Evening Star Newspaper, May 14, 1935, Page 3

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TWO GO ON TRIAL IN“WELL" DEATHS Virginia Court Room Packed as State Police Guard Coleman Suspects. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. SPOTTSYLVANIA COURT HOUSE, May 14.—The trial of the two colored laborers accused of the brutal murder of Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas Cole- man in their family homestead on Hickory Point April 2 moved to a swift conclusion today before Judge Frederick W. Coleman in Circuit Court In the first hour the Commonwealth offered evidence allegedly linking the heavily-guarded pair to the murder and the robbing through an old-fash- ioned watch, said to have been stolen by the murderers. It was testified that the watch was found on John | Bhell, 37, one of the aefendants. | Shell and the other accused man, Joe Jackson, 27, sat in a crowded | court room today guarded by bailiffs | and a dozen Virginia State troopers armed with riot guns and tear gas. 1t required no more than 10 minutes } to select the jury. Five hundred spec- | tators packed the court rooms and 1,200 others were on the lawn outside peering through the windows. | Death Demanded. In his opening statement to the | Jury, Commonwealth's Attorney Em- | mett R. Carner, said | “We will show Jackson worked at | Coleman’s farm 10 days before the | murder. He and Shell plotted this | crime for days. After robbing this old | couple they clubbed them and threw them into the well. They then shot | down the well at their victims and | dropped stones upon them, some weighing more than 100 pounds.” | Summarizing the arrest and later THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1935. More Farmers Arrive for Huge Demonstration confessions of the prisoners, Carner demanded “death and nothing but death as the penalty.” Defense Attorney Harry H. Sager of Fredericksburg replied that “these prisoners are victims of a double mis- fortune—they are destitute men and they are accused of a terrible crime. Please remember that the Common- wealth of Virginia presumes every man 1s innocent until he is proven guilty.’ Coroner Testifies. The first prosecution witness was Dr. W. A. Harris, county coroner, who described the gunshot and other wounds which caused the deaths of the couple. Dr. Harris said the body of Mrs. Coleman was only parl clothed, while that of her husband was fully dressed. Winfrey Nason. a neighbor who visited the murder scene, was inter- rupted during his account of the finding of the corpses in the well, while Judge Coleman ordered the mother of & wailing baby to remove it from the court room. “This is no place for children,” the judge declared Nason continued to identify three Jjagged boulders which were lugged before the jury by the bailiffs Two colored witnesses. James Hil- liard and Allen Montague, testified on and Shell step off a irom Fredericksburg in Mas- saponax, near the Coleman farm, on the evening of the murder. Both men said they knew Jackson and could identify ‘Shell in the court room a: the “light-skinned man” who accom. panied him. The movements of the accused pair were traced further by the Common- wealth, through the testimony of El- wood Haislop. employe of a filling sta- BECOMES JUBILEE Cheers for A. A. A. Throw | 4,500 Into Frenzy of ‘ Enthusiasm. (Continued From First Page ) i cotton grower from Georgia, sitting on the edge of the stage, bellowed: “Brother, don't keep anybody from taking our Governor away from us.” | Gov. Eugene Talmadge is a persist- | ent opponent of the A. A. A. | Raps Middle-Men. | Wallace told the farmers that the processing tax was the planters’ best protection from the “processors, mid- dle-men and liberty-leaguers. who are not thinking first, last and always, about farm income.” Wallace went on “The farmers' minds are prostituted by the middle men. We should not | accept them as farm leaders. They | are a good crowd of respectable men, | but they are leading us into the ditch. i “Don't allow our processing tax to | be taken away from us, until the busi- ness men get rid of all their tariffs. “This is a serious business, but we The Louisiana delegation of farmers as it pulled into Eckington freight yards this morning for the demonstration at Constitution Hall. ~—Star Staff Photo. FARMERS SESSION “Approve the Bonus” Appeals | QNG ADE FAES | t Telegraphic History Here | Se 65,000 Messages Come to Washington, 25,000 of Them Addressed to President “Approve the bonus!" That message, or one with that meaning. has come to Washington by telegrapn close to 65,000 times since the Patman tonus bill came up be- fore the Senate. At the peak. telegrams reached Washington at the rate of 4.500 per hour over the combined facilities of the Western Union and Postal Tele- graph Compa Meanwhile normal telegraphic busi- ness continued without interruption. | The messages began when organ- ized veterans began bombarding mem- bers of the Senate whose attitude either was doubtful or definitely op- posed to the Patman bill. The peak was reached Friday and Saturday, when the White House was flooded. Telegraphic History Made. | According to local officials of the two companies virtually every Westeri Union and Postal station in the United States handled the message in some form—and all of them had to be de- livered through the “bottle neck” of tion at Thornsburg, 6 miles south of Must keep on fighting hard for some- | iha National Capital the murder farm on the road to Rich- mond. Haislop testified two colored men drove up in the Coleman auto- | mobile at 10 o'clock on the night of the murder. The filling station attendant said & man he identified as Shell came in and handed him a quarter for a package of cigarettes. As the colored man started in haste for the door, Haislop said he called: “Come back | and get your change.” He said the pair drove off toward Richmond after Shell grabbed up his 10 cents in| change. Still tracing the alleged murderers, | the . prosecution offered testimony to the effect that they arrived in a res- taurant of the colored district in Richmond around midnight. William Roy, colored, pointed out the accused men as those who were in the restau- rant about 2 a.m. on the morning after | the murder. Roy said he complied with Jackson's request to go and buy some beer. William Red, colored, iden- tifled the men as having been in the | Richmond restaurant. There were no colored persons | among the talismen, although two colored men sat on the grand jury when it indicted Jackson and Shell April 16 for the double murder. | About 10 days ago Judge Coleman appointed Attorney Harry H. Sager of Fredericksburg to defend the prisoners. Jackson surrendered to Predericks- burg police on April 7 and made a statement blaming Shell, who was ar- | rested in New York a week later with the aid of Sheriff Blaydes of Spottsyl- vania County. Shell also is alleged to have confessed, blaming Jackson for | the actual killing. SPECIAL NOTICES. AFTER THIS DATE I WILL NOT BE RE- sponsible for any debis contracted by any one other than myself personally. RUSS] EL( formerly of 1003 A 4 Russell_road._Alexandria. V WANTED—RETURN LOADS FROM DEN- ver_ Philadelphia. Hartford, Miami, Kansas City_and Cincinnati. 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KOONS 506 “Horisia” LET US PROVE —that Planograph Process of reproducing orelgn reprints, patent drawings. circu: ars. maps. el is quicker. better and more reasonable. We'll gladly tell you how uch your Jjob will cost. Phone us. Columbia Planograph Co., 50 L Bt. NE Metropolitan 4801. TILEWORK, Artistic—Durable—Sanitary. ELLETT *1108 9th St. N.W. National 8731 LOCATED. A. C. Horn Paint Products (formerly at Palais Royal) Now Sold by J. Gerstin, 1916 14th St. N.W. Decatur 5028. | time for us to act. thing that will stay with us for our | children and grandchildren.” ! Carrying bronzed plowers of the soil | from 25 States, seven special trains | from the North, South and West be- | gan to arrive in the Capital at 4:45 | am. At 8 am. eight Pullman cars | loaded with 200 Mississippians car- rying baked ham, fried chickens, sand- | wiches, fruits and grapejuice, rolled into Eckington freight yards. Arkansas Has 9-Car Train. Less than an hour later came 42 | Kansans and 165 Arkansans on a nine-car train. Within 2 minutes nine Pullman cars spilled forth 304 | Louisianans, all wearing pink ribbons around their straw hats announcing: “Louisana Cotton Farmer.” “Farm the Farmer.” | A husky cotton planter from | Iouisiana led his fellows down the | platform as he repeated rhythmically | a modulated hog call. Before long more trains brought | Alabamans, Floridians, Texans, Okla- | homans. In busses arrived hundreds from the northwest. North Carolin- ians were already here. Those arriving by train packed themselves into taxicabs lined up by tke dozen on the cobble-stone freight platform and were whisked off to Constitution Hall. Chester Davis, A. A. A. chief, was to speak this afternoon when the | meeting was scheduled to move to the blue and gold auditorium of the Labor Department. At the doors of Constitution Hall men held out hats for collections from the farmers to pay for $600 in incidental expenses incurred in Wash- ington since the delegates began to arrive Saturday. Capital Inspiration Denied. ‘The farmers to & man declared their meeting was a “dirt-farm uprising, no inspiration from Washington.” “We like the A. A. A. We like the Bankhead act, too. We decided it was ‘We pushed on to ‘Washington,” said W. M. Durr, a small cotton grower from Piola County in the Mississippi hill country. J. F. Tompkins, from Mississippi County, Ark., broke in: v “We thought Congress was misin- formed. They only got the letters of sore-heads, the protestors. They weren't hearing from the program’s backers. We held meetings, took up collections, got anywhere from 5 cents to $10 from each person. We sent our men up here.” Durr carried a petition signed by 2,700 cotton contract signers from his county urging Congress to retain the adjustment act, with its processing tax and benefit payments. While the Mississippians discussed the situation on the train platform, the Kansas-Arkansas special came to a halt on the neighboring track. Across the rear car in tall chalk let- ters was scrawled: “100% Co-operation. We Want 1936 Wheat A. A. Boosters.” The businesslike 42 from the Far ‘West plains State were led by O. O. ‘Wolf, who was ready for the press with a prepared statement. “That explains our views, boys.” he said, and hurried his group, all wearing felt sunflowers in their la- pels, into half a dozen of the long fleet of waiting cabs. Long-time Planners. The statement said: “This delegation represents a picked group of hard-thinking, long-time- planning farmers of the Midwest, de- termined to do their part in putting the farm business on a sound And economical basis.” Y KANSAS. A. | President . Altogether, local telegraphic history was made, for the volume of business was the largest ever handled in so short a period by each of the two | companies. Only once, it was recalled by Thomas | P. Dowd, superintendent of Postal,| was it approached. That was in the | Fall of 1914, two and a half years| before the United States entered the | World War. The German-Americans, | operating chiefly through their then | wide-spread German-American Clubs, adopted the telegraphic method of pe- titioning Congress not to declare war on their Fatherland. President Gets 25,000. In the present instance, however, Roosevelt alone has re- | ceived approximately 25000 mes- | sages — virtually all with the same| meaning. Before that the 96 members of the Senate distributed among them some 40,000 telegrams of similar ilk. J. W. Ayers. traffic manager of ‘Western Union, agrees with Dowd that the bonus rush is the largest Wash- ington ever had, but similar situa- tions in which emergency measures had to be adopted, have been frequent since the Roosevelt administration began. Nothing comparable ever occurred during the Hoover, Coolidge or Hard- ing administrations, although each of the last three Presidents kept the ‘White House telegraph office busy. ‘The series of rush periods began within an hour after President Roose- velt’s inaugural address. There were those who desired to congratulate him on his somewhat | startling speech. Before the messages of felicitation could be cleared by the two companies the bank holiday set the wires to buzzing and the rush was on for days. Again when the President made his’ first radio “fireside chat” he invited those about to lose their homes or farms to wire him, or to wire the Farm Credit Administration or the Home Owners Loan Corp., and the public took him at his word. Similar situations arose when all Braced Back % Unfinished Windsor Specially priced for ome day.... sl'oo 7th and H N | and took their places in the morning Roosevelt gold was called into the Treasury. ] “Next to the bonus bill,” Ayers said, | “the biggest rush of business probably was when the Senate was considering the World Court ratification.” Dowd, however, believes the bank holiday rush was second, for then there were thousands upon thousands who sent telegrams and waited for the | transfer of funds. Ayers explained how the Western | Union meets such a situation “We know that Washington is the most important capital in the world and that its business is extremely important,” he said, “consequently we are organized to handle any overflow that may take place. “So far as physical equipment is concerned, we have never reached our | capacity. Man power has been the | problem. So we have a ‘reserve’ in| Philadelphia, Baltimore, Richmond and Pittsburgh. Men at all these | cities have only to get the call and | transportation is ready. “In the present case, for instance, the rush began at night, after the country learned the Senate had passed | the bill. The White House wires took ! everything they could. Then we turned to our multiplex machines— the ones we use for most of our busi- ness. Next we turned to the simp]ex‘ machines. The multiplex machines can handle four messages in and four out at one time. The simplex takes only one message each way. “At last we turned to Morse; always the ‘old reliable’ that we can’t get along without. “When everything was busy—or at least everything we had people to handle—we immediately planned for their relief. By the time the opera- tore had finished their regular tour of duty, relief was here from Balti- more, Richmond and Philadelphia When they got to the end of their day the Pittsburgh unit was here to carry on. so there was no interruption at all in the service.” “Meanwhile,” Ayers continued, “the messages had to be delivered. Coming in at the rate of from 3,000 to 4,000 per hour, each messenger was given a bigger number of messages to carry. Before the first could reach the White House, a second and third would be under way.” He declined to say how many messengers had to be added, but said the number was “more than 20 per cent” of the normal staff. At Postal, Dowd said, when the automatic machines were at their peak, the “extra board” of operators was called in to handle the overflow by Morse wire. “During the bank holiday,” Dowd said, “we made a record in collect business. But when the President invited those ‘distress’ telegrams he got & lot of 'em collect, too.” But the White House, it was learn- ed, was not out of pocket. Collect mes- sages in answer to the “fireside chat” were referred either to the Home Owners' Loan Corp. or the Farm Credit Administration. These agencies “held the bag.” Before Selling Investigate the Prices We Pay for OLD GOLD AND SILVER Jewelry of every description. bridge~ work, silver No matter how old or dilapidated any of foregoing ar- ticles might be. you will be greatly ;ul’nrlsed at the cash prices paid y us. (Licensed by U. 8. Govt.) SHAH & SHAH 921 F St. N.W: Phone NA 5543—We Will Call CUT HOT WATER COSTS 50% to.75% U.S. TAXINQUIRY SENATE DEFEATS PROBE OF FARLEY Votes 62 to 20 After Long Offered New Accusa- tions. (Continued From First Page.) not complaining at the use against me of steps I have used against my opponents on other occasions. “I am sorry that the vote took what appeared to be party lines. “Farley has apparently been ex- onerated by this vote in the Senate. That'’s the way it will be carried in the newspapers. He will be intro- duced at one or two more banquets— not many. “You say he'll retire to run the next Democratic campaign? Oh, no. We fixed that part. You'll not dare to undertake that. You've covered the grave, but you have dug the corpse very deep. Next time we bury him it will be face down.” The vote today was regarded as a slap at Long, the Democrats standing stoutly in support of the Postmaster General. Their contention was that Long had produced no evidence of wrong doing and nothing to warrant a senatorial investigation. Earlier, Republican members of the Senate Post Office Committee and Senator La Follette had filed a minor- ity report agreeing that Long had submitted no evidence of wrongdoing on Parley’s part, but, nevertheless, they maintained that the investiga- tion should be made. 4 Called for Letters. In her afidavit, Miss Koch said she was calld by A. M. Stewart |to bring in any letters from Far- ley. She added she went to the private files of Harry D. Watts, a vice president, who Mrs. Humphreys had charged threatened to throw business to Stewart competitors through his influence with Farley unless he was given an increased salary to $25,000 a year, and “got two letters” and gave them to Stewart. One letter, she said, was signed, “Jim” and contained a short para- graph reading as follows: “The matter is in abeyance. Con- tract is yours.” Willing te Testify. Louisiana Lieutenant Gov- ernor Being Investigated by Federal Agents. By the Associated Press SHREVEPORT, La., May 14—Lieut. Gov. James A. Noe, close political aide of Senator Huey P. Long, faced today a Federal income tax investigation similar to those already directed at | other Long leaders, one of whom has been sent to the penitentiary. The Government's fresh activity was disclosed yesterday when Federal Judge Ben Dawkins issued an order directing representatives of the Cen- tral Savings Bank & Trust Co. of Monroe to appear at the internal rev- enue agent’s office there Thursday with “books, papers, records, data and memoranda pertaining to the tax lia- bility of James A. Noe and his wife.” As the Government investigated Noe's accounts, one other Long leader was in the Federal Penitentiary at At- lanta and three others faced income tax violation charges. They were State Representative Joseph Fisher of Jeferson Parish, convicted last month and sentenced to 18 months in prison. Abe Shushan, president of the Or- leans Levee Board, whose trial has been set for June 17. State Senator Jules Fisher of Jef- ferson Parish, uncle of Joseph Fisher. Seymour Weiss, head of one of New Orleans’ largest hotels and treasurer of Long's political organization. Trial dates for Jules Fisher and ‘Weiss have not been set. The court action to obtain records pertaining to Noe's financial transac- tions was taken by District Attorney | Philip H. Mecom on behalf of Ray- mond J. Roderick, special Internal Revenue Bureau agent. Speech on Peace Planned. Mary Ida Winder, associate secre- tary of the National Council for Pre- vention of War, will speak on “Arma- ments and Security” at the Capital City Forum, 709 G street, Friday at 8:15 pm. Admission is free, and dis- cussion will follow the lecture. Since 1922, Miss Winder has been associ- ated with the organized peace move- ment both here and abroad. Long, while Mrs. Humphreys looked on from the Senate gallery, read another statement from her saying she wished to “reiterate” all she had sald in her affidavit regarding Farley's telephone conversations with Watts | and expressed a willingness to testify | under oath. In further support of his charges, hnng produced a lengthy mimeo- graphed document, copies of which he placed on all Senator’s desks, regard- ing the Public Works Administration’s investigation of the New York court house contract. He has charged this was changed at the instance of Farley to save the Stewart firm $523,000. of which the Government got only | $140,000. Correspondence between Louis Glavis, director of P. W. A. investiga- tions, and the Treasury did not men- tion Farley. However, one letter, dated July 27, 1934, from Wharton Green, special agent in cha?ge at New York, to Glavis, said: “We may not be able to secure | proof there were irregularities in con- nection with the award of contracts or subcontracts on either the court house of post office annex, but the circumstances that those connected with same appear greatly concerned is indicative of something.” Miss Koch said she made her affi- davit today in the office of Senator Long of her own free will. | Makes Charges. | “I was an employe of the firm of James Stewart & Co., Inc.,” she said, “from May 27, 1918, until November 29, 1934, in the capacity as file clerk. While there I knew Mrs. Helen Hum- | phreys, who was a confidential attache |and telephone operator in the office |of the concern. Along about June or July, 1934, it was reported that Fed- eral investigators were coming to look into the files of James Stewart & Co. | “There was great excitement in the |office. I was called by Mr. A. M. | Stewart, instructed to bring him any letters in the files from Mr. Jim Farley. 1 went into the private files of Mr. Watts and got two letters from | Mr. Farley and carried them to Mr. PANAMAS CLEANED—BLEACHED BLOCKED BACHRACH 733 11th St. N.W. * - '100% WASHINGTON OWNED AND OPERATED :" frofiearape. Mo e No Creditlnvestigation! Drive in on your old tires, Drive away on sturdy fresh U. S. Royals and forget tire troubles for a long time. No cash down Easy and month’s to pay the bill the Balance Way. ONLY U. S. TIRES are built of TRIPLE-TEMPERED BUY ON BAILEY’ 14th & P Sts. N. W. 14th & Col. Rd. N. W. 2250 Sherman Ave. N. W. 7th & Penna. Ave. S. E. 9th & H Sts N. E. s BUDCET BASIS A. M. Stewart and handed them_to him in the presence of his secretdry, Mr. Robert Kob, and Mr. M. E. Kalette, ‘One was s letter from Mr. Farley to Watts relative to some Mother's day stamps. Mr. Watts had written Mr. Farley asking for a special sheet of the Mother’s day stamps, and Mr. Farley had written Mr. Watts back that the issue was in great demand, and that he would send him some of the stamps if he could get them. Gets “Jim” Letter. “The other letter from Mr. Farley was signed ‘Jim’ and contained a short paragraph reading as follows: “‘The matter is in abeyance. Con- tract is yours.’ “Deponent knows that this letter pertains to the Vesey street post office. “Along about this time Maj. Stevens, the Washington representatfve of | James Stewart & Co, was in the office in connection with the Federal | investigators, and was very busy run- | ning from one part of the office to another to tell them what this file or the other file might contain and | whether it should be supplied or not. | “In due course the company began | to remove from its files certain papers, particularly including the file per-| taining to the granite work on the | court house building, and in course of such work began as though it was installing a new filing system, and over a period of several months, in which said James Stewart & Co. was removing files from the cabinets and at the same time installing a new system. | “Memeory Too Good. | “Finally, on November 29, 1934, de- ponent was discharged, and the only statement ever given to her was by her successor, who told her that ‘your memory is too good.” “Deponent started in with the sald | company, working for $20 per week, | |and rose to a salary of $190 per | month, which, after the general of- | fices had taken two cuts in salary, was reduced to $150 per month “No complaint was ever made against her services until the trouble came up over the Federal investiga- tion, and when that arose one of the vice presidents, Mr. Lohmann, who | handled none of the Government work, but who was a vice president of | | the company, protested that deponent had never failed to be able to secure anything from the fiies that was needed, but as soon as the court house | work had been completed. and the ! work ot removing certain papers from | the files, pertaining to the same, and | | to other work, deponent was dis- | missed. “Deponent can state that Helen Humphreys was so close in the con- { fidence of the Stewarts that she was mvited to their most intimate affairs, including their funerals and their weddings, and drew a salary, she | thinks, of about $63 a week. “Deponent would be pleased to ap- | pear before any committee to give this | testimony under oath.” 1 P I = § T Yee Tee | ROOF PAINT Qt. 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