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_A—4 wus JUDGE MATTINGLY DEFENDS AGTION Replies to Star Editorial on Sentencing Distributors of Communist Handbills. Police Court Judge Robert E. Mat- tingly today denied motions for new trials for s gir. and a youth whom he last week found guilty of distribute g communist handbills in the vicinity of Grifith Stadium on the night of the Democratic nomination rally, May 23. The defendants, Miss Margaret Adams, 19, of the 400 block of F street, and Jobn Thomas, 31, of the 1100 block of I street, were sen- tenced to pay $25 or serve 30 days. In refusing to grant new trials Judge Mattingly fixed bond of $100 each for the pair when their attorneys said they would take the cases to the Court of Appeals. Objects to Editorial. In a written statement which he read from the bench, Judge Mattingly took exception to an editorial entitled “Judicial Duck Soup,” which appeared In The Star July 20. “Final judgment having now been pronounced in these cases,” Judge Mattingly said in his statement, “the court feels it to be incumbent upon it to consider something which has intervened between the original find- ing and this final judgment, while these cases were still pending, and not finally determined. “On July 20, 1936, The Evening Star carried an editorial, entitled ‘Judicial Duck Soup,’ charging that this court had ‘rendered the Communist party of America a distinct service’ by taking cognizance in its said original finding of the fact that the handbills dis- tributed in violation of law were ‘Com= munist handbills’ end also by con- demning, from the bench, Communists and communism, the editorial assert- ing that ‘what the Communist party needs now more than anything else, is to be taken seriously’” The whole purport of the editorial appears to be to influence or coerce the court in cases still pending and not finally de- termined, the influence or coercion being attempted through the medium of holding the court up to public ridicule and in a most unfair manner. Cites Plight Abroad. THE EVENING BSTAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1936. Gov. Alf M. Landon (in circle) waves to the crowd as he accepts the Republicaq presidential nnminatitzfi. ] Landon Greets Throng at Topeka Notification ROOSEVELT SILENT ... ONLANDON SPEECH Lisfened to Address on Ra- dio—Awaits Favorable Weather at Yarmouth. BY D. HAROLD OLIVER, Associated Press Staft Writer ABOARD SCHOONER LIBERTY, | Yarmouth, N. 8. July 24.—President Roosevelt, awaiting favorable weather | today before crulsing westward to Grand Manan Island on the final lap | of his vacation cruise, made no com- | ment on the acceptance speech of | Gov. Alf M. Landon, his Republican | opponent, | The President heard the address over the radio last night after ne had spent a day in fruitless search for tuna in the lower Bay of Fundy. He ‘was aboard his vacation schooner, Se- wanna, again. There was no comment from the President when he was informed of E. Coughlin for referring to Mr. | the published apology of Rev. Charles | o IESERTS. 8-DAY GASPE TOUR $143-all expenses. 2 in room §1 oa Rabea. 22150051 W, Wa D & BLUE EIPGZ SUMMIT, PA. GREYSTONE INN. | A distinctive Inn on Blue Rid Pa. twe hours from Wa food shaded lawns. plea: Block from Steel Pie: Resuauraac. Virgaas Ao Hatt Privileges . Virginia Ave.. half block to beach and Bteel Pier. Running water. Private baths. $3.50 up daily with meals. MONROE HUTCHING. Hotel MORTON Roosevelt as “a liar.” Associates of the sailing Roosevelts said a motor run up the Western Nova Scotian coast to Digby was likely if the wind falled. Otherwise, the escort vessels, the destroyer Hopkins and the U. 8. 8. Potomac, had orders to get underway for Grand Manan Island. The President steamed into Yar- | mouth aboard the Potomac late yes- ! terday after transferring from a fishing launch at the mouth of Chebogue River, about four miles out. Mr. Roosevelt had spent the day fisning for tuna on the way North from the Tusket River, off Wedge Port. Accompanying him were two of his sons, Franklin, jr, and John; his brother-in-law, Hall Roosevelt, and a Dermott of Brooklyn. The party failed to get a strike. STEAMSHIPS. and afl 1 Luxe service on famous express —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. | Landon | will go no higher than the production | level of the family type of farm.” | This was a palpable blow at the | arouse class against class, labor against capital. More than once he proclaimed the need for the preser- | Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, said: he smooth Southern Route. AN LINE. 624 5th WEST INDIES & CARIBBE. GUEST CRUISES every week with the Great White Flest 17 and 18 davs. $175 and up. UNITED FRUIT CO_ Pier 3. North River New York. or vour Travel Azent friend, former Judge Charles J. Mc- | ATLANTIC CITY and Steel Pi —ant ERATE 33 0 Dil: 1798 w o' ans” Jutly famons i'L”"" fll“ll!fl” NTIC CITY n, Managing Director LBERON :!m;us!l "g“ - ronNaRLY OF noTeL Luwy * Doy HOTEL STANLEY Ocean End—South Carolina Ave. $1 Daily; $2.50 with Meals HAK—UI"—L:DA.\('I\G COLBUS HOTEL 70 sp. Kentucky City N. J. ROOMS to arcommadate i Dersons with running water. 10-812.815 per room per week. Also brivate baths. Central. _Bathing | =z el At Mississiopi Ave., Boardwalk Hotel Opp. Convention Hall | ROOMS. $10 up WKLY", §20 With Meals. acing ocean. American and COMMENT VARIED - A o 8 It took labor years to secure the | Tl f “When this court took its oath of 00d served by Dilullo Bros. office to support the Constitution of | the United States, it took it gladly | and seriously, and it is unwilling to | be swerved from its performance of | the obligations of such oath by either | press propaganda or communistic | propaganda, urging that communism | (which seeks the overthrow of this | Republic) should not be opposed or | denounced or even taken seriously by members of the judiciary. All stu- dents of communism are well aware that, instead of communism wanting to be taken seriously, as claimed by | ‘The Star’s editorial, the fact is that it does not want to be taken seriously, except by its dupes and paid agents, until it is toc late to check its in- roads, which are usually made through boring-from-within methods. Had the peoples of Russia, Mexico, Spain and France taken communism seriously in time, they would not be in the sad plight in which they are found today. “Every judge in our Republic is, of zo\:rs%, under a solemn obligation to lefend and support the Constitution | temporary appearance of pre of the United States against all ene- | we and our ‘::%eud.ren. as u,} 0;2;:;}: mies, foreign and domestic. He is| have yet to pay the bill. For every also obligated to try cases according | dollar spent we will pay back two to the American method, without | dollars.” ;r:lu or other ;umde influence, or in- Speech Shows Earnestness. erence such as occurs too fre- | : quently in some foreign countries, | o0, LA0dON's speech, delivered (Continued From First Page.) out of the allotments to the unem- ployed. We will take them out of the hides of the political exploiters. “The question is not as stated by the administration—how much money the American people are willing to spend for relief. The question is how much waste the American people are willing to stand for in the ad- ministration of relief.” The Republican candidate stands committed to the proposition that working men must be free to organize —or not to organize—as they see fit, | to organize in any kind of union they desire, without let or hindrance from employer or from other employes. 1He stands committed to the propo- sition that the Government of the | United States must be run without mounting deficits and an ever in. creasing public debt. He said: “While spending billions of dollars of borrowed money may create a Roosevelt administration of the A. A.| vation of “human rights” But only | A, under which thousands of dollars can these rights, including the “the have been paid in benefits to big in- | life. liberty and happiness” of the dividual farm operators, to banks and | Declaration of Independence, be | other corporations holding large areas ' maintained, he insisted, by a con- | |of farm lands. Nor did he fail to | tinuance of the basic principles upon | point out where the Roosevelt farm ' which the Nation was founded. policies have fallen down. | The Landon address did not sound A A A z““'?""’: A‘mlmx"é:d‘ like the address of a man who has Puyme‘n under the triple difm. | MOt knowledge of national and in- | help to tide the farmers over a difi- | ternational problems. The criticism | cult period,” he said. “But. even be- | of his opponents has been that he | | fore it was ruled out by the Supreme | : 3 | has no grasp of such problems. It | Court, the triple A was rapidly dis-| 00" fon o clear and definite phil- | organizing agriculture. Some of its| o ooty government and of eco- worst effects continue. By its policies nomlci | the administration has taken the 7 + | American farm out of foreign markets | _Landon has not the finished graces | of the orator and the radio speaker. and the foreign farmer into the Amer | s ket His presentation is faulty, almost | | "“The loss of markets, both at home s!umbllnlh "t ":”u'l' The people m; i |and abroad, far outweighs the value | !Sh (0 Bim closely, however, an of all the benefits paid to the farmers. | What he says has its appeal. and so | | | | ON LANDON TALK | | Reveals Rugged Honesty, Says Knox—Scored by | George L. Berry. | Py the Associated Press. | The Capital sought today to evaluate public reaction to Alf M. Landon's acceptance speech as New Deal and Republican leaders issued conflicting opinions about it. | Soon after the Kansas Governor had declared before a throng at Topeka that the object of his presidential race is “to restore our Government to an Every American judge is also required to make the sentence in criminal cases comport with the seriousness of the Pparticular violation, and, consequently, to consider and explain such serious- ness in announcing sentence. It would be an obvious disregard of such duty, in both respects, were an Amer= ican judge to treat communistic hand- bills distributed in violation of law as no more serious than other handbills containing unobjectionable matter.” Judge Mattingly also condemned the District branch of the American League Against War and Fascism, the Communist and Socialist parties for sending telegrams criticizing his de- cision and urging new trials. Miss Adams and Thomas were repre- sented by John Finnerty, attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, who said his organization paid his clients' fine, and Samuel Levine of the International Labor Defense. Three Telegrams Read. The three telegrams, which Judge Mattingly said were addressed to him at Police Court and were received this morning, were read by him also. They follow: “American League Against War and Fascism vigorously protests your 1llegal procedure in sentencing Thom- as and Adams before completion of testimony because of your interpreta- tion of their political beliefs which are irrelevant to case. This Fascist court procedure violates all constitu- tional guarantees of civil rights and fair trial. We demand new trial for Thomas and Adams. “D. C. Branch, American League Against War and Fascism.” “Protest attack on freedom of speech in Thomas-Adams case. De- mand immediate release. “Communist party.” “Soclalist party of the District of Oolumbia protests against violation of constitutional rights of Adams and Thomas in handbill case cause for granting new trial. Your comments from bench on origin of defendants and political opinion of their counsel are ludicrous and unworthy of your office. “Socialist party.” Judge Mattingly said that two-thirds of all crime in this country is com- mitted by foreigners and their de- scendents. Yet many foreign-born citizens, he added, are more loyal than “our own people.” During a pause in Judge Mattingly's reading of his state- ment, Attorney Finnerty interrupted to point out that the Communist party is a legal party with legally-appointed candidates in the coming elections. £ - ey Alcohol in Gasoline. The government of Brazil has de- creed that all gasoline sold for motor vehicles shall contain 10 per cent al- cohol. Smothers Pain Corns Shed Off Pain goes, so does corn, when you use E-Z Korn Remover. Soaks thru toughest skin and softens hardest corns until they shed right off—core and all. Easy to use—works fast. Seldom fails. At dr* stores, 35c. with intense earnestness, sst forth his philosophy of government as op- | posed to the philosophy of govern- | ment of the New Deal President. He | spoke straight from the shoulder, in | language that was®clear to all who heard. i His first words were: | Republican party for the presidency | of the United States. In accepting | this leadership I pray for divine guidance to make me worthy of the faith and the confidence which you | have shown in me. Tonight, facing | | this honor and responsibility, I hope | for the gift of simple and straight- | forward speech. I want every man and woman in this nation to under- stand my every word, for I speak of | | issues deeply concerning us all.” | His wish for clear speech was | | granted. His address was on a high | | plane. And at the same time he | raked the Roosevelt New Deal fore | and aft, | “Our country has tried one eco- | | nomic theory after another. The | | present administration asked for, and received, extraordinary powers, upon the assurance that these were to be | temporary. Now it becomes our duty | to examine the record as it stands. | The record shows that these meas- | ures did not fit together into any definite program of recovery. As & result, recovery has been set back again and again. This was not all of the failure. Practical progressives have suffered the disheartening ex- perience of seeing many liberal ob- | Jectives discredited during the past three years by careless thinkipg, un- workable laws and incompetent ad- ministration. The Nation has not | made the durable progress, either in reform or recovery, that we had the right to expect. The time has come to stop this fumbling with recovery.” | Farm Topic Natural, It was natural that the Republi- can nominee, hailing from one of the | great agricultural States of the Union, should deal particularly with the farm problem. No sound na- tional policy, he said, will neglect the farmer. And he proceeded to expound his own agricultural policy, 2 policy which he will undoubtedly follow if he be elected President. He declared for “effective soil con- servation and erosion policies in con- nection with a national land use and flood prevention program, and keep it all out of politics.” He declared that the farmers are entitled to “all of the home market they can supply without injustice to the consumer.” “Some of our farmers," said Gov. Landon, “dependent in part upon foreign markets, suffer from disad- vantages arising from world disorder. Until these disadvantages are elimi- nated we propose to pay cash benefits in order to cushion our farm families against the disastrous effects of price fluctuation and to protect their stand- ard of living.” Landon stands committed, there- fore, to the payment of cash benefits to the farmers where they may be necessary. He pledged himself also to the aid of the drought stricken farm- ers. He declared himself for the en- couragement of the “family type of farm”—the farm that will support s family. And he said, “the benefits which will be paid uxder our program “I accept the nomination of the | “Worse than this, from the stand- | 408 he. | point of the public, is the fact that | the administration through its pro- gram of scarcity, has gambled with the needed food and feed supplies of ! | the country. | “It overlooked the fact that Mother | Nature can not be regimented.” \ Gov. Landon made it clear as crystal | that he does not believe that the Con- | stitution of the United States, above change.” If the American peo- | ple no longer were able t¢ change | | their Constitution they would no | longer be free, he said. But the| | change must come through the people | | and not by usurpation. “There has now appeared in high places,” he said, “a new and danger- | ous impulse. This is the impulse to | take away and lodge in the Chief | Executive, without the peoples’ con- sent, the powers which they have kept in their State governments or which they have reserved to themselves.” | He admitted that at times many | Americans have become dissatisfied | | and impatient with the efforts of our | local and State administrations to | “solve our difficulties.” He said that | he himself had felt that way at one; time. “As & young man,” he said, “I was attracted to the idea of centralizing | in the Federal Government full| power to correct the abuses growing | out of a more complex social order. | When the people rejected this al- | ternative, I was disappointed as any | one. But in spite of this rejection, I have lived to see many of those abuses substantially corrected by Lhe\ 48 State Legislatures in their flelds and by the Federal Government in its fleld of interstate commerce.” | Landon’s defense of States’ rights | was a clear bid for the support of | those Democrats who oppose the New | Deal idea of centralization of power | in Washington. Calis War on Monopolies. The Republican candidate sounded a call to battle against monopolies. “We propose,” he said, “to use full power of the Federal Government to break up private monopolies and to eliminate private monopolies The Republican party he continued, pro- poses to restore and maintain “a free competitive system—a system under which, and only under which can there be independence, equality of opportunity and work for all” “A free competitive system” said Landon, “is necessary to a free gov- ernment.” This doctrine should sit well with that champion of a free, competitive system and antagonist of monopoly, Senator Willlam E. Borah of Idaho. | And the Idsho Senator probably will | be pleased because Gov. Landon, while | he declared that “we must be freed from the effects of an arbitrary and uncertain monetary policy,” he made no mention of a return to the gold standard. i “If I am elected Chief Executive of this Nation,” said Landon, “I pro- pose to restore our Government to an efficient as well as constitutional basis. “I shall call to my aid those men best qualified to conduct the public business—and I mean just that. I shall stand back of them. I shall ?:b'ld"thm responsible for doing their This part of Gov. Landon’s speech, taken in conjunction with his defense of the dual form of government un- der which the United States has grown, was interpreted as meaning that he will, when the time comes, not hesitate to place anti-New Deal Democrats in his cabinet or in other high office in Government, The address of Ciov, Landon will 80 down in history as & human docu- ment, without being an appeal to |efficient as well as constitutional | In an oratorical contest with Presi- | basis” the flow of conflicting state- dent Roosevelt he would be left at ments began. the post. But the people this year | B are electing a President, & Chief Ex- ‘“:;‘;i;n;“:fef( rom z},fifi:flfi,‘“g,fi_ ecutive—not an orator. entation of the principles of sim- His huge audience last night, plicity, honesty and economy in Gov- spread out over the capitol grounds, |ernment” to a Roosevelt supporter's was estimated at more than 100,000. |statement that it was “claptrap and How closely they followed his remarks weasel words.” was shown agaln and again. At one| The former opinion was expressed time he said: “In its ultimate effect upon the welfare of the whole people, this then, | is the most important question now before us: Shall we continue to dele- gate more power to the Chief Ex- ecutive?"” i The crowd roared a thunderous “no.” He added: “Or do we desire to pre- serve the American form of gov- ernment?” There was an equally thunderous “yes” from the multitude. At one point in his address, when he was discussing the question of the relief of the unemployed, Lan-| don said: | Will Handle Funds as Trust. “In extending help, we will handle’’ the public funds as a public trust. We will recognize that all citizens, irrespective of color, race, creed or party affiliation, have an equal right to this protection. We would consider it base beyond words to make loyalty | or serviee to party a condition upon | which the needy unemployed might obtain help. These who use public | funds to build their political machines | forfeit all right to political considera- tion from true Americans.” His words were cheered to the echo. | The great outdoor meeting, numeri- cally the equal to the gathering which listened to the Roosevelt acceptance | speech in Philadelphia, was called to | order by Chairman John Hamilton of | the Republican National Committee, another Topekan who has “made good.” In a brief speech Hamilton introduced Representative Snell of New York, who as chairman of the | Republican National Convention be- came chairman of the committee to “notify” Landon of his nomination. | In a brief address, the Republican | leader of the House delivered his | message to the candidate and pledged | “America will see you through to vic- tory.” take advantage of the new low rates on out-of-town calls dally after 7p.m.and ' all day on Sundays. | tion.* by Col. Frank Knox, Landon's running mate, who said at Manchester, N. H.: It 1eveals the rugged honesty, the quiet determination, the warm sym- pathy of Landon as a man. It is just what the country expected—no fire- works. on fancy phrases, no pre- tence * * *. Undoubtedly the people will see, in this address and in this man. the order and efficiency that the Republican party stands for.” Scored by Berry. The other viewpoint was expressed by George L. Berry, president of la- bor's Non-Partisan League, an or- ganization formed to support Presi- dent Roosevelt. Criticizing Landon’s | remarks on labor matters, Berry said: “His acceptance speech statements are entirely in harmony with his labor record, Out of that record we could expect nothing except the clap- trap and weasel words of the Topeka speech. It bulwarks industrial bour- bonism. It denies labor's aspira- tions.” In statement John L. another Saddlery TRUNKS-*Li Repairing of Leather Goods G. W.King, Jr., 511 11th St.N.W. nd (OFFICE-WORKER HELPED BY NATURAL LAXATIVE FOOD ALL-BRAN Corrected Her Constipation* | i | | | Here is her voluntary letter: “For years I was a sufferer from constipa- | It was necessary to take a | laxative every night before retiring. I| ‘was an office worker, and did not get much exercise. { “Some one told me that ALL-BRAN | was & good remedy for constipation.* | I bought a box, and found that it helped my condition. Since then I have not had to invest in laxatives.”— Mrs. Margaret Jones, 911 E. Laura | street, Clearwater, Florida. | Scientific tests have shown that | Kellogg's ALL-BRAN corrects consti- | pation* safely and pleasantly. This | delicious cereal supplies mild “bulk,” 8s well as vitamin B and iron. Two | tablespoonfuls daily are usually suffi- | cient. If not relieved this way, see| your doctor. { Wouldn't you rather enjoy this natural food than abuse your system | with harmful pills and drugs? | Protect your family from the dangers of common constipation.* Serve ALL-BRAN regularly for regu- larity. Either as a cereal with milk or cream, or cooked in tempting muffins, breads, etc. Recipes on every package. 8old by all grocers. Made by Kel- logg in Battle Creek. *Conatipation due o inauficient “bulk’ | in meats. Serve Ali-Bran | Regul ;Iy for Regularity passage of the Norris-La Guardia act, which declares the national public policy with reference to the organ- ization of workers that it ‘shall be free from the interference, restraint, or coercion of employers of labor or their agents’ Mr. Landon indorses the plank of his party that proposes to modify that declaration of policy. “Adopting the demand of the Na- tional Manufacturers’ Association he proposes there shall be ‘no interference from any source’ Such a policy, if carried into effect, would call for a re- writing of the Norris act to the end that efforts of organized labor to unionize an industry or a plant would become wrongful as a species of ‘in- terference from any source.'” Another topic of much discussion to- day was Father Charles E. Coughlin’s future. Developments in the next few days are expected to reveal whether he is about to vanish from the American political scene or continue his vehement EDUCATIONAL. 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