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JOE LYNCH LEADS COLLEGE GOLFERS Georgetown U. Captain Ends Second Qualification Round With 76. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. CONGRESSIONAL COUNTRY CLUB, Md. June 25.—Sixscore boys from 30 colleges continued their on- slaught on par today as the second and Sinal qualification round for the national intercoliegiate golf cham- plonship got under way under smiling skies at the Congressional Country Club. Early finishers still were hav- ing trouble with the lengthy and rugged course which yesterday balked their best efforts to shatter par. Jack Malloy of Princeton and Woodrow Malloy of Michigan, who led the field yesterday with twin 72s, were listed among the late starters today. Par for the Congressional course is 72. Joe Lynch, Georgetown captain and president of the Intercollegiate Asso- ciation, finished with a 76 for a 36- hole total of 151 to take the early lead. John Pischer, tall Michigan ace, and former Walker Cup team member, scored a 75 today to add to his 77 of yesterday for a 36-hole total of 152. Yates Uses 41 Strokes. Charlie Yates of Georgia Tech, the defending champion, used up 41 strokes for the out nine and needed a good in nine to insure qualification. He scored 78 yesterday. Freddie Haas, the tall Louisiana State boy, who scored 73 yesterday, also took 41 for the first nine today. Other complete scores: Bill Welch, Texas. ..... Arthur St. John, Okla- homa A H. Eshelman, Yale Richard A. Harris, North Carolina J. Levinson, Yale 5 R. J. Govern, Hamilton 83—81—164 Richard Collard, Buffalo 82—84—166 R. B. Parker, Prince- ton ..................84—16—160 W. B. Newsome, Prince- ton Lynch took a self-imposed penalty of one stroke on the fifteenth hole, where his first tee shot lay on the out-of-bounds line. He ruled that the greater part of the ball lay out of| bounds and took the penalty after dis- cussing it with the committee. Second Drive in Rough. His second drive was in the rough and he wound up with a 6 on the par 4 hole. As the scores continued to run high, observers predicted that 159 would mark the qualifying limit, with a pos- sibility that some of the boys who start this afternoon may shoot the top limit down to 158. 1 Releasing 500 carrier pigeons, which raced home to the various cities which will be served by the Royal Blue, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad’s newest streamlined steam train, Miss Marie McIntyre, daughter of the President’s secretary, is shown as she officiated as mistress of ceremonies at the inauguration of the new serve THE EVENING ice at the Washington terminal yesterday. Cutting (Continued From First Page.) and J. C. McConerry, all of New Mexico; H. Phelps Putnam of Boston and Frederick M. Bishop and Gordon Gardiner, both of London, England. Bequests of $50,000 each are made to H. H. Dorman and Clifford Mec- Carthy of Santa Fe, as well as that to Senator La Follette. Herman S. Baca | and Brian O'Dunn, both of New Mex- ica, each are to receive $100,000. J. M. | Baca, also of New Mexico, is be- queathed a cash gift of $150,000, as well as full title to the newspaper Sante Fe New Mexican. The Spanish American Normal School at El Rito, N. Mex., receives $150,000. Mother One of Executors. The will names Senator Cutting’s 75 YACHTS LOST IN $1,000,000 FIRE Costly Craft, Moored Near Fort| Lauderdale, Fla., Are Destroyed. By the Associated Press. FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., June 25.—A $1,000,000 fire yesterday raced through a fleet of palatial Yachts berthed in the Pilkington Basin near here, consuming 75 pleasure craft. one man was missing, another crit- ically burned. An internal explosion aboard the houseboat Seminole sent the flames crackling through the flotilla of finely appointed, close-moored craft. Gar Wood, the speedboat king; Lawrence Schwab, Broadway produc- er; the Cudahy family, J. Wesley Pate of Cincinnati and scores of others lost boats in the wholesale destruc- tion. ‘The missing man was Capt. R. C. Abel, 28, of West Palm Beach. He was last seen entering the engine room of the Seminole shortly before a | terrific blast rocked the houseboat. | John B. Thomas, who accompanied Abel, was blown high into the air. From the Seminole, the fuel-fed flames jumped from boat to boat in the storage basin, blasts marking the progress of the fire as gasoline tanks exploded. Only one vessel, the cabin cruiser Betty Jane, anchored in the stream, escaped, A drenching rain swept the wreck- age of shed and burned boats just before dark and extinguished what big fires remained. PLAN GARDEN PARTY Summit Park Citizens to Stage Event Tomorrow Night. Final plans for a garden party to be staged by the Summit Park Citizens' Association tomorrow night have been made by William J. Smith, president of the association, and George H. Marshall of the committee in charge of the program. ‘The party will be held on the lawn and in the ball room of Marshall's * home, 3707 Bangor street southeast, at 8 o'clock. Included on the program will be a demonstration of magic, esthetic dancing, a “gypsy” fortune teller and a program by the neighbor- hood Boy Scouts. Dancing will also be a feature of the program. BUILDING IMPROVED HARRISBURG, Pa., June 25 (#).— The hammer and saw are moving 50 per cent faster in Pennsylvania cities than in 1934. The Department of Labor and In- dustry reports that building permits fssued in May totaled $2,909,275, or $989,275 more than in May, 1934. Pro= posed new homes alone totaled $849,: 703, an increase of 85.8 per cent. Tou CANNDWE,. TALK T0 - WHEELING FaRr AFTER 7 PM INSTEAD OF WAITING R 8:30 STATION TO STATION CALL executors was set at $60,000 each. admitted to probate and record there, and to bring it back here for keeping. John W. Nelson Accused of Lar- mother, Mrs. Olivia M. Cutting of Oakdale, Suffolk County, N. Y., and Jesus M. Baca of Santa Fe as exec- utors. The residuary legatees are Mrs. Justine B. Ward and Mrs. Olivia James, sisters, and his niece, Iris| Origo. The petition for probate recites that the testator lefi property in| New Mexico, the District of. Co- lumbia and the State of New York; that he had residences at San'e Fe and Washington. The estimated value of ihe real property under the will is approxi- mately $376,260 and the value ni the personal property is estimated at ap- proximately $3,600,000 The petition states the debts 1o be approximately $55,000. The will was wilnessed by Reed Holloman of Sante Fe and J. D. Atwood of Roswell, N. Mex. It was dated only a few months befors the ?&r crash, which cost the Senator his e. The testament was admitted to probate and record this morning by Judge O. R. Luhring. Bond for the The court directed Theodore Cogs- well, register of wills, to transport the original will to New York to have it | Petition for probate of the will in New York will be filed tomorrow morning. FORMER STOCK DEALER RETURNED TO JAIL HERE ceny of $1,000 by Theresa A. De Laider. John W. Nelson, alias Tom Starrat, 47-year-old former District stock sales- man, was remanded to the District Jail today in default of $10,000 bond following his return here from New York under an indictment charging him with larceny of $1,000 given iim by Theresa A. De Laider of 1324 Euclid street to buy stock. Nelson was indicted a year ago, but was not arrested until recently. He was returned here by Detective Sergt. Chester Stepp after the complainant went to New York and identified him. Nelson also is charged with larceny of $700 or $800 worth of stock given him by another Washington woman incite war against Russia. STAR, - WASHINGTON, ' D. Protestants Hurl Bottles and Stones—Seven Fine! ‘The opped Protestants gathered at Waverly Mar- Xket, where the Catholics were holding an open-air meeting in connection with the congress. Men and women, singing hymns, hissing and booing, converged on the Catholics and flung missiles at auto- mobiles and busses which had brought them to the meeting. X Cries of “Down with the Pope!” were heard. Mounted police made repeated charges into the crowd before order was restored. Ten demonstrators were arrested. tion Protested. The gates of Waverly Market Were guarded by Catholic youths, who be- came involved in the confiiet after —Underwood & Underwood Photo. Prof ts swept through s police Faces Ouster PROSECUTOR IS THREATENED BY GOV. LEHMAN. Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. WILLIAM C. DODGE, The New York district attorney, prosecutor to stamp out the “various types of organized vice and crime in New York County.” TEXT OF SWANSON’S LETTER TO BE ASKED By the Associated Press. The House Naval Committee agreed yesterday to ask Secretary Swanson to supply & copy of a letter he had written Rear Admiral Yates Stirling, jr., commandant of the Brooklyn Navy Yard, in connection with publication of a newspaper article which some members of Congress said tended to Pending before the committee is a resolution by Representative Marcan- tonio, Republican, of New York, which' would require the Secretary to inform the House what disciplinary action had been taken against Stirling for “having failed to insert a statement to the effect that the opinions or ” assertions” in the article “were not to be construed as official or reflecting the views of the Navy Department or the naval service at large.” Swanson wrote the committee that the letter was the onmly disciplinary measure taken, but he did not say what it contained. Ouney N COCKTAILS BY AN EXPERT BOTH WEEKDAYS AND SUNDAYS ‘The 'outbmk originated as a coun- ter-demonstration, organized by the Protestant Action Society, which was formed to protest against any official tion of the Catholic Church in Scotland. The society, which has been in ex- istence for a long time, became in- creasingly active under the leadership of Town Councilor Cormack. The Eucharistic Congress, a gath- ering of Catholics in Scotiand, held its first sessions yesterday. HOUSE GROUP APPROVES BUS AND TRUCK BILL Rewritten to Apply Only to Com- mon Carriers, Measure Gets 3-to-2 Vote. By the Associated Press. Rewritten to apply only to common carriers, the administration’s bus and truck regulatory bill was approved yesterday by & House interstate com- COAL MERCHANTS WILL HOLD OUTING Three Hundred Will Go to Bay Ridge Tomorrow by Auto- mobile. Some 300 Washington coal mer- chants, their families and employes will motor to Bay Ridge, Md, to- morrow for the tenth annual outing of the coal division of the Merchants and Manufacturers’ Association. ‘The party will assemble in their automobiles at the Peace Monu- ment and Pennsylvania avenue at 9:30 am. and a half an hour later will head out of town, accompanied by an escort of motor cycle police. At the District line Maryland motor cycle patrolmen will take over the guidance of the caravan. A bathing beauty contest open to members of the coal merchants’ fam- ilies and their employes will be a C., TUESDAY, -JUNE 25, 1935. Asks Divorce 85 YEARS ¥ MUCH FOR HER. “AUNT SARAH” McNABB. - Aunt Sarah was home again to- day after a trip to court at Parma, Mo., where she charged her 85- year-old husband with cruelty. “I love that man, but we can't get along,” she explained. Judge R. L Cope sent the pair home together. JUDGE RULES ROOSTERS MAKE TOO MUCH NOISE Holds Hens Have Nothing to Do With Keeping Neighborhood Awake at Night. The rooster lost his dominance in the chicken yard this morning when Judge Robert E. Mattingly ruled in Police Court that two defendants keeping fowl which kept the neigh- borhood awake at night must get rid of their roosters. “You have too many roosters, even if you needed them,” the court told the defendants, who later were ac- quitted, “but the court knows you don’t need them.” “Roosters,” said the court, “always have crowed, but you can't tell me that hens cackle at night. They only cackle after they have laid eggs.” The cases was that of George King and Edward Edwards, residents of Croissant place southeast. Testimony showed that not only do they have chickens, but also a goat and pigeons. VISIT OUR FURNISHED PLAYS TO BE GIVEN ormansucr oo | | AT SYLVAN THEATER feature of the after-luncheon pro- gram at the bay resort. Other events scheduled are races for men, women and children, a basket ball throwing contest for wom- en, base ball games for men and boys and horseshoe pitching. Danc- ing will round out the program. Arrangements for the outing have merce subcommittee by a bare three to two vote. It next must be considered by the full committee. The bill would put interstate motor carrier traffic under |- the Interstate Commerce Committee. As passed several weeks ago by the been supervised by Joseph B. Murphy, | g, chairman of the Outing Committee. The Capital's coal yards will be closed all day. Honey Found Best Healer. Dr. N. Zaiss, a leading physician in Vienna, Austria, says honey is the best healer of wounds and superior to all ointments. He has treated several thousand cases with honey and has not had a single failure. It soothes pain, hastens healing and acts as an antiseptic, he declares. It is also high- ly effective with burns and carbuncles. to take to the road for hire. 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