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30 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1928 LANSING TRBUTE PAD BY OFFCALS Diplomats Also Join in Fu- Girl Lost 16 Years Located by Mother In Insane Asylum By the Associated Press. LAS VEGAS, N. Mex., November 2.— Eleanor Reddick, for 16 years the sane asylum, said to have been com- mitted there by her stepmother, has been reunited with her real mother, THO WOMEN HURT IN TRAFFC CRASH “mystery girl” of the New Mexico in- | Mother and Daughter Treat- ed at Hospital After Auto- voir by an automobile operated by Wll-‘ ter A. Lowry, 1317 Irving street. ‘Themostacles Placos, 20 years old, 710 F street northeast, was injured on the forearm and finger when his automo- bile was in a collision at Sixth and G streets northeast with a machine op- erated by Fred C. Weaver, 18 Quincy street northeast. Placos was treated at Casualty Hospital. Charges of leRving the scene of an accident were placed against Bruce Dickens of Thirteenth street and Iowa circle and Charles Moore of the 500 block Fifty-sixth street northeast after their automobiles collided with parked CHURCH GROUP HITS PROHIBITION ISSUE Protestant Committee Says Mem- bers Will Vote for Smith or Thomas. By the Assoclated Press. tempt by many of our respected leaders and official bodies to.subordinate all other issues in this campaign to the single issue of prohibition.” ‘The committee, which said additional replies to its letter were still being re- ceived, mailed its appeal for signatures mainly to five theological seminaries —Union, in ~ ew York; Yale Divinity School, New Haven, Conn.; the Prot- estant Episcopal Theologicau School. Cambridge, Mass.; Garrett Methodist Biblical Institute, Evanston, Ill, and Oberlin Theological Seminary, Oberlin, Ohio. | with great apprehension upon the at- | ber 4, 1859. He was ordained a priest in 1893. Since then he has served at St. Mary's College, St. Mary's, Kans.: Marquette University, Milwaukee, and St. Xavier's College here. A sister, Miss Theresa Finn. supervisor ‘of music at a St. Louis high school, and a brother, Louis, of Los Angeles. survive. Maintenance of buildings cost Har- vard last year $233,540. EXCLUSIVE o Bladder Trouble? This extremely painful and often serious affliction need not cause despair. The pain can be soothed by properly drinking Mountain Valley Mineral Water from Hot Springs, Arkansas. This famous water contains alkaline minerals that tend to neutralize th ids that are causing the irri on, neral Services Here—In- terment Today. NEW YORK, November 2.—A protest against the “attempt to identify through e the prohibition issue the interest of Protestantism with a Republican vic- PRIEST-AUTHOR DEAD. tory” was issued yesterday by an “inde- pendent committee of Protestants,” of | Father Francis J. Finn, Writer of which Rev. Dr. Arthur L. Swift, asso- Boys' Books, Succumbs. ciate professor of applied Christianity at Union Theological Seminary, New York, CINCINNATI, November 2 (#).—The Rev. Francis J. Finn, 8. J, 69, author is chairman. of numerous books on boy life and pro- cars, causing slight damage. Dickens, who is sald to have struck two parked cars at Massachusetts avenue and Fifth street, was also charged with operating without a permit. PAUPER KILLS SELF. Florida Man Prefers Death to Life - pain and inflammation. It also as- sists the kidneys to prevent the further accumulation of these acids. Physicians have prescribed it for over 50 years. Why suffer longer? Order a case of Moun- tain Valley Water today. Ask anyone who has been to Hot “Popularity is Proof of Quality” Springs, Ark. MARTIN J. BARRY ‘ Mountain Valley Water Co. Mrs. W. F. Greve of Fresno, Calif., after being separated since the girl was 6 -years old. With the reunion, Eleanor, now 2 years old, had her first ride on a rai Toad train and trip to a beauty parlor. She also had her first visit to a wom- en’s shop to buy what she wanted. officals and diplom: "I 1 At the asylum officials and attendants noon at funeral services conducted at!page good-by to smartly dressed the Lansing home, 1323 Eighteenth | pretty young woman who for 16 years mobiles Collide. DISTRIBUTOR Following & collision at Nineteenth and R streets last night Mrs. Judith Fishburn, 45 years old, and her daugh- ter, Miss Judith Fishburn, 17 years old, both of 2133 R street, were taken to Emergency Hospital, where Mrs. Fish- ute to the memory of afe in A silent tr Robert Lansing, Secretary of the Wilson administration, wa It bore the signatures of 152 Protest- ant teachers of theology, ministers, stu- in Poorhouse. street, had been the plain, poorly dressed girl | hury was treated for lacerations to the dents in theol s i | This afternoon, Nhen O testown, | Yo had worked around the institution | forehead and both legs and her daugh-| TAMPA, Fla, November 2 UP.—|lagmen lades mor ol soninaries s B e s G B T o toned stateeman wili| 20d had been housed there becauise | ter treated for shock. Police say tha | Frank Moffett, ‘65, preferred death to | intend fo vote for ey’ Sors °LuS | hospital here early today. He had (N 1636 Conn. Ave. Pot. 3501 212 Colorado Bldg. Do 430 ot ceat B Eeokide semelery, | £ D0C KneW WML to/do with et and the automobile operated by Miss Fish- life in the poorhouse. others for Norman Thon been in fll health for three years. Father | B prompt Service—We Hurry ||| Phone Metrovolitan 1062 Open untit 9 P, at : Cemelery, | he officials_wei y urn was in a collision with a machine| A physician who went to Moffett's| The protest said the signers * ; ! o following ices in the First Presby-(per oyt The mother and daughter | driven by Joseph Reichgot, 19 years old. woml’yelsmd“ 1o Sucambany M 4 P! 2 e signers “look Finn was born in St. Louis, Mo., Octo: terian Church, of which Mr. Jeft for California, had been a member since his boyhood | s ¥eer "vears ago, Mrs. Greve sald, days. His widow and surviving mem- fche and her husband were separated, bers of his family accompanied the | Gre "Fleanor was about 8 years old. (It body on its last journey. | was not until about three weeks ago The Department of State closed at 1| ¢nat che found a trace of her daughter. o'clock yesterday out of respect to it | e’ id Mr. Reddick remarried shortly, | former head. From its offices a num- | e "trev had separated and that she | 1300 Spring road. Isadore Levin, 7 years old, 3014 Georgia avenue, suffered bruises to the left leg last night when he was struck | down on Hobart place near the reser- a charity institution found him dead in his bed from a pistol wound. Mof- fett, unable to support himself, had been sustained by contributions from friends for a year. J. B. JONES & CO. New York J. B. Jones Ho]ds‘Van Amazing’ Sale of JBEAUTIFUL DRESSES Par;s ber of those who served under Mr.|p 4% 0 80 oPH o fepmother had 4 Lansing went to pay him last honors. {iye child committed to ul:e asylum in New York J B JONES fd CO Paris Secretary of State Kellogg was among | nev “Mexico, the rep! atives of the Government |~ xcoim e iare <aiq Miss Reddick’s 1 here. John W. Davis dor to Great Britain: , British Ambassador | and Maj. Gen. John A. Lejeune, U. S | TItaly’s largest automobile plant is M. C., were among other notables seen | producing 250 cars a day and expects among the former friends of Mr. Lan-|to increase the number to 500 by sing. , Spring. It fell to the lot of Capt. William G. Stott of the third precinct to di- rect the movement of automobiles in front of the home. As a private o the police force during the war. Capt.| Stott was detailed to guard the Lansing home, and between the former Secre- tary of State and the policeman therec sprang up a friendly acquaintance. The funeral car, laden with flowers Jeft Union Station at 7:20 o'clock las | night for Watertown. Services will b begun in the church there, it was said, before the arrival of the train. At the simple services conducted here Rev. Dr. Charles Wood, pastor of the Church of the Covenant, read the prayer, and Rev. William A. Eisenber- ger, assistant pastor, read from the Scriptures, in a flower-banked drawing room on the second floor of the resi- dence. AUTOIST IS FREED BY TILT IN COURT A difference of opinion between a| Police Court judge, a Traffic Bureau | poiiceman and a defendant as to what | constituted reckless driving lead to the | acquittal of the defendant in Traffic mind had always been normal. 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