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2 = THIEF 1S SURPRISED, BUT MAKES ESGAPE _Burglar Threatens J. G. Darby After Looting House. Hesse Spurs Police. Awakened by a noise in his room early this morning, J. Gardner Darby, 8510 Macomb street, assistant cashier of a bank at Rockville, Md., got out | ©f bed and followed a bury to the v to find himself covered ht from below and warned it he would be killed if he made tanother move. While the burglar, believed to be the same man who shot Comdr. Lucius | \W. Johnson, U. S. N., when surprised In his home, 3303 Thirty-fifth street, tly Friday morning, made good his scape, Mr. Darby reached a phone and summoned police from the four- iesuth precinet. The burglar, who is believed to have entered the house by means of a duplicate key used in a kitchen door, made his way upst to the room where Mr. and Mrs. Darby were sleeping and took $1 from Mr. Darby’s trousers. When he dropped a small purse belonging to DMirs. Darby her husband was aroused. Schofield Ho Looted. The Darby burglary came on the heels of a report to police that an in- truder bad entered a home two blocks away, that of Rear Admiral Frank H. Schofield, U. S. N., at 3235 Macomb street, during the absence of the fam- 1ly and ransacked the house Saturday night or early yesterday morning. Helen Morrison, colored maid, who Giscovered the robbery when she went to open the house yesterday morning, was unable to ascertain what was missing. \ third home in the same section 1s believed to have-been the objective of the intruder about 1:30 yesterday morning, when the occupanis of the house of Frank S. Gardner, 3508 Ka- nawha street, heard attempts being made to gain entrance by tampering with a rear door. A light turned on in the house frightened the stranger Aroused by these reports concern- ing the operation of a burglar to the north and west of Rock Creek, Maj. Edwin B. Hesse, superintendent of police, issued this order to police: especially on the alert in the outlying precincts for the ‘night prowler’ now operating in No. 14 precinct. The capture of this man will be consid- ered especially creditable and official recognition will be given the man or men capturing him.” ‘While police were turning their at- tention to this series of robberies, other Washingtonians reported the loss of articles to the officials. Apartment Robbed. M. C. McGinley, apartment 201, 2501 Calv street, appealed to the police to investigate a theft committed in his apartment between 9 o'clock Sat- urday night and 2 o'clock Sund: morning. Jewelry valued at $380 w stolen. Miss Dorothy Donnelly, 1806 Monroe street, reported a burglary commit- ted between 1 and 8 o'clock yesterday morning. Entrance to her home was gained by jimmying the pantry win- dow, she stated, and three $5 bills and some small change stolen. John J. Sheehan, apartment 104, 55 M street, rportd a visit from bur- glars paid his apartment Saturday night. The intruder stole clothing valued at §$125. Forcing a rear window, burglars gained entrance to the office of the unders System of automobile hirin, 628 Pennsylvania avenue, late Satur- day night or early yesterday morning, 'and stole $65 from the cash register. Joseph Scher, 2901 M street, reports his tailor shop was entered Saturday night_and robbed of clothing valued at_$35. Lewis Harris, 624 North Capitol street, was assaulted and robbed by two unidentified men while in Neal place near Cross alley northeast, early last night. His assailants, he reported, relieved him of $60. Oscar Klibe, 925 New York avenue, ‘was relieved of $62 last night while in a local theater. He suspects an un- identified man of having taken the money from his pocket. CODLIDGE IS SEEN AS PARTY'S CHOICE Ludlow Claims Political Mas- ters Will Name President Unless He Refuses. By the Associated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, November T.— Louis Ludlow, president of the Na- tional Press Club, and a Washington correspondent, helieves President Cool- idge will be renominated unless he is- sues another statement positively for- bidding the use of his mame. Mr. Ludlow spoke today before the Wom- en’s Press Club of Indiana. “The master politicians of the Re- publican party already have picked the next Republican presidential can- didate. They have chosen Calvin Cool- idge,” he said. “There may not be a hard and fast understanding among the master politicians, but they are driving ahead with a common inspira- tion and a common purpose. “Thelr plan is to fill the convention with a Jarge number of uninstructed delegates, and with delegates instruct- ed for favorite sons. This combined mass of delegates is to be held for delivery to Coolidge. The plan con- templates that, as far as possible, all delegates shall be sent to the conven- tion uninstructed, but wherever an active presidential candidate invades, or threatens to invade, a State the yuaster politicians who are supporting Coolidge will bring out a favori of that State who will hold the legation intact until such time as Jolidge’s name i sprung In the con- ~vention, when the delegation will flup to Coolidg “The actl of the rival aspir- the Rtepublican presidential on will subside when they U there I3 no ¢ @ politi- te to be admin 1. The 4 . it Coolldke a8 wurely as to unless—mark this word he taken himuelt out of it by a poxit} stement. that he will not accept If numinated.” MEETING RAIDED. 'Tokio Police Break Up Demonstra- tion of Labor Party. ‘TOKIO, Japan, November 7 (#) — All open-air meetings and demonstra- tions were banned in Toklo today, morrow s ‘unless,” HOMES AND BARNS FLOAT ON WATER Crew of Photographic Plane Graphically Describes Flood Conditions. BY C. B. ALLEN. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, November 7.—Our plane in which we ie a tour of gland flood area took off 1d, Long Island, at fter the pilot, Bill Winslow two mechanics | had spent the better part of two hours starting a motor that did not take kindly to the idea of working so early on Sunday. A bit of hot water in ics ation finally made it cough into action and a few minutes saw it purr- ing_sweetly. Winslow headed northeast. weather at Curtiss Field w although a gusty wind was just be- ginning to rise, and one of the ground men had predicted ideal conditions all the way. He was even more posi- tive when told the New York Weath- er Bureau's prophecy night had been for ¢ 8 mont and eastern New Y . with probahle rain squalls or snow flurries. “That clinches it.” he said; “if they said it would Le bad it’s bound to be good.” Despite a northwest w Bridgeport, Conn., at § Housatonfc at Darby Junction and saw New Haven 5 or 10 miles at our right 15 minutes later. The country became more rugged; Mount Carmel slipped by on the east and a little later we picked up Meriden by two adjacent peaks, Cathole Moun. tain and West Peak. Discomforts forgotten. Discomforts were forgotten as the Connecticut, a strangely distorted and far-spread river, hiove into sight ahead. Trees appeared to be growing in the middle of the stream with here and there houses, barns and other outbuild- ings. Here we dropped down to with- in 50 feet of the buildings. As the plane came closer we saw that the houses were second-story deep in the muddy gray water, sluggish and seemingly with little direction or current here because of the wide area it had overrun. Our map and watch informed us that this was Cromwell, Conn., at 9:05. A larger town down river claimed our attention, and we surveyed it at heights of 50 to 500 feet. It proved to be Middletown, and on the way to look it over we spied a wagon bridge strangely awry on its plers as the water lapped its floorings, and rising in grotesque isolation because the flood hid for hundreds of yards on either side the road it was wont to serve, Summer cottages, outlying dwelling houses and riverside factories in Mid- dletown were cut off from dry land by the flood, but appeared to stand solidly on their foundations in the slow-mov- ing water despite their half-submer- sion. The bridges across the normal bed of the river between Middletown y|and Portland were intact, but the muddy-gray of the pilers. Northward along the winding course of the Connecticut, Summer cottages marked the otherwies obliterated river banks, their eaves barely above the surface in many places and their win- dow-tops giving them the appearance of hippopotamuses in some vast pool With only their nostrils and broad fore- heads peeping out of the water. Great tobacco barns, their contents ruined, spotted the flooded fields in grim eco- nomic tragedy. Farm houses every- where seemed cut off from the rest of the world by great sheets of muddy water. Thus we flew on to Hartford. Water Covers Airport. Here, at 9:20, we located the Hart- ford Airport, headquarters of the Con- necticut National Guard Air Service, by a bravely fluttering wind cone on the hangar roof. A fine field it would have made—for ducks! The runways were covered with 10 to 15 feet of the Stuff that boats run on. Only the roofs of the hangars and the faithful cone, indicating the wind direction for any one who cared to land, were above the greedy flood. Hartford itself was an aquatic eity wherever its buildings stood on land only a little higher than the river banks, but here, as at most other cities along the Connecticut, factories, warehouses and the paorer class of residence$ seemed to have been the chief sufferers, the main part of the city being on high enough ground to 80 ‘unscatched. All through this region the river's breadth, because it had gone entirely out of bounds, varied from 2 to 5 miles. waAlfld o:éc):l J:lew h.pec;u:h Winslow nd the plane dow. SOAt:e!’ sost the -‘n’xr!ace. S e E we were over Windsor, Conn., and found the river still fflisl‘?ll;' well contained between its high banks but rushing along at tremendous speed. A railroad bridge which was almost awash, seemed to be still firm- ly on its plers, but washouts further up and down the river rendered this of no immediate consequence. A wagon bridge was being used by au- tomobiles, but the road leading from it ran for less than a mile before it became a sunken road, and the baffled z-:;grlsu stopped at the edge of the flood was at the very tops Fly Over Springfleld. Thus we passed Into Massachusetts and on to Springfield, where again we found the municipal airport a sight to please only ducks or flying hoats, In the door of one half-submerged hangar as Winslow dipped low and pointed, we saw a plane with only its top wing above the surface, a me- chanical bird that had not flown to safery. Springfleld itself was com- fortably above water, but its factories were flooded and many of its ware- houses and outlying residences of poorer type surrounded and halt filled by water. The Eastern States expo- sition grounds in west Springfield were distinguishable only by the grandstands and other buildings which projected above the flood. ere, as we circled low t any refugees who might havo hoo caught on top of their houses, we saw a boat rowlng toward dry ground from a group of buildings, and led by a halter behind it and snorting with indignation but swimming well a gray cart horse which evidently had been rescued from his stable, To the west as we passed Winslow nointed out the ewollen Westfield J\;Ixy:f;&;afise 9L most of the dumage to & eld whean it w; “‘"':"““""R r('!ler\'ulr.a' Homstbye We passed over Chicopee and Hol- voke, noting a dam at the latter place g scemed to be holding its own nst the river, though taking a lot of punishrgent. We were still flving at low altitude and missing nothing, 0 that when Winslow pointed the plane through a narrow gap in the Holyoke range we came out suddenly on a wide valley, which first seemed a lake. Northampton, Mass., and 10 o'clock, Water Covers 10 Miles. Here the countryside was flooded to a width of 10 miles, with countless tobucco barns standing in wet and ruined isolation, and here and there a fleld in which yellow piles of corn were visible in the muddy water thinly cov- after police arrested 27 persons yes- terday and broke up a meeting held under auspices of the left wing of the Labor party. to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the bolshevik revolution. Six . alleged reactionaries raided headquarters of the Peasant Labor party smashed tmi%yro and de- ering everything. In Northampton a flooded race track, guessed only by the grandstand and a double oval of post tops sticking out of the water. Another boat rowing out to a farm- house from a road on slightly higher ground. | Greenfleld next at 10:15 and Tur- s, a flood-glorified version of #he veal WaiRs AR apray shootins 50 Top—Wrecked mill of the Babbitt Paper Co. at Bellows Falls, Vt. Second from top—Trolley bridge and new highway bridge at Rutland, Vt., which were completely demolished. Third row—At left, the flood waters of the Connecticut River rushing through the new $2,000,000 hydro- electric plant at Bellows Falls, Vt.; at right: the swollen Winooski River sweeping through one of the mills at Burlington, Vt. Bottom—Main street in Beckett, Mass., after the water had mlx,hsldetl, showing wreckage scattered about. to 100 feet in the alr from the mad current of the stream. Then North- feld and the Vermont border slip by, with possibly a little more driftwood than before caught in the trees along the fringes of the river, so that we know the crest of the flood has passed. At many of the little places we pa wagon bridges and even a hundred vards or s0 of road are missing, but these are almost commonplace Now. Brattlehoro comes into sight and one of the first things wo see is that the center section of a three:span wagon afd railroad bridge has been cleaned out by the flood. A frame house, flat- tened by the force of the flood, has jimmed against one of the remaining spans. Avoiding a mountain on the right, Winslow dived for a close-up of Bel- lows Falls, the next town of any size after Brattleboro, pointing to a raging torrent where there had been two bridges. Tho flood spared two other spans in the same town, but ahove Bellows Falls we saw the best sample of the day of what a flood can do. Bridge Knocked Down. A covered bridge on the Willlams River which had been knocked from its pier at the one end was the next thing we saw, A few minutes later in the hills at Clearmont Junc Winslow picked up the first dry land rport we had found, a little emer- ‘ney field which he roted on his map. It was snowing or raining on the distant mountains to our left and -, and Winslow was still shaking his head at these signs. We passed Ascutney Mountain at 11 o’clock and saw that the big peak's head was swathed in clouds. At Windsor, which we found as wet as the other river towns over which we had passed, but with the water receded a little farther, our ship Swung away from the Connecticut and began fol- lowing the White River up into the hills beyond which lies Montpelier. Here the water had no chance to spread in wide valleys and as a result caused more damage in proportion. bridges were missing or i t,” as our pilot put it A heavy rainstor was moving down on Montpelier from the held a hasty conferen Winslow sald, that we would never away from Montpelier that day if we lai.ied there to make pictures and got caught by the rain. Why not make $befl on the wing? WPM indged! THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. RAMBUNT NEWE PROTE Bower shot plate after plate as Win- slow banked and turned over the wrecked bridges in_Montpelier and ths garage from which automobiles were spilled upside down and every other way by the flood which came d.wn with cloudburst fury on the little town. Scores of men were visl- ble cleaning up the wreckage, but they were not too busy to wave & friendly greeting. We shot our last picture and headed back just as thy first flurry of raindrops caught us. Snow Is Encountered. The weather that had been follow- ing us and causing Winslow so much headshaking began to close in with a vengeance on the return trip, We had planned to follow a different route home, coming by way of Rutland, Vt., for a possible new series of plctures on the flood damage in this region. Winslow flew through a few slight showers and then, sighting a heavy rain ahead on the course by which he had come, attempted to take up the Rutland route by crossing a low spot in the rugged mountain divide be- tween the two. We flew over Turners Falls and took some “shots Kor the most part, however, Winslow headed for home, taking advantage of a slight wind that followed and paying little attention to the r T, ‘e wind was fearfully gusty and treacherous, o that the plane pitched and tossed like a chip on the waves and all of the pilot's skill was needed to keep it on a reasonably even keel. Now and then he weuld find a level 84 Which the air seemed smoother, but only for a little while, the wind seem- ing perversely to follow and annoy us. At last, however, Long Island Sound was reached and crossed and a land- ing made at Curtlss Field at 240 p.m. SNOW INTENSIFIES FLOOD SUFFERING; DEAD EXCEED 150 (Continued from First Page.) viver's rage, with the water nearly 30 feet above normal. Hundreds of aban- doned homes dotted the low, water- covered meadows of East Hartford. All of Hartford’s lower East Side, from the rallroad tracks at the foot of State street west to Front street, and south to the foot of Potter street was a swirling sea of water. In Windsor, at the junction of the Farmington and Connecticut Rivers, 500 students at the Loomis Institute athered about open fireplaces in their dormitories, when the power plant at that establishment was put out of commfssion. Middletown in Darkness. Middletown was in darkness all night, while the waters drove families to the top floors of their homes along the river front. M&lu“"n&‘dfilflo«d'fl . MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1927. progress in Connecticut, the damage ran into milllons. Small factorfes and mills along the river were hard hit. In Hartford, estimates placed the damage at well over $500,000. TWIN CITIES IN DISTRESS Need in Duxbury and North Duxbury Called Acute. WATERBURY, Vt, November 7 (#).—The little twin communities of Duxbury and North Duxbury were in critical need today, _ thelr 200 or more inhabitants having been without food nearly three days and because of their isolation they had been overlooked in the rescue work. All means of reaching the outside world was cut off when the bridge across the Winooski River was car- ried away in the first day of the flood. Only yesterday persons in the out- skirts of Waterbury noticed men wav- ing their coats on the other shore. The stream is fully 200 feet wide still, and of treacherous swiftness, but with megaphones the plight of the residents of the little communities, largely the familles of workers in the talc mines, was learned. Rescue work was begun at once. With much difficulty a light line was floated’ across the river, a heavier one pulled over and with that a steel cable was stretched from one side to the other. Lloyd Squire, as- sigtant editor of the Waterbury Req the VERDICT IS UPHELD IN“PADLOCK" CASE Harry Maynard Loses Appeali From Punishment on Contempt Charge. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals, in an opinion by Justice Josiah A. Van Orsdel today, upheld the right of the District Supreme Court to punish for contempt of a “padlock” injunction without refer- ring the matter to & jury. The court ained a sentence of one vear in| uil and a fine of $1,000 imposed on Harry Maynard, who conducted the Maple Inn Cafeteria, 1416 K street, and who was convicted of selling in- toxicants in February and March, after the court had laid an in- junction on him under the provisions of the national prohibition act. Counsel for the accused claimed that the denial of his motion for a jury trial amounted to a deprivation of the rights of his client. The court. however, points out that there is no provision for a jury trial under the section of the prohibition act, and a defendant in_a contempt case is not entitled to trial by jury except where such a right is expressly reserved by statute. In the absence of such stat- utory restriction, the court finds, there is no deprivation of any coi stitutional right in subjecting him to trial by the court. “The power of the court to punish summarily for disobedienc i Justice Van Orsdel, “of its injunctive orders, issued under the provisions of section 24 of the national prohibition act, is not_limited by or dependent upon the limitations found in the Clayton act. Authority is derived from the general statute relating to contempt proceedings in the Federal courts.” The court also sustained the search warrant in the case, declaring it is difficult to find a case where the evi- dence of the existence and the sale of liquor on the premises is more posi- tive. “It is simply the usual ordinary case of belng caught with the goods on,” concluded the court. o DRIVER IS KILLED BY RUNAWAY TRUCK Roy L. Twenty of Frederick County, Md., Found Crushed Be- tween Milk Car and Wall. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE. Md., November 7.— Roy L. Twenty, 25 years cld, driver of a dairy truck, on his way to Wash- ington from Frederick County, Md. with 900 gallons of milk, early today was killed when the truck ran through a guard rail across Seneca Creek and crashed into a stome wall south of Clarksburg, Md. His body was pinned against the wall by a tank of milk, which was hurled through the front of the truck by the impact. It is believed the man lost control as the truck was rounding a curve just before reaching the creek. He was dead when found by motor- ists. Police Chief Moxley and Serst Guy Jones investigated and decided that an inquest was unnecessary. The man leaves a wife and was the son of John Twenty of Frederick. RED CROSS PLANS WORK IN FLOOD AREA An extensive reconstruction pro- k] C.P.TAFT CALLS "' CURE FOR CRINGE President and Mrs. Coolidge, Together With Chief Jus- tice, Hear Address. Character building, with a religious foundation, fied in the Young Men i i the best L3 possible 2d, cluding Preside zathered {or the * the local Y. M. C. A. ton Auditorium root of the evil, active steps to improv ment of Such or . are proving to be adequate # remedy for social conditions con- ducive to crime, the speaker stated. Parents Hear Address, Chief Justi and Mrs. Taft a box with Pr dent an p - idge. 1t the first time the C Justice had heard his son make lic speech, and although he 1 from applauding, his face radiated & proud paternal smile throughout the :;‘ddn;sv. Mrs. Taft could not restrain er impulse to c¢la now il P no and then, More than a score of for i s oreign diplo- mats and a number of ecab et Il\:lfl' lers occupied boxes for the celebra. tion, in which large delegat many of the city's civic, 1 ional and religious organizati cation sious organizations The yotnger ing attorney v an Taft. who is prosecut- ing f Cincinnati and a mem- ber 2L the National Council of the - M. C. A, pointed out that he first hecame acquainted with the While he was living at the White House. At that time, a mere hoy, he ardently desired to learn to swim, he said, so he joined the hoys' depart. ment of the local association. His in- terest in the organization grew from thl: Hq\nrnn, he declared. Mr. Taft told of the great expan- ?l)rlnr:‘ o tlhndl'. M. ;: A, movement in oreign lands, wit xce (oreicn the exception of Denies Bolshevist Doctrines. Vigorously denying “a report that the Y. M. C. A. is fostering bolshevi tic doctrines,” he asserted that the, bolshevists . “hate” the organization® and have prevented establishment of any associations in Russia. It is impossible, he said, for the Y M. C. A. to be friendly to an organization th; destroys the ties of home and for- bids religious instruction to children, Russia is antagonistic to the Y. M. C. A. because of what the organiza- tion has done for China, the speaker stated. There are four hundred Y. M. C. A. secretaries in China, he said. Y. M. C. A, camps in the Balkans have upset tradition and done what previously was declared to be impos- ble—developed a friendly relation between the various races—Mr. Taft asserted. The Y. M, C. A. fs an important adjunct to “the church, he said. Churches which have built their own gymnasiums and swimming pools in competition with the Y. M. C. A. have found that they “have white elephants on their hands,” Mr. Taft declared. Such projects require close super- » vision by experts, and churches are unable to provide this, he explained. Hugh A. Thrift, president of the local Y. M. C. A., in introducing Mr. Taft, disclosed plans of the association to seek the erection of four new build- ings in Washington. The buildings will cost, in some cases, as much as $450,000, he said. An endowment fund ¢ also is needed, he added. Mr. Thrift sketched brieflly the history of the Y. M. C. A, here and predicted a de- velopment during the next 25 years equal to that of the past 75 years. ‘William Knowles Cooper, genargl secretary of the local “Y,” read a gram will be conducted by the Amer- ican Red Cross for benefit of the New England flood victims. The organization made plans today for rehabilitation work, and it was said that as soon as the waters had subsided to a point where permanent relief could be undertaken, the Red Cross would See that all the commu- nitles affected by the disaster were placed on their feet. Although Red Cross officials said it was impossible at this time to de- termine what would be the necessary type of assistance to be extended, the reconstruction program probably will include such items as the rebuilding and repairing of dwellings, the re- placing of household goods, the fur- nishing of clothing and the providing of live stock and farm implements. The rehabilitation will be flnanced entirely from the national treasury of the Red Cross and such voluntary contributions as come in. It was emphasized that no speclal appeal for tunds will be made. RITES FOR MRS. McKENNA. Funeral Held Today for Victim of Traffic Mishap. Funeral services for Mrs. J. C. Mc- Kenna, 83 years old, who was fatally hurt Friday night by a motor vehicle driven by Harry Berenter, 3909 Kansas avenue at Fleventh and Euclid streets, were conducted in St. Paul's Church this morning at 9:30 o'clock. Interment was in New Cathe- dral Cemetery, Baltimore, where the body of her husband, Bernard Me- Kenna, is interred. An inquest con- ducted at the morgue today by Cononer Nevitt resulted in a verdict of accidental death, exonerating the driver, o MRS. E. S. WAY IS DEAD. Woman, 70, Succumbs at Homeo- pathic Hospital. Mrs. Elizabeth S. Way, 70 years old, 613 Longfellow street, died in Homeo- pathic Hospital yesterday. She is survived by a son, Ellwood J. Way of this city, and two daugh- ters, Mrs. James Mathieson and M Lucile C. Way, both of California. rs. Way was a member of the Uni- versalist National Memorial Chureh, | &) B She was a native of Richland, N. Y. but moved to Minnesota at an early age and had spent the greater part of her life in Minneapolis. Funeral services will be conducted in the chapel of J. Willlam Lee Sons, 332 Pennsylvania avenue, Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. F. E. Perkins will officiate. Interment will be In Glenwood Cemetery. ——— ord, volunteered to make the peri- lous crossing, and hand over hand he swung himselt over the swirling waters. He reached the Duxbury shore, as- certained actual conditions and needs, and then swung back, carrying with him one end of a light rope. Provi- slons were secured from Red Cross headquarters, hung in palls over_the | So¥! steel cable and pulled across to Dux- bury with the light rope. Squire said that he had been told the dead numbered a dozen in Dux- bury and North Duxbury each, and number of congratulptory messaggs, including one from Comdr. Byrd, who, Cooper stated, attributed his excellent physical condition on his North Pole flight to the two years of training he received in the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium here. Other messages were from the National Council of the English Y. M. C. A, the president of the American National Council, the Montreal asso- ciation, which was the first in Amer- ica, and W. H. H. Smith, oldest living member of the Washington associa- tion, who joined in 1862. Egyptian Greetings Read. Mr. Cooper read the following greet- Ing from Minister Mahmoud Samy Pasha of Egypt: “Your institution in Egypt has proved its value, as it does not distinguish between religion, race 4 or natlonality, and is a true brother- hood in every respect. This is a prin- ciple, which, if thoroughly followed, will lead to the peace of the world.” A musical program preceded the speeches. There was an organ re- cital by Miss Edith B. Athey, organist of Hamline M. E. Church, and selec- tions by ths Y. M. C. A. Glee Club, un- der leadership of Louis B. Thompson, and by the Interhigh School Festival Orchestra, under the direction of Lud- wig Manoly. E. N. C. Barnes led the congregational singing. Invocation was pronounced by Rev. Frederick Brown Harris, president of the ~ Washington Federation _ of Churches, and benediction by Rev. Dr. Freeley Rohrer, president of the Ministerial Union. PIMLICO ENTRIES rl“l’:n TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, ST RACE—Pu $1,300 i 3-vear-oids and up: 1 mile and 70 youm Just Folks . Fn\'erm‘:m! Yaon o s il Arist Stanmore’ & SECOND RACE—] $1.300: the Dranl Hill Park: Sryearaide Deposition Kentucky € Miss Hogan . Linger o Imperator s: Goulash *Chicory arm High Hops Outstep *Jamie . Rough Sea " s THIRD RACE—The _Helptul: added: 2-ear olds; 8 furlongs, Not Guilty . b Manuscript ver are 21 cSun Roman' .. aScoteh & 8 Penalo eoeeess Imperator 123 a Sagamor v. bSamuel Ros ¢ entry. ¢ Willis Sharpe Kilmer entry. FOURTH RACE—The Sudbrook Park purse; d-year olds: 1 miles, Fairy M. 111 Festic ... Bonnie 108 Herodian . Fair Star 11 FIFTH RACE—Purse, $1.30¢ 3-year-olds and up: 1 mile and 7 wel sNorth_Breeze *Maxiv: *Franc lowhorn Keydet . SIXTH RACE—Purse, $1.300; claiming; 3-year-olds and up; 1s miles. ‘Trapstock louthbreeze 12 *Middle Tei 17 King O'Neill 1. . Roland 120 SEVENTH RACE—Purse. S$1. Ruxton handicap: all ages: 6 furld that scores were seriously suffering from hunger. What food there had been in the little community had largely been washed away by the flood that destroyed the Watkinson 107 Son of Joh Powhatan 114 Prince of W Sandy 118 Pandera Al 111 80 Glister . Shufla Along. . 105 A 1t 1 . B unds SRR e o