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A—4 * . @ JURY QUIZ OPENS INMINEDLA DEATH Charges of Protection Flung‘ by Attorney for Accused | Long Island Policemen. | e | By tne Associated Press | MINEOLA, N. Y. July 21.—An| extraordirary grand begzn con- | sideration today of the death of Hyman Stark, for which 13 county police have been arrested, some on second-degree murder charges. some for assault and all for conspiracy to cbstruct justice. e firet wilness was the court ste- nographer, who transcribed the testi- mony at the John Doe hearing into the death of Stark, who was beater to death after being arrested for fs- saulting the mother of & detective dur- | ing the robbery of her home. It was understood District Attorney Elvin Eilwards intended to read this testimeny to the grand jury instead of calling before it the witnesses Who tes- tified al the hearing, which ended ves- terday witn the 13 policemen being held for grand jury acticn. Early Report Seen. Before reading of this testimony be- gan, however. Dr. Thomas Fearns. & physician called in by police to attend Stark before he died, was called into the grand jury room There were indications the grand Jury might conclude its consideration of the case by midafternoon. District Attorney Edwards announced today he had requested Stete police taks over the investigation of the Stark death ! So many county detectives been withdrawn from p: warrants issued in the r gree case that four major criminal in- Jestipations have hed to be dropped for the time being. One of these is the continued investigation of the death of Starr Faithful, whose body was found | in the surf at Long Beach a year Ago | “Higher-Ups” Charged. A charge that “higher-ups” were be- OUTING IS PLANNED ing protected echoed in Long Island's | third degree killing today as the in-| The annual all-day uutmg of the vestigation of the death of Hyman |Scdality Union of Washington will he Stark, 20, in_ police hPa'Iq\\Br‘(‘rs‘hfld at Chapel Polnt, Md. next Teachied e grand Jury Sage. o 1a of | Wednesday. Members will leave aboard 13 ’w.i men atrested yesterday as the | the S. S. City of Washington at 9 am., aftermath of the beating to death of returning at 7:30 pri. insisted that “some one Was | Elaborate preparations for the enter- made the goat to shield higher- | ainment are g worked out under 8 | the direction Miss Ann Jenkin fter hastily telegraphing the grand | chairman of the Entertainment Con to meet today, District Attorney |mittce. Miss Ma Mattingly, pres n N. Edwards prepared to push the ' dent of the union, ting " as gen- case along by asking indictments 1ang- | eral chairman ing from second-degree murder down | Dinner will be served at the Wills to _conspiracy to obstruct justice. | Hotel. During the afternoon mem- Four policemen accused of sharing in | bers of the Sodaliiy Union will be what Supreme Court Justice Meler | guests of the Rev. John H. Gampp, S Steinbrink called a “brutal tragedy” St. Ignatius Church on the hill were held on second-degree murder ! overlooking Chapel Point and the bay. EMBERS of the Nassau Coun held for the grand jury on ¢ George Hutchinson, eft to right: were held on murder charges. charges by the justice yesterday. Seven were held for assault, and all 13 were charged with conspiracy. The highest police official ameng the 13 was Dcputy Chief Frank J. Tappan do Republican leader of Oy:te: of being &n N second-degree murder He has denied he stood on the stomach and neck of Stark, who was buing questioned about an attack on a detec- tive's mother. have Stark, betng ‘ou YOU in SAVI! 30 Top Coats . . . $25 Top Coats . . . PRICE beating and Geath of Hyman Stark, a prisoner. Thomas Benanza, Patrick Shanley. ¢forth, Detective Charles Wesser and Patrolman Lannis Ray. | in Knoxville, coming here in 1913 to | Lincoln avenue, Half Price! For any Suit and Top Coat in the house (except- ing only Tropicals)—but that includes both Fashion Park and Glenbrook *Full Dress Suits We are including a lot of Glenbrook Full Dress Suits— (coat and trousers)—that are $50—at HALF Policemen Accused in Stark Death ELEVEN HELD FOR GRAND JURY IN THIRD DEGREE CASE. sland, N. Y., police force photcgraphed yesterday after four of them were murder and seven others for second degrce assauli in the “ront row, left to right: Sergl. Marcel Chagnon, Detective Detective Joseph Hizenski and Patrolman Harold Breilenbach. Bae ander, Patrolman Hairy Liljegren, Detective Leslic Pear: Mayforih, Pearsall, Zander and W F }"]m' Long I es of tecond degree Detective Harry SUCCUMBS IN ATLANTA 'TAKOMA PARK RESIDENT j ACCUSED BY MERCHANT . Prominent Marketer of Proprietary i Medicines Dies at Home. Charles A. Is Held in ATLANTA, July 21 (Pl—George F. poo. ; ckville Jail artant Charg- T ) e b s | S T G AR e GLELT ing of proprietary medicines, died at | his home here yesterday after & 1ong | By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. iliness \ Originally from Waynesville, N. C,| TAKOMA PARK, Md., July Mr. Willis began his medicine business L Charles A. Immich, 24 years old, of 520 i el 1ot Takoma Park, was organize International roprietaries, g Inc., of the United States and Canada. ‘Rr““ld on & warrent chauging him His widow, formerly Miss Charlotte | With oblaining money under false pre- Bowers of Richmond, Va., and three | tenscs by Town Policeman Earl Thomas sons survive yesterday and 1s being held in the jail | at Rockville for a hearing in County | Police Court August 16 Immich was & warrant sworn to by Mrs Sams, in which che charges that he appeared at her har re store here purchased $10 worth of peint ave her a check for $20 and took $10 in change. The k. she sald Imlu'rll ing Fulse Pretense. M MURDER TRIAL DELAYED MIAMI, FhL July 21 (P —-Capt. W. N. Lancaster's murder trial for the death of Hayden Clarke, youthful writer and flance of Mrs. J. M. Keith-Miller, | the Australian aviatrix, was postponed yesterday from July 26 to August 2 | Circuit Judge H. F. Atkinson ordered the postponement because the date con- | flicted with other court duti Capt. ter, former British army in prison here. later proved to be worthless SENSATIONAL WHY THIS W, 7 rnow o//z—u' i ((-fl/l (’ (2= 4 o 7 We realize it’s a drastic move to make in mid-July— provides an opportunity you will be keen about when G dnd QUALITY. the finest clothing that is made, for one thing. all-the-year-round weight, for another—which means you will be buying for the next season—as well as now. Literally “fifty-fifty” $65 Suits and Top Coats $ $60 Suits and Top Coats $ 555 Suitsand Top Coats $ *$50 Suits and Top Coats $ $45 Suits and Top Coats $ %40 Suitsand Top Coats $ $35 Suits and Top Coats $ it means to Of course, it's It's 32 30 MobEss is today the only sani- tary napkin millions of partic- ular women will use. Once you try it, you'll find—as millions have—that it is the softest, safest, most comfortable napkin made. X To get you to try it—Modess is now reduced. Quality stays the finest—but the price of Modess is now less than the reg- ular price of any other estab- lished brand. 55% less than Modess cost last year. Accord- ing to location and service, prices vary in different stores. But the most you should now pay for Modess anywhere is twenty-five cents. Try Modess! See what a rev- elation it is! Different? You can’t imagine how different till you wear it. What'’s the secret? . . . The Modess filler. Soft, $ $ 25 p2) #’I!?[(({J /l/fll7 7 ((l( li Because the reductions are Under the circumstances all CHENIT IS ADDED | AT GEORGETOWN U, Rev. G. F. Strohaver of Holy, Cross Joins Faculty as Head of Department. | i Georgetown University has added to Iits liberal arts faculty an eminent | Jesuit scientist and teacher, Rev. | George F. Strohaver, S. J, who has | come here from Holy Cross College, | Worcester, Mass.. to become head of the ' | chemistry department at the Hilltop. | Under his supervision it 15 expected the | department will undergo 8 radical change and expansion during the com- | ing academic year. | For the last seven years Father| Strohaver has been dean of chemistry | at Holy Cross. During that period he has raised the standards of the chemis- try courses to the pinnacle of New England liberal arts colleges. At ‘(‘(‘u'l‘ulumn he succeeds the late Rev. George L. Coyle, S. J. whose recent death left the chemistry department without an active head. In addition to | these duties he will become director of the Chemo-Medical Research In- stitute, founded by Father Coyle, where important experiments in cancer are being conducted. In recent years Father Strohaver has gained prominence with his own ex- periments in the field of chemistry, md he is especially interested in ultra- | s and in the upp‘xcanuu of | to the study of insanity. At ss, among other experiments | d, were tests with cello- | | established in 1686 & he has been studying | itra-violet radiaticns; derivatives. He is particu- ested in the relations of chemistry and industry. He was for- | merly president of the Worcester | Chemists’ Club, the only organization of its kind outside of New York City when formed. Its members are com- posed chiefly of chemists aff industrial plants in Worcests Father Strohaver is 45 and a native of Baltimore. He was graduated from TLoyola College in 1907, and immediately cntered the Jesuit order. He became interested in_chemi-try during his col- tege days &nd pussued advanced studies at Forcham University. He soon by came one of the leading science teach- ers in the Jesuit order, and some years ago he . ated a course of study under which the science departments in all the Jesuit institutions in the East were established on a broader scale the effects on ml».n larly 1 wl g; /HICF s Il(lt 5 REV. GEORGE F. STROHAVER, 1200 ORGANIZE TO PRESS THEIR CLAIM TO HARLE | Belf-Styled Descendants of Orig- inal Dutch Patentees Gather. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK. July 21.—Two hun- dred optimists gathered in Park Pa yesterday with the belief thet Harlem belongs to them and they are going to get it back. They are the self-identifiec descend- ants of the 23 original Dutch patentecs | of the tuwnship of New Haarlem, first and now the largest y in the United State: As members je corporation of the Town of New Haarlem, they elected Jesse S. Halstead, an Oz\kmnd Calif,, chemist, “town supervisor.” colored comm 'POLITIGIANS HELD | RELIEF RACKETEERS’| | Eloger ‘W. Babson Tells Silver Bay ‘ Institute U. S. Is as Much on Dole as England. By the Assoclated Press. | SILVER BAY, N. Y., July 21.—De-| | scribing “all politicians high and low" a5 the chief benefictariss of the “relief | racket,” Roger W. Babson, economist. | today ‘told_members of the Silver Bay Institute that the United States today is as much on a dole as England and asserted that until public attention is focused on men instead of money “the world will continue to suffer.” | “Money,” said Mr. Babson, “will no | more succeed in getting us out of the depression than it succe led in keeping {us”cut. Nor does the solution lie in building more non-productive public | works, but in getting the unemployed back to their old productive jobs.” “Organized relief,” he said, “is bene- fitting the politician more than the distressed unemployed. It is the big- gest racket in the country and all noliticiens high and low are its chief beneficiaries.” Mr. Babson urged & “quota plan” for bringing business back to normel and pointed out “the real task” was to balance production and consumption so as to get cvery one back to work. He sald a simple remedy would be to | quota the unemployed against em- | ployer and those already employed. COUNCIL HEAD NAMED Mrs. Hazel Beall of Alpha Chapter has been elected chairman of the Exe- cutive Council of Columbia Province of Sigma Epsilon National Soro Other officcrs named are Miss Lil Lind- Gomma Chapter and Edna Perry, Delta Chapter, treas- ure Meztings of the council will continue out the season, the next one take place at the home of Mrs. Beall t 2 Preserver” Sale $6.85 and $7.85 Broken Lots $ $4.85 {HUDSON GETS A JOB AND WAITS FOR “MA” { Now Is Her Chance to Come to Me, Bays New Cigar Counter At- tendant at Boulder City. By the Associated Press. LAS VEGAS, Nev., July 21.—Guy Edward Hudson, estranged husband of Mrs. Minnie (Ma) Kennedy-Hudson, mother of Afmee Semple McPherson- Hutton, has found a_job. He goes to work today as a cigar counter attendant and pool table care- ‘a}:er in a recreation parlor in Boulder y. Hudson came here several days ago, leaving the seaside cottage of hi near Los Angeles a short time before she signed a divorce complaint. He said he would wait now to see if she would keep her agreement to live with "She has always said if I xct a lub and went to w Now 1s her chance to make good.” Hudson took occasion to d ments quoting him as sa “expose” the disappear McPherson-Hutton, who ihe ocean in 1926 shert time later in she had bre The DODGE HOTEL North Capitol and E Sts. N.W. ;= 80 2 1t's easy to park your car here. Then come through our gates...enjoy our charming gar- den. . .and our cocl restaurant. Dinner—$1.00, $1.25, $1.50 Luncheon, 60c and $1.00 Also a la Carte at Moderate Prices Washingtcn’s Only “No Tipping” Hotel “Carlton” $8.75 to $1 Shoes $6.45 and $7.45 Broken Lots $4.85 0 ; “Dynamic” 860 Shoes $2.95 fluffy, molding to the body the moment you put it on. No stiff layers like piles of paper. No compressed ends to reveal themselves under the sheerest dress. Modess can never be detected. This same yielding, downy filler spells comfort too. Chafing is unheard of. “Packing” and stiffening are impossible. For even the gauze is treated on an entirely new principle. Modess is more absorbent. And the specially-treated back repels moisture—gives you per- fect peace and security. Modess is deodorized. Disposable. And surgically safe. Madeby Johnson & Johnson, world specialists in surgical dressings. Get Modess now—at this wonderful reduction. The more you buy, the more you save! 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Now.$2.85 sales must be for cash—but a small deposit will reserve any selection. so extraordinary and extrava- gant, we must make a nominal charge for alterations. - Lady Luxury Silk Hose Allsilk chiffons or service weights. 2 pairs, SL10. Fashionable mesh dress or sports hose. Were $1.35. Now . LOWEST PRICK! Price sanitary napkins now —atyourdrugordepartment store. Then be wise! Get a supply of Modess and save! SOFTEST FILLER! Feel Modess—see how downy and soft the filler is! No wonder it's comfortable —figure-conforming! MOST ABSORBENT! A bottle of ink poured on Modess will be absorbed but won't come through the moisture-repellent back. ii NEW BRUNSWICK 5; NEW JERSEY The Mode—F at Eleventh Women’s Shops *3212 14th 1207 F *Open Nights