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_THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1522. 5 |BLOOD TEST TO FIX ; ‘LOVE NOTES OF HALL AND MRS. MILLS THROW LIGHT ON CASE‘ Boy's PARENTAGE|Hall “Gypsy King” to Mrs post office In the kitchenette of the | didn't suppose It was right to sell the Hall Murder “Tragedy of Lies 98 DOCTORS DECREE Mills, ’ MAY SPEC'ALIZE mn Res cive being told tons | “Well If Charlotte gets any money ONLY EXPERIENCED Gypsy and Rival Agree to His Fervid Notes and Diary Show Kentucky Association Rules Accept Result. Motive, Says Psy choa ha lyst Five Years Practice Is panes pa det eanction of i It is also shown by the letters that] for those letters I'll never let her keep Requisite. the District Court at Taunton to a the rector had « habit of leaving a] cent of it. I'll take {t all from hor Cc i L Pl d: VY g package of chocolate eciairs in the] and use it for those funeral expenses, r me on anne 9 en eance PADUCAH, Ky., Oct. 18,-at- [Proposal to have the boy claimed as church “Post Office” with his notes| Yes, I would uso her letters to pay torneys for the Kentucky Btate |£°° by Mrs. Clarence Smith of Digh- to Mrs. Mills. More than once she| the funeral expenses.” refers to her appreciation of these] There is a new theory that the dainties. couple were shot with a pistol owned A reference to a “‘epley book”|by the Rev, Mr. Hall. Apparently which was found in one of the notes] the only basis for it is the questions of Mrs. Mills, which became partly| certain witnesses are known to have Brn, an ditee whee ewes tal or aba tae PUOLe th Bele Medical Assvciation to-day were | 8nd Mrs. Eugene Choquette, wife The Rev, Edward W. Hall wanted to be Mrs. Eleanor Mulls’s “Gypay to refer to elther instructed by the association's | ® Nomadio wanderer, made the sub-| King," according to additional letters from the rector to the choir singer secretary, Dr. A. T. MeCormuck, ject of a blood test to determine his| made public to-day. In his diary, which he wrote to be exchanged for one to draw up fronclad rules which |D&rantage, has been obtained. Tho|sho kept during his vacation In Maine, he refers to the “sweet moments any physician desiring to become |tWo women, it was sald, agreed to} we had together this morning”’—meaning the day of his departure. a specialist must meet. Author- | Submit to the teat. The rector calls the singer “Gypsy Queen” and his “orn true mother? ity to control spectalists is given The Smith family has claimed the|!n some of tho letters. He sent her sweet pea blossoms and she sent him under a new State law. boy was stolen by gypsies four years| roses, and during his absence always kept a rose on his desi. Peter” or “Mother of All oka tes ee reece welone no trace Bee ee to ike seule “btenen A report that the watch of the Rev. Called Peter’’ is the exploitation of |r Hall, which was missing when Dr. McCormack announced that |&80. Mrs. Choquette asserts he is her — one rule will require five years | Fn, tn ewneey Wanita) seeds In a note book, starts with tho first general practice before applica- larg sad to bear out her contention. Talaparasd Wide NaSatAPei Teun one body was found, was now fn the the uncontrolled passion of a minister | his + for a woman who was not his wife.) Possession of Mrs, Hall .waa em- tion can be made to become a — der hearta” 4 "i specialist. Other rules provide |“MOTHER JONES” ILL IN WasH- ry hearts” and such endearing terms, Pastor's Letters Call Singer His “Queen” and Tell of Longing “to Hold You, Crush You.” Andre Tridon Blames American Puritanism of Small Town Which Caused Respectable Talk to Cover Things Up to Save Community’s Reputation. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall A tragedy of LIES: Everybody lying about his or her emotions and actions. Everybody lying about the emotions and actions of every- body else. Each actor, each actress in the grim New Brunswick drama of passion, jeal- ousy, hatred, envy, murder, torn by a conflict of desires, and hiding, suppressing them; in- stead of giving them, first, frank recognition— phatically dented by Prosecutor Beek~ SHE WROTE HARMLESS LET-| oon and members of the Hall house- TERS TO DECEIVE MRS. HALL. | poia, Today’s instalment of the letters) On behalf of his wifes Addison sold for publication by the woman law-| Clarke made a statement to-day in yer of Charlotte Mills for $1,000 shows] which he dented many of the impll- first that, to decetve Mrs. Hall as to] cations carried by referendés to Mrs, the passing of love letters between the | Clarke as “Minnie in the letters of two, Mrs. Mills wrote occasio: matter-of-course friendly letters to the rector and addressed them to Isie- ford, where the minister and his wits were staying. These were letters which the Rev. Mr. Hall could cas- ually hand over to his wife. But the burning missives of overwhelming af- fection were addressed by Mrs. Mills to Sea} Harbor, two miles and a half away, and the rector went for them when he had a chance. It is also shown that Mrs. Addison Clarke, known to the Rev. Mr. Hall ‘and Mrs. Mills as “'Minnie,”’ was also writing to the minister and once worried him by saying that Mrs. Mille was ill. The letters also Indicate that the couple had another meeting place than the farm on De Russey Lane— a place referred to'as ‘‘No, 49." Th two-family tenement in which James Mills lived “his bewildering life with his family (without, apparently, any nse that it was bewildering) is at No. 49 Carmen Street. There are references in the letters of Mrs. Mills which are disparaging to a Mrs. Burns, indicating the sub- ject of the criticism did not have the spiritual understanding, which was shared by the rector and the so- prano. A Mrs. Burns, lives in a house on George Street next to the church. Her kitchen overlooks the church horse sheds which have been men- tioned as a meeting place for the lov- ers until mounting gossip forced the minister to erect an alibi in the form of a barbed wire fence between the back door of the Sunday school room and the sheds and appoint a new trysting place out Buccleuch Park way. urely,” said Mrs. ‘Burn she didn't like’ me. ‘She often when I was peeling potatoes I looked right into the shed and saw them. And she knew I didn’t like what she was Mobdigs’t “: TRIED TO SHOW IMPROVEMENT IN HER EDUCATION. y| Mrs. Mills. The statement denied Mrs. Clarke ever was consajeus of any enmity felt for her by Mra, Mills; that Mrs. Clarke had ever followed the ex- ample of Mrs. Mills in sending pies to the rector or putting flowers on his desk; that Mra, rke observed secret exchanges of affection between Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills at Lake Hopat- cong the day before the murders and threatened to ‘‘tell Mrs. Hall,’’ and, finally, that Mrs. Clarke was a regular member of the choir of St. John's. Miss Florence North, who {se repre- senting Charlotte Mills, when asked if she and the private detectives she is working with had made any prog- ress in their independent Investiga- tion, replied: “Our most important discovery ts that men, identified as members of the congregation of Dr. Hall's church, were seen In heated conversation with Willie Stevens about 8 o'clock -the night of Thursday, Sept. 14, near French Street, New Brunswick. This street {s far remote from the Phil~ lips farmhouse. DETECTIVES SEARCH FOREIGN SECTION OF THE CITY. “The operatives we have working out here have combed the Hungarian quarter thoroughly. Several of the private detectives, in fact, are of Hun- garian descent and they have been able to get close to the people there. The detectives have found that the people down there seemed to know quite a lot about the affair, No, I can't specify just what they know. Felix di Martini, @ former New York detective of wife experience in homicide cases and several brilliant achievements, has been investigating the murders for two weeks for a client whose identity is not revealed. He said to-day he had not been able to find the slightest support for the be- Nef that the bodies of the minister and Mrs. Mills were carried to the knoll under the apple tree after they had been killed somewhere else. The report of the Squibbs Labora- tories, made to-day to Prosecutor Beekman supports di Martini's opinion. The laboratories have made , Rever have happened at all If, in then readjustment. And one destre so long suppressed, so long inhibited, that in the end it could find fulfilment only in death and mutila- tion after death. ‘Then the spectacle of the whole community exhaling one long “Hush-sh-sh! That is the psychoanalyst's view of the still unsolved double killing in New Brunswick, N. J., of the Rev. Edward Hall and his attrac- tive young choir leader, Mrs. Mills. I obtained the remarkable psycho-analytic analysis which follows from Andre Tridon, the leading New York authority in this newest science, the au- thor of ‘Psychoanalysis and Love,''/‘‘Psycho- analysis and Behavior” and a number of other books. Mr. Tridon told me in his study at No. 121 Madison Avenue, “is the murky light cast upon American Puritanism—that Beiree? morality which W. L. George once described as ‘too good to “It is a morality which simply will not admit that certain things exist, that they can be. Not ad- mitting the truth means that we le. Everybody in New Brunswick seems to have been lying about the Hall-Mills murder since {t was first discovered. ‘Cover it be ended.’ Rut you can’t kill psychic emotions as easily as physical bodies. The murderer undoubtedly has suffered as in- tensely since the commission of the act as before it. There is more scandal, gossip, suspicion abroad in the respectable com- munity where the victims lived = than ever before. Nothing has up.’ apparently, is the community been solved, Not even decency slogan. It is a whole town of has been preserved. Babbitts— you've read Sinclair “From the psychoanalytic Lewis's novel? Whatever hap- viewpoint," concluded Mr, Tri- don, “the way to prevent such Pens—whatever the suppression | tragedies is, first, the honest of truth, justice, fair dealing, recognition of your emotions; sec- democracy—the credit of the ond, their readjustment. You community and of its highly re- cannot have the second step witb- out the first. spectable citizens must be pre- served, “And the way to solve such mysteries,” he added, candidly, “4p to teach detectives psychol- ogy. The psychologist, you see, can tell wnen people are lyin; he can tell by the swelling of t! carotid artery, by the slightly higher pitch to the voice, by the contraction of the hands, by the uneasy movements of the feet, “As I see it, the tragedy need the beginning, we had had a little honesty, a little recognition: of facts, a little readjustment in tio face of them. Instead of this, every one proceeded on the grand assumption that a minister _can- for demonstrations of ability. “Protection will be afforded the public,” Dr. McCormack said. “There have been too many grad- uates from medical colleges en- tering a highly specialized fleld without adequate experience.’ INGTON, CHARLESTOWN, W. Va., Oct. 18.— “Mother Jones,” noted labor leader, Is {i at Washington, D. C., and will be unable to attend the trial of C. Frank Keeney, President of District No. 17, United Mine Workers of Amercia, un- der charges in connection with tho kill- ing of Deputy Sheriff Gore a year ago. HALL AND SINGER WERE SLAIN AS HEHEARD OF PLOT, IS THEORY (Continued.) Dr. Hall Thursday afternoon. She refused the neighbor's offer of use of her telephone, and ran to a little corner store. What she said no one knows, but she left home about 7.30 that evening and was never again seen alive by the members of her family. As to the rector’s movements just before the crime, we are left in doubt, through reticence of Mrs. Hall and her family to per- mit a thorough investigation, But we know enough to believe Dr. Hall was agitated. I have reason to believe a mem- ber of the Hall household will tes- tify the rector was greatly dis- turbed. Now, what came next? We have the testimony of a witness who saw Mrs. Mills aboard a car, headed out toward the park where she and Dr. Hall were wont to meet and discuss poetry and nature and the things they loved. Mrs. Mills left the car three blocks before reaching the usual etop at Easton Avenue. She side, were found beneath the crab- apple tree. But my investigations lead me to believe that some such scene as this took place: Mra. Mills was seized and pushed into an automobile. She was taken to a vacant building, not Phillips farm, but in a little group of houses northwestward of the crab-apple tree, ana some distance removed. There she was thrown Into a dark room. Next, Dr. Hall was captured and taken there. The couple were confronted with indisputabie evi- dence of an “‘affair. The rector sprang to Mrs, Mills's defens He was thrown down. He arose, fighting, and was shot through the head. They probably had not intended to kill him. Then, doubly enraged, the wo- man—the mysterious woman, who planned the crime—wreaked ter- vengeance upon poor littls Mills, enfeebled through a serious operation, and weighing but 109 pounds. Mrs. Mills was emall, but she fought for her life. She received bruises and scratches in the fight. She was shot three times, and afterward her throat REV. EDWARD W. HALL. In one letter he tells her of longing for a “true heart gypsy letter,” but Iam piggy” and-that he want- ed a letter every moment. of his longing “to hold you, crush you and pour my burning kisses on your Also he speaks of th ry dear body.” most wonderful thing He also tells of “storing up health and strength to be your Gypsy love that you are keeping a rose on my desk," he wrote in another. mentioning some pictures he had he "I have them safely That the path of love di run smooth! when he says, “ he assures her, for them he Intir that all our memories, even the rels, were ‘but stepping stones to the vision of a greater, In the same letter he calls her “ heart of mine," and tells of his whole strength and oceans of dept talks of meeting her at “. return and says he will Just want to crush her for hours His plans called for his return on a Friday, and he tells her he wants to see her alone by : let out unrestrained universe of Joy and and tells how they ere together every moment, though so far apart. It ap= pears that because of the presence of re, Hall, the rector received the love Mills at Seal Harbor, ers were sent to two and a half One entry tells that it will be ange Sunday—away from her, He m a week long to him, and how he longs to clasp her to him and klas her all over. He tells of carrying her pleture everywhere with him, but does not say whether y or in his mind. The diary, it has been explained, was written by him for her exclusive benefit, to be ivered to her at the end of his va- jon to show how he had spent the ne tim a WOMAN FOUND INJURED IN STREET IDENTIFIED Condition Dus to Fall From Aute and Alcohol, Rellef. well-dressea women found d Street and Second Ave- M. to-day was {dentified at Bellevue Hospital at 10 o'clock this as Margaret Gassmey, twenty-~ S12 Tast ith Street. She Patrolman Barry of n thrown oF to tomobile. us when taken to, and appeared to be! a that might have b nation ef alcohol and the which she was suffering, She Was identified by friends. morn overed ——— FILIPINO KLAN CAUSES TROUBLE IN HAWAII Copyrignt, 1922 (New York Evening World by Press Publiahing Company. HONOLULU, Oct. 18.—A Filipina Ku Klux Klan organized during thi past six months Is terorizing Fillpin in the outlying districts of the ‘sland! One of the pathetic features of the not be aman. You are only justi- by still other symptoms as ob- correspondence is an obvious effort by] €Xhaustive tests of the soll immedi-| fied in that assumption if you vious. Where the third degree Mrs. Milfs, the wife of the church}ately under the murdered couple.]| begin by making him a eunuch. fails to elicit the truth, the sexton and furnace man at the high|Theso show the earth absorbed far “From the viewpoint of the psy- physcho-analyst succeeds." school, to give proof of the intel- | more blood than was superficially ap-]| choanalyst, even Mr. Hall and > ite aE lectual fruit of her association with| could have seeped from the bodies if] Mra. Mills were not quite honest walked slowly, hesitantly, looking was cut. behind her occasionally. Why did The bodies were then taken to | Will be theirs. He tells t she act that way? the crab-apple tre and the letiers | kissing her tenderly and fiercels And tho rector? We are not ab- scattered so that \hey might secin jhe sald Mrs. Hall wondered why he solutely certain, but we have been to have been murdered ina lovers’ | was taking only three Sundays (va- SCARLET FEVER KILLS TWo. told by supposed witnesses that rendezvous. cation) this year. One of the letters | 1s! aixwosmcmemee her clerical lover by presenting him] they were carried to the place aftor] in facing their attraction toward ‘Two of the five children of Abrahum| he came along on foot a few min- This, as T see it, ts probably |concludes: "It was you, darling—you| It is said the organization has more with a formal literary effort at a book] their hearts had ceased to pump. euch other, They were x little |Fremit, No.. 185 Jersey Street, New| Utes later, hands in pockets, head what happened about 9.30 or 19 |I was longing for—my true mother—| than t among Filipino review of ‘The Mother of All Liv-] Attorney Pfeiffer made some point-| bit conscience-stricken, That {# | Brighton, S. I., are dead of scarict| own, hurrying. o'clock on the night of Sept. 14. |my gy heart--my life—Al-| sugar plantation workers, all sworn ing.” In one of the torn letters} @4 comments on the examination of] why they tried to adorn their re- | fever and the other three are Jn the The darkness of the night that To-morrow, I will vo into detail as © letters were slened| +, secrecy under extreme penalties, found scattered about the bodies on] his clients, Mrs. Hall and her broth-] lationship with references to the | hospital suffering from the same dis-| Uns over Buccleuch Park swal- to our search for the perpetrators L. T.” initia ling Abers’ ure) devlaved te be the knoll on the farm was a sentence| ¢', Henry and Willlam Stevens, yes-| interchangeability of prayer and ease, but are expected to recover. Abra-] lowed them up, and from then on of this fiendish *texecution,'’ and Geran words meaning ‘your to Join under threat of deuth. _ which was understood to read ‘Was|terday afternoon. He was asked love, with emphasis upon their |ham Jr., three, died Saturday night and] ts, as yet, conjecture as to what will tell all we have beon able to | truo love.” oy Pan Religious?" It is now shown| “Does Mrs. Hall know anything] musical congeniality, But music |Rebeccu, four, died Sunday went on until the bodies, side by discover. His diary, which he kept in. penc of Oahu and other Hawailan islands, according to information given the City Attorney's office by Fillpino leaders ' | | that it should have been read ‘Is|®>out 4 diary kept by her husband} is no Puritan! Music says to Pam religious?" and refers to Pamela, a character in the Keable novel. One reference in the letters presents ® puzzle for which no one now alive can give an explanation, There was apparently a spot out on Huston Avi Bue s0 consecrated in the memories of the pal that the Rev. Mr. Hall lifted his hat whenever he passed it. Mrs. Mills wrote to him of the thrill she felt—even when not looking at him because of the presence of his wife or possibly the other church worker she regarded as her other rival in his esteen—when she knew he was lifting his hat in passing the placa, She tried constantly in her letters to throw a glow of religious sanctity bout their affection; she justified their passion by a frank avowal that she was not only not beautiful but “scrawny,” and that therefore the minister's, attraction for her must be spiritual and not sensual, Something bh caused the investi- mators to believe the very last letter which Mrs, Mills wrote to the min- ister—one perhaps Inter than that in which she expressed her jealousy that she had net bis wife's privilege of “sewing his torn trousers’’—never d him and that it contained a reference to the engagement tho Rev. ir. Hall and the choir singer had imude to meet at the Phillips farm, It is known some of the letters were intercepted and read by a third per- son. If this ipat letter was inter- cepted, it may have furnished the in formation which might have led to the following cf the couple to their meeting place and their subsequent murder James Mills. (ke meek, easygoing busband of the siuin singer, admis be Is no longer confident of the novence of his wife's (rlendship Mector Hall. te sald that althe he had learned throurh Miss North of the letters, he was led to belleve they showed only u plutonle relationship When asked v he felt after resd- ng the letters. le replied “Weill, it shook me up e bit." Ho added he was no} r convinced his wife's relutions with the clergyman were purely placomic, explaining “No one could possibly believe that reading the letters.” His did not appear at first to bi y opinien on the subject of the ¢ of his wife's letters, but his brother Henry was almost-wild from indigna- tien. He talked of {njunctions and wound saying that he got Thold of the persun who sold them he would “throw her from here across the Raritan River." James became aroused over his bwetber's anter and finally sald ue and one kept by Mrs. Mills, and which they are sald to have exchanged af- ter his vacation in Maine in August?" I think not, I say I think not, be- cause I can't recall all that she was asked and I don't remember anything about it. “What can you teil us as to a cer- tain Hungarian woman who, it is re- ported, has told the authorities that she saw a woman supposed to be Mrs, Hall ut the sceno of the crime that Thursday afternoon?” “On that there js this; Mrs. Hall was asked to take her hat off and put on the gray coat and the hag she wore the night she went out seagching for er husband. A woman whom Mrs. Jail regayded as one of the working class was ushered in after the change was made. Mrs. Hall was asked to stand Mp, he woman faced her and then sat in a ob id of the room, Then Mrs. Hall sat down, “The woman made no etatement and did not indicate to amy one in the room whether she had recognized Mrs. Hall as u woman she had previously seen somewhere, This woman, who was pot known to Mrs, Hall and whose name we do not know, re- mained seated without saying a word. Then she went out." It became known to-day that the woman who was brought tn to look at Mrs, Hall was Mrs, Matthew Zulies, wife of the man who was sup- posed to act as watehman for the Phillips farmhouse and tts store of valuable tique furniture, ‘HEALER’ SCHLATTER WAS NOT MURDERED ST. LOUIS, Oct. 18 (Associated Press}—The deuth of Francis Schlat- ter, alleged "healer," in a rooming house here Monday night was from causes, It Way announced fol- in autopsy to-day. The was performed following an assertion of Mrs. Sehiatter, who ar- rived here from Kansas City tast night, that she believed her husband to have been the vietim of foul plu The police, despite the autopsy, are continuing thelr search for a young woman, “ho was with Schlatter for severs! days preceding his death, and who told a physician thet she was hin nuree Mre, Schlatter to-day devied that her husband the Francis Sehlas ter who wae convicted In Los A1ge! in 1917, on & charge of using thu m to defraud in connection with sei!ing by mail “blessed handkerchiefs.’ every lover, ‘Go to your sweet- heart;' to every woman, ‘Your lover awaits you.’ “If, on the one hand, there was the conflict between the natural ~ desires of the clergyman and the choir leader and their respect for respectability, for the community pressure—how much more intense the conflict between the jealousy of those who thought they had the right to be jealous and their (Continued.) real, true, nature 18 real—true, so our love is the most vital power, the truest joy that can be known in this life and hereafter. Please don’t laugh at this, I know I’m a crazy cat, but I can’t be differe: passion for respectability, thelr Charlotte talks—then Dan asks questions, then he annoys, so how intense dread of scandal! And if, as the authorities have declared, the motive for the crime was Jealousy, no psychoanalyst can wonder at this final upheaval of fires so long suppressed. “For the psychoanalyst is never fooled by the assumption—so popular with the police and with many unthinking persons—that respectable, tax-paying, church- going folk cannot commit a crime It is by just these persons that some of our most cold-blooded, long-headed crimes are commit- ted. And it is these adjectives which, in my opinion, most fitly characterize the Killing of Mr, can I write’ Darling mine, utc where I find my gres boy, every time you take yo your face. Monday, too. And it do, and my heart sings for yes, t you feel me purring—blissfully contented’ And close to you, too. Was my goodby to the others too hasty, and should T have said more? What a truly unexpected pleasure {t was, dearest, sweetest boy! Oh, how good you are. est joy to be near my man; what care I for what other people call pleasure; to be near you, although I didn't dare look at my noble boy's face, this is all I ask. How friondly our Easton Avenue road seems to us, and dear, dearest hat off I never fail to notice and can read 8 4 new message of love every timo you and | could fling my arms about you and pour kisses on my Babykin’s head and face, Grandmu is here. 1 must stop As I rode along I thought, this ts Sweetheart, my true heart! I could Hall and Mrs. Mills, crush you. Oh, ! am wild to-night, eo happy 1 could dance wildly. *Miverd detail of that crime wae | aprEMPTS REVIEW OF BOOK HALL SENT HER. planned beforehand. It wus no 0 Wy feel this way to-day—it will pass as you know wift, tngane {mpulsc, It was T don’t know why T tonainine porate “ipualived in the God, I know, oh, I know that as much as I know you are my true heart, mind of the perpetrator; the care- that’ He is Watching and caring and wo ure never alone. Ife ts always ful placing of the bodies, the ne in whatever we do, even in pliysical closeness, He 1s near, for we strewing about of the letters prove as much. Furthermore, it seems to me that the criminal did not rely on cleverness alone, but The Chris she thought he was, on the contributing assistance of 1am the Resurrection und t money and social position to would be nc escape the nets of our none too his always foi democratic Amertcan Sustice “The crime is simply the flow ering of a desire for vengeance long suppressed. If the murdere uatii this moods had given frank, even publ too much? 1 know recognition to this emotion—if presence, and go into a convent there had been a ucene, # denyn- Put there 1 wouldn’t see uny one elation, a warning of ‘hands off’ — if, as might have been the case in Oh, darling, Hie non-ccclesiastical clr body directly and indirectly con- names? nected with the case had not felt impelled to shut his or her eyes {ts because I ain je: to facte—why, then, indeed, there ]' life, Not because of conventic might have been a scandal in New the man at the gate ot Man' Brunswick, tut there would have vthoet leoking at yoo (I'm 4 been no double killing thrill that brings te: Was Pam religious? Did she ver beloved was English (page 49) I huve much w Es at anew the old truth—that violence settles nothing. ‘When those two are dead,’ one may imagine the murderer thinking, ‘everything will be forgotten, nothing wil! come out, wy, own suffering wil) “ot d I don't want to stay for wes asked to and kept my word her things T wa ed urse. it Avk me any part of the book and 1 will remember !t t now I ¢ mld your tired body, sew your torn trouse : "t ever want to call you ‘dear’ or “honey” i any~ les, every- one else can. Aren't you glad that no one but you can call me dear One time 1 told you I hated your work Logiuse n Beach called you ‘‘doctor, ) knew ft thrilled you, the kind of our eyes. of Joy to 3 “and the erime has proved Oh, 1 know it because you are a true pri cause that is your supremo joy and satists cal inspiration and you see tn me what rvice c s children to taste deeply of all things. LL ee ee cl God? Yes, I think 80, but she hadn't found her soul; nor did Chris. Chris was Cecil's mate no more than you, » he was her true mate. —and if he knew that, then there Pamelas for him Init‘ prayerful life—a desire to be Nke I ought to do but I can't to-day, T must walt nd T come down to earth again. Do? love you yes, even your physical re always in my mind and heart > touch you, call you "dear,"’ rub but becau ‘ou teach, you the priest. T haven't unlocked the doors as I But it seems as though I am unworthy, ape again I don't understand—you p Pam's mother I hated your parish. I guess it must wlways come first in your you love it so. When and I, —born for it. And be- tion | am merely your physi- FERVID LOVE NOTES OF MRS. MILLS AND RECTOR HALL MADE PUBLIC 10 DAY have had time to do them. Well, it doesn’t matter one bit what comes. I had a simple greeting but did not leave it But since {t is a dut about yourself service when our hearts are bitter. i think the truest way is to forget all church bids, forgetting everything but that you are the priest. o Dearest, darling boy, | love you most as you love me as you do to-day. Not so much physleally but pray darling. the physical fits in and doesn’t dominate. same—not to be denied—never. Dearest, believe me, won't you? rather than me—what I really am are girls with shapely be IT have the @reatest of all ble: love and my heart is his—my awfully lonesome for you to-night of thoughts. Way uo I ery so—oh, it pains me to « nights, Then I dream of curling up in 4 God knows bes I must get some rest as I expect to be up early dreams I have. Will it ever be? lunch. , BUT MUST TAKE CHANC By is | would leave « that it may not be wise but | must take a chance vinted even though it isn't much at a gay, happy girl T love your dear note of last night 9 I know own my “NOTE MAY NOT BE W. My dear, dear boy, When 1 you dis Dearie, w ing it. Of all the people thi but of course I have never One never can except t the How impatient | am and will by dear face for hours as you touch 4 pose we could start early in the following night late—say 10 or 11 Darling. do you yearn tor it as When will it be dear, the last of thi I guess I'd better not leave t looking over toward the trees by my Ife is nothing except I have never get discouraged or discontented if I am terial things. I have the greatest anything else I am holding my stveet Babykine deep into his heart and reading the gives me strength and life. Oh, honey, | am fiery to-day since ! saw my Bab;kins * * It ts 3.80 and he hasn't return and then J can be sure you will get this Goodnight, my true heart. I never buy me—but if we go on a picnic I will make whatever you like to eat tell me what to make. ‘Words—notes are useless. But | » than ever I need ta, y—exulted and you see It was thero just the Never will I say you want my know that it you lov long and ache for my body. Haye | ever tempted you, dear? ever madé you want me? | never wanted to. Dearest, there isn’t a man who can even make me said to-day, our hearts are true as steel I'm not pret ; but I'm not caring what they have ing n e is his—all ! have is his—poor as my body is—scrawny my skin may be—but | am his forever. I want to talks to I know there Burning, flaming love BARS KEMALIST POLICE FROM CONSTANTINOPLE rifiah Navy Ordered (to Euforee Allied Order, CONSTA lated F NOPLU, Oct. 18 (Asso- 5).—The Allied missions unanimous decision to-day Kemalist Gendarmerte for Thrace, to enter Constan aritish Navy has been erdered ty bearin Turkish all At the highest Pinnacle of Quality Regardless of how little you pay, but this does not mean fancy boxes and ribbons. Advt.on Page 10 NEWCOME smiTH.— f ji | 45 “Lost end } M55, World Bu for thirty such goodies as vou do for