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Washington News FISCAL RELATIONS GROUPTO RETURN HERE NOVEMBER 1 Further Public Hearings Un- likely, but More Data Desired. PLAN MAY BE READY WITHIN 2 MONTHS Roberts Expected to Submit Re- ports and Details on D. C. Gov- ernment Reorganizing. F Members of President Roosevelt's Special Fiscal Relations Investigating Committee scattered to various parts o the country today, carrying with them for study the mass of evidence submitted during two days of public hearings showing the justification for a substantial increase in the Federal payment toward District expenses. rge McAneny, chairman of the z;mmmee, returned to New York ity and his duties as president of the Title Guarantee Trust Co. To Louisville went James W. Martin, chairman of the Kentucky State Tax ‘Commission. The third member, Clarence A. Dykstra, went back to Cincinnati, where he is city manager. Only the director of the fiscal relations study J. L. Jacobs, Chicago efficiency engi- neer and tax expert, remained in ‘Washington. To Discuss Conclusions. ‘The committee members will return to Washington November 7 and dis- cuss their individual conclusions with Jacobs. Within two months after that date they hope to have on the Presi- dent’s desk a definite plan which they believe will solve the perplexing fiscal relations problem. Pending return of the committee members, Jacobs said he would con- tinue to gather information which may be of value in the comprehensive study of the problem. He indicated it 1s unlikely that any additional public hearings would be held, although he is anxious for any individual or organi- eation to submit information. Jacobs also hopes to have by No- vember 7 information which he re- quested during the hearing from Wil- liam A. Roberts, retiring peopie’s counsel. This includes reports on the proposed reorganization of the District government resulting from an ex- haustive study Roberts made several years ago in conjunction with Lewis Douglas, then budget director, and Maj. Daniel J. Donovan, District audi- tor and budget officer. Outline of Roberts’ Plan. Also included is a detailed outline of Roberts’ plan for solving the fiscal relations problem through creation of a permanent fact-finding commission that would annually determine the equitable share of the Federal pay- ment toward operation and mainte- nance of the municipal government. Throughout the remainder of the study, Jacobs and the committee ex- pect assistance from a special liaison committee which the Citizens’ Joint Committee on Fiscal Relations has been requested to create. The Presi- dent’s committee was so impressed with the presentation of the Citizen’s Joint Committee that it urged that a representative group of three be named to continue to work with it in arriving at a solution of the fiscal re- lations problem. The Citizens’ Joint Committee pre- gented a 246-page argument for fiscal equity and its vice chairman, Edward F. Colladay, supplemented that with & vigorous verbal plea. e DRIVE PLEDGED HERE TO SPEED JUSTICE Hepbron Hits Delays in Criminal Cases in Broadcast for : Association. Scoring delays in criminal cases as one of the common causes of dismis- sals, James M. Hepbron, acting di- rector of the Washington Criminal Justice Association, in a radio talk last night promised that one of the objects of the new organization would be to speed justice by the pressure of public opinion. “We all know what delays in prose- cuting & case mean,” he said. “They mean, in too many cases, dismissal. Every delay gives the arrested man, his relatives and his lawyer more time in which to work—and don't think they don’t work. In the end, it means the case is tried, not on the facts of the case, but on emotions.” Hepbron said there should be some sgency in Washington to gather all data kept by police, the grand jury, district attorney and criminal courts. This, he said, his organization plan- ned to do. Police Inspector L. I. H. Edwards, who took part in the radio program over WOL, asked Hepbron if the association planned to operate as a “super-detective agency.” Hepbron replied in the negative. “Ours is not a head-hunting or- ganization,” he said. MRS. MARY A. ANDERSON TO BE BURIED TODAY Mys. Mary A, Anderson, 51, who died Saturday at her home, 333 Ten- nessee avenue northeast, will be buried this afternoon in Cedar Hill Ceme- tery. Funeral services are being held today at her late residence. Mrs. Anderson was the wife of John F. Anderson, a representative of the International Association of Ma- chinists. A native of Chester, Il she had been a resident of this city for 20 years. She was a member of the Centennial Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star and of the Ma- chinists’ Union Auxiliary, Besides her husband, Mrs. Anderson Jeaves two daughters, Clarice and Loretta Anderson; a son, Byron Ander- son, and three brothers, Omar and Oscar Hampton, both of East St. Louis, I,"and Walter Hampton, Salt Lake City. SRR No. 1-—Yankee, the sow, looks at the corn and then looks at the electrified wire. She goes without the corn. No. 2—Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Hunt, who show hundreds of visitors over the electric farm. No. 3—It’s past sundown, but the big lamps in the poul- try house make the hens think it’s day, and they lay more eggs. No. 4—Fake rain squirting Jrom pipes. Electricity shoots this water so high that it is mired with orygen, just like real rain. It spreads an inch of rain in 79 hours. —=Star Staff Photos. The Foening St WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1936. kR Visitors the World Over Marvel At Electrical Farm’s Gadgets Rosedale Has Guide to Show How Volts Keep Stock Penned and Pitch Hay. 4 a.m., However Still Is Milking Hour. BY BLAIR BOLLES. Down on the electrified farm at Herndon, Va., where flies die scien- tifically and water is hoisted from the ground by centrifugal force, vis- itors are welcome, but there is a point where hospitality reaches the sticking point. The owner of the | Rosedale Dairy Farm has nailed a neat metal plaque to his porch door announcing: “This is our home. Please do not request admission after visiting hours. J. M. Hughes and family. Thank you." Vistting hours are from 10 am. to noon and from 2 pm. to 5 pm. A large sign at the junction of the Hughes lane with route 7 beckons the passing motorist to inspect the farm, and since July 1, when it was officially opened by Secretary Ickes, 5,000 gadget lovers, interested farm- ers, utilities experts and tourists have looked over the array of wonders with which the farm is equipped. Guide Service Provided. To make it possible for Hughes and his two sons, Randolph and Darr, to go about the business of farming | and dining in peace, the Rural Elec- trification Administration, which des- | ignated Rosedale as the model dem- | onstrator of what watts, amperes and | volts can do for life in the country, named R. E. Hunt and his wife Vir- ginia as conductors of personal tours around its 300 acres. The fame of Rosedale has gone half way around the world. When the Third World Power Conference was in progress here, men and women from 24 foreign countries went to see. A Scotsman was there only last Sun- day. Russian Ambassador Troyanov- sky and German Ambassador Luther have inspected it. Luther has a farm of his own in Bavaria, and would like to adapt to it some of the luxuries with which Rosedale is equipped. The Hughes enjoy this sudden fame which has come with electric milking, electric cooking, electric washing, elec- tric vegetable raising and even fake rain made possible by electricity. John Dove Hughes, a cousin of J. M. Hughes, said as much today when he was found toasting himself by an elec- tric heater which cast its glow on the hand-hewn walnut beams of the 200-year-old house. Ancient and Modern. “Some very interesting people come out here,” he said. He joined the parade of Hunts, reporter and photog- rapher through the Hughes home, which is a monument to anomfoly. Across from the electric range is the open fireplace cookery which was in vogue until 75 years ago. Near an electric burglar alarm is a latch- string door. By the dining room mantelpiece leans a flintlock gun and on the mantel sits an electric clock, which chimes every 15 minutes and rings each hour. The house was originally a log cabin, made of walnut and set on cak sills. Most of the Americans who come to see Rosedale are impressed by its antiquity, but not two English visitors. “I don’t suppose 200 years means much to you,” Mrs. Hunt remarked to the British couple. “Well, frankly no. We just moved out of & house 600 years old, and it wasn't considered extraordinary.” Near the house is the barn, where the cows are provided electrically with everything but their calves. On the way to his bovine Ritz-Carlton the sightseers pass the toolshed with electric bandsaw, electric ripsaw, electric emerywheel and electric forge. A 70-year-old ex-blacksmith looked these over not long ago and shook his head when he asked about the forge. ‘Wonders Where Muscles Go. “What's going to happen to the man’s muscle?” he wanted to know. Men who run forges should swell up their biceps pumping the bellows, he thought. There is a great spirit of coma- raderie between the Hughes and the dozens of gasual visitors who drop by to see what Rosedale is all about, and J. M. Hughes likes to cover bets inspired by the possibilities of his electrical apparatus. Last week, for example, two young men looked at ‘Yankee, a vicious old sow, and wagered $10 they could lure her out of her pen with an ear of corn. Yankee is hemmed in by two strands of barbed wire, charged with 90 volts. Hughes turned down the $10, but offered to give the sportsmen all the butter, milk and cheese they could use if his pig left her home. Yankee stayed where she was. “She used to be one of the worst rogues and chicken eaters they had on the farm,” Hunt said. “There wasn't anything that could hold her.” But electricity has ended the ma- raudings of Yankee, the untamed sow. 8he was shocked once and she's not going to try it twice. The jazz wire cuts down fencing costs by 80 per cent. There is a 6-mile strand of this wire wound around the felds and pens of Rosedale to control horses, cattle and mules as well as Yankee. Effective Without Charge. ‘The wire is so effective that eventu- ally it doesn’t even need the juice. Cows which used to crash ordinary fences are afraid of the wire. An elec- trician left the current off one night and was fearful the next morning that the stock would have wandered away, but the cows stayed put. The Rosedale cow is milked elec- trically in four minutes. She is sprayed with a shoo-fly goo by an electric pump. She eats meal ground by elec- tricity, and she drinks from an electric water fountain. She is clipped by electricity every two weeks, and her hay is pitched with an electric fork. Everything is swell for the cow, but Randolph Hughes remarked: “We still have to get up at 4 o'clock to milk them.” At 4 am. artificial sunshine is just beginning to wake the chickens in the hen house. Violet ray lamps add five hours to their day, and they lay 20 per cent more eggs than they did in the days before July, when they went to bed with the sun in the sky. D. C. ESTATE PLEA OF PARISIAN LOST Research Agent Sought to Collect for Locating Lenman Heirs. BY the Assoclated Press. G. Merlaud of Paris, a research agent, lost today in the Supreme Court in an effort ta collect a contingent fee from heirs to the estate of Isobel Lenman of Washington. The Supreme Court refused to re- view the judgment of the United States Court of Appeals for the Dis- trict of Columbia that an agreement with the heirs was “champertous and void.” Merlaud contended he located Wil- liam Ralston Hunter and Ellen String- ham Hunter of Tasmania, heirs to one-eighteenth interest in the Lenham estate and that a contract with them provided for a contingent fee of one- third of the amount he recovered for them, He contended the claim of the heirs to participate was recognized by the executor, the National Metropolitan Bank of Wi but that the bank ignored the ct while it ar- ranged distribution ®of & fund of $220,000. The executor and heirs argued the “claim for services was based upon a speculative champertous contract, to which by their settled policy the courts Oi the United States will not lend their aid.” U. S. WORKERS ENROLLED — Organization of four new local unions of the National Federation of Federal Employes in various parts of the country was announced today by Gertrude M. McNally, secretary-treas- urer of the federation. The federa- tion is seeking a goal of 1,000 local unions and 100,000 members by the opening of its twentieth jubilee con- vention at Springfield, Ill, next Fall The new locals are in Burrwood, La.; North Woods, Wis.; Muskogee, Okla., and Huntington, W. Va. They are composed of employes of the United States Army Engineer Bcrvice'. the Forest Service and the Veterans Administration. THIRD PLEA HEARD ONLINCOLN ROAD Cemetery Withdraws Objec- tion to Street Closing Sought by College. For the third time, the District Com- missioners held a public hearing today on the proposal of Trinity College to close Lincoln road northeast, from Franklin street to Michigan avenue, which heretofore has been opposed by Glenwood Cemetery, whose property lies immediately south of the campus. The cemetery, however, has with- drawn its objections, leaving the pe- tition of the college unopposed. The plan calls for extension of Franklin street across the south bor- der line of the campus, and donation of additional land by the school at the intersections of Franklin and Fourth streets and Michigan avenue and Fourth street, so that the corners may be rounded, rather than remain as right-angle turns. The property offered by Trinity is 57,000 square feet more than the sec- tion of Lincoln road which the col- lege has asked to have closed. Trinity, which owns land on both the east and west sides of Lincoln road, argued that use of the thorough- fare has retarded development of the college. ‘The college was represented by Dan- iel W. O'Donaghue, jr. Ringgold Hart, counsel for Glenwood Cemetery, also appeared, but since his client had withdrawn opposition, took no part. A number of citizens also expressed favor of the proposal. If the Commissioners approve the closing of the road, the change will have to be approved by the commit- tee on the permanent highway plan before it can be carried out. ALLIANCE WORKERS T0 ASKJURY TRIALS Three Arrested Picketing W. P. A. Headquarters Free Under Bond. Arrested Saturday for parading without a permit, David Lasser, presi- dent of the Workers’ Alliance of Amerioa, said today he would demand a jury trial when he appears in Police Court tomorrow at 10 am. Two other Alliance officers, Herbert Benjamin and John Kelly, also will ask a jury trial. The three were arrested while pick- | eting W. P. A. headquarters, after 8 delegation had been denied admis- sion to the White House to present demands to President Roosevelt for a W. P. A. wage increase. The men are free on a total of $60 bond, Kelly having been charged with disorderly conduct. Lasser said today he understood a motion would be made to dismiss the charges. He said he would endaevor to show police had premeditated their arrests in order to break up the demonstrations. They will be represented in court by Fred A. Ballard, Washington at- torney for the Civil Liberties Union. Veteran Pays U. S. $2 for Chocolate Taken During War By the Associated Press. After all these years, a dough- boy who helped himself to a bit of chocolate during the World War has had a pang of con- science. Sending a money order for $2, an unidentified veteran of the A.E. F. told the Treasury it was for “chocolate bars taken from a truck at Verneuil, France.” The $2 went into the Treas- ury’s “conscience fund.” Since it was started in 1811, the fund has received sums totaling $624,- 113.70. ARMY AND NAVY BID FOR FLYERS: Former Expected to Offer Greater Inducements to Attract Eligibles. Competition between the Army and Navy for air-minded young manhood of the Nation to man their fast- growing air forces has placed male citizens between 18 and 25, with the necessary physical and educational qualifications, in a position to pick and choose, where only a year or two ago they were forced to wait in line. The latest development in the race, it was learned today at the War De- partment, is the plan of the Army Air Corps to ask the next Congress for appropriations+to extend the period of active duty training for graduates of its training school at Randolph Field, Tex., from two years to four. Two or three years ago a flying cadet who received his wings from the training center was lucky to get & year to wear them. The rules requiring secrecy for budget estimates before they have been acted on by the Budget Bureau make it impossible to learn much about the additional appropriation needed for the plan, but it is under- stood it includes not only an exten- sion of the active duty tour after graduation from two to four years, but also & bonus of $500 at the end of the tour. Moreover; it contemplates pro- vision -for 550 Reserve officers for a second year of active duty, instead of only 250 as at present. An applicant of a few years ago who waited, perhaps for a year or two for his name to rise gradually to the fop of the waiting list in the Air Corps files, would find his head in a whirl at the way things are moving nowa- days. ' Recently an applicant in his fourth year in college was accepted, given a physical examination and as- signed to the next class, all within a. month. He had to ask for a postponement to permit him to grad- uate. The reason the Air Corps waiting list, which has remained at about 1,000 for several years, is approach- ing the vanishing point at a rapid rate are increased personnel required for the huge, modern planes, and the Navy. NAVY PLANS SHOW HERE TOMORROW 200,000 Expected to See Plane Flights, Deep Sea Diving and Parades. The Navy is clearing the decks to- day for its annual day “at home.” Navy day, the annual observance sponsored by the Navy League of the United States, will be celebrated to- morrow, The observance coincides with the birthday anniversary of the late President Theodore Roosevelt, one of the Navy’s foremost champions. It is the Navy's traditional open- house date for the public, and in vir- tually every port of the continental United States and outlying territories the Navy will be “at home” to civilians aboard scores of war vessels, including units of the Battle Force on the Pa- cific Coast, which have been especially designated for that purpose. 200,000 Expected Here. At the Washington Navy Yard a crowd of 200,000 persons, the largest ever, is expected. They will see air flights, deep-sea diving, band concerts, parades and drills, life.saving demon- strations, various activities of civilian workmen in shops and a sham battle. In its efforts to attain, by 1942, a fleet of the full strength authorized by existing treaties, the Navy may be called on to make far-reaching de- cisions in at least two respects before another Navy day arrives. This year's will be the last under the system of fleet limitations now governing the world’s sea powers. The Washington and London treaties placing limits on the strengths of navies terminate at the end of 1936, and with them all international restrictions on the number of war vessels that may be built. Expiring at the same time is the agreement of the United States, Great Britain and Japan not to construct new forti- fications in their Pacific possessions. Other Powers’ Activities. Whether the United States will be influenced by the building activities of other powers to exceed its present five-year construction program may be determined by world events of the near future. Already, authorization has been given the President by Congress to order two new battle- ships if he considers them necessary. The question whether this Gov- ernment will embark on & program of construction of naval bases and forti- fications in its outlying Pacific terri- tories—the answer to which depends upon what other countries do in this connection—also bulks large in naval policies for the immediate future. Ninety-five new war vessels for the American fleet already are being built or have been appropriated for. Forty more will be needed before 1942 if the Navy is to reach full treaty strength by that time. Man Hurt in Fall Improves. Daniel Denny, 18, of 407 Fourth street, was reported recovering in Casuslty Hospital today from a wound in his abdomen received when he fell on an open knife in-his room yester- b ADMITLOISKEMP, BALLOU IS ORDERED Judge Bailey Enters Formal Order to Schools on Virginia Girl. A formal order directing Supt. of Schools Prank W. Ballou to permit enrollment at Gordon Junior High School of 11-year-old Lois Kemp of Clarendon, Va., was entered on the records of the District Court today by Justice Jennings Bailey. The jurist last week decided a Dis- trict statute makes it mandatory on school officials to admit children of nearby Maryland and Virginia resi- dents who are employed in the Dis- trict, but reserved issuing the formal order until counsel for the schools had opportunity to amplify the record. Appeal Noted Immediately. Immediately upon issuance of the writ of mandamus, which had been requested by Lois' father, Johm S. Kemp, Works Progress Administra- tion official, Assistant Corporation Counsel Vernon E. West noted an appeal from the ruling. The appeal will operate to suspend the writ until the Court of Appeals acts. Corporation Counsel Elwood H. Seal and West planned, however, to con- fer with Dr. Ballou tomorrow to de- termine whether they will permit Lois to enter Gordon Junior High before the appeal is disposed of. Attorney Robert E. Lynch said it had been found that there is suffi- cient room in Gordon for Lois with= out overcrowding. He said that if it is necessary he personally will urge school officials | to take her in while the litigation is | in progress so as to keep her from losing a year in school. Denies Officials Have Discretion. Justice Bailey said the law left school authorities without any discre- tion as to whether non-resident pupils should be given equal treatment with resident children, regardless of whether the schools were overcrowded. Because of unusually congested con- ditions in the junior high schools, Dr. Ballou, with approval of the Board of Education, ordered this Fall that non-residents should not be enrolled in the junior high schools unless they had attended such schools last year. CO-OPERATION IS URGED BY ARABS AND JEWS Samuel Blames Wealthy Land- owners for Disorders in Holy Land. Close co-operation between Jewish and Arab leaders, especially wealthy landowners, was urged last night by Maurice Samuel as the only means of alleviating disorder between the two peoples in the Holy Land. Speaking in ‘the first of the Na- tional Jewish Forum Winter lecture series at the Jewish Community Cen- ter, Samuel placed the burden of guilt upon wealthy Arab landowners. He said landowners, fearing restlessness among serfs, due to improved stand- ards of living brought abeut by Zion= ist immigrants, had aroused religious feeling against the newcomers. Not only has the disorder been brought about by increase in Jewish population and wealth, which has tended to make the share-cropping existence of the Arabs seem inade- quate, but by an increase of Arabs, amounting to 500,000 since the war, Samuel brought out. Samuel returned from a six months’ visit to Palestine a few days ago. MARTIN RITES PLANNED Funeral Services to Be Held in Fort Myer Chapel. Funeral services for Maj. Arthur D. Martin, 44, U. S. A, Veterinary Corps, who died Friday in Walter Reed Hospital, will be held at 10 a.m. to- morrow in Fort Myer Chapel with Chaplain Alfred C. Oliver officiating. Burial will be in Arlington National Cemetery, with full military honors. Honorary pallbearers will be Col. Daniel P. Card, Medical Corps; Lieut. Col. John R. Underwood, Veterinary Corps; Maj. F. O. Schmidt, Infantry; Majs. James R. Sperry, George L. Caldwall, F. H. K. Reynolds and Floyd C. Sager, all of the Veterinary Corps, and George Franklin. /'3 MILK INCREASE OF MORE THANT® A QUART FEARED Brief by A. L. Thompson Asks A. A. A. for Amend- ment Modification, HIGHER COST TO HIM 52.25 CENTS PER HWT. Amounts to Nearly 1.4 Cents a Quart, Says Head of Dairy Handling Large Supply. The price of milk in Washington will go up more than 1 cent a quart if the producers get the increase they are asking for, A. L. Thompson, presie dent of Thompson's Dairy, which handles 15 per cent of the milk sold in the District, told the Agricultural Adjustment Administration today. In a brief setting forth his thoughts about the proposed amendment to the milk-marketing agreement which would raise the producers’ price, Thompson asked for a modification of the amendment, adding: “It is earnestly submitted that the order should be so amended as to re- sult in an increase by the order, as amended, of an even 1 cent per quart. Such action would inevitably result in giving to the producer the maxie mum benefit, 100 per cent, of what appears to be an inevitable increase to the consumer.” Cost Higher to Thompson. Thompson said that on the effective date of the marketing agreement and | order, September 21, the cost to him of his milk went up 11 cents a hundredweight, and that the proposed amendment raises cost by another 52.25 cents a hundredweight. “The increases made by this order and proposed to be made by the amendment, therefore, total approxie mately 63.25 cents per hundredweight, or approximately 5.5 cents per gallon or nearly 1.4 cents per quart,” Thompe son said. “Such an increase must be met by | the consumers. The factors of ine | creased cost which argue for increases ito producers are equally applicable to | distributors and some of these factors | applicable to distributors do not bear directly on the producers. All Materials Higher. “All materials have substantially ine creased since the retail price was last figured. Labor costs have increased materially. General taxes have, of course, materially increased, and the cost of pay roll assessments now being set and shortly to be increased, is a | tremendous factor in the cost of a | business like that of distributing milk where so large a part of the total cost is pay roll. “In the history of Thompson's dairy during the last 55 years, there has never been an increase in the retail price of milk in excess of 1 cent & quart at any one time. The necessity of passing on to the cone sumers in one form or another an increase in excess of 1 cent per quart which would arise under the order and the proposed amendment is to be avoided if possible.” (CATHOLIC DAUGHTERS PLAN WIDE ACTION Mobilization on All American Continents to Bar Social Conflict Urged. ‘Mobilization of Catholic women and girls in all countries on the American continents under the banner of the Catholic Daughters of America to pre- vent social conflict was urged last night by Miss Grace Sprucebank, ter. ritorial delegate of the organization, at its dinner at the Willard Hotel. Citing the Spanish situation, Miss Sprucebank declared the group must fight the challenge of communism by spreading the organized Catholic movement over the Western Hemis= phere through extension of activities in co-operation with the hierarchy, Saying that the civil war theré was not political, but one between “those who believe in God and those who &t least have no active belief,” she ase serted that “the Spanish situation should arouse Catholics from their lethargy.” Rev. Edward H. Roach, Rev. A. J. Burggraff arid Rev. Louis O'Leary, 0. P., also spoke in similar vein. At the dinner, which was attended by representatives of the Ladies of Charity, the Auxiliary to the Ancient Order of the Hibernians, the Auxiliary to the Knights of St. John, the Curley Club, the Newman Club and others, 60 members of the Converts’ League were initiated into the Catholic Daughters. CONFERENCE ON LABOR LEGISLATION SLATED Bv the Associated Press. 2 Secretary of Labor Perkins yestere day announced the third national conference on labor legislation, to be held here November 9-11. State Governors have been asked to send official delegates, and State fed erations of labor to be represented. Individuals in close association with labor problems also have been ine vited. The conference will consider proge ress made in State labor legislation and the reports of committees ap- pointed at the last meeting. Miss Josephine Roche, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, will be & speaker. — BAND CONCERT. By the Army Band, in the Audi- torium at 6 p.m. today. Capt. Thomas F. Darcy conducting. Program. March, “On Dress Parade”_Chambers Overture, “Orpheus” ..... Offenbach Fantasia on the “Dargason,” from the “Second Suite for Military Band in F Major”. -Holst Fox trot, “Did You Mean It?" Dixon and Greer Waltz, “Wiener Blut”. ... March, “The Proclamation’ “The Star Spangled Banner. 4