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18 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1928.° chairman 4 i - of law, on account of age. Bomn in |the WURLITZER, RETIRED [S52 2 faxt Lnue -ANASTASIA' RETAINS |1 oot v ey o 57 iy ' o = | GOL. HENRY M. MORROW, |0, 35,3 oo S, o 27 died early ‘morn! Iversity of o Carlton Hotel. has retained a lawyer to press her [ ANSTiacia ls s guest 1n this cousty 8! AT AGE LIMIT, RETIRED |uated from the University of Michigan | w,r PIANO "AKER, DEAD Mr. Wurlitzer had been il two-days LAWYER T0 F".E SUIT claims, Princess Xenia of Russia. in 1888 and began his military service | honor at the Army and Navy Tndis survived by Mvs. Hlen. Bilings i Wiwaed W. Fallows, e lawper, s S Offcer, Leaving Army, Was|it B0 S0 08 B e Fatantr: | O . i T, hter, Valeska, gathering material which he says will Beasley Given Life. He served in Cuba and in Philip- : 7 Cincinnati Manufacturer Sucoumbs| Wurlitzer, a daughter, V and & Woman- Who Says She Is Late|prove her identity beyond a doubt. NEWCASTLE, Ind., October 30 (#).— Awarded Distinguished Service |0 Bl O o0 with that regiment| Homing Pigeon Finds Home. to Attack of Influenza in ntly from the chair- | (Czar's Daughter Seeks Prop- |Property now held by the Grand Duch- H: Medal in World War. and the 32nd Infantry. In 1901 he was| WAYNESBORO, Va. (®).—A homing manship .of the board of the company . ess Xenla, sister of the late Czar, and | Charles Beasley, 37, of Tere Haute, appointed first lieutenant, 4th United | pigeon attended the Pleasant View Two Days. which was founded by his father. erty in Europe. other property in Finland and elsewhere pleaded guilty to first degree murder | Col. Henry M. Morrow, Judge Advocate | States Infantry, and later served with the | Methodist Church he pos will be elaimed for Anastasla. for the slaying of M ller, | General’s Department, who has been on | 9th Cavalry. In 1903 Both Mr. Fallows and Gleb Botkin, | 36, of Muncie, when brought in duty at the War Department for the past | {0 the Judge Advocate General's Depart- | tion: its owner. The Rev. C. E. By the Associated Press. Princeton alumni fund for increases|By the Associated Press. former playmate of the Czar’s children, | for the opening of his trial yesterday. £ ment in the grade of major and reached | Smallwood is feeding it at his residence. RK, October 30—Howard|in faculty salaries has passed the| NEW YORK, October 30.—Mme.|charge that Grand Duchess Xenia|He was sentenced to life,imprisonment |10 years, has just beed placed on the | the grade of colonel in July, 1918. Dur- [ A band on the pigeon’s leg 18 marked E. E. Wurlitzer of Cincinnati, former ' $1,700,000 mark. Anastasia Tschaikowsky, who says she 'knows that Anastasia is her niece, but ! by ‘Judge J. R. Hinshaw. retired list of the Army by operation 'ing the World War he was on duty in ' “IF 20 B 56262 Yes, A $5,000,000 Increase in Business Since We Opened Our New Building November, 1928, three years after the opening of our new building, finds our sales totaling Five Million Dollars more than the first year. Two Million Five Hundred Thousand people shopped here last year. 'This is five times the entire population of Washington. _ : Over Thirty-five Thousand mail and telephone orders werereceived and filled in 300 selling days. : . Ten Thousand One Hundred and Nineteen new names were added to our Charge Account lists from November 1st, 1927, up to and including October 29th, 1928. Our Toy Department during the Christmas and Easter seasons is as much an event in the lives of ThouSands of Children as the Egg Rolling onthe White House grounds. This remarkable increase and the statistics quoted ... just what do they mean? They mean that this store, famous throughout the land for carrying nationally known goods and fine merchandise of international renown...atfair prices based on s(tJYh?’ (%uality and value . . . has received unprecedented recognition in the Nation’s apital. Soon we celebrate the Anniversary of the Third Yearinour New Building...to be known as the Third Year Sales. Another announcement appears tomorrow, f f BUY IN NOVEMBER—PAY IN JANUARY To those Thousands of New Patrons whom, we feel, our Third Year Sales will bring, we accord the same privilege given those uncountable charge customers already dealing here . . . and that is BUY IN NOVEMBER—PAY IN JANUARY l W