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WEATHER. (0. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast). Cloudy, probably rain tonight and to- not much change in tempera- e S T T , & i .m. yesterday; lowest, 69, at 5 a.m. wgay. ‘Full report on page 9. he FEnening Star. Entered second class matt post office, Washington, D. v v A P No: 31,881, er & FRIDAY, - WASHINGTON, D. C AUGUST 14, 1931—THIRTY PAGES, #»» “From Press to Home Within the Hour” The Star's carrier system covers every city block and the regular edi- tion is delivered to Washington homes t as the papers are printed. Yesterday’s Circulation, 107,019 CENTS. T™WO (#) Means Associated Press. COTTON PROPSA SEEHSDOONEDBY GOVERNORS STAND | By the Associated Press. | NORFOLK, Va., August 14.—An hour | of concentrated sttack todsy from a | squadron of Army bembing planes from Langley Pield failed to sink the anclent | Shipping Board steamer Mount Shasta, used as a target off the Virginia const. REJECTION IS SENT Rain began to fall early in the after- | noon and the bombers turned back to BY GEORGIA EXECUTIVE | rangley Field. Another attempt te eink the Mount Shasta will probably be made tomorrow. o Alternative Considered bY| Tye target ship was said in radio re- ! ports to have developed a slight list, Farm Board for Sta- | butotherwise appeared not to be se- . riously damaged. It was reported that there were no direct hits, except for the landing of one 100-pound bomb just off the bridge. BOMBING DESCRIBED ON AIR. Try Again Disapproval Informally Ex- pressed by Seven of 14 Queried by Stone. bilization. By the Assoclated Press | Abandcnment of the emergency cot- | ton stabilization proposal seems certain i the informal expressions of dis- spproval made by seven Southern Gov- efnors on the Farm Board's crop | After Army Practice ai Sea. During the first 53 minutes of actual ARMY PLANES FAIL ONCE MORE TO DESTROY FLOATING TARGET Mt. Shasta Suffers Only One Direct Hit in Maneuvers Off Virginia Coast; Will Mt. Shasta Staggered, but Still Floating, ! WOMAN IS QUIZZED AS TORCH SLAYERS DENY KILLING FOUR | Each of Trio, in Jail for Life,| Disclaims Part in Slaying of Couples in Auto. Tomorrow. | which John Mayo, Columbia Broadcast- | ing System announcer, gave today from | the sxcne, some 80 miles southeast of | | cape Henry. | At 12:50 o'clock, when Mayo went off the air to permit the Coast Guard cut- ter Carrabasset personnel to use the radio, the old Mount Shasta was set- tling perceptibly, wisps of smoke curling | from ‘her forepeak, where the fag end | of er last Tumber cargo remains. but | still showing no apparent damage to | binocular inspections. | At 12:58 the broadcast was called off | entirely to give way to an advertiser's | musical program out of New York, so that whether the file formation of the | nine bombers. which were expected to drop, one after the other, nine 300- pound bombs in a coup de grace. ev scored was unknown to Columbia’s By the Associated Press Nation-wide audience. g | JACKSON, Mich., August 14.—Safecly | File Operation Doubted. \removed from the mob which threat- | As a matter of fact, it is doubtful ened them at Ann Arbor last night. | whether the scheduled single-file op- | Pred Smith, Prank Oliver and David T. | eration ever was executed, for Langley| Pleld officers who were lstening to| BIAckstone, who killed and burned the JUSTICE ACTS_—(SGICKLY AFTER THREE CONFESS | Troops Called Out to Quell Mobs| Threatening to Lynch Men and Attacking Police. / //,/’ //// ) U/ octor % E-X-A:m/;n s ® érzgflum/ PRESIDENTIAL” FITNESS /7% | REPUTED REVOLT CHIEF FOUND WITH SEVEN FOLLOWERS Cuban Troops Ordered to Los Martinas to Take Former President Menocal. RUMORS OF BIG FIGHT IN SANTA CLARA HEARD | Havana Has No Word From M | chado, Reported Negotiating | Truce With Rebels. st 14 (#.~—The government was informed this after- noon that former President Mario G. Menocal, reputed leader of the revolt ageinst President Machado, had been found near Las Martinas, destruction plan are followed by formal ‘wejections. Chairman Stone, in his telegrams to 14 Governors urging acceptance of the proposal to plow under one-third of | bombing operations this afternoon the { Army's air bombers scored one “posi- | tive” direct hit on the defenseless hulk of the old 8. S. Mount Shasta, according to | & running description of the maneuvers | Mayo's description of the bombing an- | nounced shortly before 1 p.m. that, from the announcer’s account, the planes had exhausted their supply of missiles. | _Mayo had set the stage for his de- “(Continued on Page 2, Column 5.) the standing crop to avert economic disaster in that section, indicated 10 out of 14 must agree. The telegrams read: T | INDBERGHS PLAN FSEEREEEE 0 ORCLE WORD gram this board will do all in its power Will Start 1,000-Mile Hop to support the program and will pledge itself to permit no sales by the Cottord to Karagin Islands Today if Weather Clears. Stabilization Corporation of its present Toldings before July 1, 1932, and will urge upon the cotton co-operatives financed by the board the desirability of similar action by them on their stocks of 1930 cotton now held.” Rejected by Georgian. Thus far only four replies have been | veceived at the board's offices. ONE p 1o assaciated Press. came from Gov. Sterling of Texas pledg- | NOME, Alaska, August 14.—Col. and ing the support of his State. Another ngrs Charles A. Lindbergh will leave from Gov. Russell of Georgia rejected | Nome about 6 am. (12 noon Eastern thie suggestion. The other two replies | standard time) today for Safety Bay, were not made available today. | 21 miles to the east, where their mono- The board has considered no alterna- | plane is anchored, to prepare for a | tive in the event the crop destructiol | take.off for Siberia, en route to Tokio, e D ovess | the fiying colonel announced before re- is regarded as an extremely remote |iiring last night. A The trip to the plane and the hop- r‘mfl mid recently off depends on continued favorable in that commodity, adding | bergh said. 10 do so would require millions of “It will take about two hours to which the board's ireasury warm the motor for the trip,” he said. 1 stabilization operations, | Cheeks Plane Motor. | Yesterday Lindbergh spent consider- Last Scptember the boerd it m!:c not. .“{h;n; ..)”‘lhk time at his plane checking the thet scurce at least until July 31 motor and heping mechanics refuel it of this year. No new policy has since | for the 1,000-mile fiight to Karagin been definitely announced, except that it was agreed to hold the cotton ,n,gm-n¢ where he has a cache of gaso- ‘ltne and oil. year if the cotton destruction proposal were adopted. ‘The pair expect to head westward Speculation on Surplus. gbout 8 am. (2 p.m. Eastern standard tion foday centered upon the | Hme). e LBy n:refl:em to| The vacation air tour of Col. and Mrs this surplus cotton for another | Lindbergh, criginally destined to end | e ne ey |in the Orlent, has blossomed into & | projected flmt"' around the world. tion proposal was ad-| Their intention to extend their 7,000~ vanced after the Government's crop re- | ile trip by thoussnds of miles across prospective 1931 har. | Asia, Europe and the Atlantic, was dis- e than | Closed here last night by Col. Lind- Stone | bergh to a few friends as the fiying awaited favorable weather for dash across the Bering Sea vest, 2,500,000 larger than last year. has figured the prospective urryh -uve{: of American ectton a year hence at| 11,000,000 bales, almost enough to sup- | _Friends of the - Lindberghs said the ply demands for a year. | announcement was complete sur-~ Gov. Sterling has been prominently | Prise and that even if such an extended fdentified with movements fo Teduce | Journey had been talked over when they He recently con- | Were planning their route to the orient, Southern officials | the fiyers had not revealed it in Austin to obtain general adherence | From the cutset of their “vacation,” 10 & bill then before the Texas Legisia- | b:gun on July 27, at New York, and ture providing pepalties for growing | during the several weeks of previous cotton two years in succession on the | precarations, the only announced des- same land. The bill later was aban- tination had been the Orient. doned. The Farm Board declined to send s representative to that meeting Raln 54N Falling. reac] here were virtually| Meanwhile, the clearing of the unanimous that it would be an impos- | Weathcr here, which started late yes- sibility to get all farmers to plow under | terday, was awaited before a take-off 2 third of their crop. In this connec- | for Karagin Island, 1,067 miles away on tion, it was recalled today that the Kamchatka Peninsula. Rain still was board iast Spring rejected a plan ad- | falling last night, but the I°w baromet- vanced by wheat growers that one- ric area causing the storm was moving fourth of the 1931 wheat production be | eastward. held on farms. The board’s answer| To the west several hundred mniles was that such a sign-up campaign | and around Ksragin Island, messages smong wheat farmers would not be 100 | last night said the weather wes far. per cent successful and, furthermore, Much of the day vesterday Lind- ihe problems of wheat growers were |bergh spent at Safety Bay, 21 miles not identical in the various producing to the east. working on his monoplane sections (Continued on Page 2, Column 6.) Futures Quotation Advanced. - o Although trade circles also exprested | |NED BEDORTS SINKING FISH BOAT; CREW SAVED skepticism concerning the plan, quota- tions in the futures kets advanced with the Parm Board's announcement Schooner Albert W. Black Victim of Swedish-American Vessel In Liverpool prices advanced $1 a bale. and in New York there was a maximum Off Maine Coast. the Associated Press. sdvance of $1.55 a bale As these increased prices were being studied a telegram was received from Representative Patman, Democrat, of Texas, who urged the board to join with NEW YORK, August 14 —The Swedish-American Jiner Gripshoim to- day npotified its offices here that it collided with and sank the fshing schooner Albert W. Black off the Maine him {n a plea for a special session of g Congress to set mimimum prices at 20 = Coast. The crew of the schooner was reported safe (Continued on Page 2, Column 1.) The Albert W. Black, bullt in 1892, R ORI | 72 | was 72 68 NEW PARALYSIS CASES, Decline of 20 From Number Re- Stone in | low wheat prices | P eoud mot tadertake. sich | Weather Teports from Siberia, Lind- | SMITH CO. COMMON STOCK CANCELED {Delaware Court Also Calls| Preferred Holders to Reorganize. The P. H. Smith Co., built up by G. | Bryan Pitts, was dealt a death blow today when the Delaware Court of Chancery issued an order canceling | all the comon stock issued to the for- mer officers. Under the court order, a meeting of | preferred stockholders will be called to | elect a new board of directors, who will | direct the concern’s activities in the | tuture. Common Stockholders. Prior to the collapse of the comp‘nyi i bodles of two youths and two girls, near Ypsilanti, early Tuesday, freely dis- cussed their crime with a newspaper man at the Michigan State Prison today Blackstone denied he had attacked in the far western section of Pinar Del Rio. The report said only seven follow- ers were with him. Troops were ordered to Las Martinas. | public safety, sent word here the girls. He said the story was fabri- cated by Oliver and Smith. He also| denied actually participating in the slaying. Smith said he was driving the automobile and that Blackstone fired | the shots that killed the two youths. Oliver, however, said he drove the car. | | Both Oliver and Smith denied any | part in the slaying. | Oliver expressed remorse. He said he | had accompanied Smith and Blackstone | i on their contemplated robbery to obtain money with which to buy food for his parents. Several members of Oliver's family | arrived at the prison today and awaited | permission to visit the youth. The torch slayers, called “flends in | human form” by the judge Who sen- tenced them, were in solitary confine- ment today in Jackson Prison, serving the first day of life sentences. ‘They confessed, were sentenced to life imprisonment and placed in the Jackson institution_within six hours last night. Oscar G. Olander, commissioner of | Pangborn and Herndon May| Be Fined for Taking Fort Pictures. | By the Associated Press. | | TOKIO, August 14.—The Rengo News -5 | Agency said it was informed by the Lensing this morning that State police | Public prosecutor’s - office will be used to escort the slayers to the | Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon, jr Marquette prison in the upper penin- |the American fiyers, will be indicted on S0 e o WUS ‘PrITEIe = WS charge of photcgraphing fortified might be made tonight, prebably bY | ,nes from the air. The punishment, A new angle to the affair—not men- | Rengo said, was not indicated. | tioned by the men in their confessions— | The pictures in issue were taken was revealed early today with the arrest | With a small motion picture camera | of Miss Catherine Keller, 25, at her (during the aviators' flight here from home in ¥psilanti. She was brought Khabarovsk, Siberia, where, after to the county jail here. Officers began | Weather delays, they abandoned an an investigation of reports that she | €ffort to beat the Post-Gatty rcc't:rd By the Associated Press, HAVANA, August 14—While Presi- dent Gerardo Machado was believed to be negotiating a truce. additional troops were on the way to Santa Clara prov- ince today to deal with the insurgent forces. Four cars of soldiers, including one machine gun detachment, left the Cen- tral Station last night under command t|0f Maj. Francisco Ferndndez de Lara, | President Machado went to Santa Clara yesterday. | The governor of Santa Clara reported | the rebels had burned the United Rail- | ways station at Agabams and had —_— | blown up the bridge over the Guaraca- Ralph B. Fleharty, former people’s buya River. They cut telegrgph lines counsel to the Public Utilities Commis- | between Fomento and Baes gnd scized | sion, and Harry L. Rust, real estate & quantity of arms, retiring hefore the | agent, were selected today by Justice Arrival of federal trocps sent to check | Joseph W. Cox to serve as collectors of | their movements. the personal estate of Mrs. Mary F.| The palace refused to say when the Henderson, widow Jf former Senator | President would return and no news of | John B. Henderson of Missouri, who his efforts filtered through. Army head- |left five wills and two codiciis. The Quarters said they had met with signal | bond of the collectors was fixed at Successes in minor encounters during [ $50,000. | the last two days. The court announced that should | Amuesty Offer Reporied. | | ‘The gunboat Baire, which was said caveats be filed to the last will of Mrs. | to havs gone over to the rebels; e Case Is Continued As Officer’s Foot, Asleep, Fails Him HENDERSON ESTATE e et | (0 EGTORS NANED usual case continuance today. Policeman Raymond Sinclair, | | ae ¥ |Ralph Fleharty and H. L. Rus drivers, weary from a night in | the saddle of his motor cycle, | | 5 Teme donrt when he was sud: | | Selected by Justice Cox. | Plea for Edelin Fails. { | | | “poison” to speeding denly awakened by the loud shouting of his name. “Officer Sinclair!” came the | | voice of a balliff. “Officer Sin- | clair!” | Sinclalr arose, took one step, | swayed slightly and went down slightly on one knee. He pulled himself up and started forward, but again genuflected. Finally, with an expression of half pain and half sheepishness on his face, he looked up at Judge McMahon: “I can't make it, judge, not now,” he said slowly. “My foot has gone to sleep.” | the comon stock had been held ex- | clusively by e | John H. Edwards, jr.; | dale, nial R. Crissinger and Fred- | | erick N. Zihlman. accompanied the killers early Tuesday, | {0F an around-the-world speed fligh when they robbed the young couples, | Deny Violation Intent. | m attacked one of the girls, killed t The fivers from the first denied any | and then burned their bodies. Deputies ' intention of violating the stringent JURIST WILL RULE. | s turned, and the officers scoffed at re= ports of their desertion. They had in tow the yacht Coral, on wi former ‘Their actlvity in directing the affairs of the company resulted in Federal in- dictments being returned against eil of them. Pitts, Anadale and Edwards | were convicted of conspiring to embezzle the company’s funds and destroy its records. The order was issued upon a suit | brought by a committee representing the hoiders of $7,000,000 in preferred | stock of the company, { Henry Suit Pended. | At the time of the decision there was | pending before the same court a suit | by Henry for canceliation of 50,000 sald the woman was the sweetheart of (Continued on Page 4, Column 1.) MAN ELECTROCUTED INSTALLING LIFT Arthur E. Day, Electrician, Dies. Rescue Squad Is De- layed. i | | | | shares of common stock held in trust | by Pitts. These shares were voted to | be “held in trust for distribution among | deserving employes.” Henry contended, however, that Pitts never distributed the | Arthur E. Day, elevator electrician working on top of an elevator being in- was electrocuted this afternoon while | | stock and was voting it improperly in 1 stalled In a new building at 1620 Fuller his own interest | der today’s ruling The Smith company, under Pitts’ guldance, built up & $50,000,000 business, ut since the indictments were returned the volume of its business has dwindled greatly. This suit abates un- CHAMPION RETAINS U.'S. ARCHERY TITLE Russel Hoogerhyde Shoots 2,476| Score—W. 0. Robinson of Capital Named Officer of Association. By the Associated Press CANANDAIGUA, N. Y., August 14— Russel Hoogerhyde of Coldwater, Mich., @again has pinned the champiopship title of the National Archery Association to his target with precisely placed arrows. street. § Due to a mistake in the police radio | broadcast, the fire rescue squad was | Fuller street, causing a delay in reach- ! ing the scene of the accident Firemen said Day appeared to be dead ‘ when they arrived. Oxygen was admin- arrival of a phystian. Day, an em- plove of the General Elevator Co. of | Baltimore, is said to live in Baltimore. | His Washington address was the Mc- Reynolds Apartments, Eighteenth and G streets. He was connecting an elec- trical attachment on two elevators in the new apartment building with the help of Ernest Fuller. also an employe of the elevator company. Fuller said he left Day on top of one elevator at the fourth floor and went to the basement for a gox. Ha heard a_slight noise and Day exclaimed, “Ernfe, come quick!” Fuller said that when he arrived | Day was stretched out on top of the | elevaior, with his leg next to one of | the elecirical contacts. Fuller snatched him away from the contact, sustain- ing a severe shock while doing so. {sent to 1620 Fourth street instead of | istered for about 10 minutes before the | He won the championship yesterday| The current which runs through the With & acore of 2,476 for the double Yok electrical connection carries 220 volts and double American rounds in ths an- | but it is thought that the amperage of nusl meet of the association here | this current was grea‘ly increased by Second high man was A. L. Brush, the fact that Dar had stepped into a Cos Cob. Conn.. with a 2.262 score and | puddle of water a few minutes before Los Angeles, was third | the accident | The bodv was removed to the Pis- D! Duggan of Greenwich, Conn., | trict Morgue. took the women's double American tro- | . phy wit °T score of 1.906. The assoc'ation iast night ¢ OMAHA BANK CLOSED loliowing officers et President. Finch Haggard of Seattle. Wash.; first vice presidcnt, W. O. Rob- | inson, Washington, D. C.. second vice president, Dr. Edward S. Hodgson, East | St. Louis, Ill.; secretary, Louls C. Smith, Boston: members of the board of gov- ernors. Kore C. T. Duryee, Szattle; B. G. Thompson, Corvalis. Orea, ected the pend Within Week. OMAHA. August 14 (#.— The South Omaha State Bank, with authorized capital of $100,000 and deposits of ap- and Mrs. | proximately $1.000.000, has been turned over to the State Department of Trade Institution Third in City to Sus-| Japanese regulations against flying over fortified areas. They explained their | knowledge of the country was limited and any flying over forbidden areas had been accidental. Japanese officials were inclined to drop the matter until the camera was found in the big red mono- plane. A detailed investigation was ;started and continued until today. | Pangborn and Herndon arrived here August 6. The news agency understood the fly- ers would be charged with violation of the clvil aviation act and the forti- fied zone regulations, but indicated the amount of the fine to be imposed had not yet been decided. Some vernacular newspapers specu- lated the fine might be as high as 3,060 yen ($1,500). Others suggested a few hundred yen. A formal an- nouncement of the procurator's recom- mendations was expected tomorrow. With this development, the series of mishaps which have followed the Amer- icans since they set out from New York on a projected -globe-girdling | flight that was to better the time made by Harold Gatty and Wiley Post has now reached a most serious stage. Photographs Boats. Pangborn and Herndon stoutly con- tended their innocence, asserting they ok pictures while fiying over Japan not realizing they were above a fortified area. They admitted they took photo- | graphs of sampans (Japanese boats) on the Japan Sea. Regulations prohibiting the photo- graphing of fortified areas in Japan are extremely strict. They provide for | confiscation of the equipment used and {a prison sentence of not more than three years Although newspapers and press as- | sociations gave vari eports regar (Continued on Page 2, Column »&.) RUSSIAN DRIVE PUTS 17,612,000 IN SCHOO Campaign to End Illiteracy by 1932 Running 110 Per Cent Ahead of Schedule. By the Associated Press. MOSCOW. August 14—Soviet Rus- sia’s compulsory education campaign is running 110 per cent ahead of schedu’e, government statistics published today indicate. Under the slogan “Eradicate All Ti- | literacy by 1932 the campaign has placed in schools in the past 12 months 117,612,000 children, as compared with | | the high figure during the czarist regime | of 7,235,000, LENINGRAD, Russia, August 14 (®). | tors Would be enlarged 50 8s to cover g | the real estate, from which tley would | n | callect the rents and nay the expenses | jeader, was at first beli e“’ wd““‘w 3 of management, pending determination | jne- |in the court of the attacks which are ?J::,, w?,’,"fmpm,““mmf 9% 1l “Tnine | expected to be made against the Insi |~ Col. Emiliano Amiel, military com- | will, executed only a few montks before | mander in Santa Clara, was reposted | the death of Mrs. Henderson. |to have offered amnesty to all in- L s . | “Attorney Jultus I Peyser made | surgenis who laid down their. arms serves Decision in Wild |strong plea to the court to add the |within 24 hours. He was quoted as name of George E. Edelin, the executor | saying Federal troops had met their west shOW FI ht under the last will of April 8, 1931, to | adversaries 22 times since the move- | gnt. the personnel of the collectorship, but | ment started last Sunday—all with | the court said he had considered the | “good fortune.” | TR matter carefully and had reached the | Three more deaths in battie t Owners and_employes of the 101 |conclusion that the most harmonious | the unoffical count of mortaliies to 2 relations | 6. These occurred in Piner o Ranch Wild West Show aired their | O gl of a lawyer and realty broker | and Contrameste. President Menocal, ha Hears Arguments and Re- The government legal difficulties in District Supreme | Court today in what Justice Joseph W. | to _have charge of the estate. In the petition flled by Mr. Edelin | claimed it had suffered only one dead, | but the oppositionists asserted there Cox termed “one of the most unusual | for the probate of the last will, the had been many Loyalist losses. cases which has come before me.” 1 value of the personal property w given as $255,000, while he valued the real estate at about $1,000,000. A valu- | Heavy Fighting Rumored. Persistent rumors of heavy fighting Justice Cox took the case under ad- | visement and said he would render his wnug;n c(J;o;».m wnfw&lrnfly%tg; | :rtxnsé:n;a Clara, p‘roidm:e see) ;d '.hl"‘m:%;l , | entire es n an app! { jovernmental censorship an decision at 4 o'clock this afternoon. | ggay” “tormer secretary to Senator | gathering of large bodies of rebel forces T don’t know whether we have any | Henderson, in his application to be ap- | in that province and in Matanzas was precedent by which these difficulties | pointed coliector for tre estate. Op- | reported here. may be solved,” he declared, “and we | position to the selection of Seay de- | Information believed reliable told of must try to seek the best practical | veloped at a recent hearing before | heavy guerrilla warfare near Caribarien solution.” One of his chief concerns | Justice Cox when Attorney Peyser in- | and Santi Spiritus and in Santa Clara | seemed to be to protect the people of | sisted that Mr. Edelin should be ap- | Province, it was said, 3,000 armed in- | Washiington from having the 400 un- | pointed to the collectorship. | surgents were moving. paid employes of the show turned loose Other reports said the revolution was on the streets as vagrants. | 1 spreading in Oriente and Camaguey The hearing Was on a bill for an | provinces. injunction to restrain the employes | MEX'CO BARS ENTRY | _Army headquarters declined to com- from interfering with the movement of | ment on the concentration of troops G e OF ALL MINISTERS ~ (Continuea on Page 2. Golima 5~ an answer, attorneys for the troupers SR requested that the property be placed | i WIFE IS DIVORCED AND HIRED AS COOK in the hands of receivers and disposed of for the benefit of creditors. | Religious Workers of Whatever S-S Sy | Denomination Must Have Spe- ] cial Permission. | Los Angeles Woman to Remain in I Home at $50 Month in Court ! Agreement. Attorfeys Norman B. Landreau and | H. L. McCormick, for the defendants, | supported thelr answer to the bill by | |15 afidavits made by show employes. | | They said the amdavits proved the !y ine associated Press. Western Show Co., Inc., alleged lessee s ¥ JM the show. was formed by Zach T | MEXIOO CITY, August 14—The In Miller or the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch | terfor Department today issued instruc- | By the Associated Press, LOS ANGELES, August 14.—Although Mary Bail, Greenfield, Mass - and Commerce for liquidation. In mak- | —Three hundred medical workers have claims of creditors, and that Zach T. | Miller was the actual head of the sho until July 8, 1931 The bill for an injunction was brought by W. E. Rice, successor trustee |of Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Trust, | | against the Western Show Co. Inc., and four minor employes, as representa- | tive of all the troupers. It is signed by Fred H. Olmstead as attorney in fact | for the trustee. Mrs. Landreau told the court Olm- | stead, Jho represents the plaintiff, also | is vice prosident of the defendant West- | labor ern Show Co. Jurisdiction Attacked. Attorney Harry S. Barger, represent- ing the plaintiff, based his case in op: | posing receivership on the legal prop. | osition that the court had no jurisdic- tion to appoint a receiver to take over L | Trust for the purpose of defeating the | tions to immigration officers to refuse admission to Mexico of ministers of ny religious denomination who did not have specific authorization from the de- partment to enter. Entry of ministers even in the cate- gory of tourists was prohibited, and border ts were told to wire the Interior rtment for instructions in case of doubt. The Senate last night, by a vote of 40 to 1, approved the projected national Jaw. The bill has already been approved by the Chamber and now goes to President Ortiz Rubio for signature. As sent to the Senate by the House a week ago, the labor bill contained a lause providing that 90 per cent of the employes of any business or industry established in the country must be native-born Mexicans or naturalized citizens. divorced from her husband, Mrs. Agnes E. Bennett, 52, will remain in his 11= Toom home as housekeeper. Until yesterday she was the wife of Albert Austin Bennett. She was his housekeeper befcre romance came into her life “As & wife she disappointed < me," Bennett told the divorce judge, “but I like her cooking.” Mrs. Bennett will draw alimony of $50 a. month, while working for her former husband. American Acrobat Stricken. VIENNA, August 14 (P).—Anne Ringens, American vaudevi who was seriously injured du formance here a month tracted searlet fever at ihe hospital where she was convalescing ported in New York Yesterday. feet and had a gross | Jong tonnage of 54. She was in the cod NEW YORK. August 14 (#).—The | service New York City Heaith Department to- | _ocal officials of the Swedish-Amer- day repdrted 68 new cases of infantile ican Line said the Gripsholm is car- paralysis during the past 24 hours, a de- | rying 534 passengers and that her last cline of 20 from the number reported | port of call was Halifax. She is due yesterday. n New York tomorrow STANDING IN POOL OF WINE Was Cleaning Basement After Raid When She Touched Defective Light Cord. By the Associated Press. 1 taken into MILWAUKEE, Wis, August 14— law charge Mrs. Helen Vasimovic, 39 years old, | 107 5everel stood in & pool of wine which formed icft in the basement of her home last night | ticl: when it was shere by Pederal up, touched » defective electric cord and was electrocuted. s Saslioivie e B e e Y 'BULLS SEND STOCKS " UP $1T0 $5 A SHARE Quick Advances Attributed to Ex- pectant Autumn Impulse to Business. ¥ the Associated Press NEW YORK, August 14.—A revival of professional bullish activity sent share prices up smartly in today’s stock | market | Advances of $1 to $5 a share were { numerous, and trading was fairly active | {in several pool favorites. ing the announcement last night, of. begun a campaign to rid Soviet Russia | ficials of the institution said the bank | of insanitary conditions in homes and and has the propitty ol & Sreln cutmesision | ! been removed to an isolation hospital. at the behest of general creditors. Jus. tice Cox gave no opinion regarding the was an independent institution. It was the third Omaha bank to close in the past week | factories. Housewives, workors, peas- | ants and sanitary agencies all over the | country have besn enlisted. A Story on the Island Dr. Appear in the Editorial The Famous Diplomat and WHY CUBANS REVOLT! 's Present Upheaval by Cosme de la Torriente Former President of the League of Nations and Ambassador to the United States Section of the Next Issue of THE SUNDAY STAR Statesman Will Reveal the validity of this claim. In their answer the attorneys for | the plaintiff stressed the “grave danger” ! which would result from green hands being placed in charge of the elephants, steers and wild horses, which form =& ¢ | Broken Home Teaches Divorcees to Make Concessions, Columbia Students Learn. SECOND MARRIAGES HAVE LESS CHANCE OF FAILURE, STUDY FINDS NEW YORK, A mer students at conducted a course in “Social Problems of the Pamily,” asserted today The chief cause of d people gice and i3 dents found, is ce of and