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, '1 . . . .~* *PART 1"-PAGE' 3. 1

22!!3

GREEC.E REJECTSU. S. TRANSLATIONOF INSULL PAPERS

CHICAGO 'SUNDAY TRIBUNE: 'SEPTEMBER 24. 19~3.I!;:..- _

IMARY DAWES IS1_--- __'----------! WED IN CEREMONY

IN PARENTS' HOME

HEAD OF CUBADEMANDS U. 8..QUIT 'MEDDLING'

3 TRAPPED MINERSSAVrD FROM FLOOD

IN COAL GALLERY

MARY DAWES BECOMES BRIDE SHE TURNS TIME BACKWARD

ATHENS. Greece. Sept. 23.--<.4')-A deJdY has been caused In the ex-tradition proceedings against SamuelInsull, former Chicago utilities opera-tor. by the refusal of the ministryof justice to accept the American le-gatlon's translation of documents nec-essary In the case.The foreign ministry Is tra nstattng

over again all of the papers, and itwili be several days before the nextstep In the case Is taken. When thetranslations are completed the paperswill be sent to the ministry of justice,Insull Is wanted In the United

States to answer to a charge of vio-lating the bankruptcy laws.

Hazleton, pa .. Sept. 23.--<A'l-Threeminers. entombed by tons of earthdropped In a shaft of a Glen AldenCoal company mine at' nearby Tese-kow, tonight were rescued unharmed.They were standing In water up totheir shoulders when found. Theywere <trapped when a pl11ar-tl\ey wereblasting suddenly collapsed, cutting 0«their escape. - -Rescue crews, worked In relays all

day. had' bored a hole through tonsof debris. The Rev. Felix Levuda, &priest, crawled through the' opening toadminister the last rites of the Catho-lic church.He found them alive on a slope.

Th~y shouted the water was abouteight feet deep between their percharid, the rescue ou tlet; none couldswim. The priest, carried the newsto their families as miners rescued themarooned men with ropes. - ,

She Becomes the Bride ofGeorge Henry Schulz.

President Grau Says He\ViII Drive Out Reds.

BY JUDITH CASSoBY ARTHUR EVANS.[Chlc:ngo Tribune Prrss Ser vlce.]

HAVANA, Cuba. Sept. 23.-Presl-dent Ramon Grau San Martin declaredtoday that his government wl11not tol-erate meddling or dictation from Waah-Ingto"n or Moscow. At a luncheongiven by the Rotary club, which Isacting as mediator between the presi-dential palace and the counter-revolu-tionary groups, Grau said he woulduse an hon hand to drive communismfrom the island.•.My government wl1l not tolerate

interference or meddling from Wash-Ington or Moscow," he said. •. I meaninterference in the broad conception ofthe word. This Nationalist govern-ment is the exclusive product of Cu-bans."

U. S. Ambassador Accused,Grflu pounced upon former President

Marlo G. Menocal and Col. Carlos Men-dieta, leaders In the counter-revolu-tionary movement. He called them••ca udlllos," or old line politicians. Hesaid they had wrecked the Island andturned it over to American Interests.Another speaker, .Iose Antonio Pa-

dl1la of the student directorate, whichis an active element in support ofGrau, • said that the recent uprisingagainst the Grau government at Con-sola cion was on Menoca l's orders. withthe approval of United States Ambas-sador Sumner Welles.•. The so-called uprisings in the

Island," he said, "are engineered byold line politicians. with the consentof We lles, so that the American gov-ernment can land troops to protectforeign life and property. It is a dis-grace that the American fleet Is InCuban, wn ters."

Claims Revolts Are Quelled.The 'presidential palace today point-

ed to three revolts in the Interior of theisland which were suppressed vester-day by Col. F'ulrrencto Batista's armyas a demon strn tion that the Grau gov-ernment Is able to maintain 'peace andorder ... Three sons of Juan BIas Her-nandez. king of Cuban bushwhackers.who has been leading 'the revolt InCarnag uey pr-ovince, were capturedlate last night after a battle of anhour and a half at a farm ncr Ciegode Avi la, Blas Hernandez himselfescaped.Attention was also called to the situ-

ation in Havana, where in three weekssince President Carlos Manuel de Ces-pedes was ousted no killings havetaken place.The student directorate today also

made its official answer to the Rotaryclub concerning the proposal of theMenocaltstas, the Mcndietistas. theABC. and the right wing of the OCRRthat ·the president and his cabinetshould ,resign preparatory to the for-rna tion of a coalltion government. Thestudents said Grau must remain inoffice. _

Economic Weakness Grows.Against these surface indications of

11 strong government. however. ap-peared a growing economic weakness.Havana, which takes its revolutionsgayiy and casually. turned from rum-blf ng s of revolt. and overnight beganto talk. of malaria-bearing n.osquttoes.They have appeared in the last fewdays. For 20 years the-city has beenwithout screen doors and screen win·dows, and the mosquito was supposedto be as extinct here as the dodo.Due to lack of finances, the removal

of refuse has not been as completeas necessary, although garbage squadshave worked even through the gen-eral strike, and now mosquitoes arebreeding. Drinking water supplieshave deteriorated and goblets at hoteltables have a noxious smell, whilesupplies of spring water are dirnirrlah-lng, due to the strike of drivers.

U. S. Destroyer Saves Refugees.From Oriente province came word

that the United States destroyer Ham-ilton had arrived at the sugar centralat Ta narno, near Banes. to take onboard eight men. three women, andfive children, all British and Amer-ican refugees. The destroyer Is totake jhem to some port where theycan take regular steamers abroad,Sugar labor strikers, led by com-

munists. are reported to have takenover the mill. which Is owned byAmericans. Among the owners nresaid to be Vincent Astor and PllrcyRockefeller. Food was reported al-most exhausted and water and electricpower. had been eut off by. the agfta-tors. I j •••• , •• '.

At Santiago unrest is reported tobe growing. This morning a meetingwas held at the Casa Grande hote1between Fred Northcross, manager ofthe EI Cristo manganese mines of theBethlehem company of Pennsylvaniaand a committee ot soldiers. students,and laborers. Northcross said thecompany had decided to close themines permanently and would do nomore business In Cuba. The strikersinsisted that he give more considera·tion to their demands for higherwages and a closed shop.At Macabl, Oriente, the sugar mlIl

and town are In the hands of com-munists and the United Fruit com._"

In a beautiful home ceremony char-acterlzed by the same simple eleg-ance I 'that has marked all other weddingsIn the Dawes family, Miss MaryDawes, daughter of Mr. and IIlrs, IHenry M. Dawes, became the brideof George Henry Schulz yesterdayarternoon.The service was read at 4:30 o'clock

by the Rev. Paul Wolff. pastor of theFirst Presbytertan church of Evans·ton, In the presence of the relativesand a few friends before an Impro-vised altar In the drawing room ofthe Dawes' spacious home on Green-leaf avenue In Evanston. The bridalcouple stood facing a screen of huckle-berry that hid the fireplace. which Isbetween two large windows that lookout over the lake. Formal trees ofBermuda lilies were on either side ofthe screen. and the only light wasfrom cathedral candles.

Brhle on Arm of Father.The bride, on the arm of her father,

followed her attendants down thestairs and Into the drawing room alongan aisle made by garlands of buckle-berry and laurel fastened to wroughtIron standards. Only white flowerswere used to decorate the dining room,but there were autumn flowers In alltheir rich colorings In the hall andthe library. which Is half way up thestairs. A large reception followedthe ceremony.The bride, a taIl, stunning brunette,

never looked lovelier than she did Inher bridal gown of white bagheera vel-vet made along empire lines with along train and long, ~!ght sleeves.The only trfrnmlng was a band ofermine that outlined the high neck-line'. The tulle veil was held In placeby a narrow band of seed pearls. andshe carried a sheaf of calla lilles.Mrs. Trevor Stamp of London

(Frances Bosworth of Evanston), oneof the bridesmaids. wore pansy bluebagheera with no sleeves and shortvelvet gloves. slippers and a toque tomatch her gown. Mrs. Harold YeggI'and Miss Louise Hassel, the other twobridesmaids. wore similar outfits of ashad-e lighter than Mrs. Stamp's a ndcarried 'deep 'purple orchids. Mrs.Stamp's flowers were pale' lavenderorchids.

F.lower Girl in BIlle.The flower girls. blonde, curly

headed little Anne Elizabeth and MaryLouise Torrlson, nieces of the brtde-groom, were pictures In Kate Greena-way frocks of pale pansy blue withribbons the same shade around theirheads. They carried small old-rash-loned bouquets of sweetheart roses.Otto Schulz acted as best man for

his brother. The ushers were twoother brothers, William and CarlSchulz. and Curtis Dawes. the bride'sbrother. The brlde's mother worebrown crepe with a gold metal clothbodice and .a brown velvet hat trimmedwith ostrich plumes tipped with gold,and a corsage of green orchids. Mrs.Otto Schultz of Chlcago, the bride-groom's mother, wore a wine coloredcrepe gown and a hat to match andwhite orchids.After the reception the bride

changed to .a. t~avel.lng costume ofbrown cloth with a cape of blue foxesand she and her husband left to mo-tor east. The couple wlIl sail fromNew York for Bermuda and wl11 reoturn home In about a month. Theyplan to live In Evanston.

Relatives at Ceremony.Among the relatives at the cere-

mony were Mr. and Mrs. Beeman

Union Office Is Robbed01 $1,000 by 3 Bandits

Fall River, Mass., Sept. 23.-(JP)-Three bandits held up three men Inthe headquarters of the United Tex-tile Workers of America here tonightand escaped with more than $1,000,mostly dues paid by local member ,.,

.. /~'

Little Rosemarie Egger, 6539 Newgard avenue, turns back the cIockin the H alI of Science at A Century of Progress in preparation for theend of daylight saving time at 2 o'clock this morning •

(Story on page 1.) [TRIBUNE Photo.]

ZEPPELIN SERVICEACROSS SEA SOON,ECKENER PREDICTS

SAYS ALEUTIANSWINDIEST SPOTIN ALL WORLD

Mr:and Mrs. George Henry Schulz as they appeared Just after theirwedding in Evanston yesterday afternoon. The bride was Miss MaryDawes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry'M. Dawes, at whose bome at101 Greenleaf avenue, the ceremony was performed.

[TRIBUNE Photo.] New York, Sept. 23. - [Speclal].-The Rev. Bernard R. Hubbard, S. J.,known as the glacier priest for his ex-plorations In Alaska, returned to NewYork today to tell ot having visitedthe windiest spot on _earth, In theAleutian Islands.Gales which, In one Instance report-

ed by a sea captain, reached a velocityof 216 miles an hour, hampered explo-ration, Father' Hubbard reported. Hisparty of four succeeded In visiting ahitherto unexplored volcanic crater,where an accommodating lake f ur-nlshed water hot enough to cook foodat one end. warm water for bathingIn the middle, and abounds In Icebergsat the other.Other discoveries Included a prehis-

toric weapon factory. In which theworkmen appeared to have been sur-prlsed by raiders and klJled; a warmask cave, which was left for futureexploration, and the sites of severalstone age vlJlages.The expedition, which began In May

and ended in late August, was con-fined for the most part to the Krentt-zen group of the Aleutian chain.About six weeks were spent on Unt-mak Island, where the explorers re-visited the Shlshaldln volcano, inspect-ed by Father Hubbard last year soonafter It had been In violent eruption,

Akron, 0., Sept. 23. - <A') - Trans-Atlantlc Zeppelin service between Eu-rope and the United -States was seenas nearing realization today by Dr.Hugo Eckener, famed Graf Zeppelinskipper... With President Paul W. Litchfield

of the Goodyear-Zeppelin corporationI have worked out a program for car-rying that dream to realization." Dr.Eckener announced as he concludeda day and a half of almost continuousconferences.••The plans are still only plans, but

we know now what work Is to bedone and how we intend to proceedto do It." .Dr. Eckener disclosed that he hopes

to start the Europe-United States servoIce In the spring ot 1935. By thattime the LZ-129, now under construc-tion at Frledrichshafen, wlJl be com-pleted and ready for operation.

the ovens for sale. In restaurants,the amount of bread served with mealshas been reduced.Business houses In Havana Ioudly

complain of the depression, Mer-chants say they have not been able totrade since the revolutionary juntaforced De Cespedes out three weeksago,

Speak ,of Cuban ••NRA."At the palace, members of the stu-

dent directora,te, speak In generalphrases' of Cuba's NRA. They arevague in expounding their economictheories, but they say Cuba needs thesame machinery as the United Statestor 'recovery, with adaptations suit-ab Ie to the 'Island. 'One great point of difference Is that

business men appear not to be behindthe students' so-called NRA program.They 'regard It as visionary and notwell defined and the situation, theysay, Is filled with Isms and theoriesof all varieties.

parry today discontinued shipping Itssugar through that port.At Datq utr'I managers of American

owned mines are reported to havesaid they will pay their laborers offMonday. The mines are to be' closedindefinitely. The mines remain In thehands of strikers.The "Frente Rojo Juvenil" [Juve-

nile Red Front], a youths' branch ofthe communist party, sent a mem-orandum to the palace today protest-ing against the orders of' the govern-ment that the headquarters of, the or-ganization In the former home ofOrestes Ferrara, secretary of stateunder former President Machado,be closed and the organization dis-banded. Grau's orders are reportedto have been carried out.

Seize Furniture from Home.To furnish their headquarters these

juvenile Reds two nights ago are re-ported' to have entered a privateCuban home and to have taken what-ever furniture they needed.A report from Matanzas this morn-

Ing said a communist group hadejected the owners from a house andconfiscated the food supply, and tur-nlture. When the owners asked forcompensation the Reds replied:•. Lead Is the only currency In

Cuba." ..Soldier's told the owners they were

powerless to do anything.At Santa Clara a bomb was ex-

ploded at the home of the superin-tendent of _schools ..

Jsland Faces FOOll Shortage.Food shortage Is an Increasing

threat throughout the island. Thegovernment has ord~red.a surveymade. of all food stocks stored inwarehouses .at ports and other cities.It Is conjectured that the palace mayestablish a food control system tomeet the shortage growing out ofthe great number of labor strtkes,Ernnloyes of wholesale' grocery

warehouses are on strike In Havanaand bread stocks are -running low.Bakeshops have long lines In frontat the 'hour when bread comes from

BRUCEWOODDRESSES

The interesting newshoulder d eta i I s - theamusing new hip lines-the LJVeIy, soft, dull,n e w Tia gar a s it k-There's a host of newfeatures in this Bruce-wood-and it's just onein hundreds with just asmany exciting style inno-

vations

Othcr Brucewoods, $7.50$59.50. Sites 12 to 44

7th floor

Dawes of Columbus 0.; Rufus C.Dawes. president of A Century ofProgress. and Mrs. Dawes and theirlarge family, Including Mr. and Mrs.'William M. Dawes, Mr. and Mrs,Charles C. Dawes. Mr. and Mrs. Rob-ert T. Sherman [Jean Dawes]. Mr.and Mrs. Beverly Jefferson [MargaretDawes], Miss Helen Dawes, andPalmer Dawes; Mr. and Mrs. CharlesG. Dawes and their daughters MissVirginia Dawes and Mrs. Melvin B.Ericson. and Mr. Ericson; WIlliam R.Dawes and his family, consisting ofMr. and Mrs. Neil B. Dawes. Mr. andMrs. Hamilton' Walter [EleanorDawes], and Mr. and Mrs. DonaldWalker [Marlon Dawes].Mrs. Henry Haskell of Kansas City,

Mo., Miss Dorothy Bugbee of NewYork and MIss Eloise Grafton ofWashington were among the Intimatefriends at the wedding.

TYPEWRITER CO.HEAD ENDS LIFE, BY STRANGLING Maurice L Rothschild

State at JacksonBoy, 8, Awarded $3,000in Suit Against Doctor

A jury In the Superior court beforeJudge Joseph B. David yesterdayawarded Robert Smith, 8 years old.115~ West Huron street. a verdict of$3.000 agaInst Dr. Richard Haley.3737 South Campbell avenue, In a, suitfor malpractice. The boy was treatedby Dr. Haley after a falI from a treeon Oct. 20. 1931. Dr. Haley. accordtngto the testimony, found no Injury tothe boy. but It was later learned thathis arm was fractured. and that Itwill be permanently stiff.

Clar'k H. Methot, 46 years old, gen-eral manager of the Monex Machinecompany, a subsidiary of the L_ C.Smith and Corona Typewriter com-pany, committed suicide yesterday bystrangllng himself with an elastic ex-erciser ill the bathroom of his apa rt-,ment at 1125 FarwelI avenue. Hiswife, Ethel, found his body upon reoturning home in the afternoon. Shesaid he had been In 111health for morethan a year and had been using theexerciser in an effort to better hiscondition.Rogers Park pollee found Methot

had wrapped three elastic strands ofthe exerciser around his neck severaltimes and then tied the loose ends tohis right arm. Sheer wl!1 power ap-parently had enabled him to keep pull-Ing until he was strangled.

No Tipping at Gimbel'sWe have signed the Code,increased waitresses' wagesabove NRA requirements,and dlsnlaced tipping bya service charge !lRsmaller than the ,average tip.

~...~:;GimbeJ Trio6 to 9 P. M. •

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