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WEATHER. peratures—Highest, terday; Jowest, 50, Full report “I'll’“ .m. yes. , &t 2:15 p.m. yes- at 6:00 am. today. on page 9. Closing N. Y. Markets, Pages 14,15& No. 32,293. post office, 2 ed_a iecond class matte: PraeTomee “Washington, D. C. he X WASHINGTON, D. % ¥ C., THURSDAY, ey ‘WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION SEPTEMBER 29, 1932—FORTY-EIGHT PAGES. o Star. The only evening paper in Washington with the Associated Press news ‘service. Yesterday’s Circulation, 119,503 *kk UP) Means Associated Press. TWO CENTS. YANKS BEAT CUBS, 5-2,IN SECOND CONTEST COTHAMITES SHELL LOU WARNEKE AS GOMEZ HOLDS FOE IN LATE CHAPTERS Gehrig, Dickey and Chapman; Lead Attack Which Enables New Yorkers to Go West With Two-Game Lead. HERMAN LEAVES MATES STRANDED IN SECOND Cubs’ Second Sacker Doubles to Score in the Opening Frame, but Gothamites Overcome Leldl on Two Passes and a Pair of Singles. BY DENMAN THOMPSON, Sports Editor, The Star. Tw NEW YORK, September 29.-|“’ Continuing the timely swatting displayed in the opening game,! the New York Yankees came back | B today to defeat the Chicago Cubs| and hung up their second straight - world series victory. The score was 5 to 2. FIRST INNING. CHICAGO—Herman missed with a gwing for a strike to open the game, then lined down the left field line for & double. With a count of two and two, ish lofted to Combs. Cuyler took de one, then bounced to Crosetti was safe when he fumbled, Her- pulling up at third. It was Cro- second error on only two chances s had in the series to date. son popped to Combs in short r. Earl got off a good peg to the . but not in time to prevent the ng Herman from scoring with t run of the game, just as he did Demaree popped to Ruth. . one hit, one error, one left. NEW YORK—Warnecke put the first | over on Combs for a called strike. g for another after taking a fter fouling off several Combs d for a walk. Warnecke failed to ocate the plate for Sewell with his first three pitches and Joey walked with but one strike charged against him. The entire Cubs infield surrounded the pitcher to offer words of encouragement as Ruth came to bat. Babe took two straight strikes. The next was wide and on the fourth pitch Ruth went down swinging as the crowd roared. On the third pitch to Gehrig, a ball, Hartnett attempted to pick Combs off gecond, but the Yankee slid back safely. A futile swing brought the count on Gehrig to 3 and 2. Lou then singled past Grimm, scoring Combs with the tying run, while Sewell pulled up at second Lazzerri popped high to Hart- nett on foul territory. Dickey was even up at 2 and 2 when he rifled a safety past Grimm, scoring Sewell, and send- ing Gehrig to third. Grimm made a valiant effort to snare the ball, but only succeeded in knocking it down. This put the Yankees to the good. Chapman was set down on a third called strike. Two runs, two hits, no errors, two left. SECOND INNING. CHICAGO—On the second ball pitched, Grimm lined a single to cen- ter. Gomez pitched but one strike in walking Hartnett. Jurges bunted to Gomez in front of the plate, both of his mates moving up on the secrifice. With the Yankee infield pulled in ‘Warneke fouled several in the process of fanning. Herman then left his two mates stranded by picking a third strike. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left. NEW YORK—Crosetti popped harm- lessly to his rival shortstopper. Only three pitches were required to retire Gomez on strikes. Combs lined to Cuy- ler. No runs, no hits, no errors, none Jeft. THIRD INNING. CHICAGO—After waiting out the string, English lofted to Ruth. Lazzeri took care of Cuyler's easy roller. Steph- enson resumed where he left off yester- day by lining a safety to right, which netted him two bases, when the ball d past Ruth. Demaree passed e bad ones and after getting two > singled cleanly to right, scoring Stephcnson from second with the tying yan. The first two to Grimm were strikes. After pitching two balls Gomez «<etected Demaree in the act of .su-nngl and trapped him between bases, his throw to Gehrig effecting the putout. One run, two hits, no errors, none left. NEW YORK—Sewell bounced softly to Herman. Ruth fouled for strike two after taking a couple of balls. Two more wide ones and Ruth strolled With the count two and one, Gehrig smashed a single just out of Herman's reach, sending Ruth to second. Her- man only succeeded in knocking the ball down. Lazzeri cent a slow bounder over the box and was retired at first on a good play by Jurges, both runners advancing. Dickey was purposely passed, filling the bases. This brought up Chapman, hitless in the series thus far and he met the first ball pitched for a line single to right that scored Ruth and Gehrig, and put Dickey on second. This put the Yankees in front by two runs. Crosetti ended the rally by taking a third strike. Two runs, two hits, no errors, two left. . FOURTH INNING. CHICAGO—Grimm crashed a hot single past Sewell for his second straight hit. Hartnett was fanned on three pitched balls. Jurges rapped to Cro- cetti, forcing Grimm at second, Lazzeri getting the put out. Warnecke was fanned on three deliveries, taking the ;mrd. No runs, one hit, no errors, one Jeft. NEW YORK—Warnecke knocked down Gomez’s rap and tossed him out. Combs waited to the limit, then lashed a safety to left. Sewell, with the hit- e1d-run_sf displayed, smacked the fist pitch ‘ that put Gombs on third. Buth | between Box Score CHICAGO. AB. L RN Y coecccomoemp cooRRmpNmmE lco.emne‘-a-9 Icna»eeeeaa? E. o o o o o o o o o o [ E. o o o o o o o 1 o 1 @ 3 © ® [ 'S - ] Hemsley batted for Warneke in ninth. | Dickey, c.. | Chapman, Iif. Crosetti, ss | Gomez, p. OO 0 le«-nuo«ea? o'hw-e—:e—e? 30 31027 SCORE BY INNINGS. 12345678 R | Chicago.... 101000000~ 2 New York.. 20201000 3= 5 SUMMARY: to Hartnett rman to New York. 5. 4; Gomer. 1. by Gomer. 3. rs. Ki kurth and Dinneen. to Warnecke and Combs was trapped third and home. He was | tagged out and then an unusual double | play was completed, when Hartnett and ! Jurges trapped Sewell. Jurges made | the final put out. Hartnett was cred- | ited with put out of Combs. No runs, | two hits, no errors, one left. | FIFTH INNING. CHICAGO—Herman missed a swing | for the third strike and English was |set down likewise, taking the third. | Cuyler walloped over Ruth’s head in the right fleld corner for three bases, Babe making an ineffectual attempt to collar | the ball close to the screen. With a | count of three and one, Stephenson sent {2 high bounder to Sewell, who leaped j for the ball and ferried it to Gehrig { ahead of the runner. No runs, one hit, RO errors, one left. NEW YORK—Gehrig's third straight hit and his fifth of the series was a hot smash that Herman couldn't han- dle. It nstted Lou one base. Herman fumbled Lazzeri's tap, but recovered the ball to flag him at first, Gehrig pulling up at second. Dickey maintained ! his 1009 batting percentage for the day by rifling a single to left to score Geh- rig with the Yankees’ fifth run. Chapman swung for a third strike, Dickey being doubled up going cown to second, on Hartnett's peg to Herman. One run, two hits, no errors, none left. SIXTH INNING. CHICAGO—Chapman raced close to the stand in left to haul down Dema- to Gehrig. Hartnett's roller. errors, none left. NEW YORK—Demaree made &8 spectacular running catch of Crosetti’s bid for a home run in deep left center. Gomez struck out. Combs bounded to Herman. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. SEVENTH INNING. CHICAGO—Jurges lofted to Ruth. Warnecke was called out on strikes, the sixth credited to Gomez. Combs came in for Herman's high fly. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. NEW YORK—Sewell bounded to Her- man. Sewell at first. Ruth met the first pitched ball for a line single to right, his first hit of the game. Gehrig hit into a double play, Herman to Jurges to Grimm. No runs, one hit, no errors, | none left. No runs. no hits, no EIGHTH INNING. CHICAGO—English looped a single to right, the first hit off Gomez since the fifth inning. Cuyler flied to Combs in short center. Stephenson singled to left, putting English on second. Dema- ree bounded to Gomez, whose throw to Crosetti forced Stephenson at second, English pulling up at third. Grimm ! forced Demaree at second, Crosetti to Lazzeri,. No ruus, two hits, no errors, two left. NEW YORK—Lazzeri got a single on 8 smash that bounded badly for Eng- |lish. Dickey hit into a double play, Herman to Jurges to Grimm. Chapman struck out. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left. NINTH INNING. CHICAGO—Hartnett singled to left and was killed off trying to stretch it on Chapman's good peg to Crosetti. Jurgens popped to Crosettl. Hemsley batted for Warnecke and fanned. RUTH ELDER TO SEEK DIVORCE FROM CAMP Ocean Flyer Will Go to Reno to Ask Severance of Third Marriage. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, September 29.—Ruth Elder, ocean fiyer, said today she will leave within the next few days for. Reno to seek a divorce from Walter Camp, jr., movie producer and son of the late famous foot ball coach. She said a statement giving details of the divorce arrangement be issued ree’s lofty drive. Grimm bounded softly | Crosetti cleanly handled | He juggled the ball, but flagged | REPUBLICANS GIRD 10 CUT DEMOCRAT | GAINS IN MICHIGAN Forceful Campaign Launched by G. 0. P. to Win De- batable State. |MILLS PRAISES RECORD OF PRESIDENT HOOVER Secretary of Treasury and Other Leaders in State Convention Issue Ch]]e?g' e. ‘BY G. GOULD LINCOLN, Btaff Correzpondent of The Star. DETROIT, Mich., September 29.—In this heart of the industrial depression the Republicans yesterday flung their challenge to the Democrats. Meeting in State convention, the G. O. P. list- | ened to Secretary Ogden L. Mills of the j Treasury praise President Hoover and | criticize Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Democratic party in Congress. Michigan for the first time in the memory of Republicans—and Demo- crats—is debatable ground. The Re- publicans should win, but—and it is a big “but” if you can believe all the tales you hear in this city, which has been harder hit than any other by unem- ployment. Emphasizes Steps for Recovery. Realizing the fecling that has existed in Detroit and other Michigan cities | which have depended particularly on the automobile industry, Mr. Mills laid great stress on the steps which Presi- dent Hoover has taken to meet the de- | pression and to help business and to | restore employment. . the Republican convention that Presi- | dent Hoover “has mastered the forces of destruction, has laid the foundation | for recovery and earned the right to | complete the task of reconstruction.” ‘The Republicans gave him a great Mr. Hoover and their State ticket with (Conltinued on Page 3, Column 1.) . ILIMITED HITS FREIGHT | TRAIN, KILLING FOUR |Five Others Injured in Wreck at Siding Junction in Alabama. By the Associated Press. WALD, Ala. September 9.—Four trainmen were "illed, fcur were injured, three seriouslv. and four passengers were i hurt in a collision of the Crescent Lim- ited, northbound from New Orleans to New York, and a freight train emerg- ing from a siding here today. ‘The dead: ‘Tom Cowell of Montgomery, Ala., en- gineer of the Limited. Malcolm Hodges of Ocean Springs, Miss., a mail clerk. D. W. Weathers of New Orleans, Negro mail clerk. Meek Ball of Mobile, Ala, Negro brakeman on the freight train. The injured: J. W Phillips of Montgomery, engi- neer of the freight, jaw mangled, condi | tion serious. Conductor Wilson of the Limited, a resident of Montgomery, scalded about the body and badly bruised. H. G. Kennedy of New Orleans, mail clerk, scalded and bruised. Harry Parker, Negro Pullman porter, bruised about the head and scalded. Four passengers were slightly in- jured and after receiving first aid they were taken to Montgomery. Their names were not learned. Only 10 passengers were on the Lim- ited when the collision occurred at 5:20 am., and all were asleep. None was serjously injured, but all were severely [ from shock. They were placed on an- other train bound for Atlanta. ‘The Limited, an all Pullman train, crashed headon with Louisville & Nash- ville freight No. 71, which was pulling out of the siding after another passen- ger train running ahead of the flyer had passed. Phillips said his freight engine was moving onto the main line when he saw the Limited approaching. Realizing a collision was inevitable, he and his fireman jumped, landing safely, but a flying piece of wreckage struck him in the jaw. The injured were taken to Greenville, 5 miles away, where they were given first aid and those able to travel were taken to Montgomery. BLAINE STILI; UNCERTAIN ON INDEPENDENT RACE Wisconsin Paper Wrong in An- mouncing He Would Retire, Declares Senator. By the Assoclated Press. The Secretary of the Treasury told| hand. They are going to the bat for | ad ishaken up and several were suffering | basis. FRANCE BOLSTERS LEAGUE AS AGENCY FOR WORLD PEACE Its Achievements Extolled by Herriot—Hopes for Dis- armament Progress. LORD CECIL ADDS BRITISH PRAISE OF ORGANIZATION Manchurian and South American Fighting Due to Lapse From Covenant, He Declares. By the Assoclated Press. GENEVA, September 29.—France re- fuses to share the pessimism and skep- ticism which is now being directed at the League of Nations, Premier Edouard Herriot of France told the League As- sembly today. The accomplishments of the League in organizing for peace and discour- aging war are too easily forgotten, he said. Asserting that France is faithful to the League's ideals and will work reso- lutely for the success of the arms con- ference, the premier declined to discuss Germany's demand for equality of armaments or other pressing issues, de- claring this is not the time and place for such discussion. Praises Conference Idea. He praised the results of the economic conference at Lausanne, at which the emount of Germany's reparations debt was limited, and of the recent confer- ence at Stresa, Italy, on rehabilitation of the Balkan states, saying they were evidence of the spirit the League has | introduced in international affairs and | gcod omens for success at the world economic conference to be held next year. He took hope, he said, from the entry of Turkey into the League and the prospective entry of Irak, and said he understood also that Argentina, “an old and valued friend,” may also soon | return. The world is filled with complex and | difficult problems which the lomats must not hope to solve at once, he said, | that the true task which he | | rega; as most important for the League to accomplish are the reduc- tion, and perhaps ebolition, of secret diplomacy and the ending of the domi- | mn by certain powers of world af- Favors Open Diplomacy. Diplomacy should be open, he said, | and all nations should be considered on the same level. Lord Cecil, British representative, also came to the League’s defense, declaring the existing troubles between Bolivia and Paraguay over the Chaco and the | difficulties in the Far East would never have developed if each party to each had applied faithfully the principles of the covenant. “These warlike situations in South America and Asia,” he said, “are testi- mony that one or both of the parties | to each case must have been guilty of { violating the covenant.” | “seventy-five per cent of the world unrest, he added, is due to the Franco- German differences and he said if the | policies of France and Germany were guided by the covenant their dispute would be ended automatically. ‘Will to Peace Needed. “No machinery of peace,” he said, | [ “will succeed unless there is a will to peace.” | " The common people of the world, he | | told the Assembly, are asking whether the governments participating in the | Disarmament Conference are really in earnest. “If disarmament is not achieved,” he said, “the situation will be far worse than it was before the war. The na-| { tions must disarm or perish.” Signor Aloisi of Italy reaffirmed the Italian government's desire to see a realization of genuine and substantial disarmament which, he said, would re- | inforce the security of nations. Denouncing the popularity of restric- tions, prohibition and high tariffs, he said Italy never has departed from the principle of free exchange of goods, ex- cept in case of necessity and to defend the vital and economic interests of her people. He urged that the problem of restrictions on_international trade be taken up for solution on an international —_— MRS. BORAH BELIEVED PAST CRITICAL STAGE Wife of Senator Continues to Show Improvement From Par- rot Fever. By the Assoclated Press. BOISE, Idaho, September 20.—The improvement in the condition of Mrs. William E. Borah, ill with parrot fever, continues, and the latest bulletins from her physicians indicate the wife of the United States Senator has passed the critical stage. “Mrs. Borah has shown continuous and marked improvement today,” a bul- letin late last night said. I crOSS-C — WAITING FOR ORDERS. BERLIN POSTPONES SO0 DLE LS, Debt Delay Is Granted, but| Interest on Sum Will Be Charged, Says Mills. Relief Clothing Assured 700,000 in Gotham This Winter By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 29— Red Cross officials announced to- day between 700,000 and 1,000,0C0 needy persons in this city will be given clothing made from Gov- ernment cotton during this Fall and Winter. Gen. Robert C. Davis, chair- man of the New York chapter, sald 600,000 yards of cloth al- ready have arrived and more is en route. The material will be converted into clothing by volun- teer workers. The cotton was made available by congressional action. By the Assoclated Press. Germany has postponed a $7,800,000 debt payment, but so far as official no- tices go, the Treasury still expects to collect $123,500,000 from other foreign n | FURTHER POLICE TRANSFERS MAY * HIT HIH OFFICERS ] Glassford to Remove Capt. Sullivan of Crime Pre- vention Division. _ SPEAKERS KELLY CONSIDERED TEMPORARY SUCCESSOR Shift of Inspector Davis Subjech of Conference With Com- missioner Croshy. Further shifts of high ranking offi- cers in the Police Department, involv- ing a number of major transfers, the outgrowth of the removal yesterday of Inspector Odgen T. Davis as head of the crime prevention division, were be- ing considered today by Supt. Pelham D. Glassford. Capt. Jeremiah A. Sullivan, now act- ing as chief of the crime prevention division, will be removed and another captain, possibly Edward J. Kelly of the third precinct, former chief of de- tectives, brought in to head the di- | vision, pending appointment of an in- spector as permanent chief. In announcing that Sullivan would i be removed, Gen. Glassford did not istate how soon the transfer would be .S, MAY EXTEND FARM MORATORION 55555 252 | tectives, would take over the bureau. “Capt. Kelly is ably qualified to head the Crime Prevention Division.” Glass- |ford said. “I have no comment to | make at this time, however, on pos- | sible_changes which I may’ order in the Police Department.” Beckett Reports Tomorrow. Inspector James F. Beckett, Who was ordered to duty at administrative head- quarters simultaneous with the transfer D of Inspector Davis, is due to report | If the distress 1n other farm sections | 19, oh o aesionad e oy oD proves comparable to that in certain| of Inspector L. I. H. Edwards, assistant wheat-growing regions, the partial superintendent and executive officer, and moratorium on repayment of crop pro- | his duties will consist principally of | Gt lowoe o e farmers ey e | 20 & Jor o “ewoe-side o Cruet extended, it was sald at the White 'Partial Suspension to Grain Farmers May Reach Others if Needed. I | | tice that ¢ | est, while the $3,000,000 Army costs nations in December. Anncuncement by Secretary Mills that Germany will delay a $4,800,0C0 mixed claims payment and a $3,000,000 installment due on American Army of Occupation costs today brought debt | payments postponed this year to a total | of $9,052.000. Previously, Estonia, Latvia and Po- land had given the required 90-day no- y would be unable to make payments of $1,252.000 on December 15. | But in conjunction with this formal announcement of Germany's action, | Secretary Mills told newspaper men no | similar situation has arisen with any | of the other debtor nations, which. al- | together, have payments of $123,500,000 falling due December 15. Interest to Be Paid. Under the German debt-funding MANCHUKUO AR SEIZED BY CHINESE Friction Between Russia and Japan Feared as Result of Su’s Revolt. By the Associated Press. MUKDEN, Manchuria, September 29. House today. The White House announced yester-| day that because “present low prices' make it practically impossible for wheat farmers to repay their crop production ' loans, wheat farmers would be allowed | to pay 25 per cent of the amount due, | signing at the same time an agreement to secure the remaining 75 per cent.” Senator Smith, Democrat, of South! Carolina, today lodged an objection to this program, saying it discriminated ' | against producers of other agricultural; | commodities and mentioning cotton and | tobacco growers. Meanwhile, President Hoover noti-| fied Gov. Turner of Iowa that he had ! secured a preliminary discussion amons | Eastern concerns and Federal agencies !on farm mortgages, and that banking and industrial committees in the Mid- l agreement, its mixed claims payment —Difficulties of Soviet Russia and Ja- gest would launch an effort to allevi- goes over two years at 5 per cent inter- | pan, on the Manchurian border, were ate the situation. | revived today by the revolt of the Chl-‘ Su Ping-Wen. whose said the German Ambassador | troops seized the key border town of | qiy Henry Robinson, chairman of the are at 3 Mill advised him in June that his country possibly would not make its payments postponed two and one-half vears| per cent interest. nese general, Manchuli and a considerable part of Executive Committee of the banking |sion also the surrounding area of Manchukuo. l Meeting on Mortgages. The President’s telegram to Turner |and industrial committees set up in | i second inspection district, with head- | quarters at No. 10 precinet, the m by The sudden order aie yesterday y the sudden order late of Chief Glassford. The transfer of Davis and other changes ordered by Gen. Glassford were discussed at a conference this morning between the superintendent and . Gen. Herbert B. Crosby, Commis- sloner in charge of police. Gen. Crosby went to Glassford's office at police head- quarters for the conference. In chifting Davis, who for recent months has been at cdds with the police chief over his supervision of the crime prevention division, Gen. Glass- ford stated: “The transfer of Inspector Davis is made without prejudice. No explana- tion is necessary. I am head of this department and may make such changes as I think are needed. I will ray, how- ever, that the functi-ning of the Crime Preventicn Bureau of late has not been satisfactory.” Four Other Transfers. Three privates and one detective sergeant in the Crime Prevention Divi- were transferred “without prejudice” by Gen. Glassford an September 30. He added: “The Secretary advised the Ambassa. dor that if Germany delayed its deci- sion, the 90-day notice would later be waived if the German government | should decide before September 30 that it must give notice of postponement. “Such notice of postponement as pro- vided in the original debt agreement has now been received, and the Secre- tary of the Treasury has waived the | 90-day notice in accordance with his assurance to the German Ambassador.” Exchange Trouble Blamed. 1o Sviet troops previously were reparted o have crossed the old Russia-Man- Mills said inability to obtain the nec- | churia boundary, advancing half way to essary forelgn exchange was the reason | Apanchuly. A large number of Manchukuo troops were killed when Gen. Su's artillery destroyed four barracks at Manchuli and seized a number of towns and vil- |lages in the vicinity, reports said. | Manchukuo authorities appeared un- | able to proceed against Gen. Su's men | and the possibility of Japanese mili- tary action was complicated, owing to the possible danger of a clash on the Russian frontier, which might involve the Red army. ‘That the Soviets planned to | P8l each Federal Reserve district, has called | Pvts. P, E. Ambrose, precinct detective | members of those committees in the | F. N White and W. F. Sager were those | Midwest to meet in Chicago today to | transferred. Ambrose was detailed to consider farm mortgages. | the Detective Bursau and White and | “I am very hopeful that construc-| Sager to the second precinct. | tive steps will follow from these con-| At the request of Chief of Detectives ferences,” Mr. Hoover said. Frank S. W. Burke, Detective Sergt. C. Secretary of Agriculture Hyde, repre- | C, Stepp was relieved from duty with | sentatives of the Reconstruction Finance | the Crime Prevention Division and de- | Corporation and of the Federal Farm | tajled to the Detective Bureau to fill & | Loan Banks wili participate at today’s | yacancy there. With reference to the | meeting at the Chicago Federal Reserve | three privates, Gen. Glassford said: Bank. | _“These three men made two raids ‘With respect to the suspension of €rop | gaturday night directly contrary to my | loan payments, Walter H. Newton, one | grders. ~According to the plan_under of the President’s secretaries, told news- | which' the Crime Prevention Bureau per men the action was taken Par-|yas established, it was to function given by Germany for the postpone- | ment. | The formal announcement by the | Secretary said that when Ambassador | Von Prittwitz called upon him just be- | for the start of the 90-day period he| had informed him that while Germany | desired to make the payments, exigen- | cies might arise which would make it impossible, and unless he could be as- sured that the 90 days’' notice require- ment would be waived, he would have | to give notice then of the postponement. | Mills said that in hope the payment | would be met, he agreed to waive the | notice, DESTROYER IS LAUNCHED French Believe New Ship Will Break Speed Records for Class. DUNKIRK, France, Stgtember 29 (#).—The Vauquelin, a light destrdyer which the French Navy believes will break all speed records for craft of her type, was launched today. It is one of the series of destroyers of which six were laid down in 1929 and six more Mime. De Vaillancourt, Canadian- born wife of Col. De Vaillancourt, christened the ship. URRENTS later by her attorneys. MILWAUKEE, September 29.—The ‘The fiyer, with Capt. George Halder- | Milwaukee Sentinel says it had learned man, attempted to fly across the At-|that United States Senator John J. lantic in 1927, and were rescued by |Blaine has not yet decided whether he a tanker after being forced down near |will be an independent candidate for the Azores. re-election in November. is Camp is Miss Elder’s third husband.| “I have not made any decision and I They were married August 29, 1929.|have not made any statement,” the Her first husband was C. E. Moody, a|Sentinel quoted Senator Blaine as say- school teacher. Her second was Lyle!ing in a telephone conversation. Womack, son of a hat manufacturer in| The Capital Times at Madison, Pro- Panama. Cemp also had been previ- gressive Republican newspaper, carried ously married. announcement yesterday it Blaine would not run as an lndepeg::m. ‘The London Elects Lord Mayor. | 5imes said Senator Blaine had acceded to the wishes of his-wife law practice. to left field -for a single bounded OF POLITICS G. Gould: Lincoln The Star's -political writer, is beginning a tour that will take him into many of the “doubtful” States whose votes may decide the election in November. Follow in The Star his daily reports of the conditions he finds and his analysis of what they mean. remain neutral was indicated, however, by a Soviet offer of refuge for the Jap- anese in Manchuli if they could get to the Russian side of the border. Japan has troops at Tsitsihar, 300 miles away, but the only relief in sight appeared to be the Mongol cavalry sta- tioned at Dalainor, 50 miles south of Manchuli. The loyalty of the Mongols to Henry Pu-Yi's regime was believed assured by the presence in Changchu now of 12 or more young Mongol princes from the Dalainor district. Manchuli is the point where the Chi- nese Eastern Railway connects with the Soviet Trans-Siberian Railway. Gen. Su, a former lieutenant of Gen. Ma Chan-Shen, was commander of tie Chinese Eastern Railway guards in a large western area and had been thought loyal to the new Manchukuo regime. B iy S—— TRAPPED IN ATTEMPT TO LOOT BANK VAULT Two Wounded Men Captured After Sheriff Opens Fire on Robbers. By the Assoclated Press. MEDINA, Tenn., September 29.—; Officers hidden near the offices of the Medina Banking Co. wounded three men as they tried to open the vault early today. Sheriff Guy Bradshaw received ad- vance information on the robbery and he and three deputies took posit: at the rear of the building. A bank watchman sounded an alarm as the men tampered with the vault and they fled through & rear door. a volley and the robbers fell, but re- Later art and and found both KILLED BY MEAT CUTTER Machine Hurled From Auto Strikes ‘Woman on Head. Hons | Prench counter pro) The officers fired | the ticularly in regard to wheat farmers because of the distress known to exist particularly in the Dakotas and Eastern Montana, where, he said, crops had " (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) 'EDGE TO' STRAIGHTEN OUT TREATY KINKS | Ambassador to France Will Discuss Proposals With Depart- ment Heads. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 29.—Walter E. Edge, United States Ambassador to France, came home today to “straight- en out the kinks” in the French coun- ter proposals to a prospective commer- clal treaty. Arriving on the United States liner Manhattan, Ambassador Edge said his return to America in this pre-election period had no political significance. He :dded, however, that he would “do the spirit moves me” when he gets to New Jersey. “I can't see that the President needs any help in this campaign,” he said. “I am home to discuss matters pertinent to my job. I am bringing with me the posals to a prospec. tive commercial treaty, which I will d cuss with the heads of various depart- men'kjmla yuhln‘wn, to straighten out —_— - REMAIN DURING FIRE 125 Night Employes Risk Lives During Blaze in Chemical Plant. INDIANAPOLIS, September 29 (#). —One hundred and twenty-five night employes of an electrical equipment plant remained at work last night delxm danger of a major explosion overcame a spectacular blaze as in a nearby chemical warehouse. Brilliant white two hhchm'l"“ out of the fire was un- |purely as an information-gathering | body, while the suppression of vice was to be left to the precinct commanders. | “Knowing this, these men last Satur- ; day night raided a gambling house in the 400 block of N street and a house of prostitution in the 1400 block of ‘Twelfth street. “There have been several instances lately of members of the Crime Pre- vention Bureau taking the suppression of vice into their own hands and I had decided that the next offenders would be reprimanded.” Homicide Squad Duty. “With the addition of Detective Sergt. Stepp to the Detective Bureau, Chief Burke ordered Detective Sergt. ‘William 8. Beck to duty with the homi- cide squad. Beck recently was promoted to detective sergeant, having served un- til September 16 as precinct detective at No. 4.” Possibility of the early retirement of one of the older inspectors to make way for the promotion of a captain to (Continued on Page 2, Column 6.) PARAGUAYANS CAPTURE KEY POINT IN CAMPAIGN By the Assoclated Press. ASUNCION, Paraguay, September 29. —A government bulletin issued today said Paraguayan forces had captured Fort Boqueron, a key point in the Gran Chaco campaign, which has changed hands several times in the past few weeks. A thousand Bolivian soldiers sur- rendered, the bulletin said, among them two lieutenant colonels and a number of other officers, after the leun‘ym er defense had broken through the inn line. POLITICAL MURDERS OFF None in Germany for Month Heid Noteworthy Fact. emergency d dent scme political mi