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MONDAY. BRUARY 14, 192 SCORE INJURED AS GEORGIA TRAIN CRASI of a passenger f 3 ; i ap i PAULINA FACES CAMERA BRIGADE AS BIRTHDAY ARRIVES. The little daughter of the Speals training camp to I’hilm;-‘l'phia {ur :-is Imul“\\‘lilh Imnu;‘(- ) ( of the House and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth'celebrates her second hday today by accommodati who won the heavyweight title then, said he was *(h . ® - rrardg e et b R sresilen travel because the motor fumes made him ill. The cham F "“"U_-‘ of cameramen with a pose for her nh'ur_e The much: nhut'l)iu:ap hed little uul ..,_'." ,," '.{' change of mind, however, for here he is land again at | late President Roosevelt is held by her mother, while the cameras click wd out a few fee Camp Lewis, Wash. orid Photos of films for the movies. v Underwood & Underw THROUGH TRESTLE. A view of the recent wreck . which erashed through a trestle bridze near Dem when the I d one coach went had a narrow escape when it stopped on the brink of Copyright by P. & A. Photos. the smashed trestle. STARTING ON A LONG JOB. Assistant Secretary of War Hanford MacNider turns to the task of personally signing 35,000 letters to members of the 2d Division Association, of which he is president, urging them to attend the organization’s convention here in June. chieftain, who is shown with his son by another marriage, recently He hopes to conclude the job in two weeks by working in “‘off hour: figured with the princess in an insurrectionary episode. Henry Miller. Copyright by P. & A. Photos, JOLO CHIEFTAIN AND BRIDE CAPTURED. Datu Tahil, Jolo chieftain of the l‘l\lll&)pim’s. who took for the fourth wife of his harem Princess Tarhata Kiram, former University of Illinois co-ed. The INTRODUCK THE MECHANICAL DANCE. After catching the Blue, first inspiration from a visit to an automobile factory, the three Marmien baseman of the Detroit Tygers, “lofts” ofie with his trusty bat in a sisters conceived this “dance of machinery.” They are shown here in freak golf match at Los Angeles with Charles Guest, California golf pro, the weird costumes in which they will go through the “mechanical” who used the regulation clubs. It wasn't revealed who kept score, but steps at a symphony concert in New York next week. Acme Photos. at the eighteenth hole they were even up. Wide World Photos. ; sxzgon T [ CT JOENRY Eor o o 16D GO Stay, Say Doctors By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, Febuary 14.—The i | MKLPOVERBODY ot Revtce foot milmes Special T h to The Star. BOSTON, February 14.—Declaring that the financial outlay of from 3 ,000,000 to $7,000,000 for transporta- | tion of 25,000 persons to its 19 vention in Paris has I r v ts of George E. M: Amer! Legion here e | CHICAGO, February 14-—Four | Corpse Removed From Public | %" five Yive {1 iead over the world in the exporc | GeOrge E. Marsters, Inc., Ac- - trade to Russia. third _annual n, which current operating yvear, Americi | opened today sent $17,000,000 worth of manu- & of Same Name. s i forgotten how vention Pact. g e, S S ix about $1,000,000 greater than for | 5 ac themselve k for 80 per the same period last year. - seociate ros cent of th st ivor ; England third, and Poland fourth. Mentical names and similarity of cir- | with hoofs instead of feet if pres- } s §4 ; )t\ » i ' oumstances surrounding their deaths | ent tendencie inue, they said. ; r‘ . p ‘ . W ..(‘J x E Cemetery May Be Man tes who are attending 2 4 y e . ; ey : : e oorra istarof owe | “cused of Breaking Con= 2 tactured goods to Russia, which to nd therelo have .only § ving foot troubles, : i A 2 b e . Germany was a close second, e o chiropodists said. 9 < 3 Bk ’ UTICA, N. Y., February 14.—Almost The year 2000 will find people raised the question today whether the | Women I‘h'\v 6-inch heels body exhumed from & pauper’s grave | eventu wil Sicer here and now on the way to Berkeley, that n Calif., as the remains of I George )} Hillegas of that city is the body of | have developed into something : - ; g X Dr. Hillegas or the body of a one-time resident of St. Johnsville, N Fred C. Peterson, an attorney rep- | resenting California heirs, and authori- tles here identified the body as that of Dr. George Hillegas. On hearing that the identification might have been in- eorrect, William J. Hayes, one of the attorneys, preparing to distribute the | $150,000 Hillegas estate to three heirs | tn Oakland, Calif., said he and his asso clates had talked with relatives of t St. Johnsville George Hillegas: spelled his name with two s's learned definitely that he graduate is and of the 1 He was a surgec a member of the faculty t University of California. He disap peared from Berkeley in 1913 In 1925 he was picked up by the police in the railroad station here and held rge of vagraney. After a mo hospital he went to St. Johr Dr. Wagner. On | Kken ill again and dicd friends or anspives that Hillega St Johnsville w mitted to the 1e Tospital herc ont e physician buried. PLAYFUL BLOW FATAL. Dies of Lock Being HICKMA ned that lock) valoping e 1 " Wednesday night Nevada Ex-Governor Dead OAKLAND, Calif Frank Bell Nevada, and for tl of the Nevada St died yesterday. 1ie Toronte, Canada. « ¢ resembling a hoof, doctors said, KILLS PHYSICIAN ATEREALDDES | Father Held Doctor Respon- | sible for Death of Son From Diptheria. ~Frank d he had tasper S, Pendola, phys cian to Caruso’s 6-year-old son, who died vesterday of diphthe wnd for whose death the father regarded the doctor responsible. De. Pendola, who administered an | imti-toxin anjection on his first visit had heen two weeks Caruso told police Dr. Pendola ar ed yesterday two hours atter the I's’ death and liughed when told child was dead Inother on Staten Island, to o was held as a mate- Three children wer Lospital for contagious sendota was found | cked furniture the re. He was choked | and stabbed to death. King of Sweden in Berlin. BERLIN, February 14 (). —K iustav of Sweden spent vesterday in Betlin. 1le entertained at dinner the Swedish Jegation President | Hindenburg and the President’s n and daughterindaw, after which departed for Rome to meet Queen | > roval couple will then | oceed to the Riviera N Motor bus routes in the United | ates now cover a greater mileage than railroa ich he fled after the killing yes- | EMBASSY YOUNGSTERS GIVE DIPLOMATIC BIRTHDAY PARTY. Junior members of the di are entertained at a birthday party at the Mexican embassy by Amelia and Manuel Tellez, chil diplomatic youngsters attended the party in their native costumes. lomatic corps and the official set of the Capital iren of the Mexican b: Copyright by Many of the nderwood & Underwood. NEW PRAYER BOOK PROVES BEST SELLER Fiction Relegated to Baok Shelves as Demand in England Grows. ed Pre ary 14—The new Common Prayer,” recom- d by the bishops of the Chunch been by far the Fiction and other books have been relegated a back shelf in book shops hand the paper-covered cight-hy-five pages of the bishops' proposals at half a crown (about 60 | ! | cents). Groaning presses, disregarding Saturday, was the first physician | T o { called in the case, although the child | the eight-hour Jaw, have been unable ct the demands. Women have the chief buyers, bie orders for the hook are coming in from various parts of the world, and in one instance an order from | America was made by th ew wire: ruso was arrested at the home | i R less telephone. Prayer book revision was the sub- ject of numerous sermons vesterd: While ndly and favorably re- céived generally, the I lance and the L of 1 Church their cam- paign against the proposed changes by s a mass meeting to air their views, " EXECUTE RAIL WRECKERS. Mexican Federal Forces Put Four to Death. MEXICO CITY, February 14 (#).— | Four men captured while destroying the tra of the Torreon-Durango Railway were executed after the fed- erals had forced them to repair the | damage done. The rebel band of which the prison. ers were members attempted to res- cue them and in the ensulng encoun- ter the rebel leader was killed. >rotestant Al al | Suspect Held in Oregon Mail Robbery Tells How He Escaped by Joining Posse By the Associated Press. Dostar AnnouBIAE Ak CARREL ToE R MANILA, February 14.—The story | arrest “That fellow looks like you,” & mail of his life as one of the most hunted | ;i remarked to the fugitive, point- fugitives In the world was related o |ing to the photograph on the poster. Army and postal authorities here by | “Sure does,” De Autremont said he Hugh De Autremont, ‘under arrest as | replied. one of the trio of brothers who killed | The prisoner asserted that he had four men during the attempted rob-|been inspired to a life of crime by bery of a train near Ashland, Oreg., |the story of Jesse James. He added more than three years ago. that he was an atheist. He told of how, on one occasion, he! De Autremont was arrested at Los joined a posse that was hunting him | Banos ral days ago while serving and his brothers, Ray and Roy De|as a private in the 31st Infantry under Autremont. the name of James C. Price. Records “We'll hang them if we catch them,” | show that he enlisted in Chicago in the prisoner quoted a member of the | April, 192 posse as having said, to which De| “I guess you got me. I'm your Autremont said he replied: ““We sure | man,” he told arresting officers as he will."” was taken into custody. Present plans On another occasion, De Autremont | call for the prisoner’s return to the related, he went into the post office | United States today on the transport at San Francisco and there saw a ! Thomas, YOUTHS ARE CRIMINALS. ITALIAN PRINCE DIES. Survey Shows Half in Downtown | Giuseppe Lanze di Trabia Had Chicago Land in Courts. Notable Career. CHICAGO, February 14 (P).—Crim-| PALERMO, Ttaly, February 14 (). inal careers await almost half the|{—Prince Giuseppe Lanza di Trabia, youths who grow up in the environ- | diplomat, parliamentarian and scion ment of Chicago’s downtown district, [ of one of the oldest of Italian nobil- with 443 of every 1,000 landing in the | ity, died here yesterday. lle was 38 courts, Prof. Lrnest W. Burgess of | years old. the University of Chicago r- A lawyer by profession, he was day after completing a scientific elected to Parliament in 1919 when vey of youthful crime conditions in | only 31 years old. g Chicago’s various living centers. Prince Lanza served previously as Prof. Burgess' survev included only attache of the embassy in Vienna and youths between the ages of 11 and 17. | London and was secretary to Vittorio Orlondo, one of the “big four” at the Spaniards Halt Tangier Parley. P’aris peace conference. PARIS, February 14 ().—Spain's | delegates to the Franco-Spanish con- Brooks Adams Is Dead. ference on Tangier today asked for| BOSTON, February 14 (P).— Brooks 24 hours more in which to put thelr | Adams, 78, a grandson of President claims in writing. Consequently the [John Quincy Adams, retired lawger first official meeting was postponed [ and author of books on economic and until tomorrow, commerclal subjects, died yesterday. SPAIN’S FINEST SHIP REACHES NEW YORK 16,000-Ton Liner Alphonso XIII, Too Large for Company Dock, Brings Count de Guell. By the Associated Press. Alphonso XI1I, 16.000-ton liner of the | Royal Spanish Mail Line, and said the most ex- pensively and most elaborately equip- ped ship in the world, arrived yester- day from Spain on her maiden voyage Being too large for the company’s pier in the East River, she docked at the pler of the Navi- gazione Generale North River. Among the passengers was Count de Guell, grandes of Spain and di- rector of the Royal Spanish Mail Line, who said that the line would estab- lish a 5l3-day service between New York and Vigo, Spain, to be opened 2 The Alphonso XIII and the the same line will to this port. Count de Guell also said that “in King Olfonso would come to the United States in 1928, after visiting Cuba and Mexico. FIVE-DAY W| Forecast by Morrision at Dinner to Typographical Head. NEW YORK, February 14 (#).— Advent of the five-day week for or- ganized labor in the not distant fu- ture was predicted | Frank Morrison, American Federation of Labor, at a of Charles P. lHow- ident of the Inter- graphical Union. under the auspices ssive Club, an organiza- aphical workers, EEK SEEN. last night by dinner in hom ard of Chicaj national Tyj | sought to enjoin-the tourist agency from_advert he name | or phraseology ¥ | as d. 99 of 100 Prescriptions Are “Bootlegging,” Says Medi- cal Association Head. By the Associated Pres HICAGO, February 14.—More than “ninety-nine out of one hundred prescriptions written for a pint of whisky are bottlegging prescriptions and are a disgrace to the great medi- cal profession,” said Dr. Arthur Dean Bevan, chairman of the American Medical Association, which is meet- ing_here today. “From the standpoint of personal hygiene and public health, legislation has never been passed that has such possibilities for good as has the pro- hibition amendment,” he sald, add- ing that the Government’s provision which permits a physician to write 100-pint whisky prescriptions a quar- ter and to obtain 12 pints of whisky and 5 gallo of alcohol a year for office use was too liberal. “Previous to the time of the Vol stead act gemeral practice never pre- scribed 100 pints of whisky in three months. T have practiced medicine for many vears and in my work since prohibition has been in force I have never prescribed whisky except to a patient with delirium tremens. Dr. Bevan also attacked di n of fees and “some expert witnesses who give partisan testimony for pay Overemphasis on the subject-mat- ter of medicine without cultivation of the spirit of inquiry and research is an outstanding danger of medica education in universities tod id Dr. Franklin C. MtLean of U of Chicago. T Vo American to Head Soviet Project. MOSCOW, February 14 (#).—Col. | Hugh L. Cooper, American authori: on power projects, will be designated chief consulting engineer to the | Soviet authorities in the construction of the $60,000,000 hydroelectric plant on the Dnieper River, in the Ukraine. It is stated that he will receive the highest fee ever paid a technical ex- pert by the Soviet government. . et Hawalian soil is entirely volcanic lava, made in the | equity sess 1perior Court by Robert A. Adams, ad- vocate, with Leo M. Harlow and Francis J. Goode, former department commande: mes A. Donovan of Lawrence, tment judge ad- vocate, as associated counsel. It was set forth by the Legion that {it had chartered 9 ships for the rance, had advertised exten- ad made plans for the e excursion of its kind The bill decl d that the plaintift was given the sole right to use the name, the American Legion, by act of Congress and that its emblem, appearing en t%e but- ton, was patented. It further recited that at -~ meet- {ing of representatives travel |agencies in New York last May the | Legion explained its plan to handle jall transportation and housing ac- commodations for the convention and that it was voted by the meeting to give the Legion complete co-opera- tion. The defendant was represente: at the meeting and made no objec- tion, it was . The Legion now charges that Marsters, which has offices in Boston and New York, has advertised a tour to coincide with the Paris conven- tion, using the emblem, the name and the slogans of the American Legion. The Legion asks a permanent in- junction all of these and |damages for resulting loss from the violation of the agreement.® {MRS. J. K. ARMSBY KILLED. Husband Also Critically Hurt in Auto Accident. S, Calif., Febri . Jeffery K. Armsb; of J. K. Armsby, wealthy Call- fornia fruit packer. was killedd and her | husband was ¢ red when the automobile he driving on the State highway newr here yester- day s ed @ rned Until hor recent riage Mrs. Jane Russell W. Va., steel Former Steel Magnate Dies. PITTSE Yebruary 14 (#).—~ James How Dacis, 74, Pittsburgh philanthropist and former vics presi- At of the Crucible Steel Co. of Amer. i, died at Augusta, Ga., yester