Evening Star Newspaper, October 6, 1936, Page 3

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JUDGE DECLINES % 10 FREE BOLAND Tells Lyddane Case Figure | Only Recourse Is to Seek f Parole or Pardon. By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, October 6.—Judge Fugene O'Dunne declined yesterday to free John Martin Boland after hear- ing the prisoner’s plea for freedom from a conspiracy to murder convic- tion. He remanded the prisoner to the House of Correction. Judge O'Dunne pointed out that other defendants, in- dicted with Boland, had been freed either on acquittal or by nolle prosses. The jurist said Boland’s only recourse now was to seek a parole or pardon, or to ask the Montgomery County Circuit Court judges to strike out their conviction against him. Put Questions to Pugh. Judge O’Dunne put his own ques- tions to James H. Pugh, State’s attor- ney of Montgomery County, who con- wicted Boland of plotting to kill Fran- eis 8. Lyddane of Rockville. Boland and Lyddane's wife, Mrs. Anne M. Lyddane, were indicted jointly for the conspiracy. “Who wanted the woman—that they set out to murder the husband?” Judge O'Dunne asked Pugh. The State's attorney replied that the rea- sons were the same ones which he brought out at Mrs. Lyddane's trial, which resulted in her acquittal. Based Plea on Acquittal. One of the reasons for a plot on Lyddane's life, Pugh said, was a $15,000 insurance policy the Rockville liquor store clerk carried. Another, he sald, was Mrs. Lyddane's alleged affection for a married man of Mont- FOUND. REPORT deserted animals_to the Animal Protective _ Association. ~ Bradley Bivd.. Bethesda. Md. _Phone Wisconsin 4024. WRIST WATCH. lady's. on Chevy CI porthbound bus. Sep! call Cleveland 6 9. LOST. BOSTON BULLDOG. female brindle and White: answers to name Boois: please re- t Liberal reward. Shepherd 4265-W. DOG—Male 'Scotiie puppy Athy: d. North 1. Toss_ police-collie, _male. ellow and white, Reward, st nam, Reserv EARRING T4th and H sts. ne. and Madison pl. n.w. Sunday evening. reward. hone 1200~ Holbrook (33 in Lafavetie Park. October 4. Sultable Sterling 5033 or No. st_ne se-colored: an- PAPER NOTEBOOK and table ®oing to Depi. of Justice, S ward. Met. 2 KETBOOK—Lady s black eys, compact: on highway between Alton and La Piata. Reward. tiona 2 PURSE—B permit, other articles of va owner. Reward._Wilcoxon. C PURSE—Lady's. dark blue leather 0! taining keys. papers. money: vicinity 14th na Irvine. Reward. 1450 Irving n The Kenwood. Apt. 1. Adams 6899-J BUM OF MONEY by widow_in Star office | or Polly Trent’s. Reward. Mrs. Kingston, 534 20th_st. n.w. . WIRE FOX TERRIER. female_ black w Bair. bare soot 5 LR N Saxton 214 . Lincoln 5504-W or District 27 r. 2431 WRIST WATCH. gold. initials C. S on back. Liberal fd. 2805 ntario _rd. It { SPECIAL N U'I'ICE!. LD DA G PES. TINTYPI Testo mproved. copied y lBMON’gTON B’TJDXO 1 st. n.w. Speclalis over 25 years. ¥ ok o DRIVEN TRUCK—MOVE ANY- shing anywhere. short or long distance. S1 hour. _Phone Columbia CHAMBERS U, akers world, Complete funerals as low . Bix chapels. twelve pariors, seventeen ears. hearses. twenty-five undertakers and assfstants. Ambulances now only $3. 1400°! Chapin st, n.w. Columbis 0432 617 11th | at_se Atlantie 6700 ¥ WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts conPracted by any one but myself. | WILLIAM H. SCHAEFER, 538 Peah_o.dv: 353 % ts ip fine coovinx for reest tn the | s $75 st nw. THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SHARE- | holders of the ~Equitable Co-operative | Building Associatlon will be held at the office of ‘the assoclation. 915 F street morthwest. Wednesday. November 4. 1936, &t 3:30 o'clock p.m. Amendment of the | constitution of the association will be con- lered. EDWARD L. MCALEER. Secretary. _ | DAILY TRIPS, MOVING LOADS AND PART | Joads to_and from Balto., Phila. and New York. Frequent trips to other Eastern | cities. “Dependable Service Since 1866.” | THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO._Phone Decatur _2500. SPECIAL RETURN-LOAD RATES OK FULL | ®nd part loads to all points within 1.000 miles: padded vans: guaranteed service. ocal moving also. Phone National 1460, EL._ASSOC.. INC. 1317 N, Y. ave 1 L NOT BE RESPONSI debts contracted by anybody other [prielf. GEO. DIXON. 307 E st. | i 1 WILL NOT BE KESPONSIBLE FOR debts contracted by any one other than | ::;y:exr ROY O. BROOKS, 408 N. J.| . _N. el 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any one but myself. | VANS M. MOYER. 405 Howell 5:‘(.4‘ CLEANED | Furnace | heating. Weynoak < FOR | than | n.w., st Alexandriava-: FURNACES YACUSNM arts. Estimates on_plumbin ‘erms. CARL ROBEY. IN gve. nee. Phone Hillside ( MOVING TO FLORIDA. CALL TERMINAL VAN West 0R1h. o f0 S0t S NAE. 100 WEATHER STRIPPING And caulking stobs drafts, dust and leakin §indows, TURBERVILLE. 117 11th Stose n Re SR — = S LIRS REPRINTS & REPRODUCTIONS —_— Do you need extra coples of atements. Stickers. ucke!&.“m?ns‘boe?:!'i t us reproduce them for you by plan graph process—save time and mone Colors or black and white. Free estimat COLUMBIA PLANOGRAPH CO. B0 L St. NE. Metropolitan 4897 0. . either on sireet car belween | | undoubted strength which the Re- | nesota. | velt and give Lemke a cold shoulder. | Farmer-Laborite candidate, would run | than it would dislike seeing President | son-for-Governor A heavy truck loaded with Pugh added, would have paid $30,000 under a double indemnity clause if dental. Boland based his plea for freedom on Mrs. Lyddane’s acquittal. He convicted. Pugh said he believed Bo- land had been properly convicted, but | that he believed the prisoner should be paroled in view of the acquittal of the | woman. Boland was sentenced to three and a half years in the Summer | of 1935. He has been serving the term in the House of Correction. Lincoln (Continued From First Page.) and promised to support those in which he and his party believe, if he be elected to the Senate. He has not | vet given an out-and-out indorse- ment of Roosevelt for re-election. | That may come when he speaks on Friday, as he plans to do. It was the Lemke threat in the presidential race that made the Dem- ocrats willing to trade openly with { the Farmer-Laborites. That and the publicans have been showing in Min- What they hope now is that | the Farmer-Labor leaders will herd their followers to the polls for Roose- | ‘The Farmer-Laborites were willing to trade because they have been de- cidedly worried over prospects of & Republican victory in the guberna- torial and senatorial races. They still have cause to worry over these elec- tions, despite the trade. Martin A. Nelson, the Republican candidate for Governor, has been running well. and so has Representative Christianson, the G. O. P. candidate for Senator. | Both have good Scandinavian names, which go well in Minnesota. It looked very much as though Nelson would be elected and Senalor Benson, the second, with the Democratic nominee Curtis, in third place. So the Farmer- | Labor outfit, which would hate to lose | the gubernatorial election even more ville, N. Y., yesterday and the entire structure collapsed. plunged 20 feet into the Cattaraugus Creek. T | gomery County. The insurance policy, Lyddane's death had appeared lcci-l THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTO scrap metal struck a girder in this 150-foot span near Spring- time. ‘They® insisted that the Wolf outfit was merely seeking to make the Democratic party in Minnesota an adjunct of the Farmer-Labor party —in_the interest of the re-election of President Roosevelt. Again and again | during the primary campaign and | argued that the joint indictment was |afterward the candidates of the Wolf | lin is bent on the defeat of Roosevelt rendered invalid when she was not | faction for nomination shouted they | were in the race, if given the Demo- cratic nominations, to stay. As short time ago as September 16 the Demo- cratic nominee for Senator, Fred A. Curtis, said in a speech at St. Cloud: “There will be no trades, we shall go right down the line, fighting for victory, until the last hour of the last day of this campaign. I will not be cajoled and I will not be bought.” And now he, Curtis, has withdrawn from the contest for Governor in & trade with the Farmer-Labor people. It is not difficult to understand that | the Regan-Noonan people are seeing red. They see, also, a dark and dismal future for the Democratic party in Minnesota as a result of this deal, and some of them are saying: “Al Smith was right when he said the New Dealers were willing to sell the Democratic party down the river in States where it seemed an advantage to them.” To add to the general mix-up, Father | Coughlin, backer of Lemke and the Union party, speaking in Minnesota The truck, indicated by arrow, he driver was killed and a helper injured. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto, three weeks ago, gave an indorsement to Lundeen and the Farmer-Labor ticket. The trade the Farmer-Laborites have now made with the Roosevelt New Dealers is expected to make the Coughlinites sore, For Father Cough- if he can bring it about. Those factors which are helping Landon in this State are the distaste | which the farmers and others have | for the big Federal debt which the | Rosevelt administration has sadcled jon the country, distaste of the farme.s | for the Canadian and other reciprocal | trade agreements which the adminis- tration has entered into, the factional rows among the Democrats and to a lesser degree among the Farmer- | Laborites, and the Lemke third party ticket. Add to these a traditional Republican leaning in Minnesota, and you have quite a formidable array. ‘When Gov. Olson died not long ago, | the Farmer-Labor party lost its cen- tral figure, the man capable of rally- ing the full strength of the party among the farmers, labor and politi- cians who have fastened themselves on both. His death was a severe blow | to the party. And all has not been entire harmony in the party since his death. election of Roosevelt before his death. | If he had lived, he could have de- | livered the party almost solidly to Roosevelt lose the State, became a fertile fleld for the trading abilities of the Democratic high command, headed by Chairman James A. Farley. ‘The trade, which was engineered at the last minute before the time for filing or withdrawing candidates was | up, has split the Democratic party in R | this State even more widely than it was split before—which is going some. Already some of the anti-Wolf Demo- crats have formed a Democratic Nel- Club, and it Is rumored that others will soon come forward with an crganization to sup- port Landon for President. It i pos- sible, however, that the great ma- jority of Democrats of both the warring factions, will continue to support Roosevelt. The split over the gubernatorial candidate and the sen- atorial candidate is likely to be much more severe, thereby giving the Re- publican candidates for those offices a real chance for victory. Among the leaders in the formation of the Demo- cratic club for the election of Nelson as Governor is Martin Tiegen, a Roose- velt elector on the Democratic presi- dential ticket here. The Regan-Noonan faction of the Democrats have been suspicious of the Wolf-Bremer faction for a long Beauty Treatment ® Your win- dows offer reol for Your Windows! opportunity to enhance the beaouty of your home by ¥ using Vene- tion Blinds to & harmonize or contrast with your simple or for- mal set-. tings. HEADQUARTERS FOR CUSTOM-MADE ENETIAN BLINDS Our trim, sma the individual the wanted co Ezclusive Sz F The Washable | WINDOW SHADE be pleased to payment plan. W. STOKES rt blinds are made to order for requirements of each room, in lor, size and shape. Hung cor- rectly and guaranteed mechanically. We shall estimate and explain our easy SAMMONS T HADE /HOP 4 DTH. STREET NW. r 85 Olson declared for the re- | Roosevelt in the presidential election. A w0lid vote is less certain since Olson’s the election as a flitting to our great leader, Olson.” The factors which are helping Roosevelt in this State are: First, more farmers, with better prices for their produce; drought re- lief and work relief and other kinds of Government aid; the Roosevelt appeal to labor, Secretary of State Cordell Hull is coming . here tonight to defend the administration’s recip- rocal trade agreements in an address that will be nationally broadcast. He is expected to say several words for peace, a matter in which Minnesota women are particularly interested. The trade pacts were attacked by Gov. Landon in a speech here recently. Farmers Diversify Crops. . Minnesota farmers have diversified crops these days and many of them are dairy farmers. Only in one sec- tion of the State is much wheat grown now, although the State used to be the premier wheat-producing State of the Union. The dairy farmers have been angry because they believed the Canadian and other trade agreements have reduced the prices of their milk and butter. Every now and then a shipment of butter gomes in from Den- mark, not very large in itself, but it shoves the price of butter down in New York, where the prices are made for the farmers’ butter out here. President Roosevelt himself is due for & speech in Minnesota later this month; the New Dealers are counting on his coming here. It might be in the cards that the vote of Minnesota would decide the presidential election, it is pointed out. ‘Today Rooseveit seems to have the edge in this State over Landon, al- though the latter has decidedly a fighting chance, and it may be much better later. In the gubernatorial and senatorial elections the Republicans, Nelson and Christianson, appear to have the better of it. Four years ago President Roosevelt carried Minnesota with a plurality of 237,000 votes over Herbert Hoover. In that year many Republicans flocked to the Roosevelt standard. Now many of them have returned to the G. O. P. The vote on election day may be close, with not more than 50,000 or 100,000 votes dividing the candidates. Some say it will be even less. In the guber- natorial election in 1934 Olson, Farm- er-Laborite, had 468,812 votes to 396, 359 for Nelson, Republican, and 176,- 928 for Regan, Democrat. A close al- liance of the Farmer-Labor vote with the Democratic, it seems, should give | a Roosevelt victory unless a very | strong tide is running for Landon. P.-T. A. OF WHEATLEY T0 MEET TOMORROW Supplemented by colored moving pictures of children of members of the Wheatley Parent-Teacher Association, the relation of the school to the home and community will be the topic of discussion at a “fellowship night” to be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Wheat- l ley School Auditorium. Miss Florence C. Mortimer, princi- pal of Wheatley School, will speak. The movies were made by Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superintendent of schools, last June in the Wheatley garden while the children were at work. You. too,would smo only — that until Philip Motris proved otherwise, an ingredient now known to be a definite source of irritation was believed indispensable to cigarette man- ufacture; — that Philip Morris Cigarettes are made by a new method, without that in- gredient, without that source of irritation; — that a group of doctors tested the effects of the Philip Morris method, on actual men and women smokers; — that their reports, published in lead- ing medical journals, proved conclusively that on changing to Philip Morris Ciga- rettes, smokers’ coughs and irritation cleared completely in the majority of cases;* — that Philip Morris Cigarettes are amazingly mild —robustly full-flavored. ili do not claim that Vosirse s -~ a source of irritation is not used i i ®Published_in" leading + medical Philip Morris y say thet an other cigavettes— :"of Philip Morris. + Names on the manufacture ical jowrnals. request. Philip Morris, Fifth Avenuc, New Yorke MORRIS tl;‘ D. C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1936. ILLNESS IS FATAL ' TO DR. W. H. WALDO Native of City Was Son of Man Who Died Fighting Yellow Fever. Dr. William H. Waido, 65, for many years a practicing dentist here, died yesterday in Garfield IHospital. He had been ailing for some time, but $ became seriously 1l only s short time before his death. Dr, Waldo, who lived at 1412 Chapin street, was & native of this city, He was the son of the late Dr. Roswell Waldo, Public Health physician, who died of yel- low fever con- tracted while treating patients Dr. Walde. At 4n et demic in Cairo, Ill, in the 70s. He Miller-Built Home in Westerleigh 4211 49¢h St. A Section of Wesley Heights Pleasing design—all brick; strong steel construction. Practicel plan —4 bed rooms end 2 baths—in this Miller-controlied community. $14,500, with terms. Open day end evening. W. C. & A. N. Miller, 1119 17¢h Se. Dist. 4464 For a Soft White Finish Use PEE GEE OLD KY. WHITE $9.50 For wood, brick or concrete. Preserves wood due to creosote content. Paint Advice Free MUTH 710 13th St. N.W. ELECTRIC SUFPLY COMPANY Display of Models ESTINGHOUSE Household Appliances iy 44 NEW ‘SHOW ROOM LOUGHBOROUGH OlL COMPANY 1022.17th Street NW NAtional 2616 “1pen Evenings Untit 9:30 PM dall, Dourigheq had volunteered for service in the fever area, ‘The younger Dr. Waldo was grad- uated in dentistry at Georgetown University and began practice here. Subsequently he practiced in Florida for & number of years and returned to Washington in 1915. He had prac- ticed here since. He was a member of tie Masonic fraternity. Surviving him are his widow, Mrs. Mary L. Waldo; s daughter, Miss Kathryn P. Waldo, and a son, Roswell P. Waldo, all of this city, and a sister, Mrs. Lydia W. Lockling of Cherry- dale, Va. Puneral services will be held at 2 pm. tomorrow at Hysong's funeral | parlors, 1300 N street. Burial will be in Glenwood Cemetery. = T Y Building in Germany is registering new highs, State Group to Elect. % The Massachusetts Soclety of Washington will elect officers for the coming year at a meeting at the ‘Wardman Park Hotel tonight at 8:15 o'clock. Plans will be made for the society's Winter classes in French, current events and contract bridge and for the programs of the dramatic and glee clubs, Juvenile delinquents are steadily in- creasing in Great Britain. COSTLY LEAKS in d satis- ired by our reofing Call— x. FERGUSON % experts. 3831 Ga. Ave. COL 0567 0 SETTLE YOUR HEATING PROBLEM EE TIMKEN SILENT AUTOMATIC OIL BURNERS T THE ]I]) .. 6912 4T ST. N.W. OME OI], COMPANY INCORPORATED GEORGIA 2270 COLONIAL A cold house may cause illness, in your Your best health insurance is a binful of good, clean Colonial Anthracite. family. Look up “Colonial Coal” in the yellow section of your telephone book. A1IJVHHINY COMMERCIAL OFFICE FURNITURE CO. Home Service Division 800 E St. N.W. 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