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2 * BERLIN GLADDENED BY U. 5. LOAN NEWS Situation Believed Under- stood, With 20,000,000 People Hungry. BY HIRAM K. MODERW a the Ch s to The Star an ago Daily News. Copye LIN, December that the American will approve a food v received here as that el govern- toan for grat America, ment Germar fully under ness of the ermans u were = indlcatic the natu pendi an n £ d how diflicult it 1d of the which 18 to convinee seri- ousness ¢ 1 in 000,000 persons, war, raised 85 Social Collapse, the Ger- RAILROAD CROSSINGS IN CITY INSPECTED Commissioners Accompany B. & 0. Officials on Tour of Danger Spots Here. The District accompanied nd Ohio Commissioners inls of the ailroad on tion visited | huma a DED AS LAST BRITISH HOPE FOR STRONG CABI A COALITION REGA A NET 5 \» n this w to poll ¢ Tennant, oppo al 1 v candi ghth of f the brother of an candidate had to pay Women Well Trained. woman d members, Mi and Mis that they can hardly be called novices. Another new lahor member, 58 Dorothy Jewson. is the daugh- ter of a wealthy rwich family. She is a graduate of Cambridge and sub- sequently took a job as chambermaid in a hotel to learn the conditions under which hotei servants work, The Duchess of Atholl is a schoiar- Iy, artistic woman, who, it fs I dicted, will prove a useful addition to the house. Lady Terrington's ualifications, as given by the Daily Mail, are an unerring taste in dress, #0od horsewomanship and a useful knowledge of agriculture, SEES LLOYD GEORGE RETURN. By the Assoctated Press, PARIS, December to witness George' Lioyd ( .—*“We are about the reappearance of Lioyd formulae and probably of orge himself,” says the Petit Parisien, regarding the Hritlsh elec- tion. “Englane .o to pass through a cifficult period. Tt would be vain to hide from ourselves that the entente 1iay come out considerably damaged.” The Journal forcsees another elec- tion out of which will emerge the contral party dreamed of by Lioyd George, uniting the conservatives and *he moderate liberals aga'nst labor. The radical newspaper 1/Oeuyre ex- pects the return of Mr. Lioyd George, hut does not see that such an event is to be 8o dreaded by Iranc “Perhaps she will gain much,” says the paper, “by tha replacement of the influence ‘of ‘the solemn Curzon by that of the man once described as the most comprehensive of Englishmen.” Newspaper | | | | 1 coms { him. | Gen | listed as a private. { to_a captainey. i gon In his campaign which resulted ! in breaking the. power of the “lion of | | the north,” and he was promoted to | THE EVENING 58th Anniversary Observed By Pioneer Body of Citizens Association of Oldest Inhabitants Cele- brates With Banquet—Bishop Free- man Lauds Civic Spirit. in a building of our own or one owned jointly by ~the Oldest Inhabitants, the Columbia Historical Society the Socicty of Nativ Some he way has been made in securing gifts and bequests toward a buflding fund primarily for an Oldest Inhabitants building endowment, but which, in accordance with the spirit underly- ing the zifts, could doubtless be used . for a building owned jointly by the Kindred organizations “This worthy movement deserves, and L hope will receive, the support and co-operation of all of us by gifts |While we live and bequests in our | | wills. “In fighting Washingtonian the |strons in their faith in action, have co-operated heartily with other organizations of citizens for financtal and political equity for The ploneer citizens of Washing- ton—members of the Association of Oldest Inhabitants—gathered around the banquet board at the Ebbitt Hotel last night and celebrated the fifty- clghth auniversary of the organiza- tic They listened to a stirring address Rt. Rev, James E. Freeman, Epis- | hal Bishop of Washinzton, in which uded c spirit prevailing in Washington despite the absence of wnchi heard Noy ihabit i by the: o w their president, Theo- for the duty of the nts to unite during the with othe tions fn | king for politi nd financial | ity for the nation's Capital | ¥ paid tribute to the memory of twenty-seven e de. plpodn ty-seven comrades who !y G0 th fair p ddest ay for the nhabitants, unity of neial Equity. the fight for finarcial equity o : the Incoming Congress the ce il- | Oldest Inhahitants will vigorously co- nd they separated, |operate in the effort to induce the renewal of old ac- |lawmukers to appropria. ot the amount of the estimates of the Com- niisgione and budget bureau, to the d that ¢ a reasonable tax bur- den shall be fmposed upon the tax- | Dayers of today: that the nation s contr b with w liberality ward Capital ding | rdice Congr: Capital's be: uitab t Bishop Rishop Fr Freeman's Address. in fizht- \ppropriate as part of | onate contri venue which t rifies o exist to trict, In the sum ertain trepidation in fac- | 1" the bishop con- | rly [ van contribute wledge of such an 5 controll 3 the cred I of anproximately $4 We wil fight to ciple of definit. tributlon by na unity toward ¢ maintain the | contributions, ns ct. As a we will oppos: proposal to substitute ump sum payment by the nation in | lieu of the definite proportionate con- tribution | “In the O1d to | states ad nendme to the etonian WA the prin- ' nate co local ilding and in of such | by the new | part of thix | with all our | tion apiial u £0-40 fixed vital to i many fight for political equity t Inhabitants will co-operat from ss and the ption of our constitutional | which empo « nt to t representath House, in th 3 >t only other Cammissioner st M 1 the udyin 1 was tol he went on, “that 8¢ Co as a city for retired Army offi- 1 men who had been in politi I were lac nd a consciousness of bi After Was! kreates ultimate factor the T t residents the Senate al college federal courts speaker wis Engl- J. Franklin Bell i Bell President ew Commissioner District n muking fo n Washingt votin, v in ng ector na- | it in ail 1 liv- Legun is th interested in tonight, Afte s 1 ha t only s mer ngs that others died us « ur disfran i Julius Viedt ved a g lily wization Michael utler, A Muth Job = B. Curtis Burrows Samuel | Impress Barnard, ofoundly moved by cremonial of piacing o Whle white fle who die b 1 J. Bt -~ Whole gripped fin program by Rev. evening t ot 5 Proctor ous poem & the invited i Colladay. Isanc ton Stephan, Charles A J Allan Clark 1 with e Milburn, nbia ctions an in- Dur- Quar- an t P & It th the departed. thing reuc my heart rather bishop continued that next kin st thin liie “The and iy rem than | the friendship.” Le bishop lives of men, s in th paid a tribute th sthers in s the “that he remarked er than,his niother still true that the ks the crad s exts Present. s present were W. Spencer Armstronz, Webster A | Barr, Dr. W. W. Barton, William Bar. num.’ Isaac Birch, Louis’ Bernau. H. T. Broadbent, Henry' L. Br Judge C. S, Bundv. W. F. Hrod:, J. William A Cooper, Wil jr. Opel Cooper, L. Cronin, Clarke Curtis, Charles H Harvey Dunham, | Frank W. Dowl- William M. Dove, J. F. Du- M. Dulin, George E. Em- orge M. Emmerick, George Abram Fi am H orze W. 3 Hendley, Georie son. Chris Heurteh, James W. Huzhes, ad, bert Harper. I Keefer, Muax Koh- the present-day condi- bishop went « ught vou narrowed ht of gime, as broadly today as re are too many ul pessimists, who feartully, who are tnoa shadowy 1 thin ha ion in ¥ You are | " i ho ere dole ding 1if . : s W Clarence 1. . Rev. W vision v Dowling, not hop vour morrow World wortd Needs New Hope. needs a new hope tion, a kindlier vie W 1d get before the new ¥ s. the hatred, ights that rend mons T W. Evan per ¢ n bitterne t th unpieasant venture as a James E. Lambie, Charles A ley. L Lipscomb, William Hirry J. Lee, Millard William Lehman, Rev. Malone aulley {w. w Noyes, Ge Lang- G. Lee, Lord, J. Page Milburn, | Mahoney, B! Theodore but with healthful, year V’:-,. rore hopetul new n, T and President Noyes' Annunl Address, nual Presid teen ye <ing o o ssion to use men the yth and H ciation of Old- s and the w with souvenirs F. N addres w wi . s Rothroc thony ummy Shue Alexander St Joh tephenson, Leland W. Tatspaugh, M William Tindall, n Topham, W.'S, Voigt, K. Willard. Wirt, H. 3 " L Gedrge E. Wise labor of today a 1 for either Wright, and E Wilk, iot | Wright, W. L. White. | uvenirs, 28000 MEXICAN TROOPS ON WAY TO VERA CRUZ TO CHECK REBELLION (Continued from Iirst Page.) tween the flecing president and the The forces of Trevino and attacked him from the rear. | wis foreed o floe s \here, withs ; he inated. Sanchez was | th woted to the rank of general | ot s and chief of military oper- | | ations in the state of Vera Cruz. ARMY GIVES PLEDGE. stde of our gov- | as the following | Sixth Bat of Ori- Jalapa on the as well commanders: of line in zone 7th Battalion in region of' Rebellions Activities. n, 49th Regiment of Cavalry! at Potrero del Liano; generals, . M.| The Mexican army, as a whole, has | Judo, L. M. Urrieta, M. M. Reyes!reiterated a pledge of loyality to the M. . Morales; colonels, 1eoncio | gprogon government and emphatios as c0 A. Mayer, Can- lario and other commanders whose | ally repudiated the rebellious atti- s 1 do not recall. T jtude of de la Huerta and hia fol- The social «fense in whicl s v party had confidence and hope have | 0Wers. according to a statement| united and“sworn adhesion to Gen.|!ssuod by the Mexican embassy here jlast night, following receipt of offi- Obrezon “The data contained herein are all | i3) gdvices from that country. The statement sald: true and I authorize them to clarify public opinich through the press of Texas, the messaze concluded. “With reference to the reports pub- lished in the press regatrding the SANCHEZ DASHING GHIEE. |,yenreak of & revolutionary mioves ment in the state 'of Vera Cruz the | Mexican embassy Is in receipt of official information that Adolfo de la Huerta arrived yesterday at Vera Cruz, where he was able o secure, hrough alluring promises, the re- | bellious support of a small portion of i the garrison there. The army, as a whole, has _reiterated its foyalty to the government and has emphat. foally repudiated the rebellious attl- tude of de la Huerta and his fol- lowers. President Obregon arrived vosterday at the city of Mexico and wae greoted at the station by numer- ous demonstrations of popular sym. pathy and cordiality.” CODE MESSAGES HALTED. ng nd Obregon Forces Repudiate Again. Began Military Rise as Private in Madero Revolt. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., December 8. Gen. Guadalupe Sanchez, titular lead- er of the uprising against Obregon, is but thirty-two years old, and is con- sidered one of the most dashing lead- ers developed by the revoiutionary period in Mexlco, according to San Antonio men who are acquainted with During the Madero revolution, when Candido Aguilar took Teocelo from the Diaz adherents, Sanchez en- Before the end of the revolution he had won his way Sanchez again aistinguished him- self, and emerged from the campaign against Huerta as a colonel. Fol- lowing the break between Carranza and Villa, Sanchez served under Obre- ., Other Wire Communication Cen- sored by Mexico. NEW YORK. December 8—The | Mexican government has stopped all code telegraphic messages to and from Mexico via Galveston and has imposed a strict censorship on all plain-language messages because of the revolutionary troubles, the West- forcing Carranza to flee. Sanchez, |ern Unlon Telegraph Company and prevailed upon by Obregon, inter- the All-America Cables announced to- posed a wall of steel at Algibes be- ‘day: Sty i S I o the rank of general of brigade. With this rank he continued to serve under Gen. Aguilar until~the revolution of 1920 resulted in the forces of Obre- gon investing the City of Mexico and STAR, WASHINGTON, D. | hou | Ganster | He met Gangster and Mann near Burk- [s} ' Jay | | | | | dge xending her good wishes “by air route” to the Plzeon and | %' Axsoctation, opening itx annual show in Cleveland, Ohio. w In the largest one of its kind held In the country | Natioual Ploty COONTER CHARGES | To1E Wetiies INLIQUER ROBBERY and {and settl | tomorrow night; w northwest noor Records for Twenty- r District and Maryl warmer tonigh 1 na r Cloudy possibly | on Horsery Distillery Warehouse. rer portion “our Hours. 1 pm, teh to The Star. UCK, Md., rkinz one of t prohibition enforcement officers in western Maryland, Harry A.| (Hoppy) Grove, Frederick, reputed to have grown wealthy ’lhrouah boot- leg: &, and sald to be head of one of the most extensive bootleg rings in this section, has been tndicted in the United States court, charged with a conspiracy to unlawfully obtain whisky from the much-robbed ware. of the Outerbridge Horsey Company at Burkittsville. 1 Indictment of Grove followed the arrest of H. Waiter Ganster, Jr., Bal- | timore, torney for the distillery | company, and Louis Mann, Baltimore, | s manager of the any, onf by Gro of obtaining {ronl‘ him $25.000 under false pretenses.' Ganster and Mann were held, each, in $10,000 bond by Justice J. Grahame Johnson, Frederick, for a further| hearing in this city next Tuesday. | Tell of Setting Trap. was indicted by the federal jury on testimony given by and Mann. Ganster. In a statement at the preliminary hearing In this city. sald that Grove made overtures to them (Ganster and Mann) at the Baltimore offices of the company to obtain unluwfully liquor | from the Burkittsville warehouses The plan was concelv ster, to sell Grove a 1,000 cases of w ¥ at $25 per case il Grove would send trucks to the warehouses and remove it under the explanation that it was being trans- ported to the Baitimore concentration plant. This plan, Ganster declared, was explalned to Edmund Budnitz, federal prohibition director for Mary- land; Galen L. Tait, collector of fnter- nal revenue; Frank Bovd of the in-| ternal revenue department, and El- mer L Irey, Washington, chief of the inteiligence’ division of the internal revenue department, to which they agreed Grove, in cash pay the De coups of Highest noon t tod mperature at Highest Condition of the Water. water a perature, 42: condition Tide Tables. by Urited geodetic surv tide, tide, s (Furnished st and Low high Today 26 pm.; p.m. Tomorrow—Low tid pm.; high tide, 7 pm 5:01 3.0% 8:54 com The Sun and Moon. charges _ Todav—sun sets 4:46 p.m. Lomoirow—Sun rises sets 4:46 pm Moon rises 7:31 am utomobil mps one-half hourgafter s Weather in Variousx Citiex. 14 am.; sun sets § to be Grove grand Weather Ety 3000 an 30,08 L2070 Baltimore Biruingham Rismarck Hoston Buftaio Chntleston Chicago . Cineinnati Cleveland . Denver Cloudy Cloudy Suow Cioudy Tear loudy said Ganster, deposited $5,000 and made arrangements to remainder. On November 9§ he met Gangster and Mann at Jug- bridge, near Frederick, and paid $10,- 900 more, explaining that he would have the final $10,000 in two hours. Lonisville Miami, Fia londy | toudy | 1o 10 1o Toudy iy Claudy Cloudy Cloudy Pittsburzh. . Portland. M¢ | itteville and paid the final install- | ment, when, Ganster says, he turned ! over to Grove a “negotiable certificate for 1,000 cases of Old Horsey whisky. Caught Removing Liquor. Grove sent Arthur W. White, Wil- bur Routzahn and John Routzahn, Frederick, with two trucks to re- move the liquor, It was charged. DI- | rector Budnitz and two assistants, concealed In the warehouse, arrested the men when loading of the liquor was in progress. They were held in| bond aggregating $13,000, which was supplied by Grove. Grove will appear in Unfted States court in Baltimore next Tuesday and give bond. This morning he inti- mated that “others’ would “be im- |G, plicated.” He claims that it was $50,000 | ;';?‘s?s".on%?m Ganster and Mann, "d%HOUSE AND SENATE SEEK TO COMPLETE SLATES WORKERS TO VOTE FOR COMMITTEES TODAY (Continued from First Page.) attle . Spokane . 24 'ASH., D.C. 30.00 FOREIGN. | .m.. Greenwich time, today.) Temperature. Weather. 58 Part 8 Tart cloudy 78 Part cloudy 64 Clear 0 Clear ® ' Stations. Horta (Fayal), Amores. Bermuda | | 1 ON HALF HOLIDAY! (Continued from First Page.) | means committee, appointed yester- day after the fixing of minority com- mittee ratios, held their first meeting foday for the assignment of commit- tee membership. ‘An unsuccessful flght to unseat Representative Martin of Louisiana as & member of the ways and means committed because of his votes on the tariff was launched in the demo- eratio caucus by Representative Dom- fnick of South Carolina. Martin was reseated by & vote of 120 to 16. Four former members_of this committee were returned—Rainey of Illinois, Hull of Tennessee, Dickinson of Mis- souri and Casey of Pennsylvania. Representative Garner of Texas will be the ranking democratic member, succeeding the late Claude Kitchin. Under the slate determined upon | by the republican committeo on com- mittees Representative’ Green of Iowa | will become chairman of the ways and [Tmeans committee. 1 "'Representative Frear of Wisconsin, t[one of the leaders of the “progres- sives,” retained his place on the ways and means committee. “Progressives’ who have held places on the other committees discussed yesterday also were retained, Representative Peavey of Wisconsin being the only new House member allied with the “pro- gressives” to land a place on a com- mittee—rivers and harbors. The two republican vacancies on the commerce committee, which deals with railroad legislation, went to Wyant of Pennsylvania and Burtness of North Dakota.- noon or early Monday morning, bringing definitely before the ém- ployes the movement which has been gaining in momentum for the past ten days. | Previous Proposals. | The only previous occasion when the employes' union declared itself on the Saturday half holiday was during President Wilson's administration, when the proposal was taken up per- sonally by Mr. Wilson himself, and presented to. his cabinet. A delega- tion from the union had visited the President, In favor of a Saturday half holiday plan, and it was sald today Mr. Wilson had favored its adoption, as being a change for the betterment of working conditions in the govern- ment departments in the District. Upon objection of one member of the cabinet, however, the plan failed of adoption. Under the proposal before Presiden Wilson and his cabinet, however, there had been no plan .for adding half an hour to the-other five days of the week, from Monday to Friday. This feature, it was believed today by those in favor of the mew plan, would eliminate objection from those who objected to a shortening of the working hours and curtailing of work thereby. Under the new proposal, the establishments in the District of Co- lumbla would work the same hours adopted for many of the field estab- lishments of the government. - -/ { SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1923. Last of “Vast Unknowns” in U. S. Explored by Capital Scientist Neil R. Judd Crosses Land of Mystery in Utah. Unnamed, Desolate Region as Large as New Jersey. The last inside the United St Jersey, region of complete mystery continental lmits of tes, large as N uninhabited, unmapped, named, unknown and absolutel lute, has been for the first time this Il by an expedition from the National Geographic ¥ 1 €d by Neil R. Judd of the department of Amer y, New Na- tional M Judd photog after the un- explored Washington here sherd Just months ction of Utah, be river. Durin traces of thos have two this Atring on the Col the returned f near ation in « NEIL M. JUDD. rado | which are about fifty 1 of feet hiz living and ten e only hu- t , tered w and the 1 anima ences of man beings en - the Nat work now maps whi nal here L udd, detalled s wild territory, that it is almost | 125 o enter it are ever eparin made of h ) situated ible for humir Carried i Kay Eleven Mules. The exped Octobe outfitted with ¢leven nta, Ariz., early rd proceeded north ov an river, then fn flood, Colorado, of about |DUTCH SHIP SEIZED; | HUGE RUM CARGOES e a 40 iles acrc - five ve pene distance information short m thre 1 reglon v less at the on b the se mile JERSEY POLICE ACTIVE. had been expect re of Vege 1 and alw ion. Bootleggers Led Merry C State Constabulary. ase by try nea ISt w a ons are traver which subter- t BY ROBERT T. SMALL. ranean rivers Pra the & for it The liged to carry all of there ition was ¢ DRORisic since absolute to the g ng, twelve ir b ng ning thit would not provisions anim that be fo From into the canyon in the Buman holes s etimes thir foul eve touch included Tor the| ther 0 assurance : patches of grass ) i not done 1t the first the danzers of bottoms nd 1i water flow tly, the mu!. hopping have the early [ i expedition ot quicksand red ran Th with lue to rneath buried nimals difficulty Ly supplies fron nda rly st twenty 1 rorning. ut in over f coming 2 rep. ving two fri Tow with suppl A nor t fifty-five the " rumm ion and busin Rolling Rock Mesa, Looking over the co ¥9, gave him the im lling rock m stunted cottonwood tr This vegetat ad been blown rock surface | down ur about in ry. Mr. Judd ression of with rar s and cedars where Jersey Police Active. wholly along to runners hing but s supposed Atlar year she elected another wet x nor and sent a wet senator to Wa ington. But despite all this outward evid of disregard for Mr. Volstead | his works. the lice of 10St | Another ctor has fe the Jer: and come ru expected th n existed sand intd hollows of th. 2 ‘The 'ons, whiaeh followed one after another through- out the entire journey, were not vis. ible until the party cam top of the Then it w. sary to find a trail across. It was some. (:rr.h 5 advisable to travel up or down for fifte OF twenty miles before a nd. 1 Found Prehistoric Trails, ore any New Jers as the a I happy Lust ic ocean. tive of any s unning dow Mr. Judd's expert knowledge of the lore of the desert Ind 1 valug By sign rocks wusands of ye: extinct native sometimes possible up appars 1y ble from the canyon bottoms, place these 1S enabled t v to climb over practie: flo perey m,u!fl:é and all, to the n all thir: two da spe the unknown region it e mainder of the time being passed in outfitting and in reaching the borders of the country. ans proved piaced on rs ago by tribes f{t to locate hounds. been arou They exp was | federal p the trooper: trails | ipe Tnion steeps | and start n ble. a Ly the ng hibit of on o an unexpe has upset many ns. It has made liquor more dangerous than ever, and is likely to send the price of the importéd up another notch or two, Women Arrested. haulin | The bootleggers once looked upon | the White Horse pike, between Atlan- { tie City and Philadelphi th; | great white way. The W Hoped for Rains. The expedition was undertaken dur- ing October and November in hope that the great fall rains which sweep | PIK° 314 White horse cellar scotch that part of the United States wourq | FCT¢ A1MOSt synonymous terms. But, have left pools of water in hollows of | 212% the pike now ls infosted with the rock. This hope proved false, The | St4te troopers from one end to the rocks were porous and had’ drank in | O'NeT @nd the poor bootlexger can't the water almost as soon as it gather- | 5° DY With even a dozen or so cases ed. Rare springs were found, stowed away in his expensive limou- A number of prehistoric sine. houses were seen nestled in canvon, The troopers walls, the homes of the last human | bootleggers hav inhabitants of this region. Present-|€n to accompany day Indians, Judd reports, have a hor- | thus attempting ror of the country. The whole area|The womoen fre ty probably is of no economic impor-|as $26 for a ride of fifty miles or tance, but is a country of rare beauty | 0. Now that the cops have taken to any one with an appreciation of |to arresting the women as particeps desert scenery. The sandstone walis | orfminis and holding them in heav vary from a light yellow approachmg (bail along with the main bootleggers, white to blood red, and the shadows |the custom is not likely to be popu- hanging over the canyons range frem | lar, hasy blue to deep purple with ucca-| The Jersey police sional patches of green marking the |eatching far more rare vegetation. | than thelr colleagues acros Canyon 18 Miles Long. der in Pennsylvania where o) zest o AR cas| ornor reigns at Harrisburg, he The largest of the canyons was|gImor reiens i HELTSRACE | TRe found to be about eighteen miles 10ng. | there g a reason for this. There are It was necessary to travel clear round { so many more bootleggers in Jersey some of them. When nearly at the|to be caught, = = o 7 Moantime tho easte s are S00 0L bexpinEatiun 'Y>Udd.a"d h“‘asknu: themselves what chance they guide left the rest of the party and | R3NINE HREMAC AR WHis (UR0CT oy went on alone Into the roughest sec. (¥ WAEH &, U8, g L0 s tion of the country where it would |turns on the “trade’ and condentrates have been difficult for the mules ‘(.lall its troopers in an attempt to stop Keep alive. The procedure followed |the heavy holiday shipments the out- was to start before daybreak and that lately the ying wom- their trip claim they are liquor eriminals the bor- a dry gov- Haw merchants were planning to put push ahead as rapidly as possible un- | aCross. til either a water hole or surfaee indi- cations that water could be obtained by digging were found. Then the expedition would pitch camp for the day. Sometimes this water would be | found early in the afternoon and some- | times not until toward evening. Judd and his party entered the un- known region after he had spent the summer at Pueblo Bonita, N. M., where the most pretentious archeo- ! bed by the request of a prisoner for logical = excavations on the North, pearing before him, he did not al- American_continent are fn progress. v Considerable work was dccomplished | fow this to interfere with the pro- in uncovering the walls of the largest | cedure and contiued the case to a | date to be named later, fixing a real 4% prenistoric “apartment = house e magnitude of the proje Juad m‘,‘ms. grows wit;: t’lccl:' .{".‘c | estate bond for the prisoner, which ceeding summer. { was provided 3 The work this year proved that| Deboe and Fitzpatrick deposited col- the great structure found buried lateral, which was forfeited. Switzer under the New Mexican sands, con- forfeited $10 for transporting liquor. tained at least 800 rooms, which may |Steele and Willlams are being ar- have accommodated between 1,200 raigned today before Commissioner and 1,400 people. The plan of- this ( Macdonald or charges of selling prehistoric building, a city In itselt, | liquor. was strikingly like that of some| In the raiding party were Lieut. modern city apartment houses. It|Davis, Lieut. Van Winkle, Licut. was built in hollow-square forma- [ Ready. Sergt. McQuade, Sergt. Milli- tion around a center court with a|ken and Sergt. Johnson, & number of single entrance. Facing on the court | policewamen and Privates Fink, it was one story high. It sloped up Bauer, Dye and Revenue Agent to four stories on the outer walls, Amiss. —_— {230 TAKEN IN RAID ON OLD DUTCH MILL (Continued from First Page.) BOOTLEGGERS OPEN FIRE ON POLICEME Efforts to Lay Down Christ- mas Rum Blockade Brings Gun Play. 1 leged rur lishment by {of a blockad | flood of he | three speed one per Former Policeman Arrested. Dete tenth Jury str supposed colored man ing past Mic formed i pping near Fling returnci The other ul lig; owner of vited to exy N Detective an a revenue t nied Po liceman Fling to 445 Ist street south- west, wh d Vhilip Bunds | colored, 42! southw Fling’s alle He charged with transpe Following finding gallons of intoxics house, the of Johnson, colored es, and Walter R N street northwest possession. Explosion of ment of a ne street northeast, ation by Capt. with person an a i Is Arrested. zro anstield and 1st d Walt the prer boi hous in at the bas 1160 oli and Lieu view ging | natured ptleg fluid. following and the a man giving | Chamberliin of vesterday. Occupants of a neigh house told police of the cx 1 Treated at Hospital, Shortly afterward it | that Chamberlain was treated | Casualty Hospital for scvere burn {and police also were told that sev |eral men were on the: premises {the time of the blow-up. Chamb {1ain was placed under police guar! !at Casualty Hospital and his nam appears on the ninth precinct hlotter | as being held for inve ation, i, Lieut Davis and Sergt. McQuade of the vice squad and Hevenue Agent | Amis early this morning mede fou arrests for alleged violations of ti Volstead act. The defendants and | charges against them were recorded {as follows: Basil Maynard, col | ored janitor, 2059 Connecticut avent northwest, ‘illegal possession Switzer, 935 I street northwest, ir | pordng’ ene pint of liyuor; | Robert Steele, Kennedy northeast, two charges: of selling; Earl Bryan Willlams, 320 D- streed northeast, selling. ymn: e started the the explosion of ubseque his in th was learnes