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Leave Friday, Saturday, er Sunday Return Following Tuesday Pullman accommodations may bhe purchased with these tickets und are good on— THE GEORGE WASHINGTON he Most Wohderful Train in the e Workd Completely Alr-Conditioned . B. EDMUNDS 14th Street N.W. Phones Rallonst 0756 14 KIDNAP NOTES SENT T0 LINDBERGH Inspector Believes Baby Was Hurled to Death From Ladder. By the Associated Press. JERSEY CITY, N. J., November 16.| —The Jersey Journal, in the first of a | copyrighted series of interviews with} Inspector Harry W. Walsh of the Jersey | City Police Department, said yesterday | that Col. Charles A. Lindbergh re-| ceived 14 notes from the kidnapers and slayers of his infant son. | Reviewing all the early developments of the still unsolved crime, the paper also quotes Inspector Walsh, one of the key figures in the long investigation, as saying he believed the baby was killed in the descent down the ladder from the Lindbergh nursery at Hopewell and that the United States Department of | Justice secured the services of Morris Rosner to deal with the underworld. | The interview told of the discovery of the empty crib by Betty Gow at about 10 o'clock the night of March 1. “Col. Lindbergh immediately ran up- stairs, saw the empty crib, and on the sll of the southeast window of the room found the first of 14 notes from the kidnaper,” the interview said. First Revelation of Number. “This, incidentally, is the first revela- | tion that there were that many notes. I am not at liberty to make public the | contents of the notes, save the two that | were photostated and broadcast on police posters to show the handwriting.” Then the inspector told of the first| note’s demanding $50,000 in ransom | in $5, $10 and $20 bills and of its| | peculiar symbol—two blue intersecting skeleton circles with & third circle of solid red in the center, with three holes punctured in the symbol. He said all the 14 notes held the same symbol. Speaking of the death of the child, the paper quotes Inspector Walsh as follows: “In brief, I believe that the ladder placed against the window by the kid- napers buckled and broke, and that as the criminal carrying the babe from the nursery lost his footing and was | in imminent danger of being thrown he threw the babe to the ground to save his own worthless life at the ex- pense of the innacent child’s.” In supporting his theory, he said both Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh heard a noise between 9:15 and 9:30 and spoke of it | at the time. A shaft of one section of the ladder was broken. “Best Informer” Promised. ‘The inspector said in the interview that Col. Henry Breckenricge, close | friend of, Col. Lindbergh, telephoned Edgar Hoover, chief agent of the De- partment of Justice, a few hours after the kidnaping and was told the “best informer at his command” would be sent to the Lindbergh home. “The following morning one Morris Rosner, & known character in police circles * * * arrived.” Walsh told the Journal Rosner was given $2,500 for expenses and that he operated between the Lindbergh home and New York for a period of three weeks. He sald the only persons he contacted were Salvatore Spitale and Irving Bitz, who “heralded their every movement through the public press and produced nothing of imporiance. * * * By working confidentially they might have got somewhere.” HOOVER DENIES RUMOR. Says Federal Agents Had No Part in Hiring Rosner. | J. Edgar Hoover, director of the | United States Bureau of Investigation, today denied his buresu had anything to do with Col. Lindbergh's decision to enlist aid of the underworld in an effort to secure the return of his kidnaped son. The denial was issued in response to a published report quoting Inspector Walsh of the New Jersey State Police a8 inferring that Hoover projected Morris Rosner, underworld character, into the case. Inspector Walsh had been quoted by the Jersey Journal, Jersey City, N. J., as asserting that Col. Henry Breckin- ridge had telephoned Hoover shortly after the kidnaping and that the Gov- ernment official promised to send “the best informer at his command” to the Lindbergh home. Rosner appeared the next day, the inspector pointed out. “I believe it proper at this time to state,” Director Hoover announced, “that at no time throughout the in- vestigation of the Lindbergh case did Col. Breckinridge call me on the tele- phone and that my contact and the contact of the United States Bureau of Investigation with the Lindbergh in- quiry at all times was solely through Col. Schwartzkopf, superintendent of the New Jersey State police. “The inference that I or the Bureau of Investigation employed or recom- |mended the employment of Morris Rosner is entirely unwarranted. Neither | I nor any official of this bureau identi- fled in any way with the Lindbergh ‘lnvungnuon had anything whatever to do with the employment of Rosner or with his connection with the Lindbergh | inquiry. | “Purthermore, I believe it proper also to state that Rosner has not at any | time been employed in any capacity by |the United States Bureau of Investi- | gation.” | 'PATRONAGE PROBE SOUGHT BY PARKS | | | Democrat Charges Republicans Have “Juggled Postmasterships” ; to Keep Jobs. | By the Associated Press. Representative Tillman B. Parks, | Democrat, of Arkansas, told newspaper | men today he would ask for a congres. | sional investigation at the coming ses- !slon to determine whether the Hoover | administration has “juggled postmaster- | ships to keep Republicans in office | during the first term of President -elect | Roosevelt.” ‘The Arkansas Democrat said he had received “information that in order to assure Republicans of postmastershi) for the next four years it has been the general practice of the Hoover admin- istration to permit postmasters to serve as acting postmasters for two years.” “This would make most of the four- year terms of the first, second and third class postmasters continue until 1936 and 1937,” Parks sald, adding that post- masters were entitled to serve four years from the date of confirmation by the Senate. “The situation should be investigated at the short session, so that when the new Democratic Cor convenes it will have the informal and can act accordingly,” he said. Parks also said Senate Democrats would be justified in turning down con- firmation of any more of President Hoo- ver’s appointees in view of the attitude taken by the Republicans when they refused to confirm any of President ‘Wilson's intees in his last months in the House.” D. A. R. Turkey Dinner. THE Eviosind Honored SOUTHERN BEAUTY PICKED AS COLLEGE “SWEETHEART.” JANE CONWAY Of Baton Rouge, daughter of Louisiana’s secretary of State, was voted “Louisi- ana's sweetheart” at Louisiana State University. —A. P. Photo. TRAINER IS SUICIDE Baltimore Horseman Is Found Fa- tally Wounded at Home. BALTIMORE, November 16 (&) — Dr. John J. Morrissey, northern dis- trict coroner, yesterday gave a verdict of suicide in the death of William R. Midgley, a race horse trainer, who was found fatally wounded at his home yes- terday morning. His body was discovered by his wife, Mrs. Juniata Midgley, who heard a shot while she was working in the kitchen. A pistol was found near the body. Midgley, trainer for the Glen Riddle Farm, lost his license last Summer. STAR, WASLINGTON, WORK OF BAPTIST IN BURMA TOLD Columbia Association Speak- er Tells of Missionaries’ Activities. ‘The activities of Baptist missionaries in Burma were described by Rev. V. W. Dyer today at the second day's ses- sion of the Columbia Association of Baptist Churches convention, being held at the Calvary Baptist Church, Eighth and H streets. There also was an address by Dr. Solon B. Couzens of the Second Church of Richmond, Va. and a pageant pre- sented under direction of Mrs. E. L. Carleton. Last night Rev. Clarence M. Cran- ford of Philadelphia urged American youth to turn to the church for moral guidance. He said the world today is in a state of “moral confusion.” Too much individualism and freedom and too little attention to the moral D, WEDLLSDAY, m."‘:""““ exists, the speaker Reports officials of the Baptist Young People's Union of the District showed 1,064 members. Of thuemul a5 ular contributors to the church. ‘The convention will continue through- out this afternoon and tonight, when an address will be given by Dr. C. O. Johnson, president of the Northern Baptist Convention. Dr. Cranford, who delivered the prin- cipal address last night, will speak be- fore the annual Baptist Student Con- ference, to open at the Calvary Church Friday evening. The conference will bring together students from principal universities and colleges of Maryland and the District. The program for this three-day con- ference has been planned for the most part by students and a large number of | assignments have been given to stu- dent speakers, among whom are stu- dents from George Washington, George- town and Maryland Universities, Will Speak Over Radio. Mrs. Charles Janes of Oxon Hill, Md., will deliver a radio address on “What Home Demonstration Work Means to Farm Women” over Station WMAL at 6 p.m. November 22, “Gandhi’s March” is the name given to a racing grayhound in Engiand. can help you. Name Address only. 1405 K St. N.W. Arthritis—Neuritis—Rheumatism! Should be arrested in their earlier stages in order to avoid a life of pain and helplessness. Phone or write for free booklets today. FREE—sample to residents of Washington Phone or write today. Sold in Washington 15 Years Mountain Valley Water America’s Foremost Health Water From HOT SPRINGS, ARK. Learn how Nature Metropolitan 1062 NOVEMbBER 18, 1932. LAWYERS CONFER WITH LIBBY HOLMAN Former Torch Singer, Still in Se- olusion, Pleased Over Drop- ping of Case. By the Assoclated Press. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., November 16.—Freed from the cloud of a murder indictment, Libby Holman Reynolds was to confer with her attorneys at an un- announced place today. In seclusion, Mrs. Reynolds received the news yesterday that the State had dropped the murder charge against her Sold wherever this sign is displayed FORMER COAL MAN DIES OHARLESTON, W. Va, 16 (#).—William Alexander Ohley, 74, retired coal man and former secretary of State, died at his home yesterday. He had been ill for eight months. He took a large part in development | of the Cabin Creek coal fields of Virginia, You know how it is. Ifa cigarette is mild—that is, not harsh or bitter, but smokes cool and smooth—then you like it and don’t worry about how many or how often you smoke. : And if it tastes right—that is, not oversweet, not flat— then you enjoy it all the more. The right kind of ripe, sweet Domestic and Turkish tobacco . . . the right ageing and blending . . . make Chesta erfields milder, better-tasting . . . They Satisfy! ingredients are already dissolved —ready for the system to absorb. It therefore ives quicker relief from head- ache, ne ic, rheumatic and periodic pains. 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