Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
o THE EVENING BSTAR, WASHINGTON. D. C., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER T928. i | POLIGEMAN'S VISIT PREVENTS ROBBERY Officer, Off Duty, Chases Suspects When Clerk Is Decoyed From Store. i ’ o ks Bt s E > Nation ross | Herbert Dorsey. 16 yeafs old, of 3708 By the Associated Press. : Ass: A carefully planned attempt to Tob | Officials of the National Red Cro: 3 il o > . 2 H I . Fo e 2 | Thirty-third streef v e | LANTA, Ga., September 2 CHICAGO, the Virginia Dare candy store. 1302 H | went Into executive session this morn- | Thirty-third street, who won the Dis- | A A o | : ght after the young woman clerk there had been decoved away by a telephone call, and a police- | cd by a partition in the a reflection in ot, failed last ni e ¢ " The s other who is ape i Lear of Hume k. was in the store B) HEC ooy eccived a_telephone call | e caller, | told her | purse in the d left her er in the day and re- ! plete. the juniors, with four events each, the i ed her to look for it :mdl“fl!‘- | AIl chapters have been urged to have | leading junior being Edward Harms of | ROESCH AND PITT scheduled address here last night. .The with automobile phone him it it was found. He left a; their reports in by Monday morning and | Evanston. ‘These young aviation en statement, in part, follows: ¥ ne, police teleph: number. officials believe the total of contribu- | thusiasts have a great advantage ove “Alfred E. Smith at Oklahoma City tinued Call From “Headquarters.” Hold-Up Foiled Nation Lags, but tal Is Active. ing to seek way: of the needed amount ceived up to that time. storm victims. Capi- nd means of speed- {ing up contributions to their $5.000,- 000 hurricane relief fund when a chee last night disclosed that only $879,35 had’ been The immediate need of money was to the already staggering burden of the Workers at Red Cross headquarters, however, explained that most of the money in hand to date is from the large chapters in the East and that the re- ports from Western sections and the smaller chapters are by no means com- tions at that time will be much more re- RED CRUSS SEEKS 0. C.BOY VN O IPAD Hurricane Relief Fund for Herbert Dorsey One of Two Ahead in National Model Aircraft Exhibit. | | trict model aircraft tourney, ward Marcouiller, winner in the Evans- ton, TiL, finals, led in qualifying for the reatest number of events after the | check up of records by the national tournament committee at Atlantic City yesterday. | Elmira, N. ¥.. was next with four en- trants, and the remaining cities from one to_three. Washington Junior Wins. George Bell, Thirty-second street, and Robert Loper of Topeka, Kan, were second among the rest in trying for the all-round and Ed- | 15 years old, of 2714 | INTOURNEY IVALS 1 Blackmail Charged Mrs. John J. Raskob, wife of the Demo- eratic national committee chairman, under threat of death to her husband. iour letters said to have been written Mooney from Philadelphia are the ba: of the charges.* Mooney is said to have confessed. P. & A. Fhoto. FINALISTS IN GOLF DWEN GIVES FIERY REPLIES TO SAITE: Denies Charges of Bigotry. Says Nominee Asked His Aid in 1924. homa on his arrival here late yesterday, replied to Gov. Al Smith's charge that | he was “insincere” in his opposition to | the Democratic presidential nominee with a declaration that he never had “discriminated against a man because of his religion” and a reiteration of his attack on Tammany Hall. \ delegation in with McAdoo, in the Madison Square Garden convention. Replys in Statement. His reply to Gov. Smith's attack in his Oklahoma City address Thursday night was made in a formal statement to newspaper men shortly before his charged that my opposition to Tam- his memorable contest | Pool Witness | press the alleged operations of the lot- in Albany, was the first witness to at the opening of the grand jury A il —Wide World Photo. R N TAX) WAREARE 'Rivalry Over Cab Stands |Breaks Out in Chicaso—O0ne | warfare orted to have joined him as he fled further emphasized today when addi- ¢ i : . rom the store were captured three | tional | reparts. from workers in the| Washington and Boston tied for first | lhlftfl{:h[: -‘“0’}'"‘l:é"‘,gp}\,";[,g‘;‘fg:&?,fl;"] ks ¢ n trail of bills dropped storm-swept _regions of Florida and |place in the greatest number of boys | FRANK C. MOONEY. charge that he had sought Tammany | was arrested n marking the progress | Porto Rico indicated that pestilence and ving, the local group having six | e S ooNEY iback 7ot the presidency in 1024 and b el Tt o hich ended after they | | famine are hovering over the devas- | and_two seniors and Boston | Charged with attempted blackmail and | $UPPort for the presidency W 1934 apd CLARENCE A. BARNES, Al side Hotel, 1336 tated homes. ready 1o add their horrors | With four juniors and four seniors. |extortion in demanding $100.000 from | 34.C, YASE (S ERE M 0 B oo O tle, police said pool in gy me | 5 LA T DEAD Held, Ancther Scught. wing rove ave Of Boston, who had charged that Gov.* hud seen the fgh Smith had been lax in efforts to sup- | . gun p Word reached Checker rters last rs had b attempted to noar the cafe fig sl impressive. championship at Atlantic City October many and to the Kammnny can;ildalel | had been s it 15 minutes later, Policeman | al F 5and 8. Any boy even though he qual- — was not due to the corrupt criminal | Police Lieut. Dubach said the first Sanford, a friend of Miss | Capltal Fund Progresses. | 304 hut one single event, may com- ’ record of Tammany, or to his being a { indication of trouble between the e r's, dropped into the store for While contributions from the Nation | pete if all 10 events of his class in the | Both Win Way to Last Round by | product of Tammany, but because of Gy drivers came a week ago when He was off duty at the time. as & whole were lagging a bit, Washing- | finals. g | his religion. With some violence, he [ drivers of the ‘Chécker: Co. weie are The young woman had been puzzled | tanians were making an impressive | Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, Orviile Victories at Bannockburn charged me with false pretenses and in- | rested after a pistol fight with polic: by the telephone message, as she was | showing. A compilation of donations | wrioht and Comdr. Richard E. Byrd | sincerity and charged all others of like S who had ht to question then sure the pocketbook had mot leen iost { today indicated that nearly one-third | peading the national commitice, se- | Today. opinion with the base motives. HeaohestCineinnatilintR Fhree ds e I AL ohat s in the store, so she told the policeman | of the local quota has been raised OF | jecteq the names of those with the | “My answer is that no man in the | N€ACNES LINCINNATE IN RACE raccauic with intent o kill were piace of the occurence. As the l\\o‘\-c‘rv ‘pl’rqg:lclscx{i.}! e i he | Dishest records. | i I\\nrld has ever heard me say an un- | 2gainst them i ame in and told her that she | ceived $12,455.76 at an early hour to- | The local boys wil have their e Rt champion "of ‘tha | Catholic, My brother-in-law 38 & - AT R wanted on the_telephone. | day. This is exclusive of the hundreds | penses paid to the national conte. i Tl et | o Sathnne sk Gy b e e Prize. | yThe trouble is attributed by police This time, Miss Van Lear related. | : of dollars sent to The Evening Star and | the local committee, where during their | Washnstan SOl ang GOy RO | cathilie “*I never at any time in my {he desire of rival cab drivers to kez he voice, which <he is sure is the same | Upper: Miss Frances Van Lear. |a $§2000 contribution promised by a | stay they will be given a banguet, The | 870 (i€ BRETNS, (0 PR BAMPOGU | Soiic it discriminated against a man e v deesuity t spoke over the wire the first time, | local civic organization Monday lads will also have free tickets to the |y 0 ihic afternoon. Pitt defeated | because he was a Catholic or because of | by the Assocated Press. Later four witnesses of the shooting was call- declared that “headquarters” all- | ing and proceeded to cross-examine her concerning the supposed lost purse, | affecting not to believe her statement | that it hed not been left in the store. | At both times she was told that her | own telephone was out of order. | The manager of the Gayel Lower: Policeman W. M. Sanford. give two bencfit near future, dona ticket money to the A letter has beo CONTRIBUTORS TO STORM FUND ty heater informed the District Chapter of the Red Cross today that his theater wiil performances in the g one-half of the elief fund. sent by the District divertisements. The first indoor event will be held in the new municipal audi- torium and the outdoor events will be staged at Badger Field, the regular air- port at Atlantic City, and at Brigantine Beach, where the distance flights will be | held. Carl F. Kellerman, jr., of Columbia | by 3 and 2 in one semi-final round this morning, while Roesch defeated Albert R. McKenzie of Columbia by the same margin. In the second fight, C. W. Griffin of Argyle defeated C. W. Stoddard of his religion, whatever it was. Raps Corruption. “I oppose Alfred E. Smith because I regard him_as a product of a corrupt political system; I belicve that the Tammany system is, as Dr. Parkhurst CINCINNATI, Ohio, September 22— Art Goebel, Los Angeles, who piloted his Lockhead-Vega monoplane Yankee Doodle, was the first of the flyers participating in the Los Angeles-Cin- i ! identified Reister a the slayer, and said another Yellow Cab driver accompanied him after the shoot~ ing and is being sought. Reister, the police sald, tried to escape in the slain man’s cab, but ran into a telephone pole. He then commandeered another While the young woman was attend- Chapter to all Washington clergy urg Banncekburn, 1 up, and E. R. SH has recently said, organized corruption. | cinnati air race to land here today. : e \ve his name to police as Benjamin| The subscriptions to the hurricane their pulpits Sunday. Many pas. It Bariickbian s 4 aidi 00 cerity when I declared for Hoover and ' gion crossed the finish line at Lunken y e e squad. apiro, 24 years old of Philadelphia | relief fund, received by the cashicr of 8 ha‘l‘)('hml&zlc}u;:{l (l:o_v mufit' e this i In the third flight, Dr. J. R. Mood | €Xpressed g{ddlscox\tent with the nm"Ahp’ort ;c 10025 a s unametal tie PRESID*E*N* S came in the door, rapped on the counter | The Evening Star, and tabulated at|step in behalf of the storm sufferers. of Bannockburn won by default from |Many candidate. He told the country | A7 i _ n | REPORTED IMPROVED Gocbel, holder of the non-stop flight T RETURNS #nd called “stor While Sanford, sit- noon. coday, ere as follow: Women have been placed in bank: Maj. E. Montgomery of 'Congressional that I approved Tammany in 1924 and record from California to New York e screen. wa him : theaters and stores to receive donations, < il | sought his assistance in having Tam- . ting behind the screen. watched | Acknowledged . 5 e and is playing B. L. Smelker of Wash- | ing - ht, said D in % i, he proeifa, ¢ open (e | R e e o, e dere oM W | A Wi e o i prsney | and v e g o, oM HIS TOUR cksHresistes, BRO 0 S Nnai. | JuRvEan many small donations, which, it is be- | TW0 Bullets Removed at Sibley | Woodward of Congressional, 3-and 2. {4t he had an inaccurate memory. | N-_¥., en route here. THROUGH VERMONT money from it, the D( A. M. Cunningham.. lieve v s # i — = “I w. Burgin, the only ether entrant in the i i s ieved, the givers would have hesitated Hosuitil-Be 1 was not a candidate in 1924. I was byl v ook ofi trom S Chased Through Streets. 5T T to send to a regular receiving station. . Hospital—XKecovery COUNSEL PRESENTS on the delegation instructed for Wil-|Cincinnati non-stop race, took of John J. Fagan. Gov. Alfred E. Smith from Kinsley, liam G. McAdoo, which supported him Los Angeles over ‘an hour earlier yes- (Continued_from: First Page.) When he tumed to leave Sanford |87 & CnE h Eriested Los, Angeles gver an hour e oute ¢ hi: st nd attempted | Kans. nt the following telegram to pected. to the end. The idea of Tammany sup- | terday afternooi 3 B LU T e e e John "Barton Payne, chairmar: of the ARALL FINAL FARE RAISE porticg me was preposterous and Gov.| FORT WORTH. Tex, September 22 |9ayi here Y received my bride: here my abie to gt outside, where he was joined | p’ [ p X | ; » Smith must surely himself have known | () —Thirteen of the original 23 starters | 8¢ad lie pillowed among the everlasting by a young man who told police e Was | Goorge R. Gook T learned with profound grief that| The condition of Ernest W. Sale, 29 CASE ON MONDAY | it. because his patron, Charles F. Mur- | {2 the three divisions of the Los Angeles- | DillS: 3 D R Feemioinl oribhioy] S the distress in both Porto Rico and years old, 2111 First street, who wa phy. refused to attend the Jefferson day | 1o e Hree Ao o mained In the | I love Vermont because of her hills it est on H street with San- | 0 G Florida, Is even greater than it at first | shot four times Thursday by Norman L) banquet. in New York because I was an | competition today, as the seven class A ‘i‘;‘:c“?nlllgf- ‘QQKSCCXIFrL'falld invigorat- s Tecls. As the chas appeared to be. "The distress of these | James Pryor, 38 vears old, of the same | ___(Continued from First nvited guest and because I had op-| advance guard pianes prepared for a | o Cumale, But most of all becaise of d north on Fourteenth street San ford | Franklin & Co haries N. Venable, U. S. F. come speedily to their assi stricken people should move America to istance, address, was reported today to be in I favorable condition at Sibley Hospital. which the two companies compete in posed and denounced Tammany. When Gov. Smith met me in the hall of the s hop to Pine BIuff, Ark. lass B planes, which left Los An- dfié of pioncers who almost beggared them- houted to Policeman Floyd 8. s e : 0 s £ : . : chy s o earnestly indorse the appeal which the |He has improved rapidly since an op- | many sections of the city. Mr. Ham said | Manhattan Club, New York, when he 3 L M1~ | selves for others. , Hawthome, (who Wit OPeraLu itos | dames A Stuart Red Cross is making fa the people of |cration was performed yesterday for the |that separate rates would have a ten-| was cngaged in' his contest’ with Mo- | S yesterday, were to cateh up With | “If the spirit of liberty should vanish e S AGhe parkile | o TR UDRIKE this country. I hope and believe that ' removal of two bullets, and his recovery |dency to take patrons from the lines| Adoo, he solicited my assistance with |16 "2%} SEC-00 Sy poct Cror. Gl | from the rest of the Union and our in- Miss Nellic E. Pumphs it will meet with a speedy and generous | is expectad. charging the higher fare and divert| the Oklahoma delegation and I did not | s e The | Stitutions should languish, it all could ide Hotel the fugitives ran up the ou steps and up the fire escape, clim in a window and flecing down ng | the ! ¢ stairs end into the lobby. where they| g were momentarily halted by F. C.|N manager, who had been told | o ‘The brief pause in their N. B. Baker. I A. Fleming. s happening by the shouts|Mys w. T. Harrison... .. John B. Marr, Florida reiief. . | response.” . M. Hunt.... . J. Schwartz. M. . This heels " Friend. President Sends Message. message followed close on_ the f one from President Coolidge, | who, when advised at Ludlow, Vt., that the 'Red Cross had fixed a minimum | goal of $5,000,000 for its West Indies | hurricane relief fund, sent the foliowing Sale, who 1s himself under a $3,000 bond under a charge of assault with intent to kill, was shot at the boarding house in which they live, as a result of Pryor's contentions that Sale was pay- ing attention to the latter's wife, Mrs. Catherine Pearl Pryor. The accused was arraigned in Police them to the other lines. He said that while there are times when the W. R. & E. lines could carry more passengers, the problem of moving rush-hour traffic is not much different from a few years ago. Cites Former Decision. solicit his support with Tammany.” Letter Is Quoted. In support of his assertion that Gov. Smith solicited his assistance, instead of him asking the executive for support, Mr. Owen quoted a letter written him September 4 by Charles T. Lark, New of the entrants spent last night. fourth plane remained at Tucson over- night. Class A planes thus far have been the only casuals of the derbies, 10 of the original 17 starters being forced out of competition. Eight of the planes which took off Thursday morning, after a delay caused by fog in Los Angeles, be restored by the generous store held by the people in this brave little State of Vermont. Tremendous Applause. There was a great outburst of clap~ ping and cheering when he had fin- ished. He stood for scarcely a moment light was enough to enable Sanford| jonn B, Marr, Porto Rico relief. Court yesterday under a charge of as-| He asked the commission what a| York attorney, whom he said was with and Hawthorne to reach the spot and | g R. Nale JaEans message to the Red Cross at Washing-| gauit vffflh 1nto!;\t to kill and held un- | visitor arriving at Union Station would | him when he and Gov. Smith met in |failed to reach the first night control | smiling and bowing in acknowledge- arrest thom. Anna Bell Glover jer a $10,000 hond for action of the |think if he found two cars there run- | the Manhattan Club. point at El Paso. Two more Were|ment, when the train started moving. | Both men submitted without putting up any resista , and each immediately W. Irving Glover. R. M. H n: “I am gratified that the Red Cross acted so promptly upon receipt of it grand jury. Sale, on February 8 last, shot Kennon ning to virtually the same point in the business section but at different rates It follows: “Dear Senator Owen: forced out by engine trouble yesterday. Leader of the Class A flight, was Then he and Mrs. Coolidge, who had stood very close by his side throughout protested his innocence. They were|y M. G. first surveys of the etxent of the needs|T. Davis, Patent Office clerk, while the |of fare., Replying to your letter, I beg to state | undetermined here while Charles W.| waved adieus and then went inside. taken to the first precinct station and | w C. following the hurricane which, after the | Jatter was seated in an automobile Mr. Ham said the last word from | that Gov. Smith spoke to you in the hall | (Speed) Holman of St. Paul, presum-| Both she and the President. looked booked for investigation. | J. W. Wakeman devastation it had already wronght in|across from the Mayflower Hotel, With | the commission on the subject was|of the Manhattan Club in 1924. It was|ably led in class B, having been first | thoughtful and serious as they re-en- Precinct Detective J. E. Kane sald to- | g, F. S.° the Virgin Islands and Porto Rico, has | the former’s wife, Mrs. Annie Elizabeth | in a decision in a former case in which |only a short interview. He solicited|in EI Paso in his Laird plane. tered the drawing room of their car. day that Shapiro has admitted to him | - Edgar Smith. exacted a toll of a great I 05 of life, Sale. it was stated the commission would be your help for him with the Oklahoma ‘The train was soon speeding on its his part in the affair, but.Green sticks! A, M. Farkins... suffering and property devastation in O —— delegation and he was at the time way in the darkness. Mrs. Coolidge did much more open to the charge of dis- . to his original story that k}e Was | George M. West Florida. I earnestly request our citizens crimination if it permitted different | fighting McAdoo. I was there ‘with you I I not return to Washington with her hus- Knocked down by Shapiro in his dash | &. &' Robsrts to respond promptly in meeting the goal | \WOMAN 1S INJURED Tates for two lines {raversing the same | the entire time and certainly know that DENIES ATTACKING band. She left the train when it from the and was pursuing him to | Cash of at least five million dollars which territory than to keep the fare uniform. | You®did not solicit his support for your- reachad Northampton, the home of their HOOVER’S RELIGION Senator Caraway Comes Back at Mann—Asks Who Finances self.” Owens denied ith's assertion that he was a “bolter.” “I deny I'm a bol- ter,” he said. “I'm one of millions who are victims of a bolt by Al Smith. Al Smith is the bolter. the Red Cross has requested for the relief of those whose plight will appeal to the most generous impulses of our people.” In Florida, where the dreaded hurri- |canes have taken their greatest toll of American lives and_property, the re- adoption, at 9 o'elock. It is her inten- tion to remain there a weck or 10 days o be with her mother, who is so sericus- ly ill at a hospital in that city. She and the President had visited her mother on their journey to Vermont and they were not at all encouraged despite seek an explianation. EYEWITNESS FINDS WHOLESALE TRAGEDY The president ol the Washington Railway & Electric was cross-examined briefly by Ralph B. Fleharty, people’s counsel, and by Mr. Clayton. Mr. Fle- harty called his attention to the sug- gestion of the Eeague of the American Civil Service that Government employes IN AUTO COLLISION Two Men Hurt Trucks—Boy Bicyclist Ella Herbert. Eimer Hall Mabel Hall. in Falls From S. T. Conkling sponse to the appeal of the Red Cross and others refrain from using the cars " P the aged woman’s cheerfulness at seeing IN FLORIDA TOWNSlm and Mrs. has been excecdingly prompt. Is Arrested. it the fare s Increased and. asked 1t | FLOOD AND DISEASE His Activities. | them. i | Interested The chapter at Tallahassce, capital that would not have a considerable | . The remainder of the journey back to (Continued from t Page.) Mrs. H. W. Ha of the State, wired it had more than = effect. INCREASE HORROR Washington was uneventful. Th SR e F. H. Spencer. |doubled its quota and would continue | Following a collision last night at| Mr. Ham said it has been his ex- By the Associated Press. | ident retired very shortly after undamaged. Only three in the busi-|Mrs. 8. P. Fickien its efforts. Maryland avenue and Fourteenth street | Perience that such methods of protest OF FLORIDA STORM| sSenator Caraway, Democrat, of Ar- | Coolidse left, and did not arise ur ness district were habitable. Hundreds g‘fief;-re’j | —— {northeast, Mrs. Frances Hex'bart. 26 ggngfipfirlfi},’f‘fifiinfl’q rates are usually kansas denied yesterday that he had glfllgthf(‘g;;; Zgfifig‘fg"eflf*; i i of homeless refugees [rom outlying dis-| RGBT | years old, of Sent Pleasant, Md., was | Ot (WmERIRY, < LT N e wmmnu;‘—d P attacked the religion of Herbert Hoover, ation at k. this . erad a i B 1 2 i o 3 as Mr. Ha S ge.) morning. He motored immediately to tricts paraded up and down the street,| yiginia B " Gilmore WESTERN ROADS ASK |isken %o Chsuaity stospial. ster’con would be befose the comrmission at thig | — oo trom TS ZRE%) as charged by Horace A. Mann, direc- | the White House. and after a breakfast aimlessly moving from place to place. Hundreds of crude unpainted coffins cluttered the streets. Trucks came and went, bringing loads of lime and other disinfectants and coffins and then tek- ing out the dead. Undertakers worked in the sireets and so unconcerned had become those passing by that they hardly turned their heads to look at a corpse as it| E A J. was placed in a coffin, sprinkled with} M Estelle M. Gilmore Mrs. H. P. Maxwell. John G. Hern Miss Sally Schenck. . E. Clark. Sympathizer L. Rappaport Earnings Have Been lime and piled with others against the | p 0. Cris; time a truck would arrive to take them | prochet) T anid e, By the Associated Press. away. During the hour this correspond=| pysanath I, Cruickshai The "lent was in Belle Glade 11 bodies were brought 1nto the town. Four of them wers of white people. They were towed into town through Hillsboro Canal be- hind small boats. 41 Bodies in Field. | Capt. South explained that the bodies | in sight of passersby on lhiighways ncar he town could not be recovered until to | reclamation of the Florida Everglades.” Millions of dollars have been expended general upward ‘Total to date. Western trunk line railroads. Agents of the Wester: the commission for permi immediately applications loo! o that end. From Canal Point southward the ter- FREIGHT RATE RISE Hold Increases Necessary Because “Con- spicuously Inadequate.” rst step toward instituting a revision of freight rates in Western territory have been instituted before the Interstate Com- merce Commission by representatives of n roads asked n ng to in- creases on a wide range of commodi- dition is not serious. The automobile in which she was riding was operated by Joseph B. Herbert and the other by John G. Lewis, 2010 Fourteenth street southeast. Falls from trucks yesterday sent two colored men to local hospitals with minor injuries..Arthur Cauthen, colored, 26 years old, 140 B street southwest, and John Malvin, colored, 48 years old, 418 First street, were the victims, the former, of a collision and the latter, when he lost his balance. Artbur L. Vaughn of Zaltimore, was treated at Emergency Hospital for severe facerations to tne head and neck after his automobile was in a col- lision on Fourteenth street southwest with a truck operated by Spiror E. Pas- sas, 213 John Marshall place. Vaughn's injuries are not thought to be serious. Several broken fingers and a cut on the back of the head were suffered by Thomas Beaver, colored, 41 years old, 211 Eastern avenue northeast, when his time if the Capital Traction Co. Iad not applied for an increase. Mr. Ham replied he did not think he would be Earlier in the session Mr. Ham testi- fled that separate rates of fare would be discriminatory. prejudicial to his company and contrary ta. public policy NOONAN PLEA DISMISSED. Stockholder Sought to Prevent Car Merger. The appeal filed in the District Court of Appeals by John J. Noonan, largest minority stockholder in the Washington Railway and Electric Co., in his lone fight to prevent the merger of the local transit companies, was dismissed today. Noonan sought an injunction and the appointment of a receiver in his effort to prevent the local companies from merging, and his application was dis- missed by Justice Gordon of the D ice on rail lines to Pahonkee was re- stored yesterday, and last night authqr- ities ordered: bodies sent to Sebring and Okeechobee City for burial there, deeming it inadvisable to send more bodies here. ‘The governor last night ordered the State highway department mobilized for duty in clearing highways, which in some sections were blocked by de- bris piled 4 to 8 feet high. Six trucks will be sent here immediately’ and dis- patched info the Everglades. Flood Enters City. The western edge of West Palm Beach was under water last night when water from Lake Okeechobee began flowing over the Belvedere road within the city limits. This road had been dry until oday. Lake Okeechobee is approximate- 1y 50 miles from here. The intention of West Palm Beach officials to put down profiteering has tor of the Southern divisiorr of the Re- publican campaign. “My attention is called to a state- ment issued by ‘Col.’ Mann,” Caraway said, “in which he charges that I at- tacked the religion of Mr. Hoover. “Before ‘Col.” Mann is entitled to any reply he should disclose what his ac- tivities are, who pays him and why. On directions to procure literature attack- ing the Governor of New York because of his religion, and he should admit what all suspect—that the lady told the truth and that he did not. “Now, as to his charge that I attack- ed the religion of Mr. Hoover, there is one reply that could be made if one wished to descend to the level of reply- ing to him at all, but why reply at ail to a man who is engaged in an enter- prise so detestable that even ‘Col hearsay testimony he denounced as a | White House t liar a lady who obtained from his office | ;‘he Republican nominee to lunch with i eaten alone, he went to the Exccutive office. He did not at once give his at- tention to the business awaiting him, careful read the morning newvspapers and theu made a tour of the various rooms or the Executive office. peared a trifle tired after hi Imost constant traveli President Coolidge arranged to have a long talk with Herbert Hoover at the his_afternoon, inviting He ap- two days im. It was understocd that the Presi- dent, who has seen Mr. Hoover on only a couple of occasi since returning from his vacation. was anxious to dis- cuss further the progress of the cam- paign. The impression was that the President also wished to impart to the nominee impressions he gained regard- ing the political situation in New Eng- Iand during his recent trip to Vermont. Members of the President’s party learned enough during the several stops boats had been obtained to go out over | Tain is devoid of trees, except for those | tics over most of the Western terri-|automobile was in a collision at Rhode y Sl |o ; S | Mann declines to disclose what his con- , in_Massachusetts while accompanying the flat lands along the road. More|which man has brought there and |!OfY» and asserted that the increases|Isiand avenue and Tenth street with an "';‘hf‘;g’a":"f,fl“’“‘fi,'éflH“E{E"Lfl,“‘fi&wm\:)";‘l‘l‘";gd‘“[f“ev“"]‘V‘t‘é%“‘:‘l‘re‘”Ifl; J. Sor- | nections are and who finances his un- | him to and from Vermont to convince men also would be required, he said. | = . : were necessary because their earnings |automobile operated by Ralph Miles, e o iha I the North Amenican | sood at prices i £ th € | worthy activities. them that there is no mistaking the AL Soiith Bas conditions were l"m,“pl:umd. Stretching out as far as eye | “for some years have been and now 52 De Frees street. Beaver was treated on t] e g\:mm_dl at the lelAn?m‘ n\_;: 00 f at pri ?g.s n oxce.s; of those peré “Of course, I did not attack the re- | popularity of the Demo ¢ nominee worse than at Belle Glade. Only two | Can see, the land is dead flat. are _conspicuously inadequate.” at Freedmen's Hospital. Co.. Which Is sald to control the stock | mitted by ordinance. THeY mvere fncdlugion of Mr. Hoover, but this state- [ Massachusetts and the fact that it d a house boat still were| Canal Point buasts a railroad and is estern railroads have contended | Raymond Tyler, colored, 14 years old, [ the Washington Railway & Electric jand given hard labor sentences of ment is not made to ‘Col.” Mann.” will be necessary for the Republican: Of the bodics listed as re. | likewise a port of some consequence on | during recent years that their earn- | 3606 Rock Creck Church road, was ar- | Co» Was an “outside™ holding company. " Sekiire ! i el to exert themselves to the limit if Mr. B vered, A1 SHll Tay o & Beid onthic ;6% Lake Okeechobee. From |ings were considerabiy below those of | sested by’ ninin. preeimet. police vester- | Which came within the prohibitions | An hour before the trial, the city e e Ty Bitate vots 200 yards of the main part of town,|itS passengers and freight are | carriers in the Eastern and Southern | day afternoon and charged with hav- conlamrdl\.\mnu the La Follette act of | commis n ']‘_)(lsld o ordinance mak- | HUNT FOR COLORED MAN |in November it ety Ment amount. of | Moved every day across the big expanse | districts. It was further declared that|ing no bell on his bicycle after he[1913. Both the Washington Railway & ing it unlawful to sell at-prices in ex- It 15 thought likely by Mr. Coolidge' h e o e, | Of water to Clewiston, at the southwest | trainmen and conductors in the West- | struck and knocked down Mrs. Arthur |Electric Co. and the North American fcess of those existent Sepiember 14. | CHARGED WITH STABBING | intimates that tie question of the Pre wa o handle the ool [ comer ern territory have pending demands | ook A0 Knocke doears oid, | 2116 | Co. were named defendants in the suil, | Court records show that Cornell was e i e e e of reliel Wor%| In addition, at Canal Point is & large | for wage increases which have been | Thirteenth street, at Eighteenth and |and thelr counsel contended that the fcharged with selling kerosene at 25 o iy [ Ll e B R e e PP st | sugar mill which was to have been re- | pushed to the point of a strike threat. | Vernon streets. ‘The woman refused | transportation act of 1925 repealed jcents a gallon. It was explained that| yyijjjam Kimball Seriously Wound- | jects discussed when they are together 4 Il we can get ¢nough | ypiiiated and placed in operation late (W™ ‘le no mention was made of the |treatment those provisions of the La Follette act | the price of kerosene September 14 was R W e 1 up and burn them.” | (LN BC o ciderable amount of | impending increase in Western railroad i alieolinn o200 which the plaintiff sought to invoke. 20 cents a gallon. ed During Fight Staged Early Senator Deneen, who is one of the | nhabitants of | gugar cane producing lands are in |labor costs, it was assumed that the e— ] itire was charged with selling one i, recognized Republican leaders in Illi- e been missing | broximity. two matters had at least an indirect| SMITH CAMPAIGNERS : and cne-half pouds of hamburger meat is Morning. nois, during a cha the Preside e ki L South of Canal Polnt, for the most | connection. i : W. T. GCODWIN RITES. |for $100 and a pound of frankiurters | poupih precinct police are today look | 1004y assured ‘him that the State Housing Is Problem. part close to the shores of the lmge, Th nature nlnr‘l ;\x:pnt of the m-| QF D. C.VISIT ARLINGTON B g ‘I::n ‘twfl::‘t{“?r'\;fk‘fenr%:ée g{r‘p{,cmz\:rgg CiipiToe W oI R S e J"d'ii‘,ff;’;fifl»'fi?-",}fi{}"‘-‘}?‘;‘:"-h‘,‘,‘;”L“.'J;. He said ahokee conditions were better, | Where are almost the only true glades | creases contemplated by the Western i Veteran Employe of Bt Bliaabethis|wes sald: to Bave. heon ot mtots. tham | CCOUSI wonnded Villians Kiciball, col= { e HOOYEE plusaliy Wil ok be A0 gEeck lines was not disclosed by the pre- liminary approach to the commission. WILL LAY CORNER STONE. land that have been sufficiently drained to work, lie scores of farms, idle except for the sugar cane crops until in the | Fall, when the truck crops are planted. ored, 28 years old, 1440 S street, during a fight early this morning at Four-and- a-half and C streets southwest. Kim- ball is in a serious condition in Emer- pal according to , In charge ther, was shel- refugees were being sent Hoover will problem 500.000 votes. 25 cents a pound. Both men were released on bond pending appeal of their cases. but from his survey, win the State by at le MRS. COOLIDGE Legion Bugle and Drum Corps Her- alds Invasion of County in In- Hospital Buried. services for Willam T. Good- Funeral 000 mogins e ehool- | ™ panokee was a truck and cane cen- {erest of Smith nnd Robinson. | Wil veteran emplove of St. Eiizabeths S o i Beniy HoaltaE: e e ot Bt ae ! e 1y could. Another problem. | ter. Farther south Belle Glade is.the St Hospital, who dicd at. his Lome, on WIFE, ASKS SUPPORT. |silant is known. but police have been | p e 1 & | truc ands, 0! a 5 . > A B a., P er 2é.— 4 g 3 S R [cLeod, colo , 21 years old, 0 . sl ,.l(;)::;::.(j;"':' virtue of its location between two | ¢, Officiate at Fairmont Heights. |Members of the Vicfory Smith-Robin- | terday. Interment was in Mount Olivet | Alleging that her husband, William |41 Massachusetts avenue. was shot il| NORTHAMPTON, Ma September 1 piled along the | 1ATEe canals, / i : i T s son Club, from the voteless Capital |Cemetery, = F G| Wallace Sheppard, 1826 Seventeenth | the chest last night * - her home dur- |, NGITRAMFEON pe Jend o € the | “Near Belle Glade is the experiment | The Columbia Lodge. No. 85. L B.|City, mostly veterans of the Worl r. Gopdwin, who was 62 vears old. | sircet, an attoracy for the Federalling a fight. pollce say. with Witliam | %2 ()21 =0 station of the University of Florida |P. O. E. W., will lay the corner stone | war, yesterday night invaded Arlington | had b‘“u. A e ed a { Trade Commission, deserted her in 1910, Allen Robinson. colored. 24 years old, | (10 ©IEHCITE ENTIRE AREA CHANGED. and adjacent also are several extensie | for the new home of the W, Bruce | Couny. appealing to those who have | Elizabeti's Hospital. = 5 | rs. Adrienne Dugas Sheppard of 825 |of the same add She was treated | f z ‘ farms, privately owned. There are also | Evans Lodge, No. 3, Fairmont | (1 Tiaht of franchise to throw support [ He was a native of Monfgomery | yermont avenuc. sied him in Equity|at Emergency Hospital, where her con- T = experiment stations of various large en- Md. tomorrow afternoon. at o hie Democratic. candidates for the | County, Md, but moved to Washington | Goure yesierday for maintenance of | dition was said to be ot scrious, and Peaceful Farming District Devastated by | including the Brown Co. of All members of the organi- | prosidency of the United States. i with his xxl]‘"cf‘ s‘\\lul; 2 Young OV | herself and three children Robinson was arrested by sixth precinct ] ; Tropical Hurricane. Me. The latter company has asked to mect at 301 mhode | ‘rheir arrival here was heralded by | Entering the employ of St. Elzabelt B | Through her attorneys, Harry I. Car-|police and charged with assault with a | With hier mothet, Mis b o Dtember 22 | been bringing into its activities tests of | 1sland avenue and mareh o Fiftecnth | e figie and drum corps of the Vin- | Hoshital, he spent 20 wears at its daIEy | roil and M. J. Evansha, Mrs. Sheppard | dangerous weapon. . who is ifl at the Dickinson Memoriaf 1 for those who | the soll for the culture of peanuts on a |and I strec canlere, e fcentCostello Pogt, American Legion [ fatm ang the somainder of the i3 alloges that since the desertion she has S i I Hospital heve. The dent co rolades in the |I8TEe S o te. only & few miles | mont Helghts of Washington, whose playing drew | iiseq ty his widow, Mrs. Catherine F. | been forced to support her three chil-} yEMARIOKS RITES HELD. |minute stop, . 5 v to visualize the 3 lle Glade, only a few miles large crowds at Rosslyn, Clarendon and | $1¢q By T3 wieb, Mre B0 e - | dren, one of whom is an invalid, and . Aot . ) p of hurricane dev ol gt g | R BelLin . 5 children.’ Sk herself, The couple were marricd in T >, and still farthe at direction Facing a large gathering at Firemen's p Cdgefield County. ., in 1903, e 2 E Lat ¢ on e . ar and on lhcdlaé(l? are the l.‘l)lr‘nmun:;ir's DEATH TO BE PROBED. Hall here, Capt. x,vn.d,,,.;(.k L. Jones, a S i - s peiy sy Veteran Printing Office Employe :(Ii:‘.):’" m:)]u-m}; .. nz:x‘ul .\[1:. Cool- st Aterioar of Rita and Chosen, as well as that —_— veteran of the Spanish-American War ied i astosia stood 1 cw_moments on t B e Which Is located at the locks of Miami| An fnquest was being planned today | and the World war. deetared at what | INFLUENZA HITS MANAGUA BAND CONCERT. e e Bl b L observation platiorm before Mrs. Cool- farming during the Winter months|Canal. In the lake and not far from |, " "qo0in of James Thomas of (Smith has already done for World e By the United States Soldiers' Home | Funeral services for William J.|idge alighted. the President waving his when soft Spring balm rarely is broken, | Rita is what is known as Rita Island hns o o War veterans assured him of 75 per| MANAGUA, Nicaragua. September 21 | Militar; Band, at the bandstand, at|Hendricks, deputy disbursing officer at and nodding to friends and Much of their time during other periods | and several other islands, all of which | Mechanicsville, Md., at Providence Hos- | cong of their vote. “Smith should be | () —A severe epidemic of influenza has | 5:30 oclock this afternoon. the Government Printing Office, who shbors whom 'he recognized in of the year is spent in fishing are inhabited. 5 pital yesterday as a result of injuries the choice because he has demonstrated | proken out in this city. Nearly half of | March, “Ancient and Honorable died at his residence in Lyon Village, wd. He reached over the rail Vormally the ent is markeq| Truck raising is the principfl occu-|yoceived September 12 when he was|those qualities of leadership, which are | the National Guard has been stricken,| _Artiller) Va. Thursday night, were con-[to shake hands with his old friend, The various farms and | pation during the trucking season, al-| guck by an automobile on the |characteristic of great commanders,” |put only 19 mild cases have been re- | Overture, “Maritan ducted at the residence today at 11[James Lucy, ton shoemaker, mmunities have been protected drom | though South Bay produces a consider- dtown pike, near his home. he said ported among the 800 Marines stationed | Duet for flute and horn, o'clock. Interment was in Congres-| who had been Mr. Coolidge's eonfidante the waters of Lake Okeechobee by a|able amount of fish at times, Lake mas was 67 years old and a re-| Addresses were made by Harry L.|here. Many hundreds of the natives are| “SErenade” .................... riti | stonal Cemetery. ; in the days before his re-election to as yet incomplete. Okeechobee being open for fishing for | 4.4 school teach He is survived by | Bushong, secretary to former Senator (il and there have been numercus Messrs. Bergh and Famoso. Mr. Hendricks, who was 62 years old, | the governorship of Massachusetts. S i commercial uses most of the year. (st eratrs F of Baltl. | Thomas L. Martin of Virginia and Mar- | deaths ! Scenes from the opera “Carmen”. . Bizet [ had been employed in the Government [ ~When the train pulled ov Cool- SN S e more and Miss Nita of Peunsyl- [ tin L. Beban, a_ Worid-War veteran. [ Out of about 600 members of the Wayne | Printing Office for 42 years. He was|idge was driven, in company with Mr. Completion of these d: as the aim | John Maseficld aid to be eny vania. and four buc T eorge N, of | An entertaining feature was furnished | tional Guard in Managua there have i ln member of the Masons, the Federal|and Mrs. R. B. Hi her old fr s of State | upon a poem d with some of the | Rockville. Clarence of Charlotie Hall, [by J. L Kiley. well-Imown fiddler, who [been 244 cases and 4 deaths from the | ~to the Waltz” ... Von Weber | Employes’ Union and the Association of | and neighbors, to the Coolidge tlarly re-lceends of the Knights of the Round and Robert N. and Douglas of Balti- played for Henry Ford. His number disease within two weeks. The epidemic | Finale, “Gen. Pershing”. ... Vandersioot Oldest Inhabitants of the District of here. She will visit her mother ai drainage and Table. more.” was “The Sidewalks of New York.” appears to be local to Managua. “The Star Spangled Banner. Columbia. hospital in the morning. e {