Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
GET EXPENSE FUND Representatives, if Defeated, Would Be Paid Full Salaries From March 4. Ev the Asioclated Press. 1f five Representatives whose seats are contested lose them at the regular Decemher session they and the con- testants each will be paid full ulmu from March 4. If the contestants lose, however.the'y 2iso will lose the salaries, but can be paid as much as $2,000 each for their trouble. The Hause rules on contested elections provide for such payments under laws passed 50 years ago. The election of Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, daughter of Willlam Jennings Bryan and widow of an English army officer, in the fourth Florida dhtmt for instgnce, is being contested by wild liam C. Lawson, Republican, who con- tends she lost her citizenship and right to hold office by marrying an alien. Would Get Paid for Service. Should the charges be sustained by the House, Mrs. Owen would receive pey at the rate of $10,000 a year from March 4 to the date her seat was de- clared vacated and could receive $2,000 for expenses. Lawson also would re- ceive back pay from the beginning of the Seventy-first Congress and $2,000 for expenses, but if he loses all he could receive would be the expense money, while Mrs. Owen's salary would run right, along. The same would apply in the contests of Harry Wurzbach against Augustus McCloskey in the fourteenth Texas dis- trict, Ralph E. Updike against Louis Ludlow in the seventh Indiana district, H. F. Lawrence against Jacob L. Milli- gan in_the third Missouri district and John Philip Hill against Vincent L, ralmislno in the third Maryland dis- riet, Other Coniesis Dropped. These five contests are all that’ re- of more than a dozen threatencd ter the last November elections. Con- tests against Harry C. Canfleld of the fourth Indiana district and Joe L. Smith of the sixth West Virginia dis- | trict, were dropped early in the Spring. Most of the testimony in the con- tested seats has been turned over to William Tyler Page, clerk of the House, who has ordered certain sections print- ,ed. Evidence of both sides will be placed in the hands of the elections committee in December and it probably will be January before it is finally de- termined who are officially entitled to the seats, which are held by the con- testees in the meantime under certifi- cates of election submitted to the clerk through electoral agencies of the vari- ous States. SPECTAL NOTICES. NSIBLE FOR DEBTS LR Lot i C. W, E er tha; g S S P o HOL S, “SLIP COVERE draperies, zbs" aucfl_mc this week to keep our fo 7. "ANDARD i 403 _11th. Nat'l 4903, ED, STORED. SHAMPOO! ave you money. 03_11th. _Nat'l 4903, ESPO! FOR DEBTS y one other fhan myself. Flovd Burlelgh, Gen. Delivers, Ballston, Va. T WILL NOT BE I contracted by an: N !mm 'NORFOLK From NEW YORK N, LY 29 From L et our r-cnm-lom raies, "also special Tatcs for part loads. _418 10th Sf. N. R m ‘hen s Teaponsible. bulldcr invares Dormaont satisaction, Phone N. 4472. [ WE MOVED YOUR NEIGHBOR—LET know wnere and when you wish: io Taove L will il M.m’n'in. (oo orll like ‘our service, c-li 'nfl! u ‘0 CERTIFY TH. A MEET- ing of the Board of 'I‘mthAell‘ 5% the Girte Milling Comn:xl,\y. 3, 2ody incorporated under e’ Disf ict, of Columbla, held joz, il o wn"mn ton D: 211 6 the siocknolders of record Which meeting was authorized by”said THeGHNG of (Fustees, Terolutiane mese anans B e S L g ationa Tefrigerating Corporation, Tnc. names sng amzed b ¢ bave’ Nerzunto set our s orar | Ton This"Zoth day of June: 150, - O POTe D A “BERLIN, President. Segretary. !'Itfl.xk"brenf (il')hlmgll, o o bile & rt Allen Jones, s notary publie in 2nd for the District of Columbia, do certify jhat Fred A Berlin. vresident and J A Ward, secretiry of the Girta Com- Y s Coruificate chansing The ration, ' dated 20, to persons who Hacats Naa neKnowicased. the samme Yo e thgr act lgd deed. " " 1 this 28th iven under my hand an ae7 of Junes 198 ppn ALLY:‘JONE.B. Nt::'rv Pulme in and for the District of A emaitiul and 13 situated at Edge: b gt n the w: doc! 2 ereetele. Pt Saeleha dock <ud, exrase: el T g stove. ber. my hew Chrls-C: 5-mil {hcluded tn m-' rice. toserher canoe, 800-fal. saso hn- u.ux unmm e have had vers tittle " ) ¥ Tetle it, henc: twill ."I‘M.:glflulur"l?flcr or trld.lv but l Hl'propety "wiehe v e onder” b+ s will sell, for medi- ion, Tor appointment ‘o inspect. thi call Prangiin 7::2 ‘ummxm'n' %‘3‘!""' o | Adama 1787 and In_ the mlturcgt th.‘fl "t‘!. Ol ;l'l‘rt.hl County of Yar ios " “ “r“” \ the Ints John Jo .vmgl BB or"smainis Bt estate or his I by way of dower or nmenrlu a0 ufinim to und by Tegistered .r.‘.a that m lay UIT 3 2 i bRl o e ‘1..“':!:‘ of which he En"sdl Then Jiave recetved Tonto this 4th day of June, 1929. ' Federal 708 85 Richmond 8. wunL Jorontg, WORRISON. Executor of the _Sen Wright. WEA'lHER STRIPPERS—' ln.luh yolu' mew? 1=t fihfiifigjgzgzagzzfi& FLOORS “:‘,T‘:"'&m e 4 Every Facfi? —for .a perfect i ~. . .printing - service. ! Thc National Capital. Press 210-1212 D St. N.'W.. - Phone RC G‘—-by xm“""""" ING THE FAR EAST | By GIDEON A. LYON, - lun&u of Awurlun Journglists’ [Party Nowp of Ci atuuamp‘m Kobe to excuse uxtorthe pruent and to allow us to be “received” when we return from For- mosa in July. That means that we stay here, for the most part, until" turday morning, when we entrain to go to Shimonoseki, there to u-ke the steamer for Korea. Some of our party will not adhere strictly to this program, but will go on to Kobe on personal errands and mis- sions, either returning here before Sat- urday or joining the main Satur- day morning in the passage through Kobe. It is assured that we all get to Korea Sunday morning. ‘These details of re-d)ustment are not easily effected in a group like ours, with 2 dozen differing sentiments nnd views and desires, but the change has been ‘Ortent af Guests ' mmmm ‘Peace. . neuth.tnot li'l,'hmvewoh motor cars and returned to e R M S " 2 e * bottle,” a clever device which whistles s the lquid contents are poured forth. A Water-Spouting Dragon. . The temple is very ancient and con- tains some rare works'of art. There il an outdoor bronze Buddha of benign aspect to which prayers are made by great numbers of people. Then close by u:lnflnelnwhichmeounzmnm; temple is the purification fount at the main entrance, consisting of a fearsome 1t | dray spouting forth the water. lere_are so many of these temples this morning went out to northwestern part of the city and vis- ited the Klnklkujl temple, the particu- llrrurpue Inxtowsee'.hewoxld-hmed pavilion,” which, alas! is no longer golden, and has not been for a very long time. The interest of Ameri- cans in this exquisite pavilion, apart from its situation on the side of a lly pond, is that it is regarded -~ . The Aerial Tram on M ount Hiei, Near Kyoto. made with entire harmony and we will | as the real cause of the discovery of leave Japan at the end of the week wlth our solidarity intact.- ‘We have been sightseeing here 1n Kyoto somewhat more leisurely than in some other places. And Kyoto calls for slow action, for .there is much to see. There are so many ancient templen and shrines that the tourist mind is bewil- dered. There are other things to note and admire than the seats of religious worship, the quaint shops and.the busy factories and the old castles or palaces. AND | And_ always the people, who here in Kyoto seem to be peculiarly unchanged by the new civilization. Cable Car Used. One of the ‘rrnc “sl‘ht.(" of the a cient capital is Mount Hiei—~pronounc- ed ‘“Hee-a-ee”—which is some 2,800 feet above sea level and a dozen miles or so from Kyoto, We drove yesterday morning to the foot of the mountain, where we took a cable car that is hauled up a very steep incline for the greater part of the distance toward the peak. It is a dizzy, wonderful ascent. The day, however, was unpropitious for extended views, the air being strangely | 5! thick and smoky, yet as we stood on the landing level we could imagine.the remarkable scene that on a brighter day would be spread before us for many miles, a series of mountain peaks and densely wooded slopes making a fasci- nating panorama. But we were not at the top. We still were considerably below the point at which the Buddhist monks of old, ths famous fighting monks, made thejr We-did not try alked around the shoulder of the mountain and entered an aerial tramcar t.h-t is hauled across a deep valley by cal The car is 50 small that it had to mnkz two trips to carry our entire party, but we all as- sembled safely on the other side of the pit, which requires four minutes to cross, four terribly long minutes. Then began a remarkable walk of about a mile, through a cryptomeria forest which is alone worth. despera dangerous traveling to see. These trees are centuries old. Placed with -very careful relation to the mysterious ele- ments of the alr—especially with re- gard for the “dragon point,” the north. east, from which comes the most men- acing force—are numerous temples and monasteries. They appear sug out of t.he ma veneub le structures, their roofs. mad sometimes two or three rm thlck, hld on hundreds of years ago. ‘These temples are among the holiest places in Japan. To them go many pil- grims from all over the country. On our way down yesterday afternoon we used one of these itinerant wor- small his way up the mountain, perhaps in- unu.ln; to visit every one of the sev- score on that elevation before golngonmflunextmun‘ Some of these pilgrims of a certain sect under~ ke to visit every Buddhist temple of that sect in the the | and was ggifia‘ £ | g2 S isf !gm : i 1 £ : | | i s i i g h g i i g f i i 2 ¥ 5 i 5 i i sk ?fi | gz { 8 B § § fely | Andrew - Michalakopoulos America by Christopher Columbus, who, according to tradition, heard of Marco Polo's discovery of a building made of solid gold and set out on what he sup- d to be the short cut io Japan— called all this part of the world Indin, or the Indies—and bumped into the islands of the unknown continent. However, that may be, the pavilion is in itself, golden or otherwise, a very lovely creation, pure in its outline, a veritable gem in its setting of forest and water. party were given spe- cial permissionto ascend to the upper stories, which are not accesible to the public at large. We did so in our stocking feet, having, of course, com- plied with the temple rules and remov- ed our shoes. On our way back to the hotel from the golden pavilien we stopped to see a silk brocade display at a museum and then inspected the castle of the first shogun, called the Nijo-Rikyu Palace. It was built in 1603 and but for some deterioration of the decorations is as good a living place as it was 300 years ago. It is a vast establishment, con- sisting of five buildings united. It is ot eppecial historical nce, in that on the restoration of the imperial power m 1868 it was there that the peror issued his edict for the sub- Junfinn of the shoguns, who had made it their prtnclpnl headquarters for two and a half centuries, Our extra time in Kyoto may enable us to see some more of her treasures. There are enough of them to occupy one for mnny ‘weeks. Note—. Anobher of Mr Lyon’s letters | will appear tomorrow. EX-GREEK PREMIER TAKES CABINET POST Made Second in Cabinet to Eleu- therios Venizelos. By the Associated Press. ATHENS, lakopoulos, & former premier of Greece, was taken into the cabinet of Eleutherios Venizelos as vice president of the council of ministers and head of the forelgn department yesterday.| ™ He will act for M. Venizelos when the latter is absent. The change was made to solve a cabinet difficulty caused by the resig- nation of C. Zavitslanos, minister of | Mt the ulos, xnm-lar Ammpo minister of agreed take the wntolh of che interfor, thus lmnkln: a place for M. Michalakopou- “Ime latter was piemier from . 1924 to 1925, and it wu hu ministry which was overthrown by the military coup of Gen Plnn.lol, wha later made it ch m'fie cablnev. in num P of foreign affairs for Perle!u two years. S — « CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. ‘TODAY. The children’s performane of Con- % play “The Heart,” which was can- oe?:\l:e n‘:’c 'P.u&hb at t.h:u?ylun Theater 1 ut.hevut.heru ”“"m' “"odw::gpuywmbedm M’mdly evening at 7. FUTURE. y Places:to Be Alaska oL EXPORTPRICE | AREEMENT URGED American Executwes Will- Go Abroad - to: Discuss ‘World Problems ‘of Industry. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, July 6.—The N‘w York Times says today that a committee of American-petroleum executives is going | ma: abroad to discuss world problems of the ofl industry with @ representatives of European interests. Revision of export prices, the elimina- tion of friction between American and foreign oil interests and world-wide curtailment of production are the chief subjects of discussion. ¢!)ne m;m o: t?gmoom;utme o:tr’s‘ Holmes, lent o exas ration, is alreadv en route to Europe, and James Moffett, vice dent of the gflndflg oll Co. of Co. the Aquitania undly night. Seek Export Price Agreement. ‘The prlmlry object of the connmwe is an attempt to reconcile different between Amerlcan and lm.er- ests over the question of n.wmu export m-:c;es’ll An ma;e;;eln the basic expun price is opposer European producers. erences will be held with Sir Henri Deterding, managing the Royal Dutch Shell group; Sir.John Cadman, head of the British-controlled Anglo-Persian Oil Co.. and officlals of the Anglo-American Oll Co., and with other leaders of the industry in Eng- land, France and Germany. Last Summer Walter C. Teagle, presi- dent of the Standard Ol Co. of New Jersey, met Sir Henri Deterding, 8& John Cadman and other European-oil leaders in Scotland, where a series of conversations regarding world condi- tions of the industry were held. Search for Ol Indicated. “ subsequent agreement brought nhout by the American Petroleum In- stitute to eurtail 1929 production to the 1028 level was abandoned when the Federal Oil Conservation Board refused Further efforts to solve a conference of governors of ofl- ducing States and leaders of the in- dustry held at Colorado Springs last month. No definite action was taken. An intensified competitive search for oil is indicated by the steady increase in production in the United States, which last week reached a new peak of 2815400 barrels, a gain of 50,900 barrels over the previous week end. TURNER FORGING AHEAD IN HIS OVERSEA VOYAGE Man Who 1' !urope-lound in 16- Foot Craft Reported “Okay” Off Cape Ann, )y the Associated Press. AHANT, Mass., July 6.—The United sum Coast Guard radio station here received a wireless ' report from the 1 Coast Guard cutter Antietam yesterday uwlnl !hl’. hvld ‘Turner lnd his 16- proj pe; picked up by the station here. flh“ b?;‘ llo';I boat, ipped e ‘open equi wuh an outboard motor. He will stop uke on a ‘stock of provisions to carry over the long lap to Hlvn, Fréance. SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals a¢_and Sailings From New .York. ARRIVED YmDAY. | Aauitania—Soutis Gatun—La Celba Oleveland—] Vol a, Baracoa—Puerta Colombi: DUE TOMORROW. Adriatie—Liverpoal PortLim July 6.—Andrew Micha- | Vi Vuloania—Trieste . Scythia—Liverpool Majestic—Southampton yes—We Siboney-—Havans . DUE WEDNESDAY, JULY 10. at Silvia—Trinidad Evangeline—Yarm DUE THURSDAY, JULY 11. OUTGOING STEAMERS. TODAY. Ne x !uu-nnrflcrd— m Sornetin—San 3 uzw—ltn\u g':g“ tan—Pacific Const. Gatun—La Ceiba. Lillian—Santo Dominso. Castilla—Tela. % Southampton and vau Rio ds Juneiro, Monte- K 3od, Biesss Aes No:‘.g—lt anngmd Halifex. W it Ancon—Port au Prizce and Cristobal. SAILING WEDNESDAY, JULY 'rm-b—nmmm. Havre and London.. B ey e T Sl ‘fim". m! 1n. o and m the King to ot | formed, passi: t| Royal of St. James' at Halifax, Nova seoth to refuel nna g BRITAIN H[lNflRS KING AND QUEEN Thanksgiving for Ruler’s Re- covery- Marks. Royal Pair’s 36th Wedding-Anniversary. By the Assoclated Press. LONDON, s e on the = versary ‘Tomorrow both will join 'lth Bfl'.lln’t millions in a thanksgiv- :.nxumultorhu reevvery from - his long recent serious ';he royalties, ln limp]l morning ‘dress, vul by open carriage tomor- oW Wunnlmur Abbey, where a se) stponed once berore ‘when majesty suffered a relapse—has been arranged. Aside from a few reserved seats for the royal family, members of the diplo- matic corps and others, the church will be open to the public. Not more than a few hundred will be able to find ld- mission even then, a fact which has led ask all worship with him at ‘their own churches. The cere- monial will be enacted throughout the empire. Clergy to Greet Royal Pair. Entering the Abbey at the great west door their majesties will be received by the dem, headed by the dean of Westminster and the Archbishop of cmv.crb\lry A procession will then be seats fronting altar. ‘The choir will llnu as the procession moves to assigned places, -mr ‘which the congregation will join in singing the hundredth psalm, followed by the first verse of the national anthem. Part of the service taken will be from that used on the occasion of the recov- ery of King George IIT in 1789, another part that used in thanksgiving by King Mv;:rd VII when he was Prince of ‘Wales., Prayers will be interspersed amceng: the hymns and anthems, the ceremony concluding with a Te Deum. An offer- atory for hospitals will be taken not only at the Abbey but, at other churches where the service will be held. Couple Weded July 6, 1393, King George and Queen Mary were married July 6, 1893, in the Chapel Palace. He was then Duke of York, newly attained to the succession through death of his elder brother, the Duke of Clarence. He was 26 years old. George had been assigned to the royal navy when the Duke of Clarence died, leaving 23 his bethrothed Princess Mary Victoria of Teck, known popularly as “Princess May.” Twelve months after the duke's death her betrothal to George was announced. ‘The bride's dress was of silver and white brocade, with clusters of sham- rocks, thistles and roses, symbolic and beautiful. The bridegroom was sup- ported by his father, who was not to become Edward VIL for another eight years. and by the Duke of Edinburgh, his uncle, who fllefl a few years later. ‘The honeymoon was spent at Sand- ringham in Norfolk, for which place, incidentally—the most domestic of all their residences—their majesties will leave on l(tmd‘y. '|NON- ZIONISTS SEATED IN JEWISH COUNCIL Election of Six Delegates Leads to Break-up of Palestine Agency Meeting. By Jewish Telegraphic Agency. TEL AVIV, July'6.—Palestine Jewry, through its national tative body, elécted 6 delegates and 12 alternates to the non-Zionist part the Extended Jewish Agency at a cial session held here on July 3 and 4. ‘The election was preceded by a bitter fight among the factions attending the conference of the Assefath Ha'Niv- charim (Assembly of the Elected), con- stituting the national body which ‘elects the National Council of Palestine Jews. Zionist revisionists tried to prevent the election and when the malority over- rode their objections they left the meet- ing. ‘When the session opened on July 3 3 sharp incident between the presid- ing \cer, Dr. Thon, and Viadimir Jabotinsl developed, leading to a break-up of the mee Atruumflonatthemlonmly( the tumult eonunuea and Jabotinsky, accompanied by 11 other revisionists, lett th: meeting. “THREE CHEERS” IS TOPIC| FOR EVENING SERMON Pastor of Calvary Methodist Church Announces Program for Tomorrow. The minister of the Calvary Metho. dist Church, Columbia road near Fif- EARLY WEST AUTHORITY IS DEAD IN NEW YORK Former Idaho Rancher and Friend of Buffalo Bill Succumbs at Summer Home, ate; | BY the Assoctated Press. &—wi- d'to the o g1 :5:; Seasft gaf h of the Council onnuruuzdty'rh Ve!erln Pi!ot Tells of Lowg “Ceiling” Ships in Use in Early Days and Dangers of Flights Then; as Compared With ~ - - e ohete er planes, with 50, i1 mmm Plahes have m tne comfort considered. n 1928 the od 5%006,00 mlhg, 8, dTing With now few serious BY GROVER TYLER, Modern Speedy and Powerful Craft. e e e evseriances. These "'"'"Q}gg& "‘:&’,Bl" Bliots e vis Honn aps the mail 2 ] Mail Pilot for the Pacific Alr Transport on Portland-Seattle Run. ‘Written exclusively for The Star and the North American Newspaper Alllance. After I m worked along the road omLum section -of the road hel mmupthnbemmon mmmmmmm ‘That was in 1926. d the best planes that were on market at the time. But the best planes then not all they shouxd have bun for daily work scheduled airwa; heavy loads. u-llor-po'- Engine. ‘We had to fly over the Tehachapi nnze between Bakersfield and Los Angeles, in shi) Ox-5 engines. This type was devel ered with be!ore the war to stand the hard knocks of student training. And it stood the knocks, but it had only 90 horse- power as compared with the 425 and 525 horsepower engines we use today. To get over the '!‘ehuhlpl e in clear weather you should fly at.10,000 or 12000 (eet for safe clear- ance. When storms or fogs top the tude is needed. e ridge, more alti- ‘The ships we flew then had barely 10,000 feet alti- tufle. n.m: when more was ne any more Yiny Simes I had to fight blindly, going through inces in the ridges. the fog or under it, hunting low p! The speed of my ship was around 7! at best. When 2 head: be subtracted /rom my normal Lands Now at 57 Miles. Now my problems are fewer by many. I fly modern mail planes that make 129 miles an hour at top speed—enough to u;rd the teeth out.of the worst head wi I land at 57 miles an hour and cln‘ climb 5,000 feet in 10 minutes, wii plenty more altitude available -bove that. I can get off the ground in 14 seconds. I sit far back in the fuselage where I have perfect vision in all di- rections. ‘Those of us who survived those old days certainly have a betier time flying t:e mail now than anybody ever did en. (Next: Edmund Matucha—Flying with a blinded ptlot.) (Copyright, 1020, by ¢ Newspaper ENVOY MACMURRAY PLANS VISIT TO HOME COUNTRY Will Leave Peking for U. 8. July 22—May Not Return to Chinese Post. By the Associated Press. PEKING, China, July .6.—John Van #. MacMurray, American minister herz will leave Peking July 22, sailing fro Kobe on the President l(cKln]ly. .Vul}' 30, for the United States. His family will accompany him, the trip being his first home in nearly three years. ‘The minister’s furniture is being boxed and, although remaining here, friends believed it quite likely he 'wld not return to this pm NATIONAL GU GUARD ARD TROOPS North American liance.) SENT TO HUNT SUSPECT, Mis:lulppi Governor Orders Sol-| diérs Out to Find Man Warted for Murder. By the_Assoclated Press. JACKSON, Miss., July 6-—Maj. Allan officers of the McClure and four e el o e €01 Corinth National. of bled at Booneville, lolldinflamrch' De Witt " Geno, alleged to have killed his brother-in-law, Amy Jumper, ursday. Brig. Gen. J. M. Hllnum ordered the troops_out following notification from | Gov. Bilbo. - Sheriff Womac of Prentiss - County asked for aid. Geno is hiding in Pren- thought to be tiss County, and it is Lhnu‘ht that the sheriff knows his hiding place. Merchant Rescued From Well. MACON, Ga., July 6 (#).—Sam Deep, fruit merchant, paused by a roadside and hauled up an old o-ke.n bucket. Then something gave Deep fell into a 'ell 15 lefl dcvm Passersb led him ouf Cathedral Mansions 3000 CONN. AVE. furnished . nmrll..m'nthlh,fl! Wardman Management Resident Manager, Adams 4800 iwind blowing 35 or 40 miles was —theu wasn't Grover Tyler. , that had:to the T, What was left wasn't so good, and up the nave to the | danger of forced landings due to exhaustion of the gasoline supply became mt CHILD ENSLAVEMENT PRACTICES SCORED Industrial System in Non-Christian Lands Inhuman, Endeavor Convention Told. By the Assoclated Press. KANSAS CITY, July 6.—The indus- trial enslavement of children .from 5 to onwsoflgelnm-chfllflm lands - the challenges faced by churches in their world evangelistic en- by the portrayal of pictures of babies being thrown'into the Ganges River as a sacrifice to appease the heathen gods. “As compared with the sacrifice of : Court Forbids ‘| tion” diplomas “are court, life in the Ganges by one act, the pres- ent system of industrialism practices in non-Cl lands by ‘which thousands | and hundreds of thousands of children are deprived of their heritage to live | what we call normal lives is more in- human,” he said. Bricklayer Finds $8,400 Gold. LLANES, Spain, July 6 (#).—PFriends of a bricklayer have !ud a rlsht royal | time, with banquets and drinks galore, au paid for with wld. The police the bricklayer must be a rob- ' containing 60,000 gold pesetas about | ‘300 years olc. The vl.lue of the money as $8,400. ‘ SO ‘The Queen of Spain is assisting a royal blnlnpher ln wrmnl a story of ~» 2 4001 to 4019 INSPECT 0000000000000 000000000 00000"0“000000“00.00000 00000‘0“00000 QWQQWQ"”M ‘DIPLOMAS UPHELD Un'wersity Trustees lnterfermq or Reflecting on Me_rrts. mail route, I By the Associated Press. DES MOINES, Iowa, July 8. gt o8 B Tl oty lamen! it institution, learned that theu- “mufi. which enabied them 1o certificates of graduation by & restraining order te pre- vent Prnlden'. H. Wayman from keeping the school closed following the rock and egg riots of May 11, z0 termed the diplomas. The board of trusts was warned t.h.t it would be cited for mvrvnpv, of court if it performed 2ny further act which might interfer 'lm.h the rights of the students or general op- eration of the school. District Judge Frank 8. Shenkland made the ruling during a hsaring on a plea I:7 attorneys lflr the student to prevent the trustees from interier- g with them or casting refiection upon the merit of their credits and diplomas. recently - declared the "ln}unef.km" diplomas “nuil and void” on the argument that thev had no warrant in legal or academic prac- tice. It was learned at the hearing thet the board has informed 6 graduates and 12 undergraduates that it has evidence that they rnl.uuud in- the riots of May 11. rd suggested that the ‘students appear to answer o the charges, failure to do which wou'd result in withholding the names of fhe students from the school records. Government’s | sma!lest post ofl.oe is claimed to be the tinv struc- ture, 23 inches wide and 38 inches high, i?flh"&d about .7 miles from !"‘hnd_:b al That Summer Is Here Live in Davenport Terrace 4800 Block, Conn. Ave 20 minutes from the " the city Spacious lawne with shaded berches. One room, kitchen, bath, Two rooms, kitchen, batt Three rooms, kitchen. ha Free Frigidaire 15 degrees cooler than Aowntown Wardmean Management “hea 3 ~ ONLY TWO LE LEFT DETACHED HOMES AT ROW HOUSE PRICES North Wopdridne 1st and Randolph Sts. 21st St E. Drive out Rhode Island Avenue to 22nd Street N.E., then north to Randolph Street and left on. Randclpn.to 21st and see positively the biggest bargains ever offered in this section—on your own terms—and thousands of dollars less than other builders ask for same house. you like a.home with plenty of yards, flowers, gard and separate garage, be sure and inspect. Open fo 2 p.m TODAY An Open Book on Banking BANK and its a to each other. on its part, must adhere strict- ly to the:principles of safety —protection of its de representing its major ol liga- tion. The bank must lend its funds stimulate industry, but be collectible when due. “To, en- courage unsound ‘plans of borrow- where they will ers may bring whom the bank desires to help. This bank, l.lm'el'ore, has ndopted a policy of— “ngre:swe-Commlmsm. have certain oblj depositors s gation, should The bank, i ways its to the man THE DEPOSITOR— make his . account valuable to the bank by al- keeping balances large enough to com) .:{5 the lul!xt for the lpueg ices it renders. s THE. DEPOSITOR— who borrows should be en- tirely-frank with his banker in furnishing all the facts .about his financial affairs " and thus establish the best basis of credit.