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tA_D xR APPLAUSE GREETS . EULOGY OF HOOVER #, Hyde Tells Young Repub- | licans to Curb ‘Yes, But—’ Comment on Party. | (Continued From First Page) is doing. He showed them the progress being made by the great farm co-op- eratives, whose business has been in- “creased enormously under the fostering care of the board. Stabilization, he said, undertaken by the Farm Board and of which there hss been a tre- mendous amount of discussion, “is only the sideshow, not the circus.” “Stabilization is not the fundamental program of the Farm Board," con- tinucd Secretary Hyde. “The funda- mental program of the Farm Board is to organize agriculture anl to help it up the hill. In normal times that job would be hard enough. But given a .. World depression, the Farm Board has had nothing but bad breaks. tions that would try the patience of a saint or stimulate ‘the devilishness of a sinner have prevailed. Stabilization is an emergency matter and has only been tried twice. First in 1929 after th: stock market crash. The Farm Board felt that the farmers had nothing to do with blowing up the stock market bubble and should not suffer on account of its bureting. It tried to help the farmers | maintain prices. Denies Board Is in Business. he second time stabilization was tried was last Fall, when 60 banks failed in Arkansas in one day. We knew that 50 or 60 million bushels of wheat was in the West, and that it might be dumped on the market and bring the price of wheat down to 50 cents a bushel, with co-operatives Tuined and banks carried down, Stabi- lizaticn was attempted to stem the tide. It did stem the tide. Heaven knows what ruin might have followed, not only for the farmers, but for business, 4f stabilization had not been at- tempted. “You hear a lot of talk that the Farm Board should not go into business. The Farm Board is not in business and not going into business. The Farm Board is trying to put the farmer into busi- mess, and way not? The object of the Farm Board is to so organize the farmer 50 that he can go into the market with his own products and can plan his own | production, just as the United States Steel Corporation does. Its purpose is to organize the farmers so they can speak for themselves, just as the Stand- ard Oil speaks for the oil business, and United States Steel speaks for the steel business. The crops belong to the farmers. There is no divine right for anyone else to sell the crops for him. If there is anything radical in this pro- gram, it i because the farmers are doing 1 Busmess and labor long ago organized in_their own interest.” Secretary Hyde said that there were complaints that the Farm Board had lost $500,000.000. As a matter of fact, he said, only $400,000,000 is at issue, and no one can tell whether in the end anything will be lost. He admitted that if farm loans had to be liquidated to- v there would be large paper losses, but he added that the operation of the Farm Board had saved the country many times those losses. Value Fixing Disclaimed. The secretary said that the Farm Board had been accused of fixing val- tes. He said that when anybody ac- cusad the Farm Board of it he felt him- self that the Farm Board was accused of stealing chickens. The enemies of the board. he said, like to refer to the fixing of the values of rubber, and to call attention to the fact that it had falled. He denied that the Farm Board was attempting any such thing as value ing, which did not admit there was any relation between supply and de- mand. The Farm Board, he said, freely Bdmitted the relations Leiween supply and demand and had sought constantly to have the farmers give attention to their production in relation to the de- mand. “If the farmer insists on burying him- sclf in an overproduction of his crops,” said Secretary Hyde, “then no power on earth cin save him. But if we can get him to limit his production, according to the demand, then we have accom- plished something.” Secretary Hyde declared it was neces- sary for the Federal Government to help the farmers organize since they were so widely scattered throughout the extent of the whole country. “I understand that the election has Already been settled here,” said Secre- , Rary Hyde, referring to the predictions made by speakers yesterday at the con- ference that President Hoover would be renominated and re-elected. “I am thor- oughly in sympathy with that arrange- ment. Personally, I had it settled a Jong time ago.” Dr. Robinson Speaks. . Dr. John J. Robinson of the Universi- ty of Indiana, discussed for the con- ference what has been done in the way of organizing the young Republicans in the Hoosier State. He declared that the'| movement among the young Repub- licans was not a rebellious movement, but a thinking movement. He insisted that any candidate who has the hearty support of young Republicans can win. For any party to neglect the young “Noters is tantamount to seeking the death of that party, he said. He re- ferred to the death of the Whig party, declaring that ‘it had neglected the young people of that time. He said that young people coming into the Republican party are bound to give it added life and success. He urged the college men and women to | gel their organizations started this Summer in_preparation for the cam- paign next Fall. Walter Newfon, secretary to the President, addressed the conference briefly, urging the young Republicans to take an active part in politics. h More Indictments to Come. The Young Republicans themselves; }ad a lot to say at the meeting yester- day afternoon, The nearest approach «,to mention of prohibition came from ! Paul E. Lockwood of the Young Repub- Jican Club of Brooklyn, who in opening his talk to the conference mentioned the fact that Brooklyn was the first city in the United States to have a brewery and also the first city to have & Young Republican Club. We are not very strong,” said Lock- wcod, “but we make a terrible lot of noise. We watch the deals in which the city buys real estate and then de- termine who gets the dough and then we send embarrassing telegrams to Gov. Roosevelt. We have had seven Demo- crats indicted, and I can promise you there are more to come.” The thorn in the side of such an or- ganization as the Democratic organi- vation of New York City, he said, is fthe law against larceny. He added that| if the tactics pursued by the Young Re- publican Club of Brooklyn were car- ried into the “hinterland” they might be of some assistance. Willlam Shersdn Green, a Young Hepublican from New Jersey, gave the conference a talk on the practical side of interesting young voters in the G. ©O. P, urging snappy speeches at out- door meetings, and fi “darn good food,” as among the necessaries. ‘The conference, which was called by Robert H. Lucas, executive director of the Republican National Committee, will be concluded tonight with a din- mer dance. On this occasion speeches will be made by Secretary Hurley, Rob- ert A. Taft of Cincinnati, W. Kingsland Condi- |, | ANTHONY J. Macy, chairman of the New York Re- publican State Committee; Mayor Wil- Jiam B. Harrison of Lculsville, Miss Katherine V. Parker, president of the Republican Women's Club of Massa- chusetts, and Prof. Willlam Starr Myers of Princeton University. [ Miss Baker THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, JUNE Is Honore GIFTS PRESENTED RETIRING Center Department to become M and department members. COMMUNITY CENTER HEAD, 1SS SIBYL BAKER, who recently resigned as director of the Community director of the municipal playgrounds | June 15, was guest of honor at a luncheon yesterday afternoon in the Franklin Administration Building, given by the community secretaries Miss Baker was presented with a silver vase and a desk set by members of her staff and the clerical force of the department. Speaking for th® staff, Mrs. Alice C. Driscoll wished Miss Baker “continued success in her new position as head of the playgrounds, which offers a wider opportunity in the development of a city-wide recreation system, which is the dream of citizens of the Capital City.” ADAMS T0 SPEAK INRADIO FORUM Secretary Will Tell of Navy’s Work and Program in Talk | Tomorrow Night. The work of the Navy in scrapping | its obsolete ships, launching new | cruisers, building the latest type sub- | marines and destroyers and training its far-flung personnel, will be described by Seeretary Adams in his address to- morrow night in the National Radi Forum, arranged by The Star and | broadcast over a coast-to-coast network | of the Cclumbia Broadcasting System. | The cabinet officer, who was an ex- | pert yachtsman and seagoing man long | | before he came to head the Navy De- partment, will tell his radio audience | of the Navy's program for heavier and | lighter than air craft. Mr. Adams re- | cently became a ploneer by flying in | the Navy's only autogiro to the Presi- | dent’s Summer camp on the Rapidan | last Saturday. He has flown in the | dirigible Los Angeles and in other types of craft. Speaking over Station WMAL from | 8:30 to 9 o'clock, Mr. Adams’ address will mark another in the series of | radiocasts being delivered by members | of President’s Hoover's cabinet. He will | deal with the new operating plan, put | into force by Admiral Willlam V. Prait, chief of naval operaticns, and recount the accomplishments of the Navy dur- ing the past two years: tell what it i5 now doing and what it hopes to achieve in the next couple of years. Secretary Adams returned to the | Capital today from New York, where he spoke at the dedication of the Dcver Patrol Memorial, erected in Fort Hamil- ton Park, opposite the entrance to New York Harbor. | | BIDDLE | WEDS MILLIONAIRESS Scion of Philadelphia Family Mar- ries Mrs. Margaret Schulze in London. By the Associated Press. | LONDON, June 12.—Anthony J.| Drexel Biddle, jr., of Philadelphia, and Mrs Margaret Schulze, daughter of the late William Boyce Thompson, were married at noon today in the registry office on Princess row. The Biddles plan to spend honeymoon in a tour of England and the continent before returning to the United States to make their home. | At today's ceremony the bride wore a frock of ivory-colored lace and silk | with a close-fitting hat. She was ac- companied by her mother, Mrs. Ger- | trude Thompson, several relatives and | friends. Mr. Biddle was accompanied by his father and several friends. The dingy little rooms in the registry office were orightened with many flowers. After the marriage there was a reception at the Ritz Hotel. It was Mr. Biddle's second marriage. | His first wife was Mary L. Duke, daugh- ter of the late Benjamin S. Duke, tobacco manufacturer. They were divorced at Newburg, N. Y., last March. Willlam Boyce Thompson, the American coffee magnate and father of Mrs. Schulze, died in 1930, leaving an estate of about $85,000,000. their | Textile Study Planned. Bright young men and women in the future probably will get college credits for knowing their percales, ginghams, plaids, tweeds and serges. The Textile Foundation decided to- dey to give $100,000 to establish collegs fellowships for training students in tex- tile research. The money will cover a two-year period. Forum Speaker SECRETARY OF THE NAVY ADAMS. RAILROADS UNITED FOR FREIGHT BOOST Carriers of Nation to Join in Plea to Replenish De- pleted Revenue. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 12.—The railroads of the Nation stood united today be- hind a decision to petition the Inter- state Commerce Commission for a gen- eral increase in freight rates of 15 per cent. Representatives of Eastern, Western and Southern groups of roads who par- ticipated in the agreement reached yes- terday said the increase was designed to offset some of the reductions in freight tariffs made since 1921 and would bring an estimated increase in revenue of 10 per cent, or about $400,000,000. The petition was described as an emergency measure to meet a slump in rail revenue which has resulted in earn- ings falling to the lowest level in a decade, ‘The railroads hope to have their pe- tition on file within a week and hope that it will be treated as an emergency measure by the commission, so that the increased rates may go into effect within three months. ¢ They will seek to have an order is- sued by the commission omitting the 90-day tuspension clause, under which rate increases are automatically sus- pended for that period. A general increase of 15 per cent was ecided upon to make the guestion one of revenue, rather than one involving individual rates, to prevent long debate. Although the petition will be for a general increase. the roads do not in- tend, representatives said, to increase all rates by that amount. The first move toward making the application was made by representatives of Eastern and Western roads a week ago. After their plans had been agreed upon they presented the proposal to traffic officials of Southern roads at a meeting in Washington. The result was the meeting here yesterday, in which all groups joined. The committee appointed to present the application comprises John J. Pel- ley, president of the New York, New Haven & Hartford; H. A. Scandrett, president of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific, and W. R. Cole. presi- dent of the Louisville & Nashville. M Hawaiian Exhibit Opens. PARIS, June 12 (#).—The Hawailan Pavilion at the French Colonial Expo- sition was opened yesterday. America was represented by Hawaiian Commis- sioner Cullen. FURRIER TESTS BURGLAR ALARM AND MOTOR POLICE EFFICIENCY Inadvertent Call Brings Officers to Rescue in 90 Seconds. Terms System “Fine!” However inadvertently Joseph Sper- ling tripped his burglar -alarm - this morning, he, nevertheless, seized the op- portunity to test a system which was costing him good money. Sperling customarily opens his fur store, at 709 Thirteenth street, around 8 o'clock. This morning he went in at 6:45 o'clock. When he opened the door, he ex- plajned later, he forgot it was protected by the alarm system until the usual opening hour: Detective Sergt. Tom Nally got the call at headquarters and responded in an automobile operated by Police Driver Mullins, A Arriving, the officers’ reported, they found Sp:riing standing before his store, watch in hand. “Splendid!” said Sperling. “Fine! Dandy! Just 90 seconds, it took!” i.l‘.[lAl MINERS ASK ~|LINDBERGHS FLY | AID OF PRESIDENT Seek Parley With Operators, Claiming Acute Situation in Industry. (Continued From First Page.) night. Four men in an automobile, who were said to be miners, were stoned at_Wildwood. Eight hundred men and women held a demonstration at Vesta mine number 4 of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Co, in Washington County; a crowd of 200 or more strikers marched from Slovan to the Francis mine at Burgettstown, and nearly as many marched from the Kinlcch district, in Westmoreland County, to the Harwick mine of the Dugquesne Light Co., near Harmarville this morning. 4 While officials of the United Mine ‘Workers of America said they intended to szek a conference with the Pitts- burgh Terminal Coal Co. in an effort to reach an agreement, Frank Borich, secretary of the National Miners' Union, a, faction which has opposed the U. M. W., announced that peace overtures had been made by the Charties Gas & Coal Co. and that the management he Tremont mine of the S. M. Spears Co. had made inquiries as to the miners’ demands. LEWIS' PLEA STUDIED. President Turns Request for Coal Con- ference Over to Doak. ‘The communication of John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, asking President Hoover to convene a joint meeting of operators and coal miners, has been referred to the Labor Department for recommenda- tion. Lewis asked the President to call the meeting for the purpose of “mutually discussing the problems of the industry and finding a common basic under- standing.” - ONE SLAIN | | BATTLE. Two Others Shot in Row Blamed on Laber Trouble. HARLAN, Ky, June 12 (#).—Bit- ter feeling growing out of the labor trouble in the coal mines was believed by officials today to have caused the shooting at Cawood last night in which John Chasteen, 50, a restaurant keeper, was killed and twe others were wounded. ‘W. L. Randolph, 30, a mine guard, and Omar Smith, 19, both wounded, but not seriously, were breught to jai here today along With five others. Randolph sald Omar Smith, going into the restaurant to buy tobacco, was fired on, that his cousin, M. C. Smith, went to his ald and ihe general shoot- ing followed. It was estimated 50 or 60 shots were fired before troops inter- vened. 1,200 MINERS STRIKE. Properties Are Guarded After Mob Attempts to Storm Jail. ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio, June 12 (#)—More than 1,200 coal miners in two Eastern Ohio counties were on strike today seeking an eight-hour day, abolition of the “average system” and reinstatement of miners they claimed were dismissed because of union af- filiations. At. St. Clairsville Sheriff Howard Duff had 40 special deputies guarding mine properties and the county jail where 11 alleged strikers were held on charges of inciting a riot. The situa- tion was quiet after an attempt last prisoners was repulsed by officers using tear gas. Machine guns were mounted about | the new Lafferty mine of the M. A. Hanna Coal Co. after strikers had marched upon it last night. The guns augmented a large number of Belmont County deputy sheriffs, who had orders to keep the highways clear. Another mine was closed in Jefferson County at Bradley, and strikers placed pickets around the properties. At Cadiz the Harrison County commissioners ap- propriated $10,000 for use of the sheriff and prosecutor in maintaining order. No strike had been called there, but the sheriff said reports were current of an attempt to call a walkout of 800 men in two mines. The three alleged leaders of the Bel- mont County strike went on a hunger | strike at noon tod: They said it would continue until they were released. The men are Leo Thompson, 23, Pittsburgh; Tony C. Gizigna, 31, Pitts- burgh, and Fanta Spontano, 50, New | Lafferty. Sheriff Duff reported that “Thomp- son sald immediate action will be taken to obtain our release, either by delivery |or legal methods.” “MISSING” BOY WALKS 8 MILES TO CLARENDON Hiked Home While Frantic Mother and Police Made Futile Search Here. With his frantic mother and police conducting & futile search for him in the Capital, 7-year-old Jimmy Eden trudged wearily to his home in Claren- don, miles away, last night after becoming separated from his mother when she alighted from a street car at Twelfth and F streets. Mrs. Eden, wife of Fred J. Eden, refereee in bankruptcy, left the street car, thinking her son was following her, and the trolley moved on before she noticed his absence. Hailing a taxicab, Mrs. Eden gave chase, but learned upon overtaking the street car several blocks away that her son had got off alone at Fourteenth |and F streets. She notified police and | began a frantic search of the neigh- borhood herself. ‘While members of the Detective Bu- | reau’s radio cruiser crew No. 1, in charge of Detective Sergt. Steve Brodie, and officers from the first precinct searched the vicinity the boy set out on foot for his home and arrived there two hours later. ‘The mother, who was waiting at the first precinct for word from her son, was notified by telephone of the child's safe arrival. Tmcl; Driver Given Ultimate in Lessons On Auto Etiquette ‘What listeners-in decided was the ‘ultifate in “bawlings-out” was reported here today. One of the trucks carrying dirt to the site cf Poli's play house shot too speedily across the curb into E street and, stopping with a jerk, barely missed a roadster bearing Ohio license plates, which, hav- ing the right of way, had not hesitated on its course. The roadster halted. Out of it climbed a flannel-shirted, high- booted passenger about twice the size of the careless truck driver, He climbed on the step of the latter vehicle and there gave vent, at length and in picturesque language, to his feelings. He re- ceived no answer, nor was any required or expected. He walked off a few steps, turned and came back, and delivered himself of this final verbal bombshell: “And ermore, don't say nothing to yourself as you drive down ‘the street, neither|” i night to storm the jail to release the | BACK T0 NEW YORK Flyer Spent Yesterday Dis- cussing Flight to Orient | With Officials. By the Associated Press. After discussing with Government officials the reasibility of flying to the Orient in a seaplane over thousands of miles of timbered lands, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh took off from Bolling Field this morning to return to New York. They left in a borrowed biplane after deferring their start until this morning because it was not equlgeped with lights for night flying. Lindbergh spent all of yesterday talking over his proposed aerial vacation with officials here. Favors Alaskan Route. With Mrs. Lindbergh he expects to cross over either the Atlantic, the Pa- cific or the frozen wastes of the Arctic {Ocean in his stream-lined and pontoon- fitted Lockheed monoplane before the Summer ends. Altogether four routes are being con- sidered. A final decision will depend upon the establishment of satisfactory fuel s. One route would take them over the Atlantic to Greenland, and thence to Spitzbergen and across Siberia to Japan. The second would be along the water- ways of Northern Canada to the nor- thernmost fringe of the Alaskan Coast and over a portion of the Arctic Ocean to Siberia. ‘The third would send the flyers up the Canadian Coast to the Aleutian Islands that stretch from Alzska in a long string toward the eastern coast of the Asiatic Continent. land near Kamchatka the route would then be southward to Japan. The fourth possibility, in which Lindbergh said he was particularly interested, was the route across Alaska, over the Bering Sea to_ Siberia, and then to the Nipponase Islands. Lindbergh said his decision to make the flight in a pontoon-equipped plane had been reached after a study of the rivers and lakes along the projected routes. Should the path carry them entirely across Canada or eastward by the Atlantic route, which would neces- sitate a flight over several thousand miles of Siberian land, he said he doubted whether any change would be made in the plane’s undercarriage. Evades Russian Discussion. Lindbergh did not desire to discuss the possibility of obtaining permission from the Soviet government to fly over Russian_territory, explaining that rep- resentativcs of that country undoubtedly would make known whether he would be permitted to fly over it. Japan was the first of the governments to welcome the Lindberghs. Other countries have indicated that they would grant permis- sion for the flight over their territories. Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh flew from New York yesterday. in a borrowed bi- plane to confer with Und:rsecretary of State Castle and other Government officials on their plans. Further dis- cussions were held 2t a luncheon at the Japanese embassy given in Lindbergh's honor, with Assistant Secretary of War Davison, Assistant Secretary of Com- merce Young, Stanley Hornbeck, chief of the Far Eastern division of the State Departm<nt, and Dr. Gilbert H. Grosve- nor, president of the National Geo- graphic Society. Arrive at Newark. NEWARK, N. J., June 12 (#).—Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and Mrs. Lind- bergh arrived at Newark Airport short- ly after noon today from Washington. The colonel started for New York by ! automobile, while Mrs. Lindbergh took off in their plane in the direction of the Hicksville, Long Island, Country Club. | |GRAND JURY CONDUCTS PROBE IN DROWNING OF FAITHFULL GIRL (Continued From First Page.) twice for the missing garments without | results. Richard Findley, an elevator starter in the Chanin Building in New York, told of a young woman, intoxicated, who entered the Chanin lobby Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock and whose ac- tions resulted in the summoning of a policeman. Both Findley and the officer have identified the body of Starr Faithfull as that of the young woman. The officer, however, was positive she wore a dif- ferent dress than that in which the body was clad. The woman was placed in a taxicab and driven to section of Queens—many miles from the Chanin Building. Ar- riving there, she was uncertain to what house she wanted to go, and the driver finally turned her over to a drugstore proprietor and drove away. She paid | her bill, which was considerably more than the $3 she had when she left home that morning. No Alcohol in Body. Dr. Otto Schultze said that if the woman at the Chanin Building was as intoxicated as the witnesses said, she was not Starr Falthfull, for there were no traces of alcohol in the woman's body. % graphologist was subpoenaed to study the handwriting in Starr's diary. Although it appeared to have been writ- ten by the same person, there were marked differences in the entries, indi- cating varying moods. Stanley E. Falthfull, stepfather of the girl, was in the grand jury room for more than an hour. Starr's body was washed ashore at Long Beach last Monday. Inquiry since then as to the activities of the 25-year- old girl, who lived in Greenwich Village, a member of a family in modest cir- cumstances, has developed incidents of gay life in New York and London and on liners, with one visit to a hospital for acute alcoholism and one trip to a sanitarium for observation. Experienced “Every Thrill” A 30-page diary written by Starr and found by a detective in the Faithfull home contains the following: “I have experienced every sensation life holds and if ( ) does not meet me soon, I have nothing to live for.” Detectives said there were various references to the possibility of suicide. “The diary contains many initials, apparently of men,” Edwards said. “The family has not helped me in indicating who is meant.” Besides initials, incidents described in the diary offered Edwards many leads for questions before the grand jury. He said there was evidence to indicate that several persons would have been happler if Starr Faithfull were dead. Information has been given Edwards that .the Faithfull family was in need of funds. GIVES SLAYING MOTI London Artist Says Girl Was to Tesiify in $25,000 Suit. LONDON, June 12 (#).—Rudolph Hay- brook, artist, was quoted by the Dail Mail today as saying he believed Starr Faithful had been slain in New York because she was to have been the prin- cipal witness in “a $25,000 settlement case which would have caused a sensa- tion when it came to court.” (Stanley E. Faithfull, her stepfather, hlln dedeniled this statement is ) D the fiance of her sister Elizabeth, the paper further quoted him to the effect that there were influential people in New York who were concerned in the case and to whom her death would have been a matter of importance, | and his attorney sought to show Miss Clues in the mystery death of Starr Faithfull (below), whose body was Should they | washed ashore at Long Beach, N. Y., led police t> Boston. Above is the family Left to right: Elizabeth Tucker Faithfull, Mrs. Helen Faith- r father of Starr. of the slain girl. full and Stanley E. Faithfull, Slain Girl. and Family CLUES IN DEATH LEAD POLICE TO BOSTON. —A. P. Photo. HOWELL ANDPITT MEET IN FINALS Middle Atlantic Champion Sheots 16 in Par to Beat Nolan. Bllly Howell of Richmend, holder of | the Middle Atlantic golf championship | and winner of the Columbia tourna- | ment last year, is playing Harry G. Pitt of the Manor Club in the final round of the Columbia Coutitry Club invitation golf tournament this afternoon. ‘ Howell, a 19-year-old sophomore at Washington and Lee University, played | 16 holes in even par in the semi-final#l this morning to defeat M. Parker Nolan of the Congressional Country Club, by 3 and 2. Pitt, who has already won | two tournaments this year, defeated Everett Eynon, the Columbia Club champion, by 7 and 6 in the other semi-final. Results in the other matches follow: Second flight—John W. Owens, Co- | lumbia, defeated W. B. Donham, Glen | Ridge, N. J., 2 and Maurice Nee, Ar- gyle, defeated Emmons Smith, Colum- bia, 4 and 3. | Third flight—John J. Tierney, Con- | gressional, defeated Luis Velasco, Ha- | vana Country Club, 1 up; Forrest | Thompson, Beaver Dam, defeated | Charles W. Cole, jr., Indian Spring, 2| and 1. | Fourth flight—John W. Merritt, Co- lumbia, defeated W. C. Murphy, Co: lumbia, 4 and 3; Tommy Webb, Wash- ington, defeated A. T. Wannan, unst- tached, 7 and 5. Fifth fligh . M. Haynes, Colum- | bia, defcated E. T. Rice, Washington, | 1 up: John H. Davidson, Washington, defeated B. L. Taylor, Congressional, 1 up. SUITOR TO BE TRIED FOR GIRL’S SLAYING; Bloody Pockets Torn From Clothes| of Moss Garrison Prove Aid for Prosecution. By the Associated Press. SAN DIEGO, Calif.,, June 12.—Moss E. Garrison, 37, was held today without bail for formal trial for the murder of his 22-year-old former fiancee, Hazel Bradshaw. The girl's body, torn by 17 knife wounds, was found in an artificial Indian village in Balboa Park. May 3. He stoutly maintained he had left the girl at her home at midnight May 2 Bradshaw later met.another man who killed her in an automobile and left| her body in the Indian village. The State charges Garrison killed Miss Bradshaw in a fit of jealousy as they walked through the park. Fred Westerdahl, jail hospital steward, was a surprise State rebuttal witness as the preliminary hearing closed yesterday. He said when he searched Garrison after his surrender all pockets of Garrison's trousers were intact. Several days later, police testi- fied, they found two pockets torn from them and the frayed edges stained with lood Garrison had testified he cut a finger while he was slicing bread the day before Miss Bradshaw was killed and had torn out the pockets then to band- age the finger. T0OO BUSY TO MARRY New York Broker Forced to Delay Ceremony With Actress. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., June 12 (#).— Robert Richie, New York broker, who was to have married nette Mac- Donald, blonde film actress, June 9, sald yesterday the marriage had been postponed dindefinitely because he wasef “too busy.” Postponed several times before be- cause Miss MacDonald was engaged in pictures, Ritchie said they finally agreed on June 9, but delayed the marriage again because “when I was free, she was_busy. Now she is free and I'm too busy.” e BAND CONCERT. By the United States Army Band this evening at_the Ugited States Capitol at 7:30 o'clock. ' William Stannard, leader, conducting; Thomas F. second leader. March, “American Army"” ‘anmhauser” from the “Scenes from “Alda” . Miss Patricia O'Connell, soprano. Selection from, “The Fortune Teller,” Herbert (a) “My Prayer’ (b) “Prelude” .. March, “From “The Star Spangled Banner.” |“Tuesday to override the government’s | ministers objectionable to the Indus- | Communist riots against emergency tax hon | terfor are understood not to take these BRUENING CONFERS WITH. HINDENBURG Parley Is Expected to Fix| German Economic and Political Policies. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, June 12.—Germany's politi- cal spotlight shifted today to President Von Hindenburg's quiet Summer home at Neudeck in East Prussia. Chancellor Bruening and Otto Meissner, the P dent’s right-hand man, went there to- day to discuss the economic and politi- cal situation at home and abroad. Whatever course they decide to follow will likely form the basis for political decision of highest importance in the immediate future. The President and the chancellor have seen eye to eye in the past and there appeared to be little doubt that Herr Bruening will come back tomorrow with the President's per- mission to do whatever he thinks ad- visable. Stands by Colleagues. Before he left the capital the chan- cellor macde it plain that he and his cabinet would resign if the Reichstag's | council of elders should decide next ! veto on an extra session of the Parlia- ment. He let the various party leaders know that he will have nothing to do with maneuvers to oust certain cabinet mem- bers, including Dr. Julius Curtius, the foreign minister. He will stand or fall with his col- leagues, he told the party heads and anybody who thinks he will head a new cabinet is mistaken. His determination to pursue the lines he has mapped out appears to have| blocked for the time being a movement to reconstruct the cabinet, leaving Bruening at its head but removing ! trialists. The Populists, who nurse that ambi- ! tion, voted at a party caucus last| night for an extra session of the Reich- stag in the hope that a no-confidence motion against the cabinet as it is; now constituted might be carried. In| view of the chancellor’s reiterated loyal- ty to his colleagues it was thought like. i ly that they might reconsider their action before Tuesday's meeting of the Council of Elders. Balance Sheet Published. ‘The finance ministry today published the Reich's balance sheet for the fiscal year beginning April 1, 1930, and end- ing March 31 this year. Ordinary budget receipts were 10,-/ 386,800,000 marks, expenditures 11,417,- 300,000, leaving an ordinary deficit of | 1,031,500,000. Extraordinary budget revenue was | 970,200,000 marks and expenditures | 459,900,000, leaving a surplus of 510,-| 300,000. This, however, was turned int: a deficit of 261,400,000 by an adverse balance from the previous year of | 771,700,000 marks. The mark is worth about 25 cents. | RIOTS QUELLED BY POLICE. BERLIN, June 12 (#).—Widespread decrees caused the police to take spe- clal precautions today on orders of the ministry, of the interior. Communists again clashed with au- thorities at a mass meeting in Berlin iast night, attended by 12,000 perscns. Police searched them for weapons and | arrested scores. Ernst Thaellman, the | chief speaker and a member of the Reichstag, was taken into custody when he refused to submit to search. As the crowd moved away from the | Sportspalast after the meeting, police were forced to fire blank cartridges and to use their clubs to maintain order. Several newspaper offices were | placed under guard to prevent the par- ticipants from damaging them. | Five persons were wounded in Ham- burg, when police broke up a radical demonstration near the English church. Ten thousand persons were present at a gathering preceding the outbreak. One was killed and two were injured at Lauenberg as a result of authorities’ efforts to separate a mob of Commun- ists fighting among themselves. Police were attacked when they tried to quell the row originating in a manifestation and had to resort to firearms to battle their way out. Conflict between Communists and Na- tional Socialists brought 20 arrests in Bremen. Officers attempted to rescue the Nazis and the Reds pelted. both groups with stones, using iron drain- pipes for hand-to-hand fighting. Radical disorders broke out in Kas- sel for the second successive night. Threatening crowds gathered in the main streets and resisted police uftil the latter resorted to clubs and blank cartridges. The discovery that an aged shoemaker had been killed the preced- ing night brought the death toll this week to two. This violence had its counterpart in verbal warfare against the decrees. Communist deputies in the Prussian Diet agitated strongly for revolutionary action and demanded the fol 0! a dictatorship. The Oldenburg Diet adopted a bill calling on the immediately to revoke the measures. Natlonal Socialists, Nationalists and the People’s Party joined in the move. Officials of the ministry of the in- IR, WU PREPARES TO LEAVE CAPITA Ignores Cable From Nanking Urging Him to Remain as Minister Here. . Despite protests from Nanking, rela- tive to his resignation as Minister and a cable urging that he continue in the office which he has held for the past two years, Dr. C. C. Wu is unchanged in his decision to leave Washington and is now preparing to leave for China within the next two weeks. It was explained at the legation that the cable urging Dr. Wu to remain in the United States as Minister was merely a formal procedure, and that at the same time another cable had been received from different. authorities in Nanking, accepting his resignation. Yung Kwei in Charge. In the meantime, all official matters at the legatioh will be handled by the chancellor, Yung Kwei. Yung Kwai, now past 70 years old, has been charge d'affaires of the lega- tion almost a score of times since he joined the staff, in 1889. Dr. Wu submitted his resignation yes- terday and it became effective today, because he was long out of sympathy with the policies of the Nanking regime under Chiang Kai-Shek. The Minister explained that the breaking point was reached when he was instructed to seek an export permit for munitions, which he feared mfght be used against the Cantonese, of which faction he is a member. Married American Woman. Yung Kwal came to the United States in 1873, was graduated from Yale in 1884 and was first made charge d'a faires in 1910. He married an Ameri- can woman and his children have been educated in America. A man of wealth, Yung Kwal's friends describe him as a ‘“representa- tive of the old China who has gone un- concernedly through the political changes unaffected.” At a_ press conference in the after- noon, Dr. Wu explained the necessity of his resignation. Last Straw Reached. “The last straw,” he said, “was the necessity for me to apply for export licenses for munitions ordered by the Nanking government to go to China. Since there seems to be warlike prepa- rations by the Nanking government against the rival government of Canton . it is highly probable that most, if not all, of the munitions’ for which I have been instructed to apply for export li- censes would be used against Cantonese. As I am a Cantonese any one can ap- preciate my feelings not to want to do anything to facilitate an army for such warfare.” Further explaining the issue between Canton and Nanking, Dr. Wu said it was based on Cantonese demands that Chiang Kai-Shek resign. He discredited some contentions advanced by Can- tonese sympathizers that Canton was being deprived of representation in the Nanking government. The munitions and war supplies asked for by the Nanking government he described as a considerable order. It included some 20 airplanes, 16 tons of powder and other equipment. Under the embargo on arms to China, licenses must be obtained for export by appli- cation to the State Department thrcugh the Chinese legation. Asked whether Yung Kwai would apply for permits to ship arms to Nan- king, Dr. Wu replied: “That will be his job. There is more than one way to kill a cat.” e e O PATENT SUIT LOOMS FOR “LUNG” USED IN (Continued From First Page.) crosses for their work in developng the escape device. and Hobson, being in- eligible for a service cross, was award- ed a year's extra pay. According to Hobson, information reaching him and his associates indi- cates that the Davis “lung.” reported to be the invention of a Londoner, R. H. Davis, is modeled after the American invention, except that it employs an oxygen tank. He declared the Ameri- can “lung” is patented to use a tank also, but that in practice it has been eliminated. News dispatches state the British admiralty has confirmed use of the Davis “lung” by six members of the Poseidon’s crew, two of whom died on reaching the surface. Hobson said today the death of the two men ap- parently was due to failure of the Brit- ish to employ a buoy line, with which the rapid ascent of escaping men can be retarded. Too rapid ascent results n an explosion of the person, caused by expansion of the air in the body. Hobson pointed out that the British admiralty some time ago bought two of the American “lungs” from the Mine Safety Appliance Co. for “experi- mental purposes.” At the time of the successful conclusion of tests with the Hobson-Momsen-Tibbals ~“lung,” the American Government notified all for- eign nations of its willingness that the safety device should become common property, subject to patent rights of the inventors. Cites Patent Rights. Under that invitation, Brazil and Norway already have contracted to equip their submarines with the Ameri- can “lung,” and one or more samples of the invention have been purchased by Italy, Spain, Japan and several other foreign powers, it is understood. Hobson emphasized that he and his colleagues have no objection to use of the American “lung” by the British or any other navy, providing patent rights of the inventors are respected. Any infringement of those rights will be fought vigorously, he stated. The Davis “lung” is said to have been manufactured for the British Navy by the Siebe-Gorman company, which builds much of the submarine and simi- lar_equipment for the admiralty. The British patent office, Hobson said, has granted “broad” patents for the American “lung.” Requests Refused. Hobson said efforts to obtain from Great Britain samples of the Davis “lung” have been unsuccessful to date. Press descriptions and drawings of it, however, are said to have convinced the inventors that their patents have been infringed upon. The American “lung” now is stand- ard equipment on all United States submarines. Repeated tests under ac- tual diving conditions have proved its efficiency as a rescue agent. It con- sists of a breathing bag and attached mouthpiece, with a purifying chamber for eliminating carbon dioxide from exhaled breath, so that the air may be breathed again safely. The air is exhaled through the rub- ber mouthpiece and conveyed to & -lime compartment, where it is purified and sent back into the mouth- f | plece and lungs by natural inhalation. Two complete sets of “lungs” for each member of the crew are on every submarine, one set being in the forward part of the craft and another set in the stern. Thus, if the bow of the ship should be caved in, éscape could be out! seriously, them merely as attempts by Communist lead- ers to Incite the masses. made with the “lungs” in the aft. The men emerge through a hatch and ascend by rising, hand over hand, along a buc, line sent fo the surface.