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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1929 at the expense (both of long and short | the Zeppelin with his navigator: ‘A\It“(lcdli Lower California, bord hil H Hacarmel, near Haifa, were arrested | of the British taxpayer.” course flying. I‘og of Gl‘af Zeppelin | were carefully studying meteoroloy! |town, at 3:51 a. m. today Mexicali| Its altitude was estimated at 5,000 fect and at Aztec less than 12 mile way, the ship had dropped to 1,500 feet. passed over| No indication had come from the at 4.08|Zeppelin itself as to whether it was | having difficulty. As day broke th | skies had cleared and favorable fy- conditions were indicated in re | \\'hlch attacked the suburb of Hadar | sham Jewish ‘nation’ distance By the Associated Press. All times are Eastern Standard Time Wednesday, August 7 110:39 p. m.-tLeft Lakehurst, for Friedrichshafen.. Saturday, August 10 a. m.—Landed at Friedrichs- hafen, completing trip of 4,200 miles in 55 hours 24 minutes. Wednesday, August 14 m.—Left Friedrichshaten N. X, (Continued From First Page) Changes Course curred spasmodically in the streets. Travelers from Amman reported | warlike Arab demonstrations and | sudden outbursts in Transjordania, part of the Bri mandated terri- tory east of the River Jordan and Dead S Consul Fired On The Egyptian Consul Abdin Buy and his secretary and assistant were d stoned while 27 Pichacho, Ariz, Aug. 27 (#—Fol- lowing the rails of the Southern Pacific ' commission from Maricopa. approximately 40 miles northwest cf | here, the Graf Zeppelin passed over | here at 9:40 a. m., M. S. T., today. | The distance was covered in 45 min- utes. ity here of medi- food Prices for latter have reached almost amine level. The Jerusalem Jew ih communal board ha tarted a to maintain the refug who come » from all Palestine b st growin, n wall notor s re supplies ar is a but guarded escaperd n igyptian consulate. grave ad All mcting tion which scuss t develoy has fu he disturbances a result of f controversy an conflict r the wa ft of the old left s temple, used by the ous obse 1ces Mhe sale hHERL Arabs maintained the observ- terranean port where five by % e T i 4 495 an consti an obstruction to it S o =) s killed and 20 injured News in an Arab attack the settlement of Bethalpa, on the Esraclon Plain, | a dispateh from Haifa said yester- | da | In the fighting at Hebron, $0 Jews were ted killed and 40 wound- atrol t list died from during fightin Communications Cut unications b ritish . i fa Moslem leade appeal to the der, Pantano, Ariz, Aug. 27 (P—The 1| Graf Zeppelin swept over this vil- lage at 11:03 a. m. M. S. T., making ove n or- we published Arabs to preserve omor us WA Jews in reli portant Me Sunday | course across the United States. this onerous and uncomfortable po- | Tecolete, Lower California, Miami-Miami Beach-Cleveland air| thirty-six. ailroad line and was expected ties were reported. The Jewish | Consuls Urge Action yesterday 3 | second across Russia and Siberia to|4:43 a. m. (P. §. T.) today. Ap-|over here at §:55 a m. (M & T) tles wara reported from Mozza but|their countries agalnst the rioting|tral Afrport, Camden, N, J. today a. m—Landed at Kasumigaura ight. ; Los Angeles. over the route th Greece, Lithuania, Poland Rouman- away took the air at 9 a. m. (E. D. tae Graf Zeppelin are Lady Gracs ‘ not considered to be of sufficient More trcops were landed by a|liams Greenville S. J. I?nnrr\ oo E Sk | quim Rickard. 78 hours 58 minute A itralian s At that time | Nev weather wais 8 | Philadelphia, with Frank Cartright | = land taken to Ha where many| The Daily Express, independent, | — cal maps as the ship left Los An. |is approximbately 300 miles fro | other disturbers have been interned. | called it “a strange and wayward| Miami Fliers Hop Again Los Angeles. Louisville, Ky., Aug. 27 (P—C. D. and yesterday and many Jews were There were fifty-one men and o \\mmdul with some dead. sition—that in stine as in Meso- woman aboard the ship, the woman, m. (P. 8. T.) to officials of leisan all Jewish houses were | potamia has saddled us with expen- |derbyists in the hop off from here Lady Grace Drummond Hay ot |the Southemn Pacific railroad repori- hnrnm! one Jew was Kkilled, and 21| sive responsibilties without any ade-|at 9 a. m. (C. T.) tod Thir- London, and fifteen men were pas-|ed here. The dirigible was apr were wounded. Rehowoth, south of | quate return.” |teen other fllers left Bowman field {at one minute intervals in the re- For 16,880 miles the great Ger- | reach Yuma. Ariz. about 4:50 a. | colony at Artuf, between Jerusalem | Jerusalem, Aug. 27 (UP)—The man dirigible cruised through the | D Maricopa, Ariz, Aug, 2T (P— and Jaffa was set on fire. consular corps at Jerusalem met to- e skies in three great hops, one across | Sighted Over Yuma | Swinging southward and apparently Christians Mark Houses ISe v and Bonied | rasolnkona i sioe || Philly Racers Off |the Atlantic from Lakehurst, N Yuma, Ariz. Aug. 27 UP—The |changing its course to Tucson from Considerable looting has occurred |the authorities to take ringent | Philadelphia Aug. (A—Eleven | Japan, and the third across the Pa- | parently, it had increased its speed |It had flown the approximately 40 not confirmed. Many Christians in | petween Jews and Arabs. in the Philadelphia-Cleveland derby airport, completing trip of 6,830 | cific to Los Angeles. | toward El Paso, Tex. it was |miles from Gilabend in one hour Jerusalem marked their houses With [ (Nations represented by consular |of the national air races, miles in 101 hours, 53 minutes.| It wag believed the dirigible wonl1 | averaging approximately 100 miles |and 17 minutes, a further decreass blue crosses as a sign that the officials in Jerusalem include Ger-| Lloyd O. Yost, Conyingham, Friday, August 23 5 lan hour. in speed. Maricopa is direcfly buildings harbored neither JeWS many, the United States, France, |with Mrs. Yost and George C. | y A To Meke 80 Miles an Hour | Sunday, August 25 The average speed of the Zeppelin | huge dirigible was expected to ks, ia and |T.) and the others left at one min. 9:02 p. m.—Sighted off Farralone gcrogs the American continent An electrical and rain storm whicn | | ute intervals. | Islands. B cexpected to be eighty miles an 1 | struck central Arizona last nght e Haifa, Palestine, Aug. 27 (UP)— | Other contestants were Henry A.|9:25 P. m.—Arrived over Golden . | tended to within about fifty miles A Dritish policeman was wounded in | Little, Norristown, Pa.; ~ Howard | ; neighboring bay cities. | Drummond Hay, London; Com d 9:45 p. m.—Head for Los Angeles. |pandor Charles E. Rosendahl, and | intensity to disturb the flight. British destroyer, Two cruisers also | caux, New York; Isaac Stewart, Mo- | Monday, August 20 Lieut. J. C. Richardson, U. S. N.;| Thirty-eight minutes later due, one here and one at Jaf- [line, TIL; with Joseph Garretson, Jr.|5:11 a. m.—Landed at Los Angeles, e e R e a passenger; J, Wesley Smith, | ed over Mohawk, 55 miles ea Philadelphia; Joseph L. McGrady, | Sir Hubert Wilkins, Tuesday, August 27 [ ibrer e Rart Woa Welcaba .:|the storm area. The 14 a. m.—Left Los Angeles for|p "o oo Niodias” Madrid; Gus. |fine, with a very light head wing |the 30 miles from Tucson, at il nazsenkor IDhavlea B Stvai Lakehurst, N. J. Tave Kandar L Tlistaln s ‘Baron | blowing. speed of about 55 miles an hour. Philadelphia and Signey A. Riley, | 6731 & m.—Passed over b Berman ol | To Start Home Sunday Allentown, Pa., with A. twell as o RN Y OTIGAR SHE S THCAL el passenger. Palestine, Aug, op) have [ Mexicali. ew wa | > | photo er; 2 i 10:56 a. m.—Passes slowly over | Diotosrapher; Helnz Von ) 5 AT ux| Phoenix, Ariz, Aug 2 led by its Los Angeles agent today Marcicopa, Ariz, and heads south. | oo Scherl publications | e e Gelsenheimer, Frankport-on-Main; |telephone operator at Astec, Ariz.|that the dirigible Graf Zeppelin : | Leo Gerville-Resche, Parls; Prof.|120 miles southwest of here, repori- |planned to leave Lakehurst, N. 1., Karkins, Russian geographer; Dr.|ed at 7 a. m. (M. §. T.) today that|four days after its arrival for its Seilkopf, Hamburg, weather man. the Graf Zeppelin passed there|home station at Friedrichshafen, and Lieutenant Colonel Christoph |headed north traveling at a “very |Germany. | Iselin, Swiss a |slow” rate of speed. She estimated e Graf was expected to reach it was going no more than 50 mil>s | Lakehurst tomorrow night, which an hour, flying at an elevation of |would set its departure from Ameri~ approximately 1,500 feet. The|ca for Sunday night. weather was clear and a light head- —_— geles to ascertain the most practical Haifa was attacked both | policy which landed Great Britain in The Graf Zeppelin Bowyer, Westfield, N. J., led ths| sengers, and the crew consisted of |ently following the inter-Californis l)\ a, was attacked but no casual- | P | verse order of their arrival here | to Friedrichshafen, Germany; the | Graf Zeppelin was sighted here at|Phoenix, the Graf Zeppelin passed over all Palestine and Arab atroci- |steps” to protect the nationals of |cabin planes took off from the Ceri- Monday, August 19 each its goal some time tomorrow : m.—Left Kasumigaura fo Yuma is approximately 500 mi'cs |south of Phoenix. nor Moslems Belgium, Spain, Austri Ttaly, [ton as passengers, | from El Paso hour. oyer s The 16 passengers aboard Gate, circled San Franeisco and of this proposed course, but it was demonstration here yesterda: | Young, New Castle, De rrett Wil- e e Wiiam coxipleting MEREtrom LokyDin Boston and Madrid; 55 here. it had skirt New York city; Robert Hewitt, : Heinz Von Perkhammer, Lower California. bt o hwege- n Acr | Hamburg-American line was inform- om Jewish seftlements Witness P () They came savages,” a Jeru: the London Daily saul Gordon, ying of the ck on Tal- Jerusalem. id,” he said, | Cause had cuated all women and children from twelve dwellings adjoining my house, which was in a strong posit “But as darkness fell they great numbers. flourishing knives and other weapons, We had only three rifl and were running short of ammunition . “One girl was shot in the Then two young men were hit. st about hopeless and to give up when a Dritish civilian vol- Hep From Milwaukee Milwauk Wis. Aug. 27 (P— Bight pilots, each with determina- tion evident in his tanned features, shot their speedy airplanes grace fully into the air at the county air port, starting at 10 a. m. today on the final leg of the Portland-to- | Cleveland air derby. | The dirigible left Los Angeles at | 12:14 a. m. today (3:14 A. M. T.) expecting to land at Lakehucst, J., within forty-eight hours to | bring to an end the first world tlight | of a lighter-than-air craft. The big sky craft carrying persons, soared into the cast just 19 hours and 3 minutse after compi - ing its 5,800 miles flight from Tokyo to Los Angele With only 2,500 miles to go fc bring to an end the epic flight, the last lap was expected to be an easy | one for the ship which had outrid- |den the storms of the Atlante, | crossed the frozen steppes of Rus- | sia and Siberia and resisted the blus- tery challenge of the Pacific. Carres Light Load The Zeppelin carried a lighter | load this time, however, because of altitude to which it must climb 1n crossing the southern Rocky Moun- Flies Over Mexico tain area. There were 60 persons| Los Angles, Aug. (A—The aboard on the flight from Japan to | Southern Pacific railroad chief d | the Pacific coast. patcher here reported that the Gra | Dr. Hugo Eckener, commander of | Zeppelin was London e han e S t us like mac 1 lem dispatch press tod usalem b Sabbath suburb ¥e alestine, reinforcements were ¢ A French consular fired upon today e c Cairo t At 11:54 the Zeppelin was being maneuvered to the center of the | | field with the nose pointed eastward. At 11:48 p. m. the last of the mail was being put aboard the airship. Leaves at 12:14 A. M. other Je A pioth, first ab — Atrocites Reported rlin, Aug (UP)—The Je- rusalem correspondent of the Berlin Zietung Am Mittag reported today that Arabs at Motza had hurnml‘ seven Jews to death, mutilated wom- en and tortured men. The Christians at Motza, it was reported, have marked their houses with a blue cross. Heads Down Coast San Pedro, Cal, Aug. 27 (P—The | steamer West Katan reported by ra | dio that she had sighted the Gruf'wind was blowing. | Zeppelin 12 miles south of here at ! —— | 12:50 a. m., apparently headed down | Aug. 27 (A—The the coast toward San Diego. a5 sighted appro Apparently the plan to cross tle mallly 10 miles west of here at 7: mountains at San Gorgonio Pass|a m. (M. S. T.) today. The dir had been given up and that the hig ble was flying low and had travele:] craft was flying for San Diego, he- |t 0 miles from Aztec in thirty- fore attempting to cross the c eight minutes. 2 range. —_— Storms Cut Speed Down Phoeniz, Ariz., Aug. 27 (P—Al- | though the Graf Zeppelin apparently | had successfully aded a severe | Graf Zeppelin passed over Pomt |electrical storm which swept sections | Loma near here at 2 a .. |of Arizona last night, its speed had Flying at an altitude of approxi- |been greatly reduced and the giaat mately 1,500 feet, the mighty -r|craft w flying low as it neared | craft passed over Coronado at 2 here this morning. . m., In the early part of its flizht | Mexico. from Los Angeles, the dirigible had flown approximately 70 miles an | hour and later had reached 100 |Wilking and Lady Drummond-Hay miles. The speed had been re- |will discuss various phases of the duced to 47 miles an hour at Gila- |flight over the radio. bend and reports indicated it was| The list of stations in the hook-up was not announced. of not but not injured. we were ixtend to Syria we Aug. 27 (P)—The wish Tele- reported today Arabs and beyond th Irench au- detachment of Jewish quarter Beirut, corresponde graphic Agency her that hostilities betw Jews had extended = trontiers of Palestine - thorities sent a large = troops to protect the = in Damascus. Manifestations by both Jews = Arabs in sympathy with the o tudes of their co-religionists in = Palestine controversy over worship » at the Wailing Wall took place here terday afternoon. Twenty thousand people paraded = the streets to express approval of = Syrian Moslem for the action of the Palestine Moslem Omaha Left Behind Omaha, Neb., Aug. 27 —The five remaining fliers in the Oakland-to Cleveland air derby took off from the airport here shortly after 9 o'clock this morning, headed for Springfleld, IlL. their next stop. D. G. Warren of Oakland, was the first in the air his leaving time being 19:12:10 a. m. To Broadcast Arrival New York, Aug. 27 (P)—The Na- | tional Broadcasting Co. today an- nounced that arrangements were eing made to broadcast a descrip- tion of the arrival of the Graf Zep- clin at Lakehurst, N. J. The description of the arrival to- gether with talks by officers and pas- sengers of the ship will be trans- mitted through a nationwide hook- up. Announcers in planes and at | points of vantage on the roof of the hangar at the naval air station will relay details of the landing. Dr. Hugo Eckener, commander of the airship; Lieutenant Com- mander Charles E. Rosendahl, U. S N., American observer of the world cruise; and Lieutenant John C. Richardson, N. S. N.; Sir Hubert n came FITRLERLAINTI I, AIR DERBY PILOTS o ~ KILLED AT BOSTON 7EppELIN ESCAPES The company said Devereaux was | married only about three months ago | miles an hour. to the girl who was probably fatally | Dr. Eckener planned to plot the | injured in the accident that caused inderi of Liktconvas furont bl manager of the Anglo-Palestine his death. |arrival at Bl Paso Texas bank, 15 persons were killed, in- | e . A northeasterly. route from Two Rac | Paso through Texas, Oklahoma and | cluding Stonim, his wife, two chil- | n dren, and the parents of Mrs. Slo- | Ohio, Kansas, hence to Kansas City, St. | ' v head Our position was_j we were reac detachment of s came up. ay on the Passes San Diego I San Diego, ( Aug. Erowie and naval radio station reported that the , and we saved."” at Meal Time Special correspon- | v xpress, said the wvish population at Hebron was rtaking of the Sabbath meal when Arab tribesmen suddenly de- scended upon the little village. In one home, that of A. D. Slonim, fir were Attack J. Ketcham, of the Daily opened R (Continued From First Page) Karkur Expe Karkur, Palestine, = The Anglo Jewish colonists here ex- w Pect an attack by Ara but are well = prepared. Karkur is western Pale and headed south lo\\acli near Bl s to End 27 (A Haifa, in north- Cleveland, Aug. The still slower rale. a London Jews Complain London, Aupg. 27 (P)—A big Jew- = ish demonstration against the Pales- = tine administration for what is com- = plained of as the inadequate way in = which it handled the situation in = Palestine, together with a pro = meeting and mourning ceremonies | = for the dead, will be held by the | = Jewish community in London. = The place and date of the meet- = Ing will be determined when Dr. = Chayim Weizmann, president of the | = world Zionist organization, arrives | & in London from Switzerland lata o7 = day. = _ No cables have been reccived in = Jewish circles from Jerusalem since = 1ast night. Whatever news is coming Z from Palestine is filtering through = Cairo. Attack Haifa Power House Cairo, Aug. 27 (®—The electri "pow"r station at Haifa, part of th .= Ruttenberg scheme to harness the = waters of the Jordan to supply hea = light and power for Palestine, T been aftacked by Arabs, = to reports received hei = ish Telegraphic Agency. Five Jews = were killed and the power house i = stated to be in danger. The Jewish colony of Chuldah = Jewish national fund T lower Galilee, was destroyed Ly = Arabs Monday night. Rechoboth, a -« nearby coleny, was not touched. has ceording by the Jew- a settlement in More Than 100 Jews Dead = Jerusalem, Aug. = dead in four day ~ warfare with Arab Moslems today ~ numbered more than 100, of whom ~ 15 were Americans, students of the = Rabbinical college at Hebron. Arab = dead were assumed to be as numer- ~ous. Hundreds suffered from = wounds. - Southern ~seemed qulet but o breaks between the w Jews were reported = western Palestir = the vicinity of Hal T There were rec ~both Tel-Aviv, all-Jev = nearby Jaffa, where British police ~fired on a crowd attacking the sernment offic Killed ~ Arabs, woundi Palestine momentarily fierce new out- trihesmen and from north- particularly in gOV- five six ems s Troops The government Arriving as begun to dis- o obtain Polict devolve vol is} - the =~ tain or¢ * British = the - fe “the bayone! situation 1 tho T - Buried in Common Grave = buried “mon grav. T dug in - Olives n sin es of 16 slain the 1 he i six Aviv of the n Isauc Leib G . Arah Sheik Killed Englishme re ictims of at Tel son hropist Two lled i 1 Jewish olo: . Ipha in acldon valley, » their sheik being killed in the act ive or six more Jews killed & new outbreak at Kastina colony. Forty Arabs, members of a group | Es; were | where | policy in nin IFifteen American were among 64 Jewish dead. Gordon's home stood on -top of | ¢ highest hill in his immediate \1—‘f!‘:l("l"' events of the de Women and children of the brought there | ied while | cinity. neighborkhood v they crouched terri ended them. press man was killed by when he attempted to d old daughter. re the men d The the Moslems | end his 13 yeal Situation Very Grave Cairo, Egypt, Aug legraph Agency) — Uncensored advices telephoned from Jerusalem today indicated an extremely grave situation throughout Palestine as a consequence of continuing Arab- rfare. from among us have been ¢ Ben Jewish labor “Our arms have been but not those the 27 (Jewish ve of Jewish population at Tel Aviv, complained the action of Brit- ish troops there was weak and that the Jewish self-defense corps had | °n ordered to abstain from action. ere were other complaints of | vealk governmental action and of obstruction pf Jewish self defense measures. Vaad Halir, Jewish community | board at Jerusalem, estimated the | Jewish dead ranged between 120 and 150, All Islami Watching London, Aug 27 (P—Islamic ction to Moslem-Jewish fighting in cir- 7 ra- | Palestine was regarded in some today as possibly porten:l disturbing movements | Mohammedan section of | cles here ing further within the the empire Dispatches statement W signed by three tors of three Lahore, Delhi secretar said a| Bomba edi- from India issued in Mohammedan crnacular newspapes and Bombay, an of the central | warning the at by Khalifat British ‘The committee government high handed pro-Jewish Arab countries has created commotion and a feeling of resent- ment in Islamic countries. Th sequences of which cannot be looked or minimized.” Some indication of the slem on hands of the gov- nt be apparent when it considered the whole Islamic observin enly Lhe the trou Palestine mis provole con- over- difficuit owth of fial sions in medan dom Britain Knows Danger vidence the govern ghly al this to forces eastern Mr included 1 troops, many ai- standir four t n or g by ttalions of artillery and ships, a Would Abandon Mandate nwhile the British ested growing “burden’ h B press nas ction stine shouldercd of Nationg ur; vances rit Daily ed a ing contro- of the call- ny tine tion sh mandate lor MacDon- when order has to reopen the entive the o 1geous folly of with British backing to | old Arab state into a to lo: > time restore on of voring rt convert an | Portland, | Milwaukee over night [1ap today, | stand crowds checred | cago, | five | the | tod | caused end for fresh squadrons of cross- country derby fliers today in the s program Five der- the of at the National Air races. hies were included schedule of flying, in two them | reaching the finish line this after- aid that at Mozza a noon. i One of the most spectacular der- !)ml dash from quartered at for the final| s checked in bies of the races, the Ore., was Another w Louisville last night today [from Miami—Miami orida. Schoenhalr Laps Field In addition to these the non-stop spurt from Los Angeles, to be at here Beach, |raced at any time the pilots elect so long as they finish in the after- noon, drew attention to the third race which was expected to bring some of the entrants diving acros the finish line today. The race was opened yesterday by the brilliant tlight of Lee Schoenhair who lapped the country in 13 hours, 51 minutes and 10.8 second Schoenhair vashed across the fin- (udents | Cleveland airport became the trail's | o, 48¥'8{ oo o New Yok state over on the way | | complete ish line a short time after the wom- | As the grand- he zoomed, spurted across en's derby had ende circled the airport. again and after stunting over field came to earth. Bitter Contests Charles “Speed” Holman of Chi- minutes elapsed time to Wells of Wichita, Kan.,, when they landed at Milwaukee last night in Portland derby. Their last y was routed over South Bend, Ind. Tex Rankin, of Portland, held third place and Snyder Hall of St Louis was fourth Another close race was in the pre-final lap ending at Louis- ville last night. George E. Halsey of Buffalo harely exceeded a half hour marging in elapsed time over C. D. Bowyer of Westfiled, N. J. in the Class “A" division. The Class “B" leadership was still more closely contested. Earl Rowland of sonville, TIL., held a lead of nine min- tes nine seconds over Leslie Bow- n of Kansas City. A forced land- due to a clogged gasoline pipe the forced landing of Bow- ver, who had been leading both groups in elapsed time. Two other derbies today sc nts of the races land, Cal, at Omaha with Robert Oakland, leading on from Salt Lake City leadership in elapsed endell, endurance ame cond with a fuselage. Mechanics he plane in time S ing ttered The Oa last night 2 the r who badly ripped bout repairir today's lap. Mrs. Thaden Wins The Philadelphia derby today was mapped through the ea tonight's control point esf Roston. Other hops in the were by way of Albany, Syra- | and Buffalo, N. Y. Six planes | we entered, Mrs. Lo sot or t, with ab- lished at cuse McPhetridge won approximately 310,000 finishing first in the from Santa Monic It was the first ev in priz- women's 1 ent of it s by TRy yes. terday kin Womén Race A Mrs. McPhetrids ished company entered in the closed ten mile rin of avii- mile ourse a ational air toc Omlie, ision in the d, as we race winner of 1me hea light 150 1sche, who finished secc t plane class and Lady ) Heath, of England, noted flight from London to Bagdac Race officials said the cross coun- fers will have surpassed the exacting tests yet given wom- mos jen pllots in overcoming the demands f conceded a lead of less than| Thaden, | the | lap | recorded | Jack- | Ttah, | starting | Chicago and Cleveland was indicated as the preferred cours should weather conditions permit. Should that line of flight be follow- |ed the Zeppelin was expected to the Mo hawk Valley and then head for New York city and Lakehurst. an alternative it was indicated a route through New Orleans, Birmingham, Atlanta, Washington D. C. and Baltimore might chosen. The dirigible and 3 minute Tokyo and e be left here 19 hours after its arrival from Dr. Eckener hoped to the world flight within 48 hours of the takeoff here. Scrapes High Tenston Wire Municipal Airport, Los An Aug. 27 (A—The dirigible Zeppelin scraped a high tension ic line with its tail shortly after taking off here carly today for Lakehurst, N. J., on the last leg of s world flight irst word that the Zeppelin had with an accident was received more than an hour after the takeoff when the Radio Corporation reported age from the dirigible ng the damage had been slight and that the flight would not be inter- rupted. When it was seen dirigible would gaining altitude the takeoff, Graf met here that the have difficulty immediately much canned such as tea and vegetables, dumped overhoard hastily. Eckener Dumps Ballast ckener at the last minute, arriving late from a downtown ban- ordered the ship lightened in tour inspection, He ed water ballast dumped nt for more hydrogen. Apparently Dr. Eckener's mands were met without need for further hydrogen, for at 11:19 the nose was cut from the mooring mast and the great sky down the fi For 45 minutes the ground crew walked the ship around the airport while mail was placed aboard and various tests were made by Dr. Hugo Eckener preparatory to the actual take off. At 11:51 o'clock the sky ship was still held by the ground crew and another mail truck drove across the field. big in after de- Wiy Sutter [3FY T ] Stomach Trouble X All Your Life? 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