Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1930, Page 34

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c—4 MRS. BORAH SAILS AFTER VISA MIX-UP Senator Will Be Candidate for Re-Election, Wife Says Before French Trip. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 10.—It was almost time for the liner Mauretania to sail sterday when a passenger discovered passport had no French visa. Naturally all tourists can't be ex- pected to know all about these foreign requirements. But there was an_emer- gency passport, secured for her by the chairman of the Senate foreign rela- tlons committee, Senator William E. Borah, himself, and she was Mrs. Borah. Cunard Line officials hastened to the French passport office nearby and after some delay obtained an ordinary visa. Accompanying Mrs. Boarah was Mrs. Jerome Day, whose husband is an offi- cial of the Hercules silver mine in Tdaho. They expect to spend the Spring in Southern Francc and England. Asked if Senator Borah was as out- en at home as in the Senate, Mrs. h laughec and said: “Oh, no! He is very quiet. He is tired out and told me before I took a train for New York that 10 minutes after Congress adjourns he is going back to Boise and get some rest. The trouble with Mr. Borah is that he works too hard. 8he added that Senator Broah is standing for re-election in November. FRANCE TO INCREASE DUTY ON U. S. AUTOS| American Dealers Learn Authori-| ties Will Change Valuation Methods for Time. By the Associated Press. ; PARIS, April 10.—American automo- bile dealers in France today said they had learned the French customs au- thorities had decided, pending passage of the new tariff, to change the manner of valuation of American cars for duty in such a way as to increase the amount payable thereon from 25 to 60 per cent. y this measure also the existing 45 cent ad valorem duty will be calcu- ated on the selling price in France in- stead of as heretofore on the produc- tion price in America. The supposed object of the surprise measure is to prevent dealers from im- porting large stocks of cars before the new tariff becomes effective. It was recalled that at the time of the passage of the McKenna duties in | England the dealers, forewarned, got in stock enough to last the rest of the year | before the tariff became effective. NEWLYWEDS MUST KISS | Irish Pastor Makes Bridal Pairs Seal Pact. BELFAST (#).—Rev. John McCaffrey, 8 Belfast Methodist minister, -insists that all bridal couples in his church kiss immediately after the ceremony. “T think it is a very good and proper way to start married life,” Mr. McCaf- frey explained. “I may add that musles carry out my behest cheerfully and I have never known a refusal.” Four thousand steel emfloyg at Sa- gunto, Spain, recently went on strike. THE MODERN WAY to clean Aluminum and all otheor Pots and Pans 4 Pat. Jan. 15, 1913— Rog. U. 8. Pat. OF. ABE MARTIN SAYS Scarface Al Capone must be an athiest. He says he don't know where he'll go from Chicago. Lemmiz Peters went to work in the Little Gem restaurant today an’ll learn the drug business from the ground up. (Copyright. 1930.) DR. KERNAHAN SPEAKS ON “CHRIST THE FRIEND” Holds People Must Turn to Christ as Representing Enduring and Definable Reality. “While so many indispensable thin, |in life remain incomprehensible w | must turn to Christ as representing the one enduring and definable reality,” Dr. | A. Earl Kernahan declared yesterday, speaking in the noonday Lenten service: at the First Congregational Chul His subject was “Christ the Friend.” In an existence whose whole struc: ture, constantly attacked by indefinable forces, is gradually disintegrating be- fore our eyes, Dr. Kernahan pointed out, man’s faith in immortality must be fortified by some object of proven per-| manence. This, Dr. Kernahan said, is| best embodied in the personality and example of Christ, realities unassailable | by time or opinion. new lowelr I15° | mdl;abdyylga%wyra UNDERWOOD .‘ Deviled Ham \ \things loo AX§ MAGIC SCOURING PADS No extra soap to bother with? BIG VALUE for HCUSEWIVES! B = SEREAR & b SWEETHEAR - AT YOUR GROCER full size 107 package of STEEL wWoolL with your purchase of ckages of famous TOILET SOAP A double-value combination for less than the regular price of Swetfihe:‘tl Soap “’::ons. Act L b"g:‘:- uy 4 cakes of!;"m p for 25¢ and the full size 10¢ wcknge of Blue Streak Steel loolisyours FREE. DoitNOW! MANHATTAN SOAP CO.. Inc..NEW YORK AGROCERS: GET THIS BIG DEAL FROM,YOUR JOBBERS THE EVENING BYRD PROPHESIES Aviation Will Bind Nations Together in Peace, _ He Asserts. By the Associated Press. WELLINGTON, New Zealand, April 10.—Speaking today at a luncheon at- tended by New Zealand officialdom, Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd said he be- lleved aviation would bind nations closer with ties of peace as great airships soon would be flying over the Atlantic and the Pacific. “1 belleve aviation 1s more an instru- ment of peace than of war,” he said. “It tends to bring the nations of the world closer together and to know is to un- derstand; knowledge lessens criticism.” The admiral did not predict the same development, for the airplanes as for the dirigibles, although he believed that air- rl-nes eventually would be flying regu- arly across great oceans, with landing stations established at various points en route. The New Zealand government min- isters in cordial terms asked Admiral Byrd to act as an unofficial ambassador on his return to the United States to convey to President Hoover and the eople of his country the best wishes from the Dominion of New Zealand. o FILMS ARE CRITICIZED Brazil Blames Suicide Epidemic to Movies. RIO DE JANEIRO (#).—Films of love themes are responsible for many sui- cides of young Brazilians, in the opin- ion of commentators here. ‘There were 14 suicides or attempted suicides in one recent 24 hours and ost of them, police investigation aled, were inspired by infatuations. In one case a boy and girl hanged | themselves at opposite ends of the same rope thrown over the limb of a tree. —_— Nearly 40 per cent of the Negro en- rollment in public schools in North Carolina is in the first grade. A big favorite with STAR, WASHINGTON, [ D. C, THURSDAY, TELEVISION TEST SUCCESSFUL "IN TELEPHONE CONVERSATION Apparatus Applicable to Radio—Officials See but Little Inmediate Prospect of Commercial Use. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 10.—Application of television to the telephone, making it possible for persons engaged in con- versation to see each other, was a dem- onstrated fact today. Apparatus developed in the laborato- ries of the American Telephone & Tel- dinary telephone instrument. A beam of mild blue light played on the face of the spuaker. As the voice of the person at the other end of the Une was heard, his image, about a foot square, appeared on the glass screen, showing sharp and clear. In place of a telephone instrument APRIL 10, 1930. CURTISS COMPANY GETS LARGE ARMY CONTRACT War Department Orders 100 Model D-13-E Airplane Engines, Costing ‘00?,2!0. ‘The War Department yesterday an- the Curtiss lane & Motor Co., Inc., Garden City, N. Y. These engiles will be installed in model A-3-B attack planes, for which & contract was recently awarded the Curtiss company. . Luray Citizen Dies at 83. LURAY, Va, April 10 (8 — Thomas A. Hook, lzpye.u old, ggm ume) to Luray about 21 years ago. after re- nounced the awaré of a contract for! tiring from his farm in Clarke County, | ting bu | died londay. His second wife, two 100 Curtiss water-cooled model D-12-E daughters, a brother and wo sisters sur- airplane engines, costing $660,280, to' e “Talkies” Invade Italy. R ey pp! ve! the ‘shores of Tialy 80 far. because the Italians have not made “talkies” them- selves yet and Mussolini has prohibited the use of them in any foreign language. ‘The talking films that do exist are a few early American ones that got in before #‘u!lo“‘nllnl banned them. How- ever, an company proposes sy with the new art and hg;rl to put forth its first flowers before the Bummer is over. (Copyrisht, 1930.) e&lph Co. was used yesterday in a se- ke of experiments over a 2l,-mile telephone circuit. e engineers explained that distance was not a determining factor in the use of the equipment, and that it was ap- plicable to radio as well as wire circuits. The device was housed in a small comglrtmrnt resembling a telephone booth. The speaker seated himself in a chair before a small glass screen. The television equipment was hidden from view and there was no sign of the or- the television equipment am:loyed a microphone and a small loud speaker similar to those used in radio trans- mission, so that the speaker’s face was in_full view. Experimenters sald the images were sharp enough to permit changes in ex- pression to be noted and that there was little fiicker. Officials of the A. T. & T. said they saw little immediate prospect of com- mercial use for television in electrical communication. DREVEALED THE TRUTH ABOUT ORANGE-PEKOE fill ILLIONS know that ‘Orange- Pekoe’ is not a kind or flavor of tea...that it is only a trade name for a size of leaf. They know, too, that no two ‘Orange-Pekoes’ are alike. Now, tea drinkers who formerly asked for just "Orange-Pekoe’ are demanding INDIA Orange-Pekoe. Because India grows the finest tea in the world. When you buy tea ... look for the Map of India on the package of tea you buy. INDIA TEA * 70 88 SURE THAT YOU OET GENUINE INDIA TEA LOOK POR THE MAP OF INDIA ON THE PACKAGE OF TIA YOU 8UY. o v good things to eat Salted . . . ju-u-s-st enough to bring out the delicious wheat flavor Wax-wrapped! Moisture is locked out « « « OVen-crispness is locked in FROM THE THOUSAND WINDOW BAKERIES of Loose- Wiles Biscuit Co. It has been proved to the satisfaction of millions of lhrifg, e money-saving house-wives that it’s cheaper to pay a lit more for flour and get Pillsbury’s Best. Cheaper in' cold hard cash—not merely in time and trouble saved. In other words, no matter what you pay for Pillsbury’s Best, you get the most economical flour you can buy. Ask the women who use it and will use nothing else —they’ll tell you these things: (1) Pillsbury’s Best Flour will never cause a baking failure—and baking failures cost too much money. @ Pillsb:'s: Best is an unusually rich flour. It yields more f ger bag, makes foods stay fresh longer, gives a finer flavor to everything you bake. (3) Pillsbury’s Best is a true all; urpose flour. You can use it successfully for all your baking—bread, biscuits, cakes and pastry. Remember Pillshury’s Best—the most economical and satisfactory flour you can buy at any price. All good grocers have it—ask for it by name. Pillsbury's Besi Flour ailled for richer flavor in bread, biscuits, pustry School - Toilet Tissue is not always safe! Protect your child with Scott Tissues the way this mother does - - - "CHILDREN are especially sus- ceptible,” doctors say, 'to seri- ousrectal ailments caused by harsh, chemically impure toilet tissue.” Millions of careful mothers are heeding this medical warning by equipping their bathrooms with health-protecting Scott Tissues. And many go still farther in safeguarding their children. They see that each child, start- ing off to school, carriesa few sheets of these softer, more absorbent tissues. ScotTissue, Sani-Tissue and Waldorf are made from specially processed fibres— "v.hiug‘ fibres.” Crumpled in the hand they feel actually cloth-like in texture ... suave as old linen. Scott Tissues are extremely ab. sorbent—yet tough and strong. Without this absorbent quality real cleanliness is impossible. Not only your children but the grown peoplein your family need rotection from the troubles in- erior toilet tissues may bring. Be sure of safety! Always ask for either ScotTissue, Sani-Tissue or Waldorf. They cost no more than ordinary tissues. Scott Tissues NOTE: ScotTissue and Waldorf are the two largest selling brands in the world . . . Sani-Tissue is the new'popular priced white toilet tissue embodying the famous #hirsty fibre qualities. V74 YOU cannot prevent people from TALKING BEHIND your BACKI CONCEALED in millions of bathroom cabinets after I have donemy brightening job, I have listened to the compliments of visiting guests.*Whatanimmac- ulate bathroom. What twink- ling tubs and tiles, basins and bowls.” Let me give your bathroom a beauty treatment. For I am BAB-O,.¢.the magical powder, created especially for enamel and porcelain. I conquer stains, discolorations, watermarks. I bring back sparkling lustre to clouded surfaces. I work won- ders, too, on kitchen ranges, refrigerators, walls, floors. I am modern...efficient...quick. Try me in your bathroom today. Ask formebyname,BAB-O. J V4 B.T.Babbitt, Inc., Est. 1836, N.Y. i i X) ] “A WIPE AND IT’S BRIGHT” BAB-O =brightens bathroomsZz. ~5 works like ml;ie all over the house & P. § Use Babbiw’s Lye for clogged drain pipes *ENAMEL NOPORCELAIN .

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