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SNOW, RAIN, WIND . INNEW ENGLAND Communication and . Power Lines Disabled and Roads Blocked to Traffic. By the Associated Press. W. October 35.—High winds. w, Tain and sleet swept over New abnd today, broke communication power lines in the north, felled tr#es and polés, blocked roads, drove s mgm steamer nd in Vineyard B86und and tore craft from their moor- mgflln the harbor at Portland, Me. ving conditions weéfe made dan- gotous on the highways by the precipi- tion which took the form of snow and sleet at various times in all six of the New ln,hnd Btates. A half inch of snow fell in parts of Connecticut. Flurries and squalls were recorded in Rhode d and Massachuséfts. In Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine the snow assumed more serious propor- tions. In parts of Northern New End- land the storm, which an Friday, down a blanket of snow ranging from 3 10 20 inches. Power Poles Down. Theavy, wet snow that later changed fmnm Northern Vermont unsed down 50 electric power and telephone in the vicinity of St. Johnsbury, disabled 35 telephone trunk |ln3s and put 1,000 telephone poles out o6f com- mission in the town. The fire alarm system was disabled and at times only telephone circuit connected St. with the outside world. Hun- o6f broken limbs from trees filled streets. ‘The storm in that vicinity was the October since 1925, d::nl- ‘were marooned the road between Temple and Peter- borough, where the snow was 14 inches freighter Katrina Luckenbach, Boston to Mobile, Ala., went aground in ¥ near Woods Hole, but was slndntumcdhmhbe examined for damage. mnlemtl.fi:cdmeomflp- ped & schooner, and smaller t from their 24 PRISONERS HELD IN BUFFALO RED RAID Headquarters of Oommunists Wrecked After Mass Meot- ing Is Broken Up. FREIGHT TRAIN KILLS MAN Companion Escapes by Standing Between Passing Cars. 3 : e §158 33w g H i ERROR OF $1,800,000 IN BUDGET BLAMED ON WRONG DEBITING (Continued From Pirst Page) the suditor totals these requests and uthen formation the taxpayers fecéive until the first Monday in each Mmb:rn when m;u ael:u:h of “the made publie & report of Budget Director to Congress. In the intervening six months, when the budget is being made up, the Auditor makes up his estimate of the available revenue during the year being budgeted. The Commissioners decide aré going to recom- dget Bureau. They down the requests of the depart- t heads to meet this figure. The foners’ res then go to the Bureau, where léngthy hearings held and usually further scaling “u nog;m ll.lhedh.flul:"or all htlrlnu IXDAY now ug! offict s ve by way of rumors. ) ] One That Was Reversed. - Of those which leaked out this year of the strangest, from the tax- ' point of view, was that the city basing their budget on an ge«ed Federal contribution of $10,- ,000, plus & tax rate during 1932 $1.80 pér $100 of as: ation. report was duly con , but éame another report that the t Bureau had told the Commis- jers that they must not base their on an leral contribution in of $9,500,000, the amount of the 1 contribution. 2 October 11 came the disclosure t the Commissioners had much more actually to their credit in the sury than they had thought; that would be unnecessary to raise the tax ¢ in 1932; that even with the present rate they would probably close ":5 nt fiscal year with & surplus ,000 on their budget as now be- the Buoset Bureau. No one at the trict Building has given the details miscal tions and Mr. Donovan, is the only oné who knows. n&'\u end tomor- of National Capi- 1 h:?: | Planniog Commission were o ek group, 10 Be heéard. The These gloves will be introduced as murder trial. The NDAY ‘¢ by the defense in the Baker evidene ution contends that a pair of like these belonging J mn & manhole on the Campbell were found with some of Mary Baker's to Drnm-n of Agricult o griculture exp automobile. RULE ON GUN TEST 15 SET TOMORROW Controversy on Ballistics Overshadows Fate of Herbert Campbell. (Continued From PFirst Page.) sistant United States Attorney William H. Oollins by Lucian Vandoren of coun- el Bioot.‘l‘l t-huo;l defense. _— e prosecution an o de- mmmm to make nub&e the -challenge. The prosecutor said he advised the defense attorney the Government intends to stand on its al offer and that if the defense does not care to accept it, or has some other proposal to make, that fact ahould bé miade known to the court and the ry when the trial resumes at 10 ‘clock, tomorrow morning. The new :pnnl of the defense, , differed from that out- lined in published reports earlier yester- to the effect that the defense would fer & test in which Goddard and .82-caliber gun point out to the jury their confii “theories” on ballis- tics. Such a plan would be “assinine,” Oo_}!‘ll.m commented. g 8 prosecutor, in h good humor over what his associates declare was & Ju o much eonsternation into the ranks of the defense” by its chalienge. “If they acoept the challenge,” asserted, “they know that Col. God will d a doubt that ballis- e and that he eould not o [ mll::.ke‘ lllm branding 's gun as eath weapon. 'y turn down the offer, onp".,hne they are admitting that the suthority we claim Claim of Defense. erimental missing gloves were found in & where he had been worki; ‘lg:nmlho gloves !Mml:l" the r The defense contends that Camp- on his garage. -—lln St Photo. FIRSE EAST-WEST MAIL PLANE LANDS Completes Inaugural Flight Only 12 Minutes Behind 36-Hour Schedule. By the Assoalated Press. NEWARK, N. J, October 35.—The first eastbound plane of the transconti- nental air mail line arrived at Newark Alrport st 6:37 pm. (Eastern standard Hx::& tonight, 12 rminutes behind sc) LINES LINK EAST AND WEST. Rival Lines Join Forces to Inaugurate 36-Hour Service. NEW YORK, October 35.—The Bast and West Coasts were linked today by & new 36-hour air mail and passenger line operated by rt companies previously competing with each other. Under the air mail contract recently, awarded jointly to Transcontinental Air ‘Transport-Maddux Air Lnies and West- ern Air Express, the operating subsidiary of those two and Pittsburgh Aviation Industries, known as Transcontinental and Western Air, inaugurated sérvice on the all-air route. Both T. A. T. and Western Air Express were already oper- ating rival train-plane services across the country. Elevern multi-motored planes _took part in the inaugural flights. Three left New York for Los Angeles and will stay overnight at Kansas City, where they will meet two that took off in Los Angeles for New York and will also wait for daybreak to continue their journey. ‘TWo others left Kansas City this morning, one bound for New York and the other for Los Angeles, and two more 1eft Amatillo, Tex. ere, 100, one Head- East and the other West. On the ‘est Coast two others made round irips between Los Angelés and San ttorn Franciséo. LT gt gue “ lain juty fa concerned only with the pbell revolver, and that to bring various other guns would be irrele- vant. Goddard said last night he 1d enjoy making the demotistration would clusively to the ould prove conclusivel e rt and the ji mt"not\'vomu world fire bullets exactly alike,” and that the bullets removed from Mary conlg have come from “no body other in & i bl suh ce” than Camp- Goddard said he would be glad to |, TD tiake the test right in the cours room, | Fack the light 1 enough to permit oper use microscope. t the defense select the i of they make the experiment, the micro- scope will not fail to detect the tell- tale striations which are the individual fingerprints of each gun. Goddard Confident. Col. Goddard is confident because he has undertaken such critical tests before without a failure. The court M’n(h.l; btendml':do! a similar ex- conduct in 192¢ rh“pfl.n‘flnld Armory. e “In that e ex. the same machine, ‘and with. the Same cutting tool and two other bar- rels on_another machine with a second t0ol. Bullets were fired through these barrels out of my presence, and ;rgze et n:crnl{“ nl::r::d %0 that other | W whic] fired 'h?lh hu"fli" Feoe ever it were possible to mak guns exactly identical, this was a fest o disclose it. But with the aid of the microseope I was able to prove that €ach of the six barrels was different and had no trouble in reporting what barrel each bullet had emerged from.” Dr. Wilmer Souder, ballistic authority of the Bureau of Standards, who is ex- fected to take the witness stand when he pending question of gun tests is dis- Eled of by the court, also made simi- rly conclusive tests, it is recalled. Some months ago & prominent firearms manufacturer submitted to Dr. Souder two pistols which the maker declared to be as nearly alike as it is mechanic- ally and humanly possible to rifle them. These guns, too, had been made on one | machine, with one cutting tool, by the firm's most expert workman. Dr. Bouder, using a comparison microscope of the same type as that employed by Goddard, readily distinguished différ- :&c:fi )\‘XI\ lf‘\; l‘:‘l‘l”'l:’ markings that .en- im om which gun each bullet had been shot. i Dr. Souder to Testity. It is understood that microphoto- graphs of the Baker bullets taken by Dr. Bouder with a special new lens of great magnifying power will be intro- duced in evidence when the Federal ex- { takes the stand, possibly tomorrow. tion, are o clear and distinct as to “‘convinee any jury of laymen” that the bullets were fired from Campbell's re- volver. Defense lawyers have characterized photographs of the bullets taken by Col. idard and shown to the jury Friday to be “Anymln'&.but convineing.” It was pointed out that a number of scratches on the test bullets do not at | those on the fatal slugs. imitted by dard, who told of many technical factors responsible fot the discrépanciés. Even two bullets fired from the same gun may not agree satin is to settle numerous its of M:‘fl thhé.ld ovér “c'flluot;;: ton budgets n Donovan's 1 iy ol who believe in all their markings, he explained, due to fouling of the barrél by powder, rust or other matter; to vas size of un- fired bullete, and to differing angles of entrance from the chamber into the barrel. All factors involved Must bé consideration [ R Beints, according to_the prosecu- | Lindy Surveyed Gol. Charies A. Lindbergh, who s technical advisor of the new operating company just as he is of T. A. T., Yesterday he com| gleud & personal aerial inspection of the route between Newark and Co- lum!;un. ]meflw\ly leg of filn course r;:t previously flown regular passengér planes, and one the most difficult flying ai in thé country. e cross-country airline is “single " between Columbus and New t! Amarillo and Los Angeles, “double track” between Columbus and Amarillo. On the double track section one line branches South at St. Louis and éoeo to Amarillo by way of Oklahoma City, while the other line takes the more northerly course from Columbus to Kansas City. BROWN AT CEREMONY. Postmatet Gerieral Supervises Loading of Plane at Columbus. COLUMBUS, Ohio, October 25 (#).— Eastbound and Westbound mail planes on their inatgural flights over the New York-Los Angeles line met at Port Co- lumbus toay Before a large erowd. which included Postmaster Genersl Walter Brown and high officials of the Transcontinental & Western Alr ‘The Eastbound plane arrived at 1:40 pm. from Kansas City, while the New York P‘:nbes arrived from McKeesport, at 1: Pa, p.m. In addition a Columbus-to-New York plane left here at 1:15 p.m. Postmaster General Brown supervised the loading of the Westboun lane. Its unloading was delayed 15 minutes by the work of unloading the plane from Kansas City BISHOP GRISWOLD NEAR DEATH IN CHICAGO Bulletin Quotes Physitian as Say- ing Only Unféreseen Rally ‘Would Save Episcopal Leader. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 25 —The Episeo- I News Bureau tonight issued a bul- tin stating that Bishop Sheldon Mun- son_Griswold of the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago “appears to bé fighting his last_battle.” The bulletin quoted Dr. Dwight ¥ Clarke, attending physician, to the ef- fect that only some unforeseen rally would now save the life of the bishop, who is suffering in the Evanston Hospl- tal from a complication of heart and kidney disorders. r. Cllarke #aid the bishop was slowly losing ground and that his heart was functioning with diffiéulty, the bul- letin said. WASHINGTON STUDENT GETS YALE SCHOLARSHIP Bell One of 13 Selected for Award Under Annie 6. K. Garland Fund. By the Associated Press. NEW HAVEN, Col Award of the first sciolarships from the reécently establishe ie G. K. arland Pund to 13 students uums 'rom 7 ol the graduaté and profess schools at the uniyersity was announced toddy by Yale University. The (w was established last ]elr by a $100, gift from Willilam J. Oatland of this city in memory of his wife. ong those awarded the scholar- Géo! Hirst, Lewis ships are K. t, ston, uo:'t Frank Lr.‘:nmn. Dénton, Tex. F. nn., Oectober 25— in rend decision, he said,, g East (é’leveh\nd‘ Frankenstein, O] ?hflf‘ » 5 : Charlés B. Alred V. Co. | Forbes of New Zealand in an interview | STAR, W MACDONALD DENIES CHANGE OF POLICY Explains Government’s Pal- estine Action in Cable to Gen. Smuts. SHINGTON By the Associated Press. 'WN, South Africa, October 25.—Denial that Britain's recent state- ment of policy in Palestine constituted & ‘“retreat from the Balfour declara- tion” was cabled today by Prime Min- ister Ramsay MacDonald to Gen. Jan Christian Smuts, former premier of South Africa. Gen. Smuts, A member of the war- time imperial cabinet that drafted the declaration, had previously sent a ca- blegram to Prime Minister MacDonald expressing perturbation over the terms of the statement. On récelpt of Mr. MacDonald's reply today, explicitly saying the statement “‘cannot, fairly be described as a retreat from the Balfour declaration,” Gen. Smuts sent another message to Lon- don expressing mppreciation of the prime minister's prompt and complete answer. Reaffirms Objections, . He reafirmed, however, his objec- Uons to the statement issued by the colonial office under Lord Passfield and indicated his disagreement with Mr. MacDonald's views as to its effect on the spirit of the Balfour declaration. He sald he hoped Mr. MacDonald's cable would “remove some of the mis- conception.” “I especially welcome your assurance,” he said, “that recent statements do not definitely crystallize the government's policy on the national home, as my im- pression remains that both as regards land purchase and immigration the | statement does not correspond to the | active obligation for a Jewish national home undertaken in the Balfour decla- ration.” Gen. Smuts thought the declaration represented a debt of honor that must be. dhchlr!.fl in full at all costs. Mr. Mt d said he believed the general's perturbation had been caused by the incompleteness of cabled reports of the statement. Takes Up Cause of Arabs. ‘Taking I?fll.hc cause of the Arab o ulation of Palestine, he sald, “The Bal- four declaration explicitly provided that nothing should be done which tht prejudice the ¢ivil and religious rights of the existing non-Jewish com- munities in Palestine. “The British government has affirmed the view indorsed by the Permanent Mandates Commission of the Council of the League, that the obligations laid down in the mandate as regards two #ections of the population are of equal weight. “You also recall that the Permanent Mandates Commission expressed the view that had the mandatory govern- ment concerned itself more closely with the social and economic adaptations of the Arab population to the new condi- tions due to Jewish immigration, it would have served the interest of both sections of the population.” He reaffirmed the principle that Jew- ish immigration should not exceed the economic capacity of the country to ab- sorb néw workers, but denied the state- ment involved Moppege or suspension of colonization on the large amount of land still undeveloped and already in Jewish ownership. B CATHOLIC U. RECTOR HONORED BY ITALY Rev. James H. Ryan Made Knight Commander o¢f the Crown by King Emanuel. One of the most-coveted honors that | Italy can give, that of being named a Knight Commander of the Crown, has been bestowed upon Right Rev. James H. Ryan, rector of Catholic University, by his majesty, King Vietor Emanuel IT1. ‘The insignia of the order was pre- sentéd yesterday by the Itallan Ambas- sador, Nobile Giacomo de Martino, and was lookéd upon as a recognition of Mgr. Ryan's work in promoting the study of ItAlian art, culture and lan- guage. He is one of the most prominent edu- cators in the United States. He spent four years in Rome, from 1905 to 1909, and has made frequent visits there stnce. Mgr. Ryan is a fellow o6f the Medieval Academly of America and also of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. . PREMIER PESSIMISTIC OVER MEETING RESULT New Zealand Official Feafs English Imperial Conference Doomed to Be Abortive. By the Associated Press. LONDON, October 25.—Pessimism about the results of the imperial eon- | fererice was expressed today by Premler | | with the Sunday Dispatch. Mr. Forbes said the conference was “doomed to be abortive except in mat- ters like co-operation in research.” He based his pessimism on the Labor government's adherence to free trade | principles as proclaimed in a speech at | Manchester by Chancellgs @f the Ex- | chequer Snowden. | New Zealand has constantly been a | stanch advocate of higher imperial | tariffs, and the Sunday Dispatch is one | of Lord Rothermere’s papers crusading | for imperial free trade. FISH GOING TO MEXICO MEXICO CITY, October 25 (#).—Po- lice circles reported today that Repre- sentative Hamilton Fish, jr, would | ome to Mexjoo ahortly with polios of- ficlals from Washington and New York to_examine documents seized here last July at the time of the arrest of Mark | Lulinsky, agent of the Amtorg Trad- | ing Co. ! According to the report, which could | not be vérified in official circles, the sending of these documents to the United States proved to be impracti- cable, and for this season Mr. Fish de- eided on & ME to Mexico. | The Lulitsky documents are alleged to reveal Communist plans in the | United States. By the Associated Press BATON ROUGE, La., October 25.— Through the strange power of hyprosis memory may be restored to the healthy young man who awoke last year in a small New Orleans hotél with his past & complete blank. All other treatments having failed to nmtu the fog of his memory, the tien| -nre?n to permit . Paul C. oung, profestor of psychology at Louisiana State University, to try hyp- B Youn rted today {hese éx . You y ih - T &nmuu over a pe*lnd of espital d_ might ted by iypnotist, | i | STRANGE POWER OF HYPNOSIS MAY RESTORE MEMORY OF MAN D. C, OCTOBER CL 26, 1930—PART OXNE EARED SQUARE OPENS NEW BUILDING TO PENNSYLVANIA AVE. Above: Demolition of part of the buildings west of Fourteenth street on the sotith side of Pennsylvania avenue has opened the new Department of Commerce Bul to view from the Avenus. Below: Famous old Center Market, which will be the next to fall in the Government's building program. LAW ENFORCEMENT AGREEMENT SEEN Wickersham Commission to Gather for Conference Day After Election. By the Associated Press. Members of Presient Hoover's Law Enforcement Commission have & feeling they are going to get together on the impending report on prohibition. It is just & feeling so far, but the facts wiil be known soon. On Novers~ ber 5, the day after the election, the 10 men and 1 woman of the com- mission will speak their minds around the commission’s conferefice table. The decision will be reached from one of the most exhaustive reports compiled in any investigation. The index alone to the prohibition reports before the commission fills 146 type- written pages. Data From Speelalists. The reports include data from spe- cial investigators, testimony of expert witnesses, surveys of conditions through- out the Nation, figures on prohibition problems in foreign lands and several other phases Pending final study of this volumin- | ous memoranda, commission members T views as well as their proposals. ‘The first decision confronting the commission is whether the dty law is being enforced and, if it is not, whether it can be enforced. Thmhlhnhn controversy 18 the first r of business when the com- mission reconvenes and there is a determination to speed the work to con- clusion in time to get the report before Congress when it reassembles in December. Desire to Reach Agreement. Chairman Wickersham, Kenneth MacIntosh of Washington and Dean Pound of the Harvard Law 8chool are the members carrying on at headquar- ters here now. They insist there i8 a common desire in the commission to | reach an early conclusion and & com- mon understanding, if it is at all possible. 1t is among this trio that the feeling prevails that the commission can get together on the prohibition report, but eAch insists that there have been no preliminary conferences among membership or discussions on the wet and_dry problem. “We are too busy to talk,” explained Dean Pound, “and you can depend upon it that all of the members have enough work at home to prompt them | to the comfmon desire to coniclude our | task here as early as possible. U. S. LAW HELD BROKEN Civil 8ervice Employes in Wyoming Reported Assessed by G. 0. P. CHEYENNE, Wyo., October 25 ().— Complaint that the Wyoming Republi- can State Committee is assessing Fed- eral Civil Service employes for the pur- pose of the Republican State and national campaigns was contalned in a telegram dispatched today by T. Cassidy, Democratic State chairman, to the United Btates Civil Service Com. mission in Washington. Cassidy de- clared the Civil Sérvice law was being violated. Louisiana State Univetsity Professor Reports Progress in Treatment of Amnesia. 8an Francisco and of beiny “Chuck” b tioned having infantile paralysis, whieh | afternoon at 3 o'clock fot buildin was proved by & ?hy!lcll examination. Encouraged by thi hopes to bring him through the stages of his life until he ean pick up the threéads lost when he awoké in New Or- 1&8::0. taide of his loss of memory, K siclans said the man ;‘ppen:? bghie healthy and norm: e the name of “M: + the | K. | the exce] | David Lynn, who 18 devéloping the new |CENTER MARKET TO BE TORN DOWN DURING JANUARY (Continued From PFirst Page.) coluns, and impressive architecture, harmen! well, with_the new De- partment of Commerce Bullding. This com} is now more apparent sinc& the old structures i the corner are being rased. Next comes the former R«E’w:’v‘ Building. Bot% the District and Southern Rallway Buflding probably will stand for somé time in the building as they are in program, the proper alignment for the so-called unified architectural eomposition. OM Post Ofice to Go. Proceedin| tward one comes to the block between irteenth and fth sitéets where the new Post Of De- %?:xm“ o e oid Fost Ofhce Depars: o ce - ment, ufinedm u,sonto:txxe way for & more artistic structure, of better and more efficlent deaign. The b to be constructed cn the two bl cluding the one on which the Post ice stands and the oné im- médiately to the east will be the north end of the new building which has been erected for the Internal Revenue Bureau, and which is now occypisd. The incomplete northern wall of the Internal Revenue Building, where it is to be joined to its northern new build- ing s piainly visible from Fennsyl- vania avenue. Coming next to Tenth street the site for ‘the new Department of Justice lies between Tenth and Ninth, and then the old Center Market, which Is to sive for archives. The little block between Seventh and Bixth streets on Pennsylvania avenue is intended for a future building, but the use to which it is to be put has not yet been determined. The Govern- ment, however, plans to acquire this block, and raze it. one comes upon Sixth street, which is to be the point of the Federal triangle, and the beginning of the new and en- larged Mall. The two long bloeks of old buildings along the Avenue from Sixth to Third streets, are now under condemnation proceedings. As soon s they can be acquired and title passed to the Government, these old struc- tures will be torn down and the greater B street, which now jogs around Oenter Market and gets lost at Sixth street, will be cut straight through and into Pennsylvania avenue at about Fourth stréet. The rest of the area there will be turned into parkway. On the north side of this area will be the magnificent new munieipal center, Botanic Gardens to Be Moved. Arriving at the present site of the Botanic Gardens at Third street, one comes to the place which is to bé en- tirely changed from the Botanic Gar- dens into a new area to be known &s Union Square. The Botanic Gardens are to be moved southward, entirely out of their sent location and placéd on two blocks on either side of B street southwest. These two blocks for the new Botanic Garden are being acquited through the architect of the Capitol, Botanic Garden. The first block 18 bounded by Maryland avenue, First strest, Second streét and B street south- | west. In this first block will be located | the consérvatory. In the second block, bounded by First and Second streets, B | street and Canal street will be developed the gardens. Plans are being prepared for this garden. The condemnation Jury award has been approved, witl [mun of one ot two pieces of | land still in litigation. It is expected | | Bit by bit the man’s past hds beén reconstructed, Dr. Young explained, by utting the patient under del e was again a child. \In the trances, Dr. Young sald, the man usion that | dation for the new House Office Build- had mentioned | Jersey avenue, C street, South Capitol an orphan’s home called “Sacréd }[elfl“.;l“fl B streets southwest is now bein, & Bister Mary, of being & newsboy in | Doured, called | Décember 1. playmates. He also men- | the House caucus room next Tuesday | e results Dr. Young | Office | has adopted | into of that béfore long bulldings on these two blocks will come down. When the Botanic Garden is moved out, the placé where it is now located | will be relieved of its old stone fence, | which formérly was surmounted by an | area. —Star_Stafl; Photos. PRINCES PREPARE FOR INDIA PARLEY “Mr. A.,”” Who Figured in Badger Game Suit. By the Associated Press. LONDON, October e:l—?flnuu of ibin wealth and power would defy calculation, gathered today at Bt. J 3 ames’ Palace to shaj their pelicies in the forthcoming round table conference on Xé‘;flu‘.‘ - Anmong them were the Maharajss Jummah and Kashmir, of Birkamer, g} IA’L:!“ of Nawanagar, 6f Rewa and In distinguished group the best known kfllul:” was :?:d Maharajs of Kashmir, w] presi over today's sessioh. London and most of the world would remember him in connection with the adventure of a fabulously rich young potentate, then Sir Hari Singh, heir to_the Kashmir throne, in a law case which was the sensation of five years ago. Famous As “Mr. A.® He was the famous “Mr. A” in the trial of an sction hrx}um by Charles Robifison, husband the supposed woman in the case, ‘the Mid- land Bank for the recovery of part of $760,000 “hush money” muléted in & badger game at Paris. Court witnesses testified that “Mr. A” was found in a Paris hotel room with Proceeding still toward the Capitol. | 390 all but £26,000 of it deposited in the Midland Bank. Testify to Forgery. Willlam C. Hobbs, it was testified, | obtained the money from the Midland Bank by forging thus garnerin Rajah thought he was paying to an injured husband. Robinson sued the bank for £120,000. A London jury es- tablished the fact that Robinson and Mrs, Robinson were not parties to | swinidle. The jury was unable to agree on the liability of the bank. “Mr. A” then was in India, content to stand his loss And keep his name secret for reasons of state. There was fear for & time that he mi lose his | speeifications are prepared by Cass Gilbert, consulting architect, and the great new Supreme Court Building will rise 6n the site bounded by First avenue and Second street. Plans are being prepared for the annex to the Conrrenlonnl Library, which is to be built adjacent to the present Library, and condemnation pro- ceedings are under way for the site, directly to the east and adjacent to the | Folger Memorial Shakespeare Library | now nearing completion. Plaza Work Progresses. Over in the Plaza between Capitol Hill and the Unlon Station work is pro- ceding to develop the Plasa. Contract was recently let to Logan Pingree for rough grading of 13); acres of this Old Government hotels are all torn down but one, and it is to go soon. Other buildings in the Plaza are now being wrecked. It is from this Plaza that the new avenue is to éut through to» Pennsylvania avenue and Union Squaie. The Park and Planning CommisSsion has received iron picket fence. Th> two outstanding | pieces of statuary in Union BAL re will | be the Meade Memorial and the Grant | Memorial, which are already there. | It is inlo this part of Pennsylvania avenue, between Second and Third | streets. that the new avenue will arrive, | diréct from Union Station. rty 18 | now being acquired for this new avenue, and & contest s on as to which State shall have the honor of naming it. Projects on Capitel Hill, UP on Capitol Hill several great proj- ects aré under way. The concrete foun- ing to g0 on the site bounded by New and is to be complete aboul Bids will be opened in the iupemrucmre of this House uilding. The site of the Supréme Couft is now virtually levelled. Bved the old briek Oapitol is fow e, and the contractor is clearing 6ff the last bits n? mm from“:h: e kll“:n'be L4 have snéd for making borin the subkoil to determine nafure freat | gram’ in another part of Bids | bridge numerous requests to name this avenue, but Maine, Ohio and California appear to be the most eager. A paft of the public building pro- the city is the new Public Health Service Build- ing, which is to go on the site bounded by Ninetéenth and Twentieth streets, facing B street. This land is bel acquired and plans are being drawn for the building. The face of the old State, War and Navy Bullding also is to be rigorously alteréd undér plans now in the hands of Waddy B. Wood, local architeet. ‘This Building is to be made to resemble the Treasury Building, so the White House will be flanked with similar ar- chitecture. Meantime steady n)“r-l is_being - tlc'Ar lington Memo- and the th, across historic Potomac River, from the memorial for President Abraham Lincolth to Arlington House, formerly the homé of Robert E. Lee. Many phaseg of this project under . ‘The Wasl mo vel, wiong " the. Botoni s ly morial - Mount melo foundations feeded. Plans and the boulevard age 10 bicentennial. F% street, East Capitol street, Maryland|_opon which connects the North | shatts | : S St ey IRAIN AND HAIL MAR PRINCESS' WEDDING Czar Boris and His Bride Leave Assisi for Trip on Royal Yacht. By the Assoclated Press. ASSISI, Italy, October 325.—Csar Borls III of Bulgaria and Princess Glovanna of Italy were married in the Church of St. Francis this morning as & tempestuous hail and rain storm raged outside. Fate tossed a monkey wrench into the machinery of intricate court arrange- ments for the wedding and the 32-year- old princess cried bitterly during the ceremony, for worse marriage weather could not have been imagined. But when the ceremony was over the bride récovered her usual dimpled smile as she walked across the plazza in & pelting storm so that her peorle ‘might bid her godspeed and farewell. The hitch in the arrangements re« sulted from the fact that three royal trains, bearing members of the wedding party, pulled in late from Pisa, despite the fact that they had clear tracks and the right of way. Mussolini Paces Platform. Anxious dignitaries, including Premier Mussolinia, paced the platform nervous- ly in the meantime, knowing from watching the sky what was coming. Just udt'l‘lhe "‘mu' pulled in & .&nn\m u.: began and the royal personages closed motor cars for the trip up the hill along streets lined with troops. ‘This protected them for the moment, . Princess Giovanna and. although anxious hands hel brellas over her, her beautiful white wedding gown was considerably damp- In the resulting confusion meny of the cars were unable to drive close to the church and their occupants were hly drenched before reache Assisi sits in & high altitude and & sudden oold the pell rain to hail bx-r.:lln( could inside the church. Thus, between rain and hail, nearly all of those who made the trip from the station were elther soaked or battered by hallstones. Low Mass Omiited. The ceremony itself, performed by ther Risso, was brief, but impressive. cause the wedding was held much later than scheduled the low mass which had been planned to follow the cerémony was omitted at the last mo- m ent. flm the ceremony the grl.nceu bri 4and her husband boarded thelr royi traln and heéaded for Brindisi, where they will embark tomorrow aboard the foyal yacht Csar Ferdinand. atic, Ionian, Aegean and to-Bulgaria, where they will arrive with- in a week. 'London Gathering Includes | poen the young King Boris reac MAN KILLS CHILDREN, SELF; SPARES WIFE Vitginian Blows Top Of Head Away After Lighting Dynamite to Blow Up Home. By the Associated Press. BURG, Va, Octobér 28— After ‘wife ty said he deemed an inquest unneces- sary. SENTENCED FOR HOLD-UP Bandit Says Lawyer Directed Rob- bery to Obtain Fee. MACOMB, Miss, Otober 25 (fl.—A bandit and a lawyer who the at sald got him to hold up & jeweiry store 80 he could pay him his fee for de- flhdlgg«l’lln in a prévious robbery were sente to seven years éach in_ the peniténtiary today. Judge E. J. Sim- mons of County Oourt imposed the sentences. The lawyer, J. Bam MeGuire of Ma- comb, was expected to thke an &ppeal. Just before conviction he ed &8 a member of the mwfluhslpplwbt J- fence’ ang. teatined ‘The bandit, turned State’s evidence and - A Store ZM The ecourt pérmitted 11¢ by to serve the seven-yéar séntence simul- taneously with & 10:year senténce for robbing & bank at Madison, Miss. The men were tried separately, but were séntenced together, Prominent Coal Merchant Diets. Wis,, October 25 (#). Lewis Deering, 69, native g8, Wis., former president of the Chicago Association of Comneres the Nation's leading coal merchants, died today. Worl(Wn Official Succumbs, DES MOINES, Iowa, October 26 (). —E. L. Kelly, 51, assistant general counsel to the Alien Property Custodian duting the World War, died today. He had practiced law here since 1911, 100 BELIEVED DEAD IN GERMAN MINE; WEEK’S SECOND BLAST (Continued Prom First Page.) attempted to reach from two sides the men entombed in the shaft. hine shafts were choked with gas, Wwhieh hampeted the e work. ‘The disaster followed close uj th“:: mi in which 262 miners at the Alsdorf mine, about 1i north of here, ‘The bodies of the minefs at_Alsdor! were buried mornin, Reports di were killed. F%mwlmw& the missiny 5 high as , while the TR e, SRR Lo there were 90. The figure of 140, how- ever, 18 belleved to be exaggerated. Blamed. oke poured from gt LD uv"? the ing d Some engineers said that they be- on the Io\.\nh s, B 2 e e A D! s the coul “sekms,” But nolbing ws ds of the beéén to France for 15 undet the téfrms & of the Versallles . — *