Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“FOUR-POINT-FOUR™ CAL taken at the Windsor ferry house. T OO g g e a4 F ARLINGTON COUNTY the laying of the corne 193, L. 0. O. F, stone of the A BEER RUSH INTO ONTARIO. Detroiters entering Windsor, Ontario. after th and all the residents of Detroit have to do is go across the river to quench their thirst FIRST ODD F ind Rebekah Lodge, No. 28, at Canton. No. 1. of Alexandria, had charge of the ceremany, and . Fugene Only a few of the thousands of thirsty new beer law became effective. The law now allows 4.4 beer, The photograph was Coprrizht by Underwood & Uniderwood. 1LOW TEMPLE. Scene at new home of Arlington Lodge, No. Clarendon yesterday. THE ROY AL HOUS the v Lodge. laid the stone. the King's serious illness. ABROAD. with Queen Marie and Princess Tleana, ont for an early morni inity of the roval mountain retreat. WASHIN JUST FOR THE FUN OF THE THING. GTON, MONDAY, King George and Queen Mary, at the British Empire Exposition, Wembly, riding on the tiny train of the “Treasure Island™ exhibit. « King Ferdinand of Rumanta, g ride in Photograph made soon after Wide World Photn “opsright by Underwood & Underwood GASTON GOES TO THE PEN. MAY -25, 1925 GEN. MANGIN, HERO OF VERDUN, BURIED WITH SIMPLE RITE! en route to the ceme on the casket of the ery at Montparnasse. hero of a thousand battles.” officials attended the service in the Chapel des Invalides. At left, Gaston B, Means, more or lese well known in Washingtan, leaving for a trip to Atlanta, in charge of a deputy United State< marshal reside in the Atlanta Penitentiary Gaston, cording to a court decree, will for the next two vears. By United News Pictures POLICE CHIEFS WEAR PICTURESQUE COSTUMES. The funeral procession in Paris Only a laurel wreath and a single bunch of violets were placed Members of the diplomatic corps and high government Copsright by P. & A. Photos George Puckas chief of the Royal Hungarian State Police. and Dr. John Bingert. captain of the Hungarian police, who are in Washington with other members of the International Association of Police Chiefs. Copynzht by Harris & Ewing Heir to $50,000, Doyle, first noble grand of Arlington |Unique ‘Tiny Town’g RULE IN CONTENPT Zemines Yoamgerore S DENIED CLINIG Corerrmens of ity Court Refuses, Without Prejudice, Order Requested in Welfare Clinic Litigation. of the District denied the ap- Wesley Martin the Woman's Justice Hoehling Bupreme Court today plication of Mrs Stoner, president of Welfare Association, for a rule in contempt of court on Mrs. Muriel ‘richton, Nanette B. Paul and Mrs J. Irvine Steele. who held a meeting of 25 or more members of the ciation at the Shoreham Hotel 15 after Justice Hoehling had an- nounced that he would enjoin them | from interferinz with the corporate | affairs of the association, which con- ducts a clinic venth and L streets. May Motion Heard Friday. | Attorney 1. J. O'Brien, for N Stoner, made the meeting the b of an application for a contempt pro ceeding, and the court heard the mo tion Friday in open couri Through orneys Wilton J. Lambert and M: T. Bigelow, the three defendants de nied thev had done anything in con tempt of court, but, on the contrary, had selected officers to take effect when the colrt detern ed the terms| of the present officers had expirved. “The refusal the ure 1o cite the three women is de | prejudice to the ri : to renew the app for contempt should any attempt be ade (o in-| terfere later with the conduct of the | business of the association Meeting Regarded as “Tl-Advised.” that s of the the as- Justice Hoehling meeting of the sociation was “ill-ady ave been more no s . b actual int in the conduct management the association The continuation of the friction and discord in a public way, the justice suggests, must necessarily result -to the disadvantag charitable or- ganization. He is not convinced, he said, that any useful purpose would he served by issuing the mpt rule and so denied the application without prejudice. WILL TAKE INSTRUCTION. Army Officers at U. S. Posts Or-! dered to Washington. Medical officers statiohied in various parts of the United States have heen | ordered to this eity to take a course of instruction at the:Army medical center, as follows ; Medical Corps: Capts. James' C.| Kimbrough, Frank W. Pinger, Henry } Rrooks, George J. Schirch, Daniel B. Faust, John 8. Gibson, Henry M. Van Hook. Hemry C. Johannes, Ralph L Cudlipp, Willlam K. Turner, Ra mond C. Wolfe, Claude C. Langley Joseph 1. Martin, Barion W. Johnson and First Lients. William Furr Ray H. Skaggs, Paul A. Brickey, Francis C. Tyng and Edwih F. Shaffer. | Veterinary Corps: Capis. Kenneth E. Buffin, Chauncey E. Cook, How-| ard M. Savage, Sawyer A. Grover,| George JI.. Rife and. First Lieut.| James E. Noonan. and Girl Is Mayor and Boy Is ernment Cummings. ager The walks to Manager in Springfield, Mo., Experiment. M, [ Mo., May liny Town,” governed by children, is on exhibition here. This Lilliputian city, operated by a city manager—commission form of government— sceiving the atten tion of educators and all inte; vouth. It is unlike any other the country. In ny Springfield school tow § { ! ? f swn the children .,r§ Jearning the dutles of ) | citizenhsip, and when they complete intelligent interest in politics and gov Hazel Wilhoit. 14 vea and an orphan, is mayor, and 5. ix chty manager. They were elected recently in a reg: ular “political” campalgn with 18 nominees for the office of city mgn mavor and municipal judge. Fol lowing the election. Hazel and Gordon went to Washingion, D. C.. and. in- vited President Coolidge to attend the opening of Tiny Town to the public The President took the matter under thelr work they will be able to take ans old rdon consideration The town siands on a piot of ground 250 feet by 1,000 feet, in Grant Beach Park, and contains a community cen ter with iis city hall. a high school library and a chamber of commerce. 1 7,500 linear feet. The blocks are large, inclosing spacious ons that represent plavgrounds. v and by night faithful patrol- wd Tiny Town, while a fire- ng brigade is alwavs on wateh, | cor g BRIG. GEN. M. C. GOODRELL | IS CLAIMED BY DEATH| Retired Mfi;i;e Sffi;nies at Age of* 8l—Served Civil War as Volunteer. in Brig. Gen. Mancil Clay United States Marine Corps, veteran of the Civil War, died at the | a Naval Hospital. here | He was &1 vears old rved In the Civil lowa Volunteers, Tennessee. He cd a second lieutenant United States Marine Corps 1965: reached the grade of lieuienant, in April, 1870, and atof captain in 1886, He was sub. | sequently promoted to major in 1889, lieutenant colonel in 1899 and a colonel | n 1903. He was retired with the rank of brigadier general in 1906. lie served on the flagship New York during the war with Spain_and later | in the Philippine Islands. Gen. Good- | rell was a member of the Natlonal Geographic Society and the Army and Navy Ciub of this city. 1 Goodrell, | retired, irell with the I5th e Army of the District Is Denied Writ. | The Unfted States Supreme Court today denfed the petition of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia for a writ of certiorari to the, Court of Appeals of the District | in the case of the Commissioners of | the District against Catherine H. Bauer. This case involves the suft | for damages against the District by | the plaintiff. The decision of the lower court in her favor is sus- tained, FREAK' STORM DOES SERIOUS DAMAGE IN BALTIMORE.Y terday. At places in the city ice was piled toa height of two feet. drovpad i starm allowell Walerran itasperstine. STERDAY. Rain, hail, wind and ice tied up Cars were derailed, trees wer |Bones of Famed Indian Leader Now at Rest Beside Squaw’s Grave | Body of Chief Ouray of Colorado Utes, Who Died PRESBYTERY DROPS [}ASE []F F[]SD'GK in 1880, Transferred, With Colorful Rites, Refuses to Act on' Church| Plea for Vindication ! . ¢ e v 95 The bones | &rave in the San Miguel in Controversy. JGNACIO, Colo., May 25.—The bones| FI%0/, 440 “renervaion. of Chief Ouray, the most famed lead-| "yray's body was conveved by four er of the Colorado Ufe Indian tribe, ! Ute Indian chieftains, who knew him By the Associated Press: | were laid to rest late yesterday in the d‘urlnz life, to the grave, where a JOLUMBUS, Ohlo.. May™ 25,-7he | Indian reservation's cemetery here be- | 'TeSPY! General Assembly of the. Presbyterfan | side’ the grave of his squaw, Chipeta.| During the “invasion” of the white Church ¥n the United States of Amer. | Chief Quray died in 1880 and hix body | mun into Colorado in the late nine- ica, in session here. today accepted | WAS buried in a secret grave, Known|teenth century Ouray kept his tri {he report of the biila and overtures |°DIY to the medicine mem of the tribe. 5 e e e e form warring upon the ‘“palefaces o vhic | With colorful rites, in which the en-1anq signed the famous Ute treaty committee, which recommended that |, Vit cororful Tees. (B TRICR U0 S no action be taken on the memorial | L with the whites, which set aside the = or ian O | with brayes from the Navajo and|jands the tribe occupied for their per- of the First Presbyterian Cliurch of | WTLR BN, from e e Mexico ‘ew York ask i r its | °0 | manent abode. He became a Christian e K e g I tlon for it land Arizona, bore the body of their fin 1360 and was a devout worshiper son Fosdick to occupy. its pulpit. fl\lxrlng the remaining 20 years of his Entering ' its final stages, the gen-| = s eral assembly had before it today for |assembly included possible settlement || The romance of Ouray and Chipeta actlon a proposal providing for great-|of the controversy brought about by |18 noted in the annals of Western In- er co-operation between the denomi.|the making public of a pamphlet on |dian trival history. For more than & nation and the Congregational Church. | motion pictures issued over the name | h2/%) R e e Moot B e s The recommendation, contained in a |of Dr. Charles Scanlon, assoclate sec- | WEIoCK: FOOT OF /% CATdL, & won, FIC 0 report of the department of church|retary of the Presbyterian Board of | T4, 2 ({“mn' o li‘," N{“m the co-operation and union, is looked |Christian Education, in which the |{ndians during 2 war = between the upon ax being the inkial step toward | bods was asked fo question Will H.| [le3 400 ihe Cheyennes eventual union of the churches. It|Hays in regard to the questionable : was first presented -last- week. but |motion pictures. action was postponed when Dr. David | Report of the standing committee S. Kennedy of Philadelphia attacked jon bills and overtures, which, with it on the grounds that the two de- lother things, has the disposition of nominations are too far apart in|the Chester overture, asking that the [of fit, but it makes the going easier ereedal. beliefs 1o merge. New York Presbytery be: exacinded, 'and ' happler for averybody. The Other jnportant lasues-before-ibe aleq Was awalted 'With interest tadade-Foughes the-road the more you need it to Reservation Cemetery. | former chieftain from its concealed A cheerful disposition is like air in a tire. There doesn't seem to be muck stripped of their limbs. Hailstones 1o a depth of three feet were washed up at Charles and I Mountains terian minister conducted the traffic for hours in Baltimore yes- nd several horses were vale streets. Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. 0. S-MEXICO PACT - DRAFT COMPLETED Border Crime Makers Predict Early Ratification. ; | | By the Associated Press. EL PARO, Tex.; May 25.-~The draft {of a treaty between the United ates land Mexico, designed to aid the au- thorities of both countries to control | smuggling and other border crime, has been prepared by the American- | Mexican conference and its makers expect to see the treaty formally {adopted and ratified by both nations within a short time, Gen. Lincoln C. Andrews, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury and chairman of the Ameri- can deiegation to the conference, sald last night. The general decline to reveal details of the proposed treaty with Mexico on {the graund that it should not be ex- posed to hostile attack in advance of ratification. He stated that the treaty covered | four principal matters, smuggling of |liguor and narcotics, immigration problems, hunting and fishing rights, and exchange of information between Mexican ~ and American border authoritles, 'BALTIMORE HAIL Missing Five Years, | Found in Toy Shop| Agreement | Doctor Dropped From Sight Because He W ant- ed to Be Merchant. By.the Associated Press ERIE, ¥ than five ye: trywide s Dr. Charles . May Missing more rs, during which a coun- . Hastings, heir to a $50, 000 legacy, left him by his mother, has been locaied in FErie, where he was known as John Hugh, proprietor of a toy shop. As soon asx he learned through newspapers that he ing sought, Dr. Hastings identified himself to local authorities and is now in communication with his attorney in New York concerning the property{ left him by his mother, Mrs. Caroline | Ithaca, | F. Hastings, N.'Y., May. 8. Dr. Hastings disappeared from Pittsburgh late in 1919. He had been an interne at the Homeopathic Hos- pital. He worked on farms and in rds in Pennsylvania and spent his Summers at Chatauqua Lake, Ys Leaving Pittsburgh he assumed the name of John Hugh, believing his real name to be “too fancy” to obtain work as a laborer. He left home, he said. following a family disagreement about his career and declared that he was now a business man and proud of it. Dr. Hastings passed the State ex- amination to practice medicine after completing his interneship. Business appealed to him, he pointed out, and e preferred to be a member of the ; “blue shirt gang' rather than a pro- | fessional man. who died in NEGRO “MAMMY” DIES. Colored Servant, Born in Slavery, Succumbs in Newark. be- | * CALLS SHOVELER Streets Jammed in Places by rch was instituted for him, | | | \ | Pellets—Windows Shat- tered—Number Rescued. Special Dispatch BALTIMOTL is rolling and agaln, following an extrs storm vesterday that ¢ of a number of property loss. Hallstones clear dinary hall 1sed the death animals and serious were piled 3 and 4 feet deep In some sections by the high wind and the torrents of rain that quickly succeeded a barrage of icy pellets, breaking all history here for density. Marooned in automobiles or caught in open places in the thick of the deluge several women and chil dren were bodily rescued, but no sert ous injury occurred to any persons. Temperature Drops 35 Degrees. The storni was marked by a sudden fall in temperature of about 35 de grees Three horses were drowned when the stable in the rear of 2129 Taylor avenue was flooded. Four others were rescued by policemen. Part of the 12- foot wall of the Baltimore Cemetery, on Belair road, collapsed. Many thou sands of panes of glass were shattered by the hailstones in buildings through- out the city Shovels were used in some streets to dispose of the packs of ice driven by the wind and rain. Shovelers kept the flow open at manholes. In spite of this. however, great pools of water formed in some’ streets, one of these ools, 5 feet deep, marconing a num er of automobiles occupied by women and children HAIL BREAKS WINDOWS. Mary E. Bell, who belonged to that Fruit Trees Also Damaged by Storm rapidly diminishing class of older col- ored women affectionately known as | “Mammys,” died Saturday at | nome of her niece, Lavinia®Warren, in Newark, N. | Burial will be in Harmony Cemete | tomorrow morning, following servic | at the chapel of James Brothers, 1840 | L_street northwest. Just how old | definitely, but it was generally posed she was born more tham | vears before the Civil War. | parents were slaves, living at the time of her birth near Frederick, Md. Dur- ing her early childhood her mother Bave her to Mrs. George Beale of Georgetown, who raised her. More than 50 years ago she became a clay, father of Mrs. James Rankin later became a servant in the latter's home, where she remained almost con- tinuously until a few years ago, when - —e Assumes New Pastorate. Reyv. W. A. Linger, formerly of the Rosedale Methodist Mission Church, yesterday assumed his duties at the | He preached on “What Prayer Can Do.” Only Christian teachings and to prayer as a most vital and essential means of attaining an understanding of truth, servant in the home of John M..Bar- Massachusetts Avenue M. E. Church, | Massachusetts and Cathedral avenues. | ideals can solve the present unrest in | the world-today, he declared, pointing | aboard the warship Izumo for two. Mary was is not known ' ot PPGIONO! sup- | 20 Her | churches Young of this city, and a féw years | | ing. | day’'s storm, played havoc with crops, in West Virginia. the | Special Dispatch to the Star MARTINSBURG, W. Va.. May J., after a long illness. | Hajl fell generally over this section vesterday when the heat was broken by a sharp, brief electrical storm. The hail broke glass in some windows at epherdstown and Hedgesville, and e to fruit was reported The lightning came just as church services were started, and in the city blew out electric lights Some plasterin nd stripping were knocked off in the belfry of one church. The mum storm. SNOW IN HAGERSTOWN. Special Dispateh to the Star HAGERSTOWN, Md., May 25.— Snow fell here today in light flurries. temperature reached a mini of 40 degrees following the she retired becaused of failing health. [ The mercury, dropped from 98 degrees on Saturday to 40 degrees this morn Hail, which fell during yester- causing thousands of dollars’ damage to truck patches and fruit orchards. Nippon Prince to Study Aboard. TOKIO, Mdy 25 (#).—Prince Chi- chibu, second son of the Emperor of Japan, left for England yesterday years study abroad. He will leave the warship at Hong Kong, whenoe he will travel by liner, &