Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
: TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1929 CONGRESS TO GBT {aan sora DEBENTURE PLAN \Macks Lose Two IN BARLY AUTUMN) Straight Games In First ‘Slump’ Norris Plans to Put Aid Measure| - Into Tariff Bill; Warm Lead Dwindies to Only Seven Fight Is Promised and One-half Games but Washington, June 18—(P}—The Worry te Absent warm late summer and early fall days will bring to congress a second of farm relief which League pennant, are their first “stump” of the season. ‘The A’s dropped the last game of the Cleveland series Sunday and then bowed to the Chicago White Sox 6 to 4, yesterday, the first time this sea- son that Mack's powerful array has been cessive games. Despite this condition of affairs, Uittle, if any, worrying. in shaping the general the tariff bill. Debenture seven and one-half games in front of the second place New York Yankees who took time out yesterday to beat Bridgeport of the eastern leagué 3 to 2, in an exhibition game. In the only other American League activity of the day, the Detroit Tigers and Boston's Red Sox split even in a double bill at the Hub. The Sox bunched. hits off Owen Carroll be- hind fairly effective pitching by |. ob- | Charlie Ruffing to win the first fray 6to5. The Tigers clouted Milt Gas- ton’s offerings to all corners of the lot to take the second 8 to 3. St. Louis and Pittsburgh marched along step for step in the hot Nation- al League struggle, the Cardinals shelling the Cubs into defeat by 13 to 3, while Pittsburgh was nosing out Cincinnati 2 to 1, in a tight pitcher's battle. All other National clubs were idle. Risko Loses to Cook By Fouling Cleveland Baker Boy Had Good Margin Until Blow Strikes Groin in Fifth of the $151,000,000 tained from effort looking to the relief and stabil- ization of agriculture. Of the total $150,000 is available for that work and much of this sum probably will be expended in an effort to solve the wheat surplus situation. The satis- faction or dissatisfaction with which members of congress view the results of that project is expected to have considerable influence on their con- duct during the new debenture con-' test. Renewal o the contest was clearly foreshadowed at the time the de- tenture plan was first voted upon favorably by the senate, 47 to 44. The administration senators who led the opposition were told then by some members that they would vote against the plan in the farm bill but not as @ part of the tariff bill. If the de- benture group can hold its ranks firm, which most leaders seem to think it can, it would appear as if the - vote in the senate on debentures in the tariff bill might be somewhat increased. Works Out Plan Senator Brookhart, Republican, Towa, meanwhile, is working out & plan to make the debenture provision more attractive to the house and also et atedent. Hoover” through af by President Hoover [nbeareret Ky rou pberecea tins was well out in front, and seemed in Ce setert exporters of agricultural |® fair way to defeat the Australia commodities. A cut his opened oi gir Me tie Whether the house, which voted lander's eye early in the overwhelmingly to eliminate the plan | 00 Tiong Cook's tee from the farm bill, will be ready to 0's. Risko protested, think- take a difterent, view later is a matter }!ng that the butt had been purposely leaders. League | Boston, June 18.—(#)—George Cook | of Australia stood a winner today by | virtue of a low left hook, turned loose by Johnny Risko of Cleveland. Cook won his fight with Risko at! the opening of the Boston garden's | outdoor season last night, when the | Cleveland boy accidentally scored a | low left swing to Cook's groim early delivered. In the second Cook claimed a foul when Risko handed the Australian a_low left as the round opéned but a ay peas to al- and was count three the entire session. Cook got to his feet. The third and fourth found Cook on the run, unable to get in under 8 barrage of hooks and drives TORPEDO DIVERS |e = SET NEW RECORD Pyle Has More Money Trouble here by two Poicied torpedo men who, — equipped with mechanical] Los Angeles, June 18.—(#)—C. C. “lungs” to permit breathing under|Pyle, promoter of the Transcon- water, withstood a pressure of 155|tinental Bunion Derby which ended constructed |here Sunday, was invol in a series of financial altercations yes- This pressure terday. mark of 306 feet reached in actual] He lost a $500 judgment in muni- diving by navy in helmets andjcipal court, and members of his men ving suits in 191§ while salvaging; cross-country troupe, including girls the eee, submarine F-4 off Hon-| who said they had performed in his road_show, informed City Prosecu- state labor bureau. the navy’s new submarine escape| Pyle was called to Nix’s office device. ' and ‘dropped out before the finish, that Nix suspended further investigation up in presenting the case of 10 Bur- | for it. and ter Lloyd = Nix that they filed 4 questioned regarding complaints Farmers Tell Court the promoter had failed, to return Belief that the remainder of is today’s|when Pyle assured him the men in suit fut administration leaders say the first house vote doomed the plan for ashington, June 18—(7)—A new mark for divers has been established st the promoter with the of three: cross-country runners, who to money they posited About Fire Damage|witn'him at the start of the race. court will be taken | might have their money by asking it a Mack Holds Hope Of Guiding Club Four More Years Athletic Manager Spikes Re-| ports Which Indicate He Is Ready to Retire Philadelphia, June 18.—(4)—Connie} Mack, veteran manager of the Phil-| would be able to go through with an- _ adelphia Athletics, today spiked re-j other season of managing, and I'came ports frequently heard in baseball | Circles that he wanted to win one more pennant and then retire. He said he had no intention of re- tiring and hoped still to be managing beaten in as mminy as two suc-|the Athletics when he is 70 years old. He is now 66. “There is absolutely nothing to the! the chances are that Mack is doing | report, about winning a pennant and “The only thing that will ever make me arrive at that decision will be my health, If the time comes when to continue managing will have harmful effect on my well-being, then I will| step out. Not before. “What a wonderful thing it would be if I could only manage the club in my seventieth year. I doubt if I will be able to do it. But if my health is all right I expect to do it. Then I may be ready to hand over the reins to some younger man and let him do the worrying for me.” Mack revealed that he was on the verge of retiring during the southern training trip of the Athletics this spring, because of his health. “I wasn’t feeling so good then,” he said. “The influenza had laiéwme low during the winter and I was still feel- ing its effects. I doubted that I KILLED IN WREC Mendota, Minn., June 18.—()—A University of Minnesota medical stu- dent, beating his way to Minneapolis for summer school, was killed near here early today when the engine and five cars of an Omaha railroad pas- senger train left the tracks and ploughed along the ties for 300 feet. The crew and 75 passengers were shaken up but none was injured. The cars remained upright. The cause of the wreck has not been determined. The dead student is Earl Hanson, 20, Carleton, Minn. He was riding be- tween the locomotive tender and the mail car, trainmen said, when the crash occurred, His head was crushed. Students from Calio High School Stop Off closer to quitting than ever before.” This is Mack’s 29th season as pilot of the Athletics and his 36th as a baseball manager. JAPAN FAVORS PACT | Felix Hummer, principal of the Tokyo, June 18.—()—The commit- | Calio high school, near Devils Lake, tee of the privy council which has | with 12 students—boys and girls—on been considering the Kellogg anti-) thcir way to Dickinson to visit the . The standing | retiring,” said Mack. “I have no rea-| war pact voted today to report it | briquet plant at Lehigh, stopped off this morning showed the Athletics | son to quit. No one will have to tell me/ favorably to the council, June 26. |for brief sightseeing in Bismarck, Monday. Among other places visited was The Tribune plant, te ste the operations of getting out a daily newspaper. The party started frem Calio in cars at 1:30 Sunday afternoon and arrived here at 9:15 in the evening. They spent the night and part of the fore- neon here and will make another stop in Bismarck on their return homeward. NEW YORK BAKS’ BUY BRITISH GOLD New York, June 18—(?)—Gold ‘amounting to $7,000,000 was purchased today in London by two New York banks and a Wall Street investment house for immediate shipment to the United States. Commercial National Bank and Trust. Company and New York Trust Com- pany are each importing $2,000,000 on ‘the liner Olympic, due here June 25,! ceeding with the Spanish government Here for Sightseeing | and Brown & Company is bringing in $3,000,000 on the Paris due about June 24. The pound sterling for several days has been under the point where it is profitable to import gold. Today Lon- don sterling cables opened $4.84 25-32, unchanged night. from last ZEPPELIN 10 SAIL AROUND THE WORLD Friedriehshafen, Germany, June 18. >(#)—Pagsengers for the next trans- atlantic trip of the Graf Zeppelin have been informed that the dirigible is now scheduled to start for Lake- hurst on July 15. Several days after the landing in the United States the projected Mrs, Walter Chrysler Pays Custom Penalty New York, June 18.—(#)—Mrs. Wale ter P. Chrysler, wife of the automo bile manufacturer, paid $3,762 cuse toms penalties on French gowns and summer dresses which she failed to declare upon her recent return from Europe, it became known today. Cus- round-the world trip in an easterly | toms officials said they were not sat- direction is to begin by way of Fried- | isfied when she submitted a sworn richshafen, Tokyo and San Francisco. | declaration listing foreign On her arrival at Lakehurst again! subject toa total duty of $600 and from San Francisco, the Graf Zep- | seized her luggage after a re-examin- pelin, according to present plans, is| ation. The domestic value of the to remain in the United States three| gowns and dresses was fixed at or four weeks giving exhibition flights | $1,881.20 to which was added 100 per in various parts of the country. Be-| cent for failure to make a full dec- fore returning to her home moorings | laration. in Friedrichshafen. Meanwhile negotiations are pro- SENTENCED TO CHAIR Macon, Ga. June 18.—(AP)4Earl Manchester, 19, convicted yesterday of murder of James Parks, 25, today was sentenced to die in the electric |chair on August 14. Defense attor- neys announced today they would for the sale of the Graf Zeppelin aft- er her world and American cruises. ‘DADDY’ AUCTIONS PROPERTY New York, June 18—(P)—At an :auction in Madison Square Garden ‘file a motion for a new trial. at? fifteen parcels of Edward W. Brown- ing’s realty brought $2,515,000. proceeds, he announces, are to be; tains 3,348 square miles. The} Yellowstone National Park con- At Smart Affairs--- always preferred ‘Among the smart set—folk who know and appreciate the finest in eatables—Purity Ice Cream is preferred by virtue of its rich, velvety deliciousness, and its reputation for the most absolute wholesomeness and purity. Purity Ice Cream sold by the undersigned ‘ dealers is made up of pure cane sugar, pasteurized cream and delicious ingredients in accordance with the most stringent requirements of the Pure Food Law of the state. Hostesses realize its popularity at dances, teas, suppers, bridges and club meetings. Purity Ice Cream is sold at all leading soda fountains in brick or bulk. It is offered in many delicious flavor combina- tions, and sold as a fountain delicacy as well as for home con- sumption. Make Purity Iee Cream a regular habit—it’s more than a delightful refreshment; it’s a wholesome nourishing The fresh crushed fruits, pasteurized cream and cane sugar that comprise Purity Ice Cream are recommended by doctors as health foods. Muse by Jack Ml and Hie Becseing et BSS RE ARG i RAS SRL AOS SCC SO