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WEATHER. (0. 8. Weather Bureau n?;mmm‘;’ - Rain this afternoon, pa: el night with lowest temperature about 36 degrees; w fair and warmer. Temepratures: Highest, 46, at 2 p. yesterday; lowest, 39, at noon today. Full report on page 9. Closing M. Y. Markets, Pages 14 and 15 Entered. as second class matter post o ‘Washington, D. C. . Xo. 31,031 WASHINGTON, D. C, HOOVER ASKS CONGRESS TO REDEEM PLEDGES TO FARMERS IN CAMPAIGN LimitedChanges Highlights of Hoover Message Also Favored in Tariff. | ' Here are some of the terse sentences in the first message submitted to Congress by President Hoover: The Government has a special mandate from the recent election, not only to further develop our waterways and revise the agricultural tariff, but also to extend systematic relief in other directions. | | i Every penny of waste between farmer and consumer that we can eliminate, whether it arises from methods of distribu- O[I:]E(;I}gilc?j;léslaED gornm eorr ltrx‘-gr%o:::;‘rg’ .or speculation, will be a gain to both | Certain vital principles must be adhered to in order that | | we may not undermine the freedom of our farmers and of our people as a whole by bureaucratic and governmental domina- tion and interference. We must not undermine initiative. Census and House enin WITH SUNDAY MORNING' EDITION TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1929—FORTY-SIX PAGES. * The only evening paper in Washington with the Associated Press news seryice, Yesterday’s Circulation, 109,752 s L e e A w4 ) Means Associated TWO CENTS. l FORECAST SOVIET ARMS CUT /BAILIE EXPULSION - APPEAL RENEWED RULING UPHELD BY . ATGENEVAPARLEY ... CONGRESS [Litvinoff Declares It Only Ef- Newspaper Men and Visitors fective Way to Back Up | Are Called on to Leave at Kellogg Pact. ! Executive Session. lTHREATS OF WAR FOUND BRIEF PhOCEEDINGS END STILL MENACING WORLD | IN DENYING HER APPEAL | Naval Differences Betwéen U. S, Ousted Woman Says and Other Powers Becoming | More Acute, He Says. ! | | Members “Show Themselves Content to Be Led by Mediocre Minds.” By the Associated Press. The Thirty-eighth Continental Con- . | = Reapportmnment There should be no fee or tax imposed upon the farmer. GENEVA, April 16—Maxim Lit- | gress of the National Society, Daugh l | No governmental agency should engage in the buying and vinoff, Soviet vice commissar for for- |ters of the American Revolution, today Requeste( . | | setting and price fixing of products, for such courses can lead eign affairs, renewed his appesl for ex- | formally sustained the ruling of its | | only to bureaucracy and domination. tensive world-wide partial disarmament board of management expelling Mrs. The difficulties of agriculture can not be cured in a day: they can not all be cured by legislation; they can not be cured by the Federal Government alone. But farmers and their organ- izations can be assisted to overcome these inequalities. RY 6. GOULD LINCOLN. President Hoover laid his legis- lative program before Congress today in a message which was both terse and brief. He recom- mended: Establishment of a Federal farm board with wide powers, to help the American farmér solve his many problems. Revision of the tariff, agricul- tural schedules to give the farmer better protection in the domestic | market and to stimulate him to diversify his crops. Further development of inland water- ways to help the farmer meet the high | No discrimination against any foreign industry is involved in equalizing the difference in costs of production at home and abroad and thus taking from foreign producers the advantages they derive from paying lower wages to labor. In a large sense we have learned that the cheapening of .the toiler decreases rather than promotes permanent prosperity because it reduces the consuming power of the people. Chinese Cook Flips Flapjack Into Shirt Trying to Learn Art FARM BILL HINTS | O aried reuidon of the entire tarif - UF LUNG SESS!UN' Br the Asiociated Pross Tiith due regard to the needs of | NEW ©YORK. April 16.—A ‘Aax:\zr‘\t:an producegrs and a strengthen- | | Chinese cook, with ambitions to jted St Tariff Com- s | | master the purely American art = g sl Issue of Federal Price Control mission. of flipping flapjacks, came to e e Likely to Involve Pro- tracted Debate. grief today. Cries of pain coming from the kitchen of a cafeteria in West ‘Twenty-third street attracted a patrolman, who rushed in, think- The President recommended. too. the | passage by Congress of bills prnv:dmg‘ for taking the decennial census, for the | reapportionment of the House of Rep- resentatives and a bill to suspend the| . operation of the national origins clause | of the immigration act. He suggested, 00, “spme minor administrative author- izations,” without specifying them. At the outset of his message, which ing a hold-up was in progress. He found that Chick Gum, the cook, had misjudged his aim and had let a flying flapjack fall in- side his opened shirt. He was treated Yor burns at Bellevue Hospital. BY DAVID LAWRENCE. Examination of the farm relief bill completed by the House committee on NOTHING BUT WINE 1B0ARD LEVATHAN 'No Spirituous Liguor and No Bar for Westward Trips, Manager Avers. | | | By the Associated Press. | SOUTHAMPTON, England, April 16. | day on the Leviathan, sald only wines | would be carried on westward voyages | tives here and in Virginia, it was dis- Veteran Who Made ‘ Million From $5 | Wills SCHACHT REICTS Eaateto Kin. |11 BT OFFER Relatives Get Wealth of M. F. Embrey, Noted Figures Beyond Germany’s Southwest Resident. | Madison F. Embr ey, by the liner, in accordance with the closed today in his wili. policy of the ship'’s new owners. He declared there was no intention of “Wines only will be carried. | “Uncle Maddy,” as the 94-year-old | selling liquor over open bars nor any | Confederate veteran was affectionately | idea of stocking whisky or other spirits. | known in the neighborhood of 420 Sev- L and the | anin street southwest, where he lived venerable and | | beloved character of Southwest Wash- | ington, who went South atter the Givil | War with $5 in his pocket and amassed | —David Burke, general manager of the |a fortune in the cotton business, left | United States Lines. arriving here to- | more than a million dollars to his rela- Capacity PARIS. April Schacht, chiefl of tions delegation, | lected figures as being capacity to pay. to Pay, He " Tells Experts. Br the Associated Press. 16.—Dr. Hjalmar the German repara- today definitely re- | the recent allied reparations differences it presented not only had|against Mre. Bailie setting forth that beyond Germany During this morning’s session, Dr. ! complicated by new questions. | Schacht went over the annuities and the | | total amount _proposed by the allied |have arrived at a solution satisfactory creditor powers in order to support his | t0 their respective interests new differ- | contention that they were beyond Ger- | in a dramatic speech before the pre- ! Hslen Tufts Bailie of Cambridge. Mass. paratory commission on disarmament Immediately after the resolutions of the League of Nations today. | committce had completed its report this hmm Ruulln'smke in English and morning, Mrs. Alfred J. Brosseau of eld every one’s rapt attention as he | Connecticut, the president general. noti- | argued that rejection of the Soviel | fioq the congress that Mrs. Ballie's ap- {scheme meant a dashing of peoples’ |peal was before the congress for con- | hope for reduction of armament bur- | sideration. | dona: quu;lvmxdout that under the program | officially adoptes v the congress the . He expressed his disapproval of appeal should be considered under new | ‘Tepeated attempts of certain states- | business Saturday. Mrs. Brosseau said | men_to minimize the ‘importance of |however. that in view of the wish to | the Kellogg pact renouncing war,” and 'give Mrs. Bailie an adequate considera- said he even feared that the atfempts |tion. the appeal should be considered to minimize the pact were made with at once. Consequently, the matter was a view to creating extenuating circum- |placed before the congress in executive stances for possible infringements, or ' session. Newspaper men and visitors to weaken its importance as a starting | were called on to leave the hall. |point for a demand for disarmament.| The proceedings were brief. and in a Would Supplement Pact. {fewt momen 'y’ 1he delsguidn Hads voted He declared the Kellogg pact was no | 0 “ nn its board's ruling. [less binding for its participants and | “Black List” Charge Stirred D. A. R. present. Nno newer guarantees of se- 8 5 :mty than, for Instance, the Lmamn’nvM;!rin];iaé? n:‘?fi.mng&'ac":‘rfi; ements, On the other hand, h - h clared, acceptance of the Sonl:r scl?utr‘:w b mfm*"lmg S for partial iaomemthe Soviet scheme | circulating a “black list” of prominent | ould imme- | Americans who were not to be per- { diately diminish the menace of war. mitted to address D. A. R. gatherings | He argued that the consideration of pe, { their purported friendli {a technical draft could lead nowhere | b movietnm " PUrPorted friendliness and then made a particular allusion to il 21 | 5 M 10| On April 21 last year, charges signed the naval problem. remarking that the by 19 members of the society were filed not been softened, but actually had be- {come more acute and rendered more iataq e dictrt it peace and harmeny lated to disturb the peace and harmony of the society.” The charges were referred to the | national board of management by the sxecutive committee, which recommend- ed that the board give Mrs. Bailie a “While France and Great Britain may | ences have arisen to take the place of was read to the Senate and House, the | joricylture has Tevealed 3o many revo- | 2 1 i 1 A b 8 o uantity allowed on each westboun | many’s capacity. . - those settled—this time between the 5o President said he had “called this'spe-| [FL T L St Cauid of Fed- ;"m ‘Wil be determined by the number With his nieces, never boasted of his| "~ He then was asked what he would |Anglo-French compromise and the riion Jun;rhfim’};;“y i e ci i ress to redeem two | 3 . iy eral legislation that Speaker Longworth's PRORIBITION S SEEN | of passengers booked for the vessel” | wealth, and the size of his estate was suggest as being within his _country’s points of view of the United States of pledges given in the last election— | '8 Amers : . the proceedings were described today 1 o | = % he said. “There will be A conference in " . | capacity to pay. The president of the America and Italy. As far as we know, .- vl e iniety | L ¥ el oty B | London this week to decide on the ‘¢ PrRciPal foplc of conversation {0-| pejcnspank sald that he would trans. |Degotiations for the settlement of these DY, OCers who commented on the ac: that ‘the entire message was written, | Mering as debate becomes extended. | amount per head. | day among old-timers of the section. mit to the allies.what he termed -sug- | diflprences have not even begun.” {Hon e heving b . except for nnbnet paragraph at the con- | The preamble of the proposed bill &% 1] | “The nnng w!l‘l' fi‘: sdT\:d o n-ug: He died March 28 after a short iliness. | tegrt:i’m; ‘t:u;o;;o; :'ru.mmn b Sees Threats of War. ! r-,‘:e o Fp ‘.m'e'd N clusion suggesting the passage of the | declares “the policy of Congress” to be | gers in their cabins. M’ | Negleeted Own Needs. ‘ s el u'“':m"“‘“';g; M. Litvinoff characterized the com- Del Mrs. Bailie and she and her chapter census Bill zeapportionment. and sus- | 1, yromote “effective merchandising” of | wine they will have sthve chief ‘The old - gentleman’s pl of | his .estimate of 's - maximum mission’s methods of fechnical-investi- | Were. 50 advised. 5 prigihs - cinuse At hes | hilosophy | " " pe%lgnyz;gl:m md:] no attempt to | agricultural commodities and “to pro- | been served, they will be able to con- | self-sacrifice led him to spend large | figure and a complete table of annui- glllgzn -;ll the armament problem as a | “Appeal, Not a Trial. write into his message the details of | tect, control and stabilize the current | . sume it either in th'f Fncy rm z;ma{ money on worthy relatives and | “‘%M‘ . ed with the dis- | the .;.g. .'.l:ek‘;?l'zfi::e‘:g '1}';‘: Mrs. Brosseau read into the record a bill either for farm relief or for tarlff | o¢ jnierstate and forelgn commeree.” the dining room. e ahall b, Able 0| (Comtinued on Page 2, Golumn 1) | . fodey's fession oper e hicker aihan ever. Helof the proceedings today a certified ver, 1 'Congressm i doubt_in g};; ::‘&uh%‘(mler:y oer:e“ th‘:: | Congress would endeavor to accomplish | ngressmen, ne'mm"fl to he believed there should be no delay in | this by “minimizing speculation, pre- | camto] Hill Tell of cofl' establishing & Federal farm board,| oniing inefMcient and wasteful methods | i capable of aiding the farmer with in-| ot gisirfhution and limiting undue and | . i formation. advice and funds, to be used | &, © ST IRC B cotions” and by stituents’ Views. by the farmers themselves for the more | 0" n™ hreventing and controlling | orderly marketing of thelr crops and to | ;u,;,lfim 9 any agricultural com- | meet surplus crisis. He did not indicate | = odity through orderly production and e e o e O Star_saryy | distribution, 0 2 to maintain advan- | aid revision. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. Members of Congress, back in Wash- ington this week, reveal the opinion that | prohibition remains the one and only | Nation-wide issue of genuine popular interest. In the farming West, agricultural re- lief is the paramount proposition at the tageous domestic markets and prevent | such surpluses from unduly depressing | prices of the commodity.” The farmers’ problems, the President | Express Tholr Hopes. declared, arise from a multitude of | T causes, including the post-war deflation, | These principles express the hopes wasteful methods of marketing, climatic | and aspirations of the group who, for | surpluses, increased rdilway rates, com- so many years, have sponsored the Mc- Various Capses Cited. | ampton or Cherbourg for the westbound trip, and, not to violate United States laws, all we have on board when' we reach the 12-mile limit will have to be thrown overboard. e shall therefore have nothing for sale on eastbound trips, and whatever | aboard by passengers themselves, | “So far as the ship’s medical supply | is concerned, this will only be dispensed in cases of real emergencies and will . not be given for any slight or imaginary plan.” 'MORE WIVES FOUND | | is consumed will have to be brought | . | allment. We intend to adhere to this R AT R Al el MARYLAND FLOOD TYING UP TRAFF locks Road at Bladensburg; ORENING 6 Other Sections Report | | dividual items. This n the | gaining which wil more or less whittl posed annuities of a table of figures showing how the creditor nations had arrived ‘na the proposed annuities. This table had been requested yesterday by Dr. | Schacht, who, without discussing the | sotal, asked Tor ‘more lght on he in. | llament all testified to the growth of | period of real bar- 1 probably result in ling down of the pro- AME OFF UNTIL TOMORROW copy of all the proceedings in that trial, | but a detailed reading of the proceed- | ings was dispensed with on motion from | the floor. “This is not & trial,” Mrs. Brosseau \dflil‘audr b(;"n;ls ;x an appeal ({ml:uvhz | _Happlly,' he -sald, along came ' the | SocCe! DOAIT ol ‘nenagement's muling | Kellogg pact which. s Fesuls of the | RO Ie et remes e dptodistion ot nitiative of the Soviet government. al- | - , ready had come into force in_eight | o ore, *AnOUNCEd that Mrs. Ballie's at- | states of that part of Europe considered | (0000Y, PG 2Sked for permission to under the greatest menace of war.| PRIk 0% her APDERL ' Yet, if peace was to be really assured, |, Mrs. George Debolt of West Virginia. he sald the nations must abandon | NOROFary State regent and former na- their reluctance to reduced armaments. | Uonal officer, moved the previous ques- o1 | tion after asserting that at the trial an inereased number of threats of war during the past year and declared that the recent pronouncement of respon- | sible statesmen and members of Par- | the alarm. Turning again to the tripartite naval conference, he said that even if nego- tiations between Great Britain, France and America should succeed he doubt- | Mrs. Bailie had enjoyed the privilege ; of introducing full testimony and that | to hear her attorney today would be petition from foreign countries where | Nary-Haugen bill, but the new measure labor is cheaper, overproduction, local | suggesis a method different from the taxes and the substitution of machinery | equalization fee in carrying out the | for work animals thereby decreasing purposes of those who want agriculture the consumption of farm products. “placed on an equality with the other There is no difference of opinion, the ' industries.” President, said,, over the fact that there | There are many in Congress who do | is need for farm relief. The question | not want to go that far, who are averse is one of method. He declared himself | to seeing the Government undertake to flatly against the imposition of any | ‘“control” prices of farm products be- | “fee or tax” upon the farmer, thereby |cause the precedent, in their judgment, ranging himself squarely once more in | would be dangerous and would open the opposition to the old equalization fee|way to price control of products in all plan of the McNary-Haugen bill of | industries engaged in interstate and for- the last and preceding Congresses. eign commerce. They fear, in other The President appeared to be im- | words, that industry some day may be pressed with the need of protecting the |placed on an equality with agriculture. American farmer in the domestic mar-| There are some parts of the pro-| ket and for that reason desired an in- | posed bill which will be the basis for| crease in tariff duties on farm products | prolonged discussion. Just as the; from other countries. In this connec- | equalization fee was declared the heart tion, he said: of the McNary-Haugen bill last ses- sion, so are the advances to be made SSEI b In g out of a revolving fund of $500,000,000 “The great expansion of production p et e Pheliaci the crux of the new plan. abroad under the conditions ave mentioned renders foreign competition Much. te Stir Debate. in our export markets increasingly seri- | .While the Federal Farm Board would ous. It seems but natural, therefore, | withhold advances from any co-opera- that the American farmer, having been | tive or producers’ organizations whose greatly handicapped in his foreign mar- | efforts might be construed as aiding in ket by such competition from the|overproduction, the bulk of the money Inundations. to take the time of the congress. moment. In the inter-mountain coun- | try beyond the Mississippi, the Hoover | dministration’s ofl-conservation pro- | gram is absorbing attention. | In the industrial East, prospective re- vision of the tariff grips the public’s at- tention, with controversy between the Federal Reserve Board and high finance. Prohjibition at All Points. Seme Program Will Be Followed, | With President and Other | Notables Present. ed the agreement would be acceptable “xp.” motion to sustain the board's to other powers. i ruling was made by Mrs. Robert J. Naval Differences Cited. Johnston of Iowa, and was agreed to with only one dissenting vote, it was “The acceptance of the Soviet pro- | " o Omy O E_vote, it was posal for a proportional reduction of (Continued on Page 4, Column 1) Washingion will nave its- base ball| AIEALS WOUM RAVE removed. those dil- GLASSIE IS BEI_JEVED OUT AS D. C. JUSTICE opening tomorrow, with all the ceremony | hox ws preseny biocking e work ot Hoover to Send Nomination for Additional Judgeship to originally planned for this afternoon. the preparatory commission and ob- Senate Tomorrow. Water 2 feet deep, and rising rapidly. ' IN CAMPBELL'S PAST { Known Record of Marriages, Some purg, Md. halted sutomobile trafic ' Bigamous, Now Brought | there this afternoon. | This inundation is the result of a Up to Seven. | heavy rise in the Eastern Branch of the }inmnc River, already at high-water But the question that is being talked | By the Associated Press. mark, which overflowed today into the about, argued about and wondered, ELIZABETH, N. J.. April 16.—More streets of Bladensburg. The water cov- about—East and West, North and South ' Wives have emerged from the dim past ers & 200-yard area in front of the —is prohibition. Skilled observers of | to shadow the much-married life of | Bladensburg Jail, also surrounds that | section near the Defense Highway Cross. popular trends are comparing notes on | Henry Colin Campbell, bigamist and | *r, 2605 wed up by yesterday's down- no way differ from attempted agree- | Capitol Hill in the opening hours of | Confessed slayer of his latest bride, poyr, today was virtually at a standstill | clash tomorrog. ments made before the war, like the | the special session, and agree that their | Mrs. Mildred Mowry. Identified by | after 24 hours of steady rain. Garage- | President Hoover and his cabinet and! one-time proposal for a naval holiday respective constituents, no matter what | ingerprints a quarter century old as, men in the vicinity reported a busy|many high dignitaries of the Govern- | between Great Britain and Germany 3 I r what | afternoon assisting motorists who were | ment, civil and military. will attend the | Extreme precaution was being taken | parts of the country they inhabit, are | Henry C. Close, who served time in! iionded in the flooded area. The President will formally alike as next-door neighbors in one di- | Sing Sing Prison, and in Auburn Prison | rection. The eighteenth amendment|in New York for embezzlement, and in " President Hoover will send to the today by the Swiss government to sec “ that no harm befall Litvinoff while at- Senate tomorrow the nomination of an Busses Get Through. and the Volstead act are their favorite | San Quentin Prison, Calif,, back in 1890 | , Washington Rallway & Electric busses. topics of conversation. on a forgery charge, Campbell has | tending the conference here. ‘flddlllnnll associate justice for the Su- ington club a new base ball just be!ore} A large coterie of detectives was as- | preme Court of the District of Co- however, are making m‘efllr’wl:y t{:irm;;!‘\ . 's Plea admitted to Prosecutor Abe J. David | By o el el Wopewy Gets Results. that Close s his right name and con- | if the Representatives and Senators pretty R the contending teams take the field at signed to M. Litvinoff and his Soviet | jymbia. 3:30 o'clock. assoclates and remained with them al-| TP continues busses will be de- | Gates io the stadium will be opened [most constantly. Fear of attempts erstood that e ‘wi 14 three more marriages. This . at 11:30 o'clock. ‘Box and reserved mt,a(:inst tfi:‘:’l‘mfiu bel;e\-rg t% exnlalr:‘ nominate Henry H. Glassie of Chevy younger expanding countries, should ask | would be used to assist the so-called essed e LT Reports from Williamsport, Va.. state | tickets issued for today's game will be | extreme tions of attendance at|Chase, Md. former member of the that " forelgn access to our domestlc: stabilization corporations in DUrchas- | ors insuaural scdre vare s oL, ioo; | brings his known record fo seven wives | nai'the Polomac at (hat point hts [honored tomorrow, with the holders |the commission's sessions also. ittt Conitaiion and. 6 Hoeddat Gob market should be regulated by taking |ing or agreeing to purchase Crops atiappeal to individual citizens 1o help in | St Hormin ar the tnc umined | Ovecfiowed its-banks and one home al- | gelting the same seats the coupons| The Lessue of Ustlons tefused 10| " \ants to the Attormey Gen into account the differences in our costs | basic prices, 5o as to prevent Sharp | observing and enforcing the lquor laws, State H“P“"lh’“' e e Brossen | ready has been flooded. S of production.” jdeclines due to_world_market prices. | has had widespread result. It hasn't | oo bog derl e e e end g5 n0p| , Dispatches from Cumberland. Md., Shulimiin: PAG RO I Sie VIS, The Presidents faith fn the plan for |~ (Continued on Page 5, Column 4) | put everybody on the water wagon yet. | o somaomes Arey nadiet declare that the streams in that lo- the esteblishment of & Federal farm | . but ‘members. of ‘Congress. ave® corats | ® SooAtme ! 4 cality are rapidly approaching the flood called for today. | grant cards of admission to all who have appointment last January by President board is strong, he indicated in his | L that the effect of the Bresident's sran | jaGompbell has not only admitted his | siage. Rain has been steady for almost {CLEARING WEATHER | could only be met by the creation of & | neously. and it is feared several streets in the various parts of the country, which Neither Manager Johnso) Cor- | asked for them, but, on the contrary, nelius McGillicuddy, leader of the Phil. |have admitted to the public benche Coolidge, but who failed to be con- 2 3 ict, it Was as- . | firmed before expiration of the last message. - In that connection he said: identity as Close, ex-cony 36 hours and the whole Potomac water- ; firm piration “T have long held that the multiplicity In‘:lfin;(‘:glar now of usiated instances | 1eried: But confessed that he lived with | ., "ty affected. The river near Cum- | . ; | among so-called “better-class citizens,” | i 3 2 SR great instrumentality clothed with suf- IS EXPECTED TODAY | in yhich ar, Hoover's request has heen NEW YORK, April 16. () —Henry | low-lying section will be inundated. ficient authority and resources to assist Colin Campbell, confessed torch slayer | hitherto had no compunction about Prepare for Trouble. Temperature of 36 Degrees Fore- |about turning locker rooms into = YOl e’ SR G G SRR et leias e vt | drenched by a 24-hour dewnpour of | problems of land and air forces,” the | rain, officials of the Washington club |Sover vee commssar declared. | called off today’s game at an early hour | ~ ge assailed “limitation” of arma- and announced that the program firsi. ments, insisting that limitation would | planned for the season start will be in | not lead to dimnution and would in | effect when Nationals and Athletics | contest. - | ticipating in the convention and dele- :e;gnb‘:%zmv.l:‘:h‘l;:m t:l:yfitp}?::, nmpn. w‘olher conferences now under been in good conditio than a | VaY at Genev The White House has given no indi- cation as to the name of the individual the President has selected for this place, week, while the Atme‘;lé?ramluh tgey o — AMERICAN ARRESTED \IN SPAIN TO BE FREED | scrioss onsitertion Georse ©. Bute went through a poor training period, of Texas, who at present is an Assistant are, with few exceptions, in good physi- cal tring. . No changes in pitching selections for the opening game are likely. Manager Johnson ts to start Sam Jone: adelphia club, believed his team would | Only wives and daughters of those par- | Congress. of causes of agricuitural depression three of his bigamous wives simulta- |} hyng is within 2 feet of fiood stage promptly acted upon. Golf clubs in r farmers to meet these problems, ! % amis! e O e ety A check-up at the Baltimore & Ohio éach upon its own merits. The creation | ife, at Cranford, N. J., tivel; of such an agency would at once trans- wife, at Cranford, Wwas tentatively identified from photographs at New and Western Maryland Rallroads re- | easies, are said to have gone dry. There teran right-ha; rm was fer the agricultural question from the cast This Eveni: Potomac | is a general conviction among politicians | York police headquarters today by .| vealed that although no trouble has | veteran right-hander, as he had planned | Attorney General, who former), itics into the Tealm of eco. ng: . g pol ns ;‘:, y E rted, rations for emer- | for today and Connie Mack i ¥ y A ly field of politics e _& ithlt the President’s Delia Budd as the “Frank Howard” who | been repol Drepe will send to the pitching box Rube Wal- i Washingtonian Was Held With| attorney general of Porto Rico. kidnaped her 10-year-old daughter | gency are being made. Grace on June 3, 1928. AT Georgian Revolt Denied. .MOSCOW, April 16 (#).—The Soviet. authorities today denied reports pub- lished in P and the United States Others who are known to have been under serious consideration for this place are John Lewis Smith, former president of the Bar Association of the District of Columbia, who has the in- dorsement of that organization as well as that of the Republican State com- mittee of the- District; Paul E. Sleman of Chevy Chase, Md., chairman of the lumn 1. Dlea more for prohibition than the Jones- " (Continued on Page } { Stalker law. though everywhere - boot- LISBON REVOLT BLOCKED. Portuguese Police Arrest Several If Over Seawall. berg, the left-hander he had intended omas, W.. V., 1 miles Thomas, W. Va., severs) miles | o enploy thid: sftermicon. At west. of Cumberland, a temperature of 35 degrees is reported and snow min- th rain. . The rivers and 'lCOAL TAX REPEAL 0. K.’D.; | Two Women Accused of Criti- cizing Rivera's Government. | Clearing weather will result in a tem- | perature of 36 degrees in Washington G'RI«_ i this evening, the Weather Bureau an-; nounced i ‘ today. Rain will continue to fall until late ’S DEATH PROBED AFTER PARTY IN CABIN By the Associatea Press. P MADRID, April 16.—William Wright §| | Pennsylvania- Senate Passes Bill| en out - in Prominent Politicians. LISBON, Portugal, April 16 (#).—An. other atfempt:d revolutionary move. Traces of Poison Found at Autopsy. Sister, 16, Is Beind Held as winds are expected to bring clear frustrated by the ‘Witness by Officials. weather. The temperature was drop- blsihed in the ping rapidly this afternoon, and was A note pul press today | ® to go as low as 36 degrees be ftated that the authorities had arrested several political figures hostile to the i8 ockhwn!;he. r‘ur'md warmer ; weather is promised for tomorrow. By the Associated Press, i 4 ’gn:lzrmnent :v'n::;t" sinvolved in el mfif’.mm": l‘;mr‘h“ 2 '“m‘m: NIWAKI, Quebec, April 16.—The utionary m the o al to the amount of | sudden death of 20- id Oli t and the police had broken up | Ing. _This is equ | BN &':‘;?v:mem “”“1 - S H:fnml during the entire of { Charlebois after a party at a trapper’s that public order was | April last year. X ey o hit the ‘police were inves- | The Weather Bureau reports storms Gabin was under investigation tods tigating how far each of the arrested along the Atlantic Coast with probable | men had gone in the ‘plot. les from the Delaware Breakwater to this afternoon, when strong northerly | ment in Portugal ;’T‘mmfly has been} - MONMOUTH, 1ll.. (#).—A half cen- | that Wright was a resident of this city Forei, Bank Statements T S B o esion 2 ‘Washington - clearing house, $5,036,- esent nveA g 573.99. or The Evening Star office, Treasury balance, $384,003,663.73. cl‘enlrln: house exchange, $1,882,000.000. New York clearing house $161,000,000, that a re rgia, By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, April 16—The Epis- | of An| copal Church at Sawtelle, Calif., will *Bient. sioops, neay g oes , were at Church to Ask Congress to Pay Claim On Yankee Slo_oli Sun_k in 1798 by Pirates e estate has not been settled beaunl m.mi pirate n’éflgu& its International | of the hard ily. laden with cér- Court HARRISBURG, The Senate last anthracite tonnage an emergency tax was declared to be sitv to. night passed providing a gradual repéal of the Proponents of: the measure tended that the tax imposed in au'-“ that the emer- Tardy Once in 50 Years. Recalling Anthracite Levy. Pa., April 16 (#).— ht a bill State’s Ao tax. . The tax was blamed for ‘the present depression coal makket, and it repeal “an economic neces- the anthracite an American citizen regularly employed | Republican committee in ‘Montgomery in Granada, arrested several days ago in | County, and W. W. Bride of s company of two Spanish women who, Md., corporation counsel for m‘;,‘m poljce said were publicly criticizing the | [8 ish government, it to be released = News of D. A. R. Full reports of the D. A. { by the Madrid police on the condition of keeping in touch with authorities. Mr. Wright speaks no Spanish. The | Spanish . women, sisters, whose name | was given as Bonilla and who reside| !in_the United States, are also to be re- R. Convention April 14 to | leased. Mr. Wright took no part in the 21, inclusive. | criticisms which the women were said to have made, but was arrested along Mail — Postage Pre- with them. paid U. S., Mexico and Canada ... The first reports reaching here said 11th 8t. and Pa. Ave. N.W.