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_RI'BBER PAJAMAS ARE THE LATEST. in the newest beach mode—rubber pajamas—strolling on the boardwalk at Long Beach, N. Y. The costume: d with gorgeous hand-painted de: Two years old, Carl Andrae Brum- me traveled alone from Copenhagen to New York. He carried a placard with the announcement that he was not lost and that he was joining his parents. VETERANS' BUREAU SLUGANLSSERVICEE Hines Tells Disabled Men He Hopes to Make Medical Aid Permanent. Br tha Amociated Pr OMAH A Nebr., “Service” as a slogan, Bureau is seeking to perfect an or-| ganization of fewer, better paid and | more efficient employes to carry out | the lberal features of erans’ ac Director I sald today In a prepar fore the fifth annui conve Disabled Amerlcan Veterans World War Director Hines re derived from changes in the veterar act and asserted It had bee nd would continue to be the policy of the bureau to employ in key positions properly qualified ex-service men and women. Morale, he said, will be | encouraged “through attempting (o place personnel in positions according 1 to their fitness and through recogni flon of individual endeavo: To guarantee the permanency of medical service to disabled v ans Director Hines said, C: ould | again be asked to establis] L perma pent medical staff for ithe bureau. Fe | declared it to be essential, if the Gov ernment was to get full value for in yestment of more than $64.000,000 in hosplta nstruction, that “‘we place fn the hospltals the type of profes sional personnel to run them in keep- | ng with their character.” Hospitals Modern. Accomplishment of hospital con- | struction work already authorized, he said, would, to a large extent, put the treatment of disabled veterans within modern and permanent Government structures and permit the relinquish- ment of leased hospitals and tempora rv cantonment type hospitals Hospital sites now developed or in | process of development, believed to be numerically adequate, and in consid ering future hospital construction, he sald. it will be the policy of the bu reau to develop existing sites rather than seek additional locations i Declaring the law provides that | 24. ~With the Veterans fon of the | of the wed the benefits h after July 30 no further inductions in |y n be m vecational training ¢ nd that after June 30, all train shall cease, the director sald Congress would be asked to extend the limits to | permit, first, the vocational rehabili tation of men who, because of their| phy condition, could not com-| mence such training prior to July 1,| and, second, to open the courses (0’ those cases whera progress was so re: tarded as to prevent completion of training before July 1 next year. ] Cruiser Memphu at Honolulu HONOLULL, June 2, ).~ Thwy Might eruiser Memphis, carrying Rear | Admiral Hugh Rodman, retired. who will mccompany the fleet to Australia, ived here yesterday. 1o a i £ Fair daughters of Eve, clad suitable for water or land, are adorn- Copyright by Kadel & Herbert AMBASSADOR AT HOT SPRINGS THE EVENIN( THE ERESIDENTIAL an. VA. Emile Daeschner, representa- tive of the French government in Washington; his wife and daughter Irene at the Virginia resort. The picture for an early morning walk. \Carload of Beer | Billed as “Lye” Is Found by Raiders| Spectal Dispatch to The Star CUMBERLAND, Md., June ° The contents of a steel box car billed “lve” was found to be beer the Western Marvland Rallway vards here vesterday. It 150 half barrels, which d 4.4 per cent car was consigned from Lockhaven, Pa.. to McKeesport Pa., but the local prohibition offi cers who made the seizure are of the opinfon it was for local use, and would have found its wayv to local dispensaries by reconsign- ment The name of the consignor and consignee are withheld, but the “lye” is under guard. STORTHING HONORS s in AMERICAN GUESTS| 1Adjourns to Attend King's Recep- tion to U. S. Citizens of Norwegian Descent. By the OSLO, Norway. June T'he torthing adjourned vesterday in order that the leg or and ministers { might attend King Haakon's reception large number of Americans Norwegian extraction who arrived in Oslo from New York on board the steamer Stavangerfiord. The reception was held at the old ress of Akergshus. The arrival of { Haakon was thé signal for the ring- {ing of the "Liberty” bell, which was given Norway by American women in 1905 after the peaceful separation of Norway and Sweden. The reception was opened with the singing of a can- tata symbolic of the sensations of re- turned emigrants. M. Lyvkke, presi- dent of the Storthing, ed the visitors in a speech in which he dwelt upon the impetus for closer re- lations between Norway and the | tates through the celebration Norse-American centennial. He tors to convey his thanks Coolidge for honoring v and her sons by attending the centennial in Minnesota. Judge Gilbert of Willmar, Minn., ident of the Sons of Norway, thanked the people for the warm re- ception accorded them. Laurits S. Swenson, the American Minister, also responded. King Haakon in a speech said he hoped the visit of the Americans would strengthen the bonds of Nor- wegians on both sides of the ocean. The University Male Chorus. closed e proceedings by singing “The Star and the Norwegian Associated Press. th Spangled Banner” national anthem. In the afternoon a reception was held at the American legation for the American delegates and their relatives and friends. Because of a favorable balance in the Irish budget estimate. the income tax there has been reduced, of | officially greet- | was taken when they left their hotel Copyright by Underwood & Underwood GOVERNMENT ASKS - FURTHER HEARING Action Taken in International | | Harvester Case and Cement | Plant Controversy. Attorney General Sargent has thorized an appeal to the Supreme | Court on the International Harvester | Co. case, and has arranged that pe- titions be drawn requesting a rehear- ing by the Supreme Court of the Maple Flooring and Cement Manu- facturers’ Protective Association cases. The latest decision in the Harvester | case, which was begun in 1912, when |the Government charged that the |company was a combination in re- |straint of trade, was handed down May 10 by the Federal District Court at Chicago, denying the Government's supplemental petition for further re- |lief under the consent decree of 1918. an Attorney General's Comment. rw of the Government, the Attorney General announced, that the decree accomplished nothing in {the direction of restoring competitive {conditions in the industry. In the| Supreme Court, he said, decision in the appeal may rest upon the mean- |ing_of “competitive condition: “The decree.” said Mr. argent, ‘presupposes that such conditions did not exist in the harvester industry and provided for the disposition of certain of the Harvester Co.’s prop- erties to bring about such conditions. “The District Court, in finding such conditions to exist, apparently adopted {the test laid down by the Supreme Court in the steel case, which was decided after the decree of 1918 was entered. The ultimate question for| decision i whether the supplemental It is the v |decree or by the later rule .of the | Supreme Court in the steel case.” In the trade association cases the | Supreme Court held that trade as- | sociations could legally collect and | distribute - trade statistics so long as | the information was not used to con- | trol prices of production. | The court held in these cases that | trade associations could legally col- llect and distribute trade statistics |so long as the information was not used to control prices of production. The object of the petitions, it was announced, “will not be to obtain a reconsideration of the principles of law ennunciated by the Supreme Court in its recent decisions, but to point out that the evidence in these cases brings them within prior de- cision of the Supreme Court, the authority of which has not been questioned.” “The whole effort,” the depart- ment’s announcement said, “will be to show that the evidence leads ir- resistibly to the conclusion that the defendants, through their associa- | tions, had agreed to maintain prices and otherwise restrain trade within the prior decisions of the Supreme Court in the hardwood lumber and linseed oil cases. PARTY LEAVES President’s secretary; Mrs. Sanders, Mrs. Cool Photo taken at the Union Sta petition is governed by the law of the| STAR, n a few minutes before the Pre Lieut. Comdr. R. W. Shrum, U.'S. N., who has been officially desig- nated as chaplain of the Mayflower. the President’s yacht. The vessel has left Washington for Swampscott. Copyright bty Underwood & Underwood. Special Dispatch to The Star. DANVILLE, Va.. June armed vegsmen who passed up the |usual implements of the craft for row b , cold chisels and sledze ham- I mers wrecked the safe of the Swain- Watson Hardware Corporation and ob- tained $21 The thieves, enfering the premises | by a rear window. made a careful se 'Vm tion of heavy hardware, and. an. | ticipating a hard evening, carried the { water cooler upstairs and placed it | near the scene of operations Scattered about the floor were crow {pars that had crumpled under strain. cold chisels and hammers. Examination of tha shattered showed that it had been heavily ITALY FREE OF BLAME | —Strong State Department Satisfied” Assault at Leghorn ‘Was Due to Mistaken Identity. ! Thé Stdté ‘Department has directed Ambassador {farm the soverpment of Jtaly that the | {United States “is thoroughly satisfied” {that the assault on Vice. Consul| Franklin C. Gowen at Leghorn, Ttaly, | May was due to a mistake identity. The State Department {gards the incident as closed in | prompt and satisfactory manner." | /The vice consul was incapacitated for several days by the attack which occurred during the celebration, by Facist delegations of the tenth anni- {versary of Italian entrance into the World War. Regrets and_apologies were tendered by Italian officials and {the government of Italy also offered {to reimburse Mr. Gowen for medical and other expensgs incident to the attack. The State Department’s announce- ment said an investigation of the in- cident ordered by Premier Mussolini had disclosed that the vice consul was iassalled by a 19-year old student named Fausto di Suolo, who sur- rendered voluntarily and declared he did not know that he was attacking lan officer of the United States. NUPTIALS OFF, AS BRIDE IS DIPHTHERIA CARRIER 200 Wedding Guests Hastily Told Invitations Are Canceled, Due to Malady. By the Associated Press. GOSHEN, N. Y., June 24.—A wed- ding was postponed and 200 wedding guests were hurriedly notified that all invitations had been canceled when it was discovered yesterday that the pro- spective bride was a “diphtheria car- rier.” Miss Rose de Narde, the prospective bride, recently recovered from an at- tack of diphtheria. Her marriage to Daniel Leon will take place as soon as the condition is corrected, / afe | IN ATTACK ON CONSULg WASHINGTON, D. WASHINGTON FOR VACATION AT SUMMER WHITE HOU ge, the President, Col S. A. Chene: Sledges, Chisels and Crowbars Used | By Strong-Armed Yeggs to Open Safe | of the door, the | ft | ‘-Thoroughly Millionaire \ 1 Fletcher at Kome to in-| By the Associated Press, in ! Forest re-|on the C., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1925. o Sverett Sanders, the lent’s personal phy- Left to right military aide, and Maj. Coupal, the Pre where the Summer White wmal Photo, train left for Swampscott, Ma A MOVIE STAR HA the right, was best man. | pounded just below the upper causing the <m-1 curl outward, lea; FRANL‘E TRUTHFUL h-'(‘);";;' y;‘"',‘_\":l strength. - ,German Official Story Less ey g ocznow Impartial, Early Volumes | Received Here Indicate. | corner | ‘ltt‘rml door to broad at a late hour for further interrogation those unable | to_give an account of themselves. | The robbers who entered the hard- | ware store stole a closed car belonging to .\lhn ewman, but abandoned | The nations involved on when the starter. jammed. In the | of the World War now is telling thelr | car were found burglar tools and hard, | o1 " World War now is telling their | ware identified as having been part of | ¢4l stories of whs the Swain-Watson stock. policy of question both sides actually happened | |for the first time. | France, Great Britain, Germany DURAND ADOPTED SON :‘;"“‘1..‘l"‘.&l.’lif:il.?lf?.‘t:1-".‘.}r;fe",;".:;‘i ACCUSED AS BANDIT {for publication the details of the movements of their armies on all the [tronts. When these works are fin: |ished they will fill scores of volum nd will be almost entirely devoid of Couple Institutes | propaganda or excuses 5 | Search for Boy Charged With The first dwo volumes of the (er man account, which is expected to| Hold- “p! in Chlcngo run about 35 volumes in | 1. have just | received at the War Department and are Dbeing devoured | |P:.|;:Pr|\ by American officers who |served as observers during the early Police search |days of the war . adopted son of Durand, La and, Lokel oo first two volumed of the French has been started | f it ons 5 account also. which are declared to b Pacific coast as the result of | the coldest. most imparti: and scien confessions by three youths naming | oy otiraiiitars acth i him as leader of a band which staged || SLoTy f military a ction ved it holdups and burglaries in the fash- | Franch and German accounts of the ionable North Shore section. IS i ations e e ! Two of the youths were arrested in | et ¥ ety an attempt to hold up a taxicab driver. | Ne|ther of the combatants seeks to On one the police sald they found a | giggtrous defeats are chronicled as letter addressed to Durand threaten- | g jrIOUE G S B0 ¢ ing a confession unless a division w 151 "rhe German account. howeve . T “Hdson White, president of Ar.|DY: Do means so impartial as the o7 7 “ French, army officers here say. The mour & Co.. whose home was robbed | reauon is not that the Germans seek | last September, was mentioned as a [{oa%0T I ot that the Cermans so P o e o esslons, dewels|apologize for them, commenting on| Vi Ve jousan ollars v el iz e = were taken from his daughter Hester [0V \REY, TNEN HATE ooen Chaneed during a par Three automobile |10 Vietories € somebody Mad oo thétta and & '$5/000 Durglary of the| oo v.C 1o forces had been mumsti 4 cally superior or the source of sup- Hugh McLennan home also were con- | 0¥ ol "rear at hand. i e e The same criticism also is made of | Young Durand was said to be an - hr ool . X orATrelen { the British account, of which also two | 2y gy ol 4\';:1|nn?:< have X.mer[\ !:«\‘ue(L 'fim_:u.] CONGRESSMEN ARE ASKED | vour ' | TO MAKE VISIT TO JAPAN; would have happened if conditions had | been different Official Invitation Is Extended Party Now on Inspection Tour CHICAGO. June 24. {for Jack Durand, 20 Mr. and Mrs. Scott millionaires, French Story Dispassionate. is The histories are being prepared by the general staffs of the three coun- tries and are intended largely as con- tributions to military sclence. U. S. Story Underway. The American general staff is work- of Philippines. ing on the same proposition, but has no funds now available for publica- By thetApociatell Fagans - Hou1 # he! Fritich "y, | Bacauas o HONOLULU, June 24—The 12| reduced appropriations, has been United States Congressmen here, en | obliged to curtail its original plan for route to the Philippines on a tour of |a monumental military history, but inspection, yesterday were invited to | will publish much the same material visit Japan on their way home. jon a reduced scale. The French and The invitation was from Baron |German officers appear to have been Kijuro Shidehara, the Japanese for-|provided with sufficient appropriations eign minister, through the Japanese |to carry out the work as planned. consulate here. The slow progress of such work is The Congressmen are traveling to | fllustrated by the fact that the com- Manila on the Chaumont, a Navy |plete Japanese official report on the transport, ussian-Japanese war in 1905 has just HER WEDDING CEREMONY PHOTOGRAPHED. mony being issued to the Hollywood group, Viola Dana and Maurice (“Lefty”) Flynn, former Yale foot ball star, went to the Los Angeles courthouse and were married by Judge Harry Hollzer. Wife to Divorce [EVENING STAR CLUB | them to the wharf. . what actually happened, WHITE HOUSE BACKGROUND TO THEIR ROMANCE. Jame Haley is the secret service operative who gnards Mr~. Coolidge. His bride was Miss Evangeline J. Holler. ative of Washington. They left er day with the President and Mrs. Coolidge for the Summer White Hous Swampscott. M & E M The and here is Lillian May honors Sea started Miss have an early winner Erbe, who took top Isle City, N. J.. last w World Photo P. 0. HEAD WARNS MAIL CHAUFFEURS Must Obey Trafflc Rules or | Risk Dismissal, Postmaster Mooney Says. Leauty contests Without invitations to the cere- ¥ Jimmie Anderson, at at Copsright by P. & A. Photos Wllllam H. Dilg For Second Tlme‘ By the Associated Pre CHICAGO, June 24 Dilg. president of the ton League of America thros day ~William Isaac \\ announced attorneys in court vester. that he would not contest A his wife's suit for divorce. was ordered d wn up. Mrs. Marguerite Ives Dilg to waive alimony and to her husband to have their 5-ye old daughter part of the time. Mrs Dilg. who is writer on outdoor subjects, c ged cruelty and fail ure to provide. In a cross-billl Mr. Dilg charged his wife with numerous indiscre- tions and named a New Zealander | whom they met in the’South Seas. This is the second divorce grant ed to Mrs. Dilg from Mr. Dilg. She obtained the first March 10, 1914 he then married Edward T. Me decree reed permit : veh he Ci perators « the risdiction of |expect no sympathy or _assistance | from Postmaster William M. Moor | 1f they fall into the hands of the pol for willful violation of traffic regu |1ations. Mr. Mooney has addressed a com munication to all operators of postal ehicles here emphasizing that ex ions made in the yezulations which allow the postal cars considerable lat itude must be construed us Laug E X . but | granting the operators high license on lived with him an two | the str In other words, the Enguihs yen el Juivorcen him BTt fon seanut (ke taker avan she remarried Dilg of except as the cireumstances requ it to be done. he operators of ! vehicles most without, exception efficient and perform thefr duties jtelligently and with credit » them | selves and to the serviee I want MEMBERS ON OUTING‘”"‘“ men to know that such servics is fully appreciated My own stion | information received sources, compels ihe fow. soi Post Office need “not observ however from and other opinion that a in the day time t night, but more espes are inclined for ful of the regulations and of the r of others and knowingly commit fractions which they wonid hesitate 1o commit openly or ahovebo: € addressing this warning par to the small minority last to and 1 desire to say em 125 Enjoy Trip Down Chesapeake Bay From Baltimore to Annapolis. Four ton, line: 25 special cars of the Washing Baltimore and Annapolis Electric taxicabs and a chartered teamer were required to take The| éning Star Club on its annual Sum. | Phatically that unless there is an im mer outing last night mediate refo ion on their part Onehundred and twenty-five members | they may expect ultimately to fall into of the club, composed of officials and | the hands of the police. in which event {employes of The Evening Star News.|D0 Svmpathy. or assistance may be | paper Company, boarded the interur.€Xpected from this office. On the con ban cars at Eleventh street and New | trary, if persisted in, these sinister { York avenue at 4:30 o'clock yvesterday | Violations undoubtedly will result in afternoon and rode to Baltimore, the ultimate removal of the offender. where the taxicabs waited to take| - COPY of the “warning” was tra The steamer Lord | Mitted by Mr. Mooney to A. O. E Baltimore, with the club and crew|ridge. director of traffic, who, in ac and nobody else on board, left Balti- | knowledging receipt of it, said he had more at 6:30 o'clock and arrived at|referred it 1o the acting superintendent Annapolis at 10:30 p.u { of police with the request it be sent During the cruise to Annapolis din. | all precinct captains for information ner was served the members and |of their men music was furnished by Myer Gold-| . - STONE TO BE LAID. man’s Orchestra. On arrival at An napolis the four special W., B. & A Exercises at Lynchburg Church to Be Held Today. cars that conveyed the club to Balti more were waiting to return the party to Washington. The outing officially Special Dispateh 1o 1 NCHBURG, Va 23 ssion of the Rivermont Avenue ended at the starting point at mid Presbyterian Church here, assisted by night. | Col. C. Fred Cook, president of the | five ministers, will lay the corner stone {of the new church this afternoon at 3 club, was in charge of arrangements for the outing and presided over the ck. The building is nearing com pletion, in Rivermont avenue not far party. from Randolph-Macon Woman's Col lege. Rev. E. M. Delaney of Alexandria, formerly pastor of Rivermont Church, will make the address, Star June Mhe been issued in full and secured for the War Department library. Both, the maps and text are in Japa- nese, but a translator has been se- cured and started work today turning them into English, so that American officers may make a close study of