Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D, €, TUESDAY. AUGUST 11, 1931 ss B-F l 8 T . : ; condition in his State had not been ex- [tack from their and | i m T e e ] e o st e o o e et o o v BODY OF GIRL SOUGHT uillotine Rt B e ™ ot i v, | i b, 1, St total this year would be littie more | e il g KB B mswm m Prof. Holcombe upheld open mplo-r:}’co—wenuon. Although the dreams | | of m are at last “capable” of | than 20,000,000 bushels, aithough official | 5 ” A ankind vl II IHU A ‘ KlmznT:r:: :x T U S PRlEE FlXINGJuH}?E!F:fi;:‘ ;:px‘:ig:?é sm‘::“hm‘ UPEN DIPI—UMAGY fi::“:flln:::::m;“m: v::; ;n::::] n:-;n e ; | = - d ' | science and technology. litical. eco- | 4 i « U |he added. “Something must be done jone” He said there should be more | momic and educational leadership nas | DYiRg Miner, Suicide, Tells Police - 1 _ — . | open _ diplomacy beca Democratic | restore the buying power to the| pe 'y cause | falled to rise to the ity. | 4 3 - AR, | 50000,000" peapte ‘on-our ‘tarms. T be- | e | countries ike the United States are at | *Dr. Counts said the social planning| He Xilled and Buried Bride = 3 | R PO - K a sadvantage in negotiations with | of Soviet Russia was one “experiment | Mr. and Mrs. Silas E. Moore : | |Wants Regulation of Certain giie of 50000 iamiies in ouc section Italian Defends Secret Nego- ciher countrics wihoe Hiolomatic fon: | in thi Tesim that dvaris ol others” S i i | rememinsie 5 o o ; e The Senator sald he had heard little practices. The issur over open or eloovd 1‘11’:‘.‘;:] that is l.l‘llfl 0‘; R lylr;:;;g' By the Associsted Press. Funeral at Epworth. : Commodities and Debt | discussion of politics and he sitributea | ~tiations, While American |Giplomacy is 8 modern ane, he. sai | ook dn. ) : : ;}l:flfl:g l;h:‘ 2?;2’:‘%1:“’:1’1‘“.‘(!::0}:“ i | made by Pu'filder;l ‘Wilson when h “The hope of planning,” he said, “is L, A Church. . . Holiday for Farmers. | of e peopre. o "onei® o Urges Publicity. v A T N i S e The Japenese representative. Yusuke tempt to enrich the spiritual life of ' Elizabeth Valek, Tsurumi, said that in his country the | the masses.” Puneral services for Sias Edwin| [ ;: 4 By(hrAksorul‘r-{d Press. AR FORD TAXES CUT By the Associated Press. formulation of foreign policy is coming Moore and his wife, Mrs. Ida Fowler | A proposal for Government o , WILLIAMSTOWN. = st 11, more and more under public contro! } e | “state e e » e e oo he M "o e amacy | rough the. forcign ofice and the| HALL RITES HELD | suve up'the hun shorty vefore mide P S | night, resumed L ect 3 oression is to be laid New Jersey County Reduces Valua- —The practicability of open diplomacy & Prodercksbort. yesieriny motmng. | : Before Precident Hoover and other Gov- was discussed at the Institute of Poli- | : their search at dawn. Wil be held At 11 oclock, fl?fgém‘ y ‘: ernment_officials by Senator Nye. ‘ tion by $1,000.000. {tics today in a general conference con- Paints Gloemy Picture. Modiber of B¢ Albans to B¢ Burtet} e Josep! morning at Epworth Methodist Eplsm-! | : | The North Dakota Republican h;r-‘ HACKENSACK, N. J. August 11 () ‘x’,"é‘o'r"o?’augi;nfififié"nx"fl:?fl'& CY: George Sylvester Counts, pro- { himself pal Church, ~Thireenth _strect ) L"‘;};&‘mcfl}";rfl:"%xm‘g’s‘m‘}n‘;:‘oc or —The Bergen County Doard of Taxa- | versity, r of education nt Columbia Uni- | in New York. | he pen Telal s o B Sunwe Loclipent, ot 5 S | three “years while we are getting our tion yesterday granted the Ford Motor | Dr. Luigi Villari, Italian author, ar- versity. painted a gloomy picture of | _Puneral services for Miss Josephine | had siain the girl and buried Which Mr. Moore was organist. Burial | T . 3 A |bearings and building up again.” He Co. a reduction of $1,000,000 in the |SUed Against open diplomatic negotia- conditions during the coming Winter. | Barnes Hall. who died Sunday at her | because she had YR .- SUne T coweiery. | ; ialso recommended a debt holiday for |, - " | tions among natlons, while Dr. William | “Apparently nothing short of & | residence, 3700 Massachusetts avenue,|Later the The young couple, who lived at 618 |4, Ithe farmers, suggesting the Federal|taxable valuation of its Edgewater |Rappard, director of the School for miracle can save us from one of the | after a long iliness, were held today | found in Ridteent sucthesst, were fWning Irom | Government postpone collection on its | property. Frederick P. Saum, one of |Higher International Studies at Ge- | most terrible Winters in our history,” |at St. Albans Church. Interment will Colonial Beach, where they had spent | intermediate credit bank loans. | those voting for the reduction, in a |neva, upheld open negotiations he said. be in New York. | e e B il B | Urging the Government to “take some | prepared statement said the board had | Dr. Villari said that to talk of cov-| “The situafion will be aggravated be-| Miss Hall came to Washington from | 20 to Wellsburg, W. Va., B e e i positive step in aiding our situation.” been “guilty of discrimination” in in- |enants openly arrived at is to ignore | cause the reserves piled up for the pur- | New York two years ago. During her | Fied John Hart.'s Mbore, was in & head-on collision with | he said prices should be fixed on such | creasing the assessment. the very elements, not only of diplo- | pose of alleviating distress from unem- | stay she was active in church activities | Another Pittsburgh They said an automobile occupled by Mr. and | | commodities as cotton, wheat, dairy| The board has asseised the assembly |matic procedure, but of all negotiations. | ployment have been subjected to heavy| 6t St. Albans. She was the daughter |Snyder and Miss Valek had been e % mamuim, e i, WHG | products, beef, potatoes, pork and wool. |plant and annexes at $3,285,750. | He pointed out that that method is im- | drains in the relief of distress of the | of A. Oskey Hall and Katherine Louisa | K°¢Ping company. were returnng to their home after | He noted congressional approval would | James F. Ganncn, jr., former director | practical, because if “every move in the past Winter. | Barnes Hall of New York. s B SIE W Shs-Oapitel. e {be neceseary, and did not suggest any | of revenue and finance of Jersey City, game” were conducted in public, how- | “There ate cities lke Detroit and| She is survived by a sister, Mrs.| Several cases of sunstroke were re- Five other perscns, including Moore's : prices for the ~ommodities named | testified as an expert that the land and |ever sincere the participants were, thay Chcago which are facing bankruptey.| Thomas H. Stevens, of this city, and | ported recently s soldiers in the 60-year-old father, S. E. Moore, were | [} Senator Nye sald that the drought!buildings were worth $2,200.000. would find themselves exposed to at- | Business has show little improve- | a brother, H. Oakey Hall, of New York, | British squadron o ha e Saame, hurt in the smash-up. The others were | Doneld Gulbranson, 17, of 1729 D street southeast; Dent Kirby, 17, 112 Fiftzenth street southeast, occupants of the Moore | autcmobile, and Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton. | All but Kirby are in Mary Washington | Hospital, Fredericksburg, where it is | said ol will recover. Kirby wes treated at_a local hospital and returned home. i . 7 . HK“’DY was the hero of t;mhln\gf‘d]y " ';‘?:-\-'T:)iP;FSI';(Rl\ES ‘\FT AEI')\FE%I‘;IISNE‘; L » LOCATED AT ECKINGTON PLACE e was asleep at the time of the crash, ENTS ZARING IN THE EVED ' sty and on awakennig, dragged his injured STAR EACH MONDAY — SHOWING - i - ARD “R S:REETPNQRTHEAST e i companions from the car, which had ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPHS OF HOW 2, OWNED AND OPERATED BY THE caught cn fire after the accident. Kirby SANICO BAKERY PRODUCTS ARE D SANITARY GROCERY COMPANY OF ‘Wwas severely cut, bruised and burned MADE. % 4 WASHINGTON, D. ‘The young:-r Mr. Moore was taken to Playing a game /of “guillotine” at a bt 4 A ? h D. & the Marine Hospital at Quantico, where | New York birthday party, Alfied Tver- he died. His wife was taken to Mary | son, 21, was killed when the blade of ‘Washington Hospital, with the other in- | an ax slipped from the haft, striking Jured, and died shortly after. | her at the base of the skull as it was | being wielded in pantomine by a_mock $26,000,000 CLAIMED | =~ e {Blind Man to Get IN CURIISS \lll.l. SU|T§ $1,000 for Reading Three Directors of Air Complny: Bible With T()“g“e Sue in Florida County Court .| . 5 in Probate of Will. Lexington, Va., Minister | | | By the Associated Press. E to Divide Prize Won MIAMI, Fla, August 11—A claim With Feat. I e B il | &y the Assosiatea Press In the vernacular of home folks, i STt S In| KANSAS CITY, August 11.—William this. process is called “rising.” In County Court here yestsrday. | i P Cus o x The claim was signed by Prederick A McPherson, blind and handless, learned the parlance of Sanico Bakers it is known as “pan-proofing.” But P. Kimball, George Skivington and to Tead the Bible by touching his ww ‘éfil”"" wh;) xungd they | tongue to raised letters en ctors of e company | isi an- i i E since January 1, 1917. An inventory | His Ifat may brlngdmm :11.20? {Iflm rising .or pan-proofing- 1t 1s un fled with the caurt here recently |the Rev. D. T. Lauderdale of Lexington, doubtedly the most important wvalued the estate, exausive of real es- | Va., who submitted McPherson's tongue- A : tate, at $2,667,258,85. memug accomplishment in & contest process in the entire method of their claim | and thereby won a prize of $2,000. : : T e e R eniion | The Kantas City Star said foday the making high quality Sanico Brca(!; in a suit which has been pending | contest manager had informed it the The dough loaves are “panned n New York State since October, 1919, | Winner would divide the prize with the p : o In filing the claim, the directofs said (aflicted Scot. S and confined in'a heavily insulated they were not walvi any rights the: [cPherson sal a premature dyna- | x e “ e y have in New Vorx ourts mor are |mite explosion crippled him in 1906, | room where they are kept a fixed giving up their contention that |but he was unwilling to forego comfort | period of time in a temperature of Curtiss wes a resident of that State |of the Bible . A ar s 4 mnd that his will should have been o3 - < from 90 to 95 degrees F. and a rela- m"g.fi:’&:fig;%;’afl"xfiu; Spenish Paper Fired. tive humidity of 76 to 80%. owes the Curtiss-Herring Co. $14,483.- | AO, Spain, August 11 (#.—The | “Many 00K »af 18 spoi ir 08586 for patents and earnings on| oy ot newevener Gaseta Del any a good loaf is spoiled in them; $1,070,000 for stock and earn- | Plant of the mewspap the prooi” is a bakeryman’s adage ings: $1,130,000 for receipts from exhi- | Norte was set on fire last night by a o ; B, . i bition flights and interest; $813,600 for | group of men raid to have been angered that is never heard at Sanico. For damages for illegal injury to the com- | by the paper’s pro-Catholic editorials. Bt sty O . Pany and $8,750,030.13 for cash com- | Firemen. extinguished the blaze before Sanico Bakery CONTROLS. the ‘missions. much damage was done. rising bread dough to make sure the finished loaf will be light. Dough Loaves Racked in Rising Room—Control l.‘.".-‘ Pictured at Left To Give the Finished Loaf Finer Texture--- l3th&GStl. Dough that doesn’t rise enough C makes bread soggy and heavy ... e dough that rises too much results in a loaf of irregular shape, coarse | grain and weak texture . . . things i that Sanico Bakery guards against 5 most carefully in every step of ™ making the high quality bread that AI E has hecome so popular in Wash- ington homes. Inspect the even- ness of texture, the unmistakable evidence of correct rising, that shows so plainly in the picture at 9 the right. Such fine quality bread is the inevitable result of the exact- New S“mmer ing methods followed by Sanico Bakery. DRESSES S . AND BETTER QUALITY More and more as time goes on, . ANNIVERSARY FEATURE coming convinced of the desir- ability of Sanico Bread for its high Sanico Whole quality. Sanico Bakery adheres ¥ ’c to exacting principles throughout w“..t m every process developed by exten- True, whole wheat bread IS one of the very finest of vigor-building, health sive research to bring out the full foods. But aside from its nutritive richness. SANICO whole wheat bread boasts the enticing flavor and high quality that can come only from proper mixing and goodness of fine bread. 1t is no baking of the best of pure ingredients. You will find it a welcome substitute, and wonder that “better quality” is a ! a pleasant addition to your daily menus. Try it for one day . . . at your favorite fitting description of the products ' ot il o ditde . of Sanico Bakery. T T e IS I Come in with mother, sister or a friend and #\ try them on! Flowered Asilk chiffons, Silk Piggly Wiggly Stores Shantung Suits, Knit- ALWAYS OPEN FOR INSPECTION . . . Where You Help Yourself.....! NEXT SOTRAY TR A TRL I ted Suits, Fine Printed PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED . . . -'r'nz umfiomufa‘ixm“m NI “A:l; 22;5 Silks. BN ORI 4 PO Mot p ESSAND CONDUCTS FREQUENT 46 to 56 for Stouts FINAL