Evening Star Newspaper, April 25, 1930, Page 40

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Cc-8 JUNIOR MUSICIANS MEET IN CONTESTS Piano and Violin Competition and Final Contest Sched- uled Tomorrow. Certificates from the National Fed- eration of Music Clubs and cash prizes from the local federation will be award- ed the winners in various contests to be held tomorrow under the auspices of the District of Columbia Federation of Music Clubs. The junior contest for violin and ano solo work will open at the Wash- Eg’nn club ball room, Seventeenth and K streets, at 9:30 in the morning. Twenty-three entrants under 18 years of age will compete in the different groups and classes. The certificates and prizes will be awarded to the group tors. The final junior oconcert will be given in the Interior Department auditorium at 8 o'clock tomorrow night. Among the participants will be Lella Belle Foster, Home Stephens McAllister, 5 years old; Leah Effenbach, Dora Mino- vitch, Burley Martin, Anne Stowell and Olive Kolar, pianists; Margaret Comp= ton, Jean Westbrook, violinists; Frank Westbrook, cellist; the Sing-son Glee Club of Friendship House and the East- ern High School Glee Club. ‘Mary Ware Goldman will be in charge of the concert, while Lois Marshall Hicks is chairman of the contests. The public is invited to attend both events. WORLD BANK HEADS COMPLETE PROGRAM Stock to Be Issued Eight Days After England and Italy Ratify Young Plan, By the Assoclated Press. BASEL, Switzerland, April 25.—The directorate of the new Bank of Inter- national Settlements, organized under the Young plan to handle reparations and other matters of international banking has completed its plans of im- mediate operation, organization and personnel. All proceedings were considered defi- nite, but will be adopted formally again when the Young plan is adopted by Great Britain, and Italy fulfills all the requirements for actual commencement of operations of the bank. It was decided to issue stock at par eight days after these two ratifications are secured. Reparations bonds totalling $300,000,000 will bear 6 per cent inter- est, as was understod previously, but details of this transaction have not been completed. ‘Three chiefs of departments were ap- pointed and two others left open. Dr. Hulze of Germany was made chief of the banking department, Signor Pillotti of Italy named the secretary general, and ‘M. Nanzeeland of Belgium was appoint- ed the chief of the security marketing division. —_— PIERCE PETROLEUM SALE NEGOTIATIONS UNDER WAY Zarger Company Will Purchase $25,000,000 Holding Concern, Officials Indicate. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, April 25.—Negotiations for the sale of the Plerce Petroleum Corporation, a holding and operating concern, to a larger company are being carried on in New York. W. H. Coverdale, chairman of the company, confirmed a report that ne- gotiations with other interests were pro- ceeding, but the name of the larger concern could not be obtained. Edward D. Levy, president of the company, came here Wednesday from 'Ii‘% Louis to take part in the negotia- ns. ‘The Pierce Petroleum Corporation has assets of $25,000,000. Pt STRIKE HELD FAILURE Memway and Bus Workers Re- sume Posts in Tokio. ‘TOKIO, April 25 (#)—The strike of tramway and bus workers of Tokio, which started Sunday, apparently failed 88 4,000 strikers resumed operations at reduced wages, which caused the walk- out. Municipal authorities who operated the transportation system predicted that conditions would be normal today. Although 12,000 of the 13.000 trans- rtation workers quit work, the au- horities maintained reduced service with the aid of volunte Save money.. ‘You get more miles per dollar and more pleasure per mile if you go via bus. Careful drivers, convenient d;rr ture hours, fixed schedules, fine coaches make a bus trip the best ‘way totravel—anditcostsmuch less, Tickets and information at your ‘bus depot. PITTSBURGH . DETROIT .... CHICAGO . CINCINNATI BALTIMORE . PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK ...... .. ALTANTIC CITY .wceee. WILMINGTON ... “ST.LOUIS ... RICHMOND, Va. .. LOS ANGELES .. SAN FRANCISCO UNION BUS DEPOT 1336 New York Ave. N.W. Phone: Metropolitan 1512-3-4 PEOPL At DEPENDABLE THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 25 1930. | 7 stlaz'ngton o 7 C/oz'mgo .+ In New York In thousands of homes Women Test Bread by Toasting PROVE ALL-ROUND QUALITY AND SUPERIORITY OF SLO-BAKED BREAD You can now judge bread in your own home . . . Read how demons “M{&ég tions were made, then try famous test-by-toasting yourself By ALICE ADAMS PROCTOR E wanted to demonstrate to housewives that Wonder Bread was best for use on their tables . . . for every household need. We wanted to show the world that here, at last, was a really betser bread in every respect. Since only a scientifically perfect bread makes perfect toast . . . there is one sure way to prove bread quality—test it by toasting. Hence, recently in many leading American cities our household bureau held toast demonstrations. Public demonstrations were held 3. in department stores, in public service buildings and atfood shows. They revealed clearly how much better slo-baked bread is. In over 150 cities . . . including San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Kan- sas City, Washington and Cleveland ..: Wonder Bread proved the perfect all ? 70 Yo Ho! Yo Ho! Yo Ho! for the famous Happy Wonder Bakers and their orchestra conducted by Frank Black. Tune in on the entertaining Wonder Bread period every Tuesday evening at 9:30 over WRC and associated N. B. C. stations. JUST ASK YOUR GROCER for slo-baked Won- der He gets it fresh twice each day: Whise or Whole-wheat a3 you prefer The Toast Test In the actual demonstration an auto- matic toaster was started . . . allowed to heat to bright redness. Then slice after slice of slo-baked Wonder Bread was inserted : ; . generously thick slices ; ; : wafer-thin slices. Slices suited for dainty tea parties . . . for a hungry man’s meal. In every instance the demonstra- tion revealed Wonder Bread as a rich, even golden brown over the en- tire surface . . . no uneven toasting ...nounderdone slices. .. no burned edges or blackened spots—every piecewasthatdelicious golden brown most families like. Housewives who were present tasted the toast. They were delighted atits superiority over toast from ordi- nary bread. They remarked how de- licious the taste . ; : how even the toasting. Women went home. Made this identical test themselves. Had the identical results! Toast madefrom the bread they had been using suffered in comparison. No other bread, they said, would find a place in their toasters—or their bread-boxes. Here, at last, was the bread they sought. Why Is This So? Why does the fact that Wonder Bread makes better toast prove that it is a finer bread for all purposes? Because only a scientifically per- fect bread can make toast that’s an even golden brown over the entire surface. Slo-baked Wonder Bread is such a bread. Every year we pay $2,000,000 extra ITS SLO-BAKED BAKERS ALSO OF WONDER PAN ROLLS AND HOSTESS CAKE ©1930, Continenie} Bahing Cou tra- \ for the super-quality Ingredients re- quired by the Wonder Bread recipe. We use a special flour made only from the most nutritious portion of the wheat . . . the very heart of the wheat berry. Our recipe calls also for double the usual quantity of milk, every drop of which is pasteurized: Every Loaf Slo-Baked Then all the natural flavors and nourishing qualities of these ingredie ents are sealed in by a special method of baking—Wonder Bread is slo- baked. This means that every loaf is thoroughly baked. Each cell is baked to perfection, and thus Wonder Bread is remarkably easy to digest: Won’tyou try a loaf today? Wonder Bread is delivered fresh twice daily to grocers in your neighborhood. NEW SANDWICH BOOKLET! A-l Continental Baking Company, 2300 Georgia Ave,, Washington, D. C. Please send me FREE New Edition of Alice Adams Proctor’s Woander Sand- wich Booklet. Name, Address. Gy __Sote___

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