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-A—4 MRS. NORTONASKS GABLEBLOODTEST Woman Convicted of Mail Fraud in Parenthood Case in Belligerent Mood. Bs the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, April 24.—Plump Violet Wells Norton, in a belligerent mood, asserted from her jail cell today “there should be blood tests to prove” whether Clark Gable, big-eared mat- inee idol, is the father of her illegit= imate daughter. “I'm innocent of the charge,” said the 47-year-old English woman who was convicted of mail fraud in Fed- eral Court. “I still think Gable is the man, and there should be blood tests to prove he's the father of my daughter.” Mail Charge Conviction. A Federal jury convicted Mrs. Nor- ton of misuse of the mails in demand- Ing money from Gable on the ground he is the “Frank Billings” of her clandestine love affair in England in 1922 and 1923, and who, she said, is the father of Gwendoline Norton, 13. Gable testified for the Government he never was in England and had mever seen Mrs. Norton until the trial, The cefense sought to show that Mrs. Norton was honestly mistaken in her ftentification. B Probation to Be Asked. 2 Attorney Morris Lavine conferred with Mrs. Norton in her cell. He said he had been granted permission to apply for probation for his client and © move for a new trial. +“I have advised Mrs. Norton that 1t we are successful in obtaining pro- bation she should go back to her home m Canada and drop the whole mat- tgr,” Lavine added. “However, she is in a belligerent mood and wants to fight the whole conviction.” Mrs. Norton faces a maximum fine of $1.000 and five years' imprisonment, or both. . DR. JAMES G. ROGERS SPEAKS HERE MAY 5 Former Assistant Secretary of State to Address G. U. Law School. James Grafton Rogers, former t Secretary of State and now professor of law in Yale University, will be the speaker at a special meet- ing arranged by the Georgetown Law School May 5. Members of the District Bar As- sociation a n d alumni of the law school will be in- vited to hear the 1a w professor, who is chairman of the section of legal education of the American Bar Association. He will speak on the DE work of the legal Rogers education section. Henry 1. Quinn, president of the District Bar Association and an alumnus of Georgetown Law School, will introduce Dr. Rogers. There will be a brief address by Rev. Francis E. Lucey, S. J., regent of the law school. ‘The session will be held at 5:10 p.m. in the school auditorium. Dr. Rogers formerly was dean of the law schools of Denver and Colo- rado Universities and served in the State Department from 1931 to 1933. At Yale he also is master of Timothy Dwight College. Service Band Concerts. APT. TAYLOR BRANSON, leader of the United States Marine Band, announces the following band and orchestra schedule for the coming week: Monday, 4:45 pm—Sunset dress parade at the Marine Barracks. Tuesday, 2 p.m.—The Marine Band Orchestra will play for the presenta- | tion of statues by the Nebraska Me- morial Commission in the rotunda of the United States Capitol. Saturday, 12:30 p.m.—Music appre- ciation hour for the 4-H Clubs, spon- sored by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. This will take place in the auditorium at the Marine Barracks. Saturday, 3:30 pm.—The band will participate in the May day ob= servance at the District of Columbia ‘War Memorial, sponsored by the Dis- trict of Columbia Salon, No. 14, Eight and Forty, American Legion Auxiliary. On Wednesday night at 8 o'clock the Marine Band Symphony Or- chestra will present the following pro- gram in the auditorium at the Marine | Barracks: Overture, “In Springtime,” Opus 36 Goldmark “From the Bohemjan Pields and ~Forests” from the suite. “My Fatherland " Smetana “Fantasle Pastorale Hongroise.” 26 poler Boloist. Principal Musician Clinton Lindsay. “Segfried’s Rhine Journey" {rom ‘Gotterdammerung”’ , agner Rhapsody. “Culprit Fa¥.” Opus 62. Hadley “Invitation to the Dance.” (Weingartner Weber 1and Fugue” Cesar Franck ‘The weekly shut-ins dream hour concert scheduled for Tuesday after- noon, April 27, has been canceled. Flute solo. Opus 3¢ arrangem *Prelude. Ch Concerts by the United States Sol- diers’ Home Band Orchestra, Stanley Hall, John S. M. Zimmermann, band- master; Anton Pointner, assistant, Tuesday, 5:30 p.m. March, “Loyal Comrades’ _Blankenburg. Overture. “Peter ‘Schmoll” ~ Von Weber. Entr'Acte. “A"Scoten Lullabye (b(_“Dreaming’” (a) units, ___Richard_Strauss e) “Japanese Sandman’ Waltz Suite. “Love Thoughi Finale. “Ole Virginny" (Requested) Zamecnik. “The Star Spangled Banner.” ‘Thursday, 5:30 p.m. March Espagnole. “Banderilleros,”. Volpatt1. Overture. “Benvenuto Cellinl” ___Berlioz, Ballet Music from the Ballet, “La Source.’ (1) “Pas de Echarpes.” (2) d’Amour.” (i) “Variations.” “Dance Circasienne.” Melange, aster Melodies of Favorite Oper: Roberts. Fox Green Trot. w Down Rhythm' “On’ the Gin, Gin. Ginny Shore” Donaldson; Waltz Suite. “The Beautiful Blue Danube." (Requested) ___ -8t Finale, “The Land of ‘The Star Spangles This will conclude the series of in- door orchestral concerts for the sea- son. The outdoor military band con- certs will be given on each Tuesday, ‘Thursday and Saturday evening, be- THE SUNDAY STAR, WASfiINGTON D. C, APRIL 25, 1937—PART OXNE. Spain (Continued From First Page.) in the staggering problem of feed- ing and keeping in order a shell-bat- tered city of one million souls. “I am just a soldier,” Miaja has said often. Meaning of Order. Hence the order from Largo Ca- ballero, defining Miaja’s functions “strictly” as those of “chief of mili- tary operations in the Madrid sec- tor,” and setting up a civil assembly, or “ayuntamiento” to replace Mia- ja's defense junta, which was dis- solved, meant this: The government is assuring Madrid that it is not going to have permanent military dictatorship. At the same time, all of Miaja's energies are needed to whip back the insurgents who still are on the edges of the city and to win the war, now in its tenth month. The new City Council had one bit of luck—it was able to meet quietly. The insurgents refrained from shell- ing Madrid for the first time in 13 days. Wary residents, however, sped across the streets and kept off the main avenues, never quite sure the artillery attack would not be resumed at any moment. More than 250 persons were killed and vast damage done in downtown sections by the 12 days of shell fire. Official reports said there was vir- tual quiet on all of Spain's war fronts with the exception of the Bil- bao district, on the north coast. There the autonomous Basque government insisted insurgent drives toward the important port city had been checked. Coalition Rules Council. The new city council is dominated by a Socialist-Communist coalition, but all members belong to popular front parties—those parties which Joined to elect a Leftist goyernment in the general elections of February, 1936, five months before the civil war was begun by the defeated, or Rightist, ele- ments. Anarchist and Syndicalist groups have six representatives in all, while there are 18 Socialists and Com- munists, the others are from small | Republican and labor organizations. Henche was unanimously elected head of the council as it met in the civil governor’'s palace. The members voted expressions of gratitude to Miaja and his junta. REBELS MOVE ON BILBAO. Mola’s Troops Advance to Heights 19 Miles From City. HENDAYE, France, April 24 (#).— An insurgent broadcast from Sala- | manca tonight announced the advance of Gen. Emilio Mola's troops to heights 19 miles southeast of Bilbao. Insurgents occupied the strategic village of El Orrio, it declared, and heights 3 miles from Durango, “gate- way” city to the Basque capital. Du- rango is 16 miles southeast of Bilbao on a broad plain. Basque lines were broken in El Gueta sector and the retreating troops were declared late tonight to be flee- ing, closely pursued by their foe. ‘The Basques, in & communique,ead- mitted there was ‘“heavy pressure” from the insurgents at El Orrio and El Gueta, but said their forces were “defending their ground inch by inch.” 1,000 Prisoners Taken. Officers at insurgent headquarters at Vitorio announced 1,000 prisoners were taken when El Orrio fell. Italian troops—who have seen little action since their disastrous rbut on the Guadalajara front last month— were reported to have been shifted to —_— e N eCw TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS SLIP COVER SPECIAL 2PIECE §11.96 SUITE __ 5159 3-PIECE SUITE __ Price includes material, labor, box pleats and French seama. ‘We have a large selection of lin- ens. cretonnes, plaids. plain and Joselty cloths” for you ‘to choose Tom. Upholstering work done at reasonable prices— $28.45 and $38.45. Call, phene or write and resen- tative will call with fall ine of A Study of Girl in Gable Case Here are three photos of I13-year-old Gwendoline Norton, whose mother, Mrs. Violet Norton, was convicted of misuse of the mails at Los Angeles. Mrs. Norton still maintains the girl is the daughter of Clark Gable, film actor. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. the northern front to bolster the in- surgents’ big push. Insurgent officers yesterday said 1,- 500 Italian troops who arrived at San Sebastian, 48 miles from the Bis- cayan battle front, were regular Italian army artillerymen. (Officials in Rome asserted the troops were merely vol- unteers who had been in Spain for some time.) Census (Continued Fror t Pag{\ population shifts took place during the back-to-the-land movement early in | the depression and during the more recent migrations from the dust bowl. The influence of technological ad- vances on production and unemploy- ment, the shifts from one trade to another occasioned by the expansion of some industries and the contrac- tion of others and the retirement from the high speed industries of men past 40 years of age are other eco- nomic and social trends about which the Government would like more in- formation. An independent enumeration of the unemployed, such as Senator Vanden- berg, Republican, of Michigan, and others have advocated recently, is re- garded as relatively valueless by the Government's statistical agencies. Of such a census, Secretary Perkins said at her press conference Friday, “it would not help greatly to know how many are unemployed at any specific date; we know just what we want in | the way of information about the un- employed and eventually we will have a census, maybe in connection with the 1940 census.” Plans for Jobless Count, From other reliable sources, it was learned, that the Labor and Commerce Departments have definite plans for an unemployment enumeration in con- nection with the regular census. In the last few months they have drawn up a detailed prospectus of the infor- mation desired and are waiting word from the White House as to when to go ahead. What the Government statisticians want is a complete population enumer- ation of the employed by industries and trades and an enumeration of the unemployed showing in which indus- tries they were employed last and the date of last employment. With such basic figures at hand, the Labor De- partment feels confident it can keep the unemployment indices constantly corrected with the help of the employ- ment reports it receives monthly, the registrations of the Social Security Board and the registrations with the United States Employment 8ervice in connection with administration of the unemployment insurance act which will be in force throughout the Nation in another two years. No employment enumeration, so the Government statisticians argue, would be enlightening without reference to total population, which will not be known until the general population census is taken. What the Govern- ment particularly wants to know, it was explained, is what proportion of the population is out of work. Statisticians’ Objections. As.to an independent unemployment enumeration, the Government statis- ticians objected: 1. First, that it would not show how T L : WY LS [ S b [FLL YOUR Bin In APR! Last gall Ant and Grasshopper te for your many of the unemployed were persons who had never held jobs but had re- cently become of unemployable age. 2. How many were out of employ- ment because of seasonal lay-offs. 3. How many were unemployed tem- porarily because of illness. 4. How many were unemployed be- cause they did not desire employment, because they had never worked. 5. How many. who normally would not be employed. had listed themselves as unemployed because they felt com- pelled to work to compensate for the unemployment of the head of the family. 1t is the aim of those planning the new census to classify the employed as | to their actual status, what their last trade or occupation was, whether they had been steady or seasonal workers, whether they were new seekers after ployable age or whether their unem- ployment dated from their reaching the age of 40, at which many men and women in the high-speed industries are being retired. Given such basic figures of unem- ployment by industrial classifications, it would not be a difficult matter, the Government statisticians believe, to keep the figures up to date, since the principal industries, exclusive of agri- cultural workers, report monthly on gains and declines in employment. Soclal Security Figures. Moreover, in computing future trends in unemployment, the figures of the Soclal Security Beard and the | United States employment offices are expected to be helpful. The Treasury collects social security taxes based |on the number of employed persons. A rise or fall in the amount of taxes collected would indicate similar move- ments in employment. Under the un- employment act, persons who lose employment in the future must reg- ister with the United States employ- ment offices to be eligible to receive insurance. Such registrations would afford an additional index of employ- ment movements. The idea that it would be a year |or more before census figures would | | be available and that hence the un- employment statistics would be out of date before they were published was discounted by the Government experts. The figures could be pub- | lished in six months, it was said. and | could be brought corrected to date by | referenee to the Labor Department’s | employment reports. | The projected unemployment count is but one phase of a rather ambi- | tious statistical survey which the ad- | ministration is perfecting. In con- | junction with the National Resources | Committee, the Labor Department has been investigating the consuming habits of families of various incomes. Much data have been accumulated showing how the expenditures of a family with an income of $1,000 a | year for various items such as food |and clothing compare with those of | families in higher income brackets. | The purpose of the study is to deter- | mine how an increase in the national income would be spent, which indus- tries would benefit most and what effect a redistribution of wealth would population. | preliminary reports have been made |to the President, but it will not be completed until toward the end of "the year. L soct 4414 s in A official en of what the g 1mit 1 3 Tons of o tons of PenT the FREE Hotning to bU April rices entire :uvvfyn‘x',’:u Sider the Fgilicer, AT money! Telephone (ol AL ‘;:B’W:and SA are_al¥ next are VI gamily)- AL FREE! thracite state ARG anks w08 1 aiven fte Goe second o try. wi ' Alse ! er of WN whereby YU NAtion ROOSEVELT CALM ATSNUBS TO BILL To Delay. Reorganization Plan Drive—Leaves Capi- jobs who had recently reached em- | tal Tuesday. BACKGROUND— During first campaign for presi- dency, Roosevelt declared Govern- ment departmental set-up needed revising and simplifying. During first term, however, his adminis- tration greatly increased extent of Government machinery, At urging of Senator Byrd of Vir= ginia, Senate during last year un- dertook study of problem of reor- ganizing departments and bureaus. Later President suggested such a study and joint congressional com= mittee was named. Before this committee mow rests his specific recommendations for revisions in administrative and executive branches. BY J. RUSSELL YOUNG. President Roosevelt is not con- cerned over the apathy on Capitol Hill toward his plan for reorganizing the executive branch of the Govern- ment. It is known he has no inten- tion of pushing this proposal for the present, being content to allow it to hang fire at least until disposition of his bill reorganizing the courts, Reports from his lieutenants in regard to the Presi- dent's reorganization plan have not been encouraging, it is understood, exert pressure to get action at this time. His proposal now is in the hands of a congressional joint com- mittee. Meanwhile Mr. Roosevelt is con- centrating his strength behind the judiciary expansion plan, although he appears unworried over the prospects for passage of this bill. He has said repeatedly in discussions with friends he is confident he has sufficient votes in the Senate and that his court pro- gram will be successful. To Leave on Vacation. Satisfied that he has the winning {hand and that nothing will be lost by permitting the opposition to run |its full course, the President will | leave Tuesday night for a vacation of (at least two weeks, during which time he will fish for tarpon in the Gulf of Mexico. While thg,President is showing no jconcern aqver the fate of his re- | organization plan, it is known he is |by no means as sanguine about the outcome of this part of his New Deal | legislative program as he is about the | court plan, He is not unmindful of the really serious opposition to his reorganiza- |tion plan. He is informed opposition is by no means confined to | Republican legislators. Many in his |own party have given evidence they | propose to fight the plan, or at least | certain phases of it, when the time comes. Principal Objections. The President has been told by his lieutenants the principal objections { to his reorganization proposal concern those sections which transfer the Comptroller Ganeral's office to the Treasury Department, and ‘place most of the major independent agencies, |such as the Interstate Commerce | Commission and the Civil Service | Commission, under the supervision of |one of the regular departments. He {has heard, also, that his proposal to create two new departments, the heads | | of which would be in the cabinet, is |not popular, principally because this |tends to increase governmental ex- | penses. | Recent tendencies on Capitol Hill | indicate there are a number of legis- {lators in genuine mood for economy | and that they proposed to vote accord- | ingly. If this economy sentiment is more than temporary, it is likely it may have some effect on the fate of the reorganization plan. | It is pointed out, however, there | probably will be some touched by the economy wave who will go along with |the President’s plan, believing it will | effect expense cuts in Government ‘There undoubtedly will be others who will oppose the plan because there is no indication it will result in econ- |omies. The President, himself, has | stated that economy was not his aim |in working out the program, his ob- | jective being greater efficiency and better business methods. Judiciary (Continued From First Page.) | would happen to the bill in committee. He said that in his opinion the com- | mittee would divide, 9 to 9, or 10 to 8 8. He admitted, too, that the com- | mittee might vote adversely on the | have on the spending habits of the | This study is well advanced and | in dia Federal | , congressional | but he is not expected to attempt to | the | PERFECTION Supreme Court proposal of the Presi- dent, although he expressed the hope this would not happen. The chairman insisted, however, | that even if the bill was reported adversely, he believed that it would pass the Senate. Committee action would by no means be final, he said, “No man knows exactly what will happen if the vote in the Senate itself comes on the proposal to in- crease the Supreme Court by six new justices,” Ashurst said. “The President could have two new Justices—as proposed in the McCar- ran amendment—any time he is willing to take the bill in that form,” the chairman continued. He added that there had been no indication whatever that the President would agree to such a compromise. “He might veto the bill if it came to him in that form,” said Ashurst. Many of the President’s advisers ‘would urge him to accept the two ad- ditional justices, however, if Con- gress authorized them, it is believed. It was recalled last night that Presi- dent Woodrow Wilson, if he had been willing to accept the Lodge reserva- tions, would had been successful in bringing the United States into the League of Nations. His fallure to accept the reservations defeated the entire proposal. Not Seeking to Speed Bill. Chairman Ashurst is not seeking to hurry the court bill in committee, just as he did not try to hurry the hearings on the measure. He is con- fident that time is an ally of the administration in this fight. Already, he insisted, the sentiment in the country has changed materially sifice | the bill was first sent to Congress by | the President. He admitted that the | public was adverse to the measure then. “If a referendum vote was taken now throughout the country, the bill would carry in all but five or six | States,” Ashurst said. He mentioned | Pennsylvania as one of the States that would favor it. Apparently the chairman believes | that if the sentiment in the country | becomes more and more favorable to | the President's Supreme Court pro- gram, it will eventually affect the | votes of Senators now inclined to | | oppose the program. | | Incidentally there are 28 Demo~l | cratic Senators who come up for re- | election next year—among them some iof the Democrats who are now at- | tacking the President's Supreme Court bill, like Clark of Missouri, George of Georgia, Tydings of Maryland, and among them some of the Democrats like McCarran of Nevada, now on the fence. The administration forces are warning these Senators that if they oppose the President now, they will have to take the consequences in the | Democratic primaries next year. | Opponents of the bill insist that in- stead of gaining ground, the Presi- dent’s court bill is losing out in the country, despite all the efforts of the | administration to gain favor for it. | Four Meetings a Week. | senator Ashurst plans to have only | four meetings of his committee a | week, an hour and a half each meet- | ing, to consider the bill in executive | session. This week there will be only three meetings, since there is to be none tomorrow. Thereafter he will ask the committee to meet Mondays, | Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, he said. It may be May 20 or later before the bill is reported to the | Senate. | The chairman said that he consid- ered the hearings, which ran for six and a half weeks, had been very in- formative, “My wish,” he said, “was in addition | to getting information for the com- mittee and the country, that every witness who appeared before the com- mittee should go away having a higher opinion of himself after he left than he had before.” The committee, he said, had been extremely courteous to | all witnesses and had not treated them | as though they were under suspicion | of wrong doing. | Opponents of the President's Su- | preme Court program last night were counting 44 Senators as definitely | committed against and 39 for the bill, | with the remainder, 12, uncommitted. | What will happen if and when the administration brings pressure to bear upon the uncommitted Senators is a matter of speculation. Privately one Senator who is not supporting the court bill admitted yesterday he saw little real chance of defeating the President. The appointment of a'! Senator to fill the vacancy caused by | the death of Senator Bachman of PONTIAC Sixes & Eights IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WE NEED USED CARS Flood Motor Co. Direct Factory Dealer 4221 Connecticut Ave. Clev. 8400 monds the whole truth about Jewelers Describing diamonds in true terms is an obses- sion with A, Kahn, Inc. anteed to be axactly as represented . . . mean- ing, a perfect gem is 100 per cent perfect .. . a safeguard to those who would desire to know purchasing for either ddornment or investment. CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED Platinumsmiths A. KAHN Inec. A diamond is guar- the DIAMOND they are Stationers ‘Tennessee may have a bearin, result. Senator Bailey of North Carolina, an opponent of the court bill, yester- day addressed a letter to the members of the North Carolina State Legisla- | Machine ture, setting forth his reasons for this | opposition. The Legislature recently passed a resolution urging all North Carolinians in Congress to support, the President’s bill. He said in his letter: “If the powers reserved to the State | of North Carolina ought to be im- | paired, if the rights of the people of | North Carolina as individuals are to be abridged, if the powers of the | President or Congress ought to be | increased, there is a way provided, and | that way is the submission of amend- ment to the Constitution for ratifica- tion by State conventions or State Legislatures.” | No worse way, he said, could be conceived than that proposed by the | President in his court bill. He insisted that it was violation of the Democratic | platform, that it would undermine the | independence of the courts, and that | “it would invade the holy precincts of justice and bring her helpless down to the pit of politics.” R Will Give Joint Recital. Pearl Williams, mezzo-soprano, and Frank Williams, baritone, will give a | Joint recital at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in | Goodwill Baptist Church, U street be- | tween Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets. | Supreme Tonal Beauty—the Accelerated Action—and All provements Are Embodied Charming New Model *‘S” ~ s on the | CAR QUT OF CONTROL, ELDERLY WOMAN HURT Careens Up Terrace, Stops Against Porch After Collision. Mrs. Jessie Bradford, 70, of 720 Tewkesbury street, escaped with & slight scalp injury yesterday when the automobile in which she was riding careened up & steep terrace at 806 Nicholson street and came to rest against the porch after a collision with & light delivery truck at Eighth and Nicholson streets. The automobile, driven by her huse band, James C. Bradford, also 70, got out of control after the collision with a truck operated, police say, by Eugene Luckett, 16, of 615 Fern street. Sixth precinct police arrested young Luckett and later released him in cus- tody of his parents for arraignment in Juvenile Court. Police said the boy had a permit which permitted him to drive only his father's car. Psychic Mental Counsel “CARLETTA" 922 14th St. N.W. Personal interviews for ance may arranged isit to her studio. or telephone MEt. 3003, Carletta. reader. Ce s See Name on’ Brass Sign at help and guid- by & visit 1 Door, Patented Latest Im- in This STEINWAY GRAND PIANO “THE INSTRUMENT OF THE IMMORTALS" $88 ; 5 Feet 1 Inch Long, It Will Fit in EvenaVery Small Apartment. Used Pianos Taken in Partial Payment. COME AND PLAY THIS PIANO CONVENIENT TERMS (IF DESIRED) THE HAMMOND ELECTRIC ORGAN A New Musical Instrument for Home, Church, Studio. 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