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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D., 10; MONDAY, JANUARY 2501932 ° GLASS 15 QUOTED IN REPLY BY HYDE Secretary Refers to Records | to Show Post-War Loans Without Legal Authority. Becretary Hyde, whose charges that President Wilson's administration made postwar loans to Europe without legal suthority were called & “malicious fabrication” by Senator Glass of Vir- ginia, today turned Government documents for substantiation Pointing to printed page and para- graph, the Republican cabinet member | quoted the statements of Senator Glass, Secretary of the Treasury at the end of the Wilson regime, and his predecessor, Willlam G. McAdoo, in seeking legislation “extending the au- thority to establish credits in favor of foreign governments.” Nearly $2,000,- 000,000 was sent to the war-torn allies, he charged, although Congress had de- nied approval of permissive legislation He quoted McAdoo as saying: ‘“We have no power to consider such loans now. We have no authority to make such loans.” Secretary Hyde first made his accu- gations in speeches in which he con- fidently predicted the re-election of President Hoover. Senator Glass re- plied heatedly on the Senate floor, say- ing they were “false in spirit and in fact.” to Truth Held Available. “There isn't a word of truth in it the Virginian said, “and the Secretary of Agriculture might easily have as- certained the facts had he been as cautious to observe the truth as he was swift to misrepresent the facts.” Hyde said the point he was stressing that nearly all of America’s “deli- te economic and political questions have grown out of the war or have been enhanced by it” and that Mr. Hoover was not responsible for the Joans made after the war. “It is perfectly evident,” the Secre- tary contended in his answer, “that if the provisions of the law had been fol- lowed in making loans to foreign gov- ernments, we should have had not de- mand notes, which had later to be funded and scaled down, but market- able obligations of foreign governments bearing, as the law required, a rate of interest not less than the Liberty loans from which the money was derived and containing substantially the same terms and conditions. Such loans would not have become enmeshed in questions of reparations, in which we had no share and which ‘were no part cf their consideration. We g0t no colonies. We did not ask to be made whole by reparations, and if Mr. McAdoo and Mr. Glass had followed the plain terms of the Liberty loan acts, which were their sole source of author- ity, we should nqt now be engaged in endless international complications and debate.” Waving a darge cigar for emphasis Hyde told newspaper men he was not now_raising other questions, such’es the European talk of cancellation at the time the post-war loans were made. Liberty Loan Acts. He said Glass perhaps had forgotten that the Liberty loan acts limited the loans to “the purpose of more ef- fectually providing for the national se- curity and defense and prosecuting the war.” Becretary McAdoo was quoted as say- iny before the Hous: Ways and Means Committae on December 12, 1918, in support of legislation he recommended, “The purpose of this amendment is to enlarge the power so that you may lend | for other purposes than those necessi- tated by the war.” | Glass succeeded McAdoo December 16 as head of the Treasury. He also favored the legislation, Hyde held, and said before the same committee, “I urgently ask the authority to broaden | the purposes for which the loans to foreign governments may be made.” “If Glass thought he had authority,” Hyde asked, “why did he come before Congress and ask for more?” | TRADE ACCORD REACHED Canadian . Official From New Zealand With Agreement. OTTAWA, Ontario, January 25 (&) ~—Returning with a tentative trade un- derstanding between Canada and New Zealand, H. H. Stevens, minister of trade and commerce, arrived in Ottawa yesterday. Premier G. S. Harrington of Nova Scotia also reached the capital vesterday. The cabinet probably will give im- mediate consideration’ to the New Zealand agreement so that if further negotiations by cable are necessary they may go forward and the final terms of a treaty be decided. Terms of the agreement have not been dis- closed — Returns SPEC I WL ot B debts “contracted myself. ~ ALBERT ragut st. nw. st I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debt contracted by any one other than my- selt. William L. Horstkamp, 1107 8th st. n.v. 5 ANY other S. 616 Far- WHO OWES YOU MONEY? LET US GET it for you—anywhere. No charge for serv- ices if o collection_ Reports at small fees Federal Protective Bureau. 301 Bond_Bide HONEY_5-LB. TIN. PURE. 90c DELIVERED. For folks Who can't eat sugar. HONEY POT. 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AVE.. 3rd and N N.E ROOF WORK— -9t a7 nature promptiy and capably per- ormed by PrACtiCal Toofers. Call us upt i NS Eoonne 193rd St 8w, Company. District 0933 PROPOSALS. BONIAN INSTITUTION, Office of the T Natonal Zoojowical’ Fark. Wash- D. C., January 23, 1932.—Sealed pro- w Teceived ‘at this office until 2 k pm. on the 16ih day. of Pebruary and then opened, for the erection of t 11,000 linear feet of chain link fence, the National Zoological 3 d_speciica st this office. and | ital Press Lin oples of which 1824,25.26 Uncovered by Archeologists in Mexico temb that the six Mixtecan wa: benches. Lower is shown some left to right, a 31-bead strand the upper square of which rcsembles a head and two earrings. In center, a nec! bottom, some of the plaques taken from PPER is shown the interior of the king of chiefs tomb recently opened by archeologists atop Mount Alban, in-Oaxaca, Mexico. rrior kings were found seated on stone | 1t was in this of the rarest jewels recovered. At top, of perfectly matched pearls: a pendant, calendar stone; a baton with serpent’s klace delicately wrought of gold, and, at the tomb. —A. P. Photos. COUP FREES DENVER (INAP PRSONER Police and Newspaper Lead Bower Captors to Suspect Treachery Among Selves. By the Associated Press. | DENVER, January 25—Return of Benjamin P. Bower from a mountain cabin, in which Kidnapers held him five days, was followed quickly by revelation of a coup, whereby police | and a newspaper tricked the gangsters into suspecting each other of treachery and thus broke up the plot to extort $50,000 from Bower's family. Bower, 62-year-old Denver bakery manager, was taken by motor car to West Denver and released early yes- terday. His eyes were covered with adhesive tape, which he was instructed to wear until he could no longer hear the motor of the kidnapers' car In a copyrighted article the Rocky | Mountain News revealed it had pub- | lished last Saturday morning a false note, written by Police Chief Albert T.| Clark and purporting to have been re- ceived by Mrs. Bower from the| Kidnapers, to create suspicion in the | minds of the gangsters. | Different Place Given. 0 almost identical with one “r?l]l'fihumgr‘\ Bower to his wife Friday, the note differed in designation of a place of rendezvous for the payment of the ransom. “Indicating today one of the m‘;*mhvr.& robably the ‘pay-off man,’ had destroy- D riginal. substituting the ficti- | tious, in an effort to grab the $50,000. | The desired result was achieved and Bower was released as & result of the note, the News said It reported there Were four men in the gang, including “the chief.” e | ‘T Ghe same ardicle the News said that Mrs. Bower, in answering Bower's note, had driven to the Dj’n\‘(‘l‘ home of Joseph P. Roma and delivered a note to Homa as directed. It also said she delivered another such note to a man named Smaldone. Both men, the News said, accepted the not lf delivery to Mr. Bower in his captivity “[n\e News further stated that, after acceptance of the note by Roma, Chief Clark called Roma to his home and told him he would hold him personally Tesponsible for Bower's safety, and that Bower was released soon afterward Neither Roma_nor been arrested early today. Bower is be- {ng kept under heavy police guard at one of his captors as he was being released. gether because we'll be back to see you in a day or two,” Bower sald he was told. Joyous at his escape from the gang which dragged him from his home last Tuesday night, Bower said the tape was never taken from his eyes save for a brief moment when he wrote a short men who grarded him. “They fed me ham and eggs, straw- berry jam and bread,” he said. “It was dark all the time and the place was warm, so I slept. They treated me civilly and didn’t harm me in any way.” {The News said it was “reliably in- I formed that not one cent of the $50,000 demanded by Mr. Bower's abductors m;dbeen paid, and not offg, cent will be Smaldone had | his home because of a threat made l7yJ “You'd better get that $50,000 w-1 letter to his wife at dictation of. the | BRADY BOMB QUI CONTINUES HERE District Detective Sergeant Aids Inquiry of Balti- more Officials. The new year-old S begun Satur today by Lieut Charles Sc tective Bure, investigation of the Pleasant bombing case was being continued Joseph TItzel and Sergt lter of the Baltimore De- isted by Detective Sergt. Thomas Sullivan of Washington ‘The Baltimore officers, who handled the first investigation of the case, were asked to reopen ir inquiry by State’s Attorney Alan Bowie of Prince Georges County, following discovery of 17 sticks of dynamite ir apital garage. The dyna according to the de- tectives, cont the same percentage of nitroglycerin opears to be of the same manuf; as that used in the bomb. It also is said to be similar to dyna- mite found on the Mitchellville, Md., farm of Clarence Brady, uncle of Leroy | Brady, now serving a 10-year term in the Maryland Penitentiary for second- degree murder in the death of one of three persons killed in the explosion The blast occurred New Year day, 1930, when Mrs. Naomi Hall Brady, 18-year-old bride of Leroy's brother, Herman, opened what she thought was a belated Christma She and her sister and brother, Dorn Hall, 4, and Samuel, 19 months, were killed, and several other members of were maimed At the time of the explosion, Leroy was employed as an automobile me- chanic in the garage in which the dynamite was found last Tuesday night. Boy Fatally Hurt in Ball Game. WARREN, Pa, January 25 (@) —A 10-year-old boy was killed in & base beil game yesterday. The lad, Clare Springer, across the stomach by slipped from the hands boy. He died on the ‘The coroner exonerated t was_ struck a bat that of an older to a hospital he batter, Will Rogers Says: LONDON.—Got the dope o international bankers that a?a“c‘é'éf ing for us to cancel. Every Amer- ican trade com- missioner and business man over here tell of the flock of bankers repre- : sentatives over | in Germany and Europe in the last few years. Hotel lobbies full of ’em, of- 4 fering all kinds of commissions to help put over | loans for American banks. The | loans were forced over here as much l as the sales of 'em were forced over home. Now they want the Gov- ernment to cancel to make up for ?l:!" n\IlS]!,akes. Now if this is not e real lowdown on it, t] is a Republican, e { two- | the family RARE JEWELS FOUND IN TOMB OF KING OF CHIEFS. HALF BILLION cUT B UL 1S SOUGHT National Chamber of Com- merce Orders Survey Look- ing Toward Economy. A survey of Government expenditures to determine the possibility of effecting a_haif-billion-dollar cut that would in- clude pay roll retrenchment has been ordered by the Board of Directors of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States as part of the program of a spe- | | cial committee delving into Fede finances A preliminary report by this com- mittee, submitted to the board at its concluding session here Saturday and | given out for publication today, demands | radical curtailment of disbursements by | the Government. The board itself adopted a resolution calling upon officers of the chamber to | suspend, during the present situation, | any requests for increased Federal ex- | penditures, even though they might have been approved by past chamber committees Many Items Specified. This preliminary report from the | committee, which is headed by Matthew 8. Sloan, 'president of the New York Edison Co., specifies more than a score | of large items which could be reduced | immediately to help balance the Gov- ernment, budget | This follows a move by the directors | for a referendunf among the chamber’s | membership on a declaration in favor | of cutting expenses to balance the Gov- | ernment’s accounts rather than to do | this through taxation. Particular avenues which offer the best possibilities for cuts, the Sloan re- pori says, are national defense, Federal- aid grants to States, pensions and vet- erans’ benefits, the Departments of Ag- riculture, Labor, Commerce and Post | Office, Farm Board and something more | than 40 independent establishments On the matter of national defense, the report suggests that the new naval | construction be suspended pending the | forthcoming arms conference, and it favors centralization of combinable ac- tivities of the War and Navy Depart- ments. Social work in the Agriculture and the Labor Departments is viewed critically, as is the expansion of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of the Department of Commerce. | DEATH HELD. ACCIDENTAL Report on Mrs. Dowle, 84, Victim Pf a Fall, Made by Dr. MacDonald. A certificate of accidental death was issued by Dr. A. Magruder Macdonald, deputy coroner, in the death of Mrs. Elizabeth Dowle, 84, 719 H street south- | west, in Casualty Hospital yesterday | from injurles received Saturday when she slipped and fell on a street car track | on_Seventh street southwest | Mrs. Dowle was treated at the hos- | pital for a broken collar bone and cuts on the head. | Why We Do It } It’s easy enough to sell “just dinary service. in the promptness of its de- it gives to individual heating problems. it? tomers COME BACK to us, year after year! ’Phone us your order—find out for yourself! William King & Son COAL MERCHANTS ESTABLISHED 1835 Main Office 1151 16th Street Phone Decatur 0273 | coal” and to render an or- King & Son insists on being EXCEPTIONAL — in the high quality of its pure, long-burning Anthracite . . . liveries, and in the attention SPECIALIST DEATH LAID TO CYANIDE | Further Analysis to Be Made, However, in Case of Dr. Glover, Boston. By the Associated Pre BOSTON, January 25.—Cyanide, ab- sorbed probably from a solution With | which he was making experiments in & search to discover a substance to retard | the growth of cancer, caused the death of Dr. Ernest Chellis Glover, Medical | Examiner Timothy J. Leary said last night | "Dr Glover, who at the age of 20 was regarded as having made promising | steps in the field of cancer research, | was stricken Friday while working in a | 1ittle laboratory at City Hospital. |~ He staggered out of the cubicle in | which he was working and fell uncon- scious in_the corridor. Death came | within a half hour. The young doctor had been experimenting with fatty sub- | stances derived from animal tissue and | was using a dilution containing a solu- | tion of cyanide. Final Analysis to Be Made, Leary, after performing an , said he had found traces of poison, but that the'reactions were so | minute a chemical analysis of the stom- | ~As result of the chemical anal | there was no doubt, Dr. Leary said, that | cyanide caused death. How the poison | was absorbed, the medical examiner could not say. He added, however, that the solution with which Dr. Glover was | working probably furnished the means. | The solution might have been so | strong a simple trace absorbed into Dr. | Glover's system, possibly by wiping his | mouth with his hand, would have been | sufficient to cause death, the medical | examiner said. “But it is not like the | usual cyanide case,” Dr. Leary added. ‘ Was Research Fellow. | Dr. Glover was employed as a research fellow in the Thorndyke Memorial Laboratory, which is the research unit of the Boston City Hospital. His brief career was regarded by medical asso- ciates as a particularly brilliant one. Dr. George Minot, professor of medi- cine at the Harvard Medical School and | director of the Thorndyke Laboratory, described the young man’s death as a “distinct loss.” " He said that Dr. Glover had been working along the lines of Prof. Maisin, celebrated authority on cancer at Louvain, Belgium, and that he had opened up “an important lead” in_the study of cancer. Dr. Glover was graduated from Har- vard College in 1924, a leader in his | class. “He studied at the University of Louvain and was married only a month 280 to Miss Dorothy E. Colby of Brook- ne. | HORSE FALLS ON MAN Employe ofrHunr' Cil\l;‘l Injured in Accident at Stables. Hayden Anderson, 48, colored em- ploye of the Riding and Hunt Club, was | injured about the hips and legs today | when a horse fell on him while he was at work in the club's stables at Twenty- second and P streets Anderson was removed to his home, at 1132 Twentieth street, in an auto- mobile and later was taken to Emer- gency Hospital in the ambulance of the fire Tescue squad when his condition became worse. | 2 28 Years of Service - DENTISTRY ' In A B | LOWER PRICES | EASIER | TERMS 1 FREE | DENTAL X-RAYS |RESTORING LOST TEETH 1 During the many years of my dental practice 1 have developed a successful technique for restoring lost teeth. T invite you to take ad- vantage of this service, Dr. Carleton Vaughan DENTIST 932:934 F St. N.W. Over Metropolitan Theater MEtropolitan 9576 ranches g » % But Wm. Why do we do Because it makes cus- Georgetown 2901 K Street Experiment Fatal DR. ERNEST GLOVER, Young Boston specialist in cancer re- search, who died, apparently from ef- fects of cyanide. Woman Promoter Of Charity Movies Held in Atlanta Arrested Under Sunday Closing Law at Theater Door; Ex-Pastor Blamed. By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, January 25.—Sunday movies for benefit of the unemployed met with police resistance yesterday. | Mrs. M. S. Margeson, director of the Women's division of Mayor Key's Emergency Relief Committee, was ar- rested 10 minutes after the doors opened at a local theater. The performance was permitted to continue, but Mrs. Margeson was cited to appear in Recorder’s Court Wednes- day on charges of violating a city or- dinance forbidding Sunday movies even in the name of charity. The charges were brought by Dr. C. A. Norton, retired minister, Margeson said. The arrest was made by Chief of Police James L. Beavers in_person. Mrs. Margeson several weeks 8go challenged Atlanta ministers to under- write the sums realized from Sunday movies for aiding the unemployed or | else withdraw their objections to the | Sunday performances. | Several pastors replied. declaring the | churches were already bearing a heavy | portion of the relief work, “The Mikado” is said to be the only Gilbert and Sullivan opera to be pro- duced at the Metropolitan Opera House, in New York. Mrs. | ROOSEVELT FACING HARD TAGK IN EAST New England Is Challenge to |His Strength in West—Smith Still Silent. By the Associated Press. Now, formally in the race for the presidential nomination, Gov. Roose- velt of New York finds his candidacy far in front of Democratic rivals, but | | ACUTE INDIGESTION strikes Ni ght! late at (when drug stores are closed.) Why not be safe with Bell-ans on hand . . . Now! BELLANS| Feel Tired, Lazy? Biliousness sick headaches bother you> Flush poisons from the facing hurdles of a most difficult sort Announcement Saturday that Roose- | velt sccepted campaign efforts on his | behalf came with the West and South lined up for him about as well as pos- | sible at this stage of the campaigning. But the Eastern States and New Eng- | land offer a challenge which may nul- | lify this advantage, while scattered “favorite son” States hold off to seel which way to jump. Besides the sev- eral yet undeclared possible contestants and the announced candidacy of Gov. Ritchie of Maryland, the Eastern chal- lenge is largely tied up with the en-| grossing question of Alfred E. Smith’s | intentions. The enigmatic silence of the party's | | 1928 nominee, combined with active efforts on his behalf along the Norther: Atlantic Seaboard, lies directly acro: the path of his successor in the Ne York governorship. The answer may come early in March when New Hampshire holds its pref- erential primary. Roosevelt's campaign is to be waged there. and there also Smith's volunteer supporters are at work. | By contrast with the Democratic | leader's_prospects, President Hoover is in the Republican race substantially by himself, so sure of renomination that some foes within the party are giving earnest thought to organizing outside | the regular G. O. P. fold. These are the Western independents who have tried without audible re- | sponse to obtain Hiram Johnson's entry against Mr. Hoover. If any, their third party movement seems due to blossom after the Republican and Democratic conventions, for should Roosevelt win the Democrats, some of the Western band apparently would be satisfied to back his candidacy, and the third party idea should collapse. 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