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EAKERS STONTS | BRING CHARGES Army Flyer Accused of Driv- ing to Within 100 Feet of Oakland Crowd. By the Associated Press. OAKLAND, Calif., March 27.—Capt. Ira C. Eaker, noted Army pilot, may | face charges of violating air traffic reg- | ulations as the result of a series of | stunts that thrilled a crowd at the Oak- | land Airport vesterday after he took ©off in a pursuit plane for Seattle. { Millard Hamilton, Department of | Commerce inspector, said Capt. Eaker | put on a demonstration of “power dives” | over the airport and hurtled down from | an altitude of 2,000 feet to within 100 | feet of a large crowd of spectators be- | fore he leveled off The inspector announced he would | send specifications embodying the | charges to Washington | Capt. Eaker was chief pilot on the! 150-hour endurance cruise of the Army | monoplane Question Mark and recent 1y made a flight from Brownsville, Tex., to the Panama Canal Zone and return. CAPTAIN DI ST f Declares “Crowd” Consisted of 25 Peo- | ple; Doubts Jurisdiction. A > PORTLAND. Ore, arch 27 (4) Capt. Ira Eaker arrived here tenig i and denied he did aerial acrobatics over | military history. ES CHARGE. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1929. The bedy of Marshal Ferdinand Foch, generalissimo of the allied armies, moving through the streets of Paris. with distinguished escort, to the dome of the Invalides, where he rests in company with Napoleon and other figures of French | This picture was rushed from Paris to London and radioed to New York. ~~Associated Press Photo. ESCALON CAPTURE I LOOMS AS CALLES | the Oakland, Calif.. airport yesterday a charged by Millard Hamilton, Depart ment of Commerce inspector. The flyer seid he did not care to enter a verbal controve with the in- spector, but Army aviators are not in- cluded 'in what Hamilton charged & violation of air rules. “I did swoop over the Oakland Air- CONTINUES MARCH | port.” the capiain said. “But this was e Gone to test my 'motor as all-aviators | (Continued From First Page) I SRR ORIE. SR south of Escalon, and at Escalon, the| FAI.'. MEETS DOHENY former President said, the water situa 19,000 men north from Torreon for the | | campaign in Chihuehua, acting under | “The marches of Monday and Tues- | | I can assure you” Gen. Calles | ST | | B. Fall, former Secretary of the In- | considered himself in a posiiion now terior, said yesierday that he and E. L. | to force the rebeis to fight, or retreat in Arizona 50 years ago, and nothing more” in a meeting here. | their forces concentrated at Jiminez, 50 ‘The message of Gen. do before they embark on a long trip. | The crowd which Hamilton refers 1P | Seventy trucks alone were necessary to| was about 25 persons and I did not en- y todder for the cavalry horses. danger any lives or do acrobatics.” With arrival today at Jaral Grande, tion would be solved and further ad- | vance northward would be quicker than | the last 100 miles. The general's report FOR INFORMAL TALK | reveatea he was moving only a force of | G . lthe orders of Gen. Juan Andreu Al- Former Secretary Says They Dis- mazan, who was forced to cross another 3 | section of the same desert for his at- cussed “Horses, Books and Dude ! tack on Torreon last we: Cowboys,” but Nothing Else. a wired to President Portes Gil, “give us complete control of the situation in| By the Associated Press. Chihuahua.” PHOENIX, Ariz, March 2T.—Albert| This was inferred here to mean he| Doheny, ofl magnate, had discussed | from the state, into Sonora, or flee “horses, books, dude cowboys and Mr. | Mexico into the United States. Doheny's experiences as a prospec(or' He said his aviators reported aban- donment of Escalon by the rebels, with | The meeting, described as an in- | miles north. formal wisit, was the first between the | Calles was sent from Conejos and said two principals in the Government oil | he intended going back himself to his lease investigation in more than ;xx\heldflufirtm at Bermayjillo. months. Doheny was taking the five children | of his son, E. L. Doheny, jr., who was murdered in Los Angeles recently, to a Todeo and invited Fall to accompany | them, the former cabinet officer sald. | Fall with his wife and daughter, Mrs. | C, C. Chase of El Paso, came here ves- | terday. Mr. and Mrs. Doheny, their | son’s widow and their five grandchildren | arrived Saturday. 1 “We are old friends” Fall said.| Meanwhile, as the campaign zn the | west coast developed into another pro- spective chase, Gen. Jaime Carrillo, at Mazatian, wired the President that all the railroad track north of Culiacan, capital of Sinaloa, had been torn up and he hoped to force the rebels into an open- battle there when they fcund | their retreat cut short. Gen. Carrillo reported aviators had | found the main rebel column, under the | command of Gens. Roberto Cruz and | Francisco Manzo, at La Cruz, Sinalca, | |on their way to Naco. “ Olachea, commanders at Naco, ex-| pressed the belief that the oft-threat- encd attack from rebels under Gen. Fauso Topete would not develop. | To the south there were sigus that| federal forces Had pushed farther north- | ward into rebel territory. The Asso- ciated Press representative at Culiacan, | Sinaloa, reported that a federal column was approaching that city from Duran- | - go and that a rebel force had been sent | out. to meet it. | Rebel headquarters asserted a small | detachment of revolutionists still were besieging Mazatlan and that the prin- ipal Western insurrecto army under | Gen. Francisco R. Manzo was heading | south for Tepic after abandoning ils} attack upon Mazatlan. | The federal army near Culiacan was | looked upon as the chief menace to the revolutionary cause in the North, as it is a_potential instrument for pre venting Manzo's possible retraet Nogales, Sonora. | Federal cavalry also was reported | approaching Sonoyta, Sonora, 45 miles south of Ajo, Arizona. The village, which has about 100 inhabitants, has| been garrisoned by 17 rebel soldiers. | The 17 were reported as having fled with the approach of the cavalry. | Sightseeing privileges went up at No- | gales, Sonora, where rebel headquarters | posted notice that Americans crossing | into Mexico must have identification | cards and passports, which were to be issued by the rebels at a cost of 1 peso or 50 cents in American money. At Yuma and Douglas, Ariz., Ameri- can Government agents still were inves- tigating the report that Mexican federal | troops crossed into Arizona yesterday to! REPORTS REBEL RETREAT. Consul at Mazatlan Telegraphs Retire- ment of Attackers. American Consul William P. Blocker, at Mazatlan, reported to the State De- partment today in a telegram sent at 6 | | By the Associated Press. \ | NATIONALIST FORCES DRIVEN FROM CHEFO00 BY CHANG’S TROOPS ‘ (Continued From First Page. {o launch ment.” ‘The loyal forces of the province un- der Gen. Liu Chen-Nien during the first week administercd several stinging defeats to the army of Chang and forced it to retrcat northwestward to- ward Tengchow. The result then be- came quiescent until a few days ago when it broke out afresh about the same time that the Wuhan clique op.ned hostilities in southern China, an anti-Nationalist move- LI CHA1-SUM YET ALIVE. Rumors That Canton Governor Had Been Executed Are Held False, NANKING, China, March 27 (#).— Li Chai-Sum, governor of Canton, who was imprisoned here recently by orders of the Nationalist Central government, has not been executed. Rumors were current yesterday that this had been done. The general was arrested by the Na- tionalist government when he arrived in Nanking March 13 for the Kuom- intang conference. Canton leaders a few days ago de- manded his release by Nanking officials on threat that they would join with | their forces the Wuhan armies, with which Gen. Chiang Kai-Shek now is engaged in civil war. PRIESTS SLEEP WITH GUNS. nary Tells of Dangers Resulting From Communist Bands in Kiangsi. PHILADELPHIA, March 27 (#).—A letter received here yesterday from the Rev. Francis Flaherty, a Catholic mis- | - BY FOCHS CASKET iBill to Pension Marshal’s Widow Is Introduced in Chamber. | | 1 = | | By the Assoclated Press. } PARIS, March 27.—Thousands of } | former soldiers who fought under Mar- { shal Foch filed past his casket in'an { uncrowded but steady stream tcda | The body of the marshal lay where the { had_placed it yesterday in an open | { vault under the altar of the Ciapel of | St. Louis in Les Invaiides. | Meanwhile the government has in- | troduced a bill in the Chamber of Depu- ! ties to provide an annual pension of {100,000 francs (approximately $4,000) for the marshal's widow. During his { lifetime, said the preamble of the go { erument’s bill, Marshal Foch refused | gifts offered to him from the Unite | States and England. He never soug | fortune and died a poor man. Afte { widow's death, the proposed pens | would be divided ameng the grandchi dren uniil they reached their majority May Retain Home. | 1t is understood that the government | will permit Mme. Foch to retain the home in the Rue de Grenelle which | was placed at the marshal's disposal | | after the war and in which he died | The gates of the home are only a three- | minute walk to the crypt where the | marshal Jies. When sufficiently recuperated from the fatigue of the lng watch at her husband’s sick bed and the n of the funeral ceremonies, Mme. Foch probably will go to the country to rest. Ti honor of the marshal a new | cruiser which will be launched in June | will be christened Foch. War veterans of France today had the exclusive privilege of visiting Les | | Invalides and viewing the bier of Mar- | chal Foch, placed there yesterday. Poincare Placates Veterans. This was allowed them by Premier | | Poincare by way of compensation for | his having vesterday stopped the march | in front of the bier as it reposcd in | | front of Les Invalides before the war | { veterans had passcd before it. | The veterans, disgruntled at what | | they considered a siight to their war | | services and feeling for the dead com- mander, gathered in front of the| Chamber of Deputies and shouted, “Down with Parliament —drive these slackers out of here!” The premier explained it was neces- | | sarv to curtail the march past Les In- | valides because the ceremony had al- | | ready lasted two hours longer than| | planned and it was impossible to sub- | ject the family, foreign princes and | diplomats and the war-crippled to fur- | ther fatigue. Decorations on Display. The flag-draped coffin was to be ex- | | posed until late today. A double line of republican guards in full dress form- ed an aisle through the courtyard of !the Chapel of the Invalides. A row | | of candles upon the steps leading down (to the crypt revealed the marshal's ’glmerlng medals and decorations | which, with three batons, rested upon seven cushions of velvet and satin in front of the casket; upon the flag-cov- | ered coffin reposed the marshal’s sword | and cloak Order Movies éleanea Up. | HAVANA (#).—Sanitation officials have ordered hundreds of small mov theaters cleaned up and have forbidden | five-day | {of Central Europe, % Friedrichshafen probable some time to- | Policeman Halted IVHERANS MARB é'ln Adding Comment To Parking ‘Ticket’ oliceman William Sheets of the thirteenth precinct was ordered to- dgy by his commander, Capt. 3 M. Lord, to discontinue bis practice of putting comment on parking iickets” he leaves in automobiles in the future. Following several complaints an investigation was made and it wi disclosed that the officer has d iributed about 150 Lotices for vio- Jations cf the parking regulations, to which he had appended the words, “Friznds or Drag—Impotent.” Last night Shoets turned in to t. Lord a written report stating that it was not his intenticn to in- timidate motorists but merely to avoid being antoyed by “fixers.” Capt. Lord said today that al- though he does not know of any ction of the police manual which prohibits such a comment on a traf- fic notice, he thinks that to avoid possible criticisms ke practice shouid be disconinucd. 1 | DIRIGIBLE AT ATHENS | ON RETURN VOYAGE Graf Zeppelin Faces Two Days of Flying Over Eastern and Central Europe. By the Associated Press. ~1 ATHENS, March 7.—The Graf Zeppelin appeared over Athens at 7 am. | today on the return trip to Germany | its Eastern Mediterranean cruise. Crowds watched as it flew low over the Parthenon, - JERUSALEM, March 27 (#.—The | Graf Zeppelin had its nose turned to- ward home today after crulsing over Palestine and the Holy Land. Two days’ fiying over Eastern and Central Europe faced it before completion of its four- day, 5,000-mile air voyage. The scheduled route was over the Eastern Balkans and over the capitals with landing at | morrow night. The schedule, however, | was subject to variation caused by wind | and weather conditions. The dirigible appeared over Palestine coast yesterday at Haifa at |3:15 pm. and bucked headwinds down the coast to Jaffa, which was reached | at 6:18 pm. At Tel Aviv the passen- gers dropped confettl over crowds of Jews who had gathered to celebrate Purim_and at Ramleh mails brought from Germany were dropped. Over Jerusalem the dirigible maneu- vered while messages of good will were signaled to her from the home of the deputy governor. It left the city headed southwest, but it was assumed it would turn toward Greece or Constantinople. ¥light to the Holy Land since departure | from Friedrichshafcn Sunday night was | by way of France, Italy and across the | Eastern Mediterranean. SEE US FOR LUMBER MILLWORK PAINT HARDWARE BUILDING SUPPLIES COAL Whatever Your Needs Talk With Us First! Small Orders Given Careful Attention No Delivery Charge Make this your recipe or ) Deauity Tonight remove all trace of powder or rouge with luke-warm water and Cont1 Castile Soap — finish with a gentle patting of cold water, and dry with a soft towel. Repeat each night and watch your complexion gain in health and loveliness. Conti Castile Soap is made from pure olive o It cleans without drying the skin. ltisthe soap that doctors recommend for the tender skin of babies and will not harm the most delicate complexion. For your hair use Conti Castile Soap Shampoo—the shampoo for natural cleanliness. It does not remove all the natural oils and leaves the scalp clean, cool and nourished and the hair soft, glossy and alluring. Both Conti products mean cleanliness and health—both will protect your beauty. CONT) CASTILE SUAP and Qhampoo ONTT Castile Soa; has received first pris n 39 National and In- ternational expositions because of the excel- ience of its qualitv. It is guarantced to be im- ported from Ttaly and made from_pure olive oil. The Shampoo is tho same Conti qualit in_a more convenient form for the hair. At leading drug and department stores saesasanans " “When Mrs. Fall attended the funeral | fieeing on foot and horseback to Culia- of Doheny, jr. in Los Angeles, MIS.| can. Aviators few over the rebels and Doheny told her she would try to get | harrassed them with machine-gun fire. Mr. mfly away from the scene of | There were no rebels at all south of the murder, but we did not know | Mazatlan, he said. The federal army o'clock last night that the rebel forces | sionary in China, said Communist up- which had attacked that city were in | Tisings in Kiangsi Province had forced fullretreat mbfth of Quila: |13 priests of the Vincentian order sta- | tioned there to sleep with guns and pis- The consul said that rail and tele-| tols at thelr sides to safeguard their | they had come to Phoenix.” Due to & misunderstanding of time, Fall did not azcompany Doheny to the rodeo, but was awaiting the oil mag- nate at his hotel suite when he returned. ‘ LECTURE TON.IGHT ENDS INSTITUTE SEASON Thornton Wilder Last 1928-1920 Engagement—Arrangements for New Schedule Will Be Made. ‘With the Thornton Wilder lecture this evening at 8:15 o'cloek, the Com~ munity Institute of Washington brings to a close which 10 events of the most varied types have been presented for its pa- trons. The institute is making plans for the coming séason, and friends nnd! patrons will be given the opportunity tonight to make suggestions for the choice of artists and lecturers for next season. Next season the Washington Society of the Fine Arts and the Public Li-, brary again will co-operate with the Community Center department of pub- lic schools in bringing a series of cult- ural events to the citizens of Wash- ington at a purely nominal cost. Tickets for this evening's lecture will be on sale at the door of Central High School Auditorium WOMAN, HELD IN $45,000 BONDS, PUT ON TRIAL its 1923-9 season, during | of Gen. Lazaro Cardenas had left Guad- | alajara for Tepic and Nayarit; with its | arrival in Sinaloa the chase of the reb- e's, disheartened at failure of their at- tack on Mazatlan, was to begin in ear- nest. | Sticcess of this campaign and of the | | efforts of Gen. Calles and Gen. Alma- | | zan in the north were expected here to | | confine the rebellion to the State of | lSf:rmm before many more days. MORRISON BACK IN U. 8. | “Lucky to Be Alive,” Says American Flyer Captured by Rebels. NOGALES, Ariz, March 27 (#.—G. K. “Buzz” Morrison, 24-year-old Ameri- | can aviator, who was captured by Mexi- can rebels while serving the federal army in Mexico, was back in “the good old United States” today, declaring | himself lucky to be alive.” While American consular officers here i were negotiating for the Reno, Nev, | fiyer’s release yesterday, Morrison walk- ed into Nogales, Ariz., unheralded. He was ‘unshaven and had a bundie of | clothes under his arm. “I'm Morrison,” he said. | He was told that Gen. J. Gonzalo Es- cobar, leader of the rebel armies, had | announced that he was to be held pris- | oner until the end of the revolution. “Well, here I am anyway,” said Mor- rison, “and I never want to see another | revolution. The farther I get away from Mexico the better I will like it.” Morrison, who was captured last Sat- jurday by the Mexican insurgents after a forced landing in rebel territory, was taken before the rebel general, Fausto | | Topete, yesterday at Cananea, Sonora, | and then placed on a special train graphic communication to the south|lives. should be restored by the end of the week. Ambassador Morrow in a telegram re- ceived today said that the rebel force in the State of Sinaloa, in which Mazal- lan is located, is now reported to be be- tween 2,000 and 2,500 men. He also said there was no especial change in the Chihuahua sector, where Gen. Calles is pursuing the rebel force: SPONSORS CARD PARTY. Mt. St. Ursula Guild Lists Benefit Entertainment. ‘The Mount St. Ursula Guild w'l hold a card party at the Mayflower | Hotel Monday, April 8, for the beneilt of the Mount St. Ursula House at Al'a Vista, Md. Proceeds from the affair will be devoted to a fund to be used for the establishment of a Center House at Aita Vista for the Ursuline Sisters. Mrs. E. J. Brennan, president of the guild, heads a list of patronesses which is assisted by the following committ:e in charge: Mrs. J. J. Early, Mrs. H. L. Offutt, Mrs. Joseph A. Phelan, Mrs. J B. Stanley, Mrs. Estelle Bayne, Mrs. | Frank Wall and Mrs. S. M. Tucker. @he Foening Star The letter, dated February 15, was received by Mrs. Fred W. Aikens, a rela- tive of Father Flaherty. It stated that | although they were constantly in dan- ger of Communist attacks the little band had escaped unharmed up to that time, FOLLOWS STRAIGHT LINE. Man, Testing Railway Tracks, Is Escorted to Police Station. ! Emile Anderson, 200 block of H street, was walking the “straight and narrow path” last night. For more than two blocks he followed the center rail of the street car track: on E street between Third and Fiftt streets under the observant eye of Offi cer A. C. Poulson of the sixth precinct Even an approaching street car wit clanging bell did not deter him as ! walked toward it, but Poulson, afre’ that Anderson would be 'injured, a sisted im in proceeding in another d rection, this time toward the sixth pre cinct, where a charge of intoxicatio was preferred. Arraigned in Police Court today, Ar: derson ‘was fined $10 by Judge Ralph iven. | | | | | J. Frank Kelly, Inc. 2101 Georgia Ave. N. 1343 Lumber—Millwork—Du _ Pont _ Paints Coal — Hardware — Buildin Suppiies | the custom of throwing cigar butts in :'l':e luis{;sildxgfie of sections of the| eater bul gs as living quarters als has been banned. e d % When You Dine— ~-quietly at home—or in comipany, trifling an- noyances often spoil a good meal and real companionship. Frequently a heatlache, fatigue or nervous irritability caused from some slight visual defect. ‘Often you allow these annoy- “ances to continue when—at the first sign—you should have an > Etz Eye Examination Your whole system weakens when vour eves falter. Jee Etz and See Better' | which brought him to the border. There ge of Mur-|he was released to walk across the in- | ternational line. | The flight which proved disastrous | {for him was to- have been his last scouting expedition for the federal Edna Gray, colored, who is under a |garrison at Naco. He already had re- | total of $45,000 bonds on charges rang- | tigned, he said, but was making the last | ing from murder to criminal operations, | flight at request of the federal Gen. was placed on trial before a jury in|Augustino Olachea. | Criminal Division 1 of the District Su- | A federal bomber attacked Jimenez preme Court today under an indiciment | the Tebel base, yesterday and killed | for hzving performed an illegal opera- |4 persons and injured 17. When the | tion last November 16 on Miss Hazel | rebels occupled Torreon federal air | Hardy of Clarendon, Va. raids resulted in several casualties, | At the time of her indictment under | The rebels have two bombing planes the present charge the Gray woman |available and it was reported they own also was under bond for the grand jury |Several planes suitable for conversion | in the death of a 26-year-old mother of | into either fighting or bombing ships. three children, who died September 7| | following an operation, alleged to have | Quist Metgns ion Warder. been performed by the defendant. | Quiet prevailed along the western | A social worker, Mae Jacobs, swore |part of the international border today | to the information which resulted in|despite the movement of Mexican | the arrest of the Gray woman. ~| rebel forces to a point within 8 miles § jof the federals intrenched at Naco, Sonora. Gens. Lucas Gonzalez and Augustino Edna Gray Faces Char der Caused by Unlawful | Operation. VICE SQUAD NABS DRIVER.| Autoist Is Arrested on RnckIQSS: Driving Charge. OUNCEMEN METHODIST EPISCOPAL METROPOLITAN METHODIST CHURCH Corner John Marshall Place and C Street N.W. { Harry James Baer, 24 years old, of | the 1700 block of Euclid sireet, did not ! know he was immediately preceeding ! the vice squad while motoring home- ward early this morning. The official | party, returning from a raid, fell in be- hind ‘Baer at Eleventh and U .suocwl because, they claim, Baer was driving at 40 miles an hour with his muwx[ J Sh M horn sounding continually. 1 They overhouled him st Kalorama [JOIies dhera ontgomery and Ontario roads, arrested the motor- | Minister ist and had him booked at the eighth | precinct on a charge of reckless driving. | Special services conducted by g the MINISTER Thursday evening ateight o'clock. Administration of HOLY COMMUNION SPECIAL MUSIC BY Capture Band of 22 Thieves. | DORTMUND, Germany (#).—A band of 22 thieves credited with 235 bur- | glaries has been captured here. The | band seized everything of value in its| raids, from c and jewelry to cattle and some 12,000 hens | Statistics show that 50 per cent of the medical ! Mesico City, of efficient’ doctors and ~other parts of Mexico. men of Mexico reside in while there is a shortage g2,)] Special Services Friday Evening surgeons ADVERTISENENT ke orfl) RECEIVED HERE O’Donnell’s Drug Store— 3rd & Pa. Ave. S.E. Is a Star Branch Office You will be surprised how quickly you can supply most any want you may have at home or in your business through a Classified Adver- tistement in The Star—and the quickest and most con- venient way of inserting this advertisement is to leave the copy at the Star Branch Of- fice in your neighborhood. No matter where you live, in town or the nearby sub- urks, there’s one ready to serve you. No fees are charged; only regular rates. THE ' ABOVE SIGN 1s DISPLAYED ByE A AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES The Star prints such an over- Imingly greater volume of sified ~ Advertising every day than any other Washing- ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give you the best results. “Around the Corner” is a Star Branch Office American fleet sets record Famous United States Liners again prove their extraordinary popularity URING 1928 this fleet carried a higheraverage numberof passengers per voyage than any other trans-Atlan- tic steamship line. Wise travelers ap- preciate American-flag standards at sea. Coming sailings of American ships to Ewrope: GEORGI ON, Apr. 24, May 22; AMERICA, Apr. 30; N, May 4, May 25;. PRES, HARDING, May 8. See your local agent, or United States Lines 1027 Connectieut Ave. N.W. Stoneleizh Court Bldr. 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