Evening Star Newspaper, November 24, 1932, Page 11

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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, BUSINESSMEN BAEK From the Front Row TWO-YEAR ELECTION FARM MUGRAM PLAN SUGGESTED Chicago Conference Gives Mount Rainier Recommends Agriculture Support It Change to Legislative Body Never Had Before. as Economy Move. NOVEMBER 24, 1932 men, who were indicted jointly, was moved from Marlboro last month on motion of Defense Attorneys Paul Mules By s Staff Corresporident of The 5 TEAHOUSE MURDER £:5£55% R i It was said munti that aner | John Mudd and Wal Mitchell would | November 24.-Forty -baskets of food ]- IAI- | assist the defense here. The State Will | were distributed last’ night and this FOOD IS DISTRIBUTED building permit issued by the town. The o laim ition was built councilmi the of wood, although the permit specified that it be fire-resisting material. ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md, November 24 | Spech morning to the poor of the county (Special) —The will of Mary Jane l be nmud‘nbx 1 Prosecutor Prank M. Hall the State’s attorneys of Prince Georges and Charles Counties. | through Mrs. Mae E. Jacobs, superin- ‘Thomas Simone of Philadelphia, also | tendent of public welfare. In addition | indicted for the murder of Amick, has | to these donaticns, food was distributed John Wallace and James Za- | not asked that his trial be removed, but by the churcher, schools and varicus MAY APPear as a witness. other or lenski to Face Jury at | La Plata Tuesday. i Reviews and News of Washington's Theaters. Page of the Clarksburg neighborhood, | admitted to probate in the Orphans’ Court here yesterday, bequeaths the| entire estate to Mary Jane Metz, niece of the testatrix, who is named as ex- ecutrix. The instrument was executed | May 1' . Mrs. Page died last w Licenses have been issued here for the m‘rfll&t of Willlam B. Lloyd, 2f end Miss Gladys Virginia Warren, 18, both of Richmond, Va; Aubrey L. Pear- son, 22, and Jacksie Fiorence Hibbs, 19, both of Vienna, Va. and Lee Hech-| u;mvs;, fl'n lnwx:l Julia M. Moran, 31, both | John Wallace and James Zalenski of of Washington, D A committee of Rockville and Galth- Baltimore, charged with the murder of | ersburg. young peopie, headed by -Abel | Grover Amick in the Bladensburg Tea ' A. Norris, jr., and composed of Mrs. A.| House a year ago yesterday, will go on g L Gloyd aid Misses Maude Wilson. | irial here next Tuesday. | Vi onds, N ” | n eanor Diamond, RS | This was announced yesterday by | . Abert, Mary Somervell, M Hershey, State’s Attorney Alan Bowie of Prince Eulalie Boland and Edna Beell and Leo Walters, has combleted arrangements | Georges County following a conference “Air Mail” appears on the screen, comes to Al Opens at the Ito. Desert as a demon fiyer, 4E new “sky” film, “Alr Mail” | hating e and loving every at Rialto workman- woman. L . this quiet aviation . where nothing worse than smoking is al- Jowed and alcohol is tossed uncere- moniously to the winds, Mr. O'Brien walks-out with the wife of one of the ace fiyers, and is about to ven- ture off with the lady to some out- landish land when Ral Bellamy, his worst enemy, is wrecked on a mountain pass. ‘Then it is that O'Brien’s real nature comes to the fore. Giving his lady friend a lov- ing pat, he leaves her and rescues Bellamy, to the shouts and roars and general congratulations of the rest of the world. ‘While the plot itself is reminiscent of many other aviation scenarlos, it ter bres all rules in like job, with a romantic story ‘written for it by Lieut. Comdr. Frank Wead. While much of the action takes place on { terra firma, thete are enough air | mancuvers and trick alr shots (all of REASON | By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. By a Btaff Correspondent of The Star. LA PLATA, Md, November 24— MOUNT RAINIER, Md, November 24—As & matter of economy, Mayor John H. Beall announced yesterday he| had suggested to the town's recently | appointed Legislative Committee that local elections be held only once every | two years. At present two of the four town councilmen here.ere elected each year,| & system that is followed in most Prince | Gecrges towns. Mr. Beall EBpecial Dispatch to The Star. which very CHICAGO, November 24.— When flndeJ: to keep the i audience in more Congress again takes up the probletd |, g erage gus- of devising practical measures of relief| ponge for agriculture, it will find an entirely |~ The “place” is different class of backing for the pro- Desert Airport. gram offered than at any time in the| The time — the past. | present. The play- Overnight, l;usln!'!‘.s has joined agri- | ers: Ralph Bellamy, culture in this-section of the Jand, to|Gloria Stuart, fair demand enactment of legislation that put cold; Pat will provide the farmer with the sam> soct of protection as that acct d industry by the tariff. During past years, when farm organizatic for' enactment of bills designed t s reform, business has inspired p dential vetoes. Harriman Leads Conference. The present week has se:n in CI cago a gathering of executives of in-| dustrial concerns to formulate a relief | program fcr agriculture and to provide | the driving force for its enactment. Henry 1. Harriman, president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, has inspired the conf ce, end | Gen. Robert E. Wood, t of | At the same time the Chicago Jour-| nal of Commerce, in the past actively opposed to all measures for pmvidlnfl a subsidy to agriculture similar o that | given industry through the tariff, has | indicated & sympathetic reaction to the present moves. The Chicago Daily News, conservative and Republican, has | done likewise. City Depends on Farms. Baid Mr. Wood, sounding the new | note of support for an agricultural pro- | gram on the part of industry: | “It has been & mystery to me why business men of Chicago and the Mid- dle West, whose prosperity depends on the prosperity of the producers in the States of this area, should adopt an at- titude of i y passible “The city is an artificial crganism. The farm or homestead is a natural one. Elementally, the land producer | can do without the city, but the eity | cannot do without the farmer, “For 11 years the farmers of this country have been reduced gradually | to & condition of unprofitable operation | of their farms. Unless the normal pur- | , _excellent as vilia'n who turns hero; Slim ummerville, Lil- an Bond, Russell [e} an - | Hopton and others. Gloria Stuart. names been well chosen, and those who do their part in this saga of “the mail must go through” seem born to their and every inch what they are nt to be. Particularly is this true of Pat O'Brien, the dare-devil fyer, who, betides having almcst bacome a king in some Balkan province before he is the general spirit of “fight” and fair play which is prevalent in cne of these air stations that makes this picture outstarding. As some one has remarked, “it brings this type of aviation right down to the groimd.” Stripping it of some of its glamor, it presents this side of the life of those who carry the mail across from one end of the country to the other, with insight and sincerity. John Ford has directed it bril- liantly. Summerville is amusing as the man who never gets off the ground and Bellamy is perfectly cast as the man, who, they must have thought, looks a little like Lind- bergh. E. de S. MELCHER. CALF SHOW IS FEATURE , OF POOLESVILLE EXHIBIT Five Classes Are Shown by Mem- bers of Montgomery 4-H Club. Messer's Entry Wins Title. Special Dispatch to The Btar. POOLESVILLE, Md., November 24— Five classes were shown in the calf show staged here by the Montgomery County 4-H Jersey Calf Club in con- nection with the annual community ex- hibit of the Poolesville Chapter of the Future Farmers of America. The entries of Allie Messer, Aubrey Walters and Frank Stiles were placed first, second and third, respectively, in the class for calves under 3 months old; the calf of Frank Stiles was de- cided the best, with that of Richard Vetter second, in the contest among calves under 6 months of age; among 1 year those of Samuel Poole, Edward Poole and Stanley Umstead were rated in the order named, and in the show- manship class for those never shown the entries of Edward Poole, Robert Stiles and Richard Vetter and Stanley Umstead were ranked first, second and third, respectively, the calves of Vetter and Umstead tying for third place. In the champlonship class the hon- ors were awarded to the entry of Allie Messer. Arrangements for the show were in charge of & committee headed by Al- bert A. Ady, assistant county agricul- tural agent. QUALIFIES AS WARDEN By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., November 24— Charles Lowman of Collington, in Prince Georges County, has qualified es a forest warden to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Warden George Baldwin of the same commun- fty, it was announced today by the Maryland State Department of For- those shown in the class for calves under | estry. Lowman will work under C. F. Wins- low, forester in charge of the second district patrol. the councilmen and the be elected every other year, thy These elections cost about §120. Another proposal which the Leg tive Committee may study is a sugge: tion by Councllman Floyd B. Mathias during periods of depression. The committee is headed by Corpora- tion Counsel Bird H. Dolby, the mem- bers of the council and Perry Boswell, Benjamin Sherwood. motorists to drive through the recently established “safety zones” on Rhode Island avenue, drafted by Mr. Dolby, has just been sdortca by the council. It provides that violators be fined not less than $2 or_more than $100. Robert E. Funkhouser of Mount Rainier has been cited to appar before the next meeting of the council to ex- plain why he failed to erect an addition to a laundry here in accordance with that the town be given authority to levy | | an “Indigent tax” to provide relief work | D. J. Orcutt, | W. T. S. Rollins and | An ordinance making it unlawful for | for a dince in St. Martin’s Hall, Gaith- | with the Circuit Court judges and de- | crsburg, tomorrow night. | fense attorneys. 89c 2 prs., $1.65 Its A SILK MESH Meshes are taken for granted as part of your wardrobe this season. These stockings by Rydal are favorites with we‘ll ddre;nd women. Surprisingly low priced. WHELAN'S 1105 F Street Northwest Tadier. Skecialey Slibe The trial of the ua| 1 | | | | | REASON No. 1, cleanliness — reason No. 2, convenience — reason No. 3, preference for the Chevy Chase Seal-Kap cover! 95 out of every 100 custom- ers preferred Seal-Kaps.) And reason No. 4 — the (By actual canvass, Seal-Kap has been tested and approved by Good House- keeping Institute. All these guarantee that you will like Chevy Chase Special Milk. Why not order some today? It’s only 13¢ a quart, Phone West 0183. Wise Brothers A PIVISION OF CHEVY CHASE DAIRY NATIONAL PAIRY chasing power of the farmer is restored his poverty inevitably will drag the| city down to his economic level. ““There will be no return to a sound batis in this country until we place | thy farmer-industrialist upon a per- mapent income basis corfiparable with the city-industrialist.” Would T3x Middleman. o work that change, there is a dis- position on the part of big business to regard sympathetically some features of-the so-called voluntary domestic al- lofment plan for farm relief. This plan provides an ingenious method of taxing the city consumer, or the mid- dieman, to provide the producer with a benefit equal at least to the tariff, which now is inoperative because sur- lus products find the : price con- on a world basis. The Daily News has editorially cut- features of the domestic allot- ment plan and showed a willingness to consider it without pre-judgment—a fate that Las not attended the cons: eraion of other relief programs. ~e (Copyright, 1882.) _CHARTER IS GRANTED le;cro(t Civic League Incorporated Under Virginia Laws. Bpecial Dispatch to The &tar. RICHMOND, Va., November 24.—A charter has just been granted the Bar- croft School and Civic League of Bar~ Pposs of bt orgamization. being 1o organization g to advance the religious, literary and civic ‘welfare of ofie community. 1t is a non- stock corporation. Officers were listed as C. Orrie Potts, president; Herman G. Other incorpora- tors were Gus Lee Hogan, J. G. Pep- | per. T. J. g, C. W. 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American BOSCH Personal Radios AU Ao S e = TR0 Vibro Power ... No More Unwanted Noises! Compact, light in weight, portable . . use it upstairs, downstairs, all around the house. Mahogany-fin- ished case. Automatic noise reducer. Full-tone dynamic speaker. $ 9 Ljumfltto $ 1 055 $5 Delivers It A $4.95 (Main Floor, The Hecht Co.) CASH YOUR oy v 1 S : - - CASH YOUR CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CHECKS AT #THE HECHT CC /F STREET AT 7™ TELEPHONE DISTRICT 9 » (racical & 95¢ $1.55 or

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