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L4 wew POST AND ROGERS SEPARATE IN DEATH Flyer’s Body En Route to Oklahoma—Humorist’s Stays in California. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, August 20.—In the darkened cabin of a transport plane the body of Wiley Post began its last aerial voyage today while thousands | waited to pay final homage to Will Rogers, who met death with the avia- tor in a tragic Alaskan air crash. The body of the famous humoris: lay in a Glendale mortuary awaiting public and private funeral services Thursday as the huge plane sped to- ward Oklahoma City, where services | for Post will be held. Aboard the plane, which took off at | 6 am. (9 am. Eastern standard time), were Col. Clarence M. Young, airline executive; Joe Crosson, who brought the bodies from Alaska; William A. ‘Winston, chief pilot; J. L. Fleming, Junior pilot;: T. W. Dowling, radio operator, and Engineer Tom Ward. Two Stops Scheduled. ‘The flight was expected to take about seven and one-half hours. with refueling stops at Albuquerque. N. M., and probably Amarillo, Tex. The 3.500-mile journey from the | Northern Alaska wilds where they crashed in Post's ship last Thursday ended just at dusk yesterday. when | Pilot Winston set down his big Pan- American Airways transport at Bur- bank Airport. The arrival was attended by the first disorders since the bodies of the | celebrated dead were brought from Point Barrow, Police and the curious clashed at the airport after the officers had sought to halt the taking of photo- graphs. The riotous scene occurred | at the hangar when a photographer was discovered concealed in the raft- ers above the ship. | While a squad of police captured him and smashed his camera, removal | of the two bodies was delayed for nearly a half hour. Outside the hangar police engaged in hand-to- hand fights with photographers nnd‘ onlookers. Crosson Dodges Reporters, Crosson, who had brought out the bodies of his friends in less than two | days. relinquished the controls for the | flight from Seattle. | Crosson refused to be interviewed ! on his trip or on what his personal | nspection of the remains of Post's ship had indicated as the possible | cause of the crash. ‘ The body of the famous humorist- ! actor will lie in state five hours, be- ginning at 7 am. Thursday, in a grove of pine and olive trees at For- | est Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale. | Private services were set for 2 p.m. | in the Wee Kirk o' the Heather and | will be conducted by Dr. J. Whitcomb | Brougher, an old friend. For the time being the remains will | rest in a crypt at Forest Lawn, to be transferred by Mrs. Rogers later to the family burial plot at Chelsea, Okla. | Mrs. Rogers, accompanied by her | three children—Will, jr.; Mary and | James—and by relatives from Okla- homa, including Rogers' sister, Mrs. | Tom McSpadden of Chelsea, were en | route to Los Angeles by train from the East. Loi)b)_'— (Continued From First Page.) | half the time covered, the utility sys- tem under him was not paying divi- dends on its stock. The earnings were made by private companies ovned by him and his family which sold services to companies in the system. Warned by Committee. It was the first time he had agreed publicly to his profits. He had char- acterized them as inaccurate before the House Rules Committee. | The committee warning to Hupson‘ was to the effect that unless he answered questions directly, instead | of making elaborate statements, ad- ditional charges of contempt would | be preferred against him. One con- tempt citation, served because of his | failure to respond on time to a| Senate subpoena, has not been | pressed. The warning was given Hopson soon after he took the witness stand and was contained in a statement which the committee previously had unanimously approved. Chesley W. Jurney, sergeant at arms of the Senate, sat in the com- mittee room as Chairman Black read | the statement, and remained for some | time, obviously waiting to determine whether his services would be needed. Hopson Heeds Warning. ‘Hopson, however, changed his at- titude completely. He answered all questions slowly, precisely and in a tempered voice, in marked contrast with his belligerent position of yes- terday when Chairman Black issued the first warning that he would be cited for contempt unless he stopped his arguments. A discussion of expense accounts of high salaried officials of the Associ- ated who came to Washington to tes- | tify before the committee provided one of the humorous highlights of the hearing, especially in view of the fact that after citing figures running into the millions, Chairman Black questioned Hopson about a $14 rail- road fee claimed by one of his asso- ciates when the fare, with Pullman sleeper, he pointed out, is $11.89. Hopson insisted the Associated offi- cials who testified should receive wit- ness fees to cover their expenses, but declared he did not propose to ask for any remuneration for fear it “might start some trouble” for himself. Hopson Explains “Profits.” After the hearing recessed until 10 am. tomorrow, Schwellenbach told newsmen the evidence so far disclosed profits of $13,000,000 from 1926 to 1933 to Hopson and J. I. Mange. He said more would be discovered later. Hopson contended throughout, how- ever, that the great bulk of the profits were only “paper profits” and that he never actually realized on them. Hopson Identifies Message. At the outset of today's hearing, Chairman Black presented Hopson with a copy of a telegram and asked him to read and identify it. After reading it slowly, he identified it as a message he sent from Miami Beach, Fla, on March 18, to a New York advertising agency suggesting changes in phraseology of a proposed news- aloud, disclosing that he recommended that “stronger language be used” in the advertisemerfts later in the cam- paign when the utilities bill reached the Senate. A that time the nu.n ‘was in the THE EVENING o The transport plane bearing the bodies of Will Rogers and Wiley House and Hopson said in that mes- sage that members of the House then were “more important than Senators.” Immediately afterward Chairman Black read to Hopson the statement, approved unanimously by the com- mittee, again warning him that ad- ditional contempt charges would be preferred against him if he contin- ued to attempt to make statements in | answer (o questions. Given Stern Warning. The committee statement read: “This committee has been very pa- | tient with the witness, H. C. Hopson. It has not yet pressed the charges of | contempt which are pending before the Senate. It has, during four ses- | sions, afforded him great latitude in | the answering of its questions. The committee is determined that it will no longer permit the practice of this | witness of evading questions by mak- ing speeches or criticism of the com- mittee, or by asking cther questions, | or going far beyond the scope of the question in the answer, and by con- tinuing to talk after he is called to order. “The committee is interested in ascertaining facts on specific ques- tions and intends to limit this wit- ness to answering questions with | facts. The witness, Hopson, is now instructed that this rule must be followed by him. His failure to do so will necessarily result in the im- mediate presentation of additional contempt charges to the Senate. “It is hoped that no such action will be necessary, but the attitude of | the witness has made it necessary to consider the question and the com- mittee has unanimously reached the conclusion that it will no longer tol- erate the conduct previously indulged in.by the witness. He is a lawyer and knows how to confine himself to facts, and he must do so or suffer the consequence of a citation to the | Senate.” Questioned by Schwellenbach. After reading that statement Black said it was not the desire of the com- mittee “to take such steps.” | Senator Schwellenbach then took | up the examination of the utilities magnate, question him in detail about | the set-up of the Associated Gas & Electric. Much of Hopson's testimony along that line followed closely information he gave the House Rules Committee last week. He did admit, however, that he had exercised control over the association until recent years, when it passed dividends. Hopson also explained that in addi- tion to stockholders in various sections of the country, whose votes his man- | agement controlled through proxies, there were other large shareholders whose proxies the management could not get. He mentioned specifically Pierson & Co. of Holland and the Electrical Securities Co., an invest- ment trust. Asked About Dividends. Senator Schwellenbach later ques- | tioned Hopson about the Associated’s | securities, developing the fact that‘, cash dividends had not been paid on various classes of its stock as far back as February 1, 1931. Cash dividends | on the class A stock, of which there were 4,400,000 shares outstanding, were stopped on that date. Hopson next was asked about a $22,000,000 dividend paid to Associated in 1929 by the Assoclated Securities Co. and credited to earned income. This dividend, it was developed, re- sulted from the sale of the class A stock. Schwellenbach wanted to know if the profits from the sale of stock were | included in circulars put out by the | Associated which listed its earned in- | come. Hopson said that had never | been done. Chairman Black then took up the examination and inquired if the Fed- eral income taxes of the Associated’s numerous subsidiaries were paid to the parent company and treated as profit. The witness replied that method always had been followed, Post, killed in an Alaskan plane crash, as it arrived in Los Angeles late STAR, WASHINGTON, yesterday. transferred to hearses. D. C., TUESDAY, Rogers, Post Funeral Ship at End of Journey The plane was taxied into a hangar, where the bodies were —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto, ;Sims -aml Stamlléiy ai O«I(Is Over Navy Promotion System By the Associated Press. A sharp difference appeared today to have developed between two of the Navy’'s high commands, past and pres- ent Attacking the Navy's system of pro- motion, Rear Admirgl Willlam S Sims, war-time commander, wrote in the At- lantic Mon thly that Navy morale was “conti f 1y declin that high officers Fave been “notoriously inef- ficient.” To which Ad- miral William H. Standley chief ranking officer of the Navy, replied that Sims was no longer in a position to judge such mat- ters. Sims wrote: “It is enough to make one’s hair stand on end to contem- plate the results of an unexpected cutbreak of war at a time when the fleet and the Navy Department Admiral Sims. happened to be in the hands of officers | who lacked the essential confidence of the service.” | Standley said: “Admiral Sims has been retired from the Navy for a num- ber of years and I do not think he is in a position to judge Navy morale.” Other officers recalled Sims has made previous attacks on the selection method of Navy promotions. The selection method is so named because officers above the rank of lieu- tenant are select- ed for promotion by a board of sen- ior officers who make their rec- ommendutions to the Secretary of the Navy and the Presiden.. Officers not se- lected for promo- ¥ tion within a specified number of years after : graduating from the Naval Acad- | emy face compul- sory retirement. Apparently referring to compulsory retirements, Sims sald “the naval ca- reer has ceased to be a life profession and become only a temporary job.” He advocated a study of the promo- system. with a possible overhaul- 'ing to follow. Admiral Standley, ARLINGTON BURIAL FAVORED FOR POST Plans Made to Place Body Tem- porarily in Oklahoma City Crypt. By the Associated Press. | OKLAHOMA CITY, August 20— While a transport plane bore the body of Wiley Post toward Oklahoma today, tentative plans were made to place it in a temporary resting place here until it can be decided whether the aviator is to rest in Arlington National Cemetery. Friends of the family said the flyer's widow is inclined to place the famed airman’s body in the ceme- | tery of national heroes if it is possible. ‘Tomorrow morning an escorted hearse will bear the body to Wiley | | Post's home town, Maysville, 60 miles | | south of here, where it will be met by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Post. Late in the afternoon the | body will be returned to the funeral| | home here. From 10 am. Thursday until noon the body will lie in state in the ro- | | tunda of the Oklahoma Capitol. Among the honorary pallbearers will be Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Floyd Gibbons, Frank Phillips, ofl man who sponsored Post’s stratosphere flights, and F. C. Hall, sponsor of Post’s first world flight. The eight active pallbearers are: | Joe Crosson, who brought the bodies of Post and Will Rogers from Point Barrow to Seattle; Harry Frederick- son, Oklahoma City man who han- dled Post’s business affairs; Leslie | Fain, Oklahoma City oil man, hus- | band of Winnie Mae Hall Fain, for whom Post’s famous round-the-world plane was named; Bennie Turner, aviation editor of the Daily Okla- homan; Billy Parker, associate of | Post in his stratosphere flights; L. E. Gray id Ted Colbert, Ponca City airmen; Ernest Shults, Bartlesville | airman and mechanic, who prepared | the Winnie Mae for many of her fights. Girl, 15, Saves Train. When a railway bridge over the Cal- | der at Dewsbury, England, caught fire recently, a 15-year-old girl ran a mile to flag a train, and succeeded in stop- ping it in time, C. W. A. Murals Ordered Down;| - San Antonio Sees Red Stigma By the Associated Press. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., August 20.— Mayor C. K. Quin has ordered the municipal auditorium purged of 2- year-old C. W. A. murals which American Legion officials are sure contains sly communistic propaganda. Herman G. Nami, Legion post com- mander, who discovered what he called insignia and symbols of a sin- ister nature yesterday, said one paint- ing bore a clenched fist which, he said he had been told, is the com- munistic salute. Another panel showed an out- stretched hand with palm pierced twice. Nami asserted it was the in- signia of some socialistic organiza- tion. The panel depicts the horrors of war. He objected also‘to a large “S” superimposed on shadows to give a dollar sign effect. He declared he was sure it was some sort of objec- tionable reference l‘flu capitalistic system. Mayor Quin said mow that he thought of it he had received several complaints about the murals, which were painted by Xavier Gonzales, an American of Mexican descent who is teaching Summer school at the Al- pine, Tex., State Teachers’ College. “The whole thing indicates the communistic influence has penetrated to San Antonio from New York, where that Mexican, Rivera, did the mural for Radio City,” commented Nami. “Rockefeller had that taken down, and we ought to have this one re- moved.” > He referred to Diego Rivera, noted artist. ‘The paintings had attracted scant attention until Nami made his alleg- edly sinister discoveries yesterday. The Legion council followed his rec- ommendations and drew up the pro- test which led yor Quin to order the murals and returned to the Federal t. |VIDAL TO FLY TO RITES FOR ROGERS AND POST | Intends to Get First-Hand State- ment of Crash From Joe Cros- son, Alaskan Pilot. | By the Associated Press. Eugene L. Vidal, director of the Bureau of Air Commerce, announced that he will fly to Los Angeles today to represent the department at serv- ices for Will Rogers and Wiley Post. Vidal also intends to get a first- hand statement from Joe Crosson. pilot who brought the bodies from Point Barrow to Seattle, in connection with the department’s investigation of the accident. . Murray Hall, the department's rep- resentative at Anchorage, has reported that because of weather conditions it has been impossible for him to ret to the scene of the crash. He is for- warding a report obtained from other augment this by a conversation with Crosson, |SGT. MORGAN PROMOTED By the Associated Press. ‘Technical Sergt. Stanley R. Morgan geant, the highest non-commissioned Army rank. vancement was “in recognition of his initiative, resourcefulness nd fine judgment” in organizing and direct- ing the recovery of Will Rogers’ and Wiley Post's bodies, taking them to the lonely Eskimo village, and transmit- ting to the outside world a detailed account of the Arctic tragedy near Point Barrow, Alaska. 50¢ ( spri battery, clean windshield differential. Essolube Waverly *Sealed FREE sources, but Vidal feels that he can! FOR AIR CRASH WORK | today was promoted to master ser- | Secretary of War Dern said the ad- | Owens Pennsylvania Oil Expert, Courteous Service - CATHOLIG BISHOPS Gather in Secret to Plan Counter Attack on Nazi Campaign. By the Associated Press. FULDA, Germany, August 20.—The German Catholic bishops met in secret today to prepare a counter attack cn the Nazi drive against “political Ca- tholicism.” The conference, described by Nazis as one that “will have a decisive influence on the relationship of the church to the National Socialist state,” was regarded by Catholics as the most important assemblage of bishops in recent years. The entire German Catholic hier- _‘ archy—3 cardinals, 3 archbishops and 19 bishops, presided over by Senior Cardinal Bertram of Breslau—dis- cussed what Catholics call the “serious situation facing the German church.” Discuss Means of Protection. One of the main questions under | the | discussion was how to protect clergy from the order of Hermann Goering, head of the secret police, for the arrests of priests who ‘“misuse | their authority and their holy position for political ends.” Other topics were: What to do about the concordat be- tween the Reich and the Vatican, which the church claims has been violated in many ways, principally by the dissolution of Catholic youth societies and enforcement of the ster- ilization law, How to combat Alfred Rosenberg's “German faith movement;” denuncia- tion of which recently brought retalia- tion from Rosenberg and Wilhelm Frick, minister of interior, to Bishop Muenster of Clemens, who sought to | restrain Rosenberg from delivering an address. Place Blame on Church. { An officially Mspired Nazi state- | ment took the position that the church had broken the concordat, not the Nazis. The statement urged the bishops’ meeting to order priests to | abstain from further blows at na- | tional socialism. Several proposals had been made, the statement continued, which would end the youth societies' difficulties and end, too, the “exchange viola- tion by Catholic orders which have {put the church in an unpleasant situation, and the bishops' program as well.” Jews Barred From Parks. Meanwhile, Jews in Garmisch- Partenkirchen, international _resort |and center of next year's Winter Olympic games, found themselves barred from the public parks. The | Municipal Council issued the order. Further weeding out of Jews from public life was reported from Hanover. “The district of South Hanover- | Brunswick is free from Jewish-owned | movie theaters,” the Nazi press service | announced. Four theaters owned by Jews were locked by police because the pro- | prietors “glaringly offended the Reich filth law,” according to the service. LUBRICATE YOUR CAR Not a special, but our regular price. Includes all cups, generator, starter, fan, spray g, door hinges and locks, water . Check transmission and If lubricant is ordered—25c Ib. 6 Brands of Motor Oil -20c qt. O High Speed Oil Quaker State Oil_ Cans, 8 AM. to 6 P.M. ‘We furnish purchasers of new Chevro- lets, free of charge, Waverly 30,000- mile Guarantee Oil Bonds. OWENS MOTOR CO., Inc. 6323 Georgia Ave. GEorgia 0100 AUGUST 20, MEET IN GERMANY, the | 1935. HOUSE PRIGE QUIZ AGTION FORECAST As Result 0’Connor Will Not Press Special Inquiry of Meat Situation, Prompt House action was promised‘ today on the Senate-approved resolu= | tion directing the Trade Commission to investigate the spread between prices paid to the farmer and by the consumer. As a result, Chairman O'Connor of the Rules Committee said there prob- | ably would be no action on the pro- posal to create a special committee to | study the meat situation, including | the Detroit meat strike. | “This resoluion covers the meat | strike as well as everything else,” he decided. Led by little Mrs. Mary Zuk, five | Detroit housewives called on Repre= | sentative Dingell, Democrat, of Michi- | gan, late yesterday to protest after | Secretary Wallace had given them lit- | tle satisfaction and Marvin McIntyre, | presidential secretary, told them Mr. | Roosevelt was too busy to see them. Dingell. author of a resolution to investigate packers’ profits, told them | he would seek to block sd)ournmem‘ until his resolution 1s acted on. He said he had talked to Speaker | Byrns and Chairman _ O'Connor, | Democrat. of New York of the Rules Committee and that they “seemea” | to be favorably disposed toward tne 1esolution. He added he had talked with seven members of the Rules Committee who would vote to bring | the resolution to the tioor. Mrs. Zuk and her companions, whno | say they represent 7.000 Michigan | butcher shop boycotters, lett tor home after their day of storming the Capitol. They are determined not to eat meat until the price of pork is 20 | per cent below what it was July 15. l 'PAIR HURT | N BALCONY | FALL HELD IMPROVING | Girl Has Fractured Skull as Re- sult of Alleged Leap at | Hangar Club. | Miss Fern Moesta, 27, who accora- | ing to police, leaped from the baicony | of the Hangar Club early Monday | morning and William S, Tipton, 4>, | who fell to the concrete in attempt- | ing to rescue her, were reported in a | much improved condition at kmer- | gency Hospital today. Miss Moesta, night club waitress, | who lives in the 1200 block of L street, | is suffering from a fractured skuil,| received when she hurtled from the | balcony toward the Airport Pool, and struck the cement runway beside the pool instead. Tipton, who resides in the 600 block of F street northeast, fell the 15 teet to the concrete when he lost his balance in trying to rescue the giri He received a strained leg and broken wrist, BANDITS ATTACK MAN Knocked down by a blow on the head with a pistol butt, James C. Henley, 3220 Connecticut avenue, was robbed of $156 by two men early today | in the 2900 block of Macomb street. The bandits stepped from behind a tree as he walked toward Connecti- cut avenue, according to Henley, who told police he was robbed as he lay on the sidewalk. He gave police de- scriptions of the men. remember. Party Salute NEW YORK BANKER LEADS NATIONALISTS, INC. . WILLIAM S. CORBY FUNERAL IS TODAY ‘Bishop William F. McDowell Among Prominent Clergy- men Officiating. Funeral services for William Ste- DUDLEY P. GILBERT, New York banker, shown giving the salute of the Ameri Na- tionalists, Inc., a new political party, of which he is national, c mander. Gilbert claimed the party was responsible in part for the re- cent Republican victory in the Rhode Island election. He is now at Newport, R. 1. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. FIRE L0SS GAINS SCHROM REVEALS 21 Pieces of Apparatus Are Obsolete, He Says, but Rate Still Is Low. Commenting pointedly on the ne- cessity of continued use of 21 pieces of apparatus which have reached the ob- solete stage, Fire Chief Charles E. Schrom reported yesterday the fire loss in the District last year amounted to $341,434. The total was $46,045 greater than in the 1934 fiscal year. At the same time, however, the average loss per fire was $100.10 and the per capita loss 69 cents, both figures being sub- stantially Jower than those established by fire control authorities as “satis- factory,” Chief Schrom said. The per capita loss, he explained, is less than half the figure regarded as “very low” by national authorities. phen Corby, co-founder of the Corby Baking Co, who died Sunday at Moultonboro, N. H., were to be con- ducted here this afternoon at 3 o'clock at his late residence, No. 9 Chevy Chase circle. Bishop William P. McDowell of the Methodist Epis- copal Church, Dean G. C. F. Brat- enahl of the Washington Cathedral and Rev. Dr. Philip G. Murray, as- sistant pastor of Calvary Baptist Church, were to officiate Tempo- rary interment was to be at the Washington Cathedral, where Dean Bratenahl will say prayer. Honorary Pallbearers. Prominent citizens, friends of Mr Corby, comprise the list of honorary pallbearers. They are: Corcoran Thom, Howard Morgan, F. P. H. Siddons, P. Stanley Holland, William L. Beale, James C. Dulin, Clarence A. Aspinwall, William J. Flather, jr.; C. C. Glover, jr.; James M. Greene, William Montgomery, Clarence F. Norment, John S. Saul, Percy Thompson, Thomas W. Bra- hany, J. Harry Cunningham, Judge Jesse C. Adkins, John D. Green, Fred Treuleben, H. L. Rust, Joseph H. Himes, John C. Koons, Col. P. M. Anderson, Robert V. Fleming. John C. Walker, H. C. Sheridan, L. P. Steuart, Jobn Meany, Col. Leroy W. Herron, Charles Demonet, E. C. Graham, Joshua Evans, jr.; Charles P. Light, Ulric Bell, C. K. Berryman, Charles V. Imlay, Dr. Joseph M. M. Gray, John C. Letts, George T. Dunlop, Lloyd B. Wilson, Frank R. Jellefl, Harry B. Spencer, H. R. Dulaney. jr.; Dr. H. C. Macatee, Dr. F. J. Eisen- man, Dr. L. H. Reichelderfer, E. F. Cooper C. Lightbaum, Rob= algleish, Arthur B. Shelton, Robert P. Smith, L. E. Brueninger, Dr, Francis Hagner, Gen. M. E. Jarvin, Admiral Cary T. Grayson. Charles Riborg Mann, E. A. Merritt and Same« | uel Prescott. i Retired in 1 Mr. Corby, who was in his 69th vear, retired from the baking business in 1925 when the Corby interests were sold to the Continental Baking Co. He was widely known as a business and civic leader and at the time of his death held many important posi- tions here with financial and business anizations and ot titutions. | He was a thirty-second degree | Mason, and held life memberships in leading clubs here and elsewkere. | BRIDGE RITES URGED Keystone Club Suggests Commit- | tee to Plan Ceremony. | A request for appointment of “a representative citizens' committee” to lay plans for ceremonies in connection with opening of the new Calvert Street Bridge was made to the District Com= missioners today by the Advisory Board of the Keystone Automobile Actual fires in the year ending June 30, last, numbered 3.411, or 247 less than in the preceding vear. There were 5357 alarms, or 2,289 less than in the preceding vear. Of the total alarms, 560 were recorded as false. It's an event! Put on a coat of Moorwhite Primer before vou paint vour house. You'll get a better looking and longer lasting Jjob. Y. 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