Newspaper Page Text
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
VOLUME XXXII. NO. 48.
JURY IN EERRIE
BSE UNABLE 10
REACH
Out Since Four O’Clock Monday
Afternoon They are Dead*
locked at Trial of Accused
Pastor
JUDGE PREPARING
TO DISMISS THEM
Former Preacher is Charged
With Having Poisoned His
Wife to Marry Young Choir
Singer.
Muskogee, Gkla., Oct. 25. (/P)—The
jury deliberating a charge that the
Rev. S. A. Berrie murdered his first
wife by poison apparently was dead¬
locked today.
Out since 4 p. m. yesterday, the
jurors had given no indication an
agreement was imminent. Judge W.
J. Crump said he would discharge
them if “a verdict is not reached
4 p. m. today.”
After seven hours of deliberation,
*’‘e jury retired last night without r e
iMrting to District Judge W. J. Crump,
whose instructions were for acquittal
or death or life imprisonment.
Exhorting the jurors to remember
“the wages of sin is death,” County
Attorney Phil K. Oldham declared the
52-year-old hymn-writing minister
poisoned his 50-year-old wife
March because of intimacies with a
girl in her ’teens, whom he married
less than two months later.
But Grover Watkins, the preacher’s
“Don’t wake up and find, after
you’ve turned on the juice, that
made a mistake. . . . We’ve got every
circumstance in the world that Mi-s.
Berrie died of uremic poisoning. . . .
The prosecution has not proved where
Reverend Berrie even gave her a glass
8 n; I s tl0ub * ,, '?? to , „
’ V
wopien and malicious r gossipers,” has
remained confidence of hie acquittal.
THOUSANDS MARCH
IN HUNGER PARADE
IN LONDON STREET
London, Oct. 25. (UP)—Two thous¬
and jobless “hunger marchers” clos¬
ed in upon London today to present
demands for abolition of the “means
test” which obliges every recipient of
the dole to prove that he has no other
means of support.
It has been hard going through in¬
cessant rain along muddy roads from
Scotland, Wales and many parts of
England, but early this morning the
sun broke through briefly only to
hide behind clouds which threatened
another downpour.
Tonight the marchers will camp at
such nearby places as Croydon and
St. Albans,
CONFESSKTHEFTS”
AS SCHOOL LEADER
ADMITS FRAMING HOAX OF AB¬
DUCTION BY BURGLARS TO
HIDE HIS CRIMES
Los Angeles, Oct. 25. (UP)—From a
prodigal husband who failed in a plot
to disappear as the supposed victim
of burglars and wed a Seattle girl
under another name, Elliott B. Thom¬
as, school superintendent, became a
jail prisoner today by a voluntary
confession he conceived the hoax to
hide a theft of approximately $8,000.
Appearing at the office of District
Attorney Buron Fitts with his wife,
Olive, who had spoken forgiveness for
his scheme to marry Sylvia Wilson,
the 36-year-old head of Redono Beach
schools said he had forged county
warrants totaling between $8,000 and
$10,000 since January, 1930.
He assigned the motive first to
speclation and later to financing his
romance with Miss Wilson, which be¬
gan last July and ended last week
shortly after they had taken out a
marriage license at Kelso, Wash. His
attorney, George Penney, said he
would plead guilty if an indictment
were returned.
“I just don’t know why I did it,”
Thomas told Fitts. “I began to spec
ulate in 1930. At first small amounts;
then larger ones.”
As he unfolded his story, he drew
from his pockets $2,600 in cash and
$500 in checks, which he surrendered
to repay a portion of the thefts.
He had carried the cash and checks
with him since he contrived to disap¬
pear eight days ago after leaving a
meeting of the school board at his
home supposedly to obtain needed doc¬
uments at his office. His office was
found in wild disorder and he was. at
first sought on the theory he had sur
prised burglars who kidnaped him.
Instead he drove to the Pacific
northwest in an automobile which his
wife believed he sold. There, under
the name of E. T. Sherwood, he ob
tained a license to marry Miss Wilson
but returned here voluntarily without
marrying the girl when he learned his
subterfuge was disclosed.
j
I
j
i
Six-year-old Went ford Cook rode his
jpony 1 *<» Atlanta 200 miles from Gov. his at Franklin Chula, (la., D.
to greet
Roosevelt. A servant accompanied the
bo - v -
j - '
| j TWO BONG HELD
j
I
Pan - is Arrested on technical
Charges By Macon Authors
j ties in Connection With Mys=
j tery.
Macon, Ga., Oct. 25. UP)—Leonard
Gregory, farmer, who exhibited at
a. price two forms which he said were
« : >, »S5f f , .MndSUXtaS! hi , , .
who bou ght a)1 interest in the forms,
was held on technical charges today
while authorities investigated the
“discovery” of the figures which cre¬
ated a sensation in Georgia.
Dr. ryant and Gregory were dock¬
ed on charges of “loitering, held for
on $300 bond and a Macon physician
guaranteed Dr. Bryant’s appearance
at a hearing Friday.
Chief Detective T. E. Garrett said
he was convinced the “mummies”
weve frauds. They and' were found at In
dian Springs hundreds paid ten
cents each to see them. The forms
are of a mother holding a baby. Chief
Garrett said he had a catalogue from
a supply house in South Boston, Mass.,
which offered for sale manufactured
mummies. The prices, he said, ranged
from $15 to $35, C. O. D. He said
a letter from the supply house to a
prospective purchaser referred to the
Indian Springs “mummies.”
The forms were brought here sev¬
eral days ago and placed on exhibi¬
tion. Garrett said he visited the show
and asked the exhibitors to open the
case which held the forms. They
suggested he open it himself, he said,
but he didn’t. However, it was tak¬
en to police headquarters and the
forms were examined through the
glass covering on the case.
Chief Garrett said he was convinc¬
ed the bodies were not real but ask¬
ed Prof. Lean P. Smith of Wesleyan
College and Dr. W. B. Childs, ortho¬
dontist, to make a scientific examina¬
tion.
Workmen found the forms while
digging near Indian Springs.
TO SENTENCE STARNES
Atlanta, Oct. 25. UP)—Dr. W. A.
Starnes, sanatarium proprietor, will
be sentenced Friday in federal court
following his conviction yesterday on
three counts of a four-count indict¬
ment charging violations of the fed¬
eral narcotic laws. He was acquitted
on the fourth count. The maximum
sentence under the jury’s verdict is a
fine of $6,000 and imprisonment for
15 years.
IN HEATH CHAMBER
Miliedgeville, Ga., Oct. 25. UP)—
Charlie Green, Jr., and Paschal Baker,
negroes, were brought to the state
: prison farm hei’e yesterday to await
; execution Friday for conviction of
assault charges in Webster county,
j The men had been in the Bibb county
i jail since their conviction last August.
both men claim they are innocent.
ILLINOIS BANK ROBBED
Ransom, 111., Oct. 25.
bandits robbed the First National
Bank here of between $1,500 and
000 today and escaped after tem
I porarily kidnaping the president
the bookkeeper
i ----------
I BETTY GOW BACK
I New York, Oct. 25. UP)—Miss
; ty Gow, who was nursemaid for
England sla^n Lindbergh today baby, the liner arrived
on
and declined to answer any
Miss Gow sailed for England
| August Glasgow. and visited with her
j near
BRUNSWICK, GA., TUESDAY, OCT. 25. 1932.
REPUBLICANS IN I
APOLOGETIC TILE
Speaker and Vice-Presidential
Nominee Says Their ‘Would!
Have,' If’ and But' State- j
ments Amusing
NO LONGER ABLE TO
PRESENT PLATFORM
Takes Issue With Political Foes
That Economic Troubles in
This Country Came From
Abroad.
Washington, Oct. 25. UP)—Speaker
Garner said today that President
Hoover and his associates “have be¬
come so involved in ‘would have,’ ‘if,’
and ‘but’ apologies for a task poorly
done that they are no longer able to
present their own contentions logical¬
ly or honestly.”
“President Hoover,” he said in a
statement issued through the Demo¬
cratic national committee, “whips him¬
self into a self-righteous fury because
the Democratic have promised a sav¬
ing of a billion dollars in govern¬
mental expenses and in the very
breath in which he denies the possi¬
bility, says that he himself will save
a billion and a half if allowed to re¬
main in office.”
Taking issue with the Republican
contention that economic troubles
spread to this country from abroad,
the vice-presidential candidate said
unemployment figures “revealing a ra¬
tio of unemployment nearly twice as
great here as in Europe, hardly justi¬
fy the theory that foreign infection
has poisoned our economic blood
stream.”
“It is hard, indeed, to escape the
conclusion, judging by some of the
defensive speeches made by the Hoov¬
er leaders,” he continued, “that they
seek to be more familiar with condi¬
tions in Europe which contributed to
our downfall.
“In order to form an estimate of
those conditions, let me present a com¬
parison between things as they are in
the United States and abroad at the
present time.
“On October II, the American Fed¬
eration announced that 11,000,000 of
the 122,000,000 residents of the Unit¬
ed States were unemployed. On that
me day unemployment in England,
Germany anc Italy havmg
a total fP u la t ‘ on of 182,000,000, em
bra f ed 9 -J 61 1 ’°°0 „ Persons. The per
ce nt |5® oi unemployment m the Un.t
® <! , St f es was ™ ne P ercent < for the
four fading ,. European nations five
P e, ' ce nt.
Unknown Fireman
Hero Of Fire In
Roosevelt Rally
Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 25. UP)—An un¬
known fireman was revealed today
as the hero of a fire that blazed
backstage in the Atlanta city audi¬
torium last night while Governor
Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York
delivered a campaign address to
thousands of persons in the building.
So quickly did the fireman work,
and so efficient were his methods,
that none of the listeners in the aud¬
ience or the Democratic notables on
the platform were aware that any-,
thing out of the ordinary had taken
place.
The fireman’s action was first
known when Glenn Dewberry, gener¬
al manager of Atlanta’s public build¬
ings, wrote a letter to Fire Chief John
Terrel, praising the man’s quick
thinking.
The giant Democratic rally was
well under way when the belt of an
electric motor which operates a ven¬
tilating fan, slipped off, allowing the
motor to become overheated. Sudden¬
ly the machine was enveloped in
flames.
The fireman, one of many posted in
the building, saw the blaze. His first
act was to close a door, shutting out
sight of the flames from those in the
audience. Then with a chemical ex¬
tinguisher, he smothered the flames.
The crowd which filled the. auditor¬
ium to the rafters and pressed at the
entrances in a vain effort to gain ad¬
mission, was estimated by officials at
from 12,000 to 15,000 persons.
SHOT TO DEATH
Cochran, Ga., Oct 27. i/P)—Levi Hin¬
son, 40, was shot to death and Cleve¬
land Cannon was arrested on murder
charges as the result of a shooting
at a public sale of farm implements
near here yesterday.
GENTRY’S WIDOW DIES
I Atlanta, Oct. 25. UP)—Mrs. Nina
W. Gentry, widow of W. T. Gentry,
j former president of the Southern Bell
Telephone Company, died at her home
early today. She was 79 years of age.
BUSINESS MAN DIES
Dawson, Ga, Oct. 25. I/Pj—W. W.
Dunn, 64, prominent business man of
Parrott, Ga., died at his home there
late yesterday afternoon. He under¬
went a major operation Oct. 13. Death
resulted from pneumonia.
ARE REPORTED TO
FLORIDA POLICE
Authorities Baffled
By Series of Whippings
ministered By Secret Group
of Men
MORE VIC TIMS
TELL THEIR STORIES
One New Case Yesterday and
Five Last Night are Brought
to Attenion of Mayor and Ptu
lice Chief.
Jacksonville, Fla., Oct. 25. (UP) The
of three more persons was
to police today, bringing to
19 the number who have been whip¬
by therrorists here recently.
Officers said three white men U>ld
they had been taken to a woods
the outskirts of the city and
by a band of mobsters. Iden¬
of the men and details of the
were withheld by police.
One new flogging case was report¬
yesterday and five last night. Pre¬
ten other persons, including
white women, said they had been
Chief A. J. Roberts took personal
of the police investigation and
W. B. Gaboon ' turned the
of his office into the case.
R. L. Tilley as foreman called the
jury floggings investigation as five new
of were reported to
investigators last night.
Names of the victims and other de¬
of the newest cases were with¬
by the officers. Only two of the
names have been made public
saying secrecy would aid their
Police still held to their theory that
the victims were told they were be¬
whipped for “sellling liquqr” or
a white man’s job” or other
Fifteen witnesses have been sum¬
to appear before the grand
convening tomorrow.
Meantime, George J. Garcia, grand
of the Ku Klux Kian here, in¬
a paid advertisement in a local
saying that that organiza¬
was “in no way whatever respon¬
for the recent epidemic of whip¬
in or this floggings that have occur¬
vicinity.”
The advertisement pledged the
cooperation with authorities in
those responsible for
floggings.
To Propose
Arms Schemes
At Geneva Parley
By GLENN BABB
Associated Press Staff Correspondent
Copyright, 1932, By The Associated
Press
Tokyo, Oct. 25. (A 3 )—-Japan has de¬
to propose her own comprehen¬
Scheme for reduction of naval
to the disarmament con¬
at Geneva, a high official told
Associated. Press today.
The Japanese plan, it was under¬
will neither accept nor reject
American and British schemes for
in naval strength, bu! will offer
distinctly Japanese suggestion.
The details of the plan, even an
of its general character, are be¬
ing held in the closest secrecy for the
being.
The Associated Press was informed
however, that the scheme embraces
all the naval categories, and will lie
enough to stand alongside
Hoover and Baldwin proposals.
(President Hoover has suggested a
one-third general cut in ar¬
maments. This envisaged reduction
by one-third of all battleships—both
tonnage and number—under the An
glo-American-Japane.se naval treaty;
reductions in treaty tonnage of air¬
craft carriers, cruisers and destroy¬
ers by one-fourth, and submarines by
one-third, with no nation having more
than 35,000 tons of submarines.
Great Britain’s last disarmament
plan involves placing the Washington
and London naval treaties establish¬
ing ratios between Great Britain, the
United States and Japan at approx¬
imately 10-10-6 respectively, in a
world treaty. Great Britain adheres
to the policy of abolition of subma¬
rines and certain methods of warfare,
but is opposed to limitation by re¬
duction of specific categories of na¬
val vessels.)
MEET JON LINDBERGH!
New York, Oct. 25. UP)-—The
World-Telegram -aid today the
second son of Col. and Mrs. Chas.
A. Lindbergh has hen named Jon
Morrow Lindbergh.
It said the Jon was chosen for a
Scandinavian forebear of Col.
Lindbergh’s. Morrow is Mrs. Lind¬
bergh's maiden nam<-.
Jersey Senate Candidates
■~xC
IP
J#
IV. Warren Bariums (left) is seeking elect ion to the United Slates
senate from New Jersey on the Republican ticket. Ilis Democratic rival
is Percy It. Stewart.
Orders Present Import Duties
Probed To Determine Adequacy
FEDERAL TARIFF
List of Eighteen Industries
lected By Levies is Placed
Before Commission By
idcnt.
Washington, Oct. 25. (/PI—Accom
panied by President Hoover’s request.
lor quick action, the tarill commiK
sion today had a list of 18
in 30 states before it for
tions into the adequacy of exi.- ling
import duties.
Mr. Hoover submitted the p-4 “of
industries ami localities wluuo there
i has been actual increase oi unenipioy
i mentor alternatively where it i,. in
evitable that it will increase from im
! portations” and directed < ‘hai. i.:;.r
| j O’Brien rates in connection to investigate with the the tal i'!
o< niv
j eiated currencies abroad, lie added
| in his letter to O’Brien:
“If it shall prove that the diliei
ence in cost of production between
here and abroad in these indu.u.rux
have altered the basis of the tarill du¬
ties, I wish to receive recommend;!
tions of the tariff commission at the
earliest possible moment.
Commodities included in the list
submitted by the President foi .lives,
ligation were: “Rag and grass rugs,
tooth and hair brushes, electric light
bulbs, cutlery, pottery, rubber bools
and shoes, leather gloves, silverware,
jewelry, canned vegetables, dried
beans, iron and steel products, mein!
goods, canned fish, lumber products,
chemical products.
The president’s list named points in
the following states as locaMcus of
these industries: New York, Massa¬
chusetts, Connecticut, Rhode island,
Maine, Vermont, New Jersey, Mary
land, Virginia, Georgia, Alabama,
Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, »Vn
eonsin, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia, Iowa, Michigan, Tonnes;ue,
Utah, Arkansas, California, Wash¬
ington, Oregon, Missouri, Louisiana,
and Texas.
The president’s letter to O'Brien
said:
“An extension of my recent verbal
instruction as to the necessity for in¬
vestigation of certain tariff schedules
due to depreciation of currencies in
foregn countries, I enclose herewith
a list Ii.-u furnished i u, mi >— i me mv by Hj the .... department
of commerce of industries and Ioeali
ties where there has been actual in
crease of unemployment or alterna¬
tively where it is inevitable that it
will increase from importations aim¬
ing out of this cause unless they he
halted.
“You recognize that currencies
thirty countries have now depi ct lat
ed from 5 to 55 per cent, which has
reduced the standards of living in
those countries and greatly widened
the difference in cost of production
j I between localities. the United States and i.iio
“I would therefore be obliged if
the tariff commission would expedite
this matter in order to afford all pos
sihie relief to unemployment in these
communities. 1 urge this expedition
because of this possible retardation
of increasing employment of our peo¬
ple.”
YEGGMEN CRACK SAFE
Bainbridge, Ga., Oct. 25. (/!')
Yeggmen cracked open a steel
in the R. I. Rich Chevrolet
last night after rolling the
i strong box from the office to the
of the garage. The sum taken
not revealed, but it is understood
jhave the been large. A cash box
|in office also was rifled.
officers were without clues today
(agreed that the job was that of
fessionals
Appeal For Roosevelt
i anl Garner and Denounced (i.
O. P. Regime in Newark Ad*
dress.
j Newark, By Wit.MAM N. J., Oct. KINNEY 25. (/!') Jiib
| —
j il^tion rang in the Democratic camp
. " vuv Uu ' Id-open-armed wel- ,
! <‘«>nio that the slate Democracy gave
jits idol “the Happy Warrior” when
j i u . ,. aim . |, a t k last night to Jersey to
j d his ; j , , tnajor cal , fol . the clci
i |' Roosevelt . and
"»*» 1,1 Garner,
One man died of a heart, attack and
| (;o wore injured in a jamming crush
|,,| cheering humanity. Democratic
leaders said it was one of the greatest,
1 political demonstrations in New Jcr
|soy's history.
Inside the armory a throng esti¬
mated at 20,000 heard and saw him.
Outside, an hour before his arrival,
police Gomniisisoner Edward Reilly
estimated 60,000 persons choked the
K (,|( ul |, | u ter became the trium
phul pathway of Alfred E. Smith.
Criticizing President Hoover as
“the dry leader of the United States,”
lie devoted much of his speech to rid¬
iculing the Republicans oil prohibi¬
tion. He assailed them on charges
of bigotry, deception and hypocrisy.
He attacked Col. William J. Don¬
ovan, Republican candidate for gover¬
nor of New York, declaring he was
on the Republican “board of strategy"
directing the 1928 campaign when
Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrundt made
a speech which Smith said aroused
“bigotry and intolerance.”
Smith claimed authorship of the
j Democratic repeal plank and assailed
the Republican plank as holding out
“a aop to the wets and a little bone
to the drys.” He called on New Jer¬
sey to make the senate Democratic at
the next session by electing Percy
Stewart to succeed I he late Dwight
Morrow.
And in conclusion, he said the
“election of the Democratic ticket is
the best way to solve these problems
ami the best way to bring hack pros¬
perity tli<' election of Roosevelt, and
Garner.’
Hi return to the armory ainioi y where wm-it- he in:
j (
ma de a prohibition speech in 1928
bore the aspects of the home-coming
of a hero. The crowd that jammed
the cavernous drill shed, with its
hunting draped rafters and its. criss¬
cross of brilliant spotlights, cheered
wildly. been transform
Sussex avenue, hail
| j ,,,j f 0( . (docks with tunneled arches of
electric lights flashing, “welcome
Happy Warrior.” Aerial bombs ex
j jdodetl salvos, and red, blue and green
flares h pole hod the sky. Mayor Frank
j Hague of Jersey City, who fought for
Smith at Chicago and who introduced
j him last night, estimated that 200,000
j | K , 0 |,| ( , lined his path from the llol-
1 ] an( ) tunnel,
LIQUOR ( Alt HITS CHIU)
! Atlanta, Oct. 25. f/P) Kight-year
: old Julia Kathleen Andrews was
struck and seriously injured here yes¬
terday as an automobile officers were
; pursuing on a liquor raid was aban
! doned by its driver and plunged across
ja sidewalk into a group of school chil
j ilren. The driver, a negro listed by
police as John Bennett, was captured
j by passersby arid an angry crowd
(quickly surrounded him. Pursuing offi
cers took him from his captors and
placed him iri jail. The condition of
child was pronounced critical by
medical —'■ attendants. Two gallons of f
liquoi were seized by the officers, --
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Voice So Hoarse Thai He Speaks
With Difficulty But He Does
Not Eaii to Appear Before
Throng
hes confident
OF certain victory
“About Only Thing That I Lost
Down in Georgia is My Voice,”
He Says Upon Reaching North
Carolina.
ll.v F. G. VOSBURGH
Associated Press Stuff Writer
Aboard Roosevelt Special, En Route
to Baltimore, Oct 25. t/P> His voice
so ho.arse that he spoke with diffi¬
culty, Governor Roosevelt today made
his first appearance of the campaign
in North Carolina, greeting big crowds
that gathered along the route of his
special train.
The governor was not yet up when
the train reached Hamlet and his son,
James Roosevelt, and Robert Rey¬
nolds, North Carolina’s Democratic
senatorial nominee, addressed the.
crowd in his stead.
At Southern Pines, the governor ap¬
peared on the rear platform to the
accompaniment of cheers and shouts
ol greetings.
Conspicuous in the crowd was a sign
which read “Friends of Roosevelt and
Repeal.”
“About the only thing 1 lost down
in Georgia is my voice," said the gov¬
ernor, smiling broadly
"I am confident of the result on No¬
vember 8 and even more confident of
the result in the state of North Caro¬
lina.''
That brought another big cheer and
yells of “You’re right, Roosevelt.”
North Carolina was one of the
stales which broke away from the
“solid smith” to go for Hoover in
1928.
Members of the governor's party
expressed themselves as concerned
about his voice. They made plans to
spare it as much as possible by hav¬
ing him cut short his remarks at the
various stops scheduled in North Caro¬
lina and Virginia during the day.
By the time Raleigh was reached,
jnost of North Carolina’s Democratic
leaders had hoarded the governor’s
special, some of them to ride on with
him through thegutate to Virginia.
On this final swing, the governor
in loss than a week has visited Penn¬
sylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Mis¬
souri, Kentucky, Tennessee and Geor¬
gia, addressing big crowds at every
stop.
He left Atlanta last night to the
strains of “Dixie” after two days of
tumultuous demonstrations in his hon¬
or culminating in a mass meeting
which packed the city’s big auditorium
to the rafters while hundreds of
others clamored in vain for admit
(Continued (in Page 81
F
PERSISTENT RUMORS OF PEACE
BETWEEN ('AUDI. AND HELEN
HEARD AT CAPITAL
Bucharest, Rumania, Oct. 25. (UP)—
The persistent rumors of reconetllia
t ion bet ween King Carol and former
Queen Helen of Rumania today over¬
shadowed the interest of the capital
in the eleventh birthday of their son,
Prince Michael, the youngest former
king in Europe.
Despite all denials, the populace, es¬
pecially the farmers with whom
Princess Helen is very popular, still
believe peace between her and Carol
is just around the corner. They were
more than ever convinced of this by
the mystery and excitement of the
former queen's unannounced arrival
in the capital yesterday.
The princess was apparently unin¬
terested, however, in what was going
on outside Ciselef Palace, her resi¬
dence, and had no other desire at the
moment than to make her son happy
on liis birthday.
Since early morning, she has been
reported preparing the birthday table
for the lad, expected from the royal
residence at Sinaia during the fore¬
noon.
In Princess Helen's living room was
a table with a circle of 11 burning
candles with a twelfth larger candle
in the middle indicating that the
prince was entering his twelfth year.
There was also a large birthday cake
and various presents brought from
I.ondon.
Buenos Aires, Argentina, Oct. 25.
(UP) When the liner Neptunia arrived
today one of the third class passengers
was Madame Elisa Lupeseu, a Ru¬
manian who said she was a widow
caTW^ to visit a niece who lives here.
There were reports that she wai<
Madame Magda Lupeseu, friend ot
King Carol of Rumania, but she de¬
nied that she had any connection witti
that Madame Lupescue. t
___