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2 ¥ —— FAILS T0 EVOLVE PLANTOPAYU.S. Allied Parley Sees No Imme- diate Hope for Getting Rhine Army Expenses. BLAME PUT ON GERMANY Regular Payments on Bepnratmns Account Seen as Only Solution. By tne Associated Press. PARIS, March Tt the United States cou Army 1t on omsiderable sums resu ratlons account, Wad & pressed at yesterd tween Ellot Wadsworth, secretary of ths Treasury. tinanclal representatives of t governments. and tr alli or in credits, it was were examined fr -jew. Howeve I'rance, Great Brit 10t sugge ny to pa tes have been it as suspended 4nd there s no immediats prosp ither money or goods w h United States m Spirit of Harmony. The spirit of ths conf ons of harmony. and un ecurn There was no_ & American governm uate directly with Gemn <ubject. thermore, it stood by tha members ancs that Ge tered in the ad to matisfy citizens against Gern 10t be appiied to the srmy of occupation. | FLASH OF $1,000 BILL EXCITES SPECTATOR . on Jump, Respond to Hurry Call Only to Find Joke Victim. an get a t ' Pnhc t ousand- “ | ¢ Anybody hrill o {ing some on Tollar custo {15th und a by - th 1led for an arm f detectives from and they went there king they might get who s alieged to \m«va 2ol from under the plilow of Louis Flehaudler |York, s repomed in i |sleeper. Afier investigation it de- ‘:Inpvd that the ¥ _one who got ’ thrill was the man » saw the bill dtspley or , to purchase a drink, anul while A check from the cashi them flashed the one-thou- Sand-doliar DI s @ joke. A cus- #d read of the theft, und tm- called police he feh were dispatche speed Det snd Springn handler did not utinstion. he wired of his trouble, arned home wired the ‘r wd! ately r i Grant today i police | 8ot the - THOMAS P. KANE EXPIRES SUDDENLY of see- | | {Sberit Vagan § {Was Deouty Controller of | Currency and Had Been in Office 25 Years. ENO'SD. . TRAFFICPLAN URGED BY SENATORBALL Committee Chairman Suggests | Rules Be Tried Out During Summer. Senator B trict commt{ Commission Commissioner to put into he trafiic regulations recommended by Willlam P. Eno. His lotter to Al Rudolph follows: “The time is so ournment of Congress that ot be well to endeuvor to do thing now, but the traffic plan sug- sted by Mr. Willlam 1 0. having been tried in New York and elsewhere and found to operate st in no way an experiment, 1t has been successful in other citles it would seem that there is no reason why it should not be a success in Washington. Therefore, 1 would sug- gest that the plun furnished your Dbody by Mr. Eno be immediately put into effect here, to be continued until after the Senate convenes in Decem ber next, so thereby an ample op- portunity would be had to observe the effect and to consider whether the plan cannot bs improved at that Die a letter to st vefore ad- 1a e. 1 heslate to suggest this, view of the situation Washington at present, 1 feel tha: our committee might be blamed If we do not !ecummtnd a remedy which stands ready for adoption, and one which has been so widely tried with success.” ASKS $100,000 FOR BUREAU SHORTAGE (Continued from First Page.) but in existing in 1822, a further effort was made by the Treasury committee, which {ncluded Tepresentatives of the Secretary of the Treasury, the controller of the cur- rency and the director of the bureau of engraving and printing, to analyze the differences in order to determine the money loss to the government, Its supplemental report, based on this aralysis, estimates the possible money 108s to the government on aoc- count of discrepancies in both dis- tinotive and non-distinctive paper at $54,632.34, part of which has actually materialized, as, for example, in the form of federal reserve notes and federal reserve bank notes stolen from the bureau of engraving and printing without seal or serial num- ber and subsequently redeemed by the treasurer to the amount of $5,682. “Further losses may develop from the differences which have been found, but as already indicated, it is quite ‘imposaibie to predict the exact amount, and 1 have therefore sub- mitted the estimate in terms of an appropriation of $100,000. or so much thereof as necessary, to adjust the accounts. Effort to Clean Slate. Director Hill thls afternoon, in re- =ponse to inquiries, sald the $100,000 appropriation asked was merely to “clean the slate” of the bureau with regard to paper shortages that “might exist” in the accounts of the custodlan of paper. He was disin- clined to cxplain what these short- ages consisted of or whether they | had any bearing on the dismissal of bureau employes last April. He remarked that he did not know that there was anything “unusual” about the request for such an appro- priation. —_— Kettle Legend Shattered. From the New York Sun. ‘The story of how James Watt in- vented the steam engine after seeing the 11d of his mother’s tea kettle bob- bing up and down “listens good” and makes a cute Sunday school plcture, but the historians knock it into a «<ocked hat. They polnt out that steam engines ~xisted before Watt's time, and that it was as a full-fledged mechanical angineer that he began to improve them. S0 his mother's tea kettle <ouldn’'t have had anything to do ‘with the case, and it ranks as a harm- less legend, llke Washington's little hatchet. In 1543 a Spanish savant, Blasco de Garay, exhibited a steamboat in the harbor of Barcelona. In the following century an Italian engineer produced a steam windmill. Tt worked by a spouting of steam against the flat vanes of a wheel And o whole gencration before Watt ‘I‘l his work in the middle of the , elghteenth century Thomas Bavery had invented a steam pump that wi ully to drain the min Devonshire. But it was & crude thing until Watt devised the separate condenser and other {m= * pertant improvements, the | fert hare | Thomas P. the cur amo: Death is believed to have been due to heart trouble and high tlood prps.v"n, | Mr. Kane spent the entire da ;| terday at his desk. lar cvening meal, jearly and expired some time durin the night, his death being unknowr Ito tha family unt!l an attempt was made to i . Fu- eral arrangements b been completed. Mr. Kane was deputy c. jthe currency twe Mr. Kane recent {tion through the | book, “The Rom i i ] rolier of ty-five years publication of a ice and Tragedy of Banking,” outlining the history of the national banks in the United States since passage of the national banking |act in 1863, He entered the controller's office in May, 1885, as secretary L. Trenholm of South Carolina, and was _appointed deputy controller in 1899 by Charles G. Dawes, then controller,” later brigadier general of the Army and director of the bureau of the budget. Mr. Kane was born in Brandywine, Del.,' December 24, 1848. With his family he later moved to Trenton, N. J., where hn was educated. In 1865, Mr. Kane came to Washington, where, at various times, he was sec- retary to Represcntative Starin of New York, and was also connected With the pension bureau. Controller Crissinger declared that it had been a shock to all his per- sonal and official friends, and that the vacancy would bs exceedingly difi- cult to fill. Mr. Kane was serving his second axtension of time beyond the retire- ment age. He is survived by one son, Thomas F. Kane, a national bank ex- aminer. —_— TEACHERS’ PAY BILL MAY PASS IN HOUSE BEFORE END OF DAY (Continued from First Page.) tion to the school measure amended form. “So far as I am able to judge con- cerning the attitude of those who may be denominated school officials, there s absolutely no opposition to the proposed amendments, and we ishould be glad to have those amen- | ments passed,” said Acting Supt. of Schooly Kramer. ¥. E. Lucas, chairman of the legis- lative committee of the High School Teachers' Association, said: “So_far as I know, the high school teachers are unanimously in favor of the bill as reported by the House District committee and hope for its passage. e hope also that there will be no cut in the salaries of any school of- ficial as proposed in the original bill.” Grade Teachers Back It. “As far a8 I know the grade teach- ers are unanimous in their support of the bill as reported by the House District committee,” declared Miss . Gertrude Young, principal of the Pea- body-Hilton group school. Edith Compton Paul, chairman of the faderated committees of Teach- ers’ Union, issued the following statement: he teachers of Wash- Ington are in favor of the most lib- eral salary provisions that can be made for the officials of the school system in order that the highest type of men and women may conduct the business of our schools, They have alwaye supported the highest salarles of the bill for school of- fictals. “I have been in close touch with the officiala and teachers,” said Allan Da- vis, president of the teachers’ council, “and know of no material difference of opinion with Tegard (o the passago of the bill and the House ameni ments. HOUSE VOTES TWO BUSTS. Memorial busts of the late Speaker Champ Clark and former republican House leader, James H. Mann, are to be placed in the main corridor of the House between the House chamber and Statuary Hall. The House adopt- ed a resolution yesterday appropriat- ing 33,000 each for macble busts n its » achleved distine- | to Willlam | futter i home, | { | i | America. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO MOB ATTACK FALLS; ELEVEN ARRESTED “Sheriff Wounded in Hand as He Repulses Would-Be Lynchers. m’RETREATING MEN JAILED ! Phone Call Heads Off Party After Failure to Get Prisoner. Y the Assoviated Press PALATEA, Fla, March -Eleven embers of a mob were captured v today tng repulsed by when they attempted Putnan y Jait t @ negro prisoner. than fifty shots were fired by into the jall, one striking in the left hand. .The imed the jall ‘door in the = mob, which retreated ! hrough the doors und -foot rope was left Mor the mob message t fter the mob retreated elaven their number 1 lodged in that juil be lodged ags n are white mean. ched - Palutia shortly and wuthoritien swid i < composed went to ro Lige ¢ ail not fifte t of over the a4 slammed hero was a f rating received o HARVEY’S SPEECH ESCAPES CRITICISM vrior to Need of U. S. Amsistance. i urgument iy that Washington a ical eftect of the fin tered the war was that Great Brit borrowed from the ted States abo me amount that was lent thereafter to the continental powers by Great Britain. the British wish to make is that if ey had not had to support the con- tinental allies thers would have been no need of financial assistance from The idea i that Great Brit- borrowed for an altrulstic purpose -—not _for herseif, but for others, that hence the money she had just agreed to pay back to America is, after all, mouey that she lent to the other alifes, but probably will never collect. There is a theory held in offictal circles here that somehow and some- time in the future Europe will revive the discussion of cancellation, and that if the British impression’ goes unchallenged at a time when the facts are still fresh in the memories of of- ficlals they will not be so easily re- futed ten or fifteen years hence. The controversy over funds reminds many officials here of the controversy which raged in 1919 and 1920 as to which country really won the war. Each Nation War Winner. The Belgians were convinced that if they had not halted the first German advance, Paris would have been cap- tured; the French are sure that if they had not furnished the big army they did the allles would have been crughed; the British feel confident that i the British fleet had not been as powerful and effective as it was, the blockade would not have been any good and the Germans would have had more supplies from the outside, and finally many Americans will carry to their graves the irrefutable impression that but for the two million men brought to France in the cruclal mo- ment the whole allled course would hlAVedbeer‘l d‘eleued“ nd so it is with funds. If America hadn’t helped Great Britain the allies would have lost; if Great Britain hadn't helped the continental pow- ers with funds the whole allied fab- ric would have collapsed. Any effort to imply that concessions are, there- fore, due one power will not be re- garded with favor here, and as for & general cancellation all around, the arguments made before the British mission arrived and decided to pay its debts still hold good so far as the American government {s con- cerned. A general all-around effort at {to pay debts is viewed as an economic necessity and a psychological stim- ulus to world credit conditions. (Copyright, 1923.) QUESTION OF WAR AID. “Authoritative” British State- ment Recalled by Harvey’s Words By the Associated Press. LONDON, March 2-—Ambassador {Harvey's reference to the Balfour note otfaid her allies, in his address at the Pilgrims' din- ner calls forth an anonymous com- munication to the Times recailing, “with great deference and with all re spect to his excellency,” the atate- The point which | and | D. C, 3 FRIDAY, MARCH 1923. MONTICELLO, THE OLD HISTORIC THOMAS JEFFERSON HOME AT CHARLUI'TBSVILLE VA TO BECOME NATIONAL SHRINE| quiTs OVER TRADE PACT JEFFERSON'S HOME 10 BECOME SHRINE Movement Is Started to Pur- : chase Monticello Through Popular Subscription. i i i Me: tate Vi, will b second onty ording to un! nt last night b, negerade Andrews, r-r— of a newly formed organization | of soclety women of this city known tion. The fation, Mrs. Andrews stated in interview, is expecting to purchase the historic property by pop: tion from Jefferson M. Levy, forme: New York, und present owner. ome of the author of the of Indepe tativ llery, Who hax bee um' e tion Stephen B. El W. Henson, roke and John K. Barbour, sors for the s Voodrow Wi s Members of tee are Dr. Kate Janet Richurds, v Maxwe!l and Mrs. Randoiph cello Assoctation | president, stated = organization I who feel that they their right to Plans Under Way. at is why this organ pects to obtain Monticell through t! American movement, and lish it as a public shrine, just as Mount Vernon fs. W organize or get to work Thers have been several and we now feel that well under way Lot me tell you my interest in the My husband painted the por- and pu ent hung in_the White House for many years. The portralt is based on the Gilbert Stuart head of Jefferson. A replica of it 13 also at the University of Virginlu at Charlottesville, Va. I am a Virginian and love to help in anything public-spirited, especially anything that tends to perpetuate the memory of the state's distin- guished natives. Ail the members of the assoclation feel the same way. FRANCE DEMANDS TWO GUARANTEES IF SHE QUITS RUHR (Continued from First Page.) hundred Germans, the French officers assert, have requested work. Gen. Degoutte has ordered the col- Jection of an internal revenue tax on all tobacco and spirits sold in the Ruhr and Rkineland. Persons who refuse to pay this tax will be ar- rosted and their places of business will be closed. GERMANY PAYS FINES. Policemen Get Money to Prevent Being Imprisoned by French. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, March 2—The German government has been paying fines as- signed by French court-martial against Essen policemen, in order to expedite their release from prison, says a dispatch to the Vossische Zei- tung. Prison sentences and fines ranging from 50,000 marks to hundreds of thousands of marks have been im- posed on many policemen for obey- ing the orders of the federal minister of the Interior not to salute French and Belglan officers, the dispatch says. The sentences, according to the cor- respondent, provided that uniess the fines were pald within forty-eight hours the terms of imprisonment would be extended, and “thus nothing Temained for the legal representatives ot the sentenced men to do but to fun immediately to official German uartern get the fine money from e cash drawers and take it 10 the French so that the officers would not need to spend a day longer than was necessary in prison.” i L e T ment printed in the Times on Au‘uslg 26 last. The statement, which came from “authoritative British quarters,” was to the effect, the correspondent points out, that there was some misappre- hension respecting the Earl of Bal- four's assertion that money had been borrowed for the allies. It quoted & statement made by Sir Robert Horn in the house of commons on October 20, 1921, showing that if Great Britain had not had to help the allies she would not have been obliged to bor- row from the United States. ‘The Times statement, the corre- ndent continues, said that wllh the exception of $140,000,000 loaned to Great Britain to be immediately reloaned to Russia for expenditure in the United States, the whole proceeds of the American advances wer. plied to meet British expenditure: rn u:o United States. These advances, however, were only necessitated cause Great Britain was obliged to L Important News is Postscripted —in the 5:30 EDITION OF THE EVENING STAR. uels of the earlier events are reported down ?'ou may be correctly The seci to the last minute—that ful]y informed. News o ports—are featured in the “5:30 Star” urf calendar for the nex For sale by as the Natfonal Monticello Associa- | dencs has been | vi < 1 Insura I I I representative from ! | MRS, MARIETTA MINNIG ANDREWS, President of the National Monticello Ansoclation, which in planning the purchase of the estate by public sub- -.«mul n. 0w=lev Warns, However, He Will Not Forget Interests of Ex-Service Men tor of the sed the sup American Legi national ight Owsl }adar | ires at the National 8/C “The legion had no position ainistration Gen. a complete success in * said Commander Owsley: candidate tor of “The leg 5 Lopes to assist him probloms v 1 deal w and honestly ime will forget 4 ex-service men whose welfara the | director is charged with super- ing.” | Six other legislative m {ing former service cussed by Comma cluding the reclas weet bill, conta wniendmer in solving the h him fairly, at all times, but tters affect- en also were dis- der Owsl: ification b u ning fifteen pe| the war {will should have| compensation and hospital care, but re not now recelving it Ithe law's limitation.” trait of Thomas Jefferson which has| {WOMAN WITH INFANT IN ARMS SHOT DOWN Former Roomer and Alleged Suitor | Sought by Police on Charge of Killing. By the Associated Press. WILDWOOD, N. J, March 2. —While {holding her seven-month-old infant lin her arms, Mrs. Emma McKeown ! was shot and killed in the kitchen of the Fremont Hotel today. Fred Ellin- ger, accused of the killing, escaped. ITha, baby was unharmed. Refusal by Mrs. McKeown to leave her husband and elope with Ellinger prompted the deed, police said, Mrs. McKeown operated the place as a hotel in the summer and rented it to roomers in the winter. Ellinger often lived at the place. Several months ago, it is said, he told Mrs. McKeown that he was in love with her and asked her to flee ‘with him. She refused to have amything to do | with him, according to friends. El- Ilnger ‘was reported as having ap- o8 the asband with. sos oo of $1,000 to give up his wife. Mc- Keown ordered him from the place. How Romans Fed Beetles. From Harper's Weekly. The family of the longicorn beetle affords a rich store of luscious larvae which are sought and eaten by the inhabitants of most countries where they are found in abundance. It 1s considered to have been mem- bers of this family that were fed upon flour and wine by the Romans for the table with all the care that is nowadays bestowed upon a prize pig. Othors of this tribe are mentioned by Mme. Marian as being eaten by both the native and white inhabitants of Surinaam, who serve them up nicely roasted after being cleaned and washed. In St. Plerre's voyages also this or some similar insect is mentioned, under sthe name of the Moutac grub, as being eaten by whites and natives alike. In Jave there is a species of cock- chafer to which Wiedemahn, the ento- mologist, has drawn attention as forming food for the inhabitants. The last instance from among the beetles is the well known meal worm, the larvae of a small beetls, which Turkish women eat in large quan- titles _tor the purpose of acquiring that plumpness of form their lords ®0 much desire. and the stocks. finals in the '—and also the t day. newsboys and newsdealers throughout the city. 2 and it hopes ! n promises to co-operate, | ch confront him. | openly | because of | { claim what an I'WII .sound heroic, nor una | | WRITING IN SKY NORWAY’S GOVERNMENT Rejection of Proposed Treaty With Portugal Is Cauee of Upset. By the Aswociated Press. CHRISTIANIA, March Z.—The Nor- wegtan government has resigned, fol- lowing rejection by the storthing of its proposal for a commercial treaty with Portugal. The proposal was voted down, 119 to 22 commercial and Portugal for severul Negotiations for treaty between Norw have been in progres months, and a Lisbon dispatch last week sald 2 settlement had been reached, whereby Portuguese wines would again be on sale in Norway, with the Norweglan government it- telf us the buyer. Under Norway's 5 HALTS PRISONERS' RETURN TO TURKS Athens Cabinet Resents Con- tinuance of Deportations by Kemalists. 25,000 IN REFUGEE CAMP Constantinople Relief Official Says i Sitnation From Disease lprohibition 1aw the wines could not | —{be 80ld as beverages, being destined | { for medical and technical purponeg CRIVINAL DOCKETS T0BE SHOWNHERE 10 BE CLEANED P {Flyer Will Festoon Air With, Letters 10,000 Feet Above Ground. modern aviatio rais abhove Cupt. Washington tomorrow, Derel Shepperson, for- | of the British Roval ing j Corps, will make an airplane write !4 message in th | the National Capital. | will be the birdinan's “lead.” Morning and afternoon, Capt. | person w {11 “hop ofr" his S ‘hkl?lld to an IThere he wiil bhave his machine ex- hale, by means of a patented process, | a quantity of heavy smoke through a small pipe. By m pulating his ma- A which merely includes «prinkled he will igarette | when merly and process six minutes and 50,000,000 et Tet used s process h 15 called n New York last n about forty been given Washingto demonstratfons all were successt the third fiyer. The Capt stunt will depend upon i o will wait ur be time is | to 'BRANDS FAKE SOLICITORS.. Gospel stslnn Declares Candy Sellers Not Aiding Them. Acting on information that unid tifled are candy in varfous parts of the eity by ¢ ading householders to beliave the i procecds are to g6 _to the child wel- of the Gospel Mission, 333 thwest, officlals of the | on. and . of the center today an 1 that such representations are | persons It women who believed they were aid- ing the Child Welfare Society and the | o¢ Gospel Mission, the latter of which is now conducting a campaign for §100,- 000. have had payment stopped on them when the knowledge was gained that the center or the mission was t benefiting. | | DEBATE IS OPENED ON CLASSIFICATION (Continugd from First Page.) ] {and upon his announcement of this fact, the committes members request- ed that their classifications be thrown lout of the bill. One reason for the {protest, it was declared today, was that the men belleved the personnel classification board to be set up by the bill, not competent to act on cases affecting their wages and con- ditions of employment. Sterling Takes Issue. Senator Sterling said he told the committee he felt the bill protected the classifications represented by them and that the clause assuring | continuance of the prevailing practice would be ample protection for the employes represented by this commit. | tee. He said also that as far as he was concerned the bill would go through in this respect as it stood. An amendment, however, from another quarter in the Senate may result along this line. The .representatives of the men from the bureau included spokesmen for machinists, steel and copper plate finishers, siterographers or trans- ferrers, steamfitters, plumbers, en- gineers, firemen and other skilled frades, mot including plate printers. Machinists from the navy vard also wero represented, but information as to whom the men from the govern- ment printing office represented was not obtained. Objects to Board's Make-up. objection laid against the clas- sn;rchn:lon’ board, it was declared by 2 labor leader today, rests to some oxtent upon the fact' that the mem- bers of this board would be one man from the budget bureau, one member from the Civil Service Commission and one from the bureau of efficiency. Fhe Skilled tradesmen feel that the technical knowledge needed for the Sdjustment of conditions in thelr | Jines of work and for the setting of Laties for their classifications could Tot adequately be handled by a board on which no technical experts were represented, DEFINING AN AMERICAN. | Practical in Enthusiasm and En- thusiastic in Practice. American I8 the one man in the mori who I8 equally & practical enthusiast and an enthusiast in prac- e b e Tk L R professor of sociology at Columbla Piiversity in an article, “Making the American Mold,” in Our World. The reason why we don't all pro- American is instesd find a different definition, I oot tho way we hava been d the things we ha Prof. of try! is because o brought up an been taught. """%. don't quite l:ko gl}aa :.u:er u: American t doesn’ e heboies tainably othical. 0 not quite sure that it is gen- tv::l " or, for that matter, respectable 1 suffer from a suspiclon it i» materialistic; Grace defend w!" declares Prof. Giddings. The American's enthusiasms are sincere, countless and all-embracing, and they have a quality as unmis- takable as !r.nlnh courtesy; but hig instinots and habits are practical, aad hie of being pnfl.lul s “a@ characteristio as & dog's way of making his bed. or the Chinese way of satips. tlee,” Prof Giddings write aititude of 10,000 feet. | I ! Shep- I is understood that more than afgq score of checks made out by men and | {;ancterred t | Gordon has held frequent conravennes of Edward W. Tutner, Trial Calendar W|ll Be Es-! tablished to Relieve Con- gestlon of Cases - wxhiuiies 1060 NEW PRACTICE IN D. C.| Indictments Will Be Called Ac- @ky to the folks of| cording to Their Numbers and ," < Dense smoke ; Assignments Made. s v to clean 1 dockets. To effect this most desirable result an order ©of the general term has been passed whereby, beginning with the April term, a trial calendar cases will be estab! cases are decided When the l' is honed‘ a lar “dead wood” has glutted th | dockets of the aietrict attorn. miral calendar new practice |in Heretofore the setting o been left Ir on rare o« ing in the cri court {trial of a cuse at a sprcifi lussign L crney 4 time ¢ the United States at- been with regard | e crowded condition of the jalil and the exigencies of certain cases like, for instan fornia may hav i@nd the culprit caugh trfal is arranged to £ bringing back the prosecutir nuni fror ifornia Mode of Procedure. Urder the wh from ¢ t, when un early new order iare at issue they are to be set do“m i (an k'r trial fn the order of the number | n the ictment. 1If un odd num 6 st Criminal Divt 1, and if an even number in Cri 1 Division 2. The order, howev provides that the criminal ju icr the court in general term {change this moGe of procedure ect @ case assigned to one Cov o the otheg. The new rule is solely’in the interest slearing the dockets. Chief Justice McCoy declared today, and is in no manner a criticism of the old rule which hes prevailed in the District | | Attorney’ officoe for years. Maj. ber | n ! ™ th the justices in the matter, the | Chief Justice stated. | Text of New Order. The new order of the court reads: “It is ordered that the following be and the same hereby is established as a rule of this court and that it be | designated Law Rule T1A: “There shall be a trial calendar of all criminal cases at issue for jury upon which every case shall be enter- ed as soon as It'1s so at {ssue. When several cases come 1o issuo on the same day they shall be arranged in the order of the indictment numbers. The only numbers used in the trial and motion calenda: all be the in- dictment numbers. Order of Trial “Subject to special order Ly the Justices holding the criminal courts or by the general term the -ases shall be tried in the order in which they stand on the trial calendar, the ©0dd numbered cases in Division 1, and the even numbered in Division 2. “There shall also be a motion cal- endar in the Criminal Court of all cases In which demurrers mmy be filed, motions made or any issue of law raised and of all cases in which the defendant shall not be arraigned! within three months after the finding of the indictment. All cases thereon in which the indictment has an odd number shall be assigned for hearing to Criminal Division 1 and the others to Criminal Division 2. unless other- wise ordered by the justices holding said divisions or by the general term. “This rule shall go into e:ect on the first day of the April term, 1923." Boy Engineer Triumphs. From the New York Sun. The future of the nation need never be despaired of while there are such enterprising boys as Doug. Doug lives in a village not fifty miles from New York, and when snow fell heavily there recently he bar- gained with his father's neighbors to clear the sidewalks on both sides of his streets for a distance of two blocks. The price stipulated in each case was 2 cents and Doug received many orders from the skeptical, who could not imagine how one smail boy could remove 50 much snow, some of them going so far as to caution him against the evil of boasting. But Doug wasn't worrled. “I'll do it all [t he said. {A(ar he appeared, accompanied by @ pair of Airedale dogs hitched to a homemade snow plow, with which he soon cleared the sidewalks. He collected payment from his sur- rised customers and s now hoping or another heavy fall of snow. Eight Years Writing “Elegy. From the Boston Traveler. It was elght years from the time Thomas Gray, English poet, began the most famous of all his poems, “Llegy Written in & Country Churchyard.” until he had finished it. He began it in 1743, and it was finished in June, 1760, It attracted so much attention in manuscript that & pirate announced his intention of printing it. This caused Gray to authorize a publisher, to whom be loftily ylelded all the to print an edition in 1751, It ed at once the popularity it has never lost, and was much parodied and imitated throughout the western world. It was his love of romantic scenery and his morbid temperament which gave Gray his post of eminence smong the “churchyard poets” He was shrinking and fastidious, and he ‘was also depres: d‘\‘y m°q_:;.“§7r" of his alnnl ect to poetry. r:p!{er:‘uy that be was indolent and irreselute. L _{careful dis of criminal| calendar | The | obbed here | jown battle Is Serious. B the Associated Press. ATHENS, March 2.—-The Greek: inet annour t in continued deportation l ¢ the Kemalists, £ the Ne spend the ex lian pri<or 'nu antinople. had {ministers that 25.000 cal of the of Pontus it has ted vests en after Il Rellef « formed reek refugec s dis ‘he sit ican calle ement w binet exam Dr. Ad nisters de exchange of wh (March 1) Lausanne cided to remaln i contin i Pon 11,000 at Samsoun. clief today received msoun asserting were gatheres 1sportation the Turks ediate use of i ou repot tha awaiting embarke- ran 170 the Turks 00 ersons from stanti .opll- 2 at 10 exn {1500 more WUNIAN INJURED ON ONE-MAN CAR Crash at Michigan Avenue and Monroe Street Blamed to Trolley Trouble. Mrs W. O Jones, 841°East Captiot {street, was fnjured and ‘sévergl pas? {sengers were shaken up when a oney Iman street car of the Nofth Capito and Eleventh street I crashéd {into another one-man car at Michigan I.uem.a and Monroe street, last night 19 sister-in-law president of Association, ve |the Brookland C which has been fighting the use of one-man cars in_its vicinity, suffered lacerated mouth, a-broken tooth ans - as weverely shocked. She was taken 20 the home of the Turner family which she left only a few minutes be {fore the accident to T. . Crump, 1351 avenus 1st, one the passengers, the accident was no: the fault of the motorman-conductar He said trouble with the trolley was . experienced at 13th and Monroe streets when he hodrded it, and later the motorm onductor had dif- culty in closing: the door after ad mitfing passengers. Oluce the car.go: under wuy, he siid, it appeared to hin ona control, and when the onductor Fealized it was t to crash into the one ahead of m, Le applied the . emergency brakes aud stepped back from the trol to save himself from injury <. Jones was thrown agajnst the t in front of her and to the floor hile Mr. Crump also was_knocked from his seat by the crash. The other passengers, although shaken up, wers transferred to another car. . BELLEAU HERD BILL PASSED BY HOUSE The House' today passed the -bili fathered by Representative Louis'A Frothingham of Massachusetts, to in-’ corporate the Belleau Wood Memo rial Association. The bill has passed the Senate and now goes to the Free tdent, This legislation is sought to over come through diplomatic prestige the dificulties in the French laws pre- venting foreigners from holding title to real estate. The purpose of the as sociation s to preserve that sectior | of Belleau wood as a memorial to the heroes in the American expeditionary force who lost their lives in the vers severe fighting in that sector. This association has taken an option on this land, which would otherwise have gone to a syndicate planning. to erect a tourists’ hotel and amuse- ment park. It was pointed out that this s the battlefleld most sacred to Americans and nearest to Paris. which would be most frequently wis ited by tourists. The association in- tends to erect a conspicuous memorial there and to allow units that partici- pated in the fighting to set up proper memorial tablets to the dead of thei unit. i | Sixteen Incerporators Named. The Incorporators named in theleg islation are 1ra E. Bennett, Gen, Tas. ker H. Bliss, Nathalla Boynton, Mari Moore Forest, Ellzabeth Van® Rensse’ laer Frazer, Rev. Dr. James T. Free' man, Margaret Overman Gregory, Hasry V. Huynes, Gen._ John A, Lejeune A L. McClellan, Wendall C. Neville Frank B. Noves, John Barton Payne, Augusta Reath, Alice Hay Wadsworth' and John Walsh. The purposes of the corporatiom named in the bill.are to ucquire and: maintain the whole or any portfon of Belleau wood, Department of Alsne, France. for memorial pur poses: to erect such buildings and monuments and to -establish sych in- stitutions thereon as it muy deem ap propriate as a memoriul to the men of the American expeditiondry forces who participated in the battle of. Belleau wood and.vicinity during. tha world war; to care for &l taln, | sueh memorialtic. -t it 9