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GEN. CARAVED REACHES L PASO | Mexican Rebel Leader Wins| Race Across Desert Ahead | of Federal Forces. Br the Associated Press EL PASO, Tex., May 24.—Gen. Mar- | celo Caraveo, former Governor of Chi- | huahua, Mexico, and an outstanding Tebel leader in the recent unsuccessful Mexican revolution, revealed his pres- ence at his home here yesterday. He said he crossed the border five miles | west of El Paso late Tuesday and since has been resting in seclusion. Worn and haggard, caraveo plainly showed the effects of his days of flight across the deserts of Northern Mexico from the victorious Mexican federals. With a handful of men, he s1id, he Teached the American line, but only two | crossed with him. Caraveo refused to.! | tus, Teachers’ College, Columbia Uni- THE- EVENING discuss the revolution or the M:xlcanisHlP_To_sHonE AlR MAIL ‘meet the liner Leviathan, Dr. L. B}COAST GUARDSMAN FREED political situation. | No papers were filed against the gen- | eral, who reported to the United States | immigration authorities here. He prom- jsed a detailed statement woild be pre- | Use of Plane Expected to Save 24 and fiy them to the Newark, N. J. alr- | ;.o o4t 12 Hours in Finding Ver- Hours in Transatlantic Let- pared and released tonight. | For the present, he said, he would re- | main with his wife and children in | their El Paso home, which they have | owned for several years. Association . for Adult Education | Re-Elects Its Officers, | CHAPEL HILLS, N. C., May 24 (#).— | With a business session at which the | year's officers were re-elected, the| American Association for Adult Educa- tion brought to a close yesterday its fourth annual meeting, which had been | in session here at the University of North Carolina since last Monday. Officers re-elected for the ensuing vear were: Jones E. Russell, dean emeri- versity; E. W. Richards, director, exten- | sion division, University of California, vice president; Margaret E. Murton of | the National Board of the Y. W. C. A., | secretary, and John P. Puelicher of the | American Bankers' Association, treas- | urer. | LOW-FARE EXCURSION Danville, Va. Lynchburg, Va. Charlottesville, Va. Orange, Va. Culpeper, Va. Round Trip $5.00 Round Trip 4.00 Round Trip 3.00 Round Trip 2.50 Round Trip 2.00 Saturday, June 1st, 1929 SPECIAL TRAIN leaves Washington (Union Station) 5:30 P.M. By ter Movement. the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, May 24 —Inauguration | Uup another in one operation. Adams of Seattle, Wash, has an- SERVICE PLANNED SOON ™%, 0eq to meet te umer 30| IN SHOOTING OF HANSON| miles off shore, pick up 100,000 letters | port, saving 24 hours on regular trans- | atlantic mail service, Dr. Adams said. | | A pickup device of his invention will be | | used. Dr. Adams said that with it a | plane can’ drop one mail sack and pick v- | trial a Burnelli air liner will be used, Its tender, firm flesh and captivating fla- vor make it the sea’s choicest delicacy. Wonderful in salads, cocktails, sand- wiches and hot dishes. Rich in phos- phorous and iodine, those goiter-resisting elements. dict—Urges Restraint in Use of Firearms. — . —_— For the By the Associated Press. | of regular ship-to-shore air mail ROCHESTER, N. Y., May 24—Gl ENDS BUSINESS SESSION. Sk omia s tocshors o e roted with Comidr . George Pond at ~ the | Jennings, 32-véar-old Const Guards- el . | June 7 by a plane fiying out to sea to | controls. man, was acquitted tonight of man- AR, WASHINGTON.. D. C. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1929. shooting of Jacob Hanson, secretary of | reading: jury was out nearly 12 hours. Hanson was shot when he failed to | in stopping of vehicles on the public | halt his automobile at the commard of | highway.” Coast Guardsmen near Lewiston, May | The j 6, 1928. Jennings was tried in Elmira | ‘ames H: in January and the jury disagreed. which ®:i>d the lodge secretary had With' its verdict the jury handed a!ricochetted from another object, had ‘that he controls them. The picture shows how the V-notches in each Sunshine Soda Cracker form rows of vent holes in the complete sheet of dough as it .goes into the oven. Thus the heat can quickly envelop the “bake.” This rate of baking al- lows the starches and sugars to unite in the wonderfully delicate flavor that is finally imprisoned in the bright red wax-wrapped package. At your grocer’s! 87 { slaughter in connection with the fatal | paper to Federal Judge John R. Hazel. | much to do with the verdict. Hatcher r | was the only witmess. the Niagara Falls Lodge of Eks. The “This jury recommends that greater | = | is se of firearms | care be exercised in the use of firearms Man Who Moves the Moon. | Prof. E. W. Brown of Yale has said tostimony of Capt. | spent so many years studying the many er, U. S. A., that the bullet | complicated motions of the moon that some who are facetiously inclined say Tickets good returning Sunday, June 2nd, 1929, on all regular trains (except CRESCENT LIMITED). Visit the beautiful Piedmont, Section of Virginia during Spring Season. Tickets and information at Southern Railway City Ticket Office, 1510 zrli“v’::w‘; Union Station; 7th St. Station; also Union Station, Alexan- SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM WHITE STAR TUNA ‘WINCOW BAKERIES of Loose-Wiies Biscuit Co. Tomorrow and Monday 10 to 50% off on a vast portidn of our stock of Lifetime Furniture Better not put off longer! Special reductions for only two more days. Every piece and suite is of our regular carefully selected stock of Lifetime Quality: Truck deliveries within 100 miles. TASTE above everything Wb_y are Chesterfield tobaccos “cross- blended?” Why are they so thoroughly aged? Why do our leaf buyers watch guality so closely? Why : P o + is the Chesterfield blend so accurate? You get the answer when you light up; you get out of your Chesterfields exactly what we put in—*"taste . . . above everything.” - Chesterfield FINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDED MILD and yet THEY SATISFY Ample Salesmen to Serve You MAYER & CO. Seventh St. Bet. D and E © 1929, Licosrr & Mymas Tosacco Ce. -