Evening Star Newspaper, June 4, 1937, Page 3

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HE EVENING STAR, WASHIN i TON, D. FRIDAY, 19317. JUNE 4, A3 MRS. BAUKHAGE, WRITER, DIES HERE Was Author of Stories andv ’ | HERE was no hint of impend- Articles Under Name Alice g |Lagety Samll fhefdes parture of Charles F. Keene Daki | on a business trip to Norfolk akin. [ late in the afternoon of May 13. g v In fact, the elderly real estate Mrs. Alice Dakin Baukhage, 74, well- | qoone “aiet o inolinee 1o ba o bit of known author of short storles for chil- | "o T BO D T Y heer dren’s and religious magazines, died | 1 “har voual "“"“hd"‘ QO g ]1‘1‘\ S"‘;;"I Keene was inclined to be imprac- teenth street, after a long lllness. She | ) “maying Dlans which sometimes was the wife of F. R. Baukhage, em- | qiot W0 08 B0 P're. Btknage wrote (he magasiné | | On this aiternoon Keene walked S eldnari ot L aboard the yacht Sunshine, anchored articles under the name of Alice | 3 . | in Washington Channel, for a chat Dekin. She stopped writlng the short | Gy fp SCCTEL Sl RCe VL 8 £8 stories many years ago, but only a few | L ;i b vears ago syndicated a newspaper fea- | & distant cousin and for 30 years one ture based on reminiscenses of her life, | °f Dis closest friends. Born in York, N. Y., Mrs. Baukhage Keene explained that in half an| was descended from first settlers of | hour he was sailing aboard the Nor- Dunstable, Conn. Her father, Maj. | folk & Washington steamer District of Oscar Fitz-Allen Blood, lost his life ;Columbm, docked nearby. Meanwhile, while serving with the Union Army | he had called to pass the time of day &t Folly Island with his friend. | Mrs. Baukhage went to Washington | The two men had the fondness for | State with her husband during the | each other which sometimes develops | pioneer davs there. At the turn of | between opposites. Blount is a yachts- | the century was active in club | man, a lover of hunting and sports, a | and literary in Buffalo, N. Y swordsman, marksman and collector | and later in Danvi I, where Mr. | of guns. None of these things had | Raukhage was treasurer of the Hegler | any particular interest for Keene, with | Zinc Co. She had been a Washington | his artistic mind, but he nevertheless resident since 1925 and was a member seemed to feel closer to Blount than | of the Elizabeth Jackson Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolu- to his other friends. tion, here Besides her son, Hilmar newspaper Funeral pm. tomorrow Fourth nue nort she, work Told of Trade Prospects. Keene had often expressed surprise | that Blount should live on a yacht. For himself, he had a distrust of boats, feit uneasy on the water. Keene's only connection with things nautical, his friends said, was the fact that his son, Charles F. Keene, ir, | had graduated from the Naval Acad- | husband she leaves a Baukhage, Washington | man | held at 2 n Lee's funeral home. and Massachusetts ave- Buria be private. services will be street east Keene emy. He told Blount he hoped to turn & nice sum from a deal he planned to close in Norfolk. He had an agent's | reluctance to disclose details or parties to the trade, and Blount did not press him. Before Keene left Blount gave him & couple of suggestions to trade on—a | resident of the Shoreham Hotel was | looking for a buyer for his boat and an interior decorator had made an offer for a section of a country estate Blount owned. Keene made notes and these subsequently were found on his | body. Blount regards the notes as stantial proof that Keene left Wash- ington with no thought of suicide and | with every intention of running down | the “tips” he had given him. Keene already had left his baggage on the boat (Continued From Firsi Page.) ita contents scattered the metal ban his shattered eyeglass the floor There w wash basin, catwalk out and back from The 32-ca owned His wrist broken, and | found on watch were as blood on tt on a drail de the state bed, on the above the om window deck guard rail 10 feet window b er re fired Keene fat was from a never llet sub- | such a gu Knots. the rope case around have been tied Keene could in a itdn’t cate e The kno which Keene's only by an ex Stranger Bought Him Beer. He left the yacht about 6:15 pm and went aboard the District of Co- | lumbia. Keene later substituted the | hat he was wearing when he embarked for a brown beret, a circumstance | which attracted some attention. Keene's state room was next to the aft deck on the port side. Ship’s officers cannot recall taking up Keene's ticket, although this was | done alter the boat left Alexandria as a matter of routine. A few passengers who noticed Keene that night remem- bered him as & quiet, slender man in | a beret About 11 o'clock Keene bought two soft drinks from J. M. Elby, who runs the newsstand in the salon. Later, at | about midnight, Elby recalled that “a | ; oot thres | Te-faced man” bought a bottle of bullet was & mate of three | o "o, Keene and strolled away | caliver bullets found in | 450 geene finished the beer. Keenes family MY |~ Keene presumably retired to his about the caliber | o i mediately after drinking the beer. Some time after 1 o'clock that morn- ing the boat was approaching the mouth of the Potomac, in slightly rough water simple kno eved to have he boarded the boat anged & $5 bill a and, only state was found | were, a kle he room ets empty, his wallet and left pocket The automobile mechanic’s ham in the brief case ard equipr Keene never as stand- | idebaker A car 1 A owned suct Evidence. rray of mur nents e suicide Suicide der evi- dence pr declare he fatal unfired 32 his vest pocke have been m of his sister's gu Keene had con he was worried heory taken ded to friends that er financial reverses. He said he ended to meet a Norfolk consummate a ! but no one with whom appointment can be Keene had found There the bullet nd Irrespective of what decision police reach, the case will remain on Mary- land's records s & murder nnless a jury the verdict of the coro- ner's j Boat Engines Noisy. The steamer is one of the line's oldest, and her engines, coupled with the stress on the hull. made consid- | erable noise. Then, too, the steam radiators popped as they contracted The night watchman, William H Bowen, was seated in the salon not far | from Keene's cabin door. He heard & noise which might have been a muffied | shot or might have originated in the LCST. normal operation of the boat. Bowen took a turn on the after deck. noted | no lights were on, and hearing nothing further, dismissed the matter. A ventilating grill-work runs around | the top of the cabins. If & shot was fired in the cabin, it must have been carefully muffied. A passenger in the adjoining cabin, Mrs. R. F. Loper of Newport News, Va., heard no unusual sound during the night and, she said, | | she is a light sleeper. Not until most of the passengers case. | had alighted at Norfolk after 7 o'clock “0°. | the following morning did ship's offi- an were powder burns around WO reverses BILLFOLD. Ar pass Bryant. 1 RRIEF CASE 049-E. C Nat_Baten CAT, 1200 H Adams 17 DIAMOND ing cash. street conta e straved Liberal reward s. bet. Md. Club id P now o temerald Potomac_bti46._ case. on 4th_st. tenden sts. nw ard.Adams 0746 blue Edmu _RING between Al Wednesda GLASSES_ pair_in vicinity Chevy Chase. Wisconsin REPORT DESERTED st unwanted | cors learn something was amiss. animals to_the Animal Protective Assn | am Telephone Hillside 0509 before 10_am.. | Maid Found Bloody Cabin. AWATCH. sold. open face on Calvert st.| Ella Montgomery, a colored steward- DearcSho ,’“ e eema®eall | ess, had discovered Keene's cabin in | | disarray, with blood stains on the lower berth, on the rug and wash | | basin_beside an open window which Swiss. initials | looked out directly om the water. Call Georgia | The stewardess summoned Thomas D. C. ing slenmont WHITE POODL on George ave. vike. Md Reward. Kensingi WRIST WATCH. ladys “R.0.Z" engraved on back ©355 after 7 pm. Reward DOG. *'Lass! vici | side | and wrist watch were on the | crime was raised | agency. | eral Bureau of Investigation to take | Department | dence came out at the hearing. Sergt District Investigator The Keene Mystery—Is It Murder or Suicide? A Chronological Review of the Baffling Case Confronting Maryland and e iesiaiisid | The state room on the Norfolk boat, in which F. Keene met mysterious death. J. Shannon, jr. the purser, who re- | | ported Keene's disappearance to Nor- folk police Detectives came on board and made an examination It was said they were unable to obtain any fingerprints in the cabin They found bloodstains, however, on & handrail above a catwalk out- Keene's window and another bloodstain on the deck rail some 10 feet aft of Keene's cabin. Keene's suitcase was open and the contents scattered about. His broken glasses floor From the clothing in the room it was presumed that Keene went over board in his underclothing, trousers, shire and vest Police “Pass the Buck." The cabin was cleaned up after Norfolk police completed their in- vestigation. Then the question of who had jurisdiction to investigate the Norfolk detectives said Keene could not have disappeared in their city. Washington police pointed out that Keene was seen alive while the boat was at least 75 miles south of this city. Both agencies were anxi- ous to “co-operate” with investigators but unwilling to assume responsibility for the investigation Keene's son, Charles 7. Keene, who had resigned from the Navy to g0 in business in New York, came to Washington to aid in the investiga- tion, With detectives from the Wash- ington homicide squad he met the Dis- | trict of Columbia on her return here the morning of May 15 Local detectives examined the lay- out of the cabin and interviewed ship's officers. They then announced the next move was up to some other Young Keene asked the Fed- over the case, but J. Edgar Hoover, | director, held the bureau had no au- thority over “inland waterways Meanwhile the Coast Guard sent a patrol boal to search the mouth of the Polomac and adjacent areas of Chesapeake Bay for the body. Young Keene's efforts to have a re- sponsible party take over the inves tigation resulted in an unusual hear- ing here on May 21 in the Commerce Building, called by the Federal Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat, Inspection. | Statements were taken from ship's | officers and detectives, but no new evi- i Marlin Brubaker of the Maryland | State police was assigned to take charge of the investigation. | It was learned that a .32-caliber re- volver once owned by Keene could not, | be found In his effects. Blount and other friends of Keene, however, were | SPECIAL NOTICES. JAL MEETING. Gl [ENWOOD CEMETE lot owners of ill be held in the ade rooms, second on Monday. The annual meeting the Glenwood Cemet Washingion Board of floor. Evening June 5. 1037 All Jot owners are earnestly reauested to be present BOARD OF TRUSTEES. CHARLES E. MARSH WILLIAM E_WISE President. 5 Secretary THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOCK- holders of the American Fire Insurance Co_of D, C. for the election of nine (9) trustees for the ensuing vear will be held at_the office of the company. 511 7th st nw. on Thursday June 17. 1937 'at 11 o'clock am. Polls open from 11_am. until 1 pm. GEORGE M. EMMERICH. Secretary SR v WE WILL SELL FOR REPAIRS AND storage Graham sedan motor No. 620895; left with us by T. R. Frazier. 1528 34th st. nw. on Tuesday. June 15th 1 TRIANGLE MOTOR CO., 2 N. Y. av NEW FOLDING CHAIRS FOR RENT VERY Teas. We cater to all occasions, small or large. Metropolitan X254, National 8664. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT ON and after this date I will not be responsibie for debls contracted by any one except my- self. FEARSON S. MEEKS, 622 G st Diine 1 W08 i i IP YOU NEED STORAGE. LOCAL OR long-distance moving_services. phone Met. 2042 MANHATTAN STORAGE & TRANS! co. N. Y. ave. n.w. Rugs cleaned Snd_seored B Nl WHEN_YOU HAVE ELECTRICAL WORK to be done no matter how small the job may be, call the Electric Shop on Wheels No job too small or too large. District 6171. T WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debis contracted by any one other than myself. = JAMES A WILSON. Columbia ave. and Gretta st., Riverdale, Md.__4* DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART ioads to and from Balto. Phila. and New York. Frequent trips {o other Enstern cities. “Dependable Service Since 1896." THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. _Phone Decatur o R ANY ONE_SEEING AUTO ACCIDENT AT 21st and Q sts, n.w. Feb. 16 5 m.. please address Box_6: Star office. 4 T WILL NOT BE FO! A Y debts contracted for by any one other than myself. HOLLIS COFFELT. 26 T st. n.e. 37 . KO- eepsake ED- OLD D dak prints or any treasured pictures” restored improved, copted MONSTON STUDIO _1 OUR SLAG ROOFS are bound to hold in any stress ot weather. High-zrade materials properly ap, by ctical roofers. ~ Assure vourself of a durable job. Call us up KOQNS ROOFING = 033 V'St N.W. COMPANY North 4423, LONG-DISTANCE MOVING. ] 2000 miles. full and part NAT DEL. ASSOC.. INC.. National Padded Vans 630 N. Y. ave. 1460, Blackstone (igar THE CHOICE OF SUCCESSFUL MEN Jlnedt g @/m.m.. filor PERFECTO, 3 fi 2t CABINIT OR LONDRIS, 108 A me.eéénd !in a square of canvas Charles certain he did not take the gun with him and would never have used it if he had Charles Osborne, & jewelry dealer from whom Keene rented office space in the Union Trust Building, was of the opinion Keene sold the gun years ago Police were unable to locate the party or parties whom Keene had planned to see in Norfolk on his busi- ness trip If Keene was murdered, the only possible motive seemed robbery. Yet Keene could have had no more than $40 when he left for Norfolk. No trace of his money or billfold was found. Other puzzli brought the still. Then, was learned ng circumstances inquiry almost to & stand- on Tuesday morning, it that fishermen had found the body of Keene Monday afternoon, floating in Chesapeake Bay near Smiths Island, just across from the mouth of the Potomac Capt. Edward Smith towed the body to Smith's Island. Tied about the neck with bowline knots such as a sea- man might use, was & leather brief case weighted with a weird assortment of metal objects. The case contained an automobi'e jack, tire tool, machine hammer, pen- knife, pocket comb, two beer can openers and & ladies’ mesa purse, later identified as having belonged to Keene's sister, now dead The automobile 1ools were wrapped such as might have been torn from a lifeboat cover. The case was secured to the body with light cotton rope, and there was & length of marlin cord about the body under the arms. A tin box containing two tablets and three 32-caliber pistol cartridges were found in Keene's vest. The hip pockets of the trousers were turned inside out. No money was found on the body, although there was a key ring, stamped with Keene's business address and sev- eral business notes on scraps of paper That night the fishermen assembled & cOroner’s jury on Smiths Island and found Keene had been “murdered by & party or parties unkown.” News of Window of the state room, catwalk below, may have crawled with a along which murderer Star Staff Photos. the gruesome find did not reach the mainland until the following morning Somerset County authorities ordered the body brought to Crisfield, Md., aboard a boat, and Sergt. Brubaker was dispatched from Baltimore in a Coast Guard airplane to take charge of the investigation When the objects found on Keene's body were collected. it was discovered that the marlin rope and tin medicine box had been lost, either of which might have proved a valuable clue An autopsy was held at Crisfield Tuesday after State's Attorney Kirk Maddrix and Sherifft W. H. Dryden of Somerset County announced they would disregard the murder verdict, since it was arrived at without suffi- clent evidence, The autopsy had been shot in the chin, the fatal bullet cot and fracturing the sku The lethal bullet was found to be of a different. weight from that of the pel- lets in the three cartridges The body showed Keene had been struck over although investigators could not be certain because of the advanced state of decomposition Keene's ington Wednesday and buried afternoon in the family plot ham, Md., ily and a few friends Meanwhile, Brukaber took the brief case and its contents to Baltimore, and plans later 1o show the articles to Keene's widow to learn if she can identify them as her husband's. disclosed that Keene indication that that at Lan- Ketne's son, who left yesterday for New York, believes the only article that can be traced to his father is the mesh purse left him by his sister LAWYERS’ BRIEFS COMMERCIAL PRINTING ADVERTISING SERVICE BYRON S. ADAMS IR TR 512 11T ST. neck under the | sing upward | slightly \ the eye, | body was returned to Wash- | in the presence of the fam- | stored in a suit case and Keene took it along while unaware of its presence. Keene's son said his father's only brief case was located in his office. | He is convinced a murderer brought | the other case into his father’s cabin | |and weighted down the body with it. | | Investigators have been unable to | Identify the automobile tools. No one can remember seeing Keene with such |articles in his possession. The real estate man had not driven & car since | his machine was wrecked in an accl- | dent several months ago. A.F.G.E. ICoanued P‘mm First Page.) Young Keene thinks the purse wu’ know it has no part in a proposed | mass meeting against so-called false | economy to be held next week under | the direction of these suspended | lodges.” | The committee which will conduct the hearing was designed by the Ex- ecutive Council from its own member- | ship. 1t is headed by James A. Camp- | bell of Cincinnati, and includes also | | John B. Murray, Boston; John Dan- | iels, Philadelphia, and Ira Y. Bain, | | G. Carroll Dimond, Michael D. Schae- | | fer and Cecil E. Custer of Washington. The last-named is national treasurer, | while the other are vice presidents. It will sit at the Hamilton Hotel, and report, its findings to the council The convention will pass on the cases |of those whose suspension may be | continued after the hearing has beea | wound up. “Purge” Is Second. | Today's “purge” is the second that the federation has conducted against | | the “liberal” element that has come into its ranks, principally through New Deal agencies. Five lodges were expelled at the Detroit Convention last September on thinly-veiled charg- es of communism. These were Social Security, Securities and Exchange. Justice, Rallroad Retirement Farm Credii. By a coincidence groups—Social Security, Securities and Exchange, Railroad Retirement and Farm Credit—last night an- nounced that an appeal for reinstate- | ment had been sent to the executive council. Joining in this plea was the former lodge of the Public Assistance Division of the District of Columbia which also was dropped in Detroit, on the grounds of dwindling member- ship Since the Detroit ousters new | lodges have been organized in Rail- road Retirement and Justice by per- sonnel acceptable 1o the conservative wing. The federation also has “con- servative” lodges in Agriculture, Labor and Interstate Commerce, which are not being disturbed in the current suspension. four of these U. S. GOLD HOARD NOW OVER TWELVE BILLIONS By the Associated Press. The Treasury's gold hoard. largest in the world, now is more than $12,- 000,000,000. The Government's gold stocks. the Treasury said yesterday, reached $12.- 5,190,885 on June 1, an increase of 35,927,415 over the previous day and almost $800,000,000 over January 1 Since the first of the year the Treas- ury has been “sterilizing” incoming gold to prevent it from flowing into excess bank reserves and thus laving the basis for a credit inflation Under the sterilization program funds are borrowed from the money market to pay for gold acquisitions. thus keeping the credit supply stable A total of $793.861.973 of gold has been sterilized. GOING AWAY? Let us have the ‘fa for zepiating while 3o silver” gone T.Erommcll Founoe o' 1873 _Body Work |1¢1|¢ys 2020 M ST. N.W. Let Haley's Do It Right! Don't "Take It Lying Down'’ For your own future protection and for the safeguarding of others prosecute those who swindle you. Racketeers and operators often appearance of this ertisement in these eolumns is evidenee that The Evening Star ea-eperates with and subports the Better Bosiness Bureau for vour protection. THE BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU OF WASHINGTON, D. C., INC. Room 534, Evening Star Building able to continue their nefarious operations. justice—aid those seeking to do so—tell them your own experience—and, cial testimony, give it gladly, that others may not be imperiled by practices similar to those which proved so costly to you. Before You Invest—Investigate Telephone NAtional 8164 "take many of our citizens for a ride” and failure to prosecute the swindlers invariably results in their being If you have been victimized and if law-enforcing bodies seek your aid inbringing the principals to if they want offi- | associates, | of matter and into the behavior of the | pea | alchemy” of transmuting elements by | sub-atomic bombardment by means of | set up | mal minute particles as protons, neu- | tube with a propelling force of 5.000.- and | Steel “Pear” Observatory To Delve Secrets of Atom Plans for an atomic observatory in |the “supergravity,” the discovery of the form of a gigantic steel pear 50 | which was first announced by Dr. feet high, to be built at the Terrestrial | 1, " 'y S Al Magnetism Laboratory of the Carnegie | 11" 804 his S sy Institution of Washington, on Broad |though long postulated and referred Branch road. have just been flied at io as “atomic energy”—the force com- [REeiDiricaBUlIding ared io which all other forces know In this observatory, under the di- > ) QUMY [OFoen tow in creation were minute—the first | rection of Dr. M. A. Tuve and his | it is planned to make in- ‘nrtua! observations and measurements veaugatinns of far-reaching Iimpor-|of this force in action were observed at the terrestrial labor= tance into the fundamental structure | atory. It was a major development in | modern research into the nature of things, and specially designed ap- paratus was required to carry it much further. The newly-discovered force is chiefly of significance for the new light it throws on the structure of | matter itself. It operates only within the field of the atom, something less than the diameter of a trillionth of an inch, and at present has no con= ceivable practical application The original discovery, however, was considered as notable an eveat in the history of science as the promul- gation of ihe theory of gravity by Sir Isaac Newton three centuries ago and for this reason the new Wash- ington observatory is bound tn be ona of the centers of interest in the scien= tific world magnetism newly discovered force—36,000,000,. -l | 000,000,000,000,000 greater than grav- | | ity—which binds the nucleii of atoms | | together and hence is the basic bind- ing force of creation. The observatory also will be equip- for experiments in the ‘“new | which such lately fantastic dreams as | | that of changing lead into gold have become realities, although on a very small scale at great expense Within the great steel pear will be the high voltage apparatus capable of “firing” such infinitesi- trons and deutrons through a vaccuum 000 volts. A constant pressure of 50 pounds to the inch will be maintained inside the “rear” when the apparatus is in action The pear-shaped structure will be placed over a circular chamber of re- inforced concrete entirely under ground in which will be placed the target to be bomberded. Thus the electric beam will be directed straight downward toward its mark. Beside it will be a control room reinforced by earth and concrete in which will be set up the instruments for control of the processes All observations will be made through reinforced windows The only entrance to the observatory will be by means of a zig-zag tunnel re- inforced by earth and concrete lead- ing from the main laboratory building The zig-2ag arrangement is to prevent damaging rays from the atom-smash- ing and other processes affecting the other machinery of the laboratory or any of the personnel Below the circular chamber for the target will be an 8-foot-deep tank filled with water when the apparatus is in action The water is for the absorption of neutrons thrown off in the bombardments. The whole struc- ture, according to Dr. John A. Flem- ing. director of the Terrestrial Mag- netism Laboratory, has been designed to present & pleasing architectural effect in a residential neighborhood There will be a pilastered wall with casement windows around it The “pear” will be 50 feet high, 37 feet in diameter al the top, and ap- proximately 15 feet at the bottom t will be equipped with entirely new and improved high voltage apparatus The major program of the high- voltage division of the laboratory which will be carried out in the new structure, is to clear up the nature of for a similar, tructure, were announced by the Westinghouse Co burgh. SUMMER CLAIS;SES FRENCH GERMAN SPANISH START FOR A CONVENIENT HOUR ENROLL TODAY £0-Mi Native Teachers Smal SY PAYMENTS The Berlitz School of Languages 1115 Connecticut Ave. NAt. 0230 Plans but smaller this week at Pittse ite Sexaic Rlessed relief has been the experience of thousands who have used PILE-FOE : t relioves bu Pr healing a Don’t suffer for guaranteed re. 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