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\WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) Cloudy, slightly colder tonight; mini- mum temperature about 18 degrees; to- The only evening paper in Washington with the Associated Press service. morrow partly cloudy. news Temperatures: Highest, 34, at 4 p.m. yesterday; lowest, 24, at 5 a.m. today. Full report on page 3. @h WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ¢ Foening Star Saturday's Circulation, 106,304 : Closing N. Y. Markets, Pages 10 and 11 Sunday's Circulation, 112,433 i No. 1309600 S ohes "amingon DoC. WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1929—THIRTY-FOUR PAGES. L () Means Associated Press. TWO CENTS. CAPT. BURLINGAME SUSPENDED AT OWN REQUEST BY HESSE; CHARGES ORDERED * District Commissioners 0. K. Action—Counsel Tolg to Draft Specific Counts on Which He iay Be Tried. L) GIBSON THREATENED, BLANTON TELLS HOUSE "Plot to Put Case of Liquor in Auto; § of Committee Chairman and An- other Run Him Down With Car Planned as Retalitory Moves, | Texan Declares on Floor. | Capt. Guy E. Burlingame of the second precinct, today was sus- ‘pended from duty at his own re- ‘quest by Maj. Edwin B. Hesse, ‘superintendent of p(&ige. The Dis- grict Commissioners approved the | suspension. The corporation coun- isel’s office was ordered to draft . started last month with charges ;);referred against the captain by s. Helen F. Blalock, a Washing- ton palmist, through the Gibson pubcommittee of the House Dis- trict committee. Shortly after the order for the sus- ension of Capt. Burlingame had gone forward Representative Blanton of Texas charged on the floor of the House that the life of Chairman Gib- had been threatened because of exposure of police conditions. Mr. Blanton said a plot to place a case of liquor in Mr. Gibson’s automobile fand another to run him down with an wutomobile had been unearthed. Ru- fmors of the second plot have been afloat for several days, but Mr. Blanton has ideclined to confirm them. ! Blanton also charged on the floor #hat Capt. Burlingame had received money from several bookmakers in_ex- rhange for protection, and named Sam Beard, Frank McCormick and Eddie illeen. One -of these, said, paid $300 a month to Burlingame. Mr. ®lanton said he had asked the Com- missioners to investigate these charges Relieved of Dut CAPT. GUY E. BURLINGAME. EDISON PRODUCES RUBBER FROM WEED Inventor Discovers Substi- tute, Assuring U. S. of Sup- FORT MYERS, Fla,, February 11.— Thomas A. Edison’s latest contribution to mankind, a rubber substitute which would save the United States from a world rubber’ monopoly such as Herbert Hoover smashed in time of peace or from Germany's problem during the war in the event that normal overseas sources of rubber should be cut off, will be described to Mr. Hoover today by the celebrated inventor and scientist on his eighty-second birthday anniversary. This substitute is not a variation of the rubber tree. He long ago found that nothing could be done along that line. He has found a weed, after ex- perimenting with nearly 15,000 vari- eties, which will produce a latex, ur fluld, from which a workable substi- tute for rubber can be extracted. This weed can be moved like wheat, it was asserted by Mr. Edison's lieutenants yesterday, and is perennial, so that it does not have to be planted anew each year. Gecks to Perfect Separator. The only missing link in the chain is that so far the inventor has not MUNGPAL CENTER DL PASSES HOLSE WTH3THERACTS Amended Simmons Measure to Purchase Four Squares for Site Approved. CHILDREN’S TUBERCULAR SANITARIUM AUTHORIZED Tax Proposals 0. K.'d—One Pro- vides Personal Levy Must Be Paid Before Car Tag Issued. The House today promptly passed four important District bills before going into the committee of the whole for consideration of the Zihlman bill providing for additional bathing pools, on which Representative Blanton was recognized and proceeded to discuss the Burlingame case and law enforcement | in the District. The House passed the Simmons bill, as amended in the District committee, providing for acquisition of the four large city squares between Third and Sixth streets, Pennsylvania avenue, In- diana and Louisiana avenues as a site for a municipal center. The estimated cost g mately $6,000,000. Representative Black, Democrat, Texas, inquired re- is approxi on District appropriations, author of the bill, and Representative Under- hill, Republican, M: achusetts, who | offered the amendment in the com- mittee, all explained the desirability of immediate acquisition of the en- tire site needed for the municipal center to prevent enhancement of values on any part not acquired, ru ning up the price against the Di trict taxpayers. The House also passed without de- bate the bill authorizing establish- ment of a childrens tuberculosis san- itarium at an estimated cost of $500,- 000. The House passed two tax bills, one providing a better method of collecting taxes on intangible personal property, which already has passed the Senate. This measure provides that a person must pay a personal property tax before he can get an automobile license and VATICAN ANDIITALY END CHURCH SSUE BY SIGNING TREATY Momentous Question Solved as Mussolini and Cardinal Gasparri Affix Signatures. TEXT OF DOCUMENTS IS NOT MADE PUBLIC Historical Papers to Be Presented to Legislative Assembly Before Contents Are Announced. SUMMARY OF PACT Text of Official Com- munique on Papal Relations. By the Assoclated Press. ROME, February 11.—The text of the official communique summariz- ing the agreement, concordat and financial convention between the Vatican and Italy, which will be published tomorrow, follows: “The political treaty between the holy see and Italy is composed of a preamble of 27 articles. After stat- the Catholic apostolic Roman re- ligion is the only state religion in Italy. “The treaty then proceeds recog- nizing the full property and exclu- sive dominion and sovereign juris- diction of the Holy See over the Vatican as at present constituted. City of Vatican Created. “For this purpose, the ‘City of the Vatican’ is created, declaring that in its territory no interference by the Italian government will be possible and that there will be no authority but the authority of the Holy See. (Continued on Page 2, Column 7.) By the Associated Press. ROME, February 11.— After more than half a century of estrangement, places the same penalty for failure to pay taxes as for failure to pay on tan- | gible real property. | Representative Blanton supported this measure and emphasized that it cai unanimous report from the Dis- trict committee. ‘The other tax bill also unanimously reported safeguards both the property peace was formally established today between the Holy See and the Italian government, marking one of the most momentous chapters in the modern his- tory of the church and state. Representing the Vatican and the Itallan government, respectively, Car- SENATE 10 OPPOSE CAPPER MEASURE ONKELLOGG PAGT Borah Sayc hie Is Against any “Economic Sanction.” RESOLUT_ION IS EMBARGO, ALIEN SMUGGLING JOINS RANKS OF "MILLION-D Underworld Leaders Turn From Booze and Dope to New Enterprise. “Crashing the back gate”—or smug- gling alien undesirables in wholesale lots across United States borders—joins the ‘“million-dollar rackets.” Smug- glers’ syndicates, well financed, with agents in many Cities here and abroad, are now delivering human contraband on our shores at the rate of 100,000 | annually and collecting $100 to.$1,000 a head. . The fast-growing menace of this alien-smuggling conspiracy, which has unloaded between 1,000,000 and 1,300,- 000 undesirables on the United States since the 1924 quota law went into ef- fect, is revealed in a series of twelve articles, of which this is the first. BY NORMAN KLEIN. “Back-gate crashing” is the newest OLLAR RACKETS” | | SECRETARY DAVIS. well financed organizations in many cities of the United States, Canada, Mexico, South America, China and AVIATRIX BREAKS Epecific charges against Capt. Bur-| ply During Emergency. | four, sauares instead of the two Dasties recognize the avisability of | ““Back-Gate” Crashing in fect. practically an act of war Whils lingame on which he may be tried. L i | (clmimating every, feason Toxienmity 2 | he took no dsfinite stand with regard « | This was the latest move in the Sl man Zihlman of the District com- between them, 1 et weied i | Wholesale Lots Is Highly ———-M t0 She Capper rosiution, the indica- ries of sensational events which 3 L mittee handling this legislation. Chair-| {pe first article of the constitution 3 Senator Burton of Ohio, other Special Dispatch to The Star. man_ Simmons of the subcommittee| of the Italian kingdom, by which Profitable. Bobby Trout Sets Marks for hand announced himself ",,',”,’" e avor of Endurance, Night Flying and Distance. MINES FIELD, Los Angeles, Feb- ruary 11 (#)—Miss Bobby Trout, Los Angeles girl aviator, landed here at 10:19:30 o'clock tkis morning in her Golden Eagle monoplane, setting a new world endurance flight record for women of 16 hours and 52 min- utes. By the Assoclated Press. LOS ANGELES, February 11.—Miss Bobby Trout of Los Angeles captured three world’s aviation records here today by exceeding the existing marks set by woman fiyers for endurance, night flying and distance covered in a solo fiight. Miss Trout set a new women’s endur- ance record at 8:27:30 o'clock this morn- ing by remaining aloft two hours longer than Miss Elinor Smith of New York, who a few days ago established a mark SHIPSTEAD BELIEVES Senator Burton of Ohio, However, Declares Himself in Faver of Provisions. BY G. GOULD LINCOLN. The Capper resolution, introduced in the Senate today, proposing an em- bargo against the shipment of war sup- plies to any nation violating the Kel- logg multilaterial treaty denouncing war will face strong opposition in the Senate, it was learned today. Semator Borah of Idaho, chairman of the foreign relations committee, while not declaring flat opposition to the Cap- per proposal, said he was against anye thing that smacked of an economic or any other kind of “sanction.” Senator Shipstead of + Minnesota, Farmer-Labor, member of the foreign relations committee, took the view that the proposal in the Capper resolution amounted to an economic embargo the Capper resolution. The Ohio Sen- ator while a member of the House in- troduced in the last session of Congress a somewhat similiar resolution provid- ing that no arms and muntions should be exported to a country engaged in an aggressive war. In the end it was proposed that the embargo should be imposed against both nations invalved in the war, but leaving Congress free to make an exception if it desired to do so. The House did not act upon the resolution, however. The text of Senator Capper’s resolu- tion is as follows: Text of Resolution. “Whereas the Congress of the United States, on August 29, 1916, solemnly de- clared it “to be the policy of the United States to adjust and settle its interna- tional disputes through meditation or arbitration to the end that war may behonorably :hv:wed: and. ““Whereas United States, in - suance of this policy, has ennel\?g:d with & number of countries and is ne- gotiating with many others. a treaty of arbitration and conciliation in a new form under which the les agree to submit to arbitration all differences re- fnd they would not do s0. » perfected the right kind of machine | owner on the District Treasury in the | ginal Gasparri, papal secretary of state big-money business to interest the lating to international matters in which t 3 -/ 5 Europe, the day-after-day traffi¢ in|of 13 hours, 16 minutes and 45 seconds. Capt. Burlingame, in requesting Ris|for taking the rubber substitute from |sale of property for delinquent taxes.| . premier Mussolini, creator of the racketeers. i mmtp" BB h“Y grown. ta] " The girl aviator, who held the endur- they are concerned by virtue of a claim suspension, bitterly assailed “a certain iBenator” as using “the protective man- tle of his privilege that so many have t on before preferring charges against itizens and officials whose characters are anxious to assassinate.” " Senator Caraway of Arkansas at- facked him on the Senate floor last Sat- urday and obtained passage of an sndment to the District appropriation ill withholding Burlingame’s pay until = should be cleared of the charges nding against him. Capt. Burlingame called on Maj. tesse this morning with his request in riting. He was accompanied by Wil- Jiam E. Leahy, local attorney, who Genied that he had been retained by Capt. Burlingame. “The press of yesterday and this fmomning,” it read, “has brought me the latex of the plant. He has experi- mented & great deal on this, hoping for an apparatus which would pick out the rubber substitute from the rosin and other component parts of the latex. The machine, he hoped, would be equal in efficiency and simplicity to the milk separator which takes the cream from the milk, and pours it out of one fau- cet while the skimmed milk pours from another. He expects to solve this problem in the near future, with the aid of his as- sistants, whereupon the final step will be to set up a working plant. =~ “Five pounds a day production,” is his own idea of this plant. The point is that Mr. Edison has been annoyed at reports that he is working to _produce something which will supplant ine rub- It was explained that this measure car- ries the approval of the District asses- sors, the District auditor and the cor- poration counsel. MLEOD BILL ASKS DISTRICT DELEGATE Election to Congress Would Be Done by Commis- Fascist state in Italy, placed their sig- natures upon three historical documents —one a treaty solving and eliminating the “Roman question,” which has ex- isted ever since the loss of temporal power in 1870; the second a concordat designed to regulate the relations of the church and state in Italy, and, third, a-convention settling the financial re- lations between the Holy See and Italy. Text Not Made Public. ‘The text of these documents was not made public, since it must still be rep- resented for discussion to the legisla- tive assembly, but it was announced that an exhaustive and precise synopsis would be given out tomorrow, which is ‘Turning competition- crowded industries of booze and dope, the master minds of the underworld are now engaged in getting a strangle hold on a safe and highly profitable 1acket— smuggling aliens into the United Siates. ‘With smugglers’ syndicates building astonishing proportiops. It is estimated by immigration offi- cials that approximately 100,000 aliens a year are smuggled into this country and that this business of “crashing the (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) MENGO 1S STIRRE BY TRAN BOVEING “I’m in Jail,” Swain Phones Girl; Isn’t; She Has Him Put In ‘Annoyed Enough. by This ance record before Miss Smith made her attempt, broke by a wide margin the women’s night flying record of eight hours. The third record, for distance covered by a woman in a plane such as Miss Trout is flying, was broken when she passed the 932-mile mark. Miss Trout took the air at 5:10:45 o'clock yesterday afternoon shortly after Miss Marvel Crosson, 25, had driven her plane in what was believed to have been a successful flight to break the women'’s altitude record of 20,270 feet held by Mrs. Louise McPhetridge Thaden of Oakland, Calif. Miss Crosson, who has piloted mail and supply planes in Alaska, said the altimeter on her plane, capable of registering only 20,000 feet, indicated that point and she was certain she had gone higher. The sealed baro- of right made by one against the other and to submit to a permanent interna- tional commission for conciliation any dispute not submitted to arbitration, :lngryh“t thu.smaho'm.;l: intention to out on United States, ‘n];ll‘t ExC e “Whereas the United States has taken a further step in advancing its policy by raf the multilateral treaty for the renunciation of war in Wwhich it is declared that the contract- ing powers are: “Persuaded that the time has come when a frank renunciation of war as an instrument of national policy should be made to the end that the peaceful and friendly relations now existing be- tween their people may be perpetuated: ‘Convinced that all changes in their . ber tree in the world production system. o ™ h relations with one another B e actian{ TR 8 ok s desirs af sl CHe 157 ; the anniversary of the coronation of | Portes Gil Escapes as Blast| Guy,” She Tells Police, S3n carried i her place willD® S8 | cougnt only by pacific mekns' sng oo B Lmaeded by y, |lieves that the Tubber tree fllls 60, 6¢7C sioners. not been made public, it is known that the result of a peaceful and orderly o, beneath the protective mantle of s privilege, the cloak that so many have put on before preferring charges egainst citizens whose characters they m anxious to assassinate, has now irectly accused me of being ‘crooked.” i have always had the best interests of ithe Metropolitan Police Force of the District of Columbia at heart. I have pent my life in giving to it the best Eeomended by a certain Senator, hat was in me, devoting all my ener- | jgies for the past three years to assist | n bringing that force to the position «of excellent efliciency which, I am con- fvinced, the graat majority of our people Jn the’ Capital believe it possesscs not- mithstanding its traducers. Demards Proof of Charges. “In view of this last unjustified and | jungrounded attack, not only upon me, ‘but the force you so ably command, and even our honorable Board of Com- issioners, whom I respect and in whom know people have absolute confidence, believe the time has now come when should demand that they who charge ould be compelled to present their jevidence in order that this campaign 'of mudslinging should be brought to an lend. nomic need in the world scheme of things un!dn that the farmers of the United tates can produce plenty of other things in normal times without resorting to some substitute for rubber. Hoover Keenly Interested. ‘What has been concerning Mr. Edi-| son is to work out a substitute for this ‘commodity so that no eventuality such as the attempt of the British rubber monopoly a few years back could im- pose a hardship on American ‘motorists and other users of rubber, and also that if in the event of war this country should be cut off from overseas imports, it would not be driven to such poor sub- stitutes for rubber as Germany Wwas compelled to use during the World War. In short, Mr. Edison’s latest inven- tion is akin to insurance, rather than an attempt to revolutionize world trade channels. Mr. Hoover's interest in this problem is unusually keen because of is fight as Secretary of Commerce against the British rubber monopoly. Mr. Hoover arranged the buying of rubber for the American tire manufac- turers, and finally succeeded in forc- ing the British to abandon their plan and permit the price of crude rubber to Legislation providing for the election of a delegate in Congress from the Dis- trict of Columbia is proposed in a bill introduced in the House today by Rep- resentative McLeod, Republican, Michi- gan, chairman of the judiciary sub- committee of the House District com- mittee to which this bill was referred. ‘The McLeod bill proposes that a dele- gate to serve during each Congress shall be elected by the Board of Commission- ers of the District. The qualifications specified are the same as for the Dis- trict Commissioners, and in addition Mr. McLeod would require that the delegate shall have been a bona fide resident of the District for not less than 10 years continuously previous to his election, that he shall be not less than 25 years of age, and provides that no member of the Board of Commissioners shall be eligible for election and delegate until the expiration of four years after the termination of his service as a.Com- missioner. ‘The bill introduced today provides for the delegate to be elected on the second Tuesday after the first Monday in the first “treaty” recognizes the abso- lute independence and sovereignty of the pontiff, at the same time slightly rectifying the boundaries of the Vati- can, without any great increase in its actual area. The concordat, regarded in some quarters as of even greater im- portance, concerns the relations be- tween Italy and the Holy See. It is understood to provide for the accept- ance of canon law by the state, thus in- troducing the church attitude on such questions as marriage and divorce into the civil code. The agreement also provides for an indemnity, which the Italian -govern- ment will pay the Vatican. At first the indemnity was placed at 2,000,000,- 000 lire (about $105,000,000), but this was reduced to 1,750,000,000 lire, of which 750,000,000 (about $39,375,000) will be paid in cash and the' remainder in government bonds. The total amount is about $87,500,000. ‘Was Premier’s First Visit. ‘The signing of the documents took place in the famous Council Hall of the Lateran Palace. It was the first time that Premier Mussolini had ever en- tered the historic structure. He and Kills One—Crowds Riot at Toral Funeral. By the Assoclated Press. MEXICO CITY, February 11.—The greatest excitement Mexico City has known since the assassination of President-elect Alvaro Obregon. pre- vailed today. Police guards were doubled because of dynamiting of the train on which President Emilio Portes Gil was re- {urning here yesterday, and because of discovery shortly after midnight of an unexploded bomb in the campaign headquarters of Aaron Saenz, presi- dential candidate. Saenz I8 governor of the state of Nuevo Leon, the candidate of the Na- tional Revolutionary party for the presidency, and is a son-in-law of ex- President Calles. President Portes Gil arrived here shortly after 1 o'clock this morning aboard the special train which had been the object of a bomb attack in the state of Guanajuato, between the stations of Comonfort and Rincon. Calling Him a Pest. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, February 11.—Sure enough, William J. Walsh is in jail. He said as much last night, but then he was just kidding. He knew as much today and it was no joke. For a year Walsh had regarded Miss Hazel Lofgren as his particular girl friend. Last night, however, when he dropped around he found his welcome charged with frigidity. Miss Lofgren as much as told him to get out and stay out, and that if he came back in 20 years it would be too soon. It is just such a reception as this that upsets a fellow. Walsh decided to go_forth and execute some maneuvers. He went to the Kensington Police Station and from there telephoned Miss Lofgren. “I am in the hands,” he said, “of the police.” } . “Delighted, I'm sure!” came the voice. 1 “Good-by.” Thwarted, Walsh went into the night. Half an hour later the Roseland Hos- ital notified police that a young man HOT POLITICAL ROW SPLITS TENNESSEE Senator McKellar Expected to Go to Nashville in Answer to Gov- ernor's Telegraphic Plea. By the Associated Press. NASHVILLE, Tenn., February 11.— An apparently innocent redistricting bill for Tennessee, presented in the States Senator K. D. McKeller is ex- to participate in the battle. ‘The bill would cut the representa- tion of the State’s largest counties, counties. General Assembly here- has stirred up |to a a controversy so heated that United |Such Shelby and Davidson, and would in-|the treaty, crease representation in several other | avoided; process, and that any si which shall hern(tely u’::‘ ‘tgq mpoweur o e T len! nefits ereas it is a breach of its ol - tions with the United States ‘orbll.‘:y country which is a party to the muti- lateral treaty for the renunciation of war to have recourse to war as an instrument of national policy in its re- lations with any other party to the treaty; and o e governments which ity e end i pescel and en ful friendly relations between L their les i be perpetuated’ should not pemReo ir nationals to encourage a breach of the vhligaim of the irensy by experting gov:mmem which has committed reach arms, munitions or imple- ments of war or other articles for the support of such government; and pected to come here from Washington | “Whereas, the declaration of its policy by the United States to prevent such encouragement by its nationals of a breach of the treaty would have a great effect in accomplishing the object of that war may be honorably “Now, therefore, be it resolved by “Accordingly, I respectfully request = Cardinal® Gasparri, who arrived at the d just dashed in, announcing he had immg wired ftnat you enter an order forthwith re- | be determined by the vorld trade con- | Neyober OF Lo, YA Yooy o | palace about @ half hour apart, greeted Portes Gil Smiles Greeting. been beset by fhuigs. and beaten. The | oy Honry Horton, of Tennessse atis | Hiesor e “hoyig e of. Representa- flieving me of the command of the Sets | PVt e i what Mr. Hoover had |of the board of commissioners bl ‘e | c2ch other warmly and exchanged 8| guyie “ine President greeted_of- | ROSPUAl could find no wounds. It vas|ing him it the bill were “a_political | in O e e e & Aoy gnd precinct and susps dono in this direction, bui fearing that | declared duly elected and a certificate to | 1%, COmPliments on the occaslon, = | gcers and members of his staff from | (bR H;’;f"g',g‘gg‘b’e";;mn“"l nce | trade between administration forces and | “That whenever the President de- jcharges have bcc: preferred and my indication secured. “"(1‘ urther respectfully ‘demand_that 7 should be given a hearing as imme- {giate as the business of your office will low. Sincerely yours, (Signed) “GUY E. BURLINGAME.” Burlingame conferred with Maj. and the latter then drew up a mmendation to the Commissioners that the captain be tried by an ex- ‘tracrdinary trial board composed of lothers than members of tan police force. This the ‘Commis- joners approved, but no comment was \forthcoming as to the probable make- he board. w’rflf» "x?na):('-up of the extraordinary trial board requested by Maj. Hesse will be considered at the regular mi-weekly board meeting of the Commissioners to- !morrow. Shortly after the Commission- ers' approval of the suggestion became {imown a rumor sprang up that the ‘Board of Commissioners itseif would sit as the trial board. This since has heen Giscounted, however, and it now is be- lieved that thre rominent citizens will be asked to s Maj. Hease's commendation, which xs of the metropoli- | in the future it might not be handled so successfully, Mr. Edison at once turned his attention to the rubber situation. World's Oldest Monarch Ill. TROPPAU, _ Austro-Czechoslovakian Frontler, February 11 ().—Prince John of Lichtenstein, the oldest monarch in the world and who has governed his principality 71 years, s critically il at his palace here with bronchitis. Mem- bers of his entourage told the Associ- lated Press that there was much anx- {iety respecting the condition of the 88- that effect shall be given by the secre- tary of the board, the bill provides. Every such delegate shall have a seat in the House with the right of debate, but not of voting. In case a vacancy occurs in the office of delegate the chair- man of the District Commissioners is directed to call a special election to fill such vacancy. ‘The salary and allowances of the delegate from the District would be similar to the salary and allowances of the delegates from Alaska and Hawali. Representative McLeod expressed confidence today that he can get a year-old monarch. Of late years he has been enfeebled and almost blind. favorable report to the House on this bill at the present session. | | By the Associated Press. SEATTLE, February 11.—Intrusting their lives to the strength of a hull 34 on Japanese Ship Battle Gale With Would-Be Rescuers Helpless er rescue ship, also was assumed to have reached the stricken vessel. The Alloway's signals were so weak sands outside in the great square. Present for the signing: For the Holy See were the Most Illustrious and Rev. Francesco Borgongini-Duca, sec- retary of extraordinary ecclesiastical affairs; the Illustrious and Rev. Mgr. Giuseppe Pizzardo, undersecretary of state, and Prof. Lawyer Francesco Pa- celli consulting jurist of the Holy See; and for Italy: Alfred Rocco, minister of justice; Dino Grandi, undersecretary for foreign affairs, and Francesco Giun- ‘t:. undersecretary to the prime min- ter. The Rome newspapers appeared at noon with the first word of the accord which they had printed thus far. In- special editions the papers varied their usual conservative headlines with seven- column display heads. Bells Announce Signing. With serried ranks, theological stu- dents, baring their heads, sang the “Te Deum” under the rainy sky,” and a hundred black-shirted militia shouted the Fascist battle cry in honor of the momentous scene being enacted within the Lateran Palace. .|of war, the observation of the rear car before leaving with Senora Portes Gil and his baby daughter in an automobile for Chapultepec Castle. Arriving with hem was the minister Gen. Joaquin Amaro, and Senora Amaro. A heavy military guard was kept about the Colonia Station until after they left for their homes. Adding to the Sabbath excitement were demonstrations accompanying the funeral of Gen. Obregon’s assassin, Jose de Leon Toral, who was executed Satur- day. Of 34 persons arrested, 20 were women. Three were killed and 30 were wounded. The bombing of President Portes Gil's train took piace as the locomotive passed over a bridge in the desert wil- derness in the eastern rast of the state of Guanajuato, south of 8an Luis Potosi. The locomotive was partly destroyed and two coaches back of it were thrown from the tracks. The fireman in the locomotive was killed. The pilot train, which preceded the presidential special, passed over the bridge unscratched. The President and the secretary of war left the rear coach and questioned It was a quiet night, anyway, so the i desk sergeant at Kensington Station notified the young man and Miss Lof- gren to come over, which they did. i Walsh was waiting with open arms when she walked in, but she sidestepped. “‘Sergeant,” she said, “I've been an- noyed enough by this guy. Lock him up. He's a pest.” Should Walsh decide to telephone her today and say he is in the hands of the police, he can speak with a marked de- gree of exactitude. By the Assoclated Press. | LONDON, February 11.—Surprise and |disappointment prevailed in English hunting circles today after publication in the Express of a story that the Prince of Wales had decided to abandon Representative J. Will Taylor.” is a Republican leader in Tennessee. Gov. Horton replied yesierday, sug- gesting to the Senator that if he were to “leave your seat in the United States Senate to become councilor to the by Tennessee Democrats in the pri- mary and general election.” The legislators from Shelby, Mc- Report Wales Will Abandon Riding Surprises English Hunting Circles|- Kellar's home county, are members of an insurgent group. was giving up the sport “for the time being” only, and did not intend to abandon I;efermmentlm ‘The action was descril ae one of self-denial en= tailing considerable sacrifice in view of the prince’s well known delight in hunt- ven before the serious iliness of King Taylor | termines and by proclamation declares that any country has violated the multi- lateral treaty for the renunciation of war, it shall be unlawful, unless other- wise provided by act of Congress or by proclamation of the President, to export to such country arms, munitions, im- use in war until the President shall by proclamation declare that such viola- tion no longer continues. “Section 2. It is declared to be the policy of the United States that the nationals of the Unifed States should not be protected by their Government in giving aid and comfort to a nation which has committed a breach of the said treaty. “Section 3. The President is hereby uested to enter into negotiations with other governments which ratify or adhere to the said treaty to secure agreement that the nationals of the contracting governments should not be protected by their governments in giv- ing aid and comfort to a nation which committed a breach of the said treaty. “Section 4. The policy of the United States as expressed in section 2 hereof shall apply only in case of a breach of {was approwed without change, follows: s | they could barely be heard by the naval | The actual signing by the cardinal {some Indians whom troops captured in | hyntin, -to-point racing. s 11 invited o the atiached | destired to be scrapped if it reaches | Lo CBE TRTE 0% BRAC DY INE RAVAL | 4 the premier took about 25 minutes. | searching the vicinity. They satisfied b o D mting stable of 15 | George frequent narrow escapes from | the said treaty by war against a govern- communication received this morning |Japan, 3¢ officers and men aboard |scqumed in the absence of messages | The populace below waited in the rain | themselves these had nothing to do With | horses, among them Degomme, a fa- [serious hurts while he was hunting B e e adherence from Capt. G. E. Burlingame of the |{ne gisabled Japanese freighter Allo-|that there was little change in the | in the hope that the cardinal and the | ™ (Gontinued on Page 2, Column 6) | vorite, would be sold within a fortnight, caused some public apprehension for| % 2 policy. Metropolitan Police Force. i way today were fighting through a |condition of the ship. Duce would come to the big balcony the decision being due to rapidly in- |the &flnu‘s safety if he should persist Kellogg Is Silent. “I have relieved the captain from prin 1o while ‘would-be | .. The Alloway was first reported in | overlooking the Lateran square to re- creasing duties of the prince because of | in his hard riding. command of the second police precinct, | 98-mile Alaskan gale distress last Friday. Her engines had |celve their plaudits, but it was in vain. the flines of his father. The secretary of the Prince of Wales | At the State Department, Secret and, forwarding this request, have to|rescue craft looked on helplessly. broken down and a gale overtook it,| Just as_the plenipotentiaries were a an an In his years of riding the prince has| said today that the report published Kellogg - to comment upon the Tecommend that a trial board composed | mne exact plight of the steamer was | Capt. H. Throckmorton refused to aban- | about to affix their signatures the great become very popular am hunting | here yesterday that the heir to the Clm mmlhn at this time. 5 others than members of the Metro- [ tne SXAT PRR IS Morning, as the ra- | don the ship 8s long as her hull was | bells of St. John Lateran, “the mother S men. He took many falls while attain- | throne had decided to abandon all ‘r:monhhn was g [pui s B s 3 i Bad s o0 Sk St 8 Y 1y | e 55 it o | | Wipoinia News | |5 cr i o vis bm | s oo e sna b 13| el Voad ot P achng et hear such charges as may be preferre sterday. The steamer Bronncy, which | The last information received here | OU: g proved greatly in ee seasons | e: rated. prince was e 2 oot " attempt to tow | was that the Alloway was in no im- |of 1870 had finally been settled. : and now there are few hunters who can | at hunting near Melton that it 2gainst him, leaving to the Commission- constitution of said board. further recommended that the l'_,(‘cnnufluea o Page 2, Column 2.) ers the 1 | Vesterday gave up the Alloway after the helpless craft became unmanageable, presumably was : * standing by, The Montauk, anoth- . mediate danger, but that she was bein; driven before the powerful wind towar ihe rocks of Unalaska Island Radio Programs—Page 34 ; { A B Pages 4 and 5. follow him in a fast run. The Express story, which lacked con- firmation, emphasized, however, that he Py Mowbray, but the came from York House, his et