Evening Star Newspaper, March 15, 1922, Page 18

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TS e - --- - THE. EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, WEDNESDAYS"MARCH 15, 1922 - it e a NEAR RIOT WHEN GUARD | | (ie™ectvus hoepieat ‘authorities seid: ONH George Schmidt, the guard, was held STORM DEATH TOLL [*oreies'ocnss. oy Sk 3 2 ok R DS ; _ ; SHOOTS SOLDIER PATIENT |cor iivestisntion. 1./ o s & (13 d S ¢ GAME SEEKING FOBU 3 T companion l;nl:hr:dht:;; mr:gnf-;z upon D(etl&clon- W Hone); ors elm ; oes A1’ GENEVA, March 15.—Wintar tn'the 1200 Disabled Bush at Sentry Who | refused to make their identitics known A R oot f ! Swiss Alps has been so severe that Mistook Veteran £ to -Schmidt, who placed his pistol or 12 1%1-.- $3.00. Delivered o \ 3 8 acores of wild wolves and or against Curran's side, and fired. Parcel . Sstisfaction guars: £ : Exclusivelyin Washing- e s an dowbnde vere Fovoyted to have hreatencd. sev. = food. The authorities are offering | NEW YORK, March 15.—A near riot, | V5® 7°PY bounties for their death or cepturs. S I'eral other’guards who came to Schmldt's . Recently several taousand persons in which more then 200 disabled ex- | gssistance. * ton at all the “Hahn" Stores—including our new “City Club Shop" ~1318GSe. . - i at a football match at Besancon, near |80ldiors quartered In the Fox Hills,| . - erty Damage in Wake of ance on the field of & hi the eral of them over. It then turned its A Jutruder. . Cu suffered & give my dsughter? i the western frontier, were "thrown |Staten Island, Hospital participated, fol- . . { rran, . nard A. Cu , twenty-six, Raging Winds. { Loar. Goaded by hunger, the animal patients, by s yenty six. one of the | From Loudon Pamiag Show. charge: for an in attention to the bootbell, -w-{:.utl)' Prospective n-Law—A thou- NEW ORLEANS, March 15.—~The death toll from a series of tornadoes and cyclohes - that. stru various 89 Injured and Great Prop- into a panic by the sudden apDear. -|lowed the shooting last night of Ber- The High Bid. players and bowled sev- Retired Auctloneer—And what can By the Associsted Press, Ve o s ast the feid, e ok | akad e yoar, e tcountey || LEWIS M. THAYER e making finally for the spectators, ‘Wwho took to their heels. A rushed upon the fleld and ended the | animal's escapade wil & otig d Auctioneer (absent-minded- | HowaRn 8 t155 §07 13th N.W. who enioyl ith & revelver “the finer, better | things in life, The Florsheim. Shae | affords. quality of ' . early yesterday, y shot. 120 persons were finjured, and property :):- and n;‘eirl guests r“ a banquet in . |.. e town hall, tae referee meanwhile f;;';::;zz;‘_‘r':“ at several hundred | 30, declared the game & drav. todasaaus torioms o ™| URGES FIRE INSPECTION. Gowen, Okla., ten dead, twenty-four | \ e Tony Red~ ||t S R A stunion orand sury susguts ot lence and style Calf; rows of injured: ey Bulldings demolished:| - fctals to Perform Duty. : that 1s pleasindly o fine stitching. zog“r:‘.mgei:“ four dead, twenty in- | Special Dispatch to The Star. $10.00 Jured:. property. damage, $50,000. STAUNTON, Va. March 15.—A correct, at a cost Farming settlements in Jefferson | &rand jury in corporation court here | that is low for the satisfaction - received. Most styles are: - $10 A Few Styles, $12 and Lonoke aounties, Ark., six dead, |has recommended strict enforcement thirteen injured; property damage,|of the local and state fire laws and $50.000. an inspection of all public buildings, Arkansas City, Ark. one dead;|With the object of compeiling owners socore of houses destroyed. ) to comply with the laws In regard to Corinth, Miss., twelve injired; 150 Providing adequate fire escapes and homes destroyed. other means of safety for occupants. The tornado struck this city without| The &rand jury recommended thit warning, the storm moving in a north- this inspection be made by the mayor, westerly directon, leveling homes, tel- | the chief of police and the chief of the A AR AR Dh poles and tress in ita path, |fire department. It gaes further and B % S . 5 Isuggests that:the inspectors include e = . oits 'han 150 homes inslde (e SIY|Gil other public buildings which they \a al e S aiTe in ruins and many others|3ou1q Got ordinarily inspect under Hardly a bullding of any kind wasj the law' It also recommonded that a H i competent enginee TOCUT o Medium left standing in_the path of the storm. | ;3iift® |0 the Inspection and that the dhe, tornado passed within two hun- | §izunton fire ordinance be rewsitten to = .- - R 7. shade tan dred feet of the central school bullding | S:A% h ¥ i A where almost & thousand puplls were | S3}OT™ ‘Rith the state law. p . yor Pilson. stated that he snd Calfskin. | e AL s Yt inured the Police and fire chists had planned - en youz‘ ez. OwS w e about}t; make such an inspection and that $10.00 ually divided between the aomes of | | { white people In the better part of the |'t Wi e made very shortly. town and negro cabins in’ the out —_— : 7 akirts. Almost all the injured, how.{ Under the English law g man has H . D ever, are whites. a perfect right to open his wife's : - - Only meager details are available | letters—that is, if he has the cour- : from the sections visited by the storm | 2&¢. : / on account of the damage to wire com- munication, and it is feared the death toll will be greatly increased when complete returns’ ilabte. - Y = 1. . 4 [ ;g:;':un Faxo been "'“rfi‘.‘:’,:"";':"f';‘,‘?l"’:: 5“5@0 501‘)3 er BUT—have you given a thought to this? She will need “aamage, which. in a8al : 55 . Gostroyed homes and other bulldings, | “THE BUSY CORNER” PESUMEATSTH.ST appropriate clothes for these affairs—frocks, hats, slippers, wraps include damage to crops and destruc- . Cor. th & K 4 o tion of live stock. -Rivers and smaller —you know them all; and oh; you'll be so glad you saved your Won't you be proud of her? Of course, there will be parties, “and dances, and theatres, and football games—you have thought so much of her happiness when she starts “going around”. . streams In practically all the sections v 414 9th St. Tan Scotch visited by the storm, which was accom- money when your daughter grows up. 533 Pa. Ave. L panied by heavy rains, are swollen and S E 3 Grain Golf #ome apprehension is felt on this score. ¢ . E. orm was accompanie o The New City 191416 Pa Oxfords. usual freaks, the most outstanding o¢ Clu5 Shop = which was reported from Kennet, $10.00 Ark., where a twalve-day-old infant 1318 G St. . - Ave. ¢ was blown from a bed gn which it = was lying across the yard, where its clothing held it suspended to & picket fence until the storm abated. STUDENT, BACK BROKEN, DIES PROVIDENCE, R. L. March 15— Russell Kendall, twenty, of Mont. clatr, N. J.. Brown sophomore, who fractured a vertebra in a friendly tussle with a fraternity brother here February 27, died at the Rhode Island Hospital today. It was stated at the hospital that the fractured vertebra was not the cause of death. Kidney trouble set In &nd the youth died ,from acute’ nephritis and ‘ancmia. A Triumph in » Tweed Top Coats i There's more than the fabric recommending these Coats—there’s Saks’ standard of desidn and workmanship—which explains so much for such a price. . * THE MAN'S STORES - Why Wait Until July? We offer you _one crisp _c'lean lot in an early bird sale of - 3,000 Men’s Perfect 12 Nainsook Union Suits Miners Already Leaving Coal Fields - NEW YORK port officials say that hundreds of Poles and Slavs from the coal-mining districts are leaving this country. With a long strike ahead, they prefer to return home. Don’t face a coal- i less winter. (et coal NOW before pro- duction stops and, more important, before -our supply is exhausted. Order enough coal to carry you through at least the first month of next season. We cannot re-order.from the mines until the strike is settled and production resumed. BUY NOW! Today, phone— Main 4270 - - COAL."~ 1408 H St. N'W. Single-breasted and Double-breasted—the lat- ter with belts, the former cut full-back: plain sleeves and kimono sleeves: silk yoke and piping. Both Tan and Gray—for they are co-popular shades. You know you can see character in a Coat— same as in an individual—and these Coats are . wonderfully likable. .’ . The Saks influence mark these ‘Men’s Soft Hats If it was the other way around—which is so often the case—making price what the quality will stand—they'd be marked what their contem- i poranes are. ! Bevortrtoicossioonin A 'I;hc-'éaka of it is $5—a difference in price with no difference in quality. . ROSSLYN'S C 2 y Per- Blocke are modeled from ultra-extreme for the _young men to smartly conservative. In the shades | that are proper—in the proportions that insure becomingness. - Becoming preportion is one.of the features of all Saks’ Hats, Dozen Suits to a Customer "4 fine ‘piece bf’72x80 'pajamé checked nainsook— /! " and, understand,: these! are standard cut wion “suits.. .- ¢:: ¢ =. Closed-crofch :tyle ‘Sizes 34.to 46. " NEVER HAS THE REPUTATION OF VY“OLD VIRGINIA HAMS” | Been iqulle;l. From the Colonial Days to\ the present time they have parexcellent—a product unexcelled~ig quality. - * o . _For Sale.at Our Market Stands " ROSSLYN PACKING CO., Rosslyn, Va.. i\ # i ~ - 5 5 G R :TRY TO MATCH THESE SUITS UNDER $1.00 o

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