Evening Star Newspaper, November 29, 1935, Page 14

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DANCER IS WILLING 10 FORGIVE GABLE [Thinks Denial of Romantic Interlude May Be Fear of Undue Publicity. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 29.—Petite Della Carroll, New York show girl with starry eyes and platinum blond curls, is willing to forgive Clark Gable for saying he didn't remembey spend- ing any happy hours with her beneath the spell of a tropic moon. “I was sort of hurt for a moment, but I'm not mad,” she said when she heard that Gable asserted he couldn’t | #ven remember her name. “Well,” she philosophized today, Mmaybe he didn't want the publicity. ¥ don't blame him. If I ever see him fn Hollywood I'll tell him so.” Nevertheless, Miss Carroll insisted it fwas none other than Gable with whom ghe spent “the most marvelous two weeks of my life” when they were on the liner Pan-America a month ago. Furthermore the little dancer pro- duced photographs showing her cling- ing to Gable’s arm. She was wearing a bathing suit and the movie star was clad in trunks. “He seemed willing enough to have them taken,” she said. “I didn't coax him.” BILLIE BURKE SUED Widow of Ziegfeld Says She Was Not to Pay Club Fees. LOS ANGELES, November 29 (#).— Billle Burke, widow of Florenz Zieg- feld, deems her name on the roster sufficient pay for her membership in the Bath and Tennis Club of Chevoit Hills. The contention was made in Miss Burke's answer to a $600 suit filed by the club, listing a $500 claim for in- itiation and $100 for incidental ex- penses. Miss Burke declared that when she %“joined” the club she had an under- standing with the management she ‘was not to be billed for initiation fees or dues. She asserted she never has been inside the club. The court took the case under ad- visement. “A girl's dream, a divine dancer, a marvelous lover.” STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, That’s Della Carroll’s opinion of Clark Gable, the Hollywcod heart-breaker, whom she met on a recent tropic cruise. showgirl, By “marvelous lover,” she explained, she meant the way Gable holds hands, Miss Carroll is a platinum blond —Copyright, A. 2. Wirephoto. WIFE SLAYER HOPES HANGING IS ‘LESSON’| Real Estate Man Dies on Gallows| *n Anxious to Save Others Like Fate. By the Associated Press. FORT MADISON, Iowa, November 29.—Reginald Tracy, 54, Manchester, | Towa State Penitentiary today for slaying,his wife. The trap’was sprung at 7:11 am. and Tracy was pro- nounced dead one minute later. Tracy told Sherift Harry G. Utley of Manchester that he hoped his exe- | cution “would be a lesson to some- Tracy was convicted of plotting his wife's death with Mrs. Flossie Fear, now serving a life sentence. The actual slaying, Tracy said was com- mitted by Adolph Berg, a former con- | vict, during a faked hold-up. Berg is Towa, real estate man, was hanged at | a fugitive, TOWNSEND DRIV FOLLOWS PATTER Political Strategy Is Held Similar to That of Anti- Saloon League. BY MARK SULLIVAN. When the “Townsend plan” failed to make much headway ih Congress last Winter, many took it for granted the plan would go the way of other “white rabbits” that' emerged during the depression. Actually, the Town- send plan is today much more formid- able, Its promoters have now organized along lines that made the Anti-Saloon League successful as an agency in bringing about national prohibition. Many of the present workers in the Townsend movement had experience in the Anti-Saloon League. The same atmosphere is created of association with churches, church leaders and church folks, The literature is sprinkled with quotations of Bible texts. The movement is given the spirit of a holy cause. Movements like the Townsend plan, the Anti-Saloon League, the Ku Klux Klan and others rest on two American traits. The basis is a popular emo- tional responsiveness to causes which large numbers of people regard as wise appealing. Once the cause shows itself to be infectious, there appear men with gifts of organization, pub- licity and propaganda. Fees Provide Salaries. have learned a technique of organiza- tion and who can make a modest liv- ing out of a well-developed system of small fees colle¢ted from membership, from voluntary collections taken up | devoted to the cause, sales of buttons, banners and other paraphernalia. I | do not mean to imply that the workers | in the Townsend plan are mercenary. ‘The total receipts from July, 1934, to| altruistic, religious, patriotic, or other- | ‘There has come to be an immense | number of these, who from experience | trict. The aim is to have in the vil- lages, towns and rural communities of each district 100 Townsend clubs, co-ordmuu to bring pressure on the of Congress or the candidate. Ovvrthaclubsmmhdumul board which passes upon candidates !or nommzuon m' elecuon to Conlnll trategy I to the 1n uw election nen vaember. nnd i.n party primaries next Spring and Sum- mer, candidates will be chosen for every one of the 435 seats in the lower House. At the same time one- third of the Senate seats, 32 out of 96, will be filled. Effect to Be Seen at Once. The effect of tactics directed to- ward next year's election would show in the new Congress which will not sit until January, 1937. However, be- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1935. the revenue necessary to meet the requirements, * * *” The fiscal fallacy of this has been | good, either—to, give the figures once more. Two hurdred dollars a month 1s $2,400 & year, Twenty-four hundred dollars & year for eight million per- sons, estimated as the number of bene- ficiaries, would be $19,200,000,000 & year. This year, the total national in- come is about 60,000,000,000. That is, the cost of the Townsend plan would be just about a third of the national income. In other words, persons under 60 would be compelled to give & third of their wages or incomes to support those over 60. It just isn't possible. || Even if we had the good-will, the thing is fiscally impossible. cause practically every one now in| ™ Congress is a candidate for re-election, the effect of the Townsend campaign will show in the session of the present Congress, which opens January 3 next, | That the effect will be formidable and immediate is indicated by a recent happening in Michigan. In a Republican primary to fill a vacancy in Congress, one candidate was supported by the Townsend clubs. He received more votes than four other candidates combined. The fol- lowing day Townsend plan headquar- ters in Washingotn reported cheerfully that 15 members of Congress, alert to & rising political breeze, called up to ask for literature about the plan. The country will have to look at the Townsend plan as a movement perhaps as formidable as the Anti- Saloon League was in its beginning stage. Whether the Townsendites will go on to success as the Anti-Saloon Leaguers depends on conditions dif- fering from those that affected the Anti-Saloon movement. The Townd- send plan is coupled with inflation. If inflation comes the Townsend plan will be at once a cause of it and an effect. of it If inflation does not come, there can be no Townsend law. Meat of Townsend Plan. ‘The Townsend plan, as described in | petitions presented to Congress in last Winter’s effort, is: “First: A bill obligating the Govern- at meetings, publication of a periodical | ment to pay to every person whosc, record is free of habitual criminality, and who has attained the age of 60 years, a monthly pension of $200 * * * upon the sole condition that he retires from all further business or profession | September, 1935, are reported as $636,- | for gain, and agrees, under oath, to 803. The percentage which the full- time organizers and other paid workers receive and divide is comparatively | small. In the Townsend plan, as in the Anti-Saloon League, the unit of or- | ganization is the congressional dis- spend the entire amount of the pen- sion within the confines of the United | States during the current month in which it is received. “Second: A bill creating a Nation- wide Federal retail sales tax calculated at a rate sufficiently high to produce Did Gray Hair Rob Them of $95.a Week? Now Comb Away Gray This Buy le GRA! hair 1s risky. It scre ting oldl” To end :uy h‘n all you now have to 1 Comb it once n 'aay for several daya with a few drops of Kolor-Bak sprinkled your comb. and afterwards regularly once or twice a_week to keep your hair look- ing nice. Kolor: 1s & solution for ar- tifically coloring y hair—that imparts color and charm and abolishes gray hair worrles. Grayness disappears within a Wweek or two and users report the chan; 1550 ‘gradual and so petfect that thelr friends forget they ever had s gray hair and no one knew they did a thing to it. 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