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HE EVENING P. C. WEDNESDAY, JULY 1§- 1930. fled that the President shall int | Johnston, chairman of the Chest Pub- | 2 ( ]one more member ton(lv.eh‘- n:- jority | licity Committee, and Joseph D. Knu(-!F"‘D LONG TI"E FUGI?IVE of one to the social service organiza- man, chairman of the speakers’ bureau T S T s | tions represented on the committee. | unit. DETROIT, Mich,, July 16 (Ad—Ar- rested in connection with the killing of Louis Candea at Ecorse a week ago. a man known here as John Belford was STAR, HINGTOXN, YOUTH WILINGLY DESERBESKILLING OFFESOF CHEST 14-Year-0ld Boy Unmoved‘Community Charity Directors After Stabhing Maid to May Move for Service Death on Mountain. Building. Collese Eyes Examined DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist Phone National 0321 409-410 McLachlen Bidg. 10th and G Sts. N.W. 'SOLDIER SKELETON | MYSTERY PROBED Army Board at Fort Meade Seeks Cause of Gaider Death. Treasurer Robert V. Fleming was au- thorized to appoint assistant treasurers Corcoran Thom, chairman: Miss Mar-| to handle the signing of checks during garet Fox, Harry King, Mrs, H. H. his absence. Flather, Arthur May, A. C. Moses, Al- R identified by police yesterday as Jonn len Pope, Mrs. Charles A. Goldsmith, Diamond Ring Stolen. Harrison, sousht for s ‘murdee ‘pm- Rudolph Jose, Mrs. Joshua Evans, jr.: E. J. Murphy, Mrs. Joseph N. Sanders.| Mrs. Helen T. Cohen, 3731 Ninth mitted 14 years ago in Brookiyn. Belford denies he is Marrison. ‘s“:o"d";“:".-n dsghflgv- gd"ch i'csdeph M. | street, has asked th; lroucedw‘ make an | . W. Rutherford, repre- | effort to recover a diamond ring stolen | , senting the constituent organizations. | jen her home yesterday. e Ting, | officer of the Identification Bureau soid Representing the contributors are |set with seven diamonds and valued at | his fingerprints estabiished eonclusively Mrs. Whitman Cross, Dr. Charies P.|$150, was taken from the top of a re- | he is the man accused of shooting and Neill, D. N. Burnham, Hugh A. Thrift, | frigerator on the rear porch of the |killing Richard Weldon in a Brookiyn Wayne Kendrick, William Montgomery. | Cohen home. | garage, September 20, 1916. sfi:m‘:ln %;lyani James A. Councilor, Rob- | Pl ISR SN . 1' 1Ne;\' Yor{kn‘[‘)ol‘lse ‘Tflm" notlflfldl by ert V. Fleming, Mrs. John Jay O'Con- | elephone of the identification, and ex- ‘The board of trustees of the COom- | nor Dwight Clark and E. C. o | tradition proceedings are expected to munity Chest yesterday delegated H.L.| Short reports were made by Ernest S. ' f ! be instigated soor moved at his predicament, and appar- | Rust, jr, and a committee of his own ;- ently showing no alarm, ld-year-old | selection to work out plans looking to | establishment of central offices for the Harry Woolsey, jr, was held without|cyeq ™ gesolutions covering the activ- |} bail yesterday when arraigned on a|ity were adopted at a meeting held in|/ charge of stabbing to death Miss Anna | the council chamber of the Chamber ’ | of ‘ommerce of the Unite lates. o bas Koo asiogheomsad | Clarence A. Aspinwall, chairman of ‘Willingly, and almost gleefully, YOung | the Chest's committee on office man- Woolsey re-enacted the murder for po- npiemrm. \\‘llll serve on'dlhe L‘Onlmll(ice. Ve o. | The group is to consider two plans, lice yesterday, describing in minute de- | " (ol plating ‘the establishing of tail his movements as he p[\lnged his | offices in a building that would care hunting knife into the maid’s back 8| for (he needs of the organization and she stood on Lookout Mountain, near | ‘the other plan looking to the erection Gretst Bond, Eaturday night | of a soclal service building, such as is He interrupted his description at | maintained in several larger cities, The one interval to tell the officers that he | purpose of the committee is to provide did not like women. “They are all like | the Chest and its affliated organiza- cats.” he said. | tions with a central headquarters. The Woolsey had gone walking with Miss | committee will report at a later meet- Miller from his parent’s Summer home | ing of the trustees. The new committee is composed as fol- | lows: By the Acsociated Press. MORRISTOWN, N. J., July 16.—Un- Panama is to have its first candy tory By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. FORT GEORGE G. MI 'DE, Md. | July 16.—While a mimic ' ar raged —— e about them members of an Army board of inquiry today investigatd a im gri military mystery of real life—the fatal | shooting of Pvt. William F. Galder, ‘outhful sentry, whose skeleton was Tound yesterday in a dens: thicket at the edge of the reservation. Gaider. who had been missing since a UNITED *STATES cold night last January when he was assigned to patrol a lonely beat near the post coal tipple and ordnance ware- COMPANY houses, had died from a bullet over his right temple, apparently fired from his own .45-caliber automatic service pistol. Certain peculiar circumstances attend- ing the tragedy have led official investi- gators to express doubt that the sentry committed suicide. One theory ex- pressed here today was that the soldier was murdered by trespassers whom he you are - COOLED Investigators Are Named. / surprised while making his rounds. If precaution dictates your selection of our warchouse for the safe keeping of your cher- ished belongings, go a step further and exer- cise the precaution of having your draperies and upholstery moth- proofed—insured for three years. Call Metropolitan 1843 Y 418 10th Street % L BIG Value Not just the top of the milk poured from an or- dinary bottle. CREAM! Heavy, rich cream . . . the kind you can whip stif —AT NO EXTRA COST! Be Wisely served. * WISE BROTHERS CHEVY CHASE DAIRY WEst 0183 Maj. D. T. Green, post executive offi- cer, appointed Maj. C. D. Holmes, Capt. S. J. Raymond, Capt. W. O. Schrumm and Lieut. J. Heylman to make a thor- ough’ investigation. side it and an exploded shell nearby, were found by 4 sergeant and a civilian “K. P.” who stumbled upon the bones while walking through the thicket. The men said they found the gun beneath the edge of the soldier’s overcoat, which lay on a log just back of the twisted body. The finders removed the gun and turned it over to superiors at post headquarters, thereby pulling what officers said was “a bad blunder.” In- vestigators said the men should have left the weapon where it lay, so that its position with respect to the body and the coat could have been studied. It was pointed out that if the gun actually lay under the overcoat, the problem of how it got there after a suicide was one requiring explanation Suicide Is Doubted. Lieut. L. A. Day of the service com- pany, who was assigned to Gaider's company, expressed the opinion that the private had no known reason to end his life and sald he could not understand why a man should want to stray so far from his post in order to do so. The body was found about half a mile from the sentry's beat, near the tracks of the W., B. & A. Railway. According to Lieut. Day, Pvt. Gaider was next in line for promotion to cor- poral and was highly regarded by his officers and the men in his company. His disappearance caused an intensive hunt through the brush for several davs, as the officers were reluctant to list him as a deserter. The pistol found beside the body was identified as Gaider's from the serial number, after an examination by Lieut. Day. It was cocked, as though a bullet had been fired and the weapon had recocked itself for another shot. The gun was rusty from exposure to the weather, and difficulty was ex- perienced in “breaking” it. Another strange circumstance was finding beside the body of what some investigators thought were the ashes of a fire. This gave rise to two theories —that the soldier had burned some- thing he wished to dispose of before ending his life, or that other persons had kindled the fife and its light had prompted the sentry to investigate, his death resulting from the inquiry. There were portions of the torn sleeve of the soldier's coat nearby, but the cloth may have been mutilated by animals, it was remarked. Private Gaider was a member of Company B, 1st Tank Regiment. He was the son of Prank Gaider of 41 Kirkpatrick street, Pittsburgh, Pa. who has been notified. 10WA G. 0. P. IN SESSION Secretary of State to Be Nominat- ed and Platform Adopted. DES MOINES, Iowa, July 16 (#).— Nomination of & candidate for secre- tary of State, election of a central committee and adoption of a platform, constituted the major problems before the 1,584 delegates to the Republican State Convention today. Preconvention _ discussions _indicated there would be little disagreement over the platform. The convention was ex- pected to approve the agricultural rates of the new tarift bill and to urge a State tax revision program, as well as to indorse the party’s candidates. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Block party, Womans Auxiliary of St. Monica’s Episcopal Chapel, E street southwest between Delaware avenue and South Capitol street, 8 p.m. Lawn fete, friends of the Ursuline Sisters, Ursuline Mother House, 519 Fourth street, 5 to 10 p.m. FUTURE. Luncheon meeting, Kiwanis Club, ‘Washington Hotel, tomorrow, 12:30 p.m. Lecture by Miss Winifred Shuler, courier for the Indian defour of the Santa Fe Rallway. Sixteen days left to file your personal tax return. Bank accounts not subject to check taxable in excess of $500. Will Rogers Says: SANTA MONICA, Calif—Been having a Jot of trouble here lately getting some al- falfa to grow on my little patch of ground, one span of grey mules The remains, with Gaider's gun be-- when, he said, he 1 1t a sudden desire | to kil her. Suddeniy he plunged his knife into her back, then pursued her, when she ran, stabbing her again and | again. | Then he threw his weapon away and | dragged the body down a steep cliff and | attempted to conceal it beneath two ) boulders. Flight entered his mind nndl he hid all night in a lumber yard, Harry Woolsey, jr., 14-year-old son of a wealthy Jersey City, N. J., paint manufacturer, and Miss Anna E. Miller, 23-year-old nurse, whom he stabbed to death at Green Pond, N. J, July 14. The youth, who is said to be a mental defective, said he killed his nurse be- cause he didn't like girls. “They're all alike,” he sald to volice. st like cats.” The body of Miss Miller was found | hidden between two rocks on a cliff | leading down from a clearing. CANADIAN ELECTIONS| DEPEND ON PROVINCES | splendid New beautiful Nor dition to the Home. Open 10 A. Directions: Street north of cust Road. Conservative Premiers in Ontario and Saskatchewan Fight Return of Liberals. i Shepherd 2 By the Assoclated Press. OTTAWA, July 16—The general election campaign, in which the Liberal government, headed by Premier Mac- kenzle King, is seeking return to office, reached a climax today, with the Prov- inces of Ontario and Saskatchewan as focal points. All seats in the House of Commons are to be filled in the voting July 28. Chief opposition to the return of the government_comes from the Conserva- tive party, headed by Hon. R. B. Ben- nett. For weeks Premier Ferguson of Ontario has thrown all the resources of the provincial government into the fight against the federal government, and today the government in Saskatche- wan, headed by Premier Anderson, of- ficlally ghrew its weight against the government. Both , provincial govern- ments are Concervative, but it is un- usual for a provincial government to array itself officially in & federal cam- paign. With the final days of the: campaign in sight, the issues have become clari- fied. The tariff question has been to the fore, with the opposition charging the government with timidity in its dealings with the United States and ! proposing full retaliation for recent | tariff increase: Realty ‘Company Inc. lection of bills. patrons who have been paying their telep month at the Company’s Business Office, but the bill. Those who send in their checks mail should continue to address them to the The new bank collection agencies are locate venient 1o most neighborhoods througliout of these agencies follows: continuing on his way in the morning. also voted by the trustes n i 900 Elwood Street, director of the Chest, was unanimously re-elected for another ar. Following the election President John Poole called attention to Mr. Street’s record as a Chest erscutive, and expressed himself as highly pleased that Washington had been able to obtain his services. Enlargement of the Budget Commit- tee to a minimum of 25 persons wa: It was speci . N umerous Homes now await your inspection in thgate in ad- Star Model Daily to 10 P.M. To inspect. A motor out 16th a Avenue to Lo- icht _to Model Home. Georgia Avenue, Nonm IAsmNG'roN “ An Added Convenience For Telephone Subscribers ARRANGEMENTS have been made with a number of banks and branch banks to act as ‘our agencies for the col- This is an added convenience for our hone bills each who oftentimes find it bothersome to make the trip downtown. Current bills may be paid at the bank collection agencies up to and including the settlement date shown on the face of eachi month by Business Office. d at points con- the city. A list a glass of fresh BUTTERMILK! Hot, sultry days, a feverish sun, and we gratefully grasp the first cold drink that comes to hand—only to find we are still hot.and thirsty a few minutes later. Fresh buttermilk brings a lasting coolness—because it brings a lasting nourishment to your body, tones up your system and fur- nishes you with just the proper heat- resisting foods for Summertime. Chestnut Farms Dairy Buttermilk is churned daily, fresh and pure! A glass of it—and you are cooler! A note in your milk bot- tle or a phone call will bring delicious buttermilk to you, churned fresh daily! WORLDS . } e Ratead. 100% by the Dt of Phone. Potomac 4000 for Service SIESTNY FASTER TIME ~ ST. LOUIS : @ MEXICO New, (Effective July 20) Saves a Business Day . ' Riggs National Bank—1503 Pennsylvania ' Ave., N. W. Mexico City only 61 hours from St. Louis— J 9 hours, 45 minutes faster than at present Seventh Street Branch—Cor, Seventh and Eye Sts., N. W. via gnrmen and Mechanies Branch—Cor. Wisconsin Ave. and M St.,, N. W. % THE SUNSHINE SPECIAL Northwest Branch—Cor. Eighteenth and Colimbia Rd., N. W. i : i j Park Rond Branch—Cor. Fourteenth and Park Rd., N. W. k;:;fiii“alfs?;: ‘nse'xstodpl?‘dlldli’;;t::::;elslgg Dupont Circle Branch—1913 Massachusetts Ave., N. W. am 2nd day and Mexico City 7:35 am 3rd Friendship Branch—Cor. Wisconsin Ave. and Warren St. N. W. day (instead of 5:20 pm as at present). Through drawing room compartment American Security & Trust Co.—Cor. 15th & Pa. Ave., N.W. Slespere S feGoala o Mexco, Clfy. Southwest Branch—Cor. Seventh and E Sts,, 5. W. Aot I Oab e SanAamonio' 9 Central Branch—Cor, Seventh and Massachusetts Ave., N. Mexico City. Northwest Bra. —1140 Fifteenth St., N. W, Secure sleeping car reservations from Northeast Branch—722 H St., N, E. F. E_PENNINGTON The Anacostia Bank—2000 Nichols Ave., S. E. . General Agent Che\;y Chase Savings Bank—5524 Connecticut Ave., N. W. dont look as well as they ought to according to what they are eating, I never missed a polo ball as much in my life as I did last Sunday. Seen a couple of mighty poor movies here lately. But soon as the market picks up you watch these mules go, and this grass grow, and pictures improve, I tell you its the stock market crash last Fall_that did it. SPECIAL NOTIC SHT, PLAYER, $40: TO =% ED' STATES Apply to | cu., 618 e TO NEW YORK C FROM NEW YORK CITY FROM BOSTON Bpecial rates for Part Philadeiphia_ana New Yi UNITED STATES STORAGE €O.. INC.. 418 10th 5t N.W Metropolitan 1845 Wanted—Load —from New York, Philadeiphia, Richmond. icago, Ill.; Pittsburgh, Pa., and At- lantic City To_ Pittsburgh, N. Y., Cumberland, Md.. and’ Harrisburs, Pa % Smith’s ansfer & Storage Co., _ 1313 _You St __ North 3343 Printing Craftsmen... are at your service for result-getting publicity ‘The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D St. N.W. _Phone National 0650. YOUR ROOF SAFE? Our thorough work will put the eld 700! in good shape and keep it so for years to come. Get ready for Winter! Save and doliars, 3 Do trict 0933, 19 394 B RW 929 National Press Building Washingten, D. C. (Nat'l 2922) i i o Grom | WIRE! What a delightful “Thought” Such a remembrance is doubly MiSSOURI complete surpris Perfect Service—thru The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company 725 13th St,, N. W. ME tropolitan 9900 3 Doors West of 14th St. (Our New Address) 1407 H Streew National 4905