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10 MISSOURRT PRIMARY RACE 1S CLOSE ONE 6,0, P, Gubernatorial Candidates ow Ruming Clos Kansas City Aug. 6=—A neek & race developed teday in the for the republican governor in Kansas, but with Lieuts ant Governor Paulen maintaining his tead over Clyde M. Reed and former Governor Bluhbs. Returns from 614 precinets out of 2,079 in the state in yesterday's pri mary gave Paulen, who carried th Ku Kius Klan endorsement [ gin of 1,795 rotea over Ree Stubbs separated from second by only 26 votes. Benator Capner ap peared ured re-nomination on the republican ticket by a rote of 1o 1 ever his two opponents on incom. plete returns, Governar Jonathon only democrat elected on tieket in 1922 was re.slected by overwhelming majority What effect the Ku Klux Klan issue had on the voting was a matter for speculation, While Paulen, the Klar endorsee for the republican guberna torial nomination, was in the lead in & three.cornered fight, with less than 0 \votes separating the lowest and highest man, Attorney General Grif- fith, who drew opposition from the Klan because of his suit to oust the organization from the state, was ahead of his nearest opponent nearly 2to1 A storm last night, which destroyed telegraph and telephone service and ut light and power wires out of com- mission in many sections of the sta caused unprecedentes difficuity, in re« porting the election. A score of coun- ties, mest of them in wostern Kanss were {solated and prgbably w=ill not be received from several until Iate today. 3 nomination fer an 1, witd of of 2 M. Davis, the the stage | an | | INVESTIGATION STARTED New York Prosecutor Scoking Tie- sponsibility o | the for Fatal Crash v New York, Aug. 6.—Charles J. Dodd, Kings county district attorney, “ today began an finvestigation to de- | termine reaponsibility far the collis- | lon of a six-car wooden train with a steel subway train on the elevated tracks of the Brooklyn-Manhattan Rapid. Transit company at Brighton Beach last night, in which an elevat- ed guard was killed and eight pas-. sengers were seriously injured. Mr. Dodd said. that statements of witnesses gathered so far indicated that James ‘McNichols, ‘motorman of the wooden train, lost his head when he rounded a curve and suddenly saw the subway train standing in front of him. WANT TROOPS WITHDRAWN 5 German and French Socialists Start | | | | | SIX PRISONERS ESCAPE Siy Make Good Their Escape 1vom Detention Hoom of Suffolk Superior | Court B checkup of prise street tor ers last i escaped night at all was found man had with prisoners who this afternoon way through the in the detention room of superior and fled Charies a sixth e five awed th ir bars of window suffoik over the Late last night nene had been found the police although a general been hroadeast found missing at the jail was arge J. Mahoney whose escape Was discovs the court voofs by alarm had The m st night 'he others ered by painters at work on the roof, were Herbert Gill, a negro sentenced for w armed assauit and Thomas Gildea, Owen B Wealey G, Klechner, and Master 10 a year robbery Quilty ge There tentlon roam at the time of the flight r of Gill, carrying & bundle, was sald to have visited him during the morning and the polica believe she smuggled in the file used on the win. low ere 45 prisoners in the de he wife APPEALS T0 COOLIDGE Former North Dakota Senator Wants President to Give Sugar P'roducers n Heaving, Washington, Aug. 6.—Porter J, Me- Cumber, former senator from North Diakota, asked President Coolidge to- day to entertain a hearing from the sugar producers of the nation before | taking final actiori on the tarift com- mission report on the sugar dutjes, A a representative of the producers, McCumber said he would oppose any cut in the tariff MceCumber joined with other repub- lican leaders in advocating an active campalgn: in the northwestern states with headquarters in Minneapolis. He said reports from that territory indi- cated a trend for the republican ticket, Ogven J. Roberts, one of the govern- ment lawyers in the naval oil reserve lease ocses, also called at the White House. He reported the government was ready to proceed in the fall with osecution of two civil suits and the eriminal case involving former Secre- tary I'all and Edward L. Doheny and | Harry I*, Sinelair, i Pe;;onals G. Tuck of 17 Wakefield Harris Hall of 196 Glen street, left today for Rochester and Niagara Falls, N. Y, for a week's stay They will attend the Oriental conven- tion held at Rochester. Miss Catherine R. Burl Cherry street left today to spend the remainder in New Haven. . Arthur court and Marian Holt of 99 South Burritt street left on a motor trip to Albany, where she will remain for a week. Howard Ryder of 45 Grand street has' returned from a camping trip | with Cempany B of Hartford.’ Movement for Immediate With- | drawal of Troops trom Germany. By The Assoclated Press, . London, Aug. 6.—Pressure is being brought on the international confer- ence by Dr. Rudolph Breitscheid, | leader of the German soclalists, and the French socialists who are now in London, to effect immediate mili-| ' tary evacuation of the Ruhr. The | proponents of immediate evacuation | indicate that the German go\ernment is likely to fall if its dclegation re- turns to Berlin without a promise that the Ruhr and other occupied districts will be immediately freed of foreign troops. This question, although outside the agenda of the conference, is for the moment transcending all others.| It is being stressed by the German| deiegates who represent a minority| government whose existence, they in- sist. would be seriously threatened if | the military evacuation is not| achieved. | The French sccialists are support- | ing the position taken by their Ger- man colleagues and are intimating | that the I'rench domestic political | situation also demands compliance | with the German request. tion of your eye Iy normal, eyes rmake you sure, without delay. Frank E. 227 MAIN ST, Tout of 10 headaches are caused by eyestrain, you suffer from headaches you ought to question the condi- Often with vision apparent- the help of lenses. Only an examination can Have your eyes examined esight Specialist Over 15 vears' Optical Experience. T ¥ aymond Hincheliffe of 180 Cher- t is spending his vacation at Beach. ; Myrtle John Lyons of 14 Locust street has returned from Myrtie Beach, where he spent two weeks, Miss Margaret McLaughan of Bos- ton is visiting Miss Catherine Murray of 21 Division street, Whitney Conley of 164 Beaver street has returned home after spend- ing two weeks at Indian Neck. Joseph Ferony of New York ls spending thia week with hie brother, Jerry Ferony of 186 South Main atreet. Myrs. F Damico and daughter, Catherine, and son, Frank, returned yesterday from a motor trip to New York. Mpr and Mrs. Edward J. Dailey and sons, Gerald and Jackie, of Farming- ton avenue, and Mrs, Thomas Conlin of Plainville left this morning on a ten day trip to Lake Winnepesauke, N. K, If S. greatly need Goadwin Fhone 1205 B —— of the week with friends | JEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNES AMERICANS HOPE FOR SETTLEMENT Be Overcome T ol P Aug. 8 8 . A London American experts | whe read German memorandum and eovering letter submitted to the allies today said they did not believe the objections raised were likely te prove a serious barte the success of the program {he worked out plan effective 1t was announced that vig fourteen" of the conference would re- assemble at 9 o'clock this evening for making the Dawes | the By The Associated Press London, Aug. 6,~The German memorandum in reply to the allled protocol outlining plans foy putting the Dawes reparation program into ef- tect was handed to the allied repres asentatives in Downing street this morning by the chiefs of the Gere man delegation, In ennsequence Pre. mier MacDonald is urging all possible expedition so that another plenary meoting of the international confers erce can beh eld today The Germans worked all night and completed their veply to the protocol | at 3 o'clock this morning The memorandum “Was an document accompanied by a covering letter, It was a broad survey, from the German point of ‘iew, the whole program of the interalliied con- | ference as worked out for the launch- [ing of the Dawes plan, 1t did go into details but presented the Ger- man ‘iew point regarding the ex- perts' report on defaults and sanc- tions, on the fiscal and economic unity of Germany, and on the transfer of reparation payments, the three di- vigions into which the canference work was divided, In the covering letter which the Germans presented two important questions outside the conference was railsed, The first was the militar evacuation of the Ruir and the other zones outside the Rhineland, and the second was the question if the reten- tlon of allled rallwaymen the ADVICE FOR U. §. 18-pege of in | Should Not Interfere in Canal Zome Unless Menaced, Speaker at Wil- liamstown Says. Willlamstown, Mass,, Aug. 6.—Un- less the security of the Panama Canal and its approaches should be menaced the United States should not interfere in the domestic affairs of Central American - republics said Dr. L. S Rowe, director of the Pan-American union, in an address at the institute of politics today. He said that this county had a special interest in all matters affecting the order or stabil- ity of all Pan-America but that this terference. college, conducting a round table on the World War, said that newly pub- |lished documents from Berlin and | Vienna archives made it necessary to | revise previous ideas. The belief that Germany had plotted a war, he as | certed, was a myth, because the kaiser | was not fully Informed of Austria’s in- | tentions after the assassination ad | Serajevo and did not realize to what | the Austrian policy was leading. At a round table on the financial rehabilitation of Europe Professor | Ally A. Young of Harvard stressed the | importance of the gtabilization.of cur- rencies as the basis of financial im- | provement abroad. MARRIES THIRD TIME Addizon Darnes Gatling, Grandson of riage With South American Trip. New York, Aug. 6.—Addison Darnes Gatling, grandson of Dr. Jordan Gat- | ling, inventor of the rapid fire gun | that hears his name, was married for | the third time six weeks ago to Miss | Helen Ryan, said to be a motion pic- | {ure actress, formerly of Rochester, it | | was learned last night. They had [known each other two months. lsndol_\' is 30 vears old. His bride is |26, He said he expects to g0 |®outh America for his wedding trip. Mr. Gatling's first marriage was annulied and his second wife, the for- mer Miss Marjorly Meeker, whom he married In 1015, divorced him two years later. Once since then he has contemplated matrimony, hut after {the minister was engaged afd invita- [tions sent out, the wedding was post- poned Many Children Enrolled In Playground Clubs Junior Achievement playground clubs of New Britain, Middletown and Waterbury, Corn,, and of Springfeld, 2fass.. have considerably more than 2 theugand hove and girls enrolled. New | Rritain and Middletown had the piay gronnd clubs last vear, but this is the firet time that Waterbury and Spring- | ield have attempted it New Britain | 1eade the other cities in members en- rolled in the clubs, it having 26 clu and 440 mmbers, Springfield com next with 370 members enrolled in 26 elubs at nine playgrounds, "Third of .I-’e:\pleAin (Cuban Capital Are Inoculated | More than a third | has been in- | | Havana, Aug 6 of Havana's popilation scilated against typhoid fever the disease gained a hold here months ago, according to fi | made public today by the health department showin persons inoculated. There deaths from typhoid here July, out of a total of 293 ea poarted, and the total of existing as given s 278 compared with since were dnring “ T re RROKERS SUSPENDED The hrokerage & with York, Ang J N hranch offices in Jersey City and ark from the Yerk today for ure to meet #Siigations. New v frm of Byrne Cn was snspended New fail- stack exchanze interallied body had| Inventor, Will Celebrate Third Mar- | Mr, Gatling, who is well known in to | SDAY, AUGUST 6, 1024, New Britain Girls in This Fire susust a—puriog » gener- THIOK Gemany's Objections Willi | | Hylan of New York City, Miss Fannie E. Holme WORRIES EXPRESSED - BYTHEWAR DEPT. N6R LOEB IS T0 Final Hop of -World Fliers Is| Host Desperate One All that is left of the Hetel Hillere in this photo, Three persons died in the blaze, at this hotel at the time of the fire, the young women were not in the hotel. ing to make the trip home and they arrived here yesterday, o 6,—With the its final Washington, Aug world filght entering its great prize within the Erasp | American aviators, reports to today phase | and of the the War Department sized the seriousness of erected in the path of successful com- the obs along the Greenland co The army advance party charged | with the duty of establishing a fuel and repair base at Angmagsalik, the nest scheduled stopping place, has | been halted fifteen miles away from | |that port by fee fields which are des- | leribed as worse than recorded I many years, in dispatched’ from the | | eruiser Milwaukee. Lieutenant L. D.| ‘Schul(z. head of the party, was snldl to be “strugzling determinedl to | | carry out his mission but the me made no prediction of the outcome of | these efforts. | Wireless communication has bheen |established, the Milwaukee reported.| with the cenvoy which accompanied Lieutenants Smith and Nelson to Re. kjavik, Iceland. The planes, the Chi- | |cago and New Orleans, arrived in| {good shape, the department was in-| formed, and only minor repairs will | be necessary before the flight is con- | tinued. It has been decided to delay report from the Angmagsalik expedi- the two remaining fliers cannot afford llong to delay their departure from | Tceland in view of the certainty that |1ce conditions in the North Atlantic | will be worse rather than better as! |the season advances | Absence of an ablished base at { Angmagsalik while materially increas- ing the odds against the fliers is not | | viewed as warranting a long wait at | |the present stop. The planes “in a | | pinch” could he refueled on the open | | fee. | Unless abnormal conditions prevent ;Qhflh‘ approach to the supplyship, a | continusd flight might be attempted to Ivigtut on the southwest coast of | {Greenland, slated as the second jump | in that Tsland an the takeoff for Tn- dia harbor, Labrador. The second al- ternative wonld necessitate a straight flight of 1,000 miles and while this is |considered within the capacity of the planes, the possibility would have to be faced of heavy consumption of gas | throngh les such as were met in the approach to Reykjavik. adverse BRAILLE PRINTING American Foundation For The Blind | Plan To Revolutionize Braille Print- | ing In The United States, New York, Aug. 6.—Plans designed | [to revolutionize Braille printing in the |United States were announced yester- | ‘r}n\' hy the American foundation for the blind, after long study by a com- mittee headed by Robert B. Trwin, | director of the bureau of research of {the foundation, ‘ Standard sized volumes and an ef- | fictent method of embossing Braille on hath sides of the page were recom {mended. 1t is estimated that costs in |1arge volumes will be reduced 25 to | |35 per cent hy adoption of the com [mitten's findings \fr. Erwin announced that a sub- eommittee wonld he eent to Europe {at once to study and report on meth- | |eds of printing in Great Britain, | |France and Germany, where f{nter- rointed, or two side Braille, has bheen | in uee for vears. Onlv one magazine America has used the style REGAINING MEMORY Philadelphia Girl, Amnesia Vietim For Five Months, Today Recognizes Her Family, Philadelphia Auz. 6.--Florine Adams, 15 missing five months and found by her father in a New York telephone exchange sufiering from today ally regained her | memory, and according to her father, recog her family at ermantown | amnesia, their Her mentality 18 expected to return within a few daya. The girl | disappear=d last March while en route | to this city. It was fallen and struck her t on the train, and revived, continued on to She nbtained employment there under the name of Jane John- eon. apparently having no recollection i of her previous life. norr from Daltimore said head agair upen being ta se New York empha- | Loeb's emotional response the com- .le | pavison was extremely significant. | yet ho regist pletion by adverse weather conditions | 1o this crime | ward pleturing himself in jail. in | years, fourtcen, st | situation | stra | must not be made the excuse for in- | the takeoff for Grenland pending a| Professor Sidney B. Fay of Smith [tion, but the impression here is that | | telligence in argumentation and in ex- | qage of the Lithuanian Co-operative | phy. ! lows, | that he had been consistent to the very | phantasies and Dr. Glueck went over | st, on Great Chebeague Island, near Portland, Me,, is shown one of them being Trving O'Hara, nephew of Mayor s of Hart street and Miss Marion Hoar of Rockwell avenue, were guests At the time of the fire All of their belongings were lost, ry cloth- Friends in Portland assisted them with necessa Glueck asserted that Leopold Is o1 & distinet paranoid personality and “Is 1dme|op|n' a definite course of para- noid psychosis,” It was testified yes. terday that psychosis is a new term for insanity, Loch Is disintegrating mentally, Dr. Glueck suld, The first question Mr, Crowe direct- ed to Dr. Glueck on cross-examination was 48 to the day on which Loeb first admitted striking the ¥Franks boy. The hearing was adjourned until 1:46 when Mr. Crowe insisted upon DLr. Glueck finding immediately his regarding this admission of NEITHER LEOPOLD G0 ONTHE STAND (Continued I'rom First Page) “About hanging, he said in the most unemotional way that it would be too bad he would not get to read about notes Loeb, Dr. Glueck said he had examined a P o Jot of hardencd criminals, and in City ltems “He shows refinemént and intellect, s no emotional reaction he aatd. Concerning Toeb's “phantasy life,” > Dr. Glueck sad Loeb told of the origh |at the city clerk’s office. of these phantasies particularly to. | AMONE the men mentioned for ¥ |state commander of the American |1Legion at its coming convention in |Torrington the 25th, 20th and 30th of |this month is Harry C. Jackson of this city, lieutenant of headquarters com- |pany of the 169th infantry and a vet- eran of the world war, g | Excellent toasted marshmallows, including | o ") McEnroes, West Main St.— | advt, Joseph Baldyga of Portland has sold a lot on High street to Salvatore LaRocca, according to a record filed Was Too Bright The witness sald it was an unfor- tunate expe that Loeb o early in ted through col- lege. He was not equipped, he de- clared, and o consistently indulged in | A number of dissipations, drinking. “His final relationship to the Franks |M95e ol 0t Glen street, is at Was ( 58 e 4 5 . . e A0l PesUliat #amoladl i g Ne¥ BLdin Gnerat Rl {or arose hetween Leopold and Loeb. "‘;“:r‘:::;' s T Vrom all 1 conclude my impression i .oy gonn Kennedy, Hanford Dart is definite that Locb is suffering from | /07y o h Kannedy are the delegates a disordered personality, that the ma- (08 %5 B/ Chg itatn police depart- ture, of his disorder primarly is a pro- | "o 1€\ o ntion of the state found discord between his emotional | oyio0monts association being held in and intellectual life, and this boy, | vow Haven today i while capable of orienting himself in- | = 700 F o b0 ") member of the tellectually, s quite incapable of en-|yoarg of water commissioners, is ill dowing these surroundings with an| "\ yome at 117 Bassett street. adequate emotion, - In his sense, he | A daughter has been born at the might be looked upon as disintegrat- | q. vo Hill sanatorium to Mr. and ed.” s | Mrs. George Talbot of Stanley street. Leopold's Examination The regular meeting of the A. G. Taking up his examination of Leo-|pgoimond camp, U. 8. W. V., will be pold, Dr. Glueck continued: | held at 8 o'clock tonight at the state “T'he thing that impreseed me Was|ginory on Arch street. opold's extreme mental activity, | judge B. W. Alling in city court throughout all my tests and contact.|pag awarded a judgment by default He possesses unusual intelligence. He | ror (he plaintiff to recover damages has a positive liking for using this in- | o¢ $15.72 and costs of $5.02 in the enc position. I started out by having him | a5s0ciation against Samuel Hook. tell me of the Iranks murder. Louis Fratis of §7% Myrtle street, “He did not show the kind of emo- | reported to the police last night that tional reaction one would expect. He|jjg wife had left home with another has adhered to an egotistic philoso- man, She took with her a five year He thinks murder is justified to |14 son but left behind a two year his own mind on the basis of his|old daughter. philosophy. In developing this phil-| Madeline Sullivan, five year old girl osophy, it was very evident a great|of 327 Corbin avenue, her arm broken source of pleasure to him was the en at her home yesterday. She was re- largement of his ego. | moved to the New Britain General “Leopold told me he had expressed | hospital for treatment. this philosophy among his friends,| The meeting of the Holy teachers, parents and others. In early | Circle of St. Mary's church which was life he undertook deliberatley to Kill | scheduled to be held in Mary's in himaelf anything which had to do|school hall this evening at 8 o'clock, with feeling, sympathy, or ordinary | has been postponed until September. human responsiveness and he has per-| Next Monday the Junior Achjeve- sistently cultivated this attitude to-| ment playground clubs will have kite wards himself. | fiying and boat sailing contests at He said he would rather hang than | Walnut Hill Park. FFamily | ARE" DAY have the intimate details of this crime divulged. He is today Napoleon in| SHiBIE AR OIS | | National Railway of Nicaragua Wipes During a ten minute recess, Fore- [NaUONA BIAGIAES L L man Leopold, brother of Nathanand| Out Last of Foreign Indebtedness Allan Loeb, brother of Richard, press- | od forward and were in earnest con- | yjdes on the national railway of Nica- vergation with the youths. |vagua were enjoyed yesterday by manufacturer and shipping man, re-|day was ordered by President Mar- | wrinkles of anxiety marking his fore- |and burning of the mortgages, held by | head. foreign bankers, on the road. The osophy to me brought me to ask if | wiped out, is now completely na- | he did not believe it was leading him |tionalized. He said, yes, but it did not make any |President Martinez now desires to re- difference. | deem the national bank, with its three he wanted to show the world [out the republic. The controlling stock in this bank Po- | " weeks ago at the county HIWANIANS HEAR LEGION GOMMANDER Club Decides Not to Go to Fresh Air Camp A baseball challes from the Hart ford Kiwanis club accepted by the local Kiwanians at their meeting this noon, Htanton Ashley was appointed eapt of the team and called first practice for next Monday night at 6:30 o'vlock, The game will probably be played next Wednesday or Thursday @ place as yet undeclded, The elub withdrew from the joint sheep roast of the local elvie elubs at the Fresh Air camp in Burlington to- morrow night, due to the idability of enough members to attend, A, J, Lev. enthal won the weekly prize deter. mined by the drawing of the members names, The speaker was Eugene Armstrong, state commander of the American Le- glon, He denied that the Legion's chief alm had been the adjusted com. pensation bill, and stressed the help which the organization has rendered to individuals and communities, The Legion, according to Mr, Armstrong, has handled 610,000 cases of needy ex-service men and spent over a mil- llon dollars in disposing of them. An employment burcau is being eonduct. ed under the auspices of the organiza- tion, Over 5,000 war orphans are be- Ing cared for, and it is expected that within ten years the number will have mounted to 35,000; cottages are now being bullt to accommodate them, and there will be no suggestion of the or- dinary orphanage about thess institu- tions, Commander Armstrong said that the real purposes and achlevements of the American Legion were un- known, but laid that to the Leglon's own shunning of publicity; the organ- ization is now going in for more pub- licity to correct the public's impres- sion of it. He told how the Wilton post had voted to build a community hall with thgir bonuses, and how oth- er posts were laying sidewalks, start- Ing libraries, looking out for orphans and doing other simllar deeds for the community. He complimented the lo- cal Eddy-Glover post as being one of the foremast in this respect. The Kiwanians unanimously voted down a suggestion that meetings be done away with for the rest of the month, —_— CARRIER PIGEONS | Norwalk Woman Finds One in Tier | Window and it Declines to go .Back to Philadelphia. Norwalk, Aug. 6.—Will a earrier pigeon return home? Yes and no. This one returned to a homs in West Washington street but it is not its real home. Here is the story. Mr. Walter I, Thompson of 47 West Washington street brought a pigeon {o the Evening Sentinel office last Wednesday afternoon and said that it had flown into her home. On its leg was a band with the letters and num- bers, L. M. 20850, A local pigeon fancier said: “After you feed it and give it water let it go. It will go home.” The bird was liberated about 6 o'clock, It alighted on a roof in Wash- Ington street looked around and then rising high in the air made a couple of circles over the bulldings and dis- appeared: It went stralght back to Mrs, Thompson and again flew in her | window. Word was received that the: hird was registered by Jacob Peblo, of 452 Bermuda street, Philadelphia. Ammonia Fumes Drive Customers From Store The breaking of a gauge on an amonia tank used for refrigeration purposes in the gtore of Miller' & ol- son, Inc., at 257 Whiting street caused considerable excitement yesterday aft- ernoon. Clerks and customers were torced to leave the store. A call was sent in to fire headquarters and Chief William J. Noble ordered Mechanic Edward G. Burke and Chaufféur Rob- ert Smith to the scene With gas masks. Man Who Escaped From Bridgeport Is Captured Bridgeport, Aug. 6.—A man caught in the Greenville section of Jersey City last night has been positively identified as Raymond Phillips, 80, of New Haven who escaped from Hill- side home here last Friday., ldentifi- cation was made possible by ‘three scare on Phillips wrists inflicted by him in an attempt at suicide A two jail here. Sheriff Pease will return with the prisoner late today. el The highest cable railway ‘in: the world—12,600 feet above sea level— is being constructed at Mt. L'Aigulle his realm, hated by many but wor-! | | Managua, Nicaragua, Aug. 6.—NKree Nathan . Leopold, Sr., wealthy box |{housands of passengers. A *no-fare' mained disconsolately in his seat, deep ft:urz in celebration of the cancellation copold's exposition of his phil- | rajlway, with its foreign indebtedness {0 destruction,” testified Dr. Glueck.| With the railway question settled, “He gaid even if he went to the gal- |branches and many agencies through- f New York end and had shown no change in his!is owned by a syndicate o reasoning with himself hankers Phantasics at 9 “His phantasies began at 9 vears of | age. Snffering was a part of these phantaszies from the beginning. He | was at times in the role of a king and | a slave. There also came into | his existence a facility to inject this | phantasy into real life.' Mr. Crowe requested that the wit- zo into detail on the various then again most of the featnres which the | her aliénists already brought out. | “Leopold's tolutions with - Loeb, T| not understan went on the doe- | He said he was deveted to him | | and was jealous of lLoeb's water and | I food because he conld not become g0 cloge to him as those ingredients” | Leopold's devotion 1o his mother | and aunt were almost like that for the madonna, Dr. Glueck said. “He frequently so characterized them, holding them for devout worship.” “Leopold has so effectually trans- | tormed his philosophy 1 think he is at present manifesting a paranoid per- sonality, in which a pathological en- largement of his ego affects his judg- ment Direct examination of Dr. Glueck | was completed at 12:10 p. m. and| State's Attorney Crowe began cross- | examination In closing his direct testimony Dr. 2 SPRING & 75-81 CHURCH ST. Du Migi, Switzerland. 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