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| WASHINGTON, D. O, wfibn’.&i " FULY S’I‘l(n(l‘l(} \IM‘OIIMI’\ AND SWITCHMEN OF NEW YORK SlVBWAY HOLDING MASS MEETING. Aceunflng to the latest reports, the has fail normal. _The uate has tie up the city traffic, the ice bein; an adeq foree, and the porlnnm’; upofle:.:'utfielkt‘ henfllm The photo shows ard P. uvlu,hud:'lflzham THE WHITE HOUSE MOVES FROM WASHINGTON TO THE ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS. This pllt'm‘)f‘e mu tal- union, ad- it by P. & A. Photos for the Sumamer Wiite Houser: Latt to siht: Seerstary’ ?‘:‘&"& /% Wilbut: Dostmaster” Goneral New. Atiomey General Sartes bk f o el jul louse. o of av! s ter Gen ow, eral it, ‘War Davis, Secretary of the Treasury r&lon Coolidge and lh’v esident. S com::l by P. Arfmu?- dreulnz the mrn(m. - M!S'ED SUBMARINE 851 BEING TOWED TO BROOKLY! . After 10 months the ill-fated underseas craft, which was struck off Block Island, has been raised and, With the aid of pontoons, is being -lowly mwel by the Nsvnehod Faleon. The submarine contains the bodies of the men who lost their lives, opened at Navy Yard. Photo by Acme. IT WAS A POPULAR POOL UNTIL A POLICEMAN CAME ALONG. And then the youngsters scattered in_ THE KING'S 80N PLAYS TENNIS, The Duke of York took part in every direction. The camera man snapped fhis picfure at tle Columbus Fountain, at the Union Séalon. B o e g e s o Lra THODIEINSTORM "IN GENTRAL WEST ightning, Wmd and Rain Cause Heavy Losses in Ohio, Indiana and Hlinois. By the Associated Press. COLUMBUS, Ohio.; July g.~~Ohioans were taking stock today'of the dam- age done by storms which swept many of the State yesterday with re: tless fury, accompanied by high hedvy rains and spectacular ys of lightning. The storm ex- tended to central Illinois, ‘Where two persons were killed and one seriously injured by lightning. Damage totaling thousands of dol- lars was caused by the storm, and at least four persons were injured in Ohio. Losses in Columbus and vicinity were reported to have reached $100,- 000, and the damage at Dayton was placed even "higher, while damages were still unestimated today in many wections. Damage to crops also was reported in the storm-swept area. Boy Stunned by Bolt. ‘William Caswhion, 10, was stunned by lightning while seated on the front porch of his home here. Louis Chenowith of Grove City was talking on a telephone here when lightning struck the wires leading into the ufllce and knocked him uncon- 'l‘wo severe storms . hit Zanesville and_vicinity. During the height of one, Albert Shanks, a machinist, and Miss Ethel Wirick were rendered up- conscious when lightning struck an slectric feed wire. During the_second storm at New Concord, nearby, a natural.gas. well 'was fired when a bolt struck the rig- ging. The flames iwere controlled with dificulty. 3 Gas Well Fired. After 12 hours of fire fighting, em- wes of the Ohio Ofl Co. at Cam- , succeeded in extinguishing & fire at ‘Mercer Gas Well, No. 2, with the use of steam. The well.was nrucl. by lightning. Fire -mnafl by lightning Guring a heavy storm destroyed the denaturing plant of the Federal Products Co. at thhoge. Ohlo, near Cincinnati, caus- ing damage estimated at $75,000. Four tanks containing 10,000 galions of al- cohol exploded, one after the other, in- side the buildi Many trees and telephone polés were blown over at Dayton, which seemingly was hardest hit. by the storm. The city was without tele- phone service for hours and for two hours only one of the interurban lines running through the cify was in use. City street car service in Columbus and Deyton was paralyzed for more than an hour and & half. BULB SHIPMENTS CURBED Interstate Movement of N: Forbidden After July ‘The Federal Horticulture Burd tu placed a quarantine against state movunonz of narcissus bu‘bl effective July 16. £ ‘The action, it was an been '-lken to prevent it pest -nd “Bird of Paradlse” l Plagi Rules in Old Row n-qdma Prese. hEW YORK, July 7.—After 14 . Years of litigation the appellate division of the Supreme Court to- day ‘affirmed the decision-that th- DIIY “The Bird of Paradise” been plagiarized by Oliver Morosco, producer, and Richard Walton Tully, playwright, from an unpub- lished manuscript entitled “In Ha- hwul written by Grake A. Fend- The court.also affirmed a lower court decision for an accounting by the producer and the playwright ! of all moneys received in the pro- ':duction of the play. e MRS. FLAGLER 1S BRIDE OF ARMAND M. SULLIVIAN Wedding - Plans Changed After Publicify Given to Event—Will Reside in New York. By the Associated Press. STROUDSBURG, Pa., July 7——‘" d former physical instructor, were married yesterday at the Tan- nersville Inn, about seven miles from Stroudsburg. Announc it of the wedding was made v Max Leévy, a New York law- yer. He and his wile were the only wiinesses of the ceremony. have ‘taken: place ‘in ‘Stroudsburg and the ceremony performed by Squire P. M. Nills, but the the publicity given the engagement when it became knovm 1ast 'weelk caused a changein A wedding breakfast was -erved at e inn, ‘after which Mr>~and Mrs, Bu‘lllvhn and Mr. and Mrs. Levy mo- tored to New York. After attending a theater there tonight Mr. and Mrs. Bumvhn ‘will leave for an extanded trip and_on their return will reside in le York City.’ ——— NEIGHBORS IN COURT. - SRR AT Copyright by P. & A. Photos. Gore. ; ill be v Pum% THE smmcm-mum AR smwlén ARRIVES IN wmmmmh o m a.-émee will carry mail and pas- Ly polmdsnmll. Am:&vhgumd-mfim mm nmi 'enrll hundred nlne of the. pl FLORIDA CONCERN SEEKS Itahan Mnrble Crosses Selected INJUNCTION AGAINST U. S. Asks Ocm to !Mp’loeflhry Work ¢ From Taking Over Develop- ment Site. . Claiming that the United States ernment “has been hit by the ida land graze, the Beachland Side Screen on Porch Is Causs nc|Dovolopment Co., ‘owner . of Vero Jund . 7 W_street. The plaintiffs tell the wnrvil tl regulations, as wel Sovenabts a. the ;ddaas properties, prevent the ¢l ns and assert Beach, Fla., today filed sujt for an in- junction in the District Supreme | con! Court against- Hubert Work, Cecra- tary®” of the Interlar, and W! Spry, -Cmmhdonor of the Land Office.. company seeks to|p mtmowommmflmmt Ammwerirontmth Indian | betore t River, mm poned action ‘on. the recommen: By (He Associated Press. .| Despite vltorm mtm bv Ameri. can’ granite prodt S i s retary Dcvu of the ‘War Dcp::'umn! postpone. mdmm yesterday > that t‘; _would 3 men of A ite-producing | of the carry out the recommendal p Battle Monuments Commission, h-fl ed by Gon Pershing, and award the contract for crosses to mark ’the ves of Amorle-n .oldhu buried in Carrara marble - he iway and Companion Wounded ~ 5 by Po’l )\flh _|Child Marriages _ '| Are Under Study having carried wwm-nwn.g TRIES TO STEAL A TIRE AS JOKE AND IS KILLED By U S, Offlclals Echflol‘ll‘l marsiages and’ ins why girls: in ‘thelp lnldd-le téens nllh into the " matrimonial state either by falsification of or faflure to secure parental con- sent are being investigated by Unele Sam. The . Children’s Bureau of the Labor- Department, reporting to- day on a study undertaken by, the ‘Women’s Protective Association” of Cleveland, found that 38 of 39 girls found by verification in 1923 to be under 16 at the time of mar- had represented themselves to over that: age and only one - had obtained’ her license legally. During the same period 148 girls /had - evaded - the requirement of Hoquirement ot proof of age be jent proof of age fore s license is isued, a declaration of intention to marry days in advance of issuance of the mar- riage license, performing of civil marriages by specially appointed deputies rather than by justices of the peace; legislation to prevent the recognition of m: contracted in another State to avold State *laws and centralizing of the mar- riage records of the State in the Bureau of Vital Statistics are sug- gested as remedies for” failure of the law, EVIDENCES OF PYGMIES ‘FOUND IN NEW GUINEA Smithsonian Explorers, in Air . planes, Find Traces of Villages, Letter Informs. By the Associsted Press. BERKELEY, Calif., July Smithsonian Institution expedition, ‘which is making airplane flights over the” remote sections of New Guinea in South America, to trace a race of pygmies, has discovéred camp fires, clearings and other evidence of the mm of ~the thinu ing, o(cnu(orm- who is in charge. parked .'m first lll'l)llJl‘ ovor lho m llnflr - FONCK ANNOUNCES PLANG FOR FLIGHT rench Ace.and_Two Ameri- cans Hope to Make Paris in 35 Hours. By the Assotiated Press. . CONCORD, N. H, July 7~New York to Paris in 35 hours on a trans- atlantic non-stop flight- of 3,100 miles * with no speéial protection from ships at ‘sea - is the aim ‘of (Capt. Rene Fonck, French flying ace, and two American aviation officers during the first week in August. Decision to attempt.the hop was an; nounced here yesterday after Capt® Fonck and Capt. Homer Barry, Amer- ican flyer, €onferred with Robert Jack- son, Concord banker, one of the back- ers of the flight. Lieut. A. P. Snoddy, aid to Rear, Admiral Willlam A. Moffett at Wash- ington, will make tha trip as naviga- “i!‘l Forick and m.rry will pilot the -ship. The plane to be und 18 now completion at the Sikorski pha Long Island. It is of the inclosed tm with space for one mux to sleep, and will carry special air tanks de- signed to keep it afloat for several days in case of a forced landing. It flibe put, lflal'ou‘h severe tests, in- cluding a 100 mile experimental flight; before the actual Paris Attempt. 'rho plane will carry seven tons of The men plan to hop off from Mine- ola, N. Y., and follow the curve of the earth most of the way. The first leg of thegflight will be northeast to A | & peint some 250 miles off Nnmmd— land, thence. straight government airdome at Mr. - Jackson will within two week# to m tor the fly ot l250 000 b a !l'lp M lorde. Commission: to Fill Number of Vacancies. Examinations for. vacancies fn the Government service announced