Evening Star Newspaper, October 11, 1935, Page 1

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WEATHER. (U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; not much change in temperature; gentle to moderate southwest and west winds. ‘Temperatures—Highest, 77, day; lowest, 52, at 5:45 at noon to- . today. Full report on page B-6. Closing N. Y. Markets, Pages 17, 18, 19 No. 33,400. post ol Entered as second class matter ‘Washington, D. C. he Foening Star WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1935—FIFTY-FOUR PAGES. #%» The only in Washington wit! Associated Press News and Wirephoto Services. (®) Means Associated Press. evening paper the Yesterday’s Circulation, 130,513 Some Returns Not Yet Received. TWO CENTS. LEAGUE LIFTS ETHIOPIA EMBARGO < ITALY FACES ARMS BAN; ALOISI QUITS GENEVA; WAR CLAIMS CONFLICT - Roosevelt List‘ of Contraband Adopted. GUNS ON HAND | ~FOR SELASSIE Huge Stores Await Shipment From Djibouti. By the Associated Press. GENEVA, October 11.—The full Sanctions Committee of the Assem- bly of the League of Nations, compris- ing the membership represented in Geneva, minus Italy, today adopted the recommendation of & subcom- mittee that a general arms embargo be placed against Italy and that pres- ent embargoes against Ethiopia be lifted. The recommendation was made by the Committee of 16, formulated to decide what sanctions should be ap- plied to punish Italy for attacking Ethiopia. It made its suggestions shortly after Baron Pompeo Aloisi and six other members of the Italfan delegation had left Geneva for Rome. Embargo Effective Tonight. The embargo is effective tonight. The recommendation for the em- bargo against Italy is based on Presi- dent Roosevelt’s list of “implements of war.” The immediate effect of lifting the | embargo against Ethiopia is that Em- peror Haile Selassie’s empire will be | able to receive in the space of a very few days all kinds of armaments with | which to carry on her defense against Italy. By acting today the committee per- mitted the entrance of arms into Ethiopia, beginning tonight. Huge Stores at Djibouti. Huge stores of arms destined for the Ethiopian government are reported stored in Djibouti, French Somaliland, | where they were ordersd held by the French government. Djibouti is only two days from Addis Ababa by train. A small subcommittee was set up to study whether any materials should be added to the Roosevelt list of arms | and munitions in the application of the embargo. ‘Fhe resolution, which was drawn up | by the French and British delegations, | provides that those countries which have not imposed embargoes on Italy should do so at the earliest possible moment. The idea which dominated the Committee of Sixteen was that the various countries could be guided by the Assembly resolution of 1921. By the terms of this resolution, small countries could contribute less than great nations to the application of sanctions, but with the understand- ing that they must make clear to the League just what they intend to do. The quesion arose as to what Mus- (See GENEVA, Page 5.) ROOSEVELT MEETS TREASURE HUNTERS Takes Another Fishing Trip and Sees Leaders of Expedition Seeking Pirate Gold. By the Associated Press. WITH PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AT COCOS ISLAND, October 11.— President Roosevelt took another fish- ing trip on the blue Pacific today be- fore pointing the cruiser Houston to- ward Panama Bay. Deeply tanned from his brief vaca- tion, the Chief Executive swapped views yesterday with British treasure hunters who are following clues to buried pirate gold on this sunny island. He invited them to a beach luncheon. He discovered the British have strung a telephone line across the steep cliffs connecting the opposite shores of this hitherto uninhabited island ‘The chief of the expedition said no treasure had been found during a four- month search, but the hunt is to be continued. Costa Rican soldiers, watching to elaim their government’s share of any pirate loot uncovered, have bivouacked in a cave. Long daily reports from Washington, principally from the State Depart- ment, are keeping the President busy during the mornings and evenings. B MILE OF RAILROAD IS TAKEN BY THIEVES Bpur of Illinois Central Missing, Ties and All, Police Are Informed. By the Associated Press. BENTON, Ill, October 11.—If the thieves who stole a mile of road from the Illinois Central system don’t bring it back they are apt to get into trouble with the authorities. They not only took all of the track. but they carted away the ties as well, leaving only the roadbed. The stolen property was a spur of the road near Cambria. | (Copyrizht. 1935. by the Associated Press.) BRITAIN PREPARES | prime minister has invited the speaker |last night which was interpreted in Officers said it was the first time they had been asked to recover part of a stolen railroad. b e Italian Minister Yields at Threat; To Quit Ethiopia Told to Get Out or Be Put Out, He Decides to Go Quietly. | ADDIS ABABA, October 11.—The Italian Minister to Ethiopia, Luigi| Vinci-Gigliucci, yielded today to the| demand of Emperor Haile Selassie| that he get out of the country at once and announced that he and his aides would depart tomorrow. His announcement came after a| high Ethiopian official declared the envoy must leave of his own volition by 11 a.m. tomorrow or be put out by | force. Other membeis of the diplo- matic corps counseled Vinci not to| attempt to prolong his stay, but to leave quietly. | The Emperor informed the League | (See SELASSIE, Page 3.) TOLEVY ENARGD Parliament Called Week | Early—Arms Ready for Ethiopia. By the Associated Press. LONDON, October 11.—The govern- ment today called Parliament to meet October 22, a week earlier than sched- | uled, saying requirements of public | interest necessitated the change. The action came directly after de- velopments at Geneva indicated first sanctions against Italy will be applied tonight. i The British government announced | | it stood ready to release munitions to | Ethiopia the moment the League o(‘ Nations approves such action, just after a League committee at Geneva had recommended application of an arms embargo against Italy and removal of the embargo applied by some nations against Ethiopia. Earlier, officials had confirmed the government's refusal to permit a radio broadcast last night by Baron Pompeo | Aloisi, Italian representative - at| Geneva, to be transmitted to the United States by a British station. They said facilitating the broadcast was considered inadvisable. Recall Explained. An announcement from No. 10 Downing street explaining the recall of Parliament said: “When the houses of Parliament ad- journed August 2 adjournment 1eso- lutions provided that if public interest required they should meet again at an earlier time the lord chancellor and | speaker should give necessary notice. “The government considers that public interest requires that Parlia- | ment should meet October 22. The| lord chancellor will accordingly take | the necessary steps to summon the{ House of Lords that day, and the to give the requisite notice for sum- moning the Hause of Commons.” It was believed the action was taken to obtain thorough discussion of the international situation and the British government'’s policy toward the League before dissolution of Parliament, ex- pected about November 1, and pre- liminary general elections expected to be held late in November. Bingham Visits Office. United States Ambassador Robert ‘W. Bingham visited the foreign office this afternoon. Authoritative quarters said no pro- tests had been received against the government’s refusal to transmit Aloisi’s speech. Although newspapers in Rome and Paris, as well as Geneva, carried bold headlines on this country's refusal to afford radio facilities to Baron Aloisi, “or any other Italian spokesman,” few | lt'ncl;nuu newspapers mentioned the act. Viscount Halifax, minister of war. visiting Sheffield, home of Grea! Britain's steel industry, made a speech some quarters as forecasting an early government appeal to the industry for help in supplying materjals needed for 8 new defense program. Sir Edward Ellington, chief of the air staff, who also addressed the busi- ness chiefs in the smoke-clouded northern city, said Britain by letting her forces fall below the proper level had been guilty in the last few years of “provoking an assault.” Readers’ Guide Pages. Amusements Cross-word Puzzle Editorials Finance .. Lost and Found . Short Story - Society Sports Washington Wayside Women'’s Features .. .\ Selassie Hears of Recapture of Aduwa. ITALIAN CHIEFS DENY DEFEAT Massacre of 2,500 Fascists Reported by Addis Ababa. By the Associated Press. ADDIS ABABA, October 11 (Reu- ters).—Ethiopian troops were reported today to have stormed Aduwa last night and to have massacred the town's 2,500 Italian defenders. The forces of Ras Seyoum, Ethio- pian commander in the north, num- bering 50,800 men, were reported to have surrounded Aduwa, which was captured Sunday by the Itdlians, and to have killed “every one” of the 2,500 defenders. (Italian officials in Rome denied Aduwa had been retaken). The Ethiopian losses were said here | to be heavy, but Ras Seyoum's fight- ers were reported to have captured large numbers of rifies, machine guns, | artillery and ammunition. Fierce Fighting Reported. The Italians were said to bz plan- ning a counter-attack. The Ethiopian fighters, smarting under the loss of the historic city to the Italians, were said to have re- sorted to age-old tactics, striking under cover of darkness, falling on the enemy swiftly and engaging in bitter hand-to-hand fighting in which spears and daggers were pitted against the modern bayonets of Mussolini's | troops. ‘The battle was reported to have raged throughout the night, neither side asking nor giving quarter. Counter Thrust Planned. ‘The Italians were now reported rallying their forces to the north of Aduwa for a fierce counter thrust. (An Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Italian headquarters in Eritrea, however, said Gen. Emilio de Bono, accompanied by his staff, motored into Aduwa this morning and occupied the city officially in the name of the Italian Government. (At the same time, a Reuters dis- | patch from Asmara, Eritrea, said in- formation received there was that Ras Kassa, another Ethiopian chieftain, was joining forces with Ras Seyoum and Dedjazmatch Burru, northern provincial governor, for a concerted defense agaipst an Italian advance toward Gondar.) ITALIAN LOSS MINIMIZED. Rome Reports “Important” Ethiopian Chiefs Joining Invaders. ROME, October 11 (®) —Light Italian casualties and surrender by important Ethiopian chiefs were re- ported today in an official communique | on the Fascist campaign of occupation in Ethiopia. The losses in the first four days of fighting were announced as 5 Italians and 25 native Eritreans killed, and 20 Italians and 50 natives wounded. Thirty-three native soldiers were reported missing. Two important Ethiopian chiefs | came through the Italian lines and offered their support to the Italian command, the communique said. The first was Degiac Haile Selassie (See fl'lfifi?fA, Page 3.) LUPESCU DISAPPEARS Friend of King Carol Believed to Have Left Rumania. BUCHAREST, Rumania, October 11 (#).—The failure of Mme. Magda Lupescu, intimate friend of King Carol, to make her usual shopping trips and automobile rides recently gave rise to reports today that she had left the | country. Persons usually informed of the movements of the woman, who has been considered generally to wield an extraordinary influence behind the government scenes, said she was in Paris, National Peasant party leaders as- serted her political position was be- coming increasingly embarrassing be- cause of the demands by the nation’s farmers for governmental reforms. COVESSEDSLAVER ENDS LFE N CELL Farmer Who Strangled Stepdaughters Hangs Self With Improvised Rope. By the Associated Press. PONTIAC, Mich, October 11.— Ferrin Rowland, stolid woodsman- | | farmer who confessed twisting a rough | wire around the necks of his two small stepdaughters and drowning them in an jsolated lake near here, wrapped an improvised rope around | his own neck today and hanged him- | self from the bars of his cell. Left unguarded for a few minutes | after he had been photographed and fingerprinted, he ripped strips of tick- ing from his mattress and formed a rope. Jump Breaks Neck. He tied the improvised hangman's rope to an upper bar of the cell and jumped from a cot to his death. His neck was broken by the fall. Rowland had been alone only 20 minutes when Deputy Sheriff Louis | Burt, returning to take the prisoner | | into court for arraignment on a mur- | der charge, found him dead. Attempted resuscitation with an in- halator was futile, and Coroner J. Lee Voorhees pronounced him dead at 9:45 am. Rowland not only made swift prepa- rations for ending his own life, but wrote two notes, directing how his property should be divided. One was addressed to Elmer Row- land, his brother, who lives in Grand Blanc, Mich,, and the other appar- ently was intended for his wife, Eliza- beth, the mother of the two slain children, Katherine Woodin, 6, and her 2-year-old sister Virginia. Planned Suicide. - Rowland, who said in one of the two signed confessions he made that he had been “bothered a little” by thoughts of his deed, apparently had contemplated suicide during the week | that he was sought. When officers, who had traced him through a letter to Elmer Rowland, entered his hotel room in St. Louis, Mo.,, Wednesday, he attempted ta| shoot himself with a pistol that was under his pillow. The officers wrested the gun from him. Later he said he had taken the pistol along for the purpose of killing himself. —_— CONSULATE DESTROYED BY FIRE AT NOGALES By the Associated Prese. NOGALES, Sonora, Mexico, October 11.—The United States consulate, a large warehouse and several small buildings were destroyed by fire of un- determined origin early today. Flames broke out in the warehouse shortly before midnight last night, and as fire-fighting equipment from both sides of the border rushed to the scene, spread quickly to the American consulate. The two-story building, located just across the international line and con- taining many valuable state papers, was destroyed in less than 30 minutes. ‘The blaze roared on through an ad- Jjoining building, several rooming houses and residences, before it was brought under control. Total loss was placed at $40,000. _Thousands of Crickets Invade Virginia Homes, Eat Clothing By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. LYON PARK, Va., October 11.— The time-honored belief that a cricket on the hearth is a sign of good luck was being flatly contradicted today by a score of residents whose homes here have been invaded by an army of the insects. Apparently seeking protection from the frosty nights, thousands of the creatures have established them- selves in the homes of those living near the intersection of Tenth and nights unbearable and their appetites ‘have amazed their unwelcome hosts. Silk stockings, rayon dresses and woolen blankets sre their favorite diet, according to the harassed resi- & dents, though wall, T, an upholstery are not mun:un i Besieged with complaints, county officials have summoned the assistance of experts of the Bureau of Ento- mology of the Department of Agri- culture in ousting the pests. Dr. F. C. Bishop, chief of the division of insects affecting man and animals, dispatched men today to the afficted area armed with a quantity of poison bait, in an attempt to destroy the invaders. He admitted, however, that he was uncertain as to whether it would prove effective. . Dr. P. M. Chichester, county health officer, said the crickets came from & nearby gully where trash had been dumped as & All. €0 Vwfifl@!{e ubh‘cansj’}l HOW HAM WOULD HAVE IT! C.U. JoinsStar Safety Campaign And Launches Student Leaders to ings as Movement Starts to Obain 100 Per Cent Co-Operation. Catholic University today joined the | safety campaign of The Star by or-| ganizing its safety council, appointing | committees to make a drive for 100 per cent signature of the safety pledge and signing a blanket pledge for the entire faculty and student body of more than 1400. Catholic University has the largest campus area to patrol of any enducational institu- tion in the Capital. It has a faculty of 190, with 425 undergraduate stu- dents and an enroliment of more than 800 in its graduate schools. Sevetal meetings of campus groups have been called in the interest of the safety drive. Those in the Catholic University safety council who offically witnessed the signing of the safety pledge in- — Campus Drive Be Called to Meet- | clude Rev. Dr. Maurice Sheehy, as- sistant to the rector; Dr. E. A. Ve- lade, dean of the school of engineering and architecture; John McDonald, | chairman of the student council; | Bernard Hart, president of the senior | arts and science group, and Joseph M. Murphy, registrar. “Catholic University is wholeheart- | edly and most earnestly supporting The Star's safety campaign,” said | Dr. Sheehy. “It is & wonderful thing to get such voluntary co-operative effort by the drivers and pedestrains. I feel certain that every automobile driver on the faculty or in the student body of the university will| sign an individual pledge. Our' (See SAFETY, Page 4.) BUILDING ORDERED, FOR TUBERCULAR Reconstruction Will Be Be- gun at Gallinger to Care for 90 Beds. Reconstruction of three old build- ings at Gallinger Hospital as a part of the work-relief program was ordered today by Commissioner George E. Allen, District works progress admin- istrator, in a move to expand imme- diately facilities for care of tubercu- losis victims. ‘Two of the original group of five buildings at Gallinger, which date back to Civil War days, were rebuilt under the emergency works program, and the new project will complete re- habilitation of the whole group. The net result will be to provide 90 addi- tional beds for tuberculosis patients, nearly doubling the present capacity of 120 beds at Gallinger. Will Give Temporary Relief. Dr. Edgar A. Bocock, superin- tendent of Gallinger Hospital, said the increased facilities would serve as & stop gap until the District’s new adult sanatorium is opened next Sep- tember at Glenn Dale, Md. Also, he said, the rebuilt units would enable Gallinger to serve as a receiving and distributing center for tuberculosis cases. “Those cases in which recovery is (See TUBERCULOSIS, Page 2.) Consumer Interest The local merchants adver- tise in The Star goods that are in the best interest of the consumer to buy. That is what makes advertising prof- itable to both buyer and sell- er. The Star is the daily shopping guide in over 100,000 homes of all classes of people | said that he replied that he was deal- who are able to buy. Yesterday’s Advertising ° (Local Display.) Lines. The Evening Star_ 66,121 2nd Newspaper__. 33,379 3rd Newspaper. 24,540 4th Newspaper_.. 10,644 5th Newspaper__._ 7,458 Total ( ntedevers. ) 76,021 The circulation of The Star yesterday was 130,513, a few returns not yet received. There are few of the better homes in W; n where FUDENCE N STOLL CASE DS FATHER Nashville Prosecutor Testi- fies Robinson, Sr., Offered Officials Assistance. By the Associated Press. LOUISVILLE, Ky., October 11.—J. Carlton Loser, Nashville, Tenn., prose- cutor, testified today at the Stoll kid- naping trial of Thomas H. Robinson, | sr., and Mrs. Frances A. Robinson that C. C. Stoll, father-in-law of the kid- nap victim, told him, “We want Mr. Robinson (sr.) to act’ as our agent,| our intermediary, and we will put it in writing.” Loser, among the Nashville cltmzn.sk called by the defense to corroborate | testimony of the Robinsons that they had no part in any plot to kidnap Mrs. | Alice Speed Stoll for $50,000 ransom, | ing with gentlemen and that “noth- | ing like that was necessary.” Describes Son as “Dangerous.” Loser testified that he first learned through the newspapers of the Stoll kidnaping in Louisville a year ago and that as it became generally known Robinson, jr., was suspected he called Louisville authorities. He said he told them that he understood Rob- inson, sr., was named as intermediary and requested a copy of the kidnap note. This, he testified, was not forth- coming and never was provided him. About 2 o'clock on Saturday after- noon following the kidnaping Wed- | nesday, October 10, Loser said he met | the elder Robinson and that shortly thereafter they were jbined by J. G. Lackey, Nashville attorney. Loser testified that in Lackey’s presence Robinson, sr, told them he was sat- isfied his son was the kidnaper and said he was willing to do anything to ald in the apprehension of his son, whom he described as “a dangerous man.” The witness said that he previously had informed Robinson, sr., that as district attorney general any state- ments Robinson, sr, made to him might be used against his son and that it was following this admonition the elder Robinson volunteered the remarks about his son. Loser testified that Robinson, sr., then agreed that if any information concerning his son was received by him he would advise Loser. Loser said he told Robinson, sr., he would relay the information to the Nash- ville department of the Bureau of Investigation, Department of Justice. Loser said that Robinson, sr., called him the following Saturday between 6 and 6:30 pm. and told him he had information he wanted to discuss with him. Loser said he told him to go ahead and tell him, but that Robinson, sr., said he would prefer to talk to Loser in person. Robinson, sr., advised him, the wit- ness said, that he was going to| Lackey’s house and requested that Loser meet him there. Upon his ar- | will $5.900,000 HOME PROJEGT ORDERED BEGUN AT BERWYN Work on 1,000 Low-Cost Houses Will Be Started Tomorrow. FARM RESEARCH CENTER ALSO TO BE ENLARGED Move Is Calculated to Largely Solve Transient Problem Created Here Recently. Construction of “a new town” of 1,000 low-cost houses on Government- | owned land at Berwyn Heights, Md., at a cost of $5,500,000, will be started tomorrow, the Resettlement Adminis- tration and District Works Progress Administrator George E. Allen an- nounced today. ‘This is one of four “green belt” suburban developments pianned na- tionally to provide low-cost housing for 5,000 low-income families. The total cost is estimated at $31,000,000. Solution on Transient Problem. The local phase of the national scheme is calculated to solve promptly the transient problem, created under Pederal orders for demobilization of the transient relief system by Novem- ber 1. All employable transients now under care of the District Transient Bureau are to be inciuded in the de- velopment program. The workmen are to be taxen to the location from ‘Washington and returned each day. W. W. Alexander, assistant Tesettle- ment administrator, said 9,000 acres have been acquired for the Berwyn Heights project, but that locations of the other three suburban developments have not been determined. Alexander said sites for the other three projects probably would be se- lected within 60 days. Expansion of Research Center. Simultaneously, it was announced that the Agriculture Department, in urban Resettlement, is planning a search center at Berwyn Heights to serve the agricultural interests of the whole country. ‘The present research agencies there are to be expanded and, in addition the following bureaus and egencies locate experimentai work at Berwyn Heights: Agricultural eco- nomics, agricultural engineering, bio- logical survey, soil conservation and chemistry and soils. Commissioner Allen said local tran- sients will be set to work tomorrow on such preliminary phases of the development as grading and prepara- tion of roads, with the housing work to come later. Relief Problem Solved. Allen said: “This solves the great- est single relief problem which the District government faces. I am en- thusiastic over the project, not only for its future importance to the city of Washington, but because it is an ideal solution of the difficult social problems. The District authorities are co-operating to the full with the Department of Agriculture and with the Resettlement Administration in this dramatic solution.” W. W. Alexander, assistant admin- (Sce HOMES, Page 2.) Sunday —in— “THIS WEEK” “Let’s Go to War on Crime!” GEORGE E. Q. JOHNSON —prosecutor of Al Capone and former Federal judge, tells of his plan for a Nation-wide, whirlwind drive to control crime once for all and shows how the Nation can save $10,000,000,000 a year. * X * % “Hollywood Illusion” DOROTHY SPEARE —noted film author, tells an amusing tale of bunk and beau- ty at the capital of moviedom, where illusions are bread and butter. * % x ¥ “Purple Pajamas” JACK ALLMAN —gives you an amusing story of a lieutenant who found him- self in a hot spot and made re- treat look like a victory. * K K X These, a Host of Other Features and a Fine Array of New Fiction Will Be Ready for You —in— The Sunday Star rival at Lackey’s house, Loser said, (8es STOLL, 55 » \ GREEKS MYSTIFIED BY KING GEORGE'S SILENCE ON GOUP | Royalists Expect Return of Ruler, Who May Wait on Plebiscite. {PLANS KEPT SECRET; THRONE IS PREPARED Rumors Becloud Monarch's Reac- tion to News—Fear of Being Puppet Is Seen. By *he Associated Press. ATHENS, October 11.—Jubilant Royalists looked today for word from King George II as to whether he would return immediately to the throne regained i a bloodless coup | d'etat. co-operation with the Division of Sub- ! large expansion of its national re- | One unconfirmed report said the | King would not return from London | until a majority of the nation shouts, “come home,” a nation-wide plebis- cite on the question of restoring the | monarchy has been set for November 3, | Another rumor had the King wing- ing to Athens by airplane, but still aenother went the rounds that he feared to become a puppet of Gen. | George Kondylis, author of yesterday's swift overthrow of the 1l-year-old republic. Monarchists Celebrate. Adherents of the monarchy in Athens and the rest of the country demonstrated vociferously with cries of “long live King George.” Gen. Kondylis, former minister of | war, who assumed the regency, said his government would be temporary pend- | ing the King's return. From Paris came a report that King | George was refusing to return in view of the circumstances under which the |coup was effected, saying Greece | could get a King in the person of Prince Nicholas, George's uncle and | father of the former Princess Marina, | now the Duchess of Kent. | (In Saragoza, Spain, Prmmce Eu- gene Lascaris, & pretender to the Greek throme, declared his followers would “convert.- Greece into & river of blood” unless he was placed on | the throne. He termed George a “‘usurper.”) Republican Move in Doubt. The question asked on street cor- ners was, “What are the Republicans going to do?” | Premier Tsaldaris made that “we did not resign. turned out.” With the National Assembly ad- Jjourned until after the plebiscite the regency settled down to work, de= | claring Tsaldaris’ domestic and for« eign policies would not be changed. Kondylis, “Little Corporal” to his followers, once was an ardent Re= | publican. He deserted the exiled | Eleuterios Venizelos, however, to align himself with Tsaldaris. Some time ago he adopted the | view that the return of King George iwould be the best form of govern- ment. He led the successful govern- ment attack last March against a | revolt allegedly created by the Venie | zelist faction. | Alexander Zaimis has taken no for- mal step to leave the presidency, an | office which simply dropped from | beneath him. Kondylis issued a statement to the | public recommending that it “con- tinue orderly pursuits” and hold no mass meetings. Citizenship Restored. The cabinet today voted to restore citizenship to all Greek princes dis- | enfranchised when King George lef¢ }me throne and the republic was es | tablished. | A cabinet communique announced the country was “happy.” following the coup, and that order prevails throughout the country. The mine ister of interior announced any effort to oust the Kondylis regime “will be severely crushed.” it plain We were | King Keeps Silence. LONDON, October 11 (#).—Former King George II of Greece went about his engagements today officially un- vare ot the downfall of the republic (See GREECE, Page 2.) STOCKS ADVANCE IN BUYING WAVE Fresh Flurry Over Potential Ine flation Sends Some Issues Up $2. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 11.—The stock market was swept forward by & large wave of buying in the initia] dealings today. Many issues advanced 50 cents to $2 a share, on top o. yesterday's large gains, as orders were executed for stocks in blocks of 1,000 to 6,000 shares. The ticker fell slightly in arrears. Brokers attributed the buying wave to a fresh flurry of excitement over ‘potential inflation, following comment on the subject the past two days by Charles R. Gay, president of the Stock Exchange, and James M. Landis, chaire man of the S. E. C. Other factors contributing to the buying were further indications of business recovery and the continued subsidence of fears of serious inter- national repercussions from the Ethi~ opian conflict. Du Pont touched $133, up $2; Johns Manville $79, up $1; Chrysler $77, up nearly $1, while advances of 50 cents or more were registered by American Telephone, American Can, Santa Fe, General Motors and others. & B

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