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Show Heeney's Rise Is Sw:prising T 1-Vlee President Dawes delivering address at congressional funeral services for the late Representalhdden ot Dllnoll. 2--0erman-lrish transatlantic aviators spreading their' flags over grave of Floyd Bennett Arlington. ~neral view of New York's reception to crew of the Bremen as the parade reached city baiL EWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Dale of Vermont, 1\fclllaster of South Dakota, Barkley of Kentucky and Bratton of New Mexico. Senator Rob· lnson, tile minority lender, who presented the resolution, made no charges of Improper methods In the prerent pree6nventlon campaigns, but said It was considered desirable to have a committee go Into the matter just as the Borah committee did In 1924 and the Kenyon committee In 1920. A vote of 204 to 121 the house B YpaSI!ed the Hnugen fnrm relief By bill, which Is almost Identical with the Me. 'ary mPasure passed !Jy the sPnnte. Both contain the !'quallzatlon fee feature which Is eRpecially objectionable to the President, and It wus taken fot· granted that he woul!l veto the hill that comes out of conference. Nearly all the western and southern reprt>sentatlves voted for the Haugen bill. The eastern Republicans voted against It, but It was supported by a t·nn!'iderable number of Tammany Democrats. Veto by Presldl'nt Colldge also. Is expected for the flood relief measure which was reported to the house by the coofeN'nce committee, since the conferees Insisted on retaining the flowage rights feature to which he objects. of the political prophNLES!! ets.., 11adly fooled, California lust settled the Democratic national ilillltt!atlon at Houston, so far as the ~~ltoitlal newlnation Is concerned. '"'"'"'-" .•• • • QOw 'n!ntore any other ~Jrllihe~lfl· tllaa that AI Smith has the ~d up, \Uld It Is gen· ~ that the rush to get result In the qon Into the 110mlnatJo.....r tile ]!lew York governor on Ule flrlt -Nitot, probilbly by acclamation. ~ Calltornfa primarJ: was admittedly a 'flils'l for Smith, for Mcstme te tad the dl'J Democrats of h~ atate Into the Walsh camp, and Benator Reed also was a 11-n! contender for the preference vote. But l.'tlcAdoo fell down ao badly that the Montana 18Dttor ran third, Reed standing In leCODd place.. Smith's victory was dedalve, hla vote being greater than the pARTY lines were drawn quite sharp. ly when the senate began debat· combined votes ot the other two. With 11101t of the precincts heard from, the lng the tax reduction bill. Repub· result ID ronnd numbers was: Smlth,,llcans on the finance committee hnd 131,000; Deed, 58,000; Walsh, 46,000. cut down the total reduction of the Ot the 58 counties, all but one were house hill from $290,000,000 to about won by Smith. Imperial county wae $200,000,000, which Ia the limit placed daimed for Reed. Former Senator by the Treasury departmen~. The ,James D. Phelan, bead of the Smith Democrats still Insisted on a total reclelegatlon, has displaced l.'tlcAdoo as doction _of $325,000,000. The fight was the Democratic leader of California. mainly over the corporation tnx, the The wets rejoiced In the apparent fact Republicans wishing this cut from 13\11 that the state had joined the wet col- to 12¥.1 per cent and the Democrat,. umn, but Dr. Arthur H. Briggs, head arguing for a cot to 11 or at most 111h of the California Anti-Saloon league, per cent. The Democrats also would uaerted the wet and dry Issue was retain the graduated scale of rates for '11ot a determining factor In the tight. corporations with Incomes of $11i,OOO Smith's delegates to Houston now or less as voted by the house. Scn497, this total Including 157 ator Smoot expectt>d the debate In the uninstructed but known to favor him. senate would last over a week. He Is upected to garner about HO ARRY SINCLAIH appeared hefore more In the next few week» and to the senate's Teapot Dome com· go Into the convention with at least 685 votes. His managers believe the mlttee and told something of the Con· Ohio and Maryland delegations will be tinental Trading comvany dPal. but not qllfck to shift to Smltll, and that many near enough to satisfy the lll\·estlof th& Reed delegates also will climb gator&. He fenced skillfully with ChairInto tile band wagon promptly. man Nye and the others aurt made Wllbnr Lecette of California, stnte few admissions except that he had re· manapr for Reed, asked Josephus celved $i:>7,000 of the Continental's Daniela by wire If he would ron for profits, which sum. with Interest, he vice president on a third party ticket said he had recently tumed over to beadecl by Senator Reed or Senator the Sinclair Crude Oil Pur<;huslng com· Uorah. Mr. Daniels replied that he puny. 'l'he committee Is making up Its -would not accept a nomination on any report, but expects latt>r .to ln,·estigntP third party ticket, and declared the the oil leases In the Salt Ct·eek field. oniJ hope of wresting the government from the hands of "privilege and cor· Washington, froni ETUHNJNG ruptlon" lies In a victory by the Demwhere they attended thl' funt>ral ocratic partJ. He said he Intended to of Floyd Bennett, the German·ll'ish f11Pport the nominees of the Houston transatlantic ·flyer& were given the eonveutlon -and believed enough dry usual upronrlous reception that New Democrats would be elected to con· York accords to such celebrities. Lt crea to cuarantee no weakening of Included parades, banqll1!ts and vulot· the prohibition laws. medals and the a,·lators were alruo~t Claude G. Bowers, an editorial writ- worn out by the attentions showererl • of tbe New York Evening World upon them. Next they journeyed bark aad a political historian of note, was to the national capital where they ~ b7 the Democratic conventlop were officially welcomed to the United .,..ments committee to be tem· States by Secretary Kellogg with dig· ehafrman at Honston and to nilled ceremony. They lunched ut the the keJDote speech. This White House and President Coolidge bad beeli expected pinned on their brl'a8ts the dlstlngolii:hed flying crosses which congress EBBERT HOOVER was nnop- had voted them. In At·llngton Napoled ID the California Repob- tional cemetery they laid wreaths ou Soldier. Uean prlmiU"J, bat the Republicans 'the tomb of the Unknown In tht>m greeted wbo th011e Among tlodl:ed ,to the polls to vote for blm In Lind A. Charles Col. was Washington IIJI'Prl.alDg anmbera; Tile total G. 0. P. vote cast was more thaa twice as bergh, who had flown there in !tis tarce as the Democraelc vote. The "Spirit of St. l~ouls" for the purrose Golclea atate delegation of 29 gives of placing that famous plane in the Thursday Hoover an estimated total of 300 dele· Smithsonian Institution. Koehl Captain Huenefeld. von Baron ptes to date, though 211 ot these are Nl'w to flew Fitzmaurice Major und nnlnstrorted His supporters now claim of tour air their for arrange to York be wUJ enter the cooventloo with 526 West. Middle and East the votes, only 19 short of the neceaary Gen. Umberto Nohile nnd comran· M5 majority. Last week the ~ left Stolp, Germany, Thursday In Ions neNee Republican convention Indorsed airship Italin for Spitzbergen. the Hoover and also Instructed tbe state's miles away. 'l'he ltalinn explor1,700 delegates at large to vote for Conto mal'e reveral flight.~ over plan ers gn>ssman J. Q. 'l'llson of Connecticut regions dm·ing the summer. polar the for vice president. -wm H R E H cosslon of fupda!rn!ntallsm and modernism. In their episcopal address the 44 bishops recommended that full ad· vantage be taken of the chance to as· sign responslbllltles to younger members of the church. They held the pos:slblllty of a world union of Christian churches to be beyond considera· Uon at present. Among the laity there Is a strong movement for the democratization of the church government, Including the election cH bishops for a term of years In.tead of for life. Tile conference approved a court of 17 mPmll1't·s to tt·y nishop nast of CopeuhagPn on charges arising out of his com·iction In civil court of misusing churc!J furuls. ltev. Fred S. Stone of Chicago was chosen pro~ecutor. Kai-•hek, general! slmo of C HUX<; lhtl Chinese Nationalists, ha8 moved his ht>Uilquarters to Tslnan, cup. !tal of Shantung pro,·inc!', and Is layIng !!is plans for the final drh·e again;:ot Peking und the armies of Chang 'l'solin. It Is reported that Chang has .gathered 100,000 men lu the vlciiJit7 of Techow, where there Is a large arsenal, and presumably the next bill battle will be in that arE.>a. The situ· atlon between the NatlonalisLs and the Japanese was relieved when the former agreed to reopen the Shantung railway nnd permit the Japaneije troop trains to operate between Tslngtao and Tsinunfo. But the Nationalists In Shanghai are keeping up their antiJapanese boycott. J• Oil~ BULL Is likely to cancel Ills agrecm~nt to help Uncle Sam stfp the smuggling of illegal liquor Into the United States, for he Is getting great· ly peeved m·er the Impetuous actions of some of the American rum chasers. Coast guard boats have been entering Bail:uua und Bermuda ports without warrant, and fort>lgn ships have been ~-eized by them allegedly without right. 'fhe British government malle formal protest, and Secretary Kellogg, after r~r•lying in apologetic tone, ordered all coast guard craft to remain away from Bermuda pvrts. Only a few days ago, too, Canarlian autiiOI'ilies complained tlwt our enfnrt-ement agents In the Detroit aren were firing shots that crossed the rln•r and endangered the lives of Canadlnus. This was denied hy Washington. EGYPT bn't going to lose Its lndeJJI'ndence Ju»t y~t. but It must mind Its step. lit"l'at Britain's prote~t against the Egyptian .. public assemblil.'s bill," whieh It was said would hurnppr the protection of foreigners, was followrd up hy the sending of sevenll warships to Alexandria and opt>n threats to reduce the country again to !lllependPncy. llut the Egyptian government postponed consideration of the objeclionahle measure und the warships were called orr. However, Foreign Secretary Chamberlain warned Egn•t tl•at there must be no re•Ival of the controversy. G I~HMANY has onqoallfledly acct>pted Secretary Kellogg's proposals for a multJ.Iatpral treaty to out· luw war. The Berlin government In· dorses the plan enthusiastically and says it is ready to enter nfgotlatious with the leading powers for the consommu~on nf such a pact. The German note hold;, unfounded the French fear thut an unconditional anti-war ll'Ntty would contlict with the League of Natlnns or 11 nation's right of selfdefense, and takPs the position that reserva lions to the American draft treaty nre onnet-essary. P won a HA niONl' 1'01.\'CARE big \'lctory in the French parliamentary elections and Is assured of a worl;ing mujorlty of about one hundrt>d In the chamber of· deputies. The 1·ountry thus guve -evldPnce that it wlshel' him to continue his tn~k or putting Its finanees In order without lnterf!'n·n~e from the ra1lirnls who had tht·Patenell his plans wlllt destruc>tion. As a pt'l'limiuary to stabilization of the franc the premier hus aunnnnet•ll n hen''Y loan to rpimhurse th~ Bank of ~'rnnN> for nl!rmlC'es to the state. ltJo:~IIER ELEGATES from all parts of the wUI not cost as murb D PROBABLY In Kansas 1•:.\THS or the we<'l' include that world ore to nominate and elect a Preslden, D qmulio;•Jtnlai the of Cnn:trl'ssmun Thaclilmls R\\·eet on attendance In City th1! in somPtimes this year as it has It asscmbl~d past, for the SPnate has adopted a rPSO· Patlon for an Inquiry Into the cnm· palgn contributions and expenditures of both parties. The speclnl committee named by VIce President Dawes In· fltetwar of Ort>gnn. rhalrmsn: general confen>nce of the M~thodist Episcopal church. Thl?y hm·e H lot of bus1ness on hand. hut It Is not like!~· their doings will be tlngert with srnsn· tionallsm, since at the .-tart they \·oted overwhPlmln~:ly against R fnrmal Ill•· or :'lit•w \'c•rl;, ldllPd in tlw crnslt of Hi> uh1li:lll!': and of Palmer ~; AtlllPrsnt,, United St:tte · mar,..hal for the nortt> Prn Illinois dl,tt·ict. ~lr. Anlic•t·son has hern suc<"eeded hy 11. C. \V. LauhPllhelmer. BE struggle for ~:;:11~,1'14 at Tom Heeney, burly blacksmltb from New Zealand, which culminated In a match wltb Gene Tunney for the heuvywelght championship, reads so like a story book that a fiction magazine reeently brunded It "too Improbable." A nl'wspu(M'r man, who based a short story upon Heeney's life, had It returned with the advice that he stict. In the future to real life for his plots. The bull-like Anzac came to America 1ast January without even an O\'ercoat and "'lth no false Impressions of his own ahlllty as a fighter. He wanted a "couple of gos" to net enough funds for a trip to California before sailing from there back to New Zealand. "HoD· est Tom" hod little Idea then that championship possibilities were his. After Interviewing e,·ery ftght promoter In New York, Heeney finally was given a mntrh with Charley Andt>rsou. Chicago Df'gro, which he won In mediocre fashion when Anderson was disquallflt>d. He lookt>d a bit better In winning a tO-round dl.'cislon from Jack Oe Move, bu• lost another decision to Pautlno Uzcudun. fhe bounding Basque, although most critics thought he had eornl'd at least a dmw Heent>y got his draw with Paulino lu a l~round bout last fall. Then he knocked m·er Tom Heeney. Jimmy Moloney In '11 round and won from Johnny Risko of Cleveland, the other finalist In Tex Rickard's elim· inatlon tnnrnamtont, In 10 rounds. A 1:!-round draw with Jack Sharkey and 15-round win o,·er Jack Delaney placed him nt the top of the list of con• tPnd~rs. Before coming to America, Heeney, who !s twenty-nine years old, fought only twentyfour fights In New Zealand, Australia, England and various parts of Europe. He won t>ight by knockouts, won thirteen, drew two •tnd lost only to Blackle Miller, In Australia, nn a foul In 1924. In almost eYery match Heeney has fought here he has been the underdog going Into the ring. He thinks he Is just an ordinary fighter with plenty ublllty to "take It," but without t>xct>ptional ability. Rather frankly, Tom will tell you that the only good flghter here now T G Is Paulino Uzcudun, who has hurt him must unney. ~ne In their two fights. But I:Ieent>y's plodding style and courage as great as his 200·pounll hody always has managed to carry the Anzac through to victory o,·pr the tlashier rl\'flls In the elimination. lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll VDIAMDNDX V\PICK·UPS Alexander Alekhine, chl?ss champion of the world, is a lawyer by pro· fesslon. • • • Hobert Allen, with the l'lliladelphla Nationals in 1892, made 433 putouts, a record for a season. • • • Outfielder Bob Murray has been sold to New Haven of tbe Eastern league by the Old New Orleans Pell· cans. • • • Chink Taylor, outfielder of the Shreveport Texas league team, has been purchased by Chattanooga of tilt> Southern circuit. • • • Pittsburgh scribes are still In the dark about Cuyler's dismissal from the Pirate~. but they hope he hits .400 for the Cubs this year. • • • Robert Hichards. young Unlrersity of Denver perfHmer with the Ath· letlcs, has been sent to the Baltimore Orioles on optional agreement. • • • Despite the loss of one urm, Ken· neth Gilland Is expected to win an outfield position on the Clwrlott~ (X C.) high school baseball team. • • • National League Race Promises to Be Close President John A. Ileydler, while not hazarrllng a prediction on the out· come of the National league pennant ruce, confidently expects the struggle to be eren closer 1han was the thrill· ing contest of last year. "Our league appears to be better balanced In playing strength than at any time In recent years," he said. "Every club hns made Important changes. "It gratifies me to o·ote the real added strength to all our seconddivision clubs of last year. This will balance our league and make our race more Interesting from start to finish. "Every year for the past five sea· sons our league hns broken the attendance record of the year before. and r feel sure that 1928 will set still another new mark in attendance. "In spite of what some few pessi· mists and alarmists may say about the waning Interest of boys in baseball, r am <"onvlnced from my own obsen·atlon and information that the game still has its grip on the youths of the land. 'l'here may be fewer vacant lots to call them in the spring, hut r notice there are more boys than eYer nn e1ch lot." HARGRAVE BEST AMONG CATCHERS Seven-Year Record of .312 Tops Hard Hitters. There are more hard hitting catchere In the garbe today th11n at any pe· rloll since baseball begun. No le:1:1 than 15 catchers In the major leagues are hitting .280 or better. The most consistent of these I~ Eugene Hargrave of the <.:Inclnnatl Reds, for he hasn't missed the .SOU mark In the past seven years. His lifetime butting average stands at .312, which Is the best mark ever made In the National league since the days of Buck Ewing and Mike Kt>lly who fin· !shed their respective careers with av· erages of .313 und .312. Mickey Cochrane of the A's Is the catcher with the highest lifetime bat· ting average In the American league, but. hi& career hasn't the years to it. He leads I:Iargmve's record by four pnlots. Cochrane Is the hardest hit· tlng catcht>r the game has at the present time. In his three seasons his average stands at .315, decorated with 2!3 home runs, 20 triples and 50 doubles. The name!:' of only two catchers are to be found among the list of .300 hitters who have finished their baseball careers. Mike Kelly and Buck Ewing were the famous ones. There were such great catchers as Charlie Ben· nett, Clements and Jack Milligan who were counted as splendid batsmen, but they weren't lncludt>d In the list of the .300 hitters. Wilbert Robinson, Jim McGuire, Roger Bre~·nahan, Jack O'Connor, Chief Zimmer and Joe Sugden were the heavy-hitting catchers of the midperiod, but not one finished with a .300 average. All were hitting about .280. Today we lun·e Cochrane, Hargrave, Earl Smith, Basslt>r and Henline hitting In the .:l(X) cia~•. with Gooch, WiiRon, Gibson, Woodall, S<"hang, Ruel, O'Fa~rt>ll, Harnett, 7.ac1' Tn~·lor step· ping along at a .280 pare or better. Then there Is Yernon Clemons. Hank Se,·ereid, Halph Perkins, StHe 0':\ell, Glenn Wyatt, all cnllt>d ll~:d hlttlng catchers, but falling to rea.~ the select circle of the .300 hitters. 'foday there Is Bengoough, Tate, McCury, Luke Sewell and Milton Gaston, who are gaining recognition a~ good batsmen. Photogntpll shows Bill ~lelliorn of Pittsburgh putting during- the first an· nuat Hichmond Open ut ltichmond, \·a., which he won with a score of 283 for the 7::! holes. Ue took the first prize of Sl ,000. " ••• ••• • • • Budapest will be the scene of the International bicycle races during June. • • • • • • Perhaps Tunney figures he t>llmlnates the Hisko when he selects Heeney. The Chicago White Sox lt>d both leagues last season In team tlellling, turning In a percentage of .971, a point higher than that of the !'hiladelphia Athletics. • • • Manager Nemo Leibold of the Columbus Senators has given a release to catcher Bill Wagner, who was unable to get Into proper shape llftt>r a couple of years In tlll t 1aw ball. ' .. I.eon St. Plene, Johnny J>ughma!l and Jerry O'Connor, tl>4'" ~}·lJLhr~ high athletes, will report to Munagt>r Paddy O'Connor of the Hartrord ~~ust ern League entry. St. Pierre Is an outfielder while the other two ure • pltrhers. • • • "'Pug" Allen, who left the fndianapolis baseball dub because of Its re· rusal to sell him to the majors for a reported price of $1:i,OOO, lms de· clded to emulate the example of Waltt>r Hagen and seek fame and fortune as a golfer. ---- A professional I~ an athlete who wishes he could pmsper as amateurs do. • • • • • • ---- - Tht>) say HeenPy has u lot of personality. But that won't stop Tunnt>y. Joe N11gle, who formerly played with Brooklyn and Cincinnati, hot Is now practicing law in Chicago, tu1s been offered 11 place as scout with the Brooklyn Robins. Charles Lajeskle, 11 ftrst baseman taking a try at It with the Boston Red Sox, has been given his release. He failed to stack up to requirements In his fiellfing work. --- .5porting_5quibs No team has ever won ewry game trom another In a seasun's pluy In the American league, but this bas happened several times In the Nationul league. ••• 'l'he photograph shows Brut-e Cald· well, Yale's great football piuyer who was tmrred from playing In both the Har,·ard and Princeton games, In bls new role as flrRt baseman on the unf .. verslty baseball team. President Barnard Has Approved New Foul Rule American ll•ague umpires, meeting with PreRidE'ilt Barnard recently, adopted a ruliug permitting base run::ers to a~h·r.nre only one base when u player fulls into the grandstand or dll&Olll with a foul fly In l:is hands. The case arose In the Ntow YorkPhiladelphia ~!emorlul day game last year, and the umpires then decided to let one base runner score and the nther adv:mce to third. Unrler the new rule, marle public recently, nelth· er player could have !!'Cored. l'hlladelphla protested that hoth runners should have scored, but Presllrlent Ban Johnson upheld his uruplres. T11e Yqn~es c>H•ntualiy won the game • >!le elevenn. Inning. FIRST AID TO BEAUTY AND CHARM Nothing so mars an otb~r wlse bcnutlful lace as tbe Inevitable Jines ot fatigue and suffering caused by tired, Bt:lling teet. ALLEN'S 11'\.lllt-...:fOOT-USE, the Antiseptic, Healmg Powder,lnsures loot com [ort. IUs a Toild Neccs•ity. Shake it In your !hoes in the morning, Shop all dnyDnn<"e nil evening- then lc·t your mirrortell tho •tory. Trial parka~~ and a Foot.Eas& Walking Doll sent Free. Addreos Allen's fool·Ea... lo Roy N Y. In a Pinch, U11e Allen's Foot-Ease X-Rays Find Buttons • • • Otto Peterson, big right·hantil'd pitcher who has seen considerable service In the Western USSO('inthlO, signed a contract with till! Spring· field Midgets. Ba1er Manufacture of loloDOaeetleaeldeater of Salleylleael4 New uses are alwuy~ being found for X-ru~·s. One of the hltt>st Is that of searthing for b~ttLUb nnd other solid materials In pi:l'~ of rngs that ure to be used for p:tpl'r·m:tking. Serious damage to the filliping machine Is lil;el,,. if buttons, 'tr•t k~. t>yes, nnd such lil;e arE' not rPilltJ\'1'11 from the pulp. 'fo prt n•nt this, t·n1lle~s bnntl~ tom·e~ the rags ovrr vn X-rny tuhe, where the solid materinls at·e reudlly detected h.l' fluorescent ~rreens In the X-ray outfit. Ben Dimond, well known minor league catcher who wound up last season "'lth Topelw, has been signed by Bloomington In the 'l'hree-1 league. • • • .AIIPiriD Ia the trade mart of Bill Melhorn Wins Now Plays Baseball Outfielder Hudie Miller of the Bing· hamton Triplets has been granted nn unconditional release In order to lund a berth nearer his home In the Mid· die West. DON'T suffer headaches, or any of those pains that Bayer Aspirin can end in a hurry I Phystcians prescribe it, and approve its free use, for it does not affect the heart. Every druggist has it, but don't fail to ask the druggist for Bayer. And dmt't take any but the box that says Bayer, with ~ !ford genuine printed in :t:ed; Ohio state has a freshman coed candidate for the Am~ricun Olympic dh·ing team In Ro5e Boezek of Cleveland. ••• The ~Iexican Olympic t~nnls squad Is made up of 40 men. Mexico first sent a team Into the Ol~·mpics In 19:!4. • • • Oxford and Cambridge unl\·ersltles of t;nglnnd have met In competition nt table tennis, which Is known In thl~ country ns ping·pong. • • • Out of hundreds of Big Ten ath· letes fewer than ten were disqualitlell during the last season for !:J.fractlons of !he conference rules. • • • Tlwre's one occupation still harred to women In California. The state officials ree!'ntly refuse1l to give a woman a license as o boxing promoter. • • • 1 new Am!'ri<'an record for attend ancc at hi<·yde racl•s was set recent!) at the NPw York vPlol!rome when 10,:100 hike fans turne1l on! to s~e the lv~t ln•lnor program of the •MI!OD- CAN NOW DO ANY WORK 'Thanks to Lydia E. Pink· ham's Vegetable Compound Denison, Te.."':as.-"I think tbere is 110 tonic equal to Lydia E. Pinkham's r--....;.---, Yrgetable Com- pound for nervousness and I ho.vo u<ed Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash and the Pills for Constipation. I can certainly pra1se your medicines for what they have done for me and I wish you succe88 in the future. I can do any kind of work now and wlten women ask me what, has helped me I recommend your medicines. I will answer ietU>rs I receive asking about them.' -MRS. 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