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COUNSEL DECLARES DISTRICT DEMANDS TWO MORE COURTS (Continued from First Page.) CATLE SHORTACE PREDCTINS RECUR Era of High Meat Prices Seen With Slaughtering of Breeding Animals. possible for justice to be meted out in every case under present congested condlitions. 1t is not the fault of the courts. They cannot do the impossible. They must have help. “It is an actual fact that traffc of- fenders are deliberately demanding jury trials because they hope thus to evade punishment. They never expect their cases to reach the jury, or if they do they feel confident the wit- nesses will not appear against them after so long a delay. And, unfortu- nately, many of them have had thelr expectations fulfilled in the past. Un- | less extra court facilitles are pro- vided they will in the future.” ) K BY DAVID LAWRENCE. al predictions are will face an era ices in meats and a cattle hence because of breeding being ] ) nals being slaughter. The dapression in the 1ive steck Industry Cites Jan TSt Auee: v of mo little concern here, a8 the| . Mr. Hart recalled a traffic case ket is glutted amd prices are | he once handled in which the de- Gown. TIndeed, this is the only phase | fendant asked for a jury trial, with a view to delaying indefinitely trial of his case. “I knew he was guilty, and 1 knew why he demanded a jury trial, so I made speclal arrangements ti ricultural situation which i= cuous in the discussions of 1 relief at the moment. hi House Members Want Cross- By the Ausociated Press. Willlam E. Baker of the United States District Court in the mnorthern dis- trict of West Virginia and of his re- effort to hear complete evidence on either side, mittee of the House of Representa- tives, formed by the committee before its THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 1924, (CORRUPTION CASE RULING ON BANKRUPT ACCUSED OF TRICKERY Supreme Court Holds Man Who Obtained Loans by Falsifying Not Entitled to Discharge. A bankrupt who obtains loans from a bank upon false representa- tions is not entitled to discharge from bankruptcy, the Supreme Court held yesterday, in a case brought by the trustees of Abraham Lustgarten ot the Federal Courts of New York City. The court announced that the loans having been obtained by Lustgarten from a bank upon false statements concerning his financial condition, he was not entitled to discharge from bankruptcy. It reversed the lower courts and ordered the case back to the District Court for a new trial. TRINITY AUXILIARY PLANS CARD PART EVIDENGE SOUGHT Section of Accusations and Defense. . PARKERSBURG, W. Va., Nowember A “cross-section” of the im- chment charges against Judge Iy to these charges, rather than an is the aim of a subcom- parties to the case were in- earings opened here today. The subcommittee of the judiclary answer to the forecasts of an c i vhicl v late shortage in range cattle, the | to have his case heard ahead of a ‘\Ol'fldrm‘ltle:lghuf hme (House, which will| Women Seck Funds to Celebrate er is made in some quarters|long line of other cases. When he ‘l"" uc : :’1 “Ll' ng, is headed by A 1 5 that (ha Secratary of Agrionl. | 16arned of my move e changed his |Representative L. C- Dyer of Mis-| 25th Anniversary of Alumni ture’s rep i 2 dict he | mi y eq | sourl. ecretary to- L Sy “:”‘.Nf“!Jfl-‘h‘}’("“"f"fiedl:o mind about 2 jury trlal and pleaded |y, “otifled United States Distriot | Association. ate The reason probably is| Many of the present demands for|\UICTIEY T 4 Browe. who preferted = that t cattie population of the |Jury trials would be similarly chang-| i - 0ft INATEES AEainst Ju ‘f; A benefit card’ party will be held untry has been difficult to meas- | ed if offenders kmew their cases |y &Rttt U o, FEATIERER, IR 80| % o raman Park Hotel, Monday ure, especially since the stimulus| would go to trial at once, the as- afternoon b the women of the sistant corporation counsel asserted. He pointed out that with an extra &iven to production during the war. Many Factors Cited. ust what are o ¢t | district court night sessions for| r | celebration of the twenty-fifth anni- R Seprencion® theger| trafic and other police cases couta| [l to the defense of Judge | (O TNGE “the alumni association. o dorth there-| be arranged, so that persons arrested | otk i M e e Weashifzton s not Lo aalitintsamenl | Sona be ftakenalrect (o sconnt, el | pouition et Liguor: of the party to the funds already in In the 18 States In which cattle rajs: | 209, Sentenced within the space of| At ’,m;A nrm;ns_ office it was indi- [the treasury = o mpertant nansime "aha | a0 hour or so. This would eliminate cated that today's evidence probably | Those interested will combine in opinions of the Ut ieniaes ("4!)19 {hrffl!urb of collateral by nfl’\.!d-‘m.flll.wl be (lr:\nll‘({ to only 2 of the 33 | making the event the greatest of the | iffar: Some Aay (the T io n‘n‘ ‘:“”‘Q‘ors afraid to face the court. {charges. The first charge is that|social life of the organizatio A EIpAL eaton for e yfm_ - 1‘* Two extra courts would reguire [Judge Baker was responsible for fal-|committee In charge of arrangements Tincipal reason for the poor condl- | o extrn judges. two additional |sification of the court vecords in a|is composed of Mrs. Thomas H. Car- e om pricect ooy aant fo market and | prosecutors and probably twa more |prohibition e in 1922, while the|ter. chairman, Board of Regents; Mrs. the higt ot Which makes | clerks, Hart said. While add |econd deals with the disposition of skell, chairman of the com- ; T T makes | appropriations for salaries. etc. |S00 quarts of bonded liquor. The dis- Mre. James A. Stanley, Mrs. anxious to buy from th rance. Sin;| ould necessarily be required, the trict attorney charges that John Ready, Mrs. Maurice Doran, other contention s teatange. Stilll Government would not lose by the Koontz. a deputy United States mar- Lawrence V. Grogan, Mrs. R. L. fmouer contention 15 tiat the cattle- | nove, hie contended. as two additional |shal, had stated that half of the liquor | Graves, Mrs. J. Leo Kolb, Mrs. George vroduction getting out of thelr| courts could handie twice us many (was'(aken to Eikins. home town of | A, Weschler, secretary, and Mrs. John what the c proportion of | cagas and thus collect twice as much |Judge Baker, and that the remainder |J. Noonan, chairman of the patron- aat the consumer is paying for the | reyenue in finos |was left with C. E. Brown, Unlted|exsses. 1 |States marshal. Koontz is also al-| A partial list of the sponsors and the question of marketing the problem of marketing 47305 “Informations” This Year. | Since January 1, 1224, and includ- | other ‘agricultural products, is looke ' o 1pon as one that has to be solved before | INE_Yestel a total of 47,505 “in- any of the other factors can be clearly | formations” have been filed In the | awarked out and tackled. The suggestion | District of Columbia branch of the las been mad. the Tev asrimiiaral | Police Court, Hart ascertained today cided over by former|from the court. That is a rough | & average of 4.000 cases a month, a | Wyoming. that co 3 it Chn|large part of them traffic offenses, he | tions be andling of cattle just °’fi,‘2|'.f‘f\"“d'fi res will give a person|Mine whether the matter was one in |M. Markham Flannery, Mrs. Thomas as ccessfully done with | D e or —halone dlstricticouse | which it ahonldiiexer its pow J. Keane, Mrs. Thomas J. Lane, Mr: other commodities. In periods of de- | Some ldea of what one district €OUIt | of “impeachment, and the pres Mary Roache, Mrs. Charles Thorn, | pre there is a glut on the mar- | 1S expected 3 aten & week is & se- {hearing by the subcommittee is held |Mrs. J. A. Emery, Mrs. A. B. Mullett. cr to inability to get the | “One hundred cages a week ‘s & SO junder that direction Mrs. Milton Miss Rachel extension oficredit or to an | Klous handicap. The nevwrreenaCion | Barrington, Mrs. Thomas M. Car- | |v‘ .n’\ “r unwiilingness to hold in ':’é;‘;“;‘,’“f ‘fi'u,d“:fl S ladorntenls i PesPE T oo . John Cammack, Mrs. Charles the face of an adversa market situation. | 5¢ oot : e J. Casidy, Mrs. John F. D ue, N st | " e for i’ | QUEBEC FLOODS SUBSIDE. | anev 30 Soby E- Barois, e orderly mar- | €@ iy : et e o i ‘,m,,.!xt‘r:;;:m“n_‘: Immediate co reltef is | s s - — Eaviv. Mes, Netlie ) ite plan has been worked of s . | SBEC. — November A. W. Gleason, M ell, live stock except that ¢ ({n‘v;‘ir.g Detectives continued Without 16t-Up i rivers, which forced hund ,\": Ry |laln-xl: Dr. ,\:::r»e:‘nl ties are better now than they were a | today their reh for the f“vul' “v’ illles from their homes i Charlevoix | Johnson, Mrs. M Joynt, Miss Anna i L B ithoe here | ins death- drivers who fled after|gjstrict, 50 miles northeast of here, | J. v, Mrs. J. Leo Kolb, Mr Tecog hat a solutior | fatal injuring three men and & yesterday are receding, and indica- | Madigan, Mrs. Raymond Cler e _|woman within a month. A trap €et|tions were that the damage would|denin Miller, Mrs. John J. Noonan, Itural com in another city for one of them haSinot be as serious as was at first|Mrs. James OConnell, Mrs. Ralph tion to | so far failed to catch its intended | thought, & Shanafelt. Mre. Raphael Semmes, Mrs. ictim. Tn the other cases police are| Reports from the village of Bais St. | John 1 Mrs. George A. Weschler | conducting a careful city-wide scru-ipayl and the surrounding territory,|and Mrs. Charles Boughton Wood. tiny of repair shops. garages andwhere the flood was heaviest, showed | Delegations of former students from other automobile rendezvous in theithar the property loss was small. A Itimore and Philadelphia have hope of finding cars answering thelnumber of bridges were washed |signified their intentions of being| riptions furn by con-laway present. i The floods were brought on by | gitive™ was be-lnesevy rains over the week cnd,} R following the running|iwhich were gencral throushout the| Japanese control at least half of the ldown last night of Maurice F. Pres-|Quebec Province. cotton spindles in China. | telle of 1103 Third place northeast, | while he w crossing the street at First and M strects southwest. Pol Say the driver made no effort to stop after knocking the pedestrian down. than keep thin e Agricultt + Seeretary Three Given Commissions. ! Commissions in the Officers’ Reserve | L wiil] 3 whcn fome su- | have bren received miceion and it| Corps of the Army have been tssued ! irprising if soma] by the War Department to Seely | rrember of Smmission were to| Dunn, 1746 K street, as a major in Le appointed Secretary of Agriculture | the Quartermaster Corps: to John A. | o the work of the | Hillman, 1360 Irving street. as a| conmi ;aptain in the Niilitary Intelligence €. 1924 Division. and to Richard H. Catlett, B | Magerstown, Md., as a tain of in- | fantry. | | Madden Is Improving. | | | tative Martin B. Madden of i Dr. Stratton Uunder Knife. I grman ol dhe Hleuse an-| Dr. samuel W. Stratton, president | L e the mext | Of the Massachusetts Institute of | Congress. who has been ill in his | TCCOROIOEY and former director of| home with arip. is resting comfort. | the Bureau_of Standards, who has iy, He will resume ve charge |Deen in Washington undergoing Preliminars’ hear! e T5e [ treatment for gallstones, was oper- | jation bills + day or two, | ated upon yesterd: at Garfield Juse appropriations. commit: | Hospital. He was sald to be “doing as well as could be expected” after hoi teo iz expected to be the busiest of A all committes during the fon of | the operation. 1 chich opens Monday. for it N o | £ whip into shape the ann sup- Eighty British iron workers have | bil for the next fiscal vear, pas- | been sent to Tudia to work in new their aw sheet-steel mills and from $50 to $125 the principal busi- wages ran| Thanksgiving Table NHANCE the beauty and appearance of this DINNER of dinners by securing the many small additions which will bring commendation from your guests. ’ DULIN&MARTING 1215~1217 F Street and 1214 101218 G Street Store Hours: 8:45 to 6:00 case at the present time, and pro- posed that today be given evidence bearing on the charges, and leged to have said that the deputies received some of the liquor and gave |some of it to their friends. peared in public under the influence of liquor, and incompetence. latives that body committee to Auxiliary Board of Regents of Trin- over to Tand|ity College to raise a fund for the patrone s are: ir Esme Howard, Lady Ts la Howard, Baroness De Cartler, Mme. Prochnik, Mrs. Willlam J. Hughes, Very Rev. John A. Ryan, Admiral and Mrs. W. L. Capps, Re | Lewis O'Hern, Mrs. Timothy T. Aus- berry, . Miss, Janet Richards, Mrs. Daniel B. Casiey, Miss Estelle Riell N Dolan J. Donohoe, Mrs. G - {Bucholtz, Mrs. P. J. O'Donoghue, Mrs. | Other charges alleged that he a When the district attorney’s ¢ ere filed in the House of Represe directed its judic investigate and dete 1005 Pa. Ave. 1724 D.J.Kaufman,. 5. INTRODUCING | MR. J. W. GRADY Standard Pharmaceutical Corp. | (1833 Hamlin St. N.E.) Winner of the Fifty-Dollar 2-Trousers Suit Given at the Shrine Fashion Revue EXPECTS NEW BID ON MUSCLE SHOALS Senator Underwood Decides to Withhold Bill Designed to Solve Problem. A new bid for Muscle Shoals, simi- lar to that of Henry Ford, which has been withdrawn, is expected by Sena- tor Underwood, Democrat, of Ala- bama, and he has declded to withhold a bill under preparation for the time being. If this new bid should not ma- terialize, Senator Underwood assert- ed, he would then introduce his bill, which he is now preparing and which would have the indorsement of the Southern Senators, at the short sesslon of Congress. He sald he be- lleved the best solution for the Mus- cle Shoals problem was along the lines contained in Ford's bid. The main function for Muscle Shoals, the Alabama Senator declared, is national defense. Muscle Shoals was bullt primarily for the produc- tlon of nitrogen for the manufacture of ammunition, and since a plant must be ready for operation, he said it was logical to convert the nitrogen into fertilizer in time of peace for the farmers. He said he did not think the distri- bution of power should receive seri- ous consideration, because if Muscle Shoals is developed along the lines for which it was originally intended there would he only a small amount of surplus power. Files Cross-Bill for Divorce: Mrs. Minnie Rosendorf has filed a cross-bill for an absolute divorce from Joxeph Rosendorf, a furrier. The husband recently brought suit against his wife for an absolute di- vorce and she answers with a sim- ilar application. The ‘wife is repre- sented by Attorney Harlan Wood. Although $3.600,000 has been spent in construction of Liverpool's cathe- dral, at least $9,600,000 more will be needed to‘complete it WEBSTER'S: DIC TIONARY MAIL l orRDERS WILL BE FILLED Up to 300 miles - For greater tance ask master rate for enters your wardrobe, you expect it to stay for quite a while. The Parker - Bridget Tuxedo does not go out of style—the cloth is so good, the styling is in such good taste. Other Tuxedo Suits $30 to $75 Evening Wear Accessories Putting on your Tuxedo is not all there is to being correctly turned out for an evening func- tion. You'll need— Mr. Grady says— 2-pants Suits are “the thing” in Men's Clothes, and D. J. 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By the Associated Press ATLANTA, Ga., November 25.— Forty-four Atlanta, New Orleans and New York cotton brokers, including a high official of the New York Co ton Exchange, today were facing ar: rest under indictments returned yes- terday by the grand jury after an in- vestigation of alleged illegal inten- tions of the Atlanta Commercial Ex- change and its members. The specific charge was that the brokers named “were dealing in fu- tures on margins,” a misdemeanor under the Georgia laws. A “no bill” was returned in the case against the local exchange, the grand jury contenting itself with naming members of various broker- age firms, although no firm names were mentioned. Solicitor General Boykin said other indictments would follow. WILL QUESTION CABINET ON COMMUNIST PARADE Deputy Declares There Was Plan to Mobilize Forces of Revolution. By the Ansociated Pres: November 25. — Deputy Pierre Taittinger intends to inter- pellate the government in the Cham- ber of Deputies today regarding the incidents which marked the march across Paris by ‘revolutionarie: following the cortege which trans- ferred the ashes of Jean Jaures to the Pantheon Sunday The deputy announ his inten- tion before the general assembly of the League of Patriots yesterday. He declared he and his friends were aware of a plan of mobilization by the Communists who hoped to launch into the streets of Paris “five hundred thousand foreigners upon whom the revolution depends.” The League of Patriots, he declared, should line up against these revolutionaries to save France. Drug stores of Budapest do not sell cigars or maintain soda fountain: Coupon and c cures this NEW, authentic Dictionary. bound in black seal grain, illustrated with fuil pages In color. 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N It is reported that the local wage board has recommended that the ex- isting scale of wages at the Wash- ington Navy Yard be continued dur- ing the coming calendar year, with few changes in special cases, and that representatives of labor unions will advocate a general increase in wages to meet the higher cost of liv- ing In addition to Admiral Blochy the members of the General Wage Board are F. §. Curtis, chief clerk of the Navy Department, and Albert J Berris of the American Federation of Labor. COMPLET i .50 With Each Purchase Grand Prize Just telephone, write or cal your home our latest mo Eureka on a free cleaning tri only $4.75 Down Balance in Eas of attachments free. This offer, which is good until Christmas only, is made so that thousands of 14th and C Sts. N.W. 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Weltevreden is a suburb of Batavia capital of the Dutch East Indies Vanderhoop delayed during his flight by an dent at Philippopolis necessitating repairs to hi¢ Pernambuco will acquire a flow mill to be placed at the disposition of farmers for the purpose of grind ing wheat produced by them. Hotel inn Phone Main 8108-8100. 604-610 9th St. N.W. $7 rooms, $6 weekly: $10.30 rooms. $5; $14 with toilet. shower and lavatory. $10: 2 ia room, 50 per cent more. Rooms Like Mother's. e S SR SR S T R R SR S R S R E SET FREF § of a 1 at our del ial. y The Ideal Christmas Gift S -~ — women will learn without < S RS Main 7260 Call a «Skyscraper™ man— he’s trained! “Built Like a Skyscraper™ 605 13th Street N.W. Phone Main 8688 Branches and Agencies Everywhere. Consult Your Phone Book.