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MLE HG ea hold the Prosecutor, by threats, Wheedling and device, has gained evi- dence which to him seems positive that for some motive- possibly the protection of the reputation of the amorous parson—some of the cthers are not telling him “the truth, the Whole truth and nothing but the truth.” He believes reservations have been made—possibly for religious mo- tives, perhaps for other motives. VESTRYMAN AND GIRL ALSO SUMMONED. Ralph V. M. Gorsline, the smoothly diplomatic vestryman who a few days ago deprecated an investigation of a scandalous story rmgaring the Sunday School room of the Church of St. John the Evangelist on the ground that “that part of the butlding tsn't consecrated anyway,"’ was also on the list of witnesses before Mr. Stricker fo was Miss Katherine Restall, pretty stenographer for a lumber con- mm and a member of the choir. She 8 the girl whom, according to Gors- line, he found standing on a street corner on the night of the day Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills were last soen alive and took her in his automobile to htr home near Buccleugh Park Both she and Mr. Gorsline have denied they were on the Phillips farm that night. The hesitation of Prosecutor Beek- man of Somerset County to make an srrest is justified by his Middlesex olleague, Mr. Stricker, in this way: ff we make an arrest on tnforma- ‘ion and belief, we Iay our whole case open to exposure by habeas corpus process. We can be made to tell what our information and beliefs are. KEEPING EVIDENCE FROM 8US- PECTED PERSONS. “In this particular case, the per- sons under suspicion have almost un- limited resources for the obliteration, misdirection and suppression of ev dence. They are under constant es- pionage. They cannot hide themselves when the hand of the law reaches for them. But, if Mr. Beekman very wisely puts his evidence before u Grand Jury and an indictment and bench vant follow, they cannot learn how much or how little evidenc> the State 1s without going to a Supreme Court Judge and asking for an in- spection of the Grand Jury minutes. And I know enough about this case now to be sure that no court (having the information which I hase) would grant a motion for inspection of the minutes. “It is not the usual procedure. It ia @ procedure adapted to extraor- dinary circumstances involved In this From a semi-official source, this newly discovered corroboration of generally accepted opinions of the murder was given outrtoday: “A group consisting of two women and three men was near a crabapple tree on the old Phillips farm about ¥ o'clock on the night of Sept. 14 ‘ast. A sixth person, a woman, was concealed in the nearby shrubbery. ‘Two of those who were near the crab- apple tree are dead—the Rev. Edward W. Hall and Mrs. Eleanor Mills. “The identity of the woman who is lieged to have seen the murder is carefully concealed, Nor 18 any ofi- clal explanation forthcoming of her presence in the secluded spot thot night. One story is that she lives not far away. Another is that she may ave been one of a spooning couple, aut nothing has leaked out as to whether she had a companion. STAR WITNESS QUIZZED 8 BOTH PROSECUTORS. “On apparently good authority it Is seid that she is well known and shly respected, a member of a good New Brunswick family, and that sho is at present staying with a sister in Bound Brook, where both the Som- erset and Middlesex Prosecutors arc reported to have questioned her again lyst night. from unconfirmed 1 {vo of the persons atuick the rector and singer and saw the shots. Whether she saw Mrs. Mills's throat ext is a point that is not revealed Mor is it known whether she saw the love letters, the automobile supposed to have been used by the murderers, or watted to sce the bodies laid out ¥ the tr “Because she is reported to have yen concealed she could Uireugh the crack ef a door when witnesses were re-examined early this week, it is assumed there ts doubt as 6 her being able to identity some of he members of the party near the upple tree. But Prosecutor Beekman < Said to have obtained her affidavit ast Monday, and on the strength of t decided to ask delay in the ap pointment of an investigator repre senting the State." COMES FROM THEATRE, FINDS HER HOME ROBBED ports she suw x0 cased of Stealing §17.000 Apartment. in concert in a of Mrs Eliza- Dawson Street when $17, stolen, hom 0, 774 night, beth Paline the ax, Thursday 100 worth of Jewels men were locked who waid they forty-five, a pri ‘Third Steet Uhirty-nine, of Wirst Avenue, noar Bee. ond Street, were arrested: by. D. Hastings and Kilroy of the Left Squad, Mrs. Palmer and her family from a theatre to find the robbed. were The two up. i No, 34 t Greenber f wetives Safe and turned apartment , i ee SURRENDERS HIMSELF IN STOCK SALES FRAUD Officer of 84.000,000 jected im %. B. I. Salinger jr the Midland Packing Company, an $8 100,000 corporation, who returned yes- lerday on the Aquitania, surrendered to Masistant United States District ay ty » Vieo President of Attor new Mattuck Last May the Federal Grand Jury at Sioux Falls, 8. 1., indicted Sulinger on s charge of using the mails in w schenn to defraud Investors in stock of the Mid Jand Company, promising the stock Would pay dividends of 40 pro cent Arraigned before United tea 'onn slener Hitehvock, Saling was paroled until Monday, when hie pro fur Motive in Hall-Mills Tragedy, Jealousy, Analyzed and Defined By Woman Author Who Knows gy} Margaret Deland Calls It Combination of Selfishness and Vanity, Minus Humor, Says Brilliant Writer of “The Vehement Flame.” By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. If there be one thing on which every official and unofficial siudent 6 Hall-Milis murder in New Brunswick, N. J., !s agreed It is t! here Is a tragedy of jealousy. Jealousy pointed the pistol that killed the popular clergyman. ousy slashed with a knife the singing throat of the who loved him and whom he loved. What ever mystery stil! rrounds th double killing, there seems no longer any di: to the motive-'‘jealousy, grave: which hath a most vehement flame for Evening World readers who have followed this story of fact, as strango and thrilling and ironic as any fiction of De Maupassant, there will be a particularly timely interest In the following interview on jealousy, its causes and con- sequences, which I obtained from ono of America's greatest women writers, Mar- waret Deland: Jeu i Married woman 81 cruel as the coals thereof are coals of fire, the Therefore, lfshness-+vanity—humor=jealousy.”” No man ever keeps on loving a jealous woman; he just pretends to, to keep the MARGORET afire sleeping porch. house was ablaze and waves of smoke were sweeping acroas the porch, DE LAND peace." “It must be uncomfortable to be Jealous, but the thing about it is that it will bore any man to death.” “Jealousy is self-love, plus the @—-———————_——_________ consciousness of your own inferi- ority to the person of whom you are jealous. And it has the same effect on love that water has on fire.” “I noticed, with all my hus- bands—and I've had three—that if you tell ‘em you see ‘em lookin’ other ladies, they'l look again! —just to spite you. Don't notice em, and they'l! not do it. Men are children.” really serious tempt to show up jealousy what it is?) Why have you r ceived so many indignant letters about ‘The Vehement Flame'?"* “I don't know," answered Mre. Deland, still smiling. ‘The dis- Pleasure of a few of my women correspondents his surprised me very much—I don't see why they get so very hot about a mere novel! Do you suppose their dis- like of the story is the samo sort of dislike that some very plain People feel for looking-glasses?"* for T smiled, too, for the same idea had occurred to me. Then I said: “Isn't one of the moet painful and idiotic forms of jealousy that which women show, not toward another woman, but toward a man’s business, or his hobby, or his men friends? “Yes, it seoms to me that such Jealousy ts pathetically foolish,” Mr Deland replied. “And it is also short-sighted, for there is no way in which a woman can estab- lish the relations of comradeship and friendship with her husband more surely than,by entering into his interests and pleasures.’* Or, as one of the most amusing characters in “The Vehement Flame" puts it: “My dear father used to say that women were puffect fouls, because they never could realize that if they left the door open cat would put on his slippers and sit by the flre and knit; if they locked it, he'd climb up the chim- ney, but what ho'd feel free to rowl on the roof!" It's a brave, wise and loving woman who will tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about jealousy, the most self-righteous vice of wives and others, but that 1s exactly what Margaret Deland has done tn her latest brilliant novel, “The Ve- hement Flame,” from which the epigrams quoted above are taken. Because it seems to me that so many of us need the tonic of sound thinking on this subject, I asked Mrs. Deland to discuss it further, although she ts almost as difficult a person to interview as John D. Rockefeller hitnself. First of all, I quoted to her the old and, in my opinion, utterly false saw: “Jealousy is the proof of love." And then T asked her why women are so much more often jealous than men—for they are! . “Jealousy seems to me a proof “Jealousy is the most utterly a futile of emotions.” continued of self-love.”” Mrs. Deland quickly Mrs. Deland earnestly. “And 1 punctui the time-honored aphorism. “Jealousy,’’ she continued, ‘of am sure that a woman's jealousy never made her man true to her in any spiritual sense—though tt may haye kept him (through fear course Is not confined to women, of the unpleasantness of an earth But I think that, though men quake) from being false to her! have the primitive jealousy of A straitjacket would hive an- sex, Women have the more sophis- sweré the same purpose, * © © ticated and Jess excusable jeal- And there can be no doubt that ousy of mind, and women's minds, the jealous woman is cither re being often idler than men's, are volting or ridiculous in the eyes of more apt to be oceupied by trivi- un observing and cynical world; alti Instead of the anxious furthermore, she bores her un- preoccupation about earning bis fortunate husband to death! living, which generally fills a “it is interesting,” H the novelist man's mind, a woman's mind has ignifcantly, “in this con addi time to brood over siights and the " l nection, to remember that jeal- littlenesses of ‘hurt feelings.’ As ousy is probably the only vico @ result, the first thing she knows which gives no pleasure to the she is ‘Jealous.’ And rather prides herself on her det human creature who indulges in a1" it. The jealous person suffers the aa gonies of hell."’ “She especially prides hergelt = on it if she ts married," I pointed “Jealousy,"’ I obse “seems out. “Do you think there Is any fo me a fifty-fifty combination of more justifeation for a wife's hurt and hate, Yet it IS ‘so Jealousy than for a girl's? T have much worn!’ Can you suggest « heard wives argue that they have substitute? What is your last the ‘RIGHT’ to be jealous, when word to the jealous wife they suspect a man of breaking oa his marriage vows,’* “1 would suggest unselfishne “Can there ever be any ‘justl- fication’ for a degrading and un- generous emotion?" Mrs, Deland answered with kindling earnest- ness—"either before or after mar- as a substitute Mrs. Deland answered simp! would suy to the jealous person ‘Love Love moré and Self le the And it would help her, too, if she for jealou: would analyze herself and dis- riage?) And as for a woman's cover some of her shortcomings. ‘right’ to her husband's love Then sho would (if she was an have any of us a ‘right’ to any- intelligent person) try to culti body's / vate the charming and reasonable “Love will come—or go; It ean- and lovable qualities which she not be commanded, or held by saw in the woman of whom she force, on the ground that either was Jealous. Let her try competi husband or wile has @ ‘right’ to tion tn intelligence, good humor it, One of the most festering und guyety! mistakes that we human creatures make is (his of imagining that we have a ‘right’ to receive from “My final word to the wife The author of “Th other people any spiritual emotion hement Flame" shook her Whether it be admiration, or between a smile and a sigh trust, or honor! As for Love, the “Lam afraid,” she concluded profoundest and noblest of all “dt would take « good many words sou it is a gift The most to tél her what I really think of © can do is to try to deserve it her—how sorry 1 am for her, and . ee how pitiful and ridiculous’ she _ We spoke of the meanness of xeems to me to be, and how sure Jealousy's manifestations; its spy- I am that if she would only for. ink, keyhole listening, opening of get heracl/ she could come out otters totter of the agony of jealousy and walk Yes, jealousy reveals itself in serenely toward the highest reat- thls sort of thing,’ nyveed Mew: ization of what Love means Deland Which yveminds me, he ade with a flash of humor, NO LONGI “of an old say ing in regard to an NSIS AL excuse for some of wrong » 11 Moore doing. on the grou at it was | Stree! day they no winan nate eply was, el States Ship- ‘Yes, it may be so: but isn't tex Gotanska, hav~ auhatadieeer tats buck to the The ning Wi “And yet.” 1 sald, “why dre Be OF a he ee women so up in arms at any at- | yesterda) of grapes v fo, Stre No, 2 Gue Avenue nine, Fr Third Avenue der arrest at watehman aroused opened the door, only to look into twof sack over my head," garage wash room of It loose ran out into the going out truck fred se t Hite saw the honse SULGRAVE MEMBERS Sir Charles Wak. bers of the Sulgraye Instit companied him to this country to pre sent the statues of Pitt and Uryee, sailed for home to-day on the Homeric. Sir Charles expressed htm self as pleased with the rec corded the tion and Heved. th wd do as n coment riewn friendship did the statues of Washington and Li coln presented (0 iF by Americ Sir William Letts, afte to v that “we are all t could be dor the re- tr Lioyd George, changed it to "1" 1 praised the fighting Welshman and said he was the man who won the war ALLEGED FAKE BROKER Jimes Collins Wo in Long Branch Sw ; Swindling rations J to tn netted him and his confederate dreds of thousands of dollar charged to James Colling, arrested her yesterday on a New Jersey warrant and others picked up by the police of several eltles, following the activity of Gov, Edwards of New Jer i pursuing the band. The men are sai te have operated a pretended stock office Jast summer in Le 1 wae ' 1 DISCLAIM SIGNING AME Ob UNDER PRESSURE. KA, Oct, 21 (Associated Press) wkish Nationalists siened ot Mudaniat armistice to pre thet penceful intentions to the workl and FAMILY TRAPPED INFIRESAVEDBY | = HERG LAD OF 12 Delmont Bogart, by Playmate’s Scream, Makes 2 A. M. Rescue. Delmont vyed the Bogart, lives of twelve, his playnsate, Awakened towlay Leonard Janes, nine, and the latéer's yarents, Arthur Janes, a contrieto: of Scarsdale, and Mrs. Janes The resouréeful youngster, parents di the quick-witted, live across with the his reetly street from Janes's home on Drake Road. A little after 2 o'clock this morning young jogart was awakened by the screams of Leonard Janes. He leaped out of bed and discovered the Janes's house and the family huddled on a The first Moor of the Scrambling into 2 sweater and a pair of trousers, the Bogart boy ran to the rear of his house and got a ladder, and putting it porch, got the Janes family to the carried it across up to the street too sleeping ground The house was completely de- stroyed by the fire, the loss being estimated at $20,000. Mr. Janes said the fre originated np a grate, where a fire ‘was lighted tas® nist for the first time this year. HOLD-UP GARAGE TO STEAL $2,300 LOAD OF GRAPES Five Who Got ‘“Makings” of Wine Held in $25,000 Bail Each. men, charged with holding up Five u garage at No. 434 East 105th Street arly to-day an? ling a truckload lued at 0 and owned by Amellio Gent, No. 316 East With Street, were arraigned before Magistrate Simpson in Harlem Court on a charge of robbery. / They w held in $26,000 bail each for a hearing ‘Tuesday. The prisoners were: Gabriel Godal- twenty-one, No. 400 East 104th Antonio Russo, twent en, 9 Kast 107th Street; Salvato nteen, No, 2154 c Vitto Grammarisero, twent No. 2194 Second Avenue, and Toledo, thirty-fiv 1910 5 nd nk rolmen. Petrik Waschek of the East 101th Station while unloading the grapes, According to Jacob Greenberg, night at ara A the M he wa knock. He gara, by a revolver muzzlus The two men backed me into the h room, where th bound me nd and foot and threw a gunny said Greenberg saw three other men come into the before 1 was thrown into the I then heard the mots the truck start. [ worked at the { that bound my hands and got and then I fr myself and strect and saw the west on 105th Street. 1 to. the robb and they al shots at me Greenberg reported the robb eral alarm was sent out, About n minutes later Patrolman Wall truck before the 111th Street Hea Sa RETURN TO ENGLAND ont Sir Charles Wakefield and IN JERSEY CAUGHT HERE the papers upon his return from |w he started the pier the ei ANDREW BONAR LAW and. bis, Dayghter ISABEL, Lady SVKES |‘f,maners uno s turned around and afiven slow! Eee D ON BIGAMY CHARGE Phi ; ave air, was notified to: of th a Away on Another Ship. —|189 Lexington* Avenue, to Fifth Ave-|" Running at top speed the patrolman Philadelphia of Dr. John Seddon ef | While Mrs. Marie Hardy sailed on|nuc, and thence to Central Park, to|came even with the machine as it London on a bench warrani charging | the Celtic of the White Star Line at}signalize the opening of the campaign | “led ana) sti tree He ved ‘ Avenue anc Street. He fired bigamy, issued in this city by Judge] noon to-day, Mrs, Hardy's wardrobe|to complete the national budget of the | again, He hear! a choot, bur the cee Thomas C. T. Crain. According to | preceded her by a couple of hours on| organization. kept on going, McDonnell gave chase Assistant District Attorney O'Neill, | the Homer Mrs. Hardy, an Eng-| Every girl in the parade carried] At 54th Street and 11th Avenue the Hata rant si smen | lishwoman, is the mother-in-law offeither flowers or a toy, and at dis: {Machine swung sharply against the joeguaremL atk rarest 0 curb. A door opened and one of the .q {Jolin I. Piper of Madison, N. J. banding, motor trucks were awaiting aN have heen Who were married [orn : 4 men fell to the street. MeDonnell had daughter died three hours aft to take the girls to hospitals through- ri to Seddun within two nicaths and} were born to the Pi i out tt Where they pave either) fved a fourth shot. ‘The other three | ae Se RGTA UD phat te fore ey wave either) wished out of the machine and went there are believed to de Jlast. It had been th flowers or toys to little inmates there.] tO the assistance of thelr comrade, Dr dab iike! OM 4, | Hardy was to raise babi The parade was headed by Mrs.| ‘nit satroimen, overtaking tlien, ore : fty dow whe . |#nd Joan, in England, Jane Deeter Rippin, National Direc-| gered them to throw up thelr hands. Hoar atte ied) 19 28 | Wien the pier was: reached 10: tor, and ghese national officers: Mrs.] Gre then eaite cialty prominent, in th Hevue- it was found Homeric hed been| Frederic@Edey, Mrs. Perey Williams, Coswat thin fellow vou shots WANE Stratford Hotel in Philadeiphia. A gone several minut Mrs. Hardy| Mrs. Lee Arnstcin and Mrs. Nicholas} ne ell did you want to shoot him few duys later, on Sept. 2 t, they }Was frantic, not because her ward-| F. Brady for."" were married in the Municipal Chapel | robe was aboard the ship, but she be © ai McDonnell threntencd the three wit heret Philadelphia papers printed the | lieved the erlb for the children and FIND SOCOLOW his pistol as tt aspect became ory and Frances Webu of Atlantic [the travelling nursery also had been menacing @ od blowing his cing and continued blowing his City, who aya she mars il Neddon feurnied away “Thea ate pate 8] GUILTY OF MURDER |™" on July 25, read it. She called in | the children found on a (cuck and = ow that you've shot this gu her brother, who is a poli n, with [the outtit was moved to the Celtic] yy » my are said. the’ sbokesiian’ tor the quarters the result’ an indietment was re. |and word sent to the Homeric to lana{ Prisoner Kidnapped in Court “t's up to you to put him back in the turned here against Seddon. Mis ar- |the baggage of Mrs. Hardy at Queens- Here Gets Life. car again s0 we can get him to a hos- rest followed on information supplied |town, where it will be picked up by pital his latest wife. © Celtic BALTIMORE, Oct. 21.—Walter So-]| y{cDonnell, fearing treachery, re- bist ee nt don't cure T have the things for] eolow, on trial for the murder of Wil-| fuse the wounded man, tnd HARRIMAN CHAUFFEUR divine, na alle went atourd ith | tam B. Norris ina holdup last May,|onlered his companions to ut him in other, as she went aboare ; the car and drive to the 47 ACCUSES ANOTHER J nothing but « handbar for herself was found guilty of murder in thel street station. Assistanse soon ar- — first degree to-day ‘without capital] rived and with patrolmen clinging Diver Net on Che punishment."" The verdict carries lite] the running board the car was drive | mprisonment, ss ae ¢ nt Hos James Barry, chauffeur, of No. 211] IN NEWBURGH|"aoccow was one of a bang who call wae sen phobia elatlal North Chester Street, Yonkers, : ~ robbed Norris, «a building contractor, Rie ea tolbaye. ravekled (Gttbenybaga i Li ‘ ry a iis boo! i a busy street, | aes 5 5 held fn $100 bail yy Mag ate Heil- | Literaev sts C ausing’ Ex oe eT ee Sate on aw busy str of Hquor, each bag containing about , ors Lay 2 yottler, prin in Yorkville Court on a clusion of Some. Socolow, nineteen spas cee was a dozen bottler. — of veekloss driving preferret arrested in, New York several weeks ays ward Hyland, No, 165 We NEWBURGH, N. Y., Oct, 2l—lago, and hustled out of Supreme] GUISEPPE VERDI BRINGS Street, chauffeur for Mes Registration figures in Newburgh,| Court Justice Martin's court by Bal-! SONG BIRDS AND BRIDES Harriman, Nv. 54 Vaik }thoush higher than in 1921, are more] timore detectives during hateas cor. Y us proceed Zs, The action led ” ntri * Ghee Avene ian 2.000 belo eS 920,| Pus proceeding: LL 8 Metropaiitan Stars and Pretty Gir Hyland said Barry, driving a smait| (M88 2,000 below the total for 1920.17 ie requests by New York for Soco- Arrive From Maly, it high speed on th ewrong side|When 7,741 registered the first three} ows return. Se an ee RE of a Central road, Sunday, ii days. The total this year is 7. = > = who had en sumumering in Italy re- crashed into the Harriman machin The literacy tests are causing ex-]RICH MERCHANT LEAVES J tuned to-day for the winter season on t » e ose) seppe erdi of the Italian Line {ni law tied re Mrs. Harriman and |elusion of some of those who present the Giuseppe Verdi of t Mrs, Henry Langdon of No. 19 Kast {themselves for registration, Much of HOUSEKEEPERS $40,000} '7\\. included © Moranizont : ob by Bpe- tor; Vineet chiglan, ten baa Stront, No attention: was paid to /the dimeulty was obviated) by @ pes) a o. Comait of Sabowen Ror! iiss sor i ano; Mario Mar- : yh of the |¢lal course prepared by the Board of : warning toots of the horn of the ji members Caretakers tm WH | chesi and ic . baritone Harriman ear Ifyland said, nd he ineation, ome who did not take a Fifteen girls from Norther had preferred an " ult) charge | 4dvantage of this were excluded. ‘The will of the late Willlam L. Condit, Italy : rrived on their way to rf ainst Barry, but had been di tod — > wealthy crockery merchant of No. 621] Golorado and California, where the y by employer + to substitute TOOK TAXI FROM GARAGE | Bloomfield Street, Brookiyn, filed for] will be married ¢ less serious. Bail was tixed Vv) HILDREN RIDE| probate in Jersey City to-day, ayes) t ~ TO GIVE C D “to my good friend and house RELIGIOUS NOTICES. —_ ; congas ber,’ Mrs. eB. Watson, of No. DR. WARREN MINER DIES to cell, eat yates Corneate Hate mig Star AT HOME IN OSSINING] Carinctis Lompino, sixteen, No. 2244) ie Wateon Suan AL ThE st 97th Street, was held by Magis-{ P 04 7 . 4 Hast A held by Mugls- | Pipuinted Intervals to Mrs, Watson bye J Thrent Speetatin( Native | crate pson in Harlem Court to-day] Ti), her death these payments are to co fF New York Clty. index $1,000 ball on a charge of taking ASN Stax anumnter ay] 5 ID jot A, | Without permis) m taxicah from the ry estute [s to be equally] VAN DEN PURG.—HENRY, Campbell ru RSE pid ' <ishry garage of the American Yellow Taxicab etween two children of his ral Church, Hiway, 60th Sat, 1PM AH ney nty, is dead to-day at his) Company brother, Edward (A, Condit, of 800) | home 7 et and M Place Lompino recently obtained his first] greet and Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, ; ee York’ City, was] Job polishing automobites tn the ee ee Notice to Advertisers cates Rubell Alea ede ered rte bare ents BROOKLYN “FLOATERS” | nisviay advertising tore con, a pronse ni 1 ow York University] uo younse ot ants Wvertiaing type Modical ¢ the elass of 1882, He] prathers wept bitterly as Lompino was FACE POLICE ROUND-UP | Word 62! the. evening “Ww Whe an eye V tliroat apectaliat led away to a : ter 4 PM. the day prec Dy. Miner ts survived by his wife and —— red only ae sp Thirty Lodging House Owners Sub- ‘of receipt at Th a sister, Funeral services wil be Mor RA: ‘ Tay day oh Oo Ri iad Bell Patt FLYER DIES IN C SH, poenaed in Registration Frauds, ne Snare. by PPM Highland Methodist Chureh, will offlet PILOT UNINJURED] Grover a1. Moscowitz, Special Deputy Lining type copy for the Bun. : of The Gunday World nue ate, Ss ss Attorney General to investigate fraud- 3 'by 1 PM ‘Thuraday preceding ae By 1 Novice Killed an lane ec 3 y | publication and release must be re; WOMAY ACOUBES MAN AS PICWK-[ NAVE! Novice eliied We ulent registration in Brooklyn, said | publication and releans must be rece! POCKE to-day that thirty aubpoenas have been] to be made by The World must be received not because of pressure from the Br ish, Foreign Minister Yus Kemal Ney told the National Assen ator day in reply to David Lloyd Georg ul weuce, be said rir THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1922, ritain’s Prospective Premier As Often Seen With His Daughter NR, LAUMIERSUES ONE MAN SHOT, FORMER HUSBAND | THREE TAKEN I FORCHLO'SCARE| BOOTLEG BAIL Asks $5,000 From St. Louis Man Who Questions Pa- ternity of Boy. Lone Policeman Pursues Auto on Foot Until Bullet Stops Flight. Mrs, Byrd Shoemaker Laumier, whose former husband, Herman H. Laumier, wealthy real estate dealer of St. Louis, is suing there to determine the paternity of her son, brought suit here yesterday to recover $5,000 she claims she has spent for support and maintenance. The Liowing of a police whistle early to-day brought a dzen patrol- men on the run to 54th Street and lith Avenue, where Patrolman James B. McDonnell of the West 47th Street Station was holding three al- leged bootleggers at bay with his re- volver while a fourth man, whom he had shot through the abdomen, lay her son's In his suit in St, Louls Mr, Lau-]| moaning in the street. mier alleged the boy was born ae wounded man, who said he ecthres tt was Albert H. Halleck, twenty-six twenty-threo months atter he and hisi yosy ois, of No. Or Went” bad wife separated. If the child ts not his he wants both child and mother enjoined from making any claim against his estate. If the boy is found to be his he wants his custody on the alleged ground that his former wife's conduct, companions and associations unfit her for the rearing of a legit!- mate child. Mrs. Laumiler does not refer {n her complaint to any doubt concerning her son's father. She alleges slie and her husband were married in Juno, Street, was found to have only a flesh wound and with the three other men were locked up in the West 47th Street Station. All were charged with unlawfully transporting liquor, With the arrest of the men the po He believe they have found the ring- leaders of a gang of bootleggers who, during the last three months, have been receiving liquor from trans-At- lantic steamers lying at uptown plers and transporting it by motor Jaunch to the city pier at 64th Street and North River, used as a distri- bution point. ‘The other three pris eee = ge 1918, In Salem, Ill, and that she Gd, at Nor ll Went “age divorced him in July, 1919, In St. Thomas Ryan, twenty-four Louls, accepting a lump sum for her] or No, 450 West 50th Street, and support and maintenance in Neu of] Joun Shine, twenty-three, of No. alimony. At the time she obtained her divorce she says she had reason to believe, but was not certain she was about to become a mother. On Dec. 9, 1919, she states, her son, Herman H. Laumier jr., was born, She alleges he was the Issue of her marriage with 195 Columbu: Two months ago, following the re- celpt of information, the area two blocks on either side of 54th Street and North River, was designated as a district to be placed unaer survell- lance because of the activity of boot- leggers. McDonnell was assigned to Avenue, Laumier, and that the latter has/pairol this area during the earls failed to provide for him moraing hours Mrs. Laumter’s attorneys here are y this morning, he sald, he wing, Alley & Vorhees of No, 111 Broadway. Laumier was served with heard sound of a motor coming from the vicinty of the city pier toward him. McDonnell stood tn the path of the car and shouted for the driver to stop. Get out of the way or we'll run you down!" boomed a voice from the machine and the driver stepped on the gas, McDonnell drew his revolver and jumped to o1 le. Running behind the car, McDonnell again ordered the occupants to halt, und when they failed to do so he fired twice into the £,000 GIRL SCOUTS PARADE ON AVENUE Take Flowers and Toys to Hospital Kiddies. Girl Scouts to the number than 5,000 marched this OCTOR ARRESTED | Grandma Happy At Babies’ Crib Missing Liner lelphia Widow — and Atlantic City Girl Tis Brides, Is Charge. At of more afternoon from their national headquarters, No. rantic When Baggage Sails ney Panton PENSACOLA, F' Oct ~Capt, by Thursday noon al sued for owners of lodging houses { “ ch ne 1 Johnson this) yond B. Brumbaugh, a student oltot, | issued for owners of lodging houses in} “sunday Ma my. type copy which vd nah Pong from Tas Instantly Killed at the naval alr 1st Assembly District, in the Bath] has not been re 4'P OM. Friday an the Brooklyn Union Gas Mee tal weatandaye when the ch section. 180 Remann Stree Py ieval plano in which he was a passen-| Moscowitz said that in one cus ive insertion orderm not received by wis, Tee OTtY 8X, Pe Mkldded, crashed into the sea wall| thirty-five persons registered as voters | 6 P. Mt Friday, will be omitted as conditions Rare Aven 4 Mijand was wrecke from au address at which only sixteen | require, rigidly in the order of latest receipt Fee a ate eee en Capt. Brumbaugh was o son of Dr.| persons were living. He sald thes ond oe r Stina beh Mtawe 801 Brumbaugh of Altoona, Pa, His} vonditions were particularly prey provided above, when omitted, w aCe i ull and spine were ‘fractured, The|{n tho lat, Sd, 4th, Sth, 14th and 16th| serve to ear Souuts. of any hat Aver auld ad lot, Lieut. R. J, Bartholomew, Marine} Assembly Districts. He declared the] Oemtract or otherwis HG BLIGE). Corps, was not injured, police would begin @ round-up shortly THE WORLD or X + *