Evening Star Newspaper, August 16, 1928, Page 2

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THE EVENING COOLIDGE PRAISED NEWSPAPER RADID FOR PEACE SPEECH EACESPEECH SERVCE PLANED Telegrams Pour Into Brule |Will Provide Means of Gath- After Address on Kel- ering Information of World | logg Pact. Events More Rapidly. Radio’s peculiar advantages are about to make available for every newspaper | in the Untted States the latest from every locality in the world within | a | | ELL YOUNC | B . t of The Star | LODGE. BRULE 1st 6 elegrams and cable Prés news wireless station move and n o is necess to gi o Hor ary give vSpapers press assaciations vork that And from the Federal r news high-frequency e band oup of he pro- two © newspaper frat racess and R. C. A. Protest Overruled. assignment was over the protest poration of America nnels and more. | associations | nted But to poli and were not wspapers W ion permits organization channels icenses gr: s there | received from athan & Leh-| plan of organi-! r of incorporation ws of Delaware, a set of a sample contract® that | ered into between the new | anization and the newspapers. The nization has adopted the name 2 n News Traffic Corporation Donald D. Hughes, assistant general sel of the commission, is analyz data, and will submit recom to the com- a The press associations represented by the proposed corporation are the Con- solidated Press Association. the United Press and International News Service. | The individual newspapers a Times, World and Herald Tribu New York. the Christian Seience Moni- tor of Boston, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and Miuwaukee Journal The Associated Press is interested in! the plan but has not yet entered the | aroup. I Two Stations Ready. | Two of the stations are about ready ¢ operate. Under the commission’s listening | procedure a building permit must be ¥ was that he | procured before the actual broadcast efinite move toward world | ing license is considered or awarded. he chief contribution of his| The possibilities of this short-wave | network are great. Because of the | multiple direction in which radio waves { travel, in contrast to the point-to-point ekl I mecnania service of cables, dispatches can be ing some little political importance. Ii cked up by as many papers as have FIRMS WILL REPAIR FAULTY TIRES FREE at least supplies the Republicdn party. | the receiving facilities. At present véry | = = upon the a of a Republican | few small cities and towns receive ade- with an international peace | quate foreign news coverage, owing to | Rubber Manufacturers Issue New b Ihe President offers as 'the high cost of cable service and of | stitute for the League of Nations. | telegraphis tolls. The radio network | Guarantee for All W2S Inferesting to the President to | wil] make possible compiete coverage | % Rote that here in Wisconsin, where by virtue of the appreciably smaller “Shoes. there was a notable element of OPPO- | expense, the greater rapidity of serv- | tion to American participation in the 'ice and the fact that a large number of | t fens t the “relaying” of the dispatches ¢ YORK. the most vigorously applauded part of |*'The system of transmission, under| ov YORK. August 16 Jesterday's speech. present plans, will be this: A foreign | °'S throughout the count The President’s demand for a Proper | neyspaper correspondent will “file” his | formed yesterday by Gen. Lincoln C. el 2 fueh antooal e | story” - oifh commercial _wireless | Andrews, as director general of the T - s er or | " r t for international peace, is nothing new ;:r;\cx::n.v Ulnddd:r"ls;_ r:gw }‘“!::?mf h\“‘L i newly organized rubber institute, that with Mr. Coolidge. He regards it as'the sation or stations to whom the | 44 tire manufacturers bproducing 95 message is addressed may receive it. | PET cent of the tires made in this coun- irely consistent that a country shall he insists Then, if the paper or press association | {r val agreemen Great Britain and e recent developments in result of the strength of government. He does keep INTERNL REAR ADMIRAL E. W. EBERLE. | Has Political Significance. The speech is recognized also as hav By the Associated Press were in- tect itself and citizens we would earn the contempt of wishes to get the “copy” to its associat- | Ucts against defects in material and whole world as well as our OWn|ed papers, it can retransmit it over its | Workmanship during the life of the people if this country failed to afford oy station. tire. sufficient national defense. (Copyright. 1928) Every Aside from the early reactions to| i | facture his Wau h, the President to- BT 3 | numbe cay made it plamiy evident that ne was| HOOVER TO LEAVE [ warranty X PALO ALTO TONIGHT |and workmanship during the lite of the g".l;med with the reception accorded | ranted by iim in that thriving city in one of the richest agricultural sections of Wiscon- ire to the extent that if any tire fails sin. The cordial and enthusiastic man- | FOR JOURNEY EAST because of such defect. we will either re- pneumatic tire of our manu- | bearinz our name and serial the manufacturers say in the sent to the dealer: is war- mer in which the thousands of people air the tire or make a reasonable al- | cheered him on the streets and on the owance on the purchase of a new fair grounds where he delivered his (Continued from First Page.) | tire.” | Speech warmed his heart = = | Gen. Andrews explained that the pur- When he was elected viva voce, with gouthern route, so as to visit a dozen | Pose of the warranty is to provide for | Mrs. Coolidge, as honorary life guests California cities before striking east- | handling all claims on a basis of adjust- of the Legion, he was given a bright | arg for a three-day stay in and near | ment which will be fair to all consumer: d overseas cap which he promptly | west Branch. Iowa. where he will de- | With adjustments restricted to defective | donned at the jaunty angle so typical |jjver an address on the night of . Au- | tires and repiacements based upon rea- | of Legionnaires. as the crowd cheered | guct 31 e { sonzble expectancy and without limi- and the movie cameras cranked. A s speech, in which the nominee will | tation of time or mileage. He pointed | great voice arose out of the crowd, expand upon the farm relief views of | Out that motorists who misuse tires | “Atta boy, Cal!” |his acceptance address last Saturday, |OT Who misrepresent their mileage | his was the first time since the!yill come from the University Press to- | Profit unfairl from definite mileage President has been in Wisconsin that he | day and be distributed to newspapers Buarantees, usually at the expense of | was greeted as “Cal” and his severe'nuer the country. Another great radio |CAutious drivers who must pay the ad- gountenance broke into a broad grin.'phook-up will carry it far and near at | ditional cost of unjustified allowances He bowed toward the direction from [he time of its delivery T which this {riendly greeting came. While Hoover himseif has given little side circle on his journey and deliver IN FLOOD-SWEPT platform of his private car. 4 AP = hought to his return here in Novem- | CITIES ISOLAT ANDREWS FINDS BONES ber, if he follows the advice of some of advisers he will make a fairly OF MONSTER AS HUGE ‘w0 or three rather extensive addresses in addition to the dozen or more he will SOUTHERN STATES AS WOOLWORTH BUILDING | b calied upon to make from the rear - : (Continued from First Page.) Must Return to Vote. s Republican nominee is obliged to here 1o vdie because of Cali- | made laws prohibiting citizens outside | No the State at election time from voting | Brevard and Tryon, N. C., at an early by mail, although it permits those with- | hour today. Brief reports late yester- | the tate, but absent from their vot- | day were that water was racing down iug places, to send in their ballots the mountain sides to threaten the 1f Hoover is elected, he probably will | valleys remain here for some tme after No- | Southern Power Co. officials here re- vember 6, sceking rest and recreation | ported that although water was flowing after the strenuous campaizn period. over all their dams they were holding Yielding to the pressure of political | well and no damage was expected jeaders, the -Republican standard | They said that their gas plant at bearer has added a number of stops to | Spartansburg, reported last night ta his original itinerary for the present | have been flooded, was saved by engi- eastward trip, the first of which will | neers working all night to man pumps hich ever walk- be at San Jose within less than an hour | and place sandbags around h or swam the after his special train gets away from | (o keep it from overflowing ce knows today, Mr, | Palo Alto as the type of dino- a huge | row, he will v Jurassic | dale, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Pasa- hed | dena and San Bernardino. While ht of Long Beach he will inspect the Pacific | Southwest Exposition there as well as mingle fellow Iowans now resident Bouth Arriving at Williams ly Saturday, he and his party a side trip w the Arizona before the ith Republican | b wher of Arizona | and River the heart of the city, was on a rampage. wi e Cleveland Street [ closed to traffic because | supports Charlotte’s rainfall for the past 24 hours up to 8 o'clock this morning was reported as 356 inches Greenwood, 8. C,, reported a rainfall of 546 inches for the past 24 hours { with highways impassable and ap- proache numerous bridges washed out. Seaboard Afr Line train No lanta to Washington, was held b tween two washouts near Clinton | Hickory, N. C., reported several high- wiy bridges washed out and the three flood g at the huge Oxford Ford Dumn opened to. relieve strain because of the high wate; | Abbeville, 8 No estimate of the damage has been take of however lon of opinion on ed find until more official r received from Andrews which no edge of There is no scientific record of any monster of any known type pproaches even remotely in size ister described in these reports red Charles W f the di- t niology prehistoric the reports reserved an report had been received from the an Asheville over mountain | tain and Bus lines rerouted b of highw lide uville, 8, C., reported a rainfall in excess of seven inches for the past day and & half, with numerous roads blocked because of overflowing streams weakened bridges. ‘The Reedy a the lines today because lides near Black Moun- uda ut of he Blowing made imy Santa Barbara, Glen- | As known 1o 00 feet to Asheville were Rock on account ble by moun and 2 the pect wit ta ed | Andrew n of confer a nominee chairmen from nuj Conferences Are Planned Mexico, Bunday, Hoover Gallup as well ws Kansas, Dodgr nd Newton will be visited as well mporia, Hutchinson and Topeka, | Kansas City the nominee will be met by Mayor Beach and other official im for a brief reception during the s of tr West Branch v n exday morning in ent at which Herbert Hoove These in the East, will join h will stop & Albuquerg and | the he ere to T breakfast now Dakota addle K decided I (S5 The here da day and d on We Hoover will n conferences with Republican from the corn belt ce upon a Blate picnic and faly ows the death of George K Morris, chairman of the New York State Republican committee, reached Hoover late last night. and he immedi- | sent this message to William H & Republican leader of New Yoik will be nd night spent Thurs- Itapids lead and in attend- fon r gl owa h o reported a rafn| during the past 24 hours of 5'; inc | with streams higher than in the pa 20 years Many houses were reported flooded f carnivo pe. Neith ttanothere r of were cary New Museum The has a . Curb Members Suspended. YORK, August 16 (#). - Leon- HiN City 1 N 1 have just learned of the death of lard D. Ketcham and Eugene K, Cerf, George K. Morris. Please extend [ members of the New York Curb Mar- {10 the family my deepest sympathy. |ket, today were suspended as regular 3| His passing is & distinet Joms i the | members for six months on chArges o Republican party, which he has served | of “conduct inconsistent with just and &0 well and s0 consclentiously. equitable principles of trade.” covered by countr therium s-like animal of resented % oximately 1 and 26 fee Andrews peve was great s the ekull feet high Mr here b &L the the | Annapolis. “Tire deal- | hereafter will guarantee their prod- | | rank of mall stream running through Bridge | of weakened STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, REAR ADMIRAL E. W. EBERLE RETIRES FROM NAVAL SERVICE Will Close 47-Year Sea Ca- reer on 64th Birth- day. | Saw Action Aboard U. S. S. k Oregon in Spanish-Ameri- ! can War. of active service the ocean paths | Porty-seven which led him of the world will Admiral E. W. Eberle, chairman of the General Board and ranking officer of the Navy, tomorrow, his sixty-fourth birthday anniversary when his retire- ment becomes effective Born in Denton. Tex. August 1 1864, and graluated from the Naval Academy in 1885, Admiral Eberle’s career embraced service in the Span- ish-American War, when he was aboard U. S. S. Oregon on its epochal years over age around Cape Horn. and in the | ‘Publisher Says Liquor Dis- World War, during which he was super- intendent of the Naval Academy at He was. until recently, chief of naval operations, which com- mand he assamed in July, 1923. Be- fore that he was commanding officer of the United States battle fleet Headed Navy Yard. Admiral Eberle was commandant -of the Washington Navy Yard in 1914 and 1915, and he instituted the planning division of the gun factory in the local yard. Hequit his Washington com- mand to become superintendent of the FIREFIGHTERS WHO WON 1928 ¢ be ended for Rear | SOUTHIS SMITHS, PEED TITLE AND ST Above: Members of En Compan; and Twenty-second streets, whose record for them the speed championship of the Fire Department and a second leg on | Rosewate Capt. William A. Bryarly, Lieut. William R. Lusby, | Sergt. Steven T. Porter, Pyts. John S. Trodden ardson, Frederick Troup, Henry Beahm, John Price and Paul Ballenger. Pvt. Tal- | bott drove and Pvt. Troup was the cranker. The Star Cup. Left to right: Relow: Battalion Chief Thomas 0°C vention engineer, War Department, who DANIELS DECLARES | | on HAROLD OLIV! A ed Press Staff ALBANY. N. Y. August 16.—The South, in the opinion of Josephus Dan- iels, is safe for Gov. Smith even though BY D. ER. academy. which office he held until there is some “unrest” there. 1919, when he was made commander of the Battleship Division 5 of the Atlantic | Fleet. He became commander of Battle- ship Division 7 in 1920 and a year later was made commander-in-chief of the Pacific Fleet. His early naval service took him around the world twice and into battle When a lieutenant aboard the U. 8. S Oregon, Admiral Eberle was in com- mand of the ship’s forward guns in tie battle of Santiago. Following the San- tiago_campaign the officer returned tc the Pacific Coast in his ship with th first lieutenant. ecutive officer of the U on the cruise of the Atlantic Fleet around the world, and while in com- mand of the gunboat Wheeling, took that vessel from Puget Sound around the world to Portsmouth. N. H., by way of Alaska, Bering Sea, China, India and the Mediterranean Made Rear Admiral, in 1917, He was appointed a rear admiral in December, 1917, and he served on th Board of Inspection and Survey, Navy Department. from 1905 to 1907; com- mander of the Naval Training Station at San Francisco from 1908 to 1910 commander of the U. S, 8. Milwaukee in 1910, commander of the Atlantic Torpedo Fleet from 1911 to 1913; at Naval War College, Newport, R. 1, 1913 to 1914, and commander of the U.'S. 3 Washington and the naval force in Santo Domingo 1914, after which he came to Washington as commandart of the Navy Yard, Admiral Eberle is president of the | Naval Mutual Aid Association, the Navy Relief Society and the Naval Institute He is a member of the Society of For- | ! eign Wars, the Military Order of the World War, the Army and Navy Club. the New York Yacht Club and th: Chevy Chase Club. MRS. E. MOP.JTROP DIES. Funeral Saturday for Widow of Emile Montrop. Mrs. Emily Montrop, 80, widow of Emile Montrop and for many years a resident of this city, died at the resi- | dence of her daughter, Mrs. Charles A | Little, 1808 W street southeast, todsy after an fliness of four weeks. | Mrs. Montropy had been a resident of | washington since coming here from England at the time of the Civil War She is survived ny two daughters, Mrs Little and Mrs. R. A. Miller of Holly- Services greategrandchildren He was ex- | S. S. Louistana | | there The North Carolina publisher and supporter of the Glass dry plank at | Houston made this prediction in an in- terview with newspaper men just be- fore going into conference yesterday | with the Democratic presidential nom»‘ inee. Gov. Smith today was to con- tinue his discussions with dry leaders f his party with the arrival of Senator | of Georgia, an opponent of Smith for the nomination Walsh to Confer Tomorrow. A conference tomorrow with Senator Walsh of Montana. who withdrew from the race for the nomination after the | California primaries and announced his | support of Smith, will wind up the series of confidential discussions with promi- fnent drys that the presidential candi- date had personally arranged for the period preceding the notification cere- mony Daniels asserted the South, as he sized up the situation, would remain solidly Democratic in November despite the fact that some were opposing Smith | on his prohibition stand. He | reiterated that he would stand by the | ticket “from constable to President” | and expressed belfef that Smith would | | be taken at his word when he said he | of my State a great injustice | pended upon what Smith said on the | eighteenth amendment and Volstead act 1 | | Private funeral services will be con-! {at 3 o'clock. Interment will be in Rock | Creek Cemetery. Will Rogers i Says: See where complimenting other side of W. J 0 Josephus Daniels, the man that took the cocktall shakers off the Navy, are out for Al They say he is ac- cused of being & wet, but he has never been ac- cused of being & Republican, all of which shows that when the votes are counted this Fall that every party man will be about where he generally is No matter how bad any candi- date 15, he can't possibly be as bad as the opposing -ty P. 8. Hooyer will be here. I hope he promises us Bowlder Dam, ERLY Lowden and Bryi HILLS. now s on the n, brother and B Mr. Hoover Charley | | | Southern Raflway officials here re- | ducted in Chambers' chapel, Puurtemm; Arriving in the South early tomor- | ported that no trains were running into [and Chapjn streets, Saturday afternoon | ¢naec | | | | would faithfully enforce the law | While again expressing regret over Smith’'s message to the Houston con- | vention declaring for more liberal en- forcement. laws, Daniels said he did not belleve this was repudiation of the | Democratic platform which he thought adequately “met the situation ' | o Denies Religioud Feeling. The Secretary of the Navy under | President Wilson dented published re- | ports that those opposing Smith in North Carolina were doing so because of his religion. “These reports are doing the people he de- | clared. “Some may be opposed to the governor on those grounds. but the great bulk of those opposing him are doing so because they are dry” He safd that undoubtedly much de- in his speech of acceptance next Wed- | nesday night and predicted that if the | address “is not anv moister” than tne | governor's previously expressed views he would carry North Carolina by a hun- dred thousand majority ‘I think Smith will enforce the law h pumps | wood, Calif.; five grandehlldren and t40 | he said, adding that reports alrendy had he dam | reached him from his State of unfavor- able reaction to Hoover's references to law enforcement in his acceptance h “because he has given no as- surances or promised better things ex- cept to say he would not nullify the eighteenth amendment Holds Platform Specific He believed the Demovratic platform in thi¢ respect was more specific’ and when the people considered enforee ment_conditions under the Republican Rogers Cl\a]lenges Smith to Debate: | Asks Him to Pick Subject, if Any Special Dispateh to The Star NEW YORK, August 16— Will Rog- ers today issued another defl to his po- litical opponents in his campaign for President as the candidate of the Anti- Bunk party. Following his challenge to joint debate, sent last week to Her- bert Hoover, Rogers has thrown down the gauntlet to Al Smith. In a letter | received at Smith |u~udmmn-|.~ here to | | day Rogers also challe cratic nominee. His letter “Dear Friend Al “Now this Is the open season for de- bates, and I believe you and 1 could | put on about as good & one as one of | these others, So I hereby challenge | s the Demo- follows | you the way 1 challenged the other fel | 1 * low last week. ‘ Now, the trouble with most debates, ! they are confined to a subject. Now, | we won't let that worry us, we'll just | rent Madison Square Garden. Al we do Ia sell tickets, and let the money go to poor Democratie widows who have given their husbands' lives to trying to get elected to some office n the Demo- | 'AUGUST 16, | Haugen bill. appeared to have a plural- | with one precinct missing | i his home precinct | mdio where they can't see him. 19°28.° | RELIGIOUS DEBATE enns wormore | RESCUES LOST PAL oz e SIARVING IN WILDS AR CUP that the Jesuits in their palmiest days | 2 ad such edieval | i R o oiiv plitical verscns Prospector in Plane Saves have obtained in the last eight years. | i Man Who Spent 48 Days in Canada Woods. Religious Tssue. “You know what happened to the Jesuits. They were run out of most of the countries of Europe. Now, I say 1o you that the political parsons of thi country are riding to a fall. On one !side the fundamentalists, the Ku Klux Klan and the political parsons, and n the other side liberalism. If the po- litical parsons carry the Sou.h against Smith they will set back the spirit of liberty and educational development of the South for years.” John Stewart Bryan, publisher of the Richmond Times-Dispatch, said “We must preserve the freedom of thought. All churches together could not force a religion on_ this country I am going to vote for Smith to show that this country Is big enough not to be dictated to by bigotry.” See Loss to Hoover. | Prof. Thomas H. Reed of the Uni- | versity of Michigan said that if he suspected the religious issue had been raised or fostered by Republicans he would vote for Smith but he was con- | vinced that Herbert Hoover or any re- sponsible adviser never had said one | word to justify bringing this issue into | the campaign. He pleaded with the audience not to desert Hoover merely | to demonstrate their hatred of the wnti- Jatholic issue raised against his op- ‘ ponent. Willis J. Abbott, editor of the Chris- tian Science Monitor, also expressed | fear that the spirit of tolerance would | prevent some from voting for Hoover Prof. A. H. Hatton of Northwesta University said that he was neither | Catholic nor a Protestant, but it Lived on Frogs. was the misfortune of American Cath-| After several davs' wande olics that the avowed dogma of their (o abandon his axe and church should arouse certain suspicions | when he had not eaten for for which people can hardly be blamed. | dead fich floating on a lake. He swam {He said that this was purely an aca- oy and devoured them. Later, he demic_contention, and could not oS- | cave he became adept at catching | sibly have any effect toward the sub-!froot and he lived on them for weeks | version of State to church in the United | pinaily he reached the south shore of G2 P T e v, | Burntwood Lake, which he thought was seconds in leaving quarters won| The debate was cut off by Victor |Gold Lake. He swam out to an island. the cleairman, althouzh|yhere he sald he found potatoes grow- | there were efforts to speak from sev=|inc wild. Rich- | eral parts of the hall. | He was tottering aimlessly along Dr. Diffenbach, who personally is an | through the brush when Coleman, who | admirer of Gov. Alfred E. Smith and |nad foliowed every clue and stuck onnor (right) and W. W. Dean, fire-pre- who has been a foremost opponent of | hic trail. found hi supervised the speed contest. | Protestant fundamentalism. present=d | Tavlor was too Star Staff Photos. |the subject from a purely academic|j,ct night. But — = —— Istandpoint and uremotionally, at ihe |open forum meeiing which had been = oI R 10,000-VOTE ERROR o 2 : FAVORS IMMIGRATION. IN OHIO PRIMARY R scheduled under the innocuous title BRINGS CLOSE RACE strong plea for a vigoro | “Commercialization of the Press.” policy for the Union of Sout (Continued | | By the Associated Press THE PAS, Manitoba, Augu 16 After being lost for 48 days in the nor country and Ii g on f 5 and dead fish, Andy Taylor. prosy e back to ¢ ation vesterday and so weak from starvation could hardly walk an airplane, and « Fred Colemar. O ario prospector, who refused to bel he was dead, staved on th | kept up the search long body else had quit, and finaliy him. ) after every Ready to Quit. piloted by Capt Airways pilot, who aod Coleman Kea ‘The plane - von, Western up_to Burnts When was at { His shoes were worn wrapped pieces of his tattered clo about_his bleeding feet. For d said, he had been able to | about 50 or 100 had th dered lost hi the d so th woods when aw companion: formed ar an nd. a Onee he saw v No. of 62 Pierson Talbott, James weak to talk much he could grin. Selects Southern Locat He insisted that his object was to ¢ been made by former Premier Ger Smuts, leader of the opposition. press openly in the quiet campus a mosphere of the old college which was established by the father of the concept of religious freedom in the United Statcs | speech at Reinz ge Ri | what he considers as valid objections to | “South Africa must throw ¢ the election of a Catholic as President | its doors to immigration, for and which, since he has been in white populatisn is the best s the ‘poor white' problem,” h should open our doors 2 States and Australia did from First Page.) traffic commissioner, by a comfortable margin in a field of five candidates. Nomination of the Republican candi- date for lieutenant governor still hung in the balance today as_George - C. sion of those offe v Ch Braden, Warren. and State Representa- | shall last Winoee sad ar. tive John T. Brown, Champaign County, | Smith. The present author of the Ohio gasoline tax Iaw. |this section of the So continued the same “neck-and-neck” are political dynamite, he believes, will battle Cooper and Begg carried |serve to bring them into the open 0 Brown held a lead of | wh re they can be answered instead o 595 votes early today leaving them in the dark to work th Corgressman Theodore effect on the attitude of the voters Cleveland Republic: and Graham P The Catholic Church. he said, repre- Hunt, Cincinnati attornev. Democrat, sented a monarchic form of govern- were chosen to fight it out in Novem- ' ment and a monarchic system of thi ber for the four-year unexpired term ' ing—that is. with the spiritual author- of the late Senator Frank B. Willls. | ity vested in a supreme head presum- Congressman Burton. who retired from | ably endowed with divine authori the Benate in 1915 without seeking re- | Gov. Smith, Dr. Dieffenbach insisted election, only to return to Washington | failed to answer to the satisfaction of as a member of the lower house. de-|many persons the arguments of Charles feated Chief Justice Barrington T.(C. Marshall last Winter. He quoted Marshall of the Ohio Supreme Court Rrof. John A. Ryan of Catholic Uni- with & plurality in excess of 140.000.' Versity as saying in a recent book that Fiva candidates sought the Republican | the state should officially recognize the nomination. | Catholie religion as tne official religion Although Senator Cyrus Locher, | and insisted that, in the final analysis, Cleveland, apparently was defeated by | this s the present position of the Hunt on the basis of unofficial returns, | church. It is impossible. he said. for he fssued a statement hinting fraud in | & monarchist in religious theught to be the counting of his votes. particulariy | otherwise fundamenially than a mon- in Cuyahoga (Cleveland) County. and | archist in political thought, although indicating that a State investigation | Stressing the fact that he did not ques- might be requested. Hunt's unofficial | tion the honesty or sincerity of Gov plurality. with about 700 precincts un- | Smith reported, was 12.470. Locher, who had the support of the Anti-Saloon League, | claimed a loss of his home county by approximately 3.200, rather than the more than 10,000 votes announced. ginia, he has found troubling voter: His arguments ar BAND CONCERTS By Usited Staies A the United States Capitol at tonight March, W, Where they that vesterday. r Spirit of the West E. Burton, i - Suite, “Tales of a Traveler Sousa “Laugh Laugh! s) waltz, Fantasia (U. S 3 March. “Capt. P. W. Lewis Overture, “Yelva Excerpts from (U. 8) Fantasia Clown! Dixie on’ of M March tional Spirit “The Star Sp: Concert Band tonight March Overture, Saxophone by t H Quotes Constitution, He quoted Article 6 of the Consti tution that “no religious test | ever be required as a qualifica: {any office of public trust under United States.” but insisted that this Senator Simeon D. Fess, Yellow |never was intended to bar people from Springs, renominated on the Republic- | Voting on sectarian lines if they so an ticket without opposition, will have | desired, but merely to prevent “setting Charles V. Truax, State director of agri- | Up_an official body of American re- culture, as his November opponent. | ligious beliefs to which a candidate Truax. who concentrated his campaign | Must subscribe upon the farm reliel jssue and indorse- | - Dr f""‘lfl""{b'(\;h ;xll‘lfl lfml:‘;:i ;h:“ h’;: ment. of the principles of the ) _ | first article of the bill of rights < fEne o che memainie oF Wi I | This reads; *Can- an 10,000 votes today over | &ress shall make no law respecting an former Representative George White, | eStablishment of religion or prohibiting Marietta, who had the backing of the | the, free exercise thereof. This. he Anti-Saloon League | said, guarantees the Catholic right to Among those who went down to de- | ¥Orship without restraint, and nothing feat in Hamilton County wa harles | MO o\ 5 ? . P. Taft, 2d, son of Chief Justice Wil- | s because.” he said. “that many lam H' Taft, the citizons’ Republican | AMericans believe the Roman Cathalic : LAy _ system would prohibit the free exercise committee candida.e for renomination | of religion by other faiths than its own as county prosecutor. - Prosecutor Taft | geoording to the avowed Catholic doc- to Nelson Schwab, the organization | trine on this subject. that they have Republican candidate. by 10.875 votes. | nade up their minds “to_ take mo chances, not so much with Mr. Smith as with the hierarchy of which he is a member. The issue is not Mr. Smith We do not need to be told what kind of a man he is, but we do want to de- clare what kind of a church the Roman | Catholic Church is and would be in the American State. “The Roman Catholic Church does not believe in religious liberty for the individual, but in religious authority When it pleads for religious liberity it means liberty for itself to maintain its | dogma of religious authority. When it} bespeaks our tolerance it asks for itself what it never grants to others. Tale ance is no part of the Catholic systen Questions Catholic's Fitness. “We may do what we please by our voting. As Lincoln said, we may amend Fess Is Renominated. Mem'ries” Two movements {ron “Rustic Wedding” Bridal Song “Serenade Suite de ballet, “Romeo an “The Star By the United Sta Military Band. at 5:30 o'clock March, “Come Back . N Al ity of more t Overture Entriacte Song, A serenade Selection from (} “Lohengrin Scene Japaneg Philippine w Tagal ighing Sam Taft not only lost the nomination tor county prosecutor, but also was defeated for Republican precinct committecman tonight March, administration they would think twice before throwing their support to Hoover. Denouncing “corruption” at Washing- ton, Daniels, the Raleigh publisher, said a change wi needed to free the peaple not only from the “domination of th big interests, but the crooks as well " He likened past and present enforcement conditions tc these brought about by the leasing of the naval ofi reserve, aver which he ¢ ce had supervision. He could not remember “a bigger crime” ever having been committed, and prohi- bition enforcement under the “distil- ler” at its head, he asserted, was just revolutionize or even destroy our Gov- as bad. Asked if he referred to Sec- | ernment. The people decide. A Roman retary Mellon, Daniels said he did and | Catholic has a natural right to be Presi- added that enforcement of the dry law | dent. But is he fit, in view of his ec- under him was only “spasmodic and ' clesiastical fealty? honeycombed with corruption. with of- | Most States and fice holders flouting the law." lievable sums for Declaring that ~while the national | Prof. James K. Pollock. jr committee must decide whether Smith | versity of Michigan told the will go into the South on his campaign. | this morning. This ranges Daniels said he would be welcomed | cents per voter in Milwaukee there and predicted great crowds would | system of permanent registration turn out to hear him in Daniels’ home | been introduced, to $1.35 wm Philad city phia. The cost of registration in Kan- sas City. he said. was $127.000 & year | New York City spends more money | providing for its city election, he point- ed out. than does the Ges pub in l‘h‘tlnlg its entire Reichstag, and the cost of*a municipal eleetion in Chi- cago is greater than that of electing ! the entire British House of Commons In cities where registration costs are highest there is also the most fraud. Prof. Pollock said. The reasons for this And there's farm relief. You know | high cost, he pointed out, icluded ap- how a farmer votes. When he gets to | pointing too many election officials the polls he reaches in his pocket and | renting too many election precinets sees how much he's got. I it’'s only a | failure to use voting machines and re- few cents why he says, “Throw the ras- | quirement of annual precmet reg cals out’ and he ‘votes Democratic. | tion. England, he said, can regis But if he's got as much as a dollar he | voters for 2 cents each, while in Ger- guesses that the rascals is on his side, | many the cost is even lower, because after all, so maybe he'd better leave | the law requires non-partisan em in . I who are drafted for the service ‘I wrote Hoover and challenged him. | work for nothing But he wanted to make it over the | radio. Hoover wants o get on the But | with you it's different. You want the ' gang Lo see you, you want (o make your appeal ‘to the common people. Well you can’t muke any commoner appeal | than I can “So comg on, be a good fellow, Al ! Overture Piccolo gale” . Scherzo and finale from phony F C Minor” Op. 6 Tone poem. Prel “Shepherd's Hey".. Excerpts from “Wonderland Prelude in C Sharp M is almost ¥ the most outrageous political ¢ Considerable sentim vote” mo bringing t ke no intere: and who m. Arg wizerland b it was pointed o from wh of Tennessee the Democratic Jtorial nominati ethical campa fon, might include advertising L wor editorial cratic party. Those are the most de- Ably serving women I know of e money vote There i ed. betw macy of spend workers and the ma decided on the tne The test, he said amount of money sg pose of the cand the money a corporation the rights of | have only one of favors Despite “a good deal of defect tn the methods of promoting trade can merchants,” the United controls about 75 per cent of the trade insisted. “is | of Latin America, Roscoe Hill, Nica y a0 altbi on el Hat | raguan high commission member. | on sald that in his own political work | the group interested in South American and name the time, place and subjeet | in’ Cleveland, where three-fourths of | relatjons. These nations Also are turn (f any). You and I can pack ‘em in. | the voters either are foreign-born or | ing from Europe and looking to the So long, Al and good luck o you | of foreign parentage and gravitate into | United States as a financial center. he Il we meet in debate. Ynurfv racial groups, he found them exception- | pointed out. With these two factors WILL, ally sinoere advocates of clean govern- | promoting pan-Americanism. he insist. “Oandidate of the Anti-Bunk Party,' ment. who never seek political favors. | ed, thers is need for a closer cultural without campaign buttans or cigars” On the other hand, he sald, some and spirftual understanding. S and the so Gifts to & candid he said, probal ockholders and can Defends Foreign-Born Voter. irpose—the expectat The foreign-born voter is unjustly accused of aiding rotten municipal gov ernment, said Prof. A. H. Hatton of Northwestern University. “Such_assumption,” he purely an alibi on our part

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