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COOLIDGE'S UNCLE DEAD IN VERMONT John Wilder Gained Fame Late in Life as Old-Time Fiddler. . BY EDWARD J. KELLEY. PLYMOUTH, Vt., September 19 (#). ~“Uncle John"” Wilder, fiddler, farmer and uncle of a President, died today in his home at the center of this little town which gave a Chief Executive to the Nation. Births and deaths are few in this hamlet of 33 souls in Plymouth Town- ship, but since 1920 the deaths have become a matter of interest to the world outside, since most of the de- ceased have been in some way related to Calvin Coolidge. So when “Uncle John” breathed his last today the general storc became the focus for telephone calls, flurries of which have disturbed the quiet of Miss Florence Cilley on numerous occasions slnoel Mr. Coolidge first became a na- tional figure. Between trips to that section of her store serving as a post office and out past the big stove in the center to wait on customers, Miss Cilley answersd the telephone to confirm the death of “Uncle John.” Married 61 Years Ago. Alone in the little farmhouse, Mrs. Wilder sat throughout the day accepi- ing the condolences of neighbors c.¥he death of the manhshe hM;‘mln'lcd 61 ars ago when John was 24. ”Bercr%: her marriage she was Miss Gratia Moor and she could recall the day she had told “Uncle John” that her sister, Mrs. John OCoolidge, had become & mother and the son was to be called Calvin. That was in the days when “Uncle John” worked hard at his farming and at night played on his fiddle to entertain her and her friends, for John Wilder was as good & fiddler as there was hereabouts in those days. Years later Mrs. Wilder encouraged her husband when he organized the Wilder Quadrille Band and played for dances in Plymouth and nearby town# end villages. His pride was a violin which was then close to 100 years old. The band functioned for 10 years and then “Uncle John" devoted all his time farmin wln 192fighe decided to quit farming end spend the remainder of his Jife in the quietude of his native village, but fate was just steering him into courses he never would have believed he would take. Played for Henry Ford. It was at this time that old-time fddlers took the fancy of the sophisti- cates beyond the Vermont hills. lie” Dunham of Maine came mw'?mm- inence and Plymouth advanced “Uncle John” as & er to defend its standards st the encroachment of the Maine fiddler. Wilder was a man of few words and when he came to Boston and heard “Mellie” play his ‘only comment was, “Lots better lers anywhere.” “yl;m:le John” performed for the Bos- ton folks on the stage of a theater and then came an invitation to play y which Dlmh!mu::d ;;l:xm for the Gov- ernor a short e fore. The stage called and “Uncle John”| He toured larg Sk “Coolidge.® A Wasbington the 3 e “home folks” visited Mr. and Mrs. Cool- idge at the White House. Returned to Old Home. this flare at fame and fortune, | After *Uncle John™ returned to Plymouth to | ToP¢ devote his attention to living the long| and peaceful life most of his friends| and relatives had lived in Vermont's hills. Monday he will be buried in the vil-| , close by the grave of the morning in the house just back of ‘where “Unée John” had lived his life. “BOSSY” GILLIS HELD AFTER STREET FIGHT President “Mel- | g PART OF U. S. CAVALRY THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., Old-Time Fiddler Dies | | 1 | 1 “UNCLE JOHN” WILDER. Mayor Jimmy Reach BY CHARLES ESTCOURT, JR. NEW YORK, September 19.—There has been a strange lack of resentment on the part’ of the proletariat at the social doings of Mayor Jimmy Walker on his European . He has been feted by people who resented Kings has obviously had just about the time of his life. The Europeans seem to think that | Jimmy is a swell person, with the phrase couched in the more delicate terms of their various languages, and this city is rather pleased. Walker's European tour reached its high-water mark, though there doesn't seem to _have been much water, when Dudley Fleld Malone, “New York law- yer,” according to the dispatches, in- troduced him at the American Club in London. ‘We remember, from years ago, Mr. Malone's appearance in a minor case in Jeferson Market Court. in behalf of an important client who had gotten into some kind of trouble. “Mr. Malone,” inquired a reporter, | who had just heard the famous attor- ney’s name during the hearing before the magistrate, “what are your in- itials?" 4 » “I have none?’ said Mr. Malone. “I am Dudley Field Malone.” Customs Ordeal for Mackays. The difficulties experienced at the | hands of*the customs men by Clarence | H. Mackay and his wife, the former | Anna Case, on their arrival from Eu- | were somewhat bewildering to all | concerned. ‘The millionaire president | of & telegraph company and his recent | bride, a former member of the Metro- | politan Opera Co., were held up for | nearly three hours while their baggege | was practically ransacked. That is a far cry from the good old days of not so many years ago when it ‘was easy to get free entry to the port. | Summer WALKER'S ESCAPADES ABROAD PLEASE THE “PROLETARIAT Fete& by People Who Represent Kings. . es High-Water Mark at American Club Dinner, London. Any one with & name in the world would simply walk off the ship, accompanied by his luggage and en by the bows of customs rs. We often wondered what they had in those great trunks and sult cases. ‘The Congressmen spoliled it, of course, making free entry something lik old distribution of seeds by the De- partment of Agriculture, and orders finally came out that no ome should have unusual privileges at the port. Knowing our customs men as we do, our guess is that the case of Mr. Mackay, who had declared everything, was one of those things intended to hit the front page and assure us about their fidelity to duty. Real Heat Effects. New York is just to after the hottest spell since 1894, or was it 1849? Just try riding in & new subway car, reeking with the smell of wet paint_and varnish and characteristic New York aromas on a stifling Septem-~ ber day, if you really want to know what a heat wave is like. Over in a very ritzy section of Long Island the 20-year-old son of a wealthy family was arrested one very warm day last week for strolling down the street clad in his underwear, and dad had to e have's with approy e have approval this that the ladies are showing more sense in their warm weather at- tire. A few years ago no woman would dare appear on Broadway. or Fifth avenue in the Summer unless she wore a dark dress or suit and, most likely, Summer furs. Last Summer, which was frigid compared with this one, the gels wore thin chiff of shoes and very little else. ‘This Summer in pastel sleeveless sports dresses, a great improvement over the flowered chiffons. (Copyright, 1931, by the ey T0 BE MECHANIZED First Regiment Will Be Organ- Mayor and Council Scuffie Over Turning Off Lights. By {he Associated Press. RT, Mass. September council, were arrested by State troopers tonight charged with disturbing the after an alleged scuffie over polit- differences. Mayor Gillis was returning from a municipal meeting, at which he had is- | sued flery criticism of the city council,! ‘when he met Twomey on a street cor- ner. They had words, which led to ac-| tion and the subsequent arrests. They | were held in the local police station| while bail was hurried to them. Mayor Gillis had ordered all lights in | the city turned out at 1 o'clock tomor- | X! row morning. The power is furnished | by the Haverhill Electric Light Co.,, of which Twomey is an employee, and the company tonight said it would not obey the mayor's edict. Twomey is & pos- sible candidate for mayor in the coming | elections. | TOBACCO PLANTS PUT 400 MORE TO WORK | prove—Better Retail Sales in Reserve District. BY the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va., BSeptember 19.— | Ranks of the unemployed have been! decreased by 400 men and women | added to the pay rolls of three tobaceo | manufacturing plants in the past| month. ! “The Americen Tobacco Co. has re- cently added 150 employes, the Con-| tigental Tobacco Co. has taken on 200 the cigarette branch of Larus & . Tobacco Co. has employed 50.| tt & Myers is operating at its 1 capacity, officials seid. | The Federal Reserve Bank reported | & better retail sales record for the fifth | district, inc'uding Virginia, the Csrc-; linas, West Virginia, Maryiand and the | District of Columbia, during the first | six months of the year than any other | Reserve district in the United States. THREE TAKEN IN RAID { BY & Staft Corressor The Star. - ! _UPPER_MARLBOR - e 19.—Accused of manesisticy eod lon of liquor, three , seized E; Pederal agents in a r:n;n:: -"m- lon still rear Ridge, St. Marys aumty‘ were released under $1,500 bond each by United States Commis- sloner J. Parran for hearing next Priday. The men gave their names as J Hammett of Ridge, Charles Smith of Scotland, Brnest Sparks of Jerome Al oo Spain is preparing to issu Botes bearing the Fepublicen nsigain ized at Camp, Knox After December 1. By the Associated Press. e The thud of galloping feet that used | to bear the Cavalry into action is to | be replaced by the purr of high-speed armored cars. ! The War Departthent’s new policy | of mechanizing & part of the Cavalry was ordered into effect yesterday. The first mechanized Cavalry will be organized at Camp Knox, Ky., some time after December 1. The experimental mechanized force | at Fort Eustis, Va., is to be ordered disbanded soon for removal to Camp noX. The total strength of the mechanized regiment will approximate 40 officers | and 700 enlisted men, plus an unde- termined number of mechanics and re- airmen. iz In addition to the one Cavalry regi- ment which is being motorized, there are 14 active regiments which still use horses. Popgs L Ty 34 HELD IN DRY RAIDS | IN NORFOLK SECTION Richmond Labor Conditions Im-| |Two Former Policemen Among Those Put Under Bond—Two Defendants Freed. By the Associated Press. s i NORFOLK, Va., September = result of raids by Federal prohibition officers yesterdsy and last night Nansemond, Surry and Norfolk Coun- ties and the city of Norfolk, 3¢ persons today were held under bond or in jail ~ ILLINOIS TO BUILD NEW PRISON FOR 600 $400,0600 Additional Buildings at Joliet Will lConsixt of Five Cell Dormitories. JOLIET, IIl, September 19—Plans for the immediate construction of a new prison housing 600 convicts were announced today by Warden Henry C. Hill at a conference with the Legisla- tive Commission on Prisons, Probations and Paroles. ‘The cost will be $400,000, and Warden Hill said construction would begin at once. ‘The new prison will consist of five cell dormitories. Bids will be taken only for the con- crete framework of the cells and, the rest of the work will be done by con- | victs. ‘The new prison, fourth the first step in & program of ega- tion of first offenders, the warden told | the legislators. In addition, it will re- lieve the overcrowded condition in both the old prison and at Stateville. IS TESTED IN ARRESTS | Wagers Permitted on One Arling- ton Downs Race—Two Are Charged. | B the Assoclated Press. ARLINGTON DOWNS, Tex.,'Septem- ber 19.—Legality of the option system of horse race speculation is expected to be determined in Texas as the result of two arrests made here today by of- In | ficers who -accepted the challenge of |W. T. Waggoner, millionaire horse | fancier, ‘Waggoner was host to 10,000 persons at a one-day program of seven races, and charges of violating the dry law against two others had been dismissed. Two former Norfolk policemen, “Billy” Wilkins and W. W. Lane, are among those put under bon. The Suffolk and Surry County raids netted 19 errests, including J. L. Chap. pel, Surry County farmer; L. O. Gwal- ney, Claremont farmer; Curtis Clark, Zuni; E. T. McClery, Suffolk white man, and Willie Rountree, Nansemond County farmer. Bail of $5,000 was de- manded for Rountree, the others rang- ing from $500 to $1,500. MAN CHARGES DESERTION Marlboro Suit Says Wife Left Sev- en Years After Wedding. By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. UPPER BORO. Md., September 19.—Charging his wife left him two days after their seventh wedding anni- , Claude M. Eavey yesterday sult in Circuit Court for a divnrgc‘ versary, filed trofit Mrs. Della Marie Eavey and Albert R. Hassall, the frime him July 8, 1927, | held at his $3,000,000 race coyrse here. | The Texas Thoroughbred Horse Breed- | ers” Association co-operated in the pro- | gram. |~ Bale of options on one race was per- | mitted by Waggoner, avowedly “to en- | able our law of s, if they desire so | to_do, to test this as to its validity.” | Dr. Leslie Coulter of Arlington, Tex., was arrested as an alleged purchaser of |an option and O. O. Franklin, Vernon, !'&x. attorney, was taken into custody as er. | ey Jesse Martin of | Fort Worth said he would file mis- | demeanor charges | men, all Monday against both anti‘race-track gambling law. of the Texas —————— BRIDGE CONTRACTS LET on dressess, & pair | h . in Jollet, is | /LINDBERGH OFFERS CHINESE FLOOD AID Places Plane at Disposal of Government-in Relieving Suffering. NANKING, China, (Sunday) (#).—Col. bergh has ment in the present flood em ‘The colonel said today he and S5 Feiping, bt their o an ping, buf ir mw wait until authorities . J. Heng. health board, regarding possible “':: of the ship. Chinese officials had made no reply. 3 By the Associated Press. Japan, rested at the American e late and described their joumeyem“ from Japan. ‘The colonel time to The Lindberghs’ plans include a tour of China by air, but just when and how they will make this tour was un- Lindbergh said he and Anne to visit several places in China, includ- ing Shanghal and Peiping, but he wanted the advice and assistance of the Chinese authorities before arrang- lng'n:he 3‘“ e e only certainty is that will He surmised the Siberian route nymbuk to America said. this late in the season probably would ébehmhnmsubla for a pontooned ma- e. Finds Flood Discouraging. The fiyer reported flooded Chinese areas over which he flew today as * discouraging.” Although the route did not traverse the Northern tion Committee were uj landing. He aligh on Lotus tead of on a wharf on River prepared for him. feared winds and currents in the ri and believed the lake a better place. ‘The dignitaries who awaited him at the wharf, however, found their way to him and brought him into the eity with undiminished enthusiasm. He at 3 pm. Time). Plane Overshoots Mark. (2 am. Eastern m“"g.tm porters he decided not to risk alighting on the Yangtze because the wind and the water currents were in treacher. ous. Gen. Huang of the Aviation Bu- reau exchanged apologies with the Colonel and formally welcomed the u:lngf:rwhsl‘ k“ ‘l.n tm‘):'omptu reception. us Lake is a picturesque body of water situated in thg folds of the near- by hills with a curving fourteenth cen- tury wall sheltering it on three sides. It was formerly Nanking’s gayest pleas- ure resort, al in flower boats on which the young bloods of the 1 g‘")m the clty's famous Sing rls., This gayety was abolished under the Nationalist regime, but scores of small | craft remain which were used in the greeting of the Lindberghs. The plane was sighted first over Nanking at 2:46 p.m. spproaching from the northwest, as it had slightly overshot the mark. An escort of three Chinese planes quickly ranged alongside and ahead. These ently zoomed low over the river to indicate to the visitor where e was supposed to land. Landing Scene Striking. Thrice, as the Lindbergh plane ge-red about to come down angtze, President Chiang Ka! Headquarters Band, which was of the reception arrangements whart, struck up uncertainly, cease as the plane roared off again. river was a striking scene the Lindbergh’s Yatsen, and brown-sailed junks were | in the distance, while four ocean liners | | were ranged alongside each other at| Pukow on the opposite river bank, WOMAN WHO KILLED YEOMAN FREE ON BAIL Coast Guardsman’s Wife Says She 8Shot Man as He Stood at Her Bedside. By the Associated Press. NEW LONDON, Conn. September 19.—Mrs. Bertha Pischer, 28, who early today shot and fatally wounded Prank- lin L. Swieg, 25, chief yeoman of the Coast Guard destroyer Tucker, was re- lj;ug{t mcti,f‘w ‘bond c:hen arraigned | y Court on & cha man- bll_llighuh e ‘ e case was continued until next Saturday pending further investiga- tion by Coroner Edward G. McKay. Mrs. Fischer, whose husband 1s first-class motor | sty in the Gcas Balt machin t Guare - | more, told police she shot tge.:nm :l he stood alongside her bed after break- ing into her cottage through a win- dow. The cottage is in the rear of a three-story apartment house, middle floor of which Swieg 1 his wife and 2-year-old daughter, WALKER WINS SHIP POOL 8. 5. BREMEN, September 19 (#).— In spite of rough weather and a touch of seasickness, Mayor James J. Walker of New York tonight had what he de~ | scribed as his first break of luck on his homeward journey by winning the rmlwon the ship’s run, amounting to Part of the $1,250 winnings went to the seamen’s fund and the rest was distributed among the third-class pas- sengers, Marriage Licenses. William ©. Keator, jr. 28. Wavne, Pa. wnd R. Medbury, 3i; Rev. Horace A. alton. Rex C. Barnbam, 26, and Ruth F. Helsey, 24; Rev. Hugh M.’ Hennig Clay Duwall, 21, lg";il et Ji tt.10: Rev. 8. Carroll Goafe = es Steele, 25. Fort Washin Md., PCrllcn. 5. Rev. A. E. | Ralph Sterley. 33, Fort gr.on i, Tex., |gnd Mildred S. Volandt, 36; Rev. Ralph . e Melvin M , (cdiferis,Malrn Jugmipg 2 sad Bertna | . 'r. Auston, "i3, ‘and Mary E. Verner, 20 0% Brvant, 1, and Eisabeth Bush, 10 ST L e oot 191 an| ison, i v B O Smith. > * e William ' H. Edwards, 38, and Matilds nd Mamie Les, 33; W. L. Adams, 8. Dickel, 28, ai l"}‘&fiu 8. Hart- mps b v Rl e 4 L 8 olzman, 33, oS Phimdapniss Rev. & 4 orne, Irving Clarkson, 24, 27, Both of Richtond: eorge VETY ! fective oil feeding line; by S | newspaper At the consulate Lindbergh told re- & f | for 34 hours over Bering Sea. relayed _here | meals , in the ived with | ™ PANGBORN IS GIVEN PACIFIC HOP 0. K. Two American Flyers Plan Take-off at Japan Beach Before October 15. By the Associated Press. TOKIO, September 19.—Permission for Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Hern- don, Americans, to make a non-stop flight of 4,465 miles across the Pacific from Samushiro, Japan, to Seattle, Wash., was authorized here today. The off for Seattle miles, ln" t'empt'nhsme , in an af ywer record of Wiley Post and old Gatty. ‘Will Hop to Beach First. Fined by the Japanese government hotographs of fortifications Khabarovsk, the world- Har- Pangl ARG et P 0 2 us| Beach, 375 miles north on Hokkaido Island. There, with the plane and a full load of gasoline, they will attempt to soar from the - runway for the overseas flight. preliminary hop to Samushiro is mnrmmmmuufi stipulated. Hope to Win $25,000 Prive. The Americans, however, felt they could reach aunuxhlr;) in one hop and after a few days of preparation ready for the hazardous fight over the jorth Bering Sea. ” Th!yp.)fme -t‘;d lllecee% where three expeditions have failed. m,?hkh all started from the Sam- ushiro Beach, were by Harold Bromley and Harold Gatty, who flew out over the Pacific and returned owing to n&- and Herndon hope 6 win a timm offered by the Tokio Asahi for its first accom- plishment. MOYLE PLANE UNREPORTED. Word Is Lacking From Airmen on Siberian-Alaska Flight. SEATTLE, September 19 (P).—8i- ed | jence today again concealed the T~ |since Mondey. and ht "t Nome, Alaska. Y oy Japan, for & non- stop h'fll;htp:;lsenfle. were not heard of ber 16, when word Buriat, that by lack of fuel on Navarin Island, near the Siberian coast, after fighting storms The message Wwas through the St. Paul Island Naval Radio Station in Bering Sea, as were subsequent ones, but the naval radio at | SEPTEMBER 20, be | blocked by Charles P. - | ADVISES NOT. TO KILL 1931—P4RT ONE. Works on Projector To Throw Moving Picture Upon Clouds Special Dispatch to The Star. 100 RAN Ay DY o Mannheimer, an inventor, is per- of dhtowing & ; film upon & low-hanging cloud ‘bank, He is using an animated car- toon for his first subject,” to be special film (Copyrisht. 1931, by North American TYPOCRAPHERS CUT CONVENTION SHORT Table 25 Resolutions, Includ- | ing Wet Measure, as Parley Ends. By the Associated Press. BOSTON, September 19.—The seventy- | sixth annual convention of the Inter- national Typographical Union came to | an unexpected close tonight when the | delegates voted to lay on the table 25 ization on ication of the th amendment and restricting time allowed for advertising on radio Attem) delegates to protest the motion of Willlam Hill of Kgnus City to lay the resolutions on the table were Howard, union ident, who ruled the motion was| not debatable. To forestall such a condition at next year’s convention, he recommended that the convention or- ganize on the Saturday preceding the ; dnte"lormfi;'oob:muan. 0 committees appointed and given two extra days to act on the of l:hz pmposm 1s hibition, on prohibition, submitted by delegates from Albany, N. Y., wugl:uw instruct the union officers to ask ident Hoover to call an im- mediate session of Congress to modify the prohibition laws to permit the | manufacture of ‘I‘Jfi\t wines and beer. The resolution sich modification would relieve unemployment and in- crease Government revenue. Another resolution on hibition, gg.lm New York City, ucungm the Fed Government of financial aid to manufacturers of graj concentrates which eventually result fermented liquor. The convention had been in session JOBLESS WITH CHARITY By the Assoctated Press. CHICAGO, the poor with given today ber 19.—] 't kill Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, not heard anything from St. Paul today about the aviators. RICH GOLD DEPOSIT FOUND IN CALIFORNIA; New Vein in Carson Hill Mine Bared After Activity Stimu- lated by Depressed Conditions. RA, C.Ilf". September 19.—A reported un- covered today by &2' stimulation of activity brought about by the depres- tion mened mine idle since a shutdown five years ago. The Calaveras Tunnel has exposed & full face of 12 feet of ore averaging $10 to the ton in gold, it was reported. ESTELLE LACKS LOVE OR HATE FOR JACK Merely Hungry When She Arrives in Chicago—Will Press Coast Divorce. By the Associated Press. hotel roof from a discreet distance vorce action of Jack Dempsey, docketed for Monday. The screen actress stepped train to begin a week's stay in Chicago and bounced answers back at the eager questioners: “I don’t love him. I don’t hate him. I'm hungry.” Hunfr was give from her roof-top vantage point she dictated her views on the topic of the oment. “I won't even be represent at Reno” Miss Taylor said. want a Nevada divorce. Every one that has been contested has been. set aside. MLovn suit will come up in Los An- geles in about three weeks.” MONUMENT TO SLAVES SOON TO BE UNVEILED Daughters of Confederacy Will Honor Those Who Refused Part in John Brown’s Raid. B the Assoclated Press. John W. Buscher, 23, and Mary P. Mack- bee, 15; Rev. John E. Briggs: k- | ing INDIA HAS 350,353,678 - It is better, he said, to give less quan- tity and more variety than to much food with no nitetyA . “It is small charity,” he said, “to live(oodwt.hepwruyoumtdng to impose upon them long ills that follows mmuu‘?’um 1o UNIONS TAKE PART IN CONGRESS FIGHT Rail Labor Executives Back Democrat in Missouri at House Election. Chief executives of the standard rail- road labor organizations have taken a hand in the fight over election of & |divivio member of Congress from the seventh Missouri district, where a special elec- tion will be held September 29. They have indorsed the candidacy of Robert D. Johnson, the Democratic nominee to succeed the late Represent- ative Sam C. Major. Johnson is op- posed by John W. Palmer, Republ k Wwho was a member of the House in the Seventy-first Congress, but wes de- feated by Major in 1930. Shows Fight Is Active. brother in ‘intro- ducing the pegtop hip idea in her dance frocks it 'u‘:fiy k2 uuu' but have little flared pelins wired to stand ‘The labor leaders are sending letters | out, into the district in which they say or thepeg-top idea. HEATING PLANTS at BIG SAVINGS Lowest prices NOW—up to 3 years to pay! HOT AIR Completely fustall- ed in six rooms. Satisfaction abso- lutely_guaranteed, ' NoCash Needed 295 No Payments Until October Heating Plant |I‘Ia 6 radiators, red - T Vapor System: Complote ll-w gusrantee of sat- Low prices and unusually liberal terms make this a m opportunity to sicquire healthful comfost and con- venience of a modern heating t! Take advantage of the you save money by now—but you are E"d the inconvenience of shut- down of r furnace! INSTALL. NOW! GENERAL Heating & Plumbing Co. 901 10th Let Fisher get busy now with cleaning, dyeing and mothproofing your household possessions. 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