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[\ pnot be finished for several months, it b By H H | THOMSON SCHOOL | NOTREADYTO0PEN Pupils to Be Taught in Webster and Franklin Build- ings Pending Repairs. The Thomson School, at 12th and L streets northwest, will not open at the beginning of the new scholastic year Monday because a third-story addition fwhich is being made to the building is fnot completed, it was announced today {hy Alexander T. Stuart, director of in- stermediate instruction. The work will !15 believed. ¢ Children of the eight grades in the IThomson School will be temporarily {transferred to the Franklin and Webs ister schools. The placement of the IThomson puptls in the Franklin and "\\'Bb.\'lcl' schools will necessitate put- iting those buildings on half-time {sthedules. As a result, one group will {attend echool In the morning and the iother in the afternoon. The cholce in “hese classes is to be given the regular iclasses of the latter schools, resulting in the Thomson puplls attending in the {&fternoon ! In order to simplify the return of fhe Thomson children to their classes it has been requested that all pupils of ithat school assemble at the Thomson building Monday afternoon at 1 o'clock instead of 9 o'clock in the morning. {When the children have assembled the Mteachers will procure their books and Jeonduct the first four grades to the Franklin building, at 13th and K streets, and the upper four classes to rthe Webster building, at 10th and H istreets. HARDWICK WITNESS - INFLOGEING CASE 'Georgia Ex-Governor to Tell of Letter of Alleged Victim of Dr. Yarbrough. By the Associated Press. ; MACON, Ga. September 12.—Con- dinued efforts to connect Dr. C. A. Yarbrough, prominent dentist, with a general flogging conspiracy, are ex- pected with resumption in city court here today of his trial on charges of gioting in conpection with the double flogging of R. F. Mills, former Macon chiropodist. 'Testimony yesterday was designed to show that he had knowl- edge of letters written by persons Beeking o have others punished for various offenses. imployes of the Ku Klux Klan tes- _tified regarding the actions of Dr. Yarbrough sinece Klan investigators game here with the announced in- n_of helping to run_down the floggers, who have been oper- ins for about two years. The or- anizer of the Ku Kiux Klan here, J. Durkee, who also is charged with being implicated in one flogging of Mills, testified that he obtained three Jetters from Dr, Yarbrough _and furned them over to Sheriff J. R. Hicks, jr. Access to Letters. Durkee stated on the witness stand that many of the letters Dr. Yar- brough had_access to were addressed to the Ku Klux Klan and were placed in_his peérsonal mail hox at the post- office Mrs. Lynwod Br! band was whipped, ha & prosecution wi £y during the da n Atlan whose hus- been called as testi- . Mrs. Bright lives s testified during the tri. ¥ t £he spent an afternoon in . Yarbrough’'s office shortly before Mr. Bright was whip- ped and after he had sought to obtain some personal property from her through court action. It was stated by AMiss Elizabeth Culpepper, an employe of Dr. Yarbrough, who told of Mrs. Bright's visit, that she had heard that Dr. Yarbrough signed a bail trover| bond for Mrs, Bright and that the éx- planation of her visit was that she had come to the office to thank the doc- tor. Gevernor Subpoenaed. Former Gov. Hardwick has been subpocnaed as a witness in the case. -3t is expected that he will testify re- garding a letter said to have been written to him by Mills asking for| protection, and which, it is charged, was intercepted before it reached the governor. He also is expected to tes- tify regarding a telephone conversa- tion with Mills. Durkee. followed Mills, who testi- fled that Yarbrough was a member of the gang which flogged him. Mills testificd that Durkee had rep- resented himself to be a detective after he (Mills) had written a letter o the governor following his flogging. This letter, the state contends, never reached Gov. Hardwick, since retired. H. R. Perryman, a Ku Klux Klan detective, testified his business in Macon was investigation of whip- pings. He came here three weeks ago. Df. Yarbrowgh told him he knew nothing about the whippln The gecond time he saw Df. Yarbrough was on August 30 last, wheh the den- tist_came to his roor. He sald Dr. Yarbrough asked what headway had been made, and that he. (Perryman) told him “if Tooks pretty bad for some of the boys.” “He then asked me if it wasn’t pos- slble for me to find gofe reasonable excuse to drop the ‘investigation and Jeave towm. I told him.I could not do that.” . Miils told how. on the might of the | whipping, he was taken te a point on the Columbms road, fotced fo lle on his face.and was flogged while two mén held him. Klan Letters Identified. Two letters addressed to the Ku Klux Klan were identified by wit nesses. Mrs. Liseie Stuckey, when shown a letter addressed “K. K. K." and mailed last May said she wrote fhe letter. On cross-examination she said she did not know Dr. Yarbrough ana did not know whether he ever re- djved the letter. iss Ora Goddin identified a let- ter she 8aid she wrote and addresse to the “Ku Klux Klan, Macon, Ga., on August 14, 1923 On cross-éxamination Miss Goddin was asked if the facts in the letter. which was not read, were trile and ! she said. “Ye: “Do you know Dr. Yarbrough?” “No.’ ‘Has your father ever been whip- ped?” G “No, it “And you 8o not know whether this étter ever reached Dr. Yarbrough?" No. Sherift I. R. Hicks, jr, testified that the two letters just identifiea had peen turned over fo him by J. P. Dur- Jee, Ku Klux Klan organizer, and that he gave them to the solicitors. The sheriff said he never obtaired any Information from Dr. Yarbrough in connection with liguor raids in the Helvue seation of the city. Wwilliam G. Quarterbaum_sald that dip a conversation with Dr. Yarbroug the doctor said_conditions were due to officers not doing their duty. He said the talk had turned to conditions tn the neighborhood, where, he de. much Hquor was reported to Freeing of Slfives{ By Italian Envoys In Africa Ordered By the Associated Press, GENEVA, September 12.—Italy has notified the league of nations that she has ordered the abolition of the slavery system existing within the Italian legation in the empire of Ethiopla (Abyssinia), which recently applted for mem- bership in the league. \ Italy has ordered the native staff of the legation which owns slaves henceforth to consider them as servants, not slaves, pending Italian arrangements to restore them to liberty, with compensation to _their owners. Slavery as it exists in Ethiopia is expecied to be discussed in con- nection with the Ethiopian appli- cation for admission to the league, although it is recognized that it is a domestic question. MIX-UP OF SIGNALS BLAMED N WRECKS Destroyers Misunderstood Collision Warning of Delphy, Seaman Explains. SANTA BARBARA, Calif,, Septem- ber 12.—All attempts to recover bodies of a score of seamen drowned in the wreck of seven destroyers at Point Honda last Saturday night vir- tually are at a standstill. The list of bodles recovered stands unchanged since Monday, three having been brought to the morgue here. One is unidentified Further questioning of survivors confirmed the belief of officers e% pressed yesterday that no bodles are left in the sunken hulk of the Younsg. All survivers are positive that the vessels were searched before being abandoned and that the missing men were lost when they jumped over- board or took to life rafts. A new explanation of the piliog up of the seven boats was offered yes- terday by one of the survivers, a chief quartermaster. The sixteen vessels of the squadron were traveling in formation of two columns. the petty officer asserted. When the Delphy, in the lead, struck the rocks, she started her siren sig- nalling “collision!” ~Having no idea of their actual position, the command- ers of the other vessels took the signal to indicate a collision at sea. Following the proceedure designated for such occasion the vessels in the left column of the formation swerved sharply to port. The right-hand column made the same maneuvre to starboard. Those which swerved to the right escaped while the vespels going to port piled up on the rock in almost a solid mass. The éxplana- tion was confirmed by officers as probably the correct one. An additional detaii of twenty-two men from the U. S. §. Melville was set ashore today to join the force of twenty men watching for bodies which may be washed up from the wreck. These men are being fed and clothed by relief organizations of Santa Barbara and by the Santa Barbara chamber of commerce. SENATORS SAY DRY LAW WILL NEVER BE REPEALED Fess and Willis, Ohio’s Members of Upper House, Declare for Strict Enforcement. By the Associated Press. COLUMBUS, Ohio, September 12.— Ohlo's two United States senators, 8. D. Fess and Frank B. Willis, in ad- dresses last night before thé national convention of the W. C. T. U., in ses- sion here, declared that the eighteenth amendment and its enforcement pro- visions is an organic law, and will never be repealed. Both Mr. Fess and Mr. Willis de- clared that strict enforcement of the elghteenth amendment is necessary if prohibition is to be successful. The convention passed a large number of résolutions, indorsing the eighteénth amendment, a world court, law enforcement, campaigns against habit-forming drugs, campaicn against liquor in the Philippine Islands and world prohibition. “The problem now is enforcement,” Senator Fess declared in reviewing prohibitlon In the United States, “especially state enforcement codes. New York has repealed its enforce- ment statute and thus has sur- rendered it state rights into the hands of the federal government,” he continued. “It is the most outstand- ing case of nullification on the one hand and state immolation on the other. Senator Willis, in touching upon the repeal of the prohibition enforcement statutes in New York, said that the “leader of the nullification move- ment” in the nation “seems to be Gov. Al-cohol Smit “We must settle once for all the question as to whether we are to be a lawless or law-abiding péople,” the Senator added. “Whether we shall stand on the rock of the Con- stitution or sink in the morass of anarchy.” P HADN'T HEARD OF DRY ACT Old Colored Men Fined $95 for Driving While Drunk. Ben Robinson, a venerable calored mah, owner and driver df & one-horse delivery wagon, . was before - Judgé McMahon in the Trafic Court today, charged with driving his team’ while drunk, He was convicted and fined $26 and in default to serve twahty- five days. The evidence showed ~that Ben, who claimed that he- did: not Know there was such a law as the Vol- stead act, or that it was against the law to drive a team while drunk, over -indulged in corn whisky, fell from his wagon eeat under the wagon and he was there when a policeman found him. The horse stopped when his master toppled from the driver's seat. He was unhurt. RECEIVERS APPOINTED. ‘Will Take Over Business of Penn Eleotric Company. Char! E. Matson and George G. Webster were appointed today by Jus- tice Hoehling as receivers of the busi ness of the Penn Electric and Gas Supply Company at 91114 9th gtraet northwest. The bond of the receivers wad placed at 320,000, and they we directed to continue the business. ‘The parther aac Freedman and Milton Politser, had a disagreement and Freedman brought suit for the dissolution of thé partnership. He is represented b‘y Attorney W. B sell Thomas, while Attorney Dora Palkin appears for the defendaat, Politzer. W. U. SYPERINTENDENT DIES, LOUISVILLE, Ky., September 12.-- Charles Smith, seventysfour, oity uperintendent of the Western Unton Helegraph Company here, disd y today, after & perl He was a veteran of the service and was sald to have roomed with Thomas A.’rllu n when the inventor was smplo; as a sl operator here, 3 = ~ H | LEE IS APPOINTED STATE SECRETARY Prominent ‘Montgomery County Resident Is Named by Gov. Ritchie. BROOKE LEE. E. Brooke Lee of Silver Spring, Montgomery county, has been ap- pointed Secretary of state of Mary- land by Gov. Ritchie to succeed Philip B. Perlman, who will resign to become city solicitor of Baltimore. Mr. Lee, former state controller, and son of Blair Lee, former senator, is one of Gov. Ritchie's warmest per- sonal and political friends. He has remained one of the governor's coun- selors since leaying the state con- trollership, when he declined to stand for re-election because of the press of private business. Mr. Lee has spent considerable tfme at Annapolis since retiring from public office At the last legislative session Mr. Lee was active In furthering the passage of the “platform measures'” of the democratic party, measures upon which the party wili base, to a consideruble extent, its claim to be continued In power. Recently Mr. Lee has been engaged in the development of real estate in Washington. suburbs, He has found time, however, to take an active part in politics and has chosen the hobby of promoting the Silver Spring base ball team. The ealary of the secretary of state is only $2,000 a year, but this has re- cently been supplemented by making the secretary of state also secretary of the board of public_works at an additiona)] salary of $1.500 a year. In appointing Mr. Lec the governor took occasion, to speak highly of Mr. Perlman's services in office. Appointment of Kenneth M. Burns, assistant state purchasing agent, as executlve secretary to the governor to succeed Wjlllam K. Conway, who resigned on account of ill health, also was announced by Gov. Ritchie. MAN BADLY HURT IN GARAGE COLLAPSE W. A. Lloyd Caught Under Wreck- age With Two Others. William A. Lloyd of Springfield, Md., was injured this afternoon in the col- lapse of a garage under construction in the rear of 2237 Bancroft place, the | home of Commander Cecil S. Baker, iU s, He was rushed to Emergency Hos- pital, where early this afternoon the extent of his injuries had not been determined. It was thought possible, however, that he may be serfously in- jured internaliy. Two other men working on the garage were buried beneath the wreckage, but escaped Injury, it was reported. — e el LOVE LETTERS QUOTED IN SUIT FOR DIVORCE A. C. Lewis Says Wife Got En- dearing Epistles From Other Man. Declaring that his wife neglects her household duties and takes au- tomobile rides with a married man from Baltimore whom she calls Daddy,” Albert C. Lewis today ask- ed the District Supreme Court for a limited divorce from TIsabel E. Lewls. The husband also asserts that Mre. Lewis left notes saying she was visiting girl friends when, he has diseovered, she was with the corespondent taking auto trips to Atlantio City, Baltimore, and Ocean City, Mad. Lewls tells the court he found letfers from the “other man” to his ife in which he refers to her as My . Angel Dreams” anhd “My Most Preclous Treasure.” Instead of preparing his meals, the huaband states, the wife spent much time at the movies and In visiting the dress- ing rooms of stage folk. He de- clares she selotts as her companions persons professing a oelief in free love, and hag admitted to him that she would not be bound by the con- ventions. Attorney Henry M. Fowler appears for the husband. ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md, September 12 (Spectal).-—In the presence of a small company of relatives and:. friends, Eleanor A. Umstead, daughte N %ir. and Mrs. Jacob R. Umstead o Rockville, and Linden Prato of Washington were married yesterda. afternoon_by Rev. L. A. Weber o Trinity Catholie Church, Washing on, the ceremony taking place at the rectory. Immediately afterward they Jeft for a northern trip, expecting to be away about three weeks, For sev eral years the bride has been a mem bor of the nursing. staff at Georg town University Hospital, Washings ton. s of . elections v:;‘n here Thursday and canvass the \,:ie!‘etl :::tln Mnlndny l.'t"!%"“lm blican primary elections in .l‘:: county. “Fhe unoMolal returns in- dicate that P. Hicks Ray defeated James P. (2«»:j I;r '.hfomdamoc:-uc ination for judge of the orpl Gourt py ten votes and interest e telt as to whether or not the ial oo will changé that result. There were no other close contests. !y he far the The _supervisor: A license has been issued clerk of the eircuit court he: marrl th o L B . and Mrs. Nathan C. Stiles of néar Rockville have announced_ the marriage o thelr dai r, - Miss oo of thia ¥ 5"&':.&: Wy gl of thiraly aaar ; - 13, Vau Frederick | e of Miss Nettle Elizabeth | Bl iat it s A0 Yokohama Likely To Be Discarded As Site for City By the Assoclated Pross. . NEW YORK, September 12.—The destruction of Yokohama is so complete that the goverament is contemplating abandoning the site -of the city entirely and rebuilding Tokio ‘on a scale large enough to absorb ' the population and in- dustries of Yokohama, according to a radiogram received today by the Japanese Times " ‘The government's appropriation for reconstruction, which it is ex- pected will be between 50,000,000,000 and 80,000,000,000 yen, will be ad. ministéred by a newly created de- partment of reconstruction, the message said. Fifty thousand bales of raw silk and a quantity of habutaye, a ma- terial used in the manufacture of sllk, were destroyed in Yokohama, another message sald WARD TRIAL BEGUN, BROTHER AT SIDE White Plairis Murder Case Defendant Pale and Thin in Facing Court. WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. September 12.—Walter 5. Ward, wealthy baker's son, went on trial in supreme court today charged with the murder of Clarence Peters, former sailor, whose body was found sixteen months ago o a lonely road near here with a bullet threugh the heart. The indictment on which he is being tried is the second Ward has faced. A year ago a grand jury charged Ward with the death, but when he maintained that he had shot in self- defense after Peters had attempted to blackmalil him, the indictment was dismissed. ¢ The case was reopened last spring, and Gov. Smith ordered an extraord- inary grany jury to conduct an in- quiry. This jury returned the present indictment, charging murder in the first degree. Brother Beside Defendant. Ward was in court today with only one member of his immediate family —his brother Ralph-—at his side. His father, George S. Ward, still remain- ed outside the state and out of reach of process servers, while his wife was reported on the verge of a nervous breakdown at Atlantic City Pale, thin ‘and gaszing steadily at the floor, Ward went to the defense counsel ~table accompanied by warden. He ignored a pleasant greet- ing from his brother Ralph. ‘The courtroom was filled with speec- tators, including some women. The defense asked rospective jurors whether they “believed in a man carrying a revolver,” had any jobjection to a man betting on races, had any prejudice against a man who had a secret which led to blackmall, and whether they would accept a statement that the killing was done in self-defense unless it was proved otherwise. CHEMIST TO AWARD $80,0C0 IN SCHOOL PRIZES Money Made Available for Student Essays on Scientific i Subjects. | By the Associated Press. MILWAUKERE, Wis,, Beptember 12. —More than $380,000 in prizes, con- sting of money, scholarships and books, will be distributed by the American Chemioal Seclety to stu- dents in the high, Becofidary and {higher educational schools o United States as awards in essay con- jtests on the ecience of chemistry next year, according to an announce- ment by ‘Edwin O. Franklin, presi- dent of the organization. at the opening of the national convention of chemists here yesterday. The amount is ade_ available through Mr, and Mrs. Francls P. Garvan of New York as a memorial to their deceased daughter Patricia. General scssions of the convention of the American Chemical Society | will begin here today and will con- tinuo until Saturday. One of the featyres of the conven- tion will be the award of the Priest- 1y medal to Dr. Ira Remsen of Johns Hopkins University for outstanding achievements in chemical science. OFFICERS COMMISSIONED. Commissions in the Officers’ Reserve Corps of the Arimy have been issued by the War Department to Joseph H. Bryan, 1644 Connecticut avenue, this city, as colonel in the Medical Corps; to Francis A. Awl, Veterans’ Bureau, _this city, as lleutenant colonel of infantry; to Harry D. Mur- ray, 1514 U street, this city, as cap- tain of cavalry, and to James M. Smith, Fort Myer, Va, second lieu- tenant in the military police. dollars and cents. Its the ! RESERVE OFFICERS PRAISED BY WEEKS Seéretary Says They Made ‘Success of Summer Camps Possible. Credit for the successful comple- tlon of the summer training eamps for officers-of the Reserve Corps Is given largely to the reserve officers themselves in a letter from Secretary Weeks to Col. Edward Martin, a re- serve officer of Philadelphia, the | Secretary saying that the officers 'save so enthusiastically and un- stintingly” of their time and labor that they deserved a full share in all that had been accomplished. . “I have been deeply impressed by the splendid spifit, teamwork and co-operation manifested by the com- Ponents of the Army of the United States and the sympathetic under- standing which each now seems to ave for the other,” Mr. Weeks said. ‘Undoubtedly it has been responsi- ble for the present sucoess and is the greatest assurance of per- manency. 5 The Secretary's letter was in reply to one from Col. Mariin, who wrote “as ranking officer of the non-divis fonal group, 3d Corps Area, O. R. C. and on behalf of the members of that group who received training this year t Camp Meade. He said he'desired say for himself and his brother reser officers “how largely we have profited. by u course of instruction broadly and wisely planned, and ad- mirably carried aut.’ “We believe that under this tultion there may be trained any officers’ res serve corps of such size that shouid war come its successful issue may be more assured, its wastage reduced to a minfuum,” Col. Martin said. Col. Martin is an officer of the Med, fcal Reserve Corps and attached to the 364th Infantry Regiment in the: organized reserve. GOAL COSTS CUT BY STEADY MINING; Commission Reports $1.20 to $2.80 a Ton Bituminous Operators’ Burden. A ton of bituminous coal costs a mine operator between $1.20 and $2.80, the United States Coal Commission reported to President Coolidge today, submitting the latest installment ot its report on the industry in compli- ance with Instructions from Congress. The coal study was based on sta- tistics from 266 mines located In four states and covered operations iv 191¥, which was selected because conditions throughout that year were considered approximately uniform. Examining in detall the several fac- tors whioh made for differénces in cost of coal delivered at the mine ! mouth, the commission listed siead!-| ness of operations and certainty of car supply as important. Full-Time Ad “The advantage and economy of full-time operation is clearly indi- cated,” the report said. “As between two similar mines, each having a cost of production of $2.50 per ton if working twenty-five days per month, the mine which enjoys the best working time under conditions of car ishortage and a strong market for coal, will make the larger profits be- cause of lower cost; of, under condl- { tions of poor market, one may un-| dersell the other and realize a profit, because with more days worked the lcost will be lower. _ “Taking again a base cost of $2.50 ! per ton for fuil-time (twenty-five days) loperation it is found that when work- ling twenty days (five days per week) |there was no difference; when work- ing sixteen days (four da. per week) the difference wag negligible, 234 cents 'a ton; when working -twelve days | (three days per week) the difference was 10 cents per ton; and when | iworking eight days (two days per week) the difference was 15 cents per { ton. One day per week brought the idifference up -to 40 cents per ton. | There is thus no notable difference in uhit cost of production eaused by short-time operation whether this ibroken time be due to lack of trans- portation or lack of market. Reducion in Base Cost. “The real difference ente reduction in.the base cost, which can and quite generally is reduced in {times of inactive demand. “It may be inquired, in view of this factor of cost of idie times, what ef- {fect on the country's coalbill the |fact may have had ‘that in the past | twenty years the soft coal mines have worked an_average of but 220 days, or about 72 per cent of full time. If the price paid by the con- sumer were cost of production or a direct function of cost, then the af swer would We that the total cost to tho country was about & per cent more than it would-have been if few mines were working full time has ntage. in the A Bank’s Personality " A BANK must have two things to succeed— very foundation is con- fidence, and that is based upon plain honesty and high business ideals. When' you select -your bank, analyze its-directorate. Kére Is Ours Directors. JOHN JOY EDSON, JOUN M: CLAPP . V. COVILLE JOEIN A. JOHNSTON CARL B. KEFERMTEIN DONALD WOODWARD /900 F Street produced this coal resources and character. Business is not all Chalrtan of the Board. GEORGE A. KING J. LEO KOLB JOHN B. LARNER JOHN C. LETTS HARRY 6. MEEM THEODORE W. NOYES ANDREW PARKER WALTER §. PENFIELD ARTHUR PETER FRANK P. REESIDE HARVEY W. 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