Evening Star Newspaper, July 5, 1932, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ROOSEVELT TRALL | BLAZED BY BRYAN Nominated Without Tam- many, Candidate Draws issue on Liberalism. BY WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star CHICAGO, July 5 generation in which the issues will be fairly well drawn between the conserva- tives and the liberals Smith and Roosevelt made enough confusion justify liberals vo! ut it is apparent Roosevelt ai least will campaign down the trail that ‘went Roosevelt w lacks eloquence will be Bryanism ex ern terms. He has ne his Minneapolis specch which he sounded the t forgotten man Declared for Feder He is 5o thorou doctrine of Fede utilities and to Gov of the r sources of power cannot at least until tk four years ago, of “issues to side, | for he issues | ts mod- | be a Brys ted to the | ership paign warms up. In this city a large group of Roose- wvelt backers e n who have been fighting the ower for a decads, These mer at Roose- velt @l stand hitched ernment ownézhip of hydrau A$other group surr 2 Roosevelt i the group that b in what Thodore Roosevelt used to call social amd industrial justice—the believers in old-age pension and some sort of indus- trial unemployment insurance Strength in Convention. Still another element making for lib- eralism, if not radicalism, in the Roose- velt program, was the source of his strength in the convention. His fight with Smith was something more than a fight on Raskob and Tammany. He was nominated without New York and New England, which is significant, for both Cleveland and Wilson were nom- inated without the help of Tammany. ‘The most significant thing about Roose- velt's convention strength is that it came almost exclusively from the South and West. Smith was the candidate of provin- elal New York and Seaboard New Eng- land: Roosevelt was the candidate of the hinterland South of the Ohlo and West of the Mississippi, excepting Mich- igan and part of the Pennsylvania del- egation and Delaware Roosevelt's strength came from the old Confederacy — from the Missouri Valley States and from the mountain States. The Roosevelt map which hung on the walls of the Congress Hotel was & sectional map and every one knew it. Roosevelt's strength on the map stretched like a great elbow in red from North Carolina west to the Ohio, thence to Mississippi and across the continent, north and south and north- west to the Pacific. Bryan States. ‘These States were Bryan States. In these Western States eodore Roose- velt had his sirength. These States gave Wilson his victory when Hughes took New York and New England. So it is plain that whatever chance Roosevelt has in winning 1s to take the Bryan road and.fight for the border States, such as. Kentucky, Missourt, Tennessee and West Virginia. Curiously enough, it is In these States that Hoover is weak. Here in the South gm\s cotton, which must be marketed low the cost of production. In the West grow wheat, cattle and hogs, which have been suffering from de- vastatingly low pressure. In the South- west, copper; in the Northwest, lumber —all making acute issues in the cam- ign which will carry with them mil- s of votes. Farley Not Strategist. Let there be no mistake. Pranklin Roosevelt will not blow the Bryan bugle, though he goes the Bryan route. Roosevelt’s active managers have come from the South and West. Senator Dill of Washington and Senator Hull of Tennessee, to say nothing of Senator Huey Long and Senator Cohan, the LITTLE GIRL WOULDN'T EAT YesTerpay she only toyed with her food—and of course Mother was a little con- cerned. But today, she has a bowl of Kellogg's Rice Krispies and milk—and just see the dificrence! Watch her dip right in with her spoon and enjoy every mouthful of that good, nour- ishing treat. actually cream. sound fas- cinates youngsters. And how they love the flavor! Rice Krispies crackle in milk or The very Serve for breakfast, lunch ~—fine for the children’s supper. So easy to digest, Rice Krispies invite restful sleep. How much better than maz¥ hot, heavy dishes. Sola by all grocers. Al- ways oven-fresh in the red and-green package with the sealed inside waxTiTE bag. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Quality guaranteed. NEW EASY-OPEN TOP Youdon't need 1o cut or tear the package. Simply press with yeur thumbs _along dotted line— (N.AN.A).—The | eampaign now before the American pt‘z\-i ple will be the first campaign for a Control. H { name of W 1blic | by the nomination of Roosevelt. t he | with Hoover cam- | Ritchie. new Senator from Georgia, were active all last week in the Roosevelt campalgn. Farley was not the strategist; he took orders. But he got results. The men who nominated Franklin Roosevelt are Wilsonians, tle spoken, the sort that surrounded Wilson. They feel that the clash of the campaign should come on the straight issue of liberalism. Power is bound to be an issue. The Federal control of utilities will be stressed. Unemployment relief by crea- tion of public works will be discussed. | The program adopted by the conven- | tion seems conservative enough. In- terpreted by Smith, Ritchie or by Baker, the Democratic platform might easily be a charter of conservatism. Platform Is Liberal. But hardly a clause of that docu- pretation in the campaign—of a suave Iiberalism. | The Roosevelt managers for a week have been gradually unfolding their plan to make Roosevelt a Harvardian Bryan, sophisticated, punctilious, the gentleman_rabble-rouser. If they had revealed their design last Winter they could hardly have won The delegates from the various in- structed States sitting on the floor this eek scarcely realized where their vic- »ry has taken their party. Certainly these delegates are not left wing lib- 1s. Today they are beginning to suspect where the Democratic party was moving under the guidance of these velvet-voiced Dantons of the soft approach, who make ‘medicine with the n Wet Issue Softened. The prohibition issue will be softened Here he will be found in closer agreement than ®ith Smith and And his attitude will always | be affected by the dry South and West | of Wayne Wheeler, but the By dry one does not mean the daj day of the new drys who live in dry States. These new drys that have held to State prohibition for a generation now are willing to abandon the eighteenth amendment. but only if Federal control of the interstate commerce in liquor is written into the Federal Constitution where the eighteenth amendment now stands. These new drys come from Roosevelt's liberal territory. They must not be offended. Hoover will stand for re-elec tion on their platform. They voted 0. K. AMERICA TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE=60 modern min- wtes with the world’s finest danceorchestras, and famous Lucky Strike foatures, every Tuesday, Thursday and Sat- wrday evening over N.B.C. | the East to win; Smith's calling atten- | HE EV IN G STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, against the majority report in their own convention. They will take the Repub- lican platform if Roosevelt attempts to force the prohibition issue on _the Smith-Ritchie front line. All of which makes it necessary for Roosevelt to turn to the left at the crossroads and L down the Bryan lane. West Needed to Win. Rooseelt must have the West to win ‘To get the West he must minimize the prohibition issue and go gunning for the forgotten man. Hoover must have tion to Roosevelt's neglect of militant anti-prohibition will help Roosevelt in the West though crippling him in the East. Hoover is bound by his platform | and by his own conviction to stand for | Federal constitutional protection for | the dry States; he will not challenge {ment is immune from a liberal inter- | Roosevelt’s position on prohibition for| fear of losing Republican votes in the West. | So there you are. Roosevelt’s person- | ality has brought the prohibition issue | back from the Smith sector to the Hoover line. In this crisis, while Hoover is fighting for the East, he lacks one element o success. Mark Hanna is dead. €Copyright. 1932, by the North American Newepaper Alliance, Inc.) SOCIETY GIRL KILLED AND ANOTHER INJURED Lawrence Gross of “Whistling in the Dark” Fame in Accident Near Rice Lake, Wis. By the Associated Pr RICE LAKE, is., July - 5.— Miss Elaine Albrecht, 23, socially prominent | in Milwaukee, was fatally injured and | Lawrence Gross, playwright of Mil-| waukee., was severely hurt yesterday when Gross' automoblile skidded off the highway near here and overturned in a field % | Gross is the author of numerous plays, the most notable being “Whist- ling in the Dark.” a recent Broadway | production. Gross and his third wife were divorced last March after Mrs. Gross had filed suit naming Miss Al-| brecht co-respondent. ! A carillon has been added to the Na- | tional War Memorial &t Wellington, | New Zealand. s Do you inhale? § JULY 5, 1932. Democratic opponents, led by Gomer | Smith, Oklahoma City mon:’eyv: R. M. | McCool, Democratic State chairman, EXPED|T|0N FlNDs LA i eS| GALLERY OF MOSAICS Congressional incumbents, including | J. V. MeClintic, a Democrat, who hi | represented the seventh district since | p; Second-C % 1914, had opponent: | Pictures of md-Omtary Mot bles Called Discovery of Major Importance. SLAE OF NURRAY DRAWS OPPOSTIN Oklahoma Primary Marked by Bitter Campaigns in Many Counties. Parish Secks Inhabitant. Alethorpe, England, is a parish with- | out an inhabitant and it wants one Two years ago it had two residents and ; its Tepresentative was chairman of the | * prNGRTON. N, J. July B—A pic- rural District Council. Now the only person_on _the_electoral roll is J. T.| ture gallery of the anclents in the form Thistleton-Smith, owner of the parish's | of & Mosaic floor, containing five pan- only farm. The rural District Council | els and dating from the second century, must wait until Alethorpe’s only house | i occupled before they can declare s | hoS been unearthed at Antioch, Syria, vacancy on the Council, because only then can & nomination form be filled ' ton University. t. Prof. C. Rufus Morey, chairman of BARGAIN FARES PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD FARES SHOWN ARE ROUND-TRIP EASTERN STANDARD TIME By the Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY, July 5—Gov. Willlam H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray, the | State’s flery Democratic chief execu- tive, was an issue today in Oklahoma's | first primary election. The Governor has announced the leg- | islative candidates he wishes elected and as a result bitter campaigns have re- sulted in many counties. | 31 Seek House Seat. | Twenty-five Democrats and six Re- EVERY SATURDAY end SUNDAY publicans want the new office of Con- BALTIMORE $1.25 7isen sood only n couches on ol resula raios gressman at large. Claude Weaver, un- | til recently Gov, Murray's secretary, has PHILADELPHIA 53,00 CHESTER $3.00 his former chief’s support for the Dem- wlLMlNGToN ‘2 7 i ‘fl.lfifz‘%)‘.? ‘z,g el ocratic nomination, while Mrs. Mabel Bassett, State commissioner of char- ities and one of Weaver’s opponexts, is a pronounced foe of the Governor. | Nearly 9,000 candidates sought offices ATLANTICCITY 511,50 qi s WEEK-END ALL-E)P.NSE TOBR _ According to Hotel selected Lv. Washington 105 5. m. ranging from United States Senator to CLEVELAND, oHi0510 .50 o township constable. Of this number 800 = > gy wished State posts. Unless a candidate ATLANTIC CITY $4.00 SUNDAYS, Jely 10, 3 polls a majority, the two leaders in each Lv. Washington 12.15 4. . race will enter & run-off primary July 26 SUNDAYS, July 10, 24 One of the Democratic candidates for NEW YORK $3.50 _ L. Weshington 1915, 750 s m. %Coaches ready for occupancy 11.30 p. m. BOST s SATURDAYS, Jely 23, Awgust 20 on 10.00 Lv. Washington 7.50 p. m. NIAGARA FALLSS ™ FRIDATS | 1ot 5.9 2223 Lv. Washington, Fridays, 8.15, 11‘/)\9‘,'ggd(m'e 7DAOA¢Y1) SPATS | A $4, 1520 Ask sbout All-Expense Toun to New England and Esstern Caneda, Colorado, and Great Lakes Craises this Semmer - . N ROUND.TRIP FARES OVER WEEKEND 45% REDUCTION "5 B R VANIA EATIOAD Good going Friday sHemoon and Seturday, retursing wntil Mondey midnight PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD congressional nomination was Ernest W. Marland, Ponca City ofl man who made and lost & fortune. | Candidates for Senate. Wirt Franklin, independent ofl man and leader of the oil tariff movement J. 8. Stone, former fifth district Repre- sentative, and James A. (Big Jim) Har- ris, former Republican national com- mitteeman, were candidates for the Re- publican nomination for United States Senator. Senator Elmer Thomas, & leader in the fight for full payment of adjusted compensation to World War veterans, faced formidable opposition from his Luckies “make no [ EEP that under your hat,” said the cigarette trade when first we raised the question—"Do you inhale?” But silence is golden only when it’s unwise to speak. Let others explain their striking avoidance of this subject. Lucky Strike makes its position crystal clear... for certainly, inhaling is most important to every smoker. For everybody inhales—whether they realize it or not...every smoker breathes it was announced yesterday at Prince- | the Department of Art and Archeol- | Art and the Worchester Art Museum among others. , pronounced the discovery of jor archeological and artistic im- portance,” and sald it was the firs example of antiocene painting un. covered. The discovery was made by Dr. Clarence Fisher, fleld director of the joint expedition sponsored by Princeton, the Baltimore Museum of o8y, The Mosaic was found beneath some public baths of the fourth or fifth cen- tury on the banks of the Orentes River, and measured 17 feet by 23 feet. The panels formed a “T” in the center of the floor with a large central picture ! flanked by two smaller ones. Don’t Wait Until That . Little Roof-Leak figg? fbccom(‘f big and involves expen- PAINTS sive repairs . . . possibly necessary redecorating also. Tell us what type of roof yours is, and we'll recom- HOU:CEH mend the right Paint to make it ‘p:?ms weather-tight. Specially Low Prices QUICK- —on Roof and House Paints . . . on E%T;"gfs Varnishes, Paints, Lacquers, & LACQUERS mels and all other finishes of :PENDABLE QUALITY. FLOOR Dri-Brite Wax makes bare floors beautiful STAINS without effort . . . & WAX REQUIRES NO POLISHING. HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS—GLASS 1334 New York Ave.—Phone NAt. 1703 bones” about this vital question in some part of the smoke he or she draws out of a cigarette. Do you inhale? Lucky Strike “makes no bones” about this vital question because certain impurities concealed in even the finest, mildest tobacco are removed by Luckies’ famous purifying process. Luckies created that process. Only Luckies have it! “It’s toasted” Your Protection - against irritation - against cough

Other pages from this issue: