Evening Star Newspaper, June 25, 1925, Page 17

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 9= 25, 25 19 PRESIDENTIAL Mre Coolidg Salem. At left, PARTY en route 1o the Frank W. Stearns COMING ARRIVING OUT FOR POLO HONORS. AT SALEM, ummer White Ho and Senator Butler. MASS. This picture Mrs. John Jacob Assistant Secretary of the Navy Douglas T. Robinson, who is now a member of the Reds, an Army polo team. has taken up polo as a pastime. . DARROW REIETED AS SPEAKERTOBA Tennessee Lawyers Think Invitation Might Be Misconstrued. By the Ascocia DAYTO? drawal of Darrow to Association Memphis | cause his presence “m strued.” and a statement bridge Colby expressin: “the holiday atmosphere” surroundin the approaching evolution trial w high lights in an otherwise dull period of preparation for the court battle. Mr. Darrow, My 1 orneys The indicied scien coneluded confers Mr. D Chicago and the Staie for New Field Malone stopping off in Chatta enouch to give a public his views on the trial With Clarence nessee Bar v. be riscon by Bain surprise at an wddh for #e jnst ville Knox for of in ried stary Dudl Dayt rmer Y while etn Holds Time Inopportune. The {nvitation to Mr. address the meeting was with drawn by Lovick P. Miles, president of the organiz . who asserted tha “the time was inopportune” for eddress by the Chicago attorney that “the invitation him and presence might be misconstrued While indicating that Mr. Darrow’s subject would be the cause and treat ment of crime. with no connection with the evolution case, Mr. Miles said it was desired to have “the ut- most harmony and no cause of pre cipitating an acrimonious discussion Of any matter or man Mr. Colby. whi statement was Jssued in bLebalf of all members of the defense staff, described the issue involved in the trial ax “grave in e and asserted that he could not “account for the tone as reflected in comments appearing in the daily newspapers.” The statement called “the shocking and abnormal character of the legislation” involved as “one of the most serious questions which conld possibly arise to challenge the ability of the citizenship to rational self-government Malone’s Faith Held. Malone declared he had no diffi- in holding with devotion to “hristfanity and also to evolution I have come to Tennessee to inter- wene in this case in behalf of young men and young women who are enti- tled in all public institutions to be taught the truth and the whole truth,” aid. ““The attorneys for the defense have as many different philosophies of life as any other group of men, but weare all agreed that the battle line has been pitched at Davton to make a stand for the right of teachers to teach and the right of young people to learn truth and the whole truth about religion, literature and science. “Parrow is. in his philosophy. a pes. simist; T am an oprimist. Darrow is ¢ &n agnostic, but | believe.in God.and Darrow to t an and his i or Mi art, the | He is the only high official in the Government who' Copyright by P. & A. Photos. $10 Bills From Printing Bureau 1 Admits Stealing i |Employe Says She Hid Sheet of Money In | Clothing. Grace I. Crawford of R 1d on $£1.000 bond for rv on charges of stealing b t of $£10 bills from the Bureau of En ing and Printing, where she worked he w arr ed by Secret vice agents after they had traced one of the bills through a street car conductor, who identified her at the bureau. Mrs. ( wlford confessed | Uni es Commissioner Needham ;4‘ urnage that she had taken the money. | According to the story she told the commiss| three sheets of mone | flew off able in the rc where mployed a tissue stripper,” removing tissue paper from the sheets. When she returned the sheats she put back only two, she told Commissioner Turnage, hiding | the other in her clothing Officials who inv | declare the woman had b supportir old daughter and Mrs ted the case en in finan he; | | t |NEWARK SCHOOLBOYS DEATH ENDS 13-YEAR STRUGGLE |SHERIFF IS KILLED MRS. MORG.AN BETTER. | Shows Signs of Emerging From | ! Long Siege of Coma. | NEW YORK. June 25 () —Hopes for the early recovery of Mrs. J. P | Morgan, wife of the financier, who| | has been il of sleeping sickness at her Summer home near Glen Cove, were | strengthened today when Mrs, Mor- | | gan, for the first time since she fell {into a state of coma on June 17, gave | indications of returning consciousness Mrs. Morgan's phys announced | turday that she b sed the | g « lin the duty of a Christian. difficulty in holding with devotion | Christianity and also to evolution. | Sees No Conflict. | | My love for my mother never interfered with my love for my wife. There is no conflict in such a dual al. | legiance. Theology is concerned with | the aspirations of men and with their | faith in a future life. Science is con- cerned with the processes of nature. Theology may be static, but science must be based on progress, develop- ment and constant experimentation. The more we know about nature and the more we learn about nature through science, the greater should be our appreciation of the beauty and power of God. ““This country is not suffering from bad people, but from good people who, in their ignorance, feel ordained to |save the rest of us who stand in no | need of their ideal salvation. | ““The healthiest bit of advice for the | verage American today would be Mind your own business, take care of your own soul and life, and von will | {find that vou will have no leisuve | hours to be minding the business of your neighbor.” 4 I find no| to! . at Swampscott, Mass.. | Victims, taken when the President and stopped for a short time in in black By Uni Roge 4 News Pictures Irving L. Chesley, the Presi mail carrier at Swampscott, Mass. Chesley expects rather strenuous days in carrying letters to and from the Summer White House. right by P. & A. Photos. NEW BRAZILIAN host yesterday to a distinguished AMBASSADOR IS HONOR MAN in Engl WHAT THE WE SSED is what he is wearing at the ra colors, his garments ut on extreme attention. IS WEARING rd. He is arrayed in many ines and he attracts considerable Ity United News Pietu WOMAN GOVERNOR LETS DOWN THE BARS. Nellie Tavloe Ross of Wyoming (right) taking down the bars bearing the name of her State at the official opening of the Yellowstone National Park. Four governors of Western States attended the ceremony. Gopys by Underwood & Unde EON. Dr. L. S. Rowe, director general gathering, including the S sador S. G. Do Amaral, who arrived in Washington recently. FOUND TO BE LEPERS Brothers, 11 and 13, Came From Bermuda—Contagion Is Guarded Against. By the Associated Press RK, N. J., June 25.—Two ck schoolbovs, Hale and Frank George, 11 and 13 vears old, respec- tively, are suffering from leprosy in olation” hospital at Soho. taken to the hospital r having suffered from a skin disease for three days. Hospital physicians said the disease was not in an advanced stage. Dr. George J. Holmes. medical su pervisor of chools, said tha ger to schoolmates who had come into contact with the boys was slight and that every precaution had been taken to prevent contagion. Francis George, the father of the boys, came here from Bermuda six vears ago. The family followed soon after. FRENCH SCHOONER LOST. Crew of 32 Rescued From Sailing Craft Off Grand Banks. 'ST. PIERRE, Miquelon, June 25 (#). —The French three-masted schooner sank on the Grand Banks June 17, it became known yesterday, when her crew of 32 men. rescued by the fishing of nt Mages, were put The Emile was owned t Saintmalo. A little charity to theliving is worth a wagonload of flowers to the dead, as by LeProv the dan- | { OF U. S. CLERK TO GET JUSTICE = | | Postal Worker Ousted on False Charges Cleared, Then Never Was Able to Get Retirement Pay. Beaten by Jam in Last Congress, Special Dispatch to The Star RICHMOND, Va., June more than two years of ilines | atter waiting 1 ernment to correct E. | hearing from the chief witness for fter | the Government, asked that a nolle and | prosequi_be entered. which motion - | Judge Edmund Waddill approved and injustice | directed the jury to return a verdict | Tavlor, former post | of acquittal. But Tavlor had then lost dead. He was more | his position. The department finall | than 70 vears old and was a victim of | ordered him reinstated and then dis. | a trick that deprived him of his posi- | covered that he was over the age | { tion in the postal xervice, caused his | limit. Then began a fight to have the | | arrest and trial for emb g funds | ret ment pay to which he wo {and dismi: 1 from the s . The have been entitled allowed. The Sen-| { man denied his guilt at every stage.|ate voted for this, but in the rush ndi and it developed that another man |confusion of the closing of the last | hen in service had framed the allega- | session the matter failed to win the | | tions. | approval of the House. Since he was | 1 When | dismissed from his post Taylor has United S district attorney. lost his wife. WINS RACE WITH DEATH. |MEXICO GETS BANK PLAN.. Coast Guard Cutter Brings Oflicer'Commission Reports in Favor of | 1,000 Miles to Hospital. $50,000,000 Institution. iz CORDOVA, Alaska, June 25 (P)—| MEXICO CITY, June 25 (#).—The After a 75-hour run at full speed, the | commission appointed by the min- cutter Haida of the United States|istry of finance to study plans for Coast Guard has arrived here from |organization of a bank of issue has Dutch Harbor, 1,000 miles westward, | concluded its work. “The government with Lieut. Comdr. W. J. Scammell, [is planning to inaugurate the bank who ‘had been pronounced near death [on September 15 under the name from hernia and malarial fever “Banco de Mexico. | Scammell is executive officer of the| The institution will have a capital | cutter Algonquin and is to be traeted | of 330,000,000, 51 per cent of which | in a hospital here, the nearest to|will be controlled by the government. | Dutch Harbor. He was pronounced |the remaining 49 per cent to he sub: | materially improved” on the Haida's |scribed by native and forelgn bank- | arrival, ‘@ TS, a great | uid | the aft Taylor ate: was indicted etary of State and the Secretary of the Navy, at a special luncheon g THE Forest LAST RITES in Hill Cemetery right of the photograph. AT ery, GRAVE son, M. Film for a va Bebe Daniels, sailing ion in Bermuda. But <he will alse go to work on a new pi ture while th tion i 1 od & 1 going on. of the Pan-American Union, was ven by Ambas- National Photo. AFTER STILL RAIDS Three Others Wonn(ied From Am- bush by Mountain Moonshiners. By the Associated Press JOHNSON CITY, Tenn., June 25 Deputy Sheriff Hunter Rollins was instantly killed and three officers were wounded in a gun battle with moon. shiners vesterday morning on Paint Creek, a mountainous section in the eastern the North Carolina line men are: 8. W. Shelto prohibition officer, buc in the head and arms shot in the arm, shot in the leg. R herd of Greene County and Dej Sheriff Hartsell were uninjured. The officers were returning from a raid in the mountains, where they had captured and destroved two large stills when they were fired upon from ambush. The officers returned the fire, and the battle with the unseen mountaineers lasted for 20 minutes. A posse of more than a dozen offi- cers was hastily organized and began a search of the mountain during the afternoon. After nightfall their ef- forts had proved futile. They will continue the search. he wounded United States shot wounds Manley nd Perm Sheriff D. P, puty $150,000 Fire Near Pottsville. POTTSVILLE, P: Fire today desiroyed a number of business places in Schuylkill Haven, causing a los The Michaels bakery p tic and Pacific grocery st smaller business places were stroyed. 4 t, an Atlan- e and other de- S OF part of Greene County r| June 25 (®).—| estimated at $150,000. “FIGHTING BOB.” Burial serv Wis. NEW PHOTO OF PRINC Lascelles, daughter of the King and boys, George and Gerald. nd ehristened last October Chicago Moves ‘ To Secede From State of Illino All of Cook County In-| cluded in Plan to Withdraw. the As<o CHICAGO fr iated Pross. June °3 f Ilinois resolution Secession has been ap unanimously the city council. An out proper legal proceed to bring about the separation also was asked of Francis X. Busch, corpora. | tion counsel All of Cook would clided in the proposed swithdrawal, and adjoining counties, denied legisla- | tive representation in proportion 1o | population. would be invited to join | movenent. of the lllinois legis] reapportionment of m ed hy f the County bhe ture to | representa Alder author of the resolut n for the proposal. he said. entitled Chic more Representatives and 5 more tors than it has Toman said the plan of divorce from the State was similar to that of | Detroit. which, he said. is taking legal | {advice on how to bring about a sever- | {ance from Michigan. | I C. C. May Ask More Light on Nickel Plate Plan. | A brief session {end of the today marked present hearings on el Plate railroad merger plan be the Interstate Commerce Com | mission which the commission yester- | |day ordered postponed until it de to what extent O. P. Van | termine | Sweringen and h ates must amifications of their | the the disclose the | financing of the plan The course of the commission wa | announced last night, after attorneys | taking part in the contest over the merger concluded four hours of argu ment tha rous and | | personal, s me evident that could not be ren the commission, which was | sitting as a whole to consider the dis- | puted point. ‘ o= Hat Cleaner Is Burned. Explosion of a small quantity of igasoline in the hat-cleaning establish- [ment of P. G. Papageorge, 8061 Ninth street, started a _small gre yes- terday afternoon. The fire was quickly extinguished before much damage had resulted. Papageorge sustained burns to his hand and arm and was taken to Emergency Hospital. Canada Rejects Race News Law. OTTAWA, June 25 (#).—By a vote |of 11 to the Senate vesterday | again rejected the amendment to the | | eriminal code which would prohibit | publication of racing news except on | {a race course during the progress of | {a meet. The amendment recently was rejected by a special committee of the Senate. I Members of the family—Robert, jr S MARY The voungest lad was born in | that the plan did not invol | mination’ to of Senator Robert M. La Follette Philip I Mrs. La Follette AL P it AND HER Queen of Great Britain Au &t SONS. Viccountess her 1924 «ood with st. Copyright by 1 « CABINET APPROVES CAILLAUK'S PLANS Action Taken to Mean Issu- ance of Four Billion Francs More in Notes. PAa meetin which Finance financial proje of the tr official co s e pring posals 1o reme tion have been net counc leve pre: | commun: isters’ meetir dent Doumer Authoritative ed this simply nee has decided to nal four billion fran notes meet maturir ments in July and October “This is neither Inflation moratorium,” was all Fin Minis ter Caillaux would say about this is sue, which he has been advocating be fore the finance committee of the Chamber of Deputies for several weeks. He has always emphasi e inflati M. Caillaux and Premier P in u_conference with the reg the Bank of France vesterday, are said to have reached a definite agree ment regarding the nature of the new issue. It is reported the purchasers Il be guaranteed against fluctua tions in the exchange value of the issue, which will be based upon the par value of the franc in terms of United States dollars The Chamber of Deputies driven by M. Caillaux in his France's 1925 Lud Tuly 1. today raced (s for the ministries interior, first aillaux > presidi nancial P speci to bond pay nor a ance hard get voted hefore through the budg of foreign affairs marine within the its sitting. able 1t Pres the budget Senate’s ratification late this evening or early tomorrow. “MODEL” TRIES SUICIDE. Gloria Christy Takes Poison After Rehearsal Dispute. NEW YORK, June 25 () —Gloria Christy, formerly of Toledo, Ohlo, who has been a member of the “Artists and Models™ theatrical company since its organization, attempted suicide by swallowing poison today. following « rehearsal dispute vesterday with stage director. Prompt administ tion of an antidote by Jean English, of the cast. before Miss Christy was taken to the hospital is believed to have saved her life. A new edition of “Artists Models” opened last nizht, and a the dispute at the final rehear « terday Miss Christy left the stage an. refsed to appear,

Other pages from this issue: