Evening Star Newspaper, August 23, 1927, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RIES OF RADICALS KIN STIR FRIENDS Women Become Hystericalj as News of Executions Is Broken to Them. Br the Associated Press, | BOSTON, August 23.—Mrs. Rose | Sacco, who had attended her husband | constantly during the seven years he | was charged with murder and who made an eleventh-hour appeal in per- | son to Gov. Alvan T. Fuller vester- | closely sheltered in the | apartment where she | last night with Mi zetti, sister of Bartholome » house was barred to r hut it was g ‘hered that med: tention was necessary to quiet the two women after they were notified | by telephone of the executions this morning. Dr. Edith Jackson of New | Haven, Conn.. spent most of the night there. The apartment they occupied 18 owned by Miss Wedgewood, head | of the child hygiene division of the foston Health Department, and an other public service nurse. The residential district of Bea econ Hill had long since been quiet | and sleepy when suddenly residents | were alarmed by piercing shrieks | which echosd up the narrow street | The telephone message had been re ecived. The cries were renewed | little later when members of the Sacco-Vanzetti defente committee ar- | rived to tell of the execution. Resi- | dents of the street mpent a sleepless ht from then on. | “uneral plans were not vet formu lated this morning. One member of | the citizens' national committee for Nacco and Vanzetti explained the situ- | «tion this morning by saying: “Up to | the last minute last night we had | hope and so had talked little of the funerals. After the executions we were too weary to consider anything.” | Vanzetti was believed to have ex- | pressed a desire to be buried in his | wife of THE _EVENING THEIR PLEAS FAIL TO SAVE KINSFOLK Miss Luigia Vanzetti, sister of Bartolomeo Vanzettie, and Mrs. Rose Sacco, Nicola Sacco, who made an eleventh hour, but unsuccessful appeal to Fuller to save the men from the electric_chair. This picture was made as men left the prison in Boston after visiting the condemned men for the last time. native land, Ttaly. | Tha bodies rested this morninz at | REGIMENT WILL GUARD the Northern Mortuary, only a few | awny from the house where the | relatives of the men were re- | g from the shock of the exe- cutlons. | HURRICANE NEAR FLORIDA. JAC “). al A. J. Mitchell, in charge of the | weather bureau, said that the east of Jacksonville today, traveling 400 miles a day in a northerly direc- tion. On the face of incomplete data, he said. he did not believe it would touch Jacksonville. Vessels along the Atlantic coast north of latitude 28 have been warned. At 10 p.m. last night the hurr(clm’i tvn:;a centered near latitude 27, longi- ude Good Taste Distinguishes This Lifetime Dining Suite Ten Pieces Complete, $265 U. S. Property and League Palace | By - SONVILLE, Fla., August 23 | P ihe Associated Pro {As a precautionary measure against Weat Indian hurricane was south and | the possible renewal of Sacco-Vanzetti riots, and ' considerable here last night, a regiment of mi composed of three battalions tod: ceived orders to be ready for service at a moment’s notice. Swiss federal army thus the ci mobilized. This latter body is a kind of citizens' vigilance organization composed of volunteers sworn to help in the maintenance of public order in time of civil strife. The damage to the League of Na- | tions Palace today proved to be more extensive than at first had been esti- mated, windows in the library as well as in other halls being demolished by the mob which sought to invade the building. Windows of shops and agencies having American affiliation were smashed and American-made automobiles were damaged. Especial arrangements to protect the League of Nations building to- night_were made during the day. ing the manifestations last night ole, ' Socialist member of the of the BUILDINGS AT GENEVA to Be Protected From Sacco Sympathizers. GENEVA, Switzerland, August 23, which cost the life of one man property damage “ana editor The regiment forms part of the STAR, WASHINGTON, DEBT SOLUTIONS HIT BY DAWES AID st v Joseph S. Davis Tells Wil-| Yea liamstown Institute U. S. Forced Settlements. Degc! By the Associated Press. WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass.. —The United States used its legs position and economic power to force war debt settlements which fall short of commending themselves as a whole to allied and neutral countries as fair, reasonable, wise or even politic, d clared Joseph S. Davis, economic ad- viser to the Dawes commission, hefore the round table of the Institute of Pol- itics today. As the allied powers did in the c of the Versailles treaty and as Ger- many’s reparation creditors also did for several years, he said, the United States arrogated to itself the right to be the final judge of what was just and expedient. As a result, according | to Mr. Davis, it Is extremely likely that adjustments in the debt settle- ments will have to be made just as they were in the two former instances. By far the larger part of our in- vestments are now in countries like (wnada, France, Germany and Ja- pan,” he declared, “which are in no danger of becoming political or ecy | nomic vassals of the United States. Our foreign investments may involve oc- {casional clashes of interest, but such need not lead to a clash of ' to other exercise of force.” Additional credit for the farmer cited as the only remedy for the problem by B. W. Kil- chairman of the board of trus: of the American Cotton Growers' | A. N | of the M AUSUSL| g e Associated P Judge Webster was one of the State. attorneys we! called thought they case properly. marked by guage. Outside the cou has been active i | tions and has mw interest in sport h2 was capta lege base ball In tory over Harvar has bheen an for many ter, not far County town of was born, on Ju At Dartmouth cluded Samuel governor of Ms him to the Super John A. Aiken, chief j perior Court. Exc He held that turning farmers from | the production of one crop to another, temporarily profitable, provided no | answer. a1k no solution of the farm | problein.” he said, “to shift the are: |of distress from the corn belt to the | | South and back again, or from West | to East.” 1 A world conference of political ex- | perts and economists to consider | means of avolding disturbances to | world trade and international cur- rency relationships must be called sooner or later, said Dr. Peter P. Reinhold, German minister of finance in former Chancellor Luther’s cabi- net, before the round table of the institute today. The lever which may lift such a conference into being may very posei- bly be a snag in the transfer of Ge: man reparation payments, Dr. Rein- hold_believed. “The question of transfer will in | the future be extremely difficult, and | I believe that the authors of the Dawes plan were perfectly aware of these difficulties in the future and therefore made the determination that As a | Judge " is | for may trial and therea many threats of Judge Trayer saying: “Tonight we have manifested and the troops |say out indignation against ignoble Gov. ice.” ailable are in addition to hich has been de a & Closed all day Saturdays during August A DINING Room Suite of Early English in- fluence, with semi-clesed china and good size buffet. Ten finely made pieces, with four side chairs and two armchairs upholstered in a good-looking tapestry. The table has a very ccnvenient disappearing extension leaf and linen chest is very roomy. An cxceptional value this month. MAYER & CO. Seventh Street ¢URNITURE CAugyst Sale~ etime_ furniture Between D and E under contingent circumstances the German payments should cease,” he said terse that period he mouth nine to its first base ball vic- D. €. TUESDAY, JUDGE THAYER G ‘ FOR WATCHFULNESS IN COURT| rs Old. isions. Thayer e -V of Executed Pair 70 Language in His of the Mas sachusetts Superior Court, even before he presided at the anzetti trial, Presided at Trial, \ding jurists in the | fulness in the courtroom. to orde re not « His and v rtre n f naint . which m J atern rd. In la rdent golfer. s has been in Wore: from the Blackstor ly 7, 185 his el W. Me( for who | He served on the Worces |aldermen, and although a Republican | vate contractor. now he was the Democratic - of Worcester in 1894 In the course of the Sacco- he has received fter death. is small ined a sachusetts appointed ench in 1917, and | later | stice of the Massachusetts One of h I bers of the Athelstan Lodge, A. Chief Justice Arthur P. RUSE | have no use for them in a week or so | Fla achusetts Supreme Cour e was noted for his watch- Often he r when he onducting a sions were igorous lan udge Thayer nal orsan litelong began when three the yea Dar ars he His home ter Wore: wher ter e he mates 1, who in became fellow mem- | Were offered for & | ma of nominee nzetti in stature, el of the Dartmouth Col- | - team for with piloted forehead. has appear is deeply lined. MAIL PLANES TO BE SOLD New e after air mail route, that between New York and Chic; ATGUST AINS FAME Ni ® | now being used in the air mail service | Sealed proposals will be received for the planes and will be opened at noon | Atlanta eptember an h. JUDGE WEBSTER THAYER. 99 20, 167 5 'HOWARD PAUL BAYLY |SECOND SACCO PLEA EXPIRES ON TRAIN MADE BY A. F. L. HEAD | Censulting and Construction Engi-| William Green Wires Governor neer Will Be Interred in Urging Commutation of Rock Creek Cemetery. Death Sentence. Howard Paul Bayly, 41 sonsulting and construction engineer, Zovmerly of Washington, died yester- ing on a train hound for | t Virginia from Richmo where he had lived for some time. The f neral was held this morning from 1| | residence. 4202 Augusta avenue, Rich. The body will be brought here | red in Rock Creek Cemetcry tomor v morning at 11 o'cloc! Rev, D. L. tinyder of Emery M. E. Chuich officiating. | Mr. Bayly. n native Washingtonian s ‘educated in the public schools | re, graduating from Technical High | {eSchool and later taking a_degree in engineering at George Washington | | University. During the World War one of the engineers in charge | construction of Camp Lee and | late was with the Du Ponts. In 1914 he married Miss Alice Dur- | ritt of this city, a classmate at George Washington University. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Richmond and of the Ma- | these men. Because of this state of sonic order there. He was also affili-|mind they plead for the triumph of | ated with various engineering asso- | justice and mercy over legal techni- iations. calities. He is survived by his widow and| *\While the personalities of Sacco adopted son, Howard {and Vanzetti may mean little, faith . in Richmond and the | in the integrity of our courts and in | His mother, M1, |the -instrumentalities of government | Charles B. Bayly; and five sisters, |is of transcendent importance. The | Mrs, Stewart ¥. Blassingham, Mrs. | success of government depends upon Clinton Gurnee, Mrs. Glen B. De Witt, | the confidence which | Miss Mary Howard Bayly and Miss | manifests Margaret Bayly. tions. = | "I urge you to commute the sen- : : tences of Sacco and Vanzettl to life Admits He's Murder Suspect. |5 ies B olr " that time may be EVANSVILLE, Ind., August 23 (). | given the opportunity to develop facts James Goodman, 34, of Lagrange,|which may establish their guilt or yesters 3 ay as a suspect | innocence. in a safe robbery, admitted to Chief | of Detectives Ed Sutheimer last night 8 that he is wanted in Atlanta, Ga., on Reunited After 43 Years. 5o, is turned over to u pri- an indictment charging the murder of | CAMDEN, Ark. August 27.—Afier | Bert Donaldson, investigator for So-|having lived within 100 miles of each licitor General John A. Boykin of the |other—a fact unknown to them—a judicial circuit. ~Donaldson | brother and sister who had not met s murdered in an Atlanta hotel in|in 43 years have been reunited her nes were sold at auction in June, at . 1926, after he is believed to have | They are John Ledbetter, 64, of Dod- es ranging from $5,285 to $7.000 | worked up a case against a group of . and Mrs. S. V. Merritt, 79, of h ‘alleged swindlers operating in Atlanta By the Associated Press. A last-minute appeab to Gov. Fuller £ tt vears old, | commute sterday by William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor. In a telegram Mr. Green reiterated his vequest for clemency made on August § and said that, “while the personalities of Sacco and Vanzettl may mean little, faith in the integrity of our courts and in the instru- mentalities of government is of transcendent importance.” Ir. Green's message read: “In behalf of millions of working men and women affiliated with the American Federation of Labor 1 make one last appeal to you to commute the death sentence imposed upon Sacco and Vanzetti. These working- men and women for whom 1 speak re loyal to our Government and have faith in American institutions, but they are troubled and in doubt re- garding the guilt or innocence of hair surmounting a high | Since several illnesses he d rather frail and his face gray o oo o B. Asks Bids on Nine Rebuilt De Haviland Machines. ine rebuilt De Haviland airplanes its citizenship in governmental institu- ale toda New bec: by Post- v Genera use he will the last Government-operated | 13. Twenty-six air mail | w As cooling as a summer rain! “We avoid hot, heavy dishes these summer days. Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are our standbys. They’re so light and crisp, so deliciously flavored! As refreshing as a summer-time shower!” Kellogg’s do help you to keep cool — to feel your finest. They are always easy to digest. And so refreshingly good — more than 11,000,000 people demand them daily. Serve them with milk or cream. Extra delicious and healthful with ripe fruits or honey added. Have them for breakfast, lunch—for the kiddies’ evening meal. Order them at hotéls and restau- rants. On diners. Sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Always oven-fresh in the inner-sealed red-and-green package. Imitations cannot equal such wonder- flavor. Demand the genuine. 9 CORN FLAKES family size c now 15¢ Now 10

Other pages from this issue: