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THE IN ? AR GROUP DROPS STATION PROTEST EVEX Co-eds Seek Right To Use Cigarettes When They Please By the Associated Press. EVANSTON, Ill, October 1.— Northwestern Umvenlty co-eds began signing petitions Tuesday night demanding the right to smoke cigarettes when and where they please. The petitions pledge to decrease public smoking if the privilege is granted in sorority houses. Student organizations sponsored circulation of the petitions. ‘The women’s alumnae group, which caused the smoking ban, believes that non-smokers may contract the habit if co-eds use cigarettes in sorority hguses. HOLLYWOOD CLUB RAIDED HOLLYWOOD, Ca! Police raided the fa Club in Hollywood ed a: WOMAN IMPROVING AFTER BRIDGE FALL Mrs. Adeline Greenleaf, 40, Rallies—Bares Identity to Police. ants Boos}er Studio Will Not Cut Programs. The Assoclated Broadcasters of America today withdrew its protest to the Fed- eral Radio Commission against the | erection of a booster station in Wash- | ington by the Columbia Broadcasting | System. The organization announced it had ssured by Columbia officials that plans had been made to deprive sta- tions saffiliated with its networks of the bia by substituting | for existing outlets. ted tion had besn mads on ths us and liquor and rrested 145 |ground that the booster station in men, mostly in evening dress. Washington would be the first step to- Detective Charles Hoy, leader of the ward a Nation-wide system of booster raiders, said several rooms of the club |stations, resulting in the displacement had been rented to a group of pro- of existing stations on the Columbia fessional gamblers, who, under the | network. guise of a charity fund campaign, were | The proposed booster station in Wash- conducting a profitable one-night gam- | ington will replace WMAL as the C bling stand. He saild no women were |lumbia outlet. Columbia’s idea in ask- ing permission to erect such a station, Mrs. Adeline Greenleaf, 40, 1026 Six- teenth street, who fell 75 feet from the Dumbarton Bridge over Rock Creek yesterday afternoon, was reported re- covering this morning at Georgetown | University Hospital, although three vertebrae were crushed by the’ fall. Condition s Excellent. m!‘d latz last night b\, v] caid that her xcellent, and that the shock were disappearing . Greenleaf told police she fell during an attack of vertigo as she was leaning over the railing. The guard- rail is of concrete, breast high and 2 feet wide. At first she attempted to conceal her identity, refusing to give police her name and later giving the name of Mrs. James Brown and a non- existent address. Police finally impressed her with the serioysness of her condition and she gave her true name. Has Two Children. She is the wife of Eric Greenleaf gr neral uam~ engineer of the Chesa- Sho giris’ school here, 2nd old, who is out of (hfl city at s IMPROVEMENT SEEN IN SOUTHEAST U. S. Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia{ Banks Show Gains in Retail Trade and Textile Industry. Her Most Famous Dish Taste it! Fresh flavored deep sea cod, mealy boiled to, adroitly mixed and dehmely seasoned. That's Gorton’s Ready-to-Fry Cod Fish Cakes, and New England’s most famous dish. Just shape contents of can into small balls and fry —small, golden brown balls, crisp and de- liciously good. A great treat and a great con- venience. Ask your grocer. nced dies.” on's o S Made by the packers of GORTON'S CODFISH, Gloucester, Mass. FREE: Write for recipe book “Delicious Fish Dishes™ By the Associated Press. | ATLANTA, Ga., October 1.—Increased retail trade, greater consumption of cotton and improvement in production of coal in Alabama and Tennesses were shown Wednesday in the monthly busi- ness review of the sixth district by the FPederal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Department store sales increased 9.4 per cent in August over July and aver- aged 9.6 per cent less in actual dollar volume than in August, 1930. Cotton consumption in the United SBtates, as well as in Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee, was greater in August than it was in that month last year and in Tennessee there was an increase over July. August was the fourth month to show an increase in the production of cotton cloth by mills in the district as com- pared with the corresponding month last year. Orders received by textile mills were greater than in July or in August a year ago and unfilled orders reported at the end of August by yarh mills ‘were 31.2 per cent greater than a year ago. The number of workers at cloth mills increased slightly over July, but employment at both cotton and yarn mills was less than in August last year. Cotton consumption in the district | averaged 52 per cent smaller than| in July, but was 16.2 per cent greater | than in Augusz last )car ‘ 1,000 MINE STRIKERS RETURN TO OHIO JOBS Governor's le\ Resmcung Voto ALL DOCTORS SAY: *'Fish is a part every well- Highest quality—three | full pounds to the can —constantly tested to maintain unvarying good- ness. That's the secret of [ BlueRibbonMalt's leader- ship and ever- increasing popularity. on Acceptance of Check Weigh- men, Accepted. By the Associated Press. MILLFIELD, Ohio, October 1.— More than a thousand coal miners trudged back to their jobs in_all bu two Athens County mines Monday, ending a week's walkout that started in | a dispute over the method of selecting | check weighmen At a mass meeting here Tuesday, the ; miners voted to accept a plan submitted by Gov. George White, under which only employes of the mines concerned | can vote on the sclection of check weighmen. Previously there was no such restriction in selecting The men will not return to work at the Sunday Creek Coal Co.’s No. 5‘ mine at Murray City and the Western | Fuel Co.s 10-X mine at Goose Run until new check weighmen are selected. | These two mines were the center of the dispute. Approximately 1500 miners, their wives and children attended the meet- ing and stood in a drizzling rain while | their leaders told them the new agree- ment was not satisfactory, but must be accepted for the present to escape the | hardships of a Winter without work. Blue Ribbon Malt Americas Btégmt Seller Break one...you'll see hundreds of tiny, delicate flakes thats why they are so tenderly crisp /- AR \/ // / \V Columbia Assures Complain- | STAR, WASHINIGTON, it was sald, is to provide full-time Co- lumbia program service in the Washing- ton area, which is not now being furnished by WMAL. EMBASSY DE.NIES DANGER EXISTS IN SPAIN’S PORTS Rumors of Unsettled Conditions Declared Directed Against Pros- pective Tourist. Rumors that tourists run unnecessary risks when they land in Spanish ports, because of unsettled conditions follow- ing the recent upheaval which marked the end of Spain as a monarchy, were denied today by the Spanish embassy. The embassy issued the following aulement “It has been brought to the attention | of the Spanish embassy that aboard | Ssome of the foreign boats plying be- | tween American and European ports an unjust campaign is being waged against tours in Spain. False rumors |are spread among passengers, telling of risks they run if they land on Spanish ports, due to unsettled conditions there, jand playing-up imaginary dangers. “The Spanish embassy can emphat- ically assert the falsity of such insinu- ations, the purpose of which is only to divert toward other countries the for- | eign tourists who honor Spain with | their visit.” Philadelphia mills supply most of the | a| silk hosiery used in South Africa. D, C. THURBDAY, PIONEER LOUISIANA GOVERNOR SUCCUMBS Henry Clay Warmoth Was First Executive - After Close of Civil War. By the Assoclated Press. NEW ORLEANS, October 1.—Henry Clay Warmoth, 89, the first governor of Louisiana after the Civil War, died last night at his home here after a lingering illness. He was Governor of Louisiana from 1868 to 1872 and was | active in the early organization of the Republicans in the State. Entering the gubernatorial position at the age of 26, Gov. Warmoth wes the youngest man ever to hold the office. Once dishonorably discharged from the Union Army by direct order of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, he went to President Abraham Lincoln to win reins‘atement as a Federal colonel while still in his ‘early twenties and to become military governor of Louisiana by appointment | ~f President Grant. He was a school teacher, typesetter | and lawyer. More than 3, BW 000 “dead letters” mailed in 1925 and 1926 have just been burned in large bonfires by the French government, which has issued a special peal to writers to be more careful in dressing tueir correspondence. OCTOBER 1, 1931. SWISS WATCH INDUSTRY PLANS CORTEL AS RELIEF Business Sees New Hope From De- pression Similar to Cotton Situation in U. 8. GENEVA (Special).—A feeble ray of hope has been lately cast over the fu- ture of the Swiss watchmaking industry, which hasbeen passing through a crisis as great for Switzerland as that of cot- ton or wheat for America. A superholding company, with a capi- | tal of 20,000,000 gold francs has been | brought into being, no less by diplomatic government urging than by the desire of the varlous elements of the industry to “hang together.” The official title is ‘ Allgemeine Schweizerische Uhrenindus- | trie, and its registered office is at Nuen- organization enjoys & government sub- vention of 10 OW 000 francs. ‘The carte! expected to transfuse its lite blood an the export watch trade and save a situation which, up to the first of the present year, looked hope- less by reason of an ircreasing tition in cheag grade watches in wvgfd markets by Germany and Japan. A slight upward swing has been noted in Swiss watch exports during the past six months. COMPLETE HEATING SERVICE ‘ WE SUPPLY THE BURNER | burg, otherwise Neuchatel. Actually the | | BRAKES RELINED Chev, $ 95 I"ortlA 54 95 Pontiac Chev. . $6.95 Essex Plymouth, $9.50 lllellllll; lelr l'l‘ Agil‘m!’lll FOR LISB Tl Best Material GENERAL Prvertly. Apphied RAKE SERVICE Nortl THE SERVICE Only the Best Grades Prompt Delivery 24-Hour Service L. P. STEUART & BRO —COMPLETE HEATING SERVICE— 138 12th St. N.E. Lincoln 1203 le You’re Thinking of Buying a Radio . . . Don’t Miss This! The Greatest Radio “SALES NEWS” of the Year! THURSDAY—FRIDAY & SATURDAY George’s Radio Co. ONCE-A-YEAR ODDS & ENDS CLEARANCE of Nationally Famous Radios Terms Arranged If Desired Extra Bargains in Late Model Electric Sets— Freshman Radio In Console. $19.50 Steinite Radio In Highboy Console. $29.50 Philco Radio Table Model. $22.50 Atwater Kent Radio Table Model. A group of fine Radios that sold up to $157 50 Wonderful sets with all the fea- tures afforded by today’s fine radios. INCLUDED IN THIS GROUP ARE CROS ATW ATER KENTS (7 tubes) LEY LOWBOYS (8 tubes) EARL (8 tubes screen grid) and R. Price Includes Tubes——Nothing Else to Buy . A.s in CONSOLES (7 tubes). A group of fine Radios that sold PHILCOS, MAJESTIC, STEW.-- All Sets Sold With NEW SET Guarantee! Late Model Electric Sets at Close-Out Prices R. C. A. Radio Model 44. $27.50 R. C. A. Radio Model 60 Super. $2.4.50 R. C. A. Radio Model 18. ART-WARNERS, SPARTONS, et-. $19.50 $19.50 Sparton Radio Cabinet Model. $39.50 Apex Radio ‘Table Model. $15 Crosley Radio Cabinet Model. $10 The finest names in Radio at this ridiculously low odds and ends price. An opportunity that comes just at the beginning of a great sea- son of broadcasting. Atwater Kent Radio Dynamic Speaker. $24.50 Sheridan Radio In Console. $24.50 Philco Baby Grand Late Model. $29.00 developed by a special Sunshine method of baking, called the Full Grain Process. It results in a delightfully crisp and fla- vorful cracker...Serve them at meals . . . always/ Szmséz’ne KRISPY CRACKERS Layersof delicate flakes...tiny, fairy-like caverns...the perfect texture for a crisp bite. The extra flakiness of Sunshine Krisp¥ Crackers is no baking accident. 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