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THE EVENING _STAR, WASHINGTON, C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1926. OF NEW RUM CHASERS READY FOR LA UNCHING TODAY. now being built for the United State8 Coast Guard, shown on the ways of a Camden, v were scheduled to be launched today. The new flzet will cost $2,000,000. The boats are larger and faster f the Diesel-type rum chasers Six of the fleet of 33 patrol boats . J., shipyard where Wide World Photos. HEALTH CRUSADERS SERENADE THE PRESIDENT. the musical strains of this trio of health crusaders, who sere- yesterday, President Coolid Christmas seals. sold to aid the fight against tuberculosis. naded him at the White House a sheet of the “Gift of Health | | : plauding I oo IS After ap- purchased The seals are being Copyright by P. & A. Photos. MAJ. GEN the mllimr) attaches in “nhln‘lton. by whom he wa'l"urmalb staff. Left to right, front row, C Summerall, Brig. Gen. Villa, Ttal (N, U. 8. A.; Capt. Prieto, Maj. Sasajus, SUMMERALL IS GREETED BY FOREIGN MILITARY ATTACHES. Cuba; Spain; \mj Lombard, France, and Maj. Gen. Summerall and greeted yesterday as the mew chlef of J. H. Re Gen. Charlton, Great Britain; ien leut. Col. Garflas, ( back row, Capt. Isoda, Japan; Lieut. Col. Mar- Maj. Thenault, France; Maj. Alson,. 1:"!' Britain; Li Iq-m. Col. ll\xu't«l orn. t A. Copyr . Photos. eves, U. S . Maj. fulit). Boston sportswoman, and Miss Elizabeth Ryan, tennis star, pho- phed just after completing their 44-mile hike from Providence to Boston in less than 10 hours. Their time was about 40 minutes better llmn |Iul( n mh‘ by \ \vnr\ Iast year. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. | LOWERS HER RECORD FOR LONG HIKE. Miss Eleanora Sears { | BUCHAREST DENIES [ nand of Rumania from the Rumani: PORT eft), whose reported d n capital, photographed with the Duke of Spoleta, son OF KING'S DEATIL. King Ferdi- h is denied in dispatches of the Italian King, during the recent visit of the prince to Bucharest. They are reviewing troops from the balcony of the royal palace. !Penully Awaits Detractors of ‘ Weather Bureau| ONTARD TOVOTE ONLQUIRISSUE Ferguson, Againstb store prophet of un who The corner seasonable weather or storms attributes his forecasts to the Gov- Premier ernment Weather Bureau may be | Jle to a $500 fine or a %0-day | ibiti i | jall term or both. Prohibition, Will Face Hitting at weather reports credited to the Weather Test Tomorrow. the Department of Agri- | persons who Bureau, culture has warned disseminate these reports. that | they ave guilty of misdemeanor. | punishable by a fine or prison | TORONTO. November 30 \\);r'lh»‘ sentence. 10 shall remain dry is the The warning primarily was | 1 n gen-| directed against commercial con- | o been advertising » a “cold Winter” fo increase the sale of fuel or clothing. Persous who purchase goods on the basis | of forecasts falsely attributed to cerns that have return hir platform S o e the burewu, the department as. | < - on doctors’ prescriptions and | Serted, are inclined to distrust Ret. Up & government commis to| future statements of the Weather control the sale of alcoholic bever.| Bureau. The Liberals are opposing him. s REES. 2 M_(,EPHYSIGIAN’S RITES | ' WILL BE AT HOME | 1 the Do- | re THE PATH OF THE TORNADOES THAT SW] se razed by the terrific force of the storm. Acme Photos. i { of the fingerprint records ARMY HAS WORLD'S LARGEST FINGERPRINT FILE. Daugherty, chief of the Army’s Identification Bureau, looks over som: in the files at the War Department. A 5,023,881 prints on file constitute the largest aggregation in the world. Dr. John A. Stoutenburgh, Prom- inent Lutheran, to Be Buried in East Park, N. Y. o office he \\hH secing that | « a hottle o gov- | . for many years a practicing phy- ian in this ¢ ne time an istant medical inspector the District Health Department, | died at his home, 116 Second street | - | southeast, vesterday after a long ill " | ness. Born in Dutchess County Stoutenburgh came to thi early age and was graduz public schools here. 1 ed Georgetown Univ his M.D. degree in 18 He had served as an attending phy- + | sictan at the he attend- receiving vears and was at one attending surgeon for the ashington Railway and Eleetric Co, g the World War he served iber of No. 5 draft be °t of Columblia. a member of the Amer! n Medical Association, the Medical So-| clety of the District of Columbia Academy of Lodge, He also was a that the | member of t urch of the Refor- | rance pol- | mation, Lu § his proposed He c married. He leaves | A be u better 3 Mrs. James E the homas W. Barrett and Miss | was provided than Ontar 555 | Barneveldt Stoutenburgh Funeral services will be conducted | at the residence tomorrow .lfh’l'nu(\ll; at 4 o'clock. Rev. John Weidley, pas- | of the Church of the Reformation. gfficlate. * Interment will be. in Higher Freight on Cattle Halted. e stock from marketing t will $1 200 Damnge Awnn'l The District of Columbia must pa to deter: | Catherine D. Williams §1 wses will [according to the verdict of a jury es suffered < ’ e stumb sent rates m in the sidewalk on Belmont awson, N. Aex ceet, hetween Thirteenth and Four- nth streets. She was represented | v Attorneys Newmyer & King nndx I cents per 1 pounds proposed. schedu cents, lo wonld m 5 DINNER TO RUDOLPH TO DRAW HUNDREDS, Committees Ammging Testimonial to Retiring Commissioner Grati- fied by Public Response. The testimonial dinner on December 17 to Cuno H. Rudolph, retiring Di Commissioner, trict promises to be one of the largest affairs of its kind ever held i This wa: committees in of afternoon, inced that more than. 436 paid ub | son “ iptions have been received, rd of the | though the invitations have been out|demand for the establishment of or- less than a week the Wil sut itw of where the the | Because of this und of Lebanon | wili be filed insthe order they ceived The enter| imcomplete. take part Peck, | brated actor: comedian: Blanche Stoutenburgh, and a brother, <Hnrne, the Washington Quartet, of Bo: McLean, P n ic two Robert 1. man of the n Washington. s apparent to the various arge, who met ye: when it was an- al- The seating capac- rd Hotel ballroom, dinner will be held, is 1,000. future ac ainment prog: Among those re: Oti inner, cele- Harry Fox, vaudeville George O'Connor and Matt con- Mr J. T M and Bowie, Miss R Fleming is general chair- committees in charge of arrangenients. John D.'s Doctor Dend CLEVELAND, Hami Rockefelle; He died seventh year. rsonal November 30 (#).— lton Fiske Biggar, friend ysiclan of John D. r, will be buried (unmlrlv\\. vesterday Dr. Biggar was known of medical as a lead endeavors here 50 vears. He based his longevity Uyinks on moderny sandards of am_still is | who will! IN 1914 TALK | | By the Assoctated Press. PHILADELPIHIA, November 30— The interview with President Wilson, referred to editorially by the Mexico City Excelsior yesterday, was pub- lished in the Saturday Evening Post of May 23, 1914, and was written by Samuel G. Blythe. The conversation was held on April 27, 1914, Mr. Blythe wrote, “only a few hours after word has come that Huerta would accept the offer of mediation made by the representa- tives of Argentina, Brazil and Chile” in the trouble then existing. Mr he quoted President Wil- wving curious thing that every “It s {der in Mexico takes into considera- [ tion, not_order for the benefit of the | people of Mexico, the great mass of the population, but order for the | benefit of the old-time regime, for | the aristocrats, for the vested inter- ste, for the men who are respon- ble for this very condition of dis- | order. | For Great Owners “No one asks for order because order will help the masses of the people to get a portion of their rights and their land; but all demand it so that the great owners of prop- erty, the overlords, the Hidalgos, the men who have exploited that rich country for their own selfish pur- poses, shall be able to continue their processes undisturbed by the pro- tests of the people from whom their and power have been ob- | wealth tained. “The damages that beset the re. { public are held to be the individual |and corporate troubles of these men, not the aggregated injustices that | have been heaped on this vastly | ater section of the population that is ow struggling to recover by force what has always been theirs by right “Chex FALD G deDwila. oid-atdert __Copyright by P. & A. Photos Ty NEWARK FIREMAN JUMPS WHEN TRAPPED. This Newark, N. J fireman was trapped on the upper floor of a burning building when he went in to see that all occupants had gotten out. The camera catches him in midair as he leaps into a net held by his comrades, after throw- Several hundred lives were lost in the States visited by the series of tornadoes on Copyright by P. & A. Photos. WILSON'S MEXICAN VIEWS GIVEN IT IS RECALLED but I say to you that the old order is dead. It is my part, as I see it, to ald in composing those differences so far as I may be able, that the new order, which will have its foundation on human liberty and human righss, shall prevail.” ot Directly Quoted. Mr. Blythe wrote that as a result of his conversation with Mr. Wilson, he could state the conclusion that the policy of the President included *“a settlement of the agrarian land ques- tlon by constitutional means uch a: that followed in New Zealand, for ex- ample, will be insisted on.” Mr. Wilson was not directly quoted in the reference to New Zealand and there was no other mention of that country in the article. Mr. ~ Blythe asked Mr. Wilson whether in the event of successful mediation, offered at that time, his plans for the settlement of Mexico would be carried out. Reply of Wilson. President Wilson was quoted in re. ply as follows: “I hope so, for it's not my inten- tion, having begun this enterprise, to turn back—unless 1 am forced to do so—until I have assurances that the great and crying wrongs the people have endured are in process of satis- factory adjustment. Of course it would not do for us to insist on an exact pro- cedure for the partition of the land, for example, for that would set us up in the position of dictators, which we are not and never shall be; but it is not our intention to cease in our friendly offices until we are assured that all these matters are on their way to successful settlement. It is a great and complicated question, but T have every hope that a suitable So- lution will be found. and that the day will come when the Me; people will be pyt in full possession of th COMMITS SUICIDE AT UNION STATION I.inotype Operator in Government Printing Office Offers No Reason for Act. William Edward Nash, 55 vears old, of 805 H street, and a linotype oper- ator at the Government Printing Of- fice, shot himself to death near the Columbus monument, on Union Sta- tion Plaza, last night. He wrote a note of farewell, offering no reason for his act. Relatives are at a loss to_explain his motive. Nash had been under a doctor’s care for some time, but ft was said that he was not known to be seriously ill. He left his home at 8 o'clock to go to work, but roamed the streets instead. Ralph Balley, colored, of 105 Sixth street southeast, was croes- ing the station plaza when he heard a shot and saw Nash fall. He ran to the station and notified Policeman James C. Collins, who went to the scene and found the man with, a small.caliber pistol by his side. Nash was still alive, but unconscious, when he reached Casualty Hospital. He died, however, without regaining consclousriess. In a pocket of the man’s clothing a note, addressed to his wife, was found. It begged for- giveness and asked that the body be cremated. P Wife Sues Drug Addict. Charles F. Parker, a drug addiet, | now serving a term of imprisonment for violating the Harrison anti- narcotic law, was sued today for a limited divorce by his wife, Mary Parker. She makes his alleged addic- tion as one of the causes of her suit and also alleges desertion. land, the liberty and the peaceful lmarried in New York March 17, 1924, RQERErIY Lhak-axe FISUUEWLL thalrast ugham Pa-childcens They were | ing his coat shead of him. Henry Miller. | : = ‘Wealthy Widow, 65, I 3 Vealthy Widow. 5. | [|FG N ATTENP] * ter chaenr. 21 T) RESEUE WOMAN By the Associated Press. SOUTH DEERFIELD, Muass November 30.—Mrs. Stella Wood- EuQene Gatewood 0' SOUth ward, 65, widow of Joel Wood- H | Ward o reiired man ot westn, | €rn’Railway Fatally Injured has married her chauffeur, Her- | . | Letourneau, 1. it was by Frenzied Horse. Sunda J fegroom said the mar- | - e A Uker Diics I Tatat | imjustemyaustaineaiin i brave) at | tempt a frenzied horse, bolt } ing out of control He said he had been to stop v of Mrs. Woudward October 6 in the emy f & woman vider {xr' aix e ithe, but had known fa¢ pelaplane, Va.. November 16, re Mrs, Woodward has three adult | Sulted In the death of Eugene Gate | children. Mr. Woodward died | wood, 49 vears old, executive genera about two year BO. agent of the Southern Railway sys jtem, at Emnergeney Hospital last i night { Mr. Gatewood had heen kicked by the swerving horse, suffering interna injuries which necessitated two oper ations. He was apparently well on the way to recovery Sunday when he suffered a relapse. The severe strain on a weakened heart ultimately re sulted in death Acting as the repiesentative fo Harrison RUUSEVEH HONOR - PROPOSED BY FISH Mr. Gate Representatlve Advocates;, yan supervising wor |- Vast: Sports: Stadium onv| o, lamaes at Delapiane at the Speedway as Memorial. personal executive President Fairfax Southern systen supervising work loaded into a. car at that point prepar atory to a freight movement. e was | watching the operation iu the right | of-way of the road when Mrs. Pauline Okie, vesident of the neihborhood and Erection of a big sports stadiumn on | S ardent horsewoman, appeared riding the Speedway, in which Army and | 3" C, AOHERE Navy foot ball games and Olympic | *JPirted horse. | contests could be held, as a memorial [ | M fFatewont b to the strenuous Theodore Roosevelt, Kesslogre ooy Shivs ist greeted her r the horse whe: | 18 peon by Eepsencrifutive: Hai s\hltl»nl,\‘h(‘h' hn.nn:n[i\t; ;.x»w off | ilton Fish, jr., of New York, formerly -y i 'i"'“‘;‘;l‘(”“‘m‘ .“I')uh""‘“* 4 o A i o starte holt. Mr captain of the Harvard eleven and 8n| Garewood raced for his head. The All-American player. Mr. Fish intends to introduce a bill in the coming session of Congress horse swerved and the flying hoofs struck Mr. Gatewood in the abdomen 0 authorize an appropriation of $100,. | The horse was subdued by others ax 000 for this purpose. The need for o | MI. Gatewood sunk to the ground stadlum here has long been recog.| The injured man was taken to Sy ) A1 study has been | Bmergency Hospital where it was made by the Natlonal Capital Parks | found nmrmunr upelr:lnnn n..'n‘xhl1 '7..- 4 ol 6 i Wl ssarv. His friends were optimistic and Planning Commission, which is N Tl wers on e ready to make a report to Congress, | A site east of the Anacostia Pa With railroad facilities, has been con- sldered. and he had received a number of vis | tors. . Gatewood was a native of Vir : ginia and occupied a plantation a: T Lot f‘n'm‘fm.;‘:f'l“,:_’jg; Rectorville, adjoining that of Mr. Har the one which the Park Commission | Fifon. president of the road. Surviving {8 rendy 1o recommend to Congress, | him are his widow. Mrs. Grace Tyson on a site formed by filling in u part | (iatewood, and a daughter, Miss Julix O the st Bein Ho fosls that the | Gatewood. He was a Mason and a stadium obul®h pay for . itsslf in' a|memler of Accd Temple s Mymis couple of vears. Ha calls attention | Shrine of ot o b o to the “qualities of sportsmanship, | the service of the ruilway as a brake fair play and love of physical exer.|I&R 26 years ago and in recent year oise Whirh were predominant. in the|has been the executive representative lifo of Theodore Roosevelt,” and |t the Pl’ef"‘"l":- ik bt points out that such a stadium would | Funeral services b6 helg at his Figrnitonnd home tomorrow at 1 oclock and the D e for freat fraternal and | yyrial will be at Upperville, Va., some- S ! four miles distant. HORSE SHOW FRIDAY. TR - The Archeological Society of Wash ington, for the past three years lo cated in the Octagon Annex, has | moved to new offices in suite 809, the indoor horse show this | Architects’ Building, 1800 E street. i and Hunt Club | The soclety’s rooms are the nationa ay evening. { headquarters of the Archeological Tn | Entries will be in seven classes— | stitute of America and the editort Riding Club to Stage First Indoor | Affair of Season. ‘The first jnovice saddle horses, ladies’ saddle | offices of the monthly magazine horses, pair of saddle horses, green |and _Archeol Arthur Stanley ’hnm'r. handicap. mypsical ~stalls, | Riggs, direct 1l secretary of the Corinthian class. soclety, is also editor of the magazine There will be prizes and ribbons - and the Washingion representative #f the institute,