Evening Star Newspaper, May 4, 1932, Page 3

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The Cost of Cold Storage —is more than saved the lengthened life of furs, clothing, rugs. Why take | chances? Price list on request | Securitp Storage 140 FIFTEENTH ST | A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR41 YEARS C.AASPINWALL . PRESIDENT in Chevy Chase, D. C. Price, $9,950 $750 cash, $67.50 monthly 6134 Utah Ave. N.W. r 32nd and Rittenhouse Large Closets Gas Refrigeration Open for Inspection Waggaman & Brawner, Inc. Exclusive Agents 1700 Eve St. I" Before You Order "I SLIP COVERS or Upholstering See Henderson F PRICES ARE MUCH LOWER TODAY JAMES B. HENDERSON Telephone 1108 G STREET N.W. |} 77 i E. 3860 Radio’s Zippiest Rhythm. The Lively Party Music of « THE LITH-A-LIMERS A real suggestion for warm eve- nings. Just before retiring, pour yourself a tall tumbler of cold Lich-A-Limes. Sip it slowly. Enjoy this 71-page amendment (the longest | Duffie, MeGugin, McKeown its cool, clear,imported flavor and its tang.y bouquet. Linger over it as long as you wish. Lith-A-Limes sparkles for hours. Its leaping bub- bles will cool you and refresh you. Get it, by the bottle or the case, 10 PER GENT CUT -~ RULE IS ASSAILED ‘Bingham Asks Senate to Ex- empt Treasury-Post Office Appropriation. | __ (Continued From First Page.) | Senat> exempted that from the reduc- tion order, which meant the cutting | had to be done in other features of the | Treasury-Post Office bill Senator Johnson, Republican, of Cali- fcrnia, who fought last week against what he thought would be serious re- |'sults from a 10 per cent cut on the || State, Justice, Commerce and Labor || bill, suggested ' the Senate ought to re- consider the bills to which it has al- ready applied the 10 per cent rule. Senator Smoot Disagrees. This prompted Senator Smoot. Re- publican, of Utah, to observe that the 10 per cent cut will prove more serious on the bills to which it has already been applied than in the pending bill.” Sen- ator Smoot had charge of the Interior bill, which also was cut 10 per cent, and has been accepted by the House and signed by the President. | . Senator McKellar asked Bingham if he thought there was a desire on the part of any one to disrupt the Govern- ment services under discussion. |~ Senator. Bingham said he did not believe there was any such desire, but {felt the, Senate had acted hastily in | ordering the cut on this bill |lieve the carrying out of the reduction order would disrupt the services, and urged that the Appropriations Sub- committee be called together by Chair- man Oddie to decide where the reduc- tions should be made, and let the Sen- ate pass on these cuts when the bill is brought back. Economy Bill Slashed. ‘This morning the House sent to the Senate its recommendation, confirmed by nine roll calls, that the economy drive should not hit Government salaries under $2,500, should not slash $48.- 717,000 from veterans relief, should not | cut off the Saturday half holiday for Government workers and should not consolidate the Army and Navy. With his omnibus economy bill, her- alded to save upward of $200,000,000, reduced to a mere estimated saving of $42.314,000, Chairman McDuffie made |a final desperate effort last night to ,put in & new 10 per cent pay cut with provision for a $2,000 exemption, which was rejected, 231 to 167. Presi- dent Hoover's furlough plan was re- jected by a roll call vote of 250 to 146. So disgusted was Chairman McDuffie | over the fate of his bill that he voted against 1its passage. Bill Goes to Conference. The Democratic House leadership decided today to send the State, Jus- tice, Commerce and Labor supply bill to conference for the deletion of Sen- ate amendments other than the flat 10 per_cent reduction in the total. Chairman Byrns of the Appropria- tions Committee said that while there apparently was no objection to sav- ings effected by the Senate, the meas- ! ure contained several amendments in- | serted by the other branch for which there was no budget recommendation. | The item most strenuously objected to by the Democratic leaders, he said, was one appropriating $200.000 for the| establishment of an airmail line from | Minneapolis and St. Paul to Seattle The Senate cut the $124.000,000 supply bill to $112,000,000. Byrns said | it would probably be late in the week before the bill is sent to conference. The House accepted without change the Senate amendments cutting the In- terior Department supply, bill from $50,- 000,000 to $45.000.000, but Speaker Garner served notice this week the House would not approve any more | such cuts if they disrupted the func- | tions of the Government departments. Galleries Well Filled. In anticipation of a late night ses-i sion the galleries were well filled when ! the curtain was rung down on the econcmy bill, the coalition against the bill having been in complete control ! | Senator McKellar said he did not be- | | Hastings, THE EVENIN STAR, WASHINGTON, D. WLEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1932. are: Mrs. Davison, Mrs. Mrs. Richard Dunn. Cary T. Grayson, Hawley, Hess, Hill, Washington; Holmes, Horr, Houston, Delaware; William E Hull, Jacobsen, James, Jenkins, John- son, Missouri; Kading, Kahn, Karch, Keller, Kelly, Illinois; Kelly, Pennsyl- vania; Kennedy, Kerr, Kinzer, Kopp, Kurtz, Kvale, La Guardia, Lambertson, Lamneck, Lankford, Georgia; Lankford, virginia; Larsen, Leavitt, Lehlbach, Lichtenwalner, Lindsay, ~Linthicum, Lonergan, Loofbourow, Lovette, Mc- Clintock, Ohio; McCormack, McFadden, McLaughlin, McLeod, McMillan, Mc- Swain, Maas, Major, Maloney, Martin, Massachuset Millard: Moore, Kentucky; Moore, Ohio; | Mouser, Nelson, Maine- Nelson, Missouri; | Nelson, Wisconsin; Niedringhaus, Nolan, Norton, New Jersey; O'Connor, Oliver, | New York: Overton. Owen, Palmisano, Parker, Georgia; Partridge, Patman, Patterson, Peavey, Person, Pettengill, Pittenger, Prall, Harcourt J. Pratt, Ragon, Ramspeck, Ransley, Reed, New York: Reid, Illinois: Robinson, Rogers, Massachusetts; Rogers, New Hampshire; Rudd, Sanders, New York; Sandlin, Schafer, Schneider, Schuetz, Seger, Seiberling. Selvig, Shannon, Shott, | Shreve, Sinclair, Sirovich, Smith, Idaho; Smith, Virginia; Smith, West Virginia. Snow, Somers, New York: Spence, Stalker, Stewart, Stokes, Strong, Kansas; Strong Pennsylvania; Sullivan, New York: Summers, Washington; Sumners, Texas; Sutphin, Swanson, Sweeney, Swick, Swing, Taylor, Colorado; Temple Thomason, Thurston, Tierney, Tinkham, Treadway, Turpin, Underwood, Watson, Welch, California; Welsh, Pennsylvania; West, White, Whitley, Wigglesworth, williams, Texas; Wilson, Withrow, Wolcott, "Wolfenden, Wolverton, Wyant, Yates and Yon. Against—Aldrich, Allgood, Andersen, Andrews, New York: Ayres, Bacharach Bachmann, Bankhead, Beck. Bland, Blanton, Bolton, Brand, _Georgia; Brand, Ohlo: Browning. Buchanan, Bulwinkle, Burch, Burtness, Busby. Byrns, Cable, Cannon, Carden, Cart wright, Chindblom, _ Christopherson, Clague. Clark, North Carolina; Clarke, New York; Cole, Iowa: Collins, Cooper, Ohio; Cooper. Tennessee: Cox, Crisp. Cross, Darrow, Davenport, Davis. De Rouen, Dickinson, Dies, Dominick, Doughton, Douglas, Arizona: Doxey, Drewry, Driver, Dyer, Ellzey, Eslick, Evans, Californiz: Free. French. Pul- bright, Fuller, Fulmer, Garber, Gilbert Glover. Green. Gregory, Guyer, Hadley Hall, Mississipoi; Hancock, New York { Hancock, North Carolina; Hare, Hart Hill, Alebama: Hoch, Hogg West Virginia; Holaday. Hooper, Hope Hopkins, Howard, Huddleston, Hull Morton D.: Johnson, Oklahoma: John- son, South Dakota; Johnson. Texas Johnson, Washington; Jones, Ketcham Kniffin, Knutson. Lambeth. Lanham throughout the entire consideration of | Lozier, Luce. McClintic. Oklahoma: Mc- cn_ record) priation bill. Here are the anticipated economies after $165,714,000 estimates has been stripped from the McDuffie bill: E! per cent c! £500°" exe: ic pay ncrease of to the legislative appro- leven with $13.000.000 2.100.000 3,000,000 5.600.000 usperi- ment employes olition of overtime pay supérannuated McRey- | nolds, Magrady. Mansfield, Mapes. Mav. Michener, Miller, Milligan, Mitchell | Mobley, Montague, Montet, Morehead. | Norton, Nebracka; Oliver, Alabama: | Parker New York; Parks, Perkins, Polk Pratt, Ruth: Rainev., Ramsever. R in Rayburn, Reilly. Rich. Sanders, Texas: Shallenberger, Simmons, Snell,” Spar! Stafford, Steagall, Stevenson. Swank Taber, Tarver, Taylor. Tennessee: Tilson, Timberlake, Under- from any leading dealer, in the giant party bottle or the pint size. Be sure it's Lith- A -Limes. LITH-A-LIMES 3.000.000 3.368.000 2.500.000 5.000.000 4.000.000 750.000 725.000 56.500 Army’and’Navy rs Reorianization of the Siioping bolition of Philip- of "'departmental 400.000 | Bureau of Navigation boat inspection merke International 100,000 Water 25.000 De- with 100,000 80000 Unestimated works Unestimated urel experi- fish hatch- Unestimated v to retired ‘more thar reorganization o public £3 00 Unestimated farge of husband Government Roll Call Votes Listed. The more important of the roll call votes resulted as follows Approving the O'Connor - Britten emendment. providing an exemption of $2,500 from the 11 per cent pay cut 239 to 153 Approving the McCormack amend- ment, restoring the Saturday half holi- dav for Federal workers, 267 to 132 Rejecting the Ramseyer amendment submitting the President's furlough plan, 250 to 146 Approving the Martin amendment. to strike out the provision for consolidat- ing the Army and Navy, 210 to 187, Approving the Barbour amendment, preventing the abolition of the Army, vy and Panama transport service 7 to 98 Approving the Vinson amendment, to strike out authorization for a 15 per cent interchangeability of appropria- tions within departments, 209 to 183 Pay Cut Ballot. ‘The roll call vote on the amendment granting all Government workers an exemption of $2,500 before suffering any salary cut was as follows: For—Adkins, Allen, Almon, Amile, Andrew, Massachusetts: Arentz, Arnold, Auf der Heide, Bacon, Baldrige, Barbour, Barton, Beam, Beedy, Black, Bloom, Bohn, Boileau, Boland, Bowmon, Briggs, Britten, Brumm, Brunner, Buckbee, Bur- l dick, Butler, Campbell, Jowa; Campbell, yed in Unestimated SPECIAL record NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR AN ntracted by any one other th JOS. L n CARLL. 307 Ese I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY bills u contracted by myseif. J. VANCE 1201 Talbert st., Anaco: PART-LOAD SHIPMENT peake and North Beach Week days moving. _padded EXPRESS CO.. ) PAINTING IN ALL IT: dows and doors, & coat. 5 Vernon ave.. Va. 15 VANT TO HAUL FULL C 1r York, Ri Toer Narhieo MOTOR OIL AT WHOLE delivered for 5-xal VACATIONISTS—THE D, BTORAGE CO. | . T30sb ° WANTED-LOADS gofl HARTFORD, CONN. /OM _NEW LONDON, CONN. TO PHILADELPHIA And all_points North and West HTTED S TIRT VANS ahywhere r}H'S TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. 2313 You St N.W._Phone North 3342-3343 Keep Your Name Before the Public with attractive printed matter bearin the ha!l mark of quality from this Million_ Dollar Plant The National Capital Press' _FLA_AVE, 3rd and N NE. Linc. 6060_ —of any msture prompily and capably per- ormed_by praciical roofers Call us up! Roofing 33 V SL N.W. Company _North 4473 “CAN YOU IMAGINE A Vaftiess matirese. Inner spring construc- Liop. without bumps or holldws? Pours way s that way st small MAY 8 MAY 13 MAY 3 AGENT pack and Pennsylvania; Carley Carter, Call- fornia; Carter, Wyoming: Cary, Celler, Chavez, Chiperfield, Christgau, Clancy, Cochran, Missouri; Cochran, Pennsyl- vania; Cole, Maryland; Colton, Condon, Connery, Connolly, Cooke, Coyle, Crail, Crosser, Crowther, Crump, Culkin, Cullen, Curry, Dallinger, Delaney, De Priest, Dickstein, Disney, Douglass, Massachusetts; Doutrich, Dowell, Eaton, Colorado; Eaton, New Jersey; Engle- bright, Erk, Estep, Evans, Montana; Fernandez, Fiesinger, Finley, Pish, Fish- burne, Fitzpatrick, Flannagan, Foss, Frear, Gambrill, Garrett, Gasque, Gavagan, Gibson, Gifford, Gllchrist, Golder, Goldsborough, Goodwin, Goss, Granfield, Greenwood, Griffin, Haines, Hall, Illinois; Hall, North Dakots; Hardy, Harlan, Hartley, Haugen, utitul covers “BEDELL’S FACTORY Mational 3621, 610 E 8t. N.W. Thatcher, y hill. Vinson. Georgia: Vinson. Ken- tucky: Warren. Wason, Weaver, Weeks. | Whittington. Williams, Missouri: Wil- | Hamson. Wingo, Wood. Georgia; Wood- ruff, Woodrum, Wright. (against): Larrabee (for) with (against); Boylan (for) with Hollister (2eainst) Last of the sections to be thrown out by the coalitfon forces was the ! $48.717.000 reduction in veterans' al- | owances, As a substitute it set up a { joint committee of seven Senators and | seven Representatives to report next | session a revised program of veterans' | legislation. McDuffie Discusses Cost. “If the people of this country insist | upon luxuries in Government, thev must tax burdens,” said Chairman McDuffie of the Special Economy Committee in discussing today the failure c e omni- | bus economy program in the House yes- terday. | He absolves his colleagues from any | capricious wrecking of “his bill and credits them with responding to what they belleve to be the majority senti- | ment in their home districts Although the people of the are demanding a reduction in govern- mental costs,” he explained, “at the pame time they, aided and spurred on by organized minorities and bureaucrats appear to be insisting upon the main- | tenanee of this gigantic and expensive central Government at Washington.” | . Representative McDuffie attributes { the faflure of the economy program to bringing It all before the House in one omnibus measure. Holds Bill Unfortunate, country “In my opinion,” he said, “it is un- fortunate that all of the economy pro- gram presented by the committee was thrown together in one bill. I pro- tested against this course. However, the President, Secretary Mills. as well as other administrative officials, to- gether with a few Democrats, urged an omnibus bill containing many con- troversial matters. I warned the Pres- ident against the very results that were obtained, suggesting in of the many controversial items in the bill the possibility of a coalition of those opposed to various items which would | endanger, if not destroy, the entire program. “Certainly I have not, and do not assume, any superiority of judgment to no one feels that I have any personal criticism for any member. In the ac- tion of the House yesterday the mem bers did not wreck the bill capriciously. ‘They voted conscientiously and doubt. lieved to be the majority sentiment in their various districts.” COMMISSIONERS ELECT Bpecial Dispatch to The Star BARNESVILLE, Md., May 4—Coun- ty Commissioners Clagett C. Hilton, Wil- llam C. Brown and James Robert Lil- lard, who were re-elected town commis- sioners on Monday, met last night and organized by re-electing Mr. Hilton chairman and Eberly Dixon, clerk, First Lady Visits Store PAYS SOCIAL CALL AT JUNIOR LEAGUE SHOP. RS. HOOVER, accompanied by a group of friends, was a visitor yesterday afternoon at the Junior League Shop, 425 Seventh street. Mrs. Hoover, Mrs. Donald McKnew, Mrs Martin, Oregon: Mead, | | Paired—Kendall (for) with Chapman Pou | pay the bills, which mean additional | | didate when 155 of 237 precincts gave that of any other member of the House | on the question of economy and I hope | less were responding to what they be- | | House, has introduced a bill to make it | | | Left to right 5. F. Trubee y Hume and | r ‘Staff Photos. | ‘W. Myron Dillon. ¥ s CROWEISLOSING IN INDIANA VOTE Only Member of Congress Delzgation Not Likely to Be Renominated. y the Associated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, May present contingent in House of Representatives, with a single exception, apparently survived the primary election yesterday and will con- tend for re ction next November. The prohibition issue, which popped | into the primary campaign soon after | the recent vote in the House on the Beck-Linthicum resolution for resub- mission failed to hurt any of the Indiana Representatives who voted | against it. The wets, however, claimed | final returns would show the nomina- | tion of several candidates sympathetic to a change in the liquor laws. | Crowe Facing Defeat. | 4. —Indiana’s the Natlonal The one incumbent who faced defeat | was Eugene B. Crowe, Democrat of Bed- ford _Redistricting of the State by the | 1931 Legislature threw Crowe into con test with a Democratic colleague, Har: C. Canfield of Batesville. Incomplete | returns showed Canfleld holding a slight lead over Crowe. In most communities primary day! was peaceful ‘The Calumet district, | however, was an exception. In Lake | County ‘one man was killed and a | dozen were arrested, some accused of | voting illegally and others of partici- | pating in violence at the polls. | Leading Over Vets. } Representative David Hogg of Fort Wayne, and three others who voted | against the Beck-Linthicum resolution —Fred S. Purnell of Attica, Dr. William | H. Larrabee of New Palestine and Louis | Ludlow of Indianapolis—were well in | the lead over opponents who espoused | the wet cause. | Other Reprecentatives who seemed | likely to win out in contests for renom- ination included the Republican veter- | an, Will R. Wood of Lafayette, cam- | paigning in the second district: Glen Griswold, Democrat, of Peru, fifth dis- trict, and Courtland C. Gillen, Demo- crat, of Greencastle, sixth district Four Wwere unopposed. BLACK IS LEADING IN ALABAMA RACE Dry Senator Has Commanding Mar- gin for Renomination Over Four Opponents. By the Associated Press. MONTGOMERY, Ala. May 4—Sen- ator Hugo L. Black, a dry, up for re- nomination, held a commanding lead | over four opponents in a race for the seat in the Senate and stood a chance of winning without a run-off. i Former Gov. Thomas E. Kilby of | Anniston, favoring a referendum on | prohibition, was runner-up and Black’s | probable opponent in the second pri- | mary on June 14 if the incumbent does | mot poll a clear majority | J, Morgan Burns of Seima, advocate | of repeal of the eighteenth amendment, | held to third place, with Charlie C.| McCall of Montgomery, advocate of | referendum_with “home control,” fourth, | andsHenry L. Anderton of Birmingham. | a dry, fifth | The vote in 751 out of 2,126 boxes for Senator stood: Black, 29,185; Kirby, 18011; Burns, 6,120; McCall, 3,660; 2,960. | Representative Lamar Jeffers of An- niston drew out in front of Hunt Fra- zier of Selma in his race in the fourth district. With 87 out of 214 boxes counted, the vote was Jeffers, 3,685; Frazier, 2,285. Representative Miles B. Allgood, rep- | resenting the seventh _district, but | placed in the fifth with Representative Lafayette L. Patterson through redis- | tricting, kept to the fore. The vote, with 46 out of 245 boxes tabulated, stood: Allgood, 1268; Patterson, 539; | Burns Parker of Heflin, 451 and W. M Rayburn of Gadsden, 493. - ST. PAUL ELECTIONS Mahoney Wins Mayoralty Fight After Two Defeats. | ST. PAUL, Minn, May 4 (#) —Twice | defeated for mayor of St. Paul, Wil- liam Mahoney apparently was victori- | ous today after more than half of the city precincts had reported. Mayor Gerhard J. Bundlie conceded the election to the labor-indorsed can-| Mahoney 26209 votes to Bundlie's 23790 in yesterday's election, Mahoney, 63, editor of the Union Ad- vocate, & labor publication, came here from Chicago in 1902. OPPOSES EMPLOYING KIN Bill Would Prohibit Congressmen Hiring Relatives. Representative Mitchell, a Tennessee Democrat serving his first term in the unlawful for any member of Congress to pay any of the $5,000 a year allowed him for clerk hire to his kin. Mitchell issued a statement saying he knew his bill would not pass nor would it add to his standing as a colleague. He termed ial jobs for Sena- tors' and Representatives' relatives “a specles of graft and racketeering.” I'u' the national Democratic party. | Pita , and | several SHITH MAKES PLE FOR PARTY DEB Asks Immediate Payment of $320,000 Owing to Chair- man Raskob. By the Associated Press. N YORK, May 4—Alfred E. Smith last night appealed to the Dem: cratic party to pay back to National Chairman John J. Raskob $320,000 it still owes him, both because it is a just debt, he said, and in order that the party may function as an untram- meled organization “I make no appeal for Mr. Raskob as an individual” the 1928 Democritic tandard bearer said. “I speak for im in his official capacity as chairman | He advanced money at the rate of $10,000 a month, and the party is now indebted | to him to the extent of $320,000.” Addressing 800 women workers in the | party's $1.500,000 victory drive. Smith' made only one reference to his own campaign for the presidential nomina tion. He denled that the fund woul be used for “any one candidate.” “We must wipe out the deficit and send the party off with a flying star be sald. “We must not ow r. Raskob anything. We must not owe anybody anything. We must be a party Nation-wide connections and on our kob as “an | own feet.” Smith referred to g extremely businesslike Yaaividual,” who | would not continue as chairman unless | the party w run on an efficient and | businesslike basis. He sald expenditures in the last two weeks of the 1928 campaign had ex- ceeded expectation: “But.” he added. “you can't budget a presidential campaign.” with | ‘SEN ECONOMY BILL HITS NIGHT MAIL CLERKS Ten Per Cent Pay Differential Is Eliminated, Federation Offi- cial Points Out. Night postal employes are discrimi- nated against in an action by the House in the final shaping of the omnib |economy bill, it was declared today by | | Thomas F. Flahert y. secretary-treasurer of the National Federation of Post Office Clerks. | This is due to the action of the House in_eliminating the 10 per cent night work pay differential from the measure, he declared, reporting that efforts are being made to have the Senate cor- rect this and other features of the measure deemed inequitable. | “The House membership apparently | thought it had exempted all employes | having salaries of less than $2,500 from pay cuts,” the federation official | stated. “Unfortunately, this is not true | “Fifty thousand postal employes, most | of them working at night in the large | post offices, will lose 10 per cent of | their earnings, which average $2.100, | by virtue of the night pay work elimi- | nation. | “We are corfident the House did not intend to single out this group to suffer reductions, while very properly exempt- ing others under $2.500, and we a asking the Senate to correct this ob- vious injustice.” e G. 0. P. OF RHODE ISLAND | WILL SUPPORT HOOVER | State Convention of Providence | Also Prepared to Urge Resub- mission of 18th Amendment. | By the Assoclated Press, | PROVIDENCE. R. 1. May 4—In- dorsing President Hoover for renomi- nation and prepared to urge resubmis- sion of the eighteenth amendment to State conventions of the Union, the Republican State Convention met here today and elected eight delegates and cight alternates to attend the national | convention in Chicago June 14. In addition, the convention voted that the names of Finance Commis- | sioner Frederick S. Peck and Mrs. Paul Simons should be submitted to the Repulican National Committee for re-eleftion as members of tha: body. PHIL HACKER DIES MEMFHIS, Tenn., May 4 (P —Phil M. Hacker, 69, musician and composer, | died at his home here yesterd: In addition to a number of “ragtime” pleces, Mr. Hacker composed numerous marches including “Heart of America.” “Here They Come, There They Go.” District’s Heroes in the World War Compiled by Sergt. L. E. Jaeckel. S recorded in the official citation, Albert S. Hartwell, Private, Se tion No. 633, Ambulance Service. American Expeditionary Force, was awarded tbe Distinguished Service Cross for extraordinary heroism in action with the enemy east of Reims. France, March 20 to 23, 1918. From March 20 to 23 Pvt. Hartwell re- peatedly drove hisl: ambulance over & road east of Reims that wes under F==g bombardment of glnslandh T{gh ex- plosive shells. Upon ___ one occasion, while £ cranking his car, he was knocked yards by the explosion of & shell, yet he con- tinued his work Another day his car was hit by a shell and badly damaged, and he himself was severely | wounded in the head and both legs. In | spite of his wounds, he carried a| wounded man who was in the ambu- lance to a place of safety, thereby sav- ing his life, made him comfortable, and then crawled to a dressing station for assistance. Residence at enlistment, District of Columbia. Pvt. Hartwell now resides in Prance (Copyright. 1932.) Cleaned Blocked PANAMAS g3 Bachrach %33 Eleventh St. N.W. 3530 Connecticut Ave. N.W. d 1 & senior in her school, and will speak on “The Constitutio: Midwestern Orators Compete || PREPARE FOR CONTEST FINALS. ISS ARLINE RIDER (left) and William G. Ordway have been selected to represent the Billings, Mont., and the Amarillo, Tex., high schools, xe:.g)vc‘veh'. in the Midwestern zone finals of the National Oratorical Contest. They will speak for their respective territories when the zone elimination is held at Kansas City May 13. Miss Rider is 17 years old, | ] : A Lesson to World | , Federation Ordway, who also is a senior, will discuss “Our Constitution: A Prototype for World Government The winner of the Kansas City meeting ‘v\'fll come to Wa-hinglon May 21 as one of the six nationa! finalists. | ATOR NORBECK "EAGI.ES’VEMPLOYMENT IS RENOMINATED ~ PLAN IS EXPLAINED Holds 3-to-1 Lead Over Harry F. Rerresentative Horr Tells of Fra- Brownell in South Dakota ternal Order's Federal Com- Primary. mission Proposal. By the Associated Pres | SIOUX FALLS, D, May 4.—Sen- ator Peter Norbeck established a lead of more than 3 to 1 over Harry F. Brownell, Sioux Falls business man, for the Republican senatorial nomina- | tion. With the vote from 1,396 pre- cincts tabulated, the Senator had 72.- The proposal of the Praternal Order | of Eagles for establishment of a Fed- eral commission that weuld study problems involved in stabilizing em- | ployment in industry, agriculture and commerce, was explained in a radio | speech over WRC last night by Repre- | 827. Brownell, 22364, and Charles | Hartzough, 4.184. | Louis W. Bicknell, Webste: attorney. had _an advantage of 274 votes over U. 8. G. Cherry of Sioux Falls for the Democratic senatorial nomination when 872 precincts had reported. The | vote was: Bicknell, 9,756; Cherry. 9,482 Tom Berry, a rancher from the West River country, and L. E. Corey, Magner attorney, were running a close race for the Democratic gubernatorial nom- ination when 905 precincts had re- ported. Berry had 14,937 and Corey, | 12,371, Gov. Warren E. Green, seeking re- nomination on the Republican ticket had a plurality of 28219 and held a lead of nearly 2 to 1 over Carl Gun- derson, former Governor, in 1,382 pre- cincts. _Green polled ' 61 votes againgt 33,208. W. J. CAMPBELL TO SEEK BLAIN'S SENATE SEAT Originator of State Conference| System in Wisconsin Announces His Candidacy. By the Associated Press OSHKOSH, Wis,, May 4—William J. Campbell of Oshkosh, many years a Conservative Republican leader and orig- inator of the State conference system of indorsing Republican candidates for public office, yesterday announced he would be a candidate for the United States Senate. | He will ask for the indorsement of the Conservative Republican State Con- vention and will abide by the deter- minations of that convention. he an- nounced. Before the convention he will oppose John B. Chapple, Ashland editor who already has announced he will run for the place in the United States Senate occupied by John J. Blaine. Will Rogers Says: BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.— Let's give a great big hand to those two Governors, Rolph of California and Balzar of Nevada. for making the fiightclear ACTCSs Our coun- try in a day. Too many won't fly because of their regard for their country, and the shape it would be left in, in ease of accident See where two English scien- tists were able, headline said, to “split the atom.” The world is not bad enough off as it was, now they go and split the atom. That's the last straw; we expect the Dem- ocrats to split, the country to split over prohibition, but we always felt that the old “atom” would remain intact. Come on boys, let's up and atom. . Consult Y our Physician . . . \ LA “SAFE MILK. ,,{ (Lo BABIES ™ /) RUSH PRINTING EXPERT SERVICE BYRON S. ADAMS I Never Sisgppomns” A S sentative Ralph A. Horr, Republican, of Washington. | A bill to put through this project has been introduced by Representative Lud- low, Democrat, of Indiana | The basis of such a movement is regularized production; the commission itself would act as a clearing house for information gleaned from the several Government departments, such as Labor, Commerce, State, Interior and Agricultire. “These facts” sald Representative Horr, “under the plan of the bill, would be assembled and co-ordinated and made availeble to both industry and Government. “Much of the information necessary to inform industry of conditions Is at hand, but is scattered through the dif- ferent departments of Government. | Since the prosperity of one industry is dependent upon the prosperity of other industries, it Is necessary to have the co-ordinated facts of all industries, in order to determine the actual condi- tions of any one particular industry.” List Your Rented and Vacant Real Estate with J. Leo Kolb 804 17th St. Dlstrict 5027 Georgetown Office, 1237 2400 16th St. Unfurnished house- keeping apartment of four rooms, foyer, bath and heated porch at $140, in- cluding electricity and re- frigeration. T hree ex- posures, Wise. Ave. Stop in and ask to see it. *%x A—3 | “ORGANIZED MINORITIES” HIT IN ECONOMY FIGHT Representative Free Blames Groups for Slashing of Estimated Savings. Responsibility for the emasculation of the House economy bill, passed after a_reduction in estimated savings from $210,000.000 to $42,300,000, was placed on “organized minorities” by Repre- sentative Free, Republican, of Califor- nia, in a radio address last night The Californian, speaking over the National Broadcasting System, referred to a flood of protests he said had been received from organizations and inter- ests opposed to various reductions, but said the average constituent contrib- uting one-sixth of his income to pay the taxes had remained silent. Lamenting what he indicated was the disposition of the taxpayer not to take seriously taxes so ieng =s ae paid them indirectly, Pree urged the taxpayers to express to their congressional repre- sentatives their demands for reduced expenditures to avoid high taxes which he said were the inevitable result other- wise. Nearly $2,000.000 was spent on new railway lines in Czechoslovakia in 1931 “See Etz and See Better” Many people believe they have normal eyesight without being conscious of visual de- fects which could and should be corrected with glasses. ETZ Optometrists 1217 G St. N.W. FOR PERSONS WHO WANT the Refinements of Living in Chevy Chase, But Fit- ting Today's Pocketbook Price, $10,750 Right in Chevy Chase Brick, Detached, Center Hall, Six Big Rooms, Beautiful Architecture, Grown-ups Base- ment, Play Room, Full Attic. Not in twenty- years have we ever seen their equal produced in or about Washington. Another Marvel Value We are to produce here also an 8-room, 2-bath Brick Detached Home at $13,750. Don’t Put Off TO INSPECT Drive out Conn. Ave. past the Chevy Chase Club to LELAND ST., turn LEFT two squares to sample homes. OPEN EVENINGS Shannon & Luchs Development Co. “MOTHER’S DAY” NEXT SUNDAY Flowers, the Original Conception for Mother’s Day 3 We Wire Flowers Everywhere O¥ie NURSE] Is produced in 1407 H St. N.W. RY MILK co-operation with A4 a prominent physician and surgeon— Dr. J. Thos. Kelley Its fat is in a state of much finer emulsion (consequemly more easily digested), uniform in amount, and not in excess of the percentage found in mother’s milk. Thousands of babies are its best advertisement, A DIVISION OF NATIONAL Wise Brothers C | E \Y2 Y CHA S E DAIRY 3206 N STREET. N w L SERVING THE NATIONAL CAPTTALFIN =7 YEARS

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