Monday, Dec. 01, 1930

"TIME brings all things."

Explanation

In Athens, Greece, Peter Kulaxides, about to take to himself his eighth bride, was arrested & charged with having done to death the preceding seven. He explained: Wife No. 1 died of excitement & joy when he was released from jail after a long incarceration. The next five he did not kill. Wife No. 7 he murdered because she had told him lies.

Seconds

In Jacksonville, Fla., Moody Gibbs and Allen Posey, blackamoors, decided to settle with fisticuffs a dispute over a woman. They . appointed two seconds: Marion Campbell, James Wise. As they battled their seconds were carried away with excitement, quarreled, drew guns, shot each other. One second died, the other was badly wounded.

Dimes

In Albany, N. Y., James Mason assaulted James Gilmore, pilfered from him 10. James Mason was sent to prison to serve from seven and one-half to 15 years. In Los Angeles, Emory Ells, restaurant handyman, wanted to have his wife, Mrs. Merle Ells, killed. He gave Benjamin Franklin Brown, glass-molder, 22 dimes; Glass-molder Brown murdered her as she slept with her infant son.

Spat

In Jersey City, N. J., James ("Valley") Smith, 30, was shot several times. One bullet struck his chin, entered his mouth, knocked out a tooth. When surgeons hunted the bullet, he explained: "I spit it out." Wire At Grand Rapids, Mich., Charles Garnett, Mike Eikelbery, and Everett Glazier were arrested for stealing 150 mi. of copper wire which they dismantled while the lines were charged with 144,000 volts. Near Middletown, N. Y. Fred Woods saw a deer drop dead while crossing a field, followed it, dropped dead by its side. Both had touched a broken high tension wire.

Hairpin

In Mellen, Wise., Mrs. John Kunz, 46, was standing on a chair, fell off. was killed by a hairpin driven into her brain.

"Fluffy" In Newark, N. J., "Fluffy" playful poodle, tugged at a gas-heater hose, jerked it loose. Asphyxiated as they slept were Mr. & Mrs. Michael Moore, Mary Moore, 17, "Fluffy."

Flowers

In Augsburg, Germany, Annie Rossmeier, 16, and Fanny Schlegel, 18, were placing flowers on the grave of Annie's mother. The 300-lb. monument fell, killed Annie, wounded Fanny.

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