Evening Star Newspaper, October 6, 1927, Page 17

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TIIT._TEVENTING STAR, WASHINGTON, N. €. TIIURSDAY. OCTOBER 6. 1¢ 17 GEHRIG SCORES ON ERROR IN THIRD I man sliding into the plate to score the last of the Yanks' three run T. Ruth looks safe here, but Joe n_out before he got back i vhen Ruth, after CATCHING THE BABE OFF FIK Harris, Pirate first baseman, has 10 the hag. The play happened singling, was trapped off first by Miljus, the ¥ NING OF WORLD SERIES OPEN n this inning. The Yankee first base- arl Smith, Pirate is all set to take Traynor’s throw on the attempted double steal by Gehrig and Lazzeri, but the cate Copyright by P. & A. Photos. the seventh THE “BIG G " POSE JUST BEFORE THE GAME BEGINS. The heavy artillery of the world series contenders, of whom Babe Ruth for the Yankees and Paul Waner, of the famous Pittsburgh brothers, contributed most of the batting punch for their respective teams in the first game. Left to right: Lloyd Waner, Ruth, Paul Waner and Lou Gehrig. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. the ball get away from him, resulting in the rus FORDS GREET “PRIDE OF DETROIT” FLYERS ON RETURN HOME. William S. Brock (at left) and Ed- ward F. Schlee (second from left) are greeted by Henry Ford and his son Edsel on their arrival at the Ford airport on the last lap from San Francisco, of the trip which was at first planned to be a flight around the world. The flyers were prevailed upon to abandon the hazardous transp: PLACES WREATH FOR JUNIOR RED CROSS. Juan Denny, Indian student from the Gevernment school at Alberquerque, N. Mex., placing a oldier, at Arlington, on behalf of ow meeting here. Underwood & Underwood. wreath on the Tomb of the his fellow members of the Junior Red Cross, Wide World VIEWING WRECKAGE OF PLANE IN WHICH GERMAN ENVOY LOST LIFE. Inspectors at the scene after the crash of the big ‘passenger plane near Schleiz, Germany, in which Baron von Maltzan, German Ambassador to the United States, was one of six persons who lost their lives. The cause of the accident is now believed to have been the collapse of one of the wings, due probably to weakened struts. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. { REU[:S REMUVAI- I WHIPPLE FILES SUIT. Artist Wants Accounting Concern- ing Antique Articles. S‘[IRS BISEUSS‘UN Charles A. Whipple, the artist who ‘ls working on the restoration of the { mural paintings at the United States | Capitol, has filed suit in the District Supreme Court for an accounting and | discovery against Benjamin Veaner and Edith J. Veaner, trading as the Association of Oldest Inhab- itants Decides to Save Pic- |Bensamin' Veaner Co., dealer in an. tiques, at 1204 Eighth street. Whip- P 1 s that during the last few tures of Old Capital. i e B vears old and a Vernis Martin writing A lively discussion was invoked at | tabls about 100 sears old, two rugs 4 ; i and two candlesticks, to be sold under Tast night's meeting of the' Assoclation {1 0.0 (G bt i nim, No. salos of Oldest Inhabitants in the Old En-|j,va heen made, he states, and the de- gine House, Nineteenth and H streets, | fendants have declined to account to When one of the members suggested | him or to return the property. He is : 5 represented by Attorneys H. S. Hin- informally that “all save a chosen | ihresenicl By A few" of the as ociation’s collection of pieture relics of early Washinston he removed from ths ing hall and stored in a smaller room | gr jrj walls of the meet- | popaig of Joseph S. Simson, historian nd m Lodge, No. 10, F. A, A. M., orehe building. who attended the meeting, for knowl. or s —— has considered plans for the Tenova-| (ha old Town Hall and market hose tion of the meeting hall, and the mem- | ywhijch upied a site on the north bership, at a recent meeting, voted 10 | cide of Pennsvivanin . avenue . at have the ceiling of the old chamber | Twentieth and I streets, from 1802 No_ definite action Was | until the middle of the nineteenth cen- taken regarding the walls and their | (uv. and Thomas Wilson, first repapered. wealth of relics, however, and during | worshipful master of the lodge. Mr. 2 reces Albion of these old pictures that nobody ever | Jooks at except as I am scanning |anxious to obtain the picture: them now"” should be removed from | The old Town Hall and market the walls during the clean-up process, | house was a two dusted, packed and stored in one Of | Its lower floor was used to house the the lesser rooms of the hall. “talls for the We “They may remain there until| the upper floor, was a public hs doomsday.” Mr. Parris explained, ' which was the “but some day this have a suitable building W galleries for the correct dis these pictures, and then, if thcy are | buildings, was properly stored condition for exhibition.” !of the market house for many ves “I make this suggestion entirely in-]The old Union Ingine House, formally for proper action of the hall [ which the Association of Old and archives committee, and if that|habitants mee body sees fit, a chosen few of the|the company until July 1, 1864, when pletures might be rehung after these |the present “paid com walls are cleaned, but certainly not|the necessity for volunteer fire depart- all of them. ments, Others Oppose Removal. Returning President Greeted. th proper | Company, of | protection of the War and in a Other members of the association thelr opinions, which indicated op-|called, Mr. Topham arose to ext position to the “retirement” of the|the association’s greeting to the turned pre "‘.}:}m F. Duhamel, cha of | clared that Mr. Noyes had been missed | I'Y the hall and archive: - | from his official chair during the vae: pr clared that there was some duplica-|tion period and he expressed the as- ure in the president’s tion of pictures in the collection which | sociation’s pl ht be s ed in an effort to give | return. 5 yre wall space. In responce to the greeting, Another member reminded the as-|Noves declared that he also had mi sociation that each and every pic-|the association with his fellow ture and relic placed on the walls of | members, contending that, as y the hall was accepted with the organi- zation’s vote of thanks and he con- n’t make junk of them | those who share it »eiation, | clation the silver loving cup which ding for the first time following : was won by its participation in the his return to Washington from his|firemen's Labor y parade, and vacation, remarked that if the pic-| which the police and firemen's relief tures were to be ired” theirs would | committee had awarded to Mr. Du- be “honorable retirement.” hamel, as chairman of the Labor day Washington Topham, a vice presi-| committee, for the organization last a t of the association, suggested that| week. At the motion of Percy B. while the renovation of the hall was| jisrael, it was voted to insci in progress the pictures should be|the cup the names of the n Noyes, president of the cleancd operly identified and |who pulled the old Columbia engine then rep the discrs in the parade. hall and committee. Mr.| "y Eliot Wright, speaking for Wil Noves requested Mr. Topham to frame | liam Luckett, a membe sented the association with f weod from the hull of the jold yaeht America, which first won the renowned “America’s cup” in its During the resumed business ses-|race around the Isle of Wight. gion, Mr. Topham put his former sug-|The bit of timber was taken gestion in an orderly motion and as|from the vessel's planking when sh; voted upon by the associatios the mo- overhauled at the V tion calls for “the replacement of the ¢ Yard some years pictures by the hall and archives!Luckett explained. a motion to that effect and the rc was declared closed. tures to Be Rep! 0, Mr. committee.” George F. Downing was eclected to John Cluzeit T'votor a viee presl-|membership during the business ses dent, app i v the es.ociation on' sicn of the meeting. cern a Jacobean sideboard about 300 | veral months the association | eqge of the existence of pictures of | in the meeting last .r_nn'h!. Proctor explained that Hiram Lodge Parris suggested that “most | will celebrate its centennial during s vear and for that reason is FOLLOWING THE OPENING GAME ON THE STAR SCOREBOARD. A view of the crowd of fans massed on the Eleventh street side of The Star two daughters Building yesterday to watch the electric scoreboard and follow the play-by-play radio account of the opening clash of the world series between | ork Yankees and the Pittsburgh Pirates. story brick structure. | | HOWARD BRUCHEY DIES. PA“SAI]ES GARI]EN | Pearl, Md., Man Leaves Wife and | Six Children. Special Dispatch to The Star. FREDERICK, Md.,, October 6.— FA[I_ SHUW UPENS Howard Burnside Bruchey, 65 years | old, father of Mrs. Edward Neff and brother of Charles Bruchey. both of Washington, died at his home, nea! | Fiowers, Vegetables and Pre- Pearl, Md., yesterday. o] e o resigenee 1 | Scrved Fruits in Attractive Display. widow and five children survive. { DR. M. F. HANSBROUGH, 78, | | SR the opening of the Potomac Palisades | Prominent Physician, Brother-n-| (.:qen and Landscape Club's Fall Law of John Barton Payne, how at Potomac Heights Community Tiaves Thise CHMdven: Church yesterday afternoon. Dahlias ind other Fall flowers were on display. | The exhibits were judged by Prof. David Lumsden of the Department ¢t ienlture. Canned food products | Special Di: h to The Star. | _FRONT ROYAL. Va., October 6.— | Dr. Mortimer F. Hansbrough, 78 yeirs 1d, who was for years one of Warren | County’s most prominent physicians, were judged I Catile K nihves died yesterday folowing a stroke of | Ve SH SEC W IS COnE He paralysis at the home of his daughter, [1N¢ Mrs. White of Cabin John. The Mrs. Walter C. Carter. | following prizes were awarded: hrl;tegzva;tngt;: oroalx\lel)ln;engol‘m\r;lila‘r:‘»* Cactus and hybrid cactus dahlias— cxeeption of Several years in Fai.| C. Rittue; second, Mrs quier County, he has spent the great-| iy o o SO MK & er part of his lifo here. His wife, who | jonerrer. == Pecorative and = peony was a Miss Payne, sister of Judge(['one *‘“{-“—"‘.’-‘“- Bernard H. John Barton Payne, died a number of | ing: second, Mrs. Rittue; third, Mr: iy | Hughes. Show danlias— First, Mr g |R. D. Smith: second and third, Mrs o2 Maginnis. Single tie Hansbrougl —First, Mrs. Edw NSanihiE Mrs. Scherrer. Twin dahlias— J. Kaldenbach. Pink roses—First, e F. Hansbrough: . Carts and Miss one er, Mrs. | all of Front Royal, sur Washington Star Photo. tern Market, while 1| |NEW PASSENGER PLANES TO LINK COAST CITIES | Trustees of Guggenheim Fund to Loan Money for Air Enterprise. second meeting place ition will| of Hiram Lodge. The Union Engine nized in 1804 for the | Bobbed-Haired Women Too Sophisticated, Unshorn Locks Says | retained their power of concentration s far as the men are concerned. 1 never saw such dispiays of limbs w such female sophis- hobbed-haired is showing prog- : Prima Donna With they will be in fit| structure on the Twentieth street side | sociated Press. Attorneys in Pleading, Practice FOR LIQUOR IS URGED T‘hm ier. Collection ughes. primadonna of The | Chicago Opera Co. and champion of | unshorn locks, is distressed over the conduct of sophisticated bobbed-haired women at sea. Returning from Europe yesterady on the French liner Degrasse, subsequently housed | Luella. Melius, The Lawyers' School, a law school | Mrs. Mary Haslup Asks W. C. T. for practicing lawyers, will open for- : —First. Mrs. Lake: second, Mrs, Ells- mally tonight at 8:45 o'clock at its| TU. to Fight Wets—Election to CONRoe quarters on the third floor of 1510 H street. The school, which will be Be Held Today. ers—First. B. H. Lane: second. M conducted by James J. O'Leary of the oL . 2 District and Maryland bars, is de- signed to give practical instruction in procedure and research to members of {and I never nies” ended | By the Associated Press, NEW YORK, October 6.—Trustees Guggenheim fund for generation of girl ress, if you can call it progress. of the Daniel “I saw them sea ! the promotion of aeronautics The meeting last night was opened | Proved an equipment loan for the pur- prompily took the floor 1o register |by Jr. Noyes and, once order wax,chase of three multi-motored airplanes {10 be operated on a model passenger airway between Los Ang ed in postures that could not by any sense of the word And the men were be termed modest. “There were only 170 men in the cabin, and they were mostly elderly. T though 1 knew something about | | the art of attracting men, but I find e at it despite my stage looked young, I am a nov dent. Mr. Topham de- all. seemed to ars her hair long, precipitated a clash a between her and Mary Gar- ined that women who ident of the fund, announced here, re > the favorite marks for the flap- L operate the line, intends gation. Students will be given the benefit of actual Mr. O'Leary has been assistant | yestcrday's meeting. “A scientist in Vienna informed m: that a woman who bobs her hair loses concentration. hobbed-haired women on the Degr: {EARLY TRIAL PLANNED FOR PROHIBITION AGENTS Men Indicted in Gundlach Slaying ‘Will Face Federal Court in Baltimore. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, October 6.—Prepara- | tions for an early trial of Joseph R. ‘Washington furthermore, TPOLISH DEPUTIES MARRY “TO CONTINUE ARGUMENT’ Couple Fall in Love During De- bates—Difference of Opin- {on Not Great. Correspondence of the Associated Press. RYBNIK, Poland.—One way to ob- tain a political victory in the Polish 'V your opponent. \lina Stenslicka “ ' u uing with Deputy Kwiat- dor, Ttobert de|prohibition agents under indictment | iiitvol’ during the times she has been la member of the Polish Congress that she decided to accept his proposa) of | so that they could keep up discussicns at_home after the Diet breaks up this Fall. Both are members of the Christian Democrat party and both are elected the same district in Silesia, 50 differences in opinion are mot expected to be great, route which must nger transport by the aeronautics | United States attorney for 7 years| Mrs. Howard M. Hoge of Lincoln, | fibst Mes. tion with old friends in- its value and meaning to, {with the recently pment Joan is th s in accordance juncture “Theodore W.| Mr. Duhamel presented to the asso- zing the development of passen- |ger carrying air lines, he said. ENVOY ATTACKED. | De Billy Fights Off Two Japanese, Who Damage Auto. James Mothersbead, 21-year-old in-| Special Dispatch to The Star. mate of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, who| FREDERICK, Md., October 6.— escaped Tuesday night by climbing a| Officers were elected at the close of -foot wall, is safely confined in the|the thirty-sixth annual County Chris- | hospital again today after a thrilling | tian Endeavor Union convention held chase of several blocks —Mr. and a number of citizins yesterday,|Coblentz, Myersville, president; Mr: lafternoon. Late yesterday the police of the he upon | bers of Charles V. 's County farmer, arve officials of the United rict Court here, iction the case has been trans- re said to have been | ferred. : and damaged by | for heing made b: { works at 330 C street, stating” he was | pen“ \Wachtel received a transcript the County Court records from Leon- ardtown and the date for the opening s the incl|of the case will probably be set as soon tance and has'as United States Attorney Amos W. the foreign W. Woodcock, who will defend the accused agents, returns from France. yeals ago. 1 officers who were in the | court, has until police ar- hington | dent as of little impc member_of complaint to He was a member of the Meth- : dist € ch a Mason. ¥ Frail Hughes. LAWYERS’ SCHOOL OPENS “irtices Wi i canucie e ‘iec. | e roes fner. Yot on at the home, with interment i vt b s second, j UNDER O’LEARY TONIGHT Presnect I Cemptary. fasErae b mnmlnun“ of i —_ i —_—— "" ‘”t;r'x.m. b, x# Instructions Given to Practicing| WAR ON PROPAGANDA Snec e Hess: second and third, Perenhial asters— B. H. Marigolds—First. M R. C. : second, Mi Maginnis. Zinnias and Other Subjects. third, Mrs. Maginnis. Cosmos— J. P. Hean. Other garden flow Special Dispatch to The Star. #lnifpr?fi,i";?q".if"";’?' R“‘"m" Juncal, FREDERICK, Md., October 6.l tor, second, Mrs. Sehomver thiod, peis Slection of oficers and various Tre|R. " Manelll, Follage alorior s ."F. Maneill. 2 ants—Mrs ot pedeticing: ports accupicd the attention of the | A o Rertrees will be conferred on | delexates to the fifty.second State con- |y Huehes. Shrubs First and sec: | &raduates. Courses will deal with |vention of the Maryland W. C. T. U. | ment — First, Priseily e, [TANEe: i procedure, pleading, practice, evi- | in session herve tod Mrs. A. H. Br raod _Lane: second, dence, trial work, briefs, legal re An address by Mrs. Mary R. Haslup. | {4 1T Brewood: third, Mrs. Dols. search and the practical conduct of | State president. in whi appealed | coeo 0 l_mn; “““'_mpm q.\h Fra n extensive , featured phers to 1t wet prop ng heans . Cochran; Lima beans— econd, Mrs. Smith Mancill. Heets— ppearance in court. “t, Mr. jand a law_instructor for more than |Va. president of the Virginia union o' . < 5 . He was an honor graduate v of the national body, | o : second. Mr. Juncal. Car- in the class of 1911, Georgetown Law ed an inspiring address !y Mrs. Scherrer; second and | third, Mr. Juncal. Onions— School. last night. Mi Annie D. Starr of B 2 T timore, State corresponding secre. | Mr'S. Mancill; second, Mr: tary, gave a lengthy report on the | tAtoes—First, Mr. Fraile; s . Mrs, ESCAPED LUNATIC CAUGHT | organization's activities of the past | Lake. Sweet potatoes'Mrs. Lake. borsioy Tnmzltoe~lllr!. Mancill. ~ Yellow to- e Yorh cenbti il sl ight, |matoes—Mrs. Lake. Rhubarb—First, Inmate of St. Elizabeth’s Is Cap- @ convention will close (onlaBl. |y Munelll: seetnd, Men ERa o Pumpkin—First, Mrs. Lake: second, tured After Chase. Christian Endeavor Elects. Mr. Juncal. Peppers—First, Mrs. Scherrer; second, Mrs. Cochran: third, Mr. Juncal. Eggplant—Mr. Juncal. Spinach—Mr. Juncal. Parsley—Mrs, Mancill. _ Watermelon—Mr. Juncal. Gourds—Mrs. Scherrer. Strawberries Juncal. _Raspberries—Mrs, Lake. Unicorn plant—Mrs. G. W. Hughes. Jelly—First. Mrs. Heap: sec: : resident; | snq Mrs. Lake: third, Mrs. Heap, Mabel Marker, Myersville, secre- | & oq "Fruit ™ First and second, Mre. treasurer, and Maynard Main. | yranejil; third, Mrs. H. C. Wolf. eystown, “'h'}fl-‘.ffi'.f&'{ff"t‘;on‘“:‘:: Preserves—First, Mrs. Doig: second sville, and third, Mrs. Lake. Canned Vege- by a policeman |at Graceham, Md., as follows: Byron Null, Graceham, vice presiden precinet rcceived a telephone from Mothershead’s wife, who outside and asking for assistance. 4 Policeman D, . Rosser was sent | Jratotical contest held in conjunction | yuhles—First, Mrs. Heap: second and in’ answer to the call. As soon as - third, Mrs. E. H. McGrath. _Pickles Mothershead saw the officer he fled. i e e e and ketchup—Mrs. G. P. Oakley. The policeman and a number of near-| Hellum gas, which cost $1,500 a| Special honorable mention for un. Mrs. Kwiatkowska is the youngest | by pedestrians set off in pursuit. After [ cubic foot before the war. now costs | usual exhibits at this season was law-making | a chase through alleys and side streets| 21, cents, due to the studies and ex-|awarded for the strawberries and She was 25 when elected five ' Mothershead turned into the Capitol | periments of United States Govern-!raspberries also to Mrs. Mancill and grounds, where e was captured, ‘ ment scientists. i Mrs. Cochran for sweet violets, b o -

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