Evening Star Newspaper, June 20, 1930, Page 28

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B—12 #a CRUSERCARRER SHP NAY BEBULT BIG NAVY YARD CUT PLANNED FOR FAL THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1930. THE HECHT CO. 400 already have been separated from Ithe Washington Navy Yard as the first | to feel the pinch of the slackening up process. Washington Navy Yard offi- cials recently e:q:hmed that the 400 reduction will take care of cuts pro- posed for this fiscal year, which ends Jon June_30. | .Navy Department officials said today | that the Washington Navy rd had | taken on some 1500 additional men when new work came in for guns under 're intimations that this e cruiser building program. There |lation of Massach Hybrid Vessel, Able to Fight,|Veterans to Get Preferencei;{; MASSACHUSETTS GAIN IN POPULATION SHOWN | p1crence Meyers Charges she siip.| Total Placed at 4,364,972, an In-! create of 13.3 Per Cent Over 1820 Figures. BOSTON, June 20 (#).—The [ SUES D. C. FOR $25,000 ped on Icy Sidewalk. yesterday for $25,000 damages in the Dis- | trict Supreme Court by Florence Meyers, | ‘15’25 . Park road, for alleged personal jur! PIpu he says she fell on the fcy sidewalk |8l usetts is 4,364,972, a | of the 1500 block of Van Buren street Tk Was | gain of 512,616, or 13.3 per cent, sii o December 6 last. I The District of Columbia was sued | done too rapidly, and that now a read- | She is represented by . F STREET AT SEVENTH NATIONAL CHILDREN’S DAY, JUNE 21st as 300 Employes Face Discharge. Yet Housing Airplanes, Considered. order. | ures from the 16 census districts in the | e | "nsmnll mrmor}:1 picture thlndun of Be; » | lin, Germany, have appealed to munis roayh the exception of several of the | g authoritics fo abojieh the enteria Under the separation policy being | State yesterday disclosed. pursued here and elsewhere veterans of | S MR ety | the Government's armed forces will be | Jarger textile and shoe manufacturing By the Associated Press. Plans for a drastically different | Navy Yard will be discharged late in|provided their hybrid fighting ship are occupying the | the Summer or early in the Fall under | Feached 80 per cent. == Navy's designers. It would be a com- | bination cruiser and aircraft carrier, | capable of engaging in a running battle as well as launching more than two dozen airplanes for scouting or combat | It would be of a radical design, in | that its large guns and their number would place it in the fighting class, yet & landing platform on its deck would | equip it to carry from three to six| Some 300 employes of the Washington the tentative program of the Navy De- partment, it was learned today, ow! to the reduction in orders at the Na Gun Factory, due to the Navy's re- duced building program. Naval officials are now going forward with plans which will in the various trades will be given fur- loughs and later dropped from the roll. The reductions here are looked for in August or September. Reductions are likewise slated for various parts of the embrace all | trades and men deemed least efficient | given preferential treatment In being | centers. gains e i ment tax during the Summer. permitied to remain on the pay roll, | ne o Seins, were recorded in all the | e —tX- S8 0 SUMML efficiency rating has | FINANCE MINISTENF{QUITS | German President Accepts Resig- | nation of Dr. Moldenhauer. BERLIN, June 20 (#).— President |von Hindenburg today accepted the resignation of Dr. Moldenhauer, min- | The President ssl{;d e ister of finance. Premier Bruening to take over times as many airplanes as the most country and the cuts locally will bring | functions of the finance office pending | modern cruisers now afloat. Instead of launching its planes from & distance and running from an ut-] tack, as the existing carriers must, the proposed cruiser-carrier might get into | the melee and let its brood bomb and harrass the enemy while it joined | orthodox cruisers and battleships in | battle. | While some “old-line” naval officers | have expressed opposition to the cruiser- carrier because its effectiveness might be lessened by a reduction in armour | 1o allow for the weight of airplanes, the | Bureau of Aeronautics said that a| 10,000-ton or even a 7,050-ton cruiser- | carrier is the vessel that all nations| soon will be building because of the| mcr,eued effectiveness of airplanes mi battle. Tentative plans for the vessel provide for as many as ten 6-inch guns, as well as storage space of the planes. About | 70 per cent of the deck would be de- | voted to a landing platform, while the | necessary superstructure and two_triple | or quadruple gun turrets or houseal would be grouped in the bow. Other | guns would be at the stern, while lhe: anti-airctaft batteries would be on platfczms at the sides of the landing | platform. A ship &f this type, naval designers | say, would rivt come under the London naval treaty definition of a carrier. The treaty classifies as a carrier any | ship “designed for the specific and exclusive purpose of carrying By June of 1932 the five-year 1 seronautics program will have been completed. There will be more than 1,000 useful airplanes available, more than 500 on ships. Completion of the suthorized 13,800-ton carrier would in- crease the total fleet strength to 575 and the construction of cruiser-carriers would bring the total aerial strength afloat t0 a minimum of 800 airplanes, 35 MINERS KILLED Boviet to Pension Families of Vic- tims of Gas Explosion. KHARKOV, Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, June 20 (#).— Thirty-five miners were killed in a gas explosion at a coal mine in the Artemovsk dis- | trict. | Twenty-nine other miners were in- | jured, nine seriously. The cause of the | explosion has not been ascertained, but | the mine manager was arrested. | The government will pension the | families of the victims. | THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh For the Sportswoman Van Raalte Stockings New “Chine” HOSE 52 (3 for $5.85) Full-fashioned hose of fine rayon and silk weave ara brown, green, beigine and sunray, with new “flextoe.” Imported full-fashioned lisle with 1 cloxroee s 8150 (3 for $4.35) F ull-fashioned ported lisle, with new polka dots.... $2 (3 for $5.85) Silk “Bar Hose ... im- (Main Floor, The Hecht Co.) | the total up to about 700 men, of whom. ' developments. W. STOKES SAMMONS The “Good Old Summer Time” —is usually rough on Window Shades «..but, not on Dupont Tontine Shades. Soil, sun, rain or time cannot mar their endur- during beauty. Estimates Gladly Submitted Shade your home with Dy Pont Tontine factory-made- to-measure shades and en- joy your home more. | Or our phone| | [ | | | | | | | | | | | | | 1 | i | | | | | | | THE HECHT CO. F Street < The Ne at Seventh i Shouldaire Jantzen Bathing Suit $ 5.50 and $6 When Fashion said, “In a bathing suit « . . brevity is the soul of smartness” . .. she meant the Jantzen Shouldaire model. It permits an even suntan One and two piece models in black, navy, jade, sapphire, capucine and suntan cardinal. to 46. Sizes 34 Also ... Web-Foots at $4 Novelty One and Two Piece Suits, $2.95 to $15 Caps, 20c to $1 Shoes, 79¢, $1.25 and $2.95 Bags, 39¢ to $1.95 (Women's Sport Shop, Main Floor, The Hecht Co.) ® Pastel Leather Handbags $9.95 Soft calf leather pouches, back-strap type with enamel frame and lift-lock. Silk lined, fitted with swing purse and mirror. Nile green, blue, orchid beige and other pastels. (Main Floor, The Hecht Co.) - J AR | | ALL-EXPENSE TOUR “61” Enamel Easily applied; dries in hours. Variety of colors to select from. MEtro. 0151 || , Leave 7th Street Whart Mon. and sat - || 45 m (Standard time).” Minimum cost; & = || $12.12 per person. = All information, literature, etc. af e 607-609 C St. Phone for Color Card B WASHINGTON to BALTIMORE By Boat and Rail $12.12 Round Trip Follow the pioneers through the his- torically interesting country. 320 miles of 4 delightful cruising—down _the Potomac, - up the Chesapeake Bay. Return by fast Penna. R. R. trains Two nights and a day on water. First - class _accommodations, _excellent meals. congenial people Modern steam- ers Dorchester and Talbot L a8t Penna. R. R City Ticket Office, 613 14th st. nw. or Agent's Office, Whart, Balto. & Va. Steamboat Co. Tth Street THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh It’s ea sy to dress the part in these important new Frocks $ |6.50 We make it easy for you ... just come in and select your this complete collection. favorite style and color from All fashion successes. Carefully assembled to correctly answer every demand of a sura mer day. Sports styles, to the manner made; sophisticated modes for street; and fluffy, frilly summer afternoon prints; plain shad and navy. Wash Silks Shantung Coastline Stripes Flat Crepe For Misses, things that typify glamorous and -evenings. Gorgeous es, white and pastels and black Plain or Printed Flat Crepe Plain or Figured Chiffon Polka Dots Dash and Dots Women and Little Women (Third Floor, The Hecht Co.) Every Type New Hat “Floppy" dress hats, brimmed sports and suit hats, new versions of the beret, youth- ful modes, hats especlally for the matron, Linen, felt, coarse straw, hair lace, panama, sudanette, balipan and stitch- ed silk. White, pastels, black and navy. All head sizes. *2 (Third Floor, The Hecht Co.) Jr. Misses’ Charming new styles. flat crepes, silk piques and printed silks. New- est colors and combinations Silk Frocks Polka dots, Shantung, $5.95 Sizes 13, 15, 17 and 19 (Third Floor, The Hecht Co.) Polo Shirts—Periectly taiored, of fine fortable and absorbent and maize; colors guaranteed washable. (Women's fportsws cotton lisle mesh. .. cool, com- $ Tn white, pirk, blue, green Sizes 34 to 42 '+ Main Floor, The Hecht Co.) | justment, to lower personnel figures is in | 1920, compilation of partly revised fig- |Attorney George P. Lemm. Special Sale of Boys’ Beach and Sun Suits Linens, broadclfiths, jeans and silk pongees. Short-sleeve and sleeveless styles. In blue, tan, green, rose and combination ef- fects. Sizes 3 to 8 years. (Becond Floor, The Hecht Co.) Boys’ Sport Knickers $ | .65 Belgian and Irish linens. Wide band and buckle at knee. Belt loops and deep pockets. White, tan and gray, in plain and novelty plaids. Size 7 to 18 years. (Second Floor, The Hecht Co.) e e ——— Boys’ Speed Style Bathing Suits $]-95 All wool. 1In the snappy chest and club models. Some color solid tones of Copen blue, Kelly green, Jockey, Navy and black. 6 to 16 years. combinations. Others in Size (Becond Floor, The Hecht Co.) Boys’ Polo Shirts ¥ Light and medium weights. With short or long sleeves. In shades to match his knickers. Copen blue, green, canary, tan and brown. Size 8to 16 years. (Second Floor, The Hecht Co.) Boys’ and Girls’ $4 Shoes $2.95 Girls’ patent leather, 1-strap ’ ¥ pumps and tan oxfords with con- trasting lizard trim. Sizes 8% to 2. Boys' tan oxfords.' Leather soles and rubber heels. Sizes 10 to 13%; and 1 to 6. (Becond Floor, The Hecht Co.) Junior Misses’ S5 Sports and Dress Shoes $3.65 Patent le:ther 1-strap pumps for dress. Sport oxfords of Congo elk with gristle rubber soles and heels. Sizes 215 to 7 (Becond Floor, The Hecht Co.)

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