New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 23, 1929, Page 17

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i f | | B 4 ’ ( - [ 1 h T ~ g )t 2, p /v,fl,.,w.,,,,,,,,m,,,m,,,/ e s 2 s R0 Z A CGR N7 % I A i i I I BTN IAI ! N N N N N N s i s o AN i p e S0 Z o % g wy oy, 2 i TOGETHER The Only Photo of “Handsome Dili’ Tallman and Beautiful Mrs. Virginia Patty Whom He Is Charged With Brutally Murdering—Taken Du the Idyllic Sca Voyage on W They Met. OW, wh o W where — th whose an to dete murder myste confronti squad, and clandest h; the ot why and clouded. And Bill” Talln from his shiy been told. afforded by a ¢ desc! from a ship, th ma aged to elu med aboard how? And why? But let us go back a When Mrs. G. M. Wilson, manager of an apartment house, where known as “Handsome Bil a cozy retreat for himsel door of his flat not long spectacle met young man had rented , opened t 50 ible BT ded Baisimg Fu HER DEMAND This Coat of Dyed Rabbit Fur, with “Chin- chilla” Rabbit Trimmings in Natural Color, I< One of the Reasons Why Furriers Must Find Means to Keep Their Product § Plentiful. he neck > body edingly from two ¢l lovy wife of a we broker of Por had been bashed in by a brick. face and body mutilated As soon as the slain wom lentity had been established Lovell manager of the excl Gregon, investment Banker Who fo Was Found Slin in the Apartment of Her Young Radio Operator Boy Friend. | tment 1 a trys Meanwhile c occurring er developments were ine Tip a sten ographer occupying a flat abo the one in which Mrs. Patty wae sl fixed the time of murder o'clock of the morning preceding had been a voice cry- me, Earl! ing fran For G ives wanted t iss Tipton might not know whethe identified William Ta the *Handsome llman. a passenger a Great Mink-Breeding Farm in Gernrany. ILADY'S furs must be available year with the fi snap of frost—sometimes, indeed, in mid-Summer, But the makers of f: i le wraps have long realized that the supply of fur-bearing animals is istible. What would happen no more minks, musk not ine when ther rats, foxes, Modern sc e stock farmers tion, at least fur farming has urope and tl States. mink is being In Germany the red in ¢ tivity ona l: creatu scale wnd responds factorily to The sable, whose fur is highly prized, bred in though as yet only in an exper The Depa is being similarly urope mental way. ment of Agriculture in the United States is making a simi- lar attempt with the marten, another valuable and fast-disappearing animal. Iver fo. have been successfully sed in captivity for a number of years, and the silver fox farms off the @ sooks of what once had be ¢ly voung woman on. Her he o Swarmed Frank D. Patty, Wealthy Portland, r-Bearing Animals etective Story MysteryoftheSea 4 /- The “Locked” Stateroom Was Empty When the Ship Reached San Francisco - and Police Aboard LOVE “{/’*« QUATRAIN A Sample of the Ardent Verse in Mrs. Patty's Handwriting That Police Found in Her Luxurious Apartment. omehow, th ted before the rnoon for San iilure resulted in the on of Captain James Bean of Angeles police department. 1l warrant was next radioed Sohst of “Arrest Bill arge murder.” When the steamer docked Francisco in the morning descended directly to e Bill The Broken Lock on the Door of andsome Bill's" Stateroom Aboard the Admiral Benson —From Which He Mystericusly Disappeared While Police Were Waiting for Him. in San 1¢ state- i been a broken lock appeared jut they one “Hanc r quarry bad dis had bien rea one sailor, The Feminine Point of View By MARY T. DOUGHERTY HAE police of Los Angeles may be ivterested in finding the murderor of Mrs. Virginia Patty but society has a graver problem in trying to discover why she murdered the souls of men. Was she a vampire who gloated over the destruction of others? Was she a vain woman who found happiness only when she conquered mon and made them her slaves to do her bidding? Or was she jusi a faithless wife who merely muddled her affairs so badly that one of her fovers killed her in a mad effort to escape? These questions are vital to socicty. a great lesson to humanity. Uf she was a vampire who lived on the dead souls o have made her o decent member of society? Religion? Science? 1f she was merely a vain woman, could education and proper social taining have given her a better mental balance? And if she was a faithless wife was she to blame Was her training at fault? Was she merely a weak character. o natural prey to trivial temptations. or did her husband neglect her? The ansicers to them would constitute The murderer will be found out—maybe—and will probably ultimatels pas the penalty for his crime. But meamchile society must find the reason for L”w tragedy and a means to prevent others like it. om Faprms coast of Alaska send every year lar ze minated over large arcas by the trap shipments of skins to market pers, but now muskrat farms are being On the Pribilof Islands, in the lanned in Europe and Ameri And 8 great roo where the fur seals have eries, there are tho sands of blue foxes semi-domestica the skins of the surplus regula > will always be “fur t rabbits” to back up: reat nuir Californ in South males bein to the fur marts. The a are fed mainly on waste parts of slaughtered Is. salted to provide Winter provender. Muskrats have already been exter- supplies r spotted leopard. Making Life-Preservers ROGRESS has #een notable in re. st cent years in the m really “Kapok,” a d with the material tand on such a ma A man could ttress. in -preservers. shipwreck, and paddl fiber from the The Southeastern to the Ph con than cor deas. used far ufacture ot serviceable i floss-like seed-pods of a tree Asia, and “balsa wood” trary to many -people more than eork Kapok is splendid for lifc tresses of U. 8. Army tra wood, from a tree ippine Islands, is It furnishes the n fe rafts now to be found battleships and destroy A large number of balsa used in the aboard U aining er: U. S. NAVY RAFT This Is the Standard Life Raft in Use by American Naval Vessels. It Is of Balsa and Will Carry Ten Men Comfortably. Copsrisht, 9, by New York Evening Jourual, lne, another, swims ashore to kill his man to t Lten1e Ay " £ DEAD Equally sign ) BEAUTY checked in pencil, on Mrs. 5 Patty's a Finely o o Chiseled, Lovely oot vort : ¢ Features, Revealed TR by This Photograph, fiitha t a tc Belie the Unpleasant “Dear Dad: Sorry, old boy, Details of the Affair That" st for both of us Cost Her Life. Burn this a t would hurt some revoir, Bill." Bill Tallman was luced to M > she was m g a trip o al Benson. Their acquaint d body Patty on out assistance, T T I AR I AN O Do e the k N pened rapid ation, e the hue ¥ N according to M > stepped forward F. ( N W a_handsome yo Angeles R shoe clerk, who told tete-a-tete Q%x\\\\% led how Mrs v Mrs. Patty on rnoon of *ig\\\«\ an’s mad ador h me in the shoe "»NE\&\\ been trying te eak away frc © riday N ™ She told me he had been 1 wish NN mands upon her which she § § X} Y meet ¢ the s N b agined NN N because he was so wh N Was it th in whos mted him down would ment P case of adored one had firs and then “thrown hin But the pol wve been a difficu an to have | Elephant? No! Beetle! her with a qua ty of co she had s to es- to the R NI A I R I I ez Do i RTINS CURIOUS DESTROYER A Much-Magnified Photo of the Plum Curculio, D ly Foe of Fruit Crops In Europe and a Problem in the U. S. Note Its Resemblance to the Elephant. A PLAGL upc e in the aind other fruit-g the Spring ¢ finally enlist When the pists and hed about ha mping it upon curculio, a The plum hayoe with weapon to ch has been ¢ a remarkable fact in connection with the litt When a phot ph of a curcu enlarged it once evident much the sect resemble grown jungle elep) Tusk and head forn all amazi ible, reminding one of the little phants carved out of ivory that are parents fore they are able to nd. leave the ta

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