- (QUARTEROF U.§, INSECURITY FILES 29,954,821 Account Num- bers Issued by Board for 0ld-Age Pension. B the Associated Press. The Social Security Board disclosed yesterday it had catalogued almost a quarter of the population of the country. It has issued 29,954,821 account numbers to persons covered by the old-age pension provisions of the social security act. For each account num- ber there is a thumbnail sketch, giv- ing information about the family and occupation of the individual. The registrations are exceeding the original estimate of the board. Early this vear officials expressed belief about 26,000,000 persons, employed by 3,500,000 employers, would come under the act at this time. The normal increase in population, now estimated at 128,429.000, may in- crease the total number to 40.000,000 ultimately. Summarizing activities in fields oth- er than the old-age benefit program, the board reported that: All States and Territories have laws to protect workers against complete loss of income during periods of in- voluntary unemployment. An esti- mated 21,000,000 workers come under these laws. From February, 1936, to July 1 of this year Federal grants totaling $10.096,899 have been made to States to pay for administration of their unemployment insurance laws. The sum of $35717.178 in Federal grants to States to aid the needy aged was approved by the board for | the second quarter of this year. This | brought the total grants since Febru- ary, 1936, to $149,263561. The aver- age amount paid to needy aged indi- viduals from Federal, State and local funds was $18.63 for the month of May. Congress THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Continues “Monster” Hunt When David Smythe, White River pearl fisherman, into his homemade diving rig he is unable to see, but doesn’t keep him from “looking” for the “monster” lurking in an eddy of the stream at Newport, Ark. His equip- ment consists of an old gasoline tank hooked to a rubbed hose and bicycle pump. Here he is shown submergin Officially, the search is off. —A. P. Photo. gets that reported F. Curry, Tammany leader and nppo-l nent of Franklin D. Roosevelt's bid | for the presidency, threw him into the | political limelight in 1933. | He joined Michael J. Kenedy and with him soon controlled the fifth district by recruiting young men to battle Curry. Appointed head of a { committee of six, Dooling succeeded | ton, spoke of Dooling as *courageous | in ousting Curry and at 41 was elected and intelligent,” and prepared to| !0 take his place. come to New York for the funeral.| It was the first time in Tammany He declined to discuss the political | history a leader had been ousted. The | situation created by his supporter’s| Wigwam rocked with factional dis- death. | putes for three months and Dooling Dooling came into his leadership | Was elected July 16. 1934, only when several years ago as victor in an in-| tW0 leading candidates—Edward J. ternal fight at one of Tammany's low- | Ahearn and Stephen A. Ruddy—with- est periods as far as political prestige dr€W from the race. goes. Tammany had been ripped apart Had Roosevelt's Backing. Dooling (gontinuegr From First Page.) quarters that, despite the confusion in Tammany, Dooling’s death would not affect Tammany's support of Cope- land The Senator, himself, in Washing- (Continued From First Page.) rate. by August 5. I see no reason to | remain longer Whether victor or Yanquished, neither side is able to | Mrform services at this session for | 3msical reasons, and on account of the emotional state of mind which | has kept us here since February 6, until this time.” | McNary was referring to the fact that the President sent the court bill to Congress at that time | “There are several bills that may | be called major in character which should go over into the next session of Congress.” added McNar; Replying to McNary, Senator Bark- ley said: “With respect to the mat- ter of final adjournment, I recognize the desire of many members of both Houses to adjourn at the earliest pos- sible date consistent with the per- formance of our duty.” Barkley added that the question of the program was being canvassed and he hoped to be able to make a state- ment within the next two or there days. The Democratic leader replied that | he had noticed that Sengtor La Fol- lette. in his interview, had specifically stated he spoke merely for himself Senator Barkley said he already had discussed program plans with fhe | Democratic leaders of the House. | Within a few days. he said, he hoped | to be able to make a statement to the Senate on this subject. Senator Borah of Idaho immedi- ately wanted to know what it was pro- | posed to do about sugar legislation He apd other Senators from sugar- producing States are strongly inter- | ested in having legislation enacted before Congress adjourns Senator O'Mahoney of Wyoming, discussing that subject today, pointed out the present law fixing sugar ratios for importation, etc., would expire on i December 31. He said it was impera- | tive in the interest of American sugar | producers of both cane and beet sugar | that this quota system should be | | Seabury investigation, followed by its master General James A. Farley of- | during by the sensational disclosures of the —He won the mantle when Post- political defeat by Mayor La Guardia. | fered his support and stated Presi- Picked Copeland | dent Roosevelt also favored the Dool- | ¥ | ing nomination. Tammany leaders On top of that, Tammany ound | aw @ chance to gain much-needed | itself in extreme disfavor with the national | Federal patronage and they rallied to | Democratic administration. | e pogling cause with a unanimous and pro-New Dealers within Tammany. | ot alarmed by loss of Federal patronage. | Tammany was at a low ebb and tried unsuccessfully to oust Dooling | yne job facing Dooling was terrific. | months ago. He survived. but after | . “Fariey backing proved short the bitter fight. had a severe stroke, lived. and with Federal patronage | his second bad one. coming only in small dribbles, Dooling | His friends. and some of his BNy~ | qucter moves became numerous siclans, urged him to retire. So did | g Ve, EIE BORCOS his_political enemies. But Dooling | yive up o his promises. He said he | decided fojicarryfon; iy | had refused to be Farley's rubber Things came to a climax politically stamp. He got into further trouble | the last fortnight. Leaders| y hic friendship with Al Smith, and of the other four county Democratic | when the former Governor joined the | organizations of the city (Tammany | pmerican Liberty League and blasted covers only the County of New York. | the New Deal, Farley again started or Manhattan) tried their best to| i th beoh P get Dooling to agree to a pro-New | ™ sn fliness, intestinal toxemia, fol- Deal candidate. When he retised| soyeq by g stroke in July, 1935, next they picked Grover A. Whalen, World | pacieq" Dooling and during hie. long | Fair Commission head. v = 2 absences from the wigwam his en- Dooling then, with the advice and | 4 cqunsel of former Gov, Alfred B | €Mies Worked for his ou.\l{’r‘ Smith, another New Deal foe, picked Ouster Move Collapses. Senator Copeland as his favorite. The tall, slender Dooling proved to Suppréses Mevolt be a fighter. When he returned to A three-way split developed. Jimmy | NeW York ?,4” £l hefannounced | Hines, powerful Harlem district leader | 1€ Was we!! and would fight hard to| of Tammany, friend of the New Deal, | Fétain his leadership. His sudden re- i started a pro-Whalen revolt in Tam- | tUrn to office surprised his enemies | many Hall. Al Marinelli, another dis- | 8nd the ouster move collapsed again. | trict leader, from the lower East Side, | He Was born July 2, 1893, at 460 | backed Borough President Samuel Levy | West Forty-third street, a home his of Manhattan. Political prophets gen- | father had spent his lifetime gaining. | erally predicted that Whalen would be | After finishing his studies at Holy selected as Tammany's candidate and | Cross Academy and St. Francis Xavier that Dooling would then resign | High School, Dooling went to Ford- Dooling surprised them all by ob-, ham. He graduated in 1915 and en- taining support of Marinelli, whose | tered Fordham's Law School ,‘ backing. with those district leaders| He left when the war broke out and loval to Dooling. was enough to defeat | joined the 351st Field Artillery. He the Whalen forces in the Tammany | sPent two and a half years in the showdown, | Army, 111, months in the front lines Political observers said Dooling and | 8t St. Mihiel and Metz. When the Smith selected Copeland, who they said | armistice came he was a secon® lieu- was especially attractive to conserva- | tenant. tive Republicans as an anti-New Deal | After the war he returned to Ford- coalition candidate. The success of | ham to gain his law degree and later | Quested that no general blockade be | promised to drop picketing and em- | eration of Labor Teamsters’ Unfen, to | drew many old-timers into the wig- maintained. | their strategy showed itself last week, O'Mahoney, one of the Democrats | When Kenneth Simpson, Manhattan Who strongly fought the President's |organization Republican leader, an- court bill said that as far as he was | nounced the head of his slate was left | concerned he was perfectly willing to | open, presumably for Copeland, al- | stay here all Summer to consider the‘ rest of the legislative program ad- | vanced by the President. Other. Senators, however, insist that | the session should wind up as soon as | possible. They point out that mem- | bers of Congress have been here for more than six months. They insist, | too, that some of the measures which | the administration advocates are of | great importance and should not be hurried through Congress. One influential Democrat expressed the opinion that Congress would cen-" tainly be out of Washington by the end of two, or at most, three weeks. It is the plan of administration leaders to take up the wages and hours bill late today or tomorrow. In spite of the fact this measure has been con- siderably amended there is a great deal of opposition to some parts of it. Whether it can be hurried through still is questionable. Barkley expressed the opinion the wage and hour bill could be sent to the House in about three days. He indicated he would call up next the ‘Wagner low-cost housing measure. The Senate Judiciary Subcommittee drafting the substitute court bill got it into rough form during the week end. Members said they expected to report it to the Senate by the last of the week. The proposed bill to plug tax-loop- holes has not been finished. The Joint Tax Committee, still studying means whereby the Treasury charges income taxes have been avoided, gathered today to discuss domestic personal holding companies. With the administration’s legislative #chedule centered in the Senate, the House took up for the time being less far-reaching measures. Its immediate consideration was the bill to set up administrative machinery for the Bonneville dam project. The wage and hour bill would give to & national board power to fix a minimum wage of not more than 40 cents an hour and a maximum work week of not less han 40 hours for each industry of interstate commerce. Goods produced in violation of these standards or manufactured by child labor would be barred from interstate commerce. That provision refers to children under 16, and, in the case of hazardous occupations, under 18. Retail employes, agricultural labor- ers, seamen, fishermen and most rail- road employes are not covered by the bill. Others exempted are persons employed in an executive, administra- tive or professional capacity. ‘Wage and hour standards could be fixed by the five-man board only after appointment of an advisory commit- tee, representing both labor and man- agement, and after public hearings. J 3 though he had picked two of La Guardia'a chief allies as running mates for city-wide offices. Funeral Thursday. This action aroused La Guardia, and caused a split in the hitherto solid city Fusion party, chief bulwark of La Guardia's support. La Guardia’s closest advisers now are reported urging to ignor any possi- | ble help from the Republican organi- zation and make his run for re-elec- tion as an Independent. Dooling is survived by three sisters, Misses Florence and Ethel Dooling, and Mrs. Thomas Howley. Funeral services with interment at Calvary Cemetery. Dooling’s family asked that no flowers be sent to the house. Was Youngest Leader. The youngest man to rise to the leadership of Tammany Hall in its 151 years of activity, Dooling won the job by leading the fight to oust the man his father helped to put in office. Dooling, lawyer, war veteran and former star foot ball and base ball player at Fordham University. cap- tured the highest honor the Tammany Tiger can give. His father, Peter J. Dooling, former Congressman and purchase commis- sloner of New York, died in 1931, and the son became leader of the southern part of the fifth assembly district, in New York, a section his father had riled for 31 years. ooling’s bitter opposition to John Auto Painting hahys 2020 M ST. N.W. Let Haley's Do It Right! IRRITATION OF PIMPLES, RASHES, QUICKLY RELIEVED JLON4LY Pimples, chafings, rashes, itching and burning of eczema and other skin irritations of external origin respond to Cuticura’s amazingly B TH Cotar Sarmae P AEE e e "c"fltbo Deot. A7, Malden, M SOAP ano OINTMENT A jacts was to stage a successful fight to set up offices. In 1923 he accepted the only politi- cal job he has ever held when he be- came deputy public administrator at $5,000 per year. He resigned in 1932, a year after he had taken over his father’s leadership. ‘“Cards on the Table.” He broke into politics when he reached voting age and acted as his father’s right-hand man. On assum- ing the leadership one of his first against a judicial candidate proposed by Curry. On his election as Tammany Hall boss he called in leaders of the 23 Manhagtan districts and said: “I can’'t do this job of rebuilding Tammany Hall alone, if you men do not give me unquestioned loyalty and support at every turn and step. If you don't want to do that, let’s be on the level about it; tell me so that I will know where I am. If you do, we will go along together and I can promise you there will be no favorit- ism, no cliques, no inside coterie run- ning the works. Everything must be on the table. How about it?” Drew Farley's Fire. The leaders rallied to his support. A few months later things changed rapidly. He said he had two aims for Tam- many Hall One was to lift its tone and make it respected in New York. The other was to back only qualified men for municipal jobs, he said. Frank in speech, he called many l Stop that Itch! TCHING SKIN DISORDERS are often caused by a deficiency in the diet. Get at the root of the trouble by adding Fleischmann's Ir- radiated Dry Yeast for Dogs to your dog’s regular meals. Rich in vitamins B, GandD. 25¢,50¢,85¢. At your dog-supply Standard Brands Inc., 595 Madison Avenue, = New York, N. Y. ENBARGO ON MEAT 10 BUFFALD ASKED Aid of Midwest C. I. 0. Units Sought in Strike of 2,000 Food Handlers. BACKGROUND— With egg, butter, sugar, flour and canned goods deliveries shut off to many Buflalo independents and chain companies for the sizth con- secutive day, retail merchants re- ported the strike of food handlers is rapidly baring shelves of staples. Prices of basic foods are rising, and buyers have been forced to accept second grades and off brands. By the Associated Press. BUFFALO, N. Y., July 26 —C. 1. O. Regional Organizer Hugh Thompson today asked union butchers through- out the Midwest to help clamp a meat embargo on Buffalo to help 2,000 striking food handlers in their fight for closed shop contracts. ‘Thompson asked regional union ex- ecutives in other cities to order their men not to handle food shipments des- tined for Buffalo. Officers of the Longshoremen's and Switchmen's Union, an American Federation of Labor affiliate, an- nounced they would join the C. I. O. embargo by refusing to unload meats shipped by boat and rail to Buffalo. Thompson asked outside assistance on the food embargo after the Rev. Father John P. Boland, chairman of the State Labor Relations Board re- set up. “The C. I. O. meat embargo is a sizzler,” Dr. Boland said. “The meat end of the strike looks very serious.” 24-Hour Truce Expires. Striking food handlers returned to their picket lines and resumed efforts to stop grocery deliveries after a 24- hour truce expired without an agee- | ment being reached As Buffalo housewives sought to re- | plenish larders depleted by week-end meals, State labor mediators sougit | again a permanent settlement between | employers and the 2,000 striking em- | ployes, who have kept grocery deliv- | eries tied up for six days. The truce, during which strikers | bargo efforts and wholesalers said | they would not move provisions, ended | at midnight and strike leaders imme- diately rallied forces to resume their blockade on grocery deliveries to retail stores. Rev. Dr. John P. Boland, chair- man’of New York State’s Labor Re- lations Board, drew representatives of 44 wholesale grocery merchants and 1,000 striking truck drivers into a new peace parley to discuss three pos- sible compromise plans they worked | out last night. Proposal Discussed He asked Howard Toy and Samuel Licata, officers of the American Fed- present the plans to their men while Raymond Wattles, representing food merchants, discussed the pro- posals with operators. Acute shortages were averted by | farmers who delivered produce directly to some retail merchants. Many householders motored to the country over the week end seeking butter, eges and green foods. Father Boland, who gave up most of his Buffalo church work only three weeks ago to become head of the State Board that will administer New York's recently enacted “little Wagner” law, | worked out the preferential shop com- promises with strike combatants in a long conference vesterday. He did not detail the concessions made. | the | meetings of leaders and settled nu- merous factional disputes. His work wam, including Al Smith, who hnd‘ been absent almost five years. Dooling drew Farley's wrath when he appointed a Smith protege, Bert Stand, confidential secretary to Tam- | many Hall. Stand was the first Jew to hold the job. Later he made Smith a delegate to the National cratic Convention and again drew fire from New Dealers. Shortly before his rift with Farley Dooling had stated that Tammany Hall was “one million per cent be- hind Roosevelt.” When his illness forced him to re- tire to his Summer home, Dooling named a triumvirate consisting of Charles H. Hussey, Stephen A. Ruddy and Christopher D. Sullivan to run Tammany Hall. The appointments created an uproar and resulted in several fist fights in the wigwam oml August 9, 1936. The trio got into trouble with va- rious leaders and Ruddy was later ap- pointed to take over the reins alone. During his illness at Belle Harbor and at Miami his foes continually howled for his scalp, but he refused to give up the job. SEE US BEFORE YOU CLOSE ANY DEAL On a New DE SOTO PLYMOUTH (Immediate Delivery) MID-CITY AUTO CO. Washington's Oldest De Soto and Plymouth Dealer 1711 14th St. N.W. Demo- “See Etz and See Better” Accidents will happen to your glasses during vaca- tion time. An extra pair is good insurance. Better order them now. ETZ 608 13th N.W. Between F and G N.W. | zone D.. C, In a Hurry mAnS. RICHARD HOYi Of New York City as she rushes by at Baileys Beach, Newport, R. I. She seems to be in quite a hurry —A. P Photo. T'ennis (Continued From Pirst Page) they cracked his service again in the eleventh game of the second set 1o make that too. In the third set, which the British finally won by breaking through Mako in the sixteenth game, Wilde endangered his team by drop- ping his service in the third game. He lost his service twice in the final set, in the third and eleventh games, but each time the Britons came back in the succeeding game to break through Mako's delivery to square the count again. So that in the end it was Tuckey's failure to hold his service in the twenty-first game that was de- cisive Budge won every one of his service games throughout the match, and Tuckey lost only one. beaten five times on his own delivery and Wilde six times. American Fans Breathe Easier. American fans, hoping for the chal- lenge-round victory that would take the cup back to the United States for the first time since it was lost to the French in 1927, breathed easier after Budge and Mako finally crashed through They declined, however, to concede Hare a victory over Parker in the first of tomorrow’s final two matches despite the 2l-year-old Milwaukee youngster's poor showing against Aus- tin on Saturday. Budge, although obviously he has slipped somewhat over the peak he hit in the all-Eng- |land championships and the inter- finals when he tripped Von Cramm in one of the most dramatic | five-set matches of all time, will be heavily favored over Austin. Spanish ___(Continued From First Page) lives and that a counter-attack could be launched when “the enemy is al- ready exhausted.” Loss of Villanueva de la Canada would mean the fall of Quijorna to the insurgents, for Quijorna communi- cates with Valdemorrilo, at the mouth of the government salient, only through Villanueva de la Canada. Picked troops and tanks were con- centrated south of the town, while the government strengthened lines east to withstand attacks from hill 660, recently taken by the insurgents 65 Die in Barcelona Raid. Barcelona-today counted at least 65 | dead and 150 wounded after eight insurgent planes made the worst air raid of the civil war on the capital of autonomous Catalonia. The attack MONDAY, JULY 26, 1937, safety. The shower of bombs and bullets, starting at 3:30 a.m., lasted an hour. Authorities were unable to confirm reports of simultaneous shelling from the sea. Two previous aerial attacks on Bar- celona, allied with the Madrid-Valen- cia regime, were believed to have originated from insurgent air bases at Mallorca, in the Balearic Islands. Casualties of the two other attacks totaled 300 dead and hundreds of injured. Artillesy and aviation thundered over the infantry lines in the Brunete battle that raged all day yesterday and far into the night. Government squadrons took to the air when insurgent airmen swooped low over the government lines, spit- ting a deadly hail of lead. Three Fiat (Itallan) fighting planes were reported shot down in one en- counter while official reports said the government lost only one. (Insurgent reports, however, claimed | far heavier casualties had been in. flicted on the government's air forces with 15 planes shot down in Sunday’s battle alone. | (The chief of staff of Gen. Franco’s | Salamanca headquarters, Gen. Fran- | cisco Martin Moreno, broadcast a | Teport that a total of 106 government | planes have been shot down in the | last 19 days, 91 by insurgent airmen | and 15 by anti-aircraft batteries. | (He said the government air forces | had suffered so heavily Madrid's planes now “are making only the briefest appearances” in 'the western engagement.) | Close to Brunete the government | battalions staged a series of sharp counter-thrusts on the banks of the Guadarrama, but the insurgent lines held firm around the town. Wave | after wave of infantrymen swept over | the shell-plowed Terrain before the government militiamen finally were | dislodged. i Elsewhere in the western sector the | government said its lines held firm | with only “minor rectifications"” of the front and asserted the morale of its | troops remained at a high pitch. i A redoubled insurgent attack on the Teruel front, northeast of Madrid aiming to cut Valencia off from Ba celona, was reported by a govern- | ment communique, which admitted government lines had been “modified” after an aerial and infantry attack. | (Insurgent reports to Henday on | | the Franco-Spanish frontier reported | | the capture of six important positions |on the Tereul front as well as im- | portant stocks of munitions, after in- | | flicting heavy casualties.) ‘ | Britain Pushing Program. | LONDON, July 26 (&) —Great Britain today pressed another effort— probably her last—to preserve Eu- rope’s non-intervention program for | isolating the Spanish civil war. | British members of the 27-Nation Committee, in & two-month stalemate | since Germany and Italy withdrew | from the neutrality naval patrol, drew | up a list of questions to be submittad | | o the guiding subcommittee at its | meeting this afternoon. These ques- | | tions were designed to determine | Whether the British compromise pro- | posals have been accepted or rejected by the other 26 nations. The compromise plan, outlined by | Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, en- | | visioned withdrawal of all fomgnl | volunteers from Spain before consid- | | eration of the ticklish problem of | | granting belligerent rights to tne | | warring factions. | | | “FAIRFAX" House Paint for all exterior PAINTS—GLASS 609 C St. NNW. MEtro. 0150 | Broiled Maine 7 5: | Lobster Luncheon ___ EsTABLSHED 1830 9, LAWYERS’ BRIEFS . = was launched at dawn Saturday by five bombers, following three scouting planes, which dropped flares illu- minating most of the city. As bomb after bomb crashed into buildings and streets, the insurgent airmen swooped low and machine- gunned terrified citizens running for SURE HES SMART- BUT HE CAN'T HAVE A HANGOVER IN MY OFFICE! COMMERCIAL PRINTING ADVERTISING SERVICE BYRON S. 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