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STEEL HEAD'S PAY 1 STIL SECRET Grace Explainsv‘ Bethlehem “Company Gives Him Both ° Bonus and Salary. By the Associated Press. ‘YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, July 18— The sum Fugene C. Grace receives as| president of the Bethlehem Steel Cor-| poration remained a secret today de- apite an all-day court inquiry by at- torneys seeking to enjoin Bethlehem's merger withi the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. Grace startied the court room when he testified late yesterday that his stipulated salary 15 but $12,000 an- nually after Sheet & Tube counsel had | thwarted efforts to learn his total com- | on through the Bethlehem bonus Russian Ex-General Dies in Paris, After ‘Years of Poverty By the Associated Press. PARIS, July 18.—Lieut. Gen. Constantin De Brummer was once a shining light at the Czar's court. Wednesday he died in a public hospital here after years of pov- erty in Paris, during which time he served as night watchman in a garage, and more recently, as an_invoice clerk. He was an aide-de-camp_and cousin of the late Grand Duke Nicholas. He was 73 years old. CHINESE OFFICIAL ADDRESSES LIONS International Peace Foster- THE EVENI PLAYFUL NG STAR, WASHIN( iTON, D.. C.,-FRIDAY; PRANK DEkAILS PASSENGER TRAIN N and Kellogg Pact. JULY HULL ANONG 2D | LONDON SPEAKERS [lnterparli’amentary Union to| | Censider Security Problems 18, 1930. By the Associated Press. LONDON, July 18.—The royal gal- lery in the House of Lords was packed today when the Interparliamentary Union reassembled for its fifth sitting to consider securty problems and the | Kellogg pact. Twenty speakers were scheduled for today’s session, including Viscount Inouye and Representative Morton D. | Hull of Chicago. | The Chicagoan, in his report, pointed | out that without undertaking to re-' | define neutrality or prove any plan for | its modification it “seemed reasonable to assume that it would be examined widely in the direction of a co-opera- | t “eflort for the discouragement of SEEKS GOVERNORSHIP Former Representative Johnson of | Mississippi Announces Candidacy. JACKSON, Miss., July 18 ().—Paul | B. Johnson, former Representative from | the sixth distriet, announced his candi- | dacy for Governot of Mississippi tn 1831 | today. | The = announcémént brought the avowed candidates to five. : Johnson defedted Gov. Bilbé in & race for Congress a number of years ago. The Governor has not announced his plans- for 1931 ALL-EXPENSE - TOUR WASHINGTON to BALTIMORE By Boat and Rail $12.12 Rofind Trip Pollow the pioneers: through torically !nurrg“nl'{mlml S)' delightful cruising—down _the Potomac, up tl Chesapeake Bay. Return By fast Penna. R. R trains. Two nights on _water. First - class__accammedations _excelient o iodeT the his- Tatles of mod: meals. congenial people. n steam- ers Dorchester_and Wharf Mon., Wed. Leave Tth Street . 5 and ~ Sat., pm. (Standard ' time) on. eic. at Minimum "cost, $12.12 Al information. o R. R. City Ticket Office. 613 14th v. Of Agent's Office, Tth Street The Bank that Makes You a Loan with a Smile The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and practical and fair —it is not necessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. For each $60 or fraction borrowed you agree to de- posit 35 a month Easy to Pay Loans are pass- ed within a day or two after filing Monthly Deposit || application— ed by Such Clubs, Consul Declares. PTG stem. with few excep- tions. in an account, the proceeds of which may be used fto concel the note when due. Deposits may b:’ on a weekly, semi- $ $45.00 I monthl or b [ B monenty asie‘as - || $1,200 $100.00 you prefer. $6,000 $500.00 MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W. *““Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit™ Loan $120 $180 $240 “If there is a war anywhere,” he said, “it affects all nations. It follows | that all nations have a common con- cern in its prevention. A suggestion | that a conference be held for consider- | ation and adjustment of security prob- | lems seems to point the way to inter- | esting and desirable - developments. Community of interest should lead to community of action Big Figures Quoted. Attorneys for the Cyrus S. Eaton fnterests, fighting the merger on the und that it was fraudulently nego- fated upon terms unfair to Sheet & Tube stockholders, contend that Grace receives a “large and unheard of” com~ pensation somewhere between $1.000,000 and $1,600,000 annually. ‘This was fraudulently concealed from directors of Sheet & Tube when they were asked to approve the merger, the Eaton in- terests charge. Luther Day of Cleveland, chief of the anti-merger counsel, doggedly kept questioning Grace about his bonus since April 30, the day the consolidation was to have taken effect -had not the op- position gone into cout. ~Grace ‘snlg} i Vi letermine ]\::nnbfl‘l]“]f ;:rm:-’eu't{]'?‘;x?:snswend that | Wan, yesterday brought a similar mes- he didn®t know. when Day asked “11 | Sage to the Lions. per cent of what?” r. Chang, son of H. E. Chang Ying- Grace promised to find out what his | TARE former Cuihess Mk Yor thi 3 conven- bonus was for the last three months. | yion "y gescription of current events in Judge Limits Questions. China and their bearing on the course Previously Common Pleas Judge | 9f the country’s political and economic David G. Jenkins ruled that Grace | history. would not have to tell what agreement | _ “The revolution of 1911 was super- he had with Bethlehem prior to the ficial,’ !\E_s&ld. but it did loose certain B et of Sheet & Tube directors last | forces which ate still having far-reach- March when they decided upon the | ing effect on all phases of our national SRiola 8. ? life. Little wonder that unrest and dis- Counsel for the steel companies argued | turbances have followed, China has that Grace's compensation was m..wmm‘esssd into & space of 20 years matrial inasmuch s the merger pro- | '"hl;" basit fhmxea than all the changes position of four shares of Bethlehem for ¢ :'A:Ok D_‘ghbe during the preceding 10 Pitee of Sheet & Tube was based solely | Eenturies. The country has made tre- upon earnings. Judge Jenkins upheld | mendous strides forward. 8= e et s e’ deired most of the | - AMERICANS MEET POPE tion had been debated most of the y, but said the opposition might ask Pontiff Gives Medals and Benedic- tion to Sons of Boston Mayor. what provision was made fof Grace after the merger was to have taken ef- fect. i VATICAN CITY, July 17 (#)—The PRESTES LEAVES PARIS Pope yesterday received in audience ey Bishop Anthony J. Schuler of El Paso, Brazil President-Elect Ha ree | Tex. Among the Pope's other callers were Weeks in France and England. | yames. Paul and Leo Curley, > f Boston, Mass. To each RIS, July 18 ().—Dr. Julio Pres- ar o 3 mPAPresldex‘:LYt’lect of Brazil, left here ‘lfm tift c;vem-‘meq-u and his bene- at noon for Cherbourg after a three- | gco n. Wl&a Shem were th;lmv, M. week stay in France and England. He "x“m;bm uked‘uv' .dIL ggen di will sail at 6 pm. on the Royal Mail - cTne Fope o5 Tegarding Cardioa lner Arlanza, which is due in Rio| OConnbll an flprulsed Tegret that Jeneiro August 2. Diplomatic offioisls | the Massuchusstts prelate was unable and representatives of the President of to come to Rome with the May pilgri- France and Brazilian colony = SaW. him off. MORRIS PLAN By the Associated Press. notes are usually R, Colo, July 18—China added it greetings to those of Canada before the fourteenth annual conven- tion. of the International Association of Lions Clubs today, when Henry K. Chang, Chinese consul general, San Francisco, told the service club men that organizations such as theirs were doing much to foster international peace. W. M. Martin, judge of the Court of Appeals in the Province of Saskatche- $360 1 540 Though they may be given for any period of from 3 to 12 months. A railroad spike, believed to have been placed on a rail by boys at play, caused this derailment of a Pennsylvania express train at Mount Washington, just outside of Baltimore, Md., on Wednesday. Although the engine turned over, the crew was unhurt and the passengers escaped with a shaking —Wide World Photos. WORMS AND FROGS AID SCIENCE/ o IN GAUGING ALCOHOL STRENGTH Grain Product Found Three Times More| Stimulating as a Rub Than Wood, and Less Than Propyl, Butyl and Amyl. JANE WINTON WEDS JERSEY CITY, N. J., July 18 (®).—| Jane Winton, film actress and former show girl, was married yesterday to Horace Gumbel, 30, New York broker, in Trinity Hedding Methodist Episcopal Church. The bride, who gave her age | as 24, was formerly the wife of Churlcsl Kenyon, author and playwright. molecules are polar, others non-polar in an electrical sense, and still others partly polar and partly non-polar. Thus some of the stimulating effects of an alcohol rub may be considered as starting from electrical control. This is one further indication of the electircal foundation of all substance, a fundamental phenomenon that is coming to light in many ways, includ- ing some recent Einstein equations. RECEIVED BY POPE VATICAN CITY, July 18 (#).—Mrs. Jeremiah M. O'Brien and her daughter, Alice Anne, of Chicago, relatives of Mgr. William D. O'Brien, president of || the Catholic Extension Society of Chi- cago, today were received by the Pope. Miss O'Brien, a 1930 graduate of the | Immaculate Conception Academy of Davenport, Towa, received the pontifi- cal blessin FRED J. KRIEG formerly president and veneral r of Kriex's Express and i in business e’ o St. N.W, king, Moving For the Convenience of Week End Shoppers Our Store Will Be Open All Day Saturday All Our Employes Are Given a Day Off Each Week With Pay $1 Lace Berthas Beauties! Purchase of 7 ments show how chemical stimulation starts in any part of the body touched | by alcohol or other compounds. When contact is made, the scientist | believes, the alcohol molecules spread | about under control of definite forces, | instead of scattering haphazard. | By fhe Associated Press. COLD SPRINGS HARBOR, N. July 18.—If men respond to alcohol li frogs, barnacles and planaria (worms), then grain alcohol should be about three times more stimulating as & rub than wood alcohol. - . | By the same scale of measurement grain slcohol is less stimulating than | Energies Are Released. several of its lesser known brothers, | As the molecules spread, their en- | propyl, butyl and_amyl, all of them | ergies are released. This release may primary alcohol. Propyl is .nine times | be likened to billions of tiny hammers as stimulating as wood, butyl 27 and | striking the contact surface. These amyl 81 times. | “blows™ set off processes deeper in the These comparisons come from dis- | tissues, which, in turn, reach the nerves covery of a method to measure a and so produce the stimulation. curately the chemical stimulation of | The pattern-forming habit of mole- alcohol and other compounds reported | cules, called molecular orientation, Dr. to the biological laboratory here by Dr. | Cole says, is governed seemingly by ‘W. H. Cole, professor of physiology and | electrical forces. Certain groups of biochemistry at Rutgers University. | His_experiments were upon frogs, bar- | nacles and planaria. He devised a tank in which they could be kept under a constant flow of pure water along with means of recording normal rates of ;not!on. such as the jumping of the TOR. Satisfaction Since 1859 INGSPALACE 810-818 Seventh St. N.W. Bior, B six new styles in large ~ for himself at— bertha collars of silk 904 10th Stora, (padd L S Phone District 91 15 | ’ SIX-DAY - Mountain Excursion To VIRGINIA and WEST VIRGINIA POINTS Saturday, July 26th, 1930 Gordonsville .....$4.50 White Sulphur.,..$6.50 Charlottesville ...$4.50 Ronceverte ......$6.75 Waynesboro .....$5.00 Alderson $7.50 Staunton ........$5.00 Hinton . .$8.25 Clifton Forge.....$6.00 Thurmond $9.00 Covington ....$6.50 Montgomery .....$9.50. Hot Springs......$6.50 Charleston ......$10.00 Tickets good on all trains Saturday, July 26th, and in sleeping ears on payment of regular Pullman eharges, with return llmit August 1st. For full Information and tickets apply to City Ticket Office, 714 14th St. N, W., or Unlen Stafion, CHESAPEAKE & OHIO RY. J. B. EDMUNDS, G. A. National 0748-9 Precise Record Kept. He tainted the water with various alcohols, obtaining a precise record of the amounts necessary to stimulate the animals into more than normal activ- ity. In addition to showing effects somewhat similar to ~those of a rub- down, the animals may have been ex- hibiting also the equivalents of intoxi- cation. Dr. Cole believes his experi- mage. Deaths Reported. e following deaths have been reported to ealth Department in the Dast 24 hours: ¥, ort, 84, 1312 Holly st. rannan, 83. 3408 Dent bl rk. 81, Providence Hospital -Gertrude , Dorsey, 79, 1701 Massachuseits ave i Cornelius A. Lanshan, 73, Georgetown Uni- versity Hospital. $s na H. Rockeeharile, ‘72, 501 M st. h.e. Correil F. Smith, 52, 642 Trving st. Pearl L. Weed. 45. Emergency Hospital. William E. Albrecht. 38, Georgetown. (Sara K. Dirks, 4 days, Homeopathic Hos- pita) James Honnesty. 88, 333 S st. se. Frazier, 80, 413 21st st. e Brawn, Galinger Howital. 12 31 st. s.w. Births Repotted. t =l Y e e MeCormick Medieal Glasses Fitted 3 College Eyes Examined DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Speci E._Rober Ella_M. Barr, gir} dna it irl. fe J. Bail. girl. H beth Shepherd, sirl william C. suerite L. Prohaske, 1 Edward L. and Eleanor M. Niner, girl. Ciyde A. and Mary G. Garner. girl Harland C. and Edna T. Griswold, girl, John and Frances Petrle, girl . Fred C. and Mazie D. Venegas, girl, Ernest A. and Elizabeth Tupper, boy. Edward C. and Willie Pannill, boy. Frank M. and Mariorie Cater, boy. B. Rafey. boy. [ son, 7 houts, 516 U st.” Three-pe. suite and § separste cushions, snap fasteners, tailored to your furniture, including material, $16.50. Write or phone for samples, R. L. ISHERWOOD, Line. 5350. 1513 Tashion & 30 minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three days. 666 Also in Tablets a A George W. and Sue C. Brenton, boy. Ibert J. and Margaret E. Allen, boy. vallace B. and Charlotte Hoover, boy. and Edna J. Gibson, boy. ."and Ada M. Fox, boy ank and Marceile Beitius, 'boy allock G. and Isabel W. Davis, boy, fovanni and Laura Mencarini, boy. hn and Blanche Alsop. boy. nter C. apd Anna Artissi, boy. E":hud 8. and Josephine Cook, boy. E. Here’s the Bread 1 You'll like for a change ‘ Dorvschs Swedish Rye Nobody else here bakes bread like it— pleasantly eaten; easily digested; full of the nourishment that satisfies the keenest ap- petite and builds brawn and brain in old and young. Wash Frocks Worth 50 & $2 ses smart enough’ to wear anywhere and everywhere—in cotton Shantung, linoline, lustre cloth, batiste and lawn. Figured and floral pat- terns, polka dots and coin spots. Styles that rival those seen in silk atu-rday “ONLY Specials Store Open All Day Saturday Summer Suits Were $15, $18 & $20 Broken lots of Gabardines. Mohairs, Nurotex, Linens and Palm Beaches .. not every size in every kind, but ail sizes in the lot. Men’s Fancy Shirts , Were $1.95, $2.50 & $2.95 An assortment of patterns in stripes, fisures and solid effects... broken lot. and cotton lace and georgette. White, cream, ecru and flesh. —Street, Floor. ’ You’ll Want Several of These Beautiful New Silk $5 & $6 Fresh Shipment . | Vilivgs $3 Ballipan | —In_ White, H t 98' Pastel Shades, ats ¢§. Navy, Polka Lik IrRe Dots, Flowers Sketch S etc and Figures 4 ! New ‘Summer fashions in pure |f| poqmart summery, serviceable. sjlk fabrics of bc'auty and quality! \}.rnf.":i"'c:n"\fn“l?&hf-i::..'":f';'{o;':v}: Flat crepe, all-silk chiffon, geor- stripe silk bands. ~Also in the lot gette and Shantung silk. are some high-grade Japanese pana- | Styles of latest vogue—capes, e drapes, flares, jackets, ruffles. Your $2 & $2.50 White s .19 gr;ll\d;n opportunity to buy lovely FELT HATS silk dresses at a big saving. Whit d 1 sh i i _ A S ity felt " hateVagahonds aed piquant off-the-face models. Smart headwear at a bargain price. | Stréet Floor a———————————— White Slip-On Gloves ‘These all-popular Summer gloves of suede-finish fabric are here in white, eggshell, and the wanted light shades at this attragtive low price. I —————— | $4 & $5 Silk Umbrellas - | We have suc- s 47‘ cessfully purchased : ! these fine all-silic * 10 and 16 rib um- brellas — extraor- dinnrgmv-lues ble-h Prams c.use ey Ar ight proof and l:l;pgool.~5{l:lel:e Floar. ’ i 2,000 Men’s | Worth $1.50, $2 & $2.50 95- It'll tempt you to eat a lot—and the $1 Nun Run Ide int A= - Rayon Shirts and more you eat the better you'll like it. Shorts, a garment 69c 3 for $2 Your dealer will have it tomorrow—or will gladly get it quickly. But don’t just say you want “a loaf of bread”—ask for it $1 New Novelty Hose—guaranteed s AP aNme N Broken lots .. by name. Dorschs Swedish Rye Of plain, fancy and rayon-stripe broadcloth, woven madras and jacquard madras. Attached orisep arate collar, also neckband shirts. White, solid colors, stripes-and fig- ures. 'Sizes 13% fo 14; also sizes 17% and 18 in collar-attached shirts. SOCKS—39c and 50c fancy rayon- }nl)(:ed ufika,x sizes 10 to 1113, Per- lects an rregulars. New | patterns .. 29c wwm:tt Dgfdl( PAN‘TS. sizes 30 to [§| walst. le-cut legs, cuff_bottoms and belt loops $1.00 | UNION SUITS—Men's $1.00, .50 | and $2.00 athletic sults in broadcloth. Sojesette_and madras. Al sizes 34 :n 50. Perfects and irrégu- lars Seelie b Split-top All baked Dorsch Bakery, owned and operated by the Master Baker himself for over a third of a century. POLO SHIRTS Were $1.95. In long. or short sleeves, e dresses—fascinating new effects of frills, drapes, ruffles, capes, flares and peplums. Sizes 16 to 52. | econd Floor Perfect Full-Fashioned >~ Chiffon Silk H >, on Silk Hose With French heels or pointed heels, Silk - to - the - top chiffon weight of extra sheer texture, also lisle-top service weight. All colors. $1.00 PERFECT SILK HOSE—Pure thread silk hose, chiffon. weight, in the new Summer shades. A g thrifty low -price % c 59c SILK-AND-RAYON HOSE— Temptation” brand hose, beautiful quality, knit of silkk and rayon 39 mixed. Every pair perfect.. c CHILDREN'S SOCKS—Misses’ and children's 25¢ to 35¢ rayon and lisle socks in solid colors or with fancy g tops. Perfects and irregulars c Street Floor Girls’ & Boys’ GIRLS’ patent leath- er and tan calf straps, 8 i #ties and step-ins, i in the sizes 814 4 $ ” {to 2. 3 BOYS' calfskin oxfords with chrome leather soles. Black only. Sizes 1 to 6.