Evening Star Newspaper, August 12, 1933, Page 1

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WEAT HER. . 8. Weather Buresu Forecast.) Partly cloudy and slightly warmer to- night; tomorrow local to southwest winds. Highest, 82, at noon at 5 am. today. showers; moderate ‘Temperatures- today; lowest, 69, Fuil report on Page A-7. New York Stock Market Closed Today No. 32,610. vost office, Entered as second class matter Washington, D. C 1¢ Foeni WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 1933—TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. ‘WITH SUNDAY MORNING E®DITION ng Staf Associated service. The only evening paper in Washington with the Press news Yesterday’s Circulation, 112,196 Aok koK (®) Means Associated Press. TWO CENTS. MOB SACKS PALACE AT HAVANA MANUEL DE CESPEDES DECIDED ON AS RULER; POLICE CHIEF IS KILLED < Soldiers Kili tll'eTClosed Shops Are Defenders In Strange Siege in Havana Head of Secret Unit. HERO OF COUP ' SPURNS OFFICE Heraldo De Is Burned by Cuba! iCity Is Tense and Mute With Fear as Machado Plans to Bring Submission Through Starvation. f BY COL. FREDERICK PALMER. By Radio to The Star. rows of closed shops. | holiday aspect of this could last days, even hours. The sinister, half- mechanically | HAVANA, August 12 (NANA)— } dead city in which emotion is as taut This city is in the strangest siege ever | as it is silent does not seem as if it The city N TR \\§\ \i‘ RN B R N Box Score WASHINGTON. Schulte, of... Kuhel, 1b.... Bluege, 3b.... Seweil, c..... Whitehill, p. > RO AR DR B RE 33 2 32714 ela:esecccea.fl BOSTON. H. 0 A. > | Werber, ss .. | Walters, 2b.... Cooke, If .... R. Johnson, rf. Ferrell, c.. Judge, 1b .. McManus, 3b. Oliver, cf. Weiland, p. Welch, p. N eeococomocehM FOURHORE WAL INDLSTRES _GNEN APPROVALOF LR A 11,500,000 Workers of Power, | Phone, €anning, Construc- tion Groups In. 150,000 JOBS PROVIDED, OFFICIALS ESTIMATE Bituminous Coal Men Expect Ad- | ministration Will Settle Open- Shop Dispute. By the Associated Press. Employes of four more major indus- Throng. seen. A new kind of warfare is having | a grim test. ‘The great plane that carried me from Miami this morning carried bread and 0 tries—electric light and power, tele= © | phene, canning and construction—to- — e — —— — | day were brought under N. R. A. wage 28 1 527 @6 1|and work time supervision, with the is a muted drumhead, beaten sound- lessly with fear and fear of fear. Besiegers walk idly about among the police, who are the besieged. Their arms | and munitions are idle in this war of Hodapp Alexander ... - WRE RS e eocooomocoScsopN SeoSOmuSOO=C eooSeSemeSOO R BULLETIN. HAVANA, August 12 (®.—A mob celebrating the ousting of President Machado sacked the lower floor of the presidential palace this afternoon. Another mob set fire to the building of Heraldo de Cuba, a newspaper which had support- ed the government. The inte- rior was destroyed. Throngs of demonstrators raided the grounds of the pal- ace, stripping the gardens of shrubbery and flowers, with which they paraded about. The general staff ordered the army to occupy Havana and to patrol the streets for the pur- pose of restoring order. All political factions had agreed earlier that Carlos Man- ~ uel de Cespedes, former Ambas- sador to the United States, should be the new President of Cuba, to succeed the ousted Gen. Gerardo Machado. By the Associated Press HAVANA, August The ability to get bread is a social dis- | tinction among the American residents The defending army in this siege with eggs to the airport force in Havana.|strikes and passive resistance. The man public No cars run | past the closed shops or past the houses where people remain idle indoors, for {no enemy in sight to shoct at, aith no|only a few of the more adventurous besiegers’ trenches, is composed of solid (Continued on Page 2, Column 4.) {who opens his shon knows | opinion’s third degree. MISSION WORKERS ARE BELIEVED SAFE | Procurator Expresses View Regarding Eight Marooned in Chinese Town. By the Associated Press. HANKOW, China, August 12—The missionaries are safe at Yuanchow, al- | though that town was the center of & | belief that eight American Passionist | May Head Cuba | | | WATCHING THE PARADE! THREE MEN SLAN N KANSAS BATTL ‘Sheriff Kills Two in Auto Firing on Third—All in Night Club Business. By the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, August 12.—Three men, said by police to be connected with local night club operations, were shot and killed about 1:30 am. today |Liquor Production Gallons for 1934 ‘Large Allocation Made | Necessary by Depletion of Medicinal Stocks. | By the Associated Press. The Bureau of Industrial Alcohol | today set the production of med:icinal | liquors at 7,000.000 gallons for the cal- | endar year 1934. | Officials at the bureau said the | location, the largest since the eight- | eenth amendment became efective, was made necessary due to the depletion SHIT IS PUSTPONED Roosevelt Acts to Delay Transfer of Legal Staff to Justice Department. President Roosevelt has taken steps to halt the proposed transfer to the Department of Justice at least one- third of the legal staff in the office of Hodapp batted for Weiland in eighth. Alexander batted for Cooke in ninth. SCORE BY INNINGS. 12345678558 Boston ....001000000~ 1 SUMMARY. Runs_batted in—Weiland. Bluege, Cronin. hits 2). Manus (%) wo. Three-base hit—Mey: eiland. 5 in 8 innings. | es—Messrs. Ormsby, Summers and Me- 21; SWEEP SERIES |Bluege’s Home Run and Washington 0 000100 10~ 2 NATS TRIM RED SOK, approval by Hugh S. Johnson of modi- fied presidential re-employment agree- ments. More than 1,500,000 workers were of- ficially estimated as affected immedi- ately by the action, under which the employers may sign the blanket presi- dential agreement with their own mod- | ified wage end hcur specifications and receive the Blue Eagle. The administration estimated that 150,000 new jobs would be provided un- | der the four temporary agreements, «and that millicns of dollars wouid be | added to annual pay rolls and to macs purchasing power by the minimum | wages. Sixty-Four in Agreements. Approval of these brought to 64 the | number of temporary wage and hour | agreements which have been placed in | eftect. Six permanent codes also have been | made effective by presidential order, | hearings have been completed on a | dozen permanent codes, a number more | have been set for hearings and hun- dreds are under analysis, with hearings to be set soon. Concentrating upon rushing through | the temporary modified agreements to | bring workers under maximum hour and minimum wage provisions at the 12.—Presi- | rebel war, was expressed today by Rev. | A e - | Father Arthur Benson, procurator of i ST omas B. Bash discov- the American Passionist gdlsslon. | o it e T b with Father Benson, who is from Pitts- | earliest possible moment, the adminis- tration expects to turn them out at fle rate of at least haif-a dozen a y. ‘The administration estimated that in dent Gerardo Machado's resist- ance to combined military and civilian demands that he sur- render his office collapsed utterly ;.).f medicinal liquor stocks due to re- | the general counsel of the Bureau of | xation of restricti ription | v ’ - : dinlaeas e e B B Myer’s Triple Bring Consumption _of --medieinal _liquor, | stivat. AN s AS Syt Victory I f nts, who wefe in a they said, had increased since the en- Pone until October 12 the effect of a today. While Havana enthusiastically celebrated the end of the Ma-| chado regime, Congress was| called into session this afternoon to pass on Gen. Machado's re- quest for a leave of absence. It was a foregone conclusion that the request would be speed- ily accepted and the way paved for a chief executive acceptable to all parties. In celebration of the success of the anti-Machado movement, climaxing efforts that have gone on for years and that have cost numerous lives, thousands of Havana residents surged toward the presdential palace, de- manding to enter. The heavy police guard refused to| #dmit them. Col. Jiminez Killed. One of the most hated men of the Machado regime—Col. Antonio Jim- | inez, chief of the deaded porra, the | Machado secret police—was killed. Jimenez wounded a man celebrating | the anti-Machado victory and then | turned his gun ‘on a group of soldiers. | The soldiers shot him down. | United States Ambassador Sumner | ‘Welles, prime mover in the plan of mediation based on the ousting of Ma- chado, conferred this afternoon with political leaders over the problem of selecting a provisional President. The army, which made possible the collapse of the Machado regime after burgh, said, however, he had not been able to communicate with the mission- aries since rebels took the town June about 400 miles southwest of here. Those trapped there are Rev. Ed- ward McCarthy of Boston, Rev. Francis Flaherty of Cincinnati and Sisters Genevieve Ryan, Christiana Werth, Magdaline Ivan, Rosario Goss, Saint- anne Callahan and Mark Mullen, who were sent to China from Pittsburgh. U. S. Asks Rescue By Governor. proached Ho Chine, governor of Hunan, with a request that the Americans at Yuanchow be rescued. The belief pre- vailed here, however, that the repre- sentations will have little effect since the governor is considered virtually helpless to interfere with the activities of Gen. Li Chiao, the provincial mili- tary overlord and son-in-law of Gen. Ho. Chinese politicians here say the Yuanchow siege is a result of the in- tense enmity between Gen. Chen Yao, a rebel military chieftain who declines officials, and Gen. Li. According to the accepted story here, Chen, when on presumably friendly terms with Li, visit him, but during a feast attempted 27. Yuanchow is in Hunan Province, | | PRESIDENT SEEING It was learned today that United | States consular authorities have ap-| 1o recognize the authority of provincial | early forenoon for an inspection tour invited ‘the latter to| CARLOS MANUEL DE CESPEDES. —Harris-Ewing Photo. FORESTRY CAMPS Nightfall for Brief Vaca- tion Interlude. BY J. RUSSELL YOUNG. Refreshed after his two weeks' stay at his old home on the Hudson, Presi- dent Roosevelt arrived here during the of three civilian conservation camps in the Blue Ridge Mountains before re- turning to the White House late this afternoon. President Roosevelt had received Due Back in Washington by HARRISONBURG, Va., August 12— | “The motor car, were slain by Sheriff Bash, and the third, who was afoot, died from | wounds they had inflicted before the | sheriff interrupted them. The shoot- ings took place at Armour Boulevard and Forest avenue, in a !umonnb!e‘ apartment house district. Third Man Captured. Sheriff Bash identified the dead as follows: Ferris J. Anthon, the man who was afoot; Sam Scola and Gus Fasone, alias | Sam Stine. Police records show Anthon was in- | dicted September 29, 1932, by a Faderal | grand jury in Chicago as a member of | an alcohol ring. A third man in the motor car occu- pied by Scola and Fasone was captured when he attempted to flee and another was reported to have escaped. The captured man gave his name as Gus! Gargotta, 33, and denied he was in the | killers' car. Sheriff Bash, accompanied by Mrs. Bash, Miss Melva Taylor and Law- | rence Hodges, a deputy sheriff, was driving home. He saw & man running and two men in the front seat of a big black sedan shooting at him. The run- ner returned the fire and fell in the street. | Taking a riot gun from the motor | far, the sheriff got out of the car with Hodges, and said he fired at the car | when the men fired at him and his | deputy. The two men in the car. slumped in the seat, fatally wounded. | Gargotta was taken, the sheriff said, when he ran across the street firing a actment by the last Congress of the Celler act. The year's allocation compares with | an anrual production of 2.000.000 gal- | lons in all previous years since 1929. Distillation of liquor was abandoned in 1919 due to enactment of the eight- igleéh amendment, but was resumed in The bureau said that there might | be a further reallocation of produc- tion in the Fall if it appears that the | stock of medicinal liquor is consid- | ered sufficient for one year's needs | and amounts to 11,000,000 gallons of | liquor of aged stocks. | The all-time high record for liquor | production was in 1916, the bureau | said. when the output amounted to 284,000,000 galions. GOLD-EXPORTING RULES AMENDED | Shipment of Metal in Some | Forms Allowed Under clause in his executive order of June 10, the Justice Department from the Internal Revenue Bureau the functions of defending tax claims against the Government or prosecuting similar claims in favor of the Government. ‘The function of defending tax cases | in court is and always has been a func- | tion of the Justice Department, but a different situation has grown up within the Government in recent years. The 7.000,000-gallon figure will not be ade- | Internal Revenue Bureau has attorneys walters. quate for medicinal needs. The present | assisting the Justice Department in such | Cronin fanned. matters, some of them actually con- ducting trials in_ccurt. Then, too, the creation of the Board of Tax Appeals has thrown a great deal of legal work on _the internal revenue legal staff. ‘There is doubt in official circles as to whether the executive order of June 10, consolidating and reorganizing various bureaus, required the transfer of personnel to the Justice Department. The inability of officials to straighten out the matter in time, it was said, caused the temporary suspension c* the orcer so far as it affects the Bureau of Internal Revenue. YELLOW RIVER FLOODS THREATEN CHINESE TOWN Entire Population of Szehsui En- dangered as People Wait Behind Closed Gates. | whereby there would be transferred to| | BY JOHN B. KELLER. | BOSTON. August 12.—The Nationals defeated the Red Sox here this after- noon to make a clean swept of the three-game series. -The score was 2 to 1. FIRST INNING. WASHINGTON — Myer popped _ to Manush grounded to Werber. No runs. BOSTON—Myer threw out Werber. | Walters tapped to Whitehill, who threw | nim out. Cronin threw out Cooke. No | Tuns. | SECOND INNING. | WASHINGTON—Harris hoisted to Cooke. Walters threw out Schulte. Kuhel struck out. No runs. BOSTON—Sewell got R. Johnson's foul. Ferreil walked. Judge drove into a double play, Kuhel to Cronin to ;KuheL No runs. THIRD INNING. WASHINGTON—McManus_threw out Bluege. Sewell flied to Oliver. White- hill fouled to Ferrell. No runs. BOSTON—McManus got the first hit of the game with a double off the fence |in left field. Oliver bounced a single off Whitehill's hand. sending McMan- | us to third. A squéeze play. with Wei- land bunting, scored McManus and seat Oliver to second. the bunter being retired, Myer to Kuhel. Oliver stole| the electric light and power industry alone, 236,000 employes of more thau 13.000 power companies would be imme- | diately affected by today’s modified agreement, with 30,600 new jobs created within a few days. The canning industry, employing at | peak periods nearly 250,000 workers, wus figured by officials to add 20,000 to 39,- '000 new jobs, the telephone industry | between 30,000 and 40,000 and the con- structicn industry other thousands. | . Recent developments in the industrial | drive have led various officials to fore- cast that the glove might soon be peeled back from the harder hand that |is guiding the campaign. | _Other developments cited to support | the conclusion that more than gentle persuasion is in store are: |~ Appointment of 33 woman “lieu- | tenant generals” in as many States to | organize family buyers into groups pur- chasing under the Blue Eagle; | .. Announcement by N. R. A. that mo- | tion picture stars,” whose names were not made public, will donate their serv- ices for a series of featurettes on re- covery; ., Explanation by Gen. Johnson that if necessary the Federal Trade Com- mission and the Department of Justice eventually will be used to enforce the recovery act; Newspaper Code Rejected. | Refusal of Johnson to accept the code | submitted by newspaper publishers; | Instruction from William Green, | president, to 48 State federations of labor ‘o investigate and report viola- having been its mainstay for years, to assassinate Li, who escaped, declar- | took the unusual course of demanding | evolver at the officers. ing he would get revenge. L Wife Flees Officers. Treasury Order. third as Werber struck out. Walters lifted to Schulte. One run. tions by those displaying the Blue Eagle; telegrams en route from the State De- i Announcement by Harry L. Hopkins, By the Associated Press. that the successor to the chief execu- tive’s post must not be a military man. Most groups considered the outstand- ing possibility to be Col. Horacio Fer- | rer, who retired frcm the army in 1928 and is more identified with his pro- fession of medicine than with military affairs. But the colonel told the Asso- c’la"d Press that he did not desire the ace. On dependable authority it was | learned that the resignations of all members of the Machado cabinet had | been presented. ! Named to Serve Two Hours. The throngs at the presidential pal- ace denied entrance by the guards, | placed & “to rent” sign on the building | and seemed satisfied. The maneuverings to legalize the suc- cession to the presidency were intricate. Gen. Alberto Herrera, the secretary of war, was named secretary of state to serve for the two hours from 10 am. until noon, with the understand- ing that then he would yield to a new president. The resignation of the Secretary of State as well as the President was part of the American peace plan in order to permit the appointment of a new Secretary of State acceptable to all factions who should succeed to the highest office. The President’s decision to retire from office followed closely on a blood- less coup d'etat by the army last night in which military units seized fortresses and other strategic points in Havana and demanded that Machado get out. The police, hitherto loyal to the Ma- chado regime, began flocking to the a my. More than 400 of them reported at the Maximo Gomez Barracks. Gen. Enrique Loynaz del Castillo, Cuban minister to the Dominican Re- public, headed a movement aimed at the selection of Maj. Perdomo as the new chief of police to replace Chief A. B. Ainciart, who was nowhere to be found today. Army units throughout the island shifted to the anti-Machado forces as emphatically as the Havana garrison. ‘The battalions stationed in the Prov- inces of Santa Clara, Matanzas and Pinar del Rio officially communicated their adhesion to the movement to the general staff. Similar word was ex- pected from Santiage and Camaguey. The army's display of strength in uptown Havana was withdrawn at mid- night and policemen alone remained. People, happy at _the turn of events, Declined to Leave Town. In the middle of June, Chen and his followers established headquarters at Yanchow after expelling a small pro- vinclal force. Li immediately gathered an army and started a siege. Messengers from Shenchow, where efforts are going on to communicate with the marooned Americans, said the missionaries declined to leave the town aithough they were aware of the gath- ering war clouds. The messengers said they believed the siege would be long because of the intense feeling between opposing chiefs. Chen is quoted as saying his supplies will hold out for a year. Unverified reports said Li has a num- ber of bombing airplanes which sev- eral times have flown over the town, dropping explosives. Various Chinese reports say the bombers partly destroyed the city with a heavy loss of life, but the consensus here is that these reports are exag- gerated. Eastern Galicia Jews Attacked. WARSAW, Poland, August 12 ().— Anti-Semetic demonstrations in Eastern of windows of Jewish homes. Ukrainians were arrested. Several Galicia resulted today in the smashing | partment advising him of the latest developments in the Cuban situation, but refrained from making any com- ment. He seemed anxious to wait until he is back at the White House and can study the full reporis of the past 24 hours. \ The President was met here by Rob- ert Fechner, director of the C. C. C., and other officials of conservation camps, who will act as guides during the inspection of the camps. Others in the party to accompany the Presi- dent on the tour were Secretary Ickes and Wallace; Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, Tugwell; Louis M. Howe, one of the President's secretaries; Maj. Corps Area, and A. D. Cammerer, the new superintendent of national park system. White House automobiles, which had left Hyde Park a day ahead of the President were at the station awaiting him when he and his party alighted from the special train. Much publicity had been given the Presi- dent’s visit to this section, and as a result a large crowd was on hand at -welcome. the Shenandoah Valley was an all- night affair. Mr. Roosevelt, with Sec- retary Marvin M Gen. P. B. Malone, commander 3rd the station to accord a hearty and warm The journey to this thriving city in tyre, and the Mrs. Anthon, an attractive blond, | who had been standing on the opposite side of the street, screamed and rushed to her husband. She told officers her husband was locking his motor car when some one started shooting at him. Some of the shots went through apartment windows. Armour Boulevard, an arterial highway, became congested with motor cars. Many nearby resi- dents rushed to the scene in night clothing. Gngogtca and Mrs. Anthon were taken to the sheriff’s office for questioning. The sheriff called in agents of the De- partment of Justice to aid in ferreting out the motive for the slaying of An- thon. . o FOUR MEN KILLED IN RAILROAD WRECK Express, Hitting Track Believed C Tampered With, Overturns Near Salisbury, Md. (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) By the Associated Press. DUBLIN, Irish Free State, August 12.—Gen. Owen O'Duffy canceled a pa- rade of his National Guard “Blus Shirts” today shortly after President De Valera's government had invoked the drastic public safety act against the demonstration. (This act, under which former Presi- dent Cosgrave set up a military tribunal, proclaims revolutionary societies to he treasonable and provides severe pun- ishments, including the death penalty.’ Instead of the parade, scheduled for tomorrow, Gen O'Duffy announced he was planning church parades in many districts the following Sunday. (Continued on Page 2, Column 7.) De Valera charged that it was the avowed aim of the Natis Guard “to DRASTIC LAW INVOKED TO STOP PARADE OF ‘BLUE SHIRTS’ IN ERIN destroy the existing parliamentary in- stitutions, while the military character of its org: tion and the symbols it has adopted are evidence that its lead- ers are prepared in favorable circum- stances to resort to violent means to * Besplie repeated n P e warnings, he said, “they persisted in ordering their fol- lowers to wear uniforms at the pro- posed parade.” He said that “certain people” had presumed on the government’s leniency, thus obliging it to put the public safely act into operatiof. The parade was- announced as an honor to Arthur Griffith, President of the Dail, who died in 1922; Michael Collins of the provisional government, who was shot and killed in 1922, and Kevin O'Higgins, Free State minister, essassinated in 1927, By the Associated Press. SALISBURY, Md., August 12— Four men were fatally injured and four others hurt near here early today when the Pennsylvania Railroad fast express, “The Cavalier,” struck a- sec- tion of track that apparently had been tampered with and overturned. ‘The dead are: W. Oscar Brown of Delmar, Del., the engineer. E. R. Massey of Delmar, the fireman. Bell Corson, colored, of Millsboro, Del, who was riding the trucks of the baggage car. An unidentified colored man whose body was found under the firebox of the locomotive early this afternoon. ‘The injured: lWklllllm L. Simons of Salisbury, mail clerk. Thomas Donoho, Wilmington, Del., news agent on the train. Samuel Wilson, Delmar, & passenger. H. C. Huchcns, Wyoming, Del, a passenger. Brown, for 18 years an engineer. was extricated from the wreckage and died two hours later. Both legs and one arm were broken By the Associated Press. Gold export prohibitions have been amended by the Treasury Department to permit the shipment of the metal in the form of unretorted malgam, cyanide precipitates, concentrates and un- smelted ore. The ruling, which has been forwarded to customs collectors, was based on an opinfon handed down recently by Attorney General Cummings. The export of gold “bullion” was pro- hibited under President Roosevelt's gold embargo edict some months ago. The | new Treasury regulation was said simply 0 define what forms of gold may bc shipped out of the country. The Justice Department said the reg- ulations would be of slight benefit \lo domestic gold producers as the condi- tions were only slightly changed from those set down by the President's embargo order. American_producers have been seek- ing to sell their gold in foreign markeis at the world price, which is around $30 an ounce, comvared with the fixed American mint price of $20.67 per ounce. Modifications of the regulations fol- lows energetic efforts on the part of American gold producers to relax of the export restrictions. ‘These producers argued that if per- mission were given to domestic miners to export newly mined metal at the world price rather than the fixed mint price, it would remove an injustice to taxpayers as well as to small gold pro- ducers. ‘They contended that the removal. of the export restrictions on newly mined gold would prove a great stimulus to the American mining industry by per- mitting it to secure the world market price. This would, they claimed, greatly increase the earnings of unemployed men now panning gold under the grub- stake plan. Athletics Beat Yanks, 11-9. Athletics defeated the New York Yankees, 11 to 9, in the first half of a double header. The loss for the Yanks while Washington was defeating the Boston Red Sox give the Nationals a five-game advantage in the pennant race. ® Six home runs were made in_ the opener, each team getting three. Foxx drove out two to toost his total for the season to 34, an advantage now of eight n gnd he sustained in- ternal injuries. 3 over Babe Ruth. PHILADELPHIA, August 12—The | HANKOW. China, August 12.—The | Yellow River, continuing its rise, threatens to wipe out the population | from | of Szehsui, Chinese advices Chengchow say. At this town, located on the south bank of the river 50 miles west of Chengchow, the populace closed the city gates when the floods came. The walls are now withholding the rising waters while the people within desperately await relief or recession of the flood. In the surrounding area thousands of refugees were described as hanging to any floating thing and seeking safety. Many are considered to have drowned. MOLLISON SA.ILS TO RUSH BUILDING OF NEW PLANE Mrs. Mollison Will Stay in U. 8. to Inspect Aviation Developments. Plans Flight to Atlanta. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 12.—Capt. Jim- mie Mollison never says quit. The British fiyer sailed for London last night to rush work on a new plane, in which he and his wife, the former Amy Johnson, are expected to seek a long- distance record. The plane will be a duplicate of one in which the Mollisons flew the Atlantic only to crash at Bridgeport, Conn. Mrs. Mollison will stay in this country a while inspecting aviation developments. ‘Tomorrow she plans to fly to Atlanta. Features . Finance Real Estate... Serial Fiction. | Society i Sporis FOURTH INNING. WASHINGTON—Myer walked. So did Manush. Cronin forced Manush with a bounder to Werber, Myer pulling ters. No runs. BOSTON—Cooke singled to left. Cooke was caught stealing, Sewell to Cronin. Bluege threw out Roy John- son. Ferrell popped to Kuhel. No runs. FIFTH INNING. ‘WASHINGTON—Kuhel grounded out to Judge. Bluege hit his sixth home run of the season, a loft over the left field fence, that tied the game. It was the first hit off Weiland. Sewell flied to Cooke in the left field corner. White- hill fouled to Ferrell. One run. BOSTON—Judge grounded to Kuhel. The first baseman fumbled the ball, to the sack ahead of the runner. Mc- Manus doubled against the wall in left center. Cronin threw out Oliver, Mc- Manus going to third. Weiland hoisted to Schulte in left center. No runs. SIXTH INNING. WASHINGTON—Myer grounded to Judge. Manush singled to center. Cro- nin fiied deep to Roy Johnson. Har- ris struck out. No runs. BOSTON—Cronin threw out Werber. Walters struck out. Cooke grounded to Cronin. No runs. SEVENTH INNING. WASHINGTON—Schulte pcpped to Walters. Walters threw out Kuhel Bluege walked. On the hit-and-run play Sewell singled to left, sending Bluege to third. Whitehill fanned. No runs, BOSTON—R. Johnson bunted a foul pop fly to Sewell. Bluege came in fast for a grounder from Ferrell and threw him out. Judge lined to Harris. No runs. EIGHTH INNING. WASHINGTON—Myer dropped a ball on the right field line for a triple. Roy Johnson came in fast for Manush’s hoist and Myer held third. Cronin sent a long fly to R. Johnson, and Myer | scored after the catch to break the tie. Harris walked. Schulte singled to cen- ter, sending Harris to third. Kuhel | forced Schulte, Walters to Werber. One run. up at third. McManus got Harris’ foul. | Schulte forced Cronin, Werber to Wal- | but managed to retrieve it and scramble | BOSTON—McManus_got his third | to \hit, a single to left. Oliver sacrificed, | No emergency relief administrator. that hereafter his agency will buy supplies | from N. R. A. stores; | Submission to Secretary Wallace for | approval of a sugar stabilization plan | despite a threat of its rejection by (Continued on Page 2, Column 3.) FATHER IS‘AOCUSED OF TORTURING BABY |He and Another Jailed to Protect Them From Neighbors—Child Suspended From Tree. By the Assoclated Press. | MARTINS FERRY, Ohio, August 12. —Fourteen-month-old Richard Batzdor- fer lay with a broken leg and a dislocated collarbone while his father and another man were held in jail today to protect them from neighbors Police Chief J. W. Muhlevan said were “up in arms” over a story of the baby's torture. The infant’s mother, Elizabeth Batz- dorfer, charged in an affidavit that Wil- liam Kirkpatrick, 24, maimed her child. Chief Muhlevan filed another affidavit charging the father, Rudolph Batz- dorfer, with mistreating the boy. The chief said the baby suffered the dislo- cated collarbone when he was tied and suspended from a tree limb by his arms. The men were held under $10,000 bond each awaiting grand jury action. Kuhel to Myer, who covered first. Rice took Harris’ place in right fleld. Ho- dapp batted for Weiland and grounded to Kuhel, sending McManus to third. Werber went to a two-and-two count and then popped to ‘Bluege. No runs. NINTH INNING. WASHINGTON—Welch now pitching for Boston. Bluege flied to Cooke. Roy Johnson dropped Sewell's fly for a two-base error. Whitehill took a third strike. Myer took a third strike. No _runs. BOSTON—Walters hosted to Manush. Alexander batted for Cooke. He popped Ml'w- Myer threw out Roy Johnson.

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