The evening world. Newspaper, November 16, 1922, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MAY WITHDRAW JUDGE 10 SIGN STOKES DEGREE oe Gov. Miller Expected to Take Novel Step in Noted application for « Helen Elwood, Stokes, cided in favor senting Mrs over until that date, postponement Elwood Stoke ber of cases in pe matter of a real estate cult before ine ¢ claiming that pellate Division have found it to be within the power of the Governor to temporarily been closed by decrees and w hich were the Governor present vacation he would confer with Justice Finch 1 Division to se thing possible should be accomplished, law firm of “This is not merely rp in which the is well known to eve Stokes has in hi ent time evidence to combat the testi- offered at the JAIL FOR MOTORIST UNTIL HE PAYS $28,651 70 Monroe Street, found against him wucus on Sept. and kills three p tes District Court in Newark yester- day gaye this decision when Oster made application for se from jail on Uh chargeable in bankrupts y. and malicious chargeable and, remain confined until they & Mother of Seven, Victim of Aphasia, Reunited To Family, Insists on Another Marriage And Starts on New and Happy Honeymoon Mrs. A, Gillette, a. Wanderer for Eight Moriths, Once More in Old Home With Man and Children She Can’t Remember. Found by Sister - in - Law Through Newspaper Pub- licity—Now Enjoying the Thrills of a Newlywed— Mind Puzzle to Scientists, (Special to The Evening World.) BUFFALO, Nov. 16.—United with her husband and family after an ab- sence of eight months, during which she did not remember anything of her past life, not even her name, Mrs. Adelbert Gillette of Parma Centre, N. Y., is enjoying a second honeymoon, ‘ot having regained that part of her memory which way destroyed by an attack of aphasia, Mrs. Gillette de- she is experiencing all the of a newlywed, though her hus- band of sixtecr. years end her seven children e with ler on this second loneymoon, Mr: iiMette has puzzled eminent mental dis iulists since she was picked up in Philadelphia last February. Her mental processes have been so completely changed that noth- ing of her old life is familiar to her. Though recognized by her husband, children and neighbors as the happy mother who mysteriously vanished from her home, Mrs, Gillette was so embarrassed by her return to her hus- thr THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1922, Adelbert GILLET and five of thew sever children band and family that she asked that _Mrs. Adetbert GILLETTE a sccond marriage ceremony be per- formed by the pastor who officiated at the first wedding. insisted “It was a shock to have this strange man kiss mo when we met for the first time in Buffalo after my illness.” said Mrs. Gillette, de- Mra, Gi seribing her husband's greeting, | leaving “When L came to the house at Parma Centre, nothing was familiar, and “Te me, I'll s delphi: my worrles increased.. It did not] car, she seem right to me to be living with a| was take strange man, to whom I could not remember being married. told my troubles to Brother Clark, pastor of the Free Methodist Church at Albion. “Don't worry, Sister Gillette,’ he told me. ‘Here is the record of your first marriage. There is no doubt that you are Dill Gillette's wife.’ “But It don't seem right.’ I told him. ‘I feel as though I am living in sin to be in this strange house, Mr. Gillette is strange to me, even though you may say he is my husband. It may be just a woman's whim, but 1 will feel much easter at heart 1f you perform another marrige cere- mony, so that I will know I am part of member Clavk,"" fami) was a t Buffalo, Dr. A the caso maid for May the her home. sh heard of when became ill on # train bound for Phils last name. ital physicia memory and engaged he throughvuat the that only mental trouble would cause her to leave him and their happy family. He had remarked to a friend, shortly b fore she loft: ald his wife head doesn't stop hurting on be in an insane asylum iMette has no recollection of was next tifled woman n unide Massing down the aisle of a fell, striking her head, She a to a Philadelphia hospital where she remained until the latter April, She recovered from her injuries, but w Ne to re concerning her anything past, with the exception of a “Brother who later w her pastor. The name Mary sounded for dd to be he chose Mason her The only clew to her past ieket to Philadelphia trom J. Bradley, one of the hos- ians, became interested in of the woman without a a nurse- his two children. Late in Bradleys began to travel tern States. In married,’ " each city where they stopped an ef- fort was made to lish the iden- So another wedding was held. In-Jtity of Mason; Following. a stead of inviting all their relatives and] try to N 1 Falls, the mystery friends to the ceremony, the Gillettes took their seven children along to the pastor's house. With the completion of the marr rviee, many worry lines passed from the bride's face, and she returned her husband's kisses with wor Bradley Cuba, fervor them “Now T know you are my husband, | qa a and T know wo are going to be hap- | yjentits py." she cried With her youngest daughter in hor] pyyncit arms, and her husband and the six other children following, Mrs. Gil- Jette then led the way to the autonma- bile that carricd her to her boney- moon home at Parma Centre. On Feb, 23, Mrs. Gillette disap- peared. She drove from her home to Rochester in her automobile, Her husband had given her a check for $100 to pay bills and buy supplies, Several days later he received a let- ter, the postmark indistinguishable, tn which the wife enclosed the key of the car, named a, Rochester garage in which she had left it, and said she was “going West." The husband held faith in his wife | "mem through the months of search, He} Whom 1 woman's Society bt missing drien m Mary Gillette, “Mary Beatr member compo! dium heig' black visited in ‘Tears mothe events of ried life daughter, Duazrled, decided to come to TBuilfalo, clew might lead to her findi nections with the past. Dr. and Mrs. who were bound for Havana, rmined to reeover her I ‘And Dill, pill." Mrs. Gillette lust her customary, are and Ix other woman kissed her recall a mustache and by a clerical saddest mecting to tl Travelers’ Mra, Gillette and bh also wept connect the mind of Mrs ette wit ad tel con- » thought the rallye doer to remain with gin a new lite, but she y given to the mystery story by the Travellers’ Aid wought many in search of relatives. Mrs, Lyman Al. Jo was the first to find n the long missing Mrs her sister-in-law and girl- hood chum Mary, don't you remember t met ul. ‘Try to re- she eri your husl n to sob as the “TL can't," she replied. “No, Tcan't ‘There is only one person 1, a man of me- sht, dark halved, with a ard, He wore and Diack, and I called h Clay Brothe or the Free Methodist bion." oried the sister-in-luw, tirilled with this faint connection wil the mystery woman's past lift You knew him and his wife well why © Dad ef of the First 1 Methodist: Churet Parma Centre, just a from your husband's t mith s mp. You about thee weeks Hefore you disap peared Giliette then cam ane was overjoyed to find his wife. Hut she gave no sign of on. The Aid Societ d down the as the mot! her childhood and her mar Satisfed that there must be soma truth to the assertions of the many visitors who decinred ly was tne! platen ¢ e, Mrs. Gillett accompanied her hushand to the home at Parma Cen t and enthusinsite s fron if A tumuliuous weicomne from: ehtkiven who scampered from oi) doors of the house, Jn the mids of embraces Min, Gillette appeared ne mulutude Bvidently she wee straining Dies in Bellevue While = [is.ce. ce" He Secours City for Her Gallos Had Come Here to Return to Native Country) ™*\cr! When They Became Parted in Railroad That One person o Runs in a Hole. When the newspapers came to Bellevue Hospital to-day with the story of how Joseph Gallo, an aged Czecho-Slovakian, had chi alas hoping to overtake his wife, from whom he had been aecident-1 SALESMAN IN TOMB imiming of a train door, it v that a woman bearing the name of Mrs. Anna Gallo and wife had died in the hospital on for an hour, eparated by the deseription of Joseph » the husband, this morning “walk around and And thus far ¢ couple had booked passage which sailed rived in this their baggage, blocking the train platform Gallo started to get and telling his wife woman Defore s of what the Bellevue lat days unt that my khaki shirt the hospital Cop Warbling Canary Language [00.30.0005 Is Hot on Trail of Stolen Birds) \ °° % > »~ Another Policeman Who Talks Chicken Fluently Seeks ng Missing Hoboken Hens, ; Finkledie of Hoboken stopped thi morning at a crowded corner on Jefferson Street, that city, whistled and He found a beautiful canary which > his whistle ». trilled dialogue the policeman de- 2 went to tlie next corner and r had twenty valu- stolen from. him by buss 8 last night and I ned to the case because I can im! Jefferson St Romano at > Mr Rut here comes the rub, Ha than, w wo rt the cunaries, niso DAR “Het overcoat, And an overcoat dovsntt led 10 we or moke aay kind of a sound, a lect t Hoboken police know bs : non-commitally, stroking his ehin > faces of the youngaters ho shouted such happy welcomings . Us terrible, vemember one ber the house or anything,” Lifting up little Doris in her arms, y the tours with « smile, L enn't remem “Mamina's home! first ehild ty epy Mre roraamed by Gens musoN Ten ron nap wrer- Formerly of Brooklyn cuncn B under Mayor Wh: years old, to Donald, three years ld, MARRIED ON DARE Half. of Population Subnormal WOMAN SET FIRE GIRL IS NOW SUED | *',Stcally, Costing2,000,000,000) 1 uate) ta vu Ann nually, Says: ‘Secretary Weeks Train Youths Bodies, Ratiel BY FIRST HUSBAND)..." Ruth F. Egan Held for Jury Advises Welfarers. Action in Ex-Marine’s — Divorce Plea. WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—Half of the poptlation of tho United States ts SYRACUSR, Noy. 16,—Ruth|P!yYsically subnormnt, Secretary. of French Egan, twenty, who says she} V°r Weeks declared in an address entered into her second marriage on] t?-day opening a three-day conference a “dare,"’-{s made defendant in a di-| here of physical educators with the vores action by William Francia] War Department to discuss tralning Figan of No. 423 Madison Street, her] te youth of the country. first husbaid. Tho girl's admission] Weeks buscd this statement on sta- that ae married George Elgar} tisties of the dratt during the war, utchingon at Rochester, Feb. SonKinied by indus . : 1921, after stie was dared by friends] °°U'™med by industrial studies and to do 80, is the basis of the action, | TePorts of life insurange companics Egun, an ox-marine, told the police] and medical associations, and added he entered the Marine Corps in 1916] that the and served through the World Ware} oie 7 In 1920, whilo stationed in Syracuse, | Y"tNe illness are estimated a he married Miss French. They lived] Neatly $2,000,000,000 a year. together until October when Egun ¥ “You can (magind the possible of- transferred to South Carolina. Tonk Gf Susie eEnAll if suld he never heard from his wife and ‘ 4 condition upon a Na- later, while stationed in the Philip-| om waging a war for its lige with pines, he was informed that sho had]®!! tho hardshipsand privations which married Hutchinson. Last summer] Call for a maximum physteal effort ho came back to the United States and] "I without the support of allies to was honorably discharged Sept. 12. sustain it,” the Sceretary declared. Egan had met bis wifo in Syracuse In time yoo, disturbing: frets on Oct. 3 and then went to the police] Clearly indicate that, hacking industrial losses duo to pre- ers station and brought charges ag: the = cfiven Is not keenly in her. She was arrested and terested In the national welfare on bail to await grand fury Strikes Which involve the discomfort The girl, In a signed and almost the lives of our people; police, admitted both r massacres similar to the one at Herrin Which shoult be a civilized nat An impossibility. in Numerous organized surd political ideasn, ntan triking at of our form of 1 bf un healthy co flon in our eltizenship Improvement of the physical Ith of onr people will agaist in this condition, Undouht edly wWiversal education will help Our form of Government is based on reason and Intelligence. every fout unable te, as indicated’ by the Selective ervice Draft, & iN rm ing cor tion, the more so because it could be © ensily corrected.’’ to read and wr ed a subway train suddenly remembered ON JEWEL FIRM’S CHARGE nswering the % uerday. Murray Alschuter, thirty, a salesman a pathetic > f D> Kalb Aven Brooklyn, band was unknown and when shel» At to thn “ROAR Lin Taeine. Gy diel the following day the authoritios} default of & ) bail fsed by Jude were obliged to send her body to the] Resalsky in General Ses a afte city mortuary Alschuler had plowded net guilty to two Gallo, when his wife was carried | (Mumma charaina grand lareeny in away by the train, dropped his bags]. lev ot No, » Nason on the platform, jumped to the track Gomplalhiantes ind ran after the train, As he wa were found on thelr ng a cap and overally he way | testinier iy tiack | Alsebuler obtained 85,500. wot we mistaken for one of the rex employee memorandan recounting. Hr he by Deteetiy The man roamed ar subway for several hour keeping him away from und in the it » Providence] o'nrion third MISS KATHERINE BLISS and the maid notified tho hotel man- Watherine Herman Ro ardeville, N. “ Mins Hilss was int sister of Misa hort on the sides and bushy on top,” directed Andrew Geor; Ifudaon Street, as he climbed into Frank Tenare’s barber chair in shop at No, 259 Hudson Street. That wos’ nearly a week agoy and it¢——————___—__—___ rails and the wheels of the train th went from house to house uski his wife until a poll fo get away. Tu slept in a building that was under construction, He seems then to have been somewhere in Brooklyn, Me when hi role for more thun an hour, He wa put off and got on a trolley car and Irs. Gussie Wallach of Nu, 038 uppears Analy to have got buck tol oe Court Juetice Tlerney | Manhattan, At la howed a mun ke ad the man sent him on af had welched on a $15 bet, sv wanted her car to No, 29 Broudway, whe om Pint ort of itl t the Cunard Line people sent him to eat open space r Hotel in West Street. | (, Tee aa tannetiee AWal, Tedit phe Was put in touck with the rie Sooke to bed to recover from his three wild after which he went the wood: een with my ke 1ohim to lend me one. It Nathan W who vid | vuple in They were just the right 1 1 borrowed one. We stomped for a while and Nathan sal bet me $15 that T wouldn't m An answering trill came to him trilled like a canary, then cocked his ea from the third floor of a nearby house and he investigated. im the subway station at 14th treet on the east side line the ne Monday and marry him. E tox as Policeman — Winkledie| jy 1 from the houne, On Monday Twas ¢ ssed him making {ia i tu Dig ide 1 Hid, We went ¢ Ideyemoan, idea, the ; and t t prep 1 guess band un fier stolon canaries by whi int m T can do the same ti 1 en hens, can't 1 1 { Volk's rhen it enme out. ‘I chick ise But when | from the MRS. A. L. HARDENBERGH, |‘) 9" » DEAD IN 82D YEAR|""),"""°""" Was Wifow of Carpet Manutnc- dered about until ‘Tuesday noon.) However, if Gussie Hadn't Borrowed Nathan Tomo cancun SELF, POLIGE SAY MEMBER ENGAGED TO NEW YORKER Charred Body f Found in At- lantic City Room With Door Barricaded. ATLANTIC CIT Nov “A Womun believed to be Mrs. Clara Stevens, Atty yours oll, of Reading, Pa, was t whieh dame ‘South Carolina Avenue here carly to day. The fire started in the woman's red to death in a fire d the Hurriss Motel om room, which was found to have been carefully locked and the door barrt caded on the inside. Dama hotel was estimated Ly police at $2.- 600, 9 r to the A maid in the hotel detected an odor of smoke und traced It to the woman's room. Finding the door locked, she climbed upon a chair and opened the transom, Clothing anid furniture in the room were burning, PROTO by IMAL HEE. ager, Who turned in om . pants of the hotel were aroused and an te Wed Hackion Hurried to the street to safet Graduate. When the fire had been brought Katherine TR Bite, daughter of | Under control the charred body of the Mrs, Walter Phelps Rilsa of Woman was found fa her room. A nt No. & West} cheek book from the ted to Alor anklin Trust Company, Reading, Pa. was found among the woman's effects. She ar rived ut the hotel. three days ago. t, will f thin city by the ide'n duced to a mem.| Police believe the woman set her and jor gue. She ts afroom ufire to kill herself Ibyll Bliss, who will be a & danee on tie Bn Dec. 1 by her elder sleter, | #25000 LOSS BY FIRE IN sTATEN Hermann ©. Schwab, Mra. Bliss ISLAND, mourning Fire late last night destroyed (he joker ix the son of Mr. and Mra, | three-stoy brick bu! at No. 1400 Frederick’ Boker of No, 29 Vast] Richmond Terimee, Weat New Brightor V Strent and Sea Bright, NJ, Me ts] 8. 1. ‘The two lower fuors wore ove © of Princeton and a brother] pled hy the Staten Island Plumbing Rita Boker, one of the young] Company and the top floor by the Women prominent in New York society, | mandy s brother fa Carl birt, Waist Cony stimated at approxi Hoker Jr. was His Haircut Unsatisfactory, He Nearly Wrecks Barber Shop Andrew, Shorn of Locks But Not Strength, Aims Bottles Indiscriminately: atasin, hot until this morning that G What’ Georgiatasm maintains - fe the ductors having decided] that the haireutting job was not done skull was not fractured after] M&ht—that too much was tcken off ible to appear in the Tombs} the top. He claims he was shorn where he was held in $1,000] Worse than never was. But the a charge of felonious assault, | evidence is that, like Samson, he still had strength enough to throw bottles of hair tonic and perfume around the . ° at thundered past him. Tinally, he a B A k Di ree e place, one of them with such force ee ce ony arate e, on el, Asks Divorce 5 |:s\nitwati it rir down : * The atmosphere was laden with as. nateaid Hin found that Tenare had a badly ———— cut head and that Georgiatasm also x «| Was wounded so he had to be taken Khaki] to petievue. At first it was thought he had a fractured skull, but it proved Sehior an eyes an ene Shirt, There’d Have Beén No Trouble. to be a hairent instead Ayenue complained to Su- troux to-day that her husband, Nathan, PRESBYTERIAN OUTLAY $1,000,000 EACH WEEK 5 to Get 815,000,000 ta 1025 sANTIC CITY, N. J., Nov, 16. Executive Commission of the jan Chureh in the United m to-day to discuss budget and America opened its {ive-de matters, According ty mem Presbyterian Chureh in 19 rractically every board in the Y is asking for material budget moulled, NW y. WZ Meeting Called — Benes- million dollars woekt more than $50,000,000 fo will devote 109,000 19 Ceylon’s sunshine glows in your cup. all-Ceylon |

Other pages from this issue: