Evening Star Newspaper, June 10, 1929, Page 6

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6 RO PINSTRNE KD 2055 s oue vomase, | Time Off for Exercise Gastonia Police Seek Others, in Chief’s Death, With | N [ 60-0dd Arrested. |Flays American Phonograph‘ e e i and Records as One of | Dy the Associated F | P o Z | GASTONIA, N. C., June 10.—S*rike | Leading Diversions. | Jeaders and union officers today went | | ahead with plans for the defense of | 60-0dd strikers from the Loray mill | held in connection with the fatal shoot- ing of O. F. Aderholt, Gastonia chief of police. Meanwhile officers continued to round- up and jail additional strikers who were | about the headquarters of the National Textile Workers' Union last Friday night when Chief Aderholt and three patrolmen were wounded by gunfire from within the building as they at- tempted to approach it. Aderholt died Saturday morning. | Alfred Waganknecht, national secre- | tary of the Workers' International Re- | lief, announced that Hames Reld, presi- | dent of the National Textile Union, would come to assist in the strikers’ SLAYING CONTINUES serion v raes During Toil. By the Associated, Press. TIRANA, Albania, Junc 10.—King Zog I, Albana’s seif-made sovereign, although on the throne less than & year, has won the title of the hardest- working monarch in the world. | hiecn hours of unremitting tof! daily, with cnly ten minutes of cxer-| cise every two hours in the seclusion | of his white stucco palace here, is what he considers an ordinary day's work. Likes o Play Phonograph. | The K'ng gets up with the mountain | cagles at 6, sips a cup of Turkish cof- fee, pufis a cigarette and plunges im- | mediately into work. With the exception | defense. Other Aid Promised. Miss Juliet Stuart Poyntz, secretary of the International Labor Defense. said her organization also would aid those in jall. “We will bring attorneys like Clarence Darrow and Arthur Garfield Hays here to aid them,” she said. Police today said there were “a few more” they wished to apprehend, but declined to name them. Most of those arrested so far have been charged with sault with a deadly weapon.” Several men believed by officers to | fore he insists on doing everything per- | By the Associated Press. have been those who actually fired on the police squad have been spirited from the jail here to other counties to avold possible violence in the wake of high feeling that swept the town after Aderholt's death. Among these is Fred Erwin Beal, Southern orgenizer for the National Textile Workers’ Union. He Was arrested in Spartanburg, S. C.. Sat- urday on a warrant charging conspiracy to murder. Where Beal and others taken from the jail here were placed has not been disciosed by officers. Deputy Accidentally Shot. Yesterday's activities by police were marked by accidental shooting of a deputy sherff engaged in a search for strikers wanted in _connection with Aderholt’s slaying. George Moore was slightly wounded by another deputy. Police declared they had not de- termined yet when preliminary hear- ing for strikers jailed would be held. They said they were waiting “until feeling dies down and it is safe to bring Beal and the others back.” - FUKIEN CHAOS CONTINUE®. Dr. Holleman Believed Recaptured by Chinése Brigands. AMOY, China, June 10 (#).—Condi- tlons in the interfor of Fukien Province continue chaotic and refugees are con- stantly arriving here. Grave fears have arisen that Dr. C. H. Holleman, American Presbyterian mis- sionary, had been recaptured by the bandits from whom he was reported to have escaped recently. He had not ap- |of a few minutes’ visit to his mother, to whom he is deeply attached, he never leaves his desk until midnight. His only | - diversion is occasional play in the closely guarded palace grounds with his favorite | dogs. | "in the evening the long labors are | broken only when the King plays his | favorite American melodies on his | American phonograph, procurred for | him by Minister Hart. | " The Albanian monarch's friends say | he lacks the faculty of delegating tas| | to others, even to h's ministers. - There- | sonally and running the country vir-| tually single-handed. Rules With Gloved Fist. | But he governs Albania on a one-man | | basis. He has everything but the ap- | pearance of a dictator. His soft fea- | tures, aquiline nose, delicate mouth, blond hair, tiny chestnut mustache, | striking _dignity and _rescrved aristo- | cratic air suggest rather a French or | Austrian nobleman who never had to | sear a hand or furrow a brow by daily | i toil. | " Europe’s newest sovereign, however, |is no dilletante or parlor king. He rules | his million subjects with a firm and in- flexible but just hand and sets the king- dom a shiniing example by his cease- | less toll. Geniality Tmpresses Visitors. Although Zog was converted virtually | overnight by his adherents from an ol dinary tribal chieftain of his native dis- trict to the power and glory of a mon- arch, those who are privileged to meet him are struck by his regal manner, per- vading charm, graciousness and genial- ity.. When the Associated Press corre- spondent. visited the palace, he found the King petting and playing with a group of huge mountain eagles which he tamed himself. “As Albania is a country of high crags and peaks” the King said smil- ingly in excellent German, “we have almost as many eagles here as you have sparrows in America. Like eagles the world over, the Albanian eagle is proud, defiant, courageous and independent. Therefore we made it the symbol of our States. My people bring them to me in such numbers as gifts that I now-have national liberty, just as the United | peared at Ewatow as expected and ef- forts to locate him had failed. His wife and children escaped at the enough to export some to_America.” ‘Then, laughingly, the King added, “But I know the American people al- THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. OF ANY RULER'S KING ZOG I OF ALBANIA, LEWIS DEMANDS TARIFF ON FOREIGN PETROLEUM Head of Mine Workers Says Con-| tinued Free Entry Will Wreck Coal Industry. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 10— Urging the necessity of a tariff on for- cign produced petroleum ofl, John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine | Workers of America, declared in a let- ter {o members of the United States| Senate, made public yesterday, that contintied free entry of the fuel means wrecking of the American coal-produc- ing industry.” Speaking in behalf of the Miners' Union, Mr. Lewis requested the Senate and House of Representatives to pro- vide for such tariff on oil in the tariff bill pending in Congress. ' This action, he wrote, “will aid very greatly in af- fording _employment for many thou- sands of now idle men in the coal-pro- ducing industry.” “Consumption of many millions of| tons of coal” Mr. Lewis continued, “has been displaced by the use of ofi produced in the United States. This of, itself has done vast injury to the coal industry. To permit the continued free entry of many more millions of bar- rels of forelgn oil simply means still further shrinkage in the consumption of American coal and wrecking of this great American industry.” Citing figures of consumption, Mr. Lewis said that fuel ofl nsed in the United States In 1927 displaced approx- imately 20 per cent of the normal out- put of American coal mines and re- sulted in the closing of a large number of shafts. PALM BEACH and MOHAIR TROUSERS $4.65, $5.65 To match your Odd Coats time of his first capture, on May 23, at Lungeyenchow and are now here. ready have enough eagles and enough liberty.” A FASTER DE LUXE SERVICE to CALIFORNIA — 5 ‘”'0’11 to California NIGHTS 5.~ Coast to Coast a4 Direct connection at Chicago with fast trains from Every travel luxury of extra-fare all-Pullman trains. (Extra Fare $10.00) 13:50 a. m. 7:50 p. m. Lv.Chicage (C. &N.W) . . . . . . Ar. San Frascisco San Francisco Limited Only 63 hours, with no extra fare All-Puliman Train—barber, maid, valet, ba Lv. Chicago (C. & N.W.) O Tk e Ar. San Francisco . S Pacific Limited [58 Hours from Chicago]) by Overland Limited 8:20 p. m. %102 m. || EISEMAN'S, 7th & F | quired if the to-rd had not WILSON QUERIED ONLOBBY" CHARGE Methodist Board Chairman Asked as to Expenditures in Political Campaign. By the Associated Press A query as to whether the Melhodist Board of Temperance, Prohibition and | Public Morals had filed a stat=ment of its receipts and expenditures during the | 1ast political campaign was propounded to Dr. Clarence True Wilson, secretary public yesterday by Representative Tinkham, Republican, of Massachusetts. by the Massachusetts member in a let- ment of Wilson that his organization maintained no lobby in Washington. Tinkham said that the Methodist Episcopal Church hed erected its head- quarters oppositc the Capitol and in- described the location as “strategic” because it was located “just opposite the Senate | ) wing of the Capitol.” Other Queries Propounded. | | Among other questions, Tinkham in- quired if Wilson “or agents or servants | of the Methodist Episcopal Church had not opposed or recommended per- sons for appointment to Federal posi- | tions or supported or opposed candi- dates for public_office. | He asked if Wilson or agents of the | board had not appeared before legisla- | tive committees in advocacy or opposi- | tion to legislation, and if the secretary | and the board had not defended the | practice “of the acceptance of money by Senators and Representatives from | the Anti-Saloon League at a time when | that organization was vigorously advo- | cating legislation to Congress.” | Expense Account Introduced. He concluded by inquiring if the | board had filed a statement of “its re- ceipts and expenditures during the po- | litical campalgn of 1928 covering its | activities in behalf of a candidate or | candidates for presidential electors, | Senators and Representatives in Con- | gress, in like manner as in the case of | the orgenization led by Bishop James | o - | of the organization, in a letter made | The question was one of a series asked | ter which he based upon a recent state- | D. .- MONDAY FOUR INDIAN MISSIONARY COUPLES TO BE RETIRED ‘All >B-e;:7;;l_—3.; Years ‘ Longer, Methodist Foreign Mis- | sion Board Announces. Have or | By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 10.—Four mis- stonary couples, all of whom have been | working in Indla for 37 years or longer, | are now to retire from active service, the Board of Foreign Missions of the i Methodist Episcopa: Gaurch announced | yesterday. They are: Dr. William | tive of Penns | been in India 49 years, and his wife, formerly Miss Anna M. Thompson of Cincinnati, who has served there 40 years, Dr. Lewls Addison Core of Cassville, W. Va., 40 years in India, and his wife, formerly Miss Mary R. Kennedy of Tipton, Towa, 37 years in India. Dr. john Otis Denning of Bethlehem Ohlo, 39 years in India, and his wife, formerly Miss Margaret' W. Beahm of Harrisburg, Pa., 39 years in India. Dr. John Nikark West of Carrolton, Ohlo, 37 years in India, and Mrs. West, | who 'was Miss Mary Irene White of | West Carlisle, Ohio, and who has served | in Tndia 37 year: Henry Stephens, Grove, N. a na- J., who has| JUNE 10, 1929. | 43 INJURED; 99 JAILED. Riot Marks Attempt to Lynch| French Slayer of Two. | | LIMOGES, France, June 10 ()— | Two days of turmoil here found 43 | soldiers and gendarmes in the hospital | | Iast night, with 51 rioters and 48 other | | disturbers locked up in the very jail from which they had sought to drag for |a lynching Charles Bartaud. Bartaud. | | son of a local merchant, was convicted | of two murders, but was saved from the guillotine by a legal technicality. | The prison was stormed by a mob of | 10,000 persons. The police were so over- | whelmed that troops were called in. | y Mrs. Munn's Clothes Seized. | NEW YORK, une 10 (#).—Customs | | officials are holding six trunks of wear- | ing apparel, valued at $5,200, which | Mrs, Ector Orr Munn, daughter of the | late’ Rodman Wanamaker, can recover by payment of $10,400. Mrs. Munn's explanation of her fail- |ure to declare the clothing was that she had been aécustomed fo bringing her belongings in duty free because her | | first husband. Arturo A. Heeran, was | in the Spanish diplomatic service.” Cus toms officials also retained $450,00 worth of jewels which Mrs. Munn ought with her, but will return them |t her since she’ took them from this country. DROPS BAN ON NEWS. not permitted to give full acco events rumored beyond the Spanish | border. Spanish ‘Censorship of Associated | 1In the presence of the eorrespon | of the Associated Press the prel Press Dispatches Discontinued. |Calied the chief censor and gave necessary instructions to permit such MADRID, June 10 (®).—Premier| dispatches in the future to go on the Primo de Rivera yesterday removed the | responsibility of the correspondents, Spanish censorship on news dispatches | == going abroad, at the representations of | Auto enthusiasts in the Netherlands the Assoclated Press. 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