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T PRSI N UR R——— 3 § PRETTY WIFE WINS DISPUTE OVER ROAD Vigil With Baby Halts Dig- ging Until Contractors Make Terms Over Dirt. THe act of the attractive young wife and 30-month-old ba Maryland poultry f top of a bank besi Baltimore bot Md., yesterday afternoon and ing a sSteam shovel crew engaged in widening way dig the bank from bare fruit today. | shington- | e on the bank | f the excavating | ur ye: methods v enginee digging aw of the property of m M. Bielefeld Reach Agreement. It of her protest cached today bet il or Drotest agais State highw tractors 0 crew. wed to proceed. Bielefeld_told ause the State be | perty sent, or even requesting m and then selling the dirt dug from my farm to some one else. I still have to pay ta on the quarter acre the State is taking away from me to widen that road. and I think I am at least entitled to the earth taken off my place. ‘Woman Defies Crew. “If T had wanted to be nasty abo #t. I think I could have had the w excavat; ation crew ref suspend operati Mrs. Bielefel the baby, Cora Vivian, in her arms, sat | down on of the bank and refused to | move. If you want to go on digging here and selling the dirt, you will have | 0 dig me up, too,” she told the work- men Biclefeld declared today that the en- r in charge of the shovel attempted to frighten the woman and child away by raising the shovel scoop in front of them and clashing the jaws of the 8coop together. ‘I was sitting beside my wife on the bank at the time” Bielefeld said. “When the shovel jaws banged together sand and pebbles were showered over us. My wife raised a parasol over her- self and the baby and I pulled my hat over my face. “I said to my wife so that the shovel crew could hear me, ‘Well, Lottie. I guess you will have 1o have a new dress ’ ‘and they stopped that sort of pretty quick.” When Mrs. Bielefeld refused to move, the excavating crew appealed to Mary- land State Policeman Clarence E. Base- man to get them out of the way. Base- man called his superiors at the Laurel police substation, who in turn called the office of the State attorney general. The State legal department ruled that Mrs. Bielefeld was entirely within her rights and could not be made to leave. Threatened ‘Then Wlfixle y agreed to meet Bielefeld’s demand that the dirt be used to fill the hollow on the Biele- feld farm and work was allowed to pro- “I was ready to go right back and sit on the bank today if they didn't live up %o _the agreement,” Mrs. Bielefeld said. _Wingate and Cobey declared today that the episode 'vas due to & 'ueng;nunmu" on the part of the Biele: “It _was our intention all along to give Bielefeld earth to make up for that we were hauling away from his bank,” Wingate explained. “I told him, however, that we didn't have room enough 1o run our trucks around lhe‘ shovel and would have to haul the | earth away in back of the shovel. | When the shovel moved along far enough so we could run up behind jt into his place we intended to begin dumping it there.” The Washington-Baltimore highway s being widened to a 60-foot over-all right of way from the new Laurel Bridge for a distance of 3.7 miles toward Baitimore. Concrete strips 10 | feet wide are being lajd on each side of the present highway. This type of construction later will be continued all the way to Baltimore and from Laure to the District of Columbia line. W. H. WINCHCOLE DIES. fative of Scotland Succumbs at Age of 39. William H. Winchcole, 39 years old native of Filkirk, Scotiand, died yes erday at his home, 2020 O street, afte: brief iliness He came to this country about 21| years ago and had lived most of the time in Washington, where he was the iife insurance business. He was & member of the Maso Mr. Wincheole is survived by Mrs. Dorotny Clark Winch by two brothers and another br Great Britaix o be heid at sfternoon at Porter of the Pirs officiate. Burial Cemetery BAND CONC By the United Sta the Walter o'clock ERTS Ponce Serradell | Gutierrez by daughter of a| sitting on | BOTTLES ASSIST LIQUOR ACQUITTAL Inability to Identify Contain- ers Causes Court to Direct Verdict of Not Guilty. of the police to ¢ bottles of liquor brought in a while the defense produced | empty bottles bearing the initials of | one of the raiding officers, led Judge | Gus A. Schuldt to instruct a Police Court jury to return a directed verdict of not guilty today in the case of Ed- ward Albert Hawkins of apartment 2, 1833 Eighteenth street, charged with | sale, transportation and possession of | intoxicating liquor. Hawkins was arrested June 16 when he delivered a package allegedly con- taining two pints of gin and one of whisky to Policeman Harry C. League of the police vice squad. League said he had ordered the liquor under an |assumed name and gave Hawkins marked money when he delivered the the policeman’s apartment | “Sergt. ©. J. Letterman, head of the |squad, and Sergt. Willam A. Burke | were hidden in the apartment at the time. Hawkins was taken to the tenth p cinet station, where the marked money | ‘eputedly was taken from him and he wa | held while the vice squad searched his apartment. When he returned. the de- | fense set up, he found the bottles de- Mr. and Mrs. Bielefeld and their little daughter, Cora Vivian, who sat on | Jjvered to League in a box in his apart- to proceed with exca agree to dump the dirt in low places on CALIFORNIA CREW DEFEATS ITALIANS IN OLYMPIC RACE | m | i Pearce’s time minutes | seconds and Saurin's e Pearce is a son of Harry Pearce, a former world's professional title holder. and is one of the favorites for the | ly crown. dian eight won from Pol Canada’s time was 6 m seconds, and Poland’s 6 mir seconds. Poland led unt the 1.000-meter point, which is way, when Canada made it bow for bow. The Canadians then forged half (Continued from course. 42 up|a length ahead at 1,500 ‘meters and |claimed revenge tod: finished strong. In a quarter-final-round race, which brought together two of the leading rivals of the University of California crew for Olympic honors in the eight- oared class, the British eight defeated Germany by one length. | 1 RETAINS WOMEN'S EVENTS. | Debate. | AMSTERDAM, August 7 () —The| International Amateur Athletic Federa- tion, after a spirited debate, today voted, 16 to 5, to retain the women’s track and field events in the Olympic program. | By a vote of 14 to 8 it rejected a full list of 10 events asked by the Women's Internationzl Sports Federation. The federation banished the 800- meter run from future women's pro- grams after a long, hot debate. The | vote was 12 to 9 against the grueling test, with one country abstaining from going on record. Proposals to include the broad jump, the shot-put and the 200-meter dash also failed to command a majority. ‘The six events adopted for future feminine Olympists were proposed by the American deleg: includes three tra events as follows: 100-meter dash, 80-meter 400-meter relay, high jump, throw and javelin throw. Those opposing retention of women's events in the world games were led by Canada—the country which carried off major honors for the fair athletes this year. She was supported by England, Ireland, Pinland, Hungary and Italy. Australia hurdles, discus and South Africa broke away from the other British Empire representatives and voted to keep the women in. The United States, Japan, Belgium, Denmark, Esthonia, France Germany, Gteece, Holland, Norway, Poland, Sweden and Switzerland also favored the feminine athletes. The United States delegation opposed the inclusion of the 800-meter run, the broad jump, the shot-put and the 200- meter dash among the women's events, but the 200-meter event came very near adoption. The vote on the 200-meters stood deadlocked with 11 nations favor- ing and 11 opposing, whereupon the or- | ganization president, Edstrom = of | Sweden, cast the deciding vote against. U. S. BOXER SCORES. & I | AMSTERDAM, August 7 (@).— Stephen Holaika, lightweight from the United States, won his elimintalon bout | in the Olympic boxing tests from Tommy Potsch, Czechoslovakla, on a foul in the third round. Other Americans paired for the first eliminations were ~ Alex Caletchitz, | heavyweight, against Sverre Sorsdal of | Sweden; Leon Lucas, light heavyweight, | against Ernst Pistulla, Germany, Lieut. | Harry H. Henderson, U. 8. N., agalnst Sanz Compuzano of Spain, middle- weights; Thomas Lown against Paul Landini, Argentina, welterweight Harold George Devine against Faus Montefiore of Italy, featherwelghts: | John Daley against Ingvald Gjerke, Nor- ay, bantamweights, Hyman Miller 15t Marcel Sartos of Belgium, fiy- | The heayy and middleweights boxed with ounc % d those in the lighter divisio x-ounce gloves, Tommy Lown, welterweight and cap- tain of the United States tcam and one of its mainstays, was defeated by Lan dini of Argentina by a decision. 1 dini bad the better of the Americ the first and third rounds AMERICAN SETS MARK. AMSTERDAM, August 7 (%) Kojac of New York established g world record for the 100 m wimming today when he quali- Olympic sem minute 9 4-5 record of 1 minute as held by James A United States, yziter La and Paul Wyatt of the United State Iso won th a rLive he d qualificd for the semi-finals, | which will be disputed tomorrow, Lau- fer's time 1 minute 12 4-5 onds and Wyatt’s 1 minute 14 seconds Herber {edeman Zimmerma Aubx Dance Bkilton | “The Gondo- Sullivan Bquire Baxter Bouss s from the opera Yeomanry Valse Elaine The Gladiator he Star Spangled Banner Ladue Begins Vacation B Engl Waltz Finale Wiiliam Ladue AT his absence Mai. I My Lugineer Commissioner Wyait had the hardest race da hing only a few feet ahead of | Lundhah of Sweden ifiers Germany The Upited States entrant preme in the eliminstion s pringhonrd diy Harold Smith won the third heat with 169 points last night. Pete Des Jarming and Michael Galitzen, other American entrants, also won their respective heats yesterday They were well ahead in their respec- tive fields with & wide margin of points w spare Germany beat Great Britain in water polo, 8 goals to b, today entering the final, in which the Ger- mans will meet the winners of French-Hungarian match Amnes Geraghty of New York qualt { fieg 1 emi-fnals In the Olymy | 20 e} { fre mypic 1ecord hulder fur the distance Federation Votes 16 to 6 After Spirited | ghts, light heavywelghts yfor all heats eight- | finals scheduled of the| home near Laurel yesterday and defied State road builders their property. Star Staff Photo. MURDERED IN BED BY LIQUOR AVALS Los Angeles Gangsters Also Severely Wound Wife of Italian Victim. By soc NGELES ngland for an alleged uor theft when Gaetano Binetti was d by four men who stood by his and shot him with his own LOS Al from the st that killed Binetti also wounded his wife Con- a. Physicians said she has only a ight chance to recover. Mrs. Maria Binetti, a relative, who heard the shots from an adjoining room, told police that the men, wearing what appeared “to be police badges, entered the house shortly after midnight. three of ‘them going directly to Binetti's bed- room. The other stood guard with her, she said Before men s ne: “You stale my liquor.” Binetti denied this in shooting Binetti. one of the id to him, according to the wit- Italian, and | one of the men nicked up a Shotgun and fired two shots into his body. with a time of 3:27-3-5 made in Paris in 1924, and the brightest hope of the American team in the event, finished second to Miss Schrader of Germany. Four heats composed the elimination ~the first two finishers to qual- ify for the semi-finals scheduled at 3 p.m. toMorrow. Miss Geraghty swam a great racc Leading by a few feet at 50 meters, she was overhauled by the speedy German giri before the 100-meter mark was reached. The German, pulling steadily away, won by more than 10 meters, but she had to beat the world's record 1o do it, negotiating the distance in 3 minutes 11 3-5 seconds. The American girl's time was 3:18 4-5. The second heat was won by Fraulein Muhe, Germany; Miss Baron of Hoi- land was second and Gertrude Hoffman of Kingston, Pa., third. The United Btates entry may qualify, however, as | the swimmer making the best time for third place in the four heats is eligible to compete in the semi-finals. The timc of the winner of the second heat was 3:141-5. Miss Hoffman's time Was 3:213-5. She was tied for third,placc with Miss Hazelius of Sweden, Who finished third in the first heat. No Americans were entered in the third heat, which was won by Miss Ja- cobson of Denmark, with Fraulein Zim- Jmerman of Germany second. The win- Ining time was 3:17 3:17 2-5. The fourth and last heat was won by Miss Van Norden, Holland, with Jane Fauntz, Illinois Women's A. C., Miss Van Norden's time was 3:27 1-5 and Miss Fauntz made the distance in 3:29. All three of the American girls en- Gertrude Hoffman qualified through a tie for the best time for third. The first semi-final heat for the men’s 200-meter breast-stroke was won by Sturuta of Japan, with Spence of Canada second homas Blankenburg of Oakland, Calif, the only entry in this event from the United States, fin- ished last and was eliminated. The winning time, 3:49, set a new Olympic record In the elimination he meter men's free-style swimming, two firsts in each heat and the best third qualified for the semi- for Thursday. The by Austin Clapp of with Aral of Japan sats of the 400~ { first heat was won Hollywood, Calif | second Clarence C second heat econd The second and last of the semi-final Iheats in the 200-meter breast | competition was won by Radem |of Germany, with Harling of Sweden second. The time was 2:56 3-5 Tsuruta Spence, Canada: Iidefonso Philippines; Rademacher. Germany and Harling, Sweden, qualified for the final bbe of Honolulu won the with Yoneyama of Japan - | bottles were second. | ke | the " { navies have figured in the pa: | ment, apparently forgotten by the ation necessary for widening of the road until they would | searchers. started in whit | claimed, contained samples liquor sold to League, but when the | fense produced the box containing the bottles with the initials, which George McCarron, another member of the vic | squad, identified as his own, explaining he had marked them for evidence, the fcourt directed the not guilty verdict. } After the trial Judge Schuldt, Assist- ant United States Attorney David A {Hart and Police Inspector Stoll con- {ferred in the judge's chambers. At its | conclusion, the judge announced they | had merely discussed the “general situa- | tion. CARLIN DECLINES ALEXANDRIA OFFICE | e | Editor Turns Down Offer of Post of Commonwealth Attorney to Succeed Woolls. trial brought | When the Special Dispatch to The Star ALEXANDRIA, Va, | Charles C. Carlin, jr., editor of the Alexandria Gazette, today formally declined appointment as Com- manwealth attorney of the city of Al- August by ‘William T. Woolls, newly appointed judge of the Corporation Court. Woolls, who has been Commonwealth office to name his successor in the old job. ~ | " Carlin was admitted to the bar in 1923 and the following year received his law degree from the University of | virginia. _He is a member of the law firm of Carlin, Carlin & Hall of Al- exandria and Washipgton and a mem- ber of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. His father is former Representative Charles C. Carlin. In turning down the appointment, Carlin declared he is not a candidate for any public office ldr‘l\H[v; president and | exandria, which had been tendered him | attorney, has the power under his new | TUESDAY, RADITCH'S ILLNESS STIRS JUGOSLAVIA Troops Reported Mobilized to Prevent Trouble in Event of Leader’s Death. Py the Associated Press VIENNA, August | dications today that ning high in Jugoslavia with Stefan | Raditch, who been the cause of perhaps more political storms than any other European statesman since the war, precariously ill The Belgrade government was report- | ed to have drafted several regiments for duty at Zagreb to prevent trouble in| event of Raditch's death. Vladimir Hristovitch, editor of the Belgrade paper Jedinsto, has been assassinated for attacking Raditch in his paper. Dispatches from Zagreb said an un- founded rumor of Raditch's death drew thousands of excited people the Croat peasant party leader's villa | Hundreds of remaining around the leader’s { ports from the sick bed. Two specialists | have been summoned from Vienna and | one from Munich Wounded by Deputy. Raditch was wounded by a Monte~ negrin deputy on June 20, who during | a session of Parliament fired at the| Croatian deputies. killing two, including | Raditch’s nephew Paul, and wounding | three other |~ There has been talk that the kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes | | formed in 1918 might evolve into a dual erned after the e Austro-Hungarian _empire. Parli is already split, the National Assembl: | meeting at Belgrade and the oppositior members from Croatfa meeting i Zagreb. | The meeting of the Croat Parli | developed into a_popular demonst in favor of a “free Croatia.” A series| of resolutions were adopted 1refusing to| recognize any decision or financial ob- | ligations undertaken by the “rump’ Parliament at Belgrade. The resolu- tions also claimed full individuality for cach of the provinces united in 1918 {and full autonomy for the Croatian | people. The fire of hatred among the parties which culminated in the shooting in | June. had been temporarily extinguished by the efforts of King Alexander, who | effected a-reconciliation in 1925. When | Raditch was appointed minister of ed- | jon by the King at that time it | was thought that Jugoslavia's internal political troubles were at an end. Had Attacked Italy. Raditch, however, precipitated a new | crisis in April, 1926, when he and mem- | bers of his party resigned from the | cabinet upon their demand being refused | for the reconvening of Parliament in |order to question the premier on | charges of graft made against his son. The activities and speeches of Ra- ditch had far-reaching effects and on several occasions his attacks upon Italy and Premier Mussolini caused strained | and delicate situations between the two countries. After Raditch had been shot, his ad- perents withdrew from the cabinet and |since then his party has consistently refused to acknowledge the legality of | the Jugoslav government ‘There were in- feeling was run- to ment | Auto Catches Fire. Spegial Dispatch to The Star. POTOMAC, Va., August 7.—An auto- mobile which caught on fire at the Potomac filling station, near the gates of the Potomac railroad yards. brought out the Potomac Fire Department last night at 8 o'clock. By the Associated Press NEW YORK, August 7.—8inking of the Italian submarine F-14 and the efforts of its trapped crew to commu- | nicate with their rescuers vividly recall the tragic days that followed the sink- ing of the American submersible S-4 off Cape Cod last December. ‘The Italian rescuers faced with the same task as confronted the Amer- ican Navy, The F-14 went down in collision with an Itallan destroger; the S-4 was struck by the Coast Guard de- stroyer Paulding. Forty-two men were | aboard The slowly suffocating crew of the S-4 rapped messages to divers by bang- ing on the hull with a wrench. Dis- | tered remained in the competition, as|patches from Rome indicate that the men in the P-14 are trying to commu- nicate with rescuers. Same Weather Conditions. Weather conditions hampered the in the Adriatic were reported unfavor- able for rescuing the F-14 When the 8-4 went down, the hulk lay on the bottom for days, while the intombed men, slowly suffocating, rap- ped out messages to their rescuers. On December 19, two days after the collision, there came the faintly tapped message, “Is there any hope?” and a | day the ‘tapping became unintel- ligible and there were no more signals ‘Then the weather became too rough to work and the task was temporarily abandoned. The S-4 was not ralsed untl several months later. Slnking of the F-16 adds one more tragedy to the list of those in which submersible eraft of the world In 1925 the American S-5 S with 34 men off Block Island, R. 1. aft- collision with the steamer City of Row Other submarine disasters, as shown by the Assoclated Press records include SINKING OF F-14 RECALLS DEATH OF 42 MEN ON SUBMARINE S-4| Conditions of Collision of I;alian Under- sea Craft Similar to Those of Fate of American Vessel. work of salvaging the S-4; conditions | , The American submarine O- |in “collision with a steamer at lantic entrance to the Panama Canal in 1923 with the loss of three lives. Loss of the F-4 with 22 officers and men at Honolulu in 1915 Sinking of the 5-48 off Bridgeport |conn., in 1921. Forty-two men were Urapped and lost, as the boat went down ! with an open hatch | A Japanese submarine on its first trial run went down off Kobe in August, | 1923, with 85 men—the largest loss re- | corded in submarine history Forty-nine Iives were lost when an- other Japanese undersea craft sank in | colliston with the battleship Tatsuta off Sasebo in 1924 In January, 1924, 43 officers and men of the British' submarine 1.-24 were lost off Portland, England, in collision with the dreadnaught Resolution | Halian Crew of 50 Lost. The Itallan boat Scbastiano Venlero | was lost with 50 men in 1925, during | maneuvers off Sicily |~ In March, 1922, during the war games ‘ufi Gibraltar, a British submarine with | 23 men aboard was rammed and sunk by a British destroyer | Another British submaiine sank in the English Channel in 1618, and dur- ing the war numerous German under- sea boats were sunk without trace In 1925, the American submarine | 5-48, which had been raised and re- | conditioned after she had plunged to! the bottom off Bridgeport, Conn.. De- cember 7, 1921, grounded off Por mouth, N. H., bat the crew and craft were saved. In the same year, the §-19 | grounded off Cape Cod. bul was float- ed with loss of life’ | "An explosion aboard the E-2 in the | Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1916 killed 4 men and injured many others, and in | 1926 an explosion in the 8-49 at New | London, Conn., killed 3 men and in- jured 9 others AUGUST 7, 1928.° Upper: Little 3-year-old Gloria Matus, orphaned when her parents were | drowned Sunday. Lower: Mr. and Mrs. Erich Mati | | | | | i | | | the parents. | — | DETROIT ARRESTS 3 WASHINGTON MEN All Apprehended in Auto, Heavily Armed and Carry- ing Ammunition. Five Washington men, one a Go\'-l ernment witness in the prosecution of | the three Busch slayers, were arrested yesterday by Detroit police, who claimed to have found them, heavily armed, in an automobile with a supply of am- munition and two stilettos. Those arrested are Harry Thomas, 23; his brother, John, 25; James Cornell, 26: George Sollers, 25, and James Callan, 21. James Callan was the witness who appeared iIn the, case of Nicholas Lee Eagles, John Proctor and Samuel Mo- reno, recently electrocuted for the murder of Policeman Busch. His tes- timony concerned a pistol which fig- ured in the slaying He is also said to have admitted com-~ plicity in a filling station hold-up, for which he was sentenced to three years' imprisonment and paroled. Police records shew that George Sol- lers was released from the Lorton Re- formatory April 19, having served a sentence for grand larceny. John Thomas also s said to be on probation. ‘When arrested yesterday by members of the Detroit crime and bomb squad the five young men were sitting in their car, parked in the downtown section. ‘The elder Thomas, according to the poiice, stated they brought the weapons and ammunition to Detroit because they could sell them for a higher price there than in Washington. Each of the flvxt‘ is said to have had a concealed re- volver, U.S. NAVY SE.NDS REGRETS Robinson Cables Mussolini on Sink- ing of Submarine F-14. Acting Secretary of the Navy Robin- son today cabled to the Italian govern- ment the regret of the Navy over the disaster of the Italian submarine F-14. ‘The message read “On_behalf of the United States Navy, I desire to express to your excel- lency and the royal navy my deep re- gret over the unfortunate accident to the F-14 and my hope for the speedy rescue of her crew.” ‘The message was directeed to Mus- solini, minister of marine. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. | TODAY. | Vincent B. Costello Post, No. 15, American Leglon, will meet, '8 o'clock, | in boardroom of the District Building. | FUTURE A bridge and 500 party will be given by the Women's Benefit Assoclation | Thursday, 1:30 pm., at its clubhouse, 1750 Massachusetts avenue. | g | ‘Women's City Club—The business and | | professional women's section will give a subscription dinner in the garden tomorrow, 6:30 pm. Muna Lee, direc- tor of the Bureau of International Re- lations of the University of Porto Rico, | will be honor guest and speaker. Burnside Corps, No. 4, W. R. C., will hold its monthly business meeting to- | morrow at Grand Army Hall | INK WITH CREW OF 31 Lundhah, | Aui | | | | B TVl SRS T 0 TR S | date for the gubernatorial nomination | dgetal the | veceived only 2,000 to 3,000 votes & the | organisation | i ~—~Assoclated Press Photo NEW PAPER MONEY PRINTING 1S BEGUN | Bills Will Be About One-Third Smaller Than Present Currency. Printing of the new small-sized paper money was started today at the Bureau | of Engraving and Printing. The program, which eventually is to supplant all the large-sized bills now in circulation with new notes about one- third smaller, was inaugurated with ceremony, several officials of both the bureau and the Treasury Department being in attendance at the press. The first sheet printed contained the backs of 12 one-dollar bills. The sheet was approximately the same size as that on which the same flnnt\ns press formerly printed 8 large bills. About 600 sheets, which carry a total of 7,200 backs of one-dollar bills, were to be printed today. More presses will be added later as the plates become available and the increased production will continue without interruption. Fives to Be Printed Next. The first denomination of one-dollar bills will be followed by the fives. Printing of the backs of five-dollar bills is expected to start shortly. The first sheet of one-dollar backs, which was pulled from the press about 11:45 o'clock, was signed by the offi- clals present at the ceremony; and after it has been dried, printed on the face and completed in the process of manu- facture, it will be preserved as a souve- nir of the dpening of the Government new money program. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury H. H. Bond headed the list of officials at the ceremony. Others included Alvin W. Hall, director of the bureau: J. E. Swigert, assistant_director of the bu- reau; Charles A. Baker, superintendent of the plate printing division, and John J. Kenelly, foreman of the plate print- l\'\gl section, in which the first sheet was pulled. 0Old Employe Honored. The honor of printing the first new money went to Benjamin F. Harris, who has been in the employ of the Bureau of razing for 29 years. Mr. Harrls, the plate printer, was assisted in_the operation by Mrs. Vita Ruso and Mrs, Ruth Berry, plate printers’ assistants. The one-dollar bill comprises about 53 per cent of the total number of bills used by the American people. Consequently production of the one- dollar bills will be speeded first and | other denominations will follow. The | Government plans to turn out a C«\m-‘ | plete assortment of small size paper money before releasing any of it to the public. Just when this release will be made has not yet been decided. But it has been tentatively understood that it will be not earlier than next July. The denominations to be printed in- clude one-dollar_bills, two, five, ten, twenty, fifty. one hundred, five hundred, one thousand, five thousand and ten | #housand. The new money is approximately | 65-16 by 211-16 inches in size, which is about one-third smaller than the present money | The other parts of the printing divi- | ston are still working on the program | turning out the necessary large money | which will be needed before the new | becomes available. | G. 0. P. WILL TURN + HEAVY ARTILLERY | ON NEW ENGLAND| (Continued from First Page.) a matter of guess work. At the pri- | who is | had little hope of locat IDROWNED COUPLE NIT YT LOCATED Small Daughter of Eric Matug and Wife Has No Rela- tives Here. The 60 feet of water in the Potomad) | River off Morgantown, Md., still cove| { ered the bodies of Mr. and Mrs, Erial Matus today, while their 4-year-old daughter, Gloria, who has not been told of the tragedy, planned to go on a pice nic with the children of Mrs. John haeffer, 1428 Trving street northeasty eping the orphaned child. Authorities at the naval proving grounds at Dahigren, Va., renewed theis search for the bodies this morning, bu§ g them. The Matuses, who lived in Greates Capitel Heights, Md., were drowned Sunday morning when a small boal from which they were fishing capsized. Mrs. Anne Roberts and Andrew Mor= tensen, members of the party, were res cued, but Mr. and Mrs. Matus had dis= ppeared before nearby boats could 1 reach the scene. Child Without Relatives in U. S. The drowning leaves the child with< out relatives, save for a grandmother and uncle living in Germany. If these relatives do not claim the gitl, she will be kept by Mrs. Schaeffer. “I promised Mrs. Matus T would look out for Gloria until she got back,” Mrs. Schaeffer said, “and now that she 18 not coming back, I feel that I ought to care for the child just the same.” Although Gloria has not been told that her mother and father are dead, she seems to sense that something is wrong. When her clothes were brought to the city she wanted to know why. Mrs. Schaeffer told her that this had | been done so her “vacation” could be When the telephone rings prolonged. know if that is her she wants to | mother calling for her. Spends Time in Sandpile. The little girl spends most of her | time playing in a sandpile with the three Schaeffer children, who know of the drowning but have received strict instructions not to impart the informa- tion to their playmate. Gloria’s most constant companion is “Tiny,” a small black and white puppy which her mother gave her on her fourth birthday. The puppy is playful and frisl in sharp contrast to the conduct of a large collie, owned by Mr. Matus, which has undertaken a self- imposed fast since the drowning, ac- cording to neighbors. The tragedy which has befallen the child is closely akin to her mother’s girlhood experience, when she was left an orphan when 3 years old and reared in a French orphanage. Mr. Matus was born in Germany, coming to Washington 10 years ago. He learned the brickmasonry trade and had just gone into business for himself this Summer. JUDD FUNERAL RITES SET FOR TOMORROW | | National Geographic Seciety Will Close in Honor of Publisher. Funeral services for George Herbert Judd, 68 years old, president of the printing and publishing firm of Judd & Detweiler, Inc, who died at his Summer home, near Skyland, Va., Sun= day, will be conducted in Calvary Bap- tist Church tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Rev. Homer J. Councilor, as- sistant pastor of Calvary Baptist Church, and Rev. James Many, pastor of the East Washington Heights Bap- tist Church, will officiate. Active pallbearers will be John H. Davis, Charles H. Cooke, William A. | Edelblut, Charles Wood, Charles Smoot {and Charles Haffle. 3 Honorary pallbearers will be as fol« lows : Dean William A. Wilbur of George Washington University, William W, Everett, John Oliver La Gorce, Frank- lin. L. Fisher, Julius I Peyser, Law- rence Mills, Fred McKee, C. Elmore Cropley. Thomas C. Simpson and Oscar G. Wright. ‘The National Geographic Society, whose magazine has been published for a number of years by Mr. Judd's firm, will close tomorrow at noon and fly its flag at half-staff out of respect (0 his memory. Mr. Judd had for many years been frumlnem in the civic and business ife of this city, where he had a wide “HIGHWAY SECTION OF TO BE CLOSED SOON Lee Route I-;;m_A'E‘gton Avenue to Rucker to Be Barricaded Thursday. Special Dispatch to The' Star. CLARENDON. Va, August 7.—Close ing of the Lee Highway to traffic from Arlington avenue to Rucker avenue Thursday morning to allow for the con=- struction of a culvert at the former street crossing to take care of the drainage from Aurora Heights. is an- nounced by Corson & Gruman, con- tractors who are engaged in widenin, the highway from Rosslyn to Cherry- dale. With the closing of this stretch the highway will be closed from A lington avenue to Thrifton road, a dis tance of about one-half mile, part of the distance having been previously closed to permit the building of Spout Run Bridge. Rerouting of the busses which b been plying over this stretch is made necessary by its closing. Leon Arnold, president of the Washington and Mary- land Coach Co.. which operates the busses on the highway, announced to- day that arrangements are being made to detour the busses over the Rucker ave |avenue through Morton street to Ar- lington avenue and thence o i back to the TALKS TO G. 0. P. WOMEN. Louis A. MacMahon Speaks to Ar lington County League. maries not long ago, & proposal to re- peal the State constitutional provision for prohibition was defeated by about 6,000 votes, the drys marshaling some 97,000 votes and the wets about 91.- | 000. On the other hand the wet candi- | Both Senator Nye and | Senator Fragler are regarded as drys North Dakota, in the 1924 election | gave Coolidge 94931 votes: La Fol- lette, 89,922, and John W. Davis, Demo- crat, only 13,858, La Follette had the | support of Senator Frazier and late Senator Senators, during that campaign Smith vietory In the State, therefore, same primajy cal upheaval There is a strange clock in the Poly- technie Institute of Zurich, Switzerland It never needs to he wound, but is run by & mechanism set {n motion every time the temperature changes (wo de- ' today butchers wsed to wrap i large vegetable leaves, wrees, T . T the | tion will Ladd, both Re‘)ubuc-n | members A ngllm also will { the district | could only be regarded as a real politi- | ford Cuufi(y‘“("‘:lmm s n:l;‘s‘}vw 0 The Star CLA DON. Va. August 7.—L A. MacMahon, speaking before a ln::‘llf ing of the Arlingfon County of Republican Women In the Rucker last night, explained in Building here form of county Republican The county committee, Mr. MaoMa« hon declared, would - meet u;‘uwm" NIght (0 select a date for & MASS Meets ing at which, delegates from the wari« ous precinets will be chosen to attend the county convention. The convene select a county chatrman and of the county committee. Del- be chosen to attend be held at Staf- The pu laf the latter convention wmp |decide whether ‘s candidate LS run for Congress from the ef - gressional distriet. B Ko be . Before paper was plentiful as ft 1y up meat