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CATHOLIC WELFARE STUDY OPTINISTIC Luther C. Steward - He Makes History Croon D. C. BANK DEPOSIT ' _THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER 29, 1935—PART O GAINS LEAD U. 3. Collects. and Sings FORMER ENEMIES BACK LONG TICKET CLUBS FEDERATION WILL MEET THURSDAY Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md., September 28.— ‘The Fall meeting of the Montgomery County Federation of Women's Clubs will be held in Rockville Presbyterian s B3 plans for the year's work of the fed- sy Supper to Be Planned. At the afternoon session representa- | COLESVILLE, September 28 (Spe- tives of clubs affiliated with the feder- | cial) —The Colesville Ladies’ Aid and ation will be given an opportunity to | Missionary Society will meet Tuesday discuss ways and means of carrying | at the home of Rev. and Mrs. K. D. out projects formulated by chairmen | Swecker at 2 p.m., at which time of federation committees. final plans will be laid for the oyster Mrs. B. Peyton Whalen of Alta|supper to be held in the W. C. T. U. Report of Survey Indicates Nation Is “On Way Qut of Depression.” By the Associated Press. PEORIA, Ill, September 28.—The men who direct the welfare work of | the Catholic Church today reported | survey showed a return of the “spirit | of optimism” and indications that the Nation was “on the way out of the depression.” | Diocesan directors embodied their findings in a statement which will be presented to the four-day meeting of the National Conference of Catholic | Charities opening here tomorrow. Some 4,000 dclegates will consider | them as they map plans for one of | the largest non-Government welfare agencies in America. | Government undertakings were com- mended. The need for remedying de- | fects in the economic system, placing some restraint on industry and estab- lishing permanent public works and relief programs was cited. But the necessity for financing future aid to the needy from current tax revenues was stressed. | Urge Degree of Restraint. | “The depression revealed,” the re- port said, “that our industrial struc- ture has outgrown our industrial phi- losophy and legal and Government machinery. We will have a demand for a return to the social and economic thought of 50 years ago, characterized as ‘rugged individualism’ This might | be defined as ‘an assumed right of the indivdiual to pursue his aims unre- strained by an adequate sense of so- cial responsibility’ We will have a demand for the elimination of many forms of assistance for workers and the middle class. There will be a cry to Government from business, ‘Let us alone’ This means that business | &hould be free t do as it pleases about investment, wages and conditions of employment.” “Such policy might bring a tempo- rary boom in some industries” it added, “but with it the danger of a “more devastating depression.” | “If the Government does qot estab- | lish some degree of restraint over! these industries,” the directors found, “then the whole Nation will continue to be economically and socially un- stable.” Commend Administration. ‘The administration was commended for its efforts to bring security to mar- ginal farmers and wage earners and for setting up the C. C. C. and the National Youth Administration. Private charity was urged to see that the Federal security program wins co-operation from States and communities. The Government cannot abandon direct relief, the directors held, until | care of the unemployables is assured. But they recognized private charities as indispensable. “The tendency of our time is toward adoption of definite rules of conduct in industry and business relation- ships,” the report set forth. “Such rules are part of the age-old teach- ings of the church. They represent e distinct trend away from many of the policies of nineteenth century in- dividualism. They are the defense of the weak against the predatory.” ‘ 22 ARE SENTENCED | FOR RELIEF FRAUD. Kentucky Men First Convicted Under F. E. R. A. Get TwolYear Terms. By the Associated Press. LEXINGTON, Ky., September 28.— Twenty-two Eastern Kentucky moun= taineers, including the first convicted of relief frauds since the F. E. R. A. was set up, were under two-year Fed- eral penitentiary sentences tonight, with appeals planned for most of them. Federal Judge H. Church Ford allowed $5,000 bonds for those who will appeal. The sentences of six were probated and suspended. Dr. W. L. Stumbo, county judge of Floyd County, and Mayor Arthur C. Carter of Prestonsburg, former county emergency relief committee- men; Otto Fannin and George Woods and Cirtis W. May, chain grocery store manager, among those sentenced today. ‘When the convictions were returned & Federal Relief Administration spokesman in Washington said the Kentucky ivestigation was the fore- runner of others. The Government charged the de- fendants with using the mails in a scheme to defraud the Government | and relief clients of part of $381,000 sent into Floyd County in 1932 and 1933 to relieve suffering. Prestonburg | were | SLAYER GIVEN LIFE i Ballads of Past. . Luther C. Steward, who has one songs, which he has accumulated in t of the old-timers that he used to s bought, sold and traded for ‘em. He's ransacked the files of music stores from coast to coast for 'em, dug for 'em in dustbins, dickered with secondhand men and old bookshop proprietors. He is Luther Corwin Steward, presi- dent of the National Federation of Federal Employes. The objects of Mr. Steward's frantic search have been first-edition copies. as far as they are procurable, of early American sheet music. Principally, he has confined his searches to the tear-jerkers and' sentimental ballads of the “barber- shop quartet” era; to wit, the so- E'S got a million of 'em—well, anyway, a thousand! He's scoured attics and cellars, storerooms and junkshops, | called mauve decade of the 1890's. Was Contest Judge. Steward returned this week from' New York, where he had served as one of three judges in Manhattan's widely ! publicized American Ballad Contest. | In a State-wide tournament to deter- mine who should be the final winners | of the quartet of silver shaving-mug prizes offered, four young men from Brooklyn swung into “There’s a Tav- ern in the Town” in the Central Park | bandstand and walked off with the mugs and title of America’s Best Bar- | bershop Quartat. As co-judges, Stew- | ard had ex-Gov. Al Smith and Dr. Sigmund Spaeth, radio’s famous “Tune Detective.” Prompted by a question, Steward modestly admitted that he thought probably he had been asked to serve because, “I suppose I qualify as a nut on that stuff.” He does, rather. It all began back in 1928. Or per- haps in 1891. In 1891 there was an organization in Washington known as the Mor- ton Cadets. Its history has been chronicled elswhere many times. Briefly, it became the crack military drill company of the United States, having grown from a seed planted | by a group of boys who attended pub- | Uc schools in the Dennison Building, | S street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets. These boys formed themselves into a company, armed with wooden guns, with W. Ivanhoe | Jochum as captain. A bit wilted, the flowering company was revived by C. Fred Cook, now librarian for The Eve- ning Star, who became its captain in | the Spring of 1892. | Songs Cement Friendship. There were 48 boys in the Morton | Cadets. They were friends. Before | they had even pitched a tent on some of the many trips they used to take, they used to round up a pianoc—and sing. Their singing was a cement more strong than they knew. It held them together for 37 years. | In 1928 Steward and others of the original company, who found them- selves after all those years still in ‘Washington, decided they would try a reunion. Forty of the original 48 were pres- ent at a memorable banquet on Jan- uary 7 of that year. “Juicy” Steward hadn't forgotten the Cadets had been great singers. He undertook to gather a few of the songs. And that’s when he began his hobby —when he discovered actually how scarce were copies of the songs that had been four-part-harmonied by, the Cadets. | The festival of the old-timers was | 14,000 Coal Miners in Wales to |8 great success. Far into the night | the figurative “rafters” of the presi-| P A omorow, | dential suite of the Willard Hotel rang LONDON, Septembe: 28 (#)—A |with harmonies dragged out of for- strike of 14,000 coal miners in the | gotten hiding places after four decades Ocean & Cory Collieries of South |of dust and obscurity. ‘Wales was called today for Monday {o; They led off with that reminiscent give impetus to the union’s drive to tidbit, “You've Been a Good Old bring non-unionists into membership. | Wagon, But You've Done Broke James Grffiths, president of the | Down,” then sailed into the first bars Bouth Wales Miners’ Federation, said | of that interrogative tune, “How'd You less than 2 per cent of the men em- | Like to Be the Iceman?” Tears flowed ployed in the mines arz not affiliated | when they chanted the sad refrain, ‘with the union. The colleries will re- | “In the Baggage Car Ahead,” but main idle until they join, he added. Millions Grossed By Mickey Mouse; Seven Years Old $140,000,000 Turned in by Disney Creation, Known Over World. By the Associated Press. HOLLYWOOD, Calif, September 28.—Mickey Mouse celebrated his sev- enth birthday anniversary today. Or maybe it was Walt Disney who was celebrating. The cartoonist first brought Mickey Mouse to animation in “Steamboat Willie” and now the mouse is known around the world—as Mike Muchi in Japan, Michael Maus in Germany and El Raton Miguelito in Central America. Mickey Mouse has grossed almost $140,000,000 in the United States alone through his movies, comic strips, toy ecreations and advertisements, Kay XKamen of the Mickey Mouse Enter- prises said. The mouse is grossing $10,000,000 annually in England, and $2,000,000 “ayearly each in Canada, France, Spain, 3taly and the Scandinavian countries. ceased to fall with “One of His Legs Is Longer Than It Really Ought to Be.” “Bird im a Gilded Cage.” Their voices demanded that “Those | ‘Wedding Bells Shall Not Ring Out,” then sang of “The Warmest Baby in the Bunch,” ending with the doleful story of “The Bird in a Gilded Cage.” They informed the world that “I'm the Man That Wrote Ta Ra Ra Boom Te Aye,” and “The Man That Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo.” An impromptu quartet rendered that ditty of the proud “Mother Was a Lady,” then spiked the sentiment with verses from “Down Went M'Ginty in His Best Suit of Clothes.” 1t brought back “the old days * * *” The days of Bert Williams, Gus Ed- wards, May Irwin, “Billy Johnson, Charles K. Harris, Paul Dresser and the late De Wolf Hopper, who boomed out “Wang” in that other day. What began as a frantic search ended In a systematic campaign to collect all the extant balladry—“folk songs,” if you will—of that decade be- fore the turn of the century. For seven years Steward has been ransacking. The results are bound permanently in fine blue-vellum cov- ers, mementoes of a past tenuous and brittle in memory as many of the covers of the old songs therein. But there they are. Any one may pop into Steward’s office at 10 Inde- pendence avenue southwest and have of the largest collections of old-time he past seven years, lo0ks over some ing. a look at them, hum them over. And Steward will hum along, sing the words. Yes, he knows Lthem all—words and music, to a thousand songs. “They epitomize the thinking of a whole period,” explains - Steward. Hollywood Uses Collection. Hollywood wants the real thing—the words and music, the appearance of the sheet-music, the names of those who made them famous. They send to Steward, and he lets them photostat what they want. Such songs are ephemeral as the leaves of Autumn; they were literally play=d to pieces by the belles and gallants of 40 years ago. ! One remembers the tities, if he is old enough. There are such classics as these in Steward's three fat volumes still accumulating: A Cruel Hiss, or | Mother, Jack, Died Here Today, Good, Be Good, My Father Said, “The Picture That Is Turned Toward the Wall,” “The Girl I Left Behind,” “Belle of the Ball,” “Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home?" “Sweet Rosie O'Grady,” “Sidewalks of New York,” “Moth and the Flam “When You Were Sweet Sixteen,” “Kentucky Babe,” rrah, Go On,” “Little Annie Rooney,” “The Band Played On,” “The Blow Almost Killed Father,” “The Curse of an Aching Heart,” “She May Have Seen Better Days,” “"She's Some- body's Mother,” “Take Back Your Gold,” “The Pardon Came Too Late,” “The Future Mrs. 'Awkins” and—do you remember?—“I Love You in the Same Old Way. A. A. A. DENOUNCED BY CHRISTIANSON Representative Tells Towa Repub- lican Gathering Abundance Should Be Policy. By the Associated Press. DES MOINES, September 28.—Rep- resentative Theodore Christianson, Re- publican, of Minnesota today de- nounced the A. A. A. and proposed as Republican platform planks an agri- cultural program which “rejects the economics of scarcity and substitutes the economics of abundance and bet- | ter balanced buying power.” The former Minnesota Governor ad- dressed 700 Republican party leaders and newspaper editbrs meeting at the Iowa State fair grounds. “If the Republican party has one responsibility more important, more urgent than any other, it is to destroy, once and for all time, the damnable philosophy that it is desirable to cre- ate scarcity,” Christianson said. The party should, he added, “in- sure to the farmer his home market by high tariffs, give him first call upon the foreign market through trade concessions, and protect him from the competition of reclaimed lands until demand catches up with supply.” He censured the administration for “failure to take a single step toward the solution of the farm problem,” and referred to the A. A. A. as only a “stop-gap.” —_— REICH COLONY RETURN URGED BY GEN. VON EPP| Necessity to Provide Work and Bread for Growing Populace Is Cited in Address. By the Associated Press. DUSSELDORF, Germany, Septem- ber 28.—Gen. Franz von Epp, Gover- nor of Bavaria, advocated tonight the return of German colonies lost after the World War to provide work and bread for a growing population. Addressing & colonial gathering, he said “the question is one of furnish- ing an ever-growing people with labor and sustenance, and articles such as rubber and cotton, which our former colonies -produce. Since we do not have Devisen (bill of exchange) we cannot buy them, but if we had colo- nies we would not need Devisen.” He cited Italy and Japan as exam- ples of peoples bursting boundaries because of need for more room. “We also can advance a similar claim. justly,” he said. PIRATES MEET BATTLE Enraged Parents of 27 Kidnaped Children Plead for Aid. HANGCHOW, September 28 (#).— The frantic parents of 27 children held for ransom by pirates today appealed to the authorities at Peih- siang for their recovery from the coast town raiders. Three of the 31 kidnaped children were freed in a battle between the pirate kidnapers and the pursuing parents and a fourth child was killed. The pirates, believed led by the notorious Ying Pao Shoj, raider of coastal towns, made a surprise raid on Pelhsiang yesterday. They looted the town before escaping with their hostagess < 12.9 Per Cent Increase Re- ported in Funds Received by Insured Institutions. ‘The District of Columbja showed a proportionately larger gain in all types of deposits in insured banks for the fiscal year 1935 than nearby States and the country as a whole, according to a summary released yesterday by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corb. For the Nation, deposits in 14,173 insured commercial banks, holding all but 1.3 per cent of the deposits in | commercial institutions, showed a de- posit increase of 12.5 per cent in th2 year ended June 30. Compared with this percentage the District of Columbia showed a gan of 129 per cent in all types of re- posits on June 30, as compared with the same date of 1934. Virginia reported an increase of 10 per cent for all types of deposits dur- ing the same period and Maryland only 1.7 per cent. Total Here $226,000,000. In the District of Columbia all 22 open banks are insured and their de- posits rose at the end of the fiscal year 1935 to a total of $266.563,000. These banks reported their demand d_eposl's were $137,032,000 and their time deposits $103.352,000. Capital funds of insured commer- | cial banks in the District were shown to have had a book value of $41,067,~ | 000 at the time of this last cali Cash in vault and other items in their re- serve accounts totaled $86.919,000, while their loans and discourts amounted to $82,565,000 on June 30, 1935. Figures for Virginia. - In Virginia, the F. D. I. C. reported that deposits in 322 insured commer- cial banks increased ! In Maryland, 184 insured commercial banks were shown to have increased their deposits to a total of $464,- 487,000. For the Nation, deposits in the 14,- 173 insured commercial banks were | reported at $40,336,501,000 on June 29, 1935. This represented a $1,340,- e e STRATOSPHERE HOP | POSSIBLE MONDAY Big Balloon May Be Inflated To- day if Weather Conditions Permit. By the Associated Press. RAPID CITY, S. Dak., September 28.—Headquarters of the National Geographic-U. S. Army flight this af. ternoon said there is a remote possi- bility that orders will be issued Sunw day afternoon for inflation of the big balloon, * They were studying the weather map, and if conditions are favorable | inflation will be ordered. That will Monday morning. Earlier, Thomas W. McKnew, flight executice for the National Geographic Society, co-sponsor of the expedition with the Army Air Corps, had said he expected all tests to be completed | next Monday or Tuesday, after which the fiyers would await favorable weather. |, No definite announcement of the take-off can be made until Sunday afternoon. Test balloons must be sent up, weather maps studied and other data gathered. . |ORGANIZER IS CHARGED WITH FOMENTING RIOT North Carolina Justice Holds Man to Superior Court Dur- ing Textile Strike. By the Associated Press. STATESVILLE, N. C. September | 28.—Leonard Green, worker organizer, was bound to Su- | perior Court here today on charges | of inciting to riot during the Moores- | ville Cotton Mill strike at Moores- | ville Thursday night. He was given a hearing before | George R. Anderson, justice of the | peace, and when probable cause was found was held under bond of $1,500, which he failed to make immediately. He was then jailed. The next term of court convenes here November 4. Green denied the charge that he had made statements to some 600 | workers, who struck at the mills. He |said he was arrested just before the time he was to address a mass meeting In Mooresville during the strike, which began Monday. Sheriff John Moore of Iredell Coun- ty and J. E. Rimmon, chief of police of Mooresville, testified, however, that they heard Green make remarks they construed to be of an inciting nature. SPEED BOND FORFEITED BY YOUNG ROOSEVELT Franklin, Jr., Fails to Appear in Hampton, N. H., Court. Accused of Doing 65. By the Associated Press. HAMPTON, N. H., September 28.— Franklin D. Roosevelt, jr., son of the President and a Harvard junior, failed to appear in court today to answer a speeding charge. ordered forfeited. Young Roosevelt was stopped Sep- tember 18 by a State motor vehicle United Textile was driving 65 miles an hour. CHACO GROUP APPROVED U. 8. Judge to Head Trio to Fix Responsibility. BUENOS AIRES, September 28 (#). The Chaco Peace Conference, meet- ing in a plenary session, approved today the creation of a committee of three members to decide where to place the responsibility for the long struggle between Paraguay and ‘Bo- livia. > The group will be headed by a prominent United States judge to be selected. Bolivia and Paraguay will each request the American Govern- ment to designate a member. The salary for each member will be $1,500 monthly. Sold Winds. In the Middle Ages the Lapps and Finns were famed for the business f selling winds to sailors and others. They would sell a cord with three knots in it, one loosed a fair wind, two & storm, and three a gale, » in the year | ended June 30, 1935, to $457,784,000. | mean that the balloon will ascend | His bail of $15 was | officer who said the President’s son | Remnants of Old Regulars Support Slate- for Jan. 21 Vote. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, September 28.— Remnants of the once powerful old regular political machine of New Or- leans, shattered by the dictatorial of- fensive of the late Senator Huey P. Long, signed up today to support the ticket put out by the Long and Gov. O. K. Allen forces in the January 21 State-wide primary. While they were surrendering two anti-Long factions were active on the political horizon, consulting supporters | and mapping plans for a counter- offensive dedicated to overthrow the Long dictatorship which fell upon the | shoulders of Allen and to return local, | self-government to the State of Louisiana. Regulars Back Allen. The old regulars adopted resolu- tions endorsing the Allen administra- tion ticket headed by Judge Richard W. Leche for Governor; Earl K. Long, brother of the late Senator, for lieu- tenant governor, and Allen J. Ellender, Speaker of the House, for United States Senator to succeed the late Long. The anti-Longs were still holding caucus over the tickets which will back up Representative Cleveland | | Dear of the eighth Louisiana district | for Governor and State Representative Mason Spencer of Tallulah, who an- nounced himself the “chosen leader” of the anti's. Special Session Demanded. ‘The old regulars who surrendered to Long shortly before his assassination when the Senator was attempting to strangle the city administration of Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley, his enemy, demanded a special session of | the Legislature before the election to | return self-rule to the city. | | But the city politicians were told by Robert Maestri, commissioner of conservation in the Gov. Allen administration, that there would be | 1o session of the Legislature until after the election is held and support | was bartered on the promise that after the election some of the “obnoxious” | laws passed against New Orleans would be repealed. 1 'BULLINGTON NAMED | A. B. C. BOARD HEAD Virginia Chairmanship to B.o-‘ tate Hereafter, Is Announce- | ment of Gov. Peery. By the Associated Press. | RICHMOND, Va., September 28.— Gov. Peery today announced the ap- pointment of R. McC. Bullington as | chairman of the Virginia A. B. C. | Board to succeed Maj. S. Heth Tyler, | resigned. The change becomes ef- fective October 1. | Gov. Peery said that hereafter the | chairmanship of the board would ro- | tate, as is the case in other State ad- | ministrative boards. T. McCall Frazier was named vice chairman. Hunter | | Miller of Bedford will be the new | | member. | Maj. Tyler, who has headed the agency since it began operations 18 ‘imomm ago, today said in a signed |article written for the Associated | Press: “I believe the present alco- | holic beverage control law is the best | | system yet tried by Virginia.” LA GUARDIA POWER PLAN GETS SETBACK Justice Dore Orders Proposal Re- moved From Ballots and Bars Spending of Funds. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 28.—Mayor | La Guardia’s plan for a municipally | | owned power plant as a “yardstick” | | for utility rates received a double set- | back today when Supreme Court Jus- | tice Edward S. Dore ordered the pro- | posal removed from the ballots and | | restrained city officials from spending | funds on the project. The decisions were handed down in & suit brought by the New York Edi- son Co. to prevent the city from | carrying its proposal to the electorate. Justice Dore said in his opinion that | | he understood both litigants had | | agreed to co-operate for an immediate | appeal. IR~ NORMANDIE PASSENGER ASKS $100,000 DAMAGE | Vibration of Ship Dislodged Kid- ney Stone Necessitating Opera- tion, Says New York Woman. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 28.—Nastia Poliakova filed suit for $100,000 dam- ages against the French Line today and charged vibration of the liner Normandie necessitated a surgical op- eration after a kidney stone was dis- lodged. Poliakova, in the petition, declared injyries “by reason of the violent and excessive vibration of the aforesaid steamship Normandie” developed into pneumonia and prevented a series of contracted appearances as a singer. . Sources of Asbestos. Canada, Rhodesia, Soyth Africa, Russia, Italy and Corsica are the world’s chief sources of asbestos. * FARM AND GARDEN. or Prompt Tree Servic Phone Clarendon 567 The Forman & Biller Tree Expert Co. EVERGREENS Plant Now for Best Resulis oN LARGE SELECTI . ts Your 'chetoer 3.7 Took K123 each, Also_Apples_Direet ‘from orchard, 550 bushel. 6440 Georgia Ave. at Underwood St. Open 24 Hrs, Daily & Sunday * Church Thursday. The morning ses- sion will be devoted to a discussion of Vista, president of the federation, have charge of the meeting. conference expenses. will I hall Thursday for the benefit of the BUDGET BALANCE BARCAINS STERILIZED m flfl“ TOOTH BRUSEE ‘With compartment tray. Very handy for the office, home and shop. 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