Evening Star Newspaper, June 7, 1930, Page 3

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'YOUNG PLAN LOAN INU.S. SANCTIONED State Department Has No Objection to $84,500,000 Flotation. + By the Associatec Press. { Withlout awaiting final adjustment of , the task of floating the first Young plan Teparation loan of $300,000,000 in nine | of the world’s financial centers, the, + State Department announced yesterday | it had no objection to the issuance in | the United States of a part of the loan. Still involved in deiays by various technicalities confronting the commit- | tee charged with evolving the final agreement between the bankers and the | German government, the flotation of the | Joan is not expected for another week. The portion of the loan to be floated | in New York by a syndicate headed by ' J. P. Morgan & Co. has been estimated | at $84,500,000 in word from Paris. One- third of the total issue will be used as a | loan to Germany and the remainder will . + . be employed in the commercialization of German reparation bonds. B The issue price is expected ‘to be 91 b + or 92, but Secretary Stimson and Unde; secretary Cotton, who jointly announced | the Department's decision, said they had | no definite information on the details | of the loan so far as the New York mar- | ket was concerned. The syndicate asked the Depagment whether it would disapprove the® issue. The Department, ever since it estab- | lished its foreign loan policy after the World War. has followea the practice of not indicating its definite approval of | an_issue, but merely indicates whether | 4t has objection to the flotation. McFADDEN ATTACKS ACTION. Foreign Policy of Far-Reaching Con- sequences Seen by Legislator. * NEW YORK, June 7 (#).—Represent- | ative Louis T. McFadden of Pennsyl- vania last night issued a statement at- | tacking the announcement of the State ! Department in Washington that it has | no objection to flotation in_the United | States of part of the first Young plan Teparation loan. “The statement issued by the Secre- tary of State and his assistant,” he said, “gives the approval of the present ad- ‘ministration to J. P. Morgan & Co. for the sale of German and reparatfon | bonds to the extent, possfily cf $100,- 000,000 in the United States. “Faithful to the European cause, the State Department in this announcement brings powerful and sorely needed aid to the European governments. By this action of our Government, it fixes a for- . eign policy for the United States of far- reaching consequences and one mmn reverses Government policy definitely + followed since the war. . “It injects the United States into the midst of the most and permanent intra- European feud that has ever torn that continent. And it does it through a long course of devious and secret diplomacy foreign heretofore to the councils of a republic and abhorrent to the long-tried principle of republicanism. *“This action is a complete repudiation of the policy of the Coolidge administra- tion in refusing to mix war debts with German reparations payments. Ameri- can investors will now buy German nlrrluon bonds heretofore held by the allied governments with Government ’pprovll." . LAUDS U.8. GOLD STAR| MOTHERS IN EUROPE Ambassador Dawes Contrasts Them | With Americans Seeking So- cial Honors Abroad. By the Associated’ Press. CAMBRIDGE," England, June 7.— American Gold Star Mothers and Americans whose aim in visiting Eng- land is to secure social precedence were contrasted sharply by Ambassador Dawes in a speech Thursday before a dinner of masters and fellows of Trinity College. ‘The Ambassador, who will leave Eng- land shortly for a month’s visit in the » United States, was responding for 17 noted persons who earlier in the day had been given honorary Cambridge de- grees. The Ambassacor himself receiv- ing an honorary LL. D. “We have recently had' in ‘London;” he said, “a body of American travelers Tepresenting a cross-section of the American people, representing the hedrt and soul of the American people, repre- senting the bone and sinew of the American people—a body of travelers not self-invited, with their minds occu- .~ pied by thoughts of society reporters or fashionable dressmakers.” Then using his fist in a character- ic Dawes gesture, he said: ‘“They brought us no social introductions. The c‘l"d'he enht:l&:.ht;l:h E‘Ich carried were but Pl ph of a son and a withered flowers. S “The heads of many of them were y and the years had left them feeble, ut the heart beats of two great peoples ‘were keeping time with their footsteps. As Ambassador of the United States I met them at Westminster Hall, where they were assembled at the invitation of the British government. That, to me, ;:z the proudest hour of my sojourn Suspect Not Idgntifi}d, BATTLE CREEK, Mich., June 7 ().— —Witnesses of the $363,000 robbery last Fall of the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Jefferson, Wis., yesterday failed to identify John Conley, { Patient of the United States Veterans' - Hospltal at Camp Custer, as one of the SPECIAL NOTICE. THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE_STOCK- Bolders of the American Fire Insurance Company of D. C. and jhe election of nine {9) “trustees of ilie company for the en ini ear will be held at the office of e company, 511 7th si. n'w., Thursday. dune | 19 1930, at 11 o'clock a.m." Polls open from 1l am. ‘0o 1 pm. ‘GEORGE M. EMMERICH, T Secretary SHOP AT 1307 EAST Present il claims to Robert A. Hum- North Capitol st., on or before G, PA. . TO NE K CITY UNE 1 Bpecial rates for part ioads io apd from Philadelphia_and New York. UNITED STATES STORAGE CO.. INC. 418 10th 8t N.W.__Metropolitan 18 Cures Roof Ailments. You are running no risks with E_BROS. ROOF COATING and FING CEMENT. It will do'the work when everything eise seems to 1ail. We've been using it for 18 years—SUCCESSFULLY. ll your roofer about it, or con- e ROSE BROS. CO;, 910 GA AVE. . NoRTR oMt Protec-Tin Roof Paint Made of hardest, toughest iron ore oxide o and purse linseed oil. Applied by skilled w n Keeps out rust and lasts for & ot e o i e EVENING Reviews and News of Washington.s Theaters. Fox “Movietone Follies” Believed to Be Not So Good. HEN the “Fox Movietone 7 Follies of 1929 appeared, the entertainment ther- mometer hit just ebout 100. Sadly enough, for the 1930 edition, the thermometer drops to a bare 50, and the result can be summed up as only lukewarm fodder for brain-tired Summerites. Thus begins the new Friday opening policy of the Fox Theater. The indispensable requirements needed to bolster up this strangely inco-ordinate film are first, ‘good music: sacond, better photography ; third, something new in the way of plot and ma- terial. Outside of that the pic- ture isn't bad El Brendel may be counted upon for a few honest guffaws, Marjoric Vrhite is allowad to rhow occasional spurts of talent, and here and thers new- comers appear who do much better than their veteran associates. The whole thing. however. suffers from a sort of insomnia which is caused by one of the dullest beginnings ever conccived by the brain of man, beast, or say Rin-Tin-Tin. Once upon a time there was a rich young fellow who was enamored of a “Follies” queen, a nice, quiet, lady- like “Follies” queen, who vowed that she would have no more to do with this “soclety play-boy.” and told him 50 in no uncertein terms. Thoroughly rebuffed, the fellow went off into the hinterland, and there, on his uncle’s million-dollar_estate, devised means to bring his lady-love back to him. ‘This he did by hiring the whole show in which she was playing. to give a benefit performance at the house while his uncle was away. The uncle, of course. came back in the middle of it all, found his house flooded with chorus vampires and probably would have proceeded to get mad if one of the girls hadn't rushed up to him and called him “Dodo.” Sic transit gloria. The “high spots of the film are mestly in the hands of El Brendel. To see him sitting on a bowlful of ice, or pulling Miss White's hair out by the roots, are situations made really funny by this tongue-tied Swede. Helping him immensely, be- side the talented Marjorie, is Yola D’Avril, who, incidentally, did much toward the success of “All Quiet on the Western Front.” Another who had his occasional moments was Prank Richardson and William Col- lier, jr. All in all, a thorough dis- appointment after the bomb-shell “Follies of 1929.” The stage show, a Fanchon and Marco conception of jolly old Roos- sia, is worth (well, it’s a guess) in “cold cash,” but much less as far as amusement goes. In it there is a countess who speaks broken English, the Imperial Russian Trio (straight from Brooklyn) and the Sam Lin- field company, who are fairly amus- ing. If one skips this, one will find that the rest of the program is de- voted to the mnewsreel, various “shorts” and the orchestra playing “appropriate Russian _ selections,” such as “The Song of India.” E.de 8. M. Marjoric White. Dr. Fu At His Old Tricks At the Warner Metropolitan. STEAL!NG out from his coffin, the wax of artificlal death upon his features, the insidious Dr. Fu Manchu comes back to life in “The Return of Pu Manchu,” this ‘week’s feature at the Warner Metro- politan. As the clever maniac Chinese doctar, intent upon avenging the deaths of his wife and son, killed years before in the Boxer War, fans will remember that in Dr. Fu's first appearance on the American screen in “The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu,” an adaptation of Sax Roh- mer’s novel, the final fade showed the Oriental murderer dying a ‘poi- son death by his own hand. In his return, Dr. Fu, ably played by Warner Oland, who gave the part its first characterization, causes all the creepy thrills and ‘breathless suspension which were experienced by those who witnessed the first picturization of Sax Roh- me:’s famous character, Oriental death wails, murderous apparitions silhouetted in shadow against the walls, silent strangulations and Dr. Fu's fiendish laboratory of unique and certain poisons, all go to make the atmosphere at the Metropolitan heavy with that - uncomfortable “goose flesh” feeling, which people Ppay to enjoy. 5 The cast which made the “Insid- jous Dr. Fu Manchu,” an entertain- ing and convincing picture, has been used almost in its entirety in the feature at the Metropolitan this week. Neil Hamilton again plays the part of young Dr. Petrie, the desire for whose life is the motivating force behind all of the Chinese doctor’s diabolical scheming. Petrie’s life will complete the death of the white race, as demanded by Dr. Pu Manchu, for the unwitting death of his wife and son during the bombardment of the Boxer uprising. Jean ‘Arthur makes a charming heroine «dn the part of the English girl, reared by the oriental to further his scheme of vengeance. O. P. Heg- SWAT THE .FLY ‘Take advantage of an early start by an aggres- sive war on the fly at the beginning of the season., The Star has for free distribution wire-handled fly swatters. Ask for one at the main office ‘of The Star, 1lth and Pa. Ave. N.W. ¢ 12 BUILT 3 LEFT Why Wait Until ‘Teo Late to Inspect OUR NEW, Woodley Park Homes gie. as Smith. the onlv mind in Eng- 30-year-old | e land feared by Dr. Fu, gives much satisfaction by his excellent inter- pretation of the forceful British de- tective. An amusing comedy, “The Four- flushers,” with Eddie Buzzell, one of those “Mickey Mouse” animated car- toons, and The Evening Star Univer- sal Newsreel, with “Graham MacNa- mee speaking,” make the Metropoli- tan’s program for the week enjoyable and entertainnig G.S. 8, “Safety in Numbers” Recommended as Worthwhile. 'HIS week's attraction at the Earle is not to be sneezed at. A light, breezy, provocatively enticing bit, entitled “Safety in Numbers,” it has the virtue of having not only a sat- isfactory plot, but some of the best music heard in many a moon this side-of Tin Pan Alley. It claims the services of “Buddy” Rogers for the benefit of the ladies, and Kathryn Crawford, Josephine Dunn and Carol Lombard for the gentleman. The result, needless to say, is most pleas- ing. The plot is & curously Saturday- Evening-Post-like bit of psychology, concerning a young man who on his twenty-first birthday is to be blessed with $25,000,000. To prevent his “going to the dogs” over it, the gilded vouth is sent to New York by his guardian uncle just before his inheritance is due him, to learn a little about “the ways of the world.” The “ways” in this case are admin- istered by three ladies from the “Follies,” into whose Park avenue apartment the young man is con. _voyed. From then on the situations begin to crumble, but it seems most satistying anyhow to find an embryo millionaire being chaperoned by three “Follies” stars upon whom he gratefully bestows $2,000 bracelets on as a token of appreciation for being properly guided into the great, wide world. When the story has more or less come to a Starf@still there is mu: to cheer. Such ditties as “Love My Game,” “There Goes the Girl, “Young Man—You Appeal to Me” and (ahem) “I Want to Be a Bee in Your Boudoir” should gravitate au- spicously in the music halls for some time to come. They are sung by Mr. Rogers, quite naturally, and in one instance by Carol Lombard most amusingly. Besides the trio of Broadway belles and Buddy Rogers, who do their parts with the verve of youth (Miss Lombard being probably the most alluring of the group), there is Ros- coe Karns in the garb of a taxj driver and Geneva Mitchell in the apron strings of a maid, who very nearly steal the picture from every- body else. They are, in fact, quite superlative. But then, so is the pic- ture, which for an evening's diet, thrust in, say, between the pages of a G. B. Shaw book, should make any normal person relax, smile and chortle for the better part of an hour. Two comedies, the Paramount and Pathe newsreels and the Earle Or- chestra at its best round out one of the more amusin, rams. s meA DE 8. M. “Caught Short” Still Catches Crowd. WITH the persistency of a base ball contender, “Caught Short” goes on and on, and the crowds, even braving the solidly overcush- ioned seats at Loew's Columbia, still clamber to get a peep at it. The reason is not hard to guess; for, al- though fate and the bluebirds of happiness out in Hollywood honestly have not done well by our Marie and her stanch ally, the general mix- up in the world at large has forced the folks at home to get out and get a laugh, and they are doing it and have done it for, lo, these many moons generously. Besides, notwithstanding the fact that the necks of this feminine Damon and Pythias team have been weighted with material whose age cries to Heaven, the uncrushable Marie and the irrepressible #Polly work it up to the queen’s taste and To the utmost possibilities. It was deadly mean, for instance, to saddle upon Marie that “Spanish Song,” as old as the virgin gold that went into King Tut’s crown. And yet Marie got away with it. In fact, the two comediennes, by dint of face-twist- ing, eye-gyrating and emotional , ridiculosity, fairly mop up the film with fun that unmistakably catches the crowd. They fly each at the other’s throat, dabble in Wall Street and dabble out of it, until they finally reach the point where they started —the family washboard — with a Garrison finish. And that is why it is popular, regardless of age and originality. Short film features, a newsreel and house music round out the bill the Columbia that is entering its third week at a time when one week 'AR. WASH JUDGE SETS ASDE HTAG REGULATION Rules That Taxicab Drivers Are Not Responsible for License Plates. A taxicab driver is not responsible for the license tags carried on his | vehicle Judge John P. McMahon de- | cided in Police Court this afternoon, thus virtually nullifying the efforts of ‘lrefflc authorities to force public { vehicles picking up fares on the street to carry “H" lettered or hacker's tags. Judge McMahon's decision was made in the cases of Jesse L. Follin of the | Biack & White Taxicab Co., and | Charles E. Watson of the Diamond Cab | Co., who were charged with violating the license law by operating from street | stands. Both cases were dismissed Traffic officials have insisted that cabs operating from strect stands or that pick up fares on the street, should be | equippad with “H” tags, and that onliy | venicles operating from a central garage | could legally carry or livery tags. | Judge McMahon, however, declared that as long as a driver has the character license and automobile driver's permit, as required by law, he does not have to be concerned about the letter on the | license tag of the vehicle. | The inference drawn from Judge Mc. Mahon's decision is that vehicles carry- “L" tags are as much of a common or public utili | H" tags. Both classes of vehicles, | he said. are under the regulation of the Public Utilities Commission and are taxable as hackers, Traffic officials had conducted their | campaign pa: alarly against the 35- | cent flat rate cabs, since the majority | of them are operating with * tags. | ‘The decision effects only drivers of |eabs. In view of this, Judge Given took under advisement the cases of the | heads of two taxicab companies charged | with violating the “L” license provi- sions ot the license law, and will an- | nounce his decision next Friday. there has been an evasion and viola- tion of the license law with respect to the tags and indicated that the re- sponsibility should be fixed. If the | drivers are not guilty, under Judge Mc- Mahon's decision, it is believed Judge Given will attempt to fix the responsi- bility on the owners, DIVORCED WIFE SUES ARCHIBALD FOR DECREE By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, June 7.—Mrs. Mildred R. Archibald, wife of H. Teller Archibald, owner of a string of candy stores, Thursday filed suit for divorce, al- though her husband divorced her in ried to another woman. Mrs. Archibald charged that he de- serted her in 1926 after 25 years of married life. Her attorney explained | that yesterday's suit is intended to clarify her legal status and replaces an action for separate maintenance. There has already been a property settlement out of court, he said. Mrs. Arcnibald | tailed recently in an effort to have the Miami decree set aside on the ground that she had been notified only by pub- licaston. Archibald _married Miss Dorothy | Wooden of Washington, D. C., after he won his decree. Will Rogers Says: CLAREMORE, Okla, June 7.— Breakfast in Beverly and dinner in Claremore. . These are the two cities we been need- ing to have Jjoined by areg- ular passenger line; the town is so crowded here we have to have our air- port in the edge of Tulsa and that Tulsa and Claremore air- port bioke & world record, in May just past. They hauled 10,212 passengers. That's ten thousand, not hundreds. ~Croyden, England, was second with 4,690. They ex- pect 15000 a month during the Summer from here. Cheap rates, and safe service is what's doing it. istrice 2775 y as those bear- Judge Given said that undoubtedly | Miami, Fla., last year and is now mar- | | NAVY PROMOTIONS * ARE MADE LI Seven New Rear Admirals | Are Appointed by Presi- dent Hoover. (From yesterday 5:30 Edition of The Star.) Upon the recommendation of the selection board of the Navy, President Hoover today announced the following promoticns of officers of the line of the Navy: To 'be made rear admirals— R. Gherardi (shore duty only), Arthur St. Clair Smith, Clarence S. Kempfl, | John Halligan, Willlam T. Tarrent, George T. Pettingill and Edward B. Fenner. To the grade of captain—Walter H.] Lassing, Ross S. Culp, Frank J. Fletch- er, John H. Towers, Julian H. Collins, Milo F. Draemel, Walter F. Jacobs, Leo F. Welch, Turner F. Caldwell, Earl R.| Shipp, Charles M. Austin, Ferdinand L. Rgichmuth, Harvey Delano, Isaac C. Kidd, Frank H. Roberts, Andrew S. Rickey, Charles C. Hartigan, George A. Alexander and Roland M. Brainard. | To be commande=r—Chester C. Jersey, Frank H Kelly, jr.; James A. Logan, James P. Alexander, Francis A. La- Roche, Francis P. Traynor, Howard B. Berry, Harvey B. Cecil, Spencer S. Lewis, Walden L. Gainsworth, Edward K. Lang, Charles A. Pownall, Roy C. Smith, jr.; James G. Ware, Lawrence F. Reifsnider, Frederick G. Reinicke, e D hete. I Edoar W, Willlams Howard A. Flanigan, Marc A. Mitscher, Scott B. Macfarlane, George L. Weyler, | Earl W. Spencer, jr.; Clarkson J. Bright, William D. Kilduff, Stewart A. Mana- han, Herbert O. Roesch, Webb Trammel and Charlton E. Battle, FIRE DESTROYS OLD | Flames Confined to Former Express | Structure After Threatening Entire Loop District. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, June 7—Fire that lighted the Loop at 1 a.m. today and Yor a time | threatened nearby department _stores | was brought under control only after it |had destroyed the seven-story building fomerly occupled by the American Ex- préss Co. | The interior of the building, which is on Monroe street between Dearborn and State, was ruined by fire last Christmas 'day. Flames today com- pleted the destruction. Fire Marshal Corrigan was unwilling to estimate the amage until he had completed an in- vestigation. Two firemen were injured, not seri- {ously, by falling debris. Windows in | the Fair Department Store, Bedell’s and | other business places nearby were | broken, but the fire itself was confined to the express company building—one of the oldest in the Loop. Firemen fought the flames from vantage points in_adjacent structures, The cause of the fire was unde- termined. The fire marshal said the top floors of the building had been used by vagrants as a place to sleep, and he believed a careless cigarette may have | been responsible. Thousands of persons lined the streets watching the fire, which sent flames and sparks high into the air yisible for miles. RUFUS DAWES FLEES FIR EVANSTON, Ill, June 7.IIH,—Flre routed Rufus Dawes, president of the board of trustees for the 1933 World Fair, and Mrs, Dawes from bed early | today. The fire started in the incinerator at |the Dawes home. Smoke awakened | Dawes, who aroused the household With the aid of servants he carried valuable silver and glass ware from a butler's pantry to safety from the flames. Damage to the home was not great. Rufus Dawes is a brother of Charles G. Dawes, Ambassador to the Court,_of Sf FOR SALE Gasoline Filling Station Site This property can be very eco- nomically developed because |improved and on street grade. It is in a location of heavy vehicular traf- | fic and has a frontage of 80 feet by | a full depth of 138 feet. We have the | permit. Reasonable terms can be | arranged for buyer of financial re- | sponsibility. | Address Box 401-V, Star Office Sherwonod Forpst Washington'’s Finest Watering Place On High Banks of the Severn River High, Cool and Healthy All Country Club Advantages Championship 18-Hole Golf Course Ideal Salt Water Bathing Furnished Bungalows for Rent Walter | L Ew i | i SECURITY A strong gust of wina caused this $40,000 bronzed likeness of Gen. Nathaniel Green and his noted charver to topple off thelr stone base in Stanton Park yes- | terday afternoon. (From yesterday 5:30 Fdition of The Star.) { A freakish gust of wind at 3 o'clock | this afternoon toppled over the massive { equestrian statue of Gen. Nathaniel { Green, in Stanton Park, burying its head and shoulders in the soft turf. see the great figure sway and then top ple over, head downward, like a cavalry- man in a charge, from its 15-foot gra ite_pedestal. Examination of the pedestal showed ihat the rivets that held the statue, one of the largest equestrian figures in the city, were badly coroded and had snaped clean. Except for a circular crack around the legs of the horse, near the left thigh, the statue+is apparently un. damaged. Weather Bureau officials said the ac dent was due to a “local” gust of high velocity. At MEET cious Spectators were amazed suddenly to | —sStar Staff Photo. velocity of the wind was given as 33 miles. Sudden gusts, rising and de- creasing in velocity, often cause freak: accidents, the Weather Bureau said, and the velocity in the vicinty of Stanton Park at that time may have been greate rthan elsewhere in the city. The statue of Gen. Green, Revolu- tionary hero, Is the work of the sculptor, Henry K. Brown, according to records in the office of Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d. director of public buildings and public parks. | It was turned over to the Govern- ment in 1877 and was appropriated for by Congre: by act of June 24, 1874, making $40,000 available for the statue. while the act of March 3, 1875, provided | | $10.000 for the pedestal. goodness of their pulp . recombined by science with a taste of sugar ... a dash of pure food color . . . a jot of citrus fruit acid for tang . . . and sparkling water to make a drink more delicious than the fruit itself. 1073 31st St. N.W Stanton Park is located on Massachu- | setts and Maryland avenue, Fifth and i 45 o'clock the general C streets northeast. ““CRUSHY' This jolly little figure Is the symbol of the happy science which trans- forms the juleiest fruit into deli- Orange-Crush. (BRUCE E. 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MEET “CRUSHY” AT ALL STANDS AND .STOBEI

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