Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e o e o g~ = = — PAPER BOYCOTTED FOR TORAL STORIES Mexican Government Asks News and Advertising Be Denied Excelsior. By the Associated Press. MEXICO_ CITY, November 8.—The newspaper Excelsior has been boycotted by the Mexican government with the explanation that it made a hero and a martyr out of Jose de Leon Toral, assassin of Gen. Alvaro Obregon, in its handljng of the story of Toral's trial. An official statement, which was pub- lisned by all newspapers except EX- celsior, said the newspaper's stories on the trial were an encouragement to in- surgents in seditious activities against the government and to others to as- sassinate President Calles and other government heads. The statement was issued by Emilio Portes Gil as chief of the cabinet after he had conferred with the President. News and Advertising. All workmen and peasants, all mem- bers of the political parties and offi- cials and employes of the federal and state governments were called upon not to purchage or subscribe to Excelsior and to refuse to patronize anybody ad- vertising in the newspaper. The state- ment added that no government de- partment or employe would give any news, information or advertising to Excelsior. The action was taken by request of the Obregon bloc in Congress. Mem- bers of that bloc invaded the courtroom Monday night after a caucus i which threats were made to take measures against Toral if the jury did not con- vict him. | Nun to Get Second Trial | Mother Concepcion Aceveda de la | Llata, now on trial as an accomplice of Toral in the assassination of Gen. | Alvaro Obregon, will appear for a sec-| onc trial before a federal court on | charges of being implicated in a plot | to kill President Calles and Gen. Obregon at Celaya. She will be placed at the disposal of the federal court after her present trial is concluded. The federal court granted a petition for the release on bail of Senoritas Ana Maria Cisneros, Margarita Rubio and Leonor Rubio and Senora Esperanze Arjona, accused of being implicated in | the same plot. | $25,000 WIDER SCOPE DRIVE TO BE DISCUSSED B'nai B'rith to Hold Meeting To- night at Jewish Community Center to Plan Campaign. Plans for the opening of the $25.000 Wider Scope campaign of the B'nai Brith will be discussed at a meeting of drive workers tonight at the Jewish Community Center. Hyman Goldstein, chairman, will or- ganize the teams of workers which will engage in a week’s canvass of the city. beginning November 11. The meeting will be in the form of a smoker. Among the speakers will be Simon E. Sobeloff, deputy solicitor of Baitimore, who is a former president of the Menorah of the B'nai Brrith of that city. He was formerly GRANDCHILDREN SUE TRUSTEES OF ESTATE Hopfenmaier Descendants Ask Court to Reduce Fees of Custodians, Lewis Hopfenmaier. 2d, and his sis- ter, Babette H. Mandle, grandchildren of Lewis Hopfenmaier, local merchant, who died in August, 1917, and who are entitled to one-third of his $500,000 estate, yesterday filed suit in the Dis- trict Supreme Court against their aunt, Mrs. Mabel H. Simon, and Edwin C. Brandenburg, trustees of the Hopfen- maier estate. The grandchildren ask the court to take over the administra- tion of the estate, which has 20 years to run, by requiring the trustees to give a bond in the Equity Court and to have authorization from that court for the further expenditures out of the estate. Through_Attorneys Newmyer & King and Levi H. David, the plaintiffs tell the court that for the first nine years of the trusteeship a charge of 5 per cent for services was submitted by the trustees, but in their report for the past year the charge was raised to 5 per cent for each trustee on the funds coming into their hands. They assert this Jatter charge is excessive. KELLOGG IS liE-ELECTED BY PAN-AMERICAN UNION Secretary of State Again Chosen Chairman of Organization’s Governing Board. By the Associated Press. Secretary Kellogg yesterday was re- elected chairman of the governing board of the Pan-American Union. Ambassador Herman Velarde of Peru was named vice chairman, succeeding Dr. Ricardo Alfaro, minister from Pan- ama. Both are elected for one year. Offices Saul Building 925 15th St. N.W. Several desirable rooms at very reasonable rents. Imspec- tion invited. 2 rooms, $52.50 B. F. SAUL CO. 'Main 2100 925 15th St. N. “Somebody Ought To Tell Hyotoy 10 These Facts ‘The Motorist Who Doesn't Use Ebonite Is Missing a Lot! Ebonite keeps a hea: about the gears vh'i{hfima‘b:fwrfi shocks, prevents friction, and makes gear shifting easy at all times in today’s congested traffic. One filling will last 2,500 miles. EBONITE (Combination of Pure Oil) 20 Cents a Shot At Filling Stations and BAYERSON OIL WORKS @ Senate page. Columbia 5228 7% PORTSMOUTH WING CHAIR ;s (OMFORTABLE ~ and inexpensively priced ( 7HE PORTSMOUTH is deep-seated and comfortable, and beneath its quaint beauty is a sound construction. Its cushion is down filled, and its body is all-hair filled. There are many coverings at varying prices. Covered in Muslin it is *60 The Portsmouth will be up- “Entertaining is like dancing. 1t és most enchanting when it appears gay and un- studied, but on what practiced skill its success depends! It is one of the arts of successful en- tertaining to serve good coffee. Hundreds of different coffee flavors vipen in the tropics of four continents, but the finest, richest flavor of all is achieved by blending manyspoffees. The flavor of Maxwell House Coffee is created in this way.” Gt Motiaste (q'l' 1S CHARACTERISTIC of the warm friendliness of Mrs. Monteagle’s hospitality that she likes to draw her guests cosily about the fire- place and pour the after-dinner coffee herself. The clear, golden brown color of Maxwell House Coffee, its fragrance and flavor induce the mood of genial enjoyment in which the whole evening moves to success. her social crown with the graceof long familiarity. In the variety of her interests—from mothering her two lovely daughters, riding, driving, golfing, enter- taining, dancing for the Junior League of San Francisco, to reigning as Queen of California’s important Mardi Gras—she is typical of the youth and vigor of her generation. With the simplicity of those born to prominence she dislikes stuffy formalities, while possessing an unerring faculty for choosing wisely among the things which contribute to sophisticated living. It is not surprising that she should prefer Maxwell House Coffee. The flavor of Maxwell House has an individuality, blended of hundreds of fine coffees, which appeals instantly to the discriminating palate. A Southern gentleman long ago, with an unsatisfied craving for a coffee flavor he had never tasted, toiled with the roasting of many different coffees to- gether, as a musician toils with tones, until he ‘- 7 OUNG, vivacious Mrs. Kenneth Monteagle wears achieved a blend of unusually rich and mellow - harmony. This fine blend was Maxwell House. It took its name from the hotel where it first became famous — the old Maxwell House, celebrated throughout the South for its hospitality, its old- 80” CANDLE LIGHT; the rich gleam of dark polished wood, the sparkle of wit lightly exchanged between congenial guests, dis- tinguish the dinners Mrs. Monteagle gives at her Spanish estate at Pebble Beach. RADIO PROGRAM OF MUSIC EVERY THURSDAY: Mrs. Ker'meth Monteagle entertains in California wfl:lu brilliant informality WRS. KENNETH MONTEAGLE has a flair for entertaining with gayety and chic. Her handsome San Mateo home is usually abandoned for the summer in favor of Pebble Beach. The famous Seventeen Mile Drive is a private road which brings the fortunate visitor to this sum- mer playground of California’s socially elect. Life is lived mostly in the open—on the sunny beach and in the magnificent semi-tropical gar- dens—and a gay informality prevails. Mrs. Monteagle is one of its most popular hostesses. BREAKFAST IN THE PATIO is one of the joys of life at Pebble Beach. Mrs. Monteagle’s breakfast service of quaint and colorful Quimper adds sunshine of its own to the sun-flecked shad- ows of the ferns and palms. Whether it follows a formal dinner or is the first happy experience of the day, the rich, mellow flavor of Maxwell House is appreciated by those who have a culti- vated taste for fine coffee. time southern”dishes and particularly for its wonders ful coffee. Here distinguished travelers and belles and gentlemen of the Old South first enjoyed the coffee which is served today by America’s leading hostesses from coast to coast. Your own family and guests will appreciate Maxwell House Coffee. You will find it at your grocer’s in nicely sealed tins which preserve its rare fragrance and flavor. «Q0)E CAME IN FOR THE GREAT BALLS AND holstered in material of your [own at no additional :osg.} Famous weekly radio programs are broadcast by the talented: Maxwell House Coffee Concert Orchestra from WJZ, WBZ, WBZA, WHAM, e KDKA, WJR, KYW, WTMJ, WOC, WHO, WOW, KOA, WCCO, KSD, - WDAF, KV0O, WBAP, KPRC, WSB, WSM, WMC, WHAS, WLW, WBAL, WBT, WJAX, WEBC, KGO, KPO, KFI, KGW, KOMO, KHQ. W. & J. SLOANE Tune in every Thursday evening for the Maxwell House Coffee Program. 709-711-713 TWELFTH STREET, N. W. —— MaxweLL HouseE COFFEE ALWAYS STOPPED THERE FOR SEVERAL DAYS' —scene from a southern belle’s recollections of the old Maxwell House. Its guests spread the fame of Maxwell House Coffee which today is served by hostesses of distinction from Newport to California. “The House with the Green Shutteys” STORE OPEN FROM 9 A. M. TO s: 3 DATY INCLUDING SATORDAY ™ ™ Sloane Endorsed Morchandiss Carries An Assurancs e Charse Acconnts Conveniently Arvanged Other Retail Stores in NEW YORK~SAN FRANCISCO~LOS ANGELES