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ECHOSLOVAKIA HONORS AMERIC mis: S UNKNOWN SOLDIER. n. now in Washington. at Arlington National Cemetery vesterday af upon the tomb of the Unknown Soldier. ——————— e —— THEY SPONSOR EQUAL RIGHTS. Favoring equal rights resolutions before all the parliaments of the world. these woman delegates to the Interparliamentary Umion went to the tol vesterday and placed flowers on the statue of America's pioneer <uffrage leaders. Left to right: Antonie Pfulf. Therese Schroeder. Christine Teusch, Maude Mende and Thusnelda Lang-Bruman. National Photo. DIVORCEE REFUSED [ FLASHES OF LIFE | NEW YORK.—The Camp Fire Girls the name “flapper” aholished and “modern” substituted. A tele- gram to Colleen Moore, asking her | help says “flapper” means frivolous Woman Arrested in Death of Rich Realty Dealer Held |5, mnd common sense: Wlthout Ba” | CAIRO.—The back of the Sphinx is cracking and the government is { doctoring the Old Fellow LONDON.—*“Tay Pay” is spry and healthy starting his 78th vear. BOMBAY.—A Jew in India can have but one wife, The defense in a polygamy trial that the defendant was | entitled to the same privileges as Mo- hammedans and Hindus falled. SEATTLE.—A fireman's wife was branded in her sleep with the letter “T" and a note was left for the hus- |band by two men and a woman read- ling: ‘T’ stands for thief. Your wife want By the Associated Press PHILADELPHIA. October 6.—Li Jian Emanuel. divorcee. held in con nection with the death here last wee of Maurice E. Felt. wealthy real es tate dealer, was refused freedom on a writ of habeas corpus by Judge Bart- lett, in Common Pleas Court last night, and was ordered held without bail on | a charge of murder to awalt action of the coroner Felt, married and the father of a|fole vou. 10-year-old son, was found last Tues. 2 | CHICAGO.—Passengers on a street fay night in 2 room in Miss Emanuel’s : =ka jeteel Fomb withis brillet wotnd inihis heads | o, ee neaxlyiemolhiered ihy fuuw | 5 ~ollis ; el Tn 2 hoeoital the next after. | dust from a truck after collision with | the ca noon without regaining consciousness. o Miss Emanuel. although admitting &.“rmw josnexanip “fd‘h‘? l])lfi(’fllv ";\‘.”"i':;‘ :3:: | ern expert. has turned up safely after A e o | being lost in secret passages of an an- At the hearing yesterday Fred Felt | clent castle. causing alarm. described a meeting with his brother | HAVANA.—The Ancient and Hon- one evening about three weeks ago.|Oorable Artillery Company Miss Emanuel and Maurice were sit- | Boston has been informed in tng in the latter's car, and. on his | name of the President of Cuba: approcahing the scene, the witness|COUNIY 18 yours said, she became excited and wanted | PITTSBURGH. to know “what I was doing there.” jcomes folks in “I told her to let my brother alone; [and Avon. N that he was 4 man of good reputation | fallen aiready and had a family.” Her reply, he said, | World series was: “He's zoing to pay me the lump | hind- sum of money he promised me, or I'm | NEW YORK.-A Fifth avenue re- going 4o knock him off. | tall store is closing up an hour while In contrast to the cool poise of Miss | evervhody goes to lunch, Emanuel was that of Felt under cross-| NEW YORK.—A convention of examination. In the midst of the 1,000 butter and egg men ls causing questioning collapsed and sobbed !lots of jokes about gold diggers. incoherently NEW YORK Miss Ellamarye 4 5 | Failor, assistant United States district CHURCH ROW SPREADS. attorney thinks business women ithml dress with unobtrusive femi- Orthodox Leadership Is Disputed in Alberta. nine simplicity and not ape masculine EDMONTON. Alberta attire. PORT JERVIS, N. Y.—Georges Al- dridge of Milford, Pa., is the father | of girl triplets. | (#).—The controversy over leadership | B of the Russian Greek Orthodox Church | in North America. which came to a head in New York recently in a legal | battle for possession of St. Nicholas’ TWO TROOPERS KILLED. Cathedral, has spread 10 Edmonton. Automobile Hit by Express Train Through an injunction granted by - 3 v Near Geneva, N. Y. e Supreme Court on application of el St Bishop Adam Phillipovsky. one of the | GENEVA, N. Y., October 6 (#).— claimants to the headship of the |Two state troopers were killed and a church, embracing Canada, Bishop | third was seriously injured when their Theopile Paskowski of Chicago was|ayfonichile was hit by the Black prevented from holding an advertised | iaiiohd © Express on . the Lehigh sermon in the Russian Church of St.|Yalley at the Outlet Crossing, near Barthara here Sund here, at 6:30 o'clock last night. The engine and eight copches of the | fiver left the tracks, ploughing along the ties for several hundred yards, and Special Dispatch to The Star. ended tilting precariously over a long PARSONS, W. Va., October 6.—|embankment into the Seneca River. Mrs. H. L. Bennett died suddenly at | The train was traveling between 80 her home here of ptomaine poisoning. [and 9 miles an hour when the crash Mrs. Bennett was a_prominent club- | came. woman and was in Elkins the greater | The troopers Killed were Ernest part of last week attending the annual [ Rudd of Rom® and Thomas Scanlon meeting of the West Virginia State |of Hamilton. John W. Brockman' of Federation of Women's Clubs. Utica was seriowsly injured, ACH, Germany.—W. W. ew York explorer and cav- the ““The When rand Forks, Y.. where snow has n reflect. that the returns are not far be- Winter . Dak., he Prominent Clubwoman Dies. one with am-| from dry; THE EVENING Members of the debt funding com- ternoon, where they placed a wreath National Bhoto “Ma” Ferguson’s opponent. M. Edith Williams, a Dallas, Tex., at- tarney and former member of the State Legislature. who will oppose Gov. Ferguson in the gubernaterial race, Wide World Photo. SHAFTS ARE SUNK TOTRAPPED NEN |Effort te Remove Debris in| Tunnel Cave-In Produces New Landslides. | Special Dispatch to The star. | { RICHMOXND, Va. October ' 6.—/ Several hundred men are working in shifts of eight hours each to get to he bodies of the men imprisoned | when the old Chesapeake and Ohie | tunnel caved in Friday. The men |have been at work since the catas- | trophe, and at every step they have | been handicapped by fresh slides of |earth and the ominous cracking of the surface at varfous points in the vicinity of the cave-in. The Chesa- peake and Ohio is pushing the rescue work. When a huge excavating ma- chine began to eat into the place the earth began to slide and to come down afresh. This attempt then was abandoned. and sinking several shafts to get to the men was started. | The work of sinking the shafts is | slow, every foot having to be braced | With' heavy timbers. ‘It in believed that there is hope for the three men to be taken out alive. The impris- oned white man was engineer of the {train that went into the place. The {other two were colored ~laborers. | There were several flat cars connect- led with the engine, and it is hoped | {that the men were able to get under | Ithese and save themselves. ! { The tunnel is damp, dark, and| gases have begun to form in the| place. The tunnel had not been | used for some time, but the company had started to reinforce the structure | its entire length to make it available {for the handling of trains hound for Newport | PLAN CHURCH CENSUS. Arlington County Sunday School Group Leads Movement. Special Dispatch to The Star. CLARENDON, Va., October 6.— Plans for the taking of a religious census in Arlington County were completed at. union services held last night in _the Arlington Methodist Church. The idea for the census was initiated by the Arlington County Sunday School Superintendents’ As- soclation. members of which were present to explain the project to the meeting. Announcement was made that the county has been divided into zones and the canvas will be made beginning Sunday, with all churches participating. The general committee in charge is headed by Thomas E. Gil- bert of the Fort Myer Heights Baptist Church. i State Music Club Body Meets. Special Dispatch to The Star. CUMBERLAND, Md., October §.— The State Board of the Maryland Fed- eration of Music Clubs held its annual .Fall meeting at the home of the presi- dent. Mrs. Thomas P. Richards. Plans for the coming year's work were outlined and accepted by the board. | were {cert for her education. STAR. WASHINGTON COMPLETES sculptor of the setts war memor one Mounta MASSACHUSETTS M n Memori; TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1925. ORIAL. Augustus Lukeman, , and his completed Massachu- h is greatly admired by eritics, Wide World Photo officer of the New York recruiting district, greeting John Edward Hoag and Frank Wilton after the latter two made the trip across the continent from Astoria, Oreg.. to New York in a small motor boat. was made May 10, FISH PROVES THAT THE STORY 1S BASED ON FACT. Adam A. Weschler of Wachington went fishing at Bay Shore. on Chesapeake Bay, fiear Cedar Point. experience that his story and here is the picture of it. known anglers. TWO GIRL PRODIGIES AROUSE He pulled in a MUSICAL AND LITERARY WORLD Marion Talley, 18, Kansas City, to Sing at Metropoli- | tan—Nathalia Crane, 12, Publishes Her Second Book of Poetry, Showing Mature Mind. By the Associatad Press NEW YORK. October 6.—Metro- politan musical and literary admiration over two girl from Brooklyn. Their talents have heen recognized | the to {many terms that belong in the vocabu- diamond | lary of sea-going men. in the one case by a contract sing hefore the famous horseshoe of the Metropolitan Opera House and the other by the publica-|the Society of Authors, tion of a second hook of verse. Miss Marfon Talley of Kansas City, 18-year-old daughter of a rallroad telegrapher, who has been studying three years since she first impressed the authorities of the Metropolitan, is ready for a_debut that the musical critic of the Tribune says will startle New York opera lovers. Second Book of Verse. “Lava Lane,” the second bhook of verse by 12-vear-old Nathalia Crane, stirs_the literary critic of the Brook- lyn Eagle to place her definitely among the mature poets of America. The singing of Miss Talley at the Metropolitan was announced by Giu- lo Gatti-Casazza, general manager. She will appear for the first time late in_the Winter. The musical eritic of the Tribune writes: “Many musical ecritics regarded Miss Talley as the American operatic find of the generation. he was brought to New York in 1922 by her parents and by yers, who asked the authorities of the Metropolitan for an audition. Had Hard Audience. “The girl, then only 15, sang to one of the most difficult audiences imaginable. It incluced, besides news- paper crities, Mr. Gatti-Casazza, Otto H. Kahn and four of the most famous of the Metropolitan conductors. Miss Talley was not at all flustered by the eminence of her audience or the strangeness of her surroundings. She walked calmly on the stage of the Metropolitan and filled the great house with a lyric soprano, remark- ably developed for a girl of her ag; the sort of voice that stirs even cri cal listeners to excited admiration. “The girl's audition was an unquali- fied success, but her backers and her parents took the advice of Mr. Gatti- Casazza against rushing her into pub- lic appearances. She has passed these last three years studying in this coun- try and in Europe, and is said now to be ready for a debut that will startle New York opera lovers.” Started as Baby. Miss Talley has been singing since she was 3 years old. After she had attracted the attention of musical critics in Kansas City a fund of $10,000 was raised by- a benefit con- The role in which she will make her debut is not disclosed. When 10 years old, little Miss Crane, then a pupll in the public achools, published a volume entitled *“The Janitor's Boy and Other Poema." Reviewing her second volume the two Kansas City law- | | Brooklyn Eagle said that the working of a mind | Reology, which deals familiarly Euphrates and uses accurately | Miss Crane has been invited to join Playwright Her first dozen and Composers of London hook has run into half more editions. She is a descendant Priacilla Alden. At present she is a student at the Packer Institute in Brooklyn, a private school for girls, on a scholarship provided in recogni- tion of her talents. Her ambition is to be a newspaper reporter and write verse on the side. She says that her poems and their strange and ofter mature thoughts “just come” to her. Kipling is her favorite author. he can write poems, I can, too, has sald. a PR BARBARA LA MARR _ILL. LONG REST'‘IS ORDERED Screen Actress Collapsed While at Work Before Camera, Los An- geles Paper Says. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, October 6—The Los_Angeles Examiner says Barbara La Marr has suffered a breakdown in health that will compel her temporary | she had written lines which must be reckoned | circles | as very fine poetry, some of it teeter. tirred today in expectation and |ing on the edge of greatness. and that | prodigies. | *he shows | one from Kansas City and the other|Which is at home in the mysteries of with | | ¢ | Knoxville_on the grounils that it was of John and| retirement from the screen. | The actress collapsed during the | filming of a scene Saturday and physi- | clans advised her to give up work un-! til she regains her strength. Miss La | Marr's father, W. W. Watson, sald his| daughter had been fli since her return | to Los':Angeles last July and that| when she contracted a cold about a | month ago she was unable to over- come it and steadily lost strength. . He said she planned to complete the pic- | ture on which she is working, how- ever, before going to the mountains; for a rest. Favor Methodist Union. AUBURN, N. Y., Otober 6 (#).—The ecclesiastical members of the Central New York Conference of the Metho- dist Episcopal Church yesterday added their approval to that of the laymen several days ago in voting unification of the Methodist Church, North and South. The vote was 95 to 31. The conference also voted, 76 to 61, to ad- 'mit lavmen to the annual conferences in the future. Ordered to Omaha. Col. Dwight T. Ryther, 22nd Infan- try, at Fort McPherson, Ga., has been ordered to Omaha for duty as chief of staff, ‘$9th Division, Organized Re- serves, “whopper.” but he knew from past ght_be doubted. Theref ore, he brought the 10-pound drum fish to the Capital, Weschler was accompanied by James A. Richmond. one of Washington's well Washington Star Photo. SCOPES CASE PLEK FOUEHT Y STATE Claim Defense Bill of Excep- tions, Filed Too Late, May Bar Scientific Testimony. By the Aseociated Press. NASHVILLE, Tenn.; October 6.—A preliminary motion to’ strike out the | bill of cxceptions filed by rounsel for | Prof. John Thomas Scopes, former Dayton teacher, was made vesterda hefore the State Supreme Court not filed within the proper: time. This move, if successful, would have the effect of getting the constitution- ality of the law only before the court and excluding testimony of scientists, whith was ruled out in the Circult Court. The motion to strike out the bill of exceptions, a document of 37 pages, sets out part of the record of the evo- lution case which shows that Judge Raulston on July 21 allowed Scopes only 30 days to file his bill of excep- tions, but it was not filed until Sep- tember 16. Judge Raulston, trial judge, took cognizance of the situation, it was claimed, hecause on September 14 he certified that the bill of exceptions came to him that day, adding “Hence | there is no delay chargeable to me.” It was argued that the judge's signa- | ture to the bill cannot operate to ac- credit the bill. The court allowed the counsel for | Scopes five days to answer the new move of the State. JEW DENIED TWO WIVES. Court Holds He Is Subject to Brit- ish Law in India. LONDON, graphic Agency).—An -adherent of the Jewish religion living in India must follow the dictates of his own faith regarding matrimony and may not take more than one wife, a though mlyx{m.\‘ is permitted by the law of India. to Hindus and Moslems, a British judge in Bombay has just ruled in a polygamy trial, The defendant, named Bénjamin, argued that as a resident in India he had the same right to'take more than one wife as the Mohammedans and the Hindus, and also that the Bible does not prohibit polvgamy, which, he sald, has been banned oniy since the twelfth century with the growth of Jewish communities in Eu- rope. The judge, however, ruled that a Jew in Indla is subject to the laws of Great Britain. James B. Duke Is Il NEW YORK, October 6 (P).— Jamee B. Duke, tobacco magnate, has been confined to his bed for i0 weeks at his home, on East Seventy- eighth street, with a general nervous breakdown, it wis learned yesterday. It was waid at his home that his fil- ness was not critical, and reports that followed a- treatment for welght Yeduction were denied. October 6 (Jewish Tele-! FLEET RETURNS FROM THE ANTIPODES. The start Wide World Photo The Pacific fleet steam- ing into Los Angeles harbor after the long cruise through the Antipodes. The U. S. Virginia, Arizona is followed ttire I ~1a Ktk A B The undertaker's daughter. she has {a sealskin coat: she sports upon the |water in her own motor beat. Fer motorists are speeding athwart the |dusty heath, the traffic rules unheed- {ing. they gambol to their death. They wish to travel faster than man has gone pbfore, inviting grim disaster to do fts'fiercest chore. There is a scene of slaughter, details too sad to sprin the undertaker's daughter, she buys a diamond ring. She makes a heavy Ipavment on dresses pink and green. and other costly raiment, and buys a limousine Fxperience has taught her |that while the speeder flies the under- taker's daughter need not economize. he'll buy her jewel kets, she need not_toil or spin, while men go forth | with baskets to bring the speeders in. And there are fellows drinking the |deadly poison booz although a little thinking would show them where they lose. The wise ones oft implore them |to sidestep bootleg rye, but wise men |only bore them, and so they swig and The undertaker's daughter, she s a trip abroad: for chumps like have brought her a great and growing wad. She goes to routs and dances, the price she'll always raise while men are taking chances in fifty foolieh ways. Some day she'll doubt- less marry a prince or belted earl, and in a palace tarry—she is a lucky Rirl! (Copyright) HUMANE SOCIETY PLANS PARADES IN ALL:CITIES WALT MASON. Believes Message of Kindness to Animals Can Thus Be Brought Home to People. By the Associated Press. TOLEDO, Ohio, October 6.—'Hu- ! man kindness to dumb animals,” an axiom of the American Humane As- | =ociation, will be expressed universally |in parades if the association has its i way. ! In every city of notable size, the | mongrel will have his day, and the {pets of children, whether they be { chicken or rabbits, guinea pigs or par- | rots. pigeons or cats. will be paraded in picturesque style to arouse within men and women a kindness for lower beings. “By teaching the voung people the principle of protecting animals you en- gender in their minds a greater re- spect for the feelings of their fellow men.” said Mrs. Zula M. Valentine of Muncie, Inid., in addressing yesterday afternoon’s meeting. The 200 delegates attending the three meetings of the assoclation were requested to adopt this method in their local societies to enliven humane work. Sues Traction Company. Kate C. Garth has flled suit in the District Supreme Court to recover $10,000 damages from the Capital Traction Co. for alleged personal in- juries. She says she was struck by a street car February 24 at Seventh street and Pennsylvania avenue and sustained serious injury. She .is rep- resented by Attornevs Wflton J. Lam- bert, Rudolph H. Yeatman and Aus- tin F. Canfield. lolorado, Maryland and Tennessee. by ‘the Pennsylvania. Nevada, West Wide World Photo FRENCH ADVANCE OVERDRYING ROAD iTroops Benefit by Short | Breathing Spell Afforded by Heavy African Rains. | By the Amsociated Press | __FEZ. French Morocco, October & The fears of yesterday that the heav rainfall might cause a cessation in the French operations against the Riffian tribesmen proved haseless, for today a hot sun was rapldly drving off the roads. The downpour was really of benefit to the French, as it put some water in the beds of the | previously dried-up brooks. The troops today again are under way after the brief breathing spell provided them by the inclement weather. In the Kifane region the advanced troops resumed their march up the valleys of the Ouzert and Chaouta and are progressing rapidly toward Alhucemas. They are being well received by the inhabitants and are now barely 25 niiles from the sea. Attack Further East. Simultaneously another force hegan an attack 30 miles farther east in easy country over which to fight. Their, objective is Hassi Medlam. which commands the principal pass leading from the valley of the Mou- loufa into that of the Kert. As good roads already exist in this area. con- necting Wwith Fort Berteaux, the pos Ition offers every requisite as a base for further operations. i Fighting also is proceeding in the | center of the battlefront for the pur- pose of cleaning out the two remain- ing strongholds of the dissident trabes. men. The first of these positions. Senadja Mountain. in the upper Le. ben Valley, is reported already to have fallen. The enemy is sald to he in full flight, having left the ground strewn with its dead and abandonsd its_flock | . The mecond position. ~Messaoud | Mountain northeast of Kelaa forms a | salient between Bibane and Taounat. The troops are carrying out their familiar enveloping movement and it is thought the capture of the posi- tion s only a question of hours. Abd-el-Krim, the Riffan leader. ap- parently for the time being has aban- doned any idea of resisting the French and is turning his attention upon the Spaniards. Reports say he is concentrating his forces in the Djebela territory for an attack. - ILL OF PARA-?YPHOID. ; Movie Company Members Brought Back From Mohave Desert. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., October 6 (8). —Three members of a motion picture company on location in the Mohave Desert, 35 miles from Victorville, were brought back yesterday suffering from an iliness cagnosed by a phyai- clan as a form of para-typhoid. They were Olive Borden, Priscilla Bonner and Grace Gordon. the only women in the cast of 400. All were reported, to be recovering. | | " \