TO res ‘MOP-UP’ Senator, in Control of Legis lature, Will Seek Im peachments. * . . By th« Associated Press. BATON ROUGE. La.. August 17 Senator Huey P. Long was ready to day to push through the Legislature his “Kingfish” program for investiga tion of New Orleans and reputed im peachment of Its authorities. All signs pointed to a sweeping in vestigation of the administration of Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley in New Orleans and there was a widespread rumor that a petition was in prospect calling for the impeachment of two judges of the New Orleans Civil Dis trict Court in Long's ‘‘mopping-up” process against the city rule. Long's personally-supervised House bills were ready to skip through the Senate where he and the administra tion of Gov. O. K. Allen, his chief of staff, held a safe majority. Given Free Hand. As passed in the House over roar ing objections of a weak minority, this program gives the Governor a free hand with the State Militia beyond court Interference, added strength in election machinery and a State police force of personnel suf ficient to enforce law anywhere in the State. Long claimed that this legislation would insure ‘‘honest elections” and furnish a weapon to break the “vice ring” in New Orleans, but the mi nority leaders from country parishes declared that the Senator was seeking to wrest the election machinery and thereby perpetuate himself in office. Mayor Walmsley said that he would welcome any investigation into the affairs of New Orleans, and today the speaker of the House and the presi dent of the Senate tvere only waiting passage of the investigation resolution by the Senate to appoint a joint com mittee to conduct the investigation. Asked about the reported impeach ment petition, Senator Long refused*to discuss it other than to say "it is not In circulation at this time.” Arrests Are Made. Joe Messina, personal attendant to Senator Long and a member of the State highway police, today arrested F. Edward Herbert, special writer for the New Orleans States, and Leon Trice, newspaper photographer, for contempt of the Senate Finance Com mittee. Mayor Walmsley also made arrests. Two Guardsmen on leave from the city registration office were arrested last night at a ”5-cents-a-dance” hall and charged with being drunk and disturbing the peace. They were or dered to appear in Recorder s Court tonight for trial. Tension Prevails. Tlie capital city was charged with tension after a near riot in the House over the attempts of Representative George Lester of West Feliciana Par ish to remove “Long and his hence men” entirely from the House cham ber by invoking completely the rule against lobbying. Previously sent off of the floor. Long was talking to members of the House from the rear over the guard rail. He eagerly watched each movement as administration leaders and opponents rushed down front with shouting and fist clutching until Representative Lester, a leader of the anti-Long mi nority, modified his motion on the grounds that if he invoked it the Long men would also order the press out of the chamber. LABATT RELEASED; RANSOM PAYMENT REPORTS DISAGREE fContinued From First Page.) called at Hugh Labatt's hotel suite Wednesday night and Thursday. Hugh's mission in disappearing from his suite late yesterday. The activities of the family in their efforts to obtain the brewer's release. Seized in Side Road. The impression has grown on the basis of stories told by district resi dents that Labatt was taken from i his car not on the main highway, | which it was presumed he had trav eled. but on the Egremont side road, 6ome 15 miles north of Sarnia. Various gangsters from the United States have been mentioned in con nection with the case and fingerprints were said to have been sent from De- I troit to Albany for comparison with i those on record from the kidnaping last year in the New York capital of John O'Connell, scion of a New York political family. Telis Story of Kidnaping. Attorney General Roebuck made the following statement concerning Lablatt's kidnaping: "He was blindfolded and had been continuously blindfolded since the time he was taken. He was left in the vicinity of Forest Hill Village, from where he took a taxi to the Royal York Hotel (where Hugh1 awaited him). "He was immediately carried from : there, by his own friends, in a car to London. "At the time of his release he drove ! between five and six hours, he thinks, I but his judgment is that of a man blindfolded “He also thinks the kidnapers were killing time in the latter drive in waiting for darkness. At the time of his capture, he drove around for a time which he estimates at 12 hours. He was in Ontario all the time. He has no knowledge of having passed over any water. "For some reason, those who took charge of him failed to notify either . Toronto or provincial police. Regrets Lark of Co-operation. “His arrival resulted in a lack of co-operation between the authorities and his friends. There is no hot trail of the abductors. It is most unfor tunate and necessary that the police forces of both the province and the city have been very seriously handi capped in their work by their inabil ity to secure complete control of the situation. "Mr. Labatt arrived at London at 3:45 a m. today. In this office there is no knowledge as to what financial arrangements, if any, have been made between the friends of the captured man and the criminals. Whatever arrangement was made did not come either from Hugh Labatt or his so licitor. Mr. Ivey. "We are now clearly certain that the contact made in Toronto was a genuine one. I might add that Mr. Labatt's eyes were closed with ad hesives and glasses drawn over the adhesive tape. When let out of the car. he was told not to remove either the tape or the glasses until the auto had moved cm.” Spurns Husband Who Sold Her NEW JERSEY WOMAN PREFERS “PURCHASER." Principals in a bizarre love triangle are shown in the detention room of Hoboken. N. J.. police head quarters. Allegedly sold with her 6-year-old son by her husband for $700, Mrs. Hildegrade Rost. 30, holds the hand of Paul Herman. 41, of Union City, N. J., to whom her husband. Richard Rost, Hoboken profes sional stamp dealer, is said to have sold her. She spurned her husband when the three met at the police station, where they were charged with conspiracy to violate the morals code. Rost is at right and Herman at left. —A. P. Photo. ‘Kingfish’ Takes ‘Kingpin’ Role In Lording Self Over Louisiana Senator Long Dictates to Governor and Legislature in Attempt to Hold Political Control of State. BY WESTBROOK PEGLER, BATON ROUGE. La., August 17.— Huey Long's Legislature, meeting in Huey Long’s 33-story State Capitol, proceeds with jovial cynicism to en act the legislation which will estab lish a military dictatorship in the State of Louisiana. The boys in his House of Representatives shove his program right along as Huey, him self, swaggers through the small crowd of spectators who are held back from the floor of the chamber by an ornamental bronze rail. Huey has been expelled from the actual legislative inclosure by a coup of the small opposition who are fighting a rear-guard action in a defeatist mood. They invoke a trick rule whereby unauthorized persons may be ex cluded by a vote of 10 members. But Huey continues his lobbying from behind the rail. He shoots the cuffs of his rumpled linen suit, tugs at his waving plume of red hair, squeegees the sweat off his face with his fore finger and snaps it away. Comfortable in Governor's Office. Huey leans over the rail to beckon and talk to his boys at their seats on the floor. He drifts in and out of the Governor's private office, which is nominally that of O. K. Allen. He does as Huey says and if Huey tells him to keep quiet he keeps quiet. Huey drops into the Governor’s chair to re$t his feet, which have been sup porting his weight for some hours on a marble floor. He throws a leg over the chair arm and snaps a switch button. This turns on a loud-speaker concealed on the panelled wood wall of the Governor's office and brings the debate to him. A vote is called and Huey snaps on another button. The members at their desks record their votes by pressing buttons which illuminate little red or green bulbs on a scoreboard behind the speaker's desk. It resembles the modern ball yard scoreboard on which the kid in the press coop rings up the balls and strikes by tapping the figures on a keyboard. There is a duplicate electrical board in the Governor’s office. Huey hops up from the Governor's chair to count the lights, green for aye and red for nay. The greens have it by a fat ma The boys have rushed through nine bills in a short time which make him commander of a secret police force of unlimited numbers, place the State militia at his command for any pur pose, even to the seizure of local gov ernments and authorize him to hire unlimited numbers of special deputies at $5 a day to police elections. In New Orleans, for example, he may hire 50.000 special deputies to regulate an election. Assets in Election. The 50,000 deputies, of course, would be voters themselves and their vote would swing any election for Huey. Wherever there is a situation which has the appearance of a contest after this, Huey may buy the election at $5 per vote and charge the cost to the taxpayers of that particular commu nity. Huey's secret police force will closely resemble Gerardo Machado's Porra in Cuba or the G. P. U. in Soviet Russia. No man will know whether the next man was his mend or his enemy. The force will belong to the present State Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation. This is merely a Anger print bureau at the moment but the new law, when the Senate approves It, will permit Huey, through his Governor, to in crease the force to the proportions of an army. No limit is fixed on the salaries to be paid the Louisiana Porra or G. P. U. Huey sneers at the suggestion of armed revolt against the dictatorship. He says it is no dictatorship but just a batch of reform legislation to abol ish lotteries, gambling houses and houses of prostitution which undoubt edly do abound in New Orleans, where the city administration licked him. Such phenomena are present also in equal abundance, in the parishes of St. Bernard and Jefferson, contiguous to New Orleans, but within Huey's political domain. Huey has not mo lested St. Bernard and Jefferson but he moved troops into New Orleans to suppress vice and. incidentally, seize and edit the election rolls. How closely they were edited remains to be learned but it does not matter now. He can hire the entire underworld and all the unemployed to vote for him at $5 each, as special deputies sworn to protect the purity of the ballot. Battles Against Press. The press coop is a row of seats behind a long desk on the floor be neath the speaker's stand. There is a wild row on the floor in the argu ment on the brown shirt or secret police bill. One member wishes to rule the reporters out of the press coop on the ground that the rule against the presence of unauthorized persons, invoked against Huey, him self, applies to the journalists, too. The dictator has been denouncing the "lying press” to the citizens for a long time and there is some prejudice against the fourth estate. Huey has a propaganda paper himself called the Progress, which is printed at Meri dian. Miss. Papers printed within the State must pay a 2 per cent tax on their advertising revenue. His tax on the advertising revenues of the papers is the first move toward censorship of the press. The papers are paying the usual taxes incidental to the newspaper industry, but Huey resented their hostility and stabbed them in the bank roll. The move to run the reporters out of the press coop came when George Lester of West Feliciana complained against Huey's lobbying over the rail of the chamber. Gang’s A11 Here. Huey has leaned over the rail to holler, “All our men are here now; j move the question.” Mr. Lester demands that Huey and his henchmen be put all the way out ot the hall. Up jumps Mr. Jim Horton at this point, waving his fists. He played foot ball at Centenary College under Bo McMillan. Weight about 210 now. ‘T ain't no damn henchman,” he yells, threatening to punch Mr. Lester. The sergeant at arms moves in with his loaded walking stick. His name is Tommy Thomas. He is fat and ris ing 50, but he, too, played foot ball in his day. He was imported from Scranton, Pa., to play on Louisiana State in 1908 and remained in Baton Rouge as a political job holder. He was captain in his final year at school and in the big game of the year his team licked the Tulane team, whose captain was T. Semmes Walmsley, the present mayor of New Orleans. Mr. TRAINED FLEA INDUSTRY BOOMS, 2 CIRCUSES ADDED UNDER N. R. A.\ --- By the Associated Press. NEW YORK. August 17—The trained flea industry in Times Square has solved its "unemployment” prob lem and three circuses are attracting the crowds where only one ruled before. The establishments operate under an N. R. A. concessions code, but the management decided "work-spread ing” provisions should be extended to the insect performers. Teaches Napoleon Juggling. "We've done pretty well under the Blue Eagle,” "Prof.” Roy Heckler, the ! proprietor, said today as he coached a flea named Napoleon, "the smallest | living performer In the world," through i a juggling act. Napoleon is an un derstudy for Prince Henry, "a juggling wonder you'll have to see to really appreciate." During the last year we've put 40 unemployed fleas to work. That’s what they were to us—they were out of work. “We’ve opened a newr branch on Sixth avenue and another one up on Broadway at Fifty-second street. We re packing In the celebrities up there.” Napoleon was permitted a moment’s A \ | rest while his boss explained the new angles of the business. "All our fleas,” the professor con tinued. "operate now under the new regulations—a six-day week instead of seven, and weve cut down the hours from eight to seven a day. "We’ve branched out in other wavs too We put on shows now by special appointment for private parties.” Exhibits Ballet Dancers. Picking up Napoleon with a pair of tweezers, "Prof.” Heckler put the bug into a velvet-lined mother-of-pearl box and brought out the ballet dancers. ! "Fritzi, one of our best dancers, died during the hot spell,” he said. "We lost her in spite of all we could do. Hot weather is always hard on fleas We lost Anthony, too. He was a star on the foot ball team.” The performers are imported from | Italy and Spain because domestic va rieties cannot be trained. Heckler said. They usually live about six months. The "Professor" no longer names fleas after living persons. "I named one once after a woman and she didn't appreciate it,” he ex plained. » Walmsley is Huey's bitterest political enemy and Huey is now fixing to have him removed from office and, possibly, sentenced to prison. There is almost nothing that he cannot do with the powers which are being voted to him these few’ days. Mr. Hoflpauier joined Mr. Lester’s squak against Huey's lobbying, but turned the trick against him by insist ing that the reporters were unauthor ized persons, too. Moreover, he said, they were guilty of damnable abuse of the privileges of the House in send ing out lying reports. Mr. Lester withdraws his request In order to protect the freedom of the press. Joe Hamiter got the floor again and again the threat of armed revolution was heard. “You are going to cause plenty of bloodshed before you get through,’’ says he. Freedom at Stake. The people of the State seem unable to appreciate the meaning of the pro ceedings which are wiping out the freedom of their courts and elections and inching upon the freedom of their press, or perhaps they are just in a reckless mood, carried away by the eloquent and mischievous bearing of their own Hitler. There are not more than 200 spectators present and there is no telling, off-hand, what propor tion .of them are lobbyists. Huey is tired of Washington and the United States Senate and is com ing back home to elect himself Gov ernor again in the next holding of the solemn referendum which, no doubt, he can do very easily, God sparing him. He has not had a drink since the adjournment of Congress in Washing ton. Drams never did him any good. He often over-spoke himself when he was looking through the bottom of a glass and on one memorable occasion about a year ago in a dressy but ne cessarily exclusive club on Long Is land, he was popped in the eye by one of the members for a breach of manners. The Senator went on to Milwaukee where he appeared the next day wearing a shanty on his eye, claiming that he had been ganged by a crowd of low characters. But it never was necessary to gang Huey. In a physical fight conducted according to the American tradition, he could not lick a hen butterfly with a flit-gun and the accepted explana tion of the famous battle of the gent's room is that he spoke out of turn at a moment when he did not have his bodyguard at his elbow, and was socked in the eye, even as any one else. Lets Mercenaries Fight. The Kingfish is only 40 years old and is about as well off physically as most men of his age, but does not think it advisable to engage personally persons who desire to pop him on the eve He has discovered that mer cenaries can be hired for moderate sums, and at the expense of the tax payers to represent him in such con tests and therefore refers such chal lengers to his bodyguards. He calls them his thug men. Der Kingflsh's war is a long and complex story, but It might surprise you to learn that the ordinary citizens, such as you meet on trains and just anywhere, do not share that loathing for him which is expressed by people at a distance who form their opinions from their reading of the newspapers and political reviews. Huey is recognized even in Wash ington as one of the smartest-sleeve statesmen this country has developed and a first-class lawyer. He has a low-down familiar way of orating to the ordinary, folksy type of citizen who is easily flattered, and he some times goes off into the far country of his State and sleeps in his clothes, right on the cabin floor with the humblest families to demonstrate his humility. Arising in the morning, all rumpled and towseled and bleary-eyed to water his face and eyes under the pump and partake of whatever there is for breakfast, he sells himself be yond challenge as the friend of the people in that vicinity. Moreover, he has bribed them with concrete roads all over the State, free bridges instead of toll-ferries, and free text books for the school kids Al though he has taken care of his friends out of the public funds, he has delivered certain appreciable re sults which help to explain his com plete command of the State govern ment. Nobody has yet been able to prove that Huey took care of himself. (Copyright. 1034.1 PAINTS WALLJPAPER WALTER MORGAN COMPANY. INC. 421 10th St. N.W. NA. 1888 tTSMSISS RELIEr i I] I I J Blessed relief has been the experi ence of thousands who have used PILE-FOE. This soothing ointfhent relieves burning and itching of Blind, Bleeding, Protruling Piles. Promotes healing and tends to reduce swelling. Don’t suffer needlessly . . . get a tube of soothing PILE-FOE at Peo ples Drug Stores or other good drug gists for guaranteed results. GRUENING TAKES OVERNEWDUTIES Former Editor Sworn In as Director of Division of Territories. By the Associated Press. * Ernest Gruening. critic of the Latin American policy of previous adminis trations and authority on Caribbean matters, was sworn in yesterday as director of the newly created Division of Territories and Island Possessions, which has supervision over Alaska. Hawaii, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Isands. It is under Secretary Ickes that the division functions. Gruening, who had just returned from an economic and social survey of Cuba, assumed his new duties immediately. Policies of the new division, which was set up July 28 by an executive order, remain to be determined. The Philippines do not come under the set-up because they are slated for independence within a few years. Other smaller island possessions and the Panama Canal Zone are governed by the War and Navy Departments. Gruening, who is 47, is a Harvard graduate and former editor of Boston and New York metropolitan newspa pers and of the Nation Magazine from 1920 to 1923. He was the publicity director of the La Follette presidential campaign in 1924. He spent 1924 to 1926 in Mexico gathering material for his book, "Mex ico and Its Heritage.” which the In terior Department said was generally acknowledged to be the standard work on modern Mexico. He later estab lished a paper in Portland, Me. The Interior Department said Gruening was instrumental in expos ing for the first time "events sur rounding the United States' occupa tion of Haiti and Santo Domingo, which became something of a cam paign Issue in the presidential cam paign of that year, and led to a sen atorial inquiry.’’ Gruening was bom In New York City. ‘OPEN-HOUSE’ FETE MARRED BY STORM Heavy Rain Cuts Down Attend ance at Camp Good Will Program, The drenching downpour which fell yesterday afternoon and last night rained out the “open house” program which was to have been staged at Camp Good Will in Rock Creek Park for Community Chest subscribers and the Washington public. The event was scheduled as the sec ond of a series of “open house” affairs to acquaint Washingtonians with That is being accomplished by Chest agencies. The first, held July 7 at St. I Joseph’s Home and School, drew an attendance of more than 700. Although a large canopy had been provided at Camp Good Will for the convenience of spectators, the heavy rains cut down attendance to a min imum. The camp will close Its season Tuesday, due to curtailed funds. More than 160 children and a score of mothers from less favored sections of the city have been acocmmodated at the camp for 10-day periods. Another “open house’’ will be held In the near future, this time at an agency which can provide larger fa cilities in case of rainy weather. GIVE UP RATE FIGHT Georgia Railroads May Take Case to I. C. C. ATLANTA. August 17 (A3).—Two of the largest railroads operating in the State—the Southern and the Sea boord — yesterday abandoned their court fight against the Georgia Pub lic Service Commission's 18 per cent freight rate reduction order, but re served the right to take their case before the Interstate Commerce Com mission. Accepting the rate reduction and ordering it into effect on their lines, officials of the roads said they were changing the form of their conten tion that the rates should not go into effect and would reserve the right to take their case to the Federal commis sion at any time. Heads Bureau ERNEST GREENING. —A. P. Photo. MILITIA STUDYING COMBAT TACTICS Red Troops Forced Back to High Ground Around Hagerstown. Special Dispatch tp The Star. CAMP ALBERT C. RITCHIE, Cas cade, Md„ August 17.—The 29th Divi sion staff continued studying the tacti cal combat problem in the field today, with the division command post near Ringgold, Md. Red troops have been forced back to the high ground between Ringgold and Hagerstown and have entrenched with machine-gun placements over looking the low terrain between the two lines. Yesterday the staff and their enlist ed assistants set up offices in the fields near Midvale, with heavy rains drenching clothing and equipment. They remained at this point until 3 p.m., when the problem called for the command post to be moved forward after the retreating enemy. Equip ment was packed and carried about three miles nearer Leitersburg, where war games were continued. The 121st engineers, commanded by Col John W. Oehmann, remained in camp yesterday because of the in clement weather. Today the battalion marched into the area of operations, taking part in the command post exercise. Maj. Ralph Childs. 1st Bat talion. and Mai. Clarence S. Shields, 2d Battalion, were in charge of the troops. No actual construction was done, but sites for bridges, bad roads, etc., were studied and solutions as to the way in which they should be repaired were prepared. Band Concert Canceled. The concert by the Community Civic Band, scheduled for this eve ning at Logan Circle, has been can celed, It was announced today by the Office of National Capital Parks. FIRE INSURANCE LEGG, GRIFFIN ^CQ.Inc. Insurance and Surely £>oruls National «33 - Hitts Bldg.- Washington. O.C. Sale! of Our Custom-Tailored Kerry-Keith Clothes An extraordinary event, but we feel that our two-fold purpose merits such liberal value. First, we want to meet all the old friends of Mr. Charles Oldham, who is now in charge of our Kerry-Keith Custom Tai loring Department. And then we’d like more discriminating Washington men to learn to enjoy the unusual but inexpensive excellence of Kerry-Keith Clothes. Regularly $35, $45, $55, now $29-5° $39.50 $49.50 In all three price groups, you'll find the most important fabrics, in the outstanding new patterns, and shades. And the selection of models is more varied and more interesting than in any previous season. Let us take your measurements early, while these sale prices prevail. /'mens shop 1331 F STREET FUNDAMILABLE Project From Capital to Nashville Made Possible by P. W. A. Grant. A lighted airway from Washington to Nashville. Tenn., was made pos sible when Public Works Adminis trator Ickes late yesterday made $465,000 available to the Commerce Department for that purpose. A feature of the project will be the placing of 11 small radio stations along the route to provide point-to point communication for planes and to furnish weather information. The stations will be installed near Cul peper. Warren. Lynchburg. Roanoke, Pulaski and Marion, all in Virginia, and Bristol, Morristown, Knoxville, Harriman and Sparta, in Tennessee. "In addition to providing full air mail service, the airway will open a direct route from Washington to the Southwest.” a statement from P. W. A. explained. At present, contract air mail planes are using the route, but are unable to fly at night and cannot carry passengers because of the lack of proper facilities, the statement pointed out. The lighted airway will cover 580 miles and will require 10 months to complete. Landing fields and beacons will be established in accordance with standard policy. TWO FIREMEN DIE AS TRUCKUPSETS Six Others Are Injured in Massachusetts in Answer ing False Alarm. By the Associated PrMS LOWELL. Mas*. August 17.—Two Dracut firemen were killed and six others injured, one of them critically, here today when the Collinsville fire truck overturned, pinning its crew beneath it, after skidding on wet car tracks and crashing into a telegraph pole. The apparatus was speeding in re sponse to an alarm that subsequently proved to have been falsely sounded by a short circuit. Firemen John Dillon. 40. married and the father of two children, and Robert McAnertle, 28. were dead when they reached the hospital. Joseph Horman. 20. was in a crit ical condition in St. John's Hospital. The lower part of his abdomen had been torn away and nine of his fellow firemen volunteered to give him their blood in a transfusion. Also In the hospital were Charles Usher, 23, operator of the fire truck; Leo Sandy. 23: Charles Joyce. 22; F>Ux Wilen and Walter Pouillot, 37. George Cullinan. 32, was treated and released. Lowell fire and protective companies were called out to bring apparatus to raise the heavy truck. The top of an ambulance which responded was torn when it became enmeshed in the tele graph wires carrying 1,200 volts, which the falling pole brought dow>n, but no damage resulted from the electricity. CLEARANCE SALE OF MEN’S SUITS OVERCOATS &TOPCOATS Before the season begins—a clearance sale! Im» agine what a help this is going to he to the old budget. No charge for adjusting trouser lengths; necessary alterations at cost. Look over the list— and hurry! 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