when her father arrives from Florida. ‘SERBIA SUFFERED TERRIBLY IN WAR Loss Amounts 10,000,000,000 Francs (] Geneva, Switzerland, Jan. 20, (Cor- respondence of the Associated Press.) by Serbia during estimated by Milos member of the Central Com- mittee for Serbian reconstruction here, to aggregate 10,000,000,000 This is exclusive of the war expenses incurred by Sorbin and of the -wvaw loans Serbia received from the Ailies. M. Bavcic easoris that the present value of the Sorblan property would be double whnt it was at the time of its dostruction or 20,000,000,000 francs. “Serbia and Montenegro,” M. Saveic, ‘“‘have suffered losses in lives, relatively than any of the other Allies. Serbia alone lost about 320,000 men up to arrival in Confu in 1916. One- half of her tax-paying citizens and one-third of her population perished from sickness, epidemic diseases and the unprecedented savagery of the enemy at the fime of the invasion of 1914, and during the three vears of domination of the Bulgars and Austro- Magyars. ‘Our enen ught not destroy Serbia cconomically exterminatc her people, so as to rid themselvos once and for all of the which blocks Germany's way Berlin to Bagdad. “The restoration of Serbia quire o certain amount enemyv must Teturn evervthing he from the Serbian muse- ums, libraries, universities, churches and schools and whatever has br destroyed must be replaced. Germans, Austro-Magyars and Bulgars must re- turn the livestock which they drove away and pay for the timber, yarde and or ards which they down and ruined. Agricuitural plements and industrial machinery must he replaced in kind. The Alli must supply us with food as quickly as possible, likewise with textile, and medical stores, all of which are com- pletely Jacking in Serbia. Devastated towns and villages must be rebuilt Banks, loan societies and savings banks must be supplied with money that economic enterprise may be revived.’ Estimating the upon Serbia, cic, who was former Serbian minister of Public Works, places the value of one year’s harvest in Serbia at 1,600,000,000 francs and adds that the enemy seized three harvests. The invaders destroyed 130,000 horses, 6,000,000 sheep and ined the were are Saveic, francs. declares greater speaking, ies only to but to will of time. The vine ent inflicted home tele- | not than two ' im- | BRITAIN DAILY HE “JOE” Ha'loran i supremacy aad co at wh.ch you should’ SO, $ DAY’ ATTRAC AGA BIGGE IVE §5 BATHROBES Only 4 of these Heavy Blanket Robes; formerly sold at .00: while they last MEN’s HAlb Cloth Hats, real good value at Enfents $2.50; only 3 doz $1.50 Better get in ea 'MEN’S SHIRTS solled from window use. Values up broken sizes; $ -i .00 White Slightly to $3.0 plenty 15 1-2, MEN’S “SOX Assorted Hosr. All stores ask 33¢: while these | 10 dozen last we'll sell 6 for $1 00 BOYS’ PAN 3 200 Rokkorwmocrker Paniss | mnd £259 yeizes in 16, 18 1-2 and 17 All st to red we wil regale $1.75 Regul while NFFK\W EAR o andl Fie vien. About | 2™ $1.00 Pure and $ .-ml Gray, value yles nnd nce onr la 1i sell at wort zen in the 1ot 9 dozen in this lot sizes, 2.00. Drawe form ular $1.00 erly BOYS BL()U ES ar Bell all siness they Ias Silk Thew 507 im B Blouses, | Beach and Cordosam former! LADIE: bl 85¢ and DU o $1.15 2"“$1 .00 HEAVY UND ZE@\% LAR Shirts and and $1.00; | D | BOYS SUITS Boys® Sizes 2 Barga ins. $6.00. Extra Special Dollar Day Some hand embroidered values up to 23 Suits in all. ONLY O TO EACH CUSTOMER Suits in the new effects. 1-2 years to 8 years. Bollar Uff All Suxts and Uvemnats Atrehfly {..arked Below Cost alloran Co. “Always Reliable” 000,000 pigs, 1,300,000 than 8,000,000 poultry. Manufactured goods to the of 750,000,000 francs were away or destroyved, he sa to private property such as furniture, machinery, et he estimates at 400,- 000,000 francs. The enemy carried off goats, cattle and mo value carried Damages FASTEST AIRPLANE IN WORLD IS AMERICAN MADE New Britain AND FULLY EQUIPPED WITH AMERICAN DEVICES from Serbia silver currency amounting to 30,000,000 jewelry of | about the same value. Requisitions, enforced subscriptions war loans and dam ned by pri- | vate financial concerns estimated it 800,600,000 francs. There ave about 100,000 abled cared for and niore than 1 hans to be fed, clothed “Pensions, says M. provided for the v and orpt the roads, bridges, tun- and to return the ship- | which was re- francs and to cnemy ges sus arc now dis- | persons fo be 0,000 or and educated aveie, “must bho jarge number of widows our Allie ompel repair ans enemy to nels, railroads ping and rolling stock moved.’ CASTORIA For Infants and Children in Use For Over 30 Years Alwiss boara oAz R e mn _ the Signature o In an official navy triplanc established & now world rec loaded and test, this f'urtiss(ord for speed and climbing. equipped, this Fully Plane achieved a speed of 160 miles nd climbed 1 0 utes. The wmachine feet in 16 is equipped an hou wi power. < Undern ood & attaining nderw)