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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • 1

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Atlanta, Georgia
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ATLANTA CONS TIT The South's Standard Newspaper, A. P. Service United Press N. A. N.

A. Largest Circulation of Any Daily Newspap er, Morning or Evening, in A tlanta No. 324. ONTT MORNING NEWSPA PER PUBLISHED IX ATLANTA. ATLANTA, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 5, 1931.

Entered it Atlanta Postofflre Aa Becood-Clasa Matter. Single' Copies: Dally, 5c: Sunday. 10e. Daily and Sunday: Weekly SOc: MorflMy 80e. ON E-MAN.

STREET GA1S BARRED BY (COUNCIL CI nn FUND ET TO EBUILD BROAD IBGE Ex'Au Suspect in San Diego Slaying Believe antan CITY HALL LEASE WRANGLE ENDED; GARRISON ED OWN S35.000 ACCEPTED Constitution Wins Pulitzer Medal for 1930; Women Given Awards for Best Novel and Play DRUGSTOR I LEFT 4 YEARS AGO $34,000: of Fund Offered Will Be Diverted To Cover Half of Cost of Reconstructing Old Viaduct in Dow ntowrn Area. Roosevelt Will Visit Sick Mother in Paris ALBANY. N. May 4. Governor Franklin D.

Roosevelt abandoned his plans for a vacation at Warm Springs, Ga, today and announced he would sail on Wednesday night for the bedside of his mother, MrsI James Roosevelt, who is ill in Paris. Accompanied only by his son, Elliott, and a valet, the governor will sail on the Cunard liner Aqui-tania. He will leave the ship at Cherbourg and hurry by train to Paris. Mr. Roosevelt said hospital authorities reassured him today that his mother, who is 76 years old, steadily has improved, but the governor, her only child, asserted, "I'll be a great deal happier when I get over there and get everything arranged for her." Dr.

Vizetelly Raps Language Purists NEW YORK, May 4. (JPy Dr. Frank Vizetelly, who gets out a dictionary, remarked today that "some professors are so pure they are a public nuisance." Dr. Vizetelly was concerned particularly with the remarks attributed to Dr. Gustave Straubenmul-ler, retired associate superintendent of schools, who remarked that the Germans and the French speak more carefnlly than the people of the United States.

"How can you compare little compact nations like France and Germany with a big country like the United inquired Dr. Vizetelly. "None of us apeaks perfectly enough to please the pedants," he went on. "In a great cosmopolitan country like this, standardization is impossible "The language can take care of itself It will work out ultimately as the expression of the people and not of some high-minded purist." Druggists Believe Prisoner Same Man Who Operated Store at Peachtree and Forrest; Estranged Wife Lives Here. COUNTY AID ASKED IN LIGHT PROBLEM 3 i-vj I- i w- -j 1 i i I I 1 kV If 1 I 'A, 1 mtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmKB ffrinm ii it wn wsss.

sgaKJi SPENT VACATION HERE LAST YEAR Fulton Called on To Pay $25,000 of City's White-way Bill; Airport Building Is Authorized. CHINES MM QUIZZINGOFSTUAR ABOLISHES Garrison Told Former Friends He Was Working for Railroad; Pleads Innocence in Killing. RIGHTS I ORDERED ON HE OF ALL NATIONALS OE GAS RATE FIGHT Extraterritorial Privileges Are Revoked January 1 in New Nanking Government. Paper's Graft Expose Is Called "Most Disinterested and Meritorious Public Service" in Journalism During 1930. Margaret Ayer Barnes Takes Novel Prize and Susan la spell Wins With Play; Robert Frost Honored for Verse.

Council Moves To Determine Interest of Man Who Filed Suit; Con-f erence Today. BY H. R. EKINS. NANKING, China, May 4.

(UP) The special extraterritorial privileges which foreigners traditionally have enjoyed in China were summarily declared abolished by a mandate issued BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Vigorous editorial warfare against virulent corruption in the municipal government woa the Pulitzer gold medal or The Atlanta Constitution', one of the oldest and most progressive newspapers in the south, for the American "newspaper" rendering the by the foreign minister in the na Belief that M. E. Garr'iHon, San Diego and Arizona railroad employe, who is being held by San Diego (CaU police in connection -with the slaying of Hazel Bradshaw, is a former Atlanta was expressed Monday night by local druggists. Garrison was identified by Atlan-tans from infonnation furnished in news dispatches as Moss E.

Garrison who operated Garrison' Pharmacy, at Pcachtree and Forrest avenue, up to 10 years ago. After disponing of this store, he worked in drugstores at Pershing I'oint and on llichlettd avenue, it was said. Press dispatches from San Diego said that Garrison is being questioned as to his visit late Saturday night with Miss Bradshaw, who was found dead from stab wounds Sunday in an Jndian Tillage at Balboa Park. San Ihego. Miss Bradsbaw was an employe of the.

railroad for which Garrison works. The Moss E. Garrison who formerly lived here is about 40 years of age, and came to Atlanta from Winder, where his relatives live now. it was said. Garrison is said to have separated from his wife, with whom he had lived on Jackson street, now Parkway drive.

After leaving Atlanta about four years ago. Garrison worked in a drugstore in Macon for a time, and then went west, it was lioeal druggists said they heard from Garrison about, a year ago. and at that time be said he was working for the San Diego railroad. On a vacation visit to Atlanta last summer, Garrison said he was working for a railroad, it was said. Garrison's father, H.

J. Garrison, died in Winder several years ago. Atlanta's fight to prevent any Increase in gas rates took a new turn Monday afternoon on the eve of a conference this morning between Atlanta Gas Light Company officers and borough officials, when council moved to probe the interest of R. F. Stuart, who obtained an injunction to prevent payment of $1,500 as membership fees to the Municipal Utilities Rate Asso yfv 'fs tional, government at Nanking today.

The mandate declared that the new regulations governing the exercise most disinterested and meritorious i public service during 1930. Established June 14, 1S68, when Atlanta still lay in the ashes of the Civil -War, The Constitution for three generations has oeen controlled and' guided by the Howell family, the jour-1 nalistic forbear of which was a dis- In one of the most important sessions held by the borough council this year, that body and the alder-manic board Monday afternoon took the following action: 1. Agreed to settle the two-year-old controversy concerning lease of the old city hall site to Carling Hotel, for to drop all legal actions now pending and to free the tract for futura bids for ale or lease. 2. Agreed to divert $34,000 of the $35,000 thus received toward reconstruction of the Broad street viaduct, contingent on action by Fulton coun- ty commissioners in voting a similar amount to enable the work to proceed.

3. Passed an ordinance br ring operation of one-man street cars within the fire lim-its the borough, designed aa a safety move and to relieve traffic congestion. Vote was 28 for and 7 against paaaage. 4. Authorized investigation of R.

F. Stuart, who obtained a temporary injunction to prevent the borough paying- $1, 500 aa membership fees to the Municipal Utilities Rate Aato- ciation of Georgia. Membership was sought by the borough in order that it might get the benefit of the testimony of Dr. John J. Bauer, rate expert, at the hearing slated for 10 o'clock Wednesday morning before the Georgia public service commiaaion on a peti-.

Hon of the Atlanta Gaa Light Company for revision of gas rates. 5. Called on Fulton county commissioners to pay $25,000 on Atlanta's whiteway lighting bill for the remainder of the year to prevent necessity of carrying out action of conncil in voting to eliminate about 50 per cent of all such lights in the business district and all of them in the residential aec-tions. 6. Agreed to permit private interests to erect an adminia-tration building at Candler ciation.

In return for the fee Atlanta was to have expert advice at a hearing on a petition for revised schedules. Councilman Joseph E. Berman, chairman of council's special commit BY ASSOCLVTED PRESS-NEW YORK, May 4. The Pulitzer prizes in journalism and letters were awarded today for achievements, which ranged from a novel of war-time America to the. solution of a murder lar- a- iiewspaper reporter.

I "Yejifri of "Margaret Ayer Barnes, was chosen by the jury of awards as the novel published in 1930 which "best presents the whole atmosphere of American life." The prize-winning play was "Alison's House," written by Susan GAaspell and produced by Eva Le Gallieho? at the Civic Repertory theater. Its characters disguised by fictitious names, the play deals with the belated recognition of the poetry of Emily Dickinson. Other prizes in the field of letters were awarded to the following In history, to "The Coming of the War, 1914," by Bernadotte Schmitt in biography, to "Charles W. Eliot," by Henry James, and in verse, to "Collected Poems of Rottert Frost." The jury's decision markted the second time Mr. Frost had won a tinguished Confederate officer, Cap- T7" 1 IT 11 tain xan nvweju 01 us enterprises have been, closely inter- tee fighting any attempt to hike gas and it has been regarded as a factor lut in shaping opinion the entire south.

fr mn iS f- -i Ll gtuiwii ii.iYHidii ll.iwiMhWiili'rrtMM"M prices, offered the resolution, which in its latest endeavor, the paper, under the leadership of Clark Howell, cited the fact that there were rumors editor and publisher and son of Captain Howell, waged a relentless cam paign on political racketeers in the city hall. Beginning late in 1920, The Constitution pursued the crusade through a series grand jury in- Above are six of the 1930 Pulitzer prize winners, whose selection was announced by the board of trustees at New York Monday At the left in the top row is Clark Howell, editor and publisher of The Constitution, which was awarded the prize for the most meritorious public service performed by a newspaper. Second from the left is Susan Glas-pell, author of the prize winning play, "Alison's House." Next is Margaret Ayer Barnes, author of the prize novel, "Years of Grace." On the right is H. R. Knickerbocker of the Philadelphia Public Ledger and the New York Evening Post, who won the prize for the best newspaper correspondence.

Below on left is Charles R. Ryckman of the Fremont (Neb.) Tribune, who wrote the prize winning editorial and at the right is Edmund Duffy of the Baltimore Sun, who drew the prize winning cartoon. Photos are by -the Associated Press. quiries and a score of trials in 1930. To date, the drive has resulted in 11 convictions involving chain gang sentences and heavy fines for council-men and high city officials; 10 pleas of guilty: 19 persons awaiting trial and only seven acquittals.

Fifty-three Pulitzer prize. His "New Hamp indictments were returned. The campaign was long and bitterly fought, for in the words of the grand juries a clique had "managed to get into office and to perpetuate them Old-Styled Reporting Job Wins Prize for MacDonald jurisdiction over foreign nationals in China would become effective January 1. The declaration followed China's refusal to accept the most recent demand by the foreign powers that foreign jurisdiction over their nationals be continued in the large cities of Shanghai, Canton, Tientsin, Peiping and Hankow. The government's action came on the heels of the breakdown of negotiations between Sir Miles Lampsoo, British minister to China, and Dr.

C. T. Wang, foreign minister. Lamp-son went to the foreign office this morning to continue the parleys. It was subsequently announced that they had failed to reach an agreement on these privileges.

foreign office communique said negotiations with Great Britain, the United States, France and Japan were deadlocked. The mandate followed these announcements. It had been anticipated that Dr. Wang would issue it prior to the proposed people's convention, scheduled to convene in the capital tomorrow. An uprising against General Chiang Kai-shek, however, caused a delay in the issuance of the declaration.

Dr. Wang continued his efforts to get Great Britain and Washington to lead in the abolition movement and when they failed, the manifesto was issued without further delay. It is to be submitted to the coven-tion tomorrow. The convention will be held, the United Press was informed at the foreign office, despite the "seceding" of southern provinces and the proclamation of a separate government at Canton, seat of the original Kuomintang expedition in 1926. Dr.

Wang bad indicated in recent years that the Nanking government would seek to change the extraterritoriality privileges as part of the revolutionary regime's basic principles. la the end of 1929 he announced that these privileges which mean consular jurisdiction over a nation's citizens living in China, and the Chinese have no authority to try a foreigner whatever" were to be ended on January 1, 1930, but that manifesto was held up pending a working out of procedure between China and the foreign governments. The nations still refusing to give up their rights are the United States, Britain. France, Brazil and Japan. Both Britain and the United States have long agreed to abolition "in principle," but have insisted that Chin.i give guarantees of ability to dispense justice fairly in all parts of the country.

This so far, it was insisted, ha not been done. BY SIDNEY B. WHIPPLE. paper to Amarillo. Texas, to "get" a NEW YORK, May 4.

(UP) For GARRISON' VIEWS BODY. SOBS. PLEADS INNOCENCE SAX DIKGO, May 4. (JP M. E.

Garrison, 34, railroad worker held by police for investigation in connection with the slaying of Miss Hazel Bradshaw. his former fiancee, sobbed today when taken by police to view the girl's body, and continued to deny his guilt. Police said Miss Brsdshaw. 22-year-old telephone operator, had repudiated a promise to marry Garrison. They considered this a motive for the slaying.

The body, stabbed 17 times, was found yesterday inside the wall of the Balboa park Indian village. After being questioned shortly today Garrison asked Detective Captain Paul J. Hayes if he might be allowed to see the body and to attend the funeral. Garrison stepied up to the body and kissed the girl's forehead, at the same time calling her "sweetheart. He continued to assert he took the telephone operator home Saturday night after attending two shows and that he heard her close the door of her home.

Police continued their efforts to find a brown suit Garrison is reported to have been wearing last Saturday, but which he denies ever owning. A report by an autopsy surgeon this afternoon stated the girl had not been attacked. Garrison tonight said he lived in Atlanta, before coming here, and had worked in drug stores in Columbus, and Macon, Ga. selves in oftice because of the indifference of the voters." And so far-reaching was this ring, said the investigators, that not one pint of disinfectant, not one pound of floor cleaner nor one ounce of lavatory supplies could be sold to or bought by the city without payment of graft. It was not until 17 months after the inception of the drive, April 19, 1931, that The Constitution was able to say: "The main battle has been won.

Atlanta, at last, is freed of the vampire of graft." The Constitution is the third southern and second Georgia newspaper to be awarded the Pulitzer prize for the American newspaper rendering the most disinterested and meritorious public service in a given year. In Continued in Page 10, Column 4. that several persons had been offered as much as $500 to file a similar suit, and which demanded that Stuart submit to cross-questioning. The resolution came on the eve of a conference slated for 10 o'clock this morning at the city hall between the borough committee and R. C.

Hoffman, vice president of the gas company, in an effort to reach a compromise in the controversy. Mr. Hoffman asserted Monday night that he would attend the conference today, but that it was probable that the rate schedule would not be completed in time to be submitted to the committee, since several last-minute changes were being made at a late hour Monday. Denies Paying Anyone. He denied that the company paid Stuart or "any one else," adding "we do not do business that way and I do not even know Mr.

Stuart." Stuart declared he was not paid or "anything." John Westmoreland. Stuart's ettor-ney, declared "I never heard of anv payments. Stuart had a perfect right to file the suit." Berman declared in explaining why the measure was offered, that he had leen told that "several lawyers holding political jobs had been promised handsome fees to file a similar suit, and I want to find out if Stuart was paid for filing it." The resolution came also on the eve of the annual meeting of the rate association's meeting which opens at 11 o'clock this morning at the Piedmont hotel, at which time William M. Lester, chairman, will sponsor a measure calling for abolition of the Georgia public serviee commission before which the hearing on the gas company's petition for a rate revision will open at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning. Under a revised order.

Judge John D. Humphries Monday prevented the borough from expending any additional money for legal services or advice at the hearing, but permitted city attorneys and experts to appear. Bars Payment of Fee. The new order merely bars payment of the $1,500 fee, which the Stuart petition claims to be illegal. Lester also will offer a proposal Continued in Page 10, Column 5.

The eat her SHOWERS. murder story. A. D. Payne, a prominent attorney, had left his home, one day in June, telling his wife he would walk to his office.

Mrs. Payne and a son, A. D. Jayne. entered the family automobile to drive down.

There was an explosion. Both were killed. Payne, it was said, had "enemies," but who they were could not be discovered. 4 An affable man, this attorney. Continued In Page 2, Column 5.

doing an old-fashioned job of newspaper reporting an all-inclusive term, since it embraces anything from solving a murder mystery to "writing the facts tersely and accurately," A. B. Mac-Donald, reporter for the Kansas City Star, was awarded today what is considered one of the finest distinctions in the newspaper world The Pulitzer Prize. MacDonald was sent by his news- shire" was chosen in 1924. Prizes of $1,000 accompany all awards in the foregoing group except in history, in which the award is $2,000.

The Atlanta Constitution was chosen as the newspaper which rendered "the most disinterested and meritorious public in 1930. The award was based on the fact that The Constitution conducted a successful exposure of municipal graft, with consequent convictions. A. B. MacDonald, of the staff of the Kansas City Star, won the $1,000 prize for the best example of a reporter's work which accomplished "some public good commanding public attention and respect." MacDonald Solves Murder.

MacDonald was sent to Amarillo, Texas, at the suggestion of Gene Howe, editor of the Amarillo New? and Globe, to investigate the murder of Mrs. A. D. Payne. She had been killed by the explosion of dynamite hidden in her automobile, and police had given up the ense as a mystery too deep to be solved.

MacDonald's work brought about the confession of her husband, who subsequently, committed suicide with explosive while awaiting trial. The remaining prizes in journalism were awarded to H. R. Knickerbocker, of the foreign staff of the New York Evening Post and the Philadelphia Public Ledger, for a series of articles on the operation of the five year plan in Russia; to Charles S. Ryckman, of the Fremont (Nebraska) Tribune, for his editorial.

"The Gentleman from Nebraska," published November 7. and to Edmund Duffy, of the Baltimore Sun, for his cartoon. "An Old Struggle Still Going On." published February 27, 1930. Traveling scholarships- in journalism were awarded to Frederick Daniel and WASHINGTON Forecast Georgia Showers Tuesday Wednesday; cooler Wednesday. Continued in Page 2, Column 5.

IE DUCED TOBACCO BOY SCOUTS HONOR In Other Pages WILKINSON TODAY ACREAGE IS URGED Weather forecast for all cotton states may be found on market pages. Local Weather Report. Highest temperature 64 Lowest temperature 5S Mean temperature 61 Normal temperature 67 Rainfall in past 12 hours, .04 Excess since 1st of month, in. .27 Deficiency since January. 1, in.

8.08 Total rainfall siuce Jan. 1, in. 10.92 7 a.m. Noon 7 p. m.

Drv temperature 62- Wet bulb 54 59 56 Relative humidity fcs Reports of Weather Bureau Stations. U. S. Bridge Champion Is Reported Dying Ps Editorial Page 6 Graham Wyer Robert Quillen Pierre Van Piiihi Dr. William Brady KsUia Xerrick T.

t. A. News of Georgia 10 Society 13, 14, 15 Caroline hatfield 15 Sport Pages 18. 17, 18 Dunforta'i "Miwnin' Grantland Riea Complete Baaeball Ralph McGill Cross Sections of 18 Theater Programs 18 Full Page of Comics 19 Financial 20, 21 Tarzan 22 Atlanta's Wants 22, 23 Radio Programs 24 Curtailment of tobacco production of 28 to 64 per cent in 1931 is urged by agricultural leaders "in southern states where both bright leaf and bur-ley tobaccos are crown. In the face of this recommendation, early reports to departments of agriculture.

and survevs' bv agricultural i Temperature STATIONS AND STATE OF WEATHER 1 Hien la, AUGUSTA. May 4 UP William Barrett, 1-year-old national bridge champion, was reported sinking rapidly tonight at University hospital, where he is ill with pneumonia. Physicians doubted if be would lire through the night. Young Barrett's family Is prominent here. His father was the late Frank Barrett.

Continued in Page 2, Column 6. colleges, indicate-that the actual de Princess Ileana of Rumania To Wed Archduke von Hapsburg Lawyer for Whitehead's Wife Probes Charges in Florida Suit Mell R. Wilkinson, organizer, charter member and former president of the. Atlanta Boy. Scout council," today will be awarded the silver buffalo, the highest award given(by the Boy Scouts of America.

It will be presented at the annual" meeting of The Boy Scouts of America, in session at Memphis today. The honor is conferred on the basis of noteworthy service, of a national or international 'character outside of regular duty, to boyhood either directly through or independently of the Boy Scouts of America. Those who receive the silver buffalo are adjudged to have been outstanding in ideals and service to boys, rit was stated. Mr. Wilkinson, merchant and manufacturer, has beea a' member of the national executive board of the Boy Scout movement in America since 1922, and a member of the national field committee since 1926.

He was chairman of the region six, comprising the states of Georgia, Florida, North and South Carolina in 1926. During the war he served as assistant secretary of agriculture without compensation. The honor he will receive at the nnnual meeting of the nations conn- BY ALEXANDER HURTIG. Spain last year. He is now employed WEST PALM BEACH, MayE.

Donnell, attorney for Miss Mil- by a film company in Vienna. BUCHAREST, Rumania, May 4. ler in an effort to ascertain the truth ATLANTA, rain .0 Aucudta. pt clity .04 Birmingham, cloudy f4 7H .3 Rnftton. cl-ar 5(1 i TJ Buffalo, clear i Charleston, cloudy Ml 7U thtraro, rlear 1 Pener.

clonJv IH-m Sloinei, cloudy 7S tialreetoD, clear 72 78 Hatteraa. clear II 62 Havre, cloudy 4 4S JavkaonrUle, cloudy 7I .58 Kaoaaa cloudy 74 76 Macon, rain 6S 2.04 Memphis, pt cldy 72 74 Miami, clear 7. St .40 Mobile, pt cldy TS .16 Montgomery. rin 2 T2 New Orleaw, cloudy 72 SO New York, clear 4 62 North Platte, cloudy So 68 Oklahoma City, cloudy 70 70 Phoenix, clear 82 S4 Pittrtmreb. clear i 70 74 clear S4 70 Raleish, clear 4 70 San Franctoeo, cloudy 0 St.

Louis, pt eldy 7 74 Salt Lake City, cloudy ays fi Savannah, cloudy 72 Tampa, "In To Toledo, clear 54 62 Vlckhorg clear 72 7 .01 Washington, clear 2 i 7'1 tiO crease will be less than 1U per cent in most cases, while increased plantings are reported in some sections. The most drastic reductions recommended 'is in North Carolina, -where 66.4 per cent of the nation's crop of flue cured tobacco was grown during the past six years. Dr. G. W.

Forster, economist of North Carolina State College, has found that a 64 per cent acreage cut will be necessary if farmers are to receive 13 cents per pound for their product, the amount he said it costs to grow tobacco. -Virginia department of agriculture officials indicated that a reduction of 28 to 30 per cent would be necessary in that state if farmers are to receive a fair price for their crop. The reduction to be made ii Virginia, second state in production of bright leaf tobacco, will be about 13 per cent, the department of agriculture reported. There is no indication that North (UP) Ileana, of Rumania, described as Europe's most beautiful princess, has become engaged to marry the young Archduke Anton von Hapsburg. an official announcement issued at the castle said todav.

Save Money by borrowing doesn't sound Just rijht docs it? Nevertheless, it's true. You cin borrow money from reliable loan companies advertising daily in the Wint Ad piRes cf The Constitution and take advantage of cash discounts offered by merchants and save the difference. Turn to the Want Ads now and look them over. Read and Us Tli Constitution's Want Ad Page "First in the DayFirst to Pay" The engagement ceremonies took place at the palace of the Hohenzol-lern princes at Freiburg in Breisgau, Baden, Germany. The princess, who is 22 years old, las been reported engaged to half the young princes of the continent.

Even the Prince of Wales has been mentioned, their names having been linked by matchmakers in the capitals of Europe in recent years. The announcement recalled the dramatic in which Princess Ileana personally announced her engagement in January of last year to Count Alexander Von Hoc-hbcrg, son of charges that Whitehead had promised to marry the pretty brunette in the course of their alleged companionships last winter at Key West, Havana, and other resorts. "There are certain charges that have been made that will have to be explained by Mr. Whitehead or his lawyers." Lund said after the conference. He was due to leave for Jacksonville tonight by airplane to confer with Whitehead.

After flying here from Los Angeles several days ago for the investigation, Lund went on to Havana where the Whiteheads maintain a home and 4. (A) Almost coincidentally with the filing of a declaration today against Conkey P. Whitehead, wealthy Atlanta and Havana sportsman, in a $100,000 breach of promise suit by Selina R. Miller, of New York, Allen S. Lund.

Los Angeles attorney, representing Mrs. Whitehead, announced he was making an investigation of the charges Selina and her attorney made against her husband. Lund would not confirm or deny reports that Mrs. Whitehead, daughter of a prominent New York broker named Hughes, intended to divorce Whitehead if she found the accusations against him were true. Lund conferred Jiere late today with The wedding of Princess Beana is scheduled to take place in June, the i announcement said, Her fiance.

Archduke Anton, is a brother of Archduke Leopold Von Hapsburg, who visited New York last year. Anton nntil recently lived at Barcelona. Spain, where Ileana became cauainteu. with hia Uuruj avisii to Continued in Page, 3, Column 6. Continued in Vvt 2.

Column 5. Continued in Page 3, Column 3, C. F. von HERRMANN. Meteorologist, Weather Bureau.

A Continued in Pat 5, Colama 4..

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Years Available:
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