The evening world. Newspaper, December 3, 1921, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

} WOMAN SUBDUES. ~ ALLEGED ROBBERS WITH SHILELAA Surprises Intruders in Her Home and Wields New Found Stick. Mrs. Nora Lally, No. 164 South Street, found a good big ctick on her way home yesterday and picked it up. There was weight to and she swung it lightly and gripped it and decided it might come in handy, for she is getting along in years now and likes a little protection. When she opened her front door she saw a chance right under her nose to use that stick. Two men, perfect strangers to her, were in her home, she says, packing up about $200 worth of her clothes. The club landed on the head of the nearer man and bounced to the other head, ‘Thon it landed alter- nately on the two unt both men were lying qictly on the floor. Mrs. Lally looked at them carefully to see that they were not playing any tricks, then opened the window and yeiled for the police. Detectives Roy and Gray of the Old Slip Station came} in, Wiiy cidn’t you send f.r an un- derts ” Gray asked. But in the course of fifteen minutes the detectives managed to wake up the men and get them on their fect. They swayed a bit, but after a while the fresh air revived them and they were taken away. This morning they were taken to the Tombs Court for arraignment op burglary charges. They said they were Albert Smith, ‘rom Wales, and Samuel Senet uineteen, of Philadelphia. poids THIEF GOT THE COINS; CENTRAL THE BLAME Staffed Paper into Return Slots of Pay Phones. David Levitch, No. 223 Eas¢ 12th Street, in Essex Market Court pleaded guilty to stealing nickels from the Tele- phone Company by a novel method. He stuffed paper wads, he said, into the slot from which nickels are sup- posed to drop into the little “return box" after the operator has failed to get a number for somebody. The wad held back these nickels until he came back and released them, He had just .collected four nickels from one tele- phone in St. Mark's Hospital yester- day when he was ar pisint of a company a copmpany nappoloy “ARBITRATORS CUT PAY + inspector OF 12,000 SHGE WORKERS, Reduction of 10 Per Cent. for ALL tting Over #16 a Week, A Board of Arbitration chosen vy their union and the employers has de- cided on a 10 per cent, wage cut im- mediately for from 10,000 to 12,000 shoe workers in this city. They will be sup- jected to a further cut of from 1 to § per cent. on May 1 ‘The immediate reduction involves a saving bf $900,000 labor costs to forty \mploying firms, which the manufac- turers say is shown in recent price lists gent out to the trade. ‘There will be wo Turther price cuts now, ‘The arbitra- bra specify in their decision that no Jieereaxe in wages saall apply to work- ven receiving less than $16 a week. ree TEMPLE ISRAEL BEGINS ITS GOLDEN JUBILEE Vhree-Day Célebration Opened by Famous Congregation. Temple Israel last evening inaugur- nied a three days’ celchration of its golden jubilee in its temporary place of worship in the Secord Presbyterian Church, 96th Street and Central Park West, A new temple end commanity | centre are being erected in West 31st treet near Broadway , Rabbi (Natuan Kress will be th chief preacher this mo:ning, To-nient ats dinner at the Hotel Astor Judge iulius M. Mayer, Judge Greentaum and others will speak. Temple Israel is one OL the largest and oldest liberal Jewish: congrege' jw the country. iE ed on tae com-/ Big People in Act SAVES LCT FROM DEATH BY CA Odor Cetected by Couple Say- ing Good Night Leads to Unconscious Victims. A lingering good night saved eight persons from death by gas asphyxia- tion at No. 25 East Third Street early to-day. A young woman and her es- cort were parting In the hall after returning from a dance when a gust of wind brought a strong smell of gas. / They traced it to the apartment of Max Keotz on the second floor, ans called Policemen Pohe! and Wagner of the Fifth Street Station. Keotz, who is forty: his wife, Helen, thirty-five: their children, Sarah, thirtken; Rose, twelve; Lora, ten, and Alexander, ninc. and two boarders, Regina Schmer, twenty-one, and Lena Gewitz, twenty, were unconscious in bed, The policemen gave first afd until an ambulance arrived from Bellevue. All responded to treatment except Mrs. Keotz, who did not revive until @ pulmotor had been used for more than an pour. All remained at home. The gas was coming from a jet in the kitchen. The family, six months in this country, had been out late and, being tired, told thirteen-year-old Sarah to turn out the gas, She told the police to-day they did not have gas in Poland, adding: “I thought blowing it out was the same as turning it out, so I blew. —_—____ FUR BURGLARS FOILED, ESCAPE WITHOUT LOOT Jimmy Wey Into Stor Off Alarm Doing It. but Set, After three burglars had jimmied the door of Alexander Thern's fur store at No. $5 West 45th Street early to-day, a burglar alarm went off and they had'to flee In their waiting taxicab, They passed several policemen of the West 47th Street Station, who were re sponding to the alarm, but the police- men did not know they were the rol bers. Nothing was taken. There have been 50 many recent attempts to bur- \glarize stores in the fur districts, the police to-day received orders to clear certain restaurants where the thieves are suspected of plotting their raids. Policemen have also recelved orders to disperse groups of suspicious persons at certain street corners in districts suf- fering from burglary epidemics. jSEE Des hey STATEN ISLAND FLOODE> WITH BAD $10 BILLS INetes Ri jecret Ser- Four $2 bills which, by a painstaking process of cutting and pasting had been raised to $10 denomination Aave discovered on Staten Island, and the police belleve the island is flooded with the spurious money, ‘The Secret Ser- vice Bureau has its detectives at work to-day seeking out the culprits. Mil four bills Were taken_in_at_store: of the A. & P. Tea Copmany Stap ton yesterday, and were discovered by the Officials of the Richmond Borouga National Bank when the company's re- to, shopkeepers to-day with one of the ralsed bills, displaying it as a warning to them, or ned. While swabbing a gun in “The Battlo jot Gettysburg.” William Beidt, a Union soldier, thirty years old, of No. 140 attan Street, Brooklyn, was seriously burned about the face and head from a premature explosion of powder, Beldt was only playing soldier for the Fox Film Company in its West 54th Street studios. where a big war drama was heing staged in which the Union and confederate forces were hard at it. He is in Roosevelt Hospital. | — TWO U. S. BOATS DISABLED. (Special to The Brening World NEW LONDON, Conn, Lec, 3 United States Scout Patrol hoats Nos 8 and 177, one towing the other off Watch Hill late last night bécam> dis- abled during the storm and asked for nasistance, the coast guard responding Machinery in both boats was disabled A tug from the submarine base to-day !nformation he desired to keep from |:tove. The Fed lowed the boats here, | ceipts were deposited, The police went Weird Case of Bernice Probably Result in By Marguerite Mooers Marshall ‘When that newest remarkable in- pineteen-year-old Bernice and four- year-old. Polly Redick sharing one and the same body out In Columbus, in the survival of Bernice and the elimination of Polly, as prophesied by merely duplicate that achieved by Dr. Morton Pynce of Boston and brought a similar but even more com- pleated case of multiple personality to a triumphant conclusion. between the two afflicted young women and between the methods em- ployed for their relief. According to Dr. Goddard, Bernice Reddick, for- merly a high school girl of Lisbon, O., Was possessed two months ago of two mal self, “a bright, alert, cultured bitions to become a musician," and cuuld neither read nor write nor dis- tinguish between colors, who gib- bered ‘baby talk’ and delighted in toys. forth between personalities as often as eleven times in one day. The two Personalities had no recollection of each other. i BERNICE WILL “BE HERSELF AGAIN’; BAD POLLY DOOMED. Dr. Goddard treated the case with hypnotism, for in the hypnotic state the girl's real self was in control and received suggestions not to go back to the “Polly” personality. He now reports that the latter has been ‘almost eradicated and that Bernice will soon literally be “herself” again. The cage of Dr. Morton Prince is his book, “The Dissociation of a Personality.” It -is the account of his six years’ experience with a young woman who was literally three Persons in one; who would change apparent identities again and again in the course of an ordinary con- versation. Dr. Prince calls his Interesting patient Miss Christine Beaucham: though that is admittedly not h real name. She had been a nervous, impressionable child who had strange dreams. At thirteen her mother's death caused her a great mental |shock and in the three years follow- {ing she had experienced succ nervous strains and frights. her multiple personalities developed. He cals her normal state BL. lv state when hypnotized, B IL.; her second waking personality, B LIT, otherwise called “Chris” and later “Sally;" her third personality, B 1V. A SAINT, WOMAN AND DEVIL Devil.’"" BI. was the saint, B[V was the woman, and Sally w: jdevil—"not,” says the doctor immorai devil, but rather a mischie ous imp, one of that kind which we might imagine would take pleasure in jthwarting the aspirations of hu manity.” Two of these personalities had no knowledge of the third except by 1 ference, or at second hand. Miss Sally had knowledge of the lives of the others, and in the period of sev- eral years during which she had rea- 8 th of the heap" she led Dr, Prince and lhis complex patient a lively dance As illustrating the mental differ- |ences between the personalities undey consideration, Dr. Prince notes that while Miss Beauchamp read French easily, Saliy knew only a few words. He himself used Frencii to convey Ont of the personalities a : q Tufts College, who fifteen years ago | diseases, fi distinct personalities, that of her nor- | young woman, who wrote beautiful | letters, read good bocks and had am- | |that cf four-year-old Polly, “who! The patient changed back and | descfibed by him most intimately in| Wil of yesterday among h | Ace: of White & C ‘ized her ambitions to be “on the top| FOND GO ~ GIRL OF TWO PERSONALITIES, OND GOODNIGHT SILGRLARI MADE NORMAL BY HYPNOSIS + OTHER INFANT, and Polly in Ohio Will Survival of the Lovely Character and Total Eradication of the Igno- rant, Unlovely Alternate. wrote her dairy in shorthand so that Sally should not read’ it. Sally smoked cigarettes because stance of dual personality, the case ‘of|she knew Miss Beauchamp detested them, he made engagements and “suggested” ‘hat one of her sister personalitigs keep them. At one time, after Miss Beauchamp had O., reaches a successful termination! carelessly lost some money, she took charge of B L's pocketbook, making her whimsical allowances of postage stamps and a few cents at a time in the attending psychologist, Dr. H. H.| change. In all things Sally spoke Goddard, the satisfactory result will| and acted as an impulsive child. Yet on two occ Beauchamp’ Dr. Prine wons she saved Miss life . specialist in nervous ly succeeded in curing this case of “multiple personality. working like Dr.. Goddard, through , hypnotic suggestion. Out of various fragmentary ind hypnotic ,identities, There is a most interesting parallel the qualities were finally assorted and synthesized which went to make up the genuine, ori personality, Both details of the case and the process of the cure were described by Dr. Prince in “The Dissociation of a Personality,” published in 1906. sae eg EES GUN AT BREAST, COP’S PUNCH PUT HIM OUT Landed on Jaw of Special Officer, Who Took the Count. Charges of violating the liquor law, attempted assault on an officer and carrying a revolver without a permit were made against Edward. Caulfield, special officer of the Erie Railroad, f No. 1141 Willoughby Avenue, rooklyn, to-day, Policenian Charles Francis told Magistrate Brown in Fifth Avenue Court that he found the prisoner surrounded by a crowd on the 36th Street station of the Fourth Avenue subway last night. Francis said Caulfleld sho him and said “get out of here." The policeman, who in plain clothes, showed Mis shield and in return, it {9 charged, the prisoner drew a revol- ver and placed it against Francis's breast, Caulfield was laid out with punch on the jaw. In court to-day he sald he had just been sworn in as a State trooper, He pleaded not guilty und was held jn $2,500 bail for examination. ——— WHITTLESEY’S MOTHER GETS HIS WAR MEDALS at Bal jon Com- mander Found in His Law Office. The will of Lieut. Col. Charles W. | Whittlesey, commander of the “Lost from | Battalion,” who disappeared a Havana bound steam p at 5 hip, was found pers in the of- se, lawyers, No. 14 Wall Street. Col. Whittlesey disposes of his property and war relics in one typewritten page phe German order de render 0 sost Battalion” | to Capt, Georgs McMurtry. The of the Legion of Honor is to his former law partner, Pruyn. The remainder nanding the sur ineliaing the ¢ Medal of Honor, is left to other ve will names Mr. Pruyn as ex TRIANGLE, [ee}iors solution! on_ the. death of “If ths were not a serious psycho-| Whittlesey was passed last ovenir logical, study," writes the doctor, \ meeting of the Board of Governors might feei tempted to call this volume | tie Willams College Club, of which ‘The Saint, the Woman and th.|col- Whitttesey was a member. Reet ee ESS BOOZE STILL EXPLODES, DOES $25,000 DAMAGE | { Wrecks Top Floor of Bing- hamton Building. BINGHAMTON, N, Y., Dec. 3.—The explosion of what is slieged to have | been a still for the manufacture of quor wrecked the top floor of 4 State Mreet business block uid caused dam- age estimated at $25.6 at inidnight, The explosion was followed b. burs’ of flame which sent guests in an adja cent hotel to the et Wien the Sremen fought their way to tite centre f the fire they founu, it is nileged. eighty-five barr reis of alcohol, 1 s of 1 live ha \ bags of sugar ane TWOMEN KILLED GUIDE BEAUVAIS TOBE WITNESS IN si AS “BOOTLEG” CAR HTS AMBULANE Seven Others, Including Nurse Announcement Made in Mont- real After He Meets Mr Stillman’s Counsel. and Two Women Patients, Injured at Norwalk. NORWALK, Conn., Dec. 3.—George Brooklyn were killed and three women and four men injured when an auto- day afternoon, Dr, David W. McFarland, and Dil- nurse and two patients from New York to his sanitarium. The nurse, Miss Peggy Bain, and the patients, Miss Sarah Schuyler and Mrs. John} Waldman, are in the Norwalk Hos- pital, cut and bruised, but not sert- ously: hurt, The police say the car which hit Dr. MeFarland’s machine was driven by Harry Ferguson of Brooklyn. Others in it besides Zacherino were Angelo Mace, a Westport saloon- keeper, whose place has been raided by Prohibition enforcement authorl- ties several times; Fred Roberto, a Norwalk jitney driver who is under indictment for carrying concealed weapons and who has been accused of bootlegging by the police, and Elia Natolitanio of Norwalk. Mace and Ferguson have been arrested, charged with reckless driving. In the car, the police said, they found only a quart N CASE MONTREAL, W. Dilworth and John Zacherino of | Beauvais ‘will Stillman be a witness authoritatively stated to-day. He is now here to meet Attorneys Brennan and Mack with a mobile used as an ambulance was| mass of evidence collected in behalf of struck by an alleged bootlegging car a Stillman ent lay ; _ [evidence to offset the stories told by Ui eieons acon next hake yuater the banker's witnesses concerning the doings of Mrs, Stillman and Beauvals The ambulance auto is owned by|in the Stillman camp. “I'm gambling now,” he remarked worth, his assistant, was taking a|'-day in his first interview since he actively entered the case. gamble—and game.” not a conventional He talked simultaneously AS special Investt- gator for Mrs. Stillman he was anx- lous, eager to discuss his work, but legal circumstances forbade anything philosopher talked of life; as promoter, of newest business schemes; as gulde, of sports As co-respondent he was, for the most part, silent, but suppresséd anger of the banker and his counsel, crept into his soft tones. “James Stillman, not dare show (the North Wecds setting of the alleged romance of Beauva!s and Mrs. “They never saw him there, but they have heard of the case. view, this, in his many roles, but Anse” odor of Iquor was noticeable all over the machine. died: before how the accident police were told vecurred, but the in which] one of his interviewers asked him | going | he was fond of the Stiliman children, license number indicates it was owned part- 40|he answered finally. “What sort of a like pent up bloodhounds,” When a reporter pointed out the popular misconception of Beauvais were badly] himself as a raccoon capped woods- are expected to recover.| man, he smiled, puffed at his cigar- he could tell| ette and remarked, “Every one In life isa guide. We are all guides.” He was visibly embarrassed when His dark face flushed, he shifted in his chair. eel “Not only the Stillman children, Woodhull Street, Brooklyn, who says|Mman js he who 1s not fond of children? he had a-partner tn the ownership A orate Cone have met c Beauvais talked of his business, his Now he was engaged inoting resorts and Country Clubs, Ltd., a corporation that wouid estab- lish’a chain of country clubs through Canada for American’ whose name sounded like Zacherino | but whose business and address’ he| life. did not know. ——— WIDOW SEEKS ESTATE Beneficiary in Booth’sn Will Must Explain Bequest was directed to-day in an order made by Surrogate John P. Cohalan to testify as to her knowledge of the wi!l| hag hurt him, made by Edwin A. Booth, leaving to her | compelled all his estate, to the exclusion of his|ance business. widow, Mrs. Mary Catherine Booth, their son, Chester 8. Booth of No. Harper Avenue, Chicago, and their daugater, Mrs. Marion Booth Thompson of No, 263 Layton Street, Atlanta, Ga. of the will. Mrs, Booth de abandoned her for and lived with her up to th ri] time of his she charges. Charles Green Smith, a lawyer of No, 68 William Street, who drew the | He has already acquired miles of property Quebec for this purpose. bave a staff of guides. “They are easy to get, Meanwhile he Is wr ary’ Jane Sexton of Leonia, | Mshing and hunting, producing mov- Mrs, Mary’ Jane Sexton of Leon's.) ine pictures showing just how trout collides with the hook, The publicity of the Stillman case Recause of it he was retire from the But he ts optimistic He had views of New York He lived there five years, ~ LEFT ANOTHER WOMAN | 100 Ing articles on 3 | nice city but— discontented. things to see. They want everything. Back in the woods life Is simple and The order calls also for the production] people are happier. Of his recent trip he would say that the woodsmen ex her late husband | little Mrs, Saxton in 1s0y|Pivermen were angry at the banker, : Stillman a GRANTED ANNULMENT Playing with a in her home, No.| the Long Island College Hopital in se denied taat undue Influence wat! 9 vise mins Was Married in July a ~ —— | to Long Inland Youth, cnaen ee _ HAN STICK-| 41, interlocutory decree of annulment | was to-day granted by Supreme Court tice Kelby in Brooklyn to Mra. Avie astman, sixteen years old, of No nd Avenue, Brooklyn, from her Rastman, twenty-two kville Center, Le 1 avoording to the tes ) last, Bi ot afte 460 ¢ |hasband, Nelsor vars old The tino: th went to the cere DATE FOR WEDDING OF MISS DAVISON IS SET AT JAN. 3 Invitations Sent Out for Ceremony at St. John’s Chapel, Locust Point, L. 1. Mr. and Mrs, Henty P. Davison of No, 690 Park Avenue yesterday {sued in- vitdtions for the wedding of their daugh- ter, Miss Alice Trubee Davison, and Artemus L. Gates of Clinton, In. It will take place at 3.45 P. M., Jan. in St. John's Chapel, Locust Valley, L. 1, and will be followed by a recption at Pea- cock Point, Mr. Davison's country place vaere. Miss Davison was introduced to society lwo years ago. Mr. Gates waa a class- wate of her brother Frederick ‘Trubee Davison at Yale, and now ts connected with the New York Trust Company, paneliaseSazeaa HANNA'S HORSES VALUED AT $10,025 osed of at Private Sale ecutors May Make Settle- ment With Miss Evans, Official appraisal shows the value of the horses and stable equipment left by the late Daniel R. Hanna was $10,025, according to a report made by Kenneth C. Cole and Charles Pratt, filed with Surrogate Slater at White Plains this morning, Mr. Hanna owned twenty-five horses. Some were appraised at $100 and §250 euch, white otiers were yalued be- tween $400 and $1,000 each, One pair of black bays, Teddy and Judge, were appraised at $1,000 cach, All the horses will be sold at private sale, No contest papers have been filed by counsel fcr Miss June Avis Evans, who was mentioned in the marginal notes in the will of Mr. Hanna, which he blotted ovt. It Is understood that the executors of the will are arrang- ing to make a settlement with Miss Evans. eer BETTER CAR SERVICE OR FREE TRANSFERS Jersey City and Hoboken Trolley Patrons Get Rellef, Trolley patrons in Jersey City and West Hoboken have been granted relief in orders issued to-day by the Public Utility Commission in Trenton. Recently In affecting economies the company dis- continued Its belt line cars at the Summit Avenue tube station detween 1 and 5 o'clock in the morning. The commission ordered the company either to resume through service south of this point or to give free transfers to passengers beyond. An additional transfer, upon payment of the regular transfer charge, was ordered installed to the Montgomery and other lines just as if the through cars were run The commission's other order directed the company to issue free transfers at Courtlant Street and Summit Avenue, West Hoboken, or to run cars to the end of that line at all times. Since March the company has bees running a shuttle service and chacging two cents for w transfer beyond that point pee TS RL GERMAN THEATRES DO TREMENDOUS BUSINESS Salaries Raised 10 and 15 Tim ‘The theatre business is so good in Germany the managers can't raise the price of admission high enougn ty turn away thelr patrons,” Simeon Gest, brother of Morris Gest, the theatrical producer, sald to-day on his return from Europe. Mr. Gest was one of 34 first class passengers aboard the George Washington, which came from Bremen, Cherbourg and Southampton with 186} aboard “The price of adinission was raised fifteen times and the actors’ salaries ton times in the five months I was there,” Mr. Gest went on. "Long lines wait for admission to all the movies and theatres, although the price of gen- tral admission is 120 marks eae PIVOROR FoR S. CHISHOLM, BANK CLERK HELD FOR $29,000 THEFT N BOOTLEG PLOT Brenner Says He Was Catspvw for Fleischman, His Partner, in Liquor Deals. Harry Brenner a bookkeeper in the Broadway Central Bank, No, 2784 Broadway, and Jacob Fleischman, @ depositor in the banf, living at No. 311 Weet 116th Street were held im _ $15,000 bail each on a charge of grand ¢ — larcehy to-day following their arrest last night. Brenner according to his story had been used as a satepaw by. Fleischman in obtaining $29,000 from the bank, Brenner says Fleischman explained to him how easy it would be for them both to make some money if Fleisch- man's credit at the bank was such he could. use money in buying and sell+ ~ ing liquor at 100 per cent. profit, They were to divide the profits. Fleischman had an account at th Greenwich Bank also. Both accounts, were small, It is charged he dre' | checks for from $2,000 to depoata the Broadway Central and deposi them for collection at the Greenwich” ™ Bank. When they reached the Broadway Central, Brenner, as bOk> — keeper, approved them, Th it ia charged he deducted the "mount from some large account { | make his books balance. 4 week ago Brenner says he be- came convinced that Fleischman was “double-crossing” him, The $29,000 had been withdrawn, there were m0 profits and the money which he says Fleischman was to put back and © square things was not forthcoming, It was then he confessed to officers of the bank, Brenner was bonded for $100,000 by the Fidelity and Dew posit Company of Maryland. Ite representative was called in, For a week Brenner was kept at the bank and in a hotel waiting to hear from Fleischman. He heard from him yesterday and made an en= gagement to meet him at 838d Street and First Avenue, When they met Fleischman said: jomething ts wrong; I can feel it. You better beat it.” Brenner walked away and Detee- tives Love and Fitzpatrick of the West 100th Street Station, with the Fidelity Company agent, made the arrest : Fleischman said he had $18,000 um deposit ijfvarious banks and if give a chance would make good, The spe~ cifie charge is the larceny of $3,000, omratenneteicasia THE PEOPLE’S CHORUS IN SPECIAL CONCERT 7, and Money ton Work, The People's Chorus of New York, which did extraordinary work during the war under the name of People’s Liberty Chorus, will give @ special con- cert in the Town Hall next Thursday evening to raise money for extension work it will be a notable programme, cluding special numbers by May »@t son of the Metropolitan Opera 4 pany, Anna Welch, harpist, and John Freund, who will’ deliver an address: The advanced unit of the chorus, with sing several numbers. 5 ‘The organization was started in Janu= ary, 1916, by L. Camilleri and a come At Town Goes Into Ext |inittee. Including Mrs, Fredertels Cone, Miss Caroline B. Dow, Mrs. © Harkness Flagier, Mra. B. R, Ly | Mrs, Edward 5. Harkness, Miss Heroy, Mrs, Otto Kahn, | Mra, Lythgoe, Mrs. Dunlevy Milbank, Mi William Fellowes Morgan, Mrs. Chi R. ytillman, Mrs. Edward ‘T. HL mage and Miss Edith L, Jardine, ‘Nhe chorus has given ‘concerts for men blinded in battle, for Liberty Loam campaigns, for the Red Cross, at meme~ rial services, at the Altar and most recently of ali at the tion to Marshal Foch at th drome, <> ‘ DROPS DEAD ON WAY TO WORK, — Thomas Hill, 61, a foreman employed by on rs LAID OPP. yy The loft _had be s re Two stills were found # » gas | pending invest ‘ auilo; are ‘ine | porta.” The names wer veatigating, no further details made | hls daughter told him in the Sutherland Forwarding Com= Mrs. Edna Hazel Chisholm of No dust Sth Street, Brooklyn, was to- |Eany~ No. 41 Henry Btrest, Brooklvms , dropped dead at Fourteenth Sireet and ranted an interlocutory deerme of | Vinthe a ve: Manhattan vale © by Supre Court Justice: « Mr Hill lived at No. 170¢ Brooklyn, from Robert U.|Forty-elehth Street, Rrooklyn. ay Chishoim, of No. 2378 Bedford Avenue, on his way to Pier 18 N. They were married on June 12, 1912, ..a:a0 of u cans employed ty and seperated three months later, pany, hr

Other pages from this issue: