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New England Shows Gains for Landon Proverbiall Thrift of Area Is Major Factor in Campgign. This is the first of two dis- patches summarizing the impres- sions of New England’s political situation which ‘David Lawrence derived from a visit to the sir States in the northeast corner of the electoral map. BY DAVID LAWRENCE. ONCORD, N. H., September 19. —Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont bear a certain re- semblance to each other be- cause they have a ge rural popula- tion which still regards the Calvin Coolidge type of President as an ex- smple of true American thrift and stability. It is natural, therefore, to find Gov. Landon growing stronger in this sec- tion as a result of the revelation of his personality to New England folks. His back platform appear- ance and personal conferences have made an impres- sion far better than his radio talks. Across the top of New England there’s a definitely Republican trend. New Hampshire is going to in- crease its Republican vote materially. The primary vote showed signs of ac- tivity quite unusual for so early a pe- | riod. And the primary did not result in any dissension that might mean | trouble for Landon. The defeat of Benator Moses was a great disappoint- ment to his ardent followers, but his strength was among the conservatives who are going to vote for Landon any- how, whereas Gov. Bridges, who won the senatorial nomination, is more | popular among the liberal or so-called | progressive elements in the party who | might be classed as independent vot- ers. From this group the Landon ticket may possibly gain votes that| would otherwise have gone with the | New Deal on the strictly progressive \ssue. David Lawrence Take Cue from Maine. ‘The Maine election had a heartening effect on the Republican workers in all the New England States, but it was | bound to stimulate the neighboring | States and emphasize to Republicans | the importance of getting out the rural vote to offset the apparently strong vote which the Democrats are getting In the cities. The States of Maine, New Hamp- shire and Vermont pay a good deal into the Federal Treasury in income | taxes and there is inevijebly in New England a revulsion of feeling against Government spending, especially the boondoggling which has been so widely | described in the press. It is not surprising to find more dis- | cussion therefore of the fiscal issue in Federal affairs than almost any other. | Before I came to Concord, I visited | Rhode Island, which has all the ap- | pearance also of a Republican State, | though the margin there is not llke]y‘ to be much more than 10,000, or‘ thereabouts. Taxes Trouble Rhode Island. Rhode Island has been showing its antipathy to the New Deal in various ways, particulatly in the special con- gressional election a year ago and in a State wide vote on the spending of money for certain public works proj- ects which the people did not seem to want even though the Federal ‘Government was willing to foot nearly half the bill with a subsidy. The issue of taxation is becoming more and more talked about in Rhode Island. Perhaps one of the most interesting studies on taxation is the one being completed by the Providence Journal. It was instituted California by Sevellon Brown, managing editor, | who arranged with several typical | families to let him see all their ex- | penditures for a whole year so that | an analysis could be made of all the hidden tax items. ! The results which shortly will be | 19.—Possibility mother receiving $1,000 in rewards | for inducing her two mountllneerJ these families—not one of whom pays | sons to surrender as suspected triple | direct Federal taxes through the so- | killers was pointed out today by Dis- called income tax method—does pay | trict Attorney James Davis. published ought wide attention, to attract Nation- for they show that a considerable sum in what are called | indirect taxes. In some instances the tax amounts to almost 10 per cent | of the total income of the families studied. I have the impression that we shall but some of the congressional seats Coughlin Draws Democrats. | Rhode Island, from an organization standpoint is hardly into its stride on either the Republican or Demo- cratic sidé. The Lemke-Coughlin strength here is more largely among | the Democrats rather than the Re-| publicans and when the final ballot- ting is tallied it will be found that Father Coughlin’s talks will have alienated from the New Deal side many thousands of votes that might | otherwise have been cast for the Roosevelt Administration. Connecticut has hardly gotten go- | ing, either. Of all the New England States, I should say that Connecticut 1s the most doubtful. The Republicans have not been too sure of carrying it with a figure beyond 20,000, and that's not a big majority for Connecticut, though four years ago Mr. Hoover pulled through by less than 10,000. Gov. Landon is concededly much stronger in Connecticut than Mr. Hoover was in 1932. There have been signs of a Republican comeback in various cities and towns that have gone Republican' since 1932. But it must be borne in mind that Connecti- cut has a big industrial population in which, following trends in other parts of the country, the New Deal would naturally poll & bigger vote than usual. i~ Business Fears Spending. Much depends on whether the Lemke-Coughlin managers succeed in getting their candidates on the bal- Jot. Inroads in the industrial vote would be made by the Coughlin speeches. The business and manufacturing Interests are pretty solidly against the Roosevelt administration on the d that present governmental policies will inevitably lead to more amd more unsettlement and unemploy- ment. The Democratic Governor, ‘Wilbur Cross, is extremely popular and seems certain of re-election. But on the whole the campaign in By the Associated Press. | Brite was eligible for the rewards. New- England, with the exception of Maipe, which always comes to & @limax early, will not be definitely crystallized before about the first of) THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, News Behind the News Couzens Slated for New Deal Job—Possibly, but Not into a big New Deal job. Probably, the Treasury Post. I Casual consideration, at least, is known to have been given by BY PAUL MALLON. some of Couzens' friends toward boosting the straight-shooting Michigander RESIDENT ROOSEVELT is understood to have devoted some thought with $30,000,000 and a will of his own into the Treasury Secretaryship. This is the job he would fit best, but it is, of course, now amply occupied. Morgenthau, who holds it, is known to be inclined to keep on holding it. He would be moved only by a request {rom his friend and boss. If invited to take anything else, he would choose s & & the Paris Ambassadorship, but that, too, has just been filled. The State Department earmestly denies ru- mors that the Bullitt appointment to Paris was merely a temporary ar- rangement to meet the present pe- culiar French situation. If the wheels which are mov- ing in these directions slip the track, Couzens might be offered the budget directorship. Acting Budget Director Bell probably will be moved into the 15-year job of controller general sooner’or later. Note—Couzens is highly regarded inside New Deal circles for his independence. He was in the wrong pond in the Senate, his nature and erperience being better suited to erecutive activities. The New Dealers seem to think his appointment to any big post would be a political ten-strike jor Mr. Roosevelt. * * x x The official denial that creation of a European naval squadron means anything was entirely of the diplomatic variety. Ten days ago Mr. Roosevelt scoffed at the suggestion of such a move. A week ago Navy Secretary Swanson denied the Navy had thought of it. Three days ago it was done. ‘What happened in the meantime to change official minds was the war threat by Hitler against the Russians and the profound excitement it caused in Moscow. Officials here considered the resultant situation far more serious than the public at large. They thought there was a distinct possibility of a clash between Russia and Germany, not immediately, perhaps, but within the near future. Thus the new European nmaval squadron was created with a view to the possibility that it might have to remove American nationals some time soon from the trouble 2omes other than those in Spain. At the same time, authorities here wisely wanted to avoid starting a war scare, so they advertised it as a routine move. In a secondary way, it was one, and a good one. What it will do tech- nically is to permit the new admiral to move his ships in European waters swiftly. He will not have to go through 2ll the rigaramaroo of getting orders from Washington every time a Coast Guard cutter wants to turn around. Also, he will furnish central control on the job to keep the ships out of such trouble as the destroyer Kane unfortunately encountered from the presumably mysterious air bomber. Note—The squadron creation was an inside victory for commissioned officers of the Navy. They have been pulling for a European squadron for a long time. It affords them new cruising waters and what they call “new social education” in European ports. <o Mr. Roosevelt has been in good humor lately. His banter with news- men at press conferences has revealed his personal campaign attitude better than it has been expressed other- wise. Excerpts from the last one can be paraphrased in the proper tone, something like this: Campaign plans? Well, to be frank, he wants to make a trip to the Pacific Coast. It has gone as far as arranging a schedule to find out how many days it would take out and back, but he doesn’t know. He will do it if he can. He doesn't want to start a war scare, but, the way the European situation is right now, it would not do for him to be gone from Washington longer than four days in a row. What the situation will be 10 days hence, he doesn’t know. Sea trip in December to Pan-American Conference? No, but he will tell you what he probably will do after November 3. Take a sea trip of 10 dayvs or two weeks for fishing in some of those spots he overlooked previously in the Gulf of Mexico. Will the President do that regardless of what happens Novem- ber 3> No comment. except that he is a damned good guesser. He is such a good political guesser, he may syndicate himself after election. He doesn't want to brag, but he thinks he is pretty good. In the five Maine contests, his estimates were very close on three, off a little on one and 'away off on another, a congressional contest. That reminds him about Albany, 1932. Some of the political experts got up a pool on the election and he thinks evervbody put $5 in the hat, and “mind they were all experts.” but he won the pool. (Heavy laughter.) Anly comment about Lloyds offering 5 to 3 on his election? (Pause, and then a response in an amazed tone of voice.) Lloyds did that! (An assurance came from the crowd that it was true.) Well. (Another pause.) Probably any answer to that would be construed as a bid for British sup- port. (Laughter. Exeunt.) (Copyright, 1936.) RICHMAN-MERRILL October. In a nutshell Gov. Landon | is gaining slowly but surely against the four-year-ago majority of Presi- | dent Roosevelt. Nobody can judge | the exact rate of his gain because | there remains so much of the cam- | paign to be unfolded. (Copsright, 1936.) Before Tomorrow—Deny Row MOTHER MAY GET $1,000 During Flight. FOR SURRENDER OF SONS | | here last night in their ocean-cross- | ing monoplane and quickly denied | reports there had been serious fric- tion between them during their flight from England. September 19 (Canadian Press).— Pair, Suspected Triple Slaying, Gives Up After 20 Days in Hiding. in SACRAMENTO, Calif., of a September gray-haired denial of the report. ‘They flew here from Musgrave miles away, where their plane, the | Lady Peace, landed Monday after | to compléte a round-trip crossing. Mrs. A. J. Brite, assured protection After receiving reports of the de- would be given against lynching, per- | structive hurricane whirling up the suaded John and Coke Brite to emerge | Atlantic seaboard the aviators decided from 20 days of hiding. They disap-| to postpone their take-off from Har- peared August 30, after two officers | bor Grace until tomorrow at earliest. i F and a complaining witness were killed | hear an increasing amount of debate| near Yreka, as the outgrowth of a on this which will extend far beyond | quarrel over a horse. the election and may this year affect| were rushed from Siskiyou County not merely the top of the ticket now, and placed in Folsom Prison here after their surrender yesterday. Print Called Immortal's. After measuring the 48-inch foot- print found at Siliguri, India, am as- trologer declared that it undoubtedly belonged to Aswathama, one of the immortals of Hindu Scriptures. The brothers Davis expressed belief that Mrs. Young Washington A thoughtful young lady filling the bird bath at the Wheat- ley School. She is Jean Kendrick, 11, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Kendrick, 1230 Morse street northeast. Monday: Alvin Hale, son of Mr. and Mrs, A. QHale, at the Takoma Park:glay- - ground. ~Star Staff Photo. Iately to getting his defeated Republican friend, Senator Couzens, FLIGHT POSTPONED Will Not Return to New York HARBOR GRACE. Newfoundland, |0 possible Dick Merrill and Harry Richman flew | | spanning the Atlantic from Englnnd} Political Tide Shifts in 2 Years Primaries Show- Swift Changes in Back and Forth Since "28. BY MARK SULLIVAN. E Maine election, and primaries in three other States, show how great is the momentum & political tide can gather within a two-year period. The tide in this case runs in favor of the Republicans. The speed and force possible in a two-year tide has been shown before. It was shown be- _ . " . tween 1928 and 1930, when the 3 sweep was in fa- vor of the Demo- crats. In 1928, § the i tion, between Hoover and Gov. Smith, the Democrats won only 87 elec- toral votes to the | Republicans’ 444. In the elections to the House of Representatives that year, the Democrats won only 165 seats to the Republicans’ 268. That was in November, 1928. Two years later, in 1930, there was no pres- idential election by which to make comparison. But in the House of Rep- Mark Sullivan | jority, 219 to the Republicans’ 214. In | short, an immense Republican victory in 1928 became, two years later, a na: row Democratic victory. this year is whether the same thing can happen in the opposite direction. In the present two-year tide in favor of the Republicans, that party has | further to go than the Democrats ha For the Republicans, 1934 was an all- time low—an all-time low indeed for won only 102 seats in the House of Representatives to the Democrats’ 322. But it is apparent that in recent times a political tide can run with a swift- | ago. The causes for the faster tempo !include the loosening of party ties | which leads masses of voters to swing from one side to the other, and an ac- | celeration wrought perhaps by the | radio. Tide Changes Swiftly. How swift the present tide is can be realized by a look beneath the surface of the Maine election. In Maine, in 1934, the Democrats won 2 of the State’s 3 seats in the Lower House of Congress. This year the Republicans won those two seats back, and won them by large majorities. That per- formance leaves no possible doubt that throughout the country the Republi- cans are certain to make extraordinary gains in the Lower House. resentatives the Democrats won & ma- | The tide against the Democrats i strong. Against the New Deal it is yet stronger. This latter tide expresses itself, in some cases, in support’ for candidates who are Democrats but not New Dealers. This, also, was illustrated in Maine. In that State the Demo- oratic candidate for Senator, Brann, was universally recognized to be not a New Dealer. His dissent from the New Deal brought him much support that's New Deal Democratic candi- date could not have got, and he came close to winning. Had he won, he would have become, in the Senate, follower of the anti-New Deal Demo- cratic leadership provided by such Democrats as Senator Glass of Vir- ginia. Anti-Roosevelt Democrats Win. Something like this is going on everywhere. Democrats are being elected to the Senate and House In strong Democratic States and districts hardly possible to be won by any Re- publicans, and many of the Democrats who are winning are as opposed to the New Deal as any Republican. The same change is taking place among Democratic Senators whose seats hold over for two or four years and who are not up for re-election this year. There are Democratic Senators who up to now have “gone along” with the New Deal and Mr. Roosevelt but who, from now on, will in the Senate follow lead- ership like that of Senator Glass. Another factor that emerged in Tues”ay’s primaries is the strength of Father Coughlin's following. In Michigan, & particularly faithful Coughlinite—he is Father Coughlin's ‘Washington representative — entered the primary as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for United St:tes Senator. He came within a few thousand votes of winning over the regular Democratic contender, the vote was about 125,000 to about 120,- | 000. This strength of a Coughlinite in a Michigan Democratic primar} may be accounted for in part by the fact that it occurred in Father Coughlin's home State. Coughlin Aids Republicans. ‘The question | | either party. The Republicans in 1934 | | ness that was not possible a few years | Observers agree, however, that | Father Coughlin's following every- | | where is considerable. They agree also | that it is, like the priest himself, strongly anti-Roosevelt. Even that large part of it which is normally ! | Democratic is in this campaign anti- | Roosevelt and anti-New Deal. With | respect to the coming presidential | election, most of Father Coughlin's following will vote for the candidate whom the priest has indorsed, Mr.| Lemke of the Union party. The cur- rent straw votes seem to indicate that Mr. Lemke will get between ¢ ‘and 5 per cent of the total vote. Most of that is a vote which, if Mr. Lemke and Father Coughlin did not exist, would be for Mr. Roosevelt. It is a subtraction from Mr. Roosevelt, and therefore an aid to the Republicans. In two of the three States in which primaries were held last week Michigan and Massachusetts, the number of voters who entered the Re- publican primary was markedly great- er than the number who entered Democratic primaries. This fact, and additional evidence suggest that the Republicans should carry those States in November. Altogether, the Re- publicans have had a cheering week. (Cepsright, 1936, HAUPTMANN CASE CONTINUES ‘OPEN Newark Grand Jury to Re- new Wendel Probe on October 5. Br the Assoclated Press Two years after Bruno after his death in the electric chair, the Lindbergh kidnap-murder case remains open. Although there are no definite leads accomplices, and de- back on regular details, Col. Mark O. | Kimberling, State police superintend- | ent, sald today every piece of mail received about the case and every “tip” is checked out. The letters dribble in now, maybe “We love each other as brothers” | One a week, a marked contrast to| Richman said, and Merrill added his | the hundreds which came daily in the | | hectic days following the kidnaping (on the blustery night of March 1, Harbor, an isolated fishing village 125 | 1932, and after the announcement | | two years ago tomorrow of Haupt- mann’s arrest, No Developments Since. | Kimberling, who as principal keeper | then of the State prison, supervised | arrangements for Hauptmann's execu- | tion the night of April 3, said today | there had been no development since. | What checking is done is routine, but the case, he said, has not been marked “closed.” Gov. Harold G. Hoffman, who ing a nocturnal visit tor Hauptmann in | his cell last October, was understood to have done little on the case in re- cent months. Most of the investiga- tion done in the Governor's name before: Hauptmann went to the chair was by volunteers, many of whom | checked out their own “hot tips.” The Hauptmann case has been pro- longed by its strange sequel, Paul H. ‘Wendel's story of abduction and false confession of the kidnaping. Wendel's Story Sifted. ‘Three grand juries have sifted Wen- del’s story since he first told it, on the eve of Hauptmann's execution, which was delayed three days. A Mercer County grand jury ab- solved him of a formal charge of kidnaping the Lindberg baby; a Kings County (Brooklyn) grand jury in- dicted Ellis H. Parker, Burlington County detective chief; his son Elis, jr., and others, on charges of kid- naping Wende!; a Federal grand jury in Newark considered the case after Hoffman refused extradition. Six indictments were reported voted by the Newark jury, but the Wendel case is not yet finished. The jury will renew its investigation October 5, Seal Campaign Planned. CULPEPER, Va., September 19 (Special).—Miss Adelia Yowell headed the delegation of Culpeper women at- tending the regional meeting of the Virginia Tuberculosis Association in ‘Warrenton, at which time plans were made for the seal sales of the coming Autumn season. Miss Yowell is county chairman of this county, with Mrs. Jullan Brown, Mrs. Ashby Burton, Mrs. Margaret Martin, Mrs. Walter Pierce, Miss Virginia Tinsley, Mrs. John Grifin Durant and Mrs. William TRENTON, N. J,, September 19.— | Richard | Hauptmann's arrest and six months | tectives once assigned to the case are | | launched his own invesiization follow- | CONGRESS ‘DUMB! SAYS VANDENBERG “Has No More Concern for a Million Than Farley,” Declares Senator. Br the Associated Press. NEW BRITAIN, Conn. September 19.—Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, | Republican of Michigan, asserted to- | day that “Congress is utterly money- dumb” in its spending of public funds. “It has no more concern for a mil- lion dollars than Mr. Farley (James A. Farley, Democratic national chair- | man) has for a Jefferson Democrat,” he said in an address prepared for de- livery at the opening of the Connec- ticut State campaign at Lake Com- | | pounce. | | Declaring Congress had voted bil- | lions with “only the most casual and perfunctory” debate, Senator Van- denberg continued: “Appropriated” for President. “Usually it leaves the distribution | largely to the discretion of the Presi- | dent and his bureaucrats. On one amazing occasion, the President, ask- ing for three billion, actually had the | temerity to say: ‘I sugest that you | appropriate it to me.’ And Congress | ' “Although this autocratic process is | highly familiar abroad, this was the | | first official moment in American his- | tory when the personal pronoun be- | gan to dominate our democracy.” |~ The senator charged the President had failed in his inaugural promise | | to “put our national house in order | | and make income balance outgo,” and | instead “the Treasury is become chief- ly a device for manufacturing debt, | while Santa Claus writes checks and | Pollyanna pays for them.” Fears Bankruptcy. “Upon my responsibility as a Sena- tor,” said Senator Vandenberg, “I | state to you my deep conviction that the Roosevelt party and Roosevelt spending—unless sharply interrupted next November—will bring you to the lend of what the President himself | described as ‘the road to bankruptey.’ " He said “Democrats no longer can | recognize the Roosevelt New Deal| party as their own. “It is & new party—a third party— without fixed principles, as demon- | strated by its own boastful contempt |for its wholly broken promises of 1932, the Senator charged. o Synthetic fats are being made from | petroleum hydrocarbons in Germany. | Enrell for classes now forming in SPANISH Fameus Conversational Berlitz Method AIR COND. AND REFRIGERATION Factory Trained Instructors TART NOW! Institute MEt. Catalogue t, N.W. 1319 F 8 end for Primary, Grades, High School Annapolis — West Point 2128 Wyoming Ave, N,W. North 966§ SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1936. We, the People Maybe the Pyramid Prophets Meant the Discovery of Flu Immunity. ¥ BY JAY FRANKLIN, N THE night of September 15-16, the worid entered"s new era of happiness, prosperity and general spiritual enlargement—accord- ing to the “Prophecies of the Great Pyramid.” ‘The subtle Egyptians are said to have embeddel a key to the fu- ture in the various passages and chambers within the pyramid. If you take & unit of measurement for a unit of time, the gift of prophecy is there—illustrated by the various dips, turns, barriers and chambers which lead to the central riddle. The important thing for s good pyramidologist is to pick the right unit of measurement. With its aid, the pyramid has infallibly fore- retrospect—such events ss the World War and the panic of 1929. Therefore, it is of great import- ance to observe the state of the world, as of the night of Septem- ber 15-16, 1936, if things are going to be so different from now on. Reading the front page from right to left, we discover that Senator James Couzens, progres- sive Republican, and Frank Mur- phy, liberal New Dealer, were trail- ing their conservative opponents in the Michigan primaries, while Gev. Alfred M. Landon of Kansas hailed the recent Maine election as the beginning of a “victory para against the New Deal. Landon was, at the time, the Republican candidate for the presidency of the United States. Siz insurance ezecutives informed President Roosevelt that life insurance assets were up $30,000,000,000 since 1933, for a total of $239,915000,000. Two million mew policies had been written. The Spanish Loyalists executed 62 officers at Bilbao for trying to desert to the rebel army which was blockading that port. The rebels were conducting a big filibustering expedition against Spain, with the aid of Moors, foreign criminals, German and Italian officers, * x ¥ % At Cambridge, Mass,, scientists at Harvard University announced that the conquest of influenza was nesr, as a result of an “immunity serum.” President Roosevelt announced that he might delay the opening of nis personal campaign for re-election until after October 1, on account of the Iorellm situation, but that he would go fishing after election day, win or lose. Police stood guard around the textile mills of Lille, France, as 35,000 vorkers folded their arms in a ‘strike. The mill owners, it is unnecessary to state, were reported as adamant and determined to prevent the “estab- lishment of Soviets” in their factories. Cordell Hull, Secretary of State in the fir$t Roosevelt administration, urged new peace pacts. but barred alliances, in an effort to make the “good neighbor” policy an effective aid to world peace, % x % Looking the fleld’ over, it is obvious that the great pyramid. in its thousands of years, has seen plenty of political campaigns, plenty of wars, executions, revolts, strikes, life insurance policies, and good, bad and in- different neighbors. These it probably took for granted. i A cure for influenza, on the other hand, is something really new under e sun. There can be iittle doubt that the prophecy for the night of September 15-16 referred to the elimination of that common scourge ©of the snuffle. the sneeze, the cough, the headache, the general feel- ing that the world is a lousy place and that all men are liars. This is the mild form of the plague. The world still recalls the “Spanish flu,” which calmly took more lives in the Winter of 1918-9 thar had been destroyed in four years of terrific warfare. I recall how it hit Rome, the Eternal City, and how the dead lay unburied in the upper floors of the palatial Grand Hotel until the undertakers could catch up with their work. I remember one of the most briliiant young men in the American Government service, full of life one day, going away on leave and dead from flu within 48 hours. I re- member getting the disease myself and being dosed with a cure for cholera by a doctor who was willing to try anything once, and recover- ing. much to his and my surprise. No, influenza is no joke, not even to a dead Pharaoh who took the trouble of warning the world what it might expect in the centuries to come. If Harvard has really de- veloped an “immunity serum” for the influenza. the human race can afford to overlook French strikers. Spanish rebels, American politicians, insurance policies and even the weather, which, I forgot to report, was forecast as being “generally fair, ‘warmer today. Tomorrow cloudy, probably showers.” (Copyright, 1936, by The Register and Tribune Syndicate.) / Now: ] Ts 18 ~inlecesTne” ‘idp . Second Offense Speeding. John P. Jenkins, 1520 P street, 30 Gay W. Murphy, 29 M street, $15. | days. First Offense Speeding. | william M. Joki, Percy H. Washington, 1015 Fourth street, 15 days. street, $10. Bessie Jones, 1758 Corcoran street, James W. Roberts, 1407 Tenth 30 days. street, $10. | Thomas K. Jones, 3123 Thirteenth Nathan Wolin, 7310 Georgia ave- street. 15 days. nue, $10. | Jesse H. Knight, New York City, 30 Willard C. Morrison, 2817 Connec- | days. 912 Nineteenth ticut avenue, $10. | Herman Schmidt, 2917 North Cap- itol street, $10. | Dorothy R. Matter, Maryland, $5. Morris Bassin, 53 D street south- east, $5. ‘Tasco. T. Robinson, Virginia. $5. Eugene C. Akre, Virginia, $5. Benjamin H. Henderson, vlr;lnl.h $5. Joseph 8. Bell, Virginia, $5. Louis E. Green, 1316 Delaware ave- nue southwest, $5. Rufus Faison, 1741 T street, $5. | Virginia D. Feeney, 1340 Ingraham | street, $5. | Vernon A. Fowler, 3636 Georgia avenue, $5. Permit Suspensions. Albert Copelin, 4705 Blagden ter- race, 15 days. | Ray W. Cornell, 2700 Connecticut | avenue, 15 days. | Ray Harris, 1803 Sixth street, 15| days. | Robert E. Higdon, 2015 Douglas'| street northeast, 30 days. Hazel G. Hobart, 17 Massachusetts avenue, 30 days. Robert T. Ingels, 31 Anacostia road southeast, 30 days. Alonzo E. Jackson, 44 Myrtle street northeast, 15 days. George Jawish, 6! street, 15 days. ENGINEERING ALL BRANCHES—SPECIAL- IZED ONE-YEAR UNITS Also. Complete Four-Year Courses Columbia “Tech” Institute 1319 F 8t N. W. 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McLemore, 940 14th street southeast, revoked. Hugh J. McMahon, 30 days. Peter F. Miodusewski, beth's Hospital, 15 days. John E. Moran, Seventeenth ‘ater street southeast, 30 days. BUSINESS OTEET’S coies 14th and Eve Sts. N.W. t In Business. Pace Courses: B. C. S. and § M.C.S. Degrees. C.P. A. Preparation. Dayand Even- ing Classes: Coeducational Send for 30th Year Book. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY SRANSPORTATION BLDG MET 2818 Early Morning, Day and Evening Classes [ 3-Year Course Leading to LL. B. Degree Early Morning and Evening Classes Begin Segt. 21 Day Classes ept. 28 Southeastern University (Coedueational) 1736 G St. N.W. NA. 8250 NEW CLASSES FOR * BEGINNERS IN GREGG SHORTHAND SEPTEMBER 21 DAY AND EVENING TIVOLI THEATER BUILDING T4th Street ot Park Rood TELEPHQYE COL. 3000 921 I street, St. Elisa- | and | Gen. Martinez Anido. Headline Folk Gen. Anido, Proposed as Spain Dictator, Led BY LEMUEL F. PARTON. RESS reports name Gen. Mar= | tator of Spain if the rebels win. Former head of the na- dictatorship; called the “Javert of Spain” by his enemies; known as the ; “White Terror” in Barcelona in Gen. Anido is of the type called friends and “tough” by his ‘When Primo de Rivera was over- eral got across the French bor- squeak and holed in comfortably chance for a comeback. The Spanish provisional Republican government late Gen. Arlegui. It found letters | and documents having to do with the police of Barcelona. Some of the government leaders thought they had political crimes, particularly in its supposed bearing on the dispatching Plans to seek extradition from France were prepared. but some of that the general was less of a menace | in exile than he would be in Spain | and the extradition procedure was | dropped. But the government did | Anido's entire official life, with all the | supporting affidavits and evidence it hands of a secret ally in an undis- closed country, with instructions to history if Gen. Anido ever regains power in Spain.” at 70, was regarded several years ago as active in plans for restoration of that two years ago he dropped t idea and has been co-operating wi Nazi model dictatorship. He was & strong and inexorable military leader most skilfull strategists of the African wars and vice premier in De Rivera' | This carving out a slice of history | and putting it “in escrow” is, by the probably only romantic Latins would think of. It will be interesting to sec They Do “White Terror.” tinez Anido as prospective dic- tional sefret police under the Rivera leader of the 1921 and 1823, “strong” by his opponents. thrown the gen- der by a narrow on the French Riviera to wait for a obtained the secret archives of the activities of Gen. Anido as chief of evidence of common law, rather than of sundry enemies of De Rivera. the Republican officials concluded | prepare a complete dossier of Gen. could cbtain. They planted it in the “bring this case before the bar of Gen. Anido, resourceful and vigorous the monarchy, but it is understood | the rebel leaders in blue-printing & of the monarchist days, one of th- | cabinet. | way. an oddity in affairs of state wh if anything comes of it. As a young poet. Hermann Hagedorn thrilled to the trumpets and paced th martial tread in his| dithyramb: | Now, at 54, writing the Harvard ter- | centenary ode, his muse falters. War | 1sn't what it used to be: | What of the heaving ground, the | bodies hurtling | From towers, towers toppling, the | terror, the swirling fury, | The trampling feet. the i rolling Youth in vacuity, | Gasping for daybreak | He was born in New York of German parentage and was graduated from Harvard in 1907. Rev. Francis Pea- | body sald he was the best class day poet ever graduated. He attended the | University of Berlin and did post- | graduate work at Columbia. He has | maintained a steady output of poems, | biographies—including a notable life |of Willilam Boyce Thompson—plays nd critical writing. He lives in | Washington with his wife and three children. * (Copyright. 19.5.) drums British Children Return. Hundreds of British children who went on & ship to see their parents | stationed in India, Ceylon and Burma | returned in time for the new school | term. ational Berlitz Method LITZ i Tirh Conn_ Ave: 0 QRtional NAticnal 0770 National University Fall Term Begins Sentember 28. 1936 SCHOOL OF LAW School of Economics and Government Registrar’s Office Oven for Rezistration 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. 818 13th STREET N.W. Telenhone NAtional 6617 Refr | Send_for Ca 1319 F St. N.W. alogue MEL._5626 Ct Day. Eve. Wood’s School Established 1335 710 14th St. N.W, Met. 5051 Fall Term Starts Sept. 21 COURS] Business Adninisisatie, Ezecutive Secretarial. 1 Stenographic. 10 Months Calculating Machines. 3 Months Comptometer Positions for Graduates. ACCOUNTANCY Courses leading to B.C.S. and M.C.S. Degrees. Grad- uate Course in Preparation for C.P.A. Examinations. Day and Evening Sessions FALL TERM BEGINS SEPT. 21 and 28 Official Bulletin oa Request S'fll'fl COLLEGE OF ACCOURTANCY PINCENEKY J. HARMAN, Dizector Homer Bullding, Thirteenth &F St N.W. NAtional 1748 2 Years Year