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REBELPLOTTONIL CALESISREPORTED E! Paso Consul Notifies Mex- .ico City of Plan to Assas- [@inate Federal Commander. /o (Continued From First Page.) !un, last night and expected to arrive | t Mazatlan today to effect a juncture | Wwith Gen. Jaime Carrillo, who success- | fully defended the city against the ¥cbel generals, Robert Cruz and Fran- kisco Manzo ! Gen. Cardenas’ cavalry was divided | fnto two bodies. One body. made up of 2,000 men, was advancing toward Quelito, south of Culiacan. capital of | the State of Sinaloa, from Roseta, near | Tepie, Nayarit. Another column of | mbout 1,000 left Roseta for Quelito by ! way of Mazatlan. where Gen. Carrilio | &vas to assume command with 1,000 of | own cavalry | Quelito was to_be made the base for #dvance again Culiacan, held by the | yebels. It was estimated Gen. Cardenas | would be able to concentrate 7.000 men | there for action against Gens. Cru. ! Jturbe and Manzo. who were believed ic have about half that number. Plancs Accompany Federals. Gen. Cardenas, who is one of the | Lieut. J. Gaona, left, and Ca G. California, at Naco, Sonora, awailing th Rio and Nogales. | trenched at Naco plan (o bomb rebels, which are threatening an attack from Del THE EVENING § 9. IWOMEN T0 TREK Scientific Wanderlust Impels Many to Seek Ancient Lore Abroad. BY MARTHA DALRYMPLE. (Associated Press Staff Writer.) OUT-OF-WAY LANDS TAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 192 WOMEN TO TRAVEL ANCIENT TRAILS The curse of restless feet that insist upon turning from the paved ways of safe American cities to the dark jun- | gles of Africa, hidden paths in Spain | and remote reaches of Russia is taking | |its toll this Spring of the National So- | clety of Women Geographers. ! Members who have just come back | from long treks into unknown lands in | the interest of history, geography, | | archelogy, botany and folklore are going into seclusion to write books or to supervise the mounting of their wild life specimens, but those women who Liove spent a prosalc Winter doing rou- | tine work are picking up their khaki suits, guns and cameras, ready to start with the first of the fine weather for | far places. | The society, which is made up only of | women whose explorations have con- | tributed to scientific knowledge and | does not include those interested pri- marily in hunting big game, is celebrat- Lopez, federal fiyers from Mexicali, Baja he arrival of planes. The federals en- ~Associated Press Photo. MONKEY BRAINS blest federal generals. has eight air- | planes with him, while Gen. Carrillo already had two at Mazatlan. These | planes have harassed the rebels in their retreat, inflicting some casual- ties. Lickens reported to the government that Maj. Miguel Castillo, with 35 loyal ®oldiers, operating on his own initiative, had captured the village of Sasabe, on the edge of the Alter desert, in North- west Sonora. Rebels Bomb Bermejillo. The revolutionaries made their firc’ pir Tald Wednesday, bombing Berme- | Sillo, believed to be the headquarters of Gen, Calles. Reports from Tebel head- quarters at Jimenez said the attack was successful, “doing much damage and creating much consternation among the Jederal forces.” Eaten by “Uncooked monkey brains on the ' half skull, pickled water beetles, fried HELP FORM MENUS OVER WORLD Cobra and Python Steaks, Live Worms, Fried Locusts Among Queer Delicacies ON HALF SKULL |t ittt SKULL ers in this country and 46 corr: sponding members abroad. Plans Spanish Trip, Harriet Chalmers Adams of Wash- | ingten, president, will lead the Spring evacuation of active woman sclentists by sailing for Spain next month to con- | tinue her work along the trails of the Conquistadores. She had almost finished | | this work twoe and a hall years ago, | when it was abruptly halted by a fall | from & chff in Portugal which left her | with a broken back. Marguerite Harrison, author of “Asia | Reborn” and superviser of the filming | of the picture “Grass,” has just left| with her husband, a young English ex- | plorer, for & three-year trip over the world ‘with & motion picture camera. | Natives. lectable native dish is reindeer sausage Local members of the National So- ciety of Women Geographers, who are ready for incursions to remote corners of the world. Upper, left, Harriet Chalmers Adams, president of the organization. Ms. Adams is the wife of Franklin Adams, counselor of the Pan-American Union. Right, Caroline Carroll, wife of the late Mitchell Carroll, who also was a lentist of note, and lower, e Bell Grosvenor, wife of Dr. Gilbert Gros- venor, president of the National Geo- graphic Society, FINISHES REMOUNT TEST THREE TIMES Castor, 800-Pound Horse, | Gains Fame for Marvel- [LI-CHAI-SUM EXECUTION IS DENIED IN NANKING |Grifith Orders Georgia Tech Dia- Nationalists Say Canton Governor | Will Be Held Prisoner During Chinese Hostilities. By the Assoclated Pr NANKING, China, March 29.—The Nationalist government tonight official- Iy denied reports that Li-Chai-Sum, governor of Canton, had been executed. The government indicated that Li- Chai-Sum would be held prisoner for the duration of hostilities between Nan- king forces and the Kwsang-Si opposi- tion leaders, of whom Li was one. sfter the end of fighting his case will be fur- ther considered. TO ORIOLES ON MONDAY| iCROWLEY WILL REPORT | mond Star to Show Up for Duty | | at Baltimore. | By the Assocfated Press. ATLANTA, Ga., March 29.—Ed Crow- ley, former ihird baseman on Geor Tech's base ball team, but better known as captain and end on the Southern Conference 1927 championship “Tech” foot ball team, will Teport to the Balti more team of the International League Monday. " Clark Griffith, manager of the Wash- ington Senators, with which team Crow- ley remajned several weeks last season before being farmed to the Southeastern League, gave Crowley the instructions. Ile has not signed & contract, but will discuss terms with the Orlole’ manage- ment. Li-Chai-Sum had been several timcs reported executed by President Chiang | Kai-Shek in deflance of the guarantee | of safety given the Canton leader by three high members of the Nationalist government _itself. Wu Tze-Hul, one of these guarar.tors was said to have threatened to commit sulcide if Li-Chai-Sum were executed It had been denied previously that Wu | had actually carried his threa. Flying Baltimorean in Cairo. CAIRO, Egypt. March 29 (#).—Van Lear Black, Baltimore publisher, lands ed here last night from Assouan in continuation of his flight from Cape- town to Croydon, England. SOL HERZOG | One Day More —to take advantage of this SPECIAL—and in order that you will not be disappointed, we have made special arrangements to de- liver your clothes in time for Easter. which has been surrounded by dough Gertrude Emerson of New York has | ous Versatility. Two bombers accompanied by an un- snnounced number of pursuit planes, made the raid. the Tebels reported. The raid was taken here as an indi- cation that Gen. Escobar was ready for battle after keeping his movements for the last few days secret by enforcing & rigid censorship. A telegram from Es- pobar to the Associated Press said: | “The aerial escadrille of the revolu tionary army is ready and well equiped to combat the Calles army.” An official report received at rebel headquarters here said two federal avi- ators, a Capt. Farrel and Capt. Alfredo Ceballos, had been shot down and killed. Revolutionists Are Optimistic. Desultory skirmishes between advance guards of the rebels and federals near Fscalon Wednesday resulted in only a few casualties to each side. Rebel optimism was revealed when & trainload of rails was shipped south from here for use, it was said, in the advance on Mexico ‘City planned by Gen. Escobar. The rebels destroyed the railroad from Torreon to Jimenez when they retreated. Meanwhile the rebel army at Bellano was_being “reinforced. Four hundred soldiers from San Jose and 800 from Chihuahua have been sent southward. U. S. ARRESTS MEXICAN DEPUTY. Seized on Suspicion of Being Rebel Spy, Operating on American Soil. TUCSON, Ariz, March 20 (®.—The first engagement in Northern Sonora of the Mexican revolutionary movement in which actual firing took place, was re- locustes and cobra and python steaks are specimens of the many strange and unusual foods which grace the world's | dinner tables” says a bulletin of the | National Geographic Siciety. 0 “Plgskin and birds’ nest soup are popular Chinese appetizers, in some por- tions of the republic. Silkworms are | eaten after the cocoon has been un- | wound. Horses, donkeys and camels, | after they have lost their usefullness | as beasts of Purden, are consumed by some Asiatic tribes. Caterpillars; frogs | ncld snails are relished when obtain- | able. | “New Guinea natives find China a| good market for sharks' fins from | which the Celestials make a delectable | soup, and also for beche de mer, a large sea worm found in New Guinea | | waters. | ‘New Guinea natives themselves are | fond of the pith of sago palms. pote- | toes and bananas: and dog, snake and lizard flesh vie with that of the pig The womenfolk gather beetles. grub: and larvae from trees to grace the festive board. “Eel meals are as popular among Japanese as are Maryland chicken din- | ners in Baltimore, In some Japanese cilies eel houses are neariy as numer- | ous as weiner stands at a county fair. | When the diner enters an eel house he is led to & large tub of live eels.| He makes his choice of the wriggling | creatures, it is speared, split along the back, cut into small pieces, and with | | soy sauce {s cooked over a charcoal fire. | “At Japanese inne the traveler is told | that ‘Bombay duck’ can be had at & | reasonable price. The hungry customer and dropped in bofling water. On the lower end of the peninsula where sai- mon are plentiful, dishes of bofled fish eyes are considered a delicacy. “Perhaps few poople live as close to | nature as the Pygmies of the Belglan Kongo. Tender roots are staples, but birds, small game, rodents or caterpil- lars are not objectionable. A dish of | white ants is prized highly by these and & hall years spent in a small, mote village In Central India, and trying to make up her mind where to g next, | Te- is | Social conditions in the South Seas are still claiming the attention of Mar- garet Mead of the American Museum of Natural History, while Grace Barstow Murphy of New York is planning to diminutive people, while & slice of |sall June 1 with her four children for | raw elephant meat makes a feast, Ireland, to study the folklore and | legendary tales of the island. | Spiders and Yak Cheese. | “Frances Densmore of Red Wing, “In addition to many viands on the | Minn,, collaborator of the Bureau of Pygmy bill of fare, the Madagascar | American Ethnology of the Smithsonian natives eat spiders, silk worms, grass- | Institution, is now in the Northwest hoppers, and dried locusts. When a seeking examples of aboriginal music “cloud”’ of locusts settles on a crop, |of the American Indians. & sufficient mumber of them are col- | lected to offset the loss of food which | (IoERIE e the insects consume. Every good Mad-| The field of prehistoric classics in gascan housewife has in reserve a sup- | Various lands in Asia Minor will be the | choice of Caroline Carroll of Wash- ply of dried locusts to sustain th the | jnglon, who will sail the first of June, | amily in times of famine. “Yak cheese is & staple in the Muli | #nd Zelia Nuttall of Mexico City, who | has just completed & lecture tour of this kingdom of Western China and would not be objectionable to the Western | COUNLrY, is Teturning to her home by traveler if it were not for the numerous | W8y of Yucatan so she can study the yak hairs in the substance. | ancient Mayan civilization. | “On the table of the Corsican, .9 ‘The condition of women in Russia traveler might see half of the head of | and Turkey has been the special work & lamb with tongue, cheek and bramn | °f Elsie Grosvenor of Washington, wiie in place.’ About the time the Americen | °f the president of the National Geo- | appeiiie 1s whetied for Thanksgiving | STephic Society, and Dr. Lucy Wilson | turkey, Corsican fishermen are. gatcns | of Philadelphia, who have just returned ing eels for home consumptio | from those countries. Elizabeth Dickey | shipment 1o Mice and MNapies. whevs [of New York is siill in the upper | . Amazonian Valley, dolng_general ex- they are a delicacy. A dinner in & . i v Testaurant in - Spréewald. Germany, | PloTation and field work in that Jttle whose order did not inclade 'eels would | <O¥" Steael o i i | draw & curious glance from native pat- | visions a fat fowl but the waiter brings . o ported to have occurred yesterday re- sulting in federal troops capturing Mes- quite, a small rebel post. 60 miles west | in pleces of smoked fish about two | | inches long and &s thick as a dime. | Ve 3 arters. | The menu also includes pickied seaweed, i soont g'}:fl?'lk:go&}s‘e;:&‘;p;e?emmwred jelly, and chutney which re- | as a surprise federal strategic movement | sembles pickled citron, but is almost as | in a possible attack upon Nogales. { hot as Mexican chile. More raw than Rebel headquarters said the invaders | cooked fish Is eaten by Japanese. Raw were “bandits.” An advance guard of | baby octopuses are particularly popular. | Gen. Abelardo Rodriguez's federal troops | 'Japanese Limburger’ i3 not & chicese | from San Luis, comprising 150 men, | but & Japanese pickled daikon, or long were reported to have arrived at White radish. Fish Eyes and White Ants. Sonoyta. “Koreans, like many Orientals, live | Topete's Plans In Doubt. Rebel headquarters appeared almost | mostly on rice.: They cook their lfll-i weed in oil and serve it with slices of as ignorant of the plans of Gen. Fausto | Topete as the federal garrison at Naco, | red peppers. Kimshee, & kind of sauer- waiting behind its wire-entangled en- | kraut, is a favorite Korean dish. | there are ‘national dishes.’ trenchments for more than a week for| “To the north, the natives of Kam- an attack by Topete. Topete, according to the best advices in Naco, was at Del Rio, about 30 miles from Naco, with the main body of his insurrectos. At Yui Ariz, Alfredo Irurelagoyena, .4 member of the Mexican Chamber of Deputies, and G. Vildosola, were held for investigation after having been ar- rested by a United States deputy mar- shal on suspicion of being ‘“‘Mexi rebel sples” operating between Mexico and American soil. The matter Was placed in the hands of the United States district attorney at Phoenix. American’s Property Seized. A furniture firm in Nogales, Ariz., re- ported to the American consul that one of their drivers had been stopped by rebel soldiers and forced to take his truck to rebel headquarters while on the Mexican side of the boundary on business in Nogales, Sonora. Cars were stopped In the streets and passengers forced to alight. The auto- mobiles were dri encampment of the insurgents. FLOGGING OF AMERICAN IN JUAREZ IS UPHELD Attorney Says Jailed Man Was Fighting and Viciously Attacked Prisoners and Officials. Br the Associated Press. JUAREZ, Chihuahua, March 29.— After an investigation of the flogging of C. C. Williams, an American, in the Juarez jail Monday, Alberto Ter- razas Valdez, district attorney, said that in his opinion the punishment was no more than Williams deserved. Willlams had no cause for his charges iven by soldlers to the chatka relish the tongues and the mar- | row of the bones of reindeer, but the plece-de-resistance is the meat of un- | born fawns. From the stomach of the | reindeer the natives obtain their greens —half digested balls of moss. A de-| Beaver Skins as Money. | One of the aitractions offered by this country to the early explorers and set- “The varied bill of fare of the|tiers, was the great abundance of the | Frenchmen includes fole gras—a paste | beavers to be had with little trouble of fatty goose livers. Trufles are rare | and at the same time there wos a con delicacles. French farmers are fre- | Slant demand in Europe for the ssme uently seen leading their pig and dog | Skins. The result was that for & cen- “truffie sniffers” over the fields. Truffles | LTy OF more beaver pelts were a com- | are underground fungl which grow six | Mon unit of barter from Quebec to New Inches below the surface, and are lo-| YOrk. The beavers were nearly wiped cated by the sensitive noses of the ant- | Out. but there is & moderate supply of mals. Basques about Biibwo, Spain, | them today and the center of the beaver relish white, transparent worms about | Wibe is Michigan, It is a conservative | two inches long. They are fried in oil | estimate that in that part of the State and are served hot. i | are 20,000 of these animals. Almost froone unusual meat ls scrved not 1ar | exterminated in the lower Peninsula, | dians of Mexico prefer iguana flesh to! 1900: their numbers have been notably - ns. Eels, cucumbers and cherry pie | Sea Worms and Truffles, just published a book based on her 1WO | _ FIVE DIE IN BLAST AT BOMB FAGTORY German, His Daughter and Three Mexican Federal Sol- diers Perish in Accident. By the Associated Press. NOGALES, Ariz, March 29—Five persons met violent deaths and three others were injured Wednesday night in an explosion that destroyed a federal bomb factory near Mexicali, capital of the northern district of Lower Cali- fornia, Pranz Von Schulenberg, German bomb maker; his 17-year old daughter Blanche and three Mexican federal soldiers on guard duty were killed. The blast resulted when & bomb e ploded in the process of manufacture. touching off nine kegs of explosives and 30 aerial bombs. ‘The explosion, which jarred Calexico, Calif., just across the border, injured Francisco Kenneth, chemist engaged with Schulenberg in making bombs, and two soldiers. All threc were in a hospital in a serious condition. Another soldier was blown window, but was uniujured. ‘The factory was located on the Pack- ard ranch of the Colorado River Land Co., five miles east of Mexicali. The federal government had obtained per- mission to use the building for storage of war materials. Mexicali is the civil and military out a | headquarters of Gov. Abelardo Rod- | referred to as “above the strait,” there |riquez of Lower California, who re-| mained loyal to the government. For several weeks he has been concentrat- h’m troops and war materials in the city. chicken, The appearance in the mar- | ncreased in periods of closed seasons. kets of the green lizard-like body, be- | decked with a crest of spines running down to a long, alligator-like tall dulls the appetite of the hungry alien | shopper.” o] CIRL PAYS SCHOOL SERAPIG BOLERS Co-ed Cleans Out Steam Chest for Tuition at College. CORVALLIS, Oreg, March 29— Scraping out steam boilers may not be the ideal work for & woman, but Ruth Steele of Portiand has proved that s" girl can scrape them just as well &s any | J man. | That, in connection with dusting and | sweeping, is the way she worked her way through high school. That is the way she earned her expenses for her first two years at Oregon State College. ! and that'is the way she probably will | earn her expenses next year. | Five yeurs ugo, when Ruth was & | sophomore in high school, she'decidéd | she did not want to take care of children any more. She couldn’t do office work. Six Centuries of Paintings. A display of Russian icons, painted|By the Associated Press. during the past six centurles, was re- Happy as a schoolboy off for a vaca- cently opened in Berlin and from its|tion, former Secretary of State Frank B. Able attention 1 the St circes b8 wol | e Se8ilon's oveian St lett Wethe as religious. It was arranged and sent m;mn' 123:)' ;’J: %lnnl Y‘o‘l::lt(' ':) m"a; a to Berlin by the Soviet authorities. The | steamer for & visit to France and Eng- ’ collection includes more than 130 icons, | Jand before returning to St. Paul 10 dating from about 1155 to 1795. Most | resume his Jaw practice there. of the icons are originals. but some| Many members of the diplomatic copies are reproduced in the Ofllilll”corpl accompanied by their wives, and size. They disclose the development of | officials of the State Department gath- the art of icon painting from the time | ered about the former Becretary. and tl)}r‘mx;:]dnn‘::‘:sfil::gso e «arw('s‘oeo | Mrs. Kellogg at their train to bid them the latest medium, = = . - 1 V. S. Sign Idea in France, To keep down speeding, Frenchmen | are copying the idcas of “snappy” road | signs used in this country. An adapta- | tion of an American sign recently ap- | peared at the borders of Arcissac, in | the Department of Cantal. It reads: | “1f you drive slowly you will see our| village: it is very pretly. If you drive quickly you will see our prison; it is| very damp.” @he Foening Star Ve Bk o 'Happy as Schoolboy Off for Vacation, Kellogg Leaves to Embark for Europe good-by. Mr. Kellogg plainly showed his happiness at getting away, but at the same time indicated he did so with regret at leaving so many friends. Ambassador Claudel of France, whose country Mr. Kellogg will visit first, headed the diplomatic contingent in the absence of the British Ambassador, Sir Esme Howard, dean of the corps, who was unable to attend, but sent his counsellor, Ronald Campbell. The lit- tle daughter of one of the diplomats presented a bouquet of roses to Mrs. Kellogg. RTISEMENTS fi RECEIVED HERE Morgan Bros. Pharmacy—30th & P Sts. By the Associated Press. | MIDDLEBURY, Vt., March 29.—Out | old-timers are telling about Castor and | his great strength. It is a requiem for the famous little horse that in an even | score of years blazed a trail of glory for | his breed. Kicked by another horse, Castor died from the injury. | fame was his marvelous versatility, but those who fed him and groomed him and knew the spirit of his 800 pounds assert, in the faith of intimate knowl- | edge, that his greatest performance was finishing the United States mounted | service endurance tests three times. | Smallest of all the competitors, many {of which were of thoroughbred and | Arabian blood, Castor finished second of the United States Morgan horse farm | Horsemen say Castor's chief claim to | Regular $40 and $45 | TWO PANTS Spring Suits }In the 1919 test, despite a severely cut | | knee suffered in a fall when his rider became careless from fatigue on the fifth and last day of the 300-mile march. Overtrained for the 1920 endurance | test, he finished in seventh place. It was his performance in the 1921 test that led one of the judges to rank him with Justin Morgan, the great horse ‘!hn( founded the Morgan breed. Castor made the trip from Camp Alfred Vail, N. J., to Washington, D. C.. under a 245-pound load, nearly one-third of his own weight, without developing leg trouble and with normal temperature, respiration, pulse and appetite. His loss | of weight was only 12!, pounds. | Beginning in 1914, when he was 5 years old, Castor was used for three vears in remount breeding in Vermont. During 1917 and 1918 he was utilized at various farm tasks by the United States Department of Agriculture, which owned him. Retired from the Morgan farm, where he sired many horses pur- chased by the War Department for cav- |alry purposes, he was used as a car- riage horse by former Secretary of Agri- culture Wallace. In addition. he made a record as a utility saddle horse. S ey ‘The War Department has recently al- lowed a claim for $55 for a horse killed by the Indians in 1833, which had been pigeonholed for 95 years. Shoe L Fine woolens— 'k new styling—mod- | els for the young K man—business man | and conservative | i dresser. | 'Sor. HERZOG re F Street at Qth See them in our windows— remem- ber these are mot broken lots—but a special group of newly arrived SPRING SUITS. Make Sure You Have the Best—this Easter! “FLORSHEIM” s for Gentlemen N.W.—Is a Star Branch Office against the jail uthorilies as he was | So when some one was needed to help fighting and attacking prisoners as well | with the dusting at high school she vol- | as the officers and was calling the | unteered. 1t is not necessary NE\X’ sty[es in the new browns dnd b]acl(s— Mexican people things that were an in- | sult to them,” Valdez said. | “I questioned both Mexican and | American prisoners in the jail in iy in- | vestigation. and 1 am satisfied that his punishment was deserved. | Williams told El Paso authorities he | was whipped when rebel sympathizers | claimed he “insulted” them. He bore | marks on his back from the beating. | They Like Dome-Shaped Heads. The Mangbettu people of the Congo gauge the beauty of their women by the shape of their heads. Many of the | Africans “decorate” their bodies by tatooing or by cutting designs into the flesh, but among the Mangbettus the ideal personal beauty is attained by al- tering the shape of the lead 5o that the longer and uarrower it is the more of a success is the operation. Soon | after birth work is commenced on the unfortunate’s child's head, which Is| tighily bound and kept so for months | until the bones have been satistactonly | shaped. With its head trussed up i this manner, the child must suffer con siderable pain, but this is regarded as the penalty of beauty. The binding is sometimes the cause of an outbreak of sores about the edge, but the mother watches this very carefully and takes measures to alleviate the condition. All hats made in Germany, Italy, Hungary, Austria, Bwitzerland and Czeehoglovakin may be handled through a huge association now being proposed. ! | washies the windows and Dusting was not sll. She swept and | scrubbed floors, she washed windows | and doors, tended furnaces end fixed | motors and scraped boilers and tubes. In fact, she did everything that the manager could find for her to do. ‘The manager of janitors was etting tired of squeezing into the sic.an boil- | ers through manholes that were 100 | small, but steam boilers must be scraped | and oiled, so Ruth took over the job. It took her nine hours the first time | she scraped the two bollers, but when | she finished the job was hers perma- nently. That was four years ago and | she has been scrapping boilers ever| since. Sometimes she works over the | week end, and always goes to Portland | during the Chrisunas vacation and | scrapes the bollers. At first she wore & bathing suit, but later adopted her brother’s overalls. | which proved unsalisfactory. The man- | ager solved (he clothing problem offering the suit he had worn, a | ment resembling a diver’s outfit, and | ¥ith the aid o numerou ks and | | safety pins it was made to fit. She ha: | since worn this costume. Miss L. Le Teller Swann in her pr dential address to the London Head Teachers' Association sald that today children of 9 years of age usually read remarkably well, and possibly read in school more complete books in a year than a child read in school during its school life between 1898 and 1906. l to have had an Account at this Bank to Borrow Easy to Pay Monthly Loans THE MORRIS PLAN BANK 2 e | THE ABOVE SIGN 1S DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES A want to be supplied, some- thing that you have to sell or exchange, rooms or apartments to rgnt—lnything in the long e : . vertisement in The Star will bring prompt and satisfactory results. Copy for the Classified Sec- tion may be left at any Star Branch Office—and there’s one in your neighborhood, whether you live in town or the néarby suburbs. No fees are charged for Branch Office; only regular rates. The Star prints such an over- whelmingly greater volume of Ulassified _ Advertising every day than amy 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 smart shoes that harmonize with the season'’s clothes Come and see your new FLORSHEIMS. They'u dress your feet in timely sty|e. Most Styles $]O Sizes 4 to 12 AAA to E Widths A Fit for Man’s Shop 14th at G Every Foot 3212—14th