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EVENING STAR., WASHINGTON. D. €. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 28 1927. Miss Clare T. Murdock, contralto, of Salt Lake City, who will be heard as a solo artist at the Halloween ball to be gi by the Utah ate Soci tomo night at the Washington Hotel. FLIGHT WINNER VISITS first civilian to fly from California to Hawa air derby, is greeted by Assistant Secretary M Arthur Young, aviation officials of the nding at Bolling Field yesterday. Arthur Goebel (center), and winner of the Dole Cracken (at right) and After rumors of friction” nee Chamberlin, who n their bu They ave MANY VISITORS ON NAVY DAY, The presidential yacht flying her gay pen- vard took advantage of the opportunity to go aboard and in- weicomed tors, who Washington Star Photo. 1T MEET AGAIN. . v 1¢ MAYFLOWER RECEIVE! nants as hundreds of visitors to the nav spect the yacht yester All sections of the yard, including the naval gun factor; a Tittle better acquainted with the Nation's fir between the flew from N ness rel e in Brooklyn “oprrizht by ' & A, Phe PRESENTS CHECK TO COAST LEAGUE STAR. Lou Gehrig. slug- ging Yankee first baseman (at left), presenting check for $1,000 to “Lefty” 0’'Doul for being chosen as the “most valuable player” in the Pacific Coast League this year. “Lefty,” who joins the Giants next Spring, played in a barnstorming game with Gehrig. Wide World Photos. DOG LIES AT KING'S FEET ON TOMB. Caesar, the favorite dog of King Edward, is placed at his master’s feet by the sculptor of the tomb of the King and Queen Alexandra, which was recently unveiled in the choir of St. George's Chapel, at Windsor, England. ARRIVES TO ARRANGE TRANSATLANTIC FLIGHT. Miss Mabel Boll, the “‘Plllll:’ ‘American girl who wanted to fly back to New York in Charles Levin monoplane Columbia, arriving at New York on the liner France. She intends to have a plane built this Winter for & Tris Speaker of the Na- n_boots, hat and Cleveland DIAMOND STARS ROUGH IT OUT WH tionals (at right), wearing the latest W bandanna, joins Ty Cobb (at left) pitcher, at Cody, Wyo., for an anteloy unt on the Greybuil River. b 7 Underwood & Underwood. transatlantic flight in the Spring. Wide World Photos. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. THOVONENSLAN4 ONESMATESIY By the Associatel NEW ORLEANS, mearch of land’and sea was under way | today for Heury Moity, former mai Iberta, la., butcher shop proprietor | and erstwhile commercial artist, who, drink-crazed and in & jealous rage, is | alleged to have killed his wife and his | brother's wife yesterday by clubbing them over fhe head and then hacking their bodich to pieces with a huge | knife. | Radio reports received today from three of seven ships requested to mearch their holds and question their personnel in the hope that Moity would be located, said no trace of the fugitive was found. Similar reports were received from officers of adjacent towns and States, who were asked to be on the lookout. Jealousy Is Blamed. Motty is wanted for killing hi Mrs. Th Alfano_Moit mother of his thre Leona Lee Moity, 28, his brother Jo- seph's wife and the mother of three. October 28.—A The bodies were found in trunks, face i | down, with the severed he: and lower limbs and on top of the torsc body of his wife the slaver left his weapon, a knife, two feet long and two inches used in hacking sugar cane The hodies were found by two uts, ealled to the scene ro scrub woman, who found traces of Llood. Joseph Moity yesterday af f that h women throu clared hoth surrendered to and expr J sy, Jose nd his brother been having difficult th wives he attentions they cepted from other men. he Joseph en and Jeft his wi after a quarrel Henry staved on hoping for a change Joseph said Joseph, who is brother’s senior, said t when he lute Wednesday children and s ol his three an found penciled on Moity's 1001 1 for que Marine Corps Changes. J. :C. from n Beaumont has heen de. Marine headguarters . Washing’ and ordered to the hat tle<hip as fleet Marine off *of the United States fleet: Maj. I Gardener, from Parris Island, S, to Charleston. 8. C.o First Lieut. ¢ H. MecCullongh M head auarters, this eity navy vard New Yo Second Quade n Sth 1o Quantico, Salzu A from ) IR an, from Boston 1o Nicaragt China ibner to Observation "] by rigate Scuttled In 1812 Battle Raised in Canada XD, Ontario, October 27. —-The frigate Nancy, scuttled by its British crew during the War of 1812 to prevent its capture dur- ing a battle with United States warships, was raised yesterday on a Notawasaga River island formed near the craft during the 113 years the ship lay on the river bottom. The ship today was only a ske ton of the frigate of 1812, KMs sides were torn by cannon balls and the seams had been opened by the long period of submersion, The keel, however, was said to be strait as on the day the frigate was launched, which was said to have been in 1789. g Plans are being formulated to preserve the ship near the spot where it was scuttled. COLLECTOR RETURNS WITH RED WOLVES Specimens From Brazil Jungle. ed Press. October 28.—After nu- ting adventures among | the hills and swamplands of the Matto Grosso, region of Southern Brazil, Colin C. Sanborn of the Capt. )| Field Brazilian 'ned home with further speci- | By the Aseo CHICAGO, | merous ex | Ma 108 retur mens of mamma for the Field Museum. For more than a ye cartied Americs two i camnp . Sanborr. of South only n hunters and a in his_col- 1% for four habiat in the mu- 1 mammals, wild specie outh Amer- tapirs and zillan red species, cook. Several B long-legzed | TEXT BOOK WRITERS HIT Sevelopments So Rapid That In- structions Become Obsolete Be- fore They Can Be Rewritten, | Cha nches of aviation Liext book writers | pace. The work ade necessary the | tion on aeronautics are limited and \um\mlmu text books requires original study. “New developments that texts hecome | can be rewritten,” me so rapidly pfore they " explanation today . In reply to requests from aviation ! authority to e these text parts of them, the War required only that it ven where they re ted and that there be no resale vernzent documents at a profit | schools for | hooks D i “Screen Villain" Weds Divorcee. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., October 2 1) —fohn Miljan, sereen villain, and | Mrs. Victoire Hale, dikorced wife of Creighton Hale, the filim actor, were " " Y Marshall Field Explorer Gets Rare Expedition | . birds and reptiles | | by | BY AVIATION CHANGES | Army Air Corps ble to keep | t that sources of (n(nrmk-‘ SECRETARY WILBUR ADDRESSES NAVY DAY GATHERING. The Naval Secretary deliverin; his address JEWISH WOMEN TO GIVE 3U. S. Asks Bids for Mobile Mast ANNUAL BENEFIT PLAY For Use in Mooring ]);r;gfl,lesl ‘Hodge-Podge Follies” Will Be Presented at Center Tues- day Night. ) By the Associated Press. ground crew. Between 300 and 500 Perfection of plans for a mobile | men now are needed for that purpose. mooring mast for dirigibles, to be| Observers from Gexmany, Spain and e _|tried out at Lakehurst, N. J., home |Great Britain are understood to be ST AMUGSE S B MHONIICH: [fleld of the Los Angeles, hecame|deeply intcrested in developments of vue in eight acts, will be given as | known vesterday at the Navy Depart-|a portable mast. The mast for which | the annual benefit entertainment by | ment through advertisement for bids | bids have heen asked will be equipped | the Netional Council of Jewish Wom- | for xuch & must, to be opened here No- | with a telescopic tower, which may | H i ewish Comm e 2 be raised or lowered to meet the nose | et vl Sy e of the mammoth dirigible. It will be | I Sixteenth and Q@ stre carried on a tractor which can be run | night at 8 o'clock. The ph into the shed housing the dirigible, | k of the council is ex Aorel | connect with the ship and bring it out | it A o ret development including other |for an ascension. IBfpintealonn and edch nical improvements, which will| Development of tha mobile mast is | I tertainment is given to 1 flect “a considerable reduction” in|seen by naval experts as a distinct for the work. | the numbet ot men required for a|achievement for, the United States. One of the principal acts will he a | tashion review, comparing the styles | of 1800 with those of the present time. ST o 1 e st | PLANS FOR DEDICATION |ANTI-BLUE LAW PARTY fnine 72 Yo 0 B0V OF ROGERS MEMORIAL| TO FIGHT LANKFORD BILL| ] i by Mrs. therine W. Hertzbherg. | The services of several professional i b entertaine ve been enlisted 0| Txercises to Be Held at Arlington | Newly Formed Organization Issues Monday in Tribute to World | Statement Denouncing “Menace War General. | of Intolerance.” round out the pr neral commit i is for the 1 s, David 3 | il memorial to the late Maj. Gen. vy L. Rogers, chief quartermaster - = - {of the A, F. ¥. in the World War and Man Hurt in Street Fall. }‘un:u'wrmuslor general of the Army, Henry D. Green, years old, 1669 | 19181 just erected in the Ar- | Columbia rond und unconscious | lington National Cemetery, will be ‘:;‘, ";:‘*‘\‘“ e et ormally dedicated Monday afternoon | Cidentanly slinped and fell. He re.|at 2:30 o'clock, November 7. Maj. ceived first aid in a nearby house be- B. Frank Cheatham, the pres- fore he was taken to Emergency Hos-ient quartermaster general, will pre-! pital. Hospital physicians reported | o it BN ) side at the exercises and an address the patient suffering from an injury | S97 oo = Hiliame, Vto nis spine and shock. His recovery | (. a of 1 i *Alth plans have been kept Tuesday | strictly confidential, R Admiral | Moftett, chiet of the Naval Bureau of we itics, admitted it was part of A Dbitter fight against blue laws | throughout the United States and | energetic opposition to the Lankford bill in the coming session of Congress is promised by the newly formed Ant Blue Law Party of Amer in a statement issued by its natl sec- | retary, John C. Rogers The' statement further states that the new p is “entirely distinct the National Association Op- posed to Blue Laws,” although some of the members of the latter organ- jzation are members of the anti-blue law party. The statement also declares that | “yntelligent, organized political action sary to rid this country of the ng menace of intolerance. The terrorism established by bigots is | spreading rapidly and ~ those whi cherish freedom of conscience mus stand together or resign themselves to_a modern inquisition. E. Haldeman-Julius, publisher of Kans., is ?g n: » e Iy " Mrs. Mark fona ien, Mrs, is expected. New York City. Religious services October 28 () Myer, and 1 selections | was elected pr a | block of granite, appropriately in- United Daughter sessfon here last night. Mrs. Bank-jof Gen. Roger®in the Regular Army, es 1 - - ~ {will be conducted by Chaplain Heads Georgia U. D. C. { ev. John T. Axton, stationed at i e 1l be rendered b 1y Land. kston o hiS € Th I J ts of 4 ge AohETaE ithe " he mems s of a huge division of the of | sribed, the entire cost of which was the Confederacy, which adjourned its;met by subseriptions from the friends ston was opposed by Mrs. 8, J, Lang, | National Guard, Organized.Reserve Sandersville for the .. and civil life. 3 i at the midday exercises held at the east side of the Navy Building yesterday. The importance of the Navy for protection of the Nation’s commerce was stressed by the Secretary. Copyright by P. & A. Photos. SNEAK THIEVES GRAB DANCERS’ OVERCOATS Hats Included in Loot. Woman Reports Theft of Diamond Ring. Two Three overcoats and two hats were stolen by sneak thieves in the ball- room at the Arcadia, Fourteenth and Kenyon streets, last night. Paul Bailey, 1521 Kenilworth avenue norta- east, was deprived of h at and hat 3 ker, 5 hird street northeast, and Jack Wolf, K strect, were robbed of their overcoats, while Theodore Gates, 608 Ingraham street, lost only his hat. Theft of a three-stone diamond ring was reported from the apartment of Mrs. Elvira Ostrom, apartment 208, Mrs. Ostrom told the police the ring disappeared from her apartment in the past.two weeks. Lewis Witz, 1925 K street, asked po- lice to ake an effort to recover a suit of clothes, overcoat and watch, <tolen from his home yesterday. He 90 T 21 to valued the loot at WARNS OF SWINDLERS. Better Business Bureau Director Addresses School for Secretaries. ‘Warning against unscrupulous em- ployers who exact cash bonds and pledges for stock purchases from prospective secretarial workers was given to members of the day classes of the Washington School for Secre- tarles by Louis Rothschild. director of the Better Business Bureau, in the school classrooms yesterday aft- ernoon. “In many unfortunate cases,™ Mr. Rothschild said, *“the swindlers have obtained money in this way from ap- | 5 Massachusetts avenue northeast. | ‘Mad Man’ Arrested Found to Be Victim Of Bad Toothache By the Assoclated Press. TARRYTOWN, N. Y., October 28. —*“This man isn't crazy, but he has an awful toothache which is driv- ing him mad,” a surgeon at Grass- lands Hospital said, when Officer Kohl of the Greenburg police brought in Anthony Joseph, who was found wandering about acting like a wild man. Officer Kohl started out with suf- ficlent equipment to capture and restrain a lunatic. He was con- vinced that Joseph was insane, un- til the surgeon told him differently. The surgeon relieved the toothache for the man and he returned to his home in Greenburg acting perfect- ly normal. —. JAILED WOMAN TELLS OF MANSION ON NILE Theft Suspect Admits She Is ex- Wife of Millionaire—Claims Estates in Egypt. By the Associated Pres: SALINAS, Calif,, October 28.—Held in jail here for six weeks on a theft charge preferred by a shopkeeper, a woman known as Mrs. Grace Potter admitted that she is Mrs. Genevieve M. Paddleford, divorced wife of a Los Angeles millionaire. She asserted that she owns in her own name a man- sion on the banks of the Nile River and extensive estates in Egypt. Mrs. Paddleford, known to have had three wealthy husbands, one of them Ben Teal, theatrical producer who ged “Ben Hur,” and another a “Cairo shipbuilder,” whose rame she refused to reveal, first came into prominence in 1909, when she was eonvicted of inducing women to tes falsely in the divorce suit of k J. Gould. ‘The charges now against her grew out of a_deal whereby Mrs. Paddle- ford traded a fur coat to the shop- keeper and took clothing in return. The merchant charged the articles taken on account far exceeded the value of the coat. GLOTZBACH PAROLED Divorced Chauffeur-Husband Opera Singer Weds New York Woman. By the Associated Press. PORTLAND, Oreg., October 28.— Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment after pleading guilty to forgery, Floyd Glotzbach, divorced husband of Mme. Mantzenauer, opera singer, yes- terday was paroled to the custody of his attorney, James F. Alexander of Portland. It was announced he had made good the $5,000 he obtained on a forged heck bearing the name of Mrs. R. D. Inman, wealthy Portland widow, b whom he had been employed as chauf. plicants for secretarial positions and!feur. Glotzbach was tried recently on then have vanished from sight. Capt. Louis B. Montfort, president of the Washington School for Secre- taries, urged the classes to bring into the commerclal world, after their graduaf high ethical standards. : e the charge and the jury disagreed. On October 5, six days after the jury failed to agree in his case, Glotzbac went to Vancouver, Wash., and was married there to Mrs. Mildred A. Ha- zel of New York. Then he dropped s ted ap: ON FORGERY CHARGE| of | PROHIBITION POLL OF CLERGY SCORED Anti-Saloon Counsel Denies Temperance Group Is Backed by Church. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 28-—A natlon- wide survey conducted by the National Episcopal Church Temperance in which 1,032 Episcopal cle approved modification of the Ve act, was regarded today by Or Poland, counselor to the Anti-Saloon League, as the work of an organiza- tion holding only “a parasitic connec- tion” with the Episcopal Church, and whose secretary apparently was in the pay of the wet cause. “If the Church Temperance Society, which has published a statement pur- porting to show that Episcopai clergy- men are two to one against prohibition, had any official connection with the Episcopal Church, I should refuse to comment upon their statement,” Po- land said. “Bishop Manning some time since made it certain that the so-called Church Temperance Society is no real part of the church, but has only a parasitic connection with it.” On Wet Pay Roll. He declared Dr. James Empring- who as national secretary of the v took a prohibition poll about years ago, was on the ay roll of the Associ inst the Eighteenth Amendment. He asked the identity of an “anonymous” donor 0.000 to the societ 5 Empringham, when informed of Mr. Poland’s statements, said he v | not and never had been on the pa { of the association named. | expeetations of being on that pay ro | he said. “T wish [ were. 1 would like to be. It is nothing to be ashamed of {and 1 could use the mon No Record of 8 At the offices of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment it {was said there was no record of any Isalary payment to Dr. Empringham. ation of $30,000 to the tem- perance society, said Dr. Empringham, as from the estate of Letitia Willet sarrison, widow of Cornelius Garri- She died in London in 1925, ASSENGERS DIE. iTwo Fatally Hurt, Pilot Injured in Crash at Atlanta. ATLANTA, October 2 Hinsley of Defuniak, Fla., s Burgess, whose home is given as Chi- were fatally injured late yester- when a plane in which they were | passengers, piloted by Paul Davis, |crashed near Candler Field, local air- | port. Hinsley was declared dead when the three men reached a hospital, while Burgess died shortly after arrival, Pilot Davis suffered a broken leg and arm. | PLANE P i S Autoist Robbed by Thugs. Two unidentified colored men stop- ped Oscar Millard, colored chauffeur, of 117 Third street southeast, at Fif- teenth and T streets about 12 o'clock last night and employed him to drive them to the viaduct at Benning. When the viaduct was reached arf driver heard an order to hold up | his hands and turned to face a pistol, He gave up $1.95,