AIDE TO WALKER IN MEXICO CITY Personal Accountant, on Honeymoon, Says He May Remain Indefinitely. Br ths Allocated Pr*s*. MEXICO CITY, October 17.—Russell T. Sherwood, personal accountant of Mayor James J. Walker of New York, who has been sought for questioning by the legislative committee Investigat ing New York's municipal affairs, was at the Hotel Rltz here yesterday after noon. Sherwood said he was here on his honeymoon and might remain in Mex ico indefinitely. He refused to discuss anything connected with his business affairs In New York or the municipal Investigation. "My visit to Mexico is entirely a per sonal matter," he said, "and I do not think it would interest the public." He said he intended to visit points of scenic interest in Central Mexico and mentioned Cuernavaca. Attempts to reach him at his hotel later last eight failed. Sherwood's presence here was re vealed to correspondents of New York newspapers by a man who said he had known him for years in New York. Sherwood said he had made no effort to conceal his identity, that he had registered under his own name and moved freely in social circles. He has been here more than a week. SCAN SHERWOOD FINANCES. Income Tax Investigator* Work on Bank and Brokerage Accounts. NEW YORK. October 17 (/P).—Fed eral income tax investigators yesterday were working on the bank and broker age accounts of Russell T. Sherwood, missing accountant for Mayor James J. Walker, which have been reported to show transactions of large amounts. Newspapers saw in the announcement a hint that Federal powers may be used to find Sherwood, who has been sought by the Hofstadter Legislative Committee for 10 weeks. Samuel Seabury. counsel for the committee, whose aides have been por ing over the accounts for days, said he was powerless to issue a subpoena for Sherwood, even if he did locate him in , another State. He pointed out that Sherwood was re ported in Atlantic City last month, but j that the committee could not send for j him because its jurisdiction does not i go outside New York State. If the Federal Government joins in | the hunt, its agents would be able' to 5 bring Sherwood back to New York by procuring a grand jury subpoena, valid anywhere in United States territory. Income of Six Probed. The incomes of six Democratic poli- ' ticlans which the Hofstadter Committee i revealed as totaling nearly $2,000,000 in j the last six years, also are under Fed eral scrutiny. Seabury defended for the second time the committee's right to hold private i hearings when he argued in Brooklyn j Supreme Court a case brought by Rob- | ert Kennedy, sales manager for a badge 1 manufacturing firm. Kennedy had been subpoenaed to produce books of the concern after S;a- j bury had charged the company was | selling badges which cost 50 cents each to city employes for $5. Kennedy's attorney contended the Legislature had no power to order an 1 investigation into a particular unit ot ! the State except as an emergency i measure, which would require a two J thirds vote. The bill creating the Hos- ! stadter Committee was passed by only , a majority vote. The court reserved decision and asked counsel to submit brieis by Monday. The previous test case was brought by Minthorne T. Gordon, bus operator, but it was based on another contention, that the committee lacked power to ap point a subcommittee of less than three members to hold private hearings. The court ruled against him and he was ordered to appear for private exam ination Monday. One thousand men and women in ! cycling and hiking outfits attended serv lce at Ripon. England, recently. SPECIAL NOTICES. fiOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THERE will be a meeting of the stockholders of Herman Shaoiro Company. Inc., a corpora tion of the District of Columbia, on Satur day. November 28. 1931. at ten o'clock am., at the office of the company. 1211 G st. n.w.. Washington. D. C.. for the purpose of elect ing trustees for the said corporation and for the transaction of such other business as may properly come before the meeting. MAURICE SHAPIRO. Secretary. • APPLES FOR BALE--B ALLINCAR A. BAKER Orchard. Germantown. Md. Pick your own apples, from ground. 25c per bushel; from trees. 50c. Prime apples. Fine varieties. Low prices. Bring baskets. • I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by anybody other than myself. CHARLES J. MAINS. Brentwood. Md. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS other than those contracted by myself. Bert E. Banfleld. Sargent rd,. Broyklanri. D. C. • AWNINGS REMOVED. REPAIRED. STORED reasonably; order now. Window shades, all grades: terms. PROCTER. 214 H. Nat. 1456 PEONIES- $3 FOR J I.OO—NEW VARIETIES: guaranteed to bloom; large, strong roots; planted properly free. 322 First se. CHAIRS FOR REN'I, SUITABLE FOR BRIDGE PARTIES, banquets, weddings and meetings. 10c up per day each; new chairs. Also invalid rolling chairs for rent or sale. UNITED STATES STORAGE CO.. 418 10th »t. n.w. Metropolitan 1844 Five miles from D. C. line on Ga. ave. pike Grimes Golden. Delicious. Winter Banana and Smoke House apples. $1 bushel. Cider. 40c gal. in your container. J. E WEISMAN. Proprietor. » FURNACES —cleaned (Including smoke pipei and paint ed for $3 50: repairs, parts for every furnace, steam and hot-water heating Leaking fur naces permanently repaired with A.iax Quick Seal. All work guaranteed Robey Heating Co ■ Inc . Lin. 1440 1395 Fla ave me. 18* WANTED RETURN LOADS From HOUSTON. TEX OCT. 28 From MONTGOMERY. ALA OCT. 26 Load to CHICAGO OCT. 30 Load to ASHEVILLE. N. C . immediately. Call Met. 4474. WANTED—LOADS TO NEW YORK OCT. 20 TO PITTSBURGH OCT. 25 TO BOSTON OCT. 29 And all points North and West e.GENT ALLIED VAN LINES We also pack and Ship by STEEL LIFT VANS anywhere SMITH S TRANSFER Ac STORAGE CO.. 1313 You St N_W Phone North 3342-3343 APPLES, SWEET CIDER Grimes Golden and Delicious apples. Stavman Winesaps. York Imperials. Sweet rider made from clean, hand-picked apples. Drive to Rockville. Mn., 2 blocks beyond Court House, then one mile out Potomac rd. Rockville Fruit Farm Hollywood Orchard. Out Georgia ave. 3 miles past D. C. line. Delicious Altered cider. 35c per gal.; bring containers. Apples. 50c per bushel. 18* AN ENLARGED PRINTING PLANT designed to meet modern busines* demands. May we serve you? The National Capital Press 3rd and N N.F.. Line. 6080 Apples and Sweet Cider AT QUAINT ACRES Thousands of baskets of choice fruit at very low prices. Grimes Golden. Delicious, eitayman. Winesap. Old Fashioned Winesap. York. etc. Special school lunch size, in several varieties. Sweet cider made on the farm from carefully selected fruit, no pre . servatlve. Drive out through Silver Spring. ’ tarn right on Colesville pike (Route 27). Only 5 miles from the District. we Are EXPERT TINNERS 25 Years Experience. No Job Too Small BUDGET PAYMENTB If desired. j. FLOOD c 1411 v c. r O. st. N.W. Day. Dec 2700—Evening. Clev. 0618. SLAG ROOFING —by "Approved Roofers" for the Barrett «anv and Johns-Manville Corporation. ! you're at it, get the best. Call us up I ROOFING District COMPANY. 0933. Will Rogers Says: BEVERLY HILLS, Calif—Mex ico’s whole cabinet retired whole. Headline says "Chicago Elec trocuted Four Gang st e rs.” | Their limou sine must have crossed a live wire. “Hward Bars Almee From Campus.” Harvard must have some smart men to think up all p the fool things that school does to, get notoriety. Thirteen nations asked us to Join the League to try and help make Japan behave. That number 13 ought to be the tip-off right there to stay out of there. MOTHER KILLS SELF AND FOUR CHILDREN Unemployed Worker Finds Five Bodies on Return to Home. By the Associated Press. WILMINGTON. Ohio. October 17 j A 35-year-old mother shot and killed j her four children and then committed j suicide at their home, in Reesville, near j here, last night. The dead were: Mrs. Russell Ward and her children, Arlene. 11; Audrey, 8; Edith, 7, and Richard. 4. Authorities blamed financial troubles for the tragedy. The mother, who had told friends she was so worried she I "couldn't think," went to the village school to get her children. She told • them they were "going away.” The husband was in Wilmington at the time of the shooting. He found the bodies when he returned home. Those of his daughters were on the bed room floor. The mother lay in a door way leading from the room and nearby : was the body of the boy. Ward picked up the boy and found !he was not dead. He tried frantically j to revive the child, but death came j within a few minutes. The father, a toolmaker, had been ! without employment recently, except for , ! odd jobs. .He said his wife had been | acting strangely for several weeks and 1 had complained of feeling ill. The house, a one-story cottage, dark, but the doors were unlocked, when Ward returned. He declared he went first to the kitchen and. finding his family gone, assumed they were visit , ing neighbors. Several minutes passed before he | entered the bed room to find the bodies. The mother left no note, but the eoro ' ner was convinced she slew the children i . and herself because she was tired of 1 poverty. i Ward, almost prostrated by the trag | edy. said his wife often had threatened ito kill herself and the children. As a I precaution he had taken the cartridges from his revolver, which he kept in the ] bed room. The weapon was used tv ; Mrs. Ward, however, and Ward was at* a loss as to how she obtained cartridges. Mrs. Ward apparently took the chil | dren to the bed room on the pretense j she was going to dress them for a trip. ' It was believed the three girls were j slain first. Authorities theorized the boy i was running from the room when shot ; down, his body falling near the door- i | way only a few inches from that of the mother. (olony Hill a'Restricted Community of Early American Homes $25,000 to $35,000 Due to Many Requests We Have Decided to Keep 1705 Hoban Road Open From 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily WE BELIEVE THESE HOMES THE GREATEST VALUE OF THE DAY AND THAT YOU WILL BE UNABLE TO DUPLICATE THEM AT THESE PRICES A YEAR FROM NOW In April, 1931, the work of constructing homes was started on Colony Hill, District of Columbia, a new Boss and Phelps development. The architecture of the first four houses was “commended ’ by the Board of Review of the Architects’ Advisory Council of the District of Columbia. This is the highest award given before completion. Colonv Hill will be a community of about seventy detached, individual homes, pure I'.arly American and Georgian in design, planned by Horace \Y. l’easlee. Vice President of The American Institute of Architects. The total sale price of the houses will aggregate about $2,000,000. Miss Rose Greely is the Landscape Archi tect, and all details and drawings of gardens in the community will be made by her. Jhe development of Colony Hill will be under the personal supervision of Harry K. Boss, of the firm of Boss and Phelps. ' On the tract of ground, beautifully situated high above the Potomac River and adjoining the English sec tion of Foxhall Village, which has deservedly attracted nation-wide attention, Colony Hill, only ten mjjjutes from the center of the city, will have that delightful degree of privacy which is all essential. It is truly a village in the city. Hoban Road is the street on which the first houses have been built. Very fittingly, in recognition of the splendid service rendered the architectural art of this country, this street is named for Captain James Hoban, a talented young Irishman, selected by a commission appointed by George Washington to be the builder and architect of the White House, one of the most perfect examples of Georgian architecture now in existence in this country. Go west on Q Street to Wisconsin Avenue, north one square to Reservior Road, west to Hoban Road just beyond 44th Street. BOSS & PHELPS Creators and Exclusive Developers of Foxhall Village and Colony Hill. r ■ * / •THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, I). C., SATURDAY, OCTOUiG 17. 1931. THEATER BOMBING SUSPECT BURNED Sulphur Machine Ignites Be neath Coat —Five Others Are Injured. By the. Associated Pres*. , CHICAGO, October 17. Chicago's sixteenth theater bomb seriously burned the man, police said, who caused It to explode. Peter Mooney, who was released four years ago from Joliet Prison, was in jured about the face, body and legs when the sulphur machine Ignited be neath his coat during the climax of a motion picture at the Colony Theater, on the Southwest Side, last night. Police said the bomb was intended to terrorize the audience of 800. Two women, Mrs. Margaret Kane and Mrs. Bella McClure, sitting In back of i Mooney, were burned, but little prop erty damage was done. Audience Quickly Calmed. Three others, who extinguished the fire in Mooney’s garments, suffered burns about the hands. The audience, alarmed by the flash of bluish flame and the sharp odor of burning sulphur, was thrown into mo mentary panic. It was quickly calmed, however, and the motion picture con tinued after Mooney was carried Into the lobby. Mooney, before lapsing into uncon- ; sciousness, declared the bomb had been hurled from the balcony. Police said i i this was impossible, since he was sitting on the first floor at the rear, many tee) back of the balcony ledge. Besides. Mrs 1 Kane and Mrs. McClure said they saw . | Mooney fumbling with "something 1 | wrapped in wet clothes, then thrust tt | ! under his coat,” only a minute before j the explosion. Man Refuses to Talk. Lieut. Walter Storms, acting deputy j detective chief, questioned Mooney early 1 today, but the man refused to talk. Fifteen other bombs have been set off Permanence in FOXALL Few things in life bring greater joy ; or happiness than the ownership of one s home ... a home built to endure ... in an environment per manently protected. The superior ity of our materials, workmanship and construction insure durability, while Foundry Branch Valley Park, the Upper Potomac River Park De velopment and surrounding estates assure the continuance of its pres ent ideal environment. Visit our f urnished Model Home, open until 10 p. m.. at 4400 Volta Place, three short blocks south of Reservoir Road, and see for your self what living in Foxall really means. Paces $11,350 to $14,950 & WAVERLY TAYLORS 1522 K Street Nefl 1040 during the controvery between the Al lied Independent Motion Picture The ater Owners' Association, with which the Colony House In affiliated, and the Motion Picture Operators’ Union. The owners have refused to accept demands of the union that two operators be em ployed in each theater per shift, and since August 20 have been operating with imported operators. Last night the owners were reported by the Herald and Examiner to have I raised an additional $50,000 to continue i their fight against the union. Four at tempts by authorities to have the two organizations arbitrate their differences have failed. Son Mistakes Mother for Fox. Thinking she heard robbers In her farmyard near Bordeaux ( France, Mme. M. Blza, a widow of 60, aroused her son, who crouched by his window and shot at a fancied fox. He then found he nad fired at his mother, who had gene into the yard without his knowledge. She wes seriously Injured. - • The Virgin Islands are trying to at tract tourists, and hotels and other facilities are being planned. j HOME BARGAINS ! I DETACHED HOUSES | BIG PRICE REDUCTIONS ♦ 4009 20th St. N.E. 18 rooms. Lot 40 bz 107. Garage. Sun parlor—porches and detached. Regular price, $11,500. Now, $9,650. ! 20th and Bunker Hill Road N.E. Just finished. Detached, attractive home*. General Electric Refrlger ! T ator*. Bln porches. *8.950 to $9,150. Don't miss these. " ! 1322-4 and 6 Potomac Ave. S.E. Just completed. Beatulful new homes. 40-ft. parking. Built-In garage. Large porches. One sold. Just south Pa. Ave. " . 1737 Upshur Street N.W. I'i squares west 16th Street. 8 rooms, double brick garage, 2 baths, | General Electric relrlgerator. Reduced $2,000. | 1214 Hemlock Street N.W. • 2 stories 8 rooms, bullt-ln garage: just east of 16th St. and Alaska 4 Ave. N. W. Drive out 16th St. and turn right on Alaska Ave. to Hemlock St. | and then right 100 feet to house. Reduced $4,000. I 3400 15th Street N.E. (Corned) ♦ 4 Semi-deteched beautiful new- home, just north of Lawrence Street and 4 just south of Monroe Street; busses. Open and lighted. R-duced $2,000. i 6403 to 6411 Third St. N.W. I • : * New detached Lots 41 by 110 to alley. Drive out Georgia Avenue to j • Rittenhouse Street end thence east to Third Street, or cats pass door. Only * 1 left. e | 4710 Chevy Chase Boulevard N.W. i Just west Chevy Chase Club grounds. Special bargain Only on* of j ; these. Drive out Wisconsin Ave. and Just this side of Bradley Lane turn west t 1 r l< 2 squares 4 . | A GENUINE BARGAIN—S3OB Illinois Ave. N.W. j Attractive new home on this beautiful wide avenue. Regular price. $8,950. • T Reduced to $7,950. e j j 1117 Seventh St. N.E. j , • i . a pretty 6-room and bath home on a big lot. and double metal garage. ; . Only $6,950. 4 [ | 1218 Owen Place N.E. 4 4 : 4 New house, just north 12th St. and Florida Ave. NE A perfect little ; , 4 home with garage. Only $7,450. j | Inspect Any Time—Open Till 9 P.M. . j H.R.hIOWfeNSTEIN * ••■■■■WSsM ■ INCORTORArco VRT j 1311 H STREET NORTHWEST t • • ; i 4.>*•»*»*■••■s■••■■♦■ •»*•*••* 1 '■ ■■■■■ ' 120,000,000 CATS IN U. S. ] Society Secretary Says 7,000,000 Are In New York. NEW YORK, October 17 UP).— [ There are, says J. M. Loughborough, 120,000,- 000 cats in the United States—7,ooo,ooo in New York—which is approximately one cat for each man, woman and child. I Sixty-five of every hundred are stray, explains Loughborough, secretary of the International Cat Society. Which explains the nightly yowls on the back fence. Germany shipped 8,330 bicycles to Lithuania in the first six months of this year. Enjoy a Delightful Breakfast, Luncheon, Dinner or Supper at gs 74th Year ristauaant Jr ; v jjQjßtfSSa', - JHIII^^Hh THIS IS ONE OF THE NEW SHANNON & LUCHS HOMES AT Rittenhouse St. and Broad Branch Rd. Chevy Chase, D. C. That Have Caused Such a Sensation in Home Building Circles in the Past Two Weeks THEY ARE DIFFERENT And llieir Values Are Protected for All Time to Come Because the Grouping Is COMPLETE AND ALL ARE DIFFERENT It Is Here You Will See The New FIRST FLOOR SERVICE ROOMS. A FULLY INSULATED HOME. AUTOMATIC HEAT. INCASE RADIATION. EXQUISITELY FINISHED EVEN IN MINUTE DETALS, AND LOTS OF NEW IDEAS. Don’t miss these homes. They are an excel lent guide to what to demand for your money. TO INSPECT Right from Chevy Chase Circle on Western .4 venue two squares to Ritterhouse St., right two squares to Broad Branch Road. Bus line passes property. An Extraordinary Feature I> 1 hat All of the Refinement Accomplished Here Has Been Accomplished Within the LOW-PRICE RANGE of From s l 3,450 to 5 14,200 Note —I he Above Is a Corner Home (One Left) and Is Priced at $14,200 Built-in (iarage OPEN DAY AND EVENINGS [Shannon & luchS] ~ L— (Q Westchester’s Nezc Building C/ Bivited inspect Westchester’s or not, we believe you will t assured that you are more The Approach ...to Your Home in Westchester Sweeping driveways, beautifully landscaped, lead you into quiet and beautiful est- Chester, giant evergreens, a gorgeous sunken garden with its rustic stone walks, bab bling waters, green terraces and multicolored blooms, greet your approach. A truly wonderful setting, so typical of the unusual beauty and refinement of Westchester. Apartments ranging from one room and bath to seven rooms and three baths VEST CHE STIR. Cathedral Ave 39m Jtult -1-H P A A-3