Evening Star Newspaper, May 17, 1926, Page 17

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F\'lu\]'\(. MONDAY, STAR, WASHINGTON, b C, MAY 17, 1926. WARSAW BEAUTY SPOT MENACED BY POLISH REVOLU of the show places of the Polish « | | Yorlk, Amer- Auckland Geddes, for Ambassador to the U er woman this unt FROM THE men with the fiest of the ill-fated submarine breught to the surfac The wreeka of the forward deck. Divers arve clearing the sunken sub ul‘ un weight hefore the attempt to e her. Copsright by i AUTO INCRY FATAL T0 VIRGINIA GIRL, 17 pions Associated P HeAaGo, \! N Federation of te its new radio stat <t on a wave length o whether the United S Department of Commerc permission or mot. it v ounced vesterday by Nackels, secretary of the feder: tion Nockols said he had understood license would he denied on the nd that there are too many iy broadeasting in asserted the station t~ and that the federa- “quite willing” to have th matter taken into co The sta- tion. designated WCFL, will completed in two weeks. FIRST WRECKAGE ul])()l' Fod(-ratmn ew comy Miss Elsw Whalin Dies From Accident April 30—Others | Seriously Hurt. 7 vears old, of | vhe was in- | Cherry 0. died Tospital sie Whalin Fast 3 inred by rile ne: dale, V'a.. the night of April at Georgetown University ahout ) o'clock yesterday afternoon. | Miss \\ 1 wted, had alighte from an automobile which ‘ was stuck in the mad, when a Mary land antomoblle passed hetw the | stalled car and one that was pullir . ‘Gi.»;‘{Ivyf«”"},',',\','f,,‘,‘"‘L",'J."H‘,.‘. e | U S. PUTS OFF PROBE OF FERTILIZER FIRMS driver to furnish a hond for his pearance | Miss Vi nia Wilkins, 19 vears old 200 North by cet, Alexan Investigations Agents of Justice Depart- ment Cause. dria, \ Tast night struck vork Her n vears and hi Miss \Wilkins. police reported making a left-hand turn on New York avenue, and after her machine had passed behind an casthound Capi tal Traction car that a westbound car of the Washinztor way & Electric struck i Geo Dreshen. White secret operative mother Incompleted bv n shocked By the Ascaciated Press RBALTIMORE. Md.. eral grand j alleged fertilizer trust. have gotten under wav Court here foday. has nitely postponed.” United States Dis trict Attorney Amos Woodcock Hospital hix automobile. Physi } announced Representatives of more cian reported tl Miss Wilk sKulll i 40 firms with assets reputed to was fractured Le valued at £250,000,000 had been Eapaldeondig QM\ Old | cummoned for questioning atneel, & Iy dnjured | UG eney Woodeock explained that agents from the Department of Jus- tice in Washington had not completed their investigations. Nine Ma firms were among those summoned May which was to in Federal House been indefi took the ghter to Emersency a5 ser by an automobile y while erossing at and L, street, his skull He also received o identliy of the tablished A hitandrun a avenue and ahont 11:45 o'clock to Rtephen Lancaster 24 vears old, 154 Pier e driver was not ‘ at sireet 1ast | RABBI PLEADS IN VAIN, e, GIRL STAYS IN CONVENT Ter Tast New LEAVE FOR PARIS ME 1 the N, N > of the Will Defy U. S. Ban: BUBBLING OVER. WINNER Tuscania for National Suffrage race at Churchill Downs, Louisville. 1 rl\l AROLD PRIMA DONN Ma 1 initial New singe ment, she is again on the OF THE I\l*NTl'(‘I\'\' DERBY. AT THE JUDGES' STAND. Photograph Jockey A. Johnson in the saddle. t st The thoroughbred won a purse of $50 nl‘!ll"l’\. w Im .flm mvned Baggenbaggage, the horse which finished second, willl an additional purse of $6,000. A IN-H New York ree in IRIIOAML taken immediately after the big 0,000 for his owner, Col. E. R. Wide World Photo. SHIP COLLISION PROBE BEGUN BY U. S. OFFICIALS | Liner Cuts Gash in Stern of Freighter in San Pedro Harbor, Calif. ¥ the Associated Pre PEDRO, Calif., ation by United ping _inspectors to fix responsibility for the collision Saturday night be- May 17.—An invesi States ship colored, . Su Father of Rosie Gn]dt'nm Stands | Two Hours in Rain as Clergy- from vibs friv possible f Lane Hospital h for two colored occu r. aster errancy gtituted <ear pants of the o man Visits Her. | Br the Assoctated Prese. | ARK, N. J.. May 17 | Mary Agnes. formerly "Rosie’ stein, vesterday refused to leave vhp Dominican Convent and return to her famlily and her faith. Rabbi Hyman A. Rabinowitz of C lege Point, Long Island, friend of her father, pleaded with the girl for two Sister BURIAL CHAPl;LS URGED. Church Council Would Provide for | U. S. Cemeteries Overseas. Frection of chapels at each ery for the American dead in France Loy o e A e e Fredari | hours, Her father stood outside the Council of Churches in a letier to the | convent in the rain. One of the sis- American Battle Monuments Commis. | ters at the convent said that the girl Sion IOt inelerence 15 Congre was free to leave if she so desired. T Aore St that muiide still were | She has not taken the vell and is on being made in these cemeteries probation. the bodies battleflelds or are moved from smaller teries, and that no buildi ;T:l‘ln:vle in the Americ TOKIO, May 17 (®).—Damage to ounds for interment services silk-worm growers estimated at sev- Seremonies for families of the ‘lend | eral million ven has been caused by who visit the cemeteries. | frost nipping voung mulberry leaves during an unprecedented cold wav G The damage was heaviest in the p Australia plans a campaign fo in- fectures of Gunma Fuku Shima, Na- d\lm immigrants to go there and to|gano and 8ai Tama. The agricultural help them settle on the land after |department i< investigating the extent ' arrival, of the damags, > ceme. Fron; fiurts Silk Tr;es. tween the freighter Harold L. Lucken bach and the White Flyers line pas- enger steamer San Juan is under two vessels . collided in the channel of the harbor here and 4 25-foot gash was torn in the stern lof ‘the big freighter 5 feet above her o | water line. | The 49 passengers ahoard the San | Juan, bound for San Franeisco, were badly shaken hy the crash. The passenger liner dropped anchor in the outer harbor, but was given permis- on to proceed on her journey. CALIPHATE IS OPPOSED. Congress in Cairo Considers Time | for Return Not Arrived. LONDON, May 17 (#).—A Cairo mspmch to the exchange telegraph vs the Central committee of the | Calipate Congress, mow in kession | there, does not consider the present time propitious for re.establishment { of the Caliphate, which was abolished by the Nationalists. The committee recommends the formation of a general Moslem council to d ld' al Islamic questions. Lands]lde Imperils U. S. Hotel Men Touring Swrtzerland During Storm By the Assoclated Press. GENEVA, May 17.—Advices ceived by telephone from members of the American Hotel Association, |c {who are visitipg Switzerland, tell of a narrow eseape they had vesterday, when a landelide destroyed a section of track on the railroad line by which they were entering Interlacken, a resort town 26 miles from Bern. The train carrying the hotel men was flagged just as it approached the spot where the tracks had been torn up by a huge mass of stones and earth which crashed down into COPPER SMELTERS YIELD. Raritan Strikers Accept 5 Cents Per Hour Wage Increase. PERTH AMBOY, N. J., May 17 (®). —Many of the 1,000 workers of the Raritan Copper Co., who went on strike Thursday and Friday of last week, said they would accept the flat 5-cents-an-hour increase offered by the company and return to work. The strikers asked for 20 per cent increase in wages, a 45-hour week, time and a half for overtime and double time for Sundays and holi- days. Officlals of the Raritan works, smelting plant of the Anaconda Cop- per Co., said the demands were ex- cessive, The American Smelting Co. has posted notice of a d-cent-an-hour in- crease, -~ the valley during one of a series of storms raging throughout the coun- try. Disregarding the storm, the Ameri- ns insisted on fulfilling thelr pro- gram and went by mit of Mount Jungfrau, where they had luncheon at the highest hotel in the world while a hlizzard raged outside, The hotel re- men then journeyed to Lausanne hy way of Bern and will conclude their visit to Switzerland today in Geneva, where a reception will 'be given in .their honor by League of Nations' officials. NEW TRAIN MAKES RUN. The Minute Man Takes New Eng- landers on Chicago Tour. CHICAGO, May 17 (#).—The Min- ute Man, first through train to operate between Boston and Chicago, yester- day completed its maiden run over the route of the picturesque Mohawk trall carrying as passengérs a group of business emissaries from New England on a Lilgrimage to estabiish better industrial and commercial re- lations with the Middle West. Twenty-five hours after christening ceremonies at Boston sent the train on its first scheduled trip West, John M. Glenn of the Illinois Manufac- turers’ Association and a delegation of industrial heads welconied the New Englanders to Chicago, I to the sum. | BRYAN, JR., TO SUCCEED Commoner's Son to Be Chief Coun- sel of Tennessee in Evolution Case Appeal. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May York Herald Tribune liam Jennings Bryan, will take the place of his late father as chief counsel for the State of Tennessee when the appeal of John T. Scop frem conviction of teaching the theory of evolution in a Tennessee &chool is argued before the Supreme Court at Nashville May 31 Mr. Bryan has filed a brief with the Supreme Court contending that it is legal to control education by police authority. In the appeal’ attorneys for the American Civil Liberties Unfon have challenged the constitutionality of the Tennessee law under which Scopes was convicted. FOSTER JEWISH CULTURE. NEW YORK, May 17 (#).—Dele- gates representing Jewish educational {organizations throughout the country formed the Association of Jewish Culture and Education at a ‘meeting today called by the Zionist organ- ization of America. ‘A program was adopted, providing for the fostering of an appreciation of Jewish cultural values and calling for active interest in upbuilding of Pales- tine and the teaching of the Haeb lang and literature in the insti- luumu ¥ highier learning in America, 17.—The New that Wil | evolution trial was one of the reasons | for the refusal to permit him to speak | FATHER IN SCOPES’ CASE | |'|(I|Ilul\ fastest Charles = Hof, “the [ Sam Parriot, California 1 one of his many fa Kansas City Girl Fimaie Novet et OHIP SPRINGS LEAK, "T Porachuate Lesr 280 ARE PUT ASHORE Chav - pardgHGEe: Jumfing . 10 J”.Jf.'."‘.‘ an | Clyde Lmer Seneca Goes kick Matching her life Back to Miami Before Pas- sengers Know Danger. the luck she believed : DOING A “PRINCE OF WALE or eyele champion, rlr hlll «l to her seventh A M. Kirshe pher, crawled onto th a plane bucking 2100 feet, huckl Ry the Associated Prese MIAMI Her Inck h wants to borrow AIDED SCOPES, DENIED © PLACE ON PROGRAM | Arthur Gnrfield Hays Barred From | Peace Celebration in New York School. night en route fs unknow: believes the leal s crew the bhottom sed o The until she w Quietly t made for the lights of that the tion of their d asked them to don life prepare for hoat drill The passengers tugs Sunds ¢ to this eity —The asso ation of Arthur Garfield Hays with counsel for the defense at the Scopes passer taken off the ternoon and Recatise Peace week celebration & the hool. Charles F. Weller, general executive of the Peace Week Assoclation, said yesterday. He declared ~that William J O'Shea, superintendent of schools, | and Fugene . Gibney, director of | extension activities, told him that Hays and James Weldon Johnson » song writer and singer, were ceptable as speaker O'Shea and \I! 3 emphasized the statement Hays defended Scopes in the evo- lution case,” Mr. Weller declaved “and they sald they could not allow people to speak in the schools who are agatmst religion.” CHAMBER MAY MEETING. Bills Affecting District to Be Dis- cussed Tomorrow Night. Representative O'Connell of Rhode Island will be the guest of honor and | principal speaker at the May meeting of the Washington Chamber of Com- merce tomorrow night at 8 o'clock at the New Willard Hotel. Proctor L. Dougherty, vice chair- | man of the committee on law and G A et At legislation, will report on a number of |; P',,T,}.‘,,‘L' paS e bills in Congress affecting the Dis- | L A sk Tvid i trict of Columbia. Following an ad- % Teturn to France dress by Charles W. Darr, chairman | described Boston as the soul of Amer of the committee on police and fire | ic protection and public safety, on the bill affecting the local Juvenile Court the chamber will hold an open dis- | whose drawings she cons cussion in regard to this measure. | fensive. Following the resular business meet- o . ng an uffet su) r a musical en- ” tertainment s scheduled. This will| Woman Wins $20,000 for Hurts. be the last meeting of the chamber | ORLANDO, Fla., May 17 (®).—Mrs Lollie B. Elverson of Huntington, W. until September. | Va.. has been awarded 000 in he: damage suit against the Atlanti Coast Line Railroad Co., for injuries | suffered in_a traln wreck near | Braganza ast January. She Attorneys for the did < file an to clear the bav trip. it her side all Sunday pumpi Kept the craft afloat.” The lne Alexander, stood her to give a | response to a radio call for | help. e Al ria rerained until disissed by Capt ek \CECILE SOREL WEDDING REPORT THRILLS PARIS de ne ey hoth that Mr Famous Star to Marry Count Segur Today in Strict Privacy in Small Village. Pross. A stir was ¢ I My the As PARIS, May 17 {in the aristocratic worlds of Paris this morning by ar nonncement that Cecila Soral, famou | star of the Comedie Francaise, was | be married today to Count Gull | de Segur. The ceremony was to tak: vh" in strict privacy at a small vi skirmishes with Parisian Harry B. Opdyke Is Dead. LOS ANGELES. May 17 (®). Harry B. Opdyke of Detroit, national Iy known automotive engineer. died here last night. Death was nl(rlbmedl to a heart attack. n

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