Evening Star Newspaper, November 2, 1931, Page 10

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A~ 10 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON DAY, NOV IBER 1931, RIH NAN'S BODY IS FOUND IN AUTO Clues, Pointing to Slaying as Well as Suicide, Puzzle Police. | years Tests Try to Connect Auto Exhaust With Blood Clots on | Brain. Science || Gasses ‘\ . | | Another indictment against tiie au- | tomobile exhaust gasses that pollute | the atmosphere of cities s reported in the British medical journal Lancet 'All over the civilized worid in recent | there has been increases of thrombosis and embolisms—blood ciots which go to the brain «d cause death | or permanent disabl committed suicide while driving homew was puzziin Evidence his dgath has since his body, with a buliet wound in his head, was found in Koehring's large coupe, which had crashed through a fence and rolled about 300 off the highway into a field east of here Bubsequent investigation of Junea County _authorities, including ¢ Elmer Hempleman, District Attc Edward Vinopol and Coroner Re Pharo, has intensified the myster: ® motive for either murder or suicide Find Evidence of Worry While relatives and business elates of Koehring told authorities he apparently had no cause for worry. the sheriff and prosecutor said a check of his movements indicated he had been Yestless and dejected recently The belief that Koehring suffered skull fracture from a blo 1y rior to his be mpetus o the h for a s slayer. Doctors later amplified their statement regarding the finding of the fracture and sald an examination of the scalp revealed no bruise. Across Koehring's lap, when the body | was found lay a small caliber rifle, | which was identified as his properts An empty shell in the chamber indi- cated it was the weapon used to inflict the fatal wound, the bullet having en- | tered behind the right ear, penetrated the brain, and ending its course in the bone behind the left ear Tests made by Sheriff Hempleman showed, the officer said, that it would be possible for & man intent on taking | his own life to nave directed a bullet into his head with the rifle while seated in the roomy coupe. Car's Motor Still Running. Those conducting the inquiry were further puzzled by the fact the car ap- parently was in motion when the fatal shot wis fired. John Cassidy, living nearby, was the first to reach the scene. He said the car’s motor was still run- ning and he turned off the ignition when he noted the man seated inside was dead. The sheriff iater found the car was in second gear and this indi- cated, he said, that the machine may have been started down the highway by Soe other person after Koehring was shot. ‘The position of the body, seated up» right behind the wheet, and the fact | the rifie was apparently carefully placed | upon the dead man's lap, were factors advanced by auth-rities to substantiate the theory Koehring was slain., Foot- | prints and a pearl-handled knif slightly rusted, were found in an ad-| Joining woods, indicating some one re- | cently pneed near mm U. S. AUTHOR DECRIES STATE CHILD-REARING Would Cause Standardization, Slmn“ wood Anderson Says in Debate Wtih Russell. |)m.1‘u-|{ either ¢ und, officials By the Associated Press. NEW YORK. November 2—State | vearing of children was decried by ood Anderson, novelist and edi- tor, last night in & debate with Ber- | trand Russell, English mathematician and philosopher. | Mr. Russell argued for State-regulat- | ed homes for children on the assertion that parents who love their children | often do them more harm than per- sons who are indifferent. Dr. Russell asserted children require | physical care and freedom rather m-n] affection. Maternal solicitude, he said is designed by nature to be adequate | Tor & Tamily of 10 and become excessive when concentrated upon one or two, | the usual number of children in a | family. Mr. ' Anderson argued that state | child-rearing would result in “stand- | ardization of children” and that “the | home, no matter how bad it may be, | 1s better than that” ° ‘cannot, persuade myselt,” he said, “that if all children were placed in | State institutions the teachers would | not develop faults fully as bad as those to be found in mothers today.” | Detroit' Aireraft Show Set. NEW YORK, November 2 (#).—Lu ther K. Bell, general manager of the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce of America, Inc., yesterday announced the 1032 National Alrcraft Show will be held at Detroit, April 2 to 10, inclusive co LDs are catching! T‘her_e is only one right way to stop a cold —drive the cause out of the sys with Bromo Quinine. Countless millions of people all over the world have found this to be true. Insést on this safe, proven remedy. LAXATIVE BRr QUININE LOOK FOR THIS SIGNATURE éh Mom.v BROMO QUININE food habits enza and the tion: have has been most marked in big ci Prof. Erwin P the af Leipzig exposed cages of rabbits and | rats to these exhaust gasses for from | 20 to 30 minutes every day. He then found that the thrombocytes in the blood greatly increased. He then in- jected “into the blood a drug which tends to coagulate the blood and found | that this result was obtained much | sooner in the experimental than in nor- | mal animals T. R (Copyright, 1931 ) The leerty Limited Overnight to Chicago N easy evening and over- night trip—in one of the fastest and most luxurious trains in America—and you are in Chicago for the opening of the business day! Men of affairs, whose time is money, value the convenience of The Liberty Limited’s new faster schedule. It reduces the time-cost of this trip to oply one business hour. And travel becomes a'real pleasure on this famous fiyer. Cuisine, service, equipment are all of the highest Pennsyl- vania standard. A special fea- ture is the ‘‘Liberty Dinner"’ — you will find it one of the most delicious meals you've ever eaten, yet it costs only $1.25. To St. Louis The American, luxurious fiyer to St. Louis, has cut fifteen minutes from its already fast schedule. It leads a fleet of six fast trains to St. Louis everyday. TO CHICAGS THE LIBERTY LIMITED Leaves Washington. . L4.02P.M. Arrives Chicago .. L.9.00 AM. MANHATTAN LIMITED Leaves Washington 7.05P.M. Arrives Chicago. .. 205P.M. THE Leaves Washington Arrives Chicago. ... Alan B. Smith, General Passenger 14th Street, N. W., Wash- ington, D. C. Telephone National 9140. PPENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD stem. a gentle laxative as in IT IDENTIFIES THE 'WOMAN DISAPPEARS, POLICE START HUNT New York Matron Mysteriously of Vanishes From Home Evanston, Ill., By the Associated Press EVANSTON, 11, November 2 (nr Mrs. Alice Griewoid, 50, York City, ¥riend of Evi | ston _police began & search vestex who disappeared Saturday [ fom the home of Mrs. James 0. Snow her hostess A note left in Mrs. Griswold's hand- writing said, “If anything happens to me get In touch with Walter J. Gris- wold, 480 Park avenue, New York City care of Mr. Eugene Katz" Mrs. Snow, & friend of Mrs. Griswold | for 20 years, said her guest had an ex pressman call for her trunk Friday wh Mrs. Snow was absent, and tha Griswold left early Saturday carrying a black overnight bag. Her acquaintances in Chicago were checked without result. The Griswolds separated two years Ago, Mrs. Snow sald. Mrs. Griswold suf- fered from cancer and was despondent, over her physical condition Manhattan Saves You Mon- ey a New Way . .. by Sav- ing Your Clothes! Washed in Soft Net Bags They Look Fresher and Last Longer. Three Day Delivery, too, at No Extra Cost! Home in 3 days! No won- der she smiles. Wouldn't you, if your clothes looked 50 nice .. . at no exra cost? Read below why she and thousands of other Wash- ington women use Man- hattan: Net Bags Save You Money VIRGINIA OFFI b DIVERS IN ATLANTIC REACH LINER’S GOLD . Bigger Hole Cut in Bullion Room of Sunken S. S. Egypt Opens Way to $5,000,000. By the Assoclated Press. BREST, Prance, November 2.—A hole large enough to permit the extraction of ®old estimated at $5,000,000 was cut in the main deck of the sunken liner Egypt | yesterday by divers from the salvage \hlp Artiglio II. They went down 125 meters below the surface several times to du the job. Provided the Sea remains calm, noth- ing now seems to stand in the way of hoisting the treasure. The main deck was cut more than -1 week ago by the use of explosives, before | bad weather interrupted the work. Upon its resumption the roof of the bullion room was cut and lifted, the-task being completed vesterday. but it was then tm small to allow the salvaging uckh' to pass through. Today was devoted to the enlarging of that hole. | __The liner Egypt sank off the coast’of France in 1922 TAX OF CENT PER MEAL ON GIRLS TO AID RELIEF\ Barnard College Students Impose Levy Upon Selves to Raise Unemployment Fund. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 2.—Tax of & found the hole in the main deck was cent a meal for Imunvlfl!mm mllef l was self-imposed upon Barnard smdenu yesterday. 1,000 girs eat three meals a day sald Dorothy Kramm, “and pay their we shall have close to for 30 days,” chairman of the fund, penny taxes, Your Clothes Get this Extra Care? Net L’:ag Washing. 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Long g l Entire Advertisement Copyrighted 1981 We ‘hlvvnl decided yet where the money mural. ‘uthrr extra "!Ih" will count as meals. STQP COMPLAINING | Do “wbo ey | Advertiseme;

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