Evening Star Newspaper, June 5, 1923, Page 1

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WEATHER. Continued warm, with generally fair weather tonight and tomorrow ; possibly local thunder showers tomorrow. twenty-four hours Temperature for ended at 2 p.m. today: Highes! owest, 72 at 5 a.m. to- Full report on page 7. 4 p.m. yesterday 94, at Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 28 "'No. 28890. Entered as second-class matter post office Washington, . C. v £ L1l WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION e 0 L' s - Star. WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1923—FIFTY-SIX PAGES. 20,000 BRILLIANTLY CLAD NOBLES JOURNEY TO MECCA INPARADE OF RECORD-SHATTERING SPLENDOR Tens of Thousands Jam Gayly Decked Avenue to Watch - Gorgeous Pageant. PRESIDENT AND GEN. PERSHING REVIEW PICTURESQUE ARMY 110 Bands, 60 Drum Corps, 75 Glee Clubs, in All 320 Musical Bodies, Fill Air With Joyous Melody Down the road to Mecca, through gay lines of throbbing humanity banked high against flag-festooned huildings.‘thef: marched today the strangest pageant that ever trod the historic way of Pennsylvania avenue. It was the Ancient Arabic Order, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, passing in review before its most dis- tinguished noble—President Harding—its imperial potentate and the general of the American armies. ’ Tutankhamen in the midst of his ancient splendor—Darius in the heyday of his reign over rich Persia—neither could have led in triumphal procession a more gorgeous array of flashing color | than that presented by the 20,000 men, garbed in the most colorfully| picturesque uniforms human imagination and artistic hands could contrive to create, who stepped in perfect unison across the “burn- ing sands” from Capitol Hill to Washington Circle. It was a riot of color; an army of the jolliest good fellows | who ever came to the National Capital. There were men wearing red uniforms trimmed with gold, blue and green; turbaned march- ers in immaculate white ; oriental legions garbed in dazzling green with spla shes of crimson. And there were shades to give the most versatile chameleon a nervous breakdown had he attempted to imitate them. 110 BANDS IN PARADE. Distributed through the legions of nobles were 110 bands, sixty drum corps and seventy-five glee clubs, furnishing one con- stant blare of music and song as the procession moved slowly to- ward Washington Gircle, through the Garden of Allah, past the sacred sphinxes and saluted the President and his party in the reviewing stand. In addition there weré seventy-five queer-look- ing oriental bands, blasting the atmosphere with even queerer, but, nevertheless, beautiful music. musical organizations in line. In all, there were 320 different The greatest crowd that ever thronged Pennsylvania avenue watched the pageant in open-eyed wonder. Seated in the grand- stands alone were 40,000 persons, dated ‘at inaugural processions. the curb, in windows, on roof-tops, and even among the branches just twice the number accommo- And every available space along of fluttering trees, was filled with one .mass of human beings, heeding not the scorching heat of midday nor the discomfort of standing on tip-toe for hours for a better view—so intense was the excitement of the momerit. President Wears Fes. Wearing his Shrine fez and a pure white suit, President Harding appear- ed on the reviewing stand with Gen. Pershing at 9:50, five minutes before the parade swung into the Garden of Allah. He was given tumultous ap- plause by the throng in the grand- stand Looking down the Garden of Allah, through its pillared portals toward New York avenue, the parade offers a never-to-be-forgotten spectacle. Here it comes, its bahds glistening, its flags flying gayly in the breeze,| and the brilliantly colored uniforms of its marchers fairly- shining in the bright morning sun. 1t was :50, Supt. of Police Sullivan swung along into the garden, follow- ed by the illustrious potentate of Almas Temple, driving a green char- fot drawn by four stalwart gray horses and guarded on either side by a eunuch. Stepping to the stirring tunes of “Dixie,” Almas Temple Band of eighty-five pieces, dressed in bright green, red and yellow uniforms, leads the guard of honor, the Almas Temple Patro] Like hosts from the desert wastes, comes a company of bedouins, marking time to the wierd sound of the tom-tom. In white suits with red sashes, follows the Almas Temple Glee Club and the Saracen Guard. But it Is only & vanguard-—a mere idea of the splendor that fotiows behind. Aloha Temple of Honolulu, the im. perial potentate’s own. wearing uni- forms of green velvet flushed with red and gold and carrying shining spears, -escorts the Shrine's chieftain in triumph past the reviewing stand, immediately in front of the perfectly drilled_patrol of Islam Temple of San Francisco. As the host from Islam comes through the cheering throng of the Garden of Allah, they maneuver back and forth across the street amid the plaudits of the crowd. Imperial Potentate McCandless rides in his spotless white touring. car, accompanied by the imperial deputy potentate, Conrad V. Dykman, guard- ed on either side by fez-capped mem- bers of Washington's police force, who themselves have crossed the burning sands into the .mystic Shrine. President’s Bana Plays. Here comes the imperial divan and the imperial representatives from every state in the union, some of its insular possessions, tropical Pan- ama and northern Canada. From the hundreds of flag poles along the road through the Garden of Allah red, yellow and green pennants seem to join the crowd in waving a joy- ous welcome to the merry mnobles. Half a block down the shining street comes another band' fairly raising the distinguished spectators “from thelr seats with its crashing, peppery march. It is the President's own—Aladdin Temple of Columbus, Qhio, given the honor position over every other Shrine body as a compliment to Noble Harding. \\'eag terra-cotta-col~ ored bloomers, Pefsian worsted an vellow sashes, Aladdin's patro swings past their distinguished mem- ber with eyes left. / _The guards of honor, enough in themselves.to make an,ordipary Ve and around the gateway to the gar- den swings the first division, led by Mecca Temple of New York city, its patrol, dressed as bedoulns, forming a perfect maltese cross as it steps smartly toward Washington Gircle. Bands innumerable—one for every person {t seems—are fairly rocking the atmosphere and sending thrill aft- er_thrill through the swaying crowds in the stands. Column on cotumn come the patrols, each trying to out- do the other in the perfection of their lines, the color .and styles of their uniforms and the tumult of their bands. It is like a story from the Arabian Nights come true. with the legions of the almighty caliph trying to salaam lowest before the illustri- ous one. Bedouins Uniforms striking. Hpre comes a new color combination, something_that the crowds had long sought. It is the band and patrol of Oriental Temple, -of Troy, N. Y. Their uniforms are those of the Be- douin, grey and gold in color and every band carries the long, lean musket of the desert wanderer. It is followed immediately by the fez- capped hosts of Syrian Temple, of Cincinnatl, marching in the forma- tion of a perfect Maltese cross and every man carrying a drawn sabre that gleams like fire in the scorching rays of a summer sun. Wonders never seem to cease, for behind them marches their Arabian legion, armed with shield and spear—and the par- ade itself has scarcely gotten well on its way through the heart of Mecca. Through the mystic pillars of Egyp- tian fame march the columns of Syria Temple of Pittsburgh, dressed in gold and black, capped with turbans of black and ‘white, one of the most at- tractive color combinations that have yet passed. Behind them the weird shrieks of an orfental band lends fts part to the ear-splitting bedlam. The proper drum-major of Kaaba Temple of Davenport, lIowa, his chest pout- Ing like that of a proud pigeon, and his “baton performing . complicated antics in the air, is leading his gold and blue faithful past the omnipotent one in the reviewing stand. The band is playing “Annie Laurie" now and the crowd is going wild. Detroit, itself .almost an Aladdin eity of automobile fame, sends its leglons through the long lane of humanity to the tune of that old song. 2,000 Chicago Paraders. Far down the road to Mecca just swinging into the Garden of Allah comes a splash of red, green and white, set off by flashes of gold. It is Aleppo Temple of Boston, Mass., 500 strong. Look at Medinah of Chicago, with 2,000 faith- ful Shriners, answering the call of the muezzin. Here they come, headed by a group of chanters singing The River Shannon,” their strong voices, rising even above the tumult of the yelling spectators. - Their band in dazeling yel- low and red, marches just'behind, fol- lowed by a'drum so tremendous that it mugt be carried on a wagon. Column on column their lines swing past, every foot stepping in time to the soul stirring music. ) Suddenly, every eye is raised from the spectacle in the street to a strange sight in the air as & tremen- dous Army blimp soars a thousand feet above the heads of Medinah's Oriental Band, the third musical or- zanization of that temple to pass. Moynted _on prancing _steeds. Ul P 8 st the Zasred of.Lu Lu o High Lights of against menacing organization. . Secret fraternity is one thing, This meeting today is an ennobled _ There is an honestand righteo it embrace millions of our men and Harding Talk To Shrine Leaders at Keith’s T like the highly purposed fraternity, because it is our assurance I wish somehow we could have fraternity among nations, as it is taught in ‘America among men. * * * Under such a reign of fraternity cruel human warfare will never come again. secret cons; 3 piracy is quite another. fraternity. \ us and just fraternal life in America, women, and a hundred fraternal or- ganizations extend their influence into more than a third of American homes, and make ours a better republic for their influence. " In the lodgeroom there is molded what becomes public opinion, and contributes to the moving forces of developing civilization. In every worthy order the pri justice and equality are taught in lecture and obligation. So long as twent flag, the cherishment of our inher constitutional authority, and the lo be assured the future is secure. No man ever took the oaths and greater watchfulness and care rites of Masonry, and I say breaking faith, T have neve: example, never heard an of proclaimed to the worl Text of Speech By the President At Shrine Council Imperial Potentate and Nobles of the Council: It is a great pleasure to partici- pate in this opening session of the council. It need not be said thag I cordially join in the werds of welcome and hearty greetings al- ready uttered T like the atmosphere of frater- nity. I rejoice in the knowledge that I am addressing & body where every heart-beat is loVally Ameri- can, where every {mpulse is Amer- ican, where every commlitment and consecration are to the republic and its free institution; False Impressions. Sometimes there are. false im- pressions about fraternal organi- zations. No man ever took the oaths and subscribed to. the obli- gations with gréater watchfulness and care than 1 exercised in re- ceiving the various rites of Ma- sonry, and I say it with due delib- eration and without fear of break- ing faith, I have never encounter- ed a lesson, never witnessed an examble, never heard ane obliga- tion uttered which could not be openly. proclaimed to the world. More, if the lessons taught were heeded, the obligations read were assumed. if the relationships urged were adopted. men would be in- finitely better in their human re- lationships. Fraternities must be just. if they are to survive. And they must be just to appeal to men in their fel- low relationships. Secret frater- nity is one thing: secret conpsiracy is_quite another. This meeting today ‘is in ennobled fraternity. One must recognize that frater- nity has its abuses. Abused fra- ternity is no more avoidable than the hypocrisy which teaches how beautifully worth while is honest religion. But fraternity deals with realities and cures its own abuses. A President would not be ethical if he related fraternal appeals to which he must turn a deaf ear. I will have said enough If I suggest that men lose their right of fra- ternal hearing when they transgress the law of the land. it with bligatior Cites Experience. The abuse I had in mind is the im- position upon 'fraternal relationship promote selfish ends. Perhaps a recital of a home-town experience will {llustrate my point. There came to our town two brothers to engage in a mercantile enterprise. One joined the Methodist church and the other the Presbyterian. Still, busi- ness failed to move with a whirl. Then one joined thé Masons and the other the Knights of Pythias. They picked out the churches with the larger congregations, and the fra- ternities with the larger member- ship. Some local observer wondered at these divergent inclinations in two brothers, and there was comment about it. Here was fraternity being plaved for selfish ends. We had another fraternity,’ rare in kind and transitory in existence, which dealt with men’s idiosyncrasies and foibles and imperfections. It was a fra- ternal play ground, which sometimes witnessed rough play, and performed many a surgery in:character. So the lure of membership in the An- clent and Honorable Order of Hay- makers was held out to the joining merchants, and they fell for it. The fee was very modest, and the treas- urer spent all the funds at each meeting of the order, but the initia- tion was_imposing, revealing and never forgotten. Losing Prorposition. When the .two merchants came to receive their degree their first revelation came to them ‘while locked in a little six-by-eight antechamber, between which and the lodgeroom there was a parti- tion only eight feet high, with a great open space above, through which could be heard all that was salg among the Haymakers in sol- emn session. The eligibility and desirability of the candidates were discussed for an hour, and I fear, alas! the candidates heard every word. Their joining proclivity was emphasized, and I suspect ob- jections were urged that were not wholly justified. . In a bit of cheating, which .must have been forgiven ere this, the ministers of the two churches were imperson- ated, though the impersonators sometimes fell short of clerical terms of speech. The Haymakers, with rare facility, turned tenners, and did a wonderful job of Jjt. Manifestations of .restlessness ®in the anteropm were ignored, and after the alleged pastors had re- tired to their homes the degree was given, and glven without tint. " All ‘'went well until the {next day, when the two.brothers started out to interview the min- isters who had spoken. It was difficult for the innocent ministers to understand, but the two joiners soon came to understanding, and the Haymakers lost two member: L the town lost:its new. mercant| |4 ~ Continasd on Fags Th, Colma 13— nciples of civil and religious liberty, y millions of Americans are teaching loyalty to the ited institutions and due regard for ve of liberty under the law, we may subscribed to the obligations with than I exercised in receiving the various due deliberation and without fear of r encountered a lesson, never witnessed an n uttered which could not openly be SOUL OF MASONRY MOVES PRESIDENT IN OPENING COUNCIL Extolls High Purposes of Fra- ternity in Welcome Ad- dress at Keith’s. President Harding. declaring that sometimes “men band together for mischief to exert misguided zeal." told the Imperial Council, Mystic Shrine. 'today that he liked the highly purposed fraternity, because it is our assyrance against menacing orkanization,” and “conspiracy session of the council at Keith's The- ater, on behalf of the nation, the President. ‘who himself is a noble of Aladdin Temple of Columbus, Ohio, branded wrongfully guided assocfa- tions as “conspiracy.” but hopefully predicted that “so long as twenty millions .of Americans are teaching loyalty to the flag. the cherishment of our inherited institutions and due regard for constitutionality authori- ty., and the love of liberty under the law. we may be assured the fu- ture s secure.” Danger to Résublic. It was natural, the President said, for men to band together “for mis- chief, to exert - misguided zeal, to vent unreasoning malice, to under- mine our institutions. = This fsn't fraternity, this is conspiracy. This isn't assoclated uplift, it s organized destruction. This is not brotherhood, it is the discord of disloyalty and a danger to the republic.” Speaking to a body of picked repre- sentatives of the Shrine, who also are members of the higher orders of Ma- sonry, either the Knights Templar or Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, the President extolled the beauties and | the uses of fraternity, but also warn- | ed_against its abuses. Reiterating the thought which the President has several times put forth | in addresses to fraternal gatherings, he expressed the wish that ‘‘some- how we could have fraternity among nations as it is taught in America among men.” | Just Dealing. | “I do not mean to employ sign, grip | and password,” explained Noble Hard- |ing, “which afford an appealing my; tery to our relationship, but the in- sistent demand for just dealing, the | respect of right of others, and the ideals of brotherhood recited in the Golden Rule, and the righteous fel- low relationship which every man kpows his God approves.” .Then solemnly the President added. ‘Under such a reign of fraternity cruel human warfare will never come again.” B Taking occasion to dispel what he considered were “false impressions’ Welcoming the forty-ninth annual ! 0FALL FROM HEAT _INLINEOF PARADE None Seriously Affected; Marchers and Spectators Among Prostrated. Twenty persons were taken to hos- pitals, during the parade, from heat exhaustions today. None of them, however. is believed 1to be seriously affected. As the morn- | ling wore on and the sun went higher the heat increased until a noon am- bulances and private cars were filing one after another into Emergency, Casualty and Providence Hospitals with the men, women and children who had been overcome. At the Emergency Hospital Superin- tendent Sandidge and Assistant Sup- erintendent Dalton were kept busy directing the administration of first aid to the thirteen patients brought there. Five others were taken to Cas- ualty Hospital, one to Sibley and one to Providence. Only One Inju: Dr. Daniel Borden; a police surgeon, | stated at noon that he had only been called on to treat one accident case | along the line of the parade and that | as a man who dislocated his shoul- der while lifting a chalr to a bay window. In addition to thé persons who had to be removed to the hospltals an un- known number were forced to leave the crowds along -the line of the pa- rade and seek drug store relief from the heat Many of the marchers, particularly the musicians, who carried large in. struments, were “all in” when .they reached the end of the parade line. Only a few of them, however, needed hospital treatment. Thirteen at Emergency. Up to non today thirteen persons had been brought to Emergency Hos- pital suffering from heat prostra- tlons. Some were spectators and some were marchers. Men and women alike fell victims to the high tem- perature. The staff of nurses and doctor: the hospital was ample, however, 1o handle the situation and each patient was given prompt attentioh as they were brought into the rest room from private cars and ambulances. None of the cases treated up to noon appeared to be serious. - Brace tically all of them, the doctors sald, would recover aftér a few hours of rest. zAmong the heat victims were the following: Mrs. Flora Smith, six- ty-five, of 1302 Columbia- road; Mrs, Jennie' Brown, fifty-five, of 60 Elm- dorf avenue, Rochester, N. Y.: Frank P. Congdon, fifty-two, a Shriner from Boston; W. H. Boswéll, fifty-two, a Shriner from' Summerville, Mass.! Wilfred Foster, thirty-six, a Shriner from Toronto, Canada; Charles A. Charlton, sixty-six, & Shriner from Los Angeles, Calif.; P. E. Young, thir- ty-oneé, a Shriner from Salina, Kan.; v Ebhart, fourteen, of Alexandria, Ruth Roe, nineteen, of Cherry- , Va.; Lula Baker, twenty-four, gf Chattanoogu, Tenm; Martha P! Russell, 520 E street northeast; Rob- sometimes circulated about fraternal organizations, President Harding ad- mitted with what “watchfulness and care” he had exercised in taking the various oaths of Masonry, and ven- tured to say “without fear.of break- ing faith, I have never encountered a legson, never witnessed an example, nevér heard an obligation utfered which could not be openly proclaimed to the world. Uplitting Relationships. “More,” the President added, “if the lessons taught were heeded, the ob- ligations read were assumed, if the relationships urged were adopted, men would be infinitely better in their human relationships.” Referring to the abuses of fra- ternalism, the President sald they could no more be avoided “than the hyprocrisy which teaches how beau- tifully worth while is honest re- ligion.” “A President would not be ethical,” he explained, concerning abuses, “if he related fraternal appeals to which t he must turn a deaf egr. I will have } ~(Continued on Page 10, Column 6. DR Souvenir Imperial Council Session of the Mystic The Evening and Sunday Star From Sunday, June 3, to Sunday, June 10, Inclusive Each issue will contain a complete and accurate account of the Mailed anywhere in the United State: great event. cluding the special issue of today, R .. Sravate Sectlon of Beautitul Washington. ert H. Horne, sixty-two, of Alabama apartments, and Leroy R. Webb, Shriner from -Atlanta, Ga. Five were taken to Casualty Hospital. They were: Annie Thomas, seventy-six, 203 E_street, and Thomas Sissler, thirty-five, 661' Morton- streets -both taken from Pennsylvania avenue and 7th street; Mrs. Julia Carter, Rosslyn, Va, and Mary Carrington, 237 C street, both removed from Pennsyl. vania avenue and 3rd street, and Mary Underwood, 1355 Maryland ave- nue, taken from Péace Monument. Mrs. Lols Glower of -Elkton,- Tex., was taken {1l from the éxcéssive heat while in a room and was taken to Sibley Hospital. A womap, whose name Was not re- corded, was treated at Providence Hospital. _— CUBA ASKS EHBASSY HERE. HAVANA, June 5.—The senate last night spproved a_law raising - the Ciban legation in Washington to the status of an embassy. - PREER Editions Shrine containing a twelve-page Roto- Boy Burned Alive By Tribe to Win Goddess of Rain By the Associated Press. SALISBURY. Southern Rhodesia, | June 5—Human sacrifice stll ts practiced in some parts of the old world, it was shown recently, when six members of a local tribe were sentenced to death for burning alive a young man named Man- duza in order to appease the rain goddess. Rhodesia has been suffering from a severe drought. and some | of the native tribes accredited it i to the wrath-of the goddess, who they believed, had been violated Inquiries led the tribal chief to believe that®his son was guilty of having assaulted - the goddess and he thereupon ordered his in- | cineration. The rain godd a | voung and handsome girl, did not | testify against him. | " Defense counsel commented on the high motives which led the chief to sacrifice his son for rain, and referred to parallel cases in Hebraic and Semitic history. Rain fell scon after Manduza was burn- ed alive. ‘SHIPS FACE TIE-UP OVER LIQUOR BAN French Stokers to Strike if Wine Bafred—Issue to Be Taken Up Here. By the A#sociated Press. PARIS. June 5.—The threat of stok- ers and firemen on French steamers to strike unless assured they will receive their usual daily allowance of wine when in New York harbor has raised an issue that probably will be made the subject of diplomatic corps with ‘Washinglon. Meanwhile steamship officials inti- mate’that the La'Fayette, gailing from Tavre on Saturday and other French ships, will be supplied with the usual stocks of beverage liquor for the men, as provided by law. The ministries of merchant marine and commerce, which have been study- ing closely the ‘liquor ruling of the United States Supreme Court, make the point that French vessels are French territory, and are, therefore, subject to French law. iThe French views have been incorporated in a note that will be turned over to Premier Poincare for transmission to Washington. Tt is understood the communication wiil insist that French seamen retain their title to two litres of wine daily. The French line has not yet made known its final policy with respect to the United States territorial ban on liquor. The La Fayette would be the first steamer affected by the threatened strike of stokers and firemen. PLAN HALIFAX STOP. Italian Line Vessels to Load and TUnload Liquor at Port. " By the Associated Pres NEW YORK, June 5.—Ships of the Navigazione Generale Italiano, an Italian line, will-put in at Halifax both on east and west bound voyages, to load and unjoad the'Hquor so as not to enter the United States with the contraband aboard, L. V. Belhar, the general man- ager, has announced. Spokesmen for other foreign lines said they would obey the law literally, those of the French companies explaining that they had placed the matter before their governments, Only 2 Arrests For Drunkenness During 24 Hours + With but two arrests for drunk- eness recorded during the . past twenty-four hours, all low records for law. infractions of this nature during large conventions and inaus- ural gatherings in . Washington have been broken, it was learned today. 4 Authorities attributed this sing- ularly clean slate jointly to' the vigilance of revenue men and po- lice and to the determination of iait ners to co-operate . in"Kosnine city. orderly.dur-, ing the gonclave. The Star’: every <ity block and the regular edi- tion is delivered to Washington homes as fast as the papers are printed. “From Press to Home Within the Hour” s carrier system covers " Yesterday’s Circulation, 98,651 TWO CENTS. GREW “RESCUED" BY COAST GUARD Breeches Buoy Used to Land_ Crew of Schooner, Asking Help, in Channel. Spectacular rescues of the crew of the schooner Cecela R. Sheppard {from Colonial Beach, Va, in the | Georgetown channel, just north of “m» Highway bridge, was effected by the crew of the United States coast guard station today by the use of the {breeches buoy. Bo'sn (life-saving) {Aaron Smith of Wildwood, N. J., tn jcharge of the temporary station, di- rected the drill, which was witnessed by scores of people. One of the life guards was patrol- {ling the beach, as they do along the | miles of coasts of the United States |ran up the international signal ‘NC, | calling for help. He signaled to the crew, who im- mediately ran out the cart and line- jthrowing gun. Boatswaln Smith im- jmediately pulled the lanyard which fired the gun, throwing the line up and over the masts of the vessel, } where it was caught by the crew and | made fast to the mast. Then the life- jseving men hauled out a heavy hawser then sending out the breeches buo: After the rescue a hawser butter mast, “thus saving many fathoms of line for the government. Rescue Drowning Man, Following this drill the surfboat, of the gelf-bailing type, was taken into the tida] basin, where it was cap- sized and immediately righted by the crew. Then a vell was heard from among ths bathers at the bathing beach, the surf boatmen immediately |went 'to the spot where a man had gone down, and pulled from the wa- ver one of their own men, who had been detailed as the drowning man. They carried him to the beach and igave a demonstration of resuscita- tion. The cry for help was so real- }istic that practically all of the hun- dreds of bathers left the water to witness the resusoitation. These drills wiil be given each morning at 10 o'clock, the ship rescue i the Georgetown channel and the others in the tidal basin. In addi- tion to this work the coast guard has to tow vessels in the harbor, patrol sports, and perform a multitude: of other duties on the water. Here From Many Points. Those who have been sent here to demonstrate the work of coast guard life-saving _are. in addl- Osborne, Long Branch, lSiamn Chadwick, H Ik lantic City. B Bn'sa ;(llfesa\'inx) -ape Lookout, N. C.; T. Lewis, Core Bank, N C; M. L Yeomans, Port Macon, N. A. _W. Price, Portsy = B, Austin.’ Caffeys N. J.: Har- 3 Hereford Inlet, N. Edward Norton, Towns Inlet, 3 Adelbert Robbins, Stone Harbor, J; Herbert H._ Phillips, Avalon, X, George 3 3 R. Stewart, Cape Ma: Bdward Somers, Cape - J.. and George H. Karl- | Leslie Moore, Inlet, Melson, Paul . C.; H. S. Ward, Bodie A. C. Harris, Curretuck S. C. Sanderlin, False george E. Alston. Bonds ‘arwood J. Tho Hog 1siand, Va.;'S. L. Phillips, Cape Henlopen, 'Del.; F. ¥. Ocha, Long each, L. I; A Combs, Long Beach Richards, Lewes, Del.; John C. i Miller, N. Y. _in charge 3f motor oats; L. A. Church, Two-Mile Beach, 3. and LUH. Adams, Brigantine, Station, N. N —_— IMMIGRANT TIDE TURNS. WINDSOR, Ont., 3%une 5—Heavy emigration.from Canada to the Unit- ed States has practically ceased, and many Canadlans who went to the United States are returning, Orval Adams, chief immigration officer fo the port of Windsor, said today. H ‘said that the people Who went across the line during the winter were main- 1y farmers' sons and farm laborers, and that hundreds of them were re- turning because of better conditions throughout Canada. For Shrine Visitors Washington Guide and Map Pages 38 and 39 Inight and day, “when the schooner| and hauled it taught from the beach, | sent out and cuts the line close to the | the course during the water | tion to Boatswain Smith, Carroll A. | NEW GERMAN NOTE READY THURSDAY: U.S. TO GET COPY Ability to Pay to Be Left to Commission — Number of Annuities to Be Specified. POLICY TO BE STUDIED AT BRUSSELS PARLEY | Belgian Data, Ruhr Administra- tion, Special Currency and Other Questions to Be Discussed. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, June 5.—German reparations note will be delivered to the entente capitals on Thursday afternoon. The government is not dirclosing the nature of its contents but it is understood the note wiil specify a prescribed number of annuities and will suggest that Germany's capaci- ty for payment be left to an inter- national committee of experts for fixation. A copy of the note will be sent to Washington. LENGTHY PARLEY AGENDA. By the Associated Press. | BRUSSELS, June 5—The Franco- Belgian conversations here tomorrow i“’xll begin with an examination and lu discussion of the technical memo- randa communicated by the Belgian government to the French last week. The second part of the agenda deals | the administration of the Ruhr, Y(hl" definitive organization of the i(us( the issue of a special form |of curréncy. measures for provision- ing the pccupied regions and the de- velopment under Franco-Belgian di- rection of a s em of accountancy |for the Rhineland railroads in con- |nection with the divigion of the stocks of coal and other products. Premier Poincare is expected to re- turn to Paris tomorrow evening. | TERMS REPORTED BETTER. BY HAL O’FLAHERTY. | By Cable to The st 20 Daily News. LONDON. June 5.—Hope is express- ed here that some new and gncourag- ing solution of the reparations prob- lem will be offered this week, Brit- ish experts know In detail what terms | they can offer and they are nearer to | those proposed by Belgium than at |any other time since January. | It is reported in some quarters that Germany. in her forthcoming Tote will offer a total payment of 2,500.. 1000,000 pounds sterling ($12,130,000, { 000). The Manchester Guardian |a report that Premier Poincare has | decided to agree upon that figure. | which approximates ffty billion gold marks. But it is also stated that Poincare has surrounded this_policy with conditions which Great Britain may find difficuit to accept because he the French debt to Great publishes | ignores Britain. So far Great Britain has not re- ceived an official copy of Belgium's new plan, but newspaper reports sug- gesting that Germany pay an annuity | of 2.500,000,000 gold marks strikes | British experts as being too high. AVIATOR 1S KILLED ~ ONHIS WAY HERE Lieut. Wendell Phillips Crashed to Earth at Aberdeen, Md. Lieut. Wendel Phillips of the Army air service was killed this morning at Aberdeen, Md., when an airplane which he was piloting crashed to the earth just as he was starting to Washington. He was removed from the wreckage of the plane alive, but died a few minutes later. The plane had just taken off from the landing field and was at zn alti- tude of several hundred fee® when the miotor stopped and it dived to the earth. The cause of the accident is unknown Lieut. Phillips is the aviator who flew to Washington vesterday with a basket of select peaches for President Harding. The fruit originally came from Georgia, and the aviator was selected to relay.it from Aberdeen to the President. The aviator is twentv-four years old, and is a native of New York. He has been flying since 1918, and for the last four years has been’ stationed at Aberdeen. {ALIENS GUARANTEED RIGHTS IN TURKEY | By the Associated Press. LAUSANNE, June 5.—The long- standing controversy over judicial | guarantees for foreigners in Turkey | has been adjusted by the near east conference, thus removing one of the stumbling blocks in the path leading to’ the peace treaty. The Turks agreed to the appoint- ment of four foreign advisers who will be authorized to foliow the pro- ceedings In all cases and make rec- ommendations to the Turkish minis- try of justice. These advisers must be informed of all arrests and domi- ciliary searches. Joseph C. Grew, the American rep- resentative, referring to the settle- ment, said “I 'am sure that no_one realizes i more than Ismet Pasha that it is in the interest of Turkey itsclf to in- terpret the terms of the declaration in the most liberal spirit. On the administration of justice within her territories more perhaps than on any other factor will depend the economic future of Turkey and friendly rela= tions with other-co b +

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