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Defense Homes Corp. Sells 144-Acre Tract To Granik's Group Defense Homes Corp. has ac cepted a bid of $432,000 for a 144-acre tract of land on New Hampshire avenue, extended, at University lane, from a group of Washington business and profes sional men headed by Theodore Granik, attorney and moderator of the American Forum of the Air. That was announced today by William A. Ziegler, DHC general manager, who said the purchasers had submitted plans for develop ment of a rental housing project to provide 2,000 veterans’ dwellings. The tract, site of the Federal Public Housing Authority's war housing re-use demonstration early this year, was purchased by DHC in 1942 from the McCormick-Good hart estate as a war housing site, but was never developed. It is situ ated in Montgomery and Prince Georges County, Md.. about l\ miles from the District line. The Granik group’s bid was the highest of 12 submitted to DHC, Mr. Ziegler said. Also associated with the pur chasers is Col. Julius I. Peyser, chairman of the board of the Se curity Savings & Commercial Bank, who is a past commander of the American Legion in the District. In consideration of the bids of fered, DHC said it would “give pref erence to the prospective purchaser offering the best plan of developing the site immediately for moderate cost housing for veterans, service men and their families.’’ The terms also require the pur chaser to agree to pay cash for the the property at the time the sale is closed. Charles M. Goodman Associates have been retained as architects and construction engineers for develop ment of the 2,000-home project. Prior to announcement of ac ceptance of the bid, another bidder, the Veterans' Mutual Housing As sociation, Inc., headed by L. B. Wilson, a District Fire Department captain, announced it would file an injunction to prevent disposal of the land. Robert F. Sutphin, attorney for the association, said the group had filed a bid of $144,000 for the prop erty. When informed today of DHC's announcement, Mr. Sutphin said i the association would go ahead with its plan to seek an injunction. “We’re going to try to stop them If we can,” he said. Bolivia Mob Hangs 3, Including President's Would-Be Assassin By Associated Press LA PAZ, Bolivia, Sept. 28.—Three military men, one a would-be assas sin of Bolivia’s new President, were hanged by an angry mob here yes-, tjerdaoriir t$e first big cnjl^reafc of violence since the July 21 revolution.' A howling crowd estimated at 80,000 threw ropes over lampposts in. the city plaza and strung up Luis Oblitas Bustamante, former lieu-, tenant; and two majors. 'Jose Esco bar and Jorge Eguino, La Paz police chiefs before President Gualberto Villarroel was deposed and hanged last summer. The lynchers took Oblitas Busta mente from police near the office of President Monje Gutierrez, where he had clubbed an aide with a pistol butt and threatened to shoot the President. They broke into the city jail to seize the majors, who were charged with criminality under Villarroel and were awaiting trial. Escobar, was unconscious when hanged. Equi- j no tried to speak to the crowd. The rope broke with him and he was dis patched with two bullets. Oblitas Bustamente, witnesses j said, knocked down Presidental At- j tache Mario Pinedo with his pistol, j opened the President’s office door and saw Monje Gutierrez talking with Public Works Minister Carlos Munoz. “I am going to be President,” they heard him say. “I am here by the will of the peo ple,” said the President and opened his coat. “You will have to kill me first. Shoot and you can sit in that chair. Shoot.” Police seized the intruder before he could act. Texas Flood Sweeps Toward Gulf f By tha Anooated Pr«s» SAN ANTONIO. Sept. 28—The crest of the flash flood that left six known dead, seven missing and property damage in millions here Thursday night and yesterday, swept toward the Gulf of Mexico today. The Weather Bureau warned low land residents along the course of the winding San Antonio River to find higher ground. The floods crest was expected to flatten as it spread over the widening river valley. ■- San Antonio faced a major clean up and rehabilitation problem. Dr. Dudley A. Reekie, city health di rector urged residents of water logged areas to take special sanitary precautions. Physical damage to buildings, streets, household furnishings and store stocks in San Antonio was va riously estimated at from $1,000,000 to $8,000,000. Water poured into the basements of many downtown busi ness buildings. poomed Gl Fugitive founded in Capture ty th» A.tociotad Pr.ii * PARIS, Sept. 28.—Pvt. John D. McClelland of Whitaker, Pa., was 5*ld under guard today in the dis Ensary of the Paris detention bar cks, wounded three times by mili tary policemen who shot him as au escaped Army prisoner. ; McClelland, convicted by court martial of criminally attacking an fl-year-old girl in Rheims and un der sentence to hang, fled the deten tion barracks September 9 while his i£se was awaiting review. The escape Wps his third since his arrest a year 4°. JMPs watched Vincennes woods, £st of Paris, on a tip from an uni ftntifled French girl. They sighted fim yesterday and fired. They said ft had dropped his hands to his (ftusers pocket, but a search showed m had no gun. I PROPOSED NEW TEMPLE BAPTIST CHURCH—This building is to be erected at Sixteenth and Juniper streets N.W. at a cost of $250,000. Construction will start as soon as materials are available. A. H. Sonnerman is the architect. The building will be air conditioned and equipped with intercommunicating system. Charles M. Medford is chairman of the Building Committee. The 104th anniversary of the church, which is now located at Tenth and N streets N.W., will be observed next Sunday. Democrats Enlist Aid Of Pepper, Wallace In November Elections By the Associated Press The Democratic National Com mittee today achieved at least a pre-election armistice with Henry A. Wallace and Senator Pepper of Florida, the party's severest critics | of administration foreign policy. First the committee announced it will handle arrangements for their campaign speeches on behalf of the ! ticket in the November elections. Then Representative Sparkman of Alabama, chairman of the Commit tee Speakers’ Bureau, predicted President Truman will run in 1948 ! and that both Mr. Wallace and ; Senator Pepper will support him. Just one week ago Mr. Sparkman, referring to Mr. Wallace and Sen ator Pepper, had told a reporter: “We don't want to send out any one as a speaker who is going to cail Secretary Byrnes a reactionary or say he is all wet, or any one who is going to urge independent voters to stay home.” Counting on Pepper Support. But last night Chairman Robert E. Hannegan of the National Com mittee and Mr. Sparkman an nounced jointly that they had dis cussed the campaign with Senator Pepper and that he will speak in support of Democratic nominees in various parts of the country. “We are counting on him to be very helpful,” and added “he agrees with us that it is vital to the future welfare of this country to return a Democratic Congress on Novem ber 5.” Mr. Hannegan had said Thurs day that the committee would in vite Mr. Wallace to address Demo cratic groups who wanted to hear him. Sponsorship is not Factor. Committee officials said the ques tion of whether Mr. Wallace and Senator Pepper have official “spon sorship” is not a factor. If a party organization wants either to speak, the committee will ask them to < accept. Mr. Sparkman's declaration that! he believes President Truman will seek re-election came later during a radio interview. “What about a Wallace-Pepperj ticket?” he was asked. “They have both said they are against a third party," Mr. Spark man answered. “I expect both of | them backing the Democratic nomi- i nee.” Asked whether the party had | suffered great harm from the Wal lace-Pepper blasts against admin istration foreign policy which led to Mr. Wallace's dismissal from the cabinet, Mr. Sparkman replied: “I would rather that it had not happened, but I don’t think it did the party great harm.” May Ignore Foreign Policy. A Wallace aide said last night the’ former Commerce Secretary has speaking dates October 21 and 22 in Michigan and probably also will be heard in Pennsylvania, Wiscon sin. Indiana and Minnesota under auspices of the State Democratic organizations. i The aide expressed belief Mr. Wallace will lay off further foreign policy discussions until after the Paris Peace Conference and stump for the party as a whole on domestic issue only. Senator Pepper will speak tomor row in Chicago. Later engagements will be in Boston, New Haven,-At lanta, Brooklyn, Michigan, Indiana and Pennsylvania, the national committee said. Toma Mother' Flying Home in Army Plane By th* Associated Press ALLENTOWN, Pa., Sept 28 — “Coma Mother” Mrs. Rhoda Wenger left in a DC-3 Army hospital plane today for an 18-hour flight home to San Francisco so she could stay near her soldier husband. The 22-year-old brunette, helpless from a brain injury suffered in an automobile accident 10 months ago, was accompanied by her 4-months old daughter Karen Beth and hus band Leland. Sergt. Wenger, also hurt in the crash with her, is being transferred from Walter Reed Hospital at Wash ington, to Letterman General Hos pital. Poland Strips Anders And 74 of Citizenship By th« Associated Pr«s RADOM, Poland. Sept. 68 —The | government yesterday stripped Gen. ; Wladyslaw Anders, leader of the 1 Polish Corps, and 74 other Poles of their citizenship. A Foreign Ministry spokesman said the order also deprived Gen. Stanislaw Kopanski, now in London, of his citizenship. The government decree appar ently was aimed at closing the door to their homeland to all those known definitely to have joined the Polish Resettlement Corps in Great Britain. I ANTONIO NOVARRO FERNANDEZ. Swindle '’Continued From First Page t j had arranged for him to obtain Canadian citizenship. Later the Washingtonian, accom panied by an Eastern industrialist, again met Fernandez in Montreal. There was a conference in a hotel room. Fernandez telephoned his, “friend" the church official and ostensibly discussed his charitable contributions to the church and his plans for Canadian citizenship. The friendship with the church official was entirely ficticious, the FBI said. Pledged Stock as Collateral. Fernandez represented to his Washington victim he needed $75,000 to fulfill his promise of a contribu tion to the church, and an addi tional $75,000 to pay the person who held in his possession the code book I containing the names of the banks where the safe deposit boxes were,! and the names in which they were held. The Washingtonian agreed to lend Fernandez $125,000, and raised the! money by borrowing it from a Co- j lumbia, S. C., bank, pledging as! collateral 10,000 shares of stock car ried in the name of his friend, the industrialist. The loan fell due yes terday, ironically the same day Fernandez was apprehended in Miami. The Washingtonian went back to Canada a third time and gave Fer nandez a promisory note to sign. A few days later Fernandez ap peared in Washington, gave his benefactor a 90-day note and also produced the “code book.” The book was a Bible. Fernandez ap plied a hot iron to certain pages. The heat made visible writing in secret ink and there appeared the names of banks and names of per sons who presumably were those to whom the safe deposit boxes had been rented. Money Was Handed Over. Apparently the demonstration was convincing. The Washingtonian turned over the $125,000—in cash. Last July 25 Fernandez went to a bank at Toronto and deposited $120,000 in United States currency and received a letter of credit in ttie United States. Subsequently, he presented the letter to a large New York bank, opened an account and later withdrew $15,000. However, in Canada where Fer-1 nandez's record was known, an in vestigation had started which led to his arrest. Officials of the bank where Fernandez had deposited the $120,000 checked and found the cur rency to be genuine. However, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who apparently were called in for the currency check, became sus picious because of what they knew of Fernandez and notified the FBI. Traced to Caribbean Area. He was traced to the Dominican Republic and from there to Vene zuela, where he was arrested on September 18 as an undesirable alien. He was expelled from the country. He went to Curacao, in the Dutch West Indies, where he again was arrested and expelled by being put aboard a nonstop plane for Miami. When he arrived in Miami the FBI collared him. A complaint was filed in New York Wednesday charging Fernan dez with violation of the National Stolen Property Act and a warrant was issued, Mr. Hoover said. The New York bank was notified trans fer of the funds still on deposit would be a violation of the law. Fernandez was interned in Cuba during the World War as a sus pected German agent, according to the FBI. He served three years in a United States Federal prison for violation of the immigration laws and later was sentenced to a 1-to 10-year term in California, the FBI announced. He was deported to Germany in 1929, came back in 1938, but voluntarily went to South : America, the FBI said. He was ar i ested in British Columbia in 1940 and was interned during the war, according to Mr. Hoover. Relics Sought in Blitz Ruins American and Dutch students are participating in a search of blitzed Canterbury, England, sites for Roman relics. Reds Renew Demand On Turkey to Join In Straits Defense By the Associated Press MOSCOW, Sept. 28.—Russia re newed her demands on Turkey to day that both nations join in organ izing a defense of the vital Darda nelles gateway to the Mediterranean without the aid of any outside pow ers. In disclosing a note replying to Turkish rejjejction August 22 of such a Soviet proposal, the Russian j Foreign Ministry said: “Despite the point of view ex pressed by the Turkish note the Soviet government maintains the opinion that only by joint means can Turkey and the Soviet Union secure freedom of merchant naviga tion and also security in the straits. “Refusal by Turkey of joint de fense of the straits with the Soviet Union deprives the Black Sea pow ers of the possibility of guarantee i due the security of the region.” I The Foreign Ministry disclosed that Russia had asked Turkey to enter into direct bilateral discussions on the future control of the Darda nelles. Under the Soviet proposal, such a two-power meeting would precede any formal conference involving other nations signatory to the pres ent nine-power Montreux conven tion under which the straits are controlled. Truman (Continued From First Page.! 1 great emergency through which we have just been." Speaks at Mess Hall. The President spoke in the mess hall where he lunched with the corps before a review that served as the curtain-raiser for the game. As "shining examples” of military leaders, “doing peacetime jobs just as important as their wartime jobs.” the President cited Gen. George C. Marshall, former Chief of Staff, now’ special envoy to China: Gen. Omar Bradley, veterans’ administrator, and Vice Admiral Ben Moreell, who has just returned after operating the coal mines for the Government. “Give the country the best you have, and no matter what they may say about you for wearing a uniform in the future, maintain that dignity that goes with the leadership that has made his country great,” he concluded. The “Sacred Cow.” carrying the President and his party, landed at Stewart Field at 9:10 a.m. and the President drove in a motorcade paced by New York State troopers over 16 miles of rural roads to the Army school. Weather Is Excellent. The l-hour-and-15-minute trip from Washington was made under excellent weather conditions, al though it was overcast at the ! takeoff. i Stew’art Field, terminus of the i President's flight, is the basic and advanced flying school for the Mili i tary Academy. ; At the airfield the President was i greeted by Maj. Gen. Maxwell Tay ! lor, academy superintendent, and ! his staff. Standing at attention was *an honor guard, and, after the cus tomary honors, including the 21-gun salute, had been rendered, Mr. Tru eman, accompanied by Gen. Taylor i and Cadet Capt. John J. Lowry of Casper, Wyo., inspected the guard. On arrival at West Point the : President, making his first visit, went for a tour of inspection. Receives Set of Dinner Plates. As a souvenir of the trip, the Pres ident received a set of 12 West Point dinner plates at the review preceding the game. It was recalled today that the President as a boy had hoped to enter the Military Academy,*but poor eyesight barred him. The game today gave the Presi dent an opportunity to see an Army football team for the second year in succession. He attended the Army-Navy game in Philadelphia last year. The game was the season's opener for Oklahoma. West Point started its schedule last week with a 35-0 victory over Villanova, to continue an unbroken string of victories going back to 1943. Reception Due After Game. The Oklahoma team was accom panied by Dr. George Cross, presi dent of the university. Three mem bers of the Oklahoma congressional delegation likewise were listed— Repsentatives Johnson and Boren, Democrats, who were beaten in the primaries earlier this year, and Rep resentative Rizley, Republican. After the game, the President will hold a reception. He is due back in Washington at 7:15 tonight. With the President are his mili tary and naval aides, Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan and Capt. James H. Foskett; Admiral William D. Leahy, chief of staff; Brig. Gen. Wallace Graham, personal physi cian. and Press Secretary Charles G. Ross. Reporters and photographers flew here in>an accompanying plane. 4 Small Sees Shortage j Of Employes, Suggests Longer Work Week By th« Associated Press John D. Small, the civilian pro duction administrator, says em ployment of the Nation's work force is “bumping the ceiling” j and the only way to raise present high production levels substan tially will be a longer work week. His monthly production report showed August output of such goods 1 as radios, electric stoves, irons and! vacuum cleaners running 40 to 65 per cent higher than in prewar years, j Automobile production was up 10; per cent from July, Mr. Small said, | and the industry expects to produce I at a monthly rate of 333,000 for Sep ! tember, October and November 1 against 312.000 a month in 1941. Sees Manpower Shortage. The Nation now has 58,000,000 em-1 t ployed and only 2,000,000 jobless, Mr. I Small told a news conference yes terday. adding: “If things continue the way they have been running the last few months we are going to be very! short of manpower by the end of ■ the year.” He said he believed organized labor i would agree to work longer hours if j j compensated at overtime rates. Mr. Small's production report said j August residential construction | : jumped 7 per cent compared with J July and exceeded non-residential; . building for the first time since ; October, 1941. Building material out 1 put went up 20 to 25 per cent. Consumer Goods Figures. “This record of achievement,” the report added, “has probably never been surpassed in the history of building materials production over a comparable period of time. In deed, it compares most favorably with the rates of production increase in military programs of high ur gency during the war.” CPA cited these figures on output of consumer goods: Shoes—Up 17 per cent in August above July, but production “will fall again in September” due to the sharp drop in cattle slaughter and hide output. Washing machines—August ship ments were up 13 per cent over July, totaling 212,000 units. Refrigerators—Shipments in Au jgust declined about 1 per cent to I about 218,000 units. Sewing Machines Show Drop. Vacuum cleaners—An 11 per cent increase in shipments in August brought the total to 218,000, up from 197.000 in July. Sewing machines—S h i p m e nt s dropped, totaling 29,000 in August as compared with 35,000 in July. Radios—Shipments continued to climb, totaling 1,700,000 in August against 1,300,000 in July. Gas stoves—168,825 in August, 127.000 in July. Electric stoves—66,000 in August, 57.000 in July. Electric irons—608.000 in August, 521.000 in July. Passenger tires—5,800,000 in Au gust, 4,900,000 in July. Polish Counselor Applies To Wed Englishwoman Dr. Stefan Litauer, Minister Counseler of the Polish Embassy, yesterday applied for a license to marry Mrs. Mary Frances Porritt, 40, of Dorset House, London. The marriage is scheduled to take place at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday in the chambers of Judge Nathan Mar gold in Municipal Court, Dr. Litauer said. In filing the application in Dis trict Court yesterday, the 55-year old diplomat said his first marriage with the death of his wife. He gave his legal residence as the Embassy', 2640 Sixteenth street N.W. Mrs. Porritt, the application said, was divorced. Dr. Litauer was in the Polish dip lomtaic service until 1929, when he became a journalist. He was head of the London Bureau of PAT, the : Polish News Agency, until last No i vember, when he was appointed ; Minister Counseler at the Embassy here. He said he and Mrs. Porritt met during the war in London while she was with the British Red Cross. Power •■Continued From First Page.l and that operators, when asked why they had left their cars, said: “We don’t want to get hurt.” The spokesman added motormen in all cases drove the cars into the bams before abandoning them. The AFL Central Labor Union, with a membership of 175,000, which had supported the Duquesne Light workers in their battle against an antistrike injunction, issued a state ment saying “we now serve notice I on them (the strikers) that the AFL : will not tolerate any interference I by them with any companies using power with which we have agree ments.” The statement continued: “We propose to • • * provide the public with transportation facilities so long as there is power. It is the responsibility of our affiliates to man transportation facilities required by the AFL and CIO members and the public to go to and come from work.” AFL officials did not indicate what steps they would take to restore in terrupted bus and streetcar service. Anthony J. Federoff, regional di rector of the CIO, who also sup ported the anti-injunction fight, said the CIO hoped the conduct of George L. Mueller, independent un ion president, “will not embarrass the legitimate labor movement, or we will be compelled to divorce our selve completely in supporting him.” The union seeks a 20 per cent pay raise, which would boost the average base rate from $1.18 to $1.41; the company offers 5 per cent. Fewer people were on the streets. Many shops and office buildings were closed. Automobiles were more evi dent. Citizens still were getting electri cal service in their homes but were urged to be sparing of its use. Housewives grew restive under con tinued postponement of washings and ironings. Some disregarded pleas of the light company that no appliances be used. The average person was incon venienced but not suffering physi cally. Some were hurt financially. About 70,000 clerical and production workers among the >1,500,000 resi dents in the 817-square-mile affected area were idle. The work stoppage caused at least $10,000,000 loss to business, industry and payrolls. Actor Dies Aboard Ship NEW YORK, Sept. 28 (JF).—'The United States Line said yesterday that Charles Bruce Winston, 67, British actor-designer, died of a heart ailment while en route to the United States on the ship John Erickson. k Kidnaper of Woman | In New Jersey Hunted! Here and in 11 States Special FBI agents have been ordered on a night and day hunt in an effort to apprehend the pistol brandishing ex-convict said to have kidnaped his former sweetheart from her New Jersey home, but authori ties here and in 11 States today ad mitted they had no clues as to the man's whereabouts. FBI officials said tfiey had posi tively identified the man as Chal mers Laubaugh. 36, formerly of the 1100 block Tenth street N.W., on parole from a District Court sen tence of from one to four years for violating the Mann Act. Lookout Broadcast Here. In a lookout broadcast today. District police said Laubaugh was believed to be driving an auto mobile bearing Ohio tag E-282-D, that he may be carrying knives in addition to a gun, and was possibly en route to Akron, Ohio, where his parents reside. The lookout gave a house in the 1400 block N street N.W.. as another address where Laubaugh formerly lived. The officials said he forced Mrs. Mary Pyle Kimmey, 26, from her bed in her nome in Little Silver, N. J., yesterday, slugged her hus band. and fled with her toward Washington. According to the FBI, Mrs. Kim mey, under the name of Mary Jess Pyle, was convicted in District Court last December on a charge of per jury in connection with testimony she save in Laubaugh's behalf at his Mann Act trial. She received a sentence of from one to three years from Justice James M. Proctor, the FBI said. However, her attorney petitioned for a new trial on grounds her testi mony was not material and that cer tain evidence was erroneously ad mitted. The United States. Court of Appeals for the District reversed the conviction in June this year. The FBI said Mrs. Kimmey ia now out on bond pending final determin natlon of her case, which awaits disposition of a current move by the Government to upset the appellate court's ruling. Mrs. Kimmey and her husband, Sergt. Glenn F. Kimmey, who is from Huntsville, Tex., were married nine months ago following his re jtum from two years’ service in Eu rope. She is a former Government (clerk here and at one time was a waitress in a restaurant on Rhode Island avenue in Brentwood, Md. Laubaugh Convicted of Burglary. Laubaugh was convicted in his trial on a specific charge of forcing a woman named as Shirley Estelle Shelton into his car in Anderson, :Ind., and bringing her to Washing ton. Miss Shelton, the FBI said, was also convicted last December j on a charge of perjury arising from her testimony at Laubaugh’s trial. She received a sentence of one to three years. In addition to his Mann Act rec ord, Laubaugh was convicted in 1928 at Youngstown, Ohio, and given from 1 to 20 years in prison for burglary and larceny, court records showed. According to the District Parole Board, Laubaugh was paroled last June 24 after serving part of his one-to-four year sentence at Lorton Reformatory. He was sentenced on May 4, 1945. The man was sent back to his parents’ home in Akron, parole officials said, and reported periodically to the District Court parole officer there through Au gust 4. Pittsburgh (Continued From First Page.) I potential death, sickness, disease and deprivation. “In any event this situation was not covered by the anti-injunction act of 1937 and is outside its scope and was not contemplated by the legislature when it passed the act,” she said. Judge Walter P. Smart, also a Democrat, issued a five-day tem porary injunction, later extended 12 days, and the kickback was more than labor circles could bear. It depended on which side of the party line you stood whether the injunction had a chance of surviving upper court scrutiny. Legal minds all over the*area still are quoting the Constitution. One, feeling the means justified the end, read the Ninth Amendment: “The enumeration in the Constitu tion of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” 13th Amendment Cited. The 13th Amendment, prohibiting slavery and involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime, was cited by an anti-injunction man. Coming a minute before a proposed September 9 walkout, the injunction was characterized in some circles as “dramatic political fakerv of the midnight session.” Dodging con troversies, Miss Alpern still lets the court transcript speak for itself as to her premises. What chance the injunction would stand against the Wagner Labor Re lations Act, which defines the right to strike and picket, is another matter. Fourteen years younger than the 56-year-old Mr. Lawrence, Mr. Mueller felt his way up the ladder from a bearing babbiter at Pitts burgh Railways Co. in 1924. through night high school classes, a B S in electrical engineering at Carnegie Tech and the presidency of the Duquesne Union in 1939. Quick to incur the wrath of the established unions, he not always has pleased co-leaders of his own crowd. During a sitdown strike of 375 workers in 1944, he was the only dissenter when eight general com mitteemen voted to end the strike. When the committee brought im peachment proceedings against him, he carried the fight to the member ship and was absolved. 41 Formosans to Face Trial for Gun Battle By tho Associated Pross TOKYO, Sept. 28.—The 8th Army judge advocate today announced 41 Formosans will be arraigned Monday before a military commis sion on various charges based on a July gun battle with police in which several persons were killed and others were wounded. The clash was said to have developed from a black market dispute. Prosecutors are Maj. Dick Elliott, Memphis, Tenn.; Robert Scott, Fort Smith, Ark., and George T. Hagen, Crookston, Minn. T/5 Herbert L. Berman, Boston, and Lin Ting-sheng, Chinese lawyer in the 8th Army judge advocate’^ office, are defense counsel. A i Republican Named Mayor Of Athens in Heavy Vote By Associated Press ATHENS, Tenn., Sept. 28.—With little fanfare, this little East Ten-! nessee town—scene of an election night riot two months ago—has elected a new Mayor. A 58-year-old Republican new comer to politics, Rhea Hammer, was named Mayor on the basis of almost complete returns from the heaviest vote in the city’s history. Mr. Hammer will replace Paul J. Walker, who resigned early this month after the turbulent August 1 election night battle between vet- \ erans and sheriff's deffhties over the counting of ballots. The former servicemen did not participate formally in yesterday's election, in which four aldermen and six members of the School Board also were chosen. GOP Women Hear Brewster Deride Rift In Democratic Party By Gretchen Smith Star Staff Correspondent PHILADELPHIA. Sept. 28.—Sen ator Brewster, Republican, of Maine told the Federation of Women’s Re publican Clubs here today that the Democratic donkey occupies the “unfortunate position of a chame leon on a kaleidoscope.” “The Democratic Party in Con gress is hopelessly divided and the irreconcilable conflict within the ranks is now evident,” he declared at the closing session of the federa tion's fourth biennial convention at' the Bellevue Stratford Hotel. A Republican victory in the con-j gressional elections in November, he said, would signify "support for the bipartisan foreign policy of Byrnes and Vandenberg.” He added that "that way lies the best hope of peace.” Says Some Candidates Look Yellow. Explaining his statement that the Democratic ranks are divided, he said, "Democratic candidates represent all the hues of the rain bow. At the extreme left are the I red Peppers, at the extreme right' are the believers in white su premacy and in between are the neutral hues who would be all things to the various factions to whom they would appeal. “Right now,” he continued, “a lot : of Democratic candidates look yel low. Even Bob Hannegan, the re I doubtable chairman, was left tem jporarily speechless. Senator Mead I is obliged to take Truman’s name i out of his address for fear of of j fending the Left Wing.” Senator Brewster was one of sev eral speakers in a forum discus i sion, “Politics — Opportunity for ! Service.” Other speakers included Repre I sentative Brown of Ohio, Ralph E. Becker, director of Young Amer | ican Activities of the Republican | National Committee; Miss Marion i E. Martin, assistant chairman of the j Republican National Committee; 'Representative Halleck of Indiana ; and Mrs. Charles W. Weis. jr„ na tional committeewoman for New j York. Colored Women Represented. ! The majority of the approximately 500 delegates from 41 States at tending the convention left late yes terday for their homes. Among the delegates were several colored members of women’s Re publican clubs, including one from the District of Columbia, Mrs. Ida S. Taylor, president of the Virginia White Speel Woman's Republican Club. Others were from California, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Massachu setts, New York and Pennsylvania. Mrs. Addison B. Green was elected president of the federation, succeed ■ ing Mrs. W. Glenn Suthers of 1 Chicago. Other new officers who will be in stalled in January include Mrs. Ed . ward N. Donnellan of Denver, Colo., first vice president; Mrs. Roy T. Bishop of Portland, Oreg., second vice president; Mrs. Walter McNab of Schnectady, N. Y., third vice president; Mrs. George R. La Made, Williamsport, Pa., four vice presi , dent; Mrs. Gladys P. Gordon, Cleve land, secretary, and Mrs. Harold jAchor, Anderson, Ind„ treasurer. Train Kills Three Youths Who Fell Asleep on Tracks By th» Associated Press HAMMOND, Ind.. Sept. 28.—Three Hammond Technical High School youths were killed early today by a Nickle Plate freight train at Black Oak. a community between Ham mond and Gary, as they attempted to escape the wheels of the oncoming locomotive. The dead are Melvin Altgilbers, 16, of Black Oak; Charles Chick, 16, and James Walker, 15, both of Hammond. A fourth youth, James August Blair, 16. of Hammond, managed to get off the tracks, ran 2 miles to his home where his mother notified police. Deputy Sheriff Arthur Thompson : quoted Blair as saying the youths had a "get together” at a Hammond home last night and the three dead boys each drank a bottle of beer. The four started down the right of way when Atgilbers became ill, the officer continued. They sat on the tracks and seeing an approaching train, moved to safety. Then they returned to the tracks1 and fell asleep, the deputy continued. The rumbling of the freight train, bound from Port Wayne to Chicago, awakened them, the officer said. Altgilbers pushed Blair from the tracks, but he and Chick and Walker! were unable to get out of the path I of the locomotive, Mr. Thompson said. Ambassador (Continued From First Page.l return to Washington for the fall term of court after the Interna tional Military Tribunal delivers its verdicts next week. The justice, who served as chief American prosecutor in the Nuern berg trials, issued this statement: “There is no basis for any specu lation about my being appointed Am bassador to London or any other office, however ‘attractive. I have no intention of deserting the duties I assumed in going on the United States Supreme Court for any other public post. “Secretary of State Byrnes, under j whom I would be glad to serve if I were to consider such a place at all, j knows this and no responsible quar- i ter will give the idea any considera tion.’’ Mr. Jackson’s statement did not mention the source of the specula tion about his possible appointment as successor to W. Averell Harriman, who is leaving the London ambassa dorship to become Secretary of Commerce. State Department Aide Insists Latin Highway Was Military Need By Robert K. Walsh A State Department spokesman to day repudiated testimony of a former War Department officer before the Senate War Investigating Committee that Army construction of the Inter American Highway in 1942-43 was deemed a political rather than mil itary necessity. John Cabot, former chief of the Caribbean and Central American Affairs Division, told the committee that former Secretary of War Stim son wrote the then Secretary of State Cordell Hull in 1942 that the War Department regarded the high way as “an urgent military necessity." Senator Ferguson, Republican, of Michigan, however, read a 1942 letter of Gen. Eisenhower stating that the War Department approved construc i tion for “Continental solidarity” and not as a “present military necessity.” General. Questioners Clash. The Senator, declared this seemed to uphold yesterday's testimony of Maj. Gen. C. P. Gross, retired, for mer chief of the Army Transporta j tion Corps. Today's hearing opened with a clash between committee questioners and Brig. Gen. Ruben E. Jenkins of ; the Plans ad Operations Division of the War Department. Gen. Jenkins declared the War i Department today regarded the ! Inter-American Highway as a "mili tary asset, but not essential to ade quate national defense.” Committee Counsel George Meader described this as “trying to carry I water on both shoulders." Canal Inquiry Put Off. Gen. Jenkins said that because of its vulnerability, the road cannot be considered adequate for primary logistic support, but would increase "flexibility” of the national defense supply system and would be a mili tary asset also by “promoting inter ests of hemisphere solidarity.” Because of the absence of Acting Chairman Kilgore, the committee postponed until Monday its further inquiry into the wartime Canol oil project in Canada and the question ing of Admiral Ernest J. King. It expects at that time to have a reply from the Joint Chiefs of Staff to its request that all Canol files be made available without a label of military secrecy. 77 Million Spent on Road. The committee went ahead with examination of State and War De partment representatives to learn what rights, if any, the United States has obtained in the Inter American Highway through Central (America in return for its outlay of : $77,000,000. E. W. James of the Public Roads | Administration told the committee (yesterday the PRA already has spent ,$33,000,000 on the road through Cen tral America and the Army $44, 000,000. | Mr. James, chief of PRA’s inter American regional office, estimated jit would take $65,000,000 more to ! complete the strip from the south ern border of Mexico to Panama j City. Gentleman’s Agreement. Reports of a “gentlemen’s agree ment” for construction of a loop I road near the farm of the President | of Nicaragua, and stories of pigs [shod with leather because of rough [spots in the Army built highway in 1 Guatemala enlivened the four-hour j hearing yesterday afternoon. Mr. James reported his office is {going ahead now with a somewhat [changed route as part of a much ! larger Pan-American Highway [started in 1929. He estimated that [a through road from the Mexican [border to the Panama Canal will [be open for traffic in three years [ and completed with pavement in [ five years. Not “Military Necessity." ( Senator Ferguson drew from Gen. \ Gross a statement that a main pur i pose for wartime construction of the Inter-American Highway be ; tween Mexico and Panama was to (assure “solidarity” and co-operation [from Central American govern ments, especially in getting airfield sites. Gen. Gross added that, although he did not consider the project a military necessity, there had been "a possibility of a real need develop ing in the dark days of 1942.” Credits Examined. The committee went over In de tail with Hawthorne Arey, general counsel of the Export-Import Bank, the credits which that agency gave Mexico and other Central American republics to assist them in paying their one-third shares of the costs of construction in their country. Some of the testimony indicated j the roads agency and the Army En j gineers worked occasionally at cross purposes if not in direct conflict on i parts of the highway in 1942-3. Maj. Gen. Eugene Revbold, retired, former Chief of Engineers, and Col. Edwin Kelton, retired, former pan American highway director, blamed adverse weather and equipment transportation difficulties for fail ure to complete the project and for the great increase over original cost estimates. Third Estonian Vessel Brings Refugees to Miami By the Associated Pres* MIAMI. Fla.. Sept. 28.—The third boatload of Estonian refugees to seek haven in the United States in recent weeks was aground today just off the Miami shoreline. The boat—identical to the ones used by the two previous groups— contains 18 refugees, a spokesman aboard told newsmen. The craft anchored just outside of quarantine last night and when the tide went out was left high and dry. The tide was expected to re float it today and it will tie up be hind the two others at the city docks on Biscayne Bay. Already 30 refugees, including 1 Finn and 29 Estonians, are living in a city-owned warehouse while immigration officials study their cases. None had visas. An appeal filed by the first group is now before the Imigration oBard of Review. Telephone Workers Meef Tuesday on Union Merger The merger of local telephone workers’ unions in a national tele phone workers' union will be dis cussed at a meeting at 8 p.m. Tues day at Turner’s Arena. Joseph A. Beirne, president of the National Federation of Telephone Workers, will be the principal speaker. He explained that if the merger plans go through the 4T affiliates of the federation over the Nation would become a compact na*» tional organization. A