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A—2 % ROOSEVELT TAKES REST BEFORE TRIP Plans Week-End Relaxation After Full Program of Conferences. FUGITIVE'S BRIDE OF | | | | | By the Associated Press. HYDE PARK, N. Y, A final week-end of semi-privacy and relaxation was begun at the old family estate here today by President-elect Frenklin D. Roosevelt before starting | southward to begin actual selection of | his cabinet | A full week of conferences on presi- dential problems and future cares put: Mr. R elt in a frame of mind for | ccmplete fr m today and tomorrow. New York last | 5-mile automobile ride | River ley to thzsi lace he ived a del on of the Vaticnal s reported to | have left a list of acceptable men for Becretary of Agriculture Free to Make Own Choice. Of course, the President-elect feels fre= to pick his own cabinet members | and will do so, but there is every sign | that he wants to get the last word | from agriculture it He followed this same policy on farm relie{ I nigat for the up the H v LENN SMEEMAN, fugitive found living a of Harry Stanley in Cleveland, wa united ideas. Just who the Grange delegation put on its prefe list s not known. It| is understood that Henry Wallace of farm magazine, | application for a parden, and on the verge of collapse. Back to Prison After 15 Years His bride of a year. shown with him in Denver, was taken to a hospital | & THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1938 | SCHLEHER EADY TOMAME STRASSER Expected to Name Leader Who Quit Hitler and Split Nazi Party. YEAR NEAR COLLAPSE. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, January 14 —Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher's seizure of a split {in the National Socialist party ranks to | name Gregor Strasser, tormer Nazi or- genizer, as chancellor, and commissar of Frussia, thereby forcing Aloph Hitler to decide to support the cabinet or risk new elections, was anticipated in to- day’s newspapers. i This appointment, the newspapers sald, was likely to be made in the course | of a week. Strasser's appointment was visioned o8 part of the present chancellor’s plans | | to build a concentration cabinet from the Nationalists, through the Centrists, | to the National Socialists. | Toleration Expected Strasser having openly broken with Nasl leaders, the newspapers said the | vernment expected at least toleration tom the Nazls because Strasser was | still_ostensibly a party member. | . Hitler, the Nazi chieftain, who re- fused the post reported plinned for ;SU’H!(EX‘. was cxpected in Berl e i iy to make a decision which, if ags reformedt” life under the name; (o capinet, was almast certain to bring | dissolution ‘of the Reichstag and new which were impractical in Nazis split and the empty chests. denicd a 90-day parole. pending was sent ‘back to Colorado State Prison, —A. P. Photo. ral recommended for the FEELEC APANESE OPPOSE Frank W. ver, has just been elected tter | th term in the Senate andeis | elieved satisfied to be chairman of the | Agriculture Commission. | Tomorrow night, Mr. Roosevelt will | U eonfer with William G. McAdoo, Sena- | tor-elect from California. It was Mc- | Adoo whose announcement of the switch 3 of Californie’s votes from Speaker John | Battle Fronts Quiet as League N. Garner to Rooscvélt turned the ngzm e T onvention to the| " New Yoramr e | Offers New Plan to Settle Plans Birthday Party. | N Tonight, in keeping with the holiday Far Eastern Conflict. mood he is in, Mr. Roosevelt indulges | In a birthday party with newspaper men | who were with him during his 1920 cam- paign for Vice President among the | — uests. He becomes 51 on January 30, | specifically. Another suggested change, ut then he will be in the South. | it was said, wes omission of all refer- The birthday party is a joint affair. | ences to Japan's recognition of the State Yesterday Louis Howe, one of the sec- | of Manchukuo in Manchuria. retaries, had his birthday. Among others to be &t tonight's party will be Marvin | CHINA PREPARES TO FIGHT. MeIntyre and Stephen T. Early, who e e e e o¢ | Determination to Oppose Japanese In- the Washington staff of the Associated | vazion Increases in Country. Press; Charles McCarty of Albany, and | SHANGHAIL January 14 (P).—Chi- ug;t!m;"figbs !gf %}?f:s' York Mandlvl nese determination to oppose the Jap- night, Mr. Roosevelt will entrain for | anese at Shanhaikwan, in Manchuria Warm Springs, Ge. on Tl‘-#rsg?-m A or Jehol or anywhere else where tte ARG spent in Washirgton. | japanese may undettake an alleged in- s, Ala., | DR Sy Sho- Muinie Lt A vasion of China appeared sharply in- wer and nitrate plant will be in: Tocvs Egecud. creasing today. This was indicated by recent Chinese actions and reports ap- pearing in the Chinese press. ‘While the Japanese Economic League in Tokio was reported to have called upon the International Chamber of Commerce, which will meet in Vienna, Ey the Associated Press. to denounce the boycotting of one na- ‘President-elect Roosevelt and Demo- | tion’s goods by another, the Greater cratic congressional leaders plan to|Shanghai Chamber of Commerce sought confer Thursday and Friday on pressing | to revive the Chinese boycott of Japa- legislative problems and the growin ese goods. This chamber represents probability of an extra session of the| the majority of local Chinese business new Congress, it was learned yesterday. interests. Mr. Roosevelt plans a two-day visit| Circularizing all the commercial and here en route to Warm Springs, Ga. | Industrial guilds, the chamber stated | WILL CONFER HERE. Leaders to Discuss Issues dent-elect. ith Presi- | where he,will spend some time con- | structing his cabinet and otherwise pre- | paring to take over the administration | on March 4. | Speaker Garner said yesterday he| ‘would confer with the incoming Execu- | tive during his stay here. Senator Robinson of Arkansas, Democratic floor leader, and ranking members of im- portant committees also are to discuss the legislative situation witn the President-elect. Farley to be Present. James A. Farley, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, who is almost certain to be appointed pos master general, is expected to accom- pany Mr. Roosevelt, but to remain here some time after the conferences. One of the subjects sure to be dis: cused is the problem of balancing the budget. Democratic leaders are still trying to get their beer bill through the Senate and to the President, as well as_their economy proposals. | Dezpendent upon these and the action of the farm relief bill, sent tothe Sen- day by the House, is the pos- a meeting of the new Con- April 12, If action is expe- the Democrats plan to their proposals to raise nal taxes, but they concede pri- that this probably will have to €0 over to the new Congr “Inflation Plea Likely. Definite plans for the conferences have not been made. Different groups | are planning to urge Roosevelt to favor some currency inflation proposal as well as further legislation to aid the farm mortgage situation. A feeling is growing among the Demo- crats that they should await an extra session before undertaking any more major proposals so they may have con- trol of branches of Congress and know that their measures will not run the risk of a possible veto. Rej ive Rainey of Illinois, the Democratic floor leader, said this plan would be accepteble except for the in- coming President’s desire to stave off en extra assembly until his cabinet be- comes better acquainted with handling the reins of Government. FARLEY PINS HOPE ON NEW CONGRESS Dcubts Present Session Can Ac- complish Much to Relieve the boycott has been allowed to relax and urged a nation-wide tightening of it. (The Chinese boycott against Japan was urged after the Japanese occupa- tion of Manchuria began in September, 1931, and it was a reason given by Jap- anese authoritiess for the sending of glapanese troops to Shanghai last Pri- 8y.) Two Means to Fight. ‘The chamber statement said: “There are only two ways China can oppose Japan: They are by boycott and guerilla warfare. Shanghai, being the nation’s leading commercial city, should set the example by intensifying the oycott and simultaneously ~assisting Manchurian volunteers.” Meanwhile, the Chinese public in Nanking launched a campaign to “re- duce food bills 20 per cent, sending the savings to the forces opposing the Jap- anese” Leaders of the movement said large amounts would be raised for ths Chinese soldiers. | Dispatches from cities in various | parts of the country stated the boycott was being revived. Chinese and Manchurian advices, in the meantime, continued to maintain that formidable Japanese forces were massing on the eastern Jehol border and that a portion already had entered the province and was marching on Lingyuan, about 100 miles horth of | Jehol City, capital of the province. Minor clashes were reported along the border. These reports the Japanese legation dismissed as “‘imaginary.” Chinese Troops in Jehol. Further Manchurian advices reporting | greatly increased Chinese forces in| Jehol have been receiving great atten- tion in Chinese newspapers. They stated | that forces of Gen. Su Ping-Wen and | Gen. Ma Chan-Shan in Northwest | Manchuria were entering Jehol from the | north. (Gen. Su himself and a large body of his followers fled into Siberia from Manchuria before the Japanese offensive & month ago and they were last reported stranded at Tomsk, East- ern Siberfa. Japanese claim proof that Ma was slain last July when his ng ainst the Manchukuo gov- nt failed. There have been un- rmed rumors since that he was still | ¢ alive.) ¢ Tsai Ting-Kai, hero of the hai defense last February, who ly offered to take his veteran 19th army northward to oppose the s e, made a new appeal today at oochow He was reported to have said in an address to his troops “You may be called again to resist a Japanese invasion. Be ready.” Chinese newspapers said the troops ‘roared approval” The 16th Route army proved a stumbling block to the | Japanese at Shanghai peak of Ohio Valley the present Congress legisla- have to take the lead an: cratic Congress straight fairs of the Nation “The first thing that our new Presi- dent and Congress will have to con- sider will be the enactment of their party’s pledges into laws. They must take measures to bring about rez] econ- omy in government. Roosevelt will take the lead and the people in this country have confidence in Roosevelt They will stand behind 2 man of his courage.” The national chairman, however, said that “strange as it may seem, I have not discussed his plans or policies with | Gov. Roosevelt.” Neither, he said, | bas there been any discussion of his assuming & cabinet office. en out the af- He is fully satisfied, he added, that | serious crimes than in any year since |of the beer will be legalized by the next Con- , if such legislation iaznot enacted Bt the present session. Public Buys Airplanes. Following the Nationalist govern- ment’s recently announced move to raise funds for the purchase of airplanes, | public bodies and schools throughout | the nation announced plans to raise the price of one airplane as a present to_the government | Latest advices from Chinwangtao, the | North China seaport, said the situation | was quiet betweén that city and Shan- haikwan, where Chinese and Japanese armies have faced each other across a river since the Japanese occupation of Shanhaikwan January 3. These ad-| vices added, however, that “with the continued failure of Sino-Japanese | peace negotiations to materialize, the | chances for renewed incidents increase.” | They said Japanese were building an | airplane port at Shanhaikwan. | Vague reports said the Nationalist | government was moving troops from Ho- | nan, Anhwei and southern Hopei prov- | inces northward into the threatened | war zone, but the accuracy of these was wuestioned. London Crimes Decline. LONDON (#)—A review by Scotland | Yard of its activities in 1932 notes fewer | the war. Of 21 murders investigated dx;nn; the year, only 2 remained un- solve | | case Hitler agr | tolerate the cabinet the Reichs scheduled ression January 24 was | to_be postponed indefinitely. Some newspapers argued against the | Nationalist press claims that the gov-| | ernment planned to outlaw the Com- | | munists, citing the Reichstag's hundred | | Communists as a valuable counterweight | against the Nazis. Audience Recalled. Strasser had an audience with Presi- ?kcyl?r_mms; ugdxaslrglcys:é‘wfl?- |dent von Hindenburg January 6, at| o 3;(30 nel “r;l e fexchange | | Which newspapers said reforming of the | suggest hew mediums of exchange | | cabinet was discussed, One viewed | slong with gold. % Strasser as an instrument being used | \\eb\(\)fln ukwdntrg rl‘ _cur;. by Von Schleicher to whip Hitler into | Cy.” (IRE, Saked, " SRhy. 0o |line. Strasser broke with Hitler in De- | gM ; adn al unfixgum at’s con- | cember and was reputed to have a fol- | tr 1]1;5*1512;‘1%‘:1' bt Dease ;Jnf\\‘n'ng gl YAIL National Socialist members | T sau y S of he Reichstag. T;}"?ai n\-{c g d: dI! Mw?(?ullwd | After two_elections of the Reichstag make brass legal tender, we'c |last year, Hitler, emerging with the the richest nation in the world— | |biggest foilowing but lacking a majority, | we ha |4 good supply on the | made his famous demands of “all or ficor of the Senate! nothing” and finally he was offered the chancellorship by President von Hin- | | denburg last November, but on condi- | tions which Hitler refused to accept. | | In four major elections held last yea: | i the Nazis failed to improve their pos {tion and in the last month, following | Strasser’s lead, several leaders withdrew from the party acti | Some newspapers took the view Stras- | ser withdrew because Gen. von | Schieicher offered him a cabinet. post. | The report that the general now would make Strasser chancellor recalls his reputation 2% a “cabinet maker.” | Powerful Role Told. | Gen. von Schleicher was reported by | a biographer to have “invented” former | Chancellor Bruening and to have “top- pled the man he made” when Bruening was overthrown last Spring As minister of defense in the | Papen cabinet which succeeded Bruen- | ing. Von Schleicher was known as the | “power behind the throne.” Finally he | himself succeeded Von Papen. d to support and Aluminum Money Suggested by Long;; Brass, Say Others By the Associated Press. | Three Democratic Senators— | | | | Long of Louisiana, Thomas of | - PHILIPPINES VETO Robinson Urges Passage of | Autonomy Bill Over Exec- | utive Disapproval. | ___(Continued Prom First Page.) Philippine bill, unless overridden by | Congress, leaves the way open to the people of the Philippine Islands to se. cure from the next Democratic admin. ‘lstmuun and Congress legislation in ac- cordance with Democratic platforms and President Wilson's to | Congress.” CANADA NOW FIFTH | EXPORTING NATIO A number of professors of the Uni- versity of the Philippines expressed re- | | gret the Philippine Legislature may not | D Bo 2 st 1o ot o e Increased Shipments of Wheat | | last message | measure. TOKIO DISCLAIMS DESIGNS. Improvement Hoover's Warning in Veto Message Called Nonsensical. TOKIO, January 14 (#)—President | By the Associated Press OTTAWA, January | 14—The year | Hoover's reference to the grave dangers | 1932 saw Canada move into filth place | quived to agree to curtail his produc- | lins, Condon, Connery, Cooper of Ten- among the experting nations of the | tion the following year by 20 per cent. | nessee, Cox, Cross, of a foreign invasion if the Philippines were freed was described by a foreign D o | World’ trace by i Dambelon: B Japan. of Statistics. Displacing Belgium and The spokesman added such intima- | Argentina, the Dominion resumed the tions disclosed a total misunderstanding | Position occupied prior-to the unsettled of Japan’s fundamental policies in East- | conditions of the last three years. Can- ern Asia. ada held seventh position in 1931 and “Before the Philippines are freed at Sixth in 1930. | least a decade will elapse in which| Increased exports of wheat were Japan’s motives in Manchuria will be- | largely responsible for the improvement come clearer to the American people,” | in the position of the Dominion among he said. exporting countries. Commenting on President Hoover’s | In 1932 Canada exported 228,219,755 assertion that naturalization would be |bushels of wheat as compared with 194,- a feeble assurance of the Islands’ free- 825,612 bushels in 1931 and despite dom unless America guaranteed it, the | lower prices increased the monetary spokesman asserted that if the United | Value of her wheat exports by $10,- States, Great Britain and Japan signed | 500.000 to $128,385.733 a neutralization treaty it would be “the | As compared with 1931, Canada in- strongest possible guarantee of the Phil- | Creased her wheat exports to Great lippines’ safety and independence.” Britain last year by 32,846,364 bushels i | to 140,234,539 bushels and to other over- AUTHORESS GETS CASH, |mmsmioties by seioass bushels bo| DROPS $500,000 CLAIM | wheat to the United States for con- Mrs. Alma Newton Anderson Still w sumption in that country, however, showed a decrease from 4,949,770 bush- Has Two $250,000 Suits on File Against Architect. world, says a preliminary survey of | els to 52,100 bushels. NEWS OF FLYER SOUGHT | Appeal Sent Throughout Europe for Trace of Hinkler. By the Associated Press. | CHICAGO, January 14 —ITheNSS(m‘-‘ 000 suit brought by Mrs. Alma Newton N e Ene & | - LONDON, January 14 ¢P) —An appeal | Graham Chicago architect, _and | has been sent throughout Europe for| Thomas McGuire, detective, was off the | news of Bert Hinkler, British trans- | records today—erased by a cash settle- | atlantic fiyer, of whom nothing has | ment, the amount of which was not | been heard since he took off early last sclosed | Saturday on a projected flight to Aus- The settlement of the conspiracy | tralia. suit, however, will not change the | status of other suits pending against | the architect, Mrs. Anderson said. She i has a libel suit of $250,000 against Fa‘“rs Cut | Graham in Superfor Court here and SAYS CONGRESSMEN'S anothe: for $250,000 against him on | SALARIES ARE TOO HIGH. file in New York It was disclosed last night that Mrs Anderson is involved in further litiga- tion. The Canadian Life Assurance Co. has filed a bill in equity asking the courts to distribute proceeds of a $500 monthly annuity purchased by Graham for Mrs. Anderson. One of the claimants against the annuity is Edwin Markham, New York poet. Mrs, Anderson admitted that she had bor- rowed money from him Settlement of the conspiracy suit came yesterday after Mrs. Anderson testified two hours tellng of a love affair she said she had with the architect. SAVANT HELD AS SPY Italy Arrests Denis Eydoux of | Paris School. PARIE, January 14 (#).—Denis E; doux, director of studies in the Pol; technic School of Paris, was reported | today as having been detained the last | four months in Rome on charges of espionage, | Eydoux and his secretary were re- ported arrested in the Italian Alps. The French government, Le Matin stated, | has approached the Italian government | on the subject. | : | Parliament Police Displaced. | LONDON (#)—The government, for | reasons of economy, has displaced scme licemen on duty at the Houses of Parliament, using & new corps of custodians instead. saving is esti- mated at £13,000 a yesf. TERRY CARPENTER, Thirty-two-year-old Democratic Repre- | sentative-elect from Scottsbluff, Nebr., says members of Congress, with salaries of $10,000 a year, get “too zu;h | Physician Declares Organ Excep- | By the Associated Press. through a telegiam to & woman friend 'in_ Altoons, Pa, 'G. W. U. Society Honors Medical Savants SMITH-REED-RUSSELL SOCIETY GIVES DINNER AT UNIVERSITY CLUB. REE men who have contributed greatly to the prolongation of human life by enabling man to fight ravaging dis- | eases were honored by the Smith-Reed-Russell Society of George Washington Univer:ity at a dinner at the Uni- | versity Club last night. Dr. Theobald Smith, retired director of the Rockefeller Institute at Princeton University, who is known for his work on tuberculosis and his discovery of the use of vaccines, and Gen. Frederick F. Russell, director of the international health division of Rockefeller Foundation, who is renowned for his application of the vaccine theory to the fighting of typhoid, were guests of honor at the dinner. Dr. Walter Reed, famed for his work which led to the extermination of yellow fever in Panama and who died shortly after his work was completed, received his hon- His son, Col. Walter Reed, jr.. who could not be present, was represented by Col. A. E. pants of the chair of bacteriology at George Washington University during the periodni ors post-humously last night. Truby. All three savants were occu from 1886 to 1910. Shown in the photograph are, left to right: Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president of George Washington University: Col. Earl B. McKinley, dean of the Medical School. Truby, Dr. Russell, Dr. Smith and Dr. FARM AID MEASURE FACES REDRAFTING G. 0. P. Leaders Doubt Pas-‘ sage by Senate in Its | Present Form. By the Associated Press, Extensive rewriting of the domestic allotment farm relief bill was indicated today in view of assertions from Re- publican leaders that it could not pass the Senate in its present form. As approved by the House, the emer- | geney plan for boosting the farmer's cash’ return on seven chosen com- modities to the pre-war ratio with in- dustrial products found few outspoken friends among Senators, Many explained they needed the.week end to study the lengthy measure be- fore reaching a conclusion. But others stated without hesitation that the bill would need numerous amendments if it is to pass the Senate. Among them were Senators Watson of Indiana, Re- | publican leader, and McNary of Oregon, | chairman of the Agriculture Committee. | Committee Meeting Called. Calling a meeting of th.at committee for Monday morning to begin its con- | sideration, McNary told newspaper men | he felt that before the bill received a | Von | favorable report it would have to be | Snell, Snow, Stafford, Stalker, Stokes, altered to include all agricultural com- | modities rather than the seven it now | cove heat, cotton, tobacco, hogs, dairy products, rice and p=anuts. | McNary, long a leader in farm re- lief legislation, added he would sup- port the bill “if we can sigplify it, make it practicable and bring M within the Constitution.” Much of the Senate opposition ap- parently was based on the belief the | plan would be difficult to administer | and that it would require a large staff for successful operation. The bill would levy a tax on the | in an amount sufficient to bring the | | price to the pre-war ratio with indus- | Castellow, trial commodities. ! In return, the farmer would be re- Wants Larger Acreage Cut. An objection raised by Senator Bank- | head, Democrat, of Alabama, a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee, was that the acreage reduction is not sufficient. | With cotton especially in mind, he | advocated that the acreage be cut by at least 50 per cent. | A Republican Senator from the farm belt—Dickinson of Iowa—saw & possi- bility that the Senate might throw out the House bill entirely and substitute | for it the three-way plan of farm relief | passed by the Senate last session and | later recallod. That plan would em- | power the Farm Board to apply either the domestic allotment, export deben- ture or equalization fee plans to con- | trol surpluses, just as it thought best. | | Second Problerh Discussed, While members of the Agriculture | Committee got their scissors and pencils | Lichtenwalner, ready for the task of revising the bill and pondered whether new hearings | I should be held, another agricultural re- | Keown, | lief matter stirred considerable discus- | Swain, Major, Maloney, Mansfield, May, sion This was the question of what to do | about the farm mortgage foreclosure | situation. Senators from the farm | States have received numerous reports | | of farmers back home losing their prop- | erty through foreclosure or facing such | a prospect That President-elect Roosevelt is con- | cerned about farm mortgage foreclos- ures was indicated yesterday when his special advisor on agriculgural matters, Henry Morgenthau, jr.. of New York, | closeted himself with Speaker Garner, | Senators Robinson, Harrison and other Democratic leaders in a long discussion | of the subject. No conclusions were | reached, . MAN AT 72 DISCOVERS HEART IS ON RIGHT SIDE tionally Strong for Person of His Years. PITTSBURGH, January 14 —Richard O'Neil has lived 72 years, without know- | ing his heart was on the right side. O'Neil, seldom sick, rarely consuited | a physician. | Suffering with a bad cold he went to | a doctor yesterday, learning to his amazement that his heart is not where | it should be. The physician stated the organ was | exceptionally strong for a man of his years. BANK TELLER ARRESTED | Hollidaysburg, Pa., Man Held in St. Louis in $300 Embezzlement. S8T. LOUIS, January 14 (#).—Ralph Rentz, 32, a teller for the Hollidays- burg Trust Co. Hollidaysburg, Pa., is | held here for Pennsylvania State police, | who said he was sought under a war- rant charging embezzlement of $300 from the bank. Police sald he admitted taking about $1,000 from the bank over a period of two years. He sald he left Hollidays- burg January 2 and came here Wed- nesday. He sald he would waive extra- dition. Police said he was traced here n | Hogg of Indiana, Hogg of West Vir- [RottCall on Vet MEMOCRATS PLAN One Democrat Joins 93 Republicans Favoring Killing Bill. _— | (Prom the 5:30 Edition of Yesterday’s Star.) By the Associated Press. The House vote to override President | Hoover's veto of the Philippines bill follows: Republicans favoring sustaining: Aldrich, Andresen, Andrew of Massa- chusetts, Arentz. Bacharach, Bacon, Beck, Biddle, Bol- ton, Britten, Brumm, Burdick. Cable, Cavicchia, Chase, Chindblom, Chiperfield, Christopherson, Clague, Clancy, Clarke of New York, Cochran of Pennsylvania, Cole of Iowa, Con- | nolly, Cooper of Ohio, Coyle, Crowther. Darrow, Ddvis of Pennsylvania. Eaton of Colorado, Estep. Finley, Foss, Freeman, French, Goss, Hall of North Dakota, Hancoek of | York, Hardy, Hess, Hollister, Holmes, Hooper, Hopkins, Houston, Wil- liam E. Hull. Jenkins, Johnson of South Dakota. Knutson, Kurtz, Lehlbach, Luce. McClintock, McFadden, Magrady, Mapes, Martin of Massachusetts, Mil- lard, Mouser. Nelson of Maine, Niedringhaus, Nolan. | Parker of New York, Partridge, Per- fon, Harcourt J. Pratt, Ruth Pratt, Purnell. Ransiey, Rich, Rogers of Massachu- setts, Sanders of New York, Shott, Shreve, Strong of Pennsylvania, Stull, Swick Temple, Thatcher, Tinkham, Tread- way. Underhill Watson of New Hampshire, Watson of Pennsylvania, Weeks, White, Whitley, Wigglesworth. ‘Total 93. Democrat to_sustain: Martin of Orégon. Total for sustaining, 94. Democrats voting to override: Allgood, Almon, Arnold, Aof der | Heide, Ayres. Bankhead, Barton, Black, Beam, Largely Responsible for 1932 1 processing of the various commodities | Bland, Blanton, Bloom, Boland, Boylan, | and distribute the money to the farmer | Briggs, Browning, Brunner, Buchanan, ion his share of domestic consumption | Bulwinkle, Burch, Busby. | Cilnnon, Carden, Cartwright, Cary, | Cellar, Chapman, Chavez, | Clark of North Carolina, Cochran of | Missouri, Cole of Maryland, Collier, Col- Crosser, Crowe, Crump, Cullen. . Davis of Tennessee, Delaney, Derouen, Dickinson, Dies, Dieterich, Disney, Dom- inick, Douglas of Arizona, Douglass of Massachusetts, Doxey, Drane, Drewry, Driver. ~ Ellzey, Eslick, Evans of Montana. Fernandez, Fiesinger, Fishburne, Fitz- patrick, Flannagan, Fiood, Fuller, Ful- mer. Gambrill, Gasque, Gavagan, Gilbert, Gillen, Glover, Goldsborough, Granfield, Green, Gregory, Griffin, Griswold. Haines, Hancock of North Carolina, Hare, Harlan, Hastings, Hill of Ala- bama, Hill of Washington, Howard, Huddleston, Jacobsen, Jeffers, Johnson of Mis- souri, Johnson of Oklahoma, Johnson of Texas, Jones. Keller, Kemp, Kennedy o} Maryland, err, Kleberg, Kniffin, Kunz. Lambeth, Lamneck, Lanham, Lank- ford of Georgia, Larrabee, Larsen, Lea, Lindsay, Lonergan, Kt Lozier, Ludlow. McClintic, McCormack, McDuffie, Mc- McMillan, McReynolds, Mec- Mead, Milligan, Mitchell, Mobley, Mon- tet, Moore of Kentucky, Morehead. Nelson of Missouri, Norton of Ne- braska, Norton of New Jersey, O'Con- | nor, Oliver of New Yeork, Overton. Palmisano, Parker of Georgia, Parks, Parsons, Patman, Patterson, Pettengill, Polk, Pou, Prall. Ramspeck, Rankin, Rayburn, » Rogers of New Ham) shire, Romjue. Sabath, Sanders of Texas, Sandlin, Schuetz, Shallenberger, Shannon, Siro- vich, Smith of Virginia, Smith of West Virginia, Somers, Spence, Steagall, Stevenson, Sumners, Sutphin, Swank, | Sweeney. | Tarver, Taylor of Colorado, Thomason, | Tierney. | Vinson of Georgia, Vinson of Ken- tucky, Warren, Weaver, West, Whittington, williams of Missouri, Williams of Texas. Wilson, Wingo, Wood of Georgia, | ‘Woodrum, Wright. Yon. Democrats voting to override totals 191. | Republicans voting to override: | Adkins, Amlie, Andrews of New York. | Bachmann, Barbour, Beedy, Boileau, | Bowman, Brand of Ohio, Burtness. | Campbell of Iowa, Campbell of Penn- ylvania, Carter of California, Christgau, Colton, Culkin. De Priest, Dowell, Dyer. Englebright, Erk, Evans of California. Fish, Frear, Free. Garber, Gifford, Gilchrist, Guyer. Hadley, Hall of Tilinois, Haugen, Hoch, ginia, Holaday, Hope. James. Kading, Kahn, Kelly of Pennsylvania, Ketcham, Kinzer, Kopp. La Guardia, Lambertson, Lankfcrd of Virginia, Leavitt of Montana, Loof- bourow, Lovette. McGugin, Maas, Manlove, Michener, Moore of Ohio, Murphy. Peavey, Perkins, Pittenger. Reid, Robinson. Schafer, Schneider, Seger, Selvig, Sin- clair, Sparks, Strong of Kansas, Sum- mers of Washington, Swanson, Swin; Taber, Taylor of Tennessee, Thurs- ton, Timberlake, Turpin. Welch, Williamson, Withrow, Wol- cott, Wolverton, Woodruff. Republicans voting to override, 82, Farmer-Labor to override, Kvale. Total to override, 274. ‘The pairs, requiring 2 to 1, were an- nounced as follows: | big majority into an harmonious, close- | ly-knit organization. | Illinois, are running on platforms which | plan_ which will be submitted to -the | Byrns, chairman of the Appropriations | composed of members from all sections | ing Committee take over this authority, | trict Committee yesterday introduced by | ceipts from business done in the Dis- | before March 1 of each year on the —Star Staff Photo. STEERING GROUP House Move for Harmony and Unity on Policies and Programs. By the Associated Press. Leading House Democrats are plan- | ning to set’up a Steering Committee to decide and direct. party legislative policies and programs in the next Con- gress, with the idea of bringing their Three of the leading candidates for the speakership, Byrns of Tennessee, McDuffie of Alabama and Rainey of advocate such a_committee. Many other Democrats favor the party caucus preceding organization of the new House. The date of:this meet- ing is being left to the of the members-elect, but if a session is called by Presicent- Roosevelt in April it probably will be held then. However, there is a possibility it might be called about March 1, before this Congress adjourns. G. O. P. Committee Effective. For years the Republicans have had a Steering Committee, which once egreed, usually brought their entire cmembership in line to support or op- pose certain legislation. en the House was_organized in 1931 by the Democrats, Representative Committee, unsuccessfully scught to have a Steering Committee organized. Speaker Garner opposed the idea, maintaining the Democrats should ad- here to their ancient right of caucus on any issue. During the last session and in the present, however, there has been some criticism directed at the Texan because, members claim, he and a few close associates laid down legis- lative programs without _consulting other leaders and to which large num- ber: of Democrats were cpposed. ‘The argument being advanced by pro- ponents of a steering group—one to be of the country—is that since tne Demo- crats will have a record membership of 313 including censervatives, liberals and other elements, it will be necessary to have a central body to co-ordinate the party. Such is not the case in the present House, Garner has maintained, thre the Democrats have a bare ma- jority, * Move to Shift Power. At present the Democratic members of the Ways and Means Committee make committee appointments. There is a move to have this power taken away and given to a Committee on Com- mittees, such as“the Republicans have. There also is a proposal that the Steer- but it has considerable opposition. Last year Garner organized a Demo- cratic Joint Congressional Policy Com- mittee with Senator Robinson of Ar- kansas, the Democratic floor leader in the Senate. It met a few times but finally died when it became apparent it could not congeal the diffusefl party elements on all the major legislation the leaders wanted. BT TAX INCREASE ASKED D. C. Bill Applies to Insurance Policies and Certificates. Chairman Norton of the House Dis- request a bill to increase the tax on in- surance policies or certificates from 1 to 1} per cent of the net premium re- trict. These payments would be made amount of such income for the year ending December 31. Failure of any company to pay the taxes would result in revoecation of li- cense and a penalty of 8 per cent per month charged against the company, which, together with the taxes due, would be collected before the company was allowed to resume business. S AR e S 0il Refinery! Destroyed. KILGORE, Tex., January 14 (P)— The Guillery Oil Refinery, a plant with a capacity production of about 500 bar- rels of gasoline daily, was destroyed by a fire which originated in the explosiorn of a still yesterday. No one was in- | jured. W. L. Willlams, plant manager, said rebuilding would begin today. Wyant, Republican, of Pennsylvania. against; Reed, Republican, of New York, and Boehne, Democrat, of In- | diana, with Davenport, Republican, of | New York, against; Corning, Democrat, | of New York, and Rudd, Democrat, of New York, with Golder, Republican, of Pennsylvania, against; Crall, Republic- an, of California, and Dickstein, Demo- crat, of New York, with Eaton, Repub- | lican, of New Jersey, against; Baldridge. publican, of Washington, against; Mi ler, Democrat, of Arkansas, and Bucl bee, Republican, of Illinois, with Wol- fenden, Republican, of Pennsylvania. against; Curry, Republican, of Cali- | fornia, 'and Carley, Democrat, of New York, with Wood, Republican, of In- diana, against; Sullivan, Demodrat, of New York, and Kennedy, Democrat, of New York, with Cooke, Republican, of New York, against; Hart, Democrat, of Michigan, and Doughton, Demacrat, of North Carolina, with Gibson, Republic- an, of Vermont, against; Montague, Democrat, of Stew: | left them there. VOTE PROBE BRINGS NEW MEE COUNT Written-In Polls Found Not Sent in From 315 Districts in New York. By the Associsted Press. NEW YORK, January 14.—Every voting machine in New York City is to be opemed to help determine whether Joseph V. McKee was defrauded of his rightful quota of mayoralty votes cast by tens of thousands of anti-Tammany supporters, many of whom did almost everything but inscribe his name on their own collars and send them to the laundry. McKee, who, as president of the Board of Aldermen, automatically be- | came acting mayor on the resignation of James J. Walker, was not on the ballot as @ mayoralty candidate in November, but there was a strong move- ment looking toward the writing in of his name by those dissatisfied with the Tammany, Republican and other party candidates. 7§ Variations of Name, Almost as soon as the polls opened charges «began to fly that organization workers were interfering with the write- in vote. There is supposed to be & roll of paper in every machine for write-in votes, but many machines were reported to be unsupplied. Election workers were said to refuse to give pen- cils to McKeg supporters who went to the polls without them. The situation was also complicated by inability of many voters to under- stand just where they should write in the name of a candidate not on the ballot. Many wrote the name on_slips of paper found in the booths and just Still more didn’t know how to spell the name of their favorite, and 78 variations of the name were recorded. Hundreds of improperly written votes had to be thrown out, but even 8o McKee was officially reported to have Teceived 232,501 voies, a number un- heard of in any past write-in cam- paign. This pumber was so large that for a time there were only murmurs | that in reality it ought to have been | far larger. Then Federal officials began an in- vestigation of the election as regards Federal offices and they turned up suf- ficient facts about other offices to cause Gov. Lehman to direct District Attor- ney Crain of New York County to start an investigation of his own. Rolls Not Sent In. Investigators checking over the voting machines of Manhattan last Thursday discovered that the write-in rolls from 315 of the borough's 998 election dis- trict’s had not been sent to the Board of Elections, as the law requires, Preparations were immediately begun to,take this evidence before the grand jury and to subpoena 1,260 members of the election boards in the 315 dis- tricts. ' If it should be shown that any of these officials willfully failed to send in the rolls they might be prosecuted for a felony. If the failure was unine tentional they might still face prose= cution for a misdemeanor, .. Upon discovery of the unfiled writee in rolls in Manhattan, the City Board of Elections met in special session Fri= day and passed a resolution asking permission of the Supreme Court to open the write-in rolls from every mae chine, not only in Manhattan but in the other four boroughs of the city as well. That meeting was presided by the board’s president, S. Hownrdvaxen. who was sentenced to two 30-day terms in jail for contempt of court for re= fusing to submit the voting machines and other records for examination when the Federal inquiry began. He later purged himself of contempt by making all records available. DRYS CHALLENGE LEGALITY OF NEW BEER-WINE MEASURE (Continued From First Page) Territory, if such manufacture is proe hibited by the law thereof. $1,000 Fine Provided. “Such permit shall specify a maxi- mum alcoholic content permissible for such fermented malt or vinous liquor or fruit juice at the time of withdrawal from the factory or other disposition, which shall not be greater than the maximum alcoholic content permissible under the law of the State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, or the political subdivision of a State or Terri- tory, in which such liquor is manu- factured. The bill provides that the permit will include permission to manufacture lig- uor by the usual methods to an alco- holic content in excess of the limitation, but before it is withdrawn from the factory it must be reduced to the maxi- mum prescribed in the permit A fine of $1,000 was prescribed for any one who takes beer or wine of 3.05 per cent or less into States in which it is not allowed by law. BOYS SENT TO PRISON New Yorkers Get One to Five Years Each in Nevada. RENO, Nev.,, January 14 (#)—Two 20-year-cld Rochester, N. Y. youths were sentenced to serve from one to five years each in the State Prison yesterday following their pleas of guilty to sece ond-degree burglary charges. They were Joseph R. Mack and Ches- ter J. Krolak; who were arrested here following theft of $130 from the ¥. M. C. A. Hotel landlord. Police said they had $2,000 in jewelry they admitted they stole last night in Truckee, Calif, west of here. Mack and Krolak re cently served 30 days each for vagrancy in Los Angeles, they said. WOMAN SLAIN IN STORE Toledo Gunman Escapes—Pursued by Employes and Witnesses. TOLEDO, January 14 (#)—While a crowd of customers looked on, a gun- man walked into a chain store here to- day, shot Sally Adams, 25, a clerk, in the 'head and fled. The young woman died on the way to a hospital. No attempt to hold up the store was made and detectives said that the shooting was the result of some per- sonal grievance. Employes and wit- fiEsses gave chase to the fugitive car and obtained the license mumber. BAND CONCERT. By the United States Soldiers'’ Home Band this evening at Stanley Hall at 5:30 o'clock. John S. M. Zimmermann, Anton Pointner, assistant. ‘Generalissmo”. . of Love") . R Scenes from the opera “Lohengrin,” Chinese oddity, “Ah Sin" W;LL: song, “Tell Me W Virginia, and art, of New Jersey, with John- mdww