Evening Star Newspaper, August 1, 1928, Page 17

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Gen. Umberto Nobile, commander of the dirigible Italia's ill-fated ex- pedition to the North Pole. resting at Hinlopen Strait with his dog Titina, after being rescued from the ice floe by Capt. Lundborg. the Swedish fiver. Viglieri and Lundborg on the ice floe heside the little red tent, the only shelter of the rescued members of the Italia crew. Both men wear dark glasses to protect theh the Aretic ice. i WASHINGTON. D. €. WEDNESDA] Scene at the ice floe camp, showing the little red tent and Capt. Lundborg's plane turned upside down. This pic- Members of the Italia’s crew on the i ture was taken by Lundborg after the mishap to his plane, when he returned in an attempt to rescue other members of the party, lost for many weeks with Gen. Nobile after the crash of the dirigible on the ice. —Copyright by P. & A. Photos. member of the party with the camera —Copyright by P. & A. Photos. Members of the crew sitting on the wing of upturned plane of Gapt. Lundborg. Left to right: Pref. Behounek, Biagi. Viglieri and the injured Cecioni, who is seen” holding up the leg which was broken in the crash of the dirigible’s gondola on the ice. —Copyright by P. & A. Photos. of the Swedish fiver, who first ei ir eyes from the blinding glare of admiration of the world. of explorers and rescued Gen. Nobile from the ice floe, has cenes in the Dramatic Rescue of the Italia Crew From the Arctic Ice ce floe with Capt. Lundborg. Left to right: Biagl, Lundborg and Viglieri. This photo was taken by another Lundborg carried on his rescue flight. After his plane crash, Lundborg found himself trapped on the floe and facing the perils of the rest of the group.—Copyright by P. & A. Photos The hero of the dramatic rescue, Capt. Lundborg. The courage ited the tiny tent of the lost party won the —Copyright by P. & A. Photos. ~Copyright by P. & A. Photos. 1 P —— | HARRISON PLEADS FOR PARTY UNITY Mississippi South to Remember Tam- many Aid After War. LAKE, Miss, August 1.—Senator Harrison of Mississippl pleaded here to- day for Democratic unity in spite of any differences on religion and prohibi- "',f:‘pmkmx to & gathering at Patrons nion, he sald V‘Bomr may mmeu]lx' feel justified uf nipporting the Republican e Socause. of the views of our presidential nominee _respecting the prohibition question. Others may find opposition in the fact that the Demo- cratic nomines is a Catholic As important as these qualifications may appear to some may I say that the South cannot afford because of these Giverse opinions to alienate those millions of men and women in other parts of the country who are of the Catholic faith and who entertain dif- ferent views respecting prohibition They have stood with our section for three-quarters of & century on the yaany great and major questions of party principles and party policies. “Differences within the church and differences over the church and differ ences between churches have withou exception fanned the fiame of discord oyed the peace and happiness ‘ y principles upon was founded t Republican party its enforcement it and the President eratic nominee his public utterances condemned fication of (he prohibition women will and men Pe prohibition as well law the I ot mendment their reg legisiator, 1 But 1 of this Federal oo oo not balleve modifica shell oppose uch action concede 1w h other citizen country & right to thelr opinlons. Benator Harrison said the Democrats of the North had stood by the Bouth during the days leading up to and after the Civil War, declaring that “the peo- sle of the Bouth cannot forget that the leaders of the Derocratic party in the North and the East, and especially nose of New York City, came openly w the front, unafraid, and were our most stalwart champions re we now o forget et Tamma Senator ny Congressmen (her upon ne floor of the American Congress and for the South when represent ves of the South were absent and their presence denied? 1s it possible for th $nouth woday to forget? In the roming national cempaign the Boiith nas more st stake than any nther sectien. T would be well for those who asked Tam he and od ticket in this | TRADE BOARD STAF SCANS MOTOR DEAL Up to U. S. Group Officially, However. CAPITAL WOMAN HELD IN'KIDNAPING | | | | | | Mrs. Frederick Byrne in Pottsville Jail After Brother Takes His Son. 4 » i | l | By the Associated Press | By the Associated P POTTSVILLE, Pa. August 1--Mrs. Frederick Byrne of Washington, D. C., and Thomas Jimison, Charlotte, N. C., were in Schuylkill County Jail here to- day., charged with kidnaping Henry Grant, 9, from the home of his grand- parents near here. Police, looking for the lad and his father, Harry L. Grant. of Charlotte N. C.. had reports that the elder Grani was In Washington with his son, but were unable to locate them. Grant met his son at the home of his wife's parents, a Mr. and Mrs, Kittle and asked the boy to go for a walk ‘When they failed to return Mrs. Grant | notified policemen and had sworn out for the arrest of her husband, his sister, Mrs. Byrne, and Attorney Jimison. She sald Henry had been placed in her custody on a Charlottle court order. She told State police that Grant was here with his sister and attorney ves- terday. The couple were arresé>d and lodged in jail in default of bond. Police said they were en route to Washington when apprehended. Mrs. Frederick Byrne could not be identified here today. Police have re- gelved no request to look for Grant [l,m‘.u-n IN CHARLOTTE, N. C Anather general view of.{ - desolate little camp on the drifting ice of the Arctic. Lient. Alfredo Viglieri, navigator of the dirigible talia. is the figure bending over. He war mmand of the camp after Gen. Nobile's rescue. ~~Copyright by P. & A, Photos. | | ! Makes Trip by Charges. C.. August 1 (P Auto—Denies Prisoner Recap on Dry-Law Charge Aqualine, 1600 First sireet who was arrested last week when officers discovered a still in his house in investigating a stopped-up sewer, pleaded not guilty and demanded a jury trial when arralgned before Judge Isaac R. Hitt in Police Court this morning. He is charged with pos- sesslon, manufacture and possession of machinery designed for the manu- facture of luor. Bond of $1,000, as recommended by Asalstant United States Attorngy R. F. Camaller, was approved by the court. . Avenue to Be Widened. | | [ | | Special Dispateh to The Star FREDERICK, Md., August 1--Butz’ Fiye, who escaped f{rom the local fail July, 1924, was arrested yesjerday Point of Rocks and returfied to to finish serving a 100-day sen- He also faces Frank | northeast | " | and Van Buren, n near Jall tence for selling liquor. o charge of jail bre Frye escaped by placing a dummy in his bed, hiding in a corridor and making & dash through an open door while the turnkey was removing gar- bage from the jail late at night | 36,000 MADE HOMELESS. Dodge Bros. Inc. and the Chrysler | had been violated. until a majority of the members re- TO TAKE Two DAYS! And A”eged T}‘ucf Tal(en lnto Custody TWO WAR HEROES Commissioner Myers expressed the not have the right to divest physical s before | tor in Spanish, 513 Sixth street, is to- | his pockets were picked on’a downtown {or more charges of housebreaking, to|searching for the watch. | Jooks into all big consolidations, but o their activity is not public. There has | score of cases, Police Trial d 5 P score of cases, the Pollce Trial Baard | Watch and several pieces of clothing in | Public Library and who wanted money | Cross to William E. Ashton, Philadel- { charges will face the board at regu- ,TERMINAL M oy s s 4 ot e e acquired, so notified Baltimore police. | squad, headed by Clement P. Cox, yes- herolsm in the World War officlals here sent Headquarters De-|mitted eight “jimmy” jobs, police said, | in the Medical Corps, attached to the | Tect of ‘duty. Some of them have been are, however, three cases in which the j S, WL PTG O orcher soarched the | of small Value and aided wounded men, being subject Water ‘Sisset iSoutimast will face the hoard tomorrow 1o ANSWer | G " widow of H. P. Dels, told police | students, he claims tin. n second leutenant, 47th In- ' CHARLOTTE v 2 | 4518 Sheriff road northeast, June 21 Vesle River. He found no foot bridge | Jocated in Charlotte today. He ar- between Twelfth and Fourteenth streets | and struck her in the chest. Subsequent- men who were endangered by the swift was approved by officials of the Potomac measles, unattended In the house placed himself at the head of the most | Motorist Pays $28 for Try-Outs at Many of the best features of the mod- | accused of engaging In an altercation | it was announced it is alleged, arrested Frank A. Lewls o serted he was “just trying out” a high- when arrésted’ for fedkless driving by storage and distribution of the perish- | man's treatment confined him to bed for ‘ Three Washingtonians are included | joss driving huum Qus A. Sohuldt in Appleton P, Clark, jr,, local architect, today to serve on the candidates’ com- | fing corners. was announced. Mr. Clark will work | Dr. Hugh Humpton Young, Baltimore | POTOMAC, Vi, August 1 During the ceremony Col. Andrew Ful- | widening of Mount Vernon avenue, the other 8 Inches yesterday, inundating Hammond. 2623 - Thirteenth street, | police allege horrowed Simms' permit, | The siaff of the Federal Trade Com- | Corporation, but the commission itself | It was made clear at the commission opinion that on the face of the deal 2 Dozen Officers Face Trial, Begin- Trapped by the name engraved on | that her husband had given the time- W. E. Ashton of Philadelphia and assets under which the Dodge-Chrysler | which he is sald to have confessed. Reynolds explained that he bought | been no indication of the department’s | will be forced to sit two days this week N a Baltimore pawn shop. The proprietor | to return to Akron, Ohio. He paid $8 | phia, and Henry F. Martin, Jackeon- 'Iar weekly session tomorrow. The re- STORE SITES 0.K D tective Charles J. P. Weber to Baltimore | and Intimated that he might reveal| 309th Fileld Artillery, 78th Division, officers concerned are charged with as-| % "UE VR4 found that the watch | The police were told that Reynolds | to constant explosions of phosgene s | q... fantry, 4th Division, near Bazouches. | Harry L. Grant. jr., sald to be sought | The specifications alleged that McKee DEMANDS JURY TR‘AL FUGIT'VE FOUR YEARS | and, under heavy fire, swam the river. ' rived by motor last night, he said, and southwes!, adjacent to the Municipal |ly the officer is accused of taking the current while under the enemy's fire Freight Termi Co. and the Penn Other officers facing assault charges exposed unit and led it forward in a 3 | 16th efn produce termingls for perishable | with a brother officer, Lawrence G. Mil- i | he . terminal development now | June 6, without justification, and then powered car in the viclnity of Sixteenth The . Wnsion opment o : Three Washington Youths Given Policeman F. J. Scoville of the Thir- able food supplied to the city by rail, [ 10 days. ! in a list of advance course Coast Ar-|pglice Court has been retained by the terminal com- - BLAGOVYESCHENSK, AMUR, 8i- missioned and non-commissioned staff, . C. Simms. colored, 305 Eighth | e olinboration with Willlam H. Cook. | Purgeon, today was admitted Lo honorary { visors of Avlington Gounty o | lerton, president, of the college, eulo main street of Potomac, from Wash- | 74 streets and 25 squares in this city. | lleutenant in Battery B: H, D. Jenkins, }nrlrueq $50 collateral on a charge of thresten 10 bolt or deser, the Demo- warrants | COLORED WOMEN RECEIVE REPORTS Officers Address National Association—Headquarters Is Dedicated. | | 1‘ Addresses and departmental reporis constituted the principal part of the program of the National Association of Colored Women meeting in the Arm- strong High School today The speakers were Miss M. F. Pidgeon of the United States Women's Bureau, { Department of Labor. who told of the statistical information on women main- tained by her department and invite the delegates to avail themselves of it Mrs. Nettie Napier, president Frederick Douglass Memorial Associa- ton, who reported on maintenance ex- penditures on the caretaker's home at Anacostia; Miss Bessye Bearden of New York and Miss Elizabeth Lindsay Davis of Chicago. national historian. Devo- tional services were conducted at the morning session by Chaplain Florence Randolph, and the invocation was de- livered by Rev. R. W. Brooks, and vocal solos were given by Mrs. Sarah Magee and Mrs. C. O. Hadley. ‘The national headquarters of the as- soclation, at the corner of Twelfth and O streets, was dedicated yesterday afi- |ernoon. Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, first | president of the association, delivered | the dedicatory address. and the prayer of consecration was delivered by Bishop | E. D. Jones of the A. M. E. Zion Church. Mrs. Terrell outlined the ideals and pur- poses for which the association was or- ganized and stressed the importance of the establishment of a headquarters. Reminiscences of the assoclation were given by Miss Elizabeth C. Carter land Miss Hallle Q. Brown, honorary | president, and brief addresses were de- livered by the vegional presidents of | the association, who ave: Miss Kltzabeth C. Carter, Mrs. Ora Brown Stokes, Mrs Minnie M. Scott, Mrs. J. B. Samuels and Mrs. Emily Overan Young colored wamen sented at_the dedicatory Charlotte Hawkins Brown, Others who | spoke ncluded Mrs, W, B. Willlams o. | Tuskegee Institute, first recording sec- | retary of the assoclation; Mrs. Rebecca Styles Taylor of Qeorgla, who first opened a headquarters here; Mrs. Dalsey Lampkin of Pittsburgh, chair- man of the transportation committee, and Mrs. Maggle L. Walker, who pre- sented the headquarters with $300. The new headquarters was purchased At & cost of $25,000, $7,000 of which has been paid. Willlam Pickens, lectufer for the Na- tlonal Association for the Advancement of Colored People. spoke at length on various subjects at a meeting of the association last night. Featured also on last night's program ‘e musical selections. Xtensive exercises were planned this afternoon in conneation with the dedi- cation of the caretaker's cottage at the Douglas Home in Anacostta. Slection of the | were rtepre- exercises by erstic party 1o recall the close wed Jack hetween it and the Sonth for more ' ory than & ecentury and s quarter,” { mission has been investigating the deal | that resulted Monday in the merger of | so0 far has not considered an inquiry 1o | determine whether the anti-trust laws | = 4 - » ' "K - B, et ol iy e POLICE BOARD CASES Watch Stolen 20 Years Ago Identified CROSS AWARDED {into as a matter of routine, but not turned from vacations the commission could take no action under the Clayton act, because it did a watch stolen here 20 years ago, Ar- | plece to a son 30 years ago and that ¥ ning Tomorrow—Neglect of Duty | thur Reynolds, 34 years old, an instruc~ | he had carried it for 10 ye L H. F. Martin of Jacksonville, merger apparently was consummated Chief Charge. day held by the police to answer nine |street. The son died while police were Fla., Honored by U. §. The Department of Justice generally - unless a violation of the law is shown,| Its docket bulging with more than a Reynolds was arrested several days|the watch several months ago from a | . Servic g . A N he. At o, DAR 8| F0ung SotSh shMent: hyiet 1a the| A4 Of the Distingdishad Service attitude toward the automobile merger. | instead of one, it was nced A somv i ad of one, it was announced today. | ¢, P Bid ot suficlently explain. | for the watch, police were told. ville, Fla., was announced today by the At least a dozen of the policemen unde: the manner in which the articles were Members of the headquarters clothing | War Department for extraordinary ARKET } maining cases will be heard Priday. ‘When notified of Reynolds’ arrest the | terday brought Reynolds here. He ad- Ashton, who was a lleutenant colonel | | A majority of the cases involve neg- veoks. " to question him. The name, “H. P ’mnrr Most: of his thefts were confined | Went forward under heavy artillery fire pending three and four weeks. Therej o WECRR, b o eraved on the back | to wearing apparel, most of which was|near Marcq, France, October 18, 1918, ailway and Freight Company Of- = 4 pand Sl MeKee of the eleventh precinct | had been Teported stolen 20 years ago. | conducts privale clastes in Spanish.| and being compelled to remove his gas ficials Approve Construction on - = Mrs. Mary H. Dels, 119 B street south- | Many prominent people have been his | mask to accomplish his work a charge of assaulting Jennie Dunayer | France, August 7 and 9, 1918, Was|by Pennsylvania officers for kidnaping Construction of terminal market | pushed the woman against a wall | ordered with his platoon to cross thehis 9-year-old son. Harry, ITL was stores on the north side of Water strest ‘lwm-d the knuckles of her right hand Frank Aqualine Pleads Not Guilty Frederick, Md., | stretched ropes and improvised a pon- ! denied the charges of kidnaping toon structure, He vescued two of his Pish Market and in connection with the | woman n'.‘ the |'|)<'1'“" )uluu(:n Ir-u'\,n;n :;” tured After Escape. F = ne perishable freight terminal project S-year-ol ch! who then had he o = Two days later when his company coms INED FOR SPEED “TEST. - mander wounded he fearlessly sylvar Rallroad at meeting held | are J. W, Connors and M, Teates here yesterday both of ‘the fourth precinct. Connors is determined attack on Bazouches. ; s e ar beer 2 i - John E. Healey, an automobile me- freight at Philadelphia, New York and | ler, in the rear of a near beer saloon in | dohn ¥, me Chicago are embodied in the local plans, | Bouthwest Washington, June 12, Teates, SELECTED FOR STAFF. |[chanic of 1001 Monroe street, who as- J;noulfll\mnu in south Washington wil)|willfully mistreated him. Lewls clllflled and Van Buren streets this morning provide ample facilities for the receipt, | that injuries resulting from the police~ Diplomas at Fort Monroe. teenth precinct, was fined $28 for reck- water and truck trans ;'l‘t\un," the . terminal and railrond officials declared. tillery candidates at Fort Monroe Otl-! The offic r er testified that Healey w FELLOWSHIP BESTOWED. rens” Milltary Training Camp selected | going over fitty miles an hour and oyt pany as assoclate architect in the de " " A% | Special Dispateh to The Star o = DUBLIN, Irish Free State, August | (4" pecial AL velopment of the produce terminal, it | iy oy, Super- | berla. August 1 (P).—More than 36,000 | They were given diplomas designating | street, northeast, was fined $50 by Judge have in- | rosidents of (his city and nearby villages | thelr rank “today by Ma). Sherman | Robert E. Mattingly. for loaning his | rard fellowship i the Royal College of Sur- | structed County Engineer C. L. Kin-|are homeless as the result of floods In | Miles, camp commander. permit. James T. Quinn, also colored, of | man of Philadsiphia, architect of the | coons, Treland | near to advertise for bids for the |the Amur River, The slream rose an- w'l‘l\r Washington men selected are O.|32¢ Eighth street northeast, who ! gized Johns Hopkins Hopital ax i |ington avenue to Hume ‘Station. Bids Alrplanes are flying over the flooded | 4807 Walah strset, Ohevy Chase. liou- |operating without a permit. The men | “example to the entire world as a great | will be nmcd August 15 al & meeting | area seatfering civeulars admonishing | tenant in Rattery C, and John W.!were artested by Policeman Matthew cation and | rd of nization hoth for edu of the upervisors in Ar- | the population (0 maintain order until | Palmer. 1448 V strest, color sergeant, Chmylko on Minnesot . mtific research.” lington County Couptl the government can rush aid. Pattery 8, east, 5 nuo: S . A of affeers is to be held i ths Arm- strong High School tomorvow morning %

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