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WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) 64 at mid- night yesterday; lowest, 53 at 10 p.m. . Full report on page 7. Sunday WITH DAILY EVENING EDITION Star. 1930—116 PAGES. he WASHINGTON, D. C, (P) Means Associated Press. FIVE CENTS 'TEN CEN' IN WASHINGTON AND SUBURES ELSLWHERE Entered as second class matter post office, Washington, D. C. ; No. 1,309—No. 31,400. SUNDAY. MORNING, APRIL 20, BAKER MYSTERYDEEPENS AS CLUES FAIL SALESMEN’S RELEASE PRISON OUTBREAK TAKES TWO LIVE: THREE. WOUNDED Rhode Island Inmates Refuse to Hold Warden’s Daugh- ter as Hostage. ONE COMMITS SUICIDE AS CAPTURE NEARS| xth Major Revolt in Nine Months Has Toll of 29 Deaths and Million Damage. By the Associated Press. PROVIDENCE, R. I, April 10—A desperate bid for freedom, not without 8 touch of chivalry and a full measure of self sacrifice, was brought to an abrupt and sanguine end at the Cran- ston State Prison today with the deaths of two prisoners, the wounding of two others and the probable fatal wounding of a guard. One of the two who died, a trusty, ‘with hope of pardon in the near future, gave his life to sound the alarm. He was shot down in cold blood by the in- furiated prisoners whose plot he frus- trl'fidh The gt:l:é toul:dhdis own life when hope of freedom fade: Although beset on all sides, the riot- ing prisoners declined to hold as hostage the daughter of their warden, who un- suspectingly aj their midst. ‘The e ith il delivery was attempted wi aid rro’n: th: outside. Two men, trav- eling in l!} lutorgbbfle bearing numbel lates stolen m & gu enteredthevflwnlnthemflno{ visitors and distributed arms. They ‘made their escape u the riot faltered and their deserted blood-stained car indicated that they hld not got off unscathed. Peleg Champlin, a lifer, and the flrlt to fall, had sounded the alarm when he was shot to death by the desperadoes responsible for the attempted break. Champlin, who went to j-u for killing | anced the man who had violated his home, beeome a trusty and was under consideration ror a pardon. He was of a cigarette stand near the cage, where the outbreak Refuse to Hold Girl. John “Pretty” McNel, the other oner who died, pressed a revolver to head and pulled the trigger as Sergt. Wilson of the Cranston police came stairway covering him ‘Thelma, the pr!!ty 19-yeu-ola daughter of Warden Charles E. stepped tnio the inferno of gunnn und tear fumes. She had been to the barber lhon to have her bobl Guards called “We did not know there was a lady here,” they replied, and surrendered a tential "hostage that might have E?ou‘ht a dear ransom. Although the State prison houses approximately 500 inmates, only & small portion of them were believed by om- cials to have taken any part in attempted delivery. Break at Visiting Hour. ‘The attempted break occurred shortly after 2 p.m, during the visiting hours. ‘The two outside confederates drove up to the prison" gate, entered the prison building and mingled with the group of visitors outside the prisoners’ cage. Apparently at a prearranged signal they passed weapons to their friends inside. Firing started immediately. Champlin was slugged and then shot. James McVay a prison guard, fell and his pockets were rifled of keys. Some of the rioting prisoners brandished and the prison siren sounded above the din umde the prison and lvreld an alarm to which the full force, local police, Promlenee gonu and State "'"’ET reserves left this city for the scene. Although many shots were fired, tear gas probably had more effect than bullets in stemming the riot. Firing | tal in the visitors’ waiting room and the pen in which prisoners are confined when they receive visitors continued after all doors were locked. The rioters were making a last desperate attempt for freedom by firing into the locks of the doors in the hopes of opening them. SIXTH MAJOR OUTBREAK. 29 Deaths and Million Dollars Damage in Nine Months. NEW YORK, April 19 (#).—Today's outbreak at the Rhode Island State Prison, at Howard, was the sixth major outbreak in penitentiaries throughout the United States in nine months, with a total toll of 29 lives and more than & million dollars in property damage. Three convicts were killed at Clinton Prison, Dannemora, N. Y., known to the underworld as “Siberia,” last July 22, when 1,300 prisoners attempted to rush "gfm:""d‘ and burned several pfls?dly! later 1700 inmates of the prison at Auburn, N. Y. mutinied, set fire to h:l! a dnuan bududén'::e and were elled by an tr g:ly after tw‘:;’ruoneu had been ‘flfi:d. 11 wounded and 4 had escaped. Prop- (Continued on Page 5, Column 8.) —— 24,000-BARREL GUSHER BROUGHT IN BY SENATOR Pine of Oklahoma Opens Largest Producer From Cromwell Sand, Say Oil Men. By the Associated Press. SHAWNEE, Okla., Agg‘ 19.—An oil Eu.hfl‘ was hro#ht in y by United tates Senator W. B. Pine of Oklahoma. ‘The Senator’s No. 1 charity well in the Konawa pool blew in from a depth of 2874 feet, with initial production e,smn-wd at 24,000 barrels a day. men pronounced the well the s | & Last Man Club’s “Wine” for Toast Turns to Vinegar Survivor Knew Seccret Three Years Ago—Will Drink to Comrades. By the Associated Press. MITCHELL, 8. D., April 19.—A bottle of Bergundy wine, purchased in 1886, to be used as a toast to his departed com- rades by the final survivor of the fam- ous Last Man's Club of Stillwater, Minn., has turned to vinegar. This secret was revealed in Mitchell today by Charles Lockwood, 87 years old, the last survivor of the club, who stopped here en route from his hom at Chamberlain, S. D, to lttend the funeral of Peter O. Hall of Atwater, .,_who died Friday night. The (Continued on Page 2, Column 1.) —_— PACT RATIFICATION BY U. . FORECAST AFTERTEXT STUDY Treaty Interpreted as Assur- ing Better Balanced Navy for America. BY PAUL SCOTT MOWRER. By Radk Ia The St " fiafe B 20t e e wNDON England, April 19.—A of the London naval treaty by Ameri- can delegates, experts and observers lead to a virtually unanimous conclu- respect injurious to the interests of the United States, and that for this reason, if no other, should and will be ratified by the Senate. It promises to give us a better bal- and morl:u: ective Navy l.;xm we now possess, wi ding open for our leisure consideration several important technical naval problems on which we have not yet made up our minds. It nppunwmnk the end of three years disagreeabl n with Gmt Bflt.lm. while not involving us politi- cally It establishes tonnage higher than we should have llked and at a cost so high that it is still doubtful whether we shall actually build w this ]l.l‘l!y by 1936. ‘The main whack is that it falls short of lly. !IILl flve‘-p'::ummmnh important reductions, w was the object throughout of the American delegation. Yet, even on this point, the future remains open. France and Italy may come in later. Three-Part Result. In fact, the whole treaty and the circumstances surrounding it are so framed that it is im le at the present moment to te their real importance. will depend on what hsppem in the next few years as between Great Britain and the United States on one hand and France and Italy on the other. The resluu of the conference can conveniently be discussed under three heads—financial, naval and political. 1. Financial. The basic fact of the conference is that whereas France and Italy are building virtually new n;vies, and Japan's navy is relatively modern, the British and American navies both are faced with formidable expense of replacing in the next few rs large numbers of* oid maritime which just now are ming obsolete, and this at such heavy expense that new building at the same le would have been for Great Britain at least ruinous, if not impossible. It is 'Idely belleved 'D be for this reason the admiralit) y. which ls not nowrlnlu lor wishing to reduce the size of the British navy, -needtowmadownxromvnww cruisers. The interest of the United States was to bring about reductions so that plflty with Great Britain could be ob- ied easier and at lower cost. The lnmut of Great Britain was to find an equilibrium, somewhere around the mlfl.‘n figures, between limited finan- possibilities and the need for a strong navy. The interest of Japan was to keep expenses down and to reduce if possible. The interest of Italy was to gain parity with France at the lowest possible e. The interest of France was to restore its naval situation at a time when Prance can afford it and Great Britain and Italy are less weil off, or trade its sacrifices in tonnage for increased security by means of pacts. Savings Largely Theoretical. Much has been made of alleged sav- ings through the scrapping of a few capital ships and agreeing not to re- place others. This saving is largely (Continued on Page 5, Column 1.) By the Associated Press. pay to get too fresh with the census taker, Jason M. Roberts, 32-year-old advertising man, discovered today. When filling out his census blank Roberts answered some of the ques- tions thusly: Q. Do yml read and write? w do you think I wuldrfld&h\f!mtvflu Q. Are you naturalized or an alien? A. Yes Q. What is your trade, profession or occupation? A. Bootlegger. stive's largest producer from the Crom- ‘well sand. Senator Pine is-an independent oil sperator, » Q. Are you a veteran of the United States mfllury or naval forces? A. Yes, tank Q 1 s WM war ' expedition, L SIMMONS T0 FIGHT CAPPER LOAN BILL, HE TELLS CITIZENS But Federation Favors It After Hearing General At- tack From Representative. $15,000,000 PROPOSED RAISED TO $25,000,000 Nebraskan Against Any Return careful study of the draft of the texts|be NEW YORK, April 19.—It doesn’t | War. six months in jail and to Percentage Fiscal Basis, He Says. Representative Robert G. Simmons of Nebraska, chairman of the subcommit- tee on District appropriations, paid visit to the Federation of Citizens’ As- soclations at its regular meeting last night, and spent an hour pointing out the faults of the citizens’' associations, the federation, the newspapers, the Senate and the District's school system. He announced himself, with some heat, as firmly opposed to any proposition similar to the Capper bill providing for a loan of $15,000,000 from the Federal Government to the District government for construction of the new municipal center, and promised to use all his in- fluence against such a measure. ‘The federation apparently failed to take Mr. Simmons seriously, however, as shortly after the end of his exhortation the delegates voted, with practically no debate, to raise the sum in the Capper bfll from $15,000,000 to $25,000,000, and to strike out the clause providing for the payment of interest on the sum to loaned. The federation then appointeed a committee with instructions to go to Capital Hill and endeavor to make the views of the federation in the matter sion that it contains nothing in any | pre Fiscal Relations Question. Mr. Simmons started by stating his intention of withholding comment on the question of fiscal relations between the Federal and local rnments, and then devowa the major part of his speech to the subject of fiscal relations betw:n the Federal and local govern- The $9,000,000 annual contribution of the Federal Government toward the cost of running the District is more than the Govemment would pay if it were a taxpayer and the regular '-.l nte on its property, he lllfl. A re- rcentage basis of con- L A Un! e “The time is coming when there will be 1,000,000 inhabitants in this city,” he said, “and I tell you that at that time the percentage contributed by the PFederal Government will be not more than 10 per cent, and that that will be The reason for that dwindle with it. Turning to the Moore bill for the creation of a fiscal relations commission, Mr. Simmons declared himself to any joint commission on which Sen- ators and Representatives are members. The Representatives have to do the work, while Senators take the credit, he complained. Capper Bill Assailed. Senator Capper’s bill providing for a $15,000,000 loan to the District next en- gaged his attention and he said that as long as he had anything to do with it, the District would not put a single brick into the municipal center before having money in the Treasury to buy it with. This was the principle followed in the comtrucnon of the capitol of Nebraska, he said, and he saw no rea- son to depart from it. Mr. Simmons then stated that the District should hire the finest archi- tect to be found in the United States to consult with local authorities before approving any plans for the center. “It would be better to spend $250,000 on the plans and know you are going to have something that will be worth looking at,” he said, “than to spend $15,000,000 for the buildings lnfl then regret them after they are u In his remarks on_ schools (Continued on Page 2, Column 8. MOTHER DEAD, SON HELD Man, 41, Questioned by Police in Murder of Woman, 75. ‘TOLEDO, Ohio, April 19 (#).—Mrs. Fannie Goldman, 75, was found mur- dered in her home here today, and her son, Julius Goldman, 41, stabbed several times on the wrist, is being questioned by police concerning the death of the The murder was committed some time last night, Kouu say. The woman was tied in a chair and choked. Police say the son had been suffering from a mental disorder for 15 years. mother, CENSUS TAKER LAUGHS LAST IN ARREST OF WISE CRACKER Man Who Called Questionnaire Joke Charged With Giving False Information. A. I couldn't have been in the Civil Q. What is your native tongue or mflveslonnxum mysel %fiu"“"fi“ sumtmwme e, “T though guthl!u Government had U 56 he hauled Roberts into court to- day on a charge of giving false answers m & census enumerator. mhufll was held in $100 bail for hearing ly 1. ‘The penalty, if he is found guil Il & fine of the last should| SUBURBAN POST OFFICE f New NMMMNGAM— ¢ word Puzzle—Page 22. PARKER MAY COME BEFORE SENATORS Ultimate Confirmation Supreme Court Judge Is Expected. of BY G. GOULD LINCOLN. Judge John J. Parker of North Caro- lina, whose appointment to the United States Supreme Court has been as- salled by representatives of organized labor and of the Association for the Advancement of Colored People, is likely to appear before the Senate judi- ciafy committee to reply to these at- tacks. Senator Overman of North Carolina, chairman of the subcommittee which réorted the Parker nomination favor- ably to the judiciary committee, seid last night he would submit a motion to the committee tomorrow I.nvitin( Parker to appear and be heard. ‘members of the judiciary com- :m:ed m&x Senators Ba':eh Steiw- an hens, expressed opinion that if the motion is made by s:n-mr (Continued on Page 2, Column 7.) ROBBED BY TWO BANDITS Postal Clerk Bound by Armed Men, ‘Who Take Loot Valued at $6,000. By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, April 19.—Armed with pistols, two men entered the post office of Homewood, a suburb, today, bound wtl‘ll Clb(‘rk Ji P. Tobias lnduml a bag of registered mail an gll;l;:lty of stamps, the loot aggregat Tobias, unable to shout for help be- cause of a mail sack the robbers had thmz over his head, was found and freed by Frank Postmaster Cowing & short, time atter the Tobbery. Post Office inspectors, engaged since Thursday night in efforts to track down the bandits who robbed airmail here, are investigating the hold-up. s. Katherine Blake Dies. NEW YORK, April 19 (#).—Mrs. Katherine Duer Blake, former wife of Dr. Joseph A. Blake, internationally known . gxg of Clarence H. year ago. They had been married in 1914 in Paris, a day after Mrs. Blake and Mackay were divorced there. TODAY’S STAR PART ONE—22 PAGES. General News—Local, National and Foreign. Schools and Colleges—B-4 and B-5. PART TWO—8 PAGES. Editorial_Section—Editorials and Edi- torial Features. Army and Navy News—Page 6. D. A. R. Activities—Page 8. Y. W. C. A. Activities—Page 8. W. C. T. U. Activities—Page 8. PART THREE—12 PAGES. Society. Parent-Teacher Activities—Page 10. At Community Centers—Page 12. Veterans of Great War—Page 11. PART FOUR—14 PAGES. Am\lu‘mmt Section—Theater, Screen Music. !n v.he Motor wvfld—l’lm e and 7. Aviation Activities—Pages 8 %nd 9. Fraternities—Pages 10 and 11. News of Clubs—Pages 11l ;nd 14. Radio News—] ews—Pages 12 and 13. District National G\nrfl—h.ne PART FIVE— PAGES. Sports Section. PART SIX—12 PAGES. PFinancial and Classified Advertising. PART SEVEN—24 PAGES. Section. Magazine Review of Books—] 18. 19. GRAPHIC SECTION—12 PAGES. World Events in Pictures. COLOR SECTION—S PAGES. llogn )(\llllnl, Mut! d .Yefl. and Brutus; Bflmbody SBtenog; dm; 7 l b3 2 | firing Wife Di_éappears With Secrets, Says Friend of Kaiser IRVINGTON, N. J, April 19 (#).—Dr. Adolph Schror, 55, well known German scientist and per- sonal friend of former Kaiser ‘Wilhelm, reported to police today that his wife, the former Blanche McFarland of Portland, Oreg., had disappeared with a number of valuable chemical and en- gineering formulas. Dr. Schror said he learned his wife had gone to New York by bus on April 11, and believed she had taken a ship for Ger- many under a fictitious name. He has asked the American con- sul at Bremerhafén to meet the liner Bremen and other vessels. Dr. Schror said he met his wife through a matrimonial bureau. SERGEANT KILLS MARINE OFFICERS | will begin with a few minutes of medi- | N; Disgruntled Nicaraguan Turns | Machine Gun on Quarters as Two Sleep. By the Associated Press MANAGUA, Nicaragua, April 19.— Shot down in their sleep, Acting Capt. Veryl H. Dartt of Nashville, Tenn., and Lieut. James O. Young of Toledo, Ohio, United States Marines attached to the Nacaraguan national guard, were kflled at Jicaro yesterday by a disgruntle Nicaraguan sergeant. The sergeant, who recently had been demoted to a corporal because of drunk- enness, overpowered a sentry and turned a machine gun on the officers’ quarters, 52 shots before the awakened guardsmen surrounded and killed him. His name 1Weld.s l'lv;l‘l‘u Morlugaa in rfi; ports received in Managua today. addition to killing the two American officers, the machine gun fire seriously wounded Sergt. Go s, who was ex- pected to die. The tragedy took place at the Jicaro headquarters of the national guard first battalion, which is stationed at the northernmost outpost near ‘Hon- duran frontier. It was officially re- ported that all other sections were quiet. Acting Capt- Dartt was a lleutenant in the United States Marine Corps. His home was in Nashville, where he was re- cently married, and his wife, Mrs. Ruth 8. Dartt, now resides there. Lieut. ‘Young, whose home was in Toledo, was a sergeant in the Marine Corps. Hi mother, Mrs. Susie B. Liebster, lives in ‘Toledo. Pirst reports of the shooting were re- ceived in Managua with the arrival of an_airplane from Jicaro carrying the bodies of the two dead officers. The transport Chaumont sails on April 23, and the bodla Dmblhly will be sent home aboard ff It was not known whether Morales was drunk when he committed his act, but it was inferred that his motive in opening the machine gun fire was revenge. CROSSING CRASH FATAL One Man Killed, Another May Die From Injuries. BUFFALO, April 19 (#).—One man was killed instantly and nnother Te- celved injuries believed fi ‘when their automobile was struck nuht by the Mohawk flyer of the New York Central, westbound from Buffalo to Chicago, at Hanford Crossing, here. The only clues to the identities of the victims are a Pennsylvania autd license plate and a suit case bearing the name “Joseph Sedder, Syracuse.” FLIGHT IS REMEMBERED Banners and Plate Presented Soviet Society by Americans. MOSCOW, April 19 (M—-The Soviet Soclety of “Defense Against Alr and Gas Attacl today received from the American Society ol Priends of the Soviet Union 124 banners and a bronze plate commemorating to the recent )lnlcow-New York fll(ht of the airplane Land of the Soviets, piloted by Semyon Shestakov. The banners will be awarded as for good work to provincial The bronze near ; HYPNoTlc N SPECIALIST CAPITAL PREPARED FOR CELEBRATION Churches Make Special Ar- rangements to Accommo- date Record Throng. | _ Thousands of visitors will join the | President and Washington citizens in simple ceremonies today commemorat- ing the Resurrection. Special arrangements for accommo- dation of thousands of Washingtonians, | augmented by the largest throng of Easter visitors in the city’s history, have been made in the vlrlmu churches. rmon topic. As on every Sun- day, the church doors will be opened at 10:45 a.m. for visitors and the service tative silence. Since the orthodox Quakers follow little routine, the President will 'imul spontaneous services. Hymns will sung to rhno music without the leld- enhlp of a choir. The sermon by Dr. ugustus T. Murray, the minister, may (flllow the silent meditation, or it may be near the end of the services. Any one of eight or ten other ministers on the platform may speak if he feels moved to do so. Abandon Speaking Privilege. Because of the presence of the Presi- dent, members of the congregation have abandoned temporarily their privilege of apnking during the services. engage, instead, in meditation. The service, however, will close with the usual hand-shaking, when each member of the congregation clasps the hand of his neighbor. Mrs. Hoover will be unable to attend the church today because of a sprained back, suffered last Sunday when she slipped and fell as she arose from a couch. The President’s brother, Theodore J. Hoover, and the latter’s wife, will accompany him. Mr. Hooveu two sons, Allan and Herbert, jr., are not in the city. able, she will go with the President on an automobile ride into the country. ‘Tomorrow Mr. and Mrs. Hoover are to be hosts to hundreds of children who will gather for the umull mur m rolling on the White That afternoon the pub]lc will b! ld- mitted to the grounds for a concert by the United States Marine Band. No special arrangements have been made for any observance of Easter at the White House other than the placing | AT’ (Continued on Page 2, Column 2.) s i s ey APRIL BUSINESS SLOW Statisticians Agree Currect Reces- sions Have Been Reached. NEW YORK, April 19 (#).—Aside from moderate seasonal improvement in retail trade and in construction, conference of statisticlans in industry noted little change in the business situation at the middle of April, as compared with a month ago, in its April report made public today. ‘The conference generally agreed that the low point of the current recession had been reached for 1930. The rate for normal year to year growth and seasonal factors, was at the lowest point yet reached in the current move- ment and the lowest for any March since 1923, By the Associated Press. PARIS, April 19.—French children may no longer be taught in state schools that strong drink is an evil. Winé growers and manufacturers of spiritous liquors made a concerted at- cently on certain text books in use in minister of education, M. Plerre Mar- raud, 9mm|ud that phrases which dis- unnd e drinking, inaccurately de- l the making of bever- < of business activity in March, allowing | to PROHIBITION BARRED FROM TEXT BOOKS IN FRENCH STATE SCHOOLS Admiration for U. S. People Taught Children Stirs Wine Manufacturers to Protest. tack in the Chamber of Deputies re- |schools. public schools, with the result that the | St& EXPECTED AS ALIBIS ARE BEING CHECKED Men to Be Confronted by Wit- nesses Who Saw Struggle in Dead Girl’s Automobile. POLICE TO START PROBE ANEW WITH MASS OF UNSCANNED DATA Detectives Look to Colored Men to Ex- plain Presence of Clothing in Inspected Sewer. With all tangible clues to the murder of Mary Baker apparently exhausted after a week of tireless investigation, the Washington homicide squad and Arlington County authorities were preparing last night to make a fresh start, with indications that Mervin Sisson and Julian Gallagher, Warsaw, Va., salesmen, would be released from the Arlington County jail as on their alibis. Today the salesmen will be who believe they saw Mary Baker struggling with a man in soon as the police further checked confronted by the three pengxu er automobile at Seventeenth and B streets the evening of April 11, several hours before she was shot to death near Arlington Cemetery. Unless something develops from this the police frankly admitted last night there would be no grounds further. to detain the two salesmen Police yesterday checked on the alibis of the two men at their homes in Warsaw and reported to Inspector William S. Shelby that they were convinced that both were in Warsaw on the night of the murder. ted. Neither has been formally charged with the crime. Eec her, arrested early yesterday in Richmond, was brou‘ht to Wi ington yesterday afternoon by Willlam C. Gloth, Unless something new develops today their release is ex- Gal- commonweal attorney, on a fugitive warrant. Sisson was arrested mdly at War- saw on a murder warrant, but was held only for investigation. Will Be Examined Again. Although Sisson was subjected to an all-night grilling which ended at 4 o’'clock yesterday morning, Gallagher was questioned Mr. Gloth only while en route to Arlington court house and will be exunlned again by the prosecutor today. mass oP material in his amine, and was about to week of mnnlng down futile clues. longing to Baker. ‘The authorities believe they may get some information of value from the 10 persons whose names are listed in the book. Only two men's names are in éctor Sheiby announced last nl ht that he had tackled & possession that he had been make a fresh unable to ex- on the case after Among this is an address book this book. The others lu‘be!lfled to | the of missing clothing got into a sewer man- Do ‘m oflflmflfl xpermm r-rm. where it was found late Friday. lington County police insist that they lmed the same manhole cover Tuesday afternoon following the disclosure that Miss Baker's keys had been picked up nearby the Saturday before, and that the clothing was not there at that time. ‘The same day the two colored men who were arrested after the discovery of Miss ‘Baker’s pocketbook and lurf in their possession had been taken to Queen City, a colored settlement near the experimental farm, to search for her missing clothing. ‘The men were quoted as having ad- mitted that they took Miss Bake: coat, but that could not be lcmnd_ spector Shelby attached much tance to the theory that the cl had been placed in the search of Tuesday, and the were inclined to believe that it was put there by friends of the two colored men Thight, be Tound I thelr posseasion. and | Senal foun; n, an that they might be connected with the r- In the nnernoon, if Mrs. Hoover feels | crime. Will Revisit Sewer. Deputy Sheriff Woodyard of Arling- ton County, who claimed he looked Tuesday into the sewer which luced the missing clothes Priday 80 to the experimental farm accompanied by the three men who found the articles definitely to establish whether the sewer is the same one. If it is, the two col- ored men now ‘imprisoned in the Arlington Countr jail on a charge of having ransacked Miss Baker's aban- doned car will be given another grilling. ‘The authorities cannot believe the clothes were stuffed into the sewer by the slayer. They are of the opinion that | an, the articles were removed from the car by persons who saw it abandoned on the roadside. One theory is that after slaying Miss Baker and disposing of her , the murderer drove her automobile to the place where it was found abandoned the | Then, it is advanced he 'lflul'a‘i’u\lb her personal belongings, carri half a mile to the manhole and dropped them in before continuing his escape on foot. Without doubt this explanation Ia wm:m the range of possibility, but it topple when one considers the flct chn e slayer made little effort to conceal and none whatever hide t.hg automobile, he have been so anxious to articles which at most could aided identification of the body? Some of the police still believe that Miss was killed on the Govern- o':: ‘of the paragraphs objected to ona must admire Tvedly the people of the umua S(l‘u who was the manhole after contain a distinguishing llovzfi. %md. lnywbere for $5 a pair. ties plan to subject them swpic examination, ally disposing clue. The string of coral beads, it learned, was purchased from one of ‘Washington’s most exclusive jewelry es- tablishments. It was learned that these able to aid in the mvuunu Baker's slayer. The store has over to the Police Department nt Lhe person who had the A handkerchief bearing mark ro\md near the scene of the cflmc yesterday also will be checked. It is possible, the police said, that the laun- dry mark may yield a clue. detectives investigated (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) WILL HONOR JESUITS Paris Exposition Will Pay Tribute to Priests. nms Anrfl 19 w—lfl'cll- of Mhmww!flm'flhufl- memorated at the International Colonial P "hgenmxtmr tory in Johns Hopkins University, &: m-mmudmmm.. retrospective section of the complete | retrospectis exposition, ch-rged'e .r""""'" ‘material regard-