Evening Star Newspaper, April 20, 1937, Page 6

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BROILED CHOPS are more satisfying with LEA & PERRINS SAUCE !t onGinaL WORCESTERSHIRE Allens Foot-Ease SWAXE IV [NTO YOUR SWOES Makis new er (ight dhoos feel eacy. Beothes tander. pwiien; -rmmna::u-muhd ©® No matter what your purpose, you'll enjoy your stay more by stopping at the Hotel Pennsylvania. Glamour is host here...delightful innovations await you...and it’s in the center of everything, convenient to shops, thea. térs, piers and business districts. 2200 ROOMS «och with private Bathiiea i Rates begin ot $3.50 PENNSYLVANIA STATLER OPERATED PENNSYLVANIA STATION, N.Y. Piendent - £ A Duggen wancger ACROSS F Froms & mor ADVERTISEMENT. _STUBBORN RHEUMATISM | Your pharmacist will tell you that the chances are your stubborn rheu- matism. neuritis or rheumatic gout is caused or ageravated by excess uric acid. That being the case. he can also tell you that one swift, powerful and | safe formula is Allenru gone in 48 hours—ask any live drug- | | gist in America for Allenru Capsules— | Why not get rid of that stiffness, sore- | ness and lameness? Save this. | AGENT IS ACCLSED NSTUDIOSLAYNG Theatrical Booker Held in Death of Julia Nussen- - baum, Violinist. By the Assoctated Press. NEW YORK, April 20—Mischa Rosenbaum, 30, who operates a the- atrical booking agency under the name of Mischa Ross, was heid on a charge of homicide today in the slaying of Julia Nussenbaum, 25, night club violinist. He was booked at a police station last night, less than 24 hours after Miss Nussenbaum’s body was found in 8 soundproof rehearsal studio off Times Square. Her head was bashed in with a hammer. Police asserted Rosenbaum confessed an altercation with the dancer. His attorney said there was no such con- fession. Sam Leibowitz, noted crim- inal lawyer, was retained for the de- fense. Inspector Michael McDermott quoted Rosenbaum as saying: “I had been drinking heavily. I remember going into the room and Julia was there. We had some words. We had been arguing for several days because 1 wanted to go back to my wife and she didn't want me to. “She hit me first with something— I don't know what it was. I must have grabbed the object out of her hand and hit her with it, but I don't re- member. I don’t remember anything until T woke up In a jail in Monti- cello.” Rosenbaum was arrested Sunday night in Mountaindale, N. Y. Court (Continued From Pirst Page.) serving with the Marine Oorps over- seas, told the committee: “At Hobart and William Smith Col- leges, we have inaugurated for the first time in American colleges a con- tinuous, four-year, required course in responsible citizenship, an intensive study of the economic, political and soclal structure of America. This is done in the faith that government is an objective science, and today the moet vital of the human arts of living. “This faith will be jeopardized if the Judiciary is robbed of its independence. Students will discover that minorities are without protection, that they must climb on the passing bandwagon if they are to participate in Government action, that voice and muscle count for more than experience, that academic freedom will be lost in the clamor for conformity. “The local courts will follow the Federal courts into the discard, and the party will reign supreme, as it does in Germany today. This is fascism, and under fascism the crit- ical thinker is quickly exiled.” Miss Katharine Gallagher of Gouch- er College, Baltimore, followed Dr. Eddy. She denied the last election was 8 mandate to the President to revamp the court, and said the method | he followed has awakened some fears in the minds of the general public. Urging submission of a constitution- al amendment, she declared the pres- ent proposal can only prove “sub- versive to the court and our system of Government.” The court bill, she added, carries the elements of revolution. Benator Burke, Demoerat, of Ne- _— Out of laboratories have come the epoch- making discoveries of pasteurization, of antiseptics, of radium, of antitoxins . . . die- piness of untold millions. Today, in America, have had to “think very seriously” in determining his prior to the election had he known Mr. Roosevelt Was going to submit this plan to Con- gress. In his radio speech, Attorney Gen- eral Cummings discussed the liberal rulings of the court in the Washington minimum wage case and the Wagner cases and said: “And yet, the enlightened judgment, which has given us these recent de- cisions, by the nerrowest of marging may be eclipsed tomoriow by a return to abstract theories and mistaken as- sumptions. The statutes recently vali- dated may be whittled away in their application bit by bit until nothing remains but an empty victory. “Surely this is an unhealthy condi- tion. The bench still lacks a sufficient number of judges whose self-restraint is predictable, judges who are willing to see the facts as they are and de- cide under the Constitution and not over it. “American constitutional history is {lluminated by occasional flashes such as we have witnessed in the last few weeks, but that same history is often darkened. We find ourselves now in & moment of light. Our probiem is to keep that light burning.” Berry Alse en Pregram. Maj. George L. Berry, president of labor’s Non-Partisan League, and Mrs. J. Borden Harriman, newly appointed Minister to Norway, spoke on the same program with Cummings. Berry said the outlook for future Supreme Court decisions on social legisiation held s0 many uncertain possibilities that “the administration is unwilling to take the chance in- Yolved in these various possibilities for fear of losing the greatest opportunity of our lives to go forward toward se- ourity, stability and prosperity.” Mrs. Harrimen said a demonstra- ton like the mass meetings indicated national fnterest in the court question 18 st “fever heat.” Pt PANEL TALKS SLATED Bpecial Dispatch to The Btar. SILVER SPRING, Md., April 20.— Continuing a series of panel discus- sions on the theme “Training Our Children for Living Today,” the Par- ent-Teacher Association of the Mont- gomery-Blair Senior High School will hold a meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the school. ‘The April meeting deals with “Spiritual Life.” The following will participate in the round-table discus- sion: Albert Rogers, headmaster Sid- well Friends School; Rev. Richard Aselford, rector Grace Episcopal Church, Woodside; B. A. Chandler, Takoma Park, and Miss Marion Schwartz of Montgomery-Blaid fac- ulty. Howard P. Bailey will serve as chairman of the discussion. SOME MEN “SLOW DOWN" AT 40 Energy that is used up must be replaced, or you slow down, and look and feel old: A glass of milk, three times a day, gives you concentrated nourishment in the most digestible form. Take a glass of milk for breakfast. It's a great eye-opener and pepper- upper. A glass at noon is a pick-me- up that never lets you down. At bed- i vision CHESTNUT FARMS- CHEVY CHASE 26th STREET AT PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE In Washington, Choatnut Farms-Chevy Chase Sealtest Milk Is the Only Milk That Is Sealtest Protected Copyright, 1937, Sealtest, Inc. Making /z’fé'mfer - for millions this work of making life safer is being carried on in the dairy industry by 2 great scientific organization—the Sealtest System of Laboratory Protection—working in eo- ioperation with public health authorities. D. C, TUESDAY, CRITICS ANSWERED ING-MAN SLAYING Necessity of Secrecy Cited by F. B. l. Official in Kansas Case. B the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, Kans., April 20— The necessity for secrecy was the answer today of a Federal Bureau of Investigation official to criticisms growing out of the slaying of a Fed- eral agent in & gun battle Friday at the crowded Topeka, Kans,, post office. Two New York gunmen, Alfred (Limey) Power and Robert Suhay, escaped the trap set for them there and later were captured in Nebraska, and are held here on a charge of mur- dering the agent, Wimberly Wayne Baker. Topeka’s Chief of Police Frank Stone, sr., declared Federal officers should have “taken us into their con- fidence,” pointing out that had his men been present the gunmen, wanted APRIL 20, 1937. for bank robbery, “wouldn’t known whom to have fired upon.” Hoover Aide Answers Criticism. ‘Taking cognizance of similar criti- cism in a Topeka newspaper, W. H. Drane Lester, administrative assisiant to J. Edgar Hoover, said last night at ‘Winfield, Kans. “The National Guard might have been heipful, too, but such a pian would not be conducive to secrecy.” Then he added, “ve couldn't get to first bese without the help of local officers.” Addressing & meeting sponsored by the Winfield Boa:d of Education, In- spector Lester, declared: “We make mistakes, but the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation has yet to make the mistake of attempting to besmirch by misstatements and garbled facts the hard-won reputa- tion of any law enforcement organi- sation trying to perform to the best of its ability the tough job assigned to it.” Sheriff Roy Boast, adding to Chief Stone's comment, said at Topeka: “I understand the handicaps under which Federal men work, but it seems to me Baker's death was unnecessary and could have been prevented.” Lester mentioned only the editorials in replying to criticisms. One (in the Topeka Daily Capital) observed: “Local officials may lack the finesse of the higlhy trained G-men, but they often capture their quarry without shooting up the town.” In the gun battle in which Agent Baker was wounded fatally, a by- stander and one of the gunmen also ‘were wounded. “You two men should bare your faces,” snapped Patrick W. Croker, United States commissioner, during the 10-minute arraignment proceed- ings yesterday against stocky, bearded Power ard the tall, sallow-faced Suhay. ‘Face the court. Know what is taking place here.” In those 10 minutes these three things took place: Federal Agent A. E. Parland told how his colleague, Agent Baker, was approached from behind and fatally wounded during the attempt to trap the two in the Topeka post office Suhay pleaded “not guilty” Power declined to counsel, S. 8. Alexander, United States Dis- trict Attorney, told Croker a special grand jury will be assembled to speed the case, with the Government plan- ning to demand the death penalty. Sought for robbery of a Katonah, N. Y, bank, the gunmen were cap- tured at Plattsmouth, Nebr., Priday night. ‘The slain agent, son of H. H. Baker, Arizona State Senator, will be buried in Yuma, Ariz., after funeral services there tomorrow. and plead without SENIORS HOLD RITES McKinley Graduating Classes Plant 4 Wistaria Vines. Leaders of the June and February graduating classes at McKinley High School today held the traditional graduation ceremonies of planting memorials to their classes. More than 400 members of the two groups witnessed the program, which included the planting of four wistaria vines, two by each class, near the gymnesiuin. Tokio Information Burean. 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