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ANOTHER MEXICAN STRIKE THREATENS Fifth Governor in Trouble, Workers Demanding His Ouster. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, July 27.—A threat- ened nation-wide general strike against Augustin Olachea, governor of the northern territory of Baja Cali- fornia, today gave President Lazaro Cardenas new cause for anxiety. The National Federation of Work- ers and Peasants threatened to strike early next month unless Cardenas re- moved Olachea. The labor organiza- tion accused him of using terroristic methods. Developments in the four other trouble states today were: Tamaulipas—Virtual siege of sev- eral cities, including the capital, Ciudad Victoria, was lifted and thou- sands of rebellious peasants started home, confident Cardenas would oust Gov. Rafael Villareal. Reports from Tampico said he would resign soon, having been unable to answer charges of “oppression.” ‘Tabasco—Tomas Garrido Canabal, his 12-year state dictatorship ended | by Cardenas’ intervention to remove “Garrido’s governor,” Manuel Lastra, said he would not flee into exile. He said he would stay in Tabasco and “show that I can take it.” Queretaro—A permanent session of the Federal Congress prepared to meet | ‘Tuesday to consider impeaching Gov. Saturnino Osornio, charged with homicide, Chihuahua—Gov. Rodrigo Quevedo, the other governor in trouble, was confronted with agrarians who pro- tested to headquarters of the National Revolutionary (government) party against his administration, alleging favoritism and misgovernment. STATE VOTES TOMORROW. Gen. Calles’ Son Seeks Governorship of Nuevo Leon. LAREDO, Tex., July 27 (#) —Citi- eens of Nuevo Leon, the Mexican state across the Rio Grande from Laredo, will elect a governor tomor- Tow. ‘The candidates are Plutarco Elias Calles, jr, son of the general and former President, and Gen. Fortunato Zuazua, independent. Calles is the nominee of the National Revolution- ary party, of which Portes Gil is now president. POPE HEADS U. S. GROUP TO RED CROSS PARLEY Admiral Grayson Unable to At- tend Session in Rio de Janeiro in September. Pressure of business here will pre- vent Admiral Cary T. Grayson, na- tional chairman of the American Red Cross, from attending the Pan-Ameri- can Red Cross Conference in Rio de Janeiro September 15 to 26, he an- nounced yesterday. The American delegation to the conference will be headed by Gustavus D. Pope of De- troit, a member of the Red Cross Cen- tral Committee. Other Americans in the delegation are Col. Ernest P. Bicknell, Thomas W. Gosling and Miss Clara D. Noyes, all of Washington. Admiral Grayson has invited a number of other promi- nent Americans to accept credentials to the conference and it is expected that a large delegation will represent the American Red Cross. | Nineteen nations have been invited | to send delegates. They are Argen- tina, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Crime (Continued From First Page.) school more than a year ago to a/ police officer of the Washington force—Lieut. H. G. Callahan, former | head of the local police training school. The experiment convinced Hoover of the feasibility and desira- bility of a central school tending to serve as a clearing house on crime detection and criminal apprehension. Hoover says he expects the school to be mutually beneficial to police and to agents of the bureau. Both will have an opportunity to learn of the prob- lems of the other, and this should result in better understanding and more effective co-ordination of acticn. Course Includes Psychiatry. The students will be taught every- | thing from psychiatry to road- | blocking, from decoding of crypto- grams to developing latent finger- prints, from analyzing blood and other stains to restoring identifica- tion marks filed from guns. Dr. White will lecture to them cn “Abnormal Psychology” and “Psychi- atry.” Dr. Souder, who identified Bruno Hauptmann’s writing in the Lind- bergh ransom notes and who is an authority on identification of guns and bullets, will describe how pistols and rifles leave their “fingerprints” on bullets. Prof. Moley will lecture on “Prose- cution Administration.” He is pro- fessor of law at Columbia University. Father Walsh will speak on “Soctal Problems and Social Changes and Their Relation to Law Enforcement Problems.” Medalie will advise the students on problems of the police officer as they relate to the bar. Maj. Julian S. Hatcher, Army ord- nance officer, will discuss ballistics of police firearms. Will Fire at Quantico. In addition to studying the theory Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Re- public, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, | Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, | Salvador, the United States, Uruguay and Venezuela. UNION ELECTS BELLOWS Federai Credit Unit of Procure- ment Division Meets. ‘The new Federal Credit Union of the Procurement Division of the | ‘Treasury, with an enrollment of more than 200 employes, last week elected officers for the organization, J. A. Bellows being elected president, Maj. Ralph Graves vice president, Morris ‘Weingarten treasurer and Miss B. A. Rogers clerk. The purpose of the organization is to encourage thrift among the em- ployes by permitting the investment of small sums of money and the bor- rowing on the lowest rate of interest consistent with sound investmen TMPORTANT NOTICE. SOUTHEASTERN EXPRESS CO. 1 not discontinue express service in timore, Md.. when Washington. Balti- nnapolis Railroad ceases opera- | lop, Aurust 20, eme schedules between Baltimore and | Eashington and all_points Con- ued operation on Maryland & Pennsyl- nia Rallroad and Chesapeake Steamship nes. Same service—same office location—re- Buced rates. For _information. telephone ~SOUTH- STERN EXPRESS COMPANY, Balti- ‘more_or Washington. e PONSIBLE FOR ANY WILL NOT, BE bts after July unless contracted for py mysell. FREDERICK M. GRAEBNER, &t . . WA LOAD TO CHICAGO OR EN Toute. Insured carrier, five or six rooms. Address Box 402-T. Star offi )* 1 WILL NOT RESPONS] . FOR debts contracted for other than myself. FLORIDA CITRUS FRUITS (NELSON GARNER). 5505 Georgia ave. n.w. _20% BE RESPONSIBLE FOR I WILL NOT debts contracted by any one other than HARLES W. HYDER. 1303 Ran- ANTED_RETURN LOADS FROM NEW ork. Springfleld Tampa ~Wilmington Youngstown and Lexington. Also_local moving, SMITH'S TR AND STOR- £GE €O 1313 You st. .w. Phone North I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ‘?l other, than those contracted by my- self. JAMES C. PRENTISS, 1206 Lamont at._n.w. 29° SPECIAL RETURN-TOAD RATES ON FULL and part loads to all point: les: padded ek Bua ca: ocal moving alko. ig}fa'x'm AT. DEL._ASSOC.. INC.. within 1. eed serv) of ballistics in the class room, the trainees will be taken to Quantico and given actual practice on the range | with all types of guns. They will fire from running automobiles at moving targets, test their marksmanship with tracer bullets at night, simulate raids on gang hideouts and familiarize | themselves with latest types of gas guns and bombs. From such spectacular studies as these the officers will turn to more prosaic things, such as traffic control, police administration, report-writing and crime statistics. ‘The following police departments and organizations have accepted invi- tations to send one representative each to the school: Bergen County, N. J.; Boston, Mass.; Chicago, IlL; Cincinnati, Ohio; Con- necticut State Police; Dallas, Tex.; Delaware State Highway Patrol; De- troit, Mich.; Florida State Police; Miami, Fla.; New York City, N. Y.; Ohio Highway Patrol; Pennsylvania Highway Patrol; Pittsfield, Mass.; Prescott, Ariz.; Rhode Island State Police; San Francisco, Calif.; Tam- aqua, Pa.; West Virginia State Police; Baltimore, Md., and Petersburg, Va. These agencies were among the first to file applications for the course. Police Chiefs Aided. ‘The curriculum was,prepared by the | bureau in collaboration with a special committee of the International Asso- ciation of Chiefs of Police, members of which are: Andrew J. Kavanaugh, Florida, president of the association; Peter J. Siccardi, New Jersey, past president; Edward J. Kelly, Rhode Island, and John L. Sullivan, Massa- chusetts. Other lecturers who have agreed to serve on the faculty, with subjects they will teach, are: Arnold Miles of the staff of the Publican Administration Service, Chi- cago—"“Communications.” Dr. Mark A Day, professor of psy- chology, Yale University—*“Crime Motivation.” Prof. Albert Coates, University of North Carolina—“Criminal Law.” J. G. Laubemheimer, chief of police, Milwaukee, Wis—“Enforcement of Racketeering Statutes.” Col. P. D. Shingleton, superin- *| tendent, West Virginia State police— HARBOR. MD. The elzc!t?ocll of Commissioners of Eagle arbor. | g‘a.. will be held Saturday. Augus! 10, 19 LLIN B )WN_PAVILION. Judges of electiol Joseph W. Ridgley. ?V‘ Waoodson.cl!nien A. Smith; Mrs. Bessie . Anderson. Clerl Done by order of the Commissioners of Fapiiarbor, Md. this oth day of July, 1935, T, Chal E Attes 5 hESEIR B, ANDERSON, Cler 1s_one of the largest CH.AMBE]ISQS - S Rpee Comple :3."" Dels. twelve pariors, seventeen cars, 'ses and ambulances, twenty-five undertakers and assistants. SEND IT TO COLUMBIA — lons of books. patent draw- ‘:‘ é?b:?dl‘fi:? rflf:rn re..n?lrldnm‘ ete. Colors or black and white. Prompt serv- Cgfuggm‘gl;nograph Co. 50 L St. NE. Metropolitan 4861. lertakes funerals as “Ethics,” “Morale and Discipline,” “Public Relations.” John Jay McKelvey, New York at- torney and author—“Evidence.” Dr. George Burgess Magrath, medi- cal examiner, Suffolk County, Mass., and head of it of legal t | medicine, Harvard University—“Legal Medicine,” “Medical Examinations,” “Pathology.” Surgeon Will Lecture. Dr. Ralph C. Willilams, assistant surgeon general of the United States and president of the Association of Capt. C. W. Price, superintendent, Pennsylvania State Highway Patrol— “Highway Patrols.” Dr. J. J. B. Morgan, professor of psychology, Northwestern University— “eInf " Dr. Horace M. Taylor, assistant pro- fessor of economics, Columbia Uni- *— THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JULY 28, 1935—PART ONE. 1, J. Edgar Hoover; 2, Raymond Moley; 3, Dr. William A. White; 4, Mt Medalie; 6, Prof. August Vollmer; 7, Rev. E. A. Walsh; 8, Bruce Smith; 9, Dr. Wilmer A. Souder. . Julian Hatcher; 5, George Z. —Harris-Ewing and Underwood Photos. sylvania State Liquor Control Board— “Licensing and Inspections.” J. P. Allman, commissioner of police, Chicago—"Parades, Assemblies and Emergencies.” Cornelius Cahalane, Port of New York Authority—“Patrol Work in Cities,” “Show Up,” “Practical Psychology in Investigations.” John J. O'Connell, deputy chief inspector in charge of New York Police College, “Personal Problems.” Edward F. Burke, superintendent, Identification Bureau, Rochester, N. Y., Police Department—"Photog- raphy in Law Enforcement Work.” Dr. Jesse Feiring Willlams, pro- fessor of physical education, Columbia University Teachers College—“Physi- cal Training.” Dr. R. W. Wood, professor of physics, Johns Hopkins University— “Physics and Its Application to Law Enforcement.” Sherwood Brockwell, State fire marshal of North Carolina—“The Police and the Fire Department. Andrew J. Kavanaugh, director of public safety, Miami, Fla.—“Police Co-operation.” Vollmer on Program. L. V. Jenkins, police inspector, Portland, Ore—"“Police Co-operation With Public Health and Sanitation Officials.” Prof. August Vollmer, University of California—“Police Executives.” Bruce Smith, Institute of Public Administration and member of Na- tional Crime Commission—“Police Organization and Administration.” ‘Thomas P. Brophy, chief fire marshal, New York City—"Police Problems in Catastrophes, Explosions and Fires.” Donald C. Stone, Public Adminis- tration Bervice—“Police Records.” John A. Greening, police chief, Berkeley, Calif.—“Selection and Rat- ing of Law Enforcement Personnel,” “Records, Reports and Spot Maps.” Leonard V. Harrison, Bureau of So- clal Hygiene—“Police Responsibilities and Functions.” Dr. William A. Healy, president So- | clety of Psychiatry and Neurology— “Police Work and Youthful Offend- ers.” Lawrence J. Benson, president Chi- cago Special Agents and Police Asso- ciation—"Private Law Enforcement | Agencies.” Dr. Herbert J. Stack, Columbia | University—"Safety Education Work.” Dr. Eugene M. K. Geiling, professor of pharmacology, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity—*“Toxicology.” Dr. Miller McClintock, Harvard University; Maxwell Halsey, Harvard University; Burton Marsh, American Automobile Association, and Lieut. Frank Kreml, Evanston (Ill.) Police Department—all on “Tarffic: Organ- ization, Control, Safety and Investi- gation.” D. C. WELFARE GROUPS CARE FOR 1,003 CHILDREN Average Annual Cost Is $194 Per Child, Chest Director Points Out. Child welfare organizations in ‘Washington supported by the Com- munity Chest are taking direct care of 1,003 children, ranging in ages from infancy to 18 years, at an average cost of $194 per child per year, it was an- nounced yesterday by Herbert L. Wil- lett, jr., director of the Chest. These 1,003 children, including those in foster homes, in institutions and under supervision in their own homes, cost the Chest a total of $194,- 086 last year, Willett announced. “Contrast with this,” Willett said, “the cost of $818 a year for maintain- ing a delinquent boy at the National Training School for Boys or $632 a year for maintaining & delinquent girl at the National Training School for Girls. It is also well to remember that the cost of keeping these delin- quent youngsters also comes out of the pockets of Washingtonians in the form of taxes.” PLAYGROUND CHILDREN TO PRESENT PAGEANT Children of four playgrounds will join in presenting the ancient story of “Sleeping Beauty” Wednesday at 6:45 pm. at the Garfield Playgrourd, Second and F streets southeast. The it will receive a modern treatment at the hands of the chil- dren. The “Sleeping Beauty,” instead of being awakened by the traditional kiss of a Prince Charming, will be awakened Wednesday night by the sound of dancing and plays. Children of the Garfield, Virginia Avenue, Po- tomac and Hoover Playgrounds will take part in the program. Park View and Congress Heights Playground girls will also give a show versity—“Investigations in Business.” | Branch Clyde Smith, license director, Penn- SENATE NAZ! QUIZ DECLARED DOOMED King’s Resolution Will Be Pigeon-Holed, Body’s Leaders Forecast. By the Assoclated Press. Senate leaders forecast yesterday that State Department opposition would block action on the demand of Senator King, Democrat, of Utah for a senatorial inquiry into Germany's treatment of Jews and Catholics. King has a resolution pending be-| fore the Senate Forcign Relations | Committee for a thorcugh investiga- | tion of the Nazi goverament's dis- crimination against the two faiths, with a view to action oy the United States if proper ground should be found. Members of the committee expressed the opinion the King resolution would be put in the same p.seon hole with the resolution by Senator Borah, Re- publican, of Idaho for an investiga- tion of the Mexican government's treatment of Catholics. Action Is Forestalled. Action on that was forestalled by objection from Secretary of State Hull. It has never becn voted on by the committee. Borah said if Hull would withdraw his letter, he would get the resolution through the Senate within two days. He said there was little opposition except from the State Department. While the State Department took no official notice yesterday of King's resolution, it was expected to be re- ferred there for recommendations, as a routine procedure. The department did, however, take notice of an anti-Nazi aemonstration Friday night in New York, in which the German flag was torn from the steamship Bremen's mast. Acting Secretary Carr expressed regret at the incident. Informed by Press Reports. “We know nothing aoout the inci- dent in New York,” Carr told news- | paper men yesterday, “other than that which appeared in the news- papers this morning. Apparently there was a demonstration at the pier which was taken in lhand by a large force of police and quelled. “It would seem that two or three individuals got through the lines onto the vessel and mistreated the German flag. Of course, it is unfortunate that two or three persons should have mistreated the flag of any nation with which the United States is at peace.” State Department officials refused to comment on a communique by the officlal German press service saying Germany considered her commercial treaty with the United States had been broken by Mayor La Guardia of New York. The German Embassy here is in full possession of the facts, but it has taken no action at the State Depart- ment. Officials said that unless the matter is brought formally to their -attentien, they will not comment. D. C. RIFLE TEAM MEMBERS CHOSEN Raymond Davis, Jr., Former Cen- tral High Captain, Leads Competitors. Raymond Davis, jr, 20, of 1422 Perry place, former captain of Cen- tral High School’s rifie team, led all competitors at Camp Simms yester- day when tryouts were held to choose & team of civilians to ropresent Wash- ington at the mational rifle and pistol matches at Camp Perry, Ohio, Sep- tember 1 to 19, inclusive. Irving A. Fry of Anacostia, former crack shot of the Coast Guard and winner of the Scott rapid-fire cham- plonship in 1931 and 1932, was elected WORLD ANTHIEW WARIS REVEALED Streicher Leader of Drive, Clergyman Finds in Berlin Visit. (Rev. L. M. Birkhead, American churchman, touring Europe to study especially those countries under an “authority” government, has written the following article on Germany’s anti-Semitic policies for the Associated Press. He went to Germany from Italy and intends to go to. Russia before returning to the United States. His especial interest is tracing the survival of irreligious liberalism in modern- day European countries.) BY REV. L. M. BIRKHEAD. Pastor of All Souls’ Unitarian Church, Kansas City, Mo. BERLIN, July 27.—The Nazi anti- Semites, under the leadership of Julius Streicher, now in the midst of a violent campaign to eliminate Jews from Ger- many's cultural and political life, have started plans to anti-Semitize the world and spread the poison and ha- tred of Jews everywhere. I made this discovery while visiting Nurnberg, where I sought an interview with Streicher. After insisting for several hours that I should see him and question him regarding the anti- Jewish campaign, I was sent to the “secret office” maintained by Streicher and his violently anti-Jewish news- paper, “Der Stuermer,” where foreign- ers with proper anti-Semitic creden- tials are received. T found this office about three blocks from “Der Stuermer’s” quarters. Over the entrance was the legend “fencing school.” I was greeted with the ques- tion: “How did you get in to this se- cret office to which only properly cre- dentialed persons are admitted?” Secret Office a Mystery. Why Streicher should maintain a secret office is a mystery to me, for he had been one of the boldest and most uncompromising leaders. After ex- plaining I wanted to know the why: and wherefores of Streicher's anti- Jewish drive, I was informed this so- called secret office of Streicher's was operated by Paul Wurm and that he was in touch with anti-Semitism throughout the world. His concern is not the German Jewish situation, which is only incidental. This office, I learned, is maintained to promote anti-Jewish hatred in every land. I asked numerous questions about Streicher’s life, character and further plans. Then the files, which hitherto curtains had concealed, were exposed. I was shown books, papers, pamphlets. cartoons and clippings from anti- Jews in all major countries. Anti-Jew Clearing House, In other words, the office was an| anti-Semite clearing house, to which | they have sent fulminations which Streicher has filed handily for his own use and where they also display character of Roosevelt’s Government, an American pamphlet was brought from the files to list the Jews and Jewish-dominated Gentiles connected with the administration. The terror which has been prac- ticed against German Jews should be carried throughout the world, Streich- er insists. Moreo dence indi- cates Streicher is providing the anti- Semites of other countries with Ger- man anti-Jewish technique. I protesied to Sireicher's represen- tative: “But 1! you drive the Jews from every country, including Palestine, where _nu.u the Jews go to find " “That isn't our.problem,” Wurm replied. “That's the Jews' problem.” Gen.nany (Continued From PFirst Page.) under heavy fire, thought they dis- cerned indicajions of an imminent truce. Uneasiness increased among the 500,000 Jews after Count von Heildorf, Berlin chief of police, summarily out- lawed individual Jew-baiting and an- nounced the state Nazi movement itself would prosecute the anti-Se- mitic fight “in another way.” Stahlhelm Arms Seized. Secret police cracked down on the Stahlhelm again, raiding members’ homes in Parchim, Ludwigslust and Waren, where thé organization was recently banned. Many firearms and quantities of ammunition were found, it was officially announced, and sev- eral leaders arrested. An olive branch was held out to Catholics by the official organ of the Hildesheim Bishopric. It sald: “We consider true peace between the state and the Catholic Church quite possible.” Perhaps significantly, the pro- nouncement coincided with reports, widely circulated in Catholic circles, that Msgr. Cesare Orsenigo, papal nuncio, had delivered to the foreign office still another communication from Pope Pius protesting treatment of Catholics. Jewish Artists to Go. ‘Meanwhile, Hans Hinkel, newly ap- pointed dictator of Jewish art and cultural activity, told the German ress the few Jewish artists who still influence Aryan culture” would be eliminated through supervision of the membership lists of all German cul- | ture chambers.” To the popular belief that the ex- treme measures against “state en- emies” possibly presaged another “plood purge” was added today the fear that rising prices might bring | inflation. News-hungry citizens learned dur- ing the evening that Reichsfuehrer Hitler had motored from his quiet re- treat at Berchtesgaden to Munich to attend the opera. The new blow struck at the Stahl- helm promised to be the hardest yet. Under Nazi law, possession of unauthorized weapons, as was charged against the Mecklenburg and Luebeck veterans, carries severe penalties. Both Sides Presented. A full, frank submission of points on both sides of the church contro- ;vtrsy was given by Dr. Erich Rie- | bartsch in the “Katholisches Kirchen- | blatt,” of tomorrow's date, the or- them to foreigners with the idea of encouraging them to engage in anti- Jewish activities. There seems to be frequent and regular correspondence between Streicher and anti-Semitism everywhere, A representative of the English “Im- perial Fascist League” was introduced during my interview with Wurm and assisted in giving me information re- garding Streicher’s plans to “drive the Jews from the face of the earth.” The English “Imperial Fascist League,” which represents the British “racial Fascists,” seems to be on the friendliest terms with Streicher and is frequently in counsel with him. “Wurm,” said Streicher's English friend, “hand this man our circular entitled ‘Britons awake and oppose the Jewish strangle-hold.’ ” A circular was immediately pro- duced from the files which line the\ two walls. Furthermore, I learned more about anti-Semitism in the secret office than I had learned through a somewhat careful study thereof through newspapers, maga- zines, books and interviews in the United States. Movement in U. S. T had come to Nurnberg to discover there were anti-Jewish groups and leaders in America about whom the American public does not know and American anti-Semites who hope through Streicher’s help and inspira- tion to duplicate his plans and technique in the United States. I was given the address of a pub- lishing company in Chicago, where I was told copies of “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion” could be procured. (The “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” are a collection of documents purporting to record the desire for world domination by Jewry, as drawn up at the Zion Congress at Basle, Switzerland, in 1897. (A court at Berne, Switzerland, in May, declared proof of the authen- ticity of the protocols subrmitted by Nazis was “worthless” and ruled that the documents were obvious forgeries and plagiarisms.) I was shown copies of such Amer- ican publications as “The Cause of Anti-Judaism in the United States,” “Secret World Government,” “The Red Network,” “Jews Must Live.” As an example of Streicher's con- nections, I discovered he had anti- Jewish papers and pamphlets from as far distant as Wichita, Kans. Streicher’s representative informed me that as an American I should know President Roosevelt's Govern- ment was completely Jewish. To establish the dominant Jewish captain of the team. Others selected were: Hugh E. Riley, 715 Nineteenth street; Henry H. Pike, 1823 Nineteenth street; Al- fred H. Yeomans, 3324 Nineteenth street; Eugene A. Ross, 734 Quincy street; James A. Pritz, 2226 Newton street northeast; Raymoud Davis, sr., 1422 Perry place; Samuel Baldwin, 824 Ninth street; Robert W. Miller, 3206 ‘Wisconsin avenue; Boyd W. Ald- rich, 916 Sixteenith street; John M. Furman, 1438 Harvard street, and Henry C. Wanderly, 1673 Park road. TERMITES (Flying Ants) Most of our jobs come through the references of m': custos Aorally iown chstomers: TERMITE CONTROL CO. A Washington Owned Company Nat’l Press Bidg. Nat12711 Free Inspection. Guarsntesd Treatment mers. our na- gan of the Hildeshelm Bishopric. Four more Catholic nuns were sen- tenced to prison today on charges of smuggling money out of Germany against foreign exchange regulations. Their cases, however, were not con- sidered connected with the drive against “political Catholiscism,” since | the trials began some time ago. Luitgardis Kneppeck, general vi- | caress of the “Congregation of the | Holy Karl Borromaeus,” was sen- tenced to three years in jail and fined 115,000 marks; Rosalle Bell, the bursar, to three years and 100,000 marks; Felicitas Portz, the vicaress’ successor, to 21 months and fined 55, 000 marks, and Rosa Voelkel, the bi sar's successor, to five months. Non- payment of the fines entails one day in jail for each 250 marks. 7 ARRAIGNED IN NEW YORK. Two Others Suffering Wounds Arrested in Hospitals. NEW YORK, July 27 (#).—While a score of policemen patroled the build- ing, seven men were arraigned in West Side Court today on charges of partici- pating in a riotous Communist demon- stration at the sailing of the North | German Lloyd liner Bremen last mid- | night. ‘Two others, one suffering from bullet wounds, were under arrest in hospitals. The Nazi swastika was torn from the Bremen's bow mast and flung into the North River by a group of demon- strators. While lacking official reports on the outbreak, Acting Secretary of State Wilbur J._Carr informally expressed TERMITES Termites may be destroying vital parts of your home. ‘Washington's only BONDED termite con- trol service. Many Government _ contracts are included in the 17,000 bulidings pro- tected Dyu%lllm"lx. coErvim NGEE CN E Comn. — Bl | 2 (€ 4 Beware of Imitators—only sceept & guaranteed servics ihat esn be BONDED. —Studebaker sales have been advancing sharply as the news of the sharply reduced Stude- baker delivered prices gets around. Come in and go out for a convincing trial drive. 1138 Conn. Ave. DISTRICT 0110 regret at the incident in Washington. Scores of persons, including several policemen, were injured during the melee, which raged along the water front at the Bremen's West Forty- sixth street pier and aboard the vessel | itself. Edward Drolette, 34, described by police as the ringleader, was shot twice in the body during a skirmish on the deck. ‘Testifying in court Detective Harold Moore, who kiiled the notorious “Fats” McCarthy in an up-State gun battle a few years ago, said he and several other officers went to the pier early in the evening on advance informa- tion that a disturbance might occur. Agitators Spotted. ‘While waiting, he said, they spotted several Communist agitators mingling with the crowds on the pier and on the boat. “So far as we could gather,” he| testified, “the riot was set for 11:30. At least that’s the message put out among the visitors by Drolette, the ring leader.” Soon a crowd marched up to the pler singing the “Internationale” and shouting “Down with Hitler,” and the fighting began. After several skir- mishes, police reserves dispersed the crowd and the Bremen sailed, having retrieved its flag from the river. Later Hearings Planned. Among the prisoners arraigned today was Robert Rhodes, 19, who | said he was the son of Elmer Rice, playwright. Others included Joseph Wilson, 23, a student; Tony Alvus, 38; | George Blackwell, 24; William E.| Howe, 27; Willlam Balley, 25, and | Willlam MecCormack, 28. Some were paroled and others were held in bail for later hearings. Police officials informed the North German Lloyd 10 hours before the | Bremen's sailing time that a Com- munist demonstration was planned, | Deputy Chief Inspector David J. Mc- Auliffe said tonight. UNAWARE OF PROTEST. Vatican Prelates Doubtful New Com- plaint Sent. VATICAN CITY, July 27 (®)— Prelates tonight sald they were un- | aware of any new Vatican protest to | Germany against treatment of Catho- lics as reported from Berlin, It was unlikely, the prelates said, that Pope Pius would take up again the same issues examined in the pro- | test of July 15 when so little time had elapsed. Cartoonists’ Mother Dies. SAN DIEGO, Calif, July 27 (®).—| Mrs. Joseph Beck, 76, mother of Frank | H. Beck, nationally known cartoonist, died here today. | watches into MONEY at— A.Kahn Jnc. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres.| 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET | A-3" MISSING PICTURE OF PRESIDENT BACK Long Offers His Collection to Walmsley Chauffeur Who Took Portrait. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, July 27—The missing picture of President Roose- velt was tacked back up in the old regular political headquarters here today, but Senator Huey Long imme- diately invited the man who took it to help himself to the Senator's own col- lection of Rooseveltian portraits. Arthur J. Romaguera, former chauffeur for Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley, Long antagonist, put the picture back after a charge had been filed against him. He removed the crayon portrait from the club last night, because he said the ward lead- ers had turned to Long and “you have no right to this picture.” In New York, Long tonight offered his “entire collection” of President Roosevelt pictures to Romaguera and the club, and added facetiously: “I feel sure the people of New Orleans realize the terrific loss I am inflicting upon myself.” The picture was returned after Ulic J. Burke, first ward old regular leader and manager of the organization’s “Choctaw Club” headquarters, had filed a petty larceny charge against Romaguera and accused him of steal« ing the picture, Burke said he did not know until this morning that the picture had been taken away. He said Roma- guera came to the club last night and asked to remove a photograph of Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley, against whom 15 of the 17 old regular ward leaders have turned in their support of Senator Long. 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