The evening world. Newspaper, June 28, 1922, Page 2

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col ama see oe > eoerasad Crossed Flimsy Bridge on Her Hands and Knees—All Her Guards Slain. SHANGHAI, June 27 (Associated Press).—Mme. Sun Yat Sen, wife _-of the deposed President of South China, who arrived to-day from Can- ton, described in an Interview with the Associated Press her husband's fight and last stand in the Presiden- tial palace with a bodyguard of fifty woldiers against Chen Chiung Ming's troopers. Mme. Sun declared that a scant 600 men under her husband's com- mand were opposed to an army of %,000, ied by Chen Chiung Ming, and that the bodyguard of fifty sol- * diers left with her in tho Presiden- tial palace when her husband, after her repeated urging, took refuge in filght, was killed to a man. Mme. Sun said she was awakened at 2 o'clock in the morning, June 16, by her husband, who told her that she must flee. He informed her he had been warned by telephone that Gon. “Chen's troops were looting the city * with cries of “Kill the President” “* and that they were planning to attack his residence. “Mme, Sun insisted that she would "be safe in the Presidential palace and finally Dr. Sun agreed to leave lier io the cure of a heavily armed body- wuard of fifty of his retainers. Half _ an hour after Sun had dspaited, tn. volleys from Chen's soldiers began pouring into the pulace. The pawoe guards replied volley for vo.ley, the “siaff of seivants of the official rest dinee aiding them. Many of the d.- « fenders fell but the remainder contin- ‘Led tne battle even after po.tionn of the palace had been destroyed by evelly from @ mountain gun which Cren’s men hed planted on a nearty + PiMsido. The remnant of the body huard stuck to their rifles until & o'clock. in (he morning wha sheir ammunition guve out. At this juncture Col, George Bow, aide to Sun Yat Son, made his way to . the palace from the President's office. He traversed a narrow footbridge under heavy fire and when he found Mme. Sun he urged her to take in- stant flight. With Col. Bow and two members of her bodyguard, Mme. Sun crossed the footbridg2 on her hands and knees while @ hail of bullets trom the rifles of Chen's troops poured about the party and tore away sections of the flimsy bridge. Onc? across the bridge they clam- ~-bered over roofs in thelr dash for the « Protection of the Presidential office. Col. Bow dropped with bullets in both legs, and Mme. Sun and her two Chi- nese guards dragged him into the of- fices, There they remained until af- ,ternoon, while the volleying contin- Finally Chen's troops, who had looted the treasury and customs of- fices, forced the gates of the com- pound of the office. The President's wife crushed an old straw hat down on her head, buttoned a raincoat about her and slipped into the streot with her two faithful guards. Once clear of Canton they hid in a farmhouse for the rest of the night. * and im the morning Mme. Sun, dij guised as @ countrywoman, with a basket of vegetables on her arm, ac- companied by a guard disguised as a laborer, won the safety of a friend's home, There they remained the sec- * ond night, listening to the cruisers of Sun's navy hurling shells into the city. Mme. Sun then was not safe, and when Chen's troops appeared she again assumed the diaguise of a coun- try woman and made her way to the water front. She finally reached the Christian College in Canton, where * Wu Ting Fan, her husband's Foreign Minister, had taken refuge. She later rejoined her husband aboard — his evuiser. SHOP MEN VOTE LARGELY FAVORS STRIKE, IT IS SAID Decision Is With Provis- ion That Other Rail Unions Go Out. DETROIT, Micb., June 28 (Associated Press).—Approxi- mately 85,000 votes have been tabulated tm the strike ref- erendum conducted by the United Brotherhood of Main- nance of Way Employees and Rallway Shop Laborers, Ac- cording to information forth- coming from the genera! head- quarters, received here, where the count is in progress, \t was announced that the situation was unchanged, the member- ship generally favoring @ walkout in protest against an impending wage cut, provided other unions joined in. A spokesman tor the union reiterated it mow seemed as- sured that approximately 400,- 900 ballots would be cast, which would be virtually a 100 per cent. vote from the brotherhood’s members, to- gether with a vote of approxi- mately 150,000 im the ranks of Ron-union workers in the mulntepance crafts, THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1922, Confer With Mayor on Plan to Locate Building Near Pro- posed Court House. Three mombers of President Hard- ing’s cabinet clothed with full power to act ure conferring with Mayor Hylan and the other members of the Board of Estimate to-day on a plan whereby the old Post Office Building in City Hall Park ts to be torn down and the site ceded back to the city and the Government given a «ite for 9 Federal bufiding on city-owned land near the proposed new Court House. The President's representatives are Secretary of the Treasury Andrew J Mellon, Attorney General Harry M Daugherty and Dr. Hubert Work. Postmaster General. The visitors from Washington ar rived at City Hall in automobiles. escorted by Grover A. Whalen, the Commissioner of Plant and Structures, and a squad of motorcycle police After a short conference with Mayor Hylan, Comptroller Craig, Manhattan Borough President Miller and Rich- mond Borough President Cahill, which took place in the Mayor's office, the Cabinet members, accompanied by the city officials, visited the Department of Plant and Structures, on the eighteenth floor of the Municipal Building, from the north windows of which they were -hown the city- owned land adjoining the proposed Court House from which the Govern- mént may pick a new Federal building alte. After Inspeoting the city's civic centre, plans the Federal officials will be the guests of Muyor Hylan at a luncheon at the Ritz-Carlton. Mem- bers of the Estimate Board will be present at this gathering. While the Washington visitors were uispecting sites on iand owned Ly the city in the vicinity of the new court house site it became plain that the Government wants two bullidings i place of the old Post Office. Attorney General Daugherty sald he thought the Post Office should be from a buliding sheltering th Sates District Attorney, the Fed: Courts, tie Department of Justi and other Government agencies. For such « building, he said, he favored the site now occupied by tic Health Dejartment in Pear: Street directly south of the new court house site, Postmaster General Work suid he favored, for a building exclusively devoted to the postal service, the site new occupied by the Child Welt Bureau bounded by Worth, Centre wud Mulberry Strects, north of the court Rouse site 42,000 P. R. R. MEN ACCEPT WAGE CUT Employee Representation Plan Solves Problem of Meeting Demand. PHILADELPHIA, June 28.—An- Rouncement was made late yesterday by the Pennsylvania Railroad that agreements on reduction of wages have beén reached between the man- agement and the elected representa- tves of 42,600 of its employees. The settlement affects the mainty- nance of way department, embracia); 8£,400 men, and the employees of the telegraph and signal departmeat numbering 8,100 men, The revised seates hecome effec tive July t. ‘They involve reduc tions which have been mutually ugred upon to conform with the lower vost of Uving, the general con- ditions of employment throughout the country and the demand of the tublic for cheaper transportation, as expressed in the Interstate Commerce Commission's order reducing freigut rates,"’ the announcement stated, O. K. BOOZE TICKETS LEAD TO RAID SEIZURE After obtaining O. K. tickets from man at the door of No, 477 West Street to-day three Federal dry agents passed to the first floor, where they were served with drinks of Hquid alleged to be whisk at 25 cents a drink. The agents & twenty-one quarts of the alleged Hquor and left summonses for wilh aham, the doorman and al- leged to be the owner of the place, and Mrs. Katherine Graham, his wife, who presided upstairs. The agents we Joseph Newberger, orge McAndrews and Fred Filardl. uham acted as 4 lookout and no one could get anything to drink without a slip with his O, K. on it, the agen say. —_ HBARL HELD ON ASSISTA CLERKSHIPS FOR COURT, ATTENDANTS. The Municipal Civil rvice Commis sion to-day held a hearing on the pro- posal to per Municipal Court attend ants to take examination for assistant elerkships in these courts. Oscar W Hochstadter, Preside Court Attendants’ Benefit ferior courts had this privilege. cision waa reserved WOOD BOXES. SAN FRANCISCO, June 28.—Four teen skeletons in plain, well pre: redwod boxe shovel near the were held for identifieati States Army authorities Thomas A. Plerce, 19th Infantry, M. Jewell, head of the Railway Em- t of the Municipal Association, explained that attendants in other in- De- UNEARTH 14 SKELETONS IN RED- erved unearthed by a steam- Marine Hospital here, MME. SUN VAT SEN CABINET MEMBERS Members of the Cabinet Inspect DODGED BULLETS IN} HERE TO CONSIDER FLIGHT FOR SAFETY) POST OFFICE SITE Court House Site for Post Office Reading from left to right are Postmaster General Work, Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, and Attorney General Daugherty. RAILROADS MOVE BRIDE FOUND SLAIN TO BREAK ENTIRE | EXPECTED DEATH, SHOP WORK SYSTEM! HER LETTERS SHOW Executives See Walkout Chance to Let Work Un- der Contract. as]Named One She Said Made Her Life Miserable—Couple Murdered, Jury Finds, CHICAGO, June 28.—The railroads took the offensive to-day as lines were drawn for the threatened strike of 1,000,000 ratiroad workers July 1. It was learned rail officials planned to place all shop work under the con- tract system, letting it to outside firms. They have long desired such an opportunity and believe the strike will give it to them. This move |s opposed by the Rail- way Labor Board, but the railroad executives assert that the men by striking will violate the board's ruling first, and to meet the situation they will have a right to extend the con- tract system, CHICAGO, Press.) —The (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) NORTH WATER GAP, Pa., June 28,—A Coroner's Jury headed by D. W. J. Levering, a State Health Om- cer found to-day that Fredevick de Mundt and his wife Grace, found dead of revolver bullets in their home terday, were murdered and set afire by the murderer here y the hous derer. A number of letters were found in the building written by Mrs. De Mundt to her mother Mrs. Oscar H. Morey of Catskill, Y., and other relatives indicating that she expected death and expressing the wish that God would deal justly with one per- son she named as having made her life miserable. She dwelt on her hap- piness with her husband and his ten- derness to her in a recent filness fol- lowing an operation June 28 ultimatum sent (Associated by B. ployees’ Department of the American Federation of Labor, to T. De Witt] Mason J, Gilliland, detective tor Monroe County; Constable J. EB. Suyler, Chairman of the Associ y Surat ome Siu, tt ssociation | shaefer and Frank C. Kurtz, @ of Railway Executives, that the 400.- Ji rooper from the State police bar- 00 shop men of the Nation's railroads} packs at Wilkes-Da have a man would yo on strike unless the de-Junder observation who sernis to be cisions of the Railroad Labor Boand}of unsound mind and has been hang- were ignored and present wages|N# about the de Mundt premises ate maintained, to-day was met with} “Gear Ace, manager of the River- silence by railroad managers. side House, testified at the inquest ‘Phere was little indication that the|that the murder must have occurred rallroads would seriously consider} 5etween 11 o'clock Monday night Jewell’s demands to hold back the}'Md daybreak Tuesday because he $60,000,000 wage cut and restore aboi.Jehatted with the de Mundts at their {shed rules governing working condij.] {rent gate up to IL o'clock. They tions in the shops. w altogether cheerful then, he Maintenance of Way employees, | *!!4 clerks, signal men and other classes > whose wages were slushed in recent orders would, tn following the shop men out on 4 st take more th. 1,000,000 employees out of railroud service. In spite o f this, rail offictals have asserted that the roads could WIFE JUMPS FROM AUTO, FRACTURES HER SKULL Suffering from a fractured skull, the result of having Jumped from an a EX-GV,COXLAUDS |="< EVENNG WORLD FOR CONGRESS EXPOS “Commendable Journalism,” He Says on Departure for Europe With Family. James M. Cox, Democratic cand! date for President two. years ago, sailed to-day for Europe on the steam- ship France for a study of economic conditions and a survey of the work- ings of the League of Nations. He was accompanied by his wife, his son, James M, Jr, and Congressman T. T. Ansberry. Mr. Cox, himself a newspaper man, said he had read with interest and some degree of amazement The Eve- ning World's expose of grafting Con- gressmen who dig into the Treasury through dummies on the payrolls or through placing wives and other rela- tives in positions which enable them to draw pay without doing any work. “It was a commendable -piece of journalism,” he said. “The present Administration campaign cry two years ago was ‘America first.’ In the House of Representatives they appear to have shifted it to ‘Our families first. Gov. Cox reiterated his belief, ex- pressed on numerous occasions since his arrival in New York a few days ago, that the United States should enter the League of Nations. He said he hopes Germany will have attained membership in the League before the end of the year. Dr. Royal Commissioner, mother-in-law, 8. Copeland, Health his wifé, son and Mrs. Alice Friestedt of Chicago, were passengers on the France. Mayor Hylan and other city officials saw Dr. Capeland off, and the Mayor entered him in the race for nomination for Governor. “You'd better hurry back,"’ said the Mayor. ‘‘We may have to pick you for the nomination for Governor,"’ Dr. Copeland, leaving his family in Vienna where they will be the guests of Dr. Lorenz, will proceed to Po- land. “Eastern Poland,"’ he said, disease centre of Europe. It is a hot- bed of typhus. Inasmuch as the im. migrants from that part of Europe come direct to New York, and many of them with the intention of remain- ing here, I am going to look the situ- ation over with a view of protecting the health of this city. Two cases of typhus were reported from Brooklyn| Conn., and yosterday."" The Health Department steamer Riverside, with 200 employees and a band aboard, escorted the France out “ts the RADI casted fox @vnowd.& vsown Miss Josephine Young of Riverside, York, equipped with a portable ‘radio outfit, danced to the tunes of a broad- ing on Marconi’s Yacht To Tunes of Portable Radio DANCING TO MUSIC OF PORTABLE oOo SET ON MARCONIYS YACHT trip to Albany in Signor Guglielmo Marconi’s yacht Elettra, The pair stepped to the tunes of the radio and kept all the music to themselves. J, W. Elwood of New trot while making the to Sandy Hook. Among the other passengers were Anna Case, the operatic star, and Seymour L, Cromwell, President of the Stock Exchange, and his wife and two sons. Mr. Cromwell, talking of the failure of E. M. Fuller & Co., said: FROM Newark, N. ‘ailure was inevitable in a busi- ness conducted us that one was. Other failures may be looked for un-| money from less some firms make a drastic change| pay their fares from time to time. morning two letters from a woman io their business methods,"* All cabin accommodations on the France were taken. WOMAN SUES M. D. FOR MALPRACTICE; WANTS $50,000 Jac’ This York State t One containes when the ca The Biblic: quoted. of Yonkers] Thessatonian Charges Negligence At Mrs. son é dpe tis ‘The company declined to make pubiic| Islation Is preparing a bill regulating |) Birth of Child. the nuine nnd address of the sender, | tH Fights and survelilance of tuivigners, he especially those in business. Trial of the sult of Mrs. Nora Some of the clanses In the measure on ; Y HAI \ deal specifically with the foreign bank- Yonkers, against De. Herbert L.| 4. samitton entree for to-morrow’s| Provisions are made for the prevention y Kennedy, physician of Nepperhan| races are as follows: of speculation in exchange. Avenue, Yonkers, started at White] FIRST RACR—Purse, $1,000) for, two- war ae 3 e year-olda; claiming; fi furlongs.—Veron- ] Plains to-day before Justice Mors slim Nick Nato, 207; ‘iitae ime, 107 BEARS FORTUNE IN STAMPS. Arthur, 110, ‘Ulusionist, 107; ' Misi meee chauser and a jury. She asks $0, 107; Alien, 110. Russian Letter to Stamford Costs ds actic eR- ‘OND RACH—Stoeplechane purse OOM'end alleges malprection and nem Ridensy avout two miles —(a). (ny $200,000 on Pre-War Basin. ‘Drade Mart ligence upon the part of the physi- Bt. Paul, 140; A. O'Bryan, Vi . . i 1 cian at the birth of a child two years 110; Enrico” Ga STAMFORD, Conn June 2.—HA dyt, on page 4 ago. She claims, through her attor Postage stamps which at pre-war neys, that Dr. Kennedy did not take prices would represent more than even ordinary precautions at the time $200,000 in American money were of the childs’ birth, attached a registered’ letter re- The defense denies the alegations, claiming virtually that there ‘‘was] 100 considerable interierence from a mem- |" uouet, 1 ber of the plaintiff's family" at the] ,.heoide nnd time jJongs out ¢ In opening the case, the attorney for Mrs. Jaikson claimed that both Dr Kennedy and his later co-worker, Di Acolph Lopez of Yonkers, neglected tom Fair, 1 Lady Luxury, FIPTH RA continue to operate to m certain ex-]'oblle being driver by her husband, tent with train service employees und} Mrs. Annie Allers, fifty-five, of No. telegruphers remaining on the Job. Street, Bath Beach, was suis mene o-day to the Norwegian Hoa- THREE KILLED, 25 HURT Peet enuacd the woman to sump IN RATHENAU RIOTING J could not be explained by the husband, ee Shouts of witnesses stopped the mn- chine and Allers hurricd his wife to the Mob Had At cked Two Nepaties Injaring One of Them, B LIN, June 28.—-Threo persons werg killed and twenty-five wounded at Darmstadt yesterday when police fired on a crowd during # demonstration in connection with the assassination of Dr Walter Rathenau. The demonstrators previously had foreed their way into the houses of Deputies Dingsidey and Dr. Osann, members of the People's Party, and seriously Injured the former. ‘They also smashed the Windows and fubni- ture in two newspaper offices, Considerable damage also was done to the German National Party's build ing at Karlaruhe by the demonstrators ult Samuels ENGINEER IS KILLED IN ROCK ISLAND WRECK Sate Wh Ditehed Ne LINCOLN, Neb. and passer three mile hospital where her condition was #ald to be serious. GROCERS PLEDGE FUND TO REDUCE COST OF LIVING Five-Year War on H. C. L. Is Launched to Aid Consumers, CLEVELAND, June 28. Funds for a five-year investiga- tion of methods to reduce retail grocers’ operating and distributing costs and to bring down prices to consumers were pledged by dele- gates to the annual convention of the National Association of Retail Grocers, in session here, The inquiry, delegates urged, should be pushed under the direc- tion of the Harvard Bureau of Tr Lincoln, Ne June 28.—Roek Is! train No. 7 was ditehed west of Alvo carly to-day, eves the men were seamen who died| killing W. N. McLennan, engineer, at the little United States Public Health| Henry Dart, flreman, was sealded, and} Business Research, with the co- Service Hospital, which preceded the] Mail Clerk Roy Omer slightly injured, operation of the association, The Marine Hospital, thirty-five or forty] All passengers were safe, Kock Island} Harvard Bureau recently com- yours ago, . officials reported, pleted @ survey along similar lines. — year-olda and Mrs. Jackson, He charged further that some days alter Dr. George Mc-| }; In the good old ys before the.) heen received 1. the Gillian, ulso of Yonkers, was called)... 0 Tone Wd; Attorney. | World War a Russian ruble was | {va rey a eee in and operated on Mrs. Jackson, nrer, oa, Joan 9f AT. 410:| orth petween 61 and 52 cents, Each mil’ ron ray surgery at Fordham University, who Ti RACES Feros Alem for thi (Of the 400 stamps on the letter c2 Ne cis) gap ee elon atoeted tee 4 Was consulted a year after Dr. Kens |x" naif. furlongs. —Colando, 3; (simpitctts, 1,000 rubles, or about $520 in pre- ot Uy character, outeact or om nedy's alleged mistreatment, was ex-|'"7;. 1) Oe ee a 108; Mabel war values. | ‘ pected to be called to testify in behalf | us,” daliivant, 1 —_——$_ THE WORLD of the plaintiff, RACE Purse of 200. for _ a. at t chins, AT; Rajah, SS —————— DIED, ervitor, 106; The Lamb. CONEY REALTY RIGHTS _} F's, ts, Yu Sten: 4 N Vacation have Th RB, CAMPBELL FU> *Appr ce wal jaimed. Weather P TO BE SOLVED BY COURT] ,.if)"*thick Siow" World follow you, Mailed : ces An action for @ judielal determination] PLAMILTON SELECTIONS. very day to your summe of land titles in a tract of land at Coney _ ddress, Island Avenue and Coney Island Creek,| FIRST RACE—lIllusionist, Miss has ben started in the Supreme Court | Taft, Nickname. WORLD SUMMER RATES in Brooklyn, Justice May reserved de-] SECOND RACE—Jim Petrie, St. Week Month cision on the appointment of a referee | Paul, Enrico Caruso. Morning & Sunday. .35 $1.00 to take testimony to-day, THIRD RACE—Sweet Bouquet, Morning World... .25 ¢ ‘The action is brought by the Terraqus Corporation, a realty concern, agains: the Realty See Company, the City of tom Fair, New York, and 1,200 other defendants FIFTH who own parts of the tr: on the|Gold, Fant ground that title records are confused SIXTH The Terraqua Corporation claims one- Afth of the track, and the Realty Bee Company four-fifths, The City of New *t claims the med of the oreok, sion, Mabel 7 eee, eT MAY USE QUOTATIONS CONSCIENCE MCNEY Public Service Biblical quotations to attract conscience quotation and “Money to make up for fares not prvi from St me live honestly before all men." Presten, 114 Flying Ford, Bla FOURTH RACE SEVENTH RACE Bean, Servitor, RESOLUTION TO RETURN SEIZED ALIEN PROPERTY READY FOR CONGRESS BIBLE TO LURE WASHINGTON, June atory to final disposition of the seized by the United States World War, Thomas W. Alien Property Custodian, a d to-day that a resolutoin, con- the provisions for return of such property agreed upon recently by President Harding, Secretary Hughes, and 28.—Prepar- alien Raflway officials of J., are thinking of using property during the Miller, people who have falled to the company received in a New ‘own, each with a Biblical Geenral Daughery him- Attorney each Inclosing money. | self, had been prepared for introduction 4 $4 with this explanation: |in the House ae eee FRANCE TO PUT ALIENS UNDER SURVEILLANCE r waa crowded."' al quotation—in fact mis- Paul's Epistle to the “God would have i, read celved to-day at tae Post Office here. |,,Piisr agrerisins ups Cony tus gestae ‘Oakling, 1 The postmark was Aleksandrovst:, |! ceed ote tes ae ae upward: el liming Russia Hand Jn ‘order of receton a Lady Dancer 101 CE—Purse upward led Coll obvious reason. There were them—elght sheets of 50 each. Th letter was inclosed in the stamps. Langhorne, $1,000 Evening World.... .25 Sunday World 10c. per Sunday of time. desired, ey Boy. —Nanette, Iron Boy. RACE—Asterisk, Crock 0 oche. RACE—Actress, The Deci 1) Curtis. Phan- Gubscribe now for any length Address changed ue often Your newadealer will arrange It for you, oF remit direct to Cashier, New York World, Park Row, New York City. Fannie ‘ Rajah, PsTUS, June 28.—The Parliamentary Commission on Civil and Criminal Leg- | The stamps were not attached to i the letter in the ordinary way for an), 4100 of |r USED GUN, RAZOR AND MATCHES IN WOKING, GIL SAY Held Prisoner Several Hours in Tunnel, She Has Suitor Arrested. John Lambot's conception of th gentle art of wooing led to his ar. raignment to-day before Magistrati Ryttenberg in Yorkville Court on charges of disorderly conduct and violation of the Sullivan law. Pretty Martha Maes, who was to have mar- ried Lambot in the fall, was complain- ing witness. Miss Maes, eighteen, who lives at No. 812 Second Avenue, said her romance with Lambot prog: nicely until three weeks ago, when, she says, Lambot tried ‘“‘cave-man stuff." This didn’t please her and she didn’t see him again tmtil Sunday night. She was in bed when she heard some one at her window. It was Lambot, and for some minutes he wooed her persistently, she says, by throwing Nghted matches at her. They went out, and so did Lambot when his sweetheart slammed the window in his face. |While not approving these methods of courtship, Miss Maes took no ac- tion. She was coming home from work Monday evening when Lambot, she says, dragged her into a tunnel at Forty-second Street and First Avenue and helé her prisoner for several hours while he threatened her with what she thought was a pistol and by stropping a razor across her arm. She persisted in her refusal not t marry him immediately, but agi to meet him Tuesday night to con- tinue the argument. Thus she es- caped and took her troubles to De- tective Byrne at the Eust 62d Street station When Lambot kept his tryst he was arrested. A search of his rooms at No, 128 West 73d Street revealed a razor and glass revolver. Magistrate Ryttenberg dismissed thy disorderly conduct charge and con tinued the Sullivan law charge until to-morrow, so that Lambot could get a lawyer. Lambot is an inspector in the Health Department. AUSTRIAN REVOLT WINS, BERLIN HEARS Government Overthrown in Bloodless Revolution, Report Says. BERLIN, June 28.—The Austrian Government has been overthrown in a bloodless revolution, according to un- confirmed reports reaching Berlin to- day. Jee SS FOG PREVENTS RESCUE OF SHIP AFIRE AT SEA Radio Can for Help Recetveg®| from V el off Santa Barbara. LOS ANGELES, June 28.—Hidden in fa dense fog, a steamship whose identity could not be determined was burning Santa Barbara early to-day, ac ording to radio advices interceptea here. The steamship Humboldt, near th scene, was notified by radio from the Pedro submarine base, which picked up the vessel's call for help, The Humboldt said she was standin by to pick up Ife boats from the burn- ing ship ived by 1 P. Me for the Sapple- World omust made bs The V Hday Cony vontaloing *ieraviags to be made y Tho World must be re mday Mala Sheet copys type copy Z| SMITH.—REUBEN } | CHURCH, Wednesday, 11 A. M. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. THE FUNERAL CHURCH ‘Americos New Burial Custom" Call Columbus 8200 E.CAMPBELL “Ine Funeral Church's (80m > PeeTARIAM ) Broadway at 66ths LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS, nn nnn MEN who ave two girls and & a from Saugertion to Lake Kat kindly return camera left in back of eam A, Dillon, care Miss Tilt, Bow 168, Saugertiog,

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