Evening Star Newspaper, August 1, 1925, Page 12

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SOLDIER a few minntes after the a Tap<™ on his bugle. bl MINISTER LEADS PROCESSION Avenne Preshvierian Church. who grave on Dewey knoll. NEW MILLIONAIRE' STEPS ARE DOGGED Heir to $18,000,000 Pursued by Salesmen, But Has Not Money Yet. Antod Preas INGFIELD, Mo.. August 1 davs for Ruc sharpener—auite a time hafore he i he had Then Now he his head ont of his without " old Tim" eontrast he he ne cenerally known that to $18.000,000. ny one knew him room heing smiling “‘Howdy do; Mr millions haven't zone to He savx he is going ts his hands on the auits his saw-filing will spend rhe re avs in travel and ald te azents. antomobile sales lesmen in almost every Rucker’s trail. But sles talks he replies gol any money yet mavhe I'll talk business tucker has heen spend 1 savings in continue n London for a part of 000 estate of his great her. Patrick Rucker. days. Rucker says. he % City. where he will Nelson Rucker, for tive from Trinidad, final settlement pa icker only recently London, where a set to do with all vojr get them?” i going when offhand.” he re orked hard all mv hurt me any. . But Door—-that - has Jeft {15 impression on me. when 1 do et my share of the » be considerate 10 2m going 1o help an. Then T am go of my days in heen heas ng to spend the rest travel PLAN SCHObL EXHIBIT. Fair Promises Number of Awards. Fredericksburg Management Dispateh to The Star SBURG, Va. management of the Freder- is planning 10 give a te department to school activi ties this of award open to all ing 1924-25 and high Bpeeia FREDERIC The August 1. This department will be pupils in attendance dur. the public elementary schoolx of Spotsylvania Caroline. Stafford and King George connties. and the city of Fredericks burg. The various classes will -em. brace all phases of school work., Of special interest is the Devore cup, provided by the interest and geners ity of Col. and Mrs. 1. B. Devore of Chatham. near this city, for the ele- mentary school having the best ex hibit. The cup will be offered annual- )y anf will hecome the property of the school ' winning it three times. PALLBEARERS CARRY THt vear and will offer a number | BODY OF THE rrival of the funeral pr OMMONER TO HIS GRAVE, The casket was lowered into the grave whi VENING STAR. WASHINGTON SATURDAY TO THE GRAVE. Dr. preached Bryan's funeral sermon. Muriel M Cormick Studies for Ope In Studio in Y(lrd Re the Associated Pr CHICAGO, August 1 In a back vard studin, 20 by teet, In Lake Forest Miss Muriel MeCormick, = ‘nddaughter of John D. Rocke faller fostering operatic ambi tions. emulating her stepmother, Ganna Walska. the Polish singer- Miss McCormick diligent in her studies, spending v hours in vaily practice. and is progress ing fayorably, repori her precep. tors. who include operatic stars appearing here. Over the door of the studio. erected in the George A McKinlock home in Lake Forest. 111, where she ix apending the summer i* ins bed ‘Our Little Tower of Strength.’ Miss McCormick fs the daugh- ter of Harold E. McCormick, har vegier magnate, and Mrs. Edith Rockefe McCormick. At one time she took up dramatic art and at anorher operated a modiste’s - shop in a partnership DRUG MEN ADMIT DISTILLERY PLOT Two Pittsburghers Plead Guilty—Are Fined $10,000. Prison Term Suspended. | a| i | | i Ren L. Moses and Sattler, | both of Pittsburgh. Pa.. who formerly | conducted the Union Drug-Co.. pleaded | guilty today hefore Justice Frederick L. Siddons of the District Supreme Court to an indictment charging a conspiracy to violate the pational pro- “hibition act. The men were indicted | last vear, with John W. Langley. Rep- | resentative from Kentucky, and Mil llard F. West. former deputy commis sioner of internal revenue. on a charge of conspiring in May. 1921, to remove 1000 cases of whisky illegally from | the distillery at Penwick, Pa. Justice Siddone jmposed the maxi- mum penalty of two vears in the peni- tentiary and a fine of $10,000 on each of the fwo men. The prison term was suspended in each case, and the men placed on probation for that | time. Thev were also paroled in | custody of counsel for one week to raise the mount of the fines. Arthur N. Sager, Specfal Assistant Attorney General, and United States | Attorney Gordon appeared for the Government They were vot pre- !pared to say what disposition will be made of the case against Lang- ley and West. The accused were represented by Attorneys William E. Leahy and Ab- ner Siegel of the local bar'and Louis | Little of Pitrshireh. ] Petroleum Known 4,000 Years. ! Although little or no use was made | of it for centuries. petroleum was known to the ancients. Scientists have figured that it was known at| least 4,000 years ago. 1t is only within | | the last century. hawever. that its use | whas developed. and many advances in | mechanics and chemistry are lald; ! directly and indirect)y to petroleum. Harry Joseph R. Sizoo (left), eading the | body | with pastor of the New York solemn pracession to the ACTORS IN THE SENSATIONAL A scene in Arlington National Cemetery vesterday aft. Sergt. THOUSANDS CGATHER FOR 1. vesterday hefore 1l Frank Witchy of the 3d Cavalry National Phota AT ARLINGTON CEMETERY. Secretary of State Kellogg and Assistant Secretaries Drew and Wright at the grave of William Jennings Bryan. in the Arlington National Cemetery vesterday. They represented the Go ernment at the funeral and hurial service Cop. t by P. & A. P DRAKE HOTEL HOLD-UP IN CHICAGO. AUGUST 1 AST TRIBUTE TO THE COMMONER. t the funeral of William Jennings Bryvan. and many were forced 1o stand during the services, erman, shows the floral pieces from admirers all over the United Starec. CROWD AT THE GRAVESIDE IN ARLINGTON NATIONAL The section on Dewey knoll wa< eing lowered into place when this photograph was taken was omitred Joe Holmes (center at left) blames liquor for failure of some of the plans of the hotel robbers. He was captured in the kitchen of the hotel. Wilson (at right in center) was captured when he visited a hospital for treat- ment of a finger shattered by a police bullet. retaries, who taw the hold robhery. Two were killed hy the police. two were captured. and the fifth ic at large with $10.000 of the hotel's money. hotel s rohbery. KATO REORGANIZES CABINET IN TOKIO | Prepare for Fight on Premier in Japanese Diet. By the Associatad Press TOKIO, August 1 Baron Kato, appointed premier today after he re- signed with the cabinet because that could not agree on a tax pro- gram. has reorganized his cabinet by restoring fo their places all ministers the exception of three recalci- trant Seivukai party members. The ministers named for the vacan- cies are: Yoko Egi. minister of jus- actern Katack. minister of agri and forestry. and Seiji Ha- minister of commerce and in- ¥. The mew cabinet probably will be_installed tomorrow. Reports today say that the ousted iyukai party has combined forces | with the Seivuhonto, large majority in the diet. Observer re believe this means Premier Kato will | be forced to dissolve the diet in cember and will then call the first election under the new law, giving the ballot to 9,000,000 new Japanese. All partles fear the election in pros- pect, owing to the uncertainty of the outcome with the new voters playing , a part Premier Kato is expected to carry on _his present policy of . financial abridgement and curtailment of the natfonal budgets 'S De. thus ‘obtaining a | were identified by hotel attaches. At extreme left. wearing grav snit. Jobn Sharbaro. The men In center, |Clever Thief Cuts Gobelin Tapestries In Such Way That Strips | | — < L s V Ousted Sejynkai Party Members| Excised Pieces of Rare Work Can Be Sold as Result|Emily 6. von Tetzel, Author, ] of Artistry of Slasher—Thuringian Diet Aroused by Theft. Correspondence of the Associated Press. | WEIMAR, June Two valuable Gobelin tapestries of the Wartburg, dating from the fifteanth century, have been mutilated by unknown ever. that a_ strip of &0 centimeters in width had been cut from one Gobelin while from the other a strip 80 centi- meters wide was missing. thieves with the obvious Intention of L,lfi,\,::l“,mhw?; T | selling abroad the excised Strips as . g eammen desion one plece of tapestry. After the revo- |* TN CFEN. }lution both carpets, which belonged to [ his purchase, the grand ducal house of Saxony. were | "'TRVCNNG Ly e L pig |included in the list of “national Works | ipa Troiiegion Diet . ThE of art not to be sold abroad.” Re-|pén o MSER el The cently. in spite of the protest of the | jSACTR PROTCREE, THEs, B0 oD Wartburg Foundation. the Lord Cham. | pECIE BIERE JAYS (OCR, tayen By the | berlain of the grand ducal house sold | g2 Ml Ty (ROTIRG Haln han pub the two tapestries to an art collec- | BaFCs; TOF 00 Chnmberin, has pub/ jtor in Cologne. As they were not be- |, iantion to the legitimacy of the sale ing sold to a forelgn buyer. the pro-|,ng threatens to prosecute any one in- [test” of the Wartburg Foundation | ot oo s 0 PO o were T proved futile. | tflated with the connivance of any .The new owner thereupon sent them It 5 to the Kaiser Friedrich ‘Museum of |™®TPer of the grand ducal household. Berlin for the purpose of obtaining ]Dr Demmler's expert opinion on their Quebec Has Radio Boom. The Province of Quebec is having a exact historical significance and value. He decided that both Gobelins we of south German workmanship of radio boom, stimulated by the govern- about the middle of the fifteenth cen- | ment's action in fixing the nominal {fury. Both represent the “Conquest |fee of $1 a vear on radio receiving li- of Love's Castle’’ in sequel; and both censes. A report 1o the Department jare 28 centimeters long: one being |of Commerce says a lively pricescut- 2.24 meters In width and the other |ting war between Canadian and United 238 -meters. 1t was discovered, how- States manufacturews is in progress. rescinded stir in Social | appro- The thief performed the excision so | Fliva Lovgren and Irene Gergensahl. sistant State’s attorney. Five men took part in the B nited News Pictures ' ACUTE ALCOHOLISM fatch, FATALTO BARONESSi Dies | 7 in New Rochelle—Had Produced Many Scenarios. ‘n, the Aseociated Press | NEW YORK, Emily G. von daughter of Tetzel of Milwaukee. August 1.—Baroneas Tetzel, author and Countess Frances von is dead in New { Rochelle. a victim of acute alcoholism. | She was found dead Thursday on a sofa in the home of Countess Sedohr Argilagos, a close nd. who | tormerly an operatic star in Europe. Medical Examiner Amos 0. Squi | made an official finding of acute al | coholism yesterday. The counteas toid Dr. \th. baroness had taken liquor quite | heavily at intervals, and drinking before she lay down on a sofa in the solarium after excusing Later her sleep did not seem normal, jand the countess tried in vain .to |arouse her. The baroness is survived | by her mother and a brother. Harold { von Tetzel of Milwaukee. She was 47 vears old and had never married. Born in Milwaukee. she came to New | York when 17 vears of age. She was {literary editor for various New York { papers, and wrote extensively for theatrical and musical publications. !In recent years she had produced many motion picture scenarios. | The baroness had an_extensive es jtate at Riverside. N. Y., but spent much of her time at the homs of the countess, was | Squire that | had been | | herself to callers because she felt {Il. | There was not a vacant seat in the New York Avenne "he photograph Preshvierian Choreh which was taken jnst P CEMETERY YESTERDAY rave was covered with a tent. The nsnal gun AFTERNOON The casker salute over the closed Takoma Gardeners By 100000 Buths BLLR GIVENFLEET, Of Haltand Firm - RY CHIEF 1S IRKED An order for heen placed w bulb firms in koma Park massed with flowers, and the zrave approximately 100 h one of the | Holland by Horticultnral which i0en! racsliar the hox gardeners of that suburb The bulbs are expected to the lawns and yar September Head of Austraiian Prohibi- tion Council Protests—Rob- ison Praises Hospitality. Y The order was placed by B e Morrison. president of the club order to obtain the wholesale price and also because of some prospects of a strict embargo on imported bulbs in the near future. The bulb order includes erocuses, hyacinths, daffodils and tulips, be- w)p« larze variety of smaller ROWE I BSPUTED ONLATIN AMERICA Pan- Amervmn Labor Official Blames Outsiders for “Bal- ance of Power™ Drift. gust 1.—As t to Sydney and close the fleet officars ws to a men are beinz ovar whelmed hospitality Admiral S. . Robison. commander-in-chief of a the battleship fleet. said todav: “Tell the American peonle we are rec Ve greatsstainalor hoss weath kes the visit urak A protest 1o men o Robert B the Prohibi who. in a lon hibition publi came to us clean and wholesome provided ‘free beer' at public tions, and then we were shocked they behaved unbecomingly m most zainst the e fleet has Hammond of heer president Australia »n Council of ticle in G o The sailors We func Indignant Over Reports. MELBOURN August 1 Official Australian circles are indignant over reports cabled Ameri that unfriendliness had shown American saflor All officer and men interviewed declared that. as far as Melbourne was concerne: welcome and the kindness them exceeded by far their tions, and thev considered it to deny stories of hostil to icans, Representative McClintic homa also cabled President denying the reports. No Disturbances Reported. AN FRANCISCO, ) their é Santiago Ig Spanish language secretary of the Pan-American Federa- { tion of Labor. in a statement today took issue with recent remarks by Dr.{ | S. Rowe. director of the Pan-| Amerlm\r\ Union, on the position | Great Britain should take in the af- fairs of Latin American nations. pecifically, Mr. Iglesias described most amazing_declaration” Dr. | Rowe's statement last Monday before | | disturbances In the Tnstitute of Politics at Williams- | diers were | town. Mass.. that it is essential that \ ported from Great Britain. with her possessions in | clated Press | this hemisphere, be given a volc m At Sydney. New South Wales rmination of Pan-Amer! Where another contingent of the fleet a few fights involving e been reported 1o the but they were not so eon ias. tendered expect a dn Amer of Ok August 1--Nn which " American sc involved have bheen Melbourns to the to Ass it With 12 D. Miller Vigorons that davs study the « had not bee until yestes Rowe declared,” Mr. Iglesias | , “that Latin America s drifting amhm'lncc toward the balance-of-power svstem of | sequential pre-war Europe and urged that the | o P Monroe Doctrine be made continental. A e DISSE TRIAL AUGUST 12. “If it is true” Mr. Iglesias con. | . | tinued. “that South America is drift- Richmond Youth Charged ing toward a balance-of-power system it is because of two principal factors Murder of Three. “First, American investments in|Special Dispatch to The Star every Latin American Natlon, placing | RICHMOND. Va those nations under heavy obligations | dolph E. Disse \\uv face trial here An |and sometimes placing even their | gyst Judge Frederick W. Cole- customhouses and internal revenues man decided yesterday, for the mmr {under supervision of Amerlcan of-|der of Mrs. Vivian Peers. Detective |ficials. | Harvey Burke and Henry G. Carter “Second. to Buropean political prop- ! He is also charged with wounding aganda which is working toward a Willis Britt. European political and social leader-| . C. Page and Willis ship in Latin America. and which is{counsel for Disse. made a well known to those who observe care- | protest against being forced |fully what is taking place in interna-|case this month. holding the !lnna’ affairs. would require at least 30 “When nations drift toward thelwhich to arrange and {formation of gzroups. suspicious of fense. They said they each other. it is because certain|able to see their client forces are at work creating suspicion. |day. American finance is undoubtedly the | Judge Coleman sald the welfare and greatest force on this continent for |interest of the accused would be prop- the creation of. susplclous sen(lmeum‘rrl\ safeguarded, but that he bele betwaen naffons. a prompt trial wonld he for the haet fully aware of this|of all concerned. He was opposed 1o mgnace)’: + uhnsceseary delays. Dr. Rowe must he the extent of

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