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“ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1930. PEAQUES T0 HONOR -z In Big Sawdust Bin, fl'EPH[N * Smiothered to Death T.MATHER | ooz 4 HELEN, A, Ark.,, October 38.— Dr. 8. T. Mason, surgeon, was é‘eator of American Park Bero early yestarday under s Al caved in upon him at the plant ystem to Be Memorialized | | of the Fen Wood Products Go 3 : ipes leading from a huge tank i Throughout Nation. 5 e et Tarmaas. besasss i clogged, and Dr. Masoft went into e nl clear ‘congest i BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. ;l;h= sawdust caved in soon llofz'lr e entered. a tribute “of ‘“national apprecia- , of the services of Stephen T. His body was recovered four hours later by workers who had er creator of the United States' toiled in telays in hopes of find- system. of national parks, | ing him alive. llc bronze plaques, bearing his like- 8 g are to be placed next year in 21 tic hgn.::nifg‘m:'t;u:n“&.“ pational| MEMBER OF BROKER FIRM us ] late directs e, miional park serviee nas veen | KILLS HIMSELF WITH GUN | le by the “Stephen T. Mather Ap- tion Committee,” of which Johs ys Hammond of Washington s the | Financial Worries Ascribed as R e designed by| CAUse—Third Suicide in Phila- of America’s most_eminent sculp- delphia Within Five Days. tars, Bryant Baker of New York. Tge 2 re Iatest of Mr. Raker's designs to chal- | BY the Assoclated Press. % Public notice was the “Ploneer PHILADELPHIA, October 28.—Robert statue recently erected at|L, Zoll, 56, a partner in the firm of Ponca, Okla. He chiseled th sy s far thie statiie Of Woodrow Wilson at | Charles H. Bean & Co, stock brokers, 3:;“- Switzerland, and for the statue | killed himself late yesterday with a “c)l;é;r Justibe e Edward é)‘:’;g]l:ss White | revolver in the basement of the com- Baker's statue of Grover Cleveland wili | PA7Y's Offices here. He was the third shortly be unvelled. Philadelphia broker to end his life with- Plaques to Go in Parks. midfl:l: 5‘!{1& A mern!)e'r'fl oll the l'n'n-nm sal 1A le company's airs were witihe Blan to honor Mather's memory | excellent shape, but that Zoll had been the domains of the parks and - monuments whose care became his life | ROITied recently about ihis own finan- work followed last Spring’s action by the | €121 condition. Nation [ At his home it was said Zoll had i ,',}A;::gf;g,ggg;“ggs e | seemed cheerful when he telephoned his wellate " motdas. L wife about an hour before his death. s, Which win' nesr Mather s use | Mrs. Zoll had been depressed after at- on & base two or three feet in width, | tending’ a funeral yesterday, a friend be set Up in_ sEpropriato spots af | Of the family said, and her husband the national Parks thronghont the West | had tried to cheer her up. Besides the and in Hawail and Alaska. and at na. | Widow, he is survived by a daughter. tional monuments in many parts of the | He had been associated with the broker- country. age firm since his youth. The national monuments include ZolY¥'s suicide occurred soon after that Lincoln’s birthplace in Kentucky, fa- of Sydney F. Tyler Brock, junior partner mous battlefields of the Revolutionary, | in the investment firm of Reilly, Mexican and Indian wars, Aztec ruins | Brock & OCo. who killed himself yes- in New Mexico, lava beds in California, | terday., Brock's senior partner, George Fort McHenry, Md.; craters of the moon, | K. Reilly, shot himself at his Ardmore Idaho; and & number of national mili- | home last Thursday. tary parks under the jurisdiction of - - e e ey "wassed sway las;| Butler's Niece Asks Divorce. ‘Winter. His conception of the United ‘CHICAGO, October 28 (#).—Mrs. Lu- States’ park system was that it should | cretia’ Taylor, who, according to her at- constitute a “national gallery of Amer- | torney, is a niece of Brig. Gen. Smedley ican scenic masterpieces.” To the real- | Butler, U, 8. M., yesterday filed divorce ization of that ideal he gave the last | action against Roy W. Taylor, vice pres- and best years of his life. It was not | ident of the Tri-plex Washing Machine @5 recreational areas that Mather | Co., charging desertion. s "Snd e other promeval domains = and the other eval doma: R which an esthetic Uncle Sam has con- | _ Criticizes Cuba-U. 8. Pact. trived to keep from the enterprising, HAVANA. October 28 (#).—The parcel but marauding, hand of man. post treaty recemtly entered into by the Parks As Things of Beauty, Uniiad States and Oue was kgnuctud L secre- T e ot peani 8 Pk | tary of the National Industry Associa- gt o S Ol tion, on the grotnds that 3 principal the untamed forest. He sought to | Penefits are reaped by the United States. maintain them undefiled, as they were Mfl. He peered down the centuries niz tasfbe“:ndmdrenmedld ;:‘1“ u}:e B ch ll, B t ] et icieiin o ots 15| Burchell’s Bouquet reveled in the rlchnes:l:( m;“!h-nc(!}!“‘tl civilization on both sides of the Greal Is Truly a Fine Coffee It was a fellow Californian, Pranklin K. Lane, whom Mather first impressed Try ll- with the idea of a unified national park control, scientifically organized and su- pervised. The: 3 n a wealthy Chicago busi- ness man, Mather came to Wash'ngton in 1914 and accepted an inconspicuous Lb administrative post in the Department . ouI'm mwr‘“fi&‘“}?"?fl'flf;“\i out . He wor and effectively. He caused Con- Eirnd ie s N W. Burchell 817-19 Fourteenth St. Committee Personnel Announced. ,ir:" direeioPor e epstems the : as director of the system the F latter had devised, and thencefortt the || SOCIETY LEADERS KNOW ractical idealist from the West threw || The superculture that Spanish imparts, the national park service every | widening m:’nn'\:nnldhorlwn into the ounee of his brilliant energy to the ex- s clusion of his private interests. In a pEesis dng fipds,Ruteigaingly very literal sense, he broke down in the A , but not until he had seen it along lines which insured the tuation of his ideals. executive committee which has had charge of the Stephen T. Mather “gppreciation” includes, besides John Hays Hammond, George W. White of tnu\lm Dr. Vernon L. xdhn executive secretary of the Na- tional Reseazch Council; Dr. Gilbert H. President of the Nationai Soclety; _Representative Cramton of Michigan; Theo- dm W. Noyes, editor of The Washing- Star, and Mrs. Henry A. Strong, d-lnnan of the board of the Hattie M. Strong Foundation, Washington. Prank- lin Adams, counselor of the Pan-Ameri- | can Union, has been active in the “ap-'| preciation” movement, (Copyright. 1930.) L RUN CLOSES BANK AUBURN, Wash, October 28 (P).— | For october Bare The First National Bark of Auburn ‘The comfy, cheerful MM yesterday after & five-day run || and furnishis :“;"xhn";zufé.nt .Jr! depositors. Bad loans were reported - by owners of the bank siock, tohave e caused the rn the bank over to the Federal authorities to con- fimnded t'o Noon to 8:30 P.M. _ i ‘ : - ; And What's a Boudoir Same Size as Sample Photograph Above! Our Special Introductory Offer for i i ir? An 11x14=Inch You Need Not Spend wlthOUt a Boudoir Chair % Photograph of Yourself $ More Than $1!...Or, if 6 ‘ or Any Member of Your You Wish, You May Order : 7l i Family for Only as Many as You Want $1 Each at $1 Each No Appointment Necessary! 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