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MONARCHY HELD PLAN OF HITLER Brunswick-Lunebourg Fam- ily Head Reported Choice of Fuehrer. B7 the Associated Press. PARIS, October 27.—Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler was reported today con- sidering the establishment of s Ger- man monarchy to bolster and per- petuate his Nazi regime. The Bern (Switzerland) corre- spondent of the newspaper L'Inform: tion said German circles close to the chancellor believed he was studying & monarchy as a foundation post for naziism, The newspaper dispatch said Ger- mans in Bern understood Hitler was fmpressed with the example of Italy, where King Victor Emmanuel lends muthority to Premier Benito Mussolini and conceived the idea of emulating it by re-creating the abolished throne o the Hohenzollern Kaiser Wilhelm IL. ‘The correspondent said sources usually well posted on affairs in Berlin believed Hitler wanted the moral sup- port & monarchy might give “in case the grave internal and external diffi- culties which the Reich is facing take & still more accentuated turn.” Other Paris newspapers printed the report with careful qualifications. L'Information said the bachelor Fuehrer had chosen Prince Ernest August Christian George of the Bruns- ‘wick-Lunebourg family in preferrence to members either of the Hohenzollerns or Wittesbachs, two of Germany's most important noble families. It said the Brunswick-Lunebourg prince had promised to make Hitler chancellor for life and to guarantee | the future of Nazi power. Objection to the other families the newspaper ascribed to their Catholic members | who, it said, might be a “serious obstacle” to Hitler's ambitions. August Christian George is lineally descended from the royal house of Hanover, once the reigning family in Great Britain, and 80 is related to King Edward's family, the Windsors, who share that herit- Prince Ernest D. As Accident —— GLENN THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. Pianist, 21, Is Substitute Delays ‘Kreisler CAROW. —Star Staff Photo. BY IRVING LASH. LOST necktie caused Glenn Carow, 21-year-old music teacher, more worry last night A than the idea of substituting for Fritz Kreisler. In fact, it took Carow's whole family | to dress him when he received a tele- phone request about 9 p.m. to rush to | Constitution Hall. Several thousand persons had been waiting since 8:30 for Kreisler to ap- | pear, it was explained, and a train wreck in New Jersey would prevent the famous violinist from reaching | the Capital before 10 o’clock! What an assignment—holding the age. He is the present head of the House | of Hanover and is a great-great- grandson of King George III of Eng- land. | His rights to the English dukedom | of Cumberland and Teviotdale, as| well as his title, Prince of Grea Britain and Ireland, were taken from him by a British order in council in | 1919. - The prince’s grandfather was King George V of Hanover, who resigned from 1851 until 1866 when the Prus- | sian government abolished his throne and annexed his domain. ‘The prince in 1913 married the Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia, the daughter of Kaiser Wilhelm IL He was born at Penzinc, near Vienna, in 1887, the son of Ernest August, then reigning Duke of Brunswick, end the Princess Thyra of Denmark. At present he lives in Gmunden, Austria, McKinley P.-T. A. to Meet. The first general meeting of the McKinley High School Parent-Teach- er Association will be held at 8 o'clock tonight at the school. Plans for the | year will be discussed. FOUND. mmdumml afimals fo the Animai Assoctation, Bradle: s Bethesds. Md. Phone Wisconsin Toos " 'SETTER PUPPY. male, with vaccination tae: Chery Ohase. Md{ owner must have is, 4024 after 7 pm, fort for Kreisler! Carow rolled that | famous name around in his mouth | and still grasped the telephone. Then | he remembered he must hurry. “Mother! Dad! Sis! Where's my | tux?” The Carows responded mobly and | practically poured Glenn into his clothes. A taxi was waiting outside | touches had been applied. Glenn grabbed his hat and started | for the door. He stopped for one last | look in a mirror from the house—and was shocked. He had no tie. The Carow family went to work in earnest. They turned things over and threw things around. In every drawer and in the darkest recess of each closet, they searched. Tie or no tie, But at the last minute, one of the family came up with the missing cravat, and the young pianist was sartorially splendid. Gleon forgot to be awed when he took his seat before the concert piano | behind the footlights in Constitution | Hall. He was still seething about the necktie. before he dashed | Faultlessly he played several com- positions by Chopin. Restless a few | minutes before his arrival, the audi- youngster was good. Glenn played for half an hour and then was given a rest when a group of National Broadcasting Co. performers took the stage. After « while Glenn again played. He was half through the “Second Hungarian Rhapsody” backstage. | The celebrated violinist was pleased. His audience was still there and he | hated to disappoint his admirers. As xGlenn finished and was applauded Kreisler walked from the wings. | He shook Glenn's hand and thanked | him as one artist to another. obliged” were his words, according to Glenn. r Then Kreisler played. Apparently he was not at all upset by the crash | their home at 4000 New Hampshire |of two fast freights at Menlo Park, | avenue by the time the finishing N. J., which held up his train, nor | ence relaxed. Kreisler would be here | | any minute now and, besides, the | when Kreisler appeared | “Much | | by the fast ride from Union Station | behind a police escort. | But Glenn Carow was in a large | way responsible for Kreisler hlvlng an audience last night. It was not Glenn's first appearance before a “big house.” When he was 16, he played at the Fox Theater after winning a “music week” con- test. In 1934 he won a three-year Music, Baltimore, by outplaying a score of pianists from all over the world. Now, when not studying, he teaches at his studio at home. While last night was Glenn's first appearance in Constitution Hall, he play there. That was when 6-year-old Preble Donoho appeared several weeks | ago befoer a women's organization. Milk (Continued From First Page.) LOS?T. {MERICAN BULLDOG—Maic lack, one black eve; name Skipper. ward. _Phone Shepherd 4171. COCKER SPANIEL__Small, reddish brown: white and Re- no_tag: ans: Fewnia " "Eal Lincoin: 2550, Dr. ENGLISH BULL. male; brindle. Dee. spois; named Spot. Reward. PRATERNITY PIN. red. black and Reward. Clll P. Lloyd wuver. ir., sington 45-W. GOLD FIN 13 diamonds. vicinity 5th an Reward. ~Emerson 5201. nenumenm “value. gold. X IRISH BETTER, solid red. 6 months old: jiraved “from 3660 Livinaston Reward. Phone Cleveland 856! WALLET_ brown leather. contalsiiy. driv- permit and other personal cards: re- . Call Lieut. J. O. Seaman. West 2000. Adams WRIST WATCH_lady's white gold. Eigin: link_bracelet, Met. . 35, Despain, 8 to 4._Rewar reward. NOTICES. Y WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR A gobly contzacted by sny one but myselt. smmn 5 Rendolph_st. n TILL NOT SPONSIBLE debts wntrlc'ed by ";;13“. other '.hll’l E)"" fter Oc! CLAUDE A. 10 Fihe . Silver Spring, Md: T WILL NOX BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY flebll of any nature whatsoever unles: gonizacted by x&neu W. F. VAN SWEAR- AILY TRIPS, MOV ADS AND P. AT 0 2nd from Balto_ Phile. sad New Freauent trips to other Eastern paDEEeadanie Scrvice CSinge 1890 )N TRANSFER & STORAGE Phone Decatur_2500. RICKLAYERS UNION N R ox Ee omcers. for keneral Diestion ‘ednesday. October 28. 7:10 p.m.. Typo- graphical Temple. Order of trustée. SPECIAL RETURN-LOAD RATES ON FULL Snd part loads to all points within 1000 miles: padded vans; guaranteed service. Local moving also. “Phone National 140 NAT. Aasoc.. INC 1.u7 BRIC 00— FEnEtoAN SALE inst unuttled ll E les lelex Ol' tfll" GINCBYA M DI 170 Broad- oo DAGUERREOTYPES. TINTYPE Dfln'-l':l' fl'niym"".a“;!flga"'lesn( e Fove 5 ESmoREre pisd CUarge of m thclllllll in fine copying for 'Nfl' "5 years. UOK—MOVE_ANY- WIIR-DR!V‘IN TRI &h\l ln"hll’l lhol;’t nl'slnnl distance, !l w 4 724. e T is, EgRED nd thereafter. -5 o&e.wer the Riges ngtlolnel Bank to ope: usiness each st 930 am, Thers Sl be o n the banking house of the Savinks Office, which de- oun lm’ business am. ing_hours of the Head omu ranches will continye as hereto- ' g! Grd'l' s{ &ht Polrd of Directors of K ae Athington. Bweet Clder a.nd Apples ;AT QUAINT ACRES, iiver sprins. Colesvile Pike (gouu 20). "lrl (ly lrom 7 a.m. t0 7 p.m. WE REPRODUCE . reports. foreign ;l,l"«. lhglnu. nle‘l‘ other mmo‘l 1f you ni copies. let us handle your order. %‘m and estimates. e Fampb O, . APPLES, SWEET CIDER. ROCKVILLE FRUIT FARM, ol e g k- p o 2 MOVING TO I"DORIDA? G R T 820 lotl IL N.Ww. '7! | Statistics’ of milk, therefore, is still relatively higher than the Bureau of Labor | retail index of all food | prices in the District. ‘The present 13-cent price of milk | | is only 12 per cent below the 1925-29 | average, whereas the index of all food | costs is 18 per cent below the average | of those pre-depression years, Mont- | gomery said. ‘The consumers’ counsel dealt with the distributors’ briefs one by -one, as follows: Chestnut Farms-Chevy Chase—“The | rief states that a temporary increase in price must result in raising the 13- cents-a-quart retail price because the company’s profit is only 1-5 to 1-3 of a cent a quart. In the Senate hear- ings of 1933 a Government auditor found that the books of Chestnut | Farms Dairy recorded a profit for the first six months of almost $250,000 on total business, but that on ordinary milk sold at retajl there was.a loss, of more than $21,000. Questioned on this point, Mr. Brawner (H. N. Brawner, dairy president) testified that this apparent loss on milk wss ; | just a matter of bookkeeping and re- sulted from the allocation of expense. ‘We have never aimed to make a profit | on milk,’ he sa ‘We consider cream a luxury and by-products a luxury.’ Further, he testified that the com- pany allocates the larger portion of its expenses to the milk department and makes its profit on surplus- milk and various by-products. Cream Profit $65,000. “During the six months of that year, when the company was losing $21,000 on, retail milk, its profit on | cream was $65000 and the balance of the .$250,000 profit came -from various classes of special milk and by- products, according to the auditor's testimony. ““The contention now that the retail milk. price. must be advanced because the profit on it is small doesn’t seem to mean much, does it, in the light of this testimony? But it is inter- esting to note they are now making & profit on milk, instead of losing N | money, as in 1933.” Thompson's—“This company’s brief claims that'the original order raised its buying price 11 cents a.hundred pounds. In figuring this, the com- pany evidently added in the premiums paid for high barn scores at 35 cents a hundred, without- making allowance for the fact that, so far as the order requires, those premiums are paid only on 75 per cent of the farmers’ base milk. The price required to be paid under the order, including aver- ¢ | age premiums, was just as close ‘to the price paid before the order as it could possibly bé figured. “For the rest of the 1.4 cents a quart increase which the company claims it must pay producers, it is calculating on an amendment which hasn't been made yet. Probably a good time to build up a case for a retail advance— language than before it knows what is going to be done. Some distributors may be pay- ing a little more, some & little less, than when the order went-into effect, but for distribution as a whole the order didn't add anything.” to answer. land and Virginia Milk Producers’ As- sociation) introduced testimony on that point at the hearing (to the effect that producer prices here gen- erally were not higher than in other markets). were not there—at least they didn't challenge this testimony or make | their presence known.” | Montgomery attacked the charge | made by Chestnut Farms-Chevy Chase | in its brief that there has been “much misinformation” which “misleads the reading public” concerning price spreads here and elsewhere, | right back at them,” he said. “Chestnut Farms charges misrepre- | sentation in the comparison of the spread-in Washington with the spread | and Boston, where it is lower than it makes no allowance for Jower prices { received on wholesale milk. That is | right. It is the spread between the | price paid by dairy companies for class | 1 milk and-the retail delivered price, and was described as exactly that and nothing else, What the Consumer Pays. “It is the spread that concerns the consumer because it is based on the price the consumer actually pays. The fact that dairy companies sell part of their milk) at lower wholesale prices doesn’t help consumers any. Restau- rants charge 5 cents, some of them 10 cents, a-half pint for milk, although they buy it for 3 cents, and some of them for as little as 2% cents, a half pint. That allows the retailer a mark-up of 40 to 55 per cent. “But in using this spread for com- | Eastern cities, it must be remembered | that milk s sold at wholesale in those cities also. If what the Chestnut PFarms company means is that whole- sale discounts amount to more here than.in those other cities, then that is where they ought to make their ad- justment to carry them through this six ‘months’ period (the ‘temporary emergency psriod’ for which the pro- ducer . price_increase is sought, pur- portedly to assure Washington & con- tinued adequate supply of milk dur- ing the winter low production-high cost months).” The ‘Chestnut Farms brief referred to the expense accruing to the dis- tributor because “he has greater aif- ficulty in getting his bottles returned.” Recommends Bottle Deposit. They should. charge s bottle de- Posit, Montgomery said. Replying' further to the Chestnut Farms arguments, Montgomery con- cluded: “Another reason stated in tle brief why a higher producer price must -be_reflected in the doorstep price of milk is that the order has reduced the amount of the deduction made from producers" checks on milk taken in at its Prederick County receiving | stations _(from 35 to 25 -cents. per hundrédweight). This question was discussed at length at the July hear- Ppossession has already heard one of his pupils | ‘The association (MII’Y'i Apparently Marcey Bros. | “I throw this misrepresentation talk | | in Richmond, Philadelphia, New York | is here. The brief says this spread | | paring Washington with other large | | scholarship at Peabody Institute of | Glenn was going. | | and | his truck and drove to Center Market, | JAILED CANDIDATE FREED TILL NOV. 5 States Voting to End Jobs _and to Create Work for Nominees. BY EDWARD J. NEIL. NEW YORK, October 27 (#).—The presidential contest of Pranklin D. Roosevelt and Alfred M. Landon will hold the headlines across the Nation November 3, but a lot of other inter- esting things will be happening, too, as follows: Alex Tinsley, justice of the peace in Ansted, Fayette County, Charleston, W. Va., will be running for the State Legislature from & jail cell. He was tossed in the brig after conviction for assault on a fellow magistrate. He writes lettérs, sends out hand bills from his novel headquarters, but can do no traveling nor speechmaking. He was released over the week end until November 5, when he is due back | to finish his sentence. “Bein’ in jail is helpin’ me get votes,” he says. There's something highly significant, if it can be worked out, in two election problems that face voters in Nebraska and Georgia. Nebraskans, for instance, will judge between two candidates for State land | commissioner, and at the same time will pass on & constitutional amend- ment that would abolish the office. The situation is just reversed in Georgia. Delacey Allen, nominated by the Democrats for lieutenant governor, is running for an office that doesn’t exist. On the same ballot is the ques- tion of creating such an office to re- place that of Georgia’s Senate Presi- dent. Milwaukee has tossed a poser into the laps of the voters—the question of | whether six mounted policemen should | be put back on horses. The cavalry | was dismounted decently by a new po- lice chief, who took the attitude that | the men were more efficient afoot. So- | cialists in Milwaukee have been oppos- ing the mounties for years. Non-partisans insisted the unhors- ing was politics, and the City Council | ordered a referendum. Wrightstown, N. J., has a mayoral election scheduled, but no candidate. | In Woonsocket, R. 1. the Democrats nominated a Republican for mayor the Republicans turned right around and nominated & Democrat. Die in Plunge DEATH ' OF! FATHER, CHILD {7 R / AT James A. McPherson, above, Chicago advertising man, and his 10-year-old daughter Joan, who fell to their deaths from the twelfth floor of a San Antonio, Tex., hotel. The widow and mother of the vic- tims, Mrs. Margaret McPher- son, blamed “financial diffi- culties.” —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. only Wuhlngton dairy operuln[ country stations.” | Washington restaurant owners| meanwhile were resolved to establish their own pasteurization plant if the consumer price of milk here is raised. A detailed report on the operation and financing of such a plant will be presented to the cafe men next week | by Ralph Scott, who has been ordered to make a thorough study of the plant’s possibilities. Scott made the original uugzesuonl 10 days ago when a hearing was | called on the plea of the producers | of Washington milk to increase their price by more than 4 cents a gallon. Dairies at once indicated that a consumer price rise would follow, and | | A. L. Thompson, president of Thomp- | son's Dairy, told the Agricultural | Adjustment Administration that the | increase would exceed more than 1| cent a quart. The restaurant operators are ready | to buy directly from the producer, it was brought out last night, and thus take from the distributor an an- nual business of $2,500.000. FUGITIVE LITTLE PIG ROAMS CAPITAL STREETS | Non-Conformist Refuses to Make Trip to Market From Alexandria. This little pig did not go to mar- | ket. Instead, it decided to explore the big city and take in the sights of | ‘Washington. He 5 a little white shote, weighing 40 pounds, reared in the back yard of Preston L. Dixon of Alexandria, Va. This morning Dixon put him aboard | Florida avenue and Fifth street north- east. The pig eyed this new world and then began a new journey to Western Market, Twenty-first and K streets. By the time Dixon arrived, the pig had disappeared. o Elected by Missionary Society. Mrs. H. E. Woolever of 3511 Rod- man street, yesterday was elected re- cording secretary of the Woman’s Foreign Missionary ty, according to an Associated Press dispatch from Muncie, Ind., where the organization's General Executive Committee met. Voteless Capital Privileged to Buy Drinks on Nov. 3 Other Cities Bound by, State Laws, Stay Dry | Election Day. Washington probably is the only city in the United States where retail liquor sales will be legal next Tuesday. Elsewhere in the country the sale | of liquor on election day is banned by State law. | Officials of the Federal Alcohol | Control Administration and the Dis- | trict Alcohol Beverage Control Board | said they knew of no community, oth- | |er than the District of Columbia, where there is no election, which per- | mits liquor sales November 3. Some States permit local option by counties and in these it is possible | that there may be a few communities | where liquor selling will be legal Job Hunters Rescued. ‘They wanted a job, so Thomas Skel- ton, 22, and John Monaghan, 21, com- mandeered a rowboat at Folkestone, England, and started across the Eng- lish Channel for France. Rain came on and with it heavy seas. The boat was almost swamped when the two were rescued by a tanker, 00D FOODS CHEAPER delivering in piy te vour heme. | ‘CEDAR LANE FARMS STERLING. VA, FIRST-GRADE,_ PRODU AT A GREAT SAVlNG rosults. At Pesplon Drug Stores or other good druggists. — PUBLIC SALE e BY CATALOGUE VALUABLE JEWELRY, DIAMONDS, PRECIOUS STONES Sale each day thi: Including a Strand of Orlental Pearls lly priced to retail for tudded Clips. and Bracelets, wns In AND BENJ. 8. BELL. Auctioneer Consisting of 177 Items Originally SHAW & BROWN CO. end 203 Items from Other Sources a l 1ond; Emerald Cut Snumrz“g:u:‘mdrflru?'cnnu A Pair of Plal rous ooches and o Dleces in kold" enamel. crn eten eler 722 Thirteenth St. N.W. and SILVERWARE lly Part of the Stock of s week at 1 P.M. $8.800: » Pearl vnlueg At sel and 8t -‘nn: nnamxlmnm{m uiches, Rings ALLERIES INC. 0 SETTLE YOUR HEATING PROBLEM EE TIMKEN: SILE 6912 4™ ST. N.W. NT AUTOMATIC OIL BURNERS COMPANY INCORPORATED GEORGIA 2270 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1936. GIRL AND FATHER PLUNGE TO DEATH Man. Follows Child, 10, 12-Story Fall From Texas Hotel. B the Associated Press. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., October 27.— A 10-year-old girl and her father plunged from a twelfth-story hotel window here yesterday, crashing to their deaths on the pavement below. Passersby, attracted by the head- long fall of little Joan McPherson, scattered screaming three minutes later when the body of her father, James A. McPherson, 45, hurtled to the ground. “He must have pushed or thrown her out and then jumped himself,” said Coroner Bat Corrigan who re- turned & verdict of murder and suicide, “Our home life was exceptionally fine. It probably was financial rea- sons,” sobbed Mrs. Margaret McPher- son when informed at her Chicago home of the deaths of her husband and daughter, one of four children. Said He Had Been Robbed. McPherson, identifying himself to hotel employes as a Chicago advertis- ing man, registered with the girl Sat- urday. He said he had been robbed of money and baggage near Roosevelt, Tex., and that he expected funds to- day. Investigators turned to Chicago for a possible explanation of the deaths. On a scrap of paper in his room was written: “Dear four at home—Mom, Buddy, | Al and Jane.” Two envelopes, torn to bits, were found in a wastebasket. They were addressed to Mrs. McPherson in Chi- | cago. ‘Without Regular Work. Mrs. McPherson said her husband had been without regular employ- ment for about two years, since he left an advertising agency. He had been employed in the company’s re- search department. Since leaving the firm, McPherson had worked temporarily for other concerns and, in August, left with his daughter in an automobile, intending to make a trip through the South. It was learned that St. Louis au- thorities wanted him on complaint of Edward Green, manager of an auto- mobile rental company, who claimed McPherson had failed to return a car he rented. San Antonio officers said they found the car in the hotel ga- | rage. PAINT BAY STATE Brick and Cement COATING 33.3.) - hi surface. onutifel fat Rnish on weed. metar: brick, roncrete or stuce, Paint Advice Free MUTH 710 13th N.W. Youth May Lose Sight From Shot Of Chum’s Rifle Bullet Splintered Against Hammer Being Uséd as Target. A fear that Jack Pearson, 15-year- old victim of an accidental shooting, may never see again was expressed today by staff members at the Wash- ington Sanitarium and Hospital, in Takoma Park, Md. “Of Courg\e, You —and when you get them be sure they are from The Shads S hop— then you'll know thev ARE the best! Exclusive ‘?ON'IJNE The Washable WINDOW SHADE fit any si 830 13TH. STREET NW. Lead slivers from a bullet, which | color comb yours without obligation. W.STOKES splattered when & chum fired 1t against an iron hammer being used as & target, entered both of the boy’s eyes, The left was badly torn, while the right eye also was injured. Attending physicians declared today the youngster, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W, Pearson of 707 Roxboro place and a-student at Abbott Voea~ tional School, can barely distinguish night from cay snd may never regan his vision. Jack was injured Saturday at Pour Corners, Md., wbile a companion, Albert Buckley, 18, of 414 Ingraham street, was shooting a .22-caliber rifle at an iron hammer erected as a target in the window of an abandoned home, The Pearson boy, standing near the window, was hit by flying lead when a lead slug from the rifle struck the head of the hammer and splattered. Want the Best!” HEADQUARTERS FOR CUSTOM-MADE ENETIAN BLINDS We can quote you surprisingly modest prices on the very best blinds . . custom-made to e or shape \MFCOW in any smart inations you desire. Our time is SAMMONS DISTRICT 3324.3328 ARMY & NAVY | TRADING co. 8th & D Sts. GREAT AMERICAN GAME of FOOTBALL « « « is a supreme test—it demands an alert mind, keen vision, a strong sturdy body —hence the necessity for a proper diet. VITAMIN D> MILK is nature’s most nearly perfect food. It is first of all our finest quality “grade A” milk—REINFORCED with this wholesome VITAMIN . ... Another very important fea- ture for your consideration is the fact that— MEL 6608 No Branch Stores A4 Hot Special For Cool Weather Men’s Lined & Unlined GLOVES C pair PlGT‘X e SUEDE APESK! Novnfl LEATHERS OUR VITAMIN “D” MILK is always fresh (look for the day on the cap). Each quart is GUARANTEED to contain not less than 400 (U.S.P.) Vitamin “D” Units. FOR DELIVERY DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR, PHONE DECATUR 1011 CHESTNUT FARMS- 'CHEVY CHASE