Evening Star Newspaper, October 24, 1935, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SYMPHONY MUSIC | FUTURE GROWING Van Hoogstraten Says In- dustrial Leaders Will Finance Concerts. Symphony concerts financed by in- dustrial leaders as an advertising medium to bring about broader cul- ture among the middle classes is visu- alized by William van Hoogstraten, noted conductor of the Portland.| Oreg., Symphony and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. Arriving | here yesterday to be guest conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra | 1n its second Winter season concert at Constitution Fall Sunday afternoon. | he gave his views in an interview at his hotel room. Hoogstraten, a tall. slightly bald man with a dynamic character of expression, believes the aim of good music does not stop with entertain- ment, but that it also is an educa- ticnal factor. In order to understand the mas- ters the audience must be in a re-| ceptive mood, he says. He scoffs at| the idea that concertgoers must be | lectured on music in order to under- stand it. The main thing is to have | the mind attuned to music. Understanding Needed. “It is a tragic thing that people hear a symphony without at least | trying to understand, without givin their full attention and sympathy, he said. Meanwhile, C. C. Cappel, business manager of the National Symphony | Orchestra, gave reassurance that the eymphonies held last Summer at the | Potomac Water Gate will be resumed | next Summer, despite the fact the | barge that served as an orchestra platform has been ordered returned to the Navy. “In case there is not a Navy barge | available for the concerts next Sum- mer, we certainly can secure a com- | mercial barge for the shell” he said | after praising the Navy Department for “magnanimity of spirit” in lend- ing the barge this year Cappel explained that the sounding shell, built by F. E. R. A workers for the orchestra, can be easily moved from one barge to another without | dismantling. Pending a decision as to where the barge for the next Sum- mer concerts is to come from the shell | will be stored intact. | The Navy barge was brought here from Norfolk, Va., and will be re- turned there, it was announced by the Navy Department. “Free Concert Inevitable.” Hoogstraten, who wields the baton ! before nearly 100,000 New Yorkers every Summer, says the day of the free concert is bound to come. He cited the radio concerts financed by Henry Ford as an example of what is to come. “Many people cannot afford to pa,v‘ even 25 cents to hear a concert,” he explained. “These people are starved for good music. The time is coming | when millionaires will take care of all expenses of the symphony and Beetho- ven and Tchaikowsky will be free to | all who care to come. They will find, like the kings and princes of old, that this is a valuable medium of advertis- Musical education should start with the child, every one being able to play some instrument, he thinks. The way people live has a great deal to do with their appreciation of music, he said. “If we live on the surface, never en- Joying the fullness of life, then we will never know great music or understand the masters,” he asserted. Baitle (Continued From First Page.) @ message of thanks to the Ethiopian | government for measures taken to in- sure their safe passage to French Somaliland. ZERO HOUR NEAR. ROME, October 24 ().—Mussolini’s two armies in Ethiopia stood ready to- day for the zero hour to march on Harar. A barrage of bombs from planes will clear the way for 300,000 men to | attempt to take a broad band of Western Ethiopia, connecting Italy's two colonies of Eritrea and Italian Somaliland. The Ttalians hope for a big victory | next Monday, the thirteenth anni- versary of Il Duce’s march on Rome, | to prove their power. Long guns looked down on the wide expanse over which Gen. Emilio de Bono's northern columns expect to travel 50 miles south of their present | front lines to Makale. | Much of this strip is already Italy’s | through the surrender of Ethiopian | chie —_— SPECIAL NOTICES, DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART loads to and from Baito.. Phila. and New| York. Frequent trips to other Eastern | eities. Dcne dable Service smco 1896 " | ‘THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORA! €O.. phene Decatur 2500, 24 g HAVE AN EXPERIENCED N. Y. DEC- orator design or rearrange your apartment or home: reasonable, Call National .7<|-,x I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR .luw debts contracted by any other than myself. ALOIS J. SCHULD. 645 11th st. n.e. UPHOLSTERING DONE IN YOUR HOME, Cushions refilled new springs, $2 each. Address Box 481-C. Star office. [~ WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR Gevts contracted by anybody other than myself. RA 1408 pe ~Washington” 1. € WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR | Tents contracted by ShY one sihee Han | lyse]f HARRY L. TALBOTT, 1366 Tavlor st nw. "ECL AD R. PU'LL d part lnldl lo 1 Dnlnu 'H.hln 1, 0\)0 e e et e JAT. DEL_ASSOC.. INC.. 1317 N. ¥. ave. ANY PERSON \VHO WAS_RIDING ON A street car going south on Georgia ave. n.w. around noon October 6, 1934, at the time & short utoeky lld fell. kindly get in touch with MR. 'WDER, 3204 Georn- ave. n.w. CHRISTMAS—RIGHT NOW IS THE TIME to have those old pictures reproduced for Christmas _giff iniatures. = copies and golargements ‘6% superios olislity bave long Been speciaities of TUDIO. Rotosraphers. 1933 F. Nlmmll 2500, CKAMBERS 15 _one of the largest undertakers in the Complete funerals as low as $75 IID !lx chapels, twelve parlors, uvemeen cars. hearses and aml undertak d 1400 Chapin 517 11th st Apples—Swut Cider ROCKVILLE FRUIT FARM. Drive to Rockville, Md.. two blocks west of Court House, then one mile out road to aC CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENT. THEOSOPHY. Oct. 24 and 25, 8 P.M. \’ Free Lectures by 2> L. W. ROGERS Man a God in the Making Lecture to Members and New Class WASHINGTON LODGE T.5. 1216 H St. N.W, | 41 | believed Stern had killed seven under- Scene of New York Gang Attack Arthur (Dutch Schultz) Flegenheimer, beer baron, was sitting at this table in a cafe at Newark, N. J., last night when the bullets of rival gangsters wounded him seriously. Upper insert shows *“Pretty Louie” Amberg, whose hatchet murder in Brooklyn early yesterday is be- Police said the Schultz and Amberg gangs clashed frequently over bullets. lieved to have led to the Schultz shooting. gambling rackets. Lower inset: THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, THURSDAY, 'OCTOBER 24, 1935. Three friends also went down in the hail of Schultz I (Continued Prom First Page.) i | the stairway of an adjacent subway entrance. Women screamed as the shots were | fired. Persons on the sidewalk scat- tered. Many ducked ipto the subway. where the assailant is thought to have | escaped. 20 Shots Wired. Schultz, who had been fighting re- | . moval to New York on the income tax | Furnace Parts charge, was sitting in the tavern with his three companions when the two | assailants threw open the door and blazed away with machine guns. The gunmen fired at least 20 shots, witnesses said, and then fled through a rear door. The few patrons ran for cover. Officers were summoned by a tel- ephone call to police headquarters. | “Send me an ambulance,” said n voice. “I'm dying.” Police found Frank lying on the sidewalk outside the cafe. Deputy Chief John Haller expressed the belief | he had followed the gunmen in an\ effort to cut off their escape, only to be shot down by others in the attack- ing squad. Schultz was sitting inside, holding his right side. “You're Schultz” said one officer. | “Are you shot?” | “Yes, and it's damn painful,” Schultz | replied. ‘ Deputy Chief Haller said Schultz| later told him: ) “You're killing me, you're killing me. I've told you the truth.” | Haller said he did not understand the meaning of the sentences. Ten Are Questioned. Police took seven men and three women patrons to headquarters for questioning. Some of them said they had been dancing on the second floor and were not aware of the shooting. Rosenkrantz, questioned by officers, | said merely: “Give me an ice cream cone.” Brooklyn police, who were called into the investigation after Stern's identity became known, said Schultz’s Bronx gangsters clashed frequently with Amberg’s men over invasion of each other’s territory in the policy slip and loan shark rackets. These officers saw the wounding of Schultz and his men as retaliation for the death of Amberg, originator of the “sack murder” method, in a | blazing automobile. They said they world characters in two months. Chief Bodyguard Sought. As many known hoodlums disap- peared from Broadway “hot spots” | early today, because of the police round-up, detectives were reported investigating the whereabouts of “Bo” Weinberg, Schultz’s chief bodyguard. He disappeared from his Broadway haunts five weeks ago. Persistent | rumors said he was kidnaped and killed by a rival gang. | Schultz became a gangland figure during prohibition when he became active in beer and liquor syndicates. | Often he and his men were hunted for underworld slayings. When he and companions were ar-| rested in 1931, officers took a mswl and $18,600 in cash from Schultz's | pockets. They found he made his | home in a Fifth avenue apartment. It was not until ‘after prohibition repeal that Schultz became involved | in income tax difficulties. He was Flegenheimer. | indicted but remained a fugitive until November, 28, 1934, when he sur- rendered at Albany. Last April he was tried at Syracuse | on tax evasion charges, but the jury remained deadlocked for 27 hours and was discharged. On a retrial he was acquitted August 1 at Malone, N. Y. He sought haven in Jersey, but a warrant on another indictment was served on him there. Federal Judge William Clark ruled yesterday, over objections of Schultz's Class Timited SPANISH > = to 8 Students w Class Starts Today at 3 P. BEELITZ SCHOOL OF LAN n Conn._Ave. . 0230 Ciass Limited FRENCH ..o e ey, Starts Todas at 7 PM. THE BERLITZ SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES 1115 Conn. Ave. | York. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. counsel, that he was eligible to hear proceedings to remove Schultz to New The defense promptly filed! an appeal with the Circuit Court of Appeals at Philadelphia. Turn your old trinkets, jewelry and watches into MONEY at— | A. Kahn Jnc. Arthur J. Stmdlun, Pres. | 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET' BAR GROUP TO AID INNARCOTICS WAR Federal Association Asks Uniform Law in D. C. in Resolution. Support of the Federal Bar Associa- tion for enactment of strengthened narcotic laws for the District of Co- lumbia has been voted and its co- operation in drafting such legislation is promised. In the opinion of the association, as expressed in a resolution adopted at its meeting yesterday, acceptance of the uniform narcotic act already in effect in nearly 30 States would be the best solution of the District prob- lem. Local narcotic laws at present are admittedly full of loopholes for | violators of the drug regulations. Assistant Attorney General Justin Miller, president of the Federal As- sociation, said the association will aid Corporation Counsel E. Barrett Prettyman in studying the local prob=- s FOR GARAGE—FACTORY—WAREHOUSE $38 Installed For Single Garage Prepare for Winter. Install {rouble-proof overhead garage doors. Work done by factory trained mechanics. Guaranteed by Nation-wide organization, Act now for quick installation, Overhead Door Sales Co., Inc. Dept. A, Barr Bldg. Telephone MEt, 3818 ~Soup or Cockt 3 Vege- tables, Choicest N. Y. Juicy Tenderloin Planked Steak, Salad, Dessert, Beverage! It's without equal—a new, one-man size planked steak, mushrooms, and a big meal in fine, hotel surroundings. Near places-to-go for enter- tainment—it's the place to go for dinner— HOTEL HARRINGTON 11th ond E Streets N.W. Augustus Gumpert, Manager Fuel 0il Before Sellmg Investigate the Prices We Pay for OLD GOLD AND SILVER Jewelry of every description, bridge- work, silver No matter how old or dilapidated any of foregoing ar- ticles might be. you will be greatly gurprised at the cash orices pald y us (Licensed by U. 8. Govt.) SHAH & SHAH 921 F St. N.W. Phcne NA 5543—We Will Call "Moulders and Designers of Millinery, styled to your individual taste. Hats Cleaned and Reblocked BACHRACHE 733 11th St. N.W. If You Want Big Rooms Large Closets Plenty of Wall Space Economical Upkeep Low Monthly Payments Convenient Neighborhood Very High Elevation And the Possibility of Making the Home pay for itself— THEN YOU SHOULD SEE THESE HOMES TONIGHT! 7 Rooms, 2 Baths $8.450 Exhibit Home 5409 2nd St. N.W. Second and Concord Ave. Samuel W. Barrow 827 14th St. Na. 2227 Or Potomac 6323-J WASHINGTON’S FASTEST SELLING OIL BURNERX “FAMOUS FOR SERVICE” L. P. Steuart 139 12th ST. N.E. & Bro., Ine. o Lincoln 4300 Delivered to you in modern trucks equipped with hose, pump, strainer and meter by courteous and experienced drivers, wh protect your property as they their own, Just Phone Us— District 8223 1151 16th STREET A CENTURY OF SERVICE TO WASHINGTONIANS VVrr‘ilIIIIII||IIIIIII?'\!Ir'MIIIIllllmnt'\!f‘flflllllflfllllll"\lf : Heats WILLIAM KING @ SON COAL MERCHANTS ESTABLISHED 1838 tank HEIL OIL BURNERS 0 will would 2901 K STREET Homes Than Any Other 0il Burner in the World Colonial Fuel Oil, Inc. 1709 De Sales St. MEtropolitan 1814 The Yellow Section of Your Phone Book Lists Dealers in Colonial Fuel Oil I for o lem, either through appointment of | & special committee or through its| present committee on criminal pm- cedure, of which Prettyman himself now is chairman. In part, the resolution adopted yes- terday said: “Laws of the District of Columbia are inadequate to deal with illicit| trafic in narcotic drugs. The sup- pression of drug traffic would be greatly facilitated by uniformity of laws respecting manufacture, sale and the use c! narcotics.” PR SR S, Australia may have a $5,000,000 lot- tery for its hospitals. AMERICAN SHIP T0 EUROPE EVERY WED. AT NOON To Cobh, Plymouth, Havre, Hamburg . ROOSEVELT . . .Oct. 30; Dec. 26% MANHATTAN . Nov. 6; Dec. 3;* Jan, 3¢ Pres. HARDING . . . Nov.13; Jan. 8 WASHINGTON . . . Nov. 20; Dec. 14* *Special Heliday Sailings Thurs., Tues., Fri., Sat. AGENTS EVERYWHERE UNITED STATES LINES Company’s Office, 713 11th Tel. National 1613 A Word to the Wise | When you buy a new Ford you pay certain amount of service— when you buy vour Ford at Steuart Motors you get 100% of this service. Vigilance . . . after. DON'T BE FOOLED! Get what you ask for! we mean 14th & Col. Rd. N.W. 9th & H Sts. N.E. ANY PHILGO DELIVERED o 7th & Penna. Ave. S.E. e 14th & P Sts. N.W. TO YOUR HOME FOR THIS © 2250 Sherman Ave. N.W. SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Steuart Brake Ex- perts Can Make Your Car Stop Sure- ly—Safely? Spuealing, inefficient brakes are a menace to highways. Play safe! Have your brakes tested today. Steuart specialists, using latest, most efficient methods, can make necessary adjust- ments with factory precision. THEN when you step on the brake pedal you know you'll come to a smooth, safe stop. EUART 6th & NEW YORK AVE. N.W. 3rd & H STREETS N.W. SERVING THE PUBLIC OVER 30 YEARS “Controlled Quality” Means Ceaseless No one could possibly question the scien- tific thoroughness of District of Columbia Health Department inspections. Nevertheless, we go to the extra expense of having Thompeon's own field force check and recheck herds, buildings and equip- ment of every dairy farm before milk and cream are accepted. And constantly there- Reo. U. s. Pat. Of, Dopie>® Too particular? No, just another exam- ple of what Thompsons means by “Con- trolled Quality.” This symbol denotes that Thompson's '~Irradiated Vitamin D Milk produced ‘under license, Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, Steenbock Pat- ent, is accepted by American Medi- ca! Association, Committee on Foods. THOMPSON’S DAIRY DECATUR 1400 LEADING 100% INDEPENDENT DAIRY

Other pages from this issue: