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LEGION REMEMBERS WILSON. erans of Houor paid te memory t war. whe place wreath on his tomb. at M Rishop Freeman and Col A. Drain, n GUEST AT EXECUTIVE \I\\*ll)\,' Lillian Walker, one of America’s first important film stars, who is now on the stage, is received at the White House as a guest of President and Mrs. Coolidge. P. & A. Photos, Bank Profits Slim AUEN SMUGMS ¢ | OnWoman Patrons; FIND NEW CHANNEL 2 & 10 v | Ma ite Neilso nd trader for Vigilance of Florida Patrol| trust company here, ad- | Sed merr rs ol ouse- Drives Them to New Or- \\i\'n:'lA\ll ¢'n‘1":, (hisr\\gl‘;.““:ll‘he leans and Charleston. banks make very little money in The Sta May 30.—Miss women's accounts,” she said. *I asked a junior officer in a bank in which 40 per cent of the checking accounts are women's if. the bank made any money on these accounts, and his reply was: ‘No, we only have them to accommodate our cli- ents. Eight out of every ten wom- en overdraw.’ ‘Only the other day I had one of the wealthiest women in town come in to see me about her account. It seemed she wanted to buy an auto- mobile, and had taken out Smuggling of European aliens from | Cuba into the United States, Assist- ant Secretary W. W. Hushand, former Tmmigration Commissioner, savs is he ing diverted from the Florida penin a toward New Orleans and Charles 8. C.. due to the vigilance of the rol on the penin some immizran who entered the country lle have heen arrested 1 in the Florida district since July 1 $3,500 to- buy it, leaving 180-some Fstablishment of the horder patrol,| dollars to her credit; it wasn't long Mr. Husband declared, has made the| before she had overdrawn her ac- Florida route unpopular for illegal| count and somehow she entry of immigrants, adding that he | .couldn't understand it to save her hoped to see the patrol a picked body | life. She was sure she had some of men comparable to the Northwest | money in bank.” i:‘:””‘wl Police and the Texas Rang Two DEAD‘, 3 HURT IN WRECK OF AUTO stone to | Fast-Moving Machine Hits Trolley sk Pole, Killing Man and Boy at Cumberland. ton border ar Enter With Bootleg ts, who aim to States illegally via part. the As TS, European immi t enter the United Cuba, are for the most istant Secretary in small They use Cuba as a steppin enter this country, some goin there to Tmnpico, in the hope ting across the Mexican bord plan, Mr. Husband said, has signs of revivi Ithough in past it was found diflicult and expen sive | a1 Tyspatels to The Star. 3 | CUMBERLAND, Md. May 30.— In Cuba many of the F Two persons were killed when an au- migrants awaiting a chance to dash{ mopile, owned and driven by Clyde 1as0 United States hecome street | \" George, Pittsburgh, collided with a Beddicny ships. crews | Lole at a street car switch on Thomas andidese street here late last night. Immisrants who enter illegally and | * Taniel Moreland, 43 vears old, Bal- are apprehended are deported. Mr.|timore & Ohio track foreman, and Husband said. over £000 having been | pay] George, aged 9 years, son of the deported on warrants thus far this | autolst, are the dea Qrokisys The George family came here on a rom another source it was learned | visit over Decoration day with Mrs. that the Department of Justice is con- | George's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. ducting an investigation into the il-| pioffman. William and Thomas Hoff- legal entry ¢ in conjunction | mun, brothers of Mrs. With a secret probe being carried on in the auto. William Hoffman, by the immigration authorities has a fractured. thigh and is cut 3 - nd bruised about the head and body. FRAT CASE GOES OVER. | Spec spean_ im others sig n when the zet here. Thomas Hoffman, 24, is suffering from concussion of the brain and lac- erations about - the head and face. Clyde George-is. badly eut about the face and scalp: The machine was moving at high | speed and George lost control while | rounding a ‘car standing at the switch, Justice Bailey, in Circuit Division 1. | ((viking the curve and being swerved vesterday continued until Tuesday the | 7oainet the pole. Moreland was the rgument_on the mandamus against|paiher of Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, wite of e Board of Education brought by |\iiliam Hoffman, one of the injured. three high school students, members % e L of “frats,” who claimed they have been discriminated against by reason of their connection with the societies, and ask the court to compel the boar to restore them to their former posi tions in athletic and other activities | of the high school Attorneys John E. Laskey and Rich- Arguments Tuesday in Court Fight With Education Board. Vienna University Closed. 30 UP).—The au- . y ordered the Uni- versity Engineering School and some other colleges closed for the re- mainder of the term because of fre- % Ther % . I h i auent street fights and disturbances ard C. Thompson for the frat members | petween pan-German, Soclalist-Demo- joined issue on the matter of facts set e < g S Dy ihe Hoscn iy cratic and Jewish students, which it claimed that fr: & 7 dered snobbishness and exclusivenes i and affected the morale of the stu Drug Store Liquor Stolen. dents. Counsel for the boys also con-| Fifty-two quarts of whisky were “end that the hoard singled out certain |stolen from the basement of the drug societies for = and over- store of Elias Bielous, 724 East Cap- looked others. Corporation Counsel |itol street, according to a report to Stephens will defend the action of |police toda; The druggist valued the board, the whisky at §75, | thoriti onal commander of the Le, i fi | 1 George, were | THE EVENING war President on eve of Memorial day by vet- Alban. the er of the group are Harris & Ewink Ulysses Grant Smith of Washington, Pa., in diplomatic service more than 20 years, has been appointed to post of Minister to Uruguay. Underwood & Underwood. BELA KUN CAUGHT, | Deportation Follows Convic- tion in Attack on Police Official. By the Associated Press. LISBON, Portugal, 30.—Bela Kun. the Communist I who head- ed the short-lived Hungarian Soviet government after he organized it soon after the World War came to a close, and who is charged with having been implicated -in the recent assault on Maj. Amaral, commander of the safety state police, was captured yesterday on board a fishing vessel, ‘and will be deported. Another red leader, who is also_charged with taking part in the ambushing of Maj. Amaral, was shot dead by the police when he tried to escape as he was being taken from prison to a warship. Disappeared From Country. While little has been heard recently of the whereaboyts and doings of Bela Kun, for two years after the war he figured prominently in foreign news dispatches. After the Soviet govern- ment he set up in Hungary was over- thrown he escaped from the country, and subsequently -it was announced that he would be tried by the Hun garian government with other Soviet leader: After that he was said at different times to be in Italy, Germany and Galicia, planning uprisings. In 1922 it was reported that the federal police department of Switzerland had jssued a warrant for Bela Kun's ar- rest, it having been learned he was in hiding with a false passport. For a brief time in 1921 Bela. Kun was Soviet ‘high commissioner for the imea. SHIP ESCAPES DISASTER. as Steamer Hits Reef. PORT ONTARIO, May 30 The steamer Keewatin of the Cana- dian-Pacific railway's Great Lakes service, which went on the rocks at Passage Island, 42 miles from here, during- a depse fog early Thursday, moved into port last night in tow of two tugs and will go into dry dock today. The steamer had a narrow escape, passengeis say, and disaster probably WwAs _averted because the reef on which - the’ vessel struck was so far submerged as to prevent stoving in of the bow. ‘The Keewatin struck twice. The 15 passengers aboard.were in their berths when the ship struck and a minor panic ensued. Coolness of the officers restored calm. Rain Forces Plane Down. Heavy rainstorms forced down a naval plane attached- to the naval air ‘station here, and piloted by Lieut. Gillespie at Bowie, Md., yes- terday afternoon. - In making ~the landing in a field the landing gear was damaged and the plane was un- able to proceed. A detachment went from " the local station today and brought the plane in. No one was in- jured in the landing. e ORDERED EXPELLED Great Lakes Paseengers in Panic | ]he mounted on the standard ®).— | STAR, WASHINGTON. D. €, SATURDAY, z 5 i DECORATES SPANISH WAR VETERAN chief of staff, United States Army, p distinguish Brig. Gen. James Allen (retired ). during the S n War, when he served as chief signul officer of volunteers Marris & Maj. Gen, viee GRAND JURY IN MONKEY LAW CASE. Men who recently Scopes, Dayton, Tenn.. high school teacher, charged with violating anti-evolut Robert Regsby, J. M. Wright, J. H. Rose, J. E. Small and W. M. Dickey. J. W. Long, C. C. Cach, J. W. Rockholt. . Rear: B. F. Fisher, R. M. Dav 'Andrews Finds Stone Age Skeletons | And Dinosaur Eggs in ‘Garden of Eder’ Thousands of Stones, Polished by Hand and Believed From 10,000 to 20,000 Years Old, Also Taken From Gobi Desert. By the Associated Pross NEW YORK. May 30.—More saur eggs have been found on reputed site of the Garden of Eden. addition to these petrified remains, say dispatches from Urga, Mongolia, Dr. Tt was on his 1923 expedition to the same region that Dr. Andrew i the fact that the “terrible lizard,” of laid eggs. On that occasion he brought Roy Chapman Andrews and the expe- | back 23 specimens, the first ever dis- dition for the American Natural His- |covered by modern scientists. tory Museum have dis d_in the | . from which were hatched Gobi desert human and animal skele- fighting reptiles which tons of the Stone Age |reached 60 or 70 feet in length, are Ostrich eggs also were found, to-!extremely valuable becausé of their gether with, thousands of stones la- |rarity. They ave elliptical and from boriously polished by hand, and {five to six inches Jong. The ones first mated to be from 10,000 to discovered were found in “nests” and years old. Half the expedition’s {in a petrified state coveries must be turned over to the| Dinosaur bones have heen unearthed Mongolian government under the con- |in the United States, especially in the ditions of the agreement by which the | West, lending support to the theory explorers were permitted io penet: | that the American and Asiatian coun the vast plateau which Dr. And tries were joined at one time by a has termed “the Paleontalogical land bridge, the presumable remains den of Eden” and man’s probable place |of which are the Alaskan peninsula of origin and Aleutian Archipelago. WILL ASK BIDS SOON |COL. LOGAN RESIGNS FOR TRAFFIC SIGNALS| REPARATIONS POST Automatic Devices Will Be In-|Voluntarily Retires as American stalled on Sixteenth Street Observer With Commission in From H to U Streets. Paris—Will Return to U. S. dino- | the In |lished dinos prehistoria ws ar- e | By the Associated Press. Col.-James A. Logan has resigned as American observer with the Repa- rations Commission in Paris, and the resignation has heen accepted by Sec- retary Kellogg. Col. Logan, who took up his duties as observer in 1923, resigned for “‘per- sonal and business’ reasons,.it being understood here that he will accept an offer from Dillon, Read & Co., New Bids will be sought early next weel for ‘purchase of the apparatus to in- stall the first automatic traffic signals | on Sixteenth street from H to U | streets, according to Col. I. C. Moller, | engineer in the office of traffic di- rector. The bids will call colored lighting fixtures, for the three- which will orna- used installa- now being lighting mental lamp-posts ! Dillo for regutar street York banking firm. tions. | Now en route to Paris after a visit The signals will be placed in the | to Washington, Mr. Logan will’ turn center of the intersections along Six- | over his office to Ralph W. S, Hill, teenth street. The red light will in- | assistant solicitor of the State Depart- dicate stop, green to and yellow | ment, who has been acting observer to make both right and left hand | during Mr. Logan's absence. turns. It will be necessay to pur-| President Wilson selected Mr. Logan chase some of this equipment during | as one of his expert advisers at the June, because part of the available | Paris peace conference, and he has appropriation fer the purpose would [ been in Parls almost continuously lapse on July 1. since then. RIOTER GETS 10 YEARS. First of 20 West Virginia Defend- ants Files Notice of Appeal. MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va., May 30 (®)—Frank Corrish, a union miner, was sentenced to 10 years in the ‘West Virginia penitentiary by .Judge P. D. Morris after having’ been con- victed of taking part in an attack on Robert Crow, a non-union work- man, at the Glendale Gas and Coal Co. mine near here, April 12.. His counsel filed an appeal and Corrish yaa remanded to jail in default of ail. Corrish was the first of 20 defend- ants to be placed on trial charged ‘,vn;h inciting-to rigt. GIRL ACCUSES STUDENT. Assault at Country Club Charged to Manufacturer’s Son. BATTLE CREEK, Mich, May 30 (). —Arthur Rich, 20, son of George H. Rich, prominent manufacturer here, is under bond of $25,000 follow- | ing his arraignment here yesterda on assault charges preferred by Miss Louise King, 20. Battle Creek College student. Miss King is in_a hospital here.. Her home is in Warren, Pa. According to Dr. J. E. Cooper, the girl is suffering from a broken jaw and nose. and her face and body are severely bruised. The assault is al- leged to have taken place at the Battle. Creek Country Club. ' returned an | it was received by MXY 30, 1925 JES AT WHITE HOUS who was invited 10 dress Berrshill, Los Ange ker. film st R.1 Wall indictment against John T. tion State law. Left to right, front: Second row: R. F. Montgomery, J. M. Dillberry and R. J. Jones. NORFOLK IS ST TOCOSMOPOLITANS | Washington Club Opserves' Memorial Day on Scene of Monitor’s Victory. B, aff Correspondent NORFOLK, Va amid the cheers May 30 riving nd whistles of the Norfolk Cosmopolitans, the steamer Alabama with 200 Washington Cosmo- politans docked at Norfolk this morn- ing. Disembarking after a night of jollification, the party prepared for a Qay at Cape Henry. They left for the capes on special trains as guests of the Norfolk club. The party set sail vesterday after- noon, immediately it arrived at Balti- more. As soon as the party boarded the music started and continued until well after midnight. The Glee Club recently formed by the local organi- zation entertained the party under the direction of Mrs. Walter Gawler, and the Dramatic Club presented a farce, “Out of the Past.” Hold Memorial Service. Patriotic Memorial day services were held at sunrise on the boat this morn ing amid appropriate ceremonies. A large silken United States flag, a gift of the wives of the members, \was ac- cepted by the club. Michael Doyle, former judge of the Municipai Court, made a patriotic address. The flag was received near iames- jtown; the first English settlement in Virginia. Michael Schaffer eulogized the flag, which Mrs. Paul Bramstedt presented in behalf of the women, and Paul Branstedt, president of the club, in Roads,( almost on the spot where the Merrimac and Monitor fouzht their fa- mous battle, and a wreath was cast into the water as a tribute by the Washington club to the heroes of the Civil War. The party will board the Alabama tonight and cruise until they return to Norfolk tomorrow morning to take the Norfolk club on for the da¥. 7he Washington club will retura Monday morning. AUTO KILLEfi CONV]CTED.I Found Guilty of Manslaughter in Companion’s Death. Guilty of manslaughter was the verdict rendered late Thursday after- noon by a jury in Criminal Division 1, before :Justice Siddons, against ‘William Flippo, who was charged with causing the death of Clarence Bolton, July 9, 1923. The accused was found to have been drunk when he operated an automobile in which Bolton was a passenger and wrecked the car on the Conduit road. Motor Cycle Policeman Hugh F. Cornwell drunk and that bottles were found In the wreckage. Counsel for the accused elaimed that the%dead man caught hold of the steering = wheel and caused the wreck. Flippo was remanded to await sentence. The maximum penalty under the law is 15 vears' imprison- ment. Assistant United States At- torneys Rover and Fihelly conducted the_ prosecution, W. Hall. Oakl Hampton | testified that Flippo was | 1€ cisouizhn itys Johnn the i on of the Maccabees in this city R. P. Kuntz, Detroit, supervisin President in center ernatic ENVOY'S DAUGHTER ‘AT WHEEL. the French Ambassador to the United State cars. She has become a familiar sight, driving around town Antoinette Daeschner. daughter of . seated in o of the embassy & 110,000 Men Guard 10000 Men Guard NIV TAKE MONTHS CHICAGO, May 30.—Ten thou sand armed guards are now patr ling 1,000 Tlinois towns and cities day and night, ready to war on bank robbers at a minute’s notice, the Illinois Bankers' Association announced. Since the system of citizen guards was inaugurated on March 17, | there have been no bank robberies in the State, it was announced. All counties except Cook have armed | guards and they will be established here within a few days. It was es- timated that the citizen guard or- ganization will cost the banks of the State about $250,000 a vear. of a master BOY FATALLY BURNED /i WHEN LAMP EXPLODES ;i A. PI Early Naming of Master in | Chancery for Doheny Leases ‘ Improbable, Judge Says. 7 LOS Judge P. J decided in its suit to leases in t and « today th would el t in ¢ This official. under k's decision, wi preparing the bill a nies for oil taken from the E serve and of fixing credits | comp: for work done on a r oil st base at Pearl Ha Hawaif. Judge Mother Badly Injured in Vain At tempt to Save 13-Year-0ld Son's Life. Involved Process Necessary. Delays in pointed out cessitated by the observed. Firs ernment must prepare his_appointme by the judge, wil | Eugene Gladman, 13 years old, was | fatally burned, and his mother, Mrs. | Gertrude Gladman, was fatally injured last night when an oil lamp over- | turned, starting a fire in the home, 919 Columbia road. The boy died this | findings of fact and concl morning at Emergency Hospital. His ]8s outlined in yesterday's mother, badly burned on the hands{One copy of this will be and arms, will recover. I Eugene had remained in the dining |on the defen room of the home late last night read- | the defendants will have time ¢ ing and it is' believed he overturned | Sider action to be taken. In tI the lamp when he fell asleep reading. | Dection counsel for the cil intere His mother, who had returned to the [réady have announced their intent second floor, was startled by the ex- |0 abpeal plosign of the oil in the lamp and ran | When this legal procedure is elea fo her son's assistance. —While en.{Up the master in chancery wi deavoring _to beat out his burning | anied and steps will be started toga clothing her own life was endangered. | @ financial settlement. ; A younger sister of the hoy was the only other person in the house when the fire occurred. | o 2 el {PLAN NEGRO SYMPOSIUM. TOKIO MINISTER NAMED, Development of Civilization of Rece to Be ¥ortrayed. to Head Department of A symposium on the negro clvil tion of anclent Africa will be: give Communications. by the history department of How: TOKIO, May 30 (®).-—Kenzo|University as one of the Adachi, one of the leaders of the features of the unive Kenseikia party, has heen appointed mencement week exerc minister of _communicatio; e-[tion to a large se of caretu cession to K. Unikal, whose resigna- | prepared papers. the history depar tion of the post was aecepted yester- | ment has planned an exhibition of iy tures illustrating the various pk |of negro civilizations of ancient time Kenzo Adachi, considered one of | The first session of the sympo: the leading political strategists of |will be held Wednesday morning Japan, was at one time the proprietor | 9:30 o'clock. It will include a surve of several newspapers published in [of the peoples and cultures of Afric: Korea in the interests of the Japanese | from the beginning of the Paleaolit} administration there. He was senior |or old Stone Age, down to the clo; parliamentary secretary of foreign |of the African Neolithic Age and the affairs In the Okuma cabinet and|beginning of the use of metals since then has taken a leading role! The two principal system in the political affairs of his country. [of Canada are co-operating in/an ef He made an extensive tour of Amer-! fort to eliminate ica and Europe in 1919. ices so that oper: & { be reduced, Adachi outstangin ity's - Zon In I Thief Gets Valuables in Auto. A thief cut a hole in tof of tocked automobile of S, ucas o the Roosevelt Hotel last ht g stole packages containinz a hind sew b inz machine, knives, for glasses and & coat, .the total valued &% 115 Nursing Group Elects. MINNEAPOLIS, May 30 (#).—Miss Carrie Hall of Boston was elected presi- dent of the National League of Nu ing Education at the closing session | here yesterday. of the organization’ a‘nnun}"c;\:;ler‘;lon.‘\‘[l'he ‘1‘9;’5 conven- tion w! eld at Atlantic City, N. J My - e L oo e spoons, B