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A—4 w» THE EVENING HORSE SHOW SPILL HORRIFIES 10,000 Capt. Hoge Not Seriously Hurt, However-—Winners Are Named. New crowns today adorned the heads | of Applejack and Sport Marvel, two of the most consistent performers in | local equine eircles, following the horse show at the Jamboree Stadium last night, a meet that drew 10,000 | persons to witness a program marked | by thrills and spills. Tragedy was near at one juncture when Capt. Kenneth Hoge, 38, who | is attached to the War and resides in Arlington, feli with his horse. At first Hoge was believed to have been critically amination at Walter showed his hurts were two fractured wrists inations were to be made today, how- ever Broomfield, Reed Hospital confined to Capt. Hoge's struck the last jump in the handicap course, horse and rider somersaulting through the air and crashing to the ground, Hoge beneath the horse. The | heavy jump then collapsed on top of them. Crowd Horrifield. The crowd, which included about 2.500 or 3,000 Boy Scouts, who delayed their departure for home after the formal closing of the jaboree yester- day afternoon to witness the meet, was horrified. Later it was announced that Hoge had escaped serious injury Applejack. the towering brown geld- ing heretofore shown by C. Emery Galliher, made an under his new Fadele: annexing the tri-color rosette em- blematic of the open jumping cham- pionship. Reserve honors went to Roland Hartman's Catherine Stone and the Fort Myer Horse Show team'’s Inclusive, with the latter getting the | Tibbon on a coin toss. Sport Marvel, owned by U dle, 3d, and ridden by Frost son, won the hack and hunter and open hunter events to lift the cham- pionship in the hunter division and Maj ing the reserve ribbon. Competition Is Keen. owner, Fenton M. S. Ran- ‘The fields over which Applejack and Sport Marvel triumphed were small, | hardly more than a score of horses taking part in the competitive events, but their rivals put on some well- turned performances and their vic- tories came only after hard work. Fadeley's jumper was forced to top 8 feet in the touch-and-out class to beat off his competitors, and jump- offs occurred in virtually every open event on the program. Spectators got one of their biggest thrills from the exhibition of figure riding given by the black, red and yellow costumed “vaqueros” of Troop E from Fort Myer and the rodeo ride put on by the spectacular F Troop from the same spot. The show was sponsored by the Inter-American Horse Show Associa- tion and proceeds will be used to help bring some European team here for the meet of that Fall Riding school Won by Rob Roy. 2 School and_rid- 1o Farley: second. ding Academy Potomac, Po T second. Mully Marvin TIseley unselman. _ Miss atherine Stone, Lusby. Sport Marvel and ridden by on owned and Applejack, M. Fadeley, Myer, Capt ird Randle's’ Pride fourth. Clipped Wings. Fort Mer. a1 Thave: Hack and hunter—Won by Sport Marvel owned by Randle and ridden by Anderson zecond Gubble = Fort_Mrver. jrelev: third, Castellon. Maj. fourth. Claws. Rancic. Ro n by e iatacy 4 Hines, ir Lieut Thaver owned ide. Randie <;~n~ Marvel. owned serve champion, Castellon, Thaver umping Fadelev owned by Mal Open ed hy hamy on--Applejack e champion. In: rse show te GUILD CRITICIZES GREEN AS ‘AIDING VIGILANTES’, C. I. 0. Affiliate Says A. F. Head Encourages “Equiva- lent of Nazism.” By the Assoclated Press. The American Newspaper Guild is- gued a statement yesterday saying | William Green, American Federation of Labor president, is “encouraging the vigilante movement, which is the American equivalent of Nazism.” The statement followed by a day the assertion of Green that the pub- lic resents C. I. O. tactics. It said: “At the very moment that his brothers in the A. F. of L. are lying dead or dving outside the walls of Mellon's aluminum plant in Alcoa, | President Green sits back and prates | about ‘labor violence.’ " Charges Filed at Atlanta. ATLANTA, July 10 (#).—Charles N. Feidelson, regional director of the Na- tional Labor Relations Board, said late yesterday the Atlanta Newspaper Guild and the Georgia Federation of Labor had filed charges against the Atlanta Constitution following dis- missal of six editorial employes. The complaint charged the Constitution “has illegally discharged certain of its emploves because they joined the guild.” He said the petition also alleged the Constitution had endeavored to form a company-dominated union among em- ployes. Maj. Clark Howell, president and publisher of the Constitution, said “the charges are utterly and absolutely without foundation.” Victor Clark Gets Radio Award. HARTFORD, Conn,, July 10 (#).— Victor Clark, 19, of Phoenix, Ariz., was announced yesterday as the win- ner of the Hiram Percy Maxim Me- morial Award for the outstanding amateur under 21 years of age. The announcement was made by Kenneth B. Warner of the American Radio Relay League, national ama- teur radio organization. ‘The award includes a.cash prize of $100. \ Department | Ander- | Arthur Thayer's Castellon earn- | organization in the | Lady | L. | why they should not be held in con- | | injured, but ex- | Further exam- | | mount, | Joseph C. Holland, 37, Kansas City W. P. A. “Cuffs” Hold Accused Slayer worker, lay | handcuffed to his bed in an Omaha hospital today, recovering, police said, from a self-inflicted wound, following the slaying ’ of his estranged wife, Mae Holland, 23, in an Omaha rooming A P house. —Copyright Wirephoto. |CONVENTION CITY NAMED | Hurt in Fall || \ impressive debut | Jr., winning three classes and | | kee, Wis., |__CAPT. KENNETH HOGE. RAYON COMPANY - ACCUSES PICKETS {160 Violated Injunction, | Covington Firm Tells Court. | By the Associated Press, COVINGTON, Va. July 10.—The | | Industrial Rayon Corp. returned 50 workers to its strike-bound plant here | | yesterday under police protection and instituted court action against ap- | e, | Proximately 160 individuals it charged | | violated an injunction restricting | | picketing. i | Among those accused in the com- | plamnt filed by Charles Dasher, plant | manager, were Robert Gaffney, textile Organizing Committee sub- regional director, in charge of the 15-week-old strike, and Lloyd Mays. | president of the local union of the | Synthetic Yarn Federation The complaint was filed in Al- | leghany County Circuit Court a few | hours after the 50 employes re-entered | the mill under guard of 27 State high- | way policemen and 15 local police, Some Called Strikebreakers. Grover Higgins, company cou of Cleveland said all the men who | returned to work today were employes at the time the strik | March 29, but Gaffney said some of them had never worked in the plant | before. | Company officials said the purpose | | of sending in the crew was to prepare | the plant for resuming operations, in which approximatelv 1,250 workers | were engagzed when the strike began. The company said it would seek { court ruling Thursday requiring those | named in the complaint to show cause | tempt of court. Hits Use of Police. Dasher's complaint charged they impeded and obstruct employes from entering the plant Wednesday | when an unsuccessful effort was made to send in maintenance and mechan- | ical crews to prepare for the proposed | reopening. Six persons were and 14 arrested as a result of the Wednesday skirmish. Shortly after the men went back | to work, Gaffney declared: | “I'm beginning to believe Virginia is outside of America. This is the | only place I have ever heard of | State patrolmen being used as a con- voy for strikebreakers.” Peery Comments. Meanwhile, the heavily-armed State officers, under the direction of John Q. Rhodes, jr., director of the motor vehicle division, were ordered to stay on the strike scene until all possi- bility of further violence had passed. At the State Capitol, Gov. Peery, who kept in close telephone com- munication with Rhodes, declared that the rights of both factions would be safeguarded, but that “we will not condone acts of violence.” The Governor reiterated his state- ment that “any one who wishes to return to work will be given that privilege to do so.” SLAYER MUST KILL SELF Automatic Gallows to Act Under | Weight of Victim. | BOISE, Idaho, July 10 (#)—There?l will be no executioner at the hanging of Triple-slayer Douglas Van Vlack if he goes to the gallows July 27. The trap will be relesed by a hy- draulic mechanism set in motion by his own weight. Said Warden William Gess: “Death will amount to suicide.” Odorless Onion in Prospect. Odorless marigolds have just been produced to the enjoyment of count- less horticulturists. And now we are to have the odorless onion. < SPRINGFIELD, Ohio, July 10 ( Delegates to the twenty-first national convention of the Luther League of America selected Long Beach, Calif., last night as their 1939-blennial meet- ing place and elected J. W. Cobb of Hickory, N. C,, dent. Other Thursday. A new Executive Committee was formed with Rev. J. M. Frease of Co- lumbus, Ohio: Robert Inslee of Glen- dale, Coin.: Howard Logan of Albany, N. Y. and Rev. F. H. Bloch of Milwau- as members Retirement of Rev. C. S. Simonton of Harrisburg, Pa., as life service sec- retary of the league was announced as the convention closed. The place will be filled lates officers were named hurt | 3 Lustrous mink in a handsome coat in the new swagger leng'h. $2,895 P).— | as second vice presi- | STAR, WASHINGTON, MINUTT INVOLVED IN PRESS DISPUTE “Democracy Is Matter of Form and Not Substance,” One Paper Quotes Him. By the Associated Press. MANILA, ®. I, July 10—High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt became involved in controversy with Filipino political factions today as an out- growth of references to democracy in his Independence day speech. The flareup ‘ollowed publication by the Filipino-owned Herald of a story quoting McNutt as saying during & press conference yesterday that “De- mocracy in the Philippines is a matter of form and not of substance. This I can prove in many specific instances which I shall mention in the future whenever occasion arises. I have ready.” The sioner to confer publishers, following “Reference to the July 4 speech of the Commissioner in stories of the press conference held July incident caused the commis- with several Manila who decided to print the | cise words of the speech. The speech | itself did not affirm that ‘democracy in the Philippines is only a queauun of form and not of substanc Other newsmen disagreed with the Herald as to McNutt's exact words. A spokesman for the Commissioner's ,nm‘e said McNutt made the same peech several times in the United | States and was generalizing without referring directly to the Philippines. | One observer pointed out that some Filipinos themselves questioned the | form of democracy here, such as the new edition bill and the calling off of general elections this year. | The Manila Tribune said comments | by Filipino politicians on the press conference story varied, some agree- ing democracy here was only in form, while others claimed the best form of government for the Philippines would | | be a dictatorship. long list of examples and have them | 9, some | " | based on misapprehension of the pre- citing cases | D. C, SATURDAY, Despite efforts of a Red St Efforts to Dislodge Freighter intercoastal ship was fast ashore last night. 35 miles south of San Francisco. JULY 10, 1937. CALEDONIA ENDS TRIP FROM BRITAIN Clipper Arrives in New York to Complete Crossing. Return Hop Monday. B3 the Associated Press NEW YORK, July 10.—A new aviae tiorr conquest, demonstrating the feasie bility of commercial airline operation across the Atlantic, was completed teday—and the attendant excitement was about equal to that of the arrival of the afternoon train. Two of the world's most powerful flying boats, the Caledonia of Imperial Airways of Great Britain and the Pan American Clipper III of Pan American Airways, have completed the first scheduled shuttle crossing bee ack tug to drag the freighter Mahwah back into deep water, the The ship ran aground in a fog at Pescadero Point, A crew of 45 and two passengers were aboard. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. ‘New Burlesque stead of managers are made the ar- biters of theatrical morals in the new code of conduct under which Broad- scheduled to reopen soon. The shapely ladies in the strip- tease trade used to check their mod- | esty at the stage door and some of | them claimed, when their business | was banned, that they never had liked it. | Their successors in the variety | shows with which the one-time tem. | ples of tease will resume operations | will be guided by their own con- | sciences, with some support from the | sidelines. A contract between the American | Federation of Actors and nine mem- bers of the Variety Revue Association made public today, provides that the actors may protest the use of any act which they think is “in any way ob- Jectionable to the public morals.” 1f sustained in their objections by an advisory board, the actors may refuse to appear in objectionable e ;gf% - Ptk : &w«%&@é gk ssx& way's padlocked burlesque houses are | RESTAURANT WORKERS WIN WAGE INCREASES | But Cumberland Owners Refuse tween the United States and England, an experiment preliminary to # regular passenger and mail service About 300 persons, half of whom were there because they happened to be in swimming. greeted the Caledonia when she alighted at Port Washington vesterday after a 2-hour 27-minute flight from Montreal, completing the trip from Southhampton begun last Sunday. The flying time was 23 hours 27 minutes. The Pan American Clipper reached England a day earlier Both ships made layover stops at Botwood, New Foundland, and Foynes, Irish Free State, while the Caledonia made an extra one at Montreal Capt. A. S. Wilcockson and his cr Code Makes Censors of Strip-Teasers By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, July 10.—Actors in- | | | scenes. The contract has been ap- proved by Mayor F. H. La Guardia. With such elaborate precautions against nudity and obscenity, prepa- rations were made today to reopen CUMBERLAND, Md, July 10.— the darkened burlesque houses, pad- | Cumberland’s strike-harrassed res- | locked by License Commissioner Paul |y, ranis resumed business yesterday Moss in defense of the public morals. | % 4 on an “open shop” basis, but with wage increases in effect for all em- v Dlover of three on the Caledonia and Capt. The city's restaurants were hit by a | Harold E. Gray and his crew of six | : " laboard the Clipper were occupicd walkout three weeks ago, with Walters | 0051y with technical observations of | and cooks demanding higher pay and flying. navigation and radio conditions. a “closed shop.” The latter demand These observations are to be compared was the principal obstacle to quick @nd documented for future operations. settlement of the strike. Restaurant owners and strikers ! reached an agreement whereby workers g to their jobs without dis- crimination with a wage of $25 a week for head cooks and $16 weekly for waitresses plus extra pay for over- time. The “closed shop” demand was left out of the agreement Most restaurant owners indicated they will be compelled to raise their icide by poison. | prices to Agree to “Closed Shop"” as Walkout Ends. Bv the Associated Press. DUNCAN RITES TODAY G. U. Medical School Professor to Be Buried in Mount Olivet. Funeral services for Dr. William J Duncan, 37, former professor of anatomy at Georgetown University Medical School, were held today at the home, 1423 Juniper street, and in St Michael's Church. Burial was in Mount Olivet Cemetery Dr. Duncan died Thursday, shortly after his wife found him unconscious at the foot of a staircase in their home. He had been forced to retire in 1933 due to ill health. Coroner A. Magruder MacDonald issued a certificate of 11 —_— PSYCHOMETRY DELINEATIONS Grace Gray Delong Life Reader Adviser 11 AM to 9 PM. PSYCRIC MESSAGE COUNCIL 1100 Twelfth St. N.W. Corner of 12th Telephone MEt a Specially Priced at Unusual Savings 08 *138 °158 198 3258 upward Every coat in our Advance Selling is specially priced and will be marked higher when this event is over. We present the largest, most complete collection of fur coats ever offered by Woodward & Lothrop. You may choose from fine pelts, expert styling, typical Woodward & Lothrop coats—in every price group. Every style is new—outstanding for Fall. Swaggers, boxy rather than bulky, “chubby’’ jackets, princess, tunic styles. Any fur coat purchased now may be stored in our vaults without charge until November 15th. Finally, you are less hurried and we are able to give you uninterrupted attention. And there is a price for every purse. Make a date with yourself for Monday to stop in our air- cooled Fur Section to see these outstanding values. 08 138 158 198 Lapin, Safari or Silver Gray Beaver-dyed Rabbit, Pony Caracul, Kidskin, Muskrat, Mole, Pony, Gray Persian Paw Caracul, Raccoon, Muskrat, Jap Mink Sides, Kidskin, Pony, Persian Paw, Mole, Squirrel, Civet Cat Seal-dyed Muskrat, Caracul, Raccoon, Muskrat, Kid- skin, ‘Persian Lamb, Mole, Leopard Cat, Fitch, Pro- cessed Lamb, Squirrel, Pony. Persian Lamb, Seal-dyed Muskrat, Raccoon, O'Pos- 5258 sum, Caracul, Squirrel, Skunk, Ocelot, Fitch, Leopard Cat, Persian Paw Other Furs in Our Advance Selling, $58 to $2,895 Furs, Trmp FLOOR,