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ONLY 507 RELIEF SEEN IN'NEXT YEAR Welfare Officer Says U. S. , Plan Proves Need of Continuous Aid. ‘The $4.880,000,000 work relief pro- gram and the administration’s eco- nomic security plan can lift only 40 to 50 per cent of the national relief burden in the next year, Elwood Street, District welfare director, de- clared last night. The statement was not intended as a criticism of the President’s program, which Street praised, but was designed rather to prove that Federal aid in the relief problem must be continued *“for some years to come” and that private charitable organizations could not meet the need. In an address prepared for pres- entation last night before the East- ern Sociological Conference at Colum- bia University, New York, Street said: “The administration’s work pro- gram, projected to get people ‘off the dole,’ is now coming to life somewhat maimed by weeks of major and minor surgical operations performed upon it by Congress, but still recognizable as one of the most promising children of the New Deal. The President's economic security program, which vi- tally affects the nature. extent and administration of relief, is now being considered by Congress. Great Social Advance Seen. “These two measures, and the act which two years ago created the amazingly effective Federal Emergency Relief Administration, mark the great- est advance in the recognition of na- tional responsibility for human secur- ity that our Naticn ever has known.” Yet a “long task” lies ahead of the Nation, and States and the local com- munities in the provision of relief on a large scale, Street declared. *“The ‘emergency’ is almost over, but the necessity of long-time relief for millions of our fellow citizens re- mains,” he said. “It is fair to esti- mate that not more than 40 to 50 per cent of the present relief burden will be lifted in the next year by the work program or by the proposed economic security act. “The Federal Emergency Relief Ad- ministration estimates that some- where around 20 per cent of the cases on relief are of unemployable persons, who will continue as dependent.” Further Aid Denied. The work program, “admirable as it is,” Street said, will have to be supplemented by aid for employable persons who cannot be fitted imme- diately into the work program, or those who become sick or injured, or whose earnings at the estimated average of $50 a month are not enough to meet the cost of & large family. He said he figured the supplemental relief would total at least 20 per cent of the present relief expenditure and would be continued for at least a year. The cost of the unemployables in Washington, affecting some 4.700 out of nearly 23,000 cases on relief here, he estimated would run to some $2,- 000,000 a year. This will come out of District finances. Washington prob- ably has been more fortunate in em- ployment than most American cities, he added. To emphasize that private charit- able organizations cannot handle the relief problem, Street said approxi- mately seven times as much money will be spent for relief alone here this year than was raised by the Com- munity Chest for its 64 member or- ganizations covering every phase of | private social work. “Public funds, and public funds only, can carry the burden of relief,” he said. Some Gioups Separate, An important trend, he continued. 1s that various groups “shall be lopped off the main trunk of general relief” by setting up special legal categories of assistance, such as old-age pensions, blind pensions, mothers’ pensions, un- employment compensation and health | insurance, in addition to the work pro- gram. “Apparently, relief smells | sweeter by another name,” he said. Old-age pensions, however, he said, would affect only a small proportion of persons now destitute and receiving relief; unemployment compensation would benefit only those now em- ployed or those who get jobs; and health insurance does not seem to be a “likelinood” of the immediate fu- ture. Street made clear, however, he is ' Rot opposing these programs. + Wants Funds Increased. He did declare without qualification that the measure of relief must be increased. Public relief over the coun- try averages about $30 a month, in the principal cities. “This does not mean the average family on relief has been living on $30 a month, for income from all sources is figured into family budg- ets in which relief funds make up the deficit,” Street said. “These budgets, however, covered the barest necessi- ties of existence. The stark skeleton of subsistence to which people can be held in the height of a disaster can not be maintained as the basis of life. “Those who are receiving relief must have, instead of bare bones, a living body of reasonably satisfactory exist- ence including food adequate and di- versified; sanitary shelter; respectable clothing, not always second hand; fuel; and a little leeway for personal needs such as car fare, razor blades, haircuts, etc. Public recreation must be provided in larger measures, t00.” SPECIAL NOTICES. ‘WANTED—RETURN LOADS FROM DEN- ver, Indianapolis, Akron. Birmingham. New York and Minneapolis. SMITH'S TRANS- & STORAGE CO.. 1313 You st. n.w. Phone North 3243 DR. R. E. BENEDICT. CHIROPODIST. formerly associated with Dr. W. W. Georges. now located at 207 Colorado “Building. 14th and G_st: Hours. 9 _to 5. 5 600 CUBIC FT. FURNITURE, MOVE FORT e. Ind.. to Washington. Quote price a5 return load. PFAFMAN. 3800 13th n.w. s Phone District 3206. 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Immediate attention on Estimates and suggestions free. ri“a Planograph Co., CAN BUY A ly gauipped. 046, at Em- The thorou Metropolitan 4801. guts.” RAGE " | ocratic party in a majority of States ‘THE SUNDAY BTAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Long Draws Four Queens at Breakfast Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. Senator Huey Long FARMERS CHEER LONG IN BITTER ATTACK ON ADMINISTRATION (Continued From First Page.) salvos of cheers from the Holiday As- sociation convention crowd, estimated at 10,000 by L. M. Peet, convention manager, “The Lord has called America to| barbecue,” Long shouted, “and 50,- 000,000 people are starving.” There were numerous interruptions | by his hearers who clapped their | ister their approval. | The self-styled Kingfish called -for thousands extended their hands into the cold wind which swept the State | fair grounds. microphones. Long denled his intention of criti- cizing either of the major political parties at the start of the explanation of his program, but inserted into his istration since Woodrow Wilson. He handed to President Roosevelt the title of “Prince Franklin, Knight of the Nourmahal,” and repeated his designations of Secretary of Agricul- Secretary of the Interior Ickes as “Lord High Chamberlain, the Chinch- bug of Chicago.” Bigger Than Roosevelt. “When Roosevelt was about to run for President, I was a bigger man than he was,” Long said. “I could at least control my state which was more than he could do.” Laughter swept the grandstand when the senator told the crowd "I} don't intend to oppcse either one of the political parties. I'm like a sinner in a church; I've been con- | times. I'm still in good standing in the Democratic party—at this time.” Roosevelt and Hoover have agreed in the purpose of decreasing extreme | wealth, “cutting down the big men [!old the audience; “and they said the same words for which I have been | called a radical” | ““The only difference,” Senator Long said, “is it's all right to say it but be damned sure you don't intend to do it.” He mentioned Secretary Wallace only in passing to the “share-the- wealth” subject and asserted there is a “burglars’ code among politicians™ home towns. ‘The speaker turned his attention to the administration when he said “and now, down in Washington, they are proposing to lend a little more money. Shylock’s one pound of flesh 1s not enough; 2 pounds or 10 pounds is not enough. And the debts are owed by 75 per cent of the people who haven't got anything.” once proposed a sale tax “on the people who haven't got anything," the Sena- tor shouted, “and we told them then there'd be no tax until the millionaire down to frying size.” “The only difference between the | Democrats and the Republicans is that one is skinning from the ankle up and the other from the head down,” he said in one reference to the parties. The speaker quoted from what he called “agricultural bulletin. No. 296, right out of the mouth of the St. Vitus of the St. Vitus government” to sup- port his contention there was & scarcity of food when the Department of Agriculture was formulating its crop reduction plans. Destruction of Cotton. “Hoover proposed to plow up every fourth row of cotton,” he said. “Roose- velt went him one better and plowed up every third row. “They burned up the surplus and eased the pain (for people who didn't have enough) by putting it out of sight.” 3 He switched from his arthimetical thesis to quote the Bible and a chorus of “amen” went up from the stands. He quoted history and the Declaration of Independence and the audience cheered. “You don't have to understand it,” Long shouted to his listeners. “Shut your damned eyes and don’t try. Concluding, Senator Long told his audience, “I don't know what the| political outlook is and I don’t care personally. “From the deception, false pledges and promise breaking by politicians, it looks like it's almost hopeless to look for the American people to be relieved.” ? Long followed Reno, National Holi- day president, on the program. Reno hands and stomped their feet to reg- | | a vote as he finished his address and | “You newspaper men take that vote | | and record it,” the Senator directed | as he stepped away from the table of | speech denunciations of every admin- | | ture Wallace as “Lord Destroyer” and | delegation, | verted by both preachers so many | and building up the small men,” Long | not to talk about each other in their | Roosevelt and Democratic leaders | and the billionaire had been brought | |Can't Negotiate While Walkout' shown breakfasting yesterday with four beauty queens at Des Moines, Iowa, where he addressed the Farm Holiday Association. At his left are: Nona Kenneaster, Drake relays queen, and Lucille Robinson, Towa woman golf ch: Hough, attendant to Miss Kenneaste ball queen. This Changing World Paris Sees Showdown Upkeep Bills. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. France, more than any other Eum-[ pean country, is groaning under the | burden of military Armed peace, her statesmen say. has | become almost as costly as war. A| showdown must come soon, Paris | thinks; either Europe must make up its mind to settle down and accept peace on the basis of the existing | treaties. modified if necessary by com- | mon agreements, or an end must be put to the present uncertain and costly | state of affairs by fighting another | war. A peace in which the cost of military preparation is sky-rocketing; a peace which keeps the entire popu- lation in a continual warlike tension | is worse than a war. It will necessarily | lead to social disturbances which may have incalculable consequences. N ‘The balance sheet of Europe is a | sad one. Not longer than 25 years | ago. Europe was the leading continent in the world. Its activities determined the balance of international political, economic and financial affairs. Europe was supreme in exports to the other continents. Asia, North Af- rica and South America purchased textiles almost exclusively from Great | Britain. Germany had no competition in the export of chemicals and elec- tric appliances. French wines and lux- | ury articles had no rivals anywhere. | The European banks were the main | distributors of gold and credits. The | French, British and German invest- | ments abroad, exceeded in 1914 $40,- 000,000,000, | * ¥ X X Today America has replaced Europe as the principal world banker (a costly and dubious dis- tinction). America’s engineers and skilled workmen have replaced those from the industrial European states. Japan is supplanting Great Britain in the world markets with a terrifying rapidity. The arma- ment race provides just emough employment to keep the ranks of the millions of unemployed from swelling further. Nowhere on the strife ridden old continent can there be a thought of constructive economic activity, as long | as the specter of war hovers over Europe. * ¥ % *x Because Japan has snatched Man- churia and Jehol from China, the | American chewing gum industry re- cently established in China is threat- ened with extinction. on Burden of Arms It took many years for the Ameri- can exporters to educate the Chinese was spent in advertising the advan- | tages of that exclusive American product. The Chinese purchasers who bought it because of its qualities of whitening the teeth and helping di- gestion insisted on swallowing instead | of masticating the gum. | But perseverance had its reward to such an extent that China is now well on the road to becoming gum- | chewing minded —an obvious evi- | dence of progress toward modern civilization. China consumes at pres- ent not less than $1,000,000 worth of gum every year. * x % x When this business became a paying proposition the American exporters established a chewing-gum factory in Shanghai in order to dodge the new Chinese tariff rates. There are at presents two such factories in Shang- hai. Both are American owned and operated. Somebody has recently thrown a monkey wrench in this prosperous business by spreading the rumor that the chewing gum allegedly manufac- | tured in Shanghai was actually of Japanese origin. Despite the eflorts of the Nanking government to suppress the anti-Japanese boycott. shop- keepers in Hongkong, Shanghai, Canton, Nanking and Tientsin re- fuse to handle goods suspected of being of Japanese origin. Hence, their refusal to sell chewing gum despite the desperate eflorts of the American manufacturers to prove false the allegations that their product is Japanese. * X X X A former dictator and a supposedly ambitious this week; Carlos Davila, former Chil- ean Ambassador to Washington and short-lived dictator of Chile and Huey Long, dictator of Louisiana. ‘The breakfast lasted longer than | ordinarily. Davila was talkative and gave quite a few pointers to the senior Senator from Louisiana. He analyzed the causes why he, a popular Chilean, failed as a dictator. One of the main Teasons for his failure, said Davila, was the repugnance toward a G. P. U. on the Mosccw pattern. That was more the cause of his doom than anything else. Huey, for once, listened | attentively and took mental notes. | CHEVROLET REFUSES PARLEY ON STRIKE Is On, Official Tells U. S. Mediator. By the Associated Press. TOLEDO, Ohio, April 27.—William 8. Knudsen, executive vice president of General Motors, told a Federal conciliator today the company cannot resume any negotiations with strikers at the local Chevrolet plant while the strike is on. After conferences with officials of the United Automobile Workers Fed- eral Union, Thomas J. Williams, Federal conciliator, telephoned Knud- sen and received this Teply, he said. Ellsworth S. Kramer, president of the union local, said the men will not return to work until there is a satisfactory settlement. Knudsen sent a statement here today tn which he termed the strike “gn arbitrary and lawless act.” The strike Began Monday night and the company shut down. the plant Tues- day, putting 2,340 men out of work indefinitely. Company and union officials disagree on Whether the union is demanding a closed shop. e —— had assailed the national administra- tion for what he said were broken promises. Reno introduced the visit- ing Senator as “a man qualified to meet the situation. A man who has Sinclair Urges Action. The association today made public a letter from Upton Sinclair, defeated Democratic candidate for Governor of California, in which he urged farmers, workers and unemployed middle classes in the country to “combine, agree upon a program and capture the Dem- nex{ Spring,” rather than form a third r y. Sinclair was invited to attend the association’s annual convention here today, but wrote he was unable to come. & “If we * * * are going to solve our problem peaceably and without resort to dictatorship and civil war with its frightful waste of human life and.eco- nomic resources, we must find a way to do it by democratic action, and this action must be political,” he wrote, In the letter, Sinclair urged against the formation of a third party, and £aid “the same amount of educational and political labor needed to bring 2 new program, and for a new pur- “You do not have to pay any at- tention to the old line Democratic politicianis. You set them to one side and put in your own candidates,” he wrote. “They are the same candi- dates whom you would name on & third party ticket.” FATHER COUGHLIN SILENT. Works Behind Ciosed Doors on New Address. DETROIT, April 27 (#).—Rev. Fath- er Charles E. Coughlin withheld com- ment today on the potential role of his National Union for Social Justice in the third-party moveme:;.fl s Preparing to resume the “teacher and interpreter” for the union, which, he says, has 8,000,000 members, the crusading priest worked behind closed doors in the Shrine of the Little Flower on the first address of his new series. It & scheduled for delivery at 11 o'clock (Eastern standard time) Sunday night. Committed to a “redistribution of wealth” program as it is, speculation was heard here regarding the atti- tude of the National Union for Social Justice toward other advocates of the principle, including Senator Huey P. people into a third party will bring them into the Democratic party with ' Long, Milo Reno, Dr. F. E. Townsend MARY WILL DEPART SOON FOR ENGLAND Miss Pickford to Sail Next Month | and Expects to Make Pic- ture Abroad. By the Associated Press. SANTA CRUZ, Calif, April 27— Mary Pickford is going to England next month, probably to nfake a pic- ture there, and she has a lot of other plans that don't include Charles “Buddy” Rogers, she declared today. “Buddy,” she said, as she prepared to end the short rest visit here that set tongues wagging about a possible romance, is an old friend she has known for eight years. “I'd call him a very good friend,” said the film star, “but certainly not a ‘special friend’ I've seen him off and on, as I have many others, for & long time. I know the whole family.” Miss Pickford said she and Miss Marion Hollins, her hostess, would leave late this afternoon by motor for Los Angeles. Miss Pickford said she and her | niece, Gwynne Pickford, would leave for the East and Europe very soon, | hoping to be in England “by the end of May, if possible.” In the party also will be her secretary, her maid, and the niece’s former governess. By next Fall, she expects to have returned to Hollywood, organized a company of her own and luanched out as a producer. She said she hoped her first picture would be ready by late Fall. TRAIN KILLS THREE BEAVER FALLS, Pa. April 28 () (Sunday) —Three persons were killed and five injured shortly before mid- night when the Clevelander, crack Pennsylvania Railroad frain, struck an automobile at the Pifteenth street crossing. his wife, Ida, 38, and their grandson, Theodore Caplinger, aged 1. All lived in Beaver Falls. Loretta Dunn, 3, and Louis Dunn, 4, may die. (Fiying Ants) OR POLICY™ Good Work—Honest Information Satisfied Customers. Free Inspection. Guaranteed Treatment TERMITE CONTROL CO. Nat'l Press Bldg. Nat’l 3711 “Ask :Our Customers” and othess. 5 [} ' ampion. At Long's right are: Janet r, and Geneva Horner, 1934 basket NEW DEAL CRITICS SCORED BY FARLEY IN NEW YORK SPEECH __ (Continued From First Page.) has done and is doing a great job,” Farley said “the country will never de- !1:e ately precipitate itself either into cha ploiting reactionary group.” “The people have faith in him as expenditures. | in the art of chewing gum. A fortune | he has faith in them,” Farley said of the “Chief.” Then, without mentioning him by name, Farley ripped into former Pres- ident Hoover and named Ogden Mills, Senator Dickinson, Republican, of Iowa, and Theodore Roosevelt, jr— | “Teddy the Little"—as possible “Re- publican white hopes™” for 1936. He did not mention Long by name either, but referred to “the quacks of politics and economics who talk about the redistribution of wealth and seek | to allure the American people into | adopting policies which they promise | would make everybody rich.” After charging Republicans of pre- Roosevelt regimes with making “a ! hash of their ‘own affairs” and for | standing by “for three years after the initial crash® * * * bewildered .and planless,” Farley referted to Mr. | Hoover: “Now I am going to let you into an | administration secret. ! of the unemployment rolls, the size of | the dole account and the vastness of | the relief measures? More concerned | big business, or the political quacks with their mad schemes for distrib- uting the wealth of the country? I'll tell you. It is the man who has to meet the problems and shoulder the responsibility. Franklin D. Roosevelt has the job and, unlike some of his predecessors, has no disposition to shirk it. Message of Platitudes. “Yes, I have in mind the same man | you have—the gentleman who re- cently issued a message to the Repub- licans full of platitudes about the evils of bureaucracy and the necessity | of & return to normal processes. but gave no word as to how he would handle the job if he had another shot at it.” “I might refer here likewise to Sen- ently, has the notion that he may be ! the Republican white hope in 1936. | He explained the other day to a Vir- | ginia audience that it was an easy | matter to devise a plan that would | raise us out of the depression. but prototype had breakfast | ywas no more informative about what | | plan he would suggest than was the | ex-President. * * * “In my opinion the Senator from Towa had better look after his present post rather than to the sterile dis- | tinction of being the Republican can- | didate for President in 1936, for I miss my guess if Mr. Dickinson does not join the melancholy order of ex- Senators after November next year.” Farley said that Mills, who “is shocked and grieved at President | Roosevelt’s activity.” was & “worthy successor to Andrew Mellon as Sec- retary of the Treasury in the last administration” and “should be an authority on economic catastrophes.” “He was a conspicuous part of the | administration that led us into the | worst depression in our history,” Far- ley said, forecasting that New York | would “take care of Mr. Mills if he | ever comes to the political surface again.” The Postmaster General said Re- publicans were “so enthusiastic” about “Teddy” Roosevelt that they were “willing to nominate him for any- thing where defeat is a foregone con- clusion.” Knockout to Depression. “The work-relief legislation is the knock-out blow to the depression,” Farley said. “Administered properly, it will gwve the impetus to business and industry that will help economic recovery on the upward road that it has been following since President Roosevelt undertook to bring a sane program for recovery into the indus- trial and financial chaos of 1932 and early 1933. “I rest content that the American people will give this latest recovery measure their undivided support and co—opent_ion‘ 50 that the legislation may justify the faith that the Admin- istration and the leaders repose in it.” | An Established Business, Showing a month-to-month profit, needs several thousand dollars to be used for the purpose of expand- ing activities and to finance orders. Splendid opportunity for safe in- vestment in multiples of $100 to $1,000. High rate of interest which can be discussed after thorough investigation has been made by those interested. or into the arms of the old ex- i Who is the| man more distressed about the length | than the reactionary organizations, or | ator Dickinson of Iowa who, appar- | APRIL 28, 1935—PART O G. 0. P. CHIEFS AP DRIVE IN MIDWEST Agree “Fight Roosevelt” Program Must Be Started Soon. By the Associated Press. EXCELSIOR SPRINGS. Mo., April 27.—Midwestern Republican leaders struggled behind closed doors today with plans to rejuvenate the party, but reached open agreement on only 2. “Call the much-discussed general Midwestern meeting to draw up a net set of party principles early in June.” In announcing agreement, broadly, on the time for the conference, Har- rison E. Spangler of Des Moines, na- tional committeeman for Iowa, said the men in the parley here still were at loggerheads over the city to be chosen for the conference. Thirteen delegates from eight States were here tonight. Another delegation, from Ne- braska, was expected. “A half dozen cities want the con- ference,” Spangler said. “The site will not be determined before tomorrow.” Would Oppose Administration. ‘The one thing that brought approval all around was a statement by Richard | Lloyd Jones, Tulsa, Okla., publisher, | that “we will seek to develop an active | opposition to the national administra- tion.” After a meeting of Republican | leaders at Washington last Saturday, it was announced the proposed con- | | ference would be held elsewhere than | Kansas City. It was feared a meeting | there would give undue emphasis to {an incipient presidential boom for | Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas. | From Representative U. 8. Guyer of Kansas, in Washington, came a tele- | gram vigorously attacking efforts to | | hold the meeting elsewhere than in | Kansas City. Resent New Deal. BOSTON, April 27 (#).—Criticism of the New Deal, which they hope to crystalize into national campaign ar- guments in 1936, was voiced tonight by New England Republican leaders | who will gather in Boston next Tues- I day for a regional party conference. | Although the purpose of the confer- i ence, as set forth by John Richardson, | Massachusetts National Committee | member, is “to stimulate Republican | interest” in New England, he and | other leaders in the six States ex- pressed the belief that it would develop | a united opposition viewpoint toward | the Democratic administration. | “These Republicans reflect the growing sentiment of resentment and | protest against a political system which just doesn't work or give work | to the millions of unemployed,” said | Vernon W. Marr, chairman of the Massachusetts Republican State Com- mittee, under whose sponsorship the conference will be held. “More and more people are tiring of ballyhooed experimental schemes in Government and demand practical measures to bring a return of pros- perity.” COED KILLED IN CRASH ORANGEBURG, S. C. April 27 (#)—Pauline Crosby of Bluffton. 19- was killed and two University of South Carolina coeds were injured to- | day in a car collision three miles south of Harleyville. | The students, members of & wom- en's dance band, were returning to Columbia after playing at Summer- ville when their automobile collided with a car driven by Lydia Gibson of Taylors, Greenville County, Margaret Purcell of Union. director of the orchestra, and Bessie Mae Mc- Donald of Columbia were the two in- watches into MONEY at— A.Xahn Jne. Arthur J. 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