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THE EVENING STAR,- WASHINGTON, D. €. MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1928, BURNED MAN SEEN AS GANG VTN Police Believe Slayers Char- red Body to Prevent Identi- | | fication by Fingerprints. ®y the Associated Press ! ENGLEWOOD, N. J.. August 6.—The murder of & man whose body. shot through the head and back and then burned almost beyond recognition, w found by a berrypicl long & W traveled road atop th isades, w & mystery today to pol They laid the murder to a gang feud, believing the dead man had been *“taken for a ride,” possibly from Ne ed. his body had been taken to the spot where it was found and the cloth- ing was saturated with gasoline and fired The victim was about 30 years old weighed about 140 pounds and was about 5 feet 8 inches tall The fact that the hands were more of the body ef that it w 2 v believed a special «Fort ha ade to preclude wlentification by fingerprints A check was being made on all cars passing over the h ferries Saturday night in th bility that the victim might h: killed in New York and his body ta over to New Jersey The murder was in six months in which an attempt was made to destroy the body by burning. Miss Margaret Brown, governess, of New York was found dying on a road near Morristown, N , her clothes in flames, Febroary 21. The slayer was mever found. the second Visitor in City Dies Suddenly. 76 years old, of a yesterday morning while visiting at the ome of Mrs. J. H. Miller, 25 K street | | o while. o+ Zeped e ||OUTSTANDING WORLD EVENTS | ke o, et S OF p AST WEEK BRIEFLY TOLD uniting into one party adherents of the | dual monarchy and the federalized state i By the Associated Press. | regarding the welfare of her nationals | ideas Old World statesmen lately have been | in_that province. | ?:}',"u"“f}‘;fidl‘.l"‘i iy xt('fiv"“éé?\.»s?ufi'"fi} peace for a will to war in European cob- | movement to abolish war. It centere sciousness. | about Poland, whose several years' dis- | “'Thus far the movement has not | affected international questions, but in busy fostering substitution of & will to| One situntion only seemed to offer | (i) furnished the spark that set fire discouragement to advocates of the | D e e The fourteenth anniversary of “Der|Pute with Lithuania respecting boun Down o fifif,flf.fi“,’,‘,‘,‘l iy saw Eduard Herriot, a French el e B ken” in all parts of the body opposition rty, decided the action was uncon- itutional and called a session of Na- tional legislators, which, it w | embraced 202 of the 335 members of | Parliament. They resolved that Parlia- | ment still existed and then followed parliamentary procedure and adjourned for the hot months until November. ve an audience in a G that his country might "us tunity to win Germany's It saw | week in Vilna. }German press and officl ng to| This old city, renamed capital of persuade other powers to disarm that | Lithuania by constitutional amendment the Kellogg pact to outlaw war might |a few months ago, is the chief conten- e agent and not a mere | tion in a situation which has been de- | George, British | scribed as offering the greatest existing mier, l;m‘kmzz nusr ‘1)1} dcl; r‘zL‘lo [I,hll) lnealce 3( E‘umpe It ll::«*’ Britain Blocks Industrial Clash. unless the pact is followed | been in Polish hands since October,| . e . withdrawal of gue of Nations confirmed | Great B e ey Rhineland, the people fon in 1923, but Lithu-|©f her indu . watory nations will realize that | ania has never recognized the validity | = EXCURSION {he whole thing has been “pure hum-|of that decision. | bug.” The whole thing is to come befnrej LOW FARES o The war anniversary also witnessed | the League again.next month, but the $21.00 Sir Austin Chamberlain, British for- | ability of that body to setile the dis- BIRMINGHAM “ign secretary and political foe of | pute is problematical. The last time | lovd George, calling upon American | the Council of the Leagye tried to find | blic opinion to back up the Kellogg 30 answer it only recommended that | $25.00 $20.00 ot in order that it may become “a | the countries reopen direct negotiations. | . y A o This tried, but it failed Saturday, August 11, 1928 Tickets good on regular trais the governments of have expressed a wish to | ns going and _returning _(except CRESCENT LIMITED). and in Pullman cars s of the peace, although h continues to protest the “military upon payment of regular charges for space occupied. vity” of the other. Political lines were tightened in Jugo: Limit of ticket 12 davs in addition to date of sale. Baggage May be st formidable deterrent to war.” | ng George's speech from the throne oroguing the British Parilament, choed this hope. League Circles “Optimistic” From League of Nations circl pessimism respecting dis- t has been replaced by opti- . Coincidence of acceptances of the pact with the finding of a workable set of principles on naval re- duction between Great Britain and France—a compromise to which the | g United States has given unofficial ap- proval—caused this change in attitude. There was a lull, too, in the gather- ing of Far Eastern storm clouds, China and Japan seeming to compose men-l differences. International forces in Chinese territory are being reduced. The Vatican and the League of Nations cave a sizable measure of recognition | to the de facto Nationalist government iat Nanking. Great Britain announced ingness to negotiate for revision of nequal treaties” as soon as the ncidents growing out of the 1927 Nanking riots have been settled. Th came | slavia. Two Parliaments assembled in | hat_country. one at Belgrade continu- Checked. For tickets and further fnformation see Ticket Agents, 1510 H St. N.W. or Union Station. Southern Railway System reported, | | seve The threatened lockout of 500,000 cot- - ton mill workers was avertec by the intervention of a one-armed probation officer who persuaded a recalcitrant unionist to rejoin his local. This stopped a strike which had been cited by mill owners as a reason for ordering the lockout. Unrevealed difficulties apparently in Venezuela, where Gen. Juan V. Gomez is rounding out 35 years as president_of the South American re- public. Indirect advices related that N society women had teen arrested acas and charged with revolu- ry plotting. (Hitherto movements nst the administration have been bed to students.) 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