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FAIR AND CALMER CAPITAL OUTLOOK Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers High, but No Damage Expected. Tair weather and diminishing breezes were in prospect today as the | tropical disturbance which resulted in | several days of almost constant rain | here passed northward across the Vir- | ginia Capes, attended by a 42-mile wind at Cape Henry. “That particular storm will have no further influence on the weather| here,” the forecaster said. “We expect fair skies tonight and tomorrow, with little change in temperature and di- | minishing northwest winds.” This morning's sunshine was as wel- come as a first robin to Washington- jans weary of foggy weather and a rain which accounted for 6.70 inches of precipitation in the 48 hours ended at 6 a.m. today. The heavy rains, general over the Potomac and Shenandoah basins, had raised both rivers to a high stage at Harpers Ferry, but no damage is an- ticipated either along the water course | or in Washington, where the crest is expected some time tomorrow. The local high water will depend on whether the crest arrives at full or ebb tide, but in any event should not go more than six feet over the low normal, Weather Bureau observers said. Except for a decidedly damp spell in August, 1928, when 8.67 inches of rain fell in 48 hours, rainfall here during the last two days was the| heaviest on record at the Weather Bureau. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO! STORM SURVIVORS | [ Weather Data on Storm This Changing World BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. HE League of Nations is striving to find an “elegant” solution for the Italo-Abyssinian con- filct. there are endeavoring to make an omelet without breaking any eggs. So far the procedure at Geneva has run true to form. Litvinoff is de- nouncing Italy’s imperialistic aims— he knows™that his speeches will not alter in the slightest the situation, but will make good reading among the comrades in Moscow and else- where. Laval and Eden are still endeavoring to give an appearance of power to the League, when they know that Musso- lini’s conquering ideas will not be affected by what they say or do. The little nations are trembling in | their shoes and wonder what will hap- | pen when their turn will come. * X X x The Italians have a whip hand and | are talking plainly to the British | and the French. When accused of | starting another world war, they | reply, “And whose fault is it?” The | answer they give is that the greed for more land on the part of Great The statesmen gathered | September so far has brought 7.09 gritain and France after the last inches of rain to Washington and temperatures have averaged 5 degrees ' d World War has forced Italy in to- ay’s position. below normal. [ * ok K K The Potomac above Harpers Ferry | rtalian diplomats illustrate thelr Wwas falling this morning, with the | point of view by the following parable. crest expected to reach Sycamore| In a smart restaurant providing Island, just above tidewater here, | the most choice foods, Great Britain early tomorrow. The river is then and France were sitting at the table expected to rise nine feet above the alone, eating and drinking the best low-water level | that was obtainable. In a corner was Temperatures here were rising to- | Italy, eating a meager dish of soup. ward 70 at noon and extremes yes- Said the British to the head waiter, terday were 71 and 64 degrees. the League of Nations: “Kick that — e —— fellow out, he makes a noise when DANZ'G CONSCRIPTS eating soup and that disturbs my AUXILIARY SERVICE | digestion.” Activity Under New Law Pro- Outside, peering through the win- | dow, stood hungry Germany—hungry vides for Possibility of Vol- unteering for Force. for more land. Said the Frenchman | to the same obsequious head waiter: By the Assoclated Press. DANZIG, September 6—A notice | “Chase that fellow away, he looks #n the newspaper Danziger Neueste Nachrichte indicated today that con- scription had been introduced into the free city, although the conscript army, called the auxiliary service, was described as non-military. Provision for this service was made June 19, 1934, in a “decree for the establishment of the Danzig state auxiliary service,” but the measure was worded in general terms and its detailed provisions only now have been approved and made public. The new law provides for the pos-| sibility of volunteering for the aux-| iliary force, just as in Germany volun- teers may be accepted into the arm; Also as in Germany every able- | bodied man from 19 to 25 must re- port for muster—not, however, to a military command, for the free city | has no army, but to a police or dis- trict officer. Carolinas (Continued Prom First Page.) 8. C, said a number of cottages on Pawley’s Island, a nearby Summer | resort, had been damaged by waves which ate into the protecting sand dunes. Heavy winds which whipped | Charleston all day yesterday had sub- sided and damage was minor. Waves | pounded over the historic Battery wall | and lower parts of the city were | Sflooded. | A tornado yesterday hit a rural | community near Clinton, N. C,, level- | ing several houses and two filling stations. Four persons were injured, one probably fatally. Other twisters were reported near Florence, Chapin and Darlington, in South Carolina, but there were no casualties and damage was small. Georgia Crops Damaged. MOULTRIE, Ga., September 6 (#). ~Brisk winds and rain squalls left damaged cotton and other crops over & wide area of South Georgia today. Cotton, already damaged by frequent | rains which have kept the ground | too moist in same areas since the first of July, was whipped to the groynd or else fllled so full of trash as to lower its grade beyond the standard for Government cotton loans. The winds, which whipped corn and cane to the grounds in a wide area, also did some damage to prop- erty, both city and rural. Some large trees were felled. starved and dangerous, I am afraid that he may be packing a gun and use it when he sees us having so much to eat.” Ch The Freach realize the mistake that has been made in the redistribution | of colonies after the World War, and | are now trying—too late—to remedy it. | At Geneva Laval is empowered by his government to do all he can to avoid a war in Ethiopia—provided he does not join the British in their de- mand for sancticas. He has suggested to Capt. Eden, in private, a redistribu- tion of the colonial territories and a more equitable allocation of the exist- ing raw materials throughout the world. ' S It has dawned upon the French, | reports from Geneva say, that the treaty of Versailles is not all it should be, 2nd that Germany and Italy might be invited to share in the colonial empire of the world. * % ox X It is easy to understand the French point of view at the present. For years they have been adamant to any change in that treaty, which was considered by all French govern- ments as sacrosanct. But since, mainly through the efforts of the British government, the sections which interested Prance most —the reparations and the disarma- ment of Germany—have been aban- doned, that treaty has become of little interest to Prance. Since the French government has been forced by the British to accept important changes in matters consid- ered vital by the French people, there is no reason, says Laval, why the British should not make some sacri- | fices “for the good of the world” as | France has already made. * %k X Xk But this time London is adamant. The sentiment that “the British gov- ernment canot give away an inch of the British empire” is very strong. Any British government which may have the temerity of making such territorial concessions would be swept out of office by popular sentiment. And new elections in Great Britain are around the corner now. While diplomats at Geneva con- tinue to talk, the British government, fully aware of the complications which might result from the Italo- Ethiopian war, is strengthening its military position. Great Britain is more on the alert today than it was in July, 1914. * ok ok Preliminary work has begun for the construction of an airbase at Fanling, on the leased Chinese ter- ritory opposite Hongkcng. Subpostmasters « throughout the League of Nations, Striving to Settle Il Duce’s Row With Ethiopia, Seeks to Make Omelet Without Breaking Eggs. British isles have received orders to accept “all inland and overseas tele- grams on war office service without prepayment, if duly certified by a military cofficer or a civil servant employed by the war office.” No less then 32,000 of these forms were printed in the month of July by the stationery office. The strengthened British Mediter- ranean fleet is concentrated in three strategic points—at Alexandria, au Port Suez and at Haifa. From these vantage points it can be rushed wher- ever it is needed. Malta, which seems to fear most an air attack, is getting ready for such an emergency. Gas and bomb-proof over the rocky island and the Mal- tese population is daily undergoing |drills for protection against attacks from the skies. Gas masks are dis- tributed free by the government to the population of the island. VETERANS BURIAL PLANS UNGERTAN |Officials Here Await Word From Representative at Storm Scene. | Veterans' Administration officials today were awaiting word from Col. George E. Ijams, assistant adminis- trator, now en route to the Florida | hurricane zone, before making plans | for burial of the veterans killed in | work camps there. Arlington Cemetery is available for | all veterans who have a right to be | buried there, and whose surviving | relatives do not desire them to be baried elsewhere. No final plans can be made for interment, however, until further word has ben received from Col. | Ijams, it was explained at the admin- | ministrator in charge of medical, | hospital, construction and supplies for the administration. Meantime, arrangements were being made through F. E. R. A. headquar- ters here to prevent cremation of the bodies, if possible, and to have the veterans buried in metal coffins. F. E. R. A. officials instructed Mar- ! vin Porter, regional engineer at the scene of the hurricane, to request those recovering bodies not to cremate them, Porter advised headquarters that arrangements for speedy produc- tion of coffins near the scene were under way. The State works progress adminis- | trator in Florida, Porter reported, ac- cording to the Associated Press, al- ready was preparing for immediate rebuilding of stretches of highway and bridges torn out by the storm. The Works Progress Administration was described as prepared to give the proj- ects quick consideration. — CLAIMANT APPEALS Asserted Heir to Snuff Millions Gives Hope to Other Kin. PHILADELPHIA, September 6 (#).—An appeal to the Supreme Court gave new hope to 127 persons who claim relationship with the late Walter Garrett and desire to share his celebrated snuff fortune. Robert F. Garrett, who claims to be & cousin, yesterday appealed the rul- ing of the Orphans’ Court which threw out claims of Garrett's rela- tives on the grounds that his widow, Henrietta, received the fortune out- right. The 127 Garrett claimants held that she held merely a life interest and died intestate as far as the un- bequeathed balance was concerned. This “balance” mounted to $17,500,- 000 before the widow’s death in 1930. About 5,000 persons claim relation- ship with ‘the widow. ON YOUR If you have a definite trip planned for your Summer vacation you will want to be posted on Washington happenings through The Star. . Malil or leave your address or {itinerary 'at The Star " Business Office, and The Star will be mailed to you with the same dispatch as if you were in your own home in Washington. Bhe Slat, dugouts are rapidly being built all| | istration. Col. Ijams is assistant ad- | N JACKSONVAL Veterans Divided in Placing Blame for Death of Comrades. By the Assaciated Press. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 6. —Virtually all of them injufed to some degree or badly shocked, more than 200 survivors of the hurricane-hit war veterans’ camps on the Florida keys arrived at Camp Foster here today on a special train from Miami. A corps of Jacksonville physicians immediately began examining the vet- erans. The more seriously injured and shocked survivors will be taken to the United States veterans’ hospital at Lake City, 90 miles west of here. The others will be quartered at Camp Foster. More than half the veterans wore | bandages. They were dressed in make- | shift array, virtually all of them hav- |ing had their clothes whipped from their bodies by the 100-mile-an-hour winds which leveled their camps and killed many of their comrades. One F. E. R. A. transient relief official said there were 225 survivors in.the group. Some of thes veterans | said there were 236, An official list was being prepared. Most of the men talked a bit in- | consistently at first, some of them complaining about being moved here and most of them declaring their com- rades could have been saved and they could have been spared the horrors of last Monday night and the days that have followed if officials had moved them out of the keys in time. They varied in their statements about Who was to blame, some saying | camp officials should have taken them out of their unprotected quarters. | others blaming F. E. R. A. Veterans’ Bureau officials here at State head- quarters and still others blaming | “Washington " D. C. GIRL IN FIVE BEAUTY FINALISTS | Atlantic City Winner Will Be Chosen Tomorrow Night and Crowned Miss America. By the Associated Press, | ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.. September 6.—Miss Helen Clum of 320 Fifteenth | street northeast, Washington, D. C., | will be one of the finalists tomorrow night in the talent and beauty con- test, the winner of which will be | crowned Miss America. The 18-year-old beauty was one of five intercity girls chosen from | among 20 in the first half of the semi- | final round of the talent contest last | night. Today she was to have a| | screen test and attend a luncheon at | Belleport Yacht Club. | The Boardwalk parade of the 1935 | showmen's jubilee beauty pageant will be held tomorrow. Dixie (Continued Prom Pirst Page.) | attributed the excellent behavior to Capt. Sundstrom’s supervision and the cheerful attitude of the crew members. ‘There were two clergwmen abéard | the special as it headed toward New York. One, Father J. E. McKee of Phila- delphia, said he thought “we all real- ized the danger, but what could we do about 1t?” During the trying hours when he gave spiritual aid to passengers on the stricken ship Father McKee said, “I never saw fear openly expressed.” Miss Levings said she believed she | { expressed the attitude of all aboard | when she said “every one was resigned | | to the feeling that it was the last of | | us, but it was not a feeling of fear.” While the crew members rode toward their home base, plans were under way in Miami to salvage the stricken vessel, on which remained a skeleton crew. Officials of the Morgan Line, owners of the liner, said they were optimistic over the prospect of float- ing the ship soon. Capt. Sundstrom, 50-year-old com- modore of the Morgan Line, whose legs and back were injured in & nar- row escape from death Monday dur- ing the hurricane’s heaviest bilast, said he would remain aboard until ordered by his owners to leave. Distnterested marine authorities set at $500,000 the damage of the 8,100- ton liner, VACATION RATES by MAIL Postage Paid Payable in Advance Maryland and Virginia. Evening & Sunday Evening Sunday One Month. _ 85¢ 50e 40e One Week. 25¢ 15¢ 100 Other States and Canada .‘mv Evening Sunday One Month. $1.00 e 800 One Week. 308 230 180 , FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1935, Bureau Furnishes Bulletins Issued as Warnings in Advance of Late Monday W hen Hurricane Struck Florida Keys. Harry Hopkins, relief adminis- trator, blames weather reports for failure to evacuate veterans who lost their lives in the F. E. R. A camps on the Florida Keys. The Weather Bureau has furnished The Star with the following bulleting issued as storm warnings in advance of late Monday afternoon when the blow hit the keys. Sup- plemental bullentins not given here were issued for local distribution. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, August 31, 1935.—Advisory 1 pm. ‘Tropical disturbance of small diameter but considerable intensity central about 60 miles east of Long Island Ba- hamas, apparently moving west- northwestward attended by strong shifting winds and probably gales near center. Caution advised south- eastern Bahamas and ships in that vicinity. Further advices at 4 p.m. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, August 31, 1935.—Advisory 3:30 p.m. Tropical disturbance of small diameter near Long Island Bahamas apparently moving west - northwestward at- tended by fresh to strong shifting winds and squalls possibly gale force near center. Caution advised Ba- hama Islands and ships in that vicinity. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., August 31, 1935 —Advisory 9:30 pm. The tropical disturbance is central to- night near or over the northern end of Long Island Bahamas moving rather slowly west-northwestward attended by strong shifting winds and squalls over a considerable area and probably gale force near center. Indications center will reach vicin- ity of Andros Island early Sunday. Northeast storm warnings ordered 10 pm., Fort Plerce to Miami. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, September 1, 1935:—Advisory disturbance cent: short distance south of Andres Island moving west- ward about 8 miles per hour at- tended by shifting gales and prob- ably winds, hurricane force small area near center. Indications storm will pass through Florida Straits late tonight or Monday. Caution advised vessels in path northeast storm warnings displayed Fort Pierce to Fort Myers. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 1, 1935.—Advisory 4 p.m. Tropical dis- turbance central about 275 miles east of Havana moving very slowly west or west-southwestward prob- ably accompanied by winds of hurri- cane force over small area near center, JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 1, 1935.—Advisory $:30 p.m. Tropical | disturbance central about 260 miles east of Havana, slowly westward attended by shift- ing gales and probably winds hur- ricane force small area near center. Caution advised vessels Florida Straits next 36 hours. Northeast storm warning displayed south of Miami to Fort Myers, Fla. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 2, 1935.—Advisory 9:30 am. Tropical disturbance central about 200 miles | due east Havana, Cuba, moving slowly westward attended by shift- ing gales and probably winds hur- ricane force small area near center. Caution advised Straits next 24 to 36 hours. North- east storm warnings remain dis- played Miami to Fort Myers. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 2, 1935.—Northeast storm warnings ordered Miami 10 a.m. JACKSONVILLE, Fla.,, September 2, 1935.—Advisory 1:30 p.m. Hurri- cane warnings ordered Key West tropical disturbance central noon about latitude 23 degrees 20 minutes longitude 80 degrees 15 minutes moving slowly westward. It will be aitended by winds hurricane force in Florida Straits and winds gale force Florida Keys south of Key Largo this afternoon and to- night. Caution advised vessels Florida Straits next 24 hours; northeast storm warnings remain displayed elsewhere Miami to Fort Myers. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 2, 1935.—-Advisory 4:30 p.m. Tropi- cal storm now appareatly moving northwestward toward Florida Keys accompanied by hurricane winds over small area. Hurricane warn- ings displayed Key West and town of Everglades and northeast storm warnings elsewhere South Florida coast West Palm Beach to Sara- sota. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., September 2, 1985.—Advisory 7 p.m. Hurricane warnings ordered 7 pm. north of Key Largo to West Palm Beach and northeast storm warnings north of West Palm Beach to Titusville and storm warnings continued else- where South Florida coast Titusville to Sarasota. Tropical disturbance hurricane intensity approaching Metacumbe Key apparently mov- ing north northwestward with re- curving tendency will cause winds of about hurricane force over extreme Southern Florida and strong winds over Central Florida late tonight or early Tuesday morning. - Hurricane (Continued From First Page.) at the right time,” Williams said, in Jacksonville. He added: “But we mean to follow this thing relentlessly and let the chips fall the storm was “hopping all around— and nobody could have know where it was going to hit.” Veterans in Care of State. “Wherever we had a camp,” con- tinued Hopkins, “at Key West or any- where else, had the storm hit it would have been wrecked. “I don't think from reading those weather reports that anybody would necessarily have evacuated those people.” Technically, the veterans were in the care of the Florida Rellef Admin- istration, he added. They had been way Commission. Replying to Hopkins’ charges, Charles C. Clurk, acting chief of the Government Weather Bureau at Wash- ington, said ail storm wearnings had indicated the course of the storm. Admiral Cary T. Grayson, Red Cross chief, agreed with Clark. “A complete, unbiased and impar- tial” investigation was ordered by Frank N. Belgrano, national com- mander of the American Legion. He appointed Howard P. McFarlan of ‘Tampa, past department commander of the State, to conduct the Legion inquiry. ‘What may be the only accurate key to the exact number of casualties suf- fered among the veterans’ camps lies in a battered steel filing cabinet, rest- ing in the wreckage of the Matecumbe Hotel on Upper Matecumbe Key. The cabinet contains the records of nearby. The cabinet is visible in the debris of the hotel. No one has had time yet to retrieve it. The hurricane which struck the keys last Monday raged over Georgia and South Carolina, then spent its force out at sea. Admiral Grayson, in a telephone message from Washington to President Roosevelt at Hyde Park, reported 256 dead. He said the count was 256 known sent to Florida to help the State High- | 270 and 300. He characterized an estimate that the total might reach 1,000 as “an absurdity.” Wray Gillette, Pan-American Radio operator, sald it was believed the total would reach 700. A Red Cross official said: “There never will be an accurate casualty list.” Gov. Sholtz planned an airplane inspection trip of the stricken keys. The F. E. R. A. and the National | Guard are to take over the detail work, while the Red Cross, with the | co-operation of the Veterans' Bureau, | will look after the living, including the scores of injured. A Cuast Guard plane and a cutter with food and clothing were sent to isolated fishing communities on the west coast of Florida, where many families were reported to be in serious straits. At Cedar Key, picturesque fishing town, between 200 and 300 residents were cared for in a school house. Clothing was needed for more than 300 children. Water was brought in by trucks. More than a score of Coast Guard craft were used in relief work, some of them as hospital ships to carry the injured from the stricken area to points of refuge. Public Funeral Planned, A public funeral for veterans who the veterans at three work clmpsl where they may. If any of our men | dead, of whom 200 were World War am. Tropical | Cuba, moving | vessels Florida | are to blame we want to know it.” ‘The question of the evacuation train puzzled Willlams. “What I want to clear up,” he said, “ijs why, if the evacuation train was ordered at 1 p.m. Monday (in Miami), it didn't get to the camps until 7 o'clock that night.” Further North and up the Atlantic Seaboard, the hurricane continued. Tanker in Trouble. Off Cape Henry 120 miles, the oil tanker Vacuum lay hove to in a 55- mile gale, unable to proceed on its Southern course. The gale was driv- ing heavy rains before it, the tanker messaged, and the seas were heavy. Three deaths—one in Virginia, the other two in North Carolina—were counted as heavy winds, small torna- does and rain plagued the Carolinas, Virginia and Maryland. | Property damage was heavy as the “twister” picked roofs off buildings. Flood waters marooned at least three towns on the Eastern Shore of Mary- land. As abruptly as it struck, the storm veered away from the coast to- | day. | A count of the hurricane victims at the general morgue and funeral homes | | in Miami totaled 132 . Of these, more than 100 bodies remained unidentified. The Red Cross made these esti- | mates: 320 persons missing in Florida. 144 bodies recovered. 375 of 817 veterans known to be alive. 256 dead. | Relief Administrator Harry L. Hop- kins made an initial Pederal grant of $200,000 to Gov. Dave Sholtz to defray immediate relief expenses in the hur- | ricane zone. Other funds will be con- | tributed as needed. | W. P. A. officlals in Florida are drawing up requisitions to rebuild the roads, causeways and bridges in the keys destroyed by the storm. The question which officials sought to answer today was: “Why did the veterans die?” Gov. Sholtz said “great carelessness somewhere was responsible for the | tragedy.” | In Washington, Hopkins declared | that, in his opinion, the Weather Bu- reau had not warned the residents of the keys in time to enable them | to prepare themselves for the hurri- | cane. | Weather reports, he said, indicated | | veterans; 252 injured, of whom one- | fourth were seriously hurt. Estimates from other sources varied. | M. E. Gilford, director of the Flor- ida Emergency Relief Administration | at Key West, gave an estimate of 400 | dead and reported the “loss of civilians in the county and property damage great.” Railroad communication “cannot be started for months,” he said. Estimate Fixed at 300. L. K. Thompson, Red Cross disaster relief chairman, held to earlier esti- | mates the death toll would be between died will be held here “within the next irew days,” Col. George E. Ijams of | the Veterans' Bureau, Washington, announced. Full military honors will be ac- | corded the dead veterans and Col. Ijams will place a wreath in the name of President Roosevelt. All officers of | the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard in the area who can be spared from relief work will attend. Relatives will make the decision in the case of the identified dead, but the remainder will be buried tn some yet to be selected national cemetery, Col. | Ijams said. HEAD OF LOCAL HELD ANDERSON, S. C., September 6 (2 —Paul R. Ross, president of the Pelze Local, United Textile Workers' Union was arrested yesterday with two othe union members on charges of riot ing, conspiracy and assault and bat tery with intent to kill as & round-u of alleged participants in Monday | fatal riot at Pelzer was continued. The arrests brought the total sin‘ Monday to 20. Sheriff W. A. 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