SLAYER'S ARREST PROMISED TODAY Asheville Sheriff Insists So- lution of Girl’s Murder Is Near. ®y the Asscciated Press. ASHEVILLE, N. C, July 24— Bheriff Laurence E. Brown reiterated today he expected to arrest “at any | moment now” the man he suspects as the slayer of Helen Clevenger, 18- year-old New York University student found dead in her hotel room eight days ago. Brown made it plain the suspect is ot one of the three persons detained for questioning, but declined to discuss the identity of the person he believes ‘was the actual killer—“a particular person known to me.” The sheriff admitted, however, he ‘would have to question the suspect be- fore preferring formal charges. Brown promised Weanesday night he would seize the man “within 43 hours.” That would place the arrest By 7 o'clock tonight, and today Brown said: “T'll stick by the 7 p.m. dead- line.” while rounding a curve. Girl's Uncle Returning. Brown said Prof. W. L. Clevenger, S4-year-old uncle of the slain girl, was expected to return to Asheville to- day to aid in the investigation. Cleven- ger went to Ohio to attend his niece’’s funeral. His work as dairy specialist at North Carolina State College in Raleigh takes him on frequent tours of the State, and his niece was accompanying him on one of these trips when she was slain. The three still detained in the in- vestigation are: Mark Wollner, con- cert violinist; Daniel Gaddy, 28-year- old hotel night watchman, and L. D. Roddy, 25, Negro bellhop. Another view of the wreckage. the passengers injured, 4 seriously. THE EVENING STAR Four Die as Trains Meet Head-On Close-up of the wreckage of two Central of Georgia passenger trains after they met head-on WASHINGTON MAY DRAIN POND INTERRORIST QUIZ Police Consider Move After Alleged Black Legion Victim Is Found. BACKGROUND— Last Spring a young husband at Detroit was Jatally beaten by a mob, which accused him o} cruelty to his wife. The wife denied her husband had been cruel and police investigations of the case disclosed the eristence “of a might-riding band of terrorists kmown as the “Black Legion.” Almost a score of its members were taken into cus- tody. Several admitied night rides, beatings and other forms of intim- idation. Investigations revealed other deaths traceable to the Black Legion. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, July 24.—Authorities studied today the advisability of draining & pond near Pinckney, Mich., where the body of one alleged Black Legion victim was found, in their search for further evidence against masked and hooded members of the terroristic band. An assertion attributed to Harvey Davis, Black Legion “colonel,” that “that sinkhole could tell plenty if it could talk,” spurred them in their search. Prosecutor Duncan C. McCrea said Dayton Dean, confessed Black Legion “executioner,” told him of the re-| mark and that James Roy Lorance, | one of five, including Davis, who are accused by Dean of the thrill slaying | The engine crews of both trains were killed instantly and 19 of The crash was attributed to a misunderstanding of orders. —A. P. Photo. The sheriff released Miss Mildred Ward, 19-year-old daughter of Woll- ner’s landlady, who corroborated the | | ] musician’s statement he was at home the night of the assault-slaying. | Told “Straight b(on 4 “I became convinced she had finalh’ told me a straight story,” the sheriff said. Miss Ward told newspapermen after- ward she had stuck to her onginal statement. 5 The sheriff declined to say why ‘1e<Remanded to Jail continued to hold the three others. He questioned Gaddy again last mght and | Counsel Says McMahon announced afterward: “Gaddy’s mem- | erviEeeting much hefier | Wished to Call Witnesses. PR BACKGROUND— ‘MURDERED’ WOMAN etiring from, o formal uard BELIEVED IN WEST : King Edward was threatened by a . 2 | Relative Says She Received Post | pistol in the hands of George Andrew McMahon, a reformer. A Card From Mrs. Rose in Kansas. mysterious “woman in gray” is said to have knocked the weapon from the man’s hand. Two constables Search for Mrs. Mary Rose, whose body her husband, Eugene Rose, 216 | Twelfth place northeast, claimed to‘ also were credited with the act. have buried on the bank of the Poto- | McMahon, arrested and hustled off to jail, insisted his act was only mac after he drowned her, turned to | BY the Astociated Prese Kansas today. | a protest and that he meant mo harm to the King. Leahy, 1833 M street, told police she | revolver at King Edward’s military had received a postcard from Mrs. | parade, was remanded to jail for a Rose last week postmarked Hutchins, | week today after a henrmg on a charge Kans., saying she was traveling and | of producing a v\enpnn “with intent GETS I}UNTINUANBE After | LONDON, July 24 —George Andrew | A sister-in-law of Rose, Miss Mabel | McMahon, bald Briton who drew & in good health. to alarm his majesty.” The decision to grant a remand “Thou Shalt Nots” for Capital’s Citizens. "l‘OSSING A cigaret stub to the sidewalk, or a newspaper into the street is against the law in Wash- | ington | It is very likely none has been fined the maximum of $300 levied | volving only cigarettes, but it might | happen. | vegetables, garbage, dead animals ashes, sawdust, hay, gravel, trees, cin ders, paper or refuse matter of .ny kind. Kindling any combustible upon | | sidewalks or roadways in an attempt | to evade this regulation is also a violation of the District code. The use of your own garbage can or incinerator, or public trash con- for infractions of the regulation in- | You mustn't go about abandoning | | ervell said it apparently was a mes- sage for McMahon's wife. The first witness, Marie Blencowe, a barmaid, said McMahon came to the “Two Brewers” pub “as usual” the day before the incident apd told her: |“I am going away; you'll never see me again.” John William Remes, an eye-wit- ness at Constitution Hill, said he first saw McMahon when the latter asked a constable to move. He did not see the revolver. “The first thing I heard"” said | Remes, “was some one—I think it | was my wife—saying: ‘An insult to 1 pushed my way through | the crowd and saw the prisoner in | |the arms of a policeman. As they | turned him around I said, ‘You swinel’ | | the King!’ and struck him.” Mrs. Lily Yeoman testified she stood in the front row of spectators, in front | of McMahon | When the King rode by, she told the | | court, “a man pushed forward. pushing | me to one side by spreading his arms. | “The prisoner held his arms up above | his head and I saw something in his | | right hand. * * * It was bright, but T couldn't see what it was.” She looked at the King, then glanced about and saw McMahon in a stooping | position. i lhoughl it must be a bomb being thrown,” she said. “Then someone | rushed to the left-hand side of the | prisoner and got hold of his left arm. I saw an object leaving his right hand. | T followed it with my eves and saw it 'o{ Silas Coleman, 42-year-old colored | hod carrier, corroborated the story. | Coleman’s body was found a year | | 880 in the swamp. Dean’s recent statement offered the first explana- | tion of his death. ! Police took Dean to the marsh yes- lfl day. There he pointed out the | spots where events in his narrative of | the hod carrier's slaying—which he‘ said members of the legion perpetrated | | “Just for the hell of it”"—occurred. | Detective Sergt. Jack Harvill of the | | Detroit police homicide squad accom- | | panied Dean as the confessed killer of Charles A. Poole, who died when the | legion rode on May 12, helped the State prepare its case against the five | men accused in the Coleman case. Sergt. Harvill, who said he was with | #Pother man Dean continuously, denied a widely cir- | culated report that Dean told officers | seven bodies would be found in the lake {if 1t should be drained. The five accused in Coleman’s death | ::2"3‘"8 his attempts,” are awaiting a preliminary hearing | next Tuesday. They are Davis, Lor- { ance, Ervin D. Lee, Charles Rouse and John Bannerman. Dean has pleaded guilty to the fatal ! shooting of Poole. D. C., FRIDAY, JULY 24 1936 Trophies for Horse Show Smokers Acidity Goes in Jiffy with Bell-ans FOR INDIGESTION Any size, 6 or 8 Exposure Rolls i} Developed 9 50 and Printed on Velox g,opin1s 3¢ up HITZ_STI.IJIO 1112 G St. '36 SALES—1218 Conn. A DODGE PLYMOUTH Downtown Sales & Service Immediate Delivery—All Models Dodge Sedan Dem. Bir Discount TORREY MOTOR CO. - NA. 7840 SERVICE—1625 L N. Miss Kay Sebastian (left) and Miss Ruth Wallach are shown above admiring the trophies to be Boulevard Farms Horse and Hunt S esented winners in the ow tomorrow. The show will be held on the estate of Edmund P. Montgomery, American consul to Mexico, about 4 miles south of Alexandria, on the Mount Vernon Boulevard. Seventeen classes are listed, the show beginning at 10:30 a.m. —Star Staff Photo. (Continued From First Page) shall be only too happy to accede to the request and obey orders.” to the President as a “Franklin Double-crossing Roosevelt” was made at the recent national con- tion in Cleveland. gracious thing to do; 1 think more of him for it.” | too harshly against him.” | Smith, was disrupting the convention | | and that I could be of grefll service in | ! send's following behind him.” ‘lempmlneuus. he declared: reliable source said took place last | week, had anything to do with Father Coughlin’s subsequent apology and promise to “obey orders” from the Vat- ican were he silenced, was not dis- closed. | It was suggested in some quarters that Bishop Michael Gallagher of De- | troit, Father Coughlin's superior, | might ask Pope Pius to transfer him | from his diocese to spare him further | embarrassment in the controversy. Prelates, however, expressed ihe be- lief the holy father would prefer to | transfer the radio priest himself, | | rather than taking any action which, by implication, might reflect on the aged bishop. Any question of transfer or cen- sure, informed Vatican circles said, certainly will arise only after a possi- ble private warning to Father Cough- lin and his refusal to heed it. The prelates were declared to be awaiting with utmost interesi Bishop Gallagher's expected arrival here to- morrow. He will be the key witness in an ex- | amination of the radio priest's crusad- | T | ing tactics in the United States, a high | in a speech he said was ex- American prelate said, adding that ! Coughlin’s recent assertion that Presi- dent Roosevelt was “a liar” had caused & “painful impression” in the Vatican. Coughlin The speech in which he referred “liar” and as | vention of the Townsend organiza- Gracious, Says Townsend. Informed of the apology. Dr. Fran- cis E. Townsend said it “was me' Father Coughlin, he “let the word slip in the heat of | and “it should not be held | said, a speech” Father Coughlin said that he ap- | peared at the Townsend convention at the request of Dr. Townsend and | whom he did not' | identify. “They said Jim Farley's man, Gomer | the priest I went to try to keep Dr Town- of There, “As far as the National Union is L concerned, no candidate indorsed for Congress can campaign, go electioneer- FAINT SOUND CLUE | TO BOMB OUTRAG ceeded in driving the farmers from 1 ing for, or support the great betrayer and lar, Franklin D. Rooseveit, he who promised to drive the money changers from the temple and suc- HAHN SUMMER 14h &G e 7th & | their homesteads and the citizens from Bride Tells Postal Agents | Slight Click Before Blast Killed Mate. | CAPE CHARLES, Va., July 24— | Postal inspectors followed a clue of of | Coughlin said his reference was not their homes in the cities.” W, 7 In his open letter of apology. Father oomens Shop at 1207 to promises made by the President to | him, but to “the recorded promises | ! held out to & Nation during 1932 by '1 candidate for the presidency. I had | address | ten needlessly . LAWYERS’ BRIEFS RUSH PRINTING BYRON S. ADAMS Auto Painting ||a|¢y’s 2020 M ST. N.W. Let Haley's Do It Right! Buy from an Electrical Dealer WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATORS JC. Blessed relief has been the exns f thousands who have used PIL: is soothing ointment relieves bur nd_itching of Blind, Bleeding rudiog Piles. Promotes hea to reduce swelling. Don’t get A tube of f0othi PILE-FOE_today for guarantecd re At Peoples Drug Stores or other good druggists. STORE HOURS Men’s Shops Open All Day Saturday K 3212 14th F Closed Saturday Other Hahn Women’s Shop Open as Usual | sound here today as they sought to|in mind the noble inaugura wealthy \ delivered by that candidate-elect, and Meanwhile, Rose, who was brought | ‘lelrn why Curry Thomas, | touch the horse.” farmer, was blasted into death by a ' had in mind an oath of office to uphold | pending continuance of the hearing back here yesterday from Danville, next Friday was made after Alfred Va., where the police chief said he had “confessed” the murder of his | Kerstein, counsel for the prisoner, had wife was in Gallinger Hospital. Po- | announced McMahon wished to tes- lice said he was suffering from the |tify himself and to call witnesses. effects of drugs. Sitting in the grimy Bow street Inspector Bernard W. Thompson, ’polme station court room in the heart chief of detectives, said Rose repudi- | of Covent Garden Market, the sharp- ated his “confession,” stating he did | nosed McMahon heard Special Con- not remember making it, and if he | stable Anthony Cofdon Dick tell how had. it was under the influence of |he smashed at the prisoner’s pistol drugs. The last time Rose saw hlsI wife. according to the inspector, was | when she visited him in Gallmger Hospital about eight months ago. “Just to clear this thing up,” wife, was in Gallinger Hospital. spector Thompson said, “we are going | John Simon, the home secra‘ary. to trv to locate Mrs. Rose out in Kan- | read: try to locate Mrs. Rose out in Kan-| “For some years I have been the sas. We are pretty well convinced | victim of organized persecution by | there was no murder.” your hirelings. * * * As this perse- | Whether or not any action will be | cution. despite repeated appeals to the taken against Rose, Thompson de-|highest authority, vourself included, clined to state. | continued I deem it my bounden duty as a supposed FOUND. __ demand justice. " white throat and vaws. | “Intolerable persecution.” the letier | continued, had prevented McMahon [from obtaining employment and had | wrested emplovment from him when- Constitution Hill eight days ago. Reads Letter to’Sir John. Kerstein, after the constable had In- | testified, read to the court a letter Pfl-‘ which McMahon had writtea to Sir It Return to Mr. hand when King Edward rode by on | biect of the King to | s black and_white: n.w. section. Reward. % D st n.e. g “CARRIER—Los! Tuesday night: N, A R Revara. " Clis. Service Gasoline Station i Wisconsin_ave. n.w DIAMOND AND PLATINUM WRIST WATCH. .?\}lAulomh snorefim Hotel or 1600 block { ave.: liberal reward, return or inform. ding to recovers. 1 I. ave. Dist. Dod—wxu- aired terrier. about 5 months: brown. black. white: Nichol collar. with non-printed_tag. _Cleve. BORORITY _PIN—_Los Greek letters. s ward._Call botomac ( = TERRIER. small, bl k _and brown. hmwn spots over near 1sm P sty Reward, Lincoin ez T SPECIAL NOTICES. TERMINAL VAN LINES Padded Vlns—Piun!H Di!tlnce Mu'ers Oflcel. F"O fllh St. N.W. West_0919. MO LOADS AND PART Iflldl '.o lnd from Balto.. Phila. and New Soin ThSuL R L o, B cities, ‘‘Dependable - V] 'RANSFER & ST TDSO ORAGE &’E‘Dfllmr 2500. ;bearing arls. Re- EXPERT. UN. P e 'nF ANNGAL MEETING OF THE STOCK holders of the Potomac Insuran pany of the District of Columbl- lor the election of directors. will be held i office of the company 900-908 F s Washinston & bocks for the transter of -mk 'Ill be closed from July 27 to Au- wust 3, inclusive. 1936. ALEXANDER K. PHILLIPS. Secretary. n 29.30.31. ‘WILL N¢ REPONSI‘BLI POR ANY debts contucted by any one other than my- self.” A G. EHRLICH 1128 10th st, n.w. 4323.24. 25 27 ON AUGUST 1%th, AT 8 P.M berg’s Auction, ‘st sell for uorlu bills_an Hi motor No. 9"93.1 Dodge sedan, 106493 Buick touring, motor 77517; Chevrolet coach, motor No. an. mot motor No 118110 C Kalorama rd. n.w. APTER TODAY I WILL NOT BE RESPON- sible for debts unless contracted by me J. SUAREZ. formerly of Brown-Suares, Phers. FOLLOWING for ch e At Weschier's Public Aucon, Pridi 24th: Eisu Coupe. M 6 0b3, ieth by Eg A, Hopkins; No. otor No. M E s’ Wi, s‘c‘%. et Coach Moto a] evrol 0% 3165000, et e Wie ok, c:ucnnwr?'“ CALL CARL._INC. SPECTAL RETORN-LOAD RATES ON FULL d part loads to all nolnts 'lthln l. fl muc“"l' wr "u‘:w 1‘“'&"’"1«" ffid e mm al’ moving_also. Phone 'ASSOC. ING. 1317 M. NAT. umso PES. 'rnfl'!r e k prints or any treasured “keepsake E 5102 tures” restored. im ved ed 41 e or small) by EDMOX 4 nw. 35t3 0D e Cocsring ror o__us_vg_rL CHAMBERS s one of the largest undertakers tn the world, Complete funerals as low ‘s $55 \p, Bix chapels. tweive pariors. seventeen ears, hearses. twenty-five. undertakers and ssistants.” Ambulances now only $3 1400 Chain st, n.w. Colimbia 0432~ 517 1ith | 6700, L] st. 5.8 Atlantis 1 ever he had it. “As previous appeals 0o *he King { have been unsuccessfil, the writer | added. “I now demand full satisfac- tion within 14 hours. * * ** Failing “satisfaction” from Sir | John, McMahon wrote: “I shall ex- ,ermse my own prerogative to obtain the necessary satisfaction, which I, in my own tortured mind, consider adequate. This is not a silly boast. I demand justice, irreéspective of the consequences.” Threw Gun as “Protest.” After he was arrested last week, the prisoner criticized Sir John and said he had thrown his revolver into the street at the feet of the King's horse as a “protest.” Constable Dick, describing how he leaped at McMahon when he saw him raise his hand, testified the hand had an “object” in it. Constable Dick, describing how he leaped at McMahon when he saw him raise his hand, testified the hand had an “object” in it. “I saw the object leave his hand at the actual moment I knocked his arm,” he added. Other testimony identified the “ob- ject” as a loaded pistol, which clat- tered at the feet of the King's horse. McMahon was on trial under the treason act of 1842. The hearing opened in the musty, dimly lit little court room 6f Bow street police station. McMahon sat in the iron-railed dock. His face was flushed crimson, and he repeatedly passed notes to his solicitor, blinking his watery eyes at the parade of prosecution witnesses. Discrepancies of opinion over whether the revolver actually struck the King's horse or whether it landed in front or behind the animal, whether it was thrown or knocked from Mc~ u) Mahon's hand appeared from eye- + | witness accounts. The “woman in gray,” credited pre- viously with striking McMahon's arm, did not appear. Constable Dick, how- WHERE TO DINE. Dine Where it's Cool At the Slgn of the lvy Terrace 'QI'“ fathers, anparenl ever, testified there was a woman in a blue dress at the scene, who did not | touch the man’s arm. | The formal charge against Mc- |Mahon was producing a revolver | “with intent to alarm his majesty.” Attorney General Sir Donald Som- quoted the prisoner as telling the po- lice: “I wanted to shoot myself in front of the King, but I lost my head.” | Said Sir Donald: “The first offense ! with which this man is charged is with presenting near the person of his | majesty a revolver with intent to lbreak the public peace; the second | with producing a revoiver near the | person of his ma;my with intent to hlnrm his majesty.” These charges, he said, were in addition to that of being in possession of a revolver with intent to endanger life. Limps Into Court. McMahon, footed, limped into court from a side door, accompanied by a policeman. He was wearing a dark brown suit. Judge Sir Rollo Graham Campbell told him: “You can sit down if you like.” The attorney general said the pris- oner had told the police, done the job properly”; that he aiso had said, him,” and that subsequently he had said, “It would have been better if I had shot myself.” Somervell credited Constable Dick with knocking the revolver from Mc- Mahon’s hand. He said that as the King reached a point about 20 yards from McMahon, Dick saw the prisoner raise his arm with something in his hand. He stated Dick knocked the prisoner’s arm and an object “left his hand and traveled some distance into the middle ject was a revolver.” Reviewing the events of July 16, Somervell stated a mounted policeman stopped his horse in front of McMa- hon as the King approached. He said McMahon shouted: “Take your damn horse away. I want to see the pro- cession!” The policeman turned his horse to face the procession as it came through the arch on Constitution Hill. Afterward, he said, McMahon was seen to write on a newspaper. The paper later was picked up and the : “May I love you?” Som- SPECIAL S.AE. 10- tainers is insisted upon by the city ervell, in charge of the prosecution, | bald-headed and club- ' “I wish T had | “I could easily have shot | or near the middle of the road; the ob- | “Whose horse?” asked the prosecu- tor. “His malesty’s horse," replied the witness parcel post bomb. | . Prom her bed in Nassawodox Hos- | pital, Mrs. Thomas told of a clicking | sound she heard “like a mouse trap” the Constitution of the United States.” | He recalled that President Roosevelt, | in an address on May 14, 1935, used | the word “lying” in referring to critics | The “object,” she testified, hit the | just before s package her husband|©f his ‘arm program and said that horse near the left foreleg and fell to | the ground. “T could see then it was a revolver,” she added. “I asked a policeman at my side if it was a toy one.” nesses asserted the revolver seemed thrown out in an “underhand man- ner.” Samuel Edward Green, retired | newspaper man, also said he saw the | pistol drop between the horse's feet, but did not actually see McMahon with the weapon. Throughout the testimony the pris- oner made copious notes RETIRED POLICEMAN, | LT KENNEDY DIES | Former Giant of Force Was Na-| tive of Virginia and Served 30 Years. John Thomas Kennedyv., 65. once the biggest policeman on the District | force, died yesterday after a long ill- | | ness at his home, 4709 Georgia ave- nue. Mr. Kennedy. who had received a number of commendations prior to! | his retirement, was 6 feet 6 inches tall | and weighed about 295 pounds. | tive of Virginia, he was appointed to | the force in July, 1893, and retired in | | October, 1923. re his widow, Mrs. Belle two sons, Frank A. and J. Thomas Kennedy, jr.; a brother, George B. Kennedy, this city, and a sister, Mrs. Eli Delano, Warsaw, Va. He also leaves five grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow at his late residence. Burial will be in the Ebenezer Church Cemetery, Oldham, V: Sun Hatches Goslings. LEBANON, Ohio (#)—Lew Stibbs, farmer, revised the story of the goose that laid the golden egg. He said it was 30 hot two weeks ago that a goose on his farm abandoned a nest of nine eggs on which she had been sitting. He said later he found eight newly-hatched goslings in the nest. ! He thinks the sun did it. 20- 30 -40-50- 70 HIGH HEAT-RESISTING QUALITIES GREATER NATURAL DILINESS LASTS LONGER + LONGER CAR LIFE Under cross-examination, the wit- | A na-| started to open burst, mangling him | | and throwing her, wounded, mrouzhl the door of their automobile. A fragment of steel entered her side and one eye was injured. Postal inspectors from Richmond | ,and Newport News examined the | wrecked automobile yesterday and picked fragments of ash-like substance | from the shredded, bloodstained up- Rolstery of the seat. Early today they | had not identifled the subsance, but it was believed to have been thrown into the seat when the bomb burst Wed- nesday night. | Friends and relatives of the couple, | who had been married only a short | | While, could give little help. They told | the officers they knew of no one who | “liar might have wished Thomas' death. Mrs. Thomas told Clayton King of Cape Charles, en route to the hospital | after the blast, that the package had carried the n; me “F. C. Thomas, | | Richmond, Va.” in the space ordi- | narily used for a return address. John‘ | Willis, postal clerk, who gave Mrs. | | Thomas the package about 6 p.a. l | Wednesday, said it was wrapped in | | plain paper, was about nine inches | | square and of “average weight.” He | said he did not notice the postmark. | Other postal workers said the parcel | |post was not mailed from Cape Charles. A. P. Disparoon, a clerk, id he believed it arrived in the early morning mail, and Postmaster Thomas Nottingham said it would have been | possible for the package to have come ‘ | from anywhere in the East if it ar- |rived on the morning train from the North. | = SATISFIED TO DIE | { CHICAGO, July 24 (#).—Facing a | death sentence for the murder of her husband, Mrs. Mildred Mary Boiton, 46, told Criminal Court Judge Robert C. O'Connell yesterday she was satis- fled with the verdict. “A new trial would only be a repe- tition of the other.” she said. _Nevertheless, Judge O'Connell con- tinued her counsel’s motion for a new trial to August 3. The widow was convicted by a jury of slaying her broker-husband, Joseph, during e quarrel in his Loop office June 15, e e BALTIMORE, 65¢ One Way $1.00 Round Trip. BUS CENTER, 609 Penna. Ave. N.W. Phone “the President of the United States has | not pussyfooted when attacking either those with whom he is in dulrree-l ment or his political enemies.” | “I wish to state for the record.” the open letter said in conclusion, “that my remarks and criticisms de- livered in Cleveland were directed at a candidate for the greatest politi- office within the gift of the people.” | SPECULATION AROUSED. VATICAN CITY, July 24 (®).—A | trans -Atlantic telephone conversation | between Father Charles E. 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