Evening Star Newspaper, September 2, 1925, Page 13

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1925. * 13 Koland K. Mackenzie. the 18-year- old Washi who won the NAVY PLANE STARTING FROM SAN FRANCISCO IN ATTEMPTED FLIGHT TO HAWAIL This photograph. sent from the P: . Enimtent golk (Raimpetusiion M‘ telegraph, shows the PN-9, No. 3, taking off in San Pablo Bay. The city of San Francisco in the background. This plane was the first to give up 0ikmont. Pa. the flight, being foreed to drop to the water after four and one-half hours of flying. It was taken in tow by the destrover William Jones. ific coast by Copyrisht by Acme Photos ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY THOUSAND MINERS LEAVE THEIR WORK. Two photographs taken in the anthracite region near Wilkes.Barre. Pa. Above, the men are ving the mines. Below, a mass meeting sfter the men had worked their last shift. Many of the miners are preparing for long vi ations and are starting southward in their autos. By Acme Photo service, who has been assigned us e after he had been suspended. The Babe is reported to have told his story, silver king, which weighs 131 pounds, and is 6 feet and 9 inches The half an acrr., and then Mr. and Mr-. Ruth had a conference with Col. Ruppert, owner vice consul at Amsterdam, Holland of the Yank Wide World Photo, : Copsright by Underwood & U as operated by a 7 -horsepower boiler. and contained 30,000 gallons of mash. The raiding party monster was landed after a 36-minute § )] ) 3 2 ? Miss Pattie Field, the second woman “I HAVE A SAD STORY TO TELL YOU.” The arrival of Babe Ruth. { 1o enter the United States foreign A THRILL FOR THE FISHERMEN. Here is y of Houston ; fight. and the bait w BIG DISTILLERY RAIDED BY PROHIBITION AGENTS NEAR CONWAY. MD. The plant covered almo-t § swatter extraordinary of the New York Yankees, at the bedside of his wife Tex.. the newly crowned king of the tarpon fishermen. He caught this failed to capture the owners, but there was a fire under the boiler when they arrived. WCARL FIATHITS SITES FOR SCHOOLS STUDENT WORKERS URGED BY BALLOU Puts $300-a-Year Limit on Superintendent Will Aid D. c. Pay of Assistants at Bu- Heads in Effort to Se- FORV.F. W.OFFIGE ~ DIES AT AGE OF 8 @STEPHAN 1S BACKED BRIG. GEN. BALDWIN | State Delegations Support Was Veteran of Two Wars z General for National and Many Campaigns reau of Standards. cure Funds. Senior Vice Commander. Against Indians in West. A Jimit of $300 N yedn ia ;'vjz-;-:nvun An endeavor by the District Com Special Dispatch to The Star e T \*“:"h‘\v' A 04 :-‘“v‘ handed down August 26 by Controller | which to purchase sites for school General J. R. McCarl, rever f The District of Columb & # | buildings later to be needed and m»z to the Veterans of Foreign Wa {convention, together with Admirs delegution |y at the battle of Santiago in the Spanish-American Wa died at Chat {tanooga, Tenn.. yesterday. according llto word received here. He was 83 Peary Ship Post of Washington, in|vears old, and. in addition partici caucus today, lined up solid with 23 Dating in the Spanish-American War votes for Fred Stover of Pennsylvania |Was a veteran of the Civil War and for commander-in-chief, Maj. Gen \YVV:mEI"OU\’_uuvm'u\l{)h against the In Anton Stephan of the District of Co- |dians in the West lumbia for senior vice conmmander- [ Following ihe panish-American nd Capt. Robert B. Handy | War. Gen. Baldwin was the only com of the District of Columbia for re-|manding officer ordered to Washin, election ? With Col. Pat Hurley ruling by the Civil Service Commis- | additional playgrounds would be slon whole-heartedly supported by mem The student assistants are college | bers of the school heard, D Frank ) and high school students who work | w. Ballou, superintendent of schools. part time at the bureau. The posi-|said v tiops call for salaries up to $300. 1 S duys a0 B Last vear the Civil Service Commis- | pngineer Commissioner Bell that it ion held that this amount could be |\as essential that sites be purchased aised to §480 by adding a special $180 | now if costly condemnation proceed bons ings against improved property later C. B. Molster, disbursing clerk of are 1o be avoided found ready support the Department of Commerce. in order | in “the school superintendent © make sure of his grounds in pavi s quartermaster general. |ton With his regiment. Accordingly Qefinite | his regiment was reviewed by Presi dent McKinley on Pennsylvania € withdrawal from the race for com- this bonus referred it to the con Advocated for Years. \ Tiander. State caucuses are indors.nue. after which at the White House troller general's office and the adverse; “That is a thing we have been ad-) xt Siover and Sfontiand (the President presented Licut. Col on’ followed leotitor Mok maien- W6 demaiitd 3 { Baldwin with a commission of brig: The order sta “The Civil Serv-|“There is no difference of opinion be. Hines Is Praised. dier general of volunteers ce Commission purported to author-|tween city officials and members of The annual report of Commander- | Gen. Pershing e an increase to $4§0 per annum.|the Board of Education in that matter in-chief Dunn was read this morn- | WIN's quartermascr This does not appear to have hadjang if Col. Bell petitions Congress Jgei" < 1t evilogized the marked dm- | Wi coKuDANdIiE the' 10th Cavalry. executive approval. Unless and until { fo, this wiser method of buving school provement in the functioning of the | . Entering the Civil War as a private A higher rate of pay is fixed by eXecu- | [nd, his action will most certainiy be | SN ¢ J . United States Veterans' Bureau un- | G¢n- Baldwin rose e ank iof Hetk ve order or statute, student assist-|anoroved unanimousiy by the board. { BROADCASTING BY THE JUDGE'S ORDERS. George G. Adams, radio A BIT FROM THE EIGHTH INNING. Manager Bucky Harris of the der the administration of Director! (ENant })(’H“\\! ’!h 4"‘1\"“' between nts at the B of Standards may iine ‘and asabl e have selegted) roadcaster of Washington, was arrested on a ch. of speeding. Judge world champions out at the plate in the stirring eighth frame of yester- Frank T. Hines, and said that the di- | tne North ad o b Cmm not be paid in excess of $300 school sites only to find, when Con donald released Adams with the nunderstanding that he would broad day’s game with the Athletics, Harris was on third and Rice on first rector “is to be commended for his |y PR TP T TG 8 J: s o [eress hagprovined fhe nethbsitry & cast a talk on safety in driving. The judge (left) was on hand when the when they attempted a double steal. Umpire Evans is calling the manager (broad. liberal and humane interpre- | "5 LIC0 (RUa T | moan wienvars propriations, that the land has been talk was made last night. National Photo. ¢ out. National Photo tation and application of " the; (& 70 ned to the Tt Cavalry KLAN WILL INITIATE obtained by private individuals or ) e o . = provisions of the World War Veter-| Jater he apain served with the 100 development concerns and it been ans’ act.”” Malj H. Hale of Co- | in went back to the valry and 500 NEW MEMBERS &5 i e i o "ot U S. PARTY IN RUSSIA 130,000-YEAR-OLD SKULL FIXES [eoteunnly oiisrant: dnistevicsucs feoms runehla oty 07 SM1RAMIIR IO, {11 uVaey, Hnally resching | he | less desirabl Regular lotment fo the five-vear school build o estor.” It was a mistake, he added, | criticisims and its co-operation. Gen.|quest in 1 fter 40 vears of service Hooded Oxder Plens Big Ceremony ing appropriation. Dr. Ballou said. | Leningrad Reporters Told Recogni- Hines said the Veterans' Bureau| He is survived by his son. Col. Theo ot e o e sears | FOR SCIENCE SESSION. EUROPE AS MAN’S CRADLELANID |treestor. bit the cousin of our an| % henkine the Feterans of Rorelen | aral Trampertiely Ui | to 100 upon this man or the Neander- had been allocated for the purchase of - {thal man as an ape, for while the |Plans to procure a modification of the | dore A. Baldwin, United Arm &t Tiorie Show ' Glninii school sites. delaying construction of | tion Depends on Acknowledge- Claims Made by Sir Arthur Keith, Famous Anthro- R s e | statuatory time limitation on voca- | Air Service, and a danshter, Mre school buildings now alse needed P s 7 P 1':“‘""': ""“',‘““ YRex "‘:“"‘ apelike| yonal training in the cases of vet- Emma Baldwin Rockent of on Saturday. e Tonii ment of Pre-War Debts. oist. S 1 S = | than those of any man living now,| erans whose physical or mental con- | Brig. Gen. Rockenbach, 1 A, sta 2 ” “n "I' ;'"“\"f ,";‘f"" TR pologist, Sllo‘”ng Model of Recent Dlscovery | this man had a brain which in point |dition presented them from takin | tioned in Washington The School Board tonight will hold | By the A 4 Press : v ~ v Funeral services and interment will g e L % t sy S e 5 p ; of size, if not in organization, “reached | tralning heretofore. 5 - - - < About 500 ‘of the applicanis’ ‘for {118 B the Fall term, at | LENINGRAD, Russia, September Near City offi(apernaum. b s £ oo Wikl Coosalita oo ek | be in Arlington Cemetery Friday aft the Frs School. No important o " i | Mr. Turville-Petre’'s discovery, Sir - s questions are scheduled, Dr. Ballow o . M- Tumailss A g The District delegation is highly in- said, there being but a few retire alndlana‘ Col. William N. Haskell, for-| By the Associated Press. | France, principally in the cave of :hl;lh‘;::) \Wll'f:] Dfi:;lfl?l:\\i,\;;z?ko‘::;n;:: censed over the arrest of Department | — ments, appointments and other rou-| mer director of American relief admin- 1 SOUTHAMPTON, England, Septem- | Lemoustier, on the Veseres River, in history P Commander Francis C. Hulin Monday | by Adjt. G tine matters to come up. The real or- |istration work in Russia, and Dr.|Per 2.—The skull of an ancient |the department of Dordorgne. This|MStory: ’ .| night, when he protested at the raid | ton | ganization for the school term which | peten SOE In Fugsa. and t ‘(i“(lnlllean. “who lived at Capernaum | discovery, Sir Arthur said, makes all |, Sit Willam Tovd Dawkine, bro-| 5%yl gte) where the veterans are | Lawson's reason for recommending opens September 21, he said, will be | A celand Stanford | some 20,000 to 30,000 years before | the biblically recorded events, which | [*S50L ©F BeQIoEY S0C PRSCOIMOIORN | maying their headquarters by pro- |the change was because the Veterans membership will be formally initiated nto the mysteries of the K Klux Klan Saturday night at the ) ional Capital Horse Sho Grounds, it has heen revealed. Ot ceremonials for the purpose of taking in new mem bers are being held at frequent inter Former Gov. James P. Goodrich of s | ernoon at 3 o'clock n. H Lawson of Bos- e R o o e made at the second meeting of the | University arrived here today to at-)miracles began to be performed there,” | heretofore seemed to mark the very told the scien. | hibition officers, and assert the matter | Bureau, Pension Bureau and other or- The “naturalization” rites Saturday |board to be held September 16. jtend the bicentenary celebration of | may be taken as evidence that Europe | beginning of history, become the hap- a‘;{:’*ufi,’l";{,‘;’l"‘,?fl"‘g.,,?n :h:m!filh, will be reported to the Washington | ganizations with which the officers night will be featured by the forma-| I Ballou returned here vesterday | ho Academy of Science. was the cradleland both of man and | penings of recent da There was| 1} of a missing link.” He added | authorities. Search of the rooms of | must deal are situated in the National o bt bhuman eross, lighted | from a vacation in Maine. B e e > of his culture, Sir Arthur Kelth, | evidence, he said, that this early man | gt O] Gne’ Neanderthal men were | the District veterans diiclosed no | Capital. by brilliant flare torches held aloft by - . | Col. Haskell told reporters that the | famous anthropologist, told the British | was capable of performing a sjmple | ritc bl 0 NFETA T e in” Sir | Hiquor whatever. The resolution that has probably at- Klansmen participating in the specta e question of recognition of Soviet Rus- | Association for the Advancement of | surgical operation, probably by means | srthur Keith's view that the Galilean tvacted the most attention was one cle. This living eross will be spread | 135 Treated for Dog Bites. ia by the United States and the re. | Sclence vesterday. of a stone instrument. AT wen 10k & dtbeit Arickstow GF. i OFFICES HERE URGET. lasking. that the Federal prohibition far across the horse show grounds. | gpecia Dispatch to The Star. | establishment of official, economic and | The skull of which Sir Arthur spoke, | “From this discovery,” Sir Arthur|human race, but a member of a race ot law be amended. The measure was according to present plans BALTIMORE. September 2. One |polillcal relations between the two|a model of which lay on the table be-|continued, “we can say that in remote | that perished from the earth thou-|. . .. a prepared by the Kentucky delegation In addition to the cross of torches (y oy <000 L T le persons applied | countries depended entirely upon Rus- | side him, is that discovered by Francis | times, as today, the dominant type of | sands of years ago. V. F. W. Official Would Transfer |hefore the opening of the convention, here will be a sreat fiery cross of (B8O A0 o leatment against |8ia’s recognition of her pre-war debts. | Turviile-Petre of the British School | mankind spread abroad from a cradle- | Headquarters. and, its sponsors say, is not the re wood, similar to the one burned dur-ipygarophobia dur August, the | He said American business and in-|of Archeaology, a few months ago in {land, carrying their particular methods| Mr. Turville-Petre’s discovery of a | 4 | sult of the raid of Federal prohibition ing the ional demonstration zcross ":.xu_.m number during one inonth in | dustrial circles had changed their |a cave on the northern shore of the |of life with them until a large area of | Mousterian skull announced from | TULSA, Okla., September 2. | agents on a local hotel Monday nizht, Augnst 9 last he Highway Bric teur division | “inimical attitude” toward Russia, but | Sea of Galilee near the site of the|the world was covered. - The balance |Jurusalem June 1 the Riaiy of il and it was stated | Recommendations and resolutions | in which 18 service men were arrestad Kieagle L. . Mueller said today |, the State Health Department |that an influx of capital here was ancient city of Capernaum. where |of the evidence found in this Galilean |that a skull of this type had never |formed the major part of the second |and later released hat other “classes” will be inducted hampered by “incorrect information | Jesus performed many of His earlier |cave is in favor of Europe being the !before been found in a. Among the |day of the twent xth annual en- El Paso, Tex., del tes are active- into the order in the near future. The | = — — garding the Soviet union.” miracles. ;crudleland of both man and his cul-|discoveries recently announced by Roy | campment of the Veterans of Foreign |1y seeking the 192 encampment group to he taken in Saturday right.| their intention of joining the Kian Scores of scientists from many coun-{ Together with the skull were found | ture.’ Chapman Andrews, leader of the third | Wars here toda Removal of n I ew York City, Saratoga Spri he declared. are bui a small part of | following the Pennsylvania avenue !tries have arrived for the bicentenary |bones and jmplements simlilar to those| The Capernaum skull, Sir Arthur | Asiatic expedition In Mongolia, were | tional headquarters from Kansas City [N. Y., and Philadelphia also are ¢ the applicants who have made known parade last month. celebration, beginning today. relics of the Mousterian age found in sald, belonged lo,avsmd!! of mankind 'relics of Mousterian culture, to Washington, D. C., was advocated didates, £ 3 & A “ 4 e ————":

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