Evening Star Newspaper, June 22, 1926, Page 17

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FORMAL OF ING Cardinal Bonzanro i« THE EUCHARISTIC CON seated on the altar th and left. S AT HOLY NAME CATHEDRAL, CHICAGO. ter of the photegraph, and other Catholic Church offi- Wide World Photo. NG STAR, “’ASH] NGTON, D. €. TUESDAY, JUNE 29 1926, DENT'S SON GRADUATE At left, Dana MeCutcheon , a member of the Boltwood Intermediate School of nston, 11, graduating class. Russell Lane, at right, president of the graduat- ing class. mg Dana, an adopted son of the p .""13\ 11" Copy & A Photos, RAQUEL MELLER VISITS CHARLIE. The Spanish singer, who is making a tour of this country, visited the Chaplin studio in Hollywood, Calif., and watched the comedian at work on a new photoplay. Wide World Photo. DAUGHTER OF ACTRESS AT THE POOL. of Ethel Barrymore, at the Columbia Country Club pool yesterday aft- Miss Colt has been visiting ln‘\"nshh\zlun f ernoon. ANOTHER EXNPEDITION STAF Morrissey expedition left Rye, N. Y ford, daughter of the late ing the “polar flag, Miss Ethel Colt, daughter ome tim Wide World Photo es Admiral Peary " Which she presented to Capt. SWEDEN'S CROWN PRINCE VISITS HOUSE WHERE snapped when the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Sweden, on a sightseeing tour, POET of !Iw Prince of American lm‘l\" at Cambridge, TONGFELLOW LIVED. Photograph visited the “Shrine Photo by Acme the ry Staf- tograph, hold- “Bobh™ Bartle(t. thy P. & A. Photos. Bound for RKERS TALK nt of the Peni AROL Mrs. ' MONEY MATTERS. nsy | M ania W nchot in the recent primary, called as vestigating committee. - treasurer, at right. Mrs. | ih Cobh HINE JUNIOR HEH AWARDS DIPLONAS Prmcmal H. E Warner Gives Sheepskins to 107 in Graduating Class. JAPAN SHIFTS ENVOYS. Minister to Mexlco Gm to Argen- tin1, Tokio Reports. TOKIO, June (#).—Shigetsuna | Furuya, now Japanese Minister to | Mexico, has bee net to he Mi er to Argentina, it was learned authoritatively today. He will he succeeded at Mexico City by Arata Aoki, consul general at Hono- lulu. Kazne Wuwashima, first secretary of the Japinese embassy at ston, will be shifted to the Honolulu post. Of Appointmenis is expected " GRAND JURY FINDS hfl; Invocation was prono m« b Inspection Is Made Under e Rev. P, V. Cro: 1 th 1 tory address Foreman De Knight—Food Gets Practical Test. Lieweilyn soon. H. E. Warner, principal of the L. € Hine Junior High School. awarded pupils their diplomas the eommencement this after sided over by Miss . wistant superintendent schools. The class h AntBony Alfred ( at anm » by ‘uozzn, and pr chestra rendor: The followin: plomas: Pau Irma Barnes, Ruth Evelyn Elizabeth ' Rr: stance Rray, Marguerite Marian Cox Dorothy Ca ‘\ irginia Marie Twen:ytwn members of the local grand nd two assistant District pected the District jail | fury. headed by Vietor . foreman. and accom- M. Poarl McCall and assisiant Distriet a 1gh inspection tiers were given a.sample menu was roas. heef, hoete. o5, siaw and peas, with fce t off the meal. The food m the same sources as isoners, and eaoked conks who provids for the involuntary guests of “Mai, Peak’s Hotel” at 200 Nineteenth strest south- east. Dorothy Inez Selbicky, Mary Viok | After ’:{‘;"m"‘:‘f"m":"“iz'r;::‘"kj"‘;?,":fl Shepar MNia ilv i . 2 . 3 hepard, Lillian Lena Silverman, |:the Atention cof the grend jury to Tielen May Si mmln R, Annie sabel g W S itennmie Isabel i ceilinz of the kitchen, where the S A . ead. Tiewellyn Tewicshury, Myrtle Antofn.|Mmeal was served, and cited the oite Thom, Frieda Amelin Thume, | 11V dwindling ‘annual appropriati Mary Catherine Walker, Mary Walker, },’"r the upkeep of the jail in compa Anna Arnold Warfield, Tt e f'"“”'.',’;"’ o s de 4 oo oh Bl relsh, Mar. | ©n its facilities mong figures Whipr, Helen Elizbeth Welsh. Mar. | sy Sooptie. o) | cited were the 1021 T e lkinson and Audrey | {1n of 243, for which and approprin- orge Hunmmer Acton, Wilbur An. | tion of $39.138 was allowed, and the | derson, Willlam B. Arnold, Willard | 1927 daily population average of 424 I, Baetzner, George Bond Baily, | Drisoners, with an appropriation of | Wilbur Ervin Reall, Russell L. Brown, | #o = s Wallace Arthur Bruder, Harry Law- i Mr. De Knight complimented Capt. rence Clark. Harvey Francis Connick, | M. M. Barnard and Ma]. Peak, super- Tonald Alexander Craig, jr.. Anthony |intendent and assistant superintend. Alfred Cuozzo, Craig Raeburn Deane, | ent of local penal institutions, re- Paul Richard Dunn, Robert A. Dun. | Spectively, for thelr management of Kenneth Terrell Ellington, ! the institution. Farhood, an Willlam Gill, jr.: Jerome Rlaine Harrell, Jud- con’ Otfs Harrison, jr.; Richard R. timer, Charles Walter LeMat, Ralph Gallinger_ Lioyd, James Grant Lyons, Jobert Knight McCormick, Abraham School—Virginia Olga Ball, Pauline David Malkin, David Reid Middleton, | Mary Distl, Gertrude Eugenle Franklin Terrance Miles, jr.; Richard | D’Andelet, Margaret Elizabeth Day. S, Mudd, Cornelius Edward O'Brien, | Bertha Margaret Eney, Aneita May, Bdward Joseph Oliveri, jr.. William | Elizabeth Adelaide Pyle, Helen Rosa: Tfohl, George Weldon Price. Lawrence | lie Toomhs, Clark Miller Bressler, Pumphrev, Stanley Wayne Roh | William Boswell, Donald J. Parsons ik Ul ke Tohert |and Millard Theodore Sniffin. ddward Seott, Harry Shonrauk, By credit from Hine Night School— Lee Edmond Sweeney, Manpn Willard Edwin Payne Pitcher. he svand Gr den, Margaret Katharine Hay erine Frances Howe Hughes, Helen Ja Kuhn, Dorothy Frances v, | caret J. Leatherwood, Helen Biythe | Metinniss, 'n Lenore Matthews, | Marian M. Newman, Margaret Eleanor Oulahan, Teter, t'aroline Dvellia Fleanor Leftwich Catherine Ridgeway, Roberts, Sadie Rosenblum, | nigan, Victor | Thompson, William Henry Walkart, ! George M. Yates and Samuel Zola. By credit from FEastern High — e | | chosen by the cabl- | Wash- | inl announcement of these Iz n | ALL ABOARD FOR THE MMER CAMP OF THE CHRIST CF 1) SOCIETY! The Children. gathered at then climbed into a bus and were taken to the camp near Rockville, Md. 325 Indiana JAvenue yesterday, Washinzton Star Photo. CONTAGIOUS DISEASE EMERGENCY EXISTS Health Department Funds, Nearly Depleted,” Ordered Bolstered Up at Once. With the Health Department's fund for the prevention of the spread of disease almost exhausted, due to an alarming increase in the number of contagious diseases, the District Com- missioners declared today that an emergency existed, and authorized the department to use $1,500 of the emer- ency fund's appropriation. Tlcalth Officer William C. Fowler | submitted a statistical report to the { Commissioners showing that there had been 13,800 cases of contagious diseaeses in_the District between July . and June 18 this year, and compared with 5,984 cases in the cor- responding period of the preceding vear. The largest increases were shown in measles, pneumonia, whoop- ing cough and diphtheria. According to> Dr. Fowler's report, there remained in the contagious dis- ease fund of the Health Department $1,137.18, which is not sufficient to pay basic salaries of the employes for a half month. The department also, he said, is confronted with unpaid gas, electric light, ice, laundry and horse- shoeing bills. I TR Rain Spurts Tobacco Planting. Special Dispatch to The Star. LYNCHBURG, Va., June 22.—Re- sulting from 21 of an inch of rain Sunday, farmers in the Lynchburg district ‘generally were engaged in to- bacco planting yesterday, this having been the first season many have had. There were some sections, however, which did not have rain sufficient to enable tobacce plants to be set. Detective Was Waiting in Next Room When Regina Flory Committed Suicide By the Associated Preess. LONDON, June Regina Fiory, beautiful French act- ress and dancer, shot herself while talking with Director Sir Alfred Butt in his office in the Drury Lane The- ater last Thursday night, a French | detective who had followed her from Paris was waiting in the next room to guard against just such a tragedy. This was brought out today at the coroner’s inquest, which, after sen- sational disclosures regarding the dead star, resulted in a verdict of suicide while of unsound mind. Mile. Flory, who is said to have been neurasthenic and at one time addicted to morphine, had some time before her death threatened suicide, and a_detective, Francols Semaine, en detailed to watch her. She , o ::g :: trouble with Sir Alfred during | that she was neurasthenic nr;‘d lm;| a their interview, and the fatal shot |lOng time used drugs, But had de- came without warning. | creased the doses in an effort to break Sernine rushed into the room just | herself of the habit. She had told in time to catch the actress as she |Nim the last time he saw her that she fell. Sir Alfred, the detective testi- |intended to take her "1”“1- Tl fied, sat In his chalr, looking stupe-| He had heard she had a love r fled’ and unable to realize what had |in Paris recently with a dramatic au- he et B e with thip Trignd, bt e Flory, ovho, had Eone to % |they had hoth found it dificuit to gagement In England, was beautiful- | break off the affair. The author fol- * she | lowed her to London when she came he | ly gowned and bejeweled when she e vacently. took her life. v There was nothing in the testimony The detective sald he had informed |, " indicate that this affair was con- fi";wf’f‘ffi‘ln e i v “that | sldered to have had an unbalancing she had threatened suicide. How. | effect upon the actress. ever, as the customs officiais found no weapon upon her on her arrival in England, the theatrical manager thought little of the report. Nevertheless the detective arranged with Sir Alfred to be in the next room during the interview. When Mile. Flory entered the director's office Se- maine took up a position behind the door nf the adjoining room, prepared to rush In if she became excited. asked for an engage being informed there s mothing lable at the time, | asked Sir Alfred's advice about an | offer she sald she had received from | the Shuberts to play in America for | $1.500 weekly. Sir Alfred replied that he thought the role she domnmd would suit her admirably. Sir Alfred, d«wmhin: the scene on the stand today, said there was a lull at this point in the conversation. He had_been watching her finger her handbag, and was somewhat nervous with the thoughts of the report con- cerning her carrying a pistol. Then, without warning, she suddenly pulled out the weapon and shot herselt. Previously, Max Viterbo, director of the Cigale Theater, Paris, testified Mlle. Flory — When Mlle.| ment, and on Confederate Veteran Dies. Special Dispatch to The Star. MARTINSBURG, W, —James Ferdinand Duga, 84 years old, died at his home here vesterday morning. He served a- o courier with Maj. Cunningbam under. Stonewall Jackson, Va., June'22.| | CANADA SEEKING VOICE IN TREATIES House Approves Motion Seeking Right to Pass on Pacts In- volving Dominion. By the Associated Press OTTAWA, Ontario, June 22.—Pre- mier MacKenzie King introduced a motion in the House of Commons yes- terday, which the nouse approved, setting forth that “before his majes ty's Canadian ministers advise ratifica- tion of a treaty ing Canada or signify acceptance of any treaty, convention or agreement involving military or economic sanc- tions, the approval of the Parliament of Canada should be secured.” In presenting his motion the pre- mier said: “We stand first, foremost and al- ways for the approval of the Parlia- ment of Canada.’ This was the government's policy with regard to ratification of such treaties, Premier King intimated that the Locarno treaties were coming up for discussion before the next imperial conference, in October. The Canadian government has not signified its ac- ceptance of these agreements. “The point that I wish to bring out very clearly,” said the premier, “is that this government will take the position, regardless of what decision may be reached, that Parliament will be asked to approve acceptance of the.Locarno pact before the Dominion of Canada becomes a party to it.” Italy has ‘its radio troubles, the broadcasting stations ‘at Rome and Milan having complaints that rocep. Hnn of (halr pro&num are spoiled by e Coltande or convention affect- | |Clause Left Out May Nullify New Vll‘"lnla Aulo Law By the Assaciated Press RICHMOND. Va., June 22.-Re. ecause of a ¢ 1s blunder on the part of the last General Assembly of Virginia the new reguiations the operation uf mo the public highwa 1 to become effective may be worthless and enforcealle, It was not preceded by the usual and formal “Re it enacted hy the mbly f Vi nia, as Theicfore it con non. follows tains 1 tive hody said, however, judge in passing upon a similar point had held that omission of the enacting clause did not serve to invalidate a bill. DESCRIBES. ARRIVAL OF ‘WORLD TEACHER’ Mrs. lesant Says Knshnamurti Speaks Out When Body Becomes Inhabited. By the Associated Pre LONDON. June 22 Lecturing on “How & World Teacher Arrives.” Dr. Anne Besant, head of the Theosophi- cal Soclety, well as to him. it was blasphemy to speak of Krishnamurt!, the young In- dian known as the new “Messiah," “a world teacher.” Mrs. Besant said she knew nothing of the detalls of such an incarnation as had been spoken of, and could only suggest possibilities. ““The one thing we know. tinued, ‘“is. that he von- Krishnamurti will speak out. as we know he speaks out | in his sleep. I imagine—it is only my imagination—that such manifs tations will take place more and more | continuously as the body becomes able to face that enormous strain. “From what we have seen, that strain {s terrible. even for the moment or two of such inhabitation, and that is -why Krishnamurti remains so much in quiet seclusion. The body has to get accustomed to its great work. * ¢ * But how can I tell how far or how fast the ‘mighty one’ will be able to take possession of him as a vehicle.” Virginia Girl Honored. Special Dispatch to The Star. DANVILLE, - Va., June 22.—Miss | Anne Garrett has been designated the | best “all round” high school girl in Virginia and as such will have a week's entertainment at the Sesqui- centennial Exposition at Philadelphia. g i Mrs. F. E. Taylor Dies at 81. COLUMBUS, June 22 (#).—Mrs. Frances E. Taylor, 81, past nationai | precident of the Ladies' Auxiliary of G A protested that to her, as | as | a HORSETODEFEND. - JUMPING HONORS Becky Sharp Faces Contest for Rock Creek Cup Next Sunday. Jumps will te the new Rock (¢ This cup was estal when a group of horse love jumps to test the ounts over a severelv course. Re Sharp was - entry to m owner of the ¢ up defonc day. however, Mary d the perfect score Challenge Results. the rules, Mr. Lynch to challenze Capt. famson to jump off the tie the com- ing Sunday. The contest will ha | staged preliminary to the usual Sun | day’ morning jumping for the e | The winner will take possession the trophy until score is equaled, when the tie will azain be jumned off. The jumpin® contests will be hnm every nday morning that t weather is favorable. Besides et a chance at the cup. the first three | horses are presented ribbons and | other prizes. The cup will not go to permanent owner until the next | meeting of the National Capital Hors~ Show in the Spring. when the scores made durinzg the summer and Fall are counted up and a final contest is held in the show arena. Horses and Points. Fifteen horses were entered last Sunday. and the challenge cup con test resulted in the following sc Place. ngton equal- | tnder | called upon | Owner Fault % Mars Barington Gray 3 Ron ‘Rov Hieh Bali.” | rk >, Montuori Heinrich. . [ Crescent ... Total faults Average fanits i The judges were Quintan L. Comer, H. P. Quinter and R. L. Hanna. | Good Will Party Entertained. Special Diepatch to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., June 22.—Ap- v 160 merbers of the Good from Southwest Virginia, te Washington, sponsored by South- estern Virginia, Inc., were enter ed at luncheon here today, Chamber of Commerce, Speeches wera {made by J. 5. Haldeman, president of the ghember aad of Q

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