Evening Star Newspaper, November 19, 1928, Page 11

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f ———————— NEwNUSEON v T0 OFEH N BOSTON Section Contains Collections of 13th to 19th Century. Decorative Art. By tha dssociated Prems. BOSTON, November 19.—A ne% wing ©f decorative arts at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, is to be opened this | tmonth. Fifty-four rooms and galleries make p the oreat three-story addition. Gath- ered within are great collections of far- reaching significance. The structure will open publicly November 22. In this wing are installad collections of decorative art from the thirteenth to the first guarter of the nineteenth kentury, including some 20 period rooms from import=nt houses in Europe and »America. Ia the galleries are assem- bled composite collections of various types of work produced within a given yeriod by one nationality. Objects Brought Together. Thus, in each of the connecting geries of large galleries devoted re- spectively to Italian, Spanish, Nether- lands and English art, from the fif- veenth through the seventeenth centur: there are shown examples of ironwork, silver, pottery, textiles, furniture, glass and other products. In this manner objects that were used together in their | own day are brought together for twen- tieth century view. ‘The composite collectlons are ar- franged to give something of the char- acter of a room with much of the at- mosphere of the period that produced ihe objects in the collection Earliest among the rooms is a well | preserved Tudor corner room dated about 1490, brought from Somersetshire, England. Other notable iuteriors are two from the celebrated Chateau de la * Muette, once the residenre of Louis 'V and notable also for being the scene f the first free balloon ascension | rrying human beings. Exhibit Dated 1600. ‘There is the State morning room, ted 1690, from the palace of the old amilton family at Lanarkshire, Scot- nd. It was built on the historic site | e‘t the ancestral home of the royal lamily of Hamilton since the fourteenth Sentury. ‘There are a handsome Louis XVI Sa- fen from Paris, a charming painted boudoir from Paris in the time of Louis "XV, a Chippendale room built by the Sixth Lord Baltimore at Wcodcote Park, Epsom, Surrey, England, and a series of 12 American Tooms. Each period goom is furnished in the style of the gay and suggests in the arrangement of the furnishings that the room is petually lived in. " The American rooms show the de- welopment of the American interior in 4 New England from the seventeenth gentury through the first quarter of the nineteenth century. The last is yepresented by a series of three in- teriors with many of the criginal fur- nishings from & house built at what is now Peabody in 1800-1801 by Samuel Mclntire, the great Salem craftsman. There are rooms from Boxford, Mass.; outh, N. H.; a complete room srom Boston and Hanover, N. H., Bath, Me.; Marblehead, Fiskdale and Ipswich, SCAPINI PRAISES U. S. Blind War Veteran Says America Is “Stupendous Country.” PARIS, November 19 (#).—Georges Scapini, was blinded Deputy, returning #rom a tour of the United States, where he had represented the French war vention, described it as a “stupendous country.” “Friendship such as exists between the French and American war weterans,” he said, “is the basis upon thich_w build & real and lasting!]! Does Your ~ § Baking Powder | Mgpke Biscuits That Just ‘melt in your moutl’O ~jz Wife Chews Tobacco; Her Refusal to Stop Is Divorce Grounds By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, November 19.—A man asked for a divorce here because his wife chewed tobacco and refused to stop. Christ Harris, restaurant own- er, filed suit for divorce charg- ing cruelty against his wife, Mrs. Carrie Harris. He said his wife chewed to- bacco and disregarded his plead- 3 ings with her 10 stop the prac- tice, i {ATTEMPT AT ASSAULT Accused Man Arrested After She Follows Him to House and Notifies Police. | Undaunted by an attack made upon | her as she was returning home shortly | before *midnight, Mrs. Mary Matilda | Smith, 508 G street northeast, followed | her alleged assailant to a house in the | 600 block F street northeast and then | notified police. | _Police of the ninth precinct arrested | Thomas O'Day, 34 years old, and charged him with attempted criminal assault. He will be arraigned in Police Court foday. Mrs, Smith sald she was returning assing an alley at 630 Sixth street ortheast when & man seized her and ragged her into the alley. She fought [ frec from his grip and the man walked |away. Mrs. Smith says she followed | him_ fo, the house. | ODay gave his occupation as an electrician and said he was married. . International automobile races will b2 held in Dublin, Ireland, next July. Accuracy in Fitting CLAFLIN 922 14th St. QUART OF WATER A _ | DAY HELPS KIDNEYS || When Back Hurts or Bladder A Bothers, Also Take a | Little Salts. Eating too much rich food may | { || produce kidney trouble in some form, || says a well known authority, because | the acids created excite the kidneys. | | Then they become overworked, get | sluggish, clog up and cause all sorts |of distress, particularly backache ‘snd misery in the kidney region, | rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, | acid stomach, constipation, torpid | {liver, sleeplessness, bladder and uri- | nary irritation. H ‘The moment your back hurts or | | kidneys aren't acting right, or if | bladder bothers you, begin drinking | lots of good water and also get about | four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous | | salts is made from the acid of | grapes and lemon juice, combined | with lithia, and has been used for | years to flush clogged kidneys and | stimulate them to activity; also to neutralize the acids in the system so | that they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure any one; makes & - delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which millions of men and women take now and then IS CHARGED BY WOMAN | to help keep the kidneys and uri- ‘nlry organs clean, thus often avoid- | |ing serious kidney disorders.~~Ad- | ertisement. RUMFORD does—and more too. We can comfortably enjoy our fresh baked tea biscuits and other hot breads, knowing that they are wholesome as well as delicious when made with Rumford. It adds real body-building food value, because it scientifi- cally replaces those vital health-building phosphates lost from flour in the refining process. Rumford raises dough and batter just right, to the fullest degree, starting in the mixing and completing it in the oven heat. There is maver a baking powder taste in Rumford- made breads or cake, to impair the flavor of the other ingredients. You can depend on every spoonful in every Rumford can being uniform from first to last. WHOLESOME ~ ~ EcoNomicaL ‘EFFICIENT Write to the Ash us for the New Rumford Fruit Cook Book It’s unusual and practical =you'll like it. Rumrorp CompaNy Providence, R. L. THE EVENTNG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. . MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 19%8. SUDDEN ILLNESS FATAL ‘The viscountess was the former Wyndham sisters whom John Si Wite of Former British Foreign|givont immortalized in one of Secretary Wrote on Spirit | Teraid as a bellever in peychical manifestations recorded in a book, “The By the Associated Press. spirit messages from her eldest son by LONDON, November 19.—Viscountess | her first marriage who was killed in second_wife of Viscount Grey of Fal- Glenchonner, who died in 1920. l * * TO VISCOUNTESS GREY Pamela Wyndham, one of the three greatest pictures. She was a talented World. ) Eastern Vessel,” what she claimed were Grey is dead at the age of 57. The|the war. She was first married to Lord {Take 2% minutes to learn these important facts) REM will, or you can have your money back. The fact that not one customer in a thousand ever wanted it back tells the story. “Will it relieve my cough quickly?” “Is it an experiment?”’ REM is,- there’s positively nothing in it to hurt you. REM is no experiment. 43 years of pharmaceutical experience are back of it. 5 That’s one of the most noticable “Does it soothe the r“xalities of REM. It clings to irritation and { - x}fi{n?‘t, starting r’clllief quick- 29 y. Right away you'll notice a S aba soothing, cooling effect. REM does. It clears the air- passages and thus makes it easier to breathe during the day and sleep soundly at night. “Does it ‘cut the phlegm’?” Not REM! It’s easy to take. Even children seldom have to be coaxed to take it. REM is. Simple cou;fhs usually yield to a single bottle. Rem- edies that don’t help are expen- sive at any price. REM is no “cure-all”. We frankly tell you it’s no good for anything but a cough,~but how remarkably good it is for that! “Does it claim more than it can do?” Indeed they aren’t! No other cough medicine on the market has the same formula as REM, and “it’s the formula that counts!” “Are all cough medicines pretty much alike?” NOW you know wl;y ' “it's REM FOR COUGHS” ® Z /'/ AN 7NN 17NN 4 NWJIZANN 7NN NRVZNZNZA AN A i ) N Ve BRI | Herbert Hoover’s Trip To South America When the next President of the United States visits the nations of South America a new era in the relationships of the United States and our southern neighbors will be initiated. This is the consensus of the best minds throughout the world. _' Natul:ally Gov?rnment officials and citizens of Washington will be interested in what is happening on the President-elect’s trip. To meet this overwhelming interest. The Evening Star and The Sunday Star have arranged for .unpar_alleled service for Washingtonians. Every move of Mr- Hoove.r and his party will be heralded. The diplomatic and political sig- nificance oi Mr. Hoover’s speeches and the receptions accorded him will be made plain. Nothing will escape the vigilance of The Star’s meh accompany- ing Mr. Hoover and his party. The Star’s Own Staff Correspondent REX COLLIER —who accompanied Mr. Hoover on his trips to the flooded regions of the Mississippi and a personal friend of Mr. Hoover, will be with the next President’s party throughout. Mr. Collier, an able writer, whose articles on the Mis- sissippi flood and Mr. Hoover’s activities during the campaign commanded wide attention, is expected to give " interesting high lights on the trip. His cables and wire- less dispatches will interest all. WILL IRWIN Noted newspaper correspondent and lifelong friend of President-elect Hoover from college days, has joined the staff of this newspaper to especially report Mr. Hoover’s trip. Will Irwin’s wartime dispatches and masterly report- ing of big news events before the war won him the title in many quarters of “the best reporter in America.” Mr. Irwin will join the Hoover party at San Pedro Monday, when it puts off in the battleship Maryland. His colorful, accurate and always interesting dispatches will appear exclusively in The Star and Associated Newspapers of the North American Newspaper Alliance. Watch for them! z The Associated Press The peer of all newspaper press organizations, has assigned two of its finest reporters to accompany Mr. Hoover. One of these, JAMES L. WEST —has been in charge of the Associated Press staff covering Presi- dent-elect Hoover since the nomination of the Secretary of Com- merce at the Kansas City Convention. He accompanied Mr. Hoover on all of his campign trips and wrote of his activities X?ile ?:e ;pfadg his headquarters in Washington as well as in Palo to, Calif. As a news writer West has worked on nearly every big story which has broken in Washington since he joined the Capital staff in 1915. His assignments have included the day editorship of the Washington bureau; chief of the Capitol staff, White House and departmental correspondence. He has been a mem. ber of the Washington staff covering the last several national political conventions and has had extensive experience in travel- ing with candidates for President. He has long been familiar with the making of government policies and has a wide acquaintance among the important per- sonalities in the Nation’s political life. The other Associated Press correspondent on the trip will be CLARENCE Du BOSE Chief of the Associated Press Bureau at Mexico City. His work there has caused much commendation from news- papers in the United States. Particular praise was given to his report of the landing of Lindbergh. During the revolution preceding the election of Obregon, the assassination of the latter and the ensuing delicate political situ- ation Du Bose’s dispatches were such as to bring unstinted praise. He established relations with the Mexican government of such a character as to make it possible for American corre- spondents to send out the news of the country without fear of the restrictions of censorship or of expulsion from the country. After the World War Mr. Du Bose seryed in Tokio, China and England as a correspondent, and was assigned by the Asso- ciated Press to its Mexican City bureau in 1925. He was selected for the Hoover South American assignment because of his fluent Spanish, his wide acquaintance with Latin American problems and his ability as a writer. The dispatches of all these able writers will appear daily in The Evening Star and The Sunday Star If you desire to follow Mr. Hoover you should read The Star. SREINE ’l’~ A ."\ Ay NN/

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