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Show The Weather VTAH til mfliC Fair Sands, Sunday IDAHO AND NEVADA Loc&l Monday; cvolar portion. laid At-cberl- Swarming Bees Willebrandt Episode, and Others Taken as Rebuff Prat Bcnrlco. WASHINGTON, July 6. President Hoover has the Republican politicians guessing. They are running around in circles trying to find out who is bossing the politics of this administration- and whither said administration is drifting politically, with the result that they are even less aware than before where they stand. his own political Moses. All who hive aspired to that position have been reduced to the rank of advisory Aarons. With Dr. Hubert Work retiring from the Republican national chairmanship as a result of his distaste tor the role assigned him It now dawns upon the Republican leaders that Mr. Hoover intSnds to be his own national chairman. The successor of pr. Work will be the selection of the president and will be expected g to bring his rubber stamp.-Bilist f Those No Longer in the Picture. There is an ever growing list of those who were prominently identified with the Hoover campaign for the presidency, but who are no longer in the picture." In addltlonxto Dr. Work they include Senators William E. Borah, Republican, Idaho, and Smith W. Brdokhart, Republican, lowa; Mrs. Mabel Willebrandt, for- -' mer Postmaster General Harry S. New, former Secretary of Agriculture William M. Jardine. William J. Donovan, former assistant to the attorney, general; David H. Blair, former commissioner of Internal revenue; C. Bascom Slemp, national committeeman for Virginia, and Colonel Horace Mann, Republican out hern org&aiser. The president has taken hold with no uncertain hand of the molding of the political policies which are to be relied upon to effect his renomination in 1832 with a minimum of resistance. He aims to Introduce efficiency into political organization, as Into every other activity in which he engages, from the art of government to the art of casting the trout fiy. Repnbllcan Leader Begin te Com Bearing. They told him, the politicians did, that he was ignorant of the political art, feeling sure one must be who didn't know whether he was a Republican or a Democrat in 1820, but, viewing in retrospect the success attending his personal direction of his nomination and election campaigns, the president finds his ignorance of the art no liability. Then, of course, there is a school of politicians who have come to the conclusion that while Mr. Hoover may be unpractlced in their art. he is just about as ignorant of lty principles as Calvin Coolidge, their great apostle. The Republican leaders began losing their bearings right after the election. f There U A wealth of evidence that the Antisaioon leaguers believed thst they had Captured the White House on bag and baggage and were bent becapitalizing the situation. They came bolder in their demands upon the administration and congress with respect to prohibition enforcement policies. As their demands were met by the administration and congress the dry leaders pronounced Mr. some of Hoover very satisfactory them making invidious comparison of the present Incumbent of the White House and Mr. Coolidge, Who was far from satisfactory. j Episodes Cited aa Evidence of Stand. Bui when the developments had convinced the politicians that Bishop Cannon was in the saddle at the White House other everts disclosed to a tendency of the administration declare Its independence of Antisaloon league domination.! There was.! top example, the Willebrandt episode. Mrs. Willebrandt. who had worked hand In glove with the .league and the W. C. T. U., as assistant attorney general in charge of prohibition enforcement, wanted to be the grand chief of prohibition administration when it should be transferred to the department of justice. Bhe found that Mr. Hoover had no intention of assignwas ing her so grandiose a role. He Job. the going to appoint a Her resignation followed In short order. Then there was the Hopkins episode. R. J. Hopkins, justice of the Kansas supreme court, was a candidate for appointment to the federal bench. He Is a director of the league of Kansas. In the Kansas league scandal a few years ago it was revealed that while bolding public office he had accepted compensation from the league for speeches. Although the Kansas delegation In congress, Including the two senators, Indorsed Judge Hopkins, the Hoover administration refused to appoint him. Another rebuff suffered by the or- Anti-salo- Anti-salo- CooUntd aa Faaa Tee.) (Column Tee.) on Default. Federal CHICAGO, July W. Judge George A Carpenter today ordered foreclosure and sale of the Chicago Ac Alton railroad, which has been In receivership for seven years, to satisfy two defaulted mortgages totaling $40,000,000. The value of the road Is estimated at $125,000,000. No date for sale was set, pending an expected appeal which cannot be heard until fall. The foreclosure and sale order was I presented to the court by counsel for the Farmers Loan and Trust company of New York, trustee for holdY t ers of a $22,000,000 mortgage, which was granted the first lien. This mortgage has paid no Interest since 1922. It was applied In 1900. The United States Mortgage and Trust company of New York, holders of an $18,000,000 mortgage, had claimed the first lien on the ground that no Interest on It had been paid since 1912. A third mortgage, which is first In point of seniority, did not become a party to the hearing before Master Chancery Herbert A. Lundall InWinner Repairs Airplane in asmuch as Interest has been paid regularly. It dated from 1899 and was at Night After Crash given by the Harriman Interests who acquired the road In that year. It la expected, however, to be a party to Landing. requests for an appeal by bondholders who are understood to feel that they have been slighted in the reLONDON, July CP). Flight proceedings. R. L. Atcherley, member of ceivership Kuhn, Loeb Ac Co., of New York, the British Schneider cup team, won and the Insull interests were promthe kings inently mentioned by financial observers aa probable bidders at the flight around Britain. The race started from Heston air sale which, if held, will be at Wilairpark yesterday morning, with 41 mington, Will county. Illinois planes taking off. They represented all types of machines, and the contestants included three women. The first section of the flight was COLORADO SOLON over a course of 569 miles, to Blackpool, where 29 pilots made a successPROPOSES POWER ful landing last night The start over the second leg on the return to Heston airdrome was mads early this EMABRGO morning. The three women were still In the contest. . Lieutenant R L. Atcherley maintained an average speed ot 150 J miles - an hour. He was fortunate In getting ready Wants Temporary Ban Un for the resumption of the flight toDisState Agree day, for on landing at Blackpool last night his machine struck a rut and tribution Program. part of the tail was tom away. New parts were rushed by motor during efwas the night. It only by frantic forts that mechanics got the plane DENVER, Julv 6 (IP). Upper basin ready for the start of the final half states of the Colorado river will be of the Journey. . effort being One of the sensational features asked to Join in an E. T. Taylor of the race was the splendid piloting waged 7 Congressman to obtain a temporary embargo on of one of the three women competiColorado the tors, Miss E. W. Spooner, who fin- all power permits along ished fifth In the field of 41 original river. Congressman Taylor contends that the federal trade commission starters. should withhold issuance of all such permits until a definite distribution program is agreed upon which would protect all states In the E. Wlnbourn, Colorados attorney general, will be the interme DATE diary for obtaining from the four upper basin states a composite opin ion as to the policy they believe the should United States government LOS ANGELES. July 8 VP). Lieupursue In the matter, it was disclosed tenant Karl Lange, western repre- today. The four states usually arq of sentative of the Luftshlffbau Zeppe- .one accord in their attitude on river lin Corporation of "Germany; an- deyelopment matters, nounced the receipt of a cablegram While the states drained by 'the todya from Dr. Hugo Eckener. com river were watting for the expiration mander of the Graf Zeppelin, in- of the time limit set for ratification forming him the dirigible would of the seven-stacompact under the leave Germany July 28 on a terms of the Boulder Darn bill, i cruise. temporary embargo existed against Ail arrangements for the flight of the issuance of power permits. When the famous transoceanic flying vessel the te compact became effechate been completed. Lieutenant tive, the embargo automatically was Lange said he was informed. The raised. i proposed cruise is expected to reIn a letter to Mr. Wlnbourn, Mr. will A 28 be made stop days. quire expressed apprehension over here. No other details of the voyage Taylor the' present situation, pom ting out were made known. j that it might be a long time before work Is commenced on the Boulder dam and that "it would seriously Jeopardize and complicate the rights of ail seven states If any permits were granted on the river or its tributaries, I the Gila J before construction PHOTO PLAN except is commenced." f Mr. Taylor ha presented the matter to President) Hoover. Von BERLIN. July ) inventor,-ne-w Mihliay, Hungarian living in Berlin, claims to have solved the problem of a movable television . apparatus which pan be taken into the daylight and can make scents visible to thousands. In connection with the transmitting apparatus. Von Mihilay uses a lense functioning new NEW YORK, July MV-Thmuch like that of a photographic cJ currency which will be According to the inventor, style intosmall circulation next Wednesday it is no longer necessary to use a dark put was described tonight by Ogden li chamber. of the treasMills, talk over the Columbia ury, in Broadcasting company chain. 'With you rcooperatlon and good wlll, he told his radio audience, it is probable that a year from now the old-sicurrency bill will be s rarity and in a short time thereafter will arouse as much curiosity as our new bills will on Wednesday said the reThe Delegates heard discussion of many duced size of the new money will seve kinds of germs with names unfamll tar to laymen. Dr. Walter Simpson. the government about $1,500000 a year and that the bills will last longer Dayton. Ohio, who last year received because they will not be folded as a medal from the national associa- much as the present currency. The smaller than tion for research on tularemia and bills will be ones. undulent fever, reported on his work theAllpresent kinds of the small sized money, m curbing tolaremlar except national bank notes, will be 1924 to 15 re Issued tula of cases, 'Up only Wednesday and the currency now in use will be retired es rapidly mis were known to medical annuals, Dr. Simpson said, but during the aa possible. Issuance of national bank past five years more than 800 cases notes will begin about July 15. The have been reported in America and speaker estimated the paper currency in circulation at $5,000,000,000. many more in Russia." vAMYf ffH Ai As close as the politicians can come to It, Mr. Hoover has set out to'be Another Tragedy Marks Opening WOMAN PILOT Of Bank Probe CLAIMS FIFTH President of Savings Unit Dies in River; Bullet Kills One Officer.. VP). BIRMINGHAM. Ala.. July Affairs of two banks, which plosed today, bringing to a total of four, banking institutions which have failed to open tn the Birmingham district within the past 10 days, were under investigation of the state banking officials tonight. Meanwhile searching parties were doubling their efforts to locate the body of Dr. A. W. Bell, president of the Woodlawn Savings bank, one of the Institutions which closed today. Bank Frestdent Diet In River Hear Home. Dr. Bell drowned this morning In the Coosa river near Vincent, Ala. Dr. Bell was reported to have gone in swimming with a party of friends at his counshortly after he arrived try place for the week-enThe report of the closing of the Woodlawn bank caused a run on the Southside bank, which prompted officials to order Us doors closed. Officials of the Southside bank said that closing was temporary and that the bank would reopen tor business Monday morning. As the report spread throughout the district, mild runs started at other banks. The runs were halted in most instances when officials announced that all depositors wishing to withdraw their funds would be paid promptly. Superintendent of Banks , Arrive From Capital. Judge C. E. Thomas, state superintendent of banks, arrived tonight from Montgomery to take charge of the banking situation here. He attributed the closing of the Woodlawn and Southside banks today to runs precipitated by the closing of the two banks last week. The banks closed last week were the City Bank it Trust company and the Avondale Bank & Sawings company. J. B. Lassiter, president of both Institutions, is in a NewYork hospital, where he collapsedafter receiving news of the closing of the banks. John R. Wallace, cashier of the Avondale Bank A Savings company, died the day before the bantr closed from a bullet through his abdomen, said by his family to have been accidentally Inflicted when a pistol he was handling dropped to the floor and discharged. Coroner J. S. Rus gum rendered a verdict of accidental y d. death, j MOSCOW. Idaho. Passengers on a take boat, operating across Coeur dAlene take, between Coeur dAlene and Harrison, saw a bear swimming across the take between Twin beaches and Echo bay. J. C. White, who has been operating boats on the lake for the last 40 years, states that this is the. first time he had ever seen a bear In the lake. The boat was loaded with tourists, who enjoyed the sight. The bear seemed holly unconcerned over the approach of the boat. f Illinois automobile owners who held up traffic on highway 41 tor half an hour when bees swarmed In their machines, are the target of jokea by their friends. The ridicule arises out of the ancient custom of directing swarming bees, which is usually achieved by loud and constant rapping on a tin pan. The two automobiles were traveling together when the bees swarmed into the ms- -, chines, driving out the ten occupants. Motorcycle Officer Lon Miller, believing a tight was In progress, sped up on his machine, only to imitate the motorists in their shadow boxing. By ARTHUR SEARS HENNING. Chicago Trlbont Mortgage ChJcato Tribunt Press Servlet. Racine, wis July e, Two Dry. Special to The Tribune. Judpe Acts in Chicago & Alton Railroad $40,000,-00- 0 In A uto Stop Road Traffic Chairman. ORDER SALE j One Bank Plane Reopening Next Week. Plans for reorganization and reopening of the City Bank Ac Trust company were completed today and Roderick Beddow, member of the board of directors and attorney for the institution, announced that more than $125,000 of the $250,000 stock bank proposed ior the reorganize had been, subscribed. WOMEN KILLED IN CHURCH. P ATT ADA, Sardinia MV-- 1 Two wo - men were lulled and 10 other wor j shippers injured in the collapse of the roof of the Church of Santa Sa- bins early mass Saturday. The of- Delating priest was not hurt and, still in his vestments, administered. the last sacrament. The church was an old atone structure. -- Lieu-tena- 1169-mi- nt le PERMIT - or ZEPPELIN PILOT basin.-Rober- SETS FLIGHT te round-the-wor- ld six-sta- INVENTOR FDJDS NEW (JV-Den- es Shoppers Soon Receive Smaller U. S. Currency e under-secreta- ry NECKING BECOMES STRENUOUS, CAUSING DISEASE, DOCTOR SAYS PORTLAND, Ore, July 8 , which he daclJTed to be on the Increase and becoming more strenuous, la causing a spread of mouth diseases. Dr. Robert A. Keilty told the American (Society of Clinical Pathologists convention here today. Dr. Kielty to consulting clinical path- ologlst of the United States Veterans' bureau. People kiss more strenuously than they did 1$ years ago, the speaker said the result Is a spread in mouth diseases. WV-"Neck- ing t under-secreta- ry one-thi- ' ift rd French CabinetDecides OFFER STAT For Debt; Ratification TAX OUTLINE Without Qualifications EDUCATORS Tourist Party Sees Bear Swim In Idaho Lake BRING COURT Lieutenant R. L. who wins king's cup' air. race in England. d .Retiral of' Work Shove President Will Name LINES DEBTS WINS AIR RACE Government Affairs Organized 1c SM S2TAGKSFIVECENTS 4 , . Ml Xtn Hoover Gives Evidence HeLn.ten.ds to Rule Parly .a. . n rapper Fair and V0L.11&.K0.84. Own Settlement Prices SiUer Ministers Unanimous in Upliol ding Poi ncaret Xo Reservation Attitude. ELKS NEXT RULER As8QcialionSugegtiJdea8 for Revision of Levy Col. Walter P. 'Andrews, Atlanta, C$.;who is in line for leadership. Svstem. Useless to Pas DOCTORS MEET WITHBRITISH to Strings Unacceptable escaping continues U. S., Premier Asserts' sible for f with Jess ' PARIS, July I 077 Defying the property sentiment in the chamber of deputory, and we should, therefore, dispose of It for some other system or ties which led the finance and forconfine It to realty or tangible propeign affairs committees of that body erty, or bolster It up with a classified to recommend Inclusion of reservaproperty tax or supplement v It with an income tax." tions tn the text of the bill ratifySuch are the conclusions of the accord on ing the tax revision plan as offered for conPrances debts to the United States, sideration of the state tax revision the cabinet today decided to Insist commission by the Utah Education association by its president. Arch M. upon ratification without qualificaThurman, submitted to the state tion both of that accord and the body Saturday. Caillaux --Churchill arrangement with The material presented In the plan Great Britain. purposely avoids that which has so A special session of the cabinet far been submitted In various plans for the commissions consideration, came to this decision and it was anand as a matter of classification, has nounced that the ministers were been based upon the reports of the unanimous in upholding the no resstate tax commission of 1912 and 1922, the messages of the last four ervation" attitude of Premier Poingovernors of the state on taxation, care. Tha cabinet agreed with the the defects of Utahs tax system and ot the government that it would head the suggested remedies. accept reservations voted In resoluAssociation Summary tions apart from the bill It will, howLists Needed Changes. insist that there be no qualificaever, In the summary tha association detions attached to the rstiticatioiu notes the following; when the latter are sent to WashingBriefly, this paper attempts to ton and London. show that the wants of a growing Threatens i Ratify Debt commonwealth cannot be reduced; Aocorda by Decree. . , that while economy in government la necessary, it is not really a problem eras understood that tha preIt in taxation, but a problem of exmier even threatened to take the debt accords out of the hands of the napenditure; that expenditure are inso to will continue do tional legislature, and ratify them by creasing and because of Increased population and presidential decree, leaving the Increased stats activities. to pass afterward any resoluL , tions that it might see fit. He told The Utah tax commission of 1912 members of the finance and foreign makes the following recommendaaffairs committees that it would be use leu to pass an act of ratification tions: 1. That the state board of With strings to it that would be unshould have greater equalization acceptable to both the American and Grand Lodge Plan Junior British power, governments. 2. That the term of office and The antigovernment forces are tryinsalaries of assessors should be Order and Welfare ing to put into the ratification bill a creased so aa to obtain more effiprovision thst payments ot war debt cient men. instalments by ranee should be deScheme. ; 3. That a classified property tax pendent upon receipt of reparations should be adopted so aa to make It from Oermany. 1 hey would safeguard French finances against a pospossible to tax Intangible property LOS ANGELES. July A). Led by sible defalcation by the Retch. including money, credits, etc. 4. That mines abould pay their Murray Hulburt, grand exalted ruler, the vanguard of 120,000 Elks ex- Domes tie Party Politics (CcoUnued an Fata Kkvsn pected here lor the opening of the Injected Into Fight. (Column Two.! sixty-fift- h national convention MonA good deal of domestic party poliday, poured into Los Angeles today. tics has been Injected into the tight Streets and buildings were a mass of and some of the opposition leaders QDICK. purple and white, the Elks' colors and have acquired the belief that they can decorations were everywhere. - -- overthrow tha cabinet on this issue. Arriving with Hulbert was Colonel - Moderate members of the governACTION Walter P. Andrews ot Atlanta, Ga., ment coalition majority, who have who will be elected to the office of been opposed personally to ratificagrand exalted ruler at the first busirallied against this attitude oc FOUR ness session of the grand lodge on tion, the part of the opposition parties. At Monday. e meeting of their principal organization today they passed a resolution Grand Exalted Ruler declaring thst whatever its members Business. Chief Outline thought of the debt question as inFlier Cut$ Rope Caught in In a outdividuals, they ought not to abandon press conference Hulbert lined the principal matters which will the government at this time because Propeller of Another be laid before the lodge during the the opposition would take advantage week. Two of the most important of their detection to overthrow the Plane Below. were possible legislation for the es- cabinet. tablishment of a junior order and or8 Four ganization of a national welfare fund. VP). ATLANTA, Ga., July We hope to pave the way for the Atlanta fliers tonight owed their lives SWEEP to one of their number who was foundation of an order for young 15 and 21. men of the between a his knife when ages with dangling quick ope from a plane in flight became Hulburt said. This probably will be FARMS entangled in the propeller ot a ship known as the 'Antlers.' Applications from 40 lodges for permits to estabflying below it. Taking the air today to conduct an lish a Junior order as soon as legislaexperiment In repairing the landing tion is enacted have been received. the LINCOLN, Neb , July 8 WV-We also have under consideration gear of aircraft In flight, Beeler second time within a month southBlevins and Bonnie Rowe climbed to a proposition to offer the grand lodge east Nebraska faced flood dangers an altitude of 2500 feet and ma- whereby a $20,000 000 welfare fund from torrential rains which fell in neuvered for position below a second may be built up Under the present the last 48 hours. Although no loss we would ask 1000 lodges each plane, flown by Mackay Solenberger plan, to subscribe $1000 and 1000 members of life has been reported, heavy propand W. O. Striplln. was sustained in the Rowe climbed out on the lower to pledge an additional $1000 each, erty damage initial fund of $2,000,000. vicinity of Auburn, where more than an removed and forming lower the of ship wing ten inches of rain has fallen. a wheel, while Btrlplin, in the ship Revenue F roil Big Fund Win Lou of ripened wheat is heavy, above, began lowering away another farmers said to night. CommunicaAid Charitable Enterprise. , wheel from the end of a rope. and telephone lines were at a The revenue from this fund we tions Just as Rowe reached out to grasp standstill with bridges and wires the dangling wheel, the force of the hope will eventually build up to washed out wind whipped the rope into the proCharitable esnerprises-of- . all VETERAN SCOUT DIES peller of the lower ship. Both blades lodges would be elded by It.' A third proposition, Hulburt said. were tom off, and the rope, caught Mont., July S ANACONDA, to wind limit the size of lodges, in the propeller shaft, began scout 84, fearly-da- y Regan, , maxi-shiwind-a of fashion an the up much in ttlng arbitrary and Indian lighter, died here yesterlake, threatening to draw the two Regan was bom in Ireland snd with members In the day. hips Into a fatal collision. came to this country as a boy. After and its possessions, has the Civil war Striplln Instantly drew his knife, he Joined the army . with a total membership reached down and slashed the- rope and fought Indians in the Dakotas 800.000. free The two ships careened away He pad lived In AnaMontana. and of officers of the grand and Blevins put his crippled ship into for 35 years.) selection of s convention conda a powerless glide. Rowe quickly remade Monday. covered the original wheel and, hang- mm- -- wing struyworkedldes- Atlantl City, N. J., is being pro-th- e 1930 convention. perately to replace it. He clamped the wheel In place Just a few feet ER GETS FENALTY. f time above the ground and. lacking UKIA&. Calif., July 8 (A). Thomas to climb bick into his cockpit, clung to the landing gear as Blevins Lehew, convicted slayer of 17,340,-00- 0 brought the plane down to a perfect Theresa Johnson of Port Bragg, was sentenced in superior court here tolanding tn a cotton field. Solenberger and Striplln landed day to hang. The day of execution safely in a field a short distance was sent for Friday, September 13, at San Quentin prison. away. Mellon-Bereng- Eighty Americans Present at First Joint Confab With Europeans. t VP). Dr. Willis LONDON, July Campbell, of Memphis, Tenn, was elected president of the American Orthopedic association today, at the conclusion of a Joint meeting with the British Orthopedic association. Dr. A. Bruce GUI of Philadelphia was elected vice president; Dr. John L. Porter of Chicago, treasurer and Dr' DeFore$t Willard, of PhUadel-phlsecretary. Eighty Amerioan delegates to the first Joint meeting were entertained by Sir Robert Jones, honorary president of the British association. W." Act With amount of property Is taxation and the amount to Increase. It Is not posa growing state to get on revenue, and the general tax Is no longer satisfac- A great a, Navy Seaplane Saves Children - - In Boat Mishap A VP) ANNAPOLIS, Md., July navy seaplane tn service here for the training of naval academy midshipmen, today rescued five children whom its pilot. Lieutenant Edward S. Mulheron. lighted clinging to an overturned boat In Chesapeake bay. Lieutenant Mulheron brought his plane down beside the boat and took the children on board. The plene already carried its full load of eight men, and Lieutenant Mulheron was unable to fly with the added load. He taxied over the waters into the Miles river to St. Michaels, Md., where he turned the children over to the care 4 the father of one ot them and then returned to the naval academy to make an official report. The. children were Louis Bums, Sarah Alien, Dorothy Taylor and Warthman Dodson, all of St. Michaels, and HlUard Owens, of Washlngtoa They told their rescuers that they had been clinging to the overturned boat for some time. Bloodhounds Take Up Lost Childrens Trail LIVERPOOL, N. 8, July 6 (AT Bloodhounds were called ito use today In an attempt to find some trace of three children isbo disappeared in the woods back of that village of Milton two days ago, and for whom a continuous search by 200 men has f proved unsuccessful Hope tor the finding alive ot Hazel HaU, 7. Doris Martin. 5, And her sister, Mildrjfed, has been The little practically abandoned girls went together on Thursday morning to play In the edge of a forest that stretches d hundred miles without, a dwelling, and. have not since been see. j four-year-o-ld er Elks Crowd Into Los Angeles for a Annual Conclave par-lame- nt t AVIATORS - PREVENTS DISAS1ERT0 TORRENTS NEBRASKA For VPh-Mich-ael ROME FLIERS SEE TAKE-OF- F p. CHANCE - t OLD ORCHAREt Me., July VP)Old Orchard beacn was leveled fair- J. ly smooth by a high tide which gave hope to the crew of the takea that Pathftider monoplane off for Rome could be made early toI morrow. Lewis A. Yancey, navigator of the plane, said ocean weather reports still held favorable and that the projected flight would be attempted not later than (.30 oclock tomorrow morning, if the smoothness of the beach was not again rutted by tonights tide. Yancey declared the plane would be prepared during the night for the flight, but that definite decision on a start would not be made until 4 a. m. Take-o- ff early today was abandoned after it was found that the pounding breakers of last night had runnot Ironed out the 11 way needed for a start Before todays high tide had swept-- it smooth, the entire two and a half mile beach a corrugated effect, with presented n- - stretch of level sand more than 200 yards in length. LODGE FAMILY8CI ON WEDS. BOSTON, July 8 VP). Mins Francesca Braggiottl, Boston society girl and 'dancer, and John Davis Lodge, grandson of the late Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, were married at the Church of the Advent today. The groom la the eon of Mrs. George Cabot Lodge of Washington. lata-today- - - rease A id in annual production of pounds of Ida- ho creamery but- has .been ter SOLON ATTACKS GOVERNORS recorded ADDRESS AT TAMMANY HALL CARMEL, N. Y., July 8 .Representative Hamilton Fish., Jr- - of New York district, the Twenty-sixt- h in an address before the Putnam county Republican committee today, attacked the Independence day address of Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt at Tammany bail in New York City. It certainly waa a curious and unhappy place to select for advocating such a cause. he said, referring to the governor's plea for separation of government and business, for If there is one organization in the country that has been inextri- v cably mixed up with all kinds of business, big and little, from , building sewers to licenses for push-ca- rt peddlers, it is Tammany hall The recent report of Tammany's own Investigator, Commissioner ot Accounts James A. Higgins, disclosed a sorry spectacle ot graft, corruption and padded payrolls in the street cleaning department, which extended into most of the other departments of the city government. The slogan of Tammany is, More politics in business snd more business for Tammany hall and deserving Democrats." in the last eight .years In 1922 the state produced 4,660,000 pounds of creamery butter, and in 1928 production jumped to 22,000,-00- 0 pounds. r |