Evening Star Newspaper, February 14, 1928, Page 17

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THOU NDS THRONG HAVANA PARK AS LINDBERGH RECEIVES HONOR. A view of the crowds, said to have been the largest in the city’s history, gathered in the Prado, Havana's central parkway, for the arrival of Col. Lind- bergh for the public reception given in his honor. The good-will fiyer was presented with the keys of the city and a specially struck medal from the Province of Havana. Coryright by P. & A. Photos. STAR, WASHINGTON, UNION LEAGUE HONORS GEN. PERSHING. The A. E. F. commander receiving the Union League's medal of gold for service at the Philadelphia organization's Lincoln day observance. William G. Price, president of the league, is pinning on the medal, which is sitilar to the one presented to President Coolidge. ‘Wide World Photoe. D. €. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1928. LINDBERGH ADDRESSES GREAT ing the ceremony in the Cuban capital as Col. AT HAVANA PUBLIC RECEPTION. On the speakers’ stand dur- CROWDS Lindbergh delivered his brief address after being honored by the city and the Province of Havana. Left to right: President Machada of Cuba, Mayor Miguel Gomez of Havana, who pre- sented the keys of the city to the fiyer; Col Lindbergh and Gov. presentation. Ruiz of Havana Province, who made the medal Copjright by P. & A. Photos. As T NATION HONORS LINCOLN'S MEMORY. i>s vesterday at the Lincoln Memorial, in which many patriotic or- Scene during the ganizations joined in paying tribute to the Emancipator under the auspices of the Military Urder of the Loyal Legion. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. BRITISH ROYALTY MARCHES IN IMPRESSIVE FUNZRAL PROCE minster Abbey on removal of the body of the British military leader of the World War for burial in Scotland. the Duke of York. the Prince of Wales, representing King George, and Prince Arthur of Connaught (in white hat). SION FOR MARSHAL HAIG. As the funeral cortege proceeded from West- In front of the group. left to right, are The houses of Parliament, the minis- Copyright by P. & A. Photos HONORING KOSCIUSKO ON ANNIVERSARY. Jan Ciechanowski Min- ister of Poland. placing a wreath on the statue of the Polish patriot and hero of the American Revolution during exercises yesterday on the 183d an- niversary of his birth. They were held under the auspices of the Sons of the Revo'ution. Co 1oy ood & Underwood. try and all branches of the military and naval service were represented in the procession. INDIAN OIL QUEEN SUED FOR §200,000 Charges Conspiracy in Replyl to Cklahoma Woman’s Alienation Action. By the Aseocated Press. EUFAULA, Okla. February 14— Another conspiracy to obtain part of the fortune of Exie Fife Jackson Tol- leson, carried from obscurity to rank as an Indian princess by oil royalties, is charged in a complaint drafted for filing today in answer w an alienation suit entered by white woman. Exie, twice married and divorced since royalties of more than $1,000 a day enabied to leave her shack home at the village of Fame in 1822, through her attorneys, denied that she offered money and other inducements ©w divert the affections of Emerson Q. as his wife s suit, ng $200.000 fourth court action the £ of Exie's marital affairs. he 11 action, which followed her yment of $50,000 for & di from riin Jackson, white playmate at Fame, caused an upheaval in Okla- homa Indian affairs. T. A. Chandler. former Oklalwma Representative, and ®ix others were convicted of conspiracy @etraud the Govern Jaciesym receiy 0 [ Wi Mrx. Ollie Carr, wh Erie in an alienation s $7.500 Gameges Then Exie married sn Indian youth nemed Tolleson. They ¢ Dved in Jurury for a time % & feet of suwmobiles in wurs of the Creek Netion but the soon obtained u divorce In snswer v U present sult, Exie's ounss] charges that Melnush foreed and obtsined Vumself invs ber home by teaym of & conspiracy for the purpose of crete ing & situstion v ive ) OULeT DErSOnE 85 €XrUM " Uit ZLt v, exunt from the Gefends. BACKS BRITISH REFUSAL T0 RATIFY LABOR PACT Holds Washing win ivention Je Not Clear un Al Points » the Aswriaies Fiese i, Fetruary 14.—A labor mo- npleining of 1he guverument's o Geel vouk employment L on nis, & voue of 29% w € course of e Genate Prime ster Slenley Belowin Gefended th W oratty 1 tndard for eved tiere woud power Vi it { we et our Crnment uight b edara that e Brinsn govern el i most eager U obtain & Jevision of the convention which would remove every doutt fiom the minds of ell par Suients Leona Mclntosh, a| MAINE MEMORIAL PROGRAM PLANNED !Spanish War Veterans to Honor Heroes of Battle- | ship Tomorrow. Preparations were completed today !for the memorial exercises which are to be held in the Riding Hall at Fort Myer at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow after- noon on the occasion of the thirtieth |anniversary of the destruction of the | battleship Maine in Havana Harbor, | just before the outbreak of the Spanish- | American War. The program will be |under the auspices of the Department lof the District of Columbia, United Spanish War Veterans, with Capt. John {|Lewis Smith as master of ceremonies |and Lee H. Harris chairman of the executive committee. Before the program in the Riding | Hall begins members of " the Ladies’ Auxiliaries and the Lineal Socety of the Spanish War will place wreaths, presented by President Coolidge, on the Maine Shaft in Arlington National Cemetery. The exercises in the Riding Hall will include an invocation by John T. Ax- {ton, jr., U. 8. Army chaplain at Fort Myer; presentation of colors by the color guard of the Navy Yard, remarks by Albert Michaud, department com- mander, U. 8. W. V.. an address by Col John J. Garrity, commander-in-chief, U. 5. W. V.. an address by Senor Do Rafarl Rodriguez Altunaga, counselor of the Cuban embassy; an W be fired “taps” sound- ed by & trumpeter of the Marine Band and benediction by Eugene Doleman, ‘flrifl-nmrhl chaplain, U. 8. W. V | In order w transport persons who will attend the exercises, the Washing- won-Virginta Retlway Co. will put on ;-nra cars omorrow from ity terminal at Twelfth street and Pennsylvania ave- ne W Fort Myer and from o | Fort Myer | {TWO YOUTHS GIVE LIVES . TO SAVE THIRD, IN LAKE | Rescuers Tou Exhausted 1o Clamber H Back in Bont—Cratt Drifte | to Shore. Jy the Aseoristed Prees | BAND POINT, Idato, Februsry 14 | Wilmer Altman wnd George Kjellen, | high school boys, gave their lives W | suve that of & companion, who was un {uble swin, when their boat upset un Lake Pend Orelll Altman and Kjellen were so exhaust- led by their efforts Lo right the bont ena get the third boy, nemed Crab tree srler shourd “The boal drifted shore | ward seversl hours later and Crab teken W oa hospital nearly Prize Offered for Mine Device | BERLIN A piize of 85,000 for Ui st contiivance for neutiahzing Ui | pernicuus effects of aust n mines has iwes, oftered by \he $russis miiisiry commerce and trade. The prize of |'Win“be " domated eltner i full or spiit lup tnto perts in the event of several sooeptable devices belng subm itted, { port while the ¥ inw it that they were unsble 10| ICE SKATER ADDS A FEW BARRELS IN LATEST LEAP. Phil Taylor, thrill the Winter carnival visitors there. He safely cl red the far end. CHAIN BRIDGE WORK AUTHORIZED BY D. C. | Repairs to Deteriorated Abutment Planned in Early Part of March. Reconstruction of the deteriorated Virginia sbutment of Chain Bridge by day labor was authorized yesterday by the District Commissioners. Prepara- tions have been made by Capt. H. C Whitehurst, assistant engineer com- missioner, to begin the work early in March. He plans to have the abut- ment completed and the bridge re- opened Lo trafic i June “Ihe bridge span resting on the abut- ment o be replaced will be slung to apex of the st 1A abutm: guyed on built. It ulo will be secure carh sid Capt. Whitehurst has planned to redeck the rowdway of the bridge with a new wooden floor and steel trafic ‘treads Congress appropristed $40,000 for reconstruction of the abutme The cost of Improving the bridge roadway will be borne by the general bridge repair fund DENIES DEATH BLAME. Navy Suys Ensign Used Pilvate Parachute in Fatal Lenp gn Charles Donald Spencer, who ki was killed 1o @ leap from a commerclal near ta Monten, Callt used u privately owned para- the Navy Department has heen The parachute ripped W pieces as the navel oficer descended The Jump was a private venture, it wis polnted out n Uie report, snd the accident 1s betng fuvestigaled Bpencer's mother, Mrs, . M. Bpence lives at Honesdale, Pa, where wi born May 10, 1003 He was graduated from the Naval Academy in 1936, ulrplane Hunday it ntormead HIGHER DOCTORS' STANDARD IS PLEA OF MEDICAL DEAN Dr. Hingh Cabut of Ann Asbor, Ancwaving Petitions for Cheaper School Require- ments, Says Public Demands Best. “If we look at the practice of medi- cine a3 & commodity which can be bought and sold, the brand of medicine which the old practitioner had for sale would find no market today. ‘The pub- lic demands a better article, because it s better Informed and can think far nore soundly upon such questions than ould his ancestors " Economie and soclal factors enter the changed distribution of men of leine. Dr. Cabot mentioned the population to lar s and enormously improved means of ansportution He spoke of the practice of medicine ws “thoughtless and il-advised” any s “a legally constituted manopoly, with move to replete them that would tend ery special privileges and very special to lower the standards of modern medi- esponsibilities.” cine “The public has created this legal Even if the old family physician, great nonopoly for a very definite purpose. in his day, were to return, “the very it must protect the people to whom it seople who' demanded him would allow gives these monopolistic privileges and [ to starve 1 their midat,” he said. upon whom it has placed very definite Standards of modern practice are set testrictions from being overwhelmed by he told the Assoclated Press, not alon of fll-trained and trresponaible by the medical men, but by the public s Who can be held to no stand- which they serve ard und who, In fuct, have no morals.” NATION CLOSES SCHOOLS MOVIES AID OPERA. BUDAPEST, Hungary, February 14| Corspondonce of the Associated Froas A The mintster of education” his | paRts ordered schools and colleges through and ape out the country closed fearing anti- A storm at sea, great waves dashing Hemetic disturbances. The government Yis under discussion & proposal o mod- gainst & Hghthouse, were shown in the ity trictions against the enrollimen eat production of the Opera, “The of Jews as university students Tower of Fire" by Sylvio Lasearl 1t Disorder occurred at Budapest Uni- was @ scene Impossible to stage ade- versity when Christian studenis declared quately so the producers went to Cher- a strike as & protest to the propossl. | bourg and waited for bad weather which A strike was also declared at Beegedin oame along with such violence they had University, & hard tme taking the picture, By the Associated F . ANN ARBOR, Mich., February 14 Not cheaper but better medical men 15 Dr. Hugh Cabot's answer to the sug- gestion that college medical courses be shortened. Dr. Cabot is dean of the University of Michlgan Medical School The demand that medical standards In sehools be changed 5o that physiclans may be turned out “more cherply” s htman enough, Dr. Cabot sald; “as hu- man, In fact, as is the doctrine of the fundiwmentalist: a demund uge old, but Lopeless of fulfillment.” Tanks of the country doctor are being depleted, he agreed The movies have gone into N who is showing St. Morits how they skate in America. sails over 10 barrels to Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. LAST VICTIM'S BODY OUT IN ONTARIO Mine Shaft, Where 39 Died in Fire, Now Free of Smoke—In- quest Awaits. Ry the Associated Pres TIMMINS, Ontarfo, February 14— The last body of the 39 men who died in the Hollinger Mine fire last Friday was brought to the surface last night. Company officers pratsed the timely assistance of the Toronto special train and the mine rescue car sent Pittsburgh, Pn., by the United States Bureau of Mines There has been no indication yet as to when the inquest or the provinelal nvestigation will be held e mine was reported almost free of smoke and gas, and 1t was belleved that the fire had burned iself out HITS COTTON COMBINES. Rankin Would Make Prosecution of Monopolies Easier. Charging that monopolies are “de- moraliging the cotton industry.” Repre- sentative Rankin, Democrat. Mississippt, yesterday proposed an amendment to the Sherman anti-trust law, which he said would aid the Department of Justice in proceeding against cotton combines. He assalled “unlawful ma nipulation of the cotton market through brazen price Axing.” declaring that lavge cotton dealers removed much of the commodity from the active market i order to control prives Rankin abo served notice that he would introduce another vesalution Lter calling for an investigation of the New York Cotton Exchange His stauds both Instances were supported by Rep resentative Hlack, Democrat, Texas . . Great tnterest has been aroused in Japan by the announcement of & Japa- nese scientist who claims to have dis- covered a method of obtalning two evops of rice & year, from | PRIVATE LIQUORS TEACHERSDISCUSS AREHELD IMMUNE? BACKWARD PUPLS Court Rules Stocks Can Only Problems of Groups in Pub- Be Seized When Used lic Schools Considered at for Crime. Y. W. C. A. Luncheon. Er the SAN FRANCISCO. Private stocks and the progress in connec- with mentally defective children an address pefore the Cou of So- a crime,” the commissian Y Court of Appeal: States_Circut has ruled This decision was handed down when the cou d by Federal pro- hibition ag s raid at the h of Thomas Fabri of San Fran, court also ruled that a | under defective search its owner, 3 2 2 to_han sed by Dr. Ed- and trend of dec ¢ be taken that where, as follows here. upon an unlawful seisure in & 6 t 15, and dwelling house, Government age ze property. the possession of wh hot be lawful. the pe: won it is taken to its restaration.” The court held th: 1ot liquor illexally ment must prove i the commiss Government o established & pr small part the physioal innumerable o value, have to be n note morad class of three judges of th Appeals subseribed They are Juds Frank S. Dietrich and Frank H. R NEW FRENCH CEMETERIES BRING MOTOR HEARSES {Opening of Graveyards in City's dkin, POLICE BULLETS STOP FATHER'S KILLING ORGY Topeka Man St After Taking Wife's Life, Wounding Son and | Suburbs Creates Need for Faster Service. ' PARL | motarized [ really to want fast gas | such ceremantes but the cit are about full and new ones opened several miles outay Attacking Two Others By e Associated Fress Aans. Fedruary d—After Mmits. 'x x o ‘The prefect of the Seine department i With & revelver, abos- finally has brought himself to present b Ald son and attadking the matter to the city afficlals and the | tno other membders of his tamily with newspapers are discussing the Measure. | a duicher & dt, & Ncmer Distance from burial grounds prodadly | restaurant p was ot and will be the dectding factor, for the [ killed by & poliveman here ate yesters French are loath to moderntse tradi- | dav 3 thons that they hald sacred. Some. | Schaidt however, long have argued that & spivit jand was < of humanity should abalish long (uneral | ko ot Mis own wrisis deahtished B had slas Processlang ARt i bad weather 1= d membders of i tors say mueh thness follows Wintet | 1t tecover 8 wls becatse 1t s the custom tor Devh sepatated ad ves o walk bareheaded dehind drawn Deatse and o stand | covered at the burtal cervmony | long | Frequently sobbing women fatily stag- | MEXIOO CITY. Felvuary 14 @ gor along, supported on etther stde. at fIuspatches e San Miguel Alloinde, funerals 1t &5 Quite proper for aged ! i (he State of Guanajuata, report that or Il persans (o take & carviage. but 1t) the fireman was Kilked and the engineer 18 the walking Dehind the heatse (hat)jand & Drakeman wete fyured when & truly fulfills the old tradition of wourn- | frelght tratn fumped the track at the " entrance 1o the tuanel near that phace. WO Vet One Dead in Mexican Train Wreck

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