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| Dow’t Take Risks " With Your 'Valuables Keep your surplus silver and jewelry in our safe de- posit vaults, and your furs | and garments in our Cold vaults. We guarantee their safety. A trunk or case valued at 8500, carried to and from the vaults and stores for 2 months for $3. After that $1 per ‘month. A trunk of clothing in the Cold Storage Department, + cartage back and forth in- cluded, $6 for 6 months, Fur coats from $2 up for 6 ir“;“rifn Srorage 1140 FIFTEENTH ST ! - RADIATOR FURNITURS. Stops Smudge Humidifies Air Beautifies Room Write or Phone National €703 for free estimate. F. B. Blackburn, Distributor 706 CHANDLER BLDG. 1427 Eye St. N.W. 7202 Meadow Lane Chevy Chase, Md. This _six-room English-type red brick and white weather-board home in Meadowbrook combines all of the you could desire. are a large liv- ing room. dinin try: on the second floor, th: . two Nso & 3 wide ered side porch: General Electric Re- frigerator. built-in kitchen cabinets, Sanitas (washable) walls, etc. $16,950 Convenient Terms But don't stop to vead about it... Rurry out and see it! Drive out Con- necticut Avenue to Columbia Country Glub, “turn left on West Cyprest Street (Bethesda-Silver Spring High- way) one block to property. Phone Wisconsin 2764, 1 to 9 P.M. L, A WARREN DEVELOPMENT Just Think of It— ‘The Star delivered to Can you afford to be service at this cost? Telephone National 5000 and de- livery will start at once. SPECIAL NOTICES. AWNINGS REPAIRED, HUNG, REMOVED and stored reasonably: window shades, 85c up. WALTER J. PROCTER CO., Nat. 1456. WANTED—] LOADS., NEW YORK (N. C.), points South. Long-distance moving - | for State officers other than Governor. PINCHOT IS REAL KEYSTONE ISSUE Ex-Governor Has Caused Vare Organization to Bolt Republican Party. (Continued Prom Pirst Page.) niwell, candidate for Governor on the Democratic ticket in 1926, and John MeSparran, Democratic candidate for Governor in 1922 against Pinchot him- self in that year, both to desert Hemp- hill and board the Pinchot band wagon. | And why? Represents Anti-Sentiment. | _‘These strange antics of widely known Republicans and Democrats are due to the fact that Pinchot in his own per- son represents the anti-public utility ! sentiment, the anti-machine sentiment and the prohibition sentiment in this great Keystone State. To his opponents he is a fanatic dry and, what is worse in their eyes, a radical. They even picture him in their broadsides as a “red.” In addition, Mr. Pinchot's candidacy represents the enmity of the Republicans out in the State for the Philadelphia Republican organization. The out- State Republicans do not intend to have the Philadelphia organization control the State, either through a Republican candidate of its own choosing or through a Democratic candidate whom it is will- ing to back. ‘The gubernatorial contest in Penn- sylvania this year has dwarfed in in- terest all the other contests, senatorial, congressional .and for the remainder of the State ticket. All over the rest of the country they are talking about hard times, prohibition, the tariff, the |drought, the Hoover administration. Here they talk about Pinchot. If the former Governor is anxious to be in the spotlight, as his enemies charge, he certainly has achieved his desire dur- ing these final days of the campaign. Davis Election Assured. There is not the slightest question thai Secretary James J. Davis, who has headed the Department of Labor in the cabinets of three Republican Presidents, will elected to the United States Senate on November 4. Pennsyl- vanians have almost forgotten the name of his Democratic opponent, Sedgwick Kistler, although it appears on the bal- lot. Nor is there any question about what the result of the election will be They will be won by the Republican nominees. E£o far as the members of the House are concerned, the Democrats have already picked up one seat, in the eleventh of Scranton district, for Pat- rick J. Boland, the Democratic nominee, has no Republican opponent in that district. He received the Republican nomination as well as that of his own party. There are close fights in the| twelfth, fourteenth, twentieth and thir- tieth congressional districts, all of which are now held by Republicans. The thirtieth district, represented by Coyle in the present Congress, has been .a fighting district for a long time. In this off year the Democrats are likely to carry it. Just how the Republican defections from the Pinchot candidacy will affect congressional candidates is impcssible to gauge. However, the great re t is costly in the city of Philadelphia, and the Vare organization is expected to take care of its Congressmen. Out in the State more Democrats are expected to vote for Pinchot than Republicans are expected to vote for Hemphill. Un- der such circumstances the strange alignments in the gubernatorial race i may help the Republican congressional candidates rather than the Democratic. Has Liberals to Thank. The amazing Mr. Pinchot has to thank the new Liberal party for his present prominence. The Liberal party made it possible for Mr. Pinchot to be nominated. It made the Republican gubernatorial primary last Spring a three-cornered affair. These Liberals put up Thomas W. Phillips, jr., a former member of the House, as their candi- date for the Republican nomination for Governor. Phillips’ only platform was the repeal of the eighteenth amendment and everything that goes with it. The | Liberals were not content to stay with Prancis Shunk Brown, the candidate of | the Vare organization and many other | Republicans out in the State. Mr. Brown, 8ithough he did not come out | strongly on the wet-and-dry issue, was | satisfactory to the wet Vare orgariza- tion, and that should have satisfied any wet. In a race against Brown, without Phillips messing up the situation, Pin- chot undoubtedly would have lost, and all the heartburnings of the wet Re- publicans might have been avoided. But having made the nomination of the dry Mr. Pinchot possible, the lib- eral Republicans began to cast about for some way to defeat him. They in- sisted at first they would put an inde- pendent wet candidate in the field, but that would have made another three-cornered race, with Pinchot run- HE EVE By the Associated Press. Deportation of aliens unlawfully in the United States will be continued in a normal manner, Harry E. Hull, immi- gration commissioner, said yesterday, in commenting on the voluntary rush of aliens in San Francisco seeking return to their native lands. J. D. Nagle, immigration officer in the California city, said yesterday so many aliens were gvlrg themselves up for deportation his office could not handle all of them. The rush was attributed partly to unemployment in this coun- DEPORTATIONS TO KEEP NORMAL PACE, DESPITE RUSH OF APPEALS 'U. S. Unable to Grant Requests of Jobless Aliens Yearning for Native Lands. ‘The last Congress q‘)pmprukd ap- proximately $1,500,000 for the curren fiscal year, which allows 1,500 individ- uals to be deported monthly. “Of course, we try to use discretion and center the available funds on the removal first of the criminal and defec- tive portions of those aliens deportable,” Mr. Hull said. “The others are warned to leave, and generally go of themselves. However, we could always speed up deportation with more funds, and Congress has been for several years increasing annually the total allowed to carry on this work.” the Democratic nominee for Senator, Sedgwick Kistler. Mr. Pinchot asked the liberal party why, after having “made a deal” with the Democratic nominee for Governor, Hemphill, it had abandoned Hemphill's running mate, Kistler, “who, if the plans of the liberal party were sincere, should have been the principal candi- date on the ticket.” Liberal Party Replies. To this the liberal party replied: “The liberal party was able to.per- suade John Hemphill to become its sole candidate for office only after the pub- lic-spirited action of Kistler in urging Hemphill to accept. The liberal party’s reason in having only Hemphill on its ticket is obvious. “Secretary Da%is, in our opinion, is a sound candidate for the United States Senate. Mr. Pinchot, on the other hand, in our opindon, is a menace to industry, employment d the con- tinuation of the sound policies of ti Republican party. Finally, Mr. Pincho openly stands for the fanaticism and tyranny of the W. C. T. U. and the Anti-Saloon League, for neither of which, in our opinion, Secretary Davis stands.” And that's that, in its answer to Mr. Pinchot, however, the liberalists dis- close what is becoming more and more apparent as the campaign progresses. That _is, the Republican opponents of Mr. Pinchot shouting for repeal of the reason as a cloak for their ?po:mon to Mr. Pinchot's program relating to the public utilities and the railroads. Mr. Pinchot has been attacking the Public Utilities Commission the State day in and day out. He has charged over and over again that the public utility interests and the rail- roads are favored at the expense of the consumers of light and power and the people who must use the railroads. He has charged that the Pennsylvania tracts organi: leaders and their friends. has gained control of politics in this ecity. Mr. Pinchot proposes to remedy all that. He would do away with the Public Utilities Commission and provide for an elected board to deal with the pub- lic utility rates, etc. Denies Radical Charge. Mr. Pinchot says, in effect, that the public utility exploiters are make it appear that he is attacking legitimate business in Ivania; that he is a radical and not to be trusted as chief executive of the State. Pinchot denies these charges and points to his record as Governor of Pennsyl- vania from 1922 to 1926. Mr. Pinchot has charged that the Philadelphia organization has caused the city to go into debt to the tune of $600,000,000 and that a great deal of the huge debt has been due to the “cost plus” contracts which thbe or- ganization let to the Vare Construction Co., to Hall and to tham and to others of the organization and for which the taxpayers of the city will have to pay. Is it any wonder that the Vare organization is ready to knife Mr. Pinchot? The loud howls against Mr. Pinchot’s dryness continues. For exam] a visit to_the ant{-Pinchot finds a huge placard, saying, “Vote Wet and Help Honest Hemphill Hit Hypcrasy.” Quite alliterative. But these howls are covering up less and less the real issue in this campaign, which is the determi- nation of the Pennsylvania Railroad, represented by its president, Gen. Atter- bury, and the big public utility interests to prevent the election of Mr. Pinchot. It is quite true that there are a large number of honest-to-goodness wet Re- publicans who believe that Mr. Pinchot should not be elected because he is a . But they are permitting them- selves and their issue to be used by the big utility interests to help defeat the Republican candidate for Governor and by the Vare organiaztion, which does real?l'avor prohibition amendment, are using that | not wish to see Pinchot 15 the Gov- ernor’s chair. Pennsylvania has a drastic prohibi- tion enforcement act, the Synder act. It was put through in 1923 when Pinchot was Governor of the State. With a de- lightful candor, the wets say that if Pinchot is elected, the law may be en- forced. Hemphill has pledged himself to work for the repeal of the State en- forcement act it he is elected. g ‘The Democratic candidate for Gover- nor, John Hemphill, has been pitch- forked into the limelight by his oppo- sition to Gov. Pinchot and by the many friends he has made among Pinchot's enemies. Had it not been for the curi- ous circumstances surrounding this campalgn, Hemphill would have been just another of the Democratic candi- dates who have run for office in this rock-ribbed Republican State. He is 39 years old, a lawyer, a veteran of the World War who saw service in many of the bitterly fought campaigns in France, with a record for bravery and ability as a soldier. Mr. Pinchot charges, however, that Hemphill will be a tool of the Vare machine, so far as Philadelphia is concerned, and that he will be subservient to the interests which are now backing him, Hemphill, for Governor. Pinchot supporters poin out that Hemphill studied law while in the office of Francis Shunk Brown, the Vare organization’s candidate for the gubernatorial nomination in the pri- mary. Dr. Abram Simon to Preach. A sermon on “What Ought We Jews Believe?” will be delivéred tomorrow night at 8 o'clock by Dr. Abram Simon before the Washington Hebrew Congre- gation. Saturday morning at 10:30 o'clock, Dr. Simon will interpret the Biblical portion. Will Rogers Says: BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., October 23.—Got back home without a punc- ture. We may good they are selling worth the money now. Mr. Hoover just appointed an em- ployment agent to see who was working and who was just standing talking about de- pression. One of our submarines went down 322 feet ly. We have had ‘'em go ywer than this, but this is the first one to get back up again. Germany has a new aeroplane with its tail where its head ought to be. They to call it the congressional COUNT OF JOBLESS BEEUN BY POLCE New York Campaign to Aid Unemployed Gets Back- ing of Leaders. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 23 —Policemen began counting those out of work and in need today as part of the campaign under way to relieve suffering in the city this Winter because of unemploy- ment. The Emergency Employment Com- mittee, composed of 100 industrialists, financiers and civic representatives, was organized yesterday to raise $150,000 a week, for a pay roll fund to be admin- |istered through the Charity Organiza- tion Soclety and the Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor. It is planned to provide work in parks and on other city property. Mayor Opens Shelters. ‘Mayor James J. Walker, in announc- ing that members of the Police Depart- | ment would be detailed to make the un- employment census, said he planned to throw open the recreation piers, Bronx Terminal Market and other municipal buildings to house homeless. He said subordinate employes on the city pay rolls would bé asked to contribute $1 a month toward a relief fund. He esti- mated that this fund, with contribu- tions from officials, would amount to $150,000 a month. At the meeting of the Emergency Em- ployment Committee & message from President Hoover was read expressing his appreciation of the work undertaken by the committee. The Executive Committe¢ decided to adopt a plan similar to the Liberty loan drives to canvass all trade groups in the city for contributions to the pay roll fund. Task Called Tremendous. Walter S. Gifford, president of the American Telephone & Telegraph -Co., explained that the plan for the Emer- gency Employment Committee was the | result of ~discussions with Cornelius Bliss, chairman of the board of Bliss, Fabyan & Co. and president of the Association for Improving Condition of | the Poor. . “There will be a tremendous addi- tional task this Winter,” he said, “due | to the amount of unemployment which |in many cases has been running for over a year, which means that numer- ous families have two Winters to go through without work. Their savings cases is quite desperate. We do mot | believe fl?l.l is the only thing that | should be done, but we believe that at least it should be done and must be done.” . PLAYERS ORGANIZED Adults of Macfarland Community to Sponsor Drama Group. A “Little Theater” group is to be organized in the Macfarland Community | Recreation Center at a meeting to_be | held in the Community Center October |29 at 8 pm. the community center | department of the public schools an- | nounced today. Ruth Harsha McKenzie, who assisted with the Yale Theater last season, will direct the group. | "'The organization is expected to enter a play in the annual one-act play tournament sponsored the Com- munity Drama Guild in February and plans are being made to affiliate with the guild. The drama group will be open to all adults in the Macfarland community. | |uo 13th St. N.W. I District 3324-3325 ' W. STOKES SAMMONS Or our phone number Vigy are used up. The situation in many | DuPont TONTINE is a beautiful waterproof, sun- proof shade fabric—the most Satisfactory Shade Cloth on the market. We make shades to order and guarantee the fit and serv- NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1930. BUSINESS LEADERS SEE"“SOLID FUTURE” Executives Agree—Hoover Message Optimistic. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 23.—A picture of optimism for the economic future was laid before the American people today by the conference here of leaders of | imajor industries in the United States. ‘While there will be no spectacular re- covery of business, in the opinion of speakers at the conference, the “turning point” has been reached, and this in itself was described as a step toward a more solid future. ‘The conference, the seventh of its kind, held under auspices of the Uni- versity of Chicago and the American Institute of Meat Packers, was attended by more than 40 of the Nation's chief industrialists, business men, educators and others. Farmer More Self-Dependent. L. J. Tabor, master of the National Grange, sald: “Agriculture is at the turn of the road. Despite drought and the decline in prices, the farmer has learned to look less to Government and Congress and more to himself.” Organization of agriculture, estab- lishment of a farmer owrs#d and con- trolled merchandising system and equal- ity of taxation were advocated by Tabor Treat colds this new way, as recom- mended by doctors. Quick-healing Mistol gives your nose and throat vel- vety coolaess, soothing soreness away. Reduces swelling of inflamed nasal membranes, checks infections. A spe- | cial Mistol dropper comes in the pack- i today! Pleasant—easy—sure! J Misto Made by the Makers of Nujol L5 N “SAFE MILK. BABIES " “Turning Point” Reached, 40 age. At all drug stores. Get a bottle | of the farmer's - :lmeuu restoring pur. power. Opinions that American industry has solved the technical problems of pro- duction and that American standards and wages have come to stay were ex- pressed by other speakers. Barnes Blames Tariff Foes. Julius H. Barnes, chairman of the board of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, sald that adoption by Europe of American standards of living would absorb surplus stocks that are de- ?rasa\n' trade markets. He blamed tariff wars for economic distress. He spoke at the conference's annual banquet last night, at which Glenn Frank, president of the University of ‘Wisconsin, also outlined his views, which included a program of high wages, shorter hours and more leisure to make Sparl in . ) A note of catch up with productior, Was =i =3 2 Telae bet: 1o el spheres of activity.” | Rio de Janeiro Banks Open. | RIO DE JANEIRO; Brazl, Qcteber | 33 (#).—Banks of Rio de Janeiro opened | yesterday for the first time sinos Octo~ ber 6. and functioned n . except for discounting on bills of exchange, | which right was reserved for the Banco | do Brasil in a new decree of President Wuhmz:n‘ Luis Monday. The offic! A of e mi (9.5 to the dollar. B g Linen for Gay Hallowe’en When witches mount the broom . . . hob- goblins of all kinds take charge of the evening . . . and the fun ends ‘round the table. . Then you'll want your linens to be clean, smooth . . . well ironed! Have them Tolmanized now. Tol- man's special sizing process will make them ready for banquet or buffet + man Laun ? preferre luncheon! Tol- is those Service by who can afford the best . Yet, Tolman prices are no hx:dher. A!l( the Tolman route man to cflll. % TOIMAN LAUNDRY F. W. MacKenzie—Pres. Corner 6th and C Phone Metropolitan g Streets N.W. 0071-0072-0073 Branch Offce—6 Dupont Circle. Phone NOrth 3445 TRY TOLMAN-ZORIC— Our Magic New Method bf Dry Cleaning CHEVY CHASE DAIRY MOTHER NATURES BOTTLES of HEALTH DELIVERED FRESH DAILY TO YOUR HOME our specialty Smith's '§f fer & Storage PoN ice. Ask us for estimates. spread iton 5 ning against the wet Democrat, Hemp- m hill, and the wet liberal party candi- | date, it looked like a sure way of elect- | 9 B beraiy decled. 1 sndoree as e G u Ln E N s BE g o ChATEcs October 30 Buick Seqam, | ane Oy 1383998 B e the liberals decided to’ indorse as their . serial 1345052, New state_tag : % S what the have doe. 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