Evening Star Newspaper, October 15, 1926, Page 3

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PHERSON CASE: RETURNS TOMISS X Lock of Hair Expected to Prove Identity of Mys- tery Woman. By the Associated Press. " LOS ANGELES, October 15.—The Carmel incident of the Aimee Semple McPherson mystery remained an un- solved equation today, with the identi- ty_of “Miss X" the unknown factor. The mysterious * X" made her debut in the case by swearing that she was the companion of Kenneth G. Ormiston, radio man, -during a so- Journ at Carmel-by-the-sea last May, and then vanished. She had been part identified by Mrs. Lorrain Wiseman Sielaff, star State witness and confessed perpetrator of the “Miss X" hoax. Mrs. Sielaff, co-defendant with M McPherson, and the evangelist's accuser in the conspiracy hearing now in progress in the Municipal Court, testified. vesterday that she knew “Miss X" to be Rachel Wells of Phil- adelphia. Her present whereabouts are unknown to Mrs. Sielaff. she declared. She said she had reason to believe the woman who accompanied her to Salinas, Calif., and signed an t in an attempt to prove that McPherson was not at Carmel ew Orleans. X" Called Twin Sister. I. Gilbert of Mrs. Me- counsel, contends reality Mrs. Sie- . Virla Kimball He made the charge yes- during his cross-examination Sielaff. It was the first time ihat Mrs. I's name had been in- jected into the hearing. Mrs. Sielaff was emphatic in her denial that her sister had any part i1 the alieged conspiracy to clear the Angelus Temple pastor of charges « that it was she who shared a Carmel cottage with the missing radio man during a_part of the time she says she was held captive by kidnapers. Gilbert continued his grilling of the witnes nd’ obtained the admission that both she and **Miss X" had sub- mitted locks of their hair for identifi- cation purposes the time the i affidavit was taken. Gilbert a this exhibit would he offered extablish identity of “Miss X.” Still On Stand. the hearing adjourned ves- Mrs. Sielaff was still on the Attorney W. Pherson’ When terday stand Mrs. Kimball first McPherson case when here shortly after her on had check charges until she was confronted by her ielaff confessed her. so-called Carmel conspiracy. g that she had been employed . McPherson to produce false aracters to support the evangelist’s Kkidnaping s Previously Mrs. Stelaff swore that vas her sister and not Mrs. on who was at * Carmel with Ormiston. She repudiated the state- ment when her sister demanded that her name be cleared. Mrs. Kimball issued a statement at San Francisco last night denying she conmection with the McPher- case and declared she was in Oakland with her family when the affidavit prepared at Salinas. figured in the Dog First Human Pet. There has been considerable debate s to just where the domesticated dog came from, and same naturalists deny he was directly brought down from the wolf, but they all seem to agree that he was wild animal brought to « ate of do- mestication. ain it seems the dog was the most responsive to domesti- cation efforts of all the animals that were sought for human pets in early ONSTBLE FOR contracted for ey i Mrs. E. R. MOORE. SR oo 1 ¢ ANGES REPAIRED. rear 616 H st nw. Phone Main h 8 to 10 nm. Dron DOG N'S AND 13¢ poui NOT BE RESPONSTBLE FOR ANY ptracted by any one other than my- S BELLAS. 2014 Jackson st. ne 1877 "% thian T shington: Sat to & nm._ Town Hall, North 4 of ownership and tax receipt st be oxBibited. No_perabn o 'vote ‘at election on Nov. 2 stered on one of above Asu will be present to oth registratlon dates Ch'm'n: JOS. ROYALL, dzos ol Beplsteation” and ICK SCHWERTNER. Act- 141516 20.21,.22 HERE YOU rooms, 1if the wash- 0. 1014, N (& 18¢ WANTED—A R LOAD OF FURNI- ture from New York. ladelphia or Hn;all. more. SMITH'S TRANSFER AND STOR. h 1626-2 entitled $15 ce. using Lin. NS OF THE HUSKE OPTIC, Sintited o call at the Rinbog 5y LA S o Colorado ¢ original preseripi preseriptions of the Huske KINSMAN OPTICAL C¢ k({ Colorado Blde. Gt OUNCEMENT i We give you six and o t. 0w THAT’S IRONCLAD Wa save and protect the roof against leks, Cali us up Roofing 9th & Evarts IRONCLAD &, G ¥ Give Us Your Next Order —for Printing—and be assured of quality and promptnes The National Capital Press )2! 1 D ST AS‘ 1 NEVER DISAPPOINT PRINTING IN A HURRY" BYRON S. ADAMS LOW PRICES ON QUALITY SHADES e shades to_measure at Fac- tory Pri; GIVing you better shades_fo KUEEBTATT M ez Window Shades and Screens. _Phone Linc. 879 An efficient and economical | heating system costs very little More. WHY TARE A ("R”ANCIP P STEAM—VAPOR—WATER HEATING, 1240 9th St. N.\W. Frank 5834. CE HEAT! E HEATED 18 WELL HEATE! APPLES CIDER For the chofvest apples &nd_the purest -’:Jde?'uark st the Valley View Cider Barrel the ealey 09 18cARA ORCHARDS, '—Igv'llryul:l‘ on Fnfl%&'"‘k mnd.dfl m“h!lu"nrtl inerebure. " Open every day. including Slindaye. " Save money by bringig baskets and Juss ROOFING—by Koons No matter what your roof troubles W be we have facilities to end your troubles :::nynl \'r 8 It is our, bu lij_ C Roo 110 3rd 6t. 8. KOONS e, mpany. MARIE SURRENDERS HER WISH: WILL DEBARK AT QUARANTINE (Continued from First Page) siderable wind, rocked the Leviathan sufficiently to send many squeamish passengers to their berths today, but Queen Marle was ‘up early and ens joyed another breakfast of buckwheat cakes and sausages. The Rumanian Queen eats very sparingly, although she is keen about tasting “foreign dishes. She is not fond of elaborute dinners, and has some qualms .about “th® ceremonial feasts she -may face im-the United States. ... A - During the voyage she is pasing for some sKRetches by Segusimondo De Nagy, Hungarian artist, whos has painted.many portraits ‘of Marle and her family, < She will open an exhibi- tion of his work in New York." The Queen and the princess were invited to attend a birthday party Yor Mrs. Woodrow Wilson today. A great frosted cake was prepared for the table in Mrs. Wilson's suit Looks Leviathan Over. Queen Marie has inspected the Le- viathan from bridge to engine room. After visifing Capt. Hartley on the bridge, shc was escorted down into the engine room and talked in her, usual democratic manner with engineers and firemen. She expressed pleasure when she was told by the men far be- low the decks that Rumanian oil was the cleanest they had used. ‘When the tour of the United States starts, Princess Ileana and Prince Nicholas will participate, when they are able to do so, in their personal hobbies. Nicholas is fond of motor cars and agricultural machinery. He desires to get all the information he can in the United States regarding ma- chinery adaptable to the development of Rumania’s rich lands. He also hopes to get some shooting while in the West. The Pripcess is particu- larly interested in educational and so- cial welfare work for young women. Legation Here Prompts Change. Queen Marie's decision to debark from the ieviathan at querantine was influenced, in part at least, by a request transmitted to her by the Ru- manian legation. A favorable reply to its message was received by the leagtion today. Is said that in expressing pre- v her desire to remain aboard the ship until it docked, the Queen had no idea she was upsetting prece- dent or interfering with the New York reception program. The Queen's decision was imme- diately communicated to the State Department and forwarded to Mayor Walker’'s reception committee. NGE APPEARS. Former Premier Bratiano and Pre- mier Averescu Confer on Subject. BUCHAREST, October 15 (#) Momentous changes in the astic situation, due to the renunciation .»r} Crown Prince Carol of his rights to the throne and his retirement abroad are foreshadowed by a conference be- tween Gen. Averescu, the premier, and former Premer Bratiano. The conférence took place at M. Bratiano's country home and is the subject of the widest comment. The newspaper Adeverul asserts that the conference was due to the end of a phase of a great problem by “reason of a certain event” dur- ing Queen Marie’s stay in Pa The- “certain event” 18 the reconcili tion between Queen Marie and Prince Carol. The newspaper adds, it was decided that M. Bratiano should pro- ceed to Paris October 25, “for the situ- ation cannot longer be Kept in sus pense and must be consolidated or modifled.” PRINCESS ILEANA From latest photo to reach the U. S. According to the Adeverul, both Averescu and Btratiano oppose a per- sonal reconciliation, but their opinfons count for little in the present situa- tion. The newspaper says the open- ing of Parliament has been postponed because a change is, to be made with regard. to the regency. WANTED TO STAY ON LINER. Queen Desires .to Sée Gotham From - Leviathan Steaming to Dock. NEW YORK, October 15 (#).—Some confusian prevailed today as to the exact spot on Manhattan Island where Queen Marie of Rumania. will first set foot on American soll when she lands next Monday from the Leviathan. The Queen has announced that she desires to remain on the liner as it passes up the harbor and to its pier at the foot of West Forty-sixth street in order to see the Statue of Liberty and the vista of the city’s skyscrapers. Program Is Unchanged. This has béen met with a statement by Grover Wlhalen, chairman of the s committee for the reception stinguished visitors that there has been no change in the program to take the Queen on a reception boa Quar- antine and land her and her party at he has been in- formed by State Department that the mayor's arrangements may stand. Nevertheless, Washington ad- are that it is thought by mem- of the Emergency Fleet Corpo- ration that if the Queen should as- sert her preference for remaining on the Leviathan until she reached her k. this privilege could not well be | denied. i Hotels Make Ready. i The Hotel Ambassador has reserved the entire fourth floor, the rooms of which ordinarily bring §336 a day, f the Queen and her party. There is a report that plans have been changed. At the Ambassador the gold plate, used only once, then by Prince Chris- topher of Greece and his American ife, widow of William B. Leeds, the “tin’ plate king,” has been brought | from its vault and polished up for the royal visit. In addition, 30 detectives have been hired to protect the roval | party. They will be dressed as wait- | ers, bell hops and gu A special kitchen also will be provided for the royal party. Why I Am Coming to America By Her Majesty, the (Continued from First Page) arches—which were built to com- memorate war—is built to commem- orate the peace of a hundred Yea hetween the United States of America and Great Britain, on a borderland of 3,000 miles without soldiers or police 1o keep guard over it. Plans for the Peace Portal. Oh, 1 know all, all about that wo derful Peace Portal and the two hol cases imbedded within it. One an old, wooden, iron-bound chest, in which was placed a piece of 2 wooden beam from the M flower, bearer of the glish pilgrims, and presented by the Soclety of Friends in England, where the boat stands upside down, made into a great meeting hall. The other case is & curious metal casket, opened by a secret spring, made in the time of Columbus, which contains the soil of France from a very sacred spot, that spot at Verdun where, one day, after a great battle, 65 bayonet blades were found sticking out of the 'soil, ole sign of those who had been guard- ing that trench. A son of France was buried beneath each one. Sacred soil, indeed! In that Maryhill museum T hope to | help found a sort of “Prix de Rome” for artists of the world to compete for LAT TIRE? MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS Desirable two and four room, kitchen, hall and bath apartments. reception Unexcelled service and lo- cation. Rentals very rea- sonable. The Argonne ~| right to go there to work and exhibit | 16th & Columbia Rd. N.W. Queen of Rumania at home. The winners will gain the | their art, participating as nationals in | the achievement of each of the nations | to whom rooms have been cons ed. Oh, but that is only the beginning! There is 5o much I want to see, know, feel, remember! How will two eyes | and one brain be énough to take it all in? Too many names dance before me— names learned in my lessons as a child which have risen before me again and | HEAT WITH Landscape Gardeners Lawns Made Evergreens Planted Rich Soil for Sale Ivy Plants for Cemetery Rodman Bros. 1449 Park Road Phone Col. 6808 Special Rates Every Sunday Baltimore or Annapolis $1.50 Rownd Trip turning same day ‘on any recnier frain. I R ORI RN, TRtz b 4 «dx;u;urflmxgwfi e it again, along the road of life, called back by one event or another, and which seemed so far away that they hardly existed as_tangible, reachable existing places. Is it really possible that now they are actually to pass be- fore my eyes? Wants to Thank Friends. There are people in every part of America who have befriended my country. I hope to take them by the hand, look into their eyes and tell them that I know how hard they worked for me. I want'to thank them from the bottom of my heart. I hope to see the big trees, the Yosemite and Imperial Valleys, Santa Barbara and the wonders of the Pacific slope, the Golden Gate, and the palace of the Legion of Honor, the model of which was given by France, and the four magnificent tapestries of Jean Paul Laurens, depicting the life of Joan of Arc, which decorate its walls. 1 want to see the fine monument at the end of the Lincoln Highway. Shall I really see the Indians of the West? So full of that exciting mys- tery which our childhood loved to imagine, and about whom we've read 30 many storles! And the great ranches of Wyoming and Texas, the huge plains, the Rockies and Sierra Nevada Mountains, Denver and Colo- rado Springs. I want to see the homes of Bret Harte, Joaquin Miller and that most intrepid of all men, Col. William Cody . (“Buffalo Bill"), beloved by us all. Prospect Makes Her Dizzy. Oh! I'get quite dizzy when I begin enumerating all the wonders I hope at least to see in passing, even if I can- not go so deeply into each as would be my dearest desire. Lover as I am of nature and of all things grand, strong and solitary, I want to see your wilds, the highways and byways, all that which will be so difficult to see in the short time spared me by my own people. I only hope I may go again. For, oh, how eagerly 1 want to see it all! I want so much to see the South, the sunny, dreamy South. I want to sit on a colonial porch and dream of the history of the men and women who first came to create such a country. But shall I be able to see it all? The West, the Northwest, the Midwest and the East? I shall probably land in New York. So many already have described to me the first sight of the gigantic statue of the woman bearing aloft the Torch of Liberty, but I want to see it with my own eyes, and see that strange revelation of the skyscrapers, so foreign to all our ideas of architec- ture. I wonder if I shall like them. ‘Will it be by day or by night that I shall first see them? By night? A phantom city of giant houses, so high they will seem to touch the stars, and lights, lights, everywhere, till I shall be quite dazzled with lights. . Eager to See New York. If it is in the daytime, shall I see those great buildings from afar, through 2 misty haze of vibrating at- mosphere, looming against the sky as if they were built along the edge of a mountain, aweing us with a sense of power, suddenly faced—hitherto un- Known? Then the city, teeming with energy, activity, health. And noise, also, I fear—a great deal of noise. For sure- ly there must be noise where 5o many people are and so many machines, and where so much is being done. Every- body so busy, so efficient, losing no time—a modern, practical world so unlike the Near Kast, which is my home. A crowded city, I suppose, getting 'i%BOOKS BOUGHT =" “Bring Them In” or :#ione Fr. 5416. BIG BOOK SHOP,933 G St.N.W. 0 Something New—Stove Size Screened Soft Coal 10 5= Hard-Coal in All Sizes for Immediate Delivery John P. Agnew & Co., Inc. 728 14th St. N.W. Main 3068 IfI Wanted To Speed I'd drive up to any Rotor-Gas pump and fill up. For Rotor-Gas has the Power to Pass. But I'd make sure -that I try my Rotorized motor where there were no speed laws. Because Rotor is Power Plus! Apartment Hotel Service Don’t Miss Sunday’s Post— October 17th 8 Pages of Why You Should Live-in BHilltop Manor Washington’s Newest, Largest and Most Magnificent 1009/, Co-Operative Apartment Building 3500 Fourteenth St. N.W. we CAFRITZ 35 ‘Oml and Builders.of Comwumitieg 1 larger and larger, until one day it will be larger even than London, the'great- est city in the world. , And then there are your institutions, your schools, your hospitals, univer- sities, clubs, manufactories:. 1 know that you are efficient, advanced, mod- ern in every way: Neither money nor care, effort, nor devotion have been sparred when it was a question of creating what was useful, charitable or instructive. I hope, too, to be shown the publish- ing plant of a great newspaper, a titanic undertaking my feminine brain can never quite fathom. To Visit Historic Graves. And your graves—shall I see them? Those of Washington, Lincoln, Frank- lin, Gen. Grant and others of sacred memory who have helped make Ameri- ca the great country that it is. Where is the tomb of the great Jefferson, who wrote the Declaration of Independence in Philadelphia, that patriotic shrine lof your Nation, one of the greatest documents of the modern age, large in jts spirit, generous in its attitude toward others and forgiving while it understood the value of wrongs done? An evidence before the world that the pen is mightier than the sword, as are also men's thoughts. Thoughts are handed down through the ages to live while man inhabits the earth. Surely thoughts are living things, Thoughts are life and its environment. Thoughts are the greatest heritage of man, and memory comes next, the memory of those who were great and good. Therefore we must honor their graves. We know that their husk alone lies beneath the tomb. Their beautiful spirits have flown, but their graves Good are landmarks, keeping alive memories that never dle. After thoughts and memory comes speech, I think—speech inspired by Jove which God put into the soul of man. (To be concluded tomorrow.) Copyrignt, 1026 o the United Stajge P Al and 41l other countries by The Sonth Himerican, ews ‘Alliane 3 paper, Dbroduction in whole or in part prol All rights reserved. Mrs. Wilson Paid Birthday Tributes Aboard Leviathan By the Assoclated Press. S. S\ LEVIATHAN, October 15.—Mrs. Woodrow Wilson's birth- day celebration on the Leviathan today was of special interest because of the fact that both Queen Marie and Princess Ileana will have birthdays during their American tour and both of them are speculating as to where they will be on their natal day. Marie’'s birthday anniversary will be October 29, when she will be 51 years old. She probably will be on a train that day proceeding to the Pacific Coast. Princess Ilena's eighteenth birthday anni- versary will occur January 5. Cooks use it to season their cooking IOUSANDS of housewives are discovering the new and i flavor they can give to meats, fish and many by using Gulden’s Mustard to season as they cook. They spread &-fl;muunl on meats—mix it ore placing GULDENS s b i a low richness that's simply deli- cious! Try Gulden’s in your Write for free Recipe Book, 4BElizabethSt., New York City. MUSTARD Use it as a seasoning in cooking Is good coal. burns up clean. advance. > Bept. “PP28" It’s free from slate and dirt and Fill your bin now before prices Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. N.W. Hemlock -16th ST. NORTHWEST Hemlock St. at Alaska Ave. N.W. $500 CASH BALANCE LIKE RENT The only houses offered out 16th Street for such low cash down and such easy monthly payments. Don’t Miss This Opportunity “Garage in Your Cellar” Drive Out 16th St. past Walter Reed Hospital to Frigidaire—4 Bedrooms SEE THEM TONIGHT You Can Buy One of These Homes for the Rent You Are Now Paying— Wh,x Not Come Out? .R.HOWENSTEIN 1311 H STREET NORTHWEST St. N.W. INCORPORATED € 'SEE WARDMAN ON CO-OPERATIVE APARTMENTS Our 537 basis enables you to buy a 4-room and bath, $6,600 Bunga- low Apartment on total monthly payments of $68.89, which includes interest, principal and operating costs. Investigate This While They Are Available J. Fred Chase, Exclusive Representative Wardman Co-Ope rative Plan Office: 1413 H St. N.W. 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Pkg. Cream of Tomato

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