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JUGOSLAVIA GIVEN WARNING BY ITALY Fascist Party Order Sheet Says “Lead Is in Reserve for Other Backs.” By Radio to The Star. ROME, Italy, September 11.—A word of warning is handed Jugoslavia in the | latest issue of the Fascist party order sheet in commenting on the recent exe- cution of four Slavs at Trieste. “The Fascist revolution is determined to defend itself within and beyond its borders,” the sheet declares. “There is other lead in reserve for other backs. (The Jugoslavs were shot in the back.) ‘There are several which deserve a piece. They will get it. The Fascist revolution is becoming more modern and more stern. “Gentlemen beyond the frontiers, ay attention; the ‘Bono Italiano’ (re- gpnxnx to the cries of Austrian soldiers when they wanted to surrender in the late war) is gone. The Italian of the Pascist lictor is of another temper and spirit. And the Balkans lie just beyond the Montenevoso!” (Montenevoso, or “The Snowy Mountain” is on the Jugo- slav-Italo frontier.) Meanwhile the Fascists are proceed- ing in their efforts to wipe out the Slay organizations which have been function- ing under cover ever since Venezia ||| Giulia was added to Italy at the end of the war, Several arrests have been made in the vicinity of Postumia, fol- lowing examination of the documents found on the body of Joseph Kukec, who was killed by Fascist border police near the frontier during the Trieste trial. One of those arrested is a prominent resident of the Town of Postumia and from papers now in the possession of the police, it is learned that dozens of others who were not pre sUs: viously - have been prominent in anti- m activities. (Copyright, 1930 STOLEN CAR RECOVERED By the Associated Press. OKLAHOMA CITY, September 11— A generous stream of oil continued to | flow yesterday through the single men- | acing leak in the Midcontinent’s con- servation structure, while justices of the Oklahoma Supreme Court pondered what their ruling will be in a case at- tacking the State's right to compel proration—the mutual agreement of producers not to produce. ents pro and con were laid be- fore the court Tuesday by attorneys for the State and for the C. C. Julian Oil & Royalties Co. The Julian concern, which only recently entered the Okla- homa City gusher field from the Pacific Coast, sought to have made permanent a temporary writ of prohibition obtained two weeks ago preventing the State Corporation Commission from interfer- ing with the company's new-found | gushers. Pending a formal rule, the temporary writ remains in force, the court decided. ‘When its decision will be reached was not indicated. - Our “to make courtesy and ac- commodation distinguish- ing features of the Lincoln National Bank service, THE EVENING S1AR, OIL DECISION IN OKLAHOMA WILL AFFECT INDUSTRY IN U. S. Julian Concern Seeks Permanent Injunc- tion to Prevent State From Inter- fering With Gushers. So Jullan, who contends proration is price fixing, out of the domann of the | Corporation Commisison’s authority to prevent waste, produced his wells “on the line” today while prorating operators on mnearby léases waited and wondered apprehensively. How seriously the matter is regarded was pointed out at Tuesday’s hearing by & conservative authority, C. B. Ames, Texas Co. counsel, who assisted the State’s attorney general in pleading for immediate dissolution of the temporary writ. Ames said that if the commis- sion’s fl?ht to enforce proration orders will be found invalid, the ruling would wreck the entire proration program in the United States, which Oklahoma in- augurated. At the same time, he said, the flood of ofl resulting from wide open produc- tion here and in other pools would de- stroy the already shaky crude market. The argument that the commissicn is| exceeding its authority in issuing and enforcing proration orders came from John Head, Julian counsel in chief. Head went even further and charged Officers Aim the Oklahoma conservation act as un- constitutional. He said the commis- ot ;l no x;g‘hx:: tell menhnvl I shhlu ndle my private property or how much I shall get for it.” hfieg ll;‘: thedwhole scheme wt!}:‘ un‘; lependent operators, that resulted in price fixing, and that pools were prorated in uneven fashion. The commission’s authcrity vas de- fended by State and associated counsel “go that no man will get more than his share out of a common pool.” W.T.Z. Terman, Skelly Oil Co. counsel, said that “if the State is powerless to prorate production it is powerless to prevent physical waste.” “If one operator has 50 wells produc- ing 10,000 barrels each and has facili- ties for D}rln‘ the ofl, it would not be fair to allbw him to produce the oil from the common pool while the other | operators could not.” Chief Contention. One of the chief Julian contentions is that the company is exempt from pro- ration * agreements because it has its own pipeline, refinery and retail mar- ketlni structure. Proration percent- lfes rgely are based on the capacity of pipelines and market conditions. A dismal picture of what would hap- pen in the Oklahoma City “Wonder Pool,” should it be opened wide, was put into words by W. L. Murphy, as- sistant_State’s attorney general. Mu hy sald great 1d_result be- The Cambria-Majestie 1324-26 Euelid Street N.W. 2 Rooms, Kitchen and Bath, $42.50 WASHINGIUN, D, C. STt b, 1950 AU Ao asan cause there wouldn't be land enough %0 | would follow open flow from flush ofl | o b gusher L Ofl men estimate the pool e a tial production far greater than the total output at pres- ent of all fields in Oklahoma. Julian's counsel told the court that e jon used “preventing eco- nomic waste” as a ruse for something not within its legal power to regulate. He argued that the masses would benefit most from the low prices that ' oil production. thorizing the delegation to the —_— preparatory to revising study in public school READ THE LABEL when you buy ginger ale AND SAVE MONEY ERE’S a chance for house- wives to make big savings when buying ginger ale. Just read the label on a bottle of Clicquot Club Pale Dry. It guarantees you 16 ounces! That’s four ounces more than you get in any other na- tionally known dry gingarale. And Clicquot Club Pale Dry its is aged 6 months in the making to give it a finer, more mellow (N, flavor. It carries full carl tion, tdo, which give: it zest and sparkle. So go to your store today and ask for Clicquot Club Pale Dry. It gives you 3§ more for your money. Clicquot Club PALE DRY IXXXXXXY. Presidents Cup flelds—if there is & public interest in | ., “There is nothing,” Head- contended, in the constitution of Oklahoma su- ,)Ol’lfl(!h Commission of the right legisiate to regulate the ofl industry.” “ South Dakota is making a survey course Cor- of AT ONE STROKE You Can End Your Heating Problems for the Entire Winter Readin? Anthracite NOW A telephone call to us will bring you the cleanest, most carefully sized hard coal you have ever seen. RINALDI COAL CO., Inc. 649 Rhode Island Ave. N.E. North 1600 . THAT BETTER PENNSYLVANIA HARD COA. Regatta It is their policy to give the same degree of efficient service. and consideration AFTER COLLISION Occupant Arrested and Lodged in Jail Cell—Neither Driver Is Injured in Crash. fl.An’ automobile stolen from Mor- was recovered by Policem: Marrow of the eighth precinct early yesterday when it collided with another car at Fourteenth and U streets. J. H. Coates, colored, 22 years old, of 1418 8 street, was placed under arrest and lodged in a cell at No. 8 station when found at the wheel of the stolen car. The car operated Coates crashed into a machine driven by Archer Roberts, 23, of 4532 Reno road. Neither giriver was hurt. . an T. B. Henry Ford Reaches France. CHERBOURG, France, September 11 (P —Henry Ford, American automobile manufacturer, arriving the Bremen, avolded curious crowds aboard ship and on the pler early on a private tug. g cars awaited him on the dock and the party left immediately for Paris, where he is expected this after- noon. i Sir Willlam Hart intimate friend of Disraeli and Conservative chief whip in the English Parliament from 1868 to 1874, recently celebrated his ninty-third Birthday anniversary at Lullingstone Castle, Kent, England. Folstein, 2758 Woodley road, ||| today aboard ||} If 7th & D Sts. to our small depositors that we give to our largest, want to be told about it. Our officers are men whose business is service and whose efforts may be summed up in the creed— “We ourselves the better serve by serving others best.” Lincoln National Bank you don’t get it they 17th & H Sts. ooy of living! Find it again in these . . . 137 glorious days ROUND-THE-WORLD CRUISE © This is your winter for re- discovering life! Drift along the Nile’s silver carpet of moonlight . . . ascend the flower-mountains of Java ... let gold-swathed dancers of Siam teach your pulse a new rhythm! Slip away from New York next Dec. 2, for these 137 days of l;othlng to do but enjoy . . . days that cost as little as $14 each. You go aboard the 21,850 gross- ton Empress of Australia, transatlantic giantess. There’s galety in her Pompeiian swimming pool, in her ball- room. There’s infinite peace in her great lounges and suites . . . lazy, delicious comfort in her English-manor service and French-chef’d cuisine. © FIND OUT WHY CANADIAN PACIFIC, the world’s greatest travel system, plans this special itiner- ary..how it is based on Canadian Pacific’s round-the- world system of rail, ship, hotel, and key-city offices . .. how it is guided by Canadian Pacific’s Veteran travel “know-how” . . . one management, ship and shore. .. in its 8th world-cruise season. 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