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PRESIDENT GREETS CUBAN DELEGATES Attributes Improved Eco- nomic Conditions on Island to New Trade Pact. By the Associated Press. A group of prominent Cubans had President Roosevelt’s word for it to- day that improved economic conditions | In the island republic are largely the | result of Cuba’s new recriprocal trade | pact with the United States. The President yesterday told a dele- gation representing the Social Eco- nomic Union of Cuba that mutial | benefits derived by both nations from the trade agreement were testimony to the wisdom of the “good neighbor” | policy | Secretary Hull told the delegation | at the State Department Cuban-Amer- lcan relations provided an object les- son in proof that “security” and “peace” were the world's great needs | for recapturing prosperity. Gratified by Visit. Speaking extemporaneously to Dr. Guillermo Patterson, the Cuban Am- bassador; Jose Casanova. president of the union, and others of the delega- | tion, Mr. Roosevelt said: | “I am not only gratified, but very | much touched at your coming here. | It is a splendid thing for you to do and it proves that something we always wanted has worked out. “One has an ideal and wants to put it into effect. We tried to establish | the principle that two nations, side by side. ought to be good neighbors. The next thing we did was to try to work | out some practical demonstration of | the value of the policy of the good | neighbor. | Cites Economic Revival. ‘ “People said a trade agreement | would not accomplish anything; that | a trade agreement would not work. But wé put it through, and the proof | of the pudding is in the eating | “What pleases me particularly is | that the economic revival in Cuba has come so quickly. even more quickly | than we hoped. From all I hear, im- provement in Cuba is not merely at the top, but extends down—wages are better, and you have more *purchas- ing power.” The President added that he knew Cuba “in the old days, 20 years ago,” | and that some day he was going back for a visit to Havana and the interior. Secretary Hull took improved Cu- | ban-American relations as a thesis on how similar relations would have a beneficial effect all over the world. MAN WED IN HANDCUFFS WITH POLICE WITNESSES | Bride Weeps in Court as Mate Faces Charge of Aiding Alien Racket. By the Associated Press NEW YORK. August 13.—Lino Pez- | zaia’s bride. to whom he was married | in handcuffs, sat weeping in the court | room yesterday when Pezzaia was held in $10.000 bail on an indictment charging him with complicity in the alien citizen racket. | Pezzaia was arrested when he ap- peared at the county clerk’s office and | applied for a marriage license. With ! him was his bride-to-be, known only | to Federal agents as Ruth. Witnesses of the wedding ceremony were the arresting officers, who in- | f#isted on handcuffing the pair before the marriage could proceed. $1.64 1S IOWAN'S S;'IARE i OF RICH UNCLE'S ESTATE Tom Neudick, Establishing Claim, Finds 400 Relatives He Never Heard of Before. By the Associated Press. RED OAK, Iowa, August 13.—Tom Neudick claims to be one man whose “rich uncle in Switzerland” actually died and left him an inheritance. In establishing his claim to the estate, Neudick also discovered he had 400 | relatives he never heard of before. All shared alike in the estate. Neu- dick received an international money order yesterday for his share. It was $1.64. in i Jewish Sympathizer Held. MUNICH, August 13 (#).—Dr. Geb- hard Mosl, German-Canadian, was airested today by the secret police. It was charged that Dr. Mosl, who ! is a Gentile, had, in the course of a ! conversation, expressed sympathy for the Jews. Mosl, who is employed in | the London branch of the Ontario| Net Co., was naturalized in Ottawa in | 1933. He came here on a visit to his father. — SPECIAL NOTICES. SOME ONE TO HAUL PART LOAD FUR- | niture to Savannah Ga. #50 or less. Address Box OWNER-DRIVEN TRUCK, | thing. anywhere, any time; short or_ lon distance, $1 hour. 4' Phone Columbia SPECIAL PRICES QUOTED ON PAINTING and paperhanging now! Gentile, reliable | Torkmen: references furnished in all sec tions of ¢ity. _Phone Atlantic #153.__15° | 1 ":,V‘l;LL b:.fl-‘;nm:‘: RbESPONSIBLE FOR / ANY cor SrenuCoAested by gy one other thap | ON AUG. 14. AT WILL ‘SELL for_storage and_repairs. Ford (ruck. en- gine No. A4560747 Gus Eichberg, 'Auc- u‘?nefir DEMAS AUTO REPAIRS, Tear 'ORTANT NO' wTRE SOUTHEASTERN z‘?fluu co. Bl anot, dlscontinue “express _service “in | Baltimore, Md. when Washington. Baiti- more & Annapolis Rai¥oad Cescey apeias tion August 20, Seme schedules between Baitimore and Washington and all points South Con- tinued operation on Mn"llnd & Pennsyl- | {lr‘ln Railroad and Chesapeake Steamship | ines Same service—same office location—re- | euced Tales nformation. telephone. EASTERN EXPRESS CDMPANY, more_or_Washington. I o R S rac » PR e By g Eo TAM NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DEBTS | contracted by any other than mysell. VIN J. MARSH. 736 8th st. n.w. 13* DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART loads to and {rom Balto, Phila_and New Sles. “Debecdants Servie’ Since LABES citles. 3 THE DAVIDSON FER & STORAGE CO.___Phone Decatur_2500. , Get Our Free Estimates on_reproductions of maps. sales litera- ture. drawings. books statements. eic. Planograph process is quicker and more Teasonable. Let' us estimate. Columbia Planograph Co. _50_L _St. NE__ Metropolitan 4861 CHAMBERS B one of ¢ is one of the llr:flt world, undertakers in th 8ix chapels. twelve parlors, seventeen e: Bar- | Complete fune:als as low as 975 nmny-nn ssista; 1400 Chapin | T Columbia 0452 817 1ith AL Atiantic_6700 arts lrumuu on lumbl‘nt and humuk Terms | CABL R INC.. 4533 Rocl Creek_Church Bys Adams BEAUTIF'U'L TILE BATHS Sanltary—ArNSuc—LlsunE = ELLETT 1106 9th St National 8731 ’ | versations Whitehead Credited With First Flight Steam Monoplane Piled Into Brick Building in 1899—Fire- man on Epochal Trip Still Alive. Plane in which Gustave Whitehead made a circle over Long Island Sound on Jnnunry 17, 1902. Whitehead is shown holding the two-cylinder steam engine built by himself out of sheet and bar steel. BY DON BLOCH. N THE Spring of 1899, while Or- ville and Wilbur Wright were cau- tiously testing glider medels in their home at Dayton, Ohio, still more than four years away from the generally conceded “first flight” at Kitty Hawk, one Gustave Whitenead and his fireman, Louis Darvarich, found themselves in a steam-driven monoplane 25 feet above the ground, headed straight for a three-story brick | house in Oakland, a suburb of Pitts- burgh, Pa. This possible granddaddy of all man-carrying airships was demol- ished. But Whitehead, who lived until 1927 and built at least a hundred more flying machines, was unhurt. - Dar- varich was scalded severely by steam and lay in a hospital for weeks. He still lives, however, to tell the story THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, land, desired no publicity, spoke with | a thick accent, and again, like many lnvenwrs was impecunious and a poor | business man. It was perhaps the combination of these factors which have so long kept from him the ac- claim which Miss Randolph believes is | undoubtedly due him. Before 1901, according to sworn tes- timony of those who knew Whitehead, he had built 56 airplanes. When it is learned that not only did he design and build nls own planes, but like- wise their motors, this statement be- comes all the more startling. Pioneer in plane construction and power units for them: add the facts, also, that he experimented with motors fuel with gunpowder, ammonia, acetelyne, kerosene and finally gasoline; always used wheels under his planes for | take-off facility (both Langley and at his home, Bridgeport, Conn.—the | the Wrights used the pylon and der- first motor-driven airship casualty in | history. Through Miss Stella Randolph of Washington, librarian at the Gallinger | Municipal Hospital, comes the story of ‘Whitehead, pioneer American aviator. Her researches- and collected affida- vits may give the true answer to the much-mooted question, “Did White- head precede Wright in the world's | first power flight?” Gave Up Mariner's Life. rick arrangement and had to be cata- | pulted into the air); made one of his most famous flights, in 1901, in a plane built like a boat that landed in water on its descent; was one of the very first to make use of aluminum and silk to lighten his plane, and constructed a 60-propellored heli- copter. Experimented With Boilers. | ‘The story of that early flight near Pittsburgh is as strange as fiction. ‘Whitehead was a German who as a Working late at night Whitehead and boy had run away from home and Darvarich experimented with boilers gone to sea. He was eventually ship- | Wrecked off the coast of South Amer- Pittsburgh. for their motor. They blew up a dozen while neighbors stood about watching ica, gave up the sea and drifted to their window-panes cave in. | Finally they pieced one together Like many other inventors, he was that suited them, a two-cylinder af- a plain mechanic—not a technical | fair, with a 4-inch bore and a 10-inch | man. He was a stranger in a strange | stroke. The design of this early planc showed strong influence of White- head’s training as a sailor. Its wings were supported and held in place by ‘llnes and shrouds to bowsprit and mast. They could also be folded backward. Firemen from an engine company | nearby gave their assistance, while Darvarich fed charcoal to the flame which heated water in the homely | kitchen boiler they were using. The firebox had a sheet of asbestos under it. with a piece of sheet-iron over it aud its walls were made of clay. “No one expected the machine to go far on that eventful day,” runs an | account of the flight. “A distance or‘ a few rods would have been sufficient- | ly convincing in those days. But, as | they went onward and upward, steered by Gustave Whitehead at the controls | in the front, they exceeded the dis- tance originally planned and found | themselves headed for a three-story brick house. Afraid to attempt to swerve, there was but one hope, namely that they | might clear the top of the house. But they failed. Down fell the ma- chine, all but demolished, while the agonized fireman in the back writhed | with the pain of a scalded leg. The | glasses for indicating water level in the boilers had broken, permitting steam to envelop the man.” Not much of a flight, indeed. They had never been over 25 feet in the air and flew a distance of only abflut half a mile. But the fact remains, | they had traveled through the air| in a man-made, motor-driven, heavier-than-air craft, and the rec- ords indicate they were the first men in (he world who did it. ‘ | | | Etluopla (Continued From First Page.) Thursday of the Army planc at Cairo, Egypt, when seven men were killed, including Luigi Razza, minister of public works. The fact that the peneral and his aides spent two hours at the scene of | the accident gave rise to" the belief that the machine had been wrecked 50 completely it would be impossible to determine the cause of its deslruc- tion. Military man-power of 1,000,000 b\ | October was seen as Italy's goal with | the issuance of orders for mobilization | on August 24 of 500,000 troops for war games in the north. Eden Wants Economic Basis. LONDON, August 13 (#).—An au- thority said today that Anthony Eden, minister for League of Nations af- fairs, will urge an economic rather than political basis for the solution of the Italo-Ethiopian dispute this week Favorite Son WITH EMPEROR SELASSIE AT TROOP REVIEW. [ It was stated he was prepared to| offer this suggestion Thursday when the tri-power conference on the Eihi- opian question opens in Paris among representatives of Great Britain, | Italy and France. The British government is repre- sented as hopeful that Premier Pierre Laval of France would make some definite proposal along economic lines | which would be acceptable to Premier | Mussolini of Italy. An economic settlement, it was said, | might involve various concessions in | Ethiopia to Italy. These might be | railway, mineral and trade rights and perhaps a definite voice in Ethiopia’s future import and export trade. Laval May Be Mediator. PARIS, August 13 (#).—Premier Pierre Laval's skill as an adjuster | gave hope today that he may pull out of the three-power conference begin- | ning Thursday a solution to avert war between Italy and Ethiopia. France is seeking nothing for itself, hence the premier enters the con- with Italy and Great Britain with an open mind, official quarters said. He is ready to make suggestions, but will do so only when possibilities ! for compromise appear as the discus- sions develop. A great deal of France's optimism for a quick adjustment fled today | when it became certain that Emperor | - | the Republican nomination. Haile Selassie’s offer to cede terr: tory was a false report. Ethiopian Women Help. ADDIS ABABA, August 13 (#).— The loyal response of Emperor Haile Selassie’s subjects to the call to the colors found 10,000 native women suc- ceeding today to the jobs abandoned by the men. They became servants in the homes of native and foreign ruldenu as lhelr husbands and fathers prepared to march with the volunteer armies to- | ward the borders. Most of the troops | will go to the Somaliland frontier. The emperor, still hopeful of a peace- ful settlement of the dispute with Italy, nevertheless reiterated yesterday to his crown coundll the readiness of his fol- | | lowers to &pend their last drop of blood | in defense of their land. \Ethiopian Dispute First oy Program At League Session By the Associated Press. LONDON, August 13.—The Ethi- opian dispute has been given first place on the agenda of the Council of the League of Nations at its Septem- ber 4 meeting, it was learned today from an authoritative source. This advance agreement was made by powers during the recent sessions at Geneva. Reports circulated here of a disagreement of powers over the place of the Ethiopian matter on the agenda were flatly denied in authori- tative quarters. It was said there is no disagree- ment and that the Council must éon- { sider the Italo-Ethiopian problem first. L] MAKONNEN, Favorite son of the Emperor Hzile Selassie of Ethiopia, is shown after he had reviewed troops with his royal father at Addis Ababa. —A. P. Photo. Long (Continued Prom First Page.) his support to the liberal Republican candidate. ‘Though Long’s plans excited Repub- | licans to high hopes for 1936, they | were not counting chickens ahead of time. They realized it was possible for him to change his mind. And some wondered whether his strategy Meanwhile, other developments in | the political field engaged the Capi- tal's interest. One was a statement by Senator Capper, Republican, of Kansas that any of a number of Re- publican presidential possibilities could defeat Mr. Roosevelt next year. Another was word coming from ad- ministration circles indicating that | Mr. Roosevelt may have something to say on constitutional questions and other matters in his forthcoming trip | to the West coast. 3 As for Senator Long, politicians have long been speculating about what he would do next year. He has been the administration’s fiercest critic in the Senate since shortly after the | inauguration of President Roosevelt, after working hard for Mr. Roose- velt'’s nomination at the convention. Patronage Felt Behind Break, Administration leaders have said patronage was back of the break. Long’s friends have replied that the Louisiana Senator broke with the President over economy legislation and patronage was denied him be- cause he refused to “go along.” There have been reports that the President was concerned over the damage that Long might do in the 1936 campaign as an independent candidate. Critics of the administra- tion have contended that recent moves of the President—particularly his ux program—were designed to break up | Long's strength. Some Democrats feel that Long's candidacy might not prove dangerous. They contend that if Senator La Follette, Progressive, of Wisconsin; Senator Norris, Republican, of Nebras- ka, and other liberals support the President in 1936, Long would not draw many of the liberal votes away from the Democratic cause. ‘While La Follette and Norris have » not disclosed their political plans for | | next year, they have been on the whole supporting the New Deal pro- | gram in Congress. Capper Enthused. By the Associated Press. | cabinet while his men are branded D. C. NAZIS REORGANIZE STORM TROOPERS Fate of Steel Helmet Vet- erans in Doubt as Hitler Confers With Leader. BERLIN, August 13.—The Storm Troopers, after a year’s eclipse, are being reorganized as a quality unit of Nazi defense against the “state enemies” of Semitism and “political Catholism.” ‘The fate of the Reich’s Steel Helmet veterans meanwhile became increas- ingly uncertain. ‘That something is going to happen to the Steel Helmets, whose leader is Franz Seldte, minister of labor, was indicated by publication of the bare announcement that Reichsfuehrer Hit- ler had discussed their future with Seldte, ‘The discussion was regarded as highly significant in that the helmet- ers are now held “reactionaries” and “‘questionable ,characters.” As such they are forbidden to join the Storm- ers, or Sturm Abteilung, new standard.| bearers of the Hitler policies. Idealist Fighters Retained. Victor Lutze is leading the troopers who are rebuilding the organization by eliminating all but “idealist fighters” for Der Fuehrer. Lutze said the revamping has been careful, with only the pick -of the | idealists accepted for the Nazi defense force. .They are given thorough in- | struction in their weekly meetings and | ordered to carry on the campaign | ngllmt Jews and “political Cathol- | icism.” A reliable informant said the troop< ers are urged to remember that “it| isn't enough to be anti-Semitic, but | you must learn to hate Jews.” The Helmeters are privately eriti- cizing Seldte for remaining in Hitler's state enemies, their organizations forcibly disbanded and in many cases their property confiscated. | An increase of anti-Jewish placards | is noticeable here, especially on pri- | vate automobiles. They are inscribed with such comments as “Those who are Jews must be pmoned and "Jgu are our misfortune.” Priest Taken Into Custody. At Nordhausen a Catholic priest was taken into “protective custody” when he refused to officiate at the burial of a Storm Trooper. Continuing the fight against rising food prices, the Governor of Baden denounced food hoarders. He declared rumors of food shortages were false, and prophecies of potato crop failure | were baseless. He threatened to prose- cute those who circulated such rumors. | In Saxony and Anhalt people were | warned against speculating in hogs. | Aligemeine Zeitung carried a | column-long attack on Mayor Fiorello | TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1935. Circus Thriller WILL WRESTLE LION IN COMING SHOW. | BERT NELSON, Wild animal trainer, who hails frem Hollywood and doubled for Johnny Weismuller in the “Tarzan” movies, “where dangerous wild animals were used, will be among the feature performers of the Hagenbeck-Wallace and Forepaugh- Sells Bros.' combined circus hLere Thursday and Friday. Nelson will present a mixed group of jungle- bred lions and tigers and will wrestle his favorite homu Norma. | AMOEN STRIKERS SPURN PEACE PLAN Accuse Miss Perkins of Be- ing Unfair and Refuse Vote on Formula. Senator Capper, who has been eyeing H- La Guardia of New York, whom it | By the Associated Press the Washington scene since 13892, when termed a “Jew, not an Italian” It| CAMDEN, N. J, August 13— {been applied to the District. {also argued that since the District | has no other Legislature than Con- | gress, D. G. IS INCLUDED INWALSH MEASURE Chairman King Vigorously | Opposes Clause as Bill Passes Senate. ‘The Walsh bill to require N. R. A. hour and wage regulations for all concerns doing business with the Fed- eral Government was made to apply also to District government contracts when the Senate passed the measure | late yesterday, despite a vigorous plea by Chairman King of the Senate Dis- | trict Committee against imposing this Federal statute on purely local ex-| penditures. King Makes Stand. Senator King pointed out that in| other cities the Walsh bill will appiy only to projects financed by Govern- | ment loans and said he would not ob- | Ject to similar application here when | the District borrows from the United States. King’s fight was against extendinx\ the Walsh bill to cover the routine | annual expenditures of the District, nearly all of which comes from local taxation. He argued that the Fed- eral lump sum payment toward an- | nual District bills is neither a loan nor & grant, but is in lieu of taxes on the large property holdings of the ‘Government. Walsh replied that regulating Federal other laws contracts have He if Congress thinks the bill is a good one, it should apply to the District. The Senate agreed with Walsh without a record vote. House Action Required. The measure still requires action by the House. It passed the Senate after Senator Clark, Democrat, of Missouri failed by 61 to 23 iq sub- stitute the Black 30-hour week bill for the Walsh plan. Clark succeeded, however, in having a .two-year time limit placed on the measure. While the Walsh bill seeks to sel up N. R. A. standards of hours and | pay within the scope of Government dealings with industry, the President was given wide authority to modify the requirements or to exempt indus- try entirely, OoLD MACHINE SHOP BOUGHT BY HENRY FORD Now Seeking Tram Locomotive | of Type Made by Plant | in New Hampshire. By the Associated Press. NEWFIELDS, N. H., August 13— Henry Ford has purchased an old machine shop here which in the re- construction era manufactured tram- he was a reporter for the Topeka acCused him of getting his nomina- | Strike leaders, accusing Secretary of "8Y locomotives used to haul timber Capital, analyzed the position of the Republican party today and found it good. tion by force. The paper quoted the New York | unfair” | mayor as boasting of his death-deal- | not to submit the Government formula | | Labor Perkins of being “absolutely to their union, decided today “Practically any of the men ml'n-‘ ing to Germans when he was a mem- | for settling the strike at the New tionec as Republican presidential can- | didates for 1936 can defeat Mr. Roose- velt,” he said. In this he expressed agreement with another noted Kansan, Charles Curtis, former Vice President, who is on record that “at least a dozen" Re- publicans can whip Mr. Roosevelt. Capper flashed a smile as he spoke. “The trend is now our way. The people are turning toward the Repub- lican party. They are tired of watch- ing the administration spend money and get little or nothing for it.” In reply to a query he contended: | “Yes, Senator Borah would make a | good President. Any of those men- | tioned prominently—Senator Vanden- berg, Michigan; Col. Frank Knox, Chicago publisher—would make a good | President. So would Gov. Landon of my State, | “I am very much interested in him.” “What obatu Herbert Hoover?” he| | was asked. “I don't want to discuss that aspect | | of the situation,” he responded. Doubts Third Party. | “No,” he replied to another ques- tion, “I don’t think a third party will figure in next year's campaign.” In this analysis he differed from an- | | other Westerner, Senator Nye, Repub- | | lican, of North Dakota, who has pre- | dicted the rise of a third party as sJ | vehicle for liberals with an eye to the | future. | “It's going to be an interesting | | campaign, as interesting as any I ever | saw,” Capper concluded. His remarks were one of the latest | developments in a Capital growing in- | creasingly conscious of the approach of 1936. Another was a prediction in administration circles that President Roosevelt will discuss his views on possible constitutional changes and | other subjects in a trip he will make | | to the West Coast after Congress ad- Jjourns. This followed Herbert Hoover's | challenge to the administration to de- \cllre specifically the course it would | like to take in regard to the Constitu- { tion. IMULE SHORTAGE SEEN IF ITALY BUYS IN U. S. | B the Assocated Press. EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill,, August 13.— Purchase of 2,000 American pack mules by Italy, presumably in event of a war with Ethiopia, would create a serious shortage of the animals | for domestic use, dealers here said today. | Inquiry on the price of that number | of animals was made by Italian deal- | ers last week at this market, inter- national center of the horse and mule trade. J. J. Searcy, president of the St. Louis Horse and Mule Commission | Co., said there was a scarcity of the type of mule wanted—a short, sturdy, heavy-boned jack able to carry heavy burdens over precarious mountain trails. “We could sell all those now avail- le in the domestic market,” he said, “particularly in the South, where the smaller animals are used.” | | Before Selling | Investigate the Prices Pay for OLD GOLD AND SILVER Jewelry of every deseription, bridge- work. silver No matter how old or dilapidated any of foregoing ar- Ucles mieht, be. you will be greatly at the cash prices paid by IIl (Licensed by U. S. Gevt.) SHAH & SHAH 921 F St. NW. Pheme NA. 5543—We Will Call ber of the American Fying Corps dur- ing the World War. “I extensivelv dropped bombs on the Huns' heads,” the paper quoted La Guardi: am proud I killed so mnn). CLIPPER DEPARTS FOR MIDWAY BASE Ship Leaves Homolulu at 6:08 AM.—Will Continue to Wake Island. By the Associated Press. HONOLULU, August 13—The Pan- | American clipper plane hopped for | Midway Island, 1,323 miles westward, at 6:08 a.m. today (11:38 a.m. Eastern standard time). Eight men and 3,000 pounds of cargo were aboard. Although this flight will merely du- | plicate its previous accomplishment, | the huge flying boat will add another record to its long list of “firsts” when {it continues 1,191 miles to Wake | Island, where no airplane has landed before. Lieut. E. W. Stephens, naval aerolo- gist, predicted squally weather, with a tail wind half the way and cross winds during the rest of the flight, broken | clouds and a ceiling of at least 4,000 feet. Preparations for the flight were made in the same routine manner lhat has characterized all the clip- | per's activities in blazing a trail for trans-Pacific mail and passenger planes soon expected to be in regular service between California and the Orient, Sullivan said the ship probably will | remain at Midway three or four days. At Wake flights to calibrate the newly installed island radio direction- finder are in prospect. CUBA CELEBRATES HAVANA, August 13 (#).—Cuba yesterday celebrated the second anni- versary of the overthrow of President Gerado Machado. It was a legal holi- day throughout the republic and ail commerce was closed. Machado was forced to resign the presidency and flee the isiand on Au- gust 12, 1933, after revolutionary ac- tivities against his regime for several years. — Pioneer Surgeon Dies. NEW ORLEANS, August 13 (#).— Dr. Ernest Sidney Lewis, 95, a pioneer in gynecological surgery, died yester- day at Touro Infirmary after an ill-| ness of several weeks. He was an honorary member of the | American Medical Association and the Southern Surgical Association and a founder of the International As- sociation of Obstetrics and Gyne- cology. STEAMSHIPS, York Shipbuilding Corp. to the men | tonight. The charge against Miss Perkins | Cole, union Negotiating Committee secretary, presented in Chancery | Court in connegtion with the cor- poration’s plea for an injunction against the picketing. Cole reiterated the complaint of other strike leaders that the settle- ment plan “is a company plan and not actually the original plan tenta-| tively accepted by the union.” Green Goes to Capital. John Green, union head, who went to Washington today with other union | officers, said the Government's five- | point proposal would not be placed before the membership tonight as originally planned. He said the plan already had been‘ | Tejected because it did not provide | for recognition of the union. | Green expected to confer with Gov- | ernment officials and hoped to report te the union membership at a meet- irg tonight. | The hearing on the injunction peti- | tion ended when Vice Chancellor Francis B. Davis ruled that further testimony was unnecessary and al- lowed both sides to file additional | affidavits and arguments. Accepted by Company. ‘The arbitration plan has been ac- cepted by the company. The plan, reputedly drawn by lhe Navy and Labor Departments, pro- | vides for return of the men to work under the 1934 wage scales. i Union leaders declared the exist- ence of the union is at stake. They rejected the arbitration proposal with | the charge that it was dictated by the corporation, which, they said, re- fused to recognize the union as rep- resenting the 3,700 strikers. ‘The Navy Department is seeking to -end the delay in construction of four destroyers and three cruisers, to cost $50,000,000. NEW STRIKE OF GO[D ORE ASSAYS $29,334 TO TON By the Associated Press. OURAY, Colo, August 13.—Jack Delcoe, vice president and general manager of the Revenue Develop- ment Co., said last night a strike of gold and, silver ore assaying $29.- 334 to the ton has been made in the old Revenue mine. Delcoe said extensive veins had been mapped out. The community, while elated over the announcement, remained calm. Should the ore continue to produce silver and gold assaying the present figure, mining men said, the strike would be among the greatest in the State. STEAMSHIPS. BERMUDA VIA FURNESS $50 up, round Hamiiton. in logging camps in Georgia and other Southern States. The shop will | be set up at the Ford village at Dear- born, Mich. The shop contained many pieces of machinery, most of them now obso- llete. One was a chain lathe of the and I | was made in an affidavit by David S. S3Me type on which the "’”"“"- turer learned his trade. Ford, it was reported, is seeking -‘ tramway locomotive made by the plant here, known as the fleld shop. ! Many of the original products were ‘sold and operated in the vicinity of Brunswick and Savannal ALWAYS *3 A-37 HOOK WILL DEFY: CRITICS OF RELIEF Representative Says He Is Not Responsible for Family Action. By the Associated Press. IRONWOOD, Mich., August 13— resentative Frank E. Hook, Demo- crat, of Michigan declared yesterday that if any one tries to use the fact that his father and three of his broth- ers have received Government relief “as a club over my head, I'll just fight all the harder.” Representative Hook said his rela- tives had been obliged to apply for relief before he ran for Congress and declared “I'm not a bit ashamed of it.” Disclaims Responsibility. “I had nothing to do with getting them on relief and I have nothing to do with keeping them on,” he said. “I wish I could support all my relatives.” Relief rolls here show that Michael Hook, father of the Representative, and Herman Hook, a brother, are re- ceiving work relief and that George and Lawrence Hook were employed | through May on work relief projects. Representative Hook said he believed they had been transferred to the Works Progress Administration rolls The Representative, whose criticism of the State Rellef Administration last Winter inspired an investigation, said he had been here since Wednes- day trying to expedite W. P. A, activ- ities in this district. Assertion Confirmed. In Lansing, Dr. William Haber State emergency relief administrator confirmed Hook's assertion that no inquiry was planned into relief. ex- tended the Hook family. “There was nothing irregular about t,” Dr. Haber said. “Representative Hook is not responsible for the wel- fare of every one related to him.” POPE SEES C. U-ENVOY Father Albert Murphy, on Way to Brussels, Receives Audience CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, Au- gust 13 (#).—Pope Pius today re- ceived Rev. Father Albert Murphy Cleveland, Ohio, who is on his wa: to represent the National Catholic University of Washington, D. C.. a! the International Catholic Comference on Social Science at Brussels. 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