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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, JAN UARY 18, 1932. *¥ A3 —energy like being out of doors! IMWNI'.IG & BAINES B®xienda Tofifee It’s Vacuum Sealed Basement Office for Rent at 1719 Eye Street 1st Mtge. Notes for sale; on detached all- L. W. GROOMES brick, new and modern homes near 16th St. ex- 6% GROOMES, 1719 Eye S L. W. e St. High-Grade 1st Mortg. Notes Since 1901 OIL HEATERS Large Stock New Prices Easily managed, powerful heat. Just the thing for auxiliary heat. Wicks for All Types of Oil Heaters Priced from $4.95 to $59.50 Remember your heating trou- bles last Winter—let us correct them Full Line of Cesl Ranges and Heating Stoves W.S. JENKS & SON 723 7th St. N.W., NAt. 2092 Washington's_Oldest Hardware and Stove Store ;\\\\\\\««\&i\\\\\ You d Be. Surprised’ Proof of This Statement Will Appear in_Our Advertisement Wednesday You'll find the remedy for your dry cleaning worrles right here at the West End Laundry. Ex- pert and quality work at no more St S etetetatatitatatetata et s s = S LSS S SRR IIRNTIINNIRNNN PHONE MET. 0200 Wednesday's Proof— These brushes are made from the tails of Ryssian and Siberian squirrels. Thé hair of cemels is used to make carpets and cloth. TR SPECIAL NOTICES. A UAL MEETING OF THE STOCK- of the Atlantic Bullding Company. be held the office of the com- 1 Pairfax street. Alexandria, sday, January 21st 1932, at A M. ““This meeting 18 for of officers and transaction of BUILDING COMPANY, INC. M. Parker. Jr. President, Dove, Secretary-Treas. 21* Sou Thur ci JOBLESS RALLIED | TOCOX'S BANNER Executive Committee to Meet | Soon to Enlist Idle in Presidential Boom. By the Associated Press. | PITTSBURGH, January 18.—An ef- | fort to rally the Nation's unemployed back of a presidential boom for Rev. | James R. Cox was launched by friends [ of the Pittsburgh clergyman last night. | | * The Executive Committee which aided | the fiery pastor of Old St. Patrick's| Catholic Church in mapping his job- less “march” on Washington, will meet | within the next few days, after com- | municating with leaders in the various | States. | Father Cox said “there is no law in| the Catholic Church which prohibits a | priest from running for public office | and 1 shall accept the nomination of | the jobless party if the honor is offer- { ed me.” Bishop Hugh C. Boyle declined to| comment. The priest, whose camdidacy was announced following a rally of some 50,000 unemployed and others at Pitt | Stadium Saturday, asserted he is “not | interested in politics.” | ‘I am interested in the people and | their needs only,” he said, “and I| want to see the resolutions we have | adopted carried out. “To prove we are not going to sup- | port any party or candidate other than our own, we are going to hold our con- vention in St. Louis on Labor day and {nominate our candidates. | ““our platform is our resolution, ask- ing immediate relief, jobs and a $5.- 000,000,000 program of public works to provide the jobs, with increased income | and inheritance taxes to provide funds | for the relief of the unemployed and | farmers.” | WALL STREET COOL | TO WALKER PROGRAM Would Ask Changes in Retrench- ment Plans Before Loaning $32,500,000, Says Paper. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 17.—The Times says that Mayor Walker and his associates tonight submitted to bankers the “most comprehensive retrenchment | program formulated to date,” but “fail- ed to elicit any assurance” that Wall Street would meet the city's pressing financial needs. ‘The bankers, said the paper, are re- ported willing to loan $32,500,000 for immediate needs, provided the city makes “certain changes in the re- trenchment program thus far adopted.” These changes, the Times says it understands, involve putting city rev- enue-producing enterprises on a self- sustaining basis. The fact that a high transportation official .was present at a lengthy conference at the home of | Charles E. Mitchell, president of the National City Bank, led to the con-| jecture that subways had figured in the | discussions. The meeting, attended by the mayor, members of his administration and sev- eral leading bankers, lasted from 3 to 9 pm PARIS SEND RADIO DATA PARIS, January 18 (#).—Full infor- mation on the new French radio equip- ment quota has been forwarded to Washington from the American em- bassy here for study in connection with any American action in relation to it. The chief point on which a decision is being awaited is whether the United States Government feels a discrimia- tion against American products is in- volved. Clings to Window Until Help Arrives, Then Dies in Fall | NewYorker’s Screams At- tract Wife, but Locked Door Prevents Rescue. By the Associated Prei Jobless »B;Ieet to Form Political Party 55,000 GATHER IN PITTSBURGH UNDER LEADERSHIP OF REV. COX. Secti ship of the Rev. James R. Cox ton, Retired S. Navy Officer, ides With Hawaii | Son of Rear Admiral Aligned With Forces Opposing Service. Standing- steadfast in his long-time | contention that Hawaii is ready for | statehood, Victor S. Kaleoaloha Hous- ton, Hawailan delegate in Congress, | presents the somewhat unusual spec- tacle of a former paval officer aligning himself with civil authorities and in conflict with the service of which he| was once a part While in his veins flows some of #he | wind, a tree solid to outward appear- | native blood of Hawali, Houston's father was a rear admiral, and he himself served in the Navy following his gradu- | ation from Annapolis, through two wars and until his retirement in 1926. On Hawali's right to home rule, Dele- | gate Houston took his stand—and was | surprised, he said, and hurt, when that | position brought him letters upbraiding | him for countenancing the events which | led up to the Fortescue-Massie case. | Entire Affair Disagreeable. “I have never tried to excuse the happenings in Hawaii—I am not excus- ing them now,” Houston said. “The en- tire affair has been so disagreeable to| me I don't care to even talk of it further.” | Houston was born in San Prancisco, son of the late Rear Admiral Edwin | Samuel Houston, United States Navy, | and of Caroline Poor Kahikliola Brick- | wood, part Hawatian, and member of | one of Honolulu's oldest and proudest families. In the wandering way of Navy chil- dren, Houston went to school to Dres- den, Saxony, Lausanne, Switzerland and Washington, and then to the Annapolis | Ntn\'nl Academy, finishing with the class of 1897. Retired as Commander in 1926. He served on the old U. S. 8. Iowa | throughout the Spanish-American War, the ship commanded by William Thomas Sampson, who was sent to investigate the destruction of the Maine in Havana | | Harbor. | Houston rose in rank, served in'China | and through the World War, finally re- | tiring in 1926 as a commander. | As Hawali's delegate in the House, he has no vote, but can introduce bills and | debate them on the floor. He also has | a non-voting, but vocal piace on several | committees which deal with Hawaiian | affairs. | 'BYRD BARES PLANS ' FOR ANTARCTIC TRIP, | By the Acsociated Press. | NEW YORK, January 18—Rear Ad-| | miral Richard E. Byrd hopes to estab- | lish a subbase in the interior of the The jobless plan to fcrm a politieal ps 'CAPABLE LEADERSHIP CALLED fon of the crowd of 55,000 unemployed which met at Pitt Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pa., yesterday under the leader- arty under the leadership of the p-iest.—A. P. Photo. CURE FOR HAWAII CONDITIONS to Blame; Police 'Writer Finds Whites Rather Than Natives FOI‘CC Feud Com- plicates Situation. John Phillips Marquand, —magazine writer and suthor of several books. who s now in Honolulu. presents here the first of several dispatches on conditions in that city. giving various viewpoints on fhe responsibllity "for " those condi- fons, BY JOHN PHILLIPS MARQUAND. HONOLULU, January 18 (N.AN.A) — Like a tree suddenly struck by a gale of ance, but riddled by rot, law enforce- ment here has tottered and crumbled before an unexpected and prolonged storm of adverse publicity. There has been no demoralization on the part of the people inhabitants will tell you, is no more dangerous and filled by a no greater criminal element this year than last, or for several years before. Despite reports which have filtered back from the mainland, there has been | no rioting or stirring up of racial hates To quote Patrick Gleason, much criticized head of the local police, who holds an elective office, Honolulu is & quiet place. He also has been quoted as saying at the trouble is there has ‘been too much publicity. He is right in respect to his own recent troubles and those of several other officials. Publicity which could not be hushed by apathy or expediency or civic pride has betrayed a police force shattered by feuds among its own elements, seemingly without a knowl- edge of its own underworld, and uttetly incapable or unwilling to combat the local gangs of hoodlums. Trouble Long Brewing. Publicity shows a prison whose in- mates spend their week ends at home, and whose turnkeys cut their hours of duty for the pleasures of this sunny town. And lastly, publicity has shown what may be worse for a city than un- scrupulous cleverness—incapacity on the part of its elected officers. : But this, one must remember, is political disintegration which does not concern the mixture of races here. The average citizen of Honolulu, no matter what his_color or creed, probably com- pares well with the average citizen of the big mainland cities. The trouble here has been long in brewing. It started last September with the brutal assault by five native youths of mixed blood on the wife of Lieut. Massie, U. S. N. Five defendants were apprehended, members of a local gang. The case of the prosecution seemed strong, but to lay observers the prosecu- tion was neither overzealous nor over- ably conducted. At the trial the public was astounded by the appearance of detectives of the Honolulu force testify- ing for the defense against brother officers called as prosecuting witnesses. Out of this confusion came a_ charge The city, old | selected by some mainland editors. A century of association between the Ha- | wailan and the white man shows that the Hawailan has been amenable, kind- |1y and singularly guiltless of criminal | assaults. | On Waikiki Beach the Hawaiian beach boys associate with white women, guests of the large hotels, on terms which would demoralize a Nordic. Yet they remain courteous, and have been generally well behaved over a period of years. If any one race must be blamed for | the crime conditions here, it had better be the whites, because of the peglect of obvious conditions from the white standpoint. Honolulu is only a small town, and it | reacts in a small-town way. There has been the hushing atmosphere of the small town, the same anxiety to con- done faults and the same fear of of- fending neighbors. There has been an intense fear of driving off the tourist trade, which has caused the press to prefer coral reefs, kukul trees and climate to any unpleasant reality. Resentment Felt. Lately there has been rationalizing and keen resentment of criticism, end- ing in only the last few days in a uni- ‘versa] facing of the facts. | Gangs of hoodlums have arisen here which a dozen policemen in a big mainland city could send about their business. They have grown up due largely to an overambitious system of universal education, where youths have been trained for positions which these | islands cannot offer. | ‘This element has been sheltered by | an" uncritical public and by surround- | ings where a living can be gained with little effort. The attitude of the small politician, who generally is a Hawalian, has been lenient and he has had no leadership to make him otherwise. Yet in the past he has proved eminently capable under proper direction. And he could be so again. His attitude to- ward sex irregularities is lenient, but he is as capable of guidance at present | as_he has been in the past. | _The main trouble with Honolulu is | that officials at present holding posi- | tions of responsibility are incompetent and weak. The sheriff, Gleason, has shown himself unable to obtain evi- dence for convictions, and the high sheriff, Lane, who has just offered his resignations, has allowed his prison, Oahu, to become the laughing stock of the community. |~ These ere the reasons for the situ- |ation in Hawaii. They large nor serious. | Hawali’s solutfon is leadership, which | has been sadly lacking, by executive authcrity. also | are neither | OR WK, CO0PR | Y’ LEADER, DES Fatally Stricken on Eve of| Planned Vacation in Florida. While chatting with a friend who had called to bid him good-by on the eve of a planned vacation in Florida, Dr. William Knowles Cooper, widely known Y. M. C. A, church and civic leader, was stricken fatally vesterday | with cerebral hemorrhage at his home, | 3207 Highland place. Dr. Cooper, wWho apparently was re- covering from, an illness that put him in the hospital last October, was dis- cussing his proposed Southern trip with Leonard W. De Gast, the man' who succeeded him in 1929 as general secretary of the Washington Y. M. C. A. | ! when he complained of & pain in his chest. Attributing the distress to indiges-| tion, Dr. Cooper at first made light of | his condition, but when no relief was | forthcoming his physician was called | to the home. He died within an hour of his first symptoms, the end coming at 6:30 o'clock in the presence of his wife, Mrs, Jessie M. S. Cooper; his daughter, Martha, and Mr. De Gast. His only other child, William Knowles Cooper, jr., was summoned from Coates- ville, Pa., arriving by automoblle late | last night. Departure Planned for Today. Dr. and Mrs. Cooper had purchased their tickets for the trip to Florida and their departure had been planned for today. He had shown remarkable im- provement after a long siege that had confined him for weeks in the Episco- pal Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital and at hig home. He had hoped to recover his health fully in the South. Funeral services will be held tomor- row afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home. Rev. Dr. Allen A. Stockdale, pastor of the First Congregational Church, and Rev. Dr. George A. Farnham, pastor of the Cleveland Park Congregational Church, will officiate. Pallbearers will be 8. Percy Thomp- son, John Poole, Houston Thompson, Harry O. Hine, Hugh A. Thrift and W. ‘W. Everett. Representatives of numerous organi- zations of which Dr. Cooper was a member will attend the funeral. In- | terment will be in Rock Creek Cemetery. Rev. Dr. W. S. Beard, secretary of | the Layman’s Advisory Committee of | the National Council of the Congrega- tional Church, of New York, telegraphed [ today that he would attend the sarvices. Dr. Cooper was chairman of the com- mittee and otherwise active in the na- tional affairs of the Congregational Church. Lectured Extensively. Dr. Cooper was prominent in local, | | national and international circles of the Young Men's Christian Associa- tion and was active in religious, civic, philanthropic and business fields. He lectured extensively regarding his ob- and social conditions abroad. He was chairman of the Committee of Citizens appointed by the District Commissioners to try any policeman found to have been involved in the so- | last Fall. The committee never was called upon to function, due to collapse | of the charges against the police. Born in Philadelphia, Pa., November 1, 1867, Dr. Cooper was educated in the public schools there. He entered business at an early age, but in 1890 forsook a business career to enter the service of the Young Men's Christian Association, going to Norristown, Pa., as general secretary, where he served two years. In 1892 he went from Norristown to Brooklyn, N. Y., where he served as executive secre- tary of the Eastern District Branch, Y. M 'C. A, until 1898, leaving Brooklyn to assume the general secretaryship of the Springfield, Mass., Y. M. C. A. He remained in Springfield 10 years, com- ing to Washington in 1908. For 21 years he served the Young Men's Christian Association here as general secretary, retiring October 1, 1929. He was a member and past president of the Washington Rotary Club. Served on Many Boards. He had served on the boards of many | welfare institutions in Washington and on a number of national institutions, in- cluding the Boy Scouts of America and | the national boards of the Congrega- | tional Church. He was a trustee of the International Y. M. C. A. College, at Springfield, Mass, and also of Elon | College, South Carolina. At the Inter- national Conference of the Congrega- tional Churches, held in Bournemouth, England, in the Summer of 1930, he was elected vice chairman of the In- ternational Conference of Congrega- ticnal Churches Besides his service as general secre- tary of the Washington Y. M. C. A. he | had traveled widely and had written and || servations, particularly about economic | called Staples-Schenk “frama-up” case || Dies Suddenly || £ all 1€e8 du en y } 70% [1) ACUTE mmGl]:S'non ight! strikes late at (when drug -mu4_-a ‘Why not be safe with on hand . . . Now! BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION FOR SALE, $10,750. Just East of Colorado Ave. Extended ALL Lot 70x104. $6,000 1st Trust. Easy Terms. L. W. GROOMES, 1719 Eye. Look at Your Tongue! Is it coated—are you subject to sick headaches? Then you need to fush out impurities with Hexasol, the laxative. DR. WILLIAM K. COOPER. saline dependable Long-Distance Call Keeps Woman, 26, From Ending Life| drink your own drug stores. HEXASOL Before Breakfast for Health By the Assoclated Press. | NEW YORK, January 18.—A long- | distance call from Buffalo, N. Y., saved a woman from suicide yesterday. At 4:15 police headquarters received a call that “my sister, Elsie Cook, 326 Forty-seventh street, is in trouble.” | A patrolman went at once to the ad- dress, and gained entrance by breaking glass in he door. Through gas fumes he made his way to the kitchen where | he found Elsle Cook, 26, a nurse, un- ¢ consclous on the floor. She was revived after half an hour’s work by a respirator crew, but refused to say why she had attempted to take her life. Police said she probably had notified relatives in Buffalo of her in- tention, and they had called New York. | RUSH PRINTING EXPERT SERVICE BYRON S. ADAMS “See Etz and See Better” The better care you give your eyes, the better service they will give you. 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Ask For Estimate Antarctic continent on his forthcoming | by the trial judge to a jury which ended | CHICAGO, January 18—For a time | expedition deadlocked, 'a charge legally fair, but last night a man clung to a window | Disclosure of his plans, the first oc- [so involved in the terminology of the sill of his fourteenth floor apartment, | casion on which he has mentioned them |law that a layman had difficulty in | with his legs and body dangling out- | Publicly, was made casually Saturday | understanding it in a single reading. | side, and screamed for help. | night at the twenty-eighth annual din-| Following this trial came an investi- | He was Clarence E. Brinkerhoff, 38, | ner of the Explorers’ Club here. gation by the sheriff of his force, which | had been active in almost every phase of the association movement. He was a member of the National Council of the Young Men's Christian Assocla- tions, and for six years was interstate secretary of the Y. M. C. A.'s of Mary- JAL MEETING OF THE STO th Vernon Savings Bank at_the husetts sesday (Copyright. 1932, by the North American New! spaper Alliance, Inc.) 830 13th St. N.W, W. STOKES SAMMONS ISLAND LEGISLATURE erly come before n “open_until TELD, Cashier BETWEEN ALL since 1896, Call TRANSFER & other cities. 1101 WATEI 50c per less &S MAY prop Is will_ren T. HIGHF! OVING R EP tol ANNOT FERN, TRY AN KE) (Fe Treated). office. PS. FULL AND PAR hiladelphia, New York. Bo: nd way. points: unexcelled 1460, VERY ASSOC.. INC., Local Moving Also, 5 OF THE STOCK- ELT Ave L ME of W. T WANTED—LOADS YORK “eain Furniture Repairing Upholstering Chair Caneing CLAY ARMSTRONG 1235 10th St. N.W. Metropolitan 206 prices _and Grape Juice For Ma Your Printing Dollar Dollar P: ideas. :I‘l;x(c l\‘i;(ional Capital Press| | worker. | _FLA. AVE.. 3rd and N N.E. _Linc. 6060 RN W KOONS Heeaie ™ SHEETROCK AND TILE BOARD lutely fil’(;rj)(r{)alfh :l;:,\,(“ any vou tile b-ard 'No order too small ™ “Sudden Service. J. FRANK KELLY, Inc. 2121 Ga. Ave. N.W, North 1343, Lumber—Millwork—Paint — Coal—Sand—Gravel—Cement ck and sheetroc T rating Corp.. | ximum Return From & Plant | type how tant improvements with | passers-by, and was apparently satisfied | head of an advertising agency. His | wife was in an adjoining room, but she | could not get to him, because the door of his room was locked. By telephone Mrs. Brinkerhoff sum- | | moned Robert Graham, manager of the | apartment, who hurried to the four- | teenth floor with a pass key. The key | worked, and Graham, accompanied by | Mrs. Brinkerhoff, entered. Brinkerhoff still clutched at the sill, his fingers purple from the strain of his weight; but just as Graham got close the hands began to slip and Brink- erhoff plunged to his death, his body striking a_flower bed in the courtyard. Brinkerhofl’s physician, Dr. 8. M.| Edison, said he believed Brinkerhoff | slipped out of the window by accident | when attacked by dizziness, but police said they were unable to account for the locked doaor. | BY MRS. MAR Supervisor Travelers’ Aid Cent, HE series of events suTounding the life of 17-year-old Jo from the time he stepped into our | office, a one-legged begger, until| now, \present a metamorphosis | in a human being so dramatic that it | is almost unbelievable. There must be | afundamental goodness in the boy, who was well on the path of mental and physical de- generacy, or he would not have re- | sponded so amaz- ingly to the serv-| ices of our social | Jo did not come | to us. He was sent —a sullen_blonde boy who hobbled in on crutches and, 3 with blue eyes low- | s ered, refused to an- swer our questions Fully learned in th ertifice of begging, having been cn the road for three years he knew exactly how to appeal t Mrs. Ford. with the low type of life he was leading. ger was an institutional case. For sev- eral weeks we tried to establish his legal residence, only to discover that Jo was the production of & broken home, neither his father nor stepmother caring . My Most Interesting Case It was evident that the youthful beg- | “We have 35 tons of equipment at the Boston Navy Yard,” the admiral said. | “A friend has promised to furnish the ship.” He did not, however, say when he would start | The chief objectives of the expedition, | he explained, are to determine whether | there is a nel between the Ross Sea, on the shores of which “Little America” was established, and the We- | dell Sea, Admiral B establish h Queen Maud the entire P d said he probably would | ubbase at the foot of the | Mountain Range and sperdd ar Winter there, School Dance Planned. COLESVI Md., January 18 (Spe- cial).—There be a dance at the school house T y | ool sday, beginning at 9 GARET FORD, ral Bureau for Transient Men. what happened to him, and that the | toy himsel{ had S e O any ate long enough V. y 5 old to claim Tesidence; - o Yo Since his mother's death, 12 years| ago, nobody had cared whether he lived | or died, the crippled boy eried to the worker one day. And it was on that| day that we were rewarded with Jo's | confidence after working with him for more than two months, Medical care was given him. Shelter and food were provided. And many hours were spent boy in some work in eftorts to place the | which would divert his im- e s mind from him: Now, at least once a w - eyed boy visits us. His fi:‘fintxfinf‘xmb is hardly perceptible and blue eyes| sparkle when he tells us of his progress in a barber's college, where he was Tecently sent to learn that trade, He has regained his health and his mind is occupied with thoughts of making| a future of a life which just four| months ago he thought worthless. Perhaps that fundament displased 1n Jo is the mother na re ;r:;?:ers vagucly as being beautiful and | More than 250 applicants are re-; ceived at the bureau monthly, approxi- mately 50 of which are given case work such as was rendered Jo. The majority of the applicants are young men who have come to Washington and sincerely are in hopes of finding work, seemingly ended nowhere, and an elec- trification of sentiment and resentment when it was discovered that Admiral Pettingill, who is stationed here, had notified his superior officer that Hono- lulu was unsafe for the wives of the Navy personnel. Situation Complicated. These matters might have been quieted by hush-hush methods and the imminence of Christmas if they had not been complicated by the beating of one of the defendants in the Ala Moana assault case, and an assault by an es- caped convict, who had departed easily from his prison on New Year eve, upon the wife of a local business man in her | home, in a respectable suburban neigh- borhood. B On the heels of these events came the killing of Kahahawai, another of the defendants, in the attack on Mrs. Massie, who was awalting a retrial, and the consequent holding of Lieut. Massie, his mother-in-law, Mrs. Fortesque, and two naval enlisted men on charges of first degree murder. There is no use for residents here who love these islands, to.defend gen- eral apathy, now passed, low bail for | rapists, small sentences, prompt par- dons and indications of police cor- | ruption and prosecuting inefficiency, by saying that the same situation exists in cities on the mainland. I doubt if any mainland city could be found, however corrupt its police offi- cials, which would tolerate the lenient attitude toward sex crime which exists here in the Pacific, or similar inability or unwillingness of enforcement agencies to arrest or prosecute. To one living here even for a short time the reasons for this amazing neglect cease to be startling. Neglect and dislike of trouble go too easily with the genial climate, ease of life and human selfishness, combined with a tolerance for others. Racial Issue Denied. Despite the efforts of some news- papers to indicate racial difficulties, one Qoubts if there is any other place on earth where as many divergent races mingle with as little friction. It is a sight worth remembering and an achievement for Hawaii to be proud of, fo see whites, Polynesians, Japanese and Chinese meet, smile and talk on| any street corner in such times as these There is no place where a stranger is more considerately treated, and, though it seems a paradox, no city wrere there is a better ordered popu- lation, as may be proved by the quiet which has reigned in Honolulu in the | midst of recent melodrama and alarm. It is, furthermore, & gross injustice to select any single race here for eritl- cism, as the native Hawallans have been TAKES UP CURE FOR TERRORISM IN HAWAII __ (Continued From First Page) taxation and educational matters, and | “other appropriate legislation.” Lead- | ers of both Houses agreed their work would be limited to proposals of the Governor. While legislators from outside islands —Kaual, Moloki, Hawaii and Maui— were arriving on steamers today, city and County Attorney James F. Gilli- land prepared to present to the grand jury not iater than Thursday the evi- dence in the slaying of Joseph Kaha- hawal, the city’s latest sensational case. Held for the slaying are Mrs. Gran- ville R. Fortescue, New York and Washington society’ matron; her son- | in-law, Lieut. Thomas Massie, U, S. N., | and two Navy enlisted men, E. J. Lord and Albert O. Jones. , Kahahawai was one of five men sus- pected of attacking Lfeut. Massie's young wife. Seth Richardson, assistant United States Attorney General coming here from Washington to investigate the crime situation for the Department of Justice, will be informed on pertinent questions long before he arrives. He will be met in San PFrancisco by Sanford B. D. Wood, Federal district fir&mv;idhned. wrmg sails from Hono- nesday and will Hlfi:ardson February 4 Ton WAR iss Helen Fortescue, yo! daughter of Mrs. Fortescue, sajlod yes: terday for San Francisco on the Army Transport Republic, friends said today. BAGDAD.—Finally found a tele- graph. Persia was a hot sketch. You Bible stu- dents, stockmen and hunters better note this. Flew low all morning be- tween Euphrates end Tigris. It's all level prairie and unculti- vated. Most animals I ever saw were there. Thousands of cattle, donkeys, camels, water buffa- los, deer, wild boar. Now over Jeru~ salem and Holy Land and land, Delaware and the District of | Columbia. In 1912 he was given the degree of master of humanics from Springfield | (Mass.) College, and in 1929 he was | made doctor of laws by the Southeast- ern University in recognition of nearly 40 years of service to young men and boys in promoting character-building efforts. DANIELS RECOVERING ATLANTA, January 18 (%) —Josephus Daniels, publisher cf the Raleigh, N. C. News and Observer, was making “satis factory progress” yesterday in his re- covery from injuries suffered in an automobile accident here last Wednes- day. 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