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JHUN .~ Mantgomery Grand Jury Sug- 4 * gests Transfer of Small . Larceny Cases. whicl y afternoon since Monday n offenses charged include larceny, ement, rape, nousebreaking, , perjury, assault ;mh intent to kill, obtaining money unde: tenses, robbery and recel goods. All of the cases have g for trial at the term of which _begins here 'l'hund;l of week, There aréalso scheduled for at the term 37 cases brought over the March term and 39 appeals the County P&lice Cm‘xinj o Teport of the grand jury, sub- mif Mp;lld e Robert B. Peter, stated that 48 cases had been investigated and 108, witnesses examined. ‘Jail Conditions Reported Good. The county jail, sccording to the re- 1s in as good shape “as possible existing conditions,” which condi- tions “will be remedied when the new which will doubtless 8 in the jail. b “Our enmu{mm of the court house,’ stated the report, “evidences the well known condition of overcrowded offices and uate space and protection for + vall le records of the. county. These conditions will also be remedic upoh the completion of the new court ] ded State’s Attor- eration adv Mnd jury and for his efficient tion of the cases cubmitted.” The Walter Bogley, was also com- for “his attention to his du- as was Chief of Police Alvie A. the report, ncy of this force more else is due the ‘small IRfpet CE I # in Budapest Terrorist Plot. ll n balic vesterday ed officers NOT ANNOUNEED 5 v /. Visitors' from all over the world enter the Presi- dential Dining Room of The May- flower and are instantly recognized By Fred, the genial maitre d'hotel. Fred just happens to be one of those ‘persons with an unfailing memory 4 @ 1 was back in 7gay Vienna where hearts are cheered the flow of the Danube and “frothing Pilsner that Fred, as s boy, started on this memory busi- jess. As his career progressed with ‘service in the leading hostelries of London, Paris, Montreux, Geneva Jand other famed cities, Fred con- stinued his habit of always getting fout the correct mame. And quite @ few syllables hé bad to wutter Jsometimes, too. ¥ @ Fred knows ithousands of persons from every swalk of life and they all know him. He also knows food and personal dikes. He knows how a meal ‘should be served and insists that ithe waiters follow his instructions. | license hod has Lindy Is Regarded As No Eclipse for Prince of Wales sonalities and neither in his own sphere has any rival. The idea that they would be rival stars ‘elipsinig_one another is merely fodlish. They would be far more likely to form an instant hearty friendship based on mutual ad- miration—and so s2t an example to their countrymen.” WEATHER - DELAYS CROSS-COUNTRY HOP Gerald Nettleton Will Attempt to Lower Boynton's Junior Record. By the Assoclated Press. NEWARK, N. J., November 15.—Un- favorable weather reports today kept Gerald Nettleton, 20-year-old Toledo fiyer, from starting & transcontinental hop. 5 Nettleton said he would take off as soon as the weather permits in an d | effort to better the junior transconti= nental record held by Stanley Boyntox of_Rockland, Me. Nettleton showed his skill in bad weather flying yesterday, when he &I‘loud his ship from Rochester, N. Y., Newark, stopping at Syracuse and at Teterboro a few miles from Newark, zr:“ rg\’ue.b a o % ‘The you s been flying for about 18 months and received his it His small an 110-horsepbwer engine and is capable of 160. miles an hour, 4 h —_—— ‘ The first 10 carloads of munitions huve been stored at the new naval arsenal at Hawthorne, Nev. GETS GRP ON PACIFIC SLOPE From Mountains to Sea and Yukon to Mexico Cold Wave Strikes. By the Assoclated Press. . SAN FRANCISCO, November 15— Accompanied by a cloud of failing’ snowflakes in many sections, Winter came tripping to th: West yesterday to whisk away last vestige of In- dian Summer and 1¥place it with varled temperatures that spell Winter for coast or_mountain State alike. From Denver to th: Pacific Coast and from Canada to Mexico, particu- larly in the highlands, snow fell and in the lowlands along the coast there was frost or rain, ) Seattle Is Freezing. 3 Seattle had it coldest mornitig this Fall with th: temperature officially down to 32 degrees al zero. Inland there wes snow and cold. At Leng View it went down to 24 above. All Oregon was visi'ed by the cold snap. . The snow was great:st at Pen- dleton, a half inch. The lowest tem- perature was at Klamath Falls, where the mercury went down to 19 above. In California it was clear and cold in most places, following a daw of snow and rain. The snow blanketed the Sterra and plateau region generally, al- though it was not deep, In San Fran- cisco the minimum dropped to 48 and in Los eles to 52, Up in ka, the Yukon Territory and Northern British Columbia the low temperatures extended and rivers froze over. Rockies Snow Clad., In Arizona, especially in the northern uplands around Flagstaff, snow fell during the night and the forecast was for more. In Utah and Idaho it was clearing somewhat and thawing after a snowfall. Two inches fell yesterday around Salt [ in Lake City. A0 record aboye. mild, de- POLISH BRUTALITY N GALICIA PROVED BY CORRESPONDENT (Continued From First Page.) this. This is the first offical admission the Poles have given of these deaths. In my interview with Bichop Saze) politan bishop of the Uniat Chure] prelate told of evidence that at least thres peasants have died as the result of incxcusable brutal flogging by the Polish_soldiery. In the “Yuro” Ukrainian Hobital in Lwow, protected because it is in‘ide the walls of the sacred prcincts of the metropolitan churchyard, I saw 11 ants, fl-m of whose bodies had 2en 1i erally hamméred to a pul& victims have been lying ther: for weeks attended by kindly nuns. ‘There are stories of peasants being pursued like wild animals b:fore the cavalry—flogging 100 to 200 strokes, during which the victim fainted and was revived by being dashed with waler and these battered” Polish soldiery. I saw a priest who declared that his wife and two daugh- ters were beaten. Now, while I wish to make no excuse for such atrocities—there can be no excuse for them—I also feel convinced that there was much provocation from the Ukrainian side. The minister for public security of Lwow, Bayzli Wro- jowiki, showed me a map of alleged Bmlnhn outrages and sabotage. There were 51 cases of incendiarism in the Lwow district, 20 in its environs, 31 in the Stanislaw district, 73 in the 1 district, he sald. All these have happened since July 1. 500 Awalting Trial ‘The Poles have admifted arresting over 800 people. 500 of whom are now prison awaiting trial. Ukrainian mail robbers killed a policeman in July five ‘Wyoming's Winter arrived at the | in the exact time predicted, and brought a 7-inch snowfall to Yellowstone National Park. The fall around n ler. At Great Falls, Mont., the State’s lowest temperature was recorded, where the thermometer said two below. At N “ Fashions $4950 upwards Tae Wawvr Roow, Tamp FLook. > THE WALNUT ROOM enlarged re-arranged DWARD WASHINGTON, D, C, SATU | were perpctrated " g who ‘wre - tinder tion's influence. Lwow—whose pastorel letter | the Poles confiscated October 16—the | there is much truth in suech cl . __That is not my point. The Polish. inian antag- onism is)an old and deep-rooted a particularly violent since the. thidnight of \ctober 31, 1918, when, upon the colla) of ‘the Austrian Empire, the iang revolted, seized half of Lwow during the nl“m and for three months all Galicia was_terrified by the Ukrainian rebellion. One ean- not help feeling a certain s; ithy for the Poles in this ugly « of a rebellious minority. Calls Flogging Extreme. My point is, and there is much tragic evidence to prove it, that the floggings of Ukrainian peasants by the Polish soldiery, while customary affairs in Eastern Europe, were carried to & length of absolutely unnecessary and extreme brutality. Entire villages have been subjected to terrorism when the Polish police or soldiery were unable to find the real culprit, and that terrorism still rules the countryside, Anything like the free in- vestigation which the Polish Ambassa- dor at Washington asked American cor- respongdents to come and make in Bast is an absclute Impoul‘l;lmy silence. I had to come out to the town of Beuthen in Germany in order to feel sure that this report got through the web of the Polish police supervision and the time at my disposal is too brief to allow fully the details of the right snd wrong on both sides of such a compli- cated situation. (Copyright, 1930, by Chicago Daily News.) MOSCOW REPORTS ARREST. BY JUNIUS B. WOOD, * By Radlo to The Star. MOSCOW, U. 8. 8. R., November 15.—Under the title, “Arrest American Correspondent,” the Moscow Izvestia today on the first page publishes a telegram “from our own correspondent,” which says: “WARSAW, November 14 (by tele- phone).—Negley Farson, correspondent of the Chicago Daily News, was arrested in & village near Lwow. After investi- gation Mr. Farson was released. The police suspected Mr. Farson of having secured photographs showing the results of punitive operations by the Polish cavalry.” g (Copyright, 1930.) Avocados are used as a shortening for bread by a Santa Ana, Calif, the work.of the Ukrainian terroristisy| farmer. & Lot w1 he Christmas Store <= The Walnut Room—Washington's exclusive Fashion desi Priced |2 afternoon, wraj fashions, i parties, in fact, Room, re-opens—resplendent in its enlarged and new arrangement—its new decoration and new fashions— a natural climax to our New Third Floor of Fashions in architectural beauty and with exclusive Fashions. Its quiet dignity creates anew the innate beauty of the Lous XVI period. It is an ideal conception of an interior designed with a particular appeal in mind— that of a place in which gowns may atmosphere in which they will be worn. shown, in the In this Walnut Room where finer frocks are presented, each model is personally selected by our style authori- ties with the advance information from the ‘leading ers here and abroad at their command. Paris replicas, frocks for the street and daytime gowns for and gowns for evening, debutante f gowns and gowns for wedding all finer fashions for women and misses are included in The Walput Room’s comprehensive fashion service, which awaits your inspection and ap- RDAY, NOV =) 000 A KL M E BY CHNESE REDS 5,000 People Carried Off and $2,000,000 Damage Is Reported. By the nted Pross. - HONGK( ), November 15.—An un- verified from Canton today said Communists retreating from Kian, Kiangs! Province, ‘had passed through the town of Hsinpu, which they put to the sword and set afire, *killing some 2,000 men, women and children in a| few hours. ‘Two thousand houses were set afire in the raid, the report said. The in- vasion occurred last week. Some 5,000 more of the inhabitants were carried off for ransom by the Reds, and proximately = $2,000,000 damage done, according to the report. by’l‘g:mn;'dll‘nw;u d"lv::tl out of Kian forces week, . firmed dispatches said. b 20,000 Communists Flee, The Communist forces, numbert: about 20,000, fled southward in the dni! rection of Kanchow, hotly pursued by the Natlonalists, and were reported to have been headed lwl;ulrom that, city ‘br{”nlnnlmenl kien Province The from Foochow. Reds, it was said, then turned COAL Our low prices are for cash del 'y only. W. A. Egg..$14.60 W. A, Stove, $15.30 W. A. Nut. .$14.75 W. A. Pea...$10.40 Buckwheat.. $8.10 Coke .......$10.75 Fairmont Egg $8.25 New River Egg, $11.60 lace and “Ilul are ned and weight guaranteed. B. J. WERNE 1937 Fifth St. N.E. North 0079 iy, )& We o surtound and exueFmInate the Gomne hunists, % o SHANGHAL November 15 (P).—Re- B Lasri Lazarist 1 5 ovine bench Missionaties stationed there, nclud- ing Bishop Balconl, three fathers and at Hanchung Fu, has been looted Hait! President to Honor Miami With Relic of Columbuls. ¥, Nos D). here today stated that | Miami six nuns, all Italians, escaped to the | the hills and have not since been heard of. The Lasarist Mission here received dispatches today from the mission sta- tion at Nanchang in Kiangsi Province, dated last Tuesday, saying t Chinese Reds from the Poynlgl Lake region had captured and looted Fuchowski, 50 miles | gu!hmt of Nanchang, the preceding | Y. | PRIEST IS BEHEADED. | Nuns, Held for Ransom, Forced to! Watch Executlon. | NEW YORK, November 15 (#)g-A | Shanghal dispatch to the New York | Times yest'rday sald that an army of | § more than 30,000 Communists had | | gwooped down on _Klidngfu, Kiangs! | Province, beheaded Father Paul Cheng. a Chinese priest, and kidnaped threc French sisters and on French priest. each of whom 1s now held for $20,000 | ransom | execution of Father Paul oc- curred ‘on_the steps of the Kiangfu Catholic Church, ' the captured being forced to look on. N e ps off planned to place the anchi ;onecucm of West Indies lay hel i 4 Rooms, Kitchen and Bath, $90 The Montana 1726 M Street N.W. " Just Think of It— The Star delivered to your door every vvening and Sunday morning at 1'%c per day and 5¢ Telephone National 5000 and de- tivery will start at once. Oé en Unts1 5P. M. Momiaz, Nov. 17th Timely Provision For Emergencies —is a subject in which every should be interested. There' individual s no better way to safeguard the future, financially, than to save while you have gainful em- filo ment. ‘e’re serving hundreds of thrift-workers, and will be glad to have you utilize our facilities. One dollar or more will open a “Columbia” savings account. 3% Paid on Savings OLUMBIA National Bank, 217t | Capital & ODWARD & LoT —The Christmas Store Surplus, $750,000.00 why ’-’// é.' OoP )t o " The New Bea'uty 1 ~of Esmond Blankets "Is Shown Monday in Lectures and Displays New blanket beauty in more subtle tones, in texture and in light- ness (that does not sacrifice warmth), opens up fascinating pos- sibilities of decorating your bedroom. You will be most interested in these lectures and displays we have arranged on Esmond Blankets . . . November 17, 18 and 19.. . . in the Blanket Section, Second Floor. Helen Kendall, Decoration Consultant for the Esmond Mills, Here November 17, 18 and 19 Miss Kendall has a fine understanding of the new tendencies'in decoration . . . backed by an extensive education and years of practical experience. She will talk each day at 3 o'clock. .~ Monday—Color, a Language of Self-Expression Tuesday—Creative Guidance in Color Harmony Wednesday—Color Keys to Unlock Every Room BLANKETS, Brcond. FLOOR. I “\