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Show BURIED GOLD IN ' ALOIIY TRIAL y Special News Service. tna ANOKLJ!H, June S. Graveyards, Grave-yards, peacocks and akld chains figured fig-ured In the preliminary hearing of the separata maintenance eult brought by Mra. Mary A. Dobbins aaejnat her husband, Timothy C. Dobblna, wealthy Inventor, who waa arrested recently In company with Mra. Grace Olbaon. The queatlon before the court was the payment pay-ment of temporary alimony pending the trial of the case, and despite a vignroua examination of Dobblna by Mra. Dobbins' Dob-bins' attorney, William M. Mora Jr.. the source of the huenand'e Inoome remained eomethlng of a mystery. He waa maintaining three automobllea, he explained, becauae he waa working on an Invention for an automobile wheel and required all the machlnea to teat but hla Invention. Judge Wood look a hand In the questioning, ques-tioning, and Mra. Dobhlna apoke up: "Ask him. Judge, what he did with the 110 oon he buried In the graveyard.'4 Dobhlna laughed and aald he had not accreted his money In graveyards and that hia wlfe'a charge waa groundleas. Dobbins aald ha had Invented a akld chain and had sold the Invention to the manufacturers for IZT.00O. He aald he purchaeed a 114.000 house for his wife, and now haa but I4 In the bank. Unable to determine that her husband hus-band had more money than he claimed. Mra. Dobblna suggested a policy of economy he bad aa 4helr home, ahe aald, a large number of peacocks and fiheaeante and poultry, that "were eat-ng eat-ng their heads off." She aaked the court s permission to aell the fowla. Dobblna readily gave Ma consent, saying say-ing that the peaoocka were hla. "Now you can spend what It ensta JfedhoweeertrJrMjrmirslv lov." mM Mm. Dohb.nii to her huahand hua-hand as thpy paannd out of th oourt-I oourt-I room, rkohhinft wm orrWrM by J u dura |