Evening Star Newspaper, July 15, 1924, Page 2

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' DARK HORSE TALK “FORPARTY LEADER Davis Conferring With Demo- = crats Over Selection of Campaign Manager. POLK AND SHAVER OUT Osndidate Wants Decision Made Before Retiring to Prepare Acceptance Spuc}\. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 15.—Choice of chairman @r the national Democratic edmmittee has become o difficult that John W. Davis, the party’s presidential Bominee, today called in four of the Darty's foremost leaders to help him pifk & man for the post. The candidate held a lengthy conference with Cordell Hyll of Tennessee, present chalrman of the national committee; Norman E. Mack of Buffalo, George White of Ohio and Daniel C.-Roper. Many names were given lengthy con- sideration, Mr. Davis reported later. But no choice had been made, he said, thus lending credence to persitdent re- GEORGE E. HEBBARD. to police headquarters. .. Two.narcotics agents were credited with the coup which led to the dis- 31,000,000 1N DRUGS SEIZED; SHIP HELD 100 U. S. Agents Board ital- ian Liner After Member of Crew Falls in Trap. By the Aumoriated Press. NEW YORK, July 15.—One hundred customs agents remained aboard the Italia-America liner Duilio, early to- day, continuing their search for con- traband drugs, when, after a night d, which netted federal narcotic agents $1,000,000 worth of contra- band and nine prisoners, it was re- ported that a similar amount of nar- cotics remained hidden aboard the vessel. Capt. Francesco Schissine of the Duilio, seven of his chief oficers, and Grata Irtura, ship's plumber, who, cording to the raiders, confessed smuggling, were taken into custody. Capt. Schissino and his fellaw officers protested they knew nothing of the nareotics when they were awakepned at the height of the raid and escorted covery of 600 packages of narcotics concealed about the first-class cabins ports that when the chatrmanship is) 0. R. Davis, Who “Found’ | the liner. After having, as they . R. 'y filled—prcbably by Friday—the new oc. cupant will be a “dark horse” whose name has not publicly appeared among the long list of aspirants. Preparing Headquarters. Permanent headquarters for Mr. Davis were being prepared at the Mur- Self Here, Is Improving at Gallinger. Charles Raymond Davis, thirty, Co- ray Hill Hotel today, for occupancy to- | lumbus, Ohio, aphasia victim, who was morrow. Frank Kent, political corre- |able to recall his identity in this city reported. negotiated with the plumber for the purchase of the contraband for $110.000, they secretly summoned a score of narcotic and customs agents, who swarmed over the Dullio at her North River pier and made the seizures and arrests. Order Search of Ship. Before the raid was ordered Irtura spondent of the Baltimore Sun, jolned lyesterday, and who appealed to the |had been induced to accumulate the the nominee's staff, to assist him |police to assist him, spent a restfui|$00 hidden packages of contraband throughout the campatgn. night at Gallinger Hospital and his|®0d to accept a $6,000 roll of bills Among those who called ipon Mr.|befogsed brain seemed accordingly |™2de to look like $110,000. A syste- Davis at the home of Frank L. Polk to- |benefited. He s willing to remain in | Matic search of rugs, furniture and day were Davis Hunter Miller, treasurer |the hospital- until word of the McAdoo drive for the Democratic | from his home. nomination; H. Maynard Kimberland of is received |Ottings of the vessel's passenger quarters was ordered, and 100 cus- Davis Is anxious to return home to|'0M3 men were assigned to the job New York and Wheellng, W. Va., and | b with his wife and child. He would | ¥2e? it was reported by a “go- Edward Anderson Alderman, president |;:ot venture to say how his wife would | P°tWeen,” whe first put the narcotic of the University of Virginia. Favorites Ellminated. Mr. Davis, at the home of Frank L. |'? Polk, indicated that he desired to set. | tAching a prospective customer to tle the chairmanship problem before |drive: Today the patient Friday. It also appeared probable receive him after % 2 since July 2, when, he stated, he was| ™llion dollars’ worth of contraband while | ad been smuggled in by the Duilio. an automobile accident his wanderings was able to agents on the trail, that another According to this “go-bebtween,” whom the agents encountered sev- eral months ago in a Broadway caba- that neither Mt. Polk, Clem Shaver of |FePeat only ‘he story he told yester-| % the narcotics, bearing the trade- Fairmont, W. Va., nor others men- |42y, being unable to recall anything marke of London chemists, were des- i) tioned for the position would be |Of his wandering about the country. U:ffa;";l::::”_'"“‘;;’; ‘h""““"‘.;.':’ chosen He also ir unable to recall where he A% ounos. 0! ~ “I am considering a number of per- sons,” Mr. Davis said. “I have not yot.” ‘How about Frank Polk?" he w: “Frank is a good man,” he replied swith a smile. Polk Not Aspiraat. identity. asked. tomorrow. obtained the khakl euit he ‘wearing. Davis Is being cared for under the offered the chairmanship to anybody |supervision of the Board of Charities. Letters were sent to relatives madiately atter e Qinclosed his | thorities, Irtura disclosed that he had dt was learned that Mr. Polk. a | GEORGE E. HEBBARD close friend and legal associate of Mr. Davis, although he will, doubtless, take an active part in the campaign a§ member of an advisory body yet to be: formed, Is not an aspirant for the chairmanship of the national com- |of Mrs. Cox is registered in the name | MY Polakoff that he cut the painting mittee. of William A. Cox, 819 Fifth street|!? four parts. Two of the pieces he Another object .of .tha conferences | northwest, and that after thé name of | “"UESled lere .o ihe Duilio’s last Wis to obtain information of con- |Miss Holther as Miss Harriet Holther, | '0Y28¢ having closed a deal to sell was | Duilio arrived from Genoa yestérday. Confesses Bringing Painting. Besides confessing that he smug- Im- | 8led the narcotics, according to au- brought to America on the Duilio, in It is thought by officials of the|an unsuccessful attempt to sell them, board that relatives of the man may hurry here. two sections of a painting by Mich angelo which he sald had been stolen from a cathedral in northern Italy a year ago, and for which the Italian COMMITS SUICIDE | E2ycrnment had offered a $100,000 (Continued from First Page.) Irtura is alleged to have told As- sistant United States District Attor- ditions in various sections of the |1735 H street northwest. ceuntry—information which Mr. Da- At the Nevius establishment it was vig expects to use in preparing hisno- | s3id that the women were friends of | 1004#Ted, 80 he took the pleces back tification speech during a ten-day | tne family. visit at the summer home of Mr. and boro, Me., beginning next Friday. fThe notification - ceremonies will is pow occupied by a sister. Conferring Witk Leader. Among those “who conferred with Mr. Davis yesterday were Senator Moore of Ohio, Titus Alexander of Lgs Angeles, chairman of the Na-|Rockville High School. tiohal Negro Democratic Assoclation;(in the merchant tailoring business |aPPropriated by tbe last legislature Norman H. Davis, former undersec-|since 1900, having served as presi- |for carrying on promotion work in dent of the Merchant Tailors’ Ex- |support of Philippine independence, change one year and as its secrefary |he announced today. . The ground on He had also been |Which he acted is that the measure is 1BTH STREET MERCHANTS |15, cven zoors, Bo hat sioe beon [whicn be actet & ASK CHANGE IN PAVING |}etional Merchant Tatlors' Exchange. | The question of Wright's power to retary of state, and Cordell Hull. e ‘Want Seventy-Foot Commissioners Will Give Con- sideration to Plea, A committee of 13th stjeet business work now in progress of widening that thoroughfare between F and I |Sonic Order, streets. make the roadway eighty feet wide Columbia Commandery, No. 2, K.|The suspension of further payments ith a fiteen-foot sidewalk. The 13th | of pay: PR & Ditae P of Albert Pike Consistory, A. A.|under this act, therefore, is made missioners to change this to & sev-|g. R, and of Almas Temple of the|final, and no further payments arising street property owners ask the Com- |T.; Bannockburn Golf Club, Coraner Nevitt viewed the body at Mrs. Charles Dana Gibbson, at Isles- | (e Nevius undertaking establishment | O W00, represented s Madonna and and gave a certificate of suicide. Hebbard is survived by his widow e e e rartoere, . V| aponrd la sarvived by bis widow | L) IPINO INDEPENDENCE abput August 1 in the home in which |y, S A, now at Camp Meade, Md. M, Davis lived as a boy and which | Mrs Hebbard was sald to have been on a shopping tour when the suicide was committed. Bora im Rockville. Mr. Hebbard was fifty years of age, Robert L. Owen of Oklahoma, Goy. M. | haying been born December 1, 1873, at E.jTrapp of the same state, Isadore | Rockville, Md., the son of John Mar- | B the Associated Press. B.! Dockweller, national committee- | snall Hebbard and Charlotte H. Heb- man from Californis; Edmond H.|pard. The deceased was a graduate of the | N8, first issued March 15, suspending He had been |Payments from the million pesos fund He was a director of the American |suspend the payments was referred Commercial and Savings Bank and a [to the Attorney General of the United Roadway. | member of a riumber of local organ- |States, who, however, upheld the in- izations, including the Board of Trade, |sular official. the City Club, the Kiwanis Club, the | Auditor Wright's ruling making the the Kal- |suspension permanent say: orama Citizens’ Association, the Sons| “If the legislature exceeds the pow- Sien called on the District Commis- | of the American Revolution and the |er conferred on it by Congress in the sioners today and requested them to |Vaughn Class and Vaughn make a last-minute change in the | Cglvary Baptist Church. enty-foot roadway with a twenty-foot | yyueic Shrine. ° sidewalk on each side. The Commissioners advised the com- Cohen, that if all the owners will ‘agree to bear any additional cost that may be incurred by the engineer de- | COOLIDGE PARDONS TWO IN RAIL STRIKE RIOT ‘ w. n . 3. WANTS ‘PADLOCK’ OPENED | *- ws“:"o“‘:: :fl‘m’r‘:“‘“‘ Shrewsbury, Mass, Bride of partment in rearranging its plans they will favorably consider the re- quest. Lunchroom Proprigtor Denies Dry Law Breach. Henry Simms, proprietor of Mr. Hebbard married Miss Ottilia C. | will be passed in audit.” inittee, which was headed by Myer | Miller. —_— Pending Appeal. ed the District Supreme Court to|J. Sullivan of Mount Ida, Va., te a “padlock” injunction recent- [to ‘the penitenti l'n secured against him by the prohi- | riots connected bition unit. Through Attorneys Whe- | strike in 1922. & O'Connell, the petitioner says 1% dges not mell intoxjcants and has ne intention of violating the prohibi- runs only a lunchroom. hotels—for a copy of— ‘The investigation which led to the by of New York, writer and poet. w. u‘!‘i‘al.deellup thag three years ago | with an attack hé conducted a cabaret at the place | Judson R and had difficulty with patrons who | strike. Eight brought l:;lr h\;wnullitq‘:_:r..zzt nho‘: g:wl“l-ult mur‘;w:‘enmu:m ‘:ul: The couple will sail for a visit to this -and out on @Rcontinn aitne Coveaire: Paris later this month. Present this Coupon and 15¢ at The Star Busi- ness Office—or the newsstand of any of the leading The Star’s Auto Route Distance Atlas —as advertised in today’s Star. - 1 to be sent by mal, add 3c for postage Club - of | passage of any act, that act is mot In the Ma-|the act of the people through their he was a member of|duly elected representatives, but the La Fayette Lodge, No. 19, F. A. A. M_; |act of individuals who falsely speak The engineer department plans to|of Columbla Chapter, No. 1, R. A. M;|and act in the name of $he people. lary for participa mn‘lfi or ion with ~ the railrcad them at $500 each. But the deal fell through, Irtura is reported to have to Genoa and left them there. The stolen Michelangelo, painted child, he said. DISBURSEMENTS ENDED Wright, Holding Appropriation Unconstitutional, Makes Sus- pension Permanent. MANILA, July 15.—Insular Auditor Wright has made permanent his rul- from claims growing out of this act RICH WIDOW, 53, MARRIES THIRD TIME, POET OF 28 Mrs. Henrietta Hobbs Beal of Harold Xreb Friend. SHREWSBURY, Mass, July 15.— Pardons were irsued yesterday by (It was learned last night that Mrs. President Coolidge for Robert W. Sis- | Henrietta Hobbs Beal of Waterlane lunchroom at 913 Wourth street, has | eon of 660 Kenyon street and Maurice | Farm here, wealthy widow of Maj. Howard W. Beal, who was killed in the World War, was quletly married last Thursday to Harold Kreb Friend it ‘The marriagé license states that it is Mrs. Beal's third marriage, and gives her age as fifty-three and that of the bridegzoom. as twenty-eight TEXAN SLAIN WITH AX. Dallas Business Man Said to Have Aided Officers Hunting Italan. DALLAS, Tex., July 15.—The body of Alexander A. Bevacqua, forty-five, ownqer of the Dallas Sand and Gravel Company, was found late yasterday under a 'bridge near here. Polics said he been killed by & blow from an ax and his body transported for some " distance. Bevacqua was last seen early Ssturday nmight. Detectives investigating the case said Bevacqus tesntly ‘adiisted Ca- THE EVENING STAR; WASHINGTON, D. G yesterday, and Judge McIntyre has re-| mont of the n;’::::;:‘ ?&!eh are the subject of | the formal governmental relations be- | der arrest, charging them with trans- | manhood in teaching mathematical TWO DROWN AS CANOE HAESADS VT | e — Orders Case of Former Sol- dier Expedited in Bureau, Makes No Charges. While a flood of messages from vetersns and official publications of ex-service men condemn the action of Thomss M. Deaver of Texss, who with Ris fists recently attacked Di- rector Hines of ‘the Vetsrans’ Bureau Gen. Hines not only has failed to file any charges against the man for the ..unprovoked assualt, but P has gjvan orders that’the man’s case be "expedjted in every possible wa p Letters have been exchanged be- {woen the veteran and Director Hines t The port of Santes, Brusil, scar Sac ‘Panio. capital of province held by rebels, may be sttacked soon, sdvices today indicat: GAS HERE 22 CENTS; A. H. BREWOOD, was learned today, in which the |mewly elected president TEXAS CITY SEEKS ADMEN'S SESSION Sixty Houston Residents in London Determined to Get Convention Next Year. By the Associated Press. LONDON, July 15.—The Prince of Wales as the chief guest of the 1935 international advertising convention 48 the plan of sixty residents of Hous- ton, Tex., who are busy here trying to get next year's convention for their home town. They have announced their plan for 2ccommodating and entertaining their English delegates should Houston win, and they assert they will invite the prince to make the trip, adding the |that they have an intimation that he will consider the proposition 12N ALBANY, N. ¥ Two Cents of District Price, However, Is Tax—Tourists Feel Local Costs. Campaign Body Will Be In- formal, With Changes as Situation Demands. said: am very sorry that an ac- count af our encounter in your office yesterday should have been published in the newspapers. Apelogises for Act. “As I review the matter tn my mind I realize that the worry and anx- fety, on top of my present physical Washington motorists 'paying 22 cents a gallon, for gagojine are 8§ cents above the price of 13 ‘cents a gallon in Albany, N. Y.' Two of the 32 cents which the local motorist pays, however, are the District tax, leaving a straight -price of 20 cents The Republican sdvisory committee | while here seeking to have m: in.the forthcoming campaign, as con- | adjusted, caused this outbreak. I ceived by President Coolidge, will be | Want to tender my apologies to you 7 in this matter. an'Informat body with a shitting per- | ' GO0% TS L 1l fotier of reply, sonnel, representative of various sec- | which was sent to the veteran here tions and.points of view. at tnenflmell "Iandnm s said it had 5 i been “difficult for me to conceive Mr. Coolidge will discuss campaign il Ll ot a gallon. plans tomorrow with William M. |ioward yol that should have caused cart men own- Tourlsts coming through Washing- | Butler, the national cnairman, but it | the outbreak. Livitiewjof it 10 L serd ton report that only at few p in| s probable that no announcement the east and middle west, and.those P 7 assailant apologised, and the general |Natiomal Engravers’ Associatio clared: “Nothing that has trans- | semmmmm——————— pired will in any way prevent the bu- reau from rendering a fair and im- ® Vs ¥ 5 partial decision in your case.” The case, it was learned, Is now before the central board of appeals. Deaver in his letter to Gen. Hines condition during the past !h.reey'::‘k: Regulation Limits Push Cart Men to Few Places in Congested Area. The Houston boosters, however, have not stopped at royalty, and are going to invite the principal cabinet min- isters of whatever government is in power in 1925. The plan calls for the chartering of a large hotel in Houston for the use - of the Englishmen, and the transfor- mation of the hostelry into a typical English institution. The delegates from the Texas city declare that the next convention seems destined to go to their home town. Keep Up Propaganda. The Texans, who arrived directly from the southern port in a chartered steamer, have kept up such a contin uous clamor that the opposition, if there 15 any, has not been heard from In fact, most of the delegates have been made to believe that there is no other city in the United States ca- In another effort to curb the ac-|pable of handling such a convention When the presidents of the adver- “1 have slways endesvored” said|town section, the District Commis. | t/SIN€ clubs meet this evening to de- cide dpon a recommendation for next will be made then or later as to the | G°R- Hines, “to treat all ex-service [sioners today enacted & police regula- | year's convention city, they will find men, especially those who are dis- . thit most of t e isolated, are gasoline priees equal to | membership of the advisory commit- | abled, with the greatest courtasy amd | HOB desigmating certain - areas to | th st of the members have been or in excess of the price {n Washing- ;_-:. beca: : kindras: ton except in Virginia, whers the|The body is expected to have a more q state levies a 3-cent tax and gasoline | Or less permanent nucleus, with Re- :::??n':xpv:c?d?“ WEE) b0 B Wik u?.h“ Chw wity. sells generally for 23 cents a gallon. | Publican leaders called in from time | “I can assure you that I am glad to e The Maryland price of gasoline is usually the same as that in Wash- ington, with a 3-cent state tax added. ‘Wholesales at 18 Centa. plans and special problems. guer You. feal One of the subjects to be considered | transpired will in any way prevent Lai holesal gasoline h e At tanne ¢ i rge wholesalers o ne here | manager invol etails of the are selling gasoline today from tank | Acation ceremonies <o be hald here on |1 have given instructions to have it % Evsoline: o e | the evening of August 18, expedited in every possible way. TS retsllcriinpurcs o ' tan ceut | Graegos sl basin moeician ha na; el e s el e e - ress he wi leliver at that time, in- margin, bringing the price to the |augurating the Rapublican national|wirily emetreonATerican Veterans | east corner of 8th consumer with the tax added up to 22 | S¥mpaign, The retirement of Charles B. War- cents. ren ot Michigan CfsCarles B avar- |its latest issue an editorial under the | Vernon place. The retail price of gasoline in Al- |Mexico, formally anmounced last night bany, N. Y. dropping to 12 cents a|in Mexico City, w: gallon, represents a decrease of 10| fiateTient tod: M cents in less than a week. Inent part in the campaign. He will| Byreau thizs week was a blow the Untfl today the average price|Dea member of the advisory commit- | cause of the disabled man. There was tee. but the exact scope of his duties | nothing that was herolc, but much | Ufacturers’ Association. throughout the Capital was 18 cents. | wil] not be determined -until he ar. 1 1 = About a year ago, when the Senate|rives here late this month GRS TERD o GOt threatened an inquiry Into the cost Bufhum Sees Preatdent. of gasoline, the price dropped from 24 cents to 19 cents, some retailers | Mexico, advised selling at 18 cent . to commit the party to a definite Dollcy with regard to water conser- Since that time the price has risen |y yion 4550 "cOntrel and reclamation Reports that Deaver's case had age a cut of 1 cent a gallon became tyH-.u‘r rights along the bord letter to Deaver, dated July 10. effective in Washington and sur- | He said he received the impression rounding territory. ARNSTEIN MAY RETURN | 3£t i $1,000,000 IN BOND LOOT|>™"**.2x=r .~ 91,000, PORTER SLAYS WIFE Courts Negotiate With Prisoner £gr |, " AND TAKES OWN LIFE Recovery of Stolen Wall Street Securities. Woman Dies in Hospital After Shot in 'h’:plo—l)omsfle Trou- By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 15.—Negotiations -bles Are Blamed, William Hill colored, a Pullman intended to lead to the recovery of more than $1,000,000 worth of securi- ties stolen in the 35,000,000 Wall| FrOlem HIL colored. a Pullman street bond thefts of 1919 and 1920 wite' sl Bocend and Beaton sirests were opened today between repre- night and then killed himself.| 1ieut Davis of the vice squad, need sentatives of the federal and state|Ths Woman died early this morning| TR0, O ity et at Freedmen's Hospital from a bullet courts and Jules W. (Nicky) Arn-|wound in the temple. Dom:uuec shop at the northwest corner of D hibit it entirely. lential candidgt: trafic congestion, Wonders What ‘Sergt. Davis’ | Zcs o ma patiic’ of Liquor; Finds Out. stein, who was convioted and sent to {roubles were given as the cause of | gixth streets, opposite the Police Court g o g0 e oop on "l (L tend Amnesty to Republican Chiefs. the federal penitentiary at Leaven-|Hills action. = raduste of How. | Shortly atter 1 o'clock this afternoon. worth. ard University and was 22 years old.| While in the chair a bevy of four Arnstein’s attorney announced that| She had been married about two young women came into the barber she the prisoner’s motion for a dismissal a‘::::‘::a'm" 2 ’:\’lr:d cn’-;'xlc;l 10f | asked of. the head barber for that bottls of an indictment still pending against | Sne lived at 136 Seaton strest Loi|of Coca Coia that they had left on ice. | By the Associated Press. him had been withdrawn today. This| her husband resided at 2025 Thir-|The barber produced a pint bottle of of its informal nature. |kindness. I do not recall that I, in | Which street enders must locations designated follow: to time to give advice on particular |learn that after thinking the matter |West side of §th street between E and| g,y was partially devoted to liste impartial decision in your case, and |ing on Little B street, between 10th | tablishing a new economic life and 1lth streets; from the the west curb line of 10th ‘street; north side of 1 street from 10 to 11th street: 1 streets, 100 Weekly, one of the most ardent cham- | feet on each street and west side of 7th plons of the disabled men, prints in |street, between K street and Mount | ¢he convention seasions close. Thi south- gaption’ “Ifurting ‘Disatled — Not | “These " locations were nes,” in whicl e al upon e | fodl in onsultation followed by the | general is deplored, and, it is de- | Brown of the . first at the White House | clared: “Every blow struck in the | taguiation was enasted D would Bave a prom- | office of the director of the Veterans’ | o787 “r 00, "0 SO il G, Were Barred Altogether. sault.” Several months ago the Commission- Gen. Hines has received numerous|ers enacted a regulation letters from veterans in all parts of | street venders entirely from that area e 1s he had Senator Bursum. Republican, New |(he " country regretting the attack |referred to as the congested section | iN¢ long and hard struggle he bha Coolidge today |ypon him, and expressing the strong- |in the traffic regulations. uch sections of the cit Uniid Thi cided that the Commissioners could 3 a Would Think of Her Bottle |oid, it mmissioners could | o 0 onest advertising between n venders, they have the power to regu- |1ions, so that the public merchan late their activities.” i | DE VALERA TO BE FREED WITH OTHER LEADERS |25 the'sme thing with tho peace of confine | buttonholed for Houston and have been the victims of the heavy blasts departed from this rule. | themselves within the congested 5ecs| for Texas propaganda. Second Day Program. The second day of the convention .o,xg;t:ud your- | F'; east side of 7th street, e¥tending|ing to advice by three members of tho uly $. me Beging Speech Seon. . | assure you that nothing that has southwardly from drinking fountain | late conservative government. Stan- immediately south of B .street: the bureau from rendering a fair and | space of 150 feet on the lot front-| effect advertising would have in ¢ a | ley Baldwin, Sir Robert Horne and £ Philip Lloyd-Greame, on the dirc sound prosperity in the nations Europe. The delegates again filled the con ference rooms for this morning’s sea- sion, which is the last general meet- ing 'until Thursday afternoon, when afternoon and Wednesday the delc agreed upon | gates will attend 25 sectional meet with Capt. | Sntse will 5 ings. P The he general session this mornini s the result | was under the chairmanship of Lord Leverhulme, the s0ap king of England Com: sioners by the Merchants and Man-|and the owner and the developer of her largest chain-store system. Lord Leverhulme, as one of the first Eng- lishmen to understand the value of advertising and as one of the first to DArring | yei)ize advertising, described in detail fought in England before the manu- In a re-|facturers and public would even agree est condemnation for such violence. |port to the Commissioners today Cor- m%‘é{f.id" il: advantages. el ase, 122 | poration Counsel Stephens pointed out slowly until it reached a price of 33 | in the sauthwest Inclading meesea |Deen “closed” were answered at the | e court failed: to sustain this cents several months aso. -Four days | tion of a treaty with Mexico (o clari. | DUTeAU bY the text of Gen. Hines'|regulation, holding in substance that > while the ‘Commissioners could regu-{, The 9€OFRER SOOS TR ant &eve late street vending, they could not pro- | {0 Cheers for Baldwin. The delegates stood up and gave cheers when he arose to speak on the Bk W S 1 Coolidge probably would s bly,” h . latform. During his address, which ing left to Charles G. Dawes, the vice should have authority and power not | Without frills, he told of the knowl- other - only to regulate but to prohibit fi edge of advertising he had picked up 4 ons s y:' ey deemn a5 hena"of the Board of trade, as of the public chancellor of the exchequer and as the actlyities of these venders: Such |prime minister.y » ¥ proper in the interest |' authority should be requested ot Con- : f ARRES UF Fflu Eress. With the Increase in traffo in |advertising in the business world at Mr. Baldwin referred to the need o the downtown section. the operation |the present day. He said he had of these venders greaily adds to the |twice been slain by tariffs, one of discommodes and |Which was the McKinley tariff, but works to the annoyance and disturb- |that at both times he had been able It will be noted |10 recuperate with the aid of adver- that while the Court of Appeals de- | tiging. What the world needed today was politicians and governments would know ~each other for their honest worth. He saw the possibilities of world peace through the league of nations and suggested there might the commercial world. The former premier said his term of office as chancellor of the ex- chequer had convinced him that ad- vertising was a necessary thing to business. Now that he had graduated to be 2 business director, he was working on this principle. He knew what ad- DUBLIN, July 15.—The release of | vertising had done in the United tndictment charges Arnstein with | leenth street. Hill, 46 years old, was | (iquor the giris had left there, which he |Bamonn De Valera, ‘Austin Stack and [States, and he was out to follow that & former resident of Norfolk, Vi Coroner Nevitt deemed ::' |nq.'um delivered to one of the girls. unnecessary. criminally receiving stolen property. He was convicted on & charge of conveying stolen securities from New York to Washington. = Arnstein was said to have offered to recover more than $1,000,000 worth ot the securities on condition that the indictment be dismissed. With- A Ot e O arnmroins | p.The need for closer acquaintance |sald they wero olng over to Police upon Dby attorneys for Arnstein's|between the peoples of the Amerfcan saying they were going to creditors as & certain indication that | continent was emphasized by Dr. Leo girl, holding the bol‘llle high Abd': State government. URGES CLOSER RELATIONS |Bsreh Suvis ot e vice sauaa woui do if he would see me with this? ha, ba," Dr. Rowe Declares Better Acquaint- mzd. ance Between Americas Needed. Arvested by Officers. the prisoner had:decided to give all | 8 Rowe, director)general of the Pan- | his shave finished, went out and called | position to the present American Union, In a lects Sei the information he possessed regard- | the summer sorool of Georgs wroei. | satsmobiic driven by the girls. ing the missing securities. Argu-|ington Unive ments on the motions were heard ity, at the rch. ke on “The Devel lations of the v.u‘:’fi psychological moment Lieut. Davis States With Latin America.” While |and Sergt. McQuad came out of the Police Court bullding | his capture. and entered the machine, and at that tries of Latin ‘America are in a most bition la They were taken to No. satistactory condition, he said, there precinct, where they gave the fol- ble. b at the summer school lect: t Seeks Injunction to Halt-Hearings | 3% br Tiger: smonssiors Sty | acs 5o for Tenants of Chateau Thierry o i SRR LB e | s pushing In Buslaing. | Ame e be BLOODHOUNDS REVEAL wisBR eSS, A0S G| WHIPS BOY TO DEATH. in the District Supreme Court by ? tean %‘fa’,’? ‘tp.’r‘{:.?i&"‘::: ‘tells_the | Georgia Negro in Jail After Beat- ocourt the commission bas scheduled ing Son. in Canal-—Infant Is Miss- S e Sine Tor = reduction T of his tenants asking for WAYCROSS, Ga, July 15.—J ing Also. Middleton, negro farmer of Ware | By the Ameciated Press. 75 J °fflr:n:l:llml the commission has no County, is held in jall here after a| RICHMOND, Va., July 15.—The coroner's jury investigating the dea: ty to function and that unless Fetrain by the cOBFt.may ot to his r paradle loss. He_is represented ‘{;. ttorney W. J. Dow. . * JOHN N. REES-DIES. Retired D. C. Employs. Contracts 3 Tllness in Florida. was carri 2 strung’ him to a rafter, stripped pfm Y . terda; John Neniah Rees, seventy-five| , . ciotning except a cotton shirt | oricrnerty I¢ft Rer bome yesterday years old, & retired District employe| gnq dealt'an unmerciful beating With | * Seareh for the mother and chil and‘s l.:::‘-g Nere Ab.oté mntiy-,au & horsewhip'from which the son died. | was started late night, when yeArs, last Midaleton is said to have told the {erday, following an sheriff he was Duniahing his son for | Hre “Goris af fhiled to rsturn home. tracted on a recent to Florids. yesterday of the negro’s son, Arce; fourteen years old, returned a ver- dict’ declaring that the bo, death resulted from *s whipping and sub-|all-night search by Richmond and sequent treatment” by his father. It is charged that the negrd tied i 2 hands “abov trace of Mry. Chris - the - boy's e his head, e ‘xo thtu‘;:th':r of a merchand! broker here, was found in the James River and Ka- nawha Canal this morning after an Henrico County police.” The authorities were unable to Japanese Diet. other political leaders now in prison ‘As they were leaving the shop the |has been decided upon by the Free De Valera has been in prison since *in which all the girls |[August of lost year, while Stack has|Motors Export Company, who spoke been held since April, 1923. 1 1n releasing De Valera, the Free|in the industrial werld who could nooanns | “Fwenty minutes later the four girls |difficulties to the Free State up until Born in New York, De Valera re- Dlaced them un- | turned to Ireland and spent his early to the fore as a leader of the Repub- r is “a very great need for closer ac- [lowing names and address licans in the outbreak of Easter, 1 intance.” On Ly - . Girl Lose Lives in Cas-’ OWNER OF APARTMENTS ;| 32" diiRa, w28, KamdtEtihiniangs |, BIihins SR methr B 118 cne years whicn conowsa tne| 27 224 L twenty-one, 721 13th’ street; Agnes|tall ascetic-faced~.Irisaman fought SUES RE"T COMMISSION | The seneral functions of the fed- |Shaw, twenty-one, 1904 Benning road | unceasingly _against s eral bureau of education were out-|northeast, d Eleanor Dracums.|When the Free State was created, - [lined by Commisstoner John J. Tigert |twenty-two years old, 810 13th street. [ he turned his energies against the ‘The police say these names are all |new system, carrying through the battle cry “The republic be carried on!"” until he was pectedly captured. e broke away from the party of Michael Collins and Arthur Grimis |bury, Pa. and Clifford Crosby, 18 du: DROWNING OF WOMAN |éuring the negotiations of the Anglo- (years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas irish treaty and strongly opposed ita ratification. e : 0 headed the opposition and consistent- |&d the Casselman River, near Body of Mrs. J. B. Christian Pound |1y insisted that the Irish Repubidic |Grantsvills, Md., late Sunday night still was in existence. the negotistions are all nop-negotia- twoen the United States and the coun- nnln‘ liquor in violation of the pro-| geience in Irish schools until he came 3 4 3 rule. body of Mrs. John B. Christian, wite | JAPanese. Law Abolishing Pro- vision Passes the Diet. By the Assaciated Press. . TOKIO, July 15.—The gevernment |OVer- DBill revising the Japan iaw and abolishing “d::l. ,.m‘:','r’. search and yesterday morning, 12 was paseed today by both houses of the |hOurs after the tragedy, the body ot TO PROMOTE GENERAL. were traced by blood-| McAlexander, War Hero, Will Get |Crosby's body was taken to his home. example and to see what it would do in_England 8ir Philip Lioyd-Greame then de- scribed his ideas on the chances for the development of advertising in Europe. He was followed by J. D. Mooney, president of the General at length of the need for new leaders assume political power and work for Leaving the barber shop, the girls |gtate will be freeing a leader whose the honest betterment of peoples control of the extreme Republican|He :saw advertising as a means of fi"v"e"h the once-over. Davis, having | forces is unduestioned- and "whose op- | developing such leaders. and believed that the economic life of the nation in| woyld be benefited by advertising as gt. McQuade'and waited by & D& | 1rejand has been a source of grave |time went by. 0. C. Harn, advertising manager of the New York Lead Company, was the last speaker of the session. GOES OVER CATARACT * selman River When Panic Overcomes Party. the | Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. CUMBERLAND, Md,, July 15.—Miss un- | Louise Harding, aged 15, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Harding, Salis- e | Crosby, Meyersdale, Pa., were drown? when thsir canoe went over the falls. Misé Martha, Patton and John Bynon DUAL NATIONALITY ENDED |ot salisbury, who were in the canoe, managed ‘to make the shore. They gave the alarm at tbe camp. Miss Harding jumped from the canoc when it approached the falls. Crosby jump- ed to save her and both were carried Hundreds joined in an all-night Crosby was found about 30 fect be- low the fall in four feet of water. The water where Miss Harding leaped is abaut five feet deep, but the swift current ma swimming difficult. running away from home. houngs from the hose to the bdanks Miss Harding’s father arrived and o Fineral services . :{,‘,fiéfio?&' and when it was Second Star. jolned in the search for her body, Moers tha 6 Woman | - Brig. Gen. Ulysses G. M 3 red lat E ment, 1337 10th . VIRGINIAN IS NAMED. |bed.eftared tho'canal. the water was | now Siasiomed oe Fore Dasai ey, [which was recovered late yesterday. A0 drained from it and the body found. n at 2 o'clock. . Intermen! :::flmn private - ‘in- _ Cedar Hni e Y urvived By thres chilaren, |J- G Sbaffer, Wytheville, Bocomes Edward has been selected y ot the six- | cancy ca Theodore M. and ¥lorence sl of this city. g vacanc wife died in 1908. .L&‘ S AT C e n torney Asks $35,000 for Injury. tor the western district of Virginia. Otiver L. Humble; Jr,, Js named de- ; P fendant in a suit t »f.hom*ns.n! nmu-. filed in 8i n & tonch o ,c.'n. R e Fittn aad Gnersden atr Gen. to the mili .. Gen _Hutc! for promotion to ‘g}"."';:?'“l‘l water in thelrank of Major General to fill the va- |it to the surface. In thg evening. by the retirement July | however, a party of tourists noticed are and lllt: U. 8. District ‘m_. 4 ' 20 of Maj. Gen. Grote Hutcheso! . The the grade of tin y in f to death with the|prigadier General will r of Wytheville, was ap- " igadier Gener; Cool today o promo! of Col. Ewli tu'-l.:: ‘dlltflll:l.‘. xander Exploding .dynamite failed to bring the body floating near a bridge and he | directéd attention to-it. . Previous to this the girl's father became frenzied and, taking a rake, waded ott into He com: 4he 18th-infantry, the |the river in an attempt to find it of [ 38th infantry &nd the 180th infantry (He was rescued from the swift-cur- a| brigade, in France and received the | Distinguithed Service Cross. Col. Booth now is In command of the Fourth Cavalry, Fort McIntosh, rent. % ‘Woodbridge, England's old- % | oat meaciioing. lawyer, who has just ‘died: at-the age- of ninety-four, pracs 'or promotion to jor Gen-| ticed his profession in the same tc=wm foee trial. for seventy-three years.

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