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/ ' A—8 . THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1936. —_ . ROOF LEAK NA. 4370 GICHNER ~ ADVERTISEMENT. “Avoid Intestinal Fatigue Many people suffering from In- testinal Fatigue, commonly called Constipation, do not know what is is to feel good. Ome or two E-Z Tablets for a day or two are Just what these people need. They have more “pep” and step livelier than in years. Dizziness, .tired feeling, headaches, when due to eonstipation, disappear. Surely makes a difference. See for your- self. You get 60 little E-Z Tablets for 25c. At all good drug stores. If Your Dentist Hurts You, Try DR. FIELD Plate Expert Oouble R e 3 Suction I Guarantee a Perfect, Tight Fit in Any Mouth I Give Violet Ray Treatments for Pyorrhea Extraction $1d §2 Also Gas Ext. Plates $15 to $35 Gold Crowns $6 up Fillings, $1 up Plates § 1.50 Repaired up DR. FIELD 406 7th St. NW. Met. 9256 TRy THIS NEW"CREAMED" RUBBING ALCOHOL SPRY soothes tired, aching feet. Can’t spill. Liquefies as you rub it in, Doesn't ““dry out” the skin. Use for sore muscles, cuts, bruises. 70%, absolute alcohol. Large jar, 29¢— double size, 49¢. AT YOUR RETAILER'S SEND 10¢ 727 %eer Print name and sddress | | | | | | | TR T T T T — | Mail to SPRY, Ine., S E. 37th SL, N. V. C. D 1 Cooking today is not the task of days gone by. Cookery! Today cooking takes less time. Kitchen hours are pleasant hours. You can.enjoy better and more healthfully cooked meals. And You can save | | | | I | | | | ! LINKING MADRID 10 MOSCOW FAILS Rebel Effort Unsuccessful; Soviet Eager to Avert War, Observer Says. This is the tenth of a series of uncensored dispatches on under- surface conditions in Spain, written by a famous foreign correspondent after traveling for several weeks in the warn-torn provinces of Cata- lonia, Aragon and New Castile. BY WALTER DURANTY. | By Wireless to The Star | TOULON, France, September 23 (N.AN.A)—From the outset of the Spanish struggle, the rebels have lost no opportunity of posing as “national patriots,” fighting to save the country from the “Marxists.” Despite the fact that money has been subscribed by Soviet workers for the aid of the Loyalist government, | the rebels have been unable to show | any conneetion between Moscow and events in Spain. This is true for the excellent and well-known reason that | the government of the U. S. S. R. is |50 passionately eager to avert a | European war that, far from stimulat- ing comintern activities in Spain or elsewhere, they have been deliberately | restricted, as I happen to know be- yond a doubt. | The rebels, accordingly, tried to utilize for propaganda purposes the notoriety which the Zinoviev-Kanenev trial in Moscow recently gave to Leon Trotzky. It has been announced re- peatedly by rebel sources that Trotzky had been invited to Barcelona or | that he had appealed to the Catalonian ‘govemment for permission to visit Barcelona. Setting aside the flagrant absurdity of the pro-rebel radio station | at Lisbon, which announced this sen- | sational news, I was formally in- formed by the highest Barcelona | | authorities, first, that neither Trotzky | nor his supporters had applied for a | visa in Catalonia, and, second, that | | if such a request were made it would ; be refused. Trotzkyite Group. Sure, there is a Trotzkyite group | in the motley Socialist conglomeration | known as “Poum"—Workers' party | unified Marxists—which ranks third in importance among the Catalan | popular organizations and includes | members of the Second Internationale | and orthodox bolsheviks as well as | Trotzkyites. The leader of the latter, | Georg Nin, a former collaborator or secretary of Trotzky during the de- posed bolshevik leader’s sojourn on Prinkipo Island, was absent or uldi to be absent from Barcelona when I | was there. However, his associates de- | clared that, although earlier they had | discussed the possibility of inviting | Trotzky, no decision had been reached | on the subject. To which a spokesman | of the Central Militia Committee added curtly that, if the Trotzkyites had issued an invitation, the cam-| mittee would have countermanded it. | | In point of fact the orthodox or | | Stalinist Communists find themselves | | in the paradoxical situation of being | | —end being regarded—as a rather | | moderate, one might almost say reac- | | tionary, factor. Unwelcome as this statement may sound to the rebels and their sympathizers abroad, it hap- | pens to be true, as I saw and heard myself. Not only was the Soviet diplomatic influence at Madrid and Barcelona be- ing exercised on the side of modera- tion, but a Communist column com- mander, Grueba, on the Huesca front, told me he disapproved the practice of the Anarchist columns of national- izing the towns and villages occupied and even their attempt to abolish money. Stand of Commander. “As far as possible,” he said, “I pre- fer to leave local administration in the hands of rural or municipal coun- cils and avoid interference with the normal life of the people.” Other Communists in Barcelona de- | clared they had two principal objec- | tives—first, to win the war against the rebels, and, second, to smooth out the differences and divergences among the various radical organizations and to held back the extremists. “We are better disciplined than some of our Anarchist comrades,” they said, “and we have had greater | experience. We know the danger of trying to do too much too quickly.” To which I Heard Anarchists retort that Moscow ‘had become bureau- cratic, cautious and patriotic, and that its supporters in Spain supported the Soviet national interests but were lukewarm revolutionaries. (Copyright, 1936, by the North American Newspaper Alliance Inc.) Jones' “Nephew” Recovering. SAN PEDRO, Calif,, September 23 | (#)—Hewins Gamel, who identified | himself as a nephew of Jesse Jones, | Reconstruction Finance Corp. chair- | man, was recovering today from the effects of poison, which Police Sur- geon C. J. Ryan said was self ad- ministered. At Fort Worth, Tex.,, John Jones. brother of Jesse Jones, said he had no nephew named Hewins Gamel. DIES HEARING FIGHT PADUCAH, Ky., September 23 (#).— Ed C. Dennington, 58, former member of the Kentucky General Assembly and a well-known political figure here for eight years, collapsed while listening to the Louis-Ettore fight broadcast last night and died an hour later. 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