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* stock ex inges of most nations. {iwill DAWES SEES 1531 | -~ DEPRESSION END Ambassador Tells Irish Busi- ness of World Is Now Recuperating. By the Associated Pres: BELFAST, Northern Ireland, Sep- tember 37.—Ambassador Dawes, speak- ing as guest of honor at an official luneheon at the City Hall foday, pre- dicted the end of the ourrent world- ‘wide industrial and trade depression by the Summer or Fall of next year. “The business fool of 1929 was he who had no fear,” he sgid. The Ambassador’s addréss was an analysis of “present world-wide indus- trial and trade depression, its cause and its probable duration.” Gen. Dawes said he would not fall 1nte the common error of travelers of dis- cussing questions of local industry, but that in Belfast, which is & center o world-wide business, he could properly discuss the present world-wide depres- sion, since, as nearly everywhere else, 1t is having its serious local effect. Ambassador's Address. The Ambassador's address practically 1 ows: .-'.'sm L] depression in business is due always to sudden change in the at- titude of the world’s peoples. Thi attitude is ‘xtlhl-hfl in t countries as result of diverse causes, including unwise na- tional policies, undue speculation, over- production, underconsumption and poli- tical or social upheavals. “These, however, are more the ef. of glmrll attitude than the causes of it. It is often easier to conclude that one catastrophe or error in business is the cause of the {ellowing one, tather than that both te from underlying cause, ummk tates, for instance. as ‘well' as elsewhere, a major depression has always been precede in d a8 few months before by a stock panic| by &I:n ulation. n; t stock market caused the later depres- have assumed, too, that ligence of Caused by Same Thing. true, for “Nothing eould be more un A y o collapse of the | b e | Ahawrth the afimawrhmnwln of fut [ case general un t and in this b‘-énn A g ] stocks menths Death Is Probed T MRS. E. L. M, ARCHEY, Assistant counsel of the S this morning under circumstances indi« cating she fainted while about te light a stove and had been asphyxiated f from the opem jet. CANNON PROBERS SOONTO BE NAMED, Bishop Ainsworth to An. nounce Committee of Clergy- men in Two Weeks. By the Associated Press. Dr. Forrest J. Prettyman of Baltimore saic today & committee of clergymen to investigate charges n&llnn Bishop nfes Cannon, jr. of ucmnill.: Bis] h, nl“-l'.hy of '&E f Bishops. arges Masten, Ri d; Dr. Costen J. Har» rb' Richmond, and Dr. 1. P. Martin, ingdon, Vi Dr. Prettyman, here attending the Baltimore Confergnce of his church, other % b no intellectual judgment | carpiag can always prove to be - loading the action in filing the harges under the law of the Southern cl marke! | Methodist Chureh. qui kens | the it law the elders are Zabrupt. Nevertheless, the fundamental —-“l:tel the decline in both is the mankind, and what then happens to a man happens to mankind. g ow why & man goes , but we have no difficulty in g when it is thus with mankind. a heetic period induced by re- ible combination of overconfi- nce and misdirected energy reaction and a return to a normal view of things ‘causes first business pse, then ‘e jod of stagnation and then & “pel of recuperation. In Stage of Recuperation. “The business of mankind is now in & stage of recuperation. We know that in a general way under the law of , and reaction periods of under- nflgtgu in business n'r: mml::hnfpm- port! in_length riods of ac- “tivity preceding them. p’:‘hnt time is sconsiderably over a year behind us when the public suddenly turned over from iration and that confidence in the future which is the basis of prosperity to that lack of confidence which is the world left its normal trend earlier S in 1927, two years before the col- lapse of prices in 1929 on the leading “trend of world business resumed Summer or Fall of next year, which nnrkwv;hc end of the after two- (year “Exceptional local conditions may in ithis or that country retard or a ¢ tvance the healing effect of returni usiness confide! 'l‘he{ are desc) 1f | $20 bill on the Federal “You will t the three traveling elden to call upen the ) the law as amended “atter notice to him.” en again, under the old law the elders were re- ired to “believe him gullty." Un ve an_ investigstion *ainst. Blnoy. e attended po.ey today. Pretty. not confer with re- RESIGNS B s i KINCHELOE T0 TAKE COURT POST |3 Kentucky Representative Also| Quits as Democratic Nominee for Re-election. (Prom the 5:30 Edition of Yesterdsy's Star.) By the Associated Press. Representative Kincheloe, Demoerat, Kentucky, today sent his resignation as 4 member of Congress to Gov. Sampson of Kentucky, to become effective Octo ber 5, when he will take office as & member of the Federal Customs Court. Kincheloe also sent his resignation as 2 Democratic nominee for Congress in the second Kentucky district to the secretary of State in Kentucky, thereby rnmnvlng his name from the ballot al the forthcoming elections. A special election must be held to select a successor to complete Kinche- loe’s unexpired term. ing Ummediately st e roquest of resl m y al . dent Hoover, who mn'.'-fi him to the Customs Court and asked him to take office on Oetober 6, when the Fall term of the court opens. S BOGUS BILLS REPORTED Secret Service Warns Public of Two New Counterfeits. Chief W. H. Moran of the United States Secret Service today warned the public against two new counterfeit bills. ly as follows: A Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Ohio, 1928 series, check let~ ter “1” face plate No. 22, back plate number indistinct, probably 107; H. T. Tate, Treasurer of the United State :rfld . certain than 18 more iness recovery. The business fool of ©1920 was he who had no fear. ifool now is he who has no hope.” : “Fine Raw Material.” After analysing the industrial and eommercial situation, Gen. Dawes told nce, but nothing the co: - i “the luncheon party of distinguished Americans < guests that have a particu- ites; A. W, Mellon, of the Treasury; portralt of Lineoln. —————— Endurance Test for Radio Voice. NEW YORK, September 27 (P)— Norman Pearce, radio announ to have quite a voice from ance standpoint. He talked into & mike for 24 hours straight at a radio fair on th from capital punishment various %% | 1o the Souths ses Telass ing Board, who was feund dead in :‘I’r’l‘l‘.’“‘ f‘fl’l’hu ‘were sent to lllha'lp :z Dr. Prettyman, Dr. J. T. | had mon th | Both drove to rough at the left of | home hole, JONES WINS TITLE [N AMATEUR GOLF Defeats Gene Homans, 8 Up, Making Sweep of Major Honors for Year. Continued From First Page second shots just reached the green, with Homans' slightly away. Gens approach putt was short, so was Bob's. flzln!u his 4. Homans got his Jones 3 yp. Seventh hole, 355 yards, par Jones drove to the edge of tch and pitched on. Homans had a straight drive and sent a second well, putt- ing from 25 feet, Bob ran up close from 20 feet. Gene was within a foot and atymied Jon could not get opponent's ball and took 5 to ¢ Homans, Jones 2 up. b m l)t:‘mlg;'o first hole. o le, yards, There was little to choose botwe:x:'thn drives and they eiwh.d well on. Each putted close and it was a half in 4's, Jones 2 up, Jones pitched on from rt ninth, while Gene in water and took a penalty stroke. Jones was down in par 3 to 4 tor Homans, Jones 3 up. The card (morning): Jones, out..... 4 6355454¢3-3 VOFERUR Mok, 305 rde, pur &-caior ¥ yards, par ¢.—Ho- mans hooked to rough from the tee after Jones sent a long one down the fairway. Jones played safely to the middle of the green.” Gene's ball rolled to a trap beyond the green. He ex- ploded far past the pin and then putted close. Bob was down in 3 putts for his par 4 and went ¢ up. Eleventh hole, 378 yards, par 4. Preferring accuracy to distance, Jones was driving with a speon. The tee shots at the eleventh were not far apart but Homans was in front again, Beb played for the middle of the green and was 25 feet from the pin. Homans a;t:hea within eight feet. Jones holed long putt for a birdie 3. Homans Jjust missed his putt and took a par 4, Jones 5 up. Twelfth hole, 415 yards, par é—Jones the longer ball ‘at the twefth, but was not in the best position to approach the elevated green. Homans hl? a low, rakish shot to the green. Jones pitched high, and the ball R oo puges e 1 ok e cup. From 10 feet Jones ust mfll They holed par 3s. Jones up. !guruenth hole, 412 yards; par four—The drives again at the four- teenth were close together, with Genpe away, Homans hit a spoon second shot to eft of the green. Bob was on with a No. 3 iren, 15 feet from the cup and pulled to the lip. Homans was seven feet short in 3 and barely missed his 4, taking a 5. Jones took par 4 and ‘went 6 up, Fifteenth hole, 270 yards; par four— Jones was away from the tee, but was six feet from the pin. Gene's d caught the side of a trap and rolled to the sand. Gene came out and missed his putt for a ¢, conceding the hole. Jones knocked his putt for the birdie 3. Jones 7 up. Sixteenth hole, 435 yards, par é— at the sixteenth the “quarry hoje,” there was no appreciable ad- vantage in the drives, high iron over the cavern to the 3 Jones with a No. 4 iron was well from 60 feet. Gene putted 4 feet short. Jones' pult lipped the cup. Homans mmmowrnm.’m Seventeenth - hole, 315 yards, par 3— Jones’ tee shot carried to thick rough at the left. Homans drove within 7 feet of the cup. Jones approached te within 8 feet and missed the putt, tak- ing ¢ to a birdie 2 for Homans. Jones 7 up. Eighteenth hole, 445 yards, par 4— at the Jones was slightly in front. Homans was over the green with a long iron. Jones ?\whm 18 feet from the in. Gens hird was too strong and was atill away. He holed the 20-foot putt for the par 4. Jones just and it was a half in par 4. Cards omans, in..5 4 4 3 5 5 5 2 4—37—79 jones, in....4 343434443372 h reached a shallow trap. was just short of the green with second, while Homans was on. Jones ran up dead and Homans putted close. It was a half in par 4. Jones 7 up. ‘Twentieth hole, 538 yards; T, 5. Gene's tee was in an adjoining fair- way at the long twentieth. Bob was in the clear. Both were short in two, but Jon the pin. Homans’ third went over and he putted short. Jones missed hole was halved in par 5. Jon Twenty-first hole, 195 yards; , 3. —Neither reached the short twenty-first from the tee. Jones almost heled out from a trap. Homans was just on the edge of the green. Gene slipped 2 feet f"” the cup on his first effort and loft himself a partial stymie. He missed the putt and took 4 to 3 for Jones. Jones going 8 up. ‘Twenty-second hole, 595 yards; par, 5.—Homans was trapped from the tee at the long twenty-second and Jones u"vut his third 10 feet from | H FIVE DIE AS GALE SINKS LAKE COATS Two Go Down Off Michigan, While Fate of Third Is Undetermined. By the Associated Press. MUSKEGON, Mich., September 27— | The waters of Lake Michigan, whip- | ped into a fury by a 40-mile gale yes- terday, took the lives of at least five persons, swallowed up two boats and left the fate of a third undetermined | this morning. ‘The five dead werc members of the crew of the barge Salvor, caught in the gale yesterday afternoon when less than 2 miles from safety in the harbor here. Nine others of the fourteen who were aboard the barge reached shore alive. Two of them were brought in this morning after having spent 16 hours lashed to the derrick on the barge. They were taken to Grand Haven by members af the Coast Guard erew from that point, who shet a line sboard the barge to rescue them. A third man lashed to the derrick was dead and be- cause of the hnxxmseu still running enn.r: to remove body were aban- d oned. ‘Two bodies, those of Lorpie Olmstead, ® years old, and Elmer Lytle of Detour, Mich,, already have come ashore, -The body left on the barge was that of Clinton Lane of Muskegon. The two missing are Clarence Barnett and Tony ‘Winserowski of Muskegen. Two in Berious Condition. ‘The survivors are Mrs. Ida Olmstead, mother of Lornie, employed as a gnok: her sister, Alice la Plaunt, cook; Onncv la Plaunt, all of Sault Ste. Marie; Ed- ward Winserowski of Detour, Floyd O'Connor, George Secord, Clement Shurage and Lyman Nedeau, all of Muskegon, and Harry 8mith of Newark, N. J. Nedesu* and Smith were the two taken off the barge this morning. After the Coast Guard had taken them to Grand Haven,. it was decided to bring them back here to a hospital, . They were in a serious condition from ex- gmurl. ‘Throughout the night waves ad dashed over them as they were tied to the derrick. The other vessel to go down before the gale was the schooner Our Son, last of hey type on the lakes. She foundered off Ludington, Mich., her crew of seven being removed by the freighter William Nelson. Third Boat Unreported. A third boat, the steel-hulled motor carrier North Shore, which left St. Joseph, Mich.,, with a cargo of grapes yesterday morning en route to Mil- waukee, had not been reported today. She carried five men and a woman. Fears for the safety of eight mem- bers of the Coast Guard crew from Ludington, who set out at 4 p.m. yes- terday to go to the aid of the schooner, were dispelled this morning when word was received here that they had reached Sheboygan, Wis., making the crossing under their own po The fiu&en(er ship Missour! arrived at Muskegon last night several hours overdue from Milwaukee, after battling heavy seas, Fear had been expressed for v;ru safety because of the strong gale which had been raging and be. cause nothing had been heard from it. was in the rough. Homans w of the green in & and on in 4, 40 feel from the pin. Jones pitehed 12 feet from the eup in 3. Homans was down in 6. Jenes holed his par § and went 9 !xxe;enty-th!.rd hole, 435 yards; par, 4.—The drives at the twenty-third were not far apart. Jenes was in front 12 yards. Each second shot found & rest- ing place on the green. Jones 50 feet from the cup, Homans, 35. Jones' putt Was 4 feet short. It was d half in par ¢. Jones, 9 u}). ‘Twenty-fourth hole, 442 yards, par 4 —The drives were close together, 230 and 350 yards down the fairway at the twenty-fourth, Homans used a spoon to fet home in two, Jones took a No, 3 ron. They were both home with Jones well inside. Homans putted close from 50 feet. So did Jomes. They halved in par 4s. Jones 9 up. ‘Twenty-Afth hole, 355 yards, par 4— Homans was in the fairway while Jones drove to rough. Their seconds rolled past the pin, and each had good putts left for their pars, They missed and halved in 5s. ‘Twenty-sixth hole, 350 yards, par 4— Bob nearly drove the green and chipped to 10 feet of the cup, Homans was too strong with his approach, but just missed sinking a 15-footer. It was & half in 4s, ‘Twenty-seventh hole, 170 yards, par 3-—Jones missed the green with his tee shot at the twenty-seventh and went into a trap. Homans was 10 feet from the cup, Jones was 18 feet short in 2 and was down in 4, conceding Homans his putt and the hole, Jones 8 up. Cards afternoon: 45464454238 lomans— Out 4535445 4438 Jones— Out ~=Jones drove a very long ball, but in rough. Homans was in the fairway, 30 yards behind. Gene put his second in a trap to the left. Jones' second found the same trap. Bob failed to get out on his third and took 4 to reach the green, 15 feet from the pin. Gene went over the green to a trap on the other side in 4. They were about the same distance from the cup. It was a half in 6s and Jones was dormie 8. Grocer George W. Norris of Broken Bow, Nebr. (seated at end of table, ris met at the Senate’s Campaign Fund Investi; into the filing of Grocer Norris as a primary candi a Supreme Court ruling. Senator Norris is shewn at the extreme right. TWO NORRISES AT NEBRASKA C AIGN QUIZ AMP. B wearing bow tie), and Senator George W. Nor- tion Committee hearing in Lincoln, Nebr. idate against Senator Norris. His name was barred from the bal ‘The committee Inguired lot by —Associated Press Photo. REWARDS POSTED FOR CAPONE MEN 35 Chicago Detectives to Be Transferred as Result of “Censorship.” By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, Seprember 27.—The “Ca- pone censorship” of the Police Depart- Jent had riled Police Commissioner Alcock to determined action today. Thirty-five members of the Detective Bureau will be removed and the bureau reorganized, the commissioner said, in an effort to check wholesale gang eq}l e within the police ranks. he commissiener particularly wanis to know how the confidential list of gangsters to be hunted down as va- grants got from the Detective Bureau & room at the Carleon Hotel occup by a Capane bon . The list. was found by Pederal agenis in a raid Thursday. Eight Names Omitted. He wants to know, too, the mean of the penciled crosses in front o eight names on the confidential list, The eight names were of well known workers in the ranks of Al Capene. Especially perplexing, however, was the fact that copies of list, when com- At police headquarters, showed the eight names had been emitted, The explanation at the Detective Bureau s that the police officer who put down the original list of names— the one found by the Federal raiders— had later made his copies from memory after realizing that the original had disappeared, Commissioner Alcock, how= ever, wants to know why, in_ copyl from memory, the police officer left off the same names as those designated ?y c;u?:s u::‘ the lh‘to;he Fa;ienl men foun Possession of the bondsman, Offer $1,000 Reward Business men today lent additional aid to the police effort to smash the gang syndicate grip on Chieago by of.- |fering a reward of $1,000 for the ar- rest of Frank Nitti, a Capone execus Nitti is under Pederal indictment for income tax fraud. Similar action is -nuulfi-m in the case of Jake Gu- slek, “ ector” and “pay-off” man for the Capone ernment ac 3 The Association of Commerce, which ffered the reward, said it had been told by Federal officials that Nitt! is now the actual head of the gang, of which Oapone is merely the figurehead. . City Managers Re-elect Storey. SAN FRAN( ‘'O, September 37 (), ——Stephen B. Storey, Rochsster, N. Y., was re-elec president of the Inter- national City Managers' Assoelation | yesterday. BAND CONCERT. By the United States Soldiers' Home Military Band, this evening at 5:30 o'clock. Jghn 8, M. Zimmerman, band- master; Anton Pointner, assistant. March, “U. 8, Meld Arilllery"... Overture, “‘Sakuntal Twenty-eighth hole, 335 yards, par ¢ | Gran Madame Waltz Suite, Finale— “The Trumpeters' Carnival" “The Star Spangled Bann This will conclude the series of out- door concerts for the season. Orches- tral concerts will begin on October 14, at 5:30 o'clock, in Stanley Hall Interior of dhe new Detroit, Mich.-Windsor, Ontario, Canada, vehicular tunnel, which will be opened in November. ~—Wide World Photo, &muy, who also faces Gove | g, *| Federal amendment, Candidate Chopping Wood for Vote Told Rival Churns for It By the Associated Pres FRANKLIN, N. C, September 27.—Bert BSlagle is Demacratic candidate for sheriff in this county. Republican ean- for the same office. le, out on the hustings, A woman chflppin% wood, He offered his help. An hour he chopped wood, while the perspira- tion poured off. At last the wood was cut and Slagle seated himself on the front porch to rest. The question of his candidacy came up. “I hardly know who to vote for," the lady said. “Both you ;ld Mr. Franks have been so nice us. “Why right now Mr. Franks Is out on the back porch churning.” REPUBLICAN SPLIT 10 AID ROOSEVELT Anti-Saloon League Seen as Thorn in Side for Tuttle in Campaign, BY DAVID LAWRENCE. While the Republicans of New Yerk State, by the adoption of s wet plank in the gubernatorial campalgn, 'have endeavored to neutralize the advantage that the Democrats have enjoyed in the Empire State for the last decade, the net effect of a split in the Republican party may mean the continuance in "6t"Bov. Roosevelt, Democrat. Determination of the drys to punizh their Republican brethren by putting & third party ticket in the fleld is in line with the tactics pursued in Illin. ols and in other States. The Anti. Saloon e recognizes that it might mean the election of & Democratic wet, but their ressoning is that the Demo- cratic party ha gone wet, the Re- publican party cannot be permitted to lollow the same course, u}usuuy sinee o om T cf . tached to the dry cause. e Followed Cox Speech. the ideas Jaid down by Cox of Ohlo in his key- ch in Columbus, Ohlo, last June when he pointed out that Dwight Morrow's platform in New Jersey did not close the. deor ‘gnl.nn the saloon and outline a conception of repeal of the eighteenth amendment which the Republ now have recognized is a stronger ‘argument than to point no specific alternative to the eighteenth mendml:l. There is no doubt that the action of the Republican State Convention in New York is a disappointment to leaders because of the national atten- Empits Biats, pire ite, however, is that whieh ‘Wadsworth everything done in the The battle this year, not much different from The drys van an indepen ot blican and teok away en:lo::‘l;tveut:l Tom Mr. Wadsworth to enable 8 Demo-~ crat to win, When the made that this stra merely added a Wet vote in Congress the drys answered that the election of Wadsworth would :.‘xl’:e;nmtr eu;e same "zhm'i but that it mportant to keep the ds power of dry votes. S League Not Concerned. The gubernatorial eampaign in New Yor!l State p‘;::lb?:’nfll:u ificance 50 far as a vote on wet or dry laws because it is not likely that any will be submitted to the State Legislature in the next two years and also with the wet sentiment preponderent no issue is expected to arise on any State.enforcement laws. 8o the Anti-Saloon League isn't con- cerned very much whether a Republi- can wet or a Democratic wet holds the office of Glovernor. A third ticket in the fleld will be a thorn in the side of Charles Tuttle, the Rerubllc.nn nominee for Governor, especially since he has achieved con- siderable strength by his attacks on Tammany Hall, and the race might be close if an Independent Republican did not draw tens of thousands of votes from Mr. Tuttle. It all depends on who the Anti-Saloon League and the drx;ly organization put }Ill:l or Governor. blished _reports ve mentioned Frank "trl o-n&at@ of Rochester, who owns & string of newspapers cities of New York State, and who is no! e He would have the , but his nomination would cost Mr. Tuttle a good many votes. Between Two Desires. New York State has always been wet and the Republican party has been torn | in between two desires—one, to pla Tural slements. Which re dvy. and. tao. inroads in the big cities, where the Democrats have been able to raise &o ;'e‘t ‘:u:;' and thus take ‘mwl of e grnment almost uninters ruvt:dt, since the eighteenth amend- throughout the countny. (Copyright, 1930 ‘l” race paia s developed when Senator had in several lection SEYMOUR TO FACE PERJURY CHARGES IN NORRIS PROBE (Continued From PFirst Page. to the second George W. Norris and his |later eonnection with the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee. I also take into account the fact that W, . Murray, who was on the of the Republican National tee, was in Nebraska and made a sur- vey before the Republican primary. Nye said A. Paul Johnson, a Broken Bow 1"7“' had testified he delivered 8 8500 Liberty bond to Grocer Norris at time he filed as a candidate, “It is assumed,” said Nye, “th: bond was received from Seymou Seymour told the commiitee-in July he had never seen the Broken Bow Norris and had no relations with him. Later Seymour was appointed chairman of the Ropublican Senatorial Committee in the West and yesterday he resigned that office “for the good of the party” after the Senate Committee | pe; hearings in Nebraska. SEYMOUR QUITS G. O. P, POST, Party Aide Resigns After Part in Norrls Campaign Is Charged. By the Assaciated Press. DENVER, Colo.,, September 27.—Re- verberations of the dual Norris Repub- lican senatorial candidacies today pres- aged the probable exit of Victer Bey. mour, Lincoln business man, frein the Western political picture. Seymour, lately appointed assistant vice chairman of the Western Repub~ lican political eampaign, yesterday tel- egraphed his resignation to Senator Frederick Steiwer of Oregon. In his telegram Seymour insisted that, while he was ‘“absolutely innocent of any o o ‘controvi ing SGlcly from & Geeire. 10 ioity sttending the committee hear- Ings of Senator Geraid P. Nye in Ne- | “Modifcation breska from reflecting on the party's | which senatorial committee. First Denied Charges. ‘Wha Chimpaign Punds Investgaiing "Gom n nves! - Tiliee "had " recommended Beymous removal hsefimu name figured in the Nye at Lincoln soon after his ar- | note address e abouf e “‘.’ George ‘3 Norris, “uu“-“eu‘.' (3 1% t0x 1o nominttion o the ‘olbgs held by Senator Norris was thrown out because it was made too late. “The affair is Greek to me,” Seymour said Smnounecd oty cherges e o pei cl e g AT result of testimony given at the coln hearing. Denies the Charge. Before coming to Colorado, Seymour aERied" e new anyihine” sbost. e e kne al candidacy of the fi?&"‘u- th: Norris “the second” at first teld the committee he attemp on his own volition, his testimeny to 350 filing fee. A. Paul Johnson, Broken Bow attor ney, testified Seymour fee and sald he ‘assumed" enter but later to Grocer Norris after he had fled o hough declgaing to oug! g comment at length on his telegraphic resignation pendin Toturn of Senator Steiwer from this week, Seymour told newspaper men he had acted “ent on my own volition and without ha consulted any one. I think I owe to the party” LUCIEN W, POWELL, 84, DIES IN SANITARIUM AFTER LONG ILLNESS —— (Continued Prom WFirst Page.) Lewis Helskell of Washington and Mrs. Frances Millott of Windber, Pa., daugh- ters, and Lucien Fitshugh Powell of e e sy any of the artist's itings are to be found in Washirgton, but a number are distributed throughout the world. Permanent exhibitions are in the Public Library, Congressional Club, American University and Georgetown University, which has a holy land col- lection. Mrs. Henderson possesses about 200 of bis paintings, which come prise the largest private collection. Gran ansos of the Coroie Sby'e e Colorado, now in the Corcoran Gllle'rg. and his a ntings. London art,, Mr, Powell's work that he said on one occasion that “the sun never sets” on his pictures. Native of Virginia. Known as a resident of Washington, Mr. Powell was a native of much of his work was done at Lou doun Onunh{. He was born De. cember 13, 1846, at Levinworth Manor, ;;‘. titlu estate of his father, John Levin well. { Av17 e fought in the Confederate | Army with his brothers and after | _?% e ! § Eommits | 2 the | publican we say Seymour | ) { Republicans, led our | wadsworth and and | Ph; s home m;hd‘ 1932 WET PLANK QUESTION:RAISED Recent Developments in Both Parties Cause Leaders to Ponder Issue. BY FRANCIS M, STEPHENSON, Associated Press Staft Writer. With prohibition persistently bobbing up in polities this year, national party leaders are wondering if this issue is to be I:;."' in the 1932 presidential cam- p‘ln other words, the political leaders are wondering if either of the two na- tional parties will adopt a wet plank two years hence for the first time since adoption of the eighteenth amendment, and whether either will nominate & wet candidate. President Hoover lugnomd the eight- enth amendment in 1928 race, and Alfred E. Smith ran as a wet, but the Democratie platform was not wet. Mr. Hoover declared against repeal of the eightesnth amendment and, in effect, against modification. Mr. Hoover's utterances are regarded #s putting the Republican party in the dry column nationally, but the ranks of both the Republicans and Democrats are divided on this question. The New York State Republicans have “declared for répeal, as Dwight W. Morrow, Republiean senatorial nomines in New Jersey. Law Board Report Awaited. Meanwhile, as the Republican admin- i S T e m on juis of prohibition, Democrats iats ing on what effect the declarations of Goy. Roasevelt of New York and James A. Reed of Misgsouri for prohibition re- 5:1 ":w hlvl;o ?}l’ll the n‘:xt Democratie on, a “n"h‘.‘l mfll%ffi. re viewed as pres! irman ngs of the Demoeratic atorial Clllmnlm Committes has de- clared prohibition an issue in many of campaigns this year, and most of Demoeratic senatorial eandidates in the North and East are running to wets, with wet planks in a number of State platforms, Chairman Raskob of the D-mmmL tic National Committee is for But the Democratic strengheld of the Southland is dry, and rl A wet plank gets into the next Democratic platform it will be over the determined the the vice wmmcn of this section of the ] ator Robinson of Ar'nm:a.u :’\’u fecently was renominated and who has been advanced by his State for the 'mocratie presidential nemination, is .mn “:awm advocate of national prohi- Hoover Quoted on Views, In view of the recent prohibition out- breaks and the prospect of action by the Law Enforcement Commission en this subject, political leaders have looked over it Hoover's views on > X is what he sald when he wrote to Senator Borah, Republican, Idaho, in 1928 as a candidate for th Republican nomination and what Wun when he accepted that momi. nation: “I do not faver the repeal eighteenth amendment, I stand the efclent enforcement of the enacted thereunder. Whoever is chosen President has under his oath the solemn duty te pursue this course. “Our country has deliberately undere & great social and economic experiment, noble in motive and far. g in purpose. It must be worked reachin, the | out eonstructively.” He added, in hi ‘h of acceptance, i of w.:ulcntnr« rrt laws rmit that wi the orblds is nullification, the American people will not coun- National Republican leaders are silent from Albany that the New g’n mll‘r\:luuvmflm adopted a repeal belittle the effect of the move, and of the faith pre- dieted it would have no bearing on the next national convention of the party. Stimson Talk Omits Bubject. Stimson, a e tate Conventlon, but he sald nothing on the sub) of prohibition. here conceded that the con< Sreuhisation o the cause of Dronbition sation e cause of prol Fopas! ‘would be likely to bring this issus lore the next National Convention, but Senator Brookhart of Iowa, & Re- publiean dry, would “keep Brookhart sald, “We haven't lost » thing” because the New York Repul licans had adopted the repeal platform, }n n\g Bantor wuw:n‘:. ‘:.' g:i n TUR RS & We llnu.l,' » he is ex-Senator Wi worth n oW, Senator Sheppard, Democrat, Texas, another dry, said the New York Re- tness “has no material sig- Just reflects York City, ‘ ormer Sen: Ni Murray But- ler, president of Columbia University, had urfi a_wet k _unsuccess! at &l t Republican National Con- ‘vention. Chairman Fess of the Republican National Committee and Senator Wat- son of Indians, iblican leader in the Senate, withheld comment on the New York action. ‘With the Hoover administration tak- in the wet and dry gon- g‘ the !orfi‘womln' re] of the lh‘l‘: ent Comm! , W] been studying the proibition aifuation: London’s Remedy for Traffic Jams. LONDON, September 27 (#).—Track- less trolleys for some London suburbs by the Royal Commission rt as & means of ending con- gestion. Hundreds of miles of track would be pulled up. and he became one of a group of ad- mirers which in years to come were to include many prominent men and women in this country and abroad, The Powell family is of Welch origin, The Liandgollen estate at Uppe: h va., gn.nhd to the family by the lfln{h:l land about 1770, n historic hunting reglon, the Powells entertained George Washington 'l‘fl': u_lrtcth on _.flu lgi.m-un €5+ . artist’s un thbert Powel his Last Spring the famlly o the owmen tney, the dson of day Mr. Whithey took. s beide. e 3 e ride, former Miss linum Altemus of to the estate which he 85 a bridal gift. e Was Godly Man. £ . Powell did not hlvlmd asa ‘,'Whuthoa;:xum; n:]fli.l S e SIPI ali He that he was a Godly uld.“:llt!lnm. e 2 E5 E ‘d‘}workm!lnmt‘n‘l His goodness added ] g £ shove land. to i) § :