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= . THE EVENIN( STAR, WASHINGTON, D Cs MONDAY, JUN SPARKLING WIT AND SIMPLICITY ARSHALL'S DEATH Acting Like Animal| INSPECTOR FORCE ON MARSHALL LOVE OF NATION Is Not Evolution|Y: Y 4 ~ ; Proof, Bryan Says . . . . = 1) | i IN MYSTERY BLAZE Life Philosophy Rooted in Old-Fashioned Virtues SHUBKS INDIANA Y € i . A’ Never Lost in Exalted Office—Fairness By the Associated Press. | e | CHICAGO, June 1.—William Jen i Conflicting Tales Confront| Respected Even by Foes. _| nings Bryan, an outstanding de- | Offigial | 4 5 | Ruiteli s 9 | y Friends - Had¥ExpectediiRe- | tlussiBems. an evtstandios g ntention to Discour- | {Building Department Finds : : : —— = prohibits the teaching of evolution, ’ A | Z : Chicago Police Probing |4 .. scises press o aa o bt er e souame] . SOVERYSand Refurnitol | Bt i e s s o age Bankers’ Aid to | Construction Needing : : A sparkling sense of humor, a|WOrds. was »roken up by a nicely 5 such thing as evolution.” | A North Side Fire. Terin Mg 12T % | directed shaft of humor and sarcasm Quiet Home. “Ass’s milk,” he expinined, “is Europe Scouted. i Supervision Increased. P Vi N speaking, and &)from the chair. On these occasions the kind most resembling hu }‘l.)]:‘l :-‘:vhl\'\"(;tl“rq{pnrog(c*h{n (hp} ;;]d. the galleries alw greeted the sally P rnflk,xhl;l lh:l![dll.u;tl lvl!(fl]vrn\n - ! — By the Associnted Prees. ashioned s made Thomas Riley |with laughter anc dclapping, but| By the Associated Pn man is descended from the ass. "RENC! L ’ CHICAGO, | Jur icting | Marshall one of the most interesting | the \'n-(‘:ll’;:an‘l'»:y‘u,h"\:'lu,hh::' ‘ates ilm "INDIA P(:n ;'mnm» 1 —News/of| 9098 &heifack ithat men act 5ok DAVED TAWIENGE. - e halidioss depert storles confronted police today In their | ;€17 Of his time in American public |face, always responded by drawling | the death of Thomas R. Mars S e e e el i efforts to account for a mystery fire | Fiis 1 out 'the cutand-dried caution pre: | o ocath of Thomas R. Marshall at| their ancestor: By eC Diexarady Nt ihe dotaiion to keep up wit 1 s to g it for & s is bubbling wit washed out every | seribed enite precedents 10 carh| Washington came as a shock to his| “Men have never succeeded In [of any important loans by American clont ek e 5 which caused the death of Deo Revn-| suggestion of false dignity, and his|applanse. 5 home State. His many friends in all| developing one species from an- |bankers to foreign powers. Nor is S obpon, W sneat olds Parsons, wealthy broker and |direct manner of expression reached| It was after an unusually tiresome|POlitical parties had hoped illness other. Burbank? Ah, he merely |there u fixed policy to discourage more inspectors to carry out the re- clubman, in his apartment in a fash- | the understanding of the millions. He |season of high-flown . eeators 1o the | Would be overcome. produced varlety within a spec e st b e tadearsd vised builc h becomes fonable North Side neighborhood Sun- [ Prided himself somewhat that he was chamber, with a long succession of | MF- Marshall, following his retire-| e never crossed the line of IS, 1 a'ntaben 15 e aiatunior effective July g to Building | B B he not a diplomat, and that he never|Senators suggesting long liat of |ment as Vice President in March, | species.” Hisn & naLelh 19 L ountae I St 3 i Firemen found Parson’s hody, partly | (ULETeW the tenets of that simple|panaceas for the post-war health of|1921. had maintained a home here, | x = the, foren daanjaucation ot e clothed. In the burned drawing room | jith in God and man to which he was|the country, that Mr. Marshall de.|2Ithough he was absent from the city aiding the Many) riviots, copor s P tonmons & o : 4 e 1 : _Toom | born. Sometimes his blunt expres-|livered himself of that aictum whicn | MUCh 0f the time on speaking tours. informal threats that have been study a committes of officals hag of his home. 1In the apartment at the | sions of opinion and his refusal to put | has become the most celebrated of all | He had practiced law here in a casual publishd in the last few months in : = e time were Mrs. Parsons and James|on the cloak of an exalted reserve in | his homolies nost celebrated of all | oy “gccepting only a few cases and o eation il diis. Tailure of allied Complcied Tewilc King, @& policeman, who said he had | high office worried his friends and| 5 declining to become involved in any ection wi he fai ot al e e e " t the c FeAlisiieG g ome involved in any o Al afraneemdnts & accompanied the broker home several | dismaved his political advisers, but he | good feent einrs > TeallY needs 18 3| hy¢ would prove unduly burdensome guyerpments ito midke elxanEaIony hours previously. Iways insisted that a man must first i Since leaving the vice presidency he {for the funding of their war debts to W Toricne o rteur singer | °F Al keep peace with his own con Had Short Apprenticeship. been almost inactive in politics the United State | known to her friends as a motor- | ¥ .CHONS Like the President with whom he | 11S only public appearances have been 1 e e e B 10 nhen G o ist and horsewoman, sufferes Met Supreme Test of i served, Mr. Marshall came to high | the S ng platform, where he ardin lughes administration issued | as the burns on her face and hanc bR e Roeme CRest of Walth, responsibility after but a short appren. | “Ontinued until the last to expound his 03 s a statement calling upon all bankers | orced b Ml il b S s i Bupreme test of his fidelity to|ticeship in public office. Five sears | 4Uaint philosophies. | to consult the Department of State | P e s injured When he fell from a second- | qats Mehen Sncdime Wisol th | before his election to the vice presi. |, Mr and Mrs. Marshall purchased a | prasidant Studi iop [Pefore making “any foreign loans, | cape i Bu mended story window |days when Woodrow Wilson lay|dency he was regarded as permanent. | hOMe here in September, 1922, at 1939 | FT€SI ent Studies Long List|there has been a voluminous cor JAini mrnendment rto. the Ao escand A PAtasteditoisubie ;;r‘nvl\'en at the White House, shut off | 1y established in a comfortable 'lh\v North Tlinois eet, in the heart of " respondence with private mnkers“ rules provides that all theaters i ey M | from the Natlon by a veil of impen- | practice at Columbia City. Ind. wag|ohe Of the old residential districts. In Urged After First Two |[2nd many informal conversati tion picture houses teoqany persons about to attend serv | etrable mystery. Out of the many |known to but a limited number out.|S¢eking a house Mr. Marshall sald he ; < Department’s Views Learned. | n f s a nearby Michigan avenue whisperings of others in high places|side his own community. never had|Would reauire a place with a tront| Chojce Prove Unavoidable G towers church and millionaire residents of the |in the Government there emerged a | held eloctive office and apparently was| POTCh, & back vard and a nook for his . In practically every case the pro-| dinary open fire esca Gold Coast were attracted to the|Project to declare the war President | without political ambitios. But in | P0ks. Included in his 2,500 volumes = [icetiivat B fpeenfiinn the) SialonTe: e elextion texuls .:e\x;:\_upu.e blaze ‘1” able of performing the duties of | 1908 an unexpected turn elevated him | 1€ said he had “a little of everything partment to submit the matter to the | Mrs. Parsons said that she did not |his office and to elevate the second |to the governor's chair at s |from Abe Lincoln to Abe Martin.” Appointment of a successor to the|Treusury Department and Department know of her husband's d lin“e 2 2 governor’s chair at Indianapolis, | P of her husband’s death when |in‘command to the presidency. The |where he was Sorving wher b | The h which Mr. Marshall pur-|late Commissioner Oyster has turned|of Commerce to learn if either of | she greeted firemen who entered the [Suggestion even oecupled the serious | cratic national consen o the DEMO- | hased ntly met all of his ideas i : turnedt Yhose departments had any objection. | apartment. | thought of some members of the Wil-| more selected hini as the vice presi.|f0F it had a commodious verand e (baheia, diglentyproRiam. do gl [he advice finally rendered by the | irst informing the police that(son cabinet. But when it was |dential nominee in 1912 | deep back yard and the house itself | President. Tt was said at the White| State Department to the bankers has | she and Mr. Parsons returned home |broached to Vice President Marshall| Despite his rapid rise to fame, Mr.| W38 of the architectural period of high | House today that after giving the|never been published, but it may be | e Aes0 aoclock Saturday night, |he declined with characteristic blunt- | Marshall never forgot his old friends | “lings. big rooms and general mas-|matter close attention for several days|Said that the iber of instances in | she later fixed the time at 1:30 a.m. [Ness and finality to have anything |or put away his o wase: To trr sivar 1= @ e = which loan been discouraged :'\;:\:;la\ln‘,;‘,‘.n;‘-.}'.z.. «\x::ml::u had Te m];}o}‘:vnh o | of his da ity fcontinued o + ’ - . 1 Bl ”""d"'" = ""“l'” 5 | have been and T between and | r ediately. Neighbo: w-| ever lost a moment's sleep |lightly on his shoulders and bac ! [ tont ‘than he; waa; before he [Rave tnue iy e | over, r]n.mvve\l hey had heard the|from the strain of those trying |Indianapolis hoe was the ,L:vu.."‘d,”.,,, |MART'AL LAW GOES {the task ) the delay of a | ’\Hd{‘,: king Joudly in front of the|months when so marrow a margin | cratic sy-g0ing citizen who had | | reis fiest e e | pullding about 430 oclock in the separated him rom g lasting place | swept' into staid Washington Ike un| ON IN SHANGHAI AS laerscood 1 e | among the Natior >residents, his | exhilerating breeze in 1913 pean try did the Gov | Awakened by smoke about 10 a.m., | close associate: ver su h a7 Delano, fo. em hiae ez i B! k ates suspected it.| One of the devotions which he car 4 . h eral} here discourage the req | Mrs. Parsons summoned a Japanese | From the first to the last, in his of- | ried with him to the sroe. '“‘l,\’, e FOUR DIE IN R|0TING“';N‘“" Board and one of the organ-|private loan, pointing out tk | servant and sounded the alarm. The |ficial acts and in all his utteranc A & o s ey {izers of the Americar ic Associi-| Country in question had | i e Ho o > at sicta tterances, | alma mater, Wabash College at Craw | tion, but Mr. Delano has been founc : KACHONIN the a y of the Japanese said that previously Mir.|he remained devoted to the chief|fordsville, where he graduste he Continued from First P e naltelh ne et 18O fose e 3 | inspections, and e Di Parsons had awakened him early in |under whose banner he had become |age of 19, and upon whoes Lorrd g | — —ontinved from First Page) _ {to be ineligible Decause he cannot meet e nity 1 - - | there is an urgent need e e the morning to prepare breakfast for |first Vice President since John C. | trustees he served for muns v i Eizap : B L e e a previous loan | | spectors the clubman and Policeman King. |Calhoun to succeed himself in office. | later life. SO d four known to have been!an appointee must have been a iy H | i Breshfast over. the butier went batk| ; S seriously 4’ when the police|dent of the District for three years ge Nations Get Loans. | 10 Inspectors Serve District B b T i e e e Decisions Were Fair. b e was rounding out his eight | fired & to the ranks of the |prior nt el Birpeantcovn| | ving, B ind | i years of service in the vice presidency | de £ A i i il it S hiter Houss 8 None of the large opean ¢ | I o ol st e ke e his guest in the living room. The| In his capacity as presiding of- | he sent to the Wabash ¢ S| cemonstisons. Many ofher woundedd <t Sudn e 2 has mac through Ll tiict ot Colbt ereaby firemen helieved that Parsons, holding [ficer of the Senate he is remem.| perhaps his most temmeoo 8¢ library fwere car ©off by companions. A | thorit Coolidge next tt t t ok rict of Columbia is covered by 10 a lighted cigarette, may have fallen |bered chiefly for the conceded fair of the trying Deriod of nie sricmento | police igspector ordered the volley |ed to Edward ¢ sham, president of | i Iy fwo gr thres cf whom asleep on the divan, thus starting the |Of his rulings, and for the biting | Washingion o cher, M8 service in|when a fire hose proved ineffective the National rical Supply Co., |¢ [ v ) ge fire. Beside the body was found an |rebukes he administered to Senators | treaty of Versailles used he him oy | Sy We4bon against the strikers. —|Now a gover e i t | i e T . unexploded” revolver cariridmer. but|Who Insisted o aKing themmmony | Lheaty, of Versailles used by him as| " More than 80 per cent of ~the|serve Bank for and g | y s s s autoniobila its _ presence there could not be |t00 seriously. Many a political sham | the historic debate over the 1o nE ness places here are| rer member European | ‘ accounted for. battle on the Senate floor, carried| Nations ® over the League of 1gh many, after boarding | 5 e s o from borrowing s the| S " ws, have en operat- | ed that he be eliminated > will T had 1 = 1 LR TR‘\ ThaPraL | Conelderation because his private af.|country in question will have hed tol Eoynd Weapon in Godfa- % ot King, who was questioned at a hos-| T. R, . ~ the streets are|fairs would not permit his n i gl et P oA e ene st hoe | MARSHALL DIES {Coolidge Shocked since the beg. | the y_should wine | ther’s Pocket—Disch Sk patrol duty on Upper Sheridan road| OF HEART DISEA a participating in the | come nissioner e ers rocke IScharge |two or three men who have him, was halted at his side, and the IN SUDDEN R | BY [News o eatht |tion uwsainst ihe trial in the mixed | to put the 1 fcan Declared Accidental. [macKiies svo aainaTialioD s imself and invited the policeman to s " 1s the result of disorders that f | s process of ‘elimina. [ OIBE RSt L Yo Ghe Tritteal]. . e o ERbhb e : s I redecessor the arrest of Chinese workers in a | | coken all ik latter's apartment. where thev were . . | While the situation remained un-| % with all e | Lappeen B e T tant et et College, at Crawfordsville, Ind., at 19 | changea ‘th ghout. the day, interest | ear-old, found | = . ide Rteiien, | anenw h, he sald. | veary, he read law and was admitted| €d Mr. Marshall as Viee | tontght w e i | Jet ol f"""fi Inapectors on Side Lines He had just reached the downstairs| ' the bar at Columbia City, Ind., in| dent, expressed his sorrow in a |meetin oEG - at) b faad| 2 3 Yellies G : o S in tomorrow, at | George Panopolous. | entrance, he related, when a man|lSi% UPon his 21st birthday. The| letter to Mrs. Muarshall toduy | whick ietive measures to at 1352 U rushed up and said the apartment was| ST _of his life from then on until{ “Jist th 1oment shocl { cope w it Situstion vl 1. regarc = SEfe ok on fire. King went back. enterad theile was elected Governor of India intel e has come to me of the | rec The ratepayers' President has made « Two minutes fving room and closed ihe door, he|¥hich opened the way for him to| death of your d ished ; by Chinese rest- | inquiries to learn all he can had heen fatally | said. Unable to open it again, he ran|PSCOMe a national figure, is a plain| band.” the President wrote. “and 1 | esentation in | these men on his “preferred list { wounde v automatic to the window, hanging 1o the ledge | Marrative, his entire time being de-| hasten to expross to you not on o7 pation . { wounded automati A E€|voted to the practice of ¥ou not o i wtion Maj. Kirby Included. nd is | revolver until his strength gave way, and he| 28 practiod jotAaw my deep sympathy 1 condo- | enth consecutive vear the | y, the opinion of White House r| Steve was his_godfather fell | Defeated in First Race. lences, but the real sense of per- | scheduled ratepayers' meeting, in il (L5 & eein hbRES SnanE |during the Panopolous | nicipal Archit < Mr. and Mrs. Parsons were married| sonal loss. Mr. Marshalls long failed to obtain a qualified i . = Aran | asked him to look in his pocket for afan active part in t s in August, 1922 He was 40 vears old.| The first and only office ever sought| and notable public service, hoth iy | quorum of taxpay rendering im- | On e NN Mo No Priority ( match. Steve got Aeh. Aflar)ine e g 20 it | by Mr. Marshall was that of prosecut-| Indiana and as Vice Presider possible a decision by the ores AR « D Uk Lt he had given it to dfather he " |ine attorney. back In 1580, in a Re| eight vears had won for upon new measures introduced : S stia Pt O e Ut returne scover what the object s | publican stronghold. In this attempt| recognition for high character an, - + Lol Ul thn s nemely Al e T n o felt cold against his hai FORGE REDUCT'ON el T PE|| fcenitionifog high chiyy ter ,v: | Fight on Licensing. gineer ( forr director prio St a t his hand. LEASE OF SHOALS {¥ears later. in 1908, when the Demo. this, and something that he wo. 1 Largely through the activities of ; of the Bureau ngraving and !frm'u 2 it, he pulled the trigger. ISSUE HELD VITAL 5.5 ndh st S | sl dhos o WL | At T it B SR 0 I Sy —F e hopeless minority, he was conscripted| had drawn to himself a truly re. |.C51S1ation. the council several weeks | the last inaugur i e g Panapolous fell to the zround. The POWER IS DOUBTED to stand as his party’s candidate for| markable power of riends and |80 4ssented (o calling a special meet. | ick A Fenning, sccretars of 1he Samme request er dropped from the hand of the the governorship. friendships extending to every |i"5: The Chinese are not particula 5 . and T. Lin, o0 Townsend, At requ R - ed SR . His friends had suggested that he| Dart of the Nation, and bevee o o nterested in the child labor issue, but | - of the City Club. Mot S s died at Emergency Hos { S | t Nation, and beyond it ssue, but i ot | ject to tt ost seri T lied at Emergency Ho: - o Board Considering Service and |hecome a candidate for Congress trom| His delighttul fund of oo ously opposed to meas- | s done ot s day | In the 1ight of e three hours later. Coroner | Probe Develops Sentiment Against the twelfth Indiana district. He de-| illuminated a philosophy to provide for the| ited to the Bresidentunbil & day - n S8 88 0 e vate bankers of | Nevitt gave a certificate of accidental | ¥ Number of Dependents in lined, however, explaining he was| and affairs that had made for 1 e nting establishments, | OF %0 ago. and it s generally i s e s e e it momicine i Such Course by e afraid he might be elecwed. When it| a unigue place among public men nereasing wharfage dues and | that because of Maj e e et Dove aofl ier | 1 was playing with it,”” Steve said Planning Dismissals. Sras | susmested | that he seelt thel b Jesvon o :;1:1.#-Lfy.',{”'u,,.,’,'.'h“ | @ third licensing stock exchange '] in the Army and the executive ul Gavermmett DershEn(res v. “I didn’t mean anything.” His | U. S —_— | Democratic gubernatorial nomination| nome to occupy. S Elaborate preparations have h,.,n;;; fl‘]'”'m"""" Lo "y"”“ of te. In & few instances, about | 1 eyes looked up, sincerity and| e S AnSE lin Indiana, Mr. Marshall replied that| “Mrs. Coolidge joins 5 | made to guard the town hall where|!h¢ Bureau of Engraving and two vears ago, where the proce frankness glowing in them !e:::; o;“-m-\nfi)“;::n :!'Nu-!rvfll-::(}zpy‘xhpr {while his one ambition was to become| pression of sorrow and Ly, . | tomorrow’s meeting will'be held. The |IN& will have much welght with | tH0 SSR S0 ¥ o e of the eve's teacher at the Arthur School, | BY the Assoctated Press Do Inoluded in the new mheloncy may | governor of his home State, he would| to you and yours in this {hme e | SLTeCL activitles of student agitation | President Coolidge. Tt 18 not Knowh |p hiing “frms, the Departme; Miss Lipp, euld that the boy was one| An adverse report on the proposed tem for reducing the foree of Govern. |90, RCtRINg to attain the nomination,| your bereavement = tme of | sluckened somewhat tonight whether Maj. Kirby wil = nlt h"\ml_\v l6 Was o conanlbAl Bt Bo of the brightest pupils of the low sec- |leasing of pow at Muscle Shoals, > ment employes was befors the Der. |*though his friends could do what| | An inquest held over eleven victims | Pldce in the event it 13 offered him, | of the department is fully |ond grade there Ala.. is expected to be recommend ment employes was beforo the Per-iiney pisased.. When the State con.| = = ——— . |of Sa day’s disorder resulted in a | but hl-'N41“,1',n'--‘u!(‘vh\:4-u_\ and has e here is 1o} Bl i Dbt 2 e e % i |vention was held in Indianapolis| citizen.” democratic and unconven. Y¢rdict that the students were killed | ™Many friends beninG 4ini Jaw compelling bankers to consult the | Shoals Commission Toon at a gpecial meeting. the first flater he was selected as a com.| tonal. and to his nelghbors n Conum. | WheR police fired in quelling a riot. | , Another name lately received by the | Goyernment here or to heed its advice, TRADE COMM'SSION Thisis (te i oy hotrman: 6. A Slene fem- | promise candidate between the forces| bia City was always affectionately re.| Gen: Id Kwei Yuen, chief of stafr|President is that of Mai Fevton Gor|yut they are doing so for patriotic rea:| Lo e e e o P Allenco the |of Thomas Taggart, former United| ferred to as “Tom.’ {of the first Mukden army, is report.|don. United Sta district attorneyv | (., "unq because an objection voiced O ioy -t on o muest .« . |States Senator, and ‘the anti-Taggart| Mr. Marshall's lifa has not been|©d t0 have been killed. and Cheng Quo | fOF the District of Columbia. This step |},"{he Government might in turn dis- | POWERLESS IN D. (. |ton who also have been § Mr. Allen tnought there was aforces, and won in the bitter 1908 | Without its touch of Tomance. " It . commandant of the 28th Brigade, | VA% taken without Maj. Gordon's| U, e prospective investors *|other members. The W possibllity that the board might dis |campaign, in which he carried the|Was in the clerk’s office of Stephen |70 Yuen Chi Fu. chief of court-mar. | KNOWledge, and the latter said today | ment some tit > aske. PR Ory this Question. which holds | state by 10,000, while President Taft|County. Ind., where he first went to] ti2l: 5eriously wounded Saturduy afe. | that he would preter to remain in bis 3 3 : of the commis puh o Atore Gedthe Goyernment|carsien It byiasiony. try law cases, that he met the. at n In a quarrel arfsing from a dis. | JreSent place. “’:l I s \‘“"’\:‘?E I ZEN N R { Has No Authority to Enforce Or-|,.,;0seq tegsir edge of dismissal. Many are to be| Aided Unfortunates. I Mes. Mapial e T pow | Mukden army Neadoungrence at the | Friends of James Sloan, jr.. former | | ders on Merchants Here, Court The comm ESppet o e IS | oot oo moienor | it e S e S L | ke, e, el T | s S F 2t e 0ny COUNC of Appeals Holds (EHEE by July 1. i administration = was characterized | who clerk In het fathor's smee, | tion under. discussion -was the local| Soy 110 Yias assoclated with Fresident 1 i {held here. Possible Credits Outlined. espectally by the enactment of legis-| Mr. Marshall soon discovered that the | °PiUM traffic, and a fight ensued. To | HATdINE in his campaign in 1920, and | | = ot Under the proposal credits would |ltion looking to the moral and physl.| case” was in the clerk’s office. | £5°4be belng shot. the accounts have | jiore Tave sent his name o o | The Federal Trade Commission is|orsan be provided for length of service and|Cal Welfare of the State's unfor 4 = . Gen. TI jumped from a window S5 he GrnEldared. 3 = |powerless to enforce its orders in thej - B cnnie o Amens 2 inaten One policy inaugurated by him Married in 1895, | ana broke his neck E‘“’“‘ k "“"‘I""F'l"“‘," st Members of Board Guests of Co-|{igirict of Columbia, the District Work Not Completed Government employe's family. The|Was that of never allowing a child| They were married c tabas : . : s S . : {Court of Appeuls having decided to-| el e P Slapsifioation hoard Is. not ivided over |to De born in prison or a person to| 1895, Becanse of Nir e iobeT ol SHOOTING IS DEFENDED. | Petitions urging President | lumbia Heights Association at |a7\that there is no tribanal in Wash:| pronecties e og T the principles behind the general|die behind the bars if there was a|his mother he did mnot sarre uni| —— {to appoint Mrs. Marie Man | Fioal Weaking ob Seawon 1 clothed with authority to com-|that the new power expected to be scheme, It I8 8aid, and with prospects |home to which they could o. she died. The same devotion alwavs | CONSul General at Shanghai Reports |ar€ to be circulated through the busi-} g {pel a merchant to obey an order of |available by July 1 as a result of work of ironing out detaila in the circular,| Human welfare was the gulding|existed between him and Mes. areios | oo Disocdiets | ness section of the city and a house- | -—_— the commission. The court, there-|on the Wilson dam will not be ready it was expected that a conclusion | Principle of Marshall's administration |all, who always accompanied him on | By the Associated Pregs. {to-house canvass may be made by| o0 obe (itizens' Advisory |fOT€. dismissed a proceeding broughtuntil at least December 1. By that might be reached and the document|as Governor of Indiana. His service | campaign or lecture trips. With the| Ren Y, {members of the National Women's| ~Mempers o |by the cor ner ainst Alfred|time the commission Expaciadiite S e governor shows that he has Ini- | excention of never missiex an o the | Reporting on the rioting in Shanghai | Party, it was announced at the party [Council will be honor guests at the|Klesner, doing business as the Shade |have drawn up its report on the dispo. “Another classification problem has [ tiated and stood behind laws which | tunity to see a hase ball game. My | coemireham roil General Edwin . |headauarters today last regular meeting of the Columbia|Shop. to compel him to obey an order | aition of this property. This repors been solved, it was learned today, with |aimed at the soclal and physical bet- | Marshall was not an enthusiast over | ment. 1ofar trate (pre otate Depart-| A conference was held this forenoon | Heights Citizens' Assoclation, to he|of the commission to discontinue the | \iil be submitte ss, which decision by Acting Controller General | terment of the people of Indiana. En- [ outdoor sports. € e iy that the police of theto select speakers to address all the|held tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock use of the words “Shade Shop” in his|convenes again GInn that vacancies in an administra- |acted by the Democratic Legislature | As for hobbies, he had fust one. and | ciered o have aoremeht were con-|citizens' associations, and other civic |at St. Stephens’ Hall, 3017 Fourteenth | business or advertisements. iaent ¢ I tive unit may not he considered in the | during the session of 1911, at the in- | that was Clarence Ignatius Morrison. | sibia way 1n nriee oot o0 hos. | organizations, which meet in the near | street. 3 Rendering the opinion of the court, | that no power leased if it mastter of estimating the salary aver- |stance of Gov. Marshall, were the fol- | his little adopted son. While Mrs. |attempted to make & demonctrarintifuture on Mrs. Gasch's qualifications.| The guests include George R. Wales, | Justice Van Orsdel pointed out that|y)] interfere in a it na age of a grade. lowing important acts: To curtail| Marshall, in 1917, was directing a diet | in the settlement. . emonstration | The object, it was announced by Mrs. |civil service commissioner, Jesse C.|Congress in empowering the commis- | gisposition the propertv. On such Baiod ois Quiretion o tiSalary child labor, to regulate the sale of |kitchen in Washington, maintained| “The mob distributed “viol . iRurnita Mathews, counsel for the|Suter, president of the Federution of |sion to enforce its orders by judicial|q ground. it is urderctood. the com. The question came up from the In.|C0ld storage products, to require hy- | for the poor children, she was at- | culars of & Bolshevik naturer the r.|PArtY, is to have the entire member- | Citizens' Associatlons; Charles A. Bak- | proceedings directed that such pro-|migsion will recommend against leas- torstate Commercn Commission, whion | Slenic schoolhouses and to permit | tracted to a sickly little vear-old waif. | port said, “proclaiming that the pres. | ShiP Of the party in Washington ac-fer, from Conduit Road Assoclation;|ceedings be begun in the “Circuit|ing of the po The War Depar! e e o Sh a0 mema o | medical examinations of school chil- | When they went to their Summer |ent conditions were due to the imy|tIVely at Work to promote the candi-|Dr. George C. Havenner of the Ana.|Court of Appeals.” There is no such |mant, however, is not bound to fc M A Pt ahe had heen o | dren. to prevent blindness at birth, to | home in Michigan that Summer, | perialism of Great Britaln. France,|9acy of Mrs. Gasch. A list of organi-|costia Association: Harry N. Stull of | court here, the court says, because |jow (he recommendat > 2 mr:cldm.:;l o ‘,‘f.‘ l‘?'l”l. ot oy n r:v vegulate the sale of cocaine and other | Clarence Ignatius accompanted them. | the United States and Ja ';:-(h'“_“"‘;-‘wmns which might be interested in|the Stanton Park Association, and|in the division of the United States PR 3 A reviewing section of the Bureas |GTUSES. to provide free treatment for | With the mother's consent, the child, | Japanese circulars being the most |the commissionership and which meet | William &. Horbett, Rhode Island Ave-|into the nine clrcuits Congress ex Wyillihosh ool duggsstions. of Valuation. > “U | hydrophobia, to establish public play- | upon their return, was 'permanently | numerous and most ~ violent in |if the next few days was made up at |nue Association. i [cluded the District of Columbla. It| Thecommission, which wasappol InChelding that Mr. Pattison could |ET0URds. to strengthen the pure food | made a member of their household, | language. There are some Indications | the conference today. {Ihe prasidents of other clfizens: as [Mnishe have mads » Henthiciouit off o1 by President Coolldgs at that Mr. could | 20 o teot ratnsti I an (snarkall itionen bt e orenol | SO . L The National Women's Party is not | sociations have been invited. including | this District. but has falled to do S0, | quest of & resolution adopiec not be paid $6.500, but must continue P its legal adop- | that there will be a general strike q t dopted > A A '€ | to provide police court matrons, to|tion were then taken order | sooi >olice reservi kit | disheartened by reports that the|George A. Ricker of Kalorama|the court declared House. will take up at the r at $6,000 salary. the acting controller r In order that | soon. Police reserves have been called i - 2. O hi ks 1 general said: “You are advised that | °StAblish uniform weights and meas- | the child's mother might be near the [out and certain volunteer organiza.|President has other candidates which Heights Association, Charles E. Con-| This omission in the law may be|numerous suggestions which newly created positi or other exist. | Uf€S. to prevent trafic in white|baby boy, Mr. Marshall secured em. |tions have been ordered to stand by, | he is.considering ahead of Mrs. Gusch, | saul. Mount Pleasant Association: Iid-| corrected by Congress. Justice Van|heen rec i for the disy Tng ositions, may not be fncluded in |S1AVes, to permit night schools in|ployment for her at their hotel. Mrs. Mathews said, and considers its [gar B. Henderson, Piney Branch As 1 suggested, if 1t is found desir- | Nuscle Shoals. Such determining the salary average of per- | Cities. to investigate industrial and D 9 arguments for a woman Commissioner |sociation, and others. Refreshments|able. were requested by the detezmining the salary average of per- | Lo lcintural education, o Tequire sagreed With Harding. svmpathy for his fellow men, Mr, |are difficult to combat. will be served and an opportunity will| The commission investigated the | 1o nany have been receive Tinfeas and until the sald positions are | Medical supplies as part of a train| M. Marshall did not agree with |Marshall had a quaint and_Subtle g e be given for the people of the North.|husiness of Klesner. it is stated, and | ef the commission expecis (o g ent, transfer or pro. | equipment, ete. the principle of the Harding admini- |sense of humo o o | west to meet the members of coun- | directed him to stop the use of the : o inspect the prope Sorhon R O swradion Ut the Vica. president senatorinl aignity ‘faien (o dimpen; | HUGHES DENIES OFFERING|cif and expiain needs in this rapiaiy words within 30 dass trom the servics (0 H188271% (0 11271 110 Prover Backed Labor Laws. v |isnotIa 81ESth . conterenices’ withiet | Bany tiEres B i s Do ben, growing part of the city. of the order. Klesner failed to carry ( = et The following laws, intended to pro- | cabinet. He argued that this con-|at the expense of some Senator. Mr. LEGAL AID TO MINERS T out the order and the commission SPANISH BOMB'NG BELGIAN ENVOY, LEAVING | tect the toilers, were also champloned [ flicted with the performance of his |Marshall was a good story teller and Flooring Company Not Trust. |Sousht ‘o T e s s by him: To create a bureau of inspec- | constitutional duties, and held that|nothing delighted him more as Viee = , G| St of A pueale ol cieRponatie 0 PAYS VISIT T tion for factories, workshops, mines | it would work to the detriment of the | President than to steal out of the|By the Associated Press. The Maple Flooring Manufacturing | the Circuit Court of Appeals in the RIFF GRA'N FIELDS OCOOL“:’GE and boilers; to establish free employ- | Vice President in that it would tend |Senate chamber into his private office. NEW YORK, June 1.—Charles E.|[ Association, whose plants are largely | various circuits. The court, however, > = ment agencies, to require full train|to lessen the confidence in which he (smoke a pipe and entertain friendg|Hughes, former Secretary of State,|located in Michigan, Minnesota and |declared it must be specifically clothed Déclines to Say Whether He Dis.|CFeWS: (o require safety devices on |is held by Senators of hoth parties. |by reciting instances of his experi.|on his return today from Bermuda, | Wisconsin, was today declared by the | by Congress with the power befare it 18- | switch engines, to provide efficient| ‘“The Constitution of the United |ences as a country lawyer. Genied published reports that he had | Supreme Court not fo be operating in | has jurisdiction to hear the complaints | By the Associated Prees cussed Debt in Conversation headlights on locomotives, to require | States intended that the Vice Presi-| Mr. Marshall was an omniverous| been approached by or had offered | violation of the Sherman anti-trust!of the commission for fallure to carry| MARSEILLE, June 1.—Military ob- : inspection of locomotive boilers, to|dent should be the presiding officer | reader, but, as he once expressed to a |his services to the United Mine |laws. out its orders. servers arriving here from Morocca ‘With President. require standard cabooses, to require | of the Senate and nothing else,” said |friend, “not at all a thoughtful read.| Workers of America in connection |say the Spanish are making new efe : -~ ! full switching crews, to require storm | Mr. Marshall. “To be a presiding of- |er.” He had a penchant for detective| with their fight' on injunctions in . . forts to subjugate the Riffian tribes- Preparatory to leaving for Brussels | windows for locomotives, to provide [ ficer it is necessary that the Vice|or mystery stories and frequently sa| West Virginia courts. Mr. Hughes Yale Freshmen Are Facmg Probation |men vy dropping bombs on ihe newly :Z d%f‘!c"xzn‘ji ‘E: ?“h‘ oo )'E;;\'pnn a weekly wage, etc. ;'esldonfl f;}'h'fl?ll hfl\\'e the entire confi- {up all night to complete the reading of | was accompanied by Mrs. Hughes and sown land and upon the ripening @ United States and Belgium, Baron | * The ncome tax amendment also was | dence of all the Senators. If a Vice |a tale. He also was a Bible student | their daughter, Miss Elizabeth. o 4o . crops of barley and wheat in the vicir " Cartier do Marchienne, the Bel. | rytined st 1his scssion: hiso Jaws ia | Eresident ‘should attend meetings of | ind aitentimes while bercing o5 Vine gileig e For Rioting and Drenching a Professor | S v G glan Ambussador, made a call at the | [lovant corrupt practices at elections | the cabinet practically as a member, | President could be seen sitting in his . 2 since May 25 air squadrons have left, White uo‘u.ge today and paid his re- | ind (o provide for general registra.|it would tend to arouse suspicion, and | office reading from the little ve 50 m Town Gassed Melilla for the Alhucemas district, but spects t\n resident Coolidge. He will | 4ion of voters were enacted: block sys- | Senators of the minority party might |pocket Testament which he always By the Associated Press the old freshman fence, which has |the aviators report their efforts seem. leave New York on the Lapland|iems were made compulsory on rail-| not trust him. This would make the | carried. Of moderate financial circum- A H E l d . NEW HAVEN, Conn.. June toa Tobvehs ! ingly have had little effect, as the Eumsy Sgne b, . roads and electric railways, and a law ) path of the WVice President in the|stances, he was always interested in S eat xP odes e entire freshman class at Yale Tocked In the oval by the college |Riffians worked calmly in their fields The Ambassador declined to say | {o‘aholish the doctrine of assumed risk | Senate a rough one. educational, church and charitable Dhseusito Sen offiatale | the students swarmed |both before and after the aerial ate whether any reference to the debt | 4nq fellow-servant doctrine and to reg- | “If any representatives from the|work. Chlori Contai today faces the possibility of belng | 0, "tj,q jnclosure, and many tried | tacks. had been made in his conversation | Giata tha contributory negligence de. | Cabital are to atend ‘cabinet meet. | " “There are so many views as to what Orine LONIAINEF | paced on probation for jts riotous | {I01 (1€, Fcloture, £od many The opening of the major Spanish with the President. 3 fense was made as strong as the con- | ings, the majority leader of the Sen-|constitute true success, I have no sug action yvesterday in the Berkeley The campus police were power. |operation, the landing on the shores Secretary Kellogg was waiting to| g(itution of the State would permit. |até and the majority leader of the | gestions to offer,” he once wrote to a oval, the freshman dormitory sec- | less {o stem the outbreak. ' Prof. |of Alhumecas Bay, is expected within soe President Coolidge while the Am- House should be the men selected. nd in reply to an inquiry. . -af:| By the Associated Press on” Ir adopted by the college oft” 1|’ T 1. Hares of the Enslisk depest.: §10.0r 16 days. bassador was chatting with the Pres- Nominated at Baltimore. The idea that a Vice President|views of success are not generally ac.| _ANNEMASSE, France, June 1.— | cjals, a probationary measure will | ment attempted (o check it, but Weeks of aerial actlvities have pree dént, but did not join them Mr. Marshall was nominated for the ‘Ahould be completely informed as to|cepted. I think any man is successfyl| Fifty persons were gassed in the be far reaching, as it will mean the was forced to retreat to his room. |ceded the movement and all assis- ——t == vice presidency in Baltimore in 1912 the policies of the President so that|who is content to do well with regard| streets here yesterday as a thick recall of the freshman crew now in Three times he faced the students |[tance possible will be given the army W. Iving Glover Promoted. after his name had been before the he might carry them out in the event |to the rights of others in the particular| screen of yellowish fumes from a practice at Gales Ferry in prepara- and left the scene only when a fire |to make the campaign a success. A 2 ¥ convention for a number of ballots of the President’s death is to my|thing God fitted him to do. tank of liquid chlorine swept over tion for the Harvard regatta this extinguisher was turned upon him. |large number of small warships will W. Irving Glover, Third Assistant|as a presidential candidate with the mind fallacious. A Vice 'President| Mr. Marshall wasa Presbyterian, an| the town. The container exploded | month. Threats of placing the class on |partially blockade the coast line, Postmaster General, was promoted | Indiana delegation solidly behind him. |might make a poor President, but he |active thirty-third degres Mason, as| from heat. Desiring to celebrate the close of | probation and recalling the fresh- |closely approaching the shore line in today to be second assistant. succeed- | He was again renominated with Presi | would make a much poorer one if he|well as a member of the Phi Gam Twelve of the victims are in a | the college year, the freshmen first | man crew and the appearance on |the bay. When the moment of land- ma 4 ing Paul Henderson, who has resign | dent Wilson at St. Louis in 1916. attempted to subordinate his own|Delta and the Phi Beta fraternitieg,| serious condition. One of the minor | tried to see how many electric | the scene of Registrar John R. Ellis |ing arrives the vessels will spread a nitieg. ed to become general manager of the| Mr. Marshall prided himself on the mind and views to carry out the ideas| He also held the honorary degr ses of injury was an American, lights they could break in the oval. | finally put an end to the celebra- |curtain of fire under the cover of i : y- degree of g National Alr Tr fact that he had always been “just|of a dead man.” LL: Yrnest Steinworth, who!lives in | A bonfire was then started, and the | tion. The campus was covered |which two groups or regular nativ nsport, Inc., ofdy Cago. a plain every-day average Amerjcan! . Possessed with a ny human | versities, D. from several colleges and uni < shay Genevay. &R i - students, Jacking fugl, tore down with wrggkage., ¢ troops will land from rafis,