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PROSPERITY ISSUE *SHOTLY DEBATED Spokesmen for Major Politi cal Parties Warm Up in | Election Fight. By the Assoctated Press. The argument over the state of the Wnion, and particularly as to whether prosperity now exists in the United Ktates, contnued unabated today be- tween official spokesmen of the Demo- cratic and Republican parties. With their eyes set upon the No- vember ala-tionss, which are to decide the comgiax'an of the Seventieth Con- gress, Sesator Lawrence C. Phipps, Colorado. chairman of the Republican senato~ial samua’gn committee, de- ‘s a Republican year.” ‘*homas F. Bayard, Del- avites of the Democratic ~amnalge committee, char- 1s Co'orado colleague as an “unconacious humorist.” The propie, Senator Phipps asserted aftar a White House conference with President Coolidge, “have undimin- ished confidence in President Coolidge and believe he should be supported by a majority in Congress, which will help him maintain the most abundant prosperity the country has ever had under a Republican tariff,” but Sena- tor ra said that this statement would be received by the Western tarmers with “their tongues in thelr cheeks.” Both Sides Heard From. In the latest wave In the sea of eampalgn popaganda Senator Bayard anked whatber Senator Phipps “is the only person in American uniwares of the fact at the 16,000 employes of the Amoskeng Manufacturing Co. of New England declined only last week acterized )t 4 cut in wages which the ny dangled before thelr eyes for °d purpose of getting con- tracte.’ Senator Phipps the statement that Jooks good in Massachu: Kenator William Butler. chairman of the Republican national committee and personal friend of the President, is opposed former Senator David 1. Walsh:. It is difficult, he continued, “to imagine how it could be other- wise, {nusmuch as Massachusetts is an tndustrial State, strong for both the tariff and the President. Frem New Jkngland generally, from the Far West and from Middle Staces, Eenator Phipps “we hear of No movement away President Coolidge and therefore from the eandidates of the Republi- can party,” but Senator Bayard as- gerted that “agriculture is admittedly flat on i1s back.” and added that the rural popi: upward of 47 per cent of all our people.” Adds Spice to Debate. The Democratic party, Semator Phipps cone'vded, “hus reached the state wher is a party national only in ifs pretensions and without a single national issue on which it can stand with any hape of success.” while Senator Bavard declared that “nearly one-half our population has for five v past carried the bag politieally financlally for the Republi ty,” and asked wheth: hipps “thinks that such ements as he gave out to- day will be ratified when the ballots are cast in November?” Some spice was added to the de- bate by the statement of Senator Charles McNary. Republican, Oregon, and member of the special campaign expenditure investi 0 committee, that the committee would he ready 1o submit its report on the Pennsylvania and Iliinois inquiries in December. The report, he Intimated, would deprecate the expenditures made on hehalf of Representativ William Vare and Frank L. Smith, Republican nominees, and also may be expected to criticize the political activities of the Anti 4 Wayne B. Wheeler, of the leaxue, called on Senator Mc Nary the latter's return to it was learned, in an rtain when the report countered with “the situation ts,” where and WILLIS SUMMONS VOTERS IN OHIO TO STAND BY COOLIDGE (Continued from First Page.) issues economy, OHIO G. 0. P. CONFIDENT. promising to adopt policles of it elected. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. Special Dis to The Star COLUMBUS, Ohio, September At Columbus, within the shadow of the turreted dome of the old State- house, a Democratic governer and a Republican United States Senator are carrying on thelr respective defen- sfve battles for retention of power. A. Vie™ Donahey, seeking a third term as chief executive of Ohio, is fighting with the aid of a strongly intrenched organization of 10,000 Democratic of fice holders and wide popularity | among the horny-handed _citizenr, k B. Willis is struggling for a second perlod of six years in the I'nited_States Sen: hall- marked, dyedin-the-wool apostle of the Coolidge administra and of the oldest article in the Republican creed. the protective tariff Gov. Donahey publicly asks another | term on his record of “hons ate | conducted against the | « hostile Republican tor of State of- 4 RARRIS-EWING SENATOR WILLIS. T Pomerene's strength, apart from the “thirst vote” in the big citles, lies with_the great business interests of the State. It has, therefore, been de- cided to concentrate the heaviest fire on breaking down Ohio business men’ bellet in the wisdom of pping Senator in the midstream of national prosperity. There s to be a particu- larly fierce barrage on Pomerene's tariff record in the Senate. He is to be pillorled 2 consistently “low support the -Simmons _ bill, industrial city i : tract puts, Is to be raked fore and aft. It awill be shown that Pomerene never voted once in favor of an amendment to increase any dutles, although he had frequent opportunity to do_so. On the Fordney-McCumber bill Willis will reveal that Senator Pomerene voted 171 times, “and every time for the lowering of proposed duties.”” Fi- naily, as the arch-count in the fiscal indictment of Pomerene, Willis will tell of the Democratic Senator’s vote in 1921 against the first large tax-re- duction bill sponsored by the Harding administration. Wijhen Ohio business men “talk Pomerane” Willis will fling the for- mer's tariff and taxation record at them. Willls will ask if Buckeye cap- tains of finance and commerce want to “repudiate” Coolidse economy in government, Coolidge tax reducti Mellon’s conduct of the Treas Hoover's achicvement in develo) the Department of Commerce and all the other men and matters which, in Republican judgment, ecnshrine the present regime at Washington in glory. All of these beneficent works, Willis_claims, will be imperiled if Ohlo, by electing a Democrat to the Senate, by that much weakens “Cool- idge control” of the mext Congress. Such a calamity, the Republican can- didate about to proclaim from the compaign housetops, “would be little short of a national ¢ er.” Although soft-pedaling the prohibi- tion issue in favor of the Coolidge is- sue, liquor remains a live factor in the Ohio A recently- formed i gue” is e ing to that. It is bi-partisan and it is effectively, though not openly, sup- porting the Pomerene cause. Like everywhere else, prohibition splits the two parties in Ohio among themselves. The Anti-Saloon League, which is supporting Willis, is doing its utmost, for example, to defeat Arthur W. Sweeney, the Republican candidate for Congress in the Akron district, who is wet, and re-elect the incum- bent Democrat, Martin L. Davey of tree surgery renown. Willis' strength is out in the rural countles, amid ich, the Wayne B. Wheeler organ- aw the light of day. . according to the Taft paper in Cincinnati, the Times-Star, it will not be altogether safe for Senator Willis to fmagine that the country regions are hopelessly dry. Change in Attitude. “We see some evidence of in attitude,” savs the Ti “among old-line drys tural districts served by this journal. These men and women do not believe change in the theory of prohibition less than | they did, but they are beginning to have doubts as to the practicability of enforcing it. ‘The persistence of bootlegging, the wholesale corruption of offic and the steady increase lawlessness have made them doubt the possibility of effective prohibition in the United States in our time. No matter how they may vote, some of the most sincere drys in th were.” enator Willis, who is on the Coolidge side of the World Court fence and our European debts, is going to make such capital out of those two lssues as current develop- ments permit. He is going to defy the League ot Natlons, for example, to “dictate” to Uncle Sam on the matter of the Senate reservations. Willls, too, has been prompt to snap up the cancellation challenge re- cently laid down by that eminent Ohlo Democrat, Newton D. Baker, former Secretary of War. The Re. senatorfal nominee is a on the debts. He s Ohlo voters are with Coolidge, Baker, on the cancellation position.” Baker holds that there's teeper stratum of international m in Ohio than Coolidge Re- s imagine, even among their own set. For the first time since 1922, Ohio Republicans seem confident of un- horsing Gov. Donahey. In 1922 he heat Col. Carml A. Thompson, now in the Philippines for President Coolidge, because Republicans, mis- takenly overconfident, did not turn | versity Ohio are less sure of themselves than | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 0, WE out and vote. In 1924 Donahey was re-elected by an impressively large majority, despite the Coolidge land- slide, berause his opponent, former Gov. Harry L. Davis, had legions of Republican enemies. This time, G. O. P. leaders say, Republicans will vote unitedly Jor their nominee, Myers Y. Cooper, righ Cincinnati business man. Both Donahey and Cooper are drys, so prohibition does not enter into the gubernatorial, as it does into ‘he senatorial, fight. Donzahey a Strong Man. Donahey, despite Republican op- timism, is not going to be easy to dethrone. As a statesman, particular- 1y of the intellectual brand, he does not rank high, but Ohioans, par- ticularly out in the sticks, still cherish “Honest Vic because of a cheese- paring record as State auditor that Controller General McCarl at Wash- ington might envy. Donahey achieved State-wide fame and popularity as a pruner of expense accounts. He took a flendish deiight in making Supreme Court judges ride in street cars in- stead of taxis and eating at armchair lunchrooms, instead of hotels. Auditor Donahey made the taxpaying patriots of the Buckeye commonwealth believe that he was the only jnan who ever held high State office in Ohio who watched the people’s pennies. He became governor on that record and he has retained power four years in this old stalwart Republican strong- hold by convinrcing the electorate that Donahey runs the State at large as he used to run its expense accounts. Despite his Celtic name, the governor is a Protestant. He 1s also a dry. He is furthermore a Rooseveltian parent—the father of nine children. Once he used a campaign lithograph of himself and his brood of bairns, and entitied it: “Nine reasons why you ‘should vote for Donahey.” An unkind critic says the “reasons” are that the governor has a penchant for giving his grown-ups jobs In the state- house at Columbus. (‘ooper, the Republican gubernato- rial candidats, is new at politics, but he is weaithy, resourceful and aggres- sive. Ohio G. O. P. leaders look across Lake Erie to Michigan, which has just unhorsed, at a primary, a Gov- ernor intrenched in his fourth term (Groesbeck), and say that Wolverine gubernatorial history is about to re- peat itself in this State. They’re not discouraged {n this rosy view by the Columbus Dispatch straw poll, a reg- ular feature of Ohio campalgns, which shows Ionahey substantially ahead of Cooper. The same poll, inciden- tally, shows Willis leading Pomerene, but discloses that in two camps in which Pomerene is supposed to be weak—the women and organized la- bor—he is running neck-and-neck with Willis. Rallroad brotherhood men used to knifc Pomerene and fought him in his recent primary duel with Judge Florence Allen. But the Dis- patch straw ballot discloses rallway shopmen supporting Pomerene as strongly as they are backing Willis. Willis' friendliness for Harry M. Daugherty, for whom the brother- hood long have had an {njunction rod n pickle, 18 hurting him among the rall workers. Willlam Green, presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor, is an Ohio Democrat. He is out for Pomerene. Representative in House. Here in the Commonwealth adorned by Nicholas Longworth there is more than passing attention in the various contests for the lower branch of Con- gress. At present the Ohio delegation stands, 16 Republicans and 6 Demo- crats. The proportion seems likely to be maintained, with perhaps a gain or a loss or two for either party. Ohio Republicans say that two of their Representatives, Speaker Long- worth and his right-hand-mand, James T. Begg, are largely responsible for the expeditious manner in which the House handled public business at the last session of Congress. 'hey are bent on giving the Republican delega- tion a ringing vote of confidence by re-elections all along the line. It is a little early to predict whether their expectations of doing so will be real- ized. The Speaker of the House en- joys great popularity everywhere in Ohio. He plans to stump every con- gressional district for his party’s can- dates. It 1928 is a presidential free-for-all for Republicans, Ohio will have a fav- orite son of that breed, and his name will be *“Nick"” Longworth. KEMMERER RETURNS FROM POLISH SURVEY Princeton Expert Mute on Finan- cial Conditions or Remedies He Suggested. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 29.—Prof. E. V. Kemmerer of Princeton Uni- returned today on the liner Paris_ after conducting a financial survey for the Government of Poland. He declined to discuss conditions in that country or remedies he may have prescribed. “The results must speak selves,” he sald. Poland is the tenth country to en- list the services of Dr. Kemmerer in rearranging its affairs, and at least two others are awaiting his coming. On October 7 he will sail for Ecuador and in March he will take his finance commission to Bolivia. In the commission to Poland were H. L. Lutz of Leland Stanford Uni- versity, J. T. Byrnes, accountant of New York; F. X. Eble of the United States customs service; Wallis Clark, an industrial engineer, and J. T. Brod- erick of the Natfonal Bank of Com- merce of New York. The problems which are dealt with by the Kemmerer mission are cur- rency, banking, taxation, customs, bud ccounting and fiscal control for them- Front en of ing to some river below. The wheel a Washington-Virginia track on the Highway Bridge this morning and crashed Into a gi witnesses, the girder saved the car from a possible plunge to the is dug paths across the concrete, which are shown in the Railway jumped the ler. Accord- picture. The photograph was taken after the car had been put back on the TROLLEY ESCAPES PLUNGE INTO RIVER Car on Highway vBr_idge Jumps Rails, Crashing Against Heavy Girder. The lives of & score of passengers on a west-bound car of the Washing- ton-Virginia Railway Co. were endan- gered shortly after 9 o'clock today when the heavy car, moving slowly across the Highway Bridge, split a rail midway of the span, jumped the tracks and brought up with a crash agalnst one of the main bridge girder: ripping a six-foot hole in the top o the car and shaking up the passen- gers. One of the smaller girders of the bridge was buckled from the im- pact as the heavy car struck the main girder and ricochetted against it. Hed the car not struck the pon- derous main girder, acccording to statements made by some of the pas- sengers, it might have jumped the four-inch curb between the roadway and the sidewalk, crashed through the fragile guard rail and been precipi- tated with its human freight into the Potomac River, 35 feet below. John W. Rich, general superintendent of the railway, denied that this could have happened, claiming the car was under complete control and could have been stopped before it reached the edge of the bridge. Traffic Tied Up Both Ways. Traffic across the bridge was tied up both ways for more than a half hour and scores of passengers on other cars bound for Washington walked into the city through Potomac Park to board other cars downtown. Automobile traffic was unable to move because the car lay almost across the bridge, its nose against the girder on the south side and its rear end across the north tracks of the span. None of the passengers was hurt, although all those in the car were shaken up. Shortly after 10 o'clock the car was back on the rails moving toward the Ballston shops of the railway company for re- pair, while trafic again moved across the bridge. John A. Goodwin of Ballston, mo- torman of the car, is one of those who telieved Providence and the bridge girder alone saved the car and its passengers from crashing into the river. Goodwin said in the presence of scores of people that he prayed the car might strike the girder when it left the rails. The passengers re- mained in their seats and made no outery as the car left the rails and threatened to plunge into thé river. No Auto Traffic at Time. Many who saw the position of the car declared it was fortunate that at the time the car left the rails there was no automobile traffic or another car coming east into Washington. The accldent was caused, according to Mr. Rich, by a broken rail, the north or outside rail on the wesi bound track. It was plainly broken, showing a transverse fissure 8§ inches long. From this point the tracks of the runaway car dug deeply into the asphalt paving across tt bridge to the girder. Mr. Rich the cars move across the bridge at a speed of not more than 8 miles an ‘hour and frequently less. Motor- man Goodwin said his car was moving slowly when the rail broke. The car was bound for West Falls Church and was less than half full. Certain American tourists would be more popular abroad if their manners | were a8 good as their money, says the Office Boy. GOVERNMENT WINS TEAPOT DOME LEASE CASE ON APPEAL (Continued from First Page.) lationship between Secretary Fall and Sinclair.” Silences and evasions of the suit suggest pertinent inqufries, the opinion says. Among them are: “Why is silence the answer of a former cabinet official to the charge of corruption?” “Why is the plea of self-incrimination, one not resorted to by honest men, the refuge of Fall's son-in-law, Everhgrt?’ “Men with honest motives and purposes do not remain silent when their honor is assailed,” and “It is amazing that officers of great oil companies, such 1s Blackner and O'Neill, would flee heir country and refuse to testify in 1 sult brought by their own Govern- ment to unearth an alleged fraud practiced on it by a high gmchfl,” are other statements. KENNEDY IS SILENT. Judge Who Upheld Leases Declines to Discuss Reversal. CHEYENNE, Wyo., September 29 (#).—Judge T. Blake Kennedy of the United States District Court here, who gave the decision upholding the Teapot Dome oil lease, declined last night to discuss the order of the Cir- cuit Court of Appeals reversing his ruling and remanding the case for new trial at Cheyenne, saying he had not been advised as to the nature of the St. Louis Court's action. Federal District Attorney A. D. Wal- ton sald a new trial of the case in all probability would not*come before the November term of court, but would be heard in the April, 1927, term. Wal. ton was a member of the Government counsel with former Senator A. T. Pomerene and O. J. Roberts in the Teapot Dome hearing here. Pomerene Is Pleased. CLEVELAND, Ohio, September 29 (#).—“The Government has now scored a clean sweep in all of the court fights over the naval ofl re- sorves, and the count is three for us to nothing for Sinclair and Doheny," declared former Senator Atlee Pome- rene last night. Mr. Pomerene, special counsel for the Government in the oll frauds cases, received a telegram from the clerk of the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals at St. Louis, informing him of the Government's latest victory. “I knew the court would decide in our favor,” he said. OWEN ROBERTS GRATIFIED. Special Federal Counsel Says Doheny Case Was Forecast. PHILADELPHIA, September 29 (). —Owen J. Roberts, special counsel for the Government in the Teapot Dome oil case, expressed gratification last night at the decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in 8t. Louis. am_greatly gratified at the re. — EBONITE Strings toasti SoitWi Around the Gears It's a wonderful lubricant for the transmission as well as the rear axle gears. Beware of Substitutes. Just say “EBONITE” Be Sure You Get It 20 Cents a Shot WITH EBONITE T 2,500 MILES From the Checkerboard pump only, and in five-pouund cans At All Good Dealers DNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1926. BANDITS IN MEXICO AGAIN ON WARPATH Native Motorists Are Attacked Near Capital and Two Are Wounded. By The Associated Press. v MEXICO CITY, September 29.— Bandits again have attacked motor- ists near Mexico City, recalling the recent kidnaping and killing of Jacob Rosenthal, an American citizen. The authorities say that no foreigners were involved in the latest attack. Two Mexican motorists were wounded by the bandits, who escaped. Troops are said to be pursuing the outlaws. They are under orders to exterminate the bandits. The attack occurred Sunday night. Dr. Lasso de la Vega and Jose Cor- doba, prominent residents of Mexico City, were wounded. A wound caused by an explosive bullet necessitated the amputation of one of Cordoba’s legs. The attack occurred when about 15 bandits attempted to hold up the au- tomobile in which Dr. de la Vega and Cordoba, were riding, along the high- way midway between Mexico City and Pachuca. The bandits demanded that the chauffeur stop the car, but instead he drove off at a high rate of speed amid a rain of bullets, which riddled the body of the car. — e versal of the decislon of the District Court of Wyoming in the so-called Teapot. Dome case,” said Mr. Roberts. “The Government's special counsel, Senator Atlee Pomerene, and mysell have always had a bellet that there would be a reversal of the case, which belief was strengthened by the decision of the Ninth Courth of Ap- peals in the so-called Doheny case. ‘“The Doheny case will be heard by the Supreme Court on Monday or Tuesday, October 4 or b, and the de- cision in that case will probably final- ly settle the law applicable to this case as well.” SINCLAIR WILL APPEAL. Attorneys Declare They Will Go Be- fore Supreme Court. Attorneys for Harry F. Sinclalr, 61l magnate, said here today that they would appeal to the Supreme Court the decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals at St. Louls holding the Teapot Dome naval ofl reserve lease was obtained in a fraud- ulent manner. The move, they said, would be for & writ of certlorari. Until a complete copy of the court's decision was recelved and studied, the attorneys said, they would have nothing more to say. sPRAY AUTQ PAINTING ®°0s® DONALDSON AUTO PAINTING CO. Rear 455 New York Ave. Fr. 8694, 7 Quality Beyond Question | SR o 2% For Your Children’s Sake Don’t Neglect Their Eyes Now that school has re- opened you need to be doubly watchful. Proper attention given now will mean clear, strong vision for them in their future years. 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According to Willis there is but one issue in Ohio and in the Nation at large. That fs- sue is approval or disapproval of the Coolidge administration and the Re- publican policies to which it is com- mitted. Wl flea bite ticers ishes Demoer: dency tnation compr eternal BAYERSON OIL WORKS OLUMBIA 5228 WEEK END FARES | From Washington a1r_1d Alexandria Charlottesville — Orange Culpeper — Warrenton Harrisonburg, Va., and Intermediate Stations, via SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Southern Railway announces continuation of Week End fares to all stations up to Charlottesville, Warrenton and Har- risonburg, Va., inclusive, and from these stations to Washing- ton and Alexandria. Round Trip tickets sold for all trains (except Crescent Limited) Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays; good returning until midnight Monday following date of sale. Consult Ticket Agents, Southern Railway S. E. Burgess, Division Passenger Agent 1510 H St. N.W.—'Phones Main 5633 or 7063 Weather Forecast Hotel Gordon 916 16th St. NW. 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