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THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1929 , _ FRDERALS PREPARE 10 OCCUPY SIMINEZ Main Body of Army Under Gen- eral Almazan Hopes to Take Escalon ores oe Louisville, Ky.. March 28-(AP)—A inp yh as limntant id check for $1,141,000 given yesterday to army | Pa 8 the Loulsvilie and Nashville Railroad relentless plodding northward today | si company, by the Western Union Tele- and, as light cavalry prepared to oc- graph company, ended litigation of cupy Jimenez, furmer neadquarters of 17 years’ standing. The check is for Rebel General Escobar, rent claimed by the railroad for the General Calles reported to Presi- telegraph heed oe ried its right of way with poles and wi dent Portes Gil that aeroplanes fly- ing over Jimenez Jid not sce a single during kei apa ; ies rebel soldier there. The planes con- The check was paid in compromi tinued nortward and bombed two and settlement of a judgment ren- - troops trains which had left the Gered by Judge A. M. J. Cochran, town in the direction of Chihuahua of the federal court of the eastern shortly before. district of Kentucky, which was ap- $1,744,000 CHECK IS GIVEN 70 RAILRO Western Union Forced to Pay Railway for Rent of Land Covering Many Years Two Ministers Join In Funeral Services For Nathalie Klein Funeral services for Nathalie Klein, who died Sunday, were held at 1:30 o'clock, today, at the Evangelical church. Two ministers officiated, the Rev. Ira E. Herzberg, pastor of the chuich, and the Rev. H. Hoersch. Many friends attended and the floral tributes were numerous. The palibearers were John Hilde- brand, Earl Swartz, Arnold Schneid- er, Leo Janke, Tracy Nelson and George Meyers. Interment was in Fairview cemetery. | the diocese of western New York, were both American and internation- al in character, as befitted Dr. Brent's Personality. Anti-American Feeling Is Aroused by Sinking Belize, British Honduras, March 28. —()—Special police protection was given today to G. Russell Taggart, United States consul, as a consequence of high feeling over the sinking of ance at the opening of today’s mar- |t"~ Rritish vessel I'm Alone last Fri- ket, and prices of scores of issues day by an American coast guard Meds quickly bid up $1 to nearly $16 ; boat. @ share. Two Belize men were members of A brisk demand developed for the the crew of the ill-fated rum ship and aha’ ee han ee oil shares on the announcement that oil executives had reached an agrec- | ment for the curtailment of crude oil eee Nag "RESUME LONG HOP)": Mayor and Police Force Indicted A piece of ground, some good seeds fresh air, exercise —and high hopes. ARE THE BEST ‘ A little time, some Sunshine and Moisture —they're alive. REBUILDING TASK New York, March 28—(7)—The danger of “money panic” having Passed, Wall Street today the task of rebuilding the stock market structure. Large buy- ing orders again made their appear- ww siderable anti-American agitation since the shelling of the vessel. Taggart appealed to the police when it appeared some of this feeling might be directed against himself BRENT GIVEN IL SERVICES Lausanne, Switzerland, March 28.| The authorities promised every pre- ~—(#)—Services in the cathedral today |caution to prevent an attack on the for Bishop: Charles Henry Brent of jconsul: The main body of ‘the federal army under General Andreu Almazan was just south of Escalon and expected to occupy that city immediately. General Calles telegraphed th:: presi- dent he hoped ihe best and most complete equipment would be sent the 6,000 troops of General Cedillo recently dispatched to undertake cleanup of the so-called religious in- surgents in Jalisco, Guanajuato, and surrounding te--itory. On the west coast the advance guard of the army of General Lazaro Cardenas was expected to arrive at Mazatlan today anu reinforce the garrison of Generai Jaime Carrillo there, continuing then Pursuit of the retreating rebels up through Sinaloa. As summarized by- military experts here the campaign is rapidly ap- proaching another decisive phase, when the rebels must either fight and suffer almosi certain defeat or abandon another large rich area to the federal forces. Women Zionists Seek Land in Palestine Detroit—(?}—With the launching of a program to raise $60,000 to apply on the purchase of 625 acres of Haifa bay land, Hadassah, the women’s Zi- onist organization of America, is mak- ing its first effort to acquire a tract of land in Palestine. The raising of the fund will be ac- complished through the Jewish Na- tional Pund council of Hadassah, of which Mrs. Frieda Silbert Ullian of Detroit is national chairman. Here- tofore the council, which is the wom- en's division of the Jewish National fund, the Zionist land-purchasing agents in Palestine, confined itself to contributing to the general fund. The 625 acres to be purchased by the council will be part of th. tract of 8.250 acres acquired by the na- tional fund. This land is expected to have considerable value when the construction of a harbor at Haifa is begun in 2 few months. Hadassah has 285 chapters throughout the country, and each one will be assigned its quota in raising the $60,000. The membership of the organization is Charging that booticgging and gam- bling elements had held full sway in Ocean City, N. J., without interference by civic authorities, a grand jury has indicted Mayor Joseph G. Champion, above, the chief of police and virtu- ally all of his force. Twenty police of- ficers were named in the indictments resulting from charges of a citizens’ committee. MRS, DEKING DEATH PROBE IS APPROVED Aurora, Ill, March 28.—()}—State's Attorney George D. Carbary an- nounced today that he would ask Attorney General Oscar E. Carlstrom to take over investigation into the death of Mrs. Lillian Deking, who was killed in her home Monday night by county dry raiders. The state's attorney, who initiated the cleanup that brought about the raid, had previously rejected all sug- gestions that a special prosecutor be appointed to conduct an inquiry. Carbary said it is evident that friends and attorneys of the Deking family are “trying to create the feel- ing in Kane county that I would be unfair in handling this case.” Condition of Roy Smith, the deputy sheriff who shot Mrs. Deking after knocking her husband down with a rifle butt. was more critical last night, the hospital reported. He was shot in the leg by the Dekings’ 12-year-old son, Gerald. Smith’s temperature was rising and blood poisoning was feared. Attorneys for Joseph Deking, the slain woman’s husband, charged last night that the state's attorney was protecting Smith, withholding evi- dence and delaying an inquest and a grand jury inquiry. Tune in on KFYR every morning for the A, W. Lucas pealed to the United States circuit court of appeals at Cincinnati and argued there a year ago. Due to the death of a judge the case was ordered up for new arguments which were to have been heard April 11. The litigation was precipitated by the action of the Western Union in canceling its contract with the L. & N. in 1912 and the filing of condem- nation proceedings to acquire a right in perpetuity along the railroad com- Pany’s properties. When the Western Union thus canceled its contract it was notified by the L. & N. to vacate its properties. This it refused to do and obtained injunctions restraining the railroad from ejecting it. It was for the occupancy protected in these injunctions that the L. & N. filed suit which is now settled. STORIES ABOUT K. C. CALLED PROPAGANDA New Haven, Conn., March 28.—() Supreme Secretary William J. Mc- Ginley of the national headquarters of the Knights of Columbus today characterized reports issued from Mexico City that K. of C. members were acting as spi f the rebels as ‘baseless propaganda.” “This is only one of a series of at- tempts to charge Knights of Colu bus in general and Catholics in pa ticular with responsibility for t never-ending brawls in Mexico,” de- clared Mr. McGinley. “Columbia,” our magazine, has been barred from the Mexican mails. We have been unable to communicate with our members, and we have had no reports from councils in more than two years. ‘ Hats cleaned and_ blocked, also made to order. Broadway Cleaners. Dr. Geo. F. McErlain Osteopathic Co, day’s special. Phone 55 2-1928 GMC 1 Ton 1 Repossessed Trucks Save 1-3 of Purchase Price Guaranteed Like New Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. Bismarck, N. Dak. Physician Electrotherapy Solar-Ray Chronic Diseases a Specialty Hoskins-Meyer Bldg. Phone 240 Bismarck, N. D. H. A. Mutchler 410 Fourteenth Street Bismarck, No. Dak. Representing The Northwest Nursery Co. Valley City, N. D. Specialists in Landscape Gardening Bahia, Brazil, March 28.—(#)—The Spanish aviators, Captains Ignacio Jimenez and Francisco Iglesias, took off at 8:30 a. m., (6:30 E. 8. T.) for Rio Janeiro to complete the flight | from Seville, Spain, interrupted when | they were forced down here Tuesday morning. ‘ From Bahia to Rio Janeiro the dis- tance is 800 miles south and west along the Atlantic coast. The Span- jards’ plane “The Jesus Del Gran Poder,” can make better than 100 miles an hour, which might put it in- to Rio Janeiro at 4:30 p. m., (2:30 p. m., 8. T.). Completion of the flight would bring the plane's total mileage since it left Seville to about 4,800. New Easter Hats. Hun- dreds to select from—$5.00 to $20.00. See windows. Berge- son’s, We Telegraph Flowers Perfect Delivery Anywhere in the World in Two Hours Oscar H. Will & Co. 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