Evening Star Newspaper, October 10, 1929, Page 34

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T3 VOUNDED INPSTOL BATL fadiapa Police and 6 Bandits Fight It Out at Close Quar- i‘ ters-in Hammond. By the Asgociatéd Press. HAMMOND, Ind., October 10.—One policeman and one alleged bandit were killed, another officer and two gunmen Officer George Faraggi, Homewood, Peter Augustinovich, address un- known. William Jesky, address unknown. ‘Those under arrest are: Don Sawa, Benny Stawski, Steve Davenport, all of ths Calumet district; Mrs, Virginia Rusco, 23, of Macon, Ga.,, and Harriet Hendon, 22, of Milwaukes, Wis. ‘The t occurred after Faraggi and John Bois, both of Ham: mond, had received a tip on the hi ing piace of the six men who are a cused of holding up, early Sunday morning the Palm Gardens, owned by Willlam Siddles, forcing the orchestra to play and the bart:nder to serve free | drinks for two hours, staging a beauty | with more than $7,500 in cash and Jewelry. As the officers reached the address officers | | contest, and then 1°isurely driving off | were seriously wounded and five per- sons, including two women, are under arrest as the result of a gun fight be- tween four policzmen and six bandits in the residential district here yester- day. ‘The dead: Leo the gunm:n opened fire and Officer Fox fell, mortally wounded. Wahzynski was slain by police bullets, but in th: ex- change of fire Officer Faraggl was bad- |ly wounded. Jesky and Augustinovich also were wounded and the remaining trio surrendered. With them were the two young women. A small arsenal of revolvers, shotguns and ammunition was | captured by police. . Hammond detective, Walter Wahzynski, address unknown. ‘The wounded: : 9 “They work while you sleep When the bowels need help there is nothing like cascara; nothing more efficient, nothing so good for the system. Any doctor can confirm these facts. Candy Cascarets give you pure cascara in a most pleasant form. Take one tonight. See how fine you feel all next day. Without discomfort and without harmful effects this gentle laxative cleanses the whole thirty feet of bowels. Cascarets never produce that nausecous feeling usually asso- ciated with the use of laxatives. And their action is' so natural that there is no danger of forming the laxative habit. You can take them as. often as.you please—or give them freely to children or old folks. A coated tongue or a laden breath is a signal for a candy Cas- caret. Or a sick headache, or any sluggish feeling; any time you be- lieve the liver and bowels are not functioning . fully, Cascarets will sweep away accumulations in the lower bowel. They are sweetened with pure cane sugar and flavored with real licorice, making them the ideal laxative for children. Full medical endorsement proves their principle is right; the use of 20 million packages a year proves their cffectiveness. The Store for Thrifty Peopl FRIDAY REMNANTS HARRY KAUFMAN:! $1 Corselettes 69c Here’s Great Coat News! Three Outstanding Groups for Friday THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., LINDY ISCOVERS FOUR MAYA TS Plane Party Maps Ancient| Ruin$, One Described as Perfect Type. | By the Associated Press, 1..A COZUMEL, Quintana Roo, Mexico, October 10.—Four ancient Maya citles hitherto uncharted, were discov- ered yesterday by Col. Charles A. Lind- bergh, his wife and their companions in several hours flying in inland Quintana Roo. The first was sighted within an hour after the party left Belize, British Hon- | durac, and shortly after it crossed the Rio Hondo into the territory. feveral definite mounds set about a triangular plot were found, and the location was mapped carefully, although it was too cloudy for photographing it. Mrs. Lindbsrgh, wearing light knick- ers, high boots, blue shirt and silk scart about her head, herself discovered the second ruins, which at first seented just = bit of white wall glistening above the deep green of the bush. Three small towns finally were located nearby, Dr. A. V. Kidder, Carnegle Institute sci- belleving them to be, probably, the center of a Maya city which flour- ished & millennium ago. Indians Run From Plane. ‘When the third city was discovered later in the afternoon Santa Crugz In- dians beneath ran from the plane as it flew above them. The ruins. were laid out in almost a parfect square on sloping hills, from the highest of which the Maya masonry was perfectly visible to those in the plane. Numbers of small dwellings, temples and mounds appeared in the north. Col. Lindbergh sighted the fourth ruin, probably the most interesting find of the day, a great mound rising 60 or 70 feet above the ground, with its crumbling walls visible from as far as 22 miles away. Dr. Kidder described it as a perfect type of Maya empire edi- fice. Although the ruin was within 30 miles of Santa Cruz de Bravo, no hu- man habitations were seen. ‘Two other cities, well known to the archeologists who have investigated the ruins in this region, then were picked up by the party aboard the plane as it headed for Isla Cosumel. One of these was the City of Coba, not larger than the four ruins the aviators had discov- ered for themselves. ‘The other, Tulum, is one of the larg- est on the peninsula, with 35 buildings strung along the seacoast and grouped | about a great square. The colonel cir- cled the anclent city three times to allow picture taking and then descended, the | party inflating a rubber boat and going ashore. They spent more than two hours ashore ting every section of the ruins. 2 Leave Today for Miami, was nearly sundown before the: reached Cozumel Island, .remnnlni there for the night before taking off for Miami, the last lap of the Caribbean will flight. Besides Col. and Mrs, dbergh, re are wboard the plane Dr, Kidder and two of the staff of the Pan-American Airways Co. Most of the section flown over yes- terday has never been explored, and on most maps is just a great blank space. It appeared o he prineipally Jungle country, with few s of human habi- tation. ~although asionally on the rivers the boats of chiele producers could seen. \ $1.98 to $2.49 Hoover Dresses Assorted plain-coler and checked ginghama, with plain white collar and cuffs. Regular and extra sizes; solled from handling. Kaufman's—Second Floor Marion Confides Move to Farm Wasn’t to “Take” Former Opera Star Back in New York ard There to Stay. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 10.—Miss Mar- jon Talley, who announced her retire- ment from the op°ratic stage last April and sald she was going to live on a farm, has been residing in New York most of the time since her announce- ment, it was disclosed yesterday. Except for a few weeks last Spring and brief visits out of the city since then, the former Metropolitan Opera singer has been living in the same modest apartment on the upper West Side of Manhattan that she has oc- cupled since her meteoric rise to fame three years ago. The singer returned Sunday from a brief visit to Kansas City, whos> resi- dents supported her ris: to fame en- thusiastically. She said sh. was plan- ning no immediate return to the farm. “I won't go out there until next Spring, anyway,” she said. “I'm hers to complete my contract for phonograph records, and after that I have no plans.” Her sister Florence said the Talley farm at Colby, Kans, has not been occupied because there is no suitable hous: there. b VALLEE SUIT IS SETTLED. NEW YORK, October 10 (#).—Settle- ment out of court Wednesday treminated the suit of Bert Lown, musieian, ainst Rud{ Vallee, orchestra leader, for re- fusal to carry out a alleged agreement to share Vallee’s profits. ‘The settlement, filed today in Su- preme Court, dissolved the organization of Lown, Vallee, Inc. Lown agreed to make no commercial use of the words “Vallee,” “Rudy” or Connecticut Yan- kees,” the name of Vallee's orchests Pillows—Pillows Soft, restfyl pillows, covered with fine art ticking ond filled with feathers, Each.. consisting of nine $1.00 THURSDAY, PREVENTION CALLED DENTISTS’ MAIN AlM Dr. A. C. Thompson of Detroit Tells Optimists of Advemees in Technical Skill. The prime objective of the work of the dentist today is prevention rather than correction of teeth troubles, though very marked advances have bcen made in recent years in technical skill in pathological treatment, Dr. A. C. | Thompson of Detroit, representing the American Dental Association, declared yesterday in an address before the local Optimist Club at its session at the Hamilton Hotel. 5 ‘Tremendous advances have been made in the past 25 years in preventive medi- cine, and this is especially true in the dental care of children, Dr. Thompson sald. The ability to pound a beautiful gold tooth into some one's head no longer 1s the test of a good dentist, he added. Emphasis today, he pointed out, is being placed on prevention rather than on cure. Describing the need of preventive work among children, Dr. Thompson told the Optimists, who carry on social service work for boys, that of 154,000 school * children in Detroit who were were found to have perfect teeth, the remainder having some defects. Of these, he reported, 46,000 were found to have abscessed teeth. The meeting was addressed alo by Nicholas F. Nolan, president of the Op- timist international organization, who was honor guest. He discussed the ideals and purposes of the organization. Mr. Nolan was introduced by Frank Peirce of Washington, international vice president of the organization. Herbert B. Nevins, president of the local club, presided. James R. Yates was admitted to membership. A Bcotland Yard detectives are investi- gating the mysterious slashing of five pictures at famous Durham Castle, in England. . INTER-OCEAN BUILDING Easy to Pay—The American Way Credit arrangements American with very little mony. The plan is simple, convenient. Beautiful Dining Room Suite A good looking. sturdily built outfit, OCTOBER 10, examined at public clinics only 25,000 |~ 512 are 1929. SAYS SNAKES CHASE SQUIRRELS UP TREE Audubon’s Biography Reveals Lec- ture Caused Controversy in Philadelphia in 1827. Special Dispatch to The Star. PHILADELPHIA, October 10.—A neéw ! biography of Audubon, the great natu- | ralist, written by & former Philadelphia newspaper man, Edward A. Muschamp, has just come off the press. | A hundred years ago there were many Philadelphians who knew the natu- | ralist. Here, also; were a number of his | relatives by marriage. | Audubon, at intervals, kept coming back to Philadelphia. The friends he made here s him in good stead | when a controversy over his ability as| ; naturalist came near tarnishing his ame. In a lecture delivered before a sci- | entific soclety abroad in 1827, Audu- |bon had told how he had seen snakes |chase squirrels up trees. = Printed | abroad, it was reprinted here in the Journal of the Pranklin Institute. Al- most immediately it was branded a lie | by the editor of the Journal, the super- | intendent of the Patent Office in Wash- | ington declaring it a “tissue of false- hoods.” For a time the controversy | waxed warm, and friends of Alexander | Wilson, the naturalist, who had had a quarrel with Audubon’s friends as to which was the greater of the two, also d_into the fray. But. although FOR RENT Two Bedrooms, Liv- ing Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bath and Re- ception Room. Elec- tric Refrigeration—- $137.50 per month. THE ARGONNE 16th & Columbia Rd. made at fuss or cere- dignified and purchh of § piece si dinner set. Chest of Drawers Well built, and of wal- nut finish, useful addition to hall or bedroom. looked for a while as though the anti- Audubonites would win, they having kept him from becoming a member of the American Philosophical Society and the Academy of Natural Sciences, even- tually the Aubudonites won and their hero was admitted as a member of so- deltllu now proud to claim him on their rolls. More than 5,000,000 tons mined in Great Britain week. coal were of in a recent Peruvian to Enter Air School. Sergt. Cesar Nelli of the Peruvian Army has been authorized by the Secre- tary of War to enter the next course at the Primary Flying School at Brooks Field, Tex. The attractions provided by sports clubs and vacation camps are given as reason for this year's in the strength of the British Territorial Army of more than 50,000, one-sixth of the normal number. Coming Soon! ONE OF WASHINGTON’S GREAT STORES ETWEEN NW. 8 D FSrs. E AN FREE—Premiums—FREE American will gladly give with every 100 or more a beautiful 26- silver service or dainty 42-piece 3-piece outfit, consisting of club chair, comfortable bunny-back chair and daven- for white enamel, with soap compartment. Medicine Cabinet A practical article 8 9 the home, of pieces — Buffet, port, Covered all over in fine Jacquard ve- lour, serpentine front, reversible spring- filled cushions, $5.00 Delivers It Up to $25 Values China Closet, Extension Table, Five Side Chairs and One Armchair. $5.00 Delivers It Open an Account 0dd lot of Corselettes and Girdles, some slightly soiled from handling; broken sizes. 95 589 $O8 Sperts and Fur-Trimmed Models A most timely offering of Women's and Misses' Coats, correct weight for Fall and Winter wear. Smart models of Broadcloth, Suede Cloths, Mannish sports materials and others, ‘Plain tailored or fur trimmed. Sizes in the as- sortments from 16 to 50. $10 Party Frocks of $16.50 Silk Frocks, Silk & Tweed Ensembles Georgette and Satin Oanton Crepe. 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Bed-Davenport Suite %08 $1.95 Bed- o :p_‘nndc Comfortable bed davenport and wing _and arm._ chair. Covered all over in_choice materials. Reversible . -l soring-filled cushions and the well $ s 95 known natienally advertised Seng . bed equipment, : $5.00 Delivers It 6x9-1t. size; ten mat- terns: ' per- R Y Wi $11,75 Congo- leum Make Ru'-l 1t ox slizht An attractive four-piece outfit con- sisting of full size bed, vanity dresser, dresser and chest of drawers. Of choice walnut veneer on selected gumwood, $5.00 Delivers It P ig 8 hea! lipings; $3.95 Grass Rugs 9318 Only 3 to sell—size sz : us

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