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C, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1928, THOMPSON SPEECH GREETED BY BOOS Colored Rally Hisses His Plea for Re-election of Madden. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, March 12.—Indications that Representative Madden, Repub- lican chairman of the House finance committee, faces a stiff fight for re- election were given last night at a col- ored political rally when Mayor Thomp- son, speaking in his behalf, was booed and hissed into silence. ‘The mayor addressed a meeting in the first congressional district, four-fifths of the population of which is negro, urging the support of the Gov. Small-Thomp- son faction candidates in the State election. He also spoke for Madden, who is opposed by William L. Dawson, negro. Greeted by Misses. As Thompson urged Madden's re-elec- tion, he was greeted by stamping of feet, hisses and boos from the 2,500 persons in the hall. The din increased until the mayor was obliged to stop. It was several minutes before he could con- tinue. Roscoe Simmons, party worker, fol- lowed the mayor and he too was howled down when he mentioned Madden’s candidacy. Thompson precipitated the hubbub when, after calling attention to Mad- den’s record, he said: “A negro might go to Congress and after serving there for 20 years might become chairman of the powerful finance committee—per- haps he might—perhaps.” Talk Is Interrupted. Simmons said that negroes had sup- ported white men like Lincoln and that there was no reason to oppose Madden because he is white. He got no further. ‘When quiet was restored, Simmons said that although Mayor Thompson had encouraged the “draft Coolidge” movement, a situation might arise wherein the President would decline to accept, and that then the Coolidge sup- porters might make. Thompson their candidate. This assertion was greeted with prolonged applause. GREEN SEES HOOVER AND SMITH IN LEAD Secretary and New Yorker Strong- est Men in Parties, President of A. F. of L. Declares. LIMA, Ohio, March 12 (#).—Gov. Smith of New York and Secretary of Commerce Hoover were named “the out- standing candidates for their parties’ presidential candidacies” by Willlam Green, president of the American Fed- eration of Labor, here last night. “Of course, it is really too early to make any predictions,” Mr. Green sald, “but I feel that at the present time Smith and Hoover are the strongest men in their parties. WATSON IS CONFIDENT. Senator Foresees Success Over Hoover in Indiana. Senator Watson returned from In-| 1313 YOU STREET N. W, Shown in “The Little House of How” A Stately Governor Winthrop Sccretary $69.75 Regularly $89 A favorite today because of its simplicity design and its Finished veneer 3 large i pigeonhole , and glass es. Feurth ness. ¥inor.) diana last night expressing himself con- | fident that his impending umpngn' with Secretary Hoover for the Hoosler State’s delegation to the Republican convention would be in his favor. He said he expected to make as many speeches in Indiana between now and the primary election as his dutles in the Senate will permit. POINDEXTER TO RETURN. Ambassador to Peru Expecting to Ask Senate Seat. | Miles Poindexter, American Ambas- sador to Peru, who is returning to this country to seek election to his old seat | in the Senate from Washington, will leave Lima on March 21, according to advice cabled yesterday to Howard M. Rice, his former secretary. Mr. Rice, who has just returned from a survey of Washington State in the interest of Ambassador Poindexter's candidacy for the Senate, reported prospects for Mr. Poindexter's nomina- tion and election in that State as pleas- ing to him. Mr. Rice sees Judge Kenneth Mackin- tosh of Seattle as Ambasador Poindex- ter's principal opponent in the Republi- | can primary. FUNERAL IS HELD TODAY FOR WILLIAM McCAFFREY Official in Modern Woodmen of | America Buried at Fort Lincoln Cemetery. Funeral services for William McCaf- | frey, 65 years old, State deputy of the Modern Woodmen of America, who died |t his residence, 28 Becond street north- | east, SBaturday, were conducted at the home this afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. A. E. Barrows, pastor of Eastern Pres- byterian Church, officlated. Interment was in Port Lincoln Cemetery, Mr. McCaffrey had been State deputy | vt the Modern Woodmen of America eince 1912, The district includes the District of Columbla, Maryland, Dela- ware and Virginia. ers were as follows Representative Howard of Nebraska, Representative McKeown of Oklahoma, Commissioner General of Immigration Harry E. Hull, Dr. Thomas Linville, William H. Cole and A. H. Jaeger. The actve list included J. W, Buth- Don’t Endure Slipping FALSE TEETH Kills BEDBUGS Itching Torture Use Zemo, Healing Liquid Jendable The usually s yehel I { Pimpler hes and ritation There react o this R 4KIN IRRITAYIO $5¢. i erin, J. K. Duncan, M. L. Dicus, W. M. | | Bryce, J. A. Trunne!l and W. T, Trit- | tipoe, ‘]STERRETT MEMORIAL | WINDOW IS DEDICATED i | Bust of Church Founder Is Also | Unveiled at All Bouls’ { Edifice. i A memorial window presented 1o | { Al Souls’ Memortal Episcopal Church | by friends of Dr. James MacBride | sterrett was dedicated yesterday morn- | Uing at 11 o'clock, It 18 in the chancel | of the church. At the same Ume bust of Dr. Bterrett was unvelled and placed i w piche in the west end of | the chureh, | | he bust f5 the gift of Licut. Ralph £ Barnaby, U. 8 N, given in_memory | | 0t s wite, Charline Johnson Barnaby. The un charge ¥, Miu Frank 8. Bright, & mem- | ber of the congregation, delivered a eulogy of Dr. Bterreit Dr Berett founded the church neurly 20 yeurs sgo and held the frst | services on the present site in s port- | | able chapel 1 1911, Luter the chy | was removed and u smsll stone church crected, which has recently been en ( [Jwrged. He served us vector until his death 10 May, 1925 His son, Dr. H M. Blerrett, succecded Biin | . | The most fumous event in United | States history mssoctuted with Chiist {inas dey whs Weehiglon'y crossing of ) the Delawnre River Lo uiimck the Biit- | ish st Trentop, N, J, Honorary pail bear- | | REPRESENTATIVE MADDEN, NOTABLES ATTEND WANAMAKER RITES Friends From All Over World Pay Respects to Merchant. Funeral Simple. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, March 12.— Emi- nent citizens, political leaders and men and women prominent in business and professional circles gathered here yes- terday to pay their last respects to Rod- man Wanamaker. ‘The funeral of the great merchant, art patron, philanthropist and multi- millionaire, who died Friday in Atlantic City, is to be held at 2 pm. in St. Mark's Protestant Episcopal Church, with which he had been prominently identified both as a worshiper and benefactor. Hours before the services the ivy-covered edifice was banked deep with floral offerings which came from Mr. Wanamaker's friends in all parts of the world. Mourners came from many sections of the country and the list of honorary pallbearers included scores of prominent men in the United States, France, Eng- land, Canada and Japan. Arrangements for the services called for the utmost simplicity. In accord- ance with his wish, Mr. Wanamaker is to be laid to rest beside his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. John Wanamakcr, in the simple, quiet cemetery of St. James the Less, in Falls of the Schuyl- kill, well removed from the beaten path of the busy commercial life in which he lived. Marshals Joffre and Foch of France sent messages of condolence yesterday to Capt. John Wanamaker on the death of his father. PRINCETON ALUMNI BANQUET FEATURES | Washington Association Will Sub- stitute Humorous Debate and Exclude Formal Addresses, Featuring the annual banquet of the Princeton Alumni Association of Wash- ington tonight, characterized for its absence of serfous addresses, will bé a humorous semi-debate on “What Price Congress?” to be argued by Sena- tor Reed of Pennsylvania, who will re- ply to Dr. Charles Browne, former mayor of Princeton, N. J. The ban- quet will begin at 7 o'clock at the | Willard Hotel. According to Maj. John D. Kilpat- rick, toastmaster of the evening, who refers to the occasion as a “family re- union” for former students of the uni- versity and their fathers, there will be no talks on university needs and solicitations for funds will be taboo. Fun, frolic and a spirit of camaraderie will be the basis of an entertalning program. Charles Trowbridge Tittmann will be heard in a selection of numbers. Ken Clarke, who is famous among all Princeton men as a composer and en- tertainer, will have several new songs to offer, as well as his stock of old favorites; and the famous 1910 Nassau Quartet will lend its harmony to the occasfon. ‘The members of the committee in charge of the banquet are John D. Kill- patrick, Courtland Nixon, Lawrence M. Proctor, James Lemon, Alfred Dennis, David Lawrence, Edward Rheem, Oliver Metzerott, R. H. A. Carter, Willlam Flather, Ralph Lee and Larry Parker. HONORS ZACHARY TAYLOR. Ofcial declaration of the Zachary Taylor National Cemetery has just been made by Becretary Davis of the War Department for the five acres of land in Jefferson County, Ky, where a mausoleum containing the bodles of former president Zachary Taylor and his wife and a monument to his mem- ory are located. The State of Kentucky donated the land to the United States. Its accept- ance was approved by Congress in 1925 and the conveyance has just been com- in_accordance with_the law. AVE YOU COLONESIA? Most people have it when e change of the weather mak them catch mean, sniffly colds. You don't know how you catch them, nor why they stay #o tong. Stagnation of the colon, the lower intestine, o rea- son. It needs sterilization with Sanitized Citrate of Magnesia LEGION ASKS PART INPEAGE PARLEYS Veterans Seek Representa- tion at Future Conferences on U. S. Security. By the Associated Press, A request for American Leglon rep- resentation in future international peace, disarmament or similar confer- ences involving the question of national security in which the United States Is a participant was made to President Coolidge today by a delegation repre- senting the national defense committee of the Legion. The delegation presented to President Coolidge a copy of a resolution to that effect approved at a meeting of the natfonal defense committee of the American Legion, held yesterday at the Army and Navy Club. Resolution Rejected. At that sesslon the committee re- jected the resolution of Col. Wil- liam Mitchell for a separate department of national defense. In his resolution, Mitchell had called attention to the fact that in war, an attacking country will ruthlessly destroy cities and ham- lets, and emphasize the fact that this country must always be prepared to withstand such an attack. Japan and England, he declared in a speech to the committee, are concen- trating on the construction of huge alr and submarine forces while the United States is building surface ships, “‘useless in times of war,” and subma- rines that “sink in peace time.” The Navy's building program was among other national defense measures which received the approval of the Legion committee and a resolution like- wise was adopted calling on the United States Chamber of Commerce and chambers of commerce throughout the country to create national defense com- mittees, Senator Reed, Republican, of Penn- sylvania, and Representative Andrews, Republican, of Massachusetts, addressed the committee yesterday, outlining pending military legislation in Congress. Brig. Gen. Roy Hoffman of Oklahoma, chairman of the committee, presided. Burton Move Scored. John Thomas Taylor, vice chairman of the national legislative committee of the Leglon, yesterday forwarded to each member of Congress a letter at- tacking the Burton resolution to pro- hibit the shipment of arms and muni- tion to belligerent nations as “a self- imposed enlargement of the definition of neutrality.” His action was based on the resolu- tion adopted by the national defense committee Saturday, which urged de- feat of the Burton measure in Congress. WEATHER HALTS SEARCH. Tugs Today Resume Hunt for Bodies of Three Naval Flyers. NORFOLK, Va., March 12 (P.— Search for the bodies of Comdr. T. G. Ellyson, Lieut. Comdr. Hugo Schmidt and Lieut. Roger$ Ransehousen, naval aviators, who lost their lives in the crash of an amphibian plane in lower Chesapeake Bay early on the morning of February 27, was suspended yester- day because of bad weather. ‘Tugs today will resume dredging ac- tivitles near Cherrystone Light, where a crab dredge captain reported that Thursday the body of & man clad in a naval officer’s uniform was brought to the surface by his dredge, only to slip from the tongs and disappear. Sea- planes also will continue their patrol in an effort to discover floating bodles or wreckage of the plane. I Dead in Korea | MRS. SADIE HIRST. D. C. MISSIONARY IS DEAD IN KOREA Mrs. Sadie Hirst, Representing the Methodist Church, Had Long Career. Mrs. Sadie Hirst, wife of Dr. J. W. Hirst, superintendent of surgery at the Sev:-ance Hospital, at Seoul, Korea, for 27 years a missionary from Moun Vernon Methodist Episcopal Church South, here, died February 19 at Seoul. Her brother, R. B. Harbaugh of this city, has just learned of her death by letter from Dr. Hirst. Mrs. Hirst, who had been married for 20 years, was for seven years one of the “ploneer missionary workers in the Korea fleld. She was caught in the Boxer uprising and had many interest- inf experiences. She returned to this country three or four times and lectured in Washington churches, as did her husband. She was born in Rockford, IIl, March 19, 1875, and, coming to the Capital at an early age, attended Washington schools. ~ She later attended Scaritt Bible Training School, at Kansas City, and then went to Korea. In addition to her husband and her brother, Mrs. Hirst is survived by three children: Richard, who is in a Massachusetts pre- paratory school, prior to entering Har- vard; Donald, who is in school in Japan, and Marie, who is attending college in Massachusetts. Mrs. Hirst was hostess to many prom- nent Americans visiting in Korea, and was well known in this country for her missionary activities. RICH MAN, FATALLY SHOT, JUSTIFIES HIS SLAYER Widely Enown Sportsman, Just Before Death, Excuses Woman ‘Who Did the Shooting. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, March 12.—"She got me. I'm gone, but she's justified,” was the dying statement yesterday of Oakley B. Harris, wealthy proprietor of the Crescent Billlard Hall and widely known sportsman, who was shot to death at his chicken farm, on the out- skirts of the city. Police charged that Mrs. Sarah Kallo- way fired a pistol at Harris when the sportsman refused to return with her to her apartment. A murder charge placed af the woman. interesting ul‘)pnrnlus. in Step with Youth,” Through massage and other 1101 14t} St. N.W, Enjoy Perfect Health through daily use of the Burdick Personal Home Trainer If you desire slenderer lines, a clearer skin, a hetter eolor, brighter eyes—if you want to look more youth- ful, be more youthful, feel more fit—more efficient for your everyday life—come and learn the theory (based on medical research) and see the practice of this Let it show you how to * entire system, reduces excoss wolght, alda digestion and eltmi- natlon, strengthens the important and others that make for hetter functioning and fner grace, 1t tn for the whole family. Come learn what it does and how, Hee this marvelous apparatus at the Industrial Exposition Washington Auditorium, March 12 to 17 Opening Monday Night at 7:30 Visit Our Booth No. 53 for Demonstration Kloman Instrument Co. forms of exerclse 1t tones the musclos of the abdomen ¢ | ence Smith of Boston, a senior nurse at RALLY OF NURSES PLANNED TONIGHT Red Cross Recruiting Week to Be Marked at Central High Auditorium. Nine hundred graduate and student nurses will hold a rally in the audi- torlum of Central High School tonight to honor the birthday anniversary of Jane A. Delano, war commander of § the American Red Cross Nursing Service, who died in Franee in 1919, and to mark the ending of a Na- tion-wide observ- ance of the re- cruiting week in: her honor to enroll graduate nurses in the Red Cross Nursing Service and to interest girls in a nursing 7 career. Maj. Gen.; / char}?u AP. S%T; — merall, Army chie of staff, will be the . o principal speaker. John -Barton Payne, chairman of the central committee of the American Red Cross, will preside. A colorful proces- slon of nurses in uniform will precede the opening of the rally. Miss Mabel T. Boardman, American Red Cross scc- retary, will present Miss Kathleen Flor- Providence Hospital, with a Red Cross flag for winning a contest for the best essay on the purposes of the Red Cross Nursing Service. Miss Smith won over entrants from nine other training schools in the city. Dr. Thomas E. Green, director of the speaking service of the Red Cross, will read Miss Smith's essay, which is in the form of a poem. ‘The winner is a graduate of a Bos- ton high school and came to Providence Hospital three years ago to take train- ing. She hopes to enter the Navy Nurse Corps upon graduation in June. Miss Clara D. Noyes, national di- rector of the American Red Cross Nursing Service, will present a badge to the Washington school of nursing which enrolls the greatest number from its graduation class in the Red Cross service. Senior class students from the 13 accredited schools of nursing in the District will participate in the rally, as will those of governmental services. ‘The Army Band will play and Miss Gretchen Hood will lead the singing. Right Rev. P. M. Rhinelander of the National Cathedral will give the invo- cation, and Mgr. P. C. Gavin of the Shrine of the Sacred Heart the bene- diction. ‘The committee on arrangements is headed by Mrs. Annie S. Humphrey of ge llocnl committee, Red Cross Nursing rvice. VETERAN DIES AT 81. LOUISVILLE, Ga., March 12 (#).— Gen. W. 8. Jones, assistant adjutant of | the United Confederate Veterans, died | here yesterday after an illness of sev-| eral weeks. Gen. Jones was at one time general | of the Eastern Brigade, and was one of | the Virginia Military cadets that took | part in the battle of New Market. He| was 81 years old. | Funeral services will be held here this afternoon. A FOUR SMALLPOX CASES NOTED IN HAGERSTOWN Health Officer Urges All Persons Not Now Vaccinated to Take Necessary Precaution. Special Dispatch to The Star. HAGERSTOWN, Md, March 12. Four cases of smallpox, the first re- ported here in three years, were an- nounced today by County Health Officer Dr. Harry F. Prather. Dr. Prather ad- vised all persons who are unvaccinated to be vaccinated immediately. Three of the cases are in the family of Robert E. Burgan, several miles west of this city. Two of them are Burgan children who have been attending school. All of the children in this school, however, are vaccinated. All four of the cases were traced through a child who, while visiting here two weeks ago from a nearby town, con- tracted the disease and later came in contact with the four who now have it. Births Reported. ‘The following_births have been reported fo the Health Department jn the last 24 hoyirs TWO NAVAL OFFICERS HURT IN AUTO CRASH Lieut. Byron H. Hanlon, U. 8. N, under fnstruction at the Washington Navy Yard, and Lieut. D. W. Eberle, atteched to Annapolis Naval Academy, are confined to the hospital at the latter station, to which they were taken following an automohile accident Satur~ day night. Each has a broken nose, according to the commanding officer of the hos- pital, and cuts and bruises about the face, and it was said that Loth would be out of the institution In about 10 days. The accident is reported to have occurred on the Bailtimore-Annapolis boulevard, near Annapolis. UMBER MILLWORK PAINT HARDWARE Whatever Your Needs Talk With Us First! 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