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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. DEBUTANTE OF WAR| HAILED AS PAINTER Hard Career of Artist Due to Inspiration While “Doing Bit.” By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 24 —Pictures hailed as of utmost interest to lovers of contemporary art went up on the walls of the Ferragil Galleries yesterday because & society girl didn't like to knit sweaters or roll bandages in wartime. Antoinette Schulte—her father was Anthony Schulte, who founded the chain of cigar stores bearing his name —has reached, after several years of hard application, that stage in_success which accords her right to exhibit in & “one-man” show. Had America stayed out of the world | conflict she might never have done it. Never precocious at drawing as a child, she went through Mrs. Semple’s school with only the fittings for a social ca- reer. Expected to Do “Bit.” In 1918 she was expected to do “her bit.” so she designed dinner cards for gift shops, proceeds to go for tobacco and what not for doughboys. She drew herself right into a career. e war over, the demand for dinner cards as a_matter of patriotism gone, she found herself unable to resist the urge to create. About nine years ago | she charted a definite course, sent back | what R. 8. V. P’s she had on hand | and literally buried herself in Spain and South America. At Madrid she visited the American Consul and had him recommend a teacher. The Consul procured photo- graphs of the work of every artist of note in Spain and Miss Schulte studied them. She was quick to pick the Spanish master, Lopez Mazquita, and under his instruction she spent five years assimilating the Spanish scene. The reputation she wanted began to take shape. The Madrid salon chose one of her pictures. So did the Paris salon. Then she went to South America and painted in every country except Bolivia and Paraguay. Picture Wins Praise. Not long ago one of her pictures, identified only by a number, won a popularity ballot in a large New York gallery. It was called “Spirituals” and_represented singing Negroes. “Sobriety and honest of feeling are such paramount considerations with her as a painter of the theatrical, flamboyant, or immediately arresting ! in art, make only a negligible appeal | to her” says Frank Crowninshield in a foreword to the catalogue of her show, “Her esthetic goal, in short, is more one of balance and restraint than of bravura, agitation or surprise. Her ability to feel, even to evoke. a poetic mood; the depth and sincerity of her temp:rament, and the wide horizon of her tastes should make her develop- ment as a painter a matter of interest to lovers of contemporary art in America.” THE WEATHER District of Columbia — Increasing cloudiness and warmer tonight, fol- lowed by showers and cooler tomorrow. Gentle shifting winds. Maryland, Virginia — Increasing cloudiness and slightly warmer in the interior and probably showers on the coast tonight. - Tomorrow showers undl ccoler; increasing northeast winds West Virginia—Rain tonight and | tomorrow, warmer in extreme east and cooler in extreme west portfon tonight. Much cooler tomorrow. Report for Last 24 Hours. Temperature. Barometer. 4 pm. . £ pm Midnight . 4 am. 8 am. Noon . Highest Lowest 72,2:30 p.m. Year ago 48,6:30 am. Yearago . Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and | Geodetic Survey.) .42 ‘Tomorrow. The Sun and Moon, Sun, tomorrow Moon, today .... 4:09a.m. 6.27p.m. Automobile lamps to be lighted one- half hour after sunset. Rainfall. Monthly rainfall in inches in the Capital (current month to date): Month. 1931 Average. Record. January . .. 156 355 1709 '82 February . 327 84 March . . 3.75 ‘91 April 327 '89 May . 3.60 June . 413 July . 417 August . 4.01 September 3.24 October 284 November 237 Weather in Various Cities. " Temperature, @3 (43 Stations. Sepiaisak 30.26 Abilene, Tex ~ Clouds Alvany, N. Y o cl El Paso. Tex... Galveston. Tex. Helena, Mont... Huron, 8. Dak Indianapolis Ind Jacksonville.Fla Ransas City.Mo. Los Angeles Louisville. Ky Clear Pt.cloudy Cloudy Tamoa, WASH., FOREIGN. €7 a.m., Greenwich time, today.) Stations. perature. Weather. London. England Cloudy Paris, France Vienna, Berlin. holm, Gibraltar. 01 Forta (Faya 8l . ch’ 't . Azores..... 62 rrent observations.) a 70 Cloudy Clear Part clondy Clear is vtn’ up its fight against uct.lsn of lavor-saving 1p- farms started in the lief uld prevent urban unemfiyed ing jobs in the country. Hung; the inf ment, that if fro B bloody battles at the District Building Pr.cloudy | No—This Is Not a Breadline! The photograph shows the crowd ES” TICKETS. changes that had taken place since his departure. the Byrd expedition at some of the | 435 small ports, and natlve villages he had visited. DOCKS TINY SLOOP AFTER GLOBE TRIP Engineer Hears World News After Two-Year Exile on High Seas. Special Dispatch to The Star. | tiny lining up in front of the National to get their tickets early for Mr. Ziegfeld’s show, always an event in Washington. | THE ROACHES DEFY GLASSFORD AS TOO GREEN TO PUT ’EM OUT 1 War of Extermination at Headquarters Doomed, Says Alexander the Great, Munching Crumb. (Learning of a drive planned by Police Supt. Pelham D. Glassford against the cockroaches at police headquarters, The Star assigned its underworld reporter to get the roaches’ side of the story. His dis- patch is printed below, for what it may be worth.) I was able to get an accurate ac- count of the threatened war between the cockroaches and the police at head- quarters from none other than Alex- ander the Great, field marshal of the | contingent and a survivor of the recent | Alexander didn't seem to think it would ' be much of a war. | ‘This is old_stuff to us” he said, stroking a reflective whisker. “Thr\" tried it at the District Building and what did they get? A lot of phony publicity, If you ask me. “You remember the sodium fluoride they tried first? That was a hot one. | How the boys reveled in it. And next somebody came along with the ecstasy | powder. If they are going to try that again it will be a walkover. I'll ad- mit some of the boys at the District Building passed out after inhaling a little too much of it. They had no restraint. But we are made of tougher stuff. We have lived with policemen most of our lives. Too New on Job. “The trouble with Glassford is that | he is green. He really doesn't know what he's up against. Why doesn't he pick on somebody his own size, any- way? “Pardon me, but is that a crumb I see on your vest?" I removed the crumb and placed it before him. He munched it medi- tatively. “Is that another onp” he asked, | waving his proboscis at my vest again “That's only a little fleck of dirt,” replied. | “Well,” he said, ‘vou have to take what you can get these days, with the | depression and ‘all. T would have men. | tioned the crumb sooner, but I was| afraid you might send me down to earn | it sawing wood. It's a hard life we lead.” | Explanation Is Asked. | T asked Alexander to explain the ap- parent success of the campaign at the District Building, which for a while, at least, rid the buflding of its insect visitors. “As & matter of fact” he said, “the boys just had to lay low for a while.| T'll give you the low down if you won't | tip Glassford off. We were afraid ‘he Commisioners would appoint & commit- tee to deal with us, and then everybody would forget the whole thing. We have to keep in the public eye somehow. “But_I think this fellow Glassford Dine Thanksgiving Day The Crown Restaurant Table d'Hote Dinner Roast Turkey Dinner 12 noon Till 8 P.M. 1727 Pa. Ave. > ATRIAL WILL # ONVINCE Yol that the Hotel RNOR INTON 2006 of New Yorks Rnerts Por Money m;; or Rote/, 1200 ROOMS, BACH WITH RADIQ, BATH, SERVIDOR, GRONATING ICEWATER. s Qe mom DALY OPPOMTE PENNA R TAmOE. 5-8.0-8us8s 700 AT DOOR, WEARWVERYTHING NOR ¥ STREET and, 74 AVENUI NFW YORK has bitten off more than he can chew | this time. If he tries any rough stuff you may quote me as saying that we will take him for a buggy ride.” | Alexander finished the last of the| crumb with & sigh. Then he gave me a martial salute and, whiskers erect, scut- | tled away to his retreat behind the | wainscot. « . . nor bad breath. If you dilute your antisepti | b | VALUABLE A 1st Class ALLFOR CAR WASH § «fll 25 and 5 GALLONS of Straight Gas —or pay the few cents difference ‘for High Test gas. Sundays and Holidays, 20c Extra Super Auto Laundry, Inc. OPPOSITE CORBY'S BAKERY 2312 Ga. Ave. N%v. N‘:t.h 1 Modern research laboratories have thrown away the old ideas on killing germs. Now there’s a revolutionary antiseptic on the market ~Pepsodent Antiseptic. Its formula is a radical advance. germs even when diluted. Otherwise you haven't any right even to hope for quick relief. A new discovery—SAFE yet powerful NEW YORK, November 24 (NAN.A). —William Albert Robinson, 29-year- But he had heard nothing at all of the round-the-world flight of Post and | Gatty in 8 days. He had no news | either of foot ball games or world series | results, and announced that he was looking forward to seeing the Empire State Building of which he had heard in_Singapore. | Mr. Robinson wil | city hall, after he has brought his | sloop to the battery, this morning. | _Intimacy with cannibals in the New Herbides, with head-hunters in New Guinea and with chiefs of Polynesian tribes were a matter of course to him. He spoke graphically of hurricanes in the South Pacific, typhoons in the In- dian Ocean, and of a near-disaster off old textile engineer of Boston, docked | the coast of Greece. at Staten Island last night in his 22- | completing a | that Robinson heard from the Western 5 | World only once in six months. | months and 2 days, during which he |no radio equipment aboard foot sloop, the Svaap, round-the-world voyage of 2 years, covered more than 30,000 miles. Communication was so _infrequent He had But_he | reported that there was no ill health When Robinson sailed from New Lon- | and no particular trouble don on June 22, 1927, it was with the intention of cruising to Bermuda. But later he changed his mind and de- termined to round the globe as Capt Joshua Slocum, Harry Pidgeon, and Alain Gerbault had done, alone in other vessels. He was surprised to learn_of the Rheumatism Kidney Trouble Arthritis—Neuritis you have Arthritis. Neuritis. Rhenu- tism. Kidney ‘or Bladder Trouble. due iaulty elimination ~or _self-poisoning. put “yourself on Mountain Valley Minerai Water from famous Hot Springs. Arkan- sas. Its beneficient therapeutic 'effect is vouched for by physicians of note every- writes ave prescribed Mountain Valley Water ~to for the past 10 years and find same very beneficial for those suffering from rheumatism. kidney bles. take 'dell in _recommending same to any one in need of a_ first-class mineral water.” No taste. no odor. not a physic _Order & case today, or write for further information. Mountain Valley Water For 75 Years the Prescribed Water at Hot Springs, Arkansas. 306 District National 3ank Bldg. Metropolitan 1062 o3 ma to and bladder trou- | phone or | His stalwart little craft never failed,'the trip; W. A. McDanald of Boston | ——— e He had heard talk about | | without money, be received at| TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1931. he said, and only two sets of sails were | needed throughout the journey. He once salled for three weeks in the South Pacific at the rate of 1,000 miles & week. Etera, erstwhile pearl diver, Robin- son's mate, cook and handy man, who became second in command of the crew of two, was picked up at Tahiti after | the desertion of a man brought from Bermuda. On one occasion the two, foraged on the land and fared nicely. Most of the South Sea natives greeted them with gifts, but some islanders set bonfires on the beaches calling the war- riors to arms. ‘The route of the round-the-world voyage was from New London to Ber- muda, thence through the Panama Canal to Tahiti, outward across the Pacific, through the Red Sea, the Suez Canal, and then the Mediterranean to the Canary Islands. From there they made the 38-day trip of 4,000 miles to Morehead, N. C. They proceeded as much as possible by inland waterways to New Bruns. wick, N. J., which was reached today. Robinson was met by George Palmer | Putnam, who will publish the story of Your Last Chance Tomorrow Expert Truss-Fitting Demonstration Showing the world famous Akron Sponge Rubber Pad Trusses, especially including the wonderful Akron Triple Guard Truss. Truss wearers are amazed at the comfort and security these ap- pliances give. ‘We are exclusive representatives here. Factory Expert Fitter Here Demonstration Ends November 25—Don’t Miss It Kloman 911 19th St. N.W. Instrument Company, Inc. You can fool yourself but you can’t fool COLD The | Etera wanted to remain on the young navigator's mother was awaiting | and eat canned beef and bread. Ht him in this city. | revealed in his mixture of French and Robinson’s first order on reaching & English¥that since he had been arrested | good restaurant, clad in landsman’s|in 32 ports he would take no chances | clothes, was for a thick steak, apple in this country. ple and ice cream. He had never heard | (copyright. 1931 by the North of a tomato juice cocktail. ) Newspaper Alliance, Inc. Hail “Bill” Mooney! surhPde S B Tecd DibonabeininnTlile ontek i bles with the Budget Boys and “M. WMAL, tonite, 7:30. SHoP Eci—Mal By Nite: Porerns Use Your Creditv MR. MAN Dress Well—Head to Foot! | Pay Only i Cash Balance 10 weekly or 5 semi-monthly payments | and Fred Healy of New York. | American | | " 44 “Jes' Depends on the Way You Get Paid” Why waste money gargling when colds get worse and worse ? 3 out of 4 gargle uselessly while sore throats get worse and colds hang on Don’t waste dollars on antiseptics that can’t kill germs unless used full strength. Even when diluted with two parts of water, Pepsodent Antiseptic kills germs in 10 seconds. Thus—goes 3 times as far as other antiseptics. Thus $1 worth does the work of $3 spent for ordinary kinds. ic choose one that kills For It climaxes the best antiseptic study of 50 years. A germ- killing agent is employed unlike those now in use. It makes Pepsodent Antiseptic from 3 to 11 times more powerful in STOP gargling for a minute. Please answer this question: Do you add water to your mouth wash? 3 out of 4 do. Adding water robs most mouth antiseptics of power to kill germs. That's how millions fool themselves—but not their colds—and not the germs BAD BREATH (Halitosis) Pepsodent Antiseptic does double duty whencombating colds and throat irritations. the checks bad breath Remem. ber P. A.is 3 to 11 times more powerful in killing gorma than other leading mouth antiseptics . . . and it kills gorms when diluted. killing germs than other leading mouth antiseptics, depending on which one you use. Kills germs in 10 seconds diluted with 2 paris of water That is the startling news in this new discovery. Think! You can mix Pepsodent Antiseptic with 1 or even 2 parts of water, to suit your taste, .Pepsodent Antiseptic and it still kills germs in less than 10 seconds. That's where most other leading mouth antiseptics fail. Yet in spite of all that power, Pepsodent Antiseptic is utterly safe when used full strength. What a weapon this new antiseptic is in your fight against colds! me time It tiseptics. New security against bad breath (Halicosis) And please remember when you use Pepsodent Anti- septic for colds you are doing double duty by also fight- ing bad breath. For Pepsodent Antiseptic checks bad breath 1 to 2 hours longer! That's Pepsodent Antiseptic's record in fighting this widespread social offense due to unhygienic mouth conditions. Immediately after use— 95% of germs on mouth surfaces are destroyed. Two hours later the number of germs is still reduced by 80%. That is far longer acting than other leading mouth an- $3 worth of vesults for $1—regardless of size To kill germs—most mouth antiseptics must be used full strength. So to mix such antiseptics with water is a waste of money. Contrariwise, Pepsodent Antiseptic can be mixed with twice its own volume of water. Thus Pepsodent Antiseptic goes 3 times as ffl-“f" you $2 for every $1 you spend. Pepsodent Antiseptic comes in 3 sizes: 3 ounces for 25 cents—7 ounces for S0 cents—16 ounces for $1. The larger the size, the more for your money. Combating a cold and checking bad breath are only two uses for this remarkable antiseptic. There are scores of other uses. Some are listed on this page. Learn to rely on Pepsodent Antiseptic whenevera safe, effective germ-killing agent is required. Keep it in the home. Take it with you when you travel. Again we say: Quit being good to germs. They've laughed at you long enough. Play safe. Buy an antiseptic that really kills germs when diluted. Remember: You can fool yourself but you can’t fool a cold. Some of the 50 different uses for this modern antiseptic Cold In Head After Shaving Throat Irritations Minor Cuts Voice Hoarseness £ Blisters e Loose Dandruft Cold Sores Canker Sores Checks Under-Arm Perspiration Mouth Irritations After Extractions Tired, Aching Feet