Evening Star Newspaper, July 21, 1929, Page 2

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JUDGEN:] SINNOTT - EXPIRES SUDDENLY Claims 00urt Member, Who Served in Congress Many Years, Heart Victim. Judge Nicholas J. Sinnptt, 59 years old, member of the United States Court of Claims, died suddenly of heart dis- ease at 12:30 o'clock yesterday after- newn at his home, 105 West Bradley 1ane, Chevy Chase, Md. He was stricken while resting and died a few minutes later. It was said that he had been 11 at home for two weeks, but his con- dition was not considered of a dangerous Dature. Pudge Sinnott was serving his eigthth ferm in the House of Representatives from the second district of Oregon when appointed to the Court of Claims by President Coolidge. He resigned from Congress May 31. 1928, to accept the judgeship, and had served only 14 months on the bench at the time of his death. Headed Lands Committee. A Republican, he was one of the lead- | ers in the House and was chairman c( the public Jands committee for many years. He was elected to the Sixty- third Congress and the seven succeed- ing Congresses from March 4, 1913, He was instrumental in securing the pas- sage of much important legislation dur- ing his long service in the House and was one of President Coolidge's ad- visers on national affairs. He took & prominent part in the enactment of legislation that brought about the set- tlement of the California-Oregon and the Texas-Oklahoma Red River boun- dary disputes and also was co-author of the homestead and leasing laws that aided in developing Western lands and | - mineral resources. Native of Oregon. Judp Sinnott was born in The Dalles, | December 6, 1870. He recejved | his elrly education in the public schools of The Dalles and at the Wasco In- dependent Academy. He was gradu- ated from the University of Notre Dame in 1892 with the degree of bachelor of arts and then studied law, being ad- mitted to the Oregon bar in 1895 and commencing his practice in The Dalles. His first political election was as 2 mem- ber of the Oregon Senate in 1909-1911 and two years later he started on his eareer in Congress. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Dor- othy Purcell Sinnott; two daughters, Misses Marguerite and Gertrude, and a son, Nicholas B. Sinnott. Mrs. Sinnott will take her ‘hllsblnd‘l’ body to Oregon tonight, where he will be buried in The Dllles HOYT WILL CIRCLE NOME AND RETURN Abandons Plan to Stop to llng;nz Trop Back to New York. | By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 20—H. J. Adam- son, assistant to F. Trubee Davison, Assistant Secretary of War for Avia- tion, tonight announced receipt of a ‘message from Capt. Ross G. Hoyt, Army pilot on a round-trip flight to Nome, Alaska, in which the fiyer said he would not stop at Nome, but merely would circle the city and start his return to New York. Hoyt's message said he arrived in Fairbanks, Alaska, from White Horse and was continuing to Nome as soon as he could refuel. After circling Nome :l; pll’:.:':d to r‘ll::urn u;nr;:mnh for e nj atarti ' m fore dawn for Edmonton, Mr. Adamson expecled Hoyt would reach Edmonton tomorrow night. Min- neepolis early the following morning | and arrive at Mitchel Fleld, N. Y., his starting point, before noon Monday. An urlhr message, which was de- layed in delivery, told of a “terrible time dodging mountains, due te low hanging clouds.” = YOUTH CONFESSES HE SLEW ARCHITECT |2 In Exonenud on !ellJMenu Plea, Saying Vietim Ordered Him and Girl to Yield Car. By the Assoclaied Press. | {strings of the American people, never ! PAYNE'S "HOME, Added Verses Are Included and Song Is in Autho.r‘s Own Handwriting. i Unpublished Portlon Made Tribute to Friend in London Colony. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. A manuscript copy of “Home, Sweet Home,” in the handwriting of the author, John Howard Payne, and with two additional and unpublished verses, has been deposited in the Library of | Congress by Leander McCormick-Good- hart, commercial secretary of the Brit- | ish embassy. The extra verses attached to the famous old fentimental ballad, which | has become twined around the l\eln‘ were intended by Payne for publication, | but merely as a personal touch when presenting an autograph copy to one of his friends. The added verses read: To us, in despite of the absence of years, How sweet the remembrance of home still appears; From allurements abroad which but flatter the eye, The ununsfl-a ‘heart turns and says with & sigh Home, home: sweet. sweet home. There’s no place like home,” There's no placé like home. Your exile is blest with all fates can bestow, | But mine has been checkered with!| many a_woe. Yet though different our fortunes, our thoughts are the same, | nd both as we dream of Columbia exclaim: Home, home; sweet. sweet home. ‘There'’s no place like home. There's,no place like home. Used as Opera Ballad. At this time Payne was a member of | the American colony, in London, lead- ing members of which were Mr. and| Mrs. Joshua Bates. Both were Amer- | icans, born in Massachusetts. Bates | had come to England as & young man and had become one of the wealthiest bankers in London. Their home ap-| pears to have been a meeting place for | many homesick Americans. Payne wrote the poem for the souvenir book of Mrs. Bates, after it already had made a hit as a light-opera ballad. The refer- ence in the last verse is to the wealth and social position of Mrs. Bates, com- pared with Payne's own penniless con- dition at most_times. The author had been a wanderer and | a child of misfortune all his life. The song. one of the best known among English-speaking people everywhere, was written in Paris in 1823, 10 years after Payne left the United States, as one of the songs of the opera, “Clari,” of which he wrote the libretto. All the rest of this opera long since has been forgotten. It was first per- formed on May 8, 1823, at the Covent Garden Theater in London, and the song immediately became a popular hit. Everybody in London was humming it. ‘The musie was composed by Henry Bishop, director of music at lhe Covent Garden Theater. It was an ndnp(nuon of a Sicllian air, which, according to Payne's own nfeount he first had heard 2 peasant girl sing on a country road in Sicilly and called to-Bishop's atten- tion when the two conferred over the opera. ‘Manuscript Dated 1829. The manuscript deposited in the Li- brary of Congress is dated September 18, 1829, from 29 Arundel street, Strand, | London, and is introduced by the fol- | lowing paragraph: “I eomply with your most compli- mentary request and write the words of ‘Sweet Home' in your valuable little book. I have added a few words more, addressed to you. It would have been | more pleasing to me if I could have had time to contribute something worthier of my fflmdship for you, Dlll what this trifle wants in poetry will do me the 1us',loe w bellzve u made up in truth.” The manuscript will be exhibited in a prominent place in the Library of Congress. The depumnx o( the vmrk is the more appropriaf rding to Librarian Herbert Put becl Joshua Bates was deeply interested in public libraries and made such. large ;m‘ to the Boston Public Library, at its first organization, that he is re- garded as its principal founder. Mr. Putnam also calls attention to the fact that the author himself is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Washing- ton, at the end of his homeless wan- derings and that the grave often is visited by tourists. In Circle of Writers. The famous song writer was born in PONTIAC, Mich., July 20.—Boyden MacKilligan, 32 of Detroit, told Prosecu- tor Norman Orr_late today he shot and killed Wllul' Balko, 35, landscape .architect, near the !lrmlnghlm Golf Club the nllht of June 24. MacKil- ligan was released and exonerated the muwds of self defense. The young man told the prosecutor he went to & dance at a country club near Pontiac the night of the shooting, accompanied by Miss Fay Willlams, 18, of Detroit. At 10 p.m. they drove to 3 side road near the Birmingham Golf Course. While they were parked at the side of the road. Balko came to the car and turned a flashlight on them, MacKilligan safd. Balko was armed with : Tevolver. He ordered MacKil- ligan to give up the key ta the car and then ordered Miss Williams to get out of the car. uuxflns:. n reached to the back seat ‘where he had a revolver hidden and fired _at close range, !he bullet strik- ing Balko in the mouth, HERTZ- WILSON CRASH PROSECUTION URGE Prominent Families Would Drop Case of Girls’ Collision, But State Inmsists. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 20.—Insistence upon m{nl cha; against Miss Helen iver of the automobile eomfln with that of Miss pressed today torney John fl iman. Oounnel for the Inmred girl's huur‘ iton Wilson, head of the Wilson Shirt expressed unwuumen to ite Miss Hertz, who is the daugh- former head of On | several dramas and adapted others, Fasthampton, Long Island, in 1791 and after an apprenticeship in a New York counting house made his first appear- ance on the stage. In 1812 he first went to Europe and became interested in writing for the stage. He wrote mostly from the French. All, with the exeeptlon of “Clari,” have long since forgotten. Some were quite suc- omm in their day, including “Brutus,” “Virginius” and “Charles the Second.” Payne became a leading figure in the literary world of London and an inti- mate friend of Coleridge and Lamb. In 1832 he returned to New York. ‘The success of some of his plays and weru had brought him large sums, t he was & poor manager and was frequently in debt. In 1841 he was appointed United States consul at Tunis, North Africa, where he served until the change of administration in 1845. 1In 1851 he*was reappointed, but died -shortly after his return to the post. He was buried in Tunis. In 1883 his body was removed to Washington. Payne's title to Temembrance rests znurely upoa me hllmun song, at the ras surprised. wu.s s vclumlnmu wrlur, with an Inu- mflafln of the requlremem.s of e, but he was greatly lacking in ofinn . Consequently, most of hh work has passed out of memory. Police Chief Jailed After Fourteen Years Of Tllegal Freedom ‘THE SUNDAY SWEET HOME" MANUSCRIPT GIVEN TO LIBRARY JOI‘IN “OWAII) PAYNE ISF HOOVER'SNAME, N FRUIT FRAUD Dealers in New York Report- | make an ed Employing Labels Mis- stating Source of Product. By the Associated Press. BAKERSFIELD, Calif., July 20.—L. | W. Sims, vice president of the Poso; | Products Co. and manager of the Hoover Ranch near Wasco, sald today that apricots were reported seling on the New York market under the fraudulent label “grown and packed on President Hoover's ranch near Wasco, Calif.,” and that legal steps would be taken to atop it. Sims said that in the first place the ranch is not owned by Mr. Hoover, al- though he is a stockholder in the New York holdings company which controls the Poso Prcducts Co., which owns the | ranch. The manager said that the apri- | cots were grown on the Hoover ranch, but not packed there. Use of the name of President Hoover in connection with a shipment of apri- cots from California placed on sale in New York was termed at the White House today as “sharp practice” on the part of some fruit dealer who wished o reap a greater profit on the fruit. President Hoover was at his fishing gre.urve in the Blue Ridge Mountains, ut it was sald at the White House that the use of his name in connection with & ranch in which he is one of the stockholders had never bsen authorized in any way. The Executive, it was said, together with seven or eight other per- sons owned the ranch and the fruit from it was never sold except direct to commission merchants. The White House considered the in- cident unworthy of denial, but expressed surprise that such a practice to sell fruit would be permit “0LD PEPPERSASS” TURNS OVER WITH GOVERNORS’ PARTY (Continued From First Page.) ready to follow behind. nam, a photographer of Antrim, saw | the engine begin to gather speed. He said it appeared as if something hap- pened to the cogwheel. Putnam said Frost and Nesham shouted to Rossiter and Coe to jump. Frost, who had come back from re- tirement just to take his old engine up and down the mountain once more, was the first to jump and he was fol- lowed by Newsham and Coe. The en- gine was then on a trestle known as Jacob’s Ladda® and the trio leaped 30 feet down onto the boulder-strewn mountainside. Senator Moses in Party. ‘The Boston & Maine Railroad had charge of the rededication of the old engine toda, After exercises at the summit, it was to be placed on a pede- stal near here as a monument to New Hampshire's recreational expanses, Besides the governors the party in- cluded United States Senator George H. Moses, Representative Edward H. Wason of New Hampshire and Chief Justice Sawyer of thie State Superior Court. The old engine, vhlch was the world' first mountain-climbing locomoti was discovered by Rev. Guy Roberts of ‘Whitefield in the museum of the Bai- timore & Ohig Railroad a year ago. He notified the Boston & Maine Rail- road officials and the engine today was rededicated to recreational New Hlllz; gge with exercises on the moun Story of Building of Road. Communicating with Col. William A. Barron of Crawford Notch, chairman of the New ®ngland Council committee on recreational development, and with President Hannauer, Rev. Roberts met a ready interest in his campaign to re- turn “Old Pej ” to its native heath, President Willare, himself a former New Englander, responded im- mediately. _ And thus it came about that “Old Peppersass” returned to its native mountainside. The return of the ancient wood- burner reealls the whole story of the Im ding of the cog rallway up Mount gton by Sylvester Marsh of New mmpsmre. Marsh dreanied of bring- ing paple by railway to the summit of Mount Washington, famed as providing | mon/ the scenic view east of the Building of the road was begun in 1366 mdln-'llly. l“oiidmmfl“- way opened. Peppersass” v!ndlutod itself and its inventor by to the of Mount 'll::l- ERgEisenae E*ingi . D. Put- !Dhlde" 4 bu. ula STAR WASHINGTO M FADDENTOSTUDY|[__scoors comrers rom oorme e mmauawo m NEVSPRITSIPPLY BANKING SITUATION Pennsylvanian to Prepare for Possible Legislation Over Reserve System. Representative Louis T. McFadden of Pennsylvania, chairman of the House committee on banking and curnney, who was in w-lhlnm yesterday, i3 making plans comprehensive -mdy ot the nnnu And finkneial sit- uation tion for punbln leg- islation -0. the coming ‘;.nu ir session. speculation, the conditions for general business a<4, in ‘fact, th: whole range of subjects connected wlu these problems. Branch banking or chain banking in the States and the question of whal the Reserve system must do to meet this development will be one phase of the mltte’r inte which Mr. McFadden will go. The relations of the Reserve lylum to inter bflltlfl of a xfll who recently acted on German rations, also are to be given at- tention. Capitol Tnvestigation Is Seen, Inasmuch as it is expected the Senate banking lnd currency committee will tion of wide noPe into Federal Morve mnun. brokers' loans and many other matters relating to banking and finance, it now looks ir there would be started thsi Fall an porunt financial inquiry at each end of Capitol. Theae investigations, it is expected, umm;uly will result in Congress giv- ing serious consideration to further Federal Reserve legisiation, including the question of the attitude of the Re- | serve system toward speculation and speculative loans. Senator W. H. King yesterday said he had been assured the banking and currency committee of the Senate I’ollld act favorably on his resolution of in- vestigation after the recess. This reso- lution covers a score of points and propositions connected with banking, speculation and credit which the uun Senator believes should be studied. Senator King declares the concentration of a large share of the country’s money ’Ignd cred:: lnhlt:;.e l.ape;:\l:r.t““ centers an evil, wl neral isiness and indust i Chairman McFadden pointed out that the House banking and currency com- mittee s not yet organized. Hence it is not yet possible for the subject of an inquiry by that committee to be taken up. However, he is going ahead to make a study of broad acope indivi ually. He expects to devote practically all the time between now and the reg- r session to the inqul “I expect to study the tion care- fully,” sald Chairman McFadden. “I recognize the importance of this situa- :melm I d‘eo-lv;eh be ready in case ms need for consf - tive legislative action.” e Mr. McFadden has heen a sharp eritic of the Federal Reserve Board because of its warnings and efforts di- rected at speculation and speculative Joans. He has made it clear that he believes the board has been getting into a field where it did not belong. In speeches in and out of the House, Mr. McFadden has made plain his position. He does not think the board should at- tempt to regulate speculation. In the House early last February he dechred he did not see that the Wwas in danger nor any ine eral rise in the eommodn price vel and, because of these ruu he did not think that “the Federal Reserve g;um lh:‘ulfh.aonm mekl:tum;: the dition stock market or of the security loan market” McFadden's Viewpoint, do not thinl sald Mr. McFad- that the assumption is warranted that brokers' loans are depriving busi- ness of funds, nor that all of the se- curity Joans are unproductive. In my judgment, there is too little known about the ultimate disposition of stock :‘;kndht;m to warrant: any action igne: depress those loans the Federal Reserve system.” ks Mr. McFadden has not changed the views which he expressed then. He still believes the situation as to specu- lation and stock market loans should have been allowed to rectify itself and that the effects of the intervention by |ing :.iul:“ Tesepve board have been unfor- Mr. McFadden is not prepared say what further mmu‘.’m“ tain- ing to the reserve System and g matters in general is g the scope of the reserve board’s men, while in others there will bng“'lmlxunu lhl'l the use of Ped- e money for speculation hlb";ed l;yf Jaw. Senator Dnllh W. RECORD DAY’S RUN MADE. Liner Bremen, on Maiden Trip, Ex- pected to Set Mark for Voyage. NEW YORK, Jllly 20 (’)——The ocean liner Bremen, now on her maiden run, made | today previous day’s run by a liner is that of the Mauritania, which logged 676 nautical miles. Barlow leturn to Havana. HAVANA, July'20 (#).—Joseph E. Barlow, American resident of Havana ‘who has sought payment of a claim of $9,000,000 against the Cuban govern- ment through the aid of the United States State Department, returned here to brave possible official wrath to | boys de == More than 30,000 Boy Scouts of the world are expected to attend the annual jamboree in England next month, which barking above, will be directed in ca: YOUNG “REDS” JEER BOY SCOUTS AT PIER Demonstrahon Delays L|ner‘i “at New York Dock—Three Are Arrested. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 20—One hundred | youthful Communists, including many | girls, today staged s demonstration on the Cunard docks in the Hudson River, delaying the sailing of the liner Sa- Boy Scouts departing for the Scouts Jambeoree in England. Carrying banners, describing them- selves as members of the Young Pio- neers of America, a Communist. organi- zation, the demonsirators marched to the water front and there clashed with Tegular and reserve police who at- tempted to disperse them. The girls led the attack on the police, scratching and kicking with considerable effect, ‘but three young men were the only sons arrested. ‘The demonstration began as the Scouts were boural.ng the Samaria from the dock. The Scouts marched lbolrfl and then lined the rail to watch he police disperse the Young Pioneers, wno-e 3.000. The of them denouncing at lemonstrators’ banners, one the Scout move- ment as being “supported by the bosses | good to create cannon fcdder,” were thrown into the river. ‘The Young Communists paid no at- un'.bn to the liner Cedric sailing from a block away from '.he Samaria 'fi 125 other Scouts. Abcard this vessel were a group of American Indian Scouts from Muskogee, Okla., and Don- ald Forbes of Honolulu. who is travel- 7,000 miles to the jamboree. Other Scouts from varlous sections of the the remainder of the ressels. those Eisman, 14. and llumy Slver, 23, who were said by police to have been born in Russia. Authorities said efforts would be made to have them deported. | be| EX-STUDENT HERE BADLY CUT IN HAITIAN SERVICE Melville Monk Receives - Blood Transfusion From Comdr. John- son of Navy. By the Associated Press. PORT AU Pmcz, Halti, July 20— Melville -Monk of Fort Dodge, Iowa, an assistant director cf the internal rev- enue of this republic, was recovering from serious wounds him yuurd-y when he tried to seize some contraband tobacco. Monk, with Inspector George 8. Roy, both unlmed. hld ordered confiscation d by Leon Lafontant, & Lafontant inflicted deep- cuts on the arms and face of Monk with his machete before Roy drove him off. A gendarme who went to the as- sistance of the Americans, was se- riously cut, but he shot Lafortant in an arm and a leg. Lafontant barri- caded himself in a house, but sur- rendered later. Roy was only slightly cut. Comdr. Lucius Johnson of the United States tion as An undesirable. It| transfusion that deportation action taken months ago when .peem Senate Almost Negligible Monk 'll a student at Mt‘cfl “Col- lege and ooomtmm univemty before entering the service here. \ During the year ending June 30, 1929, there were 8941 babies born in te District of Columbia and according to the Health Office only 50 Babies under one year died of feeding troubles during that year. This proves once ‘again thc value of - properly educating Washington mothers which we have done for many years by mailing of charge, our pamphlét to every one of them, free The Well-Nourished Baby _ This pamphlet, besides up-to-date advices, contains complete F eedmg Charts, medically formulated, giving the correct rations according to the age and the weight of the baby. : Bureau 9f Hulth Educahon Berliner, s"” tracted a crowd of | Chicago. inflicted on | will mark the twenty-first anniversary of Scouting as established by Sir Robert Baden-Powell (upper right). leaders from many countries (below). director of Amerlun Q:ollln. Hundreds ol American Sfllnll IIQ alrt.d’ ¢l| route to lllt Jjamboree crnw by groups of FOR reaping a sense of fame and a sense of of Pederal jobholders. This controversy runs _Tampant through Washington, in view of the really extraordinary number of citizens whom President Hoover has separated from lucrative employment and in- ducted into the relatively impoverished Federal bureaucracy. A just conception of the issues involved would doubtless between certain of the “new patriots” and certain others of them. Unfamilar With Politics. ‘There is Mr. Robert Patterson La- mont, for instance. He was extremely reluctant to become Secretary of Com- merce. He was making money, and h!‘ money, in his business enterprises . He was wholly un(lmlllll’ with politics, He was giving a great deal of time, however, to local civic works, in which he was whole- heartedly interested. He thought, un- doubtedly, that these latter efforts of his were a sufficient contribution by him to the general welfare. He had no aspirations toward national public fame and he had perhaps even a horror of the political avenue to that fame. The President was obliged to budget him out of private life with verbal dynamite. He was obliged to represent the Secretaryship of Commerce to him as a sort of sacred Stars-and-Stripes le-call and_drum-roll. Psychologi- y, for Mr. Lamont, acceptance was certainly sacrifice. On the other hand, it was a sacrifice bringing with it high compensation. Mr. ont is the head of a mighty department. He is able to confer spa- cious benefits upon the whole American business community and the whole Nation. He can get general recognition and general gratitude for those accomplishments. He sits, be- sides, in the official family circle of the President. He has his opportunity to affect the general collective po“l:lu of his country. He has a and a lofty station. The sacrifice which he made in accepting it may well, perhaps, be regarded as likely to be outweighed in time by the satisfactions which ac- company it. Less Conspicuous Posts. Very different, however, are the cases of men like Mr. Prederick A. 'mum. Mr. Earl D. Church, Mr. Charles James Rhoads and Mr. Joseph Henry Scat- tergood. ‘How many readers will instantly name the omoe- thll those men are holding? Not many. How m-ny foreign ambassadors and ministers in Wi will instantly, because of their offices, invite those men to dinner and proceed to make much of them and to give them pleas- evenings of the sort that are the ognized perquisites of cabinet mem- bers and Senators? How many Senators will _instantly hale them, because of their offices, into the intimate familiaritles and enter- tainments and excitements of national political nektn Not many. ‘These four men, like many other men- summoned by President Hoover ‘Washington out of a prosperous and eminent private lfe, are brought here not to & new eminence, but to a new were much grander obscurity. They and more acclaimed locally, back home, | retort. than they ever, in the natural course g'l‘ events, can be grand and acclaimed uhlnm politician, or what Wuhlnm spanfien cares ex- tremely if Mr. "Tilton, as Third Assist- ant Postmaster aenenl. should save several million dollars a year to the Post. Office t through a bet- accountant? How Much Recognition? Whlf. ‘Washington polmci‘n, ::’uvh‘t corfspondent mmd to raptures of mwnul or tele- and 3 “NEW PATRIOTS" BARTER EASE R DRUDGERY WITHOUT FAME Former Leaders in Civic and Business Life at Home Show Real Devotion to Federal Duties Here. BY WILLIAM HARD. 1 One ot the great talk topics of Washington nowadays is whether or not | these alleged rich men who now are holding public offices here at low salaries are deserving of their unsought but generally accorded title of “new patriots.” Some statesmen and commentators of a conclliatory disposition are im- | pressed with the so-called sacrifice which these rich men are making and are inclined, therefore, to credit them with patriotism. Other obflerv!fl, of a dis- | Law Against Non-nendent ‘Work- | position more realistic or more acidulated, hold that the “new patriots” are maria 20 minutes while they jeered 237 | be one which would distinguish strongiy | patriots’ Scouts, em- James E. West (left) is service from their public activities and are in no wise entitled to any more esteem than is granted to the general run “sacrifice” is that they have exchanged rclative ease for unremitting drudge: and are going to do the drudgery less recognition, except from their consciences, than they got back home among their neighbors for doing the mmcmber this about the ‘‘new The ones whose names you most should remember are the ones whose names you most will not. (Copyright, 19329, Rush_es—Aboard Boat '&‘; For Marshall Hall, Lands in Norfolk!o Sightseer’s Haste to Catch| Steamer Sends Him on Long Cruise. Special Dispatch to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va, July 320.—Dr. John Haas' unfemiliarity with the steamers that ply the Potomac and their time of departure from this city cost him $11.30 more than ‘he had planned to spend for an excursion to Marshall Hall Thursday night, and he didn’t get there at that. Dr. Haas, & pharmacist, came here from Lexington, Va., recently to work in an Alexandria store. Being a stranger in the eommunity, it is not so strange that he should make a mistake in pick- ing his excursion boat, and that is CAUSE OF CONCERN Publishers at Cheyenne Meet- ing Cite Dangers of Monopolies. By the Associsted Press.’ INE, Wyo., July 20.—The concern of all publishers in the in- vestigation now being conducted by the Federal Trade Commission to determine whether practices of manufacturers and distributors of newsprint paper tend to create a _monopoly rests mainly with the future supply of newsprint, the legislative committee of the National Editorfal Association stated in its an- nual report submitted at todey's ses« ::”" of the association’s convention ere. The committee reported there has been no compiaint that the newsprint prices prevailing in recent months are excessive. Ominous Signs Ahead. “There are probably some instances where smaller consumers are obliged to pay prices disproportionate to their com- petitors, but it was not these differen- tials, fair or otherwise, that aroused the entire publishing - industry,” the com- mittee reported in stressing the concern over the future supply. The smaller newspaper, the committee stated, have reason to be alarmed over the high price trend, as the future, both near and distant, hoids ominous signs. In an extended consideration of the Government envelope printing business, the committee called attention that the International Envelope Co. a3 subsid- iary of the International Paper & Pow- er Co., is the present Government con~ tractor. In commenting on this con- nection, the legislative committee said: Oppose Government Policy. “Industry demands editorial sup- port for the principle that the Gov- ernment has no right to compete with private industry, but deliberately ignores :hz application of this principie 1o the printing industry.” Officers of the association indicated Atlanta, Ga.; Boston and Milwaukes have the inside track in the ‘race for the 1930 meeting of the organization. Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Cleveland and St. Louis also will seek the 1930 convention, but indications point to one of the three rival cities receiving the award. ‘William Hastings of 'l‘rut]ebo-rd l Masonic publication, is advancing th Athnh invitation. An invitation to meet in Alaska next year was received this afternoon from the governor of Alaska. {STOP U. S. EMPLOYED ! NOT LIVING IN MEXICO ~ Put Into Effect at Mexicali, ers By the Associated Press. CALEXICO, Calif., July 20.—Mexican immigration officers posted at the inter- national gate here tonight were in- s to the Mexi- citizens of the United States working in Mexico must live in that country. They were instructed to turn back any American attempting to cross the line tomorrow to work in Mexicali, or other sections of Lower California.’ Gov. Abelardo Bodriguez of the Northern district -of Lower California 8 grwp of Calexico business men ntly he expected the order would ified prior to the date set for its enforcement. ‘The governor is in San Diego, but his representatives in Mexicall said the order had not been revoked or modified nd they were duty bound to en- force it. The ruling affects several hundred Americans living in Calexico who eon- duct businesses in Mexicali or who {are employed by American or Mexican concerns. gy TUNNEY’S PROPERTY IS ATTACHED IN SUIT Fogarty Asks $500,000, Charging Alienation of Affection of Now _ Divorced Wife. By the Associated Press. STAMFORD, Conn., July 20.—Prop- erty of Gene Tunney, retired heavy weight champion of me world, was at- tached here today in a $500,000 suit, brought by John 8. Fogarty of Fort Worth, Tex., charging alienation of af- what he did when he decided on a river trip to Marshall Hall, his first ride down the Potomac. Arriving at the Prince street dock, Dr. Haas was spurred into action by the warning blast of a steamer king his .led:n wharf md ‘tnrely manued h rrd gang-] hnk Was drawn in. i The boat cast off. Fifteen minutes later the Charles Macalester, with & happy load of humanity, pulled into the dock, picked up several hundred more Jjoy-seekers and continued on its journey o Marshall Hall. Ten miles out from Alexandria the doctor was aroused from his pleasant perusal of the scenery by the purser, assistant purser, or whoever was the person that collected tickets. 'l‘u:keu. please,” was the genial de- "lee my fare out of thh " Dr. Haas spid, proferring a $1 bill. D.’rho fare is $4.80, please,” was the “What?"” elp.loded Dr Hlll. "GI" where do yw tmnk m‘u going, lnyny?" the ticket collector| “T'm going to Marshall Hall,” was the to| me my change from “Well, you're aboard the District of Columbia, bound for Norfolk, and we make no stops,” the ticket collector in- formed the astonished pi Dr. Haas paid the re- mainder of the fare to Norfolk. He boarded & bus when the vessel docked in the Virginia seaport and returned hm yesterday afternoon, clearly put it by the long trip, which cost him S11.80, just, $11.50 more than the g’l.y fare from Alexandria to creased” Soon, He Says. NEW YORK, July # ().—Hen: to nu“:m factory em. = to be raised” at "no time.” iwas established in 1914 dollar. fections. Fogarty is the former husband of Mrs. Catherine Fogarty, who is suing Tunney for the same amount, alleging breach of prom!u Several pleces of property, owned by ‘Tunney, were attached in the action. y in his complaint charged that he was the legal husband of Mrs. Fogarty at the time Tunney is alleged to have been w&w’ 'l':‘h )(Ie,l"b He specifically nam month o Tu- ary, 1925, as the time that Tunney stole the love and devodm of his wife, at Hot Springs, Arl He alleges thlt during this month and several thereafter, Tunney publicly named Mrs. Fogarty as his wife. He further charged Tunney with inducing his wife to divorce him, which he said he did at a later date. CHARGE DRY AGENTS GAVE GIRLS LIQUOR Officers Said to Have Been “Cele- brating” Success in Round- ing Up Violators. By the Assoclated Press. S. Dak., July 20.—Two dry from Sioux clty, Towa, who went “celebrate” their success in up liquor law violations -in ity, were in jail today on ch-nu of :mnx liquor to minor lll‘ll. . The agents, J ‘Wilshire an L. Marlette, are held in de!lult cl $1,000 bonds each following their are Taignment. lnmeourt here. Their ar< its from to According ;fimh went ndlng and alcohol. Alw not. Massac e, orth fn Eht “00 blnek of Sixteent nml. late yesterday, and crash into rked taxicab. No one was injured.

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