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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 . Yanks Beat Cu Offer Easy Payment ALL DIRECTORS OF ONLY 25 PER CENT TO BE DUE BEFORE CONGRESS MEETS Other 75 Per Cent Will Be Paid According to Plan Drawn By Solons GIVES NORTHWEST RELIEF Government Announces Grain Also May Be Used For Feeding Livestock THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE if Former Solon Dies Washington, Sept. 28—(?)—It was announced at the white house Wed- nesday that farmers owing crop pro- duction loans to the government would be asked to pay only 25 per cent of the amount due, with an agreement to produce the remaining 75 per cent on whatever terms con- | gress may authorize. Present low prices of farm prod- ucts, the statement said, would make it “practically impossible for wheat farmers to repay their crop produc- tion loans without incurring grave risk of need during the winter” On Sept. 14, Secretary Hyde said he had been authorized by the presi- dent to say the agriculture depart- | JOHN S. WILLIAMS JOHN $. WILLIAMS, ONE-TIME SENATOR FROM SOUTH, DIES Spent Part of Boyhood Fleeing; From Federals; Was Staunch Democrat BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1932 INSULL FIRM QUIT; OFFICERS DROPPED! Entire Directorate of Middle: West Utilities Company | Has Resigned ONLY TREASURER RETAINED) { Brand All Talk of Bankruptcy | For Middle West as “Poppy-Cock’ Chicago, Sept. 28.—()—The entire directorate of the Middle West Util- ities company, the billion-dollar hold- ing concern for public utilities form- erly operated by Samuel Insull in 32 states, has resigned, and, the receivers announced, has been replaced by a smaller board consisting of presidents | of the system's leading subsidiaries. Announcement of the change was} made Tuesday night by Edward N. Hurley and Charles A. McCulloch, re-| ceivers in equit¥ for the Middle West, which serves 6,300,000 customers in the U. 8. and Canada. i In addition, they said, 15 of the Holding company’s 16 officers, who served under the Insull regime, have | been dropped. Oliver E. McCormick, ! treasurer, was the only official re- tained. i 3 Plan for Crop Loans WORLD SE IES SCORE BY INNINGS WEDNESDAY (FIRST GAME): 1 Chicago 23 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 of) To Popo) NewYok MOG llam RHE BOSEE Olea Batteries: For Chicago—Bush, Grimes, Smith and Hartnett. For New York—Ruffing and Dickey. Hurricane Death Toll Continues to “ao | To Leave Bismarck oo ¢ es | 250 IN ATTENDANCE ‘AT DINNER OPENING [BAPTIST CONVENTION Missionary Gives Principal Ad- Dress; Entertainment Fea- tures Offered Mount Sugar Magnate Says He ‘Could Well Imagine Thousands’ Met Death San Juan, Puerto Rico, Sept. 28.— (AP)—Deaths from the hurricane} which struck Puerto Rico early Tues- day mounted into the hundreds Wed- nesday a reconstruction crews clear-/ More than 225 persons attended the ed away the debris while the storm | banquet Tuesday night which marked roared on toward Santo Domingo | the opening here of the 49th annual and Haiti. |convention of North Dakota Baptists. Governor James R. Beverley Placed | The dinner was served in the par- the number of dead at 200 Tuesday lors of the Trinity Lutheran church {night and the injured at 1,000, but | by the women of the First Baptist he said this estimate undoubtedly | would be revised upward. Rey. Walter E. Vater, pastor of Mc- church, host to the conference. SO f To Speak in Ci ‘ity e ——— DR. DANIEL A. POLING Dr. Daniel A. Poling, chairman of the Allied Forces for Prohibition and one of the nation’s leading dry speak- ers, will discuss “Patriotism and the Present Crisis,” at the Bismarck city auditorium Thursday evening at 8:30 o'clock. He is advocating the reelection of President Hoover in line with the de- cision of the Allied Forces to support the president in this campaign. POLING 10 LAUNCH HOOVER CAMPAIGN | | 1 The Weather Farmer ‘hareday. Light foes tools PRICE FIVE CENTS s 12-6in Opener CHICAGO PITCHERS WILT BEFORE HARD ATTACK OF VICTORS Guy Bush, Burleigh Grimes and ” Bob Smith Unable to Stop Scoring LOU GEHRIG SWATS HOMER National Champs Scored Twice in First to Lead for Three Innings Yankee Stadium, New York, Sept. 28.—(P)—The Yankees’ belting pow- er, headed by Lou Gehrig’s home run, and aided by Guy Bush’s wild- ness in a five-run sixth-inning as- sault, smothered the Cubs, 12 to 6, Wednesday in the opening game of the world series. o—- Box Score Chicago (N)— Herman, 2b English, 3b . Curler, rf .. > a r zs o > wlesccecsssonoms--¢ Smith, p . x—Batted rime Bl onmemunumanan 2S| coco nosummwg Bl ccccmmanwnwe Elecenunnesoun a ry F New York (A)— Combs, cf .. Sewell, 3b Ruth, rf .. Gehrig, 1b Lazzeri, 2b . Dickey, ment would not press for collection of its feed and seed loans until congress! had an opportunity to act. The white house statement Wed- nesday said this order had not solved the difficulties in all localities since; it had been construed as meaning that a claim remained upon the crop,} preventing the marketing of any part| of it. After further consultation with the} president, the statement added, Sec-! The new dirctorate of 10 will serve with Grover C. Neff, recently install- ed as president. Neff, like all the members of his new board, was head | of an operating company before as-j| suming his present duties. i Among the 15 directors replaced In the meantime, reports from!Cabe Methodist Episcopal church and! Santo Domingo, before communica- | president of the Bismarck Ministerial | tions were closed down Tuesday, association, welcomed the delegates! night, ; ‘1 the storm destroyed a on behalf of other Bismarck churches | number of houses at San Pedro De/ while Rev. Ellis L. Jackson, pastor of| Macoris, about 50 miles from there.'the First Baptist church, expressed | 1 It reached Santo Domingo about 8:30| the welcome of Bismarck Baptists. Dr. Pp. m., but no damage was done up! F. E. Stockton, Fargo, Baptist super-| to that hour. | intendent for North Dakota, made the Santo Domingo was struck two” response. | years ago by one of the most disas-| Rev. Bruce Jackson, New York, of Yazoo City, Miss. Sept. 28.—()— Former Senator John Sharp Wil- liams, who spent part of his boyhood | fleeing @ federal invasion of his state! and most of his manhood in his} country’s congress, died at midnight | were Samuel Insull, now in Paris; his Tuesday. |brother, Martin, now in Canada; and He was 78 and was at his old plan-igamuel Insull, Jr., en route to Paris. tation home near here with @ group| The receivers branded all talk of| of kinsmen when the end came. He banxruptcy for the Middle West as! IN BISMARCK AREA, | Noted Dry Chief Will Speak For| Chapman, it. President at Auditorium | eurring. : Thursday Night wanune 3 leonocesnoe Blonmonmwuns Fal eccconnocouni wl oconmumme Pr Bl nome names al wooorwmone Bl aw REV. D. PIERCE-JONES retary Hyde has issued a new order to accept from farmers 25 per cent of the amount due, and upon receiving such payments to press for no fur- ther money from the farmers tavol- ved until congress has acted. The 25 per cent moratorium on the loans will affect approximately $23,- 000,000 which has been loaned throughout the northwest farm re- gions where dropping grain prices brought poverty. The rate of interest on the loans is 5% per cent and this rate will be con- tinued upon the 75 per cent left out- standing after the loans fall due Nov. 30 officials said. While applications have been re- ceived for similar extensions of payin, from the cotton, tobacco and othe! agricultural regions, Secretary Hyde made the order applicable only to grain regions. Seed loan officials said both cotton and tobacco prices are above those of last year and the need for extensions was not felt so keenly. PERMIT FEEDING OF CROPS TO LIVESTOCK Minneapolis, Sept. 28.—(4)—Farm- ers of the northwest who wish to feed their crops on which the government has a seed loan lien or mortgage will have an opportunity to do so by giv- ing the government a mortgage on the livestock to be fed, L. J. Paulson, manager of northwest seed loan of- fice in Minneapolis, announced Wed- nesday. This announcement came at the same time the white house announced that seed loan borrowers would be re-/ quired to pay only 25 per cent of their loan this fall. Paulson remarked that many bor- rowers desired to feed their 1932 crop and it is the desire of the department of agriculture to assist them in.carry- ing out such a program, particularly where it will assist the borrower in| Nquidating his government indebted- ness. The new mortgage will bear a rate of five and one-half per cent, the same as was charged on the seed loan. Forms have been provided for ap- plying for the feeding privilege and field inspectors of the crops produc- tion office are being instructed in the operation of the new system. A chattel mortgage on the livestock to be fed will be drawn which will se- cure the notes heretofore executed by the borrower for his crop production Joan, which now is secured by a mort- gage or a secd lien on his crops. It will be necessary, if the livestock is already encumbered, to obtain waivers from those holding liens or mortgages against the stock Waivers also will be required from any who hold liens on the crops. Paulson said there are 113,000 bor- rowers in the Dakotas, Minnesota, the eastern half of Montana, Iowa. Nebraska, Wisconsin and Upper Mich- igan under the crop production and seed loan program pf 1932. Loans to- | ¥' tal $23,274,697. in North Dakota there are 39,045 borrowers who obtained $8,424,778, he said. North Dakota has the most borrowers and received the largest to- tal loans among states in the erea. Paulson added. Sanborn Woman Dies From Mishap Hurts Valley City, N. D., Sept. 28.—(7)— ‘Mrs. J. W. Knable of Sanbo-n, 45, died “in a hospital here Wednesday from in- juries received when. struck by an au- tomobile driven by Harold Stephan, | censes this year is Cass gcunty, sa'd| with a bottle, she said. 1%, at Banborn Tuesday night. Her four-year-old son also was in- dured. She leaves her husband and seven children, had failed fast during recent months |“poppycock.” They reiterated their | and his death was not wholly unex-/ statement the holding concern was; ees |solvent and said its 42 operating sub- | It was the crackling, piercing voice: sidiaries now ar¢ in a stronger cash! jof John Sharpe Williams — student, | position than at any time in the last | connoisseur of beautiful things.! five years. i Planter of cotton—that helped awak-! Two of Samuel Insull's investment en the south from the lethargy that{trusts, the Corporation Securities | trous hurricanes in the history of the , Caribbean . The city was practically | wiped out and more than 3,000 were killed. 10 DIRECT MISSION Stews © the field activities division of the Board of Missionary Cooperation, who was pastor of the Baptist church here ;from 1911 to 1919, conveyed greetings to his former parishioner and spoke briefly on “By-products of the Ex- periences of the Last Three Years.” Rev. Herman Olsen of Winnipeg, almost smothered it after the war between the states. The same voice commanded mighty eloquence and! | stinging sarcasm as it fought the bat- tles of Woodrow Wilson in the senate during the trying days of the League of Nations fight. same voice that told the senate, after 6 doomed Wilson's measure, “I'd rather be a hound dog and bay at the moon from my Mississippi plantation | ithan remain in the U. 8. senate.” { | Retired in 1923 | He retired from public life in 1923) jand came home after devoting almost | 130 years of his life to service in con- | gress. | Although intensely partisan, Sen- jator Williams was courteous to and considerate of his political opponents, | jand was warmly loved and respected | {by his colleagues on both sides of the political aisle. His friends said of jhim that he typified the aristocratic, jastute, vigorous, but fair-fighting | statesman of the South of Civil War times. He loved a fight and plunged jinto the swirl of every controversy | with intense earnestness, vigor and| Power. A student. a master of several -lan- guages, and equipped with a vast fund of information, Senator Wil- Hams was besides a skilled parliamen- |tarian, keen of wit and endowed with j}generous humor. He specialized in political issues of national moment ,and often presented voluminous data jand an array of statistics which dis- ‘concerted his opponents. He also {gave much study to international | problems and politics and was second in rank among the Democrats on the foreign relations and finance com- mittees. Born in Tennessee Born at Memphis, July 30, 1854 Williams as a child passed through the South's trying days during and immediately following the Civil War. His father, Christopher Harris Wil- Mams, a colonel of the Tennessee Vol- unteers, was killed at the battle of Shiloh. His mother. whose maiden name was Annie Lewis Sharp, having died, and Memphis being threatened by the Union forces, Senator Wil- ams’ family moved to his mother’s family homestead in Yazoo county, where at Cedar Grove Farm the Sen- ator made his home. After tutelage in private schools, Williams entered the Kentucky Mili- tary Institute. Later he attended the | University of the South at Sewanee, j Tennessee, and the Universtiy of Hei- delberg, at Baden, Germanv. He studied law at the University of Vir- ginia and was admitted to the Ten- nessee bar in 1877. The year follow- last offered for election in 1007 He was elected to the senate the follow- ing year and took his seat in 1911. CASS LICENSES GO FAST Fargo, Sept. 28.—(#)—Indications point to a record sale of hunting li- | F. Ford Doherty, county auditor. A} total of 860 licenses had been issued compared with 680 licenses on the same date last year. .| Says Man Made Her I company and Insull Utility Invest-} ‘ments, Inc., were adjudged bankrupt! after their receivers had despaired of | salvaging anything for « stockholders | who had invested $300,000,000. i State's Attorney John A. Swanson; And it was the/had ordered three men high in the} Rector of St. councils of the old Insull organization | to appear at his office Wednesday for questioning concerning their own and Samuel Insull’s financing. POLITICAL LEADERS ARE SLAIN IN CUBA Havana Thrown Under Martial Law Following Four Assassinations i | Havana, Sept. 22—()—Martial law! prevailed in Havana Wednesday as police and governmental agencies sought assassins who Tuesday mur- dred five of Cuba’s prominent po- litical leaders by American gangster methods. President Machado explained the decree of martial law was promul- gated to prevent possible reprisals by friends of the slain men. Dr. Clemente Vasquez Bello, friend of Machado, president of the senate,; and prospective candidate for the| presidency of Cuba died in a rain of machine gun bullets from a passing; automobile. Shortly afterward, three brothers, Gonzalo, ‘Guillermo, and Leopoldo Freyre De Andrade, political oppon- ents of Dr. Gazquez Bello and the Machado regime, were slain in their home. Investigators described their killing as an act of reprisal by friends; of the dead senate chief. Police were seeking a man named Agustin Alvarez, who, they sald, was; the owner of the car which bore the machine-gunners. They arrested the proprietor and an employe of the; suburban garage where they said the, auto was kept, but declined to say! whether they had learned anything about the owner. In the car they found six rifles, four pistols, a revol- ver, and a quantity of ammunition. Representative Miguel Angel Aguiar, who participated in the un- successful revolt against the Machado government in August, last year, was wounded fatally in a third shooting. Police closed all roads leading out of Havana in the hope of capturing the slayers. Airplanes began a patrol of the coast looking for small boats in which they might try to escape. 1 i Drink Poison Potion Minneapolis, Sept, 28.—(#)—Alice Brown, 23, was near death Wednes- day at General Hospital of poison she charged her sweetheart forced her to drink as the result of a quarrel. The girl told Lieutenant Blanche Jones she and her sweetheart quar- reled at her apartment Tuesday night. She told the man she was “through with him forever.” He left and returned in few minutes later “He threw me down and sat.on me. WORK FOR DIOCESE | George's Episco- pal Church Here Given Promotion By Bishop Announcement of his resignation as rector of St. George's Episcopal church here to accept an appointment as general missionary of the Episco- Pal diocese of North Dakota was; made Wednesday by Rev. David) Pierce-Jones. Rev. Pierce-Jones expects to leave Bismarck about October 17 to make his home in Fargo, seat of the Bis- | hopric of the Episcopal church in this , state. In his new post he will work under the direct supervision of Rt.| Rev. Frederick B. Bartlett, Episcopal bishop for North Dakota. His duties will be to supervise missionary work | in the diocese, visiting the various mission posts, arranging for new ones and revivifying Episcopal congrega- tions throughout the state. The posi- tion is a new one in the North Da- | kota diocese. i Rev. Pierce-Jones announced. that Bishop Bartlett will come to Bis- marck October 7 and will meet with the vestry of the local church at a luncheon. Announcement of a suc- | cessor to Rev. Pierce-Jones here will be made at that time. 1 Rev. Pierce-Jones came to Bismarck in January, 1931 from Shoal Lake, Manitoba. Prior to that time he had lived in North Dakota, having had a pastorate at Park River from 1920 to 19: PLAN RALLY IN STARK Dickinson, N. D., Sept. '28—()— Stark county members of the Farm- er-Labor League will open their of- fensive for the fall election campaign with a rally here.Oct. 10, Adam A. Lefor, county chairman, announced ‘Wednesday. Gerald P. Nye is sched- uled to spet SOVIET DENIES REPORT =| Moseow, Sept. 28.—(?)—The Soviet! government Wednesday denied re- (ports that 100 Soviet workers were killed in food riots at Sverdlovsk. The reports were characterized as “more | Riga fabrications.” ‘ Brazilian Joan of Arc Sheds Her Robes and Leads Attack on Rebels Uberaba, Brazil, Sept. 28.—(7)— A Brazilian Joan of Arc, who doffed her white and flowing robes for the rough garb of a vol- unteer federal soldier. brandished the sword of battle Wednesday on the northern front where the fed- eral troops are fighting the Sao Paulo rebels. She is the leader of a cult of several thousand men, children in the interior state of Goyaz, and she is leading a com- pany of volunteers from her own group. “Banta Dica;” glorious saint, her hen forced the bottle into my mouth and held my nose so I had to drink it,” Miss Brown declared. fol!owers call-her. She won her fame with them: by numerous re- puted prophetic visions, by a claim ! Domingo, moving northwestward at a' another church leader who like Rev. ; Tate of 12 miles an hour. | Jackson, spent his boyhood in North May Endanger Shipping |Daxota, spoke on “The Importance It was reported due to reach the and Value of the Small Church.” vicinity of Port Au Prince, Haiti, at Axling Is Speaker 7 a. m., Wednesday, and then would! Dr. William Axling of Japan gave begin endangering shipping off the/the principal address of the evening, coast of Oriente Province, Cuba, If speaking on “The Christian Mission its path continued unvaried, observa- in the World Crisis.” tory officials said, it would pass over; The talks were interspersed with the vicinity of Colon Straits as it musical numbers. The American Le- neared the Cuban coast. {gion Auxiliary trio sang the North Da- Property damage in the wake of, kota state song to open the session. the storm here, officials estimated, Members of the trio are Mrs. Ferris would run into many millions of dol-,Cordner, Mrs. G. J. Worner and Mrs. Jars. The heaviest damage was to A. J. Solien. Mrs. Clarence Gunness the coffee plantations which had just Played the piano accompaniment. begun to bear again this year after Miss Vivian Coghlan played a piano having been flattened by the disas-'solo and Mrs. Worner sang two solos, trous storm of four years ago. The! accompanied on the piano by Mrs. citrus fruit crop, worth about $7,000. , Solien while Mrs. Gunness played a 000, would be a total loss, observers violin obligato. said. Rev. H. H. Benns, Bismarck, gave Governor Beverley instructed the the benediction while Rev. Jackson emergency relief ‘committee to begin announced that 120 delegates had at once to find shelter and food for registered. the many thousands left destitute’ Reviewing both the dark and the and homeless. bright sides of the missionary pictures Rafael Veve, Jr., assistant general as Presented at a meeting of the In- manager of the Fajardo Sugar com- ternational Missionary council in pany, who arrived here late Tuesday Herrnhut, Germany, in late June and night after spending eight hours'early July, Dr. Axling spoke of the traveling 30 miles, said all the towns between Fajardo and Carolina, half way to the capital. were destroyed ama half the plantation houses blown lown. “growing racial consciousness, often taking the form of bitter antipathies, a deepening national sense often flow- ering into unreasoning fanaticism, a ruthless economic and industrial de- Imagines Thousands Dead The death list Fajardo was 39 when he left there, he said, and he saw about 100 bodies along the route from Fajardo to Carolina. He said he could: well imagine thou. sands killed in the districts through which he passed. All government offices were in- structed by the governor to open f business as usual Wednesday. “We must have everybody go to work,” he velopment that marches rough-shod and with death-dealing results across 4 (Continuea on page two) H Warns Republicans Against Collectors a ° Warning to all Republicans to con- ‘tribute nothing to persons soliciting said, “as though nothing had hap- Money for the Republican campaign Pened—only more so.” fund unless they can show credentials * Mayors of the stricken towns who issued by him was issued here Wed- called on the governor Tuesday night | nesday by O. E. Erickson, Tappen, were instructed to supply emergency | chairman of the Republican state cen- relief for 48 hours. Requests for tral committee. caskets in which to bury the dead} Erickson said he has been informed were refused. Governor Beverley ex- unauthorized persons are soliciting plained burial was up to the muni- contributions and that his warning cipalities. vas issued to protect contributors Communications were so crippled from fraud. that complete information on what} At the same time he announced that parts of the island were hit by the Hoover-Curtis campaign headquarters storm still was lacking Wednesday.'for North Dakota will be opened here Woodfil Buttem, the governor's sec-| about October 3 with himself in retary, said he had reports 23 were charge. He will direct the campaign Killed at Areciba, much farther west. from here, he said. The office at Fargo, opened some time ago by Wil- |lam Stern, Republican national com- \mitteeman for North Dakota, will jcontinue to function in cooperation | With the headquarters here, Erickson ‘said. | ‘The office here will be in the Pat- terson Hotel. MRS. BORAH IMPROVES Boise, Idaho, Sept. 28.—(?)—Al- ; though her condition remains serious, j Mrs. William E. Borah, stricken 12 ; days ago with parrot fever, continued jan apparently successful _ battle jagainst the disease Wednesday. She ‘was growing stronger and a weakened heart condition, which had caused , alarm, was improving. JENNINGS ON TRIAL AGAIN Minneapolis, Sept. 28.—(/P)—Ed Jen- | The first speech in Bismarck dur- ing the current campaign to reelect President Hoover will be made at 8:15 o'clock Thursday night by Dr. Daniel A. Poling in the city audi- torium. Advance notices indicate that it | will be a combined political and pro- | hibition speech, since Dr. Poling will support the president in line with a recent decision of the Allied Forces for Prohibition, of which he is chair- man. ‘The local address is one of 200 speeches which Dr. Poling expects to make between September 26, when he left Topeka, Kan., in an airplane,| and Noy. 7, when he will speak in Los Angeles. | During his 43-day campaign he will cross and re-cross the country in a specially-equipped Lockheed- Vega plane. His original plans had not, called for so strenuous an itinerary but Dr. Poling added to his own territory that which had been assigned to his friend, Col. Raymond Robins, another dry leader, after whom the plane was named. “We shall keep that fighting name before the country while we search on to find the man who bears it,” Dr. Pol- ing is quoted as saying. In_addition to his support of Hoov- er, Dr. Poling will support dry can- didates for the house and senate, re- gardless of party, and to defeat re- Peal of state prohibition enforcement laws. HOLD SUSPECT IN LINDBERGH CASE Former. Passaic, N. J., Photo- grapher Arrested by Illi- nois Police | i Harrisburg, Ill, Sept. 28—(P}— Dennis Lawrence, 30, was held in jail here Wednesday for questioning in the Lindbergh kidnaping case. Me was arrested at Marion Tuesday night |Home run—Gehriz. Chicago .. New York Ra w SUMMARIES Rans batted in—Stephenson ; Ruth, Gehrig 2, Dickey 2 |2 Combs 2, Lazzeri, Koen’ Two-base hits—Hartnett 2, Three-base _hits—Koenig. Stolen bases— Cuyler. Sacrifice—Crosetti. Double play—Herman, Koenig and Grimm. Left on bases—Chicago 11, New York 4. Bases on balls—Off Ruffing 6 (English, Moore, Grimm 2, Koenig, Bush); Bush five (Combs, Sewell, Ruth, Gehrig, Crosetti) Grimes one (Ruth). Struck out—By Ruffing 10 | (English, Cuyler 2, Moore, Grimm 2, Hartnett) Grimes, Gudat. (Combs, Crosetti). Smith one (Ruf- fing). Maced nT runs off Bush—Six runs, three hits in five 1-3 innings; Grimes—five runs, 3 hits in 1 2-3; Smith—One run, two hits in one in- ning. Hit by pitcher—By Grimes (Dickey). Wild pitch—Grimes, Los- ing pitcher, Bush, Umpires. Din- meen (A. L.), plate; Klem (N. L.) first; Van Graflan (A. L.); second; Magekurth (N. L.) third. Time of game 2:31. : Bush two First Inning Cubs—The rival managers had en extended conference with the umpires at the plate. Herman up. Manager Grimm and Coach Art Fletcher of the Yankees came out for another confab with the chief umpire. Ball one. Foul, strike one. Ball two. Her- man singled over second base. Eng- lish up. Ball one. Ball two. Strike one, called. Foul, strike two. Ball three. Foul into the stands. Foul j into the lower stands. English hit to right and Herman scored when the ball escaped Ruth and roiled to, the fence. English reached third on the Babe's error. It was a single for the batter. Cuyler up. Ball one. Strike one, called. Foul, strike two, into the boxes. Ball two. Cuyler fanned swinging at a fast ball. Steph: up. Foul, into the stands off right field. Strike two, called. Ball one, outside. Foul into the dirt. English scored on Stephenson's single over Ruffing’s head. Moore up. Ball one. Strike one, swung. Strike two, swing. ing. Moore struck out, swinging at a fast one on the outside. ing again. Foul into the screen. in same spot. down. Ball one outside. struck out swinging at a fast one. Two by Sergeant E. J. Gibbons, of the state highway police. His wife and two children were with him in a sedan bearing a New Jersey license. The arrest was made on an anonymous letter mailed to Col. Charles Lindbergh, Trenton, N. J. The letter was forwarded to Illnois high- Gibbons. Gibbons said Lawrence was: & photographer in Passaic, N. J., March 1. He the automo- bile and left there about March 29. The anonymous letter he said, was way police and given to Sergeant|t¥O BB gede?