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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, FLYERS UNSIHTED | P speakc | BLAS TO CONTINE " N DITANE Hs _ Mattern Unreported After i Leaving Rukhlovo—Span- F¥ jards Over Atlantic. By the Associated Press. How the flyers are progressing: Jimmy Mattern was sighted yester- day over Rukhlovo, Eastern Siberia, 725 miles west of Khabarovsk, his Jumping-off place for Alaska Capt. Barberan and Lieut. Collar, Bpanish airmen who took off Iroml Seville early yesterday morning, werel unreported, but apparently well on their way toward Cuba, where they are due | to land today. MATTERN OVER RUKHLOVO. Bl i Airman Seen 725 Miles Short of Next Landing Place. MOSCOW, June 10 (#).—When last | heard from today Jimmy Mattern,! American round-the-worid airman, was passing over Rukhlovo in Eastern Si- beria, about 725 miles short of Khaba- zovsk, his next landing point. That was at 9:15 o'clock this morn- ing Moscow time (1:15 a.m. Eastern standard time). The chances were that by the time Moscow received news that Mattern had been sighted at Rukhlovo he already was in Khabarovsk, uniess he had made an unscheduled stop, as communication with Eastern Siberia is | very slow. 1 From Khabarovsk the flyer will hop oft for the North American Continent. ‘There 1§ no expectation here that he will be able to take the round-the- world speed record from Wiley Post and Harold Gatty, the men he started out to beat, but it is assumed that he will g0 ahead to set a time for a solo flight | circling the globe. | i Left Beloye at 1:50 AM. Mattern's take-off place today was Beloye, Siberia, which he left at 1:50 am. Moscow time (5:50 p.m. Priday, EAstern standard time). Forty minutes later he passed over Irkutsk, about 50 miles to the east. Reports here indicated that weather conditions were fair all the way from - Beloye to Khabarovsk. The Weather Bureau said he might encounter some Jocal rain, but otherwise the weather would be favorable, Shortly before midnight tonight, Moscow time, no word of Mattern had been received here since the report of his passage over Rukhlovo. Rukhlovo is on the regular route of the Trans-Siberian Air Service, so the American flyer should have no trouble keeping to his course. MRS. MATTERN CONFIDENT. Believes Husband Will Set Mark for Solo Flight, WALLA WALLA, Wash., June 10 (#).— With hopes shattered that her husband would bread the around-the-world flight record, Mrs. Jimmy Mattern ex- pressed confidence today that he would succeed on the last difficult legs of the attempt and set a challenging mark for the first globe-girdling solo flight. Expressing deep concern over the dangers of the Siberia-Alaska stretch that lies next ahead of her husband, Mrs. Mattern said, “I'm_ sure he will make it, an n if he does trail Post and QGatty, he will be setting a won- | derful mark for himself. “Jimmy’s Alaskan flying taught him the dangefs of thick fog and sudden storms across the territory that lies ahead,” she commented, “and my con- viction is that it is the hardest leg of the flight after crossing the Atlantic. It is so treacherous.” BELIEVED OVER ATLANTIC. Spanish Flyers Unheard From Since Leaving Coast. SEVILLE, Spain, June 10 (#).—Capt. Mariano Barberan and Lieut. Joaquin Collar apparently were well over the Atlantic tonight on their flight from Seville to Cuba. The Spanish airmen, wearing white overalls and white coats, took off from ‘Tablada Airdrome early this morning after receiving reports they would en-| counter excellent flying weather. They were escorted to the coast by several airplanes. Tonight no reports had been received from them, but this occasioned no anxiety, as their route did not lie over heavily traveled sea lanes. EXPECTED IN HAVANA. Army Officials Prepare to Greet Span- ish Airmen, HAVANA, June 10 (#).—Two Spanish Army avistors attempting the Mid- Atlantic crossing from Seville, Spain, to | Havana are expected to land at Camp | Columbia, the army airport here, be- tween 4 and 6 p.m. Eastern standard | _time, tomorrow, the general staff an-| zounced today. ! The fiyers, Capt. Mariano Barberan and Lieut. Joaquin Collar, may not make it until night, however, and for that reason a squadron of Cuban Army sirplanes will take off tomorrow aft- | ernoon to escort the Spaniards to HA-( vana. | Father Gutierrez Lanza, Belen Ob- servatory meteorologist, said his obser- vations indicated good weather would | attend the pilots along the entire route, He has been cabling weather reports twice daily since May 26, and it was on the basis of his predictions that the sirmen decided to take off Sergt. Modesto Madariaga arrived from Spain last week with two cases of spare parts for the plane. He also brought clothing for Barberan and Collar. FLYERS UNSIGHTED. Bteamships Report They Have Not Seen Spaniards. GIBRALTAR, June 10 () —Steamers passing the straits here today reported that they had not seen or heard any- irplane Cautro Vientos, in which the two Spanish aviators set out from Seville for Havana. Meteorolog- tions were good in this vi- CAPT. FREEMAN SENT | T0 SPECIAL SQUADRON | Former Head of Naval Observatory Here Ordered to American Waters. Central A former superintendent of the Na- wal Observatory here is to become com- mander of the Special Service Squadron, operating in Central American wa- ters. Orders went forward from the Navy Department yesterday, directing Capt. Charles S. Freeman, U. S. N, now ¢ oridnator of the 9th Area in San Fran- | cisco, to assume duty sboard the flag- | { operate is the theme of an address to I'made for the establishment of codes by SENATOR ROBERT F. WAGNER. WAGNER T0 SPEAK IN RADIO FORUM New York Senator Will Dis- cuss Public Works Bill in Broadcast. How the administration’s public works and industry control bill will be delivered by Senator Robert F. Wag- | ner of New York in the National Radio Forum at 9:30 p.m., E. S. T., Tuesday, June 13. The National Radio Forum is arranged by The Washington Star and broadcast over the network of the Na- tional Broadcasting Co. Senator Wagner is one of the authors of this far-reaching legislation, designed | to give employment to millions of | workers and to aid in the recovery of industry. The Government proposes to expend $3,300,000,000 in its public works program. Under the industries control part of the bill provision is the industries themselves with the con- sent of the Government in order to bring about a better adjustment of wages, hours of labor, production, and 0 forth. REVOLT IN GUBA Plans Armed Invasion as Conservative Representative Leaves for Miami. By the Associajed Press. HAVANA, June 10.—While Juan Blas, the “Cuban Sandino” out in the Santa Clara hills, was vowing he would never yield to President Machado's “concilia- tion” program, Wilfredo Albanes, Con- servative representative from Oriente rovince, left for Miami, Fla., late today to sound out former President Mario G. | Menocal, opponent of the existing regime, upon the current movement to- ward political peace. Blas had let it be known he will con- | tinue his armed revolt against the gov- ernment at Havana until Machado is out of office. ‘The Santa Clara rebel chief’s follow- ers now number only an estimated 150, having shrunk from 400, but those who remain with Blas are counted the cream of his fighting men. Plea Taken Seriously. The departure of Albanes for the con- ference in Florida with the former pres- ident of Cuba indicated, however, that the Machado plea for constitutional re- form was being taken seriously in op- position quarters at Havana. A member of the orthodox House group which has consistently opposed the administration, Senor Albanes nev- ertheless has always been moderate in his expression and has retained the good will of both factions. The jubilation produced in many parts of Cuba by President Machado's proposals made Wednesday for the res- toration by constitutional amendment of the vice presidency had almost died town today, while political peacemakers were striving to convince the presi- dent’s opponents that they should re- frain from violence during the present and future negotiations. Military Censorship of Press. Renewed military censorship on news- papers was an aftermath of disorders occurring throughout the islands partly because garbled versions of President hllachado's statement reached the pub- c. Semi-official sources described this restriction as temporary indicating that the relaxed civil censorship would be i restored shortly. To further the work of concillation Havana representatives of the several factions of President Machado’s opposi- tion have formed an auxiliary junta which will co-operate with the anti- Machado group in the United States. The new group was described as| favorable to a policy of non-violence. | The anti-administration leaders in| the United States are former President Menocal, Col. Carlos Mendieta and Miguel Gomez, ex-mayor of Havana. SENATE GUN§ TURN TO EXTEND PROBE TO OTHER BANKERS (Continued From First Page.) committee counsel, and map out its future plans Tuesday. Pecora has informed the committee he is ready to proceed at once, and it will be up to the Senators to decide whether they want to stay in Wash- | ington for hearings now or let them go over until Fall, In any event Pecora is ready to keep his staff busy over the Summer col- lecting additional evidence for presen- tation in the Fall on investment trusts and stock market practices and opera- tions of the Chase National Bank. Not Bound to Secrecy. As an outgrowth of the Morgan in- vestigation the Banking Committee voted not to bind its members to secrecy about transactions in executive session. At virtually every executive session during the Morgan inquiry members of the committee protested that ‘“leaks” were disclosing everything it did behind closed doors. A motion by Senator Glass, Demo- crat, of Virginia, to remove the ban of secrecy was adopted unanimously. The Virginian has been one of the most strenuous objectors to the “leaks.” Neely, speaking in the Senate, said that as a result of its stock sales to selected clients, “no matter which party wins an election, the House of Morgan wins.” “Tax dodging is only one of Mor- gan’s breaches of the ethical code that most men consider binding,” the West Virginian said. Declared “Who's Who.” “The House of Morgan preferred many of its clients, and to these sold so-called securities at prices far below their market values. The lists of such clients reads like a page of ‘Who's Who. “They included an ex-President, a close associate of another; Ambassadors to foreign countries, past and present; cabinet officers, past, present and pros- pective, and outstanding figures of both political parties. “They have made it almost impossible for a President to appoint a cabinet of which every member will be free of Morgan obligations and the influence of Morgan power. “The naked truth is that so far as Morgan and his associates are con- cerned, the giving of millions of dol- lars in purchase rights is a brazen at- tempt to bribe on a Nation-wide scale those most influential in the indus- trial, financial and political life of the Nation.” “Fomenters of Revolution.” Neely said that as a result of dis- closures that the Morgan partners have paid only $48,000 in income taxes for the past three years, “fomenters of rev- olution should decorate J, P. Morgan for his contribution to the cause of Bolshevism. He added that Morgan had done more to foment revolution “than a hundred soap box orators in a thousand years.” Morgan was characterized by the Sen- ator as one of the world's wealthiest men and said the partners of his firm have reaped more profits than whole counties of men in all the days of their lives.” In recent years,” he said, “the Treas- ury has obligingly accepted as correct the income tax returns submitted by Morgan and his partners, These pam- pered Government pets have not been annoyed by inquiring agents.” RELIEF APPEALS DECLINE Chicago Reports 33 Per Cent De- crease for May. CHICAGO, June 10 (). —Applications for poor relief in Cook County decreased 3 per cent in May below April figures, Joseph L. Moss, public welfare director, ennounced today. He also reported an increase of 25 per cent in the number of relief cases closed, cases closed in May numbering 19,015. FARM CORPORATIONS HIT High Kansas Court Hold Ventures for Profit Unauthorized. TWO REPUBLICANS ON R. F. C. BOARD Former Senator Blaine and C. B. Merriam of Kansas New Members. By the Assoclated Press. ‘The Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion, which functioned without Repub- lican members during most of the spe- cial session, last night was lined up through quick action by President Roosevelt and Congress with two mem- bers of the minority party on its board. One was former Senator Blaine of Wisconsin, a member of the Republican independent group while in the Senate. The other was C. B. Merriam of Kansas. There still is a Republican vacancy, the law providing that no more than four members of the relief agency shall be_members of one political party. The Democratic members of the board include: Jesse H. Jones of Texas, chairman of the board; Harvey C. Couch of Arkansas, Wilson McCarthy of Utah, Secretary Woodin, ex-officio member. . WORLD INFORMATION URGED AS PEACE AID Oberlin College President Need of Bureau to Explain Conditions. By the Associated Press. . HAVERFORD, Pa., June 10.—A super- | information bureau’ to explain world | conditions without fear or favor, was | advocated as the most promising way to peace by Dr. Emest Hatch Wilkins, president of Oberiin College, at the Haverford College commencement. to- y. This bureau, financailly independent, would be the fount of facts for a peace | society, composed of members of all other peace organizations. “It should have in each of the major | regions of the world cne or more rep- | resentatives, perhaps 25 or 30 in all,” | Sees said the Ohio educator. | “These men should share the pro- | fessional abilities of the best of our for- eign correspondents; should be trained as scholars in the field of social re- search, and should be so courageous | and relentless in devotion to their task as to regard the suppression or falsifi- cation of news as worse than death. “Perhaps no one generation, even taking the world as a whole, could yield 30 such men.” ST. ELIZABETH’S INMATE OVERPOWERS POLICEMAN ;Fellnw Officers Called Before Huge | Man Is Placed in Custody Again. A 6-foot colored man, weighing about 200 pounds, went on a rampage in the | 1200 block of Delaware avenue south- | east last night. beating Policeman War- | ren E. Grimes, eleventh precinct, be- | fore other officers succeeded in over- powering him. Police were called to the neighbor- hood by residents, who reported the colored man was “running wild” with a pistol and knife. When they reached the scene, however, the colored man was unarmed After being subdued by the officers the man was identified as Edward Dy son, 42. an inmate of St. Elizabeth Hospital. Given “ground parole,” Dy son, an epileptic, had wandered away from the institution, Grimes, who was struck in the mouth by Dyson, was treated at Casualty Hos- pital. Dyson was taken back to St. Elizabeth’s. FOREST CAMP IS NAMED FOR PRIVATE CITIZEN The first forest work camp to be named for & private citizen has been D. C, JUNE 1 1933—PART ONE. Rival Calvert Street Bridge Designs OFFICIALS MUST JUDGE MERITS OF TWO PLANS. Upper: Design for masony bridge by Maj. George Oakley Totten, jr. ge by Modjeski, Masters & Chase. & —Star Staff Photos. Lower: Design for steel arch bridy the Fine Arts Commission will be called upon to decide between the merits of the two designs shown above for the Calvert Street Bridge across Rock Creek, a structure to be built at a cost of $1.- 250,000, to replace the present 42-year- old bridge. The design shown at the top was made in 1917 by Maj. George Oakley Totten, jr, and approved by the then Commissioners and the Fine Arts Com- mission. Totten was paid $2,500 for World War interfered with plans for construction, Last year the present Commissioners ordered the plans shown at the bottom drawn u% by Mojeski, Masters and Chase of Philadelphia, and paid $60,000 for them. Totten went to the Senate District Committee to complain, and that committee wrote into the 1934 Dis- trict appropriation bill & command that before letting any contracts for the new_structure the Commissioners and the Fine Arts Commission should make HE District Commissioners and | the design, but the intervention of the |a “restudy and reinvestigation to de- | termine which particular type of bridge is most economical and serviceable, and best suited to the proposed location.’ The principal difference between the |two is that Totten’s bridge is of ma- sonry and the new design calls for a steel arch. Totten claims that the masonry bridge is far less expensive to maintain than a steel structure, besides | being more pleasing to the artistic eye. | The Federation of Citizens’ Associa- | | tlluns is on record in favor of the Totten plan, By the Associated Press Samuel T. Ansell, former counsel for the Senate committee investigating the election of Senator Overton of Louisiana, yesterdays filed a petition with the Senate for an_investigation of the “behavior” of Senator Huey Long and “his qualifications to be a Senator.” Ansell charged that Long, who acted as counsel for Overton in the election probe, attempted to dominate and con- trol the subcommittee making the inquiry last Winter by “assertions of senatorial prerogatives, bluster and truculence to the chairman.” He asserted Long “manipulated wit. nesses, suborned perjury, suppressed the truth and otherwise obstructed the investigation.” Ansell described Long's appearance at the hearings and his speech and man- ner, saying he “was abusive to the chairman and counsel,” and that Long on several occasions “alluded, in excuse for such misconduc previous “indulgences.” WOUNDED INHEAD, GAL DISHPPEARS Police Seek * Bullet Victim Given Treatment at Emer- gency Hospital. A 20-year-old girl, who disappeared after being treated at Emergency Hos- pital for two bullet wounds in her head. became the object of a police search early today. Applying for treatment at the hos- pital, the young woman gave her name as “Patricia Devin,” and said she had accidentally shot herself while “play- ing with” a .22-caliber pistol in a house in the 1500 block of Connecticut avenue. She was taken to the hospital by a voung man, who identified him- self as Jack Levy, 3400 block of Oak | wood Terrace. ‘While Detective Sergts. Van Doren Hughes and H. D. Robey were check- ing on the girl's statements, she and her escort left the hospital—first tell- ing doctors she preferred treatment by her own physician, then saying she planned to leave the city. Her wounds were not considered serious. A check-up disclosed the shooting had not occurred at the address given by the young woman, and the detec- tives belicved the name she had given also might be fictitious. Efforts to lo- cate Levy for questioning regarding the girl's identity and the manner in which she was wounded failed FAIL TO TRACE THREATS J SR Police Find No Clue to Extortion- ists in Georgia. DALTON, Ga., June 10 (#)—Chief of Police Britton today said there had been no developments in recent weeks in a search for authors of extortion notes received by Mrs. M. E. Judd prominent club woman and social worker. The extortionists demanded $5.000 from Mrs. Judd under threat of kid- naping. They also threatened Chief Britton when he investigated the case. The notes were written several months ago but were not disclosed until yesterday. BEER BOYCOTT URGED Reformed Church Would Avoid Dealers in Alcohol. ‘WINONA LAKE, Ind., June 10 (#).— Members of the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America were urged by a resolution of their synod, in session here, to boycott merchants who sell “beverage alcohol.” The synod adopted a resolution for- bidding the use of fermented wine in Presbyterian ANSELL ASKS PROBE OF LONG, CITING ELECTIO Senator Surrounded Committee “Armed and Intimidating Henchmen,” He Says. N CASE CONDUCT in Louisana with “The petitioner,” Ansell said, “is ad~ vised and believes that his (Long's) | assuming to act as counsel for the said Overton was incansistent with his status and prejudicial to his duty as a Senator of the United States.” | Ansell asserted also that Long had “packed” the hearing room and sur- nded the subcommittee and its aides ith his armed, turbulent and in- timidating henchmen.” Long told the subcommittee, Ansell said, that he alone was responsible for the conduct and management of the Overton campaign. Ansell then charged that Long “de- vised, and supervised the operation of, | and fraudulent means and corrupt agencies whereby the so.called election of Mr. Overton was corruptly and | fraudulently controlled and ~deter- | mined.” | Long recently attacked Ansell in a Senate speech, and later claimed to his immediate | senatorial immunity when suit was filed | | by Ansell. |First Unemployed , Women’s Camp in : New York Opened |Seventeen Report at Site | Suggested by Mrs. Roosevelt. By the Associated Press. BEAR MOUNTAIN, N. Y., June 10.| unemployed | ¢luded a high school from the East, | his death. —The first camp for women, known as Camp Tera and sug- gested by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Secretary of Labor Perkins, opened today with 17 women, ranging in age from 18 to 30, arriving from New York. For the first week rest will be the order of the jobless women. Wednesday and Saturday & new con- tingent will arrive until the camp'’s ca- | pacity of 200 is filled. | No wages will be paid the women, but | they will be cared for completely. A | cook and an assistant cook have been | provided, but the women will do the other chores. Camp Tera, some 200 acres in extent, is on land of the State Conservation Commission and is operated by the | State Unemployment Relief Commis- sion | SHIP TO VISIT FAIR 10-Ton Craft Leaves Newfoundland for Chicago Exposition. 1 ST. JOHNS, Newfoundland, June 10 | (4)—Bound for Chicago and the Cen- tury of Progress Exposition, after the manner of the bigger vessel Bluenose, | a 10-ton sailing craft, “Spirit of New- | foundland,” cleared from St. John's to- day and headed for the Straight of, Belle Isie. The vessel carried Newfoundland products | P. s. Barbour of Trinity is skipper, and' S. M. Christian and Mrs. Christian | make up the crew. They were prompted | by the spirit of adventure, and also by the desire to call attention to New- | foundland’s industrial opportunities. | LIQUIDATION REFUSED Court Orders That Insurance Com- pany Be Allowed More Time. NEW YORK, June 10 (#).—Because | securities held by the closed Globe & | Rutgers Fire Insurance Co. have in- | creased in value to the extent of sev- | eral million dollars, & court decided to- day that the company should be allowed | time to attempt its own rehabilitation. The ruling was made by Supreme Court Justice Alfred Frankenthaler, who | withheld decision on an application for liquidation made by the State Insur- ance Department. Each | |18 in Hospital, 150 Collapsed | in National “Marching { Contest.” By the Associated Press. EVANSTON, IIl, June 10.—Eighteen | high school band members were in a hospital here tonight, the most seri- | cusly affected of 150 youthful competi- |tors who collapsed in the “marching high school band contest's final day program. Fifty of the boys who faltered in the imarching under intense heat were car- |1ied off the feld. One hundred others | eropped out of line, but were not dis- abled, | Over Two-Mile Route. Although the hot sun was blamed for the wilting of most the marchers, police were investigating the food supply for | the contestants after receiving com- | plaints from the hospital patients that some of the provisions were not of | good quality. |~ The parade of 72 bands from Patten |Gym to Dyche Stadium on North- | western University Campus was over 2 2-mile route. Police ambulances had followed the marchers in case the heat proved too severe. Police said the meals complained of were served in the ccntest mess tent by a Chicago catering firm, engaged by the chamber of commerce. Hospital authorities said all the pa- tients were expected to recover. ‘Winners in Contest. Winners in the marching contest in- one from the West and cne from the | Central States. | Winners in Class A, first division, in- ic'lucled: Carbon County High School, | Price, Utah; Cleveland Heights High, | Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Triadelphia | High, Wheeling, W. Va. Class A, sec- ond division: Parkersburg, W. Va. | Portsmouth, Ohio, and Berwick, Pa. In Class B, second division, winners |included: Logan, W. Va.; Sturges, Mich. {and Canandiaqua, N. Y.; Somerset, Pa., | won third division honors. | In Class C, Montrose High School, | Montrose, Pa., was placed in division | three. | | CAPT. W. H. BARKSDALE DIES AT WALTER REED Former Chief of Military Division of Accounting—Officer Was Native of Tennessee. Capt. William H. Barksdale, former chief of the military division of the | General Accounting Office, died yester- day at Walter Reed Hospital after a long illness. He was 71 years old. Capt. Barksdale, who was born in Hartsville, Tenn., was retired in Octo- | ber, 1926, after 41 years of service. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Alice | Ashton Barksdale; a sister, Mrs. R. A. Crenshaw of East Falls Church, Va.: | two daughters, Eliza and Mary Barks- dale, and two sons, Lieut. William H. Barksdale, jr., of Fort Myer, Va., and | Ashton Barksdale of Roanoke, Va. Funeral services will be held from his late residence, 3613 Wisconsin ave- | nue, at 2 pm. tomorrow. Burial will be in Arlingto SCHOOL BANDSHEN ~ OVERCOMEBYHEAT contest,” high point of the national | FORFOREST GAMPS Toilet Kits Only Minor Trans- action of Many Articles Contracted For. ‘The much-investigated toilet kit con- tract for the COCivilian Conservation Corps was a minor transaction, judged in relation to the total of vast purchases of more than 300 kinds of supplies made by the War Department for the boys in the forest camps. A recent tabulation of about 40 prin- cipal items, ranging from motor trucks to mess stools, bought by the Quarter- master Corps for the amateur woods- men, showed a total expenditure of more than $7,000,000 for the major articles alone. Bought By Contract. ‘The only supplies purchased by the Conservation Corps officials direct were the celebrated sartorial outfits offered by the BeVier Corporation of New York. All other equipment has been bought by the quartermaster general. At the War Department it was stated that all major contracts have been awarded after competitive bidding. Corps area officers have authority, however, to pur- chase urgently needed supplies in & spe- cific emergency without regard to bid- ding. “If the men in a certain camp are in immediate need of blankets, for exam- ple,” & War Department official ex- plained, “the officer in charge would have authority to go into the open ma: |ket and buy the emergency supplies | without waiting for bids.” List of Purchases. ‘The official list of purchases of major items as of June 1 follows: rushes, hair. rushes, shaving. . Brushes, tooth Caps, wi Pins, tent. small. tent . Bocks, wool 8tools, mess Tents, pyramidai. Towels, bath . Towels. huck : 108! 834 370,221 1,325,184 "ar128 50,613 INDICTMENT IS SOUGHT IN SLAYING OF HARRIS |Case Against Horsémen Will Be Given Grand Jury in Lees- burg This Week. Special Dispatch to The Star. LEESBURG, Va., June 10.—Common- wealth’s Attorney John Galleher will |seek from the grand jury summoned | for the June term of the Loudoun Cir- cuit Court opening here Monday morn- ing an indictment charging Henry H. Norman, 45, horseman, with first-de- gree murder in connection with the slay- ing of Thomas Harris, 65, of near Unison. Norman, who was living with his | father, C. E. Norman of Unison, sur- rendered to Deputy Sheriff John R. | Chamblin shortly after Harris, farmer and carpenter, was shot down in a fleld on the Norman farm the morning of |May 29. Harris died that evening in Loudoun Hospital from gunshot wounds in the leg and stomach. He remained | conscious until within a few minutes of ‘ypewriters = e 1.4 | Undershirts, Summer. 459,390 Other cases to be brought before the grand jury are Nelson Bryant, charged with forgery; Charlie Brasswell, burg- lary; Gilbert Phillips, burglary; Delmas Glasscock, violation of the prohibition |law, and Richard Talley, prohibition violation. PLANS SPECIAL COURSE FOR MARINE RESERVISTS Navy Department Announces Training Will Be Given at Quantico June 18-28. Marine Reservists from the National Capital will be given a special course of training at the Marine Barracks, Quantico, Va., June 18 to 28. The Navy Department announced yesterday that 19 officers and enlisted men of the 6th Marine Reserve Brigade here will take the special course at Quan- tico, which will shortly become the center of training activity for reserv- ists in this section of the Nation. The department said that these Washingtonians will take the 10-day course: Maj. Harvey L. Miller, Capt. Paul Sullivan, PFirst Lieuts. Winslow H. Randolph, jr.; George R. Littlehales, Leon Brusiloff, John Augustine, Theodore L. Bartlett, Second Lieut. Hilary C. Rowe and Lieut. Frank R. Shea of the Navy's Reserve Medical Corps, attached to the brigade. Enlisted men of the local outfit going to Quantico are: Gunnery Sergt. H. M. Irvin, M. J. Lichtenberg, M. E. Thomp- son, First Sergt. C. C. Brown, First Sergt. R. L. Jenkins, Sergts. R. J. Bartoo, Albert E. Gill, G. H. Littlefield, D. J. Nevin and F. C.' Woodman. Minimize | By the Associated Press. SACKETS HARBOR, N. Y., June 10. —Plans to patrol this village at night were made today in consequence of an outbreak last night of 300 members of the Civilian Conservation Corps now at Madison Barracks. The group is await- ing transfer to forestry work under President Roosevelt's unemployment 'CALL MADISON BARRACKS GUARD AS FOREST RECRUITS STAGE RIOT {Become Unruly When Barred From Dance, Officials Incident. their doors, but I heard of no raid on any store. We stopped things before trouble had & chance to develop.” Said Col. Sturgill: “I have investi- 2ated this matter and find there was nothing to it.” First reports sent out of the village to neighboring cities were that the 300 3 of ages between 18 and 25 with LARGE PURCHASES (275000 EXPECTED INC.C.C.BY JULY1 Army Is Pushing Program and 235,000 Have Al- ready Been Enrolled. By July 1 it is planned to have 275,000 men of the Ofvillan Conserva- tion Corps under canvas in conservation camps throughout the nine corps areas and the Army is working day and night to make sure that the program is car- ried out as scheduled. Of this number, 235,000 had been enrolled up to mid- night of Priday. These men are being sent out of con- ditioning camps at the rate of 9,000 & day and railroad yards are humming with activities approaching war-time mobllization. Fifty-three trains loaded Wwith 18,000 men were dispatched to the Pacific Coast from the East in five days this month. The assembl of the personnel in the far scatte: camps, it is said, is only one phase of the stupendous task that faces the Army. Even more com- plicated is the assemblage of camp and work equipment. No longer are complaints heard in the Army about the task imposed upon it by the Civilian Conservation Corps. At first it was regarded as a “white elephant” dumped upon their hands. Now the commissioned personnel, par- ticularly, look on the administration's forestry program as their salvation and with evident good reason. Knocked Economy Plans. More than anything else, the Civilian Conservation Corps program knock the administration’s economy plans fofy the Army into a cocked hat. By the heavy drain it has made upon the serv- ices of commissioned officers, the plan to furlough at least 2,000 commissioned officers and some 13,000 enlisted men, as one way of reducing expenses, has been dropped. Without the additional work entailed by the forestry program, the Army realizes it might have been unable to prevent the furloughing of 2,000 or more officers. The selection of veterans for the Civilian Conservation Corps will be made June 12 to 25 by the Veterans’ Administration. The enrollment of these 25,000 veterans, of whom 7 per cent may be Spanish War veterans, will begin June 26. The 2,600 veterans as- signed as the quota for the 3d Corps Area will be employed on the Winooski River, Vermont. Total Strength to Be 301,575. The total strength of the Civilian Conservation Corps, when filled, will be 301,575 men. Included among these will be 34,375 experienced foresters and 3 | other civilian workers, these being en- rolled with the 240,000 unmarried men depend- ents. In addition, there will be 14,000 Indians, coming under the Indian Reservations; 2,200 members of the bonus expeditionary force and the 25,- 000 veterans. By midnight of last Monday 217,000 men were enrolled in the C. C. C,, of which number 93,000 were in 514 con- servation camps and 124,000 were in conditioning camps. To handle this army, much larger than the Regular Army itself, 580 ad- ditional officers have been placed on duty exclusively with the C. C. C. within the last week or so, making a total of 4,230 officers. Most of the im- portant posts of the country have been stripped of all available officers and men for service with the camps. As a result the Army has entrenched itself firmly against any sharp economy cuts. CampsTor "college Souihs. have: been for you ave . Srain on, traintng persornel in the varle drain on tral personnel - ous corps areas. Particularly is this Corps Area which em- Virginia, Pennsy] o k T. C. camps will be held within this area at all this S 3 Navy and Marine Officers Called. the C. C. C., President Roosevelt, by executive order, has called out 320 Navy line and Marine Corps of Eighty of these are to be Marines. Testifying to the thorough job which the Army Medical Corps is doing, only one death has been reported at C. C. C. camps. Maj. Gen. Edward L. King, commnndlng the 4th Corps Area, re- ported on the excellent health condi- tions by saying that if nothing else was accomplished by the forestation pro- gram, it would still be an ample return on expenditures to turn out 275,000 strong, healthy citizens in of the 275,000 underfed and poorly nourished men now being taken into the camps. FORMER D. C. RESIDENT EXPIRES IN NEW YORK E. St. Clair Thompson Was Promi- nent in Masonic Affairs While Living Here. E. St. Clair Thompson, prominent in Masonic affairs here some years 8go, died suddenly Friday in New York, where hvev ‘h‘fixm made his home since v 7= er “Thompson was @ past master of Benjamin B. French Lodge, No. 15; & past high priest of Columbia Chapter, No. 2: a past grand high priest of the Grand Chapter of the District, and a member of other Masonic groups. He practiced law here, speci in income tax work, and was connected with the Internal Revenue Bureau be- fore moving to New York. Information from New York was that funeral serv- ices would be held there, in St. Thomas’ Church at 10 a.m. tomoITow. - May Circulation Daily .. 118,016 Sunday, 124,540 District of Columbia. ss: FLEMTNG NEWBOLD of THE EVENING AND Ghes solemnly swear that the, actual number P copies of the paper named Sold and dis- Hiputed” during the month of May A 1033. was as follows: Business Manager SUNDAY STAR, | (3 ¢4 523287y & SRZEN P 2D s wacmcsiond s Li 232 1909191319021910 e a1 7 3 5 33 ,. FEH sesaEsTy feit F ww o §8: 453 5! ettt 30| moi e i & Less adi tal net daily circulation Roetage “daily et paid cire Dajly average number for service. ete. i ‘ the Lord's supper, and another -that |‘GENERAL the members of the church be urged to patronize only those commerclal con- ship, U. S. S. Richmond. Capt. Freeman served in Washing- ton as superintendent of the observa- ' State Supreme Court held todey that tory from May, 1927, to May, 1930. In |ccrporation farming for profit in Kan- his new post, he will succeed Rear Ad- | sas is unauthorized miral Clark Woodward, who has been | The court found for Roland Boyn-|Allen, the supervisor of the forest, is ordered to duty with the General |ton, State’s attorney g.-n;:nl‘ in glan charzcvd(gmp N;‘I;,é' at Lurag, ‘xlf'r' 2 . - Board here. Capt. Freeman reported |suits to oust the Wheat Farming Co.|was named Camp sevel ono? 3 Tor duty in San Francicco last vear. | of Have and the Sledd Farm Corpova: |of the Bresident. Mr. Pack has gwen| e Officer Is Transferred. He is & native of Erie, Pa, and was|tion of Lycns, but withheld an ouster [ 25000 Forestry Primers to the forest| LEONARDTOWN. Md.. June 10 (Spe- appeinted to the Naval Academy in order to permit the concerns—the |camp libraries. The distribution is be- cial).—Officer C. C. Creeger of the ngse and won the Navy cross for his largest farming corporations in the ing made by the welfare department of Maryland State Police, stationed in Cal- World War service as col of- State—to voluntarily d of their the U. 5. Army as fast as the camps vert County, has been transferred this ficer of transports. large land holdings, or are set up. b week to Conowingo, Md, named in honor of Charles Lathrop Pack, president of the American Tree Associatior.. The camp is on the Le- bancn State Forest near Browns Mills, N. J., Mr. Pack’s home State. J. P. plan. SRS | Col. Walter S. Sturgill, in command A : of the barracks, and Mayor Norris cerns which do not handle beverage |Famous Civil War Engine on WAy | ppeips of the village today minimized | stuf alcohol and so far as possible those | to Chicago. | the incident. taking trousers and shirts. The village which do not handle tobacc | “There was no riot or serious trou-|residents were larmed by the noise CHATTANOCGA, Tenn., June 10 (®). | ble of any kind,” said the mayor, “but | made by the military, troopers and —"The General” is on the move again, | there might have been if I had not |sheriff’s deputies in rounding up the ‘heldlng for the World's Fair. | called for the guard from Madison | forestry camp men anl herding them | The famous 78-year-old locomotive | Barracks as quickly as I did. The men | back to camp. that figured in the inspiring race dur- little unruly when excluded from It was understood that a stricter rule dance here and seemed to think they | will apply in the granting of town m g been packed on flat cars and sent tolcould do what they pleased. Some of | missions to the corps members W P Chicago for exhibit, the its were alarmed and they remain Bere, men, angered by their exclusion from the dance, had smashed their way into a bakery from which they took bread- stuffs and crashed into a clothing store, " GOING TO FAIR TOPEKA, Kans, June 10 (#).—The Less adjustments Total Sunday net circulation. Average net paid Sunday eire Average Sunday net circulation 124,540 FLEMING NEWBOLD. ko Business Manager. and sworn to before me this th_da; June Tacaty ot duse Al