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—ee —_— WEATHER, (U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast,) Mostly cloudy tonight and probably tomorrow; cold wave tonight; lowest about 10 degrees; continued cold to- morrow; Warmer Friday. Highest, 49, at 3:20 pm. yesterday: lowest 26, at 6:30 a.m. today. Full report on Page 9. | Ciosing N.Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 12 a office, nd class matter hington, D. C. 30,220, No. post b WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ¢ Foening Star. Associated service. The only evening paper in Washington with the Press news WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1927—THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES. * Means Associated Pres: Yesterday’s Circulation, 105,908 TWO CENTS. BLOW AT SHANGHAI 1S . ACTING SINGLY IN CHINA. MAY YET HAVE TO USE FORCE BEFORE ARRIVAL OF 7-cnd Toward Arbitration of Mexican BRITISHISFEARED ~ Dispute Accompanicd by Chance of Cantonese Army Concentra- | tion Causes Apprehension " in Adjacent Provinces. BY DAVID LAWRE 2. Just as the Senate and the Pre | dent have come to an agreement that moral suasion should be used instead of force in handling the Mexican | problem, the possibility of using force = | to protect the lives and property of FIVE U. S. SHIPS READY | American citizens in another trouble B jarea of the world—China—has risen | to perplex the President and TO LAND 800 DEFENDERS | tiry”of Sute | Hitherto the United States has i | 5t00d with the foreign powers for | concerted action. England Mobilizing Biggest Fleet| the American and ; i | however, has been significantly ex Since Armistice to Guard ! piined at the White House in the ate : 3 | last 24 hours, which means that the Citizens in Orient. expedition force to be used by Britain at Shanghai will not be joined American military fo though American warships remain in ter: ritorial waters to carry off refugees. ltonese (National-| President Coolldge hopes that the wrandum issued by Secretary 1st) government troops, which is re- | RERER LT ST T oy of the ported on the Chekiang Province | Upited States will have a soothing front, has caused apprehension in |effect on the Chinese elements which Shanghai. have risen to drive foreigners out. tionali tration as to be m: British the Ass: od Press. SHANGHATIL, concentration of C: January 26.—Heavy s interpret the concen Traditional part of a supreme effort| ppoliieq State 2 by the Cantonese to ¢ab-|gyed a liberal policy toward China, ture Shanghai before the majority of jand in the present emergency the the British expeditionary force of | American Government's record stands 20,000 army and men arrives at | out as unobjectionable to any of the e Chinese groups. Not only has the the end of February. i . - United States declared itself ready to It is also feared that the e il landing | & i 3 |agree to the im ition of e mucn Hongkong will provide the < orh | mooted Ghak il Tesitions ot ik jready also to give up extraterrit : 3 ts especially anti-British, eral ha; anti-foreign; | ighis 'so soon as Chinese cou conflagration et B K shed to afford justice in the provinces held by the National- ! gortsls =10 o ists, which include about half of all| “'The official excuse given for the China present mix-up is that the powers can- not put into effect the treaties to i May Evacuate Homes. { Secre- | The divergence of | policies, | they | Stronger Role in East. | have outlined until some central gov- ernment arises capable of fulfilling international obligations. The sug gestion 18 he: however, that the two principal groups in Cnina which have been fighting each other are | united on the policy that ought to be | | pursued toward the foreign It is evident, too, that some outside powers are not ready up extraterritorial rights or to the higher customs duties. Under the circumstances the United Statesniy_compelled to play a lone hand. Secretary Kellogg's statement | is intended to convince the Chinese ’l!‘.lll‘ S that Ameri is not objecting | to their demands for tariff autonomy |and the relinquishment of extraterri | toriality. But meanwhile there aie a | million” Chinese in Shanghai who are | being rouse inst the foreign pop | ulation. The British are preparing to {land a large force troops. The United States will not join these forces unless something unforeseen happens. Queston o The fear expressed here the ieral mix-up Amer British will be confused. There easiness in British circles cause the United States | the Br property powers. of the to give to agree tection nd here be without corresponding sistance. During the Boxer outbreak American troops actually w with those of the Kuropean | under a single command. So there is precedent for an allied relief force and | | this may be the ultimate outcome, but | | the tendency for the moment is to | | keep a fleet of vessels handy to carry | off Americans rather than to engage | in_tae fightin i | _The civil war in China unquestion powers (Continued on Page 5, Column 2. | In view of this danger and the threat that the Nationalists will over- run Chekiang and Kiangsu Provinces, in the latter of which Shanghai is sit ed, the possible necessit of evacuating women and children from ovinces is under careful con sideration. Mars| DELETED KELLOGG Sun Chuan Fang, ruler of 1 | Chekiang, Anhwei and Kiangsu Prov- SIAIEMENI NUI Ifl inces, is concentrating his troops tof] ros the Cantones: concentration illi the region of Hangchow, northern| Chekiang, Sun is denuding neighbor- ing towns of troops for this purpose. H “The vanguard of the reinforcements for the defense of Shanghai against 9 % internal turmoil and possible in- | TR on from the exterior landed today. | f f erao50 Freneh roops and po.| S€Nate Committee Admits trom Haipong, including 50| r,. . Cat Frenchmen, the remainder being An-| His Right to Edit Nicaraguan nemites. Policy Document. 400 From Hongkong. | Two companies of Punjabi troops, | totaling more than 400 men, are due to arrive tomorrow from Hongkong, with a third company expected I'ri- By the Associated Press. The Senate foreign relations com- mittee decided today not to make public the transeript of Secretary Kellogg's statement of two weeks ago on the Nicaragugn situation, By direction of the committee, | Chairman Borah made this state- next contingent, comprising Indian brigade, is dwe about February 10. Prior to this, Chinese New Ye February 2, is expected to prove a time of anxiety for Shanghai. Two brigades from England are not ex pected here until late in February. | ment: Official intimations from Washing- | It was the judgment of the ¢ ton that the British lead in concen- iy o Mo h tLc L e ot . o s Sl v} betore us is incomplete in the sense little surprise in Shanghai. Wash- that the Secretary has deleted im- iportant parts of the hearing, which, rity |of course, he haa a pertect ‘right opinion. {to do, but it leaves the record in Meanwhile, five American w: | such condition that it does not record including the eruiser Pittsburgh, are | \what happened at the hearing and here, capable of landing S00 men. | iperefore we think it unwise under which i the largest forelgn naval| ., conditions to make it public. contingent available locally at| Question of Precedent. present. American Women Leaving econd, the committee was of the jon that we ought not to estab- lish the practice of having executive sessions and then after the execu- tive session has been held of giving out portions of the record as the re- sult of the hearing; that if the hear- ings are to be open they ought to be | open from the beginning.” The Senate was challenged today by nator Wheeler, Democrat, Montana, to take a stand either with our State Department and its tyranny or against 1it” on the Nicaraguan question. | In an address teeming with barbed shafts aimed at both President Cool |idge and Secretary Kellogg, the Mon- tanan also called on the Senate for- | eign relations committee to “hold a ! public hearing in which the whole sub- | ject may be aired in the light of da {ana declartd members of the commit- | tee would be recreant in their duty if | they fail to do this.” British | P President Under Fire. of substantial Ame) ochow, ~chief city of Fukien province, reports that fourdifths of | the American women and children | of Foochow district already have de- | parted and that the of | the remainder Phe Fochow Cantonese commander arrested 200 Chinese who were said to have been implicated in the re cent anti-foreign riots. Of these were executed. Hankow is quiet. The British American business houses and 1 are functioning without incident Minor disorders are reported from up Yangtze River points BIG FI MOB! 'TON. Britain to Defend Citizens at All Costs in Chi January forces ) re LONDOX Jand and naval ing on China as.a converg- nonstration of | i | DR. FREUD RECOVERING. | Noted Psycho-Analyst Undergoes | ! Cancer Operation. VIENNA, January 26 (Jewish Tele- | graph Agency).—Dr. Sigmund Freud, noted psychoanalyst. and professor of neurology in Vienna University, has| undergone an operation for cancer of | the tongue. Prof. Freud withstood the operation well, and the surgeons declare his con- | dition will be greatly improved. He | is 70 years old. BROWNING COUNSEL | Hearing Is Adjourned Until! Monday. as Wife’s Case Is Rested. Acting on its conviction that the full details of the Browning separation trial are not proper material to appear in its columns, The Star will, | | during the course of the trial, 1 print only such cts in the case as may contain genuine news value. e By the Associated Press, WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Janua ~The Browning separation tri was adjourned at 210 this afternoon until 10 o'clock Monday morning. Adjournment, granted by Supreme Court Justice ‘Seeger, on motion of | John E. Mack, attorney for Edward W. Browning, the New York realtor. came a few moments after Henry | Epstein, attorney for Mrs. Frances | Browning, had rested his case. Witnesses Due Monda; My, Mack said all his witnesses had been %ubpoenaed for Monday and that to study the testimony thus far |in the case. He said he would clear | his case up in two da | Mr. Epstein said adjournment was | satisfactory to his side of the case | and that he had put on all his wit | nesses with the e could not be utiliz mony on both sented. en ception of one who d until all the testi sides had been pre- in | un- | is permitting | sh forces to protect American ! re allied | I ton, tion i | ‘! completed their | | 1143 Connecticut avenue, | failed NAVY YARD PAY CLERK he would require the next few days ! THIEVES ROB STORE - OF §25,000 IN FURS - AND OTHER G0ODS | Truck Believed Used in Sec- | ond Downtown Raid Laid | [ to Organized Gang. |ENTRANCE IS GAINED THROUGH TINY WINDOW | [ Coats, Gowns Included in Appurel: Swept From Showcases of Erle- | | bacher's, F Street. Fur thieves broke into Eclebacher’s, | 11210 I street, through basement | window last night, and. apparently truck, made away with *be $25.000 and $30,000 worth rs, evening gowns, wraps and other | items of women's apparel | The robbery evidently was carefully planned. The weakest point was selected for entrance. The choicest stock was taken, no clues were left, | the police not even finding finger | prints. More than 100 evening gowns, | about 25 fur and ponyskin coats and | tween of | o, ! COMBINED COURT URGED FOR CAPITAL wraps and a large number of dresses were taken. showcases on the second and third floors were stripped. Believed Work of Gang. Coming right after the robber Rizik's, also in the downtown sec 5 when thousands of dollars’ worth of expensive dresses and furs were taken last Thursday night; other robberies of similar nature here and in Wilming Del., and Philadelphia, this rob bery, the police believe, is of the same apparently org One alley lead door of the store. is a window VIDENCE AGAINST of Judge Directs Jury Not to Consider Statements in Busch Trial. to the back this alley )-inches square, shroom. This window | iron grating, held in nails driven’ into the was barred by place by heavy window’ frame A jimmy was used to pry the nails out of the grating. Entry was through : the washroom, then through a door | Frank L. Ach ‘“never had a chance” communicating with the basement. | they “were shot down like dogs,” and Only cases with the best dresses and |19 year-old John Proctor, with two materials in them were given atten-| guns, w the one who suggested S Let's shoot our way out of this" after Loss Only Estimated. { they had been apprehended by the Morr mon, legal representative | two officers in Petworth, Nicholas Lee for the firm, to whom inquiries were | pagles, another defendant, told a no referred this morning, stated there hud | jiceman September 28, according (o not been sufficient time to check up on | testimony given at the trial in Crim the loss, but a general estimate of the | jnal Division 2 today by Officer oy gontents of the showcases con-{mond F. Nalls of the tenth precinet. Yinced oficials In the store that at| ywhile Proctor, on, that date. the Aeant- §25,000,. and “probubly 339,000, | e on which Officer Busch died as the result of the shooting, was charged worth of goods had been taken. The | amount after an investigation is taken | . pasiel 6 (he SUOCTRE: WAk charEod may be found greater. -ob. | band.” and virtually all of the Eagles The neatfess with which the rob- | gigtement involved ‘the youthful de Bery was executed feft little doubt | fntement involved the vouthful de. hat the ‘store had been carefullyi,ny previgus testimony, Justice Wil Inspected and charted in advance. The | 0% PIEVIOUs testimony, dustice Wi bellef exists that the thieves waited { o, "{1e Grected the Jury nut to con in & nearby place, or possibly. Balti- | ao'tt was made out of 1he Iester hoiol more, until the scouts had lined up the | 251t LGOI SIS 1Y program of operation, after which the [{ide LIS CQUE Bise Tsshed the truck and burglars came to this ¢ty [ ity of the testhmons to ol work and left before | cape, o third defendant, who 1 | was not present. . Policemen Leo W. K. Busch and Me dawn. wise An attempt was made last night to get into the Fort Dressmaking Co., The thieves succeeded in getting partial entry by Jimmying a window in the rear, but 10 pass other obstacles Related Story of Shooting. Nalls stated that between 8 and 12 o'clock on the night of September 28 he talked with Kagles and Samuel Moreno, the fourth defendant, in the cellroom at the police station, and gles ted the story of the shoot- ing to him. Before Nalls could i what Moreno said, other than explain |that the latter signified his approval lof everything Eagles stated, defense {counsel raised the question of “con- COMMITS SUICIDE TR | fesslons,” referred to statements ob. William Clayton Webb, 34, Shoots |txined the previous day from the de. e | fendants, and Justice Hitz Self in Barracks—Inquiry examination of Nalls, promising the {jury to go Into the whole matter to morrow. Is Started. Nalls recitation of what Eagles told - - him was characterized by the Govern 3 | ment as a “mere conversation” into on Webb, pay clerk | which~ Moreno, although suffering States Navy, assigned from two gunshot wounds in the leg, to duty at the Washington Navy | “entered from time to time." Yard, shot himself while in the re- | gles said on the morning of the | ceiving barracks there this morning | $hooting e faana s Al and died later. 1.)1(0“(“‘::,". them were waiting for a cab His record gives his next of kin as | whey ia avenue and Upshur street i 48 { when two policemen approached. The | his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth R | of 1813 Monroe street, this city | ing Webb | policemen Inquired what they were do- | there, and they were told that Immediately following the shoot- | their ¢ was broken down on the hill, {ing, Rear Admiral Hutchinson, com- |0 they started in the direction of the | mandant of the Washington yard, | car, which was east on New Hamp- appointed a board of inquest to e hire avenue. William €l in the United |amine into the reason for the war i rant officer's act PROCTOR BARRED tell | halted the | | | | | | | | | Mitchell disclo: | the ears and noses of lo |39 BELOW ZERO IN MI | kato, Negro Hunter Quits | Bear’s Den Despite Brave Intentions By the Associated Press NORWALK, Fla., January A negro hunter, who: feet wouldn't coincide with his brave intentions, quit a bear's den hur- riedly, after firing three charges of buckshot at the animal. Two minutes later and half a mile away he came on other hunters. A party, of seven ‘returned to the scene and brought from the den a 400- pound black bear. SEVERE COLD WAVE DUEHERE TONIGHT Forecaster Expects Temper- ature to Hit 10 Above Zero, Coldest Weather of Season. 26, in the path of a wave now sweeping rapidly southward from Hudson Bay region, and with its arrival tonight the city may experience the coldest weather of the season, Forecaster d toda Leaving in its wake a trail of below- zero temperatures dipping as low as degrees on the minus scale in north Canada. the disturbance, characterized as of “unusual” nature is expected to send the thermometers here to 10 degrees above zero, which is the record “low™ of the Winter. With the drop in temperature. which already has begun. there will develop fresh northerly winds to nip wayfarers, Mr. Mitchell stated. The skies will be mostly cloudy, bui the forecaster does not believe that Washington will share in the snow predicted for sec tions farther South The forecast, therefore, is for tinued cold weather tomorrow warmer temperatures F' Washington severe cold con- and | ISOTA. | Biting Cold Tightens Grip on North- ¢ west. SP. PAUL, Minn,, Biting cold tightened its g Northwest today, with the brunt the wave striking Minnesota. Br: erd reported 39 below. Temperatures in other parts of the State ranged up to 12 below at Man- the warmest spot in the State. The Twin Cities had 21 below. ). — p on the f n anu | serie | “flar HIGH SCHOOL GAME - SERIES SUSPENDED Riot After Central-Western Contest Yesterday Brings Investigation Order. | | | | All games of the public high school basket ball series were ordered sus- pended today pending a full investi- gation of a riot yesterday afternoon at the Arcadia Auditorium following contested game between West- ern and Central, which Central won by a score of 38 to 34. When the referee fired his gu nalizing the close of the game, Capt. George (Pewee) Walker of the West- ern team, had the ball in bis hands and slammed it to the floor in dis- sust at the loss of the game. it bounced and struck Capt. William Crouch of Central, who, evidently feel- ing that the ball had been thrown at him, heaved it at Walker. Then the melee began. | Spectators Crowd Floor. Spectators indulgéd in fisticuffs and ran upon the floor. Even after the :oaches had extricated the players |from the crowd the court was still congested with a pushing, swaying mob. 1t took several minutes for facuity members and coaches to re- store order. As the result of the affair, Stephen E. Kramer, assistant superintendent of schools in charge of high schools, today requested immediate reports of the episode from the principals of | both schools involved and directed that all games in the series be sus- pended until the matter has been in- vestigated and safe provision a ured for the crowds attending the games “A thorough investigation will be made of the matter,” Mr. Kramer “and no more high school all games will be played until the affair at the Arcadia ha | been thoroughly sifted and ance has been forthcoming future games will be safe for crowds attending them.” Games Set for Friday. The next games in the high are scheduled at the Arc for Friday afternoon between Central and Technical and Eastern and Busi ness, but unless the investigation of the affair of vesterday has been con- cluded by that time these games will not be played. Although the principals of the re. spective schools declined to issue statements today under formal investigation, both were of the impression that the episode was in the nature of a momentar: -up” rather than indicative of that the o sig- assur- | since the matter is | TORELIEVE BURDEN Consolidation of Municipal and Police Sections Favor- ed by City Heads. ABOLITION OF NIGHT SESSIONS SUGGESTED Merger Recommended by Citizens' Committee—Traffic Branch Plan in Doubt. A new plan for relieving |in the Police Court by con it with the Municipal Court proved by the District Commissioners | today and, a bill providing for the | combination will he-sent to Congress | within the next few days | _The merger of the two courts, was recommended by a citize com | mittee headed by Odell mith which made a comprehensive study | of the problem of congestion in the | Police Court,and was approved by the Commissioners after careful considera {tion. This committee also urged the | establishment of a traffic violations |bureau for handling minor traffic | cases, but the Commissioners have not vet indicated their position in regard | to this plan. | The bill providing for consolidation ongestion olidating was ap of the two courts was drafted by the committee. Under its terms the com bined court would be known as the Municipal Court and would have two distinet branches, civil and criminal The court would consist of the pres lent judges of the Municipal and Police Courts, nine in number, who would continue to serve as such for the ur | expired terms of their present com | missions. The jurisdiction and power: | vested in the two courts would be | vested in the new Municipal Court Present Laws Would Apply. The proposed criminal branch of the Municipal Court would be governed by the laws in force and which are applicable to the ' Police Court. All jurors drawn under the authority vested heretofore in hoth courts would be qualified to serve in either branch of the new Municipal Court. The bill also provides for the ab olition of the Night Court of thePolice Court, which the Commissioners have been advised answers no real need, by specificall providing that the crim- inal branch of the new. court shall . not be required to remain open from 9 am. to 11 p.m. The measure, how ever. would allow day sessions of the criminal branch of the court to ex- tend into the night. | The report of the citizens’ committee { pointed out that the congestion in the | Police Court is due largely fo two | factor: First, the great many petty [traffic cases which are now being con isidered, and the other, the inability of | the court due to “the avalanche of business thrust upon it to promptly dispatch its business, especially in the | matter of jury trials.” | “We believe the first factor will be { removed to a great extent by the crea jtion of a traffic violations bureau | similar to that operating in Chicago {and Detroit, which we commended in !our last report.”, the committee in formed the Commissioners. ““We have [had further reports from these cities jand all speak well of the system as operated there. The observations in dicate that the plan has the dual mer t of relieving the congestion in the court {and of keeping policemen on their beats, 1,000 Cases Pending. ““The second factor presents a more | serious problem. The Police Court now { has more than a thousand untried jury cases before it. The situation is be- bming more acute as liquor and traf fic offenders, realizing the long delay in reaching a jury trial, are demanding s. The result has been to tempo rily delay the administration of jus itice. It is a situation which needs im- mediate attention and merits drastic treatment “We have observed the work of the i Municipal Court. which, with one { member, Judge Terrell, for vears in | capacitated, and with having its ranks depleted from time to time by de nds made upon its personnel to upply vacancies in the Police Court nd Juvenile Court, has kept up its | work in splendid shape. We are in | formed that rarely is a jury trial ne “|“You Take Two and I'll Take Two." | Lieut. | “After they the designated Medical | spot Ach said he did not believe the nger | men, and, turning to Busch said Corps.. | ‘Busch, you take two and I'll take eneca, | two He served as an | agles sald that Proctor passed Navy from 1915 | the word, ‘Let's shoot our way out of &iven a warrant | this, and when the officers grabbed | He has served | them they broke away and started Stringham, the | shooting = Lagles said MecCabe ship Denabola and also [bed him and shot under Eagle At the {and then they ran down Fifth street. Wash- | He =ald_‘both smen were shot the | before they got ns out and they never had a chanc | “Then Eagles sald the four men r | into a basement. Proctor said, ‘Let's | g0 out of here.’ |~ ‘How about the kid" he asked, meaning Moreno. said, ‘Oh, the hell with Accusing President Coolldge of wit- | Make Joint Agreement. or unwittingly withholding from | 1. “hefore the request o _the true facts as to Nica | journment, Mack and __Senator Wheeler said the | o ion JACK and | utive's recent message to Con-| sinulation providing s showed that he had been mis. | JUMLECION providing in his dealing with Nicaragua S e “No other or more charitable state- | va ment could be made concerning such | a message,” he sald. Contending that Juan Liberal, is the constitutional p of the Central American republic, fight- | Njontanan described the conser iwrmistice ended | president, Adolfo Diaz, as “the hand- | 1918, | pleked ‘yés man’ of our State Depart the total n | ment, despised by his oft-betrayed | SOWAR e, 2 a4 ‘.,i : people, held in contempt by almost | {Atherine Mayer, today came to the e the whole Latin American world, and | 210 of Mrs. Frances (Peaches) Hee- both on land sy Nica- | D4n Browning, and added their testi- 000 10 | o and safety-pinned | MONY to the 16-vear-old girl's, in an | vill be under | the san bayonets. | attempt to show that her six months | John Duncan It be o perversion of lan-| Of marriage with Edward W. Brown in the | ®u: that Don Adolfo Di “i'"i. jhr;r\.wufln \s»|~ \'ur) ealtor, | the Far Was ever elected President of Nicar: et S nstnele sk fure | transport | Eua.” he added here has been but | scre L BT A fegphtids presidential election since the au Mrs. Heenan was the third witness | s were atic rule of our State Department | Of the day, following Mrs. Mayer, the | hanghal. |0 . | friend and companfon and at times | tate Department favorites have | the house guest of the two women, <imply been marched into office to the | Who lived with Mr. Browning. ic of the Marine Band, which con-| The mother dressed in black geor tinued to play s they were testified to the questions put to ‘zovd'—good o York bankers, aughter's chief counsel not to their own people | Epstein. She said she “alwa “When the bund ceased to play, as | waited up for her -daughter” when the North Dakota reported 11 below at Minot and 22 below at Fargo, while in South Dakota it wa below at Rapid Clty and 21 below at Aberdeen EXPLAINS NEW NOTE issuep By oivia HIMSEL any permanent ill feeling between the | held upon the day upon which it schools. jset. It is obvious from this that tu YALE STUDENT KILLS !ty i oo F BY HANGING {terial assistance in the present need i | Richard Starr Who ! Pegatinn: Stcretaryl Siys: Kellogs | Untermeger, [ cipal Court under a -single manage The salaries of the Police Court judges iand the judges of the Municipal Court Only Offered Good Offices in | Committed Suicide, Was Son of | ment to make the five Muni of | Court judges and the four Polie {are the same. The presiding judge of Noted New York Poet. Court judges all available for work £ This 18 for ad 1 Comdr. R. pstein, stand-! Corps, U, Lieut. H. R. M tated a joint | gng Lieut, Reed, Suppl that the finan-1" b,y Clerk Webb was born in York realtor be | ' ( ; 5, 18 until the close of | oy " in | to 1922, when ne as acting pay clerk 4h. Ahe: deitroyer | United stat on the cruis | time he we {ington v United board H. readiness to protect British life and property should th Placed i jeopardy through belligerent acts by | I the Chinese. exe When the fighting proceed to Chir various 4 I-les, the I terranean on the the mo units since World War stimates of effectives which for eventualities place them The land forces command of Maj. Ger who hud World War vesterday Ju composed Hermesch, ot passed from the he British the Medi hips dy be assembled tilla of bases Indies join the ne there ) ated the beginning, which | provided that testimony would not be { | taken until the judge ruled in favor Mrs. Browning, and his financial status then, for alimony purposes, be came a matter for consideration. Mrs. Carolyn Heenan and her woman friend of five years, M w e ‘i merge the Police Court and the Muni ve the he was serving on ates ship Rainbow. $1,488,147.68 IS PAID B. & 0. BY GOVERNMENT in Tacna-Arica. By the Associated Press special significance s at- to the note being sent by the | | Bolivian government to its repre- B ™ Naft | sentatives " abroad in reference to so Proctor and McCabe z HACAMBE . oy e airs | Later Eagles and Moreno moved into | —— ’(‘,'f’ P Lf;l"""’,,"fe;fi“fi‘,‘,f = another house and stayed until the | "“u™h, oo ot officially received this next morning. memorandum vet, but have read “Eagles said about it,” said De la Barr It shooting, but points out that Secretar ¢ | Moreno did. He s has not offered to act as arbitrator | oLthe Capliol; guns and Was thels in the Tacna-Arica matter. but has “'l:h'; F ‘A“'l' e A«hfl"";‘ ;l?:'l:i‘n merely tendered his good ofl;\ve:«. The real estate | George . D! purpose of the note is to let repre- A a @ ide has been take V. Fh. ion, which is being acquired by act ernment toward the stand of Peru. of Congress in the last session for ex It makes clear how we stand, stat- : 3 7 S T 5 i the Capitol grounds. On fng definitely Bolivia does not be- (Continued on Page 7, Column 1) | (Continued on Page 6, Column 2, |tension of tl ; ig definitely’ Ho! = i g B kb D.,..,.mbf,» : ,1] xxi;:.ol‘,,»‘nnt;naup E lieve Peru is l‘i‘ghl and nr'}vln% that payment of $1,5 .04 to the rea Peruvian assertions concerning Tacna- tate and Improvement Co., of Balti- Arica are not fair. Publication of more, which is o real estate holding the note will likely lead to further company for the Baltimore & Ohio statements from Peru.” Railrond. his makes a total of SEF e $3,056,631.72 already paid on the pur. ‘hase of this land, and leaves due to Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Ci imber be Ithe Municipal Court alone draws a flarger salary. “The plan has been suggested to iy | heretofore done in either court. A 1 and R ! Municipal Court could be formed with (Continued on Page 7, Column Lagles said | ) t bet i sea e Conn. 5 000. would to say hin: notablc He aboard t David Lynn, Architect of Capitol, Makes Huge Payment for Plaza left as egantic ving fore l Ground. | he did not do any MeCabe, Proctor and id Proctor had twc jer of the band.” ates Attorney jr.. refreshed the xpected thi ntrymen will id Lynn hite today paid $1.488,147.68 more & Ohio Railroad Co Be ( Nurses May (©a Column T sught likeiy wmber from the military ared to 1 S the infantry brigades, cither the same or other transports. The hospital ship Maine is being refitted at Malta i Staine e eins ived w3t Specimens of Rock Which Formed Core AT Chatham | Of Earth 550.000.000 Years Ago Exhibited! At Chatham nine destroyers are pi , the is orders also be given to of them wome to be pr wil of nurse h ”‘!'"-"‘ By the Associated NAPLES, Italy, January An anclent tomb has been discovered in he town of Bacoli on the shore of the Tyrrhenian Sea, where magnifi- cent villas once were built by the Romans. Some archeologists believe the tomb By the Associated Pre NEW HAVE January - - e Richard Starr Untermeyer, a s pho- | 3 more in Yale College, took his 1te b | FIND ANCIENT TOMB hanging in his room in Welch Hall to day. The body was found by a janitor S e e IN BACOLI, ITALY The student was a son of Louis | Y Untermeyer, writer and poet, and of . Mrs. Jean Starr Untermeyer, widely | Believed by Some Archeologists te known in the literary world. He was | B born on December 26, 1907, and pre-| Be That of Pliny the Elder pared for Yale at Schloss Glarisegg, in 2 3 Switzerland, and Horace Mann School Who Died in 79 B. C. in New York City. Young Untermeyer left no letter or message in his room, but there w. on the table & letter from his mother 26 gk t i understood that he had been in America’s temporary financial trouble, but th extent of this was unknown. uccessful Men Contribute to Father Is Noted Poet. \ring to sail, probably within a fort NEW YORK, January 26 (#®).— ht; four cruis are st n| fr the Mediterrar pr ng from the I Indies, while the destroyers Wanderer and Wolver ine and the s Aphis and Lady rd have followed rily by Among the ie China station the fifth cruiser the third destroyer flc and gunboats of the angtse and West | River flotilla, together with subm vines, attendint ships, a mine sweej (Contifued on Page 5, Column 1) bi &k the fighting units are six squadr t vessels of eight of By the Associated Press CHICAGO, January of rock which mor 50,000,000 vears ago formed the of the earth aave been received at the Field Museum According to the accepted scientific theory, t of the earth has been subjected to several titanic upheavals specimens 1 fifteen | gince jt first appeared, and vast sec- | tions of it forced to the surface. The specimens were collected along coast of Labrador and Newfcund- wd In Greenland Ly Dr. James u H. . Martens, at Cornell Uni irstructor in geology ersity, who represented the museum’s department of geology on the recent Rawson-MacMillan-Field | Museum expedition. | Many of the 579 specimens were ob tained from places never before re- | ported on geologically, and are en- | tirely new to mugeums. Of more than usual interest are the Labradorites obtained near Nain Labrador. A piece of Labradorite flashes almost every color on the spectrum, the Government $72,965 which will be paid within the next couple of weeks, as soon as the Department of Justice has re- { ported on the title. i from Beiieve 25 Fishermen Perished. MARIUPOL, Ukrainia, January 26 (). —Twenty-five \ fishermen, carried out to sea on a huge cake of ice, are believed to have perished, no trace of them having been found by searching icebreakers. the Series “If Youth But Knew” Which Begins on Page 30 of Today’s Star TOMATOES ON TREES. LONDON, January 26 (#).—Toma- toes growing on trees like dwarf ap- ples were a novelty for visitors at the first exhibition. this vear by the Royal Horticultural Society. The trees are about 4 feet high and luok like f tic orange trees. Each tree bearsf some 70 little tomatoes, growing sojclosely together that they seem to fi high cones. The tree tomato a lighter color than the ordinary Romato and its taste is sweeter. T\ Louis Untermeyer, whose son commit- ted suicide at Yale today, is a noted poet, lecturer, critic and author. He was formerly vice president of the Untermeyer-Robbins and Charles Kel. ler & Co. of Newark, N. J., but resign. ed all business connections in 1923 to devote his time to literary work. Mrs. Louls Untermeyer is the for mer Jean Starr of Zanesville, Ohio. She is a poetess and author. { Radio. Programs—Page 21 may be that of Pliny the Elder, who died at Bacoli in 79 B.C., while com- mander of the Tyrrhenian fleet. Other experts, however, doubt this because the tomb apparently had been re- opened at some later period and re decorated in the style of the second century A.D. Bacoli is but a short distance from the historic city of Misenum, where a vast naval harbor was constructed by Agrippa in order to_serve as a haven for the Roman flest on the Tyrrhenian coast. < -