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OND RELIABILITY AIR TOUR. port, Detroit, ner of the second Ford Cup, with an average speed of 121 miles an hour for the 2,652 mi right re Brice Goldshorough, navigator, and Walter Beach, pilot. The Wright travel airplane is shown after its arrival at nnual Ford reliability air tour and the $7,000 Edsel les flown. In the photo, left to Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. NEW YORK SENATOR CALLS Wadsworth, who is in the midst of his campaign for re-elec ON to the Senate, shown with President Coolidge during his week end visit at Paul Smiths, N. Y., to discuss the political outlook with the Chief Executive. Copyright by Underwood & nderwood. . : THE EVENING 'STAR, WASHINGTON, -D. .. MONDAY. AUGUST 23, 1926. SPEED IN THE GOLD CUP CLASSIC. Id Cup Regatta at Manhasset I “opyright by Underwood & Underwood. n the 30-mile race of e e —_— the 1926 ¢ RETURNS AFTER HONEYMOON. w Ellin with a Irving Berlin, popular song writer, returned from Europe the other day with his bride, the former ackay, tra g incognito as nd Mrs. Johnson,” is shown e s A itod, TRAIN WRECK KILLS 5t o s, 8. I] E MAN HURI‘ Lands in London ’ . . | —_— [ By the Associated Press. LLONDON, August phassenger alighting Airport from RBrussels ne out of picture. “Where am 12 he appealed to the )i, He was told he was in London. | But 1 wanted to go to Paris,” he exhibiting a Brussels to Paris | ticket The network of airways over | Furope has hecome so large that the | appointment of air ticket inspectors to direct passengers properly is being considered. SHIP FIGHTS STORM | OFF VIRGINIA COAST 23—A French | the Croydon thought the Thomas Allen Among 4 Badly « Injured in lllinois Fast | Freight Pile-Up. i By tha Acsociated Press. WYANET, 1L, August ing down Budda Hill at ute, an_easthound fast of the Chicago. Burlington and Quiney | plled up in the heart of town at 16 o'clock vesierday morning. killin elght persons and injuring four others. The wreck was the fourth to ocour at the spot within two vears. | The men killal and injured were | tramps riding in one car. ‘The injured were hurried to the hospital at Prince ton, sev miles away The dead some helieved to be mangled bevond recognition, were taken to the depot | freight room to await action of the coroner’s jury One of the dead was believed iden- | tified at_ Wilbur Ward of Robertsvill Minn. He and four others killed ar white; the rest are nezroes. All them were apparent!y between 20 and 24 vears old All of the four injured we: in serious condition. One of them. known to his companions as Richard Squires, was said to be on his wav to Ch go to ey of $£5.000, Another was Allen of Wash ington, D. C. A broken arch har connectir trucks of a car is believed cAuSec the wreck were thrown fr of the depot atation agent struck. The middie section of 1t which consisted largely of refr cars, leaped from the rai as it the depot and pitched over right of way. Many of the « ma on the tr when the air breaks locked The engine wa track. but did not crew escaped inj Grind a mile a min freight train Norwegian Freighter Given Aid‘, After Steering Gear and Anchors | Are Swept Away. By the Ascociated Press, NORFOLK. Va. August northeast gale that reached a velocity of 62 miies an hour swept the Vir- finia const vesterday shortly anar‘ davhreak. sending shipping scurrying wer. lattering beach resorts and | doing considerable damage inland | | Despite the strength of the wind | and the rough seas only one distress | call was picked uy sea by wireless | stations here. This came from the | Norwegian steamer Modiz, off Hog and. reporting that her steering | had heen carried away as wel | | | lared e tracks in front and overturned. The narrowly escaped being both anchors. and that the ship was wallowing helplessly in the trough the seax with prospects of being | ven ashore | “oast Guard headquarters here dis- | atched the cutte Manning to the ! aid of the craft and she was taken in | tow. However, the wind S0 Strong the towing hawser soon parted and | the cutter Mascoutin, an even more powerful vessel than the Manning, | was sent to the Modig. Around 9:30 | k the Manning and Mascoutin | succeeded in getting new lines passed S re. tkx throw ff the overturn, % More than 1,200 | pay ched right of way was AFTER A HARD DAY'S WORK challenger, who is scheduled to m centennial Stadium in Philadelphia after a day’s training work his M urday from the annual trai J. B. De Spears, Corpl. H. L. OUT. Gene Tunney, heav nect Jack Dempsey at the 'Squi- next month, enjoys this relaxation J nlator, N. ¥ wright by P. & A. Photos. veight EN'S HONORS. Mulligan, Sergt. R. T. Daly ASSUMES ROLI York's yo to defend “Red” McKenna, ex-conv hold-up, is shown at her law de: These members of the 260th Coast Artiller ng encampment at Kort Monroe, Va., qualified as first-class gunners hilz, Corpl. R. P Sergt. C. M. Cooke, OF MODERN PORT est woman lawyer, who has been appointed by the State rt, Miss F. B. Hennock, New indicted for murder in a pay-roll Wide World Phot PARENTS ARE BLAMED FOR JUVENILE CRIME American Human Association Leaders Decry Night Life and Motor Cars. B the Associated Press. PORTLAND. Ore., August Indifferent parents, night clubs motor cars were blamed for the in- creasing juvenile delinquency in America in addresses prepared by speakers for the opening session of | the fiftieth annual meeting of the American Human Association here to- and | By the Associated Press, STAFF, Ariz., s that seemed but harmless 11 depressions in the desert. as | throngs of visitors hastened toward the weird ceremonial of the Hopi In dians’ snake dance Saturday became torrents of muddy water with- in two hours after this vear's praye | to the gods for rain were concluded As darkness descended Saturday, bringing to a conclusion the rites, and | as the priests of the Antelope Clan di appeared from the Kiva, or prayver chamber, the clouds loosed a deluge, making the roads from the foot of the - August 5Deluge Answers Hopi Snake Dance Held Annually as Prayer for Rain Hopi villages, and scene of the cere- monial, almost impassable. With the coming of the rain the Snake and Antelope priests of the Hopls were rejoicing, while thousands of visitors from all sections of the country attempted to negotiate the flooded trails. The dance is a prayer for rain, and comes annually after eight days of preparation. i Last year several motor cars were wrecked on the road leading from Walpi Village, where the dance was held, and one car sank from sight in a deep wash, as the rain brought the OCEAN CITY RECOVERS AFTER HEAVY STORM Exodus of Visitors Halted as Coast Guards Report All Danger Is Past. Conditions were returned to nor- mal today at Ocean City after the nor'easter which Saturday menaced the Maryland resort, according to advices this morning. The sea still running high, the Coast Guard | but the wind had danger was past, station ‘reported. dfed out and all it was said. TRUDIE RECEIVES who been feted b, pion, is he ancestral home at B left, with other reln /'Women Who Fear To Reveal Ages at Polls Are Scored should not keep away through fear of dis- Women from the poll: closing their This is the opinion of Miss Belle Sherwin, president of the National League of Women Voters, who de- clares in statement that a woman's age, no matter what it may be, is “not a thing to conceal or to be ashamed of unless indeed it proves that with yei <he has not gained nnderstandi 'COUNTY COLLISIONS 'SEND 3 TO HOSPITALS| | Driver of Machine Containing Five | Fined $125 After Crash at | Decatur Heights. HYATTS . Md., August As result of a collision of automobiles at Decatu s esterday, James McFarland and Ch Ander- son of Hyattsville are in hospitals, the | former suffering from a possible fr ture of the skuil eph Wills Washington, driver the car, was fined $125 and costs hefore Justice of the Peace J. P. O'Neill. char driving an automobile while under the influence of “liquor or drugs.’”” RBen Roth of Fdmonston and a fifth man | Special Dispateh to The Star | of also in the car. Fred N. Julian of Washing companied hy Miss Matilda Smith, a of Washington. were occupants of the other machine, neither seriquely injured. Wills was arrested | by Constable Garrison. | " Atter a collision at Beltsville Miss | Shirley Young, of 3123 Mount Pleas- ant street, was taken to Garfield Hos. pital suffering from broken ribs and scalp wounds. The car was driven by Charles P. MeGinley of Washing Panl Kempton of Prince County, was driver of the machine, which was damaged. | accident occurred late Saturday night on the Washington and RBaltimore n, ac- Speed kings of the NCESTRAL GREETING. rman towns as the E ed with | whom the police did not locate, were | was | IRTR ntor-boat world off to a Y. The race was won iertrude Ederle, glish Channel cham- father is shown at the Copyright by . & A. Pho FWELRY ROBBER FLUDES OFFICER Droos Some of Loot When Chased. The Marx jewelry store, 701 Seventh street, w | 1Thief Who Rifles Marx Store \ | | | | w tches, s robbed of a vanity shortly after 3 a.m. Detective John F. Boxwell of the sixth precinet was nearby at the | time. e was warned by the crashing glass and arrived in time to see an | unidentified_colored man fleeing from | the store. Boxwell chased him. The | fugitive made his escape up an alley after dropping some of his plunder. Mrs. George Smithson, apartment 1 108, 1111 Columbia road, awoke snd- ! denly at 545 am. vesterday to find 4 man prowling in her_room. She screamed. He jumped from the win- {dow. A $45 gold watch was missing. | Nosie Butler, ored Fourth street,. was held up with a revolver | near the entrance to Catholic Uni- versity and robbhed of § last night. She recognized her alleged assallant and gave his name to the police. John K. Thornton. Soldiers’ Home, reported to the police that an wn- | identified colored man knocked him | down and robbed him of $50 at Mary- {land avenue and Fourand-a-half | street last night. The home of John €. Hill, 1742 Eighteenth street, was robbed yester | day morning of a Spanish shawl and clock valued at $1 A sneak thief stole $30 from the sh register of the Standard Ofl Co. filling station at Park road and leventh street last night MARRIAGE WILL UNITE " FORTUNES IN WISCONSIN | Miss Louise Uihlein Engaged to quantity of cases and bracelets vesterday. feet of double-t ripped up. Hun rushed to th yoints at Gales ar pair 1th tracks. One molasses burst, floodi with the sticky fuid tained fruit meat other perishable cago market Mesa, near~Oralbi, the oldest of three BETROTHAL 1S DE—NIED BY ALEXANDER P. MOORE Former Ambassador Declares Mrs, Spreckels “Too Smart to Marry Any One.” The break in the storm, described as one of the worst in years, came vesterday afternoon, when rain fall- ing for the past few days ceased.and ! before any serious trouble had re- | sulted from the water which backed | up for some distance in. several| places. | A check-up showed the only known | damage was to a cement swimming | pool. One family evacuated their home when the foundation loosened. | Wed Gustave Pabst, Jr., Both Prominent in Milwaukee, | ceremonial dance to a conclusion. DRYS GIVEN WARNING ON STATE REFERENDUM Some Considered Negligible From | Legal Viewpoint, While Others May Have Practical Effect. ard the freighter, the former at he how and the latter at the stern. Thus, with the Manning towing and boulevard. 1s of laborers were | ne from division d Aurora to ve tank of | iday. Richard C. Craven of Albany, the Mascoutin performing the difficult | field organizer of the association, de- |task of steering by means of only a |Clared home and parents are re-. the tracks ' giern line. it was hoped to get the |SPonsible for 95 per cent of juvenile Owhers con- | Jeanioy' inside the Virginia capes | delinquency. Other speakers’blamed i !without further difficulty. The storm |these causes for 80 per cent of the the moderated considerably last night. lawlessness attributed to { youth, insisting that povert MRS. W. W. BAYS DIES. ’h\vh\r forcing many boys N. ¥, 1 ey DONOVAN NOT TO RUN. Assistant Attorney General Vetoes Plan for Governorship. Col. William J. to the Attorney By the Associated Preas. | MILWAUKEE, August 23.—A he. trothal that will unite twe wealthy and socially prominent families was made public yesterday. when Mr. and Mrs. Joseph . Ulhlein announced the engagement of their daughter Louise to Gustave Pabst, jr.. son of Donovan, assistant General, has told Mr. and Mrs. into a life of crime. | EXPLORERS SAILING HOME| Search for Lost Norse Colony in Zoioidds Toeld | CHARLOTTE, X. C.. August 23 (.| X. Nova Scotia, August 23 Mrs. Harriet Bays, widow of (®).—The expedition headed by Lieut.| Rev. Dr. Williams W. Bays, died Donald B. MeMillan, which sailed |at her home here last night following from Wiscas: fe.. June 1 an acute heart attac search for a lost Norse colony jn_the. who.was maretthan 70 yvears of age. subarctic, is off the coast of Labra-| was well known over the South, hav- dor, homeward bound, according to.ing labored with her husband, who a wireless message received here last a Methodist minister, for many ht. The message reported all on board <he expedition schooners well Mother of District Resident Victim of Heart Attack. | HALI ion is survived by two children. % Miss Mamie Bays of Charlotte, well g known newspaper correspondent. and Templar Leader Dies. William W. Bayvs of Washington, D. - o Aucust 23 (@), | Co A special representative of the | MANSFIELD, Oblo. Ausust 28 U | Federal Trade Commission. | grand commander Ohio Knights | A SR 2 | Templar, died today Montana Politician Dies. | SCRANTON, Pa., August 23 (®).- Brakes prevent new doors for rail- | Marcus Hewett of Basin, Mont., road and street cars moving unless |former Montana State Senator, died | handleg on the doors are turned. today, | $ e | Remedies suggested by (raven in- cluded jail sentences for publishers of | questionable literature and for pro- ducers of what he termsd “indecent plays. He also urged closing at mid- night of all dance halls, road houses and amusement places in general operated for private gain. ROBBER SUSPECT*HELD. Bladensburg Garage and Barbecue Stand Are Entered. Special Dispatch to The Star BLADENSBURG, Md., August 23.- Charged with the robbery of Huddle ston's garage early yesterday Julius| Highsmith was arrested by Constable | Thomas H. Garrison. Tubes, tires and other accessories and §18 in cash were aken. The prisoner is under inves- tigation also for the robbery of the Waldrup barbecue stand, from which a gold watch was taken, automobile By the Associated Press. PARIS, August | Moore, former Ambx today saild there was ‘“absolutely nothing” in rumors that he was soon to be married to Mrs. Adolph Spreckles of San Francisco, widow of the natlonally know sugar mag- nate. “Mrs. Spreckles is most intelligent, | most charming and very rich, but {1 consider her too smart to desire {to marry any one, especially me,"” |the former Ambassador told the As. | sociated Pres 2 —Alexander P. sador” to Spain, the American hospital to a private home, where he ix undergoing elec- trical treatment of his leg, which has been ziving him some trouble lately, He hopes to be sufficiently restored to carry out his mission to Europe of inviting prominent persons to the Sesquicentennial Exposition in Phil- adelphia berure,‘remrnmg home, Mr. Moore has been removed from | | Warning was sounded by the board of temperance, prohibition and public morals of the Methodist Episopal Church last night that drys should be on the guard “against State move- ments intended to handicap the en- forcement of prohibition.” “‘Prohibitionists have no expectation of winning referendum elections in | those States where action taken at the ballot box has no legal effect,” said a statement from the board. “It is impossible to interest dry con- stituents in such polls, as they are looked upon as intended only to serve wet propaganda.” the reat question being invdlved in the election of dry Representatives and Senators to Con- gress, It is feared that confusion will lead to non-participation by drys in some referenda which will have a practical effect.” Based on primaries to-date, the board estimates “that the forthcoming Congress will almost certainly be dry in just about the same proportion as the present Congress,” With clearing weather, the exodus of visitors also was halted. W. H. H. SHELLEY DIES. Burial Will Be in Early Home at Elkhart, Ind. William H. H. Shelley, 52 years old, died yesterday afternoon at his dence, 1824 H street, after a long - ness. He was a native of Thompson- town, Pa., and had been a clerk in the solicitor’s office of the Post Office Department since 1913. He founded the Bible Institute of Washington and was a member of the Church of the Covenant | friends that he has decided not to be | a candidate for the Republican nomi- | nation for Governor of New York. ‘)le admitted having considered pro- posals to run. “I feel T have an important assign- ment from the administration,” e sald,” to outline a definite anti-trust policy and to prosecute the trusts under the Sherman anti-trust act.” Col. Donovan was district attorney at Buffalo prior to coming to Wash- ington. Horse Throws Young Woman. Miss Helen Daily, 22 years old, Third street southeast, ustained | fracture of her left arm and was | severely shocked ahout 4 o'clock ves- a, Gustave Pabst. The marriage will link two families which for many vears were leaders in rival | brewing _companies. Mr. Pabst is & member of the | United States diplomatic corps and has just recently returned from South’ America. “iaving been appoint- ed to a post with the American lega- tion at Constantinople, Turkey. Miss Ulhlein is the ‘granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. August Uihlein. | g lisn Ulhlein and Mr. Pabst have ‘ known each other since childhood. 04 . Speaks for Shortridge. D ateh to The Star. | S ANGELES. August 23. ~Mrs, He is survited by his wife, Mrs, |terday afternoon when thrown from |Marie Madre Marshall, president of a sister, Mrs. Pa.. and Isabel Garvin Shelley Ella Winey of Lancaster, two hrothers, Samuel and Charles Shelley of Thompsontown, Pa.. In- terment will take place Thursday at Elkhart, Ind.,, where Mr. and Mrs. Shelley resided before thelr marriage. her horse in Rock Creek Park. She was taken home in a passing automo- bile and given surgical aid. —_— Rumania has provided for radio let- ter service to the United States by way of wireless stations in Germanyg! the District of Columbia Federation | of Colored Women's Clubs, urged the re-election of Senator Shortridge in speaking to 5,000 persons at an open- air meeting here Saturday night. Sha, _spoke of the Senator as par : friend of the colored rage.