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; v S aRh ee W&“ etsalbeit thionim Halted |12 i, TAXI BUSINESS BOOWS |, g s oo st o e AMER'BAN AR"STS o n";?fi' abunabes of Wil :’vfi i O "lp‘m“ m%mtnfi When Their Guide % isplayed & tele. |Cabs. Casried ;llllu Passengers 1a fi%@%fih&‘rwfi of dfifi&gjfi .:’:’; :?’n ;-;u".'fl‘x'&'i better than talent, an active disposi! of ths 3 ed. s wreck was marced. The motor o riches of | multitudes of s ts, I!m . e et “&:fl Fails to Show Up!|&55 1930, 1t Ts Shown. Corporation seeking (o re- | boAt Was 16 Tect Tong. The Mundoron . whose stapl e | s s \%&- T2 S der o e —The taxi. ! & (Fa 31000.000. I b X -1 STU[]Y NA"VE |.|FE e e A knce” e | mustma. Evan In” thesé Bhrd ‘tmes P e aSTICACS: i Yo e st e T Sl mgors osx'"m From Cardenas. O *UE°T 10 Beltimors have been derived from ice, s, “He . — an “nf begun to repudiate l’orelg; label " rate in 1930 ; the eorpors e ion Ch . Cultural :n-fl:!;l: Eg:;nul :T' .mno,,{ \nthmu: a ifl]l» in W N:‘\v Yofk“m’ '|'f|p West LUDENDORFF IS SUED W. v‘ %d‘ pwlfiz o‘ 18: ‘Na- o 1 nr::{a:x ns'ogei £20-| . Arrives-to Study Law. epression Changes Cultural instead of first-nand expefiences. . réss [ aéin- ops at Fo % ———— told the criganipation that cABs . SR | NEW YORK, Juts 30 (&).—Couss - . Lhgpel ety Sops at Horty-third St E55030m 300 Samerfrs i Vr B | e Chishe . MG 4ok the e do Chamiein, 31, arvived seer &5 Mexleans Cited, Bave o6 F) Count Dohna Brings Libel Action|gla s Buisiness Outlook—Critic Sees HODE 1f we foster this growing spirit of in- w“’ to the and | BllD!l&sArEAtnehed, Against General. 330-"” day #board the French liner Paris to ; 0 encouragement of American "This, he said, o g . spend t tud: o T e e 20 (| of TS0, repeseted an Iocresss| EREIGHTER SINKS BOAT | 5 en mei i, SR ien that we shall soon have the beginnings 3 e of u native school of art. b?mh no *Thieves Steal Germs. | NEW YO! g_;\d-m Z;su{::y oin a libel action as Craven. suthor of “Men of |MOney and not much encouragement,| EVANBTON, Tl June 30 ).—Dr. L L N, ccussosrien count o lecen of | the Mexicans, by Stcking to. native | T. PP, Gherehil, pi : : g 2 Sopna, whom the £-|RIGHT .OF SOVIET FIRM |capiatn Bsports Potomas Accldent| | one of America orth: Ul 3 ® years ag>. 2 R lar Del Northwetern m E ) 5 "I couRTs 0|'EST|0NED Upon Doéking Bhip At I egular fi:ery s .tm‘t s ‘loelma ?‘.nc’z"{%'-? subject-matter, have produced the m‘?t at 't et utad n fortlen Satts | L B8 O T enasnple, | oy e Lieves, WS dple B d 4 vo ’ e W e r A N trial natlon, and that 1 ¥e Ao "wii | In the utllitarian arts the modefh-, I 2oty har was I B oo wy e iyt I kmown of & g0t Lo _— Baltimore. Ovér 100,000 families read The Tenect the 'color and character of & |ist facs are happily on the wane. This |the machine contained enough typhoid nand three years before the assassina- | U- 8. Asks Ruling on Legal status . £ e . The great ma- machine age.” craze for eccentric decoration and anti- |germs to start a city-wide epidemic. Y tion but that he took no steps to pre- By the Assoctated Press. : delivered BY THOMAS CRAVEN. : '}ft ‘;‘::;‘g;‘m was l;:'lflm"d : by in- e o vent it. / When Amtorg Seeks Recovery BALTIMORE, June 30.—Capt. A. W. pr ot Sven m:n?" s.ix‘,‘. . A o en, wi 2 ¢ [ (Gopyriht, 191, by thé Associated Pressd | & mew ‘siyle. of furniture oversigne | Odnadian Tarift Board List. ach. WL Ludendortt nor the giaintin ~ot- $1,000,000 Dutles. :lven ofut::’e. Mundolphin, which dbeked | | oty "a@ily and 5 centa Bunday. CHILMARK, MARTHA'S VINEYARD, | withous regard for the ofices of OTTAWA, Ontaris, 30 0P, . A decision I8 expected by |Bs the Assoclated Press. Aol feported 1o harb6r au- 1H you re not taking advane il Senll o e et i r, e Somips S Dumealy | 2ie Uberl sfpaneh b s Qonr, : : R Yo ot he | DU LI STV, YUETRY I ot | | ot SR T S economic ¢ our st T 'S » u 2 -4 l, a Wi — " ® s jow rate, 10) bankers .who patronize the fine arts, |OTAlive Arty the'use of the rarer metas | defeated in the of : tol v ;| ot 312729 go t Ay [Dading S Oupiratiba” buyig g::fv;?.:n Recoke, n S50 G, T08 | | Ho e Do e our overworked architects and engineers, | and tiachined siirfacés which, when | night by a voté of & od from the | England 18 Mil.v;:mmen employes in a)rt- gnm or e: Soviet government, b the Brooks, W. C. 4 TVice and other cultural optimists, phophesied ng! 54 e women. sue ited States courtd was chil- | Townsend; & youth &nd the engineer the immediate appearance of an_Amer- ican renaissance. Today these experts, frantically audit- ing their accounts, stem to have fors gotten their cultural prophesies—and perhaps it is just as well. Such utter- ances were premature, the result of conspicuous extravagance and insane vitality. The present condition of the arts, if one is to judge solely by the standard of productivity, is not one to cause the heart to rejoice. But the col- lapse of the eccnomic order has been accompanied by # wholesale shaking down of art values, which, I believe, is about the most salutary thing that could have happened to art in America. Turn to Native Art. For the first time, to any appreciable extent, American artists are beginning | to be concerned with the materials, » tendencles and rescurces of American life. Heretofore, they have been, al- most to a man. imitators of the Eu- ropeans; -now they are beginning to realize .the necessity of creating some- thing in their own right. The relation of art to the économic background has been suddenly blasted upon their minds by an industrial catastrophe, destroy- ing the weak and invigorating the strong. Their old notions of art for art's sake, or for beauty's sake, or for the sake of any abstraction whatever, have beén knocked topsy turvy. ° At last our artists are waking up to the fact that they have been buried in foréign cultures which have no sig- & B i are Telephone Set Two-Burnér Three-Burher Top-Icer This 12 Inch Consol> Table = Well Made Beach Lamps and that if we are éver to have an in- Table Tables ieces Oil Stove Gas Range ' Refrigerator Lawn Mower and Mirror = Lawn Bench Cartiay Shades such expression will re- 2 ana characier of & ma- $6.95 $3.98 $1.94 $13.78 - $1095 $9.75 $4.79 $3.95 $1.19 $4.9 $1.79 . . S R GOTHA, in Machme Resources_ and put them to work, I am confident Wiyl BY the Associated Press. Gen. Erich Ludendorff was named de- |sengers in 1929, despite the depression. AND RESCUES CREW lt:n_g t,:ne P;eneh mllkllnry commander ’ a mis and a nephew of the late Nicholas Longworth. e For modern America, in every aspect o - velopment, is opposed to the authority = — " of tradition and the respect for obsolete v standards. All of which is good for the soul of Ly the artist. He is confrontsd with a changing, crushing, terrific industrial- ism, and he must stand of fall accord- ing to his ability to adapt himself to & machiné age in which things are built for service—to be scrapped ruth- lessly and replaced by newer and better models—and not as monuments to esoteric jdeals. It follows then that he must _util the higher instrumental capacities of the modern mach'ne—the genuine artist 'of every age has always beén thé master of his tools—and that he must make the machine his ally and his friend. Enibrate Machine. The tiénd of architecturé, not only in thé lA: cities but in the rmaller 48 toward the sheer structure towns, | with éléan surfacés striped of bridal- E a ke ornament, cornices which h 62.50 i s y ’ = L. : . ettt ettt R V) §) B LT e (VS iad 879 Living Room Suite-3 Pes. borrowed from European classicism. The Dressing Table, similar to cut, Walnut finish om =3 i 1 \”jj ‘1 2 Secttee, Bunny chair and club chair, nicely ups = v e r Rolstered in serciceable jacquard velour. 2 : 4 bulldera of thé future will utilize all pumwood the resources of thé machine and make S thé machine an art factor by conirol- ling it intéliigently. The old limestone shells pefforated by thousands of holes for windows will be supplanted ‘by structures with walls of glass supported by steel and copper. In painting, production is at low tide. e “The most hopeful signs are to be found = : g [ in the lhlltlnslnol the point of view. / DL - Everywhere I find dissatisfaction with f / T s 4 p ithe tyranny of worn-out European tra- = = f T =R Co ‘ = T s ' ST ol §/29 Value! g 2 D 1 norv. . 3 YEA s ! (T IARMSTLUTRY Large Pieces 96 | b | alnut GUARANTEE 057 eveny ] o _ . el 1N Veneers! - 1 enetian GENERAL ELECTRI ’ : il : Mirrors! WATER) $98 Bed Room Group—4 Pieces ¢ 69 g ‘ 7 | : $149 Imperial Mohair Bed-Davenport Suite Consists of the four pieces pictured. They are Upholstered in beautijul Imperial . Mo- of high grade cabinét woods in walnut veneer. 2;"’(3 ";tm" sides "b’;d ?‘“k’ '"i"”‘tl""et velour gh-grade cabinet woods in walnut veneer, Forget service éx- pense (or 3 long years! New General Electric gnarantee assures constant »"J’.-Mi’:, drinking water al- ol ways. Insures satis faction to tenants 2 - profit to owner. Attractive Rental Plan S ded 2 ] : ; GENERAL @ ELECTRIC A . ' 3 i { = ‘ BOTTLE WA.rn COOLER . = 9 ; o . 2o ‘ il $115 Kroehler Bed-Davenport Suite 379 . ¥ $109 Dining Room Suite—10 Pieces 379 articles are AXD offered. Buffet, server, china closet, table, five side PRESSURE WATER COOLERS Three pieces as pictured. The Settee conceals National Electrical kR wires, ; ¢hairs and one armchair in American Walnut Supply Co. & x 1328.30 New York Ave. N. W. $129 HE NAtional 6300 . i s 7% o Value! [ N Of Walnut Veneers! - ACACIA WOl ey “ s | Have You Heard and Seen the New We Invite Your Application : , g PHILCO | 7 for & Real Estote Loan ; g : \ Baby Grand Model 70 LOW INTEREST . 5 Balanced Superheterodyne N 2 . $129 in 100% Mohair Suite Seven tubes | (Pentode and Screen . - $79 Dinette Suite—7 pieces 359 [ RATES Comprises the three pieces shown above. Th , 4 i Grid)—T Control—Electro-Dy- s 3 ; ABL) - = ing Dial. COURTEOUS e Sar o | <t > B R SERVICE S0 v Sy a8 j : (2P7 NI N Monthly Payments If Desired | ASSETS MORE THAN $40,000,000 Prompt Action on Applications e 1 7SRy M s 3-Piece 33 1.75 I 3-Piece . . ATH . AW | $Pe. Breakiast S{;’.f.k_fl.?fksl 5__2__5_ 101 Indians Avenue Washingten, D, C. ‘-. Monteomery, President Fibre Suite Fibre Suite Suite “Suite