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COUZERS POEY MCHGAN ISSE Voters Will Decide Today i Whether He Shall Be Pun- {* ished for “Irregularity.” By the Associated Press. DETROIT, September ther Michigan Republicans wlll ‘punish by their votes ths “party irregul Senator James numbered among the independents in the United States Senate, is one of the questions to be decided by the State-wide primary | today. Chase S. Osborn of Sault Ste. Marie, former Governor, has made his prin- cipal campaign issue in sceking the senatorial nomination the accusation that Efimtor Couzens is not a “regular” can. the grounds that the senior Sen- ator from Michigan has voted against President Hoover on such important matters as the confirmation of Charles Evans Hughes as Chief Justice of the United States and “has not represented anybody but himself,” Osborn has asked the voters to repudiat: him and nomi- nate a candidate pledged to ‘“party regularity.” Concedes “Irregularity.” Senator Couzens has conceded his “irregulafity,” has asserted he will con- tinue to act independently of party leadership and has declared himseif re- sponsible to no one but the people of his State. The wet-and-dry issue has received only passing mention in this campaign. Although Senator Couz:ns has said he | is not in sympathy with prohibition, he ! has promised to support law for its en- forcement as long as it is on the books. Osborn is a lifelong prohibitionist. Nei- ther has he expressed indorsement of the Anti-Saloon League in Michigan sover the other. The nomination is tantamount to election. The wet and dry issue has been paramount, however, in the sixth con- essional district, which has the rgest population of any district in the Unmed States. There Representative “Grant M. Hudson, a former Anti-Saloon League official, is seeking his fifth term and his three opponents have made prohibition the principal issue. Sey- mour H. Person, a wet, is his most active opponent. ‘The others are Mrs. ‘Maud Slocum Moross and Robert H. Cook. The sixth district includes part of Detroit and the cities of Flint, Pon- tiac, Lansing, Dearborn, Highland Park and Hamtramck. Threat of Jury Probe. Three candidates are seeking the gubernatorial nomination and the cam- paign became bitter within the last week with threats of a grand jury in- vestigation of State affairs. The candidates are Alex J. Groes- beck, three times Governor; Attorney General Wilber M. Brucker, and Judge Edward J. Jeffries of Recorder’s Court, Detroit. Attorney General Brucker has the support of Gov. Fred W. Green, who defeated Groesbeck for the nom- !nllhn in 1926. special municipal election in De- fmlt lfurnuth of the recall of Mayor Charles Bowles on July 22, is expected to swell the primary vote and a total | the well in excess of a normal 700,000 for an_off-year election. Four candidates for mayor of De- troit -have made active campaigns, in- cluding Mayor Bowles. The committee which brought about the recall has indorsed George Engel, former chair- man of the Civil Service Commission. Other active candidates are Frank® Mur- phy. formerly judge %Rewrd.s Court, former Mlyor hn W. Smith. Pl\mlp Raymond is a Communist can- didate. VERMONT. VOTERS - IN PRIMARY TODAY Two Representatives, Governor and | State and County Officers Will Be Nominated. By the Associated Press. MONTPELIER, Vi, September 9.— ‘The polls opened for the State pri- mary here today with public interest locuud to a great extent on prohibi- 'Tvo Representatives to Congress, Governor, State officers, members of the l.umnure and various county of- ficers were to be nominated. The State has always shown an overwhelming Re- publican majority. ‘The liquor question was raised during the campaign in the first congressional district, where Gov. John E. Weeks, a flry, campaigned for nomination against Max Drennan, former mayor of St. Alh‘ns an. avowed wet, and Martin S, 1 Vilas, Burlington le'hl.lmr, who would modify the nt law. In the other eongrmwn- district, Ernest W. Gibson . Joseph A. McNamara gfl .Ylmel Cosgrove are the unopposed ratic candidates for Congress. {l“ the gubernatorial field, Park H. Pollard of Cavendish, a cousin of for- amer President Calvin Coolidge, was un- ©opposed for the Democratic nomination. A wet plank and the problem of financ- ing construction were paramount issues in his campaign. The Republi- can opponents were Stanley C. Wilson of Chelsea, present lieutenant governor; James W. Gordon of Barre and W. Ar- thur Simpson. “Trees in Europe are being X-rayed to discover the presence of boring insects, nternal decay and othgr defects. NOTICE! GURS NOW. Pure metallic rool paint at lh! right price. Prompt very. ER PAIl AND GLASS 1239 Wisconsin ave. n. 1AIRS POR RENT, SUITABLE POR WED- s. parties, church suppers or festivals. 10c 10 20c_per day ea ew cl . IT"D STATES no)w:\l © 418 10th FROM CARE- rival and low s from points ust_phone and we will NATIONAL DELIV- Open’ evenings. G ne Natl L1, NOT BE_RESPONSIB) + yix other than those contracted by m: + MES F Mather Blrg. 7 _RETURN Lo.ms v e NEA YORK CITX. SEPT. BO! 1 u"d;n.pm.\n A B : SEPT. et Tonds o and 1o e cate Pmmrmmas‘rnm Nes"rgmm! S0% D A 10th St. N.W.__ Metropolitan 1 "Roof & Furnace WORK GUARANTEED a | tes! EX-GOV. OSBORN. COLORADO VOTES INSTORMY DRIVE Charges of Excessive Expen- ditures Enliven Campaign . Devoid of Major- Issues. By the Associated Press. DENVER, Colo.,, September 9.--A stormy campaign, devnld of major is- sues, Imt enlivened . by charges of ex- eul nditures exchanged among tes, was brought to an end by Colorado’s primary elections today. Two Re) blmru and three Demo- crats sought their party's nomination for the United States Senate seat to be vacated by the retirement of Senator L. C. Phipps. The bitter struggle in the Republican ranks held the chief in- The candidacy of Willlam V. Hody former treasurer of the Republican Na- |to tidnal Committee, was supported Senator Phlpm Hodges was opposed George H. former State chair- man, who hnd the support of Senal Charles A. Waterman, Clarence C. Hamlin, national committeeman, and John R. Coen State chairman. Edward P. Costigan, who, as a Re- publican, served on the Federal Tarift Commission under appointment by Pres- ident Woodrow Wilson; James A. by | Marsh, former city attorney of Denver, and Morrison Shafroth, son of a former Senator and Governor, were the Demo- cratic senatorial aspirants. The Senate Campaign Committee has announced its intention of investi- gating the charges of excessive expendi- tures after the primaries. Action of the Colorado Anti-Saloon League in indorsing all senatorial can- didates except Shaw figured promi- nently in the campaign. Colorado’s four Representatives sought ren:‘rmlnlv.km without primary con- Gov, William H. Adams, Democrat, was unopposed in the primary and will meet Robert F. Rockwell, Republican, also unopposed, in the general election in November. —— Gas Prices Cut in New York. NEW YORK, S:Et:mber 9 (#).—Gaso- line prices were hed in a large part of the metropolitan area yesterday to 16.3 cents a gallon, including the 2-cent tax. Standard Oil of New York initiated the cut. Officials said the cut was forced by small companies which were less than the bij Tenth Anniversary 24-HOUR Chevrolet Service Expert Mechanics—Special Prices | treely predicted by | woul? sm: THE EVENING BITTERNESS MARKS| LOUISIANA BflNTESI Militia on “Ovemight “Drill” for Race Between Gov. Long and Senator Ransdell. By the Associated Press. NEW = ORLEANS, September 9.— Louisiana. voters were involved today in Fermnl the bitterest battle of .ballots he Etate has seen since reconstruction days—the Democratic senatorial contest between Huey P. Long, 37-year-old gov- ernor, and Senator Joseph E. Ransdell, who has spent 31 of his 12 years in Con- gress. A battery of State militia was ordered { last night out on what was called “over- nignt drill.”” For some time it has been that the National ‘Guardsmen might be called upon for election day duty, but the adjutant gen- eral denied that the guardsmen had been “mobilized,” saying the drill was not unusual. Road Program Issue. Zong has termed his $67,000,000 road- program, defeated in the State Legisla- ture, an outtanding issue and has-as- serted that Ransdell has accomplished in his long congressional service. “The Senator has championed his record on waterways, flood control and public hellth legislation. Opposition workers charged that Sam- uel Irby, former State highway employe, and James Terrell, divorced husband of the governor's private secretary, taken by State officers from a Shreveport hotel last Thursday and missing’ since, were being secreted by Gov. Long. Irby an- nounced his intention of suing Long for slander. Called Into Court. Gov. Long and others were summoned into Federal court on a writ of habess corpus to surrender Irby and Terrell, but Assistant Attorney General E. R. Schowalter, who has been pressing the search, obtained little information as to their whereabouts. Yesterday Gov.' Lorig 'added State troops to his bodyguard. He and a newspaper reporter, whom he called a name, exchanged blows, but later apolo- gized to each other. Five of eight Representatives were un- for renomination. ¢ ey NEW HAMPSHIRE HOLDS PRIMARY Three-Cornered Fight for G. 0., P. Gubernatorial Nomination Holds State Eyes, By the Associated Press. CONCORD, N. H., September 9.— New Hampshire citizens today were in- volved in a State primary which cli- maxed one of the most feverishly con- tested campaigns in recent years. Aspirants to_the United States Sen- ate, House of Representatives, the gov- emorshlp and other local offices sought nomination. A three-cornered fight for the Republican nomination for Gov- ernor eclipsed in State-wide interest all of the other contests. The contestants were Former Gov. John G. Winant and Arthur P. Morrill, both of this city, and Dr. Hugh K. Moore of Berlin. Republican nomination is tantamount election. Should Winant be victorious he a 50-year precedent. No Governor been given a second term since the establishment of the two-year regime a half century ago. United States Senator’ Henry W. Keyes, Republican. seeking re-election, Was unoj he Democratic nom- ination was sought by Amos H. Balndin of Bath and Albert W. Koons of Peters- boro. Koone also sought the Democratic gubern.um-l nomination, in which he by Prederick E. Small, fomtr mayor of Rochester. New Use for Old—;uto‘ Tires. WEST POINT, N. Y. September 9§ () —The Army has found a use for old auto tires. They are strewn on the gridiron and candidates for positions in the backfleld have to weave their way at full speed among them. 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BOSTON, September l—John P | Fitzgerald, former mayor of Boston, & nounced from a hospital bed last nlght his retifement from the race for ‘the Democratic nomination for Governor of Massachusetts. Fitzgerald rose from a sick bed to make a radio speech Saturday night and upon his return to the hospital doctors told him it was imperative he give up his campaign. His condition is not serious, but they said his vitality {is very low. | _ Pitzgerald’s retirement leaves only Joseph B. Ely of Westfield and John J. Cummings of Boston in the field for the Democratic nomination to oppose Gov. Prank G. Allen or Mayor John J. Devir of Malden, who seek the Re- publican nomination. DIVER IS FREED Louisianan Is Alive on Being Rescued After Day and Night in Water. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, September 9.—Capt. Nick Danese, a Marine diver, was rescued alive shortly before 1 p.m. today after being trapped in 22 feet of water since 11 a.m. yesterday, when he was caught under a city pumping station on Lake Pontchartrain while repairing a leak. ‘Two hundred colored men worked last night, aided by searchlights, to build a dam to divert water from the lake and ;:leue the pressure that gripped the iver. Danese was caught while triying to stop a leak-under pumping station No. 2 of the Jefferson drainage district. He located the leak, but at the same time another developed that loosed a swirling torrent from Lake Pontchartrain and hurled him against and between.a set of pilings. The diver was wearing a helmet, but did not have on the usual diver's suit. and instead of having his lifeline tied around his body was holding it in his hand. The rushing water tore the line from his graso and he was helpless, ex« cept for his contact with the upper world by means of his air hose, Women's Flat Feet Due to Autoing. NEW_YORK September 9 (#).—Dr. . L. Goldwag fears that automobiles are helping American women to have flat feet. Much riding and improper walking result in atrophy of foot mus- cles, he told the New York State Pedic Society. D. .C.,, TUESDAY, FROM LAKE TRAP * | cumbent, SEP] PROHIBITION CHIEF WASHINGTON ISSUE |Five Representatives Seek Renomination on Strictly Dry Platforms. By the Associated Press. SEATTLE, Wash, September 9.— Prohibition was a well defined issue in ‘Washington's primary election today. | The state's five Representatives| sought renomination on strictly dry platforms, despite pronouncements of wet sentiment in both the Republican and Democratic State Conventions. Four of the five Representatives met opposition. _Representative John W. Summers, Walla Walla, Republican, who ‘has’ served 12 years. Was unop- posed. Representative John F. Miller, Seat- tle, Republican, first elected to the Na- | tional House in 1916, was opposed in a | spirited campaign by Ralph A. Horr, | King County Republican chairman, an outspoken anti-prohibitionist. Charles G. Heifner, Seattle, a wet, was the only Democratic candidate. Three candidates sought the second district seat held since 1914 by Repre- sentative Lindley H. Hadley, Belling- ham, Republican. Representative Al- bert Johnson, Hoquiam, Republican, elected first in 1942, nationally known for his immigration policies, was op- posed by four candidates in the third district. ‘Two Republican candidates fought for the right to oppose Representative Sam B. Hill, Waterville, only Democratic in- t the general election. No' senatorial seats were involved in the prlmAries e TILSON CLAIMS MAINE VOTE HOOVER VICTORY “Republicans Over U. 8. Should Be Elated by Repudiation of At- tacks,” He Says. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 9.—John Q. ‘Tilson, Eastern director of the Na- tional Republican Congressional Com- mittee, today characterized the Repub- lican victory in the Maine elections as “g sweeping indorsement of the policies and record of President Hoover.” “Republicans all over the country cannot help but be elated over one thing—the clear way in which Maine voters repudiated the unjustifiable at- tacks on President Hoover and hi$ con- stl;:ctlve Policies of legislation,” he said. Balloon as Weather Forecaster. SAN MARCELLO PISTOLESE, Italy, | September 9 (#).—Folks hereabouts are | convinced that crops will be fine and children obedient. A paper balloon 33 UEMBER 9, 1930. BLEASE ANDBYRNES| IN RUN-OFF TODAY Opponents of Six Years Ago Face Each Other Again in South Carolina Primary. By the Associated Press. COLUMBIA, S. C., September 9.— Having failed tg select a Governor and United States Senator in the first pri- mary, two weeks ago, South Carolina Democrats today ght nominations in ary. Today's vote will decide the political fate of Cole L. Blease, whose appeals during the last 40 years have carried him from a minor county office to the United States Senate. Senator Blease is opposed by James F. Byrnes, Spartanburg attorney and former Representative, who lost to the Senator in a second primary six years ago by approximately 2,000 votes. As the senatorial race is a repetition of history for its two candidates, so is the gubernatorial race for Ibra C. Blackwood, Spartanburg solicitor, whose name appears on the ballot with that of Olin D. Johnston, & member of the Leg- islature. Johnston, leading a field of eight in the first primary, received approximate- 1y 14,000 votes more than Blackwood, who ran second in the first s four years ago, when John G. rds w:’s ;lev.;t:d ‘?ovemor. i ohnston is an outspoken opponent the State’s $65,000, N‘hwly bond issue. Blackwood’s position is that some of the bonds havé been issued and that the constitutionality has been held by the State Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court. Democratic nomination is equivalen to election. o N | & run-off primi —_— Pianist Carries Own Grips. WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., September 9 () —Percy Grainger, t, believes in_ exercise. He trundled four sult cases 10 blocks from the station in a wheelbarrow. “A penny saved is a penny earned” he told the curious, and then he changed his explanation, saying. he always carries his grips from station to hotel when on tour and mankind gets too little exercise and too much food. His own diet consists of oranges for breakfast, salad for lunch and bread and butter for dinner. — | mellégw nest mustatd seeds GULDOENS feet high let loose on the feast of Saint | Celestina soared away into the blue sky. | Had it burned, so the legend runs, dlre[ things would have happened. B Vusterd g A 100% WASHINGTON INDUSTRY What a Convenience—What - a Satisfaction—Every Quart Bottle of Thompson's Pasteurized Milk Enjoys the Extra Protection STALKAPS An Exclusive Feature of Thompson’s Dairy PRESS TO REPLACE Other not, gloated over hv us, but it does seem good to be able to read of the revo- lutions in _Ar- gentins, Peru, Brazil and not read where the “American Ma- rines have land- ed and have the situation well in hand.” If Mr. Hoover does nothing else but keep our Army and Navy at home, we can forgive hlm for not giving us rain, lower taxes and inflated stock mar- ket. Won’t. it be. wonderful if we ever live to see thé day when any country can have it own revolution and even a privat and. congenial war with a. neif| g nation without umnvnedv’uesu. ILL ROGERS. TEXAS G. 0. P. SEES CHANGE AT VICTORY Platform to Be Drawn at Session Is Expected to Recommend Tariff on Oil. By the Assoclated Press. SAN ANGELO, Tex., September 9.— ! Expressing the belief that the party had a “fighting -chance”. for victory in the November election, Texas Repub- licans met in convention today to formally approve candidates and draw 1 up a platform. The platform was expected to include recommendations for a tasiff on oil, a | State law making four or five members of the State Highway Commission elective, and continued opposition to a bonding plan of providing funds for State highway construction. Advance information indicated that Dr. George C. Butte would accept the nomination for Governor to oppose Ross S. Sterling of Houston, who de- feated former Gov. Miriam A. Ferguson for the Democratic nominatio *tA3 ARIZONA VOTERS AT POLLS TODAY George W.'P. Hunt, Six Times. Governor, Before Primary for Another Term. By the dswriated Press. PHOENIX, Ariz, September 8— George W. P. Hunt, six Governor of Arizona, sought his eighth Demo- cratic nomination for the chief exec utive’s office in the State’s orimerc elections ve=. Hunt, former prospector and eowboy was opposed in his party by Frank Lyman, former juxuee of the Aruom Supreme Court; Andrew Beaty, State Senator, and Fred T. Colter, former State Senator. Gov. John C. Phillips, who admin- istered Hunt his first defeat since Ari- zona e a State in 1912 by riding the Hoover landslide into the Gov- ernor’s chair in 1928, was unopposed for the Republican nomination. Hunt was A a’s first Governor and sérved until 1919, when he was ap- pointed United States Minister to Siam. Thomas E. Campbell, Republican, now chairman of th: United States Civil® Service Commission, succeeded Hunt in 1919, but was defeated by him four years later: Hunt based his plea for election upon a promise of militant opposition to the Bouider Canyon Dam, while his op- ponents’ platforms were based on prom- ises of tax reductions. Lewis W. Douglas, Democrat and in- cumbent, had no opposition from either party for election {0 Arizona’s lone seat in the House of Representatives, A long list of State officers, for which approx- imately 200 candidates, mostly Demo- crats, are running, completad the ballot. Registrations 18,000 in excess of the previous high mark, that of 1928, were {a::rded this year, when 124,000 qual- J. P. Morgan’s Gift to Museum. NEW YORK, September 9 (#).—One of the largest crystals of beryl has been presented to the American Museum of Natural History by J. P. Morgan. It weighs four tons and measures seven by four fect. 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