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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1930 IDLE MAY SHARE $6.272.000 BILLION FLOOD AID {700 70 KEEP J0BS SET ASIDE FOR YULE MAIL ]OBS“OE AIELLO, RIVAL 08 AN PLACD ! 5 = in the reorga: of ‘work of corporation and ¥ at getti the Federsl menti out. of thg shipping business. Chairman O’Connor sald today that the Shipping Board would allow the proposed réduction pro= gram to remmin inactive at present and Mrs. Doran Visions “Perfect Hostess” | FRST BY Woobs Expecté'_ Relief Machinery to Be “Under Full Steam Within Week.” (Continued Prom First Pege.) are making redoubled efforts at em- ployment through the depzrtments, and this work will be pushed to the utmost. This problem is one that can be answered only if the whole country takes a hand at it. National unity | in action and organization is the only force that cen bring the answer. With 120,000,000 people in the United States, with our resources, our ability for or- nization and cur loyaity, we can ke care of the comparatively small fraction that are unemployed and may suffer from want and privation as cold weather comes on. “What is needed is recognition of the obligations of every man anid woman to his neighbor and to use this in team work to carry through the Winter.” Col. Woods said he was seeking the accurate numbker of unemployed. “We expect to get information from each city,” he added, “and pass it to other cifies, particularly as to success- ful methods used in combatting the un- employment problem. “We want to know all about labor conditlons, those working on part time and the number of families left with no breadwinner. It is only on accurate information that- wise action can be taken.” He said information also would be sought from the Census Bureau, the American Federation of Labor and State labor and cther agencies. Questioned whether it would be nec- essary for President Hoover to cop- vene Congress in special session a month before the December ion, Col. Woods said, “My preliminary judg- ment is that a special ,8Tess is not recessar: however, that if the Cabinet Commit- tee, with the aid of States and citics, was unable to remedy the situation a special session might be considered. Denial Made at White House. Denial was made at the White House that the President intended calling a special session. Although it had been indicated that the Chief Executive would ask Congzress to remove restrictions upon certaini public work so as to advance the con- struction program, it was said he would wait for the regular session. Col. Woods said he expected the relief machinery to be “cperating un- der full steam within a week.” He was pleased to note industry gon- erally was co-operating through the adoption of the stagger system of em- ployment. It will not be necessary for the Fed- eral Government to sct up a bread line, he said, adding the feeding of unemployed ‘was a local problem. Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown, chief of Army Engineers, announced today that all matters involving labor along the Missicsippi and Missouri Rivers were hflng handled with the greatest dis- patch to keer in emplcyment as many men as possible. y The general’s announcement wes made in connection with reports that contracts for work on the rivers were being held up in the War Depart- ment, causing the laying off of men hired by contractors t> furnish piling:. Steps Taken on All Sides. From every side today came news of steps being taken without awaiting the setup of a central organization. Not only business men and industrialists, but great numbers of workers were registering their ess to con- tribute aid. Two'Government branches given to substitutes, while the Shipping Board announced it would “forget,” for the time being, the plan to cut down the Merchant Fleet Corporation’s staff | in Washington and elsewhere. Alto- gether this cut would have laid off some 700 employes at a saving ap- proximating $1,000,000. These workers are scattered at various ports where staffs are not considered essential any longer. ‘The number affected by the post office order has not yet been deter- mined, but is to be made known short- ly. At present a good many regular employes are making 65 cents an hour for the time beyond the eight-hour period. Upward Trend Is Shown. ‘The Reserve Board’s summary of business and financial conditions for September found that after the sub- stantial decrease in factory output from May to August, September had shown an upward trend, which did not, how- ever, reach former production figures for the same month. Employment in factories also increased, though less than the usual gain for this season of the year. Residential eonstruction was #aid to have increased materially. The chief gains in employment came from the fruit and vegetable canning and the clothing industries and from retail establishments and coal mines. Employment dropped in iron, steel, au- tomobile and lumber indusiries, and so did their production. The production gains were shown chiefly in textiles, coal and copper. Suggestions reaching the Farm Board that it's supply of wheat be turned over to feeding the jobless drew from Chair- man Legge the statement the board would be glad to do so if Congress| would reimburse it for the cost of the| grain, which was acquired in stabiliza- | tion operations. Extension of the “stagger” system of employing more workers fot fewer days or hours a week, was undertaken by | Army Engineers in charge of flood con- trol works at the instance of Secretary | Hurley. HOOVER PRAISED FOR AIDING LABOR Resolution Adopted by XKiwanis| Club Commending His Efforts to | Relieve Unemployment. A resolutiod indorsing President Hoover's efforts to relieve existing un- employment conditions in this country ‘was unanimously passed by the Kiwanis Club, meeting yesterday at the Wash- ington Hotel. The resolution points out that un- em?loymflnl is a deterring factor in the revival of business conditions through- out the country and lauds the Presi- dent for his action in appointing a special commission to examine the present situation and devise ways and means to alleviate those conditions. ‘The resolution calls upon Kiwanis International to co-operate with the President in his efforts. The resolu- tion will be presented before the Capi- tal District mvention of the Kiwanis Club now in session at Virginia Beach. A series of short talks in which naval officers explained the part each took in WDI‘I:F the Navy was followed by o avy, in whic of the growth of the service and de- scribed its functionings. Others who spoke were: Maj. Gen. Ben H. Fuller, commandant of the Marine 00&: Admiral F. B. Upham, chief of Bureau of Navigation; Admiral George H. Hfi‘ fll of the first pre-historic open air museum | porary employment for more than 210,- iPest Office Dept. fakes Up Plan to Give 210,000 Tem- porary Work. ' Mooney Will Exclude All But Needy and Civil Service Eligibles. A plan whereby only those without jobs will be allowed the opportunity to shaie in the $6,272,000 set aside for the employment of extia help for the handling of the Christmas mail tnroughout the country was under con- sideration at the Post Office Depart- ment today following the announce- ment of Postmaster Willlam M. Mooney here that only the needy jobless would get Christmas jobs at the local post, office atter the eligibles under the Civil Service have been taken care of. Post Office Department officials today | estimated that if the Washington post- master’s plan is adopted, the Christmas holiday meil rush will provide tem- 000 of the country’s great army of the jobless. | The $6,272,000 has been set aside, for | the empioyment of temporary clerks, | carriers and laborers, to carry the post offices of the country over their annual Christmas “peak load.” ‘First Come’ Basis Used. Horitofore the temporary positions have been given on a “first come, first seived” basis, after those eligible but jobless under the Civil Service rules had been given their opportunity to accept or_reject the temporary employment. The jcbs, distributcd throughout the | entire Couniry. are expected to provide, a welcome stcp-gap for those who get them, at the time when they will need | work and money most. | Pcstmaster Mconey this morning an- | nounced that every effort will be made at the local Post Office to see that the Jjobless Washingtonian gets ‘his oppor- tunity to work temporarily at the Post Office during the holiday rush. ‘There will be places for about 2,200 temporary empioyes in the local post office during the rush period, the post- master estimates, on .the basis of last year's holiday business. There are about 1,300 clerks ‘and carriers on what is known as the Civil Service eli- gible list at the post office, composed of persons seeking positions with ihe st office who Fave oecome eligible by examination. The majority of ihese applicants, however, already are work- ing, many of them in other Govern- ment depariments, and cannot take advantage of the temporary jobs at the post office, An average of about 20 per cent of these eligibles, Mr. Mooney esti- mates, are without jobs and take the temporary work. This offering of work to the Civil Service eligibles is manda- tory, Mr. Mooney says, but will not cut out any who are aiready unemployed, for those who are now employed will not leave a regular position for tempo- rary work over the Christmas holidays. Hundreds of Students Apply. Mr. Mooney today said he particu- larly wants to stress the point that the needy deserve the opportunity to earn the Christmas money upon the parents of high school and college youths, who heretofore have goitcn the bulk of the temporary jobs at the post office. There are now in the post office here hun- dreds - of applications from college )’ol:_lilll and school boys for Christmas work. “The times are such” said Mr. Mooney, “that where a family is able to send a to school or college, the boy should withdraw from competition with those who actually need jobs to pay for their food and shelter. employment situation is serious, and there is every reason why those who can get along without the work should stand aside while those who need the work badly do it.” Last year the city post office paid out about $60,000 to 2,200 temporary employes, and plans are being laid this year to pay out at least that much to th: temporary workers. Last year the average total wage to temporary work- ers, at 65 cents an hour during the INSULL UTILITIES TO HELP JOBLESS ‘Months to Be Given by Employes. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 24.—Dollars from the pay checks of officers and employes of the Insull utility companies promised during the Winter months. Samuel Insull, head of the group, announced that one day's pay a month for six months would be given in volun- sonnel of his organization. “The appeal has been made to em- ployes and officers alike,” said the Insull cated that the responses will be practi- cally universal. ln!d ‘women, "fll'::m; in.” t was estima y one company official that the gift would amount to more than $100,000 per month. It will be distributed through reliet organizations to be selected later, CoL. CHEEVE.R BURIED WITH MILITARY HONORS in Many Conflicts—Held Con- gressional Medal. Military ceremonies marked the burial in the Arlington National Cemetery this afternoon -of Col. Benjamin Harrison Cheever, a retired Cavalry officer, who died at his home, in Atlantic Cit, N. J., last Tuesday in his eightieth year. Born in this city, he was commis- sioned a second lieutenant of the 6th Cavalry in August, 1876, and saw active sorvice in several Indian campaigns in the Far West, the Spanish War of 1898, the Philippine insurrection which fol- lowed and the World War. While serving with the 6th Caval: at White River, 8. Dak., in 1891, he dis- tinguished himself by bravery against a large band of hostile Sioux Indians by heading the advance across the partly- frozen river and rescuing another troop of his regiment, which had been sur- rounded by the Indians. The ther- mometer registered 20 degrees below zero at the time. Col. Cheever and his small party had to break through the ice to cross the river with their mounts. Col. Cheever was awarded the jonal Medal of Honor for his bravery and services on that At the outbreak of the World -War Col. Cheever, then on the retired list, volunteered his services and rendered valuable aid in recruit'sz at Savannah and Atlanta, Ga. Surviving him are his widow, Mrs. Cora Chapman Cheever, and a daughter, Mrs. Syewart C. Maxey of Jacksonville, Fla, Start Open-Air Museum. KOENIGSBERG, German; . —The little_town of um-unlztm One Day’s Pay Per Month for 8ix|Au today a potent fund to fight distress : B tary contributions by the entire per-/Iou Miam] Girls and boys, men < Retired Cavalry Officer Took Part|ro POSTMASTER W. M. MOONEY. | holidays, was $30, a_sum that would go a long way, Mr. Mooney thinks, in the household of the unemployed man today. Mr. Mooney has instructed his per- sonnel office to question each applicant for Christmas work to determine whether he is employed, in an edort to weed out thos> who are not dep nd- ent upon the work for their living. Particular attention will be paid to weeding out those applicants who, he says, are working in busin°ss houses about the city and who have been in the habit of saving their vacations un- til the ‘Christmas time so they can get Jobs at the post office. “This is a time,” he said, “when the man with a job should stand aside and let the man without a job earn what he can.” I THE WEATHER District of Columbia—Fair and slight- ly colder tonight, minimum temperature about 25 degrees: tomorrow fair—gentle to moderate west and northwest winds. Maryland and Virginia—Cloudy and colder tonight; tomorrow fair; fresh west and northwest winds. West Virginia—Fair, slightly colder tonight; tomorrow fair. Record for 24 Hours. ‘Thermometer—4 p.m., 56; 8 pm., 50; 12 midnight, 47; 4 am,, 43; 8 am, 45; noon, 49. Barometer—4 pm., 3009 8 pm, 0. 12 midnight, 29.94; 4 am., 20.87; .m., 20.87; noon, 29.8 Highest temperature, 2 p.m. yesterday. west temperature, 42, occurred at 4:30 am. today. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 61; lowest, 41. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) 7, occurred at ‘Tod: Low tide, 4:06 am. 4:16 pm.; high tide, 9:40 am. 10:01 p.m. Tomorrow—Low tide, 4:53 a.m. 5:01 p.m.; high tide, 10:26 a.m. 10:46 p.m. The Sun and Moon. ‘Today—Sun rose 6:26 a.m.; sun sets 5:18 p.m. ‘Tomorrow-—Sun rises 6:25 a.m. sets 5:17 p.m. Moon rises 8:25 am.; sets 6:17 p.m. Automobile lamps to be lighted one- half hour after sunset. Condition of the Waters. Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers clear this morning. Weather in Various Cities. and and and and 7 sun ‘Temperature. ueuvy Iomorvg Weather. i Abilene, Te; ibany, N. Atlantic Cit Baltimore, M Birmingham . Bismarck, N Bos hio. ... Cloudy 0.01 Pt.cloudy Clear Cloudy na, Mo; Huron, 8. Dal Indianapolis.Ind Jacksonville, Fla. Kansas City, Mo Lo Clear 0.04 Pt.cloudy Cloudy New York, N.Y 801 Cloudy Oklahoma_ City. v announcement, “and they have indi- | Q! Clear 010 Pt.cloudy Clear ... Clear 50 038 Raining 0.02 Pt.cloudy 0.06 Raining «-es Pt.cloudy (7 &.m. Greenwich time, today.) Temperature. Weather. 4 Clear e . (Neon. 3 im Horfa (Fayal), Azores.... 62 (Current observations.) Hamiiton, Ber 8 68 Cloudy Havans, Cuba Part cloudy lon. Part cloudy INDUSTRIAL BANKING It is not necessary to heve had an Account at this Bank to Borrow EASY TO PAY Monthly Deposit for 12 Loans nths $120 I $6,000 $500.00 @ THE MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. §. Treasury 1408 H Street N.W. OF CAPONE, KILLED Partner of “Bugs” Moran| Trapped as Retreat Is Cut Off by Gangsters. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 24 —Gangster guns, silent in Chicago for some time, ! opened up 2gain last night and removed Joe Alello, one of the few remaining rivals of Alfonse Capone, from the pic- ture of Chicago's crime. Alello, reputed alcohol king, partner of George (Bugs) Moran and with| Moran listed by the Chicago Crime| Commission &s & “public enemy,” was shot and killed by a gang of men, num- ber unknown, as he left the apartment of Patsy Prestogiacomo, an importer, | in North Kolmar avenue. Seventeen or more bullets were fired into the gang leader f.om machine and other guns secreted in three different | positions as Atello walked into what the police said was one of the most| elaborate assassination plots in gangland | history. Found Himself Trapped. As he stepped out of the Presto- glacomo apartment, presumably to enter a cab that was waiting take him and Prestogiacomo to his home, machine-gun fire opened from a third-floor window of an apart- ment across the street. Alello turned and fled back into the vestibule and attempted to arouse some one in the apartment. Finding his way blocked by | locked doors, he fled into the apartment | courtyard, only to meet the fire of { machine guns coming from a window of a building to the north. Fleeing to the rear of the court in an attempt to | escape over a back fence, he ran into | a fusillade of shots coming from the basmeent of the bullding housing '.he‘ Presto apartment. | A police sergeant and James Duane, | a cab driver, who had responded to a previous call for Mrs. Prestogiacomo for | acab to take Afello and her husband to | Aiello’s home, took the wounded man to a hospital, but he died before his arrival, Thus was added another victim to the long list of gangsters slain in the in- ternecine strife that had its beginning in the slaying of Dion O'Bannion in | 1924 and whicn included the machine- gun slaying of seven followers of Moran a year ago last St. Valentine’s day in a North Clark street garage. Capone Is Suspected. Varlous theories and bellefs were ad- vanced by the authorities in a possible explanation of gangland's latest slay- ing. One of these was that Alellos with the slaying last June 9 of Alfred | Lingle, a reporter for the Chicago Tri- bune, known as a friend of Capone. Some officials said they suspected Capone and mentioned the hostility be- tween Aiello and Capone in support of their suspicions. Other theories were that Alello’s assassination might have been prompted by his wish to control the destinies of the Unione Siciliane, which was at one time dominated by his irieny, 1ouy Lambardo, who was killed at Madison and Dearborn streets some years ago. Another report was that detectives had hinted that a New York gang, headed by a man known as “Joe the Boss” and believed connected with the Unione, might have been involved. Shortly after the slaying two men were reported seen running from the front of the west end building, one of them carrying a machine gun. They fled in a sedan. A Yew seconds later another machine, bearing two men, was reported to have followed the sedan. Later an automobile, with its license plates removed and its engine numbers obliterated, was found burning in an- other section of the city. ‘The police said they learned that the apartment from which the firing first began was rented by a young man 10 days ago, indicating that Afelio’s death had been plotted long in advance of last night's shooting. Alello was 39 years of age, which is considered old for a man engaged in gangland activities. He was the second of the “public enemies” to meet death since the Crime Commission fscued '+ list of undesirables last April . The other was Jack Zuta, Wh: ve< * ..l last August in a resort in Wisconsin. &C’MNJ The Call O’ Love $2.00 Weekly 8100 Blending mony — the monds and in perfect h: 5 brilliant di The “STARBEAM” Smart—Dainty $5(:e it stands ih a cl by itself. The sparkling diamond and smartly engraved mount- ing are UNUSUAL. $1.00 @ Week death might have had some connection | As Law-Observing A new idea of the perfect mod- ern_hostess is soon to be launched by Mrs. James M. Doran, wife of the commissioner of industrial al- cohol, who concocted the non- alcoholic cocktail. Her presentation of the new hostess will be made at the na- tional convention of the Women’s Christian _Temperance Union in Houston, Tex., November 14. Mrs. Doran has evolved the idea as a result of a Nation-wide symposium of women. In contrast to the perfect host- ess of years gone by, whose chief duty was to please her guests, the new 1931 pattern of hospitality chosen by the temperance women will make her guests' desires, if neccssary, subordinate. She will, first, put her guests at ease and make them feel at home; second, so tactfully but firmly im- print her own personality on any function in her home that her guests will take what she serves and like it; third, dispense only the hospitality which conforms with the laws of her city and State. A new slogan will be launched at the convention by Mrs. Doran. It is “Fill the National Goblet Legitimately.” SCHWAB PREDICTS BUSINESS REVIVAL Greatest Prosperity Era in Ameri- can History Is Ex- pected. NEW YORK, October 24 (#).—Charles M. Schwab told the American Iron and Steel Institute today that when the business revival comes, as come it must, | “it will bring to this country a larger measure of prosperity than the Amer- ican people have ever before known.” He looks forward to 1932 as “another record year.” He said the “level-headed way in which business in general has weathered the current recession is most assuring, |and shows that the underlying founda- tlons of its structure are sound. “Some are inclined to think because business pauses from time to time in its forward course, that our natural optimism has somehow been tricked,” Mr. Schwab raid. “At the first signs of recession, the timid become pessi- mistic. Assurance gives way to uncer- tainty and fear. Those with faith and courage based upon known facts refuse to accept this philosophy; they recog- nize that such pauses make for sounder progress. It is only in a stagnant eiv- ilization that changes do not occur.” As for the steel industry, Mr. Schwab id, it is within 5 per cent of the average production for the it 10 years. The gteel industry’s policy par- celing out work and maintaining wage scales has tended to keep the industry stable, he said, and has prevented far worse conditions from prevailing. ‘There was some price “sharpshooting” when the recession first came, he said, but this has been largely eliminated, and price and production stabilized. Valley Plan Attracts Hoover’s Interest. Expenditure of a billion dollars for flood control and associated hydro- electric plants in the Mississippi River Valley was uiged by Mayor James M. Curley of Boston in a conference yes- terday with President Hoover, Secretary of War Hurley and Gen. Charles P. Summerall, chief of stafl. ‘The Boston mayor sketched the possi- "bility of direct shipment of cereals, cot- ton, steel and coal through the States along the Mississippi River, contending that this commeice, coupled with cheap water transportation, would undoubt- edly prove so attractive to private capi- tal that an amount at least twice as great as the initial investment would be expended by private interests within a very few years. ‘The President, it was said, showed so much interest in this proposal that he heartily approved Mayor Curley’s offer to go into the matter further with cabi- net officers, which the Boston mayor did later with Secretary James J. Davis of the Department of Labor and Secre- tary Lamont of the Department of Commerce. He agreed to supply both of these cabinet officers with a mass cf data upon this subject. As a result of Mayor Curley’s confer- ence the Federal Government is about to turn over Governors Island to the city of Boston for development of one of o greatest airports in the world. ‘The development of this airport will cost upward of $20,000,000 and will fur- nish employment for two years to sume 2,000 men, 500 of whom will be put to work probably next month, according to Mayor Curley. In 1902 the Federal Government turned Governors Island over to the Boston municipality, but requisitioned it during the World War. The pro- posed lease will reserve to the United States Government the right to com- mandeer the island and airport devel- opment at any time it is needed for national defense. OREGON LOAN BANK WILL AID JOBLESS By the Assoclated Press. PORTLAND, Oreg., October 24— Organization of a workingmen's loan bank with a capital of $150,000 or more, to be used for unemployment relief, was proposed yesterday by Ben Selling, chairman of Portland’s Unemployment Committee. The bank’s funds would be loaned to married men with families who have lived in Portland six months or more. ‘The loans would not exceed $25 a month and would continue not more than five months. They would be re- payable at $250 a week, beginning March 15, 1931. Selling said his bank plan would care for 1,600 families during the Winter. He belleved 95 per cent of the loans would be repaid. \UNEXPECTED FLIGHT DELAYS WEDDING OF ANACOSTIA PILOT {License Is Issued After Closing Hours, When Flyer Returns From Hartford Too Late. Fast work on the part of himself and his friends made possible the marriage last night of Chief Aviation Pilot Leon- ard C. McAllister, Anacostia Naval Air Station, after he had been delayed by an unexpected flight to Hatrford, Conn., returning here after the close of the Marriage License Bureau. McAllister’s bride, Miss Generose Dickens, 24 years old, arrived by rail from Long Beach, Calif., while McAl- lister was in Hartford, where he had been sent to ferry back a new plane. McAllister did not land here until after 3 o'clock and the License Bureau was closed when he arrived at the court house. When he explained his predica- ment, however, the license was issued after hours. Buy Now for Franc’s Will Gladlj In his absence his friends had wel- comed the bride and made the last minute arrangements and at 7:30 the couple was married by Rev. Joseph V. Buckley, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, at his home, 2800 Pennsylvania avenue southeast. Chief Aviation Pilot Phillip I. Gunn of the Anacostia sta- tion was best man and Mrs. Gunn a tended the bride. McAllister's home is in Jersey City Heights, N. J. He met Miss Dickens while on duty in California six years ago. They will make their home here, at 1338 Ridge place southeast. F. W. 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Link bracelet to match at no extra charge. < §0c Weekly sesesnenneenn.i.the store that's forging ahead.......ocvsavens PROGRAM IS URGED|BY O'CONNOR ORDER Boston Mayor’s Mississippi| 250 Washingtonians Affected by Fleet Corporation Policy Suspension. Another step to alleviate unemploy- ment conditions in Washington and the Nation generally was taken yesterday by Chairman T. V. O'Connor of the Shipping Board in deciding to suspend | the discharge of about 700 emp! S of the Fleet Corporation in various parts of the country and abroad, 250 of them in_Washington. Locally, stenographers and clerks were affected mostly by the order that went | out last month under the name of| J. Caldwell Jenkins, acting president of the Fleet Corporation, who planned to reduce the numbers gradually. Under | this announced program, the jobs are safe during the Winter, at least, and | officials asserted today that the reduc- | tion program has not yet been put into effect. ‘The Jenkins order was brought about presented by amazingly 2 with two do nothing apout it. . PROMINENT ENGINEER FOUND SHOT TO DEATH By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, Ga., October 24.—Charles Cecil Case, prominént Atlanta engineer and building contractor, was found shot to death on the banks of Peach Tree Creek early today. Membors of the family said he had been despondent over ill-health. A pistol, with ofe chamber empty, lay nearby. Police who found the said it apparently had plunged bridge to the bank of the creck, fect below A search was under way for Case, who failed to return home Thursd night. His firm built much of the Atlanta waterwoiks system. His construction of a four-mile water -supply tunncl at Charleston, S. 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