Evening Star Newspaper, January 30, 1930, Page 32

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[Thirteen Thrilling Real Life! | Stories in February Issue L) $3.50 Philadelphia | $3.25 Chester $3.00 Wilmington +» AND RETURN Sundays, February 9, 23 SPECIAL TRAIN aves Washington...... 7:30 A M. TURNING. T8 ¢4 Bhiladeiphls (Broad Street) 7:40 P.M., est. Philadelphia 7:48 P.M., Chester 8:10 P.M., Wilmington 3:32 P.M. ®imilar exeursions March 9, 23; April 6, 20 ALL STEEL EQUIPMENT Pennsylvania Railroad Real Estate Loans (D. C. Property Only) 6% I No Commission Charged | You can take 12 years to I} pay off your loan without the expense of renewing. $1000 for $10 per month, including interest and principal. Larger I or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Perpetual Building Association Established 1881 Largest in Washington Assets over $20,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. EOWARD & BALTE Secrets Excursions 'Shameful Pimples | |Made Others Turn Away| « « « but almost overnight | they turned to admire “Pimples, blackheads and u‘lyl | blotches nearly drove me mad. | Balms, liquids and pastes—nothing | helped. ,Then a friend told me about | Rowles Mentho Sulphur—how _its| | Phenol ingredient cleared up infec- | tion—how its Sulphur cleansed the clogged pores—how its Menthol soothed and healed sore, raw tissue. I applied this ointment at night.| The next day I looked better. In a Successfully used for - past65 years. Pleasant, soothing and healing. Contains no opiates. 35c and 60c sizes, QUICK RELIEF KEEPS YOU FIT! Just a well-balanced food to keep you fine and fit—carbohydrates for heat and energy, proteins for good muscle, mineral salts for bones and teeth— and all so easily digested. Eat Shred- ded Wheat with plenty of milk—hot milk is best in Winter as it brings out the delicious flavor of the crisp baked wheat—and supplies the warmth the body needs. Delicious for any meal. It's ready-cooked, ready-to-eat. SHREDDED | cept for its egglike shape and irregular | the last century, Since then it has | ARPORT PLARNED ON AZORES ISLAND $5,000,000 Modern Station| Under Construction by Order of Portuguese Government. ‘The first modern air service station on the busiest Europe-America air line is in process of construction on Terceira Island of the Azores. The Portuguese government has issued warrants for $5,000,000 to build the airport. i “Terceira, situated off the usual path of tourist travel, has been unspoiled by modern encroachments,” says a bulletin from the National Geographic Society. “From the air the island presents a panorama of an agricultural area. Ex- rim, its 175 square miles resemble a checkerboard with squares of various hues of green and brown. These squares are the well kept orange and lemon groves, vineyards, grain fields, vegetable gardens and cattle pastures which, with the splendid fisheries off the coast, kecp the Terceirans in food and spending money. Travelers Undergo Hardship. “The traveler must mingle with the natives on the streets of villages and towns that dot the island and bounce with them over gracefully winding roads in springless oxcarts to get the genuine ‘atmosphere’ of Terceira. “Angra, the éapital of Terceira, and largest city on the island, was the capi- tal of the Azores until the early part of seen few changes. From Angra Bay, ! Angra presents a splash of color—clus- ters of white houses with emerald green, vermillion and blue tile roofs, nestling snugly at the base of massive gray ((.)trtru;;;:‘lllxlhlt‘ in the heyday of the city's cal power, made the capital safe from attack. . Oxcart Is National Vehicle. fouch to a traveler's first ‘close-up’ of Terceira. On the main street, however, 8 dosen 1930 models of American auto- mobiles in pastel shades would not dis- tract his attention from the native fruit vender, whose bewhiskered, suntanned face, under a colorful stocking cap, has 1 50 long and continuously that smile wrinkles deeply mark his counte- nance. The peddler leads a drowsy don- key, whose slow movements seem to protest st & burden of baskets of :nnnl, emons, pomegranates and ‘ba- ““Goat carts and sheep carts that an; American boy would like to own wmi in and out of Angra traffic. The fellows draw riders several times their size and weight, and loads of grain and other produce tax the strength of their legs. “One would gather from the number of oxcarts seen on Terceira that this is the ‘national vehicle’ of the island. With bodies like huge woven-reed wash baskets set between two thick crude wheels, they are seen on all the island highways. In wine-| Grandmother’s Dresses in Style. “Some of the main streets of Ter- ceira villages are paved with pumice blocks and flanked with neat gutters. Beyond the gutters are smooth pave- ments of mosaics. Now and then the black and white blocks spell a name umm;:“ to the islanders or form a Lif X “After a glance at those who tread no influence on native styles. “A flsfl?&r with upthrust head P tel hurhf:hnd; at her grand- » or perhaps her great-grand- mother, owned her voluml‘nrn'ua 'ltnkh- frock and bright-colored scarf that covers her dark hair. The black nunlike capote and capello (cloak snd hood) also are commonly seen on .the island. “Makers of men's shoes are not in demand on the island, for the wrinkled frult venders, the venders of sweet- the the longshoremen meats, draymen, and, in fact, nearly all the peasant men —even those bound for the festival—do not wear shoes.” . Fourteen Are Saved Off Ship. BIARPITZ, France, January 30 (#). —Fourteen members of the crew of the British steamer Knebworth, marooned in the fore hi | WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT THE SHREDDED“WHEAT COMPANY THE EVENING Junk Is Admission Price to Concert: By Russian Cellist By the Associated Pres MOSCOW, January 30.—A bundle of junk will be the ad- mittance price to & special con- cert tonight by Anna Luboshitz, a well known cellist, who has played before American audiences. The government has just launch- ed a Nation-wide campaign to collect such waste material as rags, paper, bottles, tin cans or old rubbers, so that it may be converted into useful articles for export, thus helping to fill the coffers of the Soviet union with foreign currency. Special bronze medals bearing the by the Paris mint, are being sold at the equivalent of 50 cents and $1.10, ac- cording to size. BEWARE THE STAR, WASHINGTON, U. S. TO REASSEMBLE FORTUNE OF BARNETT Federal Court Holds That Indian’s Transfer of Wealth Was Illegal. By the Associated Press. TOPEKA, Kans, January 30.—The Federal Government yesterday was faced with the task of reassembling the scat- tered fortune of Jackson Barnett, in- competent Oklahoma Creek Indian, who eight years ago gave \with & thumb- print signature more than $1,000,000 in | Liberty bonds to charitable institutions | head of the late M. Clemenceau, issued | and his white wife. ‘The order which will effect return of the fortune to the Government came yesterday in a decision handed down COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON Coughs from colds may lead to se- rious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsiol emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and in- hibits germ growth. Of all known drugs creosote is rec- ognized by high medical authorities #s one of the greatest healing agencies for coughs from colds and bronchial irritations. Creomulsion contains, is addition to creosote, other _healing elements which soothe and heal the inflamed membranes and stop the ir- ritation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisface tory in the treatment of coughs from colds, bronchitis and minor forms of bronchial irritations, and s excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if not re- lieved after taking according to direce tions. Ask your druggist. CREOMULSION FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON The 1930 BREM D. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1930. by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the tenth district, holding that transfer of the huge sum to other parties was illegal, as it was held in trust by the Government as guardian of Barnett. ‘The ruling came in a suit brought by the Government against Marshall L. Mott, Washington lawyer, seeking ney's fees for handling phases of the transfer. Mrs. Barnett was given $550,000, of which she paid $150,004 and Harold McGugin, attorney for Mrs, Barnett. The other half of the Indian's fortune $550,000, was given to the Baptist Home Mission Soclety of New York. The Fed- eral District Court of New York sub- sequently ordered the society to return that amount to the Government. Gerber Specially Prepared, Strained and Ready-to-Serve JNO. R. ERGOOD & CO Phone: N return of $15,000 paid him as l".cbl STRAINED VEGETABLES es for marlket following the scceptance new arrangement will mean to many. tne' total l-mnun::lo‘.h;uld by hese companies as duties, tax sales in American man mufm insurance mdh?fi s o‘-rmnym i nearly Gi'mm ht t nearly $17,000,000. The total invest- Porel ments of the several companies reach | (COPYFIEht 1930, by, the O.D.N. - (ONTRUSTCOMP, OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA GERMANY'S AUTO TARIFF THREATENS AMERICANS U. 8. Representatives Compile Data to Prove Effects Against Berlin’s Own Interests. BY EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER. { BERLIN, ‘Germany, January 30 (C.D.N.)~American automobile repre- | sentatives in Germany, whose commer- clial existence is being threatened by the new German scheme of raising the tariff on automobiles snd accessories and limiting import at lower duty, have prepared a statement showing just what their withdrawal from the Ge ozul'}rn n-m.:mm. hn¥ ~ | here short o the total investment of Lasting Protection The care you take to provide for your fam- ily now, and safeguard it as far as may be within your power against want or other misfortune, can be perpetuated_ by means of a trusteeship with the Union Trust Company. Under a Life Insurance Trust, or as Ex- ecutor or Trustee under Will, this institu- tion will permanently protect your depen- dents in the way that you desire. TESTED AND APPROVED normal foadings) If your grocer can’t supply you, phone us for the name of ¢ nearest grocerwhocan, SOUTHWEST CORNER FIFTEENTH AND H STREETS NORTHWEST baby ., Washington Represemtative | ational 3256 “Something To Boast About!” R-TULLY Micro-Balanced Chassis 9-Tube Radio @ LANSBURGH & B 7th, 8th and E Sts.—FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860—National 9800 This Sale of Bremer-Tully Radios Exclusi-ely at With 4 @ Screen-Grid Tubes Model S-81; Formerly $162.50 '$ 50 The latest development of radio’s most painstaking engineers offered the Washington public exclusively at Lansburgh & Bro. at a saving nearly as great as the price you pay. A reduction brgpght about by the recent sales of obsolete and discontinued radios. The new 1930 Bremer-Tully operates direct from your light- ing socket; is powered by 4 RCA SCREEN GRID TUBES in addition to S others. Complete with big. 10-inch dynamic speaker which produces tones crystal clear, without the slightest ghost of a hum. Every set with the guarantee of satisfaction you KNOW you will get at Lansburgh & Bro. Beautiful Cabinet De luxe open console S-81 of beauti- fully glined walnut veneer, 48 inches high, 25 inches wide. Furniture craftsmanship of a quality worthy of housing the 1930 Bremer- Tully with antique finish escutcheon plate and walnut tuning knobs. Complete Mechanical Precision *Chassis parts micrometer gauged to 005 inch by radio’s most painstaking engineers. New thrills, new discoveries through the distance-getting ability, the hair's- breadth station separation of the 1930 Bremer-Tully. The full possibilities of screen grid reception realized for the first time— in the power of four screen grid tubes. The tone richness of a fine old violin through the big 10-inch Bremer-Tully Dynamic Speaker, specially wound with over four miles of the finest cop- per wire. Rectifier and voltage regulator. Push- pull audio using two latest type “245” tubes. Power switch for increased volume on long-distance stations. $10DOWN —is all that is needed. . The remainder to be paid in twelve monthly installments plus a small carrying ch Radio Salon—Fourth Floor RO@®

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