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WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) Fair and cooler today; tomorrow, fair and contiftued cool. ‘Tem| tures—Highest, ; lowest, 65, at % hfi report on page 4. No. LAVAL AND BRIAND VISIT 10 GERMANY STIRS PEAGE HOPE Cabinet Conferees Expected to Lay Foundation for Co-operation. 1,384—No. - 31,925. ECONOMIC COMMISSION SEEN LIKELY RESULT First Step May Be Union of Indus- trial and Financial Leaders of Both Countries. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, September 26.—The hopes and anxieties of millions of peace-lov- ing Germans centered tonight on the blue train that is bringing Foreign Min- tster Briand and Premier Laval of France on a friendly mission to Berlin. It is the first official journey of ti kind by members of the French cab- dnet in more than half a century. The very fact that Berlin has not scen such a visit since the days of Bis- marck has added immensely to its sig- nificahce. Wide sections of the public, however, as well as the Bruening gov- ernment, are keenly aware this is no besis for expecting the sudden removal of all stones in the path of Franco- German understanding, even though the shaken nerves of Europe cry loudly for definite action to restore confidence. The consciousness of this need of a definite result, even though modest, has led government spokesmen as well as the pro-government press to restrain tendencies toward overoptimism with almost the same zeal police are display- ing to protect the Prench visitors from friendly “incidents.” a floor has been reserved for the delega- tion. Full Program Planned. ‘The program calls for Juncheon Sun- ._Curtius, dinner Sunday burg Monday, a embassy Monda: for Paris Tuesday. The last previous official French visi% was the famous Berlin Congress of 1878, ‘when the powers decided pressing ques- tions invelving Turkey and the Balkans. The French delegation then was one of the least important. France's foreign minister, Willilam Henry Waddington— who was British by birth—was so far from being the Briand of his day that Column 8.) MAJ. DOOLITTLE SETS NEW FLIGHT RECORD Lowers St. Louis-to-Indianapolis Time From Hawks' 70 Minutes to 52 Minutes. function at the French y night and departure By the Associated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, September 26.— ‘Maj. James H. Doolittle, holder of the West-to-East transcontinental record of 11 hours and 11 minutes, established another record today by flying from St. Louis to Indianapolis, a distance of 240 miles, in 52 minutes. The previ- ous record time between the two cities was 70 minutes, established by Capt. Frank Hawks. Maj. Dcolittle was one of a nurber of noted fiyers here for the dedieaticn of the local municipal afrport,” Capt. Hawks was expected also, but word was received he had made a forced land- ing at Sunbury, Pa., after starting from New York this morning. A broken oil pump was expected to delay his arrival until tomorrow. The United States Army sent two squadrons, one of 14.ships frcm Scott Field, Belleville, Tll, and another of 13 ships from Selfridge Pleld, Mount Clemens, Mich. Tks Navy was represented, too, 3 naval ships coming from the Great Lakes Treining Station near Chicago and 6 from the Grosse Isle Field near Detroit., Sports Summaries College foot ball made its 1931 bow here yesterday, with George- town, Maryland and George Washington winning their games and Catholic U., playing in the Hub City, bowing to Boston Col- lege after a hard fight. Big e base ball will take its last for the season here today, with the Nationals, rele- ated definitely to third place by iulnx twice to cn:' J;M yes- ‘Waynesburg bea! St. Mary's downed California and Ursinus conquered Lehigh in the gridiron upsets yesterddy. Other “favorites had close calls. Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare, five times woman's golf champion, lost her crown to 20-year-old Helen Hicks. Pull details of these and other events in the sports 78, at 5 pm. 10 pm. yes- Entered as second class matter post office, Washington, D. C. Legalizing Be e r Seen as'Meaning Return of Saloon Federal Control Would Be: | Lost, Members of Congress Fear. Legalization of 3 or 4 per cent beer in this country means the return of the saloon. That in brief is the way that many members of Congress look at the pro- posal now advanced in certaln quar- ters to amend the Volstead enforce- ment act to permit an alcoholic con- tent of 3 or 4 per cent In beverages. ‘The explanation they give for their position is quite simple. If 3 or 4 per cent beer is taken out of the “intoxi- cating beverage” class and placed in class with water and ginger ale, there is no way in which the Federal Government can control the manner of on Page 3, Column 3.) RAILUNIONS TO ASK CONGRESS FOR AID i Brotherhoods Believe Shorter | Day and Week Will Re- lieve Unemployment. | By the Associated Press. | CLEVELAND, September 26.—With the idea that a shorter work day and a shorer work week are the only immedi- | ate solution for present railroad unem- | ployment, 21 railroad brotherhoods to- day disclosed they will request &ongres- sinoal action in December on an unem- ployment relief plan, the detalls of which are yet to be formulated. Ten years ago the brotherhoods won Irom Congress the Adamson bill, which gave railraod workers the eight-hour day. D. B. Robertson, president of the Brotherhood of Locomtive Firemen and Enginemen, who ‘heads a' special com- plan of railroad labor unemploymeni relief will not be made until a national survey of the problem. now in progress, has been completed. Mr. Robertson explpined that the de- cision to take the relief program to. Congress was the result of refusals by mw@mmmm L shorter_hours. e Bave sl ave n said. - W ‘matter out_in but He oods' unemployed at 350,000. fl further ucfn mbn;em e‘:t il.l:e decisic to e an unel o oo ".nl?u explained, n of the brother- the rallroads are At the present time having troubles of their own in the | form of greatly reduced revenues from freight. Several months ago, however, | some of the brotherhoods essed ap- | proval of a 15 per cent freight rate in- crease, which the roagds are now trying to win through the Interstate - There have been hints recently in| raliroad circles that if the rate increase | is not approved by the commission, the raflroads would seek lower wages for all | their employes. Robertson said he had heard no such proposals. [ Decision Awaits Survey. é The president of the Firemen and i | | merce Commission. Enginemen said the brotherhoods al- ‘l‘el‘d&y have endeavored to spread the| | amount of work available among the| | maximum number of employes. | | At one time, recently, it was proposed | | among some of the brotherhoods that | the hours of work should be reduced but wages continued on an hourly basis, which in effect would reduce the in-| come of the individual worker, would | provide work for larger numbers of | men, and yet not increase the labor | expenditures of the various roads. 3 rtson had no comment to- y uj such a proposal. “We can't| | decide the wage question, nor the ma | basts of the plan itself, 'until we have | completed our unemployment survey,” { he_sald. > 1 "“The survey now being made will at- tempt to obtain every important bit { of $ita avatlable to show the results of the present situation and the possible outcome of tentative relief plans. Rob- ertson said the survey would continue through October. . Lloyd Hamilton Hurt. LOS ANGELES, September 26 ().— Lloyd Hamilton, motion picture come- dian, was seriously injured when he was struck by an automobile here to- £ mittee of the 21 bodies, said the specific | him. CONGRESS MAY ACT T0BAN-STOCK AND GRAIN SHORT SALES Senate Leaders View Action as Likely—Bills Are Prepared. VETO OF LEGISLATION BY HOOVER IMPROBABLE Tiend of Feeling Here Is Revealed by Watson—Defenders of System Are Few. BY G. GOULD LINCOLN. Investigation of the New York Sto Exchange by a congressional commit- tee, particularly with xeference to “short selling” and its effect on the securities market, when Congress re- assembles is looked for by responsible leaders of the Senate. Furthermore, there will be a drive in the coming Congress for legislation to put & curb on short selling, either of securities or of grain, Several members of Congress already have prepared bills for such a purpose and will introduce them. & There has been no indication from the administration what its attitude would be toward legislation designed to prohibit or to curb largely short selling It would be difficult, however, for the President of the United States to veto such a measure if it ever came to him. Nor has there been anything to show that the President would eppose efforts to curtail the short seiling in the stock and grain exchanges. Spoke Againgt Bears. Mr. Hoover not long ago saw fit to say to the country that certain intetests in the country wefe manipulating the market for whegt h short sell- ing. About a yeAr ago, wWhen there was also an Ouficri against the “bears” in the stock market, the President had the rincipal officials of the New York E;o.x Market at that time come ftc the White, House for & conference with Senatér James E. Watson, Republican leader ‘of the Benate, said last night slig! ¢ doubt t uefin{ thl't”vonce such a were launched in the Senate, it would be_defeated. Immediately following the anncunce- e {mcnt by the British government that Great Britain was te "]mrnri!y ‘abandon- ing the d_standard, the controiling body of the New York Stock Exchange issued an order that short selling should ‘Whether this orérr was was the order would not had it not been for the fact that wes fear short selling would in- Jjurfously affect prices of securities all along the line. For two days this order was in effect. Then came the an- nouncement of wage cuts by ths United States Steel Corporations and General Motors and several other big concerns. The market reacted favorably to thesz announcements and wide gains were made, ranging from 1 to 14 points. But these gains were just for the dav, in the main, and a slump in prices quick®» followsd. Decline Follows Repeal. At the same time the stock market was booming after the wage cuts, the New York Exchange rescinded the order against short selling. It has been ar- zued that short selling had ncthing to do with the subsequent decline in prices on the market, and that the declines were due to the foreign exchange situa- tion. But that is something it is hard to make members of Congress believe today. Furthermore, the opinion has been advanced that the Stock Exchange re- scinded its order against short, selling so " (Continued on Page 2, Column 1) |UNIDENTIFIED MAN LEAPS- INTO GULF OFF STEAMER Crew Tells of Suicide Plunge When Ship Was €5 Miles Out of Beaumont, Tex. | By the Assoctated Press. NEW ORLEANS. La., September 26.— A story of an unidentified man leaping from the steamship Western Wave into the Gulf of Mexico off Beaumont, Tex., Thursday, was told by members of the crew with the ship's arrival here today. Capt. Nelson Proctor sald the man boarded his ship at Beaumont under the name of “H. P. Nash.” Sixty-five miles out of Beaumont, he said, the man threw his handbag overboard and jumped backwards. ‘The body was not found, but the bag was recover=d and police said they found in it bank books and letters from towns Huntling.” New York theater stubs and a letter addressed to Huntling at ‘n! ht. He suffered a broken leg, deep scaip cuts and probably internal in- | juries. | the Plaza Hotel at Havana, dated Sep- tember 11, also were found. , G | By the Associated Press. r DARWEN, Lancashire, England, Sep- ANDHI SEES BRITONS’ MISERY, * BUT IS UNSHAKEN ON BOYCOTT Visits Idle English Plants and Declares Millions Suffering More in India. “The steps I took,” he said, “were part of my duty toward the lergest tember 26—Mahatma Gandhi today |army of unemployed in the world, In- saw with his own eyes the misery of this | textile center, but it did not shake his support of India’s boycott of British cot- | ton goods, the measure held largely re- | sponsible for the smokeless factory | chimneys hereabouts. After talking with operators and job- less workers, and shaking hands with a | great. crowd of school children on the | village green, the mahatma turned a deaf ear to Lancashire’s plea that his Nationalist party raise its boycott, for which he is largely responsjble, dla's starving millions, beside - whose pauperism the pove:ry‘“e,g Lancashire dwindles in E mahatma was wholly undisturbed d his tour about Darwen. He had a bodyguard of plainclothes men, but they were not meeded. In addition, police were stationed at_intervals of 50 feet for a mile or #o along every road near house n.which he is staying. the house {nWWiich e ! the. hose for When ch he encountered the b e of them faced and dressed. _Shaking « in Jowa and Ohio made out to “H. P.| \\ \\QSEN\.\= G CAWDDAYE vor PR&S\D‘;:T’ ; o .":ANcL MOTHER OF MRS. WHOLEAN FOUND, ATTORNEYS CLAIM Name Will Be Divulged in Court Battle Over Henderson Will—Dr. Kellogg Enters Fight. An important phase of the defense, it was said, will be the effort to prove Mrs. Whol The name of & woman described as “the real mother” of Mrs. Beatrice F. ‘Wholean will be d when the | that lean is the adopted and contest over the of Mrs. Mary [ not the real child of John Henderson, F. Henderson comes to trial, it was|jr., only son of the wealthy dowager. learned yesterday from counsel inter-| “Mrs. Henderson's last will denie: ested in maintaining the validity of | Mrs. Wholean any share in her estate,” the document. one attorney said. ‘“We éxpect to show The last of Mrs. Henderson's six wills | that she learned Mrs, Wholesn was an adopted child and, influenced to some extent by this discovery, decided to leave her property to blood descendants, a niece and nephew. This defense will make necessary the ce in court of Mrs. Wholean's real mother, who we know is living and whose identity will be_disclosed at the proper time.” H. Prescott Gatley, attorney for Mrs. Wholean, refused to say whether his (Continued on Page 2, Column 5. £ MANCHURIAN-HULL WOULD DROP STATESARE URGED' PROHIBITION ISSUE Japan Opposes Separatist| Tennessee Senator, in Radio Plans by Chinese and Forum, Attacks G. 0. P. Mongols. Leadership. by puted grandchild, the by gil.mn Harvey Kellogg of Battle Creek lege. One attorney interested in the will said the filing of the caveats will make necessary a defense which will hrrlns into the o] secrets which for 2 years have been carefully guarded be- hind the walls of Henderson Castle. 1 By the Associated Press. TOKIO, September 76.—The tangled Manchurian situation, complicated by Japanese occupation of the South Man- churian Railway zones and transfer of the capital for the “three eastern'oramn to encourage the support of the provinces” from Mukden to Chinchowlu, | electorate. was given a further twist today by xnhchm, he s:E. he :::;‘d blndud"e activities of divisionist agitators. “such grave problems 2s ployment, The Japanese government stated of- :g’é‘;‘:“;g};“eflgffiffi;’?’: ;’:&m ficially it found nofavor in Proposals| foreign trade policy, peace, practical for breaking Manchuria up into two| conservation, monopoly, paternalism, a | or more independent states, but that | billion-dollar Treasury deficit, bureau- | eracy, suppression of crime, together :fllzh C:‘M;:o and M;"g;i‘:”mg.“"”“ with a common leadership back in the made proposals direction of thrift, constructive econ- Order Capital Moved. | omy, retrenchment, tax reduction and Chang Hsueh-Liang, son of Chang equitable readjustment of tax systems, especially State, county and municipal.” Tso-Lin, the one-time bandit who be- oame dictator of all Manchuria, which Scores G. O. P. Leaders. §) he Nati s i eissane bt e St R e Tl e S death, s in Peiping, where he is re- Radio Forum, arranged by The Wash- irgton Star and broadcast over a coast- covering from a recent serious illness. It was by his order, however, that the to-coast network of the Columbia Broadcasting System, Hull, who for provincial capital was moved to Chin- chowfu, half way nearer the great years has been a leader in his party’s councils and formerly was chairman of wall than Mukden. He also appointed Chang Tsc-Hsiang, one of his late the National Committee, presented a Democratic view of America’s problems father's trusted lieutenants, to command |and the measures which should be all Manchurian troops morth of the great wall taken to cope with them. Today's ‘official advices sald a dele- In his address Senator Hull con- demned the Republican leadership of gation of Chinese who aim at the es- tablishment of a separate government :gauxlu!‘ d?find" ‘with espet.;lhl {efercnce e tariff poli , character- 4t Mukden, had called upon the Japa- FOUEY pu o dex hese comtander in chier, Shigeru izing it as “sulcidal” and asserting that Honjo, asking in’ soliciting Japanese support in the overthrowing of Chang Hseuh-Liang and the estab- | lishment of an independent government. The delegation’s spokesman, Chin-Kai, president of the Peace Main- tenance Commission, said his group al- ready had organized for temporary municipal administration of the native city of Mukden. Gen. Honjo refused, explaining that it was Japan’s policy not to interfere . with Manchurian internal affairs. The general afterward made a complete re- |port by telegraph to the War Depart- | ment here. : Mongols Seek Independence. A second delegation, composed of Mongols, called upon Japanese Consul General Kyujiro Hayashi in Mukden, Senator Cordell Hull, Tennessee, Democrat, last night called upon his the forthcoming campaign, and bespoke a “ccnstructive and truly national pro- the resultant “economic isolation” had cost the American people $25,000,000,000. Leadership with vision, courage and constructive capacity would have saved the Nation and the world from the chief injurious effects of the existing panic,” he sald. “Even the wild specu- lation and inflation that immediately precipitated the panic could, I think, have been curbed by the Government and the investment b2nkers. Had the Democratic policies, however, of low tariffs and fair and friendly trade rela- tions everywhere been in effect, most of the present acute conditions would not have arisen. Cites Farm Problem. “For example, world trade opportuni- ties would have enabled debtor c%?mtnu to pay their debts. With our own for- eign markets and trade, which we un- questionably could have developed since 1920, all our labor would be receiving constant employment at high wages, with 1o problem of the unemployed .or unemployment. ~American agriculture, the inhuman destruction of which by high tariffs and virtually no foreign (Continued on Fage 2, Column 4.) ALLEN AND MOYLE HELD AT FAIRBANKS BY SNOW California Aviators Delayed Hop to Tacoma by First Storm of Season. By the Associated Press. ;hAlRBANKB. 3 —The season's first snowstorm sm&l:u in from the North, today held to nd Cecil Allen and Don Moyle, fornia aviators, who rlnnn 2 non-stop ht of about e e deoe resterda; ‘mon Beach, near ‘me. :’ H e 550 miles, in 5 hours, 20 + (Continued on Page 4, Column 1.) HAWKS BRINGS PLANE DOWN DESPITE BLAZE Speed Pilot Leaps Clear of Craft on Making Forced Landing After 0il Line Breaks. on By the Associated Press. Frank M. A Jeaped clear of his plane and escaped injury when he made a forced landing here today after the ofl line of the sbip broke -ndrnqnxumowwmmm flames while he was flying at an alti- tude of 10,000 feet. The plane was damaged so seriously that Capt. Hawks, who was en route West from New York, will be forced to wait here until new parts are installed. confined to the motor, ' 26. party to shelve the prohibition issue in | in UNION PAY URGED | FOR . C. PROJECTS Secretary Doak Suggests Scale to Be Paid Labor in Letter. Secretary of Labor Doak, it was| learned last night, has suggested to| the District Commissioners that the tractors on municipal projects. e ‘The fon was made in reply to a letter the Commissioners on September 4, asking Mr. Doak for ad- vice as to the ruling painters in the $11 for an eight- identical with the ve the ion that, if the £ impressi t, of the scale led pute, he likely would make ruling. Under the law the Secreta of Labor is the final arbiter in contro- versies arising over the question of “prevailing scales.” ‘The Commissioners, it is understcod, have taken no action on Mr. Doak’s suggestion, and probably will not do so until after serious deliberation. What should constitute the “prevailing scale” has puzzled them for several months. (Continued on Page 4, Column 3.) e THREE DISTRICT GIRLS HURT IN AUTO CRASH Cars Collide Near Annapolis—In- jured Treated at Hos- pital, a_dis- a ‘Three Washington gifls, one of them the daughter of a prominent physician, were injured last night when the auto- mobile in which they were riding col- lided head-on with another car abou 5 miles from Annapolis. Those hurt were Miss Helen Tewks- bury, 17, daughter of Dr. W. D. Te bury, 101 East Lenox street, Chevy Chase; Miss Patsy Benton, 17, of 3700 Massachusetts avenue, and Miss Vir- ginia Hall, 17, of 4 Kirk street, Chevy Chase. G County rescue ‘The Prince Georges squad of Glendale took the girls to Cas- ualty Ho?lul. where Miss Benton, whose condition still was undetermined Miss Hall, driver of the machine, for shock. A fourth occupant of the auto- mobile escaped , as did those in the other car. “ scale of wages | JOPln “From Press to Home Within the Hour” The Star is delivered every evening and Sunday morning to Washington homes by The Star’s exclusive carrier service. . Phone National 5000 to start immediate delivery, UP) Means Associated Press. FIVE CENTS | TEN CENTS IN WASHINGTON AND SUBURBS ELSEWHERE MURDER IS HINTED (TWO MEN SEIZED INDEATH OF THREE | FOR INTIMIDATION; INFIRE IN'VIRGINIA! ONE ADMITS GUILT Investigators Unabte to Find|Friend of Detective Confesses Skull of Farmer in Ruins He Sought Out Third- of Destroyed Home. Degree Witness. ROBBERY SEEN MOTIVE FOR POSSIBLE CRIME BOTH OUT ON BOND; INQUIRY IS CONTINUED Goodwin Miller, Veteran, His Wife | Conviction Means $200 Fine or Im- and Young Son Found Dead prisonment Up to 3 Years. After Blaze. Grand Jury to Get Cases. Faced with a possible triple murder | QUickly smothering an alleged plot mystery, Virginia authorities last night to intimidate Government witnesses in were probing the fire-swept ruins of the the duplicate grand jury investigation home of Goodwin Miller, 4 miles|Of third degree abuses, the Department from the town of Joplin, in an effort to | ©f Justice last night sent one man to learn whether he, his wife and their | Jail and caused another to be held infant son had been slain before their | Under bond on joint charges of “ob- bodies were cremated in a blaze which | Structing justice.” destroyed their #ouse Thursday night. A few hours after his arrest by special Miller’s skull could not be found|agents of the Bureau of Investigation among the ruins and this fact led to the | and deputy marshals, Cecil Mason, self- theory that he had been slain and be- | styled friend of a headquarters detec- headed by some one bent on robbing | tive, pleaded guilty before United States him of veteran's bonus money he had | Commissioner Needham C. Turnage and drawn Tuesday. Some teeth believed to| was committed to fail in default of have been his were found beside his| $3,500 bond, to ba held for the grand skeleton, however. jury, but released at midnight when he The wife's head had hls> been severed | *“Fay ll,fl"hl: ’n,""'mm' l‘;‘:u:;:d.l)'oonnor from the body, but the skull was intact | 28-year-old employe of 3 and authorities were of the opinion her named t: neck may have been burned through by the fire. Pleads Not Guilty. e Sevee O'Connor, who, unlike Mason, was Richmond-Washington Highway, near|accompanied by his attorney, pleaded Trisngle, Va. not guilty and was held under $3,500 After a preliminary investigation of | bond for a preliminary hearing before the tragedy, Coroner E. H. ot df Manassas express: three may have murdered, and or- dered Sheriff John T. Kerlin of Prince William County to make an investiga- n. Miller was secn driving toward his home about midnight Thursday. His watch had sto) at 2:30 o’clock, and Justice of the ‘Willlam Crow of the belief that the fire was at its haight at that time. The dead man was a veteran of the World War and drew $122 avenue and Kenyon street, wi important witness against waited a full ‘The nearest neighbor of llmer' De Witt, who lives half a mile away. _“l’uw smoke Priday £83 588 # i istration of justice there- ,_shall be fined not.more than $200 (Continued on Page 2, Column 6.) GRAF NEARS CANARIES Zeppelin Reported Close to Isles on Hop Home From Brazil. et some corn husks for . was told of the fire and went at once to the scene with her 15-year-old son, Wilson. “When I saw Goodwin's car stand- ing there I knew mighty well he hadn’t gone anywhere,” she declared. “He wasn’t fond of and would have' gone in the car. away I felt sure they had all been burned, and told Wilson so. We looked in the ashes and found the bodies.” The body of the man and wife were lying side by side in the twisted Betwme thar The B een em. e baby's ‘was in its crib, a few feet -:{y. s The positions of the skeletons of the (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) It gave the airship’s position at that time as latitude 24.14 North, longitude 23.41 West. STAR BISHOP TO RETAIN PosT | TODAY’S Rt. Rev. W. A. Hickey, Providence, Paby Glwads ads Desires to Finish Work. General News—Local, National Foreign PAWTUCKET, R. I, September 26 | Schools and Colleges—Page B-4. (#)—The Pawtucket Times says today o 5 it has learned from reliable sources that PART TWO—S8 PAGES. Right Rev. Willlam A. Hickey, Roman | Editorials and Editorial Features. Catholic Bishop of Providence, who has YNews of the Clubs—Page 5. been menticned as a possible successor [ The Home Gardener—Page 7. 2 ‘Tr late Right Rev. Austin Bowling | D. A. R. Activities—Page 7. of St. Pa Minn., o would remain in P!ovldenee.“" we;Al’l‘ THREE—10 PAGES. Bishop Hickey, the Times says, has Section. been kncwn to be desirous s of conclud- Kathleen Norris Article—Page 7. ertaken tn the Pr;lvvls PART FOUR—10 nc.:s.h een In the Motor ‘World—Page 3. Aviation—Page 4. . Diltflctsol Columbia Naval Reserve— Page 5. District National Guard—Page 8. Army and Navy News—Page 5. Kingsford-Smith Takes Off. undey W Coeae et Do . Cl Kingsford-Smith took off at 4:15 l.‘l:s. for Jhansi on his attempt Miss Tewksbury's sister was injured in an accident in which a young man was killed' several months ago. 2 | Disabled Veteran:—] breat break the Australian-to-England L sue, TN record. He arrived here afternoon. e THREE “AIR JOY-RIDERS” KILLED e 6. Organized Reserves—Page 6. . American Legion—Page 6. Fraternities—Page 8. Marine Corps News—Page 8. FLYING PLANE FORBIDDEN PILOT ,;f"fg.:; W via Ride to Celebrate Last Use of Ship Barred to Mechanic |l News and Ends in Triple Fatality. By the Assoclated Press. LOGANSPORT, Ind., ‘Three men here, | of are | been flying Wash. | they had distance of PART SIX—14 PAGES. Classified Adver- Veterans of W Lo g Foreign u‘,“_M 14. American Gold Star Mothers—Page 14. W. C. T. U. News—Page 14. . PART SEVEN—20 PAGES. The “Bridge. Foraim--Page 1 5. of the Music World—Bage 16, Reviews of the New Books—Page 17. The Boys' and Girls' Page—Page 19. Those Were the Happy Days—Page 20. GRAPHIC SECTION—8 PAGES. World Events in Pictures. L