Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
port exccuted by these four backfield stars is the chief worry of the Illinois team in preparing for their urday. ON ON + was almost completely wiped out by the same storm which swept over Cuba, 17 Americans being . rly 40 killed on the Isle of Pines, where other communities also suffered heavily. Photograph shows one of the principal streets in Nueva Gerona lined with the wreckage of destroyed homes. ed ng the n aul Murph » quarterback, is gazing into the crystal in true mystic fashion as Penn prepares to mystify the 1llini. Left to right: Fields, halfback; Murphy, quarter; Scul SLE OF PINES AFTER THE HURRIC The beautiful town of Nueva Henry Miller Service. GETTING.A GLIMPSE OF HIS ADOPTED LAND. Here is Hi-Boy hunselt in the first pl since they arrived in thi collection for the Washington Zoo. tograph of either of the two juvenile giraffes country with Dr. William M. Mann's animal Photo taken at the Army base at Boston, where the giraffes are in quarantine before being brought here. Acme Photos. LOWER MANHATTAN NARROWLY ESCAPES BOMB BLAST. The vigilance of John M senger (second from right), prevented the explosion of this infernal machine at the count, New York Ci McDonald found the bomb when he opened a cheap suit case left on a windo Chief Walsh (at right) is among the police officials examining the bomb. (,‘nxv_\'ri;:m-_h . Deputy &. A. Photos. ia’s hidden ball offensive as game Sat- halfback, and Wascolonis, full- Wide World Photo. avy day program at the Anacostia Naval As one of the features of the ir Station yesterda: chinist Mate James Clark dropped with a parachute from a plane iwhile the movie camera, hung from his neck, automatically photographed his descent. It is the first time the stunt has been tried. United Sta ry addressing the gather- ing at the east side of the Navy Building yesterday. He told the assembled naval officers and civilians that the Nation’s merchant marine is dependent on the efficiency of the Navy. Walter Bruce Howe, chairman of the National Naval day committee, presided at the ceremonies. Copyright by Harris & Ewing. STRONGER CHURCH .. C. REGULATION INCOUNTRY URGED! OF TRUCKS FOUGHT Speakers at Rural Life Con- ference Favor Keeping Boys on Farm. Church Cathed; cnable of keeping the modern and latest Loy the farm with loo to ¢ strengthening of ed by speak- v at the closing sessions nd Rural Life Co wese of Baltimore, held on close touch tevelop cone wa ference 1 meetings, one of . were open eve attended by from Co ity hefore compre. ious educa director of { without crossing Would Impose Hardship on District Owners, Commis- sion Is Told. | ot impose | of operation dship on Washington shippe nd truck operators because of the | limited area comprising the District | of Columbia and the impossibility of | operating over any great mileage | tte lines, Jerome | Fanctulli of the Commercial Motor Ve- | hicle Owners’ Association of Washing- | ton declared {n a statement filed with | the Interstate Commerce Commission ! vesterday. The commission ye concluded fts hearings on proposed | motor bus and truck transportation inter wou Regulation truck a ha | regulation at the Interior Department brought out contlicting vie: auditorium The final day of the hearing on the advisability of Federal regulation, with the National Grange opposing regulation and spokesmen for the | railroad executives in favor of regu- Na- | de- | last ning Necessary. cossary f vice rector of i the dele- the not tional to farm Department of 1ditors that they ¥ to cope with Kerby, professer e Catholic the rural pastor the farmer from is weakest in dvocated the rural uguration ervices held Baltimore 1 | certificates at the Stage Line Air Line | and | Sir Abe Batley, dis- | lation. Wants Highways Free. Atkeson, Washington repre- sentative of the Grange. said the in.| terest of the farmers “lies in the m-} most freedom of highway use from interference, regulation of impedi ment,” while A P. Thom, general 1 for the Association of Rail- | yecutives, declared legislative | | of the highway S A, A, RACING BOARD| Bodles 1t they did any conaiderntie | Group Governing Motor Speed Con- operating, and would be subject to a | 1 8 fhurth reguiatory body it the Inter.| tests Recently Reorganized and Expanded. the horses as they attend the races neiulli told the commi: truck operators in Wash would be subject to three regulato state Commerce Commission becomes | a court of arbitration been oposed. He said any Federal regu- | 1 would be confiscatory and | ould tend to put truck operators out Of business Tle mld he repredented | ¢ the ‘American Automobile Aasocia- then Ih the District of | tion was announced today by Presi- . n “olumbla. Mr. F 1i did not speak | dent Thomas P. Henry. . M\‘r x“i: .I:,:f;f’ g \}(.i,,:“f“mf:\.“‘}‘l The board tch supervises the au- tomobile ra 2 the United States 15,000 Trucks in Use. which is y the associa- Stk tion, was reorganized recently with s its membership expanded to make it thoroughly rep: p and reliable mean. and trac well ve engineers, W stituted would add to the cost to such tent that many producers and man- ufacturers would purchase their own uted.” trucks, thereby passing on the cost Said Mr. fiz‘l‘»‘fir: e consumer and shipper. _\-*hl‘\f‘f at to- | Most of Washington's brick yands, ' mobile rac 4 { | ROYAL LOVERS ATTEND THE RACES { flance, Crown Prince Leopold of Belglum, attract more attent! ve of the pud- | gasoline storace plants, lumber yards| body as a and other industries, he said, are lo- - cated on the outskirts of the ci R | across_the State lines of Maryland, | Hurt in Fall From Roof. | and Virginia, while nearly all the | gpomas Hall, 27 years old, residing farm products sold in 060 B9 |y 108 & atroet. e RpihE rone | United States Tile Co., 2020 Georgia He estimated that 15000 motor |x W00 SRS T 1™ ureq vester. | trucks of all classes are now used by e e wikth peh e | Washington merchants to make de-| roof of @ fourstory building at the | REVGIAS crmay e A oo | filtration plant, Conduft and Little| = i {Falls roads. He was taken to Emer. | Two Beco! gency Hospital, where it was re. | omencomeERIYETs. L e et et et | LONDON, October 28 UP).—TWO ! ymrortable night. It is thought he more women have obtained aviators’ | \us probably injured internally. {day Club They are Lady Balley, wife of | v " South _African mil-| Rubeirao, Pernambuco, soon is to .‘onaire, and Miss Noi Brien, have its first rural telephone, Princess Astrid and her n than at the Ulrikadal course in Sweden. Prince Carl of Sweden, father of the princess, accompanies them. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. QUEEN MARIE SEES NIAGARA FALLS. The Rumanian sovereign photographed as she views the torrential splendor of Niagara Falls. | The Queen, with members of the megslnn committee, is looking through the mist and spray over Inspiration 'RICKENBACKER HEADS,POW-WOW BECOMES A BABEL AS INDIAN TRIBES ASSEMBLE| Red Men Talk in Sign Language at Haskell Institute, With Only One Word in Common, “Wo-Hah,” for Beef. By the Associated Press. l LAWRENCE, Kans., October 28.—| Interpretations of civilization by young “vanishing Americans” create strange conflicts in teepee councils | here as Haskell Institute xridiron‘» stars mingle with hundreds of Indians | from a score of tribes who are as-| sembled to dedicate a huge stadium | Saturday as a memorial to the ath- | letic prowess of red men | As the hour for the stadium cere- | monies nears, delegations of from 20 | to 150 arrive to be welcomed with | “free beef” and a place for the| squaws to pitch the family tee- | pee. Osages, Chefennes, Comanches, | Creeks, Quapaws, Pueblos, Blackfeet | and many other tribal delegations had established camps last night, in- | dicating upward of 5,000 might he Hubert Work, Secretary of the In terior, in the principal address Satur- day. A series of feasts has featurdd the festivities for two days and promises to be broken only by the demands of the children that the elders at- tend the foot ball game Saturday, when Haskell meets Bucknell Uni- versity of Lewisburg, Pa. Arrival of the Kaws, Pawnees and Kickapoos rday sided to the social problem, as with such an as- sembly there is no common language. The elders move about the camps, conversing in the sign language, while the squaws from widely sepa- rated reservations have but one com- mon word—"wo-hah”"—meaning beef. Four bison have been fattened for the barbecue fires, in addition to beeves. Presentation of Longfellow’'s ‘‘Hia- watha" last night was the first severe test for the elders in foregoing the call of tomtoms which certain delega- tions Insisted on beating outside the stadium, where an all-Indian cast staged the drama. Led by Chief Two Guns White Calf, whose profile appears on the Buffalo nickel, the Blackfeet for a time threat- ened the “Hiawatha' attraction. The children triumphed, however, and the lders were escorted to seats near the stage to sit quietly through the per- formance. Restless chiefs were quieted with cigars, while the only laugh was ob- tained when Hiawatha, casting stones, at his enemy, scored direct hits on members of the cast backstage. The program was less exacting to- day, leaving the Osages and Quapaws to discuss their rich oil grants and the Blackfeet to arrange new dance com- tests. |COSMIC RAY PROOF CAMPAIGN QUIETS MORE QUAKES AD N PENNSYLVANIA TERROR IN ARMENIA 15 1 Five Fresh Shocks Rock Villages Where 600 Were Killed. Noise of Primary Lessens as | % State Fight Centers on ' Party Issues. | By the Associated LENINAKAN I By the Associated Press PHILADELPHIA, October {contrast with the bitter prima test last May when factional differ- 7 Armenia ences were fought out by the Demo-|the population, shelte cratic and Republican parties, the began Fri night, r Fall campaign in Pennsylvania is|main in mental agony lest {eing conducted along quieter lines. | more violent quake completes their | The Republicans are asking the| goom, isupport of the voters for their candl. | : ; | Between noon Tuesday and 1 o'clock {dates as an indication of their in- |dorsement of the administration of | yesterday, five consecutive shocks | were felt in the reglon where 15 Prestdent Coolldge and are also keep- |ing before the voters the warning| i |that any change in the political com.| villages already are in ruins, and plexion of Congress might endanger|the death toll has been placed as the present protective tariff structure. | pigh as. 600, with 1,000 { The Democrats are raising the cry| pained or missing. American relief workers, half whom are women, today were near |of economy and efficiency and also | condemning the lavish use %f money physical and nervous exhaustion due to overwork and the terrific uncers |in politics. They point to the $3,000,- {000 primary of the Republicans’ last | e i Ch :,g;;:r(fi?“& tainty caused by the recurring earth | Arterican Tnttertionn shocks, which give the impression The prohibition question has not | that roofs may collapse at any mo- been thrust to the front as it was in|ment. the primary. On the Republican side, Five Days Without Rest. For five days and nights t Americans have been without slee or adequate rest, caring not only for Congressman Vare is an advocate of Volstead act, opponent, W. B. their 9,000 Armenian orphans, who burrowed like little gnomes in the open flelds, but attending the griev ously injured natives. Dr. Walter Sisson of Ohio, assisted by his wife and a Miss Edna Steiger of William Pa., performed 130 operatio candlelight since Friday. The number of sick persons creased alarmingly and the American Armenia, October h shocks con- and thousands of s since the on ay others olnt. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. for governor this | |issue is_reversed, Judge Eugene C. IS BEL'EVED FOUND | Boruiwen. the Democratic candidate. |being an avowed “wet,” while John | S. Fisher, the Republican nominee, is classed on the dry side. Both sides are expending much ef- fort in the congressional fights. At present the Republicans have a solid delegation of 36 in the House and are striving to prevent a break. The Democrats claim they will win 5 dis- | hospital is filled with eritical cases tricts and possibly 10. | A special government cor P— {sent to the stricken area ha. ISTUDENTS OF BAPTIST |matcd thac the dam: COLLEGES IN SESSION | All-Southern Conference, First of Discoverer, Back From Andes, Says Power Will Penetrate Six Feet of Lead. Press. Calif.,, October 28— New discoveries confirming existence {of the “cosmic ray" were announced | here by Dr. Robert A. Milltkan, head | {of the California Institute of Tech- | nology, upon his return yesterday from South America, where he con- b i s ducted scientific experiments in the | e ¢ 80 per cer ¥ are uninha Church Stands in Ruin Standing quite intact of all the ruin and 4 it, s the Byzantine Ct Russian Cossacks where America wont to wors| | crosses hope. Andes Mountains. His discovery Of | By the Assoclated Pi the cosmic ray was announced a| BIRMINGHAM, Ala, October 28 vear ago. —i\(or! l!hunhl.()gfl s(}:}denls of Baptist e . | colleges in the Southern Baptist con- The Transcaucassiar | Dr. Millikan explained that the |lentlon territory were here today for |has inausy | object of his journey was to obtain |the opening session of the All|paign for v {accurate data as to source and the | Southern Baptist Student Conference, | the sufferer range of frequency of the rays. |the first of its kind. The delegates |se | . While withholding his findings, Dr. | represented 17 States. Earth huts are | Millikan announced his experiments | Two special trains were due to|homeless, who have Lien | confirmed that the cosmic ray is con-|arrive during the morning, one from |derground. There to an o {stantly hitting the earth from every | Greensboro, N. C., and the other from | tents. . | direction and that it is the most pene- | Dallas, Tex. | carpenters. trating ray known. Solution of social, personal and ! g ‘“We cannot even begin to assert | religious problems of the day by the | what change in man's view of the |students, through the help of Baptist | | usly affected — Woman Hurt in Crash. woe Pleasant stree: . le fracture of the shoulder this morning whe turned in a col shire avenue and T stree: tomobile operated by Lanier place. Her who was dr(\‘:vllr. escaped in d accom nied his wife to Hos- He: universe this ray will bring about,” |leaders, will be one goal of the con. Dr. Millikan said. ference, while self-expression of spir. | \oin: Although they are the shortest rays, | itual power through work of the | MOunt they will plerce through 6 feet of lead, | local churches will be emphasized. . | POSSID their discoverer explained. | _The First Baptist Church of| | Birmingham will act as host to the Healthy children are usually partial | threeday meeting. to green and vellow garments, while | they dislike biack. Red is an excel- lent cnlg!r for youthful wearers, as it attracts.] l'" Mrs. A boy of 17 was recently fined in Edinburgh, Scotland, for selling bets on horse races.