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%NING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., CAN YOU SWIM? JUNE WEEK FETES | ["ids Campaiga | |GET RARE CHANCE HELD AT ANNAPOLIS Drills and Presentation ofl Awards Mark Ob- servance. Speclal Dispatch to the Star. ANNAPOLIS, Md., May 29.—June week at the Naval Academy presented 1ts most varied and interesting program today, including drills, ceremonies, presentations of athletic and military awards and social events. ‘This morning a physical drill under arms, but without commands, was pre- sented by two battalions, midshipmen. - In open order the battalions filled Lawrence Field and presented & most attractive exhibition to the June week visitors. Athletic Awards Presented. At noon athletic awards were pre- e=nted, the winners of “N's” being as- sembled in 16 groups according to their branch of sport. The presentations were made by Rear Admiral Thomas C. Hart, superintendent, the most im- portant being the Navy athletic sword, given to the best athlete of the year, and won this time by Midshipman Wil- liam R. Kane of San Rafael, Calif, foot ball tackle, heavy weight wrestler and weight thrower. Another notable recipient of athletic | honors was Fred C. Borries of Louis- ville, Ky, who has won three “N’: during the year. Two of them “N- Stars,” given for taking part in winning | contests against the Military A-ademy. Colors to Be Presented, At dress parade this evening Lh;; 4t colors will be presented to the Company, commanded by Midshipman Ernst L. Jahncke, jr., of New Orleans. The presentation will be made by Miss Virginia C. Thompson of Baltimore, the sister of Midshipman Raymond L. | Thompson, jr., classmate and battalion commander of Midshipman Jahncke. The special social events of the week are scheduled for this evening, the superintendent’s garden party for the graduates, the ring dance for the second class men and a hop for the members of the third class. SILK WORKERS DRAFT REORGANIZATION PLAN Program Will Be Offered as Part of Roosevelt's Industry Recovery Bill. By the Associated Press. PATERSON, N. J., May 29.—A pro- gram for reorganization of the silk in- dustry was outlined yesterday by the American Federation of Silk Workers, for presentation to the Federal Gov- ‘ernment as part of President Roose- vel’s industry recovery plan. The cardinal points of the workers’ plan were: Thirty-hour work week; one-shift ! system; minimum weekly wage, $36; ! two loom operation in order to take care ‘of surplus workers dropped by adoption of the one-shift system, and accord and co-operation with the pro- posed plan of licensing manufacturers as “the only method of keeping the manufacturers in line.” 1In a supplementary statement, Rus- sell Wood of Easton, Pa., president, and Frank Schweitzer, secretary-treasurer of the American Federation of Sik ‘Workers, said: “We feel that the idea of the Presi- ‘dent’s recovery program centers around placing of buying power in the hands of the workers, a move absolutely es- sential for the recovery of business.” BARUCH AND-LEHMAN ADDRESS GRADUATES Oglethorpe University Awards| Them and Paul Block Honorary Degrees. By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, May 29.—The responsi- | bility of youth in social and economic | rehabilitation was outlined last night before the graduating class of Ogle- thorpe University by Gov. Herbert H. Lehman of New York and Bernard M. Baruch, New, York financier. The Governor and Mr. Baruch, war- time chairman of the Industries Board, received the honorary degree of doctors of law. Paul Block, the publisher, was awarded the degree of doctor of com- mercial science. In citing a closer relation of business and government, Gov. Lehman said: “It is my cxperience that no problems of the State are without their counter- part in business and industry, and that almost every problem of business and industry is duplicated by a similar problem in government.” Mr. Block accepted the honor con- ferred on him as a compliment to the newspaper fraternity, rather than a personal tribute. WIFE CHARGES HUSBAND WITH ‘LOVE EXPERIMENT’ Physician Denies Allegation He | Intended to Mz Woman. ry Ycunger By the Assoclated Press. SEATTLE, May 29.—In divorce | papers filed here, a wife charges her | husband, a Taccma physician, with a “love experiment” in which an un- named younger weman was the sub- Ject. Mrs. Olga Linsin, a former school teacher, declared in an affidavit her husband had told her that “if at the end of six months or a year his aJec- tion for the young woman was still as now, that he then intended to marTy he husband, Dr. Ivean M. Linsin, ant paysician at the United States Indian Hospital at Tacoma, denied the charges Mrs. Linsin was awarded $50 a month y al'mony by Superior Judge Calvin 8. Hall The two were married at Mcoreheac Minn., June 1, 1915. attern Delays Globe Hop. NEW YORK. May 29 (#).—Adverse weather Teports from Newfoundland continued last night to delay the scheduled trke-off of James Mattern on a proposed rcund-the-world flight. At Floyd Bennett Field it was said the San Angelo, Tex., flyer would be unable to start before tomorrow. Minute Mysteries Solution te AN IMITATION, (See Page A-3.) ‘The mistake was that ss there was only one room lighted in the house, and that on the second floor, Fordney could not have scen his 1. L WEEP, FOR THE LIGHT IS DEAD.—Schiller. about 900 | | | 1 | | COMMODORE W. E. LONGFELLOW, Life-saving director of the Amfl‘ican! Red Cross, who has indorsed the| “Learn to Swim” drive of The Star, and Y. M. C. A. and will serve in an advisory capacity. LEASING PLANNED OF COTTON LANDS Wallace Says Consideration Is Given Idea to Main- tain Higher Prices. By the Assoclated Press. Secretary of Agriculture Wallace re- vealed today that consideration is being given a plan for leasing sections of land now planted in cotton and expressed tne opinion that expenditure of about $150,000,000 for this purpose in pa: ments to growers would have the effect of maintaining cotton prices at from 10 to 12 cents per pound. He said that a cotton program under the new farm law will be drafted as scon as C. A. Cobb of Atlanta, cotton production administrator, returns this week after a survey of the South and interviews with the growers and their representatives. Wallace also announced that the first public hearing under the new farm law has been set tentatively for next Monday and will be on the proposed trade agreement covering the Chicago fluid milk market, under which prices to producers and consumers would be fixed. The hearing will be held either | at_Chicago or Washington. Wallace said that former Senator Brookhart of Iowa, selected Saturday as special trade adviser for the new administration, was chosen for his! knowledge of Russia and its trade pos- sibilities. Sees Soviet Trade. ‘TL: Secretary said he believes exten- sive possibilities for trade exist with the Soviet government, giving an addi- | tional outlet for surplus American farm | products. The trade may take the form | of barter, depending on what methods | prove the most feasible. Brookhart has announced that he already has negotia- tions under way for trade with Russia | and that under the plans he has made | Tecognition of the Soviet government is ' not necessary, although he favors it. Wallace said that Brookhart's post wouid be advisory and of a research | character. He said that ‘appointment later of a world trade representative to handle negotiations with other countries to increase exportation of American farm products is considered. He said this country can obtain from Russia in return for farm products, quantities of wood pulp, manganese ore and platinum. Dr. R. G. Tugwell, As- sistant Secretary, said there are two additional possibilities, gold being mined in Russia and trade remittances from Russians in this country to relatives and friends in their homeland. He sald these remittances recently amount- ed to about $60,000,000 a ‘year. Wallace confirmed reports that Dr. Clyde King of th> University of Penn- sylvania, now Chicago’s milk arbiter, is being sought for the post to direct the program for dairy products under the new law. Earl Smith Sought. He also said Earl Smith of Chicago, president of the Illinois Agricultural Association, has been asked to become corn and hog production administra- tor but has net accepted. Wallace said that plans covering basic commodities under the farm law have not reached the stage of conclu- sions, but that carly action in the case of both cotton and wheat is sought. Ho said there are differences of cpinion regarding the procedure in the case of wheat between representatives of various industries concerned with that grain and that M. L. Wilson, wheat production administrator, is seeking an agreement. Wallace said he was not prepared t« say whether he would Xa\'orpanpamgnd? ment to the $3,300,000,000 industrial public works bill to set eside $200,000,~ 000 for payments to farmers who agree to reduce their acreage this year of coiton and other basic crops. This amendment has bzen proposed by a group of Southern Senators who regard a cotton acreage reduction pro- gram as necessary this season. “Frankly, I feel this matter of raid- ing the Treasury—,” Wallace started to say and then finished the sentence this_way: “The quicker we face certain fun- damental facts the better off we will be.” He said that he favors bonus pay- ments only if coupled with agreements to reduce acreage. These reducticn: he said, might be for the year fol iowing tl.> payment of part of the bonus as suggested by representatives of organized wheat growers. Girls and boys carried 2,150 coin Loxes through the streets of Glasgow, Scotland, onc day recently to collect funds for buildings to honor the mem- ory of George Geddes, a life guard on the Clyde for 43 y | 13 | August | Now, with the aid of Dentox Tooth Paste, keep the gums firm and healthy. Use ! NOTHING DOWN $4.50 in | everyone may have sparkling white Dentox for just one month and note TOLEARN TO SWIM Men Will Have Quiet Pool to Themselves for Free Instruction. Since opportunities to learn how to swim seldom come after one has grown up, men of Washington should take full advantage of the free instruction to be provided next week by The Star and the Y. M. C. A, it was declared today by Commodore W. E. Longfcllow, vet- eran water safety expert of the Amer- | ican Red Cross. Commodore Longfel- low is aiding in the “Learn to Swim" campaign. “Full-grown men who do not know how to swim have few opportunities to learn except when scores of youngsters, who swim like fish, are splashing plex,” Commodore Longfellow- said. “Now cames a chance to learn in a quiet pool with no one but men around. It's the chance of a lifetime, this free swimming campaign for men, and it is certain to do a whole lot of good. Needed for Outings. “Men today realize that, however ex- pert they arc at base ball, foot ball, tennis or golf, they are certain to be found wanting at Summer outings unless they can swim at least a little. It is expected of the modern man by the modern woman and her daughter and by every small boy. Somehow a man’s athletic stars do not seem so bright after the small boy has discov- ered that he cannot swim a stroke. “Many fathers are anxious to learn enough swimming to pass it along to the children at the shore over the week end, and it will be quite possible for the men who sign up for the cam- paign, beginning next Monday, to pass along what they have learned to the rest of the family. “With the modern group methods of instruction dozens can learn in the time it formerly took to teach a single individual. It is readily possible to learn to swim a passable crawl stroke for 20 or 30 feet in five or six lessons. The present free swimming offer should prove to be a real worthwhile contribu- tion to water safety in Washington.” All Men Eligible. All men 18 or over are eligible to receive six free lessons from swimming experts in the big pool of the Central Y. M. C. A. at 1736 G street starting next Monday. Half-hour classes will be held daily until the close of the drive on the evening of June 10. All that is necessary to obtain the lessons is to clip the coupon printed herewith, take it to the registration desk in the lobby of the Central “Y” and exchange it for a special learn-to- swim card. There are no fees or ob- ligations of any kind. Everything necessary, including soap, towels and checking cervice, will be furnished free through the generosity of the Y. M. C. A BIOGRAPHE Dr. R HONORED Fuess Named Headmaster of Phillips Academy. ANDOVER, Mass, May 29 (#).— Election of Dr. Claude Moore Fuess as headmaster of Phillips Academy was announced today. Dr. Fuess, a gradu- ate of Amherst College, is a nationally known blographer. He has served as an instructor in English at Phillips Academy and has been a member of the faculty since 1908. He succeeds Dr. Alfred E. Stearns, who resigned Janu- ary 15 bzcause of poor health. . Pope to Take Part in Parade. ROME, May 29 (#).—Catholic pre- lates said today that the Pope will par- ticipate in an enormous procession to St. Peters Square June 15, Corpus Christi day. Can you imagine a car that sells it- self —and doubles its sales in city after city—in the face of today’s stiff competition? ‘That's what the new Dodge is do- ing. Winning thousands of new owners, by laying its cards on the table. Asking any other car in the low price field to match it on the open road, in traffic, and up hills. Isn't this the way an automobile should be bought? On merit alone! Don’t you want to buy a car on what itactually does in your own hands? ‘Why gamble on words? Accept Dodge’s Challenge ask for the “Show-Down” plan and score card. Then go out and try to make any competitor’s car do what the big new Dodge Six does 5o easily. | See if it can stay anywhere near the | Dodge on a hill. Try to make itride half as smoothly, even over rough- est roads. Try to make it flash ahead in traffic, the way the Dodge does, D. | Just Pay i Sept. !| Eiseman’s — 7th & F Sts. i....free from that ugly “yellowish” tinge. i Besides safe, gentle cleansing and the difference. Get a generous S0c tube for 29¢ today at Peoples Drug July polishing agents Dentox contains a Stores. —— Ceol, Tropice! Worsted $4.50 in —_——————— 'Have White Teeth Safely special ingredient which tends to = _oerox roory paste E around to give them an inferiority com- Here’s Your June %fi No? The Star and Clip This Coupon and NORTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION ENDS | [All-Day Missionary Rally| Service at Auditorium Closes Sessions. Sessions of the Northern Baptist Convention closed yesterday with an all-day missionary rally dervice at Washington Auditorium. Returned missionaries from China, India, Africa and Mexico spoke to au- | diences that had been listening for sev- | eral days to debates on efficiency of | | modern missionary methods roused by | the Rockefeller-financed book, “Re- Thinking Missions.” Reports on Findings. Frank W. Padelford of New York, | missionary board member, who made a | study of the book at first hand in India | and China, reported his findings—that | missionary zeal still burns in the hearts of the missionaries themselves, but that they have less help from the home- land. “We are told that the interest of American Christians in world missions is dying out,” he sald. “There is evi- dence of it. The attitude of the people has become more critical; the giving of our people has declined steadily year | by year since the close of the World | War; the number of recruits for mis- slonary service has been growing less and less.” Padelford predicted “there will be no | cure for this present situation” until “there is a new experience in the hearts of American Christians.” Mexican Activities Revealed. Baptists were warned by Dr. C. D.| Dawson that Mexico is attempting to | suppress all forms of Christianity. Dr. | Dawson is supervisor of a Baptist hoa-i pital in Pueblo Pue. | Speakers at the evening session were Mrs. W. A. Petzoldt, missionary to the | Crow Indians, and Rev. Joseph C. Rob- | bins, a missionary in India for several years. Both speakers warned against| curtailment of missionary work. Presi- | dent Franklin W. Johnson of Colby | College presided. STOCK SUBSCRIBED | Total of $10,755,900 Taken in Re- gional Home Loan Banks. A total of $10755900 has been sub- | scribed for stock in' regional Federal Home Loan banks by 1,154 home financ- ing institutions which have been ap- proved for membership in the Home Loan system. according to the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. The board said the institutions had taken advantage of their membership to borrow a total of $36,517,255 for home- | financing purposes, and that an addi- | tional $10,511,708 of loans had been au- | thorized and were ready for advance. at the slightest touch on the pedal. Or stop nearly 8o quickly, so surely as the Dodge with its remarkably safe hydraulic brakes. Check Dodge's many engineering advantages, point by point. Calculate the plus value they give you on a showdown basis. Yes, be the judge yourself. Keep in mind the utter smartness of Dodge’s modern lines. The beautifully tai- Go to your nearest Dodge dealer and * “I'm skeptical about sales talk. That's why the Sh Down Plan won we. It facts, not claims, Laenhardt. %5 DODGE 6 595 With Floating Power Engine Mountings ... 115-INCH WHEELBASE odge Eight priced from $1115 to $1395 f. o. b. factory, Detroit G/RDNER-STUART MOTORS, INC.. 820 H_ Street, Northeast xfian s UETORD. . e 0 N YES MONDAY, Chance to Learn 5-10 UNDER AUSPICES OF Y. M. C. A. Present at Registration Desk in Lobby of Central Y. M. C. A. Building 1736 G St. N.W. RACKETLEADERS HELDINBEERGANE Norrfian J. Morrison Leads Government Fight Against Five Breweries. By the Assoclated Press. FHILADELPHIA, May 29.—Leader in the Government's fight against five New Jersey breweries, Norman J. Morrison, attorney of El Paso, Tex., says he has discovered “in many instances the lines of the old racket leaders are still grip- | ped on the beer business.” Morrison is serving as chief attorney | for the Federal Government in its ef- fort to have revoked the permits of the breweries, allowing them to manufac- ture 3.2 beer. Citations were issued against the breweries on charges that their permits | were obtained by fraud. The action fol- lowed the killing of Max Hassel, Read- ing, Pa., beer baron, and Max Green- berg, New York, in an Elizabeth, N. J., hotel. The Government contends Hassel was one of the owners of a brewery in- volved in the litigation. “We have found instances where the dealer has been threatened and coerced into taking beer he doesn’t want, the products of known gang brewerles,” Morrison says. “For a long time before beer was legalized I held legal beer would work no great harm to the prohibition ex- periment or to the cause of temperance. “But the breweries will have to get rid of the gang element in their con- trol or the whole vicious situation of | murders, coercion and bribery will be with us again.” The Department of Justice called Morrison to service as special deputy attorney general scven years ago. He has since been in the center of many legal battles growing out of liquor law violations. ARGENTINA AND CHILE CONCLUDE TRADE PACT By the Associated Press. BUENOS AIRES, May 29.—Argentina and Chile signed a trade treaty yester- day, the thirty-first anniversary of the conclusion of their boundary treaty. The 1902 treaty prevented war be- tween the two nations, and yesterday's is expected to end permanently com- mercial warfare, which intensified since the depression until Argentine and Chilean commerce virtually ceased. The commercial treaty supersedes a half-year modus vivendi, and provides that both signatories co-operate to pre- vent a repetition of last year's closure of the Transandean Railway. Foreign Minister Saavedra Lamas and Maximilian Ibanez, special Chilean en- voy, initialed the pact for their coun- tries. It is subject to ratification of both Congresses, which is assured. DODGE OFFERS A “SHOW-DOWN" IN WASHINGTON! WINS THOUSANDS TO DODGE OVERNIGHT! loredinteriors. Its big 115-inch wheel- base with exceptionally roomy body. Save Money With A Dodge! Compare the 7 big ways Dodge saves you money. These alone mean from $50 to $100 extra savings on running expense. Then you'll wonder how anyone can be satisfied with any other car, at anywhere near Dodgy ing low price. Only a few dollars more than the lowest price cars! Your present car will probably make the full down payment ona big, new Dodge Six. You, too, may be surprised to find that the low monthly payments on a thrilling new Dodge Six are actually less than many now spend on upkeep and repairs for their old cars! Drive the new Dodge today. Dodge ‘wants you to try it on this “Show- Down” basis. Even if you don’t in- tend to buy, Dodge wants you to have the “Show-Down” score card—the new aid in judging real motor car value. See your nearest Dodge dealer. and up £ 0. b. factory, Detroit D O G E MAY 29. 1933. ISHII IS HOPEFUL ON'WAY 70 LONDON Fails to Win U. S. Support, but Expects Aid of Other Nations. ‘Viscount Kikujiro Ishil and the other members of the Japanese delegation at the London economic conference have left Washington and will sail from New York for Europe early this week. ‘The head of the Japanese delegation still is hopeful that some solution of the Far Eastern situation may be found in the course of the next few months at the Geneva and London conferences. It is reported that Viscount Ishii re- ceived but little encouragement from President Roosevelt as to the chances of this country changing its present poli- cies in the Far East. The Japanese, .hawever, believe that the bringing of Henry Pu-Yi to the throne of China may induce the other Western powers to recognize the Manchu prince as the rightful ruler of that empire and that America will have to follow the other nations in the recognition of the new | Emperor. Seek League Change. The Japanese delegations at Geneva and in London will make a concerted drive to change the fundamental prin- ciples of the covenant of the League of Nations regarding the aggressor na- tion and also to establish the right of a nation to take whatever measures it deems necessary—even military meas- ures--in case of an unprovoked boycott by another country. Viscount Ishii has not in mind so much the threat of a beycott of Japan | by the other powers because of the dis- consideration of international treaties. His main thoughts are in regard to China. He wants to establish the rule that any nation which applies a boy- cott under peaceful circumstances against another country is guilty of provocation just as much as if it in- vaded the territory of that country with armed forces. ‘Would Revise Positions. Should this principle be adopted by the other nations the whole aspect of the present Sino-Japanese conflict would change, since it would bear out the Japanese contention that Japan has acted in self-defense when it invaded Manchuria and the other Chinese terri- tories. China would thus become the aggressor, and would have to bear the consequences of such an act. It is difficult to believe that the na- tions which are gathered now at Geneva and will meet in London will accept this point of view. The Japanese delegates believe, however, that they might get some | “support in Europe for their thesis and | i thus create a feeling placing the Jap- n‘nese Empire in a more favorable posi- | tion. PSYCHIATRISTS MEET | i e | 89th Annual Gathering of Medical Group Opens Today. BOSTON, May 29 (#).—With leading psychiatrists from the United States and England attending, the eighty- ninth annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, the oldest nl-i tional medical society in America, | opened today. The meeting will close Friday. The section on convulsive disorders | met today under the chairmenship of | Dr. Morgan B. Hodskins of Palmar. The general session will get under way tomorrow. TR SELECT PHILADELPHIA National Federation of Music Clubs to Meet There in 1935. LIS, May 29 (#).—Phila- MINNEAPO! () delphia was selected as the 1935 con- vention city of the National Federation FOOD FOR THOUGHT 16 to 11. ‘The 1933 biennial convention of the federation ended Saturday. CREAM +rom. REAM-TOP COSTS NO MORE [ ] —jyours for the asking! ENjoY thick, tich CREAM for your coffee, cereals, desserts—cream that WHIPS!—at no extra cost! Be Wisely served. Thousands of homes are enthu- siastic about the quality and convenience of our Special Pasteurized Milk in the Cream Top Bottle. So will you. Phone or write for a Trial Quart—'Phone WEST 0183 Wire Brothen, CHEVY CHASE DAIRY A Division of National Dainy 3106 N STREET,N.W. YOUR complexion perfect, your teeth excellent, your eyes snappy, your hair glossy, your hands manicured, like a patrician’s, your skin fine, your feet trim, your health and body sound . . . and from inside out, your clothes, your tastes splendidly 1933! The best You, the world and its advertisements can produce. When you move, swiftest conveniences spring to your bidding. When you eat, the most de- lectable comes to your plate. When you work, when you sleep, exer- cise, play—the world’s latest stands servile, yours to command. You are lord of your living, and it is ADVERTISING that makes you so. Read the advertisements. They equip you with sane judgments. They educate you to what is waiting for you to enjoy, and help you use it most wisely when it’s yours. Read of the good things—here —in these columns today. Advertisements bring you the world from which you may choose