Evening Star Newspaper, July 3, 1936, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A—4 ww FARMERS IN CLASH IN FRENCH STRIKE “iGendarmes Halt Battles After Hands Quit—New Walkouts Cripple Paris. By the Associated Press. PARIS, July 3—Striking, fighting farmers who refused to milk cows and "“feed horses brought gendarmes to the rural vineyard district near Loan to- " day. Officials halted clashes between farm hands and their employers after one person was injured. A new strike in the dressmaking in- dustry in Paris broke out in the Lanvin atelier, where 200 seamstresses occupied the establishment. " A similar strike of wrapping clerks, “elevator operators and other employes at the Molyneux dress house was quickly settled. Fresh walkouts among miners at Strasbourg and textile workers at Lille increased the ranks of workers continuing the “folded arms” strike. Electricians and ushers in a Paris --burlesque theater called an occupa- tional walkout. Three hundred mem- bers of the Opera Comique Co., which struck two days ago, ended | their dispute by giving Jean Zay, | minister of education, permission to arbitrate their demands with the | management. Employes of pork butcher shops, | raiding their association headquar- | ters, were caught inside the office after a janitor slammed the door. | Police took them to jail, booked them and then released the butchers. As the strike movement reasserted itself in the scattered disorders, Roger Salengro, minister of the interior, warned that unless the walkouts are soon terminated the lower middle class may abandon the workers’ cause and support fascism in the hope of achiev- ing tranquillity in the nation. Stormy scenes in the Chamber of Deputies ended with a 282-to-193 vote to oust Jean Chiappe, former prefect of Paris police, from membership. Now president of the Paris Munici- pal Council, Chiappe drew the fury of Communists because of their dis- like for the man in charge of Paris police before the days of the bloody riots precipitated by the Stavisky mu- nicipal pawnshop scandal in February, 1934. “I'll see you soon,” Chiappe asserted | as he left the chamber. A new election | is to be called in his Corsica district. The Chamber of Deputies turned its attention to the French agricultural gituation in debate on the govern- ment’s bill to establish a wheat con- trol board. GIRL MAY RECOVER FROM SHOT WOUND | | Jean Patton, 10, Hurt by Play- mate With Rifle, Stages Game Fight. The condition of 10-year-old Jean | Patton. who was seriously wounded in an accidental shooting two days ago | at Takoma Park, Md., continues un- | changed, officials at Children's Hospi- tal said today. Jean, who lives in Washington, Pa., but was visiting her sister at the time of the mishap, is staging a game fight and attaches say she probably will recover unless unexpected com- plications set in. The youngster was shot when Her- bert William Hall, also 10, of Takoma Park, accidentally touched the trigger of a .22-caliber rifle he was reloading | for a playmate. The bullet entered | her abdomen. Herbert, fearful that his father might whip him because of the acci- dent, roamed the woods in the vicinity of the Takoma Park Elementary School all Wednesday night before weariness finally overtook him. He entered a garage at the rear of his home early yesterday and was found &leeping on the running board of his | parents’ machine. MAN FOUND DEAD HERE, HEAD NEAR CAR EXHAUST M. W. Boynton, Reportedly Brit- | ish War Veteran, Victim. Was Cab Driver. Millard W. Boynton, 38, said to | have been a British World War vet- eran, was found dead late yesterday, his head on a pillow close to the ex- haust pipe of his automobile in a garage in the rear of the 400 block of Fourth street northeast. He had been living at the Railroad Y. M. C. A. Acquaintances at the “Y” said Boynton was uncommunicative about himself. He had been employed as a laundry truck driver and previously 85 a taxicab driver, with a stand at Union Station. Police found the garage door locked from within and Boynton’s body stretched on a sheet, his head on a pillow and a cold cigar in one hand. The automobile’s ignition switch was on and the gasoline supply had been exhausted. CARLISLE V. WEAKLEY- DIES AT AGE OF 42 Warfield Motor Co. Auditor Was ENnMve of Baltimore and Resi- b dent Here 25 Years. Carlisle Vincent Weakley, 42, audi- tor of the Warfield Motor Co., died iesterdly after a long illness at his ome, 4107 New Hampshire avenue. A native of Baltimore, Mr. Weakley had lived here more than 25 years and had been with the motor company 11 years. He was a member of the Wash- ington Automotive Trade Association. He is survived by his widow, Mrs, Frances D. Weakley; his mother, Mrs. Alverds C. Weakley, this city, and a trother, Dr. Roy Weakley, Annapolis, Md. Funeral services will be held at 9 #.m. tomorrow at St. Gabriel'’s Cath- olic Church, following brief servies at his late residence. Burial will be at Long Green, Md. | BEGINS VACATION Morgenthau Takes Plane to Mas- sachusetts Colony. HYANNIS, Mass., July 3 (P.— Henry Morgenthau, jr., Secretary of the Treasury, arrived here last night for a month’s vacation at the Wianno Club. The Secretary, who was alone, land- ed at 6:25 p.m. in a new Coast Guard | which jlicensed transport pilot. Mrs. Josephine Tighe Williams, Baby Earl Scott, Miss Grace McGerr and Sister Margaret_' of Providence Hospital are shown with the check for $300 given to the milk fund of the hospital by the Newspaper Women’s Clu NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C ub. The sum was netted by the cl: —Underwood & Underwood Photo. ., FRIDAY, CABARET HOSTESS SOUGHT IN KILLING |dentified as Woman Seen Leaving Hotel of Singer Shot for Vengeance. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 3.—A brunette cabaret hostess was sought today by detectives investigating the “vengeance slaying™ of s platinum blond night JULY 8, 1936. Mystery Slaying Figures l.ESf)B'l‘fi. ¢t AY GASPE TOUR 3148, 1 10 roem. From Aug 50 Fr) 4 Bt Soil for ~HOTEL RTO. ITLANTIC CITY *Ses Witer Pool .. Beach, | A Pl % %4 club songstress. ‘The object of the wide search was Mrs. Ruth Freed, 28. Capt. Andrew Barry ordered the hunt for her after he said she had been identified from a photograph as the slender woman ub at its Winter carnival. MRS SNOW WINS DIVORCE AT RENO Mental Cruelty Alleged in - Complaint—Custody of Daughter Granted. Mrs. Enid Sims Snow, Washington society matron and daughter of former Representative Sims, of Tennessee, yesterday in Reno won an uncontested divorce from Chester A. Snow, ir., son of a prom- inent local fam- ily, large real estate owner and licensed pilot. She charged mental cruelty. ‘The Snows were married here in 1923, five years after Mrs. Snow had made her debut in Wash- ington society. Her father served in Congress from 1897 to 1921 and was chairman of the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee of the House during the Wilson administration. The Snows’ 11-year-olds daughter, Enid Clalre, lives with her mother at 2139 Wyoming avenue. In June, 1935, Mrs. Snow went to Reno, but returned here without hav- ing filed suit for divorce. An agree- ment was reportedly reached last Au- gust regarding property rights and custody of the daughter. Harlan L. Heward, attorney for Snow, said at Reno that the court approved property settle- ment agreements provided that Snow give his former wife t h e Montana Apartment Build- ing, 1726 M street, valued at “about $240,000.” Heward also said his client established a trust fund of $27,500 with the American Security & Trust Co., which provides $250 & month for his daughter. Mrs. Snow is to retain custody of the daughter. The attorney stated Snow, who has mining interests in Nevada, would re- main in Reno. Snow's father is & retired real estate operator and patent attorney. The son served in the Army Air Serv- ice during the World War. He has a pilot's rating in the Army and is a He served as a “dollar-a-year man” in the aero- nauties branch of the Department of Commerce in 1933. . RESCUED MINER DIES OF INJURIES Was Trapped 22 Hours in “Home- Made” Shaft in Penn- sylvania. Br the Associated Press. SHAMOKIN, Pa, July 3.—Enoch Klinsky, jr., 29, who was trapped for 22 hours by a fall of rock in an abandoned coal working, died last night, 12 hours after his rescue. Internal injuries and a fractured vertebra caused his death, physicians sald. Oxygen was administered late in the day and every one had been barred from his hospital room except doctors and nurses. His rescue yesterday morning from a coal hole in North Mountain was & sig- nal for dynamiting of every “home- made mine” in the District, including the one from which he was taken. Klinsky, one of the hundreds of unhired workers selling fuel from make-shift holes, was brought to the surface of a 30-foot pit yesterday morning. The former miner and his father had only recently returned to the hole for some “Fourth of July money.” They defied warnings of the Ste- vens Coal Co., which owns the prop- erty. Shamokin Valley is honeycomb- ed by abandoned workings and rock fslls are frequent. A rock fall caught the Klinskys. ‘The father escaped and spread the alarm. The Stevens Coal Co. called out picked rescue men. Encouraged by cries from the depths, rescuers worked throughout Wednesday and Wednes- day night before they were able to reach Klinsky. Mrs. Enid Snow. C. A. Snow, Jr. Sportsmen Appealed to. “Come to church just as you are—in flannels, shorts or whatever you've been wearing all day,” read the an- nouncements of ministers of Scotland plane after a flight of 2 hours 15 tr who have started special Sunday eve- ning services for sport lovers. Wallace Suggests Payments ‘in Kind’ To Insure Crops B7 the Associated Press. ST. PAUL, July 3.—Crop insurance, with the premiums paid “in kind,” was suggested today by Secretary of Agri- | culture Wallace as a possible method of helping farmers to bridge crop failures. Outlining the plan in an interview here while en route to Des Moines, | Towa, the Secretary emphasized that | it was merely a suggestion and that | there was no present intention of the Government setting up such & plan. |~ “For instance.” he said, “if a farmer | raised wheat, he could pay wheat pre- miums when he hac a good crop, re- ceiving the insurance when _crops failed.” sked if the Government would es- | tablish such & system, he replied: “No. I simply suggest it as a pos- sible method of crop. insurance. The | Government could do it.” He boarded a train here for Des Moines. He said he hoped to take a | vacation after his arrival at Des Moines. | “I had one planned.” he said, “but | the drought came along.” | | | | { DRIVEIS PLANNED FORBRIDGEFUNDS, | | | Group to Seek Appropriation to Replace Old Pennsyi- vania Avenue Span. A campaign to obtain funds to re- place the old Pennsylvania Avenue | | Bridge was planned yesterday at A! joint luncheon meeting of the Bridges and Streets and Avenues Committees of the Washington Board of Trade. | The meeting was held at the Harring- ton Hotel. A committee to work for the bridge | appropriation was appointed. It in- | cluded Adelburt W. Lee, chairman: Oliver Metzerott, Roy S. Braden and Everett C. Crites. | | A resolution was passed thanking | the Senate and House District Com- | mittees, the District Commissioners | and other public-spirited citizens for | obtaining appropriations for the new Chain Bridge, and for a study of the Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge. A second committee was appointed to recommend that the new New Hampshire Bridge to be named Lang- | ley Bridge in honor of Charles A. | Langley, who aided the project. Capt. H. C. Whitehurst, District di- rector of highways, outlined the street and bridge improvement program of the future and promised to submit a more detailed plan to the next meeting. A third committee was named to study roadway approaches in the Eck- ington section and the M and K street sections of Georgetown. Dr. Llewellyn Jordan reported on the work done and the results ob- tained for replacement of Chain Bridge. e SAFE DRIVING URGED Reminding motorists that Fourth of July traffic accidents caused 130 deaths | and 4,300 injuries last year, the Amer- ican Automobile Association appealed today for a “safe and sane” Fourth | from the driving standpoint. The fact that Independence day falls on a week end, when highways and streets are normally crowded anyhow, makes careful driving even more im- perative, the A. A. A. said, suggesting that holiday outings be prolonged over KINDLER EXTENDS CONCERT CREETING National Symphony Conduc- tor, Stopping Over, Hopes for Happy Season. Dr. Hans Kindler, conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra and organizer of the first Summer con- | certs in Washington, stopped here | yesterday en route to Cleveland and | extended to the new Washington Summer Concert Association ‘“best wishes for a happy season.” Union members of the orchestra | decided to renew last Summer's con- certs independent of the National Symphony Orchestra Association after & split between union leaders and | officers of the association. Dr. Kindler said yesterday he had | would be cleared up and added, “I | still hope for the future.” Soloists to Appear. Meanwhile the Washington Summer Concert Association announced that | three outstanding soloists will appear on programs at the Watergate this | Summer—Helen Stover, soprano; John | Powell, pianist and composer, and | Philip Frank, violinist, The first three concerts of the series, to be conducted by Alfred Wnllen-i stein, will be held July 19, 22 and 24, the new association announced. | In Cleveland Dr. Kindler, who has just spent two months abroad, will | conduct an outdoor Summer series similar to the one he led here last | | season. | With regard to organizing a sym- | hony, Dr. Kindler said “Last Summer, through the united | efforts of all, I materialized the first vision of Summer concerts in Wash- ington. I wanted them this Summer greater than before. But to achieve them again, we once more needed | concerted effort on the part of all. P Difficulties Numerous. “Giving and arranging great con- certs is not as easy as it seems. It needs not just wishing for them, but countless other factors. Besides the necessary musical talent on the part of the players and the conductor, it needs inspiration on the part of the original organizer, the ability to transmute this inspiration into some- thing practical. It demands organi- zatory power, enthusiastic conviction and the ability to convince others. “Persuasiveness is needed; courage in the face of innumerable practical and artistic difficulties; knowledge of people; constant strength and will power; high idealism, and, more than anything else, integrity. With these you can start what will amount to weeks and months of planning and detail, and never once can any one of the above-mentioned qualities be absent if the end is to be great and worthy, such as music for the Capi- tal should be, A ‘good-enough’ atti- tude is the worst curse ip art.” Dr. Kindler recalled watching Arturo Toscanini, the great conduc- tor, rehearse a symphony orchestra in Paris, France, a few days ago. “That was not bad,” Toscanini told the men, after a particular passage, “but it was not very good ... And when it is not very good, it is very bad.” e DEATH RULED ACCIDENT BOISE, Idaho, July 3 (#).—An Ada County coroner’s jury brought in & verdict last night that James Mc- Donald, 2d, Boise heir to a Standard Oil Co. fortune, died accidentally in Sunday instead of trying to make re- turn journeys in one day. oY the Assoclated Press. SARANAC LAKE, N. Y, July 3.— Prof. Albert Einstein, whose theory of relativity was no match for & balky outboard motor, a whim of the winds or the threat of spending a night on the calm waters of Sararac Lake, looked upon it all today as “a great adventure.” At his Summer home, after several irksome hours in a becalmed and powerless 12-foot catboat, the flowing- haired savant, whose mathematical adventurings have carried him into the realm of infinite time, puffed on his old briar pipe and said: “I've enjoyed myself more than I have in years.” Einstein said he set out yesterday morning looking for “adventure” and he found it when the winds vanished and neither he nor an amateur sailor companion could start the auxiliary motor. James Munn, an Associated Press writer and 8 companion, after & search {lor the misstig. scientist give him & the garage at his residence early yes- terday of carbon monoxide poisoning. Stranded on Lake in Catboat, Einstein Has ‘Great Adventure’ speed tow. > But exhaust smoke got in his eyes and Einstein moved up front with Munn. For the rest of the trip, Munn said, Einstein puffed at his pipe and made complimentary remarks about the Adirondack scenery. The noise of the motor balked attempts at extended conversation and the scientist contended himself with mono- syllables. Once he shouted: “Noisy. Yes?” Fond s he is of sailing, Einstein said he did not care for fishing. A vigorous shake of his head and an emphatic “nein” were his answer when & small fleet of bass anglers were pointed out to him. Docked at last at the Einstein's private wharf, the scientist personally made the catboat safe to he landing and turned to his rescuers: “Thank you very much, gentlemen,” he said, and, tucking his maps of the Saranac chain of waterways un- der his arm, Einstein set off down 8 lonely road that led to his Summer who left a near North Side hotel yes- terday shortly after Miss Audrey Val- lette, 31, had been shot to death in her luxurious apartment. The captain said he had learned from a show girl friend of the victim that she had been friendly with Mrs. Freed's husband, Edward, manager of & gay resort called the “Nut House” The crime, he added, was plainly one of vengeance. Single Bullet Wound. A single bullet in the chest killed Miss Vallette as she apparently re- clined on a bed about 1 pm. The victim, member of a prominent Illinois and Indiana family, was clad only in a pink negligee as she enjoyed a late breakfast. Harold Knox, assistant manager of the hotel, told officials the woman he identified from a picture as Mrs. Freed | had called earlier to see some apart- ments. added, she got off the elevator at the seventh floor, saying she would call on Annabelle Blake—the name under which Miss Vallette had regis- tered. Back at his desk, Knox answered a house call at the switchboard. He heard Miss Vallette gasp: “Help. “I've been shot.” License Number Traced. Hotel attendants said the brunette caller hurried down to the street and raced off in a maroon car. The li- cense number, Barry disclosed, was traced to Mrs. Freed's husband. Lieut. Otto Erlanson reported Mrs. Freed had entered the “nut house” | some time after 1 o'clock, removed her pictures from the wall and de- parted with her husband. ‘The body of Miss Vallette, great- grand-daughter of Col. Henry Vallet 2 pioneer of Wheaton, Ill, and distant relative of Judge Albert H. Gary, once head of the United States Steel Corp., was found on the blood- spattered bed. A diary, containing a number of references to “Eddie,” was found in the room. The wall was decorated with photographs of celebrities in the sports and show world. One was | “noped to the last” that differences | 8utographed by Prizefighter Max Baer. Another was signed by Singer Harry | Richman, Many “Eddie” References. Investigators regarded the diary as important. They quoted frequent references to “Eddie.”” One entry re- lated “Eddie stayed until 3." Anothes “Could have killed Eddie because he wouldn't come over.” A third: “Eddie drove me home.” Miss Lillian Miles, a show girl, who knew the victim for five years, in-| formed detectives Miss Vallette and Edward Freed had been friendly for several months. Other passages contained the names of other men. They told of parties at fashionable supper clubs; “Winning $50 on a horse”: “Bought a couple bottles of Scotch”; “A man got smart—my eye all swelled up”; *“ he make love?”; “Drank a pint. ‘The notations ended June 27. On that day, said Assistant State's Attor- ney Richard Devine, she went to Pittsburgh. Empty bottles, a mirror marked with fingerprints and letters were also in the two-room apartment. Her wardrobe contained five sable pieces, | a Persian lamb coat, satin evening gowns, 15 purses and & man's tie and sports shoes. Roland Schenck, a night club mas- | ter of ceremonies, advised investi- gators he had visited with Miss Val- lette until about 15 minutes before her death. The slaying was carried out in the heart of the North Side's cabaret quarter. Just three days previously another cafe entertainer, Mrs. Flor- ence Thompson Castle, was beaten to death in another hotel a few blocks | away. The latter crime has been tem- porarily labeled “unsolved.” Dro (Continued From Pirst Page.) -— ught Administration indicated 100,000 farm families would need aid. Grain Prices Soar. World-wide alarm over the situa- tion precipitated a buying stampede on both sides of the Atlantic yester- day. High price records for the sea- son evere shattered on the Chicago market by every grain on the list. ‘Wheat's sky ride lifted it past the long- sought “dollar-a-bushel” level. Its 5-cent advance at Chicago was halted by exchange rules forbidding a gain of more than a nickel a day. Corn surged up the allowable limit of 4/ cents. December wheat swung up to $1.03 at Chicago and to $1.18 at Minneapolis. Traders studied estimates that heat and dryness had already destroyed 100,000,000 to 140,000,000 bushels of Spring wheat in the United States and 75,000,000 in Canada. Wheat has gained 15 cents since June 1 and corn 12 cents in a month. Southern crop damage was calcu- lated at $150,000,000, although general rains in Tennessee, Arkansas and the Middle and West Gulf States provided & respite yesterday. Chicago statis- ticians figured $100,000,000 losses in the Midwest. They asserted Canada’s bill possibly might reach $75,000,000. Held Worst in History. Agricultural observers in the Da- kotas and Montana termed the visita- tion the worst in the history of their States. Yields far short of normal Were envisioned in the affected regions of Minnesota and Wyoming. Officials in the Black Hills area of South Dakota decided to abandon their wasted fields to grasshoppers. They returned a consignment of poison bran shipped fn to eradicate Ppests. In Texas hundreds of thousands of acres were stripped of cotton and corn by floods that cost 23 known lives. - PURCHASE PLAN SET. Federal Program Launched cautionary Measure. 8y the Associated Press. A Federal cattle-purchase program, a3 “largely & preca as “Pre- After inspecting several, he | slaying. measure,” was launched by the A. A. A. today to aid stricken farmers in the Midwestern drought areas. Immediately on receipt of a tele- gram from Secretary Wallace at Du- luth, approving the program, Jesse | W. Tapp, chairman of the Agricul- ture Department’s Drought Commit- tee, indicated $5.000,000,000 had been | made avaliable for the purchases. The Secretary instructed Tapp to “move at once to develop preliminary plans for purchasing and processing part of the cattle being forced off the range because of extreme drought conditions in the Northwest.” Tapp said that after several! days required for organization, the A. A. A. would begin to make limited open ! market purchases at such terminal City and Omaha. Details of the program, he added, would be drafted to meet drought needs as they developed. Meat products obtained from the and the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation will be turned over to State relief agencies for distribution. “An extensive cattle buying pro- gram will not be necessary,” sald, “If sufficient rainfall is received . | during the next 10 to 15 days in areas | not now seriously affected by the drought. These areas then would be able to absorb the stocker and feeder cattle forced off the range. But we | will get some machinery set up so | that we will be ready to step in if | necessary after this critical period.” { Prices for cattle were reported two to three times higher than during the | last half of 1934, when as a drought- | relief measure, the Government bought 8.280,000 head from farmers |in 24 States. Officials said that the emergency purchase program this year | would differ from that of 1934 since | farmers would receive no benefit pay- | ments in addition to the purchase In the previous program, | farmers received benefit payments | upon an agreement to participate in subsequent adjustment programs. SOUTH WELCOMES RAIN, | price. to Virginia. ATLANTA, July 3 (#).—Heavy rain- fall that bathed drought-withered Southern crops during the past 2 | hours gave promise today of contin- uing into the week end. Tennessee, Arkansas and Northern Louisiana received the heaviest pre- cipitation. The showers were gen- | eral along a sweeping arc from the Texas cout‘ to the Carolinas and Virginia. Among the forecasts, that of Ar- kansas alone predicted fair weather. Lack of rain still was reported from the East Gulf Coast, South Georgia, North Florida and Kentucky. Peace (Continued From First Page.) | was Stefan Lux, a representative of | Praha newspapers. He was sitting in the gallery adjoining the main benches of the delegates. Suddenly he arose and cried out in his own language: “This is the end! It is all over!” He shot himself twice in the chest. When the resulting uproar had partially died away Dr. Augusto Vas Concellos of Portugal, former Presi- | dent of the Assembly, administered first aid to Lux. The newspaper man said feebly: “My brief case.” League officials opened the brief case after Lux had been taken to a hospital. In it they found Iletters addressed to King Edward, to An- thony Eden, the British foreign sec- retary, and to J. A. C. Avenol, secretary general of the League. In the letter to Avenol, Lux pre- sented excuses for the trouble he was causing. Premier Expresses Regret. Premier Paul Van Zeeland of Bel- pressed regrets for the incident, then said: “Gentlemen, let us continue.” The session went on. The shooting came without pre- vious warning when the sound of an explosion rang through the hall and Lux slumped to the floor. The incident interrupted transla- with enasco ‘:I.nllc ENTERPRISE t ROOFING CO. H 2125R L Ave. NE. Pot. MRS. EDWARD FREED, Sought by Chicago police for questioning in the mysterious slay- ing of Audrey Vallette, found shot to death in her hotel room yesterday. Police believed Mrs. Freed, wife of a night club oper- ator, was the woman who visited Miss Vallette shortly before the o —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. markets as Chicago, St. Paul, Sioux ! cattle purchased by the A. A A .| ‘Tapp | Showers General From Texas Coast | glum, president of the Assembly, ex- | p, | Bell & Cope Ownership Mgt 500 FEET from BOARDWALK and STEEL PIER THE IMPRESSION LASTS ring Sofirhd/b;v Mv?l #3580 e 2099, § GarageF: INTUCKY AVE. 'MILLER (OTIAGE Ave, ded 1, 9 N. Georgla Ave, $3 wp Daily: $17.50 wp Whiy.: Meals in Within two blocks Station and Convention Mall. Free Ph. 49294, 27th Year. E. C Virginia Ave.. half block to beach \‘ and Steel Pier. Running water. baths. §3.50 up daily with MONROE HUTCHIN Ocean End—South Carolina Ave. $1 Daily; $2.50 with Meals BAR—GRILL—DANCING % TENNESSEE 2o LBER @ PACIFIC AV, R’Q': osn carmasic cnuncw AL LUDY M.D. PoRMERLY OF moTeL Luey * Da) 0 E; MORTIMER 317 Ty irginia Ave. and Beach. WEEKLY. v i With Meils (2 in room). Running water and bath. Free bathing. _C. V. Mortimer DELAWARE CITY Tennessee Ave. “nd from Beach. nsas Roams. $1 up. Running water. Priv. Bath. | Bathing Privileses. WM. LAIRD. Provo. KENTUCKY 2 Near Beach | $18 up weekly with meals. Elva M. Kine. | Cor. Pacific & Arka OSBORNE g Fagific & Agka £3 up Daily. with meals. All Outside RKooms. Bathing from Hotel W. Hockenbury. VILLA NOVA Ocean Ave. | Near Beach Ocean View Rooms with Running Water | Pvt. baths. Reasonable rates. Mrs. J. Store AUDREY VALLETTE. { tion of a speech by Augusto Barcia, | Spanish foreign minister. | 485 The delegates, confronted with a C:; 5 ¢ -obl LANTIC new list of speakers OfL DrODIEMS | Boyrgualk apartment. exslusive. 3ot | arising from the Italo-Ethiopian | reasonable. GEORGE E. PENNINGTON risis, already have before them two | 204 Beardwalk R Tesolutions proposed by EMPEror AVON, Continental plan. - Ocean view Mznagement. J. P& CITY—Attraciive furnished ____ OCEAN CITY, N. 1. = 9 BISCAYNE HOTEL Modern: elevators: priv. baths, Biit. FLIZABETH BLUNDIN Privileges. J. J. McCONNELL. Manager. REHOBOTH BEACH, DEL. Modern, Central, TIC_ CITY—310% | Haile Selassie. rooms. private ba ree parking. ezson | The King of Kings, in a second A %1% to & = | eppearance, requested official action GEARY | on two motions: | 1A loan of $50000.000 under —— | League auspices to “defend the in- BEACH HAVEN. N. J. tegrity” of Ethiopia against the vic- | torious Italians. %EN w}“,fig 2. Refusal to recognize, under ar- - r’ 5 ticles X and XVI of the Covenant, | and Blse imly's annexation of Ethiopia by T force. | Twice Selassie, vanquished Empe- ror of Ethiopia, stood before the League of Nations Assembly at Geneva to plead for his country’s lost cause. First, on’ Tuesday, he recounted the history of the Italo-Ethiopian con- Private’ Baths. | flict, recalled the imposition of sanc- tions, charged Italian troops with us- ing poison gas. Declaring that when a “strong gov- ernment finds that it may with im- punity destroy a small people.” the | latter must appeal to the League, he said: REHOBOTH BEACH DELAWARE mypmmm CCAL R el Rotes $22.50 oer PERsOM -OCURLE L MEALS U.S. FRUIT INSPECTION APPROVED FOR VIRGINIA : o RGINIA. Enjoy the 4th at KNEY SPIHIES HOTEL y Springs, Va. By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, July 3.—George W. Koiner, State commissioner of agri- culture, said yesterday a subcommit- tee of the Board of Agriculture had approved a plan whereby apple and peach inspection would be placed under the supervision of Federal au- thorities. TWwo supervisors, working under the Marketing Division of the United States Department of Agriculture, will superintend the inspection serv- ice, but reports will be assembled at the Richmond office, Koiner said. Orkne g horse- ling, Gentile ‘American Plan—Attractive Rates. Send for Booklet Long Distance Tel., Mt. Jackson 30 | Mrs. E. L. Cockrell, Manager E MOUNTAINS OF VIRGINIA n ges (Basve. Va ) | fou servi hur and iron water 1 e STEAMSHIE = BERMUDA VIA FURNESS. trlp. with rivate bath. Pre direct to dock at Hamilton Line. 34 Whitehall S GREAT ~LAKES z nerary. Low cost. Write_for booklet “Tideless Seas” ' Canada S 800 Lincoln-Liberty Bias Buila> pa " MEDITERRANEAN and ail Eurepe — De Luxe service on famous exbress liners via | the smooth Southern Route : ITALIAN LINE. 634 5tn. 4 RESORTS. PEN MAR, PA. 50 up. round uent sailings Furness Ber- New_York. Attractive want to st Teservation cy Line Trail Mrs_ WILLIAM R _BR " COLONIAL BEACH, VA. TSPEND YOUR VACATION AT COLONIAL BEACH HOTEL On the broad Potomac. Beautiful. health- ful. restful and homelil G00d food. running arte 3 rooms. and rates from $12.50 weekiv. $3.00 daily with Peninsula Grevhound Bus D. Blackistone. Owner & Mana A BEACH, VA. " Botel Chalfonte MODERN COFFEE SHOPPE TAP ROOM Golf._ Horseback riding surf bath- ing. ~ Close to all amusements and ny night clubs | M HOMELIKE—REFINED B Earse porehes™ 224 Weekly and Week End Rates Sunday Dinner, $1.00 Booklet Mrs. J. E. Crout OCEAN CITY, MD. COTTAGES "™™; 50 BARGAINS. ENT $200 TO FURNISH) US| A AYRES. GCEAN CITY, MD. - FHO! On Boardwalk Private Baths, K New Waverly Hotel Virginia Beach, Va. Finest surt bathing. rolf. tennis. riding orts. Ocean Front—Every Comvenience Private Baths Private baths. BT QUL Fro! x_Boardw: Perfectly -Managemen! Am. Bporty Course. Very moderate Tates 254 W. H. Sterling. Jr. Mer. The Beachome Apartment Atlantie Boulevard and 28th St. Modern Exclusive Apt. Hotel overlooking tlantic. Rates by the day, week or L. T. ROWLAND. Mgr. Va.B. 722, On_Boardwalk. free. Mrs. e. “““THE BELMONT Terms Romnonapin ook ARNE, BREAKERS SN20A0 VALY ld running _water m.:xuu 'b. Phone 76._C. H. TIMMONS ‘rg- . Woelipquin Hall THE DEL-MAR ~ Special Private Baths. ME3. 8. L. CAREY. Virginis Attractive. modern, homellke. Directty Chesapeake Bay. Delicious Southern eook- ating. fishing. bathing. Write for June Rates

Other pages from this issue: