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-A—6 * LEVELED PRICE RISE SOUGHT BY ECLES Federal Reserve Chairman Urges Fiscal Restraint ~. to Rule Expansion. A7 the Assoctated Press. NEW YORK, March 25.—Marriner "B. Eccles, chairman of the Federal Re- serve Board, in a magazine article .suggested anti-trust legislation and tariff reduction as possible lines of Government action against “excessive ‘price rises on particular products in “Amportant fields.” Writing in the current issue of Fortune, he asserted there was danger *that plant and labor shortages might result in “undesirable price advances, .duplication of orders and speculative ~dnventory buying.” T “It would obviouslr be very diffi- cult to cope with such a situation by the use of monetary instruments,” he fadded. *“Such instruments are for “the most part non-selective. The ef- fectiveness of monetary control con- “sists more in setting an upper limit Yo expansion.” Urges Federal Restraint. He contended, however, both Fed- Leral monetary and fiscal policies, in- ‘cluding spending and borrowing, ~might be operated “in the direction of restraining the general upward -movement so as to give more time for “shortages to be met in various fields An which they occur.” Outlining a broad program for con- “trol of the business cycle, he amplified ‘points made in his recent statement ladvocating shift toward retirement of some of the national debt con- tracted the last few years for recov- ery and relief measures. “I have advocated heavy Govern- ment expenditures during the depres- sion and I advocate debt retirement now that recovery is definitely under way,” he wrote. The principle of having the Gov- emment play the role of a compen- sating agent, spending in the lean years and taxing in the good ones to retire debt, “implies a willingness to run counter to private business be- havior, not only on the downswing, . but also on the upswing,” he noted. May Mean Sharing Poverty. Suggesting careful study of labor ~ problems, he warned there was dan- ger; reduction in working hours “may mean sharing poverty rather than sharing wealth.” As one means of alleviating skilled labor shortages, he proposed postpone- ment of public-financed projects. “SBuch a course,” he explained, “would also have the advantage of creating a backlog of work for the skilled men when private business turns down.” Holding we must not “permit our- selves to be tied to a rigidly automatic gold standard that makes us helpless against the impact of forces from abroad,” he suggested lowering the price of gold or a relative fall in for= eign currencies against the dollar *“might offer a possible means of checking excessive expansion at home.” NEW FIRST-AID CLASS Red Cross to Meet Continued De- mand fgr Training. The District chapter of the Ameri- ean Red Cross announced today or- ganization of another evening class in standard first aid to meet a continued demand for this trainnig. The class will meet Mondays and Wednesdays from 8 to 9:30 p.m. at the chapter house, 1730 E street, be- ginning next week. It will be con- ducted by Claude Leland, authorized Red Cross instructor and former high school teacher. . Improving Grapefruit Juice. Aerating canned grapefruit juice by pouring it from one glass to another several times has been found by Uni- wversity of Illinois scientists to improve the flavor. ress ar Warner Bros. IM2ETEEBEASNEELINE Body Is Found in Lonely Cabin—Authorities Question Priest. BY the Associated Press. GREENSBURG, Pa., March 25—A noted Pittsburgh chemist was called today to help solve the mysterious death of Mrs. Lillian Householder of Medina, Ohio, whose nude body was found in a lonely cabin 14 miles from Greensburg. State police and Coroner H. Albert McMurray announced they were ques=- tioning a man they identified as Rev. Edward A. Haley, a priest of Canton, Ohio, who appeared at the cabin where the body was found. Coroner McMurray said, post-mortem had failed to disclose the cause of the woman's death and that he had asked F. C. Buckmaster to make an analysis of the contents of her stomach. Buckmaster has figured in many police investigations. At the trials of two State policemen charged with murder in the death of Frank C. Monaghan he testified about blood stains; and used the wax test in the prosecution of James J. Westwood, McKees Rock’s justice of the peace, convicted of the murder of his wife. McMurray said the body was bruised, but he asserted neither he nor State police had formed a theory about how the woman died. The only clothing on the woman were stockings, shoes and overshoes. The body was discovered yesterday by Joseph Myal, a meter reader of Mt. Pleasant. Police had to shoot one of two dogs guarding the cabin before they could reach the woman. McMurray said Rev. Mr. Haley asserted the woman had been dolngV‘ secretarial work for him. He told McMurray he had been on a leave of absence from a Canton parish and that he bad returned last night from Canton, where he attended the funeral of his mother Tuesday. McMurray estimated the woman had been dead two days. DISTRICT A. F. G. E. UNIT ASKS PENSION PROGRAM Retirement Benefits for Legisla- tive Employes Are Recom- mended at Session. Retirement benefits for legislative employes was recommended last night by the District Department, American Federation of Government Employes. The resolution was sponsored by the Civil Service Commission lodge. The depariment also backed em- ployes of the National Training School in urging improved working conditions and extension of classification to cover their positions. A request from the State Depart- ment lodge for a report on the action of the Credentials Committee in rec- ommending against the seating of THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Chemist Called to Aid Probe 4In Mystery Death of Woman REV. EDWARD A. HALEY. MRS. 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