Evening Star Newspaper, April 17, 1930, Page 34

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LY RELCS USED N O T Last -Supper “Recalled by {Table and Other Deposits of St. John Lateran Church, @y the Associated Press. ROME, April 17.—The bells of St Jdhn, Lateran, churches on the occasion of commemo- institution of the Eucharist, recalling the last supper of Christ with the| apasties. | ‘What is believed to be the very table used 8t the epoch-making repast was| TRt OF T8 §UPE SLi M ohe T ad of brought forth from its repository in St John Lateran and exposed for the ven- eration of the large congregation. Two skulls, regarded as those of Saints Peter and Paul, also were on view there, s Well as a reputed portion of the pil- | trab seb for B SRET SORTS MEC Ives t was bound when scourged in the house of the high priest, | and a bit of the holy sponge mentioned in St. Matthew's account of the cruci- fixion. lar te which Ch Singing of Mass. Phe mass as the Lateran Basilica was sung by Cardinal Pompili, assisted by 12 priests, 7 deacons and 7 subdeacons and & chanting choir that rendered the Eucharistic hymn “Pange, Lingua” (Sing, Oh My Tongue) most impres- ve entered in solemn pro- of the “Gloria in y to God on High) for the ringing of the bells in the higher tower, and for the great organ to pla Lord's Payer in_the | nal blessed the holy oils to be us uring the forthcoming | year in the administration of the last | sacrament, or extreme unction. At the | invbcation of “Agnus Dei” (Lamb of | God) the attending clergy repaired to the sacristy, returning in procession with the “ampullae” jars containing the chrism for confirmation and the so-called oil of catechumenes, while & subdeacon brought in a- jar of balsam. During this portion of the ceremony the choir sang the hymn, “O Re- demptor” (O Redeemer). Simflar rites were enacted in every Catholic ca- thedral throughout the world today. Services of Consecration. The Catholic ritual prescribes that at today's masses each priest shall con- | secrate two hosts, the second to be consumed at the “Mass of the Pre- sanctified tomorrow, Good Friday. This latter host, at St. John as else- where, was carried reverently to anoth- ef altar in a side chapel and there placed in a monstrance, surrounded with lights and flowers. The host's second resting place is known as “the altar of repose.” The offices of vespers and the “Tene- trae,” chanted at sundown in all Rome's churches, were marked by un- usual observances. In each the cele- brant and those serving him proceed- ed to the stripping of the altars of all their coverings and ornaments, re- at the same time the antiphon, “Diviserunt Sibi Vestimenta Meo” (They Divided My Vesture Amongst em). HAGERMAN CONVICTED ON MAIL FRAUD CHARGES Qperator Who Sold Stock on In- ' stallment Plan Basis Faces Sentence Today. By, the Associated Press. [ 7 NEW YORK, April 17.—Roy Hager- than, who operated three firms in New | ork and in Newark, N. J., on an | ent stock sales plan,” was con- victed by a jury in Pederal Court yes- terday of using the mails to defraud. The jury recommended leniency. Fed- dral Judge Henry W. Goddard post- ned sentence until today and re- ased Hagerman in $3,000 bail. . Four witnesses, who came from De- | troit, Mich., and El, Nev., testified | + they had bought stocks through Ha- | german on an installment plan and ¢l he did not buy the them when the first paymen made, as he had promised. el Rhine Fishing Dying Out. Pollution of ‘whters of the Rhme is killing the @hce prosperous fishing industry of many ‘German' villages. ven the cels ppearing ‘and . experts say. that within 10 years there will not be.a fish ft in the river. Formerly half a ton of fish would be a normal catch for a germen) but now ‘only 3@°or caught. ? MILLER (Cook SHOE Bl iyl athors From the same ben n, “mither church of | tory hunter, was found dead Tuesday Chtistendom,” rang out this morning |y, nis cage at the Memphis Municipal answered by those of all Rome's 400 | Zoo. Whether he died of injurles re- v -| tured a month ago or of pining for his ration of Holy Thursday, feast of the | haunts In the basin lowlands Was not rated Rhine salmon .is | Two Toes, Terror Of Arkansas Area, Dies in Zoo Cage Timber Wolf Was Recent- | ly Captured After 10- Year Rampage. By the Associated Press. MEMPHIS, Tenn., April 17—Two Toes is dead. Two Toes, timber wolf, that for a decade roamed the St. Fran- cis Basin in Eastern Arkansas, a preda- | ceived when he was' snared and cap- known. Two Toes was taken prisoner when | tarmers, driven to desperation by his raids on live stock and barnyard fowl, hounds. The wolf, dubbed Two Toes because of the clipping off of three of the toes of & hind foot when he ran afoul a trap set for him several years ago, was which preyed on basin farms. INVESTIGATOR FOUND T0 BE POISON VICTIM Los Angeles Man’s Body Had Been Crushed Under Automo- I bile Wreckage. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, April 17-—Blaney Matthews, chief investigator of the dis- trict attorney’s staff, said last night that poison had been found in a drink- ing glass discovered in the wreckage of the automobile of Robert Bursian, ‘undercover nt, who was killed while working on the Julian Petroleum Cor- poration stock overissue investigation. Deputy County Autopsy Surgeon PFrank Webb declared he found corrobo- rative conditions in Bursian's stomach that indicated poison was present. Bursian was found crushed under his automobile Tuesday. & In the residence of the soc ially prominent its presence is a matter=of«fact consid= eration; on the escritoire you will find the stationery engraved by ‘BrewamnD gravers m{j?ah'om eir-12th St.N.w. EASTER Novelties Favors Baskets | Your name printed on all | Virginia Dare EASTER | EGGS FREE. GARRISON’S Toy and Novelty Co. 1215 E Street N.W. ree 10 ches that have made Nettleton Shoes famous, comes the $10 Miller Cook. The brilliant designers and custom shoe experts who turn out $16 Nettletons are " the identical gentlemen wha now put their hearts and their hands to making this greatest of all $10 shoes. Yes, the Miller Cook is extraordinary— so extraordinary that only Nettleton could make it for as little patterns for Spring. as $10. See the new $10 every one. RICH’N F ST.AT TENTH THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1930. O 0 O Men’s "PASTEL @ Who said there’s nothing new under the sun? Fashion . . . aided by such recog- nized authorities as Society Brand, Worsted- tex and Sheldon . . . strikes a new color note in men’s apparel. Pastel shades . . . stealing their tones from the skies and na- ture. Pastel shades . . . as gay as the apple blossoms at Winchester. . Fashions @ Suits . . . happy as the Easter season . . . in silver-greys, star-dust blues, maple browns and desert tans. Topcoats . . . that speak the language of Spring . . . with their im- ported and domestic tweeds, their dapper herringbones, and zestful, original patterns. @ It will do your heart and soul good to see the solid color tones in Everdit Shirts. Pause to review the new Trojan Cravats with self-figured jacquard designs, or the bright ones with modest polka dots. @ Liet' Dobbs Hats bring color to your head. And put your feet in tune with this cheerful old world with a pair of Footmodel oxfords. @ Light but not loud. Gay but not gaudy. On with Easter. And on with the tonic cheerfulness of the new color harmony for men. - o Society Brand Suits and Topcoats - 340 to %75 Sheldon Suits and Topcoats 35 to %50 o Direct Elevators to the Men® Clothing Department—Second Floor Worsted-tex Suits $4.0 Knit-tex Topcoats HecHt Co. “F Street at Seventh” 00000 “F Street at Seventh™ Hats . . « in pastel shades $8 to $20 (Main Floor.) Everit Shirts .. . the AIRMAN in pastel shades $] .95 Main Ploor.) Trojan Ties . . in pastel shades $].50 (Maln Floor.) Mansco Shirts and Shorts = o 1 pastel shades s]_ each (Main Floor.) Footmodel Shoes m o i1t browns and tans 6 (Becond Floor.) mmmmmn|||tm|||uuum|mm|mummnnnnmnnmmmmmmnmunmmmlnmnm|m|||m|||mum|m|mm|m|x|nn|m1mnmnnnnmnmmunmmnunu||||1nm|mmmunnmmnmunmmmmummmmmmmmmmmmm I AR

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