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B2 « NEUTRAL RIGHTS -~ IDEAHIT BY NYE Says U. S. Should Ban Flag on Ships Bound for BeMligerents. Tegislation to mske unlawful fiying | the American flag on ships and cargo | destined for any belligerent in umel of war was called for by Senator Nye | Yof North Dakota in an address.last 'mgm before the banquet of the\ . American Society of International Law at the Williard Hotel. The banquet culminated the twenty-ninth annual convention of the society. Senator Nye coupled his proposal for modification of the traditional American policy of insistence on full respect for neutral rights with a scath- ing denunciation of the arms program _of the United States and Amencnn’ arms manufacturers, “The policy of defending our rights 5in all waters and under all circum- stances is foolish,” Senator Nye de- :clared. “We ought by this time to | “have learned that there is little to gain in following our dollars wherever they go in the world.” Arms Makers Hit. Charging that the Government is in partnership with American arms manufacturers to arm the rest of the . world, and is setting the pace for all | nations in expenditures for nmomli { defense, he proposed that this coun- | " try take inventory of itself before ac- | cusing other countries of creating | fears and suspicions of war. “Seventeen years after the close of the World War we find France and Mr. and Mrs economic and financial structure of THE SUNDAY STAR, Parents of Radio Priest Thomas J. Coughlin, parents of the Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, famed radio priest. They are shown at the meeting in Detroit when Father Coughlin opened his drivé to make his National Union for Soctal Justice an effective instrument for changing the present social, the Nation, —Wide World Photo. Russia have increased their war ex- penditures 40 per cent, and we con- : demn Japan because in that same period she has increased her expen- ditures 140 per cent,” he said. “But we have only increased the sums we | spend for such purposes a paltry 191 per cent.” Senator Nye assailed those who cry about the danger of Japan as pre- | cisely the interests who are arming the rest of the world with American | To Conduct C Arthur Stupka Will Re- 'Naturalist of Aca weapons, and charged that the United States Treasury is being plun- dered in the interest of national de- fense. Plans of the Army and Navy for future national defense called for _ the mobilization of 3,000,000 soldiers ! and their transportation thousands of ‘miles away from the United States - shores, he said. Drastie Control Needed. The speaker admitted that greatest progress toward control of the arms traffic could be accomplished through international agreement, but asserted such action is far in the future, and that in its place domesiic control now is necessary. Nve was preceded on the program by Ambassador Hirosi Saito of Japan. who paid tribute to Henry Willard Denison, an American lawyer who played a principal role in the estab- lishment and development of lel-,‘ nese diplomacy. Ambassador Oswaldo Aranha of . Brazil, making his first addréss in English, paid tribute to the American * Bociety of International Law for its part in promoting “the establishment of relations between nations on the bpasis of law and justice.” Robert Lincoln O'Brien, chairman of the United States Tariff Commis- sion, also spoke. Officers Are Re-elected. All officers and honorary officers _of the soceity were re-elected at the new Classes So Pop- ular Last Year. First Trek to Start From Pierce Mill on W ednesday. RTHUR STUPKA, park natur- alist of Acadia National Park, in Maine, is back in Wash- | ington, ready to initlate a | series of nature guide walks through Washington's park system, beginning Wednesday afternoon. | Under auspices of the National | Park Service, these walks, under Stupka’s guidance, proved popular last year, and the park authorities are anticipating there will be even greater | interest in the program this year. Pierce Mill Is Start. Starting out from Plerce Mill, Rock Creek Park, on Wednesday at |1:30 p.m., Stupka will launch the first | scheduled walk. Through Sunday, May 5, these walks will be continued from this location. From May 8 to 12, inclusive, walks will be conducted along the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, in the proposed George Washington Memorial Parkway. These walking dia Park | lasses in a pital | ntimate knowledge | would bring under | fact it was so designed. This would WASHINGTON MODIFIED CONTROL OF GAS IS ASKED Natural Product Utilities Hope to Escape Holding Firm Regulation. By the Associated Press. Natural gas utilities appealed yes- terday to the Senate Interstate Com- merce Committee to divert from them the blow assertedly aimed at electric holding companies. Their appeals were supplemented by & suggestion of former Gov. Clyde M. Reed of Kansas that the bill to abolish utility holding companies and to place operating utilities under drastic Federal regulations be revised generally to avold adverse effect on the security holdings of small in- vestors. Reed's testimony was followed by that of Ralph B. Feagin, Houston, Tex., attorney, representing natural gas producers; R. W. Gallagher, vice president, in charge of the gas divi- sion of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey, and George B. Chandler, exec- utive secretary of the Ohio Chamber of Commerce. Indorses Some Legislation. Pleading for a tempering hand in abolishing holding companies, Reed | said that, nevertheless, he hoped this | session of Congress would bring legis- lation “to fill in the gaps in State Utility Commission control of public utility service.” He said the State Utility Commis- slon needed two main Federal props, one to ald in governing interstate | transmission of natural gas, and a | second in gulding lssuance of securi ties by the various holding enmp.nles' or large-scale operating companies. At the same time he declared there | was a “fundamental” defect in the bill in that it sought to divide au- | thority among three Federal Commis- sions—the Securities and Exchange | Commission, the Federal Power Com- | mission and the Federal Trade Com. | mission supervision of gas distributing companies. i He argued that the power and trade commissions be given control of the types of securities to be issued | by the utility companies. Their | of operluns‘ company affairs, he asserted, placed | them in a far better position to de- | | termine the feasibility of proposed | security issues than the Securities Commission. “1 am inclined to agree with you in | | that,” Chalrman Wheeler, co-author | of the bill, declared. Close Afiiliation Cited. Galagher, as a spokesman for the | Standard Oil Co., declared the bill its jurisdiction the oil companies, regardless of the | come through the close afliation be- | ARTHUR STUPKA. [ will return to Pierce Mill, to observe changes in growing things that have in | come about in the intervening month. , began, Campfires Friday. At the picnic grove south of Pierce Mill, campfire programs will be con- ducted by Stupka each Friday night during May. These will feature illus- trated lectures by Stupka and other outstandng naturalists. Community singing and entertainment will also | be a part of this program. parties will assemble at Sycamore Island landing, near car stop No. 30, | on the Glen Echo line. on each Wednesday, Thursday, Fri- Officials said that from May 15 to | day. Saturday and Sunday afternoons 19, inclusive, the nature walks will ai 1:30, 3 and 4:30 o'clock. On Mon- be conducted in the National Zoologi- | days and Tuesdays there will be no cal Park, assembling at the bird | scheduled walks, as these days are house. The week following the parties | being reserved for special nature will assemble at the Sixteenth Street | classes. Three walking parties will be held tween oil production and gas produc- tion, he said. He joined Peagin in asserting that the two were so closely integrated that to separate them | would be “not in the public interest.” Chandler barely began his testi- | mony when he was brought up short | by Senator Wheeler. | “I do not represent utilities”” he | “although I would by no| means be ashamed to do so. Be| their mistakes what they may have | been, they have far exceeded in| | efficiency and integrity of purpose | the Government that is pursuing | them.” | “Perhaps you are not a propa- | gandist,” Wheeler interrupted, “but jmany of your so-called independent | commercial organizations are under | direct control of the utilities afTected |in this bill.” “Not the Chamber of Commerce of | Ohio,” Chandler insisted. | “All right” Wheeler agreed, “we | will say not your organization,” but | he asserted his statement applied to others. | D. C., APRIL 28, 1935—PART ONE. New View of Court Structure This photograph of the United from the dome of the Capitol, indicates the street design. Parked auto- mobiles, most of which represent States Supreme Court Building. taken Springtime visitors, pack the plaza. rris-Ewing Photo. DRASTIC GHANGES DUE IN JUDICIARY Three New Judges and 14 Magistrates Take Posts Soon in Montgomery. BY JACK ALLEN, Staff Correspondent of The 8tar. ROCKVILLE. Md.. April 27.—Mont- gomery County's judicial and magis- terial staffs will undergo perhaps the most drastic shake-up in history dur- ing the next few weeks. with the Re- publican appointees named by Gov. Harry W. Nice scheduled to assume their new positions. Members of the Board of Election Supervisors also will feel the effect of the victory scored by the G. O. P. in the gubernatorial race last Fall, for two of its three members are due to be replaced by Nice supporters. Three judges in the county’s lower | courts and the entire staff of 14 jus- tices of the peace now serving in ICONNALLY DEFENDS RECIPROCAL TARIFFS Roosevelt Program Declared i Proper Tonic to Revive Foreign Trade. | | | By the Associated Press. | A defense of the reciprocal tariff | | program of President Roosevelt was taken to the radio last night by Sen- ator Connally, Democrat, of Texas. Connally, replving to recent attacks | upon the program—one of which came | Friday from Senator Steiwer. Repub- | lican, of Oregon—said the objectives of reciprocal treaties were to increase wages, widen the volume of goods workers might buy with their wages and boost employment by revising foreign trade. | The Texan said efficient industries, { farmers and consumers were damaged | by high tariffs. “President Roosevelt seeks through the machinery of foreign trade agree- | ments to once again put in motion | the currents of international trade,” he said. “It is his hope that by voluntary, scientific and friendly adjustments the United States and foreign countries | Mussolini Hopes to Include Discussion of Non-aggres- sion Pacts. By the Associated Press. DANUBIANPARLEY GROUPS PETITION AGENDA QUTLINED GUARD ARMORY Oldest Inhabitans and Oth- ers Send ‘Requests to President and Dern. Petitions for construction ‘of an ROME, April 27.—Diplomats "flly‘lrmory for the District National were busy preparing the ground for | Guard have been sent to the Presi- the Danubian conference here in| June, to which nine powers have been invited. Benito Mussolini was described as hopeful an imposing array of premiers and foreign ministers would gather around his council table to settle fhese main points: 1. Austrian independence. 2. A series of non-aggression and mutual assistance pacts among the Balkan states. 3. A decision concernigg requests | by Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria for revision of treaties restricting their armed preparedness. Hungary has interposed unofficial objections to taking up any general non-interference pact. such as that likely to be proposed to safeguard Austria’s independence, unless the qustion of her rearmament be on the agenda. The little entente is described as desiring to work out the non-inter- ference and subsidiary pacts first, thereafter considering Hungary'’s, Aus- tria’s and Bulgaria's rearmament. Mussolini himself will preside at the conference, which France and Italy will jointly sponsor and to Wwhich Germany, Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Ru- | mania have been invited. In regard to Austrian independence the conference already has the impulse of reiterated agreements among the three great western European powers. This was reafirmed in the third point | of agreement reached at the Stresa conference. FRANCO-SOVIET PACT READY. | Russia Gets Assurance Paris Would Speed Aid. PARIS, April 27 (#).—While French and Russian experts polished the text of their mutual assistance pact, Rus- sia today sought assurance that France would come to her aid in the shortest time possible in case of an attack Viadimir Potemkin, Soviet Ambassa- dor, who yesterday announced an agreement had been reached on all essential details of the treaty, spent two hours with Foreign Minister Plerre Laval, and said later: “Every- thing is going normally.” While it had been expected the agreement would be initialed today, the expert found the text needed fur- ther finishing touches. Laval today insisted on retention of the original Prench thesis that the | League of Nations be first consulted in the event of an unprovoked attack on either nation. The Russians ac- cepted this, but sought ways to make the agreement “as automatic as pos- sible.” A pact between Russia and Czecho- slovakia, informed quarters say, may be one of the first offshoots of the | Pranco-Soviet pact. Negotiations of such agreements, at the instance of the French, will be on the agenda of the nine-power Danubian conference at Rome in June. dent and Secretary of War by a num- ber of organizations in Washington, | Col. John W. Oehmann, commanding | officer of the Guard, announced yes- terday. ‘Theodore W. Noyes, president of | the Association of Oldesc Inhabitants of the District of Columbia, in notes to the White Houss and Secretary Dern, reaffirmed the association’s long- time advocacy of the armory. Mr. Noyes acted afver receiving the following letter from Col. Oehmann: | “There is before the President & | program for the allotinent of P. W, A. funds for the construction of National Guard armories throughout the | country. | “Among those incluied is an armory for the Distict of Columbia National Guard. Adopticn of this program and allotment of P. W. A. funds for armory purposes will be fer the coun- | try as a whaie ana not alore for the | District of Columbia. Recommendations Urged. | "It is imperative that all possible | sources make recommendations to the | President for the adoption of t | armory building program and for the inclusion therein of an armory for the District of Columbia National Guard. | “If the armory program is adopted | and fails to include an armory for | the District of Columbia National | Guard because of lack of interest or action on the part of local organiza- | tions and individuals. it will be an | out-and-out loss to the District of | Columbia to the advantage of some other locality. “Local funds are not involved in the proposed program. Neither will these funds be available for other projects in the District of Columbia, inasmuch as they will be allotted for armories, here or elsewhere. “You are urged to immediately sub- mit to the President and the Secre- tary of War. to reach them not later than Tuesday. April 30, your indorse- ment of the armory program n gen- eral and the District of Columbla National Guard armory project in particular. Cites Land Ownership. “Emphasize the fact that the site designated by the National Capital | Park and Planning Commission for the armory is owned by the Govern- ment “Funds not used in the District of Columbia will be used elsewhere and will not be avoilable to the District for any other purpose. The District of Columbia is entitled to its share.” Besides the Oldest Inhabitants group, Col. Oehmann said the list of supporting organizations include the Federation of Citizens' Associations and a large number of citizens’ and business men's associations, as well as every District unit of the American Legion. the Military Order of the World War and the Veterans of For- eign Wars. He said the Pine Arts Commission also is on record in favor of the project. | Montgomery will be replaced on May | may arrive at mutually profitable and | 6. while the Election Board changes | peneficial understanding—that the | | are to be made on June 1. | trade and commerce of the people and Commissions for the new judges|industries of the contracting nations and magistrates are expected to be |may receive a larger share of the! forwarded to the office of Clerk of | fruits of industry, manufacture and Court Clayton K. Watkins here next ' commerce. week, 50 that the appointees may It is a daring challenge to the| take over their duties at the outset of ' ge)fishness and narrowness of tariff | Reservoir tennis courts, exploring C. Marshall Finnan, superintendent | the following week. |0 fthe National Capital parks, made | it clear yesterday there is no charge made for this nature guide service. BISHOP SMITH ILL \ | ENDICOTT, N. Y., April 27 (®— | Although attending physicians said his condition was not alarming, Bish- | op H. Lester Smith of Cincinnati, presiding officer of the eighty-fourth | Receipts of R. F. C. In March $6,000,000 More Than Payments The Reconstruction Finance Corp. took in $6,000,000 more last month than it paid out. Its March report, sent to Con- gress, showed commitments of only $40,339,664 and repayments Capt. Harold E. Smith, Rockville attorney and one of the county’s Re- publican leaders, will replace Judge Donald A. De Lashmutt on the Police | Court bench and Thomas M. Ander- | son, also a member of the bar and a | Republican chieftain, will take Judge Granville Curry's plece in the Juve- nile Court. I Herman C. Heffner will succeed A. L. Wilson as judge of the Takoma | Park Town Police Court. which han- | dles all cases growing out of the vio- lation of town ordinances. | | blundering and economic muddling.” | BILL PROPOSES LOANS TO AID SALES ABROAD Mitchell for Market Places Where | American Products Can Be Shown. . By the Associated Press. | The American merchant's idea of 1924, is honorary president. Baker, Philip Marshall Brown, Charles | Upper Rock Creek Park, May 22 Dr. Leo S. Rowe, director general o(BRUSSlNG GUARBED and Mr. Butler, chairman of the Ex- win M. Borchard, Francis Deak, As. o | Texas cattle, culled of old and weak | ,sioner of agriculture, creditel Gov- “Ranchers sold heavily and weeded cattle for which there would have :cent, compared to a 10-year average Bpring movement of cattle from Of G. 0. P.toPower New York Herald Tribune, could interests to underwrite one Only a box number is signed Scene of Rockville Bus annual meeting of the Wyoming on previous loans of $46,682,732. | | today was placed under an oxygen | Methodist Episcopal Conference here, | tent at Wilson Memorial Hospital in Johnson City. Bishop Smith, who was stricken early yesterday, is suffering from lobar pneumonia. His temperature, which Crash to Be Protected at All Times. The commitments included $17,509,737 to banks and trust companies, $10,000,000 to sub- scription of eapital stock in the new R. F. C. Mortgage Co, $6,764,771 for industrial loans, and $3,142,500 for subscription to preferred stock and capital notes reached 104 during the night, has By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. dropped to 101. ROCKVILLE, Md., April 27.—A 24- hour watch service was inaugurated by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad to- night at the dangerous Rockville grade crossing, where 14 children lost their lives in the tragic bus wreck two weeks 820. e BY P. H Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the Conquering Contract The railway, which earlier in the | greatest living contract and auction week announced no changes would be | pigyer. He was captain of the renowned made in the system of protecting the | “Four Horsemen” team, now disbanded, intersection, decided yesterday to aug- | and has won 24 national champion- shi i ment the regular guard maintained at | ba’:z’d n:,f s l;ly‘u;;mtne:;u::z'clc‘;hg; the crossing by employing an addi- | includes the one-over-ome principle, tional guard to work between the| which the Sims group of players was hours of 10 p.m. and 6 am. | the first to employ and develop. At the same time it was learned that the State Roads Commission is plan- our worthy opponents were on the lookout for one of Dorothy's ning to hold a hearing within the next famous psychics. In her flightier days, few days to receive the suggestions of local citizens who are advocating the Mrs. Sims had rarely been known to | bid a suit in which she held more | elimination of the crossing, which has than a doubleton. Wrong Deductions. \HROUGHOUT the tournament that my wife and I played against the Culbertsons, it was been the scene of several fatal wrecks. clearly evident that both of The highway body has applied for a Federal grant for the purpose of cor- recting a number of trafic hazards througout the State and the elimina- tion of the local crossing is one of the foremost projects on the program. C. M. Shriver, superintendent of the Baltimore division of the B. & O., told The Star tonight that the rail- way had decided to employ the addi- tional watchman and the new guard, Frank Poole of Rockville, began his duties promptly at 10 p.m. The crossing previously has been | unproteoted from that hour until 6 am. each day. It was during this period when the crossing was un- protected by a watchman that the Williamsport school bus was struck by | 8 B. & O. express. The railroad, how-, | ever, was absolved of blame by Police | Judge Donald A. DeLashmutt in a hearing this week and the bus driver was held for the grand jury. . Life Just the Same at 100. The world has changed but little in the last 100 years and things are about & 6-5-4-3 v 8-7-5 * A-K-Q-6 & 9-2 The bidding: of banks. AL SIMS. spade and three little hearts, she led the queen of hearts. Winning in the dummy, I unblocked the ace of spades and took two rounds of trumps, wind- ing up in the dummy in order to get two diamond discards on the king and queen of spades. I entered my own hand by ruffing a spade high, extracted North's last trump and played the nine of hearts through. | Not knowing the location of the ten, North did not cover. I was thus enabled to discard my third losing diamond on the long heart in dummy, making seven. Mrs. Culbertson. . & A-9-4 v 9-8-3 ¢ 5-3 # K-Q-6-5-3 Mr. Sims. - Mrs. 4 K-Q-8- 7-5-2 ¥ K-10-4 Sims. N 4110 W+E ¥Q-J-6-5 8 68742 & J-10-2 Bast. Pass Pass Pass Pass e bidding, six should be ut. after seeing the North hands, I do not necessarily hands should play at the or seven for that matter, 3 4 5 aeTE id cl Had any one else been sitting East, Mrs. Culbertson would doubtless have the same as when she was a child, de- clared Mrs. Frances M. Edwards while celebrating her one hundredth birth- day anniversary in Cardiff. Wales. She is the mother of 11 children and business session yesterday morning. Dr. James Brown Scott, president since 1929, was chosen for his seventh term. Elihu Root, president from 1806 to Vice presidents are: Chandler R. An- derson, Manley O. Hudson and Jesse * B. Reeves. Honorary vice presidents are former Secretary of War Newton D. Henry Butler, Frederic R. Coudert, | through May 26. During the final Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, | week, May 29 to June 2, the parties Secretary of State Cordell Hull, John | Bassett Moore, Jackson H. Ralston, | ‘ the Pan-American Union; former Sec- retary of State Henry L. Stimson, George W. Wickersham and George | Grafton Wilson. ! George A, Finch was renamed sec- | retary, Lester H. Woolsey, treasurer, ecutive Council. | The following were elected members of the Executive Council to serve| until 1938: Eleanor Syllys Allen, Ed- | | sistant Secretary of Commerce John Dickinson, Clyde Eagleton, Ellery C. Stowell, Senator Elbert D. Thomas of | Utah and Amry Vandenbosch. By the Associated Press. AUSTIN, Tex. April 27.—Hardy k. today were reported thinner in flesh but. generally healthy after a| drought-ravaged Winter. | J. E. McDonald, Texas commis- ernment purchases in 1934 of about | 2,000,000 undesirable animals as a ,reason for a normal mortality rate, | ; together with a relatively light Winter. | .out old and weak cattle,” he said. “That left only the healthiest on the _range, saved ranchers a lot of finan- :cial loss, and provided a market for ‘been no market otherwise.” Condition of cattle in April, 1934, was estimated by the United States Department of Agriculture at 74 per of 82 per cent. This April the condi- tion was placed at 65 per cent. 4 per reem higher than in March. A sharp drop was forecast in the -Texas as well as other Southwest Btates. 4 Ad Asks $1,000,000 To Insure Return By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 27.—The Republican party, if one is to believe an advertisement in the solve all its ‘roubles with one million dollars. ‘The advertisement: “Desire contact with financial million dollars, principal and interest guaranteed, to insure return of Republicans to power in 1936.” to the advertisement, which gives no hint as to the use to which the million dollars would be put. still reads the newspapers. “Times have changed very little,” she said. “All I read about is war and unem- ployment, just what ‘the peopie-talked about when I was ' little girl.” L) accepted the give-away bidding and opened & diamond. Deciding, ho ever, that Mrs. Sims' cated something in the line of six diamonds to the aca king, s singleton I3 on the club break. Playing Mr. Culbertson tried a casual He discarded his two small (Copyright. 1935.) The new magistrates who will take office along with the jurists are Fletcher D. Bennett, Duvall J. Wi | letting prospective customers see what | | they would buy would be extended to American sales efforts abroad by Rep- | |5| “Let DUPONT Beautify Your Home™ TWO WEEKS ONLY— Buy PAINT DEALER Quality at the Season’s Lowest Prices! - | resentative Mitchell, Democrat of lard, John A. England, A. Guy W kins, Henry Carroll, Frederick Miles, | Tennessee. Richard D, Bennett, William N. Self,| He is drafting for introduction this| Albert M. Dorsey. Titus J. Day, Wil- | week a bill providing for Government | liam P. Wilson, Charles M. Woodson | leans to private ~corporations that and Charles H. Davidson, s | may be organized to establish “sam- | Gov. Nice still has a recess appoint- | ple market places” in foreign lands | ment to make to fill a vacancy at and for outright Government corpora- Bethesda, the State Senate refusing to | tions of the same kind. confirm the name of one of the justices | They would provide “a place in any } recommended by the Governor for foreign country in which the manu-| that district. facturers, exporters, producers and Carey Kingdon of Rockville and | growers of American products” may Mrs. Clara Holmes of Galthersburg | exhibit their products. are to succeed Laurason B. Riggs and | Mitchell proposes setting up & Richard C. Birney as members of the | board consisting of the Secretaries of | politically powerful Board of Election | State, Commerce and Agriculture to | These specially reduced prices allow you to buy the BEST in paints. 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Easy to_use on all furnl- Dries quickly and SEE $1.08 Value PAINTING ADVICE, $1.81 Value! ~di finish fo Easy to apply with new. Jons-nandlea’ spreader. [ ] TRIM AND TRELLIS FINISH $159 qr. green that defies wear! inting. Re- nd_fungous Ll el ;',[Il.]“ OREIN olan. FOR SOUND This Two-Week Sale is now in progress at Your Neighborhood DuPont Paint Service Station % Serving Washington Nearly 50 Years. * Same Management. Same Ownership. HUGH REILLY CO. ESTABLISHED 1888 PAINTS—GLASS 1334 New York Ave.—Phone NA!. 1703 M)