The . Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 81 NO. 120. m tMMi-etMt Mtw it. im. u f, , VMM tU at HUM I tUt.. OMAHA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1921. ' Mtif (I pat). t 9mm4t, W. tM Ml aMltl M few to atkM mm, w VMM , Uu4 M MmIm, t ta. THREE CENTS I JV JV ji Belgium's Hero Takes Plane Ride Lt. Gen. Baron Alphonse Jacques Makes His First Flight Following Comple-" " tion of Trophy Race. New "Tiu7 Conferred Belgium's illustrious war hero, Lieut. Gen. Baron Alphonse Jac qurs, will henceforth be known at 'Tli Good Indnm. The general, who was moved about in Omaha yesterday in double-quick time by the local commit tee, hai had many decorations and honor conferred upon him, but it remnir.ed for Governor S. R. McKel vie to confer the latest title yester day noon at the Chamber of Com ie rce. The leader of the "Iron division." fi'no stood at Liege, Dixmude, Queue du Hois, Nieuport and other cen teri of world war conflict in Bel gium, smilingly acknowledged the American soubriquet bestowed on him in the Gate City of the west. Takes First Air Trip. General Jacques experienced his first air flight yesterday afternoon at the North Omaha air field and at the Fontenclle he ate the first prairie chicken of .his life of 64 years. In his car at the Union station last night, just before departing for the east at 6:05, the general said: "We have enjoyed our stay in Omaha more than at any place we have yet been in America, and I am especially pleased to have been christened by your governor, 'A Good Indian.' We are overjoyed to have made our first trip in an airship in Omaha. We will always remember Omaha.",' "We are going to call you "Good Indian hereafter," said . William S. Ritchie, -jr., commander of the Ne braska department of the American Legion, in bidding the general good bye at the train. t- Rode in Larstn Ship. The event de luxe of the ,day for the general and his party was an air trip during the afternoon in J. M. Larsen's plane,. "J. L.-6,' which arrived yesterday morning from Kansas City, bringing Mr. and Mrs. I B. Dunlap. jack UvJ. M-JUr- sen, Augustus Post of the Aero club of America, Rev. E.' M. Brown ot .Dicta Memorial church, JeffDunlap and Mrs. H. E. Hartney. The general observed with keen in terest the flyers in the Pulitzer trophy race, and chatted with Roger Her log, Swiss flyer, On the field. Com mandant de la Ruwiere, his Belgian military associate; Maj. Charles E. Patterson, U. S. A., and Col D. John Markey of the American Legion., kept the general posted on the details of the race. One of the party found a box which served as a seat for the general. The suggestion was made that the general take an air ride. "The Good Indian" imme diately assented. The planes on the cast side of the field were inspected and the JL-6 was chosen. Mr. Lar- (Turn t 1'aaa Two, CaUma Six.) Kansas City Back ; To Normal Condition , Kansas City, Mo.," Nov. 3. Ameri can Legion visitors have for the most part gone home, the confeti has been swept from the streets, hotel lob bies are passable and Kansas City, after three days of entertaining, is back to normal. In a statement today Commissioner J. E. Wilson of the police depart ment, said that, the, Kansas City po lice department desired to correct an impression thatN the legionaires had been responsible for great disorder and for boisterous conduct. , The only death which occurred in connection with the convention, ac cording to city authorities, was one suicide case. i ' ; -'- " TJ. S. Expenditure for 1922 Estimated at $3,940,000 Washington, Nov. 3. Estimated expenditures of the government for the fiscal year 1922, are now placed at $3,940,000, a reduction of$94,000, 000 from the August 10 estimate of $4,034,000,000, President Harding has informed congress in a letter to Speaker Gillett : - - The new estimate was presented by the president in connection with deficiency estimates of appropria tions of $187,922,576.74, which Mr. Harding said, were taken into con sideration in arriving at the new es timates for 1922 expenditures.- ; 3,292 Acres in Wyoming : To Be Opened to War Vets Washington, Nov. 3. Tracts of land aggregating 3,292 acres in Wy oming will be thrown open to entry hy ex-service men for 63 days, from December 30, 1921, the Department of the Interior announced today. Most of the land was described as having "practically no agricultural value," but as possible . for use as , grazing Acreage. i Interne Negotiations for 1 v Charles Near Conclusion Paris, No, Negotiations rela tive to the possibility of interning former Emperor Charles on one of the Madeira Islands, which nave been in oratress between the allied conclusion it was declared by the Journal today. . Jacques I mm " ' m Lieut Gen. Baron Alnhonse Tacaues. former commander of the Iron division, which stemmed the German invasion of Belgium, and Governor Samuel R. McKelvie as they appeared at Union station yesterday when the distinguished soldier arrived to attend the aero congress. At the gen eral's throat may be seen, the insignia of the Order of Leopold, with which he was decorated seven years ago today. Mothers Honored By Evangelist At City Auditorium More Than 6,000 Crowd Edi fice to Pay Homage at . ' Special Services for . Mothers Day, . '.I.. . , ' '"."!' mini II V'J. More than 6,000 persons attended! W( uipjy onmir, icvivai .iiihob" Mothers day special services at the. Auditorium yesterday afternoon at 2:30. The audience was made up, for the most part, of women and the majority were mothers and grand mothers. There was a sprinkling of sons and fathers and a great num ber of infants in arms. ' There were 17 nations represented and of the 48 states 42 were repre sented. There were hundreds of mothers of boys ' who fought in France. Mrs. Mary Nesbit, 93, from the Oldf Peoples Home, was the old est woman in the audience. v Mrs. Houston, 92, of the House of Hope was the next oldest, i At 1 o'clock the doors were opened to the crowd waiting for admittance. Hundreds of automobiles had trans ported shutins and elderly women who had to be carried in easy chairs and lounges just in front of the speakers' platform, to the Audi torium. There were many present in wheel chairs, while others came on crutches.- The entire first floor was occupied by the older mothers the shutins and crippled. ' -' Platform Was Decorated. . The speakers' platform was a bower of flowers of all. "kinds, to gether with ferns and palms which had been donafed by men and women in honor of their mothers. The women of the campaign com mittee who sold flowers reaped a harvest from money donated for flowers they handed out in the hotels and department stores.' The women paid $82 for their flowers and re ceived $400 in contributions, which go toward the expense of the cam paign. ' Preceding the . program, Alice,. Beatrice and Barbara, little daugh ters of the Rev. H. C. Whitcomb of Calvary Baptist, dressed in White, carried a huge bouquet of' rOses -.as large as themselves, to the platform. In making the presentation speech little Alice , said, "To our beloved (Tarn tm P Six. Cot TwO. ' State's Attorney to Ask Early Trial for Small Springfield, 111., Nov.. 3 Answer ing Governor Small's statement that the prosecution was delaying, trial of the case in which " the governor arid Vernon Curtis are charged with em berzlement and conspiracy to defraud the state of $2,000,000 while the gov ernor was state treasurer, State's Attorney C F. Mortimer declared his chief assistant will go to Waukegan Monday to ask an early setting of the trial. - ' " ' ' Records will be sent there tomor? row, he said, although they are in complete without the recognizance bond which Governor Small today said he would not give in place of the $50,000 sheriff's bond. Milwaukee Road Places S Order for 2,500 Steel Cars Chicago, Nov. 3.-An order-for 2,500. steel gondola coal cars, j cost ing about $4,500,000 and said to be the largest order for railroad equip ment nlaced since the roads were re turned from government control, was t. Byram, presi I dent of the Chicago, Milwaukee and (St, Paul railroad in Omaha x mw I 4 Two Prisoners v Break Jail in Dodge County Mother of Young Bahy Sus pected of Aiding Husband Escape Others Re i fuse to Leave, : :,4 ' Fremont Neb.; Nov. ' j.-rfSpeciat Teleiram-V Filine their way through a heavy steel lock' and then crawling backwards on their stom achs through a ventilating shaft, Ar vin Lundberg, 35, experienced jail breaker, and Clair Millard, burglar, wriggled themselves to freedom at an early hour this morning. The es cape"1 was discovered when the jail deputy entered the compartment with breakfast for . the , prisoners about 7:30. . V' ; ; ; ' : It was the most daring getaway ever attempted in this county. When the fleeing prisoners entered the shaft they took .a chance of taking a sheer drop of five floors to the basement below. - Instead they crawled cautiously through the sheet tin pipe until they reached the floor below and ' ended up in an ante chamber of the district court jury room; ' ' .Other Prisoners-Stay. , Despite-the fact that they were unobserved and Lundberg invited the rest of the prisoners to follow, no one else, took advantage of the avenue to escape. Lundberg was the first prisoner of Sheriff Condit when he first went . into office.'in 1909. Lundberg remained for only one day. He escaped from his captors while being transferred to the city jail. He was trailed into Iowa and captured again, only to break away once more -when he jumped from a speeding passenger train. Among the prisoners who refused a chance to" accompany the jail breakers is Craig Chesterfield,, al leged ''duke," who is serving a sen tence of 1 to 20 years on a forgery charge. Chesterfield was caught three different times before he was convicted in the act of attempting to break -out of jail. But he has' re formed, he says, and is awaiting' the mercy of law. ' ; ' Woman Is Suspected. v; His; partner,, James Baird, ex pec'ts"his release on 'November r6 and didn't care to take any chances. The officers -believe that the es cape was aided by Mrs. Clair Mil lard, Vho visited her husband at the jail yesterday. Mrs.' Millard gave birth .to a child in an Omaha hos pital a few weeks ago'.while her hus band was held here- on a charge of burglary."- " i :-'-V;.-iO Posses are searching the country for clues. Deputy Wintersteen is leading the hunt, with Sheriff Con dit absent in Toledo, O. : ' ' ' , J Four Brewers Ask Permits . To Sell Beer as Medicine Washington, Nov. Application from four brewers -. for permits to deal in beer for medicinal purposes came before Prohibition Commission er Haines today for approval. . Two of the applications were from New York, one from Newark and one from ; Milwaukee. Officials did not indicate when action upon them could be expected. Northclif fe in Yokohama 1 Yokohama, Nov 3. Lorth North cliffe arrived yesterday on hi tour of the Orient and is proceeding to Tokio. At his request no formal en tertainment has been planned for his one-day stop in the Japanese capital. Newspapers commented in a friend ly tone on Lord Northcliffe's visit. Sales Tax ..1 T ( A O f" Ck A - V CI L vU In Seriate Seventeen Republicans- Line Up With Democrats in Op position to Smoot Amend ment to Revenue Bill. Alternative Is Offered By ARTHUR SEARS HENNINO. Cbkaco Tribunt-Omaha He Lcaatd Wire, Washington, Nov. 3. Hie Smoot sales tax was rejected by the senate tonight by a vote of 25 to 43. The vote came cn an amendment to 'the revenue bill providing for a 1 per cent tax on sales by manufac turers and producers which would have produced enough revenue to make possible the repeal of all the miscellaneous taxes. bift without l permitting any material changes in the individual income and corpora tion taxes as already approved byl Following the adverse action, Senator Smoot offered his alternate amendment providing for a general turnover tax of one half of 1 per cent. Action on this amendment was deferred until tomorrow. Its rejection is expected by about lb same vote as that on the manufac turers' and producers' tax. The turn over tax would produce about $400, 000,000 in revenue as against $253, 000,000 from the other. Republicans Support. Plan. Only republicans, voted for the manufacturers' and producers' tax while the democrats solidly lined up against it. Seventeen republicans voted with 26 democrats in the neg ative. The 25 republicans recorded in the affirmative represented a ma jority of the senators of that party who were present. -The roll call: . For the amendment: Republicans: Bursum, Cameron, Edge, Ernst, Fernald, France, Fre linghuysen, Gooding, Jones ol Washington, Keyes, McKinley, Moses, New, Newberry, Nicholson, Oddie,' Phipps, Poindexter, Short ridge, Smodt, Spencer, Wadsworth, Warren, .Watson of : Indiana, ant welter. v . Against: --. .v . Republicans: Borah, Capper, Cur tis,' Kenyon, LaFollette, Lenreot, .McCormick, McCumber, McNary Nelson, Norbeck, Penrose, Stanfield, Sterling, Sutherland, -Townsend, and Willis. - Total 17. .; ; Democrats: Ashurst. Broussard, Carroway, Fletcher, Gerry; Glass, Harris, . Heflin, ' Jones of New Mexico, Hendrick, King-, MeKellar, Myers, Overman, Pittman, Pomer cne, Reed, Sheppard,' Simons, Stan ley, Swanson, Tramrnell, Walsh of Massachusets, Walsh' of Montana, Watson of Georgia, and Williams. -Total, 26. . May Support Plan. . A significant feature of the debate was the assertion by several, repub licans opposing the sales tax that they might support it in the next .Turn to Pw Two, - Column Four.) . i , ,m Nelson Youth Killed When Car Turns Turtle Nelson', Neb., Nov. 3. (Special.) Merle, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bartlctt, was killed in an automobile wreck here. -The young man was returning home frpm town and when making the turn at a rail road crossing a mile north of here Iiis car turned turtle, throwing him out. His neck and jaw were broken. Bartlett was alone in the car when the accident occurred and was dis covered shortly afterward by a farmer-who was coming to town. The car had1 skidded about 40 feet and was lying wrong-side-up and turned the opposite direction from what he had been going. Train Wrecker Sentenced ; ' To Life Imprisonment Lapeer, Mich., Nov. 3. Henry W. Gates, 59, of Huntington, Ind., who confessed Monday thathe wrecked a fast Grand Trunk train near here last Friday night, pleaded guilty in circuit court here today and was sentenced to life imprisonment in. the Michigan penitentiary at Jack son. . German Marks Drop to .48. , New York, Nov. 3. German marks today dropped to .48, a new low record. This was a decline oi one - half point from the previous low record, made yesterday. The WeatKei Forecast Nebraska: Fair. Friday and Satur day; moderate temperature. Iowa: Fair riday and Saturday; somewhat warmer Friday in east por tion. . , Hourly Temperatures. , 1 - at. m. ....... .17 a- aa S9 m. an ST m. m M m. m. 4S 1 a- am.' II . a, St M awoa 1 W. aa. t u m. p. m. 4 bk a. p. aa. p. aa. i r . p. aa.- ....SS ....! ....S7 ....54 ' Highest Thursday. C1irenna Inrenport Ietiver nodra City ...! Rapid" City ...521 Salt Laka ...72'Fanta Fa . ...TS Sheridan ...71 Sioux City ...71 5 7 ( ......11 l.atio-r Fvebl . .T4alentlna Rum Schooner Limps To Port Shy Captain And lfiOO Cases Liquor New York, Nov. 3. The British two-masted schooner J. B. Young staggered into port yesterday minus her captain and with nothing to show for 1,000 of the 1.300 cases of Scotch whisky listed in her mani fest. The schooner was sighted with distress signals flying, oft the New Jersey coast Tuesday by a pilot boat, which guided her into the har bor. The mate, Leon Mangoy, ex plained that the skipper, Ca.pt. Miles Clsen, departed in a motor boat last Friday for parts unknown, while the schooner wis loafing off the Long Island shore. Mangoy said he did not know how to navigate the boat and had floundered around with the four members of the crew since the captain's departure. J he schooner s manifest showed her bound from St. Pierre, off the Newfoundland coast, to Nassau, in the Bahamas, with 1.300 cases of whisky, but the mate said oply 300 were stowed in the -hold yesterday. Alliance With r Britain Futile Harvey Declares U. S. Ambassador Says Plan As Suggested By Lord Derby, Impossible Scores Communism. ' By Tha Aaioclated Preaa. Liverpool, Nov. 3. George Har vey, United btates ambassador to Great Britain, told an audience at the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce to night that it was futile to hope that America, as Lord Derby recently had been suggesting, may some day be merged' in a definite alliance with Great Britain and France. This statement was made as a digression from an address on eco nomics and the international indus trial' situation, in which the ambas sador attacked communism and so cialism and defended individualism. He recalled Lord Derby's statement in ah address in Birmingham, in which the latter voiced the convic tion that the success of the Wash ington conference would mean peace and that its failure would mean war in the immediate future. . He also recalled Lord Derby's suggestion to former President Poincare of France that an Anglo-French alliance would be desirable in the interests of peace, intimating the. "strong hope" that America 'might eventually jjoin the combination. 1 . Dispels Illusions, "Now it seems to haVe fallen to my unhappy lot, since L have been in England," Continued the ambassa dor, "to dispel illusions respecting the attitude of the United States. I can conceive of no more effective service on the part of an envoy than to set forth frankly any certainty which may . bear on the immediate future, however disappointing it may be to his hearers. I feel impelled to , (Trn to Page 8Ten, Column One). Ulster Premier to Join Conference on Ireland London,' "Nov. 3'. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Sir Tames Craig, the Ulster premier, has accepted the governments invitation, dispatched vesterdav. to come to 'London and consult it as to Ulster's attitude to ward the proposals regarding the Ulster boundary and other questions involved in the Irish settlement. ." , Sir James, it is stated, is coming to London to discuss specific plans, submitted to the government by the Sinn Fein of such a character that the government thinks them feasible if Ulster agrees to them, l nese plans do not, however, embody any agreement definitely reached pe tween the government and the Sinn Fein. The Ulster premier has said throughout that he would not inter vene until such an agreement was reached, but has now consented to discuss the provisional proposalsv Southard Murder Case Putin Hands of Jury Twin Falls. Idaho. Nov. 3. The case of - Lvda Mever Southard, charged with first degree murder of Edward F. Meyerwent td the jury today At 4:40 o clock, following the reading of instructions by the court which consumed exactly 40 minutes. Prosecuting ' ' Attorney Frank L. Stephan concluded his argument in rebuttal at 4 o'clock. . An enormous crowd overflowed every available inch of space in the court room and doors leading into the room were congested with peo ple striving to gain entrance. The defendant sat through the final session in the company of her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Trueblood, her brother, Oscar Trueblood, and her husband, Paul Vincent Southard. Harding Names Denver Man To Be U. S. Circuit Judge Washington, . Nov.. . .3. Nomina tions sent to the senate today by President Harding included . Robert E. Lewis. of Denver to be United States circuit judge for the Eighth circuit; Leslie Jensen of Hot Springs, S D.. to be collector of internal revenue for the South Dakota dis trict, and Henry H. Errett of Clay ton, N. M., to be registrar of, the land office at Clayton. Bert Acosta Wins Pulitzer Trophy Race; Captain Hartney 's Plane Crashes to Earth; Parachute Jumper Drowned in Missouri Winner of First Thought of Injured Pilot Is Of Wife at Field Captain Hartney "Cracks v Near Hone? Creek, la., on First LapTof Race In- , . jury Undetermined. "Telephone my wife and tell her I've only sprained my ankle." Those were Captain H. E. Hart ney's firs, .words as two rescuers reached him following his crash two miles north of Honey Creek, la., yes terday afternoon. - - - A faulty gas pump was responsible for the crash of Captain Hartney's Thomas-Morse monoplane, which he was flying in ; the- Pulitzer trophy race. . - - , ' ; Captain Hartney had just started his , first . lap when , the gas .pump failed him. . He attempted to adjust his feed line to an auxiliary tank, but while doing so he lost . so .much speed his ship fell into a tailspin. Got Out of Tailspin. Although at an altitude of , only 500 feet he managed to extricate his ship from the spin. It was to no avail, however, as the plane almost immediately became unmanageable and crashed to the earth. Captain Hartney is unable to ex plain his fall after bringing the ma chine out of the tailspin. What hap pened he does not know. He only knows the airplane's landing wheels came into contact with the : earth first and the machine hurtled through the plowed field, in which he fell at a JOO-mile an hour clip, before it nosed over.. '. . ' i , , -; The ship turned turtle with such violence that the flyer was thrown SO feet from , his craft. - . Plane Is Destroyed. The ship caught -fire ''and burned for more tnan an hour. It was com pletely destroyed. . '. ; -, Jim Gilmore, on whose' farm near Honey Creek the aviator fell,1 and Ed Campbell were working in the field only a few yards from where Hartney plunged to earth: They rap to his assistance and carried him in to Gilmore's house, where he rested on a cot until an ambulance from -the flying field could arrive to transport him to Fenger hospital. Dr. N. P. Atwood, stationed at Honey Creek, rushed to the scene and reported thatv Captain Hartney had suffered a dislocated hip. ie also feared the captain may tiave suf fered internal injuries. - Cried About Plane. I he aviator did not lose con sciousness until opiates were ' ad ministered. On his-cot in the Gil more home he cried when he learned (Tun tov Pace Twa, Calnjna Tin.) What's Doing Today In Aerial Congress 9 A. M. National meeting at Hotel Fontenelle. 11:30 A. M. Aerial parade over city. . 1 P. M. Airplane race start at Omaha field, lasting until 5 p. ra. Two speed events are on the pro gram, together with stunt flying and parachute jumping. 7 P. M. Banquet at Hotel Fon tenelle, ' M 4 Air Classic Aviator Is Injured as Plane Crashes in Iowa Jumper Pleads To Be Saved as He Battles Current Thousands See Parachute Man Leap From Plane But Few See Struggles to Es cape Death. - Scores of spectators saw Harry' A. Eibe, the parachute jumper, go to a violent death in the treacherous waters of the Missouri river north and east of the flying field yesterday. Some criticism of .the management,' which failed to. maintain emergency launches in the river, was heard after the accident, but those who stood on the bank as the jumper struggled against the current declared, human' aid was out of the question. Eibe suffered .the terrible expe rience of watching death come upon him. 'As his parachute sailed over the flying' field, borne by the wind from the south and west, he knew that in a few seconds he would fall in the river ' Spectators heard his cries. "Hep me, I can't swim,", he shouted. ', ' - Unable to Aid Him. Those who heard rushed to the river bank. They arrived there only to stand in silence as the iumner was enveloped; by the water. ''"' . ' , " bie fell in the -very middle ot the current, where1 it was impossible to reach him. Although unable to swim, the swift current of the river seemed to keep him afloat for a time and he was carried 100 yards down stream" before ' he finally went under the third time.' ' As he' was" carried down the river he continued his cries for help. "For -God's sake, help mel" he shouted -desperately. I can'tswim." . Current Very Strong. ' But even an . expert swimmer 1 would have been fortunate to have r V"7 survived, the current against which Eibe was struggling., It was impos sible for a man who could not- swim and who in addition was burdened with a six-pound pack on his back. One spectator attempted to go to Eibe's rescue with an old rowboat he found on the bank. He had to bail it out first and then found the craft was without oars. He tried to push' off by ' using a stick .to guide the boat, but his efforts were utterly useless.. ' . - , Arthur Thomas, chairman of the publicity committee for the Air con gressr was one of the spectators near the scene of the tragedy. He started to race downstream to carry word of the accident to spectators quarter of a mile down stream, where he saw another rowtfoat. Two men " heeding his cries (Tam t Twa, Catena. Three.) C. B. Coombs Second in Big Race; Lieut Macready, Third Winning Time 52 Minutes. , . INTREPID PILOTS DEFV DANGER, THRILL CROWDS Injured', Aviator, Brought to . Omaha Hospital, Stiffen Dislocated HipEx pected to Recover. Every element of thrill that possi bly could be expected in an avia tion meet tragic death; plane crashes, dare-deviltry and supertpaed was furnished the 10,000 spectators who witnessed the first-day program of the International Aero congress at Omaha field yesterday afternoon. Harry Eibe, 26, a parachute jumper for the Floyd Smith Aerial Equip ment company of Chicago, wh drowned in the Missouri river as scores stood on the bank, helpless to aid him. Capt H. E. Hartney of New York, executive secretary of the Aero Club of America, was injured dangerously when his Thomas-Morse monoplane crashed near Loveland soon after he had started in the Pulitier Trophy race. , . Bert Acosta, interpid Italian avi ator, piloted hig 400-horse power Curtiss navy biplane to victory in the 150-mile Pulitzer Trophy race at a speed that flirted dangerously with the three-mile-a-minute figure, win ning over a field of the fastest aircraft ever built ' Acosta's time for. the ISO miles was 52 minutes, 9.2 seconds, and his average speed was 176.7 miles per hour. i- Clarence B. Coombs, piloting the "Cactus Kitten," triplane, owned by S. E. J. Cox of Houston, Tex., wat second in 54 minutes, 7.6 seconds, making an average speed of 170.2! miles an hour. ; . ; Lirut. J. A.7 Macreadyt , in a Tbet!aas-Morse biplane, piloted his craft into third place wltfy 57 . min utes, 20.6 seconds as his .time. His average speed was 160.71. miles an . hour. r . ' - Four in Finish. . .. ' Lloyd Bertaud, flying the Balilla ' biplane, "Whistling Billy drove a ' spectacular race, but was fourth in, 1 hour, 1 minute, 3.16 seconds, with a speed average of 149.78 miles an hour. Engine troubje forced Jimmie Cur ran in a S. V. A. to quit after the sec ond lap, after he had been out distanced badly by the other con- . testants. : iThe S. V A'. Ansaldo 1 motored -plane owned by C. B. Wriehtsman' of Tulsa, Okl., was withdrawn from the event when its pilot, -E. F. ' Wright, announced serious engine , trouble had developed after his flight , to Omaha from Kansas City. Acosta Drives to Victory." ' Acosta drove a masterful race" in the little gray biplane, his lap record i showing a variation in running time -of less than 15 seconds. From his -hop-off the Italian had the air steed, v under perfect control. When Sfarte H. F. Wehrley gave him the red and s white flags he taxied but a short dis- v' tance before he Vent into the air. He'; circled but once and crossed the V starting line for his; 150-mile dash a little less than a minute after he had received the starter's signal. . . 0 . Flying less than 500 feet Up'he came past the starting pylon on the ' first lap in 10 minutes, 32 seconds. He took the turns easily and with out extreme banking of his plane. His motor hummed along perfectly, but it was noticed one of the wings ' appeared slightjy unsteady. Later it developed a wire had snapped as he made his first turn at Calhoun. . - From the first lap on, it was "ap- " parent Acosta had hit his .stride, for he reeled off the succeeding laps in ! clock-like style, the timers showing the second in 10:24; third,' 10:24; fourth, 10:26 and the fifth in 10:23." ' "Cactus "Kitten" WUd. After the first lap the race lay be tween the Italian and Coombs in the "Cactus Kitten," but Coombs . waa flying wild and wide. He was burn- . irig time and gasoline on wide turns' about the pylons and held to the outer edge of the, course throughout the flight. After the race the Texae pilot offered the information that he . believed the craft was performing- better and faster than if he had tries to pull it down to closer turns. "The boat was wild and 1' let k (Turn to Paa Two, Column One.) . Remit of 150-Mile Pulitzer Air Derby .Winning PilotBert Acosta. , . Winning Plane Curtiss Navy 400 H. P. ' Winner's Time 52:09.2. . Winner's Speed 176.7 miles an. hour. Winner's Prize $3,000 and Pii-.' litzer trophy until next race. Second C. B. Coombs in "Cac tus Kitten." . !- Time 54:07.6. Prixe, $2,000. Third J. A. Macready in Thorn . ; as-Morse. Time 57:20.6. Pr s, 41,000. Other Sutlers Llcyd Bertaud ' in Balhla; Jimmy Curt- ? in S. V. A.; H. E. Hartney in Thomas--Morse. . . '.