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FARM LEGISLATION DELAY MOVE ON Congressional Leaders See Aid to Economy in Postponement. By the Assoclated Press. A movement to postpone action until next year on the sgricultural adjust- ment program drafted by farm organ- lzations developed today among con- gressional leaders. They pointed out that delay would aid the economy campaign and would give farmers time to study the legisla- - tion, which combines authorization for production control, soil conservation, limited crop insurance and an “ever- normal” granary. The cost might be between $200,000,- 000 and $300,000,000 greater than the present soil conservation program, ac- cording to American Farm Bureau officials. Although final decision lay with President Roosevelt, Secretary Wallace said yesterday he hoped a broaa Federal program along the lines or that bill would be enacted at this session “I think the farmers, generally speaking, have drawn up a very fine bill,” he said. A. A. A. Ruling in Way. Wallace expressed belief it was too early to consider whether some fea- tures would be held constitutional. | Several members of the Senate Agri- culture Committee contended the | Supreme Court’s invalidation of the | old A. A. A. stood in the way of pre duction control and price guarantee The objective of the groups suppor Ing the bill is a return of the “good old days” of American agriculture-- the pre-war years of 1909-14. While it would set up & more com- plicated system, the proposed new A. | A. A. is designed to keep production | of major farm commodities in line | with normal demands. Wife Wins Suit On “Mad Man’s Manuscript” LAURA HAMPTON HOVER. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, May 20.—An an- nulment won by testimony of having Extra Special LAMPS DESK—BOUDOIR—BED A e g and $1.50 VALUES 88 McDEVITT'S DRAPERY SHOP 1317 FAqsidnsei= DI, 3211 Complete with Shade Limited Quantity In years when accumulated supplies| become excessive all farmers would pe given marketing quotas. Those selling in excess of quotas would be subject to penalty taxes and fines. Parity Payments and Loans. Farmers co-operating with the Gov- ernment program to control produc- tion would receive parity payments and would be eligible for loans on that | part of their crops not placed on the market. ments and the market price would give the farmer the 1909-1914 pur- chasing power of his products. The unmarketed portion of the co- operating farmer’s yield on which a loan was obtained would be stored under gn\'ernmom regulations—th ishing the “ever-normal gra advocated by Secretary Wallace. In years of he: production sur- pluses would be stored in the gran- aries for use in years of lean produc- tion. Advocates say that through the | power to require storage or releass of commodities violent price fluctua- tions can be eliminated Unlike the old A. A. A, the new act would levy no processing taxes. Expenses would be paid from the Fed- eral Treasury. PAYS DEATH PENALTY Toledoan Electrocuted for Slaying | in Attempted Hold- up. COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 20 (#)— The State had exacted today the death penalty from Steve Kotowicz, who | fatally shot Clement L. Mikolajezyk in | &n attempt hold-up in Toledo, | The 22-year-old Toledoan vainly at- tempted suicide three hours before he was placed in the electric chair at Ohio Penitentiary last night. Guards found him bleeding from a cut in one | arm, inflicted by a piece of razor blade. | The wound was dressed and Komv&mz‘ was led, silent, to the chair and pro- | nounced dead at 8:39 p.m. {‘dl plcasu’! n uslng "61" Omd( Drying Enamel, whether it's thrift or the sheer joy of making things beautiful that prompts the painting! Try it and see for yourself! COLOR LENDS CHEER TO ANY HOME On new or old interior wood and seif-leveling ename! produces a rich, Sponsors say the parity pay- | 8 that’s the HAYES! 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Get It From One of These Neighborhood Stores: W. W. ADAMSON (‘OMPANY LUCKETT HDWR. STORE 328 oulng St.. Alex. Va. H CE E. BROWN H. DISMER. 3134 Taeh o Nw. W F 0N UMMER, & SON mm 'r Mosu 435 K St. N.W. COLUMBIA HDWR. § 1240 4th St. N.E. MAX 2| 1712 7th_St. N.W, ALEX BERLIN 603 Pa. Ave. S.E. THE EVENING read “a mad man's manuscript” in a dimly lighted room at her husband's insistence, was recorded for Laura Hampton Hover, 19-year-old society girl, today. A 10-page episode in Charles Dick- ens’ Pickwick papers, “A Mad Man's Manuscript” tells of a husband who openly plotted his wife's murder until she wen! insane. Homer Leslie Loomis, jr., of New York, then a Princeton senior, staged the eerie scene two days after their dawn marriage in Westchester County, N. Y, December 12, 1935, Miss Hover said. “It was horflble." she testified. “Homer sat across from me and said he wanted to watch the expression on my face while I read. ¥e turned down all the lights except one. His father and mother had gone into the next room and we were alone. “When I finished reading, I said, ‘it's awfully gruesome, isn't it? It seems practically impossible.’ “He said, ‘I don’t think it is impos- sible. I have thought about it often.’ “I didn’t know whether to laugh or | cry. Superior Judge Henry Willis termed it “a cruel prank of unreflecting adol- escence.” STAR, WASHINGTON, RITES TOMORROW FOR MSGR. HEALY Services for Catholic University Professor to Be at Shrine on Campus. Funeral services for Msgr. Patrick Joseph Healy, 65, professor of church history in the School of the Sacred Sciences at Catholic University, who died Tuesday in Providence Hospital, will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Shrine of the Immaculate Con- ception, on the university campus. Most Rev. Michael J. Curley, Arch- bishop of Baltimore and chancellor of the university, will preside and give the final absolution. The mass will be celebrated by Right Rev. Joseph M. — COUNSEL CIRCLE “CARLETTA"” 25 YRS. ON 14TH ST., WASHINGTON. Personal interviews for success, help and guidance may be arranged by a visit to the Counsel Circle, or telephone Carletta, reader. Consuliation free. 922 14th St. N.W. MELt. 4993 D. C, THURSDAY, Corrigan, rector of the university. Burial will be in Holy Oross Cemetery, Brooklyn, N, Y, The body of Msgr. Healy will be taken to the shrine at 4 p.m. today and will lie in state until 9 pm. The office of the dead will be chanted at 8 p.m. by the seminarians, Msgr. Healy is survived by a brother, FL MAY 20, 1937. Joseph J. Healy, a contractor at Cobh, Ireland; two nephews, Rev. Michael C. Healy of the Church of the Im- maculate Conception, Los Angeles, and Rev. Jerome Healy of Glasgow, Scotland; & sister-in-law, Mrs. David T. Healy, and two nieces, Miss Agnes and Miss Margaret Healy of Forest Hills, Long Island, N. Y. 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