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WASHIN STAR. "ON, . TS CAING PALAGS AT S Representative Free De- scribes “Hell on Earth” Outside 3-Mile Limit. By the Associated Conditions Free, Republican, scribed as “hell on earth” were at- tributed today before a House com- mittee to “floating gambling palaces” anchored outside the 3-mile limit. His statement was made before the House Merchant Marine Committee, considering & bill to prevent “free taxi which Fire and Police Heroes MERITORIOUS SERVICE EARNS THESE MEN MEDALS. Representative | of California de- service” from the shore td these gam- | bling palaces “People go out to the boats and los their money,” Free said. “When the get back ashore, they rob filling sta tions or anything or commit suicide because of their despondency. It's hell on earth in that locality A. J. Tyrer, chief of the Commerce /Department’s Bureau of Navigation, approved the iegisiation, passed recently by the Senate. He testified there is one such boat anchored off San Francisco, two off San Pedio and one, which had been off Florida, is on its way to the New Jersey coast off Atlantic City While the commiticemen were dis- cussing the bill. Representative Evans. Republican, of California, one of its advocates, read an invitation he had received to have a “free dinner” for himself and party aboard one of the gambling_ ships Then Roy St. Lewis, Assistant Atter- ney General of the admiralty divisién, testified: “The Attorney General, alizing the States cannot handle the situation, favors the passage of fhis bill ROOSEVELT LIKELY IOWA VICTOR TODAY Btate Democratic Convention Opens | With Prediction by Chairman. By the Associated Press DAVENPORT. Iowa, March 20.—The State Democratic convention opens to- day, with State Chairman R. F. Mitchell of Fort Dodge predicting victory for Pranklin D. Roosevelt of New Belief that the 26 Iowa votes in the national Democratic convention in June would be pledged was expressed by Mitchell after State party chiefs concluded a preliminary conference. Meantime the forces of Gov. Willlam H. Murray of Oklahoma, who admit- tedly do not want the Iowa delegation instructed and have predicted the State convention would not take issue be- tween Roosevelt and Murray, opened a last-minuie offensive. They called a meeting of their fac- tion before the opening of the conven- tion at 11 o'clock to take stock of their strength and gain new adherents. Predictions of a Roosevelt victory also eame from John T. Sullivan of Water- loo, his Iowa manager, and James A. Farley, New York Democratic chair- man and Roosevelt's unofficial manager. Pockets of the delegates bulged with resolutions. Some of them advocated Tepeal or modification of the Volstead law, condemned tariff law, urged abo- lition of the Federal Farm Board and pleaded for Federal retrenchments. re- | | | \ | For daring rescues on the part of the above firemen and bravery displayed by patrolmen during the past year, a committee will decorate them with gold, silver and bronze awards at the annual firemen-policemen base ball game next September. The men were chosen by a committee headed by Gen. John A. Johnston Upper. left to right: Pvt. Frank Newman, No. 4 Truck Company, and Act- ing Inspector R. C. Roberts, assigned to fire marshal's office. Center, left to right: Capt. C. D. Bartlemess of No. 9 Engine Company and Pvt. Talmage C. Lewis, No. 2 precinct Lower, left to right: Pvt. E. L. Baker and Pvt. F. B. Ashe of No. 2 precinct. —Star Staff Photos. S ROOSEVELT FORCES DISARMING ASHED SUPPORT BARKLEY Kentuckian Will Be Suggest- ed as “Keynoter” Monday at Chicago. | 10 GANCEL DEBTS Proposal Made at Catholic Conference Would Put Issue Up to People. By the Associated Press. B\lx‘ppfoners of Gov. Roosevelt of New York for the. Democratic presidential nomination have agreed to back Senator | Proposal that people of the United Barkley (Democrat), Kentucky, for tem- | States deal directly with péoples of pther porary chairman and keynoter at the |Dations and pledge canéellation of war By the Assoclated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 20—A party convention in June. |debts if their governments agree to| CHEST TRUSTEES ARE NOMINATED List of Contributor Members of Board Made Public by Jelleff. A list of contributor members of the Community Chest board of trustees for | 1932 was made public today by Frank | R. Jelleff, chairman of the Nominating | Committee. The Nominating Committee will meet | Tuesday to consider any further nomi- | nations made by petition and to replace any person already selected who finds it impossible to serve. Members of the committee, in addition to Mr. Jellefr, are Arthur May, Arthur Sundlun, Dr Emmett J. Scolt and Mrs. Whitman s Formal election will take place at the annual Chest meeting April 25. Those nominated so far represent Chest contributors only. The board also | includes ganization afliated with the Chest, The agencies will announce their selec- tions soon. 1Comr|bu(0r-memb€n nominated in- clude Arthur Adelman. Clarence A. Aspin- wall, Maj. Henry C. Atwood, Dr. Frank | W. Ballou, Mrs. Hairy Bernton, Frank A. Birgfeld, E. S, Brashears, Mrs, Fred- eric H. Brooke, Dr. Herbert D. Brown, Mrs. Thomas Edwin Brown, Rear Ad- miral Henry V. Butler, Gov. Thomas E. Campbell, Wilbur J. Carr, Gen. B, F. Cheatham, Dwight Clark, Col. W. C. Clephane, Judge James A. Cobb, Ed- | ward F. Colladay. James E. Collifiower, John Colpoys, Mrs. Carolie F. Cook, W S. Corby, James A. Councilor, Rev. W/ | L. Darby, A. T. Davis, Frederic A. De- |lano, Clarence P. Dodge, Maj. Daniel J. Donovan, R. W. Dunlop, Joshua Evans, jr.; W. W. Everett, Willlam J. Flather, Jr.; Robert V. Fleming, Bishop James E | Freeman. J. Louis Gelbman, John W. | Ginder, Brig. Gen. Pelham D. Glass- | ford, C. C. Glover, jr.; E. C. Graham, |Col.” U 8. Grant, 3d; Dr. Gilbert | Grosvenor, Willlam F. Ham, Col. West A Hamilton, John H. Hanna, John W. Hardell, Dr. George C. Havenner, Dr. John R. Hawkins, Arthur Hellen, Mrs, Archibald Hopkins, Coleman Jennings Edmund F. Jewell, Ernest 8. Johnston | Joseph D. Kaufman, S. H. Kaufims Wayne Kendrick, - John Koons, Mark | Lansburgh, E..'W. Libbey, Denarest Lloyd, Sidney B. Lust, Simon Lyon, Ar- | thur D, Marks, Reed F. Martin, Bishop William F. McDowell, Marvin McLean, Bishop John M. McNamara, Lowell Mellett, Rabbi Solomon Metz, Dr. Kelly Miller, Walter Mitchell, W. 'W. Mont- gomery, Maj. Sidney Morgan, George Hewitt Myers, Dr. Charles P. Neill, New- bold Noyes, Mrs. John Jay O'Connor, Stanton C. Peelle, John Poole, Allen Pope. Dr. Luther H. Reichelderfer, H. | L. Rust, jr.; Dr. Abram Simon, Rev. | Anson Phelps Stokes, Edgar C. Snyder, John B, Switzer, Mrs. Sidney F. Talia- ferro, Corcoran Thom, Hugh A. Thrift, | Joseph P. Tumulty, Ben Webster. Robe | Carl white, ett C. Wilkinson, | George 8. Wilson, Lloyd B. Wilson, Ber- | nard Wyckoff, G. M. Yeatman and Ed- | ward G. Yonker. | TEACHER SAVES PUPILS AS STORM HITS SCHOOL Keeps Them Inside by Blocking Door After Bell Crashes Into Room and Causes Panic. | By the Associated Press. | LANCASTER, Pa., March 29 —While a wind ripped the roof from the one- | room school house at Dates, and scat- I {wo members from each or- | Barkley recently asked those in Ken- tucky who were urging him as a fa- absolute disarmament was made at the | lered its pleces about the school yard, sixth annual conference of the Catholic | Miss Luella Dowers of Elizabethiown, RICH BAKER TESTIFIES IN KIDNAPING TRIAL Gives Evidence Against Three Ac- cused of Holding Him Vainly for Ransom. By the Associated Press DENVER, March 29 —Benjamin P. vorite son candidate, to support Roose- 1 velt, Selection of a keynoter for the con- Monday by the Committee on Arrange- ments of the National Committee. See Little Opposition. Jouett Shouse, chairman of the Dem- ocratic National Executive Committee, has been proposed for keynoter by those opposing the Roosevelt nomination. Those suggesting Barkiey for key- noter believe he would meet with lite opposition from the “stop Roosevelt Bower, bakery executive. was summoned | forces because he seconded the nomina- as the first witness for the State today tion of Al Smith at Houston and was in the trial of three men charged with | Smith’s campaign manager in Kentucky kidnaping him for ransom A Jury was selected late yesterday to hear the evidence against George Reed. Art Taylor and Joe Pannell Detectives assert they were members of the gang which kidnaped Bower {rom his home here January 19 and held him five days in a vain attempt to col- lect $50,000 Mrs. Bower, who witnessed the kid- naping, also is a witness. The court ordered the jury kept to- gether ng the trial, a proced ordinaril pwed only in murder cases CAB DRIVER IS ROBBED; WOMAN CHARGES SECOND One Chauffeur Accused Two Men of Taking $4—Fare Says Hucker Took $5 From Her 1p at the point of a gun short- Kk this morning by a a colored man, John T. a tavicab d robbed of $4 ver. b- occurred in < riding. A cab d ddentified by Two Y. M. C. A. Lectures Are An- nounced for Early Dates Two illustrated travel lec announced bv the Young Men's Association. author. and ure on tomorrow C. A 1 a w York to Japan' 820 o'clock in the Y hall G Gordon Gordon-8mith, mili- f the Yugoslav legation From § 6 at 8:20 o'clock ir Women as well as men_sre invited to hear these speakers. There will be Do charge for_zdmission The Daly-Hopper Co., Inc. 1802 1ith St N.W, North 5976 - Gas Ranges Repaired and Refinished Estimates Furnished ALL WORK GUARANTEED Telephone National 5000 Por immediate delivery of The Star to your home every eve. ning and ‘Sunday morning. The Route Agent will collect at the end of each month, at the rate 11, cents per day and 5 cents Sunday. ia to Yygo- | in 1928, Democratic Convention was named to- day by Chairman Raskob of the Dem- ocratic National Committee and sum- moned to the Monday session, | Members of the committee will in- clude the five vice chairmen—Harry F. | Byrd of Virginia, Frank Hague of New | Jersey, Scott Ferris of Oklahoma, Mrs | Nellie Tayloe Ross of | Mrs. Florence Farley of Robert Jackson of New Hamps! secretary of the National Committee. Other Members Included, | _ Other members are J. B | Montana; Norman E. |Isidore 'B. Dockweile Archibald McNeil, Kemper r Nebraska; George A. Collins. John S. 'Cohen, Georgia; Vincent Miles, Ark 1sas! Joseph Wolf sota Horatio J Abbott Thomas D. Taggart, Indiana ce S. Pyke, Ohis Mrs. Clar Sevier, Texas: Mrs. Anna Stru Dakota, and Mrs. John Arizona | z 21 ARRESTED IN RAID: $100,000 PLANT SEIZED Bottle Supply Company In Denver M Minne- 501 reenway Taken—Owners to Charge 9 — Property contiscated und night by 10_raided v Co. i J. Zerobnick and harged with con- | y violat prohibition law operty designed to Hundreds of thousands of bottles of every size and d n, together with thousands of nd barrels, huge cases of malt ct. sacks of sugar and other materials were confiscated. CONFESSES D'EATH THREAT | Cblored Woman Held by Police Admits Writing Note, They Say. Hattie { | colored. of the street, confessed nnounced, that ening the life of a downtown age. 26 1700 block Fourteenth 1o police today, the she wrote & letter thr of Sam Lee. manager Chinese restaurant The woman is being held for inves- tigation by Detective Sergts. Mike Dowd und H, E. Brodie, The note contained a threat to kill Lee Af he failed to discharge John Lyl colored, employed by Lee WILL SAIL FOR HAVRE Rear Admiral naval hydrog Walter R. Gherardi pher, and Comdr. G, T Rudy of the Coast and Geodetic Sur- vey, Department of Commerce, will sall | tomorrow from Baltimore for Havre. | Prance, aboard the steamer City of Newport News. They are to attend the International Hydrographic Conference at Monaco and both officers will be mc- companied by their wives. Miss Neville Gherardi, the admiral's daughter, will n the party. vention will be considered in Chicago | Association for International Peace last | | night. | Rev. J. W. R. Maguire, president of | St. Viator College. Burbonnaid, Il offered the proposal after a day spent | in discussion of various phases of world peace. “I say deal with the people of the countries of the Old World because I have no confidence in the governments of the Old World,” Father Maguire said. “For many reasons,” he continued, “the proposition of partial disar is impracticable and unless we can bring about an agreement for absolute aboli- tion of the equipment of war, I can see little value in the proposition “If this condition could be agreed on and carried out we could consistently agree to cancellation of what the Euro- pean countries owe us in war debts. “With such a condition there would be an immediate restoration of the economic prosperity which the entire world is mow seekin The conference was gene Quigley, president Charitles w opened by Eu- of Catholic Bedford-Jones, African ad has received nc n voodoo s book was publi H the hor of a ory, reports wer than four 50 FAMILIES DEFY STARVATION ament | the teacher, kept her head and saved her 35 pupils from possible injury. ‘Two pupils started for the door when | the school bell crashed down into the ! the school reom. and a rush toward the | yard seemed imminent. Miss Dowers ran to the door, caught the two pupils and barricaded the exit | with her body, until the worst of t storm passed. ’ | CLASS TO GIVE PLAY “Cupid Up to Date” to Be sented at Calvary Baptist. to Pre- | “Cupid Up to Date.” a three-act mu- | sical comedy, will be presented by the | Florence M. Brown class, Calvary Bap- | tist Church, tomorrow night at 8 o'clock. | Proceeds fund ! Special music has been written for the play. About 75 local players will take part. Rehearsals have begun u der the p direction of Mis Rose Gre Sewell Lyceum Producing Co. of Atlanta. | The play deals with the conflict be- | tween love, science and materialism. | Tickets may be secured by calling Mrs. | ' E. Arnold. Lincoln 2417, or Miss Sally Balbach, North 7967 will g0 to the class charity Ina &| IN CHICAGO RIVER HOUSEBOATS Maritime Squatters Fight Off Adversity on Stream Only a Few Miles From the Loop. March 29 —Adversity has Chicago families “to the for purposes of self-preser- on It is the sternest sort of struggle that & colony of sume 50 families of house- boaters is making on the Chicago Riv- er’s notth branch, only s few miles from the Loop. Expenses Small. Some of thee maritime live on as little as a dollar Der person. Some have built boats, equipping them with iceboxes built-in cupboards. bath rooms, kitch- en facilities and cther modest comforts Some have a_cl or two, peck- ing crumbs on deck, or & dog Some are on the river because they are river folk. Others were driven to it in desperation, after eviction from their homes Onc man who had a trucking busi- ness that went bankrupt “:aved nails for six months tracted squatters per we their own to ra “BEST OIL IN THE WORLD" Get vid . . . of spend- thrift mol w W o pay! for sy that s just wasted. and in- ferior oil means extra cost for repairs. {utocrat Motor O maximum perf better piston ring seal, bet- ter compression, and great- er mileage. gives nee, | 30¢ AQUART BAYERSON OfL WORKS. COLUMBIA 5228 house for the lumber, and built own boat by hand in three months, | intending to work my way down the | Mississippi—but it costs $12 to get | through the locks.” | One 80-foot hulk with racing lines, | said to be & former Government reve- nue cutter, is the home of a couple with two boys, one 8 years old. the other 17 and at the top of his high school class’ honor roll. my | Lives on $6 a Week. { This “happy family” lives on $6 a weck and “doesn’t owe anybody in the | world & cent.” | In the old days, according to one | old-timer, musicians, artists and small | business men made up the bulk of the | houseboating population. And river life was on a more “respectable” scale, many of the houseboats being rensed out at rather decent amounts. But now all the boats are tenanted by determined householders, who defy the world to deny them their rights on the Government-owned stream. You will drive longer upon AUTOCRAT than vou have ever dared to drive upon any other oil, and it drains from the crank case with all the “look™ and “feel” of an oil that has gone hardly 100 m AUTOCRAT—THE OIl DIFFERENT FR( 7 Try Autocrat the next time you need oil, and judge its advantages for yourself. At the Better Dealers 5 DEIN STORNS ANDLOSSSHEAVY North Atlantic States Swept by Post-Easter Disturbances. | Execution Interrupted. | By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK, March 29.—Post-Eas- | ter storms that shrieked up and down the North Atlantic States took at least 15 lives and caused widespread damage. | Northern New England was speckled | with stalled automobiles in snow sev- | eral feet high. There and in upstate | New York and Pennsylvania many communities were isolated. Schools didn't keep. telephone poles toppled, bluebirds met death in freez- ing winds, snow and rain. High waves gnashed at the Maine { Coast, At Harrisburg, Pa., & murderer got two and a half hours’ extra life | when the current to the electric chair failed. Transportation was a mess. Mail piled up in post offices. York State police advised motorists to | stay home. | A tornadic wind ripped down bulld-l ings in three towns near Richmond; | Va., doing $100.000 damage. Leslie | | Dishman, 8, was killed when his home | was shattered at Lorreto, Va. | Gov. Roosevelt was “snowbound” at Hyde Park, N. Y., and snow turning to | rain undermined a 5-story building at Peekskill and it collapsed. | At Bedford, N. Y., four persons were drowned when an automobile, its driver biinded by sleet. plunged into a lake. | At Centerville, Md., the town hall lost | part of its roof. Missouri Republicans Name Four in District Conventions. ST. LOUIS, March 29 (#).—Four | | Hoover-instructed delegates to the Re- | publican National Convention in Chic- | g0 were named yesterday at conventions of the fourth and sixth Missouri con- gressional district conventions. Fourth district Republicans elected Col. John D. McNeeley of St. Joseph #nd' James M. Curry of Oregon, Mo., as delegates and passed a resolution calling.for t}i¢ Te-election” of President Hoover S0 that “he may ‘complete the great task”. of bringing the Nation out of_depression: Morris Puxpable of Garden City and Art.ar Griflith” of Greenfigld werc named national convention delegates by the sixth district Republicans, who also indorsed the Hoover administration. 4 ! U. D. C. Founder Dies at 93. SELMA, Ala, March 29 (#)—Miss Emily Florence Ferguson, who helped form the United Daughters of the Con- ' federacy, and was elected honorary life president of that organization, died | here Sunday at the age of 93. During the war between the States she worked | as an ammunition maker. | | returned from the | companied by Thomas Fighter New “Airship-Board” DIRIGIBLE AKRON TO CARRY THIS TYPE. HE Navy's famous “shipboard” fighters, carried on the airplane carriers, for his work in conne have a wicked smaller sister, designed to be carried aboard the U. S .S. discovery first made 1n 1 Akron, first airship in the world to carry ing planes, The Akron is expected to carry four of the little fighters, the | egular complement of fight- first of which is shown in this photograph. Known as the F9C2 type, the Several of the little machines, which for the Akron. The planes New | airship fighters are the newest and smallest of the Navy's air fighting fleet. are Curtiss built, are nearing completion will be carried in a hangar constructed in the hull of the airship and launched and taken aboard in flight by means of a special gear. horsepower air ment. monocoque fuselage metal. top speed is approximately feet per minute. Anacostia Neval Air Station from the Akron. STON The plane is the smallest which could be built around the 420- -cooled engine and still carry pilot and necessary military equip- It is a biplane with wings of the gull type, fairing directly into a metal Wings are metal with fabric cover and tail surfaces are The little plane is only 19 feet long, with a wing span of 251, feet. The 180 miles per hour and the plane can climb 1,800 Lieut. Prederick M. Trapnell, now flight test officer at the is one of the pilots chosen to fly these tiny ships He will report for thi service about July 1 E RUINS FOUND IN ARIZONA ’ HOOVER DELEGATES WIN ‘BELIEVED PREHISTORIC TRADE POST Pueblo and Three Smaller Ones Described on Return of Expedition By the Associated Press. PHOENIX, Ariz,, March 20.—A copy- righted articie by the Arizona Republic announces the discovery of a stone village, which Dr. Bryon Cummings, dean of archeology at the University of Arizona, believes was & prehistoric trade center. Dr. Cummings sald the pueblo was found on the Verde River He described it as “at least 390 feet long, 356 fect wide, end for the most part, three stories high.” He site Sund ac- Mercer, vet- eran Arizona guide. Tae Republic, quoting Dr. Cummings, sdid: “We:found two large. pueblos and reé smaller anes. - The latter is the largest compact pueblo I know of in Arizona. “We dug in two rooms of the larger for 10 feet, but failed to find the floor level. THIS WEEK ONLY GUARANTEED FACTORY » by Archeologist of State U. “The builders were excellent stone masons. It offers indisputable evidence of an extinct, prehistoric culture on the Verde, whih became a central meeting place for all cultures.” The structure, Dr. Cummings said on public land. He plans to ask the Federal Government to declare the site a national monument. FOUR DROWN IN AUTO BEDFORD, Feur persons N. Y, March 29 (& three from Torrington, Conn,, were drowned yesterday, when their automobile sideswiped another machine on i0 the Cross River Bridge and plunged into 25 feet of water. The dead were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pagliero of Tor- | rington, Victoria Castelli. 15, of To! rington. and Jenny Loio, 6, of New York Cil the rain-swept .approach | A rare opportunity—-e}fls this week. Every machine thoroughly rebuilt in the Eureka Factory. They ar cally perfect with new cords, fans and bearings. 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Attractively finished in vory, with juice extractor and mixing bowls in jade Mixmaster has many . it extracts fruit uices; mixes light and heavy : whips se. for making delicious For easy clean- as removable beaters. cal POVERFLL ANEMA TREATHENT RO Recovery Reported From Two or Three Injections of New Solutiom By the Assoc BOSTON, Mgrch 29 17 times as powerful | than ~A new sofutdon, as liver and more | seven times as concentrated as | any liver concentrate now available for the treatment of pernicious anemia, | has been developed by Dr. William P. Murphy. Dr. Murphy is a member of | the Harvard Medical School faculty and of the staff of the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital The new treatment is desc current issue of | American Medical article by Dr the an wn ihe that uver was of value in treating the disease So powerful is the new solution, a highly concentrated liver extract, that often as few as two or three injections result in recovery, while improvement is evident within from 36 to 48 hours after the first injection Several types of liver concentrates have been developed recently which eliminated the necessity for the daily consumption of liver or liver extract, at which patients often rebelled, but be- cause of their low concentration they ¢ither had to be injected into the veins or into the muscles. The new solution, with its high con- centration and ouritv, can be infected into the muscles without subjecting the patient to the daily discomforts of the needle. 8o powerful is it that intra- muscular injections are necessary only at mtervals of from one to three or more weeks. While developed specifically for the treatment of pernicious anemia, results obtained with 30 patients, described in the journal article, has led the author to believe the new solution may be | beneficial in the treatment of several other blood diseases. Researches to confirm this are being continued at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. KEVIN BARRY COUNicIL ELECTS C. E. RUSSELL Officers Named by Branch of As- sociation for Recognition of Irish Republic. Charles Edward Russell was elected president of the Kevin Barry Counctl, American Association for the Recogni- tion of the Irish Republic, at a meeting Sunday night at the council’s headquar- ters, 1006 E street. 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