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SPECIAL NOTICES. FOR ted b 13th mn-r ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS by us on terms of 15c¢ per day. pay that much for ice per & Smmediate delivers. 01 other . than those cont: ILLIAM H. LEMON, 3 s from oll & Co., 12th and G tional 1441. 2 THE PROVISIONS OF AR- 2. of the by-laws of the special meeting of the stock- rs of the Capital Traction Co. is called ? be held at the office of the company at 6th and M sts. n.w., hington, D. C.; on the 3rd day of July, 1933, at 11 o'clock a.m. to consider the approval of a certain orm of agreement for the unification of the ansit properties in the District of Colum- ia. as contained in and provided by joint solution” of” Congress approved January 19 6 A 3 Q. J 4. 33, as amended February 1 #to authorize the merger of street-! ‘porations operating in the Di "mmm. and for other purposes.” The polls fii be rom 11:15 a.m. until 12 noon, July 3. 1933 H. D. CRAMPTON. Secretary WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAI r from New York. Richmond, Boston, Pif rgh_end all way points; IATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN. 7 & Y. ave. NA 1460. Local moving also. CHAIRS FOR _RENT, SUITABLE FOR BRIDGE PARTIES. banquets, weddings and lfi(flu;;s:,.“ldfltroim per hdl‘y !Y.m: ne" chlll,’l. chairs for rent or sale. enm STATEnsTORAGl CO. 418 fif-.h ‘:2. n.w.__Metropolitan 1844, b oof Need Attention? Take the first step toward a solid. dur- le job today. You can be sure of Compe- Send for us. Feel safe! L ROOFING 933 VSt. NW. JINO company North 4423 Treasury Department ©ffice of the Comptroller of the Curreney Wlshlnlfl(on,] . C. ay Notice i3 hereby special rates. . INC., 1317 en to all persons who sy have_claims nst “The Commercial ational Bank of Washington,” District of Columbia, that the same must be presented Robert C. Baldwin, Receiver, with the al proof thereof within three months from this date or they may be disallowed. Comptroller of the Curreney. 0l- ice Solve il - Dr. Fordney is professor of crimint ecy at & famous university. His advi is often sought by the poiice of man: cities when confronted with particu- larly bafiing cases. This problem has been taken from his case book covering bundreds of criminal 1 ations. | The Murder of Charles Byron. ! BY H. A. RIPLEY. ROF. FORDNEY, Inspector Kel- ley and Dr. Lyman entered the luxurious suite of Charles Byron on the ninth floor of the exclu- sive Hotel Royal. They found him dead, slumped over a large, elabo- rate, practically completed jigsaw puzzle. ‘The professor stared at the dead man’s feet. What was wrong with their ggsmrm? His thoughts were interrupted the entrance of Grant Miller. “I understood you were the last known person to see Byron alive,” Kelley remarked. “Well, I don’t know about tha Miller replied. “I was chatting with him here until 9 o'clock. As I left he started to work on that puzzle— said he wanted omething to occupy his mind until his flancee arrived. I went di- rectly to my suite next door. Then I heard a shot at 9:30 and came back here just as Helen Willets, his sweetheart, let out a scream. She told me she had just arrived and found him dead.” Fordney, again staring at Byron's feet, said to the doctor, “This man certainly was not killed between 9 and 9:30. Better have the girl in, Kelley.” He stooped down and picked- up a small pearl handled revolver near the dangling hand of the dead man. Helen, a tall, stately brunette, was now quite com] . She said she had an appointmrent with Byron at 9:30 and on entering the suite had found him dead. She touched nothing. “Yol're right, Fordney,” the physi- sian said, “this man was murdered before 9 o'clock. But, tell me how did you know?” HOW DID HE? AND WHOM DID HE SUSPECT? (For Solution See Page A-5.) Perhaps you have a story or problem you would like to submit to Prof. Ford- ney. If so, send it to him in care of this paper. He will be delighted to yeceive it. DAUGHTERS OF THE NILE ELECT SUPREME QUEEN Mrs William Robinson Boone of Portland Named at National Convention. By the Assoclated Press. PORTLAND, Oreg., June 21.—Mrs. ‘William Robinson Boone, Portland, was elected supreme queen of the Daugh- ters of the Nile yesterday, succeeding Mrs. L. Pearle MacClellan, Albany, Y The order opened its national con- vention with more than 700 delegates from 54 temples in 17 States, Canada, Hawaii and the District of Columbia attending. Other officers included: Mrs. Carrie P. Barton, San Diego, supreme princess royal, who will be- come supreme queen next year, and Mrs. Dorella Taylor, Chicago, supreme Princess Tirzah. The invitation extended by Mecca Temple of San Diego to hold the 1934 convention there was accepted by the Supreme Temple following its custom of holding its annual session in the home city of the incoming supreme queen States represented at the convention fnclude New York, Iowa, Illinois, Min- nesota, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Maryland. Delegates also are here from Montreal, Quebec, British Colum- bia and Washington, D. C. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. ARE Most. hone NA- 23 CURTIS ADDRESSES GORDON GRADUATES Former Vice President Also Presents Diploma to His Granddaughter. ‘Three members of the Gordon Junior ! High School graduating class received | their diplomas this afternoon from grandfather or parent. Former Vice President Curtis was the grandfather. He also greeted the 159 graduates at the | commencement exercises. In an unusual ceremony, Mr. Curtis handed a diploma to his granddaughter, Ann George, daughter of Lieut. Col. C. P. George, U. 8. A, of Fort Myer, and Supt. of Schools Frank W. Ballou and Mrs. Philip Sidney Smith, member of the Board of Education, presented their daughters, Betty Ballou and Constance Smith, with certificates of graduation. Besides the address given by Mr. Curtis, the Gordon program included the presentation of a play written by the graduating class and entitled “A Birthday Decision.” The cast included Jack Richmond, Ted Marks, Frances Englehart, Bruce Beard, Virginia Burdette, Virginia Ry- der, Dorothy Fosdick, Mary Yingling, Edna Sutten, Frank Balsley, Bob Al- bright, William Gildart, John Hatch, Emily Allen, Mildred Shepherd, John Chronaker, Ann George and Elizabeth Wood. Singers included Louise Grant, Helen Holm, Jeanette Koon, Josephine Murphy, Kathryn Furmage and Mary | S. Hoopes. The class gift was presented by Sa- frah Anderson and was accepted by Prank ,A. Woodward, principal. Rev. Charles T Warner, rector of St. Al- ban’s Church, asked the invocation and pronounced the benediction. Music by the school orchestra completed the program. Dr. Ballou awarded diplomas to the foNowing other graduates: Bob Al-| bright, Abner Allen, Emily Allen, Anna Altschul, Madeline Ausherman, Lorraine Ball, Frank Balsley, Mary Banks, Janice Batton, Bruce Beard, Philip Bentley, Mortimer Birdseye, Thomas Blowe, Marian Brinkerhoff, Marion Brown, Raymond Brown, Virginia Bur- dette, Jack Burke, Gerald Burns, James Burnside, Marian Butler, Mary Buz- zanca, Willlam Calnan, Barron Chandler, Ruth Chew, Harry Chism, Catherine Collins, Anne Combes, David | Cooper, Margaret Cullinane, Winston Dalrymple, Helen Dammann, Marion Davis, Alberta Day, Teddy Del Borrell, Priscilla Demond, Frank Donahoe, Wil- liam Drysdale, Jack Earle, June Eck- art, William Edwards, Francis Engle- hart, Edwin Ernest, Joseph Fabrizio, Dorothy Fosdick, Edward Frawley, Her- bert Frawley, Catherine Freeman, Re- gan Fuller, Kathryn Furmage, Wil- liam Gildart, Marion Goldberg, Louis Grant, Aubrey Harrell, Hazel Harris, Edwin Hartman, John Hatch, Milton Hoffmann, Helen Holm, Mary Hoopes, Doris Horan, Allie Mae Keeter, Katherine Kennedy, Russell Kidwell, Kathryn Kitchen, Imogene Knight, Jeannette Koon, Leaton Kush- man, Gordon Lingley, Henry Lybrand, ‘Wiliam Maidens, Helen Marks, Robert McCullough, William McReynolds, Mary Meacham, Carroll Meyer, Jack Meyer, Manu Meyer, Hugh Minton, John Mooney, Malcolm Morgan, Marie Mor- gan, Edwin Mornini, Eleanor Morris, John Morrow. Josephine Murphy, Marjorie Nance, Catherine Newcomer, Nancy Offutt, Elinor Oliver, Leland Parsons, Francis Pierce, Margugrite Pratt, David Prof- fitt, Kenneth Ramey, George Reese, Albert Rhodes, Mary Elizabeth Richey, Prederick Russell, Virginia Ryder, Thomas Saylor, Prances Scott, Mildred Sheperd, Charles Smith, Thomas Soper, Bill Sowders, Betty Squires, Peggy Sulli- van, Edna Sutton, David Tate, Douglas Thompson, Robert Verbrycke, Melva Vick, Eugenia Walter, Barbara Wash. burn, Helen Weitzel, Miriam Wilkin- son, Joseph Williams, James Wills, Sam ‘Wilson, Elizabeth Wood, Robert Wuest, Elton Young, Margaret Young, Alex Adrian, Sarah Anderson, Carmen Bil- lington, Cabell Busick, Donald Colhoun, Anthony Chanaka, John Chronaker, Eleanor Gerdine, Mary Graham, Mar- tha Hamilton, Charles Hastings, Eliot Marcellus, Ann_Mewshaw, Jack Rich- mond, Willard Roundy, Willlam Tomp- kins, James Vincent, Russell Whitener, Virginia Yingling, Emily Beck, Louise Carroll, Mary Yingling, James Brown, George Buckler, Woodrow Poole, Ed- ward Sorrell, Benjamin Stalcup, Ethel ‘Wickstrand, Marvin = Wright, Edwin Marks and Charles Fortune. ABBOT VOCATIONAL STUDENTS GRADUATE Forty Members of School Receive Diplomas at Meeting Mon- day Night. Forty students of the Abbot Voca- tional School were graduated at cere- monies Monday night, presided over by A. J. Driscoll, president of the Mid-City Citizens’ Association. Rev. Calvert E. Buck delivered the commencement ad- dress following the presentation of di- plomas by W. F. Smith, principal of the school. The graduates receiving diplomas were members of both February and June classes at the school. Special music was presented by the school chorus and shool orchestra, as well as by a special instrumental quartet. Those receiving diplomas were: Automobile mechanics—William Ba- ker, Franklin Hugueley, Jesse Porch, William D'Amato, Robert Hite, Walter Laing, Edwin Prentice and Gilbert Zel- ler. Electrical work—Frank Binsted, Wil- liam Dixon, Lee Earp, George Faunce, | Wilton Johnson, Prank Malatico, Milton | Powell, John Staples, Henry Tiencken, Stanley Wells, Harry Bowers, Lee Gar- rison, ‘Herbert Gearing, Richard Giss, Wilbert Hardy, Bernard Lettau, Martin Machoian, Louis Moore, Vincent Mullin and Benjamin Warring. Sheet _metal—Robert Thomas Mattia Painting and decorating — Norman Trigger. | Naylor and THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO WEDNESDAY Goes to Work l t Oil Co. of New Jersey's plant, al sleeves and went to work in the to one of the country’s biggest fortunes, the Industrial Y. M. C. A. building at the morning to be at work on time and YOUNG ROCKEFELLER FOLLOWING IN FATHER'S FOOTSTEPS. in Dad’s Plant ANKS of the unemployed are diminished by one more—Winthrop Rocke- feller, fourth son of John D. Rockefeller, jr., gets a job. He is shown here (center) shaking hands with guards and employes of the Standard t Bayonne, N. J., when he rolled up his personnel department. Heir he is living in an_inexpensive room: in ayonne. He has to get up about 6 in rides to the office on a city bus. - j —A. P. Phito. company DUNBAR DIPLOMAS PRESENTED 10 2% Dr. J. Hayden Johnson Pre-| sides at Annual Com- mencement Exercises. | Dunbar High School awarded diplo- | mas to a class of 236 students in its annual commencement last night, under the chairmanship of Dr. J. Hayden Johnson, member of the- Board of Education. Following an address by Ruth Smith on “Knowledge, Youth’s Beacon on Un- charted Seas,” other members of the graduating class presented musical con- tributions to the program. Joseph Wood played a violin solo and a double trio, composed of Evelyn D. Nathews, Elsie Proctor, Beatrice Fletcher, Celeste Wash- ington, Margaret Ball and Mamie | Knuckles sang. Percy Taylor sang a solo and the All-High Orchestra played | several selections. George Raymond Reed carried out the theme of the| earlier oration in his own address on “Knowledge, A Light in a World of Darkness.” Dr. Johnson awarded diplomas to the following: Louise C. Alexander, Catherine M. Baker, Margaret A. Ball, Ruth E. Ban- | nister, Harriet M. Barksdale, Edith | Berkley, Juanita V. Beverly, Evelyn A. Bowman, Catherine L. Brooks, Edna E.‘ Brown, Ethel E. Browne, Mary F. Brown, Thelma K. Bruner, Bennetta C. Bullock, Omenda B. Bynum, Catherine P. Campbell, Sylvia B. Carroll, Rosalyne V. Chase, Virginia M. Cherry, Helen A. Cooke, Elena E. Crowder, Frances A. Curtis, Ruth W. Dabney, Evelyn M. Davidson, Verna J. Dosier, Elea- nore C. Hilda J. Evans, Aneita M. Fauntleroy, Lillian L. Featherstone, Yulee 1. Fickling, Vernice B. Fields, Virginia Fleming, Beatrice E. Fletcher, Camille G. Ford, Jessie Foye, Prances M. Gibson, Clara P. Graves, Hattle L. Graves, Inez M. Gwynn, Evelyn A. Hall, Sylvia B. Hampton, Vivian Hansberry, Caroline E. Harris, Bernice V. Harrison, Earlene Z. Har- | rison, Cornelia R. Hogue, Elizabeth Hubbard, Marjorie B. Hubbard, Jessie E. Hunter, Elsie F. Hughes, Clarice D. Jackson, Mildred E. Jackson, Nancy B. Jackson, Ursula J. Jackson, Dorothy T. Jones, Mamye R. Knuckles, Evelyn L. Lassery, Meta C. Lewis, Constance S. Mapp, Homer O. Mee, Bernice H. Moten, Norma D. Murray, Ruth E. McLeod, Margaret V. Nelson, Ursaline M. Peyton, Lorraine Phillips, Edith M. Powell, Elsie E. Proctor, Evelyn B. Robinson, Melita | Z. Robinson, M. Barbara Robinson, | Einora, L. Rogers, Helen M. Scott, Ger- | trude B. Robb, Lucy N. Scott, Nina E. | Scurlock, Mary V. Shorter, Anna J. Simons, Ora J. Ster, Evelyn M. Smith, Mathilde M. Smith, Ruth M. Smith, Vivian I Smith, Elsie M. Spencer, Irma O Swygert, Sallie E. Tancil, Ethel N. Tate, Sarah F. Tatum, Rita D. Thomp- son, Sylvia E. Trivers, Mary T. Tyer, Clementine G. Tyler, Carrie E. Walker, Catherine V. Ward, Celeste Washington, Elaine Washington, Lenora C. Weaver, Margaret Vivian Weaver, Edna E. Webb, Luna B. Wedlock, Dorothy B. West, Rosie E. West, Geraldine G. Westray, Catherine S. White, Marion O. Whit- lock, Francese V. Willis, Aimayda Wing, Anne S. Winston, Inez E. Wood, Mary C. Wood, Anna E. Wormley, Thelma N. ‘Wormley, Vivian L. Yates. Charles M. Adams, William C. Bald- win, Harry C. Barnum, Algernon S. Belcher, Jean D. Bellegarde, Chester Bland, Henry J. Booker, bert T. Bonds, Gemgee E. Burke, James H. Carpenter, Albert J. Carter, Joseph H. Carter, Lawrence E. Carter, Edward S. Contee, Paul P. Cooke, Elmore B. Crutchfield, Lovell L. Cyrus, Scott B. Davidson, Wilmer A. Dickerson, Gilbert A. Diggs, Joseph H. Douglass, Vincent J. Edmondson, Arthur N. Fearing, 163 GET DIPLOMAS AT DEAL SEHOOL Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle Presides at Exercises at Junior High. The Alice Deal Junior High School this morning graduated 183 students who are to enter senior high schools in September. Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle, vice: pres- ident of the Board of Education, handed the diplomas to the class as its mem- bers were presented to her by Miss Bertie Backus, principal of the school. The exercises were opened by the in- z!flur wgtch Jack Younquist welcomed e audience. Mary Jane Kelly wi valedictorian. il Ak Music was provided by the Alice Deal Junior High School Orchestra and the program included an instrumental trio, with Betty Oleson, first violin; Joe Porto, second violin, and Dorothy Waterbury, piano. The graduation class g | :n‘ chorus. plents of Alice Deal Junior High School’s diplomas follow: Rall":n Adams, Jean Appel, Victor Baker, Eliza- beth Bibber, Alan Black, .Walter Blamire, Margaret Boesch, Vernora Bogue, Dorothy Borden, Jack :Brown, Helen Brylawski, Ritchie Buckingham, Richard Burrows, Elizabeth Camalier, Wilton Carter, Mary Virginia Clark, Berthold Colle, Robert Condit, Betty Crossen, Jean Curtin, Clifford Downs, Marion Doyle, Dorothy Dyer, Lila Eaton, Eva Engel, Virginia Epes, Peggy Essary, Latimer Evans, Arthur Fletcher, Alice Fracker, Selma Freedman, Muriel Friedman, Page Full- ington, Jane Funkhouser, Martha Gay, Flora Gill, Phyllis Gordon, Wilbur Gray, William Greenwald, Carl Grimm, Eliza- beth Hahn, Harry Hambleton, Jack Harlan, Vincent “Hedderman, Edwin Hege, Ada Hickey, Jane Hill, Phyllis Howenstein, Lawrence Hufty, Robert Hulsizer, Charles Judson, Jane Keiser, Sidney Kent, Mary Jane Kelly, Mildred Langdon, Betty Lewis, Doris Long, Mait- land Macdonald, Emmett McCraw, Leonard, Meakin, Julia Merrill, Raymond Mitchell, Marion Moore, Donra Moser, James Moser, Auburn Moyer, Andres Moynelo, Jane Myers, Charlotte Nance, Robert Neeld, Page Nelson, Willlam Nixon, Richard Northrop, Betty Olesen, Harriet Palkin, Evelyn Palmer, Lorraine Pratt, Charles Rauscher, Pearce Rayner, Jane Reese, Dorothy Rice, John Riggles, Ruth Roberts, Robert Roudabush, Mary Jane Rogers, John Kothrock, Harold Schwartz, Kimball Scribner, Eleanora Shaffer, Nancy Shantz, John Kelso Shipe, Dean Short, Norwood Sparhawk, Martha Steer, William Straub, John Sutphen, Harry Swagart, Richard Trammell, Sylvia Turover, Elizabeth VanWagenen, George Walter, Dorothy Waterbury, Willlam Waters, Dorothy Weaver, Chester West, Mary E. White, John Wildman, Janet Wil- liams, James Willis, Rudolph Ashton, Morton Churchill, Virginia Dierdorf, Dean Duehring, Anna Edmonds, Eleanor Graves, Jack Griesbauer, Ward Griffith, Eleanor Gusack, Warren Harris, Elmer Hays, Richard Hunt, Mary Ellen Hunter, Richard Hutchinson, Annetta Kone, Dorothy Kone, Louis Konigsberg, Alden Lawyer, John Lear, Lester Lewls, Robert Marsden, Peggy McMillen, Alice E. Miller, Darragh Nagle, Marjorie Olsen, Walter Palmer, Jane Perry, Lloyd Powell, PFrances Reily, David Rubenstein, Robert Snow, Morgan Tenny, Angelo Valenza, Aline Wharton, Afleen Wrightson, Myer Barnes, Rode- rick Clay, Charles Holmes, Herbert Houser, Dorothy Jackson, James Mor- ton, Willam Moxley, Charles Poore, Joseph Porto, David Rawlings, Jack Thompson, Frances Ball, Mary Barbee, Julia Bayne, Charles Crowell, Wilfred James D. Fowler, William B. Frazler, | George C. Furrell, Arthur W. Gambrell, | James P. Gantt, Wilbur C. Goodwin, | Shackelford Gregory, Phillip W. Harris, | Louis F. Hill, Maurice C. Hill, Welford | Hill, Harry C. Hueston, Charles H. Hunter, Melvin R. Jackson, James L.| Johnson, Joseph Johnson, Elmer T.| Kemp, Robert E. Lee, Harry W. Lewls, | Selmon G. Lewis, Johnarthur Lightfoot. Kermit Martin, James I. Minor, John | Doris Daniels, Louise Grolig, Willlam Kolb, Ethel Morris, Doris Myers, Martha Poore, Virginia Riley, Lucy Rinaldi, s Turner, Margaret Willlams, Margaret Cheney, Helen Patterson and Jack Youngquis BOYCOTT INDORSED Brith Sholom Passes Resolution {DIL CONTROL PLAN TRADE AGT DRAWS |9 ] vocation of Rev. Dr. Henry Tyler Cocke, | Plumbing—Frank Armes, Francis Fa- of brizio, Hobart Kuebler, Paul Davis, Wil- lian Jarboe and Melvin Thompson. TODAY. Card party. Loyalty Lodge, Order ?n;;x;lmrds of Bethlehem, 2034 P street, 18D Jatboe nc ey omaon, il | Woodwork—Louis Colecchia and Louis Social meeting, Men's Class, Calvary Pizza. ¢ E. Church. 8 pm. Meeting. Justice Lodge, No. 8, Shep-iJOHN C. MART werds of Bethlehem, 935 G place, 8 p.m. | Meeting, Daughters of the Nile, Sal- ma Temple, No. 51, hall, Fourteenth and Kenyon streets, 8 p.m. IN SUCCEEDS CURTIS AS HEAD OF FIRM Board of Directors Also Elect E. Morris, John M. Murray, Alexander 5 Myers, Conrad D. Myles, Mansfield C.| Against Goods Made in Germany. Neal. Robert Nelson, Shirley F. O'Neill, | Kelsey L. Pharr, Willlam J. Price, Ad- | A ATLANTIC CITY, N. J,, June 21 (). dison P. Rand, Harold M. Randolph,|A resolution indorsing a boycott by George R. Reed, Robert S. Scurlock, | Jews against goods made in Germany Brutus R. Simmons, William J. Simp- | Was adopted Monday at the second sop, Ferman S. Bocks, Andrew F.|Session of the eighteenth annual con- Travis, Charles S. Tyler, James Walker, | vention of the Order of Brith Sholom. Richard F. Ware, Raymond J. Weir. | The resolution provided for the “in- | dorsement and support” of the boycott, | and provided further that it be contin- +/ued “as long as the present policy to- ward Jews in Germany is continued.” Another resolution adopted by the GRADUATIONS ADD 634 Picnic, Benjamin Franklin Univer- | x R fity Women's Club, Rock Creek Park,| Cbarles A. Tyler to Fill Vice vening i | President Vacancy. Card party, Ways and Means Com- By the Assoclated Press. mittee, State Council, Daughters of | PHILADELPHIA, June 21.—The America, Northeast Masonic Temple, | board of directors of Curtis-Martin Eighth and F streets northeast, 8:30 pm. | Newspapers, Inc. yesterday elected | Lawn fete, benefit Capitol Lodge, No, | JohD C. Martin president of the com- 3, Shepherds of Bethlehem, Tenth and.| PADY, 1o succeed the late Oyrus H. K. Curtis. R Charles A. Tyler, secretary and treas- TOMORROW. urer, s elected vice president to suc- Luncheon, District of Columbia Bank- | order expressed gratitpde to Senator J. T. Robinson of Arkansas for his stand in the condemnation of the Hitler regime for its attitude toward the Jew- | ish people in Germany. The resolution | also expressed the hope that tris Gov- | ernment would take a more aggressive | policy in the matter. TO ALUMNI OF YALE Exercises Are First for Recently Created School of Engineering. 453 A. B. Degrees Conferred. By the Associated Press. S NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 21.—The army of Yale alumni received 634 new members into its ranks yesterday as de- | NEAR OUTPUT LIM{T in course were conferred at the| 2324 graduation exercises on seniors Cuba Falls 5,337 Tons Short of CREATES UTILITY Industry’s Proposed Code Amounts to Complete Revolution. BY OWEN L. SCOTT. pecial Dispatch to The Star. 1 | i CHICAGO, June 21.—What amounts | “Ito a revolution is scheduled to take Yesterday— place in this country's 812.000,000.000: oil industry if Gen. Hugh S. Johnson. | administrator of the industrial control act, accepts that industry’s proposed code drawn up here. | From chaotic disorganization the oil business almost overnight would be- come a carefully controlled public util- | ity. An era of waste and exploitation seldom equaled in any other industry during all the years that rugged indi- vidualism enjoyed free play would be replaced by a period of planned pro- | duction and distribution. | This industry is among the first to respond to the offer of Government control under the terms of the indus- try recovery act. Interests long at odds, | whose batties have been bitter and cost- | ly, involving colossal wastage of an| irreplacable natural resource, now are agreed that it is time to bring order out of chaos. Policy Committee. ‘They propose to make the President dictator of their industry, standing | above a committee of nine, who will| determine policies, which then will be | administered by a committee of 52, representing the various elements of the vast oil business. | It is agreed that the oil industry has | many characteristics of a public utility and that the period of haphazard de- | velopment must be ended in the public | 8 The spectacie of the industry |y interest. almost wrecking itself on an orgy of production in the rich East Texas oil fields did much to convince leaders that a time had come to call a halt. Under the code submitted to Wash- ington for approval the President could fix maximum and minimum prices for each of the ofl-producing districts of the country. Drilling of new oil wells hereafter would be carried on only with the ex- press authorization of the Government. Under this authority it would be possi- ble to work out unit development of | new flelds to prevent waste and to con- serve oil. Must Report Production. Each month companies would be re- | quired to make sworn statements giving the details of production of ofl, the quantity sold, to whom sold, the method of transportation and the prices paid. Limits would be placed on the amount of oil taken from storage, on the amount of ofl to be imported and on the amount produced. ‘The Government would set minimum rates of wages and maximum hours of work. Once this code went into effect oil would cease to be the object of wild- cat exploitation and its utilization would be on the basis of need. ‘The improved outlook in the industry has resulted already in a stiffening of crude oil prices and in gasoline prices. The East Texas fleld is being brought under control after it had caused a second upset in the industry. Instead of periods of feast and famine, about = period of stability witere a profit will replace deficits and opera- tions can be on a fairly uniform basis. (Copyright, 19 AUTO PARTS MAKERS Competition Under Recovery Act. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, June 21.—Representatives of manufacturers of automobile parts and accessories throughout the coun- try met here yesterday in closed session lining a tentative code designed to out- law “cut-throat” competition and bring the group within the provisions of the industrial recovery act. Delegates at the committee meeting today were members of a temporary committee appointed by the parts manu- facturers last week, with Claire E. Barnes, president of the Houdaille- Hershey Corporation, Detroit, as chair- man. Some of the delegates at today’s con- ference expressed the opinion that if the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce proceeds on lines laid down in the recovery act, and if other auto manufacturers agree with the N. A. C. C. code of ethics, they anticipated parts makers will be able to report a code tending to raise prices, which, several ::m'lended. have been on a “starvation evel.” Student Wins Fair Prize. Robert Lunch, a student of Central | High School, has been presented with | a typewriter by the Underwood Elliott Pisher Co. as a prize for winning sec- ond place in & national essay contest on the theme “Why I Should Like to Attend a Century of Progress.” OU just said the man was a tout,” Inspector Will- ing's guest interrupted him. “I've often heard the word and while I know it means some sort of race track {4 —Dbets on each horse Lowest, 33 per cent, at 4:00 a.m. today. | | November the oil business now hopes to bring LS DISCUSS TRADE CODE| iz Pif Group Seeks to Stop Cut-Throat|Poria for the purpose, delegates said, of out- |, B JUNE 21, 1933. District of Columbia—Partly cloudy tonight; tomorrow probably local show. southwest 0 Maryland—Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow, possibly showers tomorrow; not much change in temperature. Virginia—Partly cloudy tonight; to- morrow possibly local showers; not much change in temperature. West Virginia—Fair' tonight; tomor- | row possibly local thundershowers; not | much change in temperature. River ‘Report. | Potomac River clear and Shenandoah | little cloudy this 5 | Report for Last 24 Hours. | Temperature. Barometer. | Degrees. Inches. | 9 29. kil k 4 pm, 5 0 = 85 Record for Last 24 Hours. (From noon yesterday to noon today.) | Highest, 95, 3:45 p.m. yesterday. Year | ago, 88. Lowest, 64, 4:30 am. today. Year ago, | 68. Record Temperatures This Year. Highest, 100, on June 9. Lowest, 14, on February 9. Humidity for Last 24 Hours. (From noon yesterday to noon today.) Highest, 95 per cent, at 4:00 p.m. yes- terday. 'ide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) . Tomorrow. 6:45a.m. 1:03a.m. 7:19 pm. 1:47pm. The Sun and Moon, 01 pm. 2:31pm. one-half hour after sunset. Precipitation. Monthly precipitation in inches in the Capital (current month to date): Month, 1933. Average. Record. January . 325 3.55 709 '82 February ... 327 ‘84 March 375 910 April . 327 May . 3.70 June . 413 July August .. September October . December ... .... Weather in Various Cities. 3 perature. ¥ Tem) 199UBIH * “quspu s 15m07 Stations. Abilene, _Te: Albany.’ Atlanta. G Atlantic Z ore, Md. Birmingham Bisms Sosoaw |+ svpiawes 2o2pIay 2222283333828 DoDw 3 S8332323RR 23283888, 8232523R2% uron,’ 8, Dak. 30.04 Indianapolis.Ind 29.96 Jacksonville.Pla. 30 City.Mo. 2992 le: 2988 59152010 10t 28583 282zE eesoees T Nt R SRR PP Besmesaenesin 33k328223 FOREIGN. (7 a.m., Greenwich time, today.) ‘Temperature. Weather. Part cloudy cloudy Siockholm. Sweden ibraltar, ‘Spain . 0on, Greenwi Horta (FayaD, (Curre! St. Georges. Bermuda. 8an Juan, Porto Rico Havs Cuba. STUNT FLYER OFF Ernst Udet, Noted German, to Give Exhibition at Los Angeles. NEW YORK, June 21 (#).—Ernst Udet, German stunt fyer, took off from Floyd Bennett Field this morning for & three-day flight to Los Angeles, where he will do exhibition flying at the Na- tional Air Races beginning July 1. Accompanied by Eric Baler, his me- chanic, Udet flew today in & tiny low- wing plane, which was one of two he brought from Germany. His stunt plane has been shipped on ahead. Stops were planned today at Pitts- burgh, Columbus, Indianapolis and St. D!M.Ill.nm Udet's plane bears the license erally at their office, and repre- sents himself as being an ex-jockey or a jockey’s brother. He tells the gentleman that he can give him tips on winning horses. He does not ask for money in advance, MANYTOCPTAL {More Than 1,000 Offices Ex- pected to Be Opened Here | for Observations. National trade associations, regional associations, trade journals, labor or- ganizations and individual members of industry are said to be sending repre- sentatives here to set up headquarters for the purpose of observing the pro- c of the gigantic Federal Indus- trial Control Administration. Recovery administration officials and officers the Commerce Department expect that within a week more than | 1,000 offices will be opened in Wash- ington by representatives of these or- ganizations and will remain here in-| definitely. | Trade associations already have es- | tablished temporary headquarters in | hotels here awaiting submission to the | board of the trade practice codes of | their members, and to watch the prog- | ress of these codes toward adoption. | Officials said there has been an influx | of trade journal representatives of or- ganizations which heretofore have not kept representatives here. Labor or- anizations, such as the United Mine ‘Workers, those affiliated with the iron and steel industry and others connect- | ed with the major groups have in-| formed Control Board officials they would be represented. It was estimated more than 100 rep- resentatives of trade associations and industries called at the Commerce De- partment yesterday. Chiefs of the com- | modity divisions of the Bureau of For- | eign and Domestic Commerce id practically all who called on them gp‘ nified they would remain here indef- initely. The Baltimore Board of Trade was one of the first civic organizations to open offices here. Other trade boards which have notified the recovery ad- ministration they would have repre- sentatives here are those of Chi ), New York, Omaha, Philadelphia, Pitts- burgh and Boston. CHINESE WAR LORDS PLAN DRIVE ON REDS Chiang Kai-Shek and Other Gen- erals Prepare Campaign Against Communist Area. By Cable to The Star SHANGHAI China, June 21.—A meeting of Chinese generals and dis- trict magistrates, presided over by Gen. ‘hiang Kai-Shek at Nanchang, on the CI .| edge of the Communist areas of Cen- tral China, has just outlined a sweep- ing military-politico program for the sup) of Communism, an increas- ingly large factor in domestic politics. Gen. 's staff does not expect fulfillment of the program in less than four months. This plan calls for & military as well as a complete economic blockade of Communists occupying an area fully as large as the three Pacific Coast States of the United States. Areas taken from the reds will be for- tified with block houses and small gar- risons will be left permanently on the scene. Canton war lords will be asked to co-operate by closing the trade routes from Canton into~the Communist aress in the north. Armies will be sent from all points o‘eflm. compass into the Communist region. ‘COUNTERFEI:I'ER’ INVITES ARREST FOR ‘A LIVING’ 4y | Federal Authorities May Try to ¥ind Prisoner Both Home and Job. By the Assoclated.Press. ST. LOUIS, June 21.—The plan of Richard M. Matthews, 60, uhemployed repair man, to turn counterfeiter and thus go to prison and “earn an honest living” met with only partial success ‘when he exhibited a mold and 36 counterfeit silver dollars and explained his inten- Last night Richard M. Crooks, sssist- ant United States district attorney, said = any charges wi be pref ould erred against the prisoner, now enjoying a diet of bread and sausage in the city holdover. His wife also is participating in his im 1448 Church St. N. W, For SILVERWARE, Works of . Art, Household Goods, for FURS;" RUGS, Curtains, for rare and.: valuable articles of all kinde; a SAFE DEPOSITORY for .43 at 1140 Fifteenth St. Removals, Packing, Shipping, Rug Cleansing. HCN Fumigation. REDUCED BRIEF PRICES RON S. ADAMS Elastic Hosiery Abdominal Supports Fitted Professionally et Reasonable Prices CO. 917 G St. N.W. Safe and Sane Antiseptic ary to use harsh, irritating solutions to evercome germ infection. Ideal Antiseptic gives you safe, sure protection at low cost. This powerful, pleas- ant tasting antiseptic is absolutely pure and effective. Excellent for throat irritations, nasal spray, bad breath, minor cuts, after shav- ing and loose dandruff, Get the big $1 pint bottle for only 3¢ today at Peoples Drug Stores. IDEAL ANTISEPTIC It is unne ‘| 1IN BOTTLES |1 Ready To Dfink DELICIOUS HEALTHFUL ] Hires S . P 1 IHHH .)N‘('!' @erm. of Real Root Juices The District of Co- lumbia Bar Association calls attention of the residents of Washing- ton to the advisability of having immediately rewritten ALL Last Wills and Testaments which name Banks er Trust Companies (now closed) as exeemtors or trustees. District of Columbis Bar Association FOR THE FOURTH A Rainbow Paint Job will give your car that look you love to see! Why drive a shabby car? Color ¢-Mlz- RAINBOW AUTO PAINTERS “Washington’s Largest Exclusive Paint Shop™ ‘Of 14th St. Between P and Q OPEN UNTIL 7 P. M.—SUNDAYS UNTIL 1 P. M. ceed Martin. ers’ Association, Willard Hotel, 12:45 pm. | iy, "Martin Newspapers had been oper- | in Yale College, the Sheffield Scientific 2 000,000-Ton Sugar Production. Since its incorporation in 1926, Cur- Dinner, H Street Christian Ghurch, | ated by Mr. Curtis and Mr. Martin as| School and the Yale School of Engi-| crook, I never did know just how but insists the man bet $10 for Sixth and H streets southwest, 6 p.m. voting trustees. This trusteeship auto- neering. HAVANA, June 21 (#)—Cuba fell matically expired from the death of Mr. Curtis. Curtis.Martin Newspapers directly and through its subsidiaries publishes the Public Ledger, Evening Public Ledger, Philadelphia Inquirer and the New York Evening Post. | Martin also was elected president and ‘Tyler vice president of the Phlhdelgb Inquirer Co, New York Evening ening Post Realty Cor- A Luncheon, Phi Gamma Delta Fra- ternity, University Club, 12:30 p.m. Luncheon, Cornell Club, University Club, 12:30 p.m. Luncheon, Kiwanis Club, Raleigh Ho- tel, 12:30 pm. Luncheon, Washington Alumni Chap- E. Sigma Delta Kappa, Carlton Hotel, Inc. and the Evi 130 pm. poration. The exercises were the first for the| 5337 tons short of producing the 2,- recently created School of Engineering| 000,000 tons of sugar permitted by and the last for the institution it will | President Machado's decree of early absorb—the Sheffield Scientific School. | this year. Bachelor of arts degrees were con-| With all mills finished grinding, the ferred on 453 Yale College seniors. island’s total production stsnds at The Engineering School ted 63| 1,994,663 long tons, official figures re- |and “Sheff” 118 with bachelor of leased today by the Agriculture De- | Hoce aarees will be conferred | **The Asures ¢ inding lonorary lerre e res cover the 1933 by the university at its wnumnce-lm, which started Pebnuryflu and ment tomorrow, ended theoretically May 3. 4 they operate. Do you mind ex- | plaining?” | “Not at all,” Willing said. “The usual method is for the tout to spend some time building up = list. He calls on these men, gen- These exposures of rackets are the public. (Copyrisht, 1933.) him on the tip. “Then he divides his sucker lst into seven parts and picks out a seven-horse race. He sends each group the name of a different horse. He can't lose.” printed to advise and protect