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Speaker Bankhead announced yes- terday that the bill reported by Chair- man Robinson of the subcommittee recommending that the President be granted authority to appoint six ad- ministrative assistants, without refer- ence to civil service requirements, at salaries not to exceed $10,000, will be passed overwhelmingly by the House the first of the week. The second House measure on the reorganization program has been drafted for subcommittee considera- tion. Representative Mead, Democrat, of New York is chairman of the sub- committee which is to consider this bill for reorganization of the civil service. This subcommittee may meet | tomorrow, and the bill is certain to| be reported to the House early next | week, Mead said. | Follows Senate Measure. | of This bill runs strictly along the lines the civil service section in the {omnibus reorganization bill presented |in the Senate by Majority Leader Robinson. It provides for abolishing | the present Civil Service Commission and creation of a civil service admin- | istrator, a non-partisan appointee with special qualifications as defined in the bill. It directs that hereafter | appointments to positions which are policy determining in character, or to | positions as head of the various bu- reaus of the departments and agencies | who are directly responsible to the | heads of such departments and | agencies, shall be made by the Presi- | dent and confirmed by the Senate, in | addition to those other positions for | which confirmation is now required. Under this bill as drafted, within a year after its enactment all offices and positions in the various agencies | | of the Government would be blanketed | into the classified civil service on rec- ommendation of the head of lhei | agency, and on passage of a suitable | non-competitive examination pre- | scribed by the new administrator. | | This provision, Chairman Mead ex- | | plains, does not apply to positions in Government-owned Corporations ex- direction of the President, or to certain other positions which are specifi - bill proposes to extend the | classification act to all positions in the Government service, both de- | partment and in the field, with the | exception of those positions now cov- ered by laws specifically fixing the | compensation of various classes of I employes. 15-Year Term. The new civil service administrator | | would be appointed for a term of 15 ' | vears at a salary of $10,000, and would be specifically qualified by reason of | his executive and administrative qual- ifications, with particular reference to his actual experience in and knowledge of accepted practices re- | garding the special function of the office. He would be subject to re- |moval at any time by the President | | “for inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office.” | | One of the important duties to be | | vested in this new administrator would be to prepare and recommend to the President plans for development and | maintenance of a career service in | the Federal Government. He would be | required to make studies of personnel | | standards, practices and policies in other Government jurisdictions or private industry, and to disseminate | | this information throughout the va- | rous Government agencies. “—’a;e-Hou_r (Continued From First Page.) of the proposed law would be barred from interstate commerce. Intrastate commerce competing with interstate ;zmds would be subject to regulation. l Ordinary labor of children under 16| and the hazardous employment of | | those under 18 would be prohibited. | | Persons employed in administrasive, | professional or local retailing capacity, | as defined by the board, would be ex- | empted as would also seamen, fisher- | men and railroad employes whose hours of service already are limited. Agriculture Is Exempted. | The original administration bill would have defined a minimum “non- | oppressive” wage and a maximum | “non-oppressive” work week, but the | | Labor Standards Board would have | been directed to vary these upward or downward to meet special condi- tions. Terms of the bill approved by the committee would give the board power to fix the minimum wage and maxi- mum work week for each industry, but the board could not require any COURT By Merlo exciting events of reviewed, and the critically analyzed. of their case. | would begin consideration of the (Continued From First Page.) _— T ST ase) within a similar period as today. Nearly ! the National THE SUPREME (With Foreword by » U. 8. SENATOR EDWARD R. BURKE) President Roosevelt's attempt to en- large the Supreme Court is one of the book the story of that venture is A'number of Senators leading the fight aqgainst the President have endorsed this book. . This fact, with Senator Burke's ringing foreword, makes it substantially a semi-official statement At All Booksteres $1.00 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937. industry to pay more than 40 cents an hour or to employ men less than 40 hours a week. No restriction was placed on how ‘low a wage or long a work week the board might establish. This was omitted, infoymed sources said, at the request of ‘“organized labor.” The new bill would not exempt any industry on account of size. Agricul- ture workers would be specifically exempted. Also exempted from regulation wou'd be all industries where collec~ tive bargaining had established stand- ards higher than those fixed in the bill. The committee had completed its revision of the bill yesterday, but de- ferred a final vote until today. Chairman Norton of the House Labor Committee announced it legislation Monday. It already has participated with the Senate com- mittee in public hearings. Jamboree every other Scout in the two and three phalanxes along Constitution avenue carried a still or movie camera. The instant the President had passed and the required salute had been rendered, Scout fingers were clicking shutters and focusing cameras on the presi- |§ dential party. Some enterprising Scouts quickly chmbed to the shoulders of their comrades or shinnied up lamp posts | and trees in order to snap photographs from more advantageous positions, 1,400 Flags Along Route. More than 1400 American and foreign flags and Scout banners were banked along the line of march. A number of Scout bands and drum and bugle corps serenaded the President with stirring martial tunes. In the President's car, in addition to Mrs. Roosevelt, were James Roose- velt, son of the President, and Dis- trict Commissioner George E. Allen, chairman of the President's Special Jamboree Committee for the District of Columbia. In cars behind him were Presi-| dential Secretaries Marvin H. Mc- Intyre and Stephen T. Early, Col. Ed- win Watson, military aide to the President; Capt. Paul Bastedo, naval | aide; members of the cabinet, con- | gressional leaders, Commissioners Mel- vin Hazen and Dan Sultan, Gen. | Malin Craig, Army chief of staff, and Admiral W. D. Leahy, chief of naval operations, | Five other cars carried members of Executive Board and jamboree officials of the Boy Scouts | of America. ‘Work halted momentarily in a num- | ber of Government departments along | Constitution avenue as the presidential | procession rode past. ‘Waves Continuously. President Roosevelt waved almost continuously to his applauding fellow Scouts and occasionally he doffed his Panama hat and bowed smilingly at cheer leaders. “Boy, he looked swell, didn't he?" exclaimed one boy, unconsciously ex- pressing the general sentiment of his comrades. “Where's Farley?” yelled & scout from Arizona, to the amusement of fellow cabinet officers. The Post- master General was there, all right, along with Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Treasury Secretary Henry Mor- genthau, War Secretary Harry H. Woodring, Attorney General Homer Cummings and Commerce Secretary Daniel C. Roper. “We are ready to go home now, shouted & boy in the Southern con- tingent. The presidential review to- | day to him, as well as to most of the other jamboree campers, was the high | spot of their 10-day jubilee. Only a final arena show tonight at the Mon- ument remained on the program be- fore evacuation of the 350-acre camp begins tomorrow. Interested in Foreign Scouts. President Roosevelt appeared espe- cially interested in the 400 foreign Scouts who lined the Avenue at the For tender, flaky pie crust, | use FIXT PIE CRUST Housewives everywhere hail this NEW FIXT PIE-CRUST MIX! Makes tender, flaky pie crust every time! Andsoeasy{ Nothing to do but add water! Allingre- dients already mixed. Ask your grocer for FIXT PIE-CRUST MIX today! CRISIS J. Pusey our time. In this policy behind it The Mécmillan Company Capitol end of the route. sturdy-looking boys from Poland, Lithuania, France, New Zealand, Venezuela and a score of other na- tlons stood rigidly in salute as the President passed them. The foreigners also cheered as they completed their salutes, Another colorful group that appealed to the President was composed of Sea Scouts in their white sailor uniforms, The Marine Scouts were lined up be- tween Twelfth and Fourteenth streets. An interesting touch was given the spectacle by a covered wagon parked near the Monument. It was marked “wizard ranch, York, Pa.” Although the Scouts marched many miles in the blazing sun, and stood in closely packed ranks for almost a These half hour awaiting the presidential party, there were no heat prostrations. “Exhaustion” forced three merchers to drop out of line, however. The boys were treated at a section hospital tent near Constitution avenue and Seven- teenth street. None was seriously af- fected. Thousands Visit Camp. Thousands of Washingtonians vis- ited the jamboree camp after watch- ing the parade. More than half of the visitors carried cameras and took hun- dreds of pictures and exchanged auto- graphs with out-of-town Scouts. The parade created a lively de- mand for ice cream cones and soft drinks sold to sidewalk crowds by scores of street hawkers. Most of the Scouts had their Army canteens with them, filling them up at various drinking fountains along the line of march, ed as guides during the jamboree, formed the foot of the “standing” parade, lined in single file along both sides of Twenty-third street. At this point the President turned off Constitution avenue. He and Mrs. Roosevelt received a rousing recep- tion from the local Scouts. The break-up of the standing pa- rade was executed with military pre- cision. The troops returned to their camps with bands and drum and bugle corps setting the pace. Boulder Dam Earns $1,109,437, John C. Page, commissioner of reclamation, reported to Secretary Ickes today that Boulder Dam'’s return to the Goverment from power produc- OUTING SCHEDULED Employes Finance Entertainment by Salvage. Financed by several months of sal- vaging waste paper, scrap iron and anything else salable, the annual out- ing of employes of Calvert & Rogers, Inc., will be held next Sunday at, Bay Ridge, Md. Lou Bowdler, president of Northeast Businessmen’s Associaticn, will be master of ceremonies at the program of sports and entertainment. African Air Survey. Aerial survey of 19,000 square miles tion at the close of the 1937 fiscal year | of coastal South Africa is being | The District Scouts, who have act- totaled $1,109,437. made. BI tB SLICED = > —= " e el onte ] A value 5 M’E‘;_&/E miss! LAST SHOW TONITE! MONUMENT GROUNDS TICKETS, 50c to $2.00 Ticket Office South Side of Constitution Ave. between 15th and 16th Sts, N.W. BRAND NEW and Oh! So Good! ANN PAGE ORANGE MARMALADE 11b. 17’: jar If you like real marmalade you must the rich, full flavor try Ann Poge .. . will win you! you really shouldn’t PINEAPPLE ESTABLISHED 1859 in Cloth Bags Ib. can Granulated Sugar Crisco Shortening Comet Ric N Clicquot Club cmcr ae ot Lipton’s Tea. ... % 23ciy Coconog 22w s 52 19c Rinso 1c Sale o 2lc Kirkman'’s onx Soap - .- 4 = 19¢ Fresh Tub Butter___ n. 35¢ Sunnyfield Flour (mzsr, 2 49¢ - = = = for Sandwich Spread 8 oz. sar |5¢ Silver Wright's s w-23¢ Wildmere Eggs “cxitant a0 30¢ Assorted Yukon Club Avecs, _ 3 st 25¢ lona Crushed Corn____ No.z ean 10c THIS AD EFFECTIVE UNTIL CLOSING SATURDAY, JULY 10TH an D 1€ w13 ¢ quart bottle 'I Zc 45c¢ Cooks Light, White, and Flaky 1 Ige. box 20, 1 reg. box 1c, lona Salad Dressing____ ot s2r 29¢ Vega Sardines________3 Stringless Beans s 28C Rajah No. 2 Brand Standara nar 8 - for Polishing Silverware 8-o1. 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EACH SMALL, MILD-CURE, WHOLE OR HALF S(;LECTED FILLETS - 19¢ Fresh Cleaned Trout______ . 15¢ Fresh Cleaned Mackerel___ 1. 15¢ Fresh Cleaned Croakers___ . 10c Ocean Perch Fillets . 18¢ Fresh White Crab Meat__ & 39¢ Fancy Sliced Halibut w. 27¢ Soft Twist 33 BUTTER AEP A e Sweet, Sun-Ripened A&P De Luxe Raisin Bread Sunnyfield Sweet Cream Air Conditioning Progresses. American air-conditioning may be introduced into Jerusalem this year. | 9 ] Roast Beef has fi fls.a\‘r:rlvlwl'filén seasoned before cooking with GULOENS ‘ Mustard . Magic Milk ~20" Unsweetened Condensed CHIPSO Makes all washing easier 20 IVORY SNOW 2 bggs_zsc SELOX 2 boxes 2 5C large box Ibs. 25‘ Juicy Lemons - . « 29¢ & 35¢ ---2m"19c - -2 25¢ b _annrhnlsc ---3+«10c WHAT A COMBINATION! Slices of golden-crusted, fragrant, fine-textured, soft Twist Bread— fresh and. tender—spread liberally with golden Sunnyfield Butter— And o healthy habit, too—for both bread and butter contain health-building elements in abundance. Serve Soft Twist and Sunnyfield liberally to your family! + « . and so economical too! Bread ot 8° e e Vs Ib. Ib. 39c Government graded 93 score or higher. / FOOD STORES |