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.S AGENTS JOIN | ™= i HENT FOR KILLER Woman Found Murdered on . Indian- Reservation Was * . Expectant Mother. , By the Assoclated Press. + BUFFALO, N. Y., October 10.—The father of Christina Mary Jurelier's unborn_child was sought tonight, as Federal, State and local authorities tried to solve her brutal murder. An autopsy today revealed the Springville, N. Y., girl, whose bat- tered body was found yesterday on the Cattaraugus Indian Reservation, south of here, would have become & mather in three months. Three unnamed men were being questioned by Federal Department of Juftice agents. The sheriff’s office said there were “no clues.” The autopsy revealed the girl had been beaten and choked and that the slayer apparently drove his knees into her side as she lay on the ground. Dr; Charles E. Long, the medical ex- anilner, said death was caused by s ruptured liver and that the killer ruptured it and broke some of her ribs by kneeling on her body while beating her about the head and chest. Teeth were knocked out and there were numerous marks of blows with s blunt instrument on the head and chest. The Federal agents entered the case because the Indian reservation s ‘under United States control. Au- therities pointed out that the killer, §f convicted, would be hanged under Federal law, and not electrocuted, as under New York law. LANDON ESTIMATES - CITED BY HOPKINS w P. A. Head Uses Them to Deny < Program Is Tending to Cut Skilled Labor. By the Associated Press. “Harry L. Hopkins, works progress administrator, yesterday cited figures glven by Gov. Alf M. Landon to deny a complaint that the works program was creating a shortage of skilled la- ber in the construction industry. The contention was made by Edward | J. Harding, managing director of the Associated General Contractors of America, Inc, who asserted the sho:tage was “acute and ardificial.” Referring to Landon’s speech at | Chicago Friday night, Hopkins said | the W. P. A. was employing about 2, | 400.000 persons “at & time when the total unemployment is estimated by | the G. O. P. candidate for President at 11,000,000.” “Relatively few skilled workers | sought, employment on the works pro- | gram,” Hopkins said, “for as a class they were far better able to care for themselves than the unskilled. The 1930 census showed 12.9 per cent of industrial workers to be skilled. The portion of skilled workers employed by W. P. A. has been little more than half as high, in relation to the total number.” \ EDWARD V. PAYNE DIES; | SERVICES TOMORROW World War Veteran Survived by Three Days Father, 83—Burial to Be in Arlington. Edward V. Payne, 47, a World War veteran, died at Mount Alto Hospital Friday. Funeral services will be held at his home, 5408 Galena place, to- morrow at 2 pm, to be followed by services by the Dawson Masonic Lodge at Arlington Cemetery, where he will be buried. He survived by only three days| his father, Samuel W. Payne, who | died Tuesday at the age of 83. “For 15 years he was employed byI the W. S. Thompson Pharmacy, Fif- | teenth street and Pennsylvania a nue. During the war he served over- | lfi:“for 15 months as a sergeant (first class) in the Medical Corps. . ZHe is survived by his widow, Mrs. Alice Payne; two brothers and two sisters, one of whom is the wife of Apsistant United States Attorney David A. Hart. Bars and Libraries on Plane. “Bars, libraries and card rooms are féatures of new London-Paris i pimnes. 1857 THE Circulation of Past Twelve Months, Statement of the ownership, management, circulation, etc., of “The Evening Star, published daily, and The Sunday Star, published Sunday morning, at Washington, D. C., required by act of Congress of August 24, 1912: + Editor, Theodore W. Noyes, Washington, D. C.; business man- ager, Fleming Newbold, Washington, D, C.; publisher, The Evening Star Newspaper Company, Frank B. Noyes, president, Washington, D. C. Owners: Theodore W. Noyes and Frank B. Noyes, trustees; Frank B, Noyes and Newbold Noyes, trustees; Theodore W. Noyes, Ruth Noyes McDowell and Elizabeth N. Hempstone, trustees; Rudolph Max Kauffmann and Henry G. Hanford, trustees; 8. H. Kaufflmann and Henry G. Hanford, trustees; Frank B. Noyes, Theodore W. Noyes, Victor Eauffmann, Barbara K. Murray, Fleming Newbold, Ethel Newbold, Grace Adams Howard, Mary B. Adams, Philip C. Kauff- mann, Jessie C. Ksuffmann, R. M. Kauffmann, Sainuel H, Kauff- mann, Miranda Noyes Pomeroy, Newbold Noyes, George Adams Howard, Ruth Noyes McDowell, Elizabeth N. Hempstone and Crosby, Noyes Boyd. All addresses Washington, D. C., except Miranda Noyes Pomeroy, Greenwich, Conn., and Barbara K. Murray, Dunkirk, N. Y, . Known bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders, holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or STAR FILES P. O. STATEMENT other securities, none. Circulation Figures. Average number of coples of or distributed through the mails each issue of the publication sold or otherwise to paid subscribers during the twelve months ended September $0, 1936: Net Paid Circulation. Net Unpaid Circulation (made up of copies given for service, etc.) «ou---- Total Average Net Circulation. .. (8igned) Average Net Circulation, Bunday. 136,576 ° 97 e 130,208 137373 R. M. KAUFFMANN, Becretary, Bworn to and subscribed before me this 9th day of October, 1936, (Beal) Firemen to Rescue. DALLAS (#).—The Grand Avenue State Bank had to call the fire de- partment to lock its money. As seven officials and employes were closing the day's business four tear gas bombs, intended to explode | only in case of robbery, went off. Choking and crying, the workers were | helpless until firemen arrived with | masks. “You can say all you want to about that gas” cried W. F. Miller, | executive vice president, “but it sure ‘works.” oo e e 60,000 Church Collections. Sixty thousand church collections will be taken in Britain for the King | George V National Memorial Fund, which now totals over $1.100,000. Latvia has banned sound signals, horns and bells on motor cycles. N. M. RAYMOND, Notary Publie, ADVERTISEMENT. ASPIRUB for ACHES PAINS--SORENESS Keep this in mind. Because of | the other ingredients in Aspirub, | the Aspirin this great rub contains, swiftly penetrates thru the skin and | greatly helps the other pain killing | agents to do a fast and thorough | job of relleving aches, pains and | soreness in joints and muscles—it is the only rub containing active As- pirin and protected by U. S. pat- a white, stainless, anti- | ains and mu ts success in colds. lumbago. and sore feet is amazing. | small. Ask Peoples Drug Stores or | any live drugsist anywhere about Aspi- | Tub. TRAILER PROSPECTS ATTEN TION! DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTION NOW ON *NEW 1936 MODEL COVERED WAGON TRAILERS %2—CUSTOM MODELS 1 FLOOR DISPLAY MODEL—1 USED 5—DE LUXE MODELS 2 BRAND-NEW—1 DISPLAY MODEL—2 USED 2—MASTER MODELS 1 BRAND-NEW—1 PRICES CUT FLOOR DISPLAY AS MUCH AS $200 FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED—BETTER HURRY W. S. DOMER CO. No. 1 DUPONT CIRCLE Phone POtomac 1610 Ezxclusively Everything in Music 1936 E. F. Droop & Sons Co., 1300 G Our efforts are concentrated on distribution of Musical Products that are reliable and trust- worthy. We offer the best quality in all grades—reasonably priced—convenient to purchase. “The Poorest Child Is Rich With Musical Training” SUNDAY STAR, "WASHINGTON, D. C, 1.5, GO-OPERATIVES 0 ASSIST LABOR League Pledges Support in Gaining ‘Living Income’ for All Workers., Py the Associated Press. OCOLUMBUS, Ohio, October 10.— ‘The Co-operative League of the United States of America pledged co-opera- tion with organized labor and agri- culture “to the fullest extent possible” OCTOBER 11 today a8 its tenth biennial congress drew to & close. . “A living income for laborers as well as farmers and other sections of the population will be an aid to the economic and social welfare of the people and to the future growth of the consumers co-operative move- ment,” said & resolution adopted. “Bona fide and well-conducted la- bor unions and farm organizations are important means of protecting and improving the money income of these groups.” Willlam Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, as- serted in s message read before the congress Priday that he believed an alliance with union labor essentiai for success of the co-operative move- ment. Belief that the only sound Basis for world peace would be a more equitable VISIT THE WHITNEY HOUSE at MAYER & CO. 8 Rooms Furnished With True Colonial Reproductions Westport Complete Decorator Welsh Cup- board. . . copied directly from an buthentic piece . . . a charming copy in Meaple priced at $84.50. 1936—PART ONE: trading relationship between nations ‘was expressed in another resolution. “This new basis,” the resolution said, “is possible only when international trading is no longer controlled by the profit motive.” The congress also resolved to ask the Federal Govlrnment to create an agency similar to the Farm Credit Administration for assisting consum- ers’ co-operative housing activities, and favored co-operation further to extend electrification to all classes of consumers at reasonable rates. —_— Tired on Waiting on Jury. SACRAMENTO, Calif. (#)—Tired after waitin; seven hours for & Fed- eral Court jury to come in with & verdict, Wilburn E. Johnson, 27, and Charles J. 8imons, 27, pleaded guilty to charges of setting a forest fire. OU will love these Whitney Maple Reproductions! HULL’S TREATY POWER CRITICIZED BY CULKIN By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 10.—Repre- sentative Francis D. Culkin of New York, in a statement issued by the Republican National Committee today, charged Becretary of State Cordell Hull with having “gdne far beyond the powers delegated to him by Con- gress in making secret trade agree- ments with foreign nations.” Culkin, assistant director of the farm division of the National Com- mittee, said of Hull in the state- ment: “He made a sorry mess in attempt- ing to defend the Canadian trade agreement in Minneapolis. * * * He suggests that National Chairman JohnI Hamilton fire me. In turn, I am| When you examine this Whitney Chest in Maple pull out the drawers and feel them glide. Note their fine cabinet work and silk-stocking smoothness. Only in Whitney quality will you find these refinements, Price, $51.90. Mayer's. going to suggest that he ought to he fired or rather, impeached for usurp. ing power not granted him by Cone , * gress.” Y ————— Intereating Nems. in .Anm'm d g items in e an: Modern _silver. china. * bric-a-brac, classware, paintings. fireplace brasses mirrors and furniture. Prices reduced on all stock to make room for alter- ations in our galleries. jpecial on three Maryland ‘Transition” Chalrs URRAY GALLERIES. INC. . N.W. Adams 4008 They fit so graciously into any decorative scheme. Early American in feel- ing, they do not demand a purely Colonial interior. Their graceful lines and proportions make them adaptable to ‘most any room. Whitney Maple is finished so beautifully, too! "It feels like Satin and looks like Sunshine,”” is the way one enthusiastic customer de- It does not matter which room you wish to furnish, you can do it with Whitney Maple from the ‘Mayer G Co. collection. scribes it. Lodderback Arm Chair with hand- woven seat — Whitney Maple, price $19. Side Chair to match is available, too, at $13.80. Mayer's. “H ARMsWoOD” MODEL GRAND Full Scale—38 Notes—7!5 Octaves—3 Pedals A graceful, lovely Grand Piano ou}"y1 4 1t. 6 in. in length, which adds beauty to its surroundings; it is especially suited to apartments of moderate size. Gulbransen Pianos are noted for their rich tone and responsiveness. Milford Butterfly Exten- sion Table with two ex- tension leaves, 42x78 ¢ inches when open . large enough for din Price, $49.50. Moyer’s. Newport Love Seat $82.80 A delighful Whit- ney piece uphol- stered in a charm- ing green plaid .+ . two reversible spring cushions . . « price, 80. Same design in a full-size 3-cushion Sofa . . . brown with floral motif, $96.90. Hanging Book Shelf in_pic- ture is $12.20. The New Super-Scale “HARMSWOOD” In Mahogany—With Bench *385 Accommodating Terms Available Draperies Rugs Bedding THREE EXQUISITE CREATIONS GULBRANSEN- ONE NAME—ONE PRODUCT—ONE QUALITY We invite your special attention to the mew studio Console, Model “Hawthorne”—Priced at $375. s RS REAREY RS A LN SPINET ORGAN L Double Set Reeds. F 98:“ Scale. 61 Notes, Stand- ard Origan Keyboard. In walnut— A BEAUTY! ““BRIARGATE" SUPER-SCALE MODEL With Bench Scores of Other Pieces for Every Room in the Home "MAYER & CO. - ~ Between D and E Full Scale 88 Notes, 7% Octaves, 3 Pedals, 3 1. 8 in. High This beautiful model is one of the outstanding values in well-known pianos. Its tone is full, mellow and rich, Delighttully responsive. Gulbransen “Vertical Grand” in mahogany.-. Guibransen Minuet Model in mahogany. 72-Note, §-Octave Ricca Piano, mahoganyee.- 66-Note_Ricea, “Recreation Room” Piano....$159.00