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Scar] AS ty Ee ‘ Jurots against her as one who “doth hrotest too much Pfeiffer said in answer to an expres- sion of this feeling. ‘We are at hand it we are wanted. We shall remain here, ready for questioning, until the Grand Jury adjourns. is suspected of complicity in the mur- der of her husband and thé pretty ‘wife of the janitor of the church, A never appeared to better advantage! Ar) Ss in the opinion of those who have been nic Cotlapees as following the investigation of the} Meet in Hospital, Speech- murders. Her heavy mourning veil was less From Fast. thrown back from her face for the —_—_—_—_—_~ Pe mics tee rectors tuseral, Her | LOST DESIRE*TO , EAT. smile ‘was serene and kindly, She - seemed to be ht t of @ ae aint cwrraus crowd the faces of those win} Able ‘to Talk Later, Tells whom she has become familiar from ‘ sof the windows of her home and from Graphic Story of Vigil the Court House in New Brunswick. Outside Jail. ra Whether she had met them formalty : - 4 OF att ete hm ta a friendly, cone] DUBLIN; Nov. 28 (Associated fident manner. One young woman, aj Press).—Mary MacSwiney, who was reporter for a New Brunswick news| released from Mountjoy Prison yes- paper, who was once a member of — } Schoo! clean, Mrs, Hall terday, the twenty-third day of her éalled to her side and chatted with hunger strike, met her sister Annte jher for some time without ever men- {in a private hospital tn this city last tioning the Grand Jury or the mur- | evening. ders of her husband and her rival in} mye ition. ce dikaey wan Se the minister's affection. Mr. Pfeiffer admitted that Mrs, | Scribed to-day being as good as Hall had not been subpoenaed to ap-] could be looked for. She was excited pear jena the pa Jury. heb and feverish, but at the nursing home to discuss her presence further, |. ie cidebrass thet ake wus backs, | Where She was being cared for the ing ‘up by action her request that she physicians expressed belief that her to testify in an effort | recuperation would be only a question to clear herself of the charge made| of q tittle time. Her condition, in by Mrs. Gibson, the farmer woman | fact, was considered much better than of Hamilton Road who has repeat-|tnat of her sister Annie, whose fast edly told under oath a ‘story of see-l outside the prison was more trying. ing Mrs. Hall in De Russey Lane} Tho scene between the two sisters with a ‘‘bushy-haired man;"’ of see-iwhon they met last evening was a ing the two enter the Phillips farm: touching one. Ag Annie was being of seeing Mrs. Hall and her husband] carried away from the prison gate in a violent quarrel by the light of an| her stretcher was stopped by her re- quest at the nursing home and she was taken upstairs to seo the released hours-later and descrying Mrs. prisoner. Tho onc tn bed, the other mourning over the body of a man OD}in the arms of a friend, the sisters the ground. gazed at each other mutely for a se Deputy Attorney*General Mott, with] ond. Mary MacSwiney moved her James Mason, chief of his investiaat-nead feebly in recognition. Anni ing statf, stopped short when they Inowever, speechless and motionless, recognized the persons on the bench} continued to stare at her sister for at the side of the Grand Jury door 88} another moment, then collapsed and was borne away. Not a word was spoken. In the private hospital to which Annie was faken she revived soon af- terward. She was in a weak condition but greatly excited and elated over her sister's release. Shortly after 9 o'clock she had recovered sufficiently to be able to take a morsel of dry toast and t A reporter for the Irish Independent who interviewed Annie quoted her as saying that after three or four days a hunger striking person loses all 4 sire for food, but that tho feeling of hunger is followed by an almost in- tolerable weakness or general indif- ference. erville sidewalke—which arg crowed) J Jost all craving for food,"’ she ‘with persons from all over the councy | said, “and my attitude toward it, be- =does not agree with the Speciallcame like my desire for a milton Prosecutor. The present Grand Jury| pounds. I would like it but I wa will sit until Dec, 19. Jt is under no] particularly concerned about not hav- to report findings until]ing jt, Annie said she experienced none of the painful sensations generally sup~ posed to accompany sych # prolonged fa! If their fellow citizens of the Som- erset County are good prophets, the Grand Jury will deliberate upon the evidence collected by Mr. Mott, Mr, ‘and Mr. Stricker until Dec. ‘I lay there waiting for those awful 19 and then hand up a finding that /MUNEer Danse, the ETIPPINE Dale ay In the first week I suf. there is no evidence warranting th led. trial of any particular person—with the unspoken verdict that if Mr, Hall] ‘red from pains in, the limba and and Mrs. Mills picked out Somerset ‘ i terrible weakness followed, It was County as the territory in which to], “ ’ ive the t whi this weakness that was the painful death’’—it is not incumbent upon the thing. Whenever friends tucked me in I could have screamed. I felt that the weight of the bedolothes was in- tolerable, and I couldn't breathe, The slightest pressure was painful. I think this fearful weakness must be the hunger-striking pain they speak about. farmers and dairymen of Somerset to pay the $50,000 or $60,000 trinl ex- penses merely to find out through ‘whom those wages were paid and wc- quit them on a justifiable homicide plea. CN ee ee ore i tiete] . The interviewer suggested she must Reon ee lta tha Tettee of the law] Rave found the nights very cold, but ia Annie answered “‘no."’ than their fellow citizens expect. pete 4 Tie Grand Jury hos heeed ‘Atty-| "MY friends were wonderful,"’ she an wine aivetccn of them vex.| Wont on: ‘they were incogbant in their Trday. Only sin remain to be hoard, | Watchfulness. Whenever it grew cold eee a eae oe neta’ | they gave mo extra, blankets and hot Se Clete the tetera etee witnere: | Water bottles, and when T dored they sae Oil be called todas. It has been] changed the bottle so carefully they Piedioted she would be questioned for| {n't waken me. Kathleen Ly several hours, but the Jurors may fool| 20 was in constant attendance on . me, says I suffered leas from cold » ae he dates ad and finish with her} ign any hunger striker whose case : ; he was acquainted with.” Louise Goist's testimony yesterday |" bea re AR WAR & surprising disappointment to], NPeeking of her sister's release, the prosecuturs, She refused to say) ee aa with joy when I was — Cha ate ee ine eventigators | told she was being taken to a private ea paid a ceiteli bodven ues nursing home, but 1 refused to leave “ wat rise eu ov of Tae fant: (aw weeks! Give lifted her |e eee aa nt Nur browse friends actually had seen her brought pretty bead in defiance when reminded} into the home. Then I was taken that she was under oath and denied to see her. The doctor didn't want she had ever heard Mrs, Hall or any-|me to go up. ‘He sald it would be body clae comment on the friendship bad for both of us. But 1 pleaded and intimacy of Mr. Hall and Mrs.| hard and he consented. The doctor Mills. gave me a bow! of broth and I was There was an intimatior ) taken I paw her, and we Geist might be recalled < ay. | be other. But she did not appear Then 1 felt myself getting weak brother of James Mills, and I was hurried out, 1 fainted of the murdered wom when the door closed, When I came tioned, as was A. H. Bennett. to and the attendants thought I was dog waked him eurly tn the morving| ail right y helped me to a bench, after the murders when Mrs. Hall] b 1 fainted Was out, us she suys, searching for] time. 1 recover snews of her b nd, and KE. J. Zim-] was brought here on a stretcher."’ porter, Who swore Asked how her sister looked, Annie of the tes of | sa the interview which Mrs. Hal! had] ‘She was tying on her back, with With newspaper reporters several} eyes closed, looking very tired. She weeks ago. amiled when she opened her eyes and Frank Pfister, « Bound’ Brook man| saw me, but T thought her face looked who was stopped by Negro footpads ‘on Kasto: Avenue on the night of Sept. 14, was a witness. It was as- sumed that he was called to explain the testimony of Mrs. Emma Vor lees, who told last week of seeing a pistol battle between two automobile parties in front of her home which| Posed to have been committed. she believed was the beginning of the} Barbara Tough, ‘~e other Hall struggle between Mr. Hall and Mrs.| Servant, also gave testimony favor- rather s:all and pinched,” which Mrs. Hall owned and drove, parked dark, near Derussey Lane on Baston Avenue at about 12:10 A. M. Mills and they murdere: it 1s reported. Charie@ Alpaugh, the owner of an| She {# alleged to have said she never automobile livery and a man familiar] Deerd any quarrels between the rec With . automobiles Drougut an| tor and Mrs, Mall about Mrs, Mills Autobus ios Len froma car-| Or anything else. She described them Bical.-at back to New| as “like a pair of yc im: lovers to Bruvswick at jittie after midnight] S*ther,”” tt @ understood 15, was before the inquisitori ——~ For Cette, ore, or Influenss story be hss told the investigators NINE that Le raw n closed cay of the type lg They this afternoog In to be a ‘message of peace.’ It was sald that it would be a wholly different address from those delivered in New York and Boston, whigh roused Democartic and Republican Senators alike to attack him, and drew a formal statement from the British Embassy at Washington. But whether it would bo more pacific nobody but the Tiger could say, and he wouldn't say. To his advisers in Now York and to dozens of friends who have wired him urging that he tone down his remarks so that they would not offend, Clemen- ceau has replied that he did not come ‘expedient’ and that he must be left to deliver his message in his own way. HOUSE AGAIN DEALS to America to be ker amendment has cash in, the office furniture ain, properly this after awhile and on the night the murders are sup- assumed that he told the ‘same ake laxative WRONG Pi boa be ne ‘ Prass, He Changes Mind About “Expediengy.” TELLING BLOW ON HARDING'S SUBSIDY cast Oe) 2) Squelching Permanent Ap- propriation Feature, WASHINGTON, Noy. 28,-—Another blow waa struck at the Harding-Las- Ship Subsidy Bill to-day when the House adopted viva voce an amendment knocking out the ‘'perma- nent appropriation’ feature ahd stipu- lating that no subsidy money shall be paid out except as it is appropriated each year. Republican leaders backed down be- fore the onslaught of Democrats and Western Republican irregulars. Chair- man Hedden, Tilino priations Committee offered. the Republican floor leader Mondell, promptly endorsed It. An amendment by Representative Frear, Republican of Wisconsin, pro- viding that no part of the $1 construction ¢und could be paid out until the excess profits tax had been re-enacted, was smothered by so many “noes” that Frear did not think it worth while to insist upon a record vote. - BANKRUPTCY PETITION SAYS BROKER OFFERED Paid $2,000 for Empire Food Shares. on Dashew, No, 15 Park F attorney for Leo Rovere, who |i ussigned claim of $8,000 from Mrs. John Julian Assets and liabilities are not given Mr. Dashew said Mrs, Julian, oman of meagre means living er money back shew, says Martin advertised the al at from $15 to $0 a share ) he only paid Ui cents a ‘The petition says () MYSTERY SURE RROUNDS DEATH OF AMERICAN GIRL, SHOT IN PARIS PARIS, Nov. 28.—Burial of Miss Rose Shannessey, pretty American girl of Minneapolls, was delayed at the request of the American Consutate| to-day pending f r {Investigation of her mysterious death in the apart ment of a prominent bachelor here Miss Shannessey was found dying of bullet wounds at first thought fo have been self-inflicted. ment is owned by the nephew of a Paris evening paper publisher Although she is said to have been originally from Minneapolis, pussports show she came from Hong- kong. ‘The State Department Washington was asked to ascertain where passports previous to that were tesued, Poll THE EVENING WORLD, Sw MARY MACSWINEY {TIGER'S ADDRESS SLOWLY RECOVERS} IN CHICAGO WILL cesecwiSvcce| FROM LONGFAST TUESDAY, Hazers Put Freshman in Coffin And Fifth Avenue Gets a Thrill NOVEMBER 28, MANAGER OF BANK JC FACING PROMTION, CONFESSES THEFT change So Capable $52,000 Shortage Is Forced. ~ BE MUCH MILDER Aftet Reading Go Comment i whether we shall ten or twenty years,"” Gen. “It we knew now to a certainty would come in there would be an im- CHICAGO, Nov. 28 (Associated Press).—-Fresh from a night's rost in the Potter Palmer mansion on Lako Shore Drive, where the roar of Lake Michigan must have thiged his dreams with visions of his ¢ottage by the now in France, Georges Clemenceau was up before dawn to-day working on bis third big message to Amerjca. he aged war Premier had confided to members of his party that his Chi- cago address, vetgpies for & o'rlock ¢ Auditoriara, was i ten years man- ager of the Harlem Branch of tho Corn Exchange National Bank, 126th Street and Lenox Avenue, afternoon indicted for stealing $51, 912.48 of the bank's funds. dictment he made ful! confession of Pershing | lem vigorously. that armed twenty year’ mediate demand for preparations. Yet that is the approximate interval that we have had major wars. tended over a number of years. this time he has made restitution of Arrangements were made for his surrender this afternoon by his at- torney, Leslie Lockhart, and for his release on $5,000 batl.| that after he had aided the bank in starightening out the books of the bank, which he admitte dfalsifying, he would plead guilty to the indiet- It was stated Hensel's confession came after he had been commended g. Frew, and the directors of the bank for his capable management Branch and to another the Harlem y of the falsity of the records he would have to leave be- hind, and he went to Mr. with a complete confe: y then communicated with the dank officials. The method Hensel employed was to pocket the checks given to him by the bank purchasing arge ticket ofr the stoc an inactive Meant discove: Z customers of eral of the luckless youths were coffins on the Students of the City College of New York awoke Fifth Avenue by bringing coffins into play during the annual college carnival. FRENCH CABINET APPROVES PLAN TO SEIZE RHINELAND foreed to rep steps of the Public Library. Hensel is thirty-two years old, mar- ried, and lives at Larchmont Gardens. Bank officials his peculations ered by his bond. ————— were entirely co DE VALERA DEFIES FREE STATE, NAMES NEW CABINET MEN Suitender” I Alone yy ill Stop Executions, Dail President. , Nov. 28 (United Press). —Eamon De Valera to-d: BOTH SIDES AGREE TO SETTLE WAR IN BUILDING TRADES As an aftermath bankruptey last February of MacMas-| Italian chef. stock brokers, of the $500,000 ters & Son 83 “is| Spaghetti his stepfather, Jonn Irregulars Aid in were indicted to-day and Broadway, on three char: prelli_of the International Valter V. Price, Organizer of the bricklayers’ union; Conover, President of the Masons’ and Frederick F. Young, Chairman of the Arbitration Board of the Masons and Builders. Vaccarelli said he would stand by his promise that if Dioguardia could show that he had 2,000 men in his union, he would resign and that Di guardia would he elected in his stead acting on the theory that if she ever expects to get a sou from Germany she must, , two of them char ing grand laceny and@pne bucketing. held them in bail of as the French hit Germany hard in the Ruhr ,her most vulnerable spot. The Cabinet had before it to-day the Government's calculations on exactly Judge Rosalsky Association ; , Which was furnished. charges was preferred by what the seizure of two-thirds of the Ruhr would yield, These official fig- among other’ resources, that the German Government's, mihes in the Ruhr produce 9,000,000 tons of , about half the amount annually French experts calcu- summer that out products valued at 578,000,000,000 paper marks (value then), so that if a Customs barrier were thrown around the Ruhr and even a small export tax imposed ield several hundred million gold marks annual Mombers of the C meeting refused to discuss the action taken, but it is generally believed the was approved without opposi- ALFRED E,LNDSAY GEN FEE TERM W SING SING to the head of the international hod- rriers for the District of New York. Dioguardia had maintained that he hase 150 sha ry grand larceny charge was preferred by J naming a new Irish Republican Gov- ernment of his own. due France. whose members are in jail, President and Minister of Foreign At- ‘alera; Minister of Finance, but said that many of them belonged to the in- ternational union. union kept books, He sald that his $3,618 in the New Haven branch. cording to the but had no bank| Stack; Home Secretary, , and that he was the custo- dian of the finances, which were kept 0 Bast 58th Street there was $80 there this of the Appro- third charge, of Defense, Minister of Local Govern- , Bean O'Kelly, and Minister of in a safe at No. shares of General Robert Bartow. With the announcement of the Cab- , presaging, in opinion from some a rebel offensive, State troops renewed their drastic ef- ‘get De Valera. binet after the fobacco stock to be sold r left immediately bacco stock to old calling off the lock- out and Price departed to send out the orders for the striking bricklayers on the eight jobs to return to work. It was explained after that the injunction suit started in the Brooklyn Supreme Court by Dioguardi be dropped, as the application no longer exists under 5,000,000 out the orde He charges his order was bucketed. District Attorney tiny be exe- McKenna had examined the cuted if captured. This was indicated be an Interview by President Cosgrove © company for months and the hearing evidence of SNgxecutions will not cease util the rebels have surrendered their arms,” was Cosgrove A ‘There can b; in inflicting carrying arms. cashier and @ holder of made a statement which he repeated to the Grand Jury. Following their indictment, © produced by their counsel, . Gilbert and Loring M. 0 exceptions made death penalty for 11-CENT STOCK AT $20 im of Woman The Arbritration Committee named is composed of Messrs. senting the bricklayera; Sullivan, ex- officlo, representing the the International Unio for the Independent Union; for the Masons and Builders; 7 of the Thompson-Starrett Com- representing, Masongyand Builders Carriers’ Union, in which he told the Detective Sergt. Raynes took their pe- An involuntary petition in bank- ruptey was filed to-day against J H. Martin, stock broker, trading under the name of John H. Martin & Co., No, 60 Broad Street, by are not as bad off as you be- » younger MacMasters > nearly $100,000 in as- BISCOVER ANOTHER $1,000,000 DEFICIT IN CITY'S BUDGET causes most of the trouble. around telling the men {n not to work with my men. more after the interest of than he does his city work. and that repayment was not id that all women were Senator Lock- wood and Samuel Untermyer cd went to court when they enting the Lorkwood Committee as arbitrators between He should not against my union Assistant Dist ase! a Plustefers’ Union was added as an ob-| When Reville heard this he sald; , “Lynch puts in a full day department, and hisunion work, which he has a right to do, own time, because he rep every morning and his reports on file show the time he puts In on the Job. vgainst Major dondo Sutton, a . ita: ahd While Frederick F. Young, at n of tho Arbitration Honrd of to Kensington, Conn., purchased $2,000 of Empire Food Products ste Martin. He s promises made he later k from id Mrs. Julian, upon ed for tood that both Comover and e then engaged in recailin the strike and lockout orders his understanding. ‘phat holds good till Dec, 3 began Chairman Lockwood, and crippled more clerical than ¢ “A month or two ago, a week's leave, tend a union convention. edge of that and approv@d the ton for leave. to the extent that ,{ plied that we a highwayman Mancuso said d many of your victims. You without pay, The advertising, Dashew says, states the companies $500,000 over liabilities. had assets of peredl confab between the Mayor and re going to work out An to his activities 8 eine adjustment through: this Board of Arbitr ge eT Tee You entertained women on the and meetings are room on the secc ond floor ‘replied the witness having gone is being In favor of the agreement adjournment was taken for t In the meantime ‘ we hope #0. down ception stairs to the Mayor's public the doors of which were Closed and was led out of th charges the fullest official o court room chalk-white and dazed Under the charters and Service Laws, permitted to engage , according to Untermyer an handed over xtent of about was divided be institutions departments pended balances a millions dollars equally between chari partly supported by the city MASKED “MARCHERS RAID LOUISIANA OIL FIELDS would get busy immediately CITY EMPLOYEE’S BOSS SAYS HE HAS RIGHT TO WORK FOR UNION employees are reauired city a full day's time. Disorde’ ay Characters head of the +} 000 for the charitable institutions had orphans and would have ‘ IRBVEPORT, Marching in International Helpers and Hodcarriers, admitted to~! day that Lynch attended a meeting of the unton in his office at Quarry Roud Third avenue, Wednesday afternoon at 406 of the City C! forbids employees of the Building De- partment engaging in activities iden- tifed with the bui states in pary military formation be- visited, a group of then ted several small forthcoming, wards of the Superintendent of Butldings in the Bronx, was asked to-day if he was conversant with t alleged union activities of one of bis building inspectors, Thom: testif! towns and. oll camps In the Smack- i tween now and the The death apart- over oll field section Sunday night and warned proprieto: a “| THE WORLD'S ‘|Harlem Office d Now Located at and habitues of places to depart. re was a general ccording to word eritt Ed Harper at Camden He said all roads from the Smackover field section were “dotted with fleeing > No violence w serious shortage of funds for the girl's Secretary of the Executive Committee at t be lawful for any em ployee in the building bureau j borough to be engaged in cond bor carrying on any prof } ness concerned with the consiruetion 5 of bulldings while holding office in the pendent Hof bureau.’ various departments ina matter city officials wh to-day's sess! Union and was tive in the present controversy be- the| tween the two rival unions, Reville sald wiite| about the testimony | guardia, head of the I attempted by oreava labors ap exhausting thataihe Kstimate Board adjourned! Near 125th St, from wert Bridev ' refused to reven! the name of the ‘man in the nse’ Jiils prominent connections, beenune of Some of them untiy a weet n’tTell HowSoon W—HaveWar War, Pershing Tells Major Wars “ase Society. Approximately Twenty Years Apart Fears We Are Losing Our Balance. MINNEAPOLIS, Noy. 28.—An appeal to the nation to “look cold, hard facts in the face and not forget our obligations, in the blind hope that we nfay not again engage in armed conflict,” marked an address de- ~ livered here today by Gen. Pershing under the alfspices of the American Defense Society. “At present we do-not see definire; not know our tongue. «° ¢ We but none of us can tell have war in five, cannot avoid the conclusion that we are losing our balance and our own self-respect unless we attack the prob- the past between is no reason to think that the immediate future will bring about a cessation of wary even though it was said that wo entered «& the World War to bring about the end The Chief of Staff stressed. again that draft statisctis show 50 per cent. of the young men called out during the war to have been physically sub- normal, largely due to defects curable by proper training, fourth of those examined were unable to read and write Englist “That means," ohe- . Pershing con- “that some 10,000,000 here do BROKERS INDICTED FOR BUCKETING IN : $600,000 FAILURE) Ssis‘sesmnoesone. Just right! - Just the thing for emer gencies. And just as good for regular every-day always convenient, MacMasters and Step-Father] @lways economical, Accused by Woman and Two Men. Prepared in the Heinz” spotless kitchens, after — the recipe of a famoug: Ready coohed, ready toserve When We Invite Com- parison:— We mean Our Best With Anybody else’s Best. See Our Big Thanksgiving Advt. on Page 13 Notice to Advertisers Display advertising ty gedere for wither the me World or The Evening after 4 P.M. the day Preceding publication fed only ag apace may Brice snd tu order of recetot st The ‘World 0 be mi The World must ar, Me Display agvertiaing type copy tor the ing Sections of The Sunday World must P. M. Thureday p! must bo received BF “al. Friday. Cory, contalning engravings be made by The World roust be recelved by Thursday noon. unday Main Sheet cong. type copy which has not been recelved b: a engraving copy which Wh § bot been resaived in ‘the publication, office by 1 P.M. F itive insertion crders nat received by S'v, BF Eraave will be omitted an conditions require, rigidly in the order of latest receipt And poaitive release order. Display copy, or orderé ieteaten later than 4 above, when omitted, will not discounts of | be THE WORLD a 2 powieee : SARAI. Campbell? Funeral . Biway, COL st, Tuesday, 7 P.M Charles 8. Hubschmitt, B28 Karle Ave., Lynbrook, rvived by. son, John daughter, Mrs. Clara Engel; of Mrs. Charles Hubschmitt, Weivehon, and brother, John M, Berger Interment at Lutheraa Cemetery, Paterson and Newark paper please copy: PASTOR..— JULIO C, Campbell Funeral Chureh, B'way, 66th at, until Saturday. SANFORD. — WALTER, Compbelt” Panerai 2092 7th Ave, HOTEL THERESA pry Gyan “any therecleny~-