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- REFUSEITO FIGHT DURING HOLY WEEK Rebel Indians Are Believed to Be Within Eight Miles of Naco. Br the Associated Press. NACO, Sonora, March 30.—Twelve hundred loyal Mexican troops, en- trenched here beiween two advancing rebel armies, today lined up for a long- expected battle—one that is said to have been delayed because some of the rebel Indians refused to fight during holy week. Activity in the trenches surrounding this border town became feverish in the early hours this morning after campfires had appeared 8 miles to the east. The fires were believed to he those of an army of 1,500 Yaqui In- dians commanded by Gen. Ramon Yucupicio, from Agua Prieta. ‘West of Naco a column of rebels from the army of Gen. Fausto Topete, Gov- | errior of Sonora, was said to be advanc- | ing also. Topete, who is said to have a lotal of 3,800 men strung between Dei Rio, 30 miles from here, and the loca- tion of his vanguard, has been threat- ening to attack Naco for more than a week. Troops advancing from the west this morning were said to number be- tween 1,000 and 2,000. Troop Train Arrives. A troop train bearing several hundred rebel soldiers and four crude tanks ar- rived at Agua Prieta from Nacozari, Sonora, early this morning. The sol- diers detrained immediately and started at once on a 17-mile march to join Gen. | Yucupicio's troops camped 8 miles east | ! of Naco. The tanks were converted | tractors, protected by a sheet metal| covering, with “peepholes” cut at inter- vals, through which machine guns poked their muzzles. The story that Yucupicio's troops had refused to fight during Holy week was published by the Douglas, Ariz., Dis- patch this morning. The newspaper said, however, that since Holy week technically ends at noon today the much-delayed battle of Naco was ex- pected to begin shortly after that hour. Gen. Lucas Gonzalez, former secre- tary of war, took over the command of the Naco garrison a few days after Olachea announced his adherence to| the federal cause. Although he has made careful preparations against an attack, he has indicated a disbelief that | Topete would move against him. Will Protect Americans. United States troops patrolling the | border prepared to take- steps to pro- tect American lives and property in | case of a battle. The town of Naco| straddles the international line and hns‘l a population of about 1,500 on each | side. The Arizona town has been filled with refugees from the Mexican side for days. The Army officers indicated they would ask citizens to evacuate the town when the battle starts. The federal garrison here is well for- tified, but isolated from any other fed- eral troops, the nearest of which are in Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Baja Cali- | fornia. Naco is surrounded by rough, open desert country. The nearest town of any consequence is Bisbee, Ariz, about 8 miles away. LORD MONTAGU TAKEN BY DEATH IN LONDON Prominent for Many Years in| Science, Engineering and Athletics. By the Associated Press. LONDON, March 30.—Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, former vice chairman of the Jjoint naval and military board and for many years prominent in athletics, en- gineering and science, died in London today, aged 62. Lord Montague isor on mechani- cal trahsport services to the government of India from 1915 until 1919. While en route to India to take up this post he was among the survivors of the | steamship Persia, which mysteriously | sank off the island of Crete. He was an_extensive traveler. He had visited the United States, Japan and | the Far East and was greatly interest- ed in aviation, railway and all trans- port matters. He was the author of numerous magazine articles. He wad an extensive land owner in Hampshire. | During the war, he was a strong be- liever in the development of an over- | whelming air force. In December, 1917, Lord Montagu's eldest daughter, the Honorable Ellen Cecil Scott Montagu, was married to Arthur J. Clark-Kennedy, in Bloom- field, N. J. Fascists Clash With Pacifists. GOERLITZ, Germany, March 30 (®). —A number of persons were seriously Injured yesterday when a meeting of a pacifist society was invaded by Fascists. An emergency. squad of police | by free use of their blackjacks ended the fight in which canes, chairs and steins had been used. 0 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any one other than my- self. SAMUEL W. BRASSE. 718 Park rd. n.w. EPAIRING AND REMODELING 5. Phone Lin. 10227, Wm. Brice. GENERAL RI and fireplace: PAPERHANGING—ROOM, $2 UP IF YOI have the paper: new samples furnished. Phone 17 3588. 30* FOR _ANY SIBLE n myself. LEON- st., Mt. Rainier, I WILL NOT BE R debts by anvone other tha :‘l‘iih HARPER, 3802 31st I Wili NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY | \debs ‘tinless _contracted by myself, FRED- ERICK JENKINS. 540 13th st. se. TOP SOIL—LARGE OR SMALL ties, delivered: siso yards graded. cavating; reasonable. Main 923. MOVING TO Get our return-] Ioad shipments fo SOME R load rates. Full and, Philadelphia, New York. Boston, Pittsburgh, Richmond and ~way points, Svecial rates; Ehone Main 1460 ATIONAL DELIVERY ASSOCIATION, Inc. THE | fighting. , lared & regular divi A SIRh e seocxnaiders of Tecord:st.the close on March 31, 1 The transter from A . The f the company will be closed f2:°%o 'the 10th, both dave in- U | hands of the rebels. MORROW IS PROPAGANDA AGENT Ambassador’s - ‘Connections in Mexico, Rabel Chief Says. Formation of Commission to Study “True- Motives” Is Asked in Statement. By the Associated Press, JUAREZ, Chihuahua, Mexico, March 30.—Dwight W. Morrow, United: States Ambassador to Mexico; was described as a “propaganda agent” for the Calles regime by Gen. Jose Gonzalo Escobar;| commander-in-chief of the revolution- ists, in' a message to" the rebel diplo- matic mission now in Washington. Gen. Escobar asked the mission to communicate the message to the State Department and to the Atherican people. | “Ambassador Morrow has obvious | business ' connections with Gen. Calle> which prevent him from realizing th~ regretiable error he makes by invading the exclusive® jurisdiction of the Mex- ican people, thereby prejudicing Amer- ican interests, not only in Mexico, but in all Latin America,” the message said. “The Ambassador, by converting him- self into a propaganda agent by sanc- tioning in his official character the Calles versions of imaginary federal vic- tories and absurd defeats and flights of the revolutionary army '* * * se- offends the Mexican nation ,” the declaration continued. Escobar suggested the formation of o commission to mvestigate “the true mo- tives of the ine: t‘:;zle solidarity of 1iberty-killing regime of Calles.” ““We do not oppose the expansion of the interests of Mr. Morrow in Mexico, upset his equanimity, inducing him to perform untruthful information tasks, injurious to the cause of liberty,” ‘the message, directed to Gerzayne Ugarte, head of the diplomatic mission, ended. | (Continued From First Page.) be fraught with difficulty. Twelve bridges have been -destroyed north of Mazatlan and miles of track torn up. The more mobile cavalry columns, com- prising approximately 4,000 men, may see most of the action occurring in Sinaloa. NACO ATTACK DUE TODAY. - Arizona Hears Indian Rebels Are Ready to Strike. DOUGLAS, Ariz, March 30 (#).— The Dispatch today published a report that the Mayo Indian rebels under Gen. Ramon Yucupicio would attack the fed- eral garrison at Naco, Sonora, shortly after noon today. The report said Yucupicio’s men had refused to fight during Holy - week, which expires- at noon. The loyal garrison here,-composed- of about 1,200 troops, mostly Indians, under Gen. Lucas Gonzalez, has been on the alert since the town was shower- ed with handbills from a rebel airplane yesterddy. The handbills, warning all' citizens to leave Naco, were signed by Gen. Topete, who for many days has been threatening an attack. The rebel aviator was driven off by two federal planes. Topete is said to have about 3,800 troops,.and has been slowly advancing toward Naco from the southwest. He was known to have moved a detachment of troops to within 10 miles of Naco, keeping the main col- gmn at Del Rio, about 30 miles from ere. The departure of Yucupicio's troops from Agua Prieta, east of Naco, was announced late Thursday night, but their destination was not made known. Yucupicio is said to have about 800 In- dians. Rebél sources along the yesterday said he was expected to join Topete. SONORA ACTIVITY RENEWED. Battle Impends at Naco; Manzo Moves North from Sinaloa. NOGALES, Ariz, March 30 (®.—A renewal of revolutionary activity in the State of Sonora, birthplace of the revolt in Western . Mexico, ‘was apparent to- day with indications of an impending battle at Naco and receipt of word that Gen. Francisco R. Manzo, commander of the rebel army which attacked, but failed to capture Mazatlan, was on his way Northward from Sinaloa. Sonora is predominantly revolutionary in sentiment but is menaced in three places by the proximity of federal troops. To the west, Gen.. Abelardo Rodriguez has troops on the Sonora- Baja California border. A federal army recently was reported nearing Culiacan, Sinaloa, on its way North. Last, but not least, is the loyal garrison at Naco, south of Bisbee, Ariz, which for two weeks has been holding the fort for the government despite the mact that all Mexican territory around it is in the \ Reports at revolutionary headquartérs at Nogales, Sonora, were that Manzo's army was massed at Quilan, its base camp in the campaign against Mazatlan. There was said fo have been no disorder in ‘its withdrawal from Magzaltan. Whether Manzo will return to Nogales was not stated... Edward Koehler, - American _aviator for the rebel forces, arrived at les, Sonora, last night from Mazat- He said he had ‘been the leader of but that the planes had been used for making observations NACO SEES. CAMP FIRES. . Presumably Lighted by Indian Rebel Soldiers.. NACO, Sonora, Mexico, March 30.— fNoWDEN, INC, of furniture. gol mond, Vs., April 1.- ARE YOU MOVING ELSEWHERE? OUR transportation system will serve you better, Large fieet of vans operating be- tween rn_cities. ~Call Main 9220, DAVIDEON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. WEATHER RIPPERS. SRS s wryrumy sy co. SLAG | ?fi'é?‘mc—”"‘—— KOONS ; the o “l’ 3rd St. 8.W. Smith’s nnsfm]jsmra%e Co., B e ! FLOORS N FOR CALLES, ESCOBAR CHARG Prejudice-American Interests| ES % % » { > AMBASSADOR DWIGHT F. MOREQW. but we would prefer thet they-did not - GEN. JOSE GONZALO ESCOBAR. FIGHT AT NACO IMMINENT TODAY: REBELS WITHIN 8 MILES OF CITY appointed eommander of the northern insurgent, forces. % Censorship of news from the battle zone was in force again today, and little could ‘be learried of the exact move- | ments of the rebels. Reports yesterday said the rebels had raided Bermejills, believed to be the headquarters of Gen. Calles, for the second time. One plane was reported to have scored a direct hit when it dropped bombs on a federal troop train. One thousand gallons of gasoline, ap- parently for rebel planes, was shipped south from here yesterday, and 2,000 gallons were to ba shipped today. o DE KING KILLING ~INQURY BEGUN County Investigator Held for Questioning on Fatal Rum Raid in Aurora. By the Associated :’r!n. AURORA, Tl March 30.—Boyd Fair- child, the coun®y investigator, whose pe) testimony brought about the liquor raid in which Mrs. Liilian De King was kill- ed, was held todsy for questioning. He was found at Odell, 1L, yesterday and hidden outiide of Kane County. State's Attorney George Carbary, who sent deputies foi him, refused to tell where he had boen taken, saying that violence was fexred. He also refused to say whether tie han was being held under protest. . Fairchild, whc was_known in his home towh, Odey, as Eugene, still in- sisted when found yesterday that he bought a pint of moonshine in the De King home. It was his previous state- ment to this effect that brought about the issuance of » search warrant and the raid Monday. nighit, in which Mrs. De King was shit to death, her hus- ‘band, Joseph, clubbed, and Roy Smith, one of the county raiders, shot by the De King boy, Gezald, 12 yes Promises t; Identify Body. Pairchild was. reported willing to identify Mrs. De King's body as that of the woman who sold it was doubtful if this would be ar- ranged, since M¥s. De King's funeral was to be today. Authorities have fre- quently expressed.a fear of violence and it was not consic®red likely they would bring Fairchild here today, when Mrs, De King's friends were gathered to at- tend her funeral ‘The 1 ty o the search warrant and the truth of the investigator’'s state- have De yesterday, when it was understood the coroner and a representative of the at- torney fenznl suggested that he be present for next Tuesday's inquest. Fairchild’s' Admission. ‘Fairohild admitteds when found yes- terday that he: had left Aurora soon after the feared and not for actual | bary" *_Pairchild .was_ not a permanen ploye of the State's attorney’s office. He only occasjonally and received $54 a- day, gnm:nmw ‘Walter The condition”of Deputy Smith, who killed Mrs. De and then was shot by her son, ‘was critical ‘today. . He is suffering from an infected bullet wound. revel troops | SAYS HEALTH AGENCIES ‘withstand an| SHOULD COMBINE IN WORK Co-operation ot Official and Volun- tary Units With Medical Profes- sion_ Urged by Speaker. IPHONE CALL CLUE - Gver Wrong Connection, ““Reported to Police. By the Associated Press. MONTREAL, March 30-—A wrong telephone. ,connection- and” & sobbing girlish appeal, “Come and get me, ‘mother,” today constituted the vague and only clue unearthed after a week | of frantic search for 18-year-old Bar- bara Pitcher, McGill University student and daughter of a prominent West- { mount family.” . Police said that about 9 o'clock the ! night of March 21, when Miss Pitcher | disappeared, the telephone rang in the ]1 Torture. C@remohy - Begun in Hills by BRITISH SEA FLVER house of H. W. K. Hale, Westmount. | | Mrs, Hale answered and heard a sob- bing voice, evidently that of & young | gir], saying, “Come and get me, mother.” Mrs, Hale's daughter was at the time a i patient in the Montreal General Hos- ! pital, and thinking it was she, Mrs. Hale asked excitedly, “Where are you?” |~ “I don’t know whese I am, but come land get me, oh, come and get me. came hysterically over the phone and the connection was lost. . . Mr. Hale was told by the hospital that it could not possibly have been his daughter who telephoned. The next morning when it became known that Barbara Pitcher was missing; he com- | municated with her family. The infor- mation was withheld by the police until yesterday. The Pitcher -telephone | | number is REACHES BARBADOS Aviator in Tiny Plane Ends ‘Another Caribbean Cimig Hop.. N. Lancaster, British leted another risky Caril hnetis | | | i Capt. William aviator has ccmp! in his_sttempt to cle. He is fying s ture are being cabl Star and the North American Newspaper Alliance. BY CAPT. WILLIAM N. LANCASTER. British Royal Air Force Reserves. BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, March 30.—I've been fiving all around the Car- ibbean Sea, or so it seems to me, trying to find an island. - And I've found it, but for a while that happy outcome, was | » Ancient Penitents Flagellations on Crucifix- ion Day ‘Feature Observ- ance of Sect-ir N. Mex. B> the Associated Press. _SANTA FE, N. Mex., March 30.— Throagh the swish and crack of whips which cut bleeding welts across their backs, the Penitents, an age-old sect now centered in the hills of New Mex- ico, sought remission for their sins on ways to sequestered spots in the hills throughout the State as the sect, which practices sclf-torture to clean away its_sins, celebrated Good Friday. Crosses of the Penitents were numer- ous in the vicinity of Santa Fe, but the practice of crucifying a member of the sect and holding him to the cross until he loses consciousness ap- parently has been ebandoned, observers, who sought to view the ceremonies, reported. Holding their ceremonies too sacred Just one desperate chance. | for the eves of the curious, the Peni- I took off yvesterday morning from | ients established guards about their Gen. Charles G. Dawes and members of the commission appointed by the Dominigan government to study the finances of the republic, as they from New York.. Left to right: Francis J. Kilkenny, Chicago; J. C. Roop, Chicago; H. C. Smither, Lawrenceville, Til.; John Stephen Sewell, Birmingham, Ala.: Harry B. Hurd, Chicago; Gen. Dawes; Sumner Welles, Washington: John F. Harris, New York; T. W. Robinson, Chicago, and E. Ross Bartley, Chicago. Will Rogers LAKE DIVERSION the liquor, but | | residence, Westmount 4128. - | lieve that the slight similarity of num- bers might have resulted in a wrong connection. WISCONSIN T0 ACT ON 275 PCT. BEER Future of State Dry Law Is at Stake in Election Tuesday. i { | By the Associated Press. MILWAUKEE, March 30.—Another wet and dry fight, viewed by both sides as having an important bearing on Wis- consin's future course in enforcement, will be decided at the polls next Tues- | day. By a “yes” and “no” vote, the State’s citizenry will express its attitude to- ward the Severson law, State prohibi- tion enforcement act, and a proposal to eliminate the penalties for manufacture and sale of beverages of not more than 2.75 alcoholic content. Bills have been introduced in the Legislature to carry out both proposals should the people issue such a mandate and action has been postpoped pend- month ago when both houses adopted i the resolution of which Senator Thomas M. Duncan, Milwaukee Socialist, was the author. Heavy Vote Is Urged. Both sides have carried their appedls to the voters and have made afh effort to “get out the vote.” The vote in Spring election usually is very light and .only local contests to be decided. On the side of the drys, the Anti-Sa- loon League, Women’s Christian Tem- erance Union -and the National Pro- hibition party joined forces in an effort to have the law upheld, while the brunt |of the attack has been borne by the | Association Against the Prohibition | Amendment. ‘The question as to whether the State enforcement act should be amended to i {ment act fostered Duncan and | vetoed as ‘“unconstitutional” by Gov. | Fred R. Zimmerman after passage by the 1927 Legislature. Asked Modification in 1926. ‘The Duncan referendums mark the latest chapter in the prohibition fight in Wisconsin. In 1926 the State asked Congress to modify the Volstead act to permit the manufacture and sale of 2.75 per cent beer under Government supervision, with the provision that no beverage so consumed should be drunk on the premises where sold. The ref- erendum was carried by a 3-to-1 vote. While the result of the referendum would not bind the Legislature to carry out its mandate, the leaders of both wets and drys have emphasized the bearing the result will have in in- erages up to 275 content was spon- sored by Senator Duncan, he said, to aid “home brewers.” It is in line with BLACK IS. FAVORED BY CONGRESSWOMEN Somber Hues Are Expected to Pre- dymiute Clothes of Feminine 2 Lawmakers. By_the Associsted Pres A casual glance over the floor of House in the mitted one to ,_except. on TR e Westmount, 2181 and that of the Hale | Police be. ing the outcome of the referendum a | % | from Lake Michigan for navigation on an' amendment to the State enforce- fluencing the course of the Legislature. | . HEARING ADJOURNS bounsel of Six Complaining States Plan Fight Here April 15. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, March 30.—The hearing on diversion of Lake water for sewage disposal by the Chicago sanitary dis- trict-adjourned yesterday, with counsel for six complaining Lake States threat- ening to “take the water out of the Chicago program” and counsel for the sanitary district maintaining they had presented an ironclad case to show. the necessity for continued diversion of wa- ter from Lake Michigan into sewage canals. . Charles Evans Hughes, special mas- ter in chancery for the United States Supreme Court, who has been hearing evidence for a week, left for New York with the announcement that hearings would _be resumed in -~Washington April 15. -+ Water Held Unnecessary. “I speak literally as well as fig- uratively when I say we mean to take the water out of the Chicago program,” Raymond T. Jackson, assistant attorney general for Wisconsin, said. “We mean to show at Washington both that Chi- cago can and should handle its sew- age without diluting it with water di- verted from the Lake. We also mean to show that the estimates of time and money required- for completion of sew- age works are watered in the sense that the}r‘e really is a lack of estimates alto- gethe: i Edmund D. Adcock. chief counsel for | the sanitary district, said he had shown there should be a diversion of water the Chicago River and that this con- tention * had been supported by Maj. Gen. Edgar B. Jadwin, chief engineer { of the United States Army, who was the | master's own witness. | Treatment Plan Proposed. | Mr. Jackson said the six complaining 1 { volving no diversion, an alternative plan ! | involving diversion of storm water only, d a criticism of ‘the entire and argument of the sanitary ‘The last witness heard today was Maj. Rufus W. Putnam, Army engineer, who | said diversion was needed as a safe- | rd to navigation. Without it, he | added, either wages must go up to com- | | pensate for obnoxious conditions or the | personnel of seamen would deteriorate. | SN T | FASCISTS’ BIG VICTORY. ROME, March 30 (#).—The national | | electoral office sitting in the Palace of | Justice today went over the returns of | the March 24 elections and dJeclared the entire list of 400 Deputies duly | elected. Crowds in the corridors ap- plauded and cheered. | The following results were proclaimed: | Registered voters for the entire king- dom, 9,673,049; voters actually at the polls, 8,663,412; in favor of the Fascist | slate, 8,519,559; contrary, 135,761; blank and contested ballots, 8,092. { i | WANTED Assistant to General Agent General Agency of a large Eastern life insurance company is planning an active program in ington. Iy o 45, whe possesses characte: Srganizing, bty Address Box 484:K, Star Office The Argonne 16th and Columbia Road N.W. Four ‘rooms, kitchen, bath’ ‘and reception room, south- ern ‘exposure. Reasonable rental. , Fénibfisdapanese '+ Cherry . ‘Blossoms Same Trees as now in Po- tomae Park.’ Yoshine, Kwan- 2an, Takinioi, Fugenzo, Ichivo, Alse Japanese Weeping Cherey, Higan-Sakura, and other va- rieties. 7 $1.50 per Tree and up 2 careful Shipmént ta Any Part of U, S. ' Free booklet on Reduest |NOTED FRESCO PA - Scvys: NEW YORK CITY.—An old boy started a system here in New York Monday that looks mighty original and fills a lifetime’s need. He come home one might pretty well incor- " porated. After the usual argument with “I do,” he started back out again. She started to follow. He just got a saw and started to re- move one of her legs, figuring that would slow her up so that, even in his condition, he could keep ahead of her. 1If she still insisted on fol- lowing, he still had the saw, and she still had another lez. This looks like a sure-fire remedy. The old way of knocking 'em down, or locking’ em up, was only temporary relief. This depends on the type of wife. One sawing will cure some; two sawings will cure any. You stock market buyers, ,buy “Saws, Incorporated.” e e | INTER SUMMONED BY DEATH Friederang Credited With Having Found Out Michaelangelo’s Secret of Creating Tints. By.the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 30.—Maximilian Franz Friederang, who spent 30 yeafrs seeking the secret of the art of fresco painting as practiced by old masters, died suddenly Thursday as he left St. Ignatius’ Church, Brooklyn. Among Friederang’s best known works are the frescoes he executed in the Rob- ins room of the United States Supreme Court and in the Senate library. The artist_was -credited with having discov~ ered Michaelangelo's secret of the cre- atfon of fresco tints, a method of paint- ing a picture on wet plaster, Some years ago. it"was said that the secret would be bequeathed on Friederang's death to the Smithsonian Institution in Wash- ington.. It now is in a safe deposit box. 2001 16th St. N.W. Exceptionally attractive apartments of three out- side rooms, reception hall, bath and large kitchen. Reasonable Rentals 1628 Ford Tudoer. Model “A"..$450 1926 Ford Tudor; int and ‘upholstery ..ot 1926 Ford Roadster 1626 Chevrolet Couve .20 HILL & TIBBITS and Evenings rieenth St. FR.764 . Formerly Main 500 LEETH BROS. Apartments of Distinction in Washington’s most exclusive building Seven and nine rooms * and three baths with enclosed porches. Each apartment has a‘servant’s room and bath. PR, T AT L2 27700, .. Valet Service H. L RUST © 1007 15th St. N.W. ©.....Main 8100 27 Gaudelope for the 250-mile water jump | to Barbados, and when I got well to sea | the visibility became very low. I was | certain, finally, that sufficient time had | elapsed for me to be close to the island, but I could see no sign of land. I strained my eyes through the haze, | but could see neither shore nor ships, and my anxiety rose. I can carry only T'chew the supply was runnidg Jov. 1 | lew supply was . I I missed the island I would have to descend to the sea, and what my | chances of rescue then would be I did | not know, Probably slight, | " Fuel Depletion Feared. | 1 spent a feaverish hour searching for Barbados, expecting any moment to hear that fatal motor stutter that would processions, and one moving picture cameraman who attempted to film a procession was sai1 to have been fired upon. Several builets were said to have gone through the cameraman’s cloth- ing and his camera-carrying case, but he was not injured. 100 Poachers in Custody. MUNESTER, Westphalia, March 30 (/). —More than one hundred poachers were arrested yesterday in the Amsborg Porest district in a raid conducted by 65 rural mounted police sent from | county seat after local authorities re- ported the situation beyond tReir con- irol. Sixty of those arrested were said to have confessed to killing game il- legally. Meany firearms and traps were warn me my gasoline was done and that | s I was through. And Isaw a dim | shaj '.hl!“looke'd like land, and was— | last! In taking off from Guadeloupe. where ' I had been delayed more than a week | waiting for a propeller to replace the one which had been smashed in a/ ewampy landing place, I damaged my oot Saning at Bucomcin; and aeioe nding at , and mine Is the first machine ever to fly here. | ;’fl-sslchuaetu Avenue. e natives floc! about the ship, chattering in their amazement -npd} & "’a mo'l"!' e brhi' wonder, and the first person to greet me | rst Hoor lavatory, bae r‘:(“nnsrlll;-:,m C,I!'. R?med son. Governor stairway, oil burner, elec- . 1 receivi e most. cor- : : : disl welcome, and I have been mc:t;r ;,"c re(ngeuuo;.'Gange or two cars. Price con- siderably under homes of very comfortable. * Trinidad Hop Sunday. similar character in this exclusive location. Anx- But I can't linger long. Sunday I will | |go aloft again, this time for another | | ious to sell within thirty My dej days. {all-water hop of 250 miles more, to Trinidad. parture from Guadeloupe was | Call Potomac 1372 TOWN HOUSE Detached stone resi- dence north of 24th and | difficult. Thursday night I had to take | my plane by truck for 35 miles to Moule, | and the road was a dangerous one. | Fortunately I had friends to help me | through an almost impossible situation. | My take-off had to be made from a | bad stretch of ground. | (Copyright, 1929. by the North Ameflc-n; i lewspaper Alliance.) | u.s. INVESTbRS WARNED. EL PASO, Tex., March 30 (#).— Enrique Liexens, federal Mexican con- sul general here, announced last nigh* that he had received instructions from | | Mexico City to inform Americans tha: | rany investments made in rebel co: | trolled territory would not be | nized by the federal government when | < the revolt ends. | Rebels in Juarez countered with the | declaration that when the revolt ends | recognition by the “Calles government | would be of no benefit.” P On [ and K Sts. Several desirable properties especially adapted for clubs or societies for sale at at- tractive prices. L. W. Groomes TR T T ST T U TISTT T R T RR T IT TSI . Something Unique— A Private Park at Your Front Door at DAVENPORT TERRACE (4800 Block Connecticut Avenue) One Room, Kitchen, Bath, $45.00 Two Rooms, Kitchen, Bath, $60.00 Three Rooms, Kitchen, Bath, $80.00 Frigidaire Included in the Rent Cleveland 1912 Every Service—Every Convenience Rock Creek Pdrk Across the Street CATHEDRAL MANSIONS (3000 Connecticut -Avenue—Center Bldg.) One Room, Kitchen, Bath, $50.00 Two -Rooms, Kitchen, Bath, $60.00 Also Larger, Units HUGE, WELL-LIGHTED ROOMS Adams 4800 MANAGED BY WARDMAN % S L L T TR R T I R A RN R RRTRRRRT ECT TODAY “BUY A HOME” '$100 CASH Monthly Payments SAMPLE HOMES OPEN TODAY 5308 Illinois Ave. N.W., just east of Ga. Ave. 1737 Upshur St. N.W., just west of 16th St. 1204 Hemlock St. N.W., near 16th St. 1108 E St. N.E., just south Maryland Ave. 1018 Third St. N.E., just north K. 1926 Fourth St.-N.E., cars pass door. 317 You St. N.E,, cars at corner. 19 Evarts St. N.E., just east N. Cap. St. 1346 K St. S.E., just south Pa. Ave. 6, 7 and 8 ROOM HOUSES All Houses Open for Inspection All Houses Sold on Monthly Payments Force Your House to Pay for Itself—You Can Easily £ Rent Second Floor for Enough to Make Monthly Payments . Cut'This Ad and. Visit Property e Pln‘m Hum for Auto to Inspect INCORPORATED 131 H, STREET NORTHWEST