26
LADY MACKENZIE
FREED FROM JAIL
Mysterious Veiled Woman
Pays S2OO on Bad Check.
Disappears.
B.v the Associated Press.
TAMPA, Fla.. July 28.—Lady Grace
Esnte Mackenzie, bis game huntress
and international adventuress, today
Has seeking to solve the element of
mystery which linked itself with her
fortunes.
An unidentified woman whose kind
ly voice was muffled beneath a heavy
black veil which shrouded her face
was sought by Lady Mackenzie as
her benefactress. Four days in jail
were ended by the woman in the
black veil yesterday when she re
funded the amount of. money alleged
to have been received by Lady
Mackenzie upon a worthless draft.
Chaf&es against the woman who
spent four days as a cellmate of an
alleged “bandit queen” were dismiss
ed and, although police of other cities
had been reported seeking Lady
Mackenzie, no other charges were
made public.
A return ticket to Havana, redeem
able, constituted her sole capital.
Lady Mackenzie announced she
would file suit for alleged false arrest
against G. E. Bray, realtor, who
claimed to have indorsed a worthless
draft for S2OO for las woman. She
said she also would start a eeAf-eh
for the woman who came to her
rescue yesterday.
"I didn't think I had a friend in
Florida until today. "Whoever came
to my assistance so nobly must cer
tainly want the money back. And T
intend to find her and return it as
■oon as possible.”
Fascist to Tour U. S.
ROME, July 2S CP). —Bastia Nini,
general secretary for Fascist organiza
tions abroad, in compliance with a re
quest from organizations in New York,
will sail for New York August 20. He
will make a tour of both North and
South America, during which he will
visit every Italian colony. He will
take with him personal greetings front
Premier Mussolini to the foreign Fas
cisti.
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AMUSEMENTS
NATIONAL—“The Goose Hangs
High.”
Another of those delightful enter
tainments that are being featured
at the National Theater this Summer
by the National Theater Players,
Lewis Beach's wholesome domestic
comedy, “The Goose Hangs High,”
was added to the season's list of
successes last evening.
“The Goose Hangs High” Is one
of those chapters from real life where
the smile has a complement in the
tear and where laughter is sometimes
checked by pathos. It concerns a
devoted father and mother who have
never counted the many sacrifices
made for their children to properly
educate them and to maintain them
in the station of life to which their
parents were accustomed. There
were those, including a dear old
grandma, who felt that the children
had been spoiled, that they were
selfish and inconsiderate and that
they had contracted habits that in
our own day are causing many a
youngster to be sharply scored by
those who imagine they were raised
with a higher moral code. When the
crash came, however, and the father,
pushed by insult, resigned his po
sition, the whole means whereby
the family was supported, and even
grandma refused to help because she
had her own ideas of what was good
for the spoiled children, the young
sters themselves, aroused to a sense
of the situation, came nobly and won
derfully to the rescue and made even
those who had thought the worst of
them love them. It is just the kind
of play that justifies the present day
optimist arid establishes beyond the
peradventure of a doubt that while
all that- glitters may not be gold, so
also all that may bear a semblance to
wickedness is not wicked after all.
The players put their hearts with
their talents into this tine little drama
and the laughter and applause of a
very large audience clearly establish
ed that they had scored a pleasant
measure of success.
J. Glynn Macfarlane, the new lead
ing man, appeared not in the role of
an adoring young lover, but as a lover,
just the same, of a lovable wife and
children that preserved his love.
Miss Kathryn Givney scored ji per
sonal success as the mother, inci
dentally displaying emotional powers
of real merit, while Lillian Dean
added to her list of character suc
cesses as the dear old sensible
grandma. Perhaps the two that
seemed to win the highest honors in
the performance were Dorothy Tier
ney and William Phelps, who made
an admirable pair of snappy twins
that won a complete vindication in
the play. Romaine Callender, in the
THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. 0., TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1925.
Bomh-Riddled Veteran Faces 41st
Operation With Unwavering Hope
4 After a Couple of Dozen More, They’ll Be Able to
Start Work in Earnest Says Man Coming
to Walter Reed Hospital.
By the Associated Press.
NEW YORK, July 28. —Frank Has
senberger was preparing today for his
forty-first operation in the last seven
years. Army surgeons, determined to
put Hassenberger together again so
that he looks and feels as he did be
fore he was torn almost to pieces in
France seven years ago, will operate
on him again in the Walter Reed
Hospital in Washington next week.
Hassenberger enlisted in the Regu
lar Army and was one of the first
men sent to France.
On September 28, 1918, the section
of trench in which he was stationed
was bombed by German airplanes and
he was taken to a first aid station
half-blinded and apparently dead.
There was n piece of steel in almost
every square inch of his body.
The Walter Reed Hospital surgeons
role of the elder son, in spite of the
difficulties he had to face, got away
nicely with the role of the elder son,
and Miss Leneta Lane was again
charming as his sweetheart. Edward
Arnold as a selfmade and aspiring
graduate from an orphan asylum, and
Thomas L. Brower, as a disagreeable
politician also contribute their bits
to a pleasant performance, in which
also Olive Wood, Gertrude Murray, ;
Robert L. Clear and Walter Soderling
offered satisfactory minor bits.
Near the summit of Longs Peak I
and close to the spot where Miss j
Agnes Vaille, secretary of the Denver j
Chamber of Commerce, was frozen to i
death last January, an emergency |
telephone has been installed for the !
use of climbers overtaken by storms. |
ISOO Scpcypoite BrcaHfast" Room j
j-- ? j
tbemyourseW " |j
a y—soo pieces of quaint Colonial furniture —ready for
w Tl\ your own brush, to convert into colorful groups for breakfast or
P I M 225 I diningrooms! Gateleg or extension tables. Windsor or Salem i
y i % chairs. Corner cabinets or Welsh highboys. Well constructed and
V[j n M V sturdy, with a glass-like surface that takes paint so easily. And the }
J JDJ prices—well, the Half Yearly Sale has seen that they are low! jj
■ ■ AA (a) A Colonial Chair, unpainted. Regularly $3.95. . (f) A Comer Cabinet, unpainted. Regularly $29.75. p
\ 1 Saddle seat and fancy shaped back. Very durable Two deep shelves, glass panel doors and space # for j*
QO \ ' and decorative when painted $2.95 linens. Server, buffet and closet-combined. s22.so P
5? Shaped leaves and shaped legs. When open it meas- Beautifully designed, with large seat and fancy back. j(
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\ Measuring 38x18 across the top and fitted with two Regularly $16.75. Top opens up to a spread of 38x45 E
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Bow-back Chair, unpainted. Regularly $2.95. (i) A Welsh Cabinet, unpainted. Regularly $22.50. j
With rounded panel back and shaped seat. Very It contains two deep shelves and a linen cabinet. C
======M Jl7 comfortable and easily decorated $1.95 Unusually roomy, yet not bulky $17.95 k
\ k=j H (e) An Extension Table, unpainted. Regularly $16.75. *
A \ \ j j Shaped drop leaves and two fillers. When open it g TyLnfj
measures 36x60 inches across $12.95 |
ft I 1 Sale on the Fourth Floor of ( I In| \\ ► ■ illy' ’ !
| In,( fan'll C.o—inf Depwlmaii Star. j I
decided to reconstruct what was left
of Hassenberger's body. They re
stored his sight completely and then
1 devoted themselves to skin-grafting
operations and plastic surgery on his
body. Forty operations over a period
of seven years were performed on all
parts of his body.
Hassenberger, while unable to move
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any of the following dealers:
N. W. Burchell, 817 14th St. N.W.
Martin L. Fries, 40-60 Arcade Market
John H. Magruder, Conn. Ave. & K St.
Knickerbocker Market, 2440 18th St. N.W.
F. A. Dodge & Bro., 3620 14th St. N.W.
Millon Dollar Grocery, 2606 Connecticut Ave. N.W.
Chevy Chase Supply Co., 5630 Connecticut Ave. N.W.
Pure Food Grocery Co., 5528 Connecticut Ave. N.W.
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