Evening Star Newspaper, June 1, 1925, Page 1

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WEATHER. S. Weather Bureau Forecast.) w Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; warmer tonight, moderate west and northwest winds mperatures—Highest, 88, at noon today: lowest, 59, at 6 Full report on page Closing N. Y. Stucks and Bonds, Page 26 WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION @h o ¢ Foening The Star” “From Press to Home Within the Hour” s carrier system covers every city block and the regular edi- tion is delivered to Washington homes as fast as the papers are printed. Star. Saturday culation, 86,84 5 7 ulation, 103,573 second class Washing ered a t off No. 29,616. WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, JUNE 1, 192 —THIRTY-SIX PAGES. * P Means Associated TWO CENTS. AMUNDSEN'S BASE BREAKS UP AS FOOD SUPPLY RUNS LOW | Nine Men Sent Ashore From Convoy Ships—Delay Is Causing Hardships. TR MARSHALL DIES OF HEART DISEASE. INSUDDEN RELIPSE ormer Vice President Passes Quietly While Read- ing Bible in Bed. RECOVERY HAD BEEN HOBBY MOUNTAINS VIGIL ALONE AT ICE-EDGE | | | Weather Conditions Good—Farm Recoaling for Four-Week's Search Northward. Bervice in Senate Was One of Long-| est—Won Love of Nation | by Simplicity. as R. Marshall Py 2 BY JAMES B. WHARTON. GF Hiainake in | THOMAS R. MARSHALL. : el | Special Correspe lenit of The Sta d North room at the Wi | ——— e — America) ewspaper Allia vears oild. Death came He KING BAY Spitzbergen, (By Mvas Iying in bed, ay recover Radio From Steamer Farm), June 1.— from his recent illness, nd he he breaking up of Amundsen's base contente his old Bible, party began today when nine of the | hen suddenly d down on 14 members were sent ashore at is pillows a word, he rrence of the st suffered on m a week ago a1l Kings Bay, to proceed homeward in a day or two by the first available ship. | All nine are men whose work was finished with the departure of the airplanes on their Polac flight, but who have remained with the mother | ship because of their natural desire to | be present at the completion of the | Polar flight. MARTIAL LAY WITH FOUR NORE SLAIN is oday with Mrs. Marsh His death came hock to his thousands nd throughout the N ondition had continued as an unexpected ends here his ove $hroughout t | vas so confidently expec Eik = : Stores Are Exhausted. physicians that plans aeady had | RIOtiNG Continues and Spread| The unexpected delay in Amuna L seen made for his return to his home | e Iaabetun do catheiaaine , Sl : ards| aboard the mother ships. i Indiannapolis the middle of this | Of Strike Is Feared—Phone | i Stores ot meat ana flour were ex. e | L . hausted on Saturday, and we are now Had Regained Strength, i Operators Out. gependent on ssal meat, which is G e & e abundant in these waters. Instead = n his arrival in Wasl n he| of bread, we have hardtack. ent directly to the hotel, complain I‘ BY A seiee The steamship Hobby will maintain Supreme Court Holds State of a cold and g exhaustion. | - P. FINCH. 3 vigil alone along the ice pack during : (Vhen physicians were summoned i | By Cable to The Star and Chicazo Daily News. | tne next two or three davs while tne| Cannot Exclude Private hu\’ ‘fuulnl he h.’li}( suffered from a| SHANGHAI, June 1 Determined | Farm is re-coaling for a possible four- | eart attack. e re ed his| to maintain all costs, the|week push northward . i i piremetr, rowever, una S0 was 16 | Municipal laimed a| The weather continues excellent Institutions. 1« Conditio as possible! stare of emergency, declaring e have made several landings at | for Mrs. Marshall to leave the bed-| £ o smErenoy daclliing i O e feGuihein ke af b nenk Bide to attend to va personal | within the settlement. The streets| . ;ove satisfied ourselves that the | BY the Associated Press. nds around the Caj are now heavily guarded. Al forel&n | congition of the ice is too bad to| Oregon lost in the Supreme Court Tentative plans were defense units and armored cars are|permit any northward push by 15 BEht ol somoat /anil ‘Tentati {today its pel children to funeral in Indiar out sledges. Any rescue attempt Will | atiend public schools guspices of the Ma The declaration followed the ugly|have to be made via Greenland, ‘we | 2 | Which he held high outlook consequent upon the Chinese | believe. robably will be at 2 fhiear a foster son who s morn! Most of the Chi Alianca: in England by Centra B&o. shops in the settlement closed Germany by Ullstein Verlag: in e by Petit Parisienne: in Italy by Cor: Short services probab! i ail Sean was little response to the strike call, | ricre 4 Ser: 5 i S0 in thot FISHE ca wioe e co | tries by the Norwegian Aero Club. All rights | I"’]mvli‘llg‘t‘ Was hington | though tonight a widespread strike | trics by, the Norwegian Acro Clu R | e e oniioing obi {1 ren Wbt vo=ri (iR fendance. The body v is developing. Telephone operators {ages of 8 and 16 to attend public | fendance, The body wi are quitting and efforts are belng XPLORER NOT WORRIED. chools, therefore was declared gomorrow or | made to bring out electricity and| s valid. > When the end came he was reading | FAmWay workers and the Chinese| Entriken, Peary’s Officer, Gives ibs declaiyn gd beop anatiod Wil Prom the Bible, to which ha. haq| Police w Amundsen 3 Montns. Syliar cirtumstances. surrounding the turned throughout life fok-consola~t Three Die in Attack. | orrLaxDO a. Juue 1 OP.—|litigation, and DéGuuse many other e oToh e e S| Larse crowds of students and other | r;n;‘fl J. mfl\mk"n’- Arctic explorer tes have compulsory education del s IC and rst officer in Peary Chinese jammed the streets of Nan- expedition | @djoining the Senate chamber in mo-|Linz road in the vicinity of the Louss|to the North Pole is not worried a ments when his presence was not |y, station this morning and at-| Roald Amundsen's protracted stay in| kequired as presiding officer. acked small police squads the Arctic regions. | Nurse at Bedside. | Wing On’s large Chinese depa “I give him three months time to 4 3 store. Overcoming firemen using a|be heard from,” said Entriken in an Only a nurse was at the bedside. | hose, the attackers tore up stones|interview giver here. ‘“Unless some Pirs. Marshall was in an adjoining |from the road, bombarded and then | unforseen accident has overtaken him Foor e | The police fired, | he will come out all right. Amundsen The room in which he died is on the | killing 1 atta and wounding 16, | knows where there is a cache of food rth floor made the he de- of the hotel, overlooking was in this hotel that he during his official life in Two later died from their wounds. | He is the only man who ever m. Large forces of Tndian policemen | northwest passage in a boat, and volunteers occupied the road,| “red g | clearing the district of Chinese. “ "«"“‘”“‘"‘““‘"’r “(* "’““"‘ his “;‘"‘*‘ ice President had plan S here, was the first man to pitch a 8y Bere i Angered at Foreigners. tent ‘on the site which is now occupied | | Agitation following the shooting of | by Fairbanks, Alaska. He is a_per-| Vice |Students by the police Saturday has|sonal friend of Amundsen, MacMillan ) hington The forme fied a ten-day fhe periodic Bince his Vi from the enforcing compulsory education laws, cannot require the attendance of chil dren in public schools. PUBLIC SCHOOL LAW The court held that the States in enforcing compulsory education laws, cannot require the attendance of chi dren in public schools, to the exclu- sion of private or parochial schools. | The Oregon compulsory education | laws. The Oregon law was attacked | by the Society of the Sisters of the | Holy Names of Jesus and Mary and the Hill Military Academy. Through-| out the controversy there were many | who charged that the statute had | been {nspired by the Ku Klux Klan. | The ccurt held that the States, in | “Certainly there is nothing in the| present record to indicate that they | have failed to discharge their obliz tions to patrons, students or the state,” the court contended. *And | there are no peculiar circumstances or present emergencies which demand in- | for money esidency in ~and on these oc |assumed the proportions of a general|and the late Sir Earnest Shackleton. |5, : g " i Bt s the |anti-foreign movement by,all Chinese | He spent five vears above the Arctic | Srimas pamatiog. e0 relative to} Nhite House to pay his respects fo|Bere. Who condemn the Police action | circle and familiar with the topos-| ¥ e piak it entirely plain that the She Pisiigen:. and are pressing for an apology and | raphy of Alaska, Greenland, Northern | act of 1922 unreasonably interferes , . compe! on as retaliation ainst | Siberfa and Spitzbergen. . e y Prieroe ] Usual Calls Prevented. [the foreign authorities of the settle- | s st e g B g i s i i ment and the municipal council | o ol n Glead Ui Ruicky eart attack, which followed | “Three thousand students and labor end saueationrot childzenyinde el uickly on his arrivel he b i b Shdonts etone control. #ay. however, prevented him from | which wag chasactmemstos thy mrere: | “AS often heretofore pointed out. | Imaking any calls or recelving any |vor ceoiemons ooeo b3 the sreat { rights guaranteed by the Constitution kallers. Despite his yedra Be' ve- |aenamnrel the forcien st may not be abridged by legislation | Bcted fo to the treatment given | (¢ s R A * |which has no resonable relation to | him by physicians, whose examina.| C°PYiERt: 1023, by Chicago Daily News Co.) some purpose within the competency | tions recorded a slow but gradual im ¥o " o | of the state. | Provement almost until the end. UR MORE KILL | Justice McReynolds, in delivering | T | the opinion for the court, said the e o] public office | mota] Deaths From Rioting Now | Placed at 16. | { SHANGHAT (®).—New out- t recent and moved | i;‘vn a modest residence at Indianapo- | s, i Coroner’s Jury Exonerates| June 1 - breaks in the Japanese spinni s | : Child’s Death Great Sor . gy not inherently harmful, but long re- ath Great Sorrow. ¥ . 3 : [strike agitation continued today, re | AtteNDaNts Who Gave | cq"ae serul ana meritorious. e to take his hody |sulting in the killing of four more | s “The fundamental theory of liber. Restre ani I followed out & | Chinese students, bringing the totai| WOMan Wrong Injection. |ty upon which all governments in this Po the tormelyave been expressed {dead to 16 since rioting started in the Union repose excludes any general Mt resins. ,\1" Fresident that his | streets Saturday — | power of the State to standardize its | os lace be near that of | In the latest outbreak at 1 o'clock | children by forcing them to accept in- s foster so : : atest outbre: o'clock ! Ace o diet of | children by : his Joster son. Clarence Morrison, |this afternoon at Peking and Che.|q Accidental death was the verdict of | gtryctions from public teachers onl; hnge Hea il (was oeliof thie at |kiang roads Sikh police fired into a | Jyiin L S f(‘EA""-“‘," Mrs. | ” “The child is not the mere creature ghild had been shall's Jife. The |crowd of demonstrators, mortally | whe died S Might at Cuprsctown |of the State: those: who nurture him gngton hospital, with the hoesovash. |wounding one Chinese student. The|Jiospital as the I af & orketow |and direct his destiny have the right, the mother, and nurseq backen aq |2ilernoon outbreak came after po-| jection of medicine during an Joray | Copled with the high duty, to ree et iReaith be e e o ap disturbances were reported from | examination two weeks previou ¥| ognize and prepare him for additional Frere chndiens. " Ha ien analls, who | many sections throughout a morning | “The coroners Jury dia not attompt | *PiSations b % Eat e “1\“,'.;‘:":\:\1-);:‘»11 ".‘:1“1“.0 r)];:urnls, arn}:m}\l(u x responsibility, but found in the | T 2% or four yez d flist a8 step - abers an marched | verdict that the entire tragic situation | i iflv‘:lv(r ke to adont nim legans. "¢ |BEouh the strects of Shanghal |\ produced et laean $50,000 in Gems Stolen. My ribte . i legally. | During the " morning _the rioting | " Testimony was given by a number| BUFFALO, N. Y., June 1 (P).— the wartime Vice Presidont were | 3 i hocamdin bUsiness section. | of prominent surgeons, physicians, at- | Jewelry, estimated by the police to be oleed by Mighest Government of |iurbing element resulted in the |tae aress, sos are in e et | Worth $50,000, was taken by five rab- Capital | The total number of wounded as the |sodium hydroxide, which is for gen-| MLl Hreet toony A thad been. hand. e arittie Hustiloterare s oon result of street fighting thus far. was |eral external use, instead of sodfum | G, four O Ploy e o tos: ba Bl eever i @ pabie Stk Prrow: | elven Included were several|joaids, which is & mild antiseptic for | SURed and shackled to steel bars op Secretary Kelloge, who was o menm: | ©"°"" to be mortally wounded. |internal use. Septic 10F 1 a window. Becre llogg. who e ternal us ber of the Senate duri Three Russians Arrested. | The testimony was that the chemi- | of Mr. Marshall's service & Three Russian agltators were ar-| 2L SYmbols for hydroxide are: Na O H) I rested near the scene of the outbreak | M the Bymbols for lodide ave T = = in the business rict this morning. | g0 D o 0§ &nd the highest chara Thepolice char ot {show that the the respect of every one | were by an indelible pencil. Part of Bl o e e M A :j;:‘!‘“:;:“| e retponaible ponevik | the lettering was rubbed off, so that | mourned by the American people. | demonstration by studen ;vrfl, !hr !fouershN 1 ;Ilille:u'ed ;m the SerVes W | Foreig its sup 3 bottle before the administration of Served for Two Terms. ,,.,',,,":"‘;f” s caupplemented Y a1 the injection. The “small a” and the Thomas Riley Marshall was Vice |pany of the volunteer corps, armed | c2Pital O had been rubbed off and President for two terms with Presi- |with sabers and rifies, began patiolling | the first part of the “H” had also been dent Wilson and served longer in|the district after Chinese police were | ci2Sed so that the only part of the| that office than any other man. He | withdrawn. { 11" remaining looked like an “I.” | came of pioneer Virginia stock, of | Barly today a mob attempted to | Coroner J. Ramsay Nevitt presided. | which he was very proud, but wis a | halt tram cars on the Nanking and | PP Herbert 1. Martyn, deputy coro Hoosier by birth. While a very suc- | Chekiang roads. Missiles were hurled | "¢ Tepoiting the - result of the kessful lawver, he never courted g = " jautoy said the cause of the | t1onal prominence until it was thrust | (Continued on Page 2, Column 4) | death was hemorrhage of the Kidneys, | upon him in 1908 by his nomination - which was the result of the injection | ps Governor of Indiana, and again i T of sodium hydroxide solution. The ver- | Zaler whes ke was selected as Wood- | _— [[|Qict ot the jury exonerated all con.| yow Wilson's running mate, in 1912 Fairy Tales || cerned in the accident from responsi- | nd 1916. His renomination wi % || bility in so far as criminal intent was Vilson in 1916 gave him the di in || concerned. | ®inction of being the first man thus i) 9-é.,\‘n’.'é‘l"m“}‘."?l{f{,'.s‘fi‘é‘l‘;.?i‘i‘:;f&," honored, with the single exception | . : | res B c | :( James S. Sherman, since (h:]vl‘lm’-‘ Pictures {l]John Eaton, who also testified con-| ;.m..u system came into practice, in | | ,‘cermng the ocase. ¥ | S o Sh e M Do Sinxl"ltllu “Once Upon a Time” || Will Honor Japanese Envoy. NMarch 14, 1854, the only son of Dr.| BY W. J. ENRIGHT ||| EBASTON, Pa., June 1 (P.—Among Duniel M. and Martha A. Patterson ||| . # ||j those who will receive the honorary Marshall. He attended the public | Pictorial records of all the ;(d!eg;;ee of doctor of[la:\'ln art lhe( nlcne. &chools and his mother had dreams | | = RS s % | tieth commencement of Lafayette Col- of him becoming a famous preacher. fmosi ol “:ms start in this ;00" ext Monday is S. T. Suneo Mat. Bbut the trinl o eivcuit rider in issue of The Star on page 4 | sudaira, Japanese Ambassador to the lid not apneal to him, and ||| United States. Do Not Miss Them sh | | duated from Wal 'Radio Programs—Page 2L | nevitable practical result ‘of enforc-| |ing the Oregon act would be destruc | tion of the parochi: other private primary schools wl |are engaged in-a kind of undertaking schools and ail ich | State Income Tax Upheld. JACKSON, Miss., June 1 (#).—The e Supreme Court today held the fississippl income tax act passed by the 1924 legislature constitutionhl. Commiss age, Judge Holds in Awarding Autoist $4,500 in Fatal Accident. “nder its dut keep the streets safe conditi well the ng street District in an opinion he court judgment of §4 Court Orsdel med Dis n agai [trict in favor of Joseph A. Berberich, | )se n it « ting automol ded v viad: was demolished hi pe avenue northeast T Berberich's ident but the compen: ther refused to sue ation for the loss of his son, but through Attornevs Tobriner & Graham sued the District for the value of his In the course of hi vion, Justice Van Orsdel said? "It is settled law in the District that the Commission ers, being charged with the duty of maintaining the streets in proper MOVE T0 COMBAT BODIES OF OFFICER BGEER RUN FLEET | Ten Coast Guard Boats Near Miami to Check Increased Operations in South. e Government is pre meet_any move by rum smugglers to transfer their major activities to Southeastern watel James Jones, assistant prohibi tion commissioner, on his return to. day from a survey in Florida, said conditions still were bad, but that 10 Coast Guard boats had been placed near Miami to combat smuggling. Mr. Jones' main visits were to Miami and Tampa, where he obtained a vivid picture of conditions from the chiefs of police, judges and other en forcement officers. Some increase in the activities of rum runners was found, but this to be expected, Mr. Jones explained since the Coast Guard had bottled up their channels to the north. shermen operating between the southeast coast of Florida and Bim- ini, an island of the [ na group, about 60 miles off shore, were said by the assistant commissioner to be landing more liquor in Florida at the present time than any other source in the scores of illicit supply depots in Cuba, the Bahamas and the Florida Keys. Hope for improvement in enforce- | ment of the dry law in Florida w seen by Mr. Jones through better co- operation on the part of local peace officers, who were elected after fights in which prohibition was an issue. Stack Murder Trail Ends. CAIRO, Egypt, June 1 (®).—The trial of the men accused of murdering Sir Lee Oliver Stack, sirdar or British commander of the Egyptian here last November ended today. Judgment will be pronounced tomor- row. Coolidge Will Forsake Regular Coach For Private Car at Railroads’ Request| By the Associated Press. Stressing the necessity of ade- quate safety precautions and for fucility in operation, railroad of- ficials have persuaded President Coolidge to do his train-riding in special trains or private cars, rather than share the regular ac- commodations with other passen- gers. Complying with the request of the railroads, the President will travel in a private train to St. Paul, Minn., where, on June 8, he is to deliver an address at the Norse- American centennial. It is prob- able also that a special car will be used when Mr. Coolidge goes to Swampscott, Mass., late in June on his vacation. When the President and Mrs.. Coolidge went to Chicago several months ago, they rode a regular train. It was pointed out at the time tha‘ a considerable saving in railroad officials emphasized Qiffi- culties in assuring complete pro- tection for the distinguished pas- sengers and also in operation of the train, One other trip is scheduled for Mr. Coolidge before the White House is moved to New England. Next Wednesday he will motor to Annapolis to address the gradu- ating class at the Naval Academy. Meanwhiie, the President is mak- ing every effort to put affairs of his office in such shape as will permit him to leave for Swampscott as soon after June 22 as possible. On that date he will address the semi- annual business meeting of the ~Government. It is planned to ar- range for the handling here of much of the routine business of the White House after the President “leaves. However, an office force ill be taken along by Mr. Coolidge to aid him at the Summer White AYS IN SUIT AGAINST D. C. oners Must Take Responsibility for Dam-| s held today | al army, | Cows Have On Airplane Banana Oil By the Associated Press. MEMPHIS, Tenn., June 1.—Lieut. Harry G. Crocker, United States Army aviator, who flew here from Kelly Field, San Antonio, Tex Saturday to serve n attendant at a wedding, will be delayed sev- eral days on his return flight cause the wings of his airplane, treated with banana oil, proved too tempting a feast for a drove of cows at the local field yesterd be- A Memphis aviator, whose air- plane previous ad provided dinner for cows, called a police guard for Lieut. Crocker's ma- chine Saturday night. The po- liceman was called to the South- ern League Base Ball Park to quell a riot this afternoon, and the cows dashed to their fe of airplane wings, served with ba- nana oil dressing. PHYSICIAN KILLS SELF WITH RAZOR Dr. D. D. Mulcahy Leaps From Window After Cut- ting Throat. After weeks of depression and do mestic ill-fortune, Dr. Daniel D. Mul cahy, 53 vears old, prominent physi cian and expert diagn , cut b | jugular vein with a razor blade this | morning and jumped from the second e v window of his home, 1216 North | Capitol street, to a paved alley at the | side of the house. | Loss of blood had resulted in death | before he could be removed to Emer | geney Hospital. Men filling station next door saw the body condition, are chargeable with negli. | 4rop to the ground and called the hos gence in allowing the streets to be. | pital. come unsafe. Unsafe conditions may | hild" result from improper lighting as well | _ 1epressed by Child's Death. as from a defect in the street and| Members of the family found him the degree of lighting required will |on the floor of his room, where he depend upon existing conditions. In | had fallen after cutting his the present case. as clouds and mist |but while they went for assistance settled in wet or damp weather about |he recovered ~sufficiently to jump the yiaduct, the District charged | from the window the duty of meeting this gmerg-| Coroner J. Ramsey Nevitt issued a ency by proper and sufficfent light- | certificate of suicide, expressing the ing facilities. The lights are for pro- | personal opinion that the mind of the tection on cloudy and dark nights as | physician had been so depre: moonlight nights. In other |ing recent weeks by burden o: s, lights are for night protection, |illnesses, which culminated tw should be of sufficient strength |ago in the death of his littl d du ! in sugh position as to meet every ter Catherine, that he was prot nary requirement. The jury there- not responsible for the t fore, was not required to pass ondaughter Angela today is ill at in a gasoline | REPLY TO GERMAN - SECURITY PROFFER ONWAYTOBERLIN | Long-Looked-For Allied Note Will Be Presented in Germany Tomorrow. | el [VIOLATION OF VERSAILLES PACT WILL BE REVEALED | Evacuation Issue Brings Firm De- mand for Demilitarized Nation. A musecial courier 1st night is en route Berlin carrying Fra%e's reply to who left |to Germany's proposal fox Western | Europe secu pact. The noté will be presented to Foreign Minister Str nn of Germany by a group jof Ambassadors of the s tomor- |row. Twelve hours later the text of |a covering letter accompanying the {reply will be published in Paris and London 1= hours later an annex giving a lis n violations of the ament uses of _the {tre Versailles will be made public. A day or two later the com- | plete report n which this annex |is based will be given out The note to Germany has beer nd and France es of views and itude of the NOTE IS EMPHATIC. Makes Strong Demand for Demili rized Germany. d Chicago Daily News June 1.—Germany is wait ¥ to receive a blow on the nd then meekly turn the other. mon rmany asked the ne was not nuary 10, as had been the belated reply ssadors arrived Minister aden, the delivered cheek probabl be different terms. the Cologne zone cannot 1 to Germany until the dis the number and character of the lights | Episcopal Ear, Eye and Throat Hos- 2IMament clauses the treaty are {but from the evidence whether the |pital. lichting at the time of the accident | Less than a month ago three of the Emphasizes Army’s i | was sufficient to maike-the place rea- |five children of Dr. Mulcahy were all| . 5 s Army’s. Regginess. safe. The evidence was suf-|serlously ill, and specialists had to be| - e jaccording to ficient to support the view taken by |called. This was also the case about t the interallied military the jury.” six months ago, and his known de. | votion to his family had acted to de | press him seriously The suicide occurred evidently short- |1y after his arising this morning. He jwas fully clad except for a coat, col {lar and necktie i Studied in Germany. | Dr. Mulcahy w well known in | professional circles. His graduation |from Georgetown University had been followed with a course at Heidleber; | Germany, during the closing years - AND NURSE FOUND Lieut. Gerald Shelby and|course at Columbia Coltege. He : 4 : had graduated in pharmacy as wel Miss Lucille Merrill Were | me®cine, Drowned @t Annapolis. work, for which he was most |by his special training, and c {on a general practice in addition. | He practiced medicine here for fitted rried [ [ | | | [ vears, during which time he devoted | i oia e o | much_sttention to charitable e . 1. —The | tution for * and X [ Lodies of Lieut. Gerald Shelby, 32| the North vings Bank was vears old. Navy Medical Corps, and |incorporated he became president of | Miss Lucille Merrill, 26, a nurse at [that. He was also physician for the |the Naval Hospital, where the officer | Dominican House of Studies and |also was on duty, were found jother institutions here. s | O Mulcahy’s first wife died about |morning in the Severn River, where |19 vears ago, shortly after the birth ;!m\; ‘!u _th‘mr lives while canoeing | of his only son, D. J. Mulcahy, who USarey nighe {survives him. In 1514 he married The lieutenant’s body was found|agaln and his widow survives him | first, being discovered about 5 o'clock, | together with three children, Helen, n the shore at Horseshoe Bar, off |Rita and Angela Mulcahy. arrangements dour, Funeral have suburb, by George Brown, | | negro, who was crabbing in the shal- | been completed. {low water. i " IS LESS FAVORABLE | | | was removed there. Seen by Carman. Shortly after 8 o'clock a motorman | on a Washington, Baltimore and An- iwhere Lieut. Shelby’s body had been | found. . | | By the Associated Press | When he telephoned to naval offi- BOSTQN, June 1—Secretary of War cials a boat was dispatched to the | r‘“’gl‘ir“‘:}?loe“.[“'a! said to be prostrated | ¥F. GORHAM BRIGHAM.” place. He will make preliminayy | [Nursday Secretary Weeks had been funeral arrangements following m’@ cnn.\'a]e.sclns favorably until yester- formal inquest, which is expected to | 02%: take place later today. It is the desire of Mrs. Shelby that her husband be burled in Arlington National Cemetery, and accordingly it is the intention to bring the body to Washington as soon as the naval and State authorities have concluded their investigation of the drowning. to be nothing alarming in his symp- toms. Banker Auto Victim in France. PARIS, June 1 (#).—Walter Rey, described as an American banker, was 2 killed and his daughter injured yes. Falls 14 Stories to Death. terday afternoon in an automobile ac- NEW YORK, June 1 (#).—Irving | Cident near Mantes. A. Schuchert, 30 years old, a musi. | cian belleved to be of Sharpsville, Ind, either jumped or fell to his death today from the top of the 14. story Times Square Hotel. Police learned that Schuchert had a wife in Sharpsville and communicated with authorities there. Robbers Hold Up Illinois Bank. CHICAGO, June 1 (#).—Five rob- bers held up and virtually cleaned the Baker State Bank, in Cicero, of avail- able cash, estimated at $15,000, today. The robhery. escaped in an automobile, - Second Article by \ Queen Marie of Rumania —revealing her views on life, will be found on page 3. not when the physicians admitted that his condition was not entirely satisfactory, although there was said would be in a position to irmy if the delinquency the disarmament clauses construc in fulfilii A |was not remedied. Th amba emand demilitari- man shutzenpolizei, their removal from bar. named large d the release of 30,000 men. demanded | re in { numerc S0 as to remove the possibi anufacturing arms {and mu and solution of secret military organizations is called for. The featt it does n | evacuation s nd milita e of the note is that mention any time for nd makes the armament ] period indefinite. 25. by Chicago Dai FRENCH POLICY DEFENDED. | Doumergue Sa By 'RASBURG President Dc News Co. ) Nation Is Playing Keeping Safe Army. France, June 1 (®). mergue, on his first official visit anywhere in France since he entered the Elysee Palace as Presi- “mvz addressed the citizens of Stras- u esterday 3 summing up the pres- negotiations ent for a security pact with Germany. “As long France has not ob. tained serfous guarantees for her fu. ture security” he said: “we cannot be ed with imperilism if we maintain prudent attitude toward any prof- 1 pact 'SIX MEN ARE KILLED EXPLORING OLD MINE f Men's Deaths. apoli: . boi v i i piling on a bridge at the riorth shore! and State Is Described as | i {of the Severn, opposite Annapolis, | pr: = G RO (s | about three-quarters of a mile from | Not So Good. ! By the Associated Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala., June 1.—Six ibridge, and Miss Merrill's body re.|John W. Weeks, who was operated | white miners were killed early last | turned to the hospital. | upen for gall stones at the Massachu- | night in mine accident at Piper. , Miss Merrill's home is in West Rox- | setts General Hospital last week,!Ala.. reports to the Little Cahaba bury, Mass., where her father, Dr. W. | passed a restless night. his physicians | (oal Co., owner of the mine here, sai T. Merrill, is attached to the Veterans’ | announced today, and his general con P e e Bureau Hospital. " | dition was described as “not so good.” | Death is belleved to have been Lieut. Shelby’s wife is in Washing-{ A bulletin issued at the hospital this | “2Used by an accumulation of black ton. SRR |damp in an unused heading of the - | “Secretary Weeks' general condition | mine. which the six men were ex Mrs. Gerald Shelby, who is staving [1s not a0 good this morning. He had | plorin. There was no explosion. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Will H. | a restless night. Pulse, 90. Tempera-| The dead are: Fred Bashman, John | Krause. 1601 Connecticut avenue, was | fure normal. | Wright, L. H. Horton, Steve Scott, notified early today of the finding of | Jeff Warren and Eli Lucas, all resi- her husband’s body. ANTEL FISKE JONE | dents of Piper. Heading Sealed for Fire. | The heading where the men met death had been sealed for two months | following a_fire in March. It was jovened Sunday and six men went in |to see if the fire was out. Attempts had been made to ventilate the shaft and when the men went in, officials | believed the heading was safe. About an hour after the explorin; party entered, other miners followed. | The bodies of the six men were found |lving about 700 yards from the en trance to the heading. When the second party entered d found the body of one of the miners, rescue parties were formed and work ed in relays without further danger until all the bodies had been recovered at_midnight. | The mine is known as Piper mine, No. 2, and is located near Piper, in | Bibb County, about 45 miles south of Birmingham. The Little Cahaba Coal Co. is owned by Memphis -and Ala bama interests. $1,000 in Gems Stolen. | Jewelry valued at $1,000 was taken {from the show window of the Elgin IJewgry Co., 1289 H street northeast, earl¥ ~his morning.

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