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KING AND QUE the Duke and Duchess of Yorl. IN OF ENGLAND VISIT THEIR NEWEST GRANDCHILD. and Queen Mary at 17 Burton street, London, to see their granddaughter, a new arri The Duke of York is the second son of the Bi THE L al of King George al at the home of sh rulers. Copyrizht by P. & A. Photos E CRASHES INTO AUTOMOBILE ON A CROWDED CITY STREET. One of the most unusual accidents since the beginning of aviation took place at Colorado Springs i 00 feet to the street, struck an automol Lee, student av A Dassenger wy 100 CONDOR LAYS SECOND §730 £GG Domestic Hen Will Try to Hatch Latest Contribu- | tion of Rare Bird. 0—the second she produced this year—is the latest con ‘ribution of the California resident in the Z 1 Park here. The precious eg: e confided to the incubating car domestic hen in the hope that a condor chick i ched from it.. at value put upon the vesults from the rarity of the Cali fornfa condor. The female and two males in the Zoo, with a younger bird held in the zoo in Los Angeles, are believed to be the on of this almost extinct bird in captiv- ity, and it is thought that there are not more than a hundred individuals left in a wild state in southern and ifornia. Eventual extinction seems almost inevits vuiture once An egg worth condoi and_the Greac area prove that the condor common as far back as the Pleistocene Like Goose Egg. The egg just laid in the Zoo resem- bles & goose egg in shape and appear ance, measuring 4 inc i length and being of a flat white color This is the fifth egg laid by this bird | in the 20 v lived in the Zoo. | were left with the | in breaking them all accidentally. It | was for that reason that the egg laid | six weok: was taken from her and | conflded to a hen for 12 days, when it | was found to be infertile. It is un- usual for the condor to lay more than ; one egg a vear. The breeding season | extends froin January to March. ‘The condor is related to the turkey | vulture or turkey buzzard and feeds largely upon carrion. It averages 4 | feet in length and weighs from 20 to 25 pounds. Its outstandinz character- | istic §s its great wing spread of more thin 9 feet, which makes it one of the | most powerful flyers among feathered | creatures. | The general plumage of the. condor is black with lighter markings about the wings. The head and upper neck are bald, e skin being brilliantly | tinted in cr2nge and red. On the neck | below a ruff stands out like a colla Male and female are alike in th markings | The early prospectors of California were in the habit of using the wing Quills vi tke vondor to carry their gold dust. Tt Is Interesting to note that the | Indlans of Central America used wing quills of various large birds for the same purpose centuries ago. ITALY CONVICTS WOMAN. Sentenced to Eight Months (or‘ Making Remarks About Mussolini. FLORENCE, Ttaly, May 3 (#).—The first woman to be convicted under the law making it a criminal offense to utter derogatory remarks about Pre mier Mussolini is Malvina_Fregioli She has been condemned to serve elght months in prison, | cutibn a THREE TO APPEAL DEATH SENTENCES Executions by Lethal Gas Se’ for Weeks of May 9 and May 16 in Nevada. . May 3.—Execution by treme penalty ir three men in the nex iree weeks unless they are success- ful in their iegal fights to escape the death ch: Commutation of sent - . Randolph, to life fmpri ment will be asked by his couns before the State Pardon Board Tues day. He is under sentence to be executed some time in the week ¢ May 9 for murdering his aged mothe; in Reno last year. The other condemned to die & Stanko slayer of an El ev. and Guadalope Acosta killel a deputy sheriff nea Elko. Loth are to be put to deall in the lethal chamber in the week of May 1 Judich Saturday asked the Fed Court at Carson City fo) a wr habeas to prevent his e e, answering Judich, denied that he is restrained of his | liberty without just cause and de- clared ther no ground for m-! terference by Federal authority. The | court will rule on Judich's appeal| Ly, nber. John e, . pleading insanity, will face | a hearing before a commission next | ‘Thursday. } NOTED SINGER STARTS VETERANS’ FOUNDATION Schumann-Heink to Make Concert | Tour to Raise First of $750,000 Fund. By the Associated Press. 1 CINCINNATI, Ohio, May 3.—Cr ation of a Schumann-Heink founda- tion of $750,000 for the disabled | American veterans of the World War, | founded by herself and sponsored by | a committee of nationally prominent men and women, was announced last | night by John W. Mahan, national commander of the organization. i “mother” of the disabled veterans, will provide the funds to start the foundation by a benefit concert tour, | which will open in Los Angeles May | 29 and take her to 15 cities, closing at Boston June 30. i According _to Comdr. Mahan, | the balance of the fund of $750,000 | will be raised through solicitation by | a national committee headed by Col. | A. A. Sprague, Chicago, former r habilitation chairman of ‘the Amer; can Legion. Among other members | of the committee are William Wrig- | ley, John Borden and Harold E. Mc- Cormick. i e Mazamet, the center of the wool pulling and scouring industry of France, imported mnearly 75,000,000 pounds of wool sheepskin in the past ar, - Colo. A plane piloted by d killed the driver. The MONUMENT ERECTED TO AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT V ik dway as a part of the Child Health day ceremonies, the idea being t wuts atterded fhe ceremony eventy-second rl OKLAHOMA BOOSTERS TO ARRIVE THURSDAY Special Train Carries Business Men and Officials on Tour of Many Big Cities. A special train of 12 cars, carry- ing of the leading business men of Tulsa, Okla., including representa- | tives of the Chamber of Commerce | v and Oklahoma State offi- s, will arrive in Washington Thurs- The purpose of the delegation |is to bring to Eastern cities a better knowledge of the commercial possi- bilities of Oklahoma. The Washington Chamber of Com- merce will entertain the visitors here. The Washington Real Estate Board also will meet the realtors who ac- company the delegation. Arriving at 7:30 a.m., the party will march from the Union Station to the ; | | . Mme. Schumann-Helnk, who is the | New Willard for breakfast, headed by a band. They will then be taken on an automobile tour of the city, and at 12:20 will call on President Cool- idge. Later the visitors will march from the White House to the City Club, where luncheon will be served under the auspices of the Washington Cham- ber of Commerce at 1:30. The entire congressional delegation from Okla- homa has been invited to this lunch- eon, and Senator Harreld will speak. The visitors will leave at 4:30 for Baltimore on an extended itinerary which includes New York City, Bos- ton, Detroit, Chicago and Kansas City. Bathing Suits Withstand Salt. LONDON, May 3 (#).—Bathing suits of artificial silk are zuaranteed to withstand the attacks of sea water. EVENING and Bro: STAR, CALIFORNIA ugh with a swan dive, Miss Ruth Newburn, who appears in the George Washington Uni- versity Troubadours’ play, * K at the university gymnasium TIMS ’10,000 MARCH IN ATLANTA SUPPORTING PROHIBITION | Sunday School Parade Staged by Clergy as Protest of Modi- fication Efforts. By the Associated Pres: ATLANTA, May 3.—Efforts to mod- |ify the national prohibtion laws were | }a parade in which upward of 10,000 persons took part. | were made up mostly of young men !and women and children, mempers of the Sunday schools of the city. The parade wound up at the Bap- tist Tabernacle, where a mass meet- ing was held, in which ministers and laymen spoke against efforts to mod- ify the dry laws, The parade was staged at the in- stance of ministers of the city and was inspired by the recent Senate committee hearing in Washington on the prohibiton law. MRS. CORA S. NALL DIES. | Was Native of New York and Resident Here 15 Years. Mrs. Cora Smith Nall, 54 vyears old, wife of James H. Nall and a resident of this city more than 15 { years, died at her home, 1123 Girard stveef, Saturday, after an illness of about two years. She was a native of New ' York. Funerol services will be conducted at lec.: chapel, 332 Pennsylvania avenve, this afternoon at 3 o'ciock. Interment will be private. Besides her husband, Mrs. Nall is survived by a son, James Smith Nall, and two sisters, Mrs der and Mrs. g P. Bennett. WASHINGTON, - D. GETS READY FOR SUMMER. practicing for the hot weather swimming_events. Long Beach pool while Miss Marjorie Williamson was € ) Bathing beauties Photo taken at the about half Copyright by Underwood & Uniderwood Harry Hartz, who won the 300. automobile race at Speedway, N. J., Saturday afternoon. MacDonogl second and De Paolo third. OF NEW YORK. STONE PLACED ON GRAVE OF MGR. JAMES MACKIN Members of St. Paul's Parish At- tend Ceremony in Memory of Late Priest. A large granite headstone dedicated to the memory of the late Mgr. James | | Mackin, the former pastor protested against here yesterday with | paul's of St. Church, Fifteenth and V streets, was placed on the grave yes- The marchers ' terday afternoon by members of the congregation. Several Mindred members of the parish attended the ceremony at Mount Olivet Cemetery andwrecited the prayers for the dead. Mgr. Mackin died about a year ago. He was the oldest priest in the Bal- timore Archdiocese, which includes ‘Washington. Among the speakers at the cere- mony were Archbishop Fumasoni- Biondi, the papal delegate; Patrick J. Haltigan and Rev. Leo J. Fealy. et o SAMUEL OXENBERG DIES. Samuel Oxenberg, 82 years old, formerly in the grocery business here, died in Garfleld Hospital yesterday. He had long been in failing health, but had been seriously ill only about two weeks. He retired from business 15 _years ago. fi’r. Oxegnberg is survived by his widow, Mrs. Rachael Oxenberg; four daughters, Mrs. Sarah Aaron, Mrs. Kate Rothenstein, Mys. Annfe Schenick and Mrs. Fannie Levanthal; three sons, Joseph, Henry and Harry Oxenberg; 39 grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Funeral services were conducted at Charles E. Snys|afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. the chapel of Bernard Danzansky this Interment in the Adas Israel Cemetery. MONDAY, MAY | o 3y 1926. after the arrival of the premier. STRIKERS AND ARMED G xtile workers went to Garfiel ies Union broucht out % i | § | TRUST FUND IMMUNE | IN VANDERBILT CRISIS| $1,500,000 Protected by Youth’s Signature to Father's Notes | as Publisher. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, May 3.—None of the $1,500,000 trust fund left to Cornelius Vanderbllt, jr., by his grandfather | is endangered by the financial diffi- culties of young Vanderbilt's news- | papers, his attorney, Dudley Field Malone, said yesterday. All the notes signed by Mr. Vander- bilt, totaling $1,080,000 and held by his father, bear the signature of “Cornelius Vanderblilt, jr., president of the Vanderbilt Newspapers, Inc.,” Mr. Malone said, thus precluding any possibility of confiscation of the young man’s personal estate to pay. the in- debtedness of his newspapers. As soon_as prans mature for the raising of $300,000, which Mr, Vander. bilt said is needed to carry his papers through the next six months, a meet. | ing of the stockholders will be called to elect & new board of directors, the attorney announced. At the Vanderbilt home here, the | publisher’s mother said she was not | worried over the financial troubles of | a her son but would not discuss her Fhusband's withdrawal of financial ald to the newspaper enterprises. i g Sydney, Australia’'s largest city, with more than 1,000,000 inhabitants, threatens to displace Glasgow as sec- ond among the white cities of the British Qflpk‘e, IN TRIPOLL ARDS ON STREE 1d for a mass meeting. a court injunetion DECLARES HOUSE BETRAYED WILSON Loncen Minister Says Lan- sing Also Aided in Altering President’s Peace Plan. By the Associated Press PHILADELPHL fent Wilson was “betraved'” who was primarily re the downfall of the dent’s hopes May 3 after the nton Coit of hical Culture Church of Lon serted vesterday before the al Culture ¢ of this city ‘erming Col. Hot the President returned to Dr. Coit said, “both Hou = got together with Cle- menceau and Balfour. the most reac- statesman in England, and tle group then undid ori®of the previous amed session the groundwork of the . which was passed on the old idea of a separate militar; settlement, rding to the dictates »f Marshal Foch, GVERPOPULATED WORLD IS PREDICTED VERY SOON | Nebraska Academy of Science Hears Warning Present Methods Will Not Feed Gain. By the Associated Prese = LINCOLN, Nebr, May 3.—The |world under present conditions will | double its population about every 60 | vears, Dr. Victor E. Levine of Creigh- ton University, Science at Bethany, a suburb, “Within _three ~generations there will be a populatiorf of seven thou- sand million,” Dr. Levine said, ‘“or two thousand million more than the earth can support.” “What is our future?” he asked. “Will the scientists méet the situ: tlon of inadequate food supply b synthetizing foods for life or shall we let matters alone and allow European and American civilization to drift into the condition that the Far East itself is in—a seeting mass of discontented humanity struggling for a hand-to-mouth existence?” “Although the birthrate is decreas- ing,” he said, “science has lengthened the average life by 20 years.” WEST GETS NEW ENGINE. Ofl-Electric Locomotive Will K Be TUsed Out of Chicago. CHICAGO, May 3 (#).—The first oil-electric locomotive for service on ‘Western railroad arrived here yesterday from Schenectady, N. Y., and will be placed in service Tuesday by the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad. The 60-ton, 600-horsepower engine on the 882-mile trip consumed 238 gallons of fuel oil and one gallon of lubricating ofl. The average cost per Hile for fuel sil was b4 eanim, il the | ) Omaha, declared in | {addressing the 'Nebraska Academy of The photograph was snapped immediately ien. del Bano, governor of Tripoli, at right. OF GARFIELD, N. J. Ten thousand strik Armed guards started to disperse them when the hich stonped interference. Acr SLAINBOY'S FATHER AND WOMAN HELD Grand Jury Thursday to Hear i Case of Lad, Found in Indiana River. By the ted Press. PETERSBURG. Ind., May 3.—The Pike County grand jury will be asked Thursday to investigate the slayins in Winslow a week ago of Leande Roe, 9. whose mutilated body wa found in the Patoka River thers | Thursday. Thomas Roe, 50, father of the bo and Mrs. Charles Bolin, 55, a neighbo who were arrested Saturday nig are heing held incommunicado in county jail here. Roe is unawa: of the arrest of the woman. Neithe |has yet been questioned. | Sherift Reece Burns and Corone | 0. D. Harris spent the day at Wi slow gathering evidence to be place | before the grand jury Thurs: Leander disappeared from his ho April His body wa | found the following Thursday fioating in the Patoka River. No water was found in his lungs, and his skuil had been fractured Melvin Wayman, playmate of | the boy, was arrested when he told | several conflicting stories of having | been with the boy when he was With the arrest of Roe i 12, “‘drownad. 1and Mrs. Bolin, the Wayman boy was released. MINER TAKES WIFE’S BODY 200 MILES BY DOG TEAM Alaskan Gold Stampeder at Nome After Six-Day Trip Over Mountain Passes. By the Associated Press. NOME, Alaska, May 3.—Duncan L. | McDonald, pioneer Alaskan miner, ar i rived here Saturday with the body of his wife, after traveling 200 miles from Candle, Alaska, by dog team in six | days over mountain passes and oblit erated trails. The body is to be shipped to Hillsdale, Mich., the home of the woman's relatives. Mrs. McDonald died in Candle, on Seward Peninsula, north of Nome. Her body became frozen during the long journey. Before marriage she was Miss Frances Bishop and was graduat- ed from the University of Michigan She was born in North Dakota and | had taught school. Mrs. McDonald was postmistress at Candle two vears. Her husband was one of the first stampeders to the Daw- son.gold region. He has relatives in Montreal. JACKS JURY DISCHARGED. PIKEVILLE, Ky., May 3 (#).—The jury in the trial of Joe Jacks, jr., charged with murder in the Allburn mine explosion, was discharged at 8 o'clock yesterday morning after hav- ing deliberated an hour last night and some time early today. No date has been set for a new Nether Joe Jacks, sr., nor his daugh ter, Mrs. W. H. Turner, will be tried at the present term of court, oliaved hewe that tha ch IP. T