Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A8 GERMANY FACING | v con ) FNNISH DEPUTIES FINANGE PROBLEM Chancellor Publicly Bares What He Describes as a Grave Situation. BY GUSTAV STOLPER. By Radio Dispatch to The Star. BERLIN, June 5—Chancellor Bruen- ing has chosen a new ceremonial form of making his financial program public. He summoned the Federal Council as the representative organ of the Garman states and in the presence of the Reichstag deputies and journalists spoke of the gravity of the situation and the difficulty of the task. The straight- forwardness and energy with which he spoke secured a good public reception for his speech, but the material and political difficulties with which the government must contend have not thus been made easy. Finance Minister's Shewing ‘The program with which the new Finance Minister Dietrich complemented the chancellor’s speech differs to its advantage in many points from that of his predecessor. Above all, Dietrich exhibits an earnest desire to effect savings. But even he presents no solution of the monstrous task con- fronting Germany's financial policy. He, like his predecessor, bases his estimates on a deficit of 750,000,000 marks, although it is obvious that the actual deficit will be much greater be- casuse unemployment this year prob- ably will greatly exceced the 13,500,000 figure upon which the budget was based and tax receipts are still estimated too high. Barring a miracle, the deficit in the Reich alone will be at least 300,000,000 to 400,000,000 marks more than the government assumes. To this must be added deficits of municipalities, amount- ing to from 5,000,000 to 6,000,000, and the Reichsbahn deficit of 500,000,000. And it is July and the Reichstag is impatient and wants to adjourn. Chancellor’s Purpose Outlined. Chancellor Bruening and his finance minister thus appear to be contenting themselves with having the Reichstag first attend to the most urgent matters; then there will be two months, pause and in the Autumn it is promised a sweeping reform will be taken up. Perhaps a hoped-for miracle will occur in_the meantime. New York especially is being watched with tense interest, for it is felt a solution of the German crisis depends above all on the overcoming of the; American crisis. Every move of Wall Street, every word from the ad- ministration and every American economic symptom is carefully observed here. But. the situation is too| optimistically estimated. ! The failure of the Young plan was a | severe dicappointment. It is known that | this is due, not only to unfavorable criticism of the loan in America, but, above all, to Parker Gilbert’s unfavor- TOM MOONEY, Who has been denied a pardon from his life sentence in the 1916 Prepared- mess day bombing outrage in San Fran- cisco. Above is how he appeared when he entered San Quentin and below is a photograph taken of him recently. —P. & A. Photo. BISHOPS TO BEGIN CANTERBURY MEET Archhishop Welcomes Dele- | gates to Lambeth Confer- ence in England. By the Assocoiated Press. CANTERBURY, England, July 5.— | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JULY 6, 1930—PART O BOLOLY KIDNAPED Ten Men Drag Two Com- munist Members From- Meeting. By the Associated Pres; HELSINGFORS, Finland, July 5.— The government and the local police tonight bent their energies toward pur- suit of 10 persons who today carried off bodily from the Diet building two | Communist Deputies, Pekkala and Roe- FIRE ENDS RUM RUNNER’S CAREER DRY LAW INJECTED INCALIFORNIA RACE Anti-Saloon League Forcing Question Into Republican Primary Election. BY CARL G. BENJAMIN. SAN FRANCISCO, July 5.—The Cali- fornia Anti-Saloon League is forcing the prohibition question into this State’s Republican primary election as a major—and congeivably it may turn out to be a deciding—issue. The league’s board of directors, by strongly indors- koe, while they were sitting in the Con- stitutional Committee. ‘Two motor cars, each containing five men, drove up outside the building. Four men forced their way into the committee room. Six others guarded the door. The committee members angrily wanted to know why they were interrupted, ~whereupon the quartet produced police badges and seized the Communist _ Deputies, ignoring the claims of official immunity. ‘The Communists were driven out of the committee room, their captors beat- ing them severely and thrusting them into & car, which drove rapidly away. ‘The committee chairman reported the incident immediately to Premier Svin- hufbud. A joint meeting of political parties was held this afternoon to con- sider the situation, while investigations were opened by the police chief, who expressed belief that the badges shown by the kidnapers were counterfeit, | ‘That bachelors for children has been proposed in Ireland. | spectacular airview of the burning ship. EXTRA FLOOR SPACE An ignoble end to the ex-rum runner Moritz, which saw service in the World 2 | War. When present owners decided that it would cost too much to recondition | ould be taxed to | the vessel after its rum-running carcer was halted by capture by Federal officials | giving no attention to the. -wet" and raise funds for supplying school books | the vessel was weighted with sand and set afire off Boston, Mass. Photo shows —P. & A. Photo. G STREET AT ELEVENTH £9 208 ing the candidacy of Gov. C. C. Young this week, drew an issue where none had existed, and created an impression of having split the “dry” vote in an attempt to solidify it. Three candidates are in the race— | all well known throughout the State and the West, all working hard for the public’s favor, and all with a substan- tial following. They are C. C. Young, incumbent; A. Johnson, progressive Re- publican; James Rolph, jr., long-time mayor of San Francisco, and Buron Fitts, World War veteran and “clean- up” district attorney of Los Angeles. Nomination as the Republican candi- date is tantamount to election. Gov. Young is a dry, personally, officially, politically. He campaigned for the Wright act, the State's enforce- ment law, and he has stood by prohi- bition, State and national, whenever the question has been in any way pre- | He has been canmaigning for | sented. renomination on his record as a bu: ness administrator “dry” question. Mayor Rolph is known among his friends as a liberal in matters of per- T PALAIS ROYAL of State affairs, | ways has been, and should be, a place to have a good time in. That is his rsonal slant. As mayor he has not n greatly concerned about prohibi- tion, and as a candidate for the Repub- lican nomination for governor he has concerned himself with State expendi- tures, revenues and administration. He has indicated a belief that prohibition is a Federal, not a State, issue. District Attorney Fitts is a fighting, crusading spirit egainst all forms of crime, as intolerant of violators of the prohibition laws.as of transgressors of other statutes. He has become the idol of law-upholding elements in Southern California, & sort of combination of David and a knight in armor to a great body of women folk down there. He has been meeting Gov. Young's fiscal administration issue and taking sideswipes at the executive because of his own affiliations with Senator Hiram | Johnson. League Becomes Alarmed. The district attorney has not harped upon the prohibition question. With everything going thus swimmingly with a brisk campaign involving person- | alities of candidates and purely State | issues under way, the Anti-Saloon League directors seemingly became alarmed lest prohibition become an is- | sue beneath the surface and divide the | majority dry vote between Young and Fitts, thus giving the advantage to TWENTIETH MARINES GOING TO CAMP TODAY Two Weeks Will Be Spent in In- tensive Training at Quantico, Va., by 800 Men. ‘The 20th Marines Reserve Regiment, an expeditionary unit on its own, will leave from the Union Station this morning at 10 o'clock for its training base at the Marine Barracks at Quan- | tico, Va.,sto undergo an intensive train- | m%v ;;‘r()gr;’m Ior‘lwo weeks, en the regiment reaches Quantico it will be the first unit of thr‘QMnrlne Corps Reserve to enter the field under | the new training plan of having an | expeditionary force of Reserve men offi- | cered by Reserve officers with their own | complete equipment and avatlable for | front-line duty in event of a national emergency. Approximately 800 men and officers from ~Washington and the nearby counties of Maryland and Virginia com- prise the personnel of the regiment. About 50 per cent of the men and offi- cers of the 20th are ex-service men, having seen service in the Army, Navy or Marine Corps overseas in the World War. There are also recruits who have never before handled a rifle. A combi- nation of the two elements is what the Rolph, the personally moist contender. W. C. T. U. units in the southland have indorsed Fitts; in the north the women's temperance organizations have | indorsed Young. Fitts on his record as | district attorney will attract many | woman and man voters who may be | classified as “drys,” but who are not | ruled by any dry organizations. Mayor | Rolph’s friends are now urging him to meet the issue the dry organizations have created and come out openly as an_anti-prohibition candidate. If he decides against this advice the issue is created anyway. If he accepts it, prohibition promises to become over emphasized at the expense of questions vitally affecting the State's.welfare and progress. (Copyright, 1930, TELEPHONE DISTRICT 4400 Splendid Values in This Sale of Daytime Dresses in models and sizes for miss and matron high officers of ali branches of the mili- tary ‘and naval forces are watching with interest. LURAY CAVERNS by BUS And the Proposed Shenandoah N Park May Be Seen in One Day """ Round Trip to Luray $6.00 Buses leave daily. ot Ave.(Bus ‘Terminal).’ 3:30 pm. Intermediate Stations. Warrenton. Sperryville. Panorama and ~ Sksland resorts. Buses Chartered for Special Tours Washington-Luray Bus Line G 32 Nat. 9493 Georgia 3 EXTRA SALESPEOPLE 3 ey CEXY € o0 A lso to certain critical | The Archbishop of Canterbury stood in | f,g';pgfif',?;; e o | the ancient Canterbury Cathederal this | afternoon and received the archbishops American Loans Lacking. {and bishops who hate assembled for It had been expected that a flood of | the Seventh Lambeth Conference of the American loans would flow to Germany | Anglican Church, which opens Monday. - 3, X o5 T of 349.C0" 6%.9, (7 following the Young plan, have not come. German industry can- not be revivified without foreign credit. In Germany, meanwhile, the dis- | proportion between interest rates in the open market and the rates of the loans becomes greater. Whereas the Reich- bank has reduced- its discount rate seven times since the beginning of the year, and Berlin at 4 per cent is only 1 per cent above London, 8 per cent mortgage bonds can still be had under par and rew emissions in largs amounts are as good as impossible. 3 German Naticnals have already decid- ed to reject the taxation program and it is boubtful whether the Socialist op- position_ will willingly help the govern- ment. Such help would, in any event, ome dear. # (Copyright, 1930.) ACID-SOAKED COAT | FREES NINE IN JAIL Jailer Is Overpowered and Burned With Garment by Alabama | Prisoners. By the Associated Press. | FORT PAYNE, Ala, July .S.—Nme‘ prisoners escaped from the De Kalb | County Jail here last night, overpower- | ing the jailer by throwing a coat soaked in acid over his head. A group of the prisoners waylaid the jailer in a corridor and took his pistol and keys as he struggled for breath beneath the coat. They opened the doors of all cells and not a single prisoner was left in the jail. | The jailer, whose name is Plunkett, | was burned on the head by the acid but.was not injured seriously. Sheriff L. J. Campbell organized a posse today and was searching for the prisoners. ! 40 JEWS ARE HURT IN POLISH RIOTING Gangs of Hooligans Are Blamed for Attack After Quarrel With Swimmers. By the Associated Press. WARSAW, July 5 (Jewish Tele- graphic Agency).—More than 40 Jews were injured in attacks by gangs of hooligans in the Jewish quarter of Kovel yesterday and today. ‘The trouble began when a number of Jews were injured in a quarrel with Polish swimmers. Revolvers, knives and sticks were used by the hooligans. The Jews of the town have deserted the streets, barred the doors of their houses and closed their shops. Windows in many Jewish houses and shops have been smashed. A delegation of Jews asked the pro- tection of the municipal authorities, but were informed by the district police chief that there were not enough police. The deputation then left for Lutsk to seek intervention by the district com- missioner. D. C. YOUTH CANOEING ON RIVER TO NEW ORLEANS Samuel Herrick, Jr., Left Connells- ville, Pa., Six Days Ago in 17-Foot Boat. Special Dispatch to The Star. 5 PITTSBURGH, Pa., July :et_:::l{; ists leaving Pittsburgh on pacl 3 it is said, have interesting trips, but not the equal of that Samuel Herrick, jr,, 19, of Washington is enjoying in a 17-foot canoe. Herrick stopped at lock No. 2, on the ‘Monongahela, to converse with the lockmaster. said he had put out from Connellsville six days ago and had pushed his craft down the Youghiogheny and to the Mon..gahela. The Ohio, if but they The archbishop stressed the desire | ence, which is the decennial gathering for fellowship, which he said was in- creasingly manifesting ltself among | Christians in all parts of the worla, He sald the world was still bewildered in the aftermath of the World War | and that the need for spiritual fellow- ship was greater than ever. The churchmen were told that among | the other themes which would require | their thought were the “insistent prob- | lems of peace, of race, of sex and of the | standards of married life.” He urged his hearers to prove that | they were men, ready to face the facts | with candor and courage. The archbishop added that material- ism was the greatest foe to be com- batted, saying that it flourished “in the partial antiquated and unworthy | conceptions of “It cannot be combatted until they | are corrected,” he sald. “We have to recover for ourselves, for our clergy, for our people and for our generation a | deeper and richer conception of God. | Deeper—yes, and more simple also.” Forty-eight bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States | planned to attend the Lambeth Confer- of the bishops of the Anglican Church throughout the world. Te sessions will last through August 10. U. S. Minister to Denmark Ill COPENHAGEN, July 5 (#).—Ralph H. Booth, United States Minister to Denmark, has canceled social engage- | ments for a week in order to shake off a cold he caught while traveling. KITCHEN | CONVENIENCE Gay and soft Summer shades; demure or splashy prints. No wonder that enthusiastic bought them gladly by threes and sixes! shoppers have There's handkerchief lawn, printed batiste dotted Swiss and polka dotted voile. And these are only four of hundreds of cool and charming frocks in this sale! Materials Flower Printed Voiles Fleck Dotted Voiles Printed Batistes Handkerchief Lawn Printed Dimity Dotted Swiss Dotted Dimity Sizes Misses’ sizes ......16 to 20 Women’s sizes ....36 to 42 Extra sizes .......44 to 52 Mail and Phone Orders Given Prompt and Careful Attention Call District 4400 PALAIS ROYAL—Third Floor Save now, right in the Midst of the Season! 1,000 Porch and Window Awnings Khaki and green or green and white Made of 8-oz. painted-stripe duck, on galvanized frames. Complete with all fixtures. 5 feet i 7.18 6 feet L 7Y feet wide........9'18 WHIPS CREAM Q\, MIXES SALAD [ DRESSING and pertorms all similar tasks fast- erand better than by hand. Electri- cally operated; fastens to the wall. Indispensable in the kitchen. Will last for years. Remarkable value; ONLY $1 495 Made by Robbins & Myers v, 10.18 . 11.18 9Y; feet Window wide .. .. 10V feet ..., 158 15.18 13V, feet Awnings wide ... Complete with fixtures ready to hang. things went right, is now bearing him onward toward New Orleans. Herrick is a junior at Williams Col- lege. This is his first canoe voyage and e likes it—when the wind blows down- stream. Central Armature Works 625 D St. N.W. | National 3660 6-0z. grade on flexible frames 30, 36, 42 and 128 48 inches wide. i Choice of green and white or sicilian. 8-0z. grade on galvanized frames 30, 36, 42 and 328 48 inches wide. : ¥ Choice of green and khaki or white and tan. PALAIS ROYAL—Second Floor 14V, feet wide ... 16.18 ool T wide .... Roll-up Style Porch Awnings —that will screen and protect the porch. Complete with ropes 3.38 3.88 9 feet wide ... 10 feet wide .... t Close out of de- partment sa m- ples and discon- tinued patterns in our regular stocks at Delart, Crex, Delhi and Mourzourk rugs in a wide choice of pat- terns. $20.00 Rugs, special. ...10.00 $18.00 Rugs, special.....9,00 $34.50 Rugs, special....17.25 $12.50 Rugs, special. ... $4.50 Rugs, special. ... $3.00 Rugs, special. . ... .. PALAIS ROYAL—Second Floor Cap and capelet sleeves; sleeve- less; all with dis- tinctive details.