Evening Star Newspaper, March 25, 1924, Page 5

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MEXICAN REGIMENT, REPORTED CRUSHED. Column of 1 ,500 Completely Annihilated in Yucatan, Rebel Leader Claims. White House Army and Navy Combine to Get Royal Feline Out of Scandal’s Way. He Refuses to Tell Story. In Fact, Seems a Trifle Disgruntled Today. By the Associatesd Press. MERIDA, Yucatan, March dio via the Dallas News) umn of 1500 federal troog pletely annihiluted” b; ts | e o e R e % l. & '!furry back has the distinction of hav- @ ala, Tabasco, vesterday |ing been stroked often by presidential morning, Gen. Candido Aguilar, chief | hands, and whose mysterious disappear- ©f the third revolutionary military | ance several days ago caused presiden- zone, reported to headquarters of the {tial concern, was returned today to rebellion at Frontera, it was an- | President and Mrs. Coolidge through the nounced here today. nou _ The revolution- | combined co-operation, it might be said, ary nerul Benito Torruco was slain ‘u[ the Army and Navy De tments. Inthe ibattle; the id. | And the home-coming of this feline is . declared | gajd to have proveked a smile on the 1i of the Obregon con- | 3 ; T reg T Con | countenance of the nation’s Chief Execu- er of War | tive, burdened though his mind is k ,~I(|u - 1r\)|'\ in {to be with the affairs of state in a time nder has becn | poiitic o By Tihas eett | of unusual poiitical turmoil. Tige, it see , tired of the luxur: of his quarters, and, palled with pampering of a distinguished mas betook himself recently out sacred portals of the White Hou unnoticed, bel th the feet, of, haps, diplom: noted figures, into a world o mance. report s g that ¢ he Gulf of Mex “indignantly r manders of th FOUR GENERALS ARRESTED. Mexican Rebel Leaders to Face Courts-Martial. forth feline fancy and ro- High Lineage Plain. This morning Tige somewhat depressed mood, walking a on the street in the vicinity of 18th and B | streets northwest. He was first spled (and here is where the Army comes in) by Capt. E. F. Koenig, U. 8. of the war planning branch of War Deps not suspec at the time. But observe that the ¢ | karden variety { Stripes of roya | that smacks u'4xtlu<|\- was though essly r, was arrested defiant an interview | ar anzo With him were his brothers, Ambrosio and F Samano and former Lavin. Ambrosio ind ; Leputy Uriano ana were while governor of ged with respo; uprising ante revolt Arrest Non-Politieal. reported their arrest ordered for non-political based on allegations of executions d_ property destruction during ! operations | rominent in ing in Jalisc Figueroa rals in the forces, for the Vera Cruz Tt is line. recognized Capt. Ko ad no difficulty capturing the bewildered Tige, Vinrique "Estrada’s upri sted while nch and w dvanes against Oa repairs to t ed t 5 = 5 the Associated Press. uilar and Gar-| CHICAC -Death from 3 ltd resistance. 1 | dore Kloster, seventy and seventy- ](“U vears old and blind since bLirth, | when their sister, Anna Kloster, six- " | ty-five, who had cared for them, died ; | suddenly, according to a theory of Other advic 4 |police, who yesterday found the ywn | ) starvation claimed Endre and Theo- | Prodtglfl Is Silent forthwth turned him over (here en- ters the Navy) to Capt. Edward Sul- livan of the Navy Department guard force in the Munitions building. For the time being it looked to Tige as though he would need all nine of his| lives to survive the dark fate that scemed to be his, for Capt. Sullivan, also wholly ignorant of the fact that was harboring the first gentleman cat of the land, placed him in a closet Rushed to White Houxe. But not for long. Getting into | communication with Capt. Rdward i charge of the State, War uard forces, Sullivan let that he had a cat on his no faciiities provided und ystem for Keeping it. I prestige rose to mar pt. Bryant remember: | House announcemen to the effect that its cast was lost had been broadcast last night by radio stations WCAP and WEAF and moreover, In the news- tion given of the tallied exactly with Ben O Fink, a watehman Munitions building, was delegated to rush the feline the White House. received with open arms sory warmth of the execu- kitchen, and attaches conveyed President’ Coolidie that the way- safely back. That's developed. pied himself where he w 4 during hours of recreancy are questions which he himself refused to divulge his fel at the I did, howe sidered it it be know hands an the budg: stantly Tige ed heights. ¢ | that a White tive to ward animul wa and those How Tige Blind Brothers Starve to Death ‘ When Sister, Their Sole Aid, Dies: ibodies were found Ly a small boy | who, believing the building deserted, crawled through a broken window in search of junk plumbing Neighbors recalled that the family once operated a prosperous but that the blind brothers scldom | were scen property in the vieinity. TI deve all her time to mi in Mexico. Both are | 1 on intercepted | It | | el chief in the | eported to be .u-l it will he cluding taining and c ploves totalin 000" dollars. found the th, demands, mai en 15 cost of an Coal Operator Kills Self. I BLUEFIELD, March 25— body of Edward McQuail, '.‘ ealthy coal operator in the Ppeahon- | . tas field, wa fu\md in the office of ! one of his mine: nis, McDowell | yeste: rdg\ with a Dbullet A coroner's jury | a verdict of sulcide i ¥ou need eflicient, industrious | ? There's one sure way to get it quickly—read and us returned Do Thoroughly Reliable Instruments of a Variety of Well Known Makes DRCOP’S || Music 1300 G Street House !to the brothers after the their father, fourteen years ugo. port-mortem examination n ordered hodies of the three in the building n which they had lived fifty ye: Dead for about ten da FIVE INJURED IN CRASH. has Queb ce, the most seriously jured « f he overturr rgeney H 2 orn and her head - left ear was others. who were their family physic Light, fou aged in Collision. Overturning of an automobile near | Licht, fou Park road and Park pla near the |,_1"“|'__<“1 H Soldiers’ Home, yesterday afternoon Quebéc p resulted in_damage to two cars and injury to five occupunts of one of them One_of the c property of Mrs. Sophie Drew, der street nnrlhv\ driven by Sion Doris Draw X was overturned. The (.nu\r car was owned and driven by Mz lara A. Sasser, Argonne apartme Margaret McCarthy, twelve, 619 twelve, thirteen. en Doyle, Ancient Harp Sent Louvre. P'ARIS, March received from Syria a harp 2,700 years lold. It was uncarthed on the the banks archeologist DEALERS R. McReynolds & Son 1423-25-27 L Street N.W. 14th and Park Road N.W. Main. 7228-7229 E. A. Hayden Co. 329-331 Pennsylvania Avenue S.E. Lincoln 4805 Davies Motors, Inc. 1028 Connecticut Avenue N.W. Fraoklin 4258 McCurdy & MacWhorter 1625 U Street N.W. North 7054 Leo McKenney Alexandria, Va. Alex. 1308 See our Exhibit at the Auto SLow or virit the above dealers and see the new models an Ideal Combination — | Complete CONNECTICUT AVENUE Ready for Occupancy ADJOINING Cathe- dral Mansions, these attractive new apartments wil strongly appeal to those seeking refined comfort with reason- able rentals. One Room and Bath to Five Rooms and Two Baths. All large, outside rooms, with spacious closets. Open for Inspection Until ¥ P. M. WARDMAN 1430 K Stree: Bridge Lamp Stand and Shade $5.75 These iron bridge lamps are offered complete, with charming hand- decorated oval parchment shades —a very special price. Lamp Salon—Second Floor DULIN&MARTING | | bakery, | They owned considerable —The Louvre has 1215-1217 F Street and 1214 to 1218 G Street Some Say Tige Had a Gay, Gay Night; |WKELLAR ADVISES MID-CITY CITIZENS Association Indorses Five-Cent Fare Rate After Senator Assails ! Eight-Cent Charge. l SCORES UTILITIES BODY Charges Companies With Placing Fictitious Values. “I take pride in_this city—my cap- nator McKellar said. “1 have been deeply impressed with heauty and its progress, and I want to see it continue making it- self more beautiful. It should be the handsomest capital city in the world, and I hope this hope will be real- ized. I intend to always favor every bit of legislation providing for the city's betterment and 1 intend to do all I can to ma Congress more liberal ts appro- priations for the ph develop- ment of the Distriet Mid-City Citizens' Assoclation went on record at its meeting | night in the Thomson School, favoring a five-cent car fare for the District of Columbia. This was unanimously voted after the membership had listened to Senator McKellar of Ten- | nessce assall the local traction com- and the Public Utiliti Com- o in his remarks as ington publ Clty Association did not for the matter had been s meeting : appointed b report upon the | mmended indorsement given a rising vote made an honorary honorary member ciation Takes Pride In Citry. | Beforc launching upon his subject | of fare reduction Senator McKellar aid he wanted to say to the citizens Washington that he is a friend of ty despite newspaper accounts contrary | and w the first clected by to be th “This bedy s ~auld operate in tae in- | terest of the citizens and not the com- | panies. By basing its ideas regarding res upon what terms a ‘fair re- on the investment, the com- has been unfair with the Dis- pulation. Eiving subject 1 is tao high Company frankly a matter of fact, study to the inced that pital Trac admits that the people three-cent your Public Utilities Commisstos For Reducing Fare: ¢ enough, this body was orig- and D Who wasx today appointed amwistant attorney of the Interior Department. tive committee the meeting voted to| petition the Public sion to rearrange 14th and U stree 15th nue 8o as to “operate in the interest of safety which is not lic, was the it the does ' tained with recitations. not that a publ C., TUESDAY, MARCH 25. 1924 WOMAN IS APPOINTED AIDTOU. S. ATTORNEY Precedent Established in Interior Department by Miss Julia Banks’ Sclection Precedent was established today in the Interior Department by the ap- pointment of Miss Julia Banks, chief of the stenographic division of the so- licitor's office, to the post of assistant United States attorney. Miss Banke, who has been with the Interior De- partment eleven years, will handle part of the legal work of the solici- tor's office. She is a native of Yenn- sylvania. Miss Banks entered the governmer.t service in 1913 as a stenographe- in the general land office. While thus employed she attended the Washins- ton College of Law, from which ke was graduated in 1917. A few months later she was admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia, and then was transferred to the office of (n/l solicitor for the Department of the Interior and placed in charge of the | stenographic force The mew assistant attorney is the first wo to he appointed to a legal | post of responsibility withia the terior Department. Women h Jogal posts in other government de- partments in past vears, znd Mrs. Mahel Willebrandt is an assistant at- torney general of the United States. Miss Banks lives at the ki 'hr‘a apartments, 14th and Chftoa stre s | MISS JULIA BANKS, Ttilities the car 9th and New Commis- tops at streets street an: York ave- | and comfort for the pub- | now the case.” It sense of the meeting that Utilitiea Commission | adjustments | be asked for. > busin Bergen_ enter- Royal Driver Gets 'l‘hree Months. T, March 25.—Prince Nico- chi has been sentenced to three months' imprisonment for run- ning over a student with his automobile. Publ Mise Alloen MEN’S WEAR Presenting A Nese Mellow Finish Felt Hat for Spring at *5 created by of reduc E t first fought this o hey have discover their inters Shown in the season’s favored colors; pearl and steel gray and several shades of tan. This is, without a doubt, the maximum hat value at the price. SIDNEY WEST (INCORPORATED) 14th and G Streets pu car companies ion. but he'nful of the two & in some de- » princi- watered HOTEL INN Formerly Staz Hotel Phons Main 8108-8108 604-610 9th St. N.W. $7 rooms, $6 weekly: $10.50 rooms. $8: $14 | with toilet. shower and lavatory. $10: 2 in | room, 50 per cent more. Rooms Like Mother's. DUNLAP HATS STEIN-BLOCH CLOTHES Seventh Street Penna. Avenue ahks & Company Suits of French Blue $45 Maybe you call it “Balkan Blue"—or perhaps “Powder Blue." The name doesn't matter—it's the shade that counts—and what we call French Blue is the identical color that fashion is endorsing. And again Saks Craftsmanship plays its im- portant part. Two and Three button models—with the Wales draped back; or on more fitting lines—de- pendcnt upon how extreme your taste. The $45 marking for these particular Suits— carries out our polxcv of * bunldmg up to a standard rather than down to a price. Third Floor. . Y - Farm Pay Averaged $33.18. The Department of Agriculture ar he | nounces that farm wages last year - | averaged $23.18 a month, with boarc ch parked | compared with 329.17 in 1 Indus Jireet bridge | trial vompetition for labor was given iy robbed of 384 Ife cipal cause for the Ir ) ' his alleged ansailant and suid | crease. WhlA way greatest in th he left the city this morning. north ‘Atlantic states. Assaulted With Icc Pick. | Charles S. Henry ter, reported to was assaulted wi other colored # Pullman por- the police that One good way to popularize cias ical music is to steal it and use it in 4 popular song The difficalty in turning im good Americans is to find Chestnut I arms COTTAGE CHEESE Chestnut Farms Cottage Cheese is more valuable than meat in material to make blood, muscle and bone. It is an inexpensive food product of the highest quality. Delicious, Wholesome, Appetizing Ready to Serve Or when combined with other foods tractive and healthful dishes can bo Ask for any at- repared Book of Recipes Ghestnut Farms Dairy 1116 Phone Connecticut Franklin Avenue 4000 Superior Dairy Products On Sals at Arcade, C(mz; and Riggs and Leading Grocers Dyring the mao. debates, upon tie fort of ar for his HAMP CLARK. former speaker of the House of Representatives, had the rare ability to mold public opmlon through his per- suasive pleas. Every man who hears his friends com- ment admiringly on his snowy starched necklinen. becomes a silver-tongued sponsor for TOLMAN- IZED collar dressiness and comfort. THE TOLMAN LAUNDRY F. W. MacKenzie, Mgr. 6th and C Sts. N.W. Jom Was}ung’tons *House of Dress-Representatives” today. Combine comfort with correct appearance and apparel precision— TOLMANIZE! Phone Franklin 71. Prompt Parcel Post Service Wherever You Are ' SLASH—BANG All Is Gver But the Shouting “Everything goes.” Don't confuse this sale with the ordinary sale. This is real; no phonies here, for you know our reputation is to confine our sales to facts. Every pair of shoes that has been or is offered here for sale has quality behind it. Don’t miss this opportunity to get real values for your money. Come, but come early. BUY NOW AND SAVE $6 Low Shoes, $1.89 In this lot you will i find the class of shoes | you are used to paying il much more than $6.00 for. But to sl .89 Women’s Shoes Now for the grand scoop. While they last, ‘we will sell Ladies’ Low Shoes at a price far below cost of material. You don’t have to take our word. Come, see for yourseif. They come’ in Pat.” leather. Dull Brown, White and Black ' Kid Slip- in | | close out now Formeriy sold for $10 and $12. To close out, now for Table Specials On this table you will find shoes of various styles and quality. This is a broken lot; not all size |n rach lot, but sizes from 9, AAAs to A included in they last to go 1 oc at, the pair.... the entire lot. 12 Pairs for $1.00 Confuse these prices with shoes that yon have in mind at such a price. Come and see. Worthy of any con- servative woman. See these before buy- ing. Now while THIS IS REAL In ladies’ dull kid patent leather, assorted colors of suede VAL RICHTER styles for quick 1304 F St. N.W. SHOE FINDINGS In straps, buckles, tongues, ete. To close out quick action while it fx now, each ...

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