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PROSECUTOR CALLS STEPHENSON AIDE Speaking of Prominent Womon Dis Debated THE EVENING Prohibition cuss the Topic. ation’s Most Interviewed by ZOE BECKLEY. (Copyright. 1923, by Custodian of Former Klan Head's Documents to Be Nearly half a century of campaign- | ¥ {ing for 'is- rights and h ;.||»\“v'f~‘4‘»(‘ Questloned Today. ‘u_u.mv-n' hhs convinced Mrs. Carrie apman Catt of the wisdom of | prohibition law | "It there were no other results of | prohibition,” says Mrs. Catt, “than {10 show a state of things we did not know existed I would support it The war draft amazed the country Klan lead- by its showup of illiteracy. The dry slesale | 1aw has shown up immorality. We a In- {learned during mobilization that . was to | erormous precentage of the bovs were hefe Prosecutor | subnormal mentally and that the aver . Remy for questioning |age person’s intelligence in the United y States is that of a 14-year-old prosecutor a photo- | “Now we look around us and an alleged agreement in the light of prdhibition the gen henson and Claude M. |erally low standard of the public's of Indianapolis | morals. We observe that most It was pur-|our friends are on the fring ported to be Worley's promise to let | criminality. For that whit shenson, who life priso- | amounts to—to break and to aid State prison, select ibet others in breaking a members of the police force in return | statute.” for nce he might give Worley Tl white-haired general in bringing about his appointment sufirage forces was not a 1 At the same time Hill said he had | totaler. She became one 40 years ago given an_ Indianapolis newspaper 32 |aiter watching others drink —at different doc cks and agree. | Parties and not liking the results n setwween his cllent cenerPAiTsct and and city officials i = The Times printed what GRitilenis was Bie & photostatic against murder i : t rava e | ways be Leopolds. Loebs G ephensan #ave 19| Grays, but that the majority ¥ O aeptember 12 [educated and guided by lex ore the indorse- | "l the law be enforced pletely 2" “Never “att. “The "hou Shalt the Ascociated Press INDIANAPOLIS who as an attorney n has heen s the fc Tuly 12.—TLloyd O. for D. ( lian of Aocu H Ste. 1 custe Ku Klux wh lares wi po I corr in diana pol e called Williar sometime Hill g static copy between Ste Worley, detectives ption s exist ties in recent vea now inspector it ind now is a ertain assist nforcement. that, despite there will Snyders county napolis purported te check ickson it Jackson Prosecutor Remy, who has main- tained silence since ‘the newest devel- | opme declined today say just | what he expected to get from Hill While he he could obtain the documents given the newspaper through duces tecum and withe court er he would not say would be his procedure. Special assistants to the prosecutol ex the opinion that the called evidence should be placed in the hands of the authorities. M laws our and can be slation r o 2 com- 1 replied Mrs oldest Taw in history ot Kill,” vet there are | Killers. Most of us, however, do not kil We have come to see it is| \\Vflll: There are ates where peo- have come to see that it is harm- to darink and the law has made wrong. “I have just come back from south- ern California. San Diego is a clean | city, but across the border in Tia | Juana American capital has establish- ed places where gambling, drinking | |and every other vice flourishes. i tecently a_vote was taken to de cide whether 6 o'clock should remain | the closing hour. I am happy to say [the vote was in favor of keeping 6 lock the dead line. |~ “You may argue that morality can- not be successfully imposed from —— | without. This may be true in grown- | s g up countries. But we are a_youns et log el o o8 w| | nation. a nation ot chilaren. P ohibi Srifor . b imselt | tion has lifted the curtain upon tha o pver to Loth himsell| ¢t "Children have to be corrected Frea Reed, who lives near Gaithers. | DY forbidding. We must have thou- Burg. and was questioned for more | Shalt-nots for a century or two. yet. than two hours vesterday in conmec- tion with the Mills case, was about the courthouse today, taking the the- ory of the authorities that he might be connected with the affair as a joke. | He said tha: he had established an | alibi by no less than eight people a to where he was at the time of the murder. Lieut. from the « perfectly,” i ressed so- REWARD OFFERED FOR MILLS’ SLAYER: DESCRIPTION GIVEN ntinued from First »d by Mrs. vate investiga his Against Modification. As for any modification in the shaltnot” of the Volstead law, | wys Mrs, Catt with emphasis. | How wonld wines and bee | distributed>” she asks. “Who shall | | manufacture them? Who shall sell | | them? How shall they be regulated | |and controlled? How shall the depots be inspected to find out what per- | centages of alcohol are heing used? | “Advocates of modification say they | do not want the saloon back. But of | | course they do want it bac 3 | may point to the ‘Quebec But there are as many people who de- re this system has been a dead | ilure as there are who declare pro- be Manning has been absent urthouse all morning, pre- | sumably running down new informa- tion. Mr. Manning, howeter, evi- denced some undisguised disgust at | the status of the case early this morn- ing, contending that he had wasted | considerable time talking to x!f'r<on~\“ = merely hecause some one else said | () they might know something of value. | [ H7¢ @5 there are tate’s Attorney Peter left the ses-| "t LlGple think out and estab | glon of the ~ounty commissioners to | jish a workable plan that can control | make public announcement of theepa et S AR Y eale of these | Posting of the reward, and he stated |peverages, they should not try to| that it was more than possible that |ywenken the law ag we have it.> North American Newspaper Alliance. | ni | T thou; Al vights reserved.) rohibition,” says ‘Miss one of the first women of prominence | in the United States to take a public | stard against the eighteenth amend ment, “is another of those infamous censorships that will ultimately a spineless nation of us If we are constantly what we must think say and feel and drink andeat wear, we shall in time become incapable of individual thought mollyeodles and nitwits protective, but they allow of no self ed ttion or wholesome evolution 1 hope I make it plain that I am opposed to prohibition? Miss Blizabetlt did make it plain sitting there her smiling and e decisiveness, like aqueen of fanciful matriarchate, her canes Tike pte at her The reasog [ flout prohibition because I am for decency, order and zoes on this energetic is a4 play broker by day the furious Forties of New ind by night a social butterfly her-own ind humorous hion “I resent ates 1 law ind do and nd weles wetion bhe L should tial that Acentara is lady, who down i York 1fter massive Naughty Children. of the wholesale United like know citizens ing treated naughty children who do not how to behave. 1 resent the smug way prohibitionists, sincere though they may be, shut their eves to what their legis'ation has done. ‘P'rogress has been Jong way by it. My good friend Fan- @ Hurst says if a law is passed, it is wrong to let it make fools and crimi- | nals of us: that we should be s ronger than the law and either repeal it or bow to it and make the ;m\.u.m denial it calls for. 1 say \\hr‘l\ it infringes on my rights as a freeborn American it is not up to me to leave my work and fight it. It is| up to those who perpetrated the law | to admit it is stupid and withdraw it.” | When its advocates say that prohibi- | tion has not received a fair trial, Miss | Marbury 10Ws symptoms of boredom We have had nearly eight years,” | answers, “of prohibition. How | must we go on, and grin and | its consequence | sot she long bear, Law's Effect on Labor, “The reason prohibition cannot be enforced is that so few persons want it enforced. Bootleggery is s common that the purveyor of illicit liquor has hecome, in the words of Senator Reed, | powertul and respected.’ The sig- icance is in that last word!" “What do you reply to the assertion that the dry law has increased the efficiency of labor?’ “A man I know,” Miss Marbury said, “reproached me for opposing the dry law. He asked if I didn't realize how much prohibition had helped the | workingman? I told him I was anti-prohibition not solely because I had been tended in infancy by a wet-nurse, but because | ht the employer of labor had.no | more right to his alcoholic beverages | than the workingman. ““You are looking, I told him, to your own profits when you rejoice that the dry iaw has deprived the toiler of his | beer. Whatever benefit prohibition is | to the laboring man is through the closing of saloons, and no one is advo- cating their return—although spea! easies do as much harm as the saloon. | “A workingman is perfectly cap- | | able of learning moderation, and it Marbury, | to be told by | not | law is no such sacred thing. | LINDBERH T0 VISIT - TECIIES INPLANE Washmgton on Natlon Wide Itinerary of Tour to Boost Aviation. make | | By the Associated Press NE'V YORK, July 12 Every § {in the Union ana 75 files will be vis [ited by Col. Chartes A will leave heve St Lindbergh, who in Wis monoplane Spivit Louls on a tour under the genheim Aeronautics, night Col Lindbergh 20, and between end of the month to vislt various and Syracuse, N thvee months W the | the 1 Was announced ug of last s ple Fund for it here July and the i for him elties Wi feave it date ks pla New Bt \ elhow | mnbide v Mhe vemainder Iinerary mnounced s ( Between August | “levelund, Pittshurgh ton, Chnelnnati wolis, Dotroit and St Louky Between August 16 and cities, Moline, Davenport land. Miwauke Twin Citles, St Paual and Minneapolis Little Falls and Favgo, N bl Sioux City and Dex Moine:, foaa, Qmial ind Denver Between Se and August 16 W heeling, Day Loubny e, Indian CGrand Kapids, Chicago B The trl ind - Rock Madison, Wis., btember 1 and 15 nne, Salt Lake City, Bolse Spokane, Seattle and Povtland | Between September 16 and 30 San Francisco, Oakland, Saeramento, Reno, Los Angeles, San Diego, Tue son, El Paso, Fort Worth, Dallas, | | OKklahoma City and Tulsa Between October 1 | Rock, Memphis, Nashville, Bir ham, Jackson, New Orleans, .J ville, Atlanta, Spartanburg Salem and Richmond Between October 16 and 20 more, Atlantic City, Washington, mington, Philadelphia and New City Cliny Rutte nd 15 Little Ming “kson Winston Balti Wil York Will Have Personal Ai Short stops will be Pa.; Springfield, IL.; Sioux Falls, 8, D. and Abilene, Tex. The tour is being made to promote popular interest in aeronautics, those in charge of administering the announced. Arrangements for a reception at each of the cities to be visited have been made with the respective may- ors. Tt is planned to have Col. Lind- bergh speak to large representative audiences with the intention of build- ing up support of air mail, establish- ment of airports and increasing gen- eral interest in aviation. Col. Lindberg will be accompanied by a Department of Commerce ai; | pTane which will carry Donald E. Key- | hoe of the Commerce ]lt‘p.nrtmmvl who will act as Col. Lindberg's per. | sonal aide. THAYER SEES. ADVISERS IN SACCO CASE PROBE Presiding Justice at Trial Ts Closet- ed With Trio Aiding Gov. Fuller on Action. made at St. Joseph, Lordsburg, N Erie Mo.; M., rund By the Associated Prese ! STAR, WASHINGTON, | Colum’a 8.€ i | D. C., TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1927. Chicago Bootleg Ring Uses Horses To Avoid Suspicion By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 12.—The slower but surer method of delivering liquor in horse-drawn vehicles is he- ing employed by bootleggers in the Chicago district. raid on a farm near the city vesulted in the seizure of two horses, ‘which an assistant district attorney todwy told Judge Adam C. CIiff of Federal District Court were being used for delivery purposes hecause they were less conspicuous than automobiles. The Government sought to have the animals con- demned and disposed of as ¥Fed eral property. Ieeding the animals, the judge was told, until action against their owners is disposed of, would cost more than they would bring at auc- tion. THE WEATHER | District of Columbia and Maryland | nerally fair and slightly warmer |tonight and tomorrow, increasing | local thundershowers to: | morrow afterncon or night | Virginia—Generally fair and slight- | IV warmer in north portion tonight; | tomorrow partly cloudy, local thunder: | showers tomorrow afterncon or night West Virginia — Generally fair, warmer in east portion tonight partly cloudy with loc thundershowers | Rec | Thermometar 1 | SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at_and_Salings From New York. ARRIVED YESTERDAY. | Arable—Antwern ... Sevthia—Liverpaol Huron—Turks _ Taland . San Lorenzo—San Juan Celtie—Liverpool American Farmer—TLondon.’...." Ecuador—San 'Francisco. - .. .. Minnetonka—TLondon Rochambeau—Havra N Juan—La Guavra: . Elisa— Valna —San_Juan DUE TODAY ampton | Pon: Maiestic—Son Orizaba—Havs 2 | Conte Rosso—Naples. | DUE TOMORROY. President Harding—Bremer | inlandsan Frapiach’ ristanal ~Colon—-Bilbao | Piris—Havrs e DUE THURSDA President Harrison—World cruise. —Port | Limon t Vietoria—Hermiiia ilvia—St. John's 3 Yoro—Kizsts openhagn, tterdam tuania—Danzig DUE SATURDAY, Muenchen—Bremen ........... DUE SUNDAY. JULY 1 altie—Queenstown and Liverpool DUE MONDAY. JULY 18, Leviathan—Southamoton and Cher- Jourk - Z American Merchant— Carmania—Havre 1 | Cristobal—Cristobal Minnekah Lendon Transylvania—Glasgow JULY 16. nidon morrow ° for 21 Hours. DUTGOING STEAMERS, pm. 81: 8 pm.,| SAILING TODAY. 4 a.m., 66; 8 n.m., | Ancon—Port au Prince to - Washington-—plymouth. DCherbours. Hambiire SAILING TOMORROW Lara—T.a Guayra. Pue 76: 12 midnight, 71 72: noon, 85 Barometer—4 pm., 30.05 30.06; 12 midnight, 30.10: 4 a.m., 30,09; § a.m., 30.11; noon, 30.10 | Highest temperature, 87, 2:45 pm. yesterda Lowest tempe 500 w.m. tor Southampton occurred at ure, 66 occurred at W York—Cherbourx, Hambui | Brazilian Prince—Buenos Aires. Fort_St. George—Bermuda. Lewis_ Luckenbach—Cana | E g Trinidad | |3 Southampton Tide Tables. | (Ifurnished by United States and Geodetic Survey.) wia 1 vday—Low tide, 12:06 a.m. and|Olancho—] | 12:58 p.m.; hightide, 5:36 a.m. and 6:26 | pom. Tomorrow 1:44 pm.; high T4 pam The Sun and Moon. Sun rose 4:51 a.m.; sun sets Coast to Cortez. THURSDAY. JULY 14. Low tide, 12:51 a.m.and tide, 644 @.m. and ‘n~hhlm;l othenburg. | Monrerey—Havana | = Tampic | Reusillon—Vigo and Bordeaux. San Lorenzo—San Juan. SAILING FRIDAY. Progreso, Today- 5 pm. Tomorrow- sets, 7:34 p.m. Moon rises, 5:55 p.m.; sets, 2:44 a.m. Automobile lamps to be lighted one- half hour after sunset. Condition o the Water. Temperature and condition of the water at Great Falls at § am.—Tem- perature, condition, clear. Poton and Shenandoah clear this a.m. Weather in Various Cities. wTemperature JULY 15. Sun rises, 4:52 a.m.; sun istohal Colon—C | Rochambeau—Ha; Plymouth — London. unna. Gilon 4 Colombia. SAILING SATURDAY. JULY 16. President _Harding—Plymouth, and_Bremen. A Seythia—Queenstown and_Liverpool. ris—Plymouth and Havre Volendam—Plymouth. terdam “_Cherbourg_and_Southampton Providence—FPonta - Delgada, Funchal Naples Caledonia—Maoville and Glasgow. Minnetonka—London. Celtie—Queenstown and Liverpool. Orizaba—Havana. Ponce—San Juan Huro | Eeuador—Puerto | -, Pacific Coast. Rivers 8 U 1 asey Bsomory Heure | Stations. Weather. Colombia, Cristobal ,,.n“ v supioIsas Waualy g Cwegol we tevideo and Buenos Aires. Silvia—Halifax and St. John's. | Fort, Vietoria—Rermuda Marea—Puerto Barrios. Clondy Pt.cloudy i ¢ loudy Abilene Ihany SAILING TUESDAY. JULY 19. Lituania—Covenhagen and_Danzig. | Conte Rosso—Nanles and Genoa oo v | SAILING WEDNESDAY. JULY 20. Chicazo | Cuncinnati Cleveland Caibo: o Denve Detro Cloudy “uly July July July Cherbourg | o Cabello and Mara- and George: Kingston. Cristobal and Port Limon Zone and Pacific lvmouth. Cherbourg and Bremen Vera Cruz and Taiti—St. Thomas, St. Crotx and Martinique. | and Bilbao. | ing Cherbourg and Antwerp. Bolivar—Cape Haitien, Cartagena and Puerto | | Cherbours. e | | | | Bouiogne and Rot- | —Puerto Piata and San Domingo City Pastores—Havana, Cristobal and Port Limon Pan-American—Rio de Janeiro, Santos, Mon- . Kingston and Puerto Co. San Juan—San Juan. La Guayra and Mara- ting of three 3 SON OF IRISH COUNT ROWS PUT TWO MEN AMONG 10 HELD IN presesadhin MURDERwAND BABY IN HOSPITAL Police Claim Husband Threw Ax at Wife and Hit Child Dur- ing Quarrel. (Continued from First Page.) ' | 1lernor general, came to pay his last ? | respects, | Bowing his head over the bier, the | governor was met by the trembling | 1} {and weeping widow. whom he em.| 2 braced and sought to console im her distress, | Attacks and fights last ni vesterday afternoon sent two n 18-month-old baby reatment. Samuel vears old, 15 1 tace badly batte to hospita C. Jeffers et northeast President Heads Procession. Huge, reverent crowds watched the @ |transfer of the hody to the Mansion | police at North (| ind T str House, most of the women dressed in |9 o'clock last r e was ta black and many weeping. All heads |Gallinger Hospit o were bared as the cortege passed into |lice he had be the temporary death chamber. A civic | fied men. guard of 100 men was stationed out- | Inez 1 side the building. of James President William T. Cosgrave was | 1621 B stre at the head of this mournful proces- |to Casualty ion. He was followed by the gov-|alleged by the rnor general and the members of the | hurled at her government and both chambers of the | during a fan Dail Eireann, hild upen the head The state funeral will be on similar | wound. The father lines as those accorded Arthur Griffith | old, is bein and Michael Collins in 1922. ninth pre N O'HIGGINS NOT HEIR. higan avenue in a fight wit Taylor, 2 road, ye |and Newton | vester was treated tal and a charge of terred against Taylo & Mi De Valera Attorney Here Denies He Was O'Conner Beneficiary. Declaring he understood that Gen. Rory O'Conner had left his property to his brothers, John F. Finerty, who said he is the Washington attorney | for Bamonn de Valera, denied today that Kevin O'Higgins, assassinated | Irish Free State vice president, had | been named beneficiary in O'Conner’s | will., | State Challenges One of Four in Finerty letter _dated lin , from Ernest Panel Presented by Defense Proud, Dublin’ s tor, which was written to rmmu-.:.m\ a .u.;n.r Jtory_clreu lating at_th U] By the Associated Press ime, he said, in “the British and pro- | "BENTON, Ils., Julv British_press.” Relating that Proud | mes coonitionsiiy acted as solicitor for Gen. O'Con- | giate and defense ner’s brother in winding up the es- | pirger Art tate, the letter continued: | Southern “As an act of justice to the dead, |, der of Aaye e I feel bound to state that the smn.‘,".',',"',li:"ffm,,"M,‘r‘\'\; ,}"’l"‘ L ment (in so far as it relates to the gen- | ;" tadious efforts to select a eral's property and not to responsibili- | “'p C0IONS FEORC IO SHECE 8 dur ty for his death) is completely and | .giorday the defense had characteristically false. He did not | JEUSIGaY, (he defense had p leave any of his property of any sort | & hane! s to Mr. O'Higgins or any other Free | e Sipetandl tin today chall SetiniHlaer | of the four, on the ground the death pen was unfavorable t | The State's attorney BIRGER HEARING DRAGS. WITH 2 JURORS CHOSEN exhibited a October 21, de Vi D and | | as Acceptable. 12.-~With \ceepted by the trial of Cha Newman and Ray H Illinois gangsters, for two the nd, the of and court ite for que Roy . M that Mass for O'Higgins Here. A solemn requiem mass will be cel- | question the others. ebrated at 11 o'clock_tomorrow morn- | = St. Patrick’s Church for Kevin | S ——n—m——— ins, the late Vice President of | BOOKS WANTED h ‘ree ate, who was as Al Kinds—Any Quantity in Dublin Sunday. KELLOGG SENDS CONDOLENCES. BRING THEM IN Or Phone Franklin 51166154 BIG BOOK SHOP—¢.; G at O'Hig: | the Tr sassinated Secretary Cables Message on Irish Vice President’s Death. By the Associated Press. Secretary Kellogg cabled condolences on the death of Kevin O'Higgins to- | day to President Cosgrove of the | Executive Council of the Irish Free | State: \ “I desire to express my heartfelt' condolence on the tragic death of Mr. Kevin O'Higgins, vice president and foreign minister of the Free State and delegate to the Geneva naval confer- ence,” the Secretary’s message said. and and A combination dirigible and airplane that will cross the Atlantic in 60 hours is being planned by an American in- ventor. L ’ Portable houses, consi: rooms and bath that c.n be erected by ‘lhrep men in eight hours, have ap- | peared in this country. The Knowing Mother Will Have No Other BOSTON, July 12.—Judge Webster | s~ e . who presided at the trial of Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti and who sentenced them to death for | Il 1 P: s Galveston” | Helena Dr. Benjamin C. Perry of Bethesd: In time, Mrs. Catt confidently pre- | {he mones mon S y of , 01 sted of chairman of the board, might have a | dicts, the law will bo enforced in the | wra spent ts' eduenie. wnohnc iton public statement to make on the Mills | entire country as it is now in many luse of alcohol and the evils of mis. case on behalf of the board before ad- | States. Tiise, swe wouin nive tries maoirmie: Clouds i) | Journment this afternoon. | “When we grow up mentally,’ It became known today that a war- | how she puts it, ““we will be moral rant actually was issued Sunday after-| She shakes a dubious head at the noon for a man hitherto unmentioned | question, “Can we become a_moder- in the Mills murder, charging this | ate, wine-drinking nation like France? man with murder, but that for some - unknown reason the warrant has The Younger Generation. “I don’t think s0,” she answers. Dever been served. Closely questioned about the issu-| “We didn't start out that way. In| @nce of this warrant, State’s Attorney | Europe they have drunk wine for hun- Peter said that to his knowledge, if | dreds of vears, because the water was | the warrant actually was made out,|bad and because there was not much it was for the purpose of obtaining |to eat. A flagon of thin, sour wine some one for questioning purposes | made a toiler’s black bread and cheese | only more palatable. Wine was cheap. In == America it was expensive. Hard | liquors were more available.” About the younger generation’s re- action to all the yammer about drink, | Mrs. Catt is reserved. “I talk with mothers.” she says, “and without exception those of the | better class discount the hullabaloo | regarding the menace to youth| through prohibition. | FONSTRTE FOR ANY | “When 1 was a girl we loved to e aher than miseil | shock our elders, and I don't think | SO0 | human psychology has changed! Now- | adays youngsters flourish the hip flask in defiance. “Prohibition came at an unfortunate time—a period when the cheap auto- | mobile was just appearing and jazz % |was on the way! If prohibition had not come, now we would be in a far worse situation than we ar PECIAL NOTICE. 1A ULL OR PART L ANT TO HA o OR FROM YA BOSTON. POINTS DELI SPE e other than my- 218 Prosvect ave. hills contracted b #elf. F. W. HARVEY. W TW HE_RESPONSIBLE . FOR | by any person other than ATGe 118 Btk . se i ND MODERN Sred: refinished and AT FINISHING € RNITUR! hotctered. - RIGHE: Finisher from Grand , 18 | and—happier one: What does this forthright think of the assertion that should be suppressed because hol is a narcotic poison? The Future Generation. .00k here,” said Miss Elizabeth, “so are lots of medicines, Aconite, iodine, strychnine—too much of any of these will kill.” “It is argued,” we suggested, “that benefi of prohibition will be seen in the next gene ion.” “Rubbish? Miss Marbury’s soprano rang out over the garden beneath | her windows, and over the busy East | River as it scuttled under Queens- | boro Bridge. Rubbish! Look at crime statistics. Look at the wild creatures of the younger generation. I tell you it will make us a race of weaklings, “What we need is a little old-fash- ioned hardening and simplicity. Teach people, instruct children—and then let them work out a sturdy code of life. lady liquor ale Ty own view is that this whole | subject of prohibition should be re- | turned by Congress to the various States, and that each State should have the responsibility and the right to settle it according to the needs, temperament and will of its people.” Ravids. Mich. Col. 6264. PAPERHANGING TN 7. | tering at Summer r;nrm (,all MI‘ ROBII B s T DEATHS REACH 300; | Bt e e SHRINES DAMAGED | Paine vrices reasonable v6" ST hin | ROOFING—bY Koons (Continued from First Page.) \blish Slag Roofing, Tinning. ' Repairs. Roof Painting. Thorough, sincere work al- | ways assured. Well gladly estimate. up! 5040 Georsi ave. n looked upon as sacred for many cen- | | turies, was badly cracked. But only 8-W. one death is recorded in the city | proper, that of a servant at Govern- | ment House. Twelve persons are L.nu\\n to have been injured. The escape of the, inhabitants of | Jerusalem seems largely due to the | fact that the shock was not severe | enough to bring down the compara- | tively solid buildings of the city, al-| 33 fh st though cracked walls and ruined in- | teriors are numerous. Nevertheless, A TLLION-DOLLAR | the auake caused intense alarm and | the people thronged the streets and “"""" Difnt equioped to handle e%ery | remained there for a long time, fear- o ot gputer 3o e 1 P |ing to return to their homes. The National Capital Press ™%, %G tie ‘eapital, the loss of life 210-1213 D _ST. N.W. P M"\ undoubtedly was greater owing to T NEVER '”N"P"'“ | the flimsy construction of many dwell- BYRON S. ADAMS ings which rnl]u,:w;l upon mni;u;. befol ¢ were able tc i mpfilfi.{}%\lgy i b e e e Bethany, crumbled, and it is feared | Je. fmt not izl priced. there were many victims, %17t Nt | kY ST vlvlrl xR | Outlying Places Hard Hit. ST MORTGAGE SERIAL BONDS. | 1rnofficial reports say that Nablus, SOTIAR R D near the site of the ancient Samaritan | v civen conter of Shechum, suffered severely with 62 persons killed and about 250 | | injured. | Ramleh, Es Salt, Amman, Ramal- o 160 0t (he lama | 1ah and Berzeit are among the places Columbia. that said | reported 1o have many houses down ereby called for redemption and | with resulting casualties. The col-| PO e B Smite Company” | lapse of a hotel in Jericho killed th Washington. D €. of all| Indian women visitors. Four children | Lo hay B oguistanding | \were killed when a house fell at us all accried’ interest | Mount of Olives and five women lost | e o M "aay 3¢ | their lives at Ain Karim, the modern | Call us KOON Furniture Repairing. CPROLSTERING. CHATR, CANFING, PORCH ROCKERS ~PKI\T'T Will Send timator. Ph one Franklin 7483, LAY ARMSTRONG. Roofing 119 3d St. NO compans. <« of ccurdti vt orpora’ Distr sonds from said an. Gme “t of 1 s covered 1167100 inclusive. P28, o inclusive. mataring Jan 131 10 405 maturing Jan- inclusive, 515, inclusive. maturing Jan- 1 caid honds. Dot o ex-| to tradition, was| ds ified to present said Jerusalem were the post office, the | 815 Fitteenth Street N.W.. Wash- e Wl e e cand | And the Hebrew University. So much ISR e high commissioner, Lord Plumer, tomb of the Savior, the Holy | " Beclesiastical records are that dur- " tantine, & C ELBERT ANADAL | and that Constantine's Itercst o said “6th day o e i Stater Pedt | name of the place, where, according John' the Baptist pterest thereon. if any be | be \ All Nolders of said | born. s | Among the buildings damaged in is ea"Conmans hereon ag “the 5 B A, SR WhM | Zionist Executive Building, the! n the said 26th day ‘of July. | Church Missionary Society’s School they will be paid. that time. the inter- | damage was done to the interior of | Government House, residence of the maturing Jan- | that it is declared to be unsafe. On a site regarded as that of the | Sepulchre Church was consecrated in 336 A.D. 1585. inclusive. maturiog Jan ;Hl).‘ excavations in the reign of Con SMITH_BUILDING. INC., the tomb of the Savior was ANADALE. | discovered T T mother undertook a pilgrimage to . Jerusalem, where she found the cross | of Christ. Hordes of Persians vandals swooped down on the Holy City in the seventh century and destroyed the church buildings, which were rebuilt only to meet the same fate again, 300 yvears later, at the hands of the Moslems. Alterations were made to the church during the succeeding 600 years, after it had been partially restored, and in 1719 most of the shrine was recon- structed In 1808 the wrought into Holy ch Sepulchre was a ed_ruin, when | fire leveled the church buildings. With | the of Greeks and Ar- edifice was built in fin | menians, 11810, The dilapidated dome was restored by architects of various nationalities in 1868, pursuant to an_agreement made with the Porte by France and Russia. FEAR FOR 9LD SHRINE. neial aid a new onas‘ery, Commissariat Concerned About Damage. felt at the Fran- in Brookland today, which is the commissariat of the Holy Lands, over what may be the fate of the foremost shrine of Chri tianity, the Church of the Holy Sepul- chre in Jerusalem, which press dis patches report has been seriously damaged b carthquake, No direct word has been received by Rev. John Forrest, prior of the Franciscan Mon- astery, but assurances were given that whatever the damages may be, they will be repaired as soon and as com- loiely as possible through voluntary contributions of the Catholic people in this country, The “smali Sepulchre, which from Washington will remember as towering over the main entrance and surmounting the Greek choir, is re- ported to have heen seriously crack- ed. The Holy Sepulchre itself is di- rectly under the “large dome,” which is directly in the rear of and lower than the “small dome.” Under this “small dome” stands a little white narble hemisphere in the midst of « rose work inlaid in the pavement. Defore it was known that the earth is round this little monu- ment marked what was believed to be the center of the world, This choir of the ceks is the great nave of the Iding of the Crusade Tandem Wedding. BROOKINGS, 8. Dak., July 11 (#) —Father and son were married on the same day when Fred and Parmenas Norton, 69 and 29, took brides at a inint eeremony here, Frane Grave concern i an Monastery of the Holy pilgrim-tourists dome" murder, today appeared before the | special advisory committee of the gov- | ernor, which is reviewing the case. | Judge Thayer had been criticized for rulings during the trial and was ac- cused of prejudice in afMdavits filed | recently. When he arrivel at the Statehouse | Assistant District Attorney Dudley P. Ranney, William G. Thompson, chief of defense counsel, and his associate, who had been closeted with Pri ident Lowell of Harvard, President Stratton of Technology and Judge Robart Grant, who compose the committee, left the room. The committee was appointed by Gov. Alvan T. Wuller to advise him, although he alone has the power to save the condemned radicals from the ectric chair the week of August 10 ORDER USE OF AMIESITE. D. C. Heads Employ New-Type Ma- terial in Street Paving. The resurfacing of Treasury place and East Executive avenue with amiesite, a new street paving mate- rial never before used in the District, 1s ordered today by the Commis- oners. The improvement of these two thor- oughfares was planned earlier in the vear, but delayed due to the recon- | struction of the roof of the White House. Havenner Store Robbed. Twenty-five fishing reels, numerous kodaks, razors, a_pis- tol and other property, valued at | $743.20, disappeared from the stock of the store of George C. Havenner, | 120 Good Hope road, Anacostia, last night. Thg merchant reported to the nolice tha® burglars who robbed the store gained entrance through a sky. light. it Biggest Bargains in Edgemoor, Md rods and 50 Offered considerably be- low the price for which they were built to se].l—n group ofwhollydetached Homes — on Montgomery Lane—one of the principal 1horou|zhfares in this exclu- sive suburh. 10,750 to *14,250 —With Special Terms— You'll like the plan— and the equipment — of every one of the different designs—and the construc- tion and finish are excep- tional. Spacious rooms, and big lots, prettily planted. for inspection day and evening cKEEVERMGOS Open Deal With a Realtor 1415 K Street. Main 4752 O WEHWIWHEWW The healthy Pt.cloudy | Cloudy | Cloudy 3 Pt.cloudy Clear . Foga Cloudy Pt.cloudy Cloudy Cloa Ptcloudy Kansas City Los_ Angeles. Lonisville ’AJQIIIIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllIlllllllllllllll ARGONNE 16th & Columbia Road Several very attractive apartments ranging in size from one room to four rooms, kitchen and bath. Okl Omaha Ehiulelihial | Phoenix l'um.u.wn or City. Francised Louis. Paul | attle Snokane WASH.. D.C 30.10 FOREIGN. reenwich time, today.) Temperature, Weather (8 am. Stations London. England Parix. France, Vientia. Austria. Copenhagen. _Denim Stockholm.' Sweden. Gilraltar, ' Spain Horta (Fayal). A7 Bermuda Porto Ric Cuba, ... Canal Zone!.. Service unexcelled and prices reasonable. ARGONN 16th & Columbia Road I An Undersized Home Is as Bad as an Undersized Shoe It affects the whole family and prevents you from getting your money’s worth for what it cost. SPREAD OUT—LIVE BETTER Go See THE MASTER HOMES In 14th STREET TERRACE WASHINGTON’S ONLY IN-TOWN SUBURB Over 400 Homes Sold Cloudy Clear Rain Clear Cloudy Colon. History's New Hero. CHICAGO, July 11 ¢®).JWashing- ton, Lincoln and Lindbergh! By order of Supt. William McAndrew, "princi- pals of Chicago schools will teach in the classrooms the lesson of the flying colonel’s patriotism, modesty and char- acter |||IIIINIIII!IIIIII!]IIIIIIIII|IIIIII||I|IIllllIIll|||IIIIIIIIIIIIINI||||III!IIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIlI Hamilton and Ingraham Streets Homes To Inspect Take Fourteenth and Colorado avenue car or drive out Si teenth street to Colorado avenue, then turn right two blocks to Ingraha street. Built by SHANNON.: & LUCH 1435 K St. NW. Main 2345 Members of the Operative Builders' Assoclation of the D, C. L OO0 CATTL condition of all the cows from which we obtain HEALTH RATING it we are extremely proud. This is another reason why the District Health Department has awarded Chestnut Farms Milk the hichest rating. Chestnut Zarms POTOMAC 4000 Pennsylvania Avenue at 26th St N.W. You Are Invited to Inspect Our ' Plant at Any Time 5 “The House with the Green Shutters” ~ INLAID LINOLEUM Here are color combinations to suit any decorative plan, the newest and most desirable designs, and a range of prices to meet the most modestly planned budget. from $150k~1-yfll CHICKRO SEAMLESS RUGS In the 9’ x 12/ mmm$30w $100% Charge cAccounts Comvemiently ofrranged nm.lormnmu AMw S P. M. DALLY; CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY Sloane Endorsed SMerchandiss Covrias ch-(m Seamless Wilton Rugs of the finnt quality are marked in 9'x12’ size