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' TOWNSEND DEAL ~INCHID CHARGED Publicity Man Claims “Cash . Transaction” in Last- ‘® Minute Sensation. P the Assoclated Press. COLUMBUS, Ohio, November 3.— An assertion that Dr. Francis E. Townsend “was personally involved” in cash transactions “paid by friends of Gov. (Martin L) Davey of Ohio” coming in the midst of the State's last-minute political strife, precipi= tated & controversy today over the Ohio affairs of the Townsend Na- tional Recovery Plan, Inc. Announcing his resignation as na- tional public relations director for the organization, O. G. Davis, who was here to make an address at a Town- send rally last night, made the as-| sertion and promptly drew a reply from State Manager Floyd J. Smith that Davis refused to address the rally “unless he could talk in behalf of Gov. Davey.” “Dr. Francis E. Townsend was per- sonally involved in cash transac- tions,” Davis said in an initialed statement, “which went to George Maines, publicity agent; Dr. S. E.| Taylor, director visual education, to- | taling more than $5,000 and which‘ ‘was paid by friends of Gov. Davey and for which value was not given. I feel that it is impossible for me to make | a satisfactory statement to the public | as I was supposed to do at a mass meeting.” | Smith hit Davis’ statement as a *false and vicious attack on the | Townend organization for the pur- | pose of wrecking the Townsend move- ment.” Gov. Davey was in Cleveland but could not be reached immediately for | comment. Democratic State Chairman | Francis Poulson likewise could not | be reached. Officials at Townsend | headquarters in Chicago said they | would issue no statement until they knew more about the situation. “s * * It is strange,’ Smith's signed statement continued, “that he | (Davis) came to Columbus for the | purpose of addressing a huge Town- send rally * * * and refused to speak unless he could talk in behalf of Gov. Davey.” | An announcement from the plat- form at the rally said Davis would | not speak as scheduled. Smith said in his statement, “I refused to allow him to speak.” Former Educator Dies at 74. SAN DIEGO, Calif., November 3 ( ~—Hudson P. Leavenworth, 74, formerly superintendent of schools in five | American cities, was struck and killed | by an automobile last night. Schools | of which he once was superintendent | included Mount Vernon, Ind.; Winsted, Conn, and Jewett City, Conn. { | | | LOST. YERICAN and Sheridan n.w. Randolph 9 BILL FOLD—On Brookland Monastery grounds: contain! auto license. Return to 1 w.. fird floor._after 5. Reward s POLICE BADGE_ No. : 10 5th_precinct. Police Dept PREFERRED STOCK—Five Potomac_Electric Power Co 1937, C and E, Eme Bla 33rd sts., Bal A RING, military. red_stone: lost Saturday nigh > W st nw. Reward. ____| VEST_ brown: lost Saturday beiween 14th and Col. rd. and 17th and Park rd. Re- | ward, _Columbia 5858 | 'CH. in 3600 Georgia ave 1 ma WATCH—Man's green gol wrist watch: Sunday. R tomac 3041 TER — Black from 18th_and Reward. Col. 1 t, 31 ward. ~Esther Young. 806 N. Taylor st. Arlington. Va. §5 REWARD for information leading o | Teturn of female collie strayed Nov. 1.| Chevy Chase, Md. SPECIAL NOTICES. THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE PER- etual building Association will be held at | he office of the association. Eleventh and | eets northwest. Monday. November 16, 1036, at seven-thirty o'clock p.m. EDWARD C. BALTZ. bl RIS I CNSCEARTY THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SHARE- | holders of the Home Mutual Building and | Loan Association for the election of officers and directors for the ensuing vear. for adopting a revised constitution in keepirg the requirements of the Federal Bome Bank. and for any ather busines which may legally come before it. will be held in _the office of the association. Rcom 4. 631 Pennsylvania ave. n.w.. Wednesday, November 4. 1936, at 2:00 p.m. sharp. CLARENCE RMENT. Presiden ODELL S. SMITH. Sec.-Treas. __ %; NUAL MEETING OF THE SHARE- holders of the Equitable Co-operative Build- 1ng Association will be held at the office of the ‘association. 915 N.W. Wednes- day. November 4. 1936. 30 o’clock p.m. Ameéndment of the ution of the association will_be considered, EDWARD L. McALEER. Secretary. Wisconsin 3015. Y WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE POR ANY debts or obligations other than those con- tracted by me personally. WILLIAM B. GIBB. 8409 Woodside parkway, Silver \ rom Balto.. Phils. and New FPrequent trips to other Eastern ““Dependable Service Since 1896.” DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO._Phone Decatur 2500. OLD DAGUERREOTYPES, TINTYPES, KO- dak prints or any treasured “keepscke pic- tures” restored. improved, covied (large or small) by EDMONSTON STUDIO. 1318 F st. n.w. Specialists in fine copying for over 25 years. o THAT ON NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN ecember 1. 1936, and thereafter. the ead Office of the Riggs National Bank of Washington. D. C. at 1503 ! Yvania ave. n. ill open for business each business day at 9 o'clock am.. and that until said _date. nlmel{. December 1 1936. the Head Office of said bank wili continue to open for business each busi- ness day al 230 a.m. ere will be no Ehange In the banking house of the Savings Department of the Head Office, which de- partment will continue to open for business each business day am. There will be no change in the banking hours of the Branches. which will con- tinue to 08"‘ for business each business day at 8:30 a.m. he closing hours of the Head Office and the Branches will continue as hereto- or, By order of the Board of Directors of the k. _Washington, DlgRisss Nationy Beyass. Cashier. PERFECT REPRODUCTIONS. years we have a Thro: mainteitiea il Eivisnis seputation. = We Teproduce books. maps, sales literature, Ieports, mexs: language matter and etc. Thorough, eficient service guaranteed. Samples ‘and estimates issued E at Jour request. Phone Met. 4892 now! Columbia Planograph Co. 0 L St NE. Metropolitan _4892. ONG-DISTANCE MOVING. Special Winter rate: 5 York: “Philadeiphia, Boston’ and the’ Weat, Full’ insurance _coverage: large padded tans, VANPORTATION & WAREHOUSE . 2 eor, - nw. 377" Night, Clevelana” biag " Adsms ARPPLES. SWEET CIDER. Mu?srom Rocknll'm vaF L ett 2 Blocks Weat of Gonre Honee: CHAMBERS ' ove of the areest undertakers the orld, c&nm funerals as 875 2 Y soRee Sadetaers and il :j%'mfi i i & _se Atlantle A700 WE ARE SPECIALISTS! Our planogra; assu eoradnenons bF sl boske e s {mn-u- matter. ‘etc. Prompt. courteous service. nts a4 extra copy, ‘work without obiigation. PN o %&'ml .tial political power of seven of the States, Arizona, g Newpglexico,psemont, Delaware, Wyoming and Nevada, The Day, November 3, 1936 To the Un-Americanized Americans of the District, A Day of Humiliation and Mourning." To Other - Americans,” a Day of National Enthusiasm \ and Patriotic Pride. THEODORE W. NOYES. On this day the people of the United States, the citizens of the American States, choose their agents to perform the executive and legislative functions of the great representa- tive Republic. American sovereignty is not the possession of one man or of a little group of men, but is distributed among the whole people. Every American is a sovereign in his own right and on this day he exercises this sovereignty as he deposits his vote in the ballot box. ‘To all full-fledged Americans this is a day of national inspiration and patriotic pride. To the un-Americanized Americans of Washington the day is one of humiliation and mourning. The Americans of the District of Columbia alone are denied the opportunity to exercise now or in future the sovereignty which belongs to them and attaches inseparably to them as Americans. H The 486,869 Americans of the District (1930 census figures, the latest census count, later figures being esti- mates only) constitute the only community in all the expanse of the continental and contiguous United States— populous, intelligent, public-spirited, of adequate resources —which is denied representation in the National Govern- ment. In relation to the national laws the sole function of the District residents is to obey. They take no part in making the laws which they must obey. DISTRICT MORE POPULOUS THAN EIGHT STATES. The Americans of the District of Columbia, according to the census of 1930, outnumber the Americans of eight of the States—New Hampshire, Idaho, Arizona, New Mexico, Vermont, Delaware, Wyoming and Nevada. They send as agents to the National Legislature to make laws for them: District of Columbia, 0; New Hampshire, 4; Idaho, 4; Ver- mont, 3; Arizona, 3; New Mexico, 3; Delaware, 3; Wyoming, 3, and Nevada, 3. Montana and Utah in 1930 exceeded very slightly the District of Columbia in population. They send to the Na- tional Legislature to engage in the councils of the greatest representative Republic in the world: Montana, 4 men; Utah, 4 men; District of Columbia, 0 men. Today's voting is not only for a new Legislature, but for a new Executive. To the electoral college, which chooses the President of the United States, Montana sends 4 votes, Utah, 4; District of Columbia, 0; New Hampshire, 4; Idaho, 4; Ver- mont, 3; Arizona, 3; New Mexico, 3; Delaware, 3; Wyoming, 3, and Nevada, 3. In relation to national taxes the sole function of the 486,869 (figure of 1930 census) District Americans is to pay. They have nothing to say, like other taxpayers, concerning the amount and kind of taxes they shall pay and how the tax money shall be spent. PAYS MORE NATIONAL TAXES THAN TWENTY-FIVE STATES; MORE THAN NINE STATES COMBINED. In the fiscal year 1935-36 without any representation whatever in the taxing body the District of Columbia paid in national taxes (internal revenue) for national purposes, $17,322929. g X The District of Columbia (with 0 Representative in Congress) contributed in national taxes to be expended by Congress for national purposes in war and peace more than 25 States, including Georgia, with 12 votes in Congress; Alabama, 11; Iowa, 11; Tennessee, 11; Arkansas, 9; Kansas, 9; Mississippi, 9;: South Carolina, 8; Washington, 8; West Virginia, 8; Nebraska, 7; Colorado, 6; Maine, 5; Oregon, 5; Idaho, 4; Montana. 4; New Hampshire. 4; North Dakota, 4; South Dakota, 4; Utah, 4; Arizona, Nevada, 3; New Mex- ico, 3; Vermont, 3, and Washington, 3. The District of Columbia with no Senators or Repre- sentatives contributed in national taxes to the fund from which the salaries of Senators and Representatives are paid over one-and-a-half million dollars more than the aggre- gate of national taxes paid by 9 States, namely, Mississippi, Arkansas, South Dakota, North Dakota, Idaho, Arizona, New Mexico, Vermont and Wyoming. TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION. These States combined paid in national taxes $15,762,929 and sent to the National Legislature 42 men to vote for them concerning the amount and kind of taxes they should pay and how the tax money should be spent. The District of Columbia contributed in national taxes $17,322,929 and was ermitted to send no representatives to the National Legis- ature to participate in deciding how the tax money should be raised and spent. A more flagrant case of taxation without representation it is impossible to conceive. In relation to national war the sole function of the 486,869 (1930) Americans of the District of Columbia is to fight 'in obedience to command. They have no voice like other Americans in the councils which determine war or peace. They have no representation in the Government which requires them to fight, to bleed and, perhaps, to die. SENT MORE SOLDIERS TO WAR THAN SEVEN STATES. The soldiers, sailors and marines furnished by the Dis- trict in the World War numbered 17,945, more than were contributed by any one of seven States, New Hampshire, Vermont, New Mexico, Wyoming, Arizona, Delaware and Nevada. Votes in Congress to make war, to end war, te decide whether our sons shall go to war, are cast by those communities, as follows: District of Columbia, 0; New Hampshire, 4; Vermont, 3; New Mexico, 3; Wyoming, 3; Arizona, 3; Delaware, 3, and Nevada, 3. 5 POPULATION OF VOTING AGE EXCEEDED IN 1930 THAT OF 10 STATES. Its population of voting age (over 21) in 1930 was 341,= 465, exceeding that of 10 of the States. . It is contended, however, that these figures of voting age are misleading for the reason that there are thousands of District residents who vote in the States and who mi§ht not vote in the District even if they had the opportunity. The census of 1930 reports that there had been enumerated in the District 15,105 thoroughly qualified recent actual voters in the States. There are 40,786 persons in the District who hold their places under the apportionment of offices law as part of State quotas. The D. C. political and partisan leaders in the presidential campaign of 1932 estimated that there 'were from 55,000 to 60,000 persons in the District who could, if they registered, vote in the States. Other estimates, including some that were obviously unrea- sonable, carried the figure of possible potential voters in the States up to 80,000. : If from the total population of voting age in the States and District (in 1930) the foreign-born residents not nat- uralized be deducted, and if from the District’s population of voting age there be further subtracted 80,000 (covering liberally every possible reasonable and some unreasonable deductions), the resulting D. C. potential voters who can vote nowhere else (251,439) would be only 6,102 less than that of New Hampshire (257,541); only 824 less than that of Utah (252,263), and 12,620 more than Arizona (238819); 12,655 more than Idaho (238,784); 37,244 more than New Mexico (214,195); 48,001 more than Vermont (203,438); 109,309 more than Delaware (142,130); 124309 more than Wyoming (127,230), and 195,726 more than Nevada (55,713). - OVER FOUR nunnmmniso‘%sm OF VOTING AGE In the pending presidential campaign (1936) the D. C. political and partisan leaders raise their combined average {:ere-election estimates of the D. C. residents who, if regis- red could vote in the States, to a figure over 100,000 (100,000 to 130,000, average 115,000). But at the same time the census estimates of population have increased the D. C. total popu- ,111:'110“1 f{ggg 486,869 in 1930 to an estimate of 619,000 on yIn' the 1930 census the D. C. residents over 21 years of age constituted 70+ &efir cent of total population (486,869 total ulation, 341, population over 21 years of age). Applying this 1930 percentage of 70+ of total population to total estimated ulation in 1936 (619,000), there results a showing of 433 of voting age in 1936. Subtracting the extremely liberal partisan pre-election estimate of 115,000 potential D. C. voters in the States there remain 318,300 who cannot vote anywhere, an increase in number of the dis- franchised residents of approximately 67,000 (66,861). The District’s 1930 showing of a quarter million of voting age but impotent to vote, puts the District ahead in m o-. and approximates closely the number of such persons in New Hampshire and Utah. The District 1936 showing of 433,300 persons of voting age without any claim whatever to voting residence in the States certainly puts the District ahead also of New Hampshire and Utah in potential voting power, and ptobably causes the District to exceed other States. But whether the District in its unused, and at this time unusable, reserve of voting power surpasses 12 or 10 or only seven of the States, its showing of potential political strength entitles it to respectful consideration. After suffering all reasonable, carefully calculated reductions, the potential voters of the District constitute a substantial army for whose favor the worldly-wise, far- seeing politicians will some day compete with sincere display of sympathetic, helpful consideration, instead of slurring it contemptuously, imputing to the community in- curable political unfitness, and to the Nation impotence to cure this evil. HURTFUL AND UN-AMERICAN INCONSISTENCIES. What gross jnconsistencies are evident in present con- ditions! By Americanization schools and otherwise we Ameri- canize the immigrant aliens who flock here as to a haven of refuge, yet inconsistently neglect the Americanization of over half a million residents of an integral part of the original United States. On every national election day the air is filled with appeals to and denunciation of the ‘millions of voters who fail to vote. In the election of 1912 the army of stay-at- homes under control of General Apathy outnumbered in millions the army under the leadership of General Woodrow Wilson who marched to the golls and elected him President. ‘The patriotic Americans who are proud of the right to participate in the exercise of American sovereignty scorn the recreant Americans before whom the pearls of voting opportunity are cast in vain. Uncle Sam appeals to the patriotism of non-voting Americans; he denounces and threatens them. But how can Uncle Sam appeal to or denounce or threaten with any effectiveness, when he himself, at the seat of Government, sets the example of contemptuous slurring of the basic prineiples of represent- ative Government? How can he lash the stay-at-home potential voter w! he himself arbitrarily bars r¥0m the po?sgbimy of partici‘}}:earl tion in their National Government a community of over half-a million Americans, with over 300,000 residents of vot- ing age who cannot vote in the States, and who constitute one of the imost intelligent, conservative and progressive communities in the Republic. NATIONAL REPRESENTATION A DISTINCTIVE BASIC RIGHT. National representation is a distinctive basic right of the American citizen—in a Government of the people, by the people, for the people—in a Government which roots its justice in consent of the governed—in a representative Gov- ernment which inseparably couples taxation and arms- bearing as a soldier with representation. Since the 486,869 Americans of the District pay national taxes, obey national laws and go to war in the Nation's defense, they are entitled on American principles to be represented in the National Government which taxes them, which makes all laws for them and which sends them to war. How is it that District Americans do not exercise this right and power, a vital part of their American heritage? The Constitution makers unintentionally omitted to fix the political status of the future residents of the Ten Miles Square, constituting the seat of Government, and uninten- tionally failed to give Congress the power, analogous to that which it possessed in relation to the admission of territories to Statehood, of granting representation in Congress and electoral college to the population of the District when it became fit. = An amendment to the Constitution is pending which corrects this unintentional omission. Without making a State of the District of Columbia, and without depriving Congress of an atom of its constitu- tional exclusive legislative control of the National Capital, it empowers Congress to grant to the people of the District voting representation in Congress and the electoral college, whenever, in its judgment, they are fit to enjoy this right and to exercise this power. DISTRICT FIT FOR NATIONAL REPRESENTATION. Are the people of the District fit in numbers, intelligence and resources, to enjoy these national rights and privileges of citizens of a State? Yes. They are American citizens assembled “in sufficient numbers in a limited space,” and they meet all the territorial requirements of the community about to be admitted to full statehood, though they are not in this constitutional amendment asking statehood for themselves. The District exceeds in population every new State in the Union at the time of its admission, except Oklahoma. The community in intelligence, in public spirit, in fiamotlc devotion, in every distinctive American character- tic is unsurpassed in the United States. The distinctive American privilege of national repre- sentation decorates the American with a badge of honor and arms him with power. Its lack slurs the Washingtonian as unfit and defective, and slurs the Nation as in this respect un-American and impotent. What the amendment proposes is equitable in itself and compulsory in accordance with American principles and traditions. L WASHINGTON ONLY CAPITAL IN THE WORLD WITHOUT SAME REPRESENTATION AS OTHER CITIES, National representation of the District will proclaim to the world that the great Republic is as devoted to the prin- ciples of representative Government and as capable of enforcing them as other republics with capitals in nation- controlled districts, like Mexico, Brazil and Argentina. These nations have not found themselves impotent to give full national representation to the people of their capitals. It will proclaim to the world that the people of Wash- ington are as fit to participate in national representative Government as the people of Rio, Buenos Aires and Mexico City. Washington will cease to be the only Capital in all the world whose people, slurred as tainted or defective, are unworthy to enjoy the same national representation as that enjoyed by all other cities of the Nation. National representation will clothe the Washingtonian with a vital American privilege to which he is undeniably in equity en_mlggl; will cleanse him of the stigma and stain of un-An.lenca_msm, and, curing his political impotency, will arm him with a certain power. It will relieve the Nation of the shame of un-American- ism at its heart and of impotency to cure this evil. It will inflict no injury or hardship upon either Nation or Capital to counteract these benefits. After four years have passed Americans will again repeat this day of patriotic pride in exercising the highest prlvilgge and power bestowed upon the citizens of - the world’s greatest Republic. Shall election day in 1940 be g:rmltted. as today, to be a day of undeserved humiliation the people of the District? NATION’S SHAME OF UN-AMERICANISM AT ITS HEART. g] viewed as typical and character- istic. The shame is natlzml not local. Autocratic non-representative Government in the only American territory governed exclusively by the Nation brands the Nation itself distinctly and indelibly as un- American. As is the Nation’s City so is the Nation. The Cagtal is the Nation’s heart. If the Republic is tainted with un-Americanism at its heart, the whole of the body politic is thus tainted. Should not the Nation, irrespective of the just plea of the Washingtonians and purely as a national conoenz abol- ish the evil and injury-working paradox of non-representa- tive un-American Government of the National Capital ter- ritory under exclusive national control? Will not {. people of the United States respond so vigorously to the District’s appeal that before the next &nfidenthl election this unjust and hurtful discrimination shall be removed? NOVEMBER 3, 1936. AL SMITH SUMS UPWALK' REASONG Charges “Stirring Up Class Hatred” and Attacks Roose- velt’s Last Speech. LY the Assoclated Press, NEW YORK, November 3.—Alfred E. Smith, the 1928 Democratic candi- date for President, yesterday supple- mented his five speeches against the New Deal with a final statement in which he summed up his reasons for “taking a walk.” He criticized the Roosevelt admin- istration on 10 major counts, charging it with “stirring up class hatred,” “repudiation of the platform in spirit and letter,” “vicious attacks on the Constitution,” and “inviting into its inner council, radical advisers without experience balance or responsibility.” ‘These and the other charges in his statement he said “constitute the sol- emn commandments to a good Demo- crat to change his allegiance.” He did not mention the name of Gov. Alf M. Landon whose election he urged in all his speeches except one. Counts Against Administration. Other counts on which he assailed the Roosevelt administration were: “For substituting in place of plat- form pledges a Government of sheer opportunism without purpose or prin- | ciple, “For lowering the prestige and use- fulness of Congress and for making it a rubber stamp for the executive branch of Government. “For waste and extravagance and for saddling a burden of debt upon | the Nation which cannot be discharged for generations. “For inventing the crack-brained theory of producing wealth and pros- perity by scarcity. “For creating the greatest reservoir | of patronage known to history, for | ignoring Civil Service principle, for | building up a great political machine | reaching into every nook and corner of | the country, overrunning the States | and municipalities, prying into every ‘one‘s personal affairs, and in every essential respect like the British Army which was quartered on the American colonies. “For its fantastic claim that it has | brought back prosperity in the face | of the number of unemployed and of the fact that substantially every ad- vance and improvement in business conditions has been due to the tre- | mendous vitality of private initiative | operating in the face of every obstacle | which could be put in its way by the | administration.” Speech Attacked. In conclusion, he said that if any | further proof had been needed to show | the soundness of his charges against | the New Deal it was furnished by the | President in his speech at Madison | Square Garden Saturday night. | “That was the most bitter, the most | intolerant, wild and fanatical oration ever delivered by a high official in this country,” Smith said, “and cer- tainly nothing like it was ever heard | before from the occupant of the White | House. “Those of us who disagree with the President, are invited to leave the country, and it is hinted broadly that if we do not leave voluntarily we will be thrown out. * * * The President | tells the country that he has been a | match for those opposed to him in the last four years, but that in the next four he proposes to be their master. “Upon a similar momentous occa- sion Abraham Lincoln, rising to the | full dignity and tradition of the presi- dential office, preached malice toward | none and charity for all. I ask the citizens of this country, before they cast their vote, to compare these words | of Lincoln with the vindictive, bigoted, | egotistical and incendiary speech of | Roosevelt last Saturday night at | Madison Square Garden.” 33 SAVED FROM SHIP American Craft Abandoned on Rocks in English Waters. LONDON, November 3 (#).—A surf- boat yesterday took off the last of the 33 members of the crew from the stricken American freighter, Bessemer City of New York. Driven hard on rocks at Pendennis Point, the vessel's keel was broken, and Capt. A. Herman, the last to leave his ship, said “She’s lost.” FOOD SHOW PR|ZE —Ford .Sd wn — $181.. 00 Sewing Machine—$59.50 m Cleaner. 2t 5PM. Al This 0, ite Shoreha : 7:30t0 10PM. Week °77""jppqp """ ot Late Fre ROCKBOTTOM PRICES ) At. 1400 | ROOF EXPERTS Hav, S Yoot "IVl rave vou many dor- S larsit Al work done by experi- E enced roofers. = = FERGUSON } = 3831 Ga. Ave. COL 0567 lieve torturing piles with soothing -FOE. Relieves bur d . 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