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The Mexico City All-Star High School foot ball team and the Mexico City Tipica Orchestra shown at Union Station,shortly after their arrival this morning in a special train from the Mexican capital. In the fore- ground the group kneeling is the. foot ball squad. uniforms, behind them, are the members of the orchestra. In Mexican police In the back- ground are local officials, Mexican Embassy - officials, school authorities and the Washington Police Boys’ Club Band. (1) Cadet Col. Edward A. Halsey, jr., representing the are as follows: The numbered figures Cadet Corps of the District high schools; (2) Capt. Gonzalo Herrera, , military aide to President Cardenas of Mexico; (3) Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superintendent of schools; (4) Dr. Rafael Fuentes, first secretary of the Mexican Embassy; (5) Luis Quintanilla, charge d'affaires of the Mexican Embassy; (6) Daniel Chavez Gonzalez, representative of the minister of education of Mexico; American Union; (7) Dr. Leo S. Rowe, director general of the Pan- (8) Willlam Manger, counsellor of the Pan-American Union; (9) Inspector L. I. H. Edwards of the Police Department; (10) Maj. Ernest W. Brown, superintendent of police; representing the alumni of Central an 12) Sylvan King, High School; Hardy Pearce, Central coach; (13) Birch E. Bayh, director of health and physical educa- tion in the public schools; (14) Maestro Miguel Lerdo de Tejada, director of the band; (15) Ernesto Villareal, captain of the Mexican All-Stars, and (16) Robert P. Martin, coach of the visiting team.—Tenschert Photo. PRESIDENT URGES ALL TOBUY SEALS Cites Tuberculosis as Na- tion’s Foremost Health Problem. Support of the Christmas seal dr&veT for funds by the National Tuberculosis | Association is urged by President Roosevelt, who declared in a state- ment issued from the White House that tuberculosis is “the Nation's fore- most public health problem—especially among the young.” o “Christmas seals give every one an| opportunity to do his part” in fighting | this dread disease, the President emplifies. His statement follows: “On Thanksgiving day will again be launched throughout the country the annual Christmas seal sale of the Natlonal Tuberculosis Association for | funds with which to continue the fight | against tuberculosis. The appeal de- | serves the serious consideration of every one, for the disease continues to be the Nation's foremost Dubllci health problem—especially among the young. It is imperative that protec- tive measures which have been found effective in preventing further spread of the disease shall be continued un- abated. ) «Leadership in the work of carrying out these protective measures is given by the National Tuberculosis Associa- tion and its two thousand affiliated units throughout the country. ‘Their work has been of special value during | the past five years, when Federal, State and municipal administrations were extended to the limit in caring for those who turned to them for aid. “The co-operation of every man, woman and child, every organized group and every governmental official 1s needed in order to bring this dread | disease under control. It is properly the duty of each local community to raise the funds for its own protection. Christmas seals give every one an op- portunity to do his part. The funds are spent in the communities in which | they are raised for the protection of all. The need is great.” Match Violin. From used wooden matches, Hans Hundt, & youth of Dusseldorf, Ger- | many, has made a violin which plays perfectly. st R B s SPECIAL NOTICES. ATTENTION—GREER'S FAMOUS HOME- made uk?l“mn be secured by calling Lin- | coln 0246 or 2220 ~MILDRED STEUART GREER_116 12th st. n.e. AILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART B .. Phila. and New CO.. phone Decatur 2500. Apples—Sweet Cider. ROCKVILLE FRUIT FARM. rive to Rockville, Md., two blocks west of Doiet Biouse. theni one mile out road to A Roaae. - Sigwbieyss W) o b A DEAL FUNERAL AT §75 s same service as one custing $300. | BoTiden aate. “insurance money. - Call | EAL. with 26 years experience. Lin- coln 8200 ____ i HAMBERS 's_one of the larsest C Undeziakers in | the | ) nerals as_low 7 T !lzzlwuelga paclors, seventeen | 8 afsiy 1400 Chapin 517 1iih st. | | cars. hearses ki undérta d_assistants. "énlumbll 0432, ntic 6 AUCTION SALES—FUTURE D. TOWEN & SON. Auctioneers, THOS. 3. O Eve 8. N.W. TRUSTEES' SALE OF VALUABLE CORNER N ING 10,000 BUSINESS SITE CONTAINING Ju.Coy the_under- . 34809, offers at Y D 1935, AT THR i he following-described land and o ilacs ‘siuate_in the District of Co- | u) a. and designated &s and being ofiginal Jot. numbered one (1) in squsre fwo hundred and eleven (211), as per plat hereof on file in the Office of the Surveyor of the District of Columbis. and contain- ing ten thoussnd sausre fect (of Eround, or less (same be! 5 Tox s ent records as lots 800, 801 211). 3 -third of the pur- e Omia 1n cash. 'and”the 'Ihl; = ! six r centum per annum. Pay: b tembaniuaily, and, secureq by geed e property, gg.":‘;‘!fingno{ the Dllachller. 000 de- It e FTs Says iromn approval and ratification by the court. otherwise the trustees re- serve the right to resell the property at the risk and cost of defaulting after five davs' advertisement o some_newspaper published in Washing- a.D. C. THESE TRUSTEES ARE AUTHORIZED BY THE COURT TO RECEIVE AND RE- PORT TO IT ANY OFFER FOR PRIVATE SBALE OF THI PERTY WHICH MAY BE_PRESENTED IN ADVANCE OF THE #OV!-NAMID PUBLIC DFFERING: AND A SBATISPACTORY PRIVATE OFFER IS BEFORE SAID DATE. 'RUSTEES WILL WITHDRAW THE PROP- ERTY FROM OFFERING AT PUBLIC 8. PENDING~ ACTION OF THE _COURT THEREON. = GEQRGE H. LAMAR asc; (Yasbinson nAlg-.) (aoodllrd Bldg. ).‘ 0025.42,0.14.16,17.18,19,20.21,33 o P ) | wished and some have regarded this UTILITIES WEIGH NEWS.E.C. RULESi Regulations Would Govern Them if They Had Registered. By the Assoclated Press. Major utility interests today held to their determination against reg- istering with the Securities and Ex- aange Commission December 1 as they scanned newly issued rules which | would govern them if they registered as the law requires. Holding company groups are band-‘ ing together to force a constitutional | test of the Rayburn act. Some utility | quarters have expressed a hope to| meet with S. E. C. members this week | in an effort to limit the number and character of the court tests. The new rules, covering what se- curities registered utility holding com- panies may buy or sell, were issued | in line with the commission’s policy | of continuing the form and semblence | of administration even though there are no companies listed to admin- | ister. Rules Meant to Be Reasonable. Commission officials termed the rules “safe and sane.” They said they were based on efforts to be entirely reasonable in an attempt to show that administration by the com- mission will not be harsh. The rules tend to exempt from the | commission’s statutory powers over | holding companies such holders of | utility stock as banks, investment | trusts and brokers. They left an ex- | tensive area for special definition in | individual cases. Six classes of securities were listed for investment by registered holding companies without application to the commission. These included invest- ment of current funds in actively- traded short-term securities, prime commercial paper, short-term notes of 50 per cent owned subsidiaries, its own or 50 per cent subsidiary obliga- tions, its own or 50 per cent sub- sidiary stock, obligations of industrial or other enterprises in territory served by investing company. Authority Is Evidenced. Relatively simple as the rules were, | they gave concrete evidence of what the commission’s authority would be- come under the act. Utility holding companies have been almost entirely free to buy or sell securities as they as an essential right. Under the act, the Government in some cases actually will have to de- cide on the values of stocks a reg- istered company may wish to pur- chase. It will have substantial power to permit or prevent such investments. e Finds Fox in Own Yard. COLUMBUS, N. C. (#).—E. B. Cloud went fox hunting without horse or hounds. He glanced out of the win- dow and saw a full-grown fox in his yard. Rushing out of doors, he cap- tured the animal before it could find the gate. Automatic Heat —with stokers and blowers comes nearest to perfec- tion when Marlow’s Famous Reading Anthracite is used. Buckwheat, $8.90 per ton; Rice, $7.80 per ton. Prepared by the most modern methods, super-cleaned —you’ll be surprised at the high heat value and low ash content. Try them NOW. 77 Years of Good Coal Service Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. NW. You MUST like or you THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1935. Officials and Band Turn Out to Greet Mexico’s All-Star High School Foot Ball Team Here to Play Capital Champs The Mexican foot ball team, esci Harrington Hotel. & ntinued From First Page) Game High School Alumni and “C” Club:‘ Dr. H. A. Smith, principal of Central; Hardy Pearce, Central coach; Birch| E. Bayh, director of health and physi- | cal education; Lynn Woodworth, Roosevelt High School coach, and others. Most of the Central team, and & number of co-eds, also were present,| as well as a group of Spanish-speak: | ing students from several schools | under the leadership of F. T. De Berriz, head of the Spanish department at McKinley High School. As soon as the special train arrived raiilroad officials switched it to the front of the station and within a few minutes Coach Robert P. Martin and | the players were greeted. The youth- ful athletes immediately mixed and mingled with the students present, and an informal “get-acquainted” ses- sion was held under the train sheds. While the youngsters were exchang- ing greetings Maestro Lerdo de Te- jada lined up the uniformed men and presented them in military forma- tion to Maj. Brown and Inspector | Edwards. In a body then the Mexicans marched behind the team and wel- coming party to to the east entrance of the station, where the Boys' Club Band presented a brief serenade. Because of the international good- will motive of the game, Maj. Brown | and John P. Meshkoff, director of the club, made special trips to the tailors in. Baltimore in order to have the boys equipped with their new | uniforms—blue trousers with red stripes, red coats and red, white and blue caps. The band and players were placed in busses and, behind the Boys' Club Band and a police motor cycle escort, were taken to their hotel. There breakfast was waiting and room assignments were made while the several groups were having their morning meal. . Because of the long trip from Mexico City, today was set aside for the visit- ors to rest, but the athletes themselves | will not escape a workout this after- noon. Central High School also planned a workout at 4 o'clock at its home stadium, and Coach Woodworth at Roosevelt invited the Mexicans to use | the field there. The boys also will work out tomorrow and next day. Meanwhile, beginning tomorrow | morning, & series of sight-seing tours have been arranged, with the Capital Transit Co. placing transportation at the disposal of the team. ‘The band plans to visit the District Commissioners tomorrow to present | greetings from Mexico City authorities. ‘Wednesday night they will appear LAWYERS’ BRIEFS RUSH PRINTING BYRON S. ADAMS NAtional 0311 A The Snow White Pe Toilet Tissue GET YOUR MONEY BACK! Ask for M.P.C. ... TODAY. And then you, too, will say —“It's the finest toilet tissue ever sold for 5¢ a roll.” MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Dealers will giadly refundthe amount of your M.P.C. pur chase if you are not thor- oughly satisfied. MARGERT PAPER CO. Lansdowne, Pa. | championship, said he has played “all | orted by the Police Boys' BRIDGE SYSTEMS FAIL"HOTSPOTS” Experts Use Card Sense and | Imagination When Hands Are Crucial. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 25—Play the game the way the experts do— forget about that contract bridge sys- tem when you're in a hot spot. Systems, most of the experts hold, are swell for beginners, for bidding routine hands, and in many cases for indicating slams. But when they are in the “hot spot,” ‘l the topnotchers use their card sense and imagination. | Charles Goren of Philadelphia, who | finished third in this year's masters” the systems” with all their exponents ! and found they are based mainly on | common sense. “Why, in the masters I played with 35 different players,” he said. “Some | of them came here with systems I never heard of, but I used a little common sense.” Harold S. Vanderbilt, the yachts- man and donor of the Vanderbilt Cup, is one of the few leading players stick- ing to one system. | He uses the Vanderbilt club conven- tion, which calls for an opening of one club with a hand holding 32 tricks or more. His partner responds “‘one dia- mond” if he holds less than 1! tricks. | The “four aces,” Ely Culbertson and | P. Hal Sims, all sponsor a system, but follow them in a tournament and see the variations crop up. “There are never any nevers in our system,” say the four aces. | Huge Hippo Shot. After causing much damage in its migrations a 15-foot hippopotamus, | weighing 4,000 pounds, has been shot | near Maasstrrom, South Africa. = in concert at the Pen-American Union, presented by the Mexican Embassy. Other entertainment for both the band and the team was being worked out today by school and local | authorities. Turn your old trinkets, jewelry and | watches into MONEY at— A.XKahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET SIGN OF Club Band, marching down Eleventh street on the way from Union Station to the China (Continued Prom First Page.) the movement was a domestic Chinese affair—no concern of Japan, A high Chinese official said the government was powerless as long as autonomy was confined to the demili- tarized zone, but conceded that the movement would cause serious con- cern if it spreads. A Japanese Embassy spokesman said: “We cannot guarantee that the movement will not spread.” JAPANESE ISSUE WARNING. TIENTSIN, China, November 25 (&) —Peiping reports that Gen. Sung Cheh-Yuan, Hopeh-Chahar overlord, ordered troops to Tungchow to sup- press the autonomy movement there drew a warning from the Japanese military today that encroachment on the demilitarized zone would not be tolerated. A coup by Tientsin agitaters for autonomy apparently collapsed when the demonstrators withdrew from buildings they had occupied and re- turned to their headquarters in the citys suburbs to await a new oppor- turity to work for political independ- ence from the Central Chinese govern- ment. They had captured some public | buildings—and yielded them—without fighting, although both sides were armed. The separatistism, however, gave evidence of confidence that their de- mands for self-government eventually would be met. Japanese General Arrives, The local unrest was coincidentalt with the arrival here of Maj. Gen. Kenji Doihara, Japan's “Lawrence of Manchukuo,” from Peiping. Chinese quarters aileged the agita- tion was part of a providence-wide and Japanese-inspired program de- signed to afford a pretext for action similar to that taken by Yin Ju-Keng today in declaring an autonomous government in the demilitarized zone of Eastern Hopei, north of the city. Posters urged overthrow of the Chinese “dictatorship” and opposition to the national government’s mone- tary program, as well as defense meas- ures against Communists. VOGUE “QUALITY” Known to Washington for 20 Years! ) MEN'S SUITS Topcoats & O'Coats MON.. TUES. and WED. Cleaned & Pressed N 39¢ comr i, Call for and Delivery Price, 59¢ Convenient Branches Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. VOGUE wClean ers = Main Office and Plant at 826 Bladensburg Rd. N.E—AT. 1415 —Star Staff Photo. DR. C. F. MAGUIRE DIES IN MARYLAND | Former Physician at House of Correction Was in 74th Year. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., November 25—Dr. C. Frank Maguire, 74, former physician to the Maryland House of | Correction, died at his home here yes- terday afternoon. Although he had)} been in ill health for six weeks, his death was unexpected. A native of Madison, Dorcester | County, Md., Dr. Maguire graduated from the University of Maryland Medical School in 1883, completing | | his education with a year of post- graduate work in Bellvue Hospital, | | New York. | Returning to Baltimore, he practiced | | medicine in that city for 17 years. His | health failed and he went back to Dorcester where he recovered and maintained a practice for many years in Madison and Hurlock. | Gov. Harrington appointed Dr. Ma- | [ guire physician to the House of Correc- | { tion. When his term expired there 16 | years ago he came to Marlboro, where he established a local practice and was | made physician to the pail and alms- | house. Although he retired from active | practice about four years ago, he was | retained by the county commissioners as physician to the jail. While in Baltimore Dr. Maguire married Miss Katherine Medilinger. He is survived by his widow, a daugh- ter, Mrs. Virginia M. Simms; a grand- | son, James W. Simms; two brothers, | W. H. Maguire of Madison and U. Lee Maguire of St. Marys County, and three sisters, Mrs. G. N. Evans of | Baltimore County, Mrs. A. Stockley of | Baltimore, and Mrs. D. A. Cook of | Cambridge. Funeral services will be held at his| | home here, Wednesday at 2 p.m., Rev. | | J. C. M. Shrewsbury officiating. Buri will be in Trinity Church Cemetery Your joy in giving someone a pair of glasses for Christ- mas will be be equalled only by their joy in receiving ETZ Optometrists 1217 G St. N.W. {antmusd From First Pfige\ in imposing the proposed embargo, | authoritative reports said. Considered, too, was a critical inter- nal situation in France which would make it impossible for Premier Pierre Laval to leave Paris Friday to attend | a meeting of the League's Sanctions Committee at Geneva. Laval Urges Postponement. Attempting to hold his government leadership and to further his negotia- | tions for Italo-Ethiopian peace, Laval was Teported authoritatively in Paris to have urged postponement of a de- cision on an oil ban for fear of “serious consequences” to European peace. The reference to the American Gov- ernment’s action was to that of last week when the administration acted to stop the flow of American oil to Italy by requests to shippers to abandon Indoor Improvements Here is your opportunity to find out how little it costs to make your home up-to-date. A delightful basement room a useful room in the attic— new “tiled” or modern walls for your kitchen or bath room—a new decorative ceiling applied right over the old plaster—an insulated at- tic to make your home more comfortable the year 'round, and reducing fuel bills- enough to pay for the im- provement, For an estimate phone the Johns- Manville Home Improvement Guild sponsored by The United Clay Products Co. Showrooms, 1000 Investment Bldg. District 0791 on those shippers indebted to the Gov- ernment. Unofficial but responsible quarters in Washington said the United States was determined to maintain a strictly independent neutrality policy regard- less of what other governments do with respect to the Italo-Ethiopian war. Officials withheld comment on League of Nations postponement of the committee meeting. Nor would they talk about bitter reaction in Italy against American attempts to dis- courage trade with the belligerents in oil as well as other commodities con- sidered essential war supplies. Many New Houses. Ten million people have been newly housed in England since the World War. Prices Greatly Reduced For Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday 1 Quart Heavy Russian Mineral Oil. Special 1,000 1 Gr. Sacch: Tablets. Special 100 5 Gr. Asparin. Special ___ e 2 Pints Beef Iron and Wine. Special 3 Bottles Citrate of Magnesia < 6 1,000 Sheet Rolis Toilet Tissue Paper. Special _ 25¢ We deliver $1 or more in Gilisons Co 917 GSt. N.W. = Why gamble with substitutes? No other fuel can take the place of dependable, long - burning Colo- nial Hard Coal. Look up “Colonial Coal” in the vellow section of your Telephone Book. COLONIAL ANTHRACITE The Finest Coal Money Can Buy. For Immediate Delivery, DIAL NAT. 5178 R. S. MILLER, 805 THIRD ST. N.W. Small Attractive Apartment Pianos Just What o Cable & Boms. Chickeriag New ond Used #°3 Schubed® You Want! e IS ALL YOU NEED- $1 Weekly Pays Choose Any New or Used Piano in Our Large Stock Over 200 Grands, Uprights and Players to select from.. Remember, after this sale these prices drawn. and terms will positively be withe Think of purchasing a fine, brand- new Grand, Upright or Player at only $3 down and $1 a week plus a small carrying charge. None higher—you may pay more if you wish. Your old piano, radio or phono- Used allowance. graph will be acceptable in trade at a liberal THUR JORDAN PIANO COMPANY 1239.G Street ~ Cor. 13% NW.