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Organized Reserves Under the policy that has been re- cently adopted by the War Department a Reserve officer who has been passed to the inactive list with ineligibility for promotions, assignment and active duty training in peace time, is now per- mitted to return, under proper safe- guards, to the active list. with its privileges of assignment, active duty training and_promotion. In the case of inactive Reserve officers of both company and fleld grade, the cligibility for transfer to the active list may be regained at any time that the officer can fulfill the requirements demon- strating his ability and can pass a sat- isfactory physical examination. The ability requirements are that the officer obtain a certificate of capacity for his present or for the next higher grade, or that he obtain official record or 200 hours’ credit for correspondence school work or for work in other mill tary classes, or that he satisfactorily completed one of the Reserve officer coursés at one of the general or specia: These credits, it will | have to be gained on | an inactive status. The privilege of regaining eligibility | for the active list will ordinarily be granted only once to any individual officer. In case such privilege is re-| quested more than once by the samc | officer, his application will be accom- panied by the recommendation of board of Reserve officers appointed by the ebrps area commander concerned. This change will take care of a“smau group of desirable officers in the Re- serve that otherwise would have been | Jost t6 the Army. It has no bear.ng on the large number of Reserve officers | who are each year passing to the im- active list because of the pressure of thelr eivilian occupation: | Washington men who will graduate from the various arms of the blue Citizens' Military Training Camps next Summer will be interested in the an- nouncement made recently by Mayj. Gen, Fred W. Sladen, commanding gen- eral of the 3d Corps Area, of which Washington is a part, pertaining to | their being commissioned in the Of- ficers’ Reserve Corps. Under the pr visions_of Army Regulations 350-3000. Gen. Sladen has published a list of basi¢ course subcourses in the Army of Maj. Lopez. The subjects to be taken up at this meeting will be the division in march to gain contact; halt and bivouac, and outpost. Maj. John A. Considine will conduct the 306th Cavalry conference, to held next Thursday evening at head- quarters and at which will be discussed mounted offensive combat. Reserve Quartermasters of Washing- | ton will meet at headquarters Friday | evening to take up types and limitatior of aircraft, and the Chemical Warfare Service. Cavalry Reserve officers of Washing- ton will receive instruction in equita- tion at Fort Myer November 24, under the direction of Maj. Considine. Lieut. Col. Eugene C. Christopher Heron, Engineer Reserve, will begin to- morrow 14 days of active duty in the office of the chief of Engineers. Capt. William L. Pureell, Air Reserve, began last week 14 days of active duty in the office of the Assistant Secretary of War. Second Lieut. Benjamin H. Pubols, THE SUNDAY BSTAR, WASHINGTON, Cavalry Reserve, 1729 P street, is as- signed to the 62d Cavalry Division. Capt. Willlam C. Ashford, 48 Bryant street, and First Lieut. Kendall K. Hoyt, 1446 Belmont street, both Infantry Re- serve, are assigned to the 1301st service unit. as are also Lieut. Col. Ralph H. Hallett, judge advocate general Re- | serve, 1901 Wyoming avenue; Maj. | Samuel J. McWilllams, judge advocate | general Reserve, 2606 New Hampshire | avenue, and Capt. Wallace C." Ma- gathan, Quartermaster Reserve, 7401 | Blair road. Second Lieut. Cariton E. Brown, Infantry Reserve, 41515 Twelfth | street northeast, is relieved from assign- | ment to the 80th Division. The Reserve Officers’ Association will hold its meeting tomorrow night at the auditorium of the Department of the Interior. The speaker of the evening | will be Maj. W. T. Wattles of the United States Signal Corps, who will speak on |“The Operations of the Field Signal | Corps in France.” Pictures will be | shown. As a measure of preparedness against | disasters, epidemics or war, & Nation- wide enrollment of nurses by the Ameri- | can Red Cross is maintained in Wash- ington. HOLLYW00OD WOMAN HELD FOR TAX TRIAL Miss Berger, Charged With Falsi- fying Returns, Faces Jury January 28. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, November 16.—Fed: eral Judge Edward J. Henning yest: day held Miss Marjorie Berger, Holly wood income tax counselor, for trial on | January 28 on charges of falsifying in- come tax returns of Tom Mix and Elea- nor Boardman, motion picture players. Last Wednesday Miss Berger was sen- tenced to two and a half years in Fed- eral prison and fined $5,000 for falsifi- cation of the 1926 return of Dorothy Mackaill, film actress. ® Miss Berger's counsel in Federal court yesterday declined an offer of United States District Attorney Samuel Mc- Nabb to dismiss several of half a dozen pending indictments against Miss Ber- ger if she would plead guilty to part of them. Setting of trial dates for the Mix and Boardman cases by the court fol- lowed. Miss Berger's attorneys have given notice of an appeal from the Wednesday D. NOVEMBER 17, sentence. Judge Henning indicated that, regardless of the appeal, Miss Berger would not be committed to prisen pending settlement of the outstanding cases. Mix previously had been ordered to trial February 18 on a charge of de- frauding the Government in connection with his income tax returns. Indict- ments also_are pending against Miss Boardman, Raymond Griffith and Ray- G, mond McKee in connection with al-| leged fraudulent income tax returns prepared with the aid of Miss Berger. and an information has been filed against King Vidor for alleged failure to make an income tax return. Hoover's Stand Lauded. By Cable to The Star. GUATEMALA CITY, November 16.— “Latin American republics should es- teem the priceless assurance of Presi- dent Hoover's clean-cut attitude when | reaffirming the Root doctrine,” Foreign Minister Eduardo Aguirre Velasquez de- clared yesterday in referring to Presi- dent Hoover's Armistice day statement that the “Root declarations” would 1929—PART ONE. Finest Examples of Wren's Domestic Architecture. ton Palace. by the average Londoner, is one of architecture. Palace was purchased by George | cess Louise, | Dowa, | and Princess Beatrice, Duchess of Argyl: suites allotted by the King | There is a beautiful SPANISH QUEEN ARRIVES IN LONDON FOR VISIT Guest at Kensington Palace, One of | LONDON (N.AN.A.).—The Queen of | Spain has arrived in London for her usual Autumn visit and is with her mother, Princess Beatrice, at Kensing- This palace, far too little appreciated | finest examples of Wren's domestic | It was enlarged by him for King William III in 1691 and was| | & popular residence with succeeding | | monarchs until 1760, when Buckingham Taris of If &re mow Oogupted b Prins T Marchioness of Milford Haven who all have gulch garden and is particularly delightful in the Bexin P g pring. Princess Beatrice has just had a new | guest room arranged in her part of the palace. The walls have been painted |ivory and the curtains and hangings are of blue and green chintz. All the furniture is richly carved old oak, and it includes a circular chest Queen Vic- toria had especially made for her crinolined gowns. ‘The Queen of Spain is doing a round | of the theaters while she is here and is also managing to get in a good deal of tennis, a game of which she is ex- tremely fond. ROG FOUND. the | Mountains, Curry County, was en route to the University of Oregon yesterday for observation, after S. A. Lawrence | removed it from a.tunnel in a mining | claim. The frog has claws and its color is that of the clay in which it was buried. The head is twice the size of an the stand as the policy of his administra- | within the palace grounds, which is'ordinary frog and much out of pr - I noted for the brilliance of its flowers, tion to the body. o tion. MARSHFIELD, Oreg., November 16 |of churchmen, | @).—A frog of unusual type, found |he acknowledged his election as & 'trib- alive 50 feet under ground in the Sixes | NEW PRESIDING BISHOP - WILL LIVE IN CHICAGO Rt. Rev. Charles P. Anderson Will Continue Residence and Work in Midwest City. By the Associated Press. . CHICAGO, November 16 —Right Rev. Charles P. Anderson, bishop of Chicago for 30 years, came home from Washin yesterday as presid- ing bishop of church and announced he would continue his residence an his work here, o by s large friends and m-xmnym'f Met_ at the train ute to his diocese. He has-been u Ttesi- - denlt :( chiutgo 4: years. £ ISV “I do not intend to resign as bishop * of Chicago.” he said, will mz o Sald the"a1d would - prob ers sal e aid woul robably be a'° bishop-coadjutor to mm{n mmtzmm- ing the diocese and to succeed him onh is retirement. T Bombay, India, now has talkies. . but_ 1 2 777 Correspondence School which are re- |R quired to be completed by blue course |\ graduates of the Citizens' Military | Training Camps before being commis- | sioned in the section or arm of the | Officers’ Reserve Corps for which they | are candidates. For commission in the Cavalry sec- tion the subcourses to be completed are: Nos. 1, Cavalry organization; 2 care of animals; administration; 5, ~weapons: reading and sretching; 7, military sani- tation and first aid; 8, combat princi- ples of the Cavalry rifle squad and platoon, dismounted, and 9 and 10, tactics, The subcourses to be'completed by | blue course graduates for commission in the Coast Artillery section are: | Nos, 1, basic gunnery, part 1, funda- mental consideration: 2, basic gun- nery, part 2, errors and probability and thelr relation to artillery firing: weapons and material, part 1, fixed artillery; 3, weapons and artillery, part 2, mobile and anti-aircraft artillery and. searchlights; 4, fire control and position finding for seacoast Artillery 5, powders, projectiles, primers and fuses, and organization. For comm'ssion in the Pield Artillery | jon the subcourses to be completed : No. 1, Organization of the Field Artillery; No. 2, Elementary Battery Training (Animal Drawn); or, No. 2a, Elementary Battery Training (Motor- ized); No. 3, Mobilization and Admini- stration; No. 4, Map Reading and Sketching; No. 5, Artillery Movements (Mounted); No. 7, Field Artille mumition, and No. 9, Care of Animals | and Stable Management. The fol'owing.subcourses are to be | completed %r commission in the Infan- try section No. 1, map Reading, O ization, Troop Movements and Shelte No.*2, Scouting and Patrolling and Weapons and Musketry: No. 3, Mobili- zation and_Administration. For the company officers’ course the following subcourses are prescribed: No. 1, Solu- tion of Map Problems, Field Fortifica- tion and Defensive Combat, and No. 3, | Combat Orders, Solution of Map Prob- lems,. Tank Operations and Special ‘Operations. ‘For commission in the Signal Corps, the following subcourses are to be com- | pleted for all candidates: No. 2; Elec- tricity and - Magnetism; No. 5. Map Reading: No. 7, Wire Communications. For telephone specialists, the subcourses in addition to above, ar Construction, and No. 2, Company Officers’ Course, application of electricity and magne- tism. In addition to the above, radio specialists should complete the follow= ing subcour: No. 17, Signal Corps Company Officers’ Course and Princi- ples of Radio, and No. 11, Basic Course of Radio Communication. When any ° Washington Citizens’ 6, map Military Training Camp student has | contpleted all the subcourses re- quired for commission in the arms in which he is a candidate, that t will be reported to Third Corps Area head~ quarters in Baltimore in order that steps may be initiated toward havin thg candidate commissioned in the Officers Reserve Corps. Fleld Artillery Reserve officers of Awashington will meet today at 9 o'clock at Fort Myer for instruction in equitation, under the direction of Maj. John M. McDowell ‘conferences will be held this week by Reserve Units of Washington, viz.: 428th Infantry, 320th Infantry, Artillery, 80th Division staff, 306th C8%- alry and the Quartermaster Corps. To- morrow evening at headquarters, the 428th Infantry, Lieut. Col. West A. Hamilton commanding. will hold its conference, at which will be taken up, under the direction of Maj. Andres Lopez, Infantry, battalions and regi- ments in attack. Maj. Lopez will also conduct the 320th Infantry conference on Tuesday evening, at which will be sSix_instructional | 4, mobilization and | FREE Handsome 3-Pe. Liv just a few days off. Why not fix The holiday season i up that living room so all the family can enjoy it. handsome pieces, and at a price and terms you can afford— P've-found-a-way sale sovvenn. 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