Evening Star Newspaper, July 18, 1925, Page 12

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POLAND'S FOREIGN MINISTER PLACES FLOWERS AT WILSON TO + affairs of Poland, National Cathedral vesterday afternoon. in the League of Nations. forei rtment. at the entative minister of State Dey Poland's repr MONKEY IS OFFERED IN DEFENSE. Miss Gertrude Bauman with the monk which was offered to Dudley Field Malone to be used as i exhibit in the evolution trial. However, the exhibit will not be taken into court on account of the ruling forbidding scientific t Wid THE 1 Detroit’s Car Ban PRESIDENT SHUN TARIFF Will Confer Monday With Senator Curtis on Legis- | lative Program. ated Pr 18 in the railway Ass: smoking owned street Detroit. 1ch S n members the tH.U roar arese ty Council eneral manages 1 of two day he said women and men noke in the rear parts ers on any line in the city. ] an ordinance prohibiting in all street the SAFE CRACKERS GET $32 IN ROCKVILLE Chisel Lock Off Oil Company Safe and Bloodstains Indicate In- jury of One. which might trail £o. in BY DAVID LAWRENCE. Outline to G pecial Dispatch to The § ROCK VILLF 7 chi Yegs: lock off s office Stamps and valuable tered over the floor of the of ins indicated that one of bbers injur his hanc 1 there re vivid fi guide the > in thei Entrance was gained by the forcing of a window. Frank Higgin manager of the com pany, discov the robbery upon reaching the office this morning. He notified Sheriff Plummer. The sheriff the idence points to profes. sionals. papers were the more in rents for leases in than if the Government own nment moreover, were placing the discretion in th the Treasury Department buildings should be constructed was supposed the Republican districts would be given the benefit of most of the money appropriated, while Democratic distr would _suffer. Some compromise plan that will elim- inate as much of the political ele- wment as possible will have to be de- vised to win support for the public buildings measure, as it is one of the easiest bills to attack, and the Pro- * ssives with the Democr: can to. sther raise considerable fuss if it is palpable political affair. Speaking of filibuste conside sposed hands of Will s to Wi Resist Revision. he Sen mpts of > waters | changes z in a polit ans who come tariff reforms administration rduc ild be necessary for in Senator cularly happy over which Vice President been making on him and tors who favor the p ent rules of the Senate. Still, it would not be ng if the Vice Pr dent tering more unpopu- {lar than i s been filibuster develop, it burden of responsibility on men like Senator Curtis to invoke the present . cloture rules or advocate an amend- ings_ bill he condition of Federal | ent to the rules which will deprive Luildings in many parts of the coun- (s few men of their chance to block try {s such as to interfere with ef- | jegiglation. ficlency, Alse-it js costing the Goy-4 4 ion can akes a disposes of the nd other matter n left over from tife pre. eding sessior . Without doubt there will be re- newed efforts to pass a public_build- 4Copyright, 10304, s it | the | THE EVENIN( STAR, WASHINGTON, D, C. SATURDAY, MB. Count ympanied by members of the Polish legation and offici The count, who holds a wreath, wa The of Mrs. Clarence boss of the Darrow family. Darrow, wife of At- torney Darrow, attorney for the evolutionists in Dayton. Mrs. Darrow her husband’s con- stant companion during the trial. leading j | STATE DEPARTM terday, when ( Pershing in ¢ T O nter of group. PRANK ON PEASANTS 'HINDENBURG REVALUATION LAW GETS PRIEST IN JAIL. LEAVES BAD TASTE GENERALLY | GERMS OF SMALLPOX “Devil,” Which Scared Simple No One Apparently in Favor of Measure, Although British Doctor Also Makes New Russian Folk, Imprisoned With Officials. MIN trial June An illustrating the ignorance superstition of the Russian t ncome of priest and to strengthen over the local peasantry group of V! ge parishioner to frighten the peasantry with | pretense of a ‘“real’} devil in village. | A village bo: resemble a devil. {he went to the village dwellers frightén them. He wa | carry out secretly | peasants’ property. several months, | peasants took it all in earnest, 1)'9!\;\!])' for their sins. They floc [to the church, induced the priest hold special services and to incre: ge | authority was dressed up and the | sions. | A special commission had to be sent from the district town to Investigate were brought to an end only by the arrest | the peasants’ troubles, which |of the “devil.” 1 onment. International Geneva’s | of “Wireless of the League of Nations FICIALS SAY FAREWEL en. Pershing left Washington to ass mazing his resolved e land sister to | D During_the night |} s instructed to | fOrtune. slight damages to | o This went on for | ignorant | o, 1 joan securities and pre-war ed ( to organized common prayers and religlous proces- The priest and the |noo t® P4 ; Should 4 | ocal authorties were placed on trinl | SLances Will be glven a will place the|anq sentenced to many years' impris- | Exposition Telegraphy will be held this year at the time of the assembly | hit by lapply_for, another valuation gf 15 per | ented by Attorney Fred B. Rhcods. Lillian Harrison, Argentine m of the body of water between p when within P& AP girl. who was unable to complete her sv England and France. A choppy sea forced her to gi five miles of her goal. e EGYPTIAN MINISTER AND STAFF AT THE SUMMER WHITE HOUSE. sentative of Egypt in Washington, with his aides, traveled to Swampscott, Ma tials to President Coolidge. This was the ceremony of the kind at the TO GEN. PERSHING AND HIS AIDES. st in the settlement of the Chile-Peru boundary dispute. President Signed Away Own Fortune in Approving Measure, Press Admits. ated Press | . July 18.~The revaluation y ¥ t pparently ch it is gener: cent. Indu bonds are revalued at 15 per ¢ von Hinden- T u es in the hands of nobody, al-|old holders are estimated to dmitted by the |about 50.000,000.000 marks s, with the exception of the Left |20,000,000,000 held by those purchasing | organs, that the presidént could not|the securities since July 1, 1920. | have acted otherwise. | The process of redeeming the loans, | It is recalled that he and his brother it is thought, will extend over a | lost their entire inherited |period of 30 ars, and possibly twice | fortune by the court' financial de- as long, as C many's reparation pay- bacle, and his friends point out that|ments take absolute precedence over by signing the bill he has definitely [such pavments. uried any hope of regaining his own | No distinction will be made between r |German and foreizn holders of the | While the bill is so complicated that |loans; holders abroad will be called w understand all its implications, it|upon’ to prove the period of their iefly provides for the exchange of |purthase In the same manner as n Ger- | tion 5. man government bonds held by Ger-! and foreign subscribers for a new the total | be o SRR L e {in Seeks Accident Damages. er I " Margaret G. Magruder of North | | Woodside, Md., has filed suit in the| | District Supreme Court to recover | ,000 damages for alleged personal | injuries against the Washington | Suburban = Sanitary Commission, a corporation with offices here. The plaintiff says she slipped and_sus- ,| tained serious injury December 13 on | Ridge road where the company was laying sewer pipes. She claims the embankment was not properly pro- loan. The loans are revalued at 21 cent, both in the case of holders before July 1, 1920, and those who obtained their securities However, those purchasing the bonds before the specified date and who are in particularly needy circum- mall rental, not exceeding 800 marks annually All_mortgages on landed propert and debts on shipping and railway lines are revalued at 25 per cent, but where the owner of a mortgaged property can show that he was hard the post-war crash he may the sidewalk slippery. 3 Photograph snapped at the Union S Secretary of State Kellogg and FINDS WAY TO KILL By the LONDON, report on an inquiry into the virus of smallpox Research Council. work of Dr. Mervyn H. sulting bacte! mew's been conducting experiments in behalf of the council in the laboratory of the hospital. Dr. Gordon started, according to the Mail, | proces pox, against smallpox. | found a method for killing the virus %" | and studied its actior fection. | "The recent prevalence of smallpox in parts of England supplied an op- portunity this di ples from four different outbreaks of | smallpox being investigated. Dr. further elucidating the role of minute microbes which are invisible under powerful microscopes, but which are known to cause a large number of diseases. Lack of water in streams of Latvia tected and the falling earth had made | has prevented the floating of She is repre- | from the camps, and this many, men out of work. witnesses in and jury WHAT THEIR TEACHER TAUGHT THEM ABOUT EVOLUTION. Boy The students told the ju READY TO TELI the Scopes trial at Dayton, Tenn., being sworn in before testifying what Prof. Scopes had related to them regarding the descent of man. ANTLEVOLUTIONIST IN ACTION. Ben McKenzie, former attorney general of Tennessee, during his clash with Clarence Darrow. attorney ~ in order to present cre for the evolutionists, in the Dayton. Tenn.. trial. McKenzie is a famous Summer White Hou-e wit, story-teller and champion of the Bible. The newly appointed rey {Carolina Family Take Four- of Six Essay Prizes—D. C. Boy Gets Honor Rating. Spencer were eac commissione he {RICH CHICAGOANS TO PAY TAX PENALTY Hundreds of Thousands in Per-lL sonal Property Unlisted by “Gold Coast™” Residents. lows: Jane Sun Jamieson, Honke. ( ion yes en. National | among the the Union and in T D. C. Boy Gets Mention ed he By Aseociated Pres: CHICAGO, July 1 nts of Chicago's Shore district, known : Gold | rardi, Coast,” will pay penalties for failure | Lau to file personal property tax sched- | | ules, it was revealed vesterday when | ¥ -mmn)nnv \‘\, v ; : : | tax lists for 1925 were made public | Mattis ynchburg, Va Discoveries About Other Dis- | by the county assessor. y |geil, ialispell, Mont.: = ilure to flle a schedule resu in | Otto, Rochester, N. ¥.; Hen ease Microbes. | assessment by the county with a pen- | ner, Lawrence, Kans = alty assessment of 50 per cent of the | Stocker, “Pa’; | valuation. Assessment valuations are | Miller odesto, Calif {mportant | Blf the actual valuations. | Young, North Chattanooga, | The penalty list included the follow- | £, Harold Leland, Oak Park ing: John Borden, §250,000; R. T.| The American Chemical & Daily Mail, will | Crane, jr. $750,000; Mr. and Mrs. F“;'-nnmmf‘r-d a three-ds ,v the Medical | C. Dennehy, $41,500; B. A. Eckart, i > by the Medical | 545 000; Hale Holden, $8.435; Vietor | Will be held in connection with th he report fs the i £ Lawson, $125,000; Potter Palmer, | Society’s forthcomir ntieth _a | $147,000, and Gustavus F. Swirt,|nual meeting at I« . Ca $10,000. . More than 1,500 sclentists are expec g ed to attend, coming from all parts o | the world. Tlundreds of papers outlir ing world development in chemistr will be presented. Those who recei orat tion n_the cor Washington, D. Honolulu, T. H nore, Md.; —Numerous resi- Lake nan Wandel Lewi ociated Press July 18.—An the shortly sa A f sium on chemical education, whi published Gordon, con- St. Bartholo- who has ologist of Hospital, London, MAN STABBED IN ROW. Alleged Assailant of Albert Dag Is | Arrested. Suffering from a stab wound over the heart, Albert Day, colored, 25, 115 N street southeast, ken to Providence Hospital from First and | M streets southeast last night. Sur- geons reported his condition as_ seri- ous. Joseph Bernard Ross, colored, 21, 63 M street southeast, alleged to have inflicted the wound, was arrested | by Detectives Jackson, Waldron and Jones. | In a fight between John Sheridan, | colored, 36, South Capitol and R | streets, and Willlam Moss, colored, 30, 3 63 G street southwest, at Sheridan's | The directors are accused of having home last night, Sheridan received entered into a conspiracy to effect a dangerous knife wound over the!corner of that stock on the Chicago heart and was taken to Casualty Hos-|and New York markets “for the bene pital. Detective Varney and Police- | fit and gain of themselves individuall man Sanders of the fifth precinct|and collectively and to the consequgnt arrested Moss and charged him with ' injury and damage of the corpora- assault with a deadly weapon. tion.” SUED FOR $2,500,000. Claim Filed Against Directors ot Piggly Wiggly Corporatisn. MEMPHIS, Tenn., July 18 (P)msys rectors of the Piggly Wiggly Corpors tion were named defendants in a su for approximately $2,500,000 which was filed in the Chancery -Court her yesterday by E. A. Gullfoyle of Me phis, a stockholder. The bill charg stockholders lost the amount sued f through fraudulent acts of the boai in connection with stock transactio of 1 and 1 with an investigation into a for handling the virus of cow- which is used for vaccination It is stated that he alive and dead, conferring protection against {f- for comparing the virus of ase with cowpox virus, sam- Gordon's report Is described as e logs has thrown

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