Evening Star Newspaper, March 13, 1931, Page 33

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PIONEERSOF WEST MEET FORRENON White Man and Two Indians Recount Stalking of Rene- gade in Past. By the Associated Press. PHOENIX, Ariz, March 13.—Memo- ries, mellowed by half a century, stirred anew last night in the minds of three benign stalwarts of the white race and the red, who collaborated in staking out civilization's frontier when the six- gun was white man's law and the fi;;i‘.':he lance a menace’ in the Arizca John P. Clum, 81, held friendly pow- wow for perhaps the last time with THE EVENING JAPAN'S TINY BIT OF ROYALTY IS CHRISTENED YORI ATSUKO |coneyet o the gous and imoeral so; Obedience and Generosity Chosen to Guide Fourth Daughter of Emperor Through Life—Ruler Chooses Name. By the Aummui! s t ‘TOKIO, —Japan's bit of royalty was chnnemdu% Atsuko today on the seventh day after the princess’ birth and shortly there- after, in strict accordance with time honored rites, Emperor Hirohito had duly reported the name to the spirits of the imperial ancestors. The neme was chosen from the encient Japanese scriptures, Yori meaning obedience to heaven and Atsuko meaning generosity to those en earth. Fourth Daughter. ‘Princess Yori is the fourth daughter Early this morning the infant was given a ceremonial bath in a tub of Hinoki (cypress) wood. Several of the court were in attendance. In a special chamber adjoining the bath room, two historians read in stentorian tones a passage from the Nihdn Shoki, the ancient history of the imperial house. Simultaneously four high noblemen, garbed in the dress of the ancient court, twanged bowstrings, an archaic rite in- tended to drive all evil influences out of the life of the imperial infant. Christening Foliows. Followed then the christening. Ikki, minister of the imperial house- Dr. three shrines in the imperial household, personally attended by the emperor, | whereby the name of the infant was o the name to the shrine of the sun god- dess, Amaterasu. at Ise. Prince Chichibu, the emperor's next younger brother, continues as heir pre- sumptive. $87,206 HIGHEST OFFER FOR OLD BATTLESHIP Three Bids on North Dakota, Now Out of Commission at Norfolk, Received by Navy. ‘Three offers for the ship in its pres- ent condition were made yesterday to the Navy Department for the old battle- ship North Dakota, out of commission at Norfolk (Va.) Navy Yard since 1923, Eight bids were received for the mate- rial if the Navy sctaps the ship at Norfolk. Bids for the ship as it now stands were: Union Shipbuilding Co.,, Balti- more, Md., $87.206; N. Block & Co., | Norfolk, Va., $72,276, and the Boston rering some 8,614 gross tons of fer- rou ‘metals, the second about ‘The Saskatchewan crop pool has so far refunded to member patrons $4,- 265,934 on handling charges after oper- ating on lower charges than the so- called “line companies” and has built up a reserve of $1,200,000. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1931. County Council Abolished. Mayo County Couneil ished by the Free State following the controversy over the appointment of Miss Dunbar as librarian. The gov- ernment ordered the council to ap- point. the woman, but the council re- fused on the ground that she did not possess a sufficient knowledge of Irish, and also that, being a Protestant, she was :mt suitable for a Roman Catholic | county. OPEN saturbay] Saturday EVENINGS Agents for ENDICOTT- JOHNSON SHOES TILL9PM. | q day Of Bargain Basement Specials & 58 0 BOYS Here’s a real one! d — LENDICOT JOHNSON Price We've born to their imperial majesties, Em- p:ror Hirohito and Empres* Nagako. The sovereign is without a direct male heir to succeed him on the throne of “the line unbroken for ages eternal.” ‘The name Yori Atsuko was chosen by the princess’ father. Iron & Metal Co., Baltimore, Md., $82,- 000. The eight bids for the material were_divided into three lots, the first Goody-Goody and Sneezer, wrinkled and bent Apache ancients who, in their youth and his, contributed to one of the most vivid es of the old West's rough- tory. Clum established in 1874 the first elvilian Indian agency at old San Car- los, now fast receding under the im- pounded waters of modern Covlidge dam. He held in peaceful restraint years 4,500 warlike 'Apaches in the surrounding hills. Separated 54 Years. Sneezer was one of the bounding| bucks who his lance cut of re-| spect for tan-be-tun-c-ki-ay— | hold, handed to Admiral Suzuki, grand chamberlain, a sheet of white paper upon which Emperor Hirohito had written in Japanese characters the name he selected. ‘Then came the ceremonies before the Ever Quoted ow Boys® Ox- fords and High Shoes OXFORDS and HIGH SHOES Black with Paracord Sole; also high shoes. The fines* quality and the lowest pfiveu oxfords in town, Boys’ & Girls’ Low Shoes COLD -aches @) When you feel that dull achiig in the head, with chills, esughing and sneezing, doesn't it seem foolish to waste time treating symptoms, when a few tablets of Bromo Quinine will uproot the cause and eliminate it from the system quickly and thoroughly? {There is only one Bromo Quinine , , . standard the world over, for over forty years, ,&'a’fl” e @s Brofnggui Low Round Trip Rates ToBaltimore Special $1.25 Week.End Every Saturday and Sunday Tickets good in coaches on all trains from Washington Saturday and Sunday. Good returning in coaches on any train Saturday or Sunday to and including 11:03 P.M. train Sunday night. Special $1.50 Seven Day Limit On sale every day. Good on all trains. Good for return on any train within seven days. as the Manager of The Roosevelt Bsm:,nflfi,& A limited number of transient and housekeep- | : o ing suites, both furnished and unfurnished, are As Good as Good Clothes Can Be... So M : Sizer are a corps of highly trained employes country. He wrote an- now available. $45 Cannot Buy Better Clothes Than R T s o TGS anz pledged to the comfort and welfare of our guests. T ——— of the Natfon’s history books, in deai- i ! . ! in the last few years now makes it pos- FREERSER The Roosevelt B ' ~made all the Apaches I ever saw look 16th St. N.W. Swedish s to most parts of the ZZ . like pikers,” in the gun-blazing days of world, including North ' and . Sowth (Bgampen 'd”w B For Spring . . . They are the disappear igi of Clum's Apache po- Sneczer and the- | hite-foretead had_seen | each other in recent times, but Clum’s | and Goody-Goody's paths had not crossed in 54 years. Goody-Goody, aged and weather- ten, came out of his ancestral hills, his _stoicism all but shattered, when J. B. Kitch, present superintendent at San Carlos, sent word by Apache grapevine telegraph that Nan-tan-tun-e-ki-ay once again was in the Apache country. The Apache brave, who proudly car- | ried a rifle insthe peace-enforcing serv- | ice of his paleface boss more than half 2 century ago, left his isolated wickiup as fast as his pony could carry him to recount in mixed English and Apache the youthful adventures of the 70s.| Then he and Clum, with other civilian | Indian police, stalked the renegade Geronimo at Apache Pass and placed | him in chains at Ojo Caliente, Mexico. Apaches Are Scattered. Not many of the Apaches of Clum's time remain in the Arizona hills, but their sons and daughters and grand- children were there to gaze in awe at the man whose name for three genera- tions has been a legend around the smoking tribal fires. “They knew me,” said Clum, “and most of them had never seen me before. ‘They told me the names of their fathers and grandfathers, and then I knew them, tco. ’ “We talked some Apache, but times are changing. When I spoke to one lad, to whom I had taken particular fancy, his father smiled. n;;i'He doesn’t know any Apache,’” he Not all the memories awakened by Clum'’s Arizona tour, which Takes Pleasure in Announcing the Appointment of Mr. L. G. Sizer for Many Years Manager of The Raleigh Sizes ‘ 6 to 2.$ ° ~ >, f = Johnson. _Sizes 6 to Tilazdes 726 Seventh Street N.W. LOOK FOR THIS IT IDENTIFIES THE SIGNATURE ONLY BROMO GUININE The Roosevelt offers every facility and con- venience to its guests. Available within the building is a delightful restaurant, drug store, grocery store, barber and beauty shop. Under the experienced supervision of Mr. Development of the Swedish shipping the Tombstone, Ariz., mining boom. America, Australia, South Africa, India, | | 5 R —— China &nd Japan. | i —— Washington’s SPORT HEADQUARTERS Shows that R S A e T L e Every Picture Tells a Story of GOLF SPECIALS Golf season is here! We are opening our new golf department with an offering of standard hlg[n-gr-de merchandise at prices that defy duplication. Every item is a special...it creates a big saving for you and a busy day tomorrow for us. Compare these bargains anywhere. A Wonderful P_urchau of All-Wool Spring Opening Bargain! '$750 Robert Lewis SET OF 5 Sports SWEATERS | ,Golf CLUBS Including the Bag, $2 95 Driver or Brassie Made $5.95 newest shades An introductory bar- and patterns. gain! 3 Wonderful values. All sizes. In plain colors, $1:.95 with $35 All-Leather GOLF BAGS Fine qual- ity, with shoe pock- ets ed $3.50 Robert Lewis Sleeveless Sweaters Beautiful plain shades and white. All wool. All sizos, finest we have ever quan Men’s $2.50 All-Woel Golf HOSE 95c i produced ... « .. because . . . $45 cannet buy any finer woolens; $45 cannot buy any smarter style;"$45 cannot buy any better tailoring; $45 cannot buy any greater wear. This season Bell has raised its own standard! Bell has never offered such values since Bell has been making clothes. No charge accounts to make you pay for the fellow that forgets to pay. No big overhead! Just fine clothes at $22.50 that defy du- plication anywhere at $45. SUITS TOPCOATS All the new popular shades Covert cloth, camel’s hair and patterns ina tremendous and_ California weight mod- variety in single and double els in every snappy and con- breasted models, Every suit servative_style, pattern and is silk lined, and has silk- shade. to select back vest and silk _sleeves. from... compare them with Buy the Best and Save the any you'll find anywhere Rest! at §45. 3 ALL MODELS—ALL SIZES Colors and patterns to match Sensational sweaters. Big variety. Values In Men’s All-Wool Knickers That Sold to $10 33.95 Smart patterns in popular cflects, Al sizes, While They Last MEN’S SILK "ROBES That Sold to £10 $2.95 Satin-faced lapel; beautiful rich pat- terns. All sizes. B $0).95 AL sizes. 9 Open Saturday Till 10 P.M. oMY é NAYY- . ~ - | TRADINGCo.” " | -] 8t & ) 5 Our Only

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