Evening Star Newspaper, August 16, 1931, Page 4

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SESSMN DOUBTFUL Regular- Congress to Have Time for Debts Action, . Leaders Say. for convening Congress in jon in November, in order to of organization and other pre- m before ‘the Tegular session ! opnu.’ are viewed mow as definitely by the ogrwncn of m-ny of Fihave tok mm ‘Hoover they ln to fllp'm‘u of fll' ler murubnum and have advised an extra-session is called mld. use of bgothe Demo- nmmnu to bombard the 1. Moreo‘vfer ltl.!:;y fi;&lnw an IX* Auucn even cel as u N would tena to multiply lm' direct Federal aid to u w-mpw-d oyhd, Amgning o g it H muc ‘That tnis would pnc\.\ dole system. £ Not Expected to Yield. been tion of yielding to the demands progressive group and some r an extra session this Summer tember. ect may be to prevent ratifica- Congress of the.moratorium on til “after December 15, when 30 THEFT CHARGES ABAINST J. H. HOECK | Ben of Minister, Who Says He Es.| oaged Rockville Sanitarium, Held at New Haven. iated Press. he office of the State's at- began an examination of charges of burglary and theft ive been lodged against him as John Hawkins on June is in the New Haven Oounty $10,000 bonds awaiting trm eptember - term of Court. ; His identity was reveal yu- terday by the arrival of his parents, Ml Mrs. Lewis G. Hoeck, from ang. Attorney Samuel E. Hoyt to- fly sa of the counts against mml g: mn of Hoeck sayisg Yor to ques- | s abked him by the detectives | “Hoegk claimé now that he did not | the mcldenta . after a two-hour confer- th his client, said tomight he red to furnish indica! Orient.. l:‘l:! l'olrh 1 f the N father 15 r of Bwederiborg Church in Cincinnati IR S SHODTS THREE WOMEN Man Wounds His Estranged Wife i Two, Then Kills Self. THE SUNDAY 'The Watermelon Crop Comes STAR, WASHINGTON, SPECIAL SESSION to the Capital BOATS, AIDED BY STIFF NOR'EASTER, BROUGHT 37,000 MELONS HERE YESTERDAY. PRESIDENT PAUSES GANDHI IS MISSING FOR PIGNIC LUNCH S DELEGATES 60 None of Guests Invited to|Twenty-seven Sail for Parley Camp Asked to Talk Gov- | at London on India, Gloomy ernment or Politics. at Mahatma’s Absence. By the Associated Press. By the Associated Press. Y, Al 15.—Twenty-seven LURAY, Va. August 15—A picniec |, BOMBAY, Auguet 15 -Foe ';’;nncs lunch caused President Hoover to in-|sajled from here today in & wet and terrupt his trip to his Rapidan camp today fence ‘woods In an mind, Hilles, i ish. luend '.be conference on Indian affairs at overnight to ] ed he would stay there until “the gov-, ernment puts me in prison.” Delogates Depressed. Most of the delegates’ who left here, in spite of the fact that their political g o i i frern He will | rectly of Gandhi, h‘n; Mrs. Hoover, who | seemed wacd that the manstma | News, Va, |Was.not a fellow passenger, fof they re- gard him as a leader of the common pe%: of India. nwefln( of the Pederal Structures | is to precede the mund-eahlr con!mnce will open in| London on Septembe: Among the dele(lws who left today | was Mooltan Sapru Jayakar, who made & strenuous eleventh-hour effort compose the differences between Gandhi | and Viceroy Willingdon. the Prosident’ acioa, a4 Capt o - the Presi en s secretar} P . ” i Joel Boone, the White House physician. |, -Minor lssues” he said, “were alt The President expects fo et ‘of"&‘;‘me chances of Gandhi's attending the Dlete et A e A Pd. i was said |conference. I hope that Prime Minister guests invited were MacDonald ultimately will persuade the { at the White House before he flm‘w St (o cumptommive to discuss d“fl“"{“};“&“&mw_ In the meantime Gandhi's two prive Mo eapetad th Sk | milch goats remained contentedly at ton Monday morning. the pler. Because of their master's o | Electric power necessary for the up- | will be spared the prospect of seasick- | keep of 3 new telephone uchlng in |ness during the present violent mon- London would lght & city of 30,000 soon which is churning the Arablan population Sea. A Baak — doing SMALL things BIG LOANS ON Stocks and Bonds This Bank makes loans for one year, or less, WITH- OUT co-makers on ap- proved securities, the bor- rower to make monthly de- posits to accumulate a fund with which to repay the loan at the end of the year or at the end of whatever period for which the loan is made. Morris Plan Bank Under Supervision U. S. Tressury 1408 H St. N.W., Washington, D.C. Loaning Hundreds o Thousands 4"« ind 'fi' he is making the his rmnz at Ahmedabad overn ht to doctrines, for the most part, are di-| to those decision not to go to London, the zuu‘ URGED ON TARIFF |Senator McKellar, in Reply to Vandenberg, Favors Drastic Cuts. By the Associated Press. 'MEMPHITS, Tenn., August 15.—United States Senator K. D. McKellar today advocated the repeal of the Smoot- Hawley tariff nct nc an extra u-um of Congress, and immediate per cent reduction of Tates as they exist after the act's 1. The Tennessée Democrat mailed a let- ter to Senator Vandenberg, Republics Michigan, suggesting that Congress also hould consider a reciprocal tariff act to encourage foreign purchasers by of- fering another 25 per cent Teduction in tariff rates to each nation increasing |its American purchases of wheat, cot- ton and manufactured goods by 25 per | cent. | Any nation increasing its purchases by 50 per cent in any one year would | have a benefit of & 50 per cent reduc- tion in duties under the proposal. Such a plan, he said, would “unquu. tionably work in 'g'l‘: interest of our R . | export trade, and this is what we im- "";'fi-nf":‘;k?; ";;’L“‘,’g;"f;"e mediately need above all things except n d to put our people to work, and this Capital market from the shores of the Chesapeake Bay and its | ou G 214 us F;'“y in accomplishing tributaries yesterday. - The melons were being sold as low ar a Cites Recent Challenge. nickel apiece wholesale, but were mov- | MeKellar said he was replying to a ing well, according to the boat captains. | recent statement of the Michigan Sen- wer: Eating up some of the |ator in which he was asked to explain They are, left to right, just a few his votes for increased rates on cement, - S.C. W. R, S.L.and H A, rayon filaments, china clay and silver C. T. Bowen aboard ore. Ollvv Vlrxl-nll from Middlesex Coun- |~ He said that during his last election —Star Staff Photos | campaign he visited an East Tennessee town where people were walking the streets because of the closing of a ce- ment plant. The owners said Beigium was sh?‘ptnl cement here for less than be mlnu!lcturod on this side. McKellar said he carried out his prom- |1se to vote for an increase in tariff on | cement in the preliminary m but | felt obliged to vote against the bill as a whole. The same, he said, vu “sub- stantially true” concerning his vote on (rayon. Asks E hM b f Ho His\nunnthin.cdclnv'u«ntg: earth itself, he sa ng sks Cao SIVSRE i voted for decr‘-ued duty on the manu- i factured article. for His Stand on Rates The prices of all have gone down since the gfirnm We‘\: ma e.urgkw‘dr; i i i asserting t he le a mi e Affecting District. all three of mue‘nprehmmnry votes.” ‘e another mistake, he sald, “in thlnk_"“ we could better the position In a letter sent out to every mrml}:}r of silver by a tariff of the House, Representative C. Asks Vandenberg’s Support. Mmuyrr Republican, of Iowa, one of he leading members of the House Ways| Considering “the many thousanrs of And Means Committee and a possible | items increased by the industrial pro- { candidate for the speakership, is seek- | visions of that bill, the four that you {ing,the views of members on tariff refer to &8 having been for by | Tates. He is asking each member to|me are of such relatively infinitesmal advise him confidentially as to whether | importance that lhey certainly did not any rates which affect his district are|deserve the time that you gave them wmbariookw considered from |in your letter,” Senator McKellar nndndnb of the difference in cost | wrote. of m abroad. ‘The Tennesseean urged Vlndznbi? mm.mve lumnyer does | “as & member of the not say so in his letter, the inference | vigorous, active, intelligent 3 ltwer drawn from it is that after he has made | of your country,” to lak Prendent a survey he will seek to have rates| Hoover to call an extra which he concludes are not properly| He advocated legislation to remove adjusted revised either by hunn tariff “barriers,” relieve unemployment, or through the Tariff Comm and |and wheat and cotton wers, abolish ovisions of the Ilw | the Farm Board, auth an organized holds that | system of exporting corpnrlums to dis- eralities in | pose of surpluses abroad to de- '.h tariff. position is | crease the Tunning expenus of the in line with that of the Repub“cln Na- | Government. | tional Committee and many leaders in| Congress, he said should “take im- ess who are calling on critics of | mediate steps to aid in every possible N.Qe! to say def to 'ht, way the two great industries of our )ect Mr. Ramseyer, how. , try, of rlllh( wheat lnd cotton, |and especially to dispose of, some Droper way the crpluses - e SsuFvey 'on own initiative and Reopening of Issue Looms. !bv the Stabilization Corporation) is vir- The letter of Representative Ramseyer | Sally indestrusiite by W, snid theve- price of the S oot 85U W, e, Tepotied 5| e oF et 1 the Government ates. Rumors are current that some of the Democratic leaders favor a 20| Tates. It pears, however, that the Democratic leaders have not yet agreed e Preparu s o Serum in Infant Malady War. Production Cost Is Yardstick. Representative mmuyzr in his let- | () —Miss Marian C. Denison of the ter, says he is for a “moderate, care- | New York Department of Health, will points out that both parties are com- | 17 quarts of blood taken from inf; mitted to the dmerenca in cost of p-r:ly:h patients here. mum&“fi “yardstick” in measuring duties. in the fight infantil “I am now undertaking to nouy such | New Yorl M - sl s PR M. | PThe 1,300,000 bales of cotton (held 1pecta of the ta: will be reopened in | S Bumors & Sl Gawome | BLOOD TAKEN FR per cent horizontal cut in the industrial 0" ‘o on any given program. WARM SPRINGS, Ga. All‘ult 15 ‘mm adjusted protective tariff.” He |leave here tomorrow for Albany with producunn here and abroad as the | be transformed into a serum to be used | products of the farms, mines and facto- ‘The hhod was taken from 40 patients | ries of the United States as under the | here yesterday and today after press | | | present ‘tariff law, measured by the | dispatches telling of the need for serum common yardstick above referred to. ew Ye gither overprotected or underprotected,” | == York had been received. s wrof In order to help in this he asked each | the farms, the mines and the factories member to send him tne following |in your district whereon the present Pirst. A list of the products of the duflea are less than the @ifference in farms, the mines and the factories in of production at home and abroad.” your district whereon the present duties Mr, Ramseyer adds that this infor- exceed the difference in cost of produc- | mation will be confidential, and the at home and abroad; and products which are listed in the replies ‘Second. A list of the products of mhknvulhuinvutm by experts. | BUBSUSSSUSVTSEENSEYY Continuing the Sale of Fine Quality Linen Suits L] Single and Double Breasted Models -$17.75.3818.75 . $19.75 * All Sizes up to 46 $14.75 Seersucker Suits, $12.50 Smartly Tailored—All Sizes up to 46 . $10-$12 Langrock W hite and Fancy Striped Trousers $7.95 All Langrock Suits Are Now on Sale. SALTZ BROTHERS 1341 F ST. NW. .Qtfi*'.fi*&&t.fi&'.!t.. D. C, AUGUST 16, 1931—PART ONE. OPPORTUNE SAVINGS! SEASONABLE APPAREL OF REGULAR HIGH SAKS . QUALITY —AT UNUSUAL ECONOMIES 5 Great Saks Sales! From Regular Stock: $25.00—$%$30.00 Tropical Worsted Summer Suits '15 Coat and Trousers, or Coat, Vest, Trousers WITH a price that shows a clear saving of $10 to $15 on the face of it, it shouldn’t take much persuasion to show you the ahsolute wisdom of getting another cool suit for the warm days that last well up into September. The suit will still be practically new next Summer! Choice of plain and patterned Grays, Tans and Browns. Some of the suits are three-piece —coat, vest and trousers. Saks—Third Floor $37.50—%45 2-Trouser Year-Round Suits 23 HEN it's August 17th, and you can buy a sterling suit for year-round wear at $23, it’s our idea of an investment. These are our own regular $37.50-845.00 clothes; so we can vouch for the saving. Worsteds, Unfinished Worsteds, Flan- nels, Twists and some Shetland Tweed 4-Piece Sport Suits. Saks—Third Floor Closed Saturday During August The Avenue at 7th Regular $1.95—$7 45 SHIRTS From Qur Quality Makers and Our Own Newest Stock 1.29’ (4 for $5) WE WERE able to arrange an outstanding “buy” with one of our chosen shirt makers. ¥t brought us, at a notable conices- sion, some of his finest $1.95 and $2.45 products of the present sea- son. To round out the assort ments, we made additions from our own $1.95 and $2.45 selec- tions. The result is a valte ne man can wisely pass up. White, Solid-Color and Famey Broad cloths, Oxfords and Chambrays, als e Fancy Woven Madrases; collar-attached; 1 and 2 collars to match, and neckband style. Sizes 13% to 17, Saks—First Ploor Neckwear From $1.50 and $2 Grades 85¢ RESILIENT construction . . . fin» est hand-tailoring . . . careful ly selected quality silks . . . light and medium weights . . . wide range of colors and color combi« nations. It's a great line-up—at 85¢! Men’s $1.00 Rayon Shirts and Shorts 65¢ per garment TAKEN right from our own shelves. Made of fine-gange quality rayon by one of Ameries’s leading rayon underwear special- ists. Cut to standard specificas : B&, Peach ud Nile.

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