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Used—Guaranteed Cash or Terms White Sewing Machine Co. 711 9th St. N.W. TROUSERS $7.65 Plain or Fancy Stripes EISEMAN'S, 7th & ~ Property Owners If you own property that you would like to exchange, see me. [ may have listed just the class of property you want. Over 25 years’ experi- ence specializing in exchanges. A. 5. GARDINER 93236 Investment Bldg. Main 334 e 'y We Move Baggage —and small lots, as well as house- hold effects, etc. 1/ Call on us to be sure of service and satisfaction. We give both. fEstimates cheerfully made. Call Main 6900. Merchants Transfer & Storage Co. ‘two comrades of the Yellow Bird bent '920-922 E Street N.W. MOVING—PACKING—SHIPPING {senger Returns From France. ip\lrchmd for ghim by Armeno Lotti, | backer of the Yellow Bird flight, and | Airplane Salute for Mme. Assolant Upon | ohe idea is that she and her husband, | itals of (SCHREIBER SILENT | ON STOWAWAY FEAT Yellow Bird’s Voluntcer Pas- Angry When Questioned. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 26.—The stow- away of the Yellow Bird, -Arthur Schreiber of Portland, Me,, returned to America aboard the Leviathan today— first class—attired In extreme cut Prench clothes, but with little to say about himself or his uninvited trip. He was met at quarantine by his father, Morris Schreiber, a Portland fur worker, with whom he exchanged affec- tionate greetings, and then “e posed, with his father and by him* for sev- eral photographs, ‘The youth had nothing to about his future plans, -All he wished now, he said, was to get back home and se: his mother, Queries Annoy Him. | He became angry when. questioned regarding rzrcns that he héd compared himself to Lindbergh and his landing in Prance. 3 “There is no precedent for what I did.” he said, “and there is no way to tell. now what I shall do with my experience.” The Prench clothes he wore were one of her crew of three that flew from ©Old Orchard, Me. Father Paid His Passage. Schreiber started home from France | in a second cabin, but was shifted to | first class on the voyage. Money for his better passage was furnished by | is father. Aside from his father and the pho- tographers and reporters there was no one to meet the stowaway. The elder Schreiber said he and his son would leave for Portland during the day. HONOR FLYER'S BRIDE. Arrival at Havre. HAVRE, France, June 26 W?.vfi‘iullnri Parker, ‘new ‘Mme. Jean Assolant, was welcomed to France with an-airplane salute today, while her husband and his low and kissed her hand. Assolant's bride of but a few weeks was jealously guarded by the thrée air- men and their officer friends and went to & Deciair’ River resort for lunch. | They probably will fly to Paris. { Assolant and his comrades, Armeno | Lotti and Rene Le Fevre, came to Havre by car early this morning, but some of their friends flew from the military ai; field at Le Boutget and a whole squad- ron of: planes’ tuned up at the Bleville airfield near here. | When the lle de France, bearing the American wife of Assolant, came into Havre, a military plane with Assolant's friends aboard flew to meet her and cir- cled low while the gangplank was low. ered to allow the American bride, her arms full of roses, to be the first to land and to be greeted by her husband. Mme. Assolant’s future plans are yet to be made, but it was reported tiat possibly accompanied by Le Fevre and Lottl, will take air trips to all the cap- Europe. Free Book Will Help You Plan Your California “40 Ways to California” outlines the most attractive railroad routes from <l and contains fares and other information vauable to travelers. Write C. & N. W. Ry, 201 Frankiin Trust Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.—Advertisement, | U. S. ADVISER TO POLAND Trip | the protest gathering. “THE EVENING, S&‘AR. WASHINGTON. D. C. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, (1929, The chiefs shown above will be among the red men attending the council of Indians at Rapid City, S. Dak., July 30-August 2, to seek congressional recognition on old land claims. PLAN LAST STAND T0 REGAIN LANDS American Indians Call Coun- cil in July to Press Long- Standing Claims. By the Assoclated Press. | RAPID CITY, S. Dak., June 26.—The | American Indian is making a last stand in his battle to obtain land from which | he was driven by the frontiersmen. A great council has been called here this Summer to seek congressional rec- ognition of the long-pending claims, and the elder chiefs feel that this may be the last” large gathering. The younger generation, they say, is being assimilated by white culture, and if | this cannot obtain recognition of the | once united tribes the cause may be | lost forever, o | The council meets July 30 to August | 2. T progress of two decades will be reversed by the Indians, who will attend the council in native regalia, painted and adorned with treasured trophies; live in buffalo hide tepees and revert for four days to the primitive life of thelr ancestors. ‘The eight leading chiefs of the larger tribes have ruled that the general coun- cil is to be a serfous protest against white encroachment, not a show event. Members of what might be called the council's executive committee have | predicted that Indian regalia which few white men have seen will be worn at 8. The Rapld City Chamber of Com- | merce has provided ‘&’ camping ground | and rations. Outdoor sessions of the council will | be during the mornings, with Indian rodeos in the afternoons. Invited guests include Vice President Curtis, | himself of Indian , and - former | President Coolidge, who was !dupk‘d} by one of the council tribes during his | 1927 vacation in the Black Hills. The scene below is of a previous council. ‘Don’t Do as I Do,’ And ‘Don’t Drink,’ Is Texan’s Advice By the Assoclated Pre:s THORNTON, Tex., June 26.— ‘The “boys” in_ Thornton now refer to Nat Hupdson as ‘“the most considerate justice of the peace in the world.” In a paid advertisement in the Thornton Rustler, Hudson warned his “bootlegger friends” as fol- lows: “Beginning with July 1, I am going to make it hard for any man to make or sell home brew or whisky. “Boys, don’t let us catch you, for ‘we will bind you over to the grand jury with enough evidence to convict you. I'm not on the water wagon. My great-garnd- father took a drink in our war with England. Grandpa had a drink in our war with Mexico. 1 was more or less drunk in three different armies. I will still take & drink.. Boys, stay out of our way; we are your friends, but have to do our duty. |ENGINEER OF ILL-FATED PLANE TELLS OF CRASH| Barrett Is Questioned Closely as to ‘Warning Given Passengers on Trip. By the Associated Press. LONDON, June 26.—N. R. Barrett, flight engineer of the ill- chal of engine trouble which caused the pilot to make a forced landing in the Channel. Barrett, who was testifying in the air ministry’s inquiry into the loss of the plane with seven deaths, was questioned , | closely about the warning given the | passengers of what they might have to expect. Barrett sald he told the passengers that the plene might have to descend ted trans- | nel passenger plane City of Ot- | tawa. today described the development | {myeks and busses in the United States | AUTO PRODUCTION REACHES NEW PEAK Commerce Department An- nounces Increase of 1,044,173 Cars. | By the Associated Press. | World automabile production set a | new record in 1928. The Department of Commerce an- nounced today that the total produc- tion last year was 5,203,139, marking | an increase of 1,044,173 over the 1927 | fgure. Combined output of the United States |and Canada was 4,601,141, an increase of 1.020,761. Decreases were reported for England, Spain and Denmark. “More than 55 per cent of total pro- duction was required for replaczments, s omcpared wthi approximately 50 per cent in 1927, 37 per cent in 1926 and a similar percentage in 1925, the Com- merce Department said. “Phts indicates that the industry is | approaching what might be termed a | stabilized condition—that is, each year | an_increasing percentage of production | is being absorbed in the form of re- placements. United States and Cana- most. equal the combined production of the balance of the world, which num- bered 601,998. “The production of passenger cars, | and Canada during 1928, which was the | highest ever recorded, amounted ' ‘to 4,601,141, While this was a gain of 1,020,761 over 1927, the 1928 production was only 95,280 in excess of 1926.” |FAMILY GOES TO SCHOOL. | COLUMBIA, Mo. (). —Three mem- dian exports alone, totaling 586,498, al- | LUTHERANS START | WORLD CONVENTION |Archbishop of Sweden Tellsf of Great Growth, Describ- ing History of Church. By the Associated Press. COPENHAGEN, June 26.—The sec- ond Lutheran world convention opened ! here today in the presence of thousands | of delegates and visitors from all parts of the world and of King Christian nl, Denmark. Divine service was held in the Copenhagen Cathedral with a sermon by Bishop Ostenfeld of Copenhagen. The Very Rev. Nathan Soderblom of Upsala, Archbishop of Sweden, opened the regular session with an address to the delegates and visitors, among whom were hundreds of Americans from all over the United States and Canada. Message Meant for World. ‘The . archbishop declared that when Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses on the church door at Wittenberg, he had not the inéention of forming a new church or of advocating separation from the Church of Rome, but was later forced into it by the ban placed upon him and his teachings. Instead, Luther considered himself as an evangel | gmclulmlng the anclent faith taught y Christ and the early church fathérs. Archbishop Soderblom said the illus- trious founder of the Lutheran Church preached & message to the entire Christian world, the influence of which was moving outward in_ever-widening circles in every age. This par- ticularly true of the small catechism of Luther, which had gained recognition during the pest four centuries as the | greatest book for the common people | ever written, with the exception of the | le. ‘No book of any church has ever been 50 widely known and diligently used among common people,” he said, “even overstepping the bounds of Lutheran- ism. ‘The Evangelical and Catholic Christianity which is there set forth with admirable clearness and power bears the promise of the future. he the small Cathechism is destined in | she coming history of the church to gain an extended importance unknown | 1o us now. Luther's Expulsion Cited. “Luther was called by God to be the | teacher of all Christendom, like Paul, | Augustine, Bernard and Francis, but he was_expelled from fellowship with the worldly papal power.” | | " “Would the Rome of today, with its | nse #so of spiritual values, have done | the same?” the archbishop asked. He pointed out that in the Scandi- navian countries of Northern Europe | Luther's message was accepted by the whole church without schism, and in | those countries Lutherans have been | | dominant for centuries. The fact that | in the Scandinavian lands the Lutheran | church is established by the state, that in America the Lutherans teach strict | separation of church and state, and in | continental Europe and other lands the policy varies, he did not consider “a matter of essential importance to the churches.” “It appertains to Lutheran ideals that the gospel should penetrate and infuse the life and culture of the whole people, and that all the school children of the country, not cnly those who go to Sun- day school or to a confirmation class, should learn to know God and the Christ He sent,” he said. Collecto; Is Stabbed and Robbed. LEBANON, Ohio, June 26 (#).—Al- | {bert Ephrath of Dayton, an agent for the Equitable Life Insurance Co. was found in a critical condition in his | automobile near here last night with seven stab wounds in his side and other wounds on his body. He had | been robbed of $15,000 which he col- lected in Cincinnati yesterday. He said two men whcem he had given a ride had been his assailants. May- wit Iowa Court Holds Radio Set Is Not Musical Instrument By the Assoclated Press. DES MOINES, Iowa, June 26— The JTowa Supreme Court divided, 6 to 3, Monday on the question of whether a radio set is a musi- cal instrument. The majority held it was not. and consequently that it was subject to execution and sale. Justice J. W. Kindig. writin the majority opinion, said: “A contrivance s hot a musical - strument which produces harmo- nious sounds - already present in the atmosphere enabling the auditor to hear that which the human ear 1= not rightly con- structed to register.” MISSISSIPPI ACTS ON DE PRIEST AFFAIR Senate Adops Resolution Asking Hoover to Give Thought to Racial Integrity. By the Assoctated Press. JACKSON, Miss., June 26.—Unre- served disapproval of the entertainment at the White House of the wife of Oscar De Priest, Negro Representative from Illinois, was expressed yesterday by the Mississippi State Senate in a resolution unanimously zdopted. The resolution, calling on Presidei? to give “careful and thoughtful o~ sideration to the necessity of the pres- ervation of the racial integrity of the white race” was then sent to the House of Representatives, The Senate then brushed aside two substitutes secking to soften the tone of the resolution, whjch was declared adopted by a unan- imous vote, after Senator H. W. Brad- show of Rankin County, a Baptist minister, who voted against it in the first roll call, had changed his vote. “The incident is the revival of a thing we_settled the South at the end of the reconstruction days" said Senator W. B. Roberts of Rosedale. The text of the resolution: “Be it resolved b'; the Senate of the State of Mississippi, the House of Rep- resentatives concm'rmt;“e as follows, to “Whereas, on 14th day of June, 1929, the wife of Oscar De Priest, Negro Congressman from the State of Illinols, was entertained at a formal and_official tea in the White House at Washington, D. C., at which tea there was also present as guests white ladies; and “Whereas, it is of supreme impor- tance to the people, not only of the South. but the entire United States of the white race be preserved; and “Whereas, such an exhibition of so- cial equality at the White House tends destroy such racial integrity; “Now, therefore, we do unreservedly disapprove such action above set forth and appeal to Pres'dent Hoover that |he give careful and thoughtful con- sideration to the necessity of the ervation of such racial integrit; Lord Burnam Resigns Post. LONDON, June 26 (#).—Lord Burnam yesterday resigned the presidency of the Empire Press Union, a position he hi occupied since 1916. Maj. Astor, M. P., chairman of the as his successor. PP Pt America, that .the racial integrity of | Publishing Co.. was unanimously elected | NG5 o DREANS CONETRUE FOR EDTORPRE |Venice, -lll., Cleric Leads Parish From Pulpit and Through Paper. Br the Associated Press. VENICE, Ill. June 26.—In the rare combination of titles borne by the Re- John S. Brockmeier of Venice lies the realization of a boy's dual ambition, He is an editor-priest. Furthermore, Father Brockmeier f{s publisher and printer of his weekl paper. He also i5 a school teacher secretary-manager of the Venice Chamber of Commerce, and at 34 is5 studying law. Unwilling to Yield Either. All of this has been acesmplished since a 13-year-old, sandy-haired Jad in Covington, Ky. just .out of the eighth grade, develope: ble for the newspapers and at same time the conviction to become a priest. Unwilling to abandon either calling he followed both. Young Brockmeler first sought to follow his newspaper urge. He worked on the Kentucky Post, at Covington, as printer’s- devil and later reporter. At St. Xavier's College in Cincinnati | he began studying for the priesthood, | He worked part-time for the Quincy (I1l.) Herald-Whig and finished a four- [ 5=2xr college course in three years, Es shes the Paper. About four yeas ago he was ar- | dained a priest and weht 3= Venice, a town of 5.000 not far frém St. L-ais, as assistant pastor of St. Mark’s parish, THere was no paper so he established jone. a church bulletin called the | Herald. The papner prospered. Editor Brockmeier established a plant up the street from the church and his sheet became the Venice Weekly Herald, as {it is now published. Meanwhile, the editor-priest founded a chamber of commerce and became director of its affairs. He also estab- lished St. Mark’s School in the parish and became its instructor. He has taken up the study of law to assist Venice citizens before legal bodles in civic affairs. Father Brockmeier is known as the biggest little man in Venice—he weighs only 96 pounds and stands 5 feet 1 inch high. Rust Epidemic ?e;ed. AMES, Jowa (#).—A ‘scvere epidemic of apple rust is feared by plant pathol ogists at Jowa State College if warm, { humid weather arrives. The plant pest, | & fungusg rowth, may be controlled by | the removal of red cedar trees, cn which it develops. i s | According to recent tests made at a { hospital in London exercise after meals i harmfu 00l and comfortable hom e and Jet us furnish estimi free to show how_ reasonable it is to have your home fitted with awnings. CORNELL WALL PAPER CO., 714 13th St. NNW.—Ph, Nat. 6708 TO TOUR THE ummei Charles Dewey, Accompanied by | Son, on Way to Moscow on Supposed Political Mission. By the Associated Press. WARSAW, June 26.—Charles Dewey, bers of the family of Dr. Stratton D. | Brooks, president of the University of | Missouri, are students in the university Summer session. Mrs. Brooks is-taking a course in | French masterpieces, and their daugh- | ters, Dorothy and Elizabeth, also are | students. | If Mrs. Broks completes the course | she will receive two and one-half hours | on the water and advised them to put | on lifebelts. He also instructed them | how and when to inflate these belts. | He ddin't tell them that there probably would be a crash because he said he didn’t know whether the plane was going to crash or not. WIELDS GUN IN CHURCH . WITH MASS UNDER WAY | Intoxicated Man, Police Say, Fired | at Priest, Hitting Worshiper, | MRS. ANONA CAMPBELL — gy DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist o Ideal for walking or for a hike is this shoe made of oil dressed tan grain calf- skin heavily perforated and foxed. Leather sole and heels. Kiltie tongues pro- tect the instep. 120 e The Stetson Shoe Shop ' of Raleigh Haberdasher 1310 F Street Vacation Time Is Here! Sweaters Scarves Ties Skirts Hats Gloves Coats Dresses Knickers Suits e c‘ should be cleaned by Footer’s America’s.Best Cleaners and Dye: ~1784 Col. Rd. Phone Col. 724 |RUM-RUNNERS CAUGHT | Yackey said the men were identified American financial adviser to Poland, has left for Moscow, accompanied by his son. He expects to tour the Ukraine as far as Odessa, paying special atten- tion to economic ‘conditions, and to re- turn by way of Leningrad. His present visit, announced in the ‘Warsaw press only after his departure, was assumed to be ‘political in char- acter, inasmuch as he will spend sev- eral weeks in Russia. Mr. Dewey de- scribed a visit to Moscow last Winter as a tourist visit. It was Teported here that Mr. {Dewey’s present visit was connected with possibility of recognition of Rus- sia by England and the United States. ON WAY TO NEW YORK Coast Guard Patrol Captures Yacht From Florida With 150 Gal- Ions Aboard. By the Associated Press. WILMINGTON, N. C. June 26— Three saflors who gave their home port as Miami, Fla. were in jail here | today while United States cusioms of- | ficials held a yacht, the Eolis, and 150 | gallons of liquor found aboard her as evidence to support charges of violaing the customs and prohibition laws. | "The sailors—John Nealson, Paul Nil- | sen and Charles Vebber—were jailed in | default of $5,000 boud each afier being ! bound over at & preliminary hearing | for trial at the next term of United | States District’ Court. Yecht, sailors and liquor were taken | g and Tried Suicide. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, June 26.—A man armed | with a pistol invaded Our Lady of Sor- | rows Catholic Church early today and | fired two shots at the priest, Rev. Father J. Keenan. The bullets missed | their mark, but one wounded Richard | Muyrphy, who was kneeling at the altar. | Tgpusllllnt. identified as Charles Foster, then turned the weapon upon himself. inflicting a slight scn:r ‘wound. The shooting took place during 6 o'clock mass. When police reached the church,| they found a crowd of worshipers man- | handling Foster and experienced diffi- culty in rescuing him. Police said Fos- | ter was intoxicated. No motive for the | shooting was established. FARMER GIVEN LIFE FOR MURDER OF SON| Wife Tells Almbama Jury Ledlow Allowed Boy to Bleed to Death ‘After Shot in Knee. By the Associated Press. DECATUR, Ala, June 26.—Willlam Ledlow, Morgan County farmer, was sentenced to life Imprisonment late yes- terday for the murder two months ago of his l4-year-old son, Thomas. Mrs. Ledlow, testified that her hus- | band fired a charge of buckshot into her son’s knee cap and then for sev- eral hours refused to summon medical Suaday by Comst Guard patrol boat | ©G-232 fifteen miles off Morehead City. | Coast Guard officers said they had heen “tipped” the yacht was & rum runner bound from Miami to New York. 1 A |SAYS IDAHO KIDNAPERS { ROBBED BANK IN IOWA Des Moines Agent Asks Return of Bandits for Trial in $5,000 Hold-up. By the Associated Press. DES MOINES, Iows, June 26.—H. V. Yackey, State agent, said yesterday | the Gilmore City Exchange- Bank of $5,000 after holding H. 8. Van Alstine, | one of its owners, and his family pris- oners in their home overnight May 12, are the men who have been sentenced to %ison for kidnaping W. B. Kinne, Idaho lieutenant governor. by fingerprint records. They gave thelr names as August Becker, 28, of Sumner, that three of the bandits who robbed { d. ‘The State charged that Ledlow al- lowed his son to bleed to death before en effort was made to get a doctor. The jury deliberated approximately one hour, Mrs. Ledlow testified her husband had. upbraided his son for failure to bring | kindling wood into the house before | he had retired. She asserted Ledlow threatened to shool the boy and grab- ed his shotgun from & corner. The youth leaped from his bed and begged his father not to shoot, the mother de- clared, but Ledlow did so. Several hours after the boy was wounded, she continued, Ledlow relented on refusing to bave & physician called, and the doctor who responded ordered the youth to & hospital. He died before his re- moval from the home. WORLD LUTHERANS MEET. Church Claims Membership Nearly Half of Protestantism. NEW YORK, June 26 (#)—The Lutheran Churches of the World, which opened their Second World Convention of Jowa; Donald Melavin, 21, and_ Roy Selmon, 21, both of Liyermore, lowa. Yackey and Abe Dérvaul, Pochontas | County attorney, began negotiations | with Idaho officials in an effort to re- turn the men to Iowa to stand trial for the bank robbery. King Zog Has Laryngiti VIENNA, Austria, June 26 (®) —XKing Zog of Albania is reported in a Scutari tch to the Tageblatt today to e It severe t."ht::k of from Rome. : rymgit. be | have 10,756 Sunday ‘schools, with 121,- Copenhagen today, have a total strength of 81,000,000 members, Rev. G. L. Kieffer, statistician of the’ Na- tional Lutheran Council, announced, ‘This number is nearly half of all Protestantism, he estimates. The Lutherap churches of the United States and Canada have 11,885 ministers and 15,587 congregations, with = 4,234,908 baptized 2,802779 confirmed members and 2,379,886 _communicant members. They 1758 officers and teaclgers and 1,281,675 - congregational members, | IS SUED FOR DIVORCE Husband Charges He Has Not Known Mate's Whereabouts in More Than Year. By the Assoclated Press SEATTLE, June 26.—Anona M. Rob- | | erts Campbell, New York singer, was made defendant in a divorce suit here yesterday by James A. Campbell, for- mer University of Washington oars- man, who alleged he had not known her whereabouls for more than a year. Seattle socléty for many years knew the defendant as Anona . Roberts, daughter of R. Knox Roberts. She was educated in New York State and passed several years in Europe, where she studied music. i l-dutumln‘ here, she continued her study. Her first marriage was to Donald McKenzie of Portland, but the romance was short-ilved and a year later she returned again to her study. After a second trip to Europe, the young singer married Campbell in Seattle, Enter Russian Coal Field, HARKOV, Russia, June,26 (#).— Robert S. Sheffer of Chicagh yesterday signed a contract with the Donetz Coal Corporation, which, it was estimated, would yleld 3,500,000 tons. Soviet plants will furnish equipment. The American firm will send experts to Russia, while the Donetz organization will send three techniclians and a rep- resentative to Chicago. LINEN SUIT! $16.50 Open a charge account EISEMAN'S, 7th & F age; that they will be expertly cared for,' and that they mre finsured from the time our representative receives them until they are safely delivered. Our storage charges are reasonable. Call ,"' Pyle Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Indiana Ave. N.W. 3257 3257 3201 3291 lis. The Property 15 7001 { college credit to add to that she gained |2t Michigan State College, where ghe | rooks were schoolmates eantry of Aational 0860 safe, sure way ‘The wonderful healing power of Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads will amaze you. One minute after you apply them you would neveér know you had a corn. 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It is sure to be read by practically everybody in Washington. Copy for Classified Adver- tisements may be left at any of the Branch Offices, which are conveniently located throughout the city and the suburbs. No fees are charged for Branch Office service; only regular rates. - THE ¥ ABOVE SIGN 18 | | i | | i DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES = | ‘The Star prints such an over- whelmingly greater volume of Classified = Advertising every day than any other Washing~ ton paper that there can be no question - to which will give yon the best results, . “Around the Corner” is a Star. Branch Office