Evening Star Newspaper, September 27, 1936, Page 47

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SOCILTY. BRAZIL SUPPORTS “NEW NEUTRALITY” . Ambassador Hails a “Con- tinental Monroe Doctrine” and American Solidarity. (This is the seventeenth and eoncluding article of a series on the new Pan-Americanism and the coming Pan-American peace com- Jerence at Buenos Aires.) BY BRENT DOW ALLINSON. | , President Roosevelt's formal invi- | tation to the coming Extraordinary Pan-American Conference at Buenos Aires delivered in Rio de Janeiro by Ambassador Hugh Gibson, was promptly accepted by Dr. Getulio Vargas, the President of Brazil, in & | letter both eloquent and brief. “The noble words with which your Excellency justifies this generous idea,” he wrote on Washington's birthday last February, “met with the ¢ most decided sympathy on the part of the Brazilian government and peo- ple. Our tradition of peace, the preference which we have always shown for conciliatory solutions, and | the strong American sentiment which | tnspires our international policy al- | ready assured in advance our sin- cere acceptance of your Excellency’s suggestion, lofty in its aims and in the way in which it was presented to the other countries of the Continent. You can depend, therefore, on our | loyal and frank co-operation for the | purpose of translating into reality | this noble initiative, which is surely | destined to mark a new epoch in the history of the political relations of the American countries.” Likened to the U. S. Such was the beginning of a new adventure in constructive interna- tionalism on an all-American pat- tern, a pattern opposed in spirit and | method of the equivocal methods of Europe, as paraded at Geneva. It is significant that Brazil, largest, most polyglot and democratic of all Latin American republics and most closely | resembling the United States in its political structure and spirit, followed | the United States into the war against | Germany. and after joining the .League of Nations in 1920, resigned from it in 1926, The present engag- ing Ambassador from Brazil to the United States, Dr. Oswaldo Aranhe, who has served the federal govern- ment of his country as minister of Jjustice and the interior, as well as minister of finance before coming to Washington, recently declared to the | writer that “Brazil looks with favor upon the development of ‘the new pan-Americanism’ and would oppose specifically the proclamation of a strict, co-operative and continental neutrality policy for all the Ameri- can republics in the event of another of decrees for the reform of economic and political conditions. By this means the 8-hour day and the 6-day weex in industrial establishments were es- | tablished, as well as woman suffrage; | and secret and even compulsory voting of- all citizens over 21 years of age. The imposition of export taxes on interstate and intermunicipal com- merce, levied by states and cities, was likewise prohibited, and a progressive national point of view established. Conditions Seen Improving. “Conditions are rapldly improving in Brazil now,” said the Ambassador, “and with the improvement in inter- American relationships and the en- largement of our commerce with the United States and certain European countries, we are breathing more easily. Our population and national wealth are rapidly increasing; the | country is developing its resources, with the co-operation of large amounts of American capital; and we look to the United States, not merely as to our largest customer—which absorbs nearly 45 per cent of our total for- eign exports, annually, in value—but are thinking of it also as our greatest friend and democratic exemplar and ally. I think that the Monroe Doc- trine should now be broadened and strengthened into a pan-American doctrine, confirming the ideal of its founders. As to assuming a share of responsibility for its defense, in time of threat or of war, Brazil gave full proof of its attitude in this respect by its conduct and sacrifices in co- operation with the United States dur- ing the World War.” “The Buenos Aires Conference,” sald Dr. Arahe, in conclusion, “will be an auspicious opportunity to carry some of our common policies to fuller de- velopment. In my opinion, the reor- ganization of the PBan-American Union, in order to include the Domi: ion of Canada, would be a very des able thing; but Brazil has alwa; opposed in the past the extension of its activities into the political aspect of inter-American problems, which is & matter that has been largely dis- cussed. As to the fertile idea of a | customs union between American re- publics, first broached at the first pan-American conference, in Wash- ington in 1890, I believe th’t it can assume concrete form only when the respective countries have attained a degree of progress sufficient to war- rant the discussion of the extension of their economic frontiers. Doubt- less, it would be feasible between cer- | tain of the smaller and contiguous states. I assure you that, when the | time comes, Brazil will be ready to! Three months consider it. We are prepared to do | everything in our power to further the | lists give this stamp & sudden rise | economic and political affliations of | the American states and the consoli- | | dation of our great continent under & rule are close to the retail quota- the banner of peace. DECLINE OF LIBERTY SCORED BY THOMAS — Democrats and Republicans Are Blamed in Address Before war in Europe or Asia; and, in case | of war on the American continent, | against the aggressor, and to the assistance of the victim of aggres- sion.” Wants Policy Defined. i “I believe,” he added emphatically, “that steps should be taken at the coming Inter-American Conference at Buenos Aires to define such a policy | . and to commit the American nations jointly to adopt it. For in proclaiming | fuch & resolute attitude and policy of | pan-American solidarity, we shall but | ratify our deepest political feelings and | instincts. And in undertaking to de- fine our newer obligations and com- | mon duties, consistent with our moral | treaty pledges, and with the enlarged | conception of neutrality—meaning commercial and economic, as well as ‘ political, non-intervention in alien con- flicts—we shall be fortifying our econ- | omic and political independence of | Europe, and implementing our com- | mon Americanism, as a potent moral and physical force against war in the world and continuation of the anar- chic war system, which has almost wrecked Western civilization. 4 think that all the supposed profits of war and the munitions traffic favor a minority against the real interests and welfare of the people of the neutral country that permits it. Your new American neutrality act is a step in the direction of suppressing it, and 1 think that all of Latin America is pre- pared to take the same step togethel Brazil, the Ambassador reminded me, s & great exporter of raw cotton, a: is the United States, as well as of cof- fee, rubber and other tropical fruits and products. Both cotton and, in ef- fect, coffee and rubber, were declared to be contraband by the contending belligerents in the World War. In facing the problems of the de- pression, which has fallen heavily upon Brazil, the provisional government of President Vargas has issued a number Chicago Bar Group. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO. September 26.—Norman Thomas held both Republicans and Democrats responsible today for tol- erating what he said was a steady de- cline of civil liberty in the United States. The Socialist candidate for Presi- dent, speaking yesterday before the Chicago Bar Association, ranged from one end of the country to the other to present a “record of injustice” which, he declared, called for a vindi- cation of democracy. “I cite the ‘Hoosier Hitlerism’ of ov. McNutt of Indiana,” he said. “He invented military law without the military in Sullivan County and later at Terre Haute. “I draw your attention to the epi- demic of floggings and kidnapings in | | Florida, with the revival of the Ku- Klux-Klan there. Legion. “In Eastern Arkansas there is a ally indorsed by Senator Joe Robin- son. “Peoria, I, is closed to labor and Socialist organizers.” Thomas also discussed what he termed the increasing denials of the right to vote by reason of difficulties in getting on the ballot.” MAXINE JENNINGS WEDS Actress and Rudolph Ising, Car- toonist, Visit Yellowstone. HOLLWOOD, Calif.,, September 26 (#)—Maxine Jennings, film actress, and Rudolph Ising, animated cartoon flim producer, were married today at Las Vegas, Nev., her studio said. After a week in Yellowstone Nation- | al Park, the newlyweds will return and | make their home in Beverly Hills, Slenderizing Coverall BY BARBARA BELL. IRST and foremost as the back- bone of any sensibly planned wardrobe comes this utilitarian coverall. 9 Note especially the sleeve treat- ment—the wide eyelets and bow knots. Unusual, aren't they? And you'll approve the smart, adjustable belt, which can be tied or buttoned, as shown. The front panel buttons at the shoulder and contributes a most appealing feature. Who would ever guess this model was & smock dress? Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1853-B is available for sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 34 requires 4% yards of 39-inch material. It re- quires 5 yards of 1}2-inch bias bind- ing for trimming. Evéry Barbara Bell Pattern in- eludes an illustrated instruction guide which is easy to understand. Send for the Fall Barbara Bell Pat- tern book. Make yourself attractive, practical and becoming colthes, se- lecting designs from the Barbara Bell well-planned, easy-to-make patterns. | Interesting and exclusive fashions for little children and the difficult junior ., age; slenderizsing, well-cut patterns " fJor the mature figure; afternoon resses for the most particular young women and matrons; and other pat- terns for special occasions are all to be found in the Barbara Bell Pattern Book. Send 15 cents today for your * copy. Address orders to The Eve- ning Star. BARBARA BELL, ‘Washington Star. Enclose 25 cents in coins for Pattern No. 1853-B = Size. {(Coprrisht, 1936.) ) THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, BY JAMES WALDO FAWCETT. The Harvard Tercentenary stamp was not singular in failing to win the approval of President Roosevelt. It has become known that he also re- fused to authorize commemoratives for the seventieth national encamp- ment of the Grand Army of the Re- public and for the silver jubilee of the United States Airmail Service. Another appeal for the Harvard issue will be filed with the Post Office Department next year, and special stress will be laid upon the fact that the university actually opened fits doors to students in the Autumn of 1638. The Army and Navy Heroes series still is promised by Third Assistant Postmaster General Clinton B. Eilen- berger, but nothing has been done to expedite production. Inquiry at the White House brings the answer: “There has been no development.” ‘Without warning, the Mother's Day stamp of 193¢ was removed from the | Philatelic Agency sales list on Tues- day last. C. Robert Kay, writing for the | Associated Press says: ‘“Most collect- ors of United States stamps, as soon as they receive a new retail price list, turn to the quotations on the | 1893 commemorative issues to see | ‘how the high-value Columbians are | doing.’ “The reason is that in the great majority of commemorative collec~ | tions the Columbia stamps between the values of $1 and $5 are the last album spaces filled, because of their cost. “Each new price list gives the high- | | value Columbians another boost. Two | years ago the five stamps could be | purchased in good condition for SHE | unused and $55 used. Today they | cost $115 unused and $75 used. Twen- | ty years ago, in case any one is in- | terested, they were priced at-$22 un- | used and $16 used. | “The price movement stamps in the past twg | been gradual, with one exception. | go the $3 value used was priced at $14. The new Fall price of these years has to 819 “Auction prices of these stamps as tions, except in the case of very fine or superb copies, which often sell far above the retail list prices. “Many s United States collector is pining for the day when he will have | the necessary $75 or $100 to lay ol | the line for these stamps, so that | | he can fill those blank spaces and | complete. “As long as this problem exists, and it seems to be a perennial one, it is likely that the high value Columbians will continue to mount in price, and the longer their purchase is delayed | high values in good condition are: $1, unused, $13, used, $9.65; $2, un- | used, $16.50, used, $6.25; $3, unused, $24, used, $19; $4, unused, $30, used, The excitement caused by Godfrey's | death and by the discovery of Cole- | man’s papers was then at the height. Gossip in postal circles hints at the | A cry was therefore raised that the | forthcoming announcement of a 10- | penny post was ‘a Popish contrivance.’ cent stamp, but nobody is willing to | The great Dr. Oates, it was affirmed, | say anything definite about why, when | had hinted a suspicion that the Jesu- | $19; $5, unused, $32.50, used, $24.” or wherefore. A Dutch airship syndicate is pre- service. Such a development probably | proved fruitless. As soon as it be- It came clear that the speculation weuld veritalbe reign of terror, * * * mor- should bring out Netherlands stamps, be lucrative, the Duke of York com- {pllmed of it as an infraction of his would have philatelic significance. if not United States.. ‘The 1d, carmine, King Edward VIIT stamp of Great Britain appeared on Monday, September 14. Very few ! first-day covers crossed to America, but Fred J Melville, president of the "Jumnr Philatelic Society, did not for- | get his Washington friends. | Postmaster General Alfonso Gomez Morentin of Mexico has presented to President Roosevelt a special album | of recent Mexican stamp productions. He also gave Ambassador Josephus Daniels & volume containing the new ilntermuoml highway commemora- | tives. Rebels advancing on Madrid | wrecked certain Spanish post offices, | and the stamps taken from them are anticipated on the philatelic market | Hungary has brought out a new‘ series of modernistic design to com- memorate the 250th anniversary of the recapture of Buda from the Turks. The stamps bear the dates *1686- 1936 and are listed as: 10f, deep green, skyline of the town as it may have appeared in the seventeenth century; 16f, deep violet, angel of victory flying over the city; 20f, red brown, Buda coat-of-arms; 32f, deep brown, battle scene, and 40f, deep blue, same as 10f. Belgium an- nounces a set of three stamps showing new portraits of King Leopold III. The values are: 70c, sepia; 1fr, rose carmine, and 1.75fr, slate. As Tepresented, the sovereign appears older than in the issues of 1934 and 1935. Sorrow and loneliness, it seems, have set their mark upon his countenance. Scott’s new standard catalog, published September 21, includes 57 peges of new issues, illustrations and descriptions. Also, as a novelty, there gre a number of “tentative listings” of stamps not defnitely recognized as legitimate productions. The édi- tors speak of them as “those items on which some question has been rhised regarding their status, which would indicate that the primary pur- | sl pose of issue was other than of a postal nature.” ¢ Many newly discovered Confederate States and various postmasters’ pro- visiongls likewise are included. For the early United States material the llustrations ©f partial frames have ] \ opia has not yet become an Italian been improved. Prices manifest the customary elevation. More new stamps were produced in 1920 than in any other year on record. The number was 3,153, as compared with 1,651 in 1933, 1,607 in 1934 and approximately 2,000 in 1935. If the “lost” colonies of Germany are returned to the Reich, renewed interest in the early stamps of those territories may be expected to de- velop. Meanwhile, the philatelic world takes notice of the fact that Ethi- possession—the League of Nations re- fuses to expel the Abyssinian repre- sentatives and thereby continues to recognize Emperor Haile Selassie as [ | of plain | crowded by the great. an independent sovereign. Lord Macauley, in his classic “His- tory of England, Great Britain: tween distant places may excite the scorn of the present generation; yet it was such as might have moved the admiration and envy of the pol- ished nations of antiquity, or of the contemporaries of Raleigh and Cecil. A rude imperfect establishment of posts for the conveyance of letters had been set up by Charles I, and had been'swept away by the civil war. Under the Commonwealth the design was resumed. At the Restora- iion the proceeds of the post office, after all expenses had been paid, were settled on the Duke of York. On most lines of road the mails went out and came in only on the alternate days. In Corawall, in the fens of Lincolnshire and among the hills and lakes of Cumberland, letters were re- ceived only once a week. During & royal progress a daily post was dis- patched from the capital to the place where the court sojourned. There also was daily communication between London and the Downs; and the same privilege was sometimes extended to Tunbridge Wells and Bath at the seasons when those places were The bags were carried on horseback day and night at the rate of about five miles an hour. “The revenue of this establishment was not derived solely from the charge for the transmission of letters. The post office alone was entitled to furnish | horses has long ceased to exist. post horses; and, from the care with | which this monopoly was guarded, we may infer tpat it was found profitable. | 1f, indeed, a traveler had waited half | n | 8n hour without being supplied, he might hire a horse wherever he could. “To facilitate correspondence be- | {heave a sigh of relief and content- tween one part of London and an-| ment in the knowledge that his com- | Other was not originally one of the | memorative album section is at last | oPjects of the post office. But, in the | | reign of Charles the Second, an enter- | prising citizen of London, William Dockwray, set up, at great expense, a penny post, which delivered letters | and parcels six or eight times a day in the busy and crowded streets near | the more it will cost egllectors for the | the Exchange, and four times a day in privilege of saying. ‘I've got United | the outskirts of the capital. This im- | ! States commemoratives complete now.’ | Provement was, as usual, strenuously | “Current retail quotations on the resisted. The porters complained that their interests were attacked and tore down the placards in which the scheme was announced to the public. its were at the bottom of the scheme, and that the bags, if examined, would be found full of treason. The utility | paring to inaugurate a trans-Atlantic |of the enterprise was, however, so “In the North we have the Black dirigible passenger and commercial | great and obvious, that all opposition Rejected This was the sketched de- sign for the Harvard Tercen- tenary stamp which President Roosevelt declined to author- ize because “other educational institutions might appeal for similar recognition.” The com= memorative was proposed by the Harvard Stamp Club, in- dorsed by the United States Senate and favored by hun- dreds ef philatelists. ~—Star Staff Photo. STAMPS. UYENO'S STAMP SHOP 1205 Penna. Ave. N.W. __ Met. 9014. STAMP ALBUMS '8 s, Si lll.r. “}“ Call and see 'HARRY B. MASON, 918 F N.W. STAMPS—COINS—AUTOGRAPHS Bought and Seld HOI 316 _17th St. N.W. Distriet 1313 WHITNEY'’S STAMP MART Met._6508 402 124h 8t. N.W. COVERS—U. 8. 1 nd 10e: Sired Fuppise” s 319, Aeias Bide. o0k | tod ¥ av. iy, Svpa Sat., 9;12 ts each. and r. Premium to all approval applicants. AD! 3 Reem 312, 1311 G St. N.W. 3 th enbure and King avia. “olrlrasine. Ale iml e Ccol favaia “sotdiers i’ Man stamps. *0e!™L. AMP_CO- %o Ness Dent, 20, Rew York. K. ¥. FLASHL_ CPY, 2. (New Id. e T er Yok (5 ; Queen Mrfl Conse " tells the following story of the early postal facilities of “The mode in which correspondence was carried on be- WILLIAM W, JEWETT, Publisher of Mekeel’'s Weekly Stamp News, was a Grand Army of the Republic pilgrim to Washington last week. Born at Bridgton, Me., he has been a resident of Portland since 1880 and is active in philatelic, patriotic and busi- ness circles in that city. He established the Portland Phil- atelic Herald in 1884 and later printed the Philatelic Era for 17 years until it was merged with Mekeel's in 1902. A charter member of the Ameri- can Philatelic Society, he also holds membership in many other stamp organizations. —Star Staff Photo. monopoly, and the courts of law de- cided in his favor. “The revenue of the post office was from the first constantly increasing. In the year of the restoration a com- mittee of the House of Commons, after strict inquiry, had estimated the net receipt at about 20,000 pounds. At the close of the reign of Charles the Second, the net receipt was little short of 50,000 pounds; and this was then thought a stupendous sum. The gross receipt was about 70,000 pounds. | The charge for conveying a single let- ter was twopence for 80 miles, and threepence for a longer distance. The postage increased in proportion to the weight of the packet. At present (1849) a single letter is carried to the extremity of Scotland or of Ireland for & penny: and the monopoly of post Yet the gross annual receipts of the de- | partment amount to more than 1.- 800,000 pounds and the net receipts | to more than 700,000 pounds. It is, | therefore, scarcely possible to doubt that the number of letters now con- veyed by mail is 70/times the number which was so conveyed at the time of the accession of James the Second.” The United States Government again has broken its own regulation | against the reproduction of stamp | designs. In the September number | of School Life, official organ of the | Office of Education, several score letters and post cards showing stamps are illustrated. A private publication, | guilty of the same mistake, would find | itself in trouble with the Secret Service. Meanwhile the postmaster general ! of Canada distributes to philatelic | writers throughout the world copies of the Canadian Geographical Jour- nal for September containing a well- written article on “Canadian Geog- raphy and Stamps” by A. Stanley Deaville, with no less than 31 half- tone representations of stamps! Ap- parently, he believes that counter- feiters, nefariously bent on cheating society, will buy their models at a post office and not clip them from a periodical. Manuel Quezon, president of the | Philippine Commonwealth, is reported | to have ordered the printing of the | proposed eucharistic congress stamps | delayed. A controversy in Manila concerning the matter has been re- ferred to the courts for decision. ‘To celebrate the 100th postal flight across the South Atlantic, Prance will | bring out a 1.50fr, blue, stamp; also | & 10fr, greenish blue. Russia’s latest issue is & commemo- | rative in tribute to A. N. Dobrolinbov, literary genius. The design shows a portrait of the author and the value is 10k, brown purple. Persia has & new series of six val- Search of a Pocket! Imagine extra dollars hav- ing to look YOU up! That is just about what they'd have to do, if you happen to be one of the many Washingtonians with gold and silver trinkets hiding around your home, We Pay Cash for Old Gold and Silver B spectacle frames, dental gold, sterling silver trinkets —you may be surprised at what we'll pay for them. ted by Lee M. Gold Dept. epera jied Form T. G. L. 12, pursuant to_the Gold Réserve Act of 1934, No, 4638. (OM Geld, Second Fioor, Acets, Dept.) SEPTEMBER 27, 1936—PART THREE. ues in the usual ornate style of de- sign. The denominations are: 5d, violet; 10d, lilac rose; 15d, ultra- marine; 30d, yellow green; 38d, orange red, and 5r, gray green. Curacso has & new low-value series 1 design—1c, black brown; 1l;c, dark blue; 3c, orange; 2%c, bright green; 5c, rose carmine. Crown Colony agents are forbidden by law ic co-operats with first-day cover collectors. Therefore a London department store, owned and operated by Americans, has advertised facilities for supplying the service desired in connection with the issuance of the new King Edward VIII empire stamps next year. Separate sets will be pro- :llded for 63 different territorial divi- ons. Don Grieve, stamp editor of thfl Cleveland Plain Dealer, writes: “When agitation was started for a special stamp for the Great Lakes Exposition we were informed that the program for the year was full and that the Army and Navy set would require all of the time left in the year for their prepara- tion. Then, without warning, came the .Susan B. Anthony stamp and rumors of stamps for Douglass and' Mother Seton.” ‘The yacht represented in the design of the new 2d stamp of Bermuda is an American craft. It belongs to| Briggs 8. Cunningham of Saltport, | Conn. A commemorative stamp for the | sesquicentennial of the opening of the Northwest Territory next year is wanted by the Fort Hamilton Phi- latelic Society. The Albuquerque Philatelic Society has classified the N. R. A. stamp of 1933 as a propaganda issue. | Otto Korte, specialist in the stamps of Central Europe, with offices in New York, reports an interesting find. In a wholesale lot of sheets of Ger- man inflation-period issues ne has discovered a complete pane of 100 coples of the “Dienstmarke” 20th m on 30pf orange official 1923 with the surcharge missing from the 100:h stamp. No other rarity of the kind ever has been announced. ‘The annual convention of the American Philatelic Society opened at the Hotel Fontenelle, Omaha, Thurs- | day, and closes today. Washington- ians attending are Mrs. Catherine L. Manning, philatelic curator, Smiin- | sonian Institution: Michael L. Eidsness, jr, associate editor, Stamps Maga- zine; Albert F. Kunze, leader, Washing- the original All in One SOCIETY. ton Stamp Club of the Air and past | president, Washington Philatelic So- clety; Robert E. Fellers, superintend- ent, Stamp Division, Post Office De- partment, and Mrs. Madeline C. Nickles. For the purposes of history. it must be mentioned that no official cachet was elther authorized or sponsored by the Post Office Department for the G. A. R. nstional encampment here last week. Adolph D. _Fennel, former editor, The American Philatelist, has joined the staff of Stamps Magazine. President Roosevelt is an honorary member of the Philatelic Society of Sweden. A new young people’s stamp club is being organized by A. L. Smith and C. E. Preusser at 8t. John's Episcopal | Church, Mt. Rainier. Meetings will | be held on successive Tuesday eve- nings, beginning this week, and all | children are invited to attend. | ‘The Washington Stamp Club of the | Air will meet from Station WOL to- morrow evening at 9:15 o'clock. Rob- ert Bilsborough, president, and Mollie Lewis, treasurer, the Washington Fed eration of Junior Stamp Collectors, will discuss their philatelic interests and explain the work of their or- ganization in behalf of junior stamp enthusiasts. The Washington Coliectors’ Club will meet at the Thomson School, Twelfth street, Tuesday evening at 8. Baltimore- practitione=s of the phi- latelic hobby will be guests of honor. ‘The Washington Philatelic Society will meet at the Hotel Carlton, Six- teenth street, Wednesday evening at 8. | Program arrangements include an | auction conducted by M. O. Cooper. The public is invited. The Washington Federation of Jypior Stamp Collectors will meet at the National Red Cross Building, Seve enteenth street, Saturday afternoon, October 10. All local boys and girls interested in philately are welcome to attend. 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