V V ,'t 1 r WOMANSLEWNUN, BISHOP'S STORY EVENING' PUBLIC LEDGER- PfflDADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER It), 1919 Priost and Sister Superior Tes tify at Trial of Former Housekeeper BODY WAS UNDER CHURCH i, Hy the Associated Press Inland, Mich., Oct. 1G. further tea timony that Sister Jfnry John, a 1V1I- clan nun, who mysteriously disappeared, from' tho convent nt Isadoro. Mich., where Bho was n teacher in 1007. was killed by an unnamed woman and that the body wai buried under IToIy Kosary Church nt Isidore, 'was given at the trial of Mrs. Stanisltwa Lypchinslti, on a char go of murdering the nun. The witnesses were the Itev. Joseph A. T.cmpke, father confessor, and Sister Mary Antonina, sister superior, of the Felician convent, Detroit. Father Lcmpke testified that he was informed in 1015 by Bishop I'duard Kozlowski, of Milwaukee, who died shortly afterward, that the nun had been killed and buried under the church. Last j car. when a new church wan about to be erected nt Jsadore, tho witness 'aid, he gave tho information to the pnrih priest there, thinking he might wish to rcinter the body in n cemetery before excavation was begun for tho new building. Father Edward l'odlnszewski, the Isadoro pastov, then ordered the body disinterred, and the investigation that followed resulted in the arrest of Mrs. Iiypehinski. Sister Mary Antonina corroborated Father Lcmplce's testimony. The story ramc to her, she stated, from Mother Mary Veronica, mother provincial of Milwaukee, who quoted Uishop Koz lowski an saying Sister Mary John did not forsake her vow at Isadorc, but was killed by n woman and buried under Holy Rosary Church there." On cross-examination Sister An tonina declnrcd she had searched under tho church for traces of a grave in 1010, but failed to find any sign of a mound or disturbed earth. Jacob Flees, tho sexton who removed the supposed body of Sister Mnry, re called to the stand, testified the grave was concealed under a pile of lumber. Mrs. Mary Flees, of Milwaukee, a daughter of Sirs. Lj.pchinski, was also lccnlled, and her testimony contradicted statements contained in an affidavit said to have been made by her labt fall and which the prosecution sought to place, in the record. In the affidavit Mrs. Flees is quoted as saying she had not seen her mother between the hours of 1 :30 and 4 p. in. otr the day Sister Mary disappeared. Witnesses hae fixed 1:30 o'clock"as the hour the nun was last seen entering the church. Mrs. Flees testified that ruo did see and hear her mother moving nbout the parish house, where she was house keeper for Father Bienewaski, between these hours. On the objection of attorneys for the defense, Judge Mayne took the matter of admission of the affidavit under advisement. HUSBAND TIED HER H0LD lunicaswrecker TO P.HAIR SAYS SINGER eff t0 D p Tram m v wi ii ., w. Rhodo Island la FruitMt.ri 15 Then He Talked and Talkod. All Because She Spilled the Sardines Now York, Oct. 10. Bound with rope to a chair in their apartment at the Pontiac Hotel for thirty-six hours by her hhsband so ho could, without interruption, tell her what he thought of her, wns the experience of Mrs. Ijva do Cordcro, a concert singer, ac cording to her story related in affidavits to Justive Oavcgan, of the Supreme Court. "Ho kept mo thus bound nnd re fused me cither food or drink," said Mrs. do Cordcro in asking for alimony 'from Conrad do Cordero, export man ager of the I. B. du l'ont do" Nemours Company, at Wilmington, Del. "I was unable to move while he walked up and down the npnrtmeut, using indecent nnd threatening language nnd snjiug he would kill me it I made an outcry." Mrs. dc Cordcro said she and tho defendant were married In Juarez, Mexico, on September "o, 1017, and dated her allegation of cruelty from a month after her marriage until last September, when Mr. do Cordcro is accused of abandoning her. While living nt the Waldorf, Mrs. de Corderosaid, her husband paid $11 a day for their room and spent $20 each night on their dinner. But boon after this outward display of gener osity toward her, she avers, his anger was aroused because sne accidentally spilled n can of (sardines, causing the fish to break in pieccmcnl, and for ten weeks he refused to tnlk to her. Mrs. do Cordero said her husband has an income of S1C00 a month and has been living in lavish style nt the Waldorf while sho is without suppoit. Justice Gnvegon allowed her alimony of ?25 n week. FOIL $1,000,000 ROBBERY Alleged Plot to Steal Camp Grant Payroll Frustrated Kockford, III., Oct. 10. A plot to rob tho finance office at Camp Grant of more than S1,000,000, kept here in anticipation of camp pay day, was frustrated last night in the arrest of three men cmplojcd as camp work men, the camp authorities announce. "It wns established that a quantity of nitro-glyccrinc was to have been delivered nt the camp either today or on Tuesday," said Captain Fitch to night, "and we nrc making every effoit to locate the explosive. This one de tail we have not learned as yet." Plan Half Million Dollar Cafe l'lans are now before Hip Art Jurv nnd Fairmount Park Commission for i the erection of n $."00,000 cafe and cafeteria at Belmont Mansion. At the head of the proposed concern nro W. I J. Osthcimcr, proprietor of the Ar endia Cafe, and John G. P.atton, pro nrictor of the Cafe IAiclnn. The proposed cafe is to be modeled after establishments of a similar character in luropc. It will be one story high and have a main dining saloon wffh n seating capacity for GOO persons. Providence, K. I., Oct. 10. (Ily A.I P.) An attempt to wreck a New Haven passenger trnin near tho Manton sta tion was frustrated Inst night by a mnrnln of n Tew minutes. II. O. Mnv- fiold, stntion agent, discovered n plank nearby plugged with railroad spikes. So close was the train that Ma field had no tlmo to remove the obstructions, but, instead, ran forward and flagged me tram across the tracks and found, the switch , The inoIclcnt was followed by the nr- rest of Charles Itnffcrty, twenty-four, who, tho pollco say, was adjudged ia snnc recently. When the pollco found Ilnfferty he was sitting astride tho rails under tho Olfnside avenue bridge with n plank across his knees. Tho nluc of such work In cnnWInc them to comprehend life was emphasised' III' till fchnnlfPFH. ntnmii ...!.... .-- . H1"' l, ''WJ'., Professor of cconomlci Jfl i tl'c1 ivsity ?f Pennsylvania' -J llcbert I,. Stcrrct, assistant federal tftaJjuAl k& TtanJcifl American and Chinese Restaurant DANCING 11 to 2 6 to 8 10 to I rS&MSj&g J4 'V rr w 1 Tllkrf!&v $vEWsSrPfliiiWlS SPwjf&fiEMGBmtfXct&ar SslLEffi& I yS jsc; Open from 11 A. M. to 1 J., M. Business Men's Lunch 11 A. M. to 2 p. M. Choice of Roast Meats, two Vegetables, Bread and Butter. Tea or Coffee, Dei- C(- 8 Dancing No Cover Charge Orchestr? Special Sunday Dinner, 12 to 4 dji oe P. M. Excellent Concert Music V'& '" ' 15th & Chestnut noa Just received from the Custom House First Shipment of the Incomparable English Aquascutum Great Coats and Ulsters Great, big", easy,-fitting ' warm overcoats and "trav eling: Ulsters," as they call them in London, in "sports men" models. Light fleece thick fabrics with style in every line of shoulder, skirt and sleeve. American designers find - it difficult to improve the true English "swagger" these greatcoats ' carry. They are distinctly English and the best ulsters we have yet seen. Only one or two of each pattern. $65, $75, $85, $95 William H. Wanamaker Penn Men Volunteer Services In a get-together meeting last night fit llin TTiitvprnllr MnttlA, ..... Tf...... Twenty-sixth and Lombard streets, li'O iwi 7"v.-"ij "J, i-eiinsjivanla .llcbert 13. Stcrrct, assistant federal I . freshman class .pledged licmsehcs to do tn t ntto.nev. nn I wi1n. l ZSfi $1 lninnucr mic al wurk ilnHm n, ....... tr.. . " " "' icj' "" ...hi. ixriii.. 3. Kw ' ' safe foods 1 KsBSmMSSm. for him ' i aaBaWKaWWaJaMLWBMBaMHiaEIEWyMS j, ,- ft rT" V jfeauaw " v' wSfflSHWw" sLLHslHaWMstaWWlWIWaMMiHMlBHM mMI&&yf "?'?$ S '.;V, WSMmilXrfrKZ"- - - :'",-l-M , : IBHLLTOaHBalaBaMBilBBBifHmllagB ':.yM& i''-, iJ5WgSeMst88anMJi'' wv"'K -J , ; BLLLaHaLLHflanaLaKflBHBaWBaSHDeSaBBBS ' " X0&ex!$.A'' ""'. . A v $ ' WalaBBMaaHWIlllhMWa J ammmmmmmmmmmBammBamaammmamalBaHBaBaammRBflammmaBaaflHnKSKaaaWH ' a iM ammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmWamBlammmmmaamWa '' HS HMaHeflEaHHHBMHHe9Haaal9Ba9am8H90aBmn JUST as the government inspection enforces the purity of milk So Bond Bread's super-inspection makes the purity of Bond Bread absolutely certain. Thus your children are assured of two safe foods pure bread and pure milk the two foods most essential to happy, healthy American boyhood and girlhood. Youngsters naturally like simple homely foods. Set a brimming bowl of Bond Bread and rich sweet milk before a healthy boy or girl, and normal appetite will do the rest. Why careful parents insist on Bond Bread You insist on Grade "A" milkbecause your children's health is too valuable to risk with milk that is impure, or deficient .in nourish ment. It is just as important to buy bread whose ingredients you know to be rich and pure, and which is baked in the way that makes it most nourishing and digestible. ! 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers