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a 9, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, MAY 1921. 17° TYLERPAGEHEAS A+iGoN's NUMEROUS PARKS G pERNG AN | st v, LIBORSHIRTAE vt g O e o, NIEHGANCASH MENACE Y HAVA | Francisco (Pancho) Villa, Mex- sonal Supervision of Charles Henlock, {Great Sugar, Pineapple and S ALY ONE SCHBO - DIVSIONNORMAL |D. C. Republican Clubs Elects Him President ago laid down his arms and turned to peaceful purauits at the behest of the Obregon government, has Taeekine iy e urtables, | Elected President of District Police, Aided by Radicals,| sroven nis finess w o ohe Charge Catholic Group farmers. The ex-banait expects to | Coffee Plantations Face But Even It Has Eight | League—Mr. Colladay the White House Gardener. harvest between 40.000 and 50,000 Near Extinction. i i i bushels of wheat from the large Oversize Classes. | Honored. in Morelia. e o e AR Marstand,| Tashinton. the model city with|drons which are at their best at 22| b\ wncintes Proes : : e by the Mevian | William Tyler Page of Maryland.|more parks and flower gardens than|an ecatur atreets and in Montrose | ™ Asancinted $xone. nce, glven him by e Mexics : e P Toprascntas .| Park. Georgetown. There are several 1CO CITY, May 13.—Fifty per- : t when he dropped his | + NO PROVISION IN PROGRAM cleric of the House of Tepresenta|any ‘other city 1n e wori, fe now | [0, GERERIOT, | There are eevrat | MO T W More Woutaea| Eovernment when e drovned nie | GOVERNOR MAKES APPEAL tives and authorsef “The <\m~r;ar;lfl ketting her new summer wardrobe 1{n Montrose g‘nrk Th. f{lt‘ |‘x11 Morelia «u;uall .‘.r ::- -] “x‘ 5 :‘ = r' w ———— Creed,” was elected president of the|The g ut un- | few around the John I 4 Michoacan, say reports to the| Department o ommerce today s ot bt nrate orabmEt] e beds are being st O Mrs. | Atthe entrance to the SpoedWay. |Excelsior early this morning, when! from 3 R Stewart. an attache of e However, if Congress Passes Ap- gue of Republican Sta der the personal supervision of Mrs. | %oy o e® O w n bloom in | police, aided by unsolicited help from| the department in Chihuahua |Wants Emergency Commission ’ 5 the annual meeting of that organiza- | Harding’s gardener, Charles Henlock. | East Potomac Park and in Gartield | radicals, charged a large group of The large crop raised by Villa Sent to Washi to ek iati i tion held last night at the University [who is in direct of the White|Park at Virginia avenue and 2d street | Catholic . has been made possible by the em- | ent to Washington to Asl propriation, Bordering Schools Club. House gmenho“:: "'“‘: propagating | southeast. @ The latter were ta a demonstration [ ployment of modern Americun e 2 - 3 : In East Potomac P: here is aleo |against alleged desecration their| farming implements, the dispatches 9 Would Relieve Congestion. gThe mecting was re-:xur_wdrklwf aa- Eardens, under the general super-|a display of vellow 'm;_ Sivie ,'h;.r‘d_\. churches last Sunday by radicals said, including the extensive use ep’ Xrom! £ongress Sotiool authoritien have searched for 1.:::2‘“8 ‘: lphr:l; {urr"l‘{ :Id‘;;‘:mlomm_ :‘—|i'x.°:n:|nefru;}nc::-‘ l(;"ncr:‘n&ee vt tab: ::]all:;n;:rtnd a peculiar spiked lily |[Put Red Flag on Cathedral Tower. ;gr;,nhv'g:n ‘mml’ulrr::;;l;‘sfldan;l‘_nn“m 1‘}["|:';\-}‘l:‘-‘l:l'fl" Press i ¢ what is an exceedingly rare thing in paign and cxpressions of hope that|llc buildings and grounds. Ui, j The Catholic population of Morelia was| ./ ian government to occupy the DL T M, Aprdl 25 DGy Washington—and found it—a school the dengne Wit expand itmfeld of en-| There ire Mbout twelve lases parks et O o o D oTaficals | mind and time of the bandit chief- layed).—The great sugar, pineapple acaver und. i e next vampaien | and thirly” clecies or’reservations 11| PINS HOPE ON RADIO. | nioi ot aoniencs, dhpee vk | 3o crowded. It is the twelfth di f republican party than ever before. four parks and thirty reservations on —_— ”";r red !‘hu: on l'}" l'«'lhf'dral w:"lr' s e BN H it ““‘ R ' . ‘"‘ I' ‘" L i : alles & aehid 3 ~ i - z A demonstra of protest was he Lof the most acute labor shortage Sontaining vty tov bulldtags P Mk Colladey Hinered 700000 Mowering o foliage pianis |Marconi Believes Wireless Phone T ording o, dispatenes re- e erenorsme. Hiktosss (the sid) versize classes in the twelfth f the league, was pres s 3 diers, i s division, it would have the distinc- {with a cane and an umbrella, tokens| . Work of planting these flower gar-| TONDON, May 13.—Signor Marconi, with jeering radicals on the [ boen wiped cut by the same cause, tion of being the only district in the WILLIAM TYLER PAGE. g ®DS [ dens began this week, and the inten-|inventor of wireless, pins his faith to | s threatened serious trouble. |and the business of Hawaii is fast sclicol systern, which dia ot need ade AN A of the esteem of the members of the|tion is to have them all in first-class! transatlantic telephonic commuiica demonstration ‘was resumed slipping into the grip of the Jap- ditional accommodations. However. organization which he piloted through | condition by Decoration day. That|tion by wireless instead of by c in the e Vicente Coyt, 8 S means about a three-week job for ten|despite the recent successful {inspector of poli led a large unit anese; the dominsting in [ty it is pointed out by school officials that one extra classroom is necessary to reduce the abnormal classes. The presentation senta- the last campalgn. address was delivered by Repr. rmed gendarme ors, few against the of whom carried men planting. and this same force|ments In Ameri connecting will be busy all summer keeping the [ with the mainland in a telephone cir-|demons territory, according to a statement made to the Associated Press by G TOBOLOER BANDIT ILL-FATED BALLOON can critical situa- tive William E. Andrews of Nebraska. 2 : A : v s of Nebraska. | gisplays in proper condition. cuit extending 5.000 mile latter refused the demand i Neot a Vacant Room. Mo comgratulated Mr. Colladay on| One of the first parks to be fixed| I still think.” he said, “that th they disperse; and whea | Charles J. McCarthy and by Albert The schools in this division, never- He deorribed bove e feniue had son: | up_will be Lafayette Square. just|only satisfactory method of telephon- & Volley was fired over their heads | nagaati d Criminolo- | Horner. territorial sugar expert theless, are crowded to capacity. e described how the league had con-| 0 oce the street from the White|ing across the Atlantic is by swire- | (he disintches state. they charged at |JETECUIVES — @N| riminolo- the situation Gov. Me- There is not a vacant room in any of tributed largely to the s House, and here the beds will be prin-[less. At present we can only do a|'he police. who leveled their guns at b e them. There are no rooms which are movement to send the v & cipally of red and yellow cannas. the|short distance by cable telephone— 'he crowd. The Catholics, some of ists Di Mea t has asked the legislature to not used a full day. ington back to their states to vote.|pew red canna named “The President” | from London to Paris is as far as we | V/10m were women, were dazed at the gists Discuss ns to e Congress, requesting the Holke other divnions, the Lweltth and paid a high tribute to Mr. Colla- [ 1o0q 00 FARTS G A et ‘tion of the police, and, seeing their lifting of immigration bars so that has no portable buildings in use. day's leadership in stating that this| ' Throughout the city the beds are|municate with Spain we have failca|comrades Iving dead in the streets, Defeat Lawbreakers & METALIN B . Neither are there any classes accol —————— phase of the work during the 1ast|peing planted with cannas. salvia.|Up to 100 or 200 miles of cable i@ fled in panic . {labor, including oriental labor, may modated in rented or other undesira- campaign was more successful than|agerstum, vinca, begonia, heliotrope | works. With 1,000 miles or more of | SEok 16 Quall Dkt . i _ | be imported. with the provision that ble quarters. Indians Near Moose Factory | iy, before, The leagye under M |for fowering plants and with foliake | cabla it wom't work. " R A Dlsenarr PITTSBURGH. May 13.—A new and | such importation shail be only for The twelfth division lies in the Colladay’s ‘leadership. Mr. Andrcws|and border plants of alternanthera, | ““wireless telephony, of course. has|tions in the stars of Michomoan’ g | distinet type of criminal is supplant-| limited periods and sha L northeast and northwest sections. It . i said, stood for the republican prin-|centaurea, pennesetum, acalypha, 50-[not yvet been developed to the same ! (ien Musien. sovernor of i uran |ing the old class of outlaws, detec-|(Tale, 0 that there Wwill e within is hounded in meneral on the nortn| Skim Water in “Wonder [cipies for which President Harding|leus in a variety of colors and euony- | extent as the wire telephone. bt : o 4 Covernior (of he. state ] R g : {the territory at any time a total by N street, on the east by the Bal- stands, and e referred to the Presi- | mus, ) T being rapidly fmproved. Mo have | e e whien | Lo and criminologista representing f num! o s it o soput t Ohi iroad. on th . ent as one of the “greatest repub- - = Ived 5000 miles|and prevent fur outbreaks which | 350 4cancies were told here recently | more than 25 per cent © popus TRy Tauisinnn avenue and on the| Craft” That Cost Nothing. |licans ever’elected. | Deniened by Ardints and Encincers. ot dshe “aylhin ke 5,000 mites i Toarid will ety O WHIER 130 agencies were told here recently | I 1A% 1 O west by 10th street. The schools in it Cites Importance of League. sut though the flowering and foliage | fyj1y from London to Rome, and we | or Indigate: Intanse 'DILEL: | s Thiscnational Seeret Seevics XKool Would Bar Japanese. are the Banncker, 3d street between | By the Associated Press. Representatives Lo 8. Brooks of | P#dS cateh the eve. many, if not most.|have got words through to Amer ng manifested against the | .. | This st provision would bar the }»,-“::ed!g‘:zlic:-glm"l\‘:r:wt:xszzl-;.)s:,misl”a:lr‘l COCHRANE. Ont, May 13.—Somej ~BITErintives 1o 8 “f“’;’n;‘ :r of the hundreds of thousands who find | but no'l“in ;:nn{m:\,\;:‘ml or bractical | extreme ‘action of Coyt. whieh is be- sn;, tion. . e importation of the Japanese, stopped ™ ; street | = | E 8 a and James Gly: ‘ 5 # way. B ere are cer ieved here ave bee varra i v class, e & bold “gentlemen's agresment™ botween Now' Jersey wvemun and 1st|wonderful canoes appeared mysteri-| Connecticut delivercd addresses in | delight in these parks—coming from | Sa¥ Bl Preoens tNCEE G, Ol fioved e (o e e an warranted. 16 niew ciass. whils f8cmore bold | gine ‘the “gentlemien's agrecment Strest. 20d Tones, 160 And L streats. ously recently in the James bay re-!which they stressed the importance |all over the country—do not realize |3 (RUNNATECe pich has not vet | St \_d e T police personally, fand daring, lacks the ingenuity of the | made in 1907, since already the The four school buildings have|gion. They were constructed not of |Of an organization. such as the|WhY they Jnd them 50 beautitul 1t I¥| discovered B ’ Fmong thoss Hiled r'?gchx::;;::aw::c old-time eriminal, it is said. Where number of ‘Japancse ln AWM OF oty 5 Ll > 9" League o epublics State because they represent the highest |5 amon se. s £ . 80- | criminals in the past indulged in|exceeds the 25 per cent of the total 1,236. = "|the north had never seen. As light| Washington, where many of the citi- | IS designed by artists and enginetrs| TEOH SEEKS EXPANSION ilea mmission here, also Was | ames that required patience to ex- consider the situation that - . low: the wing, | Zens have the right to vote In their [ WOTKIng together to combine the . - ecute, the newer and younger gen- asked the legislature to au- One Class More Needed. and swift as swallows on the z B Home states. A close election for | €Sthetic’ with the utilitarian or prac- —_— eration. ranging in age from 17 to 24, | thorize r'wlnl tion of the ll:‘!‘«m;fln Signs of congestion in_th they skimmed the water. Moose Fac- | peptce int e tion for | tical. i Tted b Shecialize in bank and mail robberics, | emergency labor commission of three sion are only evident by the oversize | tory Indians marveled. Had the great | dent can be made & s n Pr Trving W. Payne is the landscape | Various Projects Are Suppo Y. PLEASED BY INQUIRY. |tfain hold-ups. pay rofl thefts and|members to go to Washington and | impress the territory classes. Although the board of edu- architect in charge of drawing plans Alumni “T" Club. other daring crimes, speakers d : 3 & blican party, it was pointed out, ; cation has established forty pupils as | SPirit come from the happy hunting; febubl r i for these parks after consultation . . 7 tion upon Congr: the standard. eclass, there are five Erounds to teach his red children new | through the work of the league Bere: | with the Fine Arts Commission and| Support of the movement to obtain |Tech High School Organ Points . the object in view of combat-| It has been for some time an open classes having between forty-one and | medicine? Page autiimea ™, Of acceptance, ME|they are then approved by Lieut Col. |additional accommodations, a gym- il R thetobldoran view of combat ret in Sugar circles and in govern- I‘o‘rtg}flve p‘\lv!ls. and ‘these (classes Secret Gets Out. Tastnt hIchIne aia T ntends 1o Clarence O. h;rrilrk }hfi efllg;‘nee\rx ome sl ahndlat letic lfl;hl ‘{0‘( T"'u)-k Out Needs. tontatively ‘formed " at Chicago lasi|ment auarters ¢ nm::“‘n sui:;u:l»mgl; with from forty-six to fifty. ere- | o 1 carrie of . : dire e cer in charge. F. F. Gilen then takes |High School was pledged by the | wge. oo i 4 great dea g o RO st under normal c ons fore, there are thirty-four pupils in | pocie o £ batleon st carried il,,rt':eth,..g‘l’:l"‘;‘.a;_h‘l];m‘?,‘“:,,_‘,;";";'s its activities: | charge of executing these plans. He is| Alumni “T" Club of the institution at soWe bate mitha greatd oKl ol piae ¥f:¢"-or“:::,;’:fi":"l','i“:’ncfl‘u';’::"B here. | harvested by the end of July. will not excess of the standard of forty pupils | wilderncss several months ago hias | While the league now has 4 member. | Shat might by called the business |an organization meeting Thursday nisht | commiitve (o mvestigate the necds of | every deiective agency of o ponear? | be in the bags before January. Febru- per class. It is estimate at it | g 2 > fahin 3 o S A e e | manager of the enterprise. He also|in the library of the schoo e ob- | {PT Fat 2ohos Lot iy | every detective aget v celary or March, 1922 class to accommodate these puplls if | Yo I coi of the earlicst posts eatabs | for ETest txpandion, And before the | hrubbery. laying sidewalks and sew-|mote and further interests in (he |oificial organ of Tech High School. | craaring nouss will pe catabliahed at| With about one-half of the total they were all In one school. Scat-| 1203 0T Of Hbe KTl B s | T e o Lenmue hopes 1g | °r8 and caring for the lawns. Then |school's athletics. “The need of congresslonal 1egisiation | o ma oy il honed @1 population of the territory Japanese tered, as they are. in several 5chools| Hudson's Bay Company. had given |broaden its membership to include [COMo® in Charles Henlock and plants, Steps to form an ajumni "0 club | for the schools has been plainly ap- | by aptain: intormation Satheoed oy |that race already has a firm grip on t probably would take more than sishhs i L : o e o ewentativas e U | seasonal flower beds which give the|were taken last month by a commit- | parent for some time, 3 a bt: sathere s Cond y =g 2 one’ waditiona “class. . Hencer school | orders to all the Indians who owe | represcntatives from o cry oo TeD: | fnishing touch to the parks as a place | tee composed of Howard Kneessi. 08 | {his fact has e plime: and pow &hat|by. individual effort and with the. co- | 18b3r condiviens, and is tepidiy ex- officials say, the estimate of onelallegiance to the ancient fur com-|resented by ing £ of recreation for the people. Mark Lansburgh, '08; J. H. Small, 09} | gress we trust that the conditions pre- | OPeration of state and municipal au- a1 fielg class is a minimum. pany_ to leave tho great gag bag un- The work now in progress repre- | Warren Spencer. '10, and Robert' Ans|vailing here at Tech will soon be|thorities. N A prominent sugar planter is au- The original $5,000.000 schoolhouse |disturbed. These orders had been Former Presidents Talk. sents the change from the bulb plant-| derson. ‘17, Mr. Spencer was elected | ramedic it added. ®| The officers elected at the Pittsburgh | b RTOTRERE SHERD B ARt twice construction program of the school)Strictly observed. . - W« . Henry M. Camp and |ing made last fall, which fllled the ! president of the club. | “Tech. like all other high schools and | meeting follo: J. B. Taylor, Prila-|j,5t year. and once already this sea- board, which school officials hope| A band of outlaw Indians, whose|p “Lincoln Townsend, all former |parks with tulips, hyacinths and nar-|" Plans were discussed to have an | clementary institutions, is in need of |d¢lPhia, president: F. E. Boke. first|gon Japanese moneyed interests have Congress will approve at this session, | home village is sixty miles northwest| pregigents of the league, made remi- |cissus during the spring. to the an-| out-of-town high school foot ball |increased facilities. The building ex- | Vice president, Toronto, Canada; John | made a bona fide offer to buy one of carries no provisoin for the one addi- | of Moose Factory, found the balloon. | pniccent addresses, in which they re- Ini which will last through the sum-|team come to Washington next fall|tension at the school has not increased | E- Ferris, second vice presiden Ml'-lme- largest sugar plantations in the tional room needed in the twelfth;Old Hudson's Bay Company's order|.jjeq the work of the organization |mer. to play the regular Tech eleven. It |proportionately with the growth in|waukee; F. H. Smiley, Chicago, secre- | territory. All the offers were flatly division, neither does the less thanmeant nothing to them. As for Uncle|p jis early life. They predicted suc- Monthly Blooming Roses. is proposed to have this contest ' enrollment. The school needs addi-|tary, and James F. Quigley. Indian- | refused. $2.000,000 emergency project now be-|Sam, they had never Feard of,&iim. | cess for the league under the leader- | qp. omeers in oharge are also try-|Played at American League Ball Park. | tional classrooms, an assembly hall | apolis, treasurer. fore Congress. With additional ac- But they knew good canoe material {ship of Mr. Pa, 3 suitable to the size of the institution, ing out a new system of not changing commodations In the divisions bor- | when they saw it and straightway B. Norton of Wisconsin A |a gymnasium for the proper phys| LIMITS BUILDING HEIGHT. Gering the twelfth, it is believea by | with their hunting knives they sliced h Nreon of Wisconsin |some of the beds, by making perma-| MEDICAL UNIT AT G. W. U. | dcoitonment o the studenis an sl WILL AID U. S. GUARD. : school authorities. that it will be'great blanket pieces from the sides elected first and second |nent plantings of monthly blooming 3 etic field. a larger lunchroom and o <._| Under a bill introduced by Senator possible to transfer some of the,of the fallen monster and from the \dents, respectively, of the |F08es. so !hm' nwrhe w;.xdl hp’xrlmhsml- (Ry dir‘v;g-ur;xy‘\ of xh(.- f’rflddenl\,x ;:\»“mm” ot the e ot the rad”q" an ulnl‘f%rmndfln;l »qu{s{;mang”o(htlwl Na- | Curtis of Kansas the height of build- . o g 2 5 2 By Hvely, o * | sonal hiatus, but the beds will be al-)George Washington University Medi- | L0 8 s. onal Guar ereafter will be clean- |ings aloug 16th street or Massa- pupils in the present oversize classes | magic fabric fashioned canoes that and Gus A Schuldt of the | %onal Biatus, tut (he BedS Y UL ot cal School of this city has bien au- —_— e od ‘and Tepalted as Tnited Statesl ot cnns wonid be Thnitel 46 to other divisions, and thereby make |rode the waves like a thistledown. The ted re- these beds now in Farragut Square|thorized to establish and maintain a| Woman students at Indiana Univer- |salvage repairs as a result of an ar- |seventy feet. No building within 150 ihe conditiens' il (IKions asiideal a8 air, Nad ‘given the Northland their e D nth |2 hd much more of this work Is|Medical Corps unit of the Reserve |sity are to receive instruction in |rangement made by the War Depart-|feet of these highways, the bill pra- praet X most marvelous craft. tme. Wibur B Bstey of Ne iy Officers’ Training Corps as part of the |proper etiquette in private and pub- |ment militia bureau with the salvage | vides, shall be constructed above that No Fear of United States. sb) ; e andscape architects and engi- | course of instruction in that school. |lic life Ibranch of the Quartermaster Corps. height. ed_corresponding NAVAL ACADEMY CHANGE. | The Indians who wrecked Uncle Chatfee of Nebraska, reading |neers are now busy principally in the Sam's gas bag are known as pluto- oyl of the House, was made treas- |development of East and West Poto- Admiral Henry B. Wilson. com-jcrats of the wilderness. While on al yrer. = ac parks. especially about the Lin- mander-in-chief of the Atlantic fleet.| recent visit the chief of the outlaws| [ouis A. Dent, of coln Memorial and the building of a vill be the next superintendent of the | was asked if he were not afraid of | Harding and Coolidge of reflecting basin. The oldest Naval Academy at Annapolis. He will| gotting into trouble for cutting up a| Distriet, and Edgar B. Wright < ever moved in this country are succeed Rear Admiral A. H. Scales,|pailoon belonging to the great repub- | New Hampehire #ere elected mem- |being planted about the Lincoln Me- for whom no assignment has yet been||i; across the border. With a sPrug| pers of the | : morial. These are box bushes (Buxus RIIgel'um-‘;::r change will take effect{p. grew from his pocket a roll of | Following Sempervirens). One of these is twen- money that would have made a rent| sup| W ty-three feet long, thirteen feet high | ! rorre and thirteen feet wide. It had to be R e EISEMAN’S 605-607 7th St. NW. Bet. F & G Sts. You Can Have the Suit You Want at the very lowest price in the city, too. We are showing hundreds of ‘ Fine Spring Suits 727 R T P2 | —— hog jealous. He was ready to deal | program ren r 3 Fortunately we have reached the|with Uncle Sam as one man with an- committee S . | moved in three balls, weighing a to- end of ational Baby week, as jt|other. Connor, F. Collier, F stey | tal of twenty tons, and had to be moved five miles, The most attractive floral display in the parks at this time is rhododen- and Mr. Townsend. The musical pro. gram was arranged by William F Ruckert. “How much cost for big bag?" he asked, indifferently. “Me buy the thing now and pay spot cash.” Sol Herzog ® Co., Inc,, More of the Small Lots of Men’s Suits that—regardless of regular price—we have Reduced to 4O In point of fact we are giving you oppor- tunity to save as much as ONE HALF— on clothes of nationally-known makes. secems to have referred exclusively to lPhr“ Stillman baby.—Grand Rapids ess. “Ninth at F” e Pick out the suit that pleases you. There is a host of them to choose from. Blue Suits for $20 Brown Suits for $20 Green Suits for $20 Gray Suits for $20 In plain colors or fancy mixtures Serge Suits for $20—Flannel Suits for $20— Cashmere Suits for $20 Single or Double Breasted for Men and Young Men 7 T L T E L R P P P P e Straw Hats The best Sennit in Washington—at any- thing like its price—is the Herzog $ 3 . Special . . . : All perfect braids—in all the correct shapes. And they are keeping good company with Blum & Koch and Bonar-Phelps Straws nd Ecuadorian Panamas. All rightly priced. :m:zxzmzzzzmmmn&m&muaummmwmzxzzzmmg Men’s Fine Trousers In blue, gray, brown, green, etc. Plain or fancy mixtures that Just as fast as lots become broken we are placing the remainder in this group. Thus it is really very representative—in type of style and pattern—Single and Double-breasted—Gray and Brown mixtures, etc. Just what you want — with practically every size in the combined lots. T, f E Washingtonians will either match or go well with your odd coat. Fine woolen ma- terials, such as cashmeres, flan- nels, worsteds and serges. All sizes. Plain or cuff hottoms. 2010707070777 have confidence in us—in our mer- chandise—in our prices. Years of honest merchandising has won us that confidence. “Ninth at F” Co., Inc. e T