Evening Star Newspaper, August 14, 1931, Page 2

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DOAK MAKES PLEA FOR CO-OPERATION Cites Small Industries as Example of Personnel Understanding. By the Associated Press. SILVER BAY, N. Y, August 14— A plea for co-operation and under. standing between employer and em- loye in these “trying times” from ecretary of Labor W. N. Doak was read to the Smaller Industries Con- ference today. “Men and management engaged in any line of business,” the Secretary gaia, “are primarily actuated by the desire for personal gain. This desire, however, in our enlighteried day, must be modified by the persondl respect | which each group owes to the other. 'THE -EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Figure in Cuban Revolt DELEGATE IN UNITED STATES OF REVOLUTIONARY JUNTA. “The returns for service may be, K designated as profits or earnings; but | [ any commercial business must show | satisfactory finantial returns if it is to exist and advance and otherwise fill its proper place in the industrial or business ficld, When contented and satisfled workers are allied with fal dealing end considerate employers thé | eombination i8 an unbeatable one.” Secretary Doak emphasized the valus | of the intimate personnel relation that | exists in the small plants, of which there are nearly 200,000 in the Nation. “From my own observations,” he con- tinued, “and through dependable infor- mation which steadily reaches me from accurate sources, T am firmly convinced that olir most prosperous commercial, mercentile and manufacturing con- cerns, during all periods, and especially during the trying times through which we are now passing, are those which maintain & . personnel understanding with their employes, and .thus are able to avoid the engendering of differénces and disputes, which, when matured, would mean the stoppage of wofk and possible loss in pay and profits. “The advantage gained, the economies enumerated, the patronage secuted, the peace of mind t prevails—all these are dollars and cents when harmony, good will and active co-operation be- | tween men and management exist as the result of their moral industrial com- pact to produce in peace and concert and to banish ons, fears and | prejudices at the place where their com- | mon interests are so deeply concerned.” COTTON PROPOSAL SEEMS DOOMED BY GOVERNORS’ STAND| ed_From First Page.) n's a pound for cotton and $1 & ushel for wheat. + offers from Germany cf stzbilization 2 failure of its rted offer for 22,000,000 heat, and it is dcubted here if any ch offer actually will be made. An offer from the Brazilian ent to exchange surplus coffee col olled by'it for Farm Board stabiliza. lon wheat, it was learned today, has n tucked away in the board’s files jor several months. The offer, it was id, had not been carisidered for some ime. George S. Milnot, ‘president and eneral manager of the Grain Stabiliza- jon Corporation of Ohicago, has had tharge of the discussions. The coffee offer, Chairman Stone d, was only one of many received on number of commodistes during the t sixamonths. $i BLANTON RAPS PROPOSAL. s Not Fools Enough te Plow Up Cotton, He Says. fe | Were iim) e farmers in R. DOMINGO MENDEZ CAPOTE, who is the general delegate in the United States of the revolutionary junta of Cuba. Dr. curou. photo- graphed Wednesday in New York City, denied “emphatically” that he was “president of the Cuban revolution” and that ‘was the head of a future provisional government in Ouba. * the revolution has succeeded, it will designate a provisional government and ar elections will follow,” he said. Dr. Capote has been identified with polities in hhpegmtry ARGER DRY ARMY B SANTA CLARA LARGER DRY ARMY RESULTS REVEALED" BATTLE RUMORED More Cases and Fines Are Shown for First Month Machado, Reported as Ne- gotiating Truce of Big Drive. By the Associated Press. (Continued From First Page) The first month's work by the biggest | Federal dry sfmy in history was fe-|in Santa Clara province. A train of ported today by Pmmu%m Bureau | 25 cars was sent from here to Ma- to have produced more, et and | tansas, Lo carry a force of three com- better cases than did the smal | panies of infantry and two machine in the corresponding month of July last gun detachments from that province year. into Santa Clara. Ana newspa- It was disclosed that Federal agents pers were enjoined b vernment engineered 6,623 cases in which arrests | order against carrying re) were made, that 5,003 mien were of-| movements. dered held by commissipners and that 1,130 jail sentences totaling 452 years| TRUCE DISCUSSION DENIED. were imposed, along Wwith 1471 fines g aggregating $221,165. Prohibition Difector Woodcock, how. | ever, was chary of plaeing much | 'eTt upon the eour figutes produced | his his statistical division. | More Jall Sentences. “It's true” he said, “that we m— duced more cases this July than \ | “The only le between Bbut 1ts.a little 00 early to make definite | gnyernment and the revolutionists comment. The most significant thing | that Machado and Congress announce .m.léhz:‘ ':nmm number of jail sen- | their resignations and turn the power "We Tike 1o seume that the ug.‘::"r&: to the revolutionary junta,” he Wwere more important an ter made,| ‘He predicted that the whole island But We can't tell definitely yet. | would be in ferment within a few days. The Federal dry chief pointed out | "~ The revolt, he sald, Was not led by a that although a greater number of fines | single leader, but by many leaders of posed this July than last, the | ghility and education. total of all fines was not as great. In| "yf ‘guccessful, he added, the rebels contrast, however, he indicated the| would name a provisional President. 1,139 jail sentences as against the 857 | He personally is hot after that honor, for July, 1930. te said. He promised that no foreigners Still another favorable factor, he sald, | {n Cuba would suffér as a result of the Cuban Rebels Intent Machado Out, Dr. Capote Says. NEW YORK, August 14 Domingo-Mendez Capote, head of the Cuban rebels junta in New York, today denied rebel leaders were discussing a truce with President Machado. erop Bos- of Cote Pt~ 1 of ithe Federal Farm Board that thern planters destroy one-third of their cot- | flop.crop. i .The Post quotes Thoron &s saying: “If these gentiemen of the eral | Farm Board wish to improve the condi- tion of the cotton farmer and help to- ward the rehabilitation of the cotton | manufacturing industry, they will cease predicting disaster, for that is a sure way of bringing it about, and cease dealing in fu‘ures on the long side and only on the short side in the case they consider that operation an outlet for the cotton they have or expect to have 28, he BOSTON, August 14 (. Post pays that Yara Tooron nl::‘m Associfition cloed, 1o & siatement, (he pr was the fact that only 19,654 Te- | sevolt, at the | ta Carmen Mendieta, daughter with 23, 8t the of Col. Carlés Mendieta, one of the mé last year whs‘tn of the ub'ésfwlw s betng sought government forces, 3 iy Setmies Lower. + | Men e, "and his daughter, The showsd the seizute of | genorita Bare Mender Capote, i the #tills during the month totaled l.'lz:,!m of the junta in New York. 8s sgalust 1923, the belzure of beer | " . test desite is to take up arms fermenters, 1, ;- 2599; the | ong fl.fl: with the revolutionists” she selsure of 895,61 6f beer and “But I cannot enter Cuba.” re $9,414 gallons of 1x inst 696,351 m\ofll of ‘beer In:m;;! 4 gallons of | 0r. However, & ‘number ng‘ p;r- AMEHICANS SEEK CUBAN manent injunctiens was shown, the fig- ' e heiny 430 againgt 306, wnie s | WIRE AND RADIO SERVICES similar increase was indicated in the | seizure of 898 automobiles and boats | against 727 duritg July, 1930 | Smiling slightly, the prohibition di- rector told of the seizure of 111 stills during the month in Maryland, where he formerly was United States attorney. “It appears,” he said, “that my own home State is way ahead of any other | in the number of stills it offered for seizure.” Reports to the Commerce Department from Commercial Attache erick Todd at Havana said negotiations for the sale of the Cuban government’s | telegraph and radio system to private | American interests are reported in the Cuban press. A detailed report of the Cuban gov- | ernment properties is now being pre- pared by the government. receipts of the government - on Forcing | (#).—Dr. | SHIP REPORTS BODY MAY BE CRAMER'S |Corpse Dressed Like Flyer| Sighted Off Shetland Islands. | By the Associated Press. HAUGESUND, Norway, August 14— Whether or not the body of an airman sighted off the Shetland Islands was that of Parker Cramer or his radio op- | erator, missing since Sunday on s flight to Copenhagen, was the subject of spec- ulation today. | The master of the Norwegian steamer | Sjoeglimt, which arrived yesterday, re- | ported that his crew had noticed & body | clothed in what appeated to be flying togs floating west of the island of Foula Sunday afternoon. Foula is located sbout 20 miles west of the Shetland Islands. Battered by heavy storms, the steam- er had run into the lee of the Shet- lands when the discovery was made, he sald, but there was no opportunity to recover the body. The crew was of the opinion it might have been Cramer or Oliver Pacquette, his companion. Left Sunday Morning. The airmen left the Shetlands Sun- day morning on the final stage of their | flight across Canada, Greenland and | the North Bea to chart an airmail route | for American aviation interests. Their | radio signals were heard that after- noon, but no trace of them has been found by rescue expeditions Capt. Joergensen, master of the ship, | said a\e body was sighted Sunday after- | noon at 4 o'clock 20 or 30 nautical | miles Northwest of the Shetland | Islands. The ship wes on & southwest course and was bucking a strong head - | current. Two seamen called out that a corpse was drifting in the sea, he said. Several others also saw the body pass the steamer only & few meters away. It was etanding erect in ‘whves. Face Not Seen. It was not possible to see the face | | as the body was leaning forward, he | | sald. ‘The clothes resembled overalls| of & light tan or greyish color, perhéps | an_aviator's suit. | The captein sald if Oramer had | stayed on an easterly course toward | | Copenhagen this body could not have | been his because it could not have drifted that far north and west from the time that the fiyers took off from | the Shetlands. But if he had attempted | to return to the islands, he said, missed | his landing place and fallen with the plane there was a possibility it was | either his body or that of his radio | operator, DENY BODY IS CRAMER'S, | Backers of Flight Say Flyer Not Wear- ing Flying Togs. CLEVELAND, August 14. (#)—Of- ficials of the Transamerican Alr Lines | said the body of a man reported seen floating near the Shetland Islands | probably was not that of either Parker BA Cramer or Oliver Pacquette, missing | transarctic fiyers, if it were dressed A i | | 70 SoF of the lines, which backed | the fisght, said the men wore ordinary | street clothes. | Hope was still expressed by the offi- [ ctals, who clung to the possibility that weu were safe on some Temote I in the Northern watérs of on | | some vessel without wireless Which 1 | yet to make shote. | They do not plan to abandon hoj until either the bodies or the wreckage | of the plane are picked up and identi- | fled. | |COL. SHIELDS’ FUNERAL | { AT ARLINGTON MONDAY | Army Medical Corps Officer Who | Died in San Francisco Was Georgian. Funeral services will be held in Ar- | lington Cemetery Mohday morning for Lieut. Col. William . Bhields, Army | Medical Corps, who died in Ban Fran- | cisco on August 6. | |~ Col. Shields wes born at Washington, | Ga., on January 22, 1882, and entered the Army Medical Ccrps as a first lieutenant in June, 1909. He had served here in the Surgeon General’s office, at the Army Medical School and as execu- | tive officer in the attending sutgeon’s | office. He also served in the Philip-| pines, at Columbus Barracks, Ohlo; Gal- | veston, "New York City, Atlanta, Chi- | ongo, San Prancisco and Denver. | ring the Wcrld War he served as | | & leutenant colonel in the National | | Army and was appointed to the same | | grade in the Regular establishment in | une, 1929. | IR NS Garden Asked to Sing. PARIS, August 14 (#)—Mary Glrflenf | heave the surface of the sea somewhere | | and du ARMY AGAIN FAILS TO SINK MT. SHASTA Planes Expected to Try Once More Tomorrow to De- stroy Target. (Continued From First Page.) FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1931.° WASHINGTON COMMEMORATIVE STAMP SERIES DIES FINISHED Twelve Portraits of “Father of Country™ to Decorate Bicentennial Mail Engraved " on Steel for Issue. By the Associated Press. Dies were finished today Post Office Department's most pre- tentious commemorative stamp series seription of the maneuvers. Aboard the Coast Guard cutter Carrabasset Mayo told of the fieet which surrounded the doomed freighter. ‘There was another cutter and gnn of small patrol boats standing by to aid any of the land- plane fiyers who might be forced down on the surface of the choppy sea. In the air was the dirigible T-71 and & p of at least six observing airplanes. All the Aty bombers had to do was spot the fleet and the target was theirs. At 11:50 a.m. the motors of the ad- vance guard of the nine bambers was heard by the men aboard Mt and the announcer declared they were .35 minutes late. That time had permitted the wind to carry away the smoke screen which other planes had laid about the freighter. he said, in a theoretical effort to “blind” the ship's anti-aircraft batteries. First Bomb Missed. At 11:58 a.m. the first bomb hurtled out of the wallowing hulk. The bomb, & 100- pounder, released from an altitude of 6,000 fest, according to the radio an- nouncer, !Eluhed into the sea “a few feet” off the Mount Shasta's starboard bow. The detonation of the explosive was picked up by the microphone and carried the length of the land. The second bomb landed to port of the target. The third hit the sea likewise, but Mayo failed to say where in relation o its intended target. The next bomb exploded in midair, Mayo explaining it detonated | prematurely. The first hit of the maneuver landed five minutes after the first bomb was released and was the six missile to be released at the ship. It crashed onto the Mount Shasta's forward deck just aft the stem. Some plating was ripped up, Mayo 3 And so the bombing went, as Mayo described it over the air. The seventh struck quarter on the missed off the A Mayo declared, “missed a mile.” One Direct Hit. By 12:12 p.m. the fifst maneuver was | over. The nine bombers had come over | the Mount Shasta in si dropping & 100 then wa$ one 3 and one premature explosi The fiext Maneuver, acc toupe of three Mayo, was & bombing in Three planes Were o fiy over the vessel | Asl at once, each releasing & 100-pound bomb. The first salvo of three missed | the vessel. ‘The third salvo, acterding to Mayo, | was & “dud.” It plunged into the water ' and, although Mayo waited for it to | near the old ship, nothing happened. Drop 300-Pound Bombs. | At 12:30 o'clock Mayo reported the dropping of the first 300-pound bombs. These, too, he said, were dropped in salvos of three. The first salvo, ac- cording to his aceount, struck close in | sboard the Mount Shasta’s port bow. | ISia: The detonation, he sald, was terrific and “must have torn a gaping hole in m‘-t #hip's plating about on the water | .. | The second salvo of 300-pounders missed off the starboard bow, but the| third salvo struck near the waterline | again and convineed Mayo that the| vessel had suffered damage. He re-| ported. however, that inspection of the ship throush binoculars falled to reveal | any signs of vital hurt. | And $0 othet alves were dropped without spectacular effect. Mayo was convinced, however, that an occasional | bombd landed nhear enough to the vessel to ¢ause waterline damage to her| plating. At 12:27 pm. six planes flew over mped as many bombs at the target. A terrific detonation under the Mount Shasta’s counter, he reported, seemed to Ift the old vessel's stern perceptibly out of the water and thrust her bow forward. Ship Bagins to Settle. ‘Three minutes later Mayo declared the old ship “seems to be thus convinéing him she had suffered froth the waterline near-hits and probably from the hit off the stern. Col. Bey Kirtland, eommanding Lang- ley Fleld, yesterday declined naval as- sistance in loeating the doomed ship. David 8. Ingalls, Aasistant Secretary of | the Navy for Aeronautics. had written | a letter to BSecretary of War Hurley g‘fliennx the assistance of Navy navi- ors. “The Army taught the Navy how to bomb ships,” Col. Kirtland stated, “and with any sort of visibility we ¢an lo- cate our target unalded Kirtland explained Tuesday's failure by saying that the bombing squadron set its course down the coast and then turned out to sea. “Had we struck stralght for the tar- get,” he said, “we would have found it.” English card players are wearin in the direction of the |ance. | capacity, more than 500 gallons. |posed round-the-world route beyond | Tokio. He said that following visits the 12 Washington portraits to rate 1932 Bicentennial vear mail. For two months the octupied the Government’s most artful makers of miniatures, John Eissler, Louis Scho- fleld and Clafence Bensing, portrait| engravers of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Under canopies of slanting glass, these artists sat in their cublieles, do- ing George Washington free hand on steel from famous paintings. Their through magn! [ steady, sure, although minutely- lines that must be magnified again their artistry to be appreciated. Skiliful Fingers. “It takes a thorough art training plul & high of manual dexterity,” he said. “And to_that must be added infinite patiencdd It's the kind of job you've got to love—and that's why you do it.” Yet Americans, ysually considered im- patient, have led the world in this most LINDY PREPARING FOR NOME TAKE-OFF TO KARAGIN ISLAND ttxmmm Page) After checking the engine he superin- tended the filling of the fuel tanks to On returning here he sald if the weather was all favorable they would start early today. He did not discuss in detail the pro- to Japanese and Chinese efties will fly by s to Europe, but did not diselose Wl their course would take them over Siberia or Southern 8. The Atlantic crossing will be by way of the Azores. Ambitions Fulfilled. In a joking mood announcing their possible take-off this already delayed 24 hours, said hi greal First, he seid, he wanted to learn to fiy, and second, he wanted to fly to Alaska. The course westward from heéte, air- men pointed out, will bé the first time has been made across the wa Lawrence Island to about 250 miles, will be longest om-: ter flight of the trip to Karagin On their flight westward Mrs. Lind- h will operw, & radlo direction fin and listen for signals from the St. Paul Naval snt:ol:hle?' addition to messages o progress. is & small isiand of voleanie origin, peopled only by a féew Russians and Japanese fishermen. Beyond there the stops will be at Petropaviosk, Nes muro and_Tokio. Th.l: gld familiar u’f:f“ of -4 oceanic fiyers-=poot vi ity—ground- ed Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh hlt:n(-- terday, 48 hours after they w. Almost from Point 3 & _half fallen in 24 hours pour down. inch of rain had and it contihued to Pair Entertained. Meanwhile Nomeites, who had pected they would be forced to crowd entertalnment for the fiying vacation- ers into one day, were y &t the opportunity to show the dberghs more of this famous gold camp. | The same conditions frustrated the two attempts recently cf Reg L. Robbins and Harold Jones, Texas flyers, to make & hon-stop refueling flight from Seattle to Tokio. ds afd fog.were preva- lent in this aréa, while sunshine awaited them at the end of their route. Unlike Robbins and Jones and other fiyers, the Lindberghs have no set schedule to fol- low and can take off and alight when- ever and whefever conditions demand. The Lindberghs were képt busy “see- ing the sights.” They were taken first to the gold fields where huge dredges dig up the great mineral deposits. An Eskimo race in Kyaks, an Eskimo “wolf dance,” blanket- and wrestling exhibitions by the natives conclutied the rogram. ‘The Lindberghs were the guests of territorial Senator and Mrs. Fred J. Lomen at an Alaskan dinner cf foast ;| oyear-cnd Jem eondition. ved | B p portrait makers find plen uwunnunfmthwm,benflv.lz klhfilt connoisseurs, the stamp col- “We know their magnifying glasses | will not miss & line we make,” was the WAy he expressed it. 2 Series Listed. ‘The collectors, of course, will be first on .the trail of the Wi serles, One-half ‘Wilson Peale minia- Museum; E. L DOHENY ILL: STROKE IS DENIED 0il Magnate Acquitted Here of $100,000 Bribe Is in Serious Condition. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, August 14.—Edward | L. Doheny, multi-millionsire ofl man, was reported seriously il today, but members of his family would make %o statement. | Doheny's personal physician, Dr. L. G. Visscher, said he ‘would consult the oil man’s family regarding the issuance of a statement and until then he would not comment on his patient’s condition. He did, however, deny that Doheny, who is 75 vears of age, had suffered a paralytic stroke. It was not revealed whether Doheny Le¢ | was a patient in his Los Angeles home measurem .': 1( 98 by CI -y ent ‘harles B. J. P. Saint Memim, owned by J. C. nre“'vnl:.. Brooklyn, N. Y.. §-cent, adapted from W. Williams 1794 portrait for Masonfc Lodge, lehcl:nl:dr?, Va. ,Sull owned b lodfe: -cent, from t - trait in Metropolitan Iun;u\. et HELD IN SHOOTING OF STATE SENATOR 552 or at his nearby Beverly Hills estate. Doheny was sacquitted by the Dis- trict of Columbia Oourt in 1920 of having offered a $100,000 bribe to Al- Yon | New Mexico State Prisoh at Santa Fe. MRS. FALL IN BITTER MOOD. and B il evil-min where no Woman Secretary Arrested iz in Gotham Apartment on Assault Charge. 2y | By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, August 14.—Roy Yates, New Jersey State Senator from Passaic | Fll County, was shot and seriously wounded early today In an apartment at 201 West Elghty-ninth street. He was taken to a hospital and Miss Ruth Jayne, found in the seme apartment, was questioned by poliee. Miss Jayne, who told police she was his secretary, was ordered held on charge of felonious assault. She denied knowledge of how the Senator had been shot or what led to the The was notified by Miss lephone at 1 o'clock this t a shooting had occurred An ambulance was doetor found the tor in a serious Woman Declared Bruieed. Police, who said they were not notified of the shooting until three hours after Yates was taken to the hospital, found & pistol in & courtyard in the rear of found that two bull the bedroom wall. ‘wall. Inve tlon to that time had pointed to there having been "‘,';r"'-.-l “gn only one 3 ler, the bulance surgeon, thab Miss Jaynes heck i IAck and blue marks, and that she told hilm she esuld remem exoept tnnm‘ one had grabbed her by the sad she had heard no shot and h?ngfi: uvnm&pu‘kn%wwedn A eraton was Feftormd on Tates on Yai #t the , o g r::fl:l'm after he was re. room doctors said he was m\lgl:“ comfortably. Yates Heads Finance Groups. PA’ te T. Yates, ghot and wounded today in a New York -g:mm. is vict president of the n Ttust Co. of Paterson and vice president of the Investing Corporation f of New York. He was York City elubs. Senator tes s married and has N, N. J, August 18 ()— | fre S — U. S. FLYERS FACE JAPAN INDICTMENT FOR PHOTOGRAPHS (Continued From First Page. ing the developed motion pictures, no 1 statement ever was m-fi The Tokio Asahi sald “fl of film showed what was believed by war de- partment officials to be_pictutes of for- tified areas, while other pers sald the pictures were taken at such great height as to make them sible to ish. "The ‘case aticted | this country. Delega and petitions were made to the government ministries by gtflm del gations, demanding that no leniehey be mMneflefin officials took steps to aid ites Navy the fleet off Chefoo, China, flew over hile cruibing, and the wi , 11 bassy in Toki the State | ment said today that the Angmm | fiyers, Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Hern« don, jr., appear to have made a good impression personally on the Japanese e. | The report added that the two fi held for fyi in Japan wil it authority and for taking pictures of fortified territory, did not seem to have created any personal resentment against m. The embassy said the fiyers weuld be brought to trial before a magistrate. CASTLE'S AID SOUGHT. ALBANY, N. Y, August 14 (P).—W. W. PFarley. real estate operator and for- mer New York State Democratic chair- man, sought the aid of the United States Department of State today in behalf of his son-in-law, Hugh Herndon, jr.. and | Herndon’s companion, Clyde Pangborn, for sale * * * and they will abandon the business of dealing either in buy- ers’ or sellers' options, leaving that to the ordinary merchant. “What is a rational plan may be a debatable subject, but holding the cot- ton off the market for another year only | prolongs the uncertainty and postpones | the return to normal economic condi- | 'MAN IS MUTILATED, Trance Drawings Create Sensation | 3 SLASHERS SOUGHT Gross ited telegraph system for the fiscal \WILLIAM H. DEAN FREED | opersiaa tsegrabn sysiam, o e fcai IN JAYNES DEATH QUIZ|pirea with 3635124 1n the preceding Son of U. B. Chamber Offictal Is| has been asked to open the new season | monocles since it was discovered tha of the opera comigue at the National| holding one in place masks the ex- Theater October in “Pelleas nnflinr«dm and helps to acquire a poker Melisande.” She has not yet repiled. | face. American aviators under surveillance in Japan charged with having photo- graphed Japanese fortifications. Mr, Farley telepboned to United States Senator Robert Wagner of New York City and obtained his to try to_induce Assistant Secretary of State Castle to act in the fiyers' behalf. Mr. Farley also made it known that Herndon's representatives in New York will go to Washington to se¢ what can be_done. Mrs. Herndon receives a cable daily from her husband, who married her just before his transatlantic Sight. EPLACES SLADEN Maj. Gen. Hanson E. Ely, command- ing the 2d Corps Area at Governors Island, N. Y. has been detailed as & member of the Army Classification Board, in session here He replaces Maj. Gen. Fred W. BSladen, former commander of the 3d Corps ; Lieut. Col. R. P. Palmer, Addjuhm 20 inn in l;: Fight. ITZEMOE, Germany, August 14 (.| ~Twenty men were hurt last night in | & Street fight between National Social- ists and & Reichsbanner Police A 46. lm%mtx st ln \.l\x;: o . St N 5] st. .e. | Jumes T Trew. 6. 404 Ne Rire | o Hampshire gar‘!:r 8. Davis, 1. H. » B RS BLYR Wife of Injured Man Will Be Grilled in Hagersto: Assault. BERLIN MARVELS AT WORK OF STRANGE PAINTER. wny ey, b1, f - Hos- | g A S e fihur J. Butke, 42. Walter Reed nnvi R M a8 Lollar, 87, Gallinger Hospital here in a having been stabbed in the by one of the three men, the of two | holding him. | It Is the third attack made u Watson, whose previous stoties tacks the police were reluctant to believe. | G ISSUED at- | in place of Maj. R. L. Eichelberger. Cleared of Suepicion in Fatal | ] tions | 3 U3¢ thay ahouid Adutale 90 iguigete | SROOHNE 28 Oarden T Shoppe. | the. ition at the rate of 25,000 bales , Willlam Harper Dean, 21, son of & s ek and keep at it, and keep out | United States Chamber of Commerce of such & mess for the future, we would | official, was at lberty today after hav-| know whet to expeot and be able to ing been cleared of all suspieion in con- | sdjust our business accordingly.” | nection with the fatal shooting of Mrs. s | Eitpabeth Jaynes : HIGHER CONSUMPTION NEED. i Mge‘;;g mlfl beenm m{flh'(m-o"u;‘; y s 5 | Speeisl m'““'-’-‘;;:'fl Nk o . 7= 4 ; 5 3 | HAGERSTOWN, Md., August 14— Enoreased Use of Cotton Offieials “':‘h n;;‘ela'r—ow c:l:' :‘nl x S{mp- o::lumor > . : # | Authorities vesterday wm“"n’:-rch Proposals Vain, ;H,,,pml'. was nlenm" 'h" ht. ’ ; : . {for three men named Charles I.| £ ©, August 14 (#.— | Visit o Qallinger had been the result x . 1 . 3 b ] L‘.‘.“w':t.,'“‘a?"“"' and will 'S¢ the Assobiation for the In- | Of several alleged attémpts at sulcide 5 : 3 ) ; 1 B | learn what she creased Use of Cotton yesterday said | last week. g . . none of the remedies being proposed for | MIS. Bith Magruder Dodsworth, 30, the present cotton situation “can be|Of 132 M strest still is being held for wholly effective unless, and until, there | investigation in connection with the s sn increased consumption of cotton CAse. products.® A m general head- e Bl its mind n products ) iation regarding aproved “if a1l of the energies and efforts that are being devoted to trying to find some other way out were being spent in se- n can be i STORM WARNIN Caution Advised Ships by Miami Meterologist. MIAMI, Fla, August 14 (P —Rich- | ard W. Gray, Government meteorolo- gist here, sald today he had received However, Wednesday night's attack was witnessed by neighbors, who saw his assallants flee after stabbing Watson. | FATAL CRASH DRIVER | H pon ¢ Barnes. 7 D st s.w, of et # S el i 30, ¥l D et = e = == e i i i WHAT OF OUR WAR VETERANS? curing & greiter consumption of eotton produfts there would be, we believe, an the following storm warning “Advisory 10:30 a.m. tropical disturd- : HELD T0 GRAND ]URY improvement in existing conditions at an ence central about latitude 18 degrees = ; | early date. The supply of cotton on 30 minutes end longltude 80 degrees s « | hand and in sight must be used up and | and 30 minUtes apparently moving Leslie Blackmer, 20, Bound Overl“ by Inquest Into Death of | the whole South should organise to use west-northwestward about 12 miles 4 as quickly as possibie.” E hour, )!.! :&twm.u&u&k:‘md com Eon 2 s # | Vessels 1o Ha b F. : Carter Downing, 8. | A World War Veteran i : @ May Get $100 a Month for the Same Disability AT BAND CONCERT. i By the United States Army m:j { ot: | Compensation to men who served in the war against Germany may reach a4 high as $350 & month, against & maximum of $125 for prior wars. evening at the United States C: {7:30 o'elock. am The Adjustment of These Inequalitice Is Expected to Furnish ter Debate in rlo‘ Next Session of Congress A Civil War Veteran Could Get Compensation of Only $40 a Month for Total Deafness Dar. V‘“ma%. and Rhode Island avenue northeast, 8 pm 1 .Latann Py { nee, S!. Margaret’s Parish Hall ’mnn.n Beat Fleasant, Md. 9 pm. | FUTURE. 302 Bast Capitol street ites Tre Garcenihs, ‘cle, tomor- o ] mi Tawn fete, k. 8

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