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B e N CE U PP ——— 3 DEREE L SOUGHTIN GRAVE Body of 64-Year-Old Hotel Keeper in Pennsylvania May Be Exhumed. By the Associated Press. p PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa., September 28.—Attorney General Charles J. Mar- giotti said last night he would ask the Fayette County Court -for permission to disinter the body of Frank C. Mona- ghan, 64-year-old hotel keeper. Gov. George H. Earle charged Mon- #ghan died during a “third degree” to force him to confess the stabbing of Fayette County Detective John C. Wall. Margiotti said his investigators found hair in blood clots on the walls of the little Bertillon room in county detective headquarters in Uniontown, where Monaghan died September 11. He said chemists would compare the hair with Monaghan’s and added: “It indicates his head was bumped egainst the wall.” Special Prosecutor Named. ‘Earle named Margiotti specia] prose- eutor in the case after the attorney - general reported results of his personal . Investigation during which he con- { cluded Monaghan was ‘“barbarously and brutally beaten.” Margiotti’s petition will be presented to the court tomorrow morning, when he also will petition the court for per- . mission to send the case before the = hastily recalled September grand jury, scheduled to begin its inquiry Tues- . day at 9:30 am. School Strike (Continued From First Page.) . dents to enter the building. apologized and said they would re- turn to school this morning. At the opening hour, however, only about 200 students entered the build- ing, and the rest milled about outside, shouting and displaying placards reading, “strike” and “we want Graban.” Chief Cunningham, flanked by a half dozen policemen, urged the stu- ‘When they .refused and continued their demonstration, he fired two tear gas 2 bombs, Some of the children went home after the attack, but most of them re- " mained near the school, still display- > gain his high school position. ing their placards. Graban, who teaches journalism, said he would make an effort to re- He said his certificate permits him to teach only in high schools. He did Dot report today to the grade school. Dr. E. L. Bowsher, State director of “ education, at Columbus, said “that's pretty tough” when informed of the attack. Itvin S. Cobb Says: U. S./Isolation Getting Like Daniel’s in Lion’s Den. SANTA MONICA, Calif., September . 28—Excluding Britons and Scandi- - navians, ours remains almost the only important white race that hasn’t a dictatorship or worse. And the high tide of com- munism laps these shores, which once we thought were in- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 1936, C. U. REGISTRATION Scene at Memorial High School in Campbell, Ohio, where students staged a strike protesting transfer of popular instructors. The strike, beginning last Friday, reache police threw tear gas bombs to disperse the cro¥=ds. a climax today when —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. SENDEASAUT ROLLSINTO PON Effort to Halt Plunge Told by Youth, Lone Survivor. By the Associated Press. HALEYVILLE, Ala, September 28 —Seven persons drowned and an eighth escaped yesterday when an au- tomobile, out of control, rolled back- ward down a hill into Davis Mill Pond, 6 miles north of here. The eighth passenger, after a vain effort to rescue his companions, trudged to a farm house 2 miles away to give news of the tragedy. The car remained submerged seven hours. ‘The dead: John Spradling, 40, owner of the automobile; Miss Winnie Lee, 18, driver of the car; Audrey Lee, 14, sister of Winnie; Miss Maggle Mae Blackstock, 18; Miss Willo Dean Blackstock, 16; Annie Laura Black- stock, 13, and Nolan Cleo Posey, 19. Thurston Smith, 22, escaped. He Says Fortune By the Associated Press. TRENTON, N. J.,, September 28.— The National Association of Fortune Tellers, tossing equivocation to the winds, predicted at its first conven- tion today that President Roosevelt will be re-elected if Gov. Alf M. Lan- don does not defeat him. ‘The President is slated for re-elec- tion, the association said, but Gov. Landon will win “if he gets proper support.” Ten memberg of the association, gathered in the grandstand today, by various occult methods, arrived at the followed conclusions: The New York Yankees will win the world series in six games. There will be world floods and general civil war, but not in this country. The year 1937 will be a “devastat- ing” one for lovers. Business and finance in 1937 will be twice as good as in 1936. There will be trouble in foreign states, “and strong, too.” The United States in 1937 will be & “very happy land.” ‘The political prognostication was: “Astrologically, numerically and was riding on the back seat of the automobile in which his companions were returning to their rural homes from the Haleyville Fair.” Smith told officers Miss Winnie Lee was driving the automobile when it stalled on a hill near Bear Creek,| which forms the mill pond. When the car again started, Smith said, it was put into reverse instead of for- ward gear. The survivor related that Spradling reached over from the rear seat and drew the emergency brake, but this did not halt the plunge. Doors of the sedan were closed and all the bodies were on the rear seat when the machine was brought to the surface. The gears were in reverse and the emergency brake was drawn. Smith said he tried in vain to break the glass door as the car rolled back- | phrenologically, Mr. Roosevelt seems | definitely slated for re-election, but | according to our psychometry read- |ing, which is governed entirely by | our individual psychic powers as apart from the sciences of fortune telling, Mr. Landon will win if he gets proper support to bolster him up.” 20 Years of PAINTING Satisfaction No matter bow large or small s job you may ha safe and call— FERGUSON COl. 0567 ol R. K. 0000000000000 604¢ 3831 Ga. Ave. Roosevelt or Landon to Win, Tellers’ Session ‘The president read a paper by Arthur Cremin, director of the New ‘York School of Music, offering music as a means of prediction. An era of martial music, he said, “not only fol- lowed wars, but in most cases preceded them. Now that is a vitally signifi- cant fact, for you know that wars can be averted if apprehended in time.” —_— Will Speak on Russia. Dr. Fred W. Ingvoldstad will speak on the subject, “Crosses Over the Kremlin” at a meeting at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at Typograpical Hall, 423 G street, under the auspices of the American Friends of Soviet Union. ‘The kapok vogel, or cotton bird, is a small South African titmouse. l BEGINNING TODAY 5% Enroliment of 1,600 Expect- ed—Freshmen Get Tests Tomorrow. With an anticipated enrollment of also will be given to the new students. ‘The traditional freshman week pro- gram has been omitted this year, but many of its features have been re- tained. Dr. Martin K. P. McGuire, TRICO Radiator Covers complete the beauty of well- furnished and decorated rooms, prevent radiatorsmudgeand pro- vide proper humidity. Reason- able prices—convenient terms. tion. BLACKBURN 2nd Floor gssociate professor of Greek and to- English dahce from which Addison took the name for his Sir Roger in the “Spectator.” versity for the first time will be Saturday. Classes will meet for the first ‘Wednesday, when lectures will in all schools and department am. The solemn the crypt of the National the Immaculate Conception. Illinois River 500 Miles Long. ‘The most important tributary of the Upper Mississippi is the Dlinois River with a length of more than 500 miles. 01d English Dance. Sir Roger de Coverley is an old Export Rayon Hosiery. Czechoslovakia is following up- its great shipments of cheap shoes to other countries by & rush of exports of rayon hostery. /@ SPECIAL!! 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Without the retail store through which this volume of merchandise could move from factory o consumer, wages, dividends, and tex payments would have dis- appeared. To sell merchandise in such huge quantities votailers spent over $382,000,000.00 last year for newspaper advertising. No other existed through which they could attract suf- ficient buyers. The newspaper is the primary advertising medium because it prinis the news. Pecple tun fo it eagerly for information about the world and their community in particular. They turn eagerly and conmsciously to the advertising in the mewspaper becasse i i related fo the stores ot which with minimum time and eoffort they can satisfy their needs. shopping edvertising, the most effective way to build sales. sulated by time and distance against evil alien contacts. We still stand aloof from en- tangling foreign alliances despite pressure from within and with- BEARD TAX! During the reign of Queen Elizabeth of England a law was taxing beards over 2 weeks old! Today, if 1t weren’t for Gem Blades, many tender- skinned men would rather pay a beard N T L T T e R -~ R e PN NS ERNET L P ST E SRS out, but no longer may we bar treasonable foreign propaganda—not with science- making duck-ponds out of oceans. Moreover, sundry great powers work to turn out war planes capable of spanning a sea or a continent on a single hostile dash. Isn't it about time we realized—we, the foolish virgin amongst the na- tions, we who once fondly fancied this land was protected by its hemispheric isolation—that we're just about as isolated as Daniel was in the lion's den? And Daniel had & miracle to fall back on! ACopyright, 1936, by the North American Newspaper Alliance, inc.) 5] In No Small oMeasure Your success or progress in business is reflected by the stationery you use. 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