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Autopsy Shows Death 0f Girl at Laurel Was From Natural Causes Hemorrhage Is Blamed; Tentatively Identified As Capital Waitress An autopsy revealed this aft- ernoon that a young woman whose body was found under a tree on the outskirts of Laurel, Md., this morning died of natural causes from a_hemorrhage, ac- cording to Pr. James I. Boyd, Prince Georges County coroner. The young woman was tentatively {dentified through letters and a social security card found in her Ppocketbook as Miss Scott Burke, 28, of the 1900 block of Eighteenth street N.W., said to have been a ‘waitress in a drug store at Six- teenth and U streets N.W. Maryland State police said the pocketbook also contained the re- turn-trip bus ticket from Wash- ington. Assistant Chief of Detectives Rob- | ert J. Barrett of the Metropolitan Police, said the description fitted that of a Mary Scott Burke known to police. The body was found about 10 am on the banks of the Patuxent River | near a bridge leading to Laurel race track. The fact the young woman'’s | waitress uniform had been torn and | disarranged and that blood on her | clothing led investigators at first to | conclude she had been assaulted and murdered. The waitress, po- lice were told. had been accustomed to bring the young daughter of a friend to a b(vn*dmg school near | here Police said no criminal action would be taken, even if it was Jearned the girl was brought here | by other persons. It was possible. ! investigators said that she might have walked unassisted to the place where her body was found after the hemorrhage started. The body was | discovered by boys on their way to visit muskrat Uap‘ alon g the river 3 Convicled in Consplracy To Violate Civil Liberties | By the Associated Press. JONESBORO, Ark, Jan Three men accused of conspiring t0 violate _federally-guaranteed civil liberties were convicted today and two other defendants were acquitted. The Federal jury convicted Cecil B. Nance, 42, lawyer of Marion; C. C. Culp. 53, city marshal at West Memphis, and Jim Miller, 43, former trusty in the Crittenden County jail at Marion. | Those acquitted were Harold “Bud” Holland, 32, a former Crit- tenden deputy sheriff, and Omer Curlin, 44, former jailer. United States District Judge T. C. Trimble said he would pass sentence later today. Punishment could range as high 8s a two-year sentence, $10,000 fine or both. Most of the detailed charges grew out of arrests in and around West Memphis, just across the Mississippi from Memphis, Tenn. The prosecu- tion contended that between 1937 and 1940 ome two-score persons were victimized, mostly by being arrested without charge or on trumped-up charges, beaten and fined or jailed. 21— BrownisiBuy Gutteridge, Discarded by Cards BY the Associated Press, ST. LOUIS, Jan. teridge. fleet infielder who played 27—Don Gut- with the St. Louis Cardinals, will | get another chance in the major | leagues—with the St. Louis Browns. ‘The Browns announced today they had purchased Gutteridge from Sacramento of the Pacmc Coast | League, a Cardinal farm? with the ' option of returning him by April 15 if he fails to make good. | Gutteridge broke in with the | Cardinals in 1936 as a third base.l man. He was shifted to shortstop in 1938 in a Branch Rickey experi- ment but couldn't adapt himself to the new position. His batting fell off and he was sent to Sacramento, where he batted .309 last season, Hos|ery Plunt Rmses Puy | PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 27 (®.—| The American Federation of Hosiery | Workers announced today the signing of a contract with the In- terwoven Stocking Co., Martins- burg, W. Va., calling for a 10 per cent wage increase for about 1200 employes. A 5 per cent increase| will become effective in March and another 5 per cent raise in June,| the union said. Ace Parker's Injury Delays Navy Enlistment B the Associated Press. PORTSMOUTH. Va, Jan. 27.—| Clarence (Ace) Parker wants to carry the ball for his Uncle Sam’'s | Navy but will have to defer enlist- | ment for at least a month to give an injured shoulder time to heal, the Brooklyn Dodgers’ backfield star said today. : Parker, who became a powerhouse in professional football after captur- ing All-America honors at Duke, broke a small bone in his right shoulder in an all-star grid game in Richmond at the end of the 1941 season. Derby Fans Digging In for Paralysis Fund By the Associated Press. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Jan. 27.—The Kentucky Derby clan—those fellows who come to Churchill Downs year after year for the race—are swelling Kentucky's contributions to the President’s infantile paralysis fund. The spring meet at the Downs is | still a couple of months off, but Tom Young, track superintendent; Ros- | coe Goose, who rode Donerail to a | Derby victory in 1913, and “Buck” | Weaver, turf writer for the Louisville Times, wrote about 250 businessmen, | railbirds and horsemen, who an- | nually come to Louisville for the | Derby and asked them to chip in for “ the fund, [ Other tracks now operating are having benefit cards to swell the fund. | Young said so far $350 had been gent in and “more comes in on every mail.” » " STERN AND BOW OF MIDGET JAP SUB—Here are close-ups of the stern (above) and bow (below) of a Japanese two-man sub- marine captured in the attack on Pearl Harbor. the small craft are being thoroughly studied by naval experts. | Projecting metal strips are guards against underwater nets. The torpedo tubes in bow are discharged through guard strips. —A.P. Wuephotos from Paramount News. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, — The detalls of Two News-Picture Yeterans Attachedto A.E.F.for A.P. | By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK. Jan. 27—Two men | in their 30s, with news-gathering ex- perience totaling more than 40 years, | are the Associated Press correspond- ent and photographer attached to the American Expeditionary Force in Northern Ireland. | The correspondent is Rice Yahner, | 36. who covered the vast United States Army field maneuvers in Tennessee. Texas, Louisiana and the | Carolinas last summer and who is an experienced airplane pilot The photographer is Harrison B. (Bob) Roberts, who will be 36 next month and who is a fast man with | a news story as well as with a camera. Both are married, and Roberts has two small daughters. Before the A. E. F. voyage which landed them in Northern Ireland, Yahner never had been aboard any- | thing bigger than a lake boat. Rob- erts, a bright-eyed, wiry, mustached | fellow, is a long-time enthusiast for | salt water. He has his own aux- iliary sailboat, now tied up in Bos- ton. Pictures Won Him Job. In fact. it was a sea story which | won Roberts his job with the Asso- | ciated Press. His “free lance” pic- tures of the Morro Castle ship dis-' aster off the New Jersey coast Sep- ! tember 8. 1934, were so exceptional that he was appointed a full-time staff photographer. | A native of St. Louis, he attended school in Chicago. spent two years | studying engineering at Northwest- | | ern University and left to enter newspaper work. He has worked | for papers in Chicago, Detroit, New- 1 ark, Long Island and Staten Island | | and in Associated Press bureaus in | Indianapolis, Boston, Albany and New York. Yahner, despite his lack of sea- faring, was not seasick during a rather rough passage. He was born at Munhall, Pa, August 24, 1905. He went to work for the Tri-State | News Bureau in Pittsburgh whenl he was 16. Yahner participated as a pilot in | Of Disorderly Conduct | the 1928 Trancontinental Air Derby. Assigned to Capital Last May. After working in California, trav- eling over much of the United States and working for Pittsburgh papers, he was employed by the Associated Press in Harrisburg in 1933. { Later he worked in the Philadel- phia bureau and was assigned to Washington last May to cover the Army maneuvers. For seven years previously he had been out with | ! troops on annual two-week maneu- | | vers. | His wife, a former school teacher, is now studymg nursmz Broadway Rose Con\ncied By thy Assaciated Press. | it NEW YORK, Jan. Z—Broadw | Rose, panhandler of the lnmous Runyan, president of the | the near-famous and at times the | | obscure of the bright light blocks, | was convicted on a disorderly con- duct charge today, the third time since 1937. Known variously as Anne Dyonne and Anna Dym, which police say is her real name, she was held for in- vestigation and sentencing on Fri- Cay by Magistrate Morris Rothen- | berg, who remarked that an insti-| tution seemed the best place for her. She pleaded innocent to a charge | that she spat in the face of a man | on Broadway Sunday night and, called him vile names. She denied | rumors that her years of Broadway | begging had netted her a tidy 1or<‘ tune. She failed to make the $100 bail set. Vichy- Collaboration Seen PARIS, Jan. 27 (Andi Agency to (#)) —Informed quarters predicted today that France soon would reach an understanding with Germany on the protracted question of collab- oration. This forecast came as| press and radio quarrels between | German-occupied Paris and Vichy[ suddenly ceased. | ital of Yunnan Province, | Murder, Toward Hong Kong, Chungking Declares Two More Towns Retaken; Invaders’ Attacks Beaten In Three Other Sectors BY the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 27— Chinese forces are. pressing the advantage on the South Kwan- tung front gained through re- capture of Tamshui and are driv- ing the Japanese back toward the Cantqn-Kowloon Rallroad, a Chungking communique de- clared today. The war report, released by the official Chinese news agency, was picked up by radio at the C. B. 8. short-wave listening station here. Two more towns, Pingshen and Lungkang, have been retaken, the communique asserted, and«¢he “Jap- anese are retreating toward Sam- chun, on the railway bordering the territories of Hong Kong.” In three other sectors—East Kwantung, Central Suiyuan and South Anhwei — Japanese attacks were said to have been repulsed | with moderately heavy casualties | and some material losses to the in- | vader. The Suiyuan assault in- volved use by the enemy of poison gas, it was stated. “In Southwest China,” the com- munique continued, “Kunming, cap- had a brief air-raid alarm yesterday after- noon when nine Japanese planes were sighted near the Indo-China | border. | “Many Chinese planes, including American Volunteer Group planes, | appeared in the city. * * * After a little while the enemy raiders with- drew to the south without dropping their bombs ¥ Murder Inc., Member Tells of Hollywood Crime By the Associsted Press. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 27.—Al Tan- nenbaum, confessed member of Inc, testified today that Frank Carbo shot Harry Greenberg in a Hollywood langlfixd killing Thanksgiving eve, 1939. Tannenbaum said he was present when Carbo fired five bullets into Greenberg as the former aide of Louis “Lepke” Buchalter sat at the wheel of his automobile, “After he shot Greeny, Carbo ran | to the getaway car and Siegel drove | him away,” the witness testified. “I drove the other car and followed them.” Benny “Bugsy” Siegel, Hollywood night-life figure and Carbo's co- defendant” in the murder trial, stirred in his seat and smiled faintly. | Tannenbaum said he first met | Greerberg. alias Schacter, when the | latter hired him as a guard for a | New York dress manufacturing shop under protection of the Lepke mob, of which Murder, Inc., was a sub- sidiary. Gas Stations Urge Curfew | AMES, Iowa, Jan. 27 (). AGuy‘ National | Association of Petroleum Retailers, | | said today he has urged War Pro- | duction Board Chairman Domldrid Nelson to order all gasoline filling stations closed from 7 pm. to 7 am. Runyan declared the move would save 70 per cent of the elec- tricity normally used by stations. Silhouetted Against Movie Screen, Man Shoots Self to Death By the Associated Press. BARNWELL, S. C, Jan. 27— Earl Moore, 24, silhouetted against the screen of a moving picture theater, fired a bullet into his head last night while more than 100 spectators looked on. He died a short time later. Moore entered the theater and took a seat close to the front. Then he arose, faced the audience, mumbled a few words and shot himself. Deputy Sheriff J. C. Dyches indicated that an inquest would not be necessary. D. C, HUSBAND'S A. E. F. COMMAND KEPT SECRET—Preparations for the movement of an American Expeditionary Force to North- ern Ireland were kept so closely guarded that even Mrs. Russell P. Hartle did not know that her husband, Maj. Gen. Hartle, was commanding the vanguard. Mrs. Hartle, who lives in Hagers- town, Md., was photographed here while at Walter Reed for a checkup after a severe cold. She holds a picture of her husband. (Story on Page A-1.) TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1942, —A. P. Photo. Knox Plays Golf In Foursome With Wheeler Two arch political antagonists (before Pearl Harbor), Secretary of the Navy Knox and Senator Wheeler of Montana, buried the hatchet, at least temporarily, on the Burning Tree gplf course Sunday. Instrumental the “peace-mak- ing” was an unnamed golf steward who put them in the same foursome in a regular feature tournament in which players do not know before- hand who their partners will be. Senator Tydings of Maryland and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury John L. Sullivan were others in the foursome. or Mr. Wheeler at any time, it was said. The unknown golf steward, by the | way, chose the names at random, it | is understood. Senator Wheeler, before the war, continually denounced Secretary Knox as a warmonger and bitterly opposed his confirmation as a cab- | inet officer. Minnesota Athlefic Chief Seeks Army Commission MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 27—Frank McCormick. University of Minne- sota athletic director and veteran of the first World War, today ap- plied for an Army commission. pre- | sumably for special assignment for Air Corps personnel work. McCormick. about 50, took a physical examination at Fort Snell- ing today. , The Gopher athletic chief was an officer in a South| Dakota unit in World War I and after the conflict distinguighed him- | self in American Legion activities, particularly in planning the Junior | Legion baseball program. Should Mr. McCormick be ac- cepted it would be the second major loss to the Minnesota athletic de-| partment. Bernie Bierman, hud football coach, has reported Quantico, Va., for duty as a mnjor in the Marines. New York Correspondent Reported Held by Japs BY the Associated Press CHUNGKING. China, Jan. 27— Persons who escaped from Shanghai | said last night that the Japanese there had arrested Victor Keen of the New York Herald Tribune and J. B. Powell of the China Weekly Review. Other foreign newspaper- men in Shanghai were reported per- mitted to go about freely. Morris J. Harris, chief of the Asso- ciated Press Bureau in Shanghai, and J. D. White, a member of his | staff, were reported safe and well. They and other newsmen were said to have been summoned to the Metropole Hotel the day war broke out but were permitted to return a few days later to their regular living quarters. ON GUARD SOMEWHERE ON THE VIRGINIA COAST—Bear- ing a message for the commander of an anti-aircraft battery, a helmeted officer double-quicks it out of a dugout on the Virginia coast. All anti-aircraft units such as the one pictured here are connected by phone or short-wave radio, and planes are reported as soon as they are picked up on sound detectors. Information is relayed to the batteries from the dugout. ) b3 —A. P. Wirephoto. Every one was cordial | ;‘throughout and there was no no- ticeable coolness between Mr Knox "Star-Spangled Soprano’ To Sing at Birthday Ball Lucy Monroe, whose singing spe- cialty has won her renown as “the star spangled soprano,” will be on hand to sing “The Star Spangled Banner” at the President’s Birthday Ball at Uline Arena PFriday night. Miss Monroe has sung the national anthem at more than 1500 public performances during the past five years, indoors and outdoors. Edward Arnold, president of the Screen Actors’ Guild, in town to act as master of ceremonies at the Wil- lard Hotel banquet Friday night in celebration of the President’s birth- day, was the guest of Senate Ma- jority Leader Barkley at luncheon yesterday on Capitol Hill. Last night Secretary of the Treas- ury Morgenthau, speaking on behalf | of the President’s Birthday Celebra- tion, told a radio audienee of Presi- | dent Roosevelt's battle with infan- | | tile paralysis and the spirit he gave Wum Spflnu Raid on San Francisco |Probable, Greenslade Says| BY the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 21—A | submarine raid on San Francisco is | | “very probable” Admiral J. W.| | Greensfade, commandant of the 12th | Naval District, said yesterday. | ! Such a raid, with a submarine coming to the surface and firing on | | the city with its deck guns, wouldk | have only a nuisance value for its | effect on civilian morale and use in | Japanese propaganda broadcasts, he said. “It is not only possible, but very probable.” the admiral asserted. “We would even anticipate the possibility | of an air raid as well. “In modern total war, such as is being waged against us ZOda\' there | is no such thing as impregnability | from attack. We have, however, an- | ticipated any move the enemy might | 2_Dudie, Panther Creek, Busy Man. | | make and have taken every possible | pmlutlon to guard against sur- | prise.” Americans Urged fo See Just Peace, No Revenge Americans should not seek to win | this war in the spirit of revenge, but | | “to put the world back on a basis of Christianity,” the Rev. John Ma- gee. for mal years a missionary | in China, said here today. | Dr. Mdgee delivered the opening address at the educational institute established here under the auspices | of the Woman's Auxillary of the|s_pranks Boy, Jack Twink, Sir Kid. | Latters Choice, | Diocese of Washington. The gath- | ering was held at the Church of the | | Epiphany. He recalled many atrocities com- | mitted by the Japanese in China | and pointed out that those experi- | ences had given him sufficient cause | to hate the Japanese. “But it is not by &' spirit of re- | yenge for us to win the present | conflict, but through the cross o(‘ Christ,” he said. He declared that the defeat of | the aims of President Wilson is pri- | marily responsible for the condition | of the world lodly. Yunkees May Lose Henrich | MASSILLON, Ohio, Jan. 27 (#).— | The New York Yankees may lose | Outfielder Tom Henrich to Uncle | Sam. Henrich today was placed tentatively in class 1 by his draft board, which reclassified the base- ball star under instructions to re- open the cases of all 3-A men who | have acquired dependents since Sep- | tember 16, 1940. Henrich was mar- | ried last summer. | | | UNITED 8§ STATES || SAVINGS ¥%M / F) AND STAMPS It will cost money to defeat the Axis. Your Government calls on you to help now. Buy Defense bonds or stamps today. Buy them every day, if you can. But buy them on # regular basis. Bonds cost as little as $18.75, stamps come as low as 10 cents. Defense bonds and stamps can be bought at all banks and post offices, and stamps can also be purchased at retail stores and from your newspaper carriér boy. Support your Government with your dollars. LEn | Inscol | Frabsie, Sweeping Vistar Tva | . SECOND RA 4-year-olds and upwards: Racin Entries and Selecti XX News ions for Tomotrow ‘Rossvan’s Comment Selections for a Fast Track at Mialeah Park BEST BET—FIVE-O-EIGHT. FIRST RACE—ALL GOOD, MY | ZACA, CHALARA. ALL GOOD has a second and & third to show for his Hialeah outings and just slight improve- ment appears to be needed for a visit to the charmed circle. MY ZACA won his last in right good time and right off that showing he must be given stout considera- tion. CHALARA should improve her last. SECOND RACE—UNCLE WAL- TER, DUDIE, BUSY MAN. UNCLE WALTER has been threatening to come to life and give opposition of this caliber a neat trimming. This spot could find the gelding up in time for the decision. DUDIE wins often and his last bad try should be tossed out as being too bad to be strip and right off that showing he deserves consideration. KAN- SAS CITY has worked well for this try. SIXTH RACE—MARKET WISE, DISPOSE, PONTY. MARKET WISE is a champion thoroughbred, but his main claim to fame is his routing ability. He may be able to win at this shorter route. DISPOSE has trained well for this race and he could be in the thick of the scramble. PONTY wins over good ones on occasion and he may threaten. SEVENTH RACE—JOHNNIE J, ABOYNE, ALAKING. JOHNNIE J improved quite a bit in his recent Hialeah try and he may be ready to defeat the true. BUSY MAN has been sec- ond in his last three tests. THIRD RACE — TEDDER, CHARMING HEROD, BAT- TLE WON. ‘TEDDER won his last at this oval, and trimmed as good a field as he hooks up with here. A repetition of his recent outing should be good enough for an- other set of brackets. CHARM- ING HEROD disappointed in his last try, but he should be able to improve here. BATTLE WON copped at Tropical. FOURTH RACE — FIVE-O- EIGHT, LOFTSMAN, BY CONSCRIPT. FIVE-O-EIG] was far back in his last eftdrt but previously he was close up with such as ‘Wood Robin and Marksman. The son of Discovery may be able to trim these. LOPTSMAN just loped to win his last in good time and the same can be said for BY CONSCRIPT. Both are threats. high-class speedsters he meets in this number. ABOYNE seldom turns in a bad race and the geld- ing is in the proverbial pink of condition for this test. ALAKING is on the improve and he may be closer. EIGHTH RACE—PICK OUT, GETAWAY JACK, TOP STAFF. PICK OUT raced well around Chicago and she has trained smartly since arriving in Florida. ‘The mare may be able to ring the bell at the first local GETAWAY JACK threatened at Tropical and a bit of improve- ment could have him with the leaders. TOP STAFF might be in the money. Hialeah Park B the Anntlltod Press. FIRST RACE_Purse. PR fyriones. Zac's Gal (no boy! Uncle Billies” (no- boy) Al Beauty' (no boy) Tower Captain (no boy) $1.200; claiming: FIFTH RACE—NIGHT GLOW, DAILY DELIVERY, KAN- SAS CITY. NIGHT GLOW copped 5 of 12 1941 starts and finished close up on most of her other attempts. She could distance this high- class opposition. DAILY DE- LIVERY won hi.s last at this Other Selections Consensus at Hialeah (Fast). | By the Associated Press. 1—My Zaca, All Good, Tower Cap- | tain. 2—Melody Tone, Star of Padula, Dudie. $—Bright Gray, Tedder, Charming | Herod. 4—By Conscript, Gloucester, Lofts- man. | 5—Cadmium, Shadows Pass. 6—Market Wise, Dispose, Doublrab. 7—Johnnie J., Aboyne, Tragic End- Daily Delivery, ing. 8—Migal Tay, Star. Best bet—Market Wise. Hisleah (Fast). y the Louisville Times. 1—My Zaca, All Goods, Bulrushes. Top Staff, Illinois 3—Tedder, Charming Herod, Battle Won. 4—By Conscript, Refulgent, tomaton. Au- | 5—Shadow's Pass, Cadmium, Hard Blast. | 6—Market Wise, Dispose, Doublrab. | 7—Aboyne. Bucking, Johnnie J. 8—Migal Fay, Cansting, Priority. Best bet—Market Wise. Fair Grounds (Fast). | By the Louisville Times 1—First Family, Lady Ballet, Dinner Jacket. 2—Baf Cee, Walter L., Draw Out. 3—Youroff, Valdina Tout, Burma. 4—Countmein. Louisville II, Val- dina Alpha b 6—Magic Power, Sam G. T—Holl Image, Thos, Fencing. 8—Burston Manor, Air Hostess, Settler. Best bet—Franks Boy. Rucmg Results Hialeah Park } B: the Asrociated Press. FIRST RACE—Purse. maidens: 2-year-olds: 3_f Eiecurical (Dey) 7 | o y"éi "75"5"7'1'1 ) o ipber ‘Cits (Eadarella AlSe rancsLigiid_ Lunch. Moray. Spoilt Girl: Eakleston. Linden Siar. Chance Crost: Qrer Ioe, What Not. {Tower Miss. { Uh, and { Budgeteer. SECOND RACE—Purse. $1.200: claim- ml 4-year-olds and upward: «1 furiongs. Comm'ncem't (Meloche) 37.20 15.00 10.8 Tyrone (Gonzalez) 0 510 Weisenheimer (Haskell) #50 ime. Also ran—Key Man. Down Six. Barnel urlongs 70 5 Armor, Bearer ' Buckle U Unguote. Play. Ton wfio'" and Roman Hero. Balty uble paid $321.10.) THIRD RAC!—Pnru $1.200: _speci weights: maidens, 3-year-oids and up- / furlongs, Pb' l.hrnelb $.30 380 360 ag0 s 280 an Dark Lead (Stout | &1 Discant Tsle (ndn 280 Time. 1: Also ‘ran—False Play. Michigan Gold. Milltary Brush. Yarn Soinner, Qermanicus. Pemmican, Gay Fad and Yard TEDead heat Tor second "position. POURTH RACE—Purse. $1.400: claim- {os: 4-yesr-olds and up: 1y miles (8trickler) %90 220 One Jest (McCombs) 250 | Topse (Roberison) B Also nn’-—nu House, Greedan. Fair Grounds BY the Associated Press. $600; 7.20 claiming: 3.80 5.40 2.20 Trade West. Mae and Good Tip. Purse. $600: claiming: 1 mile and 70 7.00 3.80 340 00 CE— pared (Guerin) Kitene lllnll:u (Clark) l'll 46 2. o rab . Linnie Kate. Arisona Loty natuny Rllocsis, Miss Merit. (Daliy Doubie Faid $21- 40,5 New York Bank Stocks NEW —Natibnal Asso- ciatlon Secutities "Deaters 10 Am NTS (SF) (2.40) llnl n[ l(ln ( 8 ot N Y (04 740 0 | 230 | 320 Meneither (no boy) xFoe_o Woe lnn’bo’r My Zca " (Sames) | Sount Traumer " (Caftarelia) Bulrushes (Gilbe! | Halt Grang AN Good (no boy) - Reward (Peiers) boy) o FY e SECOND RACE—Purse. $1.200 “" 4-year-olds Anfl qulrd 7 Sones furlongs 11 | XBufflenead "no. bov) Coffee l‘ln lGIlhrrlr xMelody Tone (Hust IPanther Creex l(‘uu'n Moonlite Bobby (Keiper) Star of Padtla ICMBQYU | Busy Man (Dupps) | Dudie " ino boy) Uncle Walter (¢ y gk‘n‘lrQSABodlto - A cty " Step (Arcaro) | XNight Lady (Seaman) __ | Gay American ‘(o “boy) THIRD MCFP\JYM £1.200: éhy.elr:oldxflnnd upward: 1% Tming Herod ¢ Tedder Roberssony 0%~ Bright Gray (May) Battle Won (James)_ Fancy Free (no boy) TH RACE—Purse Eleht (no bos) ™ ny “Conseriot (Robertson) Automaton '(May) Laftaman o bo7) 0 Saimios; $1.200: allow- | Berths R e araded ATE dicap class C: a-year-oids and ubward: | bandica \ Har < (no boy! | Night Glow (no boyb) SIXTH | handicap elflcf_ e O e -ve 5 B et year-olds and upward Bis Ben (Westrope) Dispose (no “boy acatine (no boy) birab_(Haskell) Rinkle 150 S0y P graced s D Saions, 3-7eAT-Olds and up- Kbovne” Tatesray Alaking (no boy) Jchnnle J. (no boy) Roval Ruby 1 (Wall) Tragic Ending (no boy) _ Tea Banter (no boy) Bucking (no boy) _ "hmxl (Robertson) EIGHTH RACE—Purse. $1. ing. 4-year-old; xUncle Eric_ (ho" poyy” 0 xEleventh Hour (Garz: Migal Fay (no_ boy) .,) xCansting (no boy) = IGetaway Jack (Strickler) ar; D Bllfl (Brunelle) | XTiinots ‘Star (Menrien 5 | Butiermilk (Hust) o arming die ( | XPriority (no 'smmn = | Caten-ade-net S1,200: claiming; | Kay's Pride (Pollard) _ .~ ;Anbrenu:e sllowance claimed; Fair Grounds BY the Allotlllzd Pnu elaiming: 108 Quieh g"fi' =i o - lon Satveriiet - 0 xDinner Jacket 106 My l xStar of Dondra 103 T 3 Gray Vi xDeendene 103 Distnherit . 4 ,SECO];’GD RAde ear-olds an Tex Kiss ke Wild Pigeon xEver Hopeful Skean Dhu Modulator Purse, 3600: clatmin, 8 _turlong: o i 101 Raq 108 111 Walter L. 106 Aulee = 103 Dragon Lady _ " 108 Sunny John . THIRD RACE—Pu: weights: maidens: 3- yfd:’r-olgnno% tur} Transour XHannicale Loretta Rice xBurma ion. xBarbara A, Thin Bkin ' " Max Greenock ed Valdina Tout - xBootsey Byrd BBB=RRBBR. FOURTH RACE—Purse ances 3-vear-oids. 5 turlons; s 0% xBaruna XLouisvilie 11" 108 xPraiseworthy 110 Valdina Alpha " 113 Great Gecasion” 113 ECountmein ' " 108 xPaircals o8 Sichry "Gresnock 113 *anary narieyow ~ xBea Tack ____ 108 FIFTH RACE—Purse, 100: 3 ;yehlll'-oldl and upward: %atu .uo'.n:" Esper x8ir Kid - 106 xdeck ‘rvmx 2108 xKentown 106 Frank's Boy._ . 120 SIXTH RACE—Purse. $600: 3-year-olds: 1 mile -n‘a‘ 70 yards. allow- claiming: a Robert xumun Luuer'l Choice. Magic Power xLight Banset » George B. lon x Tool. lu sHe's n______ ucc-mey entry. rae. 3600: VENTH claime Inl 4- yelr—oldx lnd up l‘/\ miles. ) o Thos 5 100 xldie Lad Yondell E. 12 5 105 xPennsburg 100 EIGHTH RACE_Purse. $600; elaiming: 4-year-oids and up: 6 furiongs. fir Hostess Tis” Roamine Anm, 109 xBursion Manor ;n Ster ™ mzfik" 0y 22 mn? & Ilhl Drw X ] nmwa PePatiowance eimed )