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2 ) SureRelief | FOB;I[N DIGESTION | Hot water (s Sure Relief ELLANS 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Evervwhers UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITIES Rooming House i-detached home of 12 = . -hot-water het. electric b yard to paved all ow per month with six rooms Bext renting section Near two car lines. woms Tights. Clarming home of seven rooms, tile hath, hot-water heat, electric lights, hard- wood floors and trim, sun parlor, stone fireplace, screens, ete. Lot T6x130 to paved ailey. A buy at §13.000. Terms cun e arranged Nearby Suburban cight-room-and-bath home with situated on a 14,000 square ing two streets. ights, beautiful abundance of bargain wired W. C. & A. N. MILLER r On Time Payments Guaranteed Goodrich—Diamond or Any Standard Make On Easy Payments No Advance in Prices A\ RRZ> = DIAMOND SPECIALISTS FOR 32 YEARS A Paying Investment in DIAMONDS Blue-white Din. "Lt $120 b with 3 stones, welghing 1 rat. Special 907 F Stfs'lah New Store, New Goods, New Prices i righteous conditions of employment,” WOULD REORGANZE L. COALINDUSTRY Hoover Says Collective Bar- gaining on Present Basis s Failure. BLAST ON RAILWAY TRACK ROCKS CITY Police Seek Three Men Who Fled From Scene in Automobile. STONES HIT TRAIN FLYING FEDERAL BOARD- URGED Thirty Sticks of Dynatite Used ~in California Blow-Up, Say Officials. Secretary Claims N.tjon’l Welfare Depends on “Righteous Con- ditions of Employment.” SAN BERNARDINO, Calif., Septem- ber 13.—The crew of a Santa Fe rail- Hgce ) ! way freight train early today report- Marryin® fer money an’ mar-|eq to company officials they had seen must be obtained if the welfare orlrym fér love have both more or | the flash of a terriffic explosion, which the nation is to be malintained at all, fless failed, but we hain’t never |shook this city and surrounding ter- Secretary Hooyer declared last night ||, } ritory in & 4 s 5 d no statistics on murrvin’;l e e in an address before the Salesmen'sic 5 = Ly b ast night. The blast occurre: - Association of the Amerlcan C!\Pm<!tcr‘l housekeeper. ! an WLt e b et | Reath empty stock car standing ical Industry. e kin remember when th’}o,", iaing 150 yatds from the pass- By the Associated Press. NEW YORK September tinuity of coal production, 18.—Con- “under lution of the problem lay in the|even own his dress suit, but bor- | hardino and Colton, and deluged the creation of a national coal commit-|rowin’ a car hain’t so easy. ltrain with rocks. tee empowered to get at the bouoml a Deputy United States marshals es of the troubles in the coal industry. inmau-d that thirty sticks of dyna- While there was niuch “that needs mite had been exploded with a cap public ventilation,” he added, the two dnd fuse, as a sixty-five-pound rail- most important questions were the| road rail was broken and twisted. relationship of employer and em- A. J. Hillian, former police officer. ploye and the economic reorganiza- tion of the industry. Arbitration I ¥ailure. Mr. Hoover said “such | (@ commission would find that col- lective bargaining, concillation and arbitration upen their' present basis of organization have in sequence ! broken down in this industry. as ! witness the long stoppage in produc tion, which all supposed to end. In_this connection if we examine | the inside workings of this recent strike, we will find situations rew I industrial relations. Under freedom from the restraint of trade laws the workers' organizations have grown in strength, solidarity and devotion; they have shown able leadership, | whereas the organization of emplayers £Copright National Newspaper Service.) COAL-USING INDUSTRIES T0 HOLD CONFERENCE Representatives Called by Presi-; dent’s Fuel Committee to Meet Here Friday. ]mobila without {lights passed ;nluskl-ll men. ! the explosion, chased them for ibut was outdistanced. DYNAMITE PLOT FOILED. license numbers or him, bearing three Hillian, who had heard “I believe.” a mile, | | § | Deputies Surprise Four Men at Railroad Bridge. | September 13. practically all {—A party of deputy sheriffs surprised large coal-consuming industries have | foUr men whom they claim were at- Ibeen asked to attend a conference in| tempting to dynamite the Atlantic Washington Friday called by the Presi- | Coast Line railroad bridge over Six dent's fuel committee, in co-operation | Mile creek, near here, last night, and with the Chamber of Commerce of the | after a pistol battle’ two men were for the purpose of collactive bargain- | United States, to consider amelioration | ciptured. ing has been to a large degree de-of the coal situation. Federal Fue stroyed by the action of these very | pigeri Spet & eatiee Taur Withott (entoting. thatorthe b .lnsvlrxbuuzr Spencer. announc d yester [tory of rights or wrongs of this |43y phase. the bare fact exists: That the | Secretary Hoover has issued invi- recent agreement in the bituminous | tations on behalf of the federal distri industry was determined by only 15 |bution organization, and the Interstate per cent of the employers, and -this | Commerce Commission will be repre- minority’s decislons comtrolled the |sented by Commissioner Aitchison, th whole. bureau of mines by its director, H. Foster Bain, and the commerce cham ber by its president, Julius Barnes, and | E. Sh by Alexander Legge. s force, The | conference, Mr. Spencer sa will consider specifically measures for | the expedition of coal movement, for | restraint of accumulation of unneces sary coal stocks by business and in- dustrial consumers, for placing on the market some part of the production of mines normally producing for certain industries and other measures for ex- pediting return of the coal situation to normal. Co-operation of _responsible ator Mr. Spencer said, ** be requested, the general the movement being be quickly readjusted householder and small mediately supplied and the tion returned to normal these processes are Representatives - of was shot in the head degirious when brouzht to . His name was given as { Cnarles”” Goolsby, twenty-two years oM. The second man arrested gave his name as E. E. Pearson. Two men escaped into an adjacent swamp, but the deputies believe that bne of them was wounded and that hey have him cornered. According to Deputy She | Robert Periodic National Peril. Present relationships of employ and employe In the cwal industry, he declared, comprised “a periodi na- tional danger.” adding that sihce the | public through subsequent prices pays {the bill, it had & right to voice in the business. } In addition to improvement of em- Iployment relations, Mr. Hoover sug- gested that an annual storage of 20| per cent of railway consumption | would go far toward correctind the | seasonal fluctuation in coal produc- |tion. Larger storage by public utili- {ties and “the possibility “of permit- {ting the co-operative system of mar- keting developed by the farmers” also were put forward by the Secretary as promising beneficial results. 1l four are strikers. r | | COL. BROWNLEE RETIRED. Lieut. Ccl. Charles Y. Brownlee, Medical Corps, having been found in- capacitated for aciive service on ac count of disability rred in the line of duty, has been pluced on the retired list of the Army. | ORDERED TO BOLLING FIELD. Capt. Bertram J. Sherry, Signal Corps, of the office of the chief signal officer of the Army, been ordered to Bolling Fiel stia, D. C,, for duty as meteo! cal officer of the el airway. | oper il also purpose of that prices may 1 WILL 3 dents ansselt WILL MANA PROJECT. in itx entirety on a weekly salary basi ation and_kind iding contempla; dress Boy 2 tier than by ISLE. PA., MOVIN, shington to' Harrisburg + particulars phone Phone 14* e 1t RA- will leave September ZINC SPOUTING FOR PERMA. CE. cannot rust. It last indefinitely. assures economy of roof upkeep. D. H. F000 Tou ad Bw. PARTY DESIRI o with party ‘moving bY van to New York or vicinity last plauning for n load. 3 Cottage Hill D. €. Address W (€amip. Grouns). LEANED OR electric in Sorth ad to others whom it may con ce that pursuant to section of laws of the Distriet of to he sold by Adam auction house 20 Pennsylvania ave. t public eptembe: Posaioié. Tour Thadaon touting. eosmes ch has been stored with us from the 1921, for which e atorager tom T nding "Septembar the. rata: oF" fEecen dotic b FEDE I. AUTOMOBILE SUPPLY : _Weber, secretary. A New Roof With a Brush appls one coat of Liquid Asbestos ‘emeat to any kind of roof. I gu: i1k, $1 gal: in 5-gs stimate free. MADI- Line. 4219, Autoists Money 'y FAVORABLE kinds of repair- quotin; el R.M Re‘;'nolds & Sons, Inc. T ST s it % . Roof Men of Many Years” Experience Rends to serve you here. Quick serviee. Tust phone Mala T, Guiek service. “INSTRUCTION FREE. Ladie t of materfal; duvetyns, velvets, feathe ers, all trimmings reasonable prices; nat . @jc: bats made to arder. Harris Hat Frame 1010 F st. - = Ashestos Fiber Paint stops all " o T 3130 gation. 42 Jenkar K\ R. WINSLOW, 920 N. Y. ave. Main 4077, “What _Is _more im| T Than R-OOF Freo sutimate "t all e e 1116 9 he National Capital Press 12101213 D ot n.w. 1bat accomplishés its end. Consul’ HE SERVICE SHOP, YRON S. ADAMS, Finren, - £ RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY rt of September; oblect, | make your own hat for the bare I “ROOF PAINT LT NI RSN SRl | = Y 22 S 1 €y v s IS o i i i The Saunterer = S ) 08 In Plain Felts or Silk-Finished Mixtures Exclusive at the Raleigh Haberdasher ) 2 7 S S, COLORS—Pearl, Light Fawn, Tan, Filbrert,’Light Gray, ckel, Dark Gragy and Moss Green, with contrasting bands. vy For over 99 years Mallory Hats have been renowned as the Ameri- can Hat which is second to none. Extra-Quality + - FIVE DOLLARS leigh Haberdasl ;{03.1111; Penftfy{@_‘& »{Mfi g £ adius of eight miles late | Mr. Hoover contended that the so-|most pop’lar feller in town didn’ {ing treight train, between San Ber- | reported to the police that an auto- : lefod, in chafge of the.depu- | 3,000 TARIFF BILL CHANGES RECORD FOR U. S. CONGRESS The tariff bill, which has been near- ly two years in the making, is the most amepded measure in the history of the American Congress. The Sen- ate finance eommittee made 2,087 changes in the original House bill. The Senate increased this number to 2,486 and the conferees in perfecting the measure added several hundred more, running the toal to around OPEN WAR ON BREWERS ~ WHO VIOLATE DRY LAW Prohibition Officials Plan Revoca- tion of Processes, Seizure and Forfeiture of Plants. Brewers who violate the law in the | manufacture and sale of beer had bet- ter beware. War has been declared as a result of .conferences yesterday between prohibition and legal off-| cials at the Department of Justice, and a drive against offending brewers will be opened % rs. Mabel Willebrandt, assistant iey General, in charge of liquor i prosecution, represented the Depart- iment of Justice at the &onference. { The prohibition unit was represented by Commissioner Haynes and offl- {elals from New York, Ohio, Illjnois, { Pennsylvania, ~Michigan, Wisconsin {ana Indiana. { “That there is a great deal of iHicit manufacture and sale of beer,” Mr. | Haynes said, “does not “admit of {denial, and a suppression of .the j traffic is receiving the earnest con- | sideration of hoth the prohibition unit {and the Justice Department.” Various legal remedies were con- sidered at the conference, he stated, and “the more effective means” de- termined upon call for more aggres- sive and expeditious use of revoca tion of processes, the filing of crim- {inal information ‘and injunctions en- { joining unlawfully operated brew- jeries as public nuisances, the en- i forcement of double tax and penalty iprovisions of the national prohibition iact and the seizure and forfeiture of {breweries and all brewery property {in_the more flagrant instances. “Among other violations recelving i the attention of the conference.” Mr. Haynes said, “was the fact that a number of breweries, under the claim that they are making cereal beverage | products, not developing excessive {glcohol .in the process of manufac- { fure, are clalming that they are not i required to obtain permits. It was { emphasized that, all manufacturers of . | cereal beverage products, irrespective of the processes used, where, in the | manufacture of which it is possible | to develop alcohol by the processes 1used, or where the article manufac- J tured is susceptible for use as a bev. { erage, must operate under a permit. Sa e g e | EMBARGO ON BIG FOUR. i {New York Central Line Bans All | Non-Priority Freight. ATI, Ohio, September 13.— on all non-priority freight originating on other than New York 2C al lines except when billed to on t stem, was announced | night by E. M. Costin, xeneral imanager of the Cleveland,’ Chicago, {Cin nati and St. Louis railroad. § “The reason this is being don. 1d MfE. Costin, “is in order to keep Big Fuar and New York Central lines open for priority freight and to pro: tect ourselves €rom being flooded with freight which = not priority and which other roads are not handling on account of embargoes. |CLAIMS HIS BRIDE CHOSEN BY SPIRIT - OF HIS DEAD WIFE CHICAGO, September 13.—Miss Helene Rogers of Des Plaines, I, ! yesterday became the bride of Vin-| cenzo Gullatto, a Sicilian violinist and music teacher at Mooseheart, | I, Who said the young” woman had been chosen by the spirit of his dead wife. The marriage licensk was is-1 sued several days ago. “Miss Rogers is the choice of my first wife,” Gullatto said last spring | in announcing his wedding plans. He then went to Sicily to visit his mother. He told friends his first wife to_happiness. | Miss Rogers formerly was i teacher at Batavia, 111 MALGOUS BASTIVG OF AL TRASK FOUND Interstate Commerce Commission Fails, However, to Fix Personal Blame for Explosion., Derailment of a passenger train*on the International rallway near EI- wood, N. Y., August 17, which result- ed in the fnjury of twenty-one pas-| sengers, was caused “by malicious de- struction of a section of track by means of some high explosive, prob- ably dynamite,” according to a re- 2 1 i | . a school bty drmamiter accordink 12 =" RAIL BUNKHOUSE FIRE- safety of the Interstate Commerce| Commission. ACCIDENTAL, SAYS JURY “The warning said to have been| —_— o given to passengers before the de- | parture of the train,” the report said, ; Road Officials and Employes Cen- “the destruction of a portion of the it track by the uss of the explosivesi. Sured, However, for Condition and the finding on the adjoining track | of a bag containing dynamite, with ofjButlding: Tuse and caps atiached to one Of the | by e Associated Press, sticks, clearly prove this to have| pirrSBURG R WIS H been a case of malicious train wreck-| L iLISBURGH, September ' 13.-—A s | coroner's jury, investigating the fire “The identity of the person or persons | which destroyed a Pennsylvania rail: responsible for this accident Was not|roua bunkhouse here, September e ssommission also reported the | With @ 10ss of seven lives, returned a results of 1ts investigation of a derafl- | verdict censuring officials and em- ment of a passenger irain on Boston and Albany railroad near Wor ster, Mass, on August 8, rysulting in the death of two cmployes and the i | dition of the building and holding that the bluze was accidental, of eighteen passengers, one em-| The fury held that the bunkhou: on_duty and five employes off | converted from a repair shop, w The accident, the commission | u to store inflammablé materia was_caused the engine of ! that city laws governing alterations striking rocks on the track, | of buildings were violated: that exits s to|were inadequate, and that the rail- road fire fighting equipment was use- less because of ,llcnv | ‘The exact origin of the blaze, {jury decided, could not be determined. found, the trai but there was no direct evidence how the rocks came upon the roadbed. although five small boys were known to have been in the v throwing stones over the embankment a short time previous to the derailment. —_— MAY INDICT BANKER. Montreal Grand Jury Probes Al leged False Return. MONTREAL. September 15.—T) grand, jury of the court of king's bench yesterday received an appli tion from the crown for a true bill against Sir Montagu Allan. president of the Merchants' Bank of Canad. on a charge of having made to the government a false return of the bank's condition in October, 1421, After hearing George Edwards, ex- pert accountant, und J. N. Kilbourne former secretary of the b jury declined to hear other w Decision will be announced tod l Finished and under construction, side hall homes. four and six bed Lots 50 to 115 feet front; heated Finislied and under construction. signed and most complete new cit, fast porch, three baths. Lot 24x feur’s room. 'GROS-GREEN N.O-T GROS-GRAIN $2,500 Cash, $157 Month—Save $132 $3,500 Cash, $172 Month—Save $118 ground all around for $750 cash, | | E 1899—“NO PLACE LIKE 1319-1321 F Street September 13 STORE NEWS “KNOX” Hats for Men at This S| S| ) ST S ] = (SaP%ni) o, == = s E= P =2 oC ~ ) =S % =) Seal, the | ployes of the company for the con-| ineflicient organiza- the | setts Park, differently designed, detached, bric FRENCH HONOR COL. SNYDER. Lieut. Col. Oliver ¥. Snyder, U. §. A., retired, distinguished rifle and pistol shot, has been made a cievalier of the Legion of Honor of France, iu recog- -mition of hiy services during the St Mihiel ! Mcuse-Argonne offenses, during which he had command of more than 4,000 French labor troops. -Col. Snyder formerly was on duty in the office of the assistant secretary of war and was a member of the national board for the promotion of rifle prac- tice. He is serving as professor of military science and tactics at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. | She was the rarvest spirit had been guilding him | person on Broadway, for she lived off-stage in “the make-believe {land of girlish illu- gs'lon. Read Upstage-- t ) | a love story by Rita | Weiman, in OCTOBER osmopolitan at newsstands 1 | 32nd AND CATHEDRAL AVE. in restricted and zoned Massachu- < and tile, central and rooms, two, three and four baths. single and double garages. 2822 CONNECTICUT AVE. Washington’s best located, de- Two stories, attic, break- 120. Double brick garages. Chaui- Terms if Desire 84,500 $5.000 Cash, $149 Month—S. 12th AND TAYLOR NE. Central-hail Bungalows with lots 75 feet front. Homes in town with $68 a month. Save $47. Over 70 HOME: NO HOME LIKE OURS” MIDDAUGH & SHANNON, INC., OWNER Main 6935—10th Floor Woodward Bldg., 15th and H hop ONLY NEW style, a new finish and new colors—shown for the first time by Knox agents in all leading cities. Shown in a variety of beauti™ ful mixtures with a soft silken “ize with rew Fall suitings. nap in shades which will harmon- SEVEN DOLLARS