Evening Star Newspaper, January 16, 1927, Page 15

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THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTO D. €, JANUARY 16, 1927—PART 1. * "5 bt R e e et e e e e el ChAmber of Comméres and m-n,‘-’ | “one dnes not diecuss politics here." ured prominently in the American | hearings and Investigation in the gen- lo¢al eivic leaders. Seven hundred | | ©On Sundays people return from financial news August, 1924, when | eral proceedings. To this the co- and thirty reservations have been | church to their homes {natead of loiter. Dillon, Read & Co. hought from the | operative assoeiations objected and made for the banquet. | ing on the village green: even re- Shell Unfon Oil Co. a Royal Dutch | sought a separate consideration of liglous festivals and processions have hsidiary, $30,000.000 of common their cases, but this was denled today. Robert J. Cottrell, an assistant i secretary of the Board of Trade| ]hotn lr‘d[:fivv'! with the view of avold k of the Union Oil Co. of Cali-| . ! Announces the following committee | ng “Incidents.” fornla, placing the stack upon the | | BANQUET FEB. 5 it a5 PEARING S5 1 1N o8 MILLION DEAL 2 5 COTTON RATES ONLY e rnion. mres f « Ul banquet | | struggle for control that com- | : | Mi0Wiater ‘Difiter Comitiee. All sport clubs and assoclations, too, | pany hetween American and foreign | FOR PUBLISHER IN OHIO | Clever, wecretary. Difhers—=Vilmot W the Fascist party. All public celebra —— X have been placed under the control of | i A T | - President and Other High Of- | Trew chairman: &~ wane, ceorse | Mussolini Gospel of Work |tions and restivais must have the sanc-| Dillon, Read & Co. Completes Made Standard Oil Loan. Commerce Body to Consider|Hundreds of Friends Pay Last - | Milter. T Brooke Amiss. Jr. ‘Muslc 4 D T e T i i The same bankers made a loan of | & Tribute to Robert F. Wolfe, ; ficials Among Those In. [llerman E. Cant. chairman; Bgtr) Brings Severe Losses The vecent proniolton of apeect | - Negotiations With Duteh | ssommon to e sundara o co.| Trouble by Hearing on All Killed in Fall i | chairman: John Maury. Souvenirs making has been followed by the pro- THev M teMharei e n colnEctiGn: tes ¥ i vited to Affair. |Seaton W Trunnell, chatrman: W. C.| to Amusements. bl on FoEecorner MEEEIRVITE cots Shell Group in London. | ween the two transactions. | Agricultural Commodities. | ™57 Are" T sonare 1 | Witts. Lights and loud speakers monies . | Frank E. Gibson, chairman: C. W e capital. Milton . Schwab, chairman: E. « Life in a country which is trying | Simple and brief funeral services | . Ex &. | o catch up half a century lost in the | | | held this after for Rohert Publicity Committee. Tanuary 15.-—-The old Ttaly | . | 3 5 i |E : iy 5.—The old Ttaly |and greatness must he anstere and | NEW YORK, January 5. A radio | "A separate investigation into the|Evening Dispatch and t tiouh T | Publicity Richard L, Conner. chair | of song and laughter is disappearing. | simple.” sy cist leaders. “We [ telephone conversation between Clar ENGLISH GENTLEMEN |ievei "of railrond rates appiying on | Journal. Mr. Woife was k L - ,‘.\’ af tha organ gatie he | MmAD Rudget and and. Raymond M {m» Mussolini's gospel of intense unin- | myst creats an Italy which will be fa- | ence Dillon, head of the banking firm cotton in 12 Southern States was re-|day in a fall from the fifth story win- anquet of the organization to be | Forence, chaitman. Floor —jerome F.|terrunted laboriouaneas leaves no time | mous for aomething more than good | of Dillon, Read & Co., In New York, | o, fused yestarday by the Interstate|dow of the Dispatch buflding :‘h"" o February 5. at|Barnard charman: Charles A. Apple- | for play. aay theater and movie man- | tenor voices.” | and Sir Henty Deterding, chairman | Rigor of Morning Dress Presents|commerce Commission. and instead,| Hundreds of friends and admirers e New ilar by, L. Lee Combs, Frank R. Strunk. | agers and proprietors of traveling . f the hoard of Royal Dutch Shell, in | < the co-operative assoclations of | 1 t the B : | by % rere paie { . = of th= hoard of Roy ch Shell, in v I e S 5 perative assoeiations o attended the last rit he Broad Hotel. It was an | Entertainment -~ John B. MeClure. | circuses -n: untry fairs | INF ON DYING. | London. compieted SeRdtiAMons: for m|| Mreny Dimcultl s n Occa- | o Growers who complained were | Street Presbyterian Church nounced yester- [ chatrman: & Paui Ward. George V.| Those who are in the husiness of | |[NFAMOUS PRIS! « | $25,000,000 loan to the Batavia Pe- sion Almost Marred. notified that the commission would [ Dr, S. . Paimer. pastor ar day. : | Triplett, jr.. Russell Shelk, Rayniond jamusement declare the past holiday S SR troleum Co., a Royal Dutch subsid consider their difficulties in connec. | Mr. Wolfe, preached the { An entertain- M. Florence. Program and printing— |season to have heen the most disas. £ 00 | ATy, it became known today. By, B8 Awocinwd Frogs,. , _; | 0 tion with its general inquiry into all | mon, touching on the | ment program ix O Havward Marahall. chalrman: Odell | trous in their experience. The entire (St. Lazare Still Stands After 800 | 10 ° FECHRE CIONE (ClA v cable, | [ONDON, January 15.—The rigor|rates on agricultural commodities. |who had heen the henefactor of many being arranged | s Smith of tickets —J. Mitehell |nation, they complain, is taking literal- | Years' Use e e e rtaages fafled | Of morning’ dress presents more and | ‘Times and places for hearings on | nundceds of people. . for the event to i | Owens, “chairman; William H. Lan. |Iv the Duce's pronouncement that not " o to clear up & minor matter regard. |More difficulties to the English gentle- | the cotton rates will be set, later. humim‘"fl;f; hekeh P - which a long list | ham. George J. Wells. Invitations and | one Italian has a moment to waste | PARIS, January 15 (®).— St. l.azare o et man. A solemn occasion at West-| The complaints to which ‘the com- Lt Bipnains = G E J. el 5 : 3 ing sinking fund provisions, and then [ M , ployes of Mr. Wolfe's two newyspapers of prominent citv 8 | reception—E. €. Graham. chairman;|from productive Jabor | the infamous. prison for women ir | the tadis Solenmone was brought into | Minster Abbey Almost was marred re. | mission today: wap Gireeief wiosfilad and Federal offi- | Ben T Webster, and John Saul. | Foreign visitors who knew Italy be- | i i | Dlay and the matter settled satistac. | Cently by the lack of parking space | by co-operative °assotistions repre. = elals have heen - % fore the coming of fascism are unani- | Paris, i dying hard. Since .n‘fi(hu»‘: . i ol for high hats. senting cotton growers in Arkansas, | MINERS ASK RATE BOOST invited. There | | mous in confirming the almost com: | have heen countless efforts to have it | OTSRY J1E (8, EWO- LTSS LU Winston Churchill tried to push his | Alabama, North Caroiina, Georgia, . \ will be no speak- State Court Denies Writ. plete disappearance of the traditional | qar ichoq hut it stills stands after Form of Bond Issue. | hat unceremoniousiy under a chair, | Loulsiana, Missotri, Oklahoma, Ten - ine | | formula “dolce far niente” (sweet | % | but there was no roonr for it, and he | nessee, Texas, Arizona. South Care. The Ilinois Coal Miners’ Union yea- Pr J NASHVILLE, January 15 (®). | jqeness) | 800 vears of use as a monastery Che bond issue, which is to be of:|<tood apprehensively in front ‘of it|iina and Missisippi, and by the Okla- |terday Asked the Inters Commerce 'I'"“‘.""I Is | _Tennessee’s Supreme Court today ot & ™ prison. palace, fortress and hospttal. | fered publicly n week. will take|as it rested on the ground. The |homa Corporation Commission Commission for increased freight nvited. W T ¢ denled a writ of certiorari in a case No Longer Sing at Tasks. Five vears ago the place again was | the form of 15-vear debentures, guar- | prince of Wales, on the contrary, was | Nearly all of the cotton producing | ratés on coal moving from Kentucky, Among those . | brought by the State against the Bur-| jeajjans, so tourists say, no longer finally and irrevocably condemued. | anteed as to principal and interest by | particularly careful of his hat, which | territory in the United States, and the | Tennessee and West Virginia to cargo specially invited AHAM. ley Growers' Co-operative Association|ging at their taska as they always|Plans were drawn for a new bullding tha Royal Dutch Co. and the Shell | he had to hold in the same hand as |rates affecting it was brought into the [boats on the Great Lakes are President |ana others from the Equity Court of | yeed to do; thelr faces do not light up |on the outskirts of the city. The esti-| Transport and Trading ¢ Ltd. | the slip of paper on which his brief | controversy on the general charge| A brief filed alleged that a long Coolidge, Vice President Dawes, [Knox County A ruling made last |, qujck, contagious samiles as they |mate of cost today is 90.000,000 francs The Batavia company dles the | message for the oceasion was written. | that the rates applying on cotton were | series of rate decisions in recent vears members of the President’'s cabine:, |vear at Knoxville by Judge John H.| 4iq " when basking lazily in the|so St. Lazare seems likely to add more | Royal Dutch and Shell operations in| After the ceremony he smoothed its|unreasonably high. had placed the Southern States n: Members ‘of the House and Senate | Dewitt of the Court of Appeals Was|y\jeqiiarranean sunlight was the rule. | vears to its historical life connection with the . production of | glistening surface with his hand The Commission noted in receiving |in & position of preterence in the coal District committees, officials of the |sustained |z der to prevent political discus. | The place was a refuge for lepers | petrolenm in the Dutch Fast Indies Stanley Baldwin, the prime min-|the complaint t it already had un- |trade to the Northwest and Fastern National Capital Park and Planning > fon, 3 ch were | in the middle ages. Later, during the [ The company also has extensive In-|ister, wore fawn colored gloves, and | dertaken an investigation into all rall- | industrial territox T inion’s in Commission, the secretaries It he thinks any woman lucky to | f o e el e Ao | terests in Venezuela and the Argen- | his were the only covered hands pres-|road rates on agricultural products [terest was declared to he keen be executive offices of the get married. the chances are 10 to 1| during the evenings, are now thinly |stormed it to get the great mass of | tine. ent. Gloves for morning dress are|and consequently assigned the co-|cause the Southern mines operate on H Is of the United . ! populated, while posters admonish | provisions accumulated hy the monks | 1 Dutch and Shell last, fig- | dying out operation association complaint for [a nen-union basis Washington Board of Trade, will| Money to be saved and new styles to be seen at e & & Lansburgh & Bro. & & o Satin or Suede Touches of Straw 38.00 Pail.'s of Smart for Spring \ on New Hats Silk Hosiery sg50 ° im 510 | e ge sleek black sati W LR e : ular . makes! Epery life of the sleck black satin D { All-silk is very smart—faille, satin, b typif race and chic; or : ; ; ; ! . “ ks o (\,gfirsmllu:):‘;nt{‘e]?thier:ifl R Py / K bengaline or belting ribbon—cleverly : B;—;,kc,l; lines of “Phoenix.” “Onyx,”. iy ) 4 e < B draped felt is faultless, according to -ansburgh’s famous “Run-check and- alligator calf proves a most effective t 4 g other splendid makes—alls full fash- ming for the brown suede strap pump Spring fashion standards —but even Bl nestlv with ‘Ll g el sketched. Also in black suede. smarter is the hat that.boasts a touch of S L an.d‘ i E b 2 20 3 ; ; . But all sizes are here—and many smart Rhinestone Buckles, $1.50 to $: E crisp pedaline or milan shades. Chiffon and service weights. Second Floor—Lansburgh's—7th Street . Second Floor—Lansburgh’s—8th Street > Street Floor—Lansburgh's—8th Street e e Monday $59.50 to $21.75 $79.50 COATS g R : Not only our higher-priced < 7 1 b s < : ‘e?:le"_ir: such ex- ; ¢ coats greatly marked down—al- B L S SRS, though they are “beauties,” too— quisite evening shades i : i s ) 8 as powder bluc, ocean TR . but, for the most part, brand-new green, coral, maize, or- £l late Winter models that a well chid, tomato, gold, known New York manufacturer G = pEEiti o 1 Hangepne, ' parted with at great concessions. e gy bemsiully: beadsd arid e For women, sizes 36 to 524, as for Delsheen Beaver studded with rhine- . . 14 to 20 Estrella Squirrel stones—what delightful mISSEs, SI1ZEs to 2V. Carmina Manchw Wolf ing frocks they Montenenvo Fox evening ¢ v X make, when worn over a silk slip! Second Floor—8th Street Street Floor—Lansburgh's—8th Street " ¥ A A purchase of high-shade Sale of $3.50 and $5 $ Ll SR 3 - Sport Frocks— Long Kid Gloves d ‘ Lo ! (\\ f : ‘ o i . Worth a great deal more 169 |WY /B @CU 2. $1095 . . o ) | " They’ve just been unpacked! Charmingly Why, this sale price is ) N . tailored of georgette and flat crepe—the less than half of their ; ) ] sith s e e former prices. Fine, georgettes \\n. separate slips! ~ Straig] t- Shrobth irench ieid=in line and two-piece styles, beautifully tucked, the 12 and 16 button pleated, shirred or contrastingly trimmed. lengths. In this special . New high shades: monkeyskin, fiancee blue, group of 428 pairs— g <@ i rose marie, polo and the new tans; also navy there are a]l sizes—in "B\ § =8 . and jungle green. black or white. Q \ " Street Floor—th Street Second Floor—8port Shop—7ith Street .LANSBURGH & BRO—7th, Sth AND E

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