Evening Star Newspaper, August 19, 1926, Page 1

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WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Burea Rain tonight; continued cool Temperatures—Highest, at vesterday: low 66, Full report on page tomorrow Forecast.) showers; . at noon noon tor 9. Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 30 ¢ Foening Star. WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION The Star every Yesterda, city block tion is delivered to \WWa as fast as the papers are “From Press to Home Within the Hour™ carrier system covers and the regular 1 he inted ’s Circulation, 94,018 o. 30,060. office, post CARPENDER IS HEL Mrs. Hall's Cousin and Broth- er Formally Accused of Double Murder. REVOCATION OF BAIL OF WIDOW IS SOUGH Hearing Over Murder of “ector and Singer. Br the Assoia SOMERVILLE, N. J., Henry de la B W e erand Ing n Hall August 19 Nie were hel on char Edward Eleanor R. Mill . hefore Friday, hed a prim fury today dered R My= Tudge the hearing hegan the e had facie case and one that warranted th attention of the grand jury Carpender evens manded last establi were who ed presen v call to evidence plan and the were held possihle is ir alled grand and ean But the he would grand jury ve talked ton mur sury Aays special Dhesent i “hecause th e said not th Al Hall Will Move inst Mrs, wonld 400 hai H 1< re ve to have revoke n which Mrs. ¥ of the slain ifter her est Mre. Hall v the consin pender Y ased murder charge is of the we cisic that I conside Ruilty he i grand jury. The usual preliminary the notorinusness of the Hall-Mill case saring was unique on! in respect to its length and the pul licity given it It w Carpender i them hearing hearing. m e i held w ex-parte affair of the evidence re identified in judge could izgnore tha 1 1 nsnrp th 3 zrand jurors. at s the case to ther ation and_consideratior the intent of the law tha upon the credibilits as ar side W Bu fondants oo rd T did not feel 1) 0 Witnesses Testify Nearly testified a1 th jed five day these was Mrs. Jane er. who e of the « while rid thi tw v a quarr witnesse. nearin Chie £on near ti Ehe t0 ner 1 men an amor voma seen king corn ve ia woman and he ters, One of the he od he + which she saw o) One med My moceasin, Mr: the spot an kneeli then we which ghe now £ th PISTOL IS RECOVERED. Weapon Believed to Have Been in Murder Found by Polic A\ €q U. S. CLAIMS TOO LATE. & y-Five Arrive After Cl Tim MEXICO CITY Mexico City. stes embasey. but arrived he received by the commission time for filing claims expired Tue: ; midnight, Jvere (arpender and the . 5 whom said ve- ate Senator Simp- ordered per ancis Car centric I heard open AL here e intered as second W shinzton, P c WASHINGTON, D. (., THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1926—FORTY-SIX PAGES. (#) Means Associated Press. TWO CENTS. Power or of E BY BEN McKELWAY, Staft Corresy NTON, Ohio. truth of t mis bhusine nton may never be known. truth, at best an e sre it has heen so def with prejudice and hys 4 that it essly lost in the ek and dirt of small political chi- canery. municipal government cliqu efliciency picion and the lies | which rule Canton today. 1 her usually two sides to every | dispute But this Canton case is many sided. If the opposing forces | were divided by one straizht line the defined. But The cliques, are hodge It is safe to any con free from | c who | in A od s line is crool zroups. the factions thout a pattern hat no man whe has | tion with the on: ne zroup h ped the n of another gronp. Fven ditor, who lies in his grave, s the vilification aroused by e pursuit of his murderers case is People Lose Control. The on» thing that stands ent clear- aliove ihe shambies is the apathetic naction the government in whose hands a henevolent people have in trusted the management of their own 12 | affair: e he Iy ve lost tten how 1 to submitting their lives and the touch. They've 'MAELSTROM OF PETTY RIVALRIES PALSIES CANTON MURDER PROBE WTH STEVENS FOR s s ko o et o s AIE T0 DRVE VICE - GRANDIURYAGTON xposure—Slain Editcr’s Paper in Dictatorial Role, ive | They have grown so | ! i | | | ! i | | their property to the control of a class | which gains its power too easily that ! they are stumblingly incoherent when 1 on to assert themselves. The city of Canton today Is being run by a newspaper which has an| X to grind because of the sina- on of its editor. The tragic ¢ircum- ! hees surrounding this man’s death enlisted the support of a well- meaning majority who gave him a deaf ear when he lived. The rule of the Canton News is a rule of fear, but it is not a complete rule. The News is not quite able to lift the whole town and swing it by its tail. The prestige it attained through the martyrlike death of its editor has {brought the hatred and jealously of | | those who, before, had passively ig nored it Diversity of Opinions. One group in Canton helieves in! the truth of what Mellett campaigned | for. Another group depreciates and helittles it. One sroup paints Mellett as a, sincere and two-fisted fighter. Another paints him as a newspaper | | editor anxious to fatten the circula- | | tion of his paper on sensationalism. | | Still another croup combines the two | pictures of Mellett and sees in him a | man who hit upon a happy eircula- | | tion scheme through a crusade that I had his heart. | Mellett and his “News" aligned | | themselves with certain factions in| Canton and went out to get the scalp | |~ (Continued on Page 5. Column 2. st have ' SHEFFIELD TO KEEP MEXICO CITY POST Kellogg Denies Reports of En- | voy’s Disagreement With State Department. a it m n e 1l d BY J. RUSSELL YOUNG, ndent of The Star. \E CAMP. N. Y., August for news- paper reports emanating from Mexico effect that James R. Sheffield in Ambassador to Me to resign. The authority diction is Secretary of Statc who is a guest at White P’ine Zoing for this cont Ke v Sheffield's the sec he 1w n the question of My T ation was referred to this morning, while the President at the executive at Paul Smiths, he answered by that he has reason to know Ambassador is not even con from the diplo He added that there is no truth newspapeg vepe that | there has heen any disagreement he tween the State Department and Am bhassador Sheffield. He went on sav that the department expects Sheffield to return to his post in City immediately after the comple of his vacation in the t saving that the templ matie servic = retiring Mr e o Deplores Press Rumors. subject of falee =tate nations of officials i - service, Seeretary Kel he practice of publish nors of such a nature where no foundation for then nd withont king some effc to learn he truth out that such tt While on th . 3 ihout el the diplo 11 plored 1 h, rinte autho: natoral to uences, Mr. Kellogz said These erratic reports resig of oftic of 4 De. officers in the diplomatic Ay hurt the individual in hut they injure the entire ind result in all sorts of em ment.” e Kellogg con 5 ons N ment T ary 3. Column MUSSOLINI PLANS FIGHT TO DEATH FOR THE LIRA Financial Forces Believed Seeking to Depreciace Currency to Be Broken, Says Premier. the Associated Press RICCIONE, Ttaly, August 19 symii sacrifices and he e eat Premie trom Italiar doubt s. beyond th ided. people. ave worked with « v make will s comma by thei re United | MERCHANTS URGE PARLEY INMEXICD [Hard Hit by Boycott, Group| Asks Calles and Prelates | to Get Together. | I Br the Associsted Press * MEXICO CITY, fean business men Roman Catholics—have proposed the covernment and the episcopate that a conference be held | for,the adjustment of the present re- | us controversy At the same time the episcopate, for | the first time since the religious diffi cultie if not the first time in Mexican history. has | rect petition to the P { republic. | | The episcopsre, which often has ex- | | pressed s determination never to ac- | |cept the present rezulations. has sent | letter to President Calles, who has! vequently and even more vizorously teclared he will never withdraw them, | sking him te suspend the rezulations, | to give the church its “freedom” and | to modify the religious clauses of the | constitution radically. declaring that | only thus can be settled the old re- | ligious struzgle. Auzust —Mex themselves mostly 19, rose. Change in View Doubted. The President's office far | teclined official comment on these pro- posals for peace, hut senrces close tn the government express certainty that President Calles will not alter his at- | titude. The President previously h deciared that the only selution of the | controversy is for the Catholic church to ohey the constitution and the laws. Church dignitaries, how- say that the church cannot live h regulations. Thus, unless President Calles should completely re- verse himself, most ohservers feel that the episcopate’s letter will not alter the fundamental deadlock. Business men, obviously feeling acutely the effects of the economic hovcott, are fearing that some of them will go under unless the dead- | Tnc broken. They are particularly rbed hecause the hoveott is dis- Catholics themselves, since ma Mexican business are members of that f7 Some | the stores are advertising bargain <0 has (Continued on Page 3, Column 1.) 'ST. ELIZABETH’S PATIENT | | RELEASED AND ARRESTED Dr. A. C. Kolls Wins Freedom in Justice Bailey's Court—Held to Await New Proceedings. Dr. Alfred €. Kolls of Maryiand was Elizabeth’s Hospital Bailey this morn in habeas corpus by Detective ne and Mans. quarters and committed await the gs against by petition who is said to at s, medicine an lin the ( heen o have taught Hopkins Univer e leen an officer | fare Service, had | last De his At the had court Johns emical Wa amitted to > mber partment the - hospital authorities denied that red ! Weird Red Ball of F ire Over Cemetery On Consecutive Nights Puzzles Farmers to plan watch to explain the of the belief a half mile from the cemetery The licht was first noticed by Roy Pmant, who lives with his parents { Bryant and se claim to have inves aching the “ball Its regular £ Ruby, | to link it with life in the . ght resembles St.| 1y believe it appears | to be explained in that | 1bed | some- | her at mann as of times seen prominent poi nd also on land on tops of t '8 or steeples. | | It is in the nature of a brush charge | of electricity, reddish when positive, | | and bluish when negative, | received bribes, signed fictitious bonds | Canada on a fishing trip Friday I are ! cately interwoven BERNSTEEN ORDERS DENS FROM CANTON Prosecutor Counts on Attor- ney, Accused by Mazer, for Valuable New Evidence. WILL DROP OUT OF CASE AFTER GRILLING CLARK Two Warrants Expected in Mel- lett Killing—McDermott Re- ported to Have Been Here. By the Ascociated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohfo, Anugust 19.— With investigation of liquor and nar. cotic conditions in Canton taking precedence with Federal authorities over the probe into the killing of Don R. Mellett, publisher, District Attorney A. E. Bernsteen today or dered his assistant, Howell Leuck. to “clean up Canton.” At the same time Bernsteen questioned Norman E. Clark, Canton attorney, arrested for | violation of the Federal prohibition law. RIP VAN WINKLE RIGHT VP TO DAT New warrants in the case depend. | Rernsteen indicated, upon his success | fn obtaining new information from | Clark, who was implicated by Louis | Mazer, held here for violation of the | Federa hibition laws and for whom a murder warrant has heen sied at Canton. Mazer charzed the 4, while police prosecuitor, | for members of the underworld and| y had, on several occasions, received | G B = Tt T Bl iSix Other U. S. Passengers Bernsteen to Leave. i ! y After questioning Clark. Bernsteen | [njured—Death List Now Raised to Three. plans to withdraw entirely from the U. S. Flyer Takes Crutches in Plane On Andes Flight Br the Associated Press ANTOFAGASTA. Chile. August | 19, Lieut. James H. Doolittle. an American aviator. who started ye terday on a flight from Santiaxo to La Paz, Bolivia. landed here during the afternoon and remained for the night. The distance to be flown is about 1.600 miles. Antofagasta is 700 miles from San tiago. On his next jump in the small Curtiss one-seafer plane in whic he is traveling Doolittle will have to cross the Andes Mountains, which rise to an altitude of 15,000 attorney inquiry. He intends to depart for| He ¢ grill over, planned to spend the entire da rk. “ederal authorities, throush Leuck oncerned _primarily with vice | conditions In Canton, while Canton ors are proceeding on the case. The latter will be aided | any_information uncovered by | which touches the Mellett of the case, ark's arvest session with the esterday. in _which nted with Mazer usations Clark shows a great deal and can us much about_conditions in Can- | ton if he only will” Bernsteen said ‘I talked with him yvesterday and I am satisfied he will talk.” Joseph R. Roeacl Chicago “eclean up’ torney. is expected to remain in Canton from now on, centering his ctivities into finding the slayer of By the A FOLK The Briti; o | England, August b air ministry today | 1 an investigation of the crash rench cross.channel airplane at ton vesterday which caused the | [ deaths of one American. one Italian ad the French pilot, and the injury |of 12 others in the plane. Seven of injured passengers were Amer {icans The accident was the most passenger airplane tragedy that Eng- {land has ever experienced. It oc curred when the plane collided with a barn while making a forced landing during a b fog The American killed was Robert | Blaney of Boston, who has been travel AR {ing in Kurope since he was graduated Others Reported Mentioned. | from Tarvard this vear. Vigo. Rizz Mazer. in an alleged statement, is | the other man killed, was manager of understood o have implicated other | London's noted Ambassador Cluh. He Canton offic & in vice activities. A !had been on a short visit to Paris. dge and a detective were said to be | The pilot died later of his injuries. mong those mentioned i While Bernsteen was ed with Clark, Leuck was on his way to Can. ton with instructions ta co.operate fully with the proper local authori ties. 1 h with ot Leuck b Jittle was suffering from an d leg before he started the He carries crutches in the plane for use when he lands. T9KILLED, SHURT - INGERMAN WRECK | Tragedy Traced to Deliberate Loosening of Rails—Vic- tims Badly Disfigured. his long attorney was con. followed district he al serious Americans in Hospital. | The Americans injured in the crash | I were taken to the Royal Victoria Hos- | I pital. where it was stated that un | unexpected complications set | | probably would recover all | Br the Associated Prese | LEPRETE. Germany. August 10.— It was stated at the hospital later | Nineteen persons were killed and five { that the condition of Margaret Haz | ceriously injured early today when [zard and her brother Stanies is nOW | ihe Berlin-Cologne express, speeding | considered serious 5 e o Eight of those injured In the wreck |2t 3 miles an hour, was derdiled tear and who are in the hospital, are Miss | i Margaret Mazzard, 6165 West One | the deliberate loosening of fish .plates by an unknown person Hundred and Sixteenth street, New Police describe the wreck as York City, hoth thighs fractured: her worst attempt in 18 years on Lrother, Staniey Ha of the same rddre: stured nd leg: Har-|jjvés of the traveling public in Ger- adu | many. West Kingsbridge ro Although the loss ity. hoth arms fractured; Mildred Vaiden, Baltimore, M. | (WL (00 Sent it mounted am N arn. 15 Carlton | Steadily when the debris of the O e e X 1 e | Wreck was removed with difficulty. rrace, 3 Wbl | The victims were so disfizured that tused hip and face bruises; Lawrence | . 1€ Fetine dere 5o CaRERred Loet Stroh of the Boroush of the Bront.| lish. have been identified. The author New York Citv, contusec stouldebt| ifles admit'that there may be more Bobert McAdam of Glasgow, See A ehe wrech g | mechanician | Witnesses say the train was moving o e o e th | at & 5ood speed when the engine sud | three other injured persons ar | et Bevan Nursing Home, Sandgate. Miss | 4211y jumped the track and crashed in, MeDermott Home From Washington. | CANTON, Ohio. August 13 (#) Following the grilling in Cleveland of Louis Mazer, charged with the first degree murder of Don R. Mellett, ‘anton publisher, and the arrest of Norman E. Clark, Canton attorney. on “harges of conspiracy to violate the | Federal prohibition act, the next link in the murder investigation will be the issuance of warrants against Ben Rudner, Massillon, Ohio, and Patrick Eugene McDermott, Nanty Glo, Pa Investigators did not reveal specifi- cally what the warrants would charge, | but it was learned they hoth will con' | stitute tactical moves to uncover the murder plot and the liquor conspiracy, which the evidence shows are intri Reported to Have Gone rm of life at right wounds MeDermott, sought for nearly three | weeks, is believed 1o have gone to his home in Nanty Glo. from Washing ton, D. C. avrange with his broth ersfor his surrender to Detective Ora ter, leading the Stark County in tigation The investizators ave azreed that if | MeDermott did not take part in the murder conspiracy and tells all he knows about it, he is to go “scot free.” If he tells his story and implicates himself, he will receive immunity the electric chair. Prosecutor Me tock nd the invest By thi€ means the allezed higher-ups | in the crime are to he sought. GIANT SEQUOIA TREES BELIEVED SAFE IN FIRE eigh Forest Flames Stemmed by Big from the southeast sea wall of the | Naval Academy here this morning at 110:10 and began an attempt to swim the Chesapeake Bay, which, it is said, has never heen negotiated from this point. She was accompanied by her father, her Miss Marguerite Kitehin, and her coach, Morris Hamp. | eon. instructor of the Round Bay | Tiext stopping point Swimming Club | The first plane to leave was No. 13, As Miss Kitchin started the swift, | wincses e B 11, Downts, The sthers which is about 14 miles, she encoun: | bigo ot "sue rintte. tutetvals . The tered a choppy sea. and the tide Was)(;ye.off was without incident. against her. However, she was con-| “Army fiyers. serving as an advance agent of achieving nen ol guard, were not deterred by the storm Originally it was planned that Miss | Tpard, tese hot ceterred by, the Sy Kitchin would begin swimming from | yecording to schedule, but the con Bloody Pont, the siouthern end of |iestants bided their time while wait | it four of the seven cars. A day coach and a heavy sleeper were telescoped Darkness made the work of first aid very difficult. Even after the arrival of the hospital train and the wreck- ing crew, the work of recovering bodies of the dead was very slow 21 PLANES RESUME RELIABILITY FLIGHT Are Delayed for Short Time in Cin- cinnati by Storm—Take Off Is Without Incident. (Continued on Page 7, Column 1.) GIRL, 14, BEGINS SWIM OF CHESAPEAKE BAY Ruth Kitchin Starts at Annapolis | on 14-Mile Course, Believed Nev- er Achieved From There. o | Special Dispatch to The Star ANNAPOL Md.. August 19.— Ruth Kitchin, 14.vear-old daughter of nk G. Kitchin of Round Bay. about | mileg north of here, plunged By the Ascociated P CINCINNATI. Ohio. August 19— The 21 airplanes participating in the third annual commercial flight took off from Lunken airport here today at 11:45 a.m., after a delay 1of one hour and 45 minutes, caused by heavy rains in Cincinnati and along the route to Cleveland, Force and Reports Indicate Most of Forest Will Survive. B the Aseoctated Press SAN FRANCISCO, August 13.—The fight the famous giant Se- quoins of the Sequoia National For- est m fire seemed to have heen partly won early today. Although the flames River late vesterday and nto thn edge of tha Muir ve of the huge redwoods, last re- dicated that most of the fo 4 be saved and that encour < was being made sister, to save jumped the' More than 600 men today were on the fire line, which is E. Woman Drowns in Ohio Flood. HAMILTON, Ohio, August. 19 (4 Butter County’s first flood casualts ne. curred today when Mrs. John Eichler | was drowned in Sullivan Creek. near | here. More than 2 inches of rain feil in Hamilton and vicinity in three hours this morning, ? Kent Island, and swim toward An-ing weather reports on which to base napel | eruising calculations. S | Exclusive of the plane piloted by — MEXICAN RAIDER KILLED. |Bovnes, the first nine ships to take 3 3 H * | the air were, in order: Child Smothers in Blanket, | R | _No. 6. piloted, by J. R. WWilliams; CHICAGO, August 13 (P).—Daniel, | | No. 3, piloted bw_C. G. Clark; No. 20, monthold son of Mrs, Tenss| COl-s Mauel Nuez, Who Captured| ;o i(s"y "1 F. pitcaien: No. 10, Schulz, visiting here from Mobile, | Train, Slain by Federals. | piloted by Carey Jones; No. 12, piloted Ala.. was smothered yesterday when ! | by R. H. Depew: No. 23, piloted by Schultz fearing the cooler cli.| MEXICO CITY, August 13 UP).—|Bance Breese: No. 19, piloted by J. mate here, wrapped him in a thick The War Department has received re- G- Day: No. 16, piloted by i ports that former Col. Manuel Nunez, | }1unN. and No. 18, piloted by leader of the bandit outrage last Jan.| KNarp- uary on a passenger train near Guadalajara, has been captured and | Killed py federal troops in the State of | Jalisc Thieves Kill Prince. GENZANO. Italy, August 13 () — | Prince Umberto Ruspoli today was In the raid on the train many per-|shot and killed by one of two thieves sons were killed and robbed. There|he surprised in the garden of his | have been previous reports of the cag- | villa here. The prince was a member ture of Nunes, ©f eue of the oldest of ltallan families. - first | | down the embankment. dragging with | reliability | the | Walter | NEW CANADA RUM PARLEY 15 PLANNED | Kellogg to Take Action on His | Return to Supplement British Treaty. Br a Staff Correspondent of The Star WHITE PINE MP. N. Y.. Au- gust 19.—Secretary Kellogg. while at | the executive office today announced that after his return to Washington | he will take up with the proper offi | cials the question of another prohibi- with the Canadian | zovernment with the purpose of ex | tending to Canada the arrangement | which Gen. Lincoln C. Andrews, as- | sistant Secretary of the Treasury, in | charge of prohibition enforcement, re cently completed with Great Britain | to obtain greater assistance from that | government in preventing smuggling | of liquor into the United States. A conference with Canada is the loglcal sequence of the action taken [ by ritain, but because the mat ! ter is in the nature of a diplomatic | undertaking the St say nothing until arrangements have been concluded with @anada through © Lsme Howard. tHe British Am v to Washington. request for a conference will be made through him, and it is as- | <umed that the Canadian government | will assent, irrespective of the out lcome of the meeting: but if Gen. An |Arews can obtain the extra co.opera |tion from Canada that he is now sure »f from Great Britain, it is believed that imports of liquor from Canada n be cut to a minimum within a ar. tion conference Leaslative Aid Promised. That Gen. Andrews, who has threat ened to resigzn, intends to remain in |office until the end of the next ses.! ion of Congress at least now is indi- {cated by persons close to the Presi- dent. tHe planned to quit in when Congress failed to enact the ad ditional legislation which he consid ers necessary to enforcement. The |zeneral has heen assured that the ad ministration has the highest confi dence in him. and that he may ex pect help {p' having the measures which the session failed to pass ap []n'u\'nd next. Winter. Chief of these is |the hill reorganizing the prohibition unit so the head of it wll not be subor- | dinate to the commssioner of internal evenue | There already is | tween the United States and Canada relative to prohibition enforcement | In fact. it was the first of the series which Gen. Andrews reached with foreign officials but it now is neces sary to supplement it in line with !Vha agreement just econcluded in | Great Britain, and the State Depart ment, under orders from the Presi dent to do everything possible to bring about enforcement, will assist ’(;"" Andrews in eve way n agreement he MAY VISIT CANADA. | Gen. Andrews Is Spending Vacation on Lake Champlain. Gen. Andrews, the prohibition chief, now is on vacation at Lake Cham. {plain. and the Treasury considers it | possible that he may cross into | ca ton to confer with Canadian official | on_the horder liquor situation | His principal purpose will be to | secure a better understanding for l':finarh and United States prohibition officer Stricter enforcement along the hor der has heen one of the particular ambitions of Gen. Andrews. Recently he enrolled 235 additional men horder patrol duty. and most of them are being stationed along the Cana dian line. Canada recently ordered new quotas of Mounted Police for border patrol duty FROST AT WARREN, MASS. SPRINGFIELD, (#).—Light_fr Mass., August 19 in the town of War- ren. east of this city, featured_reports | today of temperature recess over western M was not hea | crops. ons all achusetts. The frost enough to damage . Japan Still Storm-Swept. TOKIO. August 19 (#).—Latest ports from Yamagata and Akita say the floods there have subsided. Dam- | age is estimated at 3,000,000 ven for the two places. Rainstorms causing considerable damage are reported from other sections of Japan, how- }u..- Radio Piograifls—f;‘a?e% e Department will | September | 1da before returning to Washing. | tor | SCHOOL OFFICIALS CALLED IN TO CUT BUDGET ESTIVATES | Figures, Originally Set at $16,000.000. May Be Be- low $13.000.000. FIVE-YEAR PROGRAM CURTAILMENT IS SEEN Final Study With Citizens' Council to Be Held on Rudolph's Return. With the annual buc cess virtually hal t € oners | bers of ard school authorities lop off a few add school estimat year. The ori al school buc for appropriations in e 000,000, was cut to $13 the Commissioner tentative estimates to the Bureau of the Budget. It was learned authori- tatively todav that this figure will ba | haved down htly than £13.000.000 While the fir pected to ecurt: five-year buile next fi sehool offic ed with fon pro. e Dis- mem and I this al it th m the fiseal fr next zet calling ¢ 216.- 100,000 befora transmitted the veduction fs ex- » some extent the eram d he pl of the s acquire school sites in advance of their need are expected | to suffer more severely it is the items for land p hat are he- ing eliminated pri The Com- missioners m that every litem is bein on its merits, and the cuts made in the recommended | that are not absoiu 1 Architect Called In. | Albert L. Ha ! n the confer- v with The allow the t what items inated. ed with red virtually Municipal Architect s called in ris also w ence hec: the five-vea Commissio school offici. in their of The Commissic the Citizens' | hours last ni all of the iter by the city head ing se: sint ¢ | Tuesdaxy . when the final portion | of the revised budget will be taken | up with the counecil { Jesse C. Suter, chairman of the { council, as well as the Commissioners, | expre: faction over the results | of the conference. The Commisioners ! made numerous notes of sug | offered by members of the cour | indicated that me adjustment { most likely to he made in their figures because of the information supplied ‘by the councilmen > | Tent buildi initia 1 jon yesterday morning. nference will be held ive Reductions Secret. Reductions thus far 1o tentative estimate: (the liimitation of 3 by presidential decrec with utmost secrecy Hef of the Commissioners would he illegal to mation to the publi sioners pointed out. | most urgent included in | showing the is required dudget Bt budget in its will be made : the Budget items restored in the | The budget daliheratia ed to he continued ti nin, because he engzaged with the National ¢ Planning Commissior | 1& likely that the pru { be completed b | ready for Auditor Daniel { to prepare for ¥ | The estimates w Lord. however Commissione return from | and discussed that nizht JAPANESE ARTIST FOUND GAS VICTIM IN NEW YORK in the them to 1 fixed were guarded to the be. he Commi the ed will ba statement nt which 1re expect the eve Commiss Rell will tomorre apital F AS a v = P final ] udget nd fizures Donovan Bureau sent to Gen hy who due n Tues uneil aga I ph is va vith th Kantero Kato, Landscape and Por- trait Painter, Came to U. S. | 20 Years Ago. | NEW YORK of Kantero Ka |and portrait painter, w lin his apartme; | third street, w} committed suic | word of exy Kato came to the rom Japan 20 vear of 19. He had achie success in nd prize offered by the sign His father is said recently postrr Japan. t 19.—The body se landses Taps o a today Twenty- apparently He left no West re he had e by tion United States t the age erable won a of De to have retired as of Fukuoka | Meet Fascist as Ship Docks After | Threats Are Received. | NEW YORK, A to threatening | steamship line. eight | detectives met the | men and Colombo to- safeguard Luizi Barzini, editor Corriere D'America and a scisti in this country. | There was no disturbance. While in Ttaly Mr. Barzini had several confer- ences with Mussolini. COAL PARLEY FAILS. ;Britlsh Negotiations to End Strike | Collapse at Once. LONDON, August 19 tiations between the British mine owners and British miners which had been looked to for bringing peace in the long coal tie-up, collapsed shortly after thay opened this afternoon. (#) —Nego-

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