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. TWO GOVERNOR: * Wyoming and afternoon. They are River power permit. “BUD” WINS THE HEART AND HAND OF A COUNTES FROM THE WE v. George H. Dern of Utah at the White House vesterday n Washington for conferences regarding a T. Gov. Nellie Tayloe Ross of “olorado National Photo. Harry C. Fisher, better known as “Bud,” creator of the comic strip, “Mutt and Jeff,” is to be married soon. mont of France. Photo York aboard the Leviathan. WARDMAN T0 FORM ENGLISH GOMPANY Will Go Abroad Soon to Com- | | Miss His bride will be the Countess Aedita de Beau- apped when the engaged couple arrived in New Copyright by P. & A. Photos. FLASHES OF LIFE | By the Ass White House caretaker s married was cook Summe Jeremial BOSTO romarnce of Margaret ( for the Coolidges. MELILLA.—Col. Mitchell may be | interested In the Riffs’ anti-aircraft plete $10,000,000 Lon- don Building Firm. Harry ¥ land in a f formation of England witk h to develop a number of downtown sites in London on a scale similar to his developments of hotels, office buildings. and apartment hou: James D. Hobbs of the Wardman company is now visiting Paris and London for the purpo: of arranging the financlal details of the proposed company. VMr. Wardman will leave about the er November to com- plete the final ngements and also to inspect the $2,000,000 hotel that he is erecting in Lon M Wardman w s to complete the 00 company in 11l undertake in Washington. | | detense. { praying aman will leave for Eng-| pocarno may be has in mind a number of sites in the heart of London which Le says are ideal locations for large hotels and apartment development. He will be associated with Bracewell Smith, pro- prietor of several London hotels. The Wardman company will raze the old George Was! ton University Law School Building, 35 K and erect a l: accupied tion. W GOVERNOR PAROLES JAPANESE SLAYER Embassy Asks Life Prisoner, Re- cently Held Insane, to Be Sent Native Land. the on thi pecial Dispateh to The Star BALTIMORE, October S { the Japanese embass Ishida, a former alienist - staff of the Sheppard-Pratt Hos- pital, at Towson, who w; convi in 1919 of the murder of Dr. C B. Wolf, a T physician, paroled yesterday by Gov. Dr. Ishida wa prisonment at the penitentiary, but later was declared insane and trans- ferred to Spring Grove State Hos- pital for the insane The principal conditions of his parole are that he will be sent to Japan d conflned at the Imperial University Asylum, at Tokio, and that, it he recovers sanity, he be returned to Maryvland for imprison- m Before granting the parole on the grounds of insanity Gov. Ritchie had an extended examination of the pris cner made by head of Phipp’s Clini Hospital, and Brush, an alienist of Sheppar reported was Incurably, insane, at Johns Hop! Dr. and former Hospital. shida probably head s sentenced to life | | | f | that Socalism is not a detri | Dr. Adolph Meyer, | Edward N.| Several rows of them lie on thelr backs and put up a bar- rage with rifleg, They have destroyed at least one French plane. LONDON.—Austen Chamberlain is “that the sunshine of reflected in the hearts and minds of men.” NEW YORK.—Arnold Daly is back from “Gay Paree” broke and wearing a monocle. WARSAW.—Poland has a “Drey- fus A Zionist student is ac- cused of throwing a bomb at the president upon a deposition of a bal- let dancer that she saw him running a The Jews regard him as a martyr. BUDAPEST.—Apparently not all the wrestlers have left for the United States. One member of Parllament threw another over his head out into the lobby. WELLESLEY, Mass. — Arguing ent to progress, the Wellesley College girls have beaten Oxford in debate. YORK.—The _suffering appalling in Harlem. Eight hundred bootblacks are on strike and 20-cent shines are threatened. CHICAGO.—M is in of the $3,000,000 her husband left her. She lost money in realty, which built up his fortune LOS ANGELES.—Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Fairban Gloria Swanson and Elinor Glyn are among the miss. ing in the latest compendium of the soclally elect of this sun-kissed sec- NEW . Grace A. Leathe MAN DIES OF INJURIES FROM TRUCK ACCIDENT One Other Hurt Still at Emergency Hospital. Confined Herbert Holman, colored, 28 vears, 417 New York avenue, one of two oc: cupants of a motor truck injured yesterday morning when the truck and a street car collided at Connecti- cut avenue and Porter street, died at Emergency Hospital vesterday after- noon, death resulting from a fracture of the sptne and internal injuries. Roscoe Morrison, colored, 23 vears, 9 G street, the other victim, suffer- ing from a fracture of the pelvis and shock, is still in a series condition at mergency Hospital. nes 1. Johns, 510 B street south- ast, motorman on the car, cut about | ihe hands and legs by broken glass, I They | was unable to appear at the inquest today. and Coroner Nevitt postponed the hearing until he is able to appear. is bankruptcy, having only $600 | THE EVENING STAR, WAS D. C. WEDN SDAY, OCTOBER 21, 5 19 MEMBERS OF THE SUPREME COUNCIL OF SCOTTISH RITE FREEMASONRY AT THE WHITE HOUSE. The President yesterday afternoon received the high officials, who are holding sessions this week at Scottish Rite Temple, on Sixteenth street. Van Trefelthan, 11 years old, of Piedmont, Calif., who is said to be the highest ranking Junior Boy Scout of the country. He is a mem- ber of the Picdmont Pioneers, and has 22 honors to his credit. Wide World Photo. 'SCHNEIDER FLYERS Weather and Water Condi- tions Required at Bay i Shore Park, Md. | | By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, Md., October 21.— Weather and water conditions per- | mitting, all seven entrants in the Jacques Schneider international sea- plane trophy race, representing the United States, Great Britain and Italy, were prepared today to sample kilometer triangular course. The 350-kilometer high-speed race, all planes entered known to be capable closed_circuit_cou | Saturday, with ification trials The two huge designed by Mario Castoldi, who has kept a watchful eve on them since thelr arrival in Ttaly's hangars at Bay Shore Park, have waited two days for n_opportunity to take to the water and the air. Weather conditions have | precluded trial flights since Sunday. will take place bility and qual- American Entries Arrive. / The three American entries, two of them fresh from the Pulitzer trophy Irace at Mitchel Field, where they | were’ flown as land planes, were the {last to arrive and have just been pre- pared to go aloft. Both the British entries, the monoplane Supermarine Napier S-4 and the biplane Gloster Napier III, have soared above the apeake since their arrival ten z0. The British were the first on the scene. With a_fiveminute interval allows ed each plane for the take off in Sat- urday’s race, the Italian pilots, Gio- vanni de Briganti and Ricardo Mar- ! selll, have anticipated trouble with | their flying boats, which are not equipped with starting devices to be operuted from the water. Equipped for Towing. The American and British entries are equipped so that they may be |towed to the starting line, start their { motors, and taxi to an immediate | start. The lack of such equipment by the Italians makes it necessary for |them to start thelr motors on the hangar runway before the planes take the water, and taxi to the starting point. Comdr. J. L. Callan, | United States Naval Reserve, assigned as liaison officer for the Itallan team, has taken their plight up with the race management and the British and American coptestants to arrange, if possible, a longer starting interval for the Macchi boats, which are sched- uled to take the air last. —_— Sergeant on Retired List. Sergt. Lamar M. Dickerson, Engi- neer School detachment, Fort Hum- phreys, Va., has been placed on the retired’ list fo_the Army on account of age and will proceed to his home. - PLANTESTS TODAY the air above Bay Shore Park’s 50-| with | of well over 200 miles per hour on a| TRAINING A TAILOR FOR OPERA. Max Berman, 29 years old, cleans and presses clothes, singing all the while. < for his trousers one day, heard Max sing, and now the tailor gets chance with the Metropolitan Opera Co. ) Prof. Giacomo Boprg, while Wide World Photo. |WOMEN’S AGES GRIMLY MARKED Hard, cold Government records c: not be used to keep milady emplo of Uncle Sam young, however hard | they might try in other ways, by the | use of modern dress, bobbed hair and generous use of cosmetics to retard age in its onward strides Not even will Uncle Sam'’s record watchers let him be a party to prolonging the day of retirement that marks anothe stage in life, when the workday is| over. | For some of the ladies—not all of | them young ladies—who are in the | Government service, at the Navy De- partment, in their rush to keep them. | selves young in everybody’s eyes. have | overlooked the records in black and white which will confront them at | periods to tell them they are growing | older despite their efforts to retain youth. They are flying back at them | IN NAVY DESPITE YOUTHIFYIN G ghostlike nc the reminder ing birthds from year to ye must remain the ome of them, each time they have been to file records of their date of birth, have edged a little on the record and put their birth dates up a little. Examinations of the records ployes of the Navy Department alone have changed their birthd: from two to three times. Now v must prove it, for those watching the re. tirement records have directed that these ladies must obtain and file with the department a copy of a birth or baptismal certificate or an affidavit from some one who has known them all their lives, attesting as to what is the correct date. There's flurry in the department, but it must be done. {U. S.-BRITISH CLAIMS | CASES TO BE HEARD Arbitral Tribusal to Resume Ses- sions Monday in Chamber of Commerce Building. | The American-British arbitral tri- j bunal will resume its sessions at the | United States Chamber of Commerce Building next Monday to complete consideration of all unsettled cas Senator Alfred Nerincx of Belgium president of the tribunal; Sir Charl Fitzpatrick of Canada the British i member, and Judge Roscoe Pound the | United States member. Sir Cecil J. B. Hurst is chief counsel for Great Brit- ain, and Fred K. Nielsen chief coun- sel for the United States. Canada and Newfoundland are represented by as- soclate counsel. Some of the cases before the tri- bunal involve claims for destruction of British property in the Philippines following the signing of the treaty of peace between the United States and Spain in 1898. A group of claims is based on injuries said to have been in- | flicted on British subjects in Hawail by the Hawaiian republic shortly be- fore the annexation of Hawaii by the United States. Another group of claims Involves questions with respect to fishing rights of American citizens in Newfoundland waters under the | treaty concluded between Great Brit-) ain and the United States, October 20, | 1818. One claim grows out of so-called treaties made by the State of New York more than a century ago Wwith Indians in whose behalf the British government is intervening. ! PR SN ‘Will Outline School Problems. Supt. of Schools Frank W. Bal- lou will outline some of his most perplexing problems at a meeting of the Connecticut Avenue Citizens' As- soclation in_the parish hall of All | Souls’ Church tonight at 8 o'clock. Sty Demand for coal in Germany is so small that the closing of mines con- tinues. Fa WINS 12-YEAR FIGHT FOR PATENT ON TUBE, General Electric Company Award- ed Right to the Langmuir Invention. By the Associated Press. ECTADY, N. Y., October 21. rear battle for the basic patent rights of the modern vacuum tube, sed extensively in radlo, X-ray and milar work, was concluded yesterday with the award of the patent to the General Electric Co., it was announced last night. The type of tube involved in the fitigation was Invented in 1912 by Dr. Irving Langmuir, assistant director of the General Electric Research Lab- oratory, and has been the center of long controversy in the United States Patent Office. Dr. Langmuir's patent application was passed for issue in 1916 by the Patent Office examiner, but was re- voked in order to permit a counter- claim in an “interference” proceedins. After it had been determined that the invention was patentable further litigation began as to prior right in the invention, but this, too, was eventually settled in Dr. Langmuir's favor. It is estimated there are more than 10,000,000 tubes embodying the in- vention now in operation in the United States. DOSE FOR BABY FATAL. Five-weeks-old Adoris Jones, col- ored, and Ada Jones, her sister, not quite 4, were left in a room at their home, 16 F street, Saturday after- noon while their mother, Mrs. Susie Jones, was engaged elsewhere, and the older child administered her younger sister a dose of camphorated ol The mother took the baby to Chil- dren’s Hospital, where she died yes- terday. afternoon. heard the explanation and gave a | water, certificate of accidental death. fl fl g | how | that 1232 per cent of the woman em- | led upon | 6 { | Coroner Nevitt | Willlam_ Sullivan, ¢ Hills estate. | Coudray National Photo. DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF LAWS of George Washington University The Evening Star Newspape journalism. Left to righ Administ George Washington University. BLUE BOOK LEAVES UTNOTED NANES in Volume of California Social Elite. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, October 21.—Eu ropean nobility may have jettisoned its rigid exclusiveness and the New York may have become but a so clal myth, but it still is rather di cult to gain recognition in the s register of southern California Out_vesterday, the “So*hwest Blue Book, edition of 192 eveals the names of those who supposedly may be considered the elite of Los Angeles Hollywood, Pasadena and other com munities of this section, and the role of those not included is longer than one might think. Among those conspicuously absent from the consregation of the selec are Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks who several months ago entertai the Duke of Alba at their Beverley Perhaps the familiar: with which film fans the world over refer to this couple as ‘“Mary and Doug™ had something to do with their omission. However, there is of the M mention , either under that or ter known apnellation of Gloria § son; and Antonio Moreno appear: have been included in the blue book chiefly because of the social promi- nence of his wife, the former Mrs. J. M. Danziger. There is, of course, no deliberate attempt to discriminate against the film folk. Both Cecil and | William de Mille are included and | Maj. Hughes, | Maj. Rupert Hughes. of course, was a mnovelist before he migrated to filmdom and Cecil de Mille was a playwright before he was | a motlon picture producer. To remove any doubt as to the blue book’s impartiality, it is only neces- E to note that nelther Mayor George E. Cryer of Los Angeles nor Dr. Robert A. Millikan, Nobel prize winner and internationall, known physicist, “made the grad President Rufus A. Von Klein Smid of the University of Southern Cali- fornia 1s included, however, as are several newspaper men and women, including a few, a very few, press agents. But Elinor Glynn is missing. ALUMNI LAY PLANS. The fifth annual vaudeville enter- talnment and dance of the Business High School Alumni Association will be held November 19, 20 and 21, it was announced today by Alfred A. McGarraghy, general chairman of the committee in charge. Assisting Mr. McGarraghy with the arrangements are Doris Schultz, Mary Sherman, Thomas Du F Mrs. Kate Out- Miss M. P. Bradshaw and Miss Selma Borchardt. Co., Frederick Bertrand Robinson, Ph. D.. dean of the School of Bu tion, College of the City of New Mliam Mather Lewis, president « Mary and Doug” Missing‘ et de la | ing of the President’s cabinet when the photographer terday. At left, Secretary of War Duw Labor James J. Day vesterday, Mr. Noves received the honor. who is president York: Mr. Noyes and Dr. W Gory Literature + dull rout It nd polite, as gracious a and then I journey home irink three quarts of t quarts of tea, my e glad in such gory j nes which deal in dea {in which the herces are m send men to the tomb. pirates long and lan ebon sails, and walk the plank, for dead 4 The with nen tell no rs of the on their g they are the good eading od _in for nools, I'd doubtle the tales which treat of hools. I'd want to read shine books in which f s hold picnics in the sylv s and gl may roam that they may nd scrap for the meekest 2 happy time; little worth that Sabbath the sun dimy their humdrum hon fighting kings. To man on earth, night and any tale has doesn't of crim (Copyright.) 'ASSERTS CRIME PAYS W | | ALT MASON. and Newspapers for Lack- ing Justice. | Bpecial Dispatch to The Star | ANNAPOLIS, Md., October | “Crime s steadily on the increase, be- cause crime pay the statement of Judge oRbert Moss yesterday morn ing when he charged the grand jury of Anne Arundel County at the be. | ginning of the October term of court. Judge Moss said that the gre | son for the increase of crime wa inadequate sentences were as: gned | said, was the light treatment of crime by a part of the newspapers. days in jail are often assigned for forgery and burglary and that at les | 80 out of 100 murderers escape the gallows. | The judge told the jury that there three persons charged with murder, three with attempt to murder, one with rape, three with attempted bur- glary and innumerable others cha { with larceny and other offenses. enforcement of law by Federal officers was criticized. He said the construc- tion of great highway | speed of motor vehicles and, p larly, the advancement in ai munication means that this ; States would soon have to the Federal Government help. rticu- com- d other 11 upon for more ONFERRED UPON FRANK BRETT NOYES. degree of doctor of laws:for services to Am ! | AND IS INCREASING | . Anne Arundel Judge Blames Bench : | by courts, and a secondary reason, he | The jurist said sentences of a few | t | | were in the local jail awaiting trial | tendency of some people to resent the | the increase of | They were en route to a me caught” them ves ight F. Davi-. At right, Sacr At the Fall convocation Associated Pre-s and can 1 Civie of both the ness DENIES COMANCHE CREVY WAS DRUNK Captain of Burned Ship ! Claims There Was No Dis- order at Time of Fire. inspector gen Harney, suy the third dis mboat Inspecti ing ins United Service, State into cor | nanche | day night estimony by three re the c tended ade Yor! manl the during In « e, the reports disorde {men as “positi dfnied that meml | were drunic one person, a Several othes ed the cap order of was obs lifeboat low no confu sengers or | exception of one | was hysterical. { ne of those tes | to give the source o crew the f tions of - commande bur e the the crew, with the \INTERIOR DEPARTMENT EMPLOYES DECREASED | Number Now Enrolled Is 3,185 Less Than During the Pre- War Period. The number of employes of the In { terior Department it 3.185 less than during the pre-war period and 4,305 {less than during the war period, ac cording to a report submitted to Sec retary Work. ‘The report shows that in the year 1916, prior to the ent the United Stat in the World War, the total employes of the Interior Depart ment amounted to 18, pared with 14,436 on & 1925, a reduction of 3,185 |outbreak of the war the total em ployes of the department in 1917 19,762. Compared with 14,456 on September 30, 1925, this represents « reduction of 4,306 over the war pe riod. In - the making public the rs retary Work pointed out that 10t |only “had the Interior Department reduced its personnel to the pre-war level, but far below it, [ ort Sec