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12 THE EVENING ¢ AR, MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1921 Blazing Plane Falls Into River; MpTT AND JEFF—You Might Say-Jeff’s Motive Was a Purely Selfish One. R e —By BUD F ISHER: i Telegraph News of U. S. in Brief *;F;’;E{“::::' _ m;f‘;:“"" \FTEEN COMING MINUTES - Two Flyers Reported Drowned in the Mississippi. Legion Opposes Non-Partisan League Activity in Kansas—Movies to Aid the Farmer. By the Associated Press. | were held pending an investigation AIRO, 11l., January 10.—Two men |into the deaths of their companions. are reported to have lost their lives| The pawned overcoat belonged to when a hydroairplane from Dayton, | BTOW™ Ohio, delivering films for a motion T e picture corporation, caught fire and| MOBILE, Ala.—For all time the fell in the Mississippi river, near Tib- | arst White House of the Confederacy tonville, Tenn. The reported dead|or nontgomery, about which much are Capt. George Simpson, who served uthern history has been constructed three years in the Canadian and Brit- | since 1361, will stand as a monument j<h roval air forces, and Carl Fish-|t0 the cause for which southern men P asbstal ptuse s ey ave their lives in the condlict be e Sl Jett heve nt 11 o'cloci yes-| tween the American states. The re oD s aften @ twenty-four- | moval of the building from its old po- i Ty . e hew. had said | sition on Bibb and Moulton streets to e aayeYeh route to. Florida, and | Site purchased by the state brings | intended to make Memphis the first|to an end an rted by the stop after leaving here. first White Ho ation many |, The trip from Dayton was begun|years ago. Les legis ed to for ass several days ago. The origin of the|ture was ance in fire was not determined. the purchase of the building and a Seen Falling in Flame: site, but each refused the request TIPTONVILLE, Tenn.. January 10— | Finally. an effort was made to ob-} George H. Simpson, captain and Carl|tain funds by private subscriptionjint here, and a drinks than in the days when liquor Fort Worth Gazette and Dallas | cuitaral Fa her, pilot of a hydroairplane mak-|and the devious ways women's asso-iforc entering the ministry. vicked up selling was legal.” Later-he came to Memphis, and ownley, Bureau National ing a trip from Dayton to Mem-|ciations use. Thi too slow. | the trip. had been connected with various papers s been in Association, American phis, are ved to have been|another appeal was and the| Would Seek Russ Contracts. — i Raised $2 to $20. here since 1880, including the Memphis | holding m committe. S Association, grange move- dro d when a plane fell into the|jegislature of 1919 made an appro-{ ROSTO! A proposal to send the Will Fight Open Shop. | CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.—John Mont-| Avalanche, the Memphis Appeal and | compc hembere ol the | tats 0l cotopirative BbusingIand t of o combat any | gom A hegro. is under arrest on the | the Commercial Appeal. At the tin% | Ameri zion from each congres- marketing ociations throughout ernational Asso- CilCAGO.—P] Yo | attempt by the 0 Ment | to continue their fight for collective | twenty dollars Mississippi_ river. priation sufficient to purchase the sitepresident of the I after the plane passed over|,;q move the building. ation of Machin two-dollar_bills to| brotherhoods | charge of r: placing a_cypher to R this town negro farm laborers from 5 S » ——— ontract with the soviet g a plantation near here came in with 2 9 e rnment | 10 o & and the closed Shob after the orizinal fizure. He was o r the manufacture of machinery 2 after the origin Fgl 3 The Story that there had been an ex-| _dudge Accidentally Kills Self. rothe manufacture of it by | through national hoards, of adiust: |taken into custody after passing one L be made at a national |of the raised bills on a local store, and ident | conference of state manufacture when searched three other raised bills ssociations here Wedn ie were found on his person. Another nounced. More than 400 delegates | (o qollar bill had been raised and from twenty states are expected 10| yphers had been added to a one-dol- attend the conference. lar and a five-dollar bill. azing plane| TULSA, Okla—Ralph E. Campbell | {55 [0 had fallen into the river from alfifty-four. former United States dist|ynoiher resolution height of about 500 feet. Later ar-|trict judge of the eastern district of i\¢iicon to act toward restoring free | angements were made to drag the}OKlahoma, accidentally shot and | .7 g unrestricted commercial cxchange the point where the negroes|killed himself. O U eveling privileges to soviet ay that the plane sank. - | Riassia: " . S. Laws Diex. Sigma With Detroit Orchestra. ASHEVILLE. N. C—Rev, Sm"ufll P DETROIT, Mich.—Ossipp Gabrilo-|spanr Laws, D. D, Ll. D.. eminent | BOSTO vitsch, for several vears conductor|theologist, educator and inventor, died {11, who is \f the Detroit Symphony Orchestra,|here at the age of ninety-seven.” Theia ‘court of law signed a contract to head the or-|body will be sent to Cinc . Dr_|than any justi anization for another two years, it is|Laws was educated at Miami Univer- fcelebrated the fiftieth ann innounced. The announcement set at |sity, Oxford, Ohio, and Princeton The- } his appointment mun later returning to ! judge in the Dorchester ion. | ment w plosion and that the bl al lodge of Insanity Casex Increascd. Lumber Rates Lowered. Jutee Joocplt B Ciimch ) | CUY CACC s of insanity from | MIMPHIS, Tenn-—Conference rates aid to have presided over | alcoholism increased in the [on hardwood lumber from gulf ports to e ser period | Cook (ounty Psychopathic Tlospital| United Jingdom ports have been re in the United States, | prohibition went into effect, |quced from $1 to 75 cents per 100 | According 1o the quarterly report of [pound (g ORI amesSWhitney SH : ived by F. L. Throck- “zent of the American | Rev. ehrates Fiftieth Year as Judze. comm for the est rumors® that he would conduct |ological Seminary. | 3 2 joston and New York orchestras. Miami as its president. He was for |was apointed by Gov. Wil | Dr. Overseas Forwarding Company. Lum- -—— twelve vears president of the on January 9, 1871. 1 per k ber manufacturers say that the reduc- | Wood Aleohol Kills Two. University of Missouri and for five | = | December, 1920, over the las on will release large quantities of NEWARK. N, J—Liquor made of |years professor at the Presbyterian Roynl Palm Derailed. Iy Homber for export shipment. e Sotahe Theological Seminary, Columbia, S. C.| TEXINGTON, Ky e cars and | ¢ == | October over DI Newspaperman Dies. ueohol, bought with proceeds from a - el S Dr. Laws was the author of s -wned overcoat is believed by Police | pooics on theolosy and_philo » have caused the deaths here of |anq at the age of ninety-six published | cago to Jacksonvill tichael Brown of New York, and|a book on “The Atonement” which at- | railed at Dry Ri vitnam H. Massey, New Brighton. |tracted attention in this country and | here and Cincinnati. ‘a. Two other men. members of their | England. He is credited with the in- | jured bevond arty. were made violently ill. They |vention o fthe electric stock ticker. it was announced at the railroad of eral | the engine of the Royal Palm Limited | was noted in O er previo oy | o the Bouthern ratlwav, from Chi- | Octobers, while in September fhe 1| apvpHIs, Tenn-—Michael W. Con e i e et o rted the | nolly, sixty-eizht, well known southern VoM | inerease “cither to the fact that pro- | newspaper man, died at his home hvfei bruises. During his newspaper career he served ibition does not prohibit or else 3 : . | hibitioh <0e8 "tei in the modern ouithic editorial glafts of fhe Houston "BIG RETAIL STORE CORNER F a0 12th STS. CLOSED THEIR DOORS SATURDAY NlGi-lT AT 6 O’CLOCK. B. H. STINEMETZ & SON CO., LOCATED ON F ST. CORNER 12TH, CLOSED THEIR DOORS : 25 Salesladies 15-Swlesmen Apply at 12th St. Entrance at Once Who have been appointed with unlimited authority and positive orders to sell the entire and complete stock of Ladies’ and Misses’ Coats, Suits, Dresses, Furs, Fur Coats, Millinery, Wraps, and Men’s Clothing, Shirts, Neck- wear, Hosiery, Underwear, Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Collars, Mufflers, Belts, Pajamas and Knox Hats will go on sale by adjusters, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 12TH, AT 10 O’CLOCK, Regardless of Weather Conditions ) of his death he was an editorial writer | sional disirict in the s on the Memphis New My worD ! You RISKED YourR LIEE IN RESCVING THAT THe SAP'S GoT FceT becp MAN! You DESERVE A MY SKATES THERE (F CARNEGIE MEDAL'L WHAT T's AN PROMPTED You T DO (T 7 . ‘. . the country. One of the first things Scimitar. ! o be undertaken i an will be e Taxi Drivers Explosion Vietima. | 0 }5, Undertaken in g e P Avpointed Director at Peking. | PHILADE o taxiean 2 raise a billion-doliar tra N ok b e o atally injured | expansion fund. on 3 lough® | when 2n ernal machine “exploded 4 ton, recently a member of the Staff |in a taxicab in front of a downtown| (Collexe Student Missing. n e : s been | axicab stand. One of the men pick- | & ving Green- e e e poskingieq up @ pasteboard box left in the | ville on Decembe imably for Uon el e eree gooratany [cab and when he lifted the cover a|his home at Mayesvilie, . C. to spend 2 2 T 2 | terrific explosion occurred. The men | the Christmas holidays with his wid- of the Rockefeller Foundation. an nounced. Dr. Houghton, a gradua of the Ohio State University and the Johns Hopkins Medical School, ha spent the greater part of the last fifteen years in China. During'that| ¢ time he has served as dean and pro- | Wide moving picture fessor of tropical medicine of the |Campaign throush whic Harvard Medical School of China, in |10 _bring the city and = of China, in | {0 er and thus solve many of the Willionaire Merchant Dead. were drivers for a company many of | owed mother, Richard Furman, twen- whose employes are on strike. | ty-one-year-old _student of Furman — University and member of the sopho- Movic to Ald Farm. more c disappeared, and since that CHICAGO—A dlan for a nation- | time has given neither his mother no here any clue as to | Shanghai. | Hee problems now confronting the farm- | COLUMBIA. C.—John L. Mim- | ers of the country is announced by | naugh, sixty-four, for thirty-eight e Vllrzlon Opposes League. | william kinner, secretary of the | vears a prominent merchant of Co- NEWTON, Kan—The action of the | National Dairy Association. For | lumbia, who has amassed a fortune Salina post of ‘the American Legion | this purpose. Mr. Skinner said, the | of more than $1,000,000, is dead at his in actively opposing the spread of | Farmers' Film Corporation has been | home herc after an extended illness. the Non-partisan Leaguc movement | formed. and co-operating with it in | Mr. Mimnaugh was born in County in Kansas, was upheld here at a | the work will be the federal Depart- | Tyone, Ireland. and came to the meeting of the executive committee | ment of Agriculture, state depart- | United States when eighteen years of of the American Legion, department | ments of agriculture and state agri- ' age. 222222222853 258233338 000 -New Shirts Just in From New York ’ More Manhattans at Half Price EMAND for Manhattan Shirts at half off d 7 £ ( was so great that we arranged with Manhattan headquarters for new stock and greater selections. 3,000 new Manhattans came in Saturday. Not made up for a sale, but sacrificed in order to sell them quickly. All'$ 5.00 Manhattan Shirts, now...........$2.50 All'$ 7.00 Manhattan Shirts, now .$3.50 All'$ 8.00 Manhattan Shirts, now .......... .$4.00 4 All $10.00 Manhattan Shirts, now ...........$5.00 And so on through the entire line. The Manhattan Company has announced that this 50% reduction applies only on the f present stock. Which means that a 50% reduc- tion may never come again. This is significant i to men who prefer Manhattans. ‘ Manhattan full dress and tuxedo shirts re- duced approximately 40%. Reductions of 25% to 50% prevail throughout the Men’s Furnishing Department during Janu- FOR DAILY PAPERS AND OTHER MEDIUMS FOR FULL DETAILS OF THIS STARTLING SALE ary Clearance Sales. Phoenix and Interwoven Hose also greatly reduced. ] MERCANTILE ADJUSTERS I i | | | || WATCH AND WAIT! 1201 F St., Corner 12th St. S ' Washington, D. C. B.H.STINEMETZ & SON CO. | Nationally Known Store for Men and Boys THE AVENUE AT NINTH Daily 8:30 to 6