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L] 2 CHURCH MAY BACK TRADE PEACE PLAN Active Role Urged on Episco-| pal Clergy for Better In- dustrial Relations. A bold program in the field of in- dustrial relations urged upon the Episcopal Church in a report presented to the General Convention this morn- ing by Rev. Dr. Charles N. Lathrop. secretary of the Department of Chris- tian wocial Service or the National Council. The outstanding recommendation is that the church take the initiative in calling conferences of representative churchmen who are employers in such basic fields as the steel, textile, coal, automobile 4nd leather industries “to discuss the implications of Christian principles in industrial relations. The report is the first made of a re- search study of the proper field of the church in industrial affairs. Mr. La- throp's rccommendations are under 10 heads. is Program of Research. 1. That the church, through its di- vision of industrial relations, carry on a program of continuous research into the fundamental problems of modern industrial relations, and provide lead- ership and advice to the clergy and laity in dealing with these problems. 2. That each seminary be asked to include a course or courses in indus- trial problems which shall be studied by every student. 3. That the division of industrial relations be a clearing house of in- formation on industrial problems. 4. That a series of Summer schools be held for the clergy at recognized colleges where current developments in the field of industrial relations can be | studied. 5. That parish classes for the laity be established for the study of the -ap- plication of Christian principles to in- dustrial and social questions. 6. That the clergy of each parish get in personal touch with local trade unions. 7. That the church take the initiative in calling conferences of representative | churchmen who are employers to dis- cuss the implications of Christian prin- ciples in social relations. 8. That representatives of union labor be asked to address congregations each year on the Sunday preceeding Labor days. 5. That the clergy of each parish try to get into personal touch with em- ployers and employers’ associations to express the concern of the church for the problem of human relations in in- dustry. 10. That the church formulate a rhore specific statement of the funda- mental Christian principles upon which industrial relations should be based, without seeking to present the partic- ular methods by which they shall be translated into service. “The gospel,” Mr. Lathrop said, “has its social implications, which must be interpreted in practical terms. The competence of the church to deal ef- fectively with the question depends | upon continuous study under leaders adequately supplied with reliable in- formation. Average Parish Conditions. “The average parish includes both the employer and the employed, al- though in cases of absentee ownership the employer may attend church in another parish. Often in industrial cities there will be an uptown church which is attended by the employers an. managers and a chapel or two in the mill districts where the workers worship. In such cases the chapels are under the direction of the vestry of the main congregation, which is usually the employer group. In those cases where the parish meets under a single roof workers in the vestry are rare. Only in one parish studied were they in the majority, and in that case over 90 per cent of the laymen were union coal miners. “In situations where there is disorder, bad feeling, low wages or long hours of work there is usually found a tendency towards irreligion and im- morality. Low wages and poor living conditions are seldom the soil in which an appreciation of Christian faith grows. In many cases, even in indus- trial parishes, the rector is uninformed as to industrial problems and the labor movement. This ignorance often re- sults én_ distrust from the people of the The department of missions of the General Convention asked for a total budget for 1929 of $3,300,000. “This is the time” said John W. Wood, executive secretary, “when the| world’s need of moral and spiritual leadership is unparallelled. The service made possible by this budget means the creation of Christian empires. It is not merely a question of saving people for some future heaven, but of saving them out of present conditions that cramp and degrade the life of God's family.” The budget was defended by the mis- sionary bishops. Right Rev. Frank W. Creighton, Bishop of Mexico, discussed the present situation in that country by which religion is brought under government control. Position in Mexico. “These laws,” he said, “are a part ot “the philosophy of the revolution. All clergymen must register with the gov- ernment before they are allowed to officiate in the republic. Rather than| submit to them some religious bodies ‘have withdrawn from the country. We elected to remain. If the only way to preach the Gospel in Mexico is to obey | the law, then it behooves us to obey the law.. The Mexican government is not opposed to religion, per se. I have never found any opposition to preach- V | | HEALING DECLARED VITAL CHURCH NEED Episcopalians Told Practice| Is Necessary Part of Min- istry of Christ. i A solemn warning that the “church which does not return to faith heal- | ing will be known soon as a back | number” was given today by Rev. Rob- ert A. Russell of Denver, Colo., princi- pal speaker at the General Conference of the Society of the Nazarene, con- | ducted in ity Episcopal Church, Third and C stre ! Rev. Mr. Russ s warning was in- tended to apply primarily to the Prot- estant Episcopal Church, before whose General Convention now being held here, is to be presented a resolution recommending recognition of faith | healing by the church. Many de gates 1o the convention attended the | faith healing conference today, the So- | ciety of the Nazarene being one of several national organizations within the church founded for the purpose of restoring the gift of healing uni- versally practiced in the early church. “We have got to come to it,” Rev.| Mr. Russell declared. “The church must give healing its proper place to meet | the demands of the hour. The day is | coming and we must realize that.” The formal resolution for the recog- nition of faith healing, which may be placed before the General Convention | later today. recommends to the church at large such efforts as are being made | under Episcopal authority “either through the personal ministrations of parish priests or through such organi- | zations as the American Guild of Heal- ing, the Soclety of the Nazarene and | the Grace Cathedral Mission of Heal- | ing, to awaken men to the truth that | there is healing power in faith in Jesus | Christ.” The commission which prepared the resolution, also urges that theological schools in their teachings “take notice of this widespread belief in the effica of prayer as an expression of a livin rather than a formal faith.” Rev. Mr. Russell, who took as his general theme “Preaching the Whole | Gospel,” declared that God had laid a | threefold mission on the ministry, namely, to teach, to preach and to heal. A half-hour of prayer and meditation preceded the open discussion of the conference, conducted by Rev. John | Gayner Banks, director of the society. | At this half-hour service :he necessits of prayerful meditation as essential to | faith healing was stressed. Without it, the speaker pointed out, it would be | foredoomed to failure. Convention Program THIS AFTERNOON. 2:30 p.m.—Joint session of House of Bishops and House of Deputies resumed. 4 p.m.—Demonstration school, church school service program. Girls 11 to 15, mission study. Visitors welcomed. St. Margaret’s Church, Connecticut avenue and Bancroft place northwest. 4 to 6 p.m.—Woman's Auxiliary. Mis- sionary teas. By invitation. 6 p.m.—Provincial dinner. of the Midwest. City Club, street northwest. 6 p.m.—Rural fellowship dinner. Gor- don Hotel, Sixteenth and I streets northwest. 8 p.m.—Department of Missions mass meeting. Washington Auditorium. Nine- tenth and E streets northwest. 8 p.m. “Foreign Missiogs.” “TOMORROW. 9 a.m—Department of religious edu- cation. Joint meeting of the college | commission and the National Student | Council’s Triennial Assembly, Y. W. C. A. Building, Seventeenth and K streets northwest. 9:15 a.m—Devotional service, St. John’s Church, Sixteenth and H streets | northwest. Very Rev. William Scar- lett, LL. D. 9:30 and 11 am—Institute, Y. W. C. A. Building, Seventeenth and K streets northwest. 10 a.m.—House of Bishops. session. 10 a.m.—House of Deputies. session. 11 a.m.—Church Periodical Club con- ference and business meeting. Willard room, Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G street northwest. 11 a.m—Woman’s Auxiliary. Busi- ness meeting: II—Missionary problems, (b) Foreign. | 1 pm—The Girls' Friendly Society luncheon. “The Contribution Made by the Various Organizations of the Church to the Character Development | of Young People.” Tickets on sale at | g. F. S. headquarters, D. A. R. Build- g. 1 p.m—House of Bishops and House of Depyiles. Adjournment for lunch, Willard Hotel. 2:30 p.m—Meetings of A House of Bishops and House of Deputies re- sumed. 2:30 p.m.—Woman's Auxiliary. Busi- ness meeting: III—Christianizing Re- lationships; IV—Gifts. 4 pm—Woman's Auxiliary. Missionary teas. By invitation. 6 p.m.—Alumni dinners, theological seminaries. 8 pm-—Mass meeting, American Church Institute for Negroes, D. A. R. Auditorium. 8 p.m.—Mass meeting on rural work. | Parish Hall, Church of the Epiphany, 1817 G street northwest. Address by Secretary of Agriculture Jardine. 8 p.m—Deaconesses public meeting. Washington Club, Seventeenth and K streets northwest. Presiding, Right Rev. James DeWolf Perry, D. D., Bishop of Rhode Island. Speakers, Deaconesses Dahigren, Fuller, Stuart and Phelp: Province | 1320 G Business | Business | by Dr. Willlam H. Milton, assistant chairman of the National Commission ing the Gospel.” The church in China is passing an | era of persecution, said Bishop Graves| of North China, so violent that the| cross has been torn from altars and| the picture of Sun Yat Sen put in its| lace. Despite this, he insisted, the piscopal Church has elected to remain and its work has been so well done in the past that it probably would survive even if every missionary was withdrawn. Church advertising in newspapers was indorsed by Rev. G. Warfield Hobbs in the report of the committee on publicity submitted to the convention. “The truth is,” said Rev. Mr. Hobbs, “that the press is not on trial before the church. Our experience proves that both the great press associations and individual newspapers stand ready to publish news of genuine public sig- nificance. The: church has no real comprehension of that commodity called news. Its chief clamor for space is often to exploit individuals, panaceas or proclaim to the public an inconse- quential mass of informatfon built around strawberry festivals or the par- ticular victim in B flat which the choir proposes to execute on the following Sunday morning.” Launching of a Nation-wide evan- gelical campaign which will reach into homes, clubs, factories and colleges was discussed at the mass meeting on evan- gelism held at the Church of the Epiph- any last night. ‘The principal speaker was Right Rev. ‘Thomas C. Darst, Bishop of East Caro- lina, and chairman of the National Commission on Evangelism. Right Rev. Boyd Vincent, Bishop of Southern Ohid, l?’(:d senior bishop of the church, pre- Bishop Darst declared that the churches no longer can wait for people to seek them out but must seek for converts. ‘The plan of the church to blanket the entire country with appeals for a ¥ebirth of religious faith was pMtlined on Evangelism. Dr. Milton warned the church against the danger of “frothy enthusiasm for evangelism.” Dr. Larkin W. Glazebrook of Wash- ington told of giving up a lucrative medical practice here last spring to de- vote his entire time to promote the work of the commission among men in all parts of the country. A total of $32,386.39 was placed on the altar of the Church of the Epiph- any yesterday afternoon as the trien birthday thank offering of the children of the church. This is made up of the pennies which children give on their birthdays. than three years ago. Adding this to the Lenten offering of the children, more_than $1,000,000 has come from the Sunday school members in three | years. The offering this year will go to the | diocese of Mexico for the support of a | school for girls at Mexico City. Next Offering for Hospital., ‘The next thank offering, it was an- | nounced, will be used to build a chil-| dren’s Wing on St. Luke's Hospital, | ‘Toklo. Luxury and selfisfness are sapping the vitality of the Nation, Right Rev. Thomas F. Gailor, Bishop of Tennessee, | yesterday told a congregation that taxey the capacity of the open-air ampithea- ter in Cathedral Close. He denouncedl the prevalence of pre- ventable diseases “due to ignorance and -arelessness which the community allows to persist in this free country. “The church,” he declared, “lives as she fights wrong, ignorance, sin and error. I am thankful that the Chris- tion world has a sense of responsibility in misisons, in education and in social service, and that people are beginning to respond to the calls of a wider duty.” A congregation of about 3,000 attended the communion seivice at the cathedral yesterday morning. It was announced | ;. that the total this year is $8,000 more | | Two views of the giant Zeppelin photographted from the top of the Star B uilding. ment tower. R STA WASHINGTON D. €. MONDAY, ZEPPELIN AS IT CIRCLED OVER WASHIN In the left foreground of the lower picture is the Post Office Depart- —Star Staff Photos. Zeppelin, Passing Over Capita], Nears End of Cruise _(Continued from First Page) ing the direction of its ip’s progress came boro, Md., a few minutes after noon. The Zeppelin at that time was following the course which brought it over Washington about 10 minutes later, Battles Adverse Winds. The Graf Zeppelin was stubbornly winning a fight against_adverse winds and the handicap of a 2damaged port horizor this morning and by 8 stern standard time was only off Cape Hatteras. ay and a night of painfully and long hours of meager concerning her where- hip was then about 280 st of Lakchurst, making fair time nst a 10 to 12 knot wind. At that time she appeared to be covering an average of 40 miles an hour. o information abouts, the 3 miles southe o'clock this morning, Eastern time the ship had been in air 96 hours, with the likelihood that the entire trip would take her about 109 hours. Over Bermuda Region. All through the carly hours of Sat- urday night and for a great part of Sunday the airship hovered in the re- glon of the Bermudas, fighting winds and seeking to find a @nore favorable course. For a time she even flew in a southerly direction in order to gain better conditions. A Only the meagerest information was coming through and it was not until sterday that the ship was defi- ated about 80 miles east by north of Bermuda. By the Assoclated *NAVAL AIR STATION, Takehurst, N. J, October 15.—The x’lunclh pas- | Germany, for Lakehurst, gave sunset- or-sooner as its arrival time today, and Navy offi estimated that it might be as much sooner as 2 o'clock this afternoon. On_ the basis of compass bearings, the Navy placed the dirigible 300 miles away at 6 o'clock this morning, pro- ceeding at the rate of about 45 miles an hour. Message From Zcpp.lln. ‘The message dir gible, signed by Rosedahl, and sent at 8:30, being re- layed here by wireless shortly - before 10 o'clock this morning, reported that pected to land at or before I8 From the tenor of the message, Navy officers_deduced that unconfirmed re- s that the dirigible might need ssistance, either because of lack of el or because of damages, were un- founded. Crowds Bezin to Gather. Although yesterday's crowd at the air station was not cleared from the congested roads until the sun was well on its course across the skies this morn- ing, another crowd began gathering early and by 10 o'clock, several thou- sand persons were gathered on the field . The dirigible passed its 100th hour in the air about 6 o'clock this morn- ing and had presumably some time before that exhausted all its Blau gas fuel. It had enough gasoline in sup- plementary tanks to keep it pushing through the air if necessary until 8 o'clock tomorrow morning. AU & press conference in the h | Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Acronautics Edward Warner soid that ino decision had been reached to angar plans were still indefinite but that it ndl ! trip, the Los Angeles to escort the Graf project were enterel senger dirigible Graf Zeppelin, more | Zeppelin here and that it was not than four days out of Friedrichshafen, | planned to do so. He did say, however that it was still in the realm of pos- sibility that the Los Angeles might go aloft as an escort to the newcomer, saying that if any such decision were reached a public announcement would be made at once. Secretary Warner returned to the pressroom a few minutes after the con- ference with the reporters had closed and _definitely announced the Los Angeles would not be sent to greet the Graf Zeppelin. “It has been decided,” he said; “that because of the manner in which the Los Angeles is berthed in the hangar, with two Navy non-rigid ships huddled beneath her, it would be unwise to disarrange the three ships at a time when we are going to need the | hangar for berthing the Graf Zeppelin.” Others Make Talks. After Warner addressed the report brief talks were made by Dr. C. C. Ki rst_secretary of the German, embassy at Washington; Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Aeronautics William P. McCracken and Capt. E. S. Jackson, commandant of the air station. All expregsed the oplon that no dis- ! appointment in the expedition should be felt because the flight had taken | longer than had been expected. Rather, | they said, satisfaction should be felt that the ship was able to stay aloft so long, carefully picking a safe path between storm areas. PLANS FLIGHT ACROSS U. 8. NEW YORK, October 15 (#).— Matthew C. Brush, Massachuseit: financier, disclosed last night that he had made tentative arrangements to charter the German dirigible Graf Zep- ] in for a trip to Los Angeles and b wanls to take 25 bankers on the he said.. Nggptiations for o with the Gers | man embassy here and the American | embassy in Berlin before the Zeppelin tarted its transatlantic voyage, Brush explained. He said he believed mooring and refueling facilities would be avail- able at Detroit and Los Angeles. ZEPPELIN SALE DENIED. | FRIEDRICHSHAFEN, Germany, Oc- tober 15 (#).—Reports from New York | that the dirigible Graf Zeppelin has i been sold to a Spanish company were denied yesterday by Director General Colsmann of the Zeppelin Corporation. He declared that the consent of the | German government would be necessary | before the company could dispose of the | Zeppelin, and that, furthermore, the {company’s _own _plans precluded all \prospects of a sale to a foreign buyer at this time. “The Graf Zeppelin will remain in .| German possession for the time being, jas we are determined to explore the | commercial possibilities of this dirigi- ble,” Colsmann said. Chartering Declared Likely. At some future time, he added, the | dirigible might be chartered for com- I mercial exploitation, but the title would remain with the German company. While there is no objection to the eventual sale to Spain, this, he declared, would happen only if such transfer would yield the necessary means for further developing the problems con- nected with the Zeppelin company's building program. It also is known that one of the pet yplans of Dr. Hugo Eckener, who had charge of her construction, is to inau- gurate a semi-monthly mail and pas- senger service between Germany and the United States which he hopes to develop into a profitable enterprise, at least sufficiently to realize revenues the | which would enable him to “write off” floor of the, cab, the cost of the Graf Zeppelin, > ¥ $10,000 STORE THEFT PROBED AS SIGNS OF | * “INSIDE JOB” APPEAR: __(Continued _from_ Pirst Page) first floor. The officer said he wanted to go directly to the office, on the seventh floor, but that Chatham in- | sisted on searching the building for | Rogers first. When they reached the seventh floor, | between 6 and 6:30 o'clock, they found | Rogers fastened to the pillar and the | cash boxes scattered over the floor. Police, however, point out that a time clock in the store was punched at 5:40, a duty allotted to Rogers. Assuming | that the colored man punched the clock | and then went to the seventh floor, | police believe he must have been mis- | about the time and that it was | | between 5:45 and 6 o'clock that he wa: This being the case, they point out, the robbers must have siipped down the back stairs and escaped while Police- | man Ellery and the night watchman | were ascending to the seventh floor. The three men took all the keys to | the store with them. and, so far as| police could learn, left through the | same door they entered, locking it after | them. As soon as he saw what had occur- | red, Policeman Ellery notified detective headquarters and Lieut Edward Kelly, Fred Sandberg, fingerprint expert, and | Detectives Howard Ogle, Oscar W. Mans- | field, George Darnall and Charles Weber | were sent to the store. Rogers was released by Darnall and | Weber, who used a hacksaw to cut through the handcuffs. The detectives searched the entire store with company officials to maki sure the robbers had not concealed themselves inside. This precaution was | taken, they said, because of the fact | that the doors were locked and no windows were found open except the one used by Chatham and Ellery. Mr. Sandberg copied several finger- prints, but they were so badly smeared | at it was not believed anvtks i ) be learned from them. | The store was entered once before. about a year ago, when thieves pried | a grating from a rear window. Ap-| parently they took nothing. TWO CHINESE DEAD, TWO WOUNDED AS TONG GUNS BLAZE| ___(Continued from First Page.) ed at 318 Pennsylvania avenue, store | of Charlie Moy, president of the local | branch of the association. Moy was | detained for questioning until police became satisfied he had no connection with the shooting. when he was released. The others also were freed after ques- tioning, with the exception of three. . Pinding of a pistol of Spanish make in a drawer at 318 was looked upon as a promising clue, but Inspectors Pratt said the bullets carried by the weapon were of smal caliber and that the istol | did not appear to have been fired in | recent months. Had No Warning. “I had no warning that anything of the kind was going to happen,” de- clared Toye this morning. “The front have had it closed and locked if I had expected such trouble.” To; responsibility for the shooting. | Lee, leading members of the On Leongs, | deny their organization is in any way | responsible for the shooting. Pang Sam, president of the Hip Sing organization, was in a room in rear of the store when the shooting occurred. door was open, and certainly I would | made no pretense at fixing the | Charlie Moy, George Wen and George | JOHNSON AGCEPTS ~ JYEAR CONTRACT Veteran, “Glad to Be Home,” Signs as Nats’ Manager Before Friends. 3 BY JOHN B. KELLER. Walter Perry Johnson is home again. After a 13-day lapse since Stanley Harris was relieved of the management of the Washington Base Ball Club, the Nationals have a new pilot. Waiter, for 21 seasons the idol mot only of the fans of the Capital, but | of the followers of the diamogd game throughout the country, this morning affixed his name to a contract as man- ager of the local club. After a briet conference with President Clark Grif- | fith of the Nationals, the veteran whose mighty arm pitched the Nationals to | many victories in the American League agreed to accept the three-year contract proffered by the Washington executiVe. “It's great to be back home,” said Walter after the formality of sigh- ing was completed. “I was happy, of with the Newark team that I ged this year, but to me Washing- ton is the one place in this counwry. | After my long residence in this city—it | began, you remember, in 1907—this is | really home.” Friends at Ceremeony. Quite a ceremonial affair was this contract signing this morning. Few were present at the ceremony, but most of them were those who have been inti- mately acquainted with the wonder of Fase Sall since he first came to Wash- ingtor a raw-boned youngster of 19 years ffom the obscure club of Weiser, Idaho, in July of 1907. Other than Pres- ident Griffith and Edward B. Eynon, jr., secretary of the club, those who saw the signing were Joe Engel, once a pitcher with the Nationals and now their scout; Mike Martin, trainer of the club for 16 s and connected with the game vears before coming to Washing- ton; Joe Judge, first baseman, who played with Walter through many sea- sons: Al Schacht, coach of the Na- tionals, and a small group of local base ball writers. ‘Walter at present is making his home at a hotel here, for he leased his estate at Alta Vista, Md., just a few miles beyond the District, before he went to Newark last Spring to assume the man- agement of the Bears. ‘Washington will see little of Johnson, however, before the next base ball season begins, for shortly he will go to Daytona, Fla., with his family, where he will await the training period for the Nationals that is to start at Tampa in the latter part of February, probabiy about a week later than has been cus- tomary. Next Spring, though. Walter again will be a resident of Montgamery | County. While Walter signed a contract call- ing only for services as manager of the Nationals, he may break into a few games in the 1929 campaign. “My arm is as strong as ever,” he declared, “and I believe I will be able to use it in emergencies. Naturally I am hoping there will be no emergencies. 1 feel that the material I will have in charge will be good enough to carry on without my physical aid.” Although this year was Walter's first as a manager, he acquired much school- ir‘uzbm the matter of conducting a ball club. No Rules, No Leniency. He vas eating, as was Toye. There were several others in the room at the Nme.[ but none made any effort to reach the | front door until they were satisfied the | { slavers had fled. | When police had concluded their | early efforts to solve the mystery, doors | jof all Chinese business houses along | lower Pennsylvania avenue were fas- | tened. and Chinese in outlying districts | ;ppealed to police to give them protec- | jon. Police of the several precincts { were directed to give all Chinese | business houses special attention. It | was deemed possible that the clayers | might make an effort to ta lives of | other Chinese, but no other demonstra- tion was made. Police think that higher-ups sought by the gunmen. ONE SLAIN IN GOTHAM. were NEW YORK, October 15 (#).—Chi- nese tongs were ai war again The death toll soon after the outbr | Sunday included one in New Yo Police guarded Chinese sections of New | York and other cities. | As Wong Chu, a New York waiter, | played cards with a dozen other Hip | Sing tongsmen in his apartment, a gun- | man described as-an On Leong. pushed open the door, shot Wong Chu four | times and killed him and then turned the gun on Wong Wai, wounding him. | The two tongs, ancient rivals, had been at peace since the signing of al formal pact March 27, 1927, after a| | series of outbreaks in which there were | killings in Brooklyn, Newark, N. J.: | | Chicago, Manchester, Conn.; Pittsburgh and Cleveland. Two Chinese were hanged in Connecticut for the murder | there. KILLED BY TWO GUNMEN, PHILADELPHIA, October 15 (#).— What police said was a flareup in tong arfare here cost the life of Lin Sing. . of Boston last night Sing. a naturalized citizen, was slain | by two Chinese, who fired three shots into his body and then escaped. The vietim was a member of the On Leong | Tong. 1 Police arrested 32 men suspected of | being members of the Hip Sing Tong, for nfany years at war with the On | Leong Tong. Sevefal taxicab drivers ! | informed police that prior to the shoot- ing they had taken a number of Chi- nese to the Pennsylvania Railroad sta- tion and that most of them, according to remarks they overheard, were going to Chicago. SHOT AT THEATER DOOR. CHICAGO, October 15 (#).—Flames of tong war, kindled by a gambling dispute in New York, leaped the inter- | vening miles last night, and one Chi- nese paid with his life Orlental vengeance was coupled with Occidental technique in the assassina- tion of Eng Pak, 40, a member of the Hip Sing Tong, who was put “on the | spot” and shot dead in front of the ‘Toy Den Quay Theater on Archer ave- | nue. His slayers, two Chinese, fled through the streets of Chicago's China- town, escaping. ‘While_police reserves were being de- ployed about Chinatown, another shoot- ing took place farther south. Willie ‘Took, owner of the China Cafe on East Forty-third street, was fired upon i He suffered a flesh wound in the neck, and two negro patrons were wounded, | not. seriously. { Took is & member of the On Leong, | or Chinese Merchants’ Assoclation. The slaying of Eng Pak, a cook, might easlly have been a gang killing, so closely did it follow the style of Chi- cago gunmen executions. clad Chinese shuffied over to a cab stand and told Edward Bernstein, a cab driver, that a fare awaited in front of the Toy Den Quay Theater. When Bernstein halted his cab in| front of the theater, the Chinese who had spoken to him ushered Pak to the motor car and held the door open for Pak to enter. Thus the victim was put on the spot. s assailants stepped forward as Pak d toward the driver to give insiructions volvers, held close fired, and Pak’s ipped to the, ‘Those who had shot him ran. A through the window of the restaurant. | A shabbily | 3 U | “There’ll be no rigid training rul for the club,” he announced after as- suming the management, “but there’ll be no leniency. /The boys must show a deal of spirit and hustle all the time. I will insist that every, man give his utmost to the club in every game he is in. Shirking will not be tolerated. “I also intend to establish a base ball school. The school will be for veterans as well as youngsters coming up to the club. The Nationals will have morning drills and have them fre- quently. I know of no better way to help a ball club than the holding of morning drills. They do not have to be so strenuous that they tire the men for the game to be played in the after- l\lmn: but they certainly develop team play.” Repair of Zeppelin Fin Declared Most Daring Flying Feat By the Associated Press FRIEDRICHSHAFEN. Ger- many, October 15—Officials and engineers at the Zeppelin work here said yesterday that the repairing of ‘the damaged fin of the dirigible Graf Zeppelin Sat- urday in midair and in the face of head winds had constituted one of the most daring engi- neering feats in the history of a tion. From the meager description of how the repairs were effected which has reached here, it ap- pears that only one man was able to work in the interior of the fin and that the others clung outside on the wind-swept strut while the job was being done The workmen were led by engi- neers Siegle and Baeurje and Knute Eckener, 24-year-old son of Dr. Hugo *Eckener, command- er of the craft LAUREL ENTRIES FOR TOMORROW. FIRST RACE_Purse, $1.300; claiming; 3- vear-olds; 6 furlongs. Earl of Warwick. 112 *Elder Blossom.. . 108 Junius Do 104 Joe A 106 Highland ‘Fiin 104 Also eligible— 115 Domineer ers. | 113 aMeridian Queen. 112 Battle Ax. . .l ‘Sunny Port 107 Bretty Michelie.. Meadow “Black Alice 107 Ph e aP. H. Falconer and John Speed Elliott. SECOND RACE—Purse, 31.300; 3-year-olds and up: 1/ miles, Wampee a*Uppity . 535 3853 33585 5558 Miss Prim Trapstock Fair Lark. THIRD RACE—Pu year-olds: 6 furlongs. jigh Gume...... 103 Jenny Lind Paulina 0 SGert'de Soissons. Mood netta .. 4 Roset Sound.’ se. $1.300; claiming; cky *Fair Anita. Charles Vs ndale Black Beetie 110 Nursery Prompter 108 Eloise FOURTH RACE-Purse, 31, all ages: 1 mile. vt 102 Glen Eagle.. Frank Croviey rown: Rose. Sun Demur Rose Smith Fortune's Fav Cassandra . FIFTH RACE 2-year-olds: 6 fu The Nut.%........ Sporting Grit .../ Marine Compass . 117 Inception < 108 ~Purse, $1.300: the Easton ines 107 Sun Broom 107 Prowler 107 Bravery £ 110 Mayor Walker Purse. 1is mi *Cockrill *Ring _On +Jim ‘Bean.’. 113 Cudgeiler . 10 armer SIXTH RACE- vear-olds and up: Danger Signal The Freshman. Ward o' Way. Brush ... *Villager . SEVENTH RACE--Pu: 3-year-olds and up. Tony Ruiz. r *Marat Fire Watel jncle Al Pi £1.300;" claiming 3 iles. e, $1,300; claiming 14 miles. 109 Honest doi. 109 K wahice elximed. truck fast e .