Evening Star Newspaper, October 1, 1930, Page 6

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'Tllcplmne National 5000 immediate delivery of The Star to your home every evening and Sunday morning. ' The Route Agent will collect at the end of each month, at the rate of 115 cents per day and 5 cents Sunday. From the Prince gilded palace to t t street. HOME LAUNDRRY Phone AT lantic 2400 While You Sleep! When a headachy, bilious, or a gassy condition tells that bowels need help, there’s nothing like cascara. Doctors say this marvelous substance actually strengthens bowel muscles. That's why candy rets bring constipation sufferers Jasting relief. A Cascaret contains cascara in its most palatable form.. No griping; no discomfort or sickening seffects when you use rets. Just quick, sure help for sluggish bowels, Both upper and lower bowels are cleansed. Coated tongue is soon cleared; breath sweetened; eyes brightened; the whole system benefits from a candy ret. Try one to- night and see for yourself! More Wear From. Better Suits Hand Tailored by Fruhauf Th Suits. for e — | consumption -of Brif |SHORTHAN VIGTORY OF GANDHI - FORECAST IN INDIA Follower Here Pictures Brit- ain Seeking Leader by April | to Settle Problems. | | By the Associated Press. |* NEW YORK, October 1.—By next | | April, in th> opinion of Dr. Haridas T. Mazumdar, follower and_biographer of | | Mahatma Gandhi, the British govern- | ment will be going to Gandhi behind his prison bars to ask his aid in a settiement of the Indian problem, He believes the program of civil dis- nce will have reached such a by then that there will be no ng against a people which scek of the right to govern Hampered by Rains. > campaign is more or less at a now while the monsoon or on is on, Dr. Muzumdar ex- ay, but beginning again thereabouts it will be hed with renewed vigor. he campaign will be carried on in ur directions: Non-payment of taxes, | t of British cleth, prohibition of! c: \a British mo- resumption of raids on pots. izumdar, whose degree v the University of Wisconsin quoted figures to show the in- dy made on John Bull's this year, Consumption Dwindles. In April, 1929, India imported 18,343 bales of British cloth; in April, 1930, the month of the march to the sea, import For | June figures s y ndiing cloth, he said. | As 1o the prohibition campaign, in | the Bombay Presidency, where the Gandhi movement is strongest, revenues from the liquor and narcotic monopolies | dropped $2.000,000 in the first six months of 1930, from the 1929 total of | $13,000,000. | D AND “TYPING” | CONTESTS SCHEDULED | Plans Under Consideration for Spe- | cial Tests at Annual Indus- trial Exposition. | Detailed plans for both the short- | hand and the typewriting contests to be held in connection with the forth- coming sixth Annual Industrial Expo- | sition were under consideration at & meeting of a special committee called for_today. ; This committee, named by the indus. trial expositionggroup to handle all & rangements for these events, arrang to meet at the Chamber of Commerce headguarters, in the Homer Building, at 4:30 pm. Headed by P. J. Harman of Strayer’s Business College, the complete roster of the group includes Dr. A. L. Howard, Business High School; Dr. Francis Moon Butts, McKinley Manual Train- | ing High School; Mrs. Adria C. Beaver, Washington School _for Secretaries; | Mrs. Caroline B. Stephens, Temple | School; W. C. Poteet, Poteet's Business | College; Hallett Hill, Mount Pleasant School ' for Secretarles; D. N. Towe, Boyd School for Secretaries; Dr. Court F. Wood, Wood Commercial College; | Miss Janet W. , Lake Schoo Adolph L. Richards, Civil Service Pr paratory School; F. B. Foote, Washing- ton Missionary _Coll and Albert n ary Schntider, shortland porter, House | of Representatives. GECIL DENOUNCES 0N | TRADING INSLAVES British Statesman Says World Records Show 5,000,- 000 Held in Bondage. 'g } J 1 By the Associated Press. | GENEVA, October 1.—Lord Cecil, | Viscount of Chelwood, one of Britain’s | | foremost statesmen in the League of | Nations Assembly, yesterday computed the number of s world at 5,000,000 | passioned appeal for suppression of | siave-owning and slave-trading. Lord Cecil protested vigorously against | rejection by the Assembly Committee of a British proposal to create a perma- nent slavery commission to examine the whole subject, and its decision to post- pone consideration of any new pro- cedure outside of the present slavery convention until next year. Sees Difficulties Confronted. he said, “if any one exists in his terri- | MRS. MARY McKENDREE JOHNSON | Of Parkersburg. W.'Va., a former news- paper woman, who will attempt to break the precedent that women cannot run | well in West V nia, as Democratic congressional ch in the fourth dis- trict of that State to succeed the late J. A. Hughes. —P. & A. Pheto. STORM HITS HONDURAS f course,” tory he I do not k {and if delinquencies of his tion will be difficult The British de Lord Cecil | said, had been prepared (o go the limit | in concessions, but despite that no new | machinery had been established | “The result,” v any one so the League cighbo:s his posi- | Widespread Damage Reported to Building, Crops, Communication. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, October 1 (#).—A furious windstorm in Fonseca nd the surrounding district yes- terday caused widespread damage to buildings, crops and communications, Telegraph and telephone lines from to Amapala were broken and the of communication prevented the { delailed information. It is however, that there was no he said, “will be re- | ceived with deep disappointment by | hundreds of thousands throughout the world who take deeply to heart this outrage upon humanity,” Says Slavery Brings Greater Evil. Slave owning, he continued. involves a still greater evil—slave trading, which | will go on as lon, owning exists. | ! He added that whatever might be said | he Visit the Folks at Home Saturday, October 4th REDUCED ROUND-TRIP FARES From Washington, D. C. TO Birmingham, Ala Bristol, Tes mery. D Chattanooy Sheflield, Asheville, Charlotte, 1 3 " L 0 | Vieksburg, M1 ALSO TO MANY OTHER IMPORTANT CITIES IN THE SOUTH Tickets permit travel in sleeping ears. Stop-overs at certain designated points. LIMITED TO RETURN BEFORE MIDNIGHT, OCTOBER 24th EXCELLENT THROUGH TRAIN SERVICE ns, tickets and schedules, call at CITY TICKET OFFICE McPherson Square, 15th & K Sts. N.W, Phone National 1465—or Union Station SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM ’s real economy and true fashion in Fruhauf Rich-looking and long-wearing Imported Flannels, ample, in Navy and Oxford with Chalk Stripes. clusively hand-tailored to fit . now and when they are old. serve you satisfactorily long after ordinary suits have .. and fit They'll be been cast aside. perfectly .. . becoming and e Sidney West, Inc. 14th & G Sts. EUGENE C. GOTT—PRESIDENT of slave owning, slave trading is an :;l"zrly horrible and beastial institu- In summing wg hc hoped that the Assembly would note what had hap- pened and would make sure that there would be no_ postponement next year. An object lesson from Canada con- cerning treatment of minorities was put before the Assembly by Senator Joseph Chapias, a member of the Quebec Legislative Council. Admits “Regrettable Conflict.” He admitted that the province of Ontario receritly had a ‘“regrettable con- flict” in educational matters, but said | this had been settled amicably and that there now was«cpmplete harmony and absence of friction. “Above our constitution and above our treaties,” he said, “is a spirit of good will, sincerity and justice which enables us to overcome all our minority prob- lems.” RED ATTACK REPULSED | Native Police Quell Disturbance in Indo-China Village. HANOI, French Indo-China, October 1 (#).—A group said to have been led by Communists, attacked the village of Nuyen-Nam-Dam in the Province of Vinh, September 28, but was repulsed by the native police. ‘The Indo-Chinese government has formed a new column of native police, who will move throughout the country t | to quell troubles which are allegedly due to spread of Communism. Similar measures are being taken in | Cochin-China, For Rent STORE and SHOP 1414 R. I. Ave. NW. Low Rental FURNITURE RENTING OFFICE FURNITURE 616 E St.N WONAN IS FREED IN POISON CASE |Ernest Pryor Repfidiates | Statement That Miss Ham Boasted of Act. | By the Associated mress. MARTINSVILLE, Ind., OctoBer 1 | Miss Elsie Ham was released yesterda. when Ernest Pryor, 32, repudiated a statement in which he accused her of having boasted that she had polsored his wife, Hrs. Carrie Thelma Pryor. Pryor has been in jail several days while a grand jury has been making in- quiry into the death of his wife on August 19. The grand jury is expected to complete its investigation this aft- ernoon. CLAFLIN Optician—Optometrist 922 14th St. NW. Established 1889 BOLGIANO’S Landscape Service LAWNS MADE Shrubs, Evergreens, Perennials Call National 0091 F. W. Bolgiano 607 E_St. /ESTMENT BUILDING is open on four sides. H. L. Rust Company Arents T’S here! The climax of all Victor’s 30 years five-circuit, micro screen-grid radio . 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