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THE ADVERTISER-JOURNAL ffasf i a r s ^ \ ! CO M P L E T E BAY REPORT OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AUBURN, N. Y., FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1929 TODAY’S NEWS TODAY In ilic Evening Paper the News la Complete Up to 4 P. ftL PRICE THREE CENTS 50 PROPRIETORS OF SPEAKEASIES L! Tour of New York Poolrooms and > Hideaway Plac?s of Crooks and Gangsters by \Strong Arm” . Squads Show Usual Haunts De serted • New York, Jan. *1.—CV)—Another sortie by Police Commissioner Wha len's liquor • raiders had landed an other batch tof more-tlian 50 apeak- easy proprietors in jail today. Meanwhile tbe lirst tour o£ pool rooms aud otber hideaway places of crooks and gangsters by Lbe newly re- \lved ’ strong arm\ squads biou;;ht out the fact that underworld chiuu-J- ters known to tbe police had deserted their usual habits. Tho Manhattan squads visited places on the Bowery, in Chinatown n r o f t s o n l N i u l t i l a t o r a l A r b i t r a t i o n and Con c il ia t io n P a c t s Ac cepted a t Pan Ameri can Session — Contro versies Settled Washington, Jan.% Without ,, '™J}nn, the Pan American coj^cr- arbitration and conciliation * l i in nlenary session today conciliation treaties which Jesteu ly ^ ]uto tJje ulld.town wlllte li-ht dU- Mre .(ipproved by tneir , ,_ _ -- . ......... . “ * • “ ' ”* “ n Refuses to Name Sanity Commission Plea of Defense Denied By Judge In Case of Louisiana Pair Con demned to Die Tomor row — Governor Re fuses to Act ndrno«e for which It met, encetobnd time to work out a means settling ■he t Parngunyan-Bollylnn which on two occasions reached the point where shots were ex- chmffed awl blood was shed, -Ellrio Avaln, Paraguayan delegate, md Die* be Medina for Bolivia, yes- erdav signed a conciliation protocol- •Ratification of the two multilateral treaties drawn up by conference com mittees was before tbe conference as,a whole todav. The arbitration treaty was regarded by conference delegates ns being the greatest advance for the einse of peace ever made In the Western Hemisphere. Two exceptions to the principle of compulsory arbitration laid down are made, namely, controversies Involving thlhj parties nnd disputes rnvnirng the domestic Jurisdiction of states. However, Individual countries would be allowed to except other matters, flonr nations, Mexica, San Domingo, teneineia, and Colombia, already have announced that they want to except gnwtlons which national courts nre competent to settle. -Another froup will want to except dl*pnte* 'which began before ttie drafting of the treaty. . 17. KILLS BIN I HIMSELF Grand Rapids, Mich., .Tan. 4—(JP)— A 17-yeer-old high school boy, without my apparent motive, shot and killed * man whom he called to the door of its home early today aud then com mitted suicide. The boy, Orrln H. Hoover, sorf of uayton. Hoover, a farmer living near *re, went to the home of Joe Skab- Wdms, 38, just outside the city limits. To a query of \who’s there?\ the boy “ tnst his fist through the glass of the wr. Mrs. Skablankas opened the door •Mthe boy stepped into the room. i v i «7 ('on'*: that man say some- Hoover asked and pointed nt ’ Coding behind his wife, without further warning he pulled m i * hls pocket and fired, Skabiankas almost instantly, without a word h e ’ placed tho JJW 1 against bis own head nnd again trlct- without lludlng any of the un- desirables they had been instructed to drive out. In one place the squad deruonsti uted strong-arm tactics. The detectives entered a basement resort in AVest 51st' Street, sea relied and questioned patrons nnd ordered them out. Then after seizing a quan tity of beer and liquor, they wrecked the place. Crowbars and axes were used to smash the bar and to break furi/iture, mirrors and glassware. Tlio bartender was arrested. This was tho second place demol ished in the campaign against “crime- breeding speakeasies.” A place in Greenwich Village was wrecked in u similar manner Wednesday night. Members of the liquor raiding squads concentrated their activities in Harlem where about two-thirds of the raids were* made, in each instance police confiscated supplies of liquor and made one arrest'on a charge of possessing liquor. Commissioner Whalen announced be would avail himself .of the weapon placed in his hands by the Court of Appeals’ yesterday when It ruled that speakeasies violated the state nuisance law. Proceedings against liauor dis pensing places under the nuisance law would permit taking cases Into the state courts as well as the federal. The strong-arm squads were sent out last night with specific Iristruo tlons to make things uncomfortable for the lawless element of the city' and lo break up their dens, not neces sarily to make arrests. Harking'back- to a phrase ho used when he took office Commissioner \Whalen said: -\There is a lot of law in the end of a night stick. The men are being sent, out not necessarily to niako’.'arrests—we do not wish to clut ter up the courts—-but to do their duty In seeing that known hangouts for gunmen and the like are put out of business.” Failure to find gangsters was re garded by police-officials, as confirma tion of reports that crooks and other undesirables were leaving the city for Chicago aud other points. Heavy Fall of Snow Over Nearly All of France **an' 4-—W5)—It was snowing 6 ,Tery3!here lr‘ France todny, in Paris, nnd nowhere wnu « « a greater fall than in tlio south. Even Biarritz saw snow eXtIemely rare Marseilles, Toulon nnd ®now has been •' f°r 4S hours. l)0ints along the rSffSJsraswM is ™ i2 dav« d continue for several KIDNAPED GIRL. FOR T I Franklin, La., Jan. 4— (JP)— Judge Jaincs D. Simon in tho St. Mary Parish District Court today refused, to appoint a commission to inquire into tbe sanity of Mrs. Ada Bonner Le- Bouef and Dr. Thomas E. Dreher, sentenced to be hanged tomorrow for the murder of th<* woman's husband, James Lebouef, but snld he would hear evidence as to their sanity. Sleepless nnd emaciated after their long death cell waits, the widow’ and the doctor nervously awaited the deci sion of Judge James Simon in Parish Court here today on the _ application for appointment of a sanity commis sion. When Mrs. Lebouef and Doctor Dreher were, told yesterday by Sheriff Charles Pecot that Gov. Iluey P. Ixyig had disregarded the recommendation for commutation from the Pardon Board, both broke down and sobbed. Mrs. Lebouef’s 10 -year-old son, Ernest, fainted at the door of her prison cell while visiting her. An open hearing on the application for the nnming of a sanity commis>- slon was announced for today by Judge Simon, the dissenting member In the pardon board’s decision. Counsel for the condemned prepared to apply to the Supreme Court for a writ of mandamus to compel the trial Judge to appoint the commission should their petition before him meet refusal. Today the broach between Governor Long and Lieut. Clov. Paul N. Cyr, member of the Pardon Board, widened over Cyr’s charge of favoritism In commutation of sentences. Ciovem 6 r Long, in a statement Is sued at Baton Rouge, declared that after- careful study of the records “in my mind there was not the slightest doubt that Ada Lebouef and Doctor Dreher were guilty of as cold-blooded a .murder as was ever plotted and carried out in-the Sfate of- Louisiana. ‘‘Not one person In Louisiana thinks that any pistols or guns went off ac cidentally' on Lake Palourde when James Lebouef died. The dismember ing of Jim Lebouef’s body and Ihe weighing of it down with angleirons was no accidental happening.” Mr. f\vr, in his statement attacked the governor. Raying “if Ada Lebouef and Thomas Dreher are hanged it w ill be a case of judicial murder.” Lebouef was killed July 1, 1927, dur ing a night boat ride on Lake P a l ourde. 18 Stone Cutters, Chauffeur Drown THIRD DAY IN AIR COMPLETED BY MONOPLANE Question Mark Drones Onward Toward Distant Aerial Goal After Breaking All Endurance Records For Heavier Than Air Craft — Ap proaches Mark For Lighter Than Air Ships Held By Graf Zeppelin BANK ROBBERY E OPEN DEBATE there. At all that falling stcnd: WEATHER FORECAST Xptt*Yor|?!Up ’,ai'- ‘J—Western what coldor /\1 Qnisht; sonie- urday clondv !,'•«ort,hea,st; Sat' lemperatiii-n fin slowb' rising moderate , nllo'ved by snow: \'rails. cs!l shilling TEMrriRATURES Water Dcpl. Thermometer) 1928 1927 23 211 20 12 sets 4:17 7:21 * & DAYS, IS FOUND Atlanta, Ga.. Jan. 4.— <sP)—Kid napers, death threats, drugs, and a dirty phack formed melodramatic se quence of the story told today by a pretty high school girl, who was found bound and gagged after two days’ absence from home. Doris Turner, high school athlete, collapsed last night in a Ailing stu- tion She had been found nearby, bound at tbe ankles. Two hours later tlio girl said she had been released un harmed by a “kindly old man with a cane” for whom police had bticn searching for two days. Blindfolds, she asserted, had kept bur from discerning where she was after being held most of tbe two days Iu a dirty shack. Authorities started an investigation Wednesday at the request of her par ents, who had received a special de- iX-ovy letter from her to the effect. she had been a stooped old man who cried when he recalled that she resembled his daugh ter, now dead. Tii old man wanted to kill her, she added. Another man objected and per suaded his companion to return tbe girl to Atlanta because \things were getting hot.” A physician said the child had not been harmed, and was suffering oniy from exposure and weakness due to lack of food. Pioneer Citizen Of San Diego Dies San Diego, Calif., Jan. 4. — (JP)— Daniel Cleveland, a pioneer dtizen of San Diego and for many years one or its most prominent attorneys, died jes- terday after a short illness, lie came here In May, .1800. He was bom in Poughkeepsie, N. Y„ ln 1838, and was a lineal f.es^endant of Stephen Hopkins, who came to America in the Mayflower in JG20. In 1SG3, when San Antonio, Texas was bankrupt, nnd under martial law, ho was commissioned Its mayor, and in a short time brought order out «C chaos nnd put tbe city’s finances In good shape. Imperial Valley, Calif., Jan. 1 —(JP) —With her three motors working per fectly, the monoplane Question Mark soared ai-ross this inland valley com pleting tbe third day of her liight at T:20 o ’ c I ol I c this moruing. Los Angeles, Jan. 4.— (JP)—Tho limit of man's mastery of tbe skies m heavier-than-air craft.remain?'! unde termined today as the‘Question Marie, mastering adverse elements and la'nor mechanical imperfections, ctroned on ward toward a distant aerial goal after having broken ail existing world’s endurance records. Nearing the end of Its third full day aloft the army's tri-motored enignm, which ascended at T :2d a. 'ii , .Tan* nary 1 , steadily advanced tosvnro lighter-than-air records this morning after having returned to America one of the two principal airplane • nfiur- ancc flight records held abroad. Tho lime of the second European record, that of- continuous flight with out refueling, was surpassed at 1 *51 a. in., today. coa«t time, at wlilcy hour tlie resourceful five-man crew had held the ship aloft for 00 hours. 2-1 minutes, a full hour longer ihan (lie record set six months ago by the Ger mans, Johann Rlct.Ic/, and Wiihejm Zimmerman. Tlie monoplane, groping its way over a wide section of Southern California in an effort ■o t nroid creeping ros blankets and cloud banks, need 'oniy land nt this airport, i>osslbly so'ferni dnys or a week distant, to j-’et offlclnl credit, for eclipsing that, record as well as the refueling endurance record of 00 hours. 7 minutes, held by Belgians, which fell Inst night Aeronautic\ regulations specify en durance -planes, in order to set n new record, must ‘ remain up an Ivjur longer than the previous record holder, and land at the same field used for the takeoff. - Even~shoulfl 'tb£\plane\in \the \closing hours of Its unprecedented flight be so crippled that it could not return hero It will nevertheless have carried hu man beings to a new record of aerial residence In airplanes. Two dawns hence, if the plane re* mains up, and its army sponsors now vision the ship,ns still in ;he air pos sibly a week distant, it will be nenr to (lie existing endurance lecord of a man-made contrivance, which now Is held nbroad. Slay Break Dirigible Rccorrt That record of 111 hours, 4G min utes of continuous flight was mhde by the German built Graf Zeppelin in its to PEACE PACT One Pal of Missing Man Dies of Wounds, Second Captured After j Chase Through Woods—Part of Loot, $9,500 5n Cash, Recov ered—Fugitive Surrounded, Be- ! T r e a ty Presented to Sen- lief voyage from Friedrichs-lhifeu Lakeluirst, X. J., last fall. A Iiulf hour before the monoplane equaled tlie rticticz-Zimiuerinnn record last night, it took 011 170 gallons of gasoline In the third successf.ii n.ght refueling, which was the sixteenth re fueling contact made by the f.vo at tendant ships. The contact was made over the Im perial Airport near El Centro, fn which point refueling ship Xo. 1, pre viously operating at San Diego, was moved yesterday when fog drove flight away from tlie coast line, and emer gency measures were ordered by Maj. Carl Spatz, in command aboard the Question Mark, to meet the adverse weather conditions. Majority of tbe first in contacts made were nt a speed of 70 miles an hour, nnd only minor trouble ••vas ex perienced in the operations-. It was estimated that the ship now lias flown nearly 5.000 miles, which if In a straight line would have carried It. to another record for non-stop distance flying. The three 223 horsepower Wright whirlwind motors of the Fokker, nny one of which can keep it going, lmvo thus far functioned, perfectly, and the only trouble experienced came Wed nesday night when suddenly-rising fog off San Diego nearly cau-ed a crisis. Gasoline - Replenished. As the shades of night fell with only a little more than 'two hours’ gasoline supply aboard Major Sputa brought the plane over fills nirport and' dropped a note ordering refuel ing plane Xo. 1 up at once with a new supply. His first, note could not be found on tbe big, dark llelrl, and another was sent down. That note was found and shortly afterward Lieut. Odas Moon took off and deliv ered 170 gallons of gasoline. At midnight the ship returned to tho field asking for more gasoline. Lieutenant Moon failed to establish} contact, in'his first .ascent aud upon more dropped orders went up a sec ond time to deliver 100 gallons of fuel. Bumpy air and a dead storage bat tery which plunged the ship into darkness caused a hectic night aboard Major Spatz reported in a note dropped yesterday w'hicli said all his crew were well. The battery was re placed during the day. nnd the sUip headed into the San Fernando Valley to avoid adverse aerial conditions . 1 Army reports showed that the plane had consumed close to six tons of gasoline and a half ton of oil. Re fueling air contacts had required a total of 310 minutes. Mexico. Mo.. Jan. 4.—(.T)—Armed men were patroling the wooded sec tor of the country near Aux Wassc to day in search of Tom Davis, 40, of Chicago, one of the three men who yesterday held up and robbed tbe First National Bank of Mexico of $ 21 .r> 00 . One of Davis’s pals is dead from wounds received In tbe attempt of the trio to make a getaway after tho rob bery. Tbe other is in jail here, hav ing been captured during a chase through the woods. Davis slipped through tlie posse and reached a gar age, where be held up an attendant and made his escape in a stolen auto mobile. Seeing the posse approaching him, Davis turned the car about. Later this car was found abandoned in a suow bank several miles farther on, and still farther down the road the posse came upon a second stolen ma chine which had been left by tbe roadside by the fleeing robber. In this vicinity Dnvis was chased across Aux Vasse, wooded ground, wi.ore sev- the high, wooded ground, where sev eral cabins offered shelter. He was known to have been armed with a rifle and a revolver, stolen from an automobile. Tbe dead robber’s name was given by the man captured as Willlo High tower of Fort Worth, Texas. He was shot as the robbers sped through Aux Vasse. He slumped over the steering wheel of the enr which ho was driv ing, and as Davis attempted fo con trol It the machine skidded into a ditch. The captured robber, who gave the name of John E. Bruelc nnd who said his home was New York City, nnd Davis took to tho woods, but the posse soon overhauled Bruck and he was sent to jail here. The posse believed they had Davis surrounded. Part, of the robbers’ loot, $9,500 in cash, was recovered. ate By Borah In Two Hour Speech — Prin cipal Opposition Ex pected From Senator Reed, Missouri 1 Brussels, Belgium, Jan. 4.— — Eighteen stone cutters and a chauf feur were, drowned last night when nil automobile taking a dangerous turn fell from a bridge into the swol len fuirthe River near Say. Several person* saw the accident but were un able to assist. The first bodies of the victims were recovered only today. Eight of them wero married. They left a total of 20 children. ♦ Flashes of Life t (By The Associated Press) New' York— Constance Talmaclge, back from abroad, insists “it's ult ;t lot of applesauce,” this talk (hat rhe is to marry Townsend N'etoher, C h i cago merchant. “He's just a long time friend.” Netcher met her at the pier and, with a blush referred quest ions to the lady. Erie, P a —Tf are corrcr-t T\K-| *'•• Northeu'-t, Pa„ is quite ii S; rung fellow. Mrs. Alda Porter of Mendvilie is suing him for $5,000. She avers that when he hugged her cne of her ribs r, ns broken and two others were injured. New York— Edward Auinony, nutrior of \How to Get Rid of n Woman ” is married. He was Eastern press di rector of the Hoover campaign- His bride is Esther Howard, who did sim ilar work for the state Hoover Com mittee. Providence, It- L— I f Stephen H o p kins, signer of the Declaration of In dependence, had bottles in his house, there aro going to be bottles in ills re stored home. Such is the answer cf Norman M. Isbam to protests of the state president of the W. C. T. TJ. Isham has been commissioned by tne Colonial Dames to flx the house. New York— A girl becomes owner of ,an encagement ring when married nnd not until then. Such is the ruling of Mn gist rate Glatzmuyer on a girl’s complaint against a young man who stole a ring that tbe girl refused to ref urn. Havana—Friends of K id Chocolate hnve received ten dollar _bil 1 « as Cbvistmas presents. Tlie “Kced\ left for New York sis months a so with siv dollars After a series of bouts he returned with ? 20 . 0 n 0 aud sundry lavender and green sutta. T THREE ALLEGED ILI TO UR WASHINGTON STARTS SUNDAY Niagara Falls, N. Y., Jan. 4— (JP)— Washington, Jan. 4.— -A 10- Three men, alleged rum runners were weeks’ war on bootleggers and speak- shot, none fatally, early today by Uni- ensies to make the national capital ted Stntes customs border patrolmen , un ‘example” to the cities of the when they resisted arrest as they are alleged to’ have landed a boatload of CO cases of contrabrand liquor on the river shore at Lewiston, seven miles not^li of here. The wounded men were brought ti) Mount St- Mary's Hospital in this city They described themselves as Charles Schultz. 20, a chauffeur: Joseph Green. 20. a railroad employe, and Philip rurzon. 22, a waiter. Schultz shot In the right arm. Green in tbe left leg. and Curzon also received n loir ^ mind. 'i >-?.■>; . The border 'itrtw? boat antf (iqnor. country will be launched in Washing ton next. Sunday. The campaign will be waged under the auspices of the National United Committee for Law Enforcement with the purpose of preparing \the nation al capital for the incoming adminis tration. pledged to a better enfnrco. inent of the law and to make Wnsh- ington an' example nnd encourage- j ment to the cities of tbf* nation.\ Former Governor Plnehot of Penn- ' sylvan'a bn1; l^w d a 'iPMthat lent Coolidge a'sK ..xlie commis-? jjn\ana BE ENGARI New York, Jan. 4.—(JP)—The Cun- ard liner Berengarla wdll sail for Eu rope tonight with only such mail aboard as was specifically addressed for transportation by thnt ship. A postofllce bulletin, made public yesterday, announced thnt. mail for Europe, Africa and West Asia, via Cherbourg and Southampton, must, be especlnliy nddressed for the Beren garla, Andanta or Ausonia in order to be! forwarded 011 those ships- All three vessels nre owned by the Cunarrt Line, a British concern. John Gammle., assistant to Sir T. Ashley Sparks, resident director of tne line, said the company had been un able to get any explanation for tbe postoffice bulletin, either at the New York postofllce or nt Washington, other than that It was \orders.\ The Postofllce Department an nounced last night that It might re route nil its European mail in favor or American ships. It was pointed out flint on their Inst trlp« the Olympic of the White Star Line carrkd 15,000 sacks of mail and the Leiinthnn of Ihe United Stntes Lines, 4.300 sacks Denial was made thnt tbe with drawal of mail from (he ships of the Cunnrd Line was connected ivith (be Washington, Jun. 4—(/P)— Holding its position before the Senate, the Kel logg peace treaty was duo for its baptism of fire today after Chairman Borah of tho Foreign Relations Com mittee, its sponsor, had concluded his plea for ratification, begun yesterday. Borali brought tbe treaty before the Senate late yesterday without even a skirmish by tlie naval construction bill udvocntes, who have agreed to sidetrack their measure for a “reason able time” to permit action 011 the pact. He propelled the document re nouncing war 011 its way in a two-hour address, which went over until today when debate developed. ■■ The Iclnlio senator will find his prin cipal opposition in bis old ally In tho fight against the Longue' of Nations and the World Court. Senator Reed, Democrat, Missouri. Reed listened In tently to yesterday’s proceedings. Anticipating opposing arguments, ? Borah yesterday contended that the i correspondence of tho 'other world !: powers In accepting the pact had not j! modified or changed the treaty in the .slightest. There Is no strength, be j: argued, in contentions that' the signu- <! tory lint Ions would be bound to exert ; force in enforcing tbe trenty. 1 The treaty cannot be considered, he j declared, as having encroached in nny 1 degree upon tho rights of every nation \ for self defense. Therefore he saw'no ! harm.In tho paragraph of a British V note 011 the treaty which reserved the ;; right to protect British, territories. j Under questioning by Senators John- j son, Republican, California, a,nd Sen-' ator Heed, Borah snld bis belief was • that the Spanlsh-Amerlcnn W ar could J have been.waged justifiably with the j treaty In operation.! To other ques- | tloners he said the treaty could not. In_.j his opinion, Impair Ip any way the\\ rights of this nation as declared in the , Monroe Doctrine. t Chairman Hale of the Naval Com- j mlttee, put flic cruiser construction j bill on It's way In a lengthy prepared , - address declaring that the 13 cruisers prQposecl would still leave f.'ils nation below a naval parity with Great Britain. Signs of Fight Seen • Signs of the approaching light on this measure were seen in the intro duction of an amendment by Senator King, Democrat, Utah, proposing tlifit ( the naval measure be limited,to an authorization of five cruisers instead 1 of 15. He also proposed that the Sen ate express its desire to have the president cnll another naval lim it ations conference. However, with the agreement to put the Kellogg treaty to a vote ahead of the naval bill, Senators King, and Nor ris. Republican. tVebraskn, who are fighting the bill, have given word that they will not seek to conduct a fili buster to block a flnnl vote on It. Discussing the treaty, Borah de clared thnt \whatever may be of value to the treaty, it must be measured by the full, conceded right of self-defense of nil the signatories” “Certainly it is not contended,\ he said, \that the language of this treaty calls for force: if refutes any such position We must remember that the philosophy of tills treaty is not of pre- ventlne war. but of orgnnlzlns peace. How can .voti imply from language which rejects war nnd pledges the set tlement of controversies by peaceful methods the obllcafion nt nny time to tbe use of force” Lenore Longley, “Lindy’s Girl” Now Mrs. Harold Knoop Chicago. Jan. 4.—(JP) —'“Lind.i '* Girl,” as they used to call Leonore Longley in Maywood, III., is Mrs. Har old Knoop now The pretty, brown-eyed daughter of the Albert Ixmgleys. at whose lo n e Col. Charles A. Lindbergh n-omed when he was just plain “Slim” of the air mail, was married New Ytar’s Day- Mr. and Mrs. Knoop were to fly today to Cleveland, Ohio, w'here they will make their home. When Colonel Lindbergh lived at the Longley home, Miss Longley often as sisted in preparing his breakfast, pud occasionally she played the piano ror him. She is IS years old. ners of the District nf Colmnhii to submit n list of spenken<dos nnd clone them on penalty of losin•' their jobs within a. week Dr. Clinton N Howard <'f Roches ter. N. who Is in 'hai'KC \f the campaign, announced that he hnd| been pledged the co-operation of thf| Washington Ministers' Assnciaitnn | He will initiate the ons'aiight <‘ii the liquor sellers at n meeting »n Sunday , nt the first Congregational C hnr* h Carpenters and >rke_ Reach Compromise1**1 » / # D n n i*/l o « / m fW'i >1 I J* controversy between the lin<* and tin United States Shipping Board over in--1 Q , 1 T L- ^ e New York-Hnvnnn I rude. 0 1 6 6 1 VV O T IV C T p;i tile Shippius Bonrd nnnouwi>d it bun allocated ihe liner Pro-ddcn; volt to the Ward Line for s.-ivl-’** Dc- tween this port nnd Ilnvnnn in moot pouters and iterl tbe competition of tbe (’utinrd llnei Oaronla. which recently 'W*. aligned to the Havana, run Albany Jan -I workers Nicaragua May N ame Sacasa Envoy To United States MIES FATAL TD P.iiffaK Jan. 4 John Buter. ,;•!* riiccktowaga policeman who was ________ i ril„ down by a motorist last niirl.t. Mnnaguu. Nicaragua. Jan. 4.— .(hod oarly today froln Jds injurio'- Dr. Jutin B. Sncftsa foriw r \icn ‘•truck mvl hurled down a - ident of Nicnrnga nnd bead of the Lih-jfoot m.l.nnkmcnt eral government set up at Puerto Cah-j poli.v said Hauer apprcnclied tli,* ezns in 1020 , is understood to be s!nt -1 aitli'nminli' because lie tlimudit it' ed for the post of minister to Wnsh dr'ner >'as a'-tinc suspiciously and as ington by the new Nicaraguan govern [he did >\ the machine was dellbfiarc- ment headed by President Moncndo. I ly steeren toward lom. Bank Call Issued. • Advices from Snn.Tunn Del Sur wtyi Autb-.riiles wen- inclined to link Washington. .Tan. 4.—(iP>—The that Dr. Rodolfo Espinoza, who held|th.- .unmrg down ot T.'iucv wit . ih • comptroller of the currency today Is- the foreign affairs portfolio in Sncn j <*'-«•«P(‘ 'iibinm sued a cnll for the condition of all na -1 sa's government has been offered the I acUawaiinn. who .>. M.ugnt tionnl banks at the close yf business I same post in the Moneada g o v e r n , t ion win me sho.-nng o on December 31. iinent. |policcmaii ~(JP)— fU>T- ifter hold ing up work \ii the new state oi'Jco biidding here f.-r four months, have compromised 011 the question of \\*ho is to place the 2.300 window frames in the building according to I'ol. W il liam M Acheson chief engineer of the Department of Public Works. The carpenters contended that plac ing tlie window frames was part of their job. while the steel workers in sisted that all steel work in a buildlug should be ere, ted by them under il-eir union regulation* and pointed wilh triumph to the fact that the fran.es wore of steel The dispute wen: from local unions to state, national and in ternational officials Now the carpenters nre putting in the window frames on alternate floors and tbe -ted workers are placing the iremainlnr fr-imes. and the work <e 1 tbe evteror of the building is oxp.- te-l .to be completed in about two wt-eU- Frozen to Death \\ ednesday f.i-i.iMn N ^ 1 I'O'h t ' <»f ab o u t -i*. J ear« < in ci.nnec j near vulr md tra a lluffaht cji\ No marks . I fuund Jan I ' ‘f ’1 The \\ \)ni<lo\Mfi>'d mar Id was found todav iii«t wo-t of this ■ f id. nt ifu at ion were