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12" - - THE EVENING STAR, WASHTNGTON; D. €. THURSDAY. TANUARY" 19, 1998, SLAYER OF CHILD SENTENGED TO LIFE Judge Regrets He Cannot Order Death—Solitary Con- ! finernent Ordered. Abe Martin Says: - ~ Br the Associated Pres FLINT, Mich., January 19.—A judge’s | wigorously expressed regret that he could not, under the law, impose a death sentence followed Adolph Hotel-y ling today on his journey to a lifer's| cell at the Marguette State Prison. Solitary confinement at hard labor for the rest of his life was the punish- ment Circuit Judg> Fred M. Brennan | decreed for Hotelling as the utmost| penalty the State could exact for the | kidnaping. slaying and mutilation of | $§-vear-oid Doro! The trial and sentencing took place here vesterday after Hotelling had been spirited into the city from the State reformatory at Ionia. The proceed- ings required a few minutes and | Hoteiling was started on | v his way to oveautomobile as | mob violence. This is th' second day o' th' trial o' Truman Kite, who wuz arrested in his home while bottlin a tubful o' gin Seven o th' eight women jurors water- ed at th' mouth, but none cried. Schneider. only olds out ther won't be a corner left loaf on. (Conyright, 1928) & precautior sl ' FALSE CREDI . “You appear to have no regrets.” | said Judge Brennan in passing sen- | T METHODS tence, aiter the defendant had ad-| DESCRIBED IN TRIAL mitted details of the assault and slay- | ing without show of emotion. “The Farm Hands Posed as Rich Planters det shown by this confession and the proof convince me that we should al punishment in this State. | c ntence of this court is that Prosecution Charges. you be confined in the Marquette p o (o branch prison in solitary confinement : " at hard labor for the balance of your COLUMBIA. S. C. January 19.—The e million-dollar conspiracy The prisoner made no response, and men and a woman charged with de- the judge shouted frauding the Intermediate Credit Bank confinement, for the restont voue il Damnement: [of Columbia, yesterday produced Gov derstand " The slaver nodded his head in ac- | Georgia farm hands were represented to knowledgment and the trial was over. be Beaufort Count: planters, worth A thousands of dollars, for the purpose of e, obtaining loans for the South Carolina As the stolid church deacon was Agricultural Credit Co. of Beaufort brought into the courtroom. Leslie | from the Federal bank here, Schneider, father of the child victim.| D. W. McDowell of Hartford, N. J., sprang from his seat and struck the | testified that he signed papers in the man squarely in the face. The room 'presence of W. R. Eve, jr., one of the was thrown into an uproar, but quiet defendants, which later turned out to was soon restored and Schneider was |include a financial statement giving his taken from the room. assets as $28.125. Asked by District At- Prom Flint, Hotelling was taken to|torney J. D. E. Meyer, what he was Saginaw and locked up. Early today |actually worth at the time, McDowell prisoner and guards entrained for Mar- | replied ifteen cents.” quette. So secret were the entire pro- | Beside Eve, the defendants are W. F. ceedings that residents of Saginaw |Richardson, former president of the de- s Mo Regrets.” ails as for South Carolina Bank ‘Ring, 4 Press % If th' fillin' station buildin® program | trial of six| ernment evidence to show that South | JOHN W. DWIGHT - DIES IN NEW YORK | ? {Former Legislator Is Dead at 68—Left Capital Sunday. Former Representative John Wilbur Dwight of New York, 68 years old, | Who served in the House of Representa- tives from the Fifty-seventh to Sixty-second Congresse inclusive, and ha: been active as execu- tive of veral companies in this city, where he had lived since about 1914, died in the Biltmore Hotel, New York City, early today. Death was attrib- {uted to angina pectoris. Mr, Dwight |left here for New York on business Sunday night. He made his home here at 1765 R street. He was president of the Virginia iBlue Ridge Railway, president of the | Leftwich Timber Co. and of the Tye |River Timber Co. He was a member |of the Metropolitan and Chevy Chase | Clubs and was a Mason. Emma He leaves his widow, | Childs Dwight. | Born in Dryden, N. Y., Mr. Dwight {attended the high school at his home jand a military school at New Haven, | Conn. He was a delegate to the Repub- | lican national conventions in 1888, 1892, 1900 and in 1908. He engaged in the | banking business in Ithaca, N. Y.; served as president of a land company in North Dakota from 1885 to 1890, and |operated a wheat farm of 12,000 acres. | He was elected as a Republican to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of George W. Ray. He was re-elected to | succeeding ~ Congresses through the | sixty-second. | Mrs. | WOMAN DRIVER FREED. Mrs. Edward Peter, 22 | vears old, or | Traffic Court of a charge of reckl drivipg in connection with an accident vesterday afternoon, when her automo- bile struck and injured Jennette Brad- ley, 5 years old, 3545 Albemarle street, at Wisconsin avenue and Grant road. The testimony indicated that the child suddenly ran into the street in front of Mrs. Peter's car. Mrs. Peter de- posited $25 collateral at the fourteenth police precinct station last nigh Rockville, Md., was acquitted today in | To Be Sought by | By the Associated Pross. CHICAGO, January 19.--The mys- tery of early Norse exploration in the United States will lure an expedition of noted archeoligists from Chicago and the University of Michigan to an anclent mining town on Isle Royal, In Lake Superior, next July. The expedition, headed by Fugene F. McDonald, Chicago archeologist and adventurer, will attempt to settle, through excavation of ancient copper workings on the island, the question of Norse exploration along the St.-Law- rence River and in the Lake Superior region. ‘While McDonald believes the mining activity was developed by Indians, he sald it is possible the Norse adventur- ers may have been the developers. He | would not divulge the t location of | the proposed excavations. It the mines are found to be of Norse origin, it undoubtedly would prove the Norsemen inscribed the Runifc inscriptions found on the fa- mous Kensington stone in northern Minnesota, McDonald said. The owner of the stone is certain that Norsemen | inseribed the tale of an Indian mas- | sacra related on the stone, although Trail of Norsemen in Lake Superior Chicago Expedition most archeologists scout the theory. A ship costing about $175,00C and equipped with the most modern exca- vating machinery will carry the expe- dition to the island. FIRST PLANE FOR LINE SENT TO WEST CANADA Six Cabin Monoplanes to Be Put in Service—Balchen De- livering Craft. Dy the Assoclated Pross. NEW YORK, January 19.—The first of six Fokker cabin monoplanes pur- chascd by Western Canada Airways for use in the frozen wastes of Canada, took off from Hasebrouck Heights, N. J., today for Winnipeg, Manitoba, with Bernt Balchen, who flew to France with Comdr. Byrd, at the controls. Stops at Chicago and Minneapolis were scheduled. - The planes will be equipped with skis in Winter and with pontoons during the Spring and Summer. For sale by good grocers everywhere | | JULIAN CORPORATION MAY BE REFINANCED Reorganization of 0il Corporation Reported Planned in California. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, January 19.—~The | Times says that plans for refinancing and reorganizing the Julian Petroleum Corporation by means of a $10,000,000 bond issue with the Los Angeles First National Bank and the Assoclated Oil Co. as the principal backers of the move have been completed. This was learned from what the newspaper characterized as an “ir- refutable source” and was said to have resulted from more than six months' effort on the part of the Federal re- celvers of the Julian Corporation, H. L. Carnahan and Joseph Scott. The collapse of the company resulted from an overissue of its stock totaling more than 5.000 shares and the piling up of stock and loan pools of approxi- mately $100,000.000. Scveral of its for- | mer officers and associates now are on | trial in connection with the overissue. - Symphonies — Operas — Ballads by the world’s great artists Drink to Your Health With '0C. The leading mine el C ral water ' / All 12-inch Records—Gold, All 10-inch Records—Gold, Purple & Black Label formerly Purple & Black Label formerly $2,$1.75,$1.50,and$1.25,now$1 $1.50, $1.25, and S$1, now .. were not aware that the slaver had |funct Beauford Bank: Miss Beulah been harbored there until after the | Harvey. H. J. Macklin, N. P. Bryan, R. party had left C. Horne, jr.. and Har During tge trip to Saginaw Hotelling | == slternately "broke into fits of praying and weeping. i “How could T do it>" he repeated | over and over agam. Frequently he | e BerberichS “How I jove her!™ he said. 2 | TaeT HALF-YEARLY REDUCTION 1000 Honor G. D. Crabbs. | CINCINNATI, Ohio, January 19 (®). | places thousands of pairs of the finest shoes oblainable within the reach of the most modest budget 100 75¢ =Tribute for a notable civic deed was | Paid jJast night by more than a thou- sand prominent “citizens at a testi- | monial banquet to George D. Crabbs, chairman of the Chamber of Com erce committee on terminals, who| Obtained an agreement for a $75.- 000,000 freight and passenger union depot system for Cincinnati. 7z, THE WRIGHT CO. ~ BRUNSWICK alone offers Fine Music these New Low Prices RUNSWICK now makes it just as easy for you to own the Music of the Masters as popular music. Always sold at a premium before, the magnificent electrical recordings of Brunswick's New Hall of Fame artists are now priced at 73c and $1. Brunswick alone offers fine music at these prices. We have taken Bedding Specials in our January Clearance Furniture Sale!! < * * ‘ | 1 0 On Friday and Saturday we , ‘ F will concentrate hundreds : ! of the season’s most popular F styles for women in our this step because of the increasing demand for better music. Go to the nearest Brunswick dealer’s today. Hear the world’s great musical masterpieces. Make vour selections. Take ’ of fine home today at least one recor music to enjoy over and over. never grows old! g Such $9 Simmons Steel Bed 2inch post; wood finish.$ JANUARY Newest Popular Brunswick Electrical Records CLEARANCE . “Blue Heaven™ ... “Among My “The Song Is Ended (But the “Fair Co-ed™ Springs : ! Souvenirs"—sung by Nick Lucas, Melody Lingers On) Kiss p 3, Bax Springs FOUNTAIN ROOM || etcriiil il s o e best makes., 3684—75¢ h To0! I rouba- Sateen ticking. - douw 1716—.5c. 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The N MP”" :-’," OU'{ Wc lt ature high notes and deep Dass — musie old-atyle year g Vel nstruments missed entively Ot untee, 99 co | | . > 3 § - e ];— "",”w"“"v’ ils i | ]{l4('UllAl{ such famous mukes as Hanan, Red Cross, Avch you by the Brunswick Pana with a *25 Double By YAt any $ —7) ; l’l(l(‘l“s Preserver, Johnston & Murphy, Selz, and Pied beauty that wilt \ ¢ 0 Bed ”,' AN | el Piper, becanne we can depend on them to hold old S nnaterpieee Rer's A In Windsor syle ANCE | friends and bring us the new ones we are always Vour Brunswick dealer w Mahogany finish Firioe 8 Lishoisy $ 95 PRICE secking Brunswick Panatvope (exponential txpe opportunity to make a store « JANU ARY . * Valencia model stration, CLEAKANCE —_ | rrIcCE . | DBerberichS | TWELFTH=F 8T8 — el sl S niaal0 WO 905 7th THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO., CHICAGO Sl-\\’ YORK Baltimore Braneh, 4104018 W, Lowbard St