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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FEBRUARY 10, 1935—PART ONE. ROOSEVELT BACKS PACIFIC DEFENGE Proposed Sum of $40,000,- 000 Will Be Shared Equal- ly by Army and Navy. (Continued From First Page.) a series of meetings of the House Military Committee, climaxed by the secret session Friday night, would be spent substantially as follows: New and improved munition sup- plies and purchase of reserve supply, $45.000,000. Air Corps expansion (as recommend- ed by the Baker Board, raising the air fleet to 2,300 planes), $90,000.000.1 Modernization of field artillery, $3 000.000. Anti-aircraft equipment, $35.000,000. Coast defenses, $23.000,000. Mechanization of Army units, $16,- 000,000. Procurement of new types developed since the war, $18,000,000. Army housing; Air Corps construc- tion, $44,600.000 Army quarters and barracks, $80,- 100.000. National Guard camps, $6,400,000. Automotive equipment, $22,189,000. Increases in National Guard from | 190,000 to 210,000, $2500,000 and | $854,000 per annum maintenance. Pay, clothing, subsistence for addi- tional officers and men $25.000,000. To the 118,740 men and 12,000 offi- cers now in the Army would be added | 64250 men and 400 officers. The national defense program figures do | not include the $600,000.000 for the C. C. C. for the next year. Admini- stration officials insist that service in the camps is in no wise military train- ing. ——— GOLD DECISION BY SUPREME COURT AGAIN DELAYED (Continued From First Page.) the announcement might come any day this week after Monday. There is ample precedent for such a course, should the tribunal decide to follow it. Elaborate preparations have already been made for handling an enormous throng of would-be spec- tators on the day the decision is handed down. The court will seat Consequently. admission card only. To be adequately prepared for keeping the spectators inside once they have entered, and the unfortun- ate cardless out, extra locks were fixed today upon the doors. The second anti-climax yesterday dispelled for a moment the aura of | speculation that has attended the| court since the gold cases were urged. But only for a moment. Then the | guesses as to what had happened were | resumed. In usually well-informed circles the delay in handing down an' opinion was attributed to the slow- | ness with which the dissente's— whichever side they represented—were preparing their disagreeing views. In Session All This Week. less than 300.} will be by | The court will be in session all week | pital. one of the leading maternity in- | pact. and will meet on Monday. February 18. & two-weeks recess. | Masked and gowned, Mr. yesterday. Papa Dionne 2-day-old baby. and Mrs. is on the left, Although the Dionnes are parents oI & set of quintuplets and five other children, Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. showed great interest in the babies at the hospital. URSERY BABIES STIR MRS. DIONNE uintuplets’ Mother on Verge of Tears Over “Home- like” Sight. | By the Associated Press. “You're Telling Me?” Says Mrs. Dionne Oliva Dionne saw more babies at the Lying In Hospital at Chicago Mamma Dionne on the right and Nurse Marie Bennett is holding a they This Changing World Nation’s Attitude Luke- warm on Anglo- French Pact. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. CHICAGO, February 9.—The sight| of rows of new-born babes in 4 hos- pital nursery today brought “Mama Dionne to the verge of tears. Until now the outward stoicism of this 26-year-old Canadian mother of | 10 children, among them the famous| are not quintuplets. had provoked much com- ment among those who have watched her adventures in the city. Visiting the Chicago Lying-in Hos- | stitutions here, she pressed her face spectators from the nursery. A wave HERE has been so far a luke- warm response to the spec- tacular Anglo-French pact for a new air Locarno. | The Italians, who had been included only as a polite gesture be- e, after all, | a western power. are not \ enthusiastic over it. Mussolini, who likes to call a spade a spade, informed his new ally, France, that there can be no such thing as a defensive air All air defense means taking the offensive before the enemy has to deliver opinions before taking | close to the glass partition separating | haa time to strike, and that is not ‘nm\lded in the British * hfime con- The general belief was that the tri- | of emotion rippled the piacid-child- | symption Locarno air pact.” | bunal—knowing the uncertainty in the | financial world the delay is causing— | would endeavor to hand down the de- cision on February 18. Administration spokesmen said some | time ago they felt the financial world | was overestimating the effect of an | adverse decision. Whether or not this had weight, financial circles calmed quite a bit | during the week. Many Wall Street | leaders were known to hold the opin- ion that about all the concrete effect of a ruling against the Government | would be a feverish but temporary flurry in the market, and the Con- | gress, if necessary, could counteract any major ill effects. Some experts here contended the | chief effect of the forthcoming de- | cision had been to postpone the mak- ing of commitments and to cause new financing to be held up. Gold Holds Attention. Most of the attention of legis- lators concerned with finance and banking was centered on gold. The plea by Marriner S. Eccles, Federal Reserve Board governor, for legisla- tion to strengthen the authority of the Government was studied closely | but few commented pending a study | of the bill itself. Representative Hollister, Republic- an, of Ohio, the ranking Repulican on the House Banking Committee, however, assailed the measure. He said it embodied a possible control of credit “for political rather than finan- cial or economic reasons.” The President, under the bill in- dorsed by .Eccles, governor of the Federal Reserve Board, would have “full control of the situation,” Hollis- ter's statement said. England’s Revenue Rises. England’s national revenue has risen from $1,683,000,000 to $4,047,- 000,000 since 1915. _ __ SPECIAL NOTICES. THE FOLLOWING CARS. WITH MOTOR 9%, Jinted below " will be sold at auction a* Holleman Motor Co.. 1231 on February 19. 1035, “at orage and othe T ,Other charges Bu Perce- Annw BPECTAL RETURN-LOAD RATES ON FULL and part loads to all points within 1,000 miles: padded vans; locnl moving also. NAT. DEL. ASSOC.. INVALID ROLLING ( CHAle—For vent or Shcea o '““d’fi'firsfl'éfl%é”s“l" & uced prices. TO) CO.. 418_10th_st. n.w. _— ‘WEEKLY TRIPS TO AND F‘Ro BALTI- more: also trips within 24 nours’ notice to any point in _United States TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. Nnnh DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS guaranteed service; Phone National 148 _IN{ N. Y ern citles, “Dwendsble Service Bmca 986" SON TRANSFER THE ST’ORAGF CO._of nhone Decatur 2500 T WILL NOT BE REEPONGIBLE ron REES debis other than my own. GREEN. st_n.w. T WILL NOfl' BE RESPONBIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted for by any one other than myself. ALTON C. WHITE, 5527 4th st n.w. TGOKING FOR WHOLE OR PART LOADS from Atlanta, Ga. or ?)urmlmdme terri- to'y. Returning Feb 17 Insured truck._Phone ECONOMICAL. Georgia ‘CHAMBERS [h3asits® 57 in one o world_ Complete funerals as low as €75 up Bix chapels twelve parlors, seventeen cars hearses and ambulances twenty-five wndertakers and sistants FOLDERS—CIrcnIun—REPRINTS —le can nmducr ‘hem quicker and l! Jess cost. Black or white or colors. Let us tell you about planograph process. Free estimates. Columbia Planograph Co. 50 L St. N.E. Metropoliten 4861, iike face, her unrouged lips quivered and she turned toward her husband Oliva. Mrs. Dionne murmured a few words in French, her usual low voice end- ing on a tearful note. Misses Her Babies. The slim, dark-haired Ontario| farmer smiled back consolingly, con- | cern manifest in his eyes. “She misses her babies, poor girl,” explained Mrs. Joseph Rochon of North Bay. Ontarlo, a relative, who is traveling with the Dionnes. “In spite of all the thrill of slght.seemg she is lonesome for her children.” Her visit to the huge modern hos- | pital resulted in several of those rare smiles that even the antics of night | club entertainers did not provoke. All of Mrs. Dionne’s 11 children— one 2-year-old boy died several years ago—were born in the farm house where she and her husband have lived since their marriage in 1925. This was the first time she had seen how babies are cared for in a great urban hospital. “See, we have more babies here than even you have at home,” said a nurse, and the remark, translated for Mrs. Dionne, brought a hint of a chuckle. Interest in Incubator. Her interest focused on an incubator in which slumbered a prematurely | born infant, and she asked, as she has seldom done, for details. She nodded interestedly as the nurses were told how the quintuplets, shortly after birth, were kept in an incubator. Another look of interest was aroused when it was explained that two of the hospital babies were twins. “So?” she smiled. She and Oliva, garbed in hospital gowns, caps and gauze masks over nose and mouth, were permitted to enter the nursery. The famous par- ents must dress thus when they visit their own quintuplets in the special hospital at Callander, Ontario, and donning the uniforms today brought a giggle from the young mother and the comment: “Just like home.” Although she was obviously tired from the perpetual round of sight- seeing and the ordeal of her vaudeville stage debut yesterday, Mrs. Dionne'’s face was more relaxed today and she was overheard humming in that de- tached manner that she has even in a crowd. Fears Being Exhibited. ‘Members of her party said she had been fearful of being put on exhibition during the trip, and had withdrawn into the shy, stoic attitude character- istic of her home neighborhood. She had been in dread, they said, of a wise-cracking reception because of the numbers of letters she and her hus- band had received after the birth of the quintuplets. The sympathetic reception of the audiences at their “bow and thank ND you” appearances, however, seemed to have warmed her. Mrs. Dionne smiled her thanks when four members of the board of the Lying-in Hospital, Mrs. Ernest Freund, president; Mrs. H. Kempner, Mrs. Hermien D. Nusbaum and Mrs. Joseph Grossman presented her five baby books Mrs. Nusbaum had written. Sunday is to be, aside from profes. sional appearances, a “day of rest Devout Catholics, they looked forward to attending mass, for the first time in a large metropolitan church. Quake Frees Prisoners. Several prisoners were freed when the walls of the ancient Moorish castle, which was used as a prison, collapsed during the recent earth- quake panic in Algarve Province in Portugal. » ek The Little Entene is equally dis- satisfied. Neither Czechoslavakia, nor | Yugoslavia, nor Rumania has been | ‘npplnarhed to join this new “peace gesture.” The French foreign office has been trying to appease their anger by telling them that they | eventually will be included, but that | there is no point in their joining \nuw when Germany has not answered the London proposal. | * ok % Reason for Nervousness. ‘This is, of course, true, but Benes, Titulesco and Jevtitch are nervous— ‘not without reason. The British are | realists and fear that the spark which | might set the European powder keg afire is likely to come from Eastern { Europe. Hence they do not want to | get into any combination with France as long as the republic is obliged to take care of its dangerously naughty stepchildren of Central and South- eastern Europe. The Germans are watching these | developments _with an _ill-concelead amusement. They feel that sooner or later Czechoslovakia, Rumania and | Yugoslavia will make approaches to | the Reich. Economically they can profit more by an understanding with Germany than with any other Euro- pean country. Czechoslovakia’s natural outlet to the sea is Hamburg and Breme Rumania’s and Yugoslavia’s enor=- mous overproduction of agricul- tural products and oil can_be more profitable disposed of in Ger- many than in France or Italy. It was only the post war political considerations which tied the Little Entente and Poland to France. Poland has broken off these ties now, and | since the political considerations be- tween France and her satelites on the Danube seem to disappear rapidly, the economic motive will prevail and bring about an eventual understand- ing between the Reich and these three states, The only thing that works against such a policy is Hitler. Rumors | from Germany indicate a strong re- vival of a monarchistic movement. When Hitler has accomplished his destiny he may be forced to make room for another emperor. * ¥k What holds today the Entente with France is not the deep feeling of friendship which exists between the peoples of these countries, but the policy of three men: Benes, Titulesco and Jevtitch. Benes is important in Europe, but could not get 500 votes in his own country if he were to run as mayor of his home town in Czechoslovakia. Titulesco Glamorous. Titulesco has covered himself with glamor as Rumania’s foremost inter- national statesman. But should inter- national events take away this glamour he would not cut more ice among his TERMITES Be Undermining Your Home We have treated Tith Tuocess many of| the outstanding hom d_buildings in" this section: including the PAN-AMERICAN UNION Free Inspection Guaranteed Treatment TERMITE CONTROL CO. Nat'l Press Bldg. Natl 2711 “Ask Our Customers™ | countrymen than the Dalai Lama from | | last 10 years the * the British say they | | dence | vestigators had been put | record in an effort of the group to| | Tibet. Jevtitch in Yugoslavia is just one of | those ships that pass by night When these men pass out of the picture the Entente will pass out. too. P Conservative European newspapers, which have been lamenting for “Americanization of Europe,” are delighted now at what | they call the “Europeanization of | America.” They point out that cock- tails, jazz. mass production and high pressure business methods are fads which are bound to disappear. Something to Remain. But the Europeanization of America, | they say, is something which will stay | The New Deal contains nothing. ac- cording to these newspapers, which has not been adopted in Europe for several decades. Old age pensions. slum clearance, unemployment in- surance, processing taxes, State con- trol over power plants, railways, graphs and telephones are as old as hills across the Atlantic. And they have not prevented the terrific depres- sion in Europe either The Belgian chief delegate at the negotiations of a bilateral trade agree- | ment with the United States, M. Pierre Forthomme, is one of the most genial | foreign representatives who has ever visited this country. He is a Belgian all right, but has traveled all over the | world and speaks more foreign languages than an American Express | interpreter in Greece. He is so much liked by the people of the countries which he has visited that during the World War while he | was representing Belgium in South Africa the Johannesburg population wanted him to run as member of Parliament. SPECULATOR WANTED IN MUNITIONS PROBE FOUND IN HOSPITAL tcf)x}fl’rflmdifiom First Page.) came after the committee had vir- tually completed its examination of | the New York corporation in a | month's session. During that time a mass of evi- unearthed by committee in- into the back up its charge that the “Big | Three,” including the Newport New: New York and the Bethlehem Ship- building Co., had operated through “accommodation bids” to divide the work largely among themselves at prices increasing within 18 months from about $8,300,000 to $16,000.000 a cruiser. Late in the week the committee swung into close investigation of suggestions of various witnesses that the builders had beaten back dis- | armament efforts on one side and encouraged spending for naval con- struction on the other. Efforts were made to disclose sums spent by the companies for anti- disarmament propaganda and in favor ot expanded national defense pro- grams. A continuation of this search was described by Larouche as a major aim during the coming weeks during which officials of the Newport News and later the Bethlehem com- panies will be quesuoned SIE:C. OFFICER TO SPEAK Judge Charles Sumner Lobinger of the Securities and Exchange Commis- sion will be guest speaker at the Charter day dinner to be held at the Sosmos Club next Friday by the Wash- ington Chapter of the University of Nebraska Alumni Association. Dr. F. A. Woods, president of the asso- ciation, will preside. Judge Lobinger is a graduate of the university and holds several degrees, including that of doctor of jurispru- jence from Soochow University, China. The subject of his talk will be the work of the S. E. C. Turn your old trinkets, jewelry and watches into MONEY at A.Xahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 42 Years at 935 F Street | | sald he would vote against the Mc- the ! tele- | — | stroyed by direct RELIEF BILL TEST OMING ON FLOOR Effort to Hold Majority Will Be Most Difficult in Final Voting. (Continued From Pirst Page) Carran amendment. He had not de- cided finally, he said, whether he would vote for or against the Adams amendment, Discussing his amendment night, McCarran said: “Through years of activity, collec- tive bargaining and legislation, the | laboring classes of this country have constructed and maintained a wage | structure that prevails with more or | less elasticity throughout the United States, differing in various communi- | | ties, but always with an established scale in each area. Says Wage Structure Lost. “If the United States Government puts $4,000,000,000 into relief con- struction projects throughout the land, and limits the amount any { worker may receive to $50 a month, it will tear down the wage structure of the country in private entergrise. because immediately upon the estab- lishment by the Government cf an average wage for work, private enter- prise, seeing the Governmen: pehind the movement, will take advaniage ot the situation with a natural tend- | ency to pull down wage scales that | have been maintained in private en- terprises. “This will lend itself to a reduction | of the earning power of the mllers‘ of the country and may have a last- | ing effect in the way of a reductien | of our ct.andard of lving for wage earners Asked what he thought would be the outcome of the effort to defeat his amendment in committee, Sena- tor McCarran replied: “I hope to hold the majority of the committee members.” | Bill's Effect Outlined. j last Estimates prepared for the Senate Appmpnatmm Committee show that a “security wage"—a new term born | since the introduction of the work relief bill—averaging $50 a month and giving employment to 3.500.000 | workers, would call for an expendi- | ture of $175000.000 a month, and the cost of materials used in con- | struction would add to this $160.- | 000.000, making a total expenditure of $335.000,000 a month. On this basis ! the annual cost would total approxi- ! mately $4.000.000.000—the amount | carried in the bill for work relief. It would give 350000 workers full time employment (130 hours per month). | Assuming that the “prevailing wag | were paid instead of the “security | wage.” averaging 80 cents an hour | [ for the type of work to be performed, (and assuming that 3,500,000 persons | would work 130 hours a month, the monthly wage bill would shoot up to $370.000,000. Add the estimated cost of material to this—$160.000.000— | and the total expenditure per month | | | would be $530.000,00. If the appro- { priation is held to $4,000,000,000, the | effect of the adoption of the prevail- | |ing wage would be to cut the time of operation from a year to seven and | one-half months, or to reduce the number of persons working for a year to 2,250,000. | Both the McCarran and the Adams | amendments—thorns in the side of | | the administration—are offered, not | ! by Republicans, but by Democrats. Senator Adams said yesterday that {\\hen the work relief bill had been first presented he had studied it sym- | pathetically. He had come to a conclusion, however, that it would lead to enormous expenditure, con- | stantly recurring: that it would not | work satisfactorily, and that the Gov- ernment plans for spending the money were extremely nebulous. He said: “The President has advanced the argument that it is better to have men at work for which they are paid than on the dole: that direct relief 1 is undermining the morale of the country. Sees Majority Suffering. “The Federal Government has as- sumed the obligation of seing that no | one lacks food or suffers from cold. | The question is how best to meet this obligation. The President argues that the morale of the people is being de- | relief payments. | | There is another side. Estimating that | 120,000,000 persons are on relief rolls in_this country, there are 100,000,000 | who have to pay the bill. If the country is to get on its feet again, con~ sideration must be given to the 100, 000,000 and to industry and busi- ness. To destroy the morale of the 1 100,000,000 and of industry and busi- | | ness would be worse than to destroy the morale of the minority on relief. | “Furthermore, I am scared by the huge increase in the public debt. The people are paying about a billino dol- | lars now in interest charges. If we appropriate $5,000,000,000 for relief and work relief this year and industry | does not reabsorb the workers this year, we will have to appropriate an- other $5,000,000,000 next year. If | we once adopt this work relief sys- tem, we cannot go back to the dole | system. We will have assumed a new ‘ obligation in addition to the obliga- tion that no man shal go hungry. It will be an obligation on the part of the | Federal Government to provide every man and woman with a job. Once the Government assumes an obligs-- tion, it can never let go. | “There is the chance that if we put men to work on a security wage, | which is far less than the wage Te- | ceived by other men doing similar work, the man on the security wnge- will eventually consider himself fll\ treated and will believe that the Gov- l ernment is grafting off him. I am not sure that the security wage will Bring Thi Completely Cleaned. Trade Mark Monday & 2niesanrs Tuesday Specul "29¢ Positive Proof of LAMSON'S RETRIAL OPENS NEXT WEEK | Divorcee and Maid May Be Called to Stand in Death Case. Hoover En Route East Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. By the Associated Press | SAN JOSE, Calf., February 9.— With the retrial of David A. Lamson one week away, the State was silent tonight on whether it had new evi- dence to support its charge that he | bludgeoned his attractive young wife | to death with an iron pipe. | Lamson, former Stanford University Press sales manager, was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death, but the State Supreme Court | granted a retrial It appeared certain that the 10-inch pipe. raked from bonfire ashes back of the Lamson home, would hold a pivotal position in the second trial, opening a week from Monday. But whether two women, whose | names were mentioned previously in the case, would be called as witnesses at the retrial was not known outside prosecution circles. The two, Sarah Kelley, Sacramento divorcee, and Dolores Roberts Sorenson, former Lamson maid, were not called at the first trial. | The defense at the first tial sought | to show Mrs. Lamson, whose nude body was found in the bathtub of | their home May 30, 1933, died from LO (; S DAer’ITER G[7 4RDEI) \:;:;’:ur:es suffered in a fall while bath- ON TRIPS HOME FROM COLLEGE 3% B bt o as a \lm out of an unhappy mare | riage and drew from him on cross- | examination the admission that he often visited Sarah Kelley. Lamson denied there was any romance with the divorcee, however. | The maid, who assisted Mrs. Lam- | son in caring for a small daughter, | may be called to testify regarding | conditions in marital status of the couple. HOOVER TRAVELING Former President Hoover as he appeared in Chicago yvesterday while en route from his California home to New York, where he plans to attend bmmvx\ (unrrru\ce\ pressing its murder charge, the L. S. U. Student Always Accompanied by Friends W hen She Leaves Campus for Shopping or Social Calls in Town. By the Assoctated Press | pany of friends. She is never alone BATON ROUGE, lLa., February 9— | when she goes to town to see a Miss Rose Long, pretty 1 -u}d movie, or goes shoppil On her co-ed at Louisiana. State Univ motor trips to New Orleans to visit justed and Demagnetized. Guaranteed One Year. Sixteen yeats of sood honest watch repairing is our record. of " satisfied_customers in Washington and surrounding_cities. and daughter of Senator Huey Long, never leaves the campus Ah.me. it was disclosed here toda Despite the little or no interest she takes in her father’s fire-spitting political activities, plain Rose Long— as she likes to be known—has felt cross-current effects of uneasiness arising at times when her paternal parent got a backlash from some of his spectacular activities throughout the State. Precautions Explained. Precautions, friends close to the family said, were necessitated by the “hatred of the Senator’s political opponents.” The family insists that she not leave the campus except in the com- PUBLIC DOMAIN ENTIRELY CLOSED FOR CONSERVATION __ (Contirued From First Page.) to end further legislative program homesteading and set up permane: uses for the acreage was authorita- tively reported to have been drafted and 1s to be submitted to Congress soon. A ban on further homesteading was one of the urgent recommendations of the National Resources Board, headed by Secretary Ickes, along with withdrawal from cultivation of 75.- 000.000 acres of unproductive farm land. To Purchase 7,000,000 Acres. The Federal Relief Administration land purchase division plans to com- plete the purchase of 7.000 600 acres by July. Officials explained that the | prohibition of further settlement con- | formed to the board’s remark that it | was useless to buy up submnrgmal land with one hand, while settlement | of additional submarginal acreage was permitted by the other. In addition, the Relief Admmmra- tion's rural rehabilitation division and the P. W. A. subsistence home- steads agency have been active in purchasing more fertile land for their mingled munities. Washington, with 692,751 acres of help the morale of the people under those conditions.” Sees Greater Expense. Adams said that he had found the cost of giving relief under the plan of work relief was costly as direct relief.” He said. too, that the representatives of the ad- | appearing before the | ministration, Senate committee, had clearly demon- strated that the administration had no real plan for spending this money on work relief—that they vaguely re- ferred to the report of the National Resources Board. Adams was one of those who voted | against the McCarran amendment in the committee. “I did so.” said Adams, “becatise I am against increasing the cost of relief, which is already enormous.” It seems clear, however, that if the | supporters of the Adams amendment and those favoring the McCarran amendment should make common cause, the administration forces prob- ably would be routed. Under his amendment, Adams said, $1,880,000,000 wouid be available for direct relief during the coming year and $1,000,000,000 could be used for public works, whether under the President’s work-relief plan with a security wage paid, or under the pres- "ent public works plan. is Adv. TR R TS BE WISE, HAVE YOUR WATCH REPAIRED WATCH REPAIR FACTORY ANY WATCH Electric Cleaning Machine Ad- 1 Our Reliability Thousands ‘mrd from politi industrial-agricultural com- | “four times as | her mother, a private is detailed to accompany her. University officials say the fam has never asked special privile; for Rose, and Rose sais she wants none Lives in Dormitory She lives in the dormitory like other student, and her two room- mates are daughters of Frank Reid, former Congressman, who has made | his home 1 police officer EAST ON BUSINESS Former First Lady Spends 36th Wedding Anniversary Far From Husband. By the Assoclated Press CHICAGO, February 9.—Herbert Hoover, former President, left Chicago aboard the New York Central's Twen- tieth Century Limited at 2:15 p.m. (C. S. T.) today for New York, where he plans to spend four days in business and philanthropic conferences. Traveling alone, Mr. Hoover arrived in Chicago at 8:35 am. today. He spent most of the time between trains in the office of Arch W. Shaw, close personal friend L wanted to attend a Coast university, but later to attend Louisiana Sta she could be close to her Rose, at first, Pacific decided where family. Rose’s hobby is music, but she says she has no desire to lead a band, one of the favorite pastimes of her father, unsettled put land, was more af- fected by yesterday’s order than any other of the 12 States. Public land in the others named included: Min- nesota, 269.451; Arkansas, 175924 Florida, 32,303; Nebraska, 20.225. In- considerabie amounts exist i bama, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma and W The withdrawals were authorize under the land program section of the recovery act Mr. Hoover plans ng of the board of directors of the New York Life Insur- ance Co., to which he was recently elected, and attend conferences of the American Child Health Association and the American Children’s Fund Meanwhile at Palo Alto, Calif, Mrs. Herbert Hoover passed the thirty sixth anniversary of her marriage to | the former President. A. KAHN Inc. for 42 years 1as sponsored ‘the finest in Liamonds. Platinum Diamond Dinner Ring WATCHES-SILVER JEWELRY-CLOCKS A.Kahn Jne. Arthur J. 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