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MABEL NORMAND 1§ VERY HUCH UPSET At Least Pretends She Doesn't Know What Caused Shooting Los Angeles, Jan. §.—What caused Mabel Normand's chauffeur to shoot Ceurtland 8. Dines, Denver oll oper- ator and clubman, in Dines' apart- ment here New Year's night in the presence of Miss Normand and Edna| Purviance, another motion picture actress, today is a matter on which those most intimately coneerned in the shooting seem utterly unable to agree. Horace A. Greer, the chauffeur, also known as Joe Kelly, still insists that he put a bullet through Dines' lung in self defense. The police are equally posjtive that infatuation for Miss Normand coupled with an am- bition to be her hero and protector led Greer to shoot when balked in his effort to ‘rescue” the actress from Dines. Laughs at Infatuation Idea. Miss Normand, ignering her chauf- feur's self defense plea ridicules the police theory of infatuation with: “Impossible! the man must have been insane.” Dines, lying on his cot at the Good Samaritan hospital says he does not| know “why in the world that fool ever shot me,” but declares “he must have been full of hops.” The theory advanced by Miss Pur- viance is that Greer was foolishly jealous enough to have shot any man he might have found in the apart- ment with Miss Normand that night. Greer Still in Jail Greer remains in jgil on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. Dinees is said to be recovering at the Good Bamaritan hospital; Miss Nor- mand is in the hospital suffering from what her physicians term a ner- veus breakdown brought on by ex. citement and worry, and Miss Purvi- ance is resting at home after an. nouyncing that reports of her ei ment to Dines were not entirely un- founded, Yes—and Yot No Mr. Dines and I were engaged - and yet we were not engaged, If you understand what 1 mean,” she told newspaper men last night, exnlulnln[‘ that while the Denver man had “nev- er given me an engagement ring, there was an understanding between us that we would be married. “I am not ashamed to siy that I am most terribly fond of him,” she udded. Charles Chaplin, who starred Miss Purviance recently in a pieture of his ction and who was reported teo have decided to use her as feminine fead in his next comedy, announced today that it was possible some one else may take the role, but denied that the publicity arlsing from Dines shooting would influence choice. his Futures Uncertain “It was unfortunate for Miss Pur. viance to be there,” he said, “"but 1 certainly wouldn’t discharge her for something for which she is not in the least to plame. Such a thing might happen to anyens.” Offielals of the Sennett studios here with whom Miss Normand has been working under one picture agree- ments, declined to say whether her connection with the sheotling would | have any effect on scheduled showing of her pictures or on future agree ments with Sennett, Greer reiterated what he told the police Tuesday night, namely thal Dines had interfered with his efforts to assist Miss Normand out of the Denver man's apartments and was about to hit him with a bottle Says Man Lies Dines branded the statement as a lie. “That fellow lies when he says T reoched for a bottle” he said. "I did not need to hit him with a botfle. 1f he annoyed me I'd crush him with my hands. He just turned the gun on me and shot.” Miss Normand had “just breezed over to my apartment” on the after- noon of New Year's day he explain-| therg | ed, and Miss Purviance was too. “Miss Normand took it into her head to put the apartment in order,” he went on, ‘dragged out all the mops and brooms in the place, and brushed things up and polished the CHILDREN'S COUGHS ctMr-" hmu"-wk::a '..:.d SOLE BY THE CITY DRUG STORE Why Suffer From Bronchial Asthma! Simple Home Trestment Makes Breathing Eany day tired, rest and missrable o say Just because you wtart the iifeless, worm.out frem loss of the diffleult hing of Asthme~go wot think you have this way Y Be sromng and well, breathe clearly and ensily sgain by using this simple (reatment known 88 Oxidaze, the prescription of = Worcester, Mass., phydician For sny form of Asthma bronchisl tubes are irritated, the bremtd ing shert and @ificult, s hesling. rellev- ing wction is really womderful. Sufferers who can't Breathe at night and who gasp for & good. Breath will appreciate thie relief 88d comfort Osidaze gites Oxtdsre 18 & tablet made from essentisl ofis which, when the patient dissolves in the mouth, AlMmost immediatsls sosthes 'he irritation, clears out the choked wp air passages And enables the suferer 1o hreathe easily B4 ger & real comfortable night's sieep. Tt _is 8018 by leading we Dickinsen Drug Co. whe sgres the full pur-base price of the te amy sullercr whe does Asthmarh a trial where — ® Aruggists " harmless and isespensice. the | chauffeur’s | Sunday evening. Janwary 13. floors,” and then after they all “had something to drink,” “this Greer or Kelly came up." An argument over whether Miss Normand should leave the apartment followed and in the midst of it with- out warning Dines said, the chauffeur drew a pistol and fired three shots,| one byllet piercing Dines’ chest and another grazing his ear. “I suppese I'll kick the bucket this| time,” the wounded man observed] sadly, althouglh surgeens had pro-| nounced his condition far from hope- less. They describe Dines’ condi- tion as ‘“very satisfactory” and said | he is on the way to recovery. Miss Purviance described the scene in Dines’ apartment before the arriv- al of Greer and the pistol as an in- | formal gathering of three good | friends on a New Year afternoon dur- ing which “it would be foolish to say| that there was nothing to drink.” ‘Wanted by Police Records of the bureau of identifi- |cation of the QOakland police depart- ment reveal that Horace Greer, who gave his occupation as a chauffeur, is wanted by the department as a fugi- tive from justice. The record shows that Greer escaped after he had served fifteen days of a 75-day sen- | tence for petty larceny, the theft of a pair of shoes, Mabel's Version. | Miss Normand last night gave her| | version of the shooting, a version di- | rectly contradicting that of Horace A. Greer, alias Joe Kelly, under arrest | for the alleged attack en Dines. Miss Normand told her story of the| New Year's party in Dines' apart- GIVEN TREATHENT, BUT JUDGE OBJECTS Framingham Boy, With Broken Leg, Gets “Science” Healing ’ Framingham, Mass, Jan. 3.—After| a hearing in the district court yester- | day Judge Blodgett held that Walter | Moyse, a 14-year-old Wayland boy, | who had been treated by a Christian Science practitioner, after breaking his |leg, was a neglected child. Counsel representing the Christian Science church entered an appeal and the case will come before the superior court at Cambridge, probably next week. | The boy fell from a haymow in’ the barn of his father, Harry Moyse, 19 weeks ago. He was in bed for 16 weeks and since then has heen able to walk with the aid of erutches. An| agent of the society for the preven- tion of cruelty to children reported that ‘the boy's condition was getting worse and the soeiety brought a com- plaint against the father for neglect, Dr. Charles E. Ayres of Worcester, | called as a witness yesterday by, the society said that X-ray pictures of the boy's leg showed that it was in bad shape and he feared that the boy would lose the leg and possibly ment, which ended in the sheoting of | Might die unless an operation was | the Denver man, surrounded by news- | Performed immediately. . | papermen and police detectives and §n| The Christian Sciene practitioner, who had treated the boy testitied that [the presence of her companion, Mrs. | | Edith Burns, for whom police had | both the boy and his father were | been searching all day. | “We'll begin at the beginning”| {said the screen actress by way of | introduction. | | 8he had reccived her interrogators Sy, {at home, sitting In & big DWFMMBURGMR REWRMS ; been tended and treated according to Christian Science practice, and that his condition had improved. | chair and attired in a trim black vel-| vet dr Door bells and telephone were seeking interviews, were looking for Gre triends wanted to speak a word of | cheer. But to all these she was not| at home. The shades were drawn; | the room was dark; Miss Normund‘Fmds l[ DOCS NOt Pa.y t0 GO 0“ spoke In a whisper. “I didn’t slecp all night,” she said.| “Worrying about this thing, this dreadful thing, You tell them, Edith,” she exclaimed, turning to Mrs, Burns; “Tell them what we did during the entire day.” Mrs. Burns then related how Miss| Nermand had arisen at 10 o'clock Tuesday monnipg, doing little incon- sequential things which occupied their time until noon; told then how Joe| }Kolly (Greer) was busy “taking the | Christmas tree trimmings upstairs,” | "It must have been then that he got the pistol,” she said; “I know of no other opportunity he could have had to get it.” Miss Normand explained she owned the weapon for four that it was given to her friend while on location the production of one of plays. New York, Jan, 3.~—Joe Goodmun, loft burglar and safecracker, made a New Year's resolution yesterduy, He decided to accept the universe and with it the old, old moral that the tortoise reaches his goal before the hare. In facl, the young year innumerable lessons to Goodman, and | when County Judge McLaughlin in Brooklyn yesterday, f him on a policeman’s plea from an overhanging charge of burglary, a shadow (hat had increased the darkness of his three years in Dannemora prison, Goodman lcarned something of the quality of mercy as exemplificd by Captain of Detectives John MeClos- key and Acting Sergeant Harry Beck t was given to me to shoot botties | of the 8ith Precinet. with,” she said. 1 used it all the| Sergeant Beek brought fime for shooting botties, but onlyfrom Dunnemors New on location; at least, 1 shot at the|Convieted of & safe job in Manhat. bottles, I'd shoot over here and-—|tun and wanted for a loft burglary in blah-—I"d hit the mountain some | Brooklyn, Goodman’'s 40v-odd-mile place else, ride from the prison, where he had Well,” she continued, arriving at| just ended a scntence to fuce another, the point in her narrative where the| had the Pllgrim's Progress tied for chauffour, Horace Greer, or Joe Kelly, [ first place. On the way he told his ontered Dines’ apartment, while she | story to Scrgeant Beck. and Miss Edna Purviance, another “He couldn't buck the system,” motion picture actress, wers chatting | suid Beek yesterday, after Capt. Mo with the Denver man. “Well, Jnn‘\'lolk\_v told Judge Melaughlin that came in and he had a package. I no-! Goodman's rctorm plan was sincore, ticed nothing unusual about him and [and won the mercy of the court. “l 1 left the room. | don’t mean the police system. That's “I went into the room where KEdna | a gumbie and men love to gamble, | was, She had on her evening gown, | mean the system down below. ‘Thre but it wasn't hooked wup. 1 didn't|years in Dannemora brought all the | want this chauffeur to see Edna with | gossip of the underworld to Goodman | her dress unhooked, s0 I went in and | He heard how Spunish Johnuie (hon- | said o Kdna, 'Say, where's your| orably deceased by a bullet) gypped powder puff?* j& pal in & big theft, and he heard (h"'l'h:n fi‘,: nllmn -ud:r‘n. lhhv;ml| how the other kings of the game prey cse terrible ngs. hought theylon the little ones. And when hie were firecrackers, 1 used to set off | counted up his roll after ail the rishs "ll_:ecrm-kvu—rlb:vrtl;hll l"l{“{h;l‘li.'nl of the burglar's trade, he found it rpin—poor old Ben, al € lime| had gone to Jawyers. until he threatened to quit his ;uln.“ < ‘wn pretty near tell when a That's what 1 thought they were, fires | s through, and 1 told Capt. M crackers. They were popping all over | kcy Goodman was out of it. I know lhfrhhou-fif' s o nere| 20 4068 the captain, and that's what en she ran into the room where | made the Jjudges uspend sentence }'iln's i~=-"‘hhc"; :‘rll:uu::ddfm;nd h-l]n Yes, 1 guess you m‘n it psychology ying on 0 Yo ed, she sald. | but I'm sure he'll go straight. She could think of ng motive 1or| The ex.boxman’s n.mfle is the shooting of Dines by her chaut-| Goodman., His real name he four, she sald, and ridiculed the|ered to protect his brother, the har theory thal Greer was Infatusted With |y this story, who, plodding along for :"“" (“;"’1”:”:"“”' Denver man in &) 16 years, now owns & paint shop in o us rage. 1y “Impossible!” she exclaimed. Brf;":;s gow he'll man must have been insane. He was| .44 the Urother only one of my gervants and was! .y gipping metal powder from & treated llke one. 1 never talked 0| parrel and his wife, sighing, kept :flm';\pn I|'kg l]nu\ft :‘o :ny .::m’r;:" nervously clifking scale welghts to- n the pas se 0 A y er. Every few minutes they ;h"""‘h‘""- 1:::“"‘"7';.‘1':" L"";V""‘;;-“-,pol:t r(o l[he N)rr'l looking for Joc ow ey d o e cene | ’ 4 ere, now A something like that—but 1 got tired| ";_’r::""f”“' bl el of @il that blah blah He's & P Mayde It aln't o 1 didn’t cven hire | much, but it's steady and respectable tary ¢id thal. . .| He stood up and shrugged despairing Mrs. Burns could not think of auY | . wi¢ this got to the old country it motive for the shooting either, shel o g kul our people. You know CITY ITEMS. | ceven @ workingman ever was in our | tamily before, let alone a th 1am a workingman and he We come from a line of rabbis | The little man’s See the Mary Eligabeth for best| seme dust from the showease values in silk and cloth dresses, also “Maybe he won't come tonight, hosiery. 87 W. Main, Professional she said. “Everyone has got | Building.—adv. troubles.” Dr. Aaron Pinkus, of Waliace street, left for New York today to greet his nephews, Julius and Samuel Kicinschmidt, whom he has not secn for 23 years. They are making a Kills Self Rather Than Obey Disagreeable Law short visit to this country and cxpect {to return to Germany within the next Treptow, Germany, Jan. S Pam Nickel, formerly chicf of the local | few dayeh “Neo, No, Nora," board of Treptow kilted Wimseil rather than surrender two rooms of ! his dwelling to a family with ma of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Erickeon of | oo o andeering of 18 Hart street, has entered the Hart- | ool ™ s when #t became evident |ford hospltal as a pupil dieticia .- sl alimee oroaghin Miss Erickson is a graduate of the | L T Tl home with strar Boston School of Domestie Scicnce = g rend — Get your Brunswick records at the Big Furniture Store John A. An- drews & Co.—advt a5 brought had years; by a during her film Goodmaun Yeur's kEve, not cov- “The go straight,” last night He him. My seccre- wife brushed piano record. by John had hie Truthful Camera Visitor—This isn't ery good pic ure of your Jittle brot Pegey—No. Pt vory s Tt Kill him, 0 he hanged himself, lea The. entertainment committee of | (00 home of Mre. William Belkin on | is it the newly elected officers. The ir ing a letter saying he could not bear ot | 1O have part of his home taken from Jehuda lodge, L O. 0. ¥, and the| Ladies” Ausiiiary, will meet at the Francis street this evening. Mans il be made for the installation of | stallation wiil be held at the mecting [a - Humorist (Londo jsnt Crooked Path i Diplomats of the Washington corps gathered at the Pan- American Union for a breakfast recently, Photo shows the Bel- Christian Sclentists, that the boy had gian minister, Baron de Cartier de Marchienne (left), leaving. | PHTHERIA DEATHS ARE BLAMED O CARELESSNESS atment Would BOY GOMPLAINS OF ™ MOTHER'S DRINKING | Prompt Ani Result Is a Raid on Philadelphia Still | Have Saved Many, Says State Expert, Albany, Jun. 3,-—A large percent. ¢ of the deuths caused by theria last year in this state might have been prevented had anti-toxin been administered immediately, ac- rding to a report made on an ane sis of the first 500 deaths by Dr. Bertrand H. Rober epldemiologist of the department of health, Delay in administering anti-toxin is laid by Dr. Roberts to the carcless- ness of parcnts or guardiuns for the most part, although he does not ab- solve attending physicians, These, he in many instances failed to give specitic treatment, To delay treatment awaiting tory report on a culture, if there is even a suspicion that the patient may uffering from diphtherin, was un- ustifiable, he maintained. In the 500 cases analyzed, 16 per cent of those from which laboratory data avalluble showed negative first ports Commenting on Dr port, Dr. Mat Nico missioner health, this analysis of dip confirm the conclusion observers that the tically nil Is given Philadelphia, Jan. The com- plaint of two small boys to Willlam |J. McClure, prohibition agent her |that their mother had been drinkir lund neglecting them led to a raid | which resuited in the seizure of a |8till, more than 100 gallons said to |be whiskey and alcohol and a quar tity of mash in houscs near the boys' home, Ragged and miserable, sters, names | the authorities, waited Clure outside his office. “Is that the guy?” they | bystander as Mr. McClure wi When told that he was the chief {shuffled over to him and |their troubles, “Please make th street stop selling |they begged, *“There Ing at our home Chr Jooy for asking about “The lady next door suid you'd put |the hootleggers in jall if down here and squealed on then “Just tell me where they we'll get them,” respondec Clure, and the boys ga [ mation { In a few minute set out, and soon a seizures Isador Ogr in one the raided rested 0 withheld Ay whose are for while a wskod 1 in 3 confided a be y Vs " ro- iskey,' place our Mom w was nothing do stma Mom hit Clan Itoherts' ate re- com wsized that therla tends to of previous leath rute is prace treatment day of the deatbs from ormously re brought te responsibility to 1 attention children or croup and iclan admints ot dosage slightest sus has diphtheria. jas Santa of emp we came e when thie number will be nopare wion of their prompt ' of rom a sor adequat tirst i dis 1 v reall r whene (ad g e urd made the udroff, who was whe f ' of liouses, was ar ver one 1 1 I el suf- Changes His Mind, Now oy Trying to Get Cabinet Tokio, Jan. Bi—Af carlier today his | a ministry Viscou who summone Prinee o only ters when pieion 1 when every phy anti-toxin in there i u child t or at Jan After ibility to t Kicgo Kiyours 4 Tuesday Hirohite to 1 TOUR DEER ATTACK AUTO By T \ Ve Falkenberg, Silesia Martha Ahrens was when her automobile surprised four stags in a forest noar this city. The nimals bec 50 excited that they ran into the car. One the deer jumped the sent where Frau Ahr sitting and its hoof cut her scriously and injured one of her . Jan. 3.~Fran seriously injured form f I'r nsidered, At the prince r task of forming @ usly ¢ to gent that as further . he new request g epted tl et Pr has ac of into cabi he u fa¢ suppo Diet CAPITALIST SULD la N aughty Girls ! Naughty, i Wom W hridge Herbert York and e defer parate m I De« lant T graduates of ering blackberrie y o Poe cauge more P y of ; fa clure agricu to wal Los Angeles, win Oronenwith, New capitalist lay i ma a suit for And the Mrs. Harri 1 irists Mis. O i Kenzie ( de. m th charges y carry their com- | ropert tn an i ers plai ! t before par diph- | labora- | TOBOGGAN COLLAPSE 15 FATAL TO TH {Accident, Claiming Couple of ' Lives, on Millionaire's Estate S L N. Y., Jan. 3.—~Two d and one injured the collapse late vesterday of a toboggan slide on the Adiron- estate of Adolph Lewisohn, York banker, on Upper Saranac The dead are Nathan M. St 52, a manufacturer lLake nd his sister-in-law, Mr Maude Shelley. Miss Alice Shelle daughter of Mrs. Shelley was | ously injured. Mr. Shelley was instantly killed and his sister-in-law, Mrs. John Shel- ley, died an hour later. The toboggan slide, ted on the lands about the camp of Adolph Lewisohn, of New York, about five | miles down the lake shore from this | village, descends a 2,000 foot em- |bankment to the ice of the lake. | The Shelley toboggan, traveling at |great speed, dashed down the chute, struck the ice of the luké, bounded |from the chute and overturned. The sengers were thrown in a heap. elley’'s mneck was broken, and ldoctors say he died instantly. Mrs, | Shelley, injured internally, was given first aid treatment, by doctors in the party but died in the camp lodge an WAS THOUGHT POOR, LEFT LARGE AMOUNT New Yorker's Estate for Kin in Scotlafl li$_103,533 New York, Jan, 3.—Robert who lived at the Mills | Bleecker street, and di | hospital on May 14, 1922, was believ- ed to be poor, but the transfer tax |report of his estate filed yesterday, |shows that Public Administrator James J, Frawley found assets of $103,653, chiefly in cash, stocks and | bonds. The public administratos found that Innes was survived brother, John Innes, and asiste Isabella Inglis, both of G Scotland, who divided his | equally. The associates and friends of Innes thought that he had a few dollars in savings banks because he kept bank- boolks in a box al the Mills Hotel, but he dressed poorly, and left no person- al articles worth while appraising, He had only $13 in his posscssion ‘whvn he was removed to Bellevue to die, his watch ‘was nickel and the | chain was brass, The public administrator found that Tunes had $8,214 in five suvings banks, and he discovered later that a deposit box rented by Innes contain. ed worth $25,704 and stocks valued at $65,053, Member o anue Lake persons were kil by huge dack New lake, Ie of loc: Innes, Hotel in d in Bellevue by a Mrs, enock, estate safe bonds f Morgan Firm California Santa Barbara, Cal, Jan. 2 Wil liam Plerson Hamilton, a 1 member of the firm of J. I>, Morgan | & Co., and an executor of the will of the late Mr. Morgun, was married yesterday to Mrs, Theodosia 8, Carlin in Montecito, a suburh Mr, Hamil- ton, whose home is al Table Rock farme, Sterlington, N. Y., is a prom inent financier of New York city, and member of the erbocker Metropolitan, Brook and o¥her clubs there, and of the Hurlingham club, London Mrs. Hamilton also is a former resident New York. The Hamiltong left last night for EKurepe. reti “ Knic of Jan, 8.—~A woman who Mrs. June Brown, a writer, when was tuken to Be Jevue hospital two days before Christ- mas, died of poison and an infection of the lungs. | New York said she was she MRS, HARDING RETURNS | Washington, Jan Mrs, | | Kling Harding arrived in Washing ton today to spend the remainder ¢ {the winter. Since Mr. Harding's jcath she has been in Marion also | DIVORCE GRANTED " THEN RESCINDED Nine Wilcox Putnam Figures in | Peculiar Cast rovidence, R. L, Jan. - Nina Wilcox Putnam Sanderson, novelist id short story writer, was granted a divoree from her husband, Robert J. nderson, vesterday afternoon by Judge Barrows in superior court, on the grounds of neglect to provide and was allowed to resume her former name A few hours later, following an investigation by the Providence Jour- result of which were placed the court, Judge Barrows an- nounced: I shall recall the de- cision and ask the lawyer to explain these statements you have laid before me I don’'t proposc to have fraud perpetrated on this court, if 1 know it. I am very glad you have called my attention to these facts and the court will give the matter a very full in- vestigation. “From the depositions in this case, there was absolutely nothing unusual about it o far as the court could see. The depositions showed on the testi- mony of the woman herself and her two corroborating witnesses that her husband deserted her and left her destitute, that she had to support her- self and that she had lived in Rhode Island for three years.” Mrs. Sanderson, in her deposition, claimed residence in this city for “just a ilttle over three years” the statutory requirement being two years' continuous residence, while the in- | vestigation of the Providence Journal disclosed, the newspaper suid, that she had “lived"” at 56 McKinley street, this city, for a period of a year or & | yeur and a half, und that she had a tually becn there but a comparatively smali part of the time. According to Town Clerk Arthur Marsden, of Madison, Conn,, where Mrs. Sanderson maintains a pretenti- | ous country home, her name was on the towns' voting list for 1921 and 1922 and she pussed several months lust summer at her country place. | Mr. Sunderson was also at the Madi- son home part of last summer, Mr, Marsden said, A telephong 3. nal the before | | | | is listed in tbe name 'of Robert J. Sanderson at Madison, Conn,, in the latest issue of the Con- necticut telephone company directory, cing Madison 107, In the 1922.23 “Who's Who in America” Ni Wilcox Putnam's ad- dresses are given as 12 Fifth avenue, | New York city, and Madison, Conn. At the former addr it was stated | tonight that she had not lived there ‘ln three months, | [ the number | Mother Can Do It | “Oh, look, father! That man just | eNanged 25 cents into a silk handker- chijef I “That's mother can {into a hat nothing, child! 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Ask for Children’s Musterole. 35¢ and 65c¢, jars and tubes; hos. pital size, $3.00. An Aid to Foot Beauty Tiue foot beauty does not shoes that cramp the pretty strict the step. Foot always lie in foot and re- beauty at its best, is the foot shod in a graceful, refined shoe which permits a graceful natural carriage. Women the eountry over are realizing the advantage of comfort and flexibility in shoes as an aid to beauty an lever Shoes are chosen. not restrict the norm Cantilev d gracefulness. Canti- The flexible arch does al functioning of the health ; ers promote permit freedom and good cireu- lation. T ing, which hey encourage walk- iz good for everybody Sloan Bros. 185 MAIN ST,