Evening Star Newspaper, June 20, 1932, Page 5

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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON . D €. MONDAY, JU INE 20, %% A—S NOMINATOR 1S 0LD | ROOSEVELT FRIEND John Mack Helped Launch Career of Governor 22 Years Ago. By the Associated Press. ALBANY, N. Y., June 20.—The man who was Gov. Roosevelt’s political god- father when he first stood for public cffice 22 years ago will nominate him for the presidency at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week. He is John E. Mack. tall, dignified country gentleman farmer. prominent attornev. neighbor of the Roosevelts for vears. iamous in his community for his homely speeches in language tuned to the “common people.” Mr. Roosevelt announced the sclec- tion of his nominator last night. It came after weeks of speculation as to who would place the Governor's name before the delegates and was somewhat A surprise, dozens of names having been picked over bv political observers with- out any guessing 1t would be Mack until | today.” Then, just before the Gove nor's announcement, there came reports that his friend and old neighbor would be named Not Listed as Delegate. Mack is not a delegate. and som body in the New York delegation “‘l”l have to give up his convention seat to| enaole him to i~ake the speech Mack was the Democratic district at- | torney of Republican Dutchess County | in 1910, when he groomed young Frank- lin Roosevelt to for State senator. | Roosevelt won, and two vears later was re-elected. It was d In the State Le; made a name anti-Tammany Democ Tiger in a fight over senatorship h York State. Mack fight of the ,nd represented Edward Bro “Daddy’s" legal troubles with his y.1 wife, Frances “Peaches” Browning Martin Conboy he is helping the ernor in his study of the Seabu Vi- dence against Mayor Walker New York. It was while the two attorneys were at the Executive Mansion night conferring with Mr. Rocsevelt on the Walker case that the announcement was made. Wagner First Mentioned. There were ic in New | mmany th last | nors on Capitol Hi C Curry, one else ‘Tiger in its city investig Curry has said which c: will get th pport of the powerf: tiger, claiming to control some 50 N York votes 1 friendly many’s votes Smith and the ment in the early balloting. The decision as to the next step i was_ believed 4 1 course in such | cases and ask the mayor for an answer to the Seabury charges. That would mean the case would not be settled be- fore the Democratic National Conven- | tion meets. TS BANK DEPOSIT BILLS KILLED FOR SESSION| = \ Senate Subcommittee to Pass on | it Measures Urging Guarantee Legislation. : anking Committee to- day decided to turn all bills urg bank deposit guarantees over to a suk committee of five, which concede kills action at this session Included is 11 bill, approved | by the House, re sponsored by Senator ' Fletcher. Democrat, Florida, who moved that the subcom- amed to consider them Norbeck of the full com- spont the three ot 1 a short time. He an 1 be mittee Fletcher w leaders to be imposisble because of the few remain- ing days in which Congress is expected to remain in session HOUSE TO EXTEND BUSINESS INQUIRY' | Committee Plans Hearings in New York and Kansas City After Recess. Chairman S| Committee inve competition with today the co York and K: facts New York hearings on clothing sold by the Government in competition with | private business will begin just after | Congress adjourns and iast three or four days. | Those in Kansas City. expected to | last longer. will begin the middle of July. in September the commit- | tee will return to Washington to resume hearings which will be recessed this | week. House | ernment | said New | isit as City in its search for Ba nges Hea Bac arranged the ) hearings, which Shannon p: ly will | not attend because of the Democratic National Convention. They wiil g0 into the question of civilian clothing sold at | wholesale prices through Army. N and veterans’ stores. ‘Th> manufacture | of clothing at the Atlanta and Leaven- worth Penitentiaries also will be con- sidered The Kansas City surve said, “has been arranged larg: of the mass of complaints Southwest." He said the committe2 there will hear in detail how the Government competes with makers of artificial limbs, banks chemists, ccal dealers, coffce roasters, cotton and wool manufacturers, dairies . grain merchants, grocers. in- ies, jewelry stores, laun- raisers, musicians, printers, railroad and barge lines, shoe facturers, restaurants and cafe- hotels, nurseries, map publishers hographers, doctors, leather and akers and numerous other lines con Arra, blican, | k Citv | Shannon because | from the| CONCERT TONIGHT = i Army Band to Present Latin Amer- | ican Program. A concert of Latin American music will be rendered by the United States | Army Band tonight at the District of Columbia World War Memorial at 7:30 o'clock. William J. Stannard will he leader of the concert, and Thomas F. Defcv, sec- ond leader. Coart ydal' J. Flelder will be commas: ing A& &. | remarks were definite refusals to discuss politics i E 1 When Dawes Returned Home GOES BACK TO TAKE UP BUSINESS AFFAIRS. NDERSLUNG pipe and all, Charles G. Dawes, the private citizen, arrived in Chicago Saturday to pick up the management of his business affairs where he left off years ago when he entercd official life. He is shown here in the center of a group of reporters s he made one point plain and drove it home with the hand-pcunding gesture. The general's —A. P. Photo. - SENATORSDISCUSS. WORLD RECOVERY DEMOCRAT PLANKS HELD MORAL ISSUE ‘Dr. Jacob Gould Schurman Outlines Four Ways Out in Speech at Cornell. Party Group Holds Sessien With Hull to Talk Chi- cago Plans. With their national convention only | BY the Associated Press up of Senate Demo- | TITHACA. N. Y., June 20—America discuss the party’s can recover her prosperity only “in a economic platform dec- | €o-operative constructive effort on a those participating said | great internation " sald Dr as reached Jacob Gould Schi former Am- was held In the office | bassador to Germanv, in a commence- r Hull (Democrat) Tennessce, ' ment address who has been prominently mentioned today. the probable chairman of the Re:o- “America s now suffering. with the rest of the world. a vast and devastat Committee which will draft the ing ssion he “America cannot recover her in isolation from the rest of the world tion and but Leaves Here Tomorrow. to leave for Chicago to- said he wanted to obtain views of party leaders here before present terrible crisis, * * * be found in any measires w ca or any other single power may dertake, ‘but in a co-operative, cor structive effort on a great international scale. That effort will, of course, em- brace the fields of economics and finance, but the ultimate solution will be found in higher domain. For the fun- damental cause of the world depression is a moral one.” Four remedies for the world's ills | were offered in the address “In the first place, justice and inter- national law must be re-enthroned both in the hearts of men and in the chan- Tt i Yall crtive cerles of the world. The nations de- | feated in the great war must be given Backing Roosevelt. | back their absolute sovereignty and Senator Dill_was one of the first|cquality with the victorious nation supporters of Gov. Roosevelt of New | Secondly, statesmen and diplomats m York for the Democratic nomination |adapt their policies to actual facts and has been in close touch with him | especially must they adapt to economic for months. realities the fantastic and intolerable ;burdcn of reparations, which was put IN CHICAGO SLAYING cise of brute force over weaker nei Submachin is not to mong those who attended the con- ce_were Senators Walsh of Mon- George of Georgia, Pittman of Nevada, Dill of Washington, Harrison of Mississippi, Byrnes of South Caro- lina, Bankhead and Black of Alabama. Senator Dill has drafted a prohibi- tion plan which has received favorable consideration from a number of Sena- tors. It proposes submissicn to the| people of an amendment to repeal the eighteenth amendment and would sub- bors bv ambition’s imperialistic pow Fourthly, there must be & general re- idnr_p}r‘m or armament. * * ¢ ’ “The longer we refuse to co-operate ¢ Gun Used in Gangland wé(h liurrm-zn nations in stemming the 3 tide of depression, the greater will be Killing Traced to Firm of |/our losses in the Dantias and the : | more certain the impossibilty of re- Titus Haffa. covering in the future anything what- ever on the war debts.” Dr. Schurman is a former president | of Cornell June 20.—Titus A. Haffa, | - . CAUGHT AFTER CHASE police learned the submachine gun | found rear the scene of George “Red” | Man Charged With Attempted Barker's assassination last week was purchased by a company of which Burglary in Chicago Loop Hotel. Haffa was presicent. | By the Associated Press Serial numbers on the gangland | weapon showed it had been sold Janu- CHICAGO. June 20.—Minhael Polin- sky, 25, of Wilkes-Barre. Pa., shoeless 18. 1928, to the Faber Screw Ma- ne Products Co. At that time, Chief of Detectives William Shoemaker said, | Haffa was head of the firm, and he was | aced & number of policemen through the Loop early yesterday and lost He was charged with attempted bur- glary and held as a parole violator from seized today at its offices with another Sing_Sing prison. Doris McEntee, 23, 1 whose identity wes withheld. | he gun was found in a vacant lot cross the alley from the Northwest Side nt. from v xecu- | ©f Cleveland, who. police said. lived o om which the gang execu- | Oy, "Polinsky at 8 Loop hotel for five months. was also held Officers said Polinsky was rrowling ioner leveled it at “Red” Barker and poured 36 bullets into his body. Barker, | through the fifteenth floor of the hotel. without shoes, and guests called for aid. ex-convict and public enemy, had been | one of the most notorious labor and Lquor racketeers for the roanone sand | e R e still shoeless. He had lock-picking in- struments in his pockets. police said. post-Capone era. Two years ago Haffa himself went to | Records showed petty larceny charges | in Ohio and California. Leavenworth penitentiary as a penalty | for violating the prohibition act. R. B. MELLON DEDICATES | NAVY OFFICER ORDERED HIS $3.000,000 CHURCH | TO DUTY HERE DIES ociated Press ! - i ITTSBURGH, June 20— Richard B Comdr. Gromer, Native of Ne- Mecllon yesterday laid the cornerstone braska, Was to Have Come to of the costly new church being erected where the Mellon family has worshiped for more than a century. The_edifice is the gift of Mr. and M::. Richard B. Mellon to the congre- Navigation Bureau. Comdr. James Gillespie Blaine Gromer, U. S. Navy, navigator of the gation of the East Liberty Presbyterian | U. S. S. Saratoga, who was ordered to| F in memory of the donors' duty to the Bureau of Navigation, Navy Estimates of its cost have | Department, died yvesterday in Seattle, e high as $3.000,000. W?:sh .dur [éncumonia_ b} . icles ‘'omdr. Gromer's widow. Mrs. Belle conl of the papers and articles in U | Burns Gromer of Seattle, survives him, the same site in 1867 were placed in | ,BOrn in Nebraska August 27, 1889, the new cornerstone. E""“’{;,S{;’;‘;:;:g:?,;’d aboard & num- 3 4 | ber o y ing e ar of e new church is intended to be oBe | and ‘ater the conflict was engineer of- of Gothic design. Beautiful lighting | ICeT of the ,e‘{j- e ISJ°"§hsD'¥°"‘ arrangements have been prepared to andiithen Hollowedl s’ tour of o CE“S illuminate it within and without. It|ghd then followed a tour of duty on is expected to be completed within 18 | {he Faclfic Coast. Recently he was with months. [lhev Naval Reserve Officers’ Training More than 100 years ago plans for | URit 8t the University of Washington. the First Pres| rian Church in the S »: EMPLOYES h East Liberty Valley were discussed in PLAN PLAY the home of the Mellons' grandparents. They donated land for the first church o . ‘Fedeml Union, No. 2, to Present crected there. CARNIVAL TO BE IN JULY | Comedy at Jewish Center. | For the benefit of the office base ball |team and to provide funds for estab- liskment of a separate branch cf Fed- | eral Employes’ Union, No. 2, the Civil Service Commission thespians will pre- Rittenhouse streets. will be held Thurs- | sent the comedy “Helen Whattagirl's cay evening at 7:45 o'clock to complete | Dilemma” Thursday night at the Jewish p'ans for a carnival to be held by the | Community Center, Sixteenth and Q iwo groups about July 15 | streets. The organization plans for many| Further entertainment will be pro- amusing features, such as costume |vided by Phil Hayden's Dancers, the A mecting of the Albright Brother- hood and ladies Bible class of the Al- bright Memorial Church, Fourth and | prizes, pic-eating contests and fortune | radio section of the Nordica Orchestra telling. | of Walter T. Holt's School, Edith Reed's Rev. George E. Schnabel has charge | Kids, Hilton's Jubilee Singers and Saxo- of program arrangements and Dewey ' phonist Jimme O'Brien, all donated Cardnes music arrangements. acts at Cornell University | prosperity | The supreme condition for ending the | ITAX BOOSTS TIRES | [1T0T5PER CENT ILeading Firms Announce In- crease, Expecting Good Market Results. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 20.—Leading tire and rubber companies will observe the inauguration of new Federal excise-tax schedules tomorrow by marking up prices from 11 to 15 per cent. | This increase will take care of the| added 10 per cent tax and will leave a ! lttle over for added sales profit. The rubber industry for over three years has been operating under the heavy handicap of declining prices— both for crude rubber and for finished products—and welcomes the increase as a boon. Some, executives believe it may signalize a return to orderly market conditions in the industry. Fluctuation of Prices. The presidents of the large rubber companies have been continually beset by the nightmare of violently fluctuat- | ing prices of crude rubber. There are few industries in which speculation is so vital a risk in the day’s business as in the making of tires. The companies have been obliged to make huge pur- chases of crude rubber, running into millions of dollars, on a market which might completely wash out the profits of a season’s hard-driven sales program by a sudden downward swoop of prices In 1931, the six leading American | manufacturers of tires sold 000 worth of products. Yet. the suffered an aggregate loss of $15,000.- | 000. Purther recession in crude rubber | prices more than wiped out the profits from intensive sclling Manufacturers are beginning to feel a little hopeful. however, that crude | rubber prices can not go through the | bottom now. on the theory that they | are already there. C: rubber is now | quoted at figures representing less than the cost of production. Exports Control Failure. ‘The cataclysmic drop in crude rubber | prices followed the failure of the Eng lish-born Stephenson plan to peg or | stabilize rubber prices by artificial con- trol of exports. The fallure has fre- quently been cited as an argument against similar schemes for govern- | mental or other efforts to peg commod- ity prices From $125 a pound in 1925 rubber began its avalanche. i reached a level around 5 cents at the end of 1931. and now is cents. Meantime, m: rubber products. who j 10 set a \alue on their own hol crude supplies. been |w off inve { ventories depr in 1930 and similar shr: ANTI-CIGARETTE GROUP TO MARK ANNIVERSARY ! crude | od Founding in District Ten Years Ago to Be Celebrated Wednes- day at First Congregational. | The tenth annive of the found | ing of the Anti-Cigarette Aliiance of the | District of Columbia will be celebrated at 8 oclock Wednesday night in the | east parlor of the First Congregational | | Church, Tenth and G streets Speakers include Dr. Dantel H. Kress president of the alliance; Mrs | Scott_Rafter. Dr. W | Rev. G. W. Kerstet | ganizer of the alliance; | Butler, Rev. Thomas E. B Rev. W. J. Hubbard Moving pictures will be shown ! ing the address, and a npera will be presented unde ' Mrs. R. T. Stout of the Women | tian Temperance Union. CALLES IN NEW YORK | e | Arrives With Wife, Undergo Operation. NEW YORK, June 20 ( Leonor C n husband. Gen' Plutarco E | former President of Mexico, arrived from Mexico City today for medical treatment and a possible | Senora Calles was taken immediately to the French Hospital for a diagnosis |of her illness. | Dr. Joseph Jordan of Gen. Calles, who m the irain at the Pennsylvania Sta . said that the nature of Senora Calles’ illness had not been determined. Dispatches from Mexico City which announced her de- | parture from the Mexican capital last Thursday state she w suffering from a kidney ailment. Other reports said she was suffering from meningitis. JOBLESS F‘UNDS GONE Philadelphia Committee Asks Pin- chot to Call Legislature. PHILADELPHIA, June 20 (#) —The Philadelphia C: ee for Unemploy- ment Relief, after distributing $14.500.- 000 in the past 18 months. yesterday announced it had decided to “dissolve | forthwith” because of lack of funds At the same time it appealed to Gov. Pinchot to call another special session of the Legislature immediately to con- sider relief for the unemployed and for State-aided institutions, asserting 5 000 families will “face actual starva- tion” with the suspension of the com- mittee’s activities. 1 ler. son-in-law | l Marri Randolph Brage. 22 ok ey age Licenses. nd Pansy C. Lilly Rev. William Pier- rna 24 and A T f Baltimore, Md.. Ret. T. Loch Everett_Hogan. 23. Purcellville. Va s L Tineman, 20, Norfols, Va: Re Washington. 20. 1328 Cor- | zabeth Coleman, 18, 1328 Smith and Mary J Rev. Al A U st st Res and v. L and | H Champlain & 2370 Champla iristie. 4525 Cathed . ‘and Jocelyn F. Johnson. Silver Sprine. Md Melvin E. Keys, 18, 3418 E. Longerbeam. 1610 Wisconsin . Norfolk. Va.. 434 4th st me K edy Frederick C. Scheuch. 32. North Md.. and Bet'y Kranzlein, 35, 751 13th M Rev. Paul A. Me 1L H. Jones. fal Beach, Va. 6 10th st. nee. 1330 11th st. and . 427 Buchanan st. and T Rev. Beach. [ M Da Rey. Henry_J_Smith We Have All Material for Screening Porches You'll find our prices ex- ceptionally low for high-grade materials. See Kelly first and save money. ORDER TOO SMA SUDDEN SERVICE J. FRANK KELLY, Inc. Lumber, Millwork, Paint, Coal, Sand, Gravel, Cement 2121 Ga. Ave.] North 1343 $520,000 - | © 153 Who Is to !, FIGHT ON GARSAUD OPENED BY LONG Louisiana Senator Contests His Reappointment to Power Commission. By the Associated Press. Opening a fight against the reap- pointment of Marcel Garsaud to the Power Commission, Senator Long, Dem- ocrat, of Louisiana, told the Senate to- day “there never was a greater crime against the men, women and children of this country than when that man was put on the Power Cc-vmission.” Long referred to Garsaud. a Louisi- anan. as a “thimble-rigging, thumb- screw appointee of the most nefarious interests in that part of the country.” “Every job he ever had,” said Long, “was a result of this power trust.” He said he would “a whole lot rather 80 to Harvey Couch, an Arkansas Public Utilities official, to secure a ruling against the power companies than to Marcel Garsaud” and would “sooner ke the chances of the people of the | United Sta' with Andrew W. Mellon than with saud.” He asserted the “only certificate of good character for an appointment by Herbert Hoover from ths State of Louisiana is that the appointee must have been publicly rebuked by the people of that State Long criticism Senator vania, for struck back him last wee Republican, of Pennsy being absy The 1 at ana Senator said he had on_bustnes: and contended Reed's case of 1 black " ator from Pennsylvania has even been absent in attending to his law busi- s He added that on that point Long said his friends in Louisiana | and the vernor of the State had d him to aid in passage of legis- | fon intended to “take care of sore | 266.000 school childry and comb. the effects of the “Hoover depression.” that the absence of Long was delaying the Sen- ate’s business. His remark grew o of an cbjectio: idering the nation of a Louisianan on the ground that Long was not present | Asserting that he was “liberal” on | ) ng home % i he “might be wrong” | i ave tc c nd attend to political ma “Doesn’t Want to Offend.” » fortunate as the Senator | n he added. “I'm | right as a United | I haven't got a Vare | lon in Louisiana to help me come to the Senat I've got to get, £ e 0 from ) iling. promptly dn't.” | m Pennsylvania has | 0 d. “He nd. which | of this administration to def Xious in every part cou FORT BACKS PLANKS FOR RESUBMISSION New Jersey Dry, Defeated by Mor- | Tow in Senate Race, to Speak in Boston for G. 0. P. Former Repre: f New Jers: for the R ntative Franklin W. | who as a dry can- | lican nominatio Je 1Wo ye was b the late Dwight W, s a wet gly def Morrow, who ra at the White House io- | day. following a talk with the President, | t he approves of the Republi | platform adopted in Chicago in its ~n- | tirety and will speak in support of it | during the campaign. ! Mr. Fort will make the first speech of the campaign Saturday night at a political gathering in Boston. He his plans after that are inde! When asked. on his way out of the | White House executive offices, if the | so-called al liquor plank in the | Republican platform suited him. the New Jersey dry exponent answered by saving. “I am going to support it and ! 1 am going to speak for it.” SALES TAX BACKED Associated Business Papers to Hold National Drive. SHAWNEE. Pa, June 80 () .—In an to draft an acceptable substitute r the excise and sales tax bills re- Jected by Congress, Associated Business Papers. Inc., at its annual meeting, has authorized a study of the problem. A national educational campaign to prevent another defeat for this type of egisiation is planned. Warren C. Platt of Cleveland, pub- isher of the National Petroleum News, rtived yesterday after two terms as president of the association. J. H. Mc- Graw, jr, vice president of the Mc- Graw-Hill Publishing Co., New York, was elected to succeed him. Samuel O. Dunn of Chicaro, vice president of the Simmons-Bcardman gubthshmg Co., was elected vice presi- | ent. CHICAGO, June 20 (#).—Clarence Darrow. the atiorney. will appear be- | fore the Illinois Supreme Court Wed- | nesday to make a plea in behalf of Rus- | sell McWilliams. 17-year-old Rockford, Tl slaver. sentenced to die Friday. McWilliams is in the “death cell” at the old penitentiary at Joliet. Pocket The s e you realize om Rinaldi's READ- ING ANTHRA. CITE COAL pur- chased now at low Summmer prices. in twelve i 0 .. 1906 Lowest (12) ye Phone North 1600 Rina/J ] Company Ine SILO STORED and RE-SCREENED 649 Rhode Island Ave. N.E. cratic floor leader of the House of Representatives were among eight who received honorary degrees today at the 111th commencement exercises of Am- herst College. DEGREE GIVEN ADAMS Navy BSecretary and Representa- tive Rainey Honored by Amherst. AMHERST, Mass., June 20 (#)—The Secretary of the Navy and the Demo- Representative Henry Thomas Rainey, Democratic leader of the House of Rep- resentatives, by President Arthur Stan- ley Pease today at the 111th com- mencement exercises of Amherst College. The honorary doctor of laws_degree : was conferred upon Charles Francis| Schools in Scotland will instruct Adams, Secretary of the Navy and | pupils in the use of the telephone. Big 3¢, 10cand 1 ScSale More for your money now, than for years. 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