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WEATHER. o ther Bureau Forecast.) d cooler tonight, tomor- (U. Showers an ¢ Foenin The only evening paper in Washington with the Associated Press news row partly cloudy. > Temperatures: Highest, 87, at 3:45 service. pm. yesterday: lowest, 71, at 12:30 am. today’ Full report on page 9. WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION Closing N. Y. Markets, Pages 14 and 15 . 5 e = s oo = e T oA oL ; Y * ) M Associated = ey = = b TN TSDAY INTF 928 —FORTY PA( eans Associate 30797 S WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1__J R I 30,717, jost " om &= — — ~— - | ’ JupGE, DIn | | THE SENATGRS | LAUGH MUCH ‘ WHEN YoU i | y | CRACKED | THATA == | 2 ONE? ”/ -~ | N7 A | i \W {2 i More Than Half of Amount Is | Naselai Beach Chosen for . Expended in Support o y—Hop to Be Made ¥ R:T\:? P.M Cpapital Time | Hoover. AMERICANS TO CONTINUE | ; i ON TRIP TO BRISBANE, | REPORT LISTS EXPENSES ( . Kenny Contracts With City of| Im Praises U. S. Aides for Bring- y , i New York Under Scrutiny ing Big Craft Through Tropi- 1 Storm | of Probers. ca or’ 3 he A T A | Making its final pre-convention re- 3 n PRI | port, the Senate investigating commit- at 3 pm P t Nasclai, 16 tee today listed the campaign expendi- 750-mile flight " | tures of all presidential candidates in | y nt Comdr. 9 both parties at $731,087.75. of which tr it amount more than half was attributed v to Secretary Hoover. o'clock Wednesday The expenditures of Hoover for the | Coast 1t - Republican presidential nomination | was made after 8 | were placed at $38082211. He headed | vers who brought S | the list of candidates examined by | =~ ! Oakiand. Calif, at T TR the committee, which has concinded its i T SEamy Ul e (% i i Amela Earhart and Com.|Soviel Message Inlended for %y ou ! PR 09 AT BUSINESS HIGH BANQUET O the Hawaiian Islands italia Mistaken for Word | penditures as well as other primary ex- s i enses. e -yl S i emety S| FOR CADETS MADE ILL BY FOOD Has Three-Mile Stretch. | From Crew. man Steiwer today showed the follow- | | ss. loaded with Weather Changes. | . licr;%disgt;iexzt_s and expenditures for the o e B, 0 | < of gasoline and oil, Sl | s Sihehes y raight level run of con- - TS s | Candidate. l’let.eln ts, - Bxpenditures ¥ . . . « U ngth. much greater thal | by ihe Asociated Press Y OSOW T | Dawes g Nine Teachers, Including Principal, Pois- & stretch on which theY "rREPASSEY, Newfoundland, June 6 MOSCOW»b-'“M 8. E‘::“t’:m‘n( 1‘::5[‘& den gima 200 | . s N rt Park Tuesday (Mon-| ;oo o ute preparations for the at- | COW caused by a growing ef that | Watson 8 27 . & 2 S ine Coast date) long, {emot of the monoplane Priendsbip lo the mising dirigive Talia had come | 811 i oned as Corps Celebrates First Drill yocarrs view of Welch In- stretc nd three miles long ¢ @ . | down on Franz Jose! nd, east of |Got No : & treteh of Ia i S op oqusi | cxom (8o Atlntl e mede oy | SO0 e Wiy vague gauobugigf{!,‘.‘mfk e Victory in 14 Years. crease Does Not Prevent runway in the world.” st adir today when at least one of the omerene . . S %o get the Southern Cross in the 8ir In northwest delayed the start. Ear. | messages thought to have been picked |Fmit" 30 04 poreikion ke ol Jm il ntinuation of its long flight, |, The three fiyers, Mism Amells Bar-| " %o o thrned ot o be-false, | Weih': 57.00 . J Two Boosts. b vernment vacht Ploneet W hart, Wilmer Stultz, pilot, and Louls nsk sta- | Heares b 14 The celebration of its first competitive | sons and Dr. R. R. Ashworth, chief * The Go! w (11:30 am. It appeared that the Murmansk sta- | Georgs ... None itens ol ERiBiET 6y e Bt feave at 7:30 3, LoT O ime) for Na- | Gordon. mechaniz, had a god sleep last |~ (ORUEC ot Mol oo ng it it drill victery in 14 years was clouded | food inspector, (o examine <o fs — Wednesday, Pacifc ottt petrol ana | night and awoke with renewed determ- | pot FHICH Yestorgay Feporiel BRREIE Rxpenisen Buo pa at Business High School today when at| bossible, the evidence remaining of The Welch salary increase law can in ai, carrying 800 gatlons of pe to get away as soon as a) the Italia mistoo | The figures showed that expenditures | T 25 | night's celebration supper 3 & Sipply of lubricating oil m;;“’“ jon o shift of the wind should | {rom here concerning rescue plans for |, 51 B2ures shot receipts In the case| least nine teachers "”“;1 S upper menu, The Star was told no way interfere with promotions which | P S RIGIETATOn OF 4 i s ex- | Students became ill, cither in class to- included reast turkey, devile B sehson’ ol AR i o i Trip. p ! the Itaita call of 10 of the candidates. Hoover's ex: 2 % ! u d were due at this season of the ye Americans to Couum\c. p. “,‘““‘“ share !amt‘ryd g; lift m‘: I’n:)“‘; Failure of the big Siberlan stations, | penditures were approximately $50,000 | day or at their homes, following the an potato salad, .np[)‘]‘(" pi(‘*r nli'l:l 168 | i Covesnmigntcacrvichs 1k Wosainds Banry W. lyon, who navigated the | with its heavy Joad 60 €000 e | which have been calling Noblle rogu- | oreater than: his. recaipta. While. Gov. | nual cadet dinner served in the school | cosem With the exception of the pie casingly clear today, as Federal Jane from Oskland to Hawall, thence | the h.rgrl'nm the forenoon Stultz ‘arly at intervals of 10 minutes, to|Smith's campaign cost about $559 more | lunchroom last night following the con- and ice cream ug entire nl:{clagh as pre- | increasingly 2 2 % Sura, and Jemes w';mdr'smnhm:;::i ! :::d‘rbcrdon }:nnt out to the plane. secure a response has caused further | than was hr::trlbutm‘ L‘ow of the| clusion of the drill at Griffith Stadium ngfi 1::\n“ 1-\1‘_‘ . Smilh. facury | Pureaus \mrk(('d ahead on the ;‘m:lency e 10 accompany Kingsford-Srn it TrC ded s candidates no receipts, | As a result of the illnesses, Allan Horropipifensi oy ttec. | ratings as of May on which new Ui o Brisbane at nk,m'sé'rs that The | B RIS H mtssfi;u:%; most noted Russian Arctic ’W'h of the cgnd‘fl"e" fhent ‘g?’ Davls, principal, himself slightly . e :l\'];:!\ar:;:::i‘ ‘IL;ff“(n‘,ii"ifirz‘:_‘fi“ e kit promotions are to be made. s Bie T eans were to be dropped {rom | Although the refueling was thought | explorers, such as Vize and Zamuy- | {i% eV Tece .‘;;Eekp:r:&ns;ea amount- | g fé{;fi,,:g‘"{};‘f“:N‘:’{mm}“,.‘“n‘,‘_ Saturday, placed on ice untll Monday. | * Tnis means that many Government ihe expedition tn Suva e e oD Y nees ehsoling | 1owich, cling to the idea that the Italin | eq to n' listle. Jess. fhan 50,000 The | pletion of the day's schedule. When When they were cooked The POWLD | oyers wi be entitied to a doudle pay The two pilots fi?nn‘?l.‘\ ;:fif:d“;“ f;fl;dd Dt ended also to & few | came down on Franz Josef L-n': hl.hdlrmlpl-s :&t:leg $683,023.72, mccording | fhe first illnesses were reported to Mo e e | thoreaae? AT KA Welkh fi" v y trouble . tions. Miss | that the first message reported Ve | to_committee figures. | Davis he ordered an investigation of | D% 3 g aise and the regular promotion in- Jess They cocounter _tropical | s Wi0 s yieriaup Toinseitog nky S nortls|” e Camtate ot don - eandidite;] e clames ad. as others: wWers . re- e sy Their problem wili M«fr’&:flt’i\ew SORA the b st e | Dvinsk was genuine. | Vice President Dawes, cost just What | ported to him he nolmcdlthr Dlfisl{)l:t Pesiad el ornog vl gt e USRI LE RIS SIS in the air until they s d. This point| To make a safe take-off the Friend- |~ rna goviet rescue commission has de- | was contributed, $579.50. ;Healt!x Department, which ‘54::“ wer- | (Continued on Page 2, Column 6. | double increase depends lam.ly' upon Lo o tenould be at Brisbane ship would have to head eastward out | ciged to continue its preliminary prepa- | D"‘l:’ Of contracts made by yerious | Harry A Ong to treat the stricken I o =~ | the administrative oficers, howerer, as 2 contact shouk z e arrow harbor mouth. But | epartments of the New York City gov- |~ — — = — —— v upon these officers depends not only the * from Brisbane they are 10 fy 50?'&23“&1‘%‘!’1 Ot OF the west 34 on | rations to search Franz Josef Land and | yrnment with corporations controlled, | gfi’;’mm; i, cmc‘enfl,"‘;am s ool les southward, either along the coast the | Nova Zemlya. respectively, by William H. Todd and Bhe Glasation of MTabing DeTROtER ik to Sydney, the | their tail, a take-off away from the | | he discretion of g P or over Mountain IAneES e&ixuiwmd was considered hazardous for the | The powerful lce;cu::lr Malj Allmu;.d‘;(éx;nsl;.' grdent_moporters HE | . S el . . | hea loaded plane. ' | bearing the plane UL-3, Cov. 1 4 ".‘,‘.“&“""m.n"\ D,m,m,g the morning Stultz and | the western shores of Nova Zemlya and | inquired into today by the committee. The McCaxl interpretation of the ‘many perils. | Gordon examined the harbor in the | to Admiralty Pe A s Boat Repairs Costs. Welch law hinted at the fact that ad- |hape of locating & protected from | be established at the northern end of ministrative officers can make regular on behalf of mysell the noted Russian| Albert Goldman, city commissioner | Tlnistr a = e been | the cross wind, where T ";flwmcgm‘tme Will fiy from |of plants sud strictures, which con- promotions at this season, but it was of our|be made in safety. - ‘gdmaibotnd Ly s 1 make & particularly | trols operation of the municipal ferry learned authoritatively today from the o iy u"idmlmuon' mhemflotm”fl :?-1‘0‘1‘52 g;‘e‘::‘l“‘:en‘:fi “llmund Cape Flora, | system and maintenance of the boats, G;‘.‘;":“ l’“‘;“}]‘“&"}f 0?}“;‘“ edntll:: this tor, and James Warner, radio oper-| t fhie . for "m monoplane 10 | which Nobile knew and probably would | told the committee that a total of $12,- poais , oy xi!x o ‘1 roe ‘;} o : e e by ’l‘fl‘* : " 0 :ake the long run necessary to take | have tried hard to reach. 522,102 had been expended by his de- 1 . z 65 Nearl a MiNion Persons See \\mc‘hj %:‘:“s,;:im oomc:r?t:nn-s ‘g “Imgine the roar of the planc’s B | e Tair without risking an. upset| ' From Cape Flora, Chuchuovsky will | partment on boat repairs snce July 1. | §ix Bandits Get Nearly $65,- Y Fiiioaats dieegen W horsepower motors, the plane’s Sml;"”"’m a broadside blow. fly over Franz Josef Land, and will 'lr':zl:d' g,r rt.r.u‘r, b:;nounL ::d -dzdzegé B‘ihfie 5 b $ W oy Bhairoafflin ‘v‘;-m'x l:“_bv o s S et veod and receive radlo | | The pontocns, which add the greatest eiher land or drop provisions and med- | Todd Co, had boen avirded $2200036 | (1 in Soactacular Detroit | Historic Epsom Race Won | adeltion to the W provision. O AT 00 per cent efcient, 4,000 to B o i | o O e Ts.on. | COBIOL BgAal it Tt Soos the | by Felstead o, Jords. the adiinistzative 5,000 miles away. | needed 1o be just right before the big | pointed three leaders for its expedition, | same date, pulting the figure at $509,- News Robbery. yre ’ ginning of the new year, July 1. ther 5 | 1 tic explorer; Chuchnov- | 714. Of that work the Kenny Co. was year, July 1. Vi ‘s Skill. monoplane could break the suction of | Prof. Vize, Arctic expl B 1 — | appropriations for salaries for the en- Praiscs Warper's S «il) | the water on her smooth boatlike sup- | sky and Capt. Anufriev. SeATha sl d";ifght;:c'-;hndy se | —_—e | tire vear. They know about how much ean = { r PE sociated Press. o “3im Warner possessed 10 B¢ back | Ports and rise into the air. terests, §20. | By the Associated Press Associated T e and how many increases they could al- and wa O O e again (Warner was The mystery which surrounded early| NORWEGIAN FLYER SEARCHES. . DETROIT, June 6.—Six men armed ~ EPSOM, England, June 6-Felstead, | low among thelf - employes, tud. the o e ol e > Fadio operator). | Preparations for the fight continued. | e Tells of Contracts. with sawed-off shotguns held up more | owned by Sir Hugo Cunliffe-Owen, won | Welch bill not passed. These increases . 5-:,,;,‘ Betore Jast in the middie of | Flyers Are Reticent. | Trip From West Spitzbergen Gives No| Fire Commissioner John J. Dormln,thull 150 r?'r‘z‘lcmnm ?1“ E‘el{gg‘y“:;;“«; the historic English Derby at Epsom ;’;,‘('," "\]\:Llc nug'mbe“‘:l‘!o;eu:' kk)”g: :flfi,',‘: » Ses were ot with us. : | s & placed the total of contracts and “open | Bullding shortly after 3 4 | Downs today . B b e g‘:ué:c& weather. Our )obi The fiyers were .'".‘.;‘,'.,“‘u‘.‘;;’?fi‘;”i.'.‘,%‘ Clue to Nobile. market orders” given by his depart- | escaped In an automobile with & greater | 010 KOV g by sie Lavrence :jl:em.‘\:wml“m;\\smranfi not incur & e hands of the navigator. UUC | ieng; y t seeking pub- | {rom Spitzbergen today sal Lo oy g Sl 1B ! J .. ‘many of them girls owned by L. Newmann, was third it Complicated. : e stage |1and; that they were not seeking pi v e fiyer, had | that sum the Todd Dry Dock Corpora-| The employes, many of them girls |owne L . ing WeS G N ed Smith | liclty; that thelr flight was a private | Luetzow Holm, Norweglan fy missing | tion had recelved & total of $203.550 1 | and women, were working at thelr desks | Pelstead's victory was before « The matter of incurring a deficit rmight just go mad. d t to | made one flight 1 . “y ' illful fiying, dodging storm | venture and that they did not care to | Bk S s and found nothing. | contracts, while the Kenny concern | i the Business offces, on the 52200d | org crowd of nearly one million specta= | however, Will be somewhat ompimia aing right angles when fiying | give out information. | o (ASEET the st fiyer to try 1o find | “(Gontivued on Page 2, Column 1) | foor of the bullding. when the ToBErS | ior, ‘(Lo massed historic Epsom Downs. | a5 o computation hecaise of e focs n im:? g Lt e T Ve o lgl Ough is | the Italia from the air, operated from | ol P tpisee entered S e of the | It Was estimated that at least $15,000.- that the operation of the Welch act ator's skill, resource and | flight, so far, very cnljny:D e‘»x] t'm the sealing ship Hobby. now off north- Jumping up on a counter, one of ."‘. P el dairbuing Creilamaisle will automatically increase a deficit en, after ail | looking forward eagerly A antle | ern coast of West Spitzbergen. | bandits shouted orders for every one to | 000 Wi A S H e o which Congress will be called upon to 2 - 2 the North Atlantic | ¢ d in | the great Calcutta sweepstakes ” Jents throughout the | fifst woman to fly the Noi n put up his hands. Another stood in | the g alcutta sweepstakes. k.| clear up by appropriations in & de- these quick movements t i |and seems little daunted by the fact| s ) the center of the room flourishing & | Felstead, by Spion Kop out of Felk- | gejanc Py nac b Could Dt The mess | that three other women have lost their | TWO SEARCHES IN VAIN. URGED BY KELLOGG sHotgun, while a third stood at the doar- | ington, wals & rank outsider in the trf | ““Fe¥ o operations are entirely sep- whes we came out of the Mes® | jiyes n similar attempts. She said that | — I'way covering a dozen or more office | classic. Nineteen horses ran. Felstead. | grate. it was explained. but aec borh Here, boys, here’s WHEre JOU | aithough she had done a great deal of |y . u .yer Finds No Trace; Alpinists' | { boys and other employes who were lined ~to-1 shot, won by length and & | authorized by law, and aill te Coo ind Abyoiiets s ot Sck§ ST 0% Tt Swier "ufors - boen: on | Hunt Futile P |up against the wall in the outer R ingo, | Proved by Controller General MeCarl e pcat, oo | SABEBE o i q Secretary Suggests Honduran. | hallway. I over 4 |, angtts,sepsrated. %% The Welch act promotions are manda- he Fight men you will® get| Newloundlanders, who have seen the| .. .g 5oy gpitabergen, June 8 (). | "“Two' other robbers vaulted over an | which was quoted at 9 to 2, o tory upon administrative chiefs, the ate them and you Wil Bl gup of many transatlantic flights dur- k hich_to- | i i | elght-foot partition around the cash-| Watch, which was 33 to 1 other regular promotions are discretion. ing the last few years, have found the | —The ice-breaker Braganza, which to Guatemalan Dispute Be Aired g e Tk e . ! x ~ vy ermcanding the . Priondchioe | day, was off North Cape, North East| fer’s cage, covered the four men in Sire Won in 1920. ary and based upon the _efficiency Lauded by Legislative Council. :fl{:’lg;{ »;*:;‘;‘::{‘m i Although the | Land, found no clue to Nobile along the Before Tribunal, | side and began scooping up the In winning the great race, which was | Fatings and availability of appropria- nave received no end of |y a0y o casoline from whmmno%t;:nnmc;n;(;u:; fi::.gg!mfig:"‘mk Lo Girl Tries to Give Alarm. | witnessed Dy @ huge crawd, Folitead oSS BN TN S g Rsopesn | o e | e sl | e | duplicated the performance of his sire, | | New efficiency ratings must s s since. the 0r tuat purpone mearly s manth gy, | another expedition secking the Italla| By the Awociated Press. | About that time a girl employe | GREICHES tE BOOURIIEE o Moorbs | lished as of May 15 of each year. under The legisiative coun- (0F Li0 BUTPOSe, become public | had been unsuccessful. This expedition | The suggestion that the centurfes-old | standing near a wall reached up to | 5P 1020, Splon Kop also won over a | Fegulations of the Personnel Classifica- i Britishi colony acopted a | 1% kKnowledge aid not become Bublic | ¢Coour” Alpinists guided by & hunter | boundary - controversy . between o | ma & Hre slarm and the robber on the | i 1920 ton Board. | 3 tion congratulating Capt. | gl Bunday, when * " | named Kremer took an casterly course | duras and Guatemals be submitted to| counter promptly fired tho shots Wt | " ainloads of racing enthusiasts were | Chief clerks o [he Government de- | and his companions Tom Boston. overland from Kings Bay. arbliration by the internatfonal Cen-|her, both of which lodged tn the wall. | AVERes o SEER SRS | partmenis and estab ishments held a TWO OTHER WOMEN PREPARE. | Another wide territory will be explored | tral American tribunal established in | As word that robbery was under | POSERe (00 PRI I R0 g | meeting for informal discussion of the E . " | by Capt. Sora and four Alpine troops | 1923 has been made to those coun-| way spread to other parts of ahe butid- | | (¥ MO MRt Victoria and. Charing | Welch act \n‘-‘s(rldu} at the State n,l. e e " | who were landed by the Braganza on | tries by Secretary Kellogg, Ing other employes began rushing imto (RIS A LiC O NS e 'nmmn‘m 1l.|\~dnm|'e£d nl‘lfluu in readi- 4 of fabel Boll and Thea Rasche Not Yet|Ney Priesland. This peninsula sepa-| A communication, transmitted by the | the second floor hallway and the rob- | Oross Stations A, leic KR Weld ness x;‘r;‘»ru::;(‘mm‘:“dl‘n_nn:m wc‘ Deces. c nd its crew Reidy o Siart, | rates Widje Pjord from Hinlopen Strait. | American Ministers to Guatemala and | bers, becoming nervous, started to | leaving London Hridge station every (o sorv promotions under the Welch ac Pijians came forth [ ‘The Soviet ‘meteorological station in | Honduras to the ministers for foreign | leave. ol CAme from the west and north of Eng-|® A or the fiyers. During a ball| NEW YORK, June 6 U®).—With Miss | giberia and two other Siberian stations | affairs of those governments yester~| They had not obtained all the money L Aot Breushl: rosny: paeitia | 2 ) Fio fmelin Eorhart delayed at Trepassey. | reported hearing what was believed to| day, was made publc at the State De- | In the cashicr's office and they dropped | O | TE tnent Newfoundland, by unfavorable winds | pe an SOS from the Italla, The trawler P rtment today. In ft Secretary Kel- | some of their loot as they raced down Pitipinte AN |ALLEGED PLOTTERS HELD. for her take-off in the monoplane | Loutchinsk, off the Murman coast, re- | logg suggested that the tribunal be | stairs and out of the building | s 4 i ; abua Friendship, two other women Were | ported hearing calls believed to be from | fully empowered to fix a common | Three Are Shot. | A ralnbow bridged the skies just after | h Ut | pushing plans here for transatlantic | the airship, boundary between ine countries, taking biges 3 |dawn. Then a thin drizzle fell for av. | Two Portuguese Naval Officers Ar- ian chief can | flights Conrad Carcone, an Itallan of Provi- | into consideration *he political, eco-| Cieorge Barstead, a traffic officer O hour. Afterward the skies cleared and | th ST M i The monoplane Columbia, in Wil;l:h dence, R. 1., thinks that radio operators | nomic and commercial interests of both | ;!utv” at the llu"\‘\x n‘;rx;vr(, vl:-« nn(\l‘:‘»::rl‘,\l | the first n[\nmr coaches began to arrive | rested as Revo anners, e for the Bris- Charles Levine and Clarence Chamber- | pysinterpreted one work in a message | states, | fatally wounded and Patrolman ot | from London. LISBON, Portugal, June 6 (# —The found that the | lin few 1o Germany last year, was re- | received in Bweden and believed to, This move Is understood to have| W. Cralg was shot in the foot In an | The prospect of a fair afternoon | xDur Diatic Neticlas' says that the ved here with ouly| ported ready for the ocean flight MIss | pear on the fate of the Italia, The mes- | been taken by Secretary Kellogg in | exchange of shots in the street in front | siarted & big trek by road and tae police, informed of fresh revolutionary | remaining in its' Mabel Boll 1s planning, and Miss Thea | wqge was reported to be “Italia Noblle| view of the fallure of efforts to fix| of the bullding . winding Surrey highways were 3000 |pianarations, have arrested two naval ted this supply would | Rasche. the German aviatrix, recelved | g°0 g Kingsbay east radio Bordeaux.” | provisional boundary ~carried on| Joseph Worten, employed in the ad- | jammed with Cockney “donkey carts, | PEWAIREONS, have of & revolutionary in the air only about from the builders the Bellanca plane | Guroone suggests the last word should | through the mediation of Roy T. Da- | vertising department, was shot in the | decorated lorries, luxurious motor {committee fn Lisbon ed about | in which she hopes to n% Vo Chermany. | have been read “Bordo” an Italian | vis, United States Minster to Costa | right hand and in the leg by the ban- | conches. cyehsts and pedestrians, all | "y omoers were arrested at the home start of the 3138- | Miss Boll was elated when she learn- { 0% JECR O8G, | ERO0 C RE A | e dits, Worten was {n the line of fire | converging on Epsom Downs. lot” Dr. Felippe Mendes. s former| Kaual, Haw ed that the take-off of the Friendship | Becretary Kellogg's letter suggested | in front of the bullding when Patrol- | The Derby throng is England's most political figure who is now living in : a had been delayed ! " that the tribunal be empowered to fix | man Baarstead was ahot, and recelved | jovial crowd and the open spaces avound | POitIGat fur X RT TOMS oo ows for e, Miybe Los Angeles Will Not Hunt. |a common bmmdllr.y between the coun- | several bullets. o | the stands were like a glgantic county | X il be first after all” she sa | By tim Associated Press tries, determine the amount of com- ore than a dozen shots were ex- | fuiy | o pwmnt icdon S . wpsictost Bhebiral Rt o B Lo gre L B B SR T While n hhared ot ors | Today's Derby was the 148th running | Polar Flyers Reach Holland. ' . " party, and thi ¢ declsions con- | boulevard, e ed or more oday's t " i e FLIGHT FROM TAMPICO | rycre were st several mattdre for | NBY RpRriinotis 1as Tio MNOR 8¢ | Biiitya And Binding. DGk (he Dra | Eetsahe Kako o oS o of | of the great classic. Some of (he thou- | AMSTERDAM, Holland. June 6 () - her o settle, however, before she could | present of % ¢ hip | Posal the mixed commission would be ' the News bullding and from doorways |sands that eagerly watched the ho Capt. George Wilkins and Lieut Koo 6 4 Witn | start her ocean attempt. She has not | Angeles in search of the lost airs| mlrn'nn\'rnrfl for the drawing up and|and windows of other buildings | thundering down the stre had spont | Bielson arrived in Amsterdam from Unabie to Rise From Ground With | jianiiely chosen phlol, aithough | Ttalia in the Aretic region, terming | he signing of the protocol The robbers' car, a sedan, proceeded | 24 hours camped out in gypsy fashion, | Brussels today by atrplane. They plan Half of Necessary Load of Charles 1e Boutiliter, Britlsh war fiyer, | yuch action impracticable with present | down the street in the line of traffc | while virtually every one had & bet, |to leave late this afternoon for London (Continued on Page 4, Column 4,) | seant information ! with all four doors open and guns stick- | small or lavge, on the race. ] [ ine e —- -l i SR " g out menacingly [ g litst vear when Call Boy, owned by | oy | NOTICE TO THE . Frank Curzon, swept to viotory i the 1 I . l . w ld ] Fl t pl t | et ” | | record-making time of 2 minutes 34 ee ¢ 99 i Voliva Insists World Is Flat as Plate, PUBLIC SANDINO REPORTED isconda e ohwres &, Encberenwes | | T e Pepalty”| B d w“ Fl O“ Ecl p 1 A U | present as the guest of Lord Lonsdale § . H 1 e at Fole " hidar QUILA . d y Fcars yr y g The Honor System for 16 MILES FROM SGold Rule” Fil * fwn Hip N Reaidirs CONDUCTOR DETAINED. Golden Rule” Film | 10 rise from ound w " wapaper Keade Englishman Brings First Word In| ‘ - { Youd of gasol ss8ry Yo CBrry Bt |y (he Assosiuted Press | “The world is flat as & plate and ns it L i O B i w Washingir NEW YORK, June 6.—Wilbur Glenn | round,” he msserted, “There A’N':.']l"; The Btar Is mow distributin Month Concerning Rebel's Ql’upl Held at Ellis Island on ln—‘ § o . » & i it anniouioed et te mop-of] | Vollva, who firmly believes the earth | Fole, cerininy, dn, the center o IS o870 alon and the Base Bal Tanaklons | come Tax Count [ "'The Evening Star the flight, snnounced that the hop-off | 4 Richard E. Byrd | [hA%. @ Final through the “Honor B i . { oen posiponed for severn) deys Be- | 16 Oat, fears Comds, Ris | ‘e an orange tem” Racks licensed by the Dis- ||| yy ¢, | NEW YORK, June 6 (.—Alleged | | ; % T Mty L oy Cot_{hy 8aee 6L, stiould N e L'llnllth“wla““'l"r:?;f: triot._ Commissioners and. erected THAUOTOALPA, Honduras, June 6. | faflure to wocouht o' the Federal aw- | | 1 umuml‘lh‘\.“ '||§l||‘.‘: Juiery iy ton, Th v o oM b te oes any farther north than the a d 3 i , Ho o R ™ n the weing shown toda long R s SN 10e o st | T S AT RN or o | L e e south || on” different atreet corners. An Euglihiman returning fim the e | erment tar incasms vecelvect I the 0K O O o wes desizebie o awelt Mr Coolidge's |iains ” he said, “I'm afraid hell never | than the Trople of Capricorn, ‘This The Washington Newspaper ||| terlar of Nicaragus brough back word | United Btates whs tho teasen, Kiven oo | ' yeturn, since he desired 1o greet Capl. | come back.” business of the sun setting and the sun Publishers’ Assoclation have | | ha Uty Orus, 16 miles from | for detaining at Elis laland Cennaro | ! e Leader anzs a8 President Celles did Col The overseer of Zion City, Tl who | rising s only an optical fllusion, 1t _r, ors who are m-nmulln{ | l“lwl'lw?i Al Santa Oruy, 16 miles ‘Pnnl‘ Ttallan conductor of the Metro- 7 Ninth $1. NW ] clurgh returned on the Laconis yesterday | doesn’t prove that the earth is round with the Police to prevent thef! Q}r;“ 18 the first information regard- | palitan Opera for 14 years. i §07 Ninth St N! o | from & four-month tour of Europe, en-| Vol a said he expected to follow &ll| of papers from these racks. 4 reavouta whioh has | "'Papi atrived from Ttaly yesterday | I rged upon his theory of the earth be- | developments of the Byrd expedition Ing Sandino’s whereabouts h h lner Saturnis, LR R I AN « adio Programs—Page 10" 3, 7" Mo theor ol ) with intense interest, veAched hore In & monih. abonrd (he liner B " 4 “— N Press. TWO CENTS. FRIENDS OF HOOVER PLANTOPUT HIMIN NOMINATION FIRST Alabama Expected to Yield to California for Naming of Secretary. |BIG TEST IS DUE TODAY | IN FIGHT FOR DELEGATES Texas Case Scheduled Before Com- mittee—26 Votes In- volved. BY G. GOULD LINCOLN, Staff Cortespondent of The Star. KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 6.—Her- bert Hoover is to be the first candidate for President placed in nomination at the Republican national convention, unless the present plans of his cam- paign managers go awry. When the roll of States is called, Alabama, first on the list, will yield to California, and | California will present Hoover as its candidate. John McNab is to deliver the nominating speech. The Hoover organization appears to | be hitting on all four cylinders up to date. The big test, and the final, in | the contested delegate cases comes for | the Hoover people today, when the | Texas case comes before the Republican national committee for consideration. | | Predict Hoover Victory. | The anti-Hoover forces, which have been trimmed repeatedly in the dele- gate contests during the last two days, are bending every effort to break through and to seat the anti-Hoover Texas delegates. The prediction by |some of the committeemen, however, |as the contest opened, was that the { Hoover delegates would be seated, gliv- |ing Mr. Hoover 26 more delegates on | the temporary roll of the convention. " If the Texas contest goes for Hoover, he will have gained about 70 votes in | the delegate contests. It has been dem- | onstrated again and again that the ma- Jority of the national committee stands Wwith the Secretary of Commerce. There are threats to take the fight over vari- ous delegations to the credentials com- mittee, and if necessary to the floor of | the convention. But the judgment of conservative members of the national | committee is that the decisions of the | committee will not be overthrown, | either in the committes on credentials or in the convention itself, if the con- tests ever gets that far. “It's Hoover or Coolidge,” according to many of «the Republican leaders gathered here. The Lowden and Dawes supporters are keeping a stiff upper | lip and seeking to show that a deadlock | s inevitable in the convention. Farmers'’ Demonstration. But some of the Lowden | feeling a bit low. They are | are their best to retrace some of the steps by | which they have become known as the | ant-administration and anti-Coolidge | group, but with comparatively little | success. While they still talk of a | farmers’ demonstration in Kansas City | during the convention, there fs some | soft peddling of earlier statements. { The Hoover people express confi- | dence that President Coolidge will not |Tun and that he will so indicate either | before the balloting begins or as soon | as the first delegate votes are cast for | in the convention. At present the | 8roup of Midwest presidential: candi- idates and their supporters are hoping | for a working union with the “draf, Cuolidge” leaders from the East, in. cluding Charles D. Hilles of New Yor} and Henry J. Roraback of Connecticut | This is another reason for soft-ped {ding the anti-Coolidge propaganda which has been put out recently by | some of the farm leaders because o |the veto of the McNary-Haugen farn iatd bill. A coalition of these forces & | admittedly somewhat like mixing of yand water, difficult at best. There & no rhyme or reason for such a combina 3 tion, except the desire to prevent thjy nomination of Mr. Hoover. The effors toward such a coalition has failed sig- nally in the national committee so far, which has been dominated by the Hoo- ver sentiment. Hilles is still looking hopefully to- ward Washington. The big New York delegation, 90 strong. is to caucus here Monday afternoon, on call of Mr. Hilles. | At that time, he said today, there would be discussion of what the delegation would do on the first ballot in the con- vention New York Split Likely. It is likely, however, that the delega- tion will be split on that ballot, as has | been the case with many New York delegations to Republican national con- ventions in the past. Mr. Hilles' in- formation is that 26 of the delegates | will vote for Mr. Hoover on the first ballot. What the rest will do he did | not indicate. In reply to & question as to whether an effort would be made to nominate Charles Evans Hughes of New York, in case the President should be abso- lutely unavatlable, Mr. Hilles said he had no further word from Mr. Hughes, beyond his early statement that he was not a candidate and would not run. Mr. | Hughes, he pointed out, is aduled to sail for Europe on June 16. The ex- pectation of Republican leaders is that | the convention will adjourn on June 13 Secretary Mellon, chairman of the | Pennsylvania delegation, Is to arrive {here Monday. His advent will be watched with keen interest, for Penn- sylvania is believed to be the key to the situation which will face the dele- fates in the convention Frank O Lowden of Ilinois will have the four | delegates at large from South Carolina, | for the opposition has withdrawn the contest filed earlier. Joseph W. Tolbert, the veteran national committeeman and boss of the Republican organtzation in {the State, has favored Lowden for President and it has been generally as- sumed that he would throw the dele- gation to the former Illinols governor. | ~ Sttdng until past the dinner hour last | night, the national committee disposed jof the contests for the 12 delegates | from Mississippl. By unanimous voie the committee seated the Perry Howard delegates, after hearing both sides. The | Howard delegates are favorable to the | nomination of Mr. Hoover. | Louisiana Decision, Not long before that decision was | rendered the committee had placed on { temporary rall the Hoover dele- | gates from Loulsiana. With two excep- | tions this means another 10 Hoover | votes in the convention, it the action of the national commitiee i rutified by the fill\\'\'u(\::\n 'l‘m‘r.:wfil‘lux‘fowrr Walter L. on AN N wery of the sixth distriet, Cohen, colored. controller of customs at New Orleans, |ted the opposition to the Hoover dele- |gation and sald he favared thy nowmis (Continued on Page 3, Column 39 4 | the