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Secretary of State Kellogg reviewing the diers of the District and nearby States at the Fort Myer A T. C. yesterday. Left to right: Dr. E. G. Dexter of the Vet- AUGUST 3, 1928.° At right: William Allen White, the Em- poria, Kan. editor, removes himself from the political maelstrom by sailing for Europe Where 10 workmen met death and many were injured in the new Welland ship canal, near Thorald, Ontario. Thi: the victims were crushed under the great weight of in the crash of a massive steel gate being erected s shows the gate after the crash in which some of steel. The accident was caused by the collapse of a crane after delivering his widely published broad- sides against Gov. Smith, the Democratic nominee. —Copyright by P. & A. Photos erans of Foreign Wars, Secretary Kellogz, Maj. Gen. B. H Wells, Brig. Gen. H. O. Williams and Col. Guy V. Henr —Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. commandant of the camp. —Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. being used o swing the gate in place. Singles finalists in the Army tennis tourney. Capt. R. C. Viiet, jr., of the Canal Zone, and Lieut. D. D. Hedekin of Fort Ben- ning, Ga., who will meet for the Army championship in tennis singles tomerrow at the Columbia Country Club. ~—Wide World Photos. INCLAR IS NAMED | IN $a44 000 ACTION Widow of Oil Man’s Lawyer Claims Defendant Failed to Account for Bonds. | | | By the Associated Press NEW YORK, August 3 —Harry F. Sinclair is defendant in a suit for $544,000 and Interest frem July, 1922, brought by Mrs. Jane Clary Zevely, widow of Col. James W. Zevely, his at- torney for man years. nclair’s famous horse Zev was named after the Jawyer The claim is the result of an alieged | transaction in stock of the Mammoth Ol Co., organized by Sinclair to hold | Dome leases. Col. Zevely for Sinclair in the Sepate | . e Teapol Dome leases. | e of the became known | filing motion Mr. with the a by Ein ely be compelled particular Zevely as band turne hares of the at $544.000 1o either b rea: ther. Her husband, s ated efforts his deat} w furnish a bill of b t in July, 1922 over to Sinclalr Mammoth Oil Co. Bhe said Sinclair return them ne, but did he said, made stock back 1y or Jue of and made ) $500.000 $4,000,000 INSURANCE IS LEFT BY SUICIDE Are 1 Dan estment 4,000,000 5 Dansa 13 Spades, Perfect Bridge Hand, Dealt To D. C. Attorney | ‘What would be your reaction to the perfect bridge hand—13 spades— should it be dealt you in a game, Probably the same as that of Simon H. Rourke, attorney, living at the Racquet Club, when he received the perfect hand last night—dis- belief. “I thought at first the dealer had “framed’ the hand for me,” Mr. Rourke said. “I inquired later, however, and am convinced now that it was the real thing, that rarest of rarities, an honestly dealt perfect bridge hand.” Mr. Rourke was not forced to bid on the hand, but merely laid down when his turn came to bid and scored 263 for the hand and 513 for game and rubber ‘The perfect hand was dealt to him by Paul Nachtman, 3118 Sixteenth streel, in & game ai the home of Miss Rita Venable, 1870 Wyoming uvenue. The fourth player was Miss Dolly Magee, 5038 Reno road. . '32 MORE NIGHT CLUBS ARE FACING PADLOCK| White Way Resorts Passed by in Indictment Proceedings Now Up | for Official Quiz ociated Press YORK, August 3 aw padiocks vesterday thr 6 more night clubs, passed by in in- dictments returned against 26 clubs and 131 individuals earlier in the week proceedings ags White it was learned, will be in summons and complaints served on the owners and man- . A NEW Prohibition ened the to be agers padlocks or injunctions d against these places of which will be kept secret service of papers. Fallure smmons will resull in a pad by delault y Federal suthori gn to mop up New York duy of and clations frou hLostesne lock i o denial rges and ¢ cumps —the night probiibition wuthoriti both club GUEST IN TWIN CITIES. Mayor Walker to Be Given Recep tion by Democrats Tonight Minn, August 3 Walker of of a long Twin € hes here PAUIL Jimmy the will be when 0 ! York acation Dem onight for will calls He sehedule one alker's hy brief tation 650 reception al & broadeast ile here he will give a radio public will then be A brief downtown hotel weeo or Walker has been spending I aays in western Canada Yankee discus thrower adds name to Olympic record-breakers. This is how Bud Houser, the Los Angeles dentist, looked as he un- corked a heave of more than 155 feet, to give Uncle Sam first place in the discus event at Amsterdam. —Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. A Ay o Do R Promoters of the recent 100-mile motor cycle road race around of the specially hazardous turns. This shows a Belfast rider smash down an embankment. NEW DUTIES ASSIGN TO CAPT. ERNEST J. KING| Drops Command of Aireraft Squad- | | By the Associated Press | A ban has been placed on Army avia- | tors participating in exhibitions of dare- Capt. Ernest J. King yesterday hauled | devil stunts, such as wing walking and Aown his pennant as commander of the | performanc imilar pature. g el dome: ot ore-| “The day of the use of the airplane Aircraft Squadron’s Scouting Fleet, pre- , , “oodium for exploftation by dare- to coming to this city 88 8- | goyils of varlous sorts has passed.” said of the Bureau of Aero-|Assistant Secretary Davison in lssuing He will be succeeded in this |the prohibition order. “The sooner lbert W | foolish airplane stunts are entirely. dis- by Rear Admiral Alber continued the better for aviation.” recently promoted, who 15} The policy of sending Army airplanes of the aircraft carvier|to dedications of airports and slmilar ot L . | events would be continued, Mr. Davison ";“‘;’,I"' i‘"”“f‘ "'h"_";:“:::‘;“f“ sald, only on the implicit understanding ommand. Admiral Murshall Hug ubout & eatien 1 schedul |NEW YORK-BERMUDA i aviation training, which | AIR LINE |S PLANNED at the Naval Alr Station at Pensacola, Fla, about August 1. Capt. King will succeed Capt. Emory 680. Muy 1. rons for Post in Aeronautics Bureau. paratory sistant nautics, command Marshall, in Lexington | terday was chief command hil Service Flight in 8ix Hours Beg Pastenger Covering Mile Land, Construction Corps, who will leave the devartment ubout the end {of August . become technical adviser | for the Guggenhetm Fund for the Pro motion of Acronauties n on November By he A FIELD, N. Y the establishment | BRENNAN IS IMPROVING. \,"“““‘"""‘ “ senger line between New York Plans for | alr Ilinois Democratic Leader Report-{and Bermuds were announced yester tday by H. B. Clarke, manager of Roose velt Fleld and chiel of operations for the company Two twin-motored Stkorsky amphib. fan pl will bhe delivered next month, Clarke sald begin operations of the new line on No vember 1. The planes will have ac mmodations for 10 passengers, a pilot 1d & navigator, who also will act radio operator of & Comfortuably 3 (). George ed Resting | CHICAGO, August Brennan, Democratic national commit teeman, was “resting comfortably” this morning #t the John B. Murphy Hos ' pital, where he has been confined for | nearly a week suffering from septic polsoning, his physietan, Dr, C. R, G. | Forrester, announced After a rvelapse late Wednesday, D Forrester made an inclslon in a swell | ing below Mr. Brennan's left ear, after which the Democratic chieflain im proved steadily, i A day 18 Clarke sald, and the planned mile overwater flight, ot o4y P Benridge, into the bags us he spilled on the turn and thus —Copyright by Underwood & Under B | Ay Dlvoce Aso Bl In Daredevil Airplane Performances| August | and it is planned to an A teip in each divection every second | the chedule provides six hours for the 680~ Iter King of Lawrence, Kan., whose neighbors call him “To- v mato” king, grew these ponderous his own backyard. And his yard Is on pecimens of the vegetable in ly 20 feet square. The tomatoes weigh from two to three and a half pounds each, and grew on vines 15 feet tall. den to Engage | that would barred This does not, of course, apply to legitimate flying acrobatics at proper altitudes,” explained the Army Air Secretary, “but merely to exhi- bitions such as trapeze work, wing walk- ing, changing from one plane to another in the alr, transferring from automobile to airplane and stunts of that character, Not by the longest stretch of the imag- ination can performances of that kind daredevil performers ble benefit to aviation, On the contrary, they are apt to create in the public mind a picture that associates flying with extreme danger and foolhardiness.” ;PLANNING TO SCRUTINIZE CAMPAIGN EXPENSES Chairman Lehlbach of House Spe- clal Committee Organizing to Be Ready for Duty. Representative Lehibach of New Jer- | sey, chalrman of the speclal House com- |mittee on cumpaign expenditures, left | Washington late yesterduy for New York to attend the organization meeting of his committee. It s to meet In the of- fices of Representative Black, a Demo- |cratic member of the committee | Chatrman Lehibach sald that nothing | has arisen thus far calling for any ac Won by the committee, but they pro- to organize and be In readiness fon that may arise | Evening classes are held in Berlin for 7.000 street car conductors of the eity, where they are taught the proper methods of handling passengers with tact, speed and efclency, " be claimed to be of the slightest possi- | “‘mw‘%‘_{ Wide World Photos. Ireland, had foresight when they threw up this barrier of bags at one coming to a stop before he slid ood MINIATURE PLANE TEST IS SET FOR TOMORROW | Hand-Launched Aircraft Will En- | | at 9:30 0'Clock. | | The hand-launched plane contest in | be| ter Competition on Bolling Field |Government A lifesaver plays the part. Miss Helen Baker, member of a dancing group of Ocean Park, Los Angeles, trusts herself to the brawny arms of Jack Stearns, municipal life guard, in this grace- ful high dive from a rock. And it ended just as gracefully. —Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. OHID N PARLEY TootacheReneas NS N FALRE (PANAx‘A, hAu(gusl “3.'7— Th;’ Elamzs ] of a toothache forced Joseph Ham- | Operators and Workers Are ma, keeper of the Castle Island lights, to venture out in the heavy Unable to Reach Agreement. Lighthouse Keeper ' Stops Liner to Get Toothache Remedy seas yesterday and stop the steamer Lililan Lukenbak to get a remedy. He flew the British flag reversed as a signal of distress and after receiv- ing medicine he sreturned to his lonely vigil, while the vessel contin- ued on to Cristobal. By the Associated Press. COLUMBUS, Ohio, August 3.—Ohio's hopes for reopening her coal mines after 16 months of idleness were dashed last - i MEMORIAL CHANGED TO NEW LOCATION |cien xhen the join -eunterence st L8 | operators and union officials adjourned | A | sine die without reaching By Direction of Congress Monu- fupon a wage scale 1méut to Confederate Detiiin Tu-i | Ditetee threatened the conference | when it opened yesterday morning with |only four State coal operators in at- | tendance, but the presence of Willlam B | Haskins of Coshocton, secretary of the of Congress, | Central Ohio Operators’ Association and quartermaster | member of the executive committee | Maj. QGen. Cheatham, eneral of the Army, has arrag {of the Ohio Operators’ Association, ey . AW nged fOF | rangthened hopes that some agree the immediate removal of the Cul\(cd-[m"“ might be reached which the large erate monument in Grasslawn Ceme- | socia tery at Indlanapolis to Garfield Park |“S5oclations of operators might later ac- Mr. Haskins explained before In the sume clly. That monument| marks the burlal place of 1616 Con- |, M federate soldlers of the Civil War. who | FISCUng that he was not repre died while confined as prisoners of |ypte¥ Of the operators’ associa | war in the prison camp at Indianapolis | tation te tope pan e down the and were buried together in a_plot |**{°% 10 ke Part In the conferer ground owned by the United States fators and three union officials went into |2 huddle late yesterday afternoon. but and afterward named Grasslawn Cemetery. 1In 1013 the {two hours of heated discussion | commissioner charged with the loca- | the two groups deadlocked and unw to_continue negotiations. tion _and marking of the g of all Confederate prisoners of war who | The operators refused to consider a agreement dianapolis Removed. By specific direction the District of Columbia miniature air- | died in Northern camps or institutions | wa, |d 2 s ge scale in exces now baia eraft tournament will be held tomorrow | feported to Congress that he found it |under non-union gt "the Ohio morning at Bolling Feld, 9:30 o'clock. The extra event has been added in preparation for the District finals Sep- tember 4 and the national finals Octo- ber 5 and 6 at Atlantic City. At the recent meet for speed in the hand- launched plane trials Frank Salisbury, a local boy blished the best record at a rate of miles per hour | " Classes in alrplane building will be held at Central Community Center Tuesday and Thursday afternoons of |each week under the direction of Wal- ‘(x- Roth, it was announced today. The je es will begin ut 1 o'clock and end la: al 4. DISTURBS QUIET ZONE. Colored Fish Dealer Before Court 1s Released on Warning. Isaac Armstead, colored, 434 Franklin street, whom police say has been in the habit of disregarding the quiet zone near Garfield Hospital by crying “fish," was arraigned in Police Court today on charges of “making an outery for pur- poses of advertising his wares,” and parking longer than necessary to make a sale. | Policeman R. W. Hopkins of the elghth precinet arvested him yesterday at Sherman avenue and Barry place. while seated on the curb beside his push cart erying “fish” at the top of his volee. Judge Mattingly gave pended sentence af §5 or five days on Isaac & sus- each count and told him to “let the ish CG-138 battfed the heavy sea to come In 1877 lpew for themselves." . o o o O ] \ | impossible | to, identify the individual | Operators’ Assoctation. graves "v{ thise buried in Grasslawn| ‘Union officials attempted to obtain Cemetery. Tt was then decided by the |an agreement on a SHOFL.term comtract War Department to mark the group|to reopen the mines tmmediately an [ of graves with a central structure, and | later make further wam poateyand » granite monument nbout 25 feet high [The operators inststed Thar: sor oy and 27 feet wide. was erected in the scale to which they might agree would ceme with tablets showing the |have to contain a “continued competi- names and commands of the Confed- |tive feature,” whereby successive drop erato dead attached o it. An act ap- fof wages in Kentucky and West Vire | proved May 14, 1928, directed the Sec- |ginia would have fo be met with suc- retary of War to provide for the re-|cessive drops in wages by the Ohio moval of the monument and tablets to | union by . Garfield Park, a municipal park in| President Lee of the > e et 15,000 Wi i oh (b Ol M 1o cover wll costs. It 15 said at the [speaking for the operators, both agreed War Department that the nct made |last night after the collapse of negott- no provision for (he removal of the |ations that “little hope for other cor bodies nor for re-marking the graves |ferences to consider & new wage scal in any manner, and that present plans | remain.” 5 contemplate solely the transfer of the | % BLOCK BUYS PAPER. monument and attached tablets from | Acquires scale the cemetery to the public park. TWENTY RES.CUED AT SEA. Coast Guard Cutter Aids Yacht Off Jersey Shore . Brooklyn Standard Union Founded in 1863 NEW YORK, August 2 (#) —Paul R‘I::khvu:l:hfl' Snnounced yesterda e ha urchased 8§ 1l ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. August 3 (.| Union of - Brookivn ".n'l?...:".f"‘:fii: Lying broadside (0, & heavy sea wash- | Sunday morning daily Ing over its deck and its rudder gone.| The Standard Union, an amalgama the steam yacht Bon Homme, owned by | tion of three newspapers, was founded Robert C. Roebling of Trenton, host to | as the Unlon in 1863 by the late a group of friends, was saved from being | Willlam Berri and a group of Brooklyn pounded to pleces by Coast Guards 16 | citisens to support Abraham Lincoln's miles off Anglesea late yesterday. | war poliey against what was consid- While the 20 persons on board. in-|ered the defeatist policy of many cluding a crew of 12, were unharmed. | Northern persons. The Union was they had an exciting time while the | combined with the Argus in 1877 and was amalgamated with the to thelr ald, . Hen ’