ROOSEVELT SPEECH PRAISED BY DEMOCRATIC LEADERS jt. .-- --- --- -- _ Will Appeal to Hearts as Well as Minds, South Carolinian Says. By a Staff Correspondent of Tne Star. PHILADELPHIA, June 27.—Demo cratic leaders from all parts of the country, gathered here for the notifi cation of President Roosevelt that he had been renominated, hailed his ad dress of acceptance as a great and human message to the American peo ple Senator Byrnes of South Carolina, sn administration leader in the Upper House, said: “A wonderful demonstration. A more wonderful speech because it will appeal not only to the minds but to the hearts of the American people.” Senator Wagner of New York, chairman of the Resolutions Commit tee of the convention, said: "It was a truly remarkable speech. It will prove to be the keynote of a Victorious campaign." Senator Guffey of Pennsylvania: “The greatest and most constructive speech ever delivered in America. It will live long in the hearts of the Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi, who notified Vice President Garner of his nomination: "It was the great est spectacle I have ever witnessed. The President's speech scintillated with brilliancy, courage and human expression. It is the kind we need to go after the hypocritical advance w hich the Republican party started at Cleveland. It will be an interesting campaign, with the Democrats a one hundred to one shot." Representative Sam Rayburn of Texas, chairman of the Interstate and Fore'gn Commerce Committee: “It shows we will have a militant leader.” Charles West of Ohio, former mem ber of Congress, now Under Secretary of the Interior: “A magnificent speech—a challenging appeal to the American people to continue to fight for the ideals of our program for the establishment of the Democracy of opportunity." Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City, Democratic national committeeman: “The President's address was wonder ful The demonstration at Franklin Field was the most inspiring I have even seen. The President has made r good start in his campaign. He has put an end to the advance which Lan dnn seemed to have made after the Cleveland convention of the Repub licans. Roosevelt Is the idol of the people. Furthermore, through the use of the radio, he reaches millions. The radio was made for Franklin D. Roosevelt—and he for it." Senator Bennett Champ Clark of Missouri, chairman of the convention Committee on Rules: “The President showed hirr.self a master—it was his superlative speech. It was listened to. The vast audience absorbed it—it went to their hearts. It outlined a great program that appealed to those who have suffered and see an opportunity for relief. That speech is the people's gospel in this campaign.” Postmaster General James A. Farley: “It was a great speech and a remark able demonstration.” Representative John J. O'Connor of New York, acting Democratic leader of the House: "President Roosevelt will carry Pennsylvania next Novem ber. I have not a doubt of It. after listening to his address and seeing the great reception accorded him. It was a great statement for the people. It was a great demonstration by the people.” -•--«... May Rebuild City. Plans are being considered for the rebuilding of Johannesburg, South Africa, so that a new city shall rise cut of the present one in the next 50 years. LOST. BLUE COAT: Sylvan Theater, late Wed. night. Reward t;41 Franklin st. n.e. Potomac _ BOSTON BULL TERRIER. female. 5 months; black, shiny coat, white nose, tnroat and stomach. 2 front Daws, white f-Dot on back of neck; vicinity of Conn, ave. and Calvert st. Reward for infor mation leading to whereabouts._Col. !hm»4. BROOCH, platinum, set with one J.»-carat diamond and about 78 small diamonds set between onyx lines: vicinity it»o block Quincy st.. Chew Chase. Md.: $.'><» reward if returned to the Nichols Co.. :J2<» Wood ward_J51dg._ FOX TERRER. white; black ears. tail. Phone Georgia 2874. J ♦» 17 Longfellow St.Jt.W.__ FRATERNITY PIN. Delta Sigma Kappa; reward;_Apt. 222. Roosevelt Hotel. GOLD NECK CHAIN, heart attached, mon cgrammed M. R. T.: reward. Phone Co 1 umbia H428._I«;4 o Hobarfe st. n.w. HOUND, black and tan. medium sizlT $5 reward. 87 Hi Georgia ave.. Silver Spring. Md. Call after_5:.'10_p.m. KEYS, on ring, vicinity 12th~~and "Girard 1424 Kenyon. Smithsonian Iftst. Call Worth 0184-J W. H LANIER • POCKETBOOK aentlpman s. containing *>22 in checks. Reward. Call North FPECTACLES—Horn rimmed ' Et/ blue case; vicinity Mavfiower Hotel or business section. Wednesday. Reward. Natl. 4!M)5. Wig. 2HR0. SretiAL NOTICES. X Tv I LX NOT BE“RESPONSIBLE FOR~ANY bills made by any one other than myself. B. F. ARRINGTON. 1734 Oregon ave. n.w. 30* I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY cirbts contracted for by any one but my trlt CLARENCE B. ROCKENBAUGH. 3 »•.’!> Col. rd.. Apt. . ;{<»• I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any one other than myself. WALTER L. CRAIG. 108 17th *t. s.e._30*_ OLD DAGUERREOTYPES. TINTYPES. KO dak prints or any treasured ’ keepsake pic tures-' restored improved, copied < large or small) by EDMONSTON STUDIO. 1333 F *t. n.w. Specialists in fine copying for pver 2 a years. _____ _ TERMINAL VAN LINES OF TAMPA, FLORIDA. Padded Vans—Pioneer Distance Movers. Offices. 8*30 20th St. N.W. West 0904. TTaily trips moving loads and part loads to and from Balto., Phila and New York. Frequent trips to other Eastern cities. 'Deoendable Service Since 1800." THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. phone Decatur 2500. LONG-DISTANCE MOVINGS. Special return full and parts shipments from Atlanta after July 1st and all points south. Newport. R. 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Atlantic 6700.__ VUC When you need reprints or "*■' reproductions of books, foreign /-•a, language matter, reports etc.. VAIN let us handle the work by I rr-F r* planograph process ... It HLLr costs less and it s quicker. Samples and estimates free COLUMBIA PLANOGRAPH CO. Milt N.E. Metropolitan 4861 t ^ Throng at Griffith Stadium Hears President Roosevelt’s Speech An overhead shot showing part of the crowd in grandstand at Griffith Stadium last night as Roosevelt nominators gathered to hear President Roose velt’s speech. .______Star Staff Photo. 17.000 • Continued From First Page.) j ship. The names of Delano and Roose ; velt for two generations and more have j been identified with every fine, for ward-looking movement in this com I munity.” I Police estimates of the crowd rose as high as 40.000. but owner Clark Griffith was certain not more than j 17,000 were at the stadium. As the tunes of "Happy Days Are Here Again" blared over the radio ! from Philadelphia at the close of the j President's speech, the Boys' Club Bend lined up behind Commissioner Hazen and his entourage and the pa rade, which had begun at 7 pm. at Tenth street and Constitution avenue, began to tour the field. For the most part the paraders were as lukewarm as the carriers of a daisy chain. The 3.012 marchers, augmented by one donkey and 33 horses, demonstrated before thou sands of sidewalk gazers how badly they wished the President's nomina tion. An occasional outburst of cheer ing. blaring bands that mixed jazz with somber tumes. and waving red flares kept up the interest in the procession. Parade Disappoints. Heralded as a mammoth procession with 50 000 marchers, the parade, strung out to the point of straggling, took one hour and nine minutes to pass. As usual. Police Supt. Ernest W. Brown was the first to come along. He rode alone in the tonneau of a touring car and was followed by a score of motor cycle police. Close behind came Commissioner Melvin C. Hazen with an equestrian group of men and women wearing derbies and knotted scarfs. The Police Boys’ Club Band pro vided a touch of color with their red coats and caps and blue trousers, and the first laugh was furnished by a damsel in a seedy-looking hack v/ho rode just ahead of a shiny limousine. A walker who paced the horse-drawn hack carried a placard announcing the exhibition as a relic of the “hoase and buggy days,” while another ban ner held up the limousine as an ex ample of “Roosevelt days.” A portly gentleman, wearing a dented silk hat and carrying a satchel labeled “Doc Hoover,” led a man powered elephant with two jackasses, also stuffed with humans, on the flanks. Float Carries “Indians.” Next in line was a float carrying an Indian tepee and a pipe-smoking chief. Dancing girls in white head dresses and scanty spangles cavorted around the float, which carried a sign. “On the Warpath With Roose velt.” Arlington County was represented by a truckload of “hill billies,” a bus with a banner worded “Move to Ar lington County and Have a Vote," and a sizable delegation of marchers. Alaska was well up among the sec tional groups. The Colored Demo cratic League featured a contingent of Boy Scouts and a crowded truck blazing with flares. Georgia and West Virginia pre sented the largest units. They shamed some of the more silent marchers by keeping up a constant din with whis tles. bells and shouts of “wahoo” and such. A colored truck rider in the Allied Democratic Club group reassured Roosevelt supporters with cries that “Everything Is O.K. All the rough edges are knocked off—you’ll get a good deal, a square deal with Roose velt.” The Civil Service Commission had warned its employes agwinst carrying signs in the parade, but the commis sion found its name emblazoned In 2-foot letters on a banner announcing “Landon Ignored Kansas Civil Service Employes.” Iowa, Minnesota, North Carolina, New York, Pennsylvania and Montana groups carried placards declaiming they w’ere “for Roosevelt." A dozen youths from South Dakota sang “Home on the Range” very mournfully, but New Jersey marchers enlivened things a bit with snatches ; of “Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here.’’ Oklahoma’s represen ta’tives would ask themselves, “Kin we yell?” and then proceed to whoop it up. A Ten nessee farmer threatened himself as he marched by waving a flare danger GEORGE A. ENGLAND, WRITER, DIES AT 59 Fiction With Far North and South Seas Settings Was Chief Claim to Prominence. the Associated Press. CONCORD. N. H„ June 27.—George Allan England. 59. an adventurer and writer on varied topics, especially Ac tion with a Far North or South Sea setting, died yesterday after a long illness. He had written little in recent years, his last novel having been published in 1929. Three years ago he made an J unsuccessful effort to organize an ex- j pedition to search for treasure in the ! Caribbean Sea. He was a member of the Authors’ League of America, the New York Writers' Club and a graduate of Har vard University. Among his better known works are “The Story of the Appeal.” “Darkness and Dawn." "The Air Trust,” “The Alibi,” “Pod, Bender and Co.” “The Golden Blight." “The Gift Supreme,” “The Greater Crime,” “Cursed,” “Keep Off the Grass,’ “Their Son.” “The Necklace.” “The Flying Legion." “The White Wilderness,” “Vikings of the Ice,” “Adventure Isle” and “Isle of Romance.” SOJOURNERS CLOSE CONVENTION HERE Admiral Hamlet Elected Presi dent—Admiral Williams Is Advanced. Election of officers brought to a close yesterday the annual convention of the National Sojourners, organi zation composed of commissioned military officers who are members of Masonic orders. The three-day pro gram was concluded with an afternoon boat trip on the U. S. S. Gen. Rucker to Fort Washington. Rear Admiral Harry G. Hamlet, Washington, was elected president for the coming year, succeeding Col. Rob ert L. Quiesser, sr„ of Cleveland. Ad miral Hamlet served as first vice pres ident for the past year. Rear Admiral Yancey S. Williams. San Francisco, was advanced from second to first vice president and Brig. Gen. R. S. Aber nathy, Honolulu, from third to second vice president. Brig. Gen. F. W. Baldwin, New York, became third vice { president. The following were re-elected: Maj. George S. Umaeht, chaplain. Fort | Benjamin Harrison, Ind.. who w-ill | come to Washington to live within a month; Lieut. Col. J. Hugo Tatscl}. | Boston, historian: Brig. Gen. Fred Taylor Pusey, Philadelphia, judge ad vocate, and Maj. Gen. Robert U. Pat terson, Oklahoma, surgeon. ously close to a fine set of false whisk ers. but when last seen he had mir aculously escaped going up in smoke, j Two Texans, one in a white linen coat and a cowboy hat, and the other in a riding outfit, carried a banner ni front of their State's delegates. Puerto Rico and Hawaii groups brought up the rear. COMDR. ZACHARIAS OFF FOR DUTY ON CRUISER Former Naval Attache at Tokio to Be Executive Officer of U. S. S. Richmond. Comdr. Ellis M. Zacharias. who speaks Japanese and has been in charge of the Par Eastern section in the Office of Naval Intelligence. Navy Department, for the last couple of years, left Washington yesterday for sea duty. He will be executive officer of the cruiser Richmond, which is temporarily in Hawaii. The commander, who was naval attache at Tokio, Japan, a few years ago when the disastrous earthquake occurred, did outstanding relief work then. He has been a commander since January. 1933, and prior to com ing to Washington on his latest tour of duty took a course of instruction at the Naval War College at New port. R. I. Comdr. Zacharias was born In Florida January 1, 1890. and entered ' the Navy in 1908. On the Richmond he will meet an old shipmate of Navy Department duty, Lieut. Comdr. George F. M. Mentz, who formerly was in charge of the press room at the Navy Department. Lieut. Comdr. Mentz now is navigator of the Rich mond. having previously been gunnery officer. -• SERVICE SUSPENDED Airport at Columbia, S. C., Is to Be Reconstructed. ATLANTA. June 27. UP).—Delta Airlines officials announced today air passenger service to Columbia. S. C.. is suspended pending completion of a Federal reconstruction project at the airport in the South Carolina capital. Work on the airport has made landing there hazardous, the officials said. Completion of the project Is expected within two months. Planes from Atlanta now fly to Augusta, then direct to Charleston, S. C. ICKES JOINS GROUP TO HONOR ERASMUS Observance of 400th Anniversary of Death of Dutch Philos opher Set July 12. Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes has accepted membership of the Washington Erasmus Committee and will aid in perfecting plans for the international observance of the 400th anniversary of the death of De siderius Erasmus, famous Dutch phi losopher, Sunday, July 12. Others Joining in the work are Robert Woods Bliss, former Ambas sador to Argentina; Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes. Washington area. Meth odist Episcopal Church; Dr. John W. Studebaker, commissioner of educa tion: Rev. Dr C C. Rasmussen, pas tor, Luther Place Memorial Church; Mrs. Horace Turbert, American Asso ciation of University Women: Mrs. Mitchell Carroll. Washington Society of the Archeological Institute, and Mrs. Fortunato Porotto. Dr. Lester K. Born, author of the latest study of Erasmus, is president of the committee, and James Waldo Fawcett is secretary. Program arrangements include; a radio broadcast betwt?en Washington and Rotterdam in which Federal Com munications Commissioner George Henry Payne and representatives of the Netherlands and Swiss Legatioas will participate; a special sen ice at Washington Cathedral, and an ex hibition of books and manuscripts by and about Erasmus at the Library of Congress. RUSSIA PASSES LAW TO AID BIG FAMILIES By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, June 27 —A big family project, which taxes divorces and j grants state aid to families with nu merous children, became law tonight on approval by the All-Union Fed eral Executive Committee. As finally signed by Michael Kal inin, president of the committee, the law contained only slight modifica tions from its previous draft, which had caused some criticism. ( WIFE REPORTS MEIGHAN ON ROAD TO RECOVERY Actor “Much Improved," She says—Embarassed by False Stories. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK. June 27 —The condi tion of Thomas Meighan. film actor, was reported by his wife tonight as "much improved.” Meighan had suf fered a relapse from pneumonia and a throat operation. She said the 57-year-old actor was not yet out of danger but showed “continual improvement.” "I have been greatly embarassed by the false stories about my husbands condition.” she said. “We have had many telegrams from the West Coast indicating his condition is low. "As a matter of fact. Mr. Meighan is making a fine recovery, although It is natural that it will be many weeks before he is himself again.” ' German Income Drops. German workers, employes and offi cials earned during the quarter of this year $3,330,000,000, which is $65,000, 000 less than in the previous three months. 60,000 People Can’t Be Wrong TRADE MARK Est. t»ll BRING THIS COUPON Monday and Tuesday Special ANY SHAPE CRYSTAL. 29c ANY MAIN SPRING, :5c FREE On our record* Rf have KO.OOO customers. Washington’s Largest Watch j Repair Company J. F. ADAMS sot r st. n w. na. an.v; 1 - STENOGRAPHIC $1 TYPIST $1 Civil Service Exam. HOME STUDY COURSE Includes Dictation Material for Junior and Senior Stenoaraphic Exam uraded and times. Plain Copy Tests. ROUGH DRAFTS and General Tests. Questions and Answers. Over 60 Pages Neatly Bound. ONLY $1.00^ Supply Limited. First Printing sold out in one week. 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