Evening Star Newspaper, October 10, 1929, Page 29

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)

SEAMEN'S WELFARE CONFERENCE OPENS Gorging Is Not Necessary, Doctor Tells THE va;:mfié s"rAit,:H L%Aggfiierdfi, Sb. FISHBEIN FLAYS FOOD FADDIST IN ADVOCATING A-1 APPETITE SHELL OIL CHAIRMAN VIEWS U. S FIELDS Viscount Bearsted Arrives in Amer- ica Imcognito and Now including M. Samuel em-nlu, & 00 bankers, and the Alliance ice Co. He plans to return to New York. the middIe of November anq to sail for home on the Majestic De- cember 7. SKIPPER WHO SHOT CREW GETS FREEDOM ON BOND Communist and Union Workers C. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1929. 12 MEN HURT IN RIOT |5l ‘Goion ssaiing -tne Znier. NEAR CHICAGO LOOP Fight It Out in Streets. nluuul udm Garment .. Workers" Union as a “sell out and scab agency. Four men, all members of the first Eaup were arrested on charges grow- out of the sluggings and stlbbln‘ .- Snowslides Ruin Chilean Baths. By Cable to The Star. $25,000. The Chillan baths have President Carlos Ibanes Summer vacations there uh popular with residents of : Zave bon Bltingo, SBANTIAGO, Chile, October 10.— Heavy snowslides have destroyed the mineral water baths neat Chillan in the Andes, 323 miles south of here, according to_reports reaching Santiago yesterday. Damage was estimated at Restauranteurs in Urging Adherence to Balanced Meal: substances — “breakfasts that will in- clude fresh fruit, cereal, milk, butter, ¥ bread and perhaps eggs and ham or day by Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of [5acon; a luncheon that will have a salad the American Medical Journal, Chicago, |and some vegetables and something to speaking before a session of the Na-|sustain energy, and a dinner that is tional Restaurant Association conven-|complete from soup to nuts.” “This does not mean that the human being must gm'gl himself with food,” he warned. e number of calories necessary to sustain life has been care- fully estimated. What is needed is a varfed diet that will appeal to the pe!lu and sugplv all the essentials.” Some day, Dr. Fishbein predicted, the wise restaurateur “is going to have a rest room adjact to his cafe, where the tired business man. the nervously strain- ed s(enos!'lrhcl’ or the exhausted me- chanic will lie quietly 10 or 15 minutes | before and after the noon luncheon.” | meeting, which may continue for two e as| or thres weeks. (1) Regulation of hours of work| Alr mail service has been inaugurated satisfled_with the representation sent | aboard ship between Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, DY the British trade union, taking the | (2) Protection of scamen in case of hannesburg Biirban, ‘Botith ALrh position that these were not truly rep-| sickness or injury. Tesentatives of the seamen. (3) The seamen’s welfare in port. Edquardo Aunos Peres, minister of| (4) The minimum professional re- Jabor and social welfare in Spain, was quirements for captains, navigating and elected president of the conference. engineer officers in charge of Iat:htl‘ TFour topics are on the agenda of the i aboard merchant ships. | In the Spirrt of Autumn Is in Far West. Four Are Arrested. 31 Maritime Nations Have Representatives at Meet- ing at Geneva Parley. Pirto Rican, Who Crossed Atlantic in 36-Foot Sloop, Is Held in Sailor's Death. By the Assoclated Press. MADRID, October 10.— Dispatches from San Lucar de Barrameda yester- day announced that Dr. Prancesco C. Franceschi, Porto Rican skipper of a 36-foot sloop which crossed the Atlantic persed the rioters. last August, had been provisionally freed The trouble started from handbiils from jail under bond. He had been | . under arrest since early in September on, charges growing out of the death of 675 C. Sts SW. S& Fla Ave NE Angel Carbo Rivera, the sole member 5021 Ga A NW, The “Tropic” of his crew, soon after the sloop reached | —in black or_brown i B sk 3|4"3|6 SEVENTH ST..NW. fi g' b | THISISIT!... . LR GREAT ol COATS || In All Washington there is no Event to Compare || with this Coat Sale . . . . By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 10.—Eleven men were slugged and another stabbed in a clash on the west edge of the Loop last night between union workers and a group which the unionists regarded as communistie. There was fighting in the streets, and hundreds of men and women re- fused to leave factories in which they are t‘mgloyed until police had dis- By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 10.—Viscount Bearsted, chairman of the Shell Trad- ing & Transport Co. and a director of the Shell Union Corporation, arrived in this country incognito on September 27 and is now in the Far West, the Asso- clated Press learned last night. He is accompanied by Lady Bearsted, and this is his second visit to the United States, the first trip, of short duration, being made about seven years ago. Inspection of the Shell Union prop- erties in California and Texas is the primary purpose of Viscount Bearsted's visit,. but it is belleved that while in this country he will take the opportun- ity of conferring with American oil executives on th egeneral problem of ofl curtailment and to watch the operation of the California plan. The Shell Union interests recently have entered upon an aggressive penetration of the retail fleld, particularly in the East. ‘The Shell-Dutch group of compan! is the largest in the world under single Viscount Bearsted, who 1is 47, also is chairman of the Venezuelan ofi ncession and a director in nearly 30 1315 New York Ave. Frank P. Fenwick, Prop. FRIDAY SPECIALS “LUNCHEON” Grilled French By the Associated Press. LOUISVILLE, Ky., October 10.—The food faddist was called a “menace” to- By the Asscciated Press. GENEVA, October 10.—Representa- tives of 31 maritime countries today be- | gan here a discussion of questions con- | tion. Eha " " , | Asserting that “faddism has no place il 9r°'°.f"°"w‘"d .“,f""““‘:f‘m foodism,” Dr. Fishbein said that “the seamen, with'a view to arriving ultl-| 054 f9ddist is especially a menace be- mately at international agreements.| cause he invariably tries to bring other This meeting is the thirteenth session | eople around to his point of view. of the international labor conference | Nothing ruins the appetite like an ora- and the third of those devoted exclu- tion on digestion and indigestion deliv- ely to maritime subjects. It con- a meal.” ered by a food fanatic in the course of tinues the work of the sessions at Genoa | Modern science, he said, urges a bal- in 1920 and Geneva in 1926. ~ janced meal, containing a variety of food Much perplexity was caused by dis- — — closure lrl British ship owners w not represented at the conference, though present at Geneva. Later it understood that the owners were dis- FOR RENT Two Rooms, Kitchen, Bath and Recepticn R 0 o m. Electric Refrigera- tion. $65.00 per month THE ARGONNE 16th & Columbia Rd. Chips Roast Lamb, Carrots and “DINNER” Fillet of Sole, Tartar tatoes. . . L as Ally Cnllr o0 S145 gal. attempted to attack the skinper Fran- ceschi was said to have shot the man, who then fell overboas FOOT INSURANCE FOR THE FUTURE Insured Comfort Through a Perfect Fitting of the Arch 7 It's true that Foot Saver's new models stand proudly among fashion's favorites. But to the woman who has been buying style shoes at the expense of foot-ease, we whisper a reas- suring secret. For Foot Savers bring a complete fatigue-bans ishing comfort to the most tem- Simple beauty of line; rich, supple leather and very fine workmanship, distinguish < these strietly tailored bl‘!. They are enve[ope and vaga —pouch in shape, extremely roomy with flaps over /top. wide gussets. In Black, Tan and Navy. peramental arch and ankle— via a patented, inbuilt con- struction that's totally invisible. Foot _Saver Shoes R ICHS Masl Orders Pregaid Established 1876 WLy 1314-16-18 F Street N.W. A Reasonable Deposit and a payment now and then will hold any coat until delivery is desired Unquestionably, you will approve of our $59 Coat Sale . .. it couldn’t be otherwise, considering the mas- terful values offered. We purposely have refraind from stating what these, coats are actually worth— but we want to assure you that it will be impsosible to duplicate coats as fine as these later in the season at $59 . . . they will command far higher prices. Large and luxurious' FUR SETS trim these coats. The materials are Silvertone, Norma, Vona, Broad- tail, Hyglo and Velvet . .. and the linings are of heavy silk crepe. Sizes for MISSES & WOMEN Individuality- Is the Keynote of Saks Coat Display A Companion Event FUR COATS 0 Priced at half and less what you would judge them to be worth Your Choice of Coats in Selected Natural Muskrat, - Leopard Cat, = Opossum, Mink Marmot, Blonde Pony, Russet Pony, Beaver Dyed Coney, Seal Dyed Coney, Squirrel Dyed Coney Having maintained for many years, an unparal- leled display of Fur Coats —Saks now brings Coats of Cloth to the forefront— adding to a wealth of se- lection, already acknowl- edged to be the finest in Washington. “Listen In” wolo WMAL this Friday evening from to 'ctock, "Saks Fur Co Musical Emissaries wtll Seiiniras vregram, FUR CO. FURRIERS SINCE 1888 Self trimmed .. .or with trimmings ?f PLATINUM FOX BROWN FOX SQUIRREL RUSSIAN FITCH s TWELFTH STREET BTN B MRS il

Other pages from this issue: