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“LOVE SWINDLER" THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, |COSMIC RAYS FROM BEYOND SUN . BOMBARD EARTH, SAVANTS FIND - JAILED ON COAST Each Carrics 786.000.000 Veoles of Eneres afld Comes From Far Unknown Space. 3 Four Noted Scientists Agree. Nationally Known Character i Held in San Francisco for Bilking Woman. By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, October 15—A man jailed here on a charge of swi dling a chambermaid out of $500 has been identified by police as a nation- ally known “love swindler” and police | character. He is booked as Charles H. | Bell, but is also known here as Dr. | Charles H. Hudson, and is said by po- lice to have several other aliases, Officers said Bell, 56, admits having been engaged in a number of fiascos which have attracted police attention during the last 25 years, including the | Oliver Osborne mistaken-identity case | in New York in 1915. Osborne, former | New York public prosecutor, was sued by Rae Tanzer, one of Bell's sweet- Thearts, for $50,000 in a breach of prom- ise suit, believing the lawyer to be Bell. Police said Bell also admitted bribing his way out of the Oregon State Peni- tentiary in 1913, and smuggling dia- monds for a New York firm. Parents of society debutantes sought his arrest here 25 years ago. but he left this coast. Bell's first prison sentence was in 1906 at San Quentin, when he was convicted of embezzling the belongings of a Santa | Rosa nurse who, he said, failed him in an elopement. 4 DENIES POLICEMAN AIDED | i ESCAPE OF MAN’S SLAYER| Chicago Police Captain Answers| Accusation Reported Made by Detroit Broker's Widow. CHICAGO. October 15.—Police Capt. | Gregory Moran denied Tuesday that one of his men had aided the escape of the man who fatally injured Earl Healy, | 32, Detroit broker, in a cafe brawl Sat- urday night. ‘The charge was reported to have been made by Healy's widow, who demanded # look at all the officers in the Chicago avenue station. Capt. Moran said her accusation had not been made to him; that he was unable to confirm it, and also unable to reach Mrs. Healy to deny it to her. Healy came here to see the Notre Dame-Northwestern foot ball game and had an argument over the relative | merits of the two teams in the Cafe de | ; Alex. He was hit over the head with a bottle and died in a hespital. sailant escaped. Moran said Policeman Charles Greinke yeported hearing a disturbance in the | cafe, and that he was told by the man- | ager the assailant and his victim had both left. An inquest was continued to October 17 to give police time to make an arrest. fbH:c ¢ His as- | s Scottish pipers of Melbourne, Aus- ! tralia, have spurned khaki trousers re- cently issued to the regiment and re- fuse to play in anything but kilts. & Louisville By the Associated Press. ROME, October 15.—Myriads of cosmic rays pour down upon the earth from distances hundreds of millions of miles farther away than the sun, each | ray carrying energy of 786,000,000 volts, !four distinguished scientists reported i here today. Robert A. Millikan and Arthur Comp- ton, American sclentists, and Prof. Bruno Rossl of the University of Florence re‘porced on the rays to the congress of physicists meeting here. Mme. Curie, co-inventor of radium, corroborated their statements. The two Americans told the congress that experiments conducted this Sum- mer disproved theories that such rays proceed either from within the earth's atmosphere or from the sun or visible stars. The place of origin, they said, is interstellar regions unknown even to astronomers. Thus far, the scientists said, the ex- periments have been in the fleld of pure sclence. When utilitarian science takes a hand in the researches they have in- dicated the tremendous energy con- tained in the cosmic rays may be har- nessed and convested to man'’s use. Prof. Millikan of the California Insti- tute of Technology reported he had | divided the cosmic ray into four sub- | stances, helium, oxygen, silicon and iron. containing 27,000,000 volts, 100,000,000 | volts, 216,000,000 volts and 443,000,000 volts, respectively, or a total of 786,000,~ 000 volts. Prof. Compton of the Univer- sity of Chicago carried on experiments In the Rocky Mountains at an altitude | of 13,000 feet. ‘The two Americans told how they had arrived at the conclusion that the rays had nothing to do with the sun by observing their intensity day and night, when the sun was of different strength, and finding the intensity in- variable. The same observations, they said, proved that the rays did not come from stars visible to astronomers. The rays vary in intensity according to altitude, they said. The rays on Pikes Peak were four times stronger than those at sea level, At a height of 46,000 feet, reached by a captive self-recording balloon, the rays were 10 times stronger while at 245 meters under water the rays were almost en- tirely absorbed. Mme. Curie described experiments in Paris in the passing of rays through iron and a magnetic fleld to measure their energy. Loses 42 Lbs. by Internal Bathing From 214 lbs. to 172 Ibs. in a Short Time ana He Never Felt Finer in His Life—No Dieting One vital reason insurance companies ‘con dltr over strain on tl Every new pound of flesh adds 4,500 linear fest of new blood vessels—and more work for the heart. Little wonder L. D. Teall of Erie, Mich., rejoiced when he made the glorious discovery that Internal Bathing with the J. B. L. Cascade not only had cor- rected his constipation but had reduced his weight from an unhealthy 214 Ibs. to a healthy 172 Ibs. “My muscles are hard, my endurance & ‘my waist line s six inches 1don’t get out of breath easily ner in years,” he adds. Most people don’t know that obesity and constipation are evil allies. Seldom do you find one without the other. Excess fat Interferes with healthy elimination. beorbed poisons from constipation weaken and impair the whole system=—you have no energy for activity, and the fat piles right on. orLondon at the touch of your finger! with the J. B. L. ing | 1 "Which foods the entire lower y lilr.lld bat creased activity and mag cleanliness work off tl wund.uo. Clean inside, you become slim outside. ‘The most beautiful re the o’\‘vn I.llll;n - um"‘ e teenal cade. Know the full story S (5 ! armament and President Hoover's Com- mittee on Unemployment were also adopted. CATHOLIC MEN SCORE BIRTH CONTROL MOVE o8t e Bt Sammes . | Deery, Indianapolls, and Treasurer | Francis A. Lowther, St. Louls, also were re-elected. Cocktail Necklace a Hit. Cocktail necklaces are the latest for the up-to-date girl in France. They consist of a chain of glasses only a half- inch long in blue, red or green glass. 7 sE4 ¢ PERRINS SAUCE is the perfect seasoning for Closing Sessions of Convention at Rochester, N. Y., Back Hoover Jobless Plan. By the Associated Press. ROCHESTER, N. Y, October 15— Resolutions condemning birth control and reasserting the Roman Catholic attitude on marriage and the Christian home were adopted Tuesday at the closing of the sessions convention of the National Council of Catholic Men. “The propaganda of socalled birth con- itrol is an infidelity of God, a dental of individual dignity of man and woman and a selfish betrayal of our country's welfare,” thesresolution read. “We be- |lieve that any legislation favoring it is against the moral order and subversive of our country's peace, prosperity and wellbeing.” | Asserting that “much of the crime | and evil of our day is due to a departure from the standards of the Christian | Fls H home,” the convention urged that its | members advance the “unity and sanc- tity of the Christian home.” Resolutions favoring international dis- standing crops of Arabia, the Indie Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia— 5 of the world’s bhest cof- fees.Glorious fl; ! g Ty ACKED hytoday ! e Wim. 8. Scull Co. Camden, N. J. Tune in “Boscul Moments”’—with Mme. Alda Fri VElent afier Amos ‘n® Andy D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, Rovund-the World RADIO Brings You WORLD.WIDE Reception This same model equipped for standard broadcast— $65-75 COMPLETE Imagine the thrill of listening to England, Delivers It! . . equipped for regular broadcast and foreign or domestic short - wave reception. Italy, South America or the Orient....Think of picking up police calls, or hearing first-hand HISTORY-MAKING reports from Airplanes or Dirigibles....By a single turn of a knob.... THE WORLD IS YOURS!! (L Come in tonight or tomorrow for a demon- stration. LIBERAL ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD RADIO! Phone Columbia 2900 for Immediate Delivery! 1817 Adams Mill Rd. N.W. (at 18th and OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 10 Col.Rd.) HAWAII AND THE REST OF THE WORLD ’ sp Will teach youv REAL flavor Get yourself a real malt thrill. Try the new Buckeye. There’s the difference of day and night when you compare Buckeye with ordinary malts. Buckeye's special new Duo-Malting process has built quality and flavor like malt has never known before. Buckeye is actually malted under vacuum to concentrate ALL the quality, ALL the goodness of the barley grain into the malt itself. Then it’s VACUUM PACKED to keep all that quality there for you to enjoy. * By all means don't confuse Buckeye wi’lh cheap inferior les which should not be used for health’s sake. MALT SYRUP VACUUM PACKED 1931. ished yesterday, and Harvard rejoiced over the loss. “The Vagabond,” columnist for the Crimson, undergraduate publication, broke the news. He related that decades ago a traditional Radcliffe girl had been glorified by Harvard students, that the TRADITION VANISHES, HARVARD REJOICES 1931 Radcliffe Girls, Observer Finds, Are “Svelte and Trim as a New Yacht.” ing college. The traditional Radcliffe girl, he said, wore cotton stockings, low-heeled, three- button shoes and her hair in braids; raised Christian eyebrows when a stu- o dent said hell; peered through shiny By tis Ui ctatsa Eroee glasses and talked through a shiny nose, CAMBRIDGE. Mass., October 15.—|and a thoroughly unattractive figure One of Harvard's oldest traditions van- Ishe was.” tradition still lived, but that he had | blasted it with a trip to the neighvor- | D—5 But the Radcliffe girl of 1931, he said, actually is “slick, svelte and trim as a new yacht.” “Tradition may have been the sal- vation of England, but not so of Rad- cliffe,” concluded “The Vagabond.” ., | Bannockburn to Be Saved. Bannockburn, historic battlefield of Scotland, is to be preserved for poster- ity. 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