Evening Star Newspaper, June 5, 1931, Page 34

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cap . | RUM BOAT ATTACK AND DEATH PROBED W. M. Miliin, Engineer of Craft, Killed by Fire From Cutter. 1.0S 5.—Dopartment | of Justice agents hzve been instructed | by United States Attorney 8. W. Me-| Nabb t igate the capture Tues- day of the 7 um runner Diatome and the fatal shooting of William K. | Millikin, its engine | Men of the Coast Guard Cutter 804, also known as the T reported they geized 289 s of liquor and 10 jugs of rum on ths Diatome after a chase 10 miles to sea off the Ventura Coast McNabb's_orders were issued vester- fter Capt. David J and C. Meore of the Diatome had brund over to trial under $2,500 ge of v I cut 1 said they believed et which killed nd the three- R, Mamifort Boatswain C. A. T! the cutter, testified ordered’ machine gun fire directed into the engine room of the “suspicious t" after it paid no attention to g shots. | BAR TEST DATES SET e | June 18 to 20 Announced for Ex-| amination at G. U. Bar examinations will be held Thurs- | day, Priday and Saturday, June 18, 19 and 20, at the law department of | Georgetown University, 506 E street, ac- | cording t» an anncuncement posted by | John Paul Earnest. chairman of the | Examinin | be filed with the | preme Court not | said F lled | of hearing was hysterical Envoy to Belgium 111 With Sore Foot Agrees With Dawes A quick response to Ambas- sador Dawes' opinion that di- plomacy is “easy on the brain, but_heil on the feet” came yes- terday from a fellow diplomat. Hugh Gibson, Ambassador to Belgium, also a guest at the White House, has a very sore foot. He clipped the Dawes state- ment from a newspaper, drew & skull and crossbones on it, and tacked it to Dawes' door. President Hoover enjoyed the explosive reply of the ~Ambas- sador to the Court of St. James. FISHBEIN SAYS FLYING FAILS TO CURE DEAF Editor of Medical Journal Dis- counts Theory Sudden Drop Is Beneficial. » By the Associated Press CHICAGO, June 5.—Dr. Morris Fish- in, editor of the American Medical Ascociation Journal said that airplane rides did little or nothing to aid the deaf to recover their hearing. “Alrplane rides for the healing of deafness,” h told the American Federa- tion of O ns for the Hard of g, * lted only in the rom severe bein explained that during the World War some one conceived the idea that a sudden drop in an air- plane would aid in the recovery of hearing. Persons, he said, whose loss that, is. did not hear because they did not want t might be aided by the airplane treat- ment through fatth, just as they would be helped through faith in any other treatment. But children, he said. do not suffer from that type of deafness. and there- fore could not be aided through faith. He said he had received clippings re counting the deaths in airplane ace dents of several children annually whose parents were trying out the air- plane theory. An ancient Roman catapult was used during recent military Rushmoor, England. Q‘ “Rabbit in a Nest” Place half a pear on lettuce. Arrange an extra section of pear for a head, and deco- rate with blanched almonds g for ears, cloves for eyes and fi nose. Arrange marshmallow for tail. Serve with Bestf Foods Mayonnaise. ‘MVER say anything about it . . . but certain husbands like salads (!) These healthful tenden- cies should have daily encouragement. A new experience awaits you both, when you taste your first salad . . . with Best Foods Mayonnaise. Even jaded appetites eagerly respond to salads served with Best Foods Mayonnaise. Its extra tangy-smoothness makes an instant hit with men! Best Fods MAYONNAISE Distributor: GOOD DISTRIBUTORS, Inc. #8600 Maryland Ave. S.W., Washington, D. C. l ment's Fine Arts Committee,’ | der_savs. THE EVENING President Niceto Alcala Zamora ex- SPAIN ACTS TO GUARD HISTORIC PROPERTY |sjaing? thet ine decree was not de. | signed against the church or private citizens, but was simply “a means of affordini Spain's artistic wealth a much needes protection by the state.” the or- Decree Forbids Sale or Altering Churches and Private Castles Without Consent. FACES MURDER CHARGE ‘Arruted for Housebreaking, Man| Held for Atlanta Police. Wanted in Atlanta on a charge of murder, John Sampson, colored, alias | Johnnie Smith, was held without bond | when arraigned yesterday on a charge ic( housebreaking before Police Court Judge John P. McMahon. No action will be taken on the house- | breaking charge until Assistant District | | Attorney Michael Keogh can confer with | Georgia authorities. Sampson probably will be tried in Atlanta first, Keogh | MADRID, June § (#)—The govern- ment issued & decree today declaring that many eathedrals and churches as well as a number of private castles, including properties of former King Alfonso, are “historic and artistic monu- ments belonging to the nation’s artistic treasures.” ‘The order places approximately 1,600 such buildings under control of 'the | Pine Arts Committee of the Ministry of Education. It was explained that the decree does not mean nationalization or seizure of church poperty. Actual ownership con- | said. tinues in the hands of the church or | He was arrested for breaking into a private citizens, but these ‘national | tailor shop at 737 Fourth street south- monuments cannot be disposed of or | east. Police sald he took several articles altered without approval of the govern- 'of clothing. h 4 4 v VvV A big, important, sensational bookl! — William Allen White THE AMERICAN BLACK CHAMBER By HERBERT O. YARDLEY Harry Hansen says in N. Y. World-Telegram: — Fiction may be thrilling, but fact, when lucidly told, can give you the creeps. “The American Black Chamber,” written to tell the world how the American government decoded the secret communications of its enemies and friends, has suspense, all the excitement of the chase, climax and denouement. To me, Yardley is nothing short of a living Sherlock Holmes. A B B | $350 Bobbs-Merrill i aln o maneuvers at,| A 7t | 2 STAR, WASHINGTON, Pi €, JUNE 5, CURTIS IS WATCHING POLITICS IN KANSAS Non-Committal on Candidacy for Re-Election—May Run for Senate. FRIDAY, 1931. tion untll next Winter,” he said in re- sponse to queries as to whether he would be a candidate for the Repub- lican nomination for the Senate seat rnow occupied by a Democrat, Senator Ge’l(!‘l;‘e hllc0|fll. . The grizzled campaigner expects to travel over the State during his visit. Whipping Left to Teachers. When a motion “to consider the ques- tion of the urgent necessity of abolish- ing corporal punishment in the schools” was placed before the school board of Edinburgh, Scotland, recently, it was voted down. The sense of the members was that they should leave the matter to “the good will and good sense” of the By the Associated Press. TOPEKA, Kans, June 4.—Vice President Curtis returned home yester- day for a month's survey of the political situation in Kansas before deciding whether he will seek another vice presi- dential term or his old seat in the Senate. “I won't be able to answer that ques- TO MIDDLE WEST CITIES ONE FARE and HALF for the ROUND TRIP 30-DAY LIMIT-—- Stop-overs permitted Tickets good on all trains Saturdays, all summer through September, to points on Clleuibelke and Ohio Railway west of Huntington, W. Va., and to points on connecting lines. Pullman accommodations available. ROUND TRIP FARES $30.23 CHICAGO .841.67 $35.58 ST. 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