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HORATORUM T BY RS, CARANAY Arkansans Told Also About Manicured Farm Board. Long Helps Calleague. By the Associated Press. WYNNE, Ark., August 3.—Manicured fingernails of the Federal Farm Board members and the Hoover moratorium were made issues in Hattie Curnwny's“ campaign for renomination to the| United States Senate in interior Ar- | kansas yesterday, as Mrs. Caraway and Huey P. Long’s sound trucks swung northward on the second day of Lheir‘ State-wide tour. | At the crossroads and on court house lawns, the junior Arkansas and | Louisiana_Senators joined in hurling | criticism without distinction at Senate | Republicans and Democrats, who, they say, “got taken in with Mr. Hoover's : pink relief pills.” H Under the high-pressure management of “Kingfish” Long they made six of the larger towns today, climaxing their dash across the country with a celebra- tion in Mrs. Caraway’s home town, Jonesboro, tonight. Want “Unbossed” ‘The caravan campaigners based their plea for Mrs. Caraway’s re-election on keeping an “unbossed vote of the peo- ple in the United States Senate.” Mrs. Caraway, slight and smiling, brought the Farm Board into the dis- cussion when she said that some of President Hoover’s appointees to the board, on. whom the Senate Agricul- ture Committee had to pass, described themselves as “dirt farmers,” but were chiefly distinguished by the “high polish of their manicures.” “They relieved the farmer all right.” she said in a soft, slow voice. “They relieved him of everything but his self- respect.” Senator Long, his face blistered after 48 hours on the road, shouted his de- nunciation of the national administia- tion and the coalition voting of the two parties into microphones that car- ried his voice far over the countryside. However, he continued to refrain from a direct attack on Senator Joe T. Rob- inson of Arkansas, asserting “Our dif- ferences will be settled on the Senate oor.” Senate. Credited With Sense. “We hear a lot about taking Mrs. Caraway out of the Senate because a woman has 1o business there,” Long said. “Well, she has more sense than a lot of these so~called national leaders, and she proved it when she was the only one of us from this neck of the woods that didn’t get taken in by the Hoover palaver about a moratorium last year.” Long next took the Texas guberna- torial Tun-off primary to task, blaming both the Sterling and Ferguson factions for defeat of “no’ cotton planting” last Fall. “That's a swell choice the people have to make in that Texas second primary,” he said, “because whichever one wins the people lose.” Dr. Charles H. Brough, former Gov- ernor and an opponent of Mrs. Caraway in the senatorial race, in a speech last night criticizéd. Long for coming into Arkansas, saying, “the people of Arkan- sas don't need the aid of the Louisiana Senator” in making thelr decision in the senatorial campaign. At Stuttgart today Long snapped back with the charge that some of Mrs. Caraway’s opposition had visited Louisi- ana in 1929 to attempt his impeachment as Governor. He called no names, say- ing, “I ain't a-going to give ’em that much advertising.” CIVILIZATION MAKES ESKIMO TEETH ACHE Smithsonian Investigation Reveals Effect of Food in Contrast to Native Diet. Investigation by the Smithsonian In- stitution reveal that toothaches are in- creasing among Eskimos of Alaska in proportion to the amount of white man’s food they eat. It was said that among 25 Eskimos who still live on fish, seal, walrus, birds | and whale meat, not a single case of tooth decay was found by Henry B. Collins, Smithsonian scientist. At Nome, largest white settlement in Alaska, on the other hand, he found seven out of nine natives had decayed teeth. Change of diet from native to “civilized” foods is undoubtedly the predisposing factor in the increased tooth decay, according to the Smith- sonian announcement. Before the ad- vent of the whites, Eskimos had the least amount of tooth decay of any racial group in the world. HOOVER TC PRESENT - MEDAL FOR ESSAY Miss Betty Ann Troy of Stamford, Conn., Winner of Bicentennial Contest, Here to Get Award. Miss Betty Ann Troy of Stamford, Conn., winner of the National Bicenten- nial Essay Contest, will be presented with the official gold Bicéntennial medal by President Hoover tomorrow at 12:30 o'clock. Miss Troy is a 16-year-old student at the Sacred Heart Academy of Stam- ford, where she has led her class for three years. The Bicentennial Essay Contest was open to all high school students in America. More than 1,- 000,000 sent in their essays. Her subject was “The Many-Sided- ness of George Washington.” She dis- cussed Washington the warrior, ad- venturer, sportsman, home-maker, in- vestigator, nation-builder, general, trustee, official and national hero, Miss Troy, who is_accompanied by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Troy, is now the guest of the commission. Actor's Wife Wins Divorce. SAN DIEGO, Calif., August 3 (F).— Virginia Graves was granted an inter- locutory decree of divorce from Ralph Graves, film actor, here yesterday. The judge awarded her $400 monthly al- lowance and custody of their 3-year- old_son, Jerry. HOME OWNERS ATTENTION! American Radiator | BOILER Full 17-in. boiler for hot-water heat. Fully guaranteed. One of the best values in years. Installed in Your Home No Cash R 1 25 to pay Hot-Water Heat e $285 American Heating Engineering Co. 997 N. Y. Ave. Natl. 8421 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1932. Enter Carnival Popularity Contest COMPETITION KEEN IN HOLY COMFORTER ENTERTAINMENT. OME of the 53 young ladies competing in popularity contest, a feature of the George Washington Bicentennial | the community turned to him for aid carnival, which has entered its second week under sponsorship of the Holy Comforter Church. The candidates are | i handling unemployment problems | Helen Oehman, Agnes Peake, Grace DI Bitetto, Pauline Grant, Helen C. Regan, Mildred Leiper and Betty Kelley. | Joseph L. Gammell, president of the Lincoln Park Citizens Association, is chairman of the carnival—Star Staff Photo. FOLK DANCES ARRANGED Americanization Entertainment to Represent Many Nations. Members of the Americanization School Association will present & pro- gram of folk dances and choral num- bers as “Contributions From Many Lands” in the fifth Summer festival at Sylvan Theater at 8 o'clock tonight. | The band and chorus of the associa- ' tion will have & prominent part on the program. The festivals are being presented under auspices of the Community Cen- ter Department and the Office of Public Buildings and Public Parks, as- sisted by the National Capital Civic | Pund. The program will be in charge of Mrs. Helen C. Kiernan-Vasa. s North Station for railways entering Shanghai, China, which was damaged during the fighting, is to be reconstruct- ed near the city’s imposing civic center, now under construction. CHILD’S LEG BROKEN Doris Somers, 8, Knocked Down by Automobile in Front of Home. Dorls Bomers, 8, of the 300 block of Fourteenth street northeast, received a broken leg yesterday afternoon when knocked down by an automobile in front of her home. She was treated at Provi- dence Hospital. The car was operated Harvey T. Leapley, of the 1200 block of Morse street, police say. THO PROFESSNS CLAMR.E. .10 Miller, as Lawyer-Banker, Holds Title-as “Most Useful Citizen.” By the Assoclated Press. UTICA, N. Y., August 3—Charles A. | Miller's business associates must have | gazed in a crystal last year when they selected him as “Utica’s most useful | citizen.” They couldn’t have known he | | was to be named president of the Recon- | struction 'Finance Corporation. | For many of his 65 years Miller has |been a man of two professions. He | | started his career as a lawyer, found | that his father’s banking business was always present for attention and there- upon became a banker-attorney. Sold Liberty Bonls. He was president of the Utica Sav- ings Bank when the United States en- tered the World War and promptly found urgent need for .energetic sales- men to sell its Liberty bonds. He “put | the sale across” and became the local | | “man of the hour.” ‘When the business slump began lull- | back riding. Tennis moments for recreation, g the few days or weeks he can steal from | his business life. He is married and has one daughter, | Mrs. John Gibson. CONSERVATION BOARD WOULD REDUCE TIMBER Special Survey Committee Says Stocks of Companies Should Be Cut Further. ‘The Special Survey Committee of the | Timber Conservation Board yesterday recommended to the board as en emergency measure that lumber com- | panies apply common management of | production and marketing operations It was also advocated that banks con- sider policies intended to stabilize the | lumber industry, and that the stocks of lumber companies be reduced by an | additional 3,750,000,000 feet. ‘The committee said stocks have been cut by more than 4,000,000,000 feet, | but that consumption also has declined from a total of 35,500,000,000 in 1929 to an annual rate of 12,400,000,000 in the first six months this year. Death Believed Suicide. MUSKOGEE, Okla., August 3 (P)— Robert Robinson, 35, a geologist, who had eight years’ experience in Mexican ofl fields, died here yesterday of a knife wound which investigators believed was self-inflicted. Cor. 14th &K Our Regular Table D'Hote Dinnex ing the industries of his city to sleep, and to help guide the city away from financial shoals. He mace himself known to the bank- | ing world through the sponsoring of | several pieces of legislation ultimately incorporated into New York banking law. Early this year, when the per- sonnel of the Reconstruction Corpora- tion was being selected, Miller was called to New York to act as regional | director, from which post he was chosen | by President Hoover to become chief | of the three-billion-dollar corporation. Writes Only for Self. Miller reads omnivorously. He writes | fiction for his own amusement, refus- | ing to offer it for publication. The bridle paths on his large estate at Barneveld, north of this city, supply Frames & Sash for Closing in Porches Come to J. Frank Kelly, Inc. and buy everything you need for closing in porches. We sell all high-grade material at reasonable prices. “NO, ORDER TOO SMALL" “SUDDEN SERVICE" J. FRANK KELLY, Inc. Lumber, Millwork, Paint, Coal Sand, Gravel, Cement 2121 Ga. Ave. North 1343 him with his favorite sport of horse- 51.50 Sevcn-Course The HAMILTON HOTEL RUSSELL A. CONN, Manager, ANNOUNCING Until Sept. 30th *1.00 DAILY, 6 to 9 P.M. SUNDAYS, 12 to 9 P.M. ... And the QUALITY and QUANTITY of Foods remain unchanged ... It's the same delicious, pop- ular Seven-Course Dinner that we have served heretofore, at $1.50—prepared under the eagle eye of our chef, Louis Meloni, formerly of the Wash- ington Mayflower, the New York Manhattan Club and the London Hyde Park Hotel. A VARIETY of delicious, —from which to select. FIRST-CLASS SERVICE. COOL DINING ROOM, in hottest weather. WE SUGGEST that you telephone your wife to meet you in our lobby, at dinner time...It is more economical than dining at home. Excellent Full-Course Luncheoh Daily, 12 to 2—75¢ seasonable dishes—well-cooked Experienced AdvertisersPreferThe Star: In case you are skeptical about IN automobile advertising nowadays *all the little fishes talk like whales.” Hence, when a car that is really new and revolutionary is ready for de- ecription, the language is weak from abuse. That’s why it takes a new word — TERRAPLANING — to picture the joy- ously thrilling performance of this radically new-type car, the ESSEX. It's a totally different kind of per- formance —a skimming, dashing, get- there, safely close-to-the-road swift smooth motion such as has not been enjoyed before except in planing on the water or in the air! We feel it is idle to challenge your credulity with generalities about this performance. Your experience with conventional cars will probably discount the glow- ing things we might say about its nimble surging getaway, its split-second acceleration, its dogged whisper-quiet six-cylindered pneumounted power on the hills, Soweasked the scientists of Guggenheim Back of the EsSEX TERRAPLANE is not only more than 200,000 miles of road- testing, but the experience and capac- ity of Hudson, one of the oldest and most progressive manufacturers in the automobile industry—a company which for nearly a quarter-century has been distinguished by ad- vanced engineering, sound manufacturing and depend- able valuein all its products What a Car!— and the lowest- priced Six in Americal ‘425 and up, 1.0.b. Detroit versity, to measure designs. here’s the School of Aeronautics, New York Uni- the action of the EssEx TERRAPLANE against earlier Just to make it interesting, we suggested it be matched not merely against cars costliest and finest competitively priced but against the mechanisms that American automotive engineering genius has devised. see the results. that’s actually down TERRAPLANING € Women everywhers will bs evidence! interested o know that Miss Amelia Earhart, who chris sonod the Essex TERRAPLANE, is herself the first woman in the world to own one of these now type cars CHART SHOWING Hill C//mél'ny and Acceleration (4v'e/oy€ Lz/‘ Five 7&5#5) CARS TESTED INSLUDE: LINCOLN, PACKARD, QADILI.AB; HUDSON, ESSEX TERRAPLANE ESSEX TERRAPLANE Herewith, graphed on the chart, you Look them over, see what TERRA- PLANING means, and then remember you get it in the new ESSEX at a price among and UNDER the former lowest-priced Three! * CAR A CAR CAR CAR 25 M.P.H 50 M.P.H 35 M.P.H. 60 M.P.H. v Acceleration high gear, 5 19 10 7o to fo '/ climb in /7{7/7 gear, time Standing start " ‘ YOU CAN HAVE THIS WONDER- FUL NEW CAR WITHOUT A CENT NOW, AND PRCB- ABLY NO MONEY FOR THIRTY TO SIXTY DAYS MORE— the chances being that your 1929 or 1930 or 1931 car if in good runable con- dition will be se» cepted for at least the entire down paye ment by the nearest Hudson-Essex Dealer listed belows and summit 5/0925/ * This chart is based on tests made by the scientists of Guggenheim School of Aeronautics, New York University. The cars used were all 1932 designs, stock production, none being specially fitted or tuned for the purpose. Performances were clocked both by stopwatch and Accelerometer. Testing hill was the steepest gradient of its distance East of the Rockics. 1 TERRAPLANE Models and Prices Standard Series: Roadster $425; Business Coupe $470; Rumble Coupe $510; Coach $475; 5-passenger Sedan $550 Special Series : Sport Roadster $525 ; Business Coupe $5103 Rumble Coupe $550; Convertible Coupe $610; Coach $5153 g S-passenger Sedan $590 ALL PRICES F.0.B. DETROIT - LAMBERT “The House of Confidence.” Show and Sales Department 14th St. at P N.W, Service and Sales Department 1212-14 New Hampshire Ave. NW, DEcatur 3900 Metropolitan Dealers: Saunders Motor Co. . 3218 M St. N.W. McDevitt Motor Co. 1417 lrving St. N.W. Schultze Motor Co. 1496 H St. N.E. Copyright 1982, BEUDSON MOTOR CAR COMPANY, Detroit, Michigen t