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]ZIEGFELD SEEKS ENGLISH ; BEAUTIES; ‘INDS BUT ONE Says He o M.ny With rnces: Up to Standard of Follies. But— & Then He Stops. | CAILLAUX DEFERS DECISION ON VISIT | for higher pay, today met to decide | Bs the Associated Press. Ratification Expected. | whether to accept the terms offered Will Head French Debt Mis-|" . S i The admini i1 by the directors."who promised some | renc I iS-| NEW YORK. September 1 | The administration is relying upon | by the directors, who promised some | |§| 5 lected by I Zinatald o8 tho most uccess o Negohatlons Will] 2 ea public opinion, as reflected | improvements in’ salaries. H H ' tiful English girl fitted to join . in the press and in other ways sion Only if Settlement |5 Siotinentone So (uted to Join ! Mark Accomplishment of | speed through Congress & ratification | to igirl, a simple Birmingham country of the first settlement made, namely, | The mr“" committes announiced at | miss, who uses no cosmetics, has ar- the one with Belgium. Senator Borah, | the end of last week that 23,000 ban Seems Probable. ey Qo Mg oo Hardest Task. chairman of the Senate foreign rela. | ing employes in Paris were abstain. || Aw 40 ihe Appeer of Enid Lil tions committee, despite recent indica- | inz from work, or two-thirds of the 2 ik . 4 lian Parsons on the stage. Chicagoans & tions (o the contrary, is expected to | total BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. will have the first say. She is going | BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. | be an ally, not a foe. of the adminis . { By Cable 10 The Star and Chicago Daily News. | there td Join the chorus of *Kid et S tration in securing prompt approval. | gun francisco leads the cities of | PARIS, September 1. Altt in- | Boots [ 5 resident Coolidge will return to| There is reason to believe that the set- | 1o world in telephones per capt _ JARIS, September Althot (e Aaashaits oasirbars | Washington next week with his first | tlement did not take influential con- | ‘'t L tructions have been given the French | ¢ MG Teviathan's o victory in the Sixty-ninth Congress | gressional leaders by surprise. | i rve staterooms on the liner | pyrsons’ identity, for face practically i hand. The success of | It is likely that they will be kept | Pasie siling trom Havre on Septem- |apparently home made ents were | the administration In foreing Amor- | Well acquainted in advance with major mission, it is not certain vet that the |mother came wjth her. as did M ; gt ipal }'i"l“’: B npesat d it {and other important debtors. at is | oon French. finance, minister will go per id his' wife, Billy Burke. 07tos the marik before the ASSeDINE |5 precaution ‘which M. Cailigix ‘him sonally to Wash ) S eld said that of 500 or |Of Congress is the outstanding |self is taking in the case of the | N Gy L nes o irls he looked at in England |achievement in the realm of foreign | French Parliament, as manifested by he it aillaux’s departure depends en ! Parsons was the only one who | policy since the new Coolidge regime |the make-up of the delegation that ST R T aled to him as of “Follies” cal assumed power last March. It can | Wil accompany him to Washington, cating the frame of mind of Presi e sought six such Erglish| oo b pecorded, o s rity, is possible to clear up one point dent (oolidge and Secretary Mellon Lo e e ey ih auhovlt: |about which some hot debate on - the School Bell regarding the French debt settlement. | 16, e said, “have Desu-| OBt -Ahe jtresdent .nd. dec * | Belstan settlement is likely when it is | 3. Callliny adia todny to ons loF Bie|tion) fac but and there he |Kellosg set themselves this goal as|pefore Congre That is, the precise . . Tatimite celiabaatora that unlacs e # the thing above all others that they | nature of the ‘weighty moral obli 1 ng--- S et il e | feet were bent upon accomplishing before | gation” imposed upon the United repoxts singicated #he certainty of his|g 5hg 112. Her hair is blond | December, 19: States by certain pledges of President ::‘ny\': .,va: to ‘:;V"}\P 1.\"\':2,..:?' arrange: {and curly and bobbed e TR ors B T x\\'andrnw \\;‘IN.n o \'er\anle’s. Th-i Th s s ot | . Congress was prepared to attack it |impression has become widespreac ns would send a large delegatio do | 4 iy | vould' send a large delegation o do MINING TOWNS GAY it the Luropean debis were allowed | that Mr. Wilson entered into some | at meal ot g s O et | |10 drift inaefinitely without serious |Kind of a binding undertaking with new clothes loareatiar Mihty e it effort to fund them. By the time the | Belgium. All he did was to promise e o il el ot v i AS 158.000 DROP | House and Senate are in session Bel- | her to reccommend to the United States | for your boy this was imposs = gium, France. Ttaly #nd - probably | Congress that Belgium's obligations | y . . : TOOLS IN WALKQUT | Czechosiovakia will' have come to|to America should be shifted to the | Must Pay to Save Credit. terms with the United States. It is | 8houlders of Germany. President Wil w. Band ¢ There is no doubt that M. Caillaux even possibie that half a dozen small- | Son lolned In u letter to this effect | e arbe Lo lqllhflr ers will make strenuous efforts to settle wontinued from First Page.) er debtor countries, without the neces. | With kgl 'menceau and Li thin, France's war debis to the United Sits "of mending negotiations to Wash- | George, as far s their respective | for boys’ clothing ealize that the only way of avoiding | the aders refused to allow | dotted line. cussion and fcism |ally Mr. Wilson did make this SUITS inflation is settler-ent of war debts |tk eep going while a new | in Congress are certain. But mp"“"' 'n'nli:v’nv-T to Congress but it n order 1o ob credits in British | cor heing made President feels that a storm has been | Was ignored along with his =zenera now that the gold loan launched last PINCHOT DELAYS MOVE. ocrat, of Mississippi, was one of the | Versailles. The Coolidge adminisira i T o i Wl b2t St St ine | BLOUSES On e other hand, the treasury i " 8 o administration fore and aft on the | Congress will approve of the limits to mi sefunsl hetweenimentenbens x| N o 1 (027 A bow eRs i estihaf AU AL which T s "gone In (R e SHIRTS et O e oth Parties. 2 g | “welghty moral obligation” in ques. | and December 31. no less than § 3 > 4 Interest in French Keen. tion. STOCKINGS 000,000 worth treasury bonds is-| WASHINGTON, Pa.. September 1| W | (Covyright. 1028 sued In 1915 and 1916. If loans in{ (). The hezinning of the suspension | There is lively m(elr»\rx at ¥ ‘un)r‘ UNDERWEAR the treasury will be forced to increa { northeastern Pennsylvania found | or ance e the bank ~note circulation. which|Gov. Pinchot touring State thatitasind | Cafllaux will present to the Kseri |ALLEGED FLEECER TAKEN CAPS means a further fall of the franc in’the bituminous coal fields of the |€an Debt Funding Commission on J outhwestern part of the State. He | September 23. Neither Cailinyex v 5 t in Lov | was “silent rezarding the situation. | nor any of his compatriots are known | Reld. Held for Wheat Deals, De- At Prices Lower ng as the war are not! phose close to the zovernor indicated | Personally to the President or Secre- | s | the embargo on British and| hix position woulll Lo one o s Tate. | taries Kellogs snd Nellen. Becrstary | pasts e Bamnts. Than Elsewhere American loans to France will con|ference u both opgrators and | Hoover and Representative Burton.| TAMPA, Fla., September 1 (#) tinue. Thus it is reliably reported | miners expressed a desire to have him | two of the other members of the | john H. Reid ested here last that the Bank of England has issued | mediate the differences funding commission. have met some | week for the Canadian authorities circular to all leading British bank SETi oo of the French statesmen at various!on charges of fleecinz farmers out | inz establishmer uesting that | MINERS FEEL NO ANXIETY. |times in Burope. The Frenchmen|of $60,000 in wheat deals, left here | < they do_not allow credits, not only will discover two things before the|last night for Regina in charge of | to the French rnment. but also!npane Start on Vacations, Some negotiations in Washington have pro- | provineial police. He said before de- French cities and public corporations S gressed very far—that the recent| parture that he would make bond on | threatening to cut down their credit ing Surope. Caillaux-Churchill Anglo-French con- | his arrival at Regina. Mrs. Reid VENTH ST. N.W. i heilank” o Evsland in case| o e e e e s | o B ey i e e 910 SEVE! they disrezard that warning. | iaar ‘ool Meptomber e ther and|Hnlted s s S e accompany him, but Such reports are rendering Krench | o “rospect of a zood rest after two | c0ld. and that our Government is well | will return to Canada soon financial circles frantic. - They are|vears of steady work helped to ease [armed ~with up-to-the-minute infor N asking M. Caillaux to setle | S50 X BNCSL N, i this region | Mation about the state of French ¥ e's war debts at the earliest| jEUGS JUR VIUIEE N itdown of | fAinances. M. Caillaux and his mates possible moment. M. Caillaux «}nlu 1o aninacits i The streets of | Will be apprised in friendly. but firm, urally ready to settle the war debts, |pe GERCOLe T L e ers | terms that America will continue to but he still maintains that “he 1% a!during the day. and the principal | insist on dealing wtih each of her gentleman and consequently he can- | thoroughfares had a holiday aspect. | debtors on strictly independent lines not promise on behalf of France more| Departure of miners to other sec-| The American negotiators, in re- | than it can pay ! tions of the country, and in some | SPonse to French claims for liberal| . “ - mog % | treatment in respect of terms, will| . Will Not Ask Cut. ope, on saved-up earnings n today, not to return until col. | from the outset stress the fact that Finoncimin ans o Sieiengtne | oEs LI D [ France, unlike Great Britain and the | or Deptember Jisposa French finance minister say it i some mines more engineers ang | United States, stubbornly refused to likely that he will not raise the ques- | firomen have & tax herself for war expenditures dur- n laid off than in pre- | ion of a reduction of the amount!yvious suspensions. One of the reasons 1 by France, but will only insist|was that numerous pumps are oper- | that the installments should not ex-|ated by electric power, necessitating | ceed those offered Grea only the services of the regular pump $62.500,000 a vear—spread | runners. { riod of years. and a moratorium until | 1930. when the com ial debt now| MINERS START VACATION, heing paid regularly will all have| paid off ht. 1825, by Chie Wilkes-Barve Streets Present Holiday | Aspect in Strike. WILKES-BARRE, (). —The central Cops: ko Dails News Co.) | 12 FIREMEN OVERCOME | Pa.. reets September of Wilkes. B: had Saturda half-holida 8- BY SMOKE FlGHTING FIRE | pect today as a result of the total sus. | pension of mining in the anthracite | fields. Streets were crowded and many | Br the Ascociated Press h a s were thronged. If there swas | NEW YORK, September 1.— alarm felt over the industrial | firemen were overcome by le it was not apparent on the ! and a number of others were rescued | surtan from the North River, into which| Hundreds of automobile parties left they fell while fighting a fire at vjfm the mountains and nearby cities pier at Fifty-fith street last night. |on short vacations. The Lloyvd Sabando Liner Conte " & Verdi, which arrived from Italy today | Emergenty Storés Held. and the Furness-Bermuda liner Fort| LANSFORD, Pa.. September 1 (). St. George were threatened and were [ —The total suspension of mining in towed into the river for safety the Panther Creek - Valley. where | 000 tons of anthracite are produced The fire was discovered shortly et Rk e | aaity. eut into effect without un control until near | toward incident e ofletrat e apports of | The local public is well fortified the pier made a thick acld. emake |AZainst shortage. having loaded their | which floated to the sonth camoke: | bins during the Summer. The Lehigh Inconvenience to crowds in rhe 1 Coal and Navigation Co., the principal Square theatrical district [ producer in the valley. has provided | re at midnight s \...lan emergency storage of coal for Firemen at midnight said there|Ch Cie” chirches, hospitals and where | fos ltde chance of extinguishing the | conait may necessitate fuel for flames. which would have to burn | 0N . . themselves out in the oil-treated | PAPHe wooden supports Hotel lnn Phone Main 8108-810%. 604-610 9th St. N.W, (WEEK $7 _rooms. $6 weskly $11 with toilet, shower and Irs: 2'in_room. 7 549 RICHMO $2.00 MAIN 1075 RED STAR LINE departure Good Returning, Fredericksburg 9:57 p.m., Children half fare. Consult Ticket 1418 “H" St Charter a Bus BUSS 50115 14th St. N.W. to leave Ric Monday Agent: Washing N.W N.W. Old Mirrors Made New When a mirror be- comes spotted, or misty and clouded, it is both unsightly and practically worthless. We can make that mirror like new at a small cost. »BARGAIN Al mizes 2% to 8 Ask Yowur Dealer Pounded 1364 HIRES TURNER GLASS COMPANY BEINARD W. SPILLE. Mans Rouslyn) WASHINGTON | c Fredericksburg, Va. THE DEBT SETTLEMENT COOLIDGE VIGTORY ine the war. IVENING STAR, WA ¥TON, 1 TUESDAY. terest or principal by France for the failure of the French to keep their economic house in order during the war as their British and American al- lies did. All this reasoning on the part of our negotiators will lead to the ex pression of America's belief that France, by drastic draft on her tax re. | sources, can and should strain herself | clerks, to fund her American obligations. ore promise Wage. PARIS, September fThose desiring to add an occasional piece The French preferred to rely upon P . Sk : internal and external loans. The in of furniture to the living room, or having a evitable resull was a hegyy and co s cae - tinuous decreade in revenae while :.?,; dining room or bedroom to refit, will do fighti impoverished armistice exchequer when came. The United Sta throuch _brotracted nonpayment of on “PNEUMGNIA INFLUENZA and COLDS” CAUSE—Treatment—CURE by Dr. G. K. Abbott Supt. of Washington Sanitarium Treatment Demonstrated During Lecture Tuesday, Sept. 1, 8 P.M. Capital-Memorial Church 5th and F N.W. Public Invited. END) Via Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac R. R. Round Trip From Washington to ND, VA. 4.0 $2.00 Tickets sold as follows, good for passage in coaches, sleeping When twenty or more and parlor cars on all regular trains: R s Saturday, September Sth—Aftcrnoon trains, commencing with % 12:01 p.m. departure It's Cheaper Sunday, September 6th—All trains. to Monday, September 7th—Morning trains, including 12:01 p.m hmond not later than 8:15 September 7th. p.m. No baggage checked ton Terminal Station; 714 14th St. that NEVER WERE THERE SUCH SHOE VALUES AS WE'RE SHOWING— BASEMENT Advance Style - Pumps x lasted and a correspondingly overnment will hold that the Amer- | ican taxpayer should not be penalized | Free Tuesday Helhh Lednre themselves a favor to visit Henderson’s now. A number of —ODD PIECES —BEDROOM SUITES AND ~-DINING DOOM SUITES all from regular stock—are SPECIALLY PRICED for September disposal. These are unusual values, well worthy of vour early inspection. AMES B . HENDERSON Fine Furniture, Laces, Upholstering, Paperhanging, Painting 1108 G Street—Phones Main 7675 Main 7676 the tes | mi A Trump Suit Play a real thrifty trump— compare today at Sidney West's the value and the price on the cards that mark these 3 and 4 Piece Spring SUITS Stein- Blochs Included Were 40. to 50. ?’ Were 55. to 5. 25.00 35.00 Summer Suit Savings Mohairs §{ Tropical Formerly 20.00 Worsteds and 25.00 Formerly 28.00 and 30.00 14.00 18.00 Tropical Worsteds : " and Flannels Formerly 40.00 and 45.00 25.00 Alterations at Cost Sidney West (INCORPORATED) 14th and G Streets N. W. + SEPTEMBER BANK STRIKE TO CONTINUE Paris Clerks Reject Offer of Com- 1 (#).—The bank who have been on strike for than a month in a movement Tonsrememarnionw B0 R Green Meadow Butter to | \u(vd lfl continue the xlrlk’:h}:\'“:r-"(’,l‘ : [ IS Pure T’S all in the churning—no matter how careful the dairy, | the very air that surrounds it is laden with myriads of | . germs — and they get into the ordinary butter — because | there is no way to keep them out—except by Heathization. That’s a patented process of churning—in a scientifically purified atmosphere—many times purer than the air we breathe. Green Meadow Heathized Butter ‘ is guaranteed to keep pure, sweet and fresh until used. It is made from se- | lected pure whipping cream. There’s no waste—no loss—so that in addition to purity there is economy in using Green ! Meadow Butter. Sold by the leading difficulty res. If you ha us—North getting it phone 1670, SURITY EATI‘HZED H. L. Black & Sons, Inc. 1620 First St. N.W, North 1670 Ave. 1724 Pa. Folks, this will go down in history as the greatest Overcoat sale Washington has even seen. Any man (from 34 to 44) who wants a good. sturcly warm all-wool overcoat at less than half its October price—had better hurry! We started with a tl’lousand coats and they‘re three- fourths gone. See you in the morning. ne 9 o Money’s Worth or Money Baok J.Kaufmanis & W KAUFMAN, Inc. Ave: The Greatest Sale We've FEver Held! ’ Imported Eng’lish All-Wool