Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENIN HINGTON, D. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 29, 1925. THE PRESIDENT AC( hi after the unve ernment, stands in Judici and members of the diplo addres COL. “BILLY" LISTENS TO THE CHARGES OF THE PROSECUTION. ant judge advocate, reading the charges placed against Col. Mitchell. ing of the charges required three hours. TRADING IN EUROPE CALLED IRRATIONAL Hungarian Says American Spirit Is Needed in Eco- nomic Affairs. NEW YORK, Gustav G Bary, was night at the a Academy of Hotel Asto husiness October 29 (®).— Dr or of Hun- | Jast 1z, privy conn: ker of thy in the length nomic the principal nual meeting itie e monopolies dise na e conditions in Hungary ing stat “Seen merely from an economic view,” Dr tionality triumphing in the whole Central rope a raises the duty on flour vegetables and fruits—wanted eagerly by its people—for the sole purpose of impeding the importation of these articles from Hungary. Hun ewers with similar measures E Austrian manufacturers. The Ru manian production of lumber has heen reatly reduced. vet that country hes tates to conclude such. azreements as would allow the exportation of wood | to Hu v. although Hunzary is in constant need of this product hoslovakia prohibits the im m of Hungarian wines and < to import wines from France and Ttaly, where Czechoslovakian ar- ticles have no market at all, althous for the price of concessions made to Hungarian wines valuable advantages | could be obtained for the Czeck industry. Obviously this is an irritat- ing and absurd situation nomic conditions 1 are still n plenty of free economic affairs met many of the said Gratz, “iv is now bating organization. Dr. Ballou Calls Attention to Law On Bible Respect Mindful of the Washington last Summers stir created Summer the Dis for rtisan Holy Supt tin called the s and teacl obscure legisl over, amendment the trict appropriation bill which bids the of polities or to th Bible in the public schools, to irely a rop many dded. One of these American spirit in Could this need be Central nk W. Ballou roblems could be solved attention of all of 1 reconstruction of Hungs : Ay to the once been carried out with Americ tive provision vice and partly with Amer Dr. Ballou f tal. The economic reconstruction re Representative Summers’ wishes quires both American advice wmd are beir spected most religiously iital. Of the two, advice is the in the District sche but thinks more important.” that a timely rer may pre Dr. Gratz 1} vent a_ slip which ht_embroil Jeremiah Smith, the school system litigation controller in Hung by the | comparable to the sensational League of Nations, whose advice, he | Scopes evolution case. said, was invaluable to Hungary in | The warning was broadcast stabilizing her war-torn finances. throughout the school system R L w through the medium of a circular letter. After quoting the amend- ment, the superintendent admonish- ed the officers and teachers to SENATOR ERNST CHOSEN | “govern themsel accordingly.” Is Made President of Centre Col-| lege Alumni in Capital. Senator Richard T. Ernst of Ken INDIANS INCREASE 2,693. tmcky last right was elected president of the Washinston alumni of Centre Population Shows Big Gain é‘r:}::g?‘.a::;:’:in i ion of which was ef. i Year, Census Shows. e s Other officers of the alumni are: William J. Price. former Minister to Panama; Senator A. 0. Stanley of v and Judge C. C. McChord vice presidents: Maj. E. Hume, 1Tnited States Army, secretary, and Hugh Voris, treasurer. Arrangements were perfected last night for the entertainment of mem. bers of the Centre College foot bhall t1eam, which will be in Washington November 14, when it is to play Georgetown at Grifith Stadium. teaching nes disrespect certain that id high American, tribute to appointed in in Alaska has in the Indian Bur States, outside of 349,595 on June 30 {in a year, da The figures were hased on census | returns from the various States. kept up fo date by reports of births and deaths among the Indians, and show ed a gain of 18,976 in the Indian popu Jation during the last 12 vears. Ten States have more than 10,000 Indians, Oklahoma leading with 120,613, numbering ul‘nl new statue, vuy yesterday was attended by high The latter stand: BUSINESS HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS GIVE HALLOWEEN SHOW. Members of the Daniel Webster De- Jub. who gave their entertainment yesterday for the purpose of increasing the membership of their The Indian population of the United | UE UNVEILE Amba aments of presentat Dr. Leo S, Rowe. Pueyrred, director of the \of Argentina of the presented by the Argentine gov- u Union, and <ador Government officials & A. Photos statue Copyrisht by following the ceremony of um MRS OLIDGE SPONSORS FORGET-ME-NOT DAY Michael Tn: buch, a disabled veteran of the World War, called at the White House yesterday and presented the First Lady of the Land with a forgetme-no Then the veteran was presented with a red rose from the White House greenhouse. Copsrizht by P. & A. Photos. Col. J. McMullen, assist. the left. The read- Copsright by P. & A. Photos. At right, — CHURCHMEN PLACE WREATH Washington Star Photo. Yeggmen Bring Suit for Return of Loot: MISSIONARY GROUP OPENS 3 DAY SCHO(]L Judge Orders Victims Paid Off Firsl‘ Instruction Work hy Interdenom-‘ HARRISONBURG, Va., Octoher : 3 b —The unprecedented court procedure inational Federation Begins at of vegemen suink for the return of |to attach $700 of the loot as his fee. | their alleged loot now held by officers, er hearing the evidence Judge Mount Vernon Place Church. v After hearing the evidence Judge and burglar tools were presented as evidence in court here. | Hugh M. Willlams of Danville, at- torney for the robhers, then sought 29, which was heard before .Judge Henry | NicDowell ordered judgments entered | | €. McDowell in United States Court|in favor of the Pilot Mountain Bank | for the Western District of Virginia, | for £501, of V W. Redmond, Pilot | Iresulted in the court ordering pay- | Mountain postmaster. for $604, and ment of counter clalms filed by three | the McKnizht-Belk Merchandise Co | victims of the robbers from the fund | of Greer, for $497. These claim. after it Ix used as evidence against |ants proved they were robbed by | the bandit trio when they are tried | Farlow, Doyle and Roberts befor three-day |at Gree the robbery | thelr capture, and identified the on, under the auspices of the|ot the post office at Pilot Mountain, | parts of the loot. After the payment Woman's _Interdenominational - Mis- [N, ¢, last May |of any other claims which may arise [ sionary Federatio u it Ver l The original action w Attorney Williams is to receive his | ”:,u“]l\r:.\ Methodist Episcopal Church by Jerry Farlow, fee and any idue returned to the vesterday : Thomas Roberts, ed in Dan-|yeggmen Other speakers are Dr. Carl Podin|yijle to five-y son terms for | Mr. Wiliiams ot (he tvia; Mrs. L. H. Russell of thisijnaving burglar in their pos-|any share of the loot Mrs. Btia Winter, pastor |se«slon after a of robberies in| The three claims are to be paid stant at the Eckington Presby-|\estern North and South ( olina. |and the $1,200 in stamps turned over terian Church; Miss Tilda B. Nelson, | to have the $4,000 to the Post Office Department after A talk on Mrs. W. @ ¥ to China for the Prayver and Missions™ by Jamison, former n- heads today’s program IFree School for Missionary In iction which opened a miss instituted s Doyle and trio receiving | Eva C. H. cinity unions . L. Ross, F. H. Caldwell, L. P. Ber are Brookland, federation; Mrs. E. W. Jansen. with|states Commissioner Barksdale at|in Greensboro for the Pilot Moun- executive supervisor among farm and Mrs. A. H. O. Ericksen is chairman | Federation in Maryland. | in Pupils Absent. | istr sneral. and registrars are Mrs, | Will man for the Federation of Republican | 90 per cent of delinquen: Arlington County: A geron: Mount Rainier, Md.: Mrs. A)nh‘ Mrs. Chase has been active in Mary- | before the National posed of: Mrs. Morris M. Risler, Mrs. | Siven a county woman. | starkweather declared, but when they Council of Congregational Churches at Arlington National Cemetery yesterday afternoon. There is little likelihood of | {lumbia Rivers Approved by U. S BOY K|LLED HOUSE FIRED. i s, said James | | former missionary to Ind} I ated o 1oot—$2,800 in currency and $1.200 | the loot is used as evidence against Washington Topham, treasurer of the |5 stamps—now held by United |the trio when tried next December hhe leper colonies on Culion, and Mrs. | ‘ Danvill s e colomlesion CHlbatan) anville, returned to them. The loot | tain post office theft. I Tomorrow Miss Laura H. Parker, ey T ave aarm and|. MRS. CHASE ELECTED. ' TRUANCY IS 2 PER CENT. | ticon lecture onvFarm and Cannery { _— _— | | Migrants. | Named Chairman of Republicaanearly All Delinquents Included | of the progzram committee, M w. | | Cockrell is in charge of the study class | 2! O ooks, Mrs: Hamt Gl r Clati e rep | - ME=: E. Chase, wife of Maj.| DULUTH, Oectober 20 ().—Only Chase of Prince Georges|s per cent of school children are H. W. 0. Millington and Miss namelvnum_ Md.. was elected State chair-| truants, but in this 2 per cent are 8. Pitt i i Women of Maryland at the State con- A, Starkweather, assistant super- vention, held in the Imerson Hotel, in | - S Py e visor of Duluth schools. He spoke the meeting of Dashiell, Hyattsville, and Mrs, G, land politics since the passage of the |League of Compulsory Education and’ Lamar of Rockville, Md. nineteenth amendment. It is the first | cpjig Welfare. The committee on courtesies is com. | lime a State chairmanship has been | ™~ pejinquent girls rarely steal, Mr. | Robert E. Cook. Mrs.” Mildred G do steal. they steal aloie. When hoys Shinn, Miss Bertha Thomas. Mrs. W The Basutos appland a popular ora- steal they pilfer in groups of four . Garr and Mrs. Edward O.'Volland, for in the assemblies by hissing him. or more, the speaker sald, o . Robert 1. of the Sth of States Army. presi- t of the court which is hearing Mitchell evidence, Howze, Cor the THEIR ROMANCE GOES ON THE I <napped at Palm Beach not long after the elopement of Josephine (“Fifi™) Widener, daughter of Multimillionaire Widener of Philadely and Now “Fifi” has filed suit for divo public. photograph was the n CORNER STONE LAYING OF NEW BUILDING OF SIBLEY HOSPITAI A zeneral view of the ceremony vesterday afternoon, with the Grand Ladee of Master Masons in charge. The working tools were presented to Grand Master Roe Fulkerson by Rev. C. Ellis William-. chairman of the ho-pital building committee. and 1l former laid the stone of the new maternity building. t Protests Fail to Keep Red in Country After lllegal Return. Lat W deported in 1920 wis an officer i hadel ihor n ON TOMB OF THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER. Committee of the National Washington Star Phote. the United sued by the Secretary « Jouhn L Schadel of Fort who was originally Germany E t he ) sarty returned the 1 N viully, the I Dey and althc in active ’ has been instituted 1 his sympathizers, the imm tion authorities have refused to ch their ruling Schadel has a wife, whom he mar ried after coming to the United States in 1906, and four children. The family circumstance was used in protest 1o the department in which a large num ber of individuals joined, among the Dr. David Starr Jordan of Caiifornia ‘ Assistant Secretary of Labor White |in a response to Dr. Jordan’s protest PRESIDENT BECOMES Peace Arch Ul‘“t‘d ‘\.‘m the law made deportation mandatory because the man “not only |-.~w fated himself with an o niz RED CROSS MEMBER To Mark Tomb e e e e | \\mnm overthrow of the Governmen | U"I\“()“']l s‘)l(]l(’l‘ of the country in which his childre P were born. but he was an active mem Is Enrolled by Mrs. Coolidge as | ber thereof and was ready to wit . s : revolution with disastro First to Sign Up in Annual it Roll Call. ts have tment re- and the main amphi- Many suggestions been made to the War Dep cently for the marking tection of the Tomb of Soldier at the of the memorial at Arlin Cemetery them invelve the e suitable monument over the grave, while others suggest The little white buttonwith Red Crossy Shnply that sentinels be 1 inscribed on it was pinned on the| tained there at all times, day and dent »el by Mrs. Coolidge| Might. All communications on the the membership| Subject have heen referred to the card and presented a check for $ quartermaster zeneral for con- in payment for a supporting member-; Sideration and report ship. Among the number is one from | The ceremony took place in the rear ;‘J?]"““:Trp‘;(' 1“;’_';‘\‘::;:;“1“31 ol of the White House offices before a SEEeCh. A pred . | score of camera men. Mrs. Coolidge | AMmerican Cross of Honor, a patri- | volunteered to enroll the President on [ Oti¢ organization incorporated by § | | is hardly necessary ¥ that the Secretary =0 out 1o the wife and American-born children, for they are real sufferers,”” Mr. White added. “Wher | the circumstances permit and the law gives him a discretion he always takes « sympathetic attitude, but where the law vests in him no such discretion he can do no more than to sympatl and say that it is indeed a pity that the husband and father brought upon | the family this sorrow for me pro- s sympathies Un- en- President took out| known American is he prest I for mem lly Armistice and ends on Thanks Coolidge today the first membership in th, Red Cross. of which he dent, in its annual roll ¢ bers, which begin offic 11 trance theater Most of tion of ton 'DR. WILLIAM H. TALBOTT SUCCUMBS IN BALTIMORE Entered Hospital Two Weeks Ago for Examination—Practiced Here Six Years. ‘Willlam H. Talbott, v act of Congress in 1906. He sug- of an ar¢h, similar to the Temple BRIDGE PLANS 0. K.’D. of Janus in Rome, with bronze D r. Spans Across Manitowoc and Ce— |old. a practicing | city for the last Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore | vesterday after a brief illness. He {went to the hospital for a physical examination about two weeks ago Dr. Talbott was a graduate of Maryland University and before com ing to Washington practiced medicine IAttack on Femily [in Calvert County, Md.. ahout 18 3 | vea He w A member of a PARKERSBURG, W. Va., October | Masonic_lodge of Prince Frederick ().—An attack on the family of | Md., and was affiliated with the Co ker Smith, Harris I m- | lumbia Chapter, 0. in this city er, followed by the firing their | He is survived by his widow, Mrs home, resulted in the death yester- |Julia J. Talbott; a son, Willlam Tal day of Claude Smith, a son. and the |bott, and a stepson, John Baltz. serfous Injury of Smith and his wife. | Funeral secvices will be conducted plans drawn by the State of Washing-| Walker Smith, who suffered a.|at the family residence, 112 ton for a bridge across the Columbia | fractured skull, told police he was |Buchanan street, tomorrow afternoon River near Vantage Werry, between'struck on the hehd while asleep. at 2 o'clock. Interment will be in Kittitas and Grant countles, His wife was seriously burned. Rock Creck Cemetery. 44 ye: fcian in" this vears, died in . gates at both sides, which gates, he said, should be kept open to the public until peace prevailed throughout the world. ph of the Wisconsin | H bridge across Mani- | towoe River at Manitowoe has been | approved by the War Department. | State authority for the change already | having been granted. | The Federal approval requires clearing of the channel of the river to a depth of at least 25 feet below low water in_the removal of unused parts of the old bridge. Army engineers have also approved Reconstruction Centralifiallvey Farmer and Wife Seriously Hurt in of