Evening Star Newspaper, January 7, 1925, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

~ JONFLYERHURT, ~ ATFARMPARLEY » LIEUTENANT'S WIDOW GE the United States Veterans' Bure Chevy Chase, yesterday. This was compensation act. F A CHANGE IN THE UNITED ST Joseph McKenna, recently resigned Court, and Attorney General Harlan him. Photograph snapped e S e bl e P G e U S TRAINS COLLIDE, B. & 0. Limited, Bound for Capital, Cut in Two by Chi- i cago Local. | ured, ously, | the the it wh Limited of Railroad the train leav in to the Capital ins were crowded w urred ain struck a mail Baltimore and Ohia probal saving inju One Baltimore and Ohio train was | rown onto the platform of the | dale static the South Side, wh several persons narrowly escaped in- | Jurs Those Baltimore was ng the city on en the injured Tifin, Oh fon, ¢ included Stanley Day Edward Rupert coilision ough th and had It rus on its rd just straightening out speed dash when the suburl aded the ecity, b al coaches were was turr CAROLINIANS TO FIGHT FOR APPALACHIAN PARK for lerailed and d on its side. | Senator Simmons Announces Meet- ing to Contest Commission’s Selection. ator ns of North Carolin that the North s will hold , to which Congress | invited, to work out plans under which the proposed new Ap- palachian National Park for the East- ern United s will be established in North Carol Opposition has been expr d by the park commission, by Senator Sim- mans and the North Carolina delega- on, as well as by the delegation of | Tennessee was stated, to the re-'| ort. mad ecretary Work by a oup of national park experts, who that the proposed park | ba located Virginla. The matter now before the House committee n public lands. Members of the North Carolina delegation have ex pressed the belief it i t certain | cretary Work adopt the | but may, in recommend eation of several parks in Vir- North Carolina and other| Simme Caro at " tin re Stat de in be it to acommenc States, Hearings will begin before the| House committee toward the end of‘ this month | | Will keep Present Post. Capt. Frederic B. Bassett, naval hy- | drographer, is to continue on his| present duties after being transferred | tn the retired list, it is announced at the Mavy Dspartment. u, handing | had | leaders { director: IRST WORLD WAR BONUS CHECK. the first p: ATES SUPREME COURT. Justice from the United States Sapreme Fiske Stone, appointed to succeed fternoon 1 P HOOVER SPEAKS Urges Relaxation of Res(raint: of Trade Acts to Aid Agriculture. Asserting that he tion of the restraint of t fecting agriculture, S in an address b cil of Farmers Association, today ical agricultural policy. This stressed the three { having the United States self-sup- | as to its food supply; the | lding of organization among | themselves, such as the vement, and the elimina- . he said, affected | well every other merican life. | All of the alarm that been | expressed as to the combination of | farmers to militate against the zon-| sumer,” Mr. Hoover asserted, “is to my mind entirely unnecessary and not worthy of consideration There to be a larger oppor- tunity for agricultural co-operation inder the int of trade acts, he sserted. He cited the work of the department in standardizing cemen and n lumber and ware s an aid to cheapening pro- distribution and- con & istance at this point Government agencies, ade acts af- cretary Hoover, - National Coun- ative Marketing sketched | vored a relaxa- | a theoret- points— ors co- fraction of A has ne he Sees Terminals Needed. Terminal facilities have mnot kept| pace with demands, Mr. Hoover said, | urging some type of organization at | these points to assist producer and | consumer. ~ Declaring that he had | secondary part in the Capper- | ms bill, Mr. Hoover sald that| Te- Willi G k for $1.553 to Mrs. Irene Crisp of yment to be made under the insurance fea NG STAR, WASHINGTON Frank T. Hines, director of 331 Teunyson avenue, ture of the adjusted ‘Copyeight by Harris & Ewing e e =3 PAINTER AND AMBASSADOR A1 Riano y Gayangos (left), cio Zuloaga, Spanish arti Society of New York Artists, in New York. FIRST MEETING OF JOINT sentatives Griest, Hadley and Rouse. MOURNED WIDELY bie na an pai {in reg | o \endatio: Council of ¥; sociations unc natlonal system of edu co-operative movement an address prepared fo: sion of the organization’s cony by Walton Peteet, its s cation and credits were topics for discussion today Mr. Peteet urged an development of | ion on the made in through national, state and to farmer members of c. operatives and to the general public He advocated appointment of a com- mittee to consider the entire subject and report to th tional Council at | tomorzow’s busin ion Asserting that ineflicient man ment was oftex € failure to und > rudimen busin tice and in- ability to pick real business exec tives for co-operative units, Mr. Peteet suggested as a remedy a “sys- tem of self-education in co-operative marketing by and for American farmers.” ge- of sound Named Aides to President. J‘ Lieuts. Ralph A. Ofstie and Thomas P. Jeter of the Navy, both in this| city, have been detailed to special | duty as naval aldes to the President at the White House, | Before you buy securities from any | church Monday follow ap dinal Patr a at educational | high movement that would reach “down | Archbishop John J local | Louis, probably will pre mon main de Su ta; pr Church nearby, gowned with cassock, | su pa ma Do Re pointed administrator of cinnatl’ archdiocese. Do Sunday until On Monday morning there will be a sp ca | pose of the prelate. EATH OF PRELATE | Thousands Pay Tribute to Archbishop Moeller—Fu- 4 neral Planned. | tise in ART EXHIBIT. CONGRESSIONAL 1IN terday, when the committce met at the Capitol, Senator Cu n 1 Senor Doa_juan panish Ambassador to Washington, and Ygna- , attending the sixth annual exhibition of the Coprright by Underwood & Underwood. VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL. These are the new cross-word puzzle stockings, now attracting attention in New York. This pair is worn by Ethelind Terry of the “Kid Boots” company. Coprright by P. & A. Photos Talking with an artificial laryox and vocal cords. The invention of Dr. John E. Mackenty was given a suc- erssful demonstration at the Vander- bilt clinic in New York this week. The patient learns to operate the device with a few days’ practice. Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. ATHLETES OFFERED CUT RATE TUITION IN NEWSPAPER ADS Aim Is to Build Up Teams, Says Masse School Head- master in Reply to Critics— Called Profession- alizing Boys for Scholarships. ciated Press. RK, January ,in which offers | Were made to athletes ew YorZz newspapers | cut-rate have been re- of To—Adver- tuition d to and were defended yester- by to hop Ienry Moeeller of the ti province, embraci d a part of a d to by pe all parts of ti Hundreds of et and sympa ices of the lats night at the ag ng an attack of heart di e Funeral arrangements were rapidly proaching completion Hayes of Ni expressed loss of the vy | eight tod telegrar his the symp a privilege to pontificat mass next Tuesda Glenn Funeral Tuesday. | The body of the archbishop will re- | at_his Norwood Heights resi- where his death occurred, until nday afternoan, when it will be| ken to St. Peter's Cathedral, the| at of his ecclesiastical co Anl iests will gather at the Louis | ne iplice and biretta. As the they will form in 1i to the cathedral, where the | will be received by the Right Mgr. Louis J. Nau, newly ap- the Cin- sses arch dy ne and same | sha | Directly beneath the high altar the | * oy dy will lie in state from 4 o'clock the funeral Tuesday. ecial solemn high mass at the thedral, with a sermon for the re- From the time the body reaches the | until the funeral, day and one he sure they are ax good nx your | night, uniformed guards of honor will dollars. su rround It, such them a half-rate One of the men | manner last as savin excl a R dv ck, head for Boy. e Herald-Tribune | aster of at_Ship- 1who, it is said, will go to Masse next | vear. Mr. Slack said he’considers this a “good way to build up his teams' | Although the use of advertising may be new, the practice of giving scholar- | ships to athletes is general through- | out secondary schools all over the | country. “We don't actually " Mr. Slack says, pay | money “and, besides, ays that it traced |they do a little work around the announ: \ble although on! tha ath- prep a cing boys' | school, like answering telephone and waiting on the table. I don't see how | the fact they accept these scholar- | ships can affect their amateur stand- was given. |ing." had obtained, s in the past|American Athletic nd had ed fon charg obtained i . Slack s Gordon of Seran- Murray Hulbert, president of the Union, said last | night that eyery boy who recelved a scholarship because he was an athlete | was professionalizing himself, A half dozen prominent educators in the East, when interviewed, con- 1 captain at Massa-| demned the practice of cutting rates A cadem la “all, Rear to Save Door- mat. recently, inex lived ¥ left an estate of $80,534.99, re- | duced only $142 by her funeral ex- liver malil at order not doormat, Con went to pensive the 50 ecial Dispateh to The Star. ORWICH, cortege | Miss Mary P. Huntington, who died her grave in n. manner January the in which rs of her life. | Miss Huntington lived a secluded. | 11fe here in her big house and was noted for her eccentric economies. to we; ar out For vears she was at outs with mail carriers because they refused to de- | the kitchen door in the front e i Before You Invest Investigate, | for athletes. {MAILMEN IRKED WOMAN |ARMY AIRMEN PLANNING | BY STOPPING IN FRONT | Rich Recluse Wanted Deliveries in TWO LONG 1925 FLIGHTS | Non-Stop Trip to Hawaii and Air Voyage Around Cape Horn Are Considered. By the Associated Press. SAN DIEGO, Calif., January 7.—Ac- { cording to Information brought to | Rockwell Field here by Capt. Lowell H. Smith, who commanded the Ameri- | can Globe-circling squadron of Army | planes, two important flights may be | undertaken by United States military airmen in the present year. One flight now being considered is a non-stop flight from San Francisco to Hawall. Lieut. Charles H. Doo- little has applied for permission to make that flight. The other voyage fs by air around Cape Horn, starting at Balboa, west ern entrance of the Panama Canal, and ending at Cristobal, the ecastern terminal, them any | BIG CAMERA TO TAKE PICTURBROF E( JPSE FROM DIRIGIBI D! r. Geo.ge H. Peters of the Naval Observatory and the specially constructed camera which will be used January 24 in making photographe of the eclipse of the sun from the dirigible Los Angeles. Dr. Peters will use the camera when the great airship is about a mile in the air, above the mist and fog. ANOTHER CASE OF “HOLD ’EM, YALE!” alumni team which won the intercollegiate cross-word puszle contest against Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, Smith, Vassar, Wellesley and Bryn Mawr graduates in New York. JRAL COMMITTEE. Preliminary plans for the event of March 4 were'taken up yes- rtis presiding as chairman. Left to right: Senators Overman, Hale and Curtis; Rerre- Copyright by Harris & Ewing. Suspect Quizzed in Rondout Case—Charges Against Women Dismissed. By the Associated Press. LITTLE ROCK, Ark.. January Postal inspectors who have recovered in Little Rock within the past 10 day approximately $100,000 of Herbert Holliday's share in the $2,000,000 |Rondout, IIL, mail loot, which Holli- |day attempted to barter for areduc- {tion in his 25-year sentence, still are |Investigating the finding of $79,000 in |a rural mail box 10 miles from Little Rock. J. C. McKinney, former cellmate of Holliday, who was held for the Federal grand jury and lodged in loot, was questloned for several hours yesterday by Inspectors, who declined to reveal the nature of the question- ing. McNefl, wife and niece of Herbert Holliday, were dismissed yesterday on charges of concealing part of the stolen _securities. Miss MeNeil is | under $10,000 bond, however, for ap- pearance in Kansas City to answer a prior charge of concealing some of the stolen money. | DRUNK ARRESTS DOUBLE. Jersey County Doctor’s Covers Last Year. Report NEWARK, N. J, January 7.—Ed- ward W. Markens, county jail phy- siclan, in a report to Essex County freeholders made public today, as- serted there has been a 100 per cent increase during 1924 In the number of persons sent to the county institu- tion for drunkenness. Convictions dur- ing the year number 1,077. The report declared that since the Volstead law became operative thera has been an increase of . 4,300 per cent in the number of such convic- tions. 2 POSTAL WEN PROBE * INDING OF 7300 Jail here in default of $25,000 on a; charge of concealing $21,000 of the Mrs. Ellen Holliday and Miss Helen | o Members of the Yale Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. WEEKS PLEADS FOR ARMY AIR FORCE Tells House Committee| Money Allotted for Service Is Found Inadequate. Secretary Weeks told the House committee investigating the aircraft industry today that the money allot- | ted to the Army Air Service was in- | sufficient to maintain an adequate air | force. | Although the approximately $16,-| 000,000 recommended in the Army | pill’ for next year, he sald, was the | |largest sum ever allotted to the serv- | |Ice, it fell far shert of the amount re- | quired. He complimented the work of | Maj. Gen, Patrick, in charge of the | service, Cites Progress by Other Nations. The impression in this country that | other nations are doing more toward | developing thelr air forces was brought about, Mr. Weeks sald, be- cause of the development of commer- cial aviation abroad. Asked if the race in armament had | not developed into a race in air arma- ment, the Secretary said it had, but | so far it “lsn’t much of a race.” | The Sacretary recommended build- |ing up commercial aviation, even to the point of a subsidy, as the best means of developing an adequate alr reserve force, Unification Held Inadvisable, Secretary Weeks would not recom | mend unification of the Army and: | Navy Air Services. Unification might |have some advantage in time of peace, he added, but it would have great disadvantages in war, where air! forces would be responsible to a large | extent in bringing hostilitles to an end. | The fields of operation of the two services, the Secretary asserted, | i should be defined, the Navy being restricted to relate to the fleet and | its operations and the Army to cover | @1 other places. |JOHN D. GARMAN WILL IS FILED FOR PROBATE Wife and Five Children to Share Bulk of Estate—Sale of Land Directed. The will of John Domer Garman, who died December 30, has been filed for probate. He gives specific direc- tlons to his executors, who are his sons, Wayne G., Jay H. and Donald A ‘arman, concerning the sale or other disposition of timber lands in Oregon and coal holdings in Penn- svlvania. The household effects are| left to his wife, Frances T. Garman, who 1s to share with the five children in the division of the remaining estate. Mrs. Kate R. Holt. who died De- cember 31, left $1,000 each to her sons, Carroll C.. Frank R. and Archl- bald J. Holt. The remaining estate, according to her will, goes to the daughter, Mrs. Mary C. De Neane, who is also named as executrix. Mrs. Blanche W. Cooke is made sole beneficlary of the estate of her husband, Charles E. Cooke, by his will, dated December 26, last She is also to act as executrix. The entire estate of Mary E. A. Cone, who died December 28, is left by her will to Jacob Wurzell, who is also named as executor. She died four days after signing-the will, | toinette National Photo. Again he is reported dead. Rais brigand and rebel leader of the R of Morocco, who, according to news dispatches, is dead again. His pas ing away has buen reported abou: 20 times, but, unfortunately for Spain, he refuses to stay dead. Coprright by Cnderwood & Caderwocd FOUR ARE INRED N AUTOAGEDENTS One Motorist Flees After Smash; Two Charged With Intoxication. Four persons were injured sli in automobile acciden one of which the operator d T ed without making his identity known, Two motorists also were ar- rested on charges of driving while intoxicated. The unidentified driver was a col- ored man, who ran down Chester At- wood, 14, of 505 Twelfth street, while the latter was riding his bicycle at Connecticut avenue and Ashmead place yesterday, the boy sustaining minor cuts and bruise A. D. Grubb of Park ave: Takoma Park, Md., picked up Pilla, 5, colored, of Eighth street, and took her h after his automobile struck her at Sherman avenue and Barry place. He then reported to the police. Messenger Hurt in Skid. James Larkin, 924 Ingomar street, a telegraph messenger boy, was thrown from his bicycle, sustalning cuts and bruises about the hands, when a rented automobile operated by James Denton of 2148 P street skidded into him near 20th street on Pennsylvania avenue. Larkin was treated at Emergency Hospital. Mamie Strothers, colored, of 232% P street was injured about the right shoulder and nose when knocked down at New Jersey avenue and P street last night by a motor truck operated by J. E. Combashner of 455% P street. She was treated at Freedman's Hospital. ue, An- Charge Intoxication. James V. Coleman, colored, 47 Chapel road northeast, was arrested on charges of driving while intoxi- cated and sent to Gallinger Hosplital for treatment for alcoholism after his automobile collided with a pillar of the Benning viaduct last night. He escaped injury. ‘Walter Charles Bray, 30, of 1806 Lawrence street northwest, was ar- rested yesterday afternoon by Motor Cycle Policeman J. G. Helm for al- leged violation of the police regula- tions regarding operation of an auto- mobile while intoxicated. He fur- nished bond for his appearance in court. - Bl DROPS DEAD IN OFFICE. Clarence D. McClure, Pension Bu- reau Clerk, Dies at Work. Clarence D. McClure, 47, 1852 Ingle- side terrace, clerk in the Pension Bu- reau, dropped dead while at work this morning shortly after reaching the office and Coroner Nevitt gave a certificate of death from heart dis- ease. The deceased, a veteran of the Spanish-American War and member of the Knights of Pythias, was a former resident of Crawfordsville, Ind., and had lived in this city the past seven vears and filled the Government position the past four years. A widow and three sons, James, Ray and Dale McClure, survive him. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. _— Before You Invest Investigute,

Other pages from this issue: