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A4 ROOSEVELT BACK, JOINS STATE FIGHT Home From West, He Joins in Effort to Nominate Lehman for Governor. (Continued From Pirst Page) v and his assoclates was to pick one of their up-State allies, T. Arthur Hend- Ticks, as permanent chairman of the convention. Hendricks voted for Smith on all bal- lots in the convention which nominated Roosevelt for President. Both Curry and McCooey sat in their room late in the night with worried Jooks on their faces and told of the futile conferences. Curry answered a series of Questions as fellows: “Is any one besides TLehman and Thacher being considered?” “Not at present ” When will a decision be reached?” When the convention meets.” “Is there consicerable sentiment for Lehman?” “There hacher.” T hieh do you consider the stronger?” “Naturally, that is what we are try- ng to decide.” H: is some sentiment for No Preference. “What is preference?” “T have none.” «Ts there more sentiment for Thacher than Lebman?” I couldn't answer that.” «Which is stronger up-State?” “They're about even.” “Has the rest of the ticket been dis- It was made clear that one of the chief arguments being used by Thach- | er's supperters is that they followed Tammany's lead in voting for Smith at Chicago, and that in return Tam- many should support their candidate now. the New York organization men | openly acknowledge they wish to do nothing to wreck this up-State alliance. Senator Wagner Speaks. Attacking President Hoover's admin- fstration, United States Senator Robert F. Wagner told the convention that “the American people will never again accept as gold The brass that was sold to them in 1977 “They have learned to identify the medicine man the miracle worker,” said the New York Senator in his key- note speech. “They have leerned to distinguish propaganda from truth.” In his preparcd address given to the press he pleaded that the people abandon “the apathy of 1924, the com- placency of 1928, and tre despair of 1930" and accept in its place “the gospel of Democracy, the pledge of a new deal, the hope of a new life.” “We need no new issue for 1932, he “We accept the issue selected by said Four years ago he Mr. Hoover himself. said: s ““The present issue is the well-being and security of the American family | and the American home.’ “Upon that issue we are ready and eager to enter the campaign. We rest our cause upon the intelligence of the American people.” Refers to Three Programs. Senator Wagner said it was proper that “we shculd here and now express our conviction that the whole structure of policies erected by the Republican Jeadership was so designed that it led inevitably to disaster.” “I have reference.” he said, “most yarticularly to the three contradictory rograms fostered by the Republican eaders, which, when brought together, were as explosive as gunpowder. The first was the encouragement of Ameri- can expansion of production for the foreign market. The second was the encouragement of American lend- ing abroad to the tune of Sl 000,000,000 to enable foreign coun- tries to pay for American prod- ucts with American meney. The third was the adoption of a tariff policy which so stifled trace that it prevented those foreign countries from paying the loans they had contracted. “Not in the World Wa would have us bu these mu- tually contradictor: , lay the de- structive powers released by the sto market collapse of 1929.” s Mr. Hoover lNVESTIGATE- CAPSIZING OF TOWBOAT; 4 MISSING | Standard 0il Co. Ship Turns Over in Lower Mississippi River. By the Assoctated Press. BATON ROUGE, La., October 3.— Investigation was bcgun yesterday the Standard Qil Co. of the capsizing of its stern-wheel towboat Standard with loss of the master, Cipt. Willlam J. Dobel of Baton Rouge, and four mem- bers of the crew River late Saturday near Lake Provi- dence, La. Capt. E. 8. Wieck of Baton Rouge, superintendent of the company’s lither- age department, left for Lake Provi- dence to examine the Standard, which was towing two s of refined oil ‘when it turned over in the muddy river. The Standard is expected to be sal- vaged, since it did not sink after turn- ing over. Possibility of beaching the toWwboat on a nearby shoal is being con- sidered. Hope was abandoned that Capt.-Dobel or any of the four missing crew mem- bers escaped drowning. Carrying a total personnel of 18, the Standard was transporting the barges | of oil from the refinery here to Grand Lake, Ark., where they were to have been refilled with crude oil for the re- turn, Strong Arm for Dough Mixing. When the housewife says that her arm is tired m kneading the dough for the family bread she is perfectly Jjustified, for dough is so resistant that it bends cast steel paddles which are a foot long and an inch thick at the neck_and which do the kneading job for the mixing machines. In order to make these paddles stand up under this severe service, nickel alloy steel has been specified for them. Inci- dentally, it requires no less tha. eight- horsepower to push one of these pad- dles through dough at the rate of 12 times a minute. Official Listener-in Added to Usual List Of G. 0. P. Workers By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 3.—To the usual list of political cam- paign directors the Republican Eastern division has added a new title—official lListener-in. Miss Helen Boswell, director of the woman speakers for the East- ern division, announced yester- day that Mrs. Laurent Oppen- heim had been designated as of- ficial radio critic, with these five points to check when she hears Republican speakers on the air: Don't talk too long. Don't attempt to cover tco many issues. Speak simply and feelingly. Lighten the speech with hu- man_interest stories and humor. When speaking through an nuinp!mer. remember to lower the voice. in the Mississippi| By the Assoclated Press. DETROIT, October 3.—The text of Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s address here yesterday follows: I want to talk to you about govern- ment. I am not going to refer to parties at all. I am going to refer to some of the fundamentals that ante- date parties, and antedate republics and empires, fundamentals that are as old as mankind itself. They are funda- mentals that have been expressed in philosophies, for I don’t know how of the world, And today in our boasted modern civilization we are facing just exactly the same problem, just exactly the same conflict between two schools of philosophy that they faced in the earliest days of America, and indeed of the world. One of them—one of these old philosophies—the philosophy of those who would “let things alone.” And the other, the philosophy that strives for something new—something that the human race has never attained yet: but something which I believe the human race can attain, and will attain —soctal justice, through social action. The philosophy of “letting things alone” has resulted in the days of the cave man, and in the days of the auto- mobile—has resulted in the jungle law of the survival of the so-called fittest But this philosophy of social action results in the protection of humanity and the fitting of as many human beings as possible into the scheme of surviving. And in that first philosophy | of “letting things alone,” I am sorry to | say that there are a lot of people in | my community back hor~e—which is a little village—and in the farming dis- tricts of the Nation and in the great cities of the country, such as your: we can fit ‘in a great many splendid people—splendid people who keep say- | ing not only to themselves and their | friends, but to the community as a! whole, “why shouldn’t we ‘let things alone’? 1In the first place they are not | as bad as they are painted, and in the | second place, they will cure themselves. Time is a great healer.” An easy philos- | ophy! The kind of philosophy, my | friends, that was expressed the other | day by a cabinet officer of the United | | States of America, when he is reported | to have said, “Our children are apt to| profit rather than suffer from what is | { going on.” | { Quotes Public Health Service. | While he was say that, another {branch of your Government and mine, | the United States Public Health Serv-| ice. which believes in my kind of philos- | cphy, I think—telling the truth—said | | this:" “Over 6,000,000 of our public i school children haven't.enough to eat | Many of them are fainting at _their | desks. They are a prey to disease. | Their future health is menaced.” What school do ycu believe in? And in the same way, there are two theories of prosperity and of well being: | First. the theory that if we make the | rich richer somehow they will let a part of their prosperity trickle through to the rest of us. And the second theory—and I sup- pose this goes back to the days of Noah “_I won't say Adam and Eve, because they had a less complicated situation— | but at least to the days of the flood— there was that second theory that if we make the average of mankind com- fortable and secure their prosperity will rise upward just as yeast rises up through the ranks. Now, my friends, the philosophy of social justice that I am going to talk about this Sabbath day, the philosophy of social justice through social action, calls definitely, plainly for the redus- tion of poverty, and what do we mean when we talk about the reduction of poverty? We mean the reduction of the causes of poverty. And when we have an epidemic of disease in this| land, in these modern days, what do we do? We turn to find out in the first instance the sources from which | the disease has come, and when we have found those sources, those causes, we turn the energy of our attack upon | them. We have got beyond the point in | modern civilization of merely trying to | fight an epidemic of disease by taking care of the victims after they are stricken. We do that, but we do more. to prevent it, and the attack v is not very unlike the attack on disease. We are seeking the causes, and when we have found them we turn r attack upcn them. What are the causes? What are the causes that de- | stroy human beings, driving millions of | them to destruction? Well, there are| a good many of them. and there ere a good many of us who are alive today | ! who have seen tremendous steps taken | toward the eradication of those causes. | Instruction in Health For instance, ill health: You and I| know what has been accomplished by community effort, state effort, the ef- fort and the association of individual | men and women toward the bettering of the heaith of humanity. We have spent vast sums upon re- rch. We have established a wholly new science, the science of publici health, and we are carrying what we | call today “instruction in health” into | the most remote corners of our cities | and our country districts. = Well, the result is what? It is two-fold: First, an economic saving. It has been money | which has been returned to the com- munity a thousand times over because you and I know that a sick person— a man, woman or child, who has to be taken care of—not only takes the individual who is sick out of active par- } ticipation and useful citizenship, but | takes somebody else, too, and so. from the purely dollars and cents point of view that we Americans are so fond of thinking about, public health has paid for itself. And what have we done along other lines for the prevention of scme of the | causes of povert I go back 22 years to a day when in my State of New York w2 had tried to | pass in the Legislature what we called | a workmen's compensation act, know- ing as we did that there were thou- sands of men and women who every year were seriously injured in industrial accidents of one kind or another, who became a burden on their community, who were unable to work, unable to get adequate medical care—and a lot of | us youngsters in the Legislature in those days were called radicals. We were called Socialists—they didn’t know the word Bolshevik in those days, but if they had known that, we would have | been called that too. And we put through a workmen's | ocmpensation act, and the courts, as some courts did and as some courts do, thinking in tcrms of the seventeenth century, declared it to be unconstitu- tional, so we had to go about amend- ing the Constitution, and the following year we got a workmen's compensation act. What has it done? We were not the first State to have it. One of the carliest States, by the way, was New Jersey, which. the year before the action in the State of New York, passed a workmen's compensation act | at the bidding of that great humani- tarlan Governor, Woodrow Wilson. But the result has teen that almost every State in the Union has eliminated that cause of poverty among the masses of the people. Cripple Children Restored. And take another form of poverty in the old days. Not so long ago, you and I know, there were families in attics— in every part of the Nation—in country districts and in city districts—there were thousands and hundreds of thou- sands of crippled children. Crippled children who would get no ade- quate care. Crippled children who were lost to the community, and who were a burden to the community, and so we have in this t 20 or 30 years gradually provided means for restoring crippled children .to useful citizenshjp, and it has all been a factor in going after and solving one of the causes of poverty and disease, And then, \ln these later years, we THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3. 1932. have been wondering about old people, and we have come to the conclusion in this modern civilization that the theory and the idea of carting old people off to the county poor house is not perhaps the best thing after all. I will tell you what sold me on old age insurance—old age pensions. Not 50 long ago—about 10 years—I received & great shock. I had becen away from my home town of Hyde Park during the Winter time and when I came back I found that a tragedy had occurred. many thousands of years in every part | One of my farm neighbors had been & | | splendid ~old fellow—supervisor of | his town, highway commissioner of his | town—one of the best of our citizens. | And before I left around Christmas- | time I had seen the old man, who was | 89, and I had seen his old brother, who |was 87, and I had seen his other brother, who was 85, and I had seen | his kia'sister, who was 83. And they were living on & farm; I | knew it was mortgaged. I knew it was mortgaged to the hilt, but I as- sumed that everything was all right, | for they still had a couple of cows and | a few chickens, but when I came back |in the Spring I found that in the | heavy Winter that followed there had been a heavy fall of snow and one of | the old brothers had fallen down on | his way out to the harn to milk the cow and had perished in the snow drift, and the town authorities had I | come along and they had taken the two old men and they had put them into the county poor house and they had taken the old lady and had sent her down, for want of a better place, | to the insane asylum, although &he was not insane, she was just old. That sold me on the idea of trying to keep homes intact for old people. Mental Deficients Aided. And then in another respect modern science has been good to us. It is not so very long ago that a young person or an old person who had anything the trouble with their mentality—they were put into what was called an asylum, and not long before that they used to call it a “mad house.” Even when I was a boy the States of the Nation used to provide asylums and when anybody who wasn’t entirely com- plete mentally—any one who was & mental defective, as we call them to- day, in any shape, manner or form— used to be carted off to the asylum and they would always stay there until they came out to go the graveyards. Today thet is not true and medical science today is doing two things, first, that the young people, the young peo- ple who are rot mentally deficient but who require -pecial mental training, and when schools allow them to remain in most cases in the bosom of their own families, we are applying special treat- ment and special education to them. so that, instead of becoming a burden when they grow up, they are going to be useful citizens. And then, on the other side of it, there are the older people, the people who do have to go to hospitals for mental troubles; and the other day, just before I left Albany, I got a re- port from my state department that showed that instead of the old-fash- foned system by which the rule was observed of “once in, always in,” this past year in the State of New York we had sent back to their families 23 Fcr cent of all those in our hospitals or mental cases—sent them back cured to their families. Now, those are the causes, the causes that have destroyed in past ages thou- sands, countless thcusands, of our fel- low human beings. They are the causes that we must attack if we are to make the future safer for humanity. We can go on taking care of the handi- capped and the crippled and the sick and the feeble-minded and the unem- ployed, but common sense, like human- ity, calls on us to turn our back defi- nitely on these destroyers. Poverty re- sulting from these destrovers is largely preventable, but, my friends, pererty if it is to be prevented requires a broad provsmn of social justice. ‘e cannot go back, we cannot go back to the old prisons, the old system of mere punishment under which when a man came out of prison he was not fitted to live in our community along- side of us. We cannot go back to the old system of asylums. We cannot go back to the old lack of hospitals, the lack of public hcalth, We cannot go back to the sweatshops of America, we cannot go back to children working in factories—those days are gone. And there are a lot of new steps to take. It is not a question of just not going back. not standing still. Unemployment Insurance. For instance, the problem in the long run, and I am not talking about the emergency of this year, but the problem of unemployment in the long run can be and shall be solved by the human for a system of unemployment insurance throughout this broad land of ours, and we are going to come to it. of the Interior would be for it. He would say that great good is coming to this country situation. Yes, the followers of the philosophy of let alone—the people have been decrying all of these meas- ures of social welfare. What do th | call them? They call them “paternal- | istic.” Al right, if they are paternal- | istic, I am a father. | They maintain that these laws inter- fere with individualism. forgetful of the | fact that the causes of poverty in the main are beyond the control of any one | individual, any czar, either a czar of | politics or a czar of industry. And the followers of the philosophy of social | action for the prevention of poveriy | maintain that if we set up a system of justice we shall have small need for the exercise of mere philanthropy. | Justice, after all. first is the goal we seek, believing that when justice has been done individualism will have a greater security to devote the best that | individualism itself can give. In other words, my friends, our long-range ob- jective is not a dole, but a job. At the same time we have in this Nation, and I know you have in De- | troit, because Frank Murphy has talked |to me of it many times in the past year or two. It is a question also of | race. Some leaders have wisely declared | But I do not believe the Secretary because of the present All of us in the city and country alike have got to do everything we can to tide over. All agree that the first re~ sponsibility for the tfx‘e'lem,h)n of pov- erty and the alleviation of distress and the care of its victims rests upon the locality, the individuals, the organiza- tions and the Government. First of all, perhaps, upon the private agencies of philanthropy, just as far as we can drag it out of them, and secondly, the other social organizations, and last, but not least, the church. 'And yet all agree that to leave to the locality the entire burden would result in placing the heaviest proportion of the burden in most cases upon those who are least able to bear it. In other words, the communities that have the most diffi- cult problem, like Detroit, would be the communities that would have to bear the heaviest of the burdens. And so the State steps in to equalize the burdens by providing for a large portion of the care of the victims of the poverty and by providing assistance and guidance for local communities and above and beyond that the National | Government has a responsibility. Avoids Political Talk, I would like to enlarge on that a lot, but that would be politics and I can- not. My friends, the ideal of social justice of which I have spoken—an ideal that years ago might have been thought overly advanced is now accepted by the moral leadership of all of the great religious groups of the country. Radical? Yes, and I will show you how radical (it is. T am going to cite three examples of what the churches say, the radical churches of America—Protestant, Cath- olic and Jewish. And first I will read to you from the ut this year by the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, repre- senting a very large proportion of the Protestants in our Country. Hear how radical they are: They say: “The thing that matters in any in- dustrial system is whah it does actually to human beings. * * ¢ “It is not denied that many persons of wealth ere rendering great service to society. It is only suggested that the wealthy are overpaid in sharp contrast with the underpaid masses of the people. The concentration of wealth carries with it a dangerous concentra- tion of power. It leads to conflict and violence. To suppress the symtoms of this inherent conflict while leaving the fundamental causes of it untouched is neither sound statesmanship nor Chris- tian good will. “It is becoming more and more clear that the principles of cur religion and the findings of social sciences point in the same direction. Economists now call attention to the fact that the pres- ent distribution of wealth and income which is so unbrotherly in the light of Christian ethics, is alto unscientific in that it does not furnish purchasing power to the masses to balance con- sumption and production in our ma- chine age.” And now T am going to read you another great declaration and I wonder how many people will call it radical. It is just as radical as I am—a declara- Sunday sermon, the labor sermon sent | | social ! perbaps, than we can realize Gov. Roorseveli‘in Address at Detroit Pledges Jobs for All Fundamentals Necessary in Dealing With Modern Conditions, He Says, Assailing Philosophy of *Letting Things Alone.” tion from one of the greatest forces of 1d, the Catholic quotation, my friends, from the scholarly encyclical letter issued last by the Pope, of the greatest ents of modern times, and the letter says this: “It is patent in our days that not alone is wealth accumulated, but im- mense ?ower and despotic economic domination are concentrated in th hands of a few, and that those few are frequently not the owners but only the trustees and directors of invested funds which they administer at their good pleasure. * * * “This accumulation of power, the characteristic note of the modern eco- nomic order, is a natural result of limitless free competition, which per- mits the survival of those only who are the strongest, which often means those who fight most relentlessly, who pay least heed to the dictates of con- science. A Three-fold Struggle. “This concentration of power has led to a three-fold struggle for dominatiol First, there is the struggle for dictator- ship in the economic sphere itself; then the fierce battle to acquire con- trol of the government, so that its re- sources and authority may be abused in the economic struggle, and, finally the clash between the governments themselves.” And finally T would read you from another great statement, a statement from Rabbi Edward L. Israel, chairman of the Soclal Justice Commission of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, and here is what he says: tion of human justice and happiness and the to preserve the essential human values of life amid all the changing aspects of the economic order. ‘e must have a revamping of the entire method of approach to these problems of the eco- nomic order. We need a new type of conscience that will give us courage to act * * ¢ “We so easily forget. Once the cry of so-called prosperity is heard in the land we all become so stampeded by the spirit of the god mammon, that we cannot serve the dictates of social conscience. * * * We are here to serve notice that the economic order is the invention of man; and that it cannot dominate certain eternal principles of Justice, and of God." And so, my friends, I feel a little as if T had been preaching a sermon. I feel a little as if I had beeen talking too much of some of the fundamentals, and yet those fundamentals enter into your life and my life every day. More, It we Tealized that far more, it would result throughout this country in a greater activity, a greater interest on the part of the individual men and women who make up our nation, in some of the problems which cannot be solved in ::;; long run without the help of every- y. We need leadership, of course. We need leadership of people who are hon- est in their thinking and honest in their doing. 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New high power “Twin-Push” Amplification, giving full tone brilliance at all volumes. Come in! Hear it! Tone-Tested RADIO . Do you know that for as little as .a few cents a day spread over the first year’s enjoyment, you can own a General Electric Radio? Consider the coming broadeasting events—the Presidential Election—Opera Stars—Famous Entertainers by the score. Consider the engi- neering advances included by General Electric for better tone—Tone proved superior in tone- tests everywhere. Then come in and “Believe your own ears.” Easy Payments on Monthly Light Bills one | of Cincinnati, Ohio, and had been liv- permanent employment of | | economic policies which will enable us ‘SCHDOL BOY HANGS SELF| | John Thomas Noxley. 12, Found Tied to Grandparents’s Porch. ‘WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., October 3 (P).—John Thomas Noxley, 12-year-old schoolboy, was found henged from a| porch post at the home of his grand- ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Bryant, ere yesterday. A coroner’s jury de- cided the death was suicide. ‘The boy wes the son of G. E. Noxley ing with his grandparents for two months and attending school here. Bryant said the boy attended church in the forencon, but upon returning home would not eat his midday meal. He cculd advance no theory as to the reason for his grandson’s self-destruc- G. 0. P. PLAN RALLY TOMORROW NIGHT Charles B. Rugg and Ira E. Robin- son to Address Campaign Event at Republicen Club. Charles B. Rugg, Assistant Attorney General, and Ira E. Robinson of West Virginia, former chairman of the Radio Commission, will bs the principal speakers at the meeting tomorrow eve- mn% of the Hoover and Curtis Campaign Club at the National Capital Republican Club, Scott Cirgle. ‘The meeting, according to E. F. Colla- day, Republican national committeeman for the District, is planned as an old- fashioned Republican campaign rally. Mr. Colladay will preside over the meeting and assisting him will be the other officers of the ciub, Mrs. Virginia White Speel, national committecwoman and club vice president; G. R. Men- chester, secretarv; Ord Preston, treas- urer, and C. J. Waters, chairman of the Membership Committes. Mrs. Harry K Daugherty, chairman of the women's division, will be present to assist, as will also the several grcup chairmen, Henry F. Woodard, G. W. Forsberg, Raymond M. Florance, Frank Hight, Charles T. Clagett, George C. Shaffer, Fred Haller, Adolph Weyl and William J. Eynon. is straight thinking—that is unselfish, but in the last analysis, we have got to have the help of the men and women all the way from the top to the bottom, especially of the men and women who believe in the school of philosophy which is not content to leave things as they are And so, in these days of difficulty. we Americans everywhere must and :hall choose the path of social justico—the only path that will lead us to a per- manent bettering of our civilization, the path that our children must tread and their children must tread. the path of | faith, the path of hope and the path of | | love toward our fellow man. An All TOPC Richman GIRL SCOUT HEADS MEET AT NORFOLK {Women From All Sections Prepare to Open Conven- tion Wednesday. By the Assaciated Press. NORFOLK, Va, October 3.—Girl Scout leaders from all sections of the country are gatherng at Virginia Beach today to engage in pre-convention ac- tivities preparatory to the opening Wed- neséay morning of the eighteenth an- nual naticnal conventicn of Girl Scouts. A series of training courses was in- augurated today by Mrs. Frederick Edey of New York an Miss Josephine Schlain, national director. Priday, the closing day of the con- vention, will be featured by the presence of Mrs. Herbert Hoover, who is sched- uled to arrive Thursday night. Mrs Hoover will attend the morning session of the ccnvention, witness the pageant, “The Coming of the Cavaliers,” written by Mary Sinton Leitch, and that night will be guest of honor at the annual banquet which brings the convention to a close. Her address will be broaccast over a National hcok-up. Mrs. Hoover is president of Girl S¢ Leaders in the organ on arriving in Norfolk today include Miss Nicholas E. Brady, chairman of the Girl Scout board; Dr. Lillian M. Gilbreath of New York, executive convention member; Mrs. Walter Rothschild of New York: Mrs. Vance McCormick of Harrisburg, : Mrs. Edgar Rikard of New York, treasurer of the organization; Mrs. Julius Barnes of New York: Mrs. Stuart McGuire, Richmond Mrs. Edward T ns of Weleley Hills rs. James J. Storrow of Bo: Senora De La Rosa. Gir Scout commissioner of Puerto Rico PLANS HALL6WEEN PARTY Special Dispateh to The Star. GLENN DALE, Md., October 3—The Glenn Dale Parent-Teacher Association is planning its annuzl Halloween party for October 29, when it also will give a rupper. Proceeds will go for & new piano, Mrs. Thomas D. Robbins has been re- lected president of the association, with Mrs. W. T, Perkins, vice president; Mrs. Wiiliam E. Owe jr., treasurer, and Mr:, Adclaide Marcos, secretary. Mrs. Perkins and_Mrs. Rotbins head the Supper and Entertainment Committees, respectively Meetings hereafter will be held the third Friday night of each month, Heret-fcre they have been held in the afternoon. Cad estapuswe® " -Star Collection of RICHMAN BROTHERS OATS Brothers 1327 F St. N.W.