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Copyright 1921 Hart Schaffner & Marx ] 3 & § l. ] % b . L 4 A Small Deposit Cheerfully Accepted. No Charge for Alterations Raleigh Haberdasher You needn’t even be dissatisped here; you can always get your money back. Hart Schaffner & Marx Fine 1921 Silk-Lined Models—Reduced to’ 83685 Compare them with any $60 Suit around town. : We’ve picked the finest for this Special Sale. Imported Scotch Bramble-proof Cloth, Gray Pin Stripe, Scotch Tweeds, Blue Serge, Blue Unfinished Worsteds, Oxford Grays, Fancy Worsteds—Silk Lined and Silk Piped. Then pick out your suit and we’ll have it ready for you any time you say. Hart Schaffner & Marx BOYS’ Spring Suits $20 The identical fabrics. the same super-styles and fine tai- loring that have helped to make Hart Schaffner & Marx famous. All styles, models; sizes 8 to 18 years. 1109-1111 Pennsylvania Avenue its | EADER OF T0-MA REVOLUTION SHOT Mexican General Faces Fir- ing Squad After Court-Mar- tial Following Capture. By the Associated Press. BROWNSVILLE. Tex.. April 1— Gen. Augustine Cardenas, leader of the ten-man revolution in Mexico. was court-martialed and summarily shot by a firing squad, commanded by Col. Modesto Garcia, on the Puerto ranch, South Matamoros, yesterday, according to reports received by Y. M. Vasquez, Mexican consul, at Brownsville. According to the reports, Cardenas and his By Garcia's forces. that _ followed tured. three of his men were killed aped In the fighting and the rest The revolt w Fernando several days ago. How- rallied to the standard. The in: gents were ordered captured by Gomez, commander of the army Orders were to shoot any one found under arms. This action is believed by Mexicans here to reflect the Ob- regon policy of dealing with border disturbers. > BEVERIDGE GIVES CREDIT TO JEWS IN FOOD PURITY 1re Civilization Upheld at Ma:s Meeting in Eli PHILADELPHIA, Avril gious instruction was urged as agency of civilization and as particu- larly useful in combating such doc- trines as bolshevism. in mass meet- ings here under the auspices of the Philadelphia Sunday School Associa- tion. N Former United States Senator Al- bert J. Beveridge of Indianapolis was the chief speaker at the principal meeting. He dealt at length with the study of Mosaic law. declaring the study of these ancient statutes inval- uable to the law student of today. Tracing thé enactment of pure food legislation in the United States di- rectly to the principles set forth by Moses, he said: “It -is shocking to our smug com- placency to realize that up to the en- actment of our meat inspection law some years ago the only scientific slaughtering of animals for food in America was done in Jewish abattoirs. Our present meat inspection law was inspired by the Mosaic statutes. Late one night I picked up the Bible and turned to the Law of Moses, and read again_about food, meat food products. we were doing along the same lines, and turned to the Revised Statutes. 1 was astonished to find, although a pretty careful inspection of meat for export was provided, there was prac- tically no inspection at all of meat food products sold to our people here at home. Strangely enough, just at this time there came the revelation of conditions in the great packing plants.” The speaker said he drafted a meat inspection law, urged an investigation, which President Roosevelt took up enthusiastically, introduced his bill in the Senate, and with the “whole pow- er of President Roosevelt's resistless personality thrown into the fight” it was passed. 'dphia. i 1. —Reli- | an especially about I wondered what DIVORCE MILL SWINDLE ALLEGED IN NEW YORK One of Victims Said to Be Wife of Representative From Foreign Country to United States. WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., April 1.—A state-wide search has been inaugu- rhted for Herbert F. Miller, in con- nection with a fake “divorce mill* he is alleged to have conducted from his Manhattan office. An indictment, charging Miller with forging the names of several supreme court justices to fraudulent divorce decrees, will be sought, District At- torney Davis said, when the West- chester county grand jury meets next weelk. Mr. Davis also said he had recelved complaints from scores of persons who ¢laim to have received “quick @i- vorces on the Miller plan” .Most prominent of these, he added, is the | wite of a representative from a for- eign country to the United States, but he declined to make public her name. Miller not only appeared in behalf of clients in regular courts, but “pre- ;lded" over one of his own in his of- ce, His “court” usually contained two or three women who were handy to give testimnoy, damaging or other- wise, in undefended cases. Miller is alleged to have received from $200 to $300 for each divorce. He has also “annulled” several marriages, Mr. Davis asserted. The alleged “divorce mill” operator had not been given a license to prac- tice law in New York, the district at- torney said, adding he believed Mil- ler was a ringleader in a divorce swindling scheme, ramifications of which extended throughout the coun- try. ‘WESTERN ELECTRIC PAY CUT. CHICAGO, April 1.—Wage cuts of about 5 per cent, affecting 25,000 per- sons will be put into effect Monday by the Western Electric Company, it was announced today. The cut also will either abolish or reduce by 50 per cent the surplus war wage weekly bonus, which the company has grant- A delicious creamy cent- er of luscious pineapple fruit covered with the best grade of smooth vanilla chocolate. The taste of one makes you ‘want another. CHOCOLATE PINEAPPLE FRUIT BAR ‘There are dealers in every town who eefl them for Sc.. It is your ©own feult if you pay more. D. AUERBACH & SONS 11th AVE. 48th to 47th ST. NEW YORK © 1920 ollowers were surrounded || Cardenas was cap- || proclaimeq at San || ever, only a small number of men || i Religious Instruction as Agency of the district attorney asserted.|® CENSUS SHOWS DECREASE IN ILLITERACY OVER U. S. Alabama, Arkansas and Delaware Reports Indicate Improvement Tiliteracy is decreasing in the United States, according to census bureau re- turns from the first three which the 1920 enumeration worked out on the subject. In Alabama, where the p illiteracy was' found to be ’ was 16.1. Tlliterates in _Arkansas 12.6 per cent of the popul ten years of age in 1910 cent in 1920. | were illiterate, jS.1 per cent. Tiliterate p the census bureau tabulaiion those unable to write. In all three st illiteracy in _the somewhat g while in 19 Over 1910. centage of illiterates colored population than in although the proportion of ill A Complete Men’s Shoe Store —with a corps of expert shoe fitters and a stock of distinctively fashionable footwear unsurpassed in this city. Only the very best grades and best make shoes for men, which are, after all, the most economical to buy because of their longer life. The Men’s Shoe Shop occupies our entire basement—easy of ac- cess by stairway near the entrance or by elevator. This Smart Oxford —of either tan or black Russia calf, with French toe and of the very highest grade materials and workmanship. $15. Other models at $8, $9, $10 and $11.50. - ;. %) total population over ten vears of age in 1910, the 1920 illiteracy percentage In Delaware but cent of the population foand under de all centage of Col. Delamere States Army. retire tha white, | of BRISTOL, Va.-Tenn., clusive, in Baltimore, | nounced here. troops from New Jersey - |and the District of Columbia. WemPay DAILY BALANCES interest on checking accounts on daily balances—compound- ed monthly interest on ordinary savings accounts—compounded quar- terly interest on special savings accounts—compounded. semi- annually EVERY DAY IS INTEREST DAY THE MUNSE.,,TRBES&T. COMPANY Pa. Ave., Between 13th and 14th Sts. NW. i e Out today New Victor Records " April 1921 Just a Little House of Love Serenata (Memories of a Concert) Hungarian Rhapsody, No. 2—Part I (Liszt) Beau Soir (A Beautiful Evening) i —Cielo e mar (Heaven and Ocean) O Coune Tity Stnging, Maiden Fai y ' en rar D Bacchanal Samson et Dalila— e Study from “The Children’s Corner” (No. 1—Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum) Piano (1) Shylock’s Speech Munasterio (The Monastery) The Merchant of Venice f!s;';...a. (Pifle‘:’ Violin Aidnm_—_oimrn vincitor (Return*Victorious) tria mia (My Native Land) Tell Me the Story of Jesus Valse Erica Saxophone hobia Saxophone i Blum—lfiedley Fox Trot Saxop! Home Crazy Blues—Fox Trot My Mammy L ] Underneath Hawaiian Skies wok for the Silver Lining 'andering Home 3 She Gives Them All the Ha! Ha! Ha! Stop! Look! Listen! Rm—Nightfin!e—Medley Fox Trot .Top— One-step I Never Knew—Fox Trot Piano Mme. Homer and Miss Louise John McCormack and Fritz Kreisler Philadelphia Orchestra Sergei Rachmaninoff E. H. Sothern and Julia Marlowe Lucy Isabelle Marsh Homer Rodeheaver Homer Do You Ever Think of Me?—Medley Fox Trot Bright Eyes—Medley Fox Trot Love Biré—Medleyeon Trot Sally—Medley Fox Trot Lady Billy—Medley Fox Trot & DaakERS Titta Ruffo P e e o R Zimbalist Elsie Baker Elsie Baker & 18720 18728 - 18729 18730 18731 18732 18733 18734 18735 35706 breeaaaaanhnbs VICTOR TALKING MACHINE COMPANY Aprit' Twenty-ninth Division veterans of the 2% werld war will hold their reunton this |year August 21 to Septefuber 5, in- it was an- WA_I; VETERANS TO MEET. Twenty-Ninth Division Wil Hcld Reunion in Baltimore. This division was made up of na- ~ tional guardsmen of Virginia and Maryland ST TR