Evening Star Newspaper, October 25, 1929, Page 3

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D.. C, Rellef “MAxu You Feer B Hot water 4 Sure Relief - E LL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ and 75¢ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere HAIR POWDER That colors twhite hair in ome minute. Absolutely harmless. Blonde. medium and dark_brown. it in the world. $1.00 per box postpai bina o 453 Washingion St Lynn. Mass. light, MODERN BELGIAN ART REVEALS RACEi Capital Connoisseurs Pay Homage at Private View-- of Special Exhibition. Diplomats and men high in public | life mingled with connoisseurs, arts | patrons and lovers and representatives | of residential society in paying homage ‘Il<! night to a school of art which | springs direct from the vitals of a | people richly endowed with artistic | temperament, the occasion being the { opening private view of the special | exhibition of cotemporary Belgian art | | installed in the Corcoran Gallery and | scheduled there to remain until Novem- . | ber 30. | Only absence from the city prevented | the attendance of President Hoover on | this the first affair of its kind to be ;wnnwred by any President, in which capacity he serves jointly with the King of the Belgians. The exhibit, gathered, transported and displayed under the |CATTS’ WITNESSES TAKE STAND TODAY Defense Will Seek to Have Most of Leah Burwells' Testimony Ruled Out. By the Associated Pr TAMPA, Fla., | fense was prepared to present iis wi ay in the trial of former Gov. ‘Sldney J. Catts, charged with violation | | of counterfeiting laws. immmonv vesterday by bringing to the nd Julian Diaz, head of the counter- Hemng ring which Catts was alleged to | have financed. | “sidney J. Catts, jr. head of his father's legal staff, said that after the Government_rests its case, a motion would be entered to eliminate much of | the testimony of Leah Burwell, Govern- | ment witness, from consideration by the | Jury. V Miss Burwell and Diaz testified that ROSE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, ‘The Government concluded its major | NPT P s e * 3 ——— 1929. Federal Prohibition Corfimissioner Hifam POSSE MAKING SEARCH Sutterfield of Arkansas today was leads FOR AGENT’S ASSAILANT ";H a posse searchibg an unidentiz fled colored man who shet his brother, | Arthur - Sutterfield, dufing prohibition enforcement activities yesterday. | Arthur Sutterfield, ~agent, working | under the commissioner, was in a crit- ical condition. There were no witnesses to the shooting, which -~occurred in Desha County, 60 miles from here, as the agent attempted to arrest the m: Catts knew a $5,000 loan he made to Diaz was to be used in connection with a counterfeiting scheme. Exhibition of 01d Bibles Held. | BUDAPEST () —To mark the 400(n anniversary of the birth of Jasper Karoli, who was first to_teanslate the e Bible 'inta 'Hungarian, Protestants of by Colored Man. Transylvania gathered an exhibition of old Bibles. The most anclent was | BY the Associated Press Karoli edition of 1592 Brother of Arkansas Prohibition October 25.—The de- k’ Wise Mothers Prefer Wise Brothers’ Dr. Wise Brothers | auspices of the recently formed Euro- | pean and American Art Committee, of | which Frederick Starr is chalrman, was | | conceived in the spirit of international | Those beautiful COLUM- BIA ROSES — deep, rich, BABY NEEDS i CHEVY CHASE! BOTH MOST babies need cod- liver oil in the daily diet. Easily taken when given as Scott's Emulsion. Emulsifica- tion helps to make the cod- Tiver oil easy to digest, like the butter fat in milk. SCOTTS EMULSION Both a Food and a Tonic YouCan Never Have Too Many How long is it since you took your last snapshot? Even if it’s only a day you can’t truthfully say “I've taken enough for awhile.” For every interesting thing you do, every new sight you see is worth recording in snapshots. To make your picture-tak- ing more worthwhile js what we’re here to do. So drop in often for plenty of film and a helpful photographic hint or two. Developing, printing and enlarging of the better sort. Eastman Kodak Stores, Inc. 607 -14th Street, N. W. SPECIAL NOTICE, TONG - DISTANCE MOVING — WE BAVE been “keeping faith with the public since ut our country.wide service i'" N-uoml | 3220” DAVIDEON TRANSFER ROOF szmm:s PAINTING, gutterint goouting: rensonablé prices. Norin 6314, T night. Ajax Roofing Co.. 2038 18th st.n.w. WANT A RETURN LOAD TO CHICAGO OR rrhm‘ust:g ?c(. 26 to 31 Telephone Hygtts ville WANTED—RETU] mNn‘ RE o New Tork. Philsdeionie, Avantic Oity. N.J, and Richmond, Va. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co i 1313 U St North LET US MAKE YOUR ATTIC INTO A beautiful English loft and recreation rooms for the kiddies with Celotex: it saves fu Call Wis. 4169 27% THE FOLLOWING CARS WILL BE SOLD for charges at Weschier's public auction on Saturday Nm-mnn 9: Nash Romdster. tags t by Teon Smith: Nash Conche Tans 0369, Tett by My Lojls Berser: Ghev: Folet Sedan, tags P-6id, left by My, H.'J. Harding. RL, of4 BBt MW, RETURN-TOAD RATES GUARANTEED ON 10 days'notice timate does not obligate. UNITED fi’rA'rzs “STORAGE €O _ 418 10ih St N.W. __ Metropolitan 1845, FORD COUPE, LEFT_IN NAME OF MR Waring, io be sold for ‘lien. repairs and ROBINSON 'CO., Téar 1116 Ve THE LOWING CARS WILL BE SOLD | for charges at Weschier's public auction on Baturday. October 26: kland c Conch, tuks P-8630; left by Mr. Rickenbacker coupe, New York tags K-1- 11237 left by Mr. W. Huff Dodge touring, tags S-7109; left by Mr. A B. Smith. CALL CARL. INC. Slegu s Nw._ CAR_18 SOLD at Wexchlrrl pubuc auctin on Baturday. November 2, 19 Ford Rondster, tags No. v 1986, left by C oan . INC. 614 nw HERE Tell us when und well move your furni- ture and take mighty good care of it at low A telephone Il _save you time le. NATIO! DELIVERY ASSN. RCOOFING—by Koons. Slag_Roofing, Iinning, Roof Painting and Re: pairs. _ Thorough. cere work by practi foofers. Let us esti- District 0933. Rooftne 119 3rd St. 8.W. KOONS &) A Printing Service —offering exceptional facili for a discriminating clientel The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D ST N.W. _Phone National 0650, “sz'fied Hzatmg" Steam, Vapor and Water ntuonnl\uxr} K. PACE REPAIRS 1240 9th St. N.W. Met. 8834, Oriental and Chinese Rugs By public_auction, within our Oriental Rug Gailery, October 30th ‘3ist, 1st, at phor BIATES STORAG! Met. 1843. ~ APPLES—CIDER Stayman Winesap. York Imi pitck” Tl apples. pert clder, made o Wa-picked appies. Drive to orchar PRI mile out cf Rockville, Md., on road o Fotomac HOCKVILLE FRUIT PARM. Tel. Rockville 31-M. { later make an extensive tour of other "o ! friendship and is but the first of a simi- lar series, the next on the schedule, in | | all probability, being the transmittal ' " of a cotemporary American exhibit in | | Belgium. [ Hoover's Selection Is Appropriate. | 1t is considered most appropriate that | Mr. Hoover, whose efforts accomplished | so much for Belgium during the dark times of war, should be co-sponsor with | . King Albert of this gesture of nlllunnl amity, It is also logical that the exhi- | ! bition' should have opened in the | National Capital, more than 500 of wWhose resiGents were last night the guests of the trustees of the Corcoran Gallery. There was no receiving line and but small evidence of formality. The 1n- terested spectators moved slowly appreciatively through the two lnxe salons and the one corridor set apart | for the display, lingering over paintings, sculptures and specimens of the graphic arts contributed by Belgian artists and | amateurs. Later in the evening the | gallery’s permanent collection and the wing housing the W. A. Clark art col- | lection were thrown open to those in attendance. | The handsome illustrated catalogue forming an essential accompaniment to the display was prepared for the com- | mittee In" charge in collaboration by Dr. Christian Brinton, its vice president, ! and M. Louis Pierard, member of the Belgian Parliament, who is in charge of the exhibit. Art Is Fundamentally Racial. Although the oldest work of art in the present display dates from only about two decades ago, vet it is pointed out in Dr. Brinton's foreword that for | the actual germination of modern Bel- | glan art it is necessary to glance much | further back, and that the art of this sturdy nation is a fundamentally racial expression. The general public, asserts | M. Pierard, 1s virtually unaware of the | lswni.shinl richness of the school of | painting and sculpture which is the | pride of cotemporary, lndependenl Belgium. “Taking into consideration its lctull popul:uon " states this representative | of the Belgian government, “there is| perhaps no country which, in less than a century, has produced so many artists | of outstanding merit as has Belgium. | There is no capital where one finds 50 | many art galleries as in Brussels, where | exhibitions succeed each other without ceasing from October to June.” The present display, which includes nearly 200 separate items, which will art centers of the United States, and | which has been described as a cross-sec- tion of the best in recent Belgian art, will receive a critical analysis in anl} Sunday's Star at the hands of ‘the art | editor of this newspaper. Po]me Wagon Crashes. | MEXICO CITY, October 25 (#).— Two prisoners and a policeman were killed and 14 prisoners and another policeman were hurt when a police van hit a light pole here yesterday. One of the dead prisoners was a woman. Gustave De Smet's conception of “Radio” from the exhibition of cotem- | porary Belgian paintings at the Corcoran Art Gallery. —Star Staft Photo. | SILVER FOXES PAYING ] $100,000 CHURCH DEBT‘ Propagation and Sale by Towa Priests Meeting Success After | Experience With Pigs. MILFORD, Towa (#).—Silver foxes are paying off a $100,000 mortgage on St. Joseph's Catholic Church here. A" mortgage-lifting pig_club, which Rev. E. C. Meyers organized a few years ago, paid $30,000 of the debt and was so suceessful that the priest i continuing | his live stock ventures. He bought a pair of silver tip toxe (Adam and Eve) of the Sir Charles Dalton strain in Canada three years | 2go and now has 22 animals. While l‘ few of the foxes are kept for breeding | stock, most of them are pelted. One | pelt brought $867 in New York last Winter. The pig_club_extended throughout | Northwest Towa. Each member raised a | baby pig to maturity and when it was sold gave the proceeds to the church. | Will Rogers Says: NEW YORK CITY, October 25.— 1 have been in Washington on inau- guration day, Claremore on Fourt] of July, Dearborn on Edison’s day. But to have been in New York on “wailing day,” when Wall Street, took that tail spin, you had to stand in line to get & window to jump out of, and speculators were selling space for bodies in the East River. If England is supposed by interna- tional treaty 1o protect the Wail- ing Wall, they will have to come here to do it. The wall runs from the Battery to the Bronx. You know there is nothing that hollers as quick and as loud as a gambler. ‘They even blame it on Hoover's fedora hat. Now they know what the farmer has been up against for eight years. Yours, WILL ROGERS. Our Fire “Storing 1TY; Por been “stori by the fact tomers has private indi are. N\ 418-420 Tent (Oppoite Gas Office) T .| THINGS Cut This Ad Out— And Inspect This Evening NEW HOMES 15th AND LAWRENCE STS. N.E. (Just North 40-Foot Front Parki to hou now paying. Store Your Furniture in | mere phrase with us ... it isa REAL- A modern fireproof warehouse . . . us send you our rates. pleasantly surprised how modest they Drive out R. I. Ave. N.E. Parlor cars or busses. proof Warehouse with care” is more than a over 28 years we have ng with care,” evidenced that not one of our cus- suffered a loss. vidual locked rooms. Let You'll be { Phone Metropolitan 1843 ) United States Storage Co. h Street N.W. Established 1901 i Allied Van Line Movers—Nation-Wide Long-Distance Moving ! R. L. Ave.) ng with Stone Wall to 15th St. and then north You can buy one of these houses for the rent you are Small monthly payments. Inspect 1452 Lawrence St. N.E. 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