Evening Star Newspaper, July 31, 1925, Page 4

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e % THE EVENING STAR, WASHIN ¥TON, D. O, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1925. STRIKE IS AVERTED IN BRITISH MINES i AS OWNERS RELENT‘ First CTYGRONTH LTS FOR SEWER FUNDS Builders Tell Bell'Budget Cuts Would Handicap Entire District. (Continued from Page.) reduc high to ask them to in view accept a of the Asked for Delay. saldwin agree t their longer yught on the there could by means of them There is x to show rm- the help of the ernment and it prot [ not yet determined. Mr. Bady emphatically vecent N | talks with the « it | impossible for the e the industry There is an unofficia vernment loan to th unable to m: pay the pre zovernment requested that to suspend for a f whicl so that | to the assistance. of work ike threat seussion as with iay. Rufus Operative | fe »sentin the Dis: owing an interview il take was sufficient scale of what in re repaid nt taki make | payment i v i A subsidy The recommene 1 rously op hat if mines are other ly industries d the he London nment onter same yropriations items the p Washir cline r will be stop defending the s that ive Peak Not Yet Rea MINES ARE RAIDED. Communists Blow Up Pits and Fire On Ofiicials. | By to JOHN GUNTHER | Daily News Vio- | Val. | dal, | ¢ CARDIFF lent terrorism Wales wept Emiyn today Saror were ofticials wi 1 shotguns wires d blowing reported t scene 1zhout tter of Life or Wales, sets or Death July the Nor between hills | is across a | m London to be | other They bluntly | the matter ind them' flood- | CALLES T0 SECURE e LAND T0 PEASANTS rs ex-| ists in ith Wales. Despite the ,,.nm n s 000 miners are whole Reported as Planning Law to Tcr- S The first riots occurred Wedn. minate Property Seizures by Agrarian Committees. By the Associated Pre MEXICO CITY, July 31 icultural population of Mex- ortant law dealing with tes is planned by Presi says Deputy Ezequiel | article in the Liberation | p t tivities of the second largest anthra- | cite field in the world. But it is but a drop in the bucket to the conditions that would b preyailed had the news- | bituminous fi ers here and the | | steam coal w at" Cardiff gone | said he |out. | - Y ] acite strike started in the | sford, 30 miles} senti | aps unique in | do with either t resulted solely resentment of surly which they have t violate A miner ed Willian Wilson, a little fel {low with a red nose, now is the hero! e whole district. Wilson red from one pit i anothe and r to the lack of r ] clusively a most imports liberation of t esid defendir fused’ 4o move i the senic fired him Sympathy Strike Ordered. 1 of Wilson's fellow pit quit work. There conference of miners’ dele. ered a sympathetic strike of | fety men in that colliery. ke spread like wildfire through istrict, eventually including 40, made and landc certain that can prop: The cked ma uge of the bit With- | rg 3 v the revolu since the ke has the miners near| and with no other issue at this particular field except Wilson's reinstatement The owners are reported to offered to reinstate Wi but miners, hungry and workless, but | still faithful ir mad ideal, are 1 Matters | when | is advanced | the safety and ordered | fields st often oblem rea that set 3 starvati be stake in ownership. ions must be credits 1 farmer be able s the inaugu-|r Mexico have | the Co-operative : d and made available fc “On September 1 to cong la band of to the workers young pits, intimid still on duty > their Dy who are miners that their with esterday on cha wal meant flooding the pits and narcotics into the At-|ruining the mines for months—per Names | permanently— sted, but the s threw them out after serious Indicted in Dope Smuggling. ATLANTA ). —Five Federal Ga., July The indictments fol | rioting. $5.000 worth The office It several John W owners telegra asking for is gen phed the home Warden reser IN the coolness of summer draperies and an atmos- phere fifteen degrees lower than that outa'd Presidential 'Restaurant Offers a grateful retreat from the prevailing warmth elsewhere. Luncheon Dinner with Dancing 6:30 to 9:30 o'clock THE MAYFLOWER ORCHESTR W. Bpencer Tuppman, directing E Dn warm days the most delight- ful spot in Wash- lll‘lofl. Air washed and ghilled by special process of refrige @ration, l mansfor the | i | than more | ¢ happen to be conveniently situated are kept going. The trouble is overproduction of coal following the wartime develop. ment of oil and electric power, and the special stimulus given German coal production during the period of infla- tion, when nearly 200,000 men were sent to the mines. Beside the German pits lie 8,000,000 tons of coal which cannot be sold. although the owners have reduced the export price from 15 to 11 marks per ton, which is the approximate cost of production. The owners state that they must in the ° o this correspondent near future release 40,000 more miners, nthracite strike, although it has | making a total of 70,000 in all. The oing on for three weeks, rece | Thyssen works alone have discharged mest no publicity in London until | 5,500 Wednesday. It is partly explicable | because Ammansford is a tiny town, | remote and inaccessible. It is eight | So hours from London, al 8 | owners and the ‘unions have been 200 miles without results. A social commission mood of the now has been appointed to investigate and, indeed | conditions and, if possible, mitigate whole Swansea distr the hardships, at the same time de writer's motor | ciding what is- best the A ord by interests. ind he was threatened with | The Ruhr owners thrown into the unless | vance from the gov t out. cent_on mined co: e mine at 150,000,000 marks. some mark loan. But President Schacht that of the Reichsbank opposes these de- mands. Meanwhile the Communists, who are | the strongest party in the Ruhr, ask a wage increase of 25 per cent and a government _injunction against closing of the works or natio bituminous | tion of the mines 5 support (Copyright. 1025, by Chicago Daily News Co.) workers, ar g . rersonal ¢ ith them | sty “neral| Noted Horseman Found Dead. v would ral order TOLEDO, Ohio, Chicazo Daily News Co.) | KKetcham, 63, & wealthy - ERT and sportsman i o % cachi i ational recognition i ——— 25 years ago by bring {out Cresceus, then the fastest t horse in the world, was found ¢ his apartment here yesterday coroner’s jury pronounced death due to apoplexy is a hot bed of communists. It is called the “First Soviet Town ‘in England.” The stubborn refusal of the miners to submit to any kind of reason undoubtedly was in response to red propaganda. A This strike, tle miner with a for his “rig ause one lit- red nose stood up " is lmnmnn’l\ impor- tates on account Alry. Now the nd the railroads It is almost incred ales fields are idle re stopped dead Negotiations Are Fruitless. far negotiations between the car was stoppes a party of picketing | river alized mood can be under: measure when it is 1 they earn in many pounds a week in wretche a the wns most of richest peers nile trike (Copyright. 1925, by July 31.—Geo Coal Conditions ermany Proba- bly Worst in Europe BY EDGAR A MOWRER Radio to The Star and Chicago Daily News | BERLIX, July The Lu con uztion becoming _critical despite the un ngland, is perhaps By < 31 spean | | Army Pridoner Killed. FORT BENNING, Ga., July 31 (®) Private Walter Parker of Tyty, Ga., Here many pits are closed | Was shot and vesterday by a e L s hn s e | iy pole when he tried tening wage reductions. A |to break away from a detail of prison- of w have been |€rs. of which he was a member. Pri | vate Lane. the guard, has been placed under arrest and will face trial by Thursday and decided to sup. | court-martial, it was stated at the the English miners to the limit. | office of the provost marshal They also decided protest to the . German government against the tax and tariff policy, and to refuse to do | Towa Honors Bryan. overtime work in the mines. s Ju X eat Ruhr coal buildin, o writer noted last | today, honoring and a| 1. following source of great misery. Small centers John_Hammtl in ma are almost deserted. i )t Witten has lost 92 per | f its poplation, Schwelm, 90 per | t and Hattingen, 52 per cent is G any’s condition ettle the down status in »f the German miners met ) were at William an orde S, Towa 3 tate half staff Jennings issued by Gov Bacillus Acidophilus Mllk For Intestinal disordera Ask your physician about it Prepared by the NATIONAL VACCINE AND ANTITOXIN INSTITUTE 1515 U St. N.W. Shutdown Brings Complaint. The Frankfurter Zeitung complains t the shutting down of pits is not | done ionally, but in view of | momentary profits. Modern works are while antiquated ones which | WANTED. Wemen'’s Votes On this simplified summer breakfast QUICK QUAKER cooks in 3 to 5 minutes Supplies energy breakfasts, ends hot kitchens wOMEN say this solves the summer breakfast problem. That it ends hot morning troubles in the kitchen. That it cooks without heating up the kitchen. That men like it, and children take to it. And. .. feel better all day long as a result. Get a package of Quick Quaker. And then tell us your opinion. Cooks in 3 to 5 minutes. Hasall thatrare Quakerflavor. And with milkit is almost a complete food in itself ... at low cost. - Quick Cooks in === OPEN SATURDAY TILL 4 P. M. CREERON Around the er 3 to 5 minutes Hate Made and Remo-eled By Expert Milliners 614 Twelfth Street Between F and G Streets N. W. Gorner High FHoes Autumn Felts in Large Headsizes $3.98, $5.00 to $12.50 Dame Fashicn has chosen Felts and Velours for milady’s early Fall Hats. We offer a fine selection of these new hats in all the latest styles and exquisite colors that will be the vogue the coming season. A host of chic styles in extra large, as well as medium and small head sizes. Included in the Large Head-size Hats are— Many Smart Gage Hats —that are so well-known for style, service and satisfaction, in extra large and small head- i Colors are Black Oakwood, Sand, Purple, Cardinal Red, Greens, Pencil and Copen Blue. All Summer Trimmed and Sports Hats At Greatly Reduced Prices! 50c, 51, $149 10 $3%8 Hair Hats Straw Hats, Peanit and White Felts—just the hats with "which to finish out the Summer season—at a fructlon of former ational | - | complaint has 000,000 | the | BRYAN MONUMENT MOVE IS LAUNCHED |GIRL MOBBED BY WOMEN REFUSES TO LEAVE TOWN Not Seriously Injured by Coat of Paint and Feathers—Authori- ties Take No Action. By the Associated Press RICHMOND, V. to the combined Ch America to join in a a monument over the grave of William Jennings Bryan in Arlington National Cemetery was sounded here at a Bryan memorial service conduct ed by Dr. Len G. Broughton. pasto of the Baptist Church of Jack sonville, “Willlam Jennings Bryan, defender of the faith—he died wielding the sword of the spirit against a relentless and scoffing foe.” This was the in scription Dr. Broughton proposed The minist s that Jo sephus Danfels of Raleigh, N. (., a fellow cabinet member with Bryan in the Wilson portfolio, be requested to nd July 31.—A call movement to By the Associated Press. La., July 31.—Mis: victim of an attack by a mob 25 or more women who are report- ed to have given her a coat of paint and feathers Monday afternoon, was net serfously injured by the experi. ence and has not vet left Eros. No further hostile move has been made by the women who have twice in two weeks attempted to drive her out of town because of alleged misconduct with employes of a lumber company here ‘ Miss Simms is an orphan and has been living With her sister here. Town and parish authoritiées have n de no move to investigate the at tack. They report that no formal been filed and that the information they have received in the form of rumors. s 1s a_town of about 1,000 pop ion and the attack is said to|t have been witnessed by more than 150 |spectators who were unaware of what was about to occur. I ary once participated in by every denom inatio fessing belief in the Chris tian religion Dr. Broughton said Mr. Daniels I\hnul(l he asked to take steps to or nize the campaign. I look forward the greatest revival of religion that America has ever seen the minister said. “Humanely sp cing, it will [ come out of this Dayton row. Mr. i ¥ £ | Bryan's ‘fool religion,’ as termed by | Mr. Darrow, in the courthouse at Day ton, will become the dynamic of the se | sreatest revival of religion that we ! have ever seen.” only Executions on public highways are still an unpleasant feature of Ci justice. A Sure Fire Picture Every Time With This No. 1 A POCKET KODAK Equipped With Anastigmat f $26 Complets Other Models, $6.50 ID pre. —With Every from us—One Kodakery—First Roll and Printed Washington Home of the Kodak HARRY C. GROVE INC. 1210 G St Camera Year's Su of Films hseription to Developed 1 HELD FOR GIRL’S DEATH. '..n advertising man of Asbur , tian churches of | Park, . who were in the car, were no Both Frey and the actress gave addresses as Elm Point, Grea Long Isiand automobile hit a motor e Bronx yesterda Miss . 19, was thrown to t ment from the side ¢ nd 4 a hospital. Her fi Charle | Bisign who was dri Z, esC with bruises. lmhl ] Husband Whn e Wife Sued Actress | their | Neck, Drove Latter's Car in Crash. SW YORK, July 31 (®).—Charles horseman, whose wife a | zo sued Wilda Bennett, musi comedy star, for $100,000 for lienation of affections, was out on { bail today on a technical charge of | homicide " for killi a girl while 2 jdriving Miss Bennett's automobile.| It is a fact not nerally Mrs. Frey's suit against Miss Ben.|that earthquakes occur in the B nett has been dropped, complete Isles once a month on an clearing the actress. | but v 200 d Miss Bennett and dama one in every Albert Barringer, Match Your Odd Coats With Our Special TROUSERS And Up from immense stock of fine trousers the pair Choose our vou need to match your odd coats and There thousands to choose vests. are of pairs from—all materials—all colors, all sizes. § EISEMAN’S 7th and F Sts. 2 S % We are going to help you enjoy these beautiful days. Big clearance of good used cars. Best Cars, Best Prices, Best Terms Financing and insurance included on the following terms: Chevrolet 0 month. Chevrolet sedan, $125 cash, $30 month. Chevrolet month Chevrolet coupe, $90 cash, month. Ford month. Ford coupe, month. “ord roadster, $75 cash, $20.50 month. Ford roadster, $60 cash, $19.50 month. Buick roadster, $40 cash, $12 Chevrolet touring, $50 cash, $22 month. K month. Olds 8 touring, $50 cash, $20 = month. Chevrolet touring, $35 cash, §25 Cadillac e ladillac touring, $60° cash, $15 Chevrolet Reo §: $10 $21 month. month Ford touring, $7; Overland roadster, $20 cash, $10 month. month. DISCOUNT FOR CASH We have a few cars in stock that we will sell on terms as low as §20 cash and $3 per week. sedan, $100 cash, touring, $90 cash, $24 $175 cash, $32.50 coupe, cash, IS AL $30 roadster, $i0 cash, touring, cash, cash, $22.50 Our salesmen are right on the job every day, Sundays in- cluded, 8:30 a.m. till 10 p.m. Ask for Mr. Smith Luttrell Chevrolet Sales Co. 14th at Rhode Island Ave. N.W. £333350203200003002200ta2d0sstaediussansiniiiatianaiizasntiatanniiniisiiodianesatiizaanss 13322323 ///////////////////////////////////////// One Day Only —Saturday SPECIALS We're making it so attractive for our customers that we are crowding a full day's business into Saturdays— although we close at TWO P.M. Don’t get here late! \PrzrzzZzz7z7ZzZz7zzzzzzg5z Saturday Only— $20 Genuine Priestley’s and Farr’s Fine Mohair Suits Sizes 34, 35, 36 Saturday Only $7.95 2 for $15 $20 Sports Coats, $99 In sizes 34, 35, 36 and 37. If you need a sport coat to wear with your light trousers, this is a snap. Saturday Only— $750 and Silk Shirts Neat patterns and stripes, sizes 13V to 18. A real special—while they last. Saturday Only— §2.95 2 for $5.50 $8-50 S No C. O. D., Exchanges, Refunds, Deliveries or Alterations. All Sales Final ne 1325 F STREET " House of Kuppc..heimer Good Clothes §mmmxxnu % We Pay You on your DAILY BALANCES 2% 3% 4% The Munsey Trust Co. Munsey Building Pa. Ave. Bet. 13th & 14th Sts. N.W. 0 s Interest on checking accounts on daily balances— com- pounded monthly. Interest on ordinary savings accounts—compounded - quar- terly. Interest on special savings cer- tificates — compounded semi- annually. Open All Day Saturday Adding Another Day of Opportunity We're open all day Saturday—Busi- ness as usual—Bargains, of course! You can’t afford to leave town for a week end until you get a line on what is being offered in The Family Shoe S Holf~\@arlg Clearance Women's $6.50, $8 and Men’s $6, $7 and $8 Ox- $9 Pumps and Oxfords. fords for sport, street and $4.65 $4.95 Over 1,000 Pairs For Children School, Dress and Play White Shoes at Shoes for Children Tremendous Colored suedes, patents, two- Reductions tones, tans and other leathers. The entire stock including AIl sizes and widths. Former “hite kid, calf and canvas group- prices $4, §5 and $6. -$1.35 ed ini three prices. --$1.95 tore's 5 to 11 Sizes up to 2. Sizes 2¥; to 8... On Bargain Tables Boys’ Oxfords in tan and black leathers; $4.00 and 23 t08 .. Several Hundred P 1’:‘4 (o vomen s Several hundred pairs of women's short lines discontinued lines Mostly. white. A good run of sizes in entire $500 values. lot—and only 95c. $2.95 $1.45 Famiry fHOE JTORE 310-312 Seventh St. NW. 3t ey Plenty of sizes—a real bargaln. Over Years' Satisfactory Service ¢

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