Evening Star Newspaper, May 24, 1933, Page 3

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- WILL SEEK REPEAL Badley to Ask Campaign Workers to Get Behind Move Falfilling Pledge. Associated Press. Democratic campaign machinery Is to be utilized to seek repeal of the dry law. Paking a step which would throw the administration behind the move- ment to knock the eighteenth amend- ment out of the Constitution, Postmas- ter General Farley announced last night he would send a letter to all cam) workers urging them to join in the repeal drive. ‘The Postmaster General is chairman of the Democratic National Committee and in that capacity directed the cam- paign to place President Roosevelt in the White House. Because of his nearness to the Pres- ‘Mdent and his position as head of the party, such a letter from him would place the matter squarely before the campaign workers as an administra- tion proposal. The party pledged itself to repeal the eighteenth amendment in the platform | adopted by the convention at Chicago | that nominated Mr. Roosevelt. Pending repeal, it promised modification of the Volstead law to permit the sale of beer. The latter part of the campaign pledge already has been carried out by the Roosevelt administration. In his letter Farley is expected 10| point to the vote of the various States that already have recorded themselves | for repeal and to call upon the workers | to endeavor to obtain similar action by | the other States. ‘This will be the first forthright step | taken by the administration for the prohibition repeal movement which was started by Congress last February. Farley, who is in intimate touch with the host of Democratic workers throughout the country, left no doubt of his intent to press the drive throughout the land. ‘The Democratic party and President fiomvelt favor repeal” Farley said. is the time to do it. Without doubt repeal of prohibition will bring in enough revenue to offset the new taxes | which Congress is going to enact now to give new jobs. “I intend to write every Democrat who took part in the campaign.” INUTE YSTERY Sgl”myfl.la Dr. Fordney is professor of crimi- nology at a famous university. His a vice is often sought by the police of onfronted with par- ticularly bafing cases. This problem Thas been taken from his case-book cover- ing_hundreds of criminal investizations. &I7, Jour wita on itl It takes but ONE Mi to Tead! Every fact and every clue necessary to its solution are in the story itself—and there is only one answer. How good a detective are you? €« I murdered!” Sergt. Stanley Barnicoat of the Rhode Island State police listened to the excited voice, put down the re- ceiver, glanced at the clock and looked | inquiringly at Prof. Fordney, an early morning visitor. It was exactly 7:54 am. i Fifteen minutes || - later the squad ar- |l | rived at Smith’s || Corners and found | an excited young ' man. He led| many cities_when Murder on Wheels. BY H. A. RIPLEY. OR God’s sake, hurry! What? Smith's Corners—on the old Bristol road. A man has been ETECTIVE PATRICK MICHAEL TIMOTHY HOGAN, like his name, covered a large terri- tory. Seen from the rear he was a broad bulk. A wide ex- panse of back swelled into a thick neck, on tep of which a black derby rested on out- spread ears. Hogan's beset- ting virtue was patience. He could wait for hours or days or months, as steadfast as Gibraltar, without a motion of face or figure to indicate he was waiting for anything or_any one. He knew now, as he stood in a store across from the Elite ool room, that he might ave to wait several days. But eventually Willle the Checker would appear, and then— Willie appeared and Hogan rattled some handcuffs in his ear. “Come along, Willie. That man is here.” Willie the Checker was quick to object. “You guys ain’t got nothing on me. I'm going straight.” Resolution Attributed to Mrs. Bannerman of D. C. Mis- take, She Says. | By the Associated Press. SEATTLE, May 24—Resolutions in- tended to put the annual convention of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers on record egainst legalized beer and in favcr of creation of school sentiment against liguor were in the hands of committee members today. ‘The proposed policies were submitted ton, D. C.,"chairman of the Legislation Committee, and Dr. Willis A. Sutton, cuperintendent of schcols at Atlanta, Ga., chairman of the Committee on the Use of Alcohol and Narcotics. Note: The resolution attributed to Mrs. Bannerman was not pre- sented by her to the ccngress, she sald here today, and was never in- tended to form a resolution. In a telegram to the congress, she explained that it was taken from a 3-minute speech she made last year at a Washington meeting of the Woman's National Committee fcr Law Enforcement. That organiza- tion had her speech printed along with other addresses delivered at the meeting Explanation ‘in Telegram. Her telegram follows: “My 3-minute talk Dbefore the Woman’s National Ccmmittee for Law Enforcement, based on spirit of last year's prohibition resolution, was never intended as convention resolution for this year, as repcrted in local press. Whatever Seattle convention decides on this and all other questions will, of course, be ‘my chart for future.” Mrs. J. K. Pettengill of Lansing, Mich., director of the department of public welfare and Mrs. Bannerman's immediate superior, said she believed thority in “going into the philosophy tion.” Mrs. Bannerman'’s resolution read in the road where a dilapidated road- bumper jammed "] against a tree ina | field about 10 || yards off the road. ] In the driver’s seat | slumped a man— his right temple. Fordney walked there was no ditch at that point and | that the field was almost as smooth and level as the road. “I was driving about 300 feet behind 1it, although it was perfectly light,” ex- | plained the young man. “That bend in the road back there hid it from my sight momentarily. It was then I heard a shot. When I rounded the corner | the car was headed for the meadow. | man jumped out and ran. I stopped my car, dashed over, turned off the motor and put my ear to the driver's heart. He was dead. Then—" | “Touch anything but the ignition switch,” Barnicourt interrupted. Fordney slipped in beside the dead man, turned the switch and backed the car. | “Better take him along, Sergeant,” he said. “He's lying.” WHY WAS FORDNEY SURE THE part: “We believe that when a program of teaching the scientific facts about ajcohol, devoid of educational propa- ganda, based upon pedagogical princi- ples and graded to the various age levels, is restored to our public school curriculum and given the time allot- —you are in your shirt sleeves. These exposures of rackets are printed to advise and protect the public. (Copyright, 1933.) BEER FIGHT PLAN - ATPT. SESSIONS by Mrs. W. T. Bannerman of Washing- | Mrs. Bannerman had exceeded her au- | behind alcoholic and narcotic legisla- | ster stood with its a bullet wound in this car and noticed the tail light was A second later it hit the tree and a “No, sir Nothing.” YOUNG MAN'S ACCOUNT WAS UN- . TRUE? | ment it was accorded in pre-prohibition | days, it will not be many vears before . | the sale of becr will not raise such reve- f nue to justify other Federal or local Pethaps you have a story or problem you would like to submit to Prof. Ford ney. If so. send it to him in care of this paper. He will be delighted to re- | ceive. it | (For Solution See Page A-11.) PECIAL NOTICES. | FORNITURE REPAIRED AND UPHOLSTER- your home: A-1 references: free esti- | ‘Address Box 220-H. Star office. 22+ TLL Y\O'l'l BE. RESPONSIBLE FOR B CARDOZA. 44 will be held at Wisconsin D. C.. on at 172 o'clock noon. <. "HEUPEL. Secretary SIONAL COUNTRY CLUB ACTIVE p. $125. Address Box 240-J. Star Int, serial 447, i Chev K. serial No Wil sell at th- SUITABLE _"OR . weddings snd : new chairs chairs for Tent or sale ES STORAGE CO. 41K 10th ropolilan ) K14 = WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD TO or from New York. Richmond. Boston. Pitts- burgh and all wav_ points: special NATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN' INC. N. Y. ave. NA. 1460 Local moving also. LONG-DISTANCE, MOVING BETWEEN ALL Eastern points. “‘Service since 1806." Da- Transter & Storage Co. 1117 W NA. 0960 RETURN LOAD WANTED TO BALTIMORE dail educed raies. “Call Baltimore, Md DECORATING ed by C. SON. 2807 34th st. n.w.. has been sold to C. PARSLEY SON, INCORPORATED. effective as of 5. All persons having claims PARSLEY & SON will undersigned on_or be- ACE W. PARSLEY. for Saving Leaky Roofs! thorough ki ledee 14 1) fter e, BT RS o T 5 acliars, Consuls us frs ';mrnm‘ P33 VSL. NW OQMPANY North 4423 rates 1317 OFORE june 1. 1955 against the firm of C. plense present Lo the HOR legalizing the traffic for governments this alleged purpose.” Th. resolution offered by Dr. Sutton said: “The major objective of the year's isa racket- JamegyE.Grant - | “Sure’ you are,” Hogan soothed him, “straight down ‘ to the Bureau of Identifica- | tion. Fifty druggists have | made complaints and it | sounds like you. It's a smart | one you got. You go in the | hallway of an apartment | building and pick a name oft | thle mail box. Then you dash | out and phone the nearest | drug store. You order, in the | name of the tenant, some | cigarettss. Then you add, [ “Tell the boy to bring change | for $20’ You duck back to the “apartment building and get up in the hallway. When | the boy comes to the door, | you meet him. And, Willie, | you are in your shirt sleeves | and carpet slippers, just like | you lived there. The Kkid | never makes an objection when you take the change and hand him a check with the tenant’s name on the dotted line. Then you beat it back up in the hall and put | on your shoes and coat. The druggist is left to moan over | - his bum check.” TWO ARE INDICTED - INSWINDLE GASE V‘Probe of Slaying of Eccentric| Millionaire Continues in New York. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 24—Two young accountants, Arthur J. Hoffman and | George Goodman, accused of swindling $210,000 from Edward A. Ridley, slain eccentric millionzire, were indicied yes- terday on charges of grand larceny. Meanwhile the police, delving into the 88-yeai-oid Teal estate operaior's com- plex affars, said they discovered that his slain secretary, Lee Weinstein. ac- complice of the accountants, had ex- acted a 10 per cent “cut” on legitimate repeirs to Ridley's extensive properties, | Weinstein, pictured by the account- ants as the “master mind” in _the scheme to systematically swindle Ridley, was estimated to have received approxi- mately $15,000 yearly on annual repairs amounting to $150,000 on Ridley's hold- | ings. E Hoffman and Goodman were indicted after they admitted forming three dummy corporations to submit bills for repairs, which Weinstein induced Ridley | to pay. The repairs, they said, were never made A large proportion of the accountants’ share of the loot has been recovered, police said, but Weinstein’s supposed wealth has not been located. Meantime & squad of more than 50 detectives is attempting to solve the mysterious slaying of the Tecluse mil- I lonaire and his secretary. Yesterday the Surrogate’s Court authorized the administrator of Ridley's estate to post |a $10,000 reward for apprehension of | his slayer | { work of this committee is to transfer | our attention from the matter of en- | forcement of any one particular law to | the underlying and basic principle of educating and training our young people to understand the evil effzcts that come from alcohol and narcotics and to live lives in keeping with this knowledge.” St. Louis, Des M:ines and Washing- ton, D. C., are bidding for the 1934 tonvention. This year's session will end Friday | Mrs. Robins Gilman of Minneapolis, chairman of the Motion Pictures Com- mittee, urged support of Federal legis- laticn to regulate “blind” and “block” booking and “other undesirable prac- tices” in distribution of films. Announcement was made by Martha Sprague Mason of Washington, D. C., editor of Child Welfare, a P.-T. A. pub- lication, that the plan of listing films, with comments indicating whether the pictures were recommended cr consid- ered objectionable, had been dropped. Her report said a general listing tends to increase sttendance of young people at undesirable pictures. 30 MORE STATES ARE NECESSARY TO REPEAL ;| By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK. May 24 —New York is | the sixth State to approve by popular {ballot repeal of the eighteenth amend- chigan, Rhode Island and Wiscon- sin have ratified. New Jersey and Wyoming, like New York, have assured formal ratification by repal victories at the polls. Similar ratification by 30 more States will be required before the cighteenth amendment is repealed. Legislatuzes in 27 States have pro- vided necessary machinery to afford citizens opportunity -to_approve or dis- approve. Twenty-five of these elections will be held this year and two next year. In three States, Legislatures ~ad- olirned without action. Governors of two States vetoed conventjon bills. Touett Shouse, president of the Associa ment, says he expects six other States o set convention dates for this year. ‘ows: Ratified: Michigan, Rhode Island, Wisconsin. Ready to ratify in conventions: New { tion Against the Prohibition Amend- | The present status of the States (ol-l 18th AMENDMENT | Jersey, “June 5; New York, June 27; Wyoming, May 25 (tomorrow) Election dates set: Delaware, May 27; Nevada, May 27: Illinois, June 5; In- | diana, June 6: Massachusetts, June 13: | Connecticut. June 20: Iowa, June 20 New Hampshire, June 20; California, June 27: West Virginia, June 27; Ala- | bama, July 18; Arkansas, July Tennessee, July 20; Oregon, July 21 | Washington. August 29; Vermont, Sep. tember 5. Maine, September 11; Mary- | land. September 12: .Minnesota, Sep tember 12; New Mexico, September 19 Ohio, November 7; Pennsylvania. No- vember 7: South Carolina, November 7; North Carolina, November 7; Texas, Au- gust 26; Nebraska, November 6, 1934, South Dakota, November 6, 1934. | Action impossible until legislatures meet next year: Virginia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi. Legislatures adjourned without ac- tion: Georgia, Kansas, North Dakota. Repeal resolutions vetoed by Gov- ernor: Colorado, Okiahoma, Expected by repeal leaders to set election and convention dates for this {?r: ma. Florida, Missouri, ontans, Utah. 5 NEW YORK SWEPT BY HUGE WET VOTE City Votes 41 to 1 for Repeal as State Is Sixth to Favor It. By the Associated Press. ALBANY, N. Y., May 24.—With New York City voting approximately 41 to 1 for repeal, the Empire State today lined up with the five States which already have taken a stand in favor of repeal of the eighteenth amendment. The huge wet majority continued to roll up in rural and urban sections alike as returns came in from voting which lasted until 10 o'clock last night. Fifty-two of the 37 up-State counties | and the five cointies of New York City incomplete total vote of reported en 1,724,368 for repeal and 153,413 against. This wes on the basis of reports from 6,942 of the State’s 8,120 districts. Only rural Yates, Delaware and Scho- harie Counties were declared dry on the basis of incomplete returns. Cort- land County. which in foriner years was dry by a wide margin, reported a sub- stantial majosity for repeal. New York City Vote. In New York City the vote was 1,047,068 to 25.506. In" A'bany. cuse and most of the smaller cities, the vote was heavy for repeal. The huge majority was considerably ebove pre- dictions made by wet leaders in ad- vance, Postmaster General James A. Farley in Washington last night, as he re- ceived returns from his home State, announced that he would send letters to all campaign workers, urging them to work for the repeal of the prohibi- tion amendment. Mr. Farley still is Democratic chairman in New ’ York | State, as well as national chairman. * “The Democratic party and President Roosevelt favor repeal,” Mr. Farley said. “This is the time to do it. Without doubt repeal of prohibition will bring in enough revenue to offset the new taxes which Congress is going to enact now to give new jobs. President Roosevelt's home district in Hyde Park returned a substantial wet vote, with 277 votes for repeal and 47 against. Lehman Casts Vote. Gov. Herbert H Lehman, who cut short -his vacation in Florida to rush back to New York to vote for repeal, will open the convention next month. Like his predecessors, President Roose- velt end Alfred E. Smith, Gov. Leh- for repeal Former Gov. Smith will be permanent chairman of the convention. The wet ticket is a coalition affair made up of leading Republicans and Democrats. Among_the outstanding Democrats are John F. Curry, Tammany leader; John H. McCooey, the Brooklyn chief: Joseph | V. McKee and Edward P. Mulrooney, chairman of the State Liquor Control rd. The Republican wing includes Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University; Elihu Root, for- mer Gov. Charles S. Whitman, former Representative 'Ruth Baker Pratt and Representative James W. Wadsworth. The other States which have voted for repeal are Michigan, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Wisconsin and Wyoming. SEES SENTIMENT GAINING. Shouse Says Most Ardent Wet Couldn’t Foresee Such a Vote. By the Associated Press In a statement on New York’s prohi- bition referendum, Jouett Shouse, presi- dent of the Association Against the Pro- hibition Amendment, said today that “not even the most ardent of repeal advocates could anticipate the over- whelming vote by which the Empire State went on record.” Saying that “of course, it was con- ceded practically everywhere that New York would give a decisive majority for repeal,” he added that “it is simply an- other evidence of the fact that the re- peal movement has grown to such an amazing extent in every section of the country that those most closely in touch with events cannot keep pace with it.” Urging repeal to reduce the amount of other taxes imposed, Shouse con- tinued: “Let the country bear in mind the fact that the taxes that will come to the Government from the manufacture and sale of liquors will not represent any additional levy taken from the pockets of the people. will merely represent the ss from the underworld into legitimate channels and will mean that part of the profit now going to the bootlegger and the racketeer will be diverted to the Federal Govern- ment.” Shouse said he was “one of those who has always believed that when the pre- dominantly Democratic States of the South have the chance to vote they will be found in line with the prevailing sentiment of the country upon this‘im- portant question.” T BARREL STAVES ORDERED Beer Making Requirements Call for $80,000 Purchase. GREENEVILLE, Tenn., May 24 (#).— An $80,000 order for barrel staves, to bz used in making beer kegs, has been re- ceived by the Bernard-Moore Co. and the plant is making plans which will put 50 additional men to work. The company estimated the order would furnish a market for 1,500,000 feet of white oak. The staves will be sent to Louisville, Ky. Plants_at Lenoir City, Oneida and Spring City have received orders for barrel staves. 4 Named Postmistress. HAMILTON, Va., May 24 (Special) — Mrs. P. C. Bidgood, who lives near Ham- ilton, has been appointed postmistress of Hamilton, to take effcct at once, follow- ing the resignation of Mrs. Ruth B. Orrison. AT FOUNTAINS DELICIOUS HEALTHFUL THY D Root Beer @ Your um-m of Real Root Juices Rackets Menace Trade BUSINESS MEN HOPE FOR END OF PIRACY. o i Buffalo, Rochester, Syra- ' | hope that scme day the pirate | This article is the third and last | of a series dealing with the growth | of racketecring and the steps being taken to protect business and society from its brutal and costly tyranny. N BY NOEL THORNTON. slaught EW YORK (#).—Law enforce- | Until a few years ago racketeering | ment agencies are discovering the alarming menace of the new era in raketeering lies in |* the fact that it is & direct on- on legitimate business. | jman took a leading part in the fight | wag largely confined to intragang war- | fare for supremacy in illegal liquor | traffic and control of votes. | As the flood of easy money from | these two activities began to trickle | !away, the underworld czars began in- | flicting their strong-arm extortion tricks upon legitimate trades, and especially upon the small business man. Tne first trades to be forced to pay | toll were cleaning and dyeing plants, laundries and milk, fish and poultry dealers. The racketeers organize their plans so cleverly that-it is often diffi- cult to tell where legitimate business | end and illegitimate begins. | “Persuading” the Laundries. | A typical instance is in the lnundr}i | business. A racketeer leader forms an organization of laundries in a big city | borough. All customers are listed in several districts, #nd each laundry is | given one district. No laundry is allowed to take work from customers outside its district. The ues” the | laundry pays the racketeer are passed on to the customers in higher charges for work. | If a laundry refuses to join the| | organization, or if one attempts to in- | vade another’s territory, then its truck drivers may be beaten up, acid thrown jon the laundry in its plant, or ma- | chinery and delivery trucks wrecked. | I Usually They Pay. Practically the same plan is applied ! in other trades. and the small merchant | usually pays the demanded ransom, |or is afraid to appeal to the police. However, in recent months merchants in New York, Chicago and other big cities have gained new courage with the | result that several racket cliques have | ibeen broken up and their leaders | | imprisoned. | ! The late Larry Fay generally is credited with originating the modern idea of racketeering. In 1929 he was arrested on a charge of conspiring to i violate the general business law by | | organizing the milk trade, but wit. | nesses failed to appear and he was dis- ' charged. Later he tried, unsuccessfully, | to organize New York’s taxi drivers, de. SIS Y 1 1 NS R D Buciness>s now paying billions in tribute to racketeering look forward in will be laid flat on his back, heipless before the co-operative effort of his present victims to throw off the yoke he “as imposed by violence and other means of intimicaticn. manding $1 a month “dues” from each driver. Other Racketeering Fields. In Chicago the Statc's attorney is secking Murray Humphreys, credited | with having succeeded to most of Al Capone’s powor, and other reputed | big shots” to question them about their | activities n cleaning and dyeing and transportation industries. Law azencles and the American Federation of Labor have been alarmed | by a_system whereby racketeers sift | €nough of their members into a union | local to vote out the regular_ officers and vote in their own regime. In addi- ion, a number of “outlaw” unions have been organized which are not in any | way affiliated with the Federation of | Labor. i State’s Attorney Courtney and his aides are now seeking to break up gangster control by having the union Iccals hold new election under the su- pervision of his office. The Federal Government is moving in on the efforts of gangsters to get a stranglehold on 3.2 beer. Agents from the attorney general's office charge that several 3.2 beer licenses have been granted to breweries secretly owned by gangsters. Recovery Act Given Support. HOT SPRINGS, Va., May 24 (#).— Authority to give full support to any national recovery act is extended to ihe Board of Governors of the National Electrical Manufa-turers’ Association in resolutions adopted by the organization in convention here. | Shaving Special 1—35c tube Mentholated Bay Rum Shaving Cream. 1—25¢ pkg. of 5 Licensed Blades to fit Gillette Razor. 1—10c After Shaving Lot 1—10c can Talcum. Total Value, 80c All for 29¢ 4 Outfits, Extra Special, $1.00 Gibson Co. 917 G St. N.W. YOUR BATHROOM UP-TO-DATE for very little Stanc fard -Prices subject fo change without nolice The old clos of order—always difficult to kee you any longer now that you can money... et is out of date—often out p clean. Don't let it embarrass have a new quiet‘Standard” Compact Closet with all its features af this very low price. The tank and bowl are bolted i nto a single compact unit that can be set free from the wall. It is made of genuine vitreous china with exposed metal parts of non-tarnishable chromard finish—and has a genvine “Church” Seat. It is so attractive, yet so easy to clean, and it will remain clean and sanitary. Let your Plumber show you the Compact Closet and tell you how quickly and easily he can bring your bathroom up-to-date._ u; “Standard” PLUMBING FIXTURES AT o Standard Sanitary Mfo. Co 1412 "F” ST, N. W., NEW WILLARD HOTEL SHERMAN ANTI-TRUST LAW REPEAL INDORSED | By the Associated Press. | LOS ANGELES, May 24—The Cali- | fornia Association of Master Plumbers yesterday unanimously indorsed the | proposed repeal of the Sherman anti- | trust law. | “The law has crippled the plumbing industry,” said E. B. Kleine of Cin-| cinnati, president of the National As- | sociation of Master Plumbers, addressing | the State conventi “If it is done away with it will mean | increased production and employment | and will permit our industry to func- | tion in & manner that will better serve | the public.” | He said the National Association fa- | vors the law's repeal. | A3 HCN FUMIGATION at residence or depository for moth and beetle infested furniture. m m Compang 1140 15th St., a safe depository for-43 years. REDUCED BRIEF PRICES BYRON S. ADAMS N . ASK YOUR WIFE TODAY what time will suit her bin with Marlow's Super-cleaned best for us to fill your Famous Reading Anthracite—the best hard coal we've ever known—and now price in years. Then call when, to deliver. selling at the lowest A. 0311 and tell us Marlow Coal Co. 811 E §t. N.W. 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