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e | at once is the BEST WAY Radio set builde! advise a complete change of tubes at least once a year. For all fine radio sets RCA Radiotrons throughout are rec- ommended. Al Radiotron| THE HEART OF YOUR RAD(O SET FOR CONSTIPATION Poisonous waste stagnates in the bowels and causes most of our ills. If you feel languid, headachy, half sick, take Dr. Tutt’s Pills for quick, sure | relief. uTt:)pcoats or Tonsilitis" | Red Cross, JORNSON URGES GANDHTS POLEY Speaker at Howard U. Says Religion Should Be Put Into Economic Questions. The policy of Mahatma Gandhi in injecting religion into economic and political questions was advocated for adoption by the American people in an address by Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, who spoke at Howard University yes- terday. ‘True religion demands “brotherly love” of the masses and their leaders and of all races, Dr. Johnson declared. It is the natural tendency of educated pereons to disassociate themselves with the masses and to forget their con- tributions to society, he said. ‘The Negro race should endeavor to cast off this system and work together for the stabilization of the Negroes' econemic standing. Failure of men of power to give ample thought to the future of the Negro, Dr. Johnson said, is one of the fundamental reasons for his lack of economic standing. Christianity weakeners itself by its failure to treat all men equally, Dr. Johnson declared. Schools of the North educate colored and white side by side, vet in churches are found only men of one race, it was contended. 1 Ghandi is interested in the masses, Dr. Johnson said, and urges the multi- tude to suffer until the time when there tempt to project their interests to the front by attacks on their leaders. The disassociation of classes weakens them, the doctor said. “At times I have wished that edu- | cated men might don overalls as a| move to show the masses that there is no_discrimination,” he advised. y Dr. Johnson is planning to depart for Port-au-Prince to assist in reorganizing the educational program of the Haitian | Republic. HOOVER TO ACCEPT BUILDING FOR NATION Red Cross Structure Will Be Dedi- | cated ot Services Here March 19. President Hoover on March 19 will | | accept on behalf of the Nation the new white marble building of the American Red Cross, erected to commemorate the “sacrifices and services of American | women in the World War.” The dedica- | tory program will be broadcast over a nefwork of the Columbia Broadcasting | System. Brief talks by Gen. Pershing, who will preside at the service, and Senator Simeon D. Fess of Ohio also will be | heard during the broadcast period, from 4 to 4:30 pm. The Marine Band will furnish music. ‘The corner stone of the bullding was laid May 31, 1928, by President Coolidge, {at an impressive ceremony presided over by the late Chief Justice Taft. Mr. Coolidge then also was president of the a position now held by President Hoover. Congress appropriated $200,000 for the building, the remainder being made up by donors in all parts of the Nation. It is located on E street, adjoining the Red Cross memorial edifice for the heroic women of the Civil War. The building will house the District of Col- umbia chapter of the organization, and serve as a model Red Cross chapter house for the country. It will contain | exhibits of the educational and humani- tarian work in which the Red Cross is engaged. MANY LIVES ENDANGERED Fear Cliffs Will Topple, Due to Heavy Rainfall. By the Associated Press. PUNCHAL, Madeira, March 10.— Fearing that the sodden cliffs encircling Madeira may topple over as a result of the heavy rainfall during the past 48 hours, all residents near the foot of the precipice have been evacuated. ‘The storm which broke over the island Priday night continued unabated yes- terday, causing much suffering from exposure and want among the poorer classes. ‘The gale blew with such vio- lence that all sea craft were compelled to leave the beaches for sheltered spots. One hundred and eighty tourists from | will be no caste system rather than at- } | 1 frivolous,” | painter or a pirate or an engine driver, BY STORM IN MADEIRA| Residents Near Foot of Precipices | NG _STAR, WASHINGTON, GEORGE BERNARD SHAW TELLS OF HIS NINE YEARS OF FAILURE Dramatist - Novelist Genius Had Five Novels Turned- Down. Creates Fiction Characters| Generation Before They Appear in Life. BY J. L. HODSON. i clusively for The Star, the London Daily News. LONDON, March 10 (NANA)— | George Bernard Shaw, whose genius as | playwright and novelist is recognized | today the world over, took nine years to get on his feet and find a medium in which he afterward made his fame and fortune. “I had nine years of complete fail- ure,” he said to me at the beginning of my interview with him, | It may be that it seemed more than nine years to him, because during our conversation Mr. Shaw told me he is | now 76 years old, but the reference books make him, only 73. "This year—50 years after it was writ- ten—one of his first novels, “Imma- turity,” will be published. | Editing Own Collection. | Mr. Shaw says he is not writing a new play, although he feels he ought to be. He is busy doing what he calls “office boy'’s Work”—preparing a col- | lected edition of his works. | “But,” he adds, “I am the only office | boy who can do it.” I saw him at his country house at Ayot. St. Lawrence. “Why didn't you ring me up?” he asked, as he slipped down comfortably | into a chair, his steel-rimmed eye- s.ast0s dangling on his brown Norfolk | twee U jacket, | Hir moustache and beard—white now —are 9 little thinner than I had ex- pectec nd his Irish brogue not so pro- nounced as the telephone makes it seem. “I thought you might say I was belng | I replied. | “You probably are,” he interrupted, | gayly. | “And that if T came it wouldn't be | North the | you.” ‘That amused him. His gray eyes twinkled under his shaggy brows. asked him about the turning point in | his career.” “Turning point?” he said quizzically. “I've gone straight on.” “When you were a_boy, did you set | out to be a writer? Did you know you were going to be & dramatist?” “Good heavens, no! You don’t taste water in your mouth. I wanted to be a I wrote because it was the only thing I could do. “But to begin with,” he went on, with a smile, “T had nine years of complete | failure. I wrote five novels no publisher would look at. George Meredith was reading for Chapman & Hall at that time and was among those who reject- ed my novels.” had written | | “I had forgotten you novels,” I said. “Of course,” he returned, whimsically, | “Nobody knows anything about me.” | The novels, he said, were written from | 1879 to 1883. | “I worked, doing so much a day, like Trollope,” he continued at length. “Aft- | er a time some of my novels got into | magazines—when the editors wanted something to fill up space. But there is this to be sald-for my novels—in doing | them I taught myself to write. Novels Pirated in America. “The novels were pirated in America. Several of them have been published since, but one of them, ‘Immaturity,’ will go straight from manuscript this “UGLY SKIN | MADE ME AN OUTCAST” | but almost overnight it wu‘ a different story | “Skin eruptions and blackheads | | repel others. Squeezing only made my skin sore and blotchy. I had |given up hope of relief when a | nurse told me to get Rowles Mentho | | Sulphur. She explained how its | | Phenol removes infection as its Sul- phur clears the skin and the Men- thol soothes and heals the sore, | raw tissue. Overnight I looked | | better, And in a few days my skin was clear.” | \ With amazing ease, Rowles Men- tho Sulphur safely clears the skin. 1t is also good for dry skin, itching | torture and eczema. Insist on| the liner Laurentic were unable to get night ashore, BREATHE VAPEX ANY- WHERE—ANY TIME—FOR INSTANT RELIEF FROM COLDS e A No oruer TrEATMENT for colds KEEP YOUR DOG CLEAN INSIDE AND OUT GLOVER’S Lasative Pills combat constipa« | tion and throw off poisons. 65c. GLOVER'S Kennel & Flea Soap kills fieas (anl b TiNE e voar and skin in finecon- tion. 25¢ T ar rew peta o1, et shop: deporting goods stores ot Saph i Peceipy OF price 119 Fifth Avenue, New Yprk, U GLOVER'S DOG MEDICINES /GOODBYE PILES— | DON'T COME BACK Yes! You can say goodbye to itch- ing, bleeding, tormenting piles in a few days when you put your faith in Unguentine Cones — doctors have proven this for over thirty years. The pain—the agony—the mad- dening itching go quickly for now |l you are dealing with a real, sooth- ing, healing suppository made by the makers of famous Unguentine and you can expect them to do all | that is claimed for them. But why elaborate—your druggist | knows there is nothing on earth that | conquers piles in such a blissful and | thorough manner as Unguentine inexpensive too—g || box for 75 cents. The Norwich Phar- | macal Co., Norwich, N. Y.—Adver- tisement. is so delightfully refreshing as Va- pex. Certainly, none is swifter or more convenient. Just a drop on your handkerchief brings instant | relief—all-day-long relief. Just a drop at each end of your pillow fights your cold while you sleep. With a few deep breaths your head clears, sniffling stops, all aboard the vessel and spent another| Rowles Mentho Sulphur for best re- | suits. All druggists—Advertisement. | As delightful to use as perfume ... yet it kills the germs of common colds so easy to get rid of me” I added. with i | “Besides, I wanted to set my eyes on Ilasked him if he plans out the play D. C, MONDAY, interesting and__ entertaining to the man making it, but it is infernally. dull to everybody else. “When I began ‘St. Joan' I knew roughly, what form it would take; and when I Started ‘The Doctor's Dilemma” I knew I should say something amus- ing about stimulating the germs. In {“The Applée Cart’ I made a false start. I had intended having two opposing | parties—Quakers and Ritualists—but I found I could use only the king and the_cabinet. | "“But I decided to leave the false | start in—the opening conversation be- tween the two secretaries. It is a sort | of Mozart overture to the play. But I agree with those who think the play | would lose nothing vital if it were left out. | " ““¥ou must allow a play to grow.” he | continued, “like a flower. Then it be- comes alive, After it has grown in that way, the critics sometimes declare the construction is perfect. But it is | perfect because of its growth and its unfolding.” “Have you decided on a subject for a new play?” I asked. | “No, can you firid me one?” | 1 suggested he might write a war play. GEORGE BERNARD SHAW. year into the collected edition of my | Works that I am so busy preparing now. “In those novels you will find the first bolsheviks. Lenin is in one of them— “The Unsocial Socialist,’ although, of course, Lenin hadn’t been heard of then. I don't know whether he was born -yet. People usually are born 20 years after I create them in fiction.” . I wondered if there had been a turn- ing point in Mr. Shaw's character as there had been in his career of turning from novels to plays, for the Bernard Shaw who was talking to me was genial, courteous and mellow—different from the fire-eating revolutionary most peo- ple have imagined him to be, He next spoke of the collected edi- tion of his works. It would be so enormous, he said, if he used all his material, that it would be like the col- lected works of Voltaire in that it would fill three shelves. “I shall have to discard some is ephemeral, any way,” he added. difficulty of mine is that I have always | been 20 years ahead of my time and some of ‘the things I wrote are just becoming up-to-date. You _ would never believe now, for example, the | storm that ‘Widowers' Houses' raised when, people first became acquainted it] " | Does Not Plan Plays. We talked of playwriting and I CCUMULATE $100 in this bank at 3% then take out a Time Certificate paying %. 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Distributed by E. Fougera & Co., Inc,, New York, A drop on your handkerchief *Reg. U. 8. Pat. OF. Lv. Chicago . . . . . Ar.St.Paul . . ¢ o & Ar. Minneapolis . . . 10:15 pm 8:05 am 8:40 am Now the ‘“North Western” offers you a new train from Chicago to St. Paul-Minneapolis. It provides a convenient departure hour from Chicago and faster time over the shortest route. Equipment includes novel cafe limou- sine observation car;sleeping cars with roller bearings; coaches. Radio. In addition to THE VICTORY the “North Western” fleet to the Twin Cities includes these fast trains with convenient departures: NORTH WESTERN LIMITED Finest Train in the World Lv.Chicago « « «. ¢ o « + 6:30pm Ar.St.Paul . . . ¢ o o o T7:00am Ar.Minneapolis. « « + « . 7:35am THE VIKING NORTH AMERICAN Popular Morning Train Late Evening Departure Lv.Chicago . 11:20pm Lv.Chicago . 10:30am ,7-GMEES - Jo0Pm Ar.St. Paul . 9:00 pm Ar.Minneapolis 10:25 am Ar. Minneapolis 9:35pm Ar.Duluth . 1:15pm Convenient connections with all trains from the East eservations and complete information Agent, C&N W Ry. n Trust Bidg. 15th and Chestnut Ste. Philadelphia, Pa. 1004-P CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN The Best of Everything in the Best of the West RAILWAY MARCH 10, 1930. “You can say all there is to be uld‘ are making with the technique. One about the war,” he said, “in 10 minutes. | problem is that & movement that is “Journey’s End’ gives you the monotony and the funk; “The Silver Tassie” is a magnificent play—and that is all you are likely to get. The war was just a plece of stupid blundering." sal ad heard of his going to see a talking flm, “Disraeli,” the other day. Says “Disraeli Good Film, “Yes,” he replied, “it is a good Arliss is an accomplished actar. Bor g0 chiefly to see what progress they satisfactory on the stage becomes a grotesque caricature on the screen.” Mr, Shaw came out bare-headed to direct my motor car driver how to re- turn to the city and then, having a second thought, said: “I'll get you the printed Instructions.” He hurried back up the drive to the house, with me at his heels, and pro- duced a pale green sheet of paper on which were printed some 350 words on how to drive from London or St. Albans A | STORES ¢ H‘ la to his house. They concluded with these B Mo bt e o colisr -ndfl:m- breeches, fih‘:‘ stock~ Lenten Foods of Quality ! Are to be ha.d at your nearest 4500 Store at amazingly modest prices. The ever-increasing popularity of the friendly 4500 Stores is conclusive proof ., that 45C0 Methods of Merchandising are approved by those who recognize QUALITY AT A SAVING! Gold Seal Macaroni Spaghetti FancyRedSalmon....:.............““25c Fat White Mackerel 1% % 3 for 25¢; 15¢ size D for 95¢ 45C0 Tomato Puree......... 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