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9 VOL. LXII. RC: 22, 182—DAILY._ ‘ TO.NIGHT'S WEATHER—Fair, Heavy Frost. WALL STREET THING . STREET! ea EDITION ¢ * Ginenladlon Books Open to All.’’ (New York World) by Jobing Company, 1923. Conran is Pree NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, Entered 1922, Post Offic 'STREET | ¢ CLO TABLE as Second-Clans Matter Ss New York, N. ¥. BRITISH PROTEST |Runaway Boy Travels “De Luxe” [BANK SRENCALLS [LETT ERS SO . UPSE T MRS. HALL On 20th Century’s Engine Tender Joe Jackson, 14, Catches Crack Train to Cleveland, but He'll Catch Another Crack From Dad in Brooklyn. CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 18.—Covered with grime and his face reddened from the wind, fourteen years old Joe Jackson of Brooklyn, N. Y., was being held by police to-day after being taken from the coal tender of the New Objects to Order for Stop-| york Central Twentieth Century Limited early to-day, following a fast ping and Search Outside | #4¢ 0” the engine tender from Albany, N. Y. Attempts were being made c ie to get in touch with ais parents, Three-Mile Limit. Joo sald. the ‘tougtest (parte? blse—o ride was between Buffalo and Cleve- CASE his previous adventure. He said the EMERALD CITED. |!2n4 last night, when the engine took jobject of his present tour was a job water by scooping it from a trough|in Chicago to enable him to repay the —— A $95. between the track during which A é tr “But now {t's all off again,’ he U.S, Asked to Explain Ac-| operation he was drenched Waid, “Aoeuppese dl eaten ecdeetulie tion of Dry Navy After It seems that this 1s the second|when I get home. [ did the last time.’ attack of “‘travellin’ blues"? Joe has had recently, and it cost his parents According to Joe, construction naval captain, PADLOCKS PLACED ON REISENWEBERS BY COURT ORDER S. Marshal to Lock Two Upper Floors as ‘(Com- mon Nuisance.” his father is engineer and former Cabinet Ruling. railroad fare to get him back from WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (Asséclated Press).—A protest against continued @eizure of British vessels ‘by Prosi three-mile limit was pivenctas! to the Btate Department to-day on behalf of ] the British Government The British complaint is under RAIDERS cE fl to have been based principally on ath ease of the Schooner Emerald, of Can- adian registry, which said in advice: Dry Agent Posed as Sales- man for Two Months to Get Line on Smugglers. Teaching British officials to have been searched on Monday by the Americ Prohibition Navy off the New J coast, more than eight miles Jana When the cabinet recently decide! that Prohibition enforcement age foreign ships should stop at the t Mile limit, except in the case of ve esis in communication with the shorv fron Following two months’ tnvestiga-| Judge Martin T. Manton of the Fede Bante crete Boats: Bilston, during which time he posed as alera! District Court to-day issued o gained the impression that no more} Woolen salesman, Prohibition Agent] formal order directing that Relsen foreign ships outside the limit to be molested until the whole ques- tion hed been settled in the courts. In the cane of the Emerald, h er, it is held by the British that there was a clear violation of the new enforcement policy. , A feeling of im-]* Patience over the situation is under- ood to have been manifest in the British protest, which was coupled With a request that an explanation be furnished as soon as all the facts be ascertai were] Samuel Kurzman led a raid to-day on the office of the Rosedale Mills, dea!- vrs in woolens at No. nue, weber's Restaurant be closed. By the terms of the order the United Stator Marshal {s directed to pyt @ padlock on the two upper floors of the prem ises, Nos. 981-88-85 Eighth Avenue. the place having been weld to be-u common nuisance under the Volstead Act. Under the terms of the order as handed down, any of the defendants which include John Reisenweber, 239 Fourth Ave- and seized 114 cases of choice e whiskeys which were 3 to have been smuggled into the in woolen shipments and estimated to be worth etail prices senberg of No, 86 West n Able of No. . officers of the BE pou renpae ie | age Knox call: | Relseaweber‘e, tnc,, the United Clear Giiside ot ts ia parties pearance to-morrow | Stores, White Rose Baking and Res- Wiarly objection contig non Whe taurant Company, the St. Regis Res- heels of the recent British note a cris peia|taurant Company, and the Fifty- tibia ao acon Sevres being put{elghth Street Restaurant Company, t is known as woolen district. n to investigate, a sample case. o the Rosedale with the exception of the last-named corporation, may apply for a modifi- cation of the order any time within six months. There ts a proviso, they must show officers, stockholde of the jurisdiction of the Prohibition avy beyond the mare The impression is British government of the situation a. poses in future a viee the rights of the British vessels a. Outlined in the Fourth Avenu signed Kurz him = with dropped int however, that of the or employees of that nono British note § aoe ee ; Armed w he visited ying company had any part JOHN D. JR. DOESN'T fine once this with Agents{in the violation of the Volsteud Act Di Stefano, that brought about the order for the closing of the place tor glx mouths. The United Cigar of a pert of the fir which an entrance is parts of the prop from the order of KNOW WHO RICHEST |g)... MAN IN WORLD IS]!22.", Bat ted a seare And Cannot See Any Way ehnasleeeicn to Find Out—Starts Rest [9u2ste"s at No. 207 Cure in Battle Cree ASSURES MAYOR HYLAN BATTLE CREEK, Mich., Oct. 1s. INVESTIGATION OF MINES John D. Ro’ began a rest cure at a lo Mine Workers Head Pledges Help iu Crueltty Charges. being ‘money thes got inside they found the whiskey piles of woolens. 4 to Prohibition Head- 1107 Broadway had to the othe , 18 exempted Tosing, HAMMOND HEADS COAL COMMISSION ckefeller 4 tarium, following bis arrival tust night. He refused to disct 13 A r Hy Programme Calls For Com- ns fo tte ihe tavistigation : Bree atancice had no appea ' ordered by tho plete Investigation. of tiines [es : WASHINGTON, Oct, 18.—John When shed who, In hig opla- ; Hays Hammond was elected Chair- paren faler stds, m rs of the Federal Fact-Finding Coal “You can answer that question a Commission at the initial meeting of as well as I can, I don't know the commission to-day of any way to Ps out ba eee Following Hammond's _ select! sion mapped out program PWO MISSING APTER TICAIN a 6 b for investigating t WRECK IN G rr xe: situation in the coal industry. BAVANNAH, Gu, Oct I eo |LEAKY AMMONIA PIPE sel EE Gha Atlanta passenger train at 6) rng PROVES ALMOST FATAL LAUREL RESULTS ery ea caught’ fr! | Bogineer Nearly Overcome Welore CLEAR AND FAST {ter the wrec! Firemen Fit Valve. FIRST RAC x furlongs ~ In one of the Felicitous (McLane), $3.70, § FIRST SNOW OF THE § foe cream plant ‘and $2.60, first; OSWEGO, rok, {nthe Dawe Panasain (Lang), $3.10 and $3.10, OSWEGO, e , to-day, anow of the gence fu “Sweet and Pretty (P. Walle), the wings of ac fell intermittently thr 4 at 146, <Time— ali fing, but melted alt Work ed stoped Any OND RACE—Two mile Srawford), $9.10, $3.70 + $5.90 and $2.50, laxeal Estate Ads. — FOR THE— Sunday World INTO FISH BUSINESS Also es of Endeavor. Il (Byero), $:1%, «Tin | CARPENTIER FH HAS GONE | Knocked-Out French Cham An Has Other L! PARIS, Oct, 18 orgoe Carpentier Ri : has {nto the @sh business, {t be-| DOG THAT OWNED Lipeiiry MUST be in Ay Pichi ga DONDS DIES. NLU came known here ay, Georges, who PALAU cea oanen aoe — tee rocked to eleep by Battllng Stkt, f ; pili oe The Wor Id Office sed a fishing trawler an ed to be the only dog in America Jucqueline’’ after baby | posseseing Liberty bonds tn own FRIDAY name, al Before 6 P. M. Misy Neene Foster, bought . ak Cla gigs erik scter A the use of the interest to support the To Insure Proper Classification |}* dishware business end mixed up 0 “anil Geagh ENTIRE TOWN T0 GUARDS) SAVINGS Mrs. Mills’s Burning Love Notes | Guard Placed at Vault to Prevent Any Attempt To Hall Reveal Both Were Aware SecretWas Known and of Danger Woman Even More Fervid Than Rector in Mixture of Religious and Sensuous Emotion, Letters Given Out for First Time Reveal. Secaucus Pofice an oe Firemen in Rush of ‘Half-Clad to 0 Scene. BUT ALARM IS FALSE. Burglar Protection Sounds Again, but Can’t Fool Citizens Twice. New let‘ers from Mrs. Hleanot Reinhart Mille, soprano of the choir Residents of Secaucus, N. J., slept}of the Church of St. John th late this morning, secure in the Evangelist, at New Brunswick, to knowledge that their deposita in theling Rey, Edward Wheeler Hall, the First National Bank are in good rector, with whom she was fouu murdered on the Phillips farm, a: published by The Evening World to-day. hands, but convinced that a burglar alarm is aptly named—it gave them the alarm of their lives and kept them up most of the night. Secaucus is progressing, and direc- tors of the First National Bank—there is no second—decided recently they would emulate New York institutions and have o burgiar alarm. As a con- Sequence a shrill siren contraption was installed yesterday morning. Most everybody in town has his $2 de- posited, in the bank and naturally a large crowd witnessed the Installation. erybody went home contented. But at about 2 o'clock this morn- ing, Just as Policeman Henry Zulauf A few sentences of them have bcon allowed to reach the public before Complete, as here printed, they show that the mixture of religious and sensuous emotion which has been re- MRS ELEANOR ere: vealed by the letters of the minister to Mrs, Hall was even stronger in the woman than in the man. They also show that both of the persons in the romance were aware their secret was known and that they were In danger of retribution. They reveai a constant striving by each of the lovers to work upon tae feelings of the other and keep them fervid even when they were apart. The letters read: Dearest, dearest boy. Wasn't 1 happy to find a sweet note, for T didn't expect that you would risk leaving one for me yesterday, Such observed to Policeman Thomas Mc-]| delicious eclairs. Grath, the ramainaer of the depurt- And the book 1s more interesting than you tho’t it would be. After ment, that things were very qulvt, a shrill shriek rent the alr and sent 2 shudder down the backs of the two I raad It wo will talk about tt. My darting, how will you seem to-da I don’t T must have caught cold, but * khow when, and I am tired to-day—want to lie with you and rest policemen. At that Instant they were] or hours, the only porsons astir in the while And, hoféy, you put the dear pidture in my hymn book. Oh, you town, but Im the very next tnetant] weet, adorable Babykins of mine. Minnie used my hymnal for the organ there wasn't a one who wago’: up and| 4nd I wonder if she saw them, although I don't care one bit. She pro doing. kes me so at times, and to-night if her flowers are still here I'l! put “Phere oes the. burglar: aler: min the kitchen. Not that I um jealous of Minnie. Why, darling, shouted McCrath, aa he cacod tow. re ish't anything to be Jealous of. But I hate her to do for you what I tho't of first. She couldn't swear I yp curmises tt was 1. Oh, well, poor Minnii crumbe, isn't she dear the bank with drawn revolver with Zulauf only a step behind him, also pointing his pistol straight vut in t the flowers on your des She is easily contented with front of him How are you to-night, darli You seemed rested and happy. ‘We Tho policemen were frst on the} didn’t have a minute alone, but it will appear so at times. scene, but won only by a few mo-|SHE HAD TO HIDE NOTE, I MET HIM ments. Within flve minutes every- Dearest, I am not dreaming to As I lool { the window 4 a cent depo: nthe] I form no thought in my mind, just 4 drifting on, staring at nothing hand, {n varloud wtages} particular and 1 always do that when Iam tired. The note I left yester unot-| day wae crumpled but | have to hice it im my small, orange purse, as | met him. be alone always. oth n writing Lear was at hand. One man, I am scuool resume to-m ou his way, picked up the large| and I can be alone to wr I could v belong to a clu sledgehammer and banged the steel} there ts incessant laughter and conversation. I need my dienm times, rall fire alarm, bringing out Claren-] my hours alone, and other people t.-itate and disturb me don Engine Company No. I—there is There isn't much pst in the may to-day, One line tn wi no No. 2—and this accentuated the| article says, “Al! uid how true that is. A to exciteme what will satiety, but what a variety of taste, in people. And because Lewis P, Huber, cashier of the} you and I hunger for the same things Is the reason t ur longing to bank, ran the half-mile from his] be together as as possible . home to the bank {n record time, but. My love {i deep, c2lm, quiet to-day. I am in the n to Usten ¢ ot course, ’ with clothing, and, with a policeman on elther side of him, unlocked the Yesterday | was tulking to Mrs. Burns. Couldn't p doors and went in. By this time the! as she was ready for convervation. She wae 5 mob outside was ready to rend the burglar asunder, Hopkins was . iin y. live 4 me people. M But investigation reveaiod that aj Mrs. Hopkins they hive peor fre short circult or defective wiring, or] Burns ls too !gnorant to und: and my, [ wish you something, had caused all the trouble,]| heard what disor 1 Jangua But [ ave, bevause all the money was there and! y hate to tulle to M sand never do !f I ¢ avold it but at times nating are ante. Ls T hust Be nif It 18 to listen to ignorance managed to shu! e ing off an = s is ART TRIANEIAT OE) +4 Yon everybody returned to thelr homes. | LOVES MOODS THAT ** MEAN INTENSE LIFE UIRE About an hour later the siren went ‘And honey mine—isn't It true | live in a different word? ‘To-day 1 off again, but, of course, you can't] um not wide-aw Iam not sad—but quiet. Yesterday I lick- fool the residents of Secaveus twice} 112 on, 1 love those moods, they mean intense life fire They remained in bea. { went off ewe the people who live next to Hopkins r everal more times before opening Of course; dear, peor bs xt to Hopkins meat time this morning, but nobody both-] that they have a st alms, conversation, education, intelligence t ered with it, which prompted one] wome peoplo but the Burnses can't under t \ t practical joker to remark that {t would] surnses? Ignorance t the ve tye be funny {f some clever burglar took A eoknds. '}advantage of the circums‘ances and| Srped mt pulled off a job. Oh, darling, if | had an income of my own, I would be + ——— guess. I'd build @ waiting love nest, where I could dre ir sted and not care {: r Baw people to talk to. Oh, what treasure | would have CHARGES ASSEMBLYMAN HAD WHISKEY IN CAFE Policeman Accases John McLaugh. Ma tn Brooklyn Court MeLau Boo! birds, ti and musle, f ods and tlelde ather watch tie Assemblyman John as they c! 9 watch ap ant us \t Honey, t ten't « igh forume:. My: dreania aio. ae big ao the arth. | outdoOrs8—to bredtle—| n ;: ture, as God crested 4 part ofund Ian _ t e just ast the truest th darling sweethoart— that 1s why | long for our love to t trusst—ideal—as pure av we gan make it—f bingy that Gi r of whtskey Greadiully 1 3 fe Did fie say w 1 " se was called to-day, but an th Saito te adjournment was taken to Oct. 25, and : t and eating all thee hours=-but | must stop, as ¢t now this, at hall of $500 was continued. Darling, | could rave for pers around, | only :! Te: A room for baggage end i a ay (Continued on Second Page.) at Tampering Until Contents Are Listed— Reams of Love Notes Between Choir Singer and Rector Now Throwing Light on Mystéty (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening Werld.) NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Qct. 18—-Mrs. Edward W. Hall, widow of the murdered rector of St. John the Evangelist, was so affected nervously to-day by the continued publication of the letters exchanged by her husband and Mrs. Mills, who was murdered with him, that she obtained a delay in the arrangement that she should go to the National Bank of New Jersey and open her safe deposit box in the presence of a representative of the prosecutors. On behalf of Mrs. Hall, her lawyer, Timotay N. Pfeffer, denied em- phatteally that Mrs. Hall had been asked to open the safe deposit bor. “Mrs. Hall herself asked that a representative of the prosecutors bu present when she visits the box,” he sald. “She asked {t to protect ber- self against any malicious reports taat she was tampering with the con- tents for some reason connected with her husband's murder. The trut!: {s that two banks {nm New York in which Mrs. Hall holds stocks ha\« merged; she wishes to get at the stocks to have the proper transfers made.” A HALL AND SINGER SLAIN AS HE HEARD OF PLOT, IS THEORY pees Gana Charlottte Mills’s Attorney Believes Pair Were Kid- napped at Unusual Tryst. A guard was put over the depos!- tary late yesterday afternoon to mak: Sure that its contents were not tam- pered with. It ts a different box trom that rénted by the minister, in which were found an unaccounted fo: $0,700, believed to be hip “fight in- surance” to pay for an élopement Japan with Mrs. Mille. One reason for the gummohing . Henry Stevens, brother of Mrs. Hal to the Court Houee, it was learn+? to-day, was to look into @ story told by @ man who keepié his motor in th garage at Lavelette,.N. J., the sum mer Home of Stevens, Accofding to this inan, Stevens hav 4 brand-new speedometer attached (vo. his green automobile on Wednesday. Sept. 18. The car retained fn the garage all day Thursday. On Friday morning, according to the report brought to tHe Prosecutor and not yet authenticated, the speed ometer registered over ninety miles The interest of the Invcetigators {a° to learn whether ‘the ear had beei:! taken a distance equivalent to round trip between Lavalette an: New Brunswick ‘and about tweli In #n analytical article on the mur- der of the Rev, Mr. Hall and Mrw. Mills written for the United Press and copyrighted by that association, Mra, Florence Nor el for sixteen- yeur-old Charlotte Mills, asserted to- lay that a conspiracy brought about a hurried engagement of Mr. Hall and Mrs, Mf to meet on the night of Sept. 14, apparently to discuss an emergency which had occurred In the ifternoon which they were obliged to talk over at once and at length, and| miles more on the night of the mu that when they went to Buceleuch|ders, when Henry Stevens sald Yark th we carried into a was out fishing with T. S. Melling HALL “INNOCENT. MINDED,” Hi WIDOW CRIES. Mrs. Hall had the newspape brought to the breakfast table th morning. She had not read deep!. erted hous vere kille being taunted Nort: writes: ay night, they night of » was not “thelr night.” and Mra, Milly were ac- ys, Fri- Dr. Hal ustomed to meet Tuenc days and Sunduy to my F ind, establiehes tha fact that | into tae newly revealed letters befor: their meeting on the night of the | she collapsed in her chatr, wringi::: uurder Was unexpected by either, tte tells m that , through a nelglh- message to call her hands, according to the extr guards who have been stationed the home by her counsel. “My. poor, dear, innocent-minde husband,’ she moaned... ‘His pure} mind could never have understood thu meaning his words to a woman he was trying to help to a happier life wou! be interpreted by a-wicked world!"* Then she read further and collapses again. According to those who have access to the Hall home, the widow is the only one who would be disposed to Give volce to a semblance of faith | the rectitude of the murdered man. “It those letters had been shown to me @ year ago,” said one member of the household, “without signature o advise as to the writer—even If the GIRL OPERATOR AT WINSLOW IS AGAIN HEROINE Sets Signal Against Train, Saving Lives of Trapped Autoists. ON, N. J., u.— telephone opera- Winslow Junction i the lives of five e Avenue crosa- HAMMONT! Oct nia Ratlroad here|had been typewritten—I would have nutd: "Those are the work of Edwarv on duty at the| Hall. t eaitves ; she heard u|MORE SIGNIFICANT LETTERS ugh darkness prevented ng what had happened, 1 against a train 1 sho knew was about to arrive. ng three men and ash THOUGHT TO EXIST. Prosecutors Beekman und Btricke believe there are other letters eve. more significant to be found besld the reams of erotic correspondence wi ‘ashed through the] nich have begun to become public. r es and was caugit on th@liy their sudden, though belated, dis Henry Layer ongineer covery that letters which are scandai ous may also contain information cz value in fizing the motive for the murder, they served notice of to-day's search of Mrs, Hall's safety deposit box on her counsel, ‘Timothy N. Ptetter. Letters from Mrg. Mills to Mr, Ha! only wentences from which have been printed hitherto, are published ta ai other column of The and show not only t the family of Mrs. Milly. were believ: to be spying og her commualestio.... with the rector, but that both Mr. Hu! and Mrs. Mille feared thelr stare» box, - fitty feet of e occupants tt. IST JAIL BREAKS: ANIONS HDCAPTUR LES, Oct. 13. — Her evangelfat, 4 murderer; A: r, and Guido » who broke recaptured hours’ SAFE DEPOSIT SEARCH HALTS 7 | J