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EPERTS TOSTUDY T NATIONS FRICTION» World’s “Sensitive Areas” and Raw Products Fights Will Be Considered. | By the Associated Press. | WILLIAMSTOWN, = Mass., July | 17,—Certain “sensitive areas” in | western Europe. casjern Asia and | Latin America will be focus.points | for discussion at the sessions of |he1 sixth annual Institute of Politics, International diffizulties arising from | vompetition in raw materials will be the predominant note of the sesslons. | according 1o Dr. Walter A. MacLaren, executive secretary of the institution, following an announcement of the program by Dr. Harry A. Garfield, president. g Organized to crystallize the opin- fons of experts in international eco- nomic, political and scientific prob- lems so that the formation of public opinion may be guided by their con- clusions, the Institute of Politics, con- vening here from July 29 to August 26. will number between 200 and 300 Public Asked to Asuist in Hunt for Wounded Man, Frank Vincent. | Application - Rejected in 1918, But Law Changed. Family in Need. rom its'millions of pages of World records the Veterans' Bureau hus unfolded & ‘strange and) petbetic m\uten\ Whereus many a soldier Is looking in vain tor money from his Govern. ment, the bureau revealed theve. i one_ missing disabled ‘man_for whom a Nation:wide search has been start- ed, because the Government has move’ than $13,000 to his credit—and can’t find him. ‘With bne arm and one leg cut off, the:man, Frank Vincent. Wwhen last seen was a pathetic sight, struggling for a pittance by selling lead pencils on the streets of Kansas City. Hav- ing been refused once by his Gov- ernment, on account of the law at that time, he resorted to lead pencils, outstanding Kuropeans ‘and Ameri- cans. Chemistry Among Subjects. | Disarmament .and security, compe- | - tition for raw materials and its ef-|left stump over clothing in conspicu- fect on public opinion and world af- | ous fashion, fairs and the future role of chemistry | Vincent was ifjured April 21, 1917, in world problems will be among the |a few days after the United States subjects discussed. Among the most | declared war on Germany, when, as distinguished Europeans on the list {a member of the Wyoming National of speakers are Dr. Albert E. Zimmer- | Guard, he was wounded by the acci man, former commissioner general in | dental discharge of his rifle at Crys. Austria for the League of Nations; | tal Lake, Wyo. 'The bullet penetrated Nicholas Politis. now Austrian Minis- | his foot, shattering the bones. Blood ter to, France: Dr. Albrecht Mendels- | poisoning followed, necessitating am- sohn’ Bartholdy, professor of law at [ putation of that member also, and and then disappeared into the great unknown. He had lost his right forearm, and his left ieg had been amputated. A ‘pegleg” of wood was strapped to his FRANK VINCENT. now over 80 vears of age, is crippled from paralysis. She lives alternately 1 | Formier D. C. Resident, Living "15 Miles From Lake Den- mark, Writes of Disaster. Some idea of the hours of terror that were experienced by families liv. Ing near the scene of the Navy muni- tions depot explosion at Denmark, N. J.. during the last week end was give: in @ letter received here by Mrs. Carle ton R. Dall, of 3814 Jocelyn street, from a friend = who lives about 15 nifles from the scene of the explosion. AMys, Carrie M. Steward, the author of the letter, formerly lived in Wash- ington but now makes her home at Mountain Lukes, a suburban section ;in the mountains. of Northern New Jersey. 'As other witnesses pointed out, she said. thunderstorm had about passed and the skies were beginning to clear perceptibly, when the first shock came. Letter Given in Part. Her letter in part’follo “‘Suddenly there was tremendous, crash, which sounded as if ‘the whole top of the house was, coming down. The trapdoor to the attic was lifted up and bac] a ban ‘We suposed the hou been struck by lightning. We rushed outdoors expecting. to ' see the roof in flames, and then came a second crash, much worse than the first. Then the siren ble “We collected & few .valuables in a bag, ready to leave the house. By this time everyone was on the street looking at his house to see’if it was struck, for each one had had the same experience we had. Some neighbors had - windows broken; doors were 4 the most !IAIION 2-0 of Yllo Oolhfo..o was grad University in th MRS. RHINELANDER SAILS, Iuo. Aucllmllw Mry. Angell, “lllill!l Rocke- Ml'l‘ and |1 n of hawYufiCH! \Ilu A has been uuumn«d ith | tended Bryn Mawr Colle, Pen yania and is I member ul the_Ju of New Haven, Conn. Mr, Mc- from uated Princeton PLEDGING LOVE TO KIP Poses for Photographers and De- Physical and Eduoational Re- - quirements for Position in D. C. Are Stated. humlmuon of applicants for a vacancy on the staff of the Woman's Bureau of ' the force are to be held the Civil Service C nounces, Applications wm be mfivad not later than Auf Other things being mw, residents of < Washington, because of their gfiur farhiliarity-with the eity, will lmn prcurwnec in appointments, ts for the position must be mwun 25 and 35 years old, haye at least 14 college entrance credits and Dossess the mlnwlntl Dhyllcll uu..u fications: * Height b feet 4 inches or monm l t 10 inches: weight of not less than 115 pounds and not more than 170; a cnm expansion of not less than 2 good eyesight. good hearing. mrh, and an absence of any chronio allment, irfcluding flat feet. Applicants also mustshow,, accord- ng to an announcement from the Woman's Bureau, that they have had experience, recent and responsible, in systematic -social #ervice or educational work, or at least two years of -responsible com- mercial experience involving ‘super- vision and public contact. Examinations of policewomen still of development. Re- 6 local force are higher than most - cities where ‘women's bureaus -have peen. . estab- lished. The Association of Police Chiefs at their San Francisco conven- tion in 1922 adopted the Washington Bureau's standards. — M'Jn o nur !utnn at least two year: are in the proce; quirements for police bcmndnm!n!huw ONE VICTIM'OF NEW YORK Pouceangrn FIGHT DIES Brother .x M Man Ts St in Hospital, With Two Detectives Who Were Shot. By Press. NEW YORK, July 17.—Death to- claimed a victim of a street gun n_gangsters and detec- Peter Bianco, who was wounded in the battle on Thursday, died in Belle vue Hospital & few Im away from a cot on which his mwm o were ounded in the t\m ue. The detectives, Thomas Hammill and Henry Hoftman, had arrésted on suspicion the Blanco brothers and two. other’ men. As they wers ' driving. them to headquarters another automo- wounded. m llOlly'l.GS Bd.m B-uu-y Park | Specials Monday and T uesday Finest ur-on Finest lity mes lny Complete Outfit, Case and Cleaner Included Toric Spheri Lenses 9 Genuine Toric KRYPTOK nies*8he Is Going to Paris to Find Husband, ' Special Dispatch to The Star. "NEW YORK, July 17.—~Mrs. Alice Jones Rhinelander, wife of Leonard Kip Rhinelander, sailed for England today, accompanied by her mother, on the White Star liner Majestic. Both occupied a small inside cabin in the second-class accommeodations. Hamburg University; Sir Frederick | finally causing his discharge "from Whyte, president of the Indian Leg- |the service on a surgeon's certificate islative Assembly from 1920 to 1 of disability, August 15, 1917. S0 James Colquohoun Irvine, pres dent of the University of St. An.| Disalkiwnd n 1913, drews, Scotland: Dr. Umberto Pomilio | When Vincent ‘applied to the Vet.| of Naples, M. Justin du Pont.of Paris | erans' Bureau for aid early in 1918 records show the bureau was com- and Dr. ) itz J. Brown of Berlin. ’: specialists in business, | pelled to 'disallow his claim, as the and science will address the | laws at that time governing the aper- institute, which will meet, following | ation of the bureau made compensa- its regular custom. in general as. |tion payable only for injuries incurred after October 6, 1917. Later, after sembly and in round-table discussions. sions. the act of August 9, 1921, had amend- with daughters and sons in Nebraska, and Colorado, but the bureau is un- able to assist her, it is said, as under the law no award can be made to her while the whereabouts of her son is unknown. The missing sold'er, who is said to have the largest unpaid credit standing on the books of the bureau today, was § feet 7 inches tall, had dark brown hair, blue eves and fair complexlon, and, if living today, would be 37 years of age. In another year it will be possible. officials of the blown open. Our bullt-in-garage doors were closed and fastened on the inside with quite a heavy piece of wood. They burst open and the stick was thrown some distance into the drive. “In a short time word came that it was an explosion, and for hours we could hear the rumble, with every now and then another explosion. We could hear the cars honking and the bells clanging out'on the State road, where they were bringing the injured to hospitals in Morristown. We drove Song Writer Buried. W YORK, July 17 U®).—John H. composer of “Little Annie Roo- the popular song hit of a gen- eration ago, who died here Wednes- day, was buried today in Calvary Cem. etery, Services were held at a fu- néral parior in the Bronx. Only three limousines, carrying a few old.friends, followed the body to the grave. Invisible Bifocal Lenses l"‘lnt and best qulity. Tcrie KRYP TOK Spherical Bif: one pdrtoleenurudln) Be-tlmul made. Sold regularly, $15 to $22. SPECIAL PRICE, Monday and Tuesday Newspaper Men to Speak. On one day of each week the gen- eral conference on public opinion in world affairs will resolve itself into a forum presided over by Arthur S. Draper. assistant editor of the New York Herald-Tribune, for discussions of statements made either in the con- ference or in round-table sessions. Speakers at these sessions will be Kent Cooper, general manager of the | ssoclated Press: Hal O'Flaherty, | foreign editor of the Chicago Daily | News: James Brown. president of | ed this law, making compenlnllon pay- able for injuries incurred on or after April 6, 1917, the bureau tried to find Vineent. blanks were sent to nddu-m where it was thought he could ‘There were returned. Compensation application be found. Later automatic insurance checks were mailed out to the soldier, but they also came ceeding flve yvears all efforts of the Government bureau and his family as well to locate the missing soldier ‘have {been in vain. “back. TIn the sue- In the meantime his family has been Editor and Publisher. and Willis Ab- | bott. editor of the Christian’ Science Monitor. : stricken by ill fortune. His father. Almond Vincent, died, and his mother, bureau said, and may become neces- sary to have the veteran officially de- clared dead, as he will then have been missing seven years. If such action is taken the bureau will be able to aid his mother. Officials fear, however, that the boy may have become insane and may now be incarcerated in some institu- tion without having been identified. All regional offices and field hospitals of the Veterans' Bureau have been requésted to ald in the search for him, and the public has been notified in a nation-wide search for the mys tery man who has Sl! 000 here in hi: name. | CAMP SAVED FROM FIRE. ,TOY Pés(;?rLs ‘::)LBDBlEJ: LIFE Regulars and Student Soldiers| Fight Flames at Custer. { Pal of “Blackie” Carmichael, Dead BATTLE CREEK, Mich., July 17 From Officer’s Bullet, Tells (®).—Fire which for a time threaten- of Weapon Used. #d the United States Army post at|py the Associated Press. Camp Custer ‘was extinguished late| CHICAGO, July 17.—A toy glass re- this afternoon. Regular Army troops|volver was the bluff used by Arthur and C. M. T. C. students to the num-| “Blackie” Carmichael of Milan, Mo., ber of about 200 fought the flames.|in a hold-up of two University of Chi- ate Cuuson the, T It Sacied: an gae:fiplonts wikh oet hie_lfe o on| day. e “weapon,” descri ¥ ‘l,l\wil\A;l:;"alidzesoo:iél\:!(&mmad burned | Dexter C. Harrison, 23, his companion, Wind aided the fire fighters in keep. ‘;:-:‘:;‘:,rdmfchunz‘;nw::tt:oc:gh?':og: ing the flames from tents and from '§ a policeman’s bullet as the two the buildings of United States Veteran ,ébb.,, fled. '!‘::Jl;rm—::' :&r;gfl as well as from am- | Harrison, born in Peoria, Ill., but 94 18J; Mahlen i1, Joyce., 1st Battalion, e it BB e shee e 2 Infantry, led the men against the | robbery on clues obtained from pa- pers Carmichael carried. o . Harrison told the police that he was ALIMONY COSTS HOME the “extra guy.” but insisted that he + |didn't “do anything.” The robbery was suggested by Carmichael, he said, NEW YORK, July 17 2 “to get some change™ and he just home of I'rank Tinney, comedian, was | “Went along” and “stood by.” Car- soid today by a sheriff to pay “back” | michael threatened George Gray and ol | Miss La Verne Lane with the glass the Chlirthquss "af pistol and took $14 from Gray. In “knocked down” to Sudye | thelr Might from twe :police ofiicers of Brooklyn, assignee of | Who chanced by at the fime of the against the comedian obtained | FOPkery Harrigon said he hid in a Mrx. Edna Davenport Tinney, the | 100YWay until “everything was over. e and furnishings at Foxhurst, | former home. at Baldwin, on | Long Island. The price was 118 il Following the development The sale was made 10 permit Mrs, ney to recover a judgment of no 800 against her former husband for ali- Miveoia. a | population of Maracaibo, the prin- cipal eity in_the wil district, has jumped from 70,000 to 100,000 in the last tw Coupe, $2,430 Delivered of pe-| troleum production in Venezuela, the !NDIANS FOR CENTURIES _BOBBED WOMEN’S HAIR “0xford Boys” Also Known of 0ld Among Mosquito Tribes, Maya Explorer Writes. By _the Associated Press. LONDON, July 17.—Some ‘of the younger “bloods” of ' Britain, who still affect “oxford bags” as being quite upto-date articies, received a shock upon learning from T. A. Joyce, an explorer, who has been visiting the Maya tribes, that these “bags” are centuries old. Mr. Joyce says: “I found that some of the colored natives, descendants of the Mosquito Indians, out ‘here wear an enormous loose garment like ‘Oxford bags.’ They are mostly white and pale vellow and some are salmon pink.” ‘The younger generation of women were also surprised to learn from the same source that Chucunaque Indian women and the San Bias women for generations have used the ceremony of hair cutting as marking & transition stage from girl- hood to v\umanhood “The hair, "} wrote Mr. Joyce, “after the girthood stage, is cropped so close that it is| exactly the same as that which is | known now in England as the Kton | | crop.” | il Smith Defends Plus Fours: PAUL SMITHS, July i1 (@) pology is necessary If you wear ‘em | Some miles from & green,” Gov. smnhl describes knickers as ‘‘formal dress in the mountain: | clothes for O | Desnite scarcity and enormous cost of SAN- up on a high hill nearby, but could see only the dense smoke. Wanted to Leave House. “We thought we had better get out of the house, but finally decided to go to bed. About 5 o'clock a neighbor came and told us that our phone was out of order; he had been trying to get us. Word had come warning every one to get out of the houses, as a blast was expected any time from the explosion of the largest ng?zme. ‘We dressed again and went ou the car about 6:30 when word came that the danger was past and we could go in the house. *‘There are 85 people in the club- | house, and this morning (the day the letter was written) a call came for them. They are mostly foreigners from the village of Mount Hope, which was gretty nearly wiped out. There are 200 refugees in the Presbyterian Church in Boonton. In some houses here dishes were knocked down in the cupboards. We do not feel altogether easy yvet, but we have | not heard much. noise since morning.” ———————— URGES FILIPINOS TO UNITE| Judge Santos Says They Should Teach Truth of Independence Plea. Addressing the Filipino Club of ‘Washington last night, Judge Jose A. Santos, chairman of the Edu- cational Mission to the United States, urged Filipinos in America to unite in an effort to convince the American people of the justice of the demand for independence. He emphasized the need of dissemi- nating correct information regarding the Philippines, “especially at this time, when, there seems to be a ten- dency to mislead American public opinion as to the real attitude of the Filipino people on independence.” He Added that, now, more than ever, the' Filipinos should insist upon their right to live a free and independent national existence, RumsteadsWormSyrup “To children an angel of mercy.” When di- rections are followed IT NEVER FAILS. vontains {ull dose. Stood sixty Sold eyerswhere, or by mail. 50¢ TONIN. it years' fest. a botile. E A BLUE BLOODED NAME and a RED BLOODED REPUTATION i5 TRUE, the Locomoblle has an honored name—that 27 mn of pcrfechon made great. But had this marvelous &lndme car been of humble origin it would hcve stlrlled America through sheer superiority of performance, _ Its red-blooded reputation hu added even greater laurels to its blue-hloodgd Ddme, Brougham, $2450 - Sedan, $2450.Roadster, $2,265 Tourmg. $1925 AUl Prices Delivered at Wnfimu. Terms if bnimr 7 THE CONNECTICUT LOCOMOBILE Co. 7 f\ 1130 annectncut AVenue 1517 Connecticut Avente * North 962 Locomobile Model ‘90 5,500 to $7,500 ‘With Custom Built Bodies f.o. b, Bnd:eport THE B EST G Mnifi m Model 48, Sqnes 10 wnh D\utm Bll'llrslodxes £. 9. b. Bridgeport: On_board ship, Mrs. Rhinelander - and her mother remained in thei cabin and Allce handed through partly opened door a brief typewritten itatement stating the purpose of the | trip was to visit her mother’s relatives in England. Later she consented to ‘pose for photographers in the second- class cabin dining salon. Before departing in a_taxicab from the Jones home in New Rochelle, Mrs. Rhinelander said that she was not going to Paris to find her husband, as she did not believe that he was there, and added: “So long as 1 am Leo ard's 1 have no eyes for any one else. I love Leonard and T feel that he loves me today just as much as he did six OP C‘A’l‘ the lowest mce a cobnrplfi eleo tricrefrigerator hasever been ered, this handsome new { youcan model Copeland - lated with solid cork board and beau- tifully finished in enduring white - pyer;:l:yhn. with a lining of mcmwhite ~—wanted to sell real estate, icnd-m -:t mruy‘ asy or o ke T e a week. 913 15th St. N.W. builtoflteel,lnm The newCopehndufnmnlynzed, 08 cubes at a time vl ‘make the Copeland the greatelt// EYES EXAMINED FREE BY OUR REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST We Use the Pinest and Most Moders Optical Instruments. 617 Seventh Street N.W. (Between F and G Streets) Deferred payment pla n available for compara- tively . small charge. 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