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| IN MUBERN INDIA Missionaries Here After| Years in Bengal Tell of Im- proved Conditions. It is the Hindoo woman—velled, | hidden and ignorant—who exercises the | Teal power in modern India. Because she turns the ‘enormous | ‘welght of her authority tp the support | of the anclent superstitions which | oppress her and make her happy, lndlnl remains in darkness.. | This paradoxical situation was ex- ined yesterday by Rev. John B.| unay, former professor at Catholic i University, and Brother Anthony, who ' are now at the Holy Cross Foreign Mission House at . Catholic Unlver!lt)‘. after several years' service in Benga l'teplnl great wave of Wuuem ue‘dauu;llm; ls over ther Duhun.y hut it 'm pmduoe little sub- c.hm? the customs of the country until it reaches the real rulers, the mothers, who are especially opposed measures leading to the ameliora- Father Delaunay’s picture is far dif- ferent from that of recent writers who have pictured the women of India as , abused and down-trodden. The boys, he sald, flock to the mission and government high schools in numbers 100 great for the growing accommoda- tions and prove apt pupils of Western Wways. They realize that education is| their only wi J of escape from the sordid | conditions Indian village life. It! enables them to come to the cities, to 'arn trades, and to get government ‘Women Squelch Advanced Ideas. 1 ‘They return to their homes with' Western ideas, even as regards the emancipation of women. en the ‘wives and mothers assert their authority K m and a great deal of the advanced are lquelcbed for good. Because ission socleties are making qechl eflum to lure the girls into l,he schools and the government is estab- lishing many girls’ high schools. Theoretically, says Father Delaunay, the woman is the absolute ‘"wpeny of her husband. She is m: to him as a small child and is taken to his house she reaches puberty, The actual ‘practice of child marriage, he says, is nut 0. horrible since it very is anything but a formality, marriage Rev. John B. Delaunay (left) and Universiéy after several years spent in Bengal. Brother Anthony, who are at Catholic —Star Staff Photn STUDENT CRUSADE ELECTS OFFICERS Organization, in Session at " Catholic University, to- Adjourn Today. : ‘The election of officers, marked by the re-election of the president and chairman of the national executive board, constituted the chief business of the sixth general convention of the Catholic Students’ Crusade at Catholic | oour University last night. Most Rev. John T. McNicholas, O. P., national president of the Crusade, and ey lg § i i 2 T cases such as could be found amo; thl 1 ng ower ele- Mhnycfiym true especially of hospital Tespe y blll Ch!] fear that if one ktl!ed another cobra will take An exhibit of articles from the Indian missions is being shown at the. mission House and the Catholic University. The established the first house in the District scores of priests, brothers and nuns gone from here to carry on the MODELIN ing, cottages, bun; . sub.; good * | By the Associated Press. 418 10th ST. OF CQéatn Giss. ——'fifi-—— & vt i e 5 o g‘mith’s Tnn:fer & Sto::ge Co.,{ ! LOORS Rand oy machine work. & w_-_vfi- COLOMETA 411 Cellar Flooded? s Wet? BT T s RS _| Minister of Finance Quoted as Say- ] i 3 5 .5 ‘The only wnhh‘wn candidate in the election was Mary Louise Collifiower, who was . dehlhd by Miss Taylor for the national representative unit on_the national board. The four-dsy convention will 1:ach final adjournment at 12 o'clock today, mnllllm:hun'mbeheldln;l;e 1- ses- ‘The day’s activities will be begun of- ficially at 8:30 o’clock, when a pontifical l:h mass will be celebrated in the Na- al Shrine of the Immaculate Con- eeptlon Mgr. Thill will preach the ser- in which he will give an inspira- tlmul discourse on the missions of the Orient. The general business sessions, to be marked by the presentation of resolutions from the divisional meetings, which have been held during the past two days, will begin at 10 o'clock. Church Services. Low masses will be celebrated in the various chapels at 6:30 o'clock today for the delegates who wish to receive holy communion, and the official breakfast is scheduled for 7 o'clock. tion to the election of offi- and list one new unit during ing year. Another resolution, to in- crease the future members’ dues 1 cent a year to 5 cents, was lost. Long years, instead of triennially, B ent. The matter was left to the discre- tion of the national executive board, however. 5 ‘The convention has been in session at Catholic University since Thurs- day night. CANADA REPORTED MAKING TRADE BID ing Revision of Australian Treaty Is Expected. Wwas likely. “The move is in sequence to the new tariff policy of Lhe United States,” the dispatch added. “The di ition here is 1o let the United States do'hl!'-h!v with their tariff, while Cansda Archbishop of Cincinnati, was renamed | M¢: MEXICAN DRY WAR “National Drink,” Cheaply Made and Plentiful, to Be Fought. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY June 22.—Although it has not been specifically mentioned by name, in the final analysis Mexico's prohibition campaign, recently in- augurated by President Portes Gil and now gaining momentum throughout the couritry, aleoholic far and away the leading drink evil of But because of the very factors that make it the principal drink evil, the hudeu s-mt-u-r«ml.m The factors t.hle ‘make pu.lque the national dH.nl d its productions ricultural indum'y are chuvne-. its, lvl.lhbluty and its vir- ual mandatory use as a substitute for water and milk, which in some parts of the republic are almost unobtainable. It is consumed by millions of Mexicans almost from birth, and frequently is fl'.n to infants as a subtsitute for insanitary conditions under which ltllmldllndlupcculhrln xicating | t which makes addicts vicious and ommel bloodthirsty. From Maguey Plant Pulque is a m.lcky milk-like Iiau(d which comes from the maguey which either grows wild or is cull vlhd hout the uplands of Mexico. ‘The maguey nt cultivation occu- ples nearly & million acres of land and it is estimated that pulque production gives .employment to 1,500,000 people, or 10 per cent of the population of Mexico. ‘The department of statistics esti- mates that the year's per capita con- sumption in the nine principal pulque- | producing states is 458 liters, or about & quart and a half daily for each man, ‘women and child. Nature Ferments It. Nearly every President since Diaz has openly o] ule but all have made -mm rd Was enemy of pulque ‘“because 1t h vre]udlchl to our people.” o machinery is required to make '.ha dflnk ‘The great maguey plants, reaching their maturity in six or eight years, are tapped and dally quart or more of sticky juice. Nature looks after its fermentation into pulque. The product is never bottled. but is pour’rd into barrels and ladled out at retail. Bottling It Is Started. One economic measure now being considered is the gradual luhtltlltlnn of other crops for maguey, so-that if prohibition of pulque ever becomes effective it would not amount to a na- tional economic disaster. Another measure already inaugu- rated in some places is to require bot- tling of the liquor. This makes it more sanitary and also more eostly, thus taking it out of the reach ol the poor. g, D. C. DOCTOR T@ ATTEND CONVENTION IN LONDON Dr. C. L. Hall Sails With Party of Americans for Ortho- pedic Gathering. Special Dispatch to The Star, NEW YOR‘ Jum 22.—Dr. of 1801 I streef ton, sailed guests of Robert Jones, president of the British Orthopedic Association, Dr. Hall will return to Washington in_September. ° Rev. Robert Johnston, rector of St sailed is in reality aimed at a single | beverage—pulque—which s | NEW OIL PROCESS Will Build' Commercial Plant _in New Jersey for Hydro- genation of Petroleum. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, June 22.—The Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey is constructing ! the first commercial plant in the United States for hydrogenation of petroleum lt lh bayway property, near Elizabeth, The process, for which the American | ts have been obtained by Standard New Jersey, was developed by the ! Oerz"n‘:n dye trust, the 1. G. Parben In- Construction of the new plant in- volves plans for production of gasoline at the rate of approximately 100,000 barrels daily. Decision Follows Long Experiments. Decision to build the pllm Iol!flwa two years' experimentation wif rocess in & small plant at Bawn , La., where it was found that 100 per cent gasoline could be recovered from crude, compared with between 35 and 45 per cent in the mn-t ‘modern use in the ‘The hydm(emu.nn method is said to be more costly than existing cracking methods. Students in the oil industry believe that hydrogenation of oil and products will, in the interests of conserving the Nation's and world’s supplies of oil, supplant entirely within the nex: ‘ew years all of the widely used methods of oll refining. This prediction is based on the fact lalt X:Dr n;:eny {}e‘an the excess of .eavy oils has been the greatest m of the oil industry. Dlnpo..lw:? these lower grade olls at very low prices for heating and power-making purpcses 1s given as a reason for depression in the coal mining industry. The German process is said to pro- duce 100 barrels of gasoline from 100 barrels of crude. The process opera‘es at & high temperature, using hydrogen and a catalyst. Description of Pracess. A general description is that the oil treated loses 10 per cent of its weight through carbon given off in treating, and increases 10 per cent in volume through the introduction of the nydro- gen necessary to the chemical and me- chanical readjustments in producing | ofl circles, will lllpplnnt existing refin- processes as as the movement supported W '.ha uovemmenz and the industry to conserve oil supplies uum definite shape. With tailed to the point 'M’Mc‘:ieldl wou]d become too expensive for use in heating buildings, on mmnthfll ind internal and coastal steamship higher ratios of gasoline recovery from crude wnuld be auenunl SPECULATION CURB CREDITED TO BOARD Hamlin Claims Success for Policy of Fighting Diversion of Funds. railroads By the Associated Press. Charles S. Hamlin, member :‘flfi‘" m in an address tonight before the Maine Bankers’ Association. Federal Reserve system,” he said, “has taken an eflwtlvc eonhb;ln.fl the situation wi wuntn'ulndhmemtmlnlmex- ercised through the medium of direct pressure the system has established new tech e which shows that di- version of Reserve credit into speculative channels may be curbed without lerimu ln)ury to agriculture and ing of his address that whll h: had -yr:m- sented merely - his dwn mdm-themnmmnymr?elk- ing for the Federal HISPANIC-AMERICAN He CONFERENCE OPENS | Session Aims to Secure Greater Fraternity and Reociprocity Between N By the Associated Press. HEAV?NA%AJ;M 22.—The 'N\Iflh nic-. n of Evan- gelical Churches mC;l}:mm g , represen educational institutions, who will .l-;:! mmmu:dnlory up:‘c:ty. TM“lfllh'nl af P o Mm i, good netproe‘l the Latin Amsflun nat of inter- uy fessor national relations at Columbia Uni- versity. OPPOSITION CONSTABLE SERVES OUSTER EDICT Louisville Democrats Face Banish- ment From Club as Repub- lican Posts Notice. By the Associsted Press. ST e 2t 0 e at t-hn today plastered a_distress warrant u)\ thudmrort.hsmmmm: city and e“?umnty executive committee’s headquar- The warrant gave notice of impend- ing sale of the office furniture wllall of payment of ' three months' rent, tof $702. Charles J. Hebel the landlord, sald the warrant was “more or less of a threat,” but that he had been unlhh to_collect the rent. Lawrence J. Macke: of the , said that he had not hesrd of the action, but investigate and PROPELLER INJURES MAN. Blade Cuts Arm While Cranking Airplane. Hlt by s ’-rwellar yesterday afternoon Johnso 20, of ’fllxltmlm an emj of the Potomac Flying Co., sustained a compound fracture of the arm. The injured man was brought to Emergency - Hospital, nwn treatment :nd hter duchsrud doctors w] thlt hll foot sl started rity of the law and has a peflect the | thority e. The Farben process, it is believed mJ AED AT PULQUE +|TO RESTORE LEE HOME itself to from the | by 30, JUNE 23, ASSALS LOWMAN iMcCallum Hopes President Will Not Put Matter Up to Him to Remedy. By the_ Associated Press. 1 LITTLE FORK, Minn., June 22. .Mayor A. R. McCallum of Little Fo commenting wdly on President He ver's letter to the International Falls| City Couneil in connection with the killing of Henry Virkkula by a border patroiman, said residents of this sec- tion would be satisfled “if the matter isn’t left in the hands of Assistant Secretary Lowman” or if the affair is not "whlte-vuh Decision Held Unsatisfactory. i Secretary Lowman, after an investi- tion of the Virkkula shooting byl fi\mefi ‘White, a border patrolman, an- nounced White “acted within the au- dz!enu " ‘This decision, Mayor asserted, “did not satisfy in t.hz leut." citizens of Little Fork. “If the President doesn’t forget about the shooting or put the affair up to! Secretary Lowman to remedy,” the mayor stated, “we will be satisfied that the Government is making an effort to remedy the situation along the interna- tional border. We don’t want the Gov- ernment to take off the bortier patrol- men, but we certainly would like to have them behave themselves.” Patrolmen Called Overbearing. _ “The border patrolmen are overbear- ing. If any one should justifiably pro- | test against the methods they employ they are apt to slap you in the face. | In short, they think they are the whole | Government.” Little Fork is about 22 miles from the international border. Virkkula was killed near Little Fork while returning with his wife and two children in an automobile from a visit at International Falls. White sald he suspected Virk- kula was carrying liquor. ATTORNEY SEEKS T0 FREE CAPONE zkeportl That Release Is Arranged for Wednesday Are Denied by Gangster's Counsel. By the Associated Press. nsu M Golder said. today that na | So sal it Tenewed eftorts o free “Scarface Al" Capone, Chicago gangster, from the Holmesburg County Prison, where he is 1 a m-;;ur sentence for carrying L Reports from Chicago that arrange- | ments already had been made for| Capone’s rele-u next Wednesday were denied by Gol Golder dechrad his plans “do not in- | clude the release of Capone next wnk No one has been authorized to speak for Capone. Charles Fischette, who the I | Chicago reports say, is Capone’s-cousin, ' and who was supposed to have talked with him lolmesburg, is taking no | part in the arrangements. o‘"Nflmr have we seen Jack Guslk pone’s su| business representa tive, and the prison authorities say no‘ such person has talked to Capone Capone, prison_officials said, was to h-ve seen Golder k‘\‘n ‘n?in today lhx‘\n to “sign some p-n" Golaorunt mawmm:nmzhe‘ !oul'd‘ be ‘unable to keep the engage- men FUNDS ARE INCREASED Kentucky Gives $9,000 to Rebuild Stratford Hall in Virginia. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 22.—Progress in the campaign for funds to restore Stratford Hall, wmmmhnd County, birthplace E. Smith, director e campaign t’ejrnyl?mdl in Kentucky, uisville. A gift of $1,000 from the Colonial Dames of Virginia was announced as well as offer of the garden clubs of Testore the colonial gardéns of pertinent works of art also lllve been received. DOGS IN GUEST LIST. ‘The 10 francs includes meals served hfldolmmdlpeciflfood\lfldc The variety oltdo( dl:lu‘:hlch the h_zu e at one e pfl: ooune o! a busy veek ud the dm nf lhe k‘lu:han management Select an Apartment Und Wardman Management See Classified We Want to Know HOW and WHY You Haven't Given ~US—? a Trial Before B To show you the wonderful ¥ new luster we can put on your & old rugs and remove all dirt. § b ‘e are respot.sible, reasonable, ¥ dependable. Shampooing, # washing, scouring, sizing, re- pairing. | except to abandon the plane and mail | 1929 PART 1. Rough Riders of the Air Mail New York-Philadelphia Run Pilot Says Ice Forming on 3 Wings to Blame for Transatlantic Failures—Describes Battle He Had in Cold Air and Peril of Blaz- ing Flare Hung on Wing While Landing. I took off from Hadley Field for Philadelphia. The clouds were low and | the “ lfin‘ under which I had to fly was only 200 feet. That is so low that, flying more than 100 miles an hour, you haven't: a chance to do much in case | Thix fs one of a of personal s WHuien Sy S5 madl ohots de- thelr most thrilng experiences erial postmen _take chances which the ‘Dilofs of passenser plancs. e Comfort of thelr passengers in avoid. when that in" 1028 me Uniud sum Sir miall was flown mofe than Bilieds i 13 awmesiug Wil iow Tew cerious | 05 Srouble.” ‘It iz too low; ialko. for 8 Tishaps the mail planes have met. | parachute jump. Your: parachute wouldn't open. P I flew int> an area where the humid- | ity was high and it was extremely cold. By now it was daylight. I could see the ice beginning to form on my wings. It piled in irregular humps. And it formed on the wires until they were | thick and began to vibrate badly. I/ expected them to break any minute, _ Tee Melts Off. ‘The wings started to lose their lifting | power and I thought I was going to be forced down. Then I flew out of Lhe‘ damp area and into a slightly warmer temperature. The ice melted off and I was glad to see it go. I believe ice forming on the wings pmhlhly accounted for the - fate of a grunh‘e of the transocean fly- s who G0k Off and mever res red I have had only one forced this run. It was due to engine u'fluble n I realized we would have to set down I dropped a lan flare. It fell and lighted the country ightly for a mile- or so, for about a minute. But I got ready to drop the second. one, be- cause I figured the first would burn out before I could get down. Sure enough, | just as I got ready to put the plane on the ground it burned out. Flare Hangs to Ship. I pulled the toggle to release the sec- | ond flare. It got‘hung on the ship in | some way. These flares burn fiercely enough to destroy a ship in no time. They are designed to ignite only after the parachute which lets' them down has opened. It fluxht fire as I touched the ‘ground | and started blazing away. But some- | thing on the ground caught it and | dragged it loose as I rolled along. It would have burned me und the lthe mail in no time if it hadn't lot loose. BY LIEUT. WALTER J. SHAFER, | Mall Pilot tor Bitcaien Aviation Corporation on New York-Philadelphia Run. (Wiltten exclusively for The Star and the North American Newspaper Alliance.) A good many aerial experiences have | plled up since I learned aviation on fly- | ing boats near Philadelphia in 1915. | One was the time I nearly starved to | death while barnstorming in okl-hmn: The bottom had dropped out of the oi market and the people in oklnhom couldn't afford to pay for rides in a e. Shot Down by Germans. Also, there was the time I was shot mnin-d fight with two Germans, their lines and was taken But this is supposed to be the mail, so here goes. at 8:30 o'clock one nllht. mber, flying the mail from phia to New York. The first thing I knew a great black ball of clouds piled up ahead. I thought it might be a thunderstorm, but at first I couldn’t ‘see any lightning. So I kept my course and ba into it. Suddenly I was flying blind in thick clouds and there were great flashes of ing lightning d behind me as | lul ST 3 d to each si ln front. There was no way to escape | and take to the parachute. So I pushed on. Air Bumps Terrific. ‘The air pumps in the thunderstorm were terrific, and tney bounced me around badly. They knocked me every way but upside down. That lasted 30 miles. It was one of the worst thunder- storms I ever saw. I got near Princeton a bolt | of lightning went down past my wings ;:ld ne';‘rlly bt:llnd;d m: It struck a rn. e barn burned up. 1 sure was in a jam. The rain had | The only bad feature about fly started, heavily, and the visibility | the mail is the hours. Night flying is wasn't 'so good, even after I got down | interesting. It is a beautiful sight to out of the clouds. The rain_ fairly | 5% your towns all spread out under you burned my face as I tried to peer over | 8nd the lights shin the windshield. | more muren&mg uu:" m. s I finally got through all right, though, Py it i o and Ianded tny mal. at Hadley Field, .?”1‘”“ to fly the New York mail to New Brunswick, N. J., the New York | Philadelphia. I take off at 5. Then, air mail terminal, that night, I haye to leave Philadelphia ‘This last Winter I had a bad experi- | 3¢ 8:30 to fly the mail back fo New ence with ice. When ice forms on the | York. The hours are tough for all mail wings of a plane It destroys the smooth | | pilots. p}owhlt:h gives them lifting power, | (next: u sink gradually to the ground. | Sometimes you sink less gradually than | at_others. paper Alliance.) 100 Offer Blood TALK BUSINESS, RELIGION And Cash to Save |Kiwanis Internstional ~Attracts | ’6,000 to Chicago Convention. Boy From Kala-Azar | MILWAUKEE, June 32 (P).—What s clergyman thinks about religion in hul- ! ness and business in religion will told delegates to the thirteenth .n- nual Kiwanis international convention, gathering today in numbers expected to Hours Are “Tough.” E. E. Underhill—Flying the | Mail Through a Mountain Pass.) | (Copyright. 1929. by North American News- 14-Year-Old Victim of Strange Indian Disease ship and | 4 ng up. It s mitch | Ex Hospital Puzzl Bradley. pasior of the Peopies Chaon B ley, pastor of 's Church, OB ursic. Chicago, at a religious musicale tomor- row night will give his views on this By the Associated Press. subject. The musicale is the first event NEW YORK, June 22.—In a city lon the flve-d'li‘mlm ‘The conven- noted for the unneighborliness of its | tion proper open Monday. residents, more than 100 men and wom- en today had offered their blood and money to save the life of a 14-year-old | ing,of a strange disease. fuuxm e week, al n 't lflord. nt a e Hm . ern Btne Island. | He is suffering kala-azar, or black fever, an East Indian disease, rare in this country. WOMOOWOWWWQ“OOMQO”O“OO“ ; When George's plight became known through newspapers the hospital was swamped with telephone and personal calls by persons who offered money to provide transfusions and others who offered their own blood. Pupils at.a city high school took-up a collection to provide funds; men, ranging from Iaborers to lawyers, offered their blood, and two citizens oflered to pay for all the treatments for the boy. ital, but because of its lim- ited facilil 'ments were made to make tests of others at various New York hospitals. The boy’s mother is dead and his father incapacitated for work from an accident. ' How he con- tracted the disease is a mystery to doctors, | 2 FessiEad THANKS U. S. CHURCHMEN. MEXICO CITY, June 22 (#).—Arch- bishop Leopoldo Ruiz tonight tele- graphed the National Catholic Welfare Council at Washington expressing ap- preciation for the part American churchmen had taken in the negotia- tions bringing about a_settlement of the Mexican religious difficulties. ___ 2001 16th St. N.W. Exceptionally attractive apartments of one and three rooms, reception hall, bath and large kitchen. All outside rooms. Electric refrigera- in this section—on .your ow: INSPECT Rmonablc Rentals Frigidaire Equipped 1725 Lanier PL. N.W. Overlooking Rock Creek Park 4 Rooms, Kitchen, Bath, $65.50 Per Month Hedges & Middleton, Inc. 1412 Eye St. NW. | Het b Lorain et Comstock & Co Pt e Harvard 011 Burners. Le'ter Opera Easy to Own—Liberal Monthly Terms—Have Our Representative Call. DOMESTIC SERVICE CORPORATION CONNECTH AVE POTOMA HONE VM. H AT LAST WE OFFER DETACHED HOMES AT ROW HOUSE PRICES North Iflflnnhrthgt 1st and Randolph Sts. N.E. 4001 to 4019 21st N.E. Drive out Rhode Island Avenue to 22nd Street N.E., then north to Randolph Street and leit on Randolph to 21st and see positively the biggest bargains ever offered dellars less than other builders ask for same house. you like a home with plenty of yards, flowers, gardens and separate garage, be sure and inspect. Open to 9 p.m. 1311 H{STREET: NORTHWEST EVERY ONE A GENUINE BARGAIN! Chas. M. Stieff, Inc. 1340 G Street N. W. Piano Manufacturers for Almost a Hundred Ynn_. SLAYER OF OFFIGER IS GIVEN 20 YEARS Jenkins ls Sentenced for Shooting. McAuliffe, Who Urged Leniency. A. Jenkins, Samuel 43 " years old, | slayer of Patrolman John F. McAuliffe, yesterday was sentenced to 20 ars imprisonment for shooting the officer, who, as he lay dying, urged leniency for Jenkins. McAuliffe was shot down on the night of January 19 when he was sum- moned to Jenkins' home, 1213 Thirty- fourth street, where Jenkins, drink- crazed, was creating a disturbance. Jenkins fired from a window as Mc- Auliffe approached. Jenkins then attempted to end his own life, and it was while he and Mc- Auliffe occupled adjoining hospital cots that McAuliffe asked his mother not to let Jenkins be prosecuted, saying he was not responsible. The slayer was indicted for first de- gree murder, but was allowed to plead té)olee“onnd dm and Chief Jultlc: Mc~ y imposed the minimum penalty. Jenkins’ address was incorrectly stated in The Star yesterday as 1217 Thirty-fourth street. FESH R CUBA’S SUGAR OUTPUT 5,156,410 LONG TONS Beason’s Record Largest in Island’s History Except for 1924-25's 5,189,346. | By the Associated Press. HAVANA, June 22—A report by the Cuban Sugar Club today placed the total sugar output of Cuba for the recently closed grinding season at 5,156,410 long tons. The re] uyx his constitutes the largest crop pro- duced in Cuba, except for the 1924- 1925 crop, which reached 5,189,346 tons. The average commercial yield for the entire island was 12276 per cent, an Ing | extraordinarily high yield. The raw market showed perceptible gains during the week, with marked improvements in prices and undertone. ports from Cuba were considerably heavier, amounting to about 130,000 long tons. These included shipments to ornia, Canada, United Kingdom, France, Belgium and Holland. THOMAS GARY STRICKEN. P\BANTA MSAutiilll! June 23'(.3-— ormer Representative Thomas of Santa Rosa was in a critical wflfll“y tion at his home here umlrht after a gln!y\‘.\c stroke. He is 77 years old. ary was the author of the Chinese ex- clusion act during his term in Con and was a Democratic leader in fornia for 30 years. 16th'& Columb Rd. N.W. Two and four rooms, kitchen, bath and reception room, southern exposure. Reasonable rental. n terms—and thousands of If TODAY TEIN O ORPORATED 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 10 Good Second-Hand | PIANOS onty 8] Q) eac TERMS As Low As 35 Per Month Take Your Choice of the Followings Ebersole '~ Stultz & Bauer Cramer Schaffer Stoddart