Evening Star Newspaper, June 1, 1925, Page 17

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1925. 1 D R e TREE FROM MOUNT VERNON PLANTED AT OLD LAFAYETTE HOME. en. Farge, commander of the thirteenth district, representing the French government, planting a_tr France, once the home of the Marquis Lafayette. The tree is a gift of for its transplanting from the shrine on the Potomac. A PLAQUE FOR THE SHENANDOAH. Miss Rose Blossom, better known as Miss Tacoma, and Comdr. Lansdowne aboard the big dirigible at Lakehurst, N. J., after the presentation ceremony. The plaque was presented by the people of Tacoma, Wasl « t by Underwood & Underwood FEDERIL RESERVE |~ LAUDS GOLD PLAN t Judiciary Park, streets northw mond G. She nding; Wil- captain, band . Stannard ucting. . The Pathfinder of | Board Explains Arrangement | Overtet i e e . | Suit allet Egypti Luigini With Bank of England | | ™" auiegro non troppo: 17, al- 2 | legretto; II1, andante Sos- for Credit System tenuto; IV, andante ex- = pressivo). luphonium solo, “The Wan derer” . Harlow (Played by M The Federal Rese Board lengthy statement mude put 8 night commented upon the benefits it { | Two popul believes will be derived by Great (a) “Waitin’ for the Moon."” Britain’s return to the gold standard Brown and revealed details of the plans b () “Ukulele Lady" Kahn which American finarcial interests | | 1ntermezzo, “The Wedding of will support Great in in the | the R e Jessel maintenance of that s d Selection, “Memories of the The statement deals largely with World War . ..Schmohl the arrangement made between the| | March, “Chicage Tribune, Bank of England and the New York | Chambers Pederal Reserve Bank prior to the| establishment of the gold standar and abolition of the ban on gold e: ports from England. Other Feder: “The Star pangled Banner” | oln Park today, at 7:30 m., concert by a section of th Reserve banks also are participating | Y, ed States M vrvlv»n' (Hr ln)-l‘\ n creation of & of $§200, T for Eerat s 1 the creation A et Taylor Branson, second leader, 000,000 for the Bank of England, upon which it can draw when and if con ditions require. Another transaction | supporting the gold standard is the | establishment of a direct credit of $100,000,000 to the British government | by J. P. Morgan & Co, | Of the credit arrangement with the | conducting March, “General Lejeune,” Branson Overture, “‘La Princess Jaune” (The Yellow Princi Intermezzo, “Just a Gen: rese; ha £ e board said ' Tobani '[{I\\golrdri‘}‘ bl:}:mm;r ent with the cerpts from “The Fortune Bank of England, the Federal Reserve) eller 2 .Herbert Bank of New York undertakes to sell | 3 letre: (_uf [h? £0ld on credit to the Bank of and . ellenick from time to time during the next two Waltz, Gitan: ears, but not to exceed $200,000,000| | Grand scenes from outstanding at any one time. Th credit is to bear interest to the exte that it is actually used at a rate of 1 “The Star Spangled Banner” cent. or, if the Federal Rese Jack M. Grifin and Miss Helen ish government on the credit which it | count rate exceeds 6 per cent has established is to be determined in Barnes Identified as Vie- er above the New York Reserve s Pemics discount rate, with minimum YALE JUNIOR AND WOMAN of 4 per cent and a maximum of 6 per KILLED IN AUTO ACCIDENT the rediscount rate of the = rate of interest to be paid by & similar manner. i s, oF Bakiiks. Keep Deposit in England. Associated Press. Upon the pu of England will pla the credit of the Bank of New Yor an equ posit’ in pounds sterling. Th may be used from time to time by arrangement with the Bank of Eng land in the urcha of ing comme al bills, which guaranteed by the Bank of T vx.'"nl\nl. a d in at case discount earned on | Hoe pilts il )iv(-P‘,,:.',mn,‘;"m the pay-|School, and Miss Helen Barnes, ment of interest | vears old, of Woodmont Reserve | Yale student and his woman com- its on “If occasion arises for the use of this| Griffin and another Yale student had ed on Miss Barnes and her sister I i reir Woodmont home. credit sup] t can be given to sterling exchange either through the purchase | at of sterling bills in New York m'| abroad, or go be shipped to o, o o e amtish becount, | New Haven, for some sandwiches. Thus the Bank of England could meet }l-"{'\l_" Ve a foreign demand for gold without |to Woodmont. e . reducing its own r . or it could \}’_‘}!"_‘T'T sald that 'rvnmr!;s Lo replenish its reserves by withdrawing | Proached the curve at a high spe gold from this country or by earmark- | and that it fng it in New York. The form in |CHines Der which the credit would be used would ! depend upon the ciroumstances at the | standard act by the British Parlia time. * * ¢ i ment in N the Federal Reserve Savin Rock, between Woodmont e it turned over. ments made by the New York Federal Reserve Bank. In giving approval the ard believed that the arrangement uld be an effectiv aid toward Reserve Bank of New York was au thorized by the Federal Reserve Board to make the arrangements with the Bank of England which have heos scribed. After the passase of the old the Bank | NpwW HAVEN, Conn., June 1.—The | pro Jent de- | panion who were killed last night deposit | when their automobile turned turtle a curve at Ames Point, were identi- ible sterl. |fied early today as Jack Merrilat Grif- hall be |fin, 21 vears old, of Fort Wayne, Ind., junior in the Sheffield Scientific pout mid- night Grifin and Miss Helen went to t occurred on the return trip side-swiped two other ma- | from Mount Vernon at Chavaniac, Americans, who made arrangements Wide World Photo. THE MODEL_AIRPL the winners of the Airplane Derby tion of model planes was Mrs. arker Gilbert and Mi | NAMES PROSECUTOR ADOR'S DAUGHTER AND NIECES READY fathilda Houghton, daughter of the United States Ambassador to Great Britain, and Mrs. Houghton. The other girls, ready for presentation to King George and Queen Mary, are, left to righ Alice Tully. 'MONTGOMERY BENCH HUGE BATCH OF “DE. WILL BE - DERBY. Two cups were recently awarded at Sudbury, England. onducted under the Society of Model Aeronautical Engineers, Copyrisht The competi- ices of the British FOR COURT PRESENTATION. Second from left: Miss Marion Tully, i \ MAIL THhEE DIE, FOURTH Ion Perdicaris l'C'l:I();\;E:)DjT;;l}R DAY | HURT, IN PLANE DIVE Famous Captive K[ANSMEN AITEND THE PRINCE OF WALES TAKES A SLOW RIDE IN SOUTH AFRICA. The heir to the Britich throne (front seat at left), riding on a “cape wagon,” drawn by oxen. The trip was made through crowds of Bri subjects from the Government House to the City Hall of Capetown. ht by Underwood & Miss Belle Sherwin, president of the s} R L National League of Women Voters, ; foi s at the fiftieth anniversary ceremonies § ) ) THE FINEST JUMP OF BRITISH MEET. Miss Nell Bullows taking one of the high hurdles at the Denham Fair, Bucks. England. on her blue ribbon winner, 1f Not. The cameraman caught the jumper just as he of Wellesley College. Miss Sherwin is a graduate and trustee of the col- lege. Wide World Photo topped the bar with plenty to spare. | o 8 : e Of Bandit, Dead Joseph C. Cissel, 27-Year-Old War Everything From Bibles to Garters Will Be Sold at| commercial Craft Crashes in Flor- RS Veteran, Succeeds John A. Garrett. Special Dispatch to The Star ROCKVILLE C. Cissel, 2 Toseph ring rld W last oy in s appointed State’s attorney for Montgomery Coun ty to serve the unexpired term of John A. Garrett, who recently went to | prison. | The appointment le by {Judges Robert B. Peter, Glenn H | Worthington _and Hammond Urner after Albert M. Bouic, former St attorney, who has been serving ad {terim <ince tt's arrest, decli to fill the post until January i en Garretls term would have ex | sel, who is married and has a | small daughter, takes office today. He |ie graduate of the Mon | County public schools and Gec rgetown il’rs\])‘ University and Law hool | A T T | SEVEN DEAD, FOUR HURT, | WHEN TRAINS HIT AUTO0S i = | Mother and Daughter Struck by Indiana Interurban; Five Killed in Ohio. By the Associated Press Willow anch, Ind., to Cincinnati. The dead are: Herschel Hutchens, 38; Donald, 8: Margaret Hutch {ens, Gladys Hutchens, 11. daugh jters, und Martha Wilson, 18, of Gre |field, Ind. Another son id, 10, |ceived a fractured skull and inter injuri ysicians said his condi tion was serious 1, PERU, Ind., June 1.—A mother and |her §.vear-old daughter were killed and three others were injured, one ! ably fatally, near here yesterday when their automobile was struck by 1 interburban car on the Union raction Line. Mrs. Emma Pulvermiller, 30, and |her daughter, Alice, 6, were Instantly {killed when the interurban cut their < ile a second as internally r almost in two, Wi |duaghter, Pauline, 4, w hurt | HOLD 3 FOR SMUGGLING. | Customs Agents Seize $100,000 | il o S | Pershing Host to Chilean General. Gems at Rouse’s Point, N. C. | ST. ALBANS, Vt. June 1 (P).- | Diamonds been seized at Rouses Point, N. Y. by customs men of the second V mont district, who arrested Henry | Margulie of Brooklyn, N. Y. and | Abrs N:¥ The men arrested had been under “In January of this year the Federal | Board approved in detail the arrange- | surveillance from the time they left | com | Paris and embarked at Amsterdam on | { the liner Minnedosa to Rouses Point | Customs Inspector Harry White. jbill turned the prisoners over to the |- b. | cellector at Rouses Point, zomery | HAMILTON, Ohio, June 1.—Five {persons were killed 10 miles west of this city vesterday morning, when a passenger train struck an automobile bearing a party on its way from | '{that the first unit of the in valued at $100,000 have | spe ham Trepple of Woodhaven, Post Office Department Building—Sale Is Ex- ample to Public for Better Mailing W eek. If you ever United States m nything in the rk to the mes t Office Department week, and come ent 1d enormou “dead” tc » on array be I is being put ties as they ate the Americ: more careful in the way mail, and to sell the “dead” ar v ve been left on the m ps. corn kniv radio, axes, por hods, Bibles, meat Toys, rat tu | crutches, tobacc celain knobs, c; choppers chains, underwear ri ca garters—the list is | endless. aln The goods will be open for inspection from 10 am. to {3 p.m. Wednesday, and the sale will | open Thursday morning at 9:30 Better ) week is being ob served under order of Postmaster Gen eral New with a view to red he careless addressing of mail 1 wvelve thousand moving picture thea. | when a commercial airplane went into | By losses revealed in $03,000 parcel: mail yearly in blank eny s removed annu )00 in checks, tended owner One of the higzest deadheads in the mail situation is said to be the “nixie. iece of mail which, must be taken out machinery for “hospital serv dressed or the owner the Dead Letter Office. The poor nixie is said to c $1,740,000 a year, orphan of the mails, the Government about {DR. W. H. WILMER PLANS | WIDE RESEARCH TOUR Washingtonian to Study Europe's Eye Treatment to Precede Open- ing $3.000,000 Institute. | By the Associated Pres BALTIMORE, Md., June 1 | William H. Palmer of Washir | noted ophthalmologist, will sail Tues day on the liner Resolute from York to mak. survey -of 1 | methods in Europe, preparatory to | the openeing of a $3,000,000 institute at Johns Hopkins for the study and tment of dis: s of blindne it was announced trustees. Dr. Winford H. Smith, director of Johns Hopkins Hospital, said today titute, | which will be under the direction of | Dr. Wilmer, will be opened in the-hos- pital on October 1. Plans for a new building which will house the institute |1ater, however, will not be made until | Dr. Wilmer’s return from Iurope in | August. Of $3,000,000 available, $1,- 1 000,000 will be spent for building and equipment and $2,000,000 will be kept intact as an endowment | Dr. Wilmer has been appointed | professor, of Ophthalmology in Johns Hopkins Medical School and ophthal- | | mologist-in-chief of the hospital. | Gen. Pedro P. Dartnell, former in- general of the Chilean Army. who is on a visit to this city, on h on, was entertained by Gen. Persh- | ing at a luncheon at the Metropolitan | Club today. This afternoon h 1l at the White House to ps respects to President Coolidge. v his military aide, N t the Union 8 v Gen. Pershin: he members of the Chilean em AMERICAN AND CANADIAN | wev to = hosral i | The Amertean Government, follow DOCTORS TO TOUR EUROPE | CLAIMS ARMY WAS USED Members of Interstate Post-Gradu- | TO QUELL BRAZIL STRIKE | ate Assembly Arrive in London. Will Study Hospital Methods. ¥ the Associated Press [Belgian Leader Charges Labor| —A large par : nadian doctor hers of the Interstate Post ( rrived yesterday tudy of the method in the clinics and hospital The first meeting of their conference will be held tomorrow, with the open ing address by the Duke of York and | the health ministe: and the Ameri- Ambassador, Alanson B. Hough B GBENEVA. June 1Al Mertens. | i be SR s Belgian labor leader and delegate to | Ao E " oh B1EA 1| the International 1 Gonterenced |t MEST BRI RN Bateh Near N0 TISC INPST charged at today’s session that mili martl pl: ises of the eye and | by the Johns Hopkins, other speeches b The program includes 16 lectures be demonstrations | while on the social side there are garden parties, tions and a banquet at Guildhall. the end of the week the visitors will Liverpool and the hospita’ | country. He said a state of sjege|# height of 300 feet as the; Manchester, provincial cities. RATE HELD REASONABLE.| L C. C. Refuses Lower Freight| Charges on Printer's Ink. on newsprint York and Massachusetts ing centers to Washington and | Baltimore were held today terstate Commerce Commission to be A complaint filed by pub- of Washington and Baltimore s dismissed. by the In-| way to Europe on a diplomatic mis- | will | newspapers w New laws in India now provide that all cotton factories there must have a G0-hour week for aduits, abolish night reduce maximum Maj the Chilean gonpmll met | we rk for females, jdaily work of children to six ho: ise the minimum age of work from 9 to 12 years. ing children ida When Pilot Loses Control. Capture in 1904 Caused - Knights Make First Organ- | ized Appearance Here at Columbia Heights Church. Episode Involving 4 Governments. By the Associated Press. ; MIAMI, Fla. June 1.—Three men | were killed and a fourth badly injured | a nose dive and cr vesterday. Hugh I dord, who had en 1ke them on a tour property near Okeechobe and_the t. Harold Ibac dead men. Charles Tuttle chanie, received »u hope is expresse 1t he w shed near Hi } W leah internatio American f the S The airy old Germar friend of Dr. Willlams, p model and, accor to sta his e : ; tioned at the field where it w kept. & s was in bad condition It was owned Americar ‘v - o ¥ by Roy Jones, who vesterday engaged | #nd his capture by Raisuli d » demand employed at the time in pilot- | ’resident Roosevelt a seaplane, to take Beckett and | dicaris alive or Raisy Ford on the trip dicaris® father was After the airplane reached an alti- | dic lived in Mc tude of about 500.feet the pilot turned | before his capture in an effort to gain height and in so| Raisuli captu doing went into a nose dive, from which he could not _recover The propeller and all of the engine were buried in the dirt. Ford died as he was being pulled from the wreck age, and Ibach and Beckett died on 1 stepson, Cromwell an, in their of Tangier, a ransom of $55.000, and ing certain political immunities from the Sultan ed by the British and French, brought pressure to bear on the Sultan and | sent warships to Tangier. The finally vielded to all the bandit's mands ‘and the two men were set free after a month of captivity in the interior of Morocco. ame in Automobiles e TWO FLYERS INJUF!VED | WHEN PLANE NOSEDIVES Chief, Were Imprisoned. and Deported By the Associated Press Baltimore Trying to Land ce at Logan Field | their tary forces in Brazil had suppressed | strikes attempted by textile and rail road workerf. Branco Clark, Brazil ian delegate, promptly denied these! BALTIMORE, Ma ne 1 charges, which, he said, were entirely Lieut. E. K. Shilling, United States Ghiustiicd ERa. an e JArmy air service reserve, and T M. Mertens' asserted that the Bra-|Serst. Elbert Tweed were injured I zilian military had imprisoned and |Yesterday when their Curtiss bi-plar even deported labor leaders of that|Nose dive into a field of beans women carried babies arms. One cept were carryi solemnly to his | erutc mes | each str folded The began with choir anc congregational singing of “Americ followed by a prayer from Dr. Smith A spirit of patriotism. Then tor opened proceedings witl announcement explanatory « ence. he said e to ask i roup here t ne. 1 told them ®|and sinner alike | church. Tt doe: e what k or wor had at times been proclaimed in Bra- | Preparing to land at Logan Field, | 7, on the pretext of revolutionary | Pundalk. At Johns Hopkins Hospi. | ciianger. but really to prevent workers im‘:a \\erx‘?l-‘w;"é_pmwx:vernnm\kpm Jt was rom organizing. sald S arm was broken Syt Mr. Clark insisted that Brazil was |Tweed had received severe cuts about | waiad upon a country of progress, where worker: hhs- head and both were under ob-|.nce of this were not denied the right of organi. | Servation for possible internal injur-ijs we zation, but dangerous fereign dema. |les. ~ Shilling is a member of the gogues were not allowed to intertere | 408th Afr Service Squadron in internal ]m'llllt- and foment dis. ‘:"""1"‘13“0:] Ren"hv:\.‘- ne: = order under the guise of protecting |l0n- d is a member o Brazilian workers, he said. | bardment Squadron of Langley Field. | t are welcome in this ke any diffe wd of a nent a man an wears in church. if he Z she comes here the right spirit M. Mertens, however, renewed his | V4. He is on detached service at| i g BACTeDIEL charges and Hisisted he had authentic | Logan Field. Preaches to Klan. information Shll\\’:inf1 they were well | — —_ | Later in the evening the Rev. Li. founded. He added that he could | Smith preached a sermon that seemed have made stronger statements, but | GRAY LEADER DIES. [to be especially directed at. the had refrained. { | strangely clad congregation facing Y o3 3 = |him. He told of the blessings of 5 = e Georgia Confederate Head Expires. edo g Pinedo Flies 570 Miles in 6 Houn.‘ ;‘ @ A e ‘ .Al;."l;“ i ;lre’:; l:’\::\m e ationy BROOME, Western Australia, June a3 sustaugtion! Kngtriger, tizens to pursue happiness, each in 1 (#).—On his_flight from Rome to AUGUSTA, G June 1 (#). faj. | his own way. He described the heri Australia and Japan, the Ttalian air- | A. J. Twiggs, of Augusta, com. |tage which had come to men and man, Commander De Pinedo, arrived | mander of Georgia Division, United [women of American ancestry to pre here’ yesterday from Coepang, Dutch | Confederate Veterans, died at his |serve the boon bequeathed them, and East Indie He covered 570 miles in | home here yesterday afternoon. Maj.|warned foreign-born, who live in six hours. He will make flights from | Twiggs was prominently known | America, that they have no right to here to Melbourne, where he will stay | throughout the South as a construg|tamper with or undermine strictly thregeweeks and overhaul his plane. | tion engineer. =i an - institutions.

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