Evening Star Newspaper, November 27, 1930, Page 6

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Every Saturday and Sunday $175 Rors BALTIMORE 80 minutes from heart of Washington to heart of Baltimore sl .00 Round Trip to ANNAPOLIS And U. 8. Navat Academs NAVY VS. GEORGE WASHINGTON U. FOOT BALL Annapolis, Saturday, November 29th Tichets good on all trains Saturdays and Sundays, with return limited to last train Sunday night. WASHINGTON, BALTIMORE AND ANNAPOLIS ELECTRIC RAILROAD 12th & New York Ave. N.W. THE_BOVS - Everything to Keep Boys Warm and Smartly Dressed Junior Overcoats $|6.75 Beautiful, all - wool fleece coats, warm as they are smart, in tans, browns, blues and blue- grays. For boys 4 to 10 years. Youths' Overcoats 325 w0 %35 Handsome fleece coats for youths from 11 to 20 years. Half and full belted styles in all the smart shades. Parker-Boy Suits With Two Pairs of Knickers 515 Suits of a quality that overtops the price. Good looking, yet built for service. Sizes 8 to 18 years. Leather Coats $15 to $25 Flannel Pajamas $1.25 and $1.50 Union Suits . ¢ $I to $2.50 Lumberjacks $5.95 to $12.50 Wool Sweaters $2.95 o $8.50 Teck Jr.Qxfords $4 to $7 Official Boy Scout Outfitters Lok Buidp New York Avenue at Fifteenth Branch Store: 3113 Fourteenth N.W. PHE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, PADEREWSKIHOLDS HIS AUDIENCE ENRAPTURED PAST DINNER HOUR Encores Finally Ended by Removal of Piano From Stage of Crowded Constitution Hall. CRIME COMMISSION TAKING: VAGATION [Recess Intended to Last Un- “til Monday Is Extended to December 8. By the Associated Press; -+ | _Presitient Hoover's Law Enforcement Commission decided yesterday to take a real Thanksgiving vacation frem the | task of preparing & report on prohibi- tion and recessed until December 8. The commission returned to its de- | liberation last Monday following a 10- day adjournment. No official reason was given for the new recess, which, under previous plans, had been expected to extend only until next Monday. From within the com- mission ‘ranks, however, came the as- surance that although the 11 members are not vet in agreement upon the re- port, there has been no discord. It was said that the 12-day adjourn- ment _was not causing the members to abandon their hope that the task on which they have laboged far 17 months can be completed before January 1. Chairman Wickersham and ‘at least four other members plan to spend part of thg recess at commission - headquar- ters. “They include Dean Pound of the Harvard Law Schoel, former Judge Mackintosh of Washington, Judge Mc- Cormick of Los Angeles and Frank J. Loesch of Chicago. JOURNALISM STUDENTS HEAR MRS. PATTERSON Woman Editor Discusses Import-| ance of Sustained and Ener- getic Efforts. Mrs. Elinor, M. Patterson, editor of the Washington Herald, talked infor- mally about newspaper methods before the class in journalism at George Wash- ington University, yesterday afternoon. She also discussed the development of several dally publications in various parts of the country. The speaker stressed the importance of sustained and energetic efforts in meeting the requirements of service to the community, and advised that suc- cessful publishing of the news required that the editorial direction should al- ways keep in mind the masses of the people, who constituted the bulk of the reading public. Mrs, Patterson told of the chief task of the young reporter in attempting to combine accuracy with eagerness to complete the task within a reasonable period, ‘and stated that fire and en- thusiasm were necessary in every branch of the profession. In reply to questions, she told of the success of many women as writers for the press And said that they were doing, in many instances, brilliant work. DRAM'[GUILD TO OPEN THIRD SEASON TOMORROW Revival of “The Great Divide,” in ‘Which Henry Miller Starred, Will Be Presented. A revival of one of America's out- standing dramas, “The Great Divide,” will feature the opening of the third season of the Community Drama Guild at the McKinley High School Auditor- Flum tomorrow. night. The play was Lwritten by the famous Willlam Vaughn Moody, dramatist, poet and ‘educator, land was originally produced by and starred the distinguished American ac- itor, Henry Miller. Elaborate preparations have been made by’ the guild for this forthcoming hproduction. New and modern settings have been created for the three acts of the play and carefully planned lighting - methods will- enhance the rscenic effects. Final rehearsals for the presentation were held last night. Included in the cast are Denis E. Connell, Marguerite Wolfe, Merwin H. Browne, Dorothea Paull, Brad W. Holmes, Maud Howell Smith, Melvin D. Hildreth, Capt. Ray C. Montgomery, Newell Lusby, Harold Farrington, H. Eldred Wilson, Milton D. Korman and Joseph Weitz. ROBERT R. SMITH DIES KANSAS CITY, November 27 (#).— Robert Reuben Smith, €7, chairman of the rd of Directors and chairman of the Finance Committee of the Mod- ern Woodmen of America, died at his office here yesterday, the victim of a Uheart’ attack. tailored by’ The Paxton A Touch of Formality in Overcoats Thr Paxton overcoat suggests that dignity so expressive of the true gentlenian. Restrained lines, strictly authentic in style, give added beauty to the rich tones of superb imported fabrics. The workmanship is of the highest quality which characterizes overcoats THURSDAY, At 7:15 o'clock yesterday evening the recital that the ‘great Polish pianist Ignace Jan Paderewski had started t 4:30 o'clock came to a definite end. Af that time, the piano was marched out literally from under his nose and he was left to bow and smile and thank his vast audience for the courtesies it had shown him. An audience that reached up into the highest reaches of Constitution Hall and threatened to burst out into the foyer and street welcomed this great master of the plano by rising at his trance and &pplauding long and loudly. Seldom —'f ever—has enthusiasm reached such a pitch in that temple of music—and seldom has there been so much excuse for it. For Paderewski played a pro- gram that will be long remembered— and he played much that wasn’t on the | program that will also be long remem- bered. Not satisfled with an exacting two-hour recital which semed to grow in intensity and a flow of skill, Mr. Paderewski swept into & series of encores that, thankfully, prolonged the ;lecltd another three-quarters of an our. Mrs. Herbert Hoover, otcupying the presidential box with a party of friends, stayed until the piano had been taken into the wings and was apparently as unwilling to leave at that time as were other members of the audience. { Avolds Modern Works. ‘True to the masters of the past, care- fully treading away from the “moderns” for whomy the world-famed pianist has little m‘x}o use, Paderewski played the musical immortals and no indica- tion of abatement in his powers. ‘Those who were prepared to see evi- dences of his ’s iliness numbing - Mortgage } Loans ! You'll find invest- ment in our 6% First Mortgages both safe and profitable. No matter whether the amount you invest is large or small, the return is in exactly the same ratio. May be purchased in amounts from $250 up. B. F. SAUL CO. National 2100 925 15th St. N.W. This bundle ¢ s not a good sists of flat work, beantifully washe Wearing apparel needs retou | the technical wizardry that has been | his from the beginning, must have been | struck by his apparent tirelessness | |and the youthfulness that he injected | | into everything that he did. His hands seemed quite as flexibly alive on the keys as they have always been, and listening to the speed and flow of notes | in_such’ difficult passages as form the | | substance of the Chopin “Scherzo B Flat Minor,” one must have been aware | | that the maestro is still one of the | mightiest exponents of the piano. He | was, in fact, yesterday so well equipped | with the essential genius, that the con- cert must bs marked as probably the | greatest that he will ever give here. | " From the striking of the first note, |in an atmosphere that, according to his custom, was dim and remote from the usual glaringly lighted concert plat- form, Paderewski had his audience so completely under his spell that it must have taken anything that he played to | its heart. As it was, he played the Bach-Liszt “Prelude and Pugue G Minor” and the Beethoven (“Apassion- ate”) “Sonata, F Minor, Opus 57," both familiar and ever-welcomed co: positions, with vigor and his accus tomed emotional understanding, nnd‘ made even the more lethargic portions | of the Schumann “Carnaval” seem brighter than they perhaps are. Best in Chopin Group. In the last group, the group that he devoted entirely to Chopin, he gave ocra s MOTOR OIL. The super quality in Autocrat Motor - Oil as- sures you of supreme per- formance—more miles of safe lubrication per filll To fully appreciate Autocrat quality, however, you should use it straight “have your: crank case drained and refilled with clean new Autocrat. BAYERSON OIL WOR NOVEMBER 27, “BEST OIL IN THE WORLD" 1930. "what' Might probably be called his Ever attuned to the mood and the methods of his countryman, he delved info nocturnes and mazurkas and the “Polonaise E Flat Minor” “Valse Brillante,” ending uj “gcherzo B Flat Minor,” and with each succeeding composition seemed to grow | more sweeping in his command. And | that was, perhaps, the most extraordi- nary thing of all about this concert— for Mr. Paderewski was quite as fresh and_exuberantly at the command of his instrument at the end of very nearly three hour's playing as he was when he started. With no unwillingness he played on and on and on, the encores coming_apparently as ungrudgingly as the audience hoped they might. Until at tHe very last he was left without his instrument, alone on the stage, and those who were late for their dinner or had missed it completely were quite willing to stay there as much longer as he might have been able to. For Mr. Paderewskl’s concert will not be re- peated—or forgotten—in a long, long | time. E.deS.M. EXTRA COAT SUSPICIOUS Chicago Police Find 25 Other Gar-| ments in Flat. | CHICAGO, November 27 (#).—It was | cold in Chicago yesterday, but, even 8o, Police Sergts. William Bergen and John Shanahan figured they had a right to be suspicious of Edward Scott when he sauntered out of a loop hotel, garbed in two overcoats. ~ All of which explains why they arrested him and then went to a flat where they said they found 25 overcats, which did not belong to Scott. Police said he implicated two other and the | with the men. 58 7 | Twenty thousand 4-H Club boys and | girls of Mississipp! are tacking up post- ers throighoul the State warning against forest fires | You will drive longer upon AUTOCRAT than you have ever dared to drive upon any other oil, and it drains from the crankcase with all the “look” and “feel” of an oil that has gone hardly 100 miles. AUTOCRAT—THE OIl, THAT 18 DIFVERENT FROM ALL OTHERS, Beware of Substitutes Try Autocrat the next time you need oil, and judge its advantages for yourself. At the Better Dealers 0¢ A QUART T WO~ KS, COLUMBIA 5228 ; TWO CONVICTS SLAIN | ATTEMPTING ESCAPE! Guard and Two Other Prisoners Wounded—Were Returning From Work in Truck. | | ! By the Associated Press, | HUNTSVILLE, Tex., November 27— Two convicts lost their lives in an a tempt to escape while retufrilng yeste: day to the State peniteritiary from a wood-choppihg eamp. Two others and a guard were wounded. - ' Wheeler McCauley, convicted burglar, and Tony Corona, 20, “Phantom Ban- | dit” of Houston were ‘killed. Tomi Shook, former police chief at Electra, | serving a 35-yedr sentence for murder and robbery; Argyle Guyton, alias Jim Tally, 30, convicted robber, and F. O Ross, prison guard, were the wounded McCauley and Corona, riding the prison truck with 25 other prisoners, leaped upon the two guards, Ross and Leonard Osborne, overpowering _and disarming them with thé aid of Shook | and Talley, who joined the attack. | The convicts were batking away from | the truck, using Osborne as a shield, | Wwhen Bud Barnes, a third guard, drove | up in an automobile and opened ‘fire | ng guard. Ross pistol and and 5 == rl\hlahou\m ‘Shook; who was Ross, was wounded as was the 1:3ed himself, took Barnes’ shot and killed McCauléy ; Corona. 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