Evening Star Newspaper, April 12, 1935, Page 3

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THE EVENING - STAR, -WASHINGTON, D. C., WORK R[“EF FUND || Absence Meant Death in Last Roll Call DREDUCEHAZARD Tydings Hopes Rockville Crossing Will Be Among First Abolished. BY J. A, O'LEARY. .The grade crossing tragedy near Rockville serves to call attention to the opportunity which exists in the ad- ministration’s new work-relief appro- priation to abolish these hazards throughout the country. As it became a law a few days ago, it authorizes allotments for grade crossing elimination out of the $800,- 000,000 earmarked for highway con- struction and provides that whatever sum the President designates to be spent for this purpose shall be appor- tioned to the States and the District of Columbia according to a definite formula. Senator Tydings. Democrat, of Maryland, commenting today on the! mecident near Rockville, expressed | hope that that crossing would be one of those eliminated in the forth-| coming program. | “I am deeply shocked at this ter- rible accident.” Senator Tydings said. “I feel great sympathy for the parents of those who were killed and injured. | Many of them are my friends. That crossing is one that I hope will soon | be eliminated.” | Hayden Formula Given, | The apportionment formula was written into the law on motion of | Senator Hayden, Democrat, of Ari-| zona. It reads as follows: “That any amounts allocated from the appropriation made herein for the elimination of existing hazards to life at railroad grade crossings, includ- ing the separation of protection of | grades at crossings, the reconstruc- | tion of existing railroad grade crossing | structures, and the relogation of high- | ways to eliminate grade crossings, | shall be apportioned by the Secre- | tary of Agriculture to the several States (including the Territory of Hawali and the District of Co- lumbia), one-half on population | as shown by the last aecennial cen- sus, one-fourth on the mileage of the | Federal-aid highway system as de- | termined by the Secretary of Agri- | culture and one-fourth on the rail- | road mileage as determined by the | Interstate Commerce Commission | * ¢ * but not part of the funds apportioned to any State or Territory under this joint resolution for public highways and grade crossings need be matched by the State or Terri- tory. * * *" | Available Sum in Doubt. | Until the administration perfects its work-relief program it will not be known definitely how much of the $800.000,000 authorization will be made available for grade crossing | work. Senator Hayden, however, gave the Senate sample figures a few days ago. | showing how much each jurisdiction | would be entitled to expend for grade- i | crossing work on the basis of a total of $100,000,000. | This table showed Maryland would | be entitled to $1.070.000, Virginia | would be entitled to $1.939.000 and the | District of Columbia, $201.000. These allotments would be proportionately | higher if the President sets aside a | larger total. Avenue Plan in Conference. ‘The 1936 District appropriation bill, now awaiting action of the conferees, | contains $100.000. under the gasoline | tax fund, to begin construction of a| bridge or viaduct to eliminate the Michigan avenue grade crossing in Brookland. This item was approved House and Senate. The ultimate cost of the Michigan avenue project is estimated at $450,- 000, the balance to be obtained later. ‘The bill provides that half the cost be borne by the railroad company. There is also in the supply bill a Senate amendment for $200,000 from the gas tax fund to extend Franklin street northeast across the railroad tracks by building a biidge or viaduct. This item goes to conference for final decision. The location of this pro- posed bridge is near the Crosby Noyes School. | BELGRANO CERTAIN BONUS WILL PASS Legion Head Confident of Success for Plan Without Infla- tion Clause. in both By the Assoctated Press. MEMPHIS, Tenn., April 12.—Frank H. Belgrano, jr., national commander of the American Legion, expressed confidence last night that the present Congress will pass an immediate bonus payment bill without an infla- tionary clause. “The American Legion stands as & unit in favor of the kind of legis- lation that can and will become a | law,” -2 ‘cld a meeting here. “I tex you here and now that I am | going back down to Washington again, take my coat off and fight for the pay- ment of this debt with every ounce of | energy I possess.” Belgrano said World War veterans “have a right to expect-that their adjusted service certificates will be paid in full at this time at face value and with cancellation of interest ac- crued and refunding of interest paid.” e———— SPECIAL NOTICES. i OT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debt unless personally contracted. J. A. BT. OME! Y. Falls Church. Va. 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ARE YOU M To or from Washington? . _rates based on the return Large fleet vans. Ace Vanportation Corp.. #18 Woodward Bldg.. 15th and H sts_n.w. Phone National 3511, Night, phone Cleve- land 5646 SLAG ROOFING A e P Goh 8 durabie “work—the kind that hold< for years— quent_repair_ bills ROOPT! KOONS 14 Heroic Teacher’s Penciled List Made Possible Quick Identifica- tion of 14 Bus Crash Victims. From the above penci plowed through the school bus at Rockville last night The others represent the dead. posite his name. HE unshaken courage and com- posure of Miss Louise Funk, attractive 27-year-old chem- istry teacher of the Williams- port High School. in the nerve- racking period immediately follow- 1ng the bus crash that killed 14 of her charges in Rockville last night made possible the speedy identification of the young victims, Although shaken by the crash, with the children ot her class dead and dying, Miss Funk, heroine of the tragedy, retaining her composure amid conditions which caused hys- terics among older persons in the rescue party, sat down and in long- band wrote down the names of every occupant of the wrecked bus. She called the roll of the survivors end checked them off. The remain- ing names provided police and rela- tives with their first authentic in- formation. Still retaining complete control of her nerves after her terrible experi- ences of the night, Miss Funk gave a first-hand account of the accident | today. She said: “The first thing we considered in planning our trip to the chemistry show at the University ot Maryland was a State bus and a competent driver. For a time we had considered making the trip in individual cars, but decided the risk was too great. Started Back Early. “The bus was insured against ac- cident and we think we select>d a very competent driver. We left Willlams- port about 4:45 pm. and arrived at the University of Maryland at 7:15. After visiting the show and damng a lecture we started for homie half an 500 IN CAPITAL STUDENT STRIKE; RIVALS DEMONSTRATE (Continued From First Page.) of preparations for war” and taking a stand against student participaticn in warfare. _Visit to White House. Meanwhile, a delegation of students visited the White House and presented a petition in which they condemned war and pledged themselves not to support the Government in the event the United States enters a war. At Howard University, approximate- 1y 100 students, about every tenth one carrying a banner, paraded past the school buildings. There were no ad- dresses and few spectators. At Roosevelt High School the stu- dent strike was turned into a sym- posium by students themselves. Allan Davis, principal. said the discussion of the question was presented in a “serious effort to present both sides | of the question fairly and in the face of the student strike against war.” Students at the University of Mary- | land, in the,main, ignored the strike. | Today was regular drill day for the R. | 0. T. C. units and the cadet corps turned out as usual. At Western High. Late this afternoon pacifist leaders | among the students at Western High | School have scheduled a demonstra- tion on the campus, but none of the other city high schools has made public | any plans in view of the Board of Edu- cation’s recent refusal to sanction the strike. Tonight student leaders hope to re- peat their demonstration at George Washington University. Before the students could assemble to hear Willlams this forenoon, an automobile bearing a huge flag and carrying banners reading “Defeat the Strike” circled the several blocks oc- cupled by the university. Each time it*appeared, a shout went up from the | students within hearing distance of | Williams. Other interruptions in his address, when faculty members were spied in nearby buildings peering at the crowd. Each in turn was singled out and given a special cheer, but Split-Second Inset: Miss Funk. | hour earlier than we had planned be- cause of the rain and fog. . ~1 was sitting on the front seat | attempting to watch the road very carefully and perhaps help the driver if he could not see any dangerous | curves. “Just as we approached the cross- ing I think the driver reduced the speed of the bus so that if there had been a whistle or bell we would have heard them. I think we both saw the train at the same instant “T felt the bus make a lunge for-| ward. It was too late, however, and the train hit the rear of the bus. Fortunately those on the front seats escaped with minor hurts, but those in the rear were fatally injured. “The people of Rockville were very | considerate and kind toward the sur- vivors. I think the rescue squad, the Fire Department, the police and all citizens should be thanked for help- ing us so much. Everything possible was done to alleviate suffering. Crossing Is Blamed. “Since the crossing where the ac- ident occurred is a very bad one I | think it should be eliminated. In fact there is a bank on the right side as | you approach Rockville and I think it was that bank that obstructed our | view. | ‘I have taken several classes to the | chemistry show on busses in previous |years. We had the consent of our principal and all the parents for last night's trip. “All of the boys and girls were love- Iy children and the cream of the high £chool.” Albert M. Bouic, Rockville attorney, .at whose home Miss Funk stayed aft Williams carried on after each in- terruption. Wilson Teachers’ College, which held | its rezular student assembly 45 minutes after the hour set for the strike, heard | Mis3 Elizabeth Wheeler, the daughter ]‘of Senator Wheeler of Montana and ! {an active peace worker, deliver an | address against war. | Dr. Stephen E. Kramer, first assist- (ant superintendent of schools in | charge of the high schools, said noth- ing had been done in any of the schools during the strike hour that “was in any way unauthorized or un- rranted.” | 150,000 STUDENTS “STRIKE.” "'Peace" Demonstrations at Colleges | Throughout U. S. By the Associated Press. | College students were called from their class rooms today by a national | committee for a one-hour “strike” on | behalf of peace, but police in several | cities feared clashes with opponents | of the movement. | Bostor: authorities particularly were | apprehensive that the anti-war dem- | onstrators might come to harm. High | school cadets there were to mass for competitive drills, Many of the cadets, Deputy Super- | intendent James R. Claflin pointed out, are “big fellows” and presumably “know pretty well how to handle those rifles they carry.” A melee climaxed a patriotic meet- ing in Chicago last night, ending only with the appearance of police. 150,000 Estimated Total. ‘The National Student Strike Com- mittee estimated that 150,000 students, a third of them in New York, would | am. High answer the call at 11 school pupils were urged to join the older students in the peace demon- | strations. Police guarded Boston high school children, who were under threat of suspension if they joined the walk- out, against further distribution of been arrested - for distributing it. New York police arrested 10 high \ led list Miss Louise Funk. school teacher, determined the dead and living after a train As a student answered “here” the notation was made op= ~—Star Staff Photo. | the accident, lauded her heroism to- day. As soon as she got off the bus, he said, she went about each child feeling his pulse and summoning aid for those still alive. She quickly com- piled a list of the injured and dead, and called Dr. Ira Zimmerman, prominent Williamsport physician, and asked him to notify the parents. Dr. Zimmerman's daughter, Mar- garet, was one of the victims of the tragedy. Visited Hospitals. After seeing that all the injured were given treatment and arranging | for their transportation home Miss Funk visited the hospitals and under- taking establishments to assist in identifying the dead. She is the daughter of J. Kieffer Funk. Hagerstown horticulturist, and has taught at the school for several vears. Her father came to Rockville this morning and she returned home with him While Miss Funk was attending to the injured last rites were administered to the dying by Rev. Charles R. O'Hara and Rev. Charles J. McNeal. Catholic priests, whose church is near the scene of the crash. Using a fashlight to locate the victims the priests helped in the rain and mud to administer the final saeraments. They said they found two victims, & boy and a girl, on the buffer of the train, which halted more than a quarter of a mile from the crossing. Among those to receive final rites was a girl who had been tossed 50 feet by the impact, upon the church lawn, was found about 15 minutes after the tragedy, having been overlooked by the eariy searchers. strike handbills, while Hunter College, New York, described as the world's largest college for women, suspended two seniors for strike activities. Plans for demonstrations had been announced at more than 35 colleges and universities, many of them with faculty support. Not all involved walkouts from classes, however. Heads of a few in- stitutions declared a forenoon recess to permit full participation in the pro- tests against war. orstrations were scheduled for late in the day. In Philadelphia a mass meeting in the shadow of City Hall was to witness the hanging in effigy of militarism. ! The scene was the plaza where Secre- tary of War Dern conducted a military | i review two weeks ago. The effigy was | garbed in a uniform like that of an | | American soldier. | Hundreds braved a rainstorm to | parade in New York last night. Stu- | dents at New Lots Evening High | School and Manual Arts Night High | School, unable to walk out today, | struck at the same time. At the New | Lots School, where serious disorders occurred last year, several fights broke out. | ed them, They said dismissal of classes had been authorized at Colgate, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania and University of Virginia. Vassar and Smith Col- leges were' reported ready for vir- tually unanimous turnouts. . Norman Thomas, former Socialist candidate for the presidency, was scheduled to address student meetings called by groups which refused to at- tend faculty-arranged demonstrations at the University of Pennsylvania. He was also listed to appear at Princeton. Albert W. Hamilton, in a radio ap- peal on behalf of the strike, said Gov. | Floyd B. Olson of Minnesota had agreed to address strikers at the | University of Minnesota. —_— Parade Pay Promised. Soldiers in the British Territorial 1 strike literature after eight Harvard | Army parading during the royal jubilee j and theolcgical seminary students had | . joprations in London, Cardiff and Edinburgh will receive pay and ration | school students who were passing out | allowances for the day. Forty policemen quickly squelch- | FRENCH PROTEST ONNAZIS DROPPED Paris Acts After British Agreé to Regional Pacts Within League. (Continued From First Page.) would apply to any country which violated treaties in the future. The impression circulated in con- ference quarters that today’s discus- sions were preliminary to a broader examination at Geneva of the ques- tion of treaty violations. British circles dismissed as fan- tastic a presumed five-point outline ot British policy 'published in some London newspapers today. With the prime minister, the foreign secretary and the permanent head of the for- eign office at Stresa, it was pointed out here that all reports from Lon- don on British foreign policy neces- sarily lack authenticity. Series of Conclusions. In place of the French resolution of censure, it was disclosed, there wiil be substituted a series of conclusions appended to a French memorandum. The conclusions will consist of juridical statements reaffirming the duty of nations to abide by their treaties. These conclusion, however, will not be voted upon by the League, it was said. Premier Mussolini’s newspaper, Pop- olo D'Italia, set forth the Italian posi- tion on France's appeal by saying: “Recourse to Geneva remains a French initiative and seemingly should not become a Franco-ltalo-English initia- tive even if the Italian and British ministers have been wholly informed of the memorandum which France will present to the League and even if they share its sentiments.” Conference circles were much inter- | ested in the decision of Maxim Lit- | vinoff. Soviet commissar for foreign | affairs, to go to Geneva to be near the Stresa Conference, but they ex- pressed the opinion the Russian weuld not come here to attend any of the sessions. The French, realizing the British | desires to avoid antagonizing Reichs- | | fuehrer Hitler, have carefully avoided |any talk of “sanctions,” such as mili- | tary and economic penalties for treaty | violators, an authoritative French | | source said. Overruled by French. | Certain French cabinet officials had | proposed discussing sanctions before | the conference”™ opened, informed | Prench circles said, but Premiet’ Pierre Flandin and Foreign Minister Laval overruled them. Flandin and Laval pointed out, it was said, that the League of Nations would be certain to shy away from any consideration of sanctions, since they must be voted | upon unanimously by all members of the League by the terms of the covenant. The Franco-Italian security pact strengthening the two nations’ con- sultative pact, reached at Rome ! January 7 between Mussolini and Laval, was discussed today by the conferees. The pact would create a bloc of Latin nations and that bloc, in turn, would invite England to conclude with it—as one unit—a treaty of friendship and consultation, but not of alliance. | It would come under the general head- ing of a regional pact. | Great Britain's approval of this sug- gestion was taken for granted because of a statement published in London this morning on Great Britain's willingness to give her moral support to regional pacts concluded on the continent within the framework of the League of Nations. Her readiness to take part in a ! purely consultative way also was taken for granted owing to a communique published in London in February, in which England expressed approval of the Franco-Italian accord of Rome and by England’s entering into a con- sultative arrangement with France. | B — | STRICKEN AT LECTURE | | Miss Emma Wright, 44, Dies of Heart Attack. | Miss Emma Du Bois Wright. 44, of | 124 C street northeast, died of a| heart attack last night in the Com- merce Department Building. i Miss Wright was stricken while at- | tending a lecture in the department | auditorium. She was pronounced | dead on arrival of Dr. Leland E.| Stevenson, Emergency Hospital phy- | sician. At others the dem- | —_— Two D. C. Boys Missing. A police search has been instituted for George Weakley, 15, of the 3400 block of Georgia avenue, and Lloyd Graham, 17, of the 900 block of Twelfth street, reported to have d“-l | 1 appeared last .ight from the District | Training School at Laurel, Md. FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1935. Reunited TWINS FIND EACH OTHER AFTER 25 YEARS. HENRY E. WALTERS AND HIS TWIN SISTER, CLARA MAY DAVID. ‘Twenty-five years ago in a Cleve- land Hospital & pair of twins were orphaned at birth. Adopted by different families, they have lived within a few miles of each other for & quarter of a century, neither suspecting the proximity of the other. Curious to learn about his real parents, Henry E. Walters searched through the records of the Cleveland Humane Society and found that he had a twin sister, and that she was the widely known Clara May David of dancing fame. Both have the same eyes, golden hair and almost duplicate facial characteristics, and, despite their long separation, have some of the same likes and dislikes. —Wide World Photo. BERLIN EXCLUDES LITHUANIAN PACT Ready for Non-Aggression Treaties With All Other Neighbors, She Says. By the Associated Press BERLIN, April 12.—Germany was represented by a high foreign office official today as ready to sign pacts of non-aggression with all her neigh- bors except Lithuania. “When the Memel question is solved, then we will be ready to make such an agreement with Lithuania,” said the spokesman, who described his ex- planation as “the absolute official policy of Adolf Hitler.” His statement was given the Asso- ciated Press soon after other official sources declared the proposed Franco- Russian mutual assistance agreement and Italy’s intention to keep 600,000 men under arms had killed all hope that the Stresa Conference would make any important contribution to European stability. The foreign office spokesman also | said Germany is prepared to enter into a general arms convention “on the basis of full equality.” He ex- plained that while Germany regards the proposed Eastern Locarno pact as unnecessary, she would be willing to “consider the Eastern situation if no mutual assistance provisions are in- sisted upon which might draw us into war that is none of our business.” The German press, refraining from all editorial comment on the Stresa PEACE BOND URGED IN LYDDANE: FIGHT County Board Fails to Act| on Plea to Restrain Attorneys. With State’s Attorney James H. Pugh reported at his office as “out of town,” and attorneys for Mrs. Anne Lyddane, charged with conspiring to murder her husband and Mrs. Arthur Beall of Darnestown, denied permis- sion by Pugh to examine the alleged confessions of the men charged with her in the conspiracy, both sides marked time today. Meanwhile, Montgomery County authorities are seeking to identify the writer of more than 50 letters re. ceived by Mrs. Beall during the pas three years, which Post Office De- partment investigators have said werei not written by Mrs. Lyddane. The | letters reported to be written “in a fine hand” were turned over to the| Post Office Department and investi- gated because they allegedly were ob- scene Bond Urged for Lawyers. Late yesterday Mayor Douglas Blanford of Rockville entered the pic- ture by appealing to the county com- missioners through their chairman, Frank H. Karn, to place prosecuting and defense attorneys under bond to | preserve the peace. Mayor Blanford’s action was the result of a dispute between State's Attorney Pugh and State Senator Stedman Prescott, chief of defense counsel for Mrs. Lyddane, resulting from Pugh's refusal to allow Prescott to see the alleged confessions. Mayor Blanford said he was taking steps because the publicity in the case was giving Rockville “a bad name.” Mayor Blanford's statement declared: ! “Things have come to a pretty pass when the State Senator and the State’s attorney talk of pitched bat- tles on the court house lawn. When they begin issuing challenges, I feel they are not acting ‘in accordance | with their oath to uphold the Con- | stitution of the United States and the | laws of Maryland. No Action Taken. “I have therefore suggested to the county commissioners that they be placed under bond.” ‘The commissioners took no action in the matter. Mr, Prescott today reiterated his willingness to allow the prosecution to examine Mrs. Lyddane’s bank account, pointing out that the prosecution might return the favor by allowing him to see the alleged confessions. There are no legal steps, he said, which can be taken to compel the presecution to grant his request, al- though such procedure, he said, has always been customary. In any event, the defense attorneys will be allowed to examine the docu- ments at the preliminary hearing in Rockville Police Court April 20. WORLD SILVER PRICES PROVE DUD TO CHINA By the Associated Press SHANGHAI April 12—The ex- change market failed to respond sub- stantially today to booming world sil- prices, reflecting the growing un- certainty over the future monetary policy of the Chinese government. A widening discrepancy between Chu:ese and world prices again made it profitable to export. “It appears as if China is going to be bled to death,” an advisor to the finance ministry declared. He said the Aneerican silver price announcement |can:e at a time this government was preparing to make new representations for modification of Washington's sil- ver purchasing policy. proceedings, limited itself to publica- | tion of reports from the several Ger- man correspondents sent specially to observe the tri-power conversations. It was apparent the government de- sires to weigh the results of the con- ference carefully before giving the press an indication of how it should interpret the discussions. ——— Crosby Twins Fingerprinted. HOLLYWOOD. April 12 () —Not yvet 9 months old, the Bing Crosby twins already have a police record. They were duly fingerprinted yester- day by Capt. H. L. Barlow of the Los Angeles Police Department. The | records were taken at Crosby's re- quest, happens. LAWYERS' BRIEFS RUSH PRINTING BYRON 8. ADAMS ..THIS COLORFUL NEW RICE BOOK EXPLAINS NEW DISHES THAT ARE UNUSUAL TO THE AMERICAN HOSTESS When it first came off the press last fall, “Rice—200 D lightful Ways te Serve It” met with instant demand ! The first 100,000 books fiterally vanished. ‘The second 100,000 books went out “like the tide”! In the rush, there were mistakes in address- 12 IN NATURAL COLOR PHO- ‘TOGRAPHY ing. Many out our third women did not get the books they re- quested. Did you get yours? If not, ask again! 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