Newspaper Page Text
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
VOLUME XXX. No. 198.
OPPONENTS PLEDGE
George H. Carswell and James
A. Perry, Whom the Governor*
Elect Defeated, Behind Him
LEGISLATIVE GROUP
IS READY FOR WORK
Program of Reorganization of
State Departments Brings Un¬
favorable Comments and
Praise From Leaders.
Atlanta, April 28. t/P)—Governor- I
Elect Richard B. Russell. Jr., and two j
of his opponents in the gubernatorial
primary last fall pledged whole-heayt
ed.support today to the legislative
committee appointed to recommend a
program of governmental reorganiza¬
tion.
Governor-Elect Russell directed the
committee’s attention especially to the
handling of tax money, which he de¬
scribed as the state’s “life blood." He
pointed to what he said were numer¬
ous instances of overlapping and
duplication in departmental opera¬
tions, and said the governmental
structure was “topheavy” and “need¬
ed pruning.”
George H. Carswell, secretary of
state, and James A. Perry, chairman
of the Georgia public service commis¬
sion, who opposed Mr. Russell in the
Democratic primary, pledged him their
hearty support in his reorganization
plans.
Hugh Peterson, Jr., chairman of the
committee, asked for complete co¬
operation between the incoming gov¬
ernor and department heads to facili¬
tate the committee’s plan to simplify
operation of the government machin¬
ery and make cuts in expenses.
Mr. Carswell said there were far too
many departments and too many un
.necessary jobs. He advocated more
power for the governor, more co¬
operation among departments on sala¬
ries, and abolition of the system of
dual salaries within a single office.
Carswell said he was one depart¬
ment head who would freely admit he
had a surplus of employes.
“But what can a man do?” he said,
"when representatives and senators
and other state officers bring him
their aunts and uncles and other rela¬
tives and demand a job? He’s got to
be more unhuman than I am if he can
resist some of them.”
The trouble with Georgia, Carswell
said, is that it is being run by the de¬
partments and not by the governor.
“What can the governor do?” he
asked, “when the departments organ¬
ize against him to block his legisla¬
tive plans ”
Carswell expressed the belief the
elimination of unnecessary machinery
could be accomplished with the saving
of a certain amount of tax money and
t ecommended removal of the motor
vehicle department from the jurisdic¬
tion of the secretary of state.
Chairman Perry detailed expendi¬
tures and activities of the public serv¬
ice commission and pledged co-opera¬
tion of the commission to the investi
(Continued on Page 2.)
JUDGE SENTENCES
HUSBAND TO EAT
WIFE’S SPINACH
Evanston, 111., April 28. (JP) —The
next time Mrs. A. L. King cooks spin¬
ach for her husband it’s likely that
he’ll eat it.
He was sentenced to do so yester¬
day by Police Magistrate Harry H.
Porter.
It seems that Mr. King was accused
by Mrs. King of becoming so angry
when she suggested that he partake of
the spinach she had prepared for him,
that she feared his wrath would get
out of bounds, so she called police.
They locked him up. Yesterday he
came before the magistrate.
“If you will promise to be agree
able to your wife and eat your spinach
like a man in the future, I’ll let you
go free,” said the court.
King agreed.
HARLEM’S BIGGEST
CITIZEN IS DEAD
New York, April 28. t/P)—Harlem
has lost its biggest citizen in the j
death of James Finch, negro sandwich ]
man.
A native of Bellton, Ga., Finch was
7 feet, 6 inches tall and weighed 078
pounds. He wore size 24 shoes and a
tent-like coat estimated as size 70.
would cany him. A makeshift was
u Eight°internes -u. r 4 - i„ r .u ,v* fe. *
shouldered it.
In the hospital he occupied two beds
placed side by side and
with underpinning. The mattresses
were sewed together, and he was out
fitted in special garments.
Finch was 28 and died of
He earned $12.50 parading before a
show store with his “sandwich.”
-----
PLANES LEAVE JACKSONVILLE
Jacksonville, Fla., April 28. (JP
Twelve naval patrol planes wai-rt par
tieipated in Bay, winter Cuba, maneuvers left here
Guantanamo ________ _
day for their base at Hampton Roads,
Va., after an overnight stop.
Returns Safe
Dr. I. D. Kelley, prominent St.
Louis specialist, who was released
his captors today, a week after he
was kidnaped by a group of men
called him from his home on a fake
message. No ransom was
for his release, it is reported.
agist
__
*
Man Accused Reinovincr
Fr„,„ Navy Dirigible
Trial By Ruling By Judge on
State Law
Akron, Ohio. April 28.
that the Ohio criminal syndi
calisnt measure is unconstitutional,
Pleas Judge Walter B. Wan
today dismissed the indict¬
against Paul F. Kassay, 27, for¬
Goodyear-Zeppelin mechanic who
been scheduled to g’o to trial to
for alleged attempts to damage
the navy dirigible Akron.
Kassay was arrested March 19 by
officers and jailed under $20,
bond.
Kassay said he will try to get back
job as riveter on the navy airship.
Kassay in a statement said “This
justifies the faith I had in
American constitution when I
up my Hungarian residence and
to this country. The decision
do more good than all the police
in the world among the people
government, calls 'Reds.’ It will
their faith in the justice of
courts.
Kassay was' accused of telling a
undercover agent known
“Ptrov” that he had left rivets out
the ship framework; would omit
and, if necessary, would attempt
wreck the craft by damaging the
room when the Zeppelin took
air.
In dismissing the indictment the
said:
“The right of freedom of speech
be abused. The Ohio constitution
that * he state has the
right in its inherent power of self
to punish the abuse of
right, when the power is such as
reasonably calculated to produce
results and a danger to the state
which it has the right to
itself.
“The statute of Ohio as it is now
is insufficient to protect the.
rights of the people of the state, as
guaranteed to them by the constitu¬
tion ,and the judiciary cannot legis¬
late and supply to the act that which
it lacks by way of protection of the
of freedom of speech, which the
guarantees them.”
RENO IS PREPARING
FOR BIG BUSINESS
UNDER LATEST LAWS
Reno, Nev., April 28. UP) -The ma
chinery of Reno’s famous divorce
mill” was being oiled today in pre
paration for a big rush of business
when the new six weeks’ residence law
becomes effective Friday, May 1.
The two judges of the district court,
Benjamin F. Curler and Thomas F.
Moran, have drawn plans by which
they said they expected a decree could
be granted every ten minutes in non
contested cases.
The , , lt - new ucvv .,, six A weeks’ law is , n retroac
tive. Persons who have resided in the
state 1or the specified time prior to
Friday may file at once The county
sSJweSrfiSble’ 01 " 1 Per
, ..
HUjrli HO HOSPITAL cp| TA AL | ATTACHES ATTACHES 1 1 AtriLJ
AT GRADY CLEARED
Atlanta, a, ^.,,.11 April 28. c.n. t/P , n) )—Grady —uiauj
a municipal municipal institution, institution,
today by its board of
of blame in connection with the
of J. S. Allen, who died at
other hospital after being
Grady where he received
meat for injuries received in an
mobile accident.
After a public hearing, at which
timony was introduced to show
Alien insisted on going home after
injuries were vrcii dressed, (uwcu, the V..V board
turned its decision clearing the
staff and attendants.
BRUNSWICK, GA., TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1931.
RELEASED BY
Dr. I. I). Kelley, SI, Louis, Kid¬
naped Last Week Alter Receiv¬
in'; Lake Call, is Returned
ABDUCTORS NOTIFY
ST. LOUIS REPORTFR
When Representative of Post
Dispatch Reaches Scene Cap
tors Place Victim jn His Cus¬
tody Today.
St. Louis, April 2S. t/P)—The Post
Dispatch in ;i copyrighted story says
j that Dr. 1. D. Kelley, wealthy eve, ear,
nose and throat specialist, kidnaped a
week ago last night, was released by
his captors today,
The release was effected, the news
paper says, on a road near East St.
j Louis, I • Illinois ill - • when 1 i he was turned i
, over to John T. Rogers, Post-Dispatch
! I the reporter, on an anonymous ' tip over
telephone.
i The physician was unharmed, the
newspaper says, and declared that as
I far as he knew, no ransom was paid
for his release.
In response to the telephone call,
j ) Rogers in uptown met St. a Louis man unknown and took to him him in
ian automobile to a point: across the
river in East St. Louis, indicated
the stranger.
Here two other cars met Rogers and
over to the reporter.
i ] Dr. Kelley had -been in the hands
of his abductors for a little more than
seven days when turned over to Rog
c .,. s
j The physician related how he was
kidnaped Monday night, when he an
severed a telephone cull purporting to
be from a patient. Dr. Kelley said he
arrived at Davis Place, the location
indicated by his supposed patient and
a man entered his automobile, direct¬
ing him at the point of a gun, to drive
where he was told.
Driving through a rainstorm in the
country Dr. Kelley said his captor and
he arrived at a house where he was
blindfilded and a hood was thrown
over his head. He was then assisted
into the house. After remaining here
for a time he was taken in another
automobile over a bumpy road to an
other building and taken upstairs.
He found himself in a room with
an iron cot. Here his captors search¬
ed him and he was ordered to lie on
the cot. His abductors then covered
him, as he was cold and wet from the
rain. When his hood was raised to
give him a drink of water. Dr. Kelley
said he saw one of his captors, “a
most picturesque looking pirate,
bandaged, up, with a handkerchief
over his face, sitting there with a gun
in his lap.”
His captors tacked burlap over the
windows, Dr. Kelley related so that
he would not be able to tell where he
was.
Aside from being spoken to in gruff
tones, and being the object of un¬
spoken menace by the men, the physi¬
cian returned unharmed.
When the physician was turned ov¬
er to Rogers, the reporter failed to
recognize him because of the goggles.
“Here’s your friend, she’s waiting
for you,” said Rogers’ unknown
| panion.
What friend?” asked Rogers.
“Dr. Kelley,” the man answered,
and then ran to one of the two auto
.mobiles and disappeared from view
down llic road.
Roger.-; extended his hand and Dr.
Kelley shook it fervently. '“This
“My God!” he said. was an
experience. I’m glad to be back in the
hands of my friends.” Rogers and
Dr. Kelley drove to the reporter’s
home where the physician’s
Iwore notified.
William D. Orthjvein, il, principal
representative of the Kelley family
since the abduction, said r.o money
was paid to any one for the release
of the physician.
110 BURKE FACING
j SENTENCE 10 LIEF.
NOTORIOUS G ANGSTER I»Le\I)
GUILTY TO SLAYING POLICE
j M ......................... \N IN ST JOSFIMI MICH
! St. Joseph, Mich., April 28. t/P,
1 n/ii ni'iniw trunt/etor who
M'H"* of Patrolman Charles Shelly
j L...., n ., 14 I qoq v ,..„
and’under heavy Kuard from Berrien
I county jail at 4:87 this morning,
companied companied by two automobiles,
Marquette Marquette where ........................ he will begin ......
his sentence there Wednesday.
The party headed north
and Grand Iiapids,
! McKinaw City. A ferry there
take them to Newbury where they
probably remain overnight and
Hinue to Marquette tomorrow
Burke had nothing to say to
small gathering of
, who witnessed his leave. He will
eligible eligible to to apply apply for for a a parole
25 years, less time off for good
(havior. according to Michigan law.
BUT ANEW AROUND
KENTUCKY’S MINES
After Short Period of Quiet, Gun
Battles Again Occur Between
Guards, Unemployed Miners
AUTOMATIC RIFLES
USED IN FIGHTING
Conflict Lasts More Than One
Hour During Which Several
Hundred Rounds of Ammuni¬
tion Were Fired.
! Harlan, Ky„ April 28. After broke! a
short period of quirt, disorder
out again in the Harlan coal Ileitis to-'
tla> with deputy sheriffs and unem¬
ployed miners smiting a giro light that
lasted more than an hour the num¬
ber 20 mine of the Black Mountain
Coal Corporation.
I The Til,, ,h,mil deputies, ii... headed I,. by Jim Daniel,
j '‘eported to Sheriff J. II. Blair that
Ifhey [they .were attacked by a loree of men
estimated at around GO after tel
jt'phone Hearts communication had been severed. from the mine
I j None ot the eight or nine deputies
| j was injured of telling hut whether they said they they inflict- had
110 way
jed any casualties on the miners. Sev
|automatic j oral hundred rifle-. rounds were fired from
Sheriff Blair sent three automobiles
i loaded with rifles and ammunition ‘o
I the scene with nine more deputies f o
|! The lighting the !
was near scene oi
the slaying about ten days ago
others were arresting several miners!
charged with beating up a union
miner. Nearly a score of arrests
have been made as the result of the
previous disorder and the Black |
Mountain and other mines have soughi I
injunctions i.i federal court against j
interference with their property or I
employes.
AUTO MISHAP FATAL
10 REPUTED GUNNER i
BENNY HI TLER WHO HAD BEEN ;
FELLED BY GANGLAND’S BUL¬
LETS MEETS DEATH IN ( RASH
Chicago, April 28. UP)- Benny But¬
ler, a reputed gunner of the Danny
Stanton and Capone gangs and the pal ]
of Leo Brothers, convicted killer of
Alfred Lingle, came to his death to
utty. Bullets had felled him before, hut it |
was not the instrument by which he
lived that was to finish him. An an
tomobile in which he was riding shot
pasta stop light, witnesses said,
crashed into another and '
car, over
turned. Butler was dead when they
picked him up.
It was Butler who furnished the !
liaison by' which the detectives seek
ing the killer of the Tribune crime re
porter, Alfred “Jake” Lingle, kept in
touch with the suspected murderer. !
His telephone wires were were tapod. j
i Butler was always in contact with
jtality and through his instrumen¬
the investigators finally cap
tured their quarry.
ROOSTER ATTACKS CHILD
Rockingham, N. C., April 28. UP)
Attacked by a rooster while in her
father’s poultry yard, the two-year
old daughter of G. B. Deane, of R<«k
inghant, was in a serious condition i
here today,
Hurley _ All * n /~\ Quiet •
As Bartenders Are
Attending Trials
Hurley, VVis., April 28. (/P) -
street, was silent today.
The tiff bartenders and proprietors
of esl ablishments along that I borough
fare who are accused of helping to
earn for Hurley the name of “ Bad
Boy” of the lumbering and mining
frontier, were all in Ashland, Wis.,
facing United State:; Gommissioner W.
S. Cate on charges of violating the
federal prohibition laws.
The defendants made a sober trek
to Ashland. Townspeople lined the
streets and waved farewells as pris¬
oner.- were carried iu an automobile
caravan under the direction of
shal C. H. Rawlinson of Madison, Wi. ..
nn ,| |,j s deputies.
For the second time within a month,
forlornl authorities yesterday swept
through Silver streel in attempts to
|,alt alleged prohibition law violations,
Severn! days ago authorities served
lu ,lice of padlock action: against 29
properly owners. pour women and
Edward Gerieh, brother of the former
police chicf, were among those served
with warrants.
The first, conlingent of defendants
w;1K arraigned yesterday. All hut one
preliminary hearings after
mitering pleas of rm! guilly and were
released on bond for hearings May 12.
PUBLISHER DIES
Little Rock, Ark., April 28. i/i’i
Richard L. Fletcher, 17, executive of
a large printing concern, was found
dead in the driveway of his home ear¬
ly today with two bullet wounds in
the breast. A pistol lay nearby hut
no empty shells were found. I’olici
.said a pistol marked with blood was
found in the home. Hi widow and
three daughters, the oldest 17, xin¬
him.
Gridiron Club Has Annual
.
x7««n \A/ith PnlfllVi/IDC _ .
r Un l hi nc-l W llll i UllllClClllb
--:—
Washington, April 28. (/Pi- The |
.“good ship Prohibition" battled
through stormy last , night • , .
j seas . >W
| members ot the Gridiron ( tub could |
east, their annual spring barbs at ev¬
erything from magicians to bolshe¬
viks, not overlooking the president.
! At the newspapermen’s dinner the
I main skit revolved about a vessel j
[captained j Wickersham. by a man As resembling President Cicoig< Hoov
!er W.
looked on, the lights went out an-U
' h voice chanted:
the Eighteenth Amendment, i
swept by gales ami rocked by stoims.
j What _wiR_ the be heavy h y political _^e seas fijunke" try
; in K V'» harbor m KffiZ, with [
ancient marinei Gemge W. V\ n k
, at t , wheel . ,,
-nani, le ■
As a man who walked arid talked
like Representative LaGuardia, of
New York, warned that the ship had
sprung another leak and Scotch wa;
pouring in, the captain ,-ang:
“Water, water everywhere
Yet how the dry votes shrink;
Water, water everywhere
And only Soteh to drink.”
LaGuardia ask°d how the mariner
proposed to get out of the storm.
“If you’ll read the report my
i
1
.
;
I
i
;
|
Mile. Grit Dorosco, recently appointed official entertainer at the lin
ntanian court in Bucharest. She is a veil known dancer in the Rumanian
and has performed before many European royal houses.
i
commission," us the answer, you’ll
1 haven’t tin slightest idea,
A few in in ill's later, in another ex
ch % ,. f . p | y w8 „ extended in Ihi
wav
“I intend to do exactly what t he
commission recommended- look both
way- at once, trust, in Herbert Hoov
er, hope ape for the best and expect t
worst.”
Then the mariner ashed:
‘ ‘Did somebody send in.y S O S to
the Whi< c Hom e?”
A man who P' <*mbl<?(l Scriat Fes: .
Here
poor radiogram to the White Ho -c
a;c ail wet. I don t know what
to do.’ Here Here L i the the answer: answer ‘Glad
lo hear you are all dry. 1 know what
to do.
The president had an opportunity
1" respond to the fun-making, hat,
as usual, there war, an agreement that
no reporter were present and hi r<, ~
marks were confidential.
There were numerous .-.kit: besides
that on prohibition. In one of them
the “1981 Nobel Prize’ was
t-. Calvin Coolidge because,
other reason, tie personifies
Mo the highest degree.”
The prize winner was told:
Now, if you wish, you are free
- lap Theodore Dreiser in the ” ftoc”
! Chicagoan /"’ll • ) s Home I I
;
Has Private Jail :
j To Cure Rowdyism
Ilioosegow Chicago, April 28. (/P) The home
is here.
Dp until lost night neither the gen
oral public or the police knew ol ils I
existence and they might never have
i learned about it if things hadn't gone
hit awry ill I he home of Howard
Lietzmau.
Then* i\;i: souk* kind ol n r<*J<*bra
timi at? Mr. Biutzimin’s Imme, which
the polite said led them to discover
the one and only privately owned jail
in f'ldea^o. It seems as though Mr.
l.iel/.nmn invited Messrs. Clyde S<
. cal, and ( buries Willboyl io join him
in l,l< ‘ party, and as mu Iters prngrexs
Mr. See rest seized a ehaii and of
I ered to unash the radio. |
It was this that prompted Mr. l/ietz- ;
man to remove Mr. Secrest to the
basemenl, where he hound him secure¬ j
ly will surgeon’s tape, put him in tile
privet jail, snapped a padlock on the !
dnte ;i<I returned to see his other
guest.,l&who by this time, Tearing a i
similar fate, had called police. All !
tim e were arrested.
"1 built the cell room," said Mr. !
I.ictzman. “to hold my guests when i
they get noisy or try to break up the
furniture. Cp until now H has been |
a Suceess.”
j
HONDURAN REBEL I
REFUSE BATTLE AS j j
SOLDIERS ADVANCE |
!
Tegucigalpa, Honduras, April 28. j
t/V) ......The revel army of (ieneral Cre
goi io Ferrara was engaged today in
hide and seek maneuvers with govern¬
ment forces defending San Pedro Sula,
key railroad point between Tegucigal-I
pa and the coast.
The government, forces under (iener
jil Jose Maria ltcina, a government
communique said today, were sent in
two large bodies against the rebel po¬
sition .Sunday night, hut the rebel:-,
refupfug baffle, had evacuated their
! breastworks. , !
The government forces, after oceu
living the abandoned positions, were
in pursuit Of Ferrara, who was j
Relieved to have made off toward hi;
home department, intibuca, where his he j
(could fight the government in own
bailiwick. |
The government had expected the
gan Pedro Sula engagement to be of ;
ti decisive character and hoped to de
feat the principal rebel body there and :
quash the revolt.
i Official communiques noted small
engagements at Han Manuel, in the
Cortes district, at Sava in the Ti n,jil
lo district, government troops being
victorious in hoth eases.
DEATH BY HANGING
CALLED ACCIDENTAL
A Manta, April 28. U\ r ) The Kulton
county coroner’;; records today listed
, |; ;i( 'cjdont.al Do* death of C. A. Belle
Isle, m,.-. ^ brother n.uvun of •>. the .... piesident v..,......v of ... a .. lo-!
#x j ( . om p an y, whose body was j
f outl( , 11 - pcmie-tl from a transom yes
av f, l( . Atlanta Opportunity j
j School.
\ negro maid discovered the body j
i anf j , ported to police, who said they
!p ounf i r c u ( . isle’s head wedged in the
transom. They said the door was
and an open Bible and numer
ou * eigarct stubs were found in the ] ,
jroom. Police said Belle Isle commit
1 t.ed xuie.ide, but the coroner's jury late j
| [dental yesterday returned a verdict of acci-| 1
death. _
.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
ROOSEVELT DROPS
IN WALKER CASE
Charges Against New York
Mayor are Dismissed By Gov
. ernor After Study
DECISION ANNOUNCED
AT HIS OFFICE TODAY
Declares He Does Not Find Suf¬
ficient Justification in Papers
to Remove Official or Proceed
Further.
Albany, V.. April 28. f/P)- Gov¬
ernor Roosevelt today dismissed the
(lunges brought against Mayor James
J. Walker of New. York bv the city
committee. The committee
had asked that Mayor Walker he re¬
moved tor inromnotency and neglect
of duty.
The governor's action was unnounc
c(l ill the executive office here. Mr.
Roosevelt, however, is at his Il.vde
Park home.
The ( lia' ges against Walker were
received by the governor on March 18.
They Were signed by Dr. John Haynes
Holmes as chairman of the commit¬
tee, and Rabbi Stephen S. Wise as
vice chairman. Governor Roosevelt:
advised Mayor Walker in California
of the action taken against him, and
that his reply hould he forwarded
to Albany when he returned from the
I’icifie roast trip intended to benefit
the mayor's health,
On April 20 Walker's reply was
handed to Roocvel'. In it Walker
defended his administration. laud¬
ing its aiTim■ >Ii hmeuts in the 15,000
word reply he had prepared. Dr.
Holmes and Rablii Wise sought an op
por*unity to tile a rebuttal..
Regarding the charges, the gov
said:
“I do not find sufficient justification
in these document' as submitted to
the mayor of the city of New
A 1 rk or to proceed further iu the mai¬
ler of t lu'se charges.”
The governor was described as feel
ing that the charges were not spe¬
ie, that the mayor had answered
the points at issue, and that any ir¬
regularities in the city administration
could la* uncovered by the committee
the legislature which is investigat¬
ing city affairs.
The charges against the mayor were
lodged with the governor by the city
committee, and (Lie mayor re
plied it, them a week ago. The coin
mil Lee asked to I’ile a rebuttal, but
the governor has not indicated that
would accept it.
The original sponsor of the legis
la ill re’s inquiry, \Y. Kingsland Macy,
Republican slate chairman, has refus
cd to contribute? to the commit.Lee of
thousand, a citizens* organization,
pay I'm its investigators. At the
time he rebuked Dr. William Jay
Tor using the name of
Seal airy, counsel for the com¬
mittee, in soliciting funds for the
He said the investigation
a governmental project and that
use of Mr. Seabury’s name was
“(‘X 4 1 cniejy had taste.’’
District Attorney Thomas (!. T.
facing ouster proceedings on
of negligentc and inefficiency,
a point in the hearings yesterday,
Watson Washburn, former assistant
general, who had previously
that Mr. ('rain had failed to
with him in prosecuting
frauds, admitted tin* charges
to Mr. Crain were sometimes
initccumto. He added that he had al¬
found the district attorney’s of¬
fice "willing to prosecute when eon
v j nro< j. jp.q s ,iit"i,'it*nt evidence ex
... .......... ..........—
NUMBERS
MIGHT SOLVE CRIME
New York, April 28. UP) ■ Rhone -----
number:, scribbled on scraps o( . paper
iu iter poeketbook were checked by po
bee today m their at t empt to sol ve he
mysterioii; killing of Virginia Bran
pen, hostess inti ‘Mi......a-dance” hall
in upper Manhattan.
Her body, penetrated by a bullet
ju t below the heart, was found be¬
hind a low wall around St. Joseph’s
Seminary iu Yonkers. One of her
hands, caught in a hedge fringing the
"'aH, projected above the stones and
the attention ol passersby.
Her body was discovered shortly
after 10 A. M. yesterday and physi¬
cian; aid : lie had been dead not mure
than an hour.
Miss Brannen, who was 28, came to
NVw York from her home in Bangor,
Me., a month ajfo.
SAN DIEGO GIRL’S
DEATH UNSOLVED
Sati Diego, Calif., April 28. CP)—A
coroner’s jury investigating-the mur
of Louise Teubcr, 17, whose body
war found hanging from a tree, has
the young store clerk came to
her death “at the hands of a person
or William persons unknown.” .her, the girl’s father,
titled the last time he saw Louise
was the Thursday night before
her death Saturday, April 11.
“She wanted to go out,,” he said,
“after being out late the night before.
f told her to entertain her company
at home.” J.
.....