Evening Star Newspaper, August 28, 1925, Page 13

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GETTING READY FOR THE BIG PARADE. Firemen of truck com- pany No. 5. at Thirty-fourth strect and Dent place northwest, flowers and decorations for the firemen's parade of September 7. to right: Privates Davie, Cox, Yonce, Ardigo, Duncan and Poole. Washington Star Photo. Left, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, AMBASSADOR’'S BODY ARRIV escorting the remains of Ambass the cortege left the railway station BROADCGASTED FROM HIGH ABOV party at Bolling Field yesterday. Miss Maxine Brown (at left holding radio fans from the airplane. Included in the photograph are (Miss Washington) and Miss Leon Arnold (presenting flowers to Miss Brown). * KLAN ISSUE ENTERS FGHT N NEW YORK Gov. Smith Charges Hylan Is Tool of Superboss and Klux Friend. | Prese. Aug rds ¢ sub YO ith rec super his ret with representatives of Kian at the 1924 Demoer national conventi his lack ability as mayor are among the Governor's rea sons for opposin the city's chief executive for a third term Crossing the bridge into last night, the governor given up vacation for State Senator Walker, Tammany designee for mayor, addressed 3,000 persons, while twice as many clam. ored for admission. Referring to the split in Demoe: ranks little amily qua the governc said he was not to be too harsh. Then the mavor’s claim that supported Smith four “Did port nation? “No.") know he went t avowedly and every | fr N Gov st 28— What Mayvor Hylan's ience to a conference u Klux ¢ boss. sec hi e Brooklyn { who had his campaign tie el,” going he took up the mayor had times. me for the nomi 1 asked. (Cries of he did not. You in 1922 his own lips to { d to | molivia President : | Denied His Office inelligent | party in_the | back to New he « know I Stone. Both dogs won ribbons. grand champion Jersey buil. ing he « stop me x the {The &t nomin: Democr conven “In Klan Confe “But nk e chased hin file of the Fork. voice: “Not only him, but Mr, By the A L. iated Prese Bolivia, August 28—The 1 in the B 1 capi Imitted to be grave. sident-ele Jose Gabino lia- iva, whose Inauguration was to ‘e taken place last Tuesday. ha been prevented from taking office b force of arms. it a bill annulling the elec I Villaneuva, who took office May The Jaj 3 | and to Arica a little over a vear ago all the | Pemocrats of the State and in the eastern part of the country stood day | fn and day long, hard siege in Garden against the and ra cial bigotrs or me as | tor what I represented in that fight. Where was the mayor (Volces: With fea “In sentatives “All of never were McAdoo; with of his complaint based on th my ability. It was his blind, obedient subservience to a super-boss, who stood over him and was the keeper of his heart, the keeper of his conscience and the director of his politeial will The Governor enumerated various |y problems confronting the city, and de- Ulared they could only be solved by a | man of greater ability than Mr. Hy- lan. Fare Issue “Smoke Screen Senator Walker, who spoke with oth- | er Tammany candidates, pointed to his | legislative record toward safeguarding the cent fare. He as: ted, as did Gov. Smith, that the 5-cent fare issue | vas merely a smoke screen in ampaign Mayor Hylan, jast night, named king,” who with traction lawyer the real hosses The man, he said stein, the big gambler, George W. Olvany, leader of repre- s against me question of | Chilean Premier Quits. SANTIAGO, Chile, August 28 (#).— mier Armando Jaramillo has re succeeded by Francisco ardones, who held the post of min: ister of public five boroughs for Wi He could have gone a step farther and claimed Saratoga County, where the poolroom king, the real dictator of Fourteenth street (Tammany Hall) is sojourning. Takes Shovel on Platform. On the Republican side Fr the | Waterman, organization designee for | nomination at the mayoralty prima- ries September 15, spoke with a shovel in his hand. He designated the shovel as emblamatic of his promise to dig more subways. an open-air Brooklyn, | Hylan s Tam- | “An outsider is coming to this town many Hall, replied in a statement that | to tell us the things we haven't done the mayvor had “completely lost his|and how I should run. the city. I head.” have given better service and provided yor Hylan then cama back: a better government for the people see Olvany has claimed the whole [ than some men in publlc office.” in Queens poolroom ambling czar and ad pointed out mmany Hall “Arnold Roth. speaking th he s of was rally in Prospect last night Mayor Commissioner Rudolph, Mi<s Abb A FEW OF THE RIBBON WINNE Congress has before | nk D.| . WASHINGTON. Officials greeting the American Legion broadcasting handle of basket), who talked to e V. Egan National Photc S AT THE ROCKVIL ILLEGAL ENTRIE i pdt| By Force of Armel TR §, LAIMED. | American and Mexican L ahor :| Bodies Plan to Prevent Excess Immigration. an to | Mexico into t | undertaken today by a cow pointed by the conference he resentatives the The conference ceive the committee sus in the day, to be used as a b | working out some declaration of policy and principles on the problem to be presented to the American and Mexi- can governments. Entry of Mexicans into the United States in violation of the contract labor law was indicated as the chief angle of the problem un- der study. Discusses Mexican Aims. As the principal speaker at a dinner { given him last night by the federation, Luis N. | of indu: commerce and labor in the Mexican government, who is at !tending the conference, discussed the |aims of the Mexican government with respect to labor and industry. Brief addresses also were delivered at the dinner. by Secretaries Hoover and Davis. Commissioner General Hull of the Immigration Bureau and Ambas- sador Tellez of Mexico, the American cials expressing the sympathetic at- hared to re- £ FATR YESTERDAY AFTERNOON. Center: Mrs. Margaret Barnes of Derwood, Md., holding a prize-w prevent | ration from | American | Morones, minister | ES ICAGO FOR FUNERAL. dor Bancroft, who died in Japan, to the Fourth Presbyterian Church in . TAKING LONG HIKE WITH BARE FE R. A. Loar, a business man of Morgantown, W. Va., arriving in Fairmont, W. Va., after walking bare- foot from his home town. Loar is en route to Tammany Hall, making a long overdue pavment of an election bet. Loar wagered on Davis in the presidential affair. By Acme Photos. Workingmen the Real Aristocrats; Democracies Failure, Ex-Kaiser Says By the Associated Press BUDAPEST, Hungary, August 28. —From the viewpoint of William Hohenzollern, the workman is not a proletarian, but an aristocrat—a col- laborator of God. | This view was expressed recently by the one-time German emperor to | Pastor Ludwig Duschik of Miskolecz, | Hungary, during a visit of the pastor to Doorn House, in Holland, where William is in exile. Willlam also con | demned “so-called democracy” as bei atal to the normal development | of tate. ‘I respect the workingman,” Wil- |liam is quoted as having said. “In | my eyes he is not a proletarian, but | an aristocrat of the first order, for he | ollaborator of God. | *“No democracy can hope to con- | form with the temperament of the | masses. A monarchy, on the other hand, always guards the interests of the people, especially if a strong and intelligent fighter is at the head. . ° “I never sought popularity, which I deemed beneath my dignity. Only lawyer-politicians, those most ridicu- lous of figures, who turn with the wind. cater to public_opinion. For political leaders anywhere today The former Ki his satisfaction over book publication statistics for the year 1924, accord- ing to which, he said, 36,000 books were published in Germany, 16,000 in England and only 6,000 in France. Most of the German works, he as- serted, were of a sclentific nature, while those of France, for the greater part, were “erotic or even licentious and those of England on the detec- tive novel order.’ NEWSIES TO SEE SHOW. Leader Tomorrow. A regular “all-boy” program has been arranged at the Leader Theater for tomorrow from 9 a.m. and Sun- day from 2 p.m., when Star news- boys and carriers will be guests of Sidney B. Lust, proprietor, through arrangements made between Mr. Lust and the circulation manager of The Star. Heading the program is the first howing of the opening chapters of ‘Secret Service Sanders,” in which Robert Dillon and Ann Little are the | sta Mix in “Law and the Outlaw,” a thrilling _story of the West, and Charlie Chaplin in “The Idle Class,” one of his funniest comedies. As a special treat for the boys, the Carry Ice Cream Co. will give each boy attending a. “Carrie,” the latest ice novelty put out by that company. titude of their Government toward Mexico’s problems. Minister Morones said that while | the Mexican government was. de scribed as a labor government its aims embraced the welfare of the nation | as a whole, and to promote that wel- ire it might even be necessary for it to sacrifice some part of its program to better the position of Mexican labor. Its practical aim, he said, was to increase the efficiency of Mexican workers through technical knowledge and at the same time to show them that their own interest lies in assist- ing to upbuild Mexican industry. Don’t imagine that a man pays his bills every time he meets them. that very reason there are no rml] r then expressed | Star’s Carriers to Be Guests at the | Additional features are Tom | | | Prompt | suspension A military guard of 200 men, a police detail and a long line of automobiles The photograph was taken as By Acme Photos. REWARDING THE CHAMPION FLYER. Pre scott, presenting Licut. Reginald Thomas, memorial trophy for having more flying hours t service, Thomas has spent 563 hours and 42 minutes in the dent Coolidge, at Swamp- N. R., with the Schiff an any other man in the air. e e e R e OLIDGE DRILLING C YOUNG dent and Mrs. At left: Mary L. Klaas of Bethesda, holding Hunt's White Stone Frackles champion English setter. ning leghorn, which is owned by Mr. Hunt of Bethesda. COHEN S NDITED Right: Miss Grace Shaefer of WITH 33 IN PLOT Negro Customs Official Is Ac- cused in New Orleans Liquor Case. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, La., August 28. application for warrants charging 34 persons with conspiracy to violat the national prohibition act was expected to follow indict- ments returned by a Federal grand Jjury here yesterday. Walter L. Cohen, negro controller of the New Orleans customs district and a Republican po- litical leader in the South, was among those indicted, as was Dr. L. A. Me- raux, sheriff of St. Bernard Parish. Appointment Caused Storm. Cohen'’s appointment . created a storm and the Senate refused twice to confirm it. The appointment was finally approved two years ago, after Presidents Harding and Coolidge had insisted upon it. In 192 Harding gave Cohen the first of three recess appointments, and he served without pay till confirmation. Capt. Joseph Johnson, now under from the New Orleans police department; Corp. Joseph (Con- ad and Patrolman Paul Gilmore were among others indicted. The corporal and patrolman have been dismissed, with charges pending against the captain, The list also included Alonso Pat- terson-and Arthur Battistella, alleged olidge (at right in first row), putting his squad thro: at the citizens’ military training camp at Ayer, Mas President | TAMP DEVENS. Corp. John Coolidge. son of the Presi : the fine points of mili John was recently advanced from private HIS SQUAD AT «Five Northern Conferences Ballot Todav—37 Others to Follow. CHICAGO, ptember month In an mer R of the {of Chicago, E conference : { the W stands 5,815 he vote, laymen for, 311 against Other Fall a be held Octobe December 6 divided as to ministers Ministerial, 3,3 1 conferences will November 5 and and Hunt’s Mallwyd White Iyn, Va., with Ward Savage's Ro: 13-Year-Old Bride Quits Food Strike And Goes Ilom(“ ian-Danist Aberdeen buguerque, Wash Mex of the irches s foll Me Methodist The N Methodist 1s shown by ship th, 2 in mem ip in eight vears for the Methodist pal Church was 81,192, and Methodist ¥ al South Dr. Wa explained hodist pal Church lands bishops, 1 with an additional 692 un 400 ordained na unordained na and ses, Church reh § aver Special Dispatch to The Star. ; the CUMBERLAND, Md., August Estella Bierance, 13-year-old who declared a_hunger strike be her 19 r-old husband S ailed several ago on cha mis- | 3 representing her age when they eloped | 1 from York, Pa., and were married at | n, called for food Wednes- 3o "0 W S0 later returne Henl 15, parents, Mr. and Mrs. b e horters cuite s for her in an automo- i e Q| ! 2,964 Sun Whitfleld Shifflett, the husband, re- e e turned to York in custody of the SCROATS AN et : " ne Northern church in 1923 re. sheriff to face chai of tabattion.lj, T1e TIGEEIND e 081 The girl's parents will seek annulment | {1%°0 S1S AmOUntng to 8100 of the marriage. | o : 443 S pastors, who ,443, or an |average of $3,578 | property valued a 3,082 nurses and 207,113 patients last year. last isco. the 28 bride, 208 304 that has pisc = the Disc cher worke 3 Sunday schools scholars and 607 heads of extensive rum-running ac- tivities. The indictments against the alleged rum runners follow their ar- rest in recent raids on the Gulf coast | by federal agents. ‘ | Rum Shipment Alleged. | The conspiracy charges set up the | lallegation that various persons named | |in the indictment planned to transport 4,250 cases of liguor from Havana to New Orlean: Three policemen were | alleged to have ed in the landin of the contraband from a_speed boat, said to be the property of Patterson. | to approve the selection of the nomi- Battistella's part was represented as | nating committee of George B. Young that of the purchaser, while he was | Calif., w ted as vice president. |also charged with being responsible | Jefferson B. Chandler of Los Angeles; Ifor its transportation to the shores | Calif., was selected as Vice president} of the United States. George G. E t of Ithac e S | | Furnishing information as to the | elected secretary, and W. O. Hart of | movements of customs boats is the New Orleans. re.elected treasurer. | charge made against Cohen. The in-| The conference executive com dictment alleges that Patterson com-|mittee, voted that the application for municated with Cohen in July as to|approval of the World Court was not | the whereabouts of a customs launch. | within the scope of the conference. > ASK UNIFORM STATE LAWS National Conferees Choose Vermont Man for President. DETROIT, August 28 (P).—The | National conference of commissioners on uniform State laws voted yesterd:

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