Evening Star Newspaper, October 7, 1930, Page 11

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WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1930. “DEAD MAN" RE.IURNS of 200 men had dragged Mud Lake for July, Benjamin Marquardt, farmer and former St. Paul American Wisconsin Farmer Comes Home After Posse Dragged Lake for Body. . sumed names in various cities near Association base ball player, yesterday retyrned to his farm near here. ASBHLAND, Wis, October 7 (#).— engo. Given up as dead after a sherifi’s posse mmm.jl h?: b:::,“:‘f,?,“:i‘" e THE EVENING TIFEFR NF LIFE MILLIONS OF YEARS AGO DEEER DEDICATING "™ stiown v Fossiis FroM GOBI' Found in Asiatic Desert by Andrews Expedition. STAR, He sald he had been living under as- Resolution Adopted to Post- pone Tribute to Late President. By the Assoclated Press. MARION, Ohio, October 7.—Adopting & resolution which stated “it would cheapen the memory of a man, most deserving, to importune anybody wo do his memory a simple justice,” the Hard- Ing Memorial Association yesterday post- poned “for the present” dedication of| the imposing memorial built here in memaory of the late President Warren G. A Harding. The resoiution-opposed the action of the Ohio Republican Party Convention in naming a committee to arrange for dedication of the tomb, which was built in 1926, Formation of the committee made “further steps ‘nadvis- able if the ceremonies are to be fee of political intercession,” it added. Resolution Presented. The resolution, presented by Harry M. Daugherty, Attorney General in the Harding cabiner, said: “A belated dedi- cation is not necessarily a reflection upon the dead, but a dedication gflg ingly given is a compliment neil the dead nor to those who participate in the ceremonies. #Now the American people, as & peo- ple, have never been swa by the lip of libel or the tongue of slander and their devotion to his memory and their judgment of his virtue and merit is the final answer and apptopriate reward to his labors. Officers Re-elected. “More than half a million people made their contributions to this beauti- ful monument to his enduring memory. And when more than 75,000 persons each month stop at this monument to partake of the story of the lives of those who rest there, the foam of falsehood will soon cease to scare the timid or llllhl&luus and all will be well in the fu- ‘The association re-elected its officers, including: Calvin _Coolidge, ent; J. S. Frelinghuysen, presi- dent; Hoke Donithen, secretary, and A. 'W. Mellon, treasurer. GUSHER SETS RECORD Ross Well Flows 1,824 Barrels in 18-Minute Test. OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., October ¥ (#).—Surpassing other gigantic wells fn the South Oklahoma City fleld which have set records for production of high-gravity oil, the No. 1 Ross Well of Oils, Inc, flowed 1,824 barrels in 18 minutes on a test late yesterday, or =:’ the rate of about 140,000 barrels a ‘While numerous 100,000-barrel pro- ducers have been completed in Mexico and West Texas, their product has been low-gravity oil. ‘The initial flow of the well, if main- tained for 24 hours, would exceed by more than five times that of the famed “Wild Mary Sudik,” which attracted national attention last April by blow- ing wild for 11 days. The Sudik well's first day gauge was only 25,000 barrels. CITES MANNERS IN SUIT Chicago Wife Asks Divorce, Blam- ing Husband’s Woman Friends. CHICAGO, October 7 (#).—Mrs. Anna Silvers contends that the man- ners of her husband’s woman friends ruined her social standing. She is suing for separate maintenance. In her suit in Circuit Court she com- that her husband, Albert, enter- ed various women in their home; that the women smoked, and that the neighhors, abhorring the use of tobacco by women, were shocked, and that as & result they shunned and avoided her. France faces a shortage of apples and pears this year. ' By the Assoclated Press. PIEPING, China, October 7.—Ering- ing a record bag of g;eh‘l;wflc fossils, the Central Asiatic lition led by Dr. Roy Chapman Andrews, the Ameri- can an logist, returned here today after five months of intensive work in the Gobi Desert. In the opinion of Walter C. Granger, chief paleontologist, who directed oper- ations in this field, this year's collection is the biggest and scientifically the most important made by the expedition since its first exploration in 1922. Represents 75 Species. Fossils representing about 76 different specles, several of them new to science, have been found and are expected to throw much additional light upon the evolution and dispersal of animal life millions of years ago. No human re- mains thus far have been discovered, but Dr. Andrews does not consider that this rules out the possibility that fore- runners of the Peking man yet may be found in the Gobi region. “We still think,” said Dr. Andrews, “that if we are allowed to continue our investigations we shall find traces of primitive man. But this can be done only by thorough exploration.” He an- nounced today that nej itions are go- ing forward with the Chinese authorities for continuation of the work next year. One of the most important finds of Prompt relief from HEADACHES, SORE THROAT, LUMBAGO, RHEUMATISM, NEURITIS, NEURALGIA, COLDS, ACHES and PAINS Does not harm the heart BAYER ASP Acceptonly “Bayer” package tains e of 12 i Ao bovies o the expedition, apart from the masto- dons discovered in a bog and reported on July 25, was a fossil deposit yielding the teeth, jaws, skulls and other parts of a coryphodon, belonging to the ambylopod order, which in general appearance was | somewhat like a long-legged hippopota- | mus, to which, however, it bears no | |[]] asclentific relationship. ‘The rty also found the skulis and | (Ll jaws of a chalicotheres, belonging to /(I the same group as the horse, rhinoceros and tapir, but much more primitive than the type previously found in Europe and America. This was & hoofed animal in | §¥ every way, but with a great claw instead of a flattened hoof. | il Sphoupus. <4 BUSINESS IMPROVING has passed the lowest level of the de- pression period and is beginning & climb gradually and steadily back to normal, Charles E. Denny, president| 0 of the Erie Railroad, said in an address A before memhers of the Traffic Club. The Erle Rallroad, Denny said, is now in the best condition in its history. 'lu'rl‘l. rallroad has spent $30,000,000 for pro wements during the last year and $125,000,000 in the last five years, he stated. Aspirin § (i Gomuint)) roven directions. Handy “Bayer” and 100—All druxm{:. BRAND-NEW 10 Grid Receiver., HARRY C. GROVE, nc Delivers to You Either Model Balanced Unit Radio Models plus GROVE Service 10 BABY GRAND CONSOLE A wonderiul, 7-tube, Screen Grid Radio complete with built-in gen- uine Electro-dynamic Speaker. 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