Evening Star Newspaper, March 5, 1928, Page 13

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LINDBERGH DODG caught up with the S PUBLIC HE flying” colonel appearance at Bolling Field yesterday morning. RE. About the only time the camera on his week end visit was on his He is shown here (at right) leaving hangar with Assistant Secretary of War Davison after his flight in an Army plane. A ‘u(‘hlrd Press Photo. WEST POINTERS ENJOY Summerville (at left), “('yoo!\' Chang.” ANNUAL DIVERSION. disguised as a Chinese soldier, helps Cadet W. W. Thiede make up as a slave dancer for the Military Acadel Cadet Duncan s annual play, Copyright by P. & A. Photos. WHEN THE CAMELS a lhrllllnl race ._MONDAY, ‘\TA'R(‘TT walkil 9 ;’v’&i' 2, ing the giant dirigible into her hangar at the end of the round-trip voyage to the Panama Canal Zone. Out of this clouded sky a short while before had swept the snow-laden gale that tore the big airship from the grip of the ground crew and carried four of them aloft. The men dangled in the air until lifted through the cabin windows 200 feet above lrouml A Illlh gnsn jumpfd nl "0 lffl and wnrllnrd Ms lex Copyright by P. & A. Photos. HOME AGAIN AFTER CLOSE CALL IN SPEED TEST. Frank Lockhart gets a rousing welcome at the station at Indianapolis after his narrow escape from death in his attempt to brcak the world speed record at Daytona Beach, Fla. He received a cut wrist and severe shaking up when his car :omtruultrd into the sea. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. fore the start of a camel race, with the drivers and their steeds at the barrier. takes the ship of Ihr desert a bit longer to get under way than &he dashing ponies of the West, but they put on nder full MATCH STRIDES ON THE RACE TRACK OF EGYPT. A view of the track just be- From this kneeling posture it Wlde World Phuk\s Comdr. E. C. Rosendahl, skipper of the Los Angeles, is shown here just after seeing the big airship safely berthed at Lakehurst after riding out a gale there on returning from Panama. Associated Press Photo. TRAINS EAGLE FOR FALCONING. Capt. C. W. R. Knight, English sportsman, with the huge golden eagle at the Bronx Zoo which he is training for falconing. No one has ventured near the bird before since its capture two years ago in Italy. Vide World Photos. PROBES SHOOTING “OF 4 AMERICANS Mexico Holding BoJies of Men Killed in Alleged Jail- Breaking Attempt. By the Associay ‘ EAN DIEGO Calif, March 5.—The bodies of four Americans who were illed in a gun ba with Mexican of- ficers after r escape from Jail at] lifornia, where d for highway | h of the border E ation of the in- was being made. ne four men were reported to have eir way owt of jail at Ensenada, g a watchman dead and two wounded. They headed for the it were overtaken The quartet and con- bridge eight e Am*m an discharged re arrest- or two hold SpReTensHES trom return v LEE STATUE UNVE!LING IS SET FOR APRIL 9 of Gen $sin o Feds e vare estin Wi Lipie 31 ot 5 Gally outpuL Ul doH00 SR Tanner, | dorehouse | C ’THRDNG AT VALLEY FORGE | Chapel Overflowed at Virginia Snte Sunday Celebration. VALLEY FORGE, Pa., March 5 (). —A crowd that overflowed the Wash- | ington Memorial Chapel attended the celebration here yesterday of Virginia State Sunday. The services were under the auspices of the Virginia State So- | ciety, Daughters of the American Revo- {lution, and the Virginia Chapter, Sons ‘01 the Revolution. Gov. Byrd found it impossible to be present and the address was given by the Rev. Dr. W. Herbert Burk, rector of Washington Memorial Cha pel. The Virginia State flag, donated by Jacqueline P. Taylor of Richmond, was used for the first time and the Virginia bell in the peace chimes was used in playing * ’rhe sur spansled Banner.” CIRL FRIEND MAY OPPOSE MRS. WEST |State Alleges Husband'’s Kisses at Parties Gave Mo- tive for Hammer Slaying. | By the Aseoriated Pr PAINESVILLE, Ohio, March 5.—Vel- trial for the hammer slaying December 6 of her husband, y Thomas, which was on call in Common | Pleas Court today, may find her closest {friend, Miss Mabel Young, aligned lagainst her, Kisses which the State avers were “ exchanged by West and Miss Young at numerous house parties are counted’ on by Prosecutor Seth Paulin to establish jealouky as w motive for the slaying {1t was 1 Miss Young's Cleveland home that 21-year-old Vela went after the ing of West at thelr Perry, Ohio, The ftate will seek o show | that Mrs. West danced, sang and played bridge u few hours after the slaying A double plea of insanity and self- defense has been prepated by the de- fense. Francts W. Poulson, chief de- counsel, said he would sitempt ) show Mrs West had been trented {brutally by West and that he struck her the night of the ymmv | SCOURGE BALKS TOURISTS ! Americans Forbidden to Land as Bmnllpox Bweeps Byria. BEIRUT, Byria, March & (F) An epidemic of smallpox in Byria yesterday it i halt the Holy Land tour of 2006 { American viurists, when they were for- bidden W lsnd here from the steam- Dorie and Rotwerdam Jurrut b been placed under strict quarantine, according W Do Wilson Duodd of Montlair, N.J ., director of the | £aneric Jteliel here epaemie - sefugee camps and epresd rapialy March 1, 105 cu vith 2¢ death INDIAN LORD DEAD. 64 | Up ] Einha Was First Native to Be Rufred to British Peerage | | cALcUsTA, Indie, Muren b | Lo 83 64 st Indinn W be raised ritish pwerage and the first iher uf the viceroy's execuy 1 s desd b vus Taived Lo the peerage He hise been s member of the o 191Y sl commitiee of the privy counetl (70U of industiial o eomimereial 16ad: {0 wt 1926 Me served \wo lerms as wivoate genersl of Bengsl from 1907 | 1910 soa Liom V9)h o 1917 He wat undersecretary of slate for India Hiom 1919 w1920 wnd gov UG Uliioh bl WMSKSUNS, " bad been eport- | { | ITALIAN L EATS HIS SPA ETTI IN THE CAGE. GERMANY’S WAR DEAD RECEIVE TRIBUTE Annual Memorial Day Observed | Throughout Country—Reichstag Draped in Black Velvet Cloth. By the Associated Pre BERLIN, March 5--The annual Memoriul day for the war dead of Ger- many was observed yesterduy through- out the country. ‘The Relchstag was | druped n black velvet cloth with large | #liver wreaths ted with black ribbons hanging on its walls Iwo ca belching flames, flanked the chalc A detachment falques, uker's of the Relchswehr, carrying war flags, and veterans, stu- dents and members of fraternities in full regalia stood at attention when President. Hindenburg, accompanted by leaders of the republie, entered the crowded hall President Hindenburg, who was formerly @ field marshil in the wymy of the emplre, wore n frock cont and top Dt Prayer for thowe who fell In hattle ws followed by historical and sacred | miusic and addresses by clergymen and others Bpectal services ao were held by all state parlfnments and socleties of veberans WIFE SLAYER GUILTY. New Oileans Jury Verdict Cariies Life OILEANE, March | Hentence, NEW Henry M of i wh {wan found guilty of sluylng The Jury vecommended merey. The ver- alet aulomatically currles a life sente No notice of appeal wus given by de fense counel, bt {wan requested | Mexicans I‘lun Commercinl Fair, MEXICO CITY, March b (A Al Lern of Mexico City commercla) fuir e - December 1o stinilate the tour it trwde. Bpontors of the project an- natnee that seversl leading American wie organizing e held from May erpor of Bihsr ,‘n 16 Abdhs Arms bipve proimibsd Lo pbd w qualified verdict ! R Signor Scaramuccia, lon tralner at the Rome Zoo, probably likes spaghetti more than his lions do, but there is always the risk that they will have a sudden change of taste, None of which worries the signor. OUTSTANDING WORLD EVENTS OF PAST WEEK By the Associated Pross. ‘Through Premler Mussolinl Ttaly has | glven her answer to Austrian complaint on the Itallanizing of the Itallan ‘Tyrol, once the possession of Austria, and now home of many German-speaking people, Italy will permit of no forelgn in- terference tn the regulntions the Fasclst government has provided for Itullan territory, Mussolint spoke eloquently before the Chamber of Deputies when he mide this announcement at the end of week, His words were addressed not only to Austiia, but to all world. “There had been no atrocities, no rystems of tyranny, Do people stanghtered by “the burbarous Fasclsta dictatorship,” he declared, und the law i Bouth Tyrol would tuke its course, Austrlan Question Missing. “The Austrinn question lost something of 1ts polgnancy through the death of the great w comi . Marshal Armando Diaz. Anger at the attitude of the Austiluns was turned (o sorrow over the death of the idol of the Tallan the s of the war and ulsed Italy o w powerful militant na- ton in that. stragele Followlng so quickly upon the death of Farl Hidg, commander of the Bt Jsharmies, Lord Oxtord and Asquith, Bl premier n the ewdy years of the wur, und PHnce Charles M Lich, nowsky, Germun Ambissador al Lon don betore August, 1914, when he stood with the allies In’ an carnest endeavorn o wird off the eatustrophe, the deatly of Marstial Diaz served o empha the disappenrance of the leaders in that Utanie struggle Gabricle d’Annunzlo, Taly's poet Mdier, wnother pleturesquo figure, who selzed the cily of Flume for his coun vy, was also stricken, and at the week enterlatned for his ve 8 eiid fears were covery Arkenting Argen Hits Monroe Doctrine. presented by Henor Can nenntonn of e scenrity com of the League of Natlons it Genevi, cast cold witter on the Mon [ mittee | nma; the |} | tonal Guard BRIEFLY TOLD ed by the other American countries this pronouncement caused ement at Genevs, nothing has been done about it. France and the United States are sUIl making un earnest effort to out- law war. Frank P. Kellogg, the Amer- fcun Secretary of State, so informed M Briand, the “French forelgn. miniter, Citiig ay an example psolution udopted by the n Con- gress at Havana prov Whi] Ie Mr. Kellogg's refer- lence was to that part of the conven- ton on conelliation and arbitration ex- tablishing that nationul policy of na- tlons was opposed 10 war. Somehow M Briand had recetved only the Mexlean olution outlawing wars of uggression, and _therefore confusion prevafled in the Frencls the omtssion wis adjusted and the ment 15 further engaged i considern= tion of the proposed pact. Meunwhile the forelgn relatfons com- mittes of the United States Senate has approved the Franco-American arbitra- ton treaty, contalning an anti-war clause, Nicaragua Situation Unchanged. The campaign in Nica Five Amerfean Marines weve killed last week and others wounded, an Ameri- can patrol betng suddenly attacked by Sandina rebels. The Marines and Na- men immediately atarted wetivitles to round up the tebels with wll forees available There wre new dlamond - flelds Houth Atview, an Eldorado has been di- covered at Namaqualand, Ca there wre thought to be millions of dol- lara' worth of dfamonds - the new which have promptly \ pres pted by the government. The out- mu Wil bo restrloted, 5o that the price of lllln Kems s not likely o be lowered much ‘Those forefgners who have been granted divorees tn Parls or are think- Ik of secking divorees weve sthired by the announcement that (he Vernallles court had refused w div bridge Colby, former Ar tary ot Btate. The Fren deckded vecently o make cult for fovelgn vestdonts marvlage honds A more dim o sever thelr Applications had been voe Doctiine, Invoked by the United Btates, for the Montoe Doctrine s w nnllulnul declarglion by the United Hiatew pud ‘ Posih BAPUCILY, e oo numerous, and some of them had octastoned (alk not altogether o the HKkIng to the French government Al Wio biakes bove buen applied, bub (op)rl;l\l by P. & A. Photos. DEMANDS INQUIRY OF ZINOVIEFF NOTE Conspiracy Has Now Been Proved Against Labor. By the Associated LONDON, March Donald, fn a statement to the press last night, declared the disclosure by Thomas Marlowe fn the Sunday Ob- server of the facts which led to publ eation of the so-called “Zinoviet! letter” called for a government inquiry He sald . conspirucy had now been proved conclusively 0 use the letter and the protest note of the British for- clgn office politically. He dented the suggestion of Mr. Marlowe, former edi- tor of the Mail, that he had tried to withhold the letter from publication, and said that until it was published 1t never occurred to him that the letter had_any political significance bearing on the election which his Labor govern- ment then faced Ramsey Mac- Publication I 1924 66 a letter allege to have been written by Gregory ZInoviet! (o Brittsh Communists, urging preparations for @ social revolution mgland, and (he forelgn office protest to the Soviet government was credited with defeating the MacDonald Tabor government. The neldent recently was tevived by government investigations another divection, . One Killed, Two Hurt in Crash. ERIE, Pa, March o (9 Alphonse Dematen of Connenut, Ohlo, was Kille nd Charles Stllwagon of Piesbuigh e Cla © Hewltt of Conneaut serl ously Injured yesterday when thete car skidded and struek w lieo at Falrview, near here the pi Nt atringent measures ave havd- Iy lkely to be retroactive A week af expectaney i the negotia- terms for adminbteation of the country ended abruptly when the Geyptian cabinet councll vejected the propased treaty diaft ‘The restging Hon of Prember Sarwat Pashin, who had been conducting (he negotiations for Egvpt follawed yesterday for “reasons of Bealth " This put BRYDE back i the poattion she has ocoupled sinee 1923 when Greal Boitaln approved hes eons M‘h ——— Wi Ramsey MacDonald Says Political | A8 botween Crreat Brttain and Egypt | wem s - o N0 IRAING FREED N HEAVY STORM Charge of Murder. COLUMBIANA, Ala, March 5 (P — Week End Blizzard Ties Up Transportation in Up- | Airing of the events leading up to me death last November of Miss lnulse per Michigan. Monteabaro, comely young saleswoman | of sewing machines, was resumed to- | day_as Chief of Police H. F. Blake | of Calera, Ala,, faced a jury on charges ¢ mur [ The police chief of the small town | Inear which Miss Monteabaro was shot |is jointly indicted with Officer W. D. | Farmer, also of Calera, as result of |an investigation which followed refusal Iby friends and relatives of the dead young woman to accept the officers’ lw,, of her fatal wound. They de- clared she committed sulcide after | being arrested for speeding near Calera | | 1ast November 14. | senger tratns marconed an army of | k‘mrhn—s was toiling today .o b'va! the BRTISHWETSDROP =555 MODFGATONNIN =2 2= Effors to Revise War-Time| S il Restriction Law Walts as passengers on the latter train could be Drys Oppose It. By the Associated Press. SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich, March S.—After freeing two snowbound pas- ¢ the of th Toca of hlh‘ ne train with 40 passengers snowound at Rexton, 50 miles west of here, ro— more than 18 rerouted into the Sco. due to the con- dition of the tracks, heaped by the storm that broke S ged all of yesterday I transportation into the d celed. Rail By the Associated Press, Recent LONDON, March 5.—The dry and | wets are at loggerheads over the gove ernment’s decision not to Introduce legislation at the present sessfon of Parllament to make 1t easier to get ltquor from public hous Capt. Bourne, for Oxford, was pre- pared to reintroduce his licensing b but when his party le; dectded would not support the movement less restriction i liquor selling, b Quiesced British Hquor interests say the leer Ing act of 192 war-time resiriction. The act sets t durtng (he day within which the oS may be open and when the, for ace | $25.000 PRlzé OFFERED IN WAR NOVEL CONTEST Monthly nounces Competition, to Close May 1, 1999, American Lexion An- nee aghtators, however, the present act, even as it s, declaring drun mereased a result of some of the the war. The 1921 A8 A War-time compromise FLOODS COVER VILLAGE | IN SOUTHERN FRANCE ! Rafus Sweep the Country. || \ A war novel e of $23.000 was by the An W for A p 4 vesterday Maonthly Heavy ¥ chard Henry ohn T W he American Legton L Springlike Weather Avrives in North, M Tioss Mareh & enjoving Springlike weather weeks aliead of time, (e south of France today was betng drenched i a [persntent vaimtall and the Medite vanean lashed by easterly wales the department of Hev fevere floods Water and o I Boslers were it number of facturkes (o close. The Vil | lage of Casouls was tvaded by fond > oand the mhabitants foreed (0 * refuge I nelhboring hamlets In northern France the femperature reached 63 degtees Fahrenhelt yester- day, WHICh was - unprecedented tor March. A bright sun sent Bavistans | semmpering o the flelds and forests. WHICH Were aglow with dattodits Viscount Knollys Engaged INDON, March & (8 The engage With northern | France must be s suage. They w not de less th Q00 words 1 lengih suttered . DIES IN AUTO CRASH. | Doctor Killed, Three Murt, When Car Qoes Over Bubankment, PINEVILLE, Ky, March 8§ (8. De James AL Morgan, Taleda, Ohky phy- atelan, was Kiled and thiee others were | Wured near here vesterday when the | Autamobile e which they were driv- Ting skidded and plunged 30 feet over [ AN embankment and landed on & vait- oad track The ll\'\l\\‘\ v . e, BAteL Oty daughter of Bir Stuart | At Berthe Rioadheart o nurse W Ly Conta, T beens inouneed. - SIe Start | Magans private. hosplial, and. Qeargs Coats I8 the son of (he late S James | Al Mus. Hiue's home s al Perrys. Coats, and his it wite, the former burg o Ol and Alln's as Waseou, Ay SMAD Auchlaclons of Now Xuike Tha DAl Wb o0 1008 I

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