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ntd ® % THE EVENING STAR. WASHIN I'ON, D. C., TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1930. D.C. AIRPORT AREA HELD FREE OF FOG Field Designated Is Reported ARRIED FIFTY YEARS e OVER FREE RAN | Celebration of French Evac- | GERMANY JUBILANT | Senate Agricultural Group Ap-I proves Resolution to Appropri- ate $125,000 for Task. By the Associated Press. A Federal investigation of declines in FEDERAL COTTON PRICE | BOY WRITES LIFE OF HOOVER SLUMP INQUIRY ASKED | S Sheppard, Democrat, Texas, would be conducted by the Department of Agri- culture through the grain futures ad ministration, ~ A sum of $125,000 would be authorized for the work. The investigators would ascertain the cause of the cotton price slumps, the amount of short selling on the ex- changes, who did the short selling. its effect and public participation in “fu- tures” and whether “the majority of | the public lost or won on the deal.” The report would be made to the cotton prices In 1916, 1926, 1927, 1928. | Senate at the end of the inquiry, 1920 and the first half of 1930 would be g as Clear for Most of the Winter. In the Washingtn Airport-Hoover Field area, designed by the Joint Congressional Afrport Comnittee for the National Capital's airport, dense urred only two days per month du the Winter and less during othe sons. the aeronautics branch, Dep: nt ot Commerce, stated in an -a v bulletin_issued today describing shington Afrport for the benefit of ation’s aviators, oversy over the prevalence of marked the long-continued | hsideration ¢f an official airport for National Capital. In its bulletin, fogs ry, inclusive; one day per menth during February, March, ‘April anfl September, and infrequently -dur- ing the remainder of the ) fight fogs average y \ from October to January | four days per month during| ruary, March, April and Septem 4 one day per month during the r mfinder of the year, it is stated. Most fofs occur between daybreak and 10 MRANDAMR&:‘STROBEL g oo Notember 1o apei, meneive:WEDDED FIFTY YEARS bu$ from November to April, inclu: fofs are almost equally frequent be- twPen noon and midnight, it was — podnted out o s She bulletin contains two drawings, | Surrounded by Three Generations, showing the position of the airport | Washington Couple Elaborately bJ a uation Orderly in Main. ; Paris Has Misgivings. | By the Associated Press. | BERLIN, July 1.—Sixty million Ger- | mans continued today to express their | | joy at the liberation of the Rhineland. | With the exception of a few isolated | ses, celebration of yesterday's evac- uation by the French was without dis- orders. | Breslau Fascists supplied a note of | discord when during a military tattoo | | they started street rows. A number of | were injured and others ar- | The Mayence celebrations wound up | in "some parts of the city in attempts | to setile old scores. One cafe owned | by a Separatist was stormed by & | crowd. Its windows were smashed and { otner damage caused before the newly | | arrived Hessian police could quell the | disturbance. | aiserslautern witnessed a severe | clash in which Republicans invaded | homes of former Scparatists and | wrecked their possession, being ex- | pelled by streams from fire hose. A | Separatist was said to have shot him- self later. | aayety. was the dominant | note of the celebrations. All over Ger- SEERSVAGEShALE £ 2 howeve: as they had clanged their clarion of release at midnight. In Berlin and else- where the stock exchanges suspended business 15 minutes today while the | | [ showing in detail the shape of the field | members were addressed by committee | William J. Marsh, jr. (right), 11, of Milford, Conn., wrote a biography of made under a resolution day by the Senate Agriculture Com- mittee. The inquiry proposed approved to- | ‘The end or purpose of war is peace, and the end or purpose of work is by Senator leisure. @he Foening Htar Bhaves o Collins’ Pharmacy—20th & R. I. Ave. N.E. Is a Star Branch Office ADVERTISENENTS [ RECEIVED HERE If you find it inconvenient to come to the Main Office with Classified Advertisements for The Star you can leave them at a Branch Office—of which there s one in practically every neighborhood in and around or “ih relation to the city and the other Celebrate Golden Anniversary. chairmen. | President Hoover and printed it on his own printing press. His brother Charles, The capital was bedecked with bunt- | 9, is his assistant and aided in setting up and printing the book, which is a neat ing which floated even from the street | yolume in pale blue paper with a cloth back and titles and other lettering in gold. cars. There were Republican pennants | gty oo el upon many private houses, with & | ——— b it s striking _display of the old imperial | colors. Others compromised on the se- | And women assembled in this region vere black and white ensign of Prussia. | solemnly reaffirm their loyalty to the Special children's festivities were ar- | Fatherland in the steadfast hope that | ¥ ranged in all schools. Military services | their hour of liberation may strike Ahomecoming with big headlines: “The were held in both Protestant and Cath- | sc0n. | Rhine Ts Free” and with a minute olic garrison churches. X i ‘(g;:;rr:p':lcnn of the last hours at of anthracite coa tors e A battery of four feld pleces fired & | ence. O e AL OTS AT MINCTS | calute of 21 guns in the Lustgarten, the Obtained the rights to exploit the Saar | Press opinions were divided, the right effort to formulate a new wage and |first time a salute had been fired there coal mines as compensation for the ! expressing strong fear, with _the vking anreement to take the Sinca st | since January 27, 1914, the Kaiser's |destruction of coal mines in the north moderates taking the attitude of Petit the one expiring August 31. | birthday, when 101 guns were fired. A | of France during the World ‘War. Journal, which said: “Profound uneasi- its ‘Washington. immediate surroundings ‘Lewis, Leader of Anthracite | Miners, Still Absent From Sessions. and and | obgtructions | ©On the reverse side is a printed de- | scription of the field and its facilities, | meteorological data and other perti- nent information. The field is de- scribed as of irregular shape, 115 acres in extent, with a landing area 1,600 by 1.400 by 2,000 feet in the three prirtcipal gdirections. The field has no landing strips or runways but is available for landings in all directions on the entire field, according to the bulletin. The field has sod surface, is level and is naturally drained. The field charges no landing fee and There are no fees in connec- tion with Branch Office serv- ice; only regular rates are charged. | Surrounded by three generations of their, descendants, Mr. and Mrs. Fred | w. trobel Sunday night celebrated their golden wedding anniversary, at their home, 4406 New Hnmpfihirc‘ avenue. | An engineer of nearly 40 years' serv- ice on the Southern Railway, Mr. Strobel himself observed the anniver- | by smoking & 50-cent cigar which | a fon-in-law, George W. Petty, gave him with the promise that he would government at 6 a.m. today by repre- sentatives of the foreign office. | The Paris morning papers greeted the THE ABOVE SIGN s DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH BY the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 1.—Representatives The Star prints such an over- whelmingly greater volume of Classified ~ Advertising every day than any other Washing- ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give Under the treaty of Versailles, France has personnel for servicing facilities | Present him with a dollar Smoke when for repairs and spare parts, it is stated | the * one-hundredth anniversary s in the bulletin. First aid equipment | reached. is on hand. Seven of the celebrating couple's| scHo(fiLAég R’OOM | They were Charles Augustus Strobel, IN THE OUT-0’-DOORS John L. Lewis, international union |review of the Berlin garrison on the president, still was missing, detained in | Moabit drill ground followed. Springfieid, Til., by an injury to his wife, | There was a pilgrimage today to the Subjects up for discussion today were |grave of the late Chancellor Strese- not announced. Yesterday the miners | mann, when wreaths from all parts of | Mrs. George W Petty, Mrs. Harvey J. | presented their demands, as outlined by | the country, which arrived this fore- ‘Woodward Students Under Y, M. bel and Mrs, Richard Coleman, all of | informally, The general economic situa- |# cordon to hold back the great crowds. Washington. Two 4 sons-in-law, Mr. | tion also was reviewed | A bust of Dr. Stresemann in the Relch- | Petty and Mr. Grant also were present.| The conference is being donducted | $tag Bufldmv‘ l_mcn.v‘,“u unve ¥ The eighth child, Mrs. Agnes Miller of | informally and without & chaifman. Foreign Minister “f;“ AUk i Baen Nevada was unable to come to Wash-| C. J. Golden, seeretary of the concilia- | The cele hmttordx m]t e ‘H[‘n 2 o ington. Other gliests at the re-union |tion board, was named ,eérmanent sec- staged under ideal conditions. | heiedea 92 Tgfandchildren and . five | retary of the conference and empowered | Summer night was starlit and beacons ness troubles the continent as liberation [of “the German territories s ae- complished. In every country of Europe friends of peace have their eyes turned toward Berlin.” PARIS GREETS GENERAL. PARIS, * July 1 (#)—Paul Tirard, president of the Rhineland Commission, and_Gen. Guillaumat, commander of . = the French army of the Rhineland, were| Japanese workers are protesting | welcomed home in the name of the! against the recent wage reductions. & OFFICES you the best results, “Around the Corner” is a Star Branch Office | p vel his last Grant, Fred W. Strobel, jr.; John Qus- | the May tri-district convention at | noon. were placed on_or near | tavus 'Strobel, rnest Eberhardt. Stro. | Hazelton, Pa.. which were discussed |rebting place, while the police formed C. A. Auspices at Camp Letts Adopt New Education Method. School will have no terrors for stu- dents of the Woodward School Summer classes this year, for the students, be- ginning today, are gcing to have all o Camp Letts for a class room. Textbooks, and tablets, heretofore banned from the Y. M. C. A. boys’ camp on the Rhode River, near, Annapolis, made their first appearance ‘in the camp today under a new educational plan adopted by the Y. M. C. A. Instead of holding Summer classes inside the four walls of the class rooms at the Central “Y" building here, as has been the custom in the past, the classes opened under the cool shade of lofty trees on the breezy shore n\'orlooklng‘ the river and Cheasapeake Bay. The curriculum includes morning and afternoon dips in the water, with Har- old LaFont, director of the Summer School, leading the swims. Other “elec- tive” subjects are base ball, volley ball, t-nnis, ing of ‘The students are “making up” studies or advancing themselves in preparation for the Winter term. The subjects em- brace studies from the fourth grade through high school. Classes are to be held two hours a day until August 12, excepting Saturdays and Sundays. In inclement weather the students will hold classes on the veranda of the camp bungalow, it was announced by Fred Dawson, assistant director of education of the ¥. M. C. A. Kintner Commissioner. Edwin G. Kintner, jr, 2301 Con- necticut avenue, this city, has been commissioned by the War Department a second lieutenant, Field Artillery, in the Organized Reserves of the Army. The Women | great-grandchildren, and_George Stro- bel, the older brother of Fred. Both Mr. and Mrs, Strobel are na- tives of Washington. BILL TO PROTECT | NAVY OIL IN HOUSE Measure Would Permit Acquisition of Privately-Owned Elk Hills Land. blazed on the heights of Taunus and to put any motion that IS NECESSATY. | pyfe)'and up and ‘down the Rhine, while Fined for “Neglect of Duty.” Ulysses Thomas, 27, Ninth street | southeast, arrested for soliciting parking | protection near Griffith Stadium yes- | terday and then failing to watch the automobiles, was fined $5 by Judge Gus A. Schuldt in Police Court today. | Policeman T. R. Haage of the eighth precinct made the Aarrest upon come | plaints of motorists. It was said that | Thomas had been warned several times ' Hindenburg: prior to the arres “One hundred thousand German men || of thanksgiving throughout the liberat- ed territory. SAAR BASIN TELLS HOPE. ermans in Territory Controlled by France Wire Hindenburg. SAARBRUECKEN, July 1 (#).—In- habitants of the Saar Basin today sent the following telegram to President von By the Associated Press. Legislation contemplated 18 years for he preservation of the Navy's most valuable oil reserve reached the House | today from its Naval Committee. | The bill, designed for the protection | of Reserve No. 1, at EIK Hills, Calif, | will not be pressed at this session. The | committee intended that lis.report to| the House should serve as a declaration of congressional policy. 4 The measure, which was_introduced at the request of the Navy Department by Chairman Britten, would permit the acquisition of privately owned land in the heart of reserve No. 1, efther through exchange or through purchase with Toyalty ofls. Of ‘the 38,068 acres comprising the | reserve, the Government holds 30,996, with 5982 acres patented by private interests and 1,090 leased by private interests. The Standard Oil Co. of California possesses 5,262 acres of the | patented land. j Development of the private lands hf the reserve, it was contended, ‘would reduce the value of the naval:lands _|as reserves through drainage. ’s Shop of the RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F-Street Raleigh Coats for Women B%! Off Smart Raleigh Sport Coats styled right and suitable for Travel, Seashore and Motoring. Exquisite fur trimmed, unttimmed and fi of the usual Rale included. Wolf, Dyed Squirrel fu and wool crepe ne imported fabrics igh character are all Lapin, Caracul and rs. Imported tweeds fabrics. A Park Ride for a Quarter! Leave Dupont Circle Every Night at 8:00—8:30—9:00 Returning, Leave Glen Echo 5—11:00—11:40 A Seat for Everybody No Standees! WASHINGTON COACH COMPANY A SALE weestlex HOS/ERY Through a concession from the manufacturer of this well-known hosiery twice yearly we are enabled to offer Queentex Hosiery at these extremely low prices, Every pair perfect and made of the finest silk. ' %fllllllIIlmlllIHI||III||ll|!ll||||llI|!||III||III|I|I|llI|IIlII|II| s A 'E Cool, Comfortable = - BUSSES § direct to 10: o H 2 2 1. > = = e \9) U1 @) il Style 705—A1l gilk Chiffon, ravel stripe, F'rench heel, re. inforced sole and toe, 4 thread, 42 gauge Regular Price $1.35 Style 100—Silk to welt, ser- vice welght, lisle top, soles ¥ Special Sale Price $1.00 and toes. Irenc Regular Pr Special Sale Price $1.15 Box of 8 Prs. $3.30 Style 707—All silk Chiffon, 4 thread, 45 gauge, picot top, reinforced silk plaited heel, mola to toe, French heel. Regular Price $1.50 Style 703—Super sheer silk Chiffon top to toe, 3 thread, picot ravel stop, French heel, reinforced toe guard, low =andal foot—ideal for eve- ning w Special Sale Price $1.29 Box of 3 Prs. Any Style '§3.78 Regular Price $1.95 Style 743—All silk service weight, 7 thread, 45 gauge, picot ravel gtop, French heel, sandal foof, reinforced toe. Regular Price $1.65 Style 08—Guaranteed Chif- fon, 4 thread. 45 gauge, dou- ble picot top, picot ravel stop, French heel, sandal foot, reinforced toe guard. Regular Price $1.95 Queen Quality Boot Shop 1219 F Street N. W.’ the church bells pealed their anthems | areh | 8 A TR il L al {FE i | BUY THEM A GOOD USED CAR HEN you drive off to the office these warm days in the car does your family have a car for their use? A good used car solves the problem of a family second car at a substantial saving. A good used car can take the kiddies to school or to the play- ground, can do those little odd runs that the wife has to do . . . the stores, shopping, etc. There are many types of good used cars suitable for the family car—coupes, roadsters, sedans and tour- ing models await your inspection in the show rooms of Washington’s automobile dealers. READ THE USED CAR ADVERTISEMENTS The Classified Section of he Sta THE GREAT NEWSPAPER OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL IN