Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ALCOHOL FOUND “I STOMACHS OF PUSNED CUPL Mystery of Deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Deepens as Investigation Procceds, FUNERAL SERVICE HELD. (@bn Leaves With Mother’s Body for Burial in Andover, Mass. - District Attorney Ruston of Kings County continued to-day his investi- ion into the mystery attending the old Fremont M. Jackson and his sixty-nine-year-old wife in their apartment in the Hotel Margaret An- mex, Brooklyn, last Tuesday night. As the investigation progresses the District Attorney ts inclined to the theory that there was neither suicide nor murder in the case, but that Ahe deaths of the couple were due to Poisonous reaction in food or drink Which the couple had taken at dinner Tuesday evening. ‘Surgeons who performed the autopsy,’’ said the District Attorney, “reported to me that the brains of Mr. Jackson and his wife were in the condition known as ‘wet'—that is, the coverings of the brains were puffed and blistered. “This condition generally accom- panies death by alcoholic poisoning, but relatives and friends of Mr. Jack- gon say that he never drank intoxi- ing liquor and that Mrs. Jackson ly drank. Nevertheless, the sur- eons are of the opinion that there was alcohol in the stomach of each of+the victims, which might, of course, have been created by fermen- tation of food. “The report of the Medical Exam- iner’a chemist, Dr. Gettler, should clear up the case. We have ques- tioned everybody who appears to have mn in position to know anything it it and the mystery is as decp ag Mt was an hour after the bodies were found in the bathroom of their apartment.” Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brainard, of South Orange, N. J., and Mr. and Mrs, Winfield Warren, of Lawrence, Mass., called at the District Attorney's office to-dav and made statements to Assistant District Attorney John F. Hurley. Mrs. Brainard is a niece of Mr. Jackson's first wife and his only surviving relative. Mr. Warren is a son of Mrs. Jackson by*her first¢mar- riage and her only surviving relative. They were unable to throw any light on the tragedy. Examination of books and records found in a safe in an office Mr. Jackson maintained in an apartment house he owned at No. 405 West 53d Street yielded nothing of interest in the direction of clearing up the mys- tery. Bank books found in the apart- ment showed that Mrs. Jackson had @ account of $8,000 in a commercial t ik and one of $1,300 in a savings bank In Lawrence, Mass. With a Treatise on and How to Keep The busy presses of the Police De- partment print shop haye turned out another volume for police perusal by the publisher, Richard E. Enright, Police Commissioner. This is a much more weighty and important book than the previous efforts of the author called Don'ts." It is a volume of forty pages profusely illustrated indefatigable Detectives working under Capt. John McCloskey have been trying to] With cartoons by Sergt. James A, De- learn where Mr, and Mrs. Jackson} Milt, and halftone photographs. As- ate their last m@@l. The task appears} sociated and collaborating with the to be hopeless f§f, according to those who knew the djuple, they were ac- gustomed to roagjing all over the city id eating whqe they found them- at mealtig ips. neral servig® for them were held this aftern m Emmanuel Baptist Church in Tatayette Avenue, Brook- lyn, Mr. Warren will take the re- mains of his mother to South An- dover, Mass., for burial. Announce- ment of the place of burial of Mr. Jackson has not been made. eee tae LEWIS HERE TO END MINE PARLEY JAM Union Head Hopes To Break Deadlock and Settle Coal Strike, John L. Lewis, President of the United Mine Workers of America, arriving here to-day, said he had re- turned to New York “to break the deadlock in negotiations toward Jement of the anthracite oc ‘ike, He said the anth ite 1 m= “seemed to have frozen over, Dut expressed satisfaction over the Bituminous strike situation. In a conference with Philip Mur- Pay, Vice President of the union, Lewig reviewed progress made in ne- gotiations with the herd’ coal opera- tors and outlined a programme for ing up moves for a settlement strike. He exrycted to attend feasions of the joint swb-commit- tee on wag. contracts this afternoon, Commissioner in the productron of the latest literary effort were Patrick J, Murray, Chief Surgeon; Daniel J. Donovan, Deputy Chief Surgeon, and Edward Appel, D. D. §., Honorary Dental Surgeon of the Police Depart- ment. The title of the book Teeth—Healthy Body," and the con- tents are copyrighted. The frontis- plece is a cartoon of a grinning cop holding a toothbrush aloft in his right hand and darrying a nightstick and a tube of tooth paste in his left hand and a revolver in his belt. “Armed to the Teeth’ is the caption of the cartoon, under which is this advice: “The toothbrush and paste are as necessary for your protection as the nightstick and gun," In an unsigned foreword appears this passage: “There is no greater asset to a policeman than a good, sound set of teeth let to impress upon members of the force the importance of caring for their teeth and to make it plain to them that their health and strength in a large measure depends upon their ability to masticate their food prop- is ‘Healthy It is the purpose of this book- hen is shown a diagram depicting all the teeth and where they should be in the mouth and printed matter Céming here from Charlestown, W. [descriptive of them and their uses. Va., where he attended the opening In this brief description of the ‘of t . teeth," writes the author, “the rela- of the trial of miners charged with “murder and treason during the mareh on Mingo and Logan Counties, Mr Lewis described the sitnation « as “the most dramatic tn the States in a generation.” aren ETT RESIC tive importance of the several group? to each oth is clearly shown, and the simple arrangement whereby our teeth are apportioned, so us to prop erly function the biting, grasping and masticating of the foods we eat is in- deed one of the most pronounced of the erful handiworks of the Creator The cartoonist devotes a couple of pages to illustrating the danger of a Uni BROOK- Whe Rev. Dr. A. Bugene Bartlett, an- nounced to-day that Ne has resigned as pastor of All Souls Universalist Church, Ocean and Ditmas Avenues, Brooklyn, 3 to accept a Il to the First Congre The author advises the police read- gationalist Church, Pontiac, Mich. Dr.ors that gexms from infected teeth Bartlett has been pastor of All Souls] Suse many diseases of the lungs, Bees Since 014. heart, liver, kidneys, stomach, in- execeiebeeees estines and joints.‘ the SENTENCED TO DEATH cHare, |{stines and Jol pita Fak iat Ls ALBANY, April 28.—Thomas Kindlon, Gar nid tunktreaidante ad convicted T alleged anster, indirectly by an abscessed murder of Charles Juknos xndy int of this city, was renterced to- | 0th May to death in the clectric ehni A chapter is devoted to wisdom Bing Sing prison, duriny the vs ei, and there is @ diagram show dune 12, Juknos was killed on Nov, 2 when er was invaded by robber: ins a wisdom tooth buried in a jaw- bone in a horizontal position, ‘with “Armed to the Teeth’’ ‘The tooth-brush and paste are as necessary for your protection as the sight-stick and gua ° Some of the Illustrations in the T Commissioner Follows Up His Book of ‘Don’ts’ ' Tooth Mightier Than the Nightstick. - THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 19232. RNIN, OFFICER, BEAUTIFUL < ext Book Put Out for Police by Publisher Enright. the Molars of the Cops Them in Trim— The little possibility the author ex- plains, ‘“‘of it ever erupting in a nor- mal manner." Insanity, melancholia, lockjaw, neuralgia and earache may be due to a malposed or decayed wis- dom tooth, The police cartoonist comic series illustrating how t made a grouch out of a Sergeant and the change in his disposition when he had the offending teeth removed. There is a chapter devoted to ‘*The Grouc! in which the author states that ‘‘there is no classier grouch known than the fellow with rebellious teeth. DON'T BE A GROUCH," Considerable space is devoted to a description of Rigg's disease, its cause and treatment. Policemen are advised to use dental floss instead of toothpicks and how to use and take care of toothbrushes. The author advises against the use of Capt. C. C. O'Neill of the United Fruit steamer Esparta brought his vessel to her berth at Pier No. 15, East River, to-day and thereby ac- complished his 500th round trip voy- age between this port and those of the Central American republics. “T've sailed 2,000,000 miles in the thirty-eight years I've followed the sea,” he sald, ‘‘and the only thing I've ever learned to fear are the women. The old skipper—he is seventy- three years old—stood at the foot of the ladder leading to the bridge and waved his tanned hand in a gesture that took in his ship. “T'm only safe when I'm here,"” he went on, “And yet I have to take precautions, When I'm at sea I keep a master-at-arms on duty here at the foot of the ladder to keep the women of the bridge. ‘They're all flappers, and I've got to be wary. Twice in my life { almost got fouled Third Degree Vork to Hunt Teeth Troubles Latest ‘‘ Best Seller’’ by Publisher Enright ‘Ue Q Sir Ss “I CEWIMFTIDIES Figure 1 with drift clear, Capt. all the years he log name. I'v books, matrimony, penned it, and wonder what the ‘C’ stands for. “I've had a fine, free and 4 % RTL but In His Thirty-Eight Years at Sea, Skipper Has Feared Only Wome “They’re All Flappers,”’ Declares Capt. O’Neill, 73—Was Almost Vamped Twice. managed to That was enough. O'Neill declared he has signed quite forgotten “It's just C. O'Neill, the way sometimes 1 had, in ship's his first happy life aboard ship, ten years under suil and the United di nee twenty-eight under Fruit Line, that time I've never had a legal resi ashore and never voter heme has been on board shtiy steam And in all 1 with My an born in Ireland and went to sea firs. when I was ten years old. “Thrilling experiences? had enough to make books. phoons? halt Why I've 4 dozen But | couldn't for the life of me pick out the most thrilling. They're all in Ty- day's work. Sed serpents? Landiubbers are tks only ones who ever see those crit- ters. Waterspouts? They always keep out of the way of O'Neill's ships. Women? No, I've never had any ad- ventures with them, They're ull vamps, and that's where Capt, O'Neill rings for full speed ahead. de’ confirmed bachelor, I'm telling you." Five Men and 1,090 Bottles Vanish Through | Ship Keyhole at Pier Booze Seized on Arriving American Liner Dis- Figure 24 Do wot usq courhpicks, aside t ineteganc their caure the gums. Use dental fuse, hill ———— | appears as Customs Guard Phones for Police. one toothbrush for a family. ‘While _ seeming only improbat he state: Evidence gathered by police and Wederul officials seems to indicate that five men and 1,000 bottles of s thing or other vanished through a key-hole on the steamship Hansa of the United American tines, between 3 and 4 o'clock this morning. ‘The men the bottles and the keyrhole were all ofynormal size, which makes intricate. “yet the writer has known of cas where the family has been using the same toothbrush. Each member of the family should have his or her own toothbrush and marked so that no one but the person it belongs to uses it."” There are no less than sixteen half tone illustrations of the proper way to brush the t Policemen are ad. vised to visit the dentist every six months, The final cartoon shows six| J#mes P. Whiteside, customs guar, grinning cops carrying big tooth| W®S Watching the Hansa beci Be brushes over their shoulders, with this] Md “rrived only yesterday from Haru Morne. burg, and Hamburg is known to be tee ours, ‘The| ¢*Porting bottles of this und that toothbrush for nightstick for others.’ > ARCHBISHOP HAYES URGES CATHOLIC DRIVE “1 saw some shadowy figures inov- ing about the deck,"’ Whiteside said “So I went up there and captured five men who hud 1,000 bottles of what-o- you-cull-it. I made them carry all the bottles into a stateroom. Then I mad them all get imtapthe same room with Effert to Be Made to Exceed Record of 1921, the bottles. Then I locked the door Archbishop Patrick J, Hayes issued peao She outnide and went to the end ‘fan appeal to-day to the Roman Catholics} ate a Fran ee ' ' Pte » Lieut, Barrett at the of the Archdiocese of New York to con-| parge office and he feat fee mons tribute to the Catholic Charities Fund. The 1922 drive for contributions will be inaugurated next Sunday. a the Sta- on customs guards. He also 1 police of the West 47th tion to send a wagon for t! treet All Catholic charities In New York|ers. The police did better than that have been administered by a central] They sent not only the wagon but also organization with headquarters at No,|* lunch from the Marine Division seb snty evap RIOR g tig In the darkness the combined army a. 47th Street for the lagt twoland navy gathered ato ak years, \In 1921 contributions totalled | Whiteside led the way te t).. state $85,000, By concentrated efort it t#}room, took the key out o ket hoped by the A bishop that this'and opened the door, amount will be excee’ed in 1923, “Throw up your handsi’’ he com- manded, as his followers levelled their revolvers, But not a hand went no hands. 2 oners. There up. There There were no pris- were no bottles, There was not even an odor of decantation. The police and guards searched the ship and found nothing but the crew, fast asleep—apparently. The Marine Division searched under pier. And that's about all,’’ ship news reporter, COAL OPERATORS sald the IN LEAGUE TO BOOST House Labor Committee Has “Shown Conclusively” of High Price Agreement WASHINGTON, April ~The House Labor Committee's investiga- tion of the coal strike has “shown conclusively" that coal operators are gue to maintain high p 5 n Nolan, California, declared to-day, Nolan said the committ Monday or Tuesday on the Bland bill, under operators would be compel nist feval fact finding formation of coal, go into the production to make whieh announcing the committee has practically concluded its inquiry e will meet report the fu ieney Cull wnd distribution REBUILDS FACE OF SLAN WOMAN TOIDENTFY HER Second Reconstruction - in Police History Expected to Solve Haverstraw Mystery. FIXES VICTIM’S AGE. Thin Plaster Coating Gives Natural Appearance, but as of One Long Ill, The facial outline of an unidentified murdered woman found a fortnight €go on a mountain near Haverstraw, has been reconstructed, ‘The ‘recon- struction’? was completed to-day by Capt. Grant Williams, former head of the Bureau of Missing Persons of the New York Police Department, now re- tired. This is the second occasion In the history of crime when an unrecog- nizable skull has beon reconstricted into the semblance of what it was in life. Capt. Williams did the work in that case to solve a puzzling crime. Usually an investigator's task !s to re- construct circumstances and motive of a murder, Capt. Willlams has recon- constructed the victim, Indentification otherwise was impossible; also solu- tion of the mystery. ‘There was little human about the body when boys stumbled over it on a lonely mountain side, where it must have lain unclad since last fall. Capt. Williams covered. the skull with a thin coating of plaster compo- sition. ‘My aim was merely to fol- low the contour of the bones of the head and face,"* he explained. "I aid not wish to give the face any ex- pression other than that which* the contours afford, because, if I gave the wrong expression, it would hinder identification, “One skull differs from another as one face differs from another, as I learned in my twenty-five years poliee experience. To cover the face bones with plaster reconstructs the face so accurately that the victim's friends immediately will recognize her, though, because of the thin coating, she may look as if she had been ill for some time." In the previous reconstruction, the skull had shown a decidedly Italian cast. It later was identified as that of Dominick Larosa, one jof the Black Hand victims of a famous “murder farm’ in Brooklyn. — A friend of the dead man fainted from shock, so lifelike was the resemblance, In the Haverstraw case, the fea- tures indicated a distinctly subnor- mal woman. There was lack of width between the eyes, narvowness of the forehecd, and pecullar blank lines from ears to mouth, with receding chin, “It had been supposed that she was a girl of nineteen, with bobbed halr,’* Capt. Williams explained. “I found a woman of between twenty-five and thirty—the wisdom teeth proved this —with a mass of very dark brown halr,”” After a study of-the hair, glass eyos of dark gray flecked with brown wer inserted in the skull. The hair was dressed in the fashion indicated by the hairpins remaining in it. A blouse of tan jersey, embroidered in three shades of brown, was drapod over im- pgovised shoulders—the blouse found a little way from the victim The reconstructed head will be compared with photographs of New Yorkers listed as missing. If no identification is made, the skull will be returned to Haverstrow for further investigation CHARGES ACTRESS WITH STORE THEFT Fifth Avenue Buyer's Complaint Causes Fashionably Dressed Girl to Be Held Clara Chester, a fashionably gowned young woman who sald she was an actress residing at No. 40 West 72d Street, was held in $1,000 bail today by Magistrate Levine in West Side Court. She was arrested in Fifth Avenue soon after 6 o'clock yesterday evening upon the complaint of John EB. MeArdell, «a buyer for Dobbs & Ca, No. 620 Fifth Avenue. McArdell was alone in the shop when, he says, Miss Chester and an other woman equally well gowned, en- tered. It was after hours, but the second Woman insisted upon see articles of wearing apparel. While he was showing the stock, McArdell Miss Chester entered the dressing room. He said he turned his head in time to see an arm hastily withdrawn from outside the curtains of the dress ing room. McArdell did nothing until the women left, and then he follows them until he met a policeman. Hid den under the coat of Miss © he says, was a silk ca valued at $145. The other woman escaped FORMER GRAND DUKE IN COURT FOR RENT ‘“HUNGERLAND ALICE’ AS SHE APPEARED IN COURT TO-DAY ORES KNKEAD WIDOW WSARE Raves in Straitjacket After Strain of Brooklyn Murder Trial. Mrs. Marte Louise Kinkead, widow of Ellis Guy Kinkead, lost her reasong according to Dr. M. Mortimer Scher« man, head of the psychological de+ partment of Kings County Hospital, Lecause her mind could not stand the effects of the tremendous urge with which she willed the conviction of, Olivia Stone, who shot and killed hery husband. Miss Stone was tried for, murder and acquitted by a jury ime Brooklyn several weeks ago. “ In a straitjacket in the observationte ward at the hospital, Mrs, Kinkeaays, ravings show that she is living ene, tirely in her earlier days in Cincinnati, She makes no reference to the killing of her husband, to the days in Brooke. lyn before the shooting nor to the. events leading up to and ending im Mias Stone's trial and acquittal, This, according to Dr, Scherman, indicates. that the strain under which Mrs. Kine’ keud’s mind broke was caused by her’ intense desire that Miss Stone should” go to the electric chair. Mrs. Kinkeud, he says, ts unques- tionably insane, and after the ree! quired period of observation will be.» sent to the Kings Park Hospital for the Insane. In her ravings the woman calls fot her husband and for friends in Cine cinnati, and addresses those she seew by the names of former Cincinnatt friends. ‘ ———— TRUSTED EMPLOYEE WAS STORE ROBBER. WEEK OF SUSPENSE FOR LITTLE “ALIGE IN HUNGERLAND” <edigetion Care of Pretty Foster Daugh- fer of Mrs, Duryea Post-~ poned by Court. Alne Caused Lons of Joba to Others —Gets Three Years, Convicted of stealing merchandise from the Fifth Avenue store of B, Alte man & Co, where he had been etme ployed for fourteen years and for the last elght years jn a position of trust and confidence, Herman Nacht, thirty years old, of No, 58 Third Avenue, the Bronx, was sentenced to-day in the Court of Special Sessions to three years: in the penitentiary, y Thefts from the Altman store over a long period, led, a month ago, to cons certed endeavor to find the ‘thief oF thieves, Detective Morris of the Fifth Avenue Squad was assigned to the case and on April 17 -he caught Nacht leava* ing the store with $41 worth of mere) chandise concealed in his clothing. A visit to Nacht’s home revealed more than $1,000 worth of stolen mer= chandise stored away, some of it in the” original packages. A .epresentative of” Altman's asked the court to inflict a” With tear-dimmed eyes, twelve-| govere sentence on Nacht because the year-old Alice Razon Duryea, the} man was the cy of eseveral clerks beautiful foster daughter of Mra,| being discharsd beause of thefts in de- partments with which they were con« nected. Flo nee Spenc a, of No. 20 Dury: Gramercy Park, sat rigidly before Supreme Court Justice Daniel F. Co- halan to-day while lawyers argued for the proper custody of the child, The suspense of the young girl, as well as her foster mother, was pro- longed for a week while Donald C. Strachan of No. 111 Broadway, coun- sel for Mrs, Duryea, has an oppor- tunity to familiarize himself with the case, In the meantime, Alice will re- turn to a private school and will ap- pear before Justice Cohalan again] + ® next Thursday morning when final z disposition of the child's custody will be decided upon, Alice, who was taken from the Jewis National Orphanage in Con- stantinople by the Near-Kast Relief in 1918 to play the leading role in a photodraina entitled “Alice in Hun- ger Land,"' which depicted the suffer- ing in the Near Kast and was shown throughout the United States as an appeal for funds, won the heart of Mrs. Duryea, who was abroad as one of the leading women relief workers, Mrs, Duryea secured the consent of the orphanage for the child's adop- Just right! Just the thing for emer- « gencies. And justas good tion, with the understanding, it is f 1 d aid, that she was rea in the Jew- - aa , that she was rea in the Jew Or regular every-day _ The custody of the child has been questioned by Rabbi Stephen 8. Wise, who sued for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that Mrs. Duryea’s agreement to give the girl a Jewish bringing-up had been ylolated meals. Always appetiz- ing, always wholesome, always convenient, Counsel for Dr. Wise stated that] always economical. Mrs. Duryea a busy won . travelled considerably, and h Prepared in the Heinz the child in a small boarding school ; in Westchester County, ‘The result spotless kitchens, after ” has been,” he said, “that the child 4 to-day has no home, no parents, and] the recipe of a famous | pretty soon will have no religion, The entire question is the welfare of the ehild Mr Duryea's with the fare Italian chef. HEINZ | Spaghetti coincided hild's wel- but add counsel way the whole question ed that there w one in this coun- try who had a greater right to the girl's custody than Mrs. Duryea, a she had brought her here at her own expense und wus educating her. Little Alice speaks four languages. Although she only has attempted to| Ready cooked, ready toserve speak Einglish during the past six months, she already has mastered the language and Was able to converse freely with the Throvgh- out the proce 0 Mrs. ‘ Duryea, called her at all times, and seemed greatly attached to ee . 8100,000 DMAGE JURY DIs- the genuine Roque- J » AGREES. fort flavor with the }© ‘ Court waa unabls ness of a creamy body. - noges brought by Louis « The double-wrapped, santary-sealed package hal bw. Butlin Russian Wife Summoned tn Brooklyn Disp Proceeding: Lfrem Melik of No. 677 V. bilt enue, Hrooklyn, who says he was a Russian Grand Duke before the revolu his wife appeared ot the Court Hous in Brooklyn to in response to a su in « dis pomses ne Through the husba explained that owned extensive — oil ld Caueasi®, but lost all to the Ho! i wo to this ‘ ¥ nonth, ‘The rent was raised but they failed to understand — the potige, The case will be reopened. With the Genuine Roguefort Flaver- CHEESE Phila. «7 © 1 injuries elevator in les below the degee be dn wclapled for lig