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B—14 ‘POT BOILERS' FAIR' WILL OPEN OCT. To Arts Club Plans Program to Represent French Events. The Arts Club of Washington will give & “Foire aux Croutes,” or “Pot- bollers’ Fair,” in the auditorium and other rooms of the club house, at 2017 I street, on October 16, 17 and 18, it ounced. ”'r‘gen ‘affair will be designed to repre- sent similar affairs given in Paris, Prance, and arrangements are being | made to insure a French stmosphere throughout. In Paris, it is pointed out, the ocsasion a time when artists display their work in carnival style. | Accordingly, the affair at the Arts Club will furnish the club members a chance to re-create many scenes of festive oc- casions in the famous French capital. Artists’ Life to Be Shown. The club members will aim to show how the Parisian artist works and plays. Many of the club members will be’ dressed in costume, to represent both French officials and other natives. Per- %ons to represent a French bride and | ‘bridegroom will walk among displays to 8] ise the various arts and crafts. ere will also be a cabaret, a waffle and coffee shop and other features, con- ducted in true French style. “The Arts Club Follies” are to be ted several times during each afternoon and evening of the affair in the club’s Little Theater and weird Parisian shadow tableaux are to be en- acted from the upper windows of the club house. Miss Frances Benjamin Johnston is chairman of the '“Foire aux Croutes” Committee and will have many assist- ants. Lynch Luquer and L. M. Leisen- ring will head a group of associated architects and decorators to supervise the creation of a skyline inclosing the garden of the Arts Club, to be designed to give an atmosphere of old Paris, Felix Mahony will provide decorative designs for the project. “Mayor of Montmartre” Named. Mrs. Alice L. L. Ferguson and Mrs. Susan B. Chase will have charge of the collection of Croutes and the staging and exhibition of paintings, drawings, sketches, ete. Robert Le Fevre and Karl Langenbeck will organize the industrial arts and crafts group. J. Milnor Dorey and Mrs. Maud Howell Smith ‘;11! have eneral supervision of dramatic features, 'thlm R. Baker will direct the “Arts | Club Follies.” Felian Garzia, as the| titular “Mayor of the Free Commune of Montmartre,” assisted by Mrs. Gar- gia and a group of their artist friends, ‘will make the “Cabaret de la Vache En- ragee” a gay rendezvous for patrons. ‘The book stalls will be in charge of Carlton Van Valkenburg, assisted by ‘William Osgood Mrs. Wolff Smith, Holmes and Miss Emily Reed Jones. Miss Aline Solomons, with Mrs. L. M. and Mrs. Nina E. Allender, conduct the ‘Patisserie.” Miss Miss y *Trout will have a small boutique for the exhibition block-printed textiles. Miss Genevieve Wimsatt will supervise the verious forms of fortune telling and a pirates’ den will in the competent hands of a worthy successor of Capt. Kidd, it assured. Miss Ml”rlafle C. Lowe will H BY WOMAN IN CHASE Atlanta Prisoner Held for Grand Jury Action at Hearing He Faces With Silence. Miss Shapiro told of the chase in court yesterday when a man who said he s Henry Henderson of Birmingham, Ala., was ed. He had nothing say and was bound over to await action of d_jury. Estedlished 1329 Sale of Decorative Potted Plants . BOSTON FERN —for home or office These attractive large size Boston Ferns will add a note of cheer- fulness wherever used. Other decorative foliage plants with which to brighten ‘the home or office. Dracenias Pandanas San Sevierias On sale at our four flower shops at special prices. We telegraph flower orders to all parts of the world Gude Bros. Company Four Flower Shops B e R R ticles to Be Used as | By the Associated Press. Y, Calif, September 10.— A new kind of atomic superpower plant was reported to the National Academy of Sciences today. It proposes gen particles to about 37,000 miles a second, 50 they can be used as bullets to bombard and possibly break the atoms of other elements. Breaking atoms is one long-sought route to transmutation, and also to “unlocking .‘J ¢ . Ave. 1102 Conn. Ave o Sane B Tel. it Decatur Members of Florist Telegraph Delivery Association ] e ——— ATOMIC SUPERPOWER PLANT MAY SOON BREAK UP ATOMS {New Discovery Speeds Up Hydrogen Par- Tiny Bits of Other Elem.ents. to speed up atomic hydro- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, field. Other methods have required ex- pensive, heavy equipment and high power. Dr. Lawrence’s machine could | be set on a chair and used with little power. It combines an alternating current of electricity and magnetism to set the nuclei, or central masses, of hydrogen atoms to whirling in widening circles at constantly increased speed until finally they are shot out of the tube like a particle flicked from the tip of a cracking whip. Their speed is equiv- alent to the energy produced by a million-volt X-ray tube, which is far | greater than any ray power yet avail- | able. | The significance of the 37,000-mile | speed may be understood in comparison with the ‘“rays” of radium, part of | which are atomic particles traveling | about 12,000 miles a second. Scientists have shot these radium particles into gases and knocked out small pieces of atoms, but lacked enough speed to break up entire atoms to any extent. Bullets to Bombard the power of the atom,” which means to find out whether breaking up atoms will release a lot of power that can be | set to work running machinery. ‘The apparatus is a University of Cal fornia product, still incomplete, but re- ported because of its great scientific interest. It is under development by Dr. Ernest D. Lawrence, associate pro- fessor of physics, and N. E. Edlefsen. What speeds of atomic bullets are The device is an excursion by a new | needed to break up atoms and put to route into the long-sought atomic power | practical test the transmutation and LAST DAY SATURDAY .. 0 power production theories are mnot | known, but, Dr. Lawrence said, “At | the speeds predicted we are getting into regions where interesting things are likely to hanpen.” The prineiple of identity, a new | | scientific mode of study to solve some | of the paradoxes of modern physics was | explained by Dr. Gilbert N. Lewis of | the University of California, world | | famous as a leader of scientific thought. It promises information about the nuclel of atoms. In recent years scien- | tists have learned atoms are composed | of electrons surrounding a central mass. | This mass is the nucleus and has most- ly defied analysis. L. M. Reichert of Stanford Medical | School told of transplanting success- fully 50 amputated legs. The experi- ments show methods of preventing | gangrene. | Discovery of a hitherto unknown | nerve food property in fats, attracted | much comment. Dr. Herbert' M. Evans, | who found it, was the discoverer of be rich in the new nutritive substance | have been isolated, | itself has not been identified. Henry White President of Chase National, Weds‘ » By the Associated Press | | NEW YORK, September 19.— Miss [Myrta L. Jones, daughter of the late | of Judge and Mrs. Jesse M. Jones of |Championship. where her family settled in 1833, | vitamin E a few years ago. Certain parts of fats which seem to FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1930. WOMANLESS LIBRARY ANKER, 80, | LEFT BY FOE OF SEX WEDS CLEVELAND GIRL Estate to Grow Into $3,000,000 > | Will Be Used, With Notice on °TMET| Door That They Are Barred. , but the substance ~ Cannon, Daughter of Leading Family. ‘!‘, the Associsted Press. LEMARS, Iowa, September 19.—~A $3.- 000,000 “womanless library” 75 years hence will form the tangible reminder a lawyer's objection to feminine The library will be known as the Cleveland, was married to Henry White | «zink Womanless Library,” as a me- Cannon, 80, New York banker, Wed- |morial to the donor, T. M. Zink, 73, a nesday. The ceremony was performed |lawyer, who died last week by Rev. Dr. Minot of All Souls’ Church. | filed here, provides that his estate, val- His wil] The bride is well known in Cleveland, |ued at between $40,000 and $80,000, is to go into a trust fund for 75 years. At Mr. Cannon is a member of the board | the end of that time, the accumulated and former president of the Chase Na- |interest, the will says, will have increas- | tional Bank ed the estate to approximately $3.000.- b Spe Spectacular Birthday Values in.... NEW FA \ Every New Fall Color Black . . . black-and-white combina- tions . . . jungle . % . almond . . . wine . . . navy . . . monet and other desired shades, Just Arrived! NEW FALL DRESSES FOR THIS SENSATIONAL 1st BIRTHDAY EVENT! This is your opportunity to purchase New . Fall Dresses “For Every Occasion” that are exact copies of higher-priced frocks. The dress pictured is of canton crepe in the new Rust Red—and comes in every New Fall® combination (14-20). SIZES 12—44 New Pile Fabric COATS FOR BBG AND LITTLE SISTER FUR- TRIMMED FALL AND WINTER COATS $22.9 In Every Desirable Shade and Little sister’s 2-6 has a cunning little muff and becoming tam to match, comes in tan and grey— while for big sister 7-14 are smart looking coats, also of soft pile fabrics. = Also genuine Schuster chinchillas in navy and brown. featuring the newest fashion The Half-Crown Trresistibly smart are these newest of new Fall styles in Velvet and Felt. Off-the-face models, of course, as Paris de- crees—and every accepted mode is here for your selection. All unusual values at these special Birthday Sale prices! WILSON SHOE Department—Main Floor Exact Copies of Expensive Styles All One Price Sizes -9 A444—-C ILSON celebrates “BIRTHDAY WEEK” with scores of special styles copied from famous $15 and $20 originals—and copied so perfectly you can scarcely tell the difference ... every smart Fall material . . . every size and heel . . . One amazingly low price—$4. cially Planned Events in ALL DEPARTMENTS 000, which is to be used for buflding the library. The words, “No Woman itted™ must be cut in stone over the mMain en- trances of the library; only ks by men will be allowed: magazines will be censored to eliminate articles by women. Nothing in the design, decoration or ap= pointments of the library must suggest feminine influence, the will provides. | - Zink's will says that his hatred for women came from his study of philoso< phy, history and science and his own | experience. The will left $5 to his daughter, Mrs. Margretta Becker, and provided that his widow is to have the use of the house as long as she wants it for $40 a,month Tent. Fire Destroys Peat Moss. Nine bales of peat moss were destroyed when fire, caused by spontaneous com= bustion, broke out at the tourist camp in Potomac Park last might. The fire was discovered by a gas station attend- ant. Park police assisted firemen in eX- tinguishing the blaze. alue-Giving | Last Sensational Day of V N| Climax the Celebration of Barbara Stone’s FIRST BIRTHDAY