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21 NEW DENTISTS PASSED BY BOARD Dr. Charles T. Bassett Re- Elected President of District Examiners, Twenty-one dentists were qualified to practice in the District at a meet- ing yesterday of the District Board of Dental Examiners, and 12 were qual- ifled as dental hygienists, it was an- nounced by Dr. Charles T. Bassett, president of the board. Dr. Bassett was re-elected president and Dr. C. Willard Camalier was re- elected vice president at the meeting. The successful candidates were Dr. Emanuel Aaronson, 7914 Orchid street; Dr. William R. Casady, 7300 Alaska avenue; Dr. Millard R. Dean, 1825 8 street; Dr. Jack Diener, 1908 First street; Dr. Irvin N. Douglas, 626 Princeton place; Dr. Wallace T. Dun- can, 702 East Capitol street; Dr. Rich- ard Fabrizio, 1438 Wisconsin avenue; Dr. Samuel M. Georgevich, 1600 Franklin street northeast; Dr. Carlotta A. Hawley, 2609 Woodley place; Dr. I. Holtzman, 1248 Eleventh street; Dr. Luzerne G. Jordan, 3505 Rodman street; Dr. Louis I. Kern, 3605 Warder street; Dr. Louis Levinson, 1245 Fifth street; Dr. Louis Milobsky, 841 Ingra- ham street; Dr. Nathan Neyman, 419 Park Lane Apartments; Dr. Jerome A. Pasternak, 5108 Forty-first street; Dr. Daniel F. Radice, 313 I street northeast; Dr. Harry Sembekos, 124 Massachusetts avenue; Dr. Manuel I Smallwood, 2716 Ontario road; Dr. Willlam Le Roy Walters, Mattoon, IlL. Star Carriers See Fight Pictures THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON D. C, THURSDAY VIRGINIA NEWSMEN WILL HEAR HANSON Press Association’s Conven- tion Opens July 23 at Old Point Comfort. By the Associated Press. NEWPORT NEWS, Va., July 9.— Elisha Hanson, general counsel of the American Newspaper Publishers’ Asso- ciation, will be the principal speaker at the annusl convention of the Vir- ginia Press Association, to be held July 23-25 st the Cihamberlin Hotel, Old Point Gomfort, Maj. Raymond B. Bottom, president of the State asso- ciation, announced. Hanson, whose convention address will be given Saturday night, July 25, will be among round-table speakers on the freedom of the press during the current institute of public affairs at the University of Virginia. Winder R. Har- ris, managing editor of the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, will serve as toast- Some of The Star carrier boys who saw movies of the Louis-Schmeling figth! at the Cameo |master at the association’s annual Theater, Mount Rainier, Md., last night are shown with their host, Sidney Lus VOTE FORDITRE PLEATOBE NADE Members of Rainbow Divi- Publicity Head LIQUDATION RGE banquet. * Among important matters to come before the delegates will be action on proposed amendments to the associa- tion constitution, held necessary be- cause of the establishment of a full- time headquarters office. Virginia editors will open their ses- sions Thursday afternoon, July 23, and business meetings will get under way the following morning, when reports will be given by committees and offi- cers. Pres Atkins, editor of the Coalfield —Star Staff Photo. AMOSKEAG MILLS' JULY 9, 1936. Labor Leaders Confer HOFFMAN IN SUIT- - DEMANDS $100,000 Boake Carter, Commen- tator, and Broadcast Chains Defendants. By the Assoctated Press. ‘TRENTON, N. J.; July 9.—The New Jersey Bupreme Court clerk today certified & suit in which Gov. Harold G. Hoffman sought $100,000 damages from Boake Carter, radio news com- mentator, and broadcasting chains as a result of broadcasts concerning the Governor during the Bruno Richard Hauptmann case. The Governor charged that as a result of the broadcasts, in which Carter commented on activities in the Hauptmann case, he has been “caused to suffer scorn and ridicule and has been humiliated before the public and before the electorate of the State of New Jersey and has be- come liable to being prosecuted for crime and subject to impeachments.” The suit said the broadcasts referred to “desperate” efforts of the Governor » § to justify his “official blundering and save his tottering reputation” It charged also that the comments ac- cused the Governor of fraud and de- ception in his official capacity and charged him with improper motives ‘The Governor charged that Carter “composed” the broadcasts as agents for other companies named as de- fendants, including the WCAU Broad- casting Co., Atlantic Broadcasting Co., William Green, right, president of the American Federation of Labor, holds a whispered conversation with Frank Morrison, secretary of the federation, at the annual meeting of the Execu- tive Committee at the federation’s offices here yesterday. g —Underwood & Underwood Photo. 500 salaried workers and executives Collapse of N. R. A. standards and competitive safeguards was cited as the reason. Although progress in the factional controversy thus was delayed yester- day, there were other developments {Master in Reorganization Al e e and Dr. Peter W. Woycik, 31 Stone street, Danbury, Conn. Those who passed the hygienist 1 Citi examination were: Harriet B. Bolks, ort Citizens. Shell Rock, Iowa; Fernandi Claire p Couture, Websicr, Mass.; Esther Mary| The national membership of the Cummings, 4412 Reservoir road; | Rainbow Division Veterans will be sion to Be Asked to Sup- Katherine Elinor Cummings, Darien, | urged to support District citizens in | N. Y.; Beatrice R. Duckett, 512 Ran- | their fight for national representa- dolph street; Sylvia A. Hanks, New tion, and the members of Congress Joanne Therese Kowalskl, | from the 27 States which furnished | 63 ' men for the famous unit will be asked | York Cit; Erie, Pa.; Antoinette A. Lyles, Quincy place; Selma Maiyels, 731 to support legislation looking to this Fifth street; Marion Joy Mallory, 1438 | end, officials of the District Rainbow | Kennedy street; Mary Kathryn Mor- gan, Baltimore, Md.; Charles M. Tig- Chapter announced yesterday. The local delegation N S ae | eighteenth annual reunion to be held |in Kansas City, beginning Sunday, will carry a resolution embodying this FORESTRY CONFERENCE | principle, which the national mem- UNDER WAY AT ATLANTA bership will be asked to adopt. M. Manning Marcus, local attorney and honorary national president of the R. D. V., has been selected to present the resolution, which declares: “It is of the very essence of constitu- eral, State Leaders. tional government that every part of Py the Associatea Press. thé population be permitted to ex; ATLANTA, July 9.--Representatives | Press tiself through the exercise o of the Federal Forest Service and for- | the ballot and to have and to select estry departments of six Southern | its OWn representatives in the National States met at regional forestry head- | Legislature.” quarters yesterday to consider future| The resolution asserts “the reasons plans for organized fire protection on Which impelled the withholding of the State and private forest lands. | ballot from the residents of the Dis- Joseph C. Kircher, Southern regional | trict of Columbia have long since be- forester, said the meeting was held | come inapplicable.” under the co-operative fire protection | Pointing out District residents are plan begun several years ago by the | citizens of the United States and “bear Federal Government and State and |all the burdens of citizenship, includ- private interests. |ing the furnishing of military con- In accordance with the original plan, | tingents in peace and war,” the reso- the foresters met to survey accom-!lution declares “they are denied the plishments and to formulate plans for | exercise of that cherished respon- the next five-year program. Another | sibility of the citizen, the privilege of Future Plans for Organized Pro- tection Discussed by Fed- to the | session will be held today. |voting * * * and representation in R the Congress.” In addition to Marcus, the official local delegates to the conclave will include Elmer F. Neagle, chairman and honorary president; William H. Kay, president; J. M. Cohan, Harold B. Rodier, editor of the Rainbow e MORGAN YACHT CORSAIR OVERHAULED FOR VOYAGE | | By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 9.—J. P. Mor- gan’s yacht Corsair, out of commis- sion for more than a year and a half, is being overhauled at a New | York shipyard under orders to have 1t ready “as soon as possible.” Morgan made two trips to Europe> in the Corsair before it was laid up. | When he was brought home {rom | Massachusetts recently, suffering from neuritis, his associates said they ex- pected he would still be able to make | his usual Summer trip abroad for the hunting season in Scotland. “He is seeing people ®ow and is progressing as well as was expected, byt I don't believe he will go any- where for two or three weeks,” said George Whitney, a partner, French (Continued Prom First Page.) ernment’s promise to prevent new oc- cupation strikes. | The number of employes still re-| fusing to return to their jobs was offi- | cially set at 80,529. Corsicgns in Marseille asked the island’s representatives in Paris to re- sign from Parliament if shipping and communications were not re-estab- | lished by the government within 48| hours. Regular services between the island | end the mainland were interrupted June 24 when dock workers and ship employes joined the strike movement. The Communist attitude on govern- ment intervention to end the refusals to work shifted slightly after previous threats to draw extreme left support from the People’s Pront administra- tion. Deputy Maurice Thorez, Communist | leader who lashed out against use of force to evacuate the factories, de- clared “the workers must know how to end sfyikes.” His followers, Thorez asserted, “per- fectly understood” the Senate’s alarm over the continued labor controversy, whickr at its height was estimated offi- cially to have taken more than 1,000, 000 workers from their jobs. ‘The Communist deputy described the strike-breaking promise of Minister of the Interior Salengro “not well in- spired in letting it be believed that force can be employed against the working class.” A prediction of new political line- ups came from Paul Faure, minister of state, in an address before a So- cialist mass meeting. If the People’s Front coalition (So- cialists, Radical-Socialists and Com- munists) fails to produce the govern- mental benefits expected, Faure de- clared, the Socialists might swing away and institute a program of their own. His declaration carried an appeal to workers to have confidence in the Blum government. The Chamber of Deputies approved another reform measure to nationalize French arms manufacturing plants. First to be affected by the new measure, on final passage, would be the establishments supplying equip- ment to the army, it was reported. An appropriation of 800,000,000 francs ($53,000,000) was planned to finance the first step in the nationalization program. Naval and air plants were to follow in the plan of government control, their immediate status remaining un- changed because of r im i supplying equipment to civilians. | Reveille, R. D. V., and Bentley Mulford, chair- man of the R. D. V.’s Medals of Valor Committee. YOUTH ADMITS GUILT IN BLACKMAIL CASE| Pleads Guilty to Seven Counts. Faces One to Five Years on Each After Cleric's Trap. Horace W. Richardson, 21, pleaded | guilty before Justice Daniel W. O'Donoghue in District Court u)dnyi to seven counts of an indictment charging him with repeatedly black- mailing Rev. Ramond L. Wolven, canon of the Washington Cathedral. Canon Wolven was not in court. The youth probably will be sen- tenced tomorrow or Monday. The law permits a sentence of from one to five years on each of the seven counts. Assistant United States Attorney Samuel Beach agreed to nolle prosse an eighth count, which charged Richardson with robbing Canon Wolven of a $30 wrist watch and $6 | in cash. Richardson was arrested June 4 when the clergyman communicated with police and they laid a trap for the boy. Owen (Continued Prom First Page.) Owen’s son-in-law will be the attend- ants. But it is doubtful, she said, if the wedding will be at the Lehman estate, because Mrs. Lehman is ill. After they are married, Mrs. Owen said, she will return to Denmark, but before that she is going to campaign for President Roosevelt's re-election. Capt. Rhode said this was his first visit to America. He found the coun- try “very beautiful,” he said, and quite up to all the marvelous things he had heard about it. He said he had no relatives in the United States and denjed the report, emanating from Copenhagen, that his father had emigrated here. His father’s name is Hermann Rohde and he his always lived in Denmark. They became engaged, Mrs. Owen sald, six months ago, but she has known him since shortly after she went to Copenhagen. “He has & very nice post in Den- mark,” she smiled. yourself from FOOT AGONY there’s comfort in the famous STACH'S Foot Health Headquarters 523 11th Street N.W. official publication of the | | A. H KIRCHOFER, Editor (Continued From First Page.) White, for the Republican National Committee. He has directed other | important publicity drives. € He was born in Buffalo 44 years ago, and received his education in the | ported. Progress, of the association, will preside at a round table for weekly publishers Fri- day afternoon. President Bottom will preside at the conference of dally newspaper publishers, St;ael (Continued Prom First Page.) Case Calls for Halt in All Expenses. By the Associated Press. BOSTON, July 9.—Arthur Black, master in Federal Court reorgnization proceedings of the Amoskeag Manu- facturing Co., recommended liquida- tion of the giant Manchester, N. H, mills today in a report filed in Federal Court. Black recommended that all salaries now being paid or expenses now being paid or expenses incurred on the chance of reopening the huge textile mills that once employed 12,000 workers be stopped at once. He said there should be no further expense except for the preservation of the property. Black said withdrawal of a reor- ganization plan offered by the com- pany “left the whole problem in a other federation members in the news- paper industry for purposes of defin- ing jurisdictional lines. Failure of the council to reach the factional dispute, however, did wot | deter Green from discussing it in a press conference held late yesterday doubt as to his personal feeling about the Lewis group. The council, he explained, had re- quested eight of the C. I O. unions saleiof prave incerlatniy; |to send representatives at various Nothing Forthcoming. [times, two each day, starting this “Neither the debtor (Amoskeag | morning. Of these eight, no word Mfg. Co.) nor the Bondholders’ Com- | has been received from three of them, mittee had given up hope, but no one | but officials of the Mine Workers, had a definite suggestion and nothing | Clothing Workers, Ladies’ Garment seemed to be forthcoming,” Black re- | Workers, Typographical Union and United Textile Workers have given Black further said it would take notice that they will be unable to [ local high school and Y. M. C. A. In- stitute. He was Boys' Work secretary of the Genesee Y. M. C. A. in Buffalo, in 1909 and 1910. Then he was with |the Buffalo Commercial, Buffalo | Times and Buffalo Courier until 1913. ! | He has been with the Buffalo Evening News since 1915, and managing editor since March 1, 1927. Was Active in Capital. While sérving as Washington cor- | respondent Kirchhofer was a director of the National Press Building Cor- poration. He is a member of the Grid- iron Club and of the National Press Club and was president of the latter in 1927. He was publicity director of the University of Buffalo $5,000,000 | endowment fund campaign, 1920-9. | He was active in Liberty Loan and | No fnan has the temerity to say when | $8,000,000 in new money for any re- | 8PPear. In addition, he said, John organization. 5 iBmph_v of the C. I. O. has requested . “It is useless to entertain any such :dthb ‘:lh: ‘“g:;:‘:lg:r:om‘:l.fg;n“m’n ope. There is nothing in the tex- S = tile outlook to warrant it. For more | DesPite advance information, Green than 12 years losses in the industry said that the council will wait until have far exceeded the gains. the appointed time for each appear- ) | ance before attempting to judge the In spite of drastic liquidation We [ ynion's case. He x’dnd‘not ]kn:w he still have at least 25 per cent more 1 added, whether decisions would be spindles than the market Warrants. mgge known in each individual case or whether a sweeping pronouncement an fmprovement will come or hOW far | wi)) be withheld until all have been and his outspoken remarks left little | it will go.” The New Hampshire concern peti- tioned for reorganization on Decem- ber 24, 1935, under Section 77-b of the Federal bankruptcy act, after the mills closed in September, Reorganization Plan Withdrawn. Red Cross campaigns during the World War. | The new director of publicity for the Landon-Knox campaign is a member of the American Society of | Newspaper Editors, a director in 1930 | Council. * % MEMBER FEDZRAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION + + On June 10 the company withdrew | & plan of reorganization, explaining expenditures of $2,500,000 would be necessary to repair damages suffered in disastrous floods of March. Another reason given was that bond- than $2,300,000. Jack a dull boy” . old, but sound, adage. * * *” considered. “In my opinion we will run into next week before this matter is set- tled,” he said council.” What this decision will be is still very much urknown, although it was rumored this morning that sentiment !15 increasing in favor of suspending the C. I. O. unions. Individual mem- bers of the council have declined to discuss the matter outside the ses- and secretary in 1931, of the New | holders selected one of the opnon.”'slons. David Dubinsky, president of | York State Society of Newspaper Edi- 'reorganization plans. which would | the Ladies’ Garment Workers and tors and of the Nationay Economy ' have reduced working capital by more only member of the council who is ' also active in the C. I O, is in Europe. "/JLL WORK AND NO PLAY makes . . 80 goes an . Do you need an exhilarating trip to the seashore; a quiet rest in the moun- tains; to brush shoulders with Europe; or to “'see America first''? Should you require additional funds you may secure them at this Bank, where provision for repayment is made in convenient monthly amounts. %« MORRIS PLAN BANK OF WASHINGTON The bk for the Jddividial/ 1408 H STREET, N. W. | “Some decision will | be reached at this meeting of the | of importance to labor in general, to the C. I. O, to the A. F. of L. and to the steel industry. First, perhaps, was Green's visit to the White House to inform President Roosevelt that nearly five million work- ers have been affected by “the break- down of labor standards” between June, 1935, and March, 1936, as & result of invalidation of the N. R. A. Green’s personal presentation of this report was interpreted by some as an effort to swing the administration into support of an A. F. of L. issue at a time when it appears that en- couragement is being extended to the Lewis insurgents. Second was the comment of Sec- retary of Commerce Roper that in his personal opinion unionization of | the steel industry as planned by the | C. L O. will not cause serious indus- trial trouble. ! Third was an accusation by Philip Murray, chairman of the C. I. O. or- ganizing efforts in Pittsburgh, that additional armed policemen have been | employed within the past few days by several specified steel companies, that employes are being trailed and spied | upon and that organizers are being | shadowed like criminals. | Fourth was announcement by the cap and millinerv department of the United Hatters that they are pledg- | ing $5,000 to the C. I O. and that | they will ignore federation orders to withdraw from the committee; at the same time, Green announced that he had been informed that the Inter- | | national Typographical Union is not | officially afliated with the C. I O, | | although its officers are active as in- | dividuals in the Lewis organization. Fifth, and coinciding with Green's information submitted to the Presi- dent, was an announcement by the large Endicott-Johnson Shoe Corp. | in Endicott, N. Y., that a pay cut of 10 per cent was being levied against Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc Green took occasion yesterday to|philco Radio and Television Corp answer Lewis’ charge that the feder- | New York and Pennsylvania and the ation had no plans to organize the!phjladelphia Storage Battery Co. Wil- steel industry in spite of instructions |jjam §. Conklin, press aide to the to do so from the conventions of |ernor, said the action would be given 1934 and 1935. In denying the charge, | to the Essex County sheriff for service Green read from convention reports ' tomorrow, telling why the actual drive was de- | layed; then he produced a letter of | last May containing some details of | the plan. Last Spring, he continued, a fund was being raised for the pur- pose when the Lewis committee by means of “abusive telegrams and an immediate offer of a large sum of money” induced the Amalgamated Iron, Steel and Tin Workers to reject the federation program and join the C. 1.0 The fund raised, he said, was not as much as the $500,000 now claimed by the C. I. O, but would have sur- passed that amount eventually. CLOSED —until Monday, July 13th, on account of the death of Mr. E. P. Hinkel, President of the Company. E. P. HINKEL & CO.,, Inc. 600 Rhode Island Avenue N.E. The little TIN SOLDIER “Our Billy! lieve it. has marched away Twenty-one? ... Why, I just can’t be- I can temember when he had to stand on tiptoe to reach the cookies on the table.” But chubby legs will lengthen, and a small boy strides into manhood. Soon, he’ll be buying a ring, and they’ll come out of a church with shy faces and shining eyes. As you did—how many years ago? Their path will be a little easier than yours . . . how you've toiled to make that possible! And they’ll have more outside help, too. Advertising has come forward in the last few years, and brought a hundred servants to the modern home. Their road will be marked with familiar names. They’ll choose the reliable, advertised trade-marks « . . whether in breakfast foods, a radio, or a new ear. They’ll know that an advertised product has to be an honest product—its honesty proved by thousands of buyers before them. They’ll take on new responsibilities—just as you two did! Advertising will help them meet these new problems a little easier, a bit better. And they’ll come out, all right . . . you needn’t worry about them!