Evening Star Newspaper, July 3, 1933, Page 3

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SPECIAL NOTICES. CIAN, CHAS. pital; now G st it i | | ES ON FULL within 1,000 o- SPECIAL LOAD RAT! and part loads to all points miles: padded vans: guaranteed service: moving also. Phone N, 1460, ASSOC.._INC. 7 N_Y._ave n.w. I NAT. EN YOU NEED AN ELE TAN C. wheels w 5 lones Wisconsin 4821, COlumbia 2400, YOUR ROOF, TOO ——can be sound. tight, {ree from ruinous ‘Why worry with falling plaster. y, mouldy rooms? Send for us and " ROOFING 933 V St. N.W. /INO compaNy North 44! Treasury Department Offce of the Comptroller of the Curremey Washington. D. C. 1933 10, all persons who ay Notice i3 hereby given may have claims agalns! e, Commercial | National Bank of Washington,” District of Columbia, that the same must be presented to Robert C. Baldwin. Recelver, with the legal proof thereof within three months from this date or they may be disaliowed O'CONN Comptroller of the Currency. LEBRUN CRITIGIZES | RODSEVELT POLIY French President Says Parley | Should Tackle Real Cause of Trouble. By the Associated Press. PARIS, July 3—President Albert | Lebrun, in a speech at Besancon yes-| terday, bluntly criticize. President ; Roosevelt's monetary policies and offered France's “wise counsel,” based on trial and experience. Meanwhile government quarters in- dicated France will stay in the World Econcmic Conference until she sees no further hopes. A special telegraph wire connected the President, at Besancon for the dedication of a national clockmaking school, with Paris where Georges Bon- | net, finance minister, with Gov. Clement | Moret of the Bank of France at his | elbow, reported developments at the | Economic Cenference. Press Asks Adjournment. While the government was debating how to face President Roosevelt’s re- jection of the latest stabilization plan, the press loudly demanded adjournment of the London parley, berating Ameri- | cans whom newspapers charged with | selfishness, meddling and impoliteness, some accusing Mr. Roosevelt of play. ing domestic politics. i President Lebrun, without mentioning ; Mr. Roosevelt or the United States spe- | cifically, said the world should “cou- rageously tackle” the real cause of trouble “instead of abandoning itself to easy solutions whose ill effects or uselessness have been proved by ex- perience.” | Stable Money Held Vital. He reiterated French advocacy of controlled preduction through interna- tioral agreements. Raising prices, he said, would follow naturally, while it is not certain it would be achieved and especially that it would last as a result of “these artificia’ measures for mone- tary devaluation, credit inflation and excessive international credits which some propose and which hardly can | be recommended by recent experience.” It is “an evident truth,” M. Lebrun said, that stable money is “imperiously needed,” for “to speak of tariff adjust- ments with fluetuating moneys is pure Utopia.” “Nations with stable exchange can- not accept such proposals,” he added. | Recovering From Appendicitis Op- eration at Hanover Saturday. HANOVER, N. H., July 3 (#).—Hilda Jane Lehman, 12-year-old adopted | daughter of Gov. and Mrs. Herbert Lehman of New York State, was re- ported at the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital yesterday to be recovering from the emergency operation for appendi- citis she underwent Saturday. The girl was stricken at & camp at BOARDMAN DIES ; FROMGRASH HURTS Wife and Brother at Bedside of Noted Flyer When ‘ By the Associated Press. ! Death Came. INDIANAPOLIS, July 3.— Russell Boardman, 35-year-old Bost:n, Mass., sportsman and aviator injured Saturday during the Transcontinental Air Race, died this morning at City Hospital. ‘The one-time co-holder of the world's long-distance, non-stop flight record, succumbed to injuries which included a fractured skull, a broken shoulder and & punctured lung. Among the few persons permitted in his hospital room before death came were Mrs. Boardman, who flew ” here | from Providence, R. I, and his brother inrl. who came from Aibuquerque, N. eX. Disaster End: s Career. Disaster ended Boardman's 12-year flying career Saturday morning as he liftea his tiny plane from municipal air- port here with 200 gallons of gasoline to continue his New York-to-Los An- geles dash in a $10,000 prize race. Twenty-five feet frcm the ground a cross-wind caught the stubby little craft. It flopped over, hit' the ground and bounded about like a wounded bird. Boardman dropped unconscious from the cockpit when ground crews lifted the overturned ship. Physicians at City Hospital, where he was taken, began a grim but they be- lieved almost hopeless battle to save his lite. They were surprised when he lin- gered on nearly 48 hours. Sunday a slender hope was held out when slight improvement in his condition was seen, but he became weaker this morning. Had Many Narrow Escapes. Boardman had had many narrow es- capes during a career that included motor cycle racing, speed boat piloting and transatlantic fiying. His greatest feat in the air was the ‘flight from New York to Istanbul, Turkey, in 1931, with John Polando of Lynn, Mass. as co-pilot. They made the 5,000-mile journey in 49 hours. It stood for some time as the world’s long distance, non-stop flight record. Recently Board:tan and Rosetta Valenti, Italian aviatrix, announced plans for a non-stop flight to Rome late this month in the same plane used in the Istanbul hop. ‘The plane which figured in the fatal crash Saturday was the one in which Maj. James H. Doolittle last year estab- lished a land plane speed record of 294.88 miles an hour. Boardman had planned to fly it in the national speed races this week at Los Angeles. | i JAKE THE BARBER TIP PROVES FALSE Mystérious Telegram Sends! Abduction Probers to Chicago Suburb. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO. July 3.—A mysterious | “tip” telegraphed from New York sent | police speeding to suburban Niles today in hopes of fiading John Factor, miss- ing since his abduction Saturday morning. The detectives, however, found only a residence whose second story was un- tenanted and whose owner satisfled the officers he knew nothing of Factor's whereabouts. The telegram read: “John Factor, four others, possibly north seven, west nine and a half miles from Morrison Hotel, from Niles, north one mile 340 feet and west one mile 480 feet; top floor; two-story masonry house, 20 feet by 50 feet, length is north-south. Signed “Charles E. Dwyer, Barbizon- Plaza, New York City.” The police expressed wonder at the | exactness of details in the address given. Niles is a small suburb a few miles from Morton Grove, the village whence Fairlee, Vt. INUTE ! YSTERY SZl”myIQI”; Factor was abducted last Saturday morning. $75,000 Ransom Asked. The sum of $75,000 apparently has; been fixed as the price for the release of Factor. This was revealed by Jerome Factor, his 19-year-old son, who said he had received a telephone call which pre- sumably came from his father’s ab- ductors, demanding the payment of the money in small bills. Young Factor said he believed the call, which came last night, was not a hoax, but that he did not know where he could raise $75,000. “The amount,” he said, “will have to | be considerably less. I wish the kid- | napers -would know that there’s no use i talking to me. Neither my mother nor I have access to my dad’s securities, even is ¢ investi: He refarred to Verne Sankey, who is being sought in connection with the kignaping of Charles Boettcher II of Denver Capt. Dan Gilbert of the State's At- torney's police, however, expressed be- lief members of the Chicago gang of | Roger Touhy were responsible. RUSSELL BOARDMAN. HUNDREDS VISIT SILVERSTARHOME Model House in Bethesda Opened Yesterday for Public Dispiay. Hundreds of home-interested persons in the greater metropolitan area ot ‘Washington yesterday visited the latest Silver Star Model Home at Wilson and Hampden lanes, Greenwich Forest, Be- thesda, which was opened for the first time for a period of public_display under the sponsorship of The Star. Of English style, attractively locateu in & woodland section in the country club section of nearby Maryland, this dwelling was constructed by the Cafritz Construction Co. and was accepted for a place in the Silver Star Model Homes program by The Star’s committee of experts in all fields of building and planning. Officials of the building concern es- timated today that more than 1000 persons visited the home yesterday de- | spite the fact that the storm during the latter part of the day doubtless prevented others from seeingz it. _ The residence, which is commodious in proportions and occupies a plot of ground containing more than 1700 square feet, has been furnis° 1 through- out for the period of the display by Dulin & Martin. Landscaping was done by the J. H. Small Co. The house is readily accessible by way of Wisconsin avenue north to the old Georgetown road. west to Wilson lane, turning left at this point and proceeding five blocks to the house. Visiting hours tomorrow and every day are from 9 am. to 10 p.m. MRS. ALICE F. STEVENS DIES IN ADIRONDACKS Mrs. Alice F. Stevens. a resident of this city for many vears and an employe of the Library of Congress for two decades. died Saturday at her camp in the Adirondacks, Port Ulster, Lake Titus. N. Y. Funeral services will be held at Malone, N. Y. Born in Peacham, Vt., Mrs. Stevens spent her early years in New England, coming to Washingtcn in the early nineties. She was associated for some years with Miss Josephine Clark, formerly librarian of the Department of Agriculture, in the indexing of new botanical species. Later, at the time of the reorganization and expansion of the | Library cf Congress, she became a mem- ber of the catalcgue division staff. She had spent her Summers in the Adirondacks for the past 20 years. FARLEY DENOUNCES SNELL A3 PARTISAN Declares House Republican Leader Retards Recov- _ery by Attacks. By the Associated Press. Criticism a week ago of the Roose- velt administration by Representative Snell of New York, House Repdblican leader, yesterday was rapped by Post- master General Farley, chairman of the Democratic National Committee as & “ruthless and reckless exhibition of petty -partisan politics.” Conterding that the public as a whole was “marching solidly behind President Roosevelt and rejoicing at the general and continuous revival of busi- ness,” Farley asserted in a statement through the National Committee that “untimely and unwarranted at- deserved “condemnation from every citizen who puts recovery of the Nation above any desire for mere par- tisan success.” Snell inserted in the Congressional Record his declaration that the Demo- cratic Congress and the administration had gone on a “spending spree” and drew counter-attacks from Democratic leaders at both ends of the Capital by | asserting that the administration was keeping two sets of books in order to! attain a balanced budget. “In my opinion,” Farley said, “Mr. Snell’s rather frenzied outburst will not even meet the approval of a majority | of his party colleagues in the House. ! “Presumably it was intended to be the opening gun of the next congres- sional campaign in connection with the movement among some of his party or- ganization leaders. because the attack is being industriously circulated by em. “If so, it is a ‘dud.’ No campaign in opposition to national recovery and na- tional prosperity could or should have the slightest chance of success.” The Postmaster General ended by say- ing that although he was out of sym- pathy “with the misleadership of the opposition party,” he had “great re- spect for its rank and file.” INDUSTRY SKETCHES Six-Point Program for Stabiliza- tion Is Presented to Gen. Johnson. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 3.--A six-point pro- gram for stabilization of the motor freight industry was sketched for Huzh | S. Johnson, United States industrial | administrator, in a letter dispatched | today by the Illinois Motor Truck Op- erators’ Association. Walter E. McCarron, association man- ager, urged that a conference of rail and motor freight executives be called to draft a transportation policy The program suggested by the trucs- men: Maintenance of adequate wage scalcs and strict limitation on hours of work by truck drivers. Adequate financial responsibility on the part of truck operators. Establishment of uniform. published rate schedules for all truck operaters. A maximum daily motor freight of 200 miles for any one driver to in- sure public safety. Fair taxation properly distributed, the proceeds to be devoted to maintair- ing highways. Adequate insurance laws. In his letter, McCarron said legiti- mately operated trucking business vas no threat to railroads, but that “irre- sponsible truck operators,” through cut- rate competition, inadequate insurance, | low wages and inability to earn enough to pay taxes were threatening both | railroads and legitimate truckers. = o {MAN DIETS TO GET THIN | AND ESCAPE FROM JAIL By the Associated Press. EAST VIEW, N. Y, July 3.—After dieting for weeks so he could squeeze through a ventilator shaft, Arthur | Palumbo, a Coll gangster, escaped from the Westchester County Prison yester- day for the second time within a year. Palumbo, who is 30 years oM, and normally weighs 146 pounds, had com- plained of ill health for two months | and refused most of his food. By this means he lost weight rapidly. He picked his cell lock between 3 and 4 am., Warden Walter Brown said, and ; | crawled up a ventilator shaft in the corridor. He squeezed through a nar- | row space at the top, sawed a bar and broke a skylight to reach the roof. ERE'S something I found in one of the old files,” one Federal agent re- marked ‘to another. “Does it remind you of anything?” “Can't seem to place it” the other officer remarked as he ifs a rag](ezt Jf amesyE. Grant. Have Succeeded—Brief and to the Point—Be Rich and Happy. SECRET OF SUCCESS. Send Ten Cents. “Don’t remember it? That was | | MOTOR FREIGHT CODE | RECOVERY PLANS INBANKING SCORED Speaking at Virginia U. Fo- rum, Edmund Platt Hits Methods of Administration. By the Assoclated Press, UNIVERSITY, Va, July 3.—Taking vigorous issue with many of the steps taken by the administration in the fleld of banking toward economic re- covery, Edmund Platt, vice president of the Midland Marine Corporation, New York, said here today that “if 1932 had not happened to be a presidential year, the recovery begun then might have continued without any serious inter- ruption, so that we might have been about where we are today.” | Addressing the round table on money, the University of Virginia Institute of Public Affairs, on “The Banking Out- look and Banking Problems,” Mr. Platt said that during the past year, and particularly the past six months, “sev- eral things have happened that none of us believed could possibly happen.” Infiation Spread Cited. “The first of these,” he said, “was the rapid spread and apparent acceptance of the inflation idea by a large section of the country and by a large majority of the members of Congress, the col- lapse of our banking system and the fajlure of the Federal Reserve system, and suspension of gold payments. Scarcely less important was the passage of the banking act of 1933.” “Personally,” he said, “I feel that the recovery then beginning (in 1832) would have continued, barring the election, if the Glass banking reform bill had been put upon the statute books before the adjournment of Congress last Summer in the form in which it was reported from the Senate Banking and Currency Committee in May.” Turning first to a discussion of the banking holiday, Mr. Platt expressed his opinion that it was a mistake to have closed all the banks on the 4th of March. The general bank closing, he said, placed an overemphasis on cur- rency and gold. The speaker also denied that it was ever necessary to suspend gold pay- ments or repudiate the contracts of the i Government to pay its obligations in gold, asserting that President Roose- velt's remarks in this regard were “spe- clous” and “oversimplifying the matter.” Attacking the inflation movement, Mr. Platt said, “I do not believe the price level of 1926 can be restored with- out a very serious inflation, and it is to be hoped that the administration is wrorgly quoted in this matter and that the goal actually aimed at may be much more modest, 50 that we shall not again be faced with another serious probiem of deflation.” Trade Expansion Seen. George Jackson Eder, manager of the foreign securities division of the Standard Statistics Co., Inc., New York, addressing the Latin American rela- tions round table, said that “regardless of economic nationalism or political or economic theorizing, it is safe to pre- dict that inter-American trade will con- tinue to expand. and furthermore, that so long as American inventive and manufacturing genius remains alive, this country will get as great a share of trade a3 England, France and Ger- many combined.” One of the first moves of the present administration in the direction of Latin will probably be in fixing a quota for the importation of Cuban sugar and in reduction of the regular tariff rate. He listed a number of other trade conces- sions with Latin America which he ex- pected to be effected “before President Roosevelt has completed his eight-year term of office.’ MOLEY DISCUSSES He and Soviet Commissar Talk of Plan for Selling Moscow American Cotton. . | By the Associated Press. LONDON. July 3.—Assistant Secre- tary of State Raymond Moley conferred vesterday with Maxim Litvinoff, for- eign commissar for Soviet Russia, and it was understood they discussed a plan | for selling Russia a quantity of Ameri- | can cotton, the purchase to be financed through an American Government loan. The deal was reliably stated to have reached a stage where a tentative con- tract had been drawn. It also was the occasion for a discus- sion of other plans for closer trade re- lations between the United States and Russia. ‘While Prof. Moley said the talk did not involve the question of recognizing the Soviet Union, it was believed here that closer commercial contact is a pre- liminary to extending formal recogni- tion. M. Litvinoff has frankly stated that Russia can use large quantities of metal and other raw materials, including cot- ton, and indications are that the United States hopes to help home recovery by selling surpluses in this vast market. ‘The conference followed close upon resumption of British-Russian trade re- lations Saturday with the release of two Britons who had been imprisoned in Moscow after being convicted of sabot- age and espionage. 45 Berlin Couples Remarried Under Nazi Church Ritual Ceremony Was Feature of First Services Under New Regime. | banking and the financial situation of | American trade, the speaker predicted, | TRADE WITH RUSSIA! [MORE JOBS AND REVENUES] IN NATION CREDITED BEER Benefits Seen From Coast to Coast in Various Lines Since Legalizaton of 3.2 Beverage. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, July 3 (NANA)— | The return of legal beer has resulted |1n an impressive gain in employment and a steady flow of increased revenue Into State, county and municipal treas- 1 uries, according to a recent survey. | Legalization of beer in New Yo | State gave jobs to 19,000 men in the brewerles and 22,000 others in allied industries. It brought a great increase |in orders for trucks, one firm receiving $121.000 in orders in a single month. A labeling machinery plant experienced 2 100 per cent employment increase and 300 per cent increase in business. A manufacturer of glass-lined tanks in| 1 Rochester received one order for $500,- | 000, requiring 135 railroad cars to ship it. Six Buffalo breweries average 100 men each and allied industries have benefited to an even greater degree. A dozen plants manufacturing beer-vend- ‘finl equipment have doubled staffs in almost every instance. A pretzel fac- | tory, dormant since prohibition, has put In three shifts. The County Board an- nounces approximately $400,000 has been taken in for licenses. The Empire State received $1,000,000 in beer revenue for the first two months, with another | 81,000,000 expected when the tax mud- dle is straightened out. The Federal -G;;":mmem received $2,290,686 for Breweries Aid Syracuse. | Operation of four breweries in Syra- | ! cuse, N. Y., has put about 275 men back to work and the remodeling of a fifth after July 1 will mean an added force jof 50 to 75 men. Opening of restau- | rants, beer gardens and steak and chop ;houses serving beer has resulted in the |employment of several hundred waiters, ' waitresses, chefs, bartenders and porters. 1 Equipment companies have experienced {a rush of orders. The city will benefit | from its share of the license fee paid | to the State. | | Surveys made by Boston trade organ- | | izations and the Department of Labor | ishow legal beer has increased restau- | | rant food sales and employment. Three | Massachusetts brewerfes are working {overtime. There were 15 before prohi- bition. These breweries have added about 900 men to their rolls. East Bos- ton cooperage, barrel and keg firms, dormant before, are working overtime. Two more breweries are under con- | struction. To date the State tax com- | | missioner has taken in $75.000 on beer |taxes and $181.600 in license fees, all | | allocated by statute to old-age pensions. | Boston took in $139,000. Atlanta, Ga., reports 150 dealers have | { purchased licenses, which means $20,000 10 $25.000 in the city treasury arnuall Proprietors ot cafes, stores and dris stands handling beer. say their business | has increased. Atlanta officials, how- ever, think employment increase as the result of beer will be negligible until the State has repealed its dry law. Beer, { though legalized by the city, cannot be | manufactured in the State.” As a result several large breweries must remain closed. Unrestricted sale of beer in South Carolina has berefited the establish- ments handling it. A masufacturer of wooden cases and several lumber com- panies have received added business. Of the tax of 2 cents a bottle and $4.65 2 keg. 20 per cent of the proceeds is allotted to the city in which sales are made, 40 per cent to county, and the remainder to the State treasury. No city license is required in Charleston. Pick-up Seen in Chicago. Legalization of beer is held one of the principal factors in the business pick-up in Chicago. It has been a boon ! to the Century of Progress Exposition, officials say. Breweries and allied trades are absorbing a larger share of the city’s unemployed than has any other upturn in the job situation since October, 1929. Bottle manufacturers, coopers, paper makers, lumber and fix- ture dealers, machinery makers a.:d food product dispensers are among those groups benefiting from the sale of legal | beer. Of 6.135 beverage licenses issued since the first of the year. 5000 were taken out since 3.2 beer became legal. | This has been a boon to the real estate merket. Brewery, distributors’ and retailers’ licenses have brought well over $1.000,- 00¢ into the Ohio treasury. The Cleve- land. district has produced $350,000 of this type of revenue, $200,000 of which has gone into the city's coffers. There are seven breweries in operation in the the city, with another planning to open soon. Several hundred men have been given jobs directly in the breweries, while scores of others are engaged in trucking the beer. Cooperage houses have had an immense increase in busi- | ness. Hundreds of vacant buildings on Cleveland’s business streets have been turned into beer parlors. Restaurants and hotel dining rooms report consid- | erable increases in their business since | beer came in. It is estimated 3,000 men who otherwise would not be at work or only on part-time jobs now have full- | time work as a result of beer in Ohio. | Legal beer in Detroit has stimulated | business to a considerable degree. One corporation manufacturing steel beer barrels is employing an additional 600 men in this department alone. The | main line of this company has been au- tomobile bodies. Officials say their | purchase of steel, insulating material, | forgings and other parts used in- the barrel department undoubtedly has | given work to another 600 men not pre- | viously employed. An equipment com- | pany's business jimped 1,000 per cent after beer became legal, and its em- ployment roster was tripled. In addi- | tion 40 or 50 salesmen were hired and | ‘wages of employes increased 10 per cent. ‘The automotive industry has benefitted | | through sales of delivery trucks. 1 Detroit Collections High. ‘There are six breweries operating in Detroit, employing approximately 1,500 | men. Beer and license collections up | to and including June 22 amounted to | $1,095,226, of which $263,054 was tax money and $832,172 license money. Local communities will get 95 per cent of the retail license fees. The State keeps the brewers’ and wholesalers’ fees. . | estimate that | ployment. !terly return to the city from becrl for construction and machinery, officials of the Board of Trade say. The figures are conservative, they add. Beer has helped box-making firms, refrigerating plants, cooperage plants, store fixture manufacturers and other businesses. and relicved the vacant store problem to some extent. The increase in city revenue has been approximately $50,000 which has served to relieve autcmobile owners of part of & tax imposed after prohibition. Definite procf that beer, along with inflation and code regulation in busi- ness, has helped Wisconsin, is in the report of the State Industrial Commis- sicn. The Milwaukee Brewers’ Union shows that close to 5,000 people have been added to brewery pay rolls, and larger sales and office forces account for another 1,000. One firm added more than 700 men for the making of steel beer barrels. Milwaukee's giant breweries are flcoded with orders. A manufacturing company, with well over $1,000,000 worth of orders on hand for bottle, washing and filling machines, has its normal force of 600 men back. Two or three smaller producers are at capacity. Wcoden box manufacturers are running full time. ‘Three large breweries in Minneapolis and St. Paul employ 1,000 men, all three operating at peak capacity. In Minneapolis a large brewery has been reconditioned completely and much new equipment installed. From 300 to 400 men have had work at this job. The ! plant will begin brewing early in July 2nd will give work to an additional 400 men. Mcre than 3,000 stores, res- ‘aurants, clubs and other establishments have been granted licenses to sell beer in Mimmeapolis, and, it is estimated, have employed at least 1.500 workers. St. Paul has nearly 2,000 beer sales places. Beer license money brought $58,000 to Minneapolis. The increased use of barley has meant business and profits for grain merchants and ter- minal elevators. Twin Cities railroads {ep&rt worthwile increases in freight raffic. Sales Aid Connecticut. ‘Three hundred men got jobs in the six breweries now in operation in Con- terially in the manufacture of equip- ment. New Haven will receive about $20,000 on July 1 as its share of the income Irom the State taken in license | fees for the sale of beer. Purther in- come will be received in the distribution of the State tax. Federal income from New Haven County breweries through the $5 tax on each barrel amounted to $68.135 for May. In addition to stimulating the city psychologically. New Orleans offici ,000 men have been e ployed directly ‘as a result of legalized beer. Six new breweries now being or- ganized will employ many more. Equip- ment businesses also have definitely benefited. The city treasurer reports $89.496 already received for licenses, of which all is net except $5,000 expense of collection. Ths Philadelphia Chamber of Com- merce estimates 10,000 persons will find employment as a result of legalization of beer. The real estate business has been materially aided by the leasing of vacant properties. Up to June 22 the city had received $905,500 in fees from wholesale and retail distributors of beer. Chief among the industries benefiting are automobile, bar equipment, bot- tlers. container manufacturer, coopers, coppersmiths and glassmakers. In retail trade, increases have been re. ported in ready-to-serve meats, pretzels potato chips, sea food and tobacco. ! Factories manufacturing restaurant sup- plies are working 24-hour shifts. Coal dealers report an increase in business as a result of opening of breweries. Revenue from beer taxes is mounting in Rhode Island. with two breweries functioning and others expected to re- open soon. Opening of the two brew- eriese in Providence, with the allied bottling and distribution activities, has put several hundred persons to work directly, according to the State De- partment of Labor. Indirectly, it is estimated 1,000 new jobs have been created. Spokane Business Stimulated, Legal beer in Spokane, Wash., has stimulated business in hotels and res- taurants. There is considerable activity in the city’s box factories. The opening of two breweries and the incidental dis- tribution of beer have added to em- Lumber and truck firms are | receiving increased revenues. The quar- | licenses was $8.000. Beer has furnished steady work to 150 men and women at the only brewery | in Scranton. Pa. It has resulted in ! greater consuraption of anthracite coal | in the region and in markets of the East, and the distribution of $142,850 in beer license fees among the munici- pal units in the county, of which Scranton received the major share, $78.175. In the middle Federal district, which Scranton is the head, $335.000 | as paid for beer stamps during Ma: Work for about 300 men will come when the Keystone, Fell, Robinson, Anthra- cite and Lackawanna Breweries reopen. Hundreds of bartenders and waiters | have been given work. Makers of boxes | and barrels have put in night shifts. | More than 18.000 persons have been ! added to the pay rolls of brewing and ' allied companies in the St. Louis dis- | trict in recent months. Six breweries in | the area are marketing beer. and three | more expect to_ have their products ready shortly. In addition eight are | making ready for brewing, with the; result there will be 17 breweries in | operation after several months. Equip- | ment factories in St. Louis, East St. Louis and Alton, Ill, have received a | marked impetus from orders. Railroads | and trucking companies have profited, | transferring materials and finished pro. | ducts. St. Louis is prohibited by law | from levying a license on the sale of beer. The State, however, has profited through its licensing and inspection tax of 1 cent a gallon. Two breweries in the city have paid the Federal Govern- ment more’ than $1,000,000 for beer stamps. Money Flow Loosened. In San Francisco beer is credited with loosening a flow of money. Since | of Wiscor BISHOP TELLS 1. §. TO REMAIN ALOOF Normal Morals Urged as De- pression Cure in Ser- mon at .Cathedral. The thing most needed to bring this | country and the rest of the world out i of the depression is a return to the !normal standard of morals, Bishop { James E. Freeman told a vesper con- , gregation yesterday in an Independence iday sermon in the Great Choir at Na- tional Cathedral. Praising the leadership and courage jof President Roosevelt, Bishop Free- | man compared the Chief Executive's { calmness with that of the Apostle Paul { who saved the lives and ship of his | captors by his leadership and coolness. Told to Stay With Ship. Quoting St. Paul in the twenty-sev- enth chapter of the Acts of the Apos- tles, in which the disciple said: “Ex- cept these abide by the ship, ye cannot be saved,” Bishop Freeman declared that Americans, too, should stay with their ship of state to emerge from the present national crisis led by the cour- {age, firm and unchanging conviction tand calm. “For four years a great Nation along with the rest of the world has been in- creasingly embarrassed,” the bishop said. “Let us all resolve this eve of another anniversary of our country's natal day to examine and improve our own individual characters as our per- sonal contribution to the general raising of moral standards. that fundamentally necessary step toward economic re- covery. Entanglements Opposed. Bishop Freeman quoted from a recent magazine article written by Alfred E. Smith, former Governor of New York, in which the latter said that only through raising the general character and morals of the people throughout the world that economic problems may be solved. That. he said. is a job for the priests and physicians and not the statesmen. “We agree with the majority of statesmen representing us at the great { Economic Conference at London that | we must enter into no entangling al- i liances,” Bishop Freeman said. “The Unecticut. Other industries shared ma. | WAY Out of the situation lies in setting i our own house in order first.” | i MISSING CHILD ASLEEP While worried relatives and neigh- | bors searched for her through the | storm yesterday, little Miss Loraine Diegelman, aged 2!; years. slept se- renely behind a chair in her home at 1900 Hamlin street northeast. | Four hours after she was first missed the child awakened, rubbed the sieep ‘from her eyes and toddled out from ¢ her hiding place into the midst of her | surprised family, all unaware f the furore she had caused. =_ channels of trade due to the legaliza- tion of beer in Tacoma., Wash. Among the tax assessing bodies the Federal Government is the greatest gainer. The i collector of internal revenue for Wash- ington and Alaska. reports he has re- ceived about $150,000. The city of Ta- coma has taken in $5000. The most apparent gain in employment has been among waiters, waitresses, cooks. truck | drivers and brewery workmen and sales- men. Tacoma one brewery in operation and snother under construc- tion. The fixture industry received an avalanche of orders. Hop ranchers are benefiting from the phenomenal in- crease in the price of hops. D. C. Restaurants Aided. ‘Washington. D. C.. boasts of only one active brewery which took on a hundred or more additional employes when beer came back. Another brewery is being reconditioned. The real beneficiaries of beer's return are the restaurants and lunch rooms. The Capital is a sea food eating city and prefers beer to other beverages with its crabs. clams, lobster and other shell fish. Eating places have been forced by increased business to take on additional help—waiters, beer tappers and dish washers. The city government is expected to receive $300.000 a year from the beer tax. Licenses have produced about $160,000. { (Copyright. 1933, by North American News- | ce._Inc.) REDUCED BRIEF PRICES BYRON S. ADAMS Come out to Bethesda, 6700 block in avenue. Benefit of St. John's CI Benefit_of Am “See Etz and See Better” How many vacations that might have been un- alloyed pleasure have been spoiled by broken glasses? Have you an extra pair? ETZ Optometrists It is estimated Detroit will get about | March, when preparations to market 1217 G St. NW. $200,000 of the collections to date. | legal beer started, 15,000 persons have A sharp financial return to the State | been taken off the relief rolls. Carpen- ER YIELDS BODY By the Associated Press. BERLIN, July 3—The tie that binds acr Dr. Fordney is professor of criminology at a famou roliv. His advice s often Cnfronted witn’ Dacticainriy pamine: cabee: s provlem has been taken from B {if it could be raised.” ::?lg“r‘n\e:.nl hundreds of criminal Young Factor, who was a kidnap vic- g e tim lflmsel;l last dsprlll;gi) but who s released unharmed. said he attempte Underground Tragedy. find out the identity of the person who BY H. A. RIPLEY. { telephoned him, but that the caller— HE elevator descending the mine | 8 man—kbuae up the receiver. shaft carried Prof. Fordney far . Factor was abducted by a gang of below the surface. He was in- | armed men as he left an outlying road- vestigating the death of Jake ; house early Saturday. Rodolski whom Bill Nelscn claimed he had killed in_ self-defense. | Saspecis Sankey Gang. The body lay as it had fallen, a hcle | Speculating as to the identity of his eompletely through the head, an opened | kidnapers, Police Lieut. Frank Free- jack-knife near the feet, its sharp blade | Muth said he “wouldn’t be surprised if gleaming in the some of the Sankey gang, working out dim light. The Just-smeared face with its ugly wound was a sight. Blood the bullet at the base of the skull smear- ed the couar of his jacket and his cap, tilted over the left eve, was pulled tightly on the head it T tell you professor, he Was cu: tc ge me,” in- sisted Nelson. “Do you think I would have killed him un. Jess it was in,self-defense? My, God. we've worked together fcr vears! It was only when he lunged toward me with his opened knife that I fired. | | Remains of Norman Derr, Drowned South of Great Falls, Found * Below Chain Bridge. Y've been in fear of him for days— that’s why I carried a gun.” ‘What mace you enemies?” “A—woman.” ! “Come into the morgue with me, Nelson,” said Fordney, cpening door. Dr. Lyman, probing the wound |pagore noon today. Derr was drowned The body of Norman Derr, 21, of Fairfax, Va., was taken from the Po- OF FAIRFAX VICTIMI he | tomac River below Chain Bridge shortly ! at the nape of the neck, removed from | it a piece of Rodolski's cap just as Sergt. Reynolds entered and exclaimed, “Been looking for you, professor. Prints on the knife were Rodolski’s alright, :ut the mark on the tip of the li e lie ‘Thanks, sergeant. The knife has ved an interesting exhibit.” Turm- f;: to Nelson he remarked, to the utter “You didn't amazemnt of Reynolds, was cold- kill in self-defense — it blooded murder! ” HOW DID HE KNOW? For Solution See Page A-4. rhaps you have a story or problem you would like to submit to Prof. Kord- ney. If so, send it to him care cf this paper. He will be delighted to receive Saturday when he was seized with cramps while swimming with friends at the mouth of Difficult Run, 4 miles | below Great Falls. | | Derr’s body, clad in a blue bathing suit, first was seen floating in the ! muddy swift current of the Potomac | under Chain Bridge by Howard Hav- iener. Havener promptly crossed Chain 1Brldle to the boat house -of Joe | Fletcher, who in turn recavered the ibody in his skiff about a mile and a half below Chain Bridge. Policeman L L. Finks of the Fairfax County force identified the body as that of Derr. Policeman Finks had come into town to ask Washington police to be on the loakout for the Virginian's ‘when hie heard that a body had been found. Derr' is the son of H. B. Derr, county larm nt of Fairfax County. He is i i —bric/ and studied the old newspaper clip- ping of an advertisement. It read: DO YOU WANT TO SUCCEED? Send for the “SECRET OF SUC- CESS"—How to Make Your Way in the World—By Men Who 45 Berlin couples was double secure to- day. made so by an unusual Naxi mass wedding. They were already married, but they : wanted the vows to be said again ac- ! cording to Nazi ritual, and the cere- | mony was a feature of Sunday services held for the first time under the new Nazi church regime. ‘What the brid ore was not report- ed; in this instance the bridegrooms’ garb—Nazi uniforms—was more a mat- ter to be noted. Nazi Swastika flags decorated Lazarus Church. Led by a storm troop band playing and its political subdivisions in beer | i taxes is noticeable in Iowa. Legaliza- tion of the new beverage has aided | | materially the pretzel and cheese busi- | ness throughout the State. | Kansas City hotels are doing & bet- | | ter business as a result of beer, but |hotel executives believe general busi- ness itself is better. Box manufacturers, operating two days a week before the new beer, are now running two shifts. Trucking companies have felt the en- trance of 3.2 beer, and half a dozen | carpentry shops are devoting full time to the point one of the old rackets. They sent them the secret of success all right. A piece of paper with three words on it. The words were—" the detective paused to get the proper effect—* ‘Work and Save.’” “I'll say it was brief and to the point,” the other man laughed. These ‘exposures of rackets are printed to advise and protect the publi (Copyright, 1933.) martial airs, the bridal procession passed | to building bars. Ice and refrigerator through several streets and was greeted by lusty cheers from a large throng. Dr. Joseph Goebbels, Nazi minister of propaganda, attended the ceremony, at which Rev. Gustav Lenging officiated. Pastors in all churches were warned in an episcopal letter read from pulpits that opposition to the Nazi church re- | filmz w?'uld notmbe co\mtmu:eed. 5 ugust Jaeger, the goyernment comm! sioner, at the last minute rescinded orders that Nazi flags must be flown at the churches. Meanwhile it was expected that dis- solution of the Catholic Center party, the last outside the Nazi fold, was ex- pected to be deferred until Wednesday, although the disintegration started when August Winkler of Cologne joinéd the Nazis, the first Centrist Reichstag mem- distributors have a heavier demand. Glassware dealers report increased sales. Los Angeles has received $110,000 for license and application fees in the two | and a half months since beer was legal- ized. The largest brewery reports a 1 jump in its weekly pay roll to $15,000 from a previous $1,500. This plant also about $250,000 for expan- sion. It is estimated the increased de- mand for bottles has added 175 to 200 men to local piants. An istic esti- ters, painters and plumbers have been employed in remodeling about 100 va- cant stores as restaurants. Hundreds have been employed in building new breweries and making additions to others. A $23,000,000 plant is to be built at Eureka. Allied industries opened 2,000 new jobs. United States tax and licenses brought more than $1,000,000 to June 30, the State tax yielded $145.- 500 to Jjune 7, and the city got $85,000 in the first two months of legal beer. Several hundred persons have been employed and thousands of extra dol- lars are circulating through the regular NO Flies on us! mate from a brewing au y is that in addition to brewery employment in- | crease, several, thousand persons- have { been added tel. the working forces of : ine businesses ' supplying FLIT kills them ~) Root Beer \ SAVE MONEY Make it at Home for ess than 1c a glass Delicious - - Healthful @ Your Guerlmh‘; of Real Root Juices

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