Evening Star Newspaper, May 9, 1933, Page 3

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When you need a good laxative or cathartic, don't Tesort to nasty-tasting oils or upsetting pills. Depend upon Hexasol, a physician's prescription that has been used and recommended for more than a quarter of a cen- tury, Hexasol is reliable, safe’and pure. Agreeable to take. due to the nicety of its blend. Get a generous bottle for only 60c today at gour nearest drug store. Hexasol must bene- t you or your money back. The First Thing in The Morning for Health HEXASOL The Safe, Pleasant Saline Laxative THE LINDBERGH LINE T (W) Shortest Route Coast to Coast NEW YORK, NEWARK, PHILADEL. PHIA, HARRISBURG, PITTSBURGH, TROOPS PREPARING BONUS ARMY CAMP Fort Meade Infantry Moved to Virginia Post Assigned to Marchers. (Continued Prom First Page.) wing” leaders here, although it was not | definitely known whether they would align themselves with Foulkrod's B. E. F. Inc, or with the Veteran's Liai- son Committee under Emanuel Levin. The Liaison Committee's headquar- ters were closed today as the committee members were working on preparations | for accommodating 8,700 veterans who will attend a convention, when imme- diate cash payment of the bonus and other relief will be demanded, Shun Communists. ‘The “right wing” men will not go to the camp, but will demand separate accommodations from Congress. This faction claims that the Veterans' Liai- son Committee is communist inspired, and will have nothing to do with it. George Alman, a veteran of the. first bonus encampment here, will command the group which is forming in New York. Fred Salzman will be next in command under Alman. The New York group will be joined in Philadelphia by a contingent of 200 under the command | of Harry Smith. According to John Alfieri, another veteran of the first encampment, there are 10,000 veterans moving on Wash- ington from the West Coast. Alfieri, now in New York, plans to return here Friday as an “observer.” Police Policy “Hands Off.” The Police Department will observe | a policy of “hands off” during the con- centration, Maj. Ernest W. Brown, superintendent of police, said. | “We have no accommodations for | these men, either food or shelter,” he said. “We will confine ourselves strict- ly to our task of preserving peace and protecting life and property. This march is the problem of the Federal Government, and we will not seek to take any part in it.” Asked specifically what preparations | had been made for policing the arriving | ex-service men, he replied that no ar- rangemenls had been made. | It is impossible to make arrange- | ments.” he said. “We do not know | how many men are coming or where they are coming from. The Federal | Government is makipg all arrange- ments.” MARCH STARTS TODAY. 1,000 Expected to Leave New York for Jersey City En Route Here. NEW YORK. May 9 (#)—The self- described “Veterans' Expeditionary Force” completed plans last night for a march on Washington to demand im- mediate cash payment of the bonus, restoration of veterans’ disability pay ments and pensions which were cur- tailed under tke economy act and im- 7 | mediate relief for farmers and unem- | ployed. George Alman, commander of the or- gamization, said he expected 1,000 men to assemble in Union Square this aft- | ernoon, parade to the Hudson River and ferry to Jersey City, N. J., the first objective. The group will be allowed to meet in Union Square, but a permit for the parade is being held up pend- ing a police investigation. | Alman disclaimed any intention to | adopt violent means in Washington, but | said his _followers were determined to | see the President and would it t year's “B. E. F. no force and do_anything. E. F.,” menibers said, is part of a movement by the Veterans' Na- tional Liaison Committee of Washing- ton, which hopes to bring men from all parts of the country to the Capital. | Walter W. Walters, commander of | the “B. E. F.." has disavowed the move- | ment, and Doak E. Carter. his chief of staff, has sald it is sponsored by Com- | munists. A similar declaration was made by Maurice Stember, State adju- F." | come to an end. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., A detachment from Fort Meade which passed through Washington today en route to Fort Hunt, Va., to make the camp ready for bonus marchers, expected to reach more than 8,000 in nymber before the end of the week. —=Star Staff Photo. THRONE FOR PU-I HELD JAPAN'S AIM Establishment of New Chi- nese Empire Declared Goal of Offensive. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. While President Foosevelt and the Tepresentatives of the principal world powers are discussing the best means for a successful conclusion of the Geneva Arms Conference and the Lon- don economic parleys, the Japanese government is proceeding in the Far East, according to a well established plan to reinstate Henri Pu-Yi, the nominal ruler of Manchukuo, as Em- peror of China. The Japanese Army is engaged in a | new drive aimed at the conquest of | Tientsin and Peiping and eventually at the occupaticn of the Province of | Shantung. All the agreements between civilized | nations, such as the Kellogg-Briand | pact, the nine-power pact and the | covenant of the League of Nations, are thereby trampled under the feet of the advancing Japanese armies. | But the Japanese don't seem to care, | since the principal powers interested in the maintenance of the peace pacts are engaged in other matters, more vital to | their own existence, and do not seem to | be able to come, for the time being, to a positive agreement. And nobody has either the time or the willingness to halt Japan's advance in Northern | China. New Slant on Recognition. According to reliable information | from the Far East, the Japanese gov- ernment intends to occupy before the | end of this month the ancient capital of the Chinese empire and its seaport. Once this is done, it is believed the present regent of Manchukuo, Henry | Pu-Yi, will be installed on his ancestral | throne in Peiping—which will be re- | named Peking—and will be proclaimed | Emperor of China. In this manner the whole question of the recognition of Manchukuo and | | the accusation against the Japanese | that they have violated the nine-power | pact which guarantees the territorial | integrity of China would disappear | ‘The young regent of Manchukuo can legally be described as the Emperor of | China. He abandoned his rights into the hands of the leaders of the Chinese republic, on the basis of an agreement | whereby in exchange for the_ payment | of a substantial subsidy and e right | to maintain his household in the old capital of China, the former boy em- | peror transferred all his rights and | prerogatives to the new republic. * Agreement Kept by Pu-Yi. INUTE YSTERY Can You, Solvey]/t p Dr. Fordney is professor of criminology at a famous upiversity. His advice is often sought by the police of many cities when confronted with particularly baf- fling cases. This problem has been taken from his case hook. covering hundreds of criminal investigations. Try your wits on it! It takes but ONE MINUTE to read! Every fact and every clue necessary to its solution are in the story jiself—and there is only one answer. How good a detective are you? A Fisherman's Tale. BY H. A. RIPLEY. s ELL, Joe, let's drop the subject of politics and concentrate on our fish- ing.” Inspector Keiley spoke with a note of finality in his voice as he made a cast to shore. “You'd better!" “What a fisherman! retorted Fordney. and you'd have landed that one!” “But did I tell \ you, Jim, of the interesting experi- ence I had last fourth of March?” Washington at am. on the day o{ the inauguration,” the professor con- tinued, unper- turbed by his friend’s interrup- tion, “and went di- rect’ to the May- flower Hotel, where an inviation for breakfast with the Roosevelts awaited | me. An hour later, after a necessarily hasty meal, during which I was an'at- tentive listener, I had the pleasure of witnessing the signing of my friend'’s first official document. As he wrote Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States of America, 1 observed the undue solemnity of his counte. nance. In another second, however, his wholesome smile replaced the stern e: pression. A few left the hotel . . . “So what?" gruffly interrupted Kelley impatiently trying to unknot his tan- | gled line. “I'm a Republican and 1 don't believe that any more than some of your other fish stories. Come on— cut it out. Let's fish or we'll be eat- ing eggs tonight instead of . . .” but the inspector's words were wasted on his line. WHY DIDN'T KELLEY BELIEVE FORDNEY'S STORY? (For Solution See Page A-5.) Perhaps you have a story or problem you would like to submit to Prof Fordney. If So, send it to him in care of this paper. He will be delighted to receive it. —_— and Cantonese government under his wer. po’I‘ht!! his domination will be main- tained over Northern China alone seems A little technique | nutes later as we | ARRESTS INCREASE WITH LEGAL BEER Intoxication Charges Rise One-half of One Per Cent Since April 7. Arrests for intoxication in the District have increased slightly during the first month after 3.2 per cent beer was legal- ized, an examination of police statistics revealed today. In April, 1933, there were 1495 arrests as compared with 1,424 in April, 1932, an increase of approximately one- half of 1 per cent. The arrests in March, before beer was legalized, numbered 1,322, which was an 18 per cent increase over the 1,114 arrests in March, 1932. Beer was legalized on April 7. Sta- tistics for the first seven days each of March, April and May, 1933, show in- creases as follows: March, 347 arrests April, 361 arrests, and May, 390 arrests. Arrests for intoxication vary between the limits of 1,100 and 1,500 per month, an examination of the records for the past 16 months show. April was the highest month in this period with its was the lowest, with 1,115 arrests. | ASSAULTED BY NAZIS, U. S. STUDENTS CHARGE Nine File Protests in Vienna, De- claring They Were Struck Dur- ing Anti-Jewish Rioting. By the Associated Press. VIENNA, May 9.—Nine American | students filed protests at the American | The complainants were listed as Isa- | dor Goodman, Henry Zanes, Nathan | Shapiro, David Weinstock, | Diener, Harold Reilert, Maxwell Silber- man, Eli Starr and Leonard Perlmutter. | ‘The disorders started at the Vienna Anatomical Institute, where a dozen | persons were injured, and later involved the university. U. S. Depository | | | | President Roosevelt petitions for the re- | cial German envoy, and Dr. Hans Lu- 1495 arrests. The next highest was | October, 1932, with 1467; June, 1932, | consulate today, saying they had been | struck by Nazis in anti-Jewish rioting. Harry | A SERIES OF FRIENDLY MESSAGES TO WASHINGTON Saving is the nest-egg that! never hatches disappointment| If you create a nest-egg out of what you save, | however small it may be, hatching disappointment. TUESDAY, MAY 9 ‘SCOTTSBORO BOYS | MARCHERS LEAVE; Police Identify Many Pa-l raders as Communists || Here Before. N The “Free - the - Scottsboro -B oys” march was a thing of the past today, || with the 2,000 or more men and women IE who came here by automobile, bus and ' | truck to demand the immediate release ! ||| of the nine defendants in the famous ||| Alabama assault case on the way back to their home communities. The marchers, mostly colored, left town last night after a day spent pa- rading through the streets in the rain, shouting for the freedom of the colored youths condemned to death for alleged attacks on Ruby Bates and Victoria Price on a freight train going through Alabama about two years ago. “Same Old Crowd.” . I | “It's just the same old hunger march crowd, parading under another nam: the police decided after looking over the corps of leaders. These included Herbert Benjamin, Ann Gerlak, Israel Amter and others identified with vir- tually all the hunger marches and other Communist demonstrations staged here | | during the past several years. | Scheduled to start from New York || avenue northeast, opposite Union Mar- ket, at 11:30 a.m., the procession did not get under way until after 1:30 p.m. Following a route that took them through the colored sections of the city, they marched to the White House, where they attempted to present to || lease of the convicted youths, President Booed. The President, however, was in con- ference with Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, spe- ther, German Ambassador. Although granted an interview with Col. Louis McH. Howe, presidential secretary, they termed the Chief Executive’s refusal to halt his conversations with the foreign diplomats to receive them “a gesure of contempt.” President Roosevelt was roundly booed when the delegation of 25 emerged from the executive offices with the news that he would not see them. From the White House the procession moved on and passed the Capitol, where smaller delegations called on Vice Pres- ident Garner, Speaker Rainey and Os- car DePriest, colored Representative from Illinois. There they presented copies of a so-called “bill of civil rights for Negroes.” with the demand the measure be introduced in Congress. Bates Girl Present. Miss Bates, who testified against the youths at their first trial, only to retract her charges at the recent trial of Hay- wood Patterson, first of the youths to be retried. was a member of the dele- gations that called on Col. Howe and Speaker Rainey. Patterson’s mother | | who, with Miss Bates, marched at the head of the parade, also was in the groups that visited the White House and the office of Representative De- Priest. Pope Receives Prelate. VATICAN CITY., May 9 (#).—Pope Pius today received Archbishop Ed- ward A. Mooney of Youngstown, Ohio, the apostolic delegate to Japan. old age will not find you Fortunes grow from Literally Almost Giving Away Haberdashery We’ve got an ambition not to take a single item of present stock—even though it is all of this season—into the remodeled store—so we’re tak- ing the sure means to that end—and making pitiless reductions like these. Of course, it is costing us a “pretty penny”’—but the unavoid- able upset condition of the store jus- tifies our upsetting prices. ® © o x o Mode Shirts $2, $2.50 and $3 grades reduced to $1.393 60t Broadcloth, madras, etc., tab and regular col- lar attached; also separate collars to match. BROADCLOTH—plain shades—that famous 128x68 count combed yarn, that is vat dyed and thoroughly pre-shrunk. Reduced to. .............. 950 x o o O New Neckwear We've just deliberately wrecked the prices of brand-new neckwear, fresh from the makers—our usual standard of quality; exclusive patterns. o o *x o - Fancy shorts; the new model, and Spring effects. Reduced from 50c to.. . . . ... 19c e o O ® o o x Undershirts Pull-on Undershirts; flat and ribbed lisle. Reduced from 50c to. . . .. .. 29c e o © @ o o & 65¢c and $1 Grades—reduced to. . . ..... Regular $1.50 Grade—reduced to........ COLUMBUS, FORT WAYNE, CHI- Pu-Yi kept his part of the agreement: | to be a fcregone conclusion. The Japa- |tant of the American Legion, in an modest beginnings; they enlarge upon added syste- CAGO, INDIANAPOLIS, ST. LOUIS, SPRINGFIELD, KANSAS CITY, Wi- CHITA, TULSA, OKLAHOMA CITY, AMARILLO, ALBUQUERQUE, WINS- appeal to veterans to igncre the move- ment. he had. at that time, no possibility of doing otherwise. But the rulers of the Chinese republic did not keep theirs and paid for only a very short time the promised subsidy. Consequently, the try of some 480,000,000 people. | encourage the maintenance of as many | separate republics in the south as pos- | nese do not wish to see a unified coun- | On the contrary they are likely to| matic accumulation and finally turn into what you originally hoped for when you started. Too much Pajamas Models of all types are included; and in fine materials and smart effects. money carelessly spent, too little money put aside, LOW, LOS ANGELES, BAKERS- ney | imposes a crushing tax upon a later life of ease and FIELD, FRESNO, OAKLAND, SAN FRANCISCO. | sible. American, French and British interests which are important along the Yangtse River and in Southern | Chinese republic having _broken its pledges, has voided the contract entered into with the last scion of the Manchu 'LIGHTED DYNAMITE USE AIR MAIL For Connections. Through Rates, and other information. call Penn< sylvania Airlines. Telephone NA- ticnal 7030, TRANSCONTINENTAL AND WESTERN AIR, Inc. Acids Cause Tooth Decay Mouth acids attack teeth and cause decay. To effectively fight this dangerous acid con- dition brush your teeth twice a day with Graham Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste. It contains more than 50% pure milk of magnesia which coun- teracts acidity. Thi tifrice also possesses safe eleansing and polishing agents which assure glistening white teeth. Get a gen- | B erous S0c tube for 39c today at | Czm Peoples Drug Stores. GRAHAM 45,7\, TOOTH PASTE SPECIAL NOTICES. ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOCK- Bank for the election of trustees and for the transaction of any other business that n of the Pennsyl: of 12 vania_ave. se.. o'clock noon and 2 p.m. 8. WILSON EARNSHAW, Secretary-treasurer. BOOKS. 5¢ UP. ALL KINDS. BROWSE AT PEARLMAN'S, 933 G st. n.w., ho branch DEBTS unless contracted for by myself. DR. M. D. WISEMAN. 151 Thomas st. n.v i DR. G. G. NASH, NATURQPATH. AN. nounces change of address to 2014 Liith st. n'w__Hou ) to 8 . i , AT rahal truck. Eichberg's auction, town_Garage ‘WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD TO or from New York. Richmond, Boston, Pitts- burgh and all way points: special rates. NATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN., INC. 1317 A. 1460. _Local moving also. WE WILL engine ~ N8630, at B st. n.w.; George- s 18 of certificate No. di 1 preferred stock. and % s for 5 shares. dated December 1. the 6% preferred stock of the Potomac Electric Power Company in the name of Frank C. Snyder. and certificate No. C1008 for 5 shares. dated December 1, 19° the (% preferied stock of the Potomac Eiec- splendid den- | FOUND IN CITY HALL |Eight Sticks, With Burning Fuse ]i Attached, Removed from Munici- |+ pal Building in Savannah, Ga. “ By the Associated Press. SAVANNAH, Ga., May 9.—An effort was made to blow up the City Hall to- day with dynamite. Eight sticks of | dynamite with fuse attached and | lighted were found by a visitor in the }City Hall shortly before 1 o'clock this | afternoon. The dynamite, wrapped in brown | paper and tied with hemp cord, was discovered in a corner of the rotunda on the second floor by Thomas D. | Pruitt, who was in the City Hall on business. He cut the paper open and discovered the dynamite. B -— - IRUSHES REPEAL FIGHT DESPITE BEER PERMIT | New York Woman Declares Dry | Law Modification Is Not Substitute. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 9.—Mrs. John S. Sheppard, a member of the New York | State Alcoholic Beverage Control Board | and State chairman of the Women's . | Organization for National Prohibition Reform, urged her associates today to' “‘constantly remind the public that the modification of the Volstead act which | permits beer dces not take the place of | repeal.” She spoke at a luncheon which cele- brated the second day of “Ratification” week. “Modification,” she said, “is not a substitute for repeal, economically, so- cially or morally. The governmental \evfls due to prohibition—evils of graft and corruption—will be practically un- touched by the legalization of beer. i|SUMMONS 12 WITNESSES | Cynasty. In view of world opposition againsi | the occupation of Manchuria and Jehol by the Japanese, it is reliably reported the Tokio government intends now to go ahead with its military operations, smash up all resistance of the Chinese | troops which are still south of the Great | Wall, enter Peiping and Tientsin and | establish a new Chinese empire. | In ihis manner the Japanese hope tc overcome all objections of the West- €rn nations to their actions in the Far East. There will be no longer a ques- tion of taking for their own benefit a slice of Chinese territory and erecting a puppet state, which has no chance of being recognized. ! Difficulties Faced. Pu-Yi will address the world and announce that he has reoccupied his ancestral throne. There will be diffi- culties at first in granting him an in- ternational recognition, but most of the Western powers are so tired of this Chinese puzzle that the Japanese be- lieve, they will be only too happy to jump at any solution which might be considered sufficient to get them out of the present predicament, without much loss of prestige. ‘The new Chinese empire would be as much under the heel of Japan as Manchukuo is today. But from the strictly technical point of view, the Japanese government can talk about the reinstatement of the Chinese dynasty in a country torn up by civil wars and where ambitious war lords play their own game without regard to the national interests of the country. Pu-Yi won't admit he is reigning over Northern China alone. He wili insist his jurisdiction extends over the same territory as that of his ancestors. But until he is able to consolidate his | present territories, he will not.advance i toward the South to bring the Nanking China will probably be harmed by a continuance of a permanent civil war, but it is not to Japan's disadvantage. The Japanese,_desire only to consolidate the northern' part of China and are willing to help Pu-Yi with money and men for that purpose. ideal, for the Japanese interests, if an- other Korea could be made out of this new Chinese Empire. Generals Reported Bought. According to_reliable news received | recently from the Shansi and Chihli Provinces, the Japanese agents have | succeeded in purchasing the support of a number of Chinese generals and Jeading business men. Scme have been bribed outright, others have been shown that they cannot expect an improve- ment of their business unless a stable government, heavily supported by the Japanese military machinery, can be set_up. The Nanking government has hereto- fore been of little assistance to the Chinese living in the north. They have hardly reinforced the existing troops and have not supplied them with mod- ern war weapins such as airplanes, tanks and anti-aircraft guns. The little medern war material Gen. Chiang Kai Shek" possesses is kept around Nanking to fight the Communists and the other rebellious factions. To Chiang the Yangtze Valley is more important than Peiping and Tientsin. Abandoned by Nanking and with only moderate hope of obtaining an effective assistance from the Western world, the Chinese in the regions in- vaded by the Japanese, or to be invaded in the course of the next few weeks, are likely to listen to the Japanese agents, who can prove to them that during the last 18 months Japan has been able to do anything it wanted in spite of the plat:nic opposition of the world. powers. S 7 $Tiack botter: Days of Open Windows Are Here Days of sunshifie and sudden thunderstorms—they all play havoc It would be freedom from anxiety. IN For more than 35 y Chestnut Farms Milk has been of surpassing excellence . . . known FOR ITS START Chestnut TIME-TESTED pwitd Bank of Commerce & Savings THE HEART OF THE SHOPPING DISTRICT 7th and E Sts. N\W, Reduced from $1.50 and $2 to 98(: *x o o © ® o o Fancy Hose In all colors, including the new pastel shades. B A .. .. 29c e o O o o o % Athletic Union Suits Fine madras, the model that is famous for fit. But only in sizes 34 to 42. Reduced from $1 and $1.50 to 39c e o O ® o o X : Handkerchiefs Sheer quality in white with self stripes; and e 15¢ 2 for 25¢ ® O o Xx o o O Beach and Lounging Robes Light weight, that you will want right now, and for months to come. Broadcloth, cheviot, etc. Reduced from $2.50, $3.50 0 2.0.0.0.0.0.8.0.0.8.0.0.000800% Reduced from 25¢c to. . . tric Power Company In the name of Margaret | {h Sl;,Yd‘er. Al;:ll:hrlnmnp has uém ‘made xmg BALTIMORE, May 9 () —State's e Potomac ver Company for | e the fssuance of dupiicate certificates of said | Attorney Herbert R. O'Conor yesterday ;‘tm:'mo;:egn:{mu\e ones lost. Any person | summoned 12 witnesses to ap] at . with ordinary window shades. BUT NOT du Pont TONTINE shades. ‘This remarkable window shade fabric is WATERPROOF. . .SUNPROOF .WASHABLE. . . WRINKLEPROOF! Truly a QUALITY SHADE! Let Us Shade Your Home NOW Farms Service to your door tomorrow . . . just phone ¥ Light-weight Felt Hats X X A new hat, in a new certificates of stock is warned to return same to ALEXANDER H. BELL. Attorney. Invest- ment_Building. Washington, D. C. NTTU! PURNITGRE ed in your hom references; free esti- | ates. Address A-1 Box 226-H, Star office, _11° death of Mrs. Cora Britton last Thurs- day at a Baltimore hospital after she had come there a month before in a serjous condition. Among the witnesses summoned are pear into possession of said |the coroner’s inquest today into the’ - SIOVING BETWEEN ALL | her husband, Dr. Roland L. Britton of ge Co. 1117 H = & Stora NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DEBTS CON- tracted by any one other than myself. _J. | U; don, Va. o EUSTACE CR GOOD luncheonette. wholesome tasty sandwiches. delicious 'pasteries and_foun- tam or soft drinks in our Dine here tomorrow. Mays Landing, N. J.; Mrs. Nellie El- | liott and Marion Elliott of Elliott, Md., and Theodore Vollten, Montgomery | County investigator. Japan Commissions Carrier. TOKIO, May 9 (#).—The Ryujo, the Mrs. McCarty’s, 1317 E St. 4&djoining National Theatre Lobby ) sioned today at the Yo | navy’s new aircraft carrieg, a ship of 7.600 tons, was- ceremoniofgly comm::a agnn na Factory Prices Save You Money Potomac 4000 FARMS CHESTNU DAIRY 4K weight; popular pearl 4 and tan shades. Real FEk $1.95 Fede e dede e de de e sk e de deok Aok ok The Mode—F at Eleventh ' * * * * * *

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