The evening world. Newspaper, March 16, 1922, Page 2

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sj a M i ‘ prosperous have » others, though, have less than ¥ per cent. invested age. : Noting against “Bloomfield, Dav h, Ferris, Gibbs, Pitcher, Robinson, Thompson, Towner, Al Wiswall, Not voting: anaugh, Lockwood. This makes twelve bil! A have been passed in the Senate out of the Lockwood Com: gramme of seventeen, Two have al- really been passed by the Assembly. The others are: Giving the option to | companies to erect ter tending the Rent Laws to Feb return of jury fee 1924; emption for new bulldi torent actions; provid ten statements by cour for dismissal of indictments. With regard to the rest of the pro- posed measures, that 1m weit of assistance n proceedings is on the Senate this Hewitt, Knight, Swift, Thayer, —— 6 ete mee ae ener > res = OOOTLEBUERS in bond an bil! enport, ton, Whitley, Draper, Kav- 8 in all woich mittee’s pro- ife Insurance nements; ¢X= 16, tax ex- ngs; defense ng for writ t of reasons Government Bran nodifying the forect Its Duty to Inquire sure alen- N INCOME REPORTS FOR TAX RETURNS Not Likely to Have Offenses Called to Attention of Other SURE OF THEIR GROUND. Tax Division Doesn't Feel It Is Money Is Made, THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAROH 16," 1932: THAT GHOST IS FIVE FEET TALL AND ITS NAME IS MARY ELLEN, SAYS DR. PRINCE IN HIS REPORT SAFE BL UP FOR VOTE BUT MAY NOTPA Cromwell Lays Protest Before Senators in Name of the Stock Exchange. By Arthur Griffith, . President of Dail Eireann. (Copyright, 1922, by United Press.) DUBLIN, March 16.—The treaty signed between Ireland, and Great Britain gives Ireland the substance, of freedom on this, the eve of St. Patrick’s Day. 4 The reality of this is already ap- parent. The Provisional Government of the Irish Free State is taking con~ trol of all departments of Irish gov- ernment, and an Jrish army occupies berracks and rongholds hitherto ches. (From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) ALBANY, March 16.—The Katlin Blue Sky Bill, which would regulate stockbrokers and promoters of Broad and Wall Street, is scheduled for final How KATLIN BLUE SKY. Seen Legh lima cdl Thanks People Here for Great Support Which Has Aided So Much in Gaining Freedom. Irigh people henceforth: will govern {their own country and the-frish na- tion takés its-place among the nations gt the world, ‘ Ireland ia freed from a foreign gov- ernment that brought her nothingeout ruin and .now concentrates upon building up her natural strength and seouting the welfare of all her people. A year ago to-day Ireland was in the grip of a terror. ‘That is now ended. ‘On this eve of our national feast day we are happy to express to the American peoplé our appreciation of the.great support which they have at all times ‘given us, and which was so Cet; A¢-are the rate mnking bill and passage to-day, but whether it will go] held only by the English. lacealp: inefrimestal in, bringiak ts the State Trade Commission ills. B . eee cation, Tt fas tech kadar |, IN € feW wonthe aa election Will {ho téoeat we patted: The bill giving the right to appeal y David Lawrence. st endcin Ad Bieall€ toes Wie caN take place, when the Irish peopte will| ‘the sincere friendship which has from dismissais of indictments, and] (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ajabe the Eastiasnant of ther telat R66 | canted garwoen ber'two soothes ein the one imposing prison sentences ning World.) vanced to third reading without op-bytate. continue in the future as in the past. for violation of tho Anti-Trust Law IASHINGTON; Maren 18) (Copy- position are in the Senate Cittes Commitee | went, 1922).—Bootlege handbook mour L. Cromwell, President of The remaining bill, which would] ja ’ compel insurance companies to ‘n- | makers, or any other class of the un- ew York Stock Exchange, had Vest. 40 per cent. of the assets in| Je*world paying a tax on incomes de- a statement by him placed on the i ortgages, was lost in the Senate |"Ved dy fraudulent or unlawful desks of the Senators. It says in ! March 14, by a vote of fice to reconsider it at time was given by Sen. so that not one of “Tt was expected that tl flad passed the Senate fight would be reported Gommittee when it mad Girly this morning. § that the others were 5 passage held back the report. To-day will see them reported o 3 MORE LOCKWOOD BILLS MAY PASS , IN SENATE TO-DAY Bmergency Messages Miller Looked For—To Act on Bonus Legislation. e ALBANY, + March thessages from Gov. Miller to-day are|teturn which disclosed that an in- expected to result in the passage by|@¥idual had been engaged in unlaw- tho, Senate of three more ing’ bills, One is intended to empower | forcement agency of the Government, the State Superintendent of Insurance] Which is a part of the Treasury De- 1 \regulate Insurance rates, another mortgages. °“The Assembly was expected to con- recommendations by Gov, Include the recodification of the Elec-| knowledge, for instance, of the sale o dom Law, the water power develop- Committee's bills has been killed 4 to 24. No-| crrenses cated ta the at eae ware | other branches of the Government or v Tolvert: | state authorities. ne bills which up to last out of Rules He its report 3ut the tact cheduled for nue, said Carl Mapes, 8 busy to do anything el course, if uny other depa the Government calls upon the income tax return of vidual or business, we are law to permit inspection.” There's another. obstacle, ut. sworn to by an individual, evidence? Doesn't the Fed From Gov. |tnortminate himsclt? have been threshed over ernment lawyers with the r Ini fu) pursuits, of the hous- It's true that the Prohib partment, could ask for any actions, But it is a matter Miller. They | evidence furnished by liquor illegally or any other ment programme and the Children’s] of existing law. Court and child welfare tie Davenport-Moore maternity and] sion is anxious to get us much revenue child hygiene bill also was expected to] as possible and does not feel its duty] mysterious occurrences. is to induire how any man makes no matter how be taken up. “The Senate was expected to dispose} his nd of most of the local measures stili/mate his business, the whole subject} tations. As for Harold Whidden, awaiting disposition, as s0ldier bonus legislation, to Administration matters, the Senate} anxious to talk. was further advanced than the Lower|one gains is that, despite earlier re- This was partly due to the|ports to the contrary, the income tax fact that the water power and child}returns are not as much a source of} night, Whidden possesses a pecullar welfare legislation had not been jn- House. twoduced In the Lower Ho making it necessary for It Senate's disposition of the matters. « The Senate passed the Whitcomb|so sure of their ground that they are| then his companion. bill to provide for the admission of }muking out their returns without fear Wotld War veterans into the Soldiers | of difficulty. and Sailors’ Home at Bat ure now goes to the Gov The Moore bill, to prohibit the of the national or State flag, standard, colors or shield on busine also was passed by the and sent to the Governor. ps SoReal UNGER PLEADS GUILTY TO THEFT OF $12,000 Semtence Deferred to Await Eight]; ),,, Indictments, Additional PHILADELPHIA, Marc! A. Unger, former As of the funds of the Evans tute of the University of pleaded guilty in Quarter to-day to an indictment with the theft of $12,000 Bentence was deferred enable the prosecution to additional indictments his fight on Mare! was said to be part of the mo securities valued at $190, havé been used by Unger to play stock «market, cieaveeentienanensias $20,000 ESTATE LEFT TO CHARITY BY DOMESTIC Syracuse Woman A Twelve Rel istant to Unger cashed « check for $10,000 measures. Inasmuch as the lacome money, well as the}of detecting fraud is one With respect} ofMicials here are not ouse, thereby | would be. toawait the} There is reason is difficult ppowed their business though it 1 “commissions, h. The meas- ernor, use 8 stationery, Upper House tax forms are broad enough and handbook maker It will immediately 1 why a man who makes ii through illicit means shoul: income taxes. h 16,—Walter ‘Treasurer Dental Ingu- records of the its depositors. ernment — can or not by examination of charging concerns which may of the funds. | goods to him. Even cast for a week to Co Present eight {tons It Is contended, can the Grand but was not made public. ernment learned that vidual had larg ablo but had made out no i return. * Inquiry disclosed h 1. ‘The sum and ged to the 90 al was assured that SYRACUSE, March 16.—Employed nade such a reques Government was not er. the @reqter part of her life aslour the matter to the a domestic, Mrs. Ellen M. Collins,| the State in question. who died here recently at the age] tate of eighty, left an estate valued at} The Government learne: more than 20,000. Gifts of $100 each are made in the whl to cach of two sisters of charity} return for him and invited him to] The burns ure never found on the ny of 83 an ordinarily mild gentleman became “I want Mrs, Brunen to go over all Mitached to St. Patrick's Parachial| make such deductions as ne felt he| Wallpeper Higher than the reach of| rom ireancnigee een Water strangely imperative and like another |her story again. I'd like to know how School here. Seve charities also | Was entitled to have.. He asked for|® person five feet tall, which is the| Sounds were not from ordinary] person, the writing claiming that the |she distinguished the report of the are remembered in the bequests, |no deductions, The Government pre-| height of a girl in the family. Over} causes, quite credible. For reasons | communicator caused the fires, which |shotgun, which she told La postaaed twelve relatives receiving but small] sented its bill for taxes due and tho]@e bed which fills one end of the} yiioh F cannot here give in detail, I} of course he might have done through | like the discharge of a torpedo ie e sums individual in question pald it with-}foom they are never higher than|ogarg the tactual sensations which| the girl, according to the theory | Pennsylvania tracks, from the at “a —_—_—>__—_ out a whimper-—and that's the last}#¥eh @ person kneeling could reach | poth had as effects upon thelr con- | of obsession. and haw long she waited before she OLD POLICE STATION TO BE SCHOOL ANNEX was heard of the case. means are not likely to have ‘Che primary Yunction of the in- come tax division ig to, collect reve- Internal Revenue, to-day, ‘and to see to it that proper returns are made for all income recelved. We are far *« in the way of prosecution, an incomé tax return, made out and stitution give a man the right not to These points they are considerably in doubt what wishes, and if It suspected that an in- ‘peks to establish < State Board and/qividual was engaged in violating the thé: other to mandate the insurance] Prohibition laws, careful watch could companies to invest in real estate| be kept for evidence of further trans- doubt whether the Income tax return ‘ar with the Senate in the passage wf| showing a lump of past transactions ef least three measures wifich embody | would be of any value without further] their fifteen-year-old foster daugh- persons’ who had particularly But the impression | roll, the detective, who were slapped information as it was thought they Just how they describe of late. Such was demonstrably the . Avilda H. Kreye) The letter, which was published e to believe that yuseve ay aie remoge pad condition of Esther Cox, around whom Lda ale reverand her} sterday after Mrs, ‘Elizabeth many bootleggers, for example, are] a wire, slapping firs! similar phenomena in the great ‘Am- Mrs. Kreyer's husband, Burton ¥F,| Jeschke of Cary, Ill, to whom. it had herst mystery’ revolved. Kreyer, inherited an estate from his|pbeen written, made it public through This, in a wuntshell, is the solu- “If the views of the late Dr. Hy-|fnther in Germany, amounting to|the prosecuting attorney of Philadel- slop, who amassed considerable ma- | $80,000. It is alleged he deserted his phia, would not be accepted as evi- the words|mystery, as arrived at by Dr. Wal- roker'’ and kindred |ter F. Prince of New York, Secre- terns now contained in the income tary of the American Institute for mosf of the activities of the bootlegger tu evade paying income taxes. fi . » is a check upon failure to pay|ENen was not “morally culpable” The Government has|for the part she played, as she was the right to compel banks to produce lin -“an altered state of consclous- whether an individual had any money One of the most interesting cases of Income tax evasion occurred recently a certain indi- sums of money avall- af : Brunen and individual feared making out a return | fires cannot be true unless the waves] The experiences were unsuggested by | resident of Illinois ote Lie, alleged ee heer Rerween vane pias anatcrd NAN EbON akteg, onsy, | are endowed with intelligence . to any"peetieus-teports, Paella by | indentednertne obligations exphad fof which his life was threatened. thought that if he told spelen know just when people are in the heey ieown eee erent through the operation of the Illinois} Mr. Parker has the namnte of many = income State ition yim ; with a dislike er ’ statute of Imitations . Mr. Leiter|circus people, given by Brunen in his income the State authorities might | Bouse; W! for the UPPEF| was less wind on that night than on] fletitied that he was born in Chicagolsome of the many conversations the possibly find it out and prosecute him. attention He atill hesi- deposits aggregated $500,000 and pro- ceeded to make out his income their part: tention of p “The amendments to the bill ef- fectually deprive the Exchange of ‘the power to exercise discipline over its members, or to prevent the improper use of ite quotations, and are direct- ly in the interests of the dishonest trader and the bucket shops. The sea eee eg toit of <i erate a (Continued From First Page.) power of the Exchange over its mem-|travets, including performers, fakit bers and over its quotations is the} 04 capita?“ (ORRvenNE strongest factor in preventing dis-| Peddlers, © “grifters.” : honest dealings, ticket takers, wagon drivers, ring us to 8 . * any tndl- “They ‘forbid the Exchange to|supernumeraries, snake charmers and mca amend its constitution, by-laws or] concessionaires, Reports from some vnc aus Rta ee c tives are coming in to- however, the Superintendent of Banks. The|% the detective ie day. Prosecuting Attorney, Kelsey and Chief of County Detectives Parker will have another interview to-day with Mrs. Doris Brunen, the widow, and her stepdaughter, Hazel, to learn if they rented a post office box sev- eral weeks ago at Palmyra, three miles from Riverside, in the name of Dolan. According to information which came to the authorities, two women answering to the description of Mrs, Brunen and her stepdaughter rented the box of Postmaster Willtam H. Cook at Palmyra and went there every day for mail, C. Morrts’Beck, Chief of Police of Palmyra, who was shown the pictures of the couple, sald they looked like the women he had often secn in Palmyra walking toward the post office and later walking back in the direction of Riverside. Both Mrs. Brunen and her step- daughter recognize the gravity of the situation caused by the letter written by Brunen to his sister, in which he sald he feared his wife. Neither, however, appears to be worried, Hazel reiterated to-day her assertion of yes- terday that hereafter statements for the family must come from their at- torney, Walter S. Keown of Camden. “My mother is in bed,” said Hazel. “Tm going to stick to her, All will be cleared up in time, for both of, us to go out with the show, which. Koes on the road April 20. Harry Mohr, my uncle, will be in charge of it.. We are innocent. Father was subject to fits of passion. His letter to my aunt was a pack of lies,” delay necessary to obtain such con- sent would many times in the past have resulted in disastrous panics. “On behalf of the New York Stock Exchange I protest against the bill itself and against its passage with- out proper publicity or the opportun- ity on the part of the members of the Exchange to be heard," District Attorney Banton made im- mediate reply to Mr. Cromwell as follows; “The words evidently are the words of Mr. Milburn. Not a single criti- cism of the bill which is contained in the statement is well founded. “The Consolidated Exchange and the Curb Market urged this Legis- lature to pass such @ measure. “This bill will put brokers on the same footing as bankers and insur- ance companies are now placed. The books of the brokers will be open to the public officers and may be used in Prosecution just as the books of bank- ers and insurance companies now may be used. This is not the case at present. “The crimes of ‘bucketing,’ ‘trad- ing against orders’ and making ‘wash sales’ are almost impossible of proof except by the books of the brokers."" pate es eaceicle DESERTED WIFE CAN'T ~ DRAW CASH HUBBY LEFT What's Left of Trust Fund Is in Chinese Bonds, Application was made to-day before Justice Newburger by Oscar L. Gubel- man, banker and broker, to be relieved of the trusteeship of one-fifth of an es- Would constitute eral Con- by Gov- ‘sult that come tax MACDONALD. * five feet tall secretively performed the acts as opportunity offered. “The various witnesse: were un- doubtedly honest in believing that the acts could not have been thus per- formed, but my acquaintance with the errors of observation and of mem- ory on the part of intelligent per- sons dealing with a large number of détails in a matter quite new to them has often demonstrated that such testimony may be vitally in error. “For example, it was thought that @ cushion which, ‘some time before,’ had been put upstairs, was placed upon the bedstead downstairs by occult agency. But it appears that the next preceding fire was upstairs, making It likely that an opportunity was found in the interval to pring the cushion down. “But I am emphatically of the opinion that the girl men- tally culpable. She ts ceedingly young for her Mysterious Fires Started by Her, Possibly Prompted by Discarnate —_Intelligence— Radio Theory Discarded. HALIFAX, N. 8., March 16.—It of much | was the supernatural, all right. bat the supernatural working through bition en- returns it ¢| ter, Mary Ellen, that drove Mr. and violations} Mrs, Alex MacDonald from their lonely farm home in Caledonian t dlvi- \vevenue| Mills with a series of fires and other illegiti-] 80 much for, the original manifes- in which} the Halifax reporter, and P. O. Car- difficult to rouse her. able that she was the victim of al- tered states of consciousness, about which psychology has learned so much when they remained in the house a quality through which a psychic’ in- tion of the great Antigonish ghost wife and went to Europe with a French girl he brought to this country and in- troduced as his sister. When about to sail he made over one-fifth the estate in trust for his wife and childre ‘The trustee the liquid assets of the estate have been used up and the rest is in Chinese bonds that cannot be feallzed upon. He says Mrs. Kreyer Keeps pestering him for cash as she needs money badly. The court asked lawyers of both sides to agree upon an- other trustee, JOSEPH LEITER, SUED, SAYS CHICAGO IS‘HOME Statute of Limitations to Claim for #66,400, Three financiers, prominent in the Chicago “wheat pit’ and Wall Street, appeared before Justice Donnelly in Supreme Court to-day in lawsuits con- cerning notes, Joseph E. Hoadley ts suing Joseph Leiter for $604,400, while Walter Hoadley ts suing the same de- fendant for $76,000. Two @uestions for the jury to mine are whether Mr. Leiter was a to know, terial in support of them, are correct, this could be a case where a dis- carnate agency brought about the al- teration of personality and performed the acts through the girl. If Thomp- son, in the case reported at length by the American Society of Psychica! Research, having no experience in painting and suddenly acquiring a technique which was pronounced by an expert to be that of at least ten years’ experience and a style which experts said much resembled that of the deceased artist, Gifford, was really influericed by telepathic con- tact with the dead artist, it would be conceivable that the Antigonish case was aimilar although on a different line. ‘The experiences of Messrs, Whid- den and Carroll, when at the house way of hearing strange sounds as of, footsteps, and feeling tactual sensa- tions, aré supported as supernormal experiences of some kind by other cases investigated at length by experte and which fevealed no psychical causes, dence in court, according to Prose- cutor Kelsey. In the interview with Mrs.. Brunen and Hazel to-day the authorities will ask if ,‘Snooky,"’ the bulldog which ordinarily watches the house from:a kennel just ‘under the kitchen win- dow through which a twelve-guage shot gun was fired to kill ‘tHonest’’ Jotm Brunen, was locked in the cel- lar last Friday, the might of the mur- der. 0 ‘The authorities have had only two brief interviews with the women and in neither have they obtainedefull de- tails from Mrs. Brunen of her ver- sion of the-quarrels her husband al- leged in his letter to his sister, and also in conversations with Mr. Par- ker, he had had with her because she “ran around with men'’ and taught Hazel “nothing but a lot of the fast life."* According to Mrs. Brunen and her brother, Harry Mohr, Detective Par- ker's detectives will find that many of the former associates of the cireus they are interviewing will ‘tell of bit- h to caver Psychic Research, who spent sev eral days in the MacDonald house. These conclusions are embodied in asked}, 5,000 word report which Dr. his money) Prince has given te a waiting world, e eres The report emphasizes that Mary 0 Similarly, ascertain ness” and didn't realize what she was doing. And evidence the scien- the books|tist found supports the theory that have sold| “this altered state was brought 1) transac-| bout by a discarnate intelligence,” be traced. |) 5 aeclares. But let him tell the story, as he does in these extracts from his re- port: “The wireless wave theory that has been advanced to account for the Pleads The Gov- income tax pter- that the several occasions when I and other persons were in the house. There was wind during the night which I passed alone in the house and I examined the loose board which some one sug- gested vibrated and there was no movement or sound, = + “My own personal study of a series of raps and other sounds whi¢h Jasted for months in my own hduse make! part of the room walls; with a re- unless the} pugnance to having persons see them the Fed! break out tnto flames, and with abli. ot ity to transport cushions trom one room to another and the like. “The fires were undoubtedly set by human hands, judging by the un- mistakable signs left in the house. in 1868 and had Always voted and paid latter had with him in which he had his taxes in Illinots. told his fear of losing his life. “I know more about this case and what led up to it than I have told,” said Mr, Parker. m going to get tho murderer. I'm going to get the man who fired the shot through the window, and if he was hired by any- body to'do it, I'll get that person, too. the fact that during my stay at the house an experiment which I per- formed, partly to pass away the time, resulted in a sudden and volcanic outbreak of automatic writing on the part of Mr. Whidden, during which d that his tax and in muddy or snowy weather one would not wish to stand on the bed, “Other slightly higher places on were downstairs and found her hus bend's body. I'd like to have her re- peat also the story of seeing two men ‘phe fact of automatic writing and ite contents also are not evidence for or against the theory, but it ts a fact sciousness not of the usual kind, and due te causes little understood. Incidentally, the States of Jnion “This new outbreak wa \- — may inspect Federal income tax re. [the woodwork were always set on sistent with the theory that the girl that many such writings contain clear | jump into an automobile driven by u La Selle Street Building to Be Al-|turns, but for the purpose only of] Fe Py Pieces of cloth, which could) wag prompted by a discarnate agency | evidence, whether of spirit communi. | third man past her hee as she came tered at Cont of $10,000, checking up income taxes duc them. |Casily pave Dech tossed in @ recess} ehich now found a new outlet owing|oation or of telepathy, which em-jdownstalrs. We could find no evi- The La Salle Street Police Station, [It 18 not considered Mkely that the|Qrer round the fragments of a glove,{t? ® Peculiar quality residing in one| braces the world like @ system of |dence of tha ous aetanae formerly Une Weat 26th Breet Station, | 22° tax divisions of any State] "*h\tithed, and in. the midst o¢/of the men, probably Mr, Whiddeo, |telegraph wires. This is a plain] It was indicated Me Oy asain, Peo tad terrence) seandonma by iF would seek Information for one pur- them a match, where it could not which quality has been given the] statement of the logical issue; but it Dr. Berne! Hank ve n Veport of ay | Dag oh eee iright, was to-day |ROme “nd use It for another, though|yaye peen prior to the fire, nor have | Byseble- In that case Mr. Carroll}is interesting to note that while this] will be aske on Re tea ikea he Ben ee einetrd Of Kducation | {tis is within Cio realm of possibility. }y0cq placed there after its extin. | algo heard and felt because he was|writing came unexpectedly to Mr. {lone Brunen a will ‘be uived us a publié school | The factris the-dnternal revenue | cuishment. The fires avoided start-| With Mr. Whidden, who was the | whidden, four succeeding attempts |arrived. is waiting for word annex agenis want all the ineome they can} ig" pefore witnesses and avoided all {human wire, 80 to speak, through | when his mind was full of expectation| Mr. Farker also is wating fo! word The Sinking Fund Commission gra collect. Other agencies of the lawl darts of the dining room and perior | whieh the forces or influence, whether | resulted in not a single word, which |from other cities Satan tonnal the request of the Board of Edués are obligated to detect and prosecute |¥ipible from the meeting place In the{@@ Unknown physical one or some|{s not quite what we would expect of |mesrages yesterday to Die A Tan for the building. This was done after | fraud and law breaking. There is no|yitchen. other, passed, I have known other| the subconscious. cook with the cirous, or Ab. Meorneyy re Coen nee § build Viegat comptiision upon a F ‘An odorless, inflammabte liquid {cases where persons shared tn the| °s ain myself not yet convinced of ad pen discharged by Bruen big. Fon Baniant as fiver to report violations of a law af wag found in a boitie on a beom| witnessing of phenomena only wien] iy¢ doeir t was alleged, had thre pal Court Justices made « another d@ivision or department of | which produced the 1 effects particular person was present t —_ — him, 6 ch se against wffort to obtain ponsession of the struc- | thr nment- more thi re on’ wet paper ¢ ndicationa}am nat arguing for Uils theory, only | Vou Need Not Mure a Cold We svill make Pee ai? Wa only eee =o crea: Baemenn an See Ree een tb nsclénoe of uny citizen! were found poiniitig to the same stating It as ft ts inieitgently held. [40° ,, ) su : 0 {list symptoms ' § salle es ek atine leet Court, Alterations will cost $60,000, outside the Government, conclusion, namely, that « person! ‘But consistently with it would be ef = Cold coming on. —A@ want to question him op 4, ss Met GRILLED IN BRUNEN MURDER MYSTERY which we believe he could help us on."* ‘The detectives will also try to learn the identity of the man who ran out of the Brunen home and told report- ers he was the advance agent of the circus ‘and that Brunen “had made countless enemies."’ This man seemed bitter about: Brunen having written the letter to his sister. '" Mrs.: Jesehke, Brunen's sister, re- mained: in Philadelphia last night without coming to the Brunen home. She was stopping at the Y. M. C. A. No confirmation could be had of a re- port in Riverside that she is now tak- ing sides with Mra. Brunen, There are no detectives watching the Brunen house. Mrs. Brunen is in bed, attended by her stepdaughter, Hazel, and by Mrs. Emma Mohr, her mother. soe eee WOULDN'T LOCK UP MIXED. JURY FOR NIGHT Court Orde Discharge When Memibe: uldn't Aree. James E. Gorrigan, clerk of the Second District Court of Newark, N. J., decided that he would not take respon- sibility for keeping a mixed jury locked up over night in view of the discussion causéd by mixed Jurtes in St. Paul and MANIAC ATTEMPTS |— TO KILL FARMER Worker Goes Insane and Attacks Employer With Pitchfork— Rescued by Neighbors, John Kish, a farmhand em: by Frank Kee, whose farm is New Brunswick, N. J., suddenly be- came Insane to-day and attempted to kill his employer with a pitchfdiim Kee fought for his life for fifteen minutes until help arrived and the maniac was subdued. ‘The two men were in the barn whe Kee saw Kish rushing toward Uffa with the pitchfork. He ran, shoutin) for help. He kept out of reach | Kish by twisting and turning until] the latter stumbled and fell. Ki jumped on him and tried to get hold af the pitchfork. Mrs. Kee saw the struggle from the house and telephoned to the néat- est farm. Kee wus almost exhausted when neighboring farmers came to Nik assistance. Trooper Elmer Smith’ ¥f, the State Police took Kish to Somer, ville, The man had been employed by Kee for four years. 2 aaa NO PROOF OF INSANITY, °* BROKER IS DISCHARGED John M. Crow ix Held, However Steck Deal Complaint, John M. Gross, a broker of No. 869 Seventh Avenue, was arraigned in Cen» tre Street Court to-day charged with being insane and also on a charge of grand larceny, ‘The complainant was his brother-in-law, George F. Grant, a denier in ejectrical supplies at No 3% West 20th Street. Magistrate Oberwager dismissed the allegation of insanity and had It noted on the papers that there was not tha, slightest proof offered to sustain the charge. Gross said he had been incar~ cerated In an asylum and was twenty: five days getting out. The charge of grand larceny grew out of a wt transaction upon which he was held $1,000 bail for a hearing on Saturda: Trenton. So when the jury fn ‘the case of the Metropolitan Lumber Company ageinst Robert Hopkins, over $500 worth of brick, had not reported at 7 o'clock last night, he called up Judge Louis R. Frevad for instructions. vudge Freund upon being told that there was little probability that an agreement would be reached, discharged the jury. Three members were women, one being married, The jury debated the ‘ease for more than six hours, esti TRUST FUND OF $5,000 FOR HIS DOGS AND CATS A trust fund of $5,000, ‘the income of whieh is to ‘be devoted to the care of certain: dogs and cats as long as they live, is provided for in the will of the late Joseph Bolton, President of the Bronx Company, textile mills, who dicd at his home, No. 1601 Boston Road, on Feb. 16. The will was filed for pro- bate to-day. Mr, Bolton had several pet dogs and cats, The executors of the will are in- structed to take particular care of the animals and see that they are prop- erly: buried when they die. No. valuation is placed on the estate by the executors. The chief benef- ciartes ‘are the widow, Eleanor Bolton, and two. nephews, William H. and Thomas Bolton. Fifteen relatives are remembered, Five thousand dollars ts left tothe M. EB. Church of West Farms and $5,000 each to the rectors, warden and vestrymen of Grace Church in Vyse Avenue. oe SHANTUNG. EVACUATION TO BE BEGUN APRIL 1 ara to Head Commission to Carry It Out, ‘TOKIO, March 16.—Japanese evacu- ation of Shantung under the agreements reached at the Washington Conference will begin April 1, it was announced to- day ie Loves reported that Masanao Hani- nara, former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs and a delegate to the Washing- ton Conference, will be named head of a commission to put into effect the Hhantung agreements, eet geen CHILD WELFARE BILL PASSED BY ASSEMBLY Ask any bowler. All pins down the first ball—a lucky strike for him, The toasting process was a lucky strike for us, Buy a package of Lucky Strike ciga- rettes today and see why millions now pre- fer the toasted flavor, . WOLCOTT.—Suddenly of apoplexy, on Marclt 14, ALLEN J WOLOOTT, Superintendent of the Iron Steamboat Company, 48 years of age. Funeral servicea at his Inte residence, 385 Washington Avenue, Grantwood, N. J., Friday evening, March 17, at '@ o'elook. fnterment at Grove Church Cemetery, Saturday, March 18, 2 P, M. Take Bngles x from Fort Lee ferry, transfer £ Junction and get off at Divisles Btreet, then west to residence, ALBANY, March 16,—Child Welfare Boards are sought to be permitted to grant allowances to persons having the care of children whose mothers are dead, insane or ill by the Cotillo Bill, which was passed by the Assembly to- day. The measure now goes to the Governor. GAEKWAR PLACING HIS BARODA GODS ON SALE IN LONDON Remover of Difficulties, Siva and Giver of Food Arrive Prom Ina... Palace. LONDON, Feb. 27 (by mail).— Silver gods from the palace of the Gaekwar of Baroda have been brought to this country for sale. One of these is the four-armed, elephant-headed Ganesa, the God of Wisdom and Remover of Dif- ficulties. It stands seven and one half inches high and is jewelled with rubles, Other gods to We dis posed of are Kandeh Rao, the form of Siva, as worshipped in the land of the Mahrattas; Anna Purna, the Giver of od, and Surya, the Sun God, seated on a lotus, FUNERAL DIRECTOR! . Notice to Advertisers Advertising tye copy release the week day World World it received a P.M. the mteatton, COB only, receding. Mermit, and ip order of Teaelpt World “Ofee Coby containing engravings” tw taade by, The World mu be recdved by rertising type copy for the Su mee accions of Mths Sunday World” ft M. ‘Thursday: pr rt top and release must de received by 2 Pa BOR Friday. Copy containing engravings 1 by The World must be recived by Thi De ring b by 1 P. sre fey e P.M 2 will ‘be omitted "as conditions require, rigl the order of latest receipt and positive releamp order t Display provided above. earn discounts of a w

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