Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA SEM-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1913.
Thp MnU-Gnd
Author of
“THE RADIUM TERRORS,"
1 IlC 1 l(lLf~\JUU
BY ALBERT DO BRING TON.
“CHILDREN OF THE CLOVEN
HOOF,” Etc.
ef Chapter XIII.)
fs yery dear to e, dearer than
any Jiving relative. 1 want to keep him
at Holm wood, Blaymore, for many rea
sons.. present he is in rather deli-
pate health, and | fear that Hammer-
sbq js killing him slowly!”
Ttye phaufteur spoke an inaudible
word as fre hpought the par alongside
file purl) seme distance from the Jap's
house, and fhen intimated his willing?
ness fo aepefnpany his mistress inside,
Bernice breathed sharply as she
alighted.-
''Bring the ear up to the cottage
feent after I have entered," she ln-
strueted him, "Then wait until I come
out with Imry.”
"And If you don't happen to come
out, madame?" he questioned.
"Then you may seek me. If you hear
a sound of pistol fire remember it is
only a harmless explosion. So . . .
you will wait here.”
She passed through the rickety gar
den gate up to the house door and
knocked loudly. She had not long to
wait. The bullet head of O Shani Ma
appeared first at the window and then,
after a shuffling of feet and some dif
ficulty with the lock, opened the door.
The Jap betrayed no .surprise at her ap
pearance. but intimated in broken Eng
lish that his master would see her in
the little back room.
Dr. Hammersho was reclining in a
low wicker chair, his swollen neck
swathed in bandages, a great bruise
showing on his right cheek where the
oak drawer had jammed chin and brow
under the pressure of Captain Engle-
heart’s foot.
An evening paper was spread before
him on the table. He stirred himself
with a suppressed groan of anguish as
Bernice entered.
"So you have killed your Engleheart,
madame!” he began without waiting
for her to speak. "The police have
your description here!’' He bent the
outspread newspaper with his black
knuckle. “Another mystery has been
created!’'
The deeps of anger stirred the light
ning in his eyes. The side of his
bruise-darkened face was turned to
her; the bandaged throat seemed to
expand in his momentary flash of rage.
Bernice had not anticipated the even
ing papers. For a moment his unex
pected announcement bewildered and
confused her. How much and how
little, she asked herself, would she have
to explain without using the pistol?
The bruised face regarded her askance.
"We have Engleheart dying of dia
mond-rays!" he exploded. "What does
it mean madam? You were there alone
with him."
"I can not tell what caused his death,
Hiogi Hammersho. You have read,
perhaps, that even the English doctor
was puzzled?"
Hammersho pressed his black fist on
the outspread newspaper. "You fol
lowed Engleheart to the German board
ing house, madame, after* he left here
with the Zeu. Why did you follow
him?"
The question was too 'direct for eva
sion. Bernice experienced a wave of
sudden annoyance at his interrogations.
A thief, murderer perhaps, what right
had he to compel her obedience in a
land where the law stood ever ready to
assist in the suppression of criminals?
"You do not answer!" His voice was
like the bark of an elk. His swollen
features almost frightened her. "You
followed Engleheart to rob him of the
Zeu!” he vociferated. "And in some
way .... you killed him and created
a mystery about his death!"
He sat back in the wicker chair pant
ing, his gnfiers pressed over his pulsing
temples. "You will tell me, madame,
what has become of the Zeu, or by the
gods "
He wrung his black hands together as
though he were rendifig imaginary fresh
and bone.
“I think you are a rascal and a cheat
Doctor Hammersho!" Bernice leaned
across the table to arrest his flinching
eyes. "How dare you claim Professor
Caleret’s property?"
"If 1 kill Imry," he answered without
effort, "there will be no need for further
explanations. You understand me.
madame, I hope?”
A cold anger seized her at this live j
threat. She knew the man's desperate .
position, the fatalistic temperament that I
knew neither mercy nor regrets.
"I shall take Imry from here, Doctor j
Hammersho. If the people of this town
knew your intentions do you know what
they would do?"
"Make noises so dear to Englisn
mobs. . But I will have done with
the boy before the street gangs can
interfere.” He bent over the table
end stared at her with his bruised and
swollen face. “You took the Zeu from
Engleheart’s pocket after—after he was
dead. It was in his tobacco pouch.
The diamond found by the police offi
cer was yours, no doubt. I noticed
you wore one the other day, in your
collar. Where is it now?” he asked al
most fiercely. Engleheart possessed no
diamond!”
She was silent, .as one listening to
the choking noise in her heart. He
put a trembling finger across the table.
“Am I right?” h-» asked hoarsely, i
YOUR HEART
|Does It Flutter* Palpitate
[or Skip Beat**? Have you
^Shortness of Rreath*Ten«
fidernesS'Numbnegsor Pain
jin left side, Dizziness*
“* Fainting; Spells. Spots be
fore eyes* Sudden Starting
In sleep* Nervousness*
Nightmare* Hungry or
Weak: Spells* Oppressed Feeling In chest*
Choking Sensation in throat* Painful to
lie on left side* Cold Hands or Feet* IMSi?'
cult Breathing* Dropsy, Swelling of feet
or ankles* or Neuralgia around heart? If
you have one or more of the above symptoms, don’t
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Tablets* Not a secret or “patent” medicine. It
is said that one out of every four has a weak or
diseased heart. Thiee-fourths of these do not
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Kidneys or Nerves. Don’t drop dead when
Dr. Kinsman’s Heart Tablets are within
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FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
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i man, Box804, Augusta* Maine, willre-
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mall, postpaid, free of charge. Don’t risk
death by delay. Write at once—to-day.
IMs Handsome Sail
SCif&SF’SF to Our
eriFSGLEL Agents
"Write Today. Be the one in your
town to got this astounding tailoring
offer. An offer to give you the swellest
suit yon ever saw FREE! But you must
hurry. We want a representative in
your town right away. He will start
I you In a big money-making busU
1 ness of your own- FREE' Plenty of M
mon«7 and plenty of nifty clothes—for
YOU—If yon write AT ONCE1 No
money nor experience necessary
WE PAY ALL EXPRESS CHARGES
Yea. we pay everything. You take no
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. on the aide; or go into the business
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PARAGON clothes fell like wildfire.
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'•Have I read arlg-ht the little puzzle
you set the police?"
She nodded, her lips tight shut, be
cause she scorned to plunge Into a
network of untruths, She knew that
this Asiatl chad powers of penetration
fa r greater than her own. Prevari
cation would serve no nous purpose.
Her fight to gain possession of Imry
must be conducted swiftly and with
decision.
“The Zeu is in my keeping. Doctor
Hammersho. I hold it ror the time
because Fabian Kromer contributed
large sums toward its production. 1
may confess frankly,'’ she went oi»,
“that it is serving an excellent pur
pose, the purpose for which it was
intended."
"To heal your pain-strteken Fabian,
eh. madame?"
"It shall heal others, Doctor Ham
mersho. good time. Once In your
hands it will become a weapon of of
fense, a destroying force which you
intend to wield in your own inter
ests!”
He leaned over to catch her soft
spoken words, then sprawled back in
the wicker chair, a wrinkle of sup
pressed mirth on his dry lips.
"You had better go, Madame Kromer.
Tomorrow the police will attend to
you. Be sure they are watening us
both.” He waved his finger at her
while his small body remained half
bent in the chair. She drew Dream
sharply and turned as if to depart.
"Woll you allow me to see Imzy—
for one moment, Doctor Hammersho?”
"I have no objection, madame. Only
you must not complain of his fragile
condition. In the top room you will
find him. Make a noise or lift your
voice to the neighbors—” He made
a gesture with his black fingers, a pe
culiar movement common to experts in
jiu-jitsu. Bernice smiled faintly and
ascended the stairs which led from the
room in which they sat.
She had expected to hear Imry’s cry
ing voice as she ascended, or some in
dication of his presence within the
house. The eerie silence struck her
with a new note of terror. Boys of
five do not usually sleep in the after
noon, and if he were suffering from
hunger some intimation of his distress
would have been heard.
She opened the door and entered the
roof. It was full of the afternoon light,
the sun flooding each corner and nook.
The sight that met her straining eyes
affected her to the point of laughter
and tears. Imry, his head sunk for
ward lifelessly, was seated in a rope
swing suspended from two hooks in an
overhead beam. To and fro it pendu
lated noiselessly and without effort on
the boy’s part. A wooden tray held
him in place, but* even in his lethargic
condition his two small fists clutched
the side ropes instinctively.
Bernice turned sharply at#a sound in
her rear. O Shani Ma was standing
in the doorway, his lips expanding in
an ugly grin.
"Swinging and starving, .eh, madame?
I have seen it done with the coolie’s
babies in Kyoto. It keeps them from
crying and, making noise. Swing, swing,
all day. Little Japanese baby not wake
up until it die. Eh, what you think,
lady?”
Bernice’s mind had almost passed the
thinking stage. She was seized with
blind tears and wrath against these
alien blackguards. She spoke without
turning to the squat figure in the door
way.
"Tell your master that I will give
him the zeu. Then he will
permit me to take Imry away."
O Shani Ma did precisely what she
desired. He descended the stairs to
convey her message to Hammersho.
To have fired at O Shani on the stairs
would have alarmed the doctor below,
causing him, in his panic, to respond
with a deadlier firearm than her own.
With scarcely a sound she followed
on O Shani’s steps until he reached his
master’s chair, then waited for a heart-
breatning moment until their heads
came together in consultation. Her
pistol slanted into line at the moment
Dr. Hammersho scrambled to his feet.
Seizing the heavy brass lamp from the
table, he poised himself uncertainly for
the throw.
"You come here to kill! Oke na!
Women are poor shots!"
The lamp crashed against the wall
within a foot of her face. Bernice
gripped the stair panel and fired at the
bandaged throat, and again at O Shani
Ma crouching to spring at her upraised
arm.
A detonating shaft of light whipped
the air in front. The pistol seemed to
becough its petrifying fumes into the
face and eyes of the up-leaping Jap.
He pitched and fell as though a small
shell had struck him. Dr. Hammersho
slipped and rolled to the floor, his
fingers clutching O Shani’s breast.
Bernice stared round eyed at her
work, a sob of pain escaping her
parched lips. The acrid fumes of the
discharged chemicals stung her throat
and eyes. Step by step she retreated
upstairs until Imry’s room was reached.
Stopping the swing, she raised the tray
which held his lethargic figure in the
seat and drew him out.
The moments seemed to fly on light
ning shafts after her desperate bid for
the boy’s life. Once outside she would
notify the police of what had happened.
Once outside
Imry lay in her arms, his scarce beat
ing heart pressed to her own. Blindly
almost, she descended into the suf
focating atmosphere of the room half
expecting the bull-necked O Shani to
rise and clutch her by the wrist or
throat
She staggefed from the room and
found the startled Blaymore waiting
in the street doorway.
CHAPTER XIV.
Imry was safe, and in her tremulous
exultation at her little son s escape
Bernice almost forgot her forlorn ad
venture in the house of the Japanese
doctor. Blaymore asked no questions
•is the car slid homewards. He saw
that his mistress was involved with a
small group of aliens whose business
in that part of Twyford was a mys
tery. It was not his place to caution
or advise her. since she had only in
. art confided the nature of her troubles
to him..
For ten minutes or thereabouts Ber
nice was wildly and uncontrollably
happy in the presence of Imry. The
car in which they rode (it was Fabian’s
pink upholstered limousine) seemed to
contain all the delicate eatables likely
to appeal to a semi-starving boy. With
her own hands she helped him to
chicken broth heated in an electric bowl
fitted within the recess of the big
traveling car. Warm food quickened
to life tl\e ill-nourished Imry until he
lay warm and contented in her arms.
Arriving at Holmwood, Bernice began
to realize how her adventure with
Hiogi Hammersho was likely to further
imperil her future. The little Japanese
doctor was the one living person who
could testify to her relations with the
dead Maurice Engleheart. Hammersho
alone knew the story of Engleheart’s es
cape from the doomed Manhattan in
the Formosa Sea.
She knew that Hiogi would never
forgive her recent exploit in his house.
When he recovered from the effects of
her pistol fire, and found Imry gone
he would use whatever skill and cun
ning remained to punish her.
For the present she decided to for
get everything except Fabian and Imry,
Her desperation had led her into curi-
ouH-jpa-tlis*. but .even. now. eaw no
SERUM GIVES IN TO
BULGARIA’S GLAIAA
Give Up Monastir and
Other Towns-Greece and
Bulgaria Still at Outs
(By Associated Press.)
PARIS, April 26.—A dispatch from
Vienna says that Bulgaria and Servia
have arrived at an amicable agreement.
ServiR has abandoned her claim to
Monastir and other disputed towns, and
the correspondent says it is hoped this
will lead to an equally satisfactory
agreement between Bulgaria and Greece,
as regards Saloniki.
Powers Still Demanding
.. Evacuation of Scutari
' (By Associated Press.)
LONDON, April 26.—The ambassa
dorial conference met again Thursday.
Premier Asquith and Viscount Morley,
lord president of the council, were
present, and discussed the Scutari
problem. It is understood the con
ference adheres to its decision that
Montenegro must evacuate Scutari, but
is indisposed to acquiesce in Austria’s
demand that the powers undertake to
compel evacuation by arms. No de
mand has been formally sent to the
Cettinije government, and probably
nothing will be done in this respect
until after the next meeting of the
conference, Monday, when Sir Edward
Grey, the British foreign minister, who
has been absent from London this
week, again will preside over the de
liberations.
The Montenegrin crown prince Danilo
made his formal entry into Scutari
Thursday. General Vokutitch has been
appointed military governor, and M.
Plamenatz, former charge d'affaires at
Constantinople, civil governor. King
Nicholas will make his triumphant entry
into Scutari today, and it is reported
he will proclaim his intention to move
his court there.
E
IN REVISING TIFF
Progressives in House Con
fronted With Their Own
Party Plank Favoring Re
duced Rates
‘'Queen of Buncoes”
Is Held in ’Frisco
As Graft Witness
SAN FRANCISCO, April 26.—The spe
cial grand jury investigating charges
of police graft as a result of confes
sions made by convicted confidence
men, returned an indictment last night
against Lello Pelligrini, a hotel keep
er accused of having “steered” victims
Into the hands of members of the bun
co ring. Pelligrini disappeared some
time ago.
Significance attaches to the indict
ment, as it is taken to indicate, that
the grand jury is placing credence in
the stories of the convicted men who
are the principal accusers of the eight
police officers involved.
Irma de Pietro, called the "queen
of the bunco ring,” was arrested last
night as she was boarding a train and
taken before the inquisitors.
DAVIES DECLINES PLACE
OF PHILIPPINE GOVERNOR
WASHINGTON, April 26.—Joseph E.
Davies, secretary of the Democratic
national committee, has declined to be
governor general of the Philippines and
has been selected for commissioner of
corporations to succeed Luther Conant,
Jr. His nomination, it was said today,
would go to the senate early next
week.
MEXICAN TROOPS
HELD UP IN TEXAS
Washington, April 26.—The two
Huerta troops detained at El Paso will
be held there until next week when
it will be determined whether they
shall be permitted to re-enter Mexico
the government had once decided not
to interfere, but on protest of Senator
Mark Smith of Arizona, reconsidered.
sin or wrong in any single action com
mitted. Hammersho had sought, at the
outset, to use her in his own interests;
he had also dragged into his scheme
of things the utterly demoralized and
nerve-shattered Engleheart. In all her
life Bernice had never conceived how
swiftly and savagely certain incidents
moved to a close. Nothing seemed to
stand still or allow her a few days to
reconstruct her outlook. She was pushed
and forced with an irresistible power
into untenable positions. She had be
lieved En'gleheart dead; she had seen
and read proofs of his drowning in that
terrible typhoon with the rest of the
ship’s company. She bad dreamt of
him lying on the coral-strewn floor off
Huan Island, amid the long sea-grasses
of the Chinese archipelago.
Instead, he was stretched on the
dingy bed of a German boarding house,
awaiting the verdict of his twelve coun
trymen concerning the manner of his
end. What would their verdict be? If
it were one of murder against some per
son or persons unknown her peril would
be great.
(Continued in next issue )
WASHINGTON, April 26.—Confront
ing Progressive members of the house
with a plank in the National platform
of their party pledging them to im
mediate revision of "excessive tariff
schedules without waiting for their
proposed non-partisan tariff com
mission, Representative Lawrence B.
Stringer, a new Democrat from lllinios,
called upon the third party representa
tives in the house tonight to support
the Lnderwood bill if they wished to
carry out their party declarations.
First defending the Progressives
against onslaughts of both Democrats
and Republicans, and deciaraing that
they represented more than four mil
lion voters and had the right to claim
that their party was "the second party
in this nation," the Illinois Democrat
emphatically denied that they repre
sented a "protection party.”
“You tell me that the Progressive
party favors a non-partisan tariff com
mission” declared Mr. Stringer. "That
is true, but that plank in the progres
sive platform concludes by saying: ‘The
work of the commission should not
prevent the immediate adoption of acts
reducing these schedules generally rec
ognized as excessive.’ ”
SINGLES OUT MURDOCK.
Waving aloft the quotation and ad
dressing himself to Victor Murdock,
Progressive party leader in the house,
Mr. Stringer continued.
"I call the attention of the gentle
men from Kansas to the statement,
that, if he and the Progressive meih-
bers of this body whom he leads, de
sire to carry out the declarations of
their own platform and I believe they
do, they will be compelled by the logic
of these declarations to join with us
in the passage of this pending measure.
"That platform denounces the Payne-
Aldrich bill as ‘unjust to the people.’ It
declares for an income tax, and I say
to the gentleman from Kansas, as his
conferees have already said to us, that
if they fail to keep faith with the peo
ple and fail to carry out the pledges
which they have made they will meet
the condemnation which they deserve.”
The day's debate further was enliv
ened by tfie first exhibition of feeling
between majority and minority leaders
in the tariff discussion when Repre
sentative Dixon, of Indiana, Democratic
member of the ways and means com
mittee, attacked the Republican tariff
law, declaring it was in effect an in
crease over the former Dingley tariff
in that the average rate of the Payne
law was 1.71 per cent, higher than the
Dingley law with the statistics of 1907
as a basis.
SERENE PAYNE ANGRY.
“The statistics that the ways and
means committee presents today show
the gentleman’s statement is utterly un
founded and false," shouted Representa
tive Payne.
Both participants in the colloquy an
nounced they would bring reports of the
ways and means committee to prove
their contentions.
Representative Collier, of Mississippi,
a majority member of the ways and
means committee, arraigned the Repub
lican party .
The income tax was the subject of
prolonged discussion early in the day,
Representative Cordell Hull, of Tennes
see. author of that section, explaining
it in detail He was kept on his feet
more than two hours by scores of
members questioning him on the pro
posed tax.
PAYNE AND MURDOCK CLASH.
A clash between Representative
Payne, of New York, ranking Republi
can on the whys and means commit
tee and author of the present tariff
law, and Representative Murdock, of
Kansas, leader of the Progressives over
the division of time for speech-making
on the minority side, enlivened the oth
erwise monotonous proceedings late
this afternoon.
Representative Kent, of California,
independent, announced he would vote
for the Democratic bill because it rep
resented a lowering of the tariff, but he
disagreed with many of its provisions.
Representative Bailey, of Pennsyl
vania, who announced himself as a free
trade Democrat, declared that while in
his opinion the Underwood bill did not
go far enough in lowering rates and
enlarging the free list, it was a "step
in the right direction."
UNDERWOOD RATES CRITICISED.
Representative Treadway, of Massa
chusetts, made a detailed criticism of
the rates in the Underwood bill, par- [
ticularly in the wool, cotton and silk |
BOUSE DEBATES INCOME
TAX FEATURE OF TIFF
Rep, Hull, of Tennessee, Au
thor of Provision, Answers
Criticisms of Opponents
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, April 26.—A compre-
her *ve analysis of the income tax by
its author, Representative Hull, of
Tennessee, featured today’s general de
bate of thx. tariff in the house.
Mr Hull replied today to numerous
comments upon provisions of the in
come tax. To the suggestion that it is
class legislation and a distinction be
tween citizens of large means and
those without particular means, he an
swered that its purpose was to reach
for taxation those who have
escaped taxes and who are able to bear
them. The masses of people were pay
ing most of the $312,000,000 tariff
taxes and most of the state and local
taxes, save in a few states.
“Where, then,” he asked, ‘‘is the in
justice of requiring the receivers of
incomes more than $4,000- to equalize
in some measure these taxes burdens
by contributing les* than $100,000,000
to the federal treasury?” He denied
that there was any sectionalism in the
effects of the tax.
“It would be monstrous," he said
“to say that the receipts of great in
comes, drawn from every section of the
country, may segregate themselves, and
upon the plea of segregation of section
alisrn, successfully exempt their entire
wealth from taxation. . They should
invoke the plea of segregation and not
sectionalism."
The tax, he'said, is fair, productive,
responsive to changes in rates and cheap
of collection. No honest taxpayer had
anything to fear, he said. Against the
assertion that the tax was upon thrift,
industry and profits, Mr. Hull replied
that the tariff was a tax upon consump
tion, want, poverty and even misery,'
and added that the proposed income tax
was measured by net profits or gains,
and not imposed by gross income, nor
other property. He characterized .the
income tax as the outgrowth of cen
turies of tax legislation throughout the
world.
"Victims of our intangible and invisi
ble tariff taxes, with all their features
of spoliation and plunder will welcome
the proposed tax; the recevers of large
incomes and owners of great wealth
should prepare to accept it as a perma
nent tax, for it has come to stay. Its
effect will be to displace about $70,000,-
000 derived from vicious customs house
taxation to the end that this country
may have in the future justice in tax
ation, flexibility and stability of reve
nue and economy in expenditures."
Mr. Hull said he had received from
policyholders of mutual insurance com
panies circular letters issued by the.
companies, designed to frighten them
into the belief that the proposed 1 per
cent tax upon net incomes of the com
panies would do the policyholders in
jury, and carrying veiled threats to In
crease the premiums.
"These companies,” said Mr. Hull,
"well know that there is no purpose to
tax the proceeds of life insurance poli
cies nor the return of any amount prin
cipal invested during for both purposes,
but only the gains and profits that
arise from the same.”
The tax would not in the least in
crease the amount of the premiums un
der any theory of fair dealing.
MILLIONAIRE GAIL BORDEN
HAS RECOVERED HIS DAUGHTERI
After Long Chase, Famous
Milk Dealer Finds Her in
Boston, Under Mysterious
Circumstances
schedules. He declared the measure
would ruin manufacturers of textiles in
this country by subjecting them to
competition with European manufac
turers who secure cheap labor.
"Our country is prosperous," he de
clared. “and times are good. Woe to
the Democratic tariff makers who
change this condition. At present our
people are not troubled about the price
of the contents of their market basket.
They ask for the continuance of an
opportunity to pay for its contents.
Better a full market basket at fair
prices than an empty one at cut rates."
"TOM” HEFLIN’S HUMOR.
Representative Heflin, of Alabama,
Democrat, made a humorous attack on
the Republican tariff attitude. He in
jected a good-natured criticism at The
odore Roosevelt and the Progressive
party. Representative Chandler, of
New York, for the Progressives, will
reply Monday.
Representative Manshan, of Minne
sota, Republican, ridiculed the Demo
crats for putting flour on the free list
and retaining the duty on wheat. Many
others spoke.
CASTOR IA
.For Infant* and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
(By Associated Press.)
BOSTON, Mass. April 26.—Ramona
Borden tumbled into the arms of . her
father, Gail Borden the millionaire milk
dealer of New York, at the Hofei Tou-
raine today, and so brought to an end
what the family has decided to regard
as a school girl’s escapade.
Half an hour later father and daugh
ter drove away in an automobile ’for a
destination not made public. Mr. Bor
den is hopeful that the affair will soon
be forgotten and is determined to pro
tect the girl from more notoriety
Miss Borden will not return to New
York in the immediate future. Her fa
ther plans to place her under medical
care in a quiet retreat to recuperate
from the physical and nervous strain
that attended her flight frm the sani
tarium at Pompton, N. J., last Wednes
day. There will be no legal proceedings
against any one.
Miss Borden was located at noon to
day at a hotel where she was staying
with two girl friends and she was asked
to return to her father. She promptly
consepted. Mr. Borden was waiting
for the girl when she arrived. Later,
it was said that the reconciliation was
complete.
WHAT FA MIL SAY.
A person authorized to speak for Mr.
Borden, said tonight:
"Mr. Borden’s daughter has been re
stored to him today by the ill-advised
and foolish persons who assisted her to
evade his authority. The case is simply
that of an undisciplined girl who found
the study and discipline her father had
laid out for her distasteful, and what
has been made so notorious is actually
nothing more than a reckless escape of
some school girls. Mr. Borden’s onlj
thought has been the good of his daugh- I
ter, at heart a good girl and a sweet]
girl, who now fully recognizes the de-1
plor&ble consequences of her foolish |
conduct, and is happy to be back with |
her father.
"Mr. Borden hopes and believes that I
the matter may now be treated as a|
purely private affair, which it is, so that I
he and his family may be relieved from |
further notoriety.”
HER SECOND "ESCAPADE."
Once before Miss Borden broke away I
from the parental moorings and for that!
reason her father decided to place her in I
the New Jersey rest cure, after she had I
been found in Washington ten days ago. [
At that time she visited friends in the!
south, being absent from home without!
permission.
When she was placed in the sanitari-1
um she regarded it as a punishment and I
last Wednesday, while out walking with!
a nurse, jumped into an automobile and!
was whirled away. The identity of her!
companions in the car was not known. I
The party went from Pompton to New-1
ark, Atlantic City, New York and Newt
Haven. Thursday afternoon they arrived,!
here.
The next day one of the party left. I
Miss Borden remaining at a hotel with!
two girls.
Yesterday one of the girls was rec
ognized by a Boston acquaintance, who|
communicated with Mr. Borden. He ar-|
rived here early today and local de-|
tectives who had been searching prom-|
ised to restore the girl to her father.
STRANGE PROCEEDINGS.
The subsequent proceedings were!
scarcely less a mystery than the cir-I
cumstances surrounding the girl’s dis-|
appearance. O. C. Kyle, who came with!
Mr. Borden from New York and said I
he was his representative, this after-1
noon notified the newspapers that the!
girl had been found. According to him,I
Miss Borden had been located at a pri-|
vate residence. The detectives said they!
had found her at a hotel. Mr. Borden I
refused to discuss the matter. He ap-|
peared to have suffered severely while!
waiting for word from the detectives.!
and according to Kyle ho was almost!
ready to collapse when he met his]
daughter.
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at Troy, Ohio |
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R. P. D. No. . . SPATE.