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PEOPLE WHO LABOR HAVET 700 HARD This Is Opinion Expressed by Williamstown Speaker Willlamstown, Mass, July 30 UP —A revolt by the industrial pdpu- latlon against high food costs was pictured before the Institute of Politics today as a possibility in the | United States within the next 40 years. Henry A. Walalce, son of the former secretary of agriculture, n an address on the agricultural sltuation, decried “the grave injus- | tice that has been done to agricul- | ture during the past six years | He predicted a food shortage | within 40 years with resultant dis- | turbances that will cause industrial | centers “a thousand times as much worry as the present farm situa- tion” and warned that the indus- trial population might precipitate trouble when an imminently inade- quate food supply compels them to pay an undue proportion of thetr wages for food, Mr. Wallace supplemented these | assentions with a discussion of the ideal balance between urban and rural population, the ultimate type of organization which agriculture must adopt, and overproduction, which,'In the face of lowered Eu-| ropean purchasing power, has cur- | | i | tailed the farmers' profits and lev- fed seriously on his patriotism. National safety demands that at| least one-fourth of our population | be farmers, he sald, forelgn food | markets notwithstanding. | “The home farmer is the basls of | sound national policy even though | the seaboard cities seem to like the | idea of exporting manufactured | goods and importing foods.” Mr. Wallace decrled corporation | ranks of the femi farming from a standpoint of hu- | movies who h man values. “I question if it 1s| _sound policy for the United States to carry the industrialization of ag- fleulture beyond the family sized | farm,” he said. “den who work on | is Sally Rand, to the low iDempsey) and to the ave lined up W Jth the “let-it-grow: | The question of keeping it cut 01‘ letting it grow is dividing the three ladies of the | " At the top | r left is Estelle Taylor (Mrs. Jack tht is Dorothy Dwan. look to you? How does it thelr own crops, even though they be only tenants, have a strikingly different attitude than union labor producing goods for someone else.” “Wonder if the men who work elght hours a dav in a factory, and get their greatest pleasure outside working hours, are as complete and worthwhile human citizens as farm- ers working twelve hours a day at half the wages." He questioned the govergment re- clamation projects and encourage- ment of increased food production when the farmers are already suf- fering from a surplus of wWheai, and cotton, together with a | r reversal In credit balances between this c¢ountry and Europe. Contrasting agriculture with other WRITER CENSURED Jeoted towCriticism July |30 (P — The Rev. Fiantelli, a comparatively new ber of t‘\ staff mano, official ory who wrote an ag about | 20 fllms in popula- tion receive ahout one-tenth of the | national income. The agricultural | industry after g for labor about €0 per cent ahove pre-wer | rates has a return on capital inv ment (which incidentally has been shrunk by about twenty billion since 1920) of 3 or 4 per cent ,whereas corporate industry, after paving its lahor more than twice the pre-war wages has a return on its capital in- vestment (which has heen ncreased | by more than 20 billion since the | war) ¢ around twelve per cent, as calculated. This would scem to in- dicate beyond doubt that for the time heing, city industries are | caterlng more satisfactorily than | the farmers to satisfyng human | needs.” FORD OBSERVING - b4TH BIRTHDAY (Continued From First Page) Rome, 1 he “Farmers today compri: The Vatican, the Assoc is informed, while ly the Rev. Panitellis crit of the frivolousness of American film produc , docs not gree 1 his rem st American civilization and its delete- rious influence on Europe. On the contrary, it is stated, finds much wh beneficial in The O "dmrmh by which \m to amuse, | article, stating that contested “dollar super made it think it posse 1tual supe: phases of $7,100 PAID FOR COW | All-American Daughter of ‘Walker | | that General Motors will counter with a lighter car than any it now produces as soon as Ford an- nounces his plans. Ford has designed and tested his new car personally, with the assis-| tance, of course, of experts in every | branch of automotive engineering. | He has surrounded the planse with|May Walker Inka Segis, the greatest possible secrecy but hufcan daughter of the Walker Ollie driven the car about 400 miles| homestead champion butter pro- around -the private roads at his|ducing cow of the Dearborn plant, it was!reported. | brought $7,100 when it For weeks Ford's factories have |to A. C. Harden, of Toronto, Ont., been idle and the financial and mo- a disposal of the tor world have been eager to learn | Holstein company. about the new car. So reports anmn‘ A son of the hutter it have leakeg out and the prepond- | champion, Sir Bea Ormshy erance of these idicated today that|year old bull, was sold to M S. Kel. | the new car will be perhaps $50 |logg of Merhy, Conr cheaper than the present Ford. |ter of May Walker There will be more room inside the to the Degroit ¢ car and the motor will be sturdier, | Mount Clemens, Mich., it was indicateds The cylinder block, | The butter ch: for instance, was reported to weigh [sold to F. 16 pounds more than the block in | Tribune publi the present car. | Ford’s persistent dentals that he | Davien Policeman m has poined, a$ he put it, “the sex- Raid on M tet,” indicated there was no truth | to the reports that it will be a 8IX-| Darien. Conn., July 30 (P—Pa- | trolman George Evans of the police cylinder car instead of a four. The | simple operation features of the | force, in civilian clothes, drifted present car, it was said, will be Te- | casually into the rear tained. ot Baward 1. Some alterations have been made |1ast night and hought a gallon in his factories and as these have guid which looked and sm Dbeen in progress for some time It hard cider. He got a warran was believed the plants were almost | tha police went down to the in readiness for Ford's final master ;14 it was closed. DBut thev got in stroke. and selzed 400 gallons of wine and Ford’s birthday found him de-!ciqer and today arrested Smith. and voting more time to his great motor | Gaorgs White, and cach is held In corporation than last year, ‘When|ginnn cor a hearing on dances and relics took part of his attention. Since the experiments started on his new car, he has been a visitor almost daily to the mag- nificent Dearborn laboratory —and | has taken a keen interest in the ac- tual work on the test models. Whistling enatches of songs, he | has walked, sometimes alone and * sometimes with his son, Edsel, ' among the test machine, observing closely every.operation of the skilled mechanics. Ollie Homestead Champion is Sold in Minnesota. Austin, Minnesota, July was sold | of a W York, July 30 (UF)-— faced a warm week-end weather bureau reported toc In New York the low ture today was 63, nt 4 m. Six degrees same hours vesterday, The than the by 9 a. m., up, with the mercury at 73 compar- ed with 76 yesterday. The weather burcau held out no hope for Tain. Two persons died from heat in New York yesterday when the tem- perature rose to 87. The first brush ‘used by Benjamin West, tamons American painter, was made of hairs pulled from the tail of the family cat. half the difference had bheen made< FOR MOVIE ATTACK { Vatican Paper Contribuor Sub- the | liguor | |al bea SCIENTIFIC WONDER Latest Discovery of Scicntists Prac- tically Makes it Possible to Bend | | Ray of Light Around Corner. July 30 P— as come to for facts. Company st and Survey have developed a ch a telescope, at night d dircetly 2 signal miles away without the Schencctady, N. Y., Jeience | | fused the property of n and app , the ends of | hich are bent at right angles and ced parrcliel with the barrel of the tolescope? ith the barrel of the teiescope, with ¢ int signal, | erver dr: = beacon into ed fic I| nl‘ N!“ te 's many of the mea by are taken um DINT'S BROTHER DIES Ohio, July jand his Wichita’s Choice s in New York. | | | | | | 30 P— | All-Ameri- | United' States, | at | Minnesota | | prodvscmgi n's Home | of the home | Smith, about midnight | Miss Mildred Orr, young society girl, will represent Wichita in tie nation- ty pageant at Atlantic City in September. Miss Orr won the honors in a contest in which 37 girls were entered. wo points of light the Geodetic | at 30 (® — ldangerous one although doctors to- brother of the late | day were unable to locate the bullet. LEVINE, CARIS], KINKADE ALL LEAVE FOR LONDON Take Off From Paris in Special Im- perial Airways Plane This Morning Paris, July 30 (M—Charles A. Le- Kuto Accident at Elm and Stan-! 1ey Strwts BaSIs 0[ Actmu {vmc, owner of the transatlantic = plane Columbia, accompanied by | John Carisi, the Bellanca plane ex- of the defendant, Vity Wightwood, Pert, and “Doc” Kinkade, the ' who was driving 4n automobile own | Wright motor expert, today left for ed by Mrs. A. Cocchillo, Dr. William | Roydon, England, in a special im- Keith, a dentist, has brought suit | Perial airways plane. for $2,000 and has named both Mrs, | Maurice Drouhin, the French avi- Cocchillo and "Mr. Wightwood as de- | ator engaged by Levine to pilot the | fendants. | Columbia on a return flight to the According to the plaintiff’s claim, | United States, did not appear at the he was driving northerly on Elm | Le Bourget fiying fleld today and in- street when at the intersection of | auirers were unable to learn why | | Elm and Stanley street, Wightwood, | the plane remained in her hangar. who was driving south on Stanley Upon reaehing Croydon, Levine | street, hit his automobile and dam- | Planned to take another machine | aged 1t considerably.. According to | to Nottingham for the king's cup | | the plaintiff he lest the use of the | races, returning to Paris Monday or | car for several days and he was | Tuesday. | obliged to spend money for repairs. (Levine's desire to.take | Attorney Thomas J. Cabelus | lumbia to Nottingham for represents tha plaintiff and Deputy | Faces, is reported to have resulted | | Sheriff Matthew Papciak made serv- |in a difference of opinion between | [ vice. him and Drouhin, tho latter being| | Willlam H. Norton was made de- | averse to exhibition flights at this | !fendant in a suit for $75 brought |time when the Columbia is being by Louis Horwitz through Cabelus | 6roomed for a transatlantic flight. & Roche. Constable Frank Clynes | The Columbia was scheduled to served the papers, leave for Nottingham yesterday, but Wociech Sajdak of New Britain | failled to take off for the trip, {was named defendant in a suit|Drouhin contenting himself with a |brought by John Bayda for $275 |Series of speed tests.) through Attorney Lawsence J. Golon, LEGION MEETING | Deputy Sherift M. Papciak made the | Aeronautical DENTIST PLAINTIFF INSUIT FOR §2,500 Claiming negligence on the part the Co- the cup service. Henry Yoaps of New Britain has | been susd by Rackliffe Brothers Co., |Inc., for $40 through Attorney Ed- ward A. Mag. Constable Clynes served the papers. Salvatore Satalino has been sued by Anna Battaglia of New Britain |for $100. Attorney Thomas J. Ca-| belus of Cabelus & Roche is th plaintiff’s attorney and Constabl Clynes served the writ. The Beneficial Loan Co. has sued | | Edward Anderson of this city for 1 $130 through Cabelus & Roche. Con- stable Clynes setved the papers. Steven Mierzejewski has brought | suit for $130 through Attorney B. J. Monkiewitz against Anthony Borysicwicz. Committees Are to Gather in Farmington Next| Thursday Evening. Hartford, July 30—Chairman C. 1. Wollenberg of the aeronautical ommittee of the department of | Connecticut American Legion, has | called an important meeting for that body for Thursday at 8 p. m., in the American Legion room, town hall, Farmington, and urges commanders of the posts to have present the chairman of thelr aeronuatics com- | mittee as suitable resolutions and | proposals are to be drawn for pres- entation at the state convention. All districts in the state will be repre- sented. L. Cleveland Fuessenich, of New Miltord will have a free ride by| aeroplane to New York and return as his prize for the best article on “How to Stimulate the Use of Air Mail.” This will be glven by the Colonial Air Transport company, which oper- | ates daily passengers and mail ser- vice between New York and Boston | by way of Hartford. City Items The police were notified today of {the return of the operator's license of Albert Sheverett of East Robbins avenue, —_— SHOOTING IN ANSONIA One Ansonia Man in Hospital With Slight Wound and Another is Un- SLOGP CAPSIZES | der Arrest. 28 Footer Ketty, Owned By Grfl‘w‘ Ansonfa, July 30.—As the after- math of a shooting affray which took place at midnight last night in | the hallway of a building at No. |1 Maple strect, Peter Nick of no cer- in address s at Griffin hospital | in the thigh and his assailant of 16 | wich Man, Overturns Off Bren- ton’s Reef—Two Escape. Newport, R. I, July 30 (®—The 28 foot sloop, Ketty, owned by R. G. Pack, of Greenwich, Conn., cap- sized and foundered in a sudden | Maple street is being held under 'squall oft Brenton's reef lightship | bonds of $500 on the charges of |late yesterday. Pack and V. B. Phil- |assault with a deadly weapon and |lips of Providence narrowly escaped. assault with infent to kill. The case | They rowed to shorethrough heavy | {came up this morning in the city |seas in the sloop’s dingy. | court and was continued until Aug-| The Ketty was caught with un {shortened sail when the storm brok 4 to have start- suddenly and went down in deep ed in a tea house during a card|water half a mile from shore near zame, the men being ordered from |the mouth of Narragansett Bay. the place by the proprictor, They | PASSING automobilists took Pack and | engaged in a seuffle in the hallway |Phillips to Price's Neck Coast Guard with the result that a gun figured in | | station, where, after having their the fight and Nick was shot. Nich. |Clothes dried, they were brought here. The sloop was on her way olas then threw the weapon over | the bridgs ' into the Naugatuelk |l° (hiS BOrt from New London, Conn. river, it being recovered by police MIL]TARY NOT‘CES this morning. Office Today with a bullet Forein Nichol The trouble is s Nick's wound is said not to be a | Adjutant General's b Gives Out List of Promotions and Fuller’s Son Undergoes S it An Operation Today Boston, Ju 30 (UP)—Alvan T. Fuller, Jr., 12-year-old son of Gov- ernor Fuller, underwent a success- | ful operation for appendicitis at the ! Thi)lips house of the Massachusetts General hospital today. Afterward the hospital issued the | tollowing bulletin: Changes. Hartford, July 30 (P — Captain Bernard H. Allen, D. C. hospital company No. 152, 115th medical re- giment, has resigned, the adjutant general's office announced, and he is relieved of duty. Captain Earl W. Fleet and Ser- geant Anthony E. Mazotas, of the | “Farly, mild, acute appendicitis.|43rd division, A. §., are detailed for | Appendix removed.” |three days’ duty with the Maine Na- Hospital authorities reported thzt {tional Guard, Aug. 1-3. the lad was resting comfortably ani| Promotions announced: was {n no dan Captain Joseph Lockwood, Q. M. = C., to be major; Captain George R. ) | A feared BARTLETT TEAM WINS The Bartlett playground indoor baseball team ran string of vic- tories to three Thursday afternoon 1— DIVORCED, RE-WED, MINISTER OUSTED Episcopal Church Drops Rev. H. A. Lynch From Clergy New York, July 30 ¢P—Because he married contrary to the canons | of his chnrch, the Rev. thur Lynch today stood deposed from the ministry of the Episcopal church. A statement by Bishop William T. Manning in the Churchman, a demoninational publication, says the action was taken owing to the R Mr. Lynch “having declared to n in writing his renunciation of t! ministry and having asked to deposed solely because of his mar- riage contrary to the canons of the church.” The Rev. second time virced from information Mr. Lynch married a after he had been di- his first wife. Detatled on the case could not be obtained today as the Rev. Mr. ch was out of the city and Bishop Manning is in Europe. During the 14 years the Rev. Lnch served in the minist assoclated with the late Rev. Mr. Ascenslon and the Rev. William Nor- man Guthrie of St. Mark's in-the- Bouwerie, both of whom have been at odds at varfous times with the ruling powers of the local Episcopal | diocese. The Rev. Mr. Lynch resigned as assistant to Dr. Guthrie in this year, a few days prior to his | marriage. FORMER GRID STAR JAILED Frank Rydzewski, Jr., All-American Football Man From Notre Damie, Guilty on Liquor Charges. Chicago, July 30 Rydzewgki, Jr., former All-Ameri- can, footbail star cf Notre Dame, was fined' $500 and sentenced to €ix months iriprisonment for possession and transportation of liquor. He was one of the first three of 74 de- tendants in an alleged liquor trust conspiracy to go to trial. The former football player and Bert Baker, former deputy sheriff, were found guilty. A third defend ant was discharged. Rydzewski moved for a new trial. New Electric Power Plan Now Reported Ottawa, Ont., plan—the third to be proposed—for | developing electric power in the in- ternational rapids section of the St. Lawrence river, was contained in a letter from the joint board of en- | Bineers received by the national ad- \xrory committee today. The proposal for a teo-stage de- ! velopment, the upper dam of which would be located at Crysler island, below Morrisburg. Construction of this dam would cost about $4,000,000 more than the Ogden island plan which was included in plans previ- ously submitted. The latest plan is said to promise greater financial re- | turns. Previously, the Canadian and American sections of the joint board ! had failed to agree on the scheme of development, the Americans recom- mending a single stage project while the Canadian engineers favored a dbuble stage development with the upper dam and power house located at Ogden fsland above. | Will Rogers Becomes “Mayor Emeritus” Now Beverly Hills, Cal., July 30 (P— Will Rogers is to lose his job as mayor of Beverly Hills A committee today informed the cowboy humorist that a new state law will oust him as mayor. “I bet it's a fra -up,” said Will. Nope,” reported the committee. “Beverly Hill becomes a city of the sixth class and Sil Spaulding, the president, of the board of trustees, automatipgally becomes mayor.” “Well,” roared the wise-cracking mayor, “what does that make me?” ‘That makes you—" the comm tee went into a hurried conference. Mayor emeritus," they declared in unison. Chilean Official Rules Out Manana Santlago, Cuba, July 30 (P — Chile's foreigr minister, Conrado Rios Gallardo, will tolerate no spirit of “Manana” in the functioning of his dspartment. Senor Gallard to his staff hereafter use the word “manara” will be forbid- den in all dealings connected with the ministry, and must be substitut- ted by the werd “hoy,” meaning to- ay The minister points out that fre- quent employment of the word “manana’ in Latin American coun- tries has led to ridicule in the United States and England, where it is taken as a symbol of Latin American indolence, has given orders he was | Percy | Stickney Grant at the church of the | (UP)—Frank | July 29 GP—A new | BIG PROBE ORDERED | Federal Trade Commission, Taking Up Du Pont Case, Faces One of Most Extensive Investigations. YACHT BOSTONIAN LEADING FIELD Washington, Juty 30—one ot tne| BOSEOD MaD's Craft Two Points | most extensive investigations In the history of the federal trade com- mission is augmented by its decision | to inquire into the relationships be- Abead of Others il“’eén the E. I. Du Pont De Nemours company, the General Motors cor-| | corporation. The chief economist of the commission will conduct the in- | quiry under its order issued yester- !day and his chief objective will be to study whether the relationships tend to bring a community of inter- est between the three corporations and its economic consequences. Such an alleged community of = interest was described as “a matter of public concern.” The commission’s order cited pub- lished financial reports said to show Du Pont company purchased investments in the stock of| 1e other two concerns while it also sald press reports asserted the Du| Pont concern made the Steel stock purchases with the expecctation of having a number of directors in| that organization as it now has in General Motors, | CLOSER RELATIONS S. Financial In- Australian and T. terests Eikely to be More Closely Identified. May, | Sydney, Australia, July 30 (L'F)—| |Closer financial relations between | | Australia and the United States were | likely in the near future, it appeared | tod: Several happenings have indicated | such a trend. H. T. Armitage, deputy | governor of the Commonwealth bank, now is en routs to New York to investigate the practicability of | the establishment of a branch bank | there or the appointment of an here expected Armitage | |to decide upon establishme: | | branch bank In view of the probable borrowing activities of the Australian government in the United States. Whatever Armitage recommends is certain to be approved by the direc- tors. James Collins, financlal adviser to the commonwealth with headquart- ers in London, also fs en route to New York. Collins will seek to ne- gotlate a $50,000,000 loan following | failure in London, NORWALK SHOOTING Virginius Odom, Negro, Not Ex- pected to Live and Woman Is Held as Assailant. Norwelk, Conn., July 30 (B — Virgintus Odom, negro waiter, was shot early today, and the woman, | Ruth Rile; 30, in whose house he lived, is under arrest charged with using the 32-caliber gun with which !ths man was wounded. The police say there was a drink- | ing bout in the Riley woman's home at 20 Day street, during the night, and others were indulgents in liquids including Tomasina Fernandez, a Portuguese; Lena Taylor and Roscoe | Mauley, negroes, who are under ar- rest. Several men got out of win- {dows and escaped. | Odom was shot in the back and the bullet is over the heart. He is at Norwalk hospital and is not ex- pected to live. Odom and the Riley | woman are said by the police o | |have lived in marriage conditions | without having gone through a ce mony, and that the woman had be- come jealous of the man. 'Well Educated Man Is Suicide From Vessel Bridgeport, Conn., July 30 (P— The suicide of Thomas Twomble: 25, apparently well educated, while the lighter “Charles H. M. Shaw"” of Philadelphia was about 30 miles be- low Asbury Park, N. J., became known when the lighter docked here yesterday. When the ery “man overboard was raised Tuesday afternoon, Cap- tain Lambert J. Craft said, a life line was thrown to Twombley, but he ignored it and drowned before boat could be launched. Capt. Craft| said Twombley had been foiled three days before in an effort at suicide. Twombley had told other mem-| bers of the crew that he was from Montreal and was working on the | | boat to “toughen up.” The only clue | to relatives revealed by his locker was a letter postmarked and d'\lml from Halifax, N. S., signed Rose.” Atlanta, Ga., July 30 (P —Several firemen, atop a vacanf building fighting a fire at the W. L. Fain| Grain company here today were be- | lieved to have been hit by a falling | wall which crushed the building on | which they were standing. Hescurers | searching the ruins were hampered | by the blaze. | | READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADSi {the fi !scored 18 points | Gosport, { money on | spin | about | Polica telephoned ! open | farm Gosport, Eng., model July 30 (P—The yacht Bostonian II, owned Harold Ar- |poration and the United States Steel | by John Black, commodore of the Boston Model Yacht club, led the field by two points at the end of t two rounds of the interna- tional regatta for model yachts on Gosport lake this morning scoring a total of 20 points. The competition is for a stlver c\lp presented by the London Mag- €, yachting monthly. The British entrant, Gertrude, the German en- t, Berlin, scored eight, and tne French boat, Marianne, two. Sweden scratched at the last moment. There are 12 rounds to bs safled. The contest will Jast three days. All the entrants are models of six meter boats built to the scale of two inches to the foot. Mr. Black this morning was en- thusiastic about the chances of his | present boat which he thinks much | better than his last year modes. however, is putting its the Gertrude, which Is built and owned locally INDIANA FARMER USES HIS PLANE {Runs Errands and Traces Thelts in It Kokomo, Ind., July 30. (#—When Ciyde Shockley needs a bolt for his binder or a new set of blades for the hay mower, he rolls his plane out of its hangar behind the barn, and takes off from the south pas. ture for Indianapolis. WWhen Mrs. Shockley and the two little Shockleys want to go for a at twilight or on Sunday afternoon, their farmer father loads them into the front seat of * p, jumps into the pilot seat and away they go. The whole family is enthusiastic flying, and Shockley thinks® that “some day every farmer will find an airplane as muchk of a farm necessity as a tractor or a binder.” Shockley has been made Ko- komo's only air policeman. His main duty is to watch for stolen cars abandoned along country roads, but he has figured often in king arrests. Once bandits held up a grocery store in daylight and escaped. to Shockley a description of the car in which they fled. He took the air and soon had srotted them speeding atong the highway. He flew dar- ingly low and opened fire on their machine. They abandoned it, sought safety on foot, and were soon rounded up and arrested by police, who saw Shockley's plane ng low and followed it. When Lindbergh came home from Parils, Shockley packed a passenger in the front seat and salled away to Washington to see the ceremonies, buffeting a high windstorm over the Alleghanies to arrive on time. When 8t. Louis welcomed the trans-Atlantic flyer, Shockley was there in his plane, too. On his farm Shockley has estab- lished an airport where he keeps ouse for passing plane — th are numerous, for his ies at the juncture of sev- eral routes prescribed by the de- and | partments of war and commerce. Mrs. Ruth Shockley neither fears the air herself nor worries while her husband flies without, her. Their son =2nd daughter—John, §, and Mary Allen, 3, have travelled thousands of miles by plane. iSanta Claus to Visit Flood Stricken Areas Little Rock, Ark. July 30 (P— Santa Claus is coming to Arkansas this year despite the flood and be- cause of that disaster which has rkened the lives of hundreds of children, he will make an extra trip, |coming in August as well as Christ- The Chicago chapter of the Red Cross has notified the state rehabill- tation authorities that two shipments to McGehee and one to Marked e, will arrive during the month f August bearing toys for about 200 fomilies. EXPLOSIO KILLS MAYN Hankow, China, July 30 UP—Be= tween 100 and 200 nationalist sol- diers were killed today in the ex- plosion of an ammunition depot placed by the nationalist military authorities in St. Joseph's school at | Wuchang, owned by the American Church mission. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Plan Airport on Post Office Roof I Sturges, Woodbury, J. A. G., depart- New Haven Man Weds |8 ve major: First Licut. Ray- New York Girl in Maine jmond T. Gatcs, Q. M. section, to be York Harbor, Me., July 30 (UP) |major finance division staff of 43rd _Miss Eleanor McCormick Stone, |division: First Lieut. Ashley J. Grif- Jdaughter of Mrs. Herbert Stone of |fin, ordnance department to be cap- New York, was to be married here |taini John A. MacDonald of Put- teday to Dr. Willlam James Toumey | ham, to be major of engineer corps. of New Haven, Conn., son of a Yale oo e professor. TooFew e m s e or| SIGNS WITH YANKEES Colgate college will officiate and the bride will be given away by her | 5 grandfather, Chiarles G. MeCormick | Washington Sandlot Player, Young | giQtaxo) Italian Athlete, Will Report Next Dutch Woman’s Tennis e T v ¢ e Washington, July 30 (P—When v(.ha.mplon A““es Here| ;"5 e ohis & Washington sand lot New York, July 30 (UP) — Kea | pitcper, last night signed and mailed Douman, Dutch women's temnis| contract to report to the New York champion, has arrived here for a|yaiees next fall, he became the os of tournaments, including the |40 o tne clty's “Little” Italy sec- cabright Chflm.p‘onshlp next weck ‘Hen. 4 the women's natlonal Aug. 22.| “yig friends and admirers jammed | d which American stars she |y ¢y pig little fruit store, while | most, she said: “All Freschi signed the contract with a | Miss Bouman praised tho | great flourish and then a crowd of | formance of Helen Wills at Wim.- ! mcn, women and children followed don | him ‘as he walked to a nearby mail T T | box to dispatch it to New York, pringfield Y. M. C. A. | Treschi is 19 -ears old and has { pitched for semi-pro teams in this College Courses Change | iy, Springfield, Mass, July 30 —A radical departu: by which an equal number of women students will- be permitted to take courses at the next session of the Springfield Y. M. C. A. llege is announced by Colonel B. A. |by defeating the Paradise .Park P'ranklin. Courses in pedagogue, re- [team, 12-9. Bartlett has not yet liglous education and physical educa- | been defeated. Was and Potkay tion, including coaching in the major | did the heavy hitting for the win- sports, soclal recreation, managing |ners, while Schmarr played well for club affairs and curriculum bullding | Paradise Park. - The score by in- will be avalilable to the women stud- ' nings: ents. | Paradise Pk.1 31000 |Bartlett ....0 31024 l Batterles—Schmarr and Golas and Potkay. 02 02 X—!Z Kurnicki; READ WERALD CLASSIFTED ADS ADS. FOR YOUR WANTS —Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Ine. An airmail flying field on the roof is one of the. features of the new post office bmldn‘xg‘gm posed for Chicago, as shown by the architect’s drawing above. The prediction is'mad the time the building is completed—within six or seven years—this will not only be a pw but a nec essa.rpd;unct.