Evening Star Newspaper, June 29, 1935, Page 3

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NEW RED ACTNITY STIRS NAZI PARTY March of Storm Troops Or- dered as Left-Winger Gets Three Years. By the Associated Press BERLIN, June 29—Signs of un- dercover left-wing agitation inthe Nazi party appeared today. just a year #fter Reichsfuchrer ~ Adolf Hitler's | firing squads finished off the “great | conspiracy.” | Wilhelm Kasper, the latest of a| &tring of left-wingers to be sentenced | to prison in a renewed Nazi drive | against such elements. was given three vears in prison and lost his citizen- ship for five vears on a charge of | high treason. He is a former Com- munist member of the Prussian| Landtag. | Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels, minister | of propaganda. ordered Storm Troop- ers to march through Berlin tomorrow | to “prove that the Nazis in two and | A half vears have conquered Red Berlin and won Berliners' hearts.” Hundreds in Camps. Hundreds of persons arrested in the Nazi “blood purge” June 30, 1934 are still in prisons and concentration camps, many of them for making a chance remark without having known | of the “plot” of Ernest Rochm, Nazi | Storm Troop leader After the purge the old “Steel Hel- met” Society was forcibly incorporated | Into the Storm Troops. It nevertheless kept a distinct identitv. Now raids are being made on the ranks of the Stahl- helm—arrests which smack of events preceding June 30, 1934 An undetermined number of Steel | Helmeters has been taken to jail with- | in recent weeks in Bavaria, Baden and | Thuringia. The head of the society | in Baden was arrested. so a Naz | leader announced. “to prevent him | from doing any more harm.” Inner Affairs Fasy. After the ‘“great conspiracy” was erushed. conservative elements led by Der Fuehrer have had a compara- tively easy time so far as inner party | affairs are concerned. Der Fuehrer harnessed his followers to a safer eart: those holding anti-capitalist and | other extremist views, excepting on race matters. were silenced and the original economic theorist of the party, Gottfried Feder, sent into re- tirement. Tt was Feder who gave Hitler his first notions about the abolition of unearned incomes. profit-sharing in biz industries and the nationalization of trusts. Tt was he who drafted the party’s original 25-plank platform in 1920 which Hitler signed and made his own None of the socialistic been put into foree. Wnank (Continned Prom First Page) | —_— | | i | planks has give full security for deposits of this nature. The deposit by the Fleet Corp consisted of $1.683.377 for current ex- | penses, and that by the property cus- todian represented $166,000 of enemy~ owned morey retained for adminis- trative expenses. These deposits also were secured by the bank and paid in full by the receiver. Under the decision of the appellate eourt, however, these two depositors must refund to the bank 50 per cent | of the total sum paid them. They are entitled to retain half the money kince thev now stand as general cred- | ftors of the bank and such depositors ! have already received the 50 per cent dividend Others must Refund. Too. Counsel for Rhodes said the opinion also governs the payment in full to several other depositors, who will now have to return half of the money paid them. Among these are the treasurer of the Philippine Islands, who had £1.000,000 on deposit: the Inland Wa- terways Corp., $211128, and the Canal Zone account, consisting of £701.495. | In holding improper the payment to the Fleet Corp. and the property cus- todian, the Appellate Court said it knew of no statute authorizing na- | tional banks tc secure deposits of | money by public officers generally. | “Certainly,” the opinion stated, “Congress has not specifically provided with relation to funds of the alien property custodian or the Fleet Corp. In this abstrect, the funds of these two depositors are in all respects sim- ilar to a private deposit unless the fact that they are public monegs, as to which we express no opinion, THE EVENING STAR. WASF{T‘\’G'TO.\’. D. €. SATURDAY. JUNE Borah Reaches 70 Today Will Hold No Celebration—Holds Death Blow to League Greatest Moment. BY BLAIR BOLLES. | HE towering figure of William Edgar Borah, shaggy lion of Idaho. is unbent today on the 70th birthday anniversary of the famous lone wolf legislator. The first citizen of the Potato State came out of the West in 1907 to battle from the Senate floor for the political | philosophy of Honest Abe Lincoln. He today will pass no comment on reaching three score and ten. He will hold no celebration. But during the years since 1907 Borah's prominence and influence has been mighty in his wars for perpetu- ation of the policies of the country's fathers, wars waged in thorough dis- | regard of his own personal interest | and party expediency. His Biggest Thrill. The death-blow to American par- ticipation in the League of Nations dealt by the Senate in defiance of the dictum of President Wilson gave Borah the biggest thrill of his 28 years | in “the world’s greatest deliberative body.” This thumbs-down nationalism was part the dramatic rejection of the Ver- sailles treaty. with its mandatory League membership, the night of No- vember 19. 1919, after months of stormy wrangling between the ob- durate President and the dissension- | rent Senate. The defeat of the treaty and the Teague climaxed the fensest day T've ever spent in the Senate,” he says today. “It culminated months of fighting. It determined the question of whether | we should quit the foreign policy we | had followed for 150 years. The | White House had been putting all its | pressure on the Senate for a favorable | vote. Europe prayed for our ap-| proval. The President had appealed to the country. But in vain. The League, Mr. Wilson's own brain child, | was doomed.” Still under the influence of war | hysteria, the country had been in a fever for months over the momentous | treaty question when November 19 came. The standstill feud between the | White House and the Senate was the | most stirring drama on the national | stage. Within the Senate raged ! another fight, led by the square- jawed Borah and his little group of | “irreconcilables,” who were unalter- ably opposed both to Wilson's wishes and to the reservation-treaty advo- cated by Henry Cabot Lodge, chai man of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Master-strategist Borah. who cap- ped his unremitting opposition the | vote on inter- and parcel of | the League-binding treaty | matic relations witih Moscow IAM BORAH. ~-Pen Sketch by Newman Sudduth. treaty if the Lodge program of reser- vations is adopted. He considers them to be a repudiation and a nullification of the treaty.” Above the tumuit, in the chair. sat Vice President Thomas Marshall, un- availing ally of his il. friend n the White House, who to the last refused to brook any con:promise. Time and again Marshall triec to circumvent the Lodge and Boran factions, and time and again his efforts proved futile. In this tense atmosphere arose the grim battler Borah to deliver one of his most famous speeches. Tossing his long shock of black hair to em- phasize his ooinls, the big-framed statesman with sledge-hammer blo: of oratory drove a stake into the heart of the League. What is to be the result of all this?” h= demanced of advocates and thundered lLis own reply “We are in the midst of affairs of Europe. ourselves with a.l European concerns. We have forfeiied ard surrendered once and for ail tae great policy of no entangling ati.ances upon which the strength of this nation has been founded for 150 years It imperils wnat | conceive 1o be the underlying, the very first prin- ciples of the Republic. I will noi, I can not give up my belief that America must be permitted to live her own dife Smarting from this scourge, the odge reservatjon treaty was brought to a vote. To ihe anxious Senaie the Vice President announced its defeat, 51 to 41. At once th2 Borah iaction moved for action on the Wilson treaty. It, too, was shouted dowr., and with it the League, 53 to 38 In the con- fusion of victory and chagrin, at 11 pm, the Senate adicurned sine die. The President’s fondest ideal was shattered. Borah has often fought persistently alone for matters which all the world opposed. He urged recogniticn of Russia as early ac 1922, 11 years be- the | fore the United Statcs opened diplo- He is| 8 champion of the public welfare, of the rights of the incividual, of the sacredness of the Constitution His towering figure, unbent at 70 years, commands rapt attention when he rises to speak m the Senate, of which many regard hini as the great- est figure. | detestable proceeding.” PRESS RAPS EDEN ROME PEACE TRIP Beaverbrook Letter Pub- lished Calling Somaliland Offer Detestable. By the Associated Pre. LONDON, June 29 —Some British newspapers severely attacked the gov- ernment today for sending Capt. Anthony Eden to Rome as a peace- | maker in the Ethiopian dispute. The isolationist Daily Express on its front page printed a letter from | Lord Beaverbrook, in which he de- scribed the British government's offer | to hand over a strip of British Somal- | iland to Ethiopia as a “monstrous, Saying the offer was made to com- | pensate Ethiopia for territory, which it would give to Italy, Beaverbrook declared: | “In order to patch up & sham peace | in a dispute, which is no concern of | ours, the British government is pre- | pared to sacrifice the freedom of British subjects dwelling in liberty under the flag. To give them up to a land of slaves is monstrou: | Policy Called Vacillation. The conservative Post referred to “the incorrigible vacillation” of re- rvent British foreign policy, “swayed this way and that by every gust of | the latest wind.” | The Telegraph. remarking that the | Italo-Ethiopian dispute has thrown a dark shadow directly across the path which leads to European security, added: | reat Britain has been abused like a pickpocket by the Italian press for | having undertaken the thankless role of peacemaker. . | “Its proved friendship for 50 years | was hastily forgotten and scorned be- | cause of the mediatorial efforts, in | which Britain even prepared herself | to provide the Emperor with some compensation for large economic con- We have entangled | cessions which he was pressed to make to Italy.” \l May Be Settled Soon. | | The ticklish question of London's' final plan of action in the crisis may be settled this week end, when the cabinet will study Eden’s full report on his coldly received mission to Rome. Three paths lie open—Britain might follow France's “hands-off” policy, al- | lowing Mussolini to take his own | course; might make a single-handed protest in the name of the League of Nations, or might call on all League members to apply sanctions against Italy. | 'MILITARY TRAINING | FOR 3,600 YOUTHS' Camps in 3d Corps Area. at Fort Meade and Fort Myer, Open | Tuesday. | Citizens' Military Training Camps in the 3rd Corps Area will open a four- week schedule of training next Tues- day with a total of 3,600 young men enrolled for activities at four Army posts. This is the largest number au- | thorized since inauguration of the Government economy program three years ago. More than 200 candidates are scheduled to report at Fort Mver, Va., Col. Kenvon Joyce, commanding offi- cer. announced. Twenty-seven of these are from the District of Colum- bia. Fort George G. Meade, Md, will operate the largest Summer camp with 2375 Infantry and 200 Signal Corps candidates enrolled from all parts c!; the corps area. Six hundred Field | | Artillery candidates will train at Fort Hoyle. Md., and 225 Coast Artillery candidates at Fort Monroe, Va. The camps will be under guidance of Regular Army commanders, but company and field officers of the Re- serve units assigned to the C. M. T. C. for a two weeks' period will handie | the detailed instruction. A revival of a Nation-wide compe- tition in rifle shooting is expected. A team composed of 10 members, 2 al- | ternates, a team captain and a coach | will be selected from the Regular Army officers on duty to represent the ard Corps Area in the national matches to be held at Camp Perry, Ohio, September 1 to 19. Boy Hitch-Hiker Finds Mother Under Alias in St. Elizabeth’s Play Director NAMED HEAD OF RECREA- TION FOR D. C. LOUIS R. BARRETT, Pictured after assuming duties as co-ordinator of recreational aec- tivities for the District of Colum- bia. The appointment was made ‘Wednesday —Harris-Ewing Photo. 1935. WONEN CONTIUE| AT ON L0k Louisiana Women’s Com- | mittee Sends Second Let- ter to Vice President. By the Associated Press. A letter renewing the attack of the? Women's Committee of Louisiana | upon Senator Long, Democrat, of | Louisiana, was sent Vice President | Garner yesterday by Mrs. Hilda Phelps Hammond for the committee. ‘The Vice President had no com- | ment on the letter. It follows: | “Press reports quote Senator George | IMl saying that he examined the peti- | tion of the Women's Committee of Louisiana, on your request, and found it ‘contained nothing new, was scur- rilous, and not of a character that it | should be received by the Semate.’ “You know, Mr. Garner, and we know, that by only one acid test can | it be decided whether the subject mat- | ter in this petition is scurrilous or | not, namely—are the facts in this pe- tition true? “Is it true, Mr. Garner, that not | one member of the Senate Commit- | | tee, after Senator Howell's death, | would look at one word of evidence | in the files nor permit the investi- BLANTON PLEDGES. HEADLEY 10 QUIT Retirement on August 31 Is Promised in New Pact, Basis of Advance. (Continued Prnmv Pirst Page) nevertheless would have given Inspec- tor Headley the appointment “Through seniority with 39 vears of faithful, efficient service, he was the man in line next to Inspector Bean entitled to this promotion. “I believe that the Commissioners took this position. “1. Because through seniority In spector Headley was entitled to it “2. That they deemed Inspector Headley honest, efficient, faithful and deserving. “3. That they had such confidence in Supt. Brown s recommendation they were forced to give great weight to it “If the Commisisoners had seen fit | to abolish this position, they would | not have heard one word of complaint from me. and if in the future, their wisdom. they should think this position unnecessary. and should de- sire to abolish it, they would have 100 per cent co-operation from me. “However, I am just one of 435 members of Congress and in the above am expressing only my personal feel- ings.” Kelly Made Inspector. Aside from Headley's elevation, the Commissioners yesterday also ad- vanced Capt. Edward J. Kelly of the third precinct to the rank of inspector, Lieut. A. E. Miller to captain, De- tective Sergt. Floyd Truscott to lieu- tenant and Pvt. Guy Rone 0 a de- tective sergeant. In the meantime, Maj. Brown shifted the assignments of 13 lieutenants, 3 sergeants and a private. The lieutenants who received new assignments are: D. J. Cullinane, from twelfth to fifth precinet; H. G. Callahan, from the police school to the first precinct: W. H. Thomas, from the first precinct to the police school; L. E. Kelly, from fifth to eleventh precinct; J. R. Jef- feries, from eleventh to ninth pre- cinct: A. L Bullock, from Traffic Bu reau to third precinct; F. A. Varney from ninth to Traffic Bureau: J. W. McGinnes, from third to twelfth pre- cinet: J. J. Bourke, from tenth to seventh precinct, and L. D. Redman, from seventh to tenth precinct. ‘The sergeants changed are R. C. Pearce, from first to second precinct; H. C. Blackman. from tenth to first precinct: J J. Knight. from third to tenth precinct, and Pvt. O. K. Stan- ton. from seventh to the sixth pre- cinct. The one private who was promoted was J. O. Curtis. He will act as a precinct detective assigned to the Traffic Bureau. Who A_re_{'ou? The Romance of Your Name. BY RUBY HASKINS ELLIS. gator to investigate for even one day? “Is it true, Mr. Garner, that the Connally committee, in spite of its whitewashing’ attempts, was forced to report to the Senate that the meth- ods employed by Mr. Long to elect Mr. | | Overton were ‘damnable, vicious and | abhorrent’ and ‘a fraud on the rights | of any free people?’ ! “Is it true, Mr. Garner, that the United States Senate has never acted on the Connally report? “Is it true, Mr. Garner, that the Senalor George's committee has never heard a single one of our witnesses | —— | nor examined a single piece of evi- | dence in support of the charges of the Women's Committee of Louisiana? “In short.”Mr. Garner, is the hideous story laid bare in this petition but- tressed by truth? That is the acid | test for what is true and is uttered | for the public good cannot be scur- | rlous “We challenge Mr. George's com- | mittee or any other Senate commitiee | to defend the statements made in this petition in public hearings.” | 7}‘];})7]osi0n | (Continued Prom Pirst Page) ‘flnmn flashed up through the cellar windows to the second floor. Firemen said that when they reach- ed the building there were no flames. but the entrance was so hot they had difficulty in gaining access. The first three men first taken out were still | alive, but Lieut. Stein said the fourth, ' | Sheppard, “was burned to a crisp.” The explosion happened before the general offices of the company had opened for the day. Firemen were inclined to attribute it to a trans- | former or oil. ‘The alarm brought ! downtown fire apparatus. Firemen | alone were permitted to enter the | basement of the building, because they were wearing rubber boots. non- conductors of electricity. All others, including police, were warned not to step into the water, company em- ployes telling them they would be subject to 13,000 volts, which could | reach them through the water, which had filled the basement when the automatic sprinkler system turned on because of the heat. The explosion occurred when traf- | fic was at its heaviest. Capt. Milton most of the Victims, Rescuer L. Davis, one of explosion in base- ment of the Potomac Electric Pow- er Co. Building. John W. Poxwell. electric employe, im Emergency suffering from ‘severe Upper: Fred ed Center company Hospital burns. Tower: L J. C. Stein of No_ 6 Engine Companv, whn rescued three men he found groping in the smoke after the explosion —Star Staff Photo. out U. S. Whisky Stocks Grow. The Governmen: will be able supply all demands for aged whisky by 1938. Treasury officials estimate that 146,000,000 proof gallons now are stored in bonded warehouses for aging. to ADVERTISING CURB: TALEDAAAIDER |S. Clay Williams Says Farm ™ | Advisers Hoped to Rule Expenditures. By the Associated Press. The contention that farm adminis- tration advisers had in mind taking control of processing businesses, “t0 the extent certalaly of regulating ade vertising expenditures,” was pre- sented the Senate Agriculture Com- | mittee yesterday by S. Clay Williams. In a brief directed against the amendments to the farm act, Wil- | liams quoted statements from Dr. | Mordecai Ezekiel, economic adviser in the Farm Administration, which he said demonstrated this intention. | Fears Wide Injury to Business. | “Such regulation is not alone of in- | terest to newspapers, magazines and | | | w other advertising mediums, but might, it permitted, prove verv hurt- ful to both producers and consumers | to whom cheap prices have been made | available through volumes developed by the use of advertising.” he said Williams, & vice chairman of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and a former N. R. A. official, said adver- tising had increased the sale of cigar- ettes by 11 fold in about 20 years and because of the huge amounts of | manufacture had cut the costs to | the consumer His brief argued against the levy- ing of processing taxes on farm prod- | ucts that already had reached parity | and contended that the continuance | of those taxes on such commodities would affect both the consumer and the producer adversely. Sees Move to “Cover Up.” Williams said the adoption of the | amendments would ‘“cover up fer the administrators of A. A. A. all of | the unauthorized or arbitrary eor wrongful actions of the administra- | tors during the two years of their administration.” The brief added that “administra- | tors have developed the habit of operating extra-legally and these amendments are designed not only to~ ratify all of their extra-legal actions = heretofore taken, in disregard of the fact that the Congress had mnot authorized them or the law did not | permit them. and also to build up in the future increased powers enabling .. them to continue the kind of action referred to.” Monks Build New Abbey. White-habited monks of the Sister- cian Monastery of Saint Bernard are versonally building a new abbey in Coalville, England. CHOOSE THE LEADER OVER 2,000 IN WASHINGTON D. Smith of the Traffic Bureau quick- gm@@m@mwmwm@mmmmmmm GG ly took charge of that situation. and his men soon had it sufficiently ' | diverted so Government employes | were enabled to reach their offices in | time for work. Traffic was permitted to continue south on Tenth street until & jam had been averted, and then was diverted. ‘The crowd on foot finally got so thick that police had to threaten with their batons in order to move the curious from the alley through which the dead and injured were be- ing brought. Shortly after the preliminary work had been done members of the police homicide squad arrived for their part of the investigation, which is ex- | pected to prepare the way for the in- | quest or inquests which will follow. | Other inquiries will be made by the | Fire Department and by officials of the Potomac Electric Power Co. Lund May Leave Council. back $10 per month for interest on the princtpal. Full details of this n Telephone NAtiona ORIE GET MONEY HERE (on Desirable D. C. Real Estate) Let Your Repayments Do a Triple Job! Oriental is making loans to Home Owners based on a new and distinctive idea. It is this You pay each $1.000 borrowed. Out of these repayments a reserve is built which takes care of your insurance and tax renewals; also the ovel plan are availahle 1 2162 or 2163 or see NTAL Building Association No. 6 600 F Street N.W, Oldest in Washington changes the rile, and we think it does not.” The rule referred to was un- derstood to hold that public moneys, | night the treaty and the League were | & Robert L. Lund, chairman of the ‘dPIPEVEd with one of the most forceful | 3 ki dr 5 board of the National Association of ' ! speeches in his long career, held the | A 3 Manufacturers. is reported to be re- deposited by a public official, may. under expressed statutory authority be secured and paid in full by a na- tional bank | Pledge Held Invalid. { “We are obliged to hold.” the opin- | fon continued, “that on the present | state of the record the pledge of se- | curities to the custodian and the Fleet | Corp. is invalid.” The case went to the appellate eourt on a motion to dismiss the suit, | and now will be sent back to the lower, tribunal for further action in con- | formity with the opinion. | Rhodes was represented by Attorney Philip H. Marcum of the law firm of | Douglas, Obear, Morgan & Campbell. | Attorneys R. L. Merrick and R. H. McNelll also participated. Galli-Curci Ends World Tour. | SAN PEDRO, Calif.. June 29 (#) Galli-Curel, the singer. returned yes: terday from a world concert tour eboard'a Pacific liner and said she expects to take a six months rest, *swimming, playing golf and going | out under trees to look up at the ! leaves.” She plans to build a home at Palos Verdes. near Redondo Beach, Calif., when she sells some property in New WANTED —RETURN LOADS FR( AT- lantic City._Birmingham, Boston. Charlotte. eland. Fort Wavne. 'S ' TRANSFER Clev, SMITH’ 1313 Yo n.w._Phone North 3343. DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART loads to_and from Balto. Phila_and New otk. Preauent trios fo other Eastern cities “Dependable Service Since 1896." THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO_._phone Decatur 2500, TO_WHOM MAY CONCERN—THE | wundersigned refuses to be held responsible for any debts unless contracted by himself. Mr. PRANK' PLACE. 1367 Pa. ave, ce. ash 0% THAUL ANYTHING gnywhere local or long distence. $1 hour. | Phone_Columbia 3724. REPAIRING. Mantels—Tiling—Fireplaces. A DEAL FUNERAL AT §75 Tovides same service as one costing E:n Don't waste “insurance money.” | 1] DEAL ~with 25 years' experiencef coln 8200. ] e | | ev-President | Root and President Lowell of Harvard, { on the floor. The rear of the chamber | | was packed with members of the | vations.” balance of power, and his sturdy band | set off the dynamite that blew to bits | the hopes of Lodge as well as Wilson. | The controversial Versailles treaty“ was laid before the Senate July 10, 1919. Already it had been accepted by the leading European nations as the proclamation of victory over the | Central powers. To the President the | document was a portent of a new era| of international love. He felt the world's future depended upon Ameri- | ca’s signing it. The agile-brained | Lodge, however, plastered the pact! with reservations and aroused the | President’s bitter indignation. Wilson demanded the unconditional overthrow of Lodge’s compromise. The issue split the country. Jim Reed of Missouri, a leading Senate Democrat, | was a member of Borah's “Battalion | of Death.” militant opponents of Wil- son’s foreign policy. Borah demanded | the Republican party come out against the League. but high and mighty G. O P. leaders such as Taft, Hughes, Elihu| urged moderation. Republican papers supported Wilson; Democratic editors applauded Borah. At last came the day of decision. “The galleries were jammed with spectators tingling with expectation.” | Borah recalled. “Every Senator was House. Such an air of excitement I've never known. “The issue for me was clear-cut. I thoroughly opposed any proposition that would entangle us in European affairs. 1 was against the League, against the treaty, against the reser- | Allies ir Allied with the Borah were Hiram fornia, Brandegee of Connecticut, Medill McCormick of Illinois, Jim Wadsworth of New York and Reed. The flame of reseniment at Wilson's unbending positioned was fanned high when Gilbert N. Hitchcock of Ne- braska, the President’s apokesman, warned the Senate of a sure veto if | the Lodge freaty carried: “President Wilson will poecket ’04 Fight. broad-shouldered | Johnson of Cali- Twelve-year-old Franklin Campbell of Pittsburgh and his friend, . 9 Engine Company, succeeded last Fireman Harvey S. Fearnow of No. night, after a two-day search, in locating Pranklin’s mother. been committed to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital under another name. HE reunion with his mother which 12-year-old Franklin Campbell of Pittsburgh has sought for hungry, weary days on end was granted last night in St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. Penniless, Franklin hitch-hiked here when he received a post card from his mother saying she was in & “Wash- ington hospital.” District Fireman Harvey S. Pearnow befriended the boy. and for two days helped him search local hospitals in vain. Pranklin had not seen his mother for as long as he could remember; not since his parents separated. The police aided in Pranklin's search, They believed the woman must be in some institution under another name and late yesterday the She had —Star Staff Photo. Woman's Bureau located Franklin's mother. Last November she had been com- | mitted to Gallinger Hospital for men- | tal observation under the name of Betty Lou Morgan, 31 years old. In January she was transferred to St. | Elizabeth’s. Franklin went to see his mother at the hospital last night. The two recognized each other at once, em- braced and enjoyed a long talk to- gether. ‘The boy spent last night at the Receiving Home for Children. Dis- trict authorities will arrange for his safe return, possibly today, but not until Pranklin goes to the hospital again to tell his mother good-by. Kelley Felly 'HIS surname, generally consid- | ered of Irish origin, dates back ' to the ancient days of Britain, prior | to the Norman Conquest, when the family of “Kelleigh” was seated in | the parish of that name in Devon- shire. This ancient parish may have | taken its name from the family or | vice versa. The manor of Kelleigh, near Tavistock, Devonshire, was the ancestral home of the family from the time of Henry IL | It is thought that the name Kel- leigh was derived from the Gaelic | word “kill.” meaning church. In Scotland the spelling of the name | was Kellie, A district in Fife was called Kellieshire. In Ireland the name was spelled Kelly and O'Kelly. The forms Kelley and O'Kelley are also found in Ireland. The relation- ship existing between Irish Kellys and English Kelleys is borne out in the similarity of the coat armor borne by both families. The Irish antiquarians | claim that the family pedigree can be traced back 65 generations to one | Milesuis of Spain. The coat of arms here displayed was borne to America by Thomas Kelly, or Kelley, who sailed up the Delaware River with his family in 1664, having left Ireland to escape religious persecution. Descendants of this pioneer are now living in New Jersey. Pennsylvania, the District of || Columbia and many other sections of the United States. (Covrright, _§ signing from the Roper Business Ad- visory Council. Three other business leaders have quit. Officials deny this indicates a break-up of the council set up to advise the administration. Member of Federal Hom the D. C. Buildin 02000 0 0 0 20000 2 ) ) 0 o S @I B R ) ne Loan Bank System and g and Loan League. ARPRPPRTRAREITERERRIRNTRRR MODERN FINISHED A COMPLETELY FIN- ISHED Laundry Service that plea: ical—only 10c per Ib. for ALL Flat Work—wearing apparel, 30c lb.—minimum charge $1.00. e Your fine clothes Men’s Suits Washed or Dry Cleaned Summer will keep that beautiful new look if they are cleaned in the careful, painstaking way that is characteristic of our clean- Family Service the most erit- t TRY it! ing workmanship. You'll be delighted with the fresh crispness of your ments, clean, new feel of the fab- rics, when we return them gar- the thoroughly o you. And you'll be amazed how much longer your clothes last!

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