Evening Star Newspaper, January 22, 1930, Page 6

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Sunday Excurisons $3.50 Philadelphia $3.25 Chester $3.00 Wilmington ..7:30 A M. RETURNING, leayes Philadelphia (Broad Street) 7:40 P.M. West iladelphia 7:45 Chester 8:10 P.M.. Wilmington P.M. Similar_excursions February March 9. 23: April 6, 20 Pennsylvania Railroad —yourself some ex- tra work this Spring and Summer by do- ing your “inside” painting N O W, “Acme” Quality Paints and Pratt & Lambert Varnishes and Enamels, in a wide. variety of col- ors, aw:zit your se- lection. UTLER-FLYNN P-A-L-N-T-S 607609 C St. Wholesale and Retail ' MEtro. 0151 2 Pleasant Relief From Constipatipn Shoulders droop und: ears. Young, yet beauty has heeks are sallow and drawn. through the ishes and with d energy. Dr. Edwards will help save you k hour. For 20 years n prescribed in pl eompound. Know olive color. 15¢, 30c druggists. See how makes teeth white—lustrous YOU areurged to try Listerine Tooth Paste, made by the makers of Listerine and in every way worthy of the Listerine name, We ask you particularly to note how swiftly it removes stubborn discolorations, tartar plaques and fermenting food particles. Note, too, after & few brushings how white, lustrous and brilliant your teeth become. Such results are due to modern cleansing and pol- ishing agents present in this unusual denti- frice. Many years of study preceded their selection. Their purpose is to cleanse speedily but with absolute safety. They do this be- cause they are harder than tartar and conse- Is | along the disputed boundary line be- | had “ordered an advance of airplanes BOLIVIAN FRONTIER WARFARE FEARED Paraguayan Representative Here Charges Attack Or- dered After 2 Deaths. | With one minor engagement and two | deaths already reported, serious fighting tween Bolivia and Paraguay was & pos- sibility today as each country accused the other of having initiated hostilities. Pablo M. Ynsfran, charge d'affaires for the Paraguay legation here, yester- day. informed Francis White, Assistant Secretary of State, that his government had advised him that Gen. Kuntz, com- manding officer of the Bolivien army, had ordered a general attack on the Paragua¥yan frontier. Airplane Advance E€harged. This was denied last night by the | Bolivian minister to this country, who issued a statement charging that on the sixteenth of this montb Paraguayan soldiers attacked a Bolivian outpost garrisoned by a small number of men. This attack, he said, was the immediate cause of the present trouble. The Paraguayan diplomat told Mr. White that the Bolivian commander into the disputed Chaco Boreal, Mon- day. He said the Bolivian frontier was filled with mobilized fighting units of the Bolivian army. The aera in controversy is one in which hostilities resulting in a score of deaths occurred in December, 1928. Bolivian Statement Issued. Edouardo Diez de Medina, Bolivian Linister, issued the following state- ment ‘Inasmuch as new stories coming from Paraguay insist on telling of a supposed attack by Bolivian troops in the Chaco, attributing this move to tactics of do- mestic policy, the Bolivian legation states that the attack made on the 16th of this month—just as well as that perpetrated in December, 1928—was ini- tiated by Paraguayan troops against an observation post of Fort Boquerno gar- risoned by 15 Bolivian conscripts. It will be as easy to prove this assertion as it has been plainly to establish the truth of the Bolivian accusation when the attack of Decemher, 1928, took place. | “It is easy to understand, on the other hand, why the Paraguayan government seems to choose military methods, since that with the design to distract popular | attention from its recent diplomatic failure, it has concealed from the Para- guayan people its obligation to rebuild previously Fort Vanguardia in order to | make available the abandonment of Fort Boqueron by Bolivia.” | —_— SEEKS $10,375 DAMAGES. Viola M. Kunze Files Suit Against Coal Company. | Viola M. Kunze, 5822 Fourth street, | has filed suit in the District Supreme | Court to recover $10,375 damages from the Nash & Turner Coal Corporation for alleged personal injuries and damage done to her automobile as the result of a collision with a coal truck at North | Capitol and L streets October 17. She charges negligence against the driver | of the truck and blames him for the | collision. Attorneys Jamieson & Ward appear for the plainti the preci toit. antiseptic Inciden: U.S. A, THE MUSIC MR. GABRILOWITSCH CONDUCTS. Ossip Gabrilowitsch, leader of the De- troit Symphony Orchestra and distin- guished pianist, led the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra in the third pro- gram given this season by that organi- zation at Constitution Hall yesterda: afternoon. An unusually large aud! ence, almost filling the auditorium, en joyed the program and applauded heart- ily after each selection. The audience also required Mr. Gabrilowitsch to take a number of bows both at the inter- mission after the symphony and at the conclusion of the program. Carl Maria von Weber’s always charm- ing overture to “Oberon” auspiciously Jpened the afternoon of music. The lightness and delicacy of this fairy opera music was beautifully presented, especially by the violins and futes. Brahms' “Fourth Symphony in E Minor” followed. It was admirably played. The unusual loveliness of the andante moderato—the second move- ment—lingered most gratefully. Thers even were those who wished that this movement might have been the closing one of the symphony, the better to re- member its exquisite interpretation. The sweeping lines of the singing phrases of this symphony were never emphasized more clearly. The brasses might have had a more rounded buoy- ancy of tone color, but the strings and reeds were always lovely. Hermann Hans Wetzler, born in Ger- many but brought to America as & child and trained in this country until his late teens, when he returned to Germany to study with Clara Schu- mann, Humperdinck and others, is usually considered as an American com- er. Yesterday his symphonic dance n_Basque style, from an opera called “The Basque Venus,” was presented. Folk music of the Basque province of Spain inspired this composition, al- though a notation in the program states that, with the exception of the melody n the Ezpatadantza, which is sym- phonically developed, no other original Basque themes have been employed. ‘There s kaleidoscopic color to this music, both melodically and rhyth- mically. There also is & fairly intri- cate, fascination pattern of orchestral development of themes that cannot be completely caught and analyzed at a first hearing. The auditor does recog- nize, however, that this is lovely music to listen to and the general enthusiasm indicated that this composition would be_welcomé on another program, Franz Liszt's symphonic poem, No, 3, “Les Preludes,” surely has never been given more brilliant rendition here than yesterday as the closing number. Mr. Gabrilowitsch_chose to _emphasize the At the first sign of sore throat, think of Tonsiline and use it promptly. It is designed and recommended only for sore throat. Tonsiline is safe and dependable for young and old. Successfully used for over 85 years. You can depend upen it for quick relief and benefit. At all druggists, 85c and 60c. Hospital size, $1.00. TONSILINE The National Sore Throat Remedy” quently remove it. But they are softer than ous enamel, and so are harmlesy Listerine Tooth Paste not only gives you ideal cleansing but definitely improves the hygiene of the mouth, for it also contains the essential dils of Listerine with their marked potency to inhibit the growth of dangerous.bacteria in the mouth, tally, at 25¢ Listerine Tooth Paste- saves about $3 per year per person when com. pared with dentifrices costing §of or more, Lambert Pharmacal Company, St. Louis, Mo., LISTERINE TOOTH PASTE EVENING STAR, 3 dl"llnlfie values and the tremendous| musical stature of this work at a tempo that brought a real sonority of tri- umphant power to the finale, as it is meant to possess. H. P. THE RUBINSTEIN CLUB PROGRAM. ‘The long-established woman’s choral organization of Washington, the Rubin- stein Club, made its initial appearance of the current season at the Willard Hotel last night. Claude Robeson, conductor, led the club. The guest soloist was George Knisely of New York. A capacity audience received the opening number, Claassen's ar- rangement of Rubinstein's “Yearning,” with enthusiastic applause. Immediately following this number Mr. Knisely made his first appearance. This was the baritone's debut in Wash- ington, and he won his audience com- pletely. He came as substitute for the tenor, Lawrence Strauss, who is ill. It was not in his first group that Mr. Knisely showed his rich voice and ef- fective personality to most advantage. He sang this group of art songs by Caldara, Legrenzi, Richard Strauss and Lenormand well, showing artistry and training. It was in the big aria of Verdi's opera, “The Masked Ball,” that he won 80 much applause that an en- core was demanded. He gave a song of the life of a sailor, with a short pre- liminary explanation, as his encore. In his last group the baritone sang songs by American composers—*“Sacrament,"” McDermid; “An Old Song Resung.” Charles Griffes; “I Am Like a Rem- nant of a Cloud,” Carpenter, and “Song of the Open,” by La Forge. The great variety of tone color and expressive values of the last-mentioned song af- forded the singer opportunity to show his skill and real love of singing to best advantage. Mr. Knisely won his audience to increasing enthusiasm as the evening progressed. The club showed concentrated and thorough preparation. All their se- lections were well received by the audi- ence. “Dawn's Awakening,” “In Autumn” and “Anitra’s Dance,” all highly effective arrangements of the music of Grieg's “Peer Gynt” suite, for chorus, were especially well presented. Adele Robinson Bush, accompanist, gave a fine performance in her essen- tial role. Mrs, Howard Blandy was sympathetic in her playing at the sec- ond plano, The average level of retail prices of necessities, including food, rent, cloth- ing, light and fuel, in England is ap- ‘;')roxml:nnlt:ly 67 per cent above that of u Special This Week NEW MEMBERS ADMITTED. Seven Added to Merchants and Manufacturers Rolls. Seven nev. members have been ad- mitted to the Merchants and Manufac- turers’ Association, it was announced today by Edward D. Shaw, executive secretary. They are George M. Mc- Culloch, the Kay Coal Co. Wertlieb Bros.,, Brookland Coal Co., Samuel S. glell‘::. R. J. Moore Coal Co. and E. J. Laundry Plant Kills Two. DALLAS, Tex., January 22 (#).—Two men were killed and a third was injured critically Sunday in_a boller explosion in the Blue Ribbon Laundry. J. B. Gilliland and Roy C. Gilliland were killed. Cobb Vanway, 45, suffered broken legs and other injuries when a gvul;:lon of the boller house wall fell on WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1930. ALL-NIGHT FIRE SYSTEM TO START ON MONDAY Special Dispatch to The Star. HYATTSVILLE, Md, January 22.— It is hoped that the new system under which two members of the Hyattsville Volunteer Fire Department will spend each night at the fire house to be ready for prompt service may be started next Monday. Fallure of beds to arrive has delayed start of the system. Meanwhile a driver is assigned to duty éach night, and while he is not required to be at the fire house all night, he is not permitted to leave town. The drivers are serving in this order: Chief Noble F. Rushe, J. Wells Fainter, Wilcoxen, Frank Elmo and C. 0. Johnson. Chief Rushe is in receipt of a letter from former Councilman I. K. Atherton congratulating the department upon its fine record during the past year. Buy Your Printing at Home ighted pal of other than the is beyond human conjecture. Thi sized when the pi ment is doubly emph: merchants who send their print. one in which they conduct bu error in business judg- quasi-public enterprises, universities or similar institutions, There can be no excuse in the latter case, as the money expended for work of this character is drava tions from members of the community. that a ing in cost enters the would be so slight that the plea is in .~ Reverse the situation. adjacent centers, what would ne: the one complained of. Spendin of the main factors in the indus and all its residents. S This indicates your printing was done in Washington. Soles or omposition Half Soles and Goodyear O’Sullivan or Monarch Rubber Heels Lea(lner Half SHOE REPAIR 403 11th St. N.W. Letyour tooth paste buy you a good tie Buy yourself & new tie with " what you save by using Lis- terine Tooth Paste instead of dentifrices in the §of class, The saving averages about $3 per year.per person, assum- ing you use a tube a month. quickly this modern dentifrice 1f workers it expedient to purchase supplies, clothing and other necessities from public funds or contribu- A plea might be made , but that saving, if any, elf evidence of the error. matt & community found be the effect on the local busi- community? Yet this course would seem just as logical § money earned at home is o trial prosperity of a community This space paid for by Columbia Typographical Union No. 101 REV. WILLIAMS SPEAKS. Brooklyn Pastor Will Talk at St. Alban’s Parish Church. “How to Read the Bible” will be the subject of an_address tonight at 8 o'clock by the Rev. G. M. Willlams of St. Paul's Church, Brooklyn, in St. Al- ban's Parish Church. His talk will be the second of a series being delivered on Wednesday nights by outstanding preachers of the iscopal Church while they are in Washington directin, courses at the:College of Preachers, hour, are being held ot St. Alban's Churah an ‘of Preachers. On next Wednesday night Rev. John 'Rathbone Oliver. of iti- more, widely known author, psycholo- gist -n% psychiatrist, will speak on “How to Meet Temptation." On his completion of 40 yi ice with the Y. M. C. A. in Britain, and his retirement after 17 years as secretary, Sir Arthur Yapp was sented a check for $2,500. Our Telephone . Numbers Are Black & White Cabs National 0051 and Yellow Cabs Metropolitan 1212 The telephone company will not connect you if you call our old nume bers—so familiarize yourself with the above new numbers—the only changes are the exchange names. FRANK H. SIMONDS famed internationalist on The STAR’S Group of 27 eat writers at gt 27 The London Naval Conference FRANK H. SIMONDS from “Who’s Who” Began, 1901, as re- porter, The Tril New York, and tinued with Washington bur 1903, and as Albany cor- respondent, 1904-05 bany correspond New York Even Post, 1906-08; editorial writer, The Sun, 13; editor The Evening Sun, 1913-14; associate same at In order that every reader of THE STAR ™ may fully understand and keep posted on the great London Naval Disarmament Con- ference, bune, con- eau, AL London ent, ing 1908- him to editor The Tribune, March, 1915-December, 1918; foreign edi Review of Revi September, 1914; tor, iews, con- tributor to syndicate of 50 ‘American and eign newspapers 1918. Shall for- since Author: “They Not Pass—Ver- dun,” 1916 ; History of the World War, § volumes. GREAT NEWSPAPER OF THE STAR ‘has 27 famed writers at this conference to write the history of this great event for you. In the group writing for THE- STAR in is Frank H. Simonds, whose: per- sonal acquaintance with men of promi- nence in both hemispheres, his wide knowl- edge of world affairs and his vision permit write with authority and under- standing for his fellow Washingtonians in THE STAR. ‘ he Star Every Day and Every Sunday THE NATION’S CAPITAL [4 v

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