TENNESSEE DOTS ACCLAIM VICTORY Prohibitionists to Move for Repeal of State Law Permitting Beer. Ur th» Associated Press. NASHVILLE, Tenn„ September 24. , —Tennessee drys today acclaimed their 3-to-l victory in yesterday's prohibi- ] tion referendum and planned an at tack on legalized beer while wets in aisted the advisory balloting was a “meaningless farce.” Prohibitionists saw a great “moral victory” in the results and announced they would move shortly for repeal of a statute that permits 5 per cent beer. The State is one of five whose anti whisky laws have survived repeal of national prohibition. Wets noted, however, that the total vote apparently would run nearly 100,000 below that cast in 1933 when the State ratified national repeal, and claimed the issue ultimately would have to be settled on a local option basis. Majority Is 61,713. With 1,723 precincts reported out of 3,160 in the State, the count stood: For repeal, 38,022; against repeal, 99,735. The dry majority was 61,713. Approximately 500,000 were qualified to vote. In the 1933 election Tennessee voted 126.942 to 120,107 for repeal of the eighteenth amendment. E. H. Crump, leader of the Memphis political organization and outstanding repeal advocate, said: “The light dry vote throughout the State, after a de termined effort on the part of the drys, is conclusive proof Tennessee will go wet when there is a chance for • clear shot at local option.” Crump opposed the referendum and did not even vote himself. Called Moral Victory. “We feel this is the greatest moral victory Tennessee has had since the State Legislature voted for State-wide prohibition nearly 30 years ago,” said Rev. Robert S. Tinnon, superintendent of the State Anti-Saloon League. Repealist leaders had made no ef fort to organize their forces, contend ing the referendum was "meaningless" since a repeal victory would not have changed the dry laws nor bound the Legislature to change them. The recent Legislature killed a liq uor legalization proposal and then called the referendum. 500 VIRGINIANS DUE AT HOLY NAME MEET Bishop Ireton to Preside at Sev enteenth Annual Convention in Harrisonburg Sunday. Ur the Associated Press. HARRISONBURG. Va.. September 54.—Catholic men from throughout the State will gather here Sunday for the seventeenth annual convention of the Virginia Holy Name Union. Approximately 500 are expected for the convention to be presided over by Bishop Peter J. Ireton of Richmond. Among the speakers will be Very Rev. Thomas F. Conlon, O. P.. na tional director of the Holy Name So ciety; Father Arthur J. Taylor, direc tor of Catholic Rural Life, and Rev. E. E Brosnan of Richmond, Virginia Holy Name director. The convention will open with mass celebrated by Bishop Ireton at 8 a.m. Following communion by the conven tion a breakfast will be served at a local hotel. Walter Murphy of Lynchburg, presi dent of the society, will preside at business sessions. -• — WEIGHTS ASSOCIATION ELECTS RICHMOND MAN Arlington Official Chosen Third Vice President as Annual Vir ginia Conference Ends. Bv the Associated Press. VIRGINIA BEACH, Va., September S3 —B. W. Ragland, chief of the Bu reau of Weights and Measures of Richmond, yesterday was elected president of the Virginia Weights and Measures Association at the closing session of the annual two-day confer ence at the Cavalier Hotel. The association voted to petition the Governor and the General Assembly to appropriate at least $50,000 annually for weights and measures work and $8,000 additional for the immediate purchase of a heavy scale-testing unit. Appropriations for weights and meas ures work in Virginia have never been sufficient to meet more than 10 per cent of the needs, a resolution set forth. Officers elected in addition to the president were R. M. Wilson of Mar tinsville, first vice president; J. H. Meek, Richmond, second vice presi dent; E. M. Moreland. Arlington County, third vice president, and the following members of the Executive Committee: C. R. Vaughan, Roan oke: M. A. Hubbard, Richmond, and H. G. Twyford, Newport News, -■.— ■ • Modern-Day Miracle. The change in Turkey is one of the miracles of modern times. That the President-dictator, Mustapha Kemal, should have beer able to persuade the whole Turkish official class to Uproot themselves from Constanti nople, where they had lived in con siderable comfort, if not luxury, and to live and work in the new capital, Angora, is an extraordinary achieve ment of one man's will power and ' discipline. “WOMAN IN RED” SUED ON DESERTION CHARGE Alexander Sage Claims Nemesii of Dillinger Left ‘Him in 1932. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, September 24.—The hus band of “the woman in red.” whc rlaimed to have put gangster John Dillinger “on the spot” for police and Federal agents, asked for a divorce yes terday. Alexander Sage, a railroad car in spector filed the suit in Superior lourt, charging desertion by Mrs. Anns Sage, who was deported to her native Rumania in April, 1930, as an un desirable alien because she was con victed of operating a disorderly house at Gary. Ind. The suit said they were married / May 10, 1929, in Chicago and alleged she deserted him February 4, 1932. There were no children. Mrs. Sage, 45, left Chicago April 25, 1930, for her homeland after immigra tion authorities refused her plea that she was promised immunity from de portation for telling Federal agents the whereabouts of Dillinger, who was shot to death outside a North Side motion picture theater July 22, 1934. -1-• Mining companies of Peru are fruit lessly seeking more workers. CHANGE IN FEDERAL TAX SET-UP URGED Institute of Accountants Submit Report to Treasury and Con gress Members. The Committee on Taxation of the American Institute of Accountants transmitted yesterday to Secretary of Treasury Morgenthau, other Govern ment officials and members of Con gress its report calling for changes in the Federal tax system. "The repeated shifting in form and incidence of federal income taxation has been decried repeatedly,” aald the report, “but none of the changes ef fected during the past two decades have had such a devastating effect upon business as the corporate surtax enacted in the revenue act of 1936. “Taxation has become a bugaboo In corporate planning, threatening future stability,” the report declared. The committee advocated simplifi cation of the tax system along lines of “conservative business practices.” de scribed the present surtax on undis tributed corporate profits as unsound, declared the tax burden should be equalized and the Federal revenue stabilized. Several modifications were urged for the corporate surtax "if it be impossible to obtain its repeal.” The report was signed by Victor H. Stempf, New York Olty, chairman; Wayne Kendrick of Wayne Kendrick b Co., Washington; J. 8. Seldman, New York City; Berl G. Graham, Cin cinnati, and Clarence L. Turner, Phil adelphia, all members of the commit tee and members or heads of account ing firms in their home cities. Prepare* for Winter. CHICAGO John Tobin be lieves that the robber who broke into his filling station is preparing for a long, hard Winter. On a day when the thermom\t*p reached 90.5 degrees, a robber carried off $48 worth of anti-freeze solution. Tobin couldn’t find another thing missing. NATIVE TOWN DEDICATES TABLET TO BILL NYE Ceremony at Bite of Birthplace Revives Memories of Humor ist’s “Clean Wit.” Br the Associated Press. SHIRLEY, Me., September 24.—A tablet In memory of Edgar Wilson "Bill” Nye was dedicated yesterday, 41 years after the famed humorist's death, on the site of his birthplace In this little Northern Maine town. Dr. Shailer Matthews of Monson, dean-emeritus of the University of Chicago’s Theological Sshool, eulogised th* snnntpw nswenanap comic-philosophical writings made hIHr~ famous. Praising the "clean, sane wlt’t of *• numerous passages he read from Nye’l \ books. Dr. Matthews remarked, "his humor never was at the expense of some one else.” Nye was born August 35, 1850. - - ‘ •-- / « t Tough on the Girl*. CHICAGO VP). — When Robert - Gould, who is 28 and married three times, testified in court that he "can't help it if the women are always after him,” Municipal Judge Thomas A Green said he would help him out. 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