Evening Star Newspaper, April 21, 1935, Page 3

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THOUSANDS AWAIT POPE'S BLESSING Easter Crowds Jam Rome for Ceremonies at St. Peter’s. By the Assoclated Press. ROME, April 20.—Pope Pius him- self will climax Easter celebrations in this center of the Roman Catholic world tomorrow by imparting his pon- tifical blessing to the thousands upon thousands of Romans already begin- ning to jam St. Peter's Plaza tonight. Scores of persons will take up posts of vantage in the plaza before dawn tomorrow. They hope to be in the vanguard of the crowds which each Easter Sunday morning pour into the Basilica and pack the huge circle. Easter ceremonies at St. Peter’s will start when the pontiff, announced by the sounding of six silver trumpets, is borne into the cathedral on his port- able throne. In his procession will be the cardinals and bishops:of Rome. Royalty to be Present. They will pass down the central aisle, guarded by Noble and Swiss guards and papal gendarmes, past row upon row of pews reserved for royalty and the diplomatic corps, to the papal throne on the far side of the central altar. There the Pope will hear mass. Afterward he will be borne to the cen- tral loggia of St. Peter's, overlooking the plaza. Loud speakers throughout the plaza will carry his words of blessing to those who have been un- able to get into the Basilica. ‘Tomorrow afternoon at St. Peter’s there will be the procession of the three Marys, a religious symbol of the visit of the Virgin Mary, Mary Mag- dalene and Mary the mother of James, to Christ's tomb after the resurrec- tion. Bells Signal End of Lent. ‘The countless bells of Rome'’s many churches rang out in chorus today to signify the end of Lent. Priests in the churches lighted Easter fires suggestive of the resurrection, and conducted special masses, while choirs sang the “Gloria in Excelsis.” Throughout Italy priests went from house to house blessing families, their Easter food, their rooms and furni- ture. Among the picturesque cere- monies was the explosion of a cart filled with fireworks before the cathe- dral of Florence. The cart was drawn into the plaza by four white oxen wita gilded hoofs and exploded by an in- flammatory image of a pigeon which skimmed over the heads of the crowds on a wire. ‘To Florentines the successful explo- sion was the signal for wild cheering They believe this will mean abundant crops. BUG IN EYE SPOILS NON-STOP ATTEMPT FOR MISS EARHART ___ (Continued From First Page) obliging, turning tail and fleeing when | she landed there on her Atlantic hop | “I enjoyed perfect weather all the way,” she related, “but regret my| failure. “Leaving Los Angeles a motor heated alarmingly, apparently due to the it cooled down. This morning I was With clear skies and balmy temperatures, the President leaves for a spin with Mrs. Roosevelt driving her roadster. The Executive’s hat, raised in greeting the crowd, obscures Mrs. Roosevelt. —A. P. Photo. Roosevelt Vetoed Suggest BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. HE attitude of the administra- tion toward Germany in general | and Hitler in particular is one “the heart says yes and the body says no.” | Some of President Roos~velt's close advisers and most of the high officials of the State Department ware in favor of taking a strong attitude against | Germany's defiance stand regarding international co-operation. President Roosevelt himself, who saw in the German rearmament the dashing of the last hopes for a general limitation of arms, is equally discouraged by the Berlin government, ‘When the first official news of the creation of a new German Army and air force of a dangerous size came out, | some State Department officials sug- | gested to the White House the sending | of a strongly worded note. Since the | Germans had disregarded the military | clauses of the American-German peace treaty, it was thought that this country should send a note of protest to Berlin ‘ahtad of the powers signa- tory of the Versailles treaty. The| State Department was so certain that | such a note would be sent that some of the high officials of that depart- matic friends in Washington about which might be described as| This Changing World ion of Advisers and Some High Officials to Send Strong Note to Germany on Rearmament. ports from Paris state that the agreement will be signed before the | end of this month. Foreign Minister Laval will proceed to Moscow shortly. The Russians are | preparing a reception which cannot fail to impress the Frenchman. A special train will await the French foreign minister on the Polish-Soviet border. The carriage which will car- Ty the representative of France to morrow to take part in egg rolling on | the Soviet capital is more luxurious | ine Jawn under auspices of the Good | than any private carriage of the richest American millionaire. It is furnished with expensive Jurniture and costly ‘ hangings. There is a real and luzurious bath room with a bath tub and showers. A coach with a private dining room —nol the usual diner—has been attached to the train. The Czar, in his days of glory, did not travel more comfortably and luzuriously. The proletarian government wants to show that it knows what the re- fined comforts of life are. After spending the first 24 hours in Moscow, Laval will be taken to the Spindovska Palace which used to be before the revolution the Moscow home of a South Russian multimillionaire, The antique furniture, the rare paint- ings and priceless tapestries are all | intact. Important visitors such as ! Eden and Laval are usually given a rest from the Moscow life in that palace. - | There is no doubt that the outlook on life of the Soviet leaders has months, since Russia has resumed her position as a world power. The Spartan mode of living of the Soviet leaders is being rapidly discarded. They discovered that sleeping on a a good, soft mattress is much more faulty pitch of the propeller, but later ment confidentially told their diplo- pleasant than sleeping on a hard bed. forced to use a hand pump to restore the gasoline pressure and while I was working with one hand a bug flew into my eye, making it impossible to read my maps, although I knew approxXi- mately where I was. 50 Cowboys Appear. “I finally spotted a dry lake bed! where cows were grazing and after | circling several times I came down. “Within a few minutes at least 50 | cowboys, together with women and | children, surrounded’ the plane and ! with their aid I got my bearings, | although none spoke English and 1 was unacquainted with Spanish. Strangely, they knew who I was. “In approximately half an hour I succeeded in taking off with consid- erable difficulty because curious spec- tators kept getting in my way. “It's silly that a bug caused me to fail, but I intend to return and make & perfect flight.” Crowd Rushes Plane. Spectators here. part of whom left when the forced landing was an-| nounced, broke through the lines of | soldiers guarding the airfield and rushed toward the big red monoplane when it touched ground. The crowd had jammed the airfield all morning. A gasp went up from the throng when an announcement from the presidential office stated she had made & forced landing at Nopala. After a brief wait the announce- ment was rectified, still not making | clear what had happened to her. She| was more than an hour overdue, and | & group of military planes which had | get out to escort her to a landing had returned, unable to locate her. Among those who waited patiently | for the overdue flyer were Foreign Minister Portes Gil and members of the Mexican cabinet and diplomatic corps. ‘When her plane roared to a land- ing, Gil presented her with flowers on behalf of the President of Mexico. Marriages Total 318,191, Marriages in England last year totaled 318,191 SPECIAL NOTICES. {WiLL NoT debts_ other than those contracted by my- selt. ROBERT R. KAHNE. 209 A st.n.e HONEY. 10-LB. CAN TAI clover. '8 Ibs.. 80c: 5 combs. OODIN. 85. RN LOADS FROM NE [aven. Newark Wilmington. Roanoke. Co- MITH CO.. 1313 You st. n.w__Phone North 3343. = L RETURN-LOA N FULL and part loads to all points within 1.000 miles: padded vans: guaranteed service; BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ARY LB BLE. $ .. $1. Call est 0654 by 10 a.m. . umbus, Tampa and New Orléans. S| o & STORAGE D RATES O ‘moving also. Phone National 1460. fose! By ASSOC.. INC.. 1317 N. Y. ave. INVALID ROLLING CHAIRS—For rent or “le.t:d“' -ndu ; all styles. all m}h ra.i go» 425 10th st. n.w. ME._ 1844, 7 o R R JON TRANSFER & STORAGE atur_2500. ST EVERY AUCTION SALE—] description to be sold for.storage charges on Thursday. April 25th. at 10 am. in our warehouse, 420 10th st. n.w.. first floor. consisting of living room suites, bed m suites, dining suites, dresse: . beds. _linens. " dishes. % s “:';3::' UNiTED "STATES STORAGE HOREENS, MADE TO ORDER. PAINTED. installed. $1.55 ea. Repair windows. doo; floors. etc. Call MR. TAYLOR. Dist. S COLUMBIA IS PREPARED —to furnish you wilh reprints of maps, patent drawings. circulars or printed mat- ter of any kind. No proofs necessary. Quick and accurate. Suggestions and esti- mates gratis. Columbia Planograph Co. ropolitan 4861. it. The European chancellories were | elated at this news and their disap- | pointment was great when the opti- | mistic telegrams of their Ambassadors proved another false alarm. What happened is this: President Roosevelt, after having seen the draft of the State Department, consultea other advisers and was warned oy them that not only such a note would have no practical results, but would be interpreted by the country at large as “meddling” in Europe's complicated | affairs. The country, he feels, is against it. Hence the decision of the ad- ministration to maintain a com- plete official silence about Gere many’s rearmament. But in private high American officials do not con- ceal their ill humor against Hitler's action and do not miss an occa- sion to tell Hitler's representatives here—with all the limitations of the diplomatic language—what they think about Der Fuehrer’s action. * ok ok % Capt. Anthony Eden, who is slated to become Great Britain's foreign sec- retary within the next few months, is full of praise for the Russians and for Stalin in particular. The spick-and- span British diplomat was not favor- ably impressed with Stalin’s attire. He did not care much for his khaki blouse and his blue wrinkled trousers, but was really impressed by the Caucasian’s clear and realistic judg- ment. Eden paid Stalin the highest compliment by stating to his friends after the historical Kremlin interview: “The man is remarkable; one might say that he thinks like an English- man.” Those who travel in the brand-new and super luxurious Moscow subway will be intrigued to find a station called Eden. The Russians did not think of the Garden of Eden when they named that station. It was the British lord privy seal was among first time a train was run on that line. EE Although there has been a slight hitch in the initialing of the new Soviet-French military alliance re- Free Inspection. Guaranteed Treatment TERMITE CONTROL CO. Nat’l Press Bldg. ~ Nat1 2711 '‘Ask Our Customers” Marketed by “Wa on’s First Fuel 0il Distributor” done to ‘commemorate the fact thnt! the officials who stopped there the || COURT ORDERS SPEED IN RAIL LITIGATION Chicago & Eastern Illinois Case Must Move On, Federal Judge Asserts. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, April 20.—Federal Judge John P. Barnes today entered an order directing all parties inter- ested in the proposed reorganization of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad to “take such steps forthwith as may be necessary to speed this proceeding to the end that it may be speedily gotten out of court.” motion and presumabiy was part of a general policy for hastening comple- tion of receivership and bankruptcy litigation pending in Federal courts here which involve hundreds of mil- lions of dollars. Similar petitions involve the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific and the Chicago and Great ‘Western Railroads. ‘878 FULLY EQUIPPED AND DELIVERED IN WASHINGT A full size, luxurious 1138 Connecticut Avenue (Opposite ‘The order followed the court’s own | 1935 Studebaker 4-Dr. 6-Pass. Sedan 100 CHILDREN GET EGGS FOR ROLLING Underprivileged to Be Given Baskets and Parade to White House. Between 700 and 1,000 of the city's underprivileged children will be given Easter baskets and will parade to the | White House shortly before noon to- Samariton Home, Inc., assisted by Policeman Jack O'Connell of No. § precinct, a member of the “Christmas Tree Funds” charity group. ‘The children will gather in the | morning, beginning at 10 o’'clock, in front of the Penny Cafeteria run by | the home at 638 D street. There they will be given the baskets and then | form at Sixth and D streets for the | parade to the White House. | Mrs. Roosevelt is to be presented an Easter basket during the afternoon by a child to be selected later by | Oliver L. Harr, president of the Good Samaritan Home. Some 100 taxicabs, the drivers of | which are offering their services free, will be used in transporting the chil- dren up Pennsylvania avenue to the White House west gate, where they will enter the grounds. In addition, 27 automobiles will be furnished by the Ford Motor Co. and two large | moving trucks by Arthur Clarendon | changed considerably in the last 12 |Smith. | Music will be furnished during the parade and at the White House by the National Training School for | Boys Band and a band and orchestra | of the Gordon Junior High School. Funds and materials for the baskets and luncheons, which will be given the children, have been donated by Washington merchants and private citizens. Already there are 75 dozen eggs on hand and 442 baskets. An additional 60 dozen eggs. 500 baskets and cakes are needed, it is said. Mr. Harr and Mr. O'Connell said they hoped these will be donated in time for the party. Police Supt. Ernest W. Brown yes- terday was presented with the first of the Easter baskets. He promised to head the parade to the White House tomorrow if his official duties do not interfere. et TREE PLANTING WAITS 360 Elms to Be Moved to Mall in September. Planting of elm trees in the Mall has been postponed until Fall,” park authorities disclosed yesterday. ‘They explained that some 360 trees, of equal size, height and shape, have been selected, but it is late in the planting season and many would have to be brought great distances. Hence it was decided to defer the planting here until about September. The trees are scattered from Ohio to the Eastern States along the seaboard. — T DELIVERED IN WASHINGTON automobile, abounding in quality and safety features. . . . At justa FEW DOLLARS more than the LOWEST PRICED CARS: Compare it feature for fea- ture before you buy ANY car at ANY price. SAFETY—AIl Steel-Welded-to-Steel Body . . . Compound Hydraulic Brakes . . . ECONOMY— One of America’s most economical cars. BEAUTY—Brilliant New Body Design! LONG LIFE—BAuilt to run 100,000 miles. LEE D. BUTLER, Inc. DIst. 0110 the Mayfiower Hotel) EASTER ATTRACTS THOUSANDSTOD.C. Sunrise Services to Mark Joyful Festival of Resurrection. (Continued From Pirst Page.) by the Cathedral Choir of men and boys at both services. ‘Tuberculosis Hospital patients will have their first sunrise service at 6 o'clock, the public being invited. The services will be conducted by Rev. A. Viebon, rector of the Sulpician Seminary, and a special musical pro- gram will be sung by the seminarists. The Ladies of Charity of Sacred Heart Parish will assist in transporting bed- ridden patients to the service. Should the weather hold fair, ‘Washington's famous “Easter parade” will be held along Connecticut ave- nue, with a description for the first time over a radio hook-up of the Na- tional Broadcasting Co. The descrip- tion will be broadcast for half an hour, starting et 1 o'clock, from a microphone in front of the Mayflower Hotel. The broadcast was arranged by the Connecticut Avenue Association. All indications last night pointed to an army of visitors greatly ex- ceeding last year's Easter throngs. The lure of the double blossom Japa- nese cherry blooms is believed to have brought many here, although the blossoms are not expected to be at their best before the middle of the week. ‘The usual influx of school children, a tradition of Washington Easter week, a rear guard of the Forty-fourth Continental Congress of the Daughters of the 9merican Revolution, and dele- gates to a number of smaller con- ventions swelled the number of visitors. Hotels Filled. Throughout the week hotels have of Washington homes have housed out- of-town guests. Agencies which have | undertaken the difficult task of direct- ting tourists to accommodations worked at top speed yesterday and | last night before announcing they | believed every one had been cared for. The Tourist Bureau of the Greater National Capital Committee of the Washington Board of Trade was open for business at 7:30 a.m. yesterday, and each of its battery of telephones was in almost constant operation un- til midnight. Yesterday morning the Tourist Bu- | reau of the American Automobile As- sociation exhausted its list of avail- able rooms in private homes, where, | for the most part, visitors without | hotel reservations are being sent, and broadcast a radio appeal for more. | C. B. Bishop, bureau manager, said he thought the response was adequate. Speedway Phones Installed. As a service to Easter visitors, to whom the Speedway is a mecca, the | automobile association has installed four telephones near Hains Point for emergency use by motorists, who may have breakdowns or run out of gas. The increase in the number of per- sons coming to Washington by air has been particularly noticeable. Officials | of the automobile association, who | make air travel arrangements for as- | sociation members, estimated the vol- | ume has doubled, compared with last | year. Bus companies for several days have | | run extra coaches, and the railroads | have attached extra cars to almost | every train entering the city. | Easter egg rolling is expected to | begin today in the Capitol Grounds and at Zoological Park, reaching its | climax tomorrow at the annual cele- bration in the south grounds of the White House. Children will be admitted to the grounds from 9 to 3:30 o'clock. Adults will be admitted during these hours | only when accompanying children. From 3:30 to 5 p.m. there will be a concert by the Marine Band. to which the general public is invited. The White House Grounds have been prepared for the annual chil- | dren’s invasion by the National Capi- tal Park Service, under direction of | Albert Clyde Burton, assistant super- intendent in charge of recreation. Temporary . comfort stations and drinking fountains have been installed. Some 35 Girl Scouts will be on hand at the White House grounds tomor- row to assist in caring for lost children | and in arranging games during the | egg-rolling festivities. They are to be in charge of Miss Alethea T. Hanson | and Mrs. Henry Robb. One group will report at 9:30 am, while the other 3 1 éVerified Values” Mean been full to capacity and thousands | BORAH WARNS PRESS GOVERNMENT TREND ENDANGERS RIGHTS (Continued From First Page.) the people themselyes have estab- lished as a guide for their agents in the discharge of their trusteeship. There is ample power within its pro- visions to enable the servants of the people to meet all emergencies in war or in peace. Within its terms may be found full authority to resist com- munism, or fasciem, or to deal with all emergencies without in any re- spect disregarding its limitations and without surrendering the liberty or forefeiting the rights of the citizen. Praises Role of Press. “There are other illustrations ready at hand, but I refer to only one to indicate what seems to me the real problem with which modern govern- ment has to deal, and that is how to protect the citizen against the en- croachment upon his rights and lib- erty by his own government, how to save him from the repressive schemes born of the egotism of public office. No political party for & moment would take tne responsibility of proposing a constitutional amendment which would suthorize the doing of these things. No political party would con- sider for a moment submitting to the people themselves the question of the right to exercise this power, It is this slow chiseling away of the rights and | privileges of the citizen which pre- sents the real problem in constitu- tional government. “There are two powerful agencies which may always be used to coun- | teract this trend, this tendency—they are a free press and a free speech, open, untremmeled debate. So long as these rights remain unimpaired there is always hope that wroags may be righted “I am not to be understood as con- tending that the Constitution of the United States is a sacred document— never to be amended, never to un- dergo modification or change. It has been amended and doubtless will be amended again and again in the course of time. But with whom rests the right to amend? That is the su- preme question. With the people, and the people alone. “It is this right which distinguishes our Constitution from all constitu- tions or forms of government which preceded it and which made possible | the first and only real Republic that | has ever existed upon this earth.” Dinner Ends Convention. The dinner concluded the editors’ three-day eleventh annual conven- tion. Former Senator Henry J. Allen of Kansas acted as toastmaster at the affair. The editors also heard Frank H. Simonds, writer on international a fairs, say that while & new war in Europe had not become inevitable, “no system of organized peace is pos- | sible under present economic condi- | | tions, and war still constitutes the {sole means of escape for upward of | | two hundred millions of people dwell- | | ing in three great powers.” Statesmanship, Simonds said, so far ‘“ms disclosed itself as impotent to solve the economic problems of the post-war era as it was to settle the | ethnic issues of the pre-war age.” Patterson Re-clected, Earlier the five directors of the | society renamed Grove Patterson, editor of the Toledo Blade, president | for the coming year. Dwight Marvin of the Troy, N. Y., Record, was chosen treasurer to succeed E. S. Beck of the $ Guaranteed Trade Mark One Year Bring This Coupon Monday and Tuesday Special Any ke spring. 7%¢ Any shape erysti Your watch is taken completely apart by a watch ex- pert and cleaned with the latest modern elec- tric cleaning Be Wise—ANY MAKE WATCH Cleaned e have over 30,000 ers. W, ngton's Largest Exclusive Watch Repair Factory J. F. ADAMS 804 F St. N.W. NAtional 2032 Chicago Tribune, who retired after holding the office many years. Other officers, all re-elected, are Marvin H. Creager of the Milwaukee Journal, first vice president; A. R. Kirchhofer of the Buffalo Evening News, second vice president, and M. V. Atwood of the Gannett Newspapers, secretary. Casper S. Yost, one of the group's founders, was re-elected director. Four other new directors are E. K Bixby of the Springfield, Mo.,, News Leader, a member only one year; Dwight Marvin, D. J. Sterling of the Portland, Oreg., Journal, and J. Charles Poe of the Chattanooga News. Members of the board with unex- pired terms who will continue in office are Paul Bellamy of the Cleveland Plain Dealer; David Lawrence of the United States News; Tom Wallace of the Louisville Times, and William Allen White of the Emporia Gazette. Richberg Speaks to Group. The editors listened at luncheon to an off-the-record talk on N. R. A. by Donald Richberg, now head man of the recovery organization. | Prompted by criticism of some | newspapers of their handling of the | trial of Bruno Richard Hauptman for the Lindbergh kidnaping-murder, the society in the morning authorized drafting of standards as a guide for covering future trials. The resolution directed the society’s president to appoint a committee to confer with a committee of the Amer- ican Bar Association to draft the standards “with a view to overcome unjustified criticism of proper action | by newspapers in reporting court | proceedings.” | It added that the committee “shall do nothing in any way to infringe | upon the freedom of the press, or to yield in any respect to any proposal | that does not contemplate full and free access to all court proceedings.” Lawyers Held to Blame. It contended that many of the acts complained of in the Hauptmann trial | coverage ‘“‘were attributable to the conduct and practices of the lawyers | engaged in the case.” ‘The society voted to condemn “the U. S. PLANES STILL GROUNDED IN PERU Row Over Destinafion Unsettled. D. C. Pilot in Crew Return- ing Home. By the Associated Press. LIMA, Peru, April 20.—A controe versy as to the real dastination of four American blolanes which landed here March 31 still held the ships grounded here today while efforts to straighten out the tangle were under way at Washington. En route to Washington were United States Ambassador Fred Morris Dear= ing, who sailed for home April 11, and Wayne D. Cannon, engineer and member of the crew who negotiated the licenses for the flight south. Cannon traveled by air. A communique issued by the peru- vian foreign office said the American Embassy here advised the Peruvian government that the Department of Commerce had canceled the permits of the four planes and the licenses of the pilots on the grounds that the crew of nine men had violated terms of their authorization. While the communique said the pilots “lack the documents which Peruvian law requires in order to per= mit their flying over our territory,” it was reported here the charge was made that the planes were destined for the Bolivian Army, in violation of the United States arms embargo against the Chaco belligerents. This Hugh I. Wells, leader of the expedition, vigorously denied. The crew apparently was being dis- banded, for Pilot Earl L. Smith of Springfield, Ill, and Washington D. C., and Radioman Floyd E. Gray of Fulton, Ind, and West Palm Beach, Fla., sailled for the United States aboard the Santa Monica. action of the National Association of Broadcasters in undertaking to finance | a court fight to break down property | rights in news as developed through the years by newspapers and press associations.” i The editors approved the Associated | Press for its “well directed effort to outlaw piracy of news as practiced by | those radio stations rebmadcns(ing, published information without the | consent of those who pay for gather- ing the news and its distribution.” ‘ Another resolution mourned the | death of Adolph S. Ochs, publisher of | the New York Times. Sugar Earnings Gain. SALT LAKE CITY, April 20 (P).— ‘The Utah-Idaho Sugar Co.’s earnings | for the year ended February 28, 1935, totaled $1,029965, Heber J. Grant, | president of the company, reported at the annual stockholders’ meeting to- day. This compares with a deficit of $720,869 the previous year. 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