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DEFENSE PLANNED BY “WOMAN IN RED'| Mrs. Sage Meets. Lawyers to Prepare Verification of “Spotting” Claims. By the Assoctated Press. CHICAGO, September 30.—Mrs Anna Sage—who styled herself Sat- urday the sole betrayer of John Dillinger—met with her lawyers yes- terday to plan steps intended tc establish in court the veracity of her | charges that the Government wes| *“chiseling” on its promised price for the “spotting.” Her objective was the cancellation of the immigration office’s order for her deportation to her native Ru- mania as an undesirable alien. From Federal Judge John P. Barnes, her sensational story yesterday won & habeas corpus writ and an order for a court hearing October 2. Not Present in Court. The “woman in red” of the gory Dillinger death scene, was not present in court—she’s at liberty under $1,000 bond in the deportation case—but her attorneys told the judge she alone | lured the Hoosier outlaw to the fatal | trap set for him by “G” men here on July 22, 1834. Her price, her counsel said, was $5000 in reward money, a three months' trip to California and per- mission to continue her residence here. While she got the $5,000 and tne| California jaunt, her counsel asserted. the Government was attempting tn‘ “welsh” on the rest of the alleged | bargain by “kicking her out” of the | eountry. They said they would =subpoena Melvin H. Purvis, former chief of the Federal agents here, with whem she alleged she made the deal, to prove their story of the “inside” of the Dillinger ambuscade. Purvis refused comment. Federal officials, too, were silent, but indicated they regarded the charges only as a dodge to avoid banishment. Ignorant of Allegations. Austin H. Hall, assistant United Btates attorney who represented *Le Government at the hearing, told the court he had no knowledge of the allegations. | But for the habeas corpus wrir, | Mrs. Sage would have left Saturday | night on an east-bound train of deportees. | Fred Schlotfeldt, Immigration B'I-I reau director here, said he wouid | persist in his efforts to see that the | ‘Government’s removal order was car- | ried out. Federal authorities said | Mrs. Sage had been convicted once | of operating a disorderly house in Indiana. Thomas J. Johnson, jr., M Sage's attorney, said her sworn statement | of the Dillinger entrapment, was, supported by affidavits from Sergt Martin Zarkovich of the East Chicage. police, who shared in the Dillinzer yeward. TO GO, SAYS GOEBBELS Destruction Indicated “for Sake of Nation’s Future,” He Tells Berlin Crowd. By the Assoclated Press. BERLIN, September 30.—Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels, Nazi minister of propaganda and public enlighteament, ssserted in an address last night that the oppositional church group may be “destroyed for the sake of the Dpation’s future.” His address was heard by thousands of Berlin residents assembled at Karls- horst, a suburb, to watch an exhibi- tion by Reichswehr detachments. He spoke shortly after opposition | had been voiced in some ch\uch‘i circles to Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler's | decree Saturday increasing the au- thority of Hans Kerrl, head of the department of church affairs, and giving him broad powers over the Protestant Confessional Synod. o REICH CHURCHES FILLED, DR. PHILLIPS DECLARES Epiphany Church Pastor Returns From Visit to Germany, Including Berlin. German churches are crowded to eapacity each Sunday despite Nazi attacks on religious groups, Rev. Ze- Barney T. Phillips, chaplain of the Benate and rector of the Church of the Epiphany, said in a sermon yes- terday on his return from a trip to Europe, which included a visit to Berlin. The American Ambassador told him, Dr. Phillips said, that he had gone to both Catholic and Protestant churches in Berlin and had never been able to get a seat. B Air Beacon Chain Started. Pilots flying across India will rarely be out of sight of an airdrome on the 2,700-mile route from Karachi to Ran- goon with a great chain of beacon lights now being set up along the route. The beacons will be at Karachi, Hyderabad, Uterlai, Badhal, Delhi, Cawnpore, Allahabad, Dobhi, Calcutta, Akyyab and Rangoon, and each will be visible from 50 to 100 miles away. At no time will an airplane have more than two hours’ flying without passing & guiding light. Caulk-0-Seal A non- ing waterproof Plastic Compound for Caulk- ing, Glazing and Filling those “‘cracks” indow fra Price o? (';'3:, $1.00 ' Butler-Flynn 609 C St. N.W. Met. 0151 Woman in Red DILLINGER WITNESS TRIES TO AVOID DEPORTATION. MRS. ANNA SAGE, The “woman in red,” is shown as she conferred with her attorney Saturday in Chicago in an effort to avoid deportation to her native Rumania. She asserts she put® John Dillinger on the spot for the “G"” men in trade for permission to stay in the United States. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. Rugs Cleaned 02"z 2% Both sides of Rugs are thoroughly cleaned. All Rugs are glue sized, after shampooinz. Rugs called fi d at no extra chi OCU] Cleaners 1744 Columbia Rd. N.W. 1735 Ave. N.W 24 Third St. N.E. Telephone ATlantic 1418 and d THE EVENING STAR, PREPAID HOSPITAL PLAN 1S POPULAR 3 Cents Daily Buys Care for Average Man in 62 Cities in U. S. By the Associated Press. 8T. LOUIS, September 30.—For the man “betwixt and between” 3 cents a day will buy hospital care in 62 cities in the United States. About 250,000 are already doing it. 8till a long way off from the Chinese idea of paying a doctor to keep you well, it appears an enter- ing wedge for the day when Ameri- cans can prepay all the necessary expenses of illness. ‘The plan, as it operates in New York, Cleveland, Dallas and other cities, is simple. Persons in good health make regular payments into a common fund to purchase up to 35 days of hospital service each year for the subscribers whenever neces- sary. Conventions of the American Hos- pital Association and the American Protestant Hospital Association, in session here, placed emphasis on the plan as a means of aiding the man WASHINGTON, who wants to pay for hospital care but can’t. Lauded by Minister. Rev. Dr. Charles C. Jarrell, Athens, Ga., president of the Protestant group, called it “bridging the chasm between the hospital and the man who needs it.” Baylor University launched the scheme in the United States in De- ceraber, 1929, at its Dallas hospital. New York City's Associated Hospital Service has 25,000 members eligible for care at 144 institutions. C. Rufus Rorem of the Rosenwald Foundation, Chicago, reported 16,000 are members of a similar service at Rochester, N. Y.; 14,000 at Cleveland, 5,800 in Memphis, 1,500 at Wichita, Kans,, and 1,600 in Louisville, Min- neapolis, St. Paul, New Orleans, Wash- ington, Houston, San Antonio and nu- merous smaller cities were also named in his report as having such plans in operation. Roosevelt Message. President Roosevelt, in a greeting to the Protestant Hospital Association yesterday, said “from the great eco- nomic depression there is evolving a keener appreciation of social values FINEST BEDDING MODEST COST ~—We inaugurated this policy in 1865 and Wi n serving instonians ce—Terms Arranged. H. A. LINGER 925 Gee St. N.W. Navl 47111 ever . TO"DYE" 1S TOO DESPERATE : MEASURE IF YOU SIMPLY WISH MORE HAIR “LIFE". - GOLD, ‘AMBER, OR COPPER LIGHTS : ARE PROGRESSIVELY ACQUIRED IN A .. 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C., than obtained when our thinking was more individualistic.” “This country,” the President wrote, “is at last emerging from the great economic depression which has en- gulfed the entire Nation for six years and some parts of our population for & much longer period. Out of this experience there is evolving a keener approciation of social values than ob- tained when outthinking was more in- dividualistic. “Because of our changed and chang- ing viewpoint regarding our social re- 20c A DAY This MODEL “c8—15” $100 A thrilling radio that brings you Foreign or U. S. programs, police, aviation or amateur calls. That's because it has the new ‘‘Magic “Brain” and metal tubes —and 1936 quality from antenna to loud speaker. In a beautiful, modern cabinet, it’s a radio you'll enjoy for years to come. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1935. sponsibilities the hospitals are des- tined to grow in the important serv ice they render communities.” ‘The President said “generous Amer- ican people have always shown a dis- position to help the affiicted and make life happler for an ever-increasing percentage of our population. Our hospitals, and particularly those ad- ministered by non-profit religious or- ganizations, symbolize better than any other institutions the depth ss well as the dynamic quality of this national characteristi On the Meter-Ice Plan which includes the small earrying charge. - PORT STRIKE SEEN Longshoremen in Gulf Cities Due to Walk Out Tomorrow. NEW ORLEANS, September 30 (/). —Representatives of the International Longshoremen’s Association said last night there is “100 per cent organiza- tion” for a strike in the ports of New Orleans, Mobile, Guifport and Pensa- cola tomorrow, but the Steamship As- sociation here sald men working in B—S New Orleans will not leave their jobs. The Steamship Association said the strike call was issued by “profes- sional agitators” and warned that leaders of the strike may resort to in- timidation of workers and violencs. Primogeniture New Custom. England’s famous rule of primo- geniture, by which the oldest son suc- ceeded without a will, was never formulated as a command by any English King or Parliament. On This All-Porcelain FRIGIDAIRE Automatic Tray Release. Interior Electric Light. It has 8.4 square feet of shelf space Automatic Defrosting. Acid-Resisting Porcelain Inside. Was $167.50 Now $139.50 Street and Third Floors “The Avenue"==7th. Sth and O St 42nd Anniversary STARTS WEDNESDAY! “*“See It by RADIO We Can Equip Your Home in Time to Heai the Whole Thrilling Play-by-Play Story On the Latest RCA ICTOR Payments Spread Out Over a Long Period! . FOURTH FLOOR TR Ui L EE S @