The evening world. Newspaper, October 17, 1922, Page 2

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ited by newspaper reporters and veri-| had declared that Mrs. Mills got no Tt is fied the statement. more than was coming to he: also what Mrs. Hall says to you.” FE eae ne ase [ft fins monty, eye] en coa ants ozo «TEIN PROGRAM [Uses Sister of Girl She Accused |¢ Jette in the course of their painstak-| been a good looking woman, he r1e- ing review of tho case and us a ro- ‘gult of what they ware told by neigh-| tomato to him." ors of Stevens, it Wan felt wise to} In the course of her quarrels with order him to come to New Brunswick] her father, the child seems to have] Then he imaginatively painted the hopes for thelr proposed elopement. Ho spoke of afrangements he would plied she “looked like an over-ripe make to have Mrs. Mills enter an “wee and make a detailed statement under| made up her mind that if her father] beauties of their contemplated honey- teh oath. was going to talk In those terms] moon trip to Germany and the Orient, ‘The widow Hall, her queer brother] privately, the letters might a® weli] although there was no mention of di- a a j ‘Willie, alternately smiling childishly or | come out—for the sake of “getting| yoroe, Mrs. Mills's maiden name was “ E importantly frowning; Miss Sally | square’ with her father, and the ad-| Rheinhardt and she was of German T am sorry, but I will not all he Peters, Mrs. Hall's faithful friend, and | ditional consideration of $1,000. ° descent, hence a honeymoon to Ger- inksaclebiohl # arbara Tough were brought to the | +RoOOPERS SENT OUT TO FIND| Many, and the rector’s use of the Int-| _ i ¥ revolver in an attack on Miss Mary TF Gees Decne Fora Dovid tie ats] | WOWAN ATTORNEY. |e iste oper tite lores | ocmeatiom | Chief | Indorses| Manutscwurers, Compny at Marr Ka tempted to lead them in by a back] State troopers were sent out by the! In two of his letters the rector re-| ° This and Rehabilitation Goor after all news reporters an | prosecutors to-day to bring in Florence! ferred to “our road the Parker ri North, the woman attorney for Cher-| Homa” The teferecce wee to in| Plans at Convention. NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 17 (Aaso- clated Press).—The American Legion, in national convention here, to-day] hitting Elizabeth, heard Samuel. Gompers, head of. the American Federation of Labor, tell of labor's aims and aspirations and what it belleves its rights and duties looked unlocking the grill door of the} State of New Jersey. As a lawyer, back entrance and the party was|she Is an officer of the court and pre- under the necessity of coming aroun’ | sumably knew the value of the letters the building on the sidewalk, as evidence. There is under con- dt was explained that reporters had] sideration an action to learn whether bean excluded from the building be-/or not there has been a deliberate cause in previous questionings when | obstruction of justice. the tors have been particular-| Miss North was not at the board- Hs Dard ty lout eee have ling house where she has been staying n ower! y persons in the cor-}since she announced to the aston- ridors. \ hed Charlotte Mills that she was] 8 o'clock at our road beyond the| Mt. Gompers and Kenesaw M. Lan- In today's programrne, it was in- | now her counsel. The best the troop-| Parker Home.” This letter was un-| «is, Commissioner of Baseball, re- ferred, questions were to be asked of | ers could Jearn was that she bad left] dated, so what Friday it referred to]celved a noisy, welcome’ when they @ nature to reveal some of the beliefs | hurriedly in an automobile. is not known, In another letter, writ-| entered. and plans of the prosecator which it) Considerable effort is being made to| ten subsequently, the pastor changed| John Barton Payne of the Red would not be timely to disclose at this] account for the newborn confidence of| the date for the appointment to ‘*2| Cross declared that the Red Cross had time. : Mr. Stricker by talk of two “‘blood-| o'clock," and again used the phrase,|done a great deal to carry out the A large number of letters from the | stained handkerchiefs” found on the] “Our road beyond the Parker Homo.”|Legion’s policy in regard ‘to the dis- fev. Mr. Hall to Mrs.) Mills were | farm and recently produced by one of| “Dear Gypsy” was not the only ex-| abled. Dublighed to-day. They were sold for | the first curious souvenir hunters who| pression of endearment the pastor re-| Commissioner John J. Tigeart of Rewspaper publication by Florence} visited the Phillips farm after the| served for Mrs. Mills, He referred] tho Federal Bureau of Education cx- cleugh Park and the end of the trol- ley line where Mrs. Mills was Inst seen, and across the way from the Phillips farm, The second road beyond the Parker Home is De Rus- sy'’s Lane. These two letters appeared to have been written toward the end of the a cruel one, made an appointment for ‘Friday at taken to the police station she wat experience, The only two handkerchiels in pos-| Queen’ and “Dear Wonderheart. the rehabilitation and hospitalization seoncorigh om gga ree the | session of the investigators were de-| _In the new letters from Dr. Hall to] programme of the Legion, and paid berger Saye will be pul scribed in The Eyening World Sept.| Mrs. Mills he professed impassioned] tributedo the Legion for its endeavor 19. Their condition, was such thai| love for her and used many terms of|to bring harmony and not strife ve.| Receiver Knocked Off Hook and Dog’s Bark Sends Pa- WROTE LOVE NOTES BN STUDY | th.y imust have laid in the red mud] endearment. Many appointments are| tween capital and labor. . evs $e AS CHOIR PRACTISED. of Derussey Lune for weeks. One of} made for meetings on ‘our road” and] ‘Tribute to Belgium was given with trol Load of Detectives to Scene. Whalen Would Relay North] - pie tae ne: act i ‘They show that the Rev. Mr. Hall] them was full of birdshot holes and| many are signed with the “D, T..L."!q roar when M. Jeanne, President of Patrolman Maher, switchboard operator at Jersey City Police Head- CLAY ANOTUN |S iv’ ateo Halee Fuad af Vise OR had apparently been hung on a fence}]—“‘Deine Treue Liebe"—Thy True| the Belgian Veterans, was introduced. was m more ardent in‘ correspon- bir or a tree trunk as a target. This} Love. Some of the passages are filled) 4, Jeanne spoke’ in French. ‘‘Bel- dence than Mrs. Mills, and that he accepted the endearing name of quarters, is prompt-and efficient. singer that “Babykins” needed moth-] Schneider and Clifford Hayes, who] Another letter disclosed late last) ‘Cheered to the echo, a representa- not been officially divulged, urged Dr. ering. The infatuation so enveloped the] the crime and soon oxonerated, are re- Hall to put an end to the friendship couple, the letters show, that the rec-| ported to have seen more on their bet * tor sat at his desk in his study dur-| rambles in the vicinity of the Phillips reween, ing hands and supporting between Clark. It is said to have been writ- detectives, ing ac’ hii |. Mills | farm night of t murder th: Stripes. Mati parkiaatiag: 12 ths enansal ot| the pubils hey been tote. MO) ten by etl viet Np daa tneyte La Praace!"™ wrested M,| When the detectives arrived they near the .. the church and wrote letters to her} One rumor is they saw an automo- shout the way her voice stirred his] bile containing two men Sadia woenen: fell a There is another story that a witness The telephone number “74% is men-| has been found who can identity the] TO ESCAPE FROM HOME tioned’ in the letters with specific] machine that has figured in the state- a = ing from his comrades in France. times established when the rector} ments of several witnesses. Drop Twenty Feet and B: San Francisco was awarded the 1923 , Would be awaiting a calj. “‘Seventy-|TWO NEW WOMEN ARE WIT- convention by acclamation. PREACHER SLAYER four” is the number of the tele#hone NESSES IN CASE. Judge Landis was paraded through in the Hall home. sieeve was empty and his breast coy-| jymped wildly. ‘The door was locked Two new women witnesses figure in b; 7 Oh heed ian caeance. ie ads to-day’s developments— Mrs. Mary its rcown of jgaged glass and 1, whose home in the Hungurian| then with a drop of twenty feet into th to the call the two made to the office | Leneal, w! 10 n a drop y fe 6 of a dentist in New York City when] Warter ‘Willie Stevens frequently | street, Mary McLaughlin: of No. 1338 ted, f Jeaders of an unprogrammed pro- eer eccrine eatenee wer Meelng’a wouan exploring the vicinity {ates Avenue and Mary Galway of No.|tast night on. the shoullers of the . rently presenc 2 a | | of the Phillips farm the day before the |217 Franklin Avenue, both of Brooklyn| the crowded streets of New Orleans clen' Ped mcrae Driane visitas murder. This witness, also a Hun-Jand seventeen years old, escaped this|veterans had returned him to the sone at garian, has indentified the woman she} morning from the House of the Gooa| crowded lobby Mr. Landis was called Dear Heart: saw from @ newspaper picture. It 8! enepnerd, at Hopkinson Avenue and not known what information, if any, How aS vie hed Ato was obtained from Mars: Lengel: Pacific Street, in that borough. The story of the strange woman| People in tho neighborhood saw the bo would get eg tye rambling about the Phillips farm the|two girls make their flight and sald non pal sth. the radbraetion and | @fternoon of the murder was obtained |they hastened down Pacific Street and, who are here attending the American erans, doughboys to high officers, cession of more than 6,000 war vet- Former Attempt to Flee. T live. My supper’s waiting for me—J also escaped. you know how far I'll go for you— gangway!"" up and shot the gateman at the jail _e none followin: in detail last night by investigators | gaining Rockaway Avenue, jumped) The veterans then shouldered Han-j; then shot one of the turnkeys and. from the new witness, who lives on a| aioard Wilson Avenue trolley car|ford MacNider, retiriny National Com.| taking the keys, opened the doors to Gne of the rensons for the fumbling | farm across from the Phillips place: | without signalling It to stop. y car! mander, and’ marched with him| liberty. =f _ — and missing which has characterized as it | Studying the footpaths and roads, and| Mary McLaughlin a year ago and ber ———— Thalt mantel prene hee boat a test |#Pent 20 much time the witneas went | companion « year before thet, BEGGAR OF PENNIES of offending religious sentiment by|t her fence to see if she knew her. oe ert Sees ALCOHOL FOUND IN CAR HAS S20UM WOODEN LEG showing the relations of the rector and | She did not, but after the bodies ware found identified aye. aN te thele true vatug. Tt bas ihe eal tas of iheapeoss| AFTER IT STRIKES MAN| Tramp tm tatters Asked Lodsiax pe on in White Plains Jail, Charged With almost seemed as though those in| Picture she sald was of the strange authority have felt it was better to} Woman. condone murder than to admit that a An interesting story i@ told in An old tramp in a tattered frock ‘coat, overall trousers and a wooden leg, who had begged a night's lodging in the qiminal. With him in the Were another convicted murderer, Adam Ward, and Guido Sprignola, held on a robbery charge. automobile from him, escaped. The Jail break was carefully timed for just before 7 o'clock, when the guns had been taken from the guards on chang- ing shifts. The jail breakers beat the } minister of an influential and exceed- regard to this peasant woman’ ingly self-righteous congregation} ‘femaining in the background so | could be false to his sacred obligations} ong. According to the detec- 3 and the ideals of his great church, tives, ‘there was a large mort- - LETTERS DESTROY ANY HOPE| 989° on the property she occu- ? OF SUPPRESSING FACTS. pies, but within the last few weeks The publication of the minister's let-| his mortgage was paid off in a ‘ters whose very existence has been ba pi Some of the letters show that the} "Us. Brooklyn. heoseen a mat tg ee aad tela couple were in the habit of meeting at} The charges were assault, operating De Russy's Lane, which is near the|® ™otor vehicle without a license and ! Sean Soot Sa rls Oey spot where their bodies were found.| violation of the Prohibition law “in t 1 cials may have had of protecting the Other Jetters show that they planned| transporting alcohol without a HMoense. Pistone Sebasheno of No, 384 Morris Street, Cliffside, N. J., was held on three charges to-day after an automo- bile truck driyen by him had struck Solomon Insenburg of No. 464 Bush- wick Avenue, at Myrtle and Troop Ave- White Plains jail, asked this morning for the return of the dentedstin cup, few pennies and handkerchief ho had left with the desk sergeant for safe keeping. of a As they were given back to him he| road was seen to bend down, apparently to having held up two inside guards. BUS INJUNG Hylan from operating buses on G Mullan in the Bronx Supreme Court.| Port Richmond, Stat ‘i i Rev. Mr. Hall's erotic miscohduct from | 2" clopement at the time of the mur-| Gaetano Leir, Sebasheno's helper, was|in It and asked what {t contained, Re-| justice Mullan declared 1 would expe: [roves eonmond. Bi z as ehoreaid swal- aint of residents of Howard Beach, iy being brought into the case and to that | 4°", €0lng first to Germany and then| charged with engaging in transporta-|luctantly the tramp produced it. It] Gite matters to awalt the decision of quantity of iodine yesterday } to the Orient. tion of alcohol without a license, contained $90.06. The tramp said he} the Appellate Division on his recent in- + era a ping wae iabrrped which have One of the letters begins} Patrolman Chopping sald he found| was “Jim Cot pet New Yor! The} junction, which restrained the city from] Mrs, Mulligan, returning, found Annie ‘An instance of the deliberate sup- | With “Dear Gypsy’ and contains the| two barrels of denatured alcohol in the] sergeant didn't bid him an affectionate | operating buses on all its lines within pression of facts which would have following sentence: ‘Do not mind | truck, ~ farewell. the elty mits. { » established a motive for the murder of the minister and Mrs. Mills by a eee | COURTNEY RYLEY COOPER, WRITER, SAYS. WOMAN, WITH MAN'S AD, KILLED HALL had any plan to elope to Japan, as “The Evening World's readers have ‘been told from the beginning. Char- ‘ Jotte knew of this plan. Mrs. Elsie Barnhardt, sister of, Mrs. Mills, knew of it, Other members of the congre- gation in the confidence of Mrs. Mills knew of it. Not one of these per- sons was ever asked by the prose- idea of her travelling into another sphere with his rival, As to the other side of the case: How many women loved Hall? ‘ = ‘ Hing was Gifferent car for that evening? For isn’t it possible that this killing Sufficiently to wish him dead, rather than to see him with some commited in an automobile? other woman? , e ed sure that two persons, instead of one, knew of the relations A hala we'll say, who might have steeled herself to her action, of Hall and Mrs. 9 few “private re- through what she deemed his hypocrisy, listening every Sunday to his ¢utors whether the story was true] 9100) Gnd Mrs Milla, Dangerous as it Is, there are te. Sometimes } sermon and knowing that his private actions were the opposite? Who It was ignored. jationships’’ without a third party acting as a confederate. knew him well enough to believe that were it not for “this other Charlotte Mills after her mother's} ‘t 1s a taki driver, sometimes a rooming house keeper, often a mes- woman" all might have been different? And who hated thut other cath sent to Mrs. Barnhardt a pack-| senger boy, or telephone girl, or a servant, It is almost impossible to woman who sang in the choir, who watched her alleged hypocrisy and (Continued.) f oge lage and eA tee me carry on 4 liaison without a go-between acting in some capacity or Joneses to meus it Impossible for that throat ever to swell with another said been direc! Lo this saci song f at the time her mother underwent u] “"°ther to make the meetings or the object of those meetings possible. Wouldn't it scem more than possible that this was a woman's hospital operation last January, in] Who was the go-between in the Hall-Mills murder case and what can erime—one who killed them both rather than see them revel in the the event of her death. Detectives} he or she tell? illicit happiness of each other? Unlike a man, a woman wants to see by om Mr. ere te i eegeinag Was it a friend? And did the interested person learn of the fact Dah heen son eve and the thing she hates dead, Hate and love ae Sorpberss here aed acid tus] and arrange the ruso by a simple forgery? If 90, that would turnin | ony ® Jealous woman's natuyy. T-believe that the bodies were moved to the place where they were talking with Mr. Stricker and Mr.| 4 reason for those scattered letters, The murderer, on second thought, found, ,There were almost ihdisputable evidences of a struggle at eennngy sp eat M ned ees wanted no examination of typewriting or signatures. Again, was that some Sees. porn bear hae, a9 T have sald, in an automobile. But could y they had not a one man fight a man and a woman, both struggling for thelr lives? brought back the letters. Mrs. Barn.| tte" ® vain attempf at a hopeless purpose—to break the companionship Wel ie Gana Wroniaaie eriinal bl hardt told The Evening World next| ° Hall and Mrs, Mills by a threatening missive which still might be on A woman—with masculine assistance. It is almost impossible to day that they hadn't asked for the| his person? conceive its accomplishment without the ald of a man, A discarded ters, Now, the case comes down to a matter of general conclusions—and admirer of Mrs. Mills? Again possible, but improbable. Rather a QPEN QUARRELING BETWEEN! those are the only kind possible in thia muddled affair: Person Influenced through money or misguided sympathy, to accomplish , a es a thing motivated by a jealous woman, Was Mrs, Mills a vamp"? In the first place, a woman alone could not have earried those Had she been implicated in other affairs? bodies and made a good job of it. Or, even if the killing was done at Did one of her former admirers kill her? the crabapple ae would @ woman, maddened enough to slash her This 1s possible, of course, but rather improbable, ‘Still arguing in | fallen enemy's throat, be at the same time calm enough to arrange ’ MILLS AND DAUGHTER, The open quarrelling between |ittl- Charlotte Mills and her father, jyui- tor of the Lord Sterling High Schoo! and sexton of St. John's, is believed those bodies in a fallen position and cover every t f fo. are bem eapiained by the sale of] general terms, the mutilation of the body of Mrs. Mills would not pre- In the first place, it is rare to find the woran ake ios Lone anes ber Pe ee ; ; clude the male element, It is a typleal feminine action, yet it does not in its every minute detatl—and then carry through any preconceived “hypo oo _— publicly eat to pelnt away from the masculine. A Woman hates the woman who takes arrangement after iNet [slag has been committed, Man kills by design the memory of his wife and tho m\n-] Mer man from her. And a man likewise hates the woman who leaves | 2d covers Nha by toca es enemas OF She 7 after-effects, Woman kills by impulse. About the only exception ti 7 ister. He has known of the existence] 11m for another man! ‘The natural egotism of male against male will this rule is in poison cases, and thoge of murder tare wT nere elutes of the letters, but has “lied like a] not, under ordinary circumstances, permit him to believe that another are done on a@ cold-blooded, wholesale basis—and often then you'll figd gentleman.” Among members of his} man is wetter than he in the e) of woman, ‘he woman herself is a man in the background. It is seldom indeed own family and members of the fam-]| to blame, \ F. ‘ ¢ where a woman kills and then covers her trail, pe pte ay of his wife, who were familicr Rather, T would say, the idea of the killing having been done by a have single-track minds when it comes to taking human lMfe—their th the romance of Mrs. Mills aui| former admirer of Mrs. Mills Is excluded beoause of another natural work ends with the actual killing, With the male plotter it often only Mr, Hall, he has spoken freely Tale characteristic—that of doubts and fears where a married woman begins there. ; Charlotte wes angered by tho} ts concerned. When a man becomes sufficiently crazed over‘a married * In the Hall-Mills case there are distinct evidences of both elements, frankness he displayed in the bosom] woman to kill her, he usually does it in the open, or murders her and with woman in tho foreground, ‘Therefore, who is that woman, and wha $4 ber family, She cromead that by | makes his own exit by, means of suicide, He doesn't seem to relish the |! the man that helped hert \ 4 = i a a Ll a ng ee THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1922. Owner of Stolen Dress by Ruse Prevents Exonerated Fellow-Worker From Shooting Her. ~ a That is what Mics Anna Curry said this morning after drawing a caped with her life only by her quick- so that Anna could not fire without/ she pad brought it from West Vir- beat their-horses and we have }) Street, Brooklyn. Sterne, according to ginia two weeks ago. y 7 law preventin, beat ‘Anna was held in $2,000 bail on a| everson, told him ‘his income was p ing men ‘ trom Miss Scully accused Anna of stealing |charge of carrying a concéaled weapon mpbridbi ata ee and ee their wives," sald “Magistrate Ober’ dress, At firat\Anna says she/and Jn $8,000 on a charge of assault 11) ire netore the rterce thought Jt was all a joke—although|with intent to kill. be Naa The trouble started yesterday, when rector’s vacation. In one of them h6] are, But when she was arrested andjing at No, 38 Mulberry Street, New- raged. She was exonerated but she says she brooded all night over the “The other girls were scornful to| thing in my lif Proud Terrier Mother Brings rire cnvice Ghatote ati volun~| murders, one of thom initialed. to her in other letters as ‘My Gypsy|tended greetings and ‘said he indorsed Police by Phone to See Puppies affidavit. handkerchief had in all four corners} With poetical allusions und in some of] gium," he said, “will never forget| {rom the Central Telephone Exchange told him, early to-day, that the re- “Babykins" given to him by her, and] machine embroidery in an ornamen-| the letters were enclosed sweet pes! what America did. Neither will she} celver was off the hook at No. 179 12th Street and she had heard a cry,] Borough President Connolly of Queens went to the pains to tell the choir] tal scroll, suggesting the initial "s,""] blossoms. eyer forget what the Germans did.''| followed by the barking of a dog, he quickly got busy. last week was arrested charged with night, the authorship of which has tive'of the G. A. R. and one of the First he dispatched mpotonuy cle Of-@— United Confederate Veterans stood] ficer George Risset to No, 179. Then himself and Mrs, Minnie| ®t Commander Macnider's side grasp-| he sent a patrol wagon loaded with Jacques Teutra representing the}saw through the window of a butcher patcancan ‘See TWO GIRLS JUMP WALL French veterans. His right coat/shop a fox terrier which leaped and ered with medals, Ho brought greet-|inut quickly broke {t down. ‘The dog Inst a wall, over the top| Legion national eonvention. When the ESCAPES FROM JAIL Evangelist Killed Man in LOS ANGELES, Oct. 17.—Herbert Wilson, former evangelist, convicted of the murder of Herbert Cox during on for speech. an attempted jail break several “Boys he said, “I'll never miss] months ago, escaped from the county another legion convention as long as} jail here to-day. Two other prisoners Wilson, armed with a revolver, held i. the behavior of the investigators in| Sh* sald the afternoon before the} "whe girls were committed to the inatl-|through the streets in the same} Herbert Wilson was known by police ignoring much of the evidence which | ™Urder the woman appeared to be/tution for lack of proper guardianship, | Manner. and Federal operatives as a aE The three held up a post office em- ploye outside the jail and, taking his night turnkey, Henry Purrler, after ION CASE GOES OVER, The case of Mrs. Jennie Quinn, wife] — . Y official of the Third Avenue Rail-] Girl Whe Couldn't Go to Party Company, against the city, in Swallows Iodine. which she seeks to restrain Mayor n attend to his wooden leg. The sergeant| Concourse, the Bronx, was adJourned|®°hoolmates, fourteen-year-old Annie caught a glimpse of a wallet tastened| indefinitely this afternoon by Justice] Mulligan of No. 104 Dixon Avenue, jow anyone to accuse of stealing.” Photographers had been’ cleared out of ness of wit, She seized Miss Eliza-[a thief,” Anna told Polloe | Jud house. ' the Court House by , State troopers. |lotte Mills, who sold tho letters of| Parker Home for the Aged, an insti- beth CHMy ca AUNer She gts “witnt BeMlnagan this mornihg:” a Raita ate ENTER GON, “MA ants | ‘Whoever made the arrangement over-] Mr. Hall and took them out of the! tution on Easton Avenue beyond Buc- M + the revolver, and used her as a shield] | She sald sho put the revolver in her! Mrs, Sterne, submitted an affidavit No. 960. 12th Waist before starting for the factory./yy Ieidor Meyerson, Algernon I. Nova, _ representi She 1s a slixht and pretty girl. Uv-lserne, sald the application. was the | NOUse sentence on Andrew McDenald, result of a conspiracy. Myerson, who is | forty-five, No. 229 W. 68th Stregt. k. Mis Hy Ii AL - q timated, bitterly <humilisted ond. ene lece Biesct, Memes ne eer Teek~ | an insurance agent, Nova sald. is the | THe Srisoner was arrested upon, eds “J was so humiliated I hardly knew] [USband of the stenographer who took | plaint of his wife Helen, McDonald the minutes beforé the referee, and F Feporter. "t hare’ never stolen say") during the hearing told Sterne that it | ro*® Gow" 19 Court and pleaded. wigh . he would take out a-pdlicy from Myer- his wife not to prosecute. t1 son, Myerson would get: the alimony |Oberwager, asked her award down to $4 a. week with coun- sel fees of not more than $250, Nova sald Sterne became suspicious and left Meyerson alone. Sterne ‘denied the statement attributed to him in. tho CITY TO OPERATE | Shore Tracks. According to a letter received Consequently, when. a girl operator not more than a few hours old. borough. Teh. tracks of this, line *Whehter their proud mother dis-| Prince and State Streets were torn this, x LLOYD GEORGE’S SPEECH CREATES TURKISH FURORE in Great Britain,” Says Kemalist. CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 17 (Associated Press).—Prime Min- ister Lloyd George's Manchester speech on the Near East, of which a summary reached Con- stanitinople last night, has created a furore among the Kemalist fol- lowers here. ‘The entire summary was telegraphed immediately to Angora. “This speech,” said the Kemalist representative here, ‘completely shatters the confidence which we were reposing in Great Britain af- ter her assurances to us at Mu- so voluntarily, stopped. Sapa GLIDER STAYS ALOFT Soaring When Air ket. NEW HAV the gliding competitions to-day Itford Hill, witnessed a filght of hour and 53 minutes’ duration Capt. F. P. Raynham in a craft British manufacture. Soaring in dania,”* he slid into an air pocket. ceived here, the Kemalists were | glider in the air for 11 minutes and particularly displeased the Nation- alist delegate, through the week. $$ —— TOLD TO STAY HOME, SHE TRIES SUICIDE oodhaven Company Agrerx Refused permission to join a party of Furnish Service Quickly. Service Comm. while her mother was out shopning. | Adueduct and Ramblersville, Borough moaning. She called St. Vincent's Hos- removed most of the fodine. The girl] its gas mains so that service will lv furnished to the complainants Sunday night the girl asked to at-| ‘neces and business places, tend the party, but her parents, afraid brooded. When time to go to school at the Bradon-Stevens Institute at New] Grew the complainants’ petition. Brighton, she* went instead to a drug pli aa la aks store and bought the iodine. Return- ing home, she pleaded tiiness, and wait-| WHITE” ARMY FLEES potson. JURY ABSORBS THE EVIDENCE T’was in Bottles; Delibera- tions Take All Night. Nave, toned: af BOSTON, Oct. 17, | depart. A Superior Court jury, which had been told that only by ex- amining a quart of whiskey and another of gin at lelsure could Seni ea, Geiolo BOE they determine whether the liq- BELFAST, ‘Oct. ing Town. vasion by Soviet troops. Members steamer ready treated to the Russ pa es bottles almost empty with a sealed verdict of not guilty to-day. to-day. ‘They forced the crew to tal They had deliberated the care, | cans. ‘There they: unloaded 400 tons of £47 dlmounte of any churecter, pomtract oF involving an alleged violation of | flour and then:allowed the ship to pro-|™ THE WORLDe| the Prohibition Law, al! night. ceed to Liverpool, ‘ } Get acquainted with Piccadilly Little Cigars today. We take all the risk— your money back if you’re not satisfied —a guarantee in every package. 10 In the package ONSPIRACY CHARGE IN DIVORCE ACTION As Shield F Rr mane ave kee FOR {LABOR PEACE rom Avenging Bullet] sts. stemes amauvie for More Alimony Attacked, Supreme Court Justice Van Sinclen Brooklyn to-day reserved decision on the application of the Mra, Hiygure Sterne to Feopen the divorce hearing before Referee Allan 8. Lock against Sdully in the dressing room.of the] Norman R. Sterne, Locke awnrded son, N. J. Mrs, Sterne alimony of $75 a week, The police believe Miss Scully es- @-———_—_———________ | $750 counsel fees and $500 expenses. i; Sterne is a wealthy importer, with an me, as if they really believed I was] interest in the Triad Trading Corpora- QUEENS TROLLEY from Grover Whalen, Commissioner of Plant and Structures, the city plans led them to a corner of a back room.|'? OPerate the New York and North ‘There lay five little fax terrier puppies, | Shore Traction Company Lines in that lodged the telephone receiver by ac-| by a contractor to lay sewers. Com- , cident or design, Patrolman Maher] missioner Whalen wishes ther re-[#tm collected above the $5,000 wilt'te won't say. But he declares the girl] stored. Borough President Cennolly at central should have called a hos-| will ask ‘the Board af Estimate ind pital instead of Police Headquarters,| Apportionment for the money to do Commissioner Whaten in his, letter says when they fre relaid he will make his application to “have. them mtinicipafly operated. The Ties which were held to a’6-eent fare went into the hands of a receiver who ceased a «,,,| their operation. ‘They ran to White- {Completely Shatters Faith] stone, Bayside and Little Neck and were the only lines of travel. “People living on the line were willing to pay an increased fare and for a time did until they were ALMOST TWO HOURS ‘orced Down by ‘ Eng. Oct. 17 (Asso- F clated Press).—Lurge crowds watching re you y ‘ strong wind he was forced down when The phrase in which, as re- Yesterday Capt. Raynham kept his cheese? compared with “warlike animals" | seconds, but was surpassed by the Dutch flyer Anthony H. G. Fokker, whol Most people are. So is: | glided 37 minutes. The competition, which is for a prize of £1,000 offered Heinz. The “just right” ) by a London newspaper, will continue COMPLAINT WITHDRAWN IN GAS CASE IN QUEENS At the hearing held by the Public fon, to-day on the com- Queens, against the Woodhaven Gas Light Company, a representative of the Pital. Dr. William Callahan made | COmPany stated that as a result of the hurry run and, using a stomach pump, | page eons made by Chairman Prende ready cooked—ready to gast, the company has agreed to extend On Oct. 9, ground was broken for thts * extension and it will be carried forward she would be out late, refused. sAlifto conclusion, Former Senator Nuss- night and yesterday morning she] baum, appearing for the complainants, stated that he was satisfled with the e outcome. of the proceedings and with- pag ettl oa ing until her mother went out,*took the CITY OF VLADIVOSTOK Soviet Troops on Point of Invad- TOKIO, Oct. 16 (Associated Press). Special despatches from Viadivostek ro-| 9, port that city in imminent danger of In-| por thay, “ave ys. the Vladivostok ‘White’ Government Signy aunt’ tek iie esis aa Seana a 3 Gen. Dieterichs, Commander of the] | Display advertising type for tbe Supalen “White” army, 19 reported to have rex | gent. sections of Ene Sunday ) nese border. ry : ’ IRISH REPUBLICANS SEIZD en, 17. — Republicans | StAyis,,coPy which has not, heen posited uor was intoxicating, returned the | seized a steamer off Westport in the ae “by 5 Fe enenrs || County of Mayo, tt was learned hefe| Wil be omitted ‘ay conditions requlte,, ri ad } i the vessel. to Newport, of the same|" Display oo Nea tater then county, ‘a point held by the Republi| mroyided’ ators, enor ean ‘YAN CONMEED OF BEATING HER iii | Court Puts,It Up to Her and She Decides on Work- “We have a law forbidding men to on} wager, in.the West Side Court to-day, when pronouncing a 60-day work- what thought ought to be done. “I wish you would let him, have ft" said the woman. ‘I would rather work for myself and my three’ small children than to be any longer wit this man who beats me all the thine." pei eA BST CURB. MARKET JNSURES ~~ Market ‘annditle ced to-day establishment of & sratatey fund throwgh witch regwlar ‘menibess of the exchange will be insured for the sum of $5,000, payable at death,to their: legal heirs, ‘To create this. fund every member will be assessed . $3@. Upon the death of a member an ment of $10 will be levied and m by in up added*to the principal of the fund, Investments df money of the fund de to» be-- in securities . authorized: ito trustees under the laws of the State,gt New, York. secs. . at 1 »| about your 28 “ cheese is especially se=r lected by Heinz to blend’ deliciously with Heing famous Tomato Sauce © in the preparation of Heinz Spaghetti. The. result is a delicious’ wholesome meal— to of heat and serve. ; Ready cooked, ready to serve = | Notice to Advertisers 4 ing World or Tag of j¢ World. if received after 4 P. M. the day preceding publication can be in I; to id Office, — Copy containing engravings te Gade by The World myst be received by 4 By. ived by P. M. Thursday Raber a ole yf, Taureday’ preve ‘and releais must ‘be Teeeived by "2 Frids Copy containing engravings to be ~ by Tue world mus: be Teotived by Thursday wooay | Sunday Main § . which not been Morimed op 28 AR ere and ene i Fa the grder of a fhe geder of “latest “receipt when emitted will Rot serve any OBR. j BELMONT,—MURRAT. 11 Funeral’ Church, Bway, 60th) Weds 7, 10 A. My | RYAN.—On Oct! 15, M0RK/ DECHAEL, bee! | loved son of the fat@eJohn Ryan and |i} Bridget, nee Cassidy, and loving brother of |} Catherine Haydes, Mrs, Mary Freneh, I Margaret Dugan, Edward, John and |i Native of ‘Thurles, Tipperary Ireland. | late residence, 87 Vane | dam es y, Oct. 18, at 9.90 i M. Requiem m at St, Anthony's Charen at 10 A.M. Interment Calvary, ! SMITH, CHARLES, Church, Bway, 60th

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