Evening Star Newspaper, October 20, 1931, Page 12

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nimum Bundle, RE'S & 3 service that offers 3 savh and mones. in bundle washed under laboratory controlled system plenty of soft frater and finest Make a Week’s Test LAUNDRY MET. 1452 -|and the work of “the fellow out of You'll never know how quick- Is a severe cough due to a cold can be conquered, until you try | this famous recipe. It is used in |\ millions of homes, because it gives || more prompt, positive relief than | ansthing else. ~ It's no trouble at all to mix and costs but a trifle. Intoa pint bottle, pour 215 ounces | of Pinex; then add plain granu- Jated sugar syrup or strained honey to make a full pint. This saves two-thirds of the mopey usually spent for cough medicine, and gives Sou a purer, better remeds. It hever spoils, and tastes good—chil- dren like it. & You can actually feel ite pene- trating, soothing action on the in- flamed throat membranes. It is also absorbed into the blood, where it acts directly on the bronchial tubes. At the same time, it promptly loos- ens the germ-laden phlegm. This Shree-fold action explains why it brings such quick relief even in those severe coughs which follow cold_ epidemics. Pinex is a_highly concentrated compound of Norway Pine, contain- ing the active agent of creosote, in a refined, palatable form, and known as one of the greatest me- dicinal agents for severe coughs ang bronchial irritations. 0 not accept a substitute for Pinex. It isguaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded. for Coughs, ARTISTS ORGANIZE T0 FIGHT ‘RACKET Seven Americans Establish Gallery to Exhibit Na- tive Productions. | By the Associated Press. . | NEW YORK, October 20. — Seven | American artists, who charge that the exhibition and distribution of art, both | in Europe and in the United States, has | become largely a “racket” in the hands | | of French_dealers, opened their own | gallery in New York yesterday. They have taken a five-year lease on a small gallery in a midtown hotel, and | | there they will show their own work | | Texas, or Montana, or Ohio,” who, they expiain, finds it almost impossible to | get a showing in New York. Styled “American Group.” They call themselves “an American | group,” and each vear will admit two American artists to their organization and conduct guest shows at which non- members, both American and foreign, will be permitted to exhibit. “The trouble with the situation at | present,” said_Anatol Shulkin, a mem- | ber of the Exerutive Committee, “is | that it is controlled almost entirely by | the French. | “Art has become big business in France—somebody referred to it re- cently as ‘France's great oil industry.’ | It is a $200.000,000-a-year business, as a matter of fact, and 90 per cent of | the money is spent by Americans. | Cites French Styles. | “It is the same as it is with styles. | American’s_think it must_come from France to be any good. I personally | know of one American style designer who has had to send his stuff to Paris, ] to get the Paris trade mark on it, be- | fore he could dispose of it in this country | “We have no quarrel with French art or French artists. As a matter of fact, | French artists do not benefit by this | situation. They are hopelessly exploit- | | ed by the French dealers. The practice | is for the dealer to buy pictures from the artist at from $10 to $50 apiece, | ‘rear’ them for a few years—which means that he sticks them out in a| rear room without showing them—and | finally, after he gets most of the artist's work, to build him up and sell the pic- tures at high prices. The artist, having sold his canvasses outright, never gets | hing out of it.” ‘We seven may never amount to any- | thing,” he said. “Our object primarily | is to get a showing for American artists, whether they are well known or not— | lh}:’ fellow out in Texas, or Montana, or ‘ Ohio.” Austral 's 1931-32 wheat crop is es- timated at 180.000, 00 bushels. THE EVENING STAR, W. CTO ASHTL D. C., TUESDAY, Wins Art Prize RECEIVES CARNEGIE AWARDS FOR HIS PAINTINGS. FRANKLIN C. WATKINS, Young Philadelphia painter and com- paratively unknown in the art world, who was the recipient last night of $3,500 in cash prizes and guest of honor at the Founder's day banquet which opened the thirtieth internation- al exhibition of the Carnegle Institute in Pittsburgh. Two of his paintings were accepted, and'no American paint- er, whatever his reputation, has more than two in the Carnegie international exhibition. The paintings _accepted were “Suicide—in Costume” and “Cruci- fixion.” which won the prize —Wide World Photo. MOTOR CYCLE RACERS CLIMB OVER HILLTOP By the Associated Press. OAKLAND, Calif., October 20.—Na- tional championship motor cycle hill- climbing records fell here Sunday when winners in three of the four events went’ over the top of the 300-foot hill used for the climb, & feat heretofore unaccomplished. “Windy” Lindstrom, Oakland, made the fastest time over the 300-foot course in the national professional champion- ship with 61-cubic-inch motors. Lind- | strom roared over the hill in 8 4-10 | seconds. He took the championship from Genechyne, Springfield, who came in third. Rhyne, however, retained the national professional championship with cubic-inch motors, going over in 9 35-100 seconds, with Lindstrom second and Joe Petrali, Milwaukee, Wis., third. ‘The third winner over the hill was in the amateur championship. R. Caston- guay, Springfield, Mass., made the 300 feet in 11 35-100 seconds. Motors of 45-cubic-inch pocket valve design were used in this It was the former painting | Mass., | 45- | TWINS PERISH IN FIRE Smoke Defeats Efforts of Parents to Rescue Babies. JACKSON, Tenn., October 20 (#).— ‘Two babies, twin daughters of Dr. Will ‘T. Fitts and his wife, perished in a fire that swept their nursery early yesterday. ‘The parents tried desperately to res- cue the 6-month-old infants. but dense smoke and flames drove them back. Dr. Fitts said the fire apparently was started by a coal falling from a grate. Maine Bank Closes. FORT KENT, Me., October 20 (#).— ‘The Fort Kent Trust Co. and its branch at Madawasca failed to open their doors yesterday. Signs on the doors sald, “Closed for adjustment.” The bank was organized in 1903 and was capitalized at $50,000 and had deposits of approxi- mately $650,000. Colds are common because people are careless. Prompt use of aspirin will always check a cold. 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