Evening Star Newspaper, July 11, 1937, Page 3

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INSURGENTS CLAIM Report Government Offen- slve Smashed—Loyalists Deny Statement. BACKGROUND— Besieged for months by insurgent forces, Madrid defenders last week turned on enemy in fierce offen- sipe. With Bilbao taken in the north, Gen. Franco is reported massing full strength against rebel strong- hold at former capttal. By the Associated Press. HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Fron- Ser, July 10—Insurgent field com- manders reported tonight that the government offensive against . the Madrid siege was smashed. ‘The republic’s army, they said, “suf- fered a great disaster.” Official communiques asserted that 8,000 of Gen. Jose Miaja's central front government troops were Kkilled and 6,000 wounded when insurgents eounter-attacked near Brunete, about 15 miles west of Madrid. ‘The government army was reported in flight from Brunete and in a des- perate plight on the Usera front, on Madrid's southwestern edge, after an attack by 20,000 troops collapsed. Vast Aerial Attack. Insurgent Generalissimo Francis®o Franco hurled the whole weight of his aerial forces in the drive to smash the five-day-old offensive. He sent 150 tri-motored bombing planes and 150 machine gunning pursuit ships| into the air in what may prove the greatest display of aerial strength yet seen in the civil war. His lieutenants said a tank-pro- tected army of 30,000 government sol- diers was suffering “astronomical” losses under a terrific bombardment from the’ sky. (The government defense ministry, however, reported insurgent counter- attacks were repulsed on the Brunete front and its forces had penetrated deeper to the rear of the siege lines. Report Capture of Stores. (Official communiques reported cap- ture of large stores of war materials and heavy insurgent casualties against few government losses. One com- pany of “Fascist infantry,” it was| said, surrendered in a body, and there were numerous other desertions. (A telegram from Teruel front, northwest of Valencia, said govern- ment forces occupied the - outskirts of Castillo de Albarrasis and held re- /maining insurgent garrisons under artillery fire. (There was no indication verses in government reports. (‘Our people’s army.” .Gen Miaja told the Madrilenos, is fighting bravely and triumphantly. Day by day it is conquering new and important posi- tions.”) of re- Government Success Reported. MADRID, July 10 (#).—Government THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JULY 11, 1937—PART ONE. 3,[11] FOES SI.AIN, Triplets Fly Away From W ashington Heat FRANCE PRESSING Middleton Girls Take Air-Cooled Skyliner to Join Father in Boston. Left to right are shown Air Hostess Olive Pearson, Mrs. Middleton and Air Hostess Agnes Nohova giving the triplets a final checking over before taking off. —Star Staff Photo. | ISIBLY annoyed by the heat.[ | Washington's now famous Middleton triplets seemed al- | most to give a sigh of relief | yesterday as they boarded the air-| !cooled skyliner which was to take | | them on the first leg of their jour- | ney to their father, and eventually | Maine. | Throwing their tiny hands about| {as if to push the warm air from | their also tiny faces, Mary Warner, | | Adelaide Du Bos and Frances Devis- mes attracted the gaze of numerous | other air passengers waiting to |leave and arriving at Washington | Airport. | Seemingly swarms of women stopped | | to remark, “Aren’'t they cute?” and/ gape admiringly at the nurse, whom | they mistook for the mother. | The little girls, the first triplets | born here this year, are the chil- dren of Mrs. A. Robertson Middle- ton of 31 West Irving street, Chevy Chase. They arrived five weeks ago at Columbia Hospital. The mother of the triplets. who are the first ever to leave Washington in an airplane, admitted that some- times she “just can't tell them apart.” Smiling at Mary Warner as she lay in a large “traveling” basket, Mrs. Middleton pointed to a bracelet bear- ing the youngster's name, saying: “That’s just in case.” A steward announced the plane was ready and then began a scramble as nurses, a maid and would-be helpers grabbed for bottles and other acces- sories. Quite bewildered by “all the excitement,” Mrs. Middleton posed for photographers with her children be- fore departing. Only occasionally would she look away from them to wave good-by to friends. A special crew of three American Airlines hostesses was provided to look after the babies en route to Newark, N. J., where they made their first landing at 6 p.m.—bottle time. Shortly afterward the mother and children were to take off for Boston, where the family was to be joined by “father.” Late today all will entrain for Port- land, Me. their destination being Camp Mechano on Lake Sebago, near there. During the Winter Middleton is athletic director at St. Albans | 8chool here. “Court (Continued From First Page.) the party leader, who took amend- | ments and substitues proposed by Hatch, Logan and McGill and worked | them into one. Administration’s Attitude. Administration Senators insist they have enough votes today to put the compromise bill through the Senate. But they have very few more than a eommuniques tonight reported con- tinued successes in the drive against insurgent lines west of Madrid and | intense aerial activity without the loss of a single government airplane. | The defense ministry, snnouncing operations in three sectors, said: 1. The insurgents were “'severely | broken up” by a surprise attack in the vicinity of the Extremadura high- | way, southwest of Madrid, by which | *our lines were advanced slightly.” 2. All enemy counter attacks were | frustrated, and the lines surrounding | Villanueva del Pardillo (about 14 miles | west and slightly north of Madrid) were tightened up further.” | 3. Fighting continued northwest of | the capital in the Guadarrama Moun- | tains “where our army is maneuver- | ing.” An earlier announcement reported the capture of the Castle of Albar- racin in the town of Albarracin, 118 miles east of Madrid and in the Teruel sector. e Slaying (Continued From Pirst Page) Bernardinelli said the woman had been dead more than nine hours. Hotel Formerly Was Club. 8cene of the slaying was the $1,.- 000,000 hostelry patronized by politi- cians and society folk. The former Newark Elks' Club, it was converted into a hotel two years ago. Police said empty liquor bottles and glasses were strewn about the room where the slaying occurred. In the clothing of the man, the suthorities said, was a two-year lease for an apartment at a Bronx address issued to “James H. Durkin.” Deputy Police Chief John Haller said the couple had rented the room two weeks ago. Returning to the room at 6:30 am. today, the couple placed several orders Wwith a restaurant by telephone, Haller said. The official quoted Carl Solarich, switchboard operator, as stating he heard a man say during the last call, at 7:15 am, “I guess I killed her this time.” In the room were found a set of costumes, indicating the woman might have been an actress. Three Bank Books Found. Among the woman’s effects, police said, were three bank books, each made out in a different name. They, were described as follows: One issued to Grace Handel, 1257 Boulevard East, West New York, N. J., by the First National Bank of West New York. ‘The second issued to Gertrude Mil- ler by the Dime Savings Bank, Brook- lyn. It showed a balance of $3,254, ‘The last notation in it was a with- drawal of $350 on June 11. ‘The third was made out to Grace Casper by the Central Savings Bank, New York. It was issued in October, 1936. The savings were listed as $85.60. BABE RUTH, GOLFING, IS OVERCOME BY HEAT Forced to Lie Down at 16th ‘When Attacked by Spell of Dizziness. B7 the Associated Press. TUCKAHOE, N. Y, July 10— George Herman (Babe) Ruth, base ball's king of the home run, was overcome by the heat today as he was playing golf at the Leewood Club, Desr here. At the sixteenth tee the survivor of many s sweltering afternoon on the diamond was struck with a spell of disziness and was forced to lie down. An sutomobile was called to return him to the club house, where restora- tives brought him around. He left for home, saying he felt “much better.” | Pittman, President pro tempore, that bare majority, and the opposition in- sists the tide is turning its way. The atmosphere last night among the op- ponents was decidedly optimistic. | Senators said they expected the bill ultimately would be recommitted to the Judiciary Committee, there to die or else that in the end there would be enough votes to defeat the com- promise in a roll-call vote. “Business as usual,” which means another week of constant driving away at the court bill on the Senate floor, was what Senator Robinson promised as he left the Senate chamber yester- day. The Senate stands in recess over the weck end—and at noon to- | morrow the “legislative day” of July | 6 will be resumed. Although it is early in the game the | administration already has sought to | tighten the reins on the debate by in- voking certain rules of the Senate. It is prepared to rule, through Senator a Senator may speak only twice in the same legislative day on the same subject. It already has invoked the rule that a Senator may interrupt another Senator only to ask a ques- tion—not to make a statement—in an effort to stem the opposition pirates who constantly were boarding the ad- ministration speakers. Talk of Motion to Recommit. There was a recurrence of talk last night about the probability of & mo- tion to recommit the bill and the compromise substitute. Such a mo- tion may come, it was said, two weeks hence. And opponents of the measure insisted it would stand a good chance of adoption, although the administra- tion leaders scoffed at the idea. The President has decreed the com- promise must go through. The con- duct of the battle has been placed in the hands of Majority Leader Robin- son. It may be expected that every possible stone will be turned to win. With the middle of July already ap- proaching and a torrid heat at hand, Senators are restive. Senator McCarran spoke yesterday for upward of two hours and a half. He asserted he preferred to go down fighting this court proposal rather than to yield to any pressure that might be brought to bear on him. Will Follow Wheeler. “If those who stand under the lead- ership of the great Senator from Montana (Wheeler) as I do are to be read out of the party by reason of the fact that we seek to hold democracy safe in the New World, in order that it may guide the Old World out of a torn condition—if that be the theory, that we cannot exercise our individual judgment, then I am ready still to stand by the side of the Senator from Montana. I would rather go down holding ‘the helm of the ship of state safe through these troubled waters than I would to return to the Senate of the United States, notwithstanding the fact that that is an honor not second even to the presidency, as I view it. But there is an honor that is even higher than that, and it is that honor and in that atmosphere that those of us who challenge this bill and this substitute are working. “An hour is coming, sirs, when you and I will be called upon in no uncertain terms to say whether or not the seeds of destruction being sown in this Government today from afar are to take root and blossom and bloom in a fruition that will poison the atmosphere of the world. “I say that this whole matter grows out of a rampant philosophy. This does not come from the Presi- dent of the United States. He is too big, he is too grand, he is too splen- did, he is too actively performing ever to have a bill of this type come from him after he had heralded to the people of his country the lines I have read.” McCarran referred to a quotation from the President contained in a istration, in which the President said that to add new judges to the courts | to relieve congestion would be to “aggravate the complaints” and “add to the ravages of the disease.” Wheeler Interrupts. Senator Wheeler interrupted, ask- when Republicans during the last campaign charged that Roosevelt was going to add new justices to the Su- preme Court, this tention.” “We used that very quotation in some of our campaign speeches to refute the statements made on the other side.” Wheeler added. McCarran said he, himself, was one of those who used it, and he con- tinued: “I wish Mr. Farley, the Postmaster General, were listening today, because I know he made a terrible mistake; but terrible though it may be, it was & dagger driven into my heart.” McCarran was referring to a state- ment made by Farley that when Mc- Carran, O'Mahoney and other Demo- crats opposing the court bill came to the White House to ask for their own pet measures, “there will be a dif- ferent viewpoint.” “He wrote my death warrant and he knew it," said McCarran, “and I may be delivering my valedictory by reason of Mr. Farley.” Recalls Talks He Made. McCarran recalled that in the clos- ing days of the last campaign, the Democratic leaders, including Farley and Emil Hurja, his assistant, were not so confident of carrying all the States of the West and called on him to fly from State to State to make addresses. The program was laid out for him by national headquarters in New York. “Oh, Mr. President, they did not say to me then, ‘When you ask for something for your State there will be a different viewpoint’,” said McCar- ran. “No, they did not say that to me then and they do not mean to say it to me now. They only want to challenge me; they only want me to crouch beneath their thumb. If I were remote from this chamber where the language might be otherwise, I would tell them.” Denying that he was fighting the President, McCarran read from the Democratic platform on which Roose- velt was elected, which said: “We pro- Pose to maintain the letter and the spirit of the Constitution.” “We are told now,” said McCarran, “that the letter and the spirit of the Constitution are one and the same thing, and that therefore this bill, which comes under the letter of the Constitution is right. But if the letter and the spirit are one and the same thing, then the platform is guilty of redundancy.” Warn of Party Danger. ‘Warning that if the platform is dis- regarded now in this respect there may be danger of defeat in the future for the Democratic party, McCarran, referring to Farley, said: /‘He who is the great prophet and who prophesies—and who reads you out of the party at the same time—he may not be with us.” McCarran said that he was “en- listed in a battalion of death to the end that the Constitution may re- main.” “Is there any lawyer—even the Senator from Indiana, Mr. Minton, who sees nothing good in the Su. preme Court—who does not want a court of last resort to which the people may go,” demanded McCarran. He insisted that there is no difference in principle between the compromise bill and the original bill. “If you place an executive veto against the vote of one justice of the Supreme Court, you can‘“destroy the judiciary branch of the Government,” he said. “And when that is done, to- morrow, you ean destroy the legisla- tive branch. They have done it in other lands. s “Because we were elected under the leadership of President Roosevelt did we become 8o subservient that we do not dare to express our own views? I would rather go back after one term where Farley says he is going to send me.” Tells of Aroused Yeuth. McCarran warned the administra- tion leaders that the country is aroused, particularly the young people, over this issue. He said “The Story of the Constitution” now being put out by special committes of Congress, book published early in his admin- headed by Repressniative Bloom ef s quotation ‘mmi the President was called to “our at- | New York, was more in demand than “Gone With the Wind.” - “Young America wants to know whether the Democratic purty means to keep its word,” he said. > Under the compromise bill, McCar- | ran continued, and with one vacancy ing if McCarran did not recall that | now to fill, the President could ap- point three new justices to the Su- | preme Court in the next few months. These new judges, he said, would know the history of this legislation and that they were put on the bench to control decisions of the court. “Would any reputable lawyer want a place on the court, if he knew he was being placed there to humiliate Justice Brandeis or Chief Justice | Hughes.” demanded Wheeler. “I can't imagine it,” replied Mc- Carran, “but there is that allurement of high places that causes men to for- et.” - “Justices so appointed would not be fit,” said Wheeler. Suggestion by Burke. Senator Burke of Nebraska sug- gested that if the compromise bill ia enacted into law, two classes of judges would be found on the Su- preme bench. The bill he said calls| for a Chief Justice and eight associ- ate justices, constituting the perman- ent court, and then provides for ad- ditional justices to be appointed when Jjustices fail to retire at retirement age. “Wouldn't this second class of jus- tices be suspected from the start in the eyes of the people and of the court,” asked Burke. Agreeing that they would, McCar- ran said that this second class of jus: tices might be called “quasi-judges. McCarran declared he was “going along with my President—the Presi- dent who told me to tell my people there would be no change. I am going along with the chairman of the Judiciary Committee (Senator As- hurst), who denounced the “absurdity of such a change.” Ashurst gained the floor for a minute or fwo—the Senate agreeing to waive the rule that only questions may be asked—to reply to McCarran, declaring that he felt important to be noticed and criticized, and that McCarran's lips had been touched with Promethian fire. HORSE'S SERVITUDE DATED T0 3000 B.C. Research in Iraq Alters Theory of Introduction Inmto Babylonia. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 10.—Archaeologists of the Field Museum of Natural His- tory have added a thousand years of servitude to the history of the horse. Richard A. Martin, curator of Near Eastern archaeology, announced today research conducted by the Field Museum-Oxford University joint expe- dition to Mesopotamia had determined the horse was under the whip of man a8 far back as 3,000 B. C. He said tombs of the early dynastic period at Kish, in Iraq, yielded animal bones which now have been identified as those of the domesticated horse. Until this conclusion was reached it was thought the horse was first in- troduced into Babylonia by the Kas- sites during the early portion of the second millenium before Christ. The skeletal remains of the horses were hitched to the remains of char- jots, Martin said, just as the horses had fallen after being slaughtered in the belief they would gallop with their owners through the underworld. The Kish horses were larger than the Arabian horse of today, standing 15 hands 3 inches (63 inches) at the withers. Bronze trappings and portions of the chariots found in the tombs were well preserved, and Martin said it was possible to reconstruct the story of the remains from scenes on seals and plaques” found at Kish. Quezon Sails for New York. . CHERBOURG, France, July 10 (#). —President Manuel Queson of the Philippine commonwealth sailed to- night aboard the liner Bremen. The ;:: 1 due next Thursday in New TOENDSPANISHAID Italy, Germany Are Given Ultimatum to Rejoin Border Patrols. By the Associated Press. PARIS, July 10.—France brought pressure on Germany and Italy to- day to get them to return to full co- operation in the all-European effort to keep the Spanish war from spread- ing. She formally notified her fellow members of the 27-nation Non-Inter- vention Committee she would suspend international control of her Spanish frontier Tuesday unless similar con- trol were restored on the Portuguese- Spanish border. This control is designed to prevent the flow of arms and men to the war- ring Spanish factions. France's announcement did mnot mean she would open her frontiers immediately to that flow, for officials sald the border would remain closed against it, but that French authorities, | instead of international control offi- cials, would maintain the barrier. Would Help Loyalists. But diplomats read in the French notification & direct Intimation to| Rome and Berlin that unless they helped restore the control cordon around Spain, on sea and on land, she would carry out previous threats to return to ‘“normal commercial re- lations” with the Spanish govern- ment. That would have an important bear- ing on the civil war, since the French government is friendly to the Madrid- Valencia regime and could become an important source of supply for war materials. Portugal has been friendly to the ! Spanish insurgents and her territory | adjoins that part of Spain under in- surgent control. Would Grant Recogntion. German and Italian return to co- operation in the control scheme would mean either that they return their warships to the four-power naval patrol of Spanish coasts or agree to let Britain and France carry on the patrol alone. The two .Fascist powers withdrew last month after the so- called “Leipzig incident” and since have rejected all Anglo-French pro- posals for its restoration. Instead they have insisted on aban- doning the naval patrol and granting belligerent status to both Spanish factions, which would permit the in- surgents, with their stronger navy, to | establish a recognized blockade of government coasts. France's stand on the control dead- lock was made known to other Euro- pean nations by Charles Corbin, Am- bassador to London, in yesterday's meetings on the Non-intervention Committee. That committee, in iwo meetings, failed to break the deadlock and turned to Britain with a recommendation that she bring forward new compromise proposals at the next meeting, prob- ably early next week. British Work on Plan, LONDON, July 10 (#).—British statesmen worked urgently today to formulate a new plan to isolate the Spanish war, hoping to complete it by Tuesday. France's announcement that inter- national control of her Pyrenees frontier would be suspended Tuesday unless a similar barrier were restored by Portugal made that date a virtual deadline for the next British move. Anthony Eden, foreign secretary, and the Earl of Plymouth, British chairman of the 27 nations Non- intervention Committee, were seeking the new formula, in fulfillment of virtual pledges made in the commit- tee’s two meetings yesterday. They were working in secrecy, with no indi- cation of the trend of their ideas. AMERICANS QUIT SPAIN U. 8. 8. Kane Leaves Santander for St. Jean de Luz. The State Department said yesterday the U. 8. §. Kane had sailed yester- day from Santander for St. Jean de Luz with & number of Americans who are being evacuated from the Spanish civil war scene. ‘The State Department's list of American citizens evacuated included Claudio Calvo and Dario Calvo, Tampa, Fla. PRSP < =% Representative Hook to Speak. Representative Frank E. Hook of Michigan will speak on *“Party Or- ganization” before the Michigan- Washington Democratic Club at 8 | guests at_aristocratic functions, but {Use of One-Time Federal pm. tomorrow at the New Colonial 1. Buy Your’s Now . . . Have It Installed Right Away . . . And Pay Nothing Till September Reconciliation Hinted as Alfonso And Victoria Attend Wedding Italian Royalty Believed Seeking to Reunite Couple. B the Lssociated Press. ROME, July 10.—Former King Al- fonso XIII of Spain and former Queen Victoria appeared together formally tonight for the first time in six years, stimulating reports they were contem- plating & reconciliation. Heading a regal procession, they en- tered the Church of San Roberto Bellarmino as patrons for their cousin, Prince Alvaro of Bourbon-Orleans. on his marriage to Carla Parodi Delfino. Side by side, they occupied special, raised royal pews just as though they had not been estranged since shortly after the Spanish monarchy fell in 1831. ‘Their appearance freshened a belief in Italian aristocratic circles & recon- ciliation was being sought by the Italian royal family. Prince Juan, son of the former King and Queen of Spain and heir presumptive to the non-existent Span- ish throne, and the Duke of Adsia ‘were witnesses for the groom. Prince Colonna, Governor of Rome, and Count Giuseppe Volpi were witnesses for the bride. Guests included princes of the House of Bourbon, members of the Roman aristocracy and political personalities. Sources close to ex-King Alfonso denied his meeting with the former Queen had any political import. It was recalled that the couple met July 2 here on the birth of a son to their eldest daughter, Princess ‘Torlonia. Previously the couple had been early in March a competent source said efforts of the Italian royal fam- ily to reconcile them met “hopeless failure.” FORMER QUEEN VICTORIA. DOUGHTON URGES TAXLAWYER GURB Associates in Pursuing Cases Is Assailed. By the Associated Press. Legislation to blunt the effective- ness of Internal Revenue Bureau lawyers who return fo private practice gained the support yesterday of Chair- man Doughton of the Tax Evasion Investigating Committee. The chairman said such lawyers should not be allowed to use their departmental friends in pursuing tax cases for their private clients. He added that if suitable prohibitory provisions could be worked out, he thought they should be included in legislation to plug “loopholes” in the tax laws. At the request of Senator La Follette, Progressive, of Wisconsin, a member of the committee, & list of Internal Revenue lawyers who have left the service for private practice is to be presented by the Treasury when the committee resumes public hearings on Tuesday. The committee also will receive details of other tax cases which La Follette said were ‘“more startling” than any of the tax avoiding evidence presented thus far. Doughton said no more individuals named in the investigation had asked to be heard and that unless they did 30, the committee could complete its public hearings Tuesday or Wednes- day. ‘Then the group will begin con- sultations over what legislation may be proposed at this session. Doughton said quite s few Internal Revenue Bureau attorneys returned to private practice and many com- plaints had been made that these lawyers used the information they gained in the Government service to help clients reduce or avold taxation. “Some of them advertise they have been in the bureau,” he said. “What worries me most, however, is the possibility of them using their con- tacts and friends in the bureau. Sometimes these things go farther than people intend them to go.” — 5 Lansburgh’s Air-Conditioned. A new air-conditioning plant, de- | signed to “health-condition” the air | on all four floors, will be put into | operation at the Lansburgh & Bro. store tomorrow. The equipment was installed by General Electric. ENJOY all the hot water you want for the balance of this month . . . and all of the month of August . without having to pay any- thing down—any carrying charges —or payments of any kind until September! COME 1IN and see the ABC in Ac- tual Operation, burning ofl, or phone for a courteous representative. Over 200,000 installed . . . over 3,000 in and around Washington. 714 13th St. N.W. _ NAH.. 3068 (Oppesite the Telephone Bldg.) i I o Man,80, Building Cradle for First Child of His Own Second Wife, 41, Has Six by Previous Marriage. By the Associated Press NODRIS, Tenn. July 10—Eighty- vear-old George Brantley, who has made cradles for many families in the Hickory Hollow section near here, is building the first cradle for a child of his own. The baby daughter, Alice Dale, was born 10 days ago to Brantley and his 41-year-old wife in their two-story farm house. They were married three years ago. She has six children by & previous union. Brantley’s first wife, to whom he was married for half a century, died about four years ago. They had no children. “I always have liked children— raised four of my brothers’ boys and girls, just for the company,” he said | tod: Brantley lives on a 30-acre farm and does carpentry work on the side. e e YOUTH GROUP TO MEET American Congress to Gather at Y. W. C. A. Tomorrow. The Washington branch of the American Youth Congress will meet tomorrow night at the Y. W. C. A, Seventeenth and K streets, to discuss the proceedings of the ‘“model con- gress” held at the organization's fourth annual convention at Milwau- kee, July 2-5. ‘The congress adopted resolutions fa- voring the granting of suffrage to res- idents of the District of Columbia and Federal territories now denied the vote, increased relief appropriations, enforcement of the Kellogg peace pact with embargoes against Germany and Ttaly for “invading” Spain, and Pres- ident Roosevelt's Supreme Court plan. Lightning killed 27 sheep in a flock near Westfield, Scotland. CHANGER RENEWS COURTBLLATTCK Substitute Still Contravenes " C. of C. Principles, Says Weekly Review. The substitute Supreme Court b now before the Senate “still contrae venes principles put forward by the chamber's membership,” the Chamber of Commerce of the United States sald yesterday in the weekly Washe ington review. The chamber’s position is set for- ward in a letter to the members from George H. Davis, the new president, who recalled the declaration of the business organization at the annual convention here when the original bill was before the Senate. The review said both sides in the Senate court debate “are digging in for what appears to be a prolonged, | historic parliamentary battle.” “With the division as close as it is,” the chamber said, “the debate could be continued indefinitely, even into the next session of Congress.” The review discussed at length rules of procedure adopted by the Supreme Court, saying that under these the court imposes on itself “a service code of self-denying ordinances.” “The record is clear for those who will examine it” the review con- tinued. “The Supreme Court has shown the highest standards of care to avoid transgressing upon the Jurisdiction of either of the other two departments of the Federal Govern- ment. “If the other two departments fol- lowed anything like these standards, the history of the times would have & very different aspect.” . TEACHER ASKED TO QUIT COLLAPSES FROM STRAIN Doctor Orders Isabelle Hallin to Hospital—To Be Unable to Attend Meeting. By the Associated Press. SAUGUS, Mass., July 10.—Isabelle Hallin, 26-year-old blond Saugus High School teacher fighting for her job, collapsed today from “mental strain” and was ordered to a hospital. The young English instructor, whom the School Committee “invited” to resign, was reported “in a favorabl condition by her physician, Dr. R. W, Allison of Lynn She would be unable, he said, to | attend a special meeting of the School Committee Tuesday to consider her demand for a public hearing to deter- mine why the was given “leave to resign.” The girl said the controversy brought numerous movie and stage offers which remained unanswered tonight, FOR DEPENDABLE * WATCH % REPAIRING | At Reasonable Prices See ERNEST BURK Formerly head wateh maker with s. Schwartr for many vears. G St. N.W., Rm. 306. DIs. 2778 enelian; BLINDS™ Privacy. Economy. Beant: Installed to Fit Perfectly by the Coolness, (Successor to_Kleeblatt's) 1100 1. 2 Lin. 0838 Mica Home Insulation Co. 436 Star Bldg. 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