Evening Star Newspaper, November 17, 1927, Page 17

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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. 0., THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 17. TTENDS WEDDING OF PRINCESS AND DUKE. In a colorful ceremon ncess Aune of Fr: , daughter of the Duke of Guise, pretender to the F at Naples, Ital, The duke and his bride are shown here leading the royal weddin ule. S BUILD AMP JURIST JOYS IS ROUND OF GOLF. Among several members of 1 the Supreme Court who find recreation on the golf course is Justice { ven Devanier. The jurist is shown here at a sand box on.the Chevy Club cou s. Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. S LIFE FOR LION CLO! aeis one of the coilection of still and moving pictures of w i rned after five months’ hunti ome narrow ttended by the Sp was married to the Duke o from the palace to the Chur Wide World P! nternational britliance taking other photos of d life in Africa brought back by Frede 2 with camera and gun. Thi ihe collection. s feeding on the carcass of ton, Ohio, business Mr. ick B. Pat. night flashlight was taken wi a opyright by P. & A AMBASSADOR'S SON A) D) DAUGHTER ARRIVE. greeting his son, Paul, jr., and his daughter, Mile. arrived at New York on the Ile de France to Mme. Claudel sailed on a later boat for the United Underwood & Underwood. LE Pzul Claudel, the ker chair is big enough to hold all the mem council of the Miami Elks. It will be the se, where he puts in some of the leisure hours of his of the Elks’ convention there. CHAIR FOR CONVENTION. s of the executive throne of the king and qu r med to be the world" e Claudel, as th UTAH IS8 “BLISTERFL ST SUBMARINES. The big naught Utah is shown here in dry dock at Boston, where “blisters being applied to her hull as protection against submarines and mines. The curi bulging effect of the lower hull is caused by the new “blister” armor plates. Herbert Photos. MELLEN, RHEAD o s, O NEWHAVEN DS O G-dieur | By the Aseociated Press. | PHILADELPHIA. Novembor 17 i i | The wedding of Nathan T. Folwell, Former Railroad President] e oo™ Sl tnave, and- Miss | Bertha Walther, daughter of a for- Had Colorful Career as mer business associate, scheduled | for this week, has been infefinitely : | postponed because of the death yes Aide to Morgan. terdny of Mr. Folwell's grand- daughter, Katrina Folwell. Miss Walther, whose home is in By the Asseciated Press. Erie, Pa. many years younger CONCORD, N. H.. November | than her fiance. Mellen, formerly president | e = been retired from active ilroad | | work for some titn | i | | Charles Sanger Mellen iined na- Says Boston Courts and Gov. Smith | tional prominence railroad offi- | i Sia? 1h 1963 when the Pierpont | Have Both Vindicated Morgan brought him back from the | 5 West after rehabilitating the North- Him. fic to repeat his success with | Saying ot s welfe. the New York, New Haven & Hart US CONDUCTS OWN DEFENSE AT CINCINNATI MURDER TRIAL. A courtroom scene during the trial of George Remus for the Remus is scated third from the right, while Charles P. Taft, 2d, son of Chief Justice Taft, is standing to address the court as prosecuting attorne, Copyright by P. & A. Photos. st i fora Railroad By the Associated Press. | As the fic, Mr. ribed as little better than ross the prairie” to i s AN e ov. Smith between them are all that | I Mass., August 16, |§s necessary for the Republicahs to i H asa1, at 18, chose a $25 prove their case.” The statement fol W | A month clerkship with the Northern Tows: ampshire Railroad in prefer 2 ence to college. He climbed rapidly e general superin | campaign T spoke’ of the g oston and Lowell | inercializ joined | Connty, in which were engaged lead-" Democratic orj he de show that “the courts and opmel In my speeches during the last SRS com- | the Union Pacifie system rose from g purc general traffic panager. In ew Yor sland Rail- { cated my charges by convicting 2 m its general |men. All of them pleaded guilty. In ston. {other words, the case against them | W York Haven and | was either %o strong that they felt it |, . deeming Mr. Mellen too pow- { was idle to contend or they feared be aligned oeeeded to bid him away from | pose traiis which would ineriminate | ing ton post and ni vice-president. In his first | “Thig condition was common knowi- | had once e eonncetion with the New Haven h"‘ for years, but continued un to have cost the life of J was trumental in forcing the W | checked by the county officials.: The ! hushand of Mme. York Central to give a larger division | offenders remained unpunished until | mer Metropolitan oy on husiness exchanged . ‘the Federal authorities were able to} ept his au Influential stockholders of the New | | b} Central od the ear of J. Pierpont Mot and caused him to take a dislike to the young official. | Jeeling that a man in a mere $12900 {{hat [ prophesied ‘that in his (Go Job could not afford to incur the il i <mith's) message this year there will | will powerful banker, Mr. Mellen he a yecommenda new tax Atr, Morgan personally and [ Togayin an inspired interview the banker | from Albany, Gov. Smith is credited | with indicating that the State budget d v the Boston courts vindi- | ARsooiated Hréen, attempt to save valu tie was have now proved the v which he had fled ment before was thought likely that though | belicve 1 build up the North-{ wijl call for an increase of was Mr. Mellen helihis vear and that he will recommend | Meliish were in_the 1 the fire started oline tax. Gov. Smith himself | Vel ab St er " charges | tinguishers proy Droved another of ‘my ChAFE®t | of 1o Llaze, Meliih orde W in 1903 Mr. Morgan 'he -courts, ‘and ‘Gov.” Smith be-| from the structure and hat was said |tween them, are all that is necessary | {2 the “raitroad. Mr. | for the Republicans to prove their arr cade with the i case, n coincided with a peried | Wall Street was thinking only | < of millions. len was indicted in_ connec 1 deal for his efforts in block rs in the West in the railroad | —_— e | His wife, whe i of the youngest Ame | have justified the New Haven's out | given a leading ro | vide investments in the benefit that!tan, was prostrate | would have accrued to New Kngland!on Riverside drive Zion with the plan of the Grand Trunk to | e ? { through successful consolidation. Me| The flam vade New England with a competin; s arel e e L e oy | Asserted that Mr. Morgan a few | vear.old warehor str e e S o Ak ation | months before died was about to | proximately 800 automobiles charged with con; in violation | motor boats: stc ¢, pmt Mr, | finance the New Haven’s require wmed | Ments with a stock issue to have been | | | vestig: ome *of the Sherman anti-try Mellen said he voluntarily Nty of the indictment to | Underwritten at $120 a share. : an, whose health had Since his retirement from active | ¢ { business Mr. Mellen made his home at Concord, N. H., and had a country tate at Stockbridge, Mass. ion revealed, by the responsib shield Mr. M end Mr. Mellen said he w, ud 1o be calied “Morgan’s man,” veed that the banke e e law in New Haven af Tihel suits totaling $430,000 have| More t further insisted that but | been filed following t nker's death time would ! election in New, s.wn'wueg JARussia in the pagt year, put up for the Winter. | ot I and word ——— = an 69,000 1 dor the FIVE-FOOT SHELF OF PATRIOTISM AYOR THOMPSON d of the Northern Pach | npw YORK, November 17.—Col.! Mellen performed _something i e miracte i building up the | Theodore Roosevelt issued a statement | ‘ Western line in six years from what | yesterday asserting that recent devel- | | . an “two ! | ' PLANNED BY M D00 FIRE wint 1nctuae Declaration of Independence, Lincoln’s Letter to Mrs. Bixby and Constitution. gambiine in Aany | J. A, Mellish Believed Killed | | Taxes as Leading to Eco- )a: nomic Danger. nization of 35 He Dashes Back Into Blazing Warehouse. By the Associated P co-operation 1@ world peace. | By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November { odical reduction of rates and increas ! taxes indicate that the railroads of the | country are drifting back to the pre | war state which brought deve of stagnation, ot of the Chicago . said last night the annual dinner foot shelf of Ameri sm to be issued | inism to be issued |, | Foundation to- day was the answer of Mayor Thomp- son to further testimony of pro-Britis inst it with a|that a Federal prosecution might ex-, NEW YORK, Novembe and the Latin him sec- | gthers of the Democratic organization. | in the flaming building from which he 1ped was belicved to 4l of South Amer ward Russell pment “old friend, Charlie Rus- | ce with me.” They shook hands in hearty greet omobile with a loss of more than st seen vester as he dashed back into the w tempting to b sell, face to | Northwestern R Mr. Russell said that in June, 1918 e were in the United States * i epresentative: d that if an imp of the railronds constituted a basis for reducing rates, then economy { ge pcy in operation will avail he railroads nothing. One of the barometers pointing to a | | tendency on the part of the { revert to the policy that pre | fore the war. he said, was the desire | of some persons to repeal that section | jon_act which “di- ate Commerce Conr fix just and reasonable © ‘as near as In some quarters it of Willlam superintendent, truck by falling timber or debris wandered aimlessly about the cit e Marshal Brophy Mellish died in the flan Henry M. Hyndman, English t England delil iblic to ailed be- 0,000,000 | ONly @ few persons in dispute to get the United State: able mood, the as one of the ions in the world, hoard today | of the transpor rects the Inter: In his addre a member, the mended teaching the ideals expres ngs as well as instruc- ing the word: force of high-powered salesmen d to sell memberships Foundation. will canvas Chicago and selling member- ships at $10 each, §1 of which will be their commission, In return for his $10 each member “five-foot shelf of Americanism”—coples of the Declara- tion of Independence, Washington’s farewell address, letter to Monroe Lincoln’s letter to Mrs. Bixby, a Lincoln biography and the Gettysburg address. of the work ex- plained by Murphy 'will be a staff of which was re ed all hands perintendent jed with them Outside, employes said rates which will prodi may be’.a fair return. By this repeal, he said, the commis- sion would be encouraged to fix rates that will not guarantee a fair return. Tl “In only one year have the railroads as a whole earned what the commis- sion has defined as a fair return,” he said, “and the Western group of roads has never approached if son to London during | tion in memor | No one knew why he retu achieved fam Will be employe: Two Schools of Thought. aganda meth- in the Metropoli-| Outlining British' proj | These men at her apartment | schools of thought, one which smpletely swept the 70. | Prevent se, and destroyed np- s to bring the United States back into the imperial fold 1id that soon after he reached ilson's envoy, called to tell me his will be sent the ed in the building The blaze resultéd, a prelimin the Constitu- alling tools igniting ofl in - the | Harry Britton 8 “ockpit of a motor boat. The hoat was | dearest wish was to bring about.some | Menish's private craft and was being | kind Monroe Doctrine, has returned tes and the mothe —Eugland.” The speaker said heard an_echo of that' a_week ago tio receiving sets 1t spirited | were sent from this country to Soviet' Milwaukee, ‘Rpenkers werml the desivabllity of LS classes in citizenship at factorles and "ber of the National Academy of Medi By Jas | Chatham, V | gen | the Confederacy on the first ballot | He became 2 |at | tohe i Mrs. Oscar | zuin Ga.. was elected first vice | daughter of 1 dent general; Mrs. P. H. P. Lane | Allen of St. Lou Road Official Raps Increased 2 e an e BODY OFLOWBARD By 17. bow! ing in Oklahoma today brought a | assistant attorney geners ¥ the Associated Pr Sumday Shootin N AY FROM TALY OKLAHOMA CITY. November Prospects of being limited to and arrows for Sunday hunt- orm of protest from nimrods. | Composer, Author and Diplo- e ™ ferre sine. | Mat, Who Died Recently, 1. that | " : of a gun on Sunday was : Was Friend of Wilson. I S turned the hunters from the field to 1ech of law books | Berry explained that firing a gun | on Sunday constitutes disturbance The Body of Louic Lombard, 68 | of the peace and therefore violates | Years old, widely known composer, a State statnte author and diplomat. a former resident of Washington, w lialy, November 1, will arrive in New TO HEAD U. D. C. died in Genoa, be brought immediately 1o this it was learned to Funeral arrangements will be completed after the arrival here. He was American deputy consul general from 1914 to | Mrs. W. C. N. Merchant Elected 1920 p 3 M= Lombard was a close friend of President General at Session | the Jate Prosident Wilkon. It ie un- , | derstood that he made several trips in Charleston. to Europe in a private capacity for President Wilson. Mr. Lombard maintained a residence in Switzerland. \, S Jovember | Born in Lyon, France, he was edu- W. €. N. Merchan of | cated in the national conservatories . was elected president | of eille and Paris and at the neral of the United Daughters of | Columbia Law School, New York Cit aturalized American citl- a1l convention here. | zen October . 1886. He was married ckenzie of Monte« | in 1899 to Miss Alice Maud Allen, spresentative Thomas the Associ "HARLE the ann | pres - |of Philudelphia was re-elected Becana Had Many Honors. Yo il A e Mr. Lombard had founded many in- L stitutions. was honored by various e g societies and served as delegate to and ) |important international scientific con I tar ner, Richmond, V 1 om ion ‘on W . *hi rec dec! the mul ille, of 1 ient in the afternoon for social|Jondon Societe des Amteuers. jawarded the Mollie Daffan cup, pre: {in memory of her mother, to the child | ; who performed the mos! f service to a Confeder widow of a Confederate angel” to an impoverished veteran and | his wife, carrying to them material | 4 comforts and endeavoring to ease theii| I Uin Congre of the Zonta Clubs were outlined in a jmember of the R radio_address broadcast here and in | committee in 1917; chairman of the 16 other cities Tuesday as a feature ; Santa Barbar: of the club’s organization week. The |cises in . 1916; instructor in the jmesage was broadcast between 7 and | 7:30 o'clock. © p leo School of the Army and Navy U. §. Surgeon Back From Peru. | S Surg. Bolivar *J. Lloyd of Unitéd States Public Health Service, |the 3736 Kanawha street, from Lima,, Peru, where he. was a|ods delegate to the Eighth Pan-American Sanitary Conference. Dr. Lloyd was elected secretary of. name ’ taken “from ' the Indian word S the | meaning trustwort business and profession: b e { vention: e Lou Gordon White of | e was the founder and former di- e ‘was chosen corresponding | (60" 0F (G [ieh T Yo Sontervay retary general. Mrs. B. A. Blen- {00005 was chairman of the treasurer Ee€N-|y\yoriq (‘ongress of Music Teachers in 1; Mrs. John L. Wo lhur\'. Louis- | (hicago in 18 was a former presi- Kd.. historian gefieral. and MTS. | gont of the artistic committee and d C. Kolman, New Orleans, regis- | was a founder and director of the In- general. ternational Theat Society, con- mination of reports of a score | (inine"'s) leading opera houses in cpresentative national officials and | 11 and South Amerien. He was a imittee chairmen occupled the ses- | mompber of the Authors” Guild, New 0 of the United Danghters of the | york AManuscript Soclety, Society of nfederacy vesterday before adjourn- | avte Sciences and Letters and the With i Affairs {the King of Italy. he was one of.the ) e ’f"f Miss Mary Vaughan of Clarksville, | rounders of® the Lugano Italian Hos- al con member of that chapter of the ! pita). idven of the Confederacy. w Delegate at Lisbon. He was a delegate to the Fifteenth International. Congress of Medicine at bon in 1906; was delegate to the e toran or | Sixth International Congress of Crim- e eteran OF | inal Anthropology; a_delegate to the > ; International Congress of Inebriety at ! London in 1910; was the sole delegate from North and South America to ted this year by Miss Katie Daffan, unselfish act ipient of the cup was a “guardian Among his { tions of a Musi “Observa S testhl . tions of Bachelor,’ 97: “The Art ZONTA cLUB 'DEALS | Melodiou: He also was the com i |)msvr of “Juliet,” comic opera; irhlinnlrn * grand opera, and miscel he purpose, ideals and significance | laneous’ compositions. He served as a ed Cross finance lining years. “Observa alif., patriotic exer- women's encampments, National Serv- tarted in Buffalo in 1919, with a | League. the objects of o It as ontlined were to encourage | F18yground Attendance Gains. high ideals and honest business meth- | Special Dispatch to The Star and high ethical standards in LYNCHBURG, Va.. November 17.— 0 stimulate | The municipal playgrounds here dur- desire of each member to be of [ing the month of October drew an service; to' promote good fellowship | aggregate. of 45,058 peopl » the conference and was made a mem-|and to quicken the interest of each |tendance. at the mumlell sadiog member. in the welfare of her com-!being 19,986 This showed an increase 06 8,423 over last yeag. 4 Rity.

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