Evening Star Newspaper, November 5, 1927, Page 2

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1 ¥ 2. %) i e ) THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1927. f ENBASSY DENES |FOURIST SOON TO FIND CAPITAL Tor o oce i coven Y mo0n wrr BERNARD! BREAKS i - Signs Designating Routes ] H[LINCOLN Ml | o e, whicn, owover. ” i ‘ ! _ Nungesser-Coli Gifts Held Up| o Points of Interest. ¢ i o i L el . Italian Aviator Attains 300 “in New York, French : R | S ol Teom Hoatt Fleld. He Ty . e s Miles an Hour in P ] ring- 3 can .\‘I‘Hf\‘nm‘Mle“,\hu‘»:\(:‘:l.\\\;:ll:yix . (W_-‘«-::mvinu of fel- ; i - o . o : " _ Offiial Charges, * [Star Commended for Bring Amocion'y g |low ofleery who had foliowed b ln| BES i L Test Flight. erecte: rough- | n man in the hurt 2 3 ) 4 gy erected through-|[n man in th hur ; ; z | ROME, November 5—Maj The French embassy today emphati- Publi : . : &ally deni ublic Attention. out Washington |cr replied: “No, he's d At that 5 i 1 : L o il 1 4ally denied published reports that the to bl for the benefit of | Capt. Gray opened his eves and said o H ¢ ki # Ber embassy in Washington is responsible p the thousands of |that he was merely resting o R ‘ g s & . { 1 speed of more than 300 miles an hour for the delay in sending to Paris > - . > motor tourists who | On that flight Capt. Gray had been 7 Sl in hig hydrouir) : s - BY WILLIAM ULLMAN. DIOE couriRts ) (O (het Tkt Cant; Ay Bad been ‘ | b ighecks remitted to them by the New | %" e foumialities stand in the fionst «"‘upi‘v‘:\ b L open s ot ::nu’|‘nv:4; In‘)u;lrin;,'":él»r:v‘i 5 eeihito couree terday, smash Work committee of the Nungesser-| o'l \Washington becoming one of o ah 1610 | Gvetithe siaa of he bASKEE. g D 5 [an existing rds for speed in the Coli fund. Jules Henry, secretary 10 | ihe' most effectively marked clties in Son il Peiie o unitad : : : y t, the Roy fAmhassador Paul Claudel, who is ab- | hq country in respect hoth to points tates highway Devised New Method. < 3 ¥ X o stated today. :i::‘r:gun:]::: ;o"h111'ri‘;::‘:ak'xn‘;:xa-<‘-‘;}:il o ’T‘,;‘{filfl“‘m"" i:‘“f";;'Wul‘»‘.““" fed B! route mm‘\l!mr, e fimmedintely bekan plans for an- y 52 Sy ‘ 4 * I “'l'l'm Aero- Club announced that Mal. - ts as a “falla s mis he h! 3 ssinw PUE el while the direc-{other flight in the lizht of - ; % < kiR e Bernardi d over the Wenteton . K effort to establish the National Cab- | ;01 sign above indivates by nanw | perience and a method of reloasi q.% g B Venice-Lido course at an average speed The only apparent reason for|jtal's pre-eminence in vespect to di : S Sirow s eyt i 3t 5 % 2 : (Which the funds collected were not (rectional signs Bide Ha host ‘ot |And pointing arrow the way to a par-|sand through the bottom of the bas- J wF R ¢ {0f 20867 miles an hour, or gisttibuted immediately,” Mr. Henry | niciar visitors reached the mctic { HHeularipoint of dnterest, “l‘};{;’;n‘“\1-~"!'.Mm Soolt Fieid/ins % L } Kilometers ®iid, “is due to the desire of the | agq ves ¢ with the offer of the i) Meconfl altempt on Sy 4 et 3 : ; 4 on S Puincare, | American Automobie Assuciation 10 pa can proceed with that decision an altitude *of 42470 feet, Faties " 2 v . - stated, the Italian spoed expert who Lildren, while Ni o ser 16 to | Provide the city i the Markers | piop ja so ntial to safe and than man_ ever before had as i X _ aptured the Schneider Cup from clildren, while Nungesser left none, 10| jacessary for this purpose smooth trafhic g either in balloon or airplane- ¥ et ’ . | the United st 5 #ce that the funds are proportionally | "Sfa k0 A" A. proposal, which also |STOOth trale @ aniztion Toad: [mone t Ea s 0 : o s ; 2 ; t nited States in 1926, re da amon: the families. This M. |incioded an offer of co-operation in |, ACGE PUCEE ST A 0L | it of more tham 70 dcsrees below . ' el . G one .42 miles an hour, or . re eunld not do without bring- [ " qavelopment of a marking plam, |10 (Y e i s Wl R GRECEDEI0N 4 ; 5 o ey s L e S04.672 Kkilometers, ing the sitation of the families 10 |ronawed closely the announcement of S e 5 d ' 543 . g / s ¥ ix “ G The world reco % 4 : the sllowed clos ! Anton Stephan, presid: the Mer. loon went out of control in ~ . ’ i i i : T d by he attention of the New York com:| raffic Director William H. Hirland ol chants and Manufacturers' Associs nt. 1t was falling so fast ! e ; i ; : s bE 4% Noilice mittee. bis willingness to m ediate | jion, Just from St. Panl, Gen. | it its speed m : : : , e apturing. the Checks Turned Over, ‘:’l tu:l'nvmv EAL e d 4 .~’1(3y-l\'x|‘x deciar ‘nu-‘v‘ one of the landing. .Capt. 2 g Z : v A o 2 | ””;"“ql'}x""" ;’:::r-rrw: .‘;.:I'\' was Ai 188 «Tast July Bernard H. Sandler, one | (hat the city's inhospitality i tosiic traxts letwesn the Minnesota eapital | check its plunge, and then, at 8,000 | miles hour for the averase time of the members of the New York fund |10 directional factit 5 be gemediod A6 and Washingtin was the' thorough- | fect, hie went over the side. 3 A ge where flood waters have caused more than a half million dollars damage. | |07 the course. The best time for committee, gave to Count ) s, D anNONE e Gifne, the uts | Togs WINE SHIch e Grineri eate: | chuter dsnogd Himtgsntly” upon The wafer has reached the second floors at places in the lower eity more than three feet high on Main [0 P (AL FRC6 vas made By French charge daffaires, two checks | e e District ot Columbin nated the routes to Its places of in-| carth ¢ Golden Gate, Ill., street, According to reports, the cily is without light and power and street cars are unable to move. 289,75 miles an Mo e representing_the New York subsc cLine . point near the Indiana State line. The et — . |2 8 ur. fon to the Mingesserand Coll fami.|Yision of the A. A. A Deko : Ve have been shortsighted where | halloon settied near him. Its sealed | 7 Maj. de Bernardi was forced out of ] Those were made pavable to whatever funds ht “f ayatan e others have seen inite need,” | pecords proved the record of 42.470 ee! th the prediction tl it | the Schneider Cup race in the middle S : | this purpose in the traffic office can be | Gueg” Gen, Stephan, | “ time that | foet, and it appeared that Capt, Gray . 3 é Some | 0f the second lap by engine trouble, Paul Claudel, the French Ambassador, | \USPITHCEE W Lloe Chere, as hosts 1o more (errists than any | had'achieved his goal. ints were | and since then has been continuing and since the checks were in the Am- |* & A 2 ) i 3 . st . - | ik ¥ other city, shouid tie action N TO RISE 1 iis_experiments with the plane with s i e BlasiWiaely/pproves AL A. Leese. nresident of the Cham- Record Was Disqualified. AS RIVERS CONTINUE safat h he had hoped to capture the forwarded them at once to him iv The orderly and rapid development [her of Commerce, is another trade ov Severalmontha inter came the word A combination of railroads today ‘I race. § \f the program since the need w leader whose indorsement gave New England its first emergen Today's flizht, the club announce- There Mr. Claudel Indorsed the | °f, the, Drogvar, S BC Tanys axo - B Its molnts] ot the marl nad been disallowed by (Continued from Tirst Page) Known Flood Dead rail connection with Albany and the | ald. was witnessed by Italian cks and turned them over to M. | pointedt 08t T Vol B nd unqualitied | of intere . ot hintS | the Federation Aeronautique Interna- A2 dif il . : Srest 1 4% hotre B ubing the okl Sporting authorities ind by the Amees aire, who has been intrusted { 1as “‘}”l‘ | sides. To the indorse- {out. diffetin s Sealiy ftom tionale because he had come to earth N p = o, and Missing Listed ton & Maine main line hetween Aver | ican, French and British air attaches. it diiding the Tunds equally be |Approval on all sides. To the indorse: fout differinz so vadically from that |1n's parachute instead of the batloon, | IBEB and was picked up by Arthur i : [ton & Maine main line hetween Aver \ British air attaches. tween the two families. jment cof municipal ang HCCREL, S for ihe Conventional ity mian, the o ayoltinny suspieloris thit hie mignt/| L Went, an amateur opatalor ot Bipe: In New England | [ North Adams and the Boston & Al gt 2 “A short time after M. Poincare |ficials concerned yester 3 o 5 Capital vs hus presented |y, va Jeaped on ‘Le ascent, leaving the hamton, N. Y., who relayed it to the i > | hany between North Adams and Pitt | the approval of trade and civic organ- o ated pr m for the tourist, ' '> | Associated 1 BOSTON, November 5.— field, a route was established over PRESIDENT ORDERS eceived the money a just whe % . SR - balloon to reac! oi ecord pilotless, i Teceived the money and just when he | o LT oce leaders voiced & Mr. declares. *An_ effective, | noiot 10 rael 10118 peeon lloties Elsewhera thioughout New Eng- -mation of flood fatalities is | [which each rafiroad scheduled three was about to distribute the funds he | s s backwardness - ; 2 ! i Jhius fo e nds he | FEHGAE Washington's backwardness | harmonions svstem of direction has | hooron, PieUie e i B disastie & slow. Following is the list so jght trains to move its accumn found that Coli had left three children | By Gyl respect was -about to be |heen an impsrative necessity and l:nu!,f‘.'(ur".\‘ h{‘naeh;“ fo show (ot he dld land with varying intens < 4 lation of milk, perishables and ex- ARMY AIRPLANES #hesides his mother, while Nungesser v ; . OWN 8 3e] b Ghildn o neare | brought to a decisive end. glad to see that it shortly is to be e v thi ‘nce | vised list of the dead showed ‘that, in- KNOWN DEAD. press. B e The formal offer of the local A. A. A. | met.” he S ],‘,’,',m‘"“"' but this evidence | & ing those reported dead in Ba Sharon, Vt.—Mrs. Clude Rey- TO FLOOD SECTION consequently calied that to the atten. s = o he signs 3 ol «sy during division to bear the cost of the SIgNS | Thus, with the A. A. A. offer to| " Consequently repar |but without estimating the possible nolds and two of her children, tion of the French embassy during the | SO0 6 (T s full facilities 10| near the expense ‘of the Siens.- 0. | (i miea the Tatal enared for | tailties In Montpelier, Vermont led Barre, Vt—Ralph Winters DEFENDS FAILURE Summer, requesting that the embas riti i 5 i i raffic authorities in placing | gether with unanimous recognition of | st wi ; ‘huse! 3 ierald Brock o T inform Mr. Gerard, former ( misting teatic 84 _ . > he started y | the list with 16. A achusetts came . 0 SUBMI MERGER i . 2 vas made at the regular month- | the need for them in both official a y 5 vhi Westfield, Mass.—Mrs. Anna them was ma 01 nd Ay ars old, was mar- | nest with which ineluded three for b alarmed about the safety of M Ambassador and president of the rd of governors |unofficial cf e o : 3 . i | sser-C i Situn. | lv meeting of the board of g unofficial el , tile National Capital A had th HnE Westfield, here varying : Kannia, 12 fsser Coll committec. of the S | Vesterday. Explaining the A. A A |is pointed toward <hs solntion of one Attt of (e second flight was |placed two and three oceupan Worchester, Mass.—Mrs. Mar- TO TRACTION FIRMS | sacgent, who ts at the Ludiow home, Droposal, Chales P. Clark, assistant|of its most trving | ms a8 host | watehed by his family. On that gc. | submerged machine among e | 1t was at the suggestion of the Presi- ___(Continued from First Page) |dent and the Attorney General that committee would grant its permission | ope 0] manager, declared two types [to the Natlon's traveling citizens. |y he waved to them as his bas- | Ums. ket lifted away, remarking casually Water Sweeps Man to D Millbury, Mass.—Mrs. Charles the War Department entered upon its to include Coli's three daughters in 3 . . g auaesy € ot signs, artistically designed, ave | Only a few details remain to be | the distribution of the funds. o adve and that only a system of | worked ou: befo e A e in effect in all of > it he d L home for dinner, He E 2 o s Rhod & 7t single | A. Putnam a daughter Dor- |and attorneys, plans in effec n all of 2 5 % i Rhiode Island had a single A. Putnam and daug| L ticn of the United States, | WOrk of assistance. Secretary of War Embassy Delay Denied. placement remains to be worked out. | completely solved. e French embassy then took the . iatter up immediately with the com- Shield-Shaped Markers. ardi, Italian fying ace, “lub of Italy two legs of the irs (Continued from st_Page.) ass.—Mrs. Gustine Mrs. Gray and one of her sons wit. | fality, with one man belicved e fon—Carmilla Bardilio. |1 have also discussed the matter ex- | Davis said aiter calling at the White el $10 eethERY Y eNECT IRy ! have béeen carried to his i to il . ) : . i Sl ik 3 b ahi 4 e D ey tlune ol | rxers which win aesignate| LINER BATTLES STORMS, |neused the eetaway vesterday, Mre.| li of waters noar Wester Rennington, Vt.—Martin Shep. | | haustively with outstanding residents | Fo0se, tnt The WiLinn, of ohininng Mr. Gerard was abroad and the|through highways will follow the Unit- —_— {wo other officers, went to the hangar| Connecticut and New Hampshire ap- ard. 1(’. tho ":8 . S tation th avery | been left entirely to Gen. Brown and treasurer of the fund committee, Mr. | od States highway marker design,| NEW YORK, November 5 (P).—|in which the dressing of Capt. Gray | PArently suftered only heavy property Rutland, Vt.—John Sabula | |{hat With Braper C00mere o oncarned | the number of planes that would he €. 8. Mitchell, informed the commit- | shaped as a shield. and 12 inches deep | With two forward Jifel emushed | lind hean comploted, | As she reached | 1055, While in Maine, wheve the storm | | and Mrs. y Salter, | S Gieoucs principals and actualities, | sent to the flood zone would remain Ao that he had the matter ander ad| and 12 inches broad, the same dimen | and a companionway care ied nway fn (1im e put lis avm about her and | 00K the form of 4 gale, a lineman “;\‘""'!;::I';‘Igi"'l"-d}"l{'(f‘,:-T‘ A D recaEnliias every Tagt| With Kim, \eraie 4. SN s 2 Mr. | gions as those used in other cities. The | what Capt.. Harold A. Cu i o | Kisved her. was electrocuted while repairing e <y - 3 . zht Pt 3 - ’ Gerard would glve his consent as he | qigns indicating turns, alse shield- | scribed R ohe ot e Upon, Ascent the basket caresned|Tallen wire L U R Fn’("“:;;';.?fieflll:nh: sé(:‘n?;l;l'efll(:;' el Will) Gonfer: With: Woeks. Pt e sl t0 00, shuped and bearing legend “R"|“blows"+in several rears, the United |and tossed in the high wind, a Continuing rain in many placos and | | Westfield, Mass—Three un- | |00 00 SES DTG Snterest, can be | Gen. Brown has been instructed to ki b September. T} for right turn for left, are | States liner (ieorge Washington ar-|ing Capt, ¢ son, who began | utter inability ds to cope| | ldentfied persons. bimaciers, ol i confer with Gov. Wecks of [presuine (he Welity was \dus to, tH8tlg inches deepiby hes wide. The | rived at Holoken, N. J., last night|to cry. Mrs. Gray, however, seemed | With the extraovdinary situation in R ER UL ; ) 5 Vermont and other authorities. canse, and to that cause only. I em-|jgpger signs, of course, will carry the | from Cherboure. SIposed and after watthing the hag | others brought the trafic paralysis| | man. SNe Sees Traction Opposition. ecaisy of the elevation at, the Phatically en: that there has been | nymyer of the throug The ship battled storms all the way |3 or 4 minutes, departed from the | Which has gripped the en e _MISSING. “My plan, as you are aware, con- | poirt where the old Coolidge Home- any del: 1e part of the embassy. | 2UTLCE, across the Atlantle, field ' arer an end today. but it did pre-) Westerly, R. L—Albert Black- | | oy hiates ultimate submission to those | stead is situated, the President is not Mhen ved the checks here|mpoce directing the traveler to It was mot until after the escort.|$ent a fresh and grave probler nall. stockholders of the three companies | fearful of it being damaged by rising e ey arded at once to the | goints within the city will be of vazled ing plunes hud landed Ist night, re.| That wi the tiueat of a mt | ot areaiy consulicd, as well as pub- | waters. ‘ihe town is high up on the > . imensions, depending upon the let- - 23 e ot T T ot | fne. Coincident with a wa ¥ | e Ntk i lic hearings before your commissicn. [ mountain side and the two o It was stated in the published re- ;'l:;']l‘n: e e asigh Flood at a Glance Rttt wor of mier ushandiiHat S ranlk o Matonos N i), | leard from. A dozen railroad bridges | \f /80 S0 o O tures of the plan, | small streams nearby, even A port that the checks apparently were | yp,t points only to the “Lincoln Memo- as on the verge of collapse through. | commissiuner, that only 4) ¢|were down in the vicinity and rall-|j o wever, that until more fully under-[to any considerable extent, are mnot T At ded, o L e, | Tial” will be different in size and shave | gy tne Awsociated Press. out the night. - Taston's supply hind been toceize] by (Foad men wonld not attempt 1o say |stood might scarcely be expected to |likely to do any zreat damage. [ Ambaasafor s all were | from one that designates the route VERMONT—Collapse of reser- denle health officials in o Mas- | when scrvies on any line could be re-{appeal to the management of the Lud‘ln\\', the county seat, the rail- canhed at the National Bank | 10 a Eroup of public buildings. voir at Montpelier reported to Haus Been Pilot Since 1921 achusetts and New Hampshire cities fsumed. RIOBECCERISIEad T2 Sopur tu dhet enliy, 3 Somai W Washington, Octuber, 5 In coloring, the local signs w KAy ChuRel Mok ot 11t ehaaton Saicke Gependent on Vermont and New York | Lurlington, although nearly immune | “Should Mr. Hanna's suggestion rel- f erably lower than Plymouth and is 2 3 low. the mew street marking e e s oF arsiiinateq aa lias been piloting bal- | Coilices for theie supplies urged | from the flood itself, by reason of its |ative to conferences be accepted and | situated on the Black River, which is Report -Held Erroneous. bination—a . gold_lettering against & | Gonqrl g% 10 S1L BAROAS ) WA | loons sinfe 1921, and his attempt to | srictest conservation of ths flull. e | elevation, did not escape effects of the should such conferences be promptly | reported to be greatly swollen and n refuting that statement, which | black background. ¢ these| GOV. Jickson had perished =) n“'(*.thlnwl '»ml“' record mark * | said no possible improven was in|disuster “which overtook its neigh-|inaugurated and result in a merger, ul[l;lnf gm_sul;‘rgl_fla damage. ir. Henry declared was an erroneous | The plm for the placing of thes® | parre " Windsor placed in charge |11 00y fect oo ond | prospect for 48 hours and that the bors. All but one bridge went out, in-[my entire object will have been at-| Lieut. Gov. Jackson was a frequent “mixing up of facts,” he said: “Two | markers contemplates fac! ll(:gl |'\l of troops with thousand persons |'ne; 0 feet. In thix flizht he wore @ | shortage might even Jast long cluding the 40-vear-old s span to|tained. Based upon previous results, | visitor ;“,‘ ,@"L«ll'"_ . being a watrm o1 ocks totaling $31,251.44 were given | movement of both tourist and loeal | o n Ll bl T2 Ut RETCHES [ heavy turdined suit with o parachute | Angther situation which, although | the opposite city of Winooskl. however, T believed that some such | ersonal freind of Senator Porter H. stabile strapped 1o his hack. The tubes from | it " held Jittle immediate peris Inhabitants watched from points of | intervention as that adopted by me ; Dule, who found it hard today to be- : < raf hem separated in ) hy-dis. Sandigrto_the French charge | traffic by keeping ther to prevent looting. Burlingto ? e g so far as poskfble. For instance, in 3 BLom | the oxygen tank led into his leather | sssible oot v o > arns -k | Was necessary to convert lethargy |lieve that Mr. Jackson is dead. H- pot that of a possible food sh 18 houses, barns, live stock 8| was often a guest at the Semator's a'affaires - isolated by rising -svaserss . Rut- . . | selecting the streets that will become y ks b heltnet, He still had wply of ¢ 52 A M i feu 1o land general del float dow into action. i the president of the Mu-| fort will be made to route this tvpe Sl (St et Dol A native of the State of Washington, | ¢uaihe S ciote; > Witioosri Valley. Wak ¢f i | utilities involved, 1 shall be happy in- | tor Dale is himself concerned over his remitted to the president of the ) e MASSACHUSETTS — Western, | coonDatIve ¢ y /M, | seathed coastal districts 4 ormous. . happy on. Tinothy o Dote i pocttna avor of Paris)|of traffic around congested centers | ... " gorod Saverely, Vills t apt. Gray was lorvn oa February 16 = K . deed to participate in such confer- |<on, Timothy C. Dale, superintendent nine checks which w York | At the ‘same time, direct arteries w } e il s o Affer servinz commis- Freight Embargo Declared. State Police Take Charge. ences. of the ”{\'d'!‘hl‘l\‘t‘rml‘ower Co., which . he Teservi ltog SEe e ¥ 1 foned otficer X Yo Nwioni o . | operates in the northern section he henent of the Nungesser-Coll camiles. | fraflc to the 120oneer treal-Boston train _setvite sus- | 1675 Vitn the ntention of transferyins | Slared an embaro on all reisht rrom | work of rehabllitation while (rosHl re | yublic discussion through public hear. | Mr. Jackson, who was an announced These nf checl epress . 2 3 -d. Boston treatened with 5 th 5 | the East to points_west of Spring- iorts of misfortunes continued to|i e e - | candidate for the governorship of Ver- $1.000 were sent by Need Held Obvious.' < famine. s lowever, it | go1q and from the West to all points <de in. At Pittsfield, Gen. Alfred |iN2S: to the end that the best inter. 5 o ris 3 Amls ¥ 2 r Mpsipn ¥ r, 1920, that I Sl bk 4 2 Sl 2 : e et | ests of that public be safeguarded and | Mont in the elections next year, was Parle b e Ko o wnoabe in his| Recognition of the different objec: EW JAMPSIRE — Northern orps. During | 225t of T The Boston and | . State commissioner for safe- | (58 T LAt e inderstand | conceded to have an excellent chance {in Washington, D0 P twed those |tives of the sightseer and the local| LO7DS cut off. North Walpole |ihe war he was commissioned in tho| Jaline ported service gen- | Ly, ¢ ha detall of State Dol ihat nothing herein contained 1o be chosen the State's next chief Mr. Clauvlel :indorsed those |tives of the sightse e ene| reported under 17 feet of water. 3 as commissioned In the | erally disrupted west of the Conne ake charge of the situatiom at | L10% e tontained or any | . ecutive, Senator Dal 18 ‘today and had them cashed at |motorist will ern the development | ol i 406" G onts and Jand, | LNfAntry snd rose to the rank of| ey, River, while in Vermont, many Get AvHL v demol. | Fepresentations of the management | 2XeCU -;em‘:'l' alo, sald foday. {the Riges Naticnal Bank in excharge |of the local sign system, as well. slides reported in White Mountains, | C'PiAn: e wis tranaferred in that of New Hampshire and certain will deter me from pressing tho entire | Frequently in Vermont a lleutenant for a check’of the same amount on| In proffering the assistance of the CONNECTICUT ~Tivars ot o grade to the Air Corps in August, |g s of Maine railroading was at | vious fairness and justice to all concerned n'r]) ’rnor :\ :N\(s’ o the dzlvv\;-z'lmrls the Natlonal City Bank of Paris, made | A. A. A, Mr. Clark declared his or-| o4 oiohic and property damage | ro T a standstill, | \vas a warning to curiosity seekers to | (the public and private interests alike) | fhAIFs "“| i ','“." bl el e pavable to the mayor of Paris. anization desired to help in the solu-| By (0 Tl ) wpt. Grav graduated from the ™ Hundreds of thousands of dollars’ | keep cl 5P tib BTHICKAT A OW DS of the plans I have already briefly l‘a"_- SEE e 9‘";‘"‘ li" the primary . tion of the problem because of its pu- RIODE 15LAND—Many minl ITt_n:rFm. School atl Ross Field, Arcadia. | 1ogg had been sustained by railroads | \ater in the millhemmed Merri- |OUtlined to you and which I beliove | election insures election. y sition in the motoring fleld | gams Lurst and 5,000 persons out | ar and from the Balloon |in the myriad bridge losses, freight-|mack River w g 4 more adequately solves the problem Headed Granite Association MRS. JLCM KENN y |resenting Lot the local “motoriat | e\, and School at Scott Tleld in |ear submerzence, track was e Nels Re. | than ansthing I have heretofore heard | 1oy Gov. Jackson was president through the local division, and the MA Rt 92 v serving as_an in-{jepminal disorders, Jandslides e b S oete Erom) B th L Vhat the people of the P bl S . F e nrough afiliation” with the| o MAINE—Communications partly |giructar-at the latter school, He aldo | oot ucas passontar ttine and fagt | Loiis from Plymouth, vt rict want is action and to that end | Of the American Granite Association, | t stupted and rallroad service crip- | wyad e S | ur 1 told of an 18-foot jump in the & with headquarters in the Mills Build: IT A. A. A.. we feel that we are doing| [iEIPed ARd valliond servie graduated from the Primary Flying | expresses. bbbl :dgs my every effort and co-opera. | Vith Heddauarters in the Afills Buitic ? o/ mors than dur daty 1 oftetivg 16} W Y . ndson | Schutl at Brooks Field, Tex. and| Added to the toll of storm losses|' south the Blackstone River, [tion.” 1S resignsd Bt Apri), ax iis auth —_— sat ithe EXhense ot Rdrqliely mack: S iver at Al |pompleted b spectal | course in jwere the countless hundred hich flows through a lage textile dis: President Held Favorable. 35 & Vermont xouitive becatio {0 ling the N ! Capital, both for the ; i avier-than-: atlof | o a8 o e ot Mvela | il : ol totan, - 5 as X ecame Mrs. Julla Cecelia McKenna, 83 |ing the Natlonal apitul, both for TS| bany 10 feet above normal. ATGincid. yatlon at the | suns who saw their means of livell- |yict both In this State and in Rhode| Following a conference with Presi. | heavy to retain the post. Serving eera Sl widow of Bernard McKenna, | motorist svho wishes £o 8ICD Bors SBEC—Property damnge of | jield. o ool at Kelly [hood swept away by turbulent floods. | jyland, was also rising, and aiready | dent Coolidge today Senator King of |also in the capacity of the assocla. Font Office. Department emplove., was | e, ane who plavs to kD Wousl, | several millions of dullars reported | {5 'tha GordonBeanett Tnt FIOm EVeRvRacHon of 2w ; siGerable hardship o | {"tah, ranking Democrat on the Sen- | tion's general counsel, Mr. Jackson Bt s injured by a motor truck driven |, ~Tlio need 1s quite obiohe, DEER| from castern townships, where |1 alioon Rice st vear. held at | har sarde. power planta and ofher en | Cictories and home owners along its | ate District committee, at the White | was frequently heard before Govern: b Harry Berenter. 23 years o, of | [N (e (YL, IR SRS | crops were destroved and timber | Sniwerp, Belgium, Capi. Grav. Tepr D L T L R convinced that the Presl-| ment tribunals Here. He sorved as 909 Kansas avenue, near the intersec- | (W0 e B 5 ey : ail service para- | oy o o ses which had been caught b | News from Malne indicated e | dent is favorably inclined toward a |president for seven years. B K enth and Euclid streets | °tic and cultural intereal, the Ratlonal | jyzed, Governor General and Lady | jor, i the Awmy Alr Corps, won |by the swirling streams. Rhods 18 |, ne storm was being felt along the | consolidation of the street railways of | He appealed to the Ameriean Battls ion el i amd | Capital has been far Lehind other ¢ oD e e ey cond when he covered 'a dis- | land alone reported 5,000 thrown ont | oo i@ SUOUE SRS CHEE 10T A st | e District of Columbia o e Featerday aCerooon. o and ao re- |Ics 1 reapect tol directional when bgdge at Kinsey was o 9 Kilometers, of employment in that State by oicoaniiie s \he ahors, and constwine| e Tiiat Benstey ooriained that It | e o Nty (o feft arm were fractured and she v |jpe result, as pointed out, I : 2 Y swollen mill rivers. ; e Ny Yok ah Senator explained that it | cranite_used in the monuments to ceived other injuries, dying at Garfleld | "% Ot e nience, embarrass- ashed away 90 minutes after % = boats from Rockland to New York|was not his intention to commit the | World War dead. He was keenly in- Hospital early this morning. ;“’_m and delay both for the visitor their ¢ Montreal train had Alcohol can he madae from ethylene Like Mississippi Scenes. hugged shelter, President on the subject, but said t {erested in having the Federal Gov. ;":fio l',e”r;:"ll i D o) wharse of reck.| But Washington's very mrmnai« in| regions showed scenes like thos nd, Maine railroads were heavy | joct ag it applied to the Boston street | frge building program mnow under ot Mol ter sk it i ST VR 1 OG OF JAPANESE FISHING SHIP | b s i | . " sl TR St Pl T 0 ! | e R IR e 1 el e Ay alt in a more effec solu- | ion, houses and barns, or what re- 5 e 1, which extends into : oo 93 g im. Mrs. McKenna made her Bome | /oY ok ave he o o8 themiae G abe thie Mame Gonttal, Siues ubject as it might ap- | peared from time to time before the o the residence of Mrs, Daniel Doody, | Hion than weuld lave Dect, BOeL TE e aine. wters, Bibia Toniendy | ew Hampshite:and Vermont, feport: | ply (o the Capital. 1t the Sena- | Tariff Commission, seking to have the 29 Eucl s y VoI paon o ) A, b 2 ed 100 washouts and landslides, $ apink i b : S St 4 259 Euclid strest. = = ind in Mrs, | ¥iously. ‘The best thought of the en- LLS TALE OF SLOW STAR v ATION | changed into lakes, bursted dams with | “lon (e face of early reports, New B Solilop (hat the ,’,;s\fd‘;,",t‘.u'\l,‘fl ‘{‘I:‘I‘;m‘r;'“;“:‘,"“‘l ofi the importation of message-on a card found in Mrs. |, "0 ig ayailable now, and from | gaping breaches, State roads trace- | prammenive s d to have aned > ath e R S ¢ . McKenna's purse a means of |5 G ubtedly will arise a system of S e Ghla only hy the tans of ahandones | Lollebite seemicd U8 L | nian of unlfication of onnehiD | M dackson ves A Canidien D denttying e, e iformation hat |mArking that will be a credit to Wash- 2 augomobiles. raflroad embankments | 1o yrnne Y U D I anecticut RIVEF | oo s i S Sealy £5 the prii | ath, Having been omm I o Ver- r name and the PEnsLiL 4t | oton and a blessing to the stran B w hd Ah W h' juried to the steel and oftentimes ! s % ; : L er T, - te Do Was'a Romag Catholic. 1t re- |Ington and a blessing to the strancot| Jioat Vvashe shore 1n ashi1ngton | inmearing entively " beneath ihe |there was little deviation from the \ciple of consideration. mont when' a_young boy. with quested, in case of accident, that a | ‘n° : e . ) oIS towiis I which atrestq | amiliar story, except that no lari King to Push Merger. father, establizning his stitus s an i . e, 27 ebb ave 0 E ! 3 e, etamo! e : odsville, 5 5 : versity i fiam McCready, b a ns to an | mewamorphosed into boatmen. i oodeville; however, held potential | SSRICE (e [5kat eraction companies | OF the Univeralty of Vermont and lo corne 95th street, New York City, | «rn addition to i : ¢ 7 oW t E i Soted ible | corner of 19bthatice ¥ In addition to its utility, ti From Windsor, Vt, came news that | (A5 ' and his family. whose [sliould be effected as soon as possible | {105 haing admitted to the bar tion will_have harmony in that the Lived 66 D With closa o 1,000 persons were homeloss | i and nis tamily, whose |0 be o ete Inten in 1595, | a to Kevitt will conduct an in-| fong il be artistic in design and 1ve ays 1ithout Iood. | 'and the town was under military con. [home was surrounded B ever. | e (he coming session in the in.| Shortly thereafter. He was State Kiaviral othet Arime Wosidenty wire | CUTOROL lIEhinens gl Ay e I e e 1 e cHedlitin heen in vain. this about. He will insist that the | i o Trouse of Representatives from 5 it s Ll be suspended from lamp posts will y " 3 AR Rniavi i e oo i | necticut River had r us situation obtainad tem- | dlan for consolidation should be along 1906 to 1907, S it Salarel | Eert| e SIALECAL i, oo MIEDS (Ean ¥ November | (dried pean say T O BeY0L0t [ DY Tl s ¢ in the valley of the Pemige. | Feasonable lines, at least to the extent | "o was a_member of the railroad a possible skuii | "o EUAran A AAE r today published anuary 4—Praise be to Kompira!| the inhabitants, the water supply 2 River between Tiristol and th ”‘,“l',’f"'”{,,'.mf' e e ito i 90608, and of the Pubiic pcked down near the 16 seciouk Nek: 5 + copywrighted translation of the lag of | 116 has sant us rain, We gathor 1t in | sried and the town was without & |Erankiin. = whare ~massengers had)cd and that the StockRolcers See BES: | service '€ don from 1905-13. Tn N Gamanenet RhIEE otna s and shall hoard it as 4 miser | drinking sup warned the farmers to seck places |{ected and that the properiy F&AtS 07 1924 osen president cf the E Japa S g £n rds his gold. Richfo 'l was literally eut in two of safety in the belief ths the bi; o interested railway companies are Vermont ssociation and was s in trade and elvic niza- | which drifted s and helplessly y shipt A s Uchlord W o idoe was swept [9Am of the New tampshire Utllity [observed. i . lelected lieutenant governor in that and they nre enthusis 55 the Pacific while members of ) e ol n o big steel bridge was swept [ Sleht cive way. He stajed that if the Public Utilities | Siccted lieutcnant soveraer it G the steps that hav 0 ity crew died one by one after months | a steamer, We build a fire, wo wity N ] b ot et A £ ; Commizshin_submits the plan of ‘con-}oe pythiins, emedy Jhe situation, thelt | o0 [rore 1o keep starvation awa e shout, we dance. But, 6 Kompira, | ailway Bridee and sped 1000.000 feet | - s e l:l"“"‘ el e B o s e he pian | M. Jackson has a wife and on has been far hehind the he dairy, ¥ by 8 va | The stranger docs not see us and iz|of jumher downstream. o e e A eed thes | does ‘not embody these iens ‘e wil | Sone: He isa brother of £ e wystem to guide | Ut his death = 5 | bone. Alas, again we are drifting, we | At the Connecticut | Went out. Lut ensincers deckived (B 1 vaft a merger bill of his own. It fs | 500 42 . er of the Burlir guests 1o points of interest us well A . told how the | KNOW not whither, O Kompira, are | River ascading over apower | el et «1:'”14*(!."::;\?;.‘_ has: pasied (G0 RTCSE of (e R Seuator itiat i :‘, '""::“R'nw n"'l';,'lf;',‘,';"[n',’,‘,;"', 0 streets connecting wit aln | s e Yoko- ary o feab, driven Lo sues oo e : Ly ‘]“ 0 ruary 13—Sickness 1 upon us. |y wecond, and the city was without banker, and of Dr. J. Holmes Jack : : ! ana, De 5, 1426, for a short| Hatuzo Terada has lain in his bunk | jight, power or railway service, us the son, former m yenrs ol fon of E, i, president of | 4 pe el 2 . . Wk thler 1681 ;. i ol 3 i astaont of bidliing men. A week past five days and is wasting | ejeetiie plant shut down to save its more <o than omal Fourteenth and 8 | 180 L 0™ learly recogniz the {1l e you without mercy? b ) Me fee ! : yoi out mercy dam at the rate of 100,000 cubie feet . 5 ed the brunt | the interests of the public of the Dis- ; fecims 1= [ frict will no doubt be served better after sfterts vol- | by unification of ownership and there | e e bralis: duat: G et ume of water of the Connecticut It i< no doubt in his mind but what the i 5 : 2 ; e A generators, swalion Be see (bt s b action companies by merging can dlary of the dea 3 goes arch 5—Today at breakfast time wollen by its tributaries, was | 3 . L | diary of the death ve then goes | e o Tood Food Hoarding Charged. down toward Long Island Souvd. « te more economically and show | , Reported cen inhospitable to the thousands | on i i . i e Hartforl saw a rise from nor sonable profits. | Lack of Amphibian Planes Reported siried dniiries e | e S ecemiar piWiich S westetily First Died March 9. Food hoarding had started at e : | i ¥ this morni et AULODIB- | ol oite UE ICaraAt e 8 Graham, | winds Dlowing day after dav| “March 9—Denjiro Hosai (his day |lows Falls, and an unconfifned teport | n Boston. e Where other cities hs b vers | Dreie n to taik of taking |died of illness. (He was the first ot | from the same place said that the en- Old M ]‘1 SORTON Neianter 5 (= Fidns Sl Tl el e Attt |ty cfated crewr to. periaiy tire town of Ludiow had been aban-| Bones of 10,000-Y ear-~ ammot o o Busion &0 1 we have heen v not be called upon to suffc “March There being no wind | doned by townspeople, who fled to the inspect the New England flood area e { 100 much hardship, especially the men { we repaired the sails. Sutejiro Izawa | hills. Ludlow is the home of Attor- H d F d b N M . E l mapeet e tvom Dresident Coallige o of anything | With wives and chiidren? 1 believe the | (the chronicler) died. (On this date ney General John G. Sargent and is er oun y New Mexico Lxplorers| i duyed at the Army headquar. ize Is the. visitor 1nft worrying very much. | Mitsumoto began keeping t 3| not far from Plymouth, the Vermont ters here today owing to the lack of under szly in his quest for | thing might have been April 19—Yoshishiro Udehira, home of President Coolidg e N amphibian machines which the Army es which attract him. The pro.|~0 fted. Words of the ancients say | Was ill, died Jin the forenoon. (le North Walpole, N. H., across the| o the Associated Press. mouth of a small creek, the party pro- | fiyers believed would be necessary in on a het. | the sins of the fathers are rested upon | the tenh of the crew io die, |river from Bellows Falls, was under | TA@ QUGN B o | Ceeded along the windings of the|case of a forced descent. An amphib- 4 o ving only the captain and Matsu- | 17 feet of water. . covery of the bones of a large hard of |<tream and found fragments of a mas. |ian plane at Mitchel Fleld, Long Is- arried out T Nynite X Juheuolt Sam et e e w bone. land, was expected to fly here later in i Day Praying. April 20—Pralse Kompira, It has | tinued rise in (he waters of the White [ maminoths that had “bogged down™ [SIN8 SO BORE 00 o0 00 L 3 Decomber H—Trom motning ‘to| iaed. We have water agsin. River, which had already shot up 30{in a salt creek in the desert wastes| ECCUIE BEE B A o ispateh the airplanes availabl. at the REcube A Reom mtening ) fll I could not|feet fn 12 hours. claimed three lives, |near the Carlshad Cavern of New|(id' we saw tusks and many huge | Army airport this morning were land mber cad 5 S Sl troyed four hridses and Wrough! | ypogieo mops than 10,000 years ago,|hones, exposed by torrents that had |machines and the flying officers feared sl I ol #Ma 4 o Miki becgme of approximately SLI00000 | o S0 t0q today in a dispateh to the |cut throush the gravel bars and clay |these planes would be of little value The Star {east, We have - _|in the town of Hurtford, of which PSR e ot o e e et ot bt v |in the fluoded district should they be iihe St TR T e e New York Times, from Carl B. Living- | banks. Apparently a herd of 25 or e s 1o the | 4i1 and head for us and both so 1l The ship is now | The railroad hridee over the White |5lon. assistant v Willis T. Lee of the |3t mammoths had died in this one P';l{'; ‘m*‘;rl:":‘_‘;““;"hng places avail ng attention | “Decem it N ul .\ ¢ n vunning with no one at the whe i \died by & train of coal| Nittional G shie Soclety spot. w s a vers do not draw pity from o Miy. ILchuty Wi R B e o g ol e society’s explorers, Livingston| Evidently all these animals during |able in the Green Mountain region O Kompiva (Japanese sailors’ | Qb v v & 5 4 «aid, had suspected that mammoths |ages past had been lured there by the under normal conditions and with v hip adrift with rolled-u i would serve us an ap- 1 i R it ok water: | most of the low ground flooded the is|aviators believed there would be little s knocke 11t So RGN . e Dity ot us or. we shall throw am suffering of the captuin's tliness.” gy 8 nad once lived in the de: ant cont L |2 thy churms, No—no—no—. | (This is the last entry in the log | s miles southeast of the Car av-|Mr. Livingston continued. “It Incatianine o % FEvery one|let us not think of such heresy. |sritten by Matsumoto. His body witn Rutland Suffers Heavily. crn, be ivory beads been [cqually easy to surmise how they met | Chance for planes to land and take-oft il B v\‘”::‘rn;f‘; i 1"." u\xmnm.;' :I'n:n_’m Please pity us und forgive us. For 13| that of the captain and the whiten- | Rutland was another Vermont city [found among the relics of cavemen | their deaths. We were walking along again. NRariatk, 1100 ARG ATULAHE RN Orue e o s i ity s iR uoPe Wa, Have wlrifteq ing Gones of the others, was found |to suffer a staggering loss in property, [ who buried their dead in cave tombs [over what seemed a dry crust in the sebeid s Gl i and his Hght leg fractured. 3le was|hcen forced 1o gre e e iy anout Sanu ] h\’ v"\gl-u' Inl.. .‘.’. in the eabin of the ship when it|#nd it counted, beside, two dead, with |in the Guadalupe Mountains, over- |stream bed—-then suddenly, down we| Dishonesty costs the people of the I ; i A o il 5 o 15ho- e celebrated | drifted up on the Washington coast, the possibility thie this might be in-llooking the region. went, hip deep in quicksand and soft United States §3,000,000,000 a yea treated at Lmergency Hospitpl I the tourist i given simplo directions this day by mixing ricAnd red beans |a few dats ngo.) = Creaed a8 outkpE districts were Picking up & mammoth tooth at the |clay,t stolen goods. e 4.

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