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THE EVENING STAR, WASHING Tfl\ D. C., TUESDAY, \I'GI'S'I‘ 21, 1998 ! THREE MEET DEATH AS TRAINS COLLIDE | Other Trainmen In- in Wreck Near Mc- Cracken. Kans. Ti‘:’f,—‘f 21 four | when “The seenger to Den- ¢ d movii six west An undete were shaken 1 badly hurt miles pass, HOOVER RENEWS OLD FRIENDSHIPS AT BOYHOOD HOME, from First Page.) rs. C: wiho rode \\i(h‘ Hoover to the homestead. ee’s train ran into a rain- but perfect weather birthplace. e Hoovers will be the s. 0. 0. Yoder, second cou- | ace. while they will have nd the night at the home alph Branson. ) also is a second cousin of Hoo- Above: The jail at Bladensburg. M structure and left locked up overnight them in case of fire. Below: John Moore, recent flood occurred at Bladensburg, th W. Brookhart called to greet the can- imber of Iowa Representa- stood on a cot o the cemetery on the | n was a block awav : eside the graves. | our west branch of the Waspi-No- leaders also were Jesse, | at in which wimming Hole Missed. Noc Creek en route to the old swim- he birthplace the T SAYS UUGS SERVE remained rce Secretary then drove he never reached this was made on the high anks of the creek at a ¥ been designated as which had been restored by a small dam. Hoover he car. but after lookh he informed his guides the place. Then nt to school with lead him to the House of Mercy Attendant Claims Gas Is Tried Out on Animals. teerc) to The District Commissioners will be advised that dogs are being taken from the District pound and used for ex- perimental purposes, Deaconess Yeo of the House of Mercy, Klingle road and Rosemont avenue, declared today. Twenty dogs were shipped {rom the pound yestergay to Bdgewood Arsén Md., 20 be used in experimentation wi poisonous gas. Among these animals was a dog which Deaconess Yeo had | | arranged Saturday to have turred over ses are the school- | to & friend in Alexandria. It was this | ised to play tag and |that brought conditions to her atiention. the old schoolhouse | She is sure the Commissioners know replaced by fine brick build- | nothing of it. Mrs. M. R. Blumenberg, vice presi- dent of the Animal Rescue League, said | today she has known of the present tored. about Hoover had | conditions for more than a year. In Ity in recognizing the old | every Congress, she said, the icague and olling green hills | affiliated organizations attempt to get and there by wide- | with dogs illegal The once pretty arred in many nlaw‘l Dr. William C. Fowler, District stands dispensing the | health officer, did not knmow of the hot dogs,” candies, | shipment of dogs yesterday, he said, but ctures and souvenirs knew that occasionally animals are ypical of Jowa was | taken from the pound to governmental as a cornst painted | laboratories. The Health Department golden corncob for &/ has been assured time and again, he |ideclared, that every precaution is taken ig t0p” | to eliminate suffering in the experi- " were J ments. erated by | The Animal Rescue League others by | no actlon in the matter, Mrs | berg said. out pasture place where we we " sald Butler, in- trees some distance dgein, pro- is it?" Hoover ‘ihe going was of a down- Well we won't go ne said as he turned back | 0ld Town Changed. 1 School and the will take and lumen- ties Poses in Cornfield. Pttt e PEPCO \ WOULD CURB REMETERING POWER| on the edge | down a e rxrr‘rvas clicked | Bevises Comracu to Prevent Prac- t But- | tice by Large Con- shucked an over .10 | erowd sumers, men and | rected | The Potomac Electric Power Co. has nd his | revised its contracts to prevent what it as the (torms as rebating by forbidding con- sumers of large quantities of electricity at g walk o the ssed between maximum 8 today by of the at annoy ice pr the ced dent and vll"v it Bowen explalned that it was nevef intended under the old contracts {that consumers should resell current at 1, but an investigation showed | has been done by owners of ildings. Such a practice, he in violation of the public util- | and the power company does to be a party o it. For| a proviston was written w contracts forbidding the of curren Lusk, executlve secretary of tine Operative Builders' Association, has the Public Utilities Commission for a dectsion whether the remetering ! current is legal or illegal s protested against the new contract the ground that wer company is attempting to control | current “which it has sold and over | which 1t does not exereise “the slight 1 a of nership” “This is abuse,” he said, “which should be im mediately corrected by the Public Util- ities Commission.” BANDITS GET $19,000. cago Bank Up by Five Armed Men CHICAGO, g when | robbers held up two bank yester- | in # taxicab today, robbing them o but at! 16,000 in cash and negotiable ne did express the| The robbery took piace at I id send solid Re- | and Division streets as the L Congress in No- | were transferring the money from th 5 was construed as an ap- | Service State Bank detent of Representative | Armed with pistols and yres of Wichita, the single | five robbers. riding in a blue nber of the House ‘rom | alongside the taxicab and crowded | inlo the curbing, forcing it to stop. | Covering the messengers and the cal national committeeman, and | driver, the robbers grabbed up 3 lfi!)w nominee re- | satche) eontaining e money mise of largest majoirty | speeded away. that Kansas ever has| The messengers were @ Repul dential | money to the Union Trust Co., bank. 5 act | this reason into_the resale form w with ¢ of belt ons not o cormn sestion picnic altend R 4 his tra is due Friday| . set up his per- | CF esidence only a home | Messengers few stant from o 8 stree August 21 10 the crowds ) Kansas rifies, the sedan, drove Arthur Capper, Dave M G ee “Ben t and s " taking a loog 22 HAVE BEEN CROWDED INTO THIS JAIL an inmate of the night and rescued Moore just as the water was creeping up to his waist a FOR POISON TESTS through a bill making experimentation | low wholesale rates from remetering | He also | the | an | Held Five | messengers paper. | wndale messengers | the | the | appearance as A singer at loonl func- TORNADOES SWEEP Two Windstorms Rake Mm- nesota and lowa, Causing | $1,000,000 Damage. By the Associated Press. | ST. PAUL, Minn, August tornadoes took eight lives, about 100 persons and d property damage estimated in excess of $1,000,000 ih southern Minnesota and | northern Iowa late yesterday Austin, Minn, suffered the heaviest |loss. Three were killed there, | than 50 injured and business buildings {and residences were wrecked ! A fourth Minnesota casualty was near | Glenville, while two women lost their lives at Twin Lakes, Towa The known dead are | bauer, automobile mechanic; Marvin | Baumgardner and Harold, 12, his son, | Laverne Roberts of Nora Springs, Towa, |all killed at Austin; Mrs. Chris G | both of Austin, of Nora Springs, Iowa, all | Austin. Mrs. Chris G. Hagen at Glen- | ville and Stella Powell of Traer and Mrs. George Steer at Twin es. Mrs. Harry Johnson was killed when her | home collapsed | One hundred members of the Ameri- n Legion alded Company H, Minne- ota National Guard. In patrolling the | streets of Austin today as a recheck of | the damage was started after a night of darkness, due fo failure of powes | tines | o Fifteen of the persons Austin required hospital treatment three are not expected to recover The Minnesota tornado apparently started near the Iowa line, Swung northeastward, striking Austin, and | then turned to enter Towa As swept on toward Austin, farm buildings and crops were crushed heavy rain followed and roads wer flooded. More than 50 automobiles were | wrecked in Austin bv the storm, wh seemed to follow the principal thoroug! fare, Starting at 4:55 p.m., the rnr'x\d» in less than 8 minutes had covered a path two blocks wide and about two miles long in Austin, where the damage was estimated at more than $500.000. All the buildings at the county f | grounds, where the fair was to hs |opened today, were w Doctors were handicapped by hts and electric power. 21 Two caus injured at and en and women have been herded into th with no jailer or guard on duty to rescue When the | e ot the HUNT FOR HASSELL MADE BY ESKIMOS jail for the past two weeks. e jailer left his home in the 5! ar Stafl Phflh)( IBLADENSBURG JAIL ' DESCRIBED AS “BLACK HOLE OF CALCUTTA tCuanued Ilom [ | l | (Continued from_First Page.) | . 4 2 | olicited through diplomatic representa- | tives at Ottawa, Copenhagen and St | Johns, Newfoundland. Earlier Rear | Admiral Billard, Coast Guard com- | mandant, directed the Marion, under ‘1t(cmp! to improve jail conditions when | command of Lieut. Comdr. Edward H the new Marlborosjail was bullt.” Smith, to begin the quest. The Marion “No provision was made in the |the only Government vessel in the re- county levy last March for & new jail |glon of the search, has been between | building at Bladensburg and we cannot |the American coast and Greenland for | do anything before next March, when | more than a month and was last re- | the new levy will be made, unless the | ported off Cape Chidley, Labrador | State Legislature, meeting next Janu- s ary, enacts special legislation author- BELIEVES PLANE LANDED. izing us to proceed with the raising of - - a bond issue for construction of & new | Mrs. Sty The fail is located in the low swampy | land near the Eastern Branch of the | CHICAGO. August 21 (& i Anacostia River, facing the Washing- | hours have lengthened into days with ton-Baltimore boulevard. The fail is a | out word from Bert Hassell and Parke small conerete and steel building about | Cramer. 20 . one-story high and with the | It was a certainty that their | concrete floor only about a foot above | had been down since Sunday. for it ground level fuel supply would long since have been cxhausted. That it succeeded in reach- | There at One Time. ing some lonely landing place on the Greenland coast was the buoying hope for those anxiously awaiting word ‘that First Page.) Hassell Hopes Greater Rockford Got to Greenland. Two steel-barred cells | occupy the | rear of the building and th e front half | off Cape Chidley, the | | ever growing fear. Although several amateur wireless operators reported hearing the Greater | Rockford's signals at 3 am. central| standard time, Sunday morning, only | one, F. L. Hall, at Stamford, Conn., to'd of hearing anything besides the plane’s call letters and the letter which | | indicated its position as 75 miles off Cape Chidley. Hall said the letter “R." which was a prearranged code signal was followed by six repfited 8 O 8 calls The distress signals, Hall felt surs were from the plane. Hall said that a message was sent after the call, but in terference prevented - his getting it. Labrador, was part of the way across, shielding a | smail portion from the view of the cell Tt this small strusturs sometimes as | many as 20 prisoners are crowded with- out any attemp: at segregation of races or ages. During the past week there were 22 prisoners in the jail at one’ time, it was stated by one fown officer While the fail is designed only as! temporary “lock-up” for prisoners pending their transfer to the Marlboro Jail or their release on bond for later court action, there are a number of occasions when prisoners are held for a week or more because of delays in court action, it is claimed County offictals avold as far as pos- sible holding women in the Bladens-| At Rockford Mrs. Hassell was begin- burg Jail, but this occasionally becomes | ning to show signs of the vigil, but she necessary and they are locked up with | expressed the belief that #ie plane had a pitiful lack of privacy. When women | landed at some isolated spot in Green are detained they usually are given |land. Hassells mother in Chicago held the freedom of the front space in the | the same view. Cramer’s brother in jail apd the men are placed in the | Rockford felt that his brother and Has- cells. Only by remaining in a small | sell were well equipped to meet an corner screened by the partition can |emergency a forced landing would have the women keep out of sight of the | necessitated | cells and their occupants, Practically| The Greater Rockford carried a col {all portions of the interlor are visible | lapsible boat, a gun and provisions for from outside the jail three weeks. Prisoners are left { vices a greater pa \ la to thelr own de- of the time with- t even a faller to ch them. There are no quarters at the jail for a guard |and the jailer spends the nights at his home. contenting himself ‘with visits to his charges at Mtervals during the day. Surrounded by Wire. The Jail building is surrounded by a wire fence, topped with several strands | of barbed wire, a padiocked gate giv-| ing_access to the inclosure from the | boulevard. Visitors often stand outside | this wire inclosure and converse with | | the prisoners through the window bars. | One of the prisoners recently con-' fined to the jail sent to The Star a| bitter complaint against conditions in | the jall. He got the letter out by toss- | {ing it from the windows to friends out- | | side the jail inclosure | | “I am up in years and a victim of | { tuberculosis,” he wrote, “and have been {subjected to the most horrible cruelties {and indignities in this living tomb or | dungeon. The jall has been flooded | more than once since my incarceration and as a result I have had to wade | around in foul water day and night.” | He goey on to describe the condition: | “Picture, if you can, & dungeon flood- with water; an old man in the | roes of® consumption wading around | all day in this vile stench.” In a postseript to his letter this pris oner, held on suspicion of housebreak- | ! “Please let 1t be known 1o | jthe U States Public Health Service | and Red Cross that I am a vietim of | tuberculosis and ask some one to come | here. Cannot possibly see a physician | or get any medical attention. I am so| | sick now can hardly write this fo| ou” { Police Need Clerks. The Police Department needs nine juntor clerk-typists and four guards for the House of Detention, It was an- nounced today by H. M. Luckett, chief clerk. The former position pays 81440 ( yearly and the latter $1,320. The |)lmru are under civil service CNATOR CURT | ed | ANSWERS MATE’S SUIT. | Wife 8ays Bhe Had Husband’s Con Theatrical Work | sent to Declaring she had no knowledge that she belng advertised as Queen of Jazz" and asserting that she never appeared at roadhouses, but only at hotels with the knowledge and { consent of her husband, Mrs. Charlotte { L. Rotenblatt, 1442 Spring road, today | | fled in District Supreme Court an af- | fdavit in denlal of statements made it]in the answer filed yesterday by husband, Bernard Rosenblatt, ~ 1625 | )| Varnum street, to her sult for & limited | | divorce. Bhe says this is the first time that her husband ever complained of her f tions, The wife is represented by At- returning from Topeka, w tomey Raymond Neudecker, and’ Laverne Roberts | killed at | AND DANISH SHIPS plane | is a large open room, with a partition | it had dropped into the sea somewhere | The vice presidentinl candidate as he arrived at eve he was foi Senator Curtis Is his sister, Mrs. Edward CLI L§TATES, KI[[INGBI injured | more | August New- | MBING IS FAMILY TRADITION WITH THIS PAIR WHO FEEL SAFE ATOP CHURCH STEEPLE| Morrison Sons Have Worked | as Steeplejacks for Four Generations. | YOUNGEST WANTS TO FLY| [ Milton, 20, Began Career at| 14—Father Climbed Singer | Building at 12. rd and fourth gen- re steeplejac who started “Even unto the th sration” the Morrison: Milton Morrison, 20, when he was 14, and his father F. Morrison, 57, who climbed first flagpole atop the Singer Build- ing at 12 when that was the tallest ihing in the way of steeplejacking that ruuld be done, are comparatively close o the ground regilding the cross atop | the Church of the Ascension, Twelfth street and Massachusetts avenue, a job | hich they started tod: s only | foet high. worked on Woolwoerth t Wants to Be Flyer. Miiton, whose great-grandfather start- ed climbing Morrisons in Philadel- | phiy, is the lowest branch on the Mor- rison funfly tree, but already he has tur his cyes longingly | of caurch steeples and flagpoles to iy | ing and wants to take a course in it | He's flown several times already | ""The present firm of George F. Morri- | son & Co. the great-grandfather of Milton. His | son George followed the trade, and now | there are two more Geor in the business—Milton's father | brother. The brother is out in Pitts- | burgh, going up | " The regilding of the cross for the | Church of the Ascension, of which the Rev. Dr. Thomas W. Cooke is rector, |is part of the work of renovating the edifice, which is being done at a cost of about $10,000. . Both the father and son have been lup the big steeple in the work of re- modeling, repairing and roofing. They are putting a thousand sheets of gold | leaf, valued at about $50, on the 10-foot M‘xn\: The hardest part of the present job. | according to Milton, was chasing out a | hundred or so pigeons who had built nests in the top of the steeple, a job which, according to Dr. Cooke, an equal sized army of starlings fatled to do in a battle royal about a month ago RITES FOR J. W. IVORY. th s Will Be Said Thurs- Church. Requiem Ma at Home Requiem mass for John W. Ivory, Library of Congress employe who fell | | dead yesterday morning in front of his | home, 3446 Connecticut avenue, will be |sald Thursday morning at 9:30 o'clock |at Holy Comforter Church, Fourteenth and East Capltol streets, with parish he has been connected for many vears Rev. Edward J A. Nestor, act- ing pastor of the .mu.n will offici { Interment will be at Mount Olivet Cem- [ etery | Mr. Tvory is survived by Mrs. Anne T. Ivory, and two {Altne and Ur-ula Ivory day Morniy his widow, RETURNS TO CAPITAL fon Station this moerning ally notitied of his nomination. With A’a»mm Press Photo, from the tops | was established in 1849 by | e Morrisons | and | which | 'BYRD SNOWMOBILE WILL COMBAT IcE | Tractors and Sledges Will Be Used in Trip to Antarctica. on om, nto the Antarctic (Edltor's note sories of sto of explora BY JOHN L. COOLEY, A ed Press Science Ed NEW YORK, Aug y dogs retor when otored Fokk » the aircraft choser ith the thin, treacher i viclous gales of the | outhe inent. Th were tested rigore with he: | at high altitudes before they were ac- cepted, for most of the work they will be called on to do will take them over land that is at a mean elevation of arly 7,000 feet, Planes Successful. used with bri - batiles and the Planes have be success in the i flew from Kings Bay | 'nr North Pole and |1 t flights in | George Hubert nent | considerably more difficult Dogs have a long record of satisfac- | tory service in polar transportatior ! and not even the airplane has outdated | them. Comdr. Byrd is taking 80 h k and malamutes, trained by Arthu T. Walden of Wonalancet, N. H., t | haul the sledges on the many side trips to be made by members of the expe- dition. They will be used. the subbases | polar flight too, in laying dc along the route of an_assignment that all over 3,500 miles of A special team of light the plane that ta but their services in the even off for the Pole, be needed only e ccessitates an The Morrisons of Phildelphia have two | George F. Morrison, 57, on his peri | who !lllr(ld climbing I\hrn he was || MISSISSIPPI GOES ~ TOPOLLS TODAY | Democrats Expected to Reg- | ister Large Vote in Leg- islators’ Race. By the Associated Press. JACKSON, Miss., August From {8 am. to 6 pm. today Democrats of Mississippi will move on the voting pre- cincts to cast their choice for a United States Senator, eight United States Representatives, a State Supreme Cour judge and eight highway commissior ers Wiih 21 interest stirred by the battle forecast by the Weather Bureau, large outpouring of voters is Campaign managers were as to start their lleutenants out to bmv' in the votes. The usual pre-election | opposing camps, each candidate being convinced that he will be elected Managers of both Hubert D. Stephens incumbent Senator, and his opponent T. Webber Wilson, member of th House of Representatives, prophesy that thelr candidate will win by be- tween 20000 and 40.000. Politic.! prognosticators believe the race will b close The result is expected to s senatorfal fssue, as the wins Democratic primary in M ing the last half century has been equivalent to election. But in view of the approaching presidential eclections Republicans might attempt to put a strong candidate in the field. in tho hope of denting the solid Democrati phalanx. In the House of Representat three contests are found out elght congressional districts CURTIS RETURNS | WILL OPEN TOUR IN RHODE ISLAND (Continued es only of the | trom_ 1-|m Page.) | a guest tomorrow night of his daughter at her country home near Providence. and will leave for Washington Thursday | evening immediately after his addr | After that Senator Curtis | scheduled nddress is at Syracus | August 28 | “The committee appointed by | Lewis_Smith, president of the land curtis Club, to welcome | Curtls upon his arrival included: Wil liam_T. Galliher, Robert V. Fleming M. D. Rosenberg, Mrs. Virginia White | Speel, Mrs. May D. Lightfoot, Miss Martha Fechan, Mrs. J. H. Branson | Mrs. Amy J. Leeds, Mrs. Lucia Hanna { Hadley, Mrs. Cecll Rose Chippenden Col. Rice W. Means, Brig. Gen. Frank | 'T. Hines, director of the Veterans' Bu- veau; Col. Winfleld Scott, commissioner of pensions: Col. Charles Burton Rob- bins, Assistant Secretary of War; Wil- liam M. Bobb, commander of the De- partment of the Potomac. G. A. R.; Dr Henry A. Johnson, surgeon general of the Gi. A. R, James G. Yaden, depart- { ment_commander of the District Span- {ish War Veterans; Col. J. Miller Ken- yon, department commander of the American Legion: T. Lincoln Town send, Samuel McComas Hawken, United States Atlorney Leo A. Rover, A, B Chaffee, Harry Wardman, Jullus 1. Pey- | ser, Joshua Evans, jr.. and United State Marshal Edgar C. Snyder Among others al the station were | tewls Pettyjohn of the Farm Loan Board ;.um Mrs. Pettyjohn, W. N. Smelser and Edward Roche. PFrancis Wells, presi- "dent of the Blalne Invincible Republi- [ean Club, the colored organization, also present with a r!.~h-nmunn ‘Flve Radio Bands Or To Clcar Alr fu | )HV the Associated Pres | I Three Navy wave bands and those | | 1 | | John Hoover Senat v used by two private broadeasting sta- | tlons were temporarily closed today to | permit possible reception of signals from | Bert Hassell's plane, the Greater Rock ford The | 6XN ot statlons affected were | Oakland, Calif, and WND of 1 Ocean Township, N. J. They. along | with the Navy, having been using waves | of about the same length as that used by Hassell Representative Buckbee of Tiltnols asked the Radio Commission to take action, contending that if Hasseli were sending slgnals they were being private | Morrisons are gilding the cross atop the Church of the Ascension. At left: ilous perch. Inset over the senatorship and a fair weather | i predictions were forthcoming from the | | vunlu‘:‘ | drowned out ibbase. been climbers for generations. Just now > Work of Tractors. Milton Morrison, 20, his son, _—Star Staff Photos. .S, MAY RESUME ARBITRATOR'S ROLE Recognition of Ecuador Apt to Bring Another Bound- ary Row to Fore. Tractors and snowmobiles of v | types have been employed in_the Ani | arctic by other explorers. The party expects to use these machines in | transporting heavy equipment in and about the base camp. No polar expedition can venture f2 afield without_sledges. drawn by doy | or men, or both, and so these Antarct | adventurers are taking man: hicles for the hard journey [ the exploring parties The* first trapsportation problem ‘o | be solved by the expedition is the movement of men, supplies and_equip ment to the base on the Ross Sea barrier. This job has been a: the stocky bark Samson. which was built for just the sort of sailing afford- ed by the southern ocean. Constructed in Norway in 1885 as a mother ship for whalers, the 512-ton vessel was designed to weather icy seas and has a record of many years of \r‘r\l[? in the subarctic. Her hull is slightly wedge-shaped, enabling her to when the ice exerts its tremendous re Her bow is a mighty ram utts a passage through stubborn rbitrator of La s by iean | virtue of the rec- led by this Gov- ne of President Samson Carries Salls. The Samson measures 149 feet and 9 inches over all. has a beam of 31 feet and 1 inch and a depth of 17 feet and 1 inch. Her hull has been reinforced with stout cross timbers 34 inches thick It is believed that no other ship has sides that thick. #er machinery has been overhauled and improved and new masts have been stepped. She burns coal, but carries the full rigging of a bark to increase her steaming speed and to use in case the coal gives out battling with the ice. The expedition's airplanes, disman- tled. can ride to Antarctica on her decks. Their motors will be stowed in the hold with the vast stores of food. clothing, scientific instruments and other eq | ernmen | Ayora of Ecuador. Resumption of h Ecuador diplom v withheld since 1 the way for that country to petition th: | United states to extend its good offi toward settling Ecuador's old fronti claims against Peru, in the event the jputants fail to agree by direct nego- tions Peruvian-Ecuadorean |signed in 1924, vrovides for settlement e question by direct negotiation. | r the protocal all claims whereon cipals fail to agree are to be left jon by the United States. Peru, like the United States. withdrew | her recognition for Ecuador in 192 when the faction that placed Prestd Ayora in power overthrew the constitit nal government of Prestdent Cordova Thus, with relations broken, no attemp: could be Ty out the terms of the protocol. Lately Peru again rec- the existing government and ited States added its recognition protoce . 1928.) HURT IN MAKING ARREST. Policeman Bailey Charges Fred- erick R. Reh Assaulted Him. ‘While empting to arrest Frederick Reh, 35 years old, a former polic | man, 1820 L street northeast. yester- day afternoon, Policeman C. A. Bailey of the second precinct was assaulted, he claims, s! ring a sprained right hand As a res of the alleged assault Re 1 to Casualty Hospital a laceration to the sc € iocked up on charg and disorderly conduct. MACMILLAN TO SAIL. HARTFORD, Conr Capt nost certain, be- tant economic_questions involved, that the boundary dispute w |fall to vield to Ecuadorean-Peruv mIR diplomacy, the good offices of the Goy- | ernment at Washington will, in all prob- |ability, be sought and another problem confront § partment officials ady engrosse ettlements © disputes betweer d Pert ’ a and H al d | United States recognition of | Ecuadorean government followed cc | vineing proof that President Ayora has| for three years been bending great forts toward cleaning up the and 1ir political and finan dition in which he found the when he assumed cffice. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT QUIET ON CLUB RAIDS ° Mrs. Willebrandt Declines to Dis- cuss Report of Rift With New York Officials ipt 1 con coun August 31 ( acMillan and his leave Anetalok Bay brador. where they have been quar- tered dm»ng the past year, for the start back to civillzation today, acco ing o ‘radio advices received by Cl Rodim ator Rodimon has been cxpedition since it = BAND (‘ONCERTS United Sta d Washing! Official day at the day erning the situation the night clubs New York City, a the questioning of witness . sult of raids recently conduc centers of night life by \gents While brandt hary x ned to W 8:40 o'c ceremonies “tification of Republie nee was th Department of ed on prohib! Red Mill Mabel he Winds Walker Ger fore m fter at conjunction or Charles ide nominee at Topeka, she declin discuss publishe reports ¢ has been a rift between h trict Attorney Tu or phase of the tion Assistant Attorne: Galloway, the A eral in the absence eral John G. Sargent equally non-committal I have nothing to Brazilian tange, “Bue dercd S l mcd R r Signal From Hassell | e ale. Mrs the the the i with | 5 Ba and fmmermar 1o assistant ) Waldm Military bands M Pa March Overture, Wel e sther Hery Attorney ¢ Attorney ¢ ) Vermont n en was of Love for euphonium say,” was oen Hill Far nes from the v edy “The Blue M w Alres” . Greex Women and Heart of America Star Spangled Banner By the United States Navy Band, at the Sylv: 1 Theater, at 7:30 o'elock tonight, Charles Benter leader March, “On the Alr Overture, and Sty The The commission issued the orders and the officer in naval communications did nec chary Hkewise. Station 6XN Is operated on and WND on 3271 The Navy bands were of similar length The Radio Commission also requested the tropieal tadio station in Honduras to shut down until further notice. This | ftation 18 operated on 6,830 kilocyele | frequency. Commissioner Plckard, whe {ssued the orders, expressed the opinion | that Hassell might be unable to keep to | his assigned frequencies, and might be ' Fox-trot attempting to send off frequency. A ssaty of Goldman anger,” Mendelssohr Tamo”... Satla Felras Wagner 8 meters Valse, “Carnival Secrets Good Friday Music Suite In the Tavern” Jensen March of the Dwarfs” Qrleg cerpis fram “Hit the Deck". Youmans “Dance of the Bayaderes," Rubinstein . Solected The Star Spangled Banner 4