Evening Star Newspaper, April 27, 1923, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

[J Ty THE .EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1923. i SHIP S AILS wn’H MEXICANS EMPLOYED !LZ‘;N‘.“:‘, soeot sasinss ovee: | ANDERSON CHARGES | oo sivea ates 5 oices 0 L m i At present thf corparation had all the States senator, have sought to malk There's More Than 5 "price" : i g situation gererally was much better. The press has been an ally of S'I'RIKE MU'I'INY nN A . e the wets in spreuding propaganda 1,000 Get Jobs at Unskilled Labor| The incrgase in wages. effective, Investigation of League Funds in | but in the fight to compel us to re- 1 ik g April 16, weuld add $2 a ton to.the g8 , gu | veal the names of our contributors when you l)uy = { in Bethlehem to Solve Short- |cost of finigued steel products, he de- | Effort to Find Names of | it has overreached lsalt. The two HIRSH'S $3.95 | lared. Thefplants of tho corporation greatest molders of public opinion are 3 " | age, Says Grace. 2 Leaders, He Says. the press and the pulpit, but in this . Fate of Substitute Crew Un-! 2 =re workin.s at mors than 80 per cent 2 V! ase the pulpit has licked the press Women's Shoes | R of capacitf, he said, and there ap- TR, to & frazzle.” = 5 By the Associated Press. peared to je no let-up in the amount | By the Associated Press. Mr. Anderson defined as the poor- known, as Steamer Leaves ‘ NEW YORK, April 27.—President|of busines in sight with firm, but not| NEW YORK, April 27.—Willlam H. | :::m:gmplr;gnfifi':;m?or his workuie San Pedro, Calif | Bugene R. Grace of the Bethlehem |runaway, g'lcea obtaining. Anderson, state superintendent of the | men because of increased efficiency ’ i Steel Corporation announces the cor-| He anndunced that the corporation | Anti-Saloon League, whose financlal| of lkhordm'v;l flor lh“é’::‘fi?'flfi"fi: ——————e ! poration recently has put to work in |had offerel to buy the remaining out- | relations with the orgarlzation are | Increnetd BuYing potwer g holds e P the Assoclated Press. its plants about 1,000 Mexicans as un- | standing minority stock of the Cam- under investigation by the district the law.” 'SAN PRANCISCO, Calif., April 27— |skilled laborers. e made the an-ibria Ste€l Company, which was ab- attorney's office, declared in an ad-| Mr. Anderson added that he was i el i e # i o fh% on the ln- | sorhed Btarch 30 tce of $18 ' | not referring to the Rockefellers, who Mhe first disorder of the strlke of | nouncement in commenting ol |sorbed Mtarch 30 at a price of $151 a | dress In the John Street Methodist | 1Ot Teferring to the Rockefellers, who 1 AW AV timber and marine worlk. bor situation at the close of & meet- |share. -opul Chureh that the “hullaba- | e ers in the acific states was an affair | Ing at which the usual quarterly divi-{ The offer would be good until May " over the league's funds had re- | — 4bodrd the tank steamer Solano as | dend of 13 per cent was declared on Atort 3,000 shares are outstand- d from a conspiracy of twenty-| Bs s onini it nises |Commbn etoout ne. woJk on the Cambria and Lacka- | five years' standing to get the names active drys in order that they \te vesterday. The| Ie pointed out that as there was 1o jwanna pfants of the corporation to de- - s i tion from Mex- £ > the properties be bulldozec | - ribed by the ship's of- | [estriction on immigra X velop aid modernize the propertics might be bulldozed. wnew num- ||| wete the results obtained on - . Anderson said ho b a “mutiny,” but, as the | ywoucere of the World, were made dur- |reflected in the corporatioN's business citizens who had been Intim-!f my last pictures. They were vessel did not return to the dock, within fhe vear. . Tor that reason, he sald, the | v nd printed at few details are available. ing iast night and early today. Ho sfited that earnings were not refused to maké public the | {138\0&53 510 & ;nddghg The old crew was taken off and a | _The men were picked up near thelgufiicterk over the quarter to eover |} GROVE'S, 1210 G, y rew one put aboard by tugs. ,The Waterfront and charged with loltering. | divideny requirements, but that they were finished in one day. ir was the climax of a day in “p ;‘c‘{‘-l “'ékt;l‘!:":‘lglsmznrmg“cegd&fi; =md im; TVed. ‘znrnmzs for March be- i 5 % v = (Signed) vhich about 1,800 dock workers quit | “Deaceful pickef ng sufiiclent to cover both common ted the court in which to finish 1t the “California port, demanding & |1n an effort to persuade men employed ana peferred dividends for that o angorted, Amateur Photographer. Wage of §1 an hour and a forty-four- | to flll the strikers’ place to leave the |month. e s oz poyertulilson 1 v double pay for overtime | Shib. of the state syndicalism - > —Because we've assembled over 40 Styles of all the popular patterns —including every popular leather —and satisfied at Seuing them for less be- cause we re selling so many! pumps. Oxfords and Sports | Steamship operators declared that : . | the labor supply was plentiful and they Patents Satins had adequate applications to fill any Out. | gaps that may be caused by the strike. . Grays Browns from Hem- |2 = s {-:O‘:.E:nf:n\‘;\z 1 Tans Blacks Streugth to “Aggravatin’ Papa” Color combinations All Heels Turn Soles Welt Soles | i ers reported ‘l is proving one of those tricky fox-trots that one wimply can't resist. It is the last word in_dance perfection on the Colum- bia Record made by The Georgians. B and Washing “Loose Feet” but timber operators in it te sald thelr estimats of on the reverse side .'“l 900 te v > siba tart everybody _going ; s e again. Ask for record ; H ermen expressed the be- A-3825 75c x \ of that the strike had_reached fits 3 | ' rtions, 1. W. W. lend- At Columbia Dealers / 3 id it was a progressive affair and \ 1 ~ e weould quit work each ~ i 3 | day May 2, on which day demon- g - p — | For Play tra r d be held. ¥ ’ B Wear and 3 8 P ), L S Dress ARREST EIGHT IN STRIKE. | R , b I Wear New Orleans Police Act to Prevent O o Gl | z = . Very Low Dock Disorders, S A 4 : B Prices NEW S, April 27.—Eight ar- + N 2NN y t of the strike here of 2 ~ . - * i Bring of the Industriul . ' 1, i Them = — - ; 5 \ Along Silk Hosiery—"Kayser" and “"Onyx"—All Peading Colors, $1.95 HIRSH'S SHOE STORES 1026-/1028 SEVENTH ST.N.W. “Upper Seventh Street in Location—City-wide in Trade” All Siz All Width- i The Clock Strikes Thirteen for Us —But It’s Still High Noon for You! Weaning—That the Hat Selling Season Ends 1#"hen the Hat 1Wearing Season Is at Its Height lose-Outs w — | | Woodmard & Lotheor -Clearance of Spring Hats "THE MEN'S STORE Hundreds of 8th and Pa. Ave. N.W. o I g 5} <) Ll ¥ ) g ¥ E 2 A G Hundreds of Fine Hats at Fine Hats at $2.15 $2.95 I T°S GOOD headwork for us to start clearing headwear stocks early—and it's just as good headwork for YOU to profit by this policy. We've grouped a full range of the season’s styles at two prices that are sure to make the clearance a speedy affair. ROBIN HOOD. our famous hit 1e hundred beau 1 Trimmed Hats dark and light shades—loveliest of the seas, models. n styles for the miss, young woma and matron — at a price truly sensa tional. = : Dress Waists Sold up to $10.98 in Spring headwear, is conspicuous, in all his clever variations. In fact, any man can find a style and a shade exactly to his tiking—at a worth-while saving. Only One More Day For These Inaugural Prices: Rt ¥ e ot S YR e v i e e i i e S Correct Straws, 3 to 0 Base ball season’s open—seems a man enjoys a game bet- ter with a straw hat on his head. Light as a breeze—on both your head and your purse—here are hundreds of straws in novelty and conservative shapes and shades and styles of bands—for men of all ages—and every good taste. 300 ovely waists, cluding striped or bead- ed georgettes, crepe de chine, plain and em broidered overblouses, satins, etc., in a host of good colors and styles. Dress Skirts Sold Up to $10.98 " $2.98 A splendid array of Men’s Hat Section, First floor. Spring Suits, $31.50 Nine spring models for young men and all men—the roll call of correct fashions for men is complete. Quality suits—created for men with exacting notions of what’s what in clothes Fine Shirts, $2.65 Our finer productions in Bates Street, Eagle and Emery shirts: Iinglish broadcloth, silk stripes, imported cords, Pembroke oxford: white, tan, stripes. With and without collars. Silk Ties, 85¢ Of quality silks, as good-wearing as they are good-looking. Diagonals, brocades, jacquards, dots—quiet and “sporty” patterns Suits Young Fellows’ With Extra Trousers 35 37 Clothes \that give young fellows first stepping into long trousers the de- cided assurance of being well dressed. Smartly adapted from the styles worn by college men, their lines are virile. vigorous, breezy as youth itself. Three-button Norfolks and belted back models in &pring fabrics and colors. xS i S T A i Y T o S e S T s S S stylish skirts in serges, heather mixture and other Pleated models in a variety of shades. A rare skirt op- portunity for Saturday. good clothes. MONEY'S WORTH OR MONEY BACK Men’s Topcoats, 35 Smart Gabardines, Bedford Cords and Tweeds—showerproofed, in a variety of models with raglan and squarc shoulders. Special Sale on Third Floor =" $10 Spring Top Coats Spring Jersey Suits Spring Silk Dresses Spring Wool Dresses Men's Clothes Section, Second floor. T S . S TS

Other pages from this issue: