Evening Star Newspaper, July 14, 1930, Page 15

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THE - EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, HOOVER MOUNTAIN SCHOOL TERM OVER Pupils Hope President Can Attend Exercises on Eriday. & 1neld By the Associated Press | Fifteen mounfain children who have fearned their “rfading and writing and *rithmetic” at the school which Presi- dent and Mrs. Hoover established near | their wn lodga-in Virginia are to hold ! their first commencement on Friday. the big day near, the mountain hoping anxiously that the Chief | Executive and Mrs. Hoover will be able | to attend the exercises But the White House has been unable | to give assurance of this, because so | long as the Senate is in session Mr. | Hoover never knows until the last min- | ute whether he will be able to leave the | Capital. | Twenty-two pupils first enrolled, but | with some being called home to heip on | the farm and others dropping out for | other causes only 15 have been able to remain faithful to their desire for learn- | g | Miss Christine Vest, the teacher, now 18 closing the school for the Summer 0 that they can go back to their homes, where most of them are needed, and be ready to return in September. WOULD-BE ASSASSIN | INVOLVES OTHERS| Man Who Shot Ortiz Rubio Makes Declarations After Audience. i 8y the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, July 14.-Daniel Plores, who shot and wounded Presi-| dent Ortiz Rubio in the jaw on inaug- | uration_day, February 5, recently had an audience with the president and since has made important declarations to the authorities that probably will tnvolve other persons in the attempted | assassination. This notice was communicated to the press vesterday, but District Judge Jose Caballero, in charge of the Flores case, refused to disclose the details of the | declarations. The young man has been held In the penitentiary since the shooting and is ewaiting trial. WHALE BUMPS SHIP | NEW YORK. July 14 (#).—Passengers of the liner Samaria, which docked yesterday, were still excited about 1| fish story enacted before their eyes | Friday. | A whale of mammoth proportions | swam alongside the ship, dove below | the surface and bumped its head vio- lently against the ships sharp prow. In | a second the zea for a hundred feet around was rec with blood. The pas- sengers believed the whale was killed. The Style . . . The Time . . . The Opportunity 200 BEAUTIFUL HATS All Priced Below Their Value If you desire a smart hat of quality and individuality, attend $3.95 $10 to $12 Values $16.50 e $12.50 to MRS. JAMES M. THOMSON, Daughter of the late Speaker Champ Clark, who, with Mr. Thomson, is o\‘cupyln‘& | a house at Summitt Point, W. Va., for the Summer. —Underwood Photo. FLYER’S FATHER DIES: |REPORTS CARROLL BARRED Thomas Saul, 87, Rallied From Illness After Son’s Success. DUBLIN, Ireland, July 14 (#).— Thomas Saul, father of Capt. J. Pat- rick Saul, navigator of the airplane Southern Cross on its transatlantic flight from Ireland to America, died here Saturday. He was 87 years old. Capt. Saul's father was critically 11l at the time of the Southern Cross’ fiight | last month, but rallied on receipt of | news that the plane had reached New York. The father of Squadron Leader | Charles Kingsford-Smith, flight leader, was confined to his bed after the flight | from the -effects of excitement and| strain. Mr. Kingsford-Smith was at flsiyfiey. New South Wales, during the ight. this sale tomorrow LONDON, July 14 (#)—The Daily Herald, Labor government organ, yes- terday said that British port authori- ties had been instructed to refuse ad. mittance to England to Earl Carroll, New York theatrical producer, if he should attempt to land. The newspaper says that the order was apparently issued in case Carroll should attempt to escape a warrant for his arrest in connection with his pres- ent trial for the alleged immorality of his “Vaniti YOU’D BE SURPRISED At the improvement that has been made in everggeens by regular feed- ing with CARBIUM PLANT FOOD. Three cents a pound in any quantity. Delivery charge for quantities less than 50 pounds. CONGER BROS. Distributors for the District of Columbia 23rd Street & New York Avenue District 9775 57.50 $16.50 to $25 Values Values MOSES—FIRST FLOOR. W. B. Moses & Sons Eleventh Street at F Fine mattresses with the felt ueually cost from If you buy direct from our factor: cushion springs beneath $39.50 to $44.80. you get these cushion-spring matiresses for only $29.50—a saving of $10.00 or more. equal of any in buoyancy These mattresses are the and long wear. Tickings in many charming patterns. Or ‘we can make these resilient mattresses out of your old ones at a cost of only $15.00 to $22.50. They will have the same type of sprin, that enshion every curve of the body, covered with layer after layer of downy felt or tesilient hair. save $20.00 or more. You Box springs and pillows rentvated or made to erder at factory prices. ZAB ANS Mattress & Box Spring 908 ESt,N.W. ;5 e + & NATIONAL 9411 - Sewing Machines Reconditioned Used and Demonstrated Treadles As Low As. .. 87.!5 Electric Portabl As Low As........ Eléctric Consol $90.00 iy i 2D ALL MAKES Cleaned—Oiled sz,so Adjusted WHITE SEWING MACHINE CO. 800 H Street N.W. Phone Metropolit. 58.85 stock of Cousins Shoes. low price, $8.85. MOURNERS SWOON AT MINERS’ FUNERAL Joint Service Held for 99 of 152 Believed Lost-in German Disaster. By the Associated Press. HAUSDORF, Germany, July 14— More than 50 persons swooned yester- day as 99 victims of the coal mine dis- aster near Neurode last Wednesday were laid to rest with elaborate cere- monies. The disaster was believed to "have cost about 152 lives, 104 of the bedies having been recovered. ‘The ceremonies were attended by more than 20,000 mourners, including Tepresentatives of the Governor and | numerous workmen's delegations, who came by automobile from all parts of Germany. The obsequies began with music by the United Miners' Band from the Silesian coal district. Archepiscopal Vicar General .Dit- tert officiated at the mass, which was followed by a requiem. Funeral orations by local Catholic and Protestant clergymen were de- livered next. The ceremonies ended with singing by the United Choral Society. —_— s ‘The Rockefeller Foundation has just given $3,500,000 to Cambridge Univer- sity in England, the university having raised $2,350,000 in addition. Philipsborn Eleventh St.—Between F & G The second week of Our July Clear- ance Brings Sum- mer’s Own Styles at Drastic Reductions. $6.50 White Kid Now $4.75 Ties, Pumps, Straps and Oxfords for street, sport and dress—spike and Cuban heels. $6.50 Linen Footwear Reduced Now _$4.75 In smart pump and ox- ford styles—spike or Cuban heels—most all sizes. Can be dyed to match your favorite Summer frock. Slight additional cost. $6.50 French Sandals & Oxfords One straps, center straps and oxford styles. ‘White or beige, tones “or trimmed with beige, brown, black or white—Cuban and- Junior Louis ~heels—sizes some- what broken. Street Floor. solid JULY CLEARANCE inr JShoes Regular $12.50 to $18.50 Styles $|0.85 This clearance includes practically our entire Many of them are advance Fall styles at reduced prices. Of especial importance is the reduction on white shoes, giving almost unlimited selection at the new $12:85 This Is Our Regular Twice-Yearly Sale MOSES—SECOND FLOOR W. . Moses & Sons F Street at Eleventh D. C., MO HAYS IN GERMANY ° “Film Pope” Confers on Settlement of Patent Disputes. BERLIN, July 14 (#).--Will H. Hays. described in the Berlin press as “the film Pope of America,” arrived here Saturday night from Paris, where he took part in a film conference that brought a settlement of patent and other rights disputed by German and American movie interests. He declined to comment on the agree- ment reached. He said his purpose was to get a first-hand knowledge of mo- tion picture conditions in Germany and “to exchange views with some of those in Germany who are contributing so much to the development of the mo- tion picture art.” Homemade Plane Falls. Harold Wean, 30 Columbus, was killed yesterday when his homemade airplane which Wean tested for the first time Saturday, spiralled into a tailspin at an altitude of about 600 feet and plunged into a field. THE COLLIER INN Columbia Rd. at 18th St. N.W. RY our delicious Chicken Salad for your next Home Party— also Sandwiches, Ice Cream and Pastries—s complete and satisfying catering service—sure to please you. 9 AM. to 6 P.M. AY, JULY COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 14 (#).—J. | crashed near Port Columbus. The plane, | W. SINCE 1861—SIXTY-NINE YEARS OF PUBLIC CONFIDENCE 14, 1930. B3 several men but eluded them and hid In the vessel's hold. argument over a deck chair. Police rescued Filomena when the 2,000 aboard the boat attempted to lynch him, Bystanders grabbed the revolver from Filomena and he was seized and fallen veral men. Zic's condition EXCURSIONIST IS SHOT Mob Threatens to Lynch Man Who Quarreled Over Deck Chair. BEAR MOUNTAIN, N. Y. July 14| 0PO% bY se (). —Joseph Zec, 28, of New York, was shot through the chest last night on |p, the excursion steamer, Clermont, John Filomena, 30, also of New YOrK. | jn When the two’became engaged in an | B 8 il et i o e Railroad Freight Declines. | _Preight traffic for May on class 1 | rallroads aggregated 36,576.433,000 net be serious. | ton miles, & reduction of 12.6 per cent A woman seized the gun Pllomena |as compared with May, The ad used and ran with it to a lower | figures were compiled by the Bureau of when a threat was made to shoot | Raflway Economics, maintained here by man with it She was pursued by the carriers. Reupholstering, Refinishing Ask About Our Easy Monthly Payment Plan Tapestries, Mohair Brocades and Velours Also. Chair Caneing and Porch Rockers Splinted by Our Ex- perts at the Now Pre- vailing Low Prices for Two Days Only. Write, Phone or Call Metropolitan 2062 Estimates and Samples Given Free Clay Armstrong Upholsterer 1235 10th St. N.W. GREENBURG'S Young Ladies’ Shop 1229 G St. N.W. Vacation Sale Special! Chiffons Georgeties Regular $10.00 to $15 Values DRESSES . Woses & Sons 5-Piece Suity A::: uites 3-Piece Overstuffed Suites Dining Room Chairs F Street at Eleventh National 3770 It’s the Living Room that Makes a House Feel Like Home 1 T ) n G HERE is one room that is essential to a home whether it be a tiny apartment or a massive house—the living room. Here should be the pleasantest place there is. A place which the members of your family look to for companionship, for physical relaxation in the comfortable living room suite, for mental relaxa- tion in fills that its style. E $195 This two-piece suite in mohair or denim ful- down-filled cushioned chairs—of refinement and beauty in the dignity, charm and elegance of the air of hominess given by tasteful upholstered furniture. This Embassy Suite EMBASSY LI R Liiammmm FACTS You Should Know About Embassy Furniture n Lawson Style In Mohair $245 Denim All Covered Frames are of oak, maple, birch or magnolia, air and kiln dried. All Joints and Corners are double doweled and corner blocked. All Exposed Wood is solid mahogany, with two exceptions, where feet or back legs are magnolia or gum, All Carvings are solid mahogany. Specific Web Bottom on every piece, the strain of webbing on tacks being relieved by stout wire stirrups. This prevents sag- ging due to tacks pulling out. . | The Metal Plate sketched above is found on every plece. It is our guarantee of quallty. = requirement of comfort in its deep, MOSES—SIXTH FLOOR * MIBASXY Living Room IFurniture lts Beauty Made Permanent By Scientific Construction

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