Evening Star Newspaper, October 2, 1930, Page 22

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B6 =! “PUBLIC ENEMIES” “enemy,” was taken from a hospital bed to court yesterday to post bond on vagrancy charges. Will Examine Druggan, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1930. PROHIBITION COST e, has succeeded thus far in-avoid-~ arrest, as have many other of the more notorious characters listed by the crime commission as “enemies.” Frank J. Loesch, who has fathered how soon he will be able to appear o | campaign against gangs and rackets. answer charges of income tax fraud. “I once had a talk with Capone,’ OF LIQUORS GREAT eenth amendment had never been acted.” enacted. “We believe that $2,500,000,000, ex- clusive of revenue;” the association added, “is a generous estimate of what we would have been spending today if there were no_prohibition. We can find no basis ‘or the sweeping claim that we should now be spending from $3,000,000,000 to $7,000,000,000 for drink BROOKHART PLANS POWER ACT CHANGE Nye, North Dakota Republicans, had | agreed to join him in questioning the ‘THREE PLANE L'NES fended 1o adop under the bpinion. Ths | ' en 0 adopt under the opinion. This A vas Sendered-ona protest v ine ap: | EXPECTED TO MERG palachian Electric Power Co. to terms CT To E ?,{ a {{?’““ t:cl;; a de\'exlaphmenl on :he\ ew A tary Kai vl in o vaa T ——— | Transcontinental Contract Presages Meanwhile, F. E. Bonner, the com- Terrence Druggan, an “enemy,” faces | (e effort to rid the city of gangsters, examination by a.physician named by | gaid in an address last night that Ca- Federal Judge Wilkerson to determine | pone is apparently .unworried by the He also has been named in a vagrancy | roesch said, “and I told him that in if there were no pronibition” - mission’s executive secretary, said_the T. A. T, Western Air and warrant. the end if ‘the law did not get him, § A e wet estimate of liquor expendi- S i . . | Mitchel opinion substantiated claims | ’ g ike” O'Donnell and “Dago Law- other gangsters would. He replied that| Anti-Dry Association Says|tures was containea in a_pampniet | Believes Mitchell’s Decision, | of certain States that the power group | Pittsburgh Consolidation. rence” Mangano have been ordered to|the gangsters might, but the law never | issued under the title “Does Prohibition ?|in the past had exceeded its jurisdiction, $511 At Least One Calling on trial late this th 5 " Both . . Pay?” In addition t senting the PR Wy 3 198 4 e this month as “vags would. $2,848,000,000 Paid | S04 ni} it evics thee oo wir | LiMiting Commiission’s Juris. | (icrotehing upon State rights, Bon<| . - Union to Meet Expense are “publle enemies " Loesch sald Capone now comes to the drink bl ¢ ok ie . ‘ | “Dago Lawrence” walked into the|Loop at least twice a week, always ac- e claim that prohibition had increased o ield the .view that the commission| NEW YORK, October 2.—At d yeas i Detective Bureau last night and tossed | companied by eight or more body- i productivity of workers, asserting the woul limit itself to obtaining assur-l * - October 2 —Award yes: of Defending Self. down a $100 bill as bond for the release ,um?ds_ Each Year. report of President Hoover’s committee dwhon’ Is Incorrect. ance that navigation be unaffected by ""““l“-" of a new transcontinental air- As of another hoodlum, Tony Accardo. A | “The bodyguard is not to portect him on recent economic changes was taken suen aner projects, and would re-|Mall confract was seen today as pre- , moment later he, Accardo and four |from arrest,” Loesch added. “It is to as a guide and it “nowhere mentions linquish the other phases of control | S38ing the probable merger of three By the Associated Press. en, Who appeared to be bodyguards, | protect him from the guns of gang- | |m B prohibition as a factor in the increased CHICAGO, October 2.—The “public | walked out of the bureau. sters.” | By the Agsociated Press | gemerally written into licenses, dealing | 8Viation companies into what might A new effort in Congress to achieve | With capitalization and valuation. ‘b”mmt‘ the largest passenger, mail and ¢ | Brookhart said the opinion “apparent- | freight air line in the country. more stringent Federal control of || BHCIIN B0 T eton authority t6 |, The contract was awarded jotntly %0 American_drinkers, on the estimate | Gutput of workingmen.” enemies”—those thus far apprehended— | “We public enemies must stick to-| Capone's “collector,” as Jack Gusick | Of the Association Against the Prohibl-| ““wrne jncreased output of workers can N : ether,” Mangano laughed as they |often is called, faces legal trouble both | tion Amendment, are spending $2848:- | pe accounted for,” the report said, “by | .. ; 5 Wy Ore mg;';’:w';‘)c::x;‘;igfx"::;"p“fpn;m{gc:‘fvnlked avay e a8 e | Nagrant’ and. paadoxically, for 000,000 & vear 'for thelr intoxicants | tue" imereuectl ude of power, improved | Waterpower development was promised | destroy its own power.” | Transcontinental Air Transport, Mad- under prohibition, o | today 51 . s " anies,” he led, | dux Air Lines and Western Air Express. g O BNk Tk Dasbelt the |- o ";g" :""::‘" C""‘"‘ i "This figure, the association siid, while e e Silag Tactas, whioh | 1ox::yMG;|::a‘1m1vch\211° pllx::;):; b\in'.i',, “hage " Sieaed A e, “Afieseey Qi of the B Avmduu: o George 2,000 Tembers of the | ve a0y Stanton. ‘the fiist ot the 20 - : not held up s infallible, was based on | are quite outside the control of the in-| o Power Commission’ ction | Gemeral’s opinion has opened wide the (dlusiries immediately announced it h word along to the 2,000 members of the | “enemies” to be arrested, is confronted | Potters Elect Vice President. an 18-month study of production of | dividual worker.” - 'Ob ommission's _jurisdiction | door to modification of licenses pr become affiliated with T, A. T. and it Coal Teamsters' Union he heads to pay | with the most serious charge of all— % | materials used in manufacturing spirits, s e over tributaries to navigable streams | viusly granted. | was considered probable the Pitts~ three months® dues ($9 per member) In | murder. Wisconsin authorities have| EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio, October 2 | yines and beer, deducting the estimated P! g would be sharply limited. failure to pay his full income tax. T At ihe commission offices it was said | Purgh company would operate the East- advance, the money to be paid in by |asked the State of Illinois to turn!(#).—The National Brotherhoot: of Op- | amounts used in legitimate industry. It| The assoclation estimated the per| Scnator Brookhart, Republican, Towa, | the opinion affected six outstanding | €'h leg of the air mail line. tonight. Barker, “publi y,” | Stanton ever to them to stand trial e 5 seph | calculated average retail prices of 50 | capita consumption of beer at a little | said he believed Mitchell's interpreta- | Jicenses and a considerable number o It is known that negotiations have needs the money, police sugg: for the gang murder of Jack Zuta, ;"::3:";"‘?;‘“:;?{;::’ ’n‘z“‘;“‘{t""“\';}‘ Cents a gallon for beer, $2.30 for wine | Over one-fourth the pre-war figure, with | tion of the power act was incorrect, but | pending applications. | been und for some time looking to A Thatts 1E dafonos apaint the Daster BIGLEE AN ChnE o LI AL T i e ottt wine consumption nearly doubled and | regardless of this he proposed to see | Lbcgtocindin s oigywen UGN a merger of T. A. T. and Western Alr, of vagrancy by which the aut Side_gai president, sudceeding George H. Cart S e M use of spirits about one-tenth higher | an amendment to prevent the commis- 7 and with the announcement from Pitts. hope to send him to jail for a yea “Three - Fingered Jack” White, a|lidge, Trentom, N. J., resigned. Smith KSR than before prohibition. ~The totals|sion from waiving control over non-| Work for 1,500 men is to be found | burgh yesterday it was considered prob- One ¢f Bifker's attorn “public enemy” who surrendered with | will assume bis new post Sund. hich | The drink bill, it mantained, “exceeds | given were 790,000,000 gallons of beer. | navigable tributaries of rivers which |by the English Office of Works in the | able that the consolidation. if it mac Dartow. Red Barker, also awaits trial, includes general charge of the Eastern | the most liberal estimate of what we | 110,000,000 of wine and 200,000,000 of | are government controlled waterwa | restoration of ancient bulldings anc | terializes, would include the Pittsburgh “Mike de Pike” Heitler, another The “No. 1 man,” Al (Scarface) Ca- | headquarters. | would have been spending if the eight- ' spirits Brookhart said Senators Frazier and | monumen organization FASHION INSTITUTION 4 o Tomorrow! An Eventin Coat History! The Opening A Short Suit and a Gay One! The Shop of UCCESS COATS Coats Reproduced From Leading Coat Successes Not short on style or in skirt—but short in their brief jackets, Gay in their colors—red, blue, green or black and white. Some have blouses .in wool lace, sqme haven't any at all. All have shawl or tux- edo collars of lapin* or caracul on those ever-so-smart monotone tweeds young fashionables insist on. Skirts are flared or swaggerly wrapped. Sizes are 14 to 38, *Rabbit. Suit Shop—Third Floor and Featuring the New Madelon Coats $ 69.50 Success Coats are adaptations from outstanding coat suc- cesses, reproduced to perfection for about two-thirds the price! Madelon coats. . .noted for fashion, quality and value . . .are leaders among our Success Coats. And Madelon makers, on this occasion, have autdone themselves com- pletely. \Witness the quality, the luxurious furs, the com- plete fashion authenticity! Madelon Revue in the Little Theater at 10:30, 11:30, 2:30 and 4:30 Miss Glenby of Madelon will display and discuss Madelon fashions and accessories and during the day mannequins will show these new coats with their finer fabrics, new lines, clever details, subtle colors. The coats are furred with Caracul, Krimmer, Persian, Beaver, Kit Fox, Fitch, Kolinsky, Badger, Wolf, Squirrel, Lynx and Fox. Black with black, and black with lighter furs—browns, greens. New Ornaments New Designs in Costume Bags At a Special Opening Price y means the ordinary $5 bag. The ct originality of the clasps, in s ted prystal, tortoise, turquoise preclude any such possi- bility. And t ique styles, car- ried out in dull cali, kid or suede with Java lizard—or in a brighter shoe calf or morocco~—make them triu in both fashion and value, Bag Shop—Street Floor The Collections Include Coats Right Now' There's for Women and Misses Nothing So Nice As Sketched: Left above Brown joz in a shawl collar and above-the-elbow spiral cuffs trims this woman’s coat of soft brown. Fitted snugly over the hips, flared and belted. A coat of dull green for the young matron has A Warm Quilted Left below a slenderizing effect with its long back seams and Satin Robe slight flare. A square shawl collar and oversleeves bordered in black Persian lamb are 1930 jeatures. * . e A deep square collar of black Persian lamb em- Right above phasizes the newness of this black coat for misses. The wide, flared cufls are bordered with Persian —the coat is belted and fitted. : % RS A misses” coat of dull black, belted_and fitted in a i f Right below devastatingly youthful fashion. The huge cape Suuggle into one of these toasty- collar and spiral-clbow cufls are of kit fox. warm quilted robes the next cold Unusual at $69.50 morning and you will realize how true this is—real luxurious comfort. With scalloped or tuxedo collars, set-in sleeves and patch pockets. Rose, coral, black, orchid, peach or French blue. Success Coats—Fourth Floor. The New $elleffs A FASHION INSTITUTION Knitted Bed Sacques $3.95 to $5.95 Knitted Shoulder Comforts, $3 Flannel Robes, $10 Grey Shops—Second Floor

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