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M WEATHER etitetai onttmi m»f_ w—«m» fiF yn Showers tonight and wlpF* /8 Sunday; slowly rising ’BaC/ i JAB 9 temperature; east winds. . w&SffiS?' Temperature yesterday— J Highest, 48; lowest, 61. f —— (Mor—ttoml !*♦•• Borneo Im* oiciootvo poblleorfrm, te any form, of sow* <|l«p*«eheo credited te W ot oof etherwtee credited no t>!» paper . —.— . ir la,— awM millii MMI I IHI BITfl iirifrn mifi mninrii Tn niiiii/ iiiii I ininii* r ULULU liiRL LlllsRIsLII 111 I4IIIIV Mill fl fIIINIIIS 11 tI I I IFIIbI I 111 If lilt 9 I II I Hill !'■ llfl M &:| 1111 111| «► lai ■ ||| 11 HI I L.IIUHULU | U HUM I7 I ULH HMIVIR I V [ ® ■■ " ■■■ B Bl . . ju. A I I ■■ ■ ? '■ '.'-i ' I Wife Denies Attack I On Caton Girl F Mr». TJb—m Hot Sri , t aai'.m-h.Si^ t k _ ,j- t : ,■■ -I ;r» I ' iia... !.1 /' -.. I W 'MH I I;■M| I ■ ■ll I■■ ■ ■ ‘ H I HHI H . H ■ '1 - ‘W. ? /f ’’ ««-3nnofftaß, il7<St» : ©« nL, seen in pnOTO;wiui mane, z, x/vruwiy, <>, »nu *vii told a pitiful atoiy when today. Mi®> Caton.was S&ffWbP^MAHospit^fi^W^. fa -r"■•*■■7 —77 —. ■< ~ ~ ~~ 1 ” ’ ■ * 75 •?*■■■ 1' 1 ' ' ‘-W-WJF •J J • ■ > Golden Wedding ' ' ‘ ‘ , ...■-- ... , 7,. ' Fifty years t ago, Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Younger were married in a little farm house near Suffolk, Vs., rice and congratulations, set out to see the Centennial at Philadelphia, a “magnificent” honeymoon trip. ■ 5 7 : 7,;-. Tzvl.v Mr VnHttMr Wltltl tn SOS'S '. ''k ill Today Mr. Younger wants to sew how the Sesqufeentennlal differs from the big west of WT<, and , since the date of his golden wedding f fella on the same day of the Demp sey-Tunney battle. September 21, he plans to celebrate by winning a Times-Herald free fight ticket and three days at the Sesqoi^entenntal.. _ '‘Staying married M years is easy If you know how,” said Mrs- - “Maybe Charley wants to see this tight, bfatwe hover did any fighting aSrosives. You have to remain con genial to stay married.” . • Came Here 35 Years Age The Youngers came to Washing ton 35 years- ago, ’ with a family of flbor children. • The 70-year-old-man the kindly smile, is a painter, .and has done painting and papering li thousands of Washington’s tomes. His "golden” bride is M years old. - Barnard Younger, a son, living in Pittsburgh; Mrs. Ida. Rogers Young er Davis, the only daughter, lives gear her parents at 1433 Perry Pl. N. Wl; George W. Younger, of Arlington, Va., and Joseph A. Younger, of the Calvingtop apart ments, polumb'e Road, are the other tWo sons.’ There are seven grand children. I “My three sons are - going to the fight and . I Just couldn’t . stay home,” said Younger. "I decided I’d win one of the Times tickets, You 4 It to yourself and your family to derive ; , as much pleasure from ; j life as you can reason- ; : ably afford. Good used cars—a wide variety of makes and models—are adver tised each day under AutomoMtes for Sale in the Classified Ads of this newspaper. r Turn the pages NOW —note the low prices and really easy terms— • and select the car you -have been wanting to * ; Times and Herald Classified Ads U —J • f r r 11 _ 1 >1 z J-#-< Pt < iznr r> jo >/> B 1 > 1 V V C/W 888 B 1/lz 1 B BB K' t B WZ JwrwW B B B 8.8 -B B B B■ B B ■ . B ■ B B B B B B B B B B B»m B B B B wa. B ■ Jtrß B BB B HZ HZ B B a B B B VZ B BL B B B BH B B-- Hy B B B B B / / I ctim /vl 1 U.&UCILLII if 11> irvviiliui a w w* i and get'a ringside seat, putting it I all over the: boys.” • To date. Younger to ,;iho qkleat ■ candidate for the tickets, but he’s , so full of enthusiasm he promises • to toad the . other candidates a fast L pace. > The Times-Herald will send 200 ' persons to the fight between the world’s heavyweight champion and his challenger.. These 200 are u> i have ringside seats and all the, er : penses fit the three-day trip. will ’■ be paid by the Hearst twin papers. Leaving here on a special Loin, the "Big Time Limited” (fun un . limited) on Thursday, they will go , to Philadelphia in pullman ■ Meals, Motel accommodations and • (Continued on Page 2, Column 8.) ; . After Free Fight. Trip 7 r 11 j. 1 j ® irf ® mH * > ft . I- i B I H '/■ I B I • 1 r HL A»w' a I R BM |7 1 —Times Staff Photo MR. AND MRS. C. G. YOUNGER WHOSE GOLDEN WADDING anniversary is Sep tember 23, the day of the Dempsey-Tunney fight. He would celebrate by winning a Times free fight ticket and trip to Philadelphia. They attended the Centen nial in 1876 on their honeymoon. .Mr. and Mrs. * Younger live at 1480 Perry PL N. .W.i ’ " > « M m——■ M'ab*^-W-4—C ; M—M JMMSh,! *»MMf O' H M. kb an w OM| K— -x—■—. Mmr—»4BW ■ K. wb >■ > B IlffwMr 1 Ipia , il 11l wl ! <■;."■ al* ▼ ■■—,*. 1 Wb ww IB HI SB l-.-*** HI IH HI uBBHBHEr Q-HE-jOA At! ?mau ffiii.?? SATUKDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,’ I** I niniluLL IfiiL 4 I '» ' '»■ Mm S' ■ I"* I Ilin Dili Hu ** ' 11 ftwij i M ~ rl lII‘S Killfll i I LRIjS JHIQL;; Investigation of "another '’eternal' ' triangle,” today, reveatog M 1 tton to the usual sordid details, that i go with such disclosures, a Sad pie- i ture—that of five children and a. j Weeping mother, tendered penniless and virtually fatherless by the al- : leged acts of "tto other woaart'’ » Mrs. Walter Ttomag, the, mother, told her, story to a -Washington Times reporter, at her home, 1118 D St. S. E. Sobbing Violently as . four of her little onoa, the eldest, 8, • clung around her, she related the | series of. misfortunes which,' she i said, had befallen their once happy 1 home. • I I Baby Critically m She told of her youngest child, a * six-months-old infant, lying critically , ill in Providence Hospital; of her ] fight against the Inroads of lm-‘ I poverlshment while her husband, a 1 (Continued. on Page 2, Column 2.) ' i , , ,7 1 BriBB*BB8 ri BB*BB BBT . JsBHBBHHan£?* —~t 1 BSK." ww^x'-wS----* Swr * st*&stiSsS& 11 ' 18 SF.v I s-ii Z3sl IgqlgL .^■SRHllb— ...z’SOw^o"t''. ' BS I t x *jF." ' : *j u ''j l 'C-;./ ■■■.'* r4y 1 ”-. 1 HOUSfc AT ites OAME©Sr» «• ~.".rj Wt TWU"'-l*rhP#*AWli WRyOjflt' ‘I- jnKKlUtt'iMr'■>j!G^Juet&'tjßßMßwpeurcjjiifiy♦ ***© wvii*<*i* •*« woo > . -,.r Mrs. Mills Slept In Rev. Dr. Hall’s Study /***r,**wy. yr y. Um. ma aitfi. ant Aar. "*■* farm. , ' Ry ffITART.fttTII MTT.T.R - ■ bf ; sfai-- Chair . (doprrisiit4 -itto. to Hmbw Ytottos toadlcate) I used to teelings about my father., I don’t blame father for uot> making money. People have to be as they are, I soppoAe., Biit I used io wonder why. he had so little education: Schools were free. You could always study and read and find out things if you worked at it. Mother did, T mmaUmw AimseWk artvsn natMA IkAWtok A ■ 11 - * 1,1,1 ’"* " I I remember .once ,sne came nome-i from a Ladies’ Aid meeting or sppie thing and said; she hear# a word She didn’t understand. It ”Mls pah,’\and phe .went right away to look ft up In.the dictionary., Then she hunted for It in our encyclo pedia. She ,came hack and told me it was the name of. a holy place mentioned in the Old Testament and that the word got to be used later as A Sort of “good-bye sen tence” meaning ’’the Lord be v’th thee and me while we are absent one frott another.” ' We both thought that was beauti ful. As I grew up mother was more and more my chum. > She was only IT years older than me, anyhow, and we'had the same way of look ing at things and the same likes and dislikes, only she was smarter She had a lively mind. She loved to read about people and countries, and she would always be imagining what Europe looked like, and even Japan and China. She used to make up stories about places and ’ r li them to me as if they were really true —and then laugh and say, ”Oh, I’m just making it up; I like to think about it.” Wouldn't Leave Her Family. Things at our house got worse, or at leant they seemed worw to me, perhaps because I was getting old endugh to realise how badly cff we were and how hopeless every thing was. My father was a shoe-cutter and he had, been working in a shoe fac tory in New Brunswick. It moved to Brooklyn and they wanted father BILLY SUNDAY Noted evangelist, will con* tinue his series of articles on tiie moral phases of the Haß-IBh Slayisg - ' , , IN Wedneday’• Tssm . He’s sAtot to seek Ma ea to* to go along. Me, would have gone but mother wouldn’t leave New Brunswick. It was her home, she said, and her family was there and all her friends. ' But most of all, she didn't want to leave the church. As I look back now, I know that the church was her life. She had nothing else but drudgery and disappointment, rot a thing. She told father he could go to Brooklyn and she and I would stay in. New Brunswick and he could come out apd see us when he wanted to. Father wouldn't go without us. I really think it was my brother Dan more than mother and me. He has always cared tremendously for Dan and so have all the Mills family. Perhaps Dan :s more like them, and mother and I are like the Reinhardts. Anyhow, we never could get along very well with the Millses. We always felt somehow they thought of us as German, and I know they think everything English is simply perfection. In these days I had more and more understanding of mother and how dreary her life was and how lonely she was In her heart. She never had a chance to be happy, mother din’t Just housework and being poor, and father having no ambition or ideals or anything she cared for, and us children to bring up, and no future, and she wasn’t strong. She confided in me and told me her thoughts and -how she prayed I would have “some kind of a future.” She used to beg me* not to marry anybody until 1 was sure J loved him and that he was the right kind of man. “Be something, Kid," she used to say. “Have some kind of a life; don’t live as I've had to. Do you understand me?” . . And I did understand • • • Bought Picture for Dr. Han Every once in,, a while Mother would get an Idea and try and fix up the house a little better. But always there wasn’t money enough • ’1 Hi -• (Continued on Page 2, ColuhMTA) i IMM A HI MA AII A- ' Uli KMB 111 IBM ■ fli 9HA A AWH II ■ 1H HI Wh H H HWw ■ ■ W w w HLb W W Hml H V H flTsB H ■ WPw -IE? ' ■»•• AB * ’W BA AB "" ’■ ’Wf „ _ ; « » B« I4HH HB BHr HI HHI HBm fIHI 188 HHI •Al •■» •is T• -■ 8 s A -fl ■ MflMs AM MMI B HB’ Ma B abh - ■ h M amß B B ■B ■■ Immb HB M H H H IA 'wH' AM ' I a S fl I Mb fll B BMI ■ MA • ■ ■- l< «* ’ MH - • ~ AM *’■ ; - ' - •••i’*^.i»^k'.<-■ •>'^fl^B-- < - - ■ - - BP ■ I Al Baar B aS AB w BHHI » » a» w«w ■ r* 1 ll “ l l ' l^l *"""■■!■'m,.» l(l *»A flEAfl ■Fjrß/.Aw-W-F-BB .'* Aw' S *.■ ll■ Ml I* ■ ■ I I ®S’ AB I A I B B dFI rln !■■ Bl B«l ill I bill br 1.1 w tow W >-1 iX-AJJCV ■ & •"<s! Ain nitfc* ■bi Bl' ' I'* - pdla 4 '* <•? 1 ’^*7> ' 5 » GEORGE. ▼.aroCHAWAM ON BOARD SHE VAL ENTINO FUNERAL TRAIN, DAVENPORT, fowl, Sept 4. —Pola Negri and Rudolph Valentino were , never really engaged. /.*-’ > ■ '. ’ • “We were not formally be trothed,” the star totd me to day. • • * • ' • “We did not believe in formal engagements. Last April we frequently talked of our plans to marqy and our close friends knew of our love. We decided .that our private life belonged to us A Janitor With No Pep w MMMF L > t < MpMbfr' ***• Br ; Hk t Jr / jflr HL*i \ W BB w> f ? MMI wl 41* * w JU , ■MMfW ■■■ W- 1 s ; wK* < MM iM V-J life" ' Hl< T1 ' 1 d|'M\ :.. J t . 1 H MWfr TBWf®i |B W Mi ■ • mBSB mkM W W W| UMMiH t. MRk ? < Wlr mH - Ml ■ “ ' f »■ 1 :H B jj . ■. 5 . : ... Y ’., ! ' '.. ■ 13 • JAMES MILLS ' ’ * James Mills. Charlotte’s father, locking Lord Sterling Public School, New Brunswick, N. J., of ‘which he is janitor. Charlotte describes him as a . man without ambition or ideals, satisfied to live the same uninteresting life, day after day. IHDMEI EDITIONJ * .. -.y .. i I p. -V;-' ' A. """ •"“<■■ Rudy's Doubly I fIAA I f . r- «> T-Foto<raiM ALVIN TETER THE MOST remarkable shoe clerk in Des'Meinee, la., is Alvta Teter, whose remarkable resem bance to Rudolph Valentino fa shown in this picture. He wants to ge into the mattes. and we did not want to make publicity of it.” She turned to Alberto GugMelmi, the dead star’s brother, as if for confirmation. (Continued on Page 2, Column 5.) OFFICIALS - ■ I isillW 1 RIF j-’V?'' BBmB 1 I T i I fl I i HIW I ' Fa I wn_ * - iiMeM- » ■ EQr JBBWwHMteKHBHI JNww® SOMERVILLE, N, J., Sept. 4.—A strange illness which forced Mrs. Jane Gibson, the “pig woman,” and star wit ness in the new Hall-Mills murder investigation, to take to her bed, alarmed the prose cution and today resulted in an immediate investigation be ing ordered. A physician was summoned to attend Mrs. Gib son by spcciabprosecutor Alex ander Simpson. Her Life Threatened , Simpson said today that Mrs. Gibson recently told him her life had been threatened and attempts. made to poison her chickens. A trooper has been on guard outside her farm, which is near the site of the murder. Mrs. Gibeon has declared under oath that she came upon the mur der scene where the Rev. Edward • W. Hall and Mrs. Eleanor Milla, his choir singer, were slain, and recog nised those bending over the bodies. Meantime a new woman witness, one' who offers testimony tending to refute statements made by Henry Stevens, latest kinsman of Mrs. Frances S. Hall to ,be questioned in the Hall-Mills murders, became a most important figure in the In vestigation today. The woman is Mrs. Anna Hoag, a resident of New Brunswick, who lives near the Phillips farm, where the bodies of the Rev. Edward W. Hall and Mrs. Eleanor Mills were found four years ago. She declares that several days after the murders, Stevens visited her home near the s Phillips farm, greatly agitated. She has made an affidavit to thia ef fect. ‘ Accused Dentes Statement ■ Stevens* denies Mrs. Hoag’s state ments, declaring .he has not been near the Phillips farm in the past 25 yearflb • Today, i detectives under Special Prosecutor Alexander Sampson con tinued their efforts to break down Stevens’ alibi that ha was at his home in Lavalette, N. J„ 50 miles away from New Brunswick, the night of the dual murder. I A surprising development in the round-up of alibi witnesses last night, was the ‘charge made by one of the detectives that a witness, Arthur Applegate, had been ap proached* by a private detective tor the Hall family four years ago. . The detective claimed that Apple- * gate had been “pressed into” sign ing a statement declaring he was fishing with Stevens In Lavalette on the night of September 14, when the murders were committed. A serious setback to ' the elab orate alibi of Henry Stevens was seen when three out of four per sons declared yesterday they were ‘ (Cfanttaued «■ A Columa XI