Evening Star Newspaper, November 22, 1935, Page 9

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COMMUNISM FOES ADDRESS GITIZEN Mme. Cantacuzene and Gen. Fries Speak at Conduit Road Meeting. Mme. Julia Cantacuzene, grand- daughter of President Grant, and Maj. Gen. Amos A. Fries told the Conduit Road Citizens' Association last night they do.not object to the teaching of Russian history to school children, but do object to subversive propaganda in the text books. Mme. Cantacuzene, who married a Russian prince and lived for 20 years in Russia, compared subversive influ- ences which led to the revolution in Russia with conditions in the United States today. She drew a parallel be- tween pacifist and disarmament prop- aganda sent into Russia to undermine the government with similar propa- ganda she claimed is being spread in the United States through schools and universities. Behind many of the pacifist organ- {zations, she contended, was the Com- munists’ international organization. Gen. Fries centered his attack on the Scholastic, a magazine compul- sory in several classes in Washington high schools. He cited a report by the Civic Counsel of Defense of Cali- fornia condemning the magazine as & communistic, organ. He calied at- tention to many authors and prof sors, contributors to the magazi who are members of various com- munistic and socialistic organizations. He also criticized a department of the publication which recommended so- cialistic books to the students as text books and as information sources. CONTRACTORS’ HEAD HITS SPENDING PLAN %Useful” Public Works Held Slighted in $4,000,000,000 Federal Program. By the Associuted Press. Edward J. Harding, managing di- rector of the Associated General Con- tractors of America, criticized the works program and the Resettlement Administration in a statement yester- day. Asserting that “made work” has ab- sorbed too much of the $4,000,000,000 program, at the expense of “useful” public works, Harding predicted that the contractors at their convention in Miami January 13-15 would demand that facilities of private enterprise be used in carrying out any future emer- gency works program. Harding also saw in the recent reor- ganization of the Resettlement Admin- istration, in which a “contractor” for construction undertaken by the bu- reau was named, an indication that it would try to enter the general con- tracting busines e H. 0. L. C. POST FILLED Alabaman to Head Insurance Di- vision, Succeeding Lintner. ‘The Home Owners' Loan Corp. has announced appointment of Mell D. Smith, Mobile, Ala., as manager of 1ts Insurance Division, succeding A. L. Lintner, Topeka, Kans.,, who resigned to accept a private insurance position here. Smith had served as supervisor of the Insurance Division in the H. O. L. C. regional office at Atlanta. Nearby Stores: WILMINGTON BALTIMORE Display of and Sunday. NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1935. resh flower headdresses, to be introduced at the annual Fall flower show at Chicago tomorrow e models are (faces upside-down) Marjorie Stanley, wearing “The Orlental”; wearing “Midsummer Night's Dream,” and Patsey Shay. wearing “Opening Night.”—Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. Eisle Rogers, NAZIS INCREASE JEWBANS BYTHO Stock Brokers Barred and| “Aryan” Wives Allowed to Leave Husbands. By Radio to The Star. BERLIN, Germany, November 22.— | | The economic extermination of Ger- | man Jews took two more steps forward | today. Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, mxchl | economic dictator, has forbidden Jews | to act as stock brokers from today on and the National Association of Na- tional-Socialist Jurists, to which all lawyers of Germany must belong, has | ordered its members to terminate all | partnership with Jewish lawyers as | soon as possible, Failure to comply | | with this order will be dealt with | by “courts of honor” of the associa- tion. | Meanwhile the appellate court of Berlin has struck still another blow at marriages between Jews and Aryans by ruling that a Jewish | husband cannot compel his Aryan | wife to return to him if they have been separated. Husband Loses Fight. A Jewish husband and his Aryan wife had been separated one year while divorce proceedings were pend- | ing. The divorce was refused, but | the wife declined to return to her husband. The husband then brought | suit to compel his wife to return to him—which the German courts will do in certain circumstances. The court refused to grant the hus- | band’s request. “Even though the | Nuremberg laws have no retroactive !effect,” said the court, “yet by the | Someone took the hide off | tion of anti-Jewish laws in Germany application of analogy to the menn-;’ ing and purpose of the laws which | forbid future marriages between Aryans and Jews it becomes appar-| ent that it would be a legal abuse if| a Jewish husband could force his Aryan wife, who lives separated from | him, to re-establish their life in com- mon against her expressly declared racial feeling.” Extends Law Application. This decision extends the applica- in a way which indicates how the policy in the Third Reich habitually | operates in this fleld. Anti-Jewish | laws themselves are only a very small part of policy, and party and govern= ment administrative officials natural-| 1y go even further beyond the strict | text of the laws than the courts do. (Copyright. 19:35.) A CUMMINGS DUCKS QUERY tion on Moley Report. his legal lore. “What ever became of that crime report Raymond Moley was getting |up for you a long time ago,” & re- ference. | The Attorney General smiled: “My boy, the statute of limitations pplies around here.” MEET YOUR FRIENDS WHERE F Meets /{fé Unchanging China. If the Chinese Republic does not function as well as we think it ought, | let us remember that for some 2,200 ' years the constitution of China had remained unchanged until the revolu- tion of 1911 when & republic such as we have was imposed overnight in a vast country about 99 per cent of whose population was illiterate. Furniture Lamps and Clocks CATLIN’S, Inc. 1324 N. ¥. Ave. N.W. Nat. 0992 Lighting Fixtures & FOR DRIVING OUT THE FAMILY'S COLDS PENETRO luggoge and no smarter ruddy brown has ever before shown up on toes! But the accent is ON the toes this winter=they must be round or square! Forget what you'd expect to poy for stunning shoes made as expensively as the: Not $6...Not $8, but a mere $398) — S A L E RINGLESS HOSE 69¢ vawe IRST QuAUTY ASB 30¢ ECK 1315 F STREET 99 A. S. BECK STORES IN NEW YORK; PHILADELPHIA, WASHINGTON, DE : i Dine in the ex- clusive new conversation roon fof ladies and gentlemen. Nearby the place you shop, the show you see, or the of- fice you leave. Drop in any time from Noon Till 1 AM. Daily The Willard Hotel Calls on Legal Lore to Parry Ques- | ‘When Attorney General Cummings | wants to duck a question he calls on porter asked at yesterday's press con PAYNE DISAVOWS “RAID” ON STOCK Retired Standard Oil Vice Presi- dent Denies Deals in Pipe- line Issue. By the Associated Press. Christy Payne, retired vice presi- dent of Standard Oil of New Jersey, gave the Federal Trade Commission yesterday what he termed a “sweep- ing denial jof all charges” that he or the company participated in a “market raid” on Missouri-Kansas Pipeline stock June 16, 1930. “I'd like to say very emphatically,” he said, “that I never traded in any stock of Missouri-Kansas, never sold & share short directly or indirectly.” He sald the same was true of Standard of New Jersey. “I should like also to say,” Payne asserted, “I never in any respect tried to block the financing or plans or construction of Missouri-Kansas and the same is true of Standard Oil of New Jersey.” He sald he wanted to make his WEEK-END SELECTED Cashews ‘Whole Broken 5—9—%. 33—“15. ¢SALTED IN BUTTER Choc. Peanuts Sugared Peanuts _ Choc. Almonds Choc. Pecans 705 Team FIELDS SUITS $‘l 5.50 They’re equal to $30 sellers— that’s what our customers tell us — no reason to dispute them, for we could say it, too, withqut boasting. Just see them—COMPARE. FIELDS HAND TAILORED ing. OPEN SAT. EVENING Look for the Stri OPEN EVERY EVENING AND SUNDAY ECONOMICAL ADVICE from FIELDS With One Of These denial “positive, sweeping and come prehensive.” It was prompted by Walter B. ‘Wooden, counsel in the commission’s utility investigation, who asked Payne to comment on testimony previously received from Frank P. Parish, presi- | dent of Missouri-Kansas, and William G. Maguire, & large stockholder in the company. Parish asserted that L. E. Fischer, then vice president of North Amer- ican Light & Power Co., had told him on June 14, 1930, that a raid on Missouri-Kansas stock would be carried out two days later unless the company’s natural gad acreage in the Texas Panhandle was sold to Standard at cost and its pipeline holdings to Cities Service. Parish said Fischer agreed to at- tempt to arrange a week’s truce while he and Maguire went to New York to see Payne and try to work out some compromise plan. On Juneg 16, Parish testified, Mis- souri-Kansas stock dropped from 36% to 15, closing above 21, while he and Maguire vainly sought to get in touch with Payne. They succeeded in reaching Payne only after the market SPECIALS! FRIDAY TO MONDAY ONLY FRESH NUTS-SALTED in BUTTER CHOICE Mixed Nuts No. 1 No. 2 83‘15. g§en. FRESH DAILY Just Arrived! FRESH CHOCOLATE NUTS Choc. Brazils___ Choc. Nut Squares Choc. Dates ______ Mixed Choc. Nuts NUT FILLED DATES MADE FRESH DAILY NATIONAL PEANUT CORPORATION 15th Street N.W. BETWEEN POSTAL AND STORE, PEOPLES DRUG ONLY WASHINGTON STORI Peanut Display e‘o‘ud and Parish said Payne opened A “How did you like it?” Maguire, however, attributed that | remark to an executive of the Colum- | bian Carbon Co., who was in Payne's | office. | Payne did not touch specifically on ! the meeting in his office while in the | witness chair. But in a statement | issued later through one of his legal advisers, Payne said he did not speak the words attributed to him by Parish. Stove Parts Boilers, Furnaces, Stoves Capitol Rock Wool Insalation Air-Conditioning Furnaces Fries, Beall & Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. Nat. 1964 The magnificent plumage of the native American game birds inspired the striking color-tones of these smart new Interwoven Socks for Fall. At your favorite store e el Yorterwoven THE GREATEST NAME ILLUSTRATED f OTHERS 2 PAIRS $1, 75¢ AND UP THE PAIR Hundreds of other attrace IN SOCKS RCOATS | | 722 14th SUITS & O'COATS The faultlessly tailored garments with all the best features of custom made cloth- HERCULES FABRICS—wear like iron and give you seasons of satisfied wear. K A ” 75- Claiming the OVERCOAT SHOW OF THE TOWN, every man will find the very coat he is after—and backed up with the FIELDS guarantee of satisfaction—come in— try on a few—You'll see why we are doing THE overcoat business of the city. GUARANTEED WOOLENS, LINING TAILORING () ALL-WOOL FABRICS Meltons Fleeces Kerseys Whitneys Camel Hair Caraculs Oxford Herringbones MODELS Balmacaans, Raglans, Wrap-Arounds, Polo Coats Ulsters, Chesterfields, Town Coats Single and Double Breasteds Full and Half Belted Sizes 34 to 50 ASK US ABOUT OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN $18.50 $22.50 OPEN SAT. EVENING ST. N.W.

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