OCR Text |
Show 0 THE. WEATHER. and Ttoaday fati unsettled northiHttio change In xtemperatyr. Local Settlement rrien. Monday t Maximum service at minimum cost that tells In - Kmer Domestic, id S3 li e : foreign. , , .5SS- (tthodes) Copper how a Tribune Want Ad - .S3 on does its work. 112.(23 V' SALT LAKE CITY, y0L.103,3TO1J6. mm seven- die - GENERAL PORTER Youngster Takes Perilous Voyage on Raft in Flood E r i Explains Troubles Facta? League of Nations in Enforcing Its Decrees. Writer X 1 T 1 Woolgrower Believe' High Is Protective - Schedule Essential to Industry. f - Eastern Manufacturers ' Inclined .to View Import Tax - as Detrimental. That Dispute in Upper Will Lead to War Si-les- ia Discounted - by Simonds. MARK By SIMONDS.' H. By FRANK Special to The Tribune. Special to The Tribune. Idaho, May 29. Len Morrte, yeare ef age, yesterday afternoon started cruise on a raft of boards down ths Rsrtnauf river, which, if continued, would have spelt At' 'disaster for It was, he was rescued by Hans Chrlatefferaen and the lad la new , ready for the next voyage. Tha Morris family, along with others, have been , driven from their hemes for some time by tho rising waters of ths portnsuf, which 'flooded tha ball park and many homaa In Tho boy had been Happy Hollow. playing with tha raft naar their Improvised home and It evidently broke from its moorings and the child waa adrift an the swift waters - sf ths river. Help-froMr, Chrtatoffarsen prevan tad a catastrophe. -- SULLIVAN. to The Tribune. WASHINGTON, D. C, May 2. Few WASHINGTON, May 29. In all people tn Washington take the emerquarreling and bickering now going gency tariff bill seriously. For the brief between London and Parla over time of its duration It can accomplish I'pper Silesian question there is one delittle. Everybody admits that. In additail jshlch promises to cause trouble even tion, a considerable number of persons when the actual frontiers have been laid srs dubious abou( making the permanent down upon the official map. This troutariff bill a high protective measure. ble. moreover, has beaet the supreme Nevertheless, by k shift In the balance of council from the days of the Paris conthe permanent tariff bill, soot, PwV ference onward. It la (the question of to be Introduced, will be a high profinding ths troops to enforce the decisions tective measure. reached by the august body which repre- Soldier, diplomat, scholar and patriot, be high because the farmers of whs 'Bled In New York early- - yesterday sents the will of Kurope. the west think high protection will help , In the case of Upper Silesia the French morning, them, this Is a reversal from the time still have 10, MOO troops present, .the when Dolllver of Iowa led the fight of Italians rather less than 3000, the Britthe west .progressives agaWsst the faNow the territory ish next to none. mous "schedule K" on wool and the real immediately affected has a population at of the h tariff. something above 1,600,000 and the French ceneial commanding the allied troops Demand Protection. High will It that in the region has estimated During Taft's administration it was the squire not less than 60,000 allied troops to enforce any decision unfavorable to Republicans of the east, headed Hie Poles and it will hardly require who demanded high protection. less to meet possible German forays. Today It is the farmers of the west wl demand high protectipn, and tha Oppose Attacking, Allies. But thyrcnctrww not W rthaTrthf-lalan- ce "of of which they troop to Power,- - both- In Universal "fha do not Approve upon their allies', house. between poles. All the real thrust have turned 'The west Is particularly Insistent on ldod George and Btiand Conducted Search for British The this round prime minpoint high protection for raw wool. There la did ister suggested that If the fole one western senator whose personal exnot ohev, the Germans might he perPaul Body perience Is typical of the stats of irlind mitted to ue troop, e The French met Briand of the wesL The senator la jhi proposal jsrith a prompt veto, In farmer hi no' misunderstanding allowing who made a large fortune In Wool and aimed sorda But what George reallv choice NEW YORK, May 2. Funeral servicoo In grazing lands on which wool was at was giving the French the for General Horais Porter, diplomat and raised. between enforcing the will of the Germane the council and letting Civil war veteran, who died early today The story, as it is told here. Is that act year, will be held on September 1, last, this farmer-sen- s tor - Briand In his retort, all in vetoing the In his eighty-fift- h waa mors than a millionaire, but that German proposal, put the blame for the Thursday at the Fifth Avenue Presbyteby November 1. the fall in the pries of situation upon the British snd the rian church. It Is planned also to hold raw wool had wiped out moet of his Italians, who had failed to send troops to keep order. a military funeral, which will he deferred fortune. This sort of misfortune - has in sufficient numbers been force two the French at least duplicated in a smaller degros on weeks, or until the arrival George. In seeking to had In mind that the bond of the general's eldest daughter, Mre. nearly every farm throughout tha wssL hand, obviously between- France and Poland would be Elsie Porter Mende, from Switzerland. West Needs Help. weakened If French troops were comBrigadier-generPorter, of the Union pelled to fire upon Polish in the course Politicians who begin to look forward Britto Impose of operations designed army in the Civil war, was the last sur- to the congressional election next year ish views upon, the majority in the I that the most nearly concrete thing e say vivor among-thmembersof General Poles Silesian districts, which the in sight agrarian movement in the Grants military staff. He accompanied west. carried. The west Is in economic Pain, antf Grant to Appomattax and was with hts they think a high protective tariff will Each Blames Other. chief when Grant and Lee discussed the help them. In ths senate and- - In ' ths Is tn the saddle, west house ths As the French aee It, the British have terms of the latter's surrender. and After therefore we shall have a the task put upon them the burden of of high protecas secretary tive tariff. the war, when Grant aerv-eoccuall over Europe, where forces but in. of war. General Porter acted as hts asThe manufacturing east, which was pation have to bg maintained, the French sistant. When Grant became president. the bulwark of high protection twelve ev ervi case have prevented tn wsv a which, General Porter accompanied him to the years ago, is now dubious auvut It. If from using thetr troops W hite house as executive secretary and Aldrich of Rhode Island wars fall In with French policy. Now-alive in might in the I'pper during the first term of office. the senate today he would lead a very Silesian affair, French remained W hen Grant died, it was General Porter different kind head a to Moreover, comes of fight In fact, resentment the the popular subscription present Republican senator from Rhode British exasperation is not less unmistak- who organised36MO.OOO and built Grant's Island voted against the emergency the that yielded able, for the British conceive that , tariff bill In its original form. French troops, had they acted as ths tomb in New York City. Altogether General Porter spent thirty Ths senators of the east are thinking British heltevs they should, could have service as in years disturbance. public soldier, dipthe whole of America's position as an exporter ef prevented h dislomat, scholar and patriot. A CongresAs usual. the latest They are thinking of tne ten Medal of Honor waa awarded him capital. billion dollars which is owed to our govpute has set in motionandrenewed aaser-tio- -i sional of the crumbling disappearance for distingutahed services tn the Civil ernment by European governments, of entente. But the star. The Grand 'Cross of the Legtcgi of the four or of the five billion dollars that Is fact of the matter is that the entente has Honor asfrom France testified to his ser- owed by European governments and priIt is no vices ambassador at Parts. He re- vate European interests to American long ago changed character ionger an alliance against Germany. It ceived .the degree of LL.D from Harvard, hankers, and of the continuing borrowThe Princeton, Union and Williams. is no longer an alliance at all. which Europe Is doing In America. Born at Huntingdon. Pa, April IS, ing British continue to associate themselves 137 the eon of a governor of Pennsylwith the French in the endless conferMust Be in Goods. ' ences. not for the purpose of an alliance vania. he studied at Harvard and at Payment reeast Into The Point of and West the thinking in terms of these obvious for design reguthe graduated hut very It made easy for jhese con- lar armv. He fought. In turn, with ths foreign loansof wants straining French action. In useful these loans and the prinarmies the Union of interest ths allies the Ohio, the Cumberars the Italians ferences the British and France is steadily In land and the Potomac. He won six brev- cipal mf them to be paid,be they know that made in the ets for bravery on many battlefields. At the payment can only the minority. Chattanooga his bravery attracted the shape of goods snd that a tariff which of flow goods from Europe attention of General Grant, who selected Impedes ths Hope for U. S. Support. as s member of his staff and kept to America will make the payments difBut the Italians are an expensive ally.' him make will it difficult also and his sids the remainder him ficult, of by during In wavs vsrioua They have to be paid war. for America to continue In her present for their support. What the British theGeneral Porter was bv profession a position of the world's greet exporter of of actually hope for Is that the return man. At 38 years of age he recapital. ihe I'nited States to the supreme coun-- 1 rniroad Is not it the east armv and from but the became the vice Howeyer. signed will mean In no distant time tha has the balance of company, later agrarian west, pteaideni of the Pullman New American support will be rmllted to Britwas president of the York. West power in Washington now, and what hey ish jjolicy so Jar as continental affairs he & Buffalo. and the Bt. Louts A wane In-- the shape- - ef a tariff Whoretr -- the me concerned. If only the American Sait Francisco- - railroads. During hie tariff that snail probably get. relied can be upon again, representatives career of twenty-fou- r Incidentally, as regards ths ten bilyears he as iu the Paris time, to accept the Brit- business lion dollars owed to us bv. foreign govwaa a director In fourteen railroad comish thesis in substantially all rontinental ther Is this to bs said about ernments. and financial Institutions. affairs, then British supremacy in Eur- panies funeral Porter again entered public Ambassador Harvey's speech: much of ope - will be promptly and inexpensively r- - e- rt red, restlnned oa Fete Three Coetinned oe Psge Three Cel mns Fees.) Hsd we been an active member of the lOehowa Teor.) storm Polish when the supreme council our representative broke, undoubtedly would have been deputed to utter the warning to the Poles. Just at le fell to Mr. Wilson's lot to make the formal appeal to Italy, over the .heads of the Italian delegation at Parts, in t8 matter of Flume. Thus American shoulders had . to hear the burden of Italian wrath, while the British and Fremh, who approved of the Wjtscnian utterance, preserved a formal hilhl. liver over to the British government A few months ago a similar battle was By GEORGE SELDEg. the skull of the late monarch." East tno Lake Tribune fought between the French and (Chicago Tribune-Ba- it African negroes declare Sultan In ' But near east a the with British Copyright,) will roam the Mkwawa's ghost In that rase the British susdifference. 29. hell his No streets of until how matter Is reskull May tained snd the French opoored a nation stored to reet In his native land and intentions, Germany seeking to expand,. The roles of today wanted to British the the favor gain BERLIN. er fulfill the treaty of In the Polish case were exactly reversed of the negroes by making such resand Greece was allotted vast extents toration tha and of ghost of Turkish tcrtUorv. to which her claim Now the German foreign office ad- -' win forever feultan Mkwawa was certainly no more valid than that mite it has not found the skull and of (he Poles to Upper- Silesia, because conBoth roem the of Streets hn. not know where It la Likewise, does In It fell with the British scheme of It cannot find the original koran of clusions come from a perusal of ths things. Othman which article 24 of Caliph How GerAnd the Fremh. this time supported government document, the treats- save was stolen from fti the Italians, fought the British policy Is fulfilling the peace treaty.many Medina by the Turks and presented the Brit. in the matter of Greece Jut-- a to Kaiser Wilhelm. As the It seems --that Sultan Mkwawa, alpeers with Italian aid. aie fighting the lh, never b fulfilled, can treaty the I rem h though- dead, wa Important enough the pm pose with respect of want German officlala to know to have a special clause In the treats whether the Ruhr basin will be ocon Itiachitree toaitmied as article 2t( saye Germany ahall de- tOeiawa I'm.) cupied as a result, Columbia ll tributes , Various , University Awards Dis- for Achievements. Payne-Aldric- DIES IN GOTHAM - farm-ere-of-t- PeaceAdvocate , of John - the Jones i al er ts-a- n Anglo-Frenc- Anglo-Fren- si. - Lost Skull of Sultan Blocks Peace Treaty Fulfillment It, - - J' SIM it LACK OF ARMIES Allied Nations Join S NEW YORK, May 29 The Boston Post's exposure of the Charles Ponxl schema of quick wealth la considered by Columbia university the most meritorious public service rendered by any American newspaper during the last year, As a result ths Pulitlier prize In gold medah cozttng - 3500," has been awarded to that- - newspaper. Other Ptllitlzer prize awards Announced today Include 31000 to Louis Selbold for his Interview with former President Wilson. The requirements for winning this prize are strict accuracy,' terseness and accomplishment of some pubHc good. One thousand dollars waa awarded Edith Wharton for her novel, "The Age of Innocence, which the prize committee considered the best American novel published during the yeer. For the origins) American plav, performed in New York, which best presents ths educational value and power of the stage in raising ths standard of good morel good taste and good manMias Lulu Bett ners, 3100 was awarded Zona by gale. For the best book on the history of the United States, 32000 was awarded "The Victory at Bea, by Rear Admiral William B. Sims, in collaboration with Burton J. Hendrick. "The Americanization of Edward Bok," by Edward Bok, was given a prize of 31000 as the beat American biography. in Reverence for American Dead Who Rest in Europe Special pOATELLO, X 3 -- FIVE CENTS S SUPREME COUNCIL CRIPPLED BY . 24 PAGES rORNING, .MAY 30, 1921. Tributes, to Sacrifices General William Mitchell Made by U. S. Troops Paid by . Leaders of Foreign Governments? ! jj: ! 3oV J9 (By the Associated Frsnce Joined with Amer- PARIS. tn the first two days ncof Memorial day for tha Americans who died In tha war. With British, Belgian and other allied S .v participants, ths French people symbol' ized their reverence Jor those who fell by a iceremony at the Arc de Trlomphe, where soldiers snd civilians placed wreaths on the tomb of France's unknown soldier, while Hugh C. Wallace, American ambassador, coupled hla tribute to the dead with an sxpresslon of the world's admiration for tha spirit of Franca. Wherever there were American graves, memorial services ware held In the French curches, and In Paris there were observances In sll English churches. Americas dav for ths dead has becoms 1 'W) almost s French rite. risen The ceremony at the Arc de Triomphe served as a svmbol of the fraternity of Assistant chief of tho army air service, the comrades In arms In the war, when a who had a narrow ascape while flying composite battalion of the American In thi storm which destroyed the amforces of occupation from the Rhineland bulance piano. , with Its band playing "Madelon," swung up the Champs Ely sees, under the arch, and passed the French guard of honor with other silled uniforms tn the massed forces at the arch. As the Americans, tali and straight, marched past the guard, the pride of the American spectators was stirred by the laudatory comments of the French veterans. Mav ) Contingents Carry Wreaths. Ambassador Wallace, Major General H, Allen, commander of the American forces, scores of American officers snd enlisted men, delegations of British and of AmeriBelgians, and can and Frenchrepresentatives organisations attended tervlces In the American Church of th The French government Holy Trinltv. waa represented, Meaawbil tha American battalions stacked arms and formed outside the church, while French battalions of infantry and cavalry were massed in adjacent streets. Headed bv the mounted, guards' of Frsnes, the procession formed outside the church with the American battalions and French troops In line, followed by dele- with colors from tha American frations egatlon and from scores of American and French veterans and military societies, uniformed detachments of British and of the Belgian troops and members American churches, each contingent carrying a wreath for the unknown soldier s tomb. T. Spectators Bare Heads. Are Out Quell Brigadier - General - Mitchell Caught In, Storm While 7 Flying in Single Seater. WASHINGTON, May the As- sociated Press.) Brigadier General William Mitchell, assistant chief of the army air service and formerly in command of American air forces In France, had a narrow escapo from death yesterday in the storgi In which the armv Curtiaa-Eagl- e ambulance plane crashed with a loss of seven lives. General Mitchell admitted todav he never felt closer to death than last evening, when the single seater pursuit plant, callable of 120 miles an hour. In which ha waa returning from Langley Field, waa twisted out of his control and tossed at the tnerev of the aterm more than 1000 feet above the earth. That he finally regained control of hie plane and ran before the wind until out of the Storm ana reamed Boiling Field bv a roundabout route was as much luck as snytbiug else, he declared. General Mitchell left Washington yesterday with several other machines to maneuvers at Langley review aerial rs Prince London for France 0. Vanderlip Britain Kills Baby Arms th Anglo-Balt- ic Steamer Off .Boston Harbor Anglo-Americ- an V- - ' Fated Plane Unbalanced. WASHINGTON, May 29 tBy the Associated Press.) Seven men. five of the ' army and two civilians, were killed In the wreck of an army Curtiss-Eagi- a ambulance airplane near Indian Head. Md , of Washington, forty miles southeast yesterday evening In a terrific wind and electrical storm. The dead: 4 Lieutenant Colonel Archie Miller, L. S. A., M. H., Waehlngton. D. C. Alaurice Connolljf'of Dubuque, Ia., former' member of the house. A. G. Batchetder of Washington, D, C, chairman of the .board of the American Automobile association. lieutenant 8. M. Ames, pilot, of Washington, D. C. Lieutenant C. W. McDermott, Langley. Field, Va. Lieutenant J. M. PennewHO laugley Field, Va. Sergeant Mechanic Richard Blumen-kran- z, , Washington, D. C. Army air service officers said the ac. e dh wort- - i the history of aviation. In the I'nited States and, that it waa on of the few in which all the passengers In a pis ns had been killed almost Instantly. Tha ship struck nos ' first and tha force of the impact was so great that-thLiberty motor . waa thrown back Into the cockpit on top of the pilot and the passengers. AU bodies were badly mutilated, was returning front Tha Curtiss-Eagl- e Langley Field, near Newport News, Vs., and had just crossed the Potomac river when it ran Into tha atorm. The exact cause of the accident probably never will be known, as those tn the machine were dead when witnesses from Morgantown, a village near Indian Head, reached the scene. will he - or-- i An official investigation dered. at which it is possible an Inquiry, will be made into the design and practical use bv the armv of such a machine, the only one of its t.vpe in the army service fitted with ambulance equipment. Air service officers said that when the plane left it waa apparently in perfect condition. military attache Captain de of the French embassy, who went hr the said tonight. In from Washington, Eagle his opinion, the Eagle was unbalanced. cldant-wa- e 2.-t- By e for French Military Attache De clinec Ride, Declaring the Strikes Nose First. Between masses of spectators with bared heads I he procession marched to the Palace de LEtoile. As the American and French marchers arrived, they formed in battalion fronj, facing each other and presenting arms as Ambassador Wallace and others psssed through the center, where the ambassador laid a wreath on the tomb and delivered an address He said: "I place this wreath on tha grave of the unknown soldier who rests Soldier Called here as the very type and symbol of heFrance. He died for . France, as to Baseball Clash roic France herself stood ready to die for Field. liberty. He died for France, and NOGALES, Aria, May 29. Mexican could grant no more. Who shall callglory "I left I.angley Field about ( oclock him soldiers were called out today to quell unknown when every French mother who li) the tingle seater, accompanied by a clash between several thousand spec- lost a son may claim him as her own?" Captain William Ocker In another. he tators during a baseball gams at Nogales, said. "We flew in formation and, alwe Sonora, and fired several rounds into It was lo beat expected dark, though By HENRY WALES. ' ths crowd, wounding three Mexicans, one the storm out. PARIS. Mav 29. On Memorial day this , cloud ceiling vra We found that-thseriously. ' We Spectators swarmed on the field to pro- year, representatives of all the allied na- only about 1100 feet from earth. test a decision by the umpire in the ninth tions In Europe bowed their heads be- could see the storm south of WashingInning in the game between the Doug-- i fore the graves of the American-soldieton Almost he fore we knew what waa to do honor to the memories of the gallas, Arts., and Nogalea, Sonora, team happening a e were caught, a terrific Douglas was leading. 2 to 0. in the ninth lant doughboys who sacrificed themselves wind with hall or rain and lightning and Aa wo crossed the Potomac tnniug, when the Sonora team got two in tha cause of right and justice and thunder. men on bases with none out. A throw who sleep their last sleep in the soil of the wind caused my ship to twist and to second base caught a runner off base France. Ockar was behind me. dip Captain For the occasion, military, political and and the umpire called him out. "The lest alternative was to turn anu Efforts to disperse the crowd failed and literary leaders of the foreign countries run from the storm and try to go around Mexican soldiers were summoned. They have availed themselves of the Chicago It, or between two storm ereaa That fired about thirty shots into the crowd, Tribune to testify tha gratitude and adIn the meantime my I decided to do. which quickly scattered. The game was miration of tha whole world for the ship 'was being thrown into spinning noble sacrifices bf ths American soldier not completed. Several hundred Amerisome 300 feet long, snd it waa divrA, and for the influential help which Amer- during cans were among the spectators. one of these that the problem of ica gave Europe during the war. turning away was solved, for when I cam out of It, I was heading on tho France Grateful. Japanese Crown return path. "I estimate that the wind must have Marahal Fayolle, former commander of Leaves an hour, the French armies of the Somme, said, been blowing at least 109 miles full open, "The United States is about to render for mv plane, with the engine 120 miles an should been doing have Chicago Tribune gait lake Tribnae Cable. solemn homage to those of her children LONDON, May 29. Crown Prince Hlro-hlt- o who fell on the battlefields of the great hour, and actually was hardly making of Japan left London todav for war tn defense of right and liberty. headway "We recroaeed the Potomac and raced France. He will also visit Holland. Bel- America has never forgotten the InterHe was seen off at vention of General Lafayettes soldiers in almost back to Richmond, then cut in gium and Italy. two storms, doubled bsrk over between Victoria station by King George, the the Revolutionary wsr. France will keep Prince of Wales, tho Duke of York and a grateful end lasting remembrance of Indian Head, reaching Bolling Field at Frith1 by a number of high British and Japanese the heroes who" Came to help Tier and After he arrived home, general Mitchofficials who contributed in a large measure te Before leaving London, the prince visthe victories of 1916. France and the ell learned that Captain B. Wright, who time as ited Chelsea, where he sat for Anguatua United States will be forever bound by had started at about the same from lngley Field in a Fokker John, tha famoua. painter. ties of mutual friendship and esteem. he did had Aid. at crashed Rockpoint, This union will not onlv be for their plane, for Rockpoint bv mutual advantage, but will be the safest He left Immediately found he where motor, Captain Wright Washington guarantee for world peace. General Gouraud: 'After having strug- uninjured, but the plan demolished. Great Sails gled almost alone against the barbarians from the beginning of the war. when, in Father Self While Real advices say that spite of the heroism of the French solRIGA, Mav 29 in His Washington D. Vanderhp, who has been diers, we began to feel exhausted, the Holding us comrades tn representing American commercial In- entry of America gave we arms as resolute ourselves to reat not la to as Moscow, fight terests, going SIOUX CITY. Iowa, May 29 While the war to a finish to make right, jusported by the consulate at Raval. baby girl In his The American bo'dtng hi He sailed Thursday for London, on tha tice and liberty triumph. diner Saltobar, it is unders- assistance gave u the necessary factors arms, Calvin J. Murphy, a aged 24, combullet through suicide mitted by firing to win victory," tood, With the consent of the British hla brain while standing In the bathroom authorities at Reval, though without an home Ids of American Response Cited. tonight. American passport. When the father fell the baby suffered Marquis Rochambeau: "Europe mav be a bruise on Its head and was removed TWO' KILLED IN WRECK. know to a hospital Domestic troubles are said ungrateful, but the Americans NEW YORK. Mav 29. Two persons! that France la too spontaneous to have have caused tha acL were killed and eight others injured thla defect In common with many na- to when a Penniujvanla railway excursion tions. They saw ua crossing the seas Grounds thsir call for help Mail train bound hers from Atlantic City in order to anewer How can we forget Crashed Into the rear end of a local In their struggle. passenger train at Burlington, N. J., of- the determination of tha Americans who ficials of tho Pennsylvania railroad an- pushed aside business considerations and nounced tontghL enlisted under our flag as soon as our BOSTON. Maas., May 29. The United They did not States country was endangered. Mall Steamship company's steamNOTE DELIVERED TO MEXICO. forget our common memories. How can er, Susquehanna, went aground on the we forget them? of the Graves, off northeastern MEXy'O CITY, Mav 29. The memopart member of parliaHoratio Bottemley, randum from the American government, Poston harbor, today. the was taking said delivered laet night to President Obre-go- n ment' "I hat! and spirit of Wireless messages cooperation which waa water and asked aid. a she friendship navy tug and by George T. Summeilln. American marked bv the advent of Colonel C.eo-y- e a roast guard cutter were sent Jo her charge d affaire, waa "not of a serious nature." President Obregon Informed the The steamer, with 700 pasassistance Cwllfliiel e Pii Tea . Associated Irena tomgbL ser (era, is bound front- - Bremen. (Celama Twe.) -- All Perton Aboard, Including Five Enlisted Men and Two Civilians, Die. Pilot Declared Skilful. "It had a small motor," he said, "of The weight was only too much; the pilot could not control it. I declined to return In it snd came back by boat. .Representatives Campbell of Kansas and Walai. of Massachusetts, who Went Field in the plane, also reto turned by boat. Mr. Campbell said that the element of safety had not entered Into their decision not to return tn the Eagle; that both of them 'were seasick. "On the way to Langley field the sir was rough and bumpv," he said. "V e had a wonderfully good piloL He would run Into en atrbank like it was a hillside and then the machine would drop, -- . sometimes more then 100 feet." Brigadier General Mitchell, assistant wh chief of the army air service, contpanied the Eagle to Langley fU'd and who had a battle with the storm during hia run. said Lieutenant Ames, piloting the Eagle, was considered a yx .good pilot. Attempted Landing: Reported. hi -- 1 , "We felt no concern for safetvj he said, "and when the Eagle circled over-thfield before a couple of time straightening out for W ashiiigtun, it was, running- - perfectly. Wz waAed. good-by- e. expecting that the big ship would be In Washington before we were ready to leave." The Eagle left Langlev field at about 4 30 p. m. yesterday. Tbe time of tho wreck is placed at ( 25 p m . the hour at which Mr. Connoilv a wauh stopped. Naval officers at Indian Head who saw the plane go down, declare Pilot Ames tried to bring hts machine down before tne full force of the storm struck, but that he was prevented from landing at the fiiet ai tempt bv tree. The atrehm crossed tha tree safely and appeared to to reach a near-b- y field. put on power the motor either failed i Apparently respond er the high wind checked the ship, for It wes seen to turn over and fall nos first, - It tnen wa only s few hundred feet up. officers t Indian Head sent out a detachment, but tt wa some time before they arrived and word of the accident did. not reach Bolling field here until 11 o'clock last night. e Stripped of Hospital toEquipment. arrive early When the plane failed assumed she in the evening officers either hsd landed to escape the ntorm or Mrs. had turned back to Langley field. Amee wes waiting for her husband at the field and when the report of the accident came she started for Morgantown tn her automobile, arriving after midntghL The bodies were taken nut of the plane, ami brought by the navel detachment to Walter Reed hospital here For the trip to Langlev field. h h -- Continued on Y iOotuaa Vswf, f Tst - " |