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WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) Fair and cooler tonight; tomorrow fair, Sunday probably showers: gentle to mod- erate northwest and north winds. Temperatures—Highest, 75, at 5 p.m. yesterday; lowest, 63, at 5:30 a.m. today. Full report on page A-11. Ch Closing N. Y. Markets Pages 17, 18, 19 Entered as second class matter post office, Washington, D. C. No. 33,267. 30,000 KILLED IN QUAKE LEVELING INDIAN CITIES; AID RUSHED TO QUETTA Thre Tervifc Shocks Spresd 1) RUEY RITE Do Noviweas, — (AGESTROERD COVPAN HARNE 44 ROYAL AIR FORCE MEN DIE; COMMUNICATIONS WRECKED _ : | Six New Connections to Be Set Up to Aid Flow [ of Traffic. People of Towns Run Out of Doors, Many Remaining All Night to Pray to Gods. Sharply warning the Capital Transit | Co. its success and very life de- | pend upon its management, Dmflres-i sive action and “a will to serve,” the By the Associated Press. Public Utilities Commission today or- | KARACHI, India, May 31.—An estimate that 20.000 persons dered a general rerouting of street were Kkilled early today in the Province of Quetta alone by an earth- cars directly affecting 20 lines and | quake which jarred Northwest India was contained tonight in a creating a half dozen new sectional | wireless message from the Quetta wireless station. The wtal‘vnnnecnons. for the entire district previously had been placed at 30.000 ,l" its IOHI{ “m"Pd statement, the | The message was one ot the first complete estimates to reach commission seized the opportunity to | WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION g WASHINGTON, D. C, L 4 N FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1935—FIFTY¥-SIX Star PAGES. ¥HF v AM [ GLAD To SEE You BACK AGAIN here since the earth shock wrecked all land communication lines discuss mass transportation generally, throughout the district. Quetta reported that the number of injured was thus far estimated only as “in the hundreds.” " Earlier reports had told of the Royal Air Force garrison being badly hit with the death of 44 men. This last message said that most of the other garrisons of soldiers had escaped the most serious damage and that various troops had been or'dergd into service digging through the debris of the city and extricating the injured. The earthquake hit around 3 am.< with three violent shocks. The soldiers at Quetta were bearing the brunt of the rescue work, for the majority of the police force was killed. The main military barracks escaped the worst damage, but the rear quar- ters, some distance away, were leveled. Hundreds Trapped in Debris. ‘Hundreds of victims were trapped in the congested districts of the city when they ran into the streets at the first shock. Buildings, collapsing, buried them in debris. Although the offices of the governor general and the staff college and mili- INLUER KIDNAPING Alleged Ringleader Yields to Federal Agents in OWALLEY CAUGHT stating as its policy: | Adoption of at least a modified skip- stop plan, which will eliminate many “unnecessary” street car stops. Broad extension of the use of bus | | operations, as supplements to rail| | service, but continuation of street car | |service at least through congested | areas. | Development of a new artery par-| alleling Connecticut avenue to relieve congestion on that highway, and| other highway improvements. i Parking Rule Enforcement. Rigid enforcement of parking re- strictions on major highways where | street cars are located, as essential | to free movement of mass transporta- tion equipment. | | Purchase of additional faster, more comfortable, quieter. modern street | cars, to make possible abandonment | of “antiquated, underpowered, uD- . (Copyricht 1935 by the Associated Press ) comfortable and slow-moving cars.” TACOMA, Wash., May Twenty such new cars have been or- | $25,000 reward may be offered within Weyerhaeuser Family May Offer It if Ransom Is Uncollected. 0F SSOHNTED i 1 31.—A| Cliff Berryman 111, Tradition Goes On As Son Substitutes For the first time since Clifford K. Berryman joined the staff of The Star, January 28, 1907, with the exception of a brief period in 1928, when he was taking a vacae tioh in the Western National Parks, where he could not, as on other occasions of absence, make his daily drawings, The Star to- day goes to press without a car- toon by Mr. Berryman, who is ill. Pending his restoration to health the cartoons will be drawn by his son, James T. Berfyman, HERRIOT CABINET RUMORED N PARIS |Bouisson Unable to Take‘ Control After Flandin | Is Defeated. “ i i | (Copyright. 1935 by the Associated Press ) PARIS, May 31.—With Premier Pierre-Etienne Flandin forced vut by | The only evening paper in Washington with the Associated Press News and Wirephoto Services. Yesterday’s Circulation, 115,716 Some Returns Not Yet Received (#) Means Associated Press. TWO CENTS. ROOSEVELT SEES BLOW AT U.5.RULE < HOLDS STATES GAIN CONTROL OF NATION | BYDECREE ONN.R. A. ’Fcars A. A. A. and Securities ' Board Are Killed by Decision. ' Alcohol Unit Seen Doomed. 'FINDING ‘ AKES NATION “BACK | TO HORSE AND BUGGY,” HE SAYS | President Uncertain on Whether Issue Points to Constitutional Amendment to Increase Congress’ Power. By the Associated Press. President Roosevelt today accepted the Supreme Court N. R. A. | decision as focussing the issue whether the Federal Government or | the 48 States shall have control over national social and economic conditions. | It raised the question whether the Agricultural Adjustment | Administration and the Securities Commission were legal, he said, and meant the end of the Federal Alcohol Control Administration as now constituted. Asked if the issue did not point directly to a constitutional amendment to empower Congress to deal with national commercial conditions, he said not necessarily. He did not elaborate, but apparently was exploring possibilities of other laws to reach New Deal objectives, laws that would be upheld by the highest court. As to the A. A. A, he said the question now before the country was whether the Federal Government has any valid power to reg- ulate crop production. The issue was up to the people, he added. indicating an expec- tation that it would be focused determinedly in the years imme- diately ahead. “Back to Horse and Buggy Stage.” He told his crowded press conference the court’s interpretation of the interstate commerce clause of the Constitution took the Nation back to “the horse and buggy stage.” The issue drawn. he said, was that of taking away from the Federal Government control over national economic and social conditions. Evidently administration thought on the subject had not matured com- pletely, as it considered what steps to take immediately to meet the prob- lems raised by N R. A.’s passing. With Mrs. Roosevelt and his secretaries nearby, the President spoke whose work appears today. an overwhelming parlismentary vote | calmly and deliberately as he outlined the situation in part to the note-taking Thus the sequence of a “Ber- dered, and will be in service soon. |a few days if kidnapers fail to ex- | of lack of confidence and with the | audience. tary headquarters escaped serious | Speedy completion of a broad pro- | change 9-year-old George Weyer- | Kansas City. damege, most of the other sections of | i i GBS v s Eman o T ol i hammer | focie Hea 000] raman T e uhich premier-designate, Fernand Bouisson, | He had a copy of the decision in his hand and referred to it occasionally, e I e street car tracks, recently ordered by | trustworthy source reported here | | front page of The Star, which | | apparently unable to form a cebinet,| Outlining the “issue,” Mr. Roosevelt said in using the word he wanted 1t Among those reported killed were | BY REX COLLIER. { the commission. today. Bavibern mainthined| atirirg neie || | potial Sttt s e ot | emphmsmENthat heididl not comaider I & “Dartixri tee He said it would have to be settled by a vote of the people—not necessarily Meredith Jones of the political de- | partment and his wife and her ! mother, Mrs. Bradford: an irrigation engineer named Francis and also his wife. The aviators reported killed in- cluded Flying Officer Charles Paylor. Previous reports that railways suf- fered heavy damage later were believed to have been incorrect, as it was said, relief supplies and workers were able to penetrate the quake-hit sections ‘The punjab government was active in recruiting physicians and nurses. A brief message by wireless, the only means of communication, said that relief work had been started at Quetta | with hospitals and camps set up on a | race course and the grounds of the residency. Supplies were said to be sufficient for the present. | Sir Norman Carter, the agent of | the Governor General, sent through one short message to Simla, confirming the intensity of the earthquake and made an urgent request that physi- cians and nurses be rushed Four out of five of the population between Quetta and Kalat. 100 miles to the south, were reported to have been killed. Every While one group of agents of the | Federal Bureau of Investigation was centering its attention today on the latest big-time kidnaping at Tacoma, | Wash., J. Edgar Hoover, director of the bureau, disclosed that another squad has captured Walter Holland, alias “Irish” O'Malley, alleged ring- leader in the kidnaping two years ago of August Luer, aged Alton, Ill, bank president. O'Malley, declared by Hoover to have been one of two men who dragged the 77-year-old banker from his home on the night of July 10, 1933, and held for a week in a cave in a vain effort to collect $100,000 ransom, has been in secret custody of the bureau at Kansas City, Mo., since Monday. Although armed with a .38 caliber automatic pistol, O'Malley made no effort to use it when special agents | seized him as he was about to enter his apartment in the Missouri city. Identified in Bank Holdup. Hoover said that O'Malley also has been identified as a member of g building in the | band of robbers who simultaneously | l Shortly after the order was made | public the Capital Transit Co. filed a {the Chevy Chase car line from Cal- | vert street to Chevy Chase circle and Chevy Chase Lake. Three types of | bus service were suggested to replace | the line. The commission frowned on pro- | posals for development of a subway system, as suggesied by People's and the possibilities of other expedi- | ents make this a matter for future | consideration. | The rerouting was anticipated and made possible by a series of 27 or- ders already issued for changes in | tracks and their connections, on some |\ g P Weyerhaeuser, jr., still were | of which work is now proceeding. The new routes will become effective as | the various track projects are com- | pleted. Present Lines Preserved. | For the most part present lines of travel were preserved. the changes consisting of a different hook-up be- tween lines running to the downtown area, | | robbed two national banks in Oke- (Continued on Page 2, Column 8.) will be ‘This angle was injected into the case es the Federal agents prepared | petition asking permission to abandon | to take over under the Lindbergh law, which provides that after seven days a kidnap victim is presumed to have been slain or taken across a State line. The curly-haired scion of the wealthy timber eand lumber family was abducted last Friday noon. Although prepared and ready for 8 | the child stealers, the demanded ran- | Counsel William A. Roberts, declaring | ¢om has not been claimed. The offer | that the cost, difficulty of financing of a reward, it was believed, might | hasten George’s delivery through the old adage of “money talks,” in buying information. It was indicated its pur- pose would be first to gain release of | the boy. The child's young parents, Mr. and in seclusion. U. S. Agents at Work. It was not known whether a reward | if one is posted, will be announced until after the Federal agents have been able to effect recovery of the lad through their own technique. The reward angle immediately caused watchers to wonder if a conference over such a move was the reason lights blazed behind drawn shades in the big | the Forest Service of the Agriculture | Iy twenty-eight and a half years, with the single lapse noted, will continue until “Cliff” returns to duty. $136.298,000 ASKED FOR FOREST WORK | 1 Trees to Protect ‘Wind- | swept Areas. By the Associaied Press A plan to spend $156.298.000 of work-relief money in the Nation's forests, and on wind-swept plains | where shelter belts of trees are con- | templated, was put forward today by {Program Includes Belts of | Edousrd Herriot probably would be called upon again 10 serve as p.emier. Herriot, who slready has held the premiership three uines, would be called upon to face the financial | emergency whicn resulted ia the | Chamber of Deputies voting sgainst | Flandin, 353 to 202. early this morn- ! ing. Herriot, himself, was overthrown after four davs as premier in 1926 | when the collapse of the franc caused Raymond Poincare to be called to the rescue | (Herriot first bLecame premier in| 1924 He servad in that office again | in 1926 and in 1932, being overtarown | in the latter year because of nis stand that the French war debt should be | paid to the Unitsd States.) | Bouisson, 60-year-old President of the Chamber of Deputies, was asked by President Leorun to form a gov- ernment succeeding that of Flandin. Coalition Demands. Bovisson undertoo< the task against his own wishes, but made such de- mand: for coaliion suppo:t that £riends said he cxpected to fall While the governmen. crisis ruled. | gold flowed out from: the Bank of this Summer or Fall.or Winter, but probably in the next four or five years. Describing the court ruling as perhaps the most important in the his- tory of the Nation, Mr. Roosevelt said it was up to the people to decide now whether there shall be 48 different State attempts to regulate the econonfic and social life of the Nation, or whether this shall be a function of the Fed- eral Government. Gravity was in his voice as he sat behind his desk for more than an hour and a half in conference with representatives of the press that crowded into the warm room. The implication of Monday's epochal decision. he said, as he flicked a cig- arette ash and scanned faces befcre him, removed any Federal jurisdiction over such major human activities as farming, manufacturing, mining and construction. That he had been in serious reflection over the historic signifi- cance of this week's developments was manifest. In his view the einanimous Supreme Court interpretation of interstate com- merce takes the Nation back to 1789, when the interstate commerce clause was put into the Censtitution. Hopes Spirit of Codes Will Be Maintained. Voicing the hope that the spirit of the voided codes for fair practices would be maintained on a voluntary basis, the President intimaied he was ready to act next week in an attempt to counter results flowing from the | court ruling. The nature of his plans was withheld. As to “pending cases.” which were undefined, he said there would be an | announcement today or tomorrow. Presumbaly this referred to cases on the N. R. A. dockets at the time it was outlawed There will be other announcements along the same line over the week end and early next week. The President referred at the outset of the discussion to a batch of telegrams and letters lying on his desk, most of which, he said, asked that mah, Okla. on December 22 last,| Some Chevy Chase cars France in a ceas | e v s Vs | escaping with more than $17.000 in | routed to Brookland, Catholic Uni-|sun room and elsewhere throughout | Department. BaRlE hie It bt fig;;’;’bwm;;n R. A. be restored in some form or other. ) ) | versity and to the new loop at Sixth | the Weyerhaeuser house until 2:30 am. | Asserting that the projects involved [ % o | He said he did not believe the people fully appreciated the vast implica- | cash and bonds. STRIKERS INJURED | IN RIOTS IN OHIO and C streets as a result of the new order. The first two of these are| made possible by orders for a new | O’'Malley was indicted on a charge | of complicity in the Luer kidnaping | on August 10, 1933. He had been Usually, since little George failed to come home from school for lunch a week ago today, the lights have been could be started without delay, and that they would draw workmen par- ticularly from relief rolls in the cities, francs ($858,000,000) in gold since the rush of withdrawals starte¢ Maich 29. An official statement shows that during the week ending May 24 3,166.- tions of the Supreme Court decision, or such suggestions for renewal would not be made. Attorney General Cummings and Solicitor General Reed were asked by him to receive and go over the vast pile of appeals and suggestions. the object of a Nation-wide search |connection in tracks from Adams | turned out by 1 o'clock, except in the | officials submitted the program to the | 400000 franes i T . | since the arrest and conviction of |Mill road into Columbia road at|sick room of his paralyzed grand-| Applications Division of the work- gng - e & w:‘:':m‘;;;'l'fi':‘:‘l:} 2 R Violent Fighti ine Colambas five men and a woman for the ab- | Eighteenth street. mother, Mrs, George Walker. .f'“_;hf 0"‘8“;‘1-‘"0“. 4 S I mounced in the chamber. 'the: losses Speaks With Considerable Feeling. iolen ighting in duction. Percy “Dice Box Kid” Fitz- _ En route to Brookland, Chevy Chase | Another development was the revela- | e work proposed woul one pave exceeded 1,000,000.000 N : s | gerald, Randall Norvell and Lillian | (Continued on Page 4, Column 1. | tion that Ed Bentz, 40, former Tacoma | in 47 States, Alaska, Puerto Rico and | gajy, Dt francs spe-kh‘dnré lllllmcnt‘;::;fi‘ha at times spoke with considerable. feeling, disavowed Marks Day—Man Killed in Cincinnati. By the Associated Press. | COLUMBUS, Ohio. Mayv 31.—Vio- | fent fighting between strikers and policemen at Columbus marked Ohio’s turbulent labor situation today. Dozens of strikers and four officers were in- | jured, and 22 strike sympathizers were | Chessen are serving life terms for the crime, Mike Musiala was sentenced to 20 years, and Charles Chessen and Christ N. Gitcho were given five years each. According to Hoover, O'Malley was with Fitzgerald and Grace Chase, the latter still a fugitive, when Luer was grabbed as he sat beside the radio in his home. Telephone Wires Cut. Fitzgerald, O'Malley and the Chase | |TWO BOYS REPORTED 'KIDNAPED IN CANADA [Police Send Out General Alarms After Car Picks Up Pair boy and onetime associate of George (Machine Gun) Kelly and of Albert Bates, may be the No. 1 suspect in the case. This fact was disclosed when a Government agent remarked, “We would like to talk to Bentz.” Gang Coalition Seen. Even earlier it was known author- ities here have theorized over the possible connection of the 40-year-old Bentz with the disappearance of the curly-haired, 9-year-old scion of the land was the single State not included, but it was explained that activities would be carried on there with regular Forest Service funds. | A statement accompanying the ap- | plication said the program primarily concerned national forests and other lands under the jurisdiction of the Forest Service. Shelter belt planting was one of the activities proposed, but the extent of expenditures planned in this direction the District of Columbia. Rhode Is- | | The high point of withdrawals, as | | stated by former minister of finance, | | Louis Germain-Martin, was 1.500.000.- 1000 on Tuesday alone but since then, it was stated, withdrawals have been “undiminished,” and in some quarters it was sald they have been increased. Gold Taken Away. | Gold buyers lined up at the bank's counters by the score and carried |away bars of the metal, sometimes In some ways, he thought the decision was the best thing that has hap- pened because it clarifies “the issue.” With the Federal Government viewed by him now as unable to exercise control over the economic and social conditions of the people, the President said this was the only Nation in the world without such authority. In several ways, he emphasized, he feels the issue is the biggest question ever before the country in a time of peace. Reading from the decision, the President said the issue was brought about by the ruling of the court that the Federal Government has no power to regu- late goods not actually in transit between States. As to the court's assertion against the delegation of power by Congress to the President, declaring this unconstitutional in N. R. A, Mr. Roosevelt arrested. | i At Cincinnati the recent strike in | Woman had entered the house under in Ontario. wealthy lumber ‘and logging dynasty. | was not disclosed. During the drought wrapped in newspapers. believed that problem could be met. e t : e X The difficulties Bouisson encounter- | . . a 4 aect) the Norwood Chevrolet-Fisher body | Pretext r:t k:nquinm; e way to & Some otln ";:nz believe that Bents, | oo rndon Fage 13, Column 4) | ed removed all hope. for construction | His worry was clearly -over the “interstate Commerce” sections of the plant was echoed with the fatal shoot- ] ouse. vised by Mrs. last of the es gang, may fan it overmiatt | decision, to the effect that the goods must directly affect interstate commerce ing of William Williams, 30, by Police | Luer that the neighbor lived down| FISHERVILLE, Ontario, May 31 |teamed with the remnants of the o The e]:’re‘;‘n“efi%es‘;;:;::} Thsisted he | t© Pe subject to Federal jurisdiction. Sergt. Charles Fritz. Patrolman Oak- | the street. the woman asked permis- (#).—Two children of W. C. Tudhope, Karpis mob to stage the Weyer- THREE REBELS KILLED | must have full powers and that Her- Origin and Purpose of Interstate Clause. ley Wilson said the shooting occurred | sion m: telephone. Instead of phon- | mapager of the Union Gas Co., were | haeuser $200,000 ransom plot. Bentz i e ot i e et when Williams. armed with a butcher | l;‘;g‘ su: ::'é 'Rsl:;re:m:h:;:o Jen 1 rgporud kidnaped today near this ‘,sh_-v'g!merf‘r!cqm-n‘ ThCVKerflA The Socialists, on who|;| BOHISSO“‘ When the interstate commerce clause was inserted in the Constitution knife, attempted to resist arrest after | over- | village, six miles south of Cayuga| (Continued on Page 13, Column 1) ' Meyican Officials Report Outbreak | depended for Qufiport. refused to par- | by the framers. the debate showed one of the impelling reasons was to | in Haldimand County. The two chil- prevent States from erecting tariff barriers against each other. He pointed lice attempted to break up a strike | Powered Luer. hauling him backward S g :):gumen[_ P | “(Continued on Page 4, Column 5. |dren, both boys, are 5 and 9 years | = in Estanito. }ticipate in a coalition government and | o Tc o Tias no problem then of unemployment and no social questions A peaceful atmasphere prevailed, old. ‘F|VE CH“DREN DIE [ declared they would mot support the | 9ut, there Was 1o brobl | MEXICO, D. F., May 31 (#) —Three | new cabinet if former Premier Andre % however, in the strike of hundreds of | steel workers at Canton. following re- peated outbreaks of violence on sev- SOVIET SHIP BURNS; Police sent out general alarms when it was reported that a car had stop- ped beside the boys as they were WHEN HOME BURNS | rebels were killed in a (wo-hour bat- tle with Federal forces in Estanito, Guanajuato. the war department an- Tardieu were included. | Herriot’s radical Socialists ofler?di | objections to the requirements Bouis- In the years that have passed since, he said, the hope had been held out that interstate commerce clause could be interpreted in the light of new things, and that it could be recognized by legislation that a harmful practice eral previous days. City officials there on their way to Rainham Schocl, near | in one part of the country could be prevented by the Federal Government, waace pians to-conduct a vote of em- | 21 LIVES ARE LOST | Fisnervit, pickea them up and spe D Y. etreated atter the | lame He e L helr aytitude | 00 the theory it is Working harm on another section. = | This has been done on the theory that the Federal Government through ployes on a proposal to end the strikes. The threat of a new strike hung over Toledo. Union electrical workers there will quit work at midnight to- night, J. E. O'Connor, Federal medi- ator said he was informed, unless mediation efforts are successful. The workers are asking a 20 per cent wage increase. | The Regional Labor Board at Cleveland took the lead today in an| Flames Engulf Vessel With Cargo of Highly-Inflammable 0il in Caspian. BY the Associated Press. BAKU, U. 8. 8. R. May 31.—The Russian steamer Sovietsky Azerbaijan away. | How many persons were supposed to be in the car was not immediately | reported. . HERBERT PRATT RETIRES FROM SOCONY-VACUUM Father, Mother and One Son Escape Morning Blaze at Toronto. By the Associated Press. TORONTO, May 31.—Five of the | six children of Mr. and Mrs. Harry | Scott were killed early today when fire destroyed their frame residence fighting, leaving their three dead and a number of wounded and prisoners. Readers’ Guide | Amusements . | if Herriot was brought into line. | Menwhile, Herriot, who said yes- terday he would not enter a new | cabinet if Flandin were overthrown, was reported to be anxious to replace Bouisson as president of the chamber. The Flandin cabinet was overthrown by a 353-t0-202 vote of non-confidence early this morning after the former premier made a futile personal appeal | for approval of his program to defend the interstate commerce clause has control over affairs indirectly affecting interstate commerce. Returning power over the economic and social conditions of the people to the 48 different States, as it is seen by him, will mean “sectionalism.” Reading from the messages, the President said he had selected those from business men—asking him to help. He expressed hope the voluntary efforts to maintain the fair proctice agreements of the codes would succeed, but believed the thought somewhat naive. Suggestions Impossible. 4 John A. Brown Elected President cs ou east e85, attempt to settle mlel strlkeko( ll;r was reported today ‘o have burned B slden at Alderwood. a suburb, The chil-| Comi ; | the franc through measures promulgat- ‘The messages read were from all sections and contained all manner of proximately 2.000 clay workers in the Caspian Sea the night of of 0il Company, Succeeding dren ranged in age from 15 months| Cross-word Puzzle C-7 |ed by decree. [nmeane o o Y o1 he oondnued. wers Rle:toc LR out under the court decision. Tuscarawas and Stark Counties. May 27 with a loss of 27 lives. Roose' Settlement of a strike at the glai&;- Noss ot ithojitragady was beought Charles E. Arnott. "01!:5 y:/::?l'e family was ssleep when | Editorials huffii‘m“n:&p:;:e:”MI%:o:&; Mr. velt talked sharply about the ruling that extraordinary cone man Co. in Cleveland was effected. | py the 5. S Soviet, which rescued two | By the Associated Press. the flames, starting from an unknown | Lost and Found discount rate of the Bank of France | ditions calling for extraordinary action did not enlarge constitutional power, union labor leaders said today, when| ;¢ the vessel's crew and picked up| NEW YORK. Ma: Tt He referred to the da; - y 31.—Herbert L. |source, swept up into the house. Paul Mallon. .. . Col 4. e refe; e war days of 1917 and 1918. Much of the legislation ?:ewmm:‘; granted a 10 per cent| yyo bodies. Lack of a radio prevented | Pratt, s veteran executive of Stand- | The father leaped from the second- Radio (Continued on Page 2, Column 4. | ;10 0ieq in that emergency exceeded the Constitution more than any enacted ge increase. it from making an earlier report. ard Oil units and former associate |story window to the ground and the| ™ 0 - ""'°‘" — in 1933, he said, but that emergency legislation was never brought before y ———.—— t'r::: engineer of %dmrhqul?. one |of John D. Rockefeller, today an- [mother threw an infant to h;r She| Serial Story.. Cavalcade Hurt, Out for Weeks. the clo’x‘x.rt. e e e e Swindling Suspect Arraigned. |O°f the survivors, an ‘explosion | nounced his retirement as chairman ped into arms| Short Story.. —— vle'lmmt g g Cap . Legisiators in general NEW YORK, May 31 (#)—Mrs. occurred at 2:15 am. on board the |of the board of the Socony- NEW YORK, May 31 (#).—8amuel | ofl-laden vessel and that he had bare- | Co., Ine. ) Soctety oo B-2-3-4 Sloane’s Cavelcade, With sentiment there still confused, various ways of meeting the it~ Rosen, 40, sought by Pittsburgh au- | ly tfine to shut off his engines before | With his withdrawal, Pratt termin- | the family. Sports ...D-1-2-3-4 | which stumbled gesterday at the start |uation with at least temporary legislation were being considered. Friends of in Jefferson Market Court. The hears ter into the of New York, now a part of Socony- las, the only child to be rescued, is .A-3 of the Suburban Handicap at Bel- thorities on a swindling charge, was | leaping into the sea. ated & 40-year connection with| The children who perished were: This Changing World. . arraigned today on a fugitive warragt | “The fire seemed to engulf the ghip | Standard Oil enterprises, ost of it | Victor, 19; Vera, 12, y, 8; Dor-| vyita] Statistics. mont Park won gy Head Play, %ill be; ChairmangConnery, a member of the House Labor Committee, planned A he said jm- | spent with the old Stand Oil Co. |othy, 4, and Sadie, 15 mohths. Doug<| o ] A-9 out of training € two or three weeks to introduce lay a revision of the measare rgyde in the light of the because of superficial cuts suffcred in the Black-Connery compulsory 30-hour-week bill were growing more active. (Continued on Page §, Column 3.)