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tA—12 5 RESERVES TO GO | TO TRANING CANP Five Officers and 30 Men With Hospital Experience to Leave on July 6. Pive officers and thirty enlisted men, | &1l with hospital training, form the medical detachment of the 20th Marine Reserve Regiment,, which goes to camp | for & two-week | training period on | July 6 Comdr. Don 8. | Knowlton, a local | ear, nose and throat spectalist, 1s | the senior- medical | officer. With 30 picked men, some of whom served _in the World War and others being medical “students the detachment rivals regular medical outfits in the number of its trained personnel. Lieut. Knowlton was educated at Tufts and | Yale Universities and is a World War | veteran. The other officers are all prac- ticing physiclans. Lt. Comdr. Knowlton. Lieut.| 8 Comdr. | | THE SUNDAY STAR . WASHINGTON, D. C, JUNE 15, CAROL ESCAPED ARREST IN COUP Disobedience -of Police Held Reason Prince Got Throne Instead of Cell. BY WHIT BURNETT. By Cable to The Star. BUCHAREST, June 14 (by airplane to Paris to avold censorship).—But for the fallure of Bucharest police officers | to carry out orders Carol would tod: | be & priconer instead of King of Ri | mania. This startling revelation was made to this correspondent By a reliable au- thority, who explained that on the night 'of Carol's dramatic_airplane descent, the then premier, Juliu Maniu, knowing of Carol's coming, gave a written order for his immediate arrest. The officer intrusted with the wa rant bungled or purposely disobeyed his istructions, merely presenting the doc ument to Carol on his arrival, instead of serving it upon him. Premier Maniu thereby lost one of the most delicate strategic moves in recent European history. Instead of becoming Maniu's pris- oner, Carol remained a free man and | went to Cotroceni Palace to confer with his brother, Prince Nicholas, and then summoned ‘Manfu himself. 1930—PART ON. Beauty Not All LOIS DELANDER, forms of transmission. Raymond Dochex of m{.m sycceeded, according to tists, in tranamitting the cold to bers of the chimpanzee family. Embarrassed by Publicity. APE TRIO SHARES TESTS WITH GIRLS . Emmeseies v | the announcement of his discove |he had been embarrassed b publicity. Johns Hopkins Scientists Con-| I shall pubiish my paper o medical publication, and I sl ll?"d‘n tinue 5-Year Seareh fOf everything in my power to establish my Cold Cure. Dr. sclen- mem- the | discovery and have it completely tested,” he said. “This discovery, like all other new things, is bound to create a consider- able scientific controversy. No medical man wants to have these controversies aired in the newspapers.” ‘ SIX DEAD: 200 HURT: MIDWEST STORM TOLL Five Fatalities in Menomonie, W' Sixth at Randolph, Minm, Damage Over $1,000,000 By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, Md., June 14.—Three gibbons, members of the ape family, as well as four Goucher College girl grad- uates, are being used in the experiments of the Abel Fund group of scientists at the Johns Hopkins Medical School in thelr five-year research tg find the cause and cure of the common cold, it was learned today. Meanwhile, Dr. J. A.F. Pfeiffer of the University of Mary- | Iand, who announced in a paper a week | ago ‘that he had found a minute or- | ganism which he said causes the cold | and had worked out a preventive in- occulation, maintained silence about the tests of his cultures to be made by the Ab;Lux\azi headed by Iz\;nl.nt Egudll-b By the Associated Press. e oup research, finance ‘ a '$195.000° fund of the Ohemicai| SIX dead, about 60 reported seriously Foundation, has been in Drl"w flor injured. 150 bruised or cut and property more than two years. What results damage estimated at more than $1,000,- have been obtained have not been an- | 000 were the tolls of & series of torna- , =. nounced. Dr. Pfeiffer sald he had dis- | does which lashed Eastern Minnesota covered the cold organism seven years andq Western Wisconsin late Friday. ago and had been testing it in the| Five of the dead were in Wisconsin, meanwhile before publishing his results | near Menomonie, where the storm skirt- and said he would willingly let the re- | ed the northern part of the city and Nineteen, of Joliet, Ill, who was “Miss | America, 1927,” recently graduated from | other qualified scientists. sults be tested by the Abel group and |ripped thmu(}? the surrounding country- side. The other death was at Randolph, Lieut. Howard H. Strine, executive officer of the detachment, is a local surgeon and graduate of the George- town University Medical School; Lieut. () Philip A. Caulfield and Lieut. (.., also graduates of the Georgetown Medical School, and Lieut. (j.g.) Lester M. Lucas, dental officer, educated at the University of Michigan, are the other officers. Ten medical students of Georgetown University have just enlisted in a body. They_are James W. McManus, Theo- dore P. Murphy, Alfred Palmer, Francis T. Sharp, James W. Shippley, Joseph A. Fahey, James J. Ortolano, Edward F. Gombar, Robert J. Coffey and L. G. Garaghty. Corpl. Walter E. Holmes is & World War veteran employed in the legal department of the . Veterans' Bureau. Among the enlisted men there are several with previous medical experi- ence in the fleld. Sergt. H. R, Dancy Maniu Attitude Mystery. Maniu's attitude toward Carol before the former crown prince’s return was long a mystery in Bucharest. Three weeks before the coup this correspond- ent was told flatly that ¥Carol is a closed question.” Circles, which then made no secret that they considered him a renegade, today regard him as | a hero. Maniu, in ordering Carol's arrest, | was simply enforcing the law of Janu- | ary, 1926, specifically prohibiting Carol’s return or attempting to place himself on the throne. Maniu's subsequent refusal to form & new cabinet confirms his hostility to- ward Carol and belies the Liberal party’s allegations that Maniu connived for the prince’s return. King Carol's political troubles were clearly apparent today. The two big parties, despite lip service to the mon- arch, are not solidly behind the new- comer. The National Peasants’ her home city high school with high honors and apparently has that rare facility of combining “beauty and | brains.” She is shown here in gradua- tion robes. —Wide World Photo. | Minn, where 40 familles were made homeless and only about a dozen houses were left untouched by the twisting wind. Hundreds of farm bufldings and silos were shattered or damaged as the winds swirled over the two States and cut a broken path, in some places 1,000 feet wide, before losing its force in a north- easterly direction from Menomone. The Minnesota executive counctl, in special session, voted an appropriation of $2,000 for use in cleaning up debris * at Randolph, where 60 National Guards- men were on duty to protect pr and aid in rehabilitation work. Continue Close Confinement. The four Goucher College girls, who | graduated last week, continued today in close confinement at the Johns Hopkins | Hospital. They were under agreement | to reveal no details of the experiments, but their parents said they had been | told the girls were to undergo tests of | | their resistante to exposure of cold organisms. | The girls agreed to be objects of the | tests for two weeks for $50 each, phys- | ical examinations and medical care. The gibbons were selected for the tests, it was said, because they closely resemble man in many respects. The | council was told that Rendolph was the Hopkins scientists have been concentrat- [only community in Minnesota needing ing on the effects of sunlight and various ' aid. This pboto by the Army Air Corps shows the beginnings of Lake Kingman, upstream of Benning road, Anacostia Park development. At the ‘e“e’ the picture the dredge is shown at work, eating out the mud. This dredged | material is being deposited on the reclaimed areas to make future park land. The lower end of the lake is now dredged | out, under the direction of the United States Engineer Office, of which Maj. Brehon Somervell is the head. E. A. Schmitt, | engineer in Maj. Somervell's office, said today that “excellent progress” is being made in the construction and contractors | for 15,000 tons of rip-rap stone, to make the foundation for the wall along the side of Lake Kingman, will begin delivery within the next few days. Work on the new deposit basin, immediately adjoining the Pennsylvania Railroad at | Magruder Bridge, is to be started in the near future. —Army Air Corps Photo. | as part of the “Slot Drug Stores” Fought. Medical men of London have started a war on the new “automatic drug stores” which are being placed in rail- way stations, hotels and other public places. The machines deal out aspirin, bismuth and other drugs. The possibil- ity of children getting the drugs hes | prompted one pathologist to predict | that the machines will undoubtedly cause many fatalities. KING CAROL SENDS MESSAGé TO AMERICA IN INTERVIEW “Tell People of America [ Reg;rd Them as Friends,” He Says—Thanks Press for interview. Rumania, however, had suf- fered in the past from inaccurate jour- nalism, he concluded, smiling. This interview is ‘Problbly the first | time in the history of European royalty that a new monarch has consented to a group interview with foreign corre- spondents_during his first days on the throne. Carol slipped quickly from the room, the courtiers bowed and the serv- ants buzzed. From the pictures on the wall and from the deep pile of carpets and the soft, inverted light of the candelabra, again one felt a sense of the anachro- served in the Army, Corpl. 1. E.. La- Londe was with the second ammunition train of the 2d Division, A. E. F., and was in five actions. He is at present employed in the Government Printing Office. Robert H. McConnell, & runner In the medical detachment, and Richard Stokes are students of Western High School and members of Company H. which won the annual cadet competi- tive drill The detachment will administer to the physical well-being of the crack 20th Regiment and at Quantico will undergo a rigovous period of training in the field. -A fleld hospital of sufficient | beds to accommodate the needs of a| regiment, as well as a dispensary, will be erected. Classes will be conducted in first aid, minor surgery, gunshot wounds and in litter drill. Enlistments are now being received by the reserve regiment at the armory, at 458 Louis- fana avenue. WORK OF WELFARE GROUPS INCREASES | Bocial Relief Organizations Report| Unusual Gains in Pleas for Aid. Pigures issued yesterday by four | family welfare organizations of the | Community Chest show unusual in- creases in the requests for relief dur- ing the first five months of this year 25 compared with a similar period in 1929, due, it is said, to the unemploy- ment sttuation. Ing cost per family, according to Walter 5. Ufford, executive secre- tary of the Associated Charitied, is due to the fact that more relief has to be provided. The amount necessary to provide the relief of needy families has taken a decidedly upward trend. For the first five months in 1930 the Associated Charities cared for 1919 families at a cost of $63,955.24, an in- crease of 606 families and an increase in expenditure of $28,358.88 over the same period in 1929. While the increase for Catholic Charities in the number of families was not so great, the cost per family | soared sharply. The Catholic Chari- | ties cared for 945 families at a cost of | $13.517.90 during the first five months of last year. For the same period this year they took care of 1,091 families, & gain of 146, served at an increased cost of $6.623.10. The Salvation Army took care of 2,529 homeless men, an increase of 962, or approximately 61 per cent, over the same period for last vear. | While figures for the number of fami- les aided by the United Hebrew Relief Society in 1929 were not avaflable, the organization spent $10,814 for family relief. This year, its expenditures have | increased to $15,352, with 275 familles mssisted. ! COWBOY STATUE LOSES TARPAULIN OVERNIGHT - Impromptu Unveiling Ceremony, Delayed for Will Rogers, Held in Oklahoma City. By the Associated Press. OKLAHOMA CITY, June 14—The Jong delayed unveiling of a $40,000 cow- boy statue, which stands near the front door of the State capital has taken place. However, the ceremony was im- promptu and the State house custodian Yesterday was wondering “who got the tarpaulin?” Either the bronze cowpuncher got tired of waiting for the unvelling, the wind did a herculean job of untying knots overnight or some prankster cele- brated Friday the 13th Fortunately, the cowboy was still seated on the back of his pony yester- day. The statue, & gift to Oklahoma, has waited seven Weeks in its canvas shroud for a formal unveiling ceremony. Failure to get Will Rogers, Claremore sage. to preside has been the chief cause of the elay. NINE COMMUNISTS FACE | 2T0 50 YEARS IN PRISON Group Convicte;i Court on Three Counts of Criminal Syndicalism. in California | By the Associated Press. | EL CENTRO, Calif, June 14.—Nine Communists, convicted of three counts of criminal syndicalism, will appear Monday in Superior Court for sentence which under the law may be from zi to 50 years in San Quentin Prison. The ~convicted, Frank Sklar, Frank | Spector, T. Horluchi, Oscar Erickson, Lawrence Emery, Edwardo Herrera, Emillo _Alonzo, Larrillo Orozeco and Benny Roxas, were charged specifiically with attempting to incite cantaloupe workers to strike, blow up railroads and | burn down packing E The defendants admitted Communistic party membership, and sald they had the betterment of humanity.” | conversation; Attitude During Exile. BY JOHN GUNTHER. ‘ By Radio to The Star and the Chicago | Daily News. Copyright, 1930. | BUCHAREST, Rumania, June 14. —‘ A young man with glossy, blondish hair, a small, darker mustache and a bright open smile is standing at one end of a long room talking in a voice hardly above a whisper. He is the man who waited four years in exile and then flew his way to a throne. | This young man wears an informal | uniform of white jacket, white trousers and white shoes, so that in the room decorated with all shades of red-ma- roon curtains, Turkey-red carpets, ver- million chairs, crimson hangings, he looks from a distance like a white paper doll pinned against ruddy damask. | He is the man who succeeds to the throne of his own son as king—the first monarch in the history of the world to reach a throne in such a way. ‘This young man stands easily and gracefully with a good deal of bash- fulness in his voice, but plenty of poise in his manner, perfectly master of him- self and the situation. To his right is & bronze bust of his boy. He is Carol, second King of Rumania, the newest king in Europe and the youngest. Inside the room, which is the library | of his town palace, was present what | might have been called medievalism— | in the bowing courtiers and uniformed | servants, in the lines of mellow books | on ghelves, in the heavy ornate carvings on the ancient staircase, in the lofty, | cathedral-life candelabra. i | Boom of Traffic Heard. And outside could be heard the | boom and sizzle of traffic snarls and of taxi horns, and soon the piping voices of boys selling newspapers in the streets. Not the least element in this paradox was the knowledge that the boys were shouting out the news | that Juliu Maniu, National Peasant | leader, had been charged by Carol an | hour ‘before to form a government. | This meant that Carol, for the mo- | ment, had been unable to find any one to form the kind of coalition govern- | ment he would have preferred and | that he acceded to Maniu's unbending | request that his party, which has an | overwhelming predominance in Parlia- | ment, must rule. (But later, in the night, Maniu was destined to bow in | failure to Gen. Peter Presan, who was | to undertake the mantate.) Servants closed the windows, the noises were shut out and the interview late yesterday afternoon began. There was ‘nothing medieval about Carol's it was brisk, direct. | Newspaper men of a dozen countries stood in & horseshoe around the mon- | arch and bent closer to listen to his | steady, pleasant and very low, modu- | lated voice. Written questions had | been submitted and of the dozen which | Carol answered, three were those | asked by the writer. | “In regard to your question as to| who was chiefly responsible for my re- country, the answer is that the details were decided upon by myself and arranged by myself,” Carol pro-| ceeded. However, he paid warm tribute | to his brother Nicholas, who handled the Bucharest end of the coup, de- scribing him .as faithful collaborator. Message to America. “Tell the Rumanians in Chicago and elsewhere in the United States” sald Carol, answering by request for a mes- sage to America, “that I will never forget the courtesy, hospitality and | warmth of welcome I found every- where.” Carol said that he remembered his trip to America as he does the Rumanians. . Carol then switched from French to excellent English: “I should have liked to have been able to stay in America longer to study the social organization there and the public spirit of the country, which I intensely admire. Tell the people of America that I regard them as friends, with an earnest desire to have them as friends in mutual collaboration. I want to ex- press my thanks for the attitude of the American press—with a certain few ex- ceptions—in its invariable consideration of me during my years in exile.” Passing to matters of state, Carol said, | briefly, that his acts as King would | always be within the constitution. “It | is my ideal to work in sincere collabora. tion with the cabinet and Parliament, he affirmed. | Pointing to the bust of Michael, the King described feelingly his intense joy over the reunion with his son. His eulogy of Nicholas followed. “Rumania is convinced that the de- cere in my desire to welcome and en courage,” continued the new King. It | any anti-Semitism here. speaks of persecution of Jews does not | know that the temper of the Rumanian | people is noted for its tolerance.” Talks of External Affairs. pitality during his exile in France. He said, referring to Italy, that the Italians | and Rumanians were naturally close because they are of the same origin, | with the same blood, and in large part, the same temperament. “A strong bond of amity also exists between Rumania and Hungary, both countries being agricultural, and I fore- see this close unity in future” was Carol's assurance. “Our relations with Jugoslavia are also close on account of | the connection between our royal houses.” | Finally, with reference to the minori- | ties, Carol said decisively that he con- | sidered all the minority groups to be | Rumanians and promised them fair treatment. | This interview had begun with the | graceful entrance of Carol from the | hall behind, and now that it was at| an end, with a quick smile and a nod he prepared to withdraw. He said that he was delighted to meet the newspaper | men, who, he was sure, would be per- fectly accurate in_their reports of the | ADVERTISENENTS Bk o ( RECEIVED HERE Kenner’s Pharmacy—17th & Q Sts. N.W. Is a Star Branch Office The thing to do when you are nistic past. open, premier, flood the enormous room. \ONLY 14 VOTES CAST IN SMALLEST ELECTION Recogd for Fewest Ballots Set in Boyce, Va., Municipal Voting. Special Dispatch to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., June 14.—Break- ing the record for the smallest number of votes cast in a local election since | its incorporation some years ago, the town of Boyce, Clarke County, with 14 of its citizens participating, has elected recorder and four council- | men to serve four-year terms from a mayor, September 1. | W. A. Heine succeeds L. E. Clarke | as mayor, Cornelius Van De ‘Venter | succeeds himself as recorder and John | 8. Coe, L. S. Kibler, 5. K. Anders and All are J. W. Suddith are councilmen. new men except Coe. CITIES STAGE BATTLE FOR MUSIC CONVENTION | By the Associated Press. | BOSTON, June 14—A battle over| velopment of its natural resources must | the selection of Chattanooga or Kansas | be by foreign capital, which I am sin- | City as the site of the 1931 conventio: sent the Thirty-fifth Annual Conven- | It |tion of the American Federation of is not true, Carol said, that there is |Musicians into an-extra day's session | “Any one who | here yesterday. The question will be de- | cided today. Then the windows flung and the noises of democracy, with announcements of the tentative appointment of the peasants’ leader as party stands absolutely for maintenance of the present Parliament, while the Lib- erals show every indication of standing stronger than ever against Carol, whom they have always regarded as an un- stable marionette. Coalition Held Temporary. Maniu's closest collaborator informed this writer that, while a coalition gov- ernment is likely to be formed, it will | be merely temporary and designed to | strengthen public confidence. A spokes- man for, the die-hard Vintila Bratianu declared the Liberals are unreconcil- able and determined to sit back and judge King Carol by his acts, which they are convinced will not'be good. ‘The Liberals, long makers and break- ers of kings, predict that a toncentra- | tion government wlil not function lon;, owing to the individualism of the lead- ers, and will inevitably fall, being re- placed by a military government, which | will fall in turn. Then, the Liberals say, |they will resume power and decide | whether to bring in a new dynasty or | restore the boy Michael, Carol's son, | to the throne or create a republic. Liberal leaders told the writer that King Carol offered the premiership to M. Duca last Saturday, but that Duca | declined. Duca, who is a Liberal, is {taking the strongest stand against Carol. Correspondence Refused. Anything praising the King is imme- diately passed by the censors, but the correspondent’s dispatch today quoting the Liberal chiefs in their intransigent attitude was refused on the ground that the Liberals’ predictions of a military government would hurt the country abroad and be misleading. The Na- tional Peasants, who voted to make Carol King, hope to continue in power n | in purl\lment%ethe face of the neces- | sity of Carol's granting jobs to non- Peasant party supporters and the ne- cessity of a multi-party government. The belief is growing here that Carol's return was_ engineered by army officers The convention unanimously adopted | and that Maniu was as surprised as a resolution favoring the repeal of the Volstead act. to “repeal” yesterday. Corner 8th For some years the or-| | ganization has had a standing resolu- | Carol progressed to external affairs| tion favoring the modification of the and thanked the French for their hos- act, but the “modification” was changed | anybody. Hence, Maniu is now reluc- tant to reassume power for a transition period with the practical certainty of | being turned out of office in a short time. (Copyright, & D Sts. 1930.) N.W. Send the Boys and Girls Savings Complete outfits for the Junior and the Senior— STANDARD QUALITY MERCHANDISE. ' perfect in every respect, AT SAV- INGS YOU'LL REALLY APPRECIATE. ! Check Their Needs From This List Ponchos Duffle Bags Khaki Shorts Tennis Mess Kits Flash Lights THE ABOVE SIGN 18 DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES in need of help of any kind is to put a Classified Advertise- ment in The Star, because that will bring you in touch with practically every one who is seeking employment. Copy for The Star Classified Section may be left at any of the Branch Offices. No matter where you live, in town or the nearby suburbs, there’s one in your neighborhood. Branch Office service is rendered with- out fee; only regular rates are charged. The Star prints such an over- whelmingly greater volume of Classified Advertising every day than any other Washing- ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give you the best results. the Corner” is Branch Office Tennis Shoes Bathing Suits Sweaters Army Lockers Canteens Sheets Pillow Face Towels Army Blankets White Ducks Sailor Pants TRADIN Pillows Sport Shirts Polo Shirts Outing Pajamas Hi-cut Shoes'. Moccasins Bath Towels Base Ball Equipment Rackets Slips We outfit for any camp from Maine to Texas— and Guarantee Savings SRMYENAY, 0. Met. 6608 Corner 8th and D Sts. 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