Evening Star Newspaper, September 26, 1930, Page 29

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TAKE FIGERPRITS T0 DENTIFY BODY Army, Navy - and Marine Records to Be Searched to Solve Mystery. 20 A fingerprint record obtained yester- day from the body of a man exhumed In Arlington County was being com- | red today with innumerable others | n the effort to ledrn who was mistaken) buried a week ago as Robert E. Marcey, 32-year-old war veteran of Lyonhurst, Va. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON MAN DIRECTS NEW MOON MAPPING AT MT. WILSON| Projection of Lunar Air Photographs on Miniature Orb Expected to Determine Whether Moon Is Changing. By the Assoclated Press, a century-old controversy whether the MOUNT WILSON, Calif, September | moon's face is changing and to help 6. f astronomical sur | from earth. Records of the Army, Navy and Ma-| "y "raboing is expected to clear up | Epstein of California Institute of Tach- rine Corps will be searched to deter-| mine if the dead man had been in| the service, a question which investi- ators hope to clear up in a few day: eanwhile the body is being held in & vault at Arlington. Marcey showed up several days ago, very much surprised to learn that his family had identified as his the body of & man killed in an automobile ac- cident near Bradshaw, Md., September 14. The subsequent funeral in Arling- ton was attended by a large number of Marcey's family and friends. In the event the stranger cannot be fdentified through his fingerprints, War Department officials _expect to run down every available clue. Some papers were recovered from the dead man by Maryland police. He was picked up by a motorist near Washington while hitch-hiking. The driver of the car knew him only as b. Should it develop that the stranger §= a former service man, his bedy will be reinterred at Arlington. BANK CLOSES AFTER | - SUICIDE IN VAULT | Cashier's Death Not Caused by | Bank Money Trouble, President Assures Depositors, Wy the Associated Press. WALLED LAKE., Mich., September 26.—The People’s State Bank, a private institution, was closed y as a re- sult of the suicide in its vault yester- | day of Clarence Chafy, 37-year-old cashier. however, that depositors have “nothing to worry about.” No motive for Chafy's suicide was es- tablished, and Fre of the bank, said that he was confident that the condition of the bank had noth- ing to do with it. e bank will remain closed, Ward sald, until its officials have an oppor- tunity to study the sityation. FAMOUS PHILOLOGIST TAKES BRIDE IN PARIS | Henry Rushten Fairclough of | Stanford University Weds Miss Mary Charlotte Holly. By the Associated Press. PALO ALTO, Calif., September 26— | ‘Ward of the mas of Henry Rush- ton Fairclough, 68, widely known philologist and professor emeritus of Stanaford University, and Miss Mary | Charlotte Holly, in Paris, Tuesday, was | received here today. Prof. Fairclough was in charge of American relief work in Belgium and Montenegro from 1918 to 1920. He ‘was decorated by both governments and ‘the Serbian government. He was chosen president of the American Philological Association in 1925. Miss Holly is & descendant of Alex- ander Hamilton. ers. The map is the latest development in The committee members tory; Drs, J. P. Buwalda and Paul 8. | detail seen by the eye looking at the —Mapping the moon by a new type | geologists discover more about nature | began today at |and causes of the moon's scenic won- Mount Wilson Observatory. An adaptation o{ nrpllune mn;\l mlsk- | et - |ing photography gives views equivalent the work of e Carnegie Institution’s ar Department's flles in an | " winging the astronomical cameras | committee on study of surface features a few thousand miles out into space to | of the moon. get more directly above side areas of |are Drs. W. 8. Adams, F. G. Pease and he moon's face, something impossible | Edison Pett of Mount Wilson Observa- WASHINGTON, mlag"'br. H. N. Russell of Princeton and . A. L. Day and P. E. Wright of | the Geophysical Laboratory of Wash- ington. Dr. Wright is chairman here in charge of the work. Moen Globe Is Used. A miniature “artificial” moon, a globe 15 inches in diameter is set up in a clearing in the pines on top of Mount ‘Wilson, ide the great 100-inch clearing resembles an open-air theater. At night moon photos are projected with a "1,000-candlepower beam upon the globe, which is a curved instead of ordinary flat screen. The globe glows realistically in the black shadows of the pines, but with a thousand times the Teal moon. The astronomers can step off to one side and photograph this artificial moon just as if it were the real one. But it is no ordinary photography. Much of the past year was spent per- fecting the instruments that shoot light beams four times acros the clearing, a distance of 135 feet, which is the al length” of the 100-inch telescope. Their 4 @ motion called libration. the Carnegie Institution astrophysical laboratory in Pasadena, where they were developed, the ‘nstruments could net be | used because of traffic t1 mors in the | ground. Distortion Straightened. The pictures from the side straighten out the distortion photographs of shapes | of craters and peaks near the edge of | the moon. This rectification is useful to geologists in determining whether these topographical features were caused by v]o canic action, meteors, or something else. The real moon continually nods, with | The con- sequence is that no two ordinary phetos | are likely to be exactly the same. But | with the artificial moon the “libration” is controlled, so that photos of the real moon can be projected, section by sec- tion. in their proper positions on the artificial ‘moon, and then re-photo- | graphed to build up a correct map. | Contraversy to Be Settled. { Old moon pietures also will be project- | ed, showing the satelite as it appeared | 50 and 75 years ago. Comparison of | and recent photos is expected to | which may have taken place on the Officials expressed the hlh(,‘ ed Ward, vice president | FANC’S Greatest Diamond Event Franc's . . . brings you diamond been absolutely unknown until this time! store that is forging ahead with its value giving . valués in their great Import Sale that we believe have « . now We went direct to the diamond markets in Europe fo bring you individually selected gems of purest quality and beauty! 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A greater int AND RELIGIOUS NOW | i andet, s esdarsent 120 moon’s surface. ‘The corrected mlg gives scientists an accurate base for the studies they are | making of the moon'y surface a square | mile at a time. PROF. B. H. MAUTNER DIES 'KILL THEM TODAY | By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 26.—Seamen s are more religious than they were eight COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, Sep-| Yéars ago, desirous cf comforts ashore, tember 28 (#).—Bertram H. Maustner, | Put With much less money, says the an- . nual rport of the American Seamen'’s | 38. associate professor of sociology &t pyieng'gociety, made public yesterday. Colorado College, died here last night| ""The report, based on the work of the | after a year's illness. He came to Colo- | society with some 400,000 seamen of all | rado Springs in 1922 from New York\mtlonllluu, says reduced funds among City | seafarers were never more in evidence | He was a graduate >f the University | than this vear, when only $39,500 was | of Michigan and later completed work | deposited for safe keeping or sent home, for a law degree at Columbia. He is| compared with $205,000 eight years ago. survived by his widow and a son. | The society gave free meals or lodging At Drug Stores---Ready for use Enough to kill hundreds of pests—3te MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS No interest or extras added to our char, accounts. N - \ penalize our We do not friends. IT_PAYS TO ) ) % Like Old Times!—3547 Men’s $1.65 to §3.50 SHIRTS 3126 are perfect 421 slightly imperfect The old familiar Dollar Day shirts are back! Once more men of Wash- ington can buy what they have pa- tiently awaited—and what values! 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Eeru or vandom gray; full eut chest and long trunk. 36 to 46. $1.69 Rayon Pajamas style in white, k cuffs in Elastic waist; $1 Union Suits Rayon athletic suits, zfor‘l Middy plain colors, Full eut, o 1) 40 to 46. Slight rregulars. Goldenbes Men's Shep—Direct Entra: In the Men’s Hat Shop—Sale of $4& 85 Felt Hats Snap Brims, Welt 32'9 5 Edges or Homburgs . Featuring the famous Brookdale Hats of Fash- ion at this special sale price. All the newest Fall shades and the new pastels. Choose from an almost unlimited selection. All neatly lined. ‘ Wat Shop—Main Floor, t in reading among.| is to replace all . busses. DOLLAR DAY| IN THE MEN’'S DEPARTMENT AT Lttt d st

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