Evening Star Newspaper, May 7, 1931, Page 26

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"B-10 * SOVETOUSTS U S ASWHEAT LEADER London Conference to Study .M Surplus Tangle Created 7% by Recovery. y ml?n?;:!‘fld by the United d that Russian production would be announced _ne:rfl picture figure would have exceeded her greatest production mark since the days when she dom- inated the world export trade. That mark, established in 1913, credited Rus- sia with & production of 1,028,000,000 bushels. Conference 1s Called. of the situation, ’ b nsion of wheat eage ouufle’dl:n g?unma States, Canada, tina, India and Australia to m;‘kle 509,000,000 bushels more than in 1913, ‘when Europe was fairly able to feed herself. TWO DIE, SCORE HURT “* IN MOORISH RIOTS Military Forces Believed in Con- trol at Tetuan, Where Dis- orders Began Monday. By the Associated Press. MADRID, May 7.—A sa result of riots in which two persons were Teport- ed killed and a score wounded, military forces were believed yesterday to be in control of Tetuan, capital of Spanish Morocco. Striking against working conditions and wages, Moorish laborers éngaged in » battle with Spanish soldiers Monday. They assembled in the Tetuan Mosque yesterday and demanded the right to elect their own municipal officials, now appointed by the government, Great numbers of Moors are re- ported to be moving into the city from outlying districts and there is consider- able dissension, Officials of the Moroc- can colonial department here minimize the danger of the situation, but their confidence is not shared in unofficial quarters. . Bur;\ed in Gasoline Blaze. Friction set fire to gasoline with which Mrs. Anna Silverman, 29 years old, of 1923 Benning road, northeast, was cleaning. clothing yesterday after- noon and inflicted burns on her hands and face. Neighbors summoned an ambul nd the woman was removed | to Casualty hospital for first aid tre | ment, TFiremen confined the blaze the kitchen. Damage was estimated $50 cover what is wrong with the wheat market and what, if anything, can be done_ about it. | “Canada produced 166,000,000 bushels more wheat in 1930 than in 1913; Ar- | gentina, 134,000,000 bushels: Australia, The result was that non-European |102,000.000; the United States, 88,000,- THE EVENIN SOCIETY (Continued From Fifth Page) will have as their guests sion Mr. and Mrs. Albert Atwood. Col. and Mrs. John Otto Johnson will be the club hosts. A card party will be held in Meridian bal Mansions, at 2400 Sixteenth street northwest, tomorrow evening for the benefit of the Holy Redeemer Catholc Church, in Berwyn, Md. A partial list of patrons and patron- esses includes Miss Elizabeth Ahern, Miss Marije Barrett, Mrs. Elizabeth Bog- ley, Mrs. Orlando , Mrs. B. W. Butler, Miss ick, Mrs. James E. Collifiower, Miss Elizabeth Corcoran, Mr. 8. E. Cornwell, Mr. and Mrs, A. H. Cordes, Mr. C. J. Cusack, Mrs. Julia Donovan, Mrs James J. Dore, Mrs.&;;: Harry K. Hickey, Mrs, Hannah ch, Mrs. Nora Mc- Carthy, J. McIntyre, Miss Ruth C. Mcintyre, Mr. Joseph W. Mec- Mahon, Miss Marie MacBeth, Mrs. John nllcfle!h. Miss Gertrude M. McNall N Waters, Mrs. Elizabeth Ralph, Mis Alice S. Kerr and Mr. Willlam L. Ed- monston. Mr. Frank S. Bright will be the gue: of honor end speaker at the dinn which the Woman's National Demo- eratic Club wilf give tomorrow evening. He will discuss “Some Democrats I Have Known."” ‘The club will entertain at its weekly forum luncheon Monday, when Mrs. Frank Hiram Snell, a prominent mem- ber of the club, will talk on “Street Scenes in Mexico City.” Mrs. Snell spent the Winter in Mexico. She made | years ago on Ru:sia, following an ex- tended visit to that country. Mr. Houston Thompson addressed the an address before the club about three | G ‘Tuesda, Shenandoah VIII" Rear Xamnmmm E. Byrd, 'b"yl come to Washington tomorrow with her mother, to_spend several days at the Woman’s National Democratic Club, while sightseeing-in Wi 3 Representative Will R. Wood, chair- man af the National blican Con- gressional Committee, 'l% &e'u!\‘u u’i Zpukar meenné o ationa apital Republican Club in the small room of the Willard tomorrow. Other speeches will be given by other | prominent men, following which there | will be a dance and card party. Mr. la;mgl:lb.!. Prescott is the president of e club. Dr. William P. Notz, dean of the For- Association of University Women at a hlm;:l;‘eon. B-'lz;x:g‘-v -:"1e o'clock, in the club house, a street. Mrs. George F. Bowerman is in charge of the lunch- eon and will introduce Dr. Notz. | Mothers will be guests at the regular dinner meeting of the Women's Club of " | Benjamin Franklin University, Saturda " | night, at the Arlingto Hotel. | members living | borrowing a n.other | Renshaw of the school of the same nam | will be guest speaker, the club members, s usual, giving & varied program of X | music. ‘Mrs. Virgil McClure, national presi- dent of the American War Mothers, is | at_the Willard and will return to her home in Lexington Kentucky the first of next week. Mrs. McClure is in Wash- ington in connection with the national | few days earlier in order that she might | greet the first contingent of Gold Moth. | ers going to their boys' graves overseas. Mrs. McClure last night presided at a meeting of the Admiral Coontz Chapter | of the American War Mothers, when the officers were installed. This is a new | chapter and is compcsed of Mothers, whose sons and daughters served in the | Navy and Marine Corps daring the | World War. Mrs. Robert E. Cocntz is the honorary president. ‘The American War Mothers will hold STAR. WASHINGTON. p produced in excess of marke ments befare the 1932 crop is harvest- elebration of Mother’s day and arrived a | D. C, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1931 lerica, Mass,, are passing several days at the Dodge Hotel. Mr. and Mts. R. A. Cordrey of Phila- delphia are spending a few days at the Shoreham Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Stewart of Easton, Md,, are at the Mayflower for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris Kemp- ton, former residents of Pelham Manor, N. Y. are occyj their new home at 4500 Cathedral avenue. Their two children, Carol ai Robert, and Mr. | Kempton's mother, Mrs. A. S. Kemp- | ton of Philadelphia, are with them. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Davis of New otk City are at the Shoreham Hotel for an indefinite stay. . | CONSERVATIVE IS VICTOR Latham 21,618 to 19,420 for Lib-| eral in Scarborough Count. SCARBOROUGH, England, May 7 ().—The Conservatives retained their | parliamentary seat for the Scarborough and Whitby division at a byelection necessitated by resignation of the sit- ting member. Today's count gave H. P. Latham | 21,618 votés against 19,429 for the Lib- | eral candidate, J. P. Ramsay Muir. A Special JShenleus. 1291 F JStreet, FEDERAL FARM BOARD BACKS NEW GRAPE PLAN California Growers' Stabilization | Program Calls for Loan of - $14,100,000. | By the Assoclated Press. : SAN FRANCISCO, May 7.—A sta- bilization program for California gra) wers had the approval of the Cali- X X M cone Farm Board today. st ‘The program, a the Stat Board Jestcraay, cals Tor o Farey Boare | loan of $14,100,000 for California’s | $350,000,000 grape and raisin industry. It includes withdrawal of the 1930 carryover of raisins on October 1 from competition with the 1931 crop; forma- oon_of lus for 19 Remodeled, FURSE=: Cleaned é COLD STORAGE Prompt Service—Very Low Prices ISADOR MILLER Mg Pu 809 11th SL'RW, " Nat1 5628 N.w. A Purchase t require- | fresh gra products by Pruit ed, and, purchase of 100,000 tons of | co-operativa. TURBANS price day. services at Arlington Mother’s day, Sun- | Outstanding Values WE ARE MAKING A SPECIALTY OF at the very special for conversion into Industries, Ltd. sf65 eountries had a surplus last year D(iWB. and India, 19,000,000 264,000,000 bushels. | While they were doing it European This wheat is held by surplus-pro- nations piled up huge import barriers ducing countries now sending deleg:tes | to encourage production and consump- to the London conference to try to on of native whe; | Young Democrats at their meeting held last night at the Woman's National Democratic Club. Miss Patricia Dacre Morton of Win- | chester, England, who was crowned ' Mass. Miss Juanita Fay, Miss Ruth Hatha- Choose Your Favorite Hat New Hats that economy would ordinarily hu.Amy.:&m section, sell for— s $5.00 to $7.50 of Straw Bouchle and Miss Molly Farmer of Bel In our new E Cunningham Co. 314~316 SEVENTH ST..NW. Gift Suggestions for MOTHER'S DAY Irresistibly Lovely Hose Full Fashioned Dull Finished Chiffon and Service $1 Weight Sizes 815 to 102 Spring . . . the We are selling more turbans than ever season for ekt before, for TWO ~very good reasons. knilled fashions! i / | ; 4 = thi,’ low Turbans have never been so smart £33 ; and .we have never had such smart_ones. There’s a knitted suit here for every taste, for every age, and for every daytime occasion . .. Three- piece costumes of zephyr or boucle so irreproachably smart and swagger they are suitable for town wear, shopping, lunching and travel, as well as golf and spectator wear, Made of our own materials styled by our best' designers. Priced so low, you will buy severall” N— g N o . . . It depends on the occasion, your costume and vour own taste . . . certainly not on “what you can find,” for at Shenley's vow will find the roughest rough straws, dull or shiny, the shiniest smooth straws, exotic straws and the very smart boucles. From the tiniest of caplike shapes to shoulder-width brims, from snug turbans to perky sailors, to models with the new side roll, in every color, . Because of the ERLEBACHER label you will note they bear an individuality and distinction all their own. From 16,75 upwards. Erlebacher TWELVETEN TWEVETWBME F STREET All Pe'rfecl SILK UNDIES for Mother OF PURE DYE FRENCH CREPE $195 Slips—Chemise Final factory close-out of all broken lots and odds and ends, repre- senting over fifty stvles. No mail or phone orders, please! . The Styles The Materials Arch Support Sandals Genuine Reptile Suede Sports Shoes Walking Shoes Brown Calf Brown Kid Pumps Dress Shoes Black Satin Blue Kid Oxfords Straps Black Calf Black Kid Evening Slippers Patent Leather Panties—Bloomers In All Pastel Shades Sizes 34 to 44 Note: Every pair branded Dorothy Dodd. Remember, the Palais Royal \ is the exclusive representative of Dorothy Dodd Shoes in Washing-. ton—therefore the only store that can offer you these famous shoes at such a great saving. Extra selling space has been ar- ranged for, extra salespeople—in fact everything has been done to make this sale an outstanding success. Special tables on the Main Floor. New Silk Blouses Palals Royal— Downstairs All the Newest Styles Frilly--Fussy or Tai- lored in all Leading Pastel Shades Including White. All Guaranteed Washable Sizes 32 to 44 MAIN FLOOR 700 Stunning Dresses resses of lovely soft silks — amazingly fine at D f lovely soft silk gly fi $6‘88 500 Summer Daytime Dresses Silks, Shantungs, Piques, Rayons—in wearable, cool daytime styles; plain shades and prints. All $ .88 this price. Prints, crepes, chiffons and georgettes, in one piece and jacket dresses. Scores of smart styles. PALAIS ROYAL—Downstairs Dress Shop washable. PALAIS ROYAL—Downst2irs Dress Shop

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