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WEATHER. (D. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) Fair tonight and tomorrow, some- what cooler tonight. Temperatures: Highest, p.m. yesterday; lowest, 65, at 3 a.m. today. Full report on page 9. . 81, at 3:30 Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 30 @ »~ WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ¢ Foening Star. The only evening paper || in Washington with the i| Associated Press news I service. | | Yesterday’s Circulation, 96,411 No. 30,089. Iintered a post office, econd class matter Washington, D;C. COOLIDGE BELIEVED NEARLY CONVINGED HEMUST RUN AGAIN President Says Nothing, But Is Aware of Favorable Feel- ing Toward Him. WILL RETURN TEMORROW BENEFITED BY VACATION Keynote of Fall Campaign Given to Nation in “‘Prosperity” Inter- views With Callers. BY J. RUSSELL YOUNG, Staft Correspondent of The Star. WHITE PINE CAMP. N. Y., tember 17, President Coolidze is to dav winding up his Summer vacation fn the Adirondack Mountains and to morrow night he wiil he back at the White House only satisfied that his vacation success, but apparently convinced that he must be his party’s candidate for President in 1928, Mr. (Woolidge has not vet thing to suggest that he has made up his mind in this respect, or even that he is considering it. At the same time, from the reports he ix receiving from all over the country and from the im pressions of numerous calle the President’s camp this Summer he cannot help but be fully aware of the feeling toward him and another term. Also it is understood that he is in clined to helieve that Alfred A. Smith tiovernor of New Vi now looms up as the possible Democratic candidate. During the ten and one half week: the President and Mrs. Coolidge have heen at White Pine Camp the Presi dent_has had not_only a happy and beneficial time fishing and tramping in the open. but he has received more than half a hundred important callers and hax given his attention to all manner of governmental. financial and economic questions. seps not was 4 great said any < at Influence On ¥ S, e has attended to the routine of his office and has laid the foundation not alone of the 1926 senatorial and congressional election campaigns now in progress, hut to a considerable ex- tent of national ecampaign vears hence. In other word® he ha this Summer done much in the way of huilding and sirengthening publican fences in advance of the 1928 | campaign, ! Although the decply interested in political activi- ties throuzhout the country and has been keeping his eve on developments | in those Statex where close contests | are expected, he has personally kept & “handsoff” attitude and has given little outward evidence of his desire to have certain candidates in particu lar of the party to win, a policy he will surely pursue to the very end of this campaign. However, he has noc hesitated to show his interest in busi ness and azricultural topies and to do soma effective pressagenting in this respect, a policy that ix looked upon as heing as wise as it is secure. At least the President has seen to it this Summer that the Republican slogan he has decided on-prosperi has been impressed upon the minds of the public. He h President has been the claim that the Republican admin- istration is mainly responsible for the present happy e of affairs. This form of publicity and education been the President’s effective but modest contribution the congres. sional campaign now zetting warmed up. Makes Hobby of Fishi who have been with the President_on this vacation the out standing feature of hix more than 10 weeks in the mountains has been his Jearning how to play and the fact that after all these yexrs he hax developed a real hobby fishing. As a result of his play and his outdoor life he will return to Washington in better physi cal trim than at any time since he has heen Preddent. His exercise in the open has made it possible for him to work harder up here than he does back in Washington. and, if for no other reason, his vacation in the Adi rondacks can be described as a com plete success The President’s spokesman at the semi-weekly press conferences. which Mr. Coolidge finds useful and helpful to all concerned and will continue in spite criticism. has made the Executive'd views on many di verse subjects and announced policies to be followed with reference to othe that quite clearly indicate the line of ofticial action many subjects for some time to come he scope of the President’s activi- ties this Summer perhaps best is sug gested by the number and variety of his callers, A practically complete list, without attempt at classification by importance or interest, follows: But to thos on Other Notable Callers. Former Representative Homer T. Snyder of Little Falls, L. J. Taber, national master of the grange: W. I Drummond. head of the American Farm Congr Senator Arthur Cap- per of Kansas, Senator Simeon D. Fess of Ohio, Julius Rosenwald. head ars, Roebuck & Co. Owen D A. J. Brossean, head of Mack Inc.: Edsel Ford, Harvey S. and Charles P. Barrett, of the Farmers' National Young Trucks Firestone president Union Secretaries Jardine of the Agri- culture Department, Kellogg of the Commerce Department. Kellogs of the State Depariment. Davis of the War Drepartment. Wilbur of the Navy and Attorney General Sargent, Su preme Court Justice Samuel J. | ris of Buffalo, Director Lord of the Budget Bureau, Senators Ernst of Kentucky and Cameron of Arizona. Rishop Charles H. Brent of Buffalo and E. P. Charlton, vice president of the F. W. Woolworth Co. Republican Natlonal Committeeman W. P. Jackson of Maryland, W. F. Whiting, Holyoke paper manufactur- er; Chairman Martin B. Madden of the House appropriations committee, Will H. Hays of the movie industry, Senator James W Wadsworth, jr. Sam S. Koenig. Republican leader of New York County: Representative Bertrand H. Snell, chairman of the House rules committee; Matthew C. Brush, president of the American In- ternational Corporation: Adolph S. Ochs, publisher, and Howard Elliott, railroad executive. James A. Flaherty, supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus, and oth ntinued on I'age 4, Column 7 two | Re- | s seen to it that | the people have heen impressed with | has | known | Hits British Ambassador’s Son Over Heart—Life Saved by Cigarette Case. Weapon Had Been Stolen From One of Intended Victims in Tokio. By the Associated P TOKIO, September 17. _hurled toward Prince: ssador, and Albert de Bassompierre, Belgian Ambassador, vesterday while a luncheon was in progress at the British_embassy. The weapon struck toger Tilley, son of the Ambassado near the heart, but was deflected by |4 gold cizaretie case. Young | was uninjured. The would-he | escaped | Bote Brit | are retic sassin and Japanese officials nt concerning the incident Government officials are givinz out | various censored versions, but it is | learned that the following is authentic I The Brazilian knife of Ambassador Tilley disappeared Wednesday from the drawing room of the British em bassy. Yesterdiy Mr. Tilley and the Belgian ambassador were seated on either side of Princess Louise at a luncheon at the British embassy in honor of the Princess and Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf. Thelr backs {were toward a window. Roger Tilley was seated near the end of the table, partly facing the windows, when sud ldenly he saw an intruder’s face cau- | tiously peering in. | The intruder then drew a knife, | whereupon young Tilley sprang to. {ward the window. The knife, hurled { toward the Princess and the am | hassadors, struck young Tilley directly <h Sweden, Sir John Tilley, British Am-| Tilley | WASIINGTON, ¥ Joy D. FRIDAY, SEPI EMBLR 17, 1926—FIFTY-TWO I’A(i_ i8S, * TWO CENTS. (#) Means Associated Press. HURLED KNIFE BARELY MISSES PRINCESS LOUISE AND ENVOYS | | | | NCES! | Photographed_on her rec | Washington. | | over the h |'ing_his_life. The luncheon immediately was in confusion, men hurrying out after the | wy - assin. Although the em- ! bassy wa arrounded by police. the man escaped. The princess remained . the cigarette case sav- continue. It is not known whether Ambassa- dor Tilley, Ambassador de Bassom- pierre or the princess was the in- tended vietim. Police are combing Tokio for intruder. The exact nationality of the man is undetermined, voung Til- ley apparently being the only guest who saw him. He said the man w dressed in Western attire he lieves he may have heen Police and vernacuiar newspapers & inclined to believe the assailant Chinese. the is GREAT UPHEAVAL - FORESEEN N SPAIN ;Impending ‘Revolt May Lead i to Overthrow of King and Rivera, Observer Says. | | By the Associated Press. ! LONDON, September 17 A spe- cial reporter of the Daily Express, {who has been in Spain investigating the recent crisis due to the mutiny of the artillery corps, telegraphs from Hendaye a lurid picture of events. He isserts that the mutiny continues to crow in the army and that a fresh {upheaval is expected. [ The correspondent gives what pur- s to be the truth concerning the nt trouble. He says that artillery from egovia intercepted | King Alfonso on a hurried trip from an Sebastian to Madrid and virtually held him prisoner till he promised to support them | Arriving in Madrid, Alfonso was | told by the premier, General Primo de Rivera, that if he vielded to the officers the premier would proclaim a republic with himself as president | Officers of all services are decls [ by the correspondent to have s that Primo de Rivera must go, but {only part of the rank and file agree with them. The whole civil guard is said to be loyal to the premier. ‘If revolution comes,” the corre- | spondent continues, “it will be through the army and not the peopl who are not allowed to know what | happening. Their potential leaders the intellectuals, are being rounded up |and imprisoned after farcical trials by rtmartial.” | “Fhe writer quotes an unnamed in- tellectual as saying: ““The only chance for the salvation of Spain lies in the | hope that Alfonso will abdicate in favor of his third son (Irince Juan, 3 vears old) with Queen Victoria a {regent until the prince attains his { majority." | The correspondent asserts that eivil justice and liberty are mere mockery lin the Spain of today. Business is Qe- coming stagnant: De Rivera is pre - [ing hard for money and imposing | fines right and left. There is author- [ itative information. the story says. | that De Rivera is negotiating with an | American group for the sale of Moroc- can concessions. This, he | why the premier or a mii resentative is going to Americ: 1t is predicted by the correspondent that within a menth in_will be [ plunged into great trouble. He says |the King cannot longer count upon the support of a majority of his sub- !jects. Victory, in the end. will go to {the man who is able to muster the strongest force, says the corvespond- ent. but it impossible to predict | who this man will be. Turks Island Swept by Storm. [ TURKS ISLAND, Bahamas, Sep- tember 17 (P).—Enormous damage to { property was caused by the tropical | storm of hurricane force which passed over Turks Island yesterday. There were no fatalities. Nearly all the lighters in port were lost. | po i | red | 1o MELLON RETURNS, SHUNS DEBT TOPIC Breaks Interview Rule in New York, Insisting Tour Was Vacation. By the Associated Prese YORK, September 17.—After unusual precautions had been taken to ~hield Secretary of the Treasury An- drew”W. Mellon from reporters and photographers upon h wrrival today from abroad, the Secre ry b | hroke his rule of declining inte | and talked to newspaper men He declined to discuss European af- fairs, repeating that his trip abroad 1d merely heen a pleasure and vaca [ tion tour. At no time had he dis- | enssed issues of national or interna. tional character. he said, although he | had met a number of distinguished | statesmen, including iremier Musso- {1ini a: Rome. | the NEW views rived on the Beren- en off the liner The Secretary | garia, and he wa at Quarantine on a special revenue cutter. With Mr. Mellon were his <on Paul and James McKay, a school mate of his son. Mr. Mellon’s interview was in a low and almost inaudible voice. Told that | certain interviews had heen attributed to him abroad, he replied “I made no statements while abroad Did you discuss the French debt situation with Premier Briand or other Frenchmen?’ he was asked. “No: 1 did not dis 3 Ny thing on the French debt. 1 met a number of men in political and gov- ernmental circles in Paris and cities of France, but in every they were purely social ealls.” When efforts were made to gain from Mr. Mellon some observation on Europe’s financial and economic re habilitation, he met such with the answe “You'll have to excuse me.™ | The fact is” said the Secretary, | “I got through this trip without mak ing any statements or comments of {any kind. I have said more to you | now than to other newspaper men during my whole trip.’ Mr. Mellon said he had found Mus- solini a most interesting man and that he ‘seems to have things well in hand™*' “Did vou take up the question of co- operation with the English officials in the matter of enforcement of the pro. i ion amendment?” he was ked. 1 talk of any matter while abroad,” was a cuss or case did not tite reply. om _the pier the party went direct to the Pennsylvania Terminal, where Mr. Mellon boarded a train for ngton, CUBA DETAINS SHIPS. HAVANA, September 17 (#).—The port police announce that they are refusing sailing _papers to six schooners suspected of implication in | rum-running or emigrant smuggling | to the United States. % By the Associated Press. WINNIPEG, September 17.—Untold damage to crops and the deatts of a Saskatchewan farmer and his wife and two children, who were killed by a lightning bolt, followed a series of | severe snow, hail and rain storms |which have swept western Canada for the past three days. The unseasonable weather has re- sulted in a sharp rise in grain quota- [tions, wheat having advanced 81z cents on the Winnipeg exchange dur- ing the past week. Tt is reported that grain is sprouting in the shocks in the districts where rains have prevented threshing for perfods of from 10 days to three weeks. The snowfall in Alberta is the earliest in years, the northern por- |tion of the province being covered with from six inches to a foot of snow. EDMONTON, Alta, September 17 P —Central and northern Alberta are still in the grip of unseasonable weather and with nui‘wspul of an |Rain and Snow Damage Crops in Alherta: IFlakes Fall in Three Citigs' in Montana| immediate change of conditions. Win- ter covers have appeared on automo- bile radiators and men are swearing Winter overcoats and woolen gloves. | The ground is still covered by a deep mantle of snow and harvesting oper- asions have been pdstponed indefi- nitely CALGARY, Alta., September 17 (P). —There was a heavy snowfall last night. The weather conditions are playing havoc with harvesting opera- tions in the south country. HELENA, Mont., September 17 (P). —Snow fell in three Montana cities yesterday. A light mantle of snow overlaid Mount Helena, at the outskirts of this city, while both Great Falls and Havre reported an inch fall. “With weather forecasts for more now or rain in the eastern part of the State, possibilities of a repetition of the heavy storm last September 18 that broke down trees and inter- rupted telephone and telegr: | munication as well as traffic ling discussed around th calm and insisted that the luncheon | mself | other | questions | ph com- | BANDIT CHIEF SLAI BY TROOPS SEEKING ROSENTHAL KILLERS, | Mayer of Village Was Head of Band, With Other Offi- cial as His Aide. éFIRM ACTION BY U. S. EXPECTED BY AMERICANS RN Body of New Yorker Shows Kid- napers Beat Him Be- fore Murder. By the Ascociated Press MEXICO CITY, September 17, Federal soldiers have shot and killed Bonificio Hinoposa, mayor of Huitzi- luo, the village near which Jacob Kosenthal, elderly retired capitalist of Woodmere, N. V.. was stabbed to { death by his bandit captors Wednes- day night. Hinoposa is believed to e been one of the leaders of the bandits. Mr. Rosenthal's body was expected to arrive in Mexico City today. Later it will be sent to his home in Wood- mere, N. Y. FOR NGRESSIONAL THE - €O RN S - s~ S\ CUP. JARDINE APPROVES MARKET SITE FOR * COMMERCE OFFICE | Believes Location Ideal for Construction of Proposed $10,000,000 Building. b MIDCITY MARKET PLAN FAVORED BY SECRETARY N MCAY, 2 S Declares Area Near Center of Porn- ulation Best for Consolidating All Branches. BY WILL P. 5! ection of the new $10.000.000 I of Commerce b on Pennsylvania aveniue hetween Seventh and Tenth streets, w site is now occupied by the Centar (retail; Mar ket and the wholesale market se jon, and comihg under the jurisd: tion of the Department of Agric { ture, meets with the approval of Dr. William M. Jardine, Secretary of Ag riculture. ‘Fhis_a when Dr. NEDY. E partment hich today aself in surance was given Jardine declared hir favor of a reloc m ¢ the | market — svstem, 1 farmers’ and wholesale ent retul, in a nid i on the ons, Inquiry Results Awaited. tesults of the investigation of the | American embassy at Mexico City into the death of Jacob Rosenthal and the resultant United States representa- tions to the Calles government were awaited today by State Department officials, who had been stirred by news of the New York business man’s mur- der by Me: n bandits. Charge Schoenfeld was structions from Secretary s upon the Mexican cation that the Washington ment feels that such an offense against its nationals demands prompt action by the Mexican authorities. Official advices received at the de- partment said that Rosent had been “heaten to death” by the bri- gands, who had seized him Sunday not far from the Mexican capital, and held him for $10,000 ransom. The slaying followed the Killing of two of his captors by federal troop: Weakened by Tllnes: News dispatches, however, said that { the outlaws stabbed the American, who was weakened by a recent illness, hecause he hampered their flizht and hecause they preferred not to have him resctied alive by the federal sol- diers, with whom they. were engaged in a running fight in a wild portion of ““(Continued on Page 7, Column 1. TRUGE 1S SOUGHT BY NICARAGUANS 1ML FREND QUEHT IN INQURY Confidante of Slain Woman May Tell of Love Letters From Rev. Dr. Hall. under in- Kellogg to adminis- vern- By the Associated Press JERSEY CITY, N. I, September 17. | —The State's effort to obtain more evidence in the Hall-Mills murder case was directed today against Minnie Clark, reputed to have been a confi- dante of Mrs. Eleanor Mills. Miss Clark was to be questioned con- cerning love letters passing between Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs. Mills. Inspector Underwood, in charge of investigators, said if the questioning corroborated storie his men have heard, Miss Clark would prove a valu- able State witness in the forthcoming murder trial of Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall, the murdered rector’s widow: Henry and Willie Stevens, her two brothers, and Henry Carpender, a cousin. iss Clark sang in the choir of Rev. New Brunswick church with Grand Jury to Consider Indicting Three or Four Witnesses. | Rebel Chief at El Bluff Offers | Guarantees—FederaIs ASK | GoMERVILLE. N. J., September 17 3 | ) —The State today was pressing not Parley on U. S. Ship. | only for speedy trfal in the I | murder case, uninfluenced by local prejudice, but for perjury indictments against tnesses whose r nt testi- mony formed a basis for murder in- dietments after four vears of delay The grand jury that indicted Mrs dward Wheeler Hall and three male M sent to Gen. Gustavo | relatives for the double murder will ot the Chamorro govern- | convene Monday to consider, as its ment for 4 Rt invitine Mirn ter 1298 JOMCAl 86t HeLs i 2 E Bluff, Gen. Arguello| asainst three or four of the 20 wit- surrender Bl Bl . hesses in the case, who testified Be. in reply requested Moncada, to cease | gore i his attempts to capture Bl Bluff, bu . i saying that if the revolutionists have To Be Arraign o Sictorious on the Pacific coast,| The slain rector’s widow, her cousin, e Mated by Moncada, he will sur. | Henry de la Bruyere Carpenter, and vender El Bluff. her two brothers, Henry and Willie *Ior. the sake of humanity, for the | Stevens, W 1l be arraigned today on {welfare of industry and commerce, the murder :v\vl‘h'!mlmzl " & ! hew stagnant in Nicaragua,’ vs! Special Pros or Alexander | O Wionoadaleinote; T, a8 therepre-| SIMDSON & id he would mnot seek to ! centative of the constitutional govern have Mrs. Hall join her relatives in ment, invite you to surrender Bluff. 'g“"f “‘_“;l‘_‘;:"é"‘ sk ”‘;‘i‘ her present ¢ a v rail of EX he raised. I promise to guarantee the lives of | § T o Liand to provide provisions for all | _ ME ! :3]!;*\5";""\}:; r::‘krm'ln:?elpr.:]':i;:' (ifoneiat T EICE 3,‘“”,‘,&',’.’1‘:}‘“"“‘,:”"11' upon Justice Parker's calendar. New ey e R e oF my | JSreey liw dcesinotipratlisieor chatize ke s o nric (Coast: ami| Of-veniic, HUE MESIupHon e ed e e ATt Coave ‘tri. | for & jury from another county to t |armphed. on the Dacifc coast. the case. Hearing on the application e (G Aratello rcrilea, | LS ACUUREREGREIeS: THEE o | “Inspired by the same humanitariar Gorsline Faces Charge: | feelings vou express. I request vou to| My, Simpson has indicated thilt per ISt In_your useless attempts 10| jury charges may be prepared agai Sture 11 BIuff. T propose that an | Raloh V. M. Gorsline, former vestry man, and Miss Catherine Rastall, for- awreement be signed on board the Tnited States cruiser Rochester, in{pier choir singer, in the murdered pas- | tor's church esence of the American admiral, ithat it the revolutionists have con-| “When, after four years of denial | quered the Pacific coast I will sur-|the pair went before the grand jury | Mehder Bl BIMff in accordance With | (o say they were neur at the time of Your mote, but if the revolutionists. the murder. a juror, according to Mr. have not been victorious on the!Simpson. demanded to know if Gor- sline could not be held for perjury. Pacific coast you will surrender and I shall extend similar guarantees to s S FRENCH ROUT TRIBESMEN Druse Attackers, Aided by Others, Driven Off With Big Loss. BEIRUT. Syria, September 17 (#).— Druse trihesmen, commanded by the Druse Sultan, Attrache, and Chiefs Rachid Talih and Abd-el-Arslan, at- tempted a surprise attack on a French FEWER ATTEND CHURCH; RADIO SERMONS OPPOSED (it fcrating i the pieven Druse countr but were driven off with 1 i considerable losses. The French used | Pittsburgh United Presbyterians hombing planes against the tribes- | men. who were aided by Bedouins and But One Pastor | DRinsacanis: The French took a number of pris- | oners and the tribesmen left some of their dead on the field. By the Associated Pre MANAGUA, Nicaragua, September —Gien. Jose Marie Moncada, leader revolutionists in Fastern of the | Nicaragua, | Arguello d Today. W because the you and your troop: Gen. Moncada has mot replied the hombardment of El Bluff by the revolutionists has been suspended. A Zovernment bombing plane left Man- | agua vesterday and arrived in Blue- fields in two hours. but Ask Ban, Backs Air Services. { | By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, ptember 17.— | Broadcasting of Sunday sermons by i Pittsburgh radio stations has so cut into the attendance of churches in the Kiskiminetas Presbytery that United Presbyterian Churches of that region have requested the stations to discon- tinue putting sermons on the air at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. The request was termed “ill-advised” by the Rev. Dr. J. Alvin Orr, pastor of the First United Presbyterian | Chureh here, a radio enthusiast. ! “With all the jazz that is on the air,” Dr. Orr said, “the church people should be grateful to those broadcast- SHIP SINKS AFTER CRASH. Cargo of Laths Keeps Vessel Afloat Until Crew Can Be Saved. NANTUCKET, Mass., September 17 ().~ The schooner Rebecca R. Doug- lass of Machias, Me., was sunk in Pol- lock Rip slue, Nantucket Sound, in a collision with the steamer Eastern Crown last night. Seven men were brought ashore from the wreek today by a Coast be gr: Guard boat. The cargo of laths kept | ers who give religious programs. I a g | know that htndreds of thousands who | 18 schooner afloat until the men were isten in are not church-going people. | EESCHEC he hours of church sei e 0 reach tnem.’ * T 7P|:og‘rums—Pag‘é 34. oo ofer the | Radio 1. Mills | Epitaph Provokes | Opening of Grave; | Officer Is Satisfied remembrance of annie. She leaves mourn her her mother, Be Brown, her fathe Shack, a } of good friends and Cousin Lou Finding this note on a_freshly acked grave on Buzzard Point vesterday afternoon Policeman shn A. Davis of the fourth pre- ot settled down to unravel what ppeared to be an unauthorized burial of a baby eor voung child. After confiding to his superiors the details of his serious mission Policeman Davis went back and ordered the body exhumed. It was found to be the body of dosz. “In dear dead child, my t a MARIE DUE FIRST AT WHITE HOUSE Proceeds Here Directly After| Arrival in New York | on October 18.” [ BUCHAREST, —Queen New York October W President Coolidge SHe may then go West to Seattle, re. | Rumania, September on her arrival in 18 will proceed im <hington and M 17 Marie i By the Associated Prees 1\ | to visit Goolidge mediateiy to turning later to attend the Sexquicen tennial Philadelphia. Her trip across, the continent, it is understood will be made on & special train With her daughter, Princess leana the young Infanta Beatrice of Spain and a suite, the Queen will leave charest for Paris sume time between October 2 and 4, boarding t athan (on which a_suite has placed at her disposal by the Ameri can Government) at Cherbourg Octo- ber 12 Pri Mmes Procopiu, Queen e Nicholas May Come. Irene the majesty's trip. The persons. It ain, that Queen's second and of Simone &rand court, will ladies in waiting royal arty will total probable, but not Prince Nicholas, the son, also will & Marie will probably accept, before her departure, invitations received from the governors of Pennsylvania and Washington, the president of the Sesquicentennial and the mayor of Detroit, and will decide on other invi tations after arriving in New York. hovary matrons be her of the 23 U. S. Formally Notified First official notification that Queen rie of Rumania will visit the United States next month was receiv- | ed yesterday by the State Department from the American legation at Bu-| charest. It is (he Queen’s intention to travel “in a private character” on her visit here. Queen Marie will travel on the Le- viathan as a guest of the United States Lines, this invitation having heen extended hy Joseph P. Sheec European manager for the corpora- tion. INDIAN VILLAGE BURNS. in Alaska—Coast | 300 Homeless Guard Sends Supplies. i JUNEAU, Alaska, September 17 (P —Fire vesterday destroved the | Indian village of Kake, on Kupreanof Island. 100 miles south of Juneau, | leaving 300 Indians homeless and | without food and clothing, advices, received here late last night stated. | The only cannery and a Govern- 1aent hospital were undamaged. The Coast Guard cutter Umalga sailed at midnight with supplies for ®he des- titute Indians. Kake was the prin- | cipal village of the Indians of that | name. 1 MISSING PHYSICIAN FOUND Dr. Hanna G—.—Hutchi_ns, 82, Was| Wandering in Chicago Streets. : CHICAGO, September 17 (®).—Dr. | Hanna Georgia Hutchins, §2, noted | woman physician and temperance worker, who disappeared vesterday | from her home, was found early today | wangdering on the near North Side. Dr. Hutchins practised medicine for 26 years and was always an active | worker in civil affairs. She has been retired for seven years. X | opening | new model market cenier | city site hounded by Sixt York, New Jersey and avenues. He stated he withdraw from the pi market 1o jon, as he believes an even bet tor market center, nearer the center of population, can I established in the mideity ea, and that the Penn svlvania av n ideal one for any great ent depart ment. As the Fine Art the City Plannins gro that the farme market wholesale market must the retail market eventuaily, Dr. Jar dine says that now is the logical tima 1to establish a model market group ! broperly co-ordinated. which could | not be dome if the various sections re moved piccemenl As the plan A the Public Buildings Commission and the Fine Arts Commission, and 211 those who are interested in the de- velopment of a beautitul Capit wl’t ity, Is to use the triangle south of Penn lvania avenue, in which the market Now operating, for pubiic building and @ start has been made there on the $50.000,000 program, he be lieves that now is the logical time to te such a commanding loeation Which some great department of Gov ernment should oceupy. Jardine’s Opinion Weighty. the Buildi of the hut he ere seek or the De bhe would fortunate insylvania ) sty New fassachusett is willing to esont CONTENDERS AWAI REGATTA OPENIN Ten Tiny Hydroplanes Ready to Start First Series for President’s Cup. ie site Governr Commission and up have decided ind the 2o now, and Trim racing craft, carrying the col- ors of every major boating center east of the Mississippi, were lining up in the Georgetown channel of the Poto mac this afternoon nals that will send them away in the races of the first annual President’s Cup regatta before a crowd of spectators lining the seawall at last Potomac Park and aboard the local and out-of-town vachts that dot the river along the course. A field of 10 tiny hydroplanes of the 151 class are inaugurating the af fair with the first of the three six-| mile heats scheduled for them during two days of the regatta. These 1 14 and 16 foot boats, classed as hydroplanes hecause of certain tech nical deviations in their hulls, mainly the step about two-thirds of the way hack, will fight for the Elgin Trophy, | which is awarded annually to the 51 turning in the best time for the vear. Dr. Jardine pointed out cation . of the Commoree comes within the | Secretary of 2 stressed the fact 1 ing a site for a new home partment of Agrienltur consider hir plf extremely to get the are between P avenue and The Mall This support by the Secretary of Agriculture of an ideal solution of the interlocking problem of locating the mew Commerce Building and estab lishing a model market center. which promis to be one of the most im Portant steps in the entire history of the National Capital toward carryving { out the n. Washington and Maj. L a magnificent ave valll‘J from the apitol the »\\ hite House, lined by imposing Federal buildings, and preservation of the Mall as a great central park fitting anvirons, is particularly sizt t, for three reasons: First, Secre T dine officially opposed placing the new Commerce Building or any depart. ment building on the Mall: second, the xisting Center Market comes under administration, and third, he 1= the official representative of the interesgk of the farmers, whose market site 1 being taken Favors Mall Preservation. rdine acquiesced in the plans Public Buildings Commission fine Arts Commission for Consolidation of the Department of A Feulture buildings south of the pres ent marble wings and running back to the railroad tracks on the line of Mars Jand avenue, in order that the integrity of the Mall might be preserved. For the same reason he officially protested against the loeation of the new Com merce Building on the Mall. or the encroachmeht of other public build ings. and his protest was considered by the Fine Arts Commission in exect tive session yesterday President Coolidge also decl atically inst encroachment of bublic buildings on the Mall. Dr Jardine emphasizes that it is a ridicu lous procedure to go to Congress each vear for $600,000 of the $1,100.000 au thorized by act of Congress for th purchase of additional park land the National Capital, and at the same time to be steadily cutting into the existing park space for sites for pub- lic buildings. He believes that these o'clock with a nine-mile handicap race | open spaces should be preserved for for speedsters of the Chesapeake-Po- | the future generations, when city con i L L, | gestion becomes more acute. Finals of the Biscayne Babies and | By special act of Congress, which took the Cents Market away from the Washington Market Co., the S retary of Agriculture was made the offieial administrator of the Center * Market for the people of the National Here Is Something e Lo e of ki 7 Nemonstration school in which ex Every Parent Will i5e O o -cactica) e e Want to Read— |stant study of all the economies that YOUR CH enter into the handling of food sup | plies between the producer and the A Series of Educational Articles By Dr. Frank W. Ballou Question Must Be Solved. The question of a new market cen- Superintendent of School Washington, D. C. Dr. er for Washington, which has been Ballou is one of the fore- most ntermittently considered fo quarter of century ‘educators of the’ period. In this series he outlines and discusses Two Champion Entriess Two racing champions are in the group here. They are Miss Spitfire | VI of Detroit, holder of the world record of 42 miles an hour, and Miss Westchester of Larchmont. N. Y., winner of the Atlantic Coast title in her maiden performance last Sun- day at Jamaica Bay, N. Y. The initial heat of the President’s Cup race will bring out a sterling field of competitors, including five Horace Dodge hoats. (ieorge Townsend' Greenwich Folly and half a dozen oth- ers capable of moving at a 50-mile clip The Riscayne Babies from the Miami Yacht Club will swing around | the three-mile course in a special race, two heats of which are carded for to day Practically all the racers brought here for a try at the Secretary of the vy Cup tomorrow will tune up to day in the Potomac River ampion- hip, a free-for-all event for hoats cu able of making 45 miles or better I H. McCormick-Goodhart's ~ Silver | Heels, the speediest of the local en- tries in the regatta, will try for the Potomac title today as well as for the Secretary’s Cup tomorrow. First Day's Final. The final of the first day’s program is the nine-mile free-forall for dis- placement hoats from clubs in the Chesapeake-Potomac section of the an Power Boat Association. Lo es are_George Hutchinson's ank Nightingale's Flapper Orme’s Miss Lizzi . lattenfield’s Gray Bat 11, L. W. Lau dick’s Lu Maru, Neal Wolcott's Whim and J. . Smith's Gem. Tomorrow’s events, which bring into action Gar Wood's Miss Americas and the other giant hydroplanes brought here for a special match race and an | attempt to lower the world record for | the straightaway mile, open at 12:30 i to with i Dr. of the and the d em (Continued on Page 4, Column 4) t i raae with the recommendations by Buildings Commissi Fine Arts Commission, the Commissioners, citizens' ass and other interested asencie come up now for a decision due to the the problems that [l 'tact that the present farmers’ market confront the child, the parent ! gite, spec ly set aside for this pur- and the teacher, and deals with interest-compelling subjects in a delightfully forceful style. Every important phase of child training is treated by Dr. Ballou with a deftness that { pose by act of Congress more than 50 makes it vitally interesting. {years ago, as a partial solution of Don’t Fail to Follow | unsatisfactory market conditions that 1even then existed, is now to he taken Your Child in School to Be Published Exclusively in ‘}1! part of the site for the new Tne The Sunday Star iternal Revenue Buildi between \Tenth and Twelfth, B and C streets In the discussion’ of a proposed site | for the new market center, Secretary | Jardine finds that all other interests !at stake have been receiving more careful consideration than those of ! the farmers, and on analyzing the I suments advanced for certain los cations_he finds them vgiced by pers (Continued on Page 4, Column 2)