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POLICE BY CRONES. IN THIRD LETTER | Maniacal ‘Atagctlet Poisoner, | 1S AN CHARLES ApMIRER Tired of New York, Will Quit City To-Morrow. BROTHER OFFERS CLUES| Yells Where Poison Suspect | Worked Here and Promises | Help in Hunt. | | Jean Crones, the letter writing ma- niacal poisoner who sought to kill! 300 diners at Archbishop Mundelein's | banquet in Chicago two weeks ago, is_ getting tired of New York. Appar-| ently he thinks tt is too casy for him| to elude the police, and in a thin| letter received last night and printed to-day Crones declares that he will leave the city Sunday night, This declaration gives the police the first tangible clue Crones has dropped | since his arrival in the city. Scores! of Inspector Gray's best men have! been roaming around town looking! for Crones, and they wouldn't pave known him if he had spoken to them. | Hie last letter gives them something | to work on, and in addition they have received from Chicago a new and offi. cial description of the tugtive. Every railroad station id ferry- house in the city is being watched to- | day because of Crones's announce- ment that he is going to leave New York. The detectives belleve they | have a better chance to land him when he is trying tu get out than when he is submerged in the city's millions. By Nixola day when { met Charlie Chaplin, Not the way you have met him on ‘Tho new doscription of Crones! places his age at twenty-four. He is| dey, 5 feet 7 inches tall, weighs 150} formance at tl pounds, is slightly stooped and has davk bushy huir and hollow cheeks. as most of the He walks rapidly and with a swing- | ing gait, and in Chicago he alwa | wore a dark sult and a gray overcoat. It is possible that, as he asserted in his first letter, he has dyed bleached his hi Every police ficer in the city will be in poss of this description before night. If what is believed of Crones is| true, that he is a maniac, and that he is prepared momentarily to blow him- self and his pursuers into eternity, he would be about as welcome a sight to the average citizen as a man-eating | er with rattlesnake fangs smok- £ a cigarette in a gunpowder plant. served. Meantime Charlie Chapli ry He fs not tasted “some of the spices of life” “Oh, no, you don't,” 1 proteste exist in th® same woman, “That's true,” admitted Mr. | down on a woman, or rather they further excited Crone’s brainstorm is| should Iike an intelligent woman: working the police up to a point of} standing Mr. Chaplin's declaration, I hope that Charlotte Perkins Gilman, They do! Jane Addams, Ida Tarbell and all the other of our professional fem: simost unparalleled anxiety. net know what he may attempt.| IwPELLECTS will NOT write "Tey have visions of Patrick's OF THE GEAUTIFUL | Favorite of the Film Fans Can’t Laugh at Himself,| but He Hasn’t Yet Seen Himself as the Mel- ancholy Dane—Nixola Greeley-Smith Finds | Him a Fine Chap, With Brains, Even | if His Toes Do Turn Up. ‘The loagt of Lives has its great moments. actually face to face, and in the Plaza Hotel, where he is staying. Of course, you are going to meet him Sun- for he 1s to lead the orchestra at a benefit per-) himself told me, his highest ambition is to be as funny He is Engi He is twenty-six years old He prefers blondes AND brunettes. He wants a woman for his wife who is beautiful and brilliant. scarcerow that warn men away from beauty when those two rare qualities The belief that publicity has still} YOu know, really, I haven't got brains enough to feel that way. saw bV bw dd Wee, BAL aw owl awe “ UbVAL, EebwUaAHE LY, Lodo. i , SE a NEW SCARE GIVEN Charlie Chaplin Would Be a Screen Hamlet; IGE GOLD BRICK | Ambition Consumes King of the Movies MAD FOR USE IN ME WANTS TO PLAY HAMLET Geriouser) Vatas ~\ Sroon ( YorIcK Greeley-Smith, I bad my great hour yester- , King of the movies, for the first time. every ecreen from Maine to Hondlulu, but} he Hippodrome, and where, Mr. Chaplin serious orchestra leaders he has ob- we FELT J have fougd out some things about n, the funniest man in the world. ish hE SAW MIM On THe 3c HE FIRST TH “DEAD” WHEN ees =) $250,000 SHINDLE Frank thoniacn, { Never Put Over Big ¢ “OU. DID Was to Be Part of Cargo of British Bullion That Was However, the BUT IT SERVICE. Stolen. CHARLES CHAPLIN mee The largest gold brick ever seen in these parts and probably the larg est gold brick ever imade for swind-| Ing purposes is to constitute the nuclous of a museum which District ; Attorney Swann Is about to start. | The brick was sent to the District Attorney's office to-day from St Louts where tt had be trunk in the home of George Pohl- man, a steerer for the Frank Thomp- son gang of confidence men, | members of which were sentenced yesterday, | ‘The brick weighs sixty-five pounds, jit is thirty inches long and two and one-half inches wide and deep and jis gold plated. In one corner, for, “testing”? purposes, there runs clear {through tho brick a thin plug of pure | gold. Scars show that the briek had | been used and that some “come oi had been supplied with chips of the (wt | He OOESNT wes FUNNY THe real gold in order to convince him that the whole brick was of precioug metal. Pohiman told Assistant District Attorney O'Malley that Thompson had the brick manufactured in pur- suance of a swindling scheme out of which ho expected to net a quarter of a milifon dollars. In this scheme Thompson intended to go after big gamo, no than a new York mil- lionaire financier whose name Pohl- man does not know. \ : si sAiecahiaa sEUnae | Thompson had the brick made and See ne's iG TO | gilded to represent a bar of gold veen carte Bewil | bullion, His idea grew out of the Me | shipment to this country of great quantities of gold from England be- married but is willing w be after le has (Mr. Chaplin's expression, not mine.) He told me so himself. say to himself, ‘Well, that’s enough that’s all.’ "i on men. B: e Charlie Chaplin answered d. Brains frighten men, Brains are the) wi. Par tite: at least, in MY. life. When I marry I intend down, Chaplin. “Men do want to—well, look want to have her ldok up to them. But I think I Still, notwith- a good chorus girl. 1 AM, save my salar: Why should 1 not T know this can't last, that is, won’ last forever, I don't see, re it ever beg: Do you know, self, I don’t seem funny at all. Weil, Yes, I'm sure I should.” to my. CHAPLIN DAY. zr we oH BRE ARC ROUGH 2) AND GRUFE, BUT DDNT “You asked me a while ago if | am lly, why OCT. 12 ON THE CALENDAR 18S “When did you first see yourself on cause of the necessity for the estab- lishment of British credit after the outbreak of the war, “1 don’t know how far he got with it,” said Pohiman, “Tt was « won- derful frame-up, though. The idea was to interest some millionaire in this gold brick by telling him it was part of a shipment of a million dol- “WANT HER TO FREEZE and secretly conveyed to another yes- sel. The inillionaire was to be led to believe that Thompson had a whole warehouse full of those bricks which he was willing to dispose of to some financier who could use them without ancien Escaping With Loot, They Siop to Close Window, Woman Tells Police. tho | | Jordan, lars in gold bullion which had been stolen from the steainship in transit |M. D. ROBINSON, ROOSEVELT’S NEPHEW, WEDS GIRL IN BOSTON. | daughter of Mr. nephew of Col, Roosevelt, Trinity Church, Boston home in Beacon Stre: ding. —— SHOT MAN AND SAID COURT WOULD FIND Shown in Ward’s Trial for Murder. The danger that menaces person: in this city from cranks who are do: clared medically insane, but not le gally so, ty illustrated by the testi Ward, murder, before Judge Crain in Gen cral Sesstons, A wedding to-day of interest to} soclety 1» that of Misa Dorothy M.| and Mrs. Eben D, Jordan of Boston, to Monroe Douglas Robinson of New York @ The ceremony will be performed at and o large reception will follow at the bride's » Mr, Robin- son is a son of Mr, and Mrs, Douglas Robinson of No, 9 Bast Sixty-third Street. A largo contingent of New Yorkers went to Bostén for the wod- WHAT MOTIVE WAS Menace of Pcraike in City Is|treaty power mony given in the trinl of Lester B. a steamfitter, charged with|+, wepster Hall REVOLT IN CHINA WILL BE CRUSHED. Because of t He. It His Enthrone- ment Was Postponed With “Saddened Hearts.” * PEKING, China, Feb, 19—In an interview with the correspondent @f the Associated Press at the palace to-day, President Yuan Shi-Kal minimized the importance of the re- bellion now in progress and expressed confidence of the ability of the Gov- vernment to suppress the uprising when adequate troops reach the Up- per Yang-tse-kiang. “This is no campaign, but only ® skirmish,” said Yuan Shi-Kal, “bu! it gives ine so much work that’ ft increases my appetite.” ‘Tho President replied laughingly to ® remark regarding bis Physical condition and good spirite, refuting rumors of his Ml health, Discussing bis enthronement, he safd+ “Although a date in February was sanctioned, tho enthronement could not take place,because of the Yunnan rebollion, which necessitated military operations. Therefore it was decided, with saddened hearts, to postpone It, ‘Tho President said the drafting of @ new constitution would be begun in a few days. When it ts finished the constitution will go before @ national convention for suggestions. He @d@ Not predict the date of promulgation of the constitution. Discussing ite ta- ture, he said: “We shall adopt from all countries the provisions most suited to China, without leaning toward any forcign constitution." Yuan Shai Kal had this to say me garding the probable recognition’ of the monarchy; “I cannot tell what Governments will or will not delay. Each will rencgaine the monaroby according to roumstances.” oheanetar China's position as af- fected by the war the President said “China has made eyery effort to maintain strict neutrality. The Ch. nese Government is not aware that the Hntonte powers or the other bet- lwerents have made any substantial harges against us for not having done so, China will endeavor to re- main on friendly terms with all the 8. Shi- i then Feverte to the ine srrection, oa ying: ‘A fow umbitious leaders, “without popular support, are engineering the rebellion. The voting showed that the public favors a monarchy.” ——— | GREENWICH PAGANS ROUT. Some Rout, Too, Though They Went Across Town to Do It, Greenwich Village last night trooped No, 119 East Bleveath ~| Street, to take part in the Pagan reut arranged by the Liberal Club. son? r Ward shot and killed John @.] “We are the Liberal Club,” an official Cathedral going up in the air and a|NICEST SORT OF CHAP, BUT HIB ( ERGs Mee a the acl hla exciting suspicion, Cowen, superintendent of « laundry at | gal threveh, Mi board, ‘and we dost bushy-haired person dynamiting| TOES TURN UP. Napoleon abdicated the in tac| To Memow the Listovianihia tWo dares | I guess the plan fell through or). Grave. ute Nw 4 lant, | Mant, UBtown veople to know any Res quarters | ly. ¥ ‘ i ee ; to eh Masked burglars with gruff voices,|the ‘sucker’ got suspicious, for he 52. Gro . Now ant. | Mout ‘our route eeu } Really, you impatient movie fans/yor of Char Chaplin, if the| for October—the day when Columbus ahi shipped the brick to me in'a trunk|Cowen's brother, the owner of tho| 80 without intrusion, those persons adore details of the alleged Chicago | waiting for me to get down to cases.| truth were known, Young Chap-| @iscovered America and the day when |rough ways and revolvers have no|i. ly tress and told me to hide it in| jaundry, was Ward's benefactor, aed cd eriton, blow: he Seana lot iven by C: 'Charlte C! h sest kind of |jints discovered himself, terrors for Mrs. Jennie Bucco, thirty-] yy Ss he Ww jaundry, wa rd's benefactor, /giv- | heard | riton blow hig thed poison plot are given by Crones in his! Charlie Chaplin is the nicest kin lin’s fo died when he was very Alacavary of Gunciie Feats balakes ‘ my home in St. Louls as he Wastin, nim cinployment at times when|hom. T ro all tl M! Jatest letter. He wrote that he did|chap—English, you know—awfully|young and his hearthroken mother|Chaplin affect you?” 1 asked, OO Cee ee eee te Tale eee id ne win ne neice ig] Werd, through his uncontrollable 9rd, saeetans vaaan mph, net put poison Into the soup served! modest and retiring with a freshs|found the burden of supporting him| ‘It was ind answered the 00? Her husband ia sick ts Haly/ Sever with the brick, si cd Reena vork | Aves and. the haired ‘arebean to the 300 priests and other prominent | vivid coloring and blue ; eye ay King of tho Movies. “I felt like a |and she lives on the ground floor at|trim with the brick” AIO pee) WES UHABIO tO (OntAle. WOR |e father runs a general Tassos | ae and his brother Sidney greater than] corpse watching his disembodied | No, 214 East One Hundred and Sixth elsewhere, so ‘store at Bumpus Va. ° ren, but put it into the “stock” in the | Small, with shoulders she could bear, So the two Uttle|spirit. Iwas disappointed. I had not|gtroet with her father, Vincenzo Tl H OWNERS SUE Tho circumstances of the murder | Wore bare-legued. cold meat room, where he was em-| slope a bit, clean shaven—o boys lived for w time in an English imagined that I looked like that and| oreo" © her RAAT EE lea pideeee ee murder | he arena | ode annus naa his room, and that he knew|as woman’ ‘ '; : ae still, I was interested! Maybe T ha: t 2 A. M. to-day, she T0 RECOVER THE APPAM | =e ‘ e a . | Hacon-Shakerpeare, controversy, | 2m piaabhechann sng tute abil Steed Shs ie complexion a z Pic ely ble to carn a living for them] better say that I felt like a disem-| police, she awoke to find two masked ately shot Cowen in the launder fhe had. performed. **Sull bam picts to daetroy 2 #8 Jove; and when T met him he didjghe took them back. And at eight | bodied spirit watching a corpse, I'did|inen with revolvers pointed at her. ——— ahas Chen Ghd ented tie Mes ichuwer wan found to baw or other acts of violence. (not twirl w cane, But be DID, he|years old Charlie Chaplin made Tis not fool a bit like laughing. “I have lirney ‘assured her one scream would| Action Taken to Overtum Ruling over, was to have bee 46 Sreneeee | An-| DOES turn up his toes, even in Pri-/theatrical debut in a melodrama] Cin sean funny to himself,” Mr.|be her end, so she screamed, They State Depart That Shi “What made you kill_my brother?! | S==—==—=—=———————====en il “the Ludlow massa vate life. ow " can’t seem funny to himsel ir ot State Department That Ship archist unt! cre in| vate life. And do you know what hi8|calied “Krom Rags to Riches.” He| Chaplin philosophi “He knows | dragged her out of bed and threw her r proprietor of the laundry asked Colorado” on April 20, 1914, at the time| great ambition Is? Ho told tt to me. |has since lived that melodrama, for| himself teo we jrittocnen while /ona pukedad her Is German Prize. ed Going It Too Hard of the labor troubles at mines coa-| “f want,” said Mr. Chaplin, sol-|(o.day t cova bat : But we must remember that Mr. ; ; . : " ; trolled by the Rockefeller interests, yt i Sante’ on uel ee workhouse baby is earns | ci olin has not seon himself as Ham- | ‘he er passed through the room) WASHINGTON, Feb, 19.—Attor- Phat is for a Supreme Court Jus-| Wo are inclined RT ee ccty eatin terete ing an income of more than $100,000 for—wet, where hor two sisters slept to the! neys for the British owners of tho| tice to find out,” was Ward's only re. agate. uote held up to ridicule by the chef, who] 4 burlesque?” J said (Roe: Rs aca room of her parents in the rear, liner Appam, in Hampton Roads as «| ply too hard;” to overs asserted that all of the men arrested} “No, certainly not,” the King of Chapt ne 4 Bturadly-—of Ir, 1 500 GEMS AND CASH Lifting the mattross at the foot of] prize of a German crew, have brought telatives Ward ve testified | work, worry, eat and i No, n ;Chaplin's income, In view of the ’ the parental bed the robbc: took out}an Admiralty proceeding under the] that he had been irrational vines he} drink too much and in Chicago in connection with the pol-| ine Movies answered with the only! predilection of the public | liad put aa wamavnd ce ‘ uP existe innocent. He suggested public | had pul a chamois bag, removed a scrafpin| prize laws to regain possevsion of | suffered from typhold fever a dozen | t« bjt bing ba sgaalche, - Ho suggested touch of hauteur in a eonverad- of that marvelous moment as tons) VANISH AS SHE SHOPS) ina diamona ring worth $75 and two| tne wnt years or so ago, Ward's sister, Mra, | cite, rest and sleep, that the whole Chicago police force be! ¢ion which lasted an hour, “A seri-'ag I decenti rm | \s the ship. Nar 3 This fills the pier sent to a correspondence school, i It % la ke a great a decently could, | —-—-—-~ pawntickets, and replaced the bag.| ‘The State Department holds that| Donnelly of No. 356 Hast Thirty-sec~ i; a Cnn hl Mr, Chaplin.” I said, “{ understand! Camden Visitor Misses Handbag|Then the robbers disappeared | under the Prussian-A) treaty | ond Mtreet, testified that for days he Over the long Phone} jioture, you know. that two years ago, before you were 4 < through the front window, which they | + 5 aelnie iii Paul Crones, assistant chef at the Ar- |" 7 should say I did know! Think jas famous as you are now, ; 4 From Arm in Broadway oe y ¥|the liner belongs to Germany us 4 ‘ ‘igont Hotel here, offered to do ail ne | or Sn Ar ee en eee ta Pt je ee A Ww, a gens: Store i carefully closed so she would not] prize, at least until a prize court While in this condition,” Mrs, Don- by. a lamlet th: t su e jer offere you 5 aw » and Store, catch cold, n, y testified, “his antipathy ran could to discover bis brother. Not an] pypry ; aig) ‘ - c passed on the legality of her capture EVERY act instead of merely in the you said, ‘Make St $1,025 and I'll take| ; cco aroused her pare The Britis contended | as sters of the Gospel, whi Anarchist himself, he declared he had} arty, ay any old tragedian like Soth- it" -Wh, thie 488 f0b% a0) pai Cash and jewelry valued at $1,000] | 10% ee ee eae ie sadn Pierced terestemin ia fa PEA DeLee OEE Ne S nee i vel trinary _ disorders. never before suspected bis brother’s| ooo. rveing or Forbes Roberteon| manager, to which you anawered, | ™¥Steriously vanished with the black |#™ th Noll cM ll Ue Ault oe owners under a provision of ‘The|” biaiee v ae ee nen rors raz | Don't wait for we riminal tendencies. hag-made him dol “The $25 is for living expenses," velvet handbag carried on the arm of |‘UIDSG Oy ae enn eee renin: | Hague convention, MAGNE CE OMS AR) He Sean WEED IR? | Colles: SERRA Paul Crones gave to a reporter hia) Meme ME Oe vet queried.” (PUTS HIMSELF IN THE LAUDER| Mise Marion Bradicy in a Broadway |OPerssont Oi UO Ble: a oe Oa red TO ttt te ie vented. laborer trom one| tie, Kidweys Use brother's former address tn New] ye ounce you do, But do you read| THRIFT CLASS, department store yesterday afternoon |Ma OD Bie Berner saw to One ienvel case wih 38 bitterly contested and |which prevented w Iaborer from on-| Dos Pills, What they have York—a rooming house in lower Man- bd | That's true” Charlie Chaplin] and police assistance has been asked the house, and none of the other} that im pound upon Frag will finally }Joying the rights that he said God in- many thousands of suffer- huttan where Crones had lived untu | him? 4° answered. “I have to admit it, even| Miss Bradley is the daughter of Ww. |tenants heard anythir But rg ye ee eRe red. 19.——United | tended for thom to enjoy ers they should do for you. bout November, 1914, while employed | “Is ( fair?” countered Mr.!though my brother says I'm getting herp ; Bucco has two scratches on her neck $ Mai (canada ite Mra. Donusily said that whew ue A a Broadway’ restaurant, the ad-| Chaplin.” 1 like Shakespeare, T ke |a reputation for thrift second only to| 2: Bradley of Camden, N. J., and with | 114 tne jewelry ix none, States Judge Waadin twaued! the usual | Mrs y su hen hor Bronx Testimony dress of which Paul also gave. He! nim particularly in Lamb's ‘Tales y Lauder's." hor parents is a guest at the Biltmore. | ——_.—_. | reel ore by 2 Deputy United Hates | Crane scar Glod her brother had Ob-! Benjamin V. Myers, 901 By 140 added the information that the land- |” iy 7 a! tinal h 1\ hen you really are a good chorus| The jewelry consisted of a diamond ha Nal ‘ ne ene jhe sir New, | boared at the funeral gayly bedecked, | | i “4 : La hore ae . cady of the rooming house had an ex- | {rom Shake eure, That's whero jini ave your salary? a RETeTet pecan a Mfoctiah onsen ; Au aay W 0% py ie Newpa awe | voaring ead) eolitie, “NGhan fa ay Lune Ht wh 1 by L kaches and Cellent photograph of Crones, which | got all I knew about him, then I had MY great mo- ' other kiduey disorders, | My occupation she exhibited to Paul when on hisar-| This W eshment, At that | mer cent, containin ) diamonds; a ’ ' uards from the | Mice oF ve pte d | prote =t89) he sald lee brother sil! as « railroad man is one that brim ival from Germany he called there to} nent 1 realized why Charlie Chap- l) are funny," Charlie Chap- | lavalilere, with diamonds as two to-| NEW “FRIENDS” 60T IT) rf) yh ; nha " n his By Haye ie bbitor OIE A 1) San | atrain on my Baek and is search for Jean, a in “You have a sense of humor, | pazes set In platinum; a gold bracelet, | ee _—— sive.” ether with being out im ‘This information was regarded as |lin has made a great success. He bas) haven't you?" added the funniest man | containing five diamonds: a watch fob, Pee Merd'a counsel, former Aasistant| Weather, naturally brings on kidmey of particular importance b: ause|the courage to be hitnself. Jim the movies. And I knew how al jennie on ido Mr. Bradley's] Monroe Street "Band Rounged U BEALTA TIP. trict Attorney Charles Lo Barbier, | trouble, I have used Doan's Kidney uleherto the pee Ee le com! “Do you read Shakespeare for) Roaae letetee latina felt When! monogram, and @ large diamond in : ' Wi itt bid »,| Dowt kiss very old people.” ssaod of suc! Pills off and on for the past four years work on @ description alone ” 26) ctoria clapped him on the| monogram, and a large diamon¢ e 00 i Tash a , ‘or these ail s, and they Of the missing man, and bave beeo |Fcreation?” T asked. ., [Shoulder and said, "Ar Knight!” | the centre of the reverse side; a plain and Have Will Look Them he New York State Department , anarontatio Idene, hore | Lor bees Amen AH tee a inable to get any picture of him. “No, indeed; I read W. J. Locke, “Don't you think women generally | gold bracelet; iw Marquise ring with Over To-Day. | of Health oldal mania, Ward | Called (0.8 atisfaction. Paul said his brother is but twenty-|Mr. Chaplin replied. “But when I ae @ sense of humor?” T° inquired | three lt upphi wrrounded bY! Charles HL eA aan oa ———_—__ ntry ever produced was three years old and that he cannot > have really good time 3|W2en ¢ Bad ceased Diushing diamonds, and 1 ring, containin ROSAS: seeye elon bed er ot President add to the description already pos- rae) ie ae fe ae © "Women AME funny," Mr, ¢ peerage htt - Street, who lost $5,000 in money, $350 DUG GRAVE FOR VICTIM tof President M sessed, by the police, as he had | not Pi bee he eer Bg gy es <> worth of jewelry and his steamer a 50¢ al all Drug Si seen Jean in seve years. lean agtime? ) ticket In a variant of t handke ru cgime tq ‘New York. trom. Cologne, | “No,” he answered, “I dislike rag- That is, thoy CHILD ROMPS LIFE AWAY, [icles io variant of vv hanakers| BREQRE HE WAS SLAIN H HAS THIRD HUSBAND AT 25, et Germany, In June, 1914, and is @liime; 1 play classics—only those I n they try to be, “Wome n, - <9) 7 CBN. German, Paul sald. Paul followed in|™e; | play clasall Dut he meant tt ers at Police Headquarters to-day, | - - Wedding A November and at once called at the | @mupick up by ear” oo beautitul to be He arrived to look over fourteen] CHICAGO, Feb, 19.—An axe muvder videnoe Youth's ’ yestaurant where Jean had written |.eROM RAGS TO RICHES” CAME) “rho rarest thing in the world,” he prisoners arrested by a squad of ) carefully that even PROVIDENCE, KL, Feb, 19. the nig mother in Cologne he was em- ' } hing in ‘orld, 5 Jetectives in Monroe Strevt la ght sa aulAiian ee Ame ORe und that his son is not of age Juliue ployed, There he was informed his TRUE IN LIFE. /Sentahed, (Jas Woman Who ls DORs | playing in tie dra: Diahbath |ue se cuucinica that 1s Hd Megat gee traded ao patana # conuaisaian. merchant, | iy brother, employed for @ time a8 4! 41) ine tine that Charlie Chaplin} When I meet that combination 1 am | Warren al S aah the gang 1 has Jutely vietimized yg Mya, [seeking to annul the marriage of Julius ? sistant chef, had gone. j etc BF oe yesterday he Ld Hzed | police in a confession by Mre se se ah and the former Mian Alice| AA DROLUTOL Remov Paul then hurried to the address of |and I were seated in the lobby of} Ing to marry it bu cnn ace t need | up ber hss 8 and fell face| several ens about to retura to |moont owas Aeeoraine (10 ahs u ah a8 r and the. me 4 : DOS a es the rooming house, where the woman| the Plaza I had been wondering of |)70rKO™ & of 1 by “ A al ran to the child, | Burope | ah thant Mane Nightingale, 3 reston y- * ; y Mea Cister irises idina, az HOTT ae | “hasss ino, Kina. of toe movies’ re-| i aeieetttast ater ts rem ae ite but | pate, Wane ce undaatlty MUG | eve mud hla vulunblea Im a money [Meets oenfension, Tomy Bandroviohs rep, years id, ane Frestn Indigestion. One package it could Be mado out over the tele- | TOG ine Suddenly all the Dick-|that I knew all feu.nino movie fang [oalied Dr. Gs Nol pelt, Ile repurted to the poll | ftty-five years old, & farmband em jeighteen, Is hor third Husband proves it. 25cat all druggists, phone, was Leng, said that Jean|Mminded me, * y 8 Would ke to a een ou r bel reported to the pollce that | jioveq near Benton Harbor, Mich., first marriage was to 4 Providence man had gone to work at a Hotel Ariing- jensian atmosphere which surrounded |v, you going to be rt fail-|newiy made fricuds escorted him | wag slain for bis money by repeated named Hubbard. This cont tos in a New qereey My . him was condensed in the vision of | your ideal woman a@ blond around the city for thve days before | plows from an axe administered by ‘annulled, In 1912 she married none ‘aul wrote to this hotel and was |olver Twist. Perhaps you don't |inveigling him into parting with the| Mra, Zdrowekl's husband, Sandro-|Cuye and divorced ini last year, On Si k H d h afvisod by return post that Jean had |) 000" tat Gharlie Chaplin was once he 1s-BOTH," replied the King | °° |helt fora moment and then going, Vich's employer, and Alex Motelaki, | |Jan, 31 sho wus married to young 1 1c eadacnes worked at the place but two months |} on war iive’ @usary Sf lot the Movies. “I admire all p John I all Has Paralytie Stroke.| into a store to buy cigars. The, “A stave already had been dug ring the ut Praented bu and then had suddenly departed, Paul |4 workhouse boy, like Oliver, ®\ women. I love beauty. And I really| John H. Prall of South Terrace, Lim. | handk et swindle constats in pre. |says the alleged confession, — "W © thelr son ‘ ption algo learned of Joan's brief employ- |father and mother were English | mean to marry and se(tie down when fe A aie, " lfending to add another Bum tothe |threw the body into it and left ¢ miner (orf ment Iready Said at aa on | travelling players and Charlie Chap- | 1 have had s spices of lite,” | BY BNE ane Wek eer tit) lotim's sayings when he Ix about to Chicago,” for th ndard © sland resort, and then lost all trace vanes T)o Misut not y mr F y n ieny ito Hurope and then. subs cot to police, the tw ' arranged of him. A ‘few months later his |! was born a France, quite ap-| ayo Obapiin. an: sea is tn tte ‘ F eee: when informed of M anit the boy's parents kn w mother wrote him that Paul was in DIOBrIN a iat eat eineheait where | awerel. “You sce, when a man mar- | way returning » Adiror in which the statoment. It iy anid only prance a week ugo tO join a hospital cago, other soyaities than es of \Le ries be has to settle down; he has to dack summer nome, when al sicken. on from Bandrovich, staff a : 4 a