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. SIKARE DROWNED | "IN CAPSIZED BOAT Only One of Party Survives After Squall Turns Over 18-Foot Sloop. By the Associated Press. BOSTON, July 15.—Five young men | and a girl sank to death, one by one, in | the bitter cold, wind-tossed brine of the | ~Auantic Sunday night and early ye terday after they had clung for hours to a little sloop that had capsized in a sudden squall a few miles off Scituate. One lone survivor, Baden Garceau, cf Scituate and Boston, clung to the tum- bling wreck for hours after his mates had disappeared, and was saved at last by the-mackerel seiner St. Rita,’ which brought him and the body of the girl to Boston. The dead were as follows: Willis Earle, 27, of 343 Spruce street, | Kansas City. Walter Kay Labire, 28, Youngstown, qh|o. graduate of Ohio State Univer- John Blower, 25, nue, Plttsburgh, Pa Betty Munseli, 19, Watertown, Mass. David Glerasch, 27, Concord, Mass. Charles E. Hall, 23, Cambridge, owner and skipper of the Nomad. Guard Boats Search. “The closing hours of the tragedy were enacted after G. Abeel Hall and John Hiall, father and' brother of Charles, ad pressed a Coast Guard boat into & mearch for e craft, and later had ob- yained the services of three Coast Guard Mestroyers and two seaplanes, After Garceau had been landed at Boston by Frank Favalora, captain of the St. Rita, he went with his father, Albert Garceau, a Boston lawyer, to the office of the harbormaster, where he told his story. “We started out in Hall's sloop from Bcituate at 5 o'clock Sunday,” he said. *“Two others who had planned to go with us found they could not go. “On the way to the pier, we met Gierasch and the girl and invited them to go along. The boat was an 18-foot boat knockabout. We went out 5 miles and decided to returs ‘We got back sbout 3 miles when a squall came up and capsized us, The main sall was up and the sheet tied. Cling to Craft. “Pive of the party climbed onto the keel and two of us into the rigging. Those in the rigging were Hall and myself. Glerasch became panic strick- en. He screamed and three others of the party went into a panic. “Gierasch went overboard twice and % hauled him back each time. Gierasch went over a third time and as he did 80 he grabbed: Blower by the leg. I then went overboard and rescued Blow- er, but Gierasch was swept away and drowned. “The waves then washed Blower off and he was lost. Earle, who was clinging for his life to! the keel. Labire clung on until mid- night, when he was forced by the rush- fng water to relinquis hhis hold and was_drowned. “During_this period of time we saw the New York boat go by and a Coast | Guard boat about half a mile away. Girl Remained Calm. “Following the disappearance of Labire, there remained only Hall, the girl and myself. The girl was calm and clung with Hall to the keel, while I stayed in the rigging. Eventually, the | 1 collapsed and was swept off the eel, but Hall saved her. Later the girl 'and Hall were forced off the keel | and I went to the rescue of both. “Pinally Hall lost his hold and dis- | 3120 Gaylord ave- #ppeared. “At about 6:30 today the girl, despite her valient efforts to cling on until a vessel should come to our succor, gave up the fight and floated away from |t the bobbing craft. “I was picked up at 9 o'clock six | miles off Scituate by the skipper of the Bt. Rita, a mackerel seiner.” Visited Yacht. Capt. Favalora, attracted by the frantic signals of Garceau and the sight of the girl's body, halted and took both aboard. For an hour he and his men attempted to revive the girl Capt. James Barry of the yacht Nep- tune said his craft was anchored about five miles off Scituate last night and that the members of the ill-fated party came sboard his vessel, were shown around the yacht and then returned in 8 skiff to their own craft, in which they started back toward shore. TO DRY LAW VIOLATION Bentence Deferred When He Says He Wants to Aid U. 8. in Clearing Situation. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 15.—Rev. John Petrykanyn, pastor of the Ukrainian Orthodox Catholic Church, Youngs- town, Ohio, pleaded guilty in Federal Court yesterday to an indictment charg- }ng conspiracy to violate the prohibition aws. He was indicted last month with Right Rev. Charles Mrzena, former Bishop of the Czechoslovakian Olid Or- thodox Catholic Church, and 17 others in an investigation centering about the withdrawal of sacramental wine for al- leged beverage purposes. Father Petrykanyn was continued in $2,500 bail and sentence was deferred when he said he wanted to aid the Government in “clearing up the situa- tion.” He previously had pleaded not guilty. Rev. Peter J. Paskiewych, pastor of St. Mary's Lithuanian Church, New friu;m. Conn., pleaded not guilty to an indictment charging perjury before the rand jury which investigated the rzena case. SPECIAL NOTICES. 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" i Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co., 1313_You_ St. _ North 3343. rinting Craftsmen... are at your service for result-getting publicity The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D St. N.W.__Phone National 06! YOUR ROOF SAFE? Our thorough work will put the old goof in good shape and keep it so for Get_ready for Winter! e e w0 y and doliars. District 0233, Company 119 31 Ft. S.W. | ternational relations. and interesting revelation to the scene in that austere library in C Fornter , “Play Boy” Prin.ce‘ Surprises Observers by Dis- | play of Good Judoment, | SAYS RETURN OWN IDEA Domestic Difficulties Seen Greatest Problem Facing | New Rumanian King. This is the third of a series of siz articles describing the events leading 0 and subscquently developing in the restoration of Carol on th» throne of Rumania. The fourth will appear tomorrot, BY LELAND STOWE. Special Dispatch to The Star. BUCHAREST, July 15.—What sort of | a beginning has Carol II, the former exiled prince, whé s the first man in history to fly to a_throne, made as King of Rumania? What are the first impressions gleaned from observing him in the trying days during the opening of his regime? Has Carol himself changed or is he still the play boy of European royalty, merely adorned with the crowns ‘and trappings of Balkan monarchial glamour? | Before launching into an analysis of | the difficulties confronting Rumania’s | new King and before considering the domestic tangle which is one of his | chief anxieties these questions should be answered. They should be studied, | both out of fairness to Carol and out of the desire to understand his situa- | tion. Likewise, they must be given at- tention because Carol, the man of to- | day, offers the key to Carol, the King | of today and probably of tomorrow. Carol's Speech Surprises. There is an element of surprise in Carol's character and conduct as re- vealed during the first 10 high-pressure days of his reign. I remember my first surprise upon reading the complete text of King Carol's acceptance speech when I arrived in Bucharest the afternoon | after he had been proclaimed King. It | was not the sort of speech one might | have expected from the man who had been called Europe’s most prodigal prince. Two days later the newspaper correspondents of a score of nations as- sembled in the royal palace for an in- terview perhaps unprecedented in Eu- ropean history were afforded further cause for lively cogitation. We had been treated to an exhibition of tact, diplo- macy and poise vividly in contrast to the picture of the man painted during the days of his exile. | Carol had been painted as irresponsi- | ble. He talked like & man glad to ac- | regarded as impulsive and lacking in | direction. Here he carried himself like a man who knew his own mind and | had distinct objectives in view. The| popular conception of Carol had made | him appear as a dilettante, and, having | been put down as a diletiante, it had | been assumed he knew little of the serfous business of diplomacy and in- Critics More Respectful. Here was a Carol who showed de- cided tact, who knew exactly how much | or how little to say. Even those who had been most inclined to be critical of Carol came away with a revised and more respectful opinion of the man. Perhaps the popular conception of | Carol of Rumania would have to be revised. At least, it was a surprising If you were to return for a moment he left wing of the royal palace, you would glimpse a new Carol, whom the world in general has not known. With sensible disregard for outworn royal precedence, the King had granted an audience to some forty newspaper men, of perhaps one-third as many nation- alties. His majesty stepped forward, clad in a mussy naval uniform, in which he had been working for days, bowed a trifle awkwardly, then shot a keen glance at men who would notice the slightest slip he might make. He realized this fully, but he did not hesi- te. Only 15 minutes before we had sub- mitted any questions we wished to ask in writing. In that interval Carol had read them, sorted them out, classified them, Now, without further prepara- tion, he set about answering verbally questions, some of which were deli- cately stuffed with dynamite. Some- times the King exhibited directness, sometimes adroitness; sometimes he was suave, sometimes he skated on thin jce—but there was no hesitancy. Asked about his attitude toward Italy, Carol stated: “Personally, I have always admired Italy. I am a classic and lover of the Renaissance. Where has the Renais- sance imbedded itself more immortally than in Italy?"” What a gracefully clever manner of avoiding any mention of Mussolini’s Fascist regime. As a friend of France. as King of one of France's allies, Carol sensed the necessity of making no po- litical commitment of himself in re- gard to Italy. A much safer thing to sing the glories of the Renaissance. This was but a passing incident, yet an eloquent one. An old-time Yankee such as Mark Twain’s would have mumbled to himself, “He’s nobody’s fool, this new King. Again Carol took pains concisely to speak a good word to foreign capital. He knew full well Rumania's pressing need for capital with which to mod- ernize her railroads, her telegraph, her farming equipment. Hence he sald: “You may assure foreign financial cir- cles of all my solicitude. I am con- vinced that the development of my country’s great riches and its economic restoration require the collaboration of foreign capital” Later on, to the query as to who was chiefly responsi- ble for his return to Rumania, Carol gave this healthily energetic retort, “I myself decided to return.” Here was vigor, tact and shrewdness. Here Carol II emerged as & man de- termined to play his role as King. Somehow, this audience was in strange contrast to the widespread conception of Carol as a vacillating play-boy prince. Perhaps he had been all of that. At any rate, he did not talk like THE AROL LAUDED FOR DISPLAY OF TACT, POISE AND DIPLOMACY IN FIRST UTTERANCES AFTER BEING ACCLAIMED NEW RULER OF KINGDOM| ’ v EVENING +WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1980. PROBER OF LINLE GASETOFACE JURY | | | STAR, DRIVER SAVED Brundidge, Reporter, Wil Tell What He Learned in | Own Investigation. | By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 15—Harry Brun- | didge, a reporter for the St. Louis Star, | cabled from Havana, Cuba, last night | that he wduld leave for Chicago to tell the grand jury what he learned in an independent investigation of the Jake | Lingle murder. | | “Brundidge, in articles published in his paper and reprinted here by the Trib- | une, told of reports involving several | | other Chicago newspaper men, as well |as Lingle, Tribune reporter, in shady practices involving police, politicians and gangsters. He previously offered to tell | early today. Doyles escaped with only a all that was left of his machine. J. Serpas of 1901 Fifteenth street. IN THIS CRASH Dame Fortune was riding with Harry Doyles of Dayton, .Ohio, when his automobile was wrecked in a crash at Fifteenth street and Massachusetts avenue few bruises, but the photo above shows The other automobile was driven by Wilford —Star Staff Photo. USE OF MUSTARD a grand jury what he had learned, but I he balked at the demand that he talk | | with the State's attorney before he ap- | King Carol II is shown above reviewing his troops at Bucharest following s restoration to the throne of Rumania. Behind him are seen his son, Prince chael, whom he displaced, and his brother, Prince Nicholas, a_former member of the deposed regen —Wide World Photo. and his father, Ferdinand; to eulogize the “sacred heritage” of Rumania's oldier dead: to plead for a well chosen cry: “Forward march and to work.” eater kings have made far poorer speeches than this. Cynics Huve Another Query. There was also a_touching reference to his little son Michael, whom at that ‘moment he was deposing from the throne. “This is the end of the greatest affliction I have had to en- dure during my years in exile. At last I have found again my dear son whom | I can rear, with all my love, in th sentiments of his illustrious ancestors. Again the cynics might ask whether Carol's past had given proof of such a great love as that. Again there might e be the temptation to ponder as to where |r sincerity began and ended in such emo- tional phrases as these. it must be acmitted that, for that particular occasion, the words were well chosen In all this speech Carol made one error—that one, I believe, a serious mis- take. With the door open for such a course, Carol neglected to pay any public tribute to the woman who had stood The next to go was | CéPt responsibilities. Carol had been | faithfully by and loved and cared for | the boy king. He did not so much as mention the Princess Helen by word or | by inference. Technically, it was a grave mistake. It could not fail to be re- marked by thousands of Rumanians who love and respect Helen. Moment Called for Generosity. Undoubtedly they still feel that Carol at that moment could well have afford- ed to be gracious and generous toward his divorced wife, the mother of Mi- chael. Even on the low basis of good policy, such an act would have won Carol many friends. It would seem that he must have known that. Perhaps the fact that he spurned this oppor- tunity means-that Carol preferred to be honest in his most personal emotions. Even so, his decision in this matter already has cost him dearly in the effort to achieve reconciliation with Helen, Some who have known Carol will see in this incident of omission the ev dence of a certain dogged stubbornness in Carol's character. When his mind is made up, especially on matters of domestic affairs, he is not to be pushed. Yet stubbornness in his attitude to- ward Helen, if it is that, is one thing that many believe the King can ill af- ford to pursue. This incident is important because it relates to the one obvious weakness in Carol's budding record as King. His domestic trouble with Helen is the only serious shortcoming in Carol’s conduct to date and, of course, that is a two- sided question. The responsibility may not be all on one side. Carol's New Qualities Surprise. Aside from this, even the most crit- ical must admit that Carol has com- menced his reign auspiciously. He has diplomacy, energy and shrewdness which most people never dreamed he possessed. Either the King does possess these qual- itles to a considerable degree or he has been remarkably well advised and co;chul!’l, ‘0 these qualities should be added the remark that Carol has proved him- self a clever “emotionalist.” “Big Bill” Thompson himself could scarcely play to the electorate with a more deft touch than Carol has done in his speeches and his proclamations. Ameri- can politicians might read, with envy and misty eyes, the words of the King’s first proclamation published on the day he assumed power and addressed to the soldiers of the army, the air and the marine. “I experi an inexpressible joy,” sald Caro), “to find myself today in the midst of ‘my dear etldiers, to whom I am so closely attached by long years of toll. From the beginning to the end of my four years of exile, my thoughts have never ceased to turn toward my dear soldiers.” And then, “I ask this day of each man to stand firm and un- shakable around the throne and to work with courage und love, as you have sworn to do. Good health, my children. Given at Bucharest, June 8, 1930. “CAROL.” Shows Determination to Work. Perhaps such phrases as these would evoke in some persons unpleasant memories of certain events in Rumania during the war. Perhaps, again, people might’ be tempted to take a skeptical smile. Yet, the fact Carol’s firmest rocks in Rumania is his unquestioned popularity with the army, and one is forced to conclude there must be some reason for that. One is also forced to conclude that this new psychology and of the expert manipu- one now. Florid Speech Fills Need. I was reminded again of the ex- tremely interesting flashes in Carol's acceptance speech before the National Assembly on the previous Sunday. A stirring rhetorical effort as you reread it. Perhaps a trifl timental—yet precisely what the occa- sion demanded. An exiled prince re- turning to his country’s throne under such dramatic circumstances as those must give evidence of warm blood in his veins, either from his heart or by policy. He spoke of the spiritual ties “which unite and have always united me to my people.” He said, “I return today, my soul recomforted, into the midst of my people and fiom my heart is effaced the last trace of bitterness” He offered forgiveness to those who had opposed his return. And then, in a beautiful choice of words, he added: “I was brought up among You. My spiritual nourishment has been your nourishment. _Your griefs have been my griefs. My country's ideals have been my ideals.” Some who remember too well Ru- mania’s misfortunes in the last five years might be tempted to smile cyni- “ally at these words. They mgiht ask whether Carol was entirely sincere. But the fact remains they were precisely the words a returned exile prince ought to have said, exactly what the Ruman- fan people wanted Carol to say. He went on to evoke the “shadowsfyof Carol I e too florid and sen- | | | CREERON 614 12th St, Bet. F & G $5.00 to $6.50 Matron Hats ‘3:.5-—2 and s3£ Black and navy—fash- ioned of horse hair and light-weight straws. Bridesmaids’ Hats $5.95 and $6.95 Formerly $850 to $9.50 Made to fit the head—21 col- ors to choose from. July Clearance of Summer Hats Reduced to §1, $2 and $3 But once more | displayed certain qualities of decision, | is that one of || King has some knowledge of mass || | lation of the kingly prerogative of paternal love. | "1t is difficult to find in Rumania many | persons who regard Carol's assumption to power as a temporary thing. If there are more people outside Rumania in- clined to regard it in that light, it might be well for them ot to under- estimate such characteristics of Carol as | this. | " Finally Carol has exhibited, in his | early days as King, a determination to work. He surprised government officials | with his long hours at the palace, with his insistence upon discussing all sorts | of questions personally and—according to statements of those working with him —by his definite opinions about organi- zation of government departments. His friends say Carol intends to be a “busi- s man King”; that, in good American fashion, he wants results and will de- mand them. One incident is enlighten- ing. Telegraph Service Poor. Rarely in journalistic experience, if ever, have the correspondents who went to Bucharest encountered more dis- heartening and _unreliable _telegraph | service for their dispatches. Dispatches that first week which were filed at 7:30 in the evening often did not reach Vienna or Paris for relay to England and America until 8 or 10 hours later. Sometimes they were not delivered until the following morning, when their util- |ity was dead. Strictly speaking, there was no censorship, although it was | not wise to write too outspokenly about the domestic difficulties of the royal family. In such instances the dispatch might be laid aside for study by a gov- ernment official and as a result killed by delay. But on the whole news dis- | patches were delayed for hours directly because of hopelessly inadequate tele- |graph facilities. Correspondents never knew whether their stories would get out of Bucharest in 4 hours or in 10. Strenuous complaints against this | maddening condition were brought to |the foreign office affable press depart- | ment and thence to the King. A week | was required for this to happen, but when Carol was informed he took an immediate personaal interest. Instead of sending a query or an order to the | chief of communications, Carol sent for |him to report to the palace in person and instructed him from that moment |on all press dispatches must be given | every facility. He, the King, would hold the telegraph bureau responsible for its future service. New Insight Into Carol Given. Unfortunately, the chief harm had already been done and in addition the | telegraph was not equipped to handle the scores of thousands of words which correspondents were attempting to get out of Bucharest daily. But there is in this another insight into Carol's char- acter. The man who was renowned as | a princely dilettante has not begun his | kingship in anything like that fashion. | Here, then, are the weather vanes | pointing to a new Carol—a Carol whom the world does not know, but perhaps it may come to know. Having said that, | one turns to the most interesting phase |of the current Rumanian episode. | There remains outstanding the situa- | tion with which Carol II is faced today. MAN SHOT IN QUARREL Bullet Wounds in Abdomen Are Declared to Be Serious. Walter Johnson, colored, 40 years old, of of 318 I street, southwest, was re- ported in a critical condition’ today at Emergency Hospital from bullet wounds in the abdomen received yesterday aft- ernoon, while engaged in a quarrel at Third and C streets southwest. Israel Lindsey, colored, 51 years old, who is alleged to have done the shoot- ing, was arrested by Detectives W. T. Dubusky and J. F. Flarerty. It is alleged that the men quarreled g/er a dice game, | | peared before the grand jury. | Under the present arrangement he | will appear directly before the grand ury. ! Today's Tiibune said Lingle murder investigators had learned the identity of the Chicago newspaper man whom Brundidge referred to as having made a the gang leader. This man, the Trib- une said, was Harry Read, city editor of the Evening American. Read today declined to comment on the published account of the trip. Methodist ministers of Chicago at the Desplaines camp meeting passed reso- lutions yesterday stating the public had “lost confidence in the Lingle investi- gation,” and demanding that State’s Attorney Swanson speed up the inquiry “without favor or quibbling.” YOUNG PILOT FOUND ALIVE IN WRECKAGE AFTER 18-HOUR HUNT (Continued From First Page.) N. ¥, to Keene, N. H., and had stopped | at Schenectady, N. Y. Taking off from there, intense fog was lost, crashing about noon. Mockler was thrown free, but was unable to pull wreckage off shis com- panion's body and, after an hour, started down the mountainside. He became lost, but following a stream, arrived at an outlying farm house at 5 p.m. Searching parties were immediately formed and airplanes were notified to fly over the country. ‘The crash occurred on Woodford Mountain. Mockler, although nearly exhausted, retufned with a searching | party and stayed on the mountain all night. He remembered a swamp and a waterfall near the scene of the crash and the information led woodsmen to the scene. An ambulance had been sent to Dun- ville Notch, which is in the town of Woodford, and had entered the woods. The searchers started out with Golds- | borough on an improvised stretcher. He | had to be carried about 2 miles to the ambulance. He was brought to the Putnam Me- morial Hospital here, about 4 miles | from the point where the ambulance met him. The searching party had no medical men among its members. Mrs. Bryce Goldsborough, the boy's stepmother, arrived here late last night from Albany. Mockler was flying with Goldsborough to Keene to keep a lecture appointment last night. Goldsborough had left Cleveland, Ohio, yesterday morning. At 9:15' am,, approximately two and a half hours after he was found, Golds borough was in an ambulance en route to the hospital. The distance from the scene of the crash is only about 4 miles, but the roads are extremely difficult. ‘The six men in the party that found the flyer used a couple of suit coats tied together as a stretcher. They car- | ried their unconscious burden for nearly 2 miles before reaching the ambulance. Part of the journey was through thick mud, knee deep, while at other points rocks and boulders barred the path. As the youthful airman was borne from his plane his eyes were closed. His teeth had been knocked out by the force of the crash, and true to the instinct of an experienced fiyer he had reached for his parachute cord. One finger en- circled in & tight grip the ring which | releases the chute. Mockler described the crash and his attempts to free Goldsborough to a res- cue party. “Fifteen minutes after taking off from Schenectady, N. Y., after flying from Buffalo,” he said, “we ran into bad fog. Soon we knew we were over the Green Mountains, but not where. Golds- borough put the ship into a dive to get below the fog. “Suddenly & tree loomed ahead and the first thing I saw was Goldsborough turning off the switch., When I came to I saw the tail and part of a wing | of the plane hanging in the tree. “Parts of the wreckage covered Golds- borough, over his head, chest and feet. I pulled it off his head and chest, but his feet were caught in the controls and he was unconscious. I finally left him to try to get to a house to find aid. I tried to free him for an hour. “He was breathing regularly and his pulse was regular, although still un- conscious. He was warmly dressed and | the weather wasn't cold. “The crash was near the edge of a swamp and within half an hour I reached a waterfall and after long wan- gerlng down the stream came to a farm ouse.” pleasure trip to Havana with Al Capone, | encountered | within 15 minutes, and the men became | small | Tobacco Use Routed By the Assoclated Press. 1 LONDON, July 15.—The lowly mouse | has become an instrument in aid of | | human health, | The annual report of the grand| council of the British Empire cancer | campaign published today says that an | experimental method by which mice may be subjected to cancer of the skin and heart has made available a mass of new material for cancer researches. Some causes of the disease which formerly were scarcely suspected are |sald to have been discovered through | experiments on small rodents, Among |other experiments the backs of the mice have been painted with tobacco tar to ascertain whether smoking causes GAS FOUND BENEFICIAL IN CANCER TESTS| as Cause in Experi- ments on Mice, Furnishing Mass of ‘New Material. malignant tumors of the mouth, but no case of malignant tumor has resulted. The report says that the.death rate from the disease would be substantially reduced if people took full advantage of radium treatments. The report revealed use of war-time mustard gas in combating the disease. | t was stated that “the induction of tumors is inhibited when mustard gas is applled to an area of skin which is being subjected to painting with tar. The report also sald “mustard gas seems to be the first true anticarcin- aganic agent ever discovered.” Action of the gas was explained as being local- ized to the particular area under- treat- ment and its cure to be strictly limited | in time, “but none the less on that ac- | count a remarkable cure.” | CROSSING CRASH KILLS THREE IN MISSISSIPPI | Four Others Injured, Two Serious- 1y, When Auto and Passenger Train Meet. | By the Associated Press. | GRENADA, Miss,, July 15.—Two per- | sons were killed instantly, another died on the operating table and forsr others | were injured, two of them seriously, in | the collision of their automobile with southbound Illinois Central passenger train No. 3 here yesterday. ‘The dead: Alfreda Sisson, 12; Lo- i raine Oliver, 9, and Mrs. Gertrude Sis- | | son, 50. | The two children were killed outright | apd Mrs. Sisson died a few minutes | later. The injured, brought to a hos- pital here, are: Shirland Sisson, 40, driver of the au- | tomobile, suffering from shock and pos- | sible internal injuries; condition critical. | Green Holland, 13, concussion of the brain and possible internal injuries; condition critical. Mrs. Savannah Holland, 49, fractured right wrist and bodily bruises. | Odeen Holland, 15, body wounds. | The seven were traveling as solicitors for the Good Samaritan organization. | Chinese Pass Truant Laws. SHANGHAI (#).—The first compul- sory school law in China has been en- | acted by Yunnan Province, South| China. Beginning next Fall all parents | | | of children of 7 to 16 years of age will be punished if the youngsters are not | sent to school. Seventeen days left to file your per- sonal tax return. Securities owned, oether pledged or unpledged, must be included in the declaration. | ;W"A';;&A"!o" / ine Jorge &Ma & Sy Cgane B B wholesome GULDENS ‘Mustard ‘ | Y OU are cordially invited to help us Celebrate our 40th Anniversary |GEOW, Jewsis Y. S PIER Bob 880 Y Will Rogers BEVERLY HILLS—If you think the Senate ain't funny, get this Norris _ resolu- “If there been any trickery about this London Treaty, and we find it out, no matter how old ‘we are, we want to recall back our signatures and call the treaty null and void. “Now we don't know that there has been any trickery (that’s what's worrying us), but if there has, in order that we (the Senate) may have an alibi in case the whole thing don't turn out so good. But, in case it is found that we have tricked the other nations, and that the treaty is a fine thing, why this clause don't hold. Respectfully yours. The U. S. Senate.” Lord Baden-Powell, chief of the Boy Scouts, has just received the honorary fellowship of the Educational Institute of Scotland. Ay MEMORIAL DRIVE SUCCESS FORECAST Secretary Davis Believes |D. C. Workers Will Raise Funds for War Monument. Secretary of Labor James J. Davis, who rose from the ranks as an_iron puddler to become a member of the cabinet under three Presidents, today de- | clared that although “times are a little slack,” workers of the District of Co- | lumbia without a doubt will take great | pride in contributing their part toward the construction of the local World War Memorial. Secretary Davis indorsed the moves ment that is under way by the Central Labor Union here to raise $20,000 to complete financing of the memorial temple, which is to be placed in West Potomac Park, in tribut> to this city's veterans of the World War. “I am sure” sald Secretary Davis, “that the workers of Washington will nobly and generously respond to an appeal for funds to make up the small balance due on the proposed District of Columbia World War Memorial. They will not neglect this honor to the many of their kind who left their occu- pations to face peril and death for their country on the fields of France. This building is to perpetuate the memory of these heroes, and every worker in the District will want the satisfaction of feeling that some of his earnings, no matter_how small the portion he can spare, has gone into this monument to his fellows. If the times are a little slack, the sacrifice may be all the great- er, but the greater the sacrifice the greater the pride in making it. It will be given, too, in the knowledge that no matier what a pinch it may be to give a little money, it is nothing to having given life and health, as these heroes have done.” P Auto Enamel “Effecto” Enamel is recom- mended by us. May be had in a number of colors. MEtro. 0151 BUTIER LY Chrysanthemum Plants Single Stem Gude’s Garden Shop A. GUDE SONS CO. 747 14th St. NW. District 5784 Pompom and Per Doz. Millinery Importers 55 ALS All suitable for All Remaifliflg’ $ Summer Hats A special group of . desirable immediate limited number of Felts suitable for Fall. 1143 Conn. Ave. 10 4 $3 wear—a Hats PHYSICAL CULTURE SHOES Style P_lu_l Comfort Shoes modeled in the Smartest Styles, yet so cleverly patterned that they “Comfort” the feet and make walking a pleasure. The Entire Stock is in the sale—but the rush is on, and sizes will become broken before long. No Branch Stores CARL M: BETZ, M'l’w 612 13th Street