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WEATHER. Ungettled ‘tonight and probably local showe morrow. Temperature hours ending at 2 p.m 50, at 4 pm 6 am. today. Full report on page 7 warmer today yesterday: lowest, 6 tomorrow: Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 22 ch WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ¢ Foening Sftar. The Star's “From Press to Home Within the Hour” carrier system covers every city block and the regular edi- tion'is delivered to Washington homes as fast as the papers are printed Yesterday’s Circulation, 90,956 Ente No. post 1 as secon 29,331, office Was d class matter ington, D, C. WASHINGTON, b (., WEDNESDAY, | REICHSTAG SURE RATIFY PACT MADE IN LONDON Reception of Renort by Party Leaders and Provincial | Heads Gives Assurance. NATIONALISTS' FEARS | o vecrons et PAFCIENT SENDS REETING TO DAWES Marx Summens Communists and Helps Plan Attitude Party Will Assume in Coming Debates. [T The Sta DECK and Chicage Daily News. ERLIN \ugust 20 of London serl Reichstag was shown roport t Eovernment The German expected make have rermitting sstruction ment 1y oo the 1 is practic Ly the by ion ndon t made to party leaders a presidents ationalists the signified who wers o strongest inten- with- their from re- | d their f ratification ind Iy by Nationals Ived, showin fraini not as this wou ao want 1 and probabiy | or general couneil Taws to convened today to prepare ' vy work. will istead of Thursday or Marx this afte nmunist party leaders mewt him, and had a long conversa tion with them resarding the attitude the i will duri the ag debates noon in- |1 to! Con te Lsume : Rargnin Suggested. \ wsial &upport tion « gain ix being sug out much reachir promising 1 Lpts requ ™r many The settiomont the taxes t h haur plus railroad cared f The liant of articles szation the in i bargaining to be th means of for new 1 obtaining laws and ratitic reement, a ba sted so far with- Marx and the separated with the chaned the ¢ hope com- |y ut |y, u- 1 sty Teaders a o n consider which are political freedom s e prisoners in Ger for the Communist It und - the that th sur- al Democrags with the reservation be 1 should hit that discharsz rhers should aceent « ts will LY proposing taining no providing for of all wealth n oof the sia smmu gesture laws bril series than tire mational- T in Germany on fi Communist pr. B riff Winx Agrarians. other parties, with the the Bavarian peasants to ratification. but they other agrarians in the Right were by the promise tective tariff for o stuffs. However, th pected to be high, becaus: needs cheap food for ¢ The industriais ti iming that economic evacus tion of the Rubr will suflice 10 en- couraze production and adding that if @ Year's term for military evac American | for the Al tion « sreed excep- | have iy and |, parties vro- | food- rmuny ap labor. Pt the situ. we of a HELE t by nkers it is good enough Germans Baden Reglons F Offenburg and Appenweir i Baden. which have wuated by French troops, are brating the eve On Tuesday rang nearly all day and ever. ghowed a flag. The enti tion has been invited to tonizht the guest of palities Aithe The ons re- been bells house Dopula banqu munici- “ a the the liberated area is|P small important industrially, | € “nd thes number troops which marched away was only @ small frac- tion of the French army of occupa- tion, the act is considered the first expression of France's good will Copyright, 1024 LY the Chicago Daily Co) MacDONALD NOTE STIRS. I ?lanuos as Irritation Manifest Among Dep- | ¢ y n uties Over Ruhr Evacuation. i By V'ARIS, August 2 The lobbiesof the mber of Deputies were seething th irritation vesterday because of | Premier MacDonald's letter to Fre mier Herriot urging an earlier evacuation of the Ruhr than agreed upon ut the London conference. The French pree micr's supporters qualified t ish prime minister's lette handed tric [ T as a “back- until they learned that it had been published with M. Her- The opposition, which normally would be eager to use the Br sh document against Premier Herriot, apparently decided it would not be wise at this Juncture. The chances are that the minority action in the forthcoming debate in the chamber will be limited to the reading of a declaration of principles and criticisms which will put members on record before the country. The only opposition i the likely Communist hin, who is planning an in- ation on recognition of the | Soviet government. Reluctance of vacationing deputies, however, to give notice on_interpellation, only one new one being reported, bringing the total to nine gives governmen supporters ample ground for belief that the forthcoming passage at arms will be of short duration and will culminate in a satisfactory though not overwhelming majority, on a vote of confidence. | Officialn Not Alarmed. Meanwhile the storm rai MacDonald letter continues to rage. | Offictal_circles, however, maintain | that Mr. MacDonald acted quite natu- rally in the matter, using the only | procedure available to him to make | known officially, apart from the Lon- | don conference, the traditional view- | point of his government It is further pointed out in these cireles that the letter, dated last Sat- | urday, was written prior to Premier MacDonald's speech at the close of | the conference in which e expressed | to deputy, ed by the |} t gratification at the happy solution of | noy the Ruhr evacuation question; conse- | heen missing all d |Farmer Is Dy ' Offers **Most Hearty” Con- gratulations™ tened in father's with hearty Mai Mr. father's voting Nir riv Mrs No News Received of Dr. and Mrs. ! ander Mrs. Rice are on an expedition bound | for stry 2 said Brazilian by with. stated | sequently it was presumed there was no the travelers. Casper Judge Noses Out in Race | Judge Robert R. Ros the lead in the cont locratic nomination for Senator in yes- | | approximately 600 in the Rose, S i City Commissioner E. Z. Gross. former mayor vesterda: where | according to a message received here today ng | From Bee Stings; Horse Is Crazed | B the Assoc CHESTER. Edward . Green, a serious condition today With' his team attacked by bees when his mowing machine struek @ hive. Physicians who treated him stated there was poison enough his d for rec A veterinary said one of the horses 1 become deranzed, and probably would die. The angered bee covered the bodies of the man and animals with stings e Pros Y a 20, farmer, w from bee of horses, colony of s in stinzs, he was a in the man's body ath, but very to cause hope was held out gratulations on Vice Presi- dential Nominee's Speech. | | i RL ient Associated Pres OI'TH, V't Coolidge sent Amgust 20— I‘rl‘sv'i “hearty .m\~l G. Dawes on his to Charles the vice presidential nominees speceh | min ot acceptanc With delivered last night i family. Mr.” Coolidge lis- last night by radio, in his; home here, to the ceremonics anstown, 11 heard satisfactio twes read held in “We b grea 1 ve o Just your address his message o M I offer you most conzratulations Although Mr. Dawes is t it was said the wome here today that no plans made yet for a visit of the fential candidate with Mr. Dawes conferred w Mr. in July when he and Mrs guests at the White Hor speak in | President’s | had been viee presi- Coolidge Co h idze Dawes sev- arly were ral days President Meanwhile Pitches Horseshoes. lose his olidge de- attention principally to Only a few visitors have ived. and though they told lidsze of brisht prospects in he paizn, he kept his houghts on politics to himself. Dur- ng walk before break this wrning, Mr. Coolidze stopped for a “w minutes to pitch some horse- . Later he received @ report on H Town Coolidge Club from seom Slemp, his secretary and Mrs. Rudolph Kauffms Miss Helen Wr visited with Mr. Mrs a short while this norning nt Coolidge planned a visit he rters of the Home which is in the Richard Brown, | remain to M. o his resting 1 re can has t Mr nd Cool- Pro o arm near coretary. rl Kinsley, nitteeman fro d here last night lub thix morning hat moge than 14,000 names had been nrolled on the club roster, princi- pally from tourists passing through Thomas Fdison, Henry Ford and Firestone, who called for a while on the President and oolidie yesterday, were among he latest to enroll Each wore the lub button on his lapel yesterday here of Republican national | Vermont., ar- nd visited the reporting later vey hort U. S. EXPLORERS FEARED LOST IN BRAZIL JUNGLE | Alexander H. Rice. for Manaos. Bound | By the Associated Press. | BUENOS AIRES, August 20.—News to the whereabouts of Dr. At Hamilton Rice, American e p'orer, and his wife, the former Mrs. seorge D Widener, is still lacking, | ays a dispatch from the Rio Janeiro | orrespondent of La Naefon. Dr. and Manaos to begin an exploration the Rio Negro Valley | The Rio dispatch says the director | »f the bureau of the Brazilian mini- of justice addressed a telegram ast Saturday to the fedgral judge ot king the whereabouts ot | Rice party. cgraphic com- ition with the state of Ama- | however, is delayed and the| espondent was informed by the | lirector of the burcau last night that | he had thus far received no repiy. | fety of Dr. Rice! pressed here re- ‘} he muni i Concern for the nd his part cently owing to rumors )f unrest anaos district. A luenos Aires dispatch last Saturday quoting advices from Rio Janeiro, the American embassy in the | capital had been assured | the American consul at Manaos arly in the week that the Ameriean -xplorers had not been intertered The consul's message, it was | at that time, was of a later | date than the reported unrest, con- reason to fear for the satety of ROSE LEADS WYOMING ; DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY ; | for Senatorial Nom- i ination. | the Associated Press. ! CHEY Wyo. August 0. of Casper, took t for the Dem- erday’s State primary when returns | rom Casper were received today. | Returns from 74 precincts out of | tate gave | 18: Joseph C. O'Mahoney of | 1,279; Leroy R. 1, “heyenne, Laird, 496. | Harrisburg Official Drowns. HARRISBURG, Pa, August 20.—| of Harrisburg, was drowned at Solid Comfort Camp on | French River, Ontario, Canada, he was spending a vacation, | he by John Campbell, a son-in- Details of the drowning were given her than that he had and that his hat aw " (Continued en Page 2, Column.l) -jand coat had been found in the river. * DENOCRATS POINT Total of 290 Electoral Votes. fin | quest | der of Mrs. Mors, | turnea 10 27 GOVERNORS ASVICTORY OMEN I | More Than Majority, Em- braced in Territory. l SEVEN STATES IN 1922 NAMED PARTY SENATORS Campaign Managers Ask What Reason Has G. 0. P. to Expect People to Turn to Coolidge. BY G, GOULD LINCOLA. T Democrats m the political ate povernments are tuking status tod, of Congress the heart and and from the record of {n fiaus, An examination vi well that denee of the situation i hard figures Republican time for overconfi- wed from suggest this is cold, to no leaders Senator Jones of New Mexico, chair of the tie committee, called the salient M this pointed out Many De Of the 48 States have Demoeratic States have electoral Joroty for a pr > In Demaocr today senatoria attention facts record. H ratie Go of govern a total of college, well M 266, whi sidential choies 2 addition to the have Democratic s States in 1922 clected 1y ators in o State-wide cad of Republican. The ave a total of votes toral col 3. The combined electo the States having Democratic ernors, and the seven that chooss ocratic Senators two vears age, a total of i This is a not these States with ors. 1 “nion hese a0 votes the in the ove ma- ary tates rnors nocratic ntests whick i seven States in the m- row tidy total. The Democrat claiming they will carry all t they are saying—and considerable show of reason—*if we carried them two ago, why haven't we an excellent chance to carry them in November The States with ocutives representing Arizen, Arkansas, prida, 6: Georgia. 14 ntucky. 13: Louis nd, 8; Mississipy . 8: Nevada, 3: New Ha Jersey, 14: New Mexico, York, 43; North Carolina. 1: Oklaho 10; Oregon Island. 5. South Carolina, Democratie re: Alabama, Colorado, an ma ex- New Ohi Rhode LAYER, 2 WITNESSES SAY inued on Page 2 “Heavy-Set” Man Seen to Enter Mrs. Mors’ ‘Apart-. ment, Testify at Hearing. August 20 —When . ex-pugilist, was arraigned | Superior Court totlay and the dictment was read to him charging the murder of Theresa W. Mors, his exes flashed and he cried, 1 did not.” His formal plea. at his attorney’s re- was postponed until Monday left the apartment whers M Mors were living to- gether before the shot was fired that | killed the woman, according t statement today by Dagmar Dahlgren dancer and eighth wife of the Kid She told the e she had been spy- ing on And Mrs. Mors, and saw McCoy leave the apartment and Mrs. Mors turn out the lights, then noticed the arrival of w “heavy-set” man. heard an argument and then shot Mrs. Tva in- | Mef he and N a Martin, apartment house neighbor of Mrs. Moss, also said that she saw a heavy-set man leave the Mors apartment a few minutes after a shot was fired, and identificd this man as Albert A. Mors, divorced hus band of the dead woman, heir to he estate and beneficlary of her life insurance. Slouches in Cell. McCoy, who 20 vears ago strode into a Los Angeles hotel boasting S0 suits of clothing, besides the fighting trunks in which he was to make his first ring appearance here, today slouched on a cot in the county Jail, a 51-year-old former pugilist, broke, dejected, awaiting trial on indict- ments ‘charging him with murder, robfery and assault with intept to murder. Nineteen witnesses told the grand jury yesterday how the body of Mrs. Theresa Mors, dead of a bullet wound in her head, was found early Wed- nesday in the apartment she and Mc Coy had occupied; how a few hours later the Kid burst into the Mors an- tique shop in the fashionable West- | lake shopping district, held up four | men and slightly wounded two men and a woman. A comparatively brief session satis- fied the jurors that there was enough evidence on which to base the indict- ments charging McCoy with the mur- with four counts of | robbery and three counts of assault specifying intent to murder Sam and Ann Schapp, friends of Mrs. Mors, and William G. Ross, a customer, who tried to escape from the Mors shop while McCoy was in it. District Attorney Asa Keyes said after the indictments had been re- that he expected to go to trial with the murder case within a month, taking personal charge and “using every legal and fair means to_secure a conviction.’ Meanwhile, McCoy’s attorneys have begun to lay groundwork for an i sanity defense, aided by a strong! aving on the prisoner's part vester- day, which State alicnists said was| feigred, but which poli ad- | mitted looks genuine. One defense alienist examined the prisoner yes- terday and three others will exam- ine him today, but will make no report on his condition for several days, . G son. 4 !air mail service | motor. car, MISSISSIPPI KEEP SENATOR HARRISON One New Face Will Appear in Delegation as Representa- tive of Third District. Ey the Asociated Press A Mi s in the next Con- Eress w embuer He will be tingt 1t i one new State Senator W, M the returned Senator the thr, for sen pat off recently . ntly renomination House smbers of the n this State tor Harrison, the for the Democratic Presi 150 key ate's orite tion feo the recent vention, ¢ State, inc ponen turns all se ¢ son r: the rrie irl Brewer rly today, ineludin State, gave Harri ~121 ed for r nth distric and in the silier was opponents Perey rese: n- de- ireaves Ithough h ad, was | Loper. wtive John striet, 1 inz a pushe Rey the first second. Joff Busy in the T. W. Wilson in the sixth out opposition GERMANY LAUNCHES in fourth and NIGHT AERIAL MAIL Operates From Berlin to Stock- holm on Schedule of Seven Hours. and . Dails Copsright, 14 STOCKHOLM, August there already talk in States abandoning the Air Ma Service as too expensive, the sup- posedly impecunious German govern- ment has just inaugurated from Berlin to Stock- o The News Dy Cable Star 20.—While the United holm The first planes arrived this week, bringing Berlin evening papers and the early morning editions to Ge mans here in time to read them at breakfast the same morning The same system of siznal towers is used along the route as is used between Chicago and Cheyenne. The trip takes 7 hours, whereas the fast- est trains take 28 The planes and their pilots are all German, and the Germans even paid for the facilities provided enroute. The Swedish government's sole con- tribution to the service was permi sion to use landing fields and hangars. The planes wsed are open Junker two-passenger machines, FOUR UNMASKED BANDITS | ROB JEWELER OF $150,000 Hold Up Store Manager at Opening Hour and Get Away in Stolen Car. By the Associated Press BOSTON, August 20.—Timing their attack to within five minutes of busi- ness hours, four unmasked men held up the manager of the jewelry store or Carl H. Skinner. on Boylston street, today and escaped with rings and gems valued at $150,000. The manager, Frederick W. Ives, was carrying several boxes of jewelry from the safe to the showcases at five minutes of 9, when he heard a comman hrow up your hands and drop that stuff. We want i He looked up to find four revolvers aimed at him but he grappled with the nearest bandit. A blow from a revolver butt and Ives was stretched out unconscious, while the robbers swiftly carried their booty to the sidewalk A bystander. Mrs. Anna Conw tried to stop them but one of the knocked her down The bandits made away In & 1 our tolen AUGUS were with- | 1] night | 20, 1924 — HIRTY- WO PAGES. * TWO CENTS UNDER AVEICH Radio of World 1 May Be Silenced To ‘Pick Up’ Mar As FEAG: Iy the ated P chance from Mars the nearest 1 On that b hare during riod the formerly tment I planet David (stronon has To ¥ azree to stations silent America <ed o al. despite their the results, but ons been radio lation Doy of keptic far no of str have reg rtment the the Todd 4 zn roached gov most o through legations confident will have the fore their o here, an that his suggest widespread acceptan: —e DISTRICT BOARD CUTTING BUDGET Commissioners Take First! Actual Steps to Meet $5,000,000 Reduction. First tricts ¢ fiscal set by the " today sioners at a sp fice of Engineer Approximately slashed from the estim The task of the | expected to be completed week. Considerable dif the Commissioners lopy off £3.000.000, the original budset of $36.500,000 contained items which were ded as absolutely essential to the continued development of Washinzton Virtually all departments of the municipal government will suffer some- at from the drastic reduction. The schools will be least affected, as the Commissioners are fully aware of the urgent needs of the public educational vstem and are desirous that they be | provided as soon as possible. i nal budget to the limit the the Board of Comm! n in the of- Commissioner Bell 000,000 will be for the of $31.551.505 sau of Indzet were by 2 tes, cutt hudget within a culty confronts is ‘ut Conduit Expense, The largest reduction is expected to be made in the appropriation of $2.000,000 proposed for the extension | of the new water conduit from Great ! Falis. The street lighting, sewer and { water systems also will suffer. The litem for the construction of a con- | tagious ward at the Gallinger Hos- | pital which Health Officer William . | Fowler has recommended for several | years may be eliminated entirely | Al of the items deleted from the | original budget during the pruning process will be included in the sup- plemental estimates which the Com- missioners plan to forward to the budget bureau along with the badly slashed budget. Gen. Lord's has given the Commissioners until September 15 to submit the revised budget, but it probably will be sent several weeks before that time. TURKESTAN TEMBLORS MAKE 8,000 HOMELESS Forty-One Dead and 4,000 Homes Destroyed, Say Reports From India. By the Associated Press. LONDON, August quake near Osh, in the Privince of Semiryechensk, Russian Turkestan, has caused the deaths of 41 persons in three villages, and rendered 8,000 people homeless, says a dispatch to the Evening News, from Allahabad, India, quoting advices to the news- paper Pioneer. More than 4,000 houses were de- stroyed. 20.—An earth- Slayers Go to Death Cell. Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., August 20.—Otto | Clear and Fritz Lewlis, colored, why robbed and murdered a farmer three weeks ago and set fire to his house, have been removed to the death cell in the penitentiary, from which they will be taken early on the morning of September 12 and put to death in the electric chale, 2 1ctual stens to reduce the Dis- | next | bureau | SLAYERS UNMOVED - BY DEATH DEMAND aaio | il heard that carth, Prof. head of at Amherst, principal gov- world | Capital Crimes Cannot Be! Mitigated by Philosophy of ! Youths, Is Argument. By the Assoc.ated Press CHICA thr " rape by N Loeb 20.—Two of m murder, ping—were committed opold, jr.. and manner justifving avath the Mars ssistant told Judre John R. ugust the es for which is death penaity in a tha | Thomas torney He urged ti argument based of the Ilineis 1 charges conn nd murde which the guilty e extreme penalty | ipon the phrascology wws and the forr ted with the kidnaping of Robert Franks, to defendants have pleaded inan Judge Follows Law Text. Caverly opened a followed the text rgad the phrases d wnd Kidnap is State the penalty of rought out in und emphatic Judze W and Marshall murder crimes ot Mr. ning capital phrase death” voice in i r a raised deliberatenes G dvfendants sns that th had been he ed more inter | made by ¢ associate The at attempt ishme expe erime that po drawing and Loet visible ey seem- gave phrase “des rd by them. sted in the h pe They otes being ce S, Darrow and his for the defense ridiculed the defense w mitigation of p testimony of mental counse rney the to by philosophy was Mr. n excuse for Marshall's text « nd he worked it out by paralleis between Leopold belief in their own pow- ers and the philosophies of anarchist communists and Mormons who were ted of violating the law despite | liance upon their beliefs S Jus-| tification for their acts. Comparex With Anarchists. 1 Mr. Marshall continued this morn- ing with-a reference to defense testi- mony that Leopold considered himself « superman. So did th vears ago Supermen,” said 1 sought to destro { mite. These me other means, but | sophical grounds He read from Haymarket riot parallel. “The philosophy here law has no application, shali. “The anarchists were executed by the luw that they damned, not their philo phy, but for their vio tion of law,” he added | Mr. Marshall, in a similar vein, dis | cussed the more recent communtst lcases in which the millionaire Lloyd | | was the central figure. i | Chicago anarchists of onsider themselves Mr. Marshall. ““They the law with dy would destroy it by on similar philo- | of the drew a the records trials and that said Mr. the Mar- for | No More Caxes Cited. “Upon what theory can it | that the views of Leopold, since they do | not_protect him from the consequences | of his a n be urged in mitigation | of his crime?” asked Mr. Marshall, | The findings of the Supreme Court of the United States in the polygamy ~Continucd on Tage e 'SPAIN CLAIMS GAIN | AGAINST MOROCCANS | Official Report Says Enemy Lost 98 Dead and 360 Wounded at Afrau. | | By the Associated Press. 1 ! MADRID, August 20.—The Spanish operations against the rebels at Afrau, | in the eastern zone of Morocco, have | been successfully terminated, says an | official communique. The rebels are known to have suffered the loss of | 98 killed and 360 wounded, although | {native reports and air observers put| the enemy casualties as high as 550. | Among the Spanish wounded were two lieutenants. “In the western zone,” the com- munique adds, “the enemy attacked Chentafa, using incendiary grenades, the explosions of which were heard ! at Loma Verde. The Spanish gar-| rison valiantly continued to defend | itself in its burning position.” Radio Programs—Page 21. | Japanese officials who | study could be found. ZR-3 Will Start On Trip Acros Ocean in Month By the Assaciated Press FRIEDRICHSHAREN, August 20.—The ZR-3, giant dirig which being built here for 1 United States, probably will start her long flight to Lakehurst. N. J.. bout the middle of September, it was announced today at the first public inspection of the dirigible The motors are being installed Inflation of the 14 with hydrogen gas i favorably. The first trial flight will b of several hours and will take Pace cardy in September, in the vicinity of Friedrichshafen. There will be several other trial flights of from 12 to hours cach prior to the departure on the transatlantic Journey U.S. FLYERS MAKE JUMPTOMORROW Will Leave Iceland on Long, Hop to East Greenland at 3 A.M. rmany. compartment progressi HALTED BY WEATHER Zanni, Crashing, Is Expected to Give Up World-Circling Attempt. The Associnted Press, REYKJAVIK, The American and Lie Locatelli who pany flight the North nent, will take off on Fredo L Eas row mor The cland. A he Ital m eric round ut aviator. their conti- n P on to e long Lup to e F orcle tome was decided tod, ade ning nes ewell e decision wWas ates Adn Lieut. L of the re Locatelli 1 ma The HoS nd-the-world ral mander and 1 The cut fivers ha D we t preparations their inten- arrival h sired, izing that proba 1 of the Richmond, Rear to means the preparations with which Revisjavik by plane on board plan was ab le was blowing there this morn and because of uncertaintly regard- ing landing of a s plane PATROL GETS ORDERS. the mater the uise Ships to Go on Posts Tomor- row Morning. By the Associat AROARD U. gust 20 (B, mond, return the accide S RICH) wireless) Tee OND, Thi ittempted board machines pare parts with w can be repaired When the aviators start from javik, 1 he tioned o the ern tip of E Barry. Billingsley stationed eastward toward lcelan and the Richmond will sec the p off at Revkjavik. The vessels been orde up their r tive station b Immediately after the Frederiksdal complet Leigh Wade. who lost his tween the Orkneys and lce be transferred to the with his mechanician, Li Ogden proceed to Pictou. Nova tia, to take over the new plane which is to be provided for him there and in which he will resume the flight with his companions. iser Raleigh w Cape Farewell, have ke spec- is be- will and ZANNI IN CRASH. Expected Now to Give Up Plans for Flight. the Associated Press. TOKIO. August 20 —Regret was ex- pressed throughout Japan today when news was received here from Hanoi, French Indo-China, telling of the overturning of the plane of Maj. Pedro Zanni, Argentine round-the-world fiye while' he was taking off for Can- ton. As Zanni's plane was put out of commission, it is believed he will make no further tempt to con- tinue. It h already been decided that he would not attempt to cross the Pacific. B, as received her, reia Uriburi. Argentine ympleted arrangements for minister, | of Zanni across Japan.| i the flight Through the ready co-operation of ided in locat- ing the same landing places prepared for D'Oisy, the Frech aviator, Zanni's landing fields would have been the best. SOCIALIST’S WIDOW AIDED | ST | Titta Ruffo. Noted Singer. Goes to Matteotti’s Wife. Jtaly, "August 20 Ruffo, the famous baritone, who brother of the widow of Giacomo Matteotti, the Socialist deputy whose body was found near Rome last weck after being missing for more than two months, has arrived from Bogota, Colombia. i Signor Ruffo was singing letto” at Bogota when he cablegram notifying him brother-in-law disappeared. tinued in his role beca Sister, MILAN, itta in “Rigo- received that his He con- e no under. Upon the con clusion of the opera he immediately boarded a steamer for Italy Lucy F;AGE GASTON DIES. By the Associnted Press. CHICAGO, August Page Gaston, founder of the national| Anti-Cigarette League, died today a Hinsdale Hospital. | | ! 20 -Miss Lucy | DAWES, NOTIFIED, STARTS FOR MAINE 10 OPEN CAMPAIGN Calls Independents “Reds,” and Democrats *Strad- dlers,” in Speech. GREAT THRONG LISTENS TO CANDIDATE’S VIEWS Leaving Today PATLY’s national campaign today for Augusta, Where Talk Will Be Made EVANSTON, min I The Saturday. \ ted I'r m. Au ed Vice Pre rmally ac h Muine s Aus Augu Mr for Dawe dertaken te AWy at D. 1n leade ders was ¢ poir vehemently over one of 1 th pe il and so vigorousiy formal 1 tive t cloped of Bath, Me., who will act Mr M Haven, Conn zo « da son, one e VLeaving Westbrook nomince Brunswick Sunday o an, Re forencon anston B This best by was given ub Then conseions culi, led nsur Mr, A - | who i from Wisconsin,™ thrown licanism and has he D. ing only of J. Kilkenny, rorE | stenographer, i ne M. b nn., y o o L d tu Leac rty night jold-time ceded the Dt the M prese Gien ar under-s it up. He had that ned only hour N Dawes spoke i notification Jefferis, N an W rom ificial likewise braska notific attacked whom pr off “all ns - o sheltered, with the party leaving b awes for Maine the his chief wddock of and H »m A »awes during his capital Dawes will arrive morn later Arriving there, ¥ automobile to to spend a nd Friday of the sank. dirceto will 80 to Au and in th ping. he will sp in Boston, arri Tuesday mornix Preside: ling fizures present and who parade the and res former ion run aw 40 years he and ortic with Wa Maing participated rally exercizes included ist 20— Ha e Republican dent, ¢ with * 1o de 1sta iver the trip Present. iign 10 conser- fied by Jefleris. < detivers epresenta chairn B committee, ma had Eepub- from th. has been finally i he v t party today with nall, con- inee, kb neis Muj Evanston; rd M stay the in New York ing and will for New he will throok Thurs- H. Wi his Chi- We of 4 wte Friday, the by wa turday capital. end Monday ving back in usta nd s In Represented. the Republican nies last in the that pre- William M. Butler, chairman of the Republi- ca ol + n | sided: in | Coolidse (Co! wtional Frank W personal \dbd ntinucd on Page o, ( commitice, Stearns of i who of Boston, President Clark, the olumn 1)