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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, OCTOBER 12,. 1981 A3 Fokok CAPONE BODYGUARD HELD WITHOUT BAIL Given Until Tomorrow to Pre- pare Defense for Toting Gun in U. S. Court. B the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 12.—Philip D'An- drea, the Capone bodyguard who carried a pistol into Federal Court dur- ing the income tax trial of “Scarface Al" Capone, was told in no uncertain terms today that he was in serious difficulties. He was given until tomorrow to defend himself and meanwhile ordered held without bail. “The Federal Court is not obliged to exercise its duties confronted by an armed man sitting next to a defendant, sald Judge James H. Wilkerson sternly as D'Andrea was brought before him. D'Andrea first asked for a few days # which to prepare a defense, but after the court warned it would entertain no motions for bail, he appeared satisfied to have it decided tomorrow. Carried Gun to Court. D'Andrea was so solicitious of the welfare of his chief that he carried his pistol with him Saturday as he sat at the counsel table behind the scar-faced gangster and only a few feet from Judge Wilkerson. On Judge Wilkerson's orders he was stoppad as he left the room, found to be carrying the weapon and taken to the county jail for the week nd. © Capone. his income tax case delayed by the D'Andrea contempt of court cas> and several others, was not in the court yoom this morning. The gang leader's attorneys, however, did what they could for D'Andrea Attorney Albert Fink suggested that the matter be delayed until after the Capone trial had been disposed of. He also wanted the jury to hear “all the factz” Judge Wiikerson said the jury Wwas not being permitted to read news- | vpaper accounts of the Capone case and knew nothing of the D'Andrea case. The judge held the bodyguard's case was an independent proceeding and that he could see no reason why it should be delayed. Once Was Bailiff. Attorney Michael Ahern, also seek- ing delay, suggested that there might be several questions of law to be argued, such as the possible illegality of the D'Andrea arrest. The bodyguard's defense was expected to be that he was once given A star and a permit to carry a firearm as a deputy municipal court bailiff, and that he believed the permit was still valid, although the present chief bailiff sald the star had been revoked. Judge Wilkerson overruled the attor- nev's suggestions, said. “There appears 10 be no dispute of the fact that this man sat through the proceedings Satur- day armed,” and ordered D'Andrea held until tomorrow. HIGHWAYS TO YORKTOWN 12,000 Cars Can Reach Town Every Hour Over Roads, Reports State Official. By the Associated Press. RICHMOND. Va., October 12— Henry G. Shirley, State highway com- missioner, estimated today that at Jeast 12,000 motor cars can quicentennial celebration. Mr. Shirley said the Washington highway has been handling more than 25000 cars per day without difficulty and without special supervision for a long time, and that if this road, now under repair and narrow in spots. can handle from 2,000 to 3,500 cars per hour, there is no reason why the six roads into the sesquicentennial grounds each cannot handle this many or more. LAND HEADS SOCIETY Elected President of Connecticut Group—Dance Planned. Officers for the 1931-32 season were elected by the Connecticut State So- ciety at its first Fall meeting in the Willard Hotel last night. The election was attended by approximately 150 per- sons. Plans for the first dance of the scason, to be held November 7 in the Willard_ball room, were proposed by Elmer E. Field, head of the Executive Committee. The officials chosen were Edward Land, president; Elmer E. Field, Mrs Eva Woodward, Mrs. C. W. Sorrell and C. O. Buckingham, vice presidents; R. G. Penndexter, treasurer; Mrs. J. 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Her white seils sparkling over the horizon, the discoverer's flagship, the | Santa Maria, burst suddenly into sight, surprising the populace. Close behind tacked the caravels Pinta and Nina which accompanied him. Columbus, who wes christened Cris- toforo Columbo and is called by his men the Spanish Cristobal Colon, set | sall from Huelva August 3. The real | exploration began September 6, when | he left the Canary Islands, then the | last known westernmost point. | In the vicinity of these islands, the explorer explained, his interest first| was attracted, to the possibilities cf | voyages to the west to prove his belief the world was round. | “My happiness is overwhelming,” | Columbus said, as ships’ reporters met | him on the gangplank. “For years I| have argued with scientists that the | world was globular, similar to an egg, | 12, Oratory Judge UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA PROFESSOR TO SERVE. | DR. RICHARD HENRY WILSO! Head of the Romance languages partment of the University of Virginia, at Charlottesville, who will serve on the board of judges for the finals of the International Oratorical Contest, to be held in Constitution Hall Saturday, October 24. SCIENTISTS DISCUSS ELECTRON STRUCTURE Mme. Curie and Six Other Nobel Prize Winners Attend Meet- ing at Rome. By the Associated Press ROME, October 12.—Some of the world's most eminent scientists, includ- ing Mme. Curie and six other Nobel prize winners, were in the audience at the opening today of a one-week gati- ering of physicists for discussion of the electron. Prof. N. F. Mott of Cambridge Uni- versity told them that a whole new system of mechanical laws must be de- vised to govern the mysterious actions of the electron It hardly ever is legiti- mate to use the ordinary laws of me- | chanics in the atomic problem, he said and he inferred that the laws of gravity. momentum and velocity, which govern more familiar things, are almost useless when applied to the unknown world within the atom. ; His subject was so technical that sev- eral in the audience confessed later that they understood only part of it. Mme. Curle, dressed in black, was in the ront row beside Jean Perrin, the French physicist, who won the Nobel prize in 1926. HELD IN SLAYING PLOT Two Men Said to Have Planned to| Kill Uriburu. | BUENOS AIRES, October 12 (P).— | Two men were under arrest today on a charge of complicity in what police said was a plot to assassinate Provisional President Joe_Uriburu. | They were Ramon Arias, described as | a chauffeur to a_former minister of | public works, and his brother Jose, who was sald to be a Cuban, Police said Jose Arias confessed he had planned to | shoot the President in his apartment by sniping from a neighboring house. | India's present acreage devoted to . | sugar is the largest in the world. THE BEST OBTAINABLE Guaranteed Work POtomac 3886 Christopher Columbus . Discovers America After Grueling 70-Day Trip From Spain—Says Find Proves World Round. | men threatened several times to mutiny, | FREE ESTIMATE FURNISHED JUST PHONE POTOMAC 3886 SUBLETTE HEATING CO., Inc. Heating Engineers and Contractors RESPONSIBLE—RELIABLE—REASONABLE s of 1492 but they insisted I'd fall off if T sailed far enough west, “The last phases of this vovage were almost as bitter as the long years of ridicule,” he said, adding, “since my once particularly when the magnetic ! compass needle varied, and begged con- stantly to be allowed to turn back | toward Spain.' Columbus, his reddish beard bristling | as he spcke, beamed in every line of his long countenance and the glow of his Joy spread through his slightly-above- average height. His blue eyes sparkled clearly under the white-gray hair as he told of the seven long years in which he sought support for his venture. Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, he said, had agreed only cn April 17 to supply the funds so he might Christian- ize any heathens he found. The queen, he said, was reported to have pawned her crown jewels, but he did not know | bimself. | Columbus said his plans for the fu- | ture were indefinite, as he wes due | in Cuba October 28 and expected to reach Hispanola (Haiti) around De- | cember 1. He expected to start the return trip early in January, so he could reach Palos by March 15, 1493. | “I expect to come back again, how- | ever,” the explorer said, “probably with meny more ships and men than | the three vessels with a combined crew of 120 forming the flotilla this time.” GENDA CEREMONIES HONOR COLUMBUS Italian City Re-presents| Claims as Birthplace of Discoverer. By the Associated Press. | GENOA, Italy, October 12 —Deter- mined to establish for all time its claims to be the birthplace of Christopher Co-, lumbus, Genoa staged its greatest show today in honor of the discoverer of America. Senator Broccardi took advantage of | the occasion to say that “Columbus was | and always will remain an Italian He | | was a son of Genoa and his family was Italian The proofs exist in Genoa ar- | chives.” Everything Decorated. | The populace decorated everything in sight, lighted candles and electric | | signs and paid votive visits to the tum- bled fiy-grown stone structure that is said to be the explorer’s birthplace. i A display of Columbus relics was held in the Tursi Palace, seat of the city government. It included two let- ters supposedly written by Columbus to the Bank of St. George, in which e | offered a tenth of h's income to the| bank to be used for the city. The bank’s reply, calling him “citizen,” was also shown. Deed Is Exhibited. Another document on exhibition was a deed, executed in 1498, in which Co- lumbus writes, “Siendo nacido en Ge- nova,” Geonese dialect for “Having been born in Genoa.” | At nightfall the whole city was to be lighted by a complicated system of con- | cealed floodlights, which will throw old | palaces with time-worn stonework intc bright contrast with the narrow, dark- | ened streets, many of them unchanged since Columbus sailed on his way to| fame and immortality. FOUR GENERATIONS FLY | Clarence Chamberlin Takes Up Group, Including Woman, 77. | NEW YORK, October 12 (/P).—Four generations of the same family yestor- day were taken on short airplane flights by Clarence Chamberlain, who flew to Germany in 1927 Mrs. Hannah Weinberg, 77, told Mr. Chamberlain she would return for an- other ride “when the rest of the family brings mi The “rest” were her son, Herman Weinberg, 60; her granddaughter, Mrs. Elsie Orenstein, and mer great-grand- daughter, Joyce P. Orenstein, 3. TRAIN FALLS IN RIVER Trainman Killed When Engine: Plunges Through Drawbridge. | ALATKA, Fla., October 12 (#).—One | trainman was drowned as the engine | and four cars of an Atlantic Coast Line | freight plunged from an open draw- | bridge into the St. Johns River at Buffalo, 6 miles south of here yesterday. The trainman was R. P. Torrence of Sanford. The fireman jumped just as the en- gine ran.onto the trestle and escaped serious injury. | Witnesses said a boat had just passed hrough the draw and the reason for the failure of the train to stop has not been determined. GIBSON’S 917 G St. N.W. 1922 M St. N. W. i ment, (GOAL GROUP HEAD ASKS HIGHER PRICE iBockus Advocates Increase to Raise Profit Margin and Cover Costs. By the Associated Press. CHARLESTON, W. Va., October 12.— | Looking “the facts straight in the face,” C. E. Bockus, president of the National Coal Association, sald in an address here today before the annual meeting of the Ohio Valley Improvement Asso- clation that there must be an increase in the realization for coal to restore “some measure of prosperity to the bituminous coal industry.” Bockus, who recently invited a group of coal operators from principal com- petitive States to meet in New York October 21 to consider the coal situa- tion, reviewed the ups and downs of the coal industry and pointed out that be- cause of the avallable supply at the present time “mighty few excepting those dependent upon it for their liveli- hood or those who have made invest- ments in coal properties” are worried. Asks Price Increases. The New York conference was sug- gested to the National Coal Association by a group of West Virginia operators upon recommendation of Gov. Conley of West Virginia, with the statement that the coal industry itself should take steps to stabilize its own business. “There muct, to solve the problem,” Bockus said, “be an increase in price to cover cost and somé margin of profit. Competitive fuels and water power widl limit the figure that can be reached. There must be a check on ‘expediency selling” Not any of these can be ac- complished without a curtailment of productive capacity to within reasonable limits of consumption demand. “It is the present-day problem in | many other industries than coal, and its solution is probably more difficult with coal than with any other com- modity. There are so many producers, such widely divergent conditions of coal seams, freight rates and labor.” Sees Little Aid From U. S. Upon the subject of Government aid, Bockus asked if the industry could hope “for much help from the Government except possible co-operation in per- mitting or assisting in some plan for our cwn control of supply.” adding “there will certainly never be an at- tempt to stabilize coal prices by large purchases on the part of the Govern- the futile course adopted with some agricultural commodities.” Asking if liberalization of the admin- | istrative features of the anti-trust laws would be helpful, Bockus said, “There is only one way to find that out, and that is to make the experiment. AIDE gPEAK.S FOR HYDE Agriculture Secretary, Ill, Unable to Attend Farm Dedication. HARROGATE. Tenn . October 12 (#), Secrctary of Agriculture Hyde aid not speak at the dedication of the Francis Randolph Curtis demonstra- ti‘n farm at Lincoln Memorial Univer- sity yesterday afternoon because of illness. His place was taken by Renick W. Dunlap. Assistant Secretary. The farm was given by F. Kingsbury Curtis and Elizabeth Curtis of New Yerk in honor of their brother, who came to this section to live. Both were present. Australia Plans Reform. SYDNEY. Australia, October 12 (&), —The political correspcndent of th> Sydney Herald s:id jast night that Prime Minister James Scullin. head of th> Australian Labor government, was cont>mplating an early referendum on the question of reorganizing the Aus- | tralian constitution. Will Rogers SANTA MONICA. Calif.—Mr. Hoover has had many a tough break during the many weeks he has been in, but just kinder looking it over from all angles, I believe that this last week was his most successful one in a lorg time. 1 think he just rounded all those big banx- ers up and said, “Now listen, this thing has got past a jok2. You birds got to get in here and help me do something. I been helping you out long cnough. Now if big business wants a Republican administration, big business better start helping Republican administration.” For HE fort ESTABLI Main Office 1151 16th Street Years—And Hours— proving to Washington householders that BETTER coal yourself—just a few hours of the steady, EVEN com- convince you that there’s no better fuel “buy” on the market! ’Phone us TODAY. William King & Son COAL MERCHANTS Phone Decatur 0273 HOOVER SAYS CAR | TOLL 1S CHALLENGE | President’s Message Opens 20th Congress of National Safety Council. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 12.—The Nation- al Safety Council opened its twentieth annual congress today with this ad- monition from President Hoover: “The 33,000 motor-vehicle deaths an- nually in the United States are a chal- lenge to the efforts of safety organiza- tions and the co-operation of every motor vehicle operator.” . The price of safety was the keynote of the congress. Tells Price of Safety. C. W. Bergquist, president of the councll, sald this price is “a trained and disciplined population, comparable to that of a well managed industrial plant, nd the denial of personal liberty where it interferes with the safety and con- | venience of the group.” In his message, the Nation's Chief | Executive said: “There is clearly a tremendous fleld still for organized ef- forts to promote accident prevention, especially in the home and on the highways, and to a considerable ex- | tent in industry, in spite of a decrease } of one-third in industrial accidents in the past two decades.” Power of any kind was likely to hava | an intoxicating effect on some natures, | Bergquist said. . The council president said in the field | of rallroad operation the human factor was eliminated in every possible way, while on the highw “every detail which would be minutely supervised in the factory or on the railroad is left 1&0 the discretion of the individual. In most_States, there is no restriction on who may operate a motor vehicle.” Accidents Held Acts of God. Samuel Insull, jr, of Chicago, said “the general pubic still believes that accidents are mainly acts of God and therefore beyond human control.” Declaring that 80 per cent of all accidents were due to porsonal acts of human beings, Insull sald the * ! nent establishment of safety habits is our most difficult problem today.” - . - | STAR AND AUTHORESS | WILL AID SALES TALKS Mary Pickford to Speak on Radio in U. S. C. of C. Series, Billing Kathleen Norris Also, Mary Pickford and Kathleen Norris will be speakers in a series of national radio programs being arranged by the Unit>d States Chamber of Commerce, designed to promote a better unde: standing between consumers and re- tailers the country over. The series, which will b> carried over a coast-to-coast network of the Colum- bia Broadcasting Syst-m. will be heard locally over Station WMAL commencing October 22, at 11 am. The Merchants and Manufacturers” Association, Wash- ington Chamber of Commerce and Washington Board of Trad> are co- operating with the national chamber in sponsoring the series in Washington. Other speakers in the series of talks, of which there will be six, are Miss Alice Edward, sccretary of the American Home Economics’ Association; Mrs John F. Sippel. president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs; Miss Katharine Fisher, director of Good Housekeeping Institute, and Miss Mary Lewis, vice president and stylist of Best & Co., New York store. Miss Ed- ward's talk will initiate the se°ries on Thursday, Octobey 22. The other ad- dresses will follow at weekly intervals. Will Address Sibley Guild. An address by Mrs. Joy Elmer Mor- gan and readings by Miss Tempe Eilen will feature the monthly meeting of the Sibley Guild in Rust Hall at 10:45 o'clock Thursday morning. The session will be followed by a luncheon at 12:30 am. Legion Leader Dies. CHICAGO, October 12 (#).—Capt James C. Russell, 58, past chef de gare of the 40 and 8, died today in a hospital of Kidney infection. His father, the late Martin J. Russell, was editor of the old 'Chicago Times, the Herald and the_Chronicle. | Look at Your Tongue! Is it coated—are you subject to sick headaches? Then you need to flush out impurities with Hexasol. the dependab! laxative. Pleasant, The first saline drink your own health. At all good drug stores HEXASOL Before Breakfast for Health 96 years we have been BETTER AT. Find this out for means of our hard coal will SHED 1835 Georgetown 2901 K Street M Merry Group FIGHTS ASTOR HEIRS of Grid Stars FOOT BALL WARRIORS TURN OUT FOR VOCAL PRACTICE. | ON ESTATE ORDER |Emerick _f-;;un? Claimant Holds Decree Vital to Riches’ Distribution. By the Associated Press. PORTLAND, Oreg., October 12.—A suit seeking to enjoin Vernon J. Em- erick, Medford, Oreg., from disposing of & New York Probate Court order to heirs of the late John Jacob Astor has been filed in Federal Court here. Jesse Jacob Emerick, Tacoma, who filed the action, asserted the Probate Court order was vital to the distribution of & huge estate, represented as left on December 16, 1816, by John Nicholas Emerick, a partner of the late Mr. Astor. John Nicholas Emerick, the petition stated, died in Philadelphia In Trust 90 Years. ‘The Emerick estate reputedly was ap- praised at $1,000,000 and left in trust for 90 years The plaintiff to the Por! Jand action contends he is a direct de- scendant of one of seveial brothers, only heirs to the estate. In 1849, it is set forth, the will was probated in New York and a determina- tion of heirs made, but the court re- fused to distribute the estate and de- cieed it must remain in trust until 1906 fornia foot the 1931 a voice is a shown is here with (left to Capt. Williams and Orv Mohler conducting a huddle on a large scale. DOLLARINTIMATES Bl SHIPPING DEAL (Full Agreement Still Lacking at Conference, He Says in Hint at Outcome. By tlie/Assoctated Press SAN FRANCISCO, October 12.—A statement of Capt. Robert Dollar, that the conferen: shipping magnates in p proposition “t it would appear that has co out Wlivened interest in_the gathering today. The head he Dollar steamship to discuss rumors lines of t compiete the nancier; 3 Ker- Roosevelt lines Portland, Ore been under ARIO CHAMLEE, former quarterback of the Univi I team and now a grand opera singer, paid a visit to ation of nridiron stars to show get them a little farther than a husky pair of legs. The petitioner says the Astor family is anxious to obtain the New York | court order because certain provisions | of the niveteenth century Emerick will directly affected the fortune of his part- ner, the late John Jacob Astor, Five Other Defendants. Defendants to the action, other than Vernon J. Emerick, include Ottc M. rsity of Southern Cali- the boys that a silver He Gavas Shaver, right) Ernie Pinckert, —Wide World Photo. y . Jones, Merton J. Emerick. Dee W. (,c()grap]]'v Used | Emerick, Bdna Carsahan ahd Lindon | Vernon J. Emerick, at Medford, to- | day said he did not possess the reputed | missing court order and did not know { Jesse Jacob Emerick. Vernon J. Em- ‘!rlck. a formed Medford mayor, said a | similar suit had been pending in New | York courts for four years Canadian Takes Pictures ! " g k Kill i : of Text and His Notes } e e PHILADELPHIA, October 12 (P When Seeking Aid. By Columbus Now Copied by Photos Ray Bird, 38, of Baltimore, was fatally {injured yesterday when struck by a | truck turning into a laundry where he | was employed. He died en route to a By the Associated Press. { hospital. Haywood Jordan, 30, colored PARIS.—Photostatic copies of the truck driver, was arrested on a charge geography, “Imago Mundi” which | Of involuntary manslaughter. Christopher _Columbus used, are avafl- | m—————— 2ble now in European libraries, the resu]v.l of labors on the part of Edmond Buron.‘ archivist of the Canadian government. ‘;(g ’VMMW"V"<$ Heretofore those who wished to see | { “ " ”» < the geography, written by cardinafl?’ SeepstrianaiSec BeRE, b4 Pierre d’Ailly and containig_marginal | § notes by Columbus, had to journey to | S 8 Sevill where the original copy L“§$ ¢ 8 ared. Buron has photographed the orig- | 144 4 al, preserved the pen scratches and ¢ calculations made by Columbus, and has | translated the book from Latin to /é B¢ The geography shows that when writ- | ¢ don’t worry if the window shades get 9 wet from the rain while we are away. Suppose you did forget to close the windows in the children’s room, du Pont TONTINE is a water- proof, washable shade fabric, 'and rain won't in- S jure it.” The next | zosts. May we submit estimates on Factory made-to-measure shades made of this washable famous Don't Forget the Address 830 13th St. N.W., w. NEVER BEFORE - SUCH DOLLAR This new Table Model 8-A will can dyne including the PENTODE and automatic volume control. Baile ‘s T IR STORES 624 Pa. Ave. 7th and Q Sts. o e you have new shades made for k;; your home specify du pont TONTINE and be in- &l sured against worry and unnecessary replacement STOK:S SAMMONS @ ¢ Q French. f e geogr % 3 Young eyes should 2 B expedition, - which: resmtea la | 55 el ==fegunrdad itrom 8 overy of America, Columbus quoted | the beginning by hav- & the cardinal's writings almost literally, | in ctl 3 A g them correctly ex- S especially when he wanted to impress | = i 8 upon the sovereigns that the ocean was amined. It will mean K narrow and hence it would not take | much in after years. 8 him long to cross it. | 2 | 8 ——————————————eeee i cussion, it was learned, was the pos- | E Il 2; & sible purchase and operation of the b4 United States lines by the combined | ; % interests of the East and West coast {) Optometrists companies. ! R { g 1217 G St. N.W. s i | { shade fabric? Or Our Phone e 3 FACTS ABOUT Wakefield Dairy Of Very Great Impor- tance to you! @ Every bottle of Wakefield Dairy Milk is given the double protec- tion of Hood Caps—for- merly used only as extra protection on special milk for babies. @ Wakefield Dairy 100% Fair to the prin- ciples of local Organized Labor. We employ Union labor at full Union wages in accord- ance with Union rules. emark APEX RADIO is & 100% local industry —loyal to home interests. Phone Atlantic 4700 for Service FOR DOLLAR VALUE do all that any large set do. 8 tube Superhetero- Full Range MU tubes, with 1234 14th St. N. W. 2250 Sherman Ave. N. 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