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Show CLUB TO MURDER OF MISS REICHLIN FOUND IN BARN Bloody Clothing: Picked Up in Dcsdrted House May Clear Mystery. LORAIN. O., May 13. What may develop de-velop Into an Important clue to the murderer of Agatha Relchlin has been discovered. An old deserted barn In the loneliest part of Lorain, near the banks or the Black river, and adjoining a railroad yard, has been the haunt for months of. a mysterious' man. That man was seldom seen there, but evidence of his S & BUOTIIEE'S HAIR is Ttnurora white. A marvelous change. a!ccordlnr to those who know him best, has ' come over Casslmir Relchlin sines the murder of his sister, i Ills hair before the tragedy was as black as a raven's winr. It is tarnins white. This Is not a fanci- ful statement, but is an actual con- dltion that Is greatly worrying his friends and his relatives. His whole disposition has changed, according to his friends. To such an extent has this trans- formation gone, on during the last two days that the people In whose ( neighborhood he has lived for ' years, .and who have known him intimately, are talking about it. s visits there' during the dark hours of the night is plentiful. On the night of the murder of Agatha Relehlln a man's vest, a pair of trousers trou-sers with spots that resemble blood were found. It was within a hundred feet of this plape that Fred Frledel at daylight of the morning of the tragedy flaw a man washing his shoes from a watering trough. He paid little attention to him at the time, believing him to be a tramp. The place is now believed to have been the haunt of the monomaniac who has spread terror across this city. "Strange things go on in that barn," said Mr. Friedel. who lives within a hundred feet of the structure. "I have heard strange noises there, but have always al-ways supposed them to be due to the presence of tramps. In the day I frequently fre-quently went through the barn. I have several times seen clothing there. One day there would.be a blue suit and the next an entirely different one. "I was in the' barn the day before the Relchlin mujder. There was no clothing there at that time. Then on the morning of the tragedy I saw the man washing his . shoes in the watering trough. I went Into the barn later and found the clothing." |