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A—4 *» INFLATION BLOCKED WITHUNITY LACKING Currency Changes Expected Only if Leaders End Differences. By the Associated Press A definite lack of agreem: 1t should b done seamed 3 about the only thing hemperiig gressicnal currency inflation edvocates in the organization of a powerful drive for mor> and cheaper mon2. Thirty members of ths Ho proved a plan for the possible of $3,000,000,000 more of ¢ there were other groups theories. Some sought to d legal am: of geld in the dc Yemonitize <ilver on the old 16-to-1 or gome other ratio, or to cure the Na- tion's money ills with a score of other proposals. In the Senate, th: demand for rency inflation in some form has heard frequently. Senator Democrat, of Mo the filibuster against tr s ing bill, threatened to block all Jation unle: me action along line were a ed. Barzch Weighs Plan. Senator Thomas. Damocrat, of Okla- homa, one of the filibustering group. yesterday declared the Nation had to come to “reflation.” Senator Borzh Tdaho, Republican, has been considering & plan to cheapen the collar In both branches, however, many con- gervative memb:rs have said privately they would oppose inflation proposals with all their power Scme responsible leaders in the who are opposed to o1l forms of e: £on propo time may bring unani that will put a bill t Representative Busby of £21d he thought he hid a bill or everybody could agree. It was the one indorzed by the 30' members of the Cur- tency Committes named by Chairman Sumners cf the unofficial Ho farm forum. fc- this Introduced Today. Busby introduced it today. Chairman Steag:ll of the House Banking Com- mittee, Busby said, had promised hear- ings on the measure soon But against Busby's efforts, there w developing a considerable drive for & bill introduced by Chmn‘na{) Somers the House Coinage Committee. Under it silver would be used ¢5 an auxiliary Teserve. Somers likewise rings on that bill. FRATERNITY TO DINE Pi Gamma Mu to Welcome George- | town Chapter. { Pi Gamma Mu chapters from George- town, George Washington, American and Catholic Universities will held a dinner meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. at the Kenneay-Werren Apartments. | ing devct=d | busingss of the convention. |MRS. ROLLER IS WINNER THE EVENING ‘STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1933, | Scene of Conflict | |CHART SAFE LIMIT § T s e g OF STEEL “CREEP" ‘ & 4 | [Scientists Measure Stretch ; § in Fight on Peril to Life | and Property. BY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE. ANN ARBOR, Micn. (#)—The once universal peril to man from the stealthy “creep” of attacking beasts has come back into the modern world in a new form, in the “creep” of steel. Steel “creeps” when it stretches im- perceptibly under weight or pressure. After its creep the metal breaks or bursts, with peril to life and prop- erty. All steel creeps when sufficiently hot. Recent advances in industry have re- quired millions of added tons of steel apparzatus to operate at and above the creep line. These dangerous tempera- tures all are “black,” nearly 1,000 de- grees under the point where steel be- gins to glow redly. Against this growing danger Uni- versity of Michigan engineers have found a safe barrier. They measure T LT the few millionths of an inch which a piece of hot steel will creep before |1t can “let go.” They find that every DISABLED VETERANS ~ WATER RATE SLASH i 5ot o Stk S TO DINE TONIGHT ~ URGED BY CITIZENS el " * ™" o *ore ¥ breaks. “Creep Chambers” Used. Nat'onal Comdr. Gen. Brightweod Association Also Pro- Hines and Representative | pozes Cut in Retail Price to Speak. ‘ of Milk. h & g S E "CHTING between the Japanese and Chinece armies for possession of Chu- menkow Pass in the Great Wall of China, one ¢f the important gateways | leading from China into the Province of Jehal., i3 reported still going on. Fhoto chows typical Chinese scldiers entrenched south of Shanhaikwan after being driven out of Chinchow. —Wide World Photo, | is so uniform that, given a sample of the steel, the Michigan scientists can measure ‘the creep and tell industri- alista how long the steel will last on |a given job, They ‘do this in creep chambers | small ‘piston-shaped electrically heated {furnaces. In them are hung spindle- A reduction in the District water shaped rate and the retail price of milk was | tested. advocat:d in resolutions unanimously | 5, 0B, & 1000 o e the adopted last night by the Brightwood | with temperature never varying at any Citizens' Association, at a meeting in | spot upom it more than two degrees, the Paul Junior High School. | except as the sclentists wish the tem- The water rate, it was stated, is con- | perature to shift. sidered excessive, being about four = Weights pull the steel strip, and times that charged in 1911, when oan |gauges which are read with small tele- increase was made for the improvement | scopes show how much the metal elon- to the local plants to cover a period |gates—the creep. A movement of thre of three years. It was also faid that | millionths of an inch registers plainl approximately $700,000 is :mnullly‘ turned into ‘the U. S. Treasury and | that this cannot be used by the Dis. trict, thus becoming a surplus. | The retail price of milk here, as com- pared with other cities, was brought to the ettention of members and a reso- lution was adopted urging the Federa- tion of Citizens' Azsociations to in- vestigate. Milk prices here were quoted | 2s 15 and 13 cents, while other cities Conley, The annual banquet cf the Diszbled camples of the steel to be : an Veterans of the D!strict will ld tonight. culminating the con- n of the District Department un- der way 1 the Raleigh Hotel today Speakers at tonight's event will include National Comdr. Conley, Gen. Frank T. . administrator of Veterans' Af- entative Willlam P. " Robert Bunge cf Cincinnati, n of the fourteenth National Cenvention of the Disabled American Veterans, to take place in that city in June, also is expected to be a guest, as well as a number of department com- manders frcm various parts of the East. Music will be furnished at the ban- quet bv the Marine Band, while Miss Edith Hoffman Jcnes and Miss Mildren Miller will sing. The e n session today was be- o ccmmittee meetings and A change of even two degrees in the temperature changes the rate of ‘“creep.” For that imperceptible move- ment of the steel the magnified dial | moves between a quarter and a half | inch. The distance that steel will creep varies both with the kind of steel and the temverature. It changes with the “load” the metal has to carry. All of | this can be computed. So from many | were paying as low as 8 cents per quart. |parts of the world samples of steel Robort A. Barton, president of the |come to the Michigan creep labora- | City Firefighters' Association, addres-ed | tory for readings. the meeting relative to the education | Steam equipment is coming into the of school children in fire prevention |creep class with higher and higher and use of fire alarm boxes. temperatures. The great oil industry goes to even more elevated tempera tures. And high pressure, high tem perature hydrogenation, which may rev- OF ARTS CLUB CONTEST | Mrs. Margaret J. R. Roller, 7135| Chestnut street, Takoma Park, has won | the $100 prize for the best poster sub- | mitted in the Arts Club contest for the COOKE LEAVES $100.000 Crporei——— olutionize present chemistry, is only Bal Boheme, it was announced today. | i i in its beginnings. Mrs. Roller, an employe in the Bu- ‘Petmon Filed for Probte of Will of That distance is not much. Yet it | ly. | of §5 by two colored men at First and | | Agents’ Association, of the Traveling BYSTANDER SHOT A STORE HOLD-P | Ralph Raedy, Nephew of For- mer Police Captain, Victim ¥ of Fleeing Bandits. Ralph Raedy, 18, nephew of former ‘Folice Capt. Michael Raedy, was re-| covering today from a bullet wound re- ceived last night at the hands of a pnr‘ of colored bandits, who are believed to | have held up two stores less than six | blocks apart within a few minutes. | The hold-up was one of a series of | | robberies in which bandits and burglars | obtaincd a total of about $75, despite | | the diligence of more than a score of | extra motor cycle policemen. | Raedy, who lives at 21 N street, was | shot through the leg during the hold-up | | of a grocery at 1216 North Capitol street. One of the bandits opened flrf,\ Raedy said, when the storekeeper, Sam | Scuderi. drew a revolver after they had | forced him to hand over $30. Robbers Make Escape. | ‘The hold-up men, apparently thinke | ing they were in for a gun battle, fired ‘rth"e shots as they fled the store, one | of the bullets striking Raedy, who had stopped in the establishment on his way | home from work. Scuderi’s revolver, | rusty from disuse, failed to discharge, | however, and the robbers escaped un- scathed. Raedy was taken to Sibley Hospital, but was discharged after receiving treat- ment. He was under the care of his family physician today, however. The bandits entered the North Capi- tol street store while police were inves- | tigating a report that two men answe | ing the seme descriptions had held up |a grocery at First street and Florida avenue a short time before | George Harper, proprietor of the| storc, saved his day's receipts, he said, by gtanding in front of the cash regis- | ter, which was beneath the counter. He gave them 65 cents from his pocket, | however. | | Other Robberies Reported. | Other robbery victims included: | | Clarence B. Wilson, 1924 Eleventh | street, struck over the head and robbed | Canal streets southwest. Charles Conway and Sarah Howard, | robbed of $10 in cash and clothing | valued at 25 by five colored men in a | house in the 200 block of L street. | Lowry H. Lowe, cut on the hand and | robbed of $4 by two eolored men in Temples court southwes:. William Corley, Fort Myer solider, | rcbbed of $1 by two colored men Four-and-a-half and B streets south- | west. | Scveral attempted hold-ups and an cttempted purse-snatching also were | INOTABLES VIEW EXHIBIT | OF ARGENTINE PAINTINGS | | Mrs. Hoover Heads Distinguished | Dies Here 'BAYARD WILL GIVES STORK JUST GRINS FUNDSFORCHARITY AT L DUGE EDCT Specific Bequests of 3388.-:ltalians Decline to Have 000 Made in Testament l Large Families Despite Filed for Prchate. | Mussolini’s Orders. { Mrs. Mary W. C. Bayard, widow of | Thomas F. Bayard, first Ambessador to Great Britain, left cpecific bequests totaling $388,000, according to her will, dA!l:rne}' C. ROME (#)—Although Mussolini fre- his people for their . they have in at nt failed to live up to his esing ol one po 5. has warned, almost families—but the oing down. 2 nation to be and that wants many number of births is smaller each year. Most students of the situation bes it a hard * t'mes. Others nounced. Mr. Clymer and his wife, Suzan, are given $150,000; $30,000 is t uted among their three chi'dren, § to the children of W. B. S. Clymer. $10000 to Finckney end Eli Trapler. George W. White is given ¢ $10,000 and a like amount goes t> Dr. Roiand Cotton Smith. The grandchil- dren of George Clymer are to divide $5,000. Other smaller bequests are made. Charitable bequests of $85000 are to be distributed as follows: 510,000 rach to Home for Incurables and St. John's Church_ Orphanage; $20,000 to St.| John's P. E. Church; $5,000 to the Ca- | thedral Foundation; $5,000 to Seamen's Church Institute of New York City $10,000 to St. Pzul's (colored) School |'of Lawrenceville, $5,000 to Tuske- | gee Institute, Alabama; $5.000 to Al- bany, N. Y. Humane Society; $5.000 to Washington Humane 1y, $5,000 to Washington Anim:l Rescue L-ague: $5.000 to endowment fund of Napl (Italy) Society for the Preventisn of Cruelty to Animals; 2050 Prince Speyer H: 1, to establish watering t:oughs for Her butler, Benjamin Matthews, is re- membered 'with $2,000. A trust fund of $25,000 is provided for | the life benefit of Edith Trapicr, which | at her death goes to the nephzw, George | Clymer. ROBERT O. RUDD. ROBERT 0. RUDD DIES SUDDENLY, AGED 56, Norfolk & Western Passenger Agent 20 Years Was Native of Capital. . the government statis~ ics department found its census re- turns for the -first 11 months of 1932 showed that the natural increase in cpulation was 44.459 below the same period of 1931 end 128,364 under that of the first 11 months of 1930. The natural increase represents number of births in exces of deaths, irths were 40,057 fewer than th of 1931 and 98,134 under those of 1930, The increase in the number of deaths— 4,402 over 1931 and 30,230 over 1930— was not enough to offset the difference in_births. ini recently took extreme steps 1 alarming decline S He Tt Robert O. Rudd, 56, passenger agent for the Norfolk & Western Railroad, died suddenly last night at his home, 3419 Wisconsin avenue. He had been | at his office all day, and was stricken after he returned home for the evening. Mr. Rudd, who was a native of this citv. had been connect>d with the Nor- folk & Western about 20 years. Pre- viously he had been in the passenger department of the Southern Railway here. He went to the Norfolk & West- ern's Roanoke office when he first entered, the road’s employ, but was for > move has arisons by Thousands of couy k the cheap wedding trips each 1 and it is thought many of them would otherwise have postponed their marriages. An idea of the results given by figures for last November, which showed 763 weddings, compared with 31,189 3 October. The remaining estate is to be di-| In the first 11 months of 1932, how- transferred back to Washington in 1920. | vided into three parts, one for Susan | ever, there were 15,059 fewer marriages He was a member of the Baltimore | Clymer; one to the three children-of | than in the first 11 months of 1932 and and Washington Passenger and Ticket | George Clymer and one to the grand- 41,387 fewer than in the similar period | children of George Clymer. of 1930, Passenger Agents of North America | and the Association of Railroad Ticke: | Agents, | He is survived by his widow, Mrs. | Madge A. Rudd; a sister, Mrs. Matti- | Ec¢monds, and two brothers, J. H. Rudd, with the Interstate Commerce Comm: sior here, and W. B. Rudd, with th- Southern Railway at Atlanta. Funeral services will be held Monday with burial in the family plot in Glen- wood Cemetery. BAR PRESIDENT TO TALK AT WOMEN'S BANQUET Clarence E. Martin, president of tho American Bar Association, will spe2l: The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and prac- tical—it is not necessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. HE MORRI!S PLAN Loans are pass- ed within a _day or twoafter filing application— with few excep- tions. For each $60 bor- rowed you agree to deposit $5 a month in an ac- count, the pro- ceeds of which may be used to cancel the note $120 $180 $240 $300 $360 $540 $1,200 $100 $6,000 $500 Gzorgetown's newly formed chapter will be eamitted to the national fra- ternity at this time. Dr. Howard Pat- terson of the University of Pennsyl- venia will be the principal speaker and W. Coleman Nevils, . president of Georgetcwn University, a guest of honor. The governot of the District of Co- lumbia province of the fraternity, Dr. John Donaldzon of George Washington University. will welcome the new Georgetown chapter. Its president is Maj. Alexander L. P. Johnson of Fort i Georg= G. Meade, Md., & special student | Boheme is meeting this afternoon to at the School of Foreign Service. Dr. | discuss plans for the affair. which will ‘William F. Notz, dean of the Foreign |be held February 6 at the Willard Hotel. Bervice School, s lieutenant governor |J. Milnor Dorey is chairman of the | |on “A Task for the Woman Lawyer” at a banquet of the Woman's Bar As-o- S S fi:%:wfingga‘n 7:30 o'clock in the Bethesda, to & A filfilmk\ll;h?d group of guests, hetll;deg i Ml\'giss Helén Clxilo&s.msp:cil;l Assm;gt | by rs, Herbert Hoover, were on han rney eneral, wi al on “Thz Best in Presbyterlan Cemetery. | Nyt Gpening of the exnibition of | Lawsers of Dickens” and Mre. Elien Funeral services for Mrs. Gertrude | paintings of Cesareo Dernaldo de Quiros | Spencer Mussey, founder of the ass Hill, 38, who died Thursday at her home ' of Argentina in the National Museum | ciation, will speak on “Early Days.” Mizs | on Rugby avenue, Bethesda. Md., were of Art yesterday. Pearl McCall, president, will preside. |to be held this afternoon at 2:30 In addition to members of the dip-| Hope Thompscn, chairman of t! o'clock at the Woodmont M. E. Church. lomatic corps, the exhibition was | Committee on Arrangements, was assist- o cootioiing SIS 0 0w e remaining estate goes to the | Burial was to be in the Presbyterian visited by Secretary of State and Mrs. | ed by Annabel Matthews, Miss Rebekal The Standing Committee of the Bal | Widow, Mrs. Mary Warner Cooke. At-| Cemetery, Bethesda. Stimson and Secretary of Navy Adams. | Greathouse, Mrs. Elizabeth B. Dav'~ torney F. W. Weitzel appears for the| " Surviving Mrs. Hill are her husband, _ Dr. Charles Abbot, secretary of the | Mabel Hiati, Grace Eddy, Louise Foster. executor. George W. Hill; a son, Earl C. Hill, and Smithsonian Institution, described the | Elizabeth Harrls, Mrs, Alice Rhine, Olive e | & cousin, James Nichols, desk clerk at | cxhibition as “one of the most inter- | Lacey, Burnida Seldon Matthews, Shel- Arebia has potentialities of palm | the Bethesda substation of the county | esting individual collections MORRIS PLAN notes are usually made for 1 year, though they may be given for any period of from 3 to 12 months. MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W., Washington, D. C. “Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit” Group of Guests at reau of Exhitits, Agricultural Depart- | D. C. Attorney. | FUNERAL TO BE '-,,ELD ment. is well known in art circles | o oo T T hol Washington. i | died December 24, left an estate valued | : o st | e T e T oot | at. $100,000, according to the petition | Mrs. Gertrude Hill, 1830 G strect. Judges were Mrs, Alice | fOr probate of his will filed by his law | 1232, Crergucon, "Eieanor Parke Custis, | Partner and executcr, George R. Bene- | Susan B, Chase, Frances Benjamin Man. Mr. Cooke's realty holdings are Sohnaton and Clifford K. Berryman. | Worth about $25000 and his personal A large collection of the posters sub- Property, including his share of the law mitted will be cn exhibition at the Arts | Dusiness. is placed at $75,000. Club, 2017 I street, beginning tomorrow | . SPecific bequests do not exceed $25.- when due. Depos- its may be made onaweekly, semi- monthly or monthly basis as you prefer. of the District province committee. ! cultivation, cattle breeding and mining. | police. ever | don Jackson, Helen Prentiss and Jean ! brought to the gallery.” | Stephenson. LOWEST PRICES . . ., HIGHEST -QUALITY . . . IN ALL Nasi HISTORY '695 . NASH BIG SIX (4-Door Sedan) $130 LESS THAN 193¢ Nash goes forward in 1933 — presenting five groups of cars— four Eights and a Six—that raise still higher the high standards of Nash efficiency and Nash quality. @ The Nash product never has been cheapened—and never will be. Every resource has been concentrated in 1933, to make these cars the finest Nash ever has built, and to bring their prices down to NASH STANDARD EIGHT 116-inch Wheelbase $830 to $900 FIVE BODY STYLES NASH BIG SIX 116-inch Wheelbase $695 to $745 FOUR BODY STYLES * * * NASH SPECIAL EIGHT 121-inch Wheelbase $965 to $1095 SIX BODY STYLES DARD EIGHT (4-Door Sedan) LESS THAN levels that are the lowest in Nash history. € Maximum quality at minimum price is the Nash achievement for 1933. Whether you choose the Nash Big Six, the Nash Standard Eight, the Special Eight, or one of the Twin-Ignition- motored, Underslung-Worm-Drive, Advanced or Ambassador Eighté, you can be certain it is a car you would rather drive, at a price you would rather pay. STAN §145 193¢ NASH ADVANCED EIGHT 128-inch Wheelbase $1255 to $1575 SIX BODY STYLES NASH AMBASSADOR EIGHT 133 and 142-inch Wheelbases $1545 to $2055 NINE BODY STYLES ‘pudf.o.i.gfl DISPLAY I'N NASH D E NASH-ORR MOTOR CO. Distributors 1522 14th Street N.W. ALER SHOWROOMS EVERYWHERE DEcatur 1460 "Authorized Washington Nash Dealer: Williams & Baker, Inc. 1507 14th St. N'W. B. D. Jerman & Co. 2819 M Street N.W. Potter Nash Motor Co. Silver Spring, Md. Nash Rohr Barsky, Inc. 1367 H St. NE. '800)